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| Book Review | The Journal of American History, 89.4 | The History Cooperative
89.4  
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March, 2003
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Book Review


Inside Out, Outside In: Essays in Comparative History. By Robert Gregg. (New York: St. Martin's, 2000. xiv, 231 pp. $59.95, ISBN 0-312-21867-2.)

The dust jacket for Robert Gregg's essays mentions this work's quirky approach. Certainly it is unlike anything I have read on comparative history. A series of loosely connected pieces of varying length, mostly in the genre of reviews of works in imperial, race, and postcolonial studies, the book covers subjects from the methodology of comparative history to South African-U.S. race issues and to class, empire, and modern sports. Gregg goes against the grain of American comparative history. The national comparative approach, with its tendency to reinforce American distinctiveness or even exceptionalism, he rejects. Rather, Gregg seeks to illuminate American history by questioning the boundaries of comparison, by juxtaposing the unfamiliar, and by broadening the scope of inquiry beyond conventional subjects. Imperialism and its racial foundation is the key theme. Though the essays are often primarily about other places, there are insights here about American empire. They are the product of very wide reading; some choice passages are in highly discursive footnotes that should not be skipped. . . .


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