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Paper 21 reading list - Faculty of History

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Modern Intellectual <strong>History</strong>, 4, 1, 2007, essays by Sartori, Bose, Kapila.<br />

(20c)<br />

Cambridge <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> Japan, 5, The Nineteenth Century<br />

EO Reischauer Japan: Tradition and Transformation, chapter 5<br />

C Blacker The Japanese Enlightenment<br />

R Braisted (ed.) Meiroku Zasshi: J <strong>of</strong> the Japanese Enlightenment<br />

AM Craig ‘Fukuzawa Yukichi: Philosophical Foundations <strong>of</strong> Meiji Nationalism’ in R Ward (ed.),<br />

Political Development in Modern Japan<br />

J Pierson Tokutomi Soho, 1863–1957: A Jist for Modern Japan, chapters 6–7<br />

KB Pyle The New Generation in Meiji Japan<br />

C Gluck Japan’s Modern Myths<br />

DH Shively (ed.) Tradition and Modernization in Japanese Culture, chapters 3–4<br />

J Pittau Political Thought in Early Meiji Japan, chapter 6, conclusion<br />

(20d) How far did early colonial governments undermine African cultures, institutions and political hierarchies?<br />

S Feierman 'Colonizers, scholars, and the creation <strong>of</strong> invisible histories', in V Bonnell and L Hunt, eds., Beyond the<br />

cultural turn (1999)<br />

Asante<br />

J Allman & I will not eat stone: a women's history <strong>of</strong> Asante (2000)<br />

V Tashjian<br />

T McCaskie Asante identities: history and modernity in an African village, Chs. 1 to 4<br />

I Wilks Asante in the nineteenth century (1989), ch. 12<br />

East Africa<br />

S Feierman Peasant intellectuals (1990), chs. 1 through 5<br />

J Glassman Feasts and riot: revelry, rebellion, and popular consciousness on the Swahili Coast, 1856-1888 (1995)<br />

J Iliffe A modern history <strong>of</strong> Tanganyika (1979), chs. 4 and 6<br />

T Sunseri Vilimani: labor migration and rural change in early colonial Tanzania (2002)<br />

Abolition and emancipation<br />

S Miers & The end <strong>of</strong> slavery in Africa (1988), chs. 1 and 17<br />

R Roberts<br />

J-G Deutsch Emancipation without abolition in German East Africa, 1884-1914 (2006)<br />

R Law From slave trade to 'legitimate' commerce (1995), intro & chs. 3, 4, 6, 8 & 10<br />

Southern Africa<br />

K Atkins The moon is dead! Give us our money! The cultural origins <strong>of</strong> an African work ethic, Natal, South<br />

Africa, 1843-1900 (1993)<br />

J Peries The dead will arise (1989)<br />

2 1 R U S S I A N E X P A N S I O N<br />

‘Imperial Russia’s expansion mirrored its domestic society; it was driven by military insecurities rather than by<br />

commercial ambitions’.<br />

G Hosking Russia: People and Empire 1552–1917 (1997)<br />

D Lieven ‘The Russian Empire and Soviet Union as Imperial Polities’, Journal <strong>of</strong> Contemporary<br />

<strong>History</strong> 30, 4 (1995); Empire: The Russian Empire and its Rivals (2000), Part 3<br />

D Geyer Russian Imperialism 1860–1914<br />

RA Pierce Russian Central Asia 1867–1917<br />

Robert D Crews For Prophet and Tsar. Islam and Empire in Russian Central Asia (2006)<br />

EE Bacon Central Asia under Russian Rule: cultural change<br />

R Pipes Russia under the Old Regime<br />

T von Laue Sergei Witte and the Industrialisation <strong>of</strong> Russia<br />

E Allworth The Modern Uzbeks (1990), chapters 1–3 and pp. 84–155; (ed.) Central Asia, 120 Years <strong>of</strong><br />

Russian Rule (1989)

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