Russia
Tags: NATIONALISM & historiography; HISTORY -- Methodology; HISTORY -- Philosophy; PLURALISM; INTERNATIONAL relations
Related Articles
- On Seeking Global History's Inner Child. Grew, Raymond // Journal of Social History;Summer2005, Vol. 38 Issue 4, p849
Starting with distinctions between global history and globalization and between the history of childhood and the history of children, this essay suggests some approaches to the global history of childhood. It calls for exploring the common circumstances of childhood; the dissemination of...
- On the Limits of Thomas Zeiler's Historiographical Triumphalism. Del Pero, Mario // Journal of American History;Mar2009, Vol. 95 Issue 4, p1079
The article responds to a preceding essay by Thomas W. Zeiler on the state of U.S. diplomatic history as a field, and its re-entry into the mainstream of historical study through an increased focus on international history, or the study of the United States in the global context. The author...
- IX: Big ends or little ends? Marquand, David // History Today;Sep91, Vol. 41 Issue 9, p38
Cautions against too pat a winners and losers interpretation of recent history, while asserting that a role remains for theory as opposed to narrow empiricism. Example of the Marxist tradition; Impact of the 1989 revolutions; Outlook.
- Introduction. Other Criteria: History Writing as a Public Calling. Burton, Antoinette // Historical Reflections;Summer2012, Vol. 38 Issue 2, p1
This introductory article raises questions about history's work in the contemporary public sphere and sets the stage for the issues addressed in the special issue as a whole. Drawing on my experience at a public university in fiscal crisis, I argue that historians can and should contribute to...
- Politics and Foreign Relations. Logevall, Fredrik // Journal of American History;Mar2009, Vol. 95 Issue 4, p1074
The article responds to the preceding essay by Thomas W. Zeiler on the state of U.S. diplomatic history as a field, and its re-entry into the mainstream of historical study through an increased focus on international history, or the study of the United States in the global context. The author...
- The Constitution of Nations. Kochin, Michael S. // Good Society Journal;2005, Vol. 14 Issue 3, p68
The article presents the author's views on study of nationalism. The author says that to understand the nature of nationalism they need to understand why the question of the social boundaries of the nation has always already been answered when the nation is constituted as a collective agent. He...
- TIME AND MEMORY: A CULTURAL PERSPECTIVE. Halas, Elzbieta // TRAMES: A Journal of the Humanities & Social Sciences;2010, Vol. 14 Issue 4, p307
This article presents an outline of the problems of time, history and memory seen from a cultural perspective. Aiming at a revalorization of the cultural dimension in sociocultural phenomena, it particularly highlights the concept of cultural memory. In the cultural perspective, memory is a...
- Stability in the Caucasus. Ware, Robert Bruce; Kisriev, Enver; Patzelt, Werner J.; Roericht, Ute // Problems of Post-Communism;Mar/Apr2003, Vol. 50 Issue 2, p12
Reports on ethnic diversity in Dagestan. Main factor dividing ethnic groups in the region; Contention of some observers that Dagestan is at risk of fragmentation; Population; Suggestion that centrifugal ethnic and religious cleavages are effectively counterbalanced by centripetal identification...
- OTTOMAN HISTORY: WHOSE HISTORY IS IT? Finkel, Caroline // International Journal of Turkish Studies;2008, Vol. 14 Issue 1/2, p1
The article explores the intersections of Ottoman history with the histories of other empires and regions including the U.S., the Balkan nations, and modern Turkey. The nationalist tendencies of Bulgarian and Greek historiographies concerning occupation by the Ottoman Empire are discussed and...


