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<title>Dept. of History</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/2142/814</link>
<description/>
<item>
<title>Say It Loud, I’m Black and I’m Proud: African Americans, American Artifactual Culture, and Black Vernacular Technological Creativity</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/2142/3463</link>
<description>Say It Loud, I’m Black and I’m Proud: African Americans, American Artifactual Culture, and Black Vernacular Technological Creativity

Fouché, Rayvon

technology

race

</description>
<pubDate>Fri, 01 Sep 2006 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cold War Cosmopolitanism: The Education of Santha Rama Rau in the Age of Bandung, 1945-1954</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/2142/2384</link>
<description>Cold War Cosmopolitanism: The Education of Santha Rama Rau in the Age of Bandung, 1945-1954

Burton, A.M.

When Santha Rama Rau burst onto the international literary scene in 1945 with&#13;
her first book, Home to India, she was just twenty-two years old. Over half a dozen&#13;
books and half a century later, she was anthologized in a Norton reader as a writer, a&#13;
writing teacher, and the prototypical cosmopolitan of the twentieth century: “Born&#13;
in Madras, India . . . [she] lived all over the world, from England to South Africa&#13;
to Japan, until she settled in the United States.” Rama Rau’s transformation from&#13;
fledgling author into the embodiment of the modern cosmopolitan ideal was largely&#13;
a function of her elite status, her family connections, and the opportunities available&#13;
to her as an educated Indian woman. The daughter of a diplomat father and&#13;
an activist-feminist mother, she had all the credentials of the classic cosmopolite,&#13;
including a transnational childhood lived across the spaces of the British Raj and an&#13;
equally mobile adulthood facilitated by marriage to an American, Faubion Bowers,&#13;
and a career as a travel writer. Though she did not recognize herself as exceptional,&#13;
she conceded that her contemporaries might find her life “odd, peculiar, even a&#13;
little mad . . . or exotic.” Exoticism was, of course, a fate to which many ex-colonial&#13;
people who aspired to a cosmopolitan identity were subject in the decades following&#13;
the breakup of the British Empire. But Rama Rau’s story does more than reveal the&#13;
possibilities and limits of cosmopolitanism. Taken together, the books she produced&#13;
in the wake of her travels in the 1940s and 1950s articulate a shifting vision of global&#13;
community: from an earlier, Eurocentric model — rooted in a British/imperial worldview&#13;
— to a pan-Asian model — rooted in the realization of an emergent America centered&#13;
global hegemony. (From the article)

Rau, Santha Rama

Bandung

</description>
<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jan 2006 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>The Case of Modern Memory</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/2142/2324</link>
<description>The Case of Modern Memory

Fritzsche, P.A.

This article will attempt to&#13;
review the historical literature on these and other ghosts and on the structures of&#13;
temporality that have made ghostly appearances and disappearances possible.&#13;
While my initial point of departure is Yugoslavia, the focus of the article is on the&#13;
modem context of the "memory crisis," and more specifically on the imagination&#13;
of a collective but imperiled national past bounded in time and space, as well as&#13;
on the reconfiguration of private life and private remembrance in the nineteenth&#13;
and twentieth centuries. (from the article)

Memory

Yugoslavia

memory crisis

</description>
<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jan 2001 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>House/daughter/nation: Interiority, Architecture, and Historical Imagination in Janaki Majumdar's "Family History</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/2142/2323</link>
<description>House/daughter/nation: Interiority, Architecture, and Historical Imagination in Janaki Majumdar's "Family History

Burton, A.M.

In an age of virtual reality, cyberspace, and migration of global proportions, the&#13;
very possibility of home is being vigorously contested. Whether it is identified as&#13;
"Africa," England, India or, more subversively, the "black Atlantic," home is neither&#13;
a stationary place nor a self-evident trope. Like all historical utterances, it is both&#13;
fictional and contingent, inflected by the particular social contexts out of which it is&#13;
fashioned and, of equal significance, defying the very materiality and permanence it&#13;
appears to embody as well. What concerns me here is how and under what conditions home&#13;
is recalled when a woman takes up the task of mapping domestic genealogies as a&#13;
daughter, and how the architecture she produces ends up figuring the nation in history.&#13;
More specifically, I want to examine what this work of reconstruction meant in the&#13;
context of 1930s Indian nation-building, in the hands of a prominent nationalist's&#13;
daughter who was bold enough to chronicle her family's history and, in the process,&#13;
to reveal her own persistent desire for the elusive fiction of home. (from the article)

Women

Social Status

Households

Great Britain

Majumdar, Janaki

India

Nationalism

</description>
<pubDate>Wed, 01 Jan 1997 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Suicide and the Secularization of the Body in Early Modern Saxony</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/2142/2299</link>
<description>Suicide and the Secularization of the Body in Early Modern Saxony

Koslofsky, C.M.

Suicide

Secularization

Saxony

Lutheran Church

Burials

Thomasius, Christian

</description>
<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jan 2001 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Historical Research Techniques: Teaching with Database Exercises on the Microcomputer</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/2142/2298</link>
<description>Historical Research Techniques: Teaching with Database Exercises on the Microcomputer

Burton, Orville Vernon

Blomeyer, R.

Fukada, A.

White, S.J., Jr.

History teaching

Computers

</description>
<pubDate>Thu, 01 Jan 1987 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Fearful Bodies into Disciplined Subjects: Pleasure, Romance, and the Family Drama of Colonial Reform in Mary Carpenter's Six Months in India</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/2142/2297</link>
<description>Fearful Bodies into Disciplined Subjects: Pleasure, Romance, and the Family Drama of Colonial Reform in Mary Carpenter's Six Months in India

Burton, A.M.

Carpenter, Mary

Colonialism

Great Britain

India

Reform

</description>
<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jan 1995 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Princes of darkness: The night at court, 1650-1750</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/2142/2296</link>
<description>Princes of darkness: The night at court, 1650-1750

Koslofsky, C.M.

Court Life

Street lighting

</description>
<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jan 2007 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>The Nationality Problem in Hungary - Istvan Tisza and the Romanian National Party, 1910-1914</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/2142/2295</link>
<description>The Nationality Problem in Hungary - Istvan Tisza and the Romanian National Party, 1910-1914

Hitchins, K.

Hungary

National Identity

Nationalism

Romania

</description>
<pubDate>Thu, 01 Jan 1981 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Did Weimar Fail?</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/2142/2294</link>
<description>Did Weimar Fail?

Fritzsche, P.A.

Weimar Germany

Historiography

</description>
<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jan 1996 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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