Историческая литература

Различные книги в жанре Историческая литература

A Half Century of Occupation

Gershon Shafir

The Israel-Palestine conflict is one of the world’s most polarizing confrontations. Its current phase, Israel’s “temporary” occupation of the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem, turned a half century old in June 2017. In these timely and provocative essays, Gershon Shafir asks three questions—What is the occupation, why has it lasted so long, and how has it transformed the Israeli-Palestinian conflict? His cogent answers illuminate how we got here, what here is, and where we are likely to go. Shafir expertly demonstrates that at its fiftieth year, the occupation is riven with paradoxes, legal inconsistencies, and conflicting interests that weaken the occupiers’ hold and leave the occupation itself vulnerable to challenge.

Forgotten Peace

Robert A. Karl

Forgotten Peace examines Colombian society’s attempt to move beyond the Western Hemisphere’s worst mid-century conflict and shows how that effort molded notions of belonging and understandings of the past. Robert A. Karl reconstructs encounters between government officials, rural peoples, provincial elites, and urban intellectuals during a crucial conjuncture that saw reformist optimism transform into alienation. In addition to offering a sweeping reinterpretation of Colombian history—including the most detailed account of the origins of the FARC insurgency in any language—Karl provides a Colombian vantage on global processes of democratic transition, development, and memory formation in the 1950s and 1960s. Broad in scope, Forgotten Peace challenges contemporary theories of violence in Latin America.

Hymns for the Fallen

Todd Decker

In <I>Hymns for the Fallen,</I> Todd Decker listens closely to forty years of Hollywood combat films produced after Vietnam. Ever a noisy genre, post-Vietnam war films have deployed music and sound to place the audience in the midst of battle and to provoke reflection on the experience of combat. Considering landmark movies&mdash;such as <I>Apocalypse Now</I>, <I>Saving Private Ryan</I>, <I>The Thin Red Line</I>, <I>Black Hawk Down</I>, <I>The Hurt Locker</I>, and <I>American Sniper</I>&mdash;as well as lesser-known films, Decker shows how the domain of sound, an experientially rich and culturally resonant aspect of cinema, not only invokes the realities of war, but also shapes the American audience&rsquo;s engagement with soldiers and veterans as flesh-and-blood representatives of the nation. <I>Hymns for the Fallen</I> explores all three elements of film sound&mdash;dialogue, sound effects, music&mdash;and considers how expressive and formal choices in the soundtrack have turned the serious war film into a patriotic ritual enacted in the commercial space of the cinema.

Paisanos Chinos

Fredy Gonzalez

Paisanos Chinos tracks Chinese Mexican transnational political activities in the wake of the anti-Chinese campaigns that crossed Mexico in 1931. Threatened by violence, Chinese Mexicans strengthened their ties to China&mdash;both Nationalist and Communist&mdash;as a means of safeguarding their presence. Paisanos Chinos illustrates the ways in which transpacific ties helped Chinese Mexicans make a claim to belonging in Mexico and challenge traditional notions of Mexican identity and nationhood. From celebrating the end of World War II alongside their neighbors to carrying out an annual community pilgrimage to the Bas&iacute;lica de Guadalupe, Chinese Mexicans came out of the shadows to refute longstanding caricatures and integrate themselves into Mexican society.

A History of Infamy

Pablo Piccato

A History of Infamy explores the broken nexus between crime, justice, and truth in mid-twentieth-century Mexico. Faced with the violence and impunity that defined politics, policing, and the judicial system in post-revolutionary times, Mexicans sought truth and justice outside state institutions. During this period, criminal news and crime fiction flourished. Civil society&rsquo;s search for truth and justice led, paradoxically, to the normalization of extrajudicial violence and neglect of the rights of victims. As Pablo Piccato demonstrates, ordinary people in Mexico have made crime and punishment central concerns of the public sphere during the last century, and in doing so have shaped crime and violence in our times.

Mainstreaming Black Power

Tom Adam Davies

Mainstreaming Black Power&#160;upends the narrative that the Black Power movement allowed for a catharsis of black rage but achieved little institutional transformation or black uplift. Retelling the story of the 1960s and 1970s across the United States&mdash;and focusing on New York, Atlanta, and Los Angeles&mdash;this book reveals how the War on Poverty cultivated black self-determination politics and demonstrates that federal, state, and local policies during this period&#160;bolstered&#160;economic, social, and educational institutions for black control.&#160;Mainstreaming Black Power&#160;shows more convincingly than ever before that white power structures did engage with Black Power in specific ways that tended ultimately to reinforce rather than challenge existing racial, class, and gender hierarchies. This book emphasizes that Black Power&rsquo;s reach and legacies can be understood only&#160;in the context of an ideologically diverse black community.

Death in the City

Kathryn A. Sloan

At the turn of the twentieth century, many observers considered suicide to be a worldwide social problem that had reached epidemic proportions. In Mexico City, violent deaths in public spaces were commonplace in a city undergoing rapid modernization. Crime rates mounted, corpses piled up in the morgue, and the media reported on sensational cases of murder and suicide. More troublesome still, a compelling death wish appeared to grip women and youth. Drawing on a range of sources from judicial records to the popular press,<I> Death in the City </I>investigates the cultural meanings of self-destruction in modern Mexico. The author examines responses to suicide and death and disproves the long-held belief that Mexicans possess a cavalier attitude toward suffering.

Patriarchs on Paper

Alan Summerly Cole

The truth of Chan Buddhism&mdash;better known as &ldquo;Zen&rdquo;&mdash;is regularly said to be beyond language, and yet Chan authors&mdash;medieval and modern&mdash;produced an enormous quantity of literature over the centuries.&#160;To make sense of this well-known paradox, <I>Patriarchs on Paper</I>&#160;explores several genres of Chan literature that appeared during the Tang and Song dynasties (c. 600&ndash;1300), including genealogies, biographies, dialogues, poems, monastic handbooks, and koans. Working through this diverse body of literature, Alan Cole details how Chan authors developed several strategies to evoke images of a perfect Buddhism in which wonderfully simple masters transmitted Buddhism&rsquo;s final truth to one another, suddenly and easily, and, of course, independent of literature and the complexities of the Buddhist monastic system.&#160;Chan literature, then, reveled in staging delightful images of a Buddhism free of Buddhism, tempting the reader, over and over, with the possibility of finding behind the thick fa&ccedil;ade of real Buddhism&mdash;with all its rules, texts, doctrines, and institutional solidity&mdash;an ethereal world of pure spirit.&#160; <I>Patriarchs on Paper</I>&#160;charts the emergence of this kind of &ldquo;fantasy Buddhism&rdquo; and details how it interacted with more traditional forms of Chinese Buddhism in order to show how Chan&rsquo;s illustrious ancestors were created in literature in order to further a wide range of real-world agendas.

The Other California

Verónica Castillo-Muñoz

The Other California is the story of working-class communities and how they constituted the racially and ethnically diverse landscape of Baja California. Packed with new and transformative stories, the book examines the interplay of land reform and migratory labor on the peninsula from 1850 to 1954, as governments, foreign investors, and local communities shaped a vibrant and dynamic borderland alongside the booming cities of Tijuana, Mexicali, and Santa Rosalia. Migration and intermarriage between Mexican women and men from Asia, Europe, and the United States transformed Baja California into a multicultural society. Mixed-race families extended across national borders, forging new local communities, labor relations, and border politics.

Shaped by the West, Volume 1

William F. Deverell

Shaped by the West&#160;is a two-volume primary source reader that rewrites the history of the United States through a western lens. America&rsquo;s expansion west was the driving force for issues of democracy, politics, race, freedom, and property. William Deverell and Anne F. Hyde provide a nuanced look at the past, balancing topics in society and politics and representing all kinds of westerners&mdash;black and white, native and immigrant, male and female, powerful and powerless&mdash;from more than twenty states across the West and the shifting frontier. &#160; &#160; The sources included reflect the important role of the West in national narratives of American history, beginning with the pre-Columbian era in Volume 1 and taking us to the twenty-first century in Volume 2.&#160;Together, these volumes cover first encounters, conquests and revolts, indigenous land removal, slavery and labor, race, ethnicity and gender, trade and diplomacy, industrialization, migration and immigration, and changing landscapes and environments.&#160;Key Features &amp; Benefits:Expertly curated personal letters, government documents, editorials, photos, and never before published materials&#160;offer lively, vivid introductions to the tools of history.Annotations, captions, and brief essays provide accessible entry points to an extraordinarily wide range of themes&mdash;adding context and perspective from leaders in the field.Highlights connections between western and national histories to foster critical thinking&#160;about America&rsquo;s diverse past and today&rsquo;s challenging issues.