
American Historical Review
@amhistreview
The American Historical Review, the flagship journal of @AHAhistorians, brings together scholarship from every field of historical study.
ID: 899806870654898176
http://historians.org/ahr 22-08-2017 01:34:10
1,1K Tweet
7,7K Followers
650 Following

Thrilled to have Empire of Refugees (Stanford Press, 2024) reviewed in American Historical Review. Many thanks to Bedross Der Matossian for critical engagement with the book’s arguments and highlighting my focus on refugee agency.


In “Resilience in Environmental History Discourse” Lee Mordechai & John Haldon rethink the use of resilience in histories of environmental and climatic change, offering a review of resilience as a paradigm of institutionalized knowledge across disciplines.academic.oup.com/ahr/article-ab…




Excited to share my combined article and video essay in the Dec. 2024 issue of the American Historical Review on the "Histories of Resilience"! academic.oup.com/ahr/article/12… 1/4

In “History on the Lost Coast,” Kathleen C. Whiteley shows how historians can use a resilience framework to highlight Indigenous agency, spotlighting the Wiyot Nation’s reclamation of 200+ acres on Tuluwat Island, the site of an 1860 catastrophic massacre.academic.oup.com/ahr/article/12…

In American Historical Review, Anne Berg’s archival investigation of prison camps in Nazi Germany reveals an extensive economy built on recycling previously used materials. academic.oup.com/ahr/article-ab…



In this episode of our “Historians On” series on #HistoryInFocus, David speaks with Katharina Matro, Jeffrey McClurken, Dr. Kalani Craig @kalanicraig.bsky.social, Jo Guldi, Johann Neem, Kevin Gannon, and Lauren Tilton on the topic of AI and its implications for history teaching and research.historians.org/podcast/histor…

In “Kenyan Nubians and the Myth of Nubian Resilience," Tammy Wilks traces claims for citizenship by a stateless Kenyan community in the late 19th century and unpacks how elders used their hybrid identities to claim both multistate origins and statelessness.academic.oup.com/ahr/article/12…


In “Love, Joy, Hope,” Amelia Golcheski & Jess B. Ramey use the career of activist Kipp Dawson to examine how resilience can operate in social movements, with a focus on movement networks, interconnections, and affects. academic.oup.com/ahr/article/12…


In his video essay “Visualizing Resilience from the Periphery” and textual essay “Setting History in Motion,” Daniel McDonald explores the central role of the visual in social resistance in late 20th century Brazil during the civil-military dictatorship. academic.oup.com/ahr/article/12…


Attending #AHA25 this weekend? Be sure to read the latest issue of American Historical Review before you go: oxford.ly/3ZAWwsI American Historical Association


A big congratulations to Durham University's historian of medicine and society Rachel Anderson on the publication of 'The Lancaster Plague Petitions' in the recent most recent issue of American Historical Review! IMEMS Durham British Society for the History of Science #hstm academic.oup.com/ahr/article-ab…
