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Category: History

Sweeping view from the floor of a great room, looking upwards past marble columns and arches to a grand golden-colored dome

The True Costs of 100 Years of War

Posted by: Jason Steinhauer

Kissinger Chair Bradford Lee arrived at the Kluge Center this fall with an ambitious research question: were the results of one hundred years of American military interventions in foreign conflicts worth the costs of achieving them? He sat down with Jason Steinhauer to discuss his research, in particular his analysis of World War I, a …

Sweeping view from the floor of a great room, looking upwards past marble columns and arches to a grand golden-colored dome

Peter Brown: A Recollection

Posted by: Jason Steinhauer

The following is a guest post by Dr. Jane McAuliffe, Director of The John W. Kluge Center. More years ago than I like to admit, I began graduate work at the University of Toronto in the newly formed Centre for Religious Studies. The director of that fledgling operation was an American scholar of Zoroastrianism, Willard …

Sweeping view from the floor of a great room, looking upwards past marble columns and arches to a grand golden-colored dome

Familiar Faces Return for the International Decolonization Seminar

Posted by: Jason Steinhauer

For the tenth year in a row, The John W. Kluge Center will welcome the International Seminar on Decolonization to the Library of Congress for the month of July. This year we’re particularly delighted that two Kluge Center alumni will be among the cohort. Historian Emily Baughan was an Arts and Humanities Research Council Fellow …

Sweeping view from the floor of a great room, looking upwards past marble columns and arches to a grand golden-colored dome

Researching the Cold War at the Library of Congress

Posted by: Jason Steinhauer

How does a scholar research a topic as formidable as the Cold War using the Library of Congress collections? Historian Kevin Kim recently answered this question in a blog post for the American Historical Association (AHA). Dr. Kim was the Kluge Center’s most recent J. Franklin Jameson Fellow in American History, a Fellowship offered annually …

Sweeping view from the floor of a great room, looking upwards past marble columns and arches to a grand golden-colored dome

Who Writes History? Romila Thapar and the Textbooks of India

Posted by: Jason Steinhauer

When historian Romila Thapar first reviewed student textbooks in her native India, she was surprised. “I was appalled by the quality of the information that was being conveyed in these books,” she wrote in a 2009 journal article recalling the experience. Particularly, she was struck by “an adherence to outdated ideas and generally colonial views …

Sweeping view from the floor of a great room, looking upwards past marble columns and arches to a grand golden-colored dome

The Indians’ Capital City: Native Histories of Washington, D.C.

Posted by: Jason Steinhauer

As a Kluge Fellow at the Library of Congress, historian Joseph Genetin-Pilawa is researching his forthcoming book “The Indians’ Capital City: ‘Secret’ Native Histories of Washington, D.C.” He sat down with Jason Steinhauer to discuss the facts, myths, and contradictions of Native presence in the nation’s capital. The Chesapeake has a rich indigenous history that …

Sweeping view from the floor of a great room, looking upwards past marble columns and arches to a grand golden-colored dome

War, Trauma, Memory and Art

Posted by: Mary Lou Reker

Recently Tara Tappert, this year’s David B. Larson Fellow in Health and Spirituality, gave her final presentation at the Kluge Center. Her lecture was titled “Art from War: Documenting Devastation/Realizing Restoration.” The presentation was, as are all presentations by post-doctoral and senior scholars, open to the public and there was a substantial audience there to …