Fr. 70.00

Historians Without Borders - New Studies in Multidisciplinary History

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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This text explores themes of the UCD multidisciplinary graduate conference. It is a unique exercise in the promotion of junior scholarly achievement and multidisciplinary research.

List of contents

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Section 1

Introduction: History and the Other Muses

The Rubble of the Other: Beethoven’s Ruins of Athens
Tekla Babyak

"Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition": Propaganda Music as a Governmental Marketing Tool During the WWII Era
Zoë Jensiene Godfrey

Can the Subaltern Laugh? A Study of Humor, Power and Resistance
Miguel Alberto Novoa Cipriani

Section 2

Introduction: Culture and Cognition

Extended Evolutionary Synthesis: Linking History and Cognitive Science
Alina Shron

Common Quest: The Search for the Everyday Person in the Merovingian Age
Matthew Gardner

Section 3

Introduction: Altered and Hostile Environments

Geophysical Agency in the Anthropocene: Engineering a Road and River to Rocky Mountain National Park
Will Wright

The Politics of Solitude: Listening to Environmental Change in Rocky Mountain National Park, 1945-Present
Mark Boxell

Hidden in Plain Sight: Rethinking Saharan Studies as a Discipline
Sarah Gilkerson

Section 4

Introduction: Contested Places and Spaces

Indigenous Land Ownership in the Praying Towns of the Southern New England Borderlands
Taylor Kirsch

Forgotten: The Spanish Influenza Pandemic of 1918
Srijita Patel

Historical Realities: Voices from the War of Algerian Decolonization
Arianna Barzman-Grennan

Section 5

Introduction: Movement and Travel

Negotiating the Sixteenth-Century Road: Diplomacy and Travel in Early Modern Europe
Krzystof Odyniec

Going It Alone: Practical Travel Manuals and Independent Women Travelers in the Nineteenth Century
Jill Poulsen

Index

About the author

Lawrence Abrams is a PhD Candidate at the University of California, Davis, specializing in Modern British History, and focusing on Scottish ethnic, national, and imperial history. His dissertation explores ideas of union and changing modes for the expression of Scottish identity in political, military, and cultural arenas. He is also working on a project investigating the relationship between comics and national identity in an international and post-colonial context in the activist comic years since 1970.
Kaleb Knoblauch is a PhD Candidate in Modern European History at the University of California, Davis, specializing in France in the nineteenth century, with a focus on Breton and Celtic history, mass culture, gender, and identity formation. His dissertation examines the region of Brittany in the long nineteenth century to argue that increased mobility and mass culture in the Third Republic changed how French people imagined the relationship between regional and national identities.

Summary

This text explores themes of the UCD multidisciplinary graduate conference. It is a unique exercise in the promotion of junior scholarly achievement and multidisciplinary research.

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