2024-03-29T12:20:28Zhttps://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/oai/requestoai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/296472019-11-01T00:58:20Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
author
Bush, Robert D.
2019-10-28T22:15:24Z
2019-10-28T22:15:24Z
1969-05-31
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/29647
Individualism is a topic which·has received but scant treatment by modern scholars, although it is a subject which has prompted a great deal of commentary within the socialist movement itself. There has not been thus far any scholarly attempt to treat this topic as it relates to the Utopian Socialists or the early nineteenth century. The role of' the individual in the writings of' this school of socialist thought is a relatively untouched area of investigation. Although researchers have examined many sources for the term “ individualism,” none of them have used the numerous dictionaries of the period, 1800•1848, to explain their findings further. And, no study has sought to place both of these problems, the origins and history of individualism and the role of the individual, together into one project. As will be developed in the text, these two problems were interrelated for the six thinkers treated below.·
As·the title indicates, this study has attempted to gather and digest the major thoughts of early nineteenth century British and French socialists on but one main subject:· individualism and the role of' the individual. Specifically this effort involves consideration of several questions. How did each thinker contribute toward the meaning of' the term “individualism” as it finally appeared about mid-century?· In what ways did they view the role of the individual not only under the existing social order, but in their respective alternatives to that order? As writers they faced the dilemma of indicating the rights due to both the collective social body and of each individual in it. How does one secure both the blessings of mankind, and yet realize the wealth drawn from individual spontaneity? What is, therefore, the true social contract? Furthermore, to what extent were these various intellectuals influenced in their decisions by their own national experiences? Clio was subjected to a great many pressures in order to “prove” a number of vastly different social programs. Never, in fact, was there such a pressing concern for the rights of the most numerous and the poorer elements in society. All of the thinkers examined here--Owen, Fourier, Saint-Simon, Proudhon, Cabet and Blanc--were agreed that the existing system of property relations generated and perpetuated a ·morally evil and inefficient social system. Western industrialization had brought, or was .bringing, a social order based upon dehumanization and automatism. Thus, the key question was, to quote Louis Blanc again "how to change it?" Their persistent love of humanity led such intellectuals to seek out the real, not necessarily the true, laws· of nature and history. Such laws, they assumed, existed a priori in the universe.
It is the thesis of this study that, although the term individualism was used by a number of critics, the application of this term to specific social conditions which ought to be changed came from the pens of the six Utopian Socialists treated here. It was they who provided the main connotations given to individualism by various dictionaries. For this reason, only passing attention has been given to the various schools founded on their behalf. Within the chronological and geographical framework of this study, the writings of the six thinkers examined here constitute the most important sources in the early socialist movement.
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
Individualism and the role of the individual in British and French socialism : the early years, 1800-1848
Dissertation
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/29647/1/bush_1969_3781246.pdf
File
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URL
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/213832017-12-08T21:38:01Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
McGaffey, Laura Belle
2016-08-23T17:11:01Z
2016-08-23T17:11:01Z
1926
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/21383
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The comment of travelers in colonial Spanish America, 1708-1824
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21383/1/mcgaffey_1926_3424719.pdf
File
MD5
a04e66bf982568dc3b33a22b332f4ecb
40700715
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mcgaffey_1926_3424719.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21383/2/mcgaffey_1926_3424719.pdf.txt
File
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/247482017-12-08T21:45:28Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Dardess, John W.
author
Lee, Choon S.
cmtemember
Nelson, Lynn
cmtemember
Kounas, Dionysios A.
cmtemember
Lee, Chae-jin
cmtemember
Wurst, Cameron G,:
2017-07-24T22:01:43Z
2017-07-24T22:01:43Z
1980
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/24748
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
China --History --Zhou dynasty, 1122-221 B.C.
The origin, functions, and nature of the tributary system in the Chou times
Dissertation
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24748/1/Lee_1980_664478.pdf
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/256622018-02-01T22:34:01Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Karr, Grace May
2017-12-22T18:09:25Z
2017-12-22T18:09:25Z
1929
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/25662
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Schurz, Grant, and civil service
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/25662/1/karr_1929_3425374.pdf
File
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/77162020-08-07T13:31:10Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Wilson, Theodore A.
author
Benson, Kevin Charles
cmtemember
Spiller, Roger J.
cmtemember
Baumann, Robert F.
cmtemember
Earle, Jonathan H.
cmtemember
Steele, Brent J.
2011-07-04T17:15:48Z
2011-07-04T17:15:48Z
2010-09-22
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:11120
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/7716
This dissertation examines the decisions taken during the development of the concept for the School of Advanced Military Studies and its subsequent refinement in the first ten years of its history. The other line of inquiry in the dissertation is the development, introduction and refinement of the concept of operational art and the operational level of war into U.S. Army doctrine, primarily in the 1982, 1986 and 1993 versions of Field Manual 100-5, Operations.
en
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
Military history
America--history
Educating the Army's Jedi
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/7716/1/Benson_ku_0099D_11120_DATA_1.pdf
File
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URL
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/183512020-06-24T16:15:54Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Mickey, Marie Elizabeth
2015-08-19T21:03:07Z
2015-08-19T21:03:07Z
1921
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/18351
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
A history of the Amistad captives
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/18351/1/mickey_1921_3424540.pdf
File
MD5
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URL
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File
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/218782018-01-31T20:07:47Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Forth, Christopher
author
Miller, Robert Warren
cmtemember
Wood, Nathan D
cmtemember
Denning, Andrew S
cmtemember
Rosenthal, Anton
cmtemember
Warf, Barney
2016-11-10T22:58:56Z
2016-11-10T22:58:56Z
2016-05-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:14591
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/21878
In 1854, Monaco faced an uncertain future. The principality subsisted on a struggling agro-economy, encountered serious challenges to maintaining its sovereignty, and contained a disgruntled populace overburdened with taxes and state monopolies. European contemporaries perceived the small state as a premodern, peripheral backwater and as a minor stop on the Grand Tour. Within a few short decades, perceptions of Monaco and its newly-founded city, Monte Carlo, changed so radically that the place became the premier vacation-leisure destination for European and American elites and a byword for luxury, pleasure, and cosmopolitanism. Monte Carlo maintained its reputation as a vacation-leisure paradise and as a playground for the wealthy and sophisticated for 150 years. This dissertation examines how, despite seemingly insurmountable disadvantages, Monaco established and maintained a thriving tourist economy from its early unsuccessful attempts to found a tourism industry in 1854 until its irrefutable operation as a site of mass tourism by 1950. It contextualizes how construction of a spatial imaginary, built through a consistent projection of the city’s image, meticulously-crafted through representational space, and mediated, re-mediated, and disseminated by visitors’ accounts, became crucial to Monte Carlo’s lasting success as a remunerative resort-tourism destination. Contrary to previous histories of Monte Carlo’s tourism economy that have emphasized the roles of the state’s liberal gaming laws and the construction of the railroad for its success, this study contends that the construction of the city’s spatial imaginary was the key factor. This dissertation further examines how Monte Carlo’s casino resort functioned as a forum of class anxieties and social distinction as middle-class vacationers began to encroach on the once-exclusive leisure practices of the social elite. An emphasis on spectacle and Monte Carlo’s spatial imaginary allowed casino promoters to navigate the tenuous balance between marketing the resort as an exclusive space and simultaneously operating as a destination of mass tourism. Monte Carlo’s story of success stands as an example of how a consistent spatial imaginary can serve as an economic boon, particularly for tourism-based economies. This is a lesson that cities such as Orlando, Las Vegas, and Macau have learned well as they have capitalized on Monte Carlo’s image, followed the city’s model of remunerative resort tourism, and have developed their own spatial imaginaries to the benefit of their tourism industries.
en
Copyright held by the author.
History
European history
Modern history
Class
Leisure
Monte Carlo
Spectacle
Tourism
Travel
Constructing a Spatial Imaginary: The Formation and Re-presentation of Monte Carlo as a Vacation-Leisure Paradise, 1854-1950
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21878/1/Miller_ku_0099D_14591_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
df58a6feaee92d3045ce7ae1afcf54f5
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Miller_ku_0099D_14591_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21878/2/Miller_ku_0099D_14591_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
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Miller_ku_0099D_14591_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/251662017-12-08T21:40:50Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Sweedlun, Verne S.
2017-10-19T15:06:58Z
2017-10-19T15:06:58Z
1929
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/25166
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The establishment of the national banking system, 1863-1864
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/25166/1/sweedlun_1929_3426477.pdf
File
MD5
330467ceedac1a733e48b1fea84f1b71
37253712
application/pdf
sweedlun_1929_3426477.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/25166/2/sweedlun_1929_3426477.pdf.txt
File
MD5
daf2a0e308fb8da9e7a2bb74c015b743
541416
text/plain
sweedlun_1929_3426477.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/204952021-08-26T22:26:43Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Elliott, Helen Dale
2016-03-08T20:24:57Z
2016-03-08T20:24:57Z
1925
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/20495
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The five constitutions of the Republic of Mexico
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/20495/1/elliott_1925_3424959.pdf
File
MD5
e0d1f17c0c3d255d6b086a9760b77169
167144659
application/pdf
elliott_1925_3424959.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/20495/3/elliott_1925_3424959.pdf.txt
File
MD5
70ac08d607dea0b336a14b36e8471059
1030437
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elliott_1925_3424959.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/204942021-08-26T20:31:04Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Wellborn, Fred Wilmot
2016-03-08T20:24:54Z
2016-03-08T20:24:54Z
1923
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/20494
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Roosevelt and the Panama Canal
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/20494/1/wellborn_1923_3424674.pdf
File
MD5
950da8e6f8e270ab49162a81c214ee81
31875153
application/pdf
wellborn_1923_3424674.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/20494/3/wellborn_1923_3424674.pdf.txt
File
MD5
b1fb175d829ec6247a3bc6cb15870737
207788
text/plain
wellborn_1923_3424674.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/247902017-12-08T21:40:50Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Wearing, J. Leo
2017-08-11T18:53:47Z
2017-08-11T18:53:47Z
1929
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/24790
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The United States civil aviation policy
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24790/1/wearing_1929_3426484.pdf
File
MD5
b8b9818f5d3047529ddc1d2274106a07
10985578
application/pdf
wearing_1929_3426484.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24790/2/wearing_1929_3426484.pdf.txt
File
MD5
907ac9d87860fcbc57361f8a7d64fadb
199085
text/plain
wearing_1929_3426484.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/80772020-08-14T14:15:37Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Tuttle, Leslie R.
author
Hinkel, Troy Joseph
cmtemember
Corteguera, Luis R.
cmtemember
Heilke, Thomas
cmtemember
Levin, Eve
cmtemember
Wood, Nathaniel D.
2011-09-22T04:08:02Z
2011-09-22T04:08:02Z
2011-04-25
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:11447
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/8077
This dissertation examens the battle between church and state at the University of Paris, 1879-1884. Jules Ferry, the Minister of Public Instruction for the French Third Republic, wished to secularize education in France through a series of legislative actions in order to modernize France, as he understood the term. Henri Maret, the Dean of the Theology Faculty at the Sorbonne, sought to prevent this. This dissertation explores the ensuing conflict between Ferry and Maret in order to analyze the strategies and rationalle uitlized by each in order to illustrate ongoing ramifications for larger church and state issues, not only in France, but throughout Europe.
en
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
History
Europe--history
Modern history
Jules Ferry and Henri Maret: The Battle of Church and State at the Sorbonne, 1879-1884
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8077/1/Hinkel_ku_0099D_11447_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
ac5846c4d7652f528c95330cb611f6f4
687049
application/pdf
Hinkel_ku_0099D_11447_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8077/2/Hinkel_ku_0099D_11447_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
454c5284c4b5c1b73663384e7a4122cf
365996
text/plain
Hinkel_ku_0099D_11447_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/103942018-01-31T20:08:01Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Brooks, Karl
author
Arnold, Tom
cmtemember
Worster, Donald
cmtemember
Wood, Nathaniel D.
cmtemember
Baron, Frank
cmtemember
Pergher, Roberta
2012-11-19T22:51:52Z
2012-11-19T22:51:52Z
2012-05-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:12083
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10394
Cities do not exist in isolation. They sum up a complex web of connections between people and natural resources, knit together by transport systems. Cities are also connected to other cities, regions, and countries. Like an organism cut off from its food, a city amputated from its vital connections to natural resources--food and fuel--can suffer and even die. This study argues these connections and the transport system that bind them together make a city work. Warfare, especially strategic bombing, disrupts these connections, having huge impacts on citizens' lives. Urbanites are forced to confront their dependence on natural resources and vulnerability to natural forces such as weather. The subject of this study, Munich, experienced these changes both during and after WWII. Between 1939 and 1948, the city descended from thriving cultural metropole to isolated, burned-out wreck, then slowly rallied to become a city on the mend. This study analyzes how wartime bombing and postwar occupation policies damaged and often completely severed Munich's connections to coal, electricity, and food. It uses eyewitness accounts and memoirs to analyze the impacts of these changes in peoples' lives. It combines the ideas and insights of military, urban, and environmental history. By analyzing war's strike against a city's connections, we better appreciate warfare's place in the perennial relationship linking humans to nature.
en
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
Europe--history
Military history
Environmental studies
Bombing
Energy
Environment
Germany
Urban
World war II
A City Amputated, A Community Regenerated: Munich During and After the Allied Air War, 1939-1948
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/10394/1/Arnold_ku_0099D_12083_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
3615de3f951af15d143d4eaeedafaa8d
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Arnold_ku_0099D_12083_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/10394/2/Arnold_ku_0099D_12083_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
d974d2c99cddb6abff090a8e902f92e2
501999
text/plain
Arnold_ku_0099D_12083_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/40242020-07-16T15:37:25Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Napier, Rita G.
advisor
Worster, Donald
author
Harvey, Douglas
cmtemember
Leon, Mechele
cmtemember
Kelton, Paul
cmtemember
Bhana, Surendra
2008-08-05T02:51:15Z
2008-08-05T02:51:15Z
2008-06-18
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:2417
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/4024
It was no coincidence that commercial theater, a market society, the British middle class, and the "first" British Empire arose more or less simultaneously. In the seventeenth century, the new market economic paradigm became increasingly dominant, replacing the old feudal economy. Theater functioned to "explain" this arrangement to the general populace and gradually it became part of what I call a "culture of empire" - a culture built up around the search for resources and markets that characterized imperial expansion. It also rationalized the depredations the Empire brought to those whose resources and labor were coveted by expansionists. This process intensified with the independence of the thirteen North American colonies, and theater began representing Native Americans and African American populations in ways that rationalized the dominant society's behavior toward them. By utilizing an interdisciplinary approach, this research attempts to advance a more nuanced and realistic narrative empire in the early modern and early republic periods. I include a broader spectrum of performance than is typical in this analysis, giving equal credence to indigenous and African American performances that illuminate the imperial nature of Anglo-American performance. This study strives to contribute to a new understanding of the imperial assumptions of this period and in the process give a stronger voice to the historically voiceless.
EN
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
United States--history
Europe--history
Theater
Empire
Cultural history
American revolution
Early republic
Trans-appalachian west
Theater and Empire: A History of Assumptions in the English-Speaking Atlantic World, 1700-1860"
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/4024/1/umi-ku-2417_1.pdf
File
MD5
162674b2aabf43eeb342b657134a5f3c
1505835
application/pdf
umi-ku-2417_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/4024/2/umi-ku-2417_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
6149fb11a03c9fbe7be201e8ffd8bd6c
786254
text/plain
umi-ku-2417_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/313192024-01-16T16:42:58Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Jahanbani, Sheyda
author
Wells, Jonathan Patrick
cmtemember
Jahanbani, Sheyda
cmtemember
Schwaller, Robert
cmtemember
Gregg, Sara
cmtemember
Syrett, Nicholas
cmtemember
Mielke, Laura
2021-02-02T17:27:46Z
2021-02-02T17:27:46Z
2019-08-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:16697
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/31319
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1872-9556
This work examines Major General Frederick Funston’s life and subsequent memory. It seeks to answer two questions: first, how and why individuals/media makers constructed various identities of Funston during his life? Secondly, this work seeks to answer how and why individuals harnessed these identities after Funston’s death to support various causes? I argue that Frederick Funston became part of a larger narrative about imperialism, and that the conflict between imperialists and anti-imperialists formed the basis for two competing memories of Funston over the next century. Funston started his career as an explorer and used the local newspapers to gain acceptance for his chosen profession. Funston became an entrepreneur of imperialism. He promoted the idea of expansionism and with it he sold himself and his story. His early writings reflect the use of racial and gendered language to pit the “civilized” against the “savage.” Funston used the language of white civilized manhood to demonstrate his superiority over “other” non-white groups. During the Spanish-American War, Funston served in the Kansas 20th and later in the regular army. Imperialists and anti-imperialists used similar language to build support for their respective causes. They used Funston as a symbol for the larger debate over imperialism and cast him as either the melodramatic hero or villain. The way media makers wrote about Funston during his life, reflects the memory of Funston throughout the twentieth century. As long as white martial manhood was hegemonic, the memory of Funston the hero remained dominant. In the 1960s and 1970s the hegemony of white manhood faltered as other groups, like African Americans, Hispanics, homosexuals, feminists, all contested what it meant to be a “real American.” The contest over Funston’s memory continues today in places like Chicago, San Francisco, and Iola.
en
Copyright held by the author.
American history
Gender studies
Latin American history
American History
Cuba
Frederick Funston
Philippines
Spanish-American War
Imperial Entrepreneur: Masculinity, Race, and the Memory of Frederick Funston
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/31319/1/Wells_ku_0099D_16697_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
81aaa349d2a892ad26855e7719a6c83b
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Wells_ku_0099D_16697_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/31319/2/Wells_ku_0099D_16697_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
9132317c6bf918e4d1ba6a619d3efa25
661570
text/plain
Wells_ku_0099D_16697_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/81162020-08-20T14:29:34Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Snow, F.H.
author
Little, Edward Campbell
2011-10-06T16:03:48Z
2011-10-06T16:03:48Z
1891
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/8116
en_US
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Smith or Caesar
Thesis
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8116/1/ETD_1891_Little_EC_mediumc.pdf
File
MD5
40d83c6a1758c161658aecb1cdfc610c
3026289
application/pdf
ETD_1891_Little_EC_mediumc.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8116/3/ETD_1891_Little_EC_mediumc.pdf.txt
File
MD5
7c612088f0fffeb2fa8503c47cc520e8
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ETD_1891_Little_EC_mediumc.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/184712020-06-24T20:04:57Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Cameron, Anna Elizabeth
2015-09-21T18:30:35Z
2015-09-21T18:30:35Z
1918
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/18471
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The significance of the treaty of 1806
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/18471/1/cameron_1918_3424298.pdf
File
MD5
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application/pdf
cameron_1918_3424298.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/18471/2/cameron_1918_3424298.pdf.txt
File
MD5
bfe6d4ef3cc48f7157c4402cc4d923ce
256942
text/plain
cameron_1918_3424298.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/148922018-03-26T21:40:22Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Wise, Walter Bailey
2014-08-06T16:42:47Z
2014-08-06T16:42:47Z
1911-05-29
Wise W.B. (1911). Some aspects of the relations of the English lower classes to the criminal system, 1815-1830. University of Kansas.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/14892
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Some aspects of the relations of the English lower classes to the criminal system, 1815-1830
Thesis
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/14892/1/Wise_CriminalSys1815-1830.pdf
File
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Wise_CriminalSys1815-1830.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/14892/3/Wise_CriminalSys1815-1830.pdf.txt
File
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Wise_CriminalSys1815-1830.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/60132020-07-29T15:39:46Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Napier, Rita G.
author
Anderson, Eric P.
cmtemember
Saul, Norman E.
cmtemember
Kelton, Paul
cmtemember
O'Brien, Sharon
cmtemember
Warren, Kim
2010-03-18T13:40:45Z
2010-03-18T13:40:45Z
2009-12-10
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:10673
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6013
Haskell Institute opened in1884, an early example of federal off-reservation boarding schools for American Indian youth. The goal was assimilation: strip away traditional languages, spiritual beliefs, tribal customs, even family ties, and replace them with inculcation into the values of Western civilization upheld by white society. In reality, students, whose ages covered a wide range, often clung tenaciously to older, more familiar ideals. This study looks broadly at the effects of this conflict in the mindsets and behaviors of both students and administrators at the school (and similar institutions). Because Haskell's first quarter-century overlaps with much of the period scholars call "The Progressive Era" in U.S. history, the time frame investigated yields rich data regarding new thinking about educational and social reform. While recent literature on the boarding school system has blossomed, the link between its activities and the larger picture of American Progressivism has not been firmly established within the context of a specific school. By the dawn of the nineteenth century, Haskell Institute was becoming the largest of these federal education outlets, making its success of especial consequence, both because it affected great numbers of students (and their support networks) and served as a model for promoting policy goals. Understanding how Haskell grew and became an increasingly accepted part of the American Indian experience requires the realization that native peoples played an active role in shaping the contours of their own education. While their "partnership" with government functionaries was often limited, the input they provided, through a variety of means, had measurable consequences for the direction and overall influence of the school. In this way, Haskell students (as well as their families, tribal leadership, and a growing vanguard of American Indian elites, themselves often the product of similar educational experiences) may be viewed through the lens of Progressive reform. Precisely defining Progressivism is difficult, but Indians' active participation at Haskell did affect visible change in their education, and comprised another, overlooked example of Progressives in action. Through attendance records, administrative and curricular changes, personal letters and reminiscences, development of a more native-centered school newspaper, elimination (or tempering) of the most egregious aspects of boarding-school life, or other means, a tangible American Indian Progressivism emerges, with its ultimate aim retention of core elements of native cultures and traditions. Thus they were not simply victims of government or outside social engineering, but active participants in the education process. The intertwining of both federal directives and native hopes in the development of Haskell makes a fascinating case study of Progressive activism and reform, the ability to affect quiet change within an oppressive institutional atmosphere, the recognition of a strong native voice in this period, and the interdependence of the boarding-school system and American Indian peoples in establishing (often quite different) measures of "success" in this education. The survival of Native American peoples, customs, and Haskell itself, as a place today celebrating that persistence, is strong testimony to this Indian Progressivism and the works and lives of those who came before.
EN
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
United States--history
Native American studies
American studies
American Indians
Federal boarding schools
Haskell institute/university
Indian ("red") progressives
Lawrence
Kansas
Progressive era
Reformers Revealed: American Indian Progressives at Haskell Institute, Lawrence, Kansas, 1884-1909
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/6013/1/Anderson_ku_0099D_10673_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
f1082987067b57f1b49fec2ab5ac2a0e
936884
application/pdf
Anderson_ku_0099D_10673_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/6013/2/Anderson_ku_0099D_10673_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
6e55d09948e5705b1ac2d0492a0ffeaf
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text/plain
Anderson_ku_0099D_10673_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/211492017-12-08T21:40:51Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Smith, Edna Maude
2016-07-21T15:08:56Z
2016-07-21T15:08:56Z
1927
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/21149
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The United States radio policy to 1927
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21149/1/smith_1927_3430224.pdf
File
MD5
70eac347df038ac165c4bdbaf8d2939b
11589464
application/pdf
smith_1927_3430224.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21149/2/smith_1927_3430224.pdf.txt
File
MD5
e85bac47260668d299d38e940d67e0b2
117739
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smith_1927_3430224.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/110882020-09-28T14:59:11Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Anderson, George L.
author
Sorensen, Conner
2013-05-01T15:10:06Z
2013-05-01T15:10:06Z
1968
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11088
One of the important adjustments made by the settlers of the High Plains to their new environment was the introduction of irrigation agriculture. Among the earliest and most important centers of this development was the Arkansas River Valley of western Kansas, in particular the community around Garden City, Kansas. This history attempts to relate the development of irrigation in the Arkansas Valley through its formative years, 1880-1910. The term "Arkansas River Valley" as used here refers to that portion of the valley of the Arkansas in the Counties of Hamilton, Kearny, Finney, Gray, and Ford, and the adjacent uplands which were influenced by the practice of irrigation. Statistitcs generally refer to those counties unless otherwise stated. The author is indebted to his advisor, Dr. George L. Anderson, who suggested the topic and provided guidance and encouragement toward its completion. Most of the research was done in the Kansas State Historical Society whose staff was most understanding and helpful. Among the many friends of irrigation in western Kansas special thanks are due to Mr. Clyde Beymer of Lakin who furnished abstracts to the South Side, Great Eastern, and Amazon Ditches, Mr. Edward Dekeiser of Deerfield who loaned a large plat of the Amazon Canal, the Garden City law firm of Calahan, Green, Calahan, and High and to their secretary Mrs. Luava Golightly (who is also secretary of the Finney County Water Users' Association) who provided free access to the Records of the Water Users' Association. Thanks are also due to the county officials in Hamilton, Kearny, Finney, Gray, and Ford Counties who provided assistance in locating and copying local records.
en
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
A History of Irrigation in the Arkansas River Valley in Western Kansas, 1880-1910
Thesis
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/11088/1/Sorensen.pdf
File
MD5
32e352a9d0ec05356dc1465d13c8d7d4
314278672
application/pdf
Sorensen.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/11088/3/Sorensen.pdf.txt
File
MD5
22d0643959925cf17e4a0af19f51b691
335361
text/plain
Sorensen.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/81102020-08-20T14:19:24Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Nickel, Henri
2011-10-06T15:02:51Z
2011-10-06T15:02:51Z
1887
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/8110
en_US
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Frederick the Great of Prussia
Undergraduate research project
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8110/1/ETD_1888_Nickel_H_mediumc.pdf
File
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ETD_1888_Nickel_H_mediumc.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8110/3/ETD_1888_Nickel_H_mediumc.pdf.txt
File
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/254852017-12-08T21:43:44Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Botts, Thomas Warfield
2017-11-27T18:12:25Z
2017-11-27T18:12:25Z
1931
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/25485
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Disposal of the Civil War Navy
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/25485/1/botts_1931_3426497.pdf
File
MD5
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botts_1931_3426497.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/25485/2/botts_1931_3426497.pdf.txt
File
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botts_1931_3426497.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/244312017-12-08T21:43:43Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Breece, Howard David
2017-06-08T17:54:13Z
2017-06-08T17:54:13Z
1932
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/24431
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Spain in European reconstitutions of 1814-1815
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24431/1/breece_1932_3425238.pdf
File
MD5
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breece_1932_3425238.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24431/2/breece_1932_3425238.pdf.txt
File
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breece_1932_3425238.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/257432023-08-11T17:11:55Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Wood, Nathan D
author
Schmidt, Allison
cmtemember
Jahanbani, Sheyda
cmtemember
Levin, Eve
cmtemember
Scott, Erik
cmtemember
Vanchena, Lorie
2018-01-28T22:14:03Z
2018-01-28T22:14:03Z
2016-05-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:14466
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/25743
This dissertation investigates migrant registration and control stations in Germany that served as a pre-“screening system” (Dorothee Schneider) to US immigration checkpoints such as Ellis Island. In the late-nineteenth, early-twentieth centuries, large numbers of eastern Europeans passed through Germany on their way to northern European ports to sail to the Americas. Studying transmigration, the “process of migration” as Gur Alroey defines it, gives insight into the economic and state mechanisms that controlled migration and which routes migrants took as they travelled overseas. In 1894 due to health concerns and costs incurred by transporting rejected immigrants back from the United States, the Prussian state and German shipping companies set up control stations along the Prussian-Russian border. Here steamship agents reviewed both the travelers’ health and financial capability. The stations gave preferential treatment to German steamship customers, yet the German government also had a vested interest: these checkpoints prevented ‘undesirable immigrants’ from entering its territories. Sizeable eastern European transmigration appeared not only in Prussia, but also in another eastern German province, Saxony. This dissertation focuses particularly on a transmigrant registration station (opened in 1904) at the railroad hub of Leipzig and checkpoints (opened in 1905) on the Saxon-Bohemian border. The growing literature on transmigration has focused on the influence American immigration policy and German steamship companies had over these stations. Instead, I emphasize the vital role the German state played in migration surveillance, with health officials and policemen managing the movement of the travelers. This research challenges the historiographical notion of lax state migration control prior to World War I and enriches understanding of the journey European migrants undertook before arriving in the New World.
en
Copyright held by the author.
European history
World history
Modern history
Austria-Hungary
Germany
migration
Saxony
state
transmigrants
Crossing Germany: Eastern European Transmigrants and Saxon State Surveillance, 1900-1924
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/25743/1/Schmidt_ku_0099D_14466_DATA_1.pdf
File
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Schmidt_ku_0099D_14466_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/25743/2/Schmidt_ku_0099D_14466_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/190862020-06-25T19:54:44Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Craik, Elmer Leroy
2015-12-04T15:09:23Z
2015-12-04T15:09:23Z
1916
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/19086
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
A history of the Church of the Brethren in Kansas
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/19086/1/craik_1916_3424343.pdf
File
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/19086/3/craik_1916_3424343.pdf.txt
File
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/84982020-08-27T14:01:02Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
McCluggage, Robert Tyler
2011-11-23T15:31:07Z
2011-11-23T15:31:07Z
1912-06-04
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/8498
en_US
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The Origin of the Whig Party
Thesis
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8498/1/ETD_1912_McCluggage_RT_mediumc.pdf
File
MD5
a5852741282145bc2ea9ffbe2fc6ef98
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ETD_1912_McCluggage_RT_mediumc.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8498/4/ETD_1912_McCluggage_RT_mediumc.pdf.txt
File
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ETD_1912_McCluggage_RT_mediumc.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/236562017-12-08T21:42:12Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Newkirk, Edna M.
2017-04-13T15:15:56Z
2017-04-13T15:15:56Z
1929
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/23656
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The Indian policy during Grant's administration
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23656/1/newkirk_1929_3430217.pdf
File
MD5
6e01898b8a48f3c273eee699e98ec6f6
14478667
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newkirk_1929_3430217.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23656/2/newkirk_1929_3430217.pdf.txt
File
MD5
4a3188b1248fe8d2ca917086a95a5cc8
192535
text/plain
newkirk_1929_3430217.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/224182020-06-23T20:43:56Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Kuo, Poyu
2017-01-03T15:08:25Z
2017-01-03T15:08:25Z
1929
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/22418
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The annexation of Korea
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/22418/1/kuo_1929_3426435.pdf
File
MD5
c032c282ef4ba970f3a2658eab5db0a4
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application/pdf
kuo_1929_3426435.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/22418/2/kuo_1929_3426435.pdf.txt
File
MD5
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133315
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/239452018-01-31T20:07:47Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Earle, Jonathan H.
advisor
Jahanbani, Sheyda
author
Prichard, Jeremy
cmtemember
Warren, Kim
cmtemember
Wilson, Theodore
cmtemember
Schumaker, Paul
2017-05-07T20:06:56Z
2017-05-07T20:06:56Z
2014-12-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:13805
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/23945
This dissertation examines the political, social, and economic development of Springfield, Illinois - Abraham Lincoln's home - during the American Civil War. It argues that Lincoln's martyrdom following the war and his assassination preserved the city's position as Illinois's state capital, despite the local populace's mixed attitudes toward him during his presidency. He won the 1860 and 1864 presidential popular vote in Springfield by a combined seventy-nine ballots. He failed to carry his own Sangamon County in either election. When he and his family departed for the White House in February 1861, they left a deeply partisan community that only strengthened over four years of war. Before he became Springfield's chosen son in death, he was a polarizing figure in the heart of Illinois. Simultaneously, Abraham Lincoln said farewell to a town struggling to keep pace with the population growth and economic development occurring elsewhere in the Prairie State due to the rise of industrialism. Lincoln's death, including the controversial burial that followed, reversed both trends, bringing momentary unity to a community facing uncertainty during the country's most trying period.
en
Copyright held by the author.
American history
Abraham Lincoln
Civil War
Memory
Political
Social
Springfield
Illinois
In Lincoln's Shadow: The Civil War in Springfield, Illinois
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23945/1/Prichard_ku_0099D_13805_DATA_1.pdf
File
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Prichard_ku_0099D_13805_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23945/2/Prichard_ku_0099D_13805_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
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text/plain
Prichard_ku_0099D_13805_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/296382019-10-19T08:01:06Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Rambusch, Sigurd
2019-10-18T20:33:39Z
2019-10-18T20:33:39Z
1957-05-31
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/29638
The purpose of this thesis is to study American public-opinion of Denmark during the German occupation from April 9, 1940, to May 5, 1945.
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
American public opinion of Denmark during the German occupation, 1940-1945
Thesis
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/29638/1/rambusch_1957_3429347.pdf
File
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rambusch_1957_3429347.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/29638/3/rambusch_1957_3429347.pdf.txt
File
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rambusch_1957_3429347.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/239382018-01-31T20:07:47Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Lewis, Adrian R
author
Krueger, Hans Juergen
cmtemember
Wilson, Theodore A
cmtemember
Wood, Nathan
cmtemember
Kipp, Jacob
cmtemember
Stephenson, Scott
cmtemember
Marx, Leonie
2017-05-07T19:54:49Z
2017-05-07T19:54:49Z
2016-05-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:14492
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/23938
The objective of the dissertation was to prove that after World War II, between May 1945, and the statehood of the Federal Republic of Germany in September 1949 1. The Germans in the three western occupation zones of the United States, Great Britain, and France could not have survived mass starvation without the food aid provided by the Allied military forces and the United States starting in late 1945. 2. The contributions the western Allies levied from the people of their respective occupation zones in form of occupation costs, reparations, restitutions, and confiscations by far surpassed all Allied food aid, as well as the financial aid provided by the United States through the European Recovery Program, better known as the Marshall Plan. 3. The German economy would have survived/restarted without Marshall Plan aid. However, it would have taken much more time to catch up with the other European economies. Looking at the pure occupation costs levied in the three western occupation zones, these costs surpassed all Allied aid by far. Occupation costs of $5,944 billion face Allied aid figures from $2,691 billion to $3,277 billion, a rough ratio of 2:1. Computed with the lowest amount of reparations of $4.44 billion, shifts the ratio of occupation costs/reparations to Allied aid to 3.5:1, a surprising and not anticipated result of the study.
en
Copyright held by the author.
European studies
Military history
military occupation
occupation costs
post-World War II Germany
reparations
Stuttgart
US occupation zone
Who Paid the Bill? Germany and American Fiscal Responsibilities in the Revival of Germany after World War II
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23938/1/Krueger_ku_0099D_14492_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
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application/pdf
Krueger_ku_0099D_14492_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23938/2/Krueger_ku_0099D_14492_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
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text/plain
Krueger_ku_0099D_14492_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/277852019-08-27T17:39:14Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Corteguera, Luis R
author
Hersh, Taylor
cmtemember
Vicente, Marta V
cmtemember
Clark, Katherine
cmtemember
Brown, Marie
cmtemember
Manning, Patricia W
2019-05-07T15:15:58Z
2019-05-07T15:15:58Z
2017-05-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:15336
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/27785
This dissertation examines women’s religiosity in early modern Spain, and it addresses the possibilities and limits of women’s religious expression. The overarching argument is that because the Catholic Church faced the challenge of articulating the parameters of acceptable religious behavior during an era of widespread reform, the tensions between official and unofficial religious practice created the possibility of flexibility in women’s religiosity. However, this flexibility had its limits since rhetoric surrounding religious practice did not separate the idea of a good woman from a good Christian woman, and women were expected to express religion within society’s definition of good womanhood. Focusing on the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, this dissertation is divided thematically into four chapters. Chapter 1 focuses on theologians’ prescriptive literature and descriptions of women’s ideal religiosity, and Chapter 2 examines male and female-authored sources about women’s life cycle in order to see how religiosity was acted out in day-to-day practices. Chapter 3 draws upon women’s accounts of their own religiosity, especially autobiographies of female mystics, and shows how women drew from concepts of good womanhood to justify their claims of mystical experiences. Chapter 4 considers how Inquisition trials of women accused of sorcery and witchcraft offer insight into why women believed they were acting as good Christians even when inquisitors did not see it that way. This dissertation is significant because it encourages a reevaluation of seemingly fixed binaries in the early modern period. It recognizes that women’s religious flexibility was more acceptable and apparent during a time when power relations were being rearticulated and binaries were being redefined. In doing so, this dissertation challenges scholarship that suggests women were simply limited by religious reform or gained agency because they manipulated a male-dominated system.
en
Copyright held by the author.
European history
Women's studies
Religious history
Gender
Marriage
Mystics
Reformation
Theologians
Witches
"Many Paths in This Road of the Spirit": The Flexibility of Women's Religiosity in Early Modern Spain
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/27785/1/Hersh_ku_0099D_15336_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
8cd17ab8bc9bb5bb04505af1c481dde2
1134827
application/pdf
Hersh_ku_0099D_15336_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/27785/2/Hersh_ku_0099D_15336_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
db154f00cf77bafeb46cfb9bb589b74e
538757
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Hersh_ku_0099D_15336_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/77712020-07-27T13:05:18Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Wilson, Theodore A.
author
Grau, Les
cmtemember
Kipp, Jacob W.
cmtemember
Carlson, Maria
cmtemember
Willbanks, James H.
cmtemember
Baumann, Robert F.
2011-07-04T23:06:25Z
2011-07-04T23:06:25Z
2009-05-04
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:10386
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/7771
Operation Anaconda was America's first conventional battle in Afghanistan. America's first battles did not always turn out as victories. Bunker Hill, Bull Run, Kasserine Pass, Task Force Smith, the Ia Drang Valley-all were hard-fought American fights which ended in retreat or a draw. Operation Anaconda was hardly a defeat. American forces entered a hostile fortified zone, fought the enemy to a standstill and then evicted him. US casualties were comparatively light. Enemy casualties were heavy. At the end of the fighting, the battlefield was in American hands and the enemy did not want to resume the contest. Indeed, the conventional enemy force was shattered. Operation Anaconda involved the forces of seven nations and US Armed Forces personnel from the Army, Marine Corps, Navy and Air Force. It was America's largest and longest light-infantry fight since Vietnam. It was the highest altitude land battle in US history. It was the Canadian Armed Forces first ground combat since the Korean War. Total allied losses were six Afghans and eight Americans killed and 53 Afghans and 86 Americans wounded. Taliban and Al Qaeda forces were smashed, suffering hundreds of casualties and limping away demoralized and disorganized. The battle was clumsy, but decisive. It was won by the combined efforts of American Armed Forces, Afghan ground forces, Canadian Light Infantry and special forces from a variety of nations. It was a pick-up fight that started off badly, but training, good will and professionalism pulled the operation together. It was Al Qaeda's last conventional fight and America's first conventional fight in Afghanistan. It broke the back of Al Qaeda and hastened their departure from the country. Lessons learned in air-ground coordination were successfully applied during the invasion of Iraq. As with any military operation or, indeed, human endeavor, Anaconda had its warts and problems. Operation Anaconda generated several books, most in support of an agenda. What makes this dissertation different is that it: covers the entire battle instead of the first three days; provides a more-balanced view of air power and ground power in the battle; provides a historic view of Afghanistan before the events of 9/11; provides a good enemy picture; identifies the culminating event of the battle and provides an analysis of what went right and what went wrong.
EN
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
Military history
Afghanistan
Al qaeda
Anaconda
OEF
Taliban
Us army
The Coils of the Anaconda: America's First Conventional Battle in Afghanistan
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/7771/1/Grau_ku_0099D_10386_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
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Grau_ku_0099D_10386_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/7771/2/Grau_ku_0099D_10386_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
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Grau_ku_0099D_10386_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/242102018-01-31T20:07:48Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Levin, Eve
author
Antley, Jeremy Scott
cmtemember
Wood, Nathan
cmtemember
Scott, Erik
cmtemember
Miller, Timothy
cmtemember
O'Brien, Joe
2017-05-15T22:45:46Z
2017-05-15T22:45:46Z
2016-12-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:15049
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/24210
As ethnic Russian Old Believers began to immigrate into the area around Woodburn, Oregon in the 1960s, their presence became a fixation for American interlocutors who viewed the new arrivals as traditional peasant figures on the path towards becoming modern citizens. Because this Russian religious group possessed little to no context for American administrators, academics, and citizens alike, attempts to build knowledge networks around the Old Believers became paramount in the first decade of their settlement in the United States. Initially assisted by the Tolstoy Foundation and, later, the Valley Migrant League, the Oregon Old Believers often became targets of character rhetoric that sought to measure the distance between the traditional lifestyle of the Russian religious group and the modern milieu amongst which they lived. Various academics, reporters, and lay observers alike built knowledge networks around the Russian religious group through reports, articles, and direct interactions that could qualify and define the distance between Old Belief and American modernity. Yet as the Old Believers took on recognized standards of American modernity- home ownership, gainful employment, and consumer consumption- they did so without wholesale abandonment of their religious culture, prompting anxiety amongst American observers who questioned the power of modernity to fully assimilate traditional subjects. Beyond being another example of the trials faced by immigrants in a new land, this examination of Old Believer settlement in Oregon asks why American interlocutors became fascinated with the Russian religious group and how this fascination led to investigation and self-affirmation of American modernity.
en
Copyright held by the author.
History
Slavic studies
American studies
Modernity
Oregon
Russian Old Believers
Tolstoy Foundation
Valley Migrant League
Measuring Tolstoy's Peasants: Old Believer Settlement in Oregon through the 1960's and 1970's
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24210/1/Antley_ku_0099D_15049_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
38f25e88be2c829c2300fe0daa590616
3119504
application/pdf
Antley_ku_0099D_15049_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24210/2/Antley_ku_0099D_15049_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
8e7ac70009087dcf9292d9fc52edf7e8
511647
text/plain
Antley_ku_0099D_15049_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/210572021-08-26T22:26:13Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Shillington, Jessie
2016-06-30T14:47:16Z
2016-06-30T14:47:16Z
1925
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/21057
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
History of national pure food and drug legislation in the United States to 1906
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21057/1/shillington_1925_3424995.pdf
File
MD5
2cec40d2567e6c2fa44e1a6aaa0b28ce
20160817
application/pdf
shillington_1925_3424995.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21057/2/shillington_1925_3424995.pdf.txt
File
MD5
d0f621092b39814d1877ff5c1e400f79
249402
text/plain
shillington_1925_3424995.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/225272018-01-31T20:07:50Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Corteguera, Luis
author
Stillo, Stephanie
cmtemember
Vicente, Marta
cmtemember
Kuznesof, Elizabeth
cmtemember
Schwaller, Robert
cmtemember
Manning, Patricia
2017-01-08T19:09:16Z
2017-01-08T19:09:16Z
2014-05-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:13249
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/22527
In 1503 the Spanish monarchy awarded the city of Seville a monopoly on Spanish-American trade. Serving as the gateway to Spain's lucrative Atlantic Empire for over two centuries, the city fashioned itself as an imperial capital, and natural successor to ancient Rome. Despite never serving as the official capital to the Spanish Habsburgs, civic authorities in Seville nonetheless expressed their city's wealth and nobility through an excess of laudatory histories, artwork, architectural renovations, and regional patron saints. This dissertation first contextualizes Seville's prominence by exploring how Phillip II's refusal to establish a permanent capital in Madrid until 1561 promoted competition between many cities in Castile, all of which saw themselves as potential contenders for the future imperial court. As Spain moved into Atlantic territories, this competition helped fashion the urban organizational strategy for colonial settlement in the New World. As Seville was the most important city in Spain during the early modern period, the city greatly influenced the conceptualization and development of Spanish-American cities between the late sixteenth to the early eighteenth centuries. Colonial capitals such as Mexico City found in Seville a language for expressing their inclusion in the Habsburgs' global empire through lavish ceremonies and architecture which could establish their New World cities as distinctly Spanish and Catholic. By placing Seville at the center of the empire, my research will act as an amendment to contemporary Spanish historiography which has failed to fully recognize the influence of Andalusia in early colonial development.
en
Copyright held by the author.
History
European history
Latin American history
auto de fe
cities
Francisco Pacheco
Habsburgs
Mexico City
Seville
Forging Imperial Cities: Seville and Formation of Civic Order in the Early Modern Hispanic World
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/22527/1/Stillo_ku_0099D_13249_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
2a9e7e19c653a74dce746c8fba5768f8
3169745
application/pdf
Stillo_ku_0099D_13249_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/22527/2/Stillo_ku_0099D_13249_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
318c280d6f2469b8b84d05eeb5b94b44
378487
text/plain
Stillo_ku_0099D_13249_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/213802017-12-08T21:40:50Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Leonard, Leatha
2016-08-23T17:10:59Z
2016-08-23T17:10:59Z
1928
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/21380
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
British treaties for the suppression of the slave trade
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21380/1/leonard_1928_3424815.pdf
File
MD5
0ffad78f4ca72e5cd26d8c1ba1da1a69
13132432
application/pdf
leonard_1928_3424815.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21380/2/leonard_1928_3424815.pdf.txt
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leonard_1928_3424815.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/185952017-12-08T21:31:50Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Malin, James Claude
2015-10-06T18:33:52Z
2015-10-06T18:33:52Z
1916
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/18595
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
David R. Atchison, Senator
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/18595/1/malin_1916_3424367.pdf
File
MD5
6366311212779615cd541097e1ca05cc
152828500
application/pdf
malin_1916_3424367.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/18595/3/malin_1916_3424367.pdf.txt
File
MD5
9e74d8f8ce8fea5fa232bbf3b872d5ee
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text/plain
malin_1916_3424367.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/280632019-08-27T18:09:08Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Lewis, Adrian
author
Gatzemeyer, Garrett
cmtemember
Weber, Jennifer
cmtemember
Bailey, Beth
cmtemember
Jahanbani, Sheyda
cmtemember
Haider-Markel, Don
2019-05-19T02:26:10Z
2019-05-19T02:26:10Z
2018-12-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:16273
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/28063
This study investigates the creation and evolution of an official U.S. Army physical culture between 1885 and 1958 built around systematic physical training. Facing “empty battlefields” wrought by new and improved weapons technology in the late nineteenth century, a few young officers advocated systematic physical training as a means of improving the Army’s manpower to meet the mounting physical and mental demands of combat. These advocates, most notably West Point’s Herman Koehler, drew on contemporary popular fitness culture and the professionalizing field of physical education to craft a new culture and associated system of exercise that has informed approaches to physical training in the U.S. Army ever since. Using archival sources, published training manuals, and professional journals serving military officers and physical educators, this study illuminates that original culture’s system of values, beliefs, and assumptions, then traces its change over time to 1958. This study finds that change primarily resulted from the influence of empowered institutional outsiders who applied cutting-edge physical education knowledge and expertise to orient the Army’s physical culture evermore on producing measurable physiological outcomes, especially after 1942. However, impulses driven by scientific rationalism existed alongside and interacted with relatively stable core values and beliefs, such as man’s central role in battle despite technological change, the Army’s role as a man-building agency, and definite connections between physical exercise, moral fiber, and mental strength. The Army’s physical culture also consistently existed at a nexus between intersecting concerns that influenced its development and motivated its deployment outside the Army into civilian society. Significant intersections included anxieties about American masculinity and fitness in an era of industrial war that demanded the deep mobilization of populations, and the changing relationship between man and machine in war. Beyond providing a rich description of the U.S. Army’s physical culture and training system as it evolved over the first half of the twentieth century, this study pioneers the investigation of martial physical culture as a profitable and as-yet understudied avenue for historical research.
en
Copyright held by the author.
History
Military history
American history
Exercise
Fitness
Masculinity
Military Training
Physical Culture
Physical Education
Bodies for Battle: Systematic Training in the U.S. Army’s Physical Culture, 1885-1958
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/28063/1/Gatzemeyer_ku_0099D_16273_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
a7553b3f53b6cda85d92ff6d525c4915
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application/pdf
Gatzemeyer_ku_0099D_16273_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/28063/2/Gatzemeyer_ku_0099D_16273_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
fb9a9cabfec7368d14bc2df592bb48fd
799109
text/plain
Gatzemeyer_ku_0099D_16273_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/112092020-09-29T14:08:20Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Tuttle, William
author
Marden, David L.
cmtemember
Griffith, William J.
cmtemember
Gainer, Bernard
2013-06-04T16:51:53Z
2013-06-04T16:51:53Z
1975-10
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11209
American historians who have studied the Cold War have usually focused upon either the events on the international scene which gave rise to tensions or on the policies and rhetoric of national political leaders such as President Truman and Senator McCarthy. It is the thesis of this study that, while the role of national leaders in fostering America's Cold War consciousness cannot be ignored, in some ways the forging of that consciousness was affected only marginally by the President and other national political leaders. To anyone familiar with the course of American life during the 1960s, it must be obvious that a sturdy anticommunism bred of a Cold War mentality had a deep and lasting impact. Such a deep imprint could not have been left by the actions of political leaders alone; other American institutions must also have had a hand in its forging.
With these assumptions behind it, this study began as a search for the origins of a "Cold War culture." It soon, however, evolved into an attempt to trace the interaction between
the Cold War and one aspect of that culture--American education. It is hoped that by examining the patterns of interaction between the Cold War and American education and educators, this study will contribute to a fuller understanding of the grip of the Cold War upon American life.
en_US
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
The Cold War and American Education
Dissertation
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/11209/1/MardenVolume1.pdf
File
MD5
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application/pdf
MardenVolume1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/11209/2/Marden_David_V2.pdf
File
MD5
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Marden_David_V2.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/11209/6/MardenVolume1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
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MardenVolume1.pdf.txt
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/11209/7/Marden_David_V2.pdf.txt
File
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Marden_David_V2.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/278942019-08-27T18:09:08Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Cushman, Gregory T
author
Rumsey, Brian Edward
cmtemember
Gregg, Sara M
cmtemember
Moran, Jeffrey P
cmtemember
Farber, David R
cmtemember
Earnhart, Dietrich H
2019-05-12T18:08:21Z
2019-05-12T18:08:21Z
2018-05-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:15986
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/27894
Littoral Limits has three related concerns: how flood risk came to be quantified, how such information was used and contested once quantified, and how this information has shaped our relationships with the natural world. These three concerns come together under the unifying theme of limits: the practice of quantifying and making policy on the basis of floodplain boundaries has entailed the determination and contestation of limits to which land is favored for diverse uses, and which land might best be regulated to limit flood hazard exposure. This project is carried out in large part via a case study of the National Flood Insurance Program, a federal program that has driven flood risk knowledge production and floodplain land use policy in the United States since its creation in 1968. The mid-twentieth century, when federal involvement in flood insurance was debated and eventually enacted, was a time of overt tension between two approaches to flood-prone lands. One of these approaches, floodplain management, prioritized managing human inhabitation and usage of flood-prone lands in order to limit exposure to hazard. The other approach, flood control, emphasized building structures that restrict or divert floodwaters in order to make flood- prone areas safer for inhabitation. In other words, floodplain management involved determining natural limits and using them to constrain land use, while flood control involved pushing the limits of acceptable land use deeper into flood-prone terrain. Proponents of both approaches were involved in the flood insurance debate, with expert theorists more in favor of floodplain management, and politicians and other interests more divided between approaches. This dissertation concludes that while the NFIP has indeed made some tangible contributions to the adoption of floodplain management practices in the United States, its most significant influence has been to help maintain extant development and inhabitation practices in flood-prone areas, iii even in the face of natural limits that are shifting due to climate change as well as land use change. This is not due to the triumph of one of the two approaches mentioned above, so much as it is due to a third, implied but rarely enunciated, approach at work: flood insurance as a taxpayer-subsidized way of protecting development that falls within harm’s way. This case study of flood insurance provides insights into the deeply ingrained drive to derive profit from the development of the natural world, using sources including archival records, Congressional hearings, newspapers, gray literature, and published scientific articles. For different groups that take an interest in flood-prone land, economic development means different things. For propertied interests, it means the ability to maximize the financial worth of their properties. For managerially-minded academics and experts, it often means minimizing governmental hazard exposure, thereby minimizing human impacts and taxpayer burden. The history of the NFIP reveals that, in conjunction with other federal programs, the scales have tipped ever more heavily toward the promotion and stabilization of real estate as an investment vehicle, for both middle-class and wealthy homeowners and large-scale developers. This is a status quo that is becoming increasingly unstable and untenable as hurricanes and the specter of climate change and sea level rise call into question the economic and engineering logics of stationarity on which federal flood insurance and flood control have been based. This project makes several historiographical contributions. It contributes to environmental history via its examination of the quantification of the natural world in a different way than environmental histories of production and extraction. It contributes to U.S. political history by highlighting the enduring relevance of an often-overlooked Great Society program. Finally, it contributes to the history of disaster by demonstrating how hazard mapping can be perceived to be a catastrophic event.
en
Copyright held by the author.
History
Environmental studies
Climate change
Flood
Flood insurance
Insurance
NFIP
Risk
Littoral Limits: Flood Insurance and the Quantification of Risk in the United States, 1914-2018
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/27894/1/Rumsey_ku_0099D_15986_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
d7953c35863e9dce40e6e9230d032323
1351440
application/pdf
Rumsey_ku_0099D_15986_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/27894/2/Rumsey_ku_0099D_15986_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
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587858
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Rumsey_ku_0099D_15986_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/306752020-08-27T08:00:56Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
author
Gaeddert, Gustave Raymond
2020-08-26T14:32:17Z
2020-08-26T14:32:17Z
1937-05-31
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/30675
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
History
Social sciences
A history of the establishment of the Kansas state government
Dissertation
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/30675/1/gaeddert_1937_3423713.pdf
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/30675/3/gaeddert_1937_3423713.pdf.txt
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/54562020-06-24T20:47:24Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Wilson, Theodore A.
advisor
Spiller, Roger
author
Sheffer, Debra J.
cmtemember
Earle, Jonathan H.
cmtemember
Kelton, Paul
cmtemember
Steele, Brent J.
2009-08-31T03:03:47Z
2009-08-31T03:03:47Z
2009-04-08
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:10323
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5456
Examination of honor culture and attitudes toward death and dying found in letters, diaries, and newspapers - from the colonial and revolutionary period through the Civil War era - strongly suggests that Civil War soldiers did not suffer from psychological combat trauma. Psychological combat trauma is as much a part of today's war as uniforms and ammunition, but this was not the reality for Civil War Americans. The truth is that all wars are terrible for those who fight them, and physical stresses of battle have been part of warfare in every age. Twentieth-century ideas of the psychological effects of war differ vastly from those of the nineteenth century. Civil War battle offered potential for psychiatric trauma. Civil War soldiers, however, lived in a time of different expectations and beliefs about honor and death and dying. Expectations for psychiatric trauma for these soldiers did not exist. This dissertation uses research in honor culture, masculinity studies, and attitudes toward death and dying to illustrate the idea that nineteenth-century cultural ideals of honor and death reduced or prevented psychological consequences of combat in Civil War soldiers.
EN
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
Military history
United States--history
Medieval history
Civil war
Death
Honor
Nostalgia
Psychological combat trauma
Warfare
"No Sacrifice is too Great, save that of Honor": Honor, Death, and Psychological Combat Trauma in the American Civil War
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/5456/1/Sheffer_ku_0099D_10323_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
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Sheffer_ku_0099D_10323_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/5456/2/Sheffer_ku_0099D_10323_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/207442021-08-26T20:32:54Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Riggs, Hazel May
2016-05-03T17:00:25Z
2016-05-03T17:00:25Z
1923
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/20744
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The report of Alonzo de Zurita
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/20744/1/riggs_1923_3424875.pdf
File
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riggs_1923_3424875.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/20744/2/riggs_1923_3424875.pdf.txt
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/270142018-10-25T20:37:38Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Weber, Jennifer L.
advisor
Jahanbani, Sheyda
author
Hickox, William D.
cmtemember
Wilson, Theodore A.
cmtemember
Welsh, Peter H.
cmtemember
Mielke, Laura L.
2018-10-24T22:28:56Z
2018-10-24T22:28:56Z
2017-12-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:15602
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/27014
This dissertation examines the experiences of New Yorkers during the American Civil War as they participated in mobilization while striving to preserve their own autonomy and that of their state and communities. At the war’s beginning in 1861, New York State was preeminent for having the largest population and strongest economy of the United States, and Governor Edwin D. Morgan had an influential role in the Republican Party. The federal government assigned manpower quotas and other directives but relied on—and often deferred to—state governments and their citizens in military recruitment. In a society of small government infrastructure, Morgan and other leaders depended on the support of ordinary citizens, their communities, and associational culture to raise manpower. New Yorkers saw the war effort as voluntary—even after the advent of conscription in late 1862—and tried to mitigate the conflict’s drastic social and economic effects by securing enough volunteers to avoid drafting, opening the military’s ranks to nearly anyone willing to serve, and debating the terms of their obligations to the cause. The second half of the war saw widespread recruitment fraud and conflicts over quotas as New Yorkers sought to preserve traditions of voluntarism and personal choice.
en
Copyright held by the author.
American history
History
Military history
American Civil War
military
mobilization
New York
recruitment
war
"An Uprising of the People": Military Recruitment in New York State During the Civil War
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/27014/1/Hickox_ku_0099D_15602_DATA_1.pdf
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Hickox_ku_0099D_15602_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/27014/2/Hickox_ku_0099D_15602_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/237982017-12-08T21:43:44Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Smock, Lee Anna Jewell
2017-04-26T16:30:47Z
2017-04-26T16:30:47Z
1931
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/23798
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Roscoe Conkling and the Grant administrations
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23798/1/smock_1931_3426828.pdf
File
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19062702
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smock_1931_3426828.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23798/2/smock_1931_3426828.pdf.txt
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smock_1931_3426828.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/278352020-07-09T21:34:19Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Warren, Kim C.
author
McMurray, Mary Angelina
cmtemember
Bailey, Beth
cmtemember
Forman-Brunell, Miriam
cmtemember
Metz, Brent
cmtemember
Schofield, Ann
2019-05-10T16:14:13Z
2019-05-10T16:14:13Z
2017-12-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:15089
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/27835
This dissertation examines the cultural concept of the Army wife ideal as it appeared and was negotiated in prescriptive literature, periodicals, and lived experiences from 1942 to 1983. Codified in response to the massive influx of married soldiers entering the Army during WWII, the historically-rooted Army officer’s wife ideal provided a platform for the Army to shape the millions of brides into what military leaders needed for success—devoted morale boosters dedicated to the Army and its mission. In codifying the ideal and altering it after the war to engage soldiers’ wives as advocates for the Army and its mission, purveyors of the ideal also created a platform for wives to shape the Army into what they needed to meet the unique demands associated with life married to service. Actual Army wives, as individuals and as part of national advocacy organizations, modeled the foundational elements of the ideal while simultaneously challenging the Army, Department of Defense, jurists, and national leaders to help them address the realities they faced married to the Army. Their efforts made it clear that the strength of the Army was closely tied to the strength of the Army family. Those who engaged in defining and shaping the meaning and responsibilities of Army wives (and, more broadly, military wives) shaped U.S. Army family policy and transformed the Army from an institution that viewed families as merely dependents to one that embraced them as interdependent partners.
en
Copyright held by the author.
History
Women's studies
Military history
Army Family Policy
Army officer's wife
Army wife ideal
Army wives
military dependents
military wives
FROM DEPENDENTS TO INTERDEPENDENCE: THE ARMY WIFE IDEAL AND THE MAKING OF ARMY FAMILY POLICY, 1942-1983
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/27835/1/McMurray_ku_0099D_15089_DATA_1.pdf
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/27835/2/McMurray_ku_0099D_15089_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
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McMurray_ku_0099D_15089_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/306052020-08-14T08:00:50Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
author
Dugan, Kathleen Garnette
2020-08-13T20:56:36Z
2020-08-13T20:56:36Z
1980-05-31
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/30605
Pre-Darwinian biologists encountered considerable difficulty in understanding the marsupials and monotremes because contemporary theoretical explanations had developed largely without reference to these peculiar creatures. Attempts to accommodate these animals within the existing theoretical framework strained accepted explanatory theories. The failure to provide adequate explanations pointed to the limitations of existing theories and thus contributed to the development of a radically new theoretical structure--Darwinian theory.
The marsupials and monotremes presented biologists with peculiarities of anatomy, classification, geographic distribution, and fossil history which could not easily be explained within the traditional frame of reference. These same general issues were central to the theoretical debates which led to the development of the Darwinian theory of evolution. Thus marsupials and monotremes provided empirical evidence with which to test new theoretical principles. In some instances the evidence directly suggested an evolutionary approach. In other, new, unexpected evidence was easily accommodated within an evolutionary framework.
Chapter I discusses aspects of the philosophy of science (particularly the role of anomalies in the development of scientific theory) and the sociology of science (particularly the nature of colonial science) which affected the theoretical debates on the issue. Early theories of marsupial reproduction, discussed in Chapter II, provide the necessary historical background to the nineteenth-century debates. Chapter III discusses the importance of the discovery of mammals, allegedly marsupials, in the Mesozoic strata of Europe and its effect on theories of uniformitarianism, progression, and evolution. Chapter IV outlines biologists' attempts to explain the unique features of the Australian environment. Chapter V discusses the theoretical problems posed by the monotremes (egg-laying mammals) and the failure of pre-Darwinian theory to resolve these difficulties.
This study investigates the effect of the problems presented by marsupials and monotremes on the development of Darwinian theory. One cannot claim that the anomalies presented by these animals by themselves discredited pre-Darwinian biological explanations, nor can one claim that they directly pointed to the new explanatory model which would be developed. Rather, they presented astonished biologists with facts which contradicted their expectations, facts which necessarily had to be accommodated within any new explanatory system. These anomalies were manipulated by scientific adversaries to argue for or against particular theoretical models.
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
History of science
Marsupials and monotremes in pre-Darwinian theory
Dissertation
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/30605/1/dugan_1980_633824.pdf
File
MD5
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/30605/3/dugan_1980_633824.pdf.txt
File
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dugan_1980_633824.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/242092018-01-31T20:07:47Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Lewis, Adrian R.
advisor
Wilson, Theodore A.
author
Anderson, Richard
cmtemember
Jahanbani, Sheyda
cmtemember
Atchley, Paul
cmtemember
Curatola, John M.
2017-05-15T22:44:42Z
2017-05-15T22:44:42Z
2016-12-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:15019
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/24209
In late spring, 1941, a small group of U.S. Army officers traveled to Britain to plan for Anglo-American cooperation if and when the U.S. entered World War II. Because the United States was still a neutral country and to prevent potential enemies from knowing the group's purpose, the U.S. Army called its mission to Britain the "U.S. Army Special Observer Group" (SPOBS). From May, 1941 until June, 1942, SPOBS (known as U.S. Army Forces in the British Isles or USAFBI after January 8, 1942) developed plans with the British for establishing U.S forces in the British Isles. Changing strategic conditions however, made much of this work obsolete. As a result, the Allies had to develop new plans for establishing U.S. combat power in Britain. The fact that the Allies never implemented SPOBS’ plans in their entirety has led scholars to underestimate the significance of the group’s work with the British. This study asserts that the process of planning that the Special Observers engaged in with their British counterparts played an essential role in setting the conditions for Anglo-American cooperation in the European Theater.
en
Copyright held by the author.
Military history
International relations
Anglo-American Cooperation
Anglo-American Planning
James E. Chaney
Special Observers
SPOBS
USAFBI
Special Observers: A History of SPOBS and USAFBI, 1941-1942
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24209/1/Anderson_ku_0099D_15019_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
4512781e290dc001d81c0dc29b55d97a
2390446
application/pdf
Anderson_ku_0099D_15019_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24209/2/Anderson_ku_0099D_15019_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
687c91c7177a05b78c1381e19ca9abef
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text/plain
Anderson_ku_0099D_15019_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/85082020-08-27T14:14:16Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Brook, Elizabeth Cable
2011-11-23T16:23:57Z
2011-11-23T16:23:57Z
1913-06
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/8508
en_US
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Chapters in the Legislative History of Land Distribution
Thesis
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
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8508/1/ETD_1913_Brook_EC_mediumc.pdf
File
MD5
a8dd0e3374e25cc191087a791f8094f1
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ETD_1913_Brook_EC_mediumc.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8508/3/ETD_1913_Brook_EC_mediumc.pdf.txt
File
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ETD_1913_Brook_EC_mediumc.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/218772018-01-31T20:07:47Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Gregg, Sara M
advisor
Warren, Kim C
author
Miller, Jaclyn J.S.
cmtemember
Schofield, Ann
cmtemember
Kelton, Paul
cmtemember
Morris, Sara
2016-11-10T22:57:14Z
2016-11-10T22:57:14Z
2016-05-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:14548
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/21877
Bankers in the Central Great Plains region of western Kansas played a significant part in transforming their communities from frontier outposts into components of a modern region. Between 1870 and 1940, country bankers came to see themselves as reformers and advisors in the process of transforming their towns into viable parts of a regional economy, and their influence was considerable. This dissertation contextualizes bankers’ multiple functions within rural communities and adds nuance to popular portrayals of predatory moneylenders. Bankers representing towns typically less than 5,000 in population served as economic, social, and political leaders instrumental in their development. The decisions they made shaped the fortunes of a specific set of rural communities as they navigated severe economic, social, and political challenges, but this story of country bankers driving development efforts while balancing the cultural and social traditions of rural America replicates trends from around the U.S. West and the nation. Contrary to the reputation of businessmen as heartless usurers, these bankers operated instead as cultivators of economic, political, and social power within their communities and the region. They shared the interests of farmers and other rural businesspeople in facing the changes of a modernizing nation.
en
Copyright held by the author.
American history
Banking
Community History
Country Bankers
Great Plains
Kansas
Cultivating Capital: Country Bankers and the Transformation of the Central Great Plains, 1870-1940
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21877/1/Miller_ku_0099D_14548_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
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2555028
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Miller_ku_0099D_14548_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21877/2/Miller_ku_0099D_14548_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
7ccba53b57f29923407031d2f78569fa
777933
text/plain
Miller_ku_0099D_14548_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/295532021-03-05T18:33:53Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Wood, Nathaniel D
author
Burks, Drew Patrick
cmtemember
Levin, Eve
cmtemember
Scott, Erik R
cmtemember
Denning, Andrew S
cmtemember
L'Heureux, Marie-Alice
cmtemember
Vassileva-Karagyozova, Svetlana
2019-09-06T19:51:56Z
2019-09-06T19:51:56Z
2018-12-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:16162
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/29553
Despite tremendous change and instability during the second decade of the twentieth century due to modernization, war, and political reconfiguration, some elements of everyday life in Cracow and Lemberg maintained a remarkable measure of superficial resilience. This study explores the resilience of newspaper advertising culture despite the violence and turmoil experienced during and after the First World War. It seeks to explain the ways in which advertising proved adaptable and the ways that it subtly, but significantly, changed. Both newspaper culture and advertising as a mode of social communication survived the war years and the unstable years in the early interwar period. This is a testament to their integral nature in the character of the modern cities of Cracow and Lemberg. The system of newspaper advertising had been in place for over a decade before the war broke out; and the level of its usage in the immediate years preceding the war is evidence of its familiarity, utility, and acceptance among the populations of Cracow and Lemberg. Though some areas of modern life suffered lapses that seemed to arrest the effects and benefits of modernization, newspaper advertising survived the war because it was an established part of urban culture prior to this period, and because it was able to adapt to the needs of advertisers during times of conflict. Further, as a reflection of the urban culture in Cracow and Lemberg, advertising as a mode of social communication serves as a lens to highlight changes in class and gender dynamics during the period from 1911 to 1921.
en
Copyright held by the author.
Modern history
European history
East European studies
Advertising Culture
Habsburg History
Marriage Advertising
Polish History
Urban History
World War I
The Persistence of Advertising Culture: Commerce and Consumers in Multi-Ethnic Galicia, 1911-1921
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/29553/1/Burks_ku_0099D_16162_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
cad29e0b4a74274ecad0f2f249653e2d
29571092
application/pdf
Burks_ku_0099D_16162_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/29553/2/Burks_ku_0099D_16162_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
3f5ac905ed09c070afc7edc1ae4b8bca
357924
text/plain
Burks_ku_0099D_16162_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/211452021-08-26T21:39:06Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Ramalingam, Solomon
2016-07-21T15:08:54Z
2016-07-21T15:08:54Z
1924
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/21145
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The break-down of the monopoly of the East India Company in 1813
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21145/1/ramalingam_1924_3424600.pdf
File
MD5
246443025ef49552eed59b09dd984baa
9719049
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ramalingam_1924_3424600.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21145/2/ramalingam_1924_3424600.pdf.txt
File
MD5
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text/plain
ramalingam_1924_3424600.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/112372020-09-29T14:25:01Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
O'Meara, Edith
2013-06-12T21:18:51Z
2013-06-12T21:18:51Z
1928
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11237
en_US
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Relief work in Kansas, 1856-1857
Thesis
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/11237/1/ETD_1928_OMeara_E_small.pdf
File
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ETD_1928_OMeara_E_small.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/11237/3/ETD_1928_OMeara_E_small.pdf.txt
File
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ETD_1928_OMeara_E_small.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/237912017-12-08T21:43:44Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Moore, Katherine Louella
2017-04-26T16:30:46Z
2017-04-26T16:30:46Z
1931
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/23791
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Practical humanitarianism in eighteenth century France
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23791/1/moore_1931_3427413.pdf
File
MD5
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moore_1931_3427413.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23791/2/moore_1931_3427413.pdf.txt
File
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moore_1931_3427413.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/233072020-06-23T21:06:29Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Tillman, William Richard
2017-02-28T19:57:56Z
2017-02-28T19:57:56Z
1932
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/23307
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The legislative history of the Capper-Volstead Act
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23307/1/tillman_1932_3425404.pdf
File
MD5
0785d21efe78c620ef770bc22ef23093
16809508
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tillman_1932_3425404.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23307/2/tillman_1932_3425404.pdf.txt
File
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187227
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tillman_1932_3425404.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/182222020-06-24T18:59:24Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Rush, Elmer Ellsworth
2015-07-11T03:53:54Z
2015-07-11T03:53:54Z
1916
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/18222
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Railroad building which made Kansas City a center
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/18222/1/rush_1915_3424375.pdf
File
MD5
c9da777412834805a85bc0a59e0e5dd0
78009877
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rush_1915_3424375.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/18222/2/rush_1915_3424375.pdf.txt
File
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dc0f367782aad70034e29403f98e3705
98046
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rush_1915_3424375.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/233022020-06-23T20:16:09Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Smith, Marc Jack
2017-02-28T19:57:53Z
2017-02-28T19:57:53Z
1932
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/23302
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Lever and agriculture, 1913-1917
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23302/1/smith_1932_3425396.pdf
File
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caf991f75ed17c97596782879f849f1f
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smith_1932_3425396.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23302/2/smith_1932_3425396.pdf.txt
File
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/84292020-08-26T14:14:57Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Warkentin, John Henry
2011-11-22T16:29:28Z
2011-11-22T16:29:28Z
1908
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/8429
en_US
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The Financial Policy of William Pitt, 1784-1802
Thesis
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8429/1/ETD_1908_Warkentin_JH_mediumc.pdf
File
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ETD_1908_Warkentin_JH_mediumc.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8429/3/ETD_1908_Warkentin_JH_mediumc.pdf.txt
File
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/224342020-06-23T21:10:44Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Christoff, Theodore
2017-01-03T15:08:37Z
2017-01-03T15:08:37Z
1926
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/22434
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The organic system of the French National Constituent Assembly of 1789-1791
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/22434/1/christoff_1926_3424683.pdf
File
MD5
be35aae37e4675cd221465ea1961a9ce
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christoff_1926_3424683.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/22434/2/christoff_1926_3424683.pdf.txt
File
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299636
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christoff_1926_3424683.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/233162020-06-23T20:17:34Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Fritze, Andrew C.
2017-02-28T19:58:10Z
2017-02-28T19:58:10Z
1929
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/23316
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Luther as an educator
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23316/1/fritze_1929_3425365.pdf
File
MD5
f50b111e1f8b8619ca9ca7ea3ea7da0b
27080358
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fritze_1929_3425365.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/23316/2/fritze_1929_3425365.pdf.txt
File
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360615
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fritze_1929_3425365.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/195742018-01-31T20:07:48Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Wilson, Theodore A
author
Kruger, Linda Lee
cmtemember
Marx, Leonie
cmtemember
Lewis, Adrian
cmtemember
Levin, Eve
cmtemember
Wood, Nathan
cmtemember
Kipp, Jacob
2016-01-03T05:40:25Z
2016-01-03T05:40:25Z
2014-12-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:13716
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/19574
The U. S. Army's presence in Germany after the Nazi regime's capitulation in May 1945, required pursuit of two stated missions: (1) to secure German borders, and (2) to establish an occupation government within the U. S. assigned occupation zone. Both missions required logistics support, an often unstated but critical mission. The security mission, provided largely by the combat troops, declined between 1945 and 1948, but grew again, with the Berlin Blockade in 1948, and then with the Korean crisis in 1950. However, the occupation mission grew under the military government (1945-1949), and then during the Allied High Commission era (1949-1955). The build-up of U. S. Army infrastructure during the early occupation years has stood forward-deployed U. S. military forces in Europe in good stead throughout the ensuing years. The United States military force, predominantly the U. S. Army, was the only U. S. Government agency possessing the ability and resources needed to support the occupation mission. Furthermore, U. S. Army logistics support underpinned not only the U. S. military occupation mission between 1945 and 1949, the U. S. presence on the Allied High Commission until its official retirement in 1955, but also the U. S. security forces on the ground throughout the entire period and for decades later. The objectives in this study are threefold. First, to validate that U. S. Army logistics in the U. S. Zone of Occupation in Germany between 1945 and 1949 laid the foundation for the long-term presence of the U. S. Army in Germany. Second, to analyze the rationale for the build-up of logistics during this period. Third, to analyze the impact of U. S. Army soldiers, aspects of their logistics support mission, and family members on the German population.
en
Copyright held by the author.
History
cultural exchange
Germany
Occupation
U. S. Army logsitics
World War II
Logistics Matters: the Growth of Little Americas in Occupied Germany
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/19574/1/Kruger_ku_0099D_13716_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
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Kruger_ku_0099D_13716_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/19574/3/Kruger_ku_0099D_13716_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
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Kruger_ku_0099D_13716_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/305582020-06-19T08:01:05Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
author
Connelly, James L.
2020-06-18T22:04:22Z
2020-06-18T22:04:22Z
1962-12-31
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/30558
This study will attempt to assess the content, nature, and accessibility of the royal collections during the eighteenth century prior to the Revolution and to trace and to analyze the ever-growing movement for a national museum of art during the decades before 1789. This examination of the attempts made in pre-Revolutionary.France to bring the crown collections to the people is an effort to make a contribution, however. small, to the cultural history of France generally, to the history of the Louvre as a museum peripherally, and to the cultural and intellectual history of the Old Regime particularly.
This item is in the public domain.
France
Eighteenth century
Museums
The movement to create a national gallery of art in eighteenth-century France
Dissertation
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/30558/1/Connelly_1962_MovementToCreateANationalGalleryofArt.pdf
File
MD5
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Connelly_1962_MovementToCreateANationalGalleryofArt.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/30558/3/Connelly_1962_MovementToCreateANationalGalleryofArt.pdf.txt
File
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Connelly_1962_MovementToCreateANationalGalleryofArt.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/181202020-06-24T18:56:46Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Dielmann, Reta Hazel
2015-06-18T19:54:37Z
2015-06-18T19:54:37Z
1920
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/18120
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Popular propaganda in the French Revolution, 1789-1792
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/18120/1/dielmann_1920_3424485.pdf
File
MD5
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dielmann_1920_3424485.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/18120/2/dielmann_1920_3424485.pdf.txt
File
MD5
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text/plain
dielmann_1920_3424485.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/149112017-12-08T21:46:53Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Jenks, Leland H.
2014-08-12T16:31:47Z
2014-08-12T16:31:47Z
1914-05-18
Jenks, Leland H. "The Origin of the South Sea Company, 1710-1714." University of Kansas. May 18, 1914.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/14911
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The Origin of the South Sea Company, 1710-1714
Thesis
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/14911/1/Jenks_Origin_of_the_South_Sea_Company_1710-1714%28Medium%29.pdf
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Jenks_Origin_of_the_South_Sea_Company_1710-1714(Medium).pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/14911/3/Jenks_Origin_of_the_South_Sea_Company_1710-1714%28Medium%29.pdf.txt
File
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Jenks_Origin_of_the_South_Sea_Company_1710-1714(Medium).pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/215892017-12-08T21:38:01Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Erwin, Elizabeth Margaret
2016-09-30T14:39:26Z
2016-09-30T14:39:26Z
1927
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/21589
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
National park legislation from 1872 to 1916
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21589/1/erwin_1927_3424792.pdf
File
MD5
76330df3be662160daf68db957e7943f
26333018
application/pdf
erwin_1927_3424792.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21589/2/erwin_1927_3424792.pdf.txt
File
MD5
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255159
text/plain
erwin_1927_3424792.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/247952017-12-08T21:43:43Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Hess, Bartlett Leonard
2017-08-11T18:53:49Z
2017-08-11T18:53:49Z
1932
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/24795
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Popularism vs. Bonapartism. A study of certain initial phases of the mobilizing of nineteenth century liberalism
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24795/1/hess_1932_3423649.pdf
File
MD5
bc3401ed8e9c58679c39be007f457c66
44350140
application/pdf
hess_1932_3423649.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24795/2/hess_1932_3423649.pdf.txt
File
MD5
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text/plain
hess_1932_3423649.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/247762017-12-08T21:43:44Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
McIlvain, Zelma Edna
2017-08-11T18:53:33Z
2017-08-11T18:53:33Z
1931
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/24776
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Governor Glick (Kansas) and prohibition, 1883-1884
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24776/1/mcilvain_1931_3426809.pdf
File
MD5
e4da659efcce698af8f71b74cc0301e7
28435453
application/pdf
mcilvain_1931_3426809.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24776/2/mcilvain_1931_3426809.pdf.txt
File
MD5
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text/plain
mcilvain_1931_3426809.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/194852018-01-31T20:07:50Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Tsutsui, William
advisor
Greene, J. Megan
author
Schneiderwind, John David
cmtemember
Moran, Jeffrey
cmtemember
Uchiyama, Benjamin
cmtemember
Takeyama, Akiko
2016-01-02T19:12:41Z
2016-01-02T19:12:41Z
2015-05-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:14054
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/19485
This dissertation examines Japan during the Allied Occupation and the intersection of Occupation goals for remaking Japan into a peaceful, democratic nation with domestic constructs of sexuality. This study demonstrates how prostitution, sex education, birth control, and obscenity served as crucial lenses to understand how the occupier and occupied attempted to shape sexuality within a complex Occupation power structure incorporating both the victorious Allied Forces and the defeated Japanese government. Rather than proposing a narrative of a dominant occupier subjugating the occupied, this dissertation shows how that dual-power structure allowed Japanese politicians and activists to undermine Occupation reform in order to mitigate perceived negative influences upon domestic notions of proper sexuality and reaffirm a Japanese-constructed sexuality for post-Occupation sovereign Japan.
en
Copyright held by the author.
Asian history
Gender
History
Japan
Occupation
Sexuality
Invading Sexuality: Perception and Response in Postwar Japan, 1945-1957
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/19485/1/Schneiderwind_ku_0099D_14054_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
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application/pdf
Schneiderwind_ku_0099D_14054_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/19485/3/Schneiderwind_ku_0099D_14054_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
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text/plain
Schneiderwind_ku_0099D_14054_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/197112017-12-08T21:31:50Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Kilgore, Maud Chase
2016-01-06T17:16:17Z
2016-01-06T17:16:17Z
1917
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/19711
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The purchase of Alaska
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/19711/1/kilgore_1917_3424273.pdf
File
MD5
6af1c9118e68ae0192c5d0a808b004df
8555099
application/pdf
kilgore_1917_3424273.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/19711/3/kilgore_1917_3424273.pdf.txt
File
MD5
2de8c9a4d2754eb11c6cb2f3ec344902
185607
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kilgore_1917_3424273.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/244342017-12-08T21:42:12Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
McDonald, Ruby Zelma
2017-06-08T17:54:14Z
2017-06-08T17:54:14Z
1929
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/24434
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The trust question, 1890-1900
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24434/1/mcdonald_1929_3425375.pdf
File
MD5
0d9e6e59dd7d922627c4d9e3c4913382
16005310
application/pdf
mcdonald_1929_3425375.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24434/2/mcdonald_1929_3425375.pdf.txt
File
MD5
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169231
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mcdonald_1929_3425375.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/214892021-08-26T21:39:35Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Norrington, Mary Edna
2016-09-12T14:11:47Z
2016-09-12T14:11:47Z
1924
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/21489
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The beginnings of the church in Mexico, 1520-1600
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21489/1/norrington_1924_3424597.pdf
File
MD5
46fc5ecaaf7221b1e51720f60f796dbf
96088442
application/pdf
norrington_1924_3424597.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21489/2/norrington_1924_3424597.pdf.txt
File
MD5
aeb0ee999828617b45f96a5314e3d75c
342535
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norrington_1924_3424597.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/203722021-08-26T20:30:02Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Wirt, Catharine
2016-02-25T21:13:04Z
2016-02-25T21:13:04Z
1923
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/20372
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Freedom of speech and press during the great war
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/20372/1/wirt_1923_3424885.pdf
File
MD5
b7bc71c8c5f38ad77442f47004786f1b
22026413
application/pdf
wirt_1923_3424885.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/20372/3/wirt_1923_3424885.pdf.txt
File
MD5
3006e40c15ca093b6398e0af8a1a5e59
112002
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wirt_1923_3424885.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/256882018-02-01T22:11:56Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Corteguera, Luis R
author
Olivares, Irene
cmtemember
Vicente, Marta V
cmtemember
Schwaller, Robert C
cmtemember
Schieberle, Misty
cmtemember
Kuznesof, Elizabeth
2018-01-02T22:57:48Z
2018-01-02T22:57:48Z
2016-05-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:14641
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/25688
This dissertation prompts us to revisit our ideas about the politics of the Spanish empire by providing a picture of a world in which women influenced politics through their petitions, and a world in which affection, nurturing, and feminine ideals were part of the monarchy’s political power. Ideas about the Spanish monarchy’s obligation to listen to its subjects provide this different picture of politics in the Spanish empire. While multiple studies have pointed out that the ideal of communication was a prominent feature of royal authority in early modern monarchies, scholars have not fully investigated how this idea affected the process of politics and the social life of the period. This dissertation finds that the king’s obligation to listen to his people transformed the pleas of women’s petitions into relevant political matters by allowing women to hold the king accountable to his duties. This dissertation also argues that the expectation for communication placed feminine ideals on the power and authority of the king by requiring him to listen to and to nurture his people. The monarchy’s obligation to fulfill these duties shaped the perimeters of what the monarchy could and could not do, shaped the standing of subjects in the empire, and subjects’ obligations to the monarchy. Looking at how the ideal of communication affected the monarchy and its people provides a new point of departure from which to consider moments of discord and harmony in the trajectory of the Spanish empire.
en
Copyright held by the author.
European history
Women's studies
Communication
Gender
Petitions
Royal Authority
Spanish empire
Women's writing
Politics of Communication: Writing, Gender, and Royal Authority in the Spanish Empire (1556-1665)
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/25688/1/Olivares_ku_0099D_14641_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
6b98b54402fa3224d6594e5f9d5d966d
1138321
application/pdf
Olivares_ku_0099D_14641_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/25688/2/Olivares_ku_0099D_14641_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
d258528394f3dd878bbb3db4a1326a30
452527
text/plain
Olivares_ku_0099D_14641_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/276802019-02-06T15:45:21Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Alexiou, Jon James
2019-02-04T17:17:12Z
2019-02-04T17:17:12Z
1968
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/27680
This paper will attempt to show that in three years from 1957 to 1960 the influence of the People’s Republic of China in the Mongolian People’s Republic was steadily waning, and to follow the events of this deterioration of influence. At the same time, this subject offers a unique opportunity to study the interaction of China and the Soviet Union in the quest for influence.
Although a number of sources have been utilized, the main research has been done with translations from Chinese and Soviet newspapers and new agency releases. Because of the paucity of information dealing with the recent period of Outer Mongolian history, it has been necessary to speculate on the importance of a number of incidents, and small events take on a much larger meaning only when viewed in the light of a continuing process of lessening Chinese influence in Outer Mongolia.
Copyright held by the author.
People’s Republic of China
Mongolian People’s Republic
Soviet Union
Outer Mongolia
Foreign relations Mongolia
The Deterioration of Chinese Influence in the Monoglian People's Republic, May, 1957 to December, 1960
Thesis
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
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/27680/1/Alexiou_1968.pdf
File
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Alexiou_1968.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/27680/3/Alexiou_1968.pdf.txt
File
MD5
9c86a7f193e5bc66b5979b1d84775fb7
114110
text/plain
Alexiou_1968.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/83722020-08-20T13:05:43Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Wilson, Theodore A.
author
Ringquist, John Paul
cmtemember
Myers, Garth
cmtemember
Spiller, Roger J.
cmtemember
Mullis, Randy
cmtemember
Earle, Jonathan H.
2011-11-12T23:35:51Z
2011-11-12T23:35:51Z
2011-08-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:11743
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/8372
"Color No Longer A Sign of Bondage" is an account of the First Kansas Colored Volunteer Infantry Regiment from its earliest days in 1862 to the regiment's triumphant return to Kansas in November 1865. This work encompasses the racial attitudes of the black and white communities of Kansas, Indian Territory, and Arkansas, and the military service of the regiment through campaigns in the service of the Union's Army of the Frontier. The evolution of white support for black enlistment in Kansas, the regiment's acceptance by white Union regiments, and the concurrent conflicts with Confederate sympathizers and military organizations are central themes of this work. Although black military service in the Union was not officially countenanced in Kansas prior to 1863 and the Emancipation Proclamation, the First Kansas Colored fought for recognition and shed blood despite the opposition of Kansas civil and military authorities alike. The irregular enlistment and employment of the regiment jeopardized its existence through the fall of 1862, and despite official disapproval the regiment survived to become a vital part of the Army of the Frontier. White and black Kansans alike took note of the regiment's military service and through the sterling service of the regiment in an unforgiving theater of war, the regiment won the admiration of white regiments and a skeptical black civil populace. The deeds of the First Kansas Colored in battle and in garrison ultimately undergirded the black drive for civil rights and proved that black men could serve as soldiers in an army that often relegated its black soldiers to fatigue duty. The First Kansas Colored was a fighting regiment that won honors in Kansas, Indian Territory, and Arkansas and by its actions demanded respect. The manhood denied to blacks prior to the Civil War was not won through legal battles, but through courageous conduct in war and the blood shed by its soldiers in combat. The First Kansas Colored never faltered in its service to the Union; nor did it fail its supporters and the families of those who served in its ranks. The First Kansas Colored proved that color was no longer a sign of bondage and, although recognition for its deeds often proved ephemeral, its legacy endures.
en
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
History
African American studies
Military history
Abolitionists
Arkansas
Kansas
Slave soldiers
USCT
Color No Longer A Sign of Bondage: Race, Identity and the First Kansas Colored Volunteer Infantry Regiment (1862-1865)
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8372/1/Ringquist_ku_0099D_11743_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
4a0c9f7e2e41cc2e7ab451dd3ec21d2e
11305993
application/pdf
Ringquist_ku_0099D_11743_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8372/2/Ringquist_ku_0099D_11743_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
d3ba4c3dd60c03fc7d1ae0f7a625b0e0
933000
text/plain
Ringquist_ku_0099D_11743_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/214632017-12-08T21:38:01Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Cruickshank, Earl Fee
2016-09-07T13:17:37Z
2016-09-07T13:17:37Z
1927
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/21463
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Organization for world peace: pioneer phase, 1815-56/61
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21463/1/cruickshank_1927_3425182.pdf
File
MD5
a409c41bfcd6daceff2d1a080e9cbafe
34907070
application/pdf
cruickshank_1927_3425182.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21463/2/cruickshank_1927_3425182.pdf.txt
File
MD5
a5ae8479d593745f1ce496883acfa381
456810
text/plain
cruickshank_1927_3425182.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/277962019-08-27T18:09:08Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Corteguera, Luis R
author
Klaeren, George Alan
cmtemember
Kuznesof, Elizabeth
cmtemember
Vicente, Marta
cmtemember
Schwaller, Robert
cmtemember
Arias, Santa
2019-05-07T15:33:28Z
2019-05-07T15:33:28Z
2017-05-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:15254
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/27796
During the eighteenth century, a wave of thought inundated the Spanish empire, introducing new knowledge in the natural sciences, religion, and philosophy, and importantly, questioning the very modes of perceiving and ascertaining this knowledge. This period of epistemic rupture in Spain and her colonies, commonly referred to as the Enlightenment, not only presented new ways of knowing, but inspired impassioned debates among leading intellectuals about the epistemology and philosophy that continued throughout the century. The previous scholarly literature has largely dismissed Spain’s intellectual activity in the eighteenth-century, arguing that its predominantly conservative and Catholic culture stifled innovation and relegated it to a peripheral and derivative position in the broader European Enlightenment. Only recently have scholars given serious attention to the conception of a widespread “Catholic Enlightenment.” This dissertation places the intellectual and religious activity of the eighteenth-century Spanish empire within this Catholic Enlightenment, specifically examining the ways in which religious intellectuals mediated and contested Enlightenment thought. It particularly highlights the works of Counter-Enlightenment thinkers who engaged eighteenth-century philosophy but ultimately rejected it. This dissertation examines the leading theological, philosophical, and scientific writings of religious intellectuals, university professors, natural philosophers, and physicians in eighteenth-century Spain, New Spain, and Peru, additionally considering personal letters, Inquisitorial evidence, and writing from the popular press of the period. In so doing, it assesses the way in which such writings contended for an epistemology which would satisfy both the new philosophies and sciences as well as the Catholic faith; showing how eighteenth-century Spaniards defined the relationship between these fields and how they conceived of the disciplines of knowledge. Ultimately, this dissertation argues that the work of Catholic Enlightenment and Counter-Enlightenment individuals in Spain was less radical than the philosophies adopted by French or British counterparts. The Spanish Enlightenment experience was the result of a deliberate, thoughtful, and careful negotiation between ancients and moderns and an attempt to conciliate new methods of knowledge into the existing Scholastic framework which had been held in the Spanish empire for centuries, rather than accepting a complete epistemological rupture. It demonstrates the role of conservative intellectuals in contesting epistemological hegemony in the mid-eighteenth century by proposing alternative, and at times, mutually exclusive, systems for understanding and pursuing truth. It similarly shows how these epistemological debates impacted the way that Spaniards conceived of the relationship between science and religion. This, in turn, impacts the way in which historians understand both the way that Spain related to the European community, especially France, during the eighteenth century, as well as the way that various religious groups encountered the Enlightenment movement.
en
Copyright held by the author.
European history
Philosophy of science
Religious history
Catholicism
early modern history
enlightenment
epistemology
philosophy of science
Spain
Encountering the Enlightenment: Science, Religion, and Catholic Epistemologies Across the Spanish Atlantic, 1687-1813
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/27796/1/Klaeren_ku_0099D_15254_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
1a3d3ef9002d8805e478ab40502edb5a
2202548
application/pdf
Klaeren_ku_0099D_15254_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/27796/2/Klaeren_ku_0099D_15254_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
4faf254002506943f430d854cff4c623
813255
text/plain
Klaeren_ku_0099D_15254_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/190162018-01-31T20:07:50Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Gregg, Sara M.
author
Boynton, Alex John
cmtemember
Worster, Donald E.
cmtemember
Russell, Edmund P.
cmtemember
Moran, Jeffrey P.
cmtemember
Brown, J. Christoper
2015-12-02T23:46:41Z
2015-12-02T23:46:41Z
2015-05-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:14032
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/19016
“Confronting the Environmental Crisis” examines the role anti-environmentalism played in the unification of conservative thought in the 1960s and 1970s. American conservatism during these decades was no monolith. Rather, it was an incredibly diverse political philosophy capable of sheltering a number of disparate strains of thought under its broad canopy. But these strains did not always exist in harmony with one another. In fact, for much of the period under consideration, the four major conservative philosophies – traditionalism, libertarianism, fusionism, and neoconservatism – existed in explicit tension within one another. Unless the ideological barriers separating these contrasting impulses were somehow smoothed over, American conservatism would remain fractured and incapable of influencing national politics in any meaningful way. This dissertation argues that opposition to environmentalism in the 1970s served as a unifying force for American conservatism. It served as the glue that held together the opposing varieties of conservatism despite the persistence of ideological divisions in other areas of thought. The emergence of conservative anti-environmentalism in the 1970s owed much to the transformation of the American environmental movement. In the 1960s, many conservative intellectuals supported the environmental protection because they believed their philosophical principles supported environmental protection. But beginning in the 1970s, the environmental movement transformed into something that American conservatives no longer recognized. They perceived that their values no longer aligned so neatly with those held by environmentalists. Some conservative intellectuals continued to support environmental measures, but for many more this divergence in values led them to repudiate their former position and to embrace an unyielding opposition to environmentalism. By the end of the 1970s, anti-environmentalism had become a defining feature of American conservatism. The unification of American conservatism around anti-environmental ideas created aftershocks that altered not only the political landscape of environmental issues in the 1970s, but the whole of twentieth and twenty-first century America. Translating these ideas into politics in the 1970s and subsequent decades proved extremely difficult. But, as “Confronting the Environmental Crisis” demonstrates, conservative anti-environmentalism in the 1970s helped contribute to the polarization of American political rhetoric concerning the environment in lasting ways. Contemporary polarization of issues such as global warming and climate change, for example, demonstrates the impressive resilience of the conservative intellectual opposition to environmentalism. The contemporary American political landscape bears scars that can be traced back to the tumult of the 1970s.
en
Copyright held by the author.
History
1960s
1970s
Conservatism
Conservative Intellectuals
Environmental Ideas
Environmentalism
Confronting the Environmental Crisis: Anti-Environmentalism and the Transformation of Conservative Thought in the 1970s
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/19016/1/Boynton_ku_0099D_14032_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
6594b73debc401c2652f737ff2401f62
1916061
application/pdf
Boynton_ku_0099D_14032_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/19016/3/Boynton_ku_0099D_14032_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
0b06deb82d04832de81a1f78da133b1d
788812
text/plain
Boynton_ku_0099D_14032_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/217172017-12-08T21:40:50Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Gillum, Spencer Leo
2016-10-13T18:43:52Z
2016-10-13T18:43:52Z
1929
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/21717
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The United States and international conferences, 1878-1881
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21717/1/gillum_1929_3425369.pdf
File
MD5
4ea74ebe249d4db8df88cb29ce84407a
24841772
application/pdf
gillum_1929_3425369.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21717/2/gillum_1929_3425369.pdf.txt
File
MD5
f1908265f3f7593ef975bc43da093b64
151499
text/plain
gillum_1929_3425369.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/40162020-07-15T14:15:34Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Corteguera, Luis
author
Hawthorne, Margaret R.
cmtemember
Fourney, Diane
cmtemember
Kelton, Paul
cmtemember
Kuznesof, Betsy
cmtemember
Vicente, Marta V.
2008-08-05T02:34:51Z
2008-08-05T02:34:51Z
2007-12-27
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:2296
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/4016
Abstract This dissertation demonstrates that Pierre François-Xavier de Charlevoix, S.J. (1682-1761) constructed in his historical writings a French Atlantic World that evolved during what I have termed the Short Eighteenth Century. The years 1682-1761 represent Charlevoix's lifespan as well as the approximate lifespan of the French colonial enterprise on what was, for them, the far side of the Atlantic Ocean. Charlevoix wrote about his world from multiple perspectives, all of which are evident in his writings. This study examines four of Charlevoix's works, La Vie de Marie de l'Incarnation (1724), Histoire de l'Isle Espagnole (1736), Histoire de la Nouvelle France (1744), and Histoire du Paraguay (1756) to elucidate those perspectives as well as their evolutions. It is evident that Charlevoix hoped to see the French Atlantic colonial enterprise prosper, but underthe auspices of the Catholic Church. The biography of Marie de l'Incarnation indicates how critical it was for the Jesuits to guide the spiritual development of those throughout the French Atlantic World. The other three works considered here continue that theme, but also reflect Charlevoix's fading optimism regarding the French and the Jesuits and the roles they would play in the Atlantic World. By the end of the short eighteenth century, neither the French nor the Jesuits were forces with which to be reckoned, and the French Atlantic World was but a weak reflection of potential never reached.
EN
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
History
Europe--history
Atlantic world
Charlevoix
France
Enlightenment
French colonies
North America
Jesuit
Pierre François-Xavier de Charlevoix, S.J.: History and the French Atlantic World in the Short Eighteenth Century, 1682-1761
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/4016/1/umi-ku-2296_1.pdf
File
MD5
9435a53ac231d8fab8a79a85b52a8341
1520418
application/pdf
umi-ku-2296_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/4016/2/umi-ku-2296_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
3bbe0444943174f4e665dae0b8296955
286452
text/plain
umi-ku-2296_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/77202020-06-24T20:36:34Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Tuttle, Leslie R.
author
Utech, Sally
cmtemember
Corteguera, Luis R.
cmtemember
Vicente, Marta V.
cmtemember
Clark, Katherine
cmtemember
Neill, Anna
2011-07-04T17:37:49Z
2011-07-04T17:37:49Z
2010-10-12
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:11177
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/7720
This project explores the legal, economic, and social aspects of household and estate management in eighteenth-century France. It investigates two paradoxes surrounding noblewomen and household management. The first involves society's view of women's appropriate social, economic, and legal activities. The second centers on women's preparation for household and estate management. Using manuscript sources from noblewomen and their household advisors, as well as official notarial documentation, this study charts how, through household and estate management, women contributed to the social, economic, and legal landscapes of France in the eighteenth century. In addition, it examines the role of household advisors, such as notaries, lawyers, and experienced members of the domestic staff, in helping women overcome their educational and experiential deficiencies when they assumed responsibility for estates and households. Current historiography on eighteenth-century French nobility tends to normalize the experiences of men, implying either that women's experiences conformed to those of their male counterparts, or that exploring the lives of noblewomen does not reveal much about society. This project addresses this issue by detailing the unique social and economic contributions of women as household and estate managers.
en
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
Europe--history
Eighteenth century
France
Household and estate management
Noblewomen
Notaries
"Certainly the Proper Business of Woman": Household and Estate Management Techniques of Eighteenth-Century French Noblewomen
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/7720/1/Utech_ku_0099D_11177_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
32dfc7c16a70a229eee6424f852f5239
1490323
application/pdf
Utech_ku_0099D_11177_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/7720/2/Utech_ku_0099D_11177_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
80526cb6e734634f14cf940a988ba3e2
454968
text/plain
Utech_ku_0099D_11177_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/81332020-08-18T13:16:57Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Tuttle, William
advisor
Moran, Jeffrey P.
author
Johnson, Crystal Lynn
cmtemember
MacGonagle, Elizabeth
cmtemember
Wilson, Theodore A.
cmtemember
Woelful, James
2011-10-09T01:11:02Z
2011-10-09T01:11:02Z
2011-08-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:11675
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/8133
The Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) pursued a vision to bring racial harmony to a nation divided. CORE--regionally known as the Chicago Committee of Racial Equality--began in the spring of 1942 in Chicago through the work of James Farmer, George Houser, Bernice Fisher, Homer Jack, James Robinson, and Joe Guinn. This group of young idealists directed its attention to social action and according to August Meier and Elliott Rudwick applied Gandhian techniques of nonviolent direct action to the resolution of racial conflict in the United States. THE CORE WAY: THE CONGRESS OF RACIAL EQUALITY AND THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT--1942-1968 reexamines CORE, its members, philosophies, and transitions. Chapter one, A New Reflection: Revisiting the Voices of CORE's Past--The Birth of CORE 1942, looks at the formation of the organization in 1942 and the development of its foundational principles and ideas. Chapter two, Reconciling the Journey of Reconciliation: The Revealing of the Congress of Racial Equality--1947, looks at the Journey of Reconciliation and how CORE put into practice nonviolent direct action--one of its main ideological principles. Chapter three, Until the Cup That We Drink from Is the Very Same: The 1961 CORE Freedom Ride, builds upon chapter two with a look at the Freedom Ride of 1961. It chronicles the overwhelming commitment of the organization to racial integration and harmony. Chapter four, We're Sick and Tired of Being Sick and Tired: The Transitional CORE Years--1960-1966, begins to highlight the fracturing of CORE and its transition away from some of its traditional initiative, campaigns, but more importantly foundational principles. Finally, chapter five, The Opening of Pandora's Box: CORE at a Crossroads, examines the shift away from the original goals of CORE and the creation of a new direction.
en
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
History
Civil rights movement
Congress of racial equality
Nonviolent direct action
THE CORE WAY: THE CONGRESS OF RACIAL EQUALITY AND THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT: 1942-1968
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8133/1/Johnson_ku_0099D_11675_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
40bc41dcf10a4857a21c2d5c6c453d29
1014077
application/pdf
Johnson_ku_0099D_11675_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8133/2/Johnson_ku_0099D_11675_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
b5f15a8a4a9688b9660d7d02b70edef0
364684
text/plain
Johnson_ku_0099D_11675_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/82422020-08-25T13:23:57Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Crawford, Clarence Cory
2011-10-18T17:40:33Z
2011-10-18T17:40:33Z
1903
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/8242
en_US
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The Suspension of the Habeas Corpus Act in England
Thesis
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8242/1/ETD_1903_Crawford_C_mediumc.pdf
File
MD5
9498bfbc71f1219314405a09c76b5a31
73014038
application/pdf
ETD_1903_Crawford_C_mediumc.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8242/4/ETD_1903_Crawford_C_mediumc.pdf.txt
File
MD5
77f48401968ed782881845a036edd4cb
266676
text/plain
ETD_1903_Crawford_C_mediumc.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/257512018-06-01T15:28:20Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Corteguera, Luis
author
Davidson, Harley
cmtemember
Gregg, Sara
cmtemember
Cushman, Greg
cmtemember
Rosenthal, Anton
cmtemember
Arias, Santa
2018-01-28T22:32:12Z
2018-01-28T22:32:12Z
2016-05-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:14620
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/25751
During the sixteenth century, or Spain's so-called "Golden Age," Spain's understanding of wealth, resource management, and cosmology underwent massive evolution in the face of gaining an empire in the Americas. Before the conquest of the Americas, resource scarcity and the need for careful resource management defined Spanish environmental thought. Afterward, the idea that the Americas could provide infinite wealth took precedence. But as the century progressed and the empire declined, people from different parts of Spanish society--municipal councilmen, conquistadors, royal cosmographers, and royal reformers--reconciled these two ideas into one line of thought: abundant wealth could be harmful if not managed correctly. This dissertation situates Spanish economic thought within the broader discussion on European economic history, the history of science, and environmental thought.
en
Copyright held by the author.
European history
Environmental philosophy
Cosmography
Cosmology
Environment
Spain
Wealth
Managing the Empire’s Wealth: Environmental Thought during Spain’s Golden Age, 1492-1618
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/25751/1/Davidson_ku_0099D_14620_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
2332f61cc41eb6b3445582a037f1df88
2353036
application/pdf
Davidson_ku_0099D_14620_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/25751/2/Davidson_ku_0099D_14620_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
ff23a349c84b33f98876460cecd50eac
432716
text/plain
Davidson_ku_0099D_14620_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/210742017-12-08T21:36:10Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Hardin, Iva
2016-07-08T12:32:33Z
2016-07-08T12:32:33Z
1922
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/21074
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy,
use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the
work.
French industry, 1786-1792
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21074/1/hardin_1922_3424648.pdf
File
MD5
acd8e5be8ee76a9e74894bacb9967133
18557440
application/pdf
hardin_1922_3424648.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21074/2/hardin_1922_3424648.pdf.txt
File
MD5
30a5ef77f3406b5737637cd271ccf21b
299183
text/plain
hardin_1922_3424648.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/64422020-08-03T14:21:24Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Kelton, Paul
author
Edwards, Tai S.
cmtemember
Napier, Rita
cmtemember
Warren, Kim
cmtemember
Cushman, Gregory T.
cmtemember
Ward, Joy
2010-07-25T22:55:23Z
2010-07-25T22:55:23Z
2010-04-16
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:10845
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6442
This study demonstrates how the Osage structured their society based on gender complementarity, and although life certainly changed in the face of French, Spanish, and United States colonization, the Osage maintained this gender construction and resisted complete colonization through the nineteenth century. Osage rituals clearly demonstrate gender complementarity. Their worldview stressed duality and defined women and men as necessary pairs. Men provided and protected; women created. The Osage employed a sexual division of labor, and each gender achieved status and power in distinct ways. Gender difference did not imply hierarchical difference between the sexes. Rather men and women cooperated to ensure tribal perpetuation and success. Gender complementarity proved one of the most stable aspects of Osage society throughout colonization. In the eighteenth century, the Osage developed one of the most expansive trading systems in North America. Scholars argue that once the Osage began trading with the French, they increased their hunting to obtain more hides and furs, expanding the male role in society at the expense of the female role. This dissertation disproves such declensionist assertions about the status of Osage women in their society. During the eighteenth century, the Osage achieved regional dominance through the work of women, in agriculture and hide processing, and men, in raiding and hunting. When the United States expanded farther west during the nineteenth century, Osage regional hegemony deteriorated. Yet, federal Indian policy's contradictions facilitated Osage resistance to colonization. While missionaries attempted to change lifeways, federal support for the hide trade encouraged the Osage to maintain historic gendered work as both a spiritually relevant and economically successful social organization. Once removed to Kansas, a volatile environment and increasing settler depredations facilitated further resistance to missionization and the civilization program. Therefore the Osage spent their time hunting and processing hides, a far more successful survival strategy in this environment. Colonization initiated some changes to Osage life, but women were not increasingly subordinated to men. As long as Osage cosmology and subsistence followed the patterns developed before colonization, gender roles remained intact.
EN
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
United States--history
Native American studies
Colonization
Gender
Indigenous peoples
Osage Gender: Continuity, Change, and Colonization, 1720s-1870s
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/6442/1/Edwards_ku_0099D_10845_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
8b58d7dec032e8d69f92f2ce17c90f91
1833082
application/pdf
Edwards_ku_0099D_10845_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/6442/2/Edwards_ku_0099D_10845_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
4585cebf94ce41d7a767cad1412287a4
378747
text/plain
Edwards_ku_0099D_10845_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/213602017-12-08T21:42:12Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Denton, Doris
2016-08-23T17:10:47Z
2016-08-23T17:10:47Z
1929
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/21360
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Harmony Mission, 1821-1837
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21360/1/denton_1929_3425353.pdf
File
MD5
137c64048b332098fb9607f11d2a8ff3
26040767
application/pdf
denton_1929_3425353.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21360/2/denton_1929_3425353.pdf.txt
File
MD5
e9cf2b9a0b44228afae8c9198e5018df
90589
text/plain
denton_1929_3425353.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/213852017-12-08T21:38:01Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Morgan, Brewster
2016-08-23T17:11:05Z
2016-08-23T17:11:05Z
1927
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/21385
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Metternich: exponent of stability
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21385/1/morgan_1927_3427769.pdf
File
MD5
2b396bec12591a6ecc94be8b74453c8b
22112275
application/pdf
morgan_1927_3427769.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21385/2/morgan_1927_3427769.pdf.txt
File
MD5
e934da52685cf1f7501ead1715ca31ce
289581
text/plain
morgan_1927_3427769.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/224322020-06-23T20:10:12Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Burgtorf, Josephine Lucile
2017-01-03T15:08:35Z
2017-01-03T15:08:35Z
1926
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/22432
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
French and German trade in the economic policy of the United States, 1860-1880
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/22432/1/burgtorf_1926_3424681.pdf
File
MD5
7386c22f917eaeb37336c9134ed1d36d
133813466
application/pdf
burgtorf_1926_3424681.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/22432/2/burgtorf_1926_3424681.pdf.txt
File
MD5
82644b8430592c467677281c2b1eb1e8
386668
text/plain
burgtorf_1926_3424681.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/243132017-12-08T21:46:53Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Wilson, Theodore A.
author
Wibel, Michael N.
2017-05-26T20:57:55Z
2017-05-26T20:57:55Z
1968-02
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/24313
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
A Strange Odyssey: The Sumner Welles Mission to Europe
Thesis
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
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24313/1/wibel_1968_3512850.pdf
File
MD5
efee786fdfc321a9d711659d92e20de2
13152238
application/pdf
wibel_1968_3512850.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24313/3/wibel_1968_3512850.pdf.txt
File
MD5
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/108212020-09-22T14:34:44Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Jahannbani, Sheyda
advisor
Alexander, Shawn
author
Zacharias, Karenbeth Garvin
cmtemember
Alexander, Shawn L.
cmtemember
Bailey, Victor
cmtemember
Jahanbani, Sheyda F.
cmtemember
Moran, Jeffrey P.
cmtemember
Schroeder, Elinor
2013-02-17T16:56:54Z
2013-02-17T16:56:54Z
2012-12-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:12534
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10821
This dissertation asks how author and journalist Era Bell Thompson understood and constructed her racial identity against the historical context of the connections between the American South and the Congo. Thompson's unique childhood on the Great Plains of North Dakota and her long-time residence in Chicago offer a new perspective on race and history outside the American South or European colonialism. Using Thompson's autobiography, American Daughter, and her African travelogue, Africa, Land of My Fathers, the dissertation uses her writing as both a lens and a mirror. African American newspapers and periodicals, particularly The Chicago Defender, are important to the project as many of Thompson's early ideas about the American South germinated from the paper's front page headlines. Throughout the dissertation poetry is utilized to convey the moment and the mood. Historical connections between the American South and Congo beginning in the early 1800s provide important historical context. The outcry against the brutality of King Leopold II's Congo Free State at the beginning of the twentieth century is connected to outcries against the American Congo, featured headlines in 1919 and 1920.
en
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
Black history
Africa--history
American congo
Black identity
Chicago
Congo
Journalist
North Dakota
Era Bell Thompson: Observations of an American Daughter on the American South and the African Congo
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/10821/1/Zacharias_ku_0099D_12534_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
8c6731eb8635d892e3af8848dbe6e063
961993
application/pdf
Zacharias_ku_0099D_12534_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/10821/2/Zacharias_ku_0099D_12534_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
9028e3231fa6b65479d2bdff76f3656c
414871
text/plain
Zacharias_ku_0099D_12534_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/211602017-12-08T21:40:50Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Frederick, James V.
2016-07-21T15:09:03Z
2016-07-21T15:09:03Z
1928
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/21160
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The attitude of Erasmus towards the medieval church
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21160/1/frederick_1928_3424922.pdf
File
MD5
c298ab7d0c7a34c595466765b15678ba
15397393
application/pdf
frederick_1928_3424922.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/21160/2/frederick_1928_3424922.pdf.txt
File
MD5
e3ced1f891938899c68698f3c2a81ccb
166930
text/plain
frederick_1928_3424922.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/82782020-08-25T14:28:33Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_7158
KU ScholarWorks
author
Clarke, Mary Patterson
2011-10-27T15:02:47Z
2011-10-27T15:02:47Z
1905
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/8278
en_US
This work is in the public domain according to U.S. copyright law and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
The Lords of Trade and Plantations
Thesis
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
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8278/1/ETD_1905_Clarke_MP_mediumc.pdf
File
MD5
e285a103d4d740e4e09c1518c944e123
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ETD_1905_Clarke_MP_mediumc.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/8278/3/ETD_1905_Clarke_MP_mediumc.pdf.txt
File
MD5
7ca91552d89470ec15e54c300b3ce943
263870
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ETD_1905_Clarke_MP_mediumc.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/313882021-02-09T09:01:01Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
author
Rahman, A.F.M. Shamsur
2021-02-08T21:04:47Z
2021-02-08T21:04:47Z
1988-05-31
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/31388
This study traces the background and development of the U.S. assistance policy toward China in the late 1930's and throughout the 1940's. This aid took place in numerous forms but mostly via U.S. government programs. Operation of Lend-Lease assistance occupies a major part of this study, which was definitely the first major commitment of the U.S. resources for the large scale reconstruction of another country's economy. Although the aid given during wartime was basically intended to strengthen the capacity of China to resist the Japanese aggression, all U.S. aid programs had far reaching effects on China's post-war industrialization and economic development. Besides Lend-Lease, the other major U.S. programs to aid China were participation in the operation of UNRRA and the dispatch of an American War Production Mission to China. The short term objective of tying down three million Japanese soldiers in China superseded America's long-term objective of a unified, democratic and friendly China.
Although U.S. aid programs to China failed to achieve a major success owing to the corruption of Kuomintang officials, an outbreak of intensive civil war, and also lack of proper coordination and information about China's actual situation, it profoundly affected the United States' later relations and assistance policy toward other countries. The U.S. emerged as a major economic giant to influence the reconstruction and development of the global economy. On the other hand, China's process of westernization was largely begun because of this U.S. aid effort.
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
Social sciences
Economic policy
Postwar
China
United States economic and military assistance policy toward China during World War II and its immediate aftermath
Dissertation
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/31388/1/rahman_1988_1183836_vol1.pdf
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URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/31388/2/rahman_1988_1183836_vol2.pdf
File
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rahman_1988_1183836_vol2.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/31388/4/rahman_1988_1183836_vol1.pdf.txt
File
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rahman_1988_1183836_vol1.pdf.txt
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/31388/6/rahman_1988_1183836_vol2.pdf.txt
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rahman_1988_1183836_vol2.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/242032018-01-31T20:07:48Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Clark, Katherine RP
author
Jeter-Boldt, Michael Duane
cmtemember
Clark, Jonathan CD
cmtemember
Corteguera, Luis
cmtemember
Weber, Jennifer
cmtemember
Sousa, Geraldo
2017-05-15T22:35:54Z
2017-05-15T22:35:54Z
2016-12-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:14995
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/24203
This study examines travelers’ perceptions of distance as they moved about the British Atlantic World in the period from the founding of the first English settlement in North America at Jamestown in 1607 to the American Declaration of Independence in 1776. Distance here is understood to encompass the familiar expressions (physical space, time between locations) and alternate conceptions, including the sense of distance created by differing cultural markers and levels of economic development. Perceptions of distance arising from attributional factors illuminate how observers, using England broadly and London specifically as cultural benchmarks, understood the place of the various components of the First British Empire and an emerging trans-Atlantic imperial British national identity. Travelers’ experiences confirm the existence of internal peripheries within the Atlantic Archipelago, conforming to the so-called “Celtic fringe” that includes the Scottish Highlands, Ireland, Welsh uplands, and Cornwall. Across the Atlantic, observers understood attributional distance, perceptible from the late seventeenth century, between Britain’s North American colonies and the metropole made retention of these colonies in the imperial framework increasingly challenging. Most surprisingly, I argue that in the late eighteenth century, travelers’ perceived the Caribbean colonies, long denigrated in the historiography as degenerate and displaying no signs of British social norms, as the most physically proximate to Britain due to the Caribbean colonists’ ability to replicate British norms and customs.
en
Copyright held by the author.
History
Atlantic World
Britain
Caribbean
Distance
Travel literature
Discourses of Distance: Conceptions of Geographic and Cultural Space in the British Atlantic, 1607-1776
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24203/1/JeterBoldt_ku_0099D_14995_DATA_1.pdf
File
MD5
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JeterBoldt_ku_0099D_14995_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/24203/2/JeterBoldt_ku_0099D_14995_DATA_1.pdf.txt
File
MD5
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JeterBoldt_ku_0099D_14995_DATA_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/66252020-07-21T16:22:13Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Sweets, John F.
author
Jones, Benjamin Forrest
cmtemember
Bailey, Victor
cmtemember
Kelly, Van
cmtemember
Saul, Norman E.
cmtemember
Spiller, Roger J.
cmtemember
Wilson, Theodore A.
2010-09-03T02:18:52Z
2010-09-03T02:18:52Z
2008-08-20
http://dissertations2.umi.com/ku:2663
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6625
General Dwight D. Eisenhower used the Forces Françaises de l'Intérieur to conduct a guerilla war against German forces during the Allied campaigns in France. The study below examines the Allied politics, the nature and the development of the French Résistance, and the actions of the German forces in France to evaluate how useful the deployment of 93 JEDBURGH teams were in their role to conduct an effective guerilla war aiding Allied military objectives. Disagreements between President Franklin D. Roosevelt and resistance leader General Charles de Gaulle led to Eisenhower's inability to get the most out of the effort. Under certain conditions, Eisenhower and the French with British and American support achieved limited success. Eisenhower's recognition of de Gaulle's authority over the Résistance and his insistence on placing a French commander in charge of the effort proved to be the single greatest factor in the successes gained with the JEDBURGHs.
EN
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
Military history
Europe--history
Modern history
Jedburgh
Unconventional war
Coalition warfare
France
Special operations
World war II
Freeing France: The Allies, the Résistance, and the JEDBURGHs
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/6625/1/umi-ku-2663_1.pdf
File
MD5
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application/pdf
umi-ku-2663_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/6625/2/umi-ku-2663_1.pdf.txt
File
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umi-ku-2663_1.pdf.txt
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/224082020-06-23T19:53:45Zcom_1808_776com_1808_1260col_1808_13939col_1808_1951
KU ScholarWorks
author
Grassley, Edith Jane
2017-01-03T15:08:10Z
2017-01-03T15:08:10Z
1927
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/22408
This work is in the public domain and is available for users to copy, use, and redistribute in part or in whole. No known restrictions apply to the work.
Cicero's letters as a historical source
Thesis
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/22408/1/grassley_1927_3425199.pdf
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grassley_1927_3425199.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/22408/2/grassley_1927_3425199.pdf.txt
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oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/108242020-09-24T13:53:19Zcom_1808_1260com_1808_776col_1808_1952col_1808_13939
KU ScholarWorks
advisor
Kelton, Paul
author
DeSanti, Brady James
cmtemember
Moran, Jeffrey P.
cmtemember
O'Brien, Sharon
cmtemember
Warren, Kim
cmtemember
Wilson, Theodore A.
2013-02-17T17:02:48Z
2013-02-17T17:02:48Z
2012-08-31
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:12392
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10824
This project examines the life of renowned anthropologist John Reed Swanton (1873-1953 ) and his work with indigenous peoples. Combining several methodologies that included archaeology, anthropology, history, and linguistics, Swanton's research methods anticipated ethnohistory. His contributions to Native Southeast studies remain indispensable and his work in the Native Northwest, particularly with Haida and Tlingit communities, continues to serve as an important reference point for many scholars. Reared in the "Boasian" school of thought, John Swanton rejected both evolutionary and racial frameworks in which to evaluate Indian cultures. He remained an exemplary anthropologist from the beginning of his professional career at the Bureau of American Ethnology in 1900 through his retirement in 1944. A key aspect of this study concerns the dynamics of the individual dialogs that took place between Swanton and some of his Indian informants. These interactions provide a window into the ways in which anthropologists and Indians interacted. At times, anthropologists and Indian collaborators grasped the other's intentions. Just as often, however, the two parties held incompatible expectations, and as a result, misunderstand each other. For example, Swanton appreciated the storytelling creativity and individual artistry of his Haida collaborators, but often overlooked the intentions of the southeastern Indians who shared their stories with him. Many of the creation stories southeastern Indians told Swanton referenced the difficult circumstances they were currently facing or had undergone in the recent past, such as attacks on their cultures, removal, and alcoholism. Swanton often disregarded creation stories that included such material, as he felt they indicated cultural loss.
en
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
America--history
Native American studies
Anthropology
Ethnohistory
Native people
Southeast
Swanton
United States--history
ARRIVING AT A COMMON GROUND: JOHN REED SWANTON AND AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGY
Dissertation
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/10824/1/DeSanti_ku_0099D_12392_DATA_1.pdf
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DeSanti_ku_0099D_12392_DATA_1.pdf
URL
https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/1808/10824/2/DeSanti_ku_0099D_12392_DATA_1.pdf.txt
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