Journals from J to Z

Journals from J to Z

[jw] H-Diplo JOURNAL WATCH, J to Z H-Diplo Journal and Periodical Review www.h-net.org/~diplo/journals/ Second Quarter 2014 15 April 2014 Compiled by Lubna Qureshi, Stockholm University The Journal of African History, Vol. 55, Issue 1 (March 2014) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=AFH&volumeId=55&is sueId=01&iid=9216967 JAH Forum: Islam in Sub-Saharan Africa • Jean-Louis Triaud, “Giving a Name to Islam South of the Sahara: An Adventure in Taxonomy,” 3. • Scott S. Reese, “Islam in Africa/Africans and Islam,” 17. • Benjamin Soares, “The Historiography of Islam in West Africa: An Anthropologist’s View,” 27. Social Order and Economic Transformation • Peter Delius and Stefan Schirmer, “Order, Openness, and Economic Change in Precolonial Southern Africa: A Perspective from the Bokoni Terraces,” 37. Slavery and Indebtedness • Paul E. Lovejoy, “Pawnship, Debt, and ‘Freedom’ in Atlantic Africa During the Era of the Slave Trade: A Reassessment,” 55. Protesting Colonial Abuse This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc- nd/3.0/us/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA. H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013 • Joel Glasman, “Unruly Agents: Police Reform, Bureaucratization and Policemen’s Agency in Interwar Togo,” 79. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of American-East Asian Relations, Vol. 21, Issue 1 (2014) http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/18765610/21/1 • Mark E. Caprio, “The Eagle Has Landed: Groping for a Korean Role in the Pacific War,” 5. • David A. Conrad, “’Before It Is Too Late’: Land Reform in South Vietnam, 1956-1968,” 34. • Eun Seo Jo, “Fighting for Peanuts: Reimagining South Korean Soldiers’ Participation in the Wollam Boom,” 58. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of American History, Vol. 100, No. 4 (March 2014) http://www.journalofamericanhistory.org/issues/1004/ • Cameron B. Strang, “Violence, Ethnicity, and Human Remains During the Second Seminole War,” 973. • Eric R. Schlereth, “Privileges of Locomotion: Expatriation and the Politics of Southwestern Border Crossing,” 995. • Julia L. Mickenberg, “Suffragettes and Soviets: American Feminists and the Specter of Revolutionary Russia,” 1021. • Dorothy Sue Cobble, “A Higher ‘Standard of Life’ for the World: U.S. Labor Women’s Reform Internationalism and the Legacies of 1919,” 1052. • Susan L. Carruthers, “’Produce More Joppolos’: John Hersey’s A Bell for Adano and the Making of the ‘Good Occupation,” 1086. • Lisa Levenstein, “’Don’t Agonize, Organize!’: The Displaced Homemakers Campaign and the Contested Goals of Postwar Feminism,” 1114. • Mary Dougherty, Eric Foner, Amy Kinsel, Randall M. Miller, and David J. Trowbridge, “Textbooks Today and Tomorrow: A Conversation about History, Pedagogy, and Economics ‘Box’,” 1139. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ 2 | Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013 Journal of American Studies, Vol. 48, Issue 1 (February 2014) https://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=AMS&volumeId=48&i ssueId=01&iid=9174627 • Anders Stephanson, “Senator John F. Kennedy: Anti-Imperialism and Utopian Deficit,” 1. • Tamara L. Follini, “Speaking Monuments: Henry James, Walt Whitman, and the Civil War Statues of Augustus Saint-Gaudens,” 25. • Philip McGowan, “AA and the Redeployment of Temperance Literature,” 51. • Jenel Virden, “Warm Beer and Cold Canons: US Army Chaplains and Alcohol Consumption in World War II,” 79. • Timothy A. Hickman, “A Chicago Architect in King Arthur’s Court: Mark Twain, Daniel Burnham and the Imperialism of Gilded Age Modernity,” 99. • Jennifer Terry, “’Breathing the Air of a World So New’: Rewriting the Landscape of America in Toni Morrison’s A Mercy,” 127. • Ramón Espejo, “Coping with the Postmodern: Paul Auster’s New York Trilogy,” 147. • Colin Hutchinson, “The Complicity of Consumption: Hedonism and Politics in Thomas Pynchon’s Against the Day and John Dos Passos’s USA,” 173. • Nick Witham, “US Feminists and Central America in the ‘Age of Reagan’: The Overlapping Contexts of Activism, Intellectual Culture and Documentary Filmmaking,” 199. • Colin Burnett, “The ‘Albert Maltz Affair’ and the Debate over Para-Marxist Formalism in New Masses, 1945-1946,” 223. • Henry Knight, “’Savages of Southern Sunshine’: Racial Realignment of the Seminoles in the Selling of Jim Crow Florida,” 251. • Venla Oikkonen, “Kennewick Man and the Evolutionary Origins of the Nation,” 275. • Mark Joseph Walmsley, “Tell It Like It Isn’t: SNCC and the Media, 1960-1965,” 291. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 73, Issue 1 (February 2014) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JAS&volumeId=73&iss ueId=01&iid=9184661 3 | Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013 • Gerald James Larson, “Partition: The ‘Pulsing Heart that Grieved’,” 5. • Manan Ahmed Asif, “Idols in the Archive,” 9. • Erik Mueggler, “Corpse, Stone, Door, Text,” 17. • Justin M. Jacobs, “Nationalist China’s ‘Great Game’: Leveraging Foreign Explorers in Xinjiang, 1927-1935,” 43. • Projit Bihari Mukharji, “Vishalyakarani as Eupatorium ayapana: Retro-botanizing, Embedded Traditions, and Multiple Historicities of Plants in Colonial Bengal, 1890- 1940,” 65. • Francis R. Bradley, “Islamic Reform, the Family, and Knowledge Networks Linking Mecca to Southeast Asia in the Nineteenth Century,” 89. • Nayoung Aimee Kwon, “Conflicting Nostalgia: Performing The Tale of Ch’unhyang in the Japanese Empire,” 113. • Kumiko Saito, “Magic, Shojo, and Metamorphosis: Magical Girl Anime and the Challenges of Changing Gender Identities in Japanese Society,” 143. • Eiko Maruko Siniawer, “’Affluence of the Heart’: Wastefulness and the Search for Meaning in Millennial Japan,” 165. • Franziska Seraphim, “A New Social History of Occupied Japan,” 187. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of British Studies, Vol. 53, Issue 1 (January 2014) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JBR&volumeId=53&iss ueId=01&iid=9175788 • Rupali Mishra, “Diplomacy at the Edge: Split Interests in the Roe Embassy to the Mughal Court,” 5. • Hannah Weiss Muller, “Bonds of Belonging: Subjecthood and the British Empire,” 29. • Coll Thrush, “The Iceberg and the Cathedral: Encounter, Entanglement, and Isuma in Inuit London,” 59. • Philip Harling, “The Trouble with Convicts: From Transportation to Penal Servitude, 1840-67,” 80. • Kenton Scott Storey, “Colonial Humanitarian? Thomas Gore Browne and the Taranaki War, 1860-61,” 111. 4 | Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013 • Eloise Moss, “’How I Had Liked This Villain! How I Had Admired Him!’: A.J. Raffles and the Burglar as British Icon, 1898-1939,” 136. • Lara Putnam, “Citizenship from the Margins: Vernacular Theories of Rights and the State from the Interwar Caribbean,” 162. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Cold War Studies, Vol. 15, No. 4 (Fall 2013) http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/jcws/15/4 • Mark J. Gasiorowski, “The CIA’s TPBEDAMN Operation and the 1953 Coup in Iran,” 4. • Nikos Marantzidis, “The Greek Civil War (1944-1949) and the International Communist System,” 25. • Michael H. Creswell and Dieter H. Kollmer, “Power, Preferences, or Ideas? Explaining West Germany’s Armaments Strategy, 1955-1972,” 55. • Robert Brier, “Broadening the Cultural History of the Cold War: The Emergence of the Polish Workers’ Defense Committee and the Rise of Human Rights,” 104. • Loch K. Johnson, “James Angleton and the Church Committee,” 128. • Mark Kramer, “The Dynamics of 1989: Reassessing a Momentous Year,” 148. FORUM: George F. Kennan and the Cold War: Perspectives on John Gaddis’s Biography • James G. Hershberg, “Reflections on George F. Kennan: An American Life,” 155. • David Mayers, “Gaddis, Kennan, and the Cold War: An Assessment of the Biography,” 161. • Barton J. Bernstein, “Analyzing and Assessing Gaddis’s Kennan Biography: Questionable Interpretations and Unpursued Evidence and Issues,” 170. • Vladimir O. Pechatnov, “Gaddis’s Achievement: Taking the Measure of Kennan,” 183. • Ivan Kurilla, “An Assessment of John Lewis Gaddis’s George F. Kennan: An American Life,” 189. • James C. Wallace, “Contained? The Religious Life of George F. Kennan and Its Influence,” 196. 5 | Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013 • Binoy Kampmark, “Commentary on John Lewis Gaddis, George F. Kennan: An American Life,” 216. • Vít Smetana, “George F. Kennan and the Division of Europe,” 225. • Anders Stephanson, “Gaddis’s Kennan: A Different Kennan?,” 233. • John Lewis Gaddis, “Reply to the Commentaries,” 241. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Conflict Resolution, 58:1 (February 2014) http://jcr.sagepub.com/content/58/1.toc • Adam S. Harris and Michael G. Findley, “Is Ethnicity Identifiable?: Lessons from an Experiment in South Africa,” 4. • Courtenay R. Conrad, “Divergent Incentives for Dictators:

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