[jw] H-Diplo JOURNAL WATCH, J to Z H-Diplo Journal and Periodical Review First Quarter 2016 22 January 2016 Compiled by Lubna Qureshi, Stockholm University Journal of American East Asian Relations, Vol. 22, Issue 3 (2015) http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/18765610/22/3 • Robert C. Cottrell, “Sex and Saigon: Gendered Perspectives on the Vietnam War,” 179. • Amanda Boczar, “Uneasy Allies: The Americanization of Sexual Policies in South Vietnam,” 187. • Amber Batura, “The Playboy Way: Playboy Magazine, Soldiers, and the Military in Vietnam,” 221. • Jeffrey A. Keith, “Producing Miss Saigon: Imaginings, Realities, and the Sensual Geography of Saigon,” 243. Journal of American-East Asian Relations, Vol. 22, Issue 4 (2015) http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/18765610/22/4 • David P. Fields, “The Rabbi, the Lawyer, and the Prophet: American Exceptionalism and the Question of Korean Independence.” 291. • Jimin Kim, “Empire versus Empire: American Critiques of Japan’s Colonial Rule in Korea in the 1920s and 1930s,” 315. • Brandon K. Gauthier, “A Tortured Relic: The Lasting Legacy of the Korean War and Portrayals of ´North Korea’ in the U.S. Media, 1953-1962,” 343. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of American History, Vol. 102, No. 3 (December 2015) http://jah.oah.org/issues/december-2015/ • Robert Michael Morrissey, “The Power of the Ecotone: Bison, Slavery, and the Rise and Fall of the Grand Village of the Kaskaskia,” 667. H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016 • Kendra T. Field, “’No Such Thing as Stand Still’: Migration and Geopolitics in African American History,” 693. • Kirsten Fermaglich, “’What’s Uncle Sam’s Last Name?’: Jews and Name Changing in New York During the World War II Era,” 719. • Jennifer Burns, “The Three ‘Furies’ of Libertarianism: Rose Wilder Lane, Isabel Paterson, and Ayn Rand,” 746. • Edward E. Curtis IV, “’My Heart is in Cairo’: Malcolm X, the Arab Cold War, and the Making of Islamic Liberation Ethics,” 775. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of American Studies, Vol. 49, Issue 4 (November 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=AMS&volumeId=49&is sueId=04&iid=10020807 • Hamilton Carroll and Annie McClanahan, “Fictions of Speculation: Introduction,” 655. • Aimee Bahng, “Specters of the Pacific: Salt Fish Drag and the Atomic Hauntologies in the Era of Genetic Modification,” 663. • Gerry Canavan, “Capital as Artificial Intelligence,” 685. • Eva Cherniavsky and Tom Foster, “Permanent Crisis and Technosociality in Bruce Sterling’s Distraction,” 711. • Laura Finch, “The Un-real Deal: Financial Fiction, Fictional Finance, and the Financial Crisis,” 731. • Leigh Claire La Berge, “Fiction is Liquid: States of Money in The Sopranos and Breaking Bad,” 755. • Andrew Pepper, “Who Knows What’s Going On? Mapping New Security Landscapes in Contemporary Espionage Fiction,” 775. • Katherine Sugg, “The Walking Dead: Late Liberalism and Masculine Subjection in Apocalypse Fictions,” 793. • Michael Szalay, “Pimps and Pied Pipers: Quality Television in the Age of its Direct Delivery,” 813. • Evan Calder Williams, “Salvage,” 845. Responses to New Southern Studies Forum 2 | Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016 • Jon Smith, “What the New Southern Studies Does Now,” 861. • Ted Ownby, “The New Southern Studies and Rethinking the Question, ‘Is There Still a South?’,” 871. Roundtable • Anthony J. Stanonis, Hugh Wilford, Andrew Hartman, Sheila Hones, Stephen Tuck, and Michael Heale, “Nicholas Barreyre, Michael Heale, Stephen Tuck, and Cécile Vidal (eds.), Historians across Borders: Writing American History in a Global Age,” 879. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 74, Issue 4 (November 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JAS&volumeId=74&iss ueId=04&iid=10061788 • John Delury, Sheila A. Smith, Maria Repnikova, and Srinath Raghavan, “Looking Back on the Seventieth Anniversary of Japan’s Surrender,” 797. • Mrinalini Sinha, “Premonitions of the Past,” 821. • Sanjay Joshi, “Juliet Got It Wrong: Conversion and the Politics of Naming in Kumaon, ca. 1850-1930,” 843. • Daniel Chirot, “The Long Struggle: Enlightenment, Counter-Enlightenment, and the Importance of Ideas in Democratization,” 863. • Mark R. Thompson, “Democracy with Asian Characteristics,” 875. • Edward Aspinall, “The Surprising Democratic Behemoth: Indonesia in Comparative Asian Perspective,” 889. • Elizabeth J. Perry, “The Populist Dream of Chinese Democracy,” 903. • Ashutosh Varshney, “Asian Democracy through an Indian Prism,” 917. • Gaerrang (Kabzung), “Development as Entangled Knot: The Case of the Slaughter Renuniciation Movement in Tibet, China,” 927. • Erik Esselstrom, “Red Guards and Salarymen: The Chinese Cultural Revolution and Comic Satire in 1960s Japan,” 953. • Dorothy J. Solinger, “Three Welfare Models and Current Chinese Social Assistance: Confucian Justifications, Variable Applications,” 977. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3 | Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016 Journal of British Studies, Vol. 55, Issue 1 (January 2016) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JBR&volumeId=55&iss ueId=01&iid=10096138 • Philip Loft, “Involving the Public: Parliament, Petitioning, and the Language of Interest, 1688-1720,” 1. • Stephanie Koscak, “The Royal Sign and Visual Literacy in Eighteenth-Century London,” 24. • Gregory Conti, “What’s Not in On Liberty: The Pacific Theory of Freedom of Discussion in the Early Nineteenth Century,” 57. • Peter Jones and Steven King, “Voices from the Far North: Pauper Letters and the Provision of Welfare in Sutherland, 1845-1900,” 76. • Brett Holman, “The Phantom Airship Panic of 1913: Imagining Aerial Warfare in Britain before the Great War,” 99. • Becky Taylor, “’Their Only Words of English Were “Thank You”’: Rights, Gratitude, and ‘Deserving’ Hungarian Refugees to Britain in 1956,” 120. • Ezequiel Mercau, “War of the British Worlds: The Anglo-Argentines and the Falklands,” 145. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Cold War Studies, Vol. 17, Issue 4 (Fall 2015) http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/jcws/17/4 • David Patrick Houghton, “Spies and Boats and Planes: An Examination of U.S. Decision- Making during the Pueblo Hostage Crisis of 1968,” 4. • Tommaso Piffer, “Office of Strategic Services versus Special Operations Executive: Competition for the Italian Resistance, 1943-1945,” 41. • Kevin W. Martin, “’Behind Cinerama’s Aluminum Curtain’: Cold War Spectacle and Propaganda at the First Damascus International Exposition,” 59. • Zachary Shore, “Provoking America: Le Duan and the Origins of the Vietnam War,” 86. • Thomas K. Robb and David James Gill, “The ANZUS Treaty during the Cold War: A Reinterpretation of U.S. Diplomacy in the Southwest Pacific,” 109. • Archie Brown, “The End of the Soviet Union,” 158. • Gary Kern, “Father, Son, and the Bomb,” 166. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ 4 | Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016 The Journal of Conflict Resolution, 59:8 (December 2015) http://jcr.sagepub.com/content/59/8.toc • David Shirk and Joel Wallman, “Understanding Mexico’s Drug Violence,” 1348. • Angelica Duran-Martinez, “To Kill and Tell? State Power, Criminal Competition, and Drug Violence,” 1377. • Javier Osorio, “The Contagion of Drug Violence: Spatiotemporal Dynamics of the Mexican War on Drugs,” 1403. • Viridiana Rios, “How Government Coordination Controlled Organized Crime: The Case of Mexico’s Cocaine Markets,” 1433. • Gabriela Calderón, Gustavo Robles, Alberto Díaz-Cayeros, and Beatriz Magaloni, “The Beheading of Criminal Organizations and the Dynamics of Violence in Mexico,” 1455. • Benjamin Lessing, “Logics of Violence in Criminal War,” 1486. • Stathis N. Kalyvas, “How Civil Wars Help Explain Organized Crime – and How They Do Not,” 1517. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Contemporary African Studies, Vol. 33, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjca20/33/3#.VpKB7Cge_zY • Leith Mullings, “Blurring boundaries: post-racialism, inequality, and the anthropology of race,” 305. • Janis van der Westhuizen and Karen Smith, “Pragmatic internationalism: public opinion on South Africa’s role in the world,” 318. • Ivan Turok, “Turning the tide? The emergence of national urban policies in Africa,” 348. • A. Carl LeVan, “Parallel institutionalism and the future of representation in Nigeria,” 370. • Niamh Gaynor, “Poverty amid plenty: structural violence and local governance in western Congo,” 391. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Contemporary Asia, Vol. 46, Issue 1 (2016) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjoc20/46/1 5 | Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016 • Michael D. Barr, “Ordinary Singapore: The Decline of Singapore Exceptionalism,” 1. • Michele Ford, Michael Gillan, and Htwe Htwe Thein, “From Cronyism to Oligarchy? Privatisation and Business Elites in Myanmar,” 18. • Sarah Turner, Thomas Kettig, Dinh Thi Diêu, and Pham
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