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Class, Culture and Empire: E. P. Thompson and the Making of Social History

Identifieur interne : 000A89 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 000A88; suivant : 000A90

Class, Culture and Empire: E. P. Thompson and the Making of Social History

Auteurs : Robert Gregg [Jersey]

Source :

RBID : ISTEX:9C2EADE91F36C435BC4C41F1D30D29B0D48DC08F

Descripteurs français

English descriptors

Abstract

In this article, the author asks: How has the legacy of E.P. Thompson helped shape the emergence of Social History in the United States? How have ideas about race, gender and empire, largely absent from Thompson’s work, been incorporated in writing on labor, immigration, and American exceptionalism? Is it now possible to synthesize race, class, and gender? Or, have histories based on class analysis so elided race and gender that such grafting has been foreclosed? With a bit of gossip here, a gesture to historiography there, and as little charm as possible, the author wonders: Is there any justice for “the Subaltern” in this profession? Or, is it just another “Organization Man” gone West?

Url:
DOI: 10.1111/1467-6443.00072


Affiliations:


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Le document en format XML

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<div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">In this article, the author asks: How has the legacy of E.P. Thompson helped shape the emergence of Social History in the United States? How have ideas about race, gender and empire, largely absent from Thompson’s work, been incorporated in writing on labor, immigration, and American exceptionalism? Is it now possible to synthesize race, class, and gender? Or, have histories based on class analysis so elided race and gender that such grafting has been foreclosed? With a bit of gossip here, a gesture to historiography there, and as little charm as possible, the author wonders: Is there any justice for “the Subaltern” in this profession? Or, is it just another “Organization Man” gone West?</div>
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