Baltimore’s Secessionist Moment: Conservatism and Political Networks in the Pratt Street Riot and Its AftermathTowers, Frank in Charles W. Mitchell and Jean H. Baker The Civil War in Maryland Reconsidered | |
Bison and Bookkeeping: Accounting for an Environmental Imagination in Great Plains Trading PostsColpitts, George in in Brian Frehner and Kathleen Brosnan The Greater Plains: Rethinking a Region’s Environmental Histories | |
Creating the Future of Health: The History of the Cumming School of Medicine at the University of Calgary, 1967-2012Lampard, J. Robert, Hogan, David B., Stahnisch, Frank W. and Wright, James R. Jr. | |
Energy in the Americas: Critical Reflections on Energy and HistoryKiddle, Amelia | |
Press, Power, and Culture in Imperial BrazilKraay, Hendrik, Celso Thomas Castilho and Teresa Cribelli | |
Review Essay: “We Carried Out Our [International] Duty!”: The Soviet Union, Cuito Cuanavale, and Wars of National Liberation in Southern AfricaHill, Alexander A. | |
Sinclair Lewis, Mantrap and Northern Canadian Modernism at Pelican Narrows, 1924Colpitts, George | |
The Creation and Early Development of the Zimbabwe Defense Forces (ZDF) 1980-93Stapleton, Timothy | |
The War on the Eastern Front: The Soviet Union, 1941-1945 - A Photographic HistoryHill, Alexander A.The RIA-Novosti press agency – now known as Sputnik in the West – has one of the best archives of Soviet Second World War photographs and for this remarkable book Alexander Hill has made a superb selection of them. These striking images record vividly, as only photographs can, the brutal conflict on the Eastern Front and the extraordinary experience of the soldiers and civilians who were caught up in it. Every aspect of the struggle is depicted – the fighting on the front lines and behind the lines, aerial combat and naval warfare, the ordeal of living under German occupation, the war industries and Lend-Lease and the massive sacrifices made at every level of Soviet society to defeat the Germans. The photographs and captions take the reader through the entire course of the war, from the Nazi-Soviet Pact and Soviet expansion into Poland, Finland and the Baltic Republics, through Operation Barbarossa and the German advances of 1941 and 1942, to the momentous battles at Stalingrad and Kursk and the sequence of massive offensives mounted by the Red Army that drove the Wehrmacht back to Berlin. The landscapes over which the armies moved, and the shattered towns and cities they left behind, are recorded as are individuals whose faces were captured by the camera during this devastating conflict over seventy years ago. | |
Visual Symbols and Military Culture in Britain’s West African Colonial Army (c.1900-60)Stapleton, Timothy |