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By Author
The Cold War in Europe: Era of a Divided Continent
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Maier, Charles S., editor
Subject: Europe, World History
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Now that the Cold War is over, this book is especially timely: it analyzes and summarizes the events that ushered in an epoch of history nearly fifty years ago, and provides an analysis of the forces that were suppressed or …
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Pathetic Symphony: A Biographical Novel About Tchaikovsky
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Mann, Klaus
Subject: World Literature
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Like Mephisto, Pathetic Symphony is a novel about important artists and their milieu. Drawing his material from documented sources, and without ever distorting historical truth or sacrificing biographical accuracy for the sake of the narrative, Klaus Mann here presents a …
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The Turning Point: The Autobiography of Klaus Mann
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Mann, Klaus (introduction by Shelley Frisch)
Subject: Europe, World Literature
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Klaus Mann, writer of Mephisto and the oldest son of Nobel Prize winner Thomas Mann, describes the life of intellectuals in Europe before the Nazi seizure of power, then moves on to depict the restless existence of the often bohemian …
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Global Practice in World History: Advances Worldwide
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Manning, Patrick, editor
Subject: World History
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This volume presents the thinking and the activities of some of the most serious and successful practitioners of world history. The 15 contributors are experienced historians from ten countries dispersed across five continents. Their essays confirm the existence of an …
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World History: Global and Local Interactions
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Manning,Patrick
Subject:
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This volume provides the fullest report on new world history research to date. In clear and lively prose, thirteen specialists in world history present their findings in three interconnected sections: the politics of empires and nations, the patterns of global …
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Slavery in the Islamic Middle East
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Marmon, Shaun E., editor
Subject: Middle East, Religion
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Slavery, recognized and regulated by Islamic law, was an integral part of Muslim societies in the Middle East well into modern times. Recruited from the “Abode of War” by means of trade or warfare, slaves began their lives in the …
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Women in San Juan: 1820-1868
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Matos Rodríguez, Félix V.
Subject: Latin America, Caribbean
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When the threat of political revolution lurked behind the shadows of the Spanish colonial state in Puerto Rico, one of the earliest casualties of anti-independence persecution in San Juan was a woman — Maria de las Mercedes Barbudo, who was …
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The Siege of Magdala: The British Empire Against the Emperor of Ethiopia
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Matthies, Volker (foreword by Richard Pankhurst; translated by Steven Rendall)
Subject: Africa, Europe, World History
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In 1867-68, a petty diplomatic dispute between Ethiopian emperor Tewodros II and Queen Victoria led to one of the strangest and most dramatic military campaigns in history. The British Indian Army, with 60,000 men, 30,000 elephants, mules and horses, and …
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Sufism and Religious Brotherhoods in Senegal
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Mbacké, Khadim (edited by John Hunwick; translated by Eric Ross)
Subject: Africa, Religion
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This book is a study of the state of Islam in Senegal and of the religious factors that influence it. Islam in Senegal is characterized by the strong intrenchment of a certain number of Sufi brotherhoods. In effect, the majority …
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Constellations of the Caucasus
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Michael A. Reynolds, Editor
Subject: Middle East
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The Caucasus has fascinated humanity for millennia. A natural crossroads and a perpetual borderland, the region has often been described as the meeting place of East and West, Europe and Asia, Christendom and Islam. The Caucasus Mountains are home to …
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Memoirs of a Janissary
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Mihailović, Konstantin (edited by Svat Soucek; translated by Benjamin Stolz)
Subject: Europe, Middle East
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Konstantin Mihailović, born a Christian Serb in the early 15th century, was kidnapped by Ottoman Turks and brought to Anatolia, where he was trained as a Janissary — a member of the elite corps of the Ottoman army made up …
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Jews of Nigeria: An Afro-Judaic Odyssey
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Miles, William F. S.
Subject: Africa, Religion, Jewish Studies
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While Jews have long had a presence in Ethiopia and the Maghreb, Africa’s newest Jewish community of note is in Nigeria, where upwards of twenty thousand Igbos are commonly claimed to have adopted Judaism. Bolstered by customs recalling an Israelite …
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Kabul Under Siege: Fayz Muhammad’s Account of the 1929 Uprising
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Muhammad, Fayz (translated by R. D. McChesney)
Subject: Middle East
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In January 1929, the reigning monarch of Afghanistan, Amir Aman Allah Khan, was driven from his capital by a former soldier turned outlaw. The uprising was a response to the ruler’s attempts to modernize the tribal culture of Afghanistan. Kabul, …
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