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http://www.hup.harvard.edu 02-11-2018 14:03:57
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Her supposed withdrawal from the worldā& our continued interest with such a narrativeāhas an apocryphal dimension we must be willing to forego in order to see the poet clearly, perhaps for the first time.
āDr. Maya C. Popa on the letters of Emily Dickinson. bit.ly/43XIxOj
We're celebrating #PoetryMonth by offering 30% off select poetry books for the rest of April.
Use code POE30 at checkout: hup.harvard.edu/poetry-month?uā¦
'Funny, convivial, chattyāa new edition of Emily Dickinson's letters upends the myth of her reclusive genius.'
The Letters of Emily Dickinson is featured on Poetry Foundation: poetryfoundation.org/articles/16241ā¦
Author of A World of Enemies, Osamah Khalil, joined Jonathan Van Ness on Getting Curious with Jonathan Van Ness for a deep dive on a fascinating period of American history, as they examine what was happening abroad and at home from 1945-1980.
Listen to the episode: podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/whaā¦
āThe story that Ingleson paints reminds us that the ubiquity of 'Made in China' labels on products sold in the US was not inevitableā
Grateful to Greg Rosalsky for engaging so closely with my book and writing such a fantastic piece about it in NPR's Planet Money
npr.org/sections/moneyā¦
Tata:Ā The Global Corporation That Built Indian CapitalismĀ by Mircea Raianu is reviewed in the latest issue of London Review of Books: lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v46/ā¦
šļø 'Made in China: When US-China Interests Converged to Transform Global Trade'
Join Elizabeth OāBrien Ingleson's discussion with Peter Trubowitz, in-person or online, to launch her new book from Harvard University Press
š LSE, 7 May, 5:00-6:30pm
buff.ly/4cpgLhw
For centuries, foreigners had seen in China a vast landmass teeming with potential customers. To them, trade meant expanding their exports. But new traders in the 1970s looked to China as a potential labor source, Elizabeth OāBrien Ingleson writes. foreignpolicy.com/2024/03/24/us-ā¦