Are there any good and reasonably neutral books on the feminist movement i.e. not the women's suffrage movement?
As in, a history of it? I wish I could remember the name of the book we used for the Women's History in America class I took. I'll try and dig it up.
Can you reccomend any good books that are a general overview of Central and South America from the Conquistadores until present? Preferably they would focus on the revolutionary wars and the military dictatorships.
I'm looking for as many books as I can which discuss the formation of macronationalist identity - i.e. the creation of the "Yugoslav" identity as a distinct identity building upon national identities such as Serb and Croat. Not too interested in cases where the identity was more or less considered shared (such as with, say, pan-Germanism), but more where groups which considered themselves distinct (i.e. Islamist vs. Arab. Any attempts at an overarching Austro-Hungarian identity perhaps?)
I'll need analysis on what caused them to succeed and fail.
It doesn't matter where geographically this happened, but it'd have to be where there was a concerted effort to form such macronationalist identities.
Thanks.
István Deák - Beyond Nationalism: A Social and Political History of the Habsburg Officer Corps 1848-1918 on "black-yellow nationalism"Any attempts at an overarching Austro-Hungarian identity perhaps?
1889 said:Not sure but Imagined Communities by Benedict Anderson might be worth looking into.
Can you reccomend any good books that are a general overview of Central and South America from the Conquistadores until present? Preferably they would focus on the revolutionary wars and the military dictatorships.