hi everyone! i'm x-posting this post from H-West in case jim zwick or anyone studying MT and his anti-imperialist writings is interested in replying. Kathy Farretta M.A. Student Northern Arizona University ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Thu, 22 Jan 1998 13:02:31 -0600 From: Elliott West <[log in to unmask]> To: Multiple recipients of list H-WEST <[log in to unmask]> Subject: CFP (II): Radical History Review H-Westers, I mistakenly sent out the earlier version of this call for papers without "wrapping aroung" its text. Sorry. Elliott West ******************* CALL FOR PAPERS The Radical History Review, an independent academic journal of history, politics, and culture published by Cambridge University Press, is currently soliciting articles and essays for a thematic issue on "Islands in History: Perspectives on U.S. Imperialism and the Legacies of 1898." The centennial of the Spanish-Cuban-American War and the War in the Philippines offers an opportunity to reflect on the national and international significance of U.S. expansion at the turn of the century. Events in 1898 profoundly changed the histories of U.S., Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Philippines, Guam, and Spain and continue to shape lives, politics, culture and economics in these areas. This issue of the RHR seeks to explore the links between the history of imperialism and the many responses, debates and consequences including anticolonial political and cultural activism, immigration and citizenship, and the construction of national identities. We are especially interested in articles that challenge the dominant discourse on U.S. expansion and regional responses and engage with current political issues related to colonial and postcolonial practices. We welcome articles that address: * Specific and comparative analysis of U.S. expansion at the turn of the century in Asia, the Caribbean, Latin America, and the Pacific; * Early accounts of responses to the transfer of control and the creation of new hegemonic configurations within the newly subjected territories; * The role of discourses about democracy in constructing the discourses of legitimization for invasion and in shaping responses to U.S. presence; * The various colonizing projects instituted or emerging from the U.S. invasions in 1898, and their impact on theories of governmental notions of autonomy and self-determination, and the very definition of colonialism; * The impact of distinct processes of racialization in informing representations of the subject populations and shaping U.S. policy toward each country and region; * The effect of U.S. racial ideologies on local and national ethnic and racial hierarchies; * Local, regional, national ethnic and racial processes of identity formation that emerged in response to colonization by the U.S., and other anti-imperialist and anti-racist political and cultural responses to the invasion; * Impact on global economy, culture and politics beyond the nations directly involved; * The implication of imperial ideologies and projects in the construction of gendered hierarchies and sexual identities; * The role of organized religion and its practitioners in helping to solidify U.S. imperialism and in creating responses to it; * The demographic transformations that resulted from U.S. occupation, including but not limited to the distinct histories of the various colonial diasporas and their incorporation into ethnic and racial configuration within the U.S.; * Effects of linguistic policies on processes of assimilation and pacification; * The cultural representations and ideological workings of imperialism from a transnational or comparative perspective; * The continued impact of imperial legacies on debates about culture, politics and economy in the U.S., Cuba, Puerto Rico, Philippines, and Guam. Submission deadline: April 15, 1998 Please send submissions to Managing Editor, Radical History Review, Tamiment Library, 70 Washington Square South, New York, NY 10012 Inquiries to Pennee Bender or Yvonne Lassalle at [log in to unmask], or to the RHRoffice at 212-998-2632