Global history research has burgeoned in the last decade, as seen in the emergence of journals (i.e., Comparativ, 1990– and Journal of Global History, 2006–), publications lists, professional organizations, electronic discussion forums and historiographical collections such as Hopkin’s Global History and Grantner’s Globalgeschichte und Globalisierung. There has also been a dramatic shift toward the provision of postgraduate global history programs in schools and universities across the United States, Australia and parts of Europe.1 At the same time, however, it is a reasonably common assumption that Australian historians have done little to shape the historiography of global history or to develop a distinctive approach to the analys...
This book is the outcome of several year's engagement with aspects of public history in Australia. I...
Building from the papers and discussions presented at the Transnational History Symposium (Canberra,...
Writing global history confronts the historian with a series of chal- lenges, some new, some (on clo...
A great deal has been written about how global affairs and the international ambitions of other nati...
On 4 June 2016, Jürgen Osterhammel of the University of Konstanz and Geoffrey Parker of Ohio State U...
On 4 June 2016, Jürgen Osterhammel of the University of Konstanz and Geoffrey Parker of Ohio State U...
The central challenge of a renewed world history at the end of the twentieth century is to narrate t...
Making Australian History : perspectives on the past since 1788 contains landmark primary and second...
This article first considers the problems of isolation that can beset national histories like Austra...
This is a critical evaluation of the leading twentieth-century historians of European settlement in ...
The Cambridge History of Australia offers a comprehensive view of Australian history from its pre-Eu...
Why is the study of Asia important in the history curriculum? Deborah Henderson argues that Australi...
The turn towards Global history shows no sign of abating. It seems that across the discipline, histo...
Over ten years ago, Geyer and Bright predicted that globalization would facilitate the revival of wo...
History Australia is the official journal of the Australian Historical Association. It aims to publi...
This book is the outcome of several year's engagement with aspects of public history in Australia. I...
Building from the papers and discussions presented at the Transnational History Symposium (Canberra,...
Writing global history confronts the historian with a series of chal- lenges, some new, some (on clo...
A great deal has been written about how global affairs and the international ambitions of other nati...
On 4 June 2016, Jürgen Osterhammel of the University of Konstanz and Geoffrey Parker of Ohio State U...
On 4 June 2016, Jürgen Osterhammel of the University of Konstanz and Geoffrey Parker of Ohio State U...
The central challenge of a renewed world history at the end of the twentieth century is to narrate t...
Making Australian History : perspectives on the past since 1788 contains landmark primary and second...
This article first considers the problems of isolation that can beset national histories like Austra...
This is a critical evaluation of the leading twentieth-century historians of European settlement in ...
The Cambridge History of Australia offers a comprehensive view of Australian history from its pre-Eu...
Why is the study of Asia important in the history curriculum? Deborah Henderson argues that Australi...
The turn towards Global history shows no sign of abating. It seems that across the discipline, histo...
Over ten years ago, Geyer and Bright predicted that globalization would facilitate the revival of wo...
History Australia is the official journal of the Australian Historical Association. It aims to publi...
This book is the outcome of several year's engagement with aspects of public history in Australia. I...
Building from the papers and discussions presented at the Transnational History Symposium (Canberra,...
Writing global history confronts the historian with a series of chal- lenges, some new, some (on clo...