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For Whom the Blame Tolls: Richard Nixon, Henry Kissinger, and
the Plight of Cambodia
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The United States and the Transatlantic Slave Trade to the
Americas, 1776-1867
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Thy Will Lord, Not Mine: Parents, Grief, and Child Death in the
Antebellum South
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Southern Saints and Sacred Honor: Evangelicalism, Honor, Community,
and the Self in South Carolina and Georgia, 1784-1860
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Working on the Dock of the Bay: Labor and Life alongCharleston's Waterfront, 1783-1861
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From the Lower Sort to the Lower Orders: Labor and Self-Identity in
Boston, 1737-1837
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To the Horizon and Back: Double Consciousness and the Journey to
Folk Modernism in Their Eyes Were Watching God, Ollie
Miss, and Banana Bottom
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"There Was a Tradition Among the Women": New Orleans's Colored
Creole Women and the Making of a Community in the Tremé and
Seventh Ward, 1791-1930
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The Contest of Exchange: Space, Power, and Politics inPhiladelphia's Public Markets, 1770-1859
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Breach of Faith: Conscription in Confederate Georgia
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Public Appetite: Dining Out in Nineteenth-Century Boston
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"[T]heir dear Idol ye Charter": The Second Charter of Massachusetts
Bay
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Religious Coming of Age among Students at Antebellum Georgia's
Evangelical Colleges
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Negotiating Unacceptable Behavior: Southeastern Indians and the
Evolution of Bilateral Regulation on the Southern Colonial Frontier
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Fields of Contest: Race, Region, and College Football in the U. S.South, 1945-1975
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"Slave Traffick": The Informal Economy, the Law, and the Social Order of South Carolina Cotton Country, 1793-1860
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