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American Historical Review

Michael O Malley, Specie and Species Race and the Money Question in Nineteenth-Century America, American Historical Review 99 2 (April 1994), pp. 369-395 Nell Irvin Painter, Thinking about the Languages of Money and Race A Response to Michael O Malley, Specie and Species, Ibid., pp. 396-408. [Pg.339]

Richard Kieckhefer, The Specific Rationality of Medieval Magic , American Historical Review, 99 (1994), 813—36 Robert Scribner, The Reformation, Popular Magic, and the Disenchantment of the Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 23 (1993), 475—94 Tambiah, Ma c, Science, Religion. [Pg.212]

The Specific Rationality of Medieval Magic , American Historical Review, 99... [Pg.252]

Ibid. see also Merle Curti, "Young America," American Historical Review, 1929. [Pg.54]

World of Pre-modern Medicine." American Historical Review 106, no. 4 (2001) ... [Pg.250]

Jones, Colin. The Great Chain of Buying Medical Advertisement, the Bourgeois Public Sphere, and the Origins of the French Revolution. American Historical Review 101, 1996, 13-40. [Pg.577]

Much of the following material on the centralization of transport in France comes from the fine sur fey by Cecil O. Smith, Jr., The Longest Run Public Engineers and Planning in France," American Historical Review 95, no. 3 (June 1990) 657-92. See also the excellent discussion and comparison of the Corps des Fonts et des Chaussees with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Theodore Porter, Trust in Numbers The Pursuit of Objectivity in Science and Public Life (Princeton Princeton University Press, 1995), chap. 6. [Pg.374]

Jervis, Robert. A Political Science Perspective on the Balance of Power and the Concert. American Historical Review 97(3) (1992), pp. 716-24. [Pg.277]

McGerr, Michael. The Price of the New Transnational History. American Historical Review 96 (October 1991) 1056-67. [Pg.691]

Tooze, Adam. Trouble with Numbers Statistics, Politics, and History in the Construction of Weimar s Trade Balance, 1918-24. American Historical Review 113, no. 3 (June 2008) 678-700. [Pg.707]

Beckert, S., Emancipation and Empire. Reconstructing the Worldwide WebofCotton Production in the Age of the American Civil War. The American Historical Review, 2004,109(5), 1405-1438. [Pg.35]

Dupree, 1966. A. Hunter Dupree. The History of American Science - A Field Finds Itself . American Historical Review 71 863-874. [Pg.522]

GUfoyle, T. 1999. Prostitutes in History From Parables of Pornography to Metaphors of Modernity. American Historical Review 104, no. 1 117-41. [Pg.216]

Anderson, Warwick. The Trespass Speaks White Mascuhnity and Colonial Breakdown. American Historical Review 102, no. 5 (1997) 1343-70. [Pg.213]

Lapartito, Kenneth. When Women Were Switches Technology, Work, and Gender in the Telephone Industry, 1890-1920. American Historical Review 99 (1994) 1075-1111. [Pg.229]

Because of the importance of cellulose and the difficulty in unraveling its secrets, several societies (CeUucon, American Chemical Society, and TAPPI) are dedicated to cellulose, lignin, and related molecules, as is at least one journal that is abstracted by Chemicaly hstracts (3). The length of the proceedings of the Tenth Cellulose Conference (1638 pages) (4) indicates the vitaUty and interest in this subject, but research results are pubUshed in many other journals as well. There are also several recent books on cellulose (5—9). Reference 10 is a comprehensive review and is recommended especially for the historical review of proof of chemical stmcture, one of the milestones in organic chemistry. [Pg.237]

Bennett, P. R., Xie, Y. (2003). Revisiting racial differences in college attendance The role of historically Black colleges and universities. American Sociological Review, 68, 567-580. [Pg.161]

Anglo-American Strategic Relations and the Far East, 1933—1939 (London Frank Cass, 2002), pp. 123—5, 136—7, 145—6 Keith Neilson, The Defence Requirements Sub-Committee , English Historical Review, 118 (2003), 651—84. [Pg.101]

The pound sterling, the American Treasury and British preparations for war, 1938-1939 , English Historical Review, 98 (1983), 261-79. [Pg.362]

Cf. Prof. F. H. Hankins, temporary President of the American Association for Demography, quoted in The Journal of Historical Review (JHR), 4(1) (1983) pp. 61-81 (online ihr.org/jhr/v04/v04p-61 Hankins.html). [Pg.182]

In 1976, the first edition of Arthur R. Butz s The Hoax of the Twentieth Century appeared in England. In 1978, I published the first American edition of this full-sized, indexed, 315-page, heavily-documented work through The Noontide Press. Later, after I set up the Institute for Historical Review (IHR), the IHR assumed publication of the Butz book. The book was mentioned even in the mainstream press and has gone through ten printings.7... [Pg.580]

In 1984, Viscusi and O Connor wrote an article for the American Economic Review about the effects of chemical hazard disclosure rules on workers propensity to qxiit. They titled it Adaptive Responses to Chemical Labeling Are Workers Bayesian Decision Makers , referring to Bayes Theorem in probability (see chapter 2). The real question that should be asked, however, is whether workers are Kantian decisionmakers do they accept or avoid risks on the basis of utility, as economists suppose, or do they value above all their autonomy as human beings in the tradition of Kant s categorical moral imperative This is an empirical question we will look for evidence of it in the historical and institutional record (chapter 4), and we will consider its implications for compensating differential theory and labor market analysis in general in chapter 5. [Pg.106]

Triolo, V A., and I. L. Riegel. The American Association for Cancer Research, 1907-1940. Historical Review. Cancer Research 21 (1961) 137-67. [Pg.184]

Browne (ed.), 1926. Charles A. Browne (ed.). A Half Century of Chemistry in America, 1876-1926. An Historical Review Commemorating the Fiftieth Anniversary of the American Chemical Society. Philadelphia, September 6-11, 1926. Golden Jubilee Number of the Journal of the American Chemical Society 48, No. 8A (20 August). [Pg.531]

The turn of the twentieth century ushered in a period in which a well-educated cohort of African American scientists began conducting research and publishing in peer reviewed journals. Most of the doctoral chemists careers were confined to historically black colleges and universities. However, conditions both in and out of the scientific community were slowly changing. Between World War I and just prior... [Pg.143]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 , Pg.109 ]




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