33 results
Search Results
2. Abstracts of papers presented at the annual meeting.
- Subjects
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MONETARY unions , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *HISTORY - Abstract
Presents an abstract of the paper `Establishing a Monetary Union: The United States's Experience,' by Arthur J. Rolnick, Bruce D. Smith and Warren E. Weber, presented at the fifty-fifth annual meeting of the Economic History Association.
- Published
- 1995
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3. Nation Women's Engagement and Resistance in the Muhammad Speaks Newspaper.
- Author
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GIBSON, DAWN-MARIE
- Subjects
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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]
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- 2015
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4. 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
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5. Prevention & Conservation: Historicizing the Stigma of Hearing Loss, 1910-1940.
- Author
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Virdi, Jaipreet
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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
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6. 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
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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]
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- 2017
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7. A Note on Technology Shocks and the Great Depression.
- Author
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Inklaar, Robert, de Jong, Herman, and Gouma, Reitze
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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
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8. The Alliance For or Against Progress? US–Brazilian Financial Relations in the Early 1960s.
- Author
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LOUREIRO, FELIPE PEREIRA
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INTERNATIONAL economic assistance , *ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC stabilization , *INTERNATIONAL economic relations , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century ,BRAZIL-United States relations - Abstract
This paper analyses the role played by US economic assistance during the administrations of Jânio Quadros and João Goulart in Brazil (1961–4). It focuses on the negotiation and implementation of financial agreements associated with the Alliance for Progress, President Kennedy's aid programme for Latin America. It demonstrates that the Alliance had a positive impact during Quadros' administration, providing substantial resources to the country and placing economic growth ahead of economic stabilisation as the principal criterion for aid. Circumstances changed, however, when João Goulart became president, resulting in serious funding constraints. The paper suggests that the main reason for this was political, specifically regarding Washington's perception of Goulart's links with communist groups. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2014
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9. US Feminists and Central America in the “Age of Reagan”: The Overlapping Contexts of Activism, Intellectual Culture and Documentary Filmmaking.
- Author
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WITHAM, NICK
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FEMINISM , *ACTIVISM , *INTERVENTION (International law) -- History , *WOMEN'S rights , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY , *20TH century feminism , *INTELLECTUAL life ,UNITED States history, 1969- ,UNITED States politics & government, 1981-1989 ,CENTRAL America-United States relations - Abstract
This paper examines the attitudes of feminist activists, intellectuals and filmmakers to US intervention in Central America during the 1980s. It traces the development of mutual intellectual and political sustenance between feminism and anti-interventionism, arguing that as feminist thinking bred new ways of approaching US involvement in Central America, so anti-interventionist struggles bred new ways of thinking about women's activism. In making this point, the paper complicates narratives of the “age of Reagan” that overlook the persistence of left-wing politics during the 1980s. Instead, it argues that a specific form of international feminism enabled a community of activists to contribute to a vibrant culture of dissent that criticized conservative approaches to women's rights and, at the same time, vigorously contested the interventionist foreign policy of the Reagan administration. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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10. Gender and the Dies Committee Hearings on the Federal Theatre Project.
- Author
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DOSSETT, KATE
- Subjects
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ANTI-communist movements , *UNITED States history , *CONSPIRACIES , *GENDER role , *NEW Deal, 1933-1939 , *HISTORY ,20TH century United States history - Abstract
This paper examines the House Committee on Un-American Activities and Propaganda's investigation into un-American activities in the Federal Theatre Project. In particular it examines the performances of committee chairman Martin Dies and his Republican colleague J. Parnell Thomas, who led the interrogation of Federal Theatre witnesses. Relying on so-called "friendly witnesses," usually disaffected former Federal Theatre employees or former communists, Dies and Thomas devoted three days to the testimony of Hazel Huffman, a WPA mail clerk, who never worked on the FTP, while allowing Hallie Flanagan and Ellen Woodward, the two women who directed the national theatre programme, just a few hours each. While Huffman gushed and flirted, Flanagan and Woodward refused to perform the version of femininity the committee demanded. The reordering of gendered roles that resulted was startling. The Dies Committee took to presenting itself as emasculated, a victim of masculine women and New Deal--communist conspirators, who were stripping not only them, but also America, of manhood. This paper suggests that it is only by analysing the powerful gendered performances of the key characters in this unfolding drama of un-Americana that we can understand how and why un-Americanism gained so strong a foothold in mid-century America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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11. The Crompton Closing: Imports and the Decline of America's Oldest Textile Company.
- Author
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MINCHIN, TIMOTHY J.
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TEXTILE industry , *CLOTHING industry , *MANUFACTURED products , *TEXTILE exports & imports , *TRADE regulation policy , *INDUSTRIAL laws & legislation , *BUSINESS failures , *ECONOMIC globalization , *HISTORY , *ECONOMIC history - Abstract
This article explores the demise of the Crompton Company, which filed for bankruptcy in October 1984, causing 2,450 workers in five states to lose their jobs. Crompton was founded in 1807 in Providence, Rhode Island and when it went out of business it was the oldest textile firm in the country, having been in continuous operation for 178 years. Despite its history, scholars have overlooked Crompton, partly because most work on deindustrialization has concentrated on heavy manufacturing industries, especially steel and automobiles. I argue that Crompton's demise throws much light on the broader decline of the American textile and apparel industry, which has lost over two million jobs since the mid-1970s, and shows that textiles deserve a more central place in the literature. Using company papers, this study shows that imports played the central role in causing Crompton's decline, although there were also other problems, including the strong dollar, declining exports, and a reluctance to diversify, which contributed to it. The paper also explores broader trends, including the earlier flight of the industry from New England to the South and the industry's unsuccessful campaign to pass import-restriction legislation, a fight in which Crompton's managers were very involved. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
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12. BACHEEISHDÍIO (PLACE WHERE MEN PACK MEAT).
- Author
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Herrmann, Edward W., Nathan, Rebecca A., Rowe, Matthew J., and McCleary, Timothy P.
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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
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13. The problem of raccoon intelligence in behaviourist America.
- Author
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PETTIT, MICHAEL
- Subjects
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RACCOON , *ANIMAL intelligence , *ANIMAL experimentation , *HISTORY of psychology , *WILD animals as laboratory animals , *COMPARATIVE psychology , *BEHAVIORISM (Psychology) , *WILDLIFE research , *HISTORY ,20TH century - Abstract
Even during its heyday, American behaviourist psychology was repeatedly criticized for the lack of diversity in its experimental subjects, with its almost exclusive focus on rats and pigeons. This paper revisits this debate by examining the rise and fall of a once promising alternative laboratory animal and model of intelligence, the raccoon. During the first two decades of the twentieth century, psychological investigations of the raccoon existed on the borderlands between laboratory experimentation, natural history and pet-keeping. Moreover, its chief advocate, Lawrence W. Cole, inhabited the institutional and geographic borderlands of the discipline. This liminality ultimately worked against the raccoon’s selection as a standardized model during the behaviourist era. The question of raccoon intelligence was also a prominent topic in the contemporaneous debates over the place of sentiment in popular nature writing. Although Cole and others argued that the raccoon provided unique opportunities to study mental attributes such as curiosity and attention, others accused the animal’s advocates of sentimentalism, anthropomorphism and nature faking. The paper examines the making and unmaking of this hybrid scientific culture as the lives of experimenters and animals became entangled. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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14. The Continental Dollar: How Much Was Really Issued?
- Author
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Grubb, Farley
- Subjects
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REVOLUTIONS , *AMERICAN Revolutionary War, 1775-1783 , *ECONOMICS of war , *BUDGET laws , *PAPER money , *MONEY , *FINANCE , *HISTORY - Abstract
The article discusses the exact amount of the money issued by the United States Congress for the financing of the American Revolution. During the revolution, Congress released paper money otherwise called Continental dollars to finance its expenditures. Past literatures have claimed the exact amount spent but they left behind unclear and conflicting estimates. The article traces back the transactions that took place from the enactment to disbursement of the dollars. The article presents supporting tables on estimates and cumulative total net emissions of the continental dollars.
- Published
- 2008
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15. “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
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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
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16. 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
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17. 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
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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
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18. Friendships in the Shadow of Empire: Tagore's Reception in Chicago, circa 1913–1932.
- Author
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CHAKRABARTY, DIPESH
- Subjects
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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
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19. Demography and Social Epidemiology of Admissions to the Colorado Insane Asylum, 1879–1899.
- Author
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Magennis, Ann L. and Lacy, Michael G.
- Subjects
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ASYLUMS (Institutions) , *PSYCHIATRIC hospitals , *PEOPLE with mental illness , *NINETEENTH century , *HISTORY ,UNITED States census, 1870 ,UNITED States census, 1900 - Abstract
This paper analyzes admissions to the Colorado Insane Asylum from 1879 to 1900. We estimate and compare admission rates across sex, age, marital, occupation, and immigration status using original admission records in combination with US census data from 1870 to1900. We show the extent to which persons in various status groups, who varied in power and social advantage, differed in their risk of being institutionalized in the context of nineteenth-century Colorado. Our analysis showed that admission or commitment to the Asylum did not entail permanent incarceration, as more than half of those admitted were discharged within six months. Men were admitted at higher rates than women, even after adjusting for age. Marital status also affected the risk of admission; single and divorced persons were admitted at about 1.5 times the rate of their married counterparts. Widows of either sex were even more likely to be admitted to the Asylum, and the risk increased with age. Persons in lower income/lower prestige occupations were more likely to be institutionalized. This included occupations in the domestic and personal service category in the US census, and this was evident for both males and females. Foreign-born men and women were admitted at, respectively, twice and three times the rate of their native counterparts, with particularly elevated rates observed among the Irish. In general, admission to the Colorado Insane Asylum appears to differ only in a slightly greater admission of males when compared to similar contemporaneous institutions in the East, despite the obvious differences in the Colorado population size and urban concentration. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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20. Inventing Un-America.
- Author
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STEELE, BRIAN
- Subjects
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AMERICAN identity , *GROUP identity , *AMERICAN national character , *DEMOCRACY , *POLITICAL philosophy , *HISTORY ,AMERICAN nationalism ,FEDERAL government of the United States - Abstract
No writer is more closely bound up with our deepest sense of the meaning of the "American" than Thomas Jefferson and it is difficult to imagine America's national purpose without some reference to his words. Yet Jefferson's projection of American identity also assumed and even constituted, of necessity, the un-American and it is in this sense that the un-American provided the necessary contours of what became the "American." Jefferson's various projects are often seen in tension with one another. But this dialectic between the American and the un-American helps reconcile many of them. Federalists, Jefferson believed, assumed that governing Americans demanded the force and corruption that had long kept Europeans in order, whereas Americans, he believed, had an experience of history that rendered them capable of transcending such political theory and practicing democratic politics. This paper explores this dialectic between the American and the un-American in Jefferson's thought as a problem of national self-definition and argues that Jefferson's overwhelming confidence about American identity rested to a large degree in the shudder produced by his experience of the other. Years before Joseph McCarthy and HUAC, Jefferson's project of defining the nation created the un-American, rendering Americans ever since profoundly, however paradoxically, ambivalent about the prospects for revolutionary republicanism abroad. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. A CONTEXTUAL AND ICONOGRAPHIC REASSESSMENT OF THE HEADDRESS ON BURIAL 11 FROM HOPE WELL MOUND 25.
- Author
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Giles, Bretton T.
- Subjects
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HOPEWELL culture , *HEADGEAR , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *MOUNDS (Archaeology) , *ENGRAVING , *HISTORY ,HISTORY of the Ohio River Valley - Abstract
I explore in this paper the significance of the headdress interred on Burial 11 under Hopewell Mound 25 by reexamining its archaeological context and the history of its interpretation. Following Shetrone's (1926) initial interpretation, I argue that it was an avian headdress that specifically portrayed a two-headed raptor. I support this reassessment with an iconographic analysis of related representations from the Central Ohio River Valley, especially the imagery engraved on a femur from Hopewell Mound 25.1 also delve into what these two-headed raptors might have meant to people in the Eastern Woodlands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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22. Idealism, Imperialism, and Internationalism: Opium Politics in the Colonial Philippines, 1898–1925.
- Author
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WERTZ, DANIEL J. P.
- Subjects
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OPIUM trade , *OPIUM abuse , *IMPERIALISM , *DRUG abuse policy , *DRUG control , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation , *GOVERNMENT policy ,PHILIPPINES-United States relations ,PHILIPPINE politics & government, 1898-1935 ,PHILIPPINE history, 1898-1945 ,FOREIGN relations of the United States - Abstract
While establishing a framework for colonial governance in the Philippines, American policymakers had to confront the issue of opium smoking, which was especially popular among the Philippine Chinese community. In 1903, the Philippine Commission proposed a return to the Spanish-era policy of controlling the opium trade through tax farming, igniting outrage among American Protestant missionaries in the Philippines and their supporters in the United States. Their actions revived a faltering global anti-opium movement, leading to a series of international agreements and domestic restrictions on opium and other drugs. Focusing mostly on American policy in the Philippines, this paper also examines the international ramifications of a changing drug control regime. It seeks to incorporate the debate over opium policy into broader narratives of imperial ideology, international cooperation, and local responses to colonial rule, demonstrating how a variety of actors shaped the new drug-control regimes both in the Philippines and internationally. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
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23. AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF EUROCENTRISM.
- Author
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Orser, Jr., Charles E.
- Subjects
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EUROCENTRISM , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *HISTORICAL archaeology , *DUTCH people , *HUMAN settlements , *HISTORY , *SEVENTEENTH century , *SOCIAL history , *ANTIQUITIES - Abstract
The role of Europe and Europeans in the archaeology of post-1500 history has recently been critiqued. Some research has been pejoratively labeled Eurocentrism. This paper addresses the problems with adopting an emotional understanding of Eurocentrism and argues instead for its archaeological examination within the framework of an explicit rnultiscalar modern-world (historical) archaeology. An example comes from seventeenth-century Dutch settlements located in and around present-day Albany, New York. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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24. The Fall of Mosaddeq, August 1953: Institutional Narratives, Professor Mark Gasiorowski and My Study.
- Author
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Bayandor, Darioush
- Subjects
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COUP d'etat, Iran, 1953 , *HISTORICAL revisionism , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY ,FOREIGN relations of the United States, 1945-1953 - Abstract
Over the decades that followed the overthrow of Mosaddeq in August 1953 a narrative attributing the fall exclusively to foreign conspiracy has taken hold and become institutionalized. In this narrative the internal factors are reduced to the simplest level of abstraction. They do not exist outside foreign conspiracy! This narrative is premised on an Anglo-American coup plot code-named TP-AJAX that was attempted in the late hours of 15 August but failed. The ensuing flight of the Shah generated dynamics which led to the fall of Mosaddeq four days later. The CIA chief operative in Tehran Kermit Roosevelt was quick to take credit claiming that these dynamics were inseminated by his ingenious and spontaneous planning. For abiding internal reasons both the CIA and the MI6 headquarters preferred to claim victory rather than admit failure. Evidence that emerged following the declassification of the State Department papers in 1989 and the leak of a secret CIA internal history in 2000 produced glaring evidence that the fall of Mosaddeq on 19 August 1953 had taken Washington, even its embassy in Tehran, by complete surprise and that post facto claims by Roosevelt were inconsistent both with Washington's explicit policy directives and Roosevelt's own situation reports filed with the CIA Washington during the interval between the two events. Roosevelt later published a phantasmagorical account of the event which, together with reminiscences of a few unnamed former operatives, was given credence by Professor Gasiorowski and associates, who curiously chose to ignore archival evidence. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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25. The Overthrow of the Government of Mosaddeq Reconsidered.
- Author
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Azimi, Fakhreddin
- Subjects
- *
COUP d'etat, Iran, 1953 , *NATIONALISM , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
The overthrow of the government of Mosaddeq has received considerable attention, scholarly and otherwise. The scholarly explanations differ in emphasis, but not in the general contours, particularly regarding the significant role of the Anglo-American secret services. There have also long been attempts to portray the overthrow of Mosaddeq as an isolated event taking place on 19 August 1953 and representing a conflation of royalist and traditionalist sentiments among soldiers and civilians. More recently it has been contended that it was not the Anglo-American secret services but the clerical nexus—prompted by Ayatollah Borujerdi, the highest religious authority in the country—which played the crucial role. This paper argues against reducing the overthrow of Mosaddeq's government to the events of 19 August, and views it as a protracted process. It further argues that assertions regarding the crucial and active role of Borujerdi are, on the basis of available evidence, untenable. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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26. Poppy Politics: American Agents, Iranian Addicts and Afghan Opium, 1945–80.
- Author
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Gingeras, Ryan
- Subjects
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OPIUM , *OPIUM trade , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *GOVERNMENT policy , *HISTORY ,IRAN-United States relations - Abstract
This paper surveys the history of American support for Iranian counter-narcotics policy between 1945 and 1989. In particular, it explores the general failings of Tehran's attempt to ban the domestic production and consumption of opium. The significance of this period is two-fold. First, this essay argues that American-backed efforts to combat the opium trade in Iran highlighted the detrimental effects narcotics had upon both state and society in Iran. Second, it suggests that the Iranian ban upon narcotics helped to stimulate a rise in Afghan opium production before the Soviet invasion of 1979. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Political Consequences of Spatial Organization.
- Author
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DeBats, Donald A.
- Subjects
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CITIES & towns , *GEOGRAPHIC information systems , *DEMOGRAPHY , *MANNERS & customs -- History , *COMPARATIVE studies , *URBAN history , *NINETEENTH century , *HISTORY ,UNITED States politics & government - Abstract
The unique feature of geographic information systems (GIS) and other forms of historical data visualization is the capacity to hold and display large amounts of data associated with spatial reference points. This software can display all data for a given point, a single variable for all points, or, most important, any combination of variables across all reference points. In doing so, these systems bring to the screen instantly and cheaply a display of information once visible only in paper form, drawn slowly and expensively, first by cartographers and then by vector plotters. This project deploys GIS to help us understand the intersection of social and political life in nineteenth-century Alexandria, Virginia, and Newport, Kentucky--medium-sized cities with populations under 20,000. Commercial Alexandria, with a race-based labor system, and industrial Newport, with an immigrant labor system, present an analytically useful mix of commonalities and differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Representing Queerness: Clifton Webb on the American Stage.
- Author
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LEFF, LEONARD J.
- Subjects
- *
LGBTQ+ culture , *GAY male dancers , *GAY actors , *POPULAR culture , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY of popular culture ,AMERICAN theater - Abstract
In the American theater of the 1930s and 1940s, the designation “queer star” was an oxymoron – except when applied to Clifton Webb. The Indiana-born singer and dancer was (according to colleagues) homosexual and (according to critics and audiences) queer. He was also, after 1932, a star on Broadway and the road as well as a reliably queer presence in the gossip columns and arts pages of the daily paper. Unlike any other show business personality of his rank, he used his star text to raise the visibility of queerness in early twentieth-century entertainment culture. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Japan's Democratization: Miyatake Gaikotsu on Prewar Plans and Postwar Programmes.
- Author
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LEWIS, MICHAEL
- Subjects
- *
DEMOCRATIZATION , *HISTORY ,JAPANESE history -- 1868- ,JAPANESE politics & government, 1868- ,JAPAN-United States relations - Abstract
Japan's early postwar leadership and American occupiers alike asserted that democratization was a new lesson that the Japanese public would have to learn. In fact, the ideas of democratic reformers had been broadcast to a large audience as feasible programmes decades before 1945. Miyatake Gaikotsu, the editor of Democracy in 1919, outlined the benefits that democratic reforms might provide in a post-World War I world. Decades later, Japanese people faced a new postwar struggle, not as victors but as the vanquished. Gaikotsu, writing in 1945, reflected on democracy in these new circumstances in his study, Amerika-sama. Although the situation was vastly different, victory and defeat in world wars had opened paths to new possibilities. This paper examines Gaikotsu's prewar writings as prescient prescriptions that he revisits in his essay Amerika-sama, or ‘Honourable America,’ at the point they begin to be played out, in some instances only partially and at times for ill as well as good, in occupied Japan. These reflections strikingly demonstrate the continuity of ideas during the prewar past and postwar present. Amerika-sama is a representative expression of many programmes Gaikotsu and likeminded humanistic activists attempted to put into practice from the late nineteenth century until they were suppressed during the wartime years. Mainstream political parties, prewar and postwar, often found it difficult to embrace Gaikotsu's ideas and political programmes. Nevertheless, the general public embraced them and they now find legal support in the Constitution of Japan. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Counting on Relief: Industrializing the Statistical Interviewer during the New Deal.
- Author
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Didier, Emmanuel
- Subjects
- *
NEW Deal, 1933-1939 , *STATISTICAL services , *STATISTICIANS , *SURVEYS , *WHITE collar workers , *UNEMPLOYMENT insurance , *HISTORY - Abstract
When the New Deal administration attained power in the United States, it was confronted with two different problems that could be linked to one another. On the one hand, there was a huge problem of unemployment, affecting everybody including the white-collar workers. And, on the other hand, the administration suffered from a very serious lack of data to illuminate its politics. One idea that came out of this situation was to use the abundant unemployed white-collar workers as enumerators of statistical studies. This paper describes this experiment, shows how it paradoxically affected the professionalization of statistics, and explains why it did not affect expert democracy despite its Deweysian participationist aspect. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. "Women of Conscience" or "Women of Conviction" ? The National Women's Committee on Civil Rights.
- Author
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LAVILLE, HELEN
- Subjects
- *
PRESSURE groups , *WOMEN civil rights workers , *CIVIL rights , *POLITICAL action committees , *ORGANIZATIONAL behavior , *SOCIAL change -- History , *HISTORY , *HISTORY of civil rights - Abstract
This paper explores the history of the National Women's Committee on Civil Rights (NWCCR). Called into being at the behest of President Kennedy, the NWCCR was an attempt to enlist the support of the organized women of America in the advancement of civil rights. The NWCCR had two main goals : first, to offer support for the passage of Kennedy's civil rights legislation, and second, to encourage their branch membership to work in support of integration. However, whilst the majority of the NWCCR's affiliated organizations had passed resolutions in favour of integration both throughout the United States and within their own organization, in practice they were reluctant to threaten the internal stability of their associations by insisting on either integrated membership or active support of civil rights in the local community. This article will argue that whilst the NWCCR were successful in organizing lobbying for the 1964 Civil Rights Act, they were unwilling to throw their weight behind efforts to encourage activism in local communities. Whilst key members of the NWCCR saw an important role for women in the implementation of civil rights at the community level, they were forced to conclude that the organizational structure and ethical inertia of the NWCCR did not make it a suitable medium for furthering racial justice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Goals and tactics of President Gerald Ford's ethnic politics.
- Author
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Zake, Ieva
- Subjects
- *
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
33. Integration or separation? Nationality groups in the US and the Republican Party's ethnic politics, 1960s-1980s.
- Author
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Zake, Ieva and Gormley, Graham
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL participation of immigrants , *LATVIAN Americans , *ESTONIAN Americans , *UKRAINIAN Americans , *POLITICAL platforms , *POLITICAL participation , *POLITICAL party organization , *UNITED States political parties , *HISTORY , *ETHNIC relations ,UNITED States history, 1945- - Abstract
Using examples of American Latvians, Estonians and Ukrainians in the states of Minnesota, New Jersey and New York this article explores the ambiguous nature of integration of nationalities groups inside the Republican Party during the 1960s-1980s. Based on the analysis of available archival information, it is shown that the Republican Party intentionally brought in the ethnics during the discussed period and created the Nationalities Sections within specific electoral campaigns, Nationalities Divisions inside the state party organizations and the National Republican Heritage Groups (Nationalities) Council within the Republican National Committee in order to recruit the ethnics and engage in the partisan struggle with the Democrats. Consequently, the nationalities were given a sense of importance, but little real power to actually influence the internal processes inside the party. At the same time, the nationalities eagerly responded to the invitation to join the Republican national and state-level organizations specifically designed for the ethnics. Yet in doing this they perceived themselves primarily as ethnics with a distinct, mainly anti-communist, agenda and only secondarily thought of themselves as Americans dedicated to Republican politics. Consequently, the Republican political strategy of creating Nationalities Sections and Divisions seemed to integrate the ethnics on the surface, while in reality intensifying political separation and even ghettoization of the ethnics in American politics. This research initiates a larger project, which will compare the Republican and Democratic strategies of directly involving ethnic groups and minorities inside the party organizations in the second part of the twentieth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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