Feminism’s Forgotten Free-Trade Past

1921 WILPF Executive Committee: Front row, left to right: Cornelia Ramnodt-Hirschmann, Gabrielle Duchêne, Lida Gustava Heymann, Yella Hertzka, Jane Addams, Catherine Marshall, Gertrude Baer. Back row, left to right: Emily Greene Balch and Thora Daugaard. WikiCommons, https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:1921_WILPF_Executive_Committee.jpg

Marc-William Palen
History Department, University of Exeter

Cross-posted from History Matters

A fragmenting world of trade wars. Food insecurity despite an abundance of food. European food wars. A broken Brexit Britain undermining European unity. The resurgence of right-wing nationalism. Human rights under attack. Children starving from wartime blockades.

The world disorder of 2024 would have looked all too familiar to the international women’s peace movement of a century ago.

Feminists back then tended to see themselves as the mothers of the world, believing that women’s active participation in politics would curb or counter men’s militant predilection for nationalism and war. ‘First wave’ feminist internationalists numbered among the leaders of the early-20th-century fight for world peace, what Harriet Alonso has described as “the suffragist wing” of the international peace movement from the First World War onwards.

Free trade was a key – but oft-overlooked – ingredient to their feminist vision for a peaceful world. Chicago social reformer Jane Addams, the figurehead of the international women’s peace movement, emphasized this free-trade dimension throughout the 1920s and 1930s.

Jane Addams made landfall in Europe in early July 1919 to bear witness to the destructive aftermath of the First World War. Addams’s main concern was the famine afflicting millions of Europe’s children.

Addams’s 1919 trek marked the beginning of what would become a multi-year European humanitarian mission of a new left-leaning feminist organization: the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), which remains active today. Addams was WILPF’s inaugural president.

Addams had her first of many encounters with Europe’s malnourished children during a stopover in Lille in northern France. There, inside a schoolhouse, Addams looked on as a physician examined them by the hundreds. ‘Stripped to the waist’, the children looked more like ‘a line of moving skeletons; their little shoulder blades stuck straight out, the vertebrae were all perfectly distinct as were their ribs, and their bony arms hung limply at their sides.’

Adding to the macabre scene, an eerie quiet hung over the improvised emergency room. You see, the French physician on duty had lost his voice, a side effect of wartime shellshock. He therefore ‘whispered his instructions to the children as he applied his stethoscope and the children, thinking it was some sort of game, all whispered back to him.

Addams encountered similarly graphic scenes in Switzerland and throughout Germany. The 1919 WILPF mission’s findings reinforced her belief that, while the war may have ended, securing the peace had just begun.

Addams therefore headed a follow-up WILPF humanitarian mission amid the hot summer of 1921, this time to southeastern Europe, where she once again encountered mass hunger. ‘Food resources which were produced in Europe itself and should have been available for instant use,’ Addams wrote, ‘were prevented from satisfying the desperate human needs. Why? Because ‘a covert war was being carried on by the use of import duties and protective tariffs’, which the war’s food blockades had legitimized.

These small starving European states, seeking self-preservation, mistakenly ‘imitated the great Allies with their protectionist policies, with their colonial monopolies and preferences.’ To Addams, such suffering in the name of ‘hypernationalism’ only amplified the need for a new international system of ‘free labor and exchange’ The world faced a clear choice: either ‘freedom of international commerce or international conflict of increasing severity.’

To meet world food demands, her envisaged free-trade order would also require supranational regulation of global transportation lines to counter ‘the ambition of rival nations.’

 She called her cosmopolitan vision ‘Pax Economica’.

Continue reading “Feminism’s Forgotten Free-Trade Past”

Considering a PhD @ExeterClio or @UofEArchaeology? Sign up for our free MOOC and Masterclass

Course: Masterclass PhD Application | Exeter Online Courses Moodle

After this short course you should be able to:

• Maximise your chances of gaining admittance to a PhD programme and winning funding
• Identify and get guidance from potential supervisors
• Select appropriate content and structure for the proposal
• Use suitable tone, language, length, and style
• Use suitable referencing and formatting conventions
• Understand differences between disciplines
• Know how to avoid common errors
• Review a sample proposal
• Submit your idea and choose suitable next steps

Also, be sure to sign up for a free PhD Masterclass

This Week’s Top Picks in Imperial & Global History

Marc-William Palen
History Department, University of Exeter
Follow on Twitter @MWPalen

World Trade Organization, Geneva, September 2021, Denis Balibouse / Reuters

From abandoning the WTO to a return of 1930s-style totalitarian politics, here are this week’s top picks in imperial and global history.

Continue reading “This Week’s Top Picks in Imperial & Global History”

This Week’s Top Picks in Imperial & Global History

‘A permanent feature of our domestic life’ … Age of Empires II: Definitive Edition screenshot. Photograph: Microsoft

Marc-William Palen
History Department, University of Exeter

From abandoning the delusions of empire to decolonizing sanctions, here are this week’s top picks in imperial and global history.

Continue reading “This Week’s Top Picks in Imperial & Global History”

This Week’s Top Picks in Imperial & Global History

Photograph: Andy Rain/EPA

Marc-William Palen
History Department, University of Exeter

From a new critical report about the Windrush scandal to Black women comrades in the struggle for liberation, here are this week’s top picks in imperial and global history.

Continue reading “This Week’s Top Picks in Imperial & Global History”

Autumn 2024 CIGH Research Seminar Schedule

The co-directors of Exeter’s Centre for Imperial and Global History (CIGH), Dr. Chris Sandal-Wilson and Dr. Rebecca Williams, wish to welcome our new students and colleagues, and are really excited to begin a new year of CIGH seminars.

All seminars take place on Wednesdays 3.30pm-5.00pm, with the option to join remotely.

Reminders, links, and abstracts will be sent a week in advance of each seminar to the CIGH mailing list. To be added, please email Chris and Beccy at c.w.sandal-wilson@exeter.ac.uk and r.williams2@exeter.ac.uk.


WEDNESDAY 2 OCTOBER [Week 2]                Welcome (Back) Social

                        Amory Senior Common Room

Join us for an informal gathering to mark the start of the academic year, welcome new researchers, and catch up with old friends. Drinks and nibbles provided!

WEDNESDAY 16 OCTOBER [Week 4]              Archives: Digital, Material, Social

Room B310, Amory

Join our panel of expert historians – Martin Thomas, Nelly Bekus, and David Thackeray – as they reflect on the archive as a digital, material, and social phenomenon, and offer tips for working in the archives of imperial and global history.

            WEDNESDAY 13 NOVEMBER [Week 8]           Meet the Children at War Team

Room B310, Amory

Come along to hear about the research Chessie Baldwin, Pamela Nzabampema, Richard Raber, and Phoebe Shambaugh will be doing as part of the Children at War project.

            WEDNESDAY 27 NOVEMBER [Week 10]        Telling Our Stories, Finding Our Roots

Forum Seminar Room 6

Telling Our Stories, Finding Our Roots is a community heritage and oral history project focused on diverse and multicultural histories in Devon. Hilda Tosfor will be joining us to talk about the project – all welcome!

WEDNESDAY 11 DECEMBER [Week 12]         Postgraduate Research Symposium

Room B310, Amory

As always, we’ll see out the term on a high note: join us as post-graduate researchers working on Imperial and Global History at Exeter share their work in progress.

This Week’s Top Picks in Imperial & Global History

Kamala Harris with Ben Crump, Doug Emhoff and Al Sharpton in a march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, on March 3. Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

Marc-William Palen
History Department, University of Exeter

From the female freedom fighters of the Haitian Revolution to the Civil Rights Movement and Kamala Harris’s foreign policy, here are this week’s top picks in imperial and global history.

Continue reading “This Week’s Top Picks in Imperial & Global History”

The World Reimagined Globe Launch: ‘Uncertain Voyage’: Friday 4th October 2024

The Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences and the BME Network are delighted to invite you to The World Reimagined Globe Launch: ‘Uncertain Voyage’, on Friday 4th October 2024.

WHEN: Friday 4th October, 13:00 – 17:00

WHERE: University of Exeter, Queen’s Building, EX4 4QH

  • The Quad
  • Digital Humanities Seminar Room 1
  • Senior Common Room
  • Foyer (next to Queen’s Café)

The full programme will be confirmed in due course, and will include a musical performance, exhibitions, and keynote speakers across the afternoon.

Background:

The World Reimagined is a groundbreaking art installation project which aims to redefine how we understand the Transatlantic Trade in Enslaved Africans and its lasting impact.  

The university has been gifted two globes from this initiative, with one now installed at Exeter, Streatham Campus. The globe was gifted to the University on the agreement that it would be used for hosting educational and cultural events and activities. 

Continue reading “The World Reimagined Globe Launch: ‘Uncertain Voyage’: Friday 4th October 2024”

Call for Papers: Diplomatic History: “1776 In Global Context”

To mark the 2026 Semiquincentennial of the American Revolution, the journal Diplomatic History seeks article proposals that engage with any aspect related to the international, transnational, transimperial, continental, or global dimensions of the American Revolution, including its origins or aftermath.  The articles will be published in a special forum in 2026. 

Please send proposals to diplomat@shafr.org.  Review of proposals will begin on October 10, 2024.  Selected authors will be notified by November 1.  The submission date for completed articles will be June 1, 2025.  For questions please contact either pgoedde@temple.edu or anne.foster@indstate.edu.

The Creame of the Crop: an Analysis of Multilingual Signs around the Frari, Venice

Katie Baker, Emily Cooper, Gabriel Labrie, Nicla Pennacchio, and Esther Roza

Faculty: Kurt Feyaerts, KU Leuven; Richard Toye, University of Exeter; Matteo Basso, Iuav University of Venice; Geert Brône, KU Leuven; Claire Holleran, University of Exeter; Eliana Maestri, University of Exeter; Michela Maguolo, Independent researcher; Luca Pes, Venice International University; Paul Sambre, KU Leuven

As part of the Summer School, Linguistic Landscapes: Using Signs and Symbols to Translate Cities, our team was tasked with carrying out a case study starting from the Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari Basilica in the sestiere of San Polo, Venice.

While exploring the area around the Frari, we noticed the following sign in front of a bar:

What does this divergent text tell us about the potential audience? What do the spelling mistakes tell us about the owner or the creator? (cf. Spolsky Handwritten bottom-up sign with divergent text 2008, 31). in Italian and English (Calle de le Chiovere)

The boundary of the sestiere of San Polo, highlighted.

The questions raised by this image piqued our curiosity about multilingual signage. Therefore, we decided to focus on signs containing more than one language (cf. Backhaus 2005 on Tokyo and Moser 2020 on Luxembourg City). Due to time constraints, the shaded area of the sestiere was omitted for this analysis, thus limiting our evaluation to the streets immediately surrounding the Santa

A larger version of the previous map with all insulae apart from Frari and Nomboli shaded, and the routes around the basilica and the Vaporetto stop are highlighted.

 Maria Gloriosa dei Frari Basilica, which permeates the insulae of Frari and Nomboli. We also examined the shortest path from the Basilica to its closest vaporetto stop, San Tomà, as this is a common route taken by ourselves and other tourists (cf. Lynch 1960, 46­−49).

Furthermore, only signs of the A4 format or larger were included. The size and language criteria allowed for systematic, thorough data collection in the defined area. Our final corpus accounts for 105 signs.

Continue reading “The Creame of the Crop: an Analysis of Multilingual Signs around the Frari, Venice”

Cash & Power – Informal use of infrastructure in Santissimi Apostoli, Venice

Ignes Bordwell-Vezzaro, Kaiko Lenhard, Qianxue Li, Miriel Vandeperre, Michelle Wyseure

Faculty: Kurt Feyaerts, KU Leuven; Richard Toye, University of Exeter; Matteo Basso, Iuav University of Venice; Geert Brône, KU Leuven; Claire Holleran, University of Exeter; Eliana Maestri, University of Exeter; Michela Maguolo, Independent researcher; Luca Pes, Venice International University; Paul Sambre, KU Leuven

In this blog, we present our exploratory study of the linguistic landscape of the neighbourhood surrounding the Chiesa dei Santi Apostoli di Cristo in Venice. By the term linguistic landscape, we refer to “the visibility and salience of languages on public and commercial signs in a given territory or region”, as defined by Landry and Bourhis (1997). The fieldwork was carried out in the context of the VIU Summer School ‘Linguistic Landscapes: Using Signs and Symbols to Translate Cities’ that took place from June 24 until June 28, 2024. Our survey of the area focused on how bottom-up street communications (meaning those not put up by the city and its officials) differ between residential areas, more frequently utilised by locals, and busy thoroughfares frequented by large amounts of tourists. 

Continue reading “Cash & Power – Informal use of infrastructure in Santissimi Apostoli, Venice”

Lingua Laguna: water in the architectural, semiotic, and linguistic landscapes of Venice

By Ikuo Harimoto, Marian Gabani Gimenez, Dongfang Liu, Javiera Scarratt, and Alexander Van Herpe

Faculty: Kurt Feyaerts, KU Leuven; Richard Toye, University of Exeter; Matteo Basso, Iuav University of Venice; Geert Brône, KU Leuven; Claire Holleran, University of Exeter; Eliana Maestri, University of Exeter; Michela Maguolo, Independent researcher; Luca Pes, Venice International University; Paul Sambre, KU Leuven

When we were assigned the Basilica dei Santi Giovanni e Paolo, in the neighborhood of Castello, as the central point of our fieldwork for the 2024 “Linguistic Landscapes” Summer Course at Venice International University, we had to decide on the criteria to delimit the area we would be exploring. Based on Kevin Lynch’s (1960) typology of the contents of the city image, i.e. referable physical forms that people recognize and rely on in their wanderings through the urban space, we reflected on the various possible maps that Venice offered. As pointed out by Lynch, the image of the same physical reality shifts according to the circumstances of viewing, and Venice is the locus where numerous circumstances coexist: for instance, the canals seem to work as an edge for earth-bound wanderers, but a path for water-bound locals. In this reflection, we realized that water could be seen as this ambiguous–or fruitful–element according to which the “circumstances of viewing” shift profoundly. We opted, thus, to define the canals as the limit for our explorations.

Venice is formed by several small islands, connected by canals, lagoons, and waterways. One could argue that this is what makes Venice distinctively attractive to people all over the world. Such geographical features, coupled with its unique history, foreground a particular identity, expressed in signs, art, images, and structures across the city. On the flip side, Venice’s geography and history also bring their own issues: over-tourism, rise in water levels, and sinking foundations. This tension is what intrigued us and guided this project. Starting from the Basilica dei Santi Giovanni e Paolo, a 14th-century church of Gothic architecture, we wandered through the paths and followed the margins of the canals seeking structures, signs, and images that referred to water, however loose the reference might be. Our goal was to understand if and how water informed and still informs the architectural, semiotic, and linguistic landscape of Venice.

We divided the results of our research into three topics: the uses of water (utility), protection from water-related events (defense), and water as a cultural element. The first topic explores the structures in place to make use of water in Venice and how they differ depending on who is making use of it. The second topic investigates the remnants and the new strategies to defend the land from water-related events and disasters. In the third and last topic, we argue that water is also present as a symbol in the cultural landscape of Venice.

Continue reading “Lingua Laguna: water in the architectural, semiotic, and linguistic landscapes of Venice”

Job Klaxon: College and Departmental Lecturer in Modern and Contemporary History (Oxford University)

College and Departmental Lecturer in Modern and Contemporary History
Faculty of History, George Street, OX1 2RL and Trinity College, Broad St, Oxford OX1 3BH
About the role

This is an exciting opportunity to join the thriving Modern and Contemporary History community, and to gain teaching experience at the undergraduate and graduate levels. Although this is primarily a teaching role, you will also conduct independent research, assist in the running of the History School at Trinity College and play an active part in the interdisciplinary and intercollegiate community.  The postholder will share in taking responsibility for pastoral duties and the general administration of History teaching at Trinity College, including by acting as Director of Studies for one year-group of undergraduate students.The post is intended to cover teaching and administrative duties for Professor James McDougall while he is on leave.The postholder will be entitled to 5 lunches and 3 dinners a week free of charge at the Common Table (SCR) during term and vacation, except when the kitchens are closed.  The postholder will also have membership of the Senior Common Room which will also be provided free of charge.The post is a full-time, fixed term until 30th September 2025, tenable from 1st October 2024.

About you

You will have research and teaching interests in nineteenth and twentieth century history, with a strong preference for applicants with interests in the modern history of the Middle East and North Africa with knowledge of one or more of the following fields: global history, the history of empire, and related regional histories.  You will be able to inspire and enthuse students and draw on your own research to inform and augment your teaching.You will hold a completed doctorate in a relevant field, or evidence that a doctorate is close to completion, and possess an aptitude for teaching with some experience of teaching Modern and Contemporary History. You will also have and familiarity with the existing literature and research in the field of Modern and Contemporary History.The ability to use technological innovations to improve teaching and research is desirable.

Application Process

We expect to hold interviews on either 11th or 12th of July 2024; overseas candidates will be offered Microsoft Teams interviews.For an informal discussion about this opportunity, please contact Professor Paul Betts (for Faculty responsibilities) at paul.betts@sant.ox.ac.uk and Dr Fanny Bessard (for college responsibilities) at fanny.bessard@trinity.ox.ac.uk; all practical and procedural queries should be sent to our recruitments team: recruitments@history.ox.ac.uk. All enquiries will be treated in strict confidence; they will not form part of the selection decision.You will be required to complete a supporting statement, setting out how you meet the selection criteria, curriculum vitae and the names and contact details of two referees as part of your online application.

The deadline for applications is 12.00 noon on Monday 1st July 2024.Only applications submitted online through the University e-recruitment system can be considered.

For further details, please click here.

‘Remembering death in British military campaigns after 1945’ – Annual lecture of the Centre for Histories of Violence & Conflict (5 June)

The challenge of commemorating wars: Developing an archive of family response to British military death after 1945. Photographs: Newport. Credit: Stuart Griffiths.

Professor Helen Parr (Keele University) will deliver the annual lecture of the Centre for Histories of Violence & Conflict on Wed. June 5 at the University of Exeter.

When: Wed. June 5 from 3.30pm-5pm.

Where: Digital Humanities Laboratory, Queen’s Building, University of Exeter.

Abstract: How has Britain commemorated its military campaigns after the era of total war? After 1945, Britain was almost continually engaged in conflict, but the numbers of British military dead were comparatively small. By focusing on a fundamental, but neglected, war experience – the memory of death – this lecture will explore how experiences of and attitudes towards military death changed with British military engagements and world role, and as society altered from the stoicism and reticence of the world wars, towards a more individualised, emotionally expressive culture. Based on ongoing archival research and on oral history, and tracing changes in commemoration from the Korean war to the recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, the lecture suggests that the world wars have shaped British expectations of commemoration, but that how Britons think of death in military service has been transformed.

Continue reading “‘Remembering death in British military campaigns after 1945’ – Annual lecture of the Centre for Histories of Violence & Conflict (5 June)”

Martin Thomas on ‘The End of Empires and a World Remade’

Cross-posted from Princeton Ideas

Empires, until recently, were everywhere. They shaped borders, stirred conflicts, and set the terms of international politics. With the collapse of empire came a fundamental reorganization of our world. Decolonization unfolded across territories as well as within them. Its struggles became internationalized and transnational, as much global campaigns of moral disarmament against colonial injustice as local contests of arms. In The End of Empires and a World Remade, Martin Thomas tells the story of decolonization and its intrinsic link to globalization. He traces the connections between these two transformative processes: the end of formal empire and the acceleration of global integration, market reorganization, cultural exchange, and migration.

Continue reading “Martin Thomas on ‘The End of Empires and a World Remade’”