This spring, students in HST 410/510: International Organizations After World War II, researched areas of United Nations history that interested them. Along with a prospectus […]
Read MoreBy Kaylie Schunk Brooks, James. Captives and Cousins: Slavery, Kinship, and Community in the Southwest Borderlands. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, […]
Read MoreWorking with Dr. Wietse de Boer as an Undergraduate Summer Scholar, Miami senior Caroline Godard investigated the world of political images in the European Renaissance. […]
Read MoreSholem Aleichem’s popular stories of Tevye the Dairyman made the author famous within and putside the Russian Empire. Published between 1895 and 1916, the stories […]
Read MoreWhen Nikolai Chernyshevsky’s novel What is to be Done? appeared in the 1863 issues of the popular journal The Contemporary, it caused a sensation. Written while the author […]
Read MoreMikhail Lermontov, Tiflis. 1837. Wikimedia Commons. By Paige Ross Understanding Russian Imperialism: Conceptions of Empire in Mikhail Lermontov’s A Hero of Our Time Mikhail Lermontov’s […]
Read MoreMikhail Lermontov, The Georgian Military Highway, 1837. Wikimedia Commons. Mikhail Lermontov’s short novel remains a classic account of the nature of the Russian Empire […]
Read MoreIlya Repin, They Did Not Expect Him. 1884-88. Wikimedia Commons. Students in the Fall 2017 class, A History of the Russian Empire, wrote creative papers that […]
Read MoreOur first issue in Volume II of Journeys into the Past features a number of articles that delve into the connections between local and global […]
Read MoreMitchell Duneier, Ghetto: The Invention of a Place, the History of an Idea (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2016) Review by Jacob Bruggeman “Today, […]
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