12 results
Search Results
2. Nation Women's Engagement and Resistance in the Muhammad Speaks Newspaper.
- Author
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GIBSON, DAWN-MARIE
- Subjects
- *
MUSLIM women , *NEWSPAPERS , *WOMEN journalists , *WOMEN'S roles , *ACTIVISM , *TWENTIETH century , *RELIGION , *HISTORY - Abstract
This paper examines Nation women's engagement and resistance in the Muhammad Speaks (MS) newspaper. MS was created as the official publication of Elijah Muhammad's Nation of Islam (NOI) in 1960. The paper employed women as journalists and invited contributions from women who had registered with the group. Women's contributions to the paper's production and content reveal their readings of NOI mandates but they equally illuminate a gentle resistance to aspects of the organization. Elijah Muhammad's NOI implemented gender roles for men and women within the organization that were often inflexible. Women embraced the organization's gender roles and found ways to navigate the patriarchal dimensions of the movement. This paper argues that a careful analysis of women's writings for the MS newspaper reveals facets of their activism that have been overlooked in existing scholarly studies. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Commercial Counterhistory: Remapping the Movement in <italic>Lee Daniels’ The Butler</italic>.
- Author
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DUCK, LEIGH ANNE
- Subjects
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CIVIL rights , *RACE relations in motion pictures , *RACISM in motion pictures , *AFRICAN American history , *PLANTATIONS , *HISTORY - Abstract
Lee Daniels’ The Butler (2013) might seem an unlikely candidate for intervening in Hollywood's civil rights genre, given both its nationalistic ending and its recuperation of iconic styles and images. This paper argues, however, that the film's pastiche interrogates past cinematic tropes for race and space; in this sense, it provescounterhistorical , a term indicating not a lack of accuracy but a commitment to illuminating the role of visual media in shaping contemporary understandings of history and to encouraging fresh perspectives on the past. Examining the many forms of constraint produced by iconic images of black and gendered personhood, the film also takes on the spatial icon with which many of these figures are associated – the southern plantation. Both exposing and challenging the ways in which spectacular accounts of southern racism occlude the geographic and political reach of African American movements against oppression, the film inconsistently insists on the importance of thinking across conventional demarcations of space and time. At these moments, it suggests possibilities for how even commercial cinema might contribute to new conceptions of black political history and possibility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Prevention & Conservation: Historicizing the Stigma of Hearing Loss, 1910-1940.
- Author
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Virdi, Jaipreet
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL stigma , *DEAFNESS & psychology , *HEARING impaired , *DEAF people , *DEAFNESS -- Social aspects , *SOCIAL history , *HEARING disorders , *MEDICAL societies , *HEALTH policy , *AUDITORY perception testing , *DEAFNESS prevention , *HEALTH promotion , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *PUBLIC health , *SOCIAL marketing , *HISTORY , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SOCIETIES - Abstract
During the early twentieth century, otologists began collaborating with organizers of the New York League for the Hard of Hearing to build a bridge to “adjust the economic ratio” of deafness and create new research avenues for alleviating or curing hearing loss. This collegiality not only defined the medical discourse surrounding hearing impairment, anchoring it in hearing tests and hearing aid prescription, but, in so doing, solidified the notion that deafness was a “problem” in dire need of a “solution.” Public health campaigns thus became pivotal for spreading this message on local and national levels. This paper focuses on how, from the 1920s to 1950s, as otologists became more involved with social projects for the deaf and hard of hearing — advocating lip-reading, community work, and welfare programs — at the same time, they also mandated for greater therapeutic regulation, control of hearing aid distribution, and standardization of hearing tests. The seemingly paradoxical nature of their roles continued to reinforce the stigmatization of deafness: with widespread availability of effective help, the hearing impaired were expected to seek out therapeutic or technological measures rather than live with their affliction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Policy Uptake as Political Behavior: Evidence from the Affordable Care Act.
- Author
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LERMAN, AMY E., SADIN, MEREDITH L., and TRACHTMAN, SAMUEL
- Subjects
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POLICY sciences -- Social aspects , *PARTISANSHIP , *POLITICAL attitudes , *REPUBLICANS , *HEALTH insurance exchanges , *DEMOCRATS (United States) , *HEALTH insurance , *TWENTY-first century , *HISTORY ,PATIENT Protection & Affordable Care Act - Abstract
Partisanship is a primary predictor of attitudes toward public policy. However, we do not yet know whether party similarly plays a role in shaping public policy behavior, such as whether to apply for government benefits or take advantage of public services. While existing research has identified numerous factors that increase policy uptake, the role of politics has been almost entirely overlooked. In this paper, we examine the case of the Affordable Care Act to assess whether policy uptake is not only about information and incentives; but also about politics. Using longitudinal data, we find that Republicans have been less likely than Democrats to enroll in an insurance plan through state or federal exchanges, all else equal. Employing a large-scale field experiment, we then show that de-emphasizing the role of government (and highlighting the market's role) can close this partisan gap. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A Note on Technology Shocks and the Great Depression.
- Author
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Inklaar, Robert, de Jong, Herman, and Gouma, Reitze
- Subjects
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GREAT Depression, 1929-1939 , *BUSINESS cycles , *POST-World War II Period , *HISTORY ,20TH century technology - Abstract
The role of technology shocks as a driver of the Great Depression is the topic of our own earlier work and the paper by Watanabe in this issue. While the two studies differ in their data and assumptions, they complement each other and strengthen the conclusion of both papers: technology shocks were not the driving force of the Great Depression. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. BACHEEISHDÍIO (PLACE WHERE MEN PACK MEAT).
- Author
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Herrmann, Edward W., Nathan, Rebecca A., Rowe, Matthew J., and McCleary, Timothy P.
- Subjects
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AMERICAN bison hunting , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *ORAL history , *DRAINAGE , *PROTECTION of cultural property , *HISTORIC preservation , *HISTORY - Abstract
Bacheeishdíio ("Place Where Men Pack Meal"), now culled Grapevine Creek in English, is the subject of Crow oral traditions that document the cultural significance of the landscape and celebrate centuries of bison hunting in the drainage. We report an ongoing, community-based project that integrates archaeological field training and research goals into a collaborative indigenous archaeology project supporting the expressed goal of the Crow Tribal Historic Preservation Office to prepare a district-level nomination for the Grapevine Creek drainage basin. This paper describes findings from field investigations that document buffalo jump locales, a previously unreported bison bonebed, and associated archaeological features in the drainage, grounding Crow oral traditions that document buffalo jumps and large-scale bison hunts firmly into the landscape. We take a holistic approach that incorporales multiple lines of evidence to assess the archaeological record associated with bison jumps and bison hunting on the Crow Reservation in southern Montana. Results of this project include an enriched understanding of the Grapevine Creek archaeological record, greater awareness of buffalo hunting strategies on the northwest Plains, and, through field training, enhanced cultural resource management capabilities for the Crow Tribal Historic Preservation Office. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. “The Most Progressive and Forward Looking Race Relations Experiment in Existence”: Race “Militancy”, Whiteness, and DRRI in the Early 1970s.
- Author
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BURGIN, SAY
- Subjects
- *
RACIAL identity of white people , *RACISM , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY , *UNITED States history ,HISTORY of African American military personnel ,20TH century history of race relations in the United States ,UNITED States military history, 20th century - Abstract
At the end of the 1960s, the United States military was rocked by race-related violence and riots. Growing fears of black “militancy” eventually compelled the military's largely white leadership to implement policies aimed at ameliorating racial disparities. One of the most significant changes was the establishment of the Defense Race Relations Institute (DRRI) and the requirement that all troops partake in race relations education. Largely overlooked in histories of military race relations and rarely viewed in terms of its place in the larger landscape of US race relations, DRRI was founded to train the military's race relations educators. Its original curriculum and methodology, during the years 1971–74, represented a radical response to the problems of racism in the military, and central to its framework was a critique of whiteness as a nexus of racialized power. This paper attempts to present a complex understanding of the motivations involved in the founding of the DRRI as it historicizes the military's quest to contain race “militancy” through the establishment of DRRI. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The Surgical Elimination of Violence? Conflicting Attitudes towards Technology and Science during the Psychosurgery Controversy of the 1970s.
- Author
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Casper, Stephen T. and Casey, Brian P.
- Subjects
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PSYCHOSURGERY , *NEUROSURGERY , *MENTAL health policy , *SCIENCE & politics , *CIVIL rights , *FRONTAL lobotomy , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY of civil rights - Abstract
In the 1970s a public controversy erupted over the proposed use of brain operations to curtail violent behavior. Civil libertarians, civil rights and community activists, leaders of the anti-psychiatry movement, and some U.S. Congressmen charged psychosurgeons and the National Institute of Mental Health, with furthering a political project: the suppression of dissent. Several government-sponsored investigations into psychosurgery rebutted this charge and led to an official qualified endorsement of the practice while calling attention to the need for more “scientific” understanding and better ethical safeguards. This paper argues that the psychosurgery debate of the 1970s was more than a power struggle between members of the public and the psychiatric establishment. The debate represented a clash between a postmodern skepticism about science and renewed focus on ultimate ends, on the one hand, and a modern faith in standards and procedures, a preoccupation with means, on the other. These diverging commitments made the dispute ultimately irresolvable. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Contending Professions: Sciences of the Brain and Mind in the United States, 1850–2013.
- Author
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Casper, Stephen T. and Scull, Andrew
- Subjects
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HISTORY of psychology , *HISTORY of psychiatry , *MENTAL health services , *HISTORY of mental illness , *PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY , *MENTAL illness treatment , *HISTORY - Abstract
This paper examines the intersecting histories of psychiatry and psychology (particularly in its clinical guise) in the United States from the second half of the nineteenth century to the present. It suggests that there have been three major shifts in the ideological and intellectual orientation of the “psy complex.” The first period sees the dominance of the asylum in the provision of mental health care, with psychology, once it emerges in the early twentieth century, remaining a small enterprise largely operating outside the clinical arena, save for the development of psychometric technology. It is followed, between 1945 and 1980, by the rise of psychoanalytic psychiatry and the emergence of clinical psychology. Finally, the re-emergence of biological psychiatry is closely associated with two major developments: an emphasis that emerges in the late 1970s on rendering the diagnosis of psychiatric illnesses mechanical and predictable; and the long-term effects of the psychopharmacological revolution that began in the early 1950s. This third period has seen a shift the orientation of mainstream psychiatry away from psychotherapy, the end of traditional mental hospitals, and a transformed environment within which clinical psychologists ply their trade. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Friendships in the Shadow of Empire: Tagore's Reception in Chicago, circa 1913–1932.
- Author
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CHAKRABARTY, DIPESH
- Subjects
- *
INDIC poets , *AUTHORS' travels , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century , *INTELLECTUAL life - Abstract
This paper supplies the historical context to the Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore's (1861–1941) first visit to the city of Chicago in January 1913 when he spoke at the University of Chicago and established life-long friendships with some of the literary personalities of the city. By focusing on how Tagore came to be received by the University authorities and on his friendship with Harriet Vaughan Moody (1857–1932), the widow of the American writer William Vaughn Moody, it also seeks to trace the role that the themes of ‘empire’ and ‘civilization’ played in determining how the poet was received, understood, and admired by his foreign friends. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Goals and tactics of President Gerald Ford's ethnic politics.
- Author
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Zake, Ieva
- Subjects
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ETHNICITY , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY , *HISTORY of political parties ,UNITED States politics & government - Abstract
This article analyzes initiatives of Gerald Ford's presidential administration toward nationalities or the so-called white ethnics against the backdrop of the legacy of Richard Nixon and the Republican Party's ethnic politics of the 1960s. Using archival and interview materials, it demonstrates that Gerald Ford intended to improve the relationship between the President's office and the ethnics who were involved in the Republican Party's structures. He consciously tried to respond to ethnics’ political concerns and even created a special position on his staff for working with the nationalities. While in office and during the election campaign of 1976, Ford succeeded in engaging the ethnics and in demonstrating his will to address their needs on the domestic “front.” He failed, however, to fully appreciate the importance of foreign policy to the nationalities. The article proposes that today, as in the 1970s, the American political establishment would benefit from recognizing international issues as crucial elements of white ethnics’ or nationalities’ political behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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