[jw] H-Diplo JOURNAL WATCH, J to Z H-Diplo Journal and Periodical Review Third Quarter 2015 20 July 2015 Compiled by Lubna Qureshi, Stockholm University The Journal of African History, Vol. 56, Issue 2 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=AFH&volumeId=56 &issueId=02&iid=9768037 New Economic Histories • Johan Fourie and Erik Green, “The Missing People: Accounting for the Productivity of Indigenous Populations in Cape Colonial History,” 195. • Jutta Bolt and Erik Green, “Was the Wage Burden Too Heavy? Settler Farming, Profitability, and Wage Shares of Settler Agriculture in Nyasaland, c. 1900-60,” 217. Crafting Political Identities in the Era of Decolonization • Elizabeth Foster, “’Entirely Christian and Entirely African’: Catholic African Students in France in the Era of Independence,” 239. • Jill Rosenthal, “From ‘Migrants’ to ‘Refugees’: Identity, Aid, and Decolonization in Ngara District, Tanzania,” 261. • Justin Willis, “The Southern Problem: Representing Sudan’s Southern Provinces to c. 1970,” 281. Enduring Violence • David Crawford Jones, “Wielding the Epokolo: Corporal Punishment and Traditional Authority in Colonial Ovamboland,” 301. 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 2015 ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of American-East Asian Relations, Vol. 22, Issue 1 (2015) http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/18765610/22/1 • Michael A. Schneider, “Mr. Moto: Improbable International Man of Mystery,” 7. • Yanqiu Zheng, “A Specter of Extraterritoriality,” 17. • Nguyet Nguyen, “Which Mirror is ‘Truer’?,” 45. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of American History, Vol. 102, No. 1 (June 2015) http://www.journalofamericanhistory.org/issues/1021/ • Kelly Lytle Hernández, Khalil Gibran Muhammad, and Heather Ann Thompson, “Introduction: Constructing the Carceral State,” 18. • Kali Nicole Gross, “African American Women, Mass Incarceration, and the Politics of Protection,” 25. • Jeffrey S. Adler, “Less Crime, More Punishment: Violence, Race, and Criminal Justice in Early Twentieth-Century America,” 34. • Miroslava Chávez-García, “Youth of Color and California’s Carceral State: The Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility,” 47. • Timothy Stewart-Winter, “Queer Law and Order: Sex, Criminality, and Policing in the Late Twentieth-Century United States,” 61. • Robert T. Chase, “We Are Not Slaves: Rethinking the Rise of Carceral States through the Lens of the Prisoners’ Rights Movement,” 73. • Julilly Kohler-Hausmann, “Guns and Butter: The Welfare State, the Carceral State, and the Politics of Exclusion in the Postwar United States,” 87. • Elizabeth Hinton, “’A War within Our Own Boundaries’: Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society and the Rise of the Carceral State,” 100. • Alex Lichtenstein, “Flocatex and the Fiscal Limits of Mass Incarceration: Toward a New Political Economy of the Postwar Carceral State,” 113. • Matthew D. Lassiter, “Impossible Criminals: The Suburban Imperatives of America’s War on Drugs,” 126. • Torrie Hester, “Deportability and the Carceral State,” 141. 2 | Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • Micol Seigel, “Objects of Police History,” 152. • Donna Murch, “Crack in Los Angeles: Crisis, Militarization, and Black Response to the Late Twentieth-Century War on Drugs,” 162. • Edward J. Escobar, “The Unintended Consequences of the Carceral State: Chicana/o Political Mobilization in Post-World War II America,” 174. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of American Studies, Vol. 49, Issue 2 (May 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=AMS&volumeId=4 9&issueId=02&iid=9703932 • Fionnghuala Sweeney, “’It Will Come at Last’: Acts of Emancipation in the Art, Culture and Politics of the Black Diaspora,” 225. • H. Adlai Murdoch, “Locating History within Fiction’s Frame: Re-presenting the Epopée Delgrès in Maximin and Lara,” 241. • Karen N. Salt, “Ecological Chains of Unfreedom: Contours of Black Sovereignty in the Atlantic World,” 267. • P. Gabrielle Foreman, “New England’s Fortune: An Inheritance of Black Bodies and Bones,” 287. • Zoe Trodd, “John Brown’s Spirit: The Abolitionist Aesthetic of Emancipatory Martyrdom in Early Antilynching Protest Literature,” 305. • Celeste-Marie Bernier, “A Visual Call to Arms against the ‘Caracature [sic] of My Own Face’: From Fugitive Slave to Fugitive Image in Frederick Douglass’s Theory of Portraiture,” 323. • Candace Ward, “’In the Free’: The Work of Emancipation in the Anglo-Caribbean Historical Novel,” 359. • Marcus Wood, “Slavery and Syncretic Performance in the Noite do Tambores Silenciosos: Or How Batuque and the Calunga Dance around with the Memory of Slavery,” 383. • Harvey G. Cohen, “Recent Music History Scholarship: Pleasures and Drawbacks,” 405. Journal of American Studies, Vol. 49, Issue 3 (August 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=AMS&volumeId=49&seriesId=0&i ssueId=03 3 | Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • David A. Davis, “The Irony of Southern Modernism,” 457. • Tao Zhang, “The Start of American Accommodation of the Chinese: Afong Moy’s Experience from 1834 to 1850,” 475. • Jay Garcia, “Richard Wright and the Americanism of Lawd Today!,” 505. • Stephanie Fuller, “’The Most Notorious Sucker-Trap in the Western Hemisphere’: The Tijuana Story (Leslie Kardos, 1957) and Mythologies of Tijuana in American Cinema,” 523. • Nathan Abrams, “A Jewish American Monster: Stanley Kubrick, Anti-Semitism and Lolita (1962),” 541. • Say Burgin, “’The Most Progressive and Forward Looking Race Relations Experiment in Existence’: Race ‘Militancy’, Whiteness, and DRRI in the Early 1970s,” 557. • Martin Paul Eve, “’Too many goddamn echoes’: Historicizing the Iraq War in Don DeLillo’s Point Omega,” 575. • Kun Jong Lee, “The Making of an Asian American Short-Story Cycle: Don Lee’s Yellow: Stories,” 593. • Tom Adam Davies, “The Economics of the Black Freedom Struggle,” 615. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 74, Issue 2 (May 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JAS&volumeId=74 &issueId=02&iid=9720665 • Adriana Erthal Abdenur, “China in Africa, Viewed from Brazil,” 257. • Kiri Paramore, “’Civil Religion’ and Confucianism: Japan’s Past, China’s Present, and the Current Boom in Scholarship on Confucianism,” 269. • Vicente L. Rafael, “The War of Translation: Colonial Education, American English, and Tagalog Slang in the Philippines,” 283. • Doreen Lee, “A Troubled Vernacular: Legibility and Presence in Indonesian Activist Art,” 303. • Karin Zitzewitz, “Life in Ruins: Materiality, the City, and the Production of Critique in the Art of Naiza Khan,” 323. • Faridah Zaman, “Colonizing the Sacred: Allahabad and the Company State, 1797-1857,” 347. 4 | Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • Benjamin D. Hopkins, “The Frontier Crimes Regulation and Frontier Governmentality,” 369. • Margherita Zanasi, “Frugal Modernity: Livelihood and Consumption in Republican China,” 391. • Tessa Morris-Suzuki, “Prisoner Number 600,001: Rethinking Japan, China, and the Korean War 1950-1953,” 411. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of British Studies, Vol. 54, Issue 2 (April 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JBR&volumeId=54 &issueId=02&iid=9651096 • Peter Lake, “The ‘Political Thought’ of the ‘Monarchical Republic of Elizabeth I,’ Discovered and Anatomized,” 257. • Beverly Lemire, “’Men of the World’: British Mariners, Consumer Practice, and Material Culture in an Era of Global Trade, c. 1660-1800,” 288. • Maria Zytaruk, “Artifacts of Elegy: The Foundling Hospital Tokens,” 320. • David G. Barrie, “Naming and Shaming: Trial by Media in Nineteenth-Century Scotland,” 349. • Daniel C.S. Wilson, “J.A. Hobson and the Machinery Question,” 377. • Tom Hulme, “’A Nation Depends on Its Children’: School Buildings and Citizenship in England and Wales, 1900-1939,” 406. • Deanne van Tol, “The Women of Kenya Speak: Imperial Activism and Settler Society, c. 1930,” 433. • Erika Hanna, “Photographs and ‘Truth’ during the Northern Ireland Troubles, 1969- 72,” 457. Journal of British Studies, Vol. 54, Issue 3 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=JBR&volumeId=54&seriesId=0&is sueId=03 • Eleanor Hubbard, “Reading, Writing, and Initialing: Female Literacy in Early Modern London,” 553. • Jacob Selwood, “Left Behind: Subjecthood, Nationality, and the Status of Jews after the Loss of English Surinam,” 578. 5 | Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • Tristan Stein, “Passes and Protection in the Making of a British Mediterranean,” 602. • Thomas Waters, “Magic and the British Middle Classes, 1750-1900,” 632. • Nicola Bishop, “Ruralism, Masculinity, and National Identity: The Rambling Clerk in Fiction, 1900-1940,” 654. • Selina Todd, “Phoenix Rising: Working-Class Life and Urban Reconstruction,
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