Duke University Press American History Catalog 2021

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American History Spring 2021 For a 40% discount on books and journal issues for the Organization of American Historians 2021 Annual Meeting, use discount code OAH21 at checkout. Valid through May 31, 2021.

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Contents 2

New Books New Journal Issues 11 Journals 12 Coming Soon 13 Also Available 9

NEW BOOKS The Life and Times of Louis Lomax The Art of Deliberate Disunity THOMAS AIELLO

US history/African American studies/Biography

April 2021

Syndicated television and radio host. Serial liar. Pioneering journalist. Convicted criminal. Close ally of Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. Publicity-seeking provocateur. Louis Lomax's life was a study in contradiction. In this biography, Thomas Aiello traces the complicated and fascinating arc of Lomax's life and career, showing how the contradictions, tumult, and inconsistencies that marked his life reflected those of 1960s America. Aiello takes readers from Lomax's childhood in the Deep South to his early confidence schemes to his emergence as one of the loudest and most influential voices of the civil rights movement. Regardless of what political position he happened to take at any given moment, Lomax preached “the art of deliberate disunity,” in which the path to democracy could only be achieved through a diversity of opinions. Engaging and broad in scope, The Life and Times of Louis Lomax is the definitive study of one of the civil rights era's most complicated, important, and overlooked figures. Thomas Aiello is Associate Professor of History at Valdosta State University.

List: $26.95 Discount: $16.17

The CIA in Ecuador MARC BECKER

In The CIA in Ecuador Marc Becker draws on recently released US government surveillance documents on the Ecuadorian left to chart social movement organizing efforts during the 1950s. Emphasizing the competing roles of the domestic ruling class and grassroots social movements, Becker details the struggles and difficulties that activists, organizers, and political parties confronted. He shows how leftist groups, including the Communist Party of Ecuador, navigated disagreements over tactics and ideology, and how these influenced shifting strategies in support of rural Indigenous communities and urban labor movements. He outlines the CIA's failure to understand that the Ecuadorian left was rooted in local social struggles rather than bankrolled by the Soviet Union. By decentering US-Soviet power struggles, Becker shows that the local patterns and dynamics that shaped the development of the Ecuadorian left could be found throughout Latin America during the cold war. Latin American studies/ International relations/History

Marc Becker is Professor of History at Truman State University.

January 2021

List: $27.95 Discount: $16.77

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American History | new books


Peripheral Nerve Health and Medicine in Cold War Latin America ANNE-EMANUELLE BIRN and RAÚL NECOCHEA LÓPEZ , editors Buenos Aires psychoanalysts resisting imperialism. Brazilian parasitologists embracing communism as an antidote to rural misery. Nicaraguan revolutionaries welcoming Cuban health cooperation. Chilean public health reformers gauging domestic approaches against their Soviet and Western counterparts. As explored in Peripheral Nerve, these and accompanying accounts problematize existing understandings of how the Cold War unfolded in Latin America generally and in the health and medical realms more specifically. Bringing together scholars from across the Americas, this volume chronicles the experiences of Latin American physicians, nurses, medical scientists, and reformers who interacted with dominant U.S. and European players and sought alternative channels of health and medical solidarity with the Soviet Union and via South-South cooperation. Throughout, Peripheral Nerve highlights how Latin American health professionals accepted, rejected, and adapted foreign involvement; manipulated the rivalry between the United States and the USSR; and forged local variants that they projected internationally. In so doing, this collection reveals the multivalent nature of Latin American health politics, offering a significant contribution to Cold War history. Anne-Emanuelle Birn is Professor of Critical Development Studies and Global Health at the University of Toronto. Raúl Necochea López is Associate Professor in the Department of Social Medicine at the University of North Caro-

Latin American studies/Cold War history/Public heath and medicine

August 2020

List: $29.95 Discount: $17.97

lina, Chapel Hill.

Universal Tonality The Life and Music of William Parker CISCO BRADLEY Since ascending onto the world stage in the 1990s as one of the premier bassists and composers of his generation, William Parker has perpetually toured around the world and released over forty albums as a leader. He is one of the most influential jazz artists alive today. In Universal Tonality historian and critic Cisco Bradley tells the story of Parker’s life and music. Drawing on interviews with Parker and his collaborators, Bradley traces Parker’s ancestral roots in West Africa via the Carolinas to his childhood in the South Bronx, and illustrates his rise from the 1970s jazz lofts and extended work with pianist Cecil Taylor to the present day. He outlines how Parker’s early influences—Ornette Coleman, John Coltrane, Albert Ayler, and writers of the Black Arts Movement—grounded Parker’s aesthetic and musical practice in a commitment to community and the struggle for justice and freedom. Throughout, Bradley foregrounds Parker’s understanding of music, the role of the artist, and the relationship between art, politics, and social transformation. Intimate and capacious, Universal Tonality is the definitive work on Parker’s life and music. Cisco Bradley is Associate Professor of History at the Pratt Institute.

Jazz/Biography

February 2021 List: $29.95 Discount: $17.97

Claiming Union Widowhood Race, Respectability, and Poverty in the Post-Emancipation South BRANDI CLAY BRIMMER In Claiming Union Widowhood, Brandi Clay Brimmer analyzes the US pension system from the perspective of poor black women during and after the Civil War. Reconstructing the grassroots pension network in New Bern, North Carolina, through a broad range of historical sources, she outlines how the mothers, wives, and widows of black Union soldiers struggled to claim pensions in the face of evidentiary obstacles and personal scrutiny. Brimmer exposes and examines the numerous attempts by the federal government to exclude black women from receiving the federal pensions that they had been promised. Her analyses illustrate the complexities of social policy and law administration and the interconnectedness of race, gender, and class formation. Expanding on previous analyses of pension records, Brimmer offers an interpretive framework of emancipation and the freedom narrative that places black women at the forefront of demands for black citizenship. Brandi Clay Brimmer is Associate Professor of History at Spelman College.

US history/African American history/Women's studies

December 2020

List: $27.95 Discount: $16.77

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The Powers of Dignity The Black Political Philosophy of Frederick Douglass NICK BROMELL

Political theory/African American studies

February 2021

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In The Powers of Dignity Nick Bromell unpacks Frederick Douglass's 1867 claim that he had “elaborated a political philosophy” from his own “slave experience.” Bromell shows that Douglass devised his philosophy because he found that antebellum Americans' liberal-republican understanding of democracy did not provide a sufficient principled basis on which to fight anti-Black racism. To remedy this deficiency, Douglass deployed insights from his distinctively Black experience and developed a Black philosophy of democracy. He began by contesting the founders' racist assumptions about humanity and advancing instead a more robust theory of “the human” as a collection of human “powers.” He asserted further that the conscious exercise of those powers is what confirms human dignity and that human rights and democracy come into being as ways to affirm and protect that dignity. Thus, by emphasizing the powers and the dignity of all citizens, deriving democratic rights from these, and promoting a remarkably activist, power-oriented model of citizenship, Douglass's Black political philosophy aimed to rectify two major failings of US democracy in his time and ours: its complacence and its racism. Nick Bromell is Professor of English at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

Animalia An Anti-Imperial Bestiary for Our Times ANTOINETTE BURTON and RENISA MAWANI , editors

World history/Postcolonial studies/Animal studies

November 2020

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From yaks and vultures to whales and platypuses, animals have played central roles in the history of British imperial control. The contributors to Animalia analyze twenty-six animals—domestic, feral, predatory, and mythical—whose relationship to imperial authorities and settler colonists reveals how the presumed racial supremacy of Europeans underwrote the history of Western imperialism. Victorian imperial authorities, adventurers, and colonists used animals as companions, military transportation, agricultural laborers, food sources, and status symbols. They also overhunted and destroyed ecosystems, laying the groundwork for what has come to be known as climate change. At the same time, animals such as lions, tigers, and mosquitoes interfered in the empire's racial, gendered, and political aspirations by challenging the imperial project’s sense of inevitability. Unconventional and innovative in form and approach, Animalia invites new ways to consider the consequences of imperial power by demonstrating how the politics of empire—in its racial, gendered, and sexualized forms—played out in multispecies relations across jurisdictions under British imperial control. Antoinette Burton is Professor of History and Swanlund Endowed Chair at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Renisa Mawani is Professor of Sociology at the University of British Columbia.

The Birth of Solidarity The History of the French Welfare State FRANÇOIS EWALD Edited by MELINDA COOPER and translated by TIMOTHY SCOTT JOHNSON

Social theory/Labor history

May 2020

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François Ewald's landmark The Birth of Solidarity—first published in French in 1986, revised in 1996, with the revised edition appearing here in English for the first time—is one of the most important historical and philosophical studies of the rise of the welfare state. Theorizing the origins of social insurance, Ewald shows how the growing problem of industrial accidents in France throughout the nineteenth century tested the limits of classical liberalism and its notions of individual responsibility. As workers and capitalists confronted each other over the problem of workplace accidents, they transformed the older practice of commercial insurance into an instrument of state intervention, thereby creating an entirely new conception of law, the state, and social solidarity. What emerged was a new system of social insurance guaranteed by the state. The Birth of Solidarity is a classic work of social and political theory that will appeal to all those interested in labor power, the making and dismantling of the welfare state, and Foucauldian notions of governmentality, security, risk, and the limits of liberalism. François Ewald is International Research Fellow at the University of Connecticut School of Law and chair of the Scientific Committee of the Université de l’Assurance. Melinda Cooper is Professor of Sociology at the Australian National University. Timothy Scott Johnson is Visiting Assistant Professor of History at Texas A&M University, Corpus Christi.

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American History | new books


Relative Races Genealogies of Interracial Kinship in Nineteenth-Century America BRIGITTE FIELDER In Relative Races, Brigitte Fielder presents an alternative theory of how race is ascribed. Contrary to notions of genealogies by which race is transmitted from parents to children, the examples Fielder discusses from nineteenth-century literature, history, and popular culture show how race can follow other directions: Desdemona becomes less than fully white when she is smudged with Othello's blackface, a white woman becomes Native American when she is adopted by a Seneca family, and a mixed-race baby casts doubt on the whiteness of his mother. Fielder shows that the genealogies of race are especially visible in the racialization of white women, whose whiteness often depends on their ability to reproduce white family and white supremacy. Using black feminist and queer theories, Fielder presents readings of personal narratives, novels, plays, stories, poems, and images to illustrate how interracial kinship follows non-heteronormative, non-biological, and non-patrilineal models of inheritance in nineteenth-century literary culture. Brigitte Fielder is an assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

American studies/African American studies

October 2020

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The Academic's Handbook, Fourth Edition Revised and Expanded LORI A. FLORES and JOCELYN H. OLCOTT, editors In recent years, the academy has undergone significant changes: a more competitive and volatile job market has led to widespread precarity, teaching and service loads have become more burdensome, and higher education is becoming increasingly corporatized. In this revised and expanded edition of The Academic's Handbook, more than fifty contributors from a wide range of disciplines and backgrounds offer practical advice for academics at every career stage, whether they are first entering the job market or negotiating the post-tenure challenges of leadership and administrative roles. Contributors affirm what is exciting and fulfilling about academic work while advising readers about how to set and protect boundaries around their energy and labor. In addition, the contributors tackle topics such as debates regarding technology, social media, and free speech on campus; publishing and grant writing; attending to the many kinds of diversity among students, staff, and faculty; and how to balance work and personal responsibilities. A passionate and compassionate volume, The Academic's Handbook is an essential guide to navigating life in the academy.

Higher education/Careers

October 2020

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Lori A. Flores is Associate Professor of History at Stony Brook University (SUNY). Jocelyn H. Olcott is Professor of History at Duke University.

Empire's Mistress, Starring Isabel Rosario Cooper VERNADETTE VICUÑA GONZALEZ

In Empire's Mistress Vernadette Vicuña Gonzalez follows the life of Filipina vaudeville and film actress Isabel Rosario Cooper, who was the mistress of General Douglas MacArthur. If mentioned at all, their relationship exists only as a salacious footnote in MacArthur's biography—a failed love affair between a venerated war hero and a young woman of Filipino and American heritage. Following Cooper from the Philippines to Washington, D.C. to Hollywood, where she died penniless, Gonzalez frames her not as a tragic heroine, but as someone caught within the violent histories of U.S. imperialism. In this way, Gonzalez uses Cooper's life as a means to explore the contours of empire as experienced on the scale of personal relationships. Along the way, Gonzalez fills in the archival gaps of Cooper's life with speculative fictional interludes that both unsettle the authority of “official” archives and dislodge the established one-dimensional characterizations of her. By presenting Cooper as a complex historical subject who lived at the crossroads of American colonialism in the Philippines, Gonzalez demonstrates how intimacy and love are woven into the infrastructure of empire. Vernadette Vicuña Gonzalez is Professor of American Studies at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa.

Asian and Asian American studies/Postcolonial studies/ Life Writing

February 2021

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AFRICOBRA Experimental Art toward a School of Thought WADSWORTH A. JARRELL With a foreword by RICHARD ALLEN MAY and an afterword by EDMUND BARRY GAITHER

Art/African American studies

May 2020

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Formed on the South Side of Chicago in 1968 at the height of the civil rights, Black power, and Black arts movements, the AFRICOBRA collective created a new artistic visual language rooted in the culture of Chicago's Black neighborhoods. The collective's aesthetics, especially the use of vibrant color, capture the rhythmic dynamism of Black culture and social life. In AFRICOBRA, painter, photographer, and collective cofounder Wadsworth A. Jarrell tells the definitive story of the group's creation, history, and artistic and political principles. From accounts of the painting of the groundbreaking Wall of Respect mural and conversations among group members to documentation of AFRICOBRA's exhibits in Chicago, New York, and Boston, Jarrell outlines how the collective challenged white conceptions of art by developing an artistic philosophy and approach wholly divested of Western practices. Featuring nearly one hundred color images of artworks, exhibition ephemera, and photographs, this book is at once a sourcebook history of AFRICOBRA and the story of visionary artists who rejected the white art establishment in order to create uplifting art for all Black people. Wadsworth A. Jarrell is a cofounder of AFRICOBRA and a visual artist who has taught art at Howard University, the University of Georgia, and Spelman College.

The Future of Fallout, and Other Episodes in Radioactive World-Making JOSEPH MASCO

American studies/Science studies/Anthropology

January 2021

In The Future of Fallout, and Other Episodes in Radioactive World-Making Joseph Masco examines the strange American intimacy with and commitment to existential danger. Tracking the simultaneous production of nuclear emergency and climate disruption since 1945, he focuses on the psychosocial accommodations as well as the technological revolutions that have produced these linked planetary-scale disasters. Masco assesses the memory practices, visual culture, concepts of danger, and toxic practices that, in combination, have generated a U.S. national security culture that promises ever more safety and comfort in everyday life but does so only by generating and deferring a vast range of violences into the collective future. Interrogating how this existential lag (i.e., the material and conceptual fallout of the twentieth century in the form of nuclear weapons and petrochemical capitalism) informs life in the twenty-first century, Masco identifies key moments when other futures were still possible and seeks to activate an alternative, postnational security political imaginary in support of collective life today. Joseph Masco is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Chicago.

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A Primer for Teaching Pacific Histories Ten Design Principles MATT K. MATSUDA

History/Pacific histories/ Pedagogy

May 2020

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A Primer for Teaching Pacific Histories is a guide for college and high school teachers who are teaching Pacific histories for the first time or for experienced teachers who want to reinvigorate their courses. It can also serve those who are training future teachers to prepare their own syllabi, as well as teachers who want to incorporate Pacific histories into their world history courses. Matt K. Matsuda offers design principles for creating syllabi that will help students navigate a wide range of topics, from settler colonialism, national liberation, and warfare to tourism, popular culture, and identity. He also discusses practical pedagogical techniques and tips, project-based assignments, digital resources, and how Pacific approaches to teaching history differ from customary Western practices. Placing the Pacific Islands at the center of analysis, Matsuda draws readers into the process of strategically designing courses that will challenge students to think critically about the interconnected histories of East Asia, Southeast Asia, Australia, the Pacific Islands, and the Americas within a global framework. Matt K. Matsuda is Professor of History and Academic Dean of the Honors College at Rutgers University-New Brunswick.

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American History | new books


Spatial and Discursive Violence in the US Southwest ROSAURA SÁNCHEZ and BEATRICE PITA

In Spatial and Discursive Violence in the US Southwest Rosaura Sánchez and Beatrice Pita examine literary representations of settler colonial land enclosure and dispossession in the history of New Mexico, Texas, and Oklahoma. Sánchez and Pita analyze a range of Chicano/a and Native American novels, films, short stories, and other cultural artifacts from the eighteenth century to the present, showing how Chicano/a works often celebrate an idealized colonial Spanish past as a way to counter stereotypes of Mexican and Indigenous racial and ethnic inferiority. As they demonstrate, these texts often erase the participation of Spanish and Mexican settlers in the dispossession of Indigenous lands. Foregrounding the relationship between literature and settler colonialism, they consider how literary representations of land are manipulated and redefined in ways that point to the changing practices of dispossession. In so doing, Sánchez and Pita prompt critics to reconsider the role of settler colonialism in the deep history of the United States and how spatial and discursive violence are always correlated. Rosaura Sánchez is Professor Emeritus of Literature at the University of California, San Diego. Beatrice Pita is Retired Lecturer of Literature at the University of California, San Diego.

Chicanx and Latinx studies/ American studies

April 2021

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Point of Reckoning The Fight for Racial Justice at Duke University THEODORE D. SEGAL On the morning of February 13, 1969, members of Duke University's Afro-American Society barricaded themselves inside the Allen administration building. That evening, police were summoned to clear the building, firing tear gas at students in the melee that followed. When it was over, nearly twenty people were taken to the hospital, and many more injured. In Point of Reckoning, Theodore D. Segal narrates the contested fight for racial justice at Duke from the enrollment of the first Black undergraduates in 1963 to the events that led to the Allen Building takeover and beyond. Segal shows that Duke's first Black students quickly recognized that the university was unwilling to acknowledge their presence or fully address its segregationist past. By exposing the tortuous dynamics that played out as racial progress stalled at Duke, Segal tells both a local and national story about the challenges that historically white colleges and universities throughout the country have faced and continue to face. Theodore D. Segal is a lawyer and member of the board of directors for the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University. He received his undergraduate degree from Duke in 1977.

US history/African American History/Higher Education

February 2021

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Rebel Imaginaries Labor, Culture, and Politics in Depression-Era California ELIZABETH E. SINE During the Great Depression, California became a wellspring for some of the era's most inventive and imaginative political movements. In response to the global catastrophe, the multiracial laboring populations who formed the basis of California's economy gave rise to an oppositional culture that challenged the modes of racialism, nationalism, and rationalism that had guided modernization during preceding decades. In Rebel Imaginaries Elizabeth E. Sine tells the story of that oppositional culture's emergence, revealing how aggrieved Californians asserted political visions that embraced difference, fostered a sense of shared vulnerability, and underscored the interconnectedness and interdependence of global struggles for human dignity. From the Imperial Valley's agricultural fields to Hollywood, seemingly disparate communities of African American, Native American, Mexican, Filipinx, Asian, and White working-class people were linked by their myriad struggles against Depression-era capitalism and patterns of inequality and marginalization. In tracing the diverse coalition of those involved in labor strikes, citizenship and immigration reform, and articulating and imagining freedom through artistic practice, Sine demonstrates that the era's social movements were far more heterogeneous, multivalent, and contested than previously understood.

US history/Labor history

January 2021

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Elizabeth E. Sine is Lecturer of History at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo.

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Experiments in Skin Race and Beauty in the Shadows of Vietnam THUY LINH NGUYEN TU

American studies/Asian American studies/Cultural studies

April 2021

In Experiments in Skin Thuy Linh Nguyen Tu examines the ongoing influence of the Vietnam War on contemporary ideas about race and beauty. Framing skin as the site around which these ideas have been formed, Tu foregrounds the histories of militarism in the production of US biomedical knowledge and commercial cosmetics. She uncovers the efforts of wartime scientists in the US Military Dermatology Research Program to alleviate the environmental and chemical risks to soldiers' skin. These dermatologists sought relief for white soldiers while denying that African American soldiers and Vietnamese civilians were also vulnerable to harm. Their experiments led to the development of pharmaceutical cosmetics, now used by women in Ho Chi Minh City to tend to their skin, and to grapple with the damage caused by the war's lingering toxicity. In showing how the US military laid the foundations for contemporary Vietnamese consumption of cosmetics and practices of beauty, Tu shows how the intersecting histories of militarism, biomedicine, race, and aesthetics become materially and metaphorically visible on skin. Thuy Linh Nguyen Tu is Associate Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis at New York University.

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The Last Good Neighbor Mexico in the Global Sixties ERIC ZOLOV

Latin American history/Cold War/Global Sixties

May 2020

In The Last Good Neighbor Eric Zolov presents a revisionist account of Mexican domestic politics and international relations during the long 1960s, tracing how Mexico emerged from the shadow of FDR's Good Neighbor policy to become a geopolitical player in its own right during the Cold War. Zolov shows how President Adolfo López Mateos (1958–1964) leveraged Mexico's historical ties with the United States while harnessing the left's passionate calls for solidarity with developing nations in a bold attempt to alter the course of global politics. During this period, Mexico forged relationships with the Soviet Bloc, took positions at odds with US interests, and entered the scene of Third World internationalism. Drawing on archival research from Mexico, the United States, and Britain, Zolov gives a broad perspective on the multitudinous, transnational forces that shaped Mexican political culture in ways that challenge standard histories of the period. Eric Zolov is Professor of History at Stony Brook University.

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American History | new books


NEW JOURNAL ISSUES

Birds and Feathers in the Ancient and Colonial Mesoamerican World ALLISON CAPLAN and LISA SOUSA , issue editors An issue of Ethnohistory (67:3) July 2020

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Time out of Joint

The Measure of Inequality

The Queer and the Customary in Africa KIRK FIERECK , NEVILLE HOAD, and DANAI S. MUPOTSA , issue

Social Knowledge in Historical Perspective POORNIMA PADIPATY and PEDRO RAMOS PINTO ,

editors An issue of GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies (26:3) June 2020

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Queer Political Theologies

Economics and Engineering

issue editors

Institutions, Practices, and Cultures PEDRO GARCIA DUARTE and YANN GIRAUD , issue editors

DAVID K. SEITZ , RICKY VARGHESE , and FAN WU,

An issue of GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies (27:1) January 2021

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An issue of History of Political Economy (52:6) December 2020

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issue editors An issue of History of Political Economy (52:3) June 2020

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Old/Age

AMANDA CIAFONE and DEVIN MCGEEHAN MUCHMORE , issue editors An issue of Radical History Review (139) January 2021

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Fascism and Anti-fascism since 1945 MARK BRAY, JESSICA NAMAKKAL , GIULIA RICCÒ , and ERIC ROUBINEK , issue editors An issue of Radical History Review (138)

Solarity

1968 Decentered

An issue of South Atlantic Quarterly (120:1)

An issue of South Atlantic Quarterly (119:3)

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The Ideology Issue

Getting Back the Land

DARIN BARNEY and IMRE SZEMAN , issue editors January 2021

JONATHAN FLATLEY and ROBERT BIRD, issue editors July 2020

October 2020

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ANDREW COLE , issue editor

Policing, Justice, and the Radical Imagination

AMY CHAZKEL , MONICA KIM , and A. NAOMI PAIK , issue editors An issue of Radical History Review (137) May 2020

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An issue of South Atlantic Quarterly (119:4) October 2020

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Anticolonial and Indigenous Strategies of Reclamation SHIRI PASTERNAK and DAYNA NADINE SCOTT, issue editors An issue of South Atlantic Quarterly (119:2) April 2020

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American History

| new journal issues


JOURNALS

Demography

MARK D. HAYWARD, editor Six issues annually | view online open access

Ethnohistory

KATHRYN MAGEE LABELLE and ROBERT C. SCHWALLER, editors

Quarterly | view online

GLQ A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies JENNIFER DEVERE BRODY and C. RILEY SNORTON, editors

Quarterly | view online

Hispanic American Historical Review

MARTHA FEW, ZACHARY MORGAN, MATTHEW RESTALL, and AMARA SOLARI, editors Quarterly | view online

History of the Present A Journal of Critical History

JOAN WALLACH SCOTT and BRIAN CONNOLLY, editors

Two issues annually | view online

Labor Studies in Working-Class History LEON FINK, editor

Quarterly | view online

Radical History Review

edited by RHR EDITORIAL COLLECTIVE

Three issues annually | view online

South Atlantic Quarterly MICHAEL HARDT, editor Quarterly | view online

History of Political Economy

KEVIN D. HOOVER, editor

Six issues annually | view online

Subscribe online at dukeupress.edu/journals. Subscriptions are not eligible for the conference discount. Use coupon code SAVE4 at dukeupress.edu to save $4 on subscriptions to these journals.

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COMING SOON

Complaint! Sara AHMED September

Black Bodies, White Gold Anna ARABINDAN-KESSON May

Archiving Mexican Masculinities in Diaspora Nicole M. GUIDOTTIHERNÁNDEZ

Songbooks Eric WEISBARD May

June

Priya KANDASWAMY

Domestic Contradictions: Race and Gendered Citizenship from Reconstruction to Welfare Reform (view online)

Women's studies/U.S. History/ African American studies

Elizabeth MCHENRY

To Make Negro Literature: Writing, Literary Practice, and African American Authorship (view online)

African American studies/ Literary criticism

Celeste Day MOORE

Soundscapes of Liberation: African American Music in Postwar France (view online)

Music/Black studies/History

June

Jennifer L. MORGAN

Reckoning with Slavery: Gender, Kinship, and Capitalism in the Early Black Atlantic (view online)

Black Atlantic/Women's history/ American history

November

Michel-Rolph TROUILLOT

Trouillot Remixed: The Michel-Rolph Trouillot Reader (view online)

Black studies/Anthropology

August

September

October

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American History


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Tropical Freedom Ikuko ASAKA

Victorian Jamaica Tim BARRINGER and Wayne MODEST, editors

The FBI in Latin America Marc BECKER

Work! Elspeth H. BROWN

The Revolution from Within Michael J. BUSTAMANTE and Jennifer L. LAMBE, editors

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Fugitive Life Stephen DILLON

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Are You Entertained? Simone C. DRAKE and Dwan K. HENDERSON, editors List: $27.95 Discount: $16.77

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A People's History of Detroit Mark JAY and Philip CONKLIN

Honeypot E. Patrick JOHNSON

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Paradoxes of Hawaiian Sovereignty J. Kēhaulani KAUANUI

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List: $24.95 Discount: $14.97

List: $27.95 Discount: $16.77

Photographic Returns Shawn Michelle SMITH

List: $25.95 Discount: $15.57

List: $29.95 Discount: $17.97

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