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G41.2834.001 Colloquium in American Civilization: Why Moby-Dick Matters Professor Cyrus Patell Monday and Wednesday 6:10-8:10pm Call# 30320 This course will use Herman Melville s classic novel Moby-Dick as a lens through which to view both American literary history from its beginnings to the Civil War and current critical methodologies. In what ways might the novel be said to sum up the American literary tradition through the middle of the nineteenth-century? How well does the novel serve as a focal point for the critical methodologies most popular today? What are the best ways to use Moby-Dick in the classroom? The course is appropriate for both novice and experienced readers of the novel. We will explore the novel s relation to a variety of literary, intellectual, and historical contexts including Zoroastianism, Christianity, the American Enlightenment, Emersonianism, natural science, and American expansionism. Methodological approaches to be considered will include liberal humanism, neo-Marxism, New Historicism, feminism, gender studies, critical race theory, and theories of canon formation. We will talk about what is at stake in various constructions of the typical introductory survey of American literature, and we will think about the legacies of the novel throughout later American literatures and in today s popular and political cultures. Students are asked to read Melville s essay Hawthorne and His Mosses in advance of the first class. A copy of the essay will be posted to the course s Blackboard site.
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NYU >> ENGLISH >> 4046 (Fall, 2008)
Summer Course Session II, 2007 G41.2720: Modern British Novel Professor Rosenfeld 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. The Secret Agent, Joseph Conrad Howards End, E.M. Forster Tono-Bungay, H. G. Wells Mrs. Dalloway, Virginia Woolf Keep the Aspid...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 4046 (Fall, 2008)
G41.2953 Major Texts in Critical Theory: On Words and Things Professor Shireen R.K. Patell Mondays and Wednesdays, 4:00-6:00 PM We explore major concepts in critical theory-e.g., representation, subjectivity, agency-via in-depth examinations of dif...
NYU >> LATINOSTUD >> 3687 (Fall, 2008)
Summary Information for Report Equity Analysis of Faculty Salaries, Appointment, and Administrative Responsibilities at New York Universitys Faculty of Arts and Science February 23, 2006 In March 2005 FAS contracted with Bruce Levin, Professor and C...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
G41.1060 Introductory Old English Spring 2008 Instructor: Hal Momma Class hours: Monday, 3:30-5:30 p.m. Office: 13 University Place, Room 221; (212) 998-8813; hal.momma@nyu.edu Required Text: t.b.a. Description: This course is designed for students ...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
DISCIPLINING ANIMALS Department of English & Department of Performance Studies G41.1957/H42.2216 (Spring 08) Wed 1 - 3 p.m. Room 229, 19 University Place. Professor Una Chaudhuri Department of English and Department of Drama 19 University Place, Room...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
Spring 2008 Wed 1-3 Dustin Griffin G41.2541:Topics in Eighteenth-Century Literature Topic for Spring 2008: Court and Coffeehouse, 1660-1735 This course looks at what might be called two major sites of literary production and circulation in the Restor...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
NYU Syllabi 2008 Keats and the Dead End of Romanticism Jan. 23 Introduction I The present state of Studies in Romanticism: Dead End Theories Jan. 30 Introduction II The role of Keats: Irony vs. Aesthetic Ideology Cynthia Chase Febr. 6 Shadow The...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
G41.2720 Modern British Novel Professor Meisel Spring 2008 January 28 Introduction: James and James February 4 11 18 25 Hardy Conrad Holiday: Presidents Day James March 3 10 17 24 31 Pater Dubliners Holiday: Spring Break A Portrait of the A...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
New York University Topics in Transatlantic Literature: Romanticism and Science G41.2805 Spring 2008 T 3:30-5:30 Jennifer Baker jbaker@nyu.edu Office hours: Thursdays 11:30-1:30 and Tuesdays by appointment COURSE DESCRIPTION AND OBJECTIVES: Romantic...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
Topics in American Literature: Race Matters in Contemporary American Culture Course Description: In this course, we will consider contemporary (i.e. late twentieth century) American cultural politics by writers and artists of color in order to consid...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
G41.2838: Topics in American Literature Wednesdays, 1-3 pm Liberal Virtues: Ethics, Aesthetics, and the Democratic Subject Thomas Augst, Associate Professor What are the practices, values, and institutions through which we define and exercise freedo...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
NYU Syllabi 2008 Foucault and the Roman Renaissance: Shakespeare, Ben Jonson Jan. 24 Introduction I Shakespeares Roman Tragedies: The Elizabethans interest in the Roman Republic (The Republican Trilogy: Julius Caesar, Coriolanus, Anthony and Cleopa...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
1 Archive, Image, Text: The Myth and Realities of What Archives Hold Humanities Initiative for Team Teaching: Professors Ulrich Baer and Shelley Rice Spring 2008, Mondays 2:00-5:00, Room 815, 721 Broadway, 8th floor H82.1120 Photography, cross-liste...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH DEPARTMENT OF COMPARATIVE LITERATURE G41.2966 Critical Theory from Kant to the Present G29.2501 Spring 2008 Thursdays, 3:30-5:30; call # 31403 Professor Larry Lockridge The course considers major texts in cri...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
Spring 2008 New York University Professor Christopher Cannon English G41.3269 Spring, 2008 The Question of Period: \"Medieval\" or \"Early Modern\"? This course will focus on a wide variety of English writing from the fifteenth century in order to bring ...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
Professor Juliet Fleming Questions of Writing and the English Renaissance This seminar is designed to help us think both deeply and elliptically on the question what is writing? We will follow two paths: one engages with some powerful theoretical te...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
ENGL G41.3536.001.SP08: Literature and Institutions: Is Eighteenth-Century Studies Changing Literary Studies? Professors Paula McDowell and Clifford Siskin Spring 2008 Jan. 23: Introduction: Institutions Then and Now INSTITUTING CULTURE Jan. 30: The ...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
English G41.3629 The Affects of Modernity Spring 2008 MON 3:30 - 5:30 24 8th St., conference room Heather Love loveh@sas.upenn.edu 215 898 0128 office hour: MON 2:30-3:30 Description This course will serve as an introduction to the concept of moder...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
G41.3920 [and G13.2304]Topics in Criticism: Literary Analysis and Social Critique Prof. Phil Harper New York University Office hours: Tuesday, 2:30-4:30 by appointment, through Patricia Okoh-Esene (992.9595; pao4907@nyu.edu) Spring 2008 Office: 13-19...
NYU >> ENGLISH >> 5881 (Fall, 2008)
Victorian Serials and Serialization Mary Poovey Spring 2008 Every scholar knows that serial publication was extremely common in Victorian England, but few have grappled with its implications. This seminar attempts to rectify this omission by focusin...
NYU >> SILVERDIAL >> 1536 (Fall, 2008)
Is Psychology the Future of Economics? Douglas Gale September 15, 2005 I For most of my career, being an economic theorist has involved building models of economic phenonomena using two fundamental ideas, rational choice and equilibrium, as building ...
NYU >> SILVERDIAL >> 1536 (Fall, 2008)
February 14, 2002 CURRICULUM VITAE DOUGLAS GALE DATE OF BIRTH: March 27, 1950 CITIZENSHIP: Canadian CURRENT ADDRESS: Office Department of Economics 269 Mercer Street New York, NY 10003 (212) 998-8944 (Tel) (212) 995-3932 (Fax) <douglas.gale@nyu.edu> ...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY Department of History COLLOQUIUM HISTORICAL ANTHROPOLOGY OF THE MIDDLE AGES Spring 2007 G57.1115.001 - Tuesday, 9.30AM-12PM - KJCC, Rm. # 607 Professor Brigitte M. Bedos-Rezak Office: King Juan Carlos Center (KJCC), Rm. # 610 Off...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
G57.1156.001 Seminar Spring 2007 T 2-5 pm KJCC 602 Instructor: Kostis Smyrlis Office: KJCC 715 e-mail: ks113@nyu.edu BYZANTIUM AND THE WEST, 4TH-15TH CENTURIES This seminar will explore the relations between the two heirs of Rome, Byzantium and We...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
HISTORY G57.1163 Family, State, and Society in the Early Modern Atlantic Professor: Nicole Eustace Office Hours: TBA Office Phone #: (212) 998-8613 Spring 2006 Th 11:00 AM-1:45 PM Email: nicole.eustace@nyu.edu When colonial Americans rebelled agains...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
G46.1620, G42.1210 Prof. Herrick Chapman Spring Semester 2007 Wed. 9:45-12:15 Office hours Tues. 3-5 hc3@nyu.edu TWENTIETH-CENTURY FRANCE This course will explore central issues in the history of France from the late nineteenth century to the early ...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
AMERICAN JEWISH HISTORY Spring, 2007 Professor Diner Tuesday-Thursday 8:00-9:15 a.m. Office Hours: Tuesday-Thursday 10:00-12:00 AND BY APPOINTMENT Office: 210 King Juan Carlos Center (212) 998-8988 hasia.diner@nyu.edu This course takes as its subje...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
Cultural History of Russia Departments of History and Russian and Slavic Studies New York University G57.1330.001 and G91.1330.001 Spring 2007 Professor Jane Burbank Class Meetings: Thursday, 6:20-8:20 pm King Juan Carlos Center 527 How have people l...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
11/06 NEW YORK UNIVERSITY GRADUATE SCHOOL OF ARTS AND SCIENCES DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY Spring 2007 G57.1751 Professor R. Bernstein Wednesday 4:55 7:35 Public History Seminar II: Presentations of the Past in Postwar New York This seminar will focus...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
G57.1781/E55.2009 History of American Education Wednesdays, 2-4:45 Jonathan Zimmerman Office Location: Dept. of Humanities and Social Sciences, Kimball Hall, 3rd floor Office Hours: Tuesday, 2:30-4:30 and by appointment Office Phone: 998-5049 E-mail:...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
Course Description and Syllabus African American History Seminar G57.1782 Fall 2005 Instructor: Jeffrey T. Sammons Time: Thurs. 2-4:45 Place: KJCC 602 Office: Rm 616, 53 Wash Sq South Phone: 998-8635 E-Mail: js11@nyu.edu Hrs: Tues.12-1, Thurs. 1-2 a...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
1 Prof. Ruth Ben-Ghiat G59.1981.002, G57.1981. Spring 2007 Office and Office Hours: Casa Italiana, T and W 2-3 or by appt vmail: 212.998.8731; email: ruth.benghiat@nyu.edu ITALY IN WORLD WAR TWO Course description Italy from 1940 to 1945, with a foc...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY ARCHIVES, HISTORICAL SOCIETIES, AND HISTORICAL EDITING PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICUM (II) G57.2010 SPRING 2007 PETER J. WOSH (212) 998-8601 pw1@nyu.edu Office Hours: Mondays, 3-5, Wednesdays 12-2 PURPOSE Provide...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
1 New York University Draper Masters Program in Humanities and Social Thought G 65.2107 Introduction to Global Histories II: The Ocean Trans-regional Histories, Routes and Discourses Spring 2007 Mondays 6.20-8.20pm Dr Pedro Machado 14 University P...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
G57.2555 AFRICAN SLAVERY AND THE ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE PROFESSOR RICHARD HULL SPRING, 2007 4 CREDITS MEETS: TUESDAYS, 2-4:45 P.M. This course begins with an exploration of the ideology of slavery in antiquity and then moves on to an examination of th...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
1 Race and Reproduction Prof. Jennifer Morgan Race and reproduction share a long and intimate relationship in the histories of slavery, industrialization, colonialism, nationalism, and more recently, globalization. From the policies, priorities, and ...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
G57.2622 Gender & Sexuality in African American History Spring 2007 Mitchell Wednesday 11:00 a.m.-1:45 p.m. History KJCC 602 Office Hrs: TBA Professor Michele Department of KJCC 511 Office Phone.: TBA Throughout U.S. history, the intersection of ...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
Prof. Marion Kaplan Dept. of Hebrew and Judaic Studies 51 Washington Square South, rm. 110 phone: 212 998 3550 office hours: Tues. 11-12 and by appointment Graduate: Number G78.2677 Cross list G57.2877 Email: marionkaplan@yahoo.com spring 2007 Jews...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
G33/57.1747 CAPITALISM AND HISTORY Spring 2004 Thursdays, 2:00-4:45 715 Broadway, Rm. 312 Harry Harootunian Office: 715 Broadway, Rm. 305 Email: hh3@nyu.edu Hyun Ok Park Office: 715 Broadway, Rm. 310 Email: hyunok.park@nyu.edu The following texts wi...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
Political Cultures of Empires G57.2861.001 Department of History, New York University Professors Lauren Benton, Jane Burbank, and Fred Cooper Spring 2007 Wednesday, 11:00-1:45 Course description: This graduate course provides the opportunity for clo...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
The ways of social history in the 20th century. Forms of historiographical change. Jacques Revel Spring 2007 (March 19-April 30) 1. General Overviews H. Stuart Hughes, The historian and the social scientist , American Historical Review, 66, 1960, p...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
Course Number: G13-2326001 Instructor: Adam Green Office and Hours: 41 E. 11th Street, #716, Tuesday 4-6 Phone 212/998-8539 E-mail: ag113@nyu.edu Roots of Race Thinking This seminar considers race thinkings constitution of modern thought and society....
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
COURSE SYLLABUS East Central Europe in the Cold War, 19451991 Graduate course (Seminar) 2007 Spring semester New York University Csaba BKS, Ph.D. Director, Cold War History Research Center, Budapest www.coldwar.hu Visiting Fulbright Professor, Ne...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
THE POLITICS OF REPRODUCTION IN A GLOBAL CONTEXT Spring 2007 Maria Mesner I. THE COURSE Reproduction has been at the center of public debate in many modern societies since the last third of the 19th century. Conflicts have focused on declining birth ...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
G14.3390 Topical seminar: Memory, Heritage, and History Course Introduction and Books Prof. Abercrombie 25 Waverly Pl, 1st Flr Conf. Rm Fall 2004 Wednesdays, 5-7:35 pm Course Description and Aims: This course surveys the realms of memory, social cont...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
G46.2530 Cultural History of France : The Enqute Enquter : histoire, littrature et socit au XIXe sicle Cours du prof. Dominique KALIFA, mars-mai 2007 lundi & mercredi 4:05-6:35pm Institute of French Studies, 15 Washington Mews 1. Descriptif sommaire ...
NYU >> HIST >> 2907 (Fall, 2008)
INSTITUTE OF FRENCH STUDIES G46.1500 Topics in French cultural History : What is a Nation ? Professor Pascal Ory Monday & Wednesday 4:05-6:35pm Institute of French Studies, 15 Washington Mews This course (given in French) is trying to refresh the old...
NYU >> HIST >> 7684 (Fall, 2008)
French History, 1770-1871 (G46. 1610) Edward Berenson Institute of French Studies Department of History 15 Washington Mews edward.berenson@nyu.edu 998-8792 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:30-4 FRENCH HISTORY, 1770-1871 focuses on the revolutionary period ...
NYU >> HIST >> 7684 (Fall, 2008)
Russian Empire in Comparative Perspective Research Seminar G57.1303.001 Fall 2008 Jane Burbank KJCC 602, Mondays, 6:20 to 8:20 pm This graduate course provides an opportunity for closely advised research and writing on student-designed projects relat...
NYU >> HIST >> 7684 (Fall, 2008)
NYUMiddle East and Islamic Studies Dept. Wednesdays 5:00-7:45 pm in Kevorkian Library Fall 2008 Dr. Tamer el-Leithy (tamer.elleithy@nyu.edu) Office: 413 King Juan Carlos Center Office Hours: Tues. 2-4 pm G77.-1646 Everyday Life in Late-Medieval Ca...
NYU >> HIST >> 7684 (Fall, 2008)
New York University Graduate School of Arts and Science Department of History G57.1772.01 Fall 2008 Daniel J. Walkowitz Seminar: Social and Cultural History of the 20th Century US Monday: 2 - 4:45 P.M. Room TBA This is a graduate level research semi...
NYU >> HIST >> 7684 (Fall, 2008)
1 NEW YORK UNIVERSITY Department of History Fall 2006 Literature of the Field: Colonial Latin America and the Caribbean (G57.1801) Sinclair Thomson 53 Washington Square South, 512 Office hours: Tu 2-4 Phone: 992-9626 Class meets: Wed 9:30-12:15 53 ...
NYU >> HIST >> 7684 (Fall, 2008)
September 2, 2008 NEW YORK UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF ARTS AND SCIENCES DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY Thursday 4:55 7:35 KJCC Room 527 ORAL HISTORY (G57.2012) Professor R. Bernstein Fall 2008 When do historians of the 20th century need oral history to complet...
NYU >> HIST >> 7684 (Fall, 2008)
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY ROBERT SINK INSTITUTIONAL ARCHIVES G57.2016 FALL 2008 Modern society is dependent upon organizations-businesses, governments, and non-profit groups-to conduct its affairs, and these organizations create and maintain voluminous r...
NYU >> HIST >> 7684 (Fall, 2008)
DRAFT G57.2109 Medieval Women T 10-11 Classes: Monday 2:00-4:45 Classroom: KJCC 607 I read [history] a little a...
NYU >> HIST >> 7684 (Fall, 2008)
Fall 2008 CONSTRUCTING INTERNATIONAL ORDER: EUROPE 1648-1919 John Shovlin History Department 53 Washington Square South, Rm. 422 e-mail: js3804@nyu.edu tel: (212) 998-8639 Office Hours: Wednesdays 2.00 3:30 or by appointment This course will examin...
NYU >> HIST >> 7684 (Fall, 2008)
PRELIMINARY SYLLABUS The Ottoman Seventeenth Century G57.3505 G77.3505 Fall 2008 Wednesday 2-4:45 KJCC 602 Instructor: Leslie Peirce 604 King Juan Carlos Center lp50@nyu.edu Course description The seventeenth century is a traditionally neglected...
NYU >> HIST >> 7684 (Fall, 2008)
SEMINAR: RECONSTRUCTING LIVES Department of History Graduate School of Arts and Sciences New York University G57.3826 Fall 2008 Tuesday, 4:55-7:35pm 53 Washington Sq. South, room 607 Professor Martha Hodes martha.hodes@nyu.edu, x8-8612 office: 53 Was...
NYU >> HIST >> 7684 (Fall, 2008)
Professor Marion Kaplan G78.2688 Cross list: G57.2688; G65.2688; G41.2956 Fall 2008 Thursdays, 11 AM, KJCC room 109 Dept. of Hebrew and Judaic Studies and Dept. of History, FAS Email: marionkaplan@yahoo.com Memoirs and Diaries in Modern European Jewi...
NYU >> HIST >> 6173 (Fall, 2008)
New York University History Dept. Spring 2008 Professor Cathy Moran Hajo KJCC, 501 212-998-8666 cathy.hajo@nyu.edu G57.1023 History in the New Media Thursdays 4:55-7:35 Bobst 737 Web-based digital history projects have become an important resourc...
NYU >> HIST >> 6173 (Fall, 2008)
1 Popular Politics and Rebellion in Latin America and the Caribbean (G57.1030) Spring 2004 Prof. Sinclair Thomson 53 Washington Sq. South, 512 992-9626 / st19@nyu.edu Office hours: Tuesday 2-4 pm Course meets: 53 Wash. Sq. South, 607 Thursday 2:00-4...
NYU >> HIST >> 6173 (Fall, 2008)
Literature of the Field Seminar: Early Modern Europe History G57.1150 Spring 2008 Time: M 4:55-7:35 Location: KJC 602 Karl Appuhn Office: KJCC 509 Office Hours: M 2-3, W 1-2 Phone: 998-8621 Email: appuhn@nyu.edu The common readings for each week are...
NYU >> HIST >> 6173 (Fall, 2008)
G57.1156.001 Seminar Spring 2008 T 2-5 pm KJCC 602 Instructor: Kostis Smyrlis Office: KJCC 715 e-mail: ks113@nyu.edu BYZANTIUM AND THE WEST, 4TH-15TH CENTURIES This seminar will explore the relations between the two heirs of Rome, Byzantium and We...
NYU >> HIST >> 6173 (Fall, 2008)
DRAFT SYLLABUS: Black Womens Political Activism G57.1256 Spring 2008 Prof. Barbara Krauthamer History Dept. 53 Washington Sq. So., rm 613 Office hours: by appointment (212) 998-8602 bk39@nyu.edu Description This course is designed to introduce stud...
NYU >> HIST >> 6173 (Fall, 2008)
G78.3520 Graduate Seminar Spring, 2008 American Jews and the Issue of Race Professor Diner Mondays, 8:00-10:45 Office Hours: Mondays, 1:00-3:00 and by appointment 2nd Floor King Juan Carlos Center 8-8988 (office phone) hasia.diner@nyu.edu This grad...
NYU >> HIST >> 6173 (Fall, 2008)
Cultural History of Russia Departments of History and Russian and Slavic Studies New York University G57.1330.001 and G91.1330.001 Spring 2008 Professor Jane Burbank Class Meetings: Mondays, 6:20-8:20 pm, King Juan Carlos Center 527 DRAFT SYLLABUS Ho...
NYU >> HIST >> 6173 (Fall, 2008)
Introduction to Preservation and Reformatting NYU Archives Program Course # G57.2013 January 23, 2008 April 30, 2008 Instructor: Paula De Stefano NYU Libraries Office : 212/998-2563 Email: destefano@nyu.edu Office hours: By appointment Course Descri...
NYU >> HIST >> 6173 (Fall, 2008)
Jacques Revel Debates in Cultural History Spring 2008 General readings Peter Burke, What is Cultural History?, Polity Press, Cambridge UK, 2004. Lynn Hunt, ed., The New Cultural History, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1989. Dominick LaCapr...
NYU >> HIST >> 6173 (Fall, 2008)
Graduate Seminar History Department New York University David Ludden G57.2122.001 Research in Globalization SEM Tuesdays, 2:00-4:45pm, 194 Mercer Street, Rm 201 This seminar is designed to facilitate graduate student research into globalization conce...
NYU >> HIST >> 6173 (Fall, 2008)
1 The Cold War and After G57.2779 Spring 2008 Molly Nolan and Marilyn Young As Caesar\'s Rome had ruled the Mediterranean world, post WW2, \"the \'Atlantic Community\' may be similarly united under the sway of Great Britain and the United States, which ...
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