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MO3351 Doing and Practicing Transnational and Global History

MO3351 Doing and Practicing Transnational and Global History

Institute for Transnational & Spatial History, School of History, University of St Andrews

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Author: Bernhard Struck

Human Trafficking is Everywhere: Analyzing The Crime and Why the Inherent Networks Matter for Organized Crime Transnationally

Despite the combative efforts of world superpowers, why do the different transnational networks of organized crime elements seemingly flourish around the globe? I propose that the crime of human trafficking, as it boasts complex linkages to transnational organized crime elements

Bernhard Struck March 6, 2020March 6, 2020 Uncategorized Read more

Pepsi or Vodka?: An analysis of transnational transactions and the creation of a ‘global consumerism’

There’s an age-old saying, ’Pepsi Or Coke’, the perfect paradox for many today of my generation who view most soft drinks best served as a ‘mixer’ with their preferred poison. If you were a citizen of the Soviet Union, however,

Bernhard Struck March 6, 2020March 6, 2020 Uncategorized Read more

“We Shall Overcome”?: Transnational Civil Rights Activism in Northern Ireland and the United States of America, 1967-72

Fionnbarra Ó Dochartaigh, a prominent member of the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA), once suggested he and his fellow civil rights activists ‘viewed ourselves as Ulster’s white negroes’.[1] Indeed, the civil rights movement in Northern Ireland, spearheaded by groups

Bernhard Struck March 6, 2020March 6, 2020 Uncategorized Read more

Transnational movements between feminists in Latin America and the Iberian Peninsula, 1900-1935.

In 1922, over 2000 women from 23 countries arrived in Baltimore for the Pan-American Conference of Women. The conference, organised by the delegates from the United States, aimed at creating a Transnational Women’s movement across the Americas in order to

Bernhard Struck March 6, 2020March 6, 2020 Uncategorized Read more

The intellectual history of Maoism

My project is an examination into the transnational elements of Maoism as an intellectual movement. Firstly, I will explore how Marxism transitioned into Marxism Leninism as it spread from Western to Eastern Europe. Then how Marxism Leninism transitioned into Maoism

Bernhard Struck March 6, 2020March 6, 2020 Uncategorized Read more

Identity and Gender Within 19th C. Whaling Communities

Though whaling has existed since ancient and prehistoric times, between the eighteenth and twentieth centuries it experienced its rise, height, and decline as a commercial industry. As a facilitator of transnational maritime networks, the introduction of new whaling technology in

Bernhard Struck March 6, 2020March 6, 2020 Uncategorized Read more

The Scots and Esperanto

From the early colonisers and traders going out into the world, to leading intellectuals of the Enlightenment, we can recognise many Scots as significant examples of Transnational and Global actors. So, should we really be surprised by the involvement of

Bernhard Struck March 6, 2020March 6, 2020 Uncategorized Read more

Unifying the World? Kang Youwei’s Vision of the Global in Datong Shu

In his posthumously-published work, Datong Shu, or The Book of Great Unity, Qing intellectual and statesman Kang Youwei (1858-1927) outlines a utopian image of a united “One World,” or “Great Unity.” In Kang’s utopian society, the “nine boundaries” of human

Bernhard Struck March 5, 2020March 5, 2020 Uncategorized Read more

Take the Leap

Probably one of my greatest struggles is decision making. I hate having to choose what to have for dinner, what movie to go see, what modules to take and, mostly, what topic I should choose for projects and essays. It

Bernhard Struck March 4, 2020March 4, 2020 Uncategorized Read more

Chinese-Cubans: ‘Chineseness’ and ‘Cubanidad’ during the Chinese Civil War (1945-49) and Cuban Communist Revolution (1953-58)

‘Migration’, the movement of people across borders, is not alien to historical research. Recently, historians have examined the way migration has influenced identity in ‘diasporas’: migrants from the same origin that have settled in a new place. This research has

Bernhard Struck March 2, 2020March 2, 2020 Uncategorized Read more

If The World?

Having just completed the first essay for this transnational history course, I want to briefly reflect on some thought that have lingered with me recently. Several weeks ago I was struck by a quote by Roger Chartier in the French

Bernhard Struck March 2, 2020March 2, 2020 Uncategorized Read more

The Mitford Sisters: transnational aristocracy

The last of the Mitford Sisters died in 2014. Deborah Cavendish, known to the world as Debo the Dowager Duchess of Devonshire, was a well liked English eccentric of the sort the aristocracy can be relied on to produce. She

Bernhard Struck March 2, 2020March 2, 2020 Uncategorized Read more

Unifying the World?

The text I have chosen to base my upcoming project proposal on is perhaps the most bizarre, ambitious work I have ever come across in my two and a half years of studying history at the university level. Its title:

Bernhard Struck February 28, 2020February 28, 2020 Uncategorized Read more

On Measuring Identity

I have struggled to find a topic to focus on for my historiographical essay. I have wrestled with terms of identity, hybridity and struggled to pinpoint definitions this week. Identity, I have been told, is a hard to think to

Bernhard Struck February 24, 2020February 24, 2020 Uncategorized Read more

The literary and symbolic “othering” of Eastern Europe

“Mechanically I laid myself back in the sledge and let my horse run for safety. The wolf did not mind me in the least, but took a leap over me, and falling furiously on the horse, began to devour the

Bernhard Struck February 24, 2020February 24, 2020 Uncategorized Read more
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