@incollection{CarlaUhinkCecchetMachado2022, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo and Cecchet, Lucia and Machado, Carlos}, title = {Introduction}, series = {Poverty in Ancient Greece and Rome. Realities and Discourses}, booktitle = {Poverty in Ancient Greece and Rome. Realities and Discourses}, publisher = {Routledge}, address = {London / New York}, isbn = {978-0-36722-115-7}, doi = {10.4324/9780367221157-1}, pages = {1 -- 13}, year = {2022}, language = {en} } @book{OPUS4-57777, title = {Poverty in ancient Greece and Rome}, editor = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo and Cecchet, Lucia and Machado, Carlos}, publisher = {Routledge}, address = {London}, isbn = {978-0-367-22114-0}, doi = {10.4324/9780367221157}, pages = {x, 305}, year = {2022}, abstract = {This volume presents an innovative picture of the ancient Mediterranean world. Approaching poverty as a multifaceted condition, it examines how different groups were affected by the lack of access to symbolic, cultural and social - as well as economic - capital. Collecting a wide range of studies by an international team of experts, it presents a diverse and complex analysis of life in antiquity, from the archaic to the late antique period. The sections on Greece, Rome, and Late Antiquity offer in-depth studies of ancient life, integrating analysis of socio-economic dynamics and cultural and discursive strategies that shaped this crucial element of ancient (and modern) societies. Themes like social cohesion and control, exclusion, gender, agency, and identity are explored through the combination of archaeological, epigraphic, and literary evidence, presenting a rich panorama of Greco-Roman societies and a stimulating collection of new approaches and methodologies for their understanding. The book offers a comprehensive view of the ancient world, analysing different social groups - from wealthy elites to poor peasants and the destitute - and their interactions, in contexts as diverse as Classical Athens and Sparta, imperial Rome, and the late antique towns of Egypt and North Africa. Poverty in Ancient Greece and Rome: Discourses and Realities is a valuable resource for students and scholars of ancient history, classical literature, and archaeology. In addition, topics covered in the book are of interest to social scientists, scholars of religion, and historians working on poverty and social history in other periods.}, language = {en} } @article{CarlaUhinkFreitag2022, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo and Freitag, Florian}, title = {Theme Park Imitations}, series = {Cultural History}, volume = {11}, journal = {Cultural History}, number = {2}, publisher = {Edinburgh University Press}, address = {Edinburgh}, issn = {2045-290X}, doi = {10.3366/cult.2022.0267}, pages = {181 -- 198}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Theme parks frequently draw not only on historical themes, from antiquity to the roaring twenties, but also on their own history - that is, the history of the medium of the theme park itself. This article uses the example of the Happy World ride at Happy Valley Beijing (China) to discuss theme park imitations, that is, the fact that theme parks frequently borrow individual elements (themes, technologies, visuals, layouts, names) and/or entire units (rides, restaurants, themed areas) from each other. Opened in 2014 in the Greek-themed Aegean Harbour section of Happy Valley Beijing, Happy World may upon first sight look like an almost exact copy of Disney's 'it's a small world' (opened at Disneyland in California in 1966) but turns out to be, upon closer examination, a complex refunctionalization of central elements of 'it's a small world' that establishes meaningful connections between (ancient) Greece and the city of Beijing via the theme of the Olympic Games: drawing on the origins of 'it's a small world' in the 1964-5 New York World's Fair and the latter's motto of 'Peace through Understanding', Happy World takes visitors on a journey from the ancient Olympiad to contemporary Beijing (the site of the 2008 Summer and the 2022 Winter Olympic Games) to offer a theme park rendition of the 2008 Olympic torch relay as an homage to 'the spirit [of peace, respect, and friendship] in the people's [sic] of the world'.}, language = {en} } @book{CarlaUhinkFreitagAntonClaveetal.2023, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo and Freitag, Florian and Anton Clav{\´e}, Salvador and B{\"o}ger, Astrid and Cl{\´e}ment, Thibaut and Lukas, Scott and Mittermeier, Sabrina and Molter, C{\´e}line and Paine, Crispin and Schwarz, Ariane and Staszak, Jean-Francois and Steinkr{\"u}ger, Jan-Erik and Widmann, Torsten}, title = {Key concepts in theme park studies}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Cham}, isbn = {978-3-031-11131-0}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-031-11132-7}, pages = {XIX, 361}, year = {2023}, abstract = {This book offers a comprehensive, multidisciplinary introduction to theme parks and the field of theme park studies. It identifies and discusses relevant economic, social, and cultural as well as medial, historical, and geographical aspects of theme parks worldwide, from the big international theme park chains to smaller, regional, family-operated parks. The book also describes the theories and methods that have been used to study theme parks in various academic disciplines and reviews the major contexts in which theme parks have been studied. By providing the necessary backgrounds, theories, and methods to analyze and understand theme parks both as a business field and as a socio-cultural phenomenon, this book will be a great resource to students, academics from all disciplines interested in theme parks, and professionals and policy-makers in the leisure and entertainment as well as the urban planning sector.}, language = {en} } @book{CarlaUhinkRollinger2023, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo and Rollinger, Chrstian}, title = {The Tetrarchy as Ideology}, series = {Heidelberger althistorische Beitr{\"a}ge und epigraphische Studien (HABES) ; 64}, journal = {Heidelberger althistorische Beitr{\"a}ge und epigraphische Studien (HABES) ; 64}, editor = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo and Rollinger, Christian}, publisher = {Franz Steiner}, address = {Stuttgart}, isbn = {978-3-515-13400-2}, pages = {382}, year = {2023}, abstract = {The 'Tetrarchy', the modern name assigned to the period of Roman history that started with the emperor Diocletian and ended with Constantine I, has been a much-studied and much-debated field of the Roman Empire. Debate, however, has focused primarily on whether it was a true 'system' of government, or rather a collection of ad-hoc measures undertaken to stabilise the empire after the troubled period of the 3rd century CE. The papers collected here aim to go beyond this question and to present an innovative approach to a fascinating period of Roman history by understanding the Tetrarchy not as a system of government, but primarily as a political language. Their focus thus lies on the language and ideology of the imperial college and court, on the performance of power in imperial ceremonies, the representation of the emperors and their enemies in the provinces of the Roman world, as well as on the afterlife of Tetrarchic power in the Constantinian period.}, language = {en} } @article{Geppert2021, author = {Geppert, Dominik Nicolas}, title = {Emotions and gender in Margaret Thatcher and Helmut Kohl's Cold War}, series = {Diplomacy and statecraft}, volume = {32}, journal = {Diplomacy and statecraft}, number = {4}, publisher = {Taylor \& Francis Group}, address = {Philadelphia}, issn = {0959-2296}, doi = {10.1080/09592296.2021.1996719}, pages = {766 -- 788}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Although German Federal Chancellor Helmut Kohl and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher were on the same side in the Cold War, as well as in the same family of moderate centre-right parties, despite being roughly the same age and sharing a fundamental market-economic and Atlanticist orientation, they were not in harmony emotionally. This analysis demonstrates how different genders, incompatible conceptions of nation, history, and regional origins, as well as experiences of mutual frustration eclipsed their ideological commonalities and counteracted against the 'emotional regimes' of 'the West' in the Cold War. It breaks new ground in several respects. First, it does not examine strong feelings that blotted out all others but rather a range of more ambivalent and nuanced emotions. Second, it links the themes of gender and feeling by enquiring about the male or female manifestations and attributions of certain emotions. Third, it focuses on not only men and women at the top but considers their entourages as either amplifiers or 'shock absorbers' of the leaders' feelings. Finally, it explores the scope and limits of the notion that the Cold War was an 'emotional regime'.}, language = {en} } @incollection{SchenckMohamedZakariaNdiritiroetal.2021, author = {Schenck, Marcia C. and Mohamed Zakaria, Abdalla and Ndiritiro, Richesse and Omar, Shaema and Rer, Samson and Reed, Kate and Teferra, Gerawork}, title = {Opportunities and challenges of oral history research through refugee voices, narratives, and memories}, series = {Global South scholars in the Western Academy}, booktitle = {Global South scholars in the Western Academy}, publisher = {Routledge}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-0-367-62582-5}, doi = {10.4324/9781003109808-18}, pages = {171 -- 185}, year = {2021}, abstract = {While academic mobility has generally been positioned in the literature as a ready, at-will movement of people and ideas, this chapter demonstrates how the conditions of mobility and immobility "all at once" impact knowledge production and exchange. By offering a more nuanced window into the experiences of scholars in exile, this chapter challenges dominant discourses of academic mobility and draws on lessons learned from within liminal spaces of knowledge production to elicit more response within higher education communities. Context-rich examples reveal the interpersonal tensions and cultural shifts—including gender, ethnic and race-based stereotypes and discrimination—that affect intellectual outputs, further problematizing the conceptualization of knowledge production in human capital terms. Lessons gleaned from Scholars at Risk (SAR) and related programmes suggest support structures that amplify scholars' agency; more broadly, higher education should consider ways of adapting to its diverse knowledge producers, rather than supporting the acclimation to its current environment.}, language = {en} } @article{ReedSchenck2023, author = {Reed, Kate and Schenck, Marcia C.}, title = {A right to research?}, series = {International migration}, volume = {61}, journal = {International migration}, number = {3}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, address = {Oxford}, issn = {0020-7985}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1111/imig.13145}, pages = {390 -- 393}, year = {2023}, language = {en} } @incollection{CarlaUhink2020, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo}, title = {Res tamquam proprias retinebat}, series = {Himmelw{\"a}rts und erdverbunden? Religi{\"o}se und wirtschaftliche Aspekte sp{\"a}tantiker Lebensrealit{\"a}t}, volume = {2021}, booktitle = {Himmelw{\"a}rts und erdverbunden? Religi{\"o}se und wirtschaftliche Aspekte sp{\"a}tantiker Lebensrealit{\"a}t}, publisher = {Verlag Marie Leidorf}, address = {Rahden}, isbn = {978-3-86757-398-6}, pages = {339 -- 355}, year = {2020}, language = {en} } @incollection{CarlaUhink2018, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo}, title = {Image Control in Court: (Auto)Biographical Elements in Athenian Trial Speeches}, series = {Competing perspectives : figures of image control}, volume = {2019}, booktitle = {Competing perspectives : figures of image control}, publisher = {Wilhelm Fink}, address = {Paderborn}, isbn = {978-3-7705-6490-3}, publisher = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {259 -- 288}, year = {2018}, language = {en} } @incollection{CarlaUhinkWieber2020, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo and Wieber, Anja}, title = {Introduction}, series = {Orientalism and the reception of powerful women from the ancient world}, booktitle = {Orientalism and the reception of powerful women from the ancient world}, publisher = {Bloomsbury}, address = {London}, isbn = {978-1-3500-5010-5}, doi = {10.5040/9781350077416.0006}, publisher = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {1 -- 15}, year = {2020}, language = {en} } @incollection{CarlaUhink2020, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo}, title = {Posthuman Ambitions in the Roman Principate}, series = {Beyond the Romans. Posthuman Perspectives in Roman Archaeology}, booktitle = {Beyond the Romans. Posthuman Perspectives in Roman Archaeology}, publisher = {Oxbow}, address = {Oxford}, isbn = {978-1-78925-136-4}, pages = {11 -- 24}, year = {2020}, language = {en} } @incollection{CarlaUhink2023, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo}, title = {Quod omni consanguinitate certius est, virtutibus fratres Families and Family Relationships in 'Tetrarchic' Ideology}, series = {The Tetrarchy as Ideology : Recoonfigurations and Representations of an Imperial Power}, booktitle = {The Tetrarchy as Ideology : Recoonfigurations and Representations of an Imperial Power}, editor = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo}, publisher = {Franz Steiner}, address = {Stuttgart}, isbn = {978-3-515-13403-3}, pages = {25 -- 46}, year = {2023}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Miller2017, author = {Miller, Nicolas B.}, title = {John Millar and the Scottish Enlightenment}, series = {Oxford University studies in the enlightenment}, journal = {Oxford University studies in the enlightenment}, publisher = {Voltaire Foundation}, address = {Oxford}, isbn = {978-0-7294-1192-9}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {240}, year = {2017}, language = {en} } @misc{Kim2020, type = {Master Thesis}, author = {Kim, Taeyeong}, title = {The involvement of the two German states in Korea during the 1950s in the context of the Cold War}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-52603}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-526039}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {100}, year = {2020}, abstract = {This master thesis will analyze the background of the involvement of the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) and the German Democratic Republic (GDR) in Korea during the 1950s in the context of the Cold War. In both Korean states, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) as well as the Republic of Korea (ROK), the so-called humanitarian aid that was provided to them in the form of medical and economic assistance to help surmount the hardship of the postwar period is remembered with great appreciation to this day. However, critical views on the German engagement in Korea are still relatively hard to find. In this paper, two exemplary cases will be studied: the GDR's city reconstruction project in the North Korean cities of Hamheung and Heungnam and the FRG's medical assistance to the ROK by means of the West German Red Cross Hospital in Busan. By looking at primary sources like governmental documents, this thesis will examine the geopolitical conditions and particular national interests that stood behind the German development and humanitarian aid for the Korean states at that time, thus shedding light on the political goals the two German states pursued, and the benefit they expected to derive from their engagement in Korea. Sources consulted include primary archival materials, secondary sources like monographs, journal articles, contemporary newspaper articles, and interviews with contemporary witnesses.}, language = {en} } @masterthesis{Lobedan2022, type = {Bachelor Thesis}, author = {Lobedan, Ben}, title = {"The mightiest critic is the public voice"}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-57524}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-575241}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {36}, year = {2022}, abstract = {In ihrer Praxis wird die aus verschiedenen Disziplinen hervorgegangene colonial discourse theory h{\"a}ufig f{\"u}r ihre totalisierenden Tendenzen im Hinblick auf den Aufbau des von ihr untersuchten Diskurses und den innerhalb dieses Aufbaus herrschenden Machtverh{\"a}ltnissen kritisiert. Das Resultat dieser strukturellen To-talisierung ist eine komplette Entmachtung der von dem Diskurs betroffenen Sub-jekte, die folglich zu passiven Objekten degradiert werden, die nicht in der Lage sind, diesen selbst zu beeinflussen. Von dieser berechtigten Kritik ausgehend, untersucht die vorliegende Arbeit die Rolle kolonialer Subjekte in der Entstehung, der Verbreitung, aber auch der Hinterfragung und des Kritisierens des kolonialen Diskurses in der Fr{\"u}hphase des britischen Kolonialismus in West Afrika. Dabei werden drei f{\"u}r den Zeitraum zwischen 1874 und 1914 relevante Themen in den Fokus gestellt: Die Aschanti-Kriege, der Aufbau eines Bildungssystem und das Problem der „Europeanized-Africans." Um afrikanische Perspektiven auf diese drei Themenbl{\"o}cke abzubilden, werden von der kolonialen Elite herausgebende Zeitungen als Quellmaterial konsultiert. Zun{\"a}chst werden in den ersten beiden Themenbl{\"o}cken die jeweiligen diskursiven Entwicklungen herausgearbeitet und gezeigt, warum die anf{\"a}ngliche Unterst{\"u}tzung der britischen Herrschaft durch die Eliten zum Ende des Jahrhunderts sukzessive abnahm. Letztlich kulminieren die in der Arbeit analysierten Tendenzen in die Entstehung des „African Regeneration" Diskurses, der zwar das Narrativ des kolonialen Diskurses auf theoretischer Ebene umdrehen kann und Afrika als den „Zivilisierer" Europas darstellt, auf strukturel-ler Ebene aber ein ebenso totalisierendes Bild afrikanischer und europ{\"a}ischer Gesellschaften zeichnet.}, language = {en} } @misc{CarlaUhinkGorideLiberoetal.2020, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo and Gori, Maja and de Libero, Loretana and Avalli, Andrea and Pintucci, Alessandro and Clementi, Jessica and Chrysafis, Charalampos I. and Gardner, Chelsea A. M. and Klein, Jonas and Gonz{\´a}lez-Vaquerizo, Helena and Mihanovic, Andelko and Agbamu, Samuel and Dubbini, Rachele and Almagor, Eran}, title = {Modern Identities and Classical Antiquity}, series = {thersites}, volume = {2019}, journal = {thersites}, number = {10}, editor = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo and Gori, Maja}, issn = {2364-7612}, doi = {10.34679/thersites.vol10}, pages = {265}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Studies on the "uses of the past" have steadily and consistently advanced over the past twenty years. Following the seminal studies by Hobsbawm and Ranger and Benedict Anderson on the role of narratives of the past in constructing (national) identities, and thanks the always more widespread practice of reception studies, the attention for cultural memory and lieux de m{\´e}moire, and following, many publications have investigated the role of nearer and further time layers in defining and determining structures of identity and senses of belonging across the world. Didactics of history has also contributed a great deal to this field of studies, also thanks to the always more refined methodologies of school book analysis. Classical Antiquity has obviously not been neglected, and multiple studies have been dedicated to its role in the development and reinforcement of modern identities. Yet, not only some areas of the world have remained less considered than others, but most attention has been dedicated to national identities, nationalistic discourses, and their activation through historical narratives. This special issues of thersites wants to contribute further to research on the role of Classical Antiquity within modern identities, asking scholars to focus especially on areas that have been less strongly represented in scholarship until now.}, language = {en} } @incollection{Leonardis2023, author = {Leonardis, Irene}, title = {Varro and the re-foundation of Roman cultural memory through genealogy and humanitas}, series = {Cultural memory in republican and Augustan Rome}, booktitle = {Cultural memory in republican and Augustan Rome}, editor = {Dinter, Martin T. and Gu{\´e}rin, Charles}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge}, isbn = {978-1-009-32775-6}, doi = {10.1017/9781009327749.006}, pages = {97 -- 114}, year = {2023}, abstract = {In the last two centuries BC, with the Republic limping towards its end, the cultivated ruling elite began to lose its moral and political authority.1 Its members not only held themselves responsible for the so-called crisis of tradition, but at the same time also conveyed the impression of a loss of memory, as if all Romans were suffering from some kind of amnesia or identity crisis.2 In particular, institutional figures such as pontiffs and augurs, who had preserved Rome's memory throughout its history, were accused of neglecting their duties and, by extension, of allowing ancient practices and values to slowly disappear.3 Accordingly, Cicero and Varro, both perfect representatives of this elite, employed recurrent terms such as neglect (neglegentia/neglegere), involuntary abandon (amittere), oblivion (oblivio), vanishing of institutions (evanescere), and ignorance (ignoratio/ignorare) to describe this critical loss of information; they depicted the citizenry of Rome (civitas) as disoriented and estranged, incapable of sharing any common knowledge or values.}, language = {en} } @article{Klessmann1999, author = {Kleßmann, Christoph}, title = {Rethinking the second german dictatorship}, year = {1999}, language = {en} } @book{OPUS4-18575, title = {The divided past : rewriting post-war German history}, series = {German historia perspectives}, volume = {25}, journal = {German historia perspectives}, editor = {Kleßmann, Christoph}, publisher = {Berg Publishers}, address = {Oxford}, isbn = {1-85973-511-8}, pages = {200 S.}, year = {2001}, language = {en} } @article{Klessmann1993, author = {Kleßmann, Christoph}, title = {The burden of the past in the two German states}, year = {1993}, language = {en} } @article{Vermeesch2005, author = {Vermeesch, Griet}, title = {War, fortified towns and the countryside, Gorinchem and Doesburg (1570-1680)}, series = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, volume = {9}, journal = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, number = {2}, issn = {1861-910X}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-20767}, pages = {155 -- 163}, year = {2005}, language = {en} } @article{Krebs2005, author = {Krebs, Daniel}, title = {"War in an Age of Revolution: The Wars of American Independence and the French Revolution, 1775-1815"}, series = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, volume = {9}, journal = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, number = {2}, issn = {1861-910X}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-20791}, pages = {192 -- 195}, year = {2005}, language = {en} } @misc{Lang2005, author = {Lang, Heinrich}, title = {Maurizio Arfaioli: The Black Bands of Giovanni. Infantry and Diplomacy during the Italian Wars (1526-1528) / [rezensiert von] Heinrich Lang}, series = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, volume = {9}, journal = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, number = {2}, issn = {1861-910X}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-20834}, pages = {202 -- 205}, year = {2005}, abstract = {Rezensiertes Werk: Arfaioli, Maurizio: The black bands of Giovanni : infantry and diplomacy during the Italian wars; 1526-1528 / Maurizio Arfaioli. - Pisa : Edizioni Plus-Pisa University Press, 2005. - 204 S.: Ill. ISBN 88-8492-231-3}, language = {en} } @article{Marschke2001, author = {Marschke, Benjamin}, title = {The development of the army chaplaincy in early eighteenth-century Prussia}, series = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, volume = {5}, journal = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, number = {1}, issn = {1861-910X}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-28852}, pages = {36 -- 38}, year = {2001}, language = {en} } @article{vanNimwegen2006, author = {van Nimwegen, Olaf}, title = {The Dutch Army and the Military Revolutions (1588-1688)}, series = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, volume = {10}, journal = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, number = {1}, issn = {1861-910X}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-20881}, pages = {55 -- 73}, year = {2006}, language = {en} } @article{Oestmann2006, author = {Oestmann, Anne}, title = {Billeting in England During the Reign of Charles I : 1625-1649}, series = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, volume = {10}, journal = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, number = {1}, issn = {1861-910X}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-20891}, pages = {74 -- 90}, year = {2006}, abstract = {Behandelte Themen sind: Billeting in England during the reign of Charles I, 1625-1649; Organisation; Tickhill: A community's response to abuse and disorder}, language = {en} } @misc{Piltz2007, author = {Piltz, Eric}, title = {Ellis, Steven G.; Eßer, Raingard (Hrsg.), Frontiers and the Writing of History, 1500-1850 / [rezensiert von] Eric Piltz}, series = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, volume = {11}, journal = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, number = {2}, issn = {1861-910X}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-21271}, pages = {191 -- 197}, year = {2007}, abstract = {Rezensiertes Werk: Frontiers and the writing of history, 1500-1850 / ed. by Steven G. Ellis and Raingard Esser. - Hannover-Laatzen : Wehrhahn, 2006. - 318 S. ISBN 3-86525-251-6}, language = {en} } @article{Berg2008, author = {Berg, Holger}, title = {Military Occupation under the Eyes of the Lord}, series = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, volume = {12}, journal = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, number = {1}, issn = {1861-910X}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-21318}, pages = {53 -- 57}, year = {2008}, language = {en} } @misc{Lang2007, author = {Lang, Heinrich}, title = {Caferro, William, John Hawkwood; an English mercenary in Fourteenth-Century Italy / [rezensiert von] Heinrich Lang}, series = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, volume = {11}, journal = {Milit{\"a}r und Gesellschaft in der fr{\"u}hen Neuzeit}, number = {2}, issn = {1861-910X}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-21268}, pages = {188 -- 191}, year = {2007}, abstract = {Rezensiertes Werk: Caferro, William: John Hawkwood : an English mercenary in fourteenth-century Italy / William Caferro. - Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006. - XV, 459 S. ISBN 0-8018-8323-7}, language = {en} } @misc{Boesch2019, author = {B{\"o}sch, Frank}, title = {Rezension zu: Elian Nathans. Peter von Zahn's Cold War Broadcasts to West Germany: Assessing America. - (Palgrave Macmillan, Studies in the History of the Media.) New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017. Pp. xxi, 334. - ISBN 978-3-319-50614-2}, series = {The American historical review}, volume = {124}, journal = {The American historical review}, number = {4}, publisher = {Oxford Univ. Press}, address = {Oxford}, issn = {0002-8762}, doi = {10.1093/ahr/rhz956}, pages = {1539 -- 1540}, year = {2019}, abstract = {It is well known that Western Europe and especially West Germany have been strongly influenced by the United States past 1945. Foreign correspondents played a crucial role in this field. One of the most influential postwar journalists in Germany, and the first permanent TV correspondent in the U.S., was Peter von Zahn (1913-2001). His weekly radio columns and his monthly TV documentary Bilder aus der Neuen Welt (Pictures from the New World) reached millions in the 1950s. Eli Nathans's Peter von Zahn's Cold War Broadcasts to West Germany: Assessing America is still the first book that analyzes the life and work of Zahn as an influential intermediary between America and West Germany. Luckily, many private letters of Zahn...}, language = {en} } @article{Boesch2017, author = {B{\"o}sch, Frank}, title = {Taming Nuclear Power}, series = {German history : the journal of the German History Societ}, volume = {35}, journal = {German history : the journal of the German History Societ}, number = {1}, publisher = {Oxford Univ. Press}, address = {Oxford}, issn = {0266-3554}, doi = {10.1093/gerhis/ghw143}, pages = {71 -- 95}, year = {2017}, abstract = {In 2011 a broad majority in the German Federal Parliament voted to abandon nuclear energy. This article explores the origins of the change in attitude towards nuclear energy and argues that seven years before the Chernobyl disaster, the accident at the U.S. power plant Three Mile Island near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, in 1979, had a profound impact which nowadays seems to be largely forgotten in Europe. The article identifies the structural causes underlying the transnational reception of the Three Mile Island accident and explores international reactions, particularly in the Federal Republic of Germany. The accident near Harrisburg led to a loss of public confidence and created unease about nuclear expansion in many industrialized nations. Reactions to the accident can be understood as an attempt to tame nuclear energy both technically, by increasing safety measures and abandoning plans for new nuclear power stations, and politically, with a more critical appraisal of nuclear energy and with semantics that encouraged a long-term withdrawal from nuclear power. Critics were now also accepted as experts. Nuclear policy in all countries became closely dependent on public opinion, indicating a high level of political responsiveness. Various factors, however, including the contemporaneous oil crisis put the brakes on this critical approach to nuclear power, while safety improvements and the limited expansion of nuclear power created new confidence in the early 1980s.}, language = {en} } @book{OPUS4-4066, title = {Baset - Bubastis - Tell Basta}, series = {Arcus: Berichte aus Arch{\"a}ologie, Baugeschichte und Nachbargebieten}, journal = {Arcus: Berichte aus Arch{\"a}ologie, Baugeschichte und Nachbargebieten}, number = {8}, editor = {Tietze, Christian and Lange, Eva}, publisher = {Universit{\"a}tsverlag Potsdam}, address = {Potsdam}, isbn = {978-3-937786-31-5}, issn = {0947-1081}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-42682}, publisher = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {201}, year = {2005}, abstract = {Inhalt: Habachi, Labib: Tell Basta Chapter 1: Introductory: Bubatis and its monuments Chapter II: The temple of Pepi I [I]: Description Chapter III: The temple of Pepi [III]: Finds and importance Chapter IV: General notes on the great temple [I]: Mihos temple and entrance hall Chapter V: General notes on the great temple [II]: Festival hall and hypostyle hall Chapter VI: General notes on the great temple [III]: The temple of Nektanebos (Nekht-har-hebi) Chapter VII: Work outside the temples Chapter VIII: Blocks transferred to Bubastis Chapter IX: Blocks removed from Bubastis Farid, Shafik: Preliminary report on the excavations of the antiquities department at Tell Basta}, language = {en} } @book{OPUS4-48377, title = {Cultures of intelligence in the era of the World Wars}, series = {Studies of the German Historical Institute London}, journal = {Studies of the German Historical Institute London}, editor = {Ball, Simon James and Gassert, Philipp Leonhard and Gestrich, Andreas and Neitzel, S{\"o}nke}, publisher = {Oxford}, address = {University Press}, isbn = {978-0-19-886720-3}, pages = {xii, 393}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Cultures of Intelligence analyses the intelligence services of Germany, Britain, the USA, and France in the first half of the twentieth century. It asks whether there were national traditions in intelligence, or whether each of the sophisticated Western intelligence powers was part of a transnational intelligence culture? The book is a contribution to the cultural turn in intelligence studies. Its underlying purpose is to place intelligence in its proper historical and comparative context. As such it is also a contribution to the history of political culture and its study.}, language = {en} } @article{Neitzel2020, author = {Neitzel, S{\"o}nke}, title = {National Cultures of Military Intelligence?}, series = {Cultures of intelligence in the era of the world wars}, journal = {Cultures of intelligence in the era of the world wars}, publisher = {University Press}, address = {Oxford}, isbn = {978-0-19-886720-3}, pages = {13 -- 36}, year = {2020}, language = {en} } @misc{Vandewalle2023, author = {Vandewalle, Alexander}, title = {Review of Ross Clare: Ancient Greece and Rome in Videogames. Representation, Play, Transmedia}, series = {thersites 16}, volume = {2023}, journal = {thersites 16}, number = {16}, editor = {Amb{\"u}hl, Annemarie and Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo and Rollinger, Christian and Walde, Christine}, issn = {2364-7612}, doi = {10.34679/thersites.vol16.220}, pages = {173 -- 177}, year = {2023}, language = {en} } @misc{Avalli2023, author = {Avalli, Andrea}, title = {Review of Dario Barbera: Processo al Classico. L'epurazione dell'archeologia fascista}, series = {thersites 16}, volume = {2023}, journal = {thersites 16}, number = {16}, editor = {Amb{\"u}hl, Annemarie and Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo and Rollinger, Christian and Walde, Christine}, issn = {2364-7612}, doi = {10.34679/thersites.vol16.233}, pages = {168 -- 172}, year = {2023}, language = {en} } @article{Pufelska2012, author = {Pufelska, Agnieszka}, title = {Between bourgeoisie and natural science the Danzig research society as model for the Berlin society of friends of natural history}, isbn = {978-83-7842-018-7}, year = {2012}, language = {en} } @misc{Kunst1998, author = {Kunst, Christiane}, title = {Grant, M., The Antonines, the roman empire in transition; Routledge, London [u.a.], 1994}, year = {1998}, language = {en} } @article{Bueschel2009, author = {Bueschel, Hubertus}, title = {Friedrich Meinecke in his time}, issn = {0149-7952}, year = {2009}, language = {en} } @article{Wyrwa2008, author = {Wyrwa, Ulrich}, title = {Narratives of Jewish Historiography in Europe}, isbn = {978-0-230-50006-8}, year = {2008}, language = {en} } @article{Goertemaker1997, author = {G{\"o}rtemaker, Manfred}, title = {The historical process of nation-building in Germany and the development of cultural self-understanding and identity, including the role of historiography}, year = {1997}, language = {en} } @article{Goertemaker1997, author = {G{\"o}rtemaker, Manfred}, title = {Europe after the Cold War : a german perspective}, year = {1997}, language = {en} } @article{Kunst1995, author = {Kunst, Christiane}, title = {William Camden's Britannia : History and Historiography}, year = {1995}, language = {en} } @book{Rink2009, author = {Rink, Martin}, title = {Is there anything new in smal-scale warfare? Developments in asymmetric violence, 1740-1815}, series = {Working Papers in Military and International History}, volume = {6}, journal = {Working Papers in Military and International History}, publisher = {Centre for Contemporary History \& Politics European Studies Research Institute}, address = {Salford}, isbn = {978-1-902496-56-6}, pages = {55 S.}, year = {2009}, language = {en} } @article{Bergien2008, author = {Bergien, R{\"u}diger}, title = {The Consensus on Defense and Weimar Prussia's Civil Service}, year = {2008}, language = {en} } @article{deLibero2009, author = {de Libero, Loretana}, title = {Precibus ac lacrimis : tears in roman historiographers}, isbn = {978-3-11-020111-6}, year = {2009}, language = {en} } @article{Goertemaker1995, author = {G{\"o}rtemaker, Manfred}, title = {Security in the post-cold war era : the role of Germany and new lessons for Korea}, year = {1995}, language = {en} } @article{SchornSchuette1994, author = {Schorn-Sch{\"u}tte, Luise}, title = {Formation and career of catholic clergy and protestant pastors in the Ancient Empire, XVIIth until XIXth century}, year = {1994}, language = {en} } @article{Barcelo1994, author = {Barcel{\´o}, Pedro}, title = {The Perception of Carthage in Classical Greek Historiography}, issn = {0065-1141}, year = {1994}, language = {en} }