Merle Curti - Further Reading

Further Reading

  • Conkin, Paul K. "Merle Curti." in Clio's Favorites: Leading Historians of the United States, 1945-2000. ed. by Robert Allen Rutland, (2000). ISBN 0-8262-1316-2 online edition
  • Cronon, E. David. "Merle Curti: an Appraisal and Bibliography of His Writings." Wisconsin Magazine of History 1970-1971 54(2): 119-135. Issn: 0043-6534
  • Davis, Allen F. "Memorial to Merle E. Curti." American Studies Association Newsletter. June 1996.
  • Henretta, James A. "The Making of an American Community: a Thirty-year Retrospective." Reviews in American History 1988 16(3): 506-512. in Jstor
  • Lillibridge, G.D. "So Long, Maestro: A Portrait of Merle Curti." American Scholar. Volume: 66. Issue: 2. (Spring 1997). pp 263+. online edition
  • Novick, Peter. That Noble Dream: The "Objectivity Question" and the American Historical Profession. (1988). ISBN 0-521-35745-4
  • Pettegrew, John. "The Present-minded Professor: Merle Curti's Work as an Intellectual Historian." History Teacher 1998 32(1): 67-76. Issn: 0018-2745 Fulltext: in Jstor
  • Wittner, Lawrence S. "Merle Curti and the Development of Peace History." Peace & Change 1998 23(1): 74-82. Issn: 0149-0508 Fulltext: Ebsco

Read more about this topic:  Merle Curti

Famous quotes containing the word reading:

    Chaucer sawed life in half and out tumbled hundreds of unpremeditated lives, because he didn’t have the cast-iron grid of a priori coherence that makes reading Goethe, Shakespeare, or Dante an exercise in searching for signs of life among the conventions, compulsions, self-justifications, proofs, wise saws, simple but powerful messages, and poetry.
    Marvin Mudrick (1921–1986)

    For 350 years we have been taught that reading maketh a full man, conference a ready man and writing an exact man. Football’s place is to add a patina of character, a deference to the rules and a respect for authority.
    Walter Wellesley (Red)