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Now showing items 1-10 of 70
A Reporter and Citizen: Harrison Salisbury’s Trip to North Vietnam
(Vanderbilt University. Dept. of History, 2012-04)
Bombing Sterling Hall: Protest, Rhetoric, and Violence in 1960s Madison, Wisconsin
(Vanderbilt University. Dept. of History, 2013-04-12)
In Defense of Reputation: The Duel of Honor and Royal Authority in Jacobean England
(Vanderbilt University, 2014-04-25)
Exploring Men "On the Down Low": Race, Sexuality, and HIV in the Twenty-First Century
(Vanderbilt University. Dept. of History, 2014-04-28)
“Coming ‘Home’: Repatriation in the Bouches-du-Rhône, 1962-1970"
(Vanderbilt University, 2015-04-23)
Sectarian Violence and the People’s Democracy, 1968-72
(Vanderbilt University, 2011-04)
Between Professionalism and Polemics: Historian Frank L. Owsley Writes his South
(Vanderbilt University. Dept. of History, 2012-04)
“The Rule of Unreason: the Reserve Clause before the Law, 1879-1953”
(Vanderbilt University. Dept. of History, 2015-04-24)
The Muddled Middle Ground: Capturing the Grey Spaces between Collaboration and Resistance on the German Occupied Channel Islands, 1940-1945
(Vanderbilt University, 2019-04-29)
The Channel Islands have been dogged with accusations of collaboration while other historians have rushed to their defense and sought to contextualize the Islanders actions in ways that emphasized their resistance. However, ...
Who Saved the Passenger Train? The Role of Public Advocacy in Amtrak's Creation: 1958 to 1971
(2019-04-29)
It was April 28th 1965, and the ballroom of the Biltmore Hotel in New York City was filled to capacity. Outside, successful stockbrokers and other well-dressed figures walked down the sidewalk in an orderly fashion holding ...