Craig Miner\u27s new book is a social history of the settlement of a specific Western region. In methodology and manner of presentation it resembles other new social histories. It is interdisciplinary and based on the social scientists\u27 modeling techniques. Miner cites European historians and, what is more remarkable, one can imagine them citing him. He uses unconventional primary materialsmanuscript censuses, tax records, and the reminiscences of the ordinary people whose story he tells; he concentrates on the material lives of those people, the fellows at the bottom, Bertolt Brecht called them, the ones, according to T. E. Lawrence who did not write the dispatches. His focus is, perforce, regional. Social history does not permi...
City histories written in the late nineteenth century by amateurs were panegyrics to local men of pr...
Who were the people making up Kansas Territory, or simply “K.T.”, as correspondence was addressed fr...
Who were the people making up Kansas Territory, or simply “K.T.”, as correspondence was addressed fr...
Craig Miner\u27s new book is a social history of the settlement of a specific Western region. In met...
In this delightful book, historian Craig Miner of Wichita State University narrates the history of w...
In this delightful book, historian Craig Miner of Wichita State University narrates the history of w...
To label a book as local history is often to discredit it as solid scholarship. No one should make t...
To label a book as local history is often to discredit it as solid scholarship. No one should make t...
Since Robert Haywood retired from the academic administration of Washburn University some years ago,...
Since Robert Haywood retired from the academic administration of Washburn University some years ago,...
"His book will have small interest to the careful student of history, but to the average reader, for...
Many modern United States travelers, much to the chagrin of the Kansas department of tourism, are us...
Kansas was born in the bloody prelude to the Civil War, a contested territory between North and Sout...
Lawrence H. Larsen was professor of American history at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, wher...
Lawrence H. Larsen was professor of American history at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, wher...
City histories written in the late nineteenth century by amateurs were panegyrics to local men of pr...
Who were the people making up Kansas Territory, or simply “K.T.”, as correspondence was addressed fr...
Who were the people making up Kansas Territory, or simply “K.T.”, as correspondence was addressed fr...
Craig Miner\u27s new book is a social history of the settlement of a specific Western region. In met...
In this delightful book, historian Craig Miner of Wichita State University narrates the history of w...
In this delightful book, historian Craig Miner of Wichita State University narrates the history of w...
To label a book as local history is often to discredit it as solid scholarship. No one should make t...
To label a book as local history is often to discredit it as solid scholarship. No one should make t...
Since Robert Haywood retired from the academic administration of Washburn University some years ago,...
Since Robert Haywood retired from the academic administration of Washburn University some years ago,...
"His book will have small interest to the careful student of history, but to the average reader, for...
Many modern United States travelers, much to the chagrin of the Kansas department of tourism, are us...
Kansas was born in the bloody prelude to the Civil War, a contested territory between North and Sout...
Lawrence H. Larsen was professor of American history at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, wher...
Lawrence H. Larsen was professor of American history at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, wher...
City histories written in the late nineteenth century by amateurs were panegyrics to local men of pr...
Who were the people making up Kansas Territory, or simply “K.T.”, as correspondence was addressed fr...
Who were the people making up Kansas Territory, or simply “K.T.”, as correspondence was addressed fr...