Diana Abbani in Conversation with Nina Studer. In her book "The Hour of Absinthe: A Cultural History of France’s Most Notorious Drink”, Studer explores the history of absinthe through the lenses of cultural, social, and colonial history. She uses absinthe as a lens which allows to look at racial inequalities, gender inequalities, class inequalities and more. She is led by the question how a consumption shared between various groups – men, women and children, bourgeoisie, artists and wor...| TRAFO – Blog for Transregional Research
It's a shame that many people don’t realise Australian history is full of fascinating characters like Sun Tong Lee and Moy Quong Tart.| Michelle Scott Tucker
The brutalist Philips Building in central London does not look very inviting at first. Nevertheless, it is a magnet for students and researchers from all over the world working on Asia and Africa. Nowadays probably the most important institution in the Global North for research on the Global South, SOAS (School of Oriental and African … Continue reading Knowledge Production between Mission, University, and Colonial Administration: Swahili Studies in Britain and Germany, 1840s–1940s| German Historical Institute London Blog
Biographer Michelle Scott Tucker discusses the joys - and curses - of working with archival records written in cursive script.| Michelle Scott Tucker
Two hundred fifty years ago, in May 1775, delegates from thirteen British North American colonies gathered in Philadelphia for the Second Continental Congress. Why was Philadelphia chosen as the seat of Congress? What made the city a critical hub for revolutionary ideas, commerce, and culture? And how has Philadelphia’s early history shaped the broader narrative […]| Ben Franklin's World
Archaeologists have uncovered the oldest firearm ever found in the U.S. at the site of a major Native American battle.| The Debrief