Class, Culture and Empire: E. P. Thompson and the Making of Social History
Identifieur interne : 000A89 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 000A88; suivant : 000A90Class, Culture and Empire: E. P. Thompson and the Making of Social History
Auteurs : Robert Gregg [Jersey]Source :
- Journal of Historical Sociology [ 0952-1909 ] ; 1998-12.
Descripteurs français
- Wicri :
English descriptors
- KwdEn :
- African americans, Alien homage, American exceptionalism, American historians, American history, American scholars, American side, Antoinette burton, Apropos exceptionalism, Artisan, Black family, Black folk, Black people, Black reconstruction, Blackwell, Blackwell publishers, Bodnar, Bourgeois, Bourgeois historiography, Bourgeois world, British caribbean colonies, British empire, British history, Bruce laurie, Cambridge university press, Carolina press, Cary nelson, Certain kinds, Chapel hill, Chicago press, Christine stansell, Class analysis, Class formation, Colonial desire, Columbia university press, Community formation, Critique, Cultural politics, David roediger, Deconstructing historiography, Dinner companion, Economic exploitation, Edward thompson, Elizabeth street, Elizabethan diary, Eric williams, Ethnic groups, Ethnic identities, Eugene genovese, Exceptionalism, Family economy, Family solidarity, Family wage, Feminist press, Free labor, Gabaccia, Gabriel kolko, Gender, Gender conflict, Gender roles, Giant steps, Great deal, Great migration, Gregg, Group portrait, Gutman, Gyan prakash, Herbert gutman, Historical perspective, Historical practice, Historical sociology, Historiography, History workshop journal, Illinois press, Immediate demand, Immigrant, Immigrant experience, Immigrant families, Immigrant family, Immigrant historians, Immigrant women, Immigration historians, Immigration histories, Imperial privilege, Imperialism, Indian history, Indian princes, Indiana university press, Industrializing america, Initial point, Insufficient attention, Intellectual life, Irish immigrants, John bodnar, Labor history, Labor market, Lillian smith, Lower classes, Madhavi kale, Many historians, Many scholars, Many ways, Mayhew, Migration, Moral economy, Morning chronicle, Nathan glazer, Nicholas lemann, Oscar handlin, Other members, Other side, Other words, Other worlds, Oxford university press, Patriarchal, Patriarchal system, Paul gilroy, Pennsylvania press, Personal correspondence, Philadelphia negro, Poor whites, Postcolonial criticism, Princeton university press, Publisher, Rabindranath tagore, Racial oppression, Racializing class, Radical history review, Ranajit guha, Relational aspects, Rick halpern, Robert gregg, Robin kelley, Roediger, Sean wilentz, Seventh grade, Sinclair, Sister carrie, Social analysis, Social change, Social historians, Social history, Social power, Social problems, Social text, Spivak, Steven watts, Studies historians, Studies scholars, Subaltern, Subaltern studies, Subaltern studies historians, Such approaches, Such conflicts, Such things, Temple university press, Terence ranger, Trade unionists, Twentieth century, Unequal relationships, Unknown mayhew, Urban america, Vann woodward, Whiteness, Wilentz, Yale university press, York city.
- Teeft :
- African americans, Alien homage, American exceptionalism, American historians, American history, American scholars, American side, Antoinette burton, Apropos exceptionalism, Artisan, Black family, Black folk, Black people, Black reconstruction, Blackwell, Blackwell publishers, Bodnar, Bourgeois, Bourgeois historiography, Bourgeois world, British caribbean colonies, British empire, British history, Bruce laurie, Cambridge university press, Carolina press, Cary nelson, Certain kinds, Chapel hill, Chicago press, Christine stansell, Class analysis, Class formation, Colonial desire, Columbia university press, Community formation, Critique, Cultural politics, David roediger, Deconstructing historiography, Dinner companion, Economic exploitation, Edward thompson, Elizabeth street, Elizabethan diary, Eric williams, Ethnic groups, Ethnic identities, Eugene genovese, Exceptionalism, Family economy, Family solidarity, Family wage, Feminist press, Free labor, Gabaccia, Gabriel kolko, Gender, Gender conflict, Gender roles, Giant steps, Great deal, Great migration, Gregg, Group portrait, Gutman, Gyan prakash, Herbert gutman, Historical perspective, Historical practice, Historical sociology, Historiography, History workshop journal, Illinois press, Immediate demand, Immigrant, Immigrant experience, Immigrant families, Immigrant family, Immigrant historians, Immigrant women, Immigration historians, Immigration histories, Imperial privilege, Imperialism, Indian history, Indian princes, Indiana university press, Industrializing america, Initial point, Insufficient attention, Intellectual life, Irish immigrants, John bodnar, Labor history, Labor market, Lillian smith, Lower classes, Madhavi kale, Many historians, Many scholars, Many ways, Mayhew, Migration, Moral economy, Morning chronicle, Nathan glazer, Nicholas lemann, Oscar handlin, Other members, Other side, Other words, Other worlds, Oxford university press, Patriarchal, Patriarchal system, Paul gilroy, Pennsylvania press, Personal correspondence, Philadelphia negro, Poor whites, Postcolonial criticism, Princeton university press, Publisher, Rabindranath tagore, Racial oppression, Racializing class, Radical history review, Ranajit guha, Relational aspects, Rick halpern, Robert gregg, Robin kelley, Roediger, Sean wilentz, Seventh grade, Sinclair, Sister carrie, Social analysis, Social change, Social historians, Social history, Social power, Social problems, Social text, Spivak, Steven watts, Studies historians, Studies scholars, Subaltern, Subaltern studies, Subaltern studies historians, Such approaches, Such conflicts, Such things, Temple university press, Terence ranger, Trade unionists, Twentieth century, Unequal relationships, Unknown mayhew, Urban america, Vann woodward, Whiteness, Wilentz, Yale university press, York city.
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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<term>American scholars</term>
<term>American side</term>
<term>Antoinette burton</term>
<term>Apropos exceptionalism</term>
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<term>Black people</term>
<term>Black reconstruction</term>
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<term>Blackwell publishers</term>
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<term>Bourgeois</term>
<term>Bourgeois historiography</term>
<term>Bourgeois world</term>
<term>British caribbean colonies</term>
<term>British empire</term>
<term>British history</term>
<term>Bruce laurie</term>
<term>Cambridge university press</term>
<term>Carolina press</term>
<term>Cary nelson</term>
<term>Certain kinds</term>
<term>Chapel hill</term>
<term>Chicago press</term>
<term>Christine stansell</term>
<term>Class analysis</term>
<term>Class formation</term>
<term>Colonial desire</term>
<term>Columbia university press</term>
<term>Community formation</term>
<term>Critique</term>
<term>Cultural politics</term>
<term>David roediger</term>
<term>Deconstructing historiography</term>
<term>Dinner companion</term>
<term>Economic exploitation</term>
<term>Edward thompson</term>
<term>Elizabeth street</term>
<term>Elizabethan diary</term>
<term>Eric williams</term>
<term>Ethnic groups</term>
<term>Ethnic identities</term>
<term>Eugene genovese</term>
<term>Exceptionalism</term>
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<term>Family solidarity</term>
<term>Family wage</term>
<term>Feminist press</term>
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<term>Gabaccia</term>
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<term>Gender conflict</term>
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<term>Group portrait</term>
<term>Gutman</term>
<term>Gyan prakash</term>
<term>Herbert gutman</term>
<term>Historical perspective</term>
<term>Historical practice</term>
<term>Historical sociology</term>
<term>Historiography</term>
<term>History workshop journal</term>
<term>Illinois press</term>
<term>Immediate demand</term>
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<term>Immigrant experience</term>
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<term>Immigration histories</term>
<term>Imperial privilege</term>
<term>Imperialism</term>
<term>Indian history</term>
<term>Indian princes</term>
<term>Indiana university press</term>
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<term>Insufficient attention</term>
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<term>Irish immigrants</term>
<term>John bodnar</term>
<term>Labor history</term>
<term>Labor market</term>
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<term>Many scholars</term>
<term>Many ways</term>
<term>Mayhew</term>
<term>Migration</term>
<term>Moral economy</term>
<term>Morning chronicle</term>
<term>Nathan glazer</term>
<term>Nicholas lemann</term>
<term>Oscar handlin</term>
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<term>Other words</term>
<term>Other worlds</term>
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<term>Patriarchal</term>
<term>Patriarchal system</term>
<term>Paul gilroy</term>
<term>Pennsylvania press</term>
<term>Personal correspondence</term>
<term>Philadelphia negro</term>
<term>Poor whites</term>
<term>Postcolonial criticism</term>
<term>Princeton university press</term>
<term>Publisher</term>
<term>Rabindranath tagore</term>
<term>Racial oppression</term>
<term>Racializing class</term>
<term>Radical history review</term>
<term>Ranajit guha</term>
<term>Relational aspects</term>
<term>Rick halpern</term>
<term>Robert gregg</term>
<term>Robin kelley</term>
<term>Roediger</term>
<term>Sean wilentz</term>
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<term>Sinclair</term>
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<term>Social history</term>
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<term>Social text</term>
<term>Spivak</term>
<term>Steven watts</term>
<term>Studies historians</term>
<term>Studies scholars</term>
<term>Subaltern</term>
<term>Subaltern studies</term>
<term>Subaltern studies historians</term>
<term>Such approaches</term>
<term>Such conflicts</term>
<term>Such things</term>
<term>Temple university press</term>
<term>Terence ranger</term>
<term>Trade unionists</term>
<term>Twentieth century</term>
<term>Unequal relationships</term>
<term>Unknown mayhew</term>
<term>Urban america</term>
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<front><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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