Paraska Tolan-Szkilnik

Assistant Professor

Publications

Book

Maghreb Noir: The Militant-Artists of North Africa and the Struggle for a Pan-African, Postcolonial Future (Stanford University Press, 2023).

Articles and Book Chapters

“’Collecting Bosoms:’ Sex, Race, and Masculinity at the Pan-African Festival of Algiers, 1969,” Arab Studies Journal, XXIX, no. 2, (Fall 2021), 96-117.

““Between their hands a fabulous geography is born”: The Maghreb generation and the fight to decolonize and unite Africa’s minds,” in Visions of African Unity, Frank Gerits and Matteo Grilli (eds.), (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2021), 237-259, invited to contribute by editors.

“The Quest for a Pan-African Groove: Saxophones and Stories from the Pan-African Festival of Algiers (1969),” World Art, 9 (1), July 2018, 1-14.

“Flickering Fault Lines: The 1969 Pan-African Festival of Algiers and the Struggle for a Unified Africa” in Monde(s), 2016/1 (N° 9)

Op-eds and Shorter Pieces

“Puigaudeau and Sénones: A Graphic Novel on Mauritania Circa 1933” in a special edition on Comix of The Markaz Review, August 2021, contribution solicited by editors, https://themarkaz.org/magazine/puigaudeau-senones-graphic-novel-on-mauritania-circa-1933

“On Decolonial Studies,” or in French translation “Des Études Décoloniales,” Jadaliyya, April 19th, 2021, https://www.jadaliyya.com/Details/42608/On-Decolonial-Studies-42608

Run naked towards the sun/Raise your barricades/Make your revolution: Poetic Revolution and Postcolonial Discourse,” Yoav di-Capua and Cyrus Schayegh (eds.), invited contribution to a roundtable in the International Journal of Middle East Studies, Volume 52, Issue 1 (Spring 2020), 161-6.

Academic Podcasts:

“The Mad-for-Maghreb Generation: the Maghreb in the Pan-African Cultural Project,” Maghreb in the Past and Present Series, Episode 55, recorded November 2018.

“The History of Pan-Africanism in the Postcolonial Period: The Pan-African Festival of Algiers of 1969,” Maghreb in the Past and Present Series, Episode 53, recorded June 2018.

Oral History Online Publications:

Contributor to PANAFEST Archives, Paris, France, http://webdocs-sciences-sociales.science/panafest/, 2018-2020.

Mayer Juni

Bruce Slovin Assistant Professor

Alan van den Arend

ALI Postdoctoral Associate

Peidong Sun

Distinguished Associate Professor of Arts & Sciences in China and Asia-Pacific Studies; Associate Professor of History

Publications

Books in Chinese

Peidong Sun. 2013. Fashion and Politics: Everyday Clothing Choices in Guangdong during the Cultural Revolution(Beijing: People’s Publishing House).

Peidong Sun. 2012; 2013. Who Will Marry My Daughter? The Parental Matchmaking Corner in Shanghai’s People’s Square(Beijing: Chinese Social Sciences Press).

Edited books in English

Patricia Thornton, Peidong Sun & Chris Berry eds. 2017. Red Shadows: Memories and Legacies of the Chinese Cultural Revolution (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).

Books in progress in English

Red Genes: How the Cultural Revolution Has Shaped the Xi Jinping Generation.

The CCP Mind: A Hidden Story.

A Certain Regard for China: Personal Accounts of French Academics Across Generations(Under contract with Routledge)

Fashion and Politics in China's Cultural Revolution(English Version)

Crossing the Three Great Walls: A Memoir

Cristina Florea

Assistant Professor

Publications

Peer-reviewed Articles

"Frontiers of Civilization in the Age of Mass Migration from Eastern Europe," Past and Present, 21 February 2022. https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtab041

"New Perspectives in German Studies: A View From the Margins," New German Critique, November 2023. 

Book Reviews and Review Essays

Review of Patrice Dabrowski, The Carpathians: Discovering the Highlands of Poland and Ukraine (Cornell University Press, 2021), History: Reviews of New Books, 50(5), pp.83-84.  

Review of Astrid Eckert, West Germany and the Iron Curtain: Environment, Economy, and Culture in the Borderlands (OUP, 2019), H-Borderlands.

"Hidden Metropolis: Modernization and Urban Culture in Eastern Europe," Journal of Urban History, January 2020. 

Review of Helga Mitterbauer and Carrie Smith-Prei, eds. Crossing Central Europe: Continuities and Transformations, 1900 and 2000 (University of Toronto Press, 2017), Austrian History Yearbook, April 2019.

Public Writing

"Ukraine's Long Self-Determination," New York Review of Books, December 7, 2022. https://www.nybooks.com/online/2022/12/07/ukraines-long-self-determination/ 

“The Crisis in Ukraine Has Disturbing Echoes of the 1930s,” TIME, February 28, 2022. https://time.com/6152294/ukraine-invasion-europe-1930s/

“Putin Knows That Controlling History Is the Key to Total Power,” CNN Opinion, April 4, 2022. https://www.cnn.com/2022/04/04/opinions/putin-destroying-ukraine-history-archives-florea/index.html

“Putin’s Perilous Imperial Dream: Why Empires and Nativism Don’t Mix,” Foreign Affairs, May 10, 2022. https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/russian-federation/2022-05-10/putins-perilous-imperial-dream

Mara Yue Du

Assistant Professor

Publications

 

“Toward a Nation Defined by State: Tattooed Loyalty and the Evolution of Yue Fei’s (1103-1142) Image from the Song to the Present,”  Journal of Chinese History, 8.1 (2024), 23-48.

“Unlimited Debt toward Father and Mother: Engendering State-Sponsored Generational Hierarchies in Late Imperial China,” Asia Major, 34.2 (2021), pp.93-125.

“From Dynastic State to Imperial Nation: International Law, Diplomacy, and Conceptual Decentralization of China, 1860s-1900s,” Late Imperial China, 42.1 (2021), pp.177-220.

“Bringing Chinese Law in Line with Western Standards? Problematizing ‘Chinese’ and ‘Western’ in the Late Qing Debate over the New Criminal Code,” Frontiers of History in China, 16.1 (2021), pp.39-72.

“Policies and Counterstrategies: State-Sponsored Filiality and False Accusation in Qing China,” International Journal of Asian Studies, 16.2 (2019), pp.79-97.

“Reforming Social Customs through Law: Dynamics and Discrepancies in the Nationalist Reform of the Adoptive Daughter-in-Law,” NAN NÜ: Men, Women and Gender in China 21.1 (2019), pp.76-106.

“Sun Yat-sen as Guofu: Competition over Nationalist Party Orthodoxy in the Second Sino-Japanese War,” Modern China 45.2 (2019), pp.201-235.

“Concubinage and Motherhood in Qing China (1644-1911): Ritual, Law, and Custodial Rights of Property,” Journal of Family History 42.2 (2017), pp.162-183.

“Legal Justice in Eighteenth-Century Mongolia: Gender, Ethnicity, and Politics in the Manchu-Mongol Marriage Alliance,” Late Imperial China 37.2 (2016), pp.1-40.

Rachel Judith Weil

Professor

Publications

Academic Articles

  • Politics and Gender in Crisis in David Underdown’s “The Taming of the Scold".  History Compass.  11. 2013
  • The Public, the Private, and Feminist Historiography.  Histoire Sociale. Social History.  80:421. 2007
  • Thinking about Allegiance in the English Civil War.  History Workshop Journal.  61:183-191. 2006
  • Book Review Colloquium: Modernity and the Glorious Revolution.  Huntington Library Quarterly.  

Books

  • A Plague of Informers: Conspiracy and Political Trust in William III's England.  New Haven: Yale University Press. 2013
  • Political Passions: Gender, the Family and Political Argument in England 1680-1714 .  Manchester ; New York : Manchester University Press. 1999

Chapters 

  • National Security and Secularization in the English Revolution of 1688.  After Secular Law. Ed. Sullivan, Winnifred.  Stanford:  Stanford University Press. 2011
  • Matthew Smith Versus the "Great Men" : Plot Talk, the Public Sphere, and the Problem of Credibility in the 1690s.  The Politics of the Public Sphere in Early Modern England. 2007
  • The Female Politician in the Late Stuart Age.  Politics, Transgression, and Representation at the Court of Charles II. 2007
  • The Family in the Exclusion Crisis: Locke versus. Filmer Revisited.  A Nation Transformed: England after the Restoration. 2001
  • Sometimes a Scepter is only a Scepter: Pornography and Politics in Restoration England.  The Invention of Pornography: Obscenity and the Origins of Modernity, 1500-1800. 1993
  • The Politics of Legitimacy: Women and the Warming Pan Scandal.  The Revolution of 1688-1689 : Changing Perspectives. 1992

Claudia Verhoeven

Associate Professor

Publications

 

 

  • Articles & Anthology Chapters:
  • “Epilogue: Shock and Awe, Terrorism and Theory,” The Oxford Handbook of the History of Terrorism, eds. Carola Dietze and Claudia Verhoeven. New York: Oxford University Press, 2021. Online publication January 2021 at https://www.oxfordhandbooks.com/view/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199858569.001.0001/oxfordhb-9780199858569-e-42
  • “’Now Is the Time for Helter Skelter’: Terror, Temporality, and the Manson Family.” Time and PowerTemporalities in Conflict and the Making of History, eds. Stefanos Geroulanos, Dan Edelstein, and Natasha Wheatley. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2020.
  • “Time Bombs: Terrorism as a Political Modernism in Russia and Europe,” in The Oxford Handbook of the History of Terrorism, eds. Carola Dietze and Claudia Verhoeven. New York: Oxford University Press, 2021. Online publication August 2020 at https://www.oxfordhandbooks.com/view/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199858569.001.0001/oxfordhb-9780199858569-e-011
  • “Rethinking Revolution: Radicalism at the End of the Long Nineteenth Century,” The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought, Vol. I, eds. Peter Gordon and Warren Breckman. Cambridge, 2019.
  • “’Une Révolution Vraiment Scientifique’: Russian Revolutionary Terrorism, the Escape from the European Orbit, and the Invention of a New Revolutionary Paradigm,” Scripting Revolution, eds. Keith Michael Baker and Dan Edelstein. Stanford/Surhkamp, 2015.
  • “Adventures in Terrorism: Sergei Stepniak-Kravchinsky and the Literary Lives of the Russian Revolutionary Community, 1860s-1880s,” Community, Kinship, and Self: Essays in Honor of David Warren Sabean, eds. Jason Coy, Jared Poley, Benjamin Marschke, and Claudia Verhoeven. Berghahn Books, 2014.
  • Wormholes in Russian History: Events ‘Outside of Time’ (Featuring Malevich, Morozov, and Mayakovsky),” Breaking Up Time: Settling the Borders between the Present, the Past and the Future, ed. Christ Lorenz and Berber Bevernage. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2013. 
  • “Oh, Times, There is No Time (But the Time that Remains): The Terrorist in Russian Literature, 1863-1913,” Terrorism and Narrative Practice, eds. Thomas Austenfeld, Dimiter Daphinoff, Jens. Munster: LIT Verlag, 2011.
  • Time of Terror, Terror of Time: On the Impatience of Russian Revolutionary Terrorism.” Special Issue of Jahrbücher für die Geschichte Osteuropas: “Terrorism in Imperial Russia: New Perspectives.” 58 (2010): 2, pp. 254-273.
  • “Crime and Punishment Draws the Line,” in Blooms Literary Themes: Civil Disobedience, ed. Harold Bloom and Blake Hobby. Chelsea House, 2010.
  • “Court Files,” in Reading Primary Sources. The Interpretation of Texts from 19th and 20th Century History, ed. Miriam Dobson and Benjamin Ziemann. Routledge, 2008.
  •  “The Making of Russian Revolutionary Terrorism,” in Enemies of Humanity: The Nineteenth-Century War on Terrorism, ed. Isaac Land.  Palgrave-MacMillan, 2008.

 

Aaron Sachs

Professor

Publications

BOOKS:

Stay Cool: Why Dark Comedy Matters in the Fight Against Climate Change (NYU Press, April 2023).

 

Up from the Depths: Herman Melville, Lewis Mumford, and Rediscovery in Dark Times (Princeton University Press, June 2022).  Finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in the Biography category. 

 

(John Demos, co-editor): Artful History: A Practical Anthology (Yale University Press, Feb. 2020, in the series New Directions in Narrative History). 

 

Arcadian America: The Death and Life of an Environmental Tradition (Yale U. Press, Jan. 2013, in the series New Directions in Narrative History).  Nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in General Nonfiction.  Paperback came out in March 2014.

 

The Humboldt Current: Nineteenth-Century Exploration and the Roots of American Environmentalism (Viking, August 2006).

 

PEER-REVIEWED ARTICLES:

“A.J. Downing and American Culture,” Hudson River Valley Review 33 (Spring 2017), 29-38. 

 

“Lewis Mumford’s Urbanism and the Problem of Environmental Modernity,” Environmental History 21 (October 2016), 638-59. 

 

“American Arcadia: Mount Auburn Cemetery and the Nineteenth-Century Landscape Tradition,” Environmental History 15 (April 2010), 206-35. 

 

“Letters to a Tenured Historian: Imagining History as Creative Nonfiction—or Maybe even Poetry,” Rethinking History 14 (March 2010), 5-38. 

 

“Civil Rights in the Field: Carey McWilliams as a Public-Interest Historian and Social Ecologist,” Pacific Historical Review 73 (May 2004), 215-48. 

 

“The Ultimate ‘Other’: Post-Colonialism and Alexander von Humboldt’s Ecological Relationship with Nature,” History and Theory, Theme Issue on the Environment, Vol. 42 (Dec. 2003), 111-35. 

 

SELECTED MAGAZINE AND OTHER ARTICLES:

“The Lessons Moby-Dick has for a Warming World of Rising Waters,” The Conversation (online), November 2021. 

 

“As Herman Melville Turns 200, His Works Have Never Been More Relevant,” The Conversation (online), August 2019. 

 

“A Different Kind of Wildness: Environmental Humor and Cultural Resilience,” Thoreau Society Bulletin, Winter 2019. 

 

“My Atlantis Complex,” podcast in the “What Makes Us Human” series, published by Cornell University, October 2017. 

 

“The Hidden Music of Words,” The American Scholar (online), October 2016. 

 

“Urban Refuge: How America’s Cemeteries Became Places of Repose for Both People and Animals,” Orion (November/December 2015). 

 

“Wallace Stegner’s Where the Bluebird Sings to the Lemonade Springs: A Calming Influence,” invited article for the series “Reading Lessons” on the American Scholar website (July 2015), available at https://theamericanscholar.org/wallace-stegners-where-the-bluebird-sings-to-the-lemonade-springs/#.VcyCqbc1dPR

 

“The Bookroom,” invited article for the series “Writing Lessons” on the American Scholar website (Feb. 2015), available at https://theamericanscholar.org/the-bookroom/#.VQi22mazBFU

 

“The Light Bulb and the Oil Spill: Two Modern Fables,” article for Cornell’s Climate Change Forum (September 2014), available at: http://climatechange.cornell.edu/the-light-bulb-and-the-oil-spill-two-modern-fables/

 

“Back to the Neotechnic Future: An Online Interview with the Ghost of Lewis Mumford,” The Appendix (July 2014). 

 

“Better than Yosemite?  Mount Auburn from the Perspective of Environmental History,” Sweet Auburn (Summer 2014). 

 

“Take a Walk through a Cemetery,” radio essay for “The Academic Minute,” WAMC, Public Radio, aired on May 14, 2013, available at: http://www.wamc.org/post/dr-aaron-sachs-cornell-university-graveyards-and-urban-parks

 

“America’s Other Best Idea: Revisiting Mount Auburn,” Boston Globe, Ideas section, Sunday, January 13, 2013. 

 

SELECTED BOOK CHAPTERS:

“Energy in U.S. History,” in Jon Butler, ed., The Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History, online at http://americanhistory.oxfordre.com/browse?t1=ORE_AMH:REFAH019 (2015).  

 

“Stumps in the Wilderness,” in Brian Allen Drake, ed., The Blue, the Gray, and the Green: Toward an Environmental History of the Civil War (Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 2015).  

 

“Looking Backward (Not Forward) to Environmental Justice,” in Michael Renner and Thomas Prugh, eds., State of the World 2014 (Washington, D.C.: Worldwatch Institute and Island Press,   May 2014). 

 

“Walking Meditation,” in Bob Beatty and Carol Kammen, Zen and the Art of Local History (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2014). 

 

“Cultures of Nature in the Nineteenth Century,” in Douglas Sackman, ed., Blackwell Companion to American Environmental History (Wiley-Blackwell, 2010). 

 

SELECTED BOOK REVIEWS:

Review of Andy Horowitz, Katrina: A History, 1915-2015 (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard U. Press, 2020), California History 99 (Nov. 2022), 121-23.

 

Review of Phoebe S.K. Young, Camping Grounds: Public Nature in American Life from the Civil War to the Occupy Movement (New York: Oxford U. Press, 2021), Journal of the Civil War Era 12 (Sept. 2022), 419-22. 

 

Review of James Schlett, A Not Too Greatly Changed Eden: The Story of the Philosophers’ Camp in the Adirondacks (Ithaca: Cornell U. Press, 2015), Hudson River Valley Review 34 (Fall 2017), 103-106. 

 

Review of Ann McCutchan, River Music: An Atchafalaya Story, with the CD Atchafalaya Soundscapes by Earl Robicheaux (College Station: Texas A+M University Press, 2011), Louisiana History, Vol. LV (Fall 2014), 480-83. 

 

“Our Common Traumas,” Review of Ann Cvetkovich, Depression: A Public Feeling (Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2012), and David G. Schuster, Neurasthenic Nation: America’s Search for Health, Happiness, and Comfort, 1869-1920 (New Brunswick, NJ, and London: Rutgers University Press, 2011), American Quarterly, Vol. 66 (March 2014), 235-43. 

 

Review of Donald Worster, A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir (New York: Oxford U. Press, 2008), American Historical Review, Vol. 114 (June 2009), 795-6. 

 

“Special Topics in Calamity History: A Review of Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth,” Reviews in American History, Vol. 35 (Sept. 2007), 453-63. 

 

Review of Anarchy, Geography, Modernity: The Radical Social Thought of Elisée Reclus, John P. Clark and Camille Martin, Eds. (Lanham: Lexington Books, 2004), Historical Geography, Vol. 33 (2005), 256-8. 

 

 

 

 

 

Tamara Loos

Professor

Publications

Bones around My Neck: The Life and Exile of a Prince Provocateur (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2016).

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