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The past is never dead. It's not even past

Not Even Past

Colour of Paradise: The Emerald in the Age of Gunpowder Empires, by Kris Lane (2010)

December 10, 2014

What do an enslaved African miner in colonial Colombia, a Portuguese Jewish merchant in Cartagena, a gem cutter in Amsterdam, and an Ottoman sultan have in common? Kris Lane’s Colour of Paradise ties together the histories of these diverse and geographically distant peoples by tracing the exploitation, trade, and consumption of emeralds between 1540 and the 1790s

Explorations in Connected History: From the Tagus to the Ganges, by Sanjay Subrahmanyam (2004)

November 12, 2014

By Ben Breen  Sanjay Subrahmanyam is a historian of remarkable erudition and imagination. His personal itineraries over the years—from the New Delhi School of Economics to the École des Hautes Études in Paris, and from Oxford to UCLA, where he currently holds an endowed chair in history—mirror those of the early modern travellers who frequently […]

Giving a life, winning a patrimony

October 22, 2014

It was the Indian month of Shravana, and early summer rains of 1653 would have set in as the delegation of villagers toiled up the steep slopes to the gates of the fort of Rohida, (later named Vicitragadh) and presented themselves to the officials there.

Indrani Chatterjee on Monasteries and Memory in Northeast India

March 1, 2014

European monasteries were segregated by sex -- for men or women only -- and the inhabitants were expected to be celebate. In South Asia, where many different religious traditions grew up side by side in the same terrain since the earliest times, monasticism neither insisted on absolute celibacy for men, nor did they exclude women. Many monastic men moved from site to site collecting food and exchanging information.

The Latest from Longhorn PhDs

February 12, 2014

Photograph of the front facade of Garrison Hall on the campus of the University of Texas at Austin

In November we wrote to everyone who received a PhD in History at UT Austin since 2000 to find out what they were doing.  We are curious about our former students’ careers and adventures and we want to celebrate their achievements in whatever line of work they pursued. And we still do! We hope everyone […]

The Ottoman Age of Exploration by Giancarlo Casale (2010)

January 27, 2013

Book cover of The Ottoman Age of Exploration by Giancarlo Casale

In The Ottoman Age of Exploration, Giancarlo Casale contests the prevailing narrative that characterizes the Ottoman Empire as a passive bystander in the sixteenth-century struggle for dominance of global trade.

Prejudice and Pride: School Histories of the Freedom Struggle in India and Pakistan by Krishna Kumar (2001)

May 6, 2011

Book cover of Prejudice and Pride: School Histories of the Freedom Struggle in India and Pakistan by Krishna Kumar

Krishna Kumar’s study of school textbooks in Pakistan and India shows that the discipline of history in South Asia has “come under the strain of nation-building rather more than other subjects.” History teaching in these textbooks seeks to settle political and ideological points and guide children’s responses to present day situations.

Review of The Other Side of Silence: Voices from the Partition of India by Urvashi Butalia (2000) by Urvashi Butalia

November 5, 2010

Book cover of The Other Side of Silence: Voices From the Partition of India by Urvashi Butalia

In the wake of Indira Gandhi’s assassination by her Sikh bodyguard, the citizens of Delhi unleashed a murderous campaign of violence on the Sikh community as a whole. Delhi-ites were horrified to discover both the inaction of the local authorities to provide safety and security for citizens, and the failure of the media to report the atrocities taking place.

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