Histórico/a

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TECHNOLOGY OF FORMATION OF POLY-ETHNICITY IN THE DISCOURSE OF MODERN STATES

Authors Zaure Malgarayeva, Indira Akylbayeva, Nurlan Mukhlissov, ...
Year 2016
Journal Name ANNALES-ANALI ZA ISTRSKE IN MEDITERANSKE STUDIJE-SERIES HISTORIA ET SOCIOLOGIA
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1 Journal Article

Archeology of Migrations

Authors Isabelle Seguy
Year 2018
Journal Name Population
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2 Journal Article

Developing Theatre: Building Expert Networks for Theatre in Emerging Countries after 1945

Description
This research project proposes a fundamental re-examination of the historiography of theatre in emerging countries after 1945 . It investigates the institutional factors that led to the emergence of professional theatre in the post-war period throughout the decolonizing world. The particular focus will be on the massive involvement of internationally coordinated ‘development’ and ‘modernization’ programs both East and West. The project will introduce the concepts of epistemic community, expert networks and techno-politics to theatre historical research as a means to historicize theatre within transnational and transcultural paradigms and examine its imbrication in globalization processes. This institutional and transnational approach will enable theatre studies to overcome its still strong national and local focus on plays and productions and connect it to current discourses on transnational history. The main objectives of this project are to: • examine how a global ‘epistemic community’ centred around theatre emerged in the post-war period; • investigate how ‘expert networks’ composed of government bodies, private foundations, transnational corporate philanthropy, local elites and individual artists sought to institutionalize particular forms and practices of professional theatre as an interconnected, transnational phenomenon; • develop a new interdisciplinary approach to theatre historiography by focusing on institutional structures, path dependencies and transnational imbrications rather than on works and authors. The principal investigator will bring to this project two decades of internationally recognized research into intercultural and global theatre. With its combination of institutional historiography and innovative research methods the project will provide a new foundation for current discussions of cultural policy and sustainability in emerging societies.
Year 2016
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3 Project

The Archeology of ‘Remote Control’

Year 2003
Book Title Migration Control in the North Atlantic World. The Evolution of State Practices in Europe and the United States from the French Revoltion to the Inter-War Period
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6 Book Chapter

Source Publications

Authors Vitaliy Skalsky
Year 2017
Journal Name JUDAICA UKRAINICA
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8 Journal Article

The historiography of gender and progressive education in the United States

Authors K Weiler
Year 2006
Journal Name PAEDAGOGICA HISTORICA
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9 Journal Article

‘Pink Slave’ or the ‘Modern Young Woman’? A History of the Au Pair in Britain

Authors Eleni Liarou
Book Title Au Pairs’ Lives in Global Context
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10 Book Chapter

The archeology of ethnicity: Constructing identities in the past and present

Year 1999
Journal Name JOURNAL OF INDO-EUROPEAN STUDIES
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11 Journal Article

Louis IX in Medieval Arabic Sources: The Saint, the King, and the Sicilian Connection

Authors Mohamad El Merheb
Year 2016
Journal Name AL-MASAQ-JOURNAL OF THE MEDIEVAL MEDITERRANEAN
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12 Journal Article

The hidden historiography of migration and Australian schooling

Authors Helen Proctor
Year 2019
Journal Name HISTORY OF EDUCATION REVIEW
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16 Journal Article

Memory of empire: the post-imperial historiography of late Antiquity

Description
'The current project aims at offering the first comprehensive interpretation and reconstruction of the historiographical traditions in the Mediterranean from the fourth to the eighth centuries AD, the crucial transitional period from Antiquity to the Middle Ages. In particular, it advances the hypothesis that the historiography of this period should be understood as ‘post-imperial’, in the sense that the literary, cultural, religious and political traditions of the Roman Empire remained the point of reference at a time when that empire had, by the seventh century, lost its grip on the West and large portions of the East. New realities were thus still understood within a traditional framework and described with long-lived categories – a situation that generated fundamental tensions within late ancient historiography but also spurred great creativity in the genre. In order to be able to test this hypothesis, the project will make new sources available (especially regarding fragmentary Early Byzantine, Syriac, and late Latin historiography), increase the accessibility of existing sources through the creation of an online database, and explore different philological methodologies and interpretative models through a series of specifically targeted studies. Emphasing the shared cultural heritage instead of cultural and political fragmentation, the interpretation will especially focus on the continuation of the rhetorical tradition in late Antiquity, the incarnation of meaning in geographical space, and intercultural contacts across the Mediterranean. It thus hopes not only to establish a new paradigm for our understanding of late antique historiography but also set the study of this field on an improved methodological footing.'
Year 2013
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17 Project

“Our Greater Ireland beyond the Seas”

Authors Paul Arthur
Year 1991
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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19 Journal Article

LIVES MATTER AND FALSE SYMMETRY: DISCOURSE IN SOCIAL MOVEMENTS

Authors Ingrid Cunha de Carvalho, Vanice Sargentini
Year 2020
Journal Name Immigrant Youth and Employment: Lessons Learned from the Analysis of LSIC and 82 Lived Stories
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20 Journal Article

SIBERIA AS A FIELD OF INTERCULTURAL INTERACTIONS: LITERATURE, ANTHROPOLOGY, HISTORIOGRAPHY, ETHNOLOGY

Authors Pavel Alekseev
Year 2017
Journal Name IMAGOLOGIYA I KOMPARATIVISTIKA-IMAGOLOGY AND COMPARATIVE STUDIES
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21 Journal Article

Industrial Heritage and Tourism: The Workers' Village Galopolis, Caxias do Sul, RS

Authors Vania Beatriz Merlotti Heredia, Bruna Tronca
Year 2016
Journal Name ROSA DOS VENTOS-TURISMO E HOSPITALIDADE
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24 Journal Article

The “Germanic Völkerwanderung“ in Early Modern Thought. Origins and Developments of a Historiographical Master Narrative, 1500-1830

Description
'In the patriotic German historiography of the 19th and 20th centuries, the motif of the “Germanic Völkerwanderung“ has played an eminent role. According to this master narrative of German nationalism, allegedly Germanic tribes like the Goths, the Vandals, the Langobards and numerous others had roamed Europe in a series of far-reaching campaigns of conquest and colonization between the late fourth and the mid-sixth century AD that brought the Roman Empire to its knees. Their bravery and martial prowess were interpreted as manifestations of primordial, unchanging Germanic virtues which modern Germans shared with their barbarian ancestors. During the last decades, historical research on the transformation processes of late antiquity and the early Middle Ages has thoroughly refuted such appropriations of the past. The deconstruction of the 'Völkerwanderung', however, makes it even more important to examine the origin of this highly influential historical narrative. The planned research project intends to examine the development of the 'Völkerwanderung' topos between the 16th and the late 18th century. How did early modern scholars conceptualise the process of barbarian migration – the migrants’ motivation, the organisation and the logistics? How did they judge the interaction between Romans and barbarians? Was 'migratio gentium' already instrumentalised in the construction of pre-national and proto-national identities before the rise of the modern concept of nationhood around 1800? And when and why did scholars reach the consensus that the period between 375 and 568 was the migration period, and that it was more heavily influenced by tribal mobility than others? A detailed analysis of the 'Völkerwanderung' motif between humanism and late enlightenment would promise important insights into the intellectual roots of German nationalism.'
Year 2013
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25 Project

Historical Analysis of Participation in 161 km Ultramarathons in North America

Authors Martin D. Hoffman, June C. Ong, Gary Wang
Year 2010
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF SPORT
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26 Journal Article

Democracy's New Song: Black Reconstruction in America, 1860-1880 and the Melodramatic Imagination

Authors Marina Bilbija
Year 2011
Journal Name The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
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27 Journal Article

INTEGRATING THE HISTORIOGRAPHY OF THE NINETEENTH-CENTURY GOLD RUSHES

Authors Keir Reeves, Lionel Frost, Charles Fahey
Year 2010
Journal Name AUSTRALIAN ECONOMIC HISTORY REVIEW
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30 Journal Article

Beyond Autopoiesis Liminal Sciences and Trans Historiography

Authors Sid Hansen
Year 2023
Citations (WoS) 1
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32 Journal Article

The reception of French historiography in Latin America, 1870-1968

Authors CA Aguirre Rojas
Year 2000
Journal Name CARAVELLE-CAHIERS DU MONDE HISPANIQUE ET LUSO-BRESILIEN
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34 Journal Article

The Catholic Charismatic Renewal (CCR): an Historical Analysis Between US and Europe

Description
The research project aims to analyze the history of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal (CCR), a spiritual awakening movement which was founded in 1967 in the United States of America within the Catholic Church and which spread rapidly throughout the world, so much so that today its has more than 120 million members. The proposal intends to focus on three specific objectives: 1. to survey the relationship between US Catholicism and European Catholicism through the history of the CCR; 2. to analyze the reaction of the Catholic Church hierarchy to the CCR, especially that of the pontiffs, through the analysis of official pronouncements made during meetings with the charismatic groups or at other specific times; 3. to problematize the issue of gender within Catholicism defining the role of women within the CCR. The research can generally be considered to be a part of World/Global Christianity Studies, seen from a cross-cultural perspective. It foresees the use of archive material (Notre Dame Archives) and the first historiographical, sociological and theological texts on the CCR as primary sources in approaching the history and nature of the charismatic movement in understanding its origin, evolution and success, firstly in US and then in Europe. The topic is particularly auspicious from the point of view of academic exchange between Europe and the United States, as it serves as a moment of reflection and dialogue on the theme of the history of Christianity. There being no expert on the subject of the charismatic movement in the Catholic Church at any of the European universities, this research project could be a unique opportunity to forge personal career possibilities and new international contacts. Finally, the project would contribute to the History of Christianity, Studies in World Christianity, American Catholic Studies and European History on an international level.
Year 2016
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35 Project

Ritual and racism: A social-historical analysis of the crack sentencing guidelines

Authors B Berndt
Year 2003
Journal Name Crime, Law and Social Change
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36 Journal Article

HEBREW IN ENGLISH: THE NEW TRANSNATIONAL HEBREW LITERATURE

Authors Melissa Weininger
Year 2015
Journal Name SHOFAR-AN INTERDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL OF JEWISH STUDIES
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38 Journal Article

Ethno-Social and Demographic Processes in Udmurtia: the Experience of the Local-Historical Research

Authors V. S. Vorontsov, I. L. Pozdeev, D. A. Chernienko
Year 2017
Journal Name EZHEGODNIK FINNO-UGORSKIKH ISSLEDOVANII-YEARBOOK OF FINNO-UGRIC STUDIES
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40 Journal Article

JEWISH IMMIGRATION TO AMERICA AND REVISIONIST HISTORIOGRAPHY - A DECADE OF NEW PERSPECTIVES

Authors EM LEDERHENDLER
Year 1983
Journal Name YIVO ANNUAL OF JEWISH SOCIAL SCIENCE
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46 Journal Article

Some Comments on the History of Italian Migration and on the Nature of Historical Research

Authors Herbert J. Gans
Year 1967
Journal Name International Migration Review
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47 Journal Article

Latvia: A Historical Analysis of Transformation and Diversification of the Higher Education System

Authors Ali Ait Si Mhamed, Zane Vārpiņa, Indra Dedze, ...
Year 2018
Book Title 25 Years of Transformations of Higher Education Systems in Post-Soviet Countries
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49 Book Chapter

RESTORING THE CHINESE VOICE DURING MEXICAN SINOPHOBIA, 1919-1934

Authors Jian Gao
Year 2019
Citations (WoS) 1
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50 Journal Article
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