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| Recent Scholarship | The Journal of American History, 88.3 | The History Cooperative
88.3  
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December, 2001
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Recent Scholarship


"Recent Scholarship" is now available to OAH members online. Unlike the print version, which will continue to appear, the database provides a fully searchable list of citations and allows the crosslisting of each citation under up to four subject headings. Thus users may widen or limit the queries they send to the database's search engine. The cumulative database allows members to locate bibliographic citations, whether for works listed in the "Recent Scholarship" section of the Journal or for books reviewed in the Journal, appearing from the June 2000 issue forward. The "Recent Scholarship" database may be accessed at <http://www.indiana.edu/~jah>.

      Under each subject heading below, the scholarship is grouped by genre: articles, dissertations, books, and primary sources are listed separately, in that order. Dissertations from the United Satates were listed in Dissertation Abstracts International: The Humanities and Social Sciences, 61 (Feb.–April 2001). Those followed by order numbers may be purchased from UMI Dissertation Services, 300 North Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1346 USA. Telephone: 313-761-4700 or 1-800-521-3042 (USA only). To obtain dissertations that do not have order numbers, we suggest that scholars write to the degree-granting institutions.

 

African Americans

Bacon, Margaret Hope, "New Light on Sarah Mapps Douglass and Her Reconciliation with Friends," Quaker History, 90 (Spring 200[1881–1882]), 28–49.

Baker, Houston A., Jr., and Dana D. Nelson, eds., "Violence, the Body, and 'The South,'" American Literature, 73 (June 2001), 231–412. Special issue.

Bankoff, H. Arthur, Christopher Ricciardi, and Alyssa Loorya, "Remembering Africa under the Eaves," Archaeology, 54 (May/June 2001), 36–40.

Bankole, Katherine Olukemi, "A Critical Inquiry of Enslaved African Females and the Antebellum Hospital Experience," Journal of Black Studies, 31 (May 2001), 517–38.

Baxandall, Rosalyn, "Re-Visioning the Women's Liberation Movement's Narrative: Early Second Wave African American Feminists," Feminist Studies, 27 (Spring 2001), 225–45.

Blau, Judith R., and Eric S. Brown, "Du Bois and Diasporic Identity: The Veil and the Unveiling Project," Sociological Theory, 19 (July 2001), 219–33.

Brown, Flora Bryant, "NAACP Sponsored Sit-ins by Howard University Students in Washington, D.C., 1943–1944," Journal of Negro History, 85 (Fall 2000), 274–86.

Buchanan, Thomas C., "Rascals on the Antebellum Mississippi: African American Steamboat Workers and the St. Louis Hanging of 1841," Journal of Social History, 34 (Summer 2001), 797–816.

Cha-Jua, Sundiata Keita, "Slavery, Racist Violence, and Apartheid: The Case for Reparations," New Politics, 8 (Summer 2001), 46–64.

Cobb, Michael D., and Jeffery A. Jenkins, "Race and the Representation of Blacks' Interests during Reconstruction," Political Research Quarterly, 54 (March 2001), 181–204.

Davis, Thomas J., "Another Place, Another Promise, Another Paradise? Another Perspective on Black Migration, Promised Lands, and Paradises," Afro-Americans in New York Life and History, 25 (July 2001), 59–78.

Gabbidon, Shaun L., "W. E. B. Du Bois: Pioneering American Criminologist," Journal of Black Studies, 31 (May 2001), 581–99.

Guenther, Todd, "Lucretia Marchbanks: A Black Woman in the Black Hills," South Dakota History, 31 (Spring 2001), 1–25.

Hackett, David G., "The Prince Hall Masons and the African American Church: The Labors of Grand Master and Bishop James Walker Hood, 1831–1918," Church History, 69 (Dec. 2000), 770–802.

Holloway, Jonathan Scott, "The Black Intellectual and the 'Crisis Canon' in the Twentieth Century," Black Scholar, 31 (Spring 2001), 2–13.

Hoy, Suellen, "Illinois Technical School for Colored Girls: A Catholic Institution on Chicago's South Side, 1911–1953," Journal of Illinois History, 4 (Summer 2001), 103–22.

Hudson, J. Blaine, "Crossing the 'Dark Line': Fugitive Slaves and the Underground Railroad in Louisville and North-Central Kentucky," Filson History Quarterly, 75 (Winter 2001), 33–83. . . .


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