Lisa Yun\u27s book The Coolie Speaks: Chinese Indentured Laborers and African Slaves in Cuba is an extraordinary exemplar of scholarship that examines the under-investigated and often misunderstood phenomenon of Chinese coolie servitude in Cuba. The book interrogates liberal philosophies and modernist epistemologies, and offers new theoretical perspectives and methodological approaches that shatter long-held notions of the labor contract. Yun\u27s analysis explores a unique body of 2,841 testimonies and petitions by Chinese coolies compiled in the 1876 Report of the Commission Sent by China to Ascertain the Condition of Chinese Coolies in Cuba
With her latest book, Chinese American Portraits, Ruthanne Lum McCunn adds to her growing list of pu...
In Anthropologists in the Stock Exchange: A Financial History of Victorian Science, Marc Flandreau t...
textThis dissertation examines the experience of the tens of thousands of Chinese indentured laborer...
Lisa Yun\u27s book The Coolie Speaks: Chinese Indentured Laborers and African Slaves in Cuba is an e...
With full diplomatic relations restored yesterday between the U.S. and Cuba, we review From Cuba wit...
It\u27s not unusual for partisans of opposing viewpoints about Cuba to spark each other to flaming a...
Chinese coolies’ hiring during 1847–1853 represents a traumatic historic moment in global labor hist...
There is no history, only fictions of varying degree of plausibility. Although historians may disag...
Tong Lam’s engaging new study A Passion for Facts analyzes the processes by which modern modes of ap...
From 1847 to 1874, as many as 125,000 Chinese indentured or contract laborers, almost all male, were...
Review of BooksAny analysis of postrevolutionary Cuba, the first socialist republic to rise in Latin...
Book Review: Counterfeit Itineraries in the Global South: The human consequences of piracy in China ...
Book review of D.A. Dunkley, Agency of the Enslaved: Jamaica and the Culture of Freedom in the Atlan...
Book Review of "Slavery Behind The Wall: An Archaeology Of A Cuban Coffee Plantation" by Theresa A. ...
The Economic History of the Caribbean since the Napoleonic Wars, by Victor Bulmer-Thomas (2012); rev...
With her latest book, Chinese American Portraits, Ruthanne Lum McCunn adds to her growing list of pu...
In Anthropologists in the Stock Exchange: A Financial History of Victorian Science, Marc Flandreau t...
textThis dissertation examines the experience of the tens of thousands of Chinese indentured laborer...
Lisa Yun\u27s book The Coolie Speaks: Chinese Indentured Laborers and African Slaves in Cuba is an e...
With full diplomatic relations restored yesterday between the U.S. and Cuba, we review From Cuba wit...
It\u27s not unusual for partisans of opposing viewpoints about Cuba to spark each other to flaming a...
Chinese coolies’ hiring during 1847–1853 represents a traumatic historic moment in global labor hist...
There is no history, only fictions of varying degree of plausibility. Although historians may disag...
Tong Lam’s engaging new study A Passion for Facts analyzes the processes by which modern modes of ap...
From 1847 to 1874, as many as 125,000 Chinese indentured or contract laborers, almost all male, were...
Review of BooksAny analysis of postrevolutionary Cuba, the first socialist republic to rise in Latin...
Book Review: Counterfeit Itineraries in the Global South: The human consequences of piracy in China ...
Book review of D.A. Dunkley, Agency of the Enslaved: Jamaica and the Culture of Freedom in the Atlan...
Book Review of "Slavery Behind The Wall: An Archaeology Of A Cuban Coffee Plantation" by Theresa A. ...
The Economic History of the Caribbean since the Napoleonic Wars, by Victor Bulmer-Thomas (2012); rev...
With her latest book, Chinese American Portraits, Ruthanne Lum McCunn adds to her growing list of pu...
In Anthropologists in the Stock Exchange: A Financial History of Victorian Science, Marc Flandreau t...
textThis dissertation examines the experience of the tens of thousands of Chinese indentured laborer...