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Carbery, Patricia L.; MacQuinn, Sandra D. – 1996
This paper describes a project designed to create a student literary magazine that would explore and compare the childhoods and the cultural rites of passage of Romanian, Bulgarian, and U.S. students. The time line for the grant project and the methodology used are also included. A materials list for English classes and history classes, assessment…
Descriptors: Course Content, Cultural Awareness, Curriculum, Developing Nations
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Kedar, Benjamin Z. – Journal of World History, 1996
Locates the origin and development of corporate expulsion: the permanent, government-sponsored banishment of a category of subjects beyond the physical boundaries of a political entity--in medieval Western Europe. This method of consolidating political power, creating convenient scapegoats, and eliminating perceived internal threats soon spread to…
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Economic Impact, Ethnic Discrimination, Ethnic Groups
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Benton, Lauren – Journal of World History, 1996
Summarizes critical attacks on Immanuel Wallerstein's World Systems approach to history and offers new critical evaluations. Wallerstein argued that an emerging capitalist world economy dominated politics and history from the 16th century to the present. Defines two new approaches, institutional analysis and post colonial cultural theory, that…
Descriptors: Capitalism, Global Approach, Higher Education, Historiography
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Baud, Michiel; Van Schendel, Willem – Journal of World History, 1997
Outlines a comparative approach to the social dynamics (struggles, adaptations, and cross-border alliances) in regions' bisected borders. Argues that borderland studies provide an indispensable corrective to historical narratives that accept the territoriality to which all modern states lay claim. Discusses borderland culture in relation to space,…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Exchange, Cultural Influences, Cultural Interrelationships
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Eaton, Richard M. – Journal of World History, 1997
Explores the reasons for the extraordinary conversion to Christianity among the Naga peoples of northeastern India. Almost the entire population has converted within the last 100 years. Tests the usefulness of models of religious change generated from fieldwork on conversion in Africa, specifically Robin Horton's "intellectualist"…
Descriptors: Christianity, Colonialism, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Influences
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Walker, J. Samuel – Journal of American History, 1995
Maintains that the impact of the Cold War rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union on U.S. politics and society during the post-World War II era can hardly be overstated. Reviews 18 college history survey textbooks on their interpretation of the origins of the Cold War. (CFR)
Descriptors: Communism, Diplomatic History, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Headrick, Daniel R. – Journal of World History, 1996
Examines the role played by botany and chemistry in the development, exploitation, and later deterioration of tropical economies. Although near equals in 19th-century international trade, the development of synthetics by European scientists in the early 20th century crippled the tropical economies. Research, innovation, and investment protected…
Descriptors: Botany, Chemical Industry, Chemistry, Colonialism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Richards, John F. – Journal of World History, 1997
Characterizes the early modern period in world history (roughly 1500-1800) as one marked by worldwide processes of change unprecedented in scope and intensity. Argues that the society of the Indian subcontinent shared directly in the massive processes of change that influenced societies throughout the world. (MJP)
Descriptors: Area Studies, Asian History, Asian Studies, Colonialism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Korhonen, Pekka – Journal of World History, 1996
Tracks the intermittent appearances and variations of the historical concept of a "Pacific Age" from the 1890s to the present. Discusses the social, economic, and historical conditions that resulted in the term's heralding of either economic optimism or racist peril. Suggests these interpretations come in cycles. (MJP)
Descriptors: Asian History, Colonialism, Cultural Images, Cultural Interrelationships
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rigberg, Benjamin – Theory and Research in Social Education, 1991
Reviews nine U.S. history textbooks, evaluating their analyses of the Spanish-American War, World Wars I and II, and the Cold War. Documents their failure to link U.S. foreign policy to economic interests. Criticizes the texts' lack of an historical framework. Concludes students are taught neither historical truth nor critical analysis skills. (CH)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Economic Factors, Foreign Policy