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CONTENTS
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VOLUME15• NUMBER 2 •
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JUNE 2004
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ARTICLES
| Survival in the Frontier Zone: Comparative Perspectives on Identity and Political Allegiance in China's Inner Asian Borderlands during the Sui-Tang Dynastic Transition (617–630) |
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JONATHAN KARAM SKAFF
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117 |
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This paper investigates the relationship between identities and political allegiances on premodern frontiers. The first half of the paper is a case study of interactions between Turks and Chinese elites and commoners during the Sui-Tang dynastic transition. The second half compares Roman, mid-imperial Chinese, and early Islamic frontiers. The paper concludes that people in frontier zones tended to forge political ties based on self-interest and personal connections. Solidarities based on ethnic or religious allegiance were rare because premodern state power, transportation, and communications could not spread these ideals effectively.
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| Global Migration, 1846–1940 |
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ADAM MCKEOWN
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155 |
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European migrations to the Americas and Australia have often been noted as an important part of world history, but movements to the frontiers, factories, and cities of Asia and Africa have largely been overlooked. This paper will show that migrations to northern and southeastern Asia were comparable in size and demographic impact to the transatlantic flows and followed similar cycles of growth and contraction. These migrations were all part of an expanding world economy, and a global perspective suggests ways in which that economy extended beyond direct European intervention. A global perspective also compels us to extend the traditional ending point for the era of mass migration from1914 to1930, and to be more aware of how political intervention has shaped the world into different migration systems and led scholars to wrongly assume that these systems reflect categorically different kinds of migration.
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| Global Feminism and Postwar Reconstruction: The World YWCA Visitation to Occupied Japan, 1947 |
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KAREN GARNER
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191 |
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This analysis of the World Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA) as a leader among international women's organizations that sought to expand political roles for women in post–World War II reconstruction projects focuses on a delegation of Western women who visited Japan when it was occupied by the Allied Powers under the Supreme Command of the Allied Powers (SCAP) of General Douglas MacArthur in 1947. It examines the World YWCA organization and its long-running goals to promote the linked values of "Christian internationalism, civilization, and women's liberation" through women's participation in international politics and governance, as well as its shorter-term objectives to reconcile Chinese and Japanese YWCA women in the wake of World War II animosities, and contrasts their efforts with the postwar agenda for Japanese women's "liberation" as defined by SCAP occupation forces.
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REVIEW ARTICLE
| How Not to (Re)Write World History: Gavin Menzies and the Chinese Discovery of America |
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ROBERT FINLAY
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229 |
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In 1421: The Year China Discovered America, Gavin Menzies claims that several Chi-nese fleets sailed around the world, charting sea coasts, founding colonies, and creating a global maritime empire. Moreover, he argues that these Chinese exploits shaped European map making, thereby inspiring Portuguese overseas discoveries and the rise of the West. The author's attempt to rewrite world history, however, is based on a hodgepodge of circular reasoning, bizarre speculation, distorted sources, and slapdash research. In reality, the voyages described did not take place, Chinese exploration did not influence European cartography, and there is no evidence of the Chinese fleets in the Americas.
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BOOK REVIEWS
| Christopher Ehret. The Civilizations of Africa: A History to 1800 |
| Reviewed by PATRICK MANNING
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243 |
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Alfred Crosby. Throwing Fire: Projectile Technology through History Nicola Di Cosmo, ed. Warfare in Inner Asian History (500–1800) |
| Reviewed by JEREMY BLACK
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246 |
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Patrick J. Geary. The Myth of Nations: The Medieval Origins of Europe Robert H. Wiebe. Who We Are: A History of Popular Nationalism |
| Reviewed by ERNST GERHARDT
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248 |
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| R. J. Barendse. The Arabian Seas: The Indian Ocean World of the Seventeenth Century |
| Reviewed by HOWARD SPODEK
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251 |
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| David T. Courtwright. Forces of Habit: Drugs and the Making of the Modern World |
| Reviewed by ROBERT PERKINSON
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255 |
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| Carla Hesse. The Other Enlightenment: How French Women Became Modern |
| Reviewed by LINDA LIERHEIMER
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258 |
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| Daniel K. Richter. Facing East from Indian Country: A Native History of Early America |
| Reviewed by GAIL D. MACLEITCH
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261 |
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| Patricia Seed. American Pentimento: The Invention of Indians and the Pursuit of Riches |
| Reviewed by HERNÁN HORNA
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264 |
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Linda Boxberger. On the Edge of Empire: Hadramawt, Emigration, and the Indian Ocean, 1880s–1930s Thabit A. J. Abdullah. Merchants, Mamluks, and Murder: The Political Economy of Trade in Eighteenth-Century Basra |
| Reviewed by R. J. BARENDSE
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266 |
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| Timothy Brook and Bob Tadashi Wakabayashi, eds. Opium Regimes: China, Britain, and Japan, 1839–1952 |
| Reviewed by JOHN M. JENNINGS
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269 |
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