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13. Duke Ellington Plays Baghdad: Rethinking Hard and Soft Power from the Outside In
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
- 1. An Alternative Tradition of Radicalism: African American Abolitionists and the Metaphor of Revolution 9
- 2. Isaiah Rynders and the Ironies of Popular Democracy in Antebellum New York 31
- 3. Leave of Court: African American Claims-Making in the Era of Dred Scott v. Sanford 54
- 4. City Women: Slavery and Resistance in Antebellum St. Louis 75
- 5. Free Soil, Free Labor, and Free Markets: Antebellum Merchant Clerks, Industrial Statistics, and the Tautologies of Profit 95
- 6. Make “Every Slave Free, and Every Freeman a Voter”: The African American Construction of Suffrage Discourse in the Age of Emancipation 117
- 7. Making It Fit: The Federal Government, Liberal Individualism, and the American West 141
- 8. Reconstructing the Empire of Cotton: A Global Story 164
- 9. Cuba Libre and American Imperial Nationalism: Conflicting Views of Racial Democracy in the Post- Reconstruction United States 191
- 10. Transnational Solidarities: The Sacco and Vanzetti Case in Global Perspective 215
- 11. “An Ironic Testimony to the Value of American Democracy”: Assimilationism and the World War II Internment of Japanese Americans 237
- 12. Student Protest, “Law and Order,” and the Origins of African American Studies in California 258
- 13. Duke Ellington Plays Baghdad: Rethinking Hard and Soft Power from the Outside In 279
- 14. The Story of American Freedom—Before and After 9/11 301
- Afterword: “From the Archives and from the Heart” 313
- Notes on Contributors 319
- Index 323
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
- 1. An Alternative Tradition of Radicalism: African American Abolitionists and the Metaphor of Revolution 9
- 2. Isaiah Rynders and the Ironies of Popular Democracy in Antebellum New York 31
- 3. Leave of Court: African American Claims-Making in the Era of Dred Scott v. Sanford 54
- 4. City Women: Slavery and Resistance in Antebellum St. Louis 75
- 5. Free Soil, Free Labor, and Free Markets: Antebellum Merchant Clerks, Industrial Statistics, and the Tautologies of Profit 95
- 6. Make “Every Slave Free, and Every Freeman a Voter”: The African American Construction of Suffrage Discourse in the Age of Emancipation 117
- 7. Making It Fit: The Federal Government, Liberal Individualism, and the American West 141
- 8. Reconstructing the Empire of Cotton: A Global Story 164
- 9. Cuba Libre and American Imperial Nationalism: Conflicting Views of Racial Democracy in the Post- Reconstruction United States 191
- 10. Transnational Solidarities: The Sacco and Vanzetti Case in Global Perspective 215
- 11. “An Ironic Testimony to the Value of American Democracy”: Assimilationism and the World War II Internment of Japanese Americans 237
- 12. Student Protest, “Law and Order,” and the Origins of African American Studies in California 258
- 13. Duke Ellington Plays Baghdad: Rethinking Hard and Soft Power from the Outside In 279
- 14. The Story of American Freedom—Before and After 9/11 301
- Afterword: “From the Archives and from the Heart” 313
- Notes on Contributors 319
- Index 323