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Tom Durwood deposited War, Society, and Commerce in World War II on Humanities Commons 6 years, 7 months ago
The success of most wars depends in part on several important non-combat factors, and crucial among them is public support.
In her fascinating and ambitious 2006 book, From Submarines to Suburbs, Cynthia Henthorn examines both the relationship of commerce to war and the relationship of the citizen to war. It is a timely topic, since America is…[Read more] -
In their ambitious book Empires of Food, authors Evan D.G. Fraser and Andrew Rimas take on a huge topic: the cause-and-effect relationship between food systems, societies and governments or, as they phrase it in the book’s subtitle, “feast, famine and the rise and fall of civilizations.” This is historical context as well as advice for colle…[Read more]
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Tom Durwood deposited International Relations and A Partnership for Disorder on Humanities Commons 6 years, 7 months ago
When I searched dissertation titles to find topics that relate to empire, I ran across a thesis entitled A Partnership for Disorder: China, the United States and their policies for a postwar disposition of the Japanese Empire 1941-1945. When I contacted the author, Xiaoyuan Liu, I found that the thesis had been turned into a book.
On our…[Read more]
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It is easy to forget what a cultural sensation technology can produce – and perhaps no instance was greater than that of the Gatling gun.
In her outstanding 2006 book, Mr. Gatling’s Terrible Marvel, author Julia Keller gives a detailed and lucid account of Richard Gatling and his quest to create a true machine gun — and the unintended conse…[Read more] -
We have long been fascinated with the connection between monsters and our underlying fears. Jerome Cohen’s 1996 book Monster Theory looks at horror stories as a sort of Rorschach test for the culture as a whole. If we look carefully, we can see in them our fears and anxieties about ourselves. According to this theory, each monster is specific to a…[Read more]
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Tom Durwood deposited Melville, Orwell, and a Brief Theory of Empire on Humanities Commons 6 years, 7 months ago
A brief comparison of the work of two authors who lived almost a century apart reveals two literatures driven by a common concern with the processes and consequence of empire. A review of their lives shows that both Herman Melville and Eric Blair (George Orwell) were disenfranchised children of empire — writers with a foot in both camps, the c…[Read more]
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Tom Durwood's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 6 years, 7 months ago