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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 multiple 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. "Recent Scholarship Online" may be accessed at <http://www.oah.org/rs/>. |
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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 States and Canada were listed in Dissertation Abstracts International: The Humanities and Social Sciences, 65 (Dec. 2004–Feb. 2005). Those followed by order numbers may be purchased from UMI Dissertation Services, 300 North Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1346, USA. Telephone: 734-761-4700 or 800-521-3042 (USA only). To obtain dissertations that do not have order numbers, we suggest that scholars write to the degree-granting institutions. |
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African American | |
| Armstrong, Erica R., "A Mental and Moral Feast: Reading, Writing, and Sentimentality in Black Philadelphia," Journal of Women's History, 16 (no. 1, 2004), 78–102.Campbell, James, "'The victim of prejudice and hasty consideration': The Slave Trial System in Richmond, Virginia, 1830–61," Slavery and Abolition (Ilford), 26 (April 2005), 71–91.Crothers, A. Glenn, "Quaker Merchants and Slavery in Early National Alexandria, Virginia: The Ordeal of William Hartshorne," Journal of the Early Republic, 25 (Spring 2005), 47–77.Cunningham, Roger D., "'A Lot of Fine, Sturdy Black Warriors': Texas's African American 'Immunes' in the Spanish-American War," Southwestern Historical Quarterly, 108 (Jan. 2005), 345–67.Dagbovie, Pero Gaglo, "Making Black History Practical and Popular: Carter G. Woodson, the Proto Black Studies Movement, and the Struggle for Black Liberation," Western Journal of Black Studies, 27 (Winter 2003), 263–74.Dawkins, Marvin P., "Race Relations and the Sport of Golf: The African American Golf Legacy," Western Journal of Black Studies, 27 (Winter 2003), 231–35.Feldstein, Ruth, "'I Don't Trust You Anymore': Nina Simone, Culture, and Black Activism in the 1960s," Journal of American History, 91 (March 2005), 1349–79.Flood, Dawn Rae, "'They Didn't Treat Me Good': African American Rape Victims and Chicago Courtroom Strategies during the 1950s," Journal of Women's History, 17 (Spring 2005), 38–61.Garabedian, Steven, "Reds, Whites, and the Blues: Lawrence Gellert, Negro Songs of Protest, and the Left-Wing Folk-Song Revival of the 1930s and 1940s," American Quarterly, 57 (March 2005), 179–205.Haidarali, Laila, "Polishing Brown Diamonds: African American Women, Popular Magazines, and the Advent of Modeling in Early Postwar America," Journal of Women's History, 17 (Spring 2005), 10–37.Hall, Jacquelyn Dowd, "The Long Civil Rights Movement and the Political Uses of the Past," Journal of American History, 91 (March 2005), 1233–63.Heinegg, Paul, and Henry B. Hoff, "Freedom in the Archives: Free African Americans in Colonial America," Common-Place, 5 (Oct. 2004) <http://www.common-place.org>.Hill, Walter B., Jr., "Finding Place for the Negro: Robert C. Weaver and the Groundwork for the Civil Rights Movement," Prologue, 37 (Spring 2005), 42–51. Heavily illustrated.Holzer, Harry J., Paul Offner, and Elaine Sorensen, "What Explains the Continuing Decline in Labor Force Activity among Young Black Men?," Labor History, 46 (Feb. 2005), 37–55.Howison, Jeffrey D., "'Let Us Guide Our Own Destiny': Rethinking the History of the Black Star Line," Review: Fernand Braudel Center, 28 (no. 1, 2005), 29–49.Johnson, Joan Marie, "'Ye Gave Them a Stone': African American Women's Clubs, the Frederick Douglass Home, and the Black Mammy Monument," Journal of Women's History, 17 (Spring 2005), 62–86.. . . |
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