Animal City: The Domestication of America.” By Jessica Wang Erased: The Untold Story of the Panama Canal.” By Catherine C. A Twentieth-Century Crusade: The Vatican's Battle to Remake Christian Europe.” By Michael E. “From the Editor’s Desk: Persilschein,” by Alex Lichtenstein “‘The Vanished Power of the Usual Reign’: Jackson Lears, No Place of Grace, and the Struggle for Hegemony in History,” by Andrew Seal “On Silence and History,” by Lilia Topouzova “Darkness at Noon: On History, Narrative, and Domestic Violence,” by Joy Neumeyer “An Illumination of a Floating World,” by William Gallois “Community-Engaged History: A Reflection on the 100th Anniversary of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre,” by Karlos K. “Walking While Indian, Walking While Black: Policing in a Colonial City,” by Sylvia Sellers-García “‘A Genius without Direction’: The Abortive Exile of Dugmore Boetie and the Fate of Southern African Refugees in a Decolonizing Africa,” by Benjamin N. “The Empire Strikes Back from Within: Colonial Liberation and the Korean Minority Question at the Birth of Postwar Japan, 1945-47,” by Deokhyo Choi “Grassroots Glasnost: Experimental Art, Participation, and Civic Life in 1980s East Berlin,” by Briana J. “Europe’s Forgotten Unfinished Revolution: Peasant Power, Social Mobilization, and Communism in the Southern Italian Countryside, 1943-45,” by Rosario Forlenza “The Unexceptional State: Rethinking the State in the Nineteenth Century (France, United States),” by Nicolas Barreyre and Claire Lemercier “‘Toilet Paper Panic’: Uncertainty and Insecurity in Early 1970s Japan,” by Eiko Maruko Siniawer As long as you see those words you're logged in and can access all versions of the AHR articles. On the Oxford site at, you'll see AHA Member Access at the top right. Next, click Continue to American Historical Review. Click the link under that for American Historical Review at Oxford University Press. On the MY AHA page, scroll down in the white part of the page until you see the section AHA Publications on the left side. Login with your email address and password. In this case, we use the platform to disseminate the June articles and other featured content as advance articles.ĪHA Members: To access the full text of articles, start at /myaha. Under normal circumstances, this would serve as a space for us to promote supplementary AHR material-everything from advance articles to additional illustrations, as well as thematic clusters of past and forthcoming content. We have made the content of the June issue available on The AHR Unbound. Due to production delays caused by the COVID-19 crisis, the American Historical Review’s June 2021 issue has been delayed both in-print and online.
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