Paper Cadavers: The Archives of Dictatorship in Guatemala
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Silencing the Past: Power and the Production of History
Placing the West's failure to acknowledge the most successful slave revolt in history alongside denials of the Holocaust and the debate over the Alamo, Michel-Rolph Trouillot offers a stunning meditat…
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Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments: Intimate Histories of Riotous Black Girls, Troublesome Women, and Queer Radicals
A breathtaking exploration of the lives of young black women in the early twentieth century.
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In Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments, Saidiya Hartman examines the revolution of black intimate life that… -
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Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America
This book traces the origins of the illegal alien in American law and society, explaining why and how illegal migration became the central problem in U.S. immigration policy--a process that profoundly…
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The Common Wind: Afro-American Currents in the Age of the Haitian Revolution
A remarkable intellectual history of the slave revolts that made the modern revolutionary era
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The Common Wind is a gripping and colorful account of the intercontinental networks that tied together the … -
The Allure of the Archives
Arlette Farge’s Le Goût de l’archive is widely regarded as a historiographical classic. While combing through two-hundred-year-old judicial records from the Archives of the Bastille, historian Farge w…
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Bad Mexicans: Race, Empire, and Revolution in the Borderlands
Bad Mexicans tells the dramatic story of the magonistas, the migrant rebels who sparked the 1910 Mexican Revolution from the United States. Led by a brilliant but ill-tempered radical named Ricardo Fl…
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Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism
What makes people love and die for nations, as well as hate and kill in their name? While many studies have been written on nationalist political movements, the sense of nationality--the personal and …
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Expelling the Poor: Atlantic Seaboard States and the Nineteenth-Century Origins of American Immigration Policy
Expelling the Poor examines the origins of immigration restriction in the United States, especially deportation policy. Based on an analysis of immigration policies in major American coastal states, i…
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Cuba: An American History
Winner of The L. A. Times Book Prize (2021) in History
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“Full of…lively insights and lucid prose” (The Wall Street Journal) an epic, sweeping history of Cuba and its complex ties to the United States—… -
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The Ice Palace
Commonly seen as the legendary Norwegian writer's masterpiece, this story tells the tale of Siss and Unn, two friends who have only spent one evening in each other's company. But so profound is this e…
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Reckoning with Slavery: Gender, Kinship, and Capitalism in the Early Black Atlantic
In Reckoning with Slavery Jennifer L. Morgan draws on the lived experiences of enslaved African women in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries to reveal the contours of early modern notions of trade…
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Waiting to Be Arrested at Night: A Uyghur Poet's Memoir of China's Genocide
A poet's account of one of the world's most urgent humanitarian crises, and a harrowing tale of a family's escape from genocide
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One by one, Tahir Hamut Izgil's friends disappeared. The Chinese governme… -
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All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley's Sack, a Black Family Keepsake
In a display case in the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture sits a rough cotton bag, called Ashley’s Sack, embroidered with just a handful of words that evoke a swee…
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Greek Lessons
“Now and then, language would thrust its way into her sleep like a skewer through meat, startling her awake several times a night.”
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In a classroom in Seoul, a young woman watches her Greek language tea… -
Regarding the Pain of Others
Twenty-five years after her classic On Photography, Susan Sontag returns to the subject of visual representations of war and violence in our culture today. How does the spectacle of the sufferings of …
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