PEN-L
mailing list archive
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]
Date:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Thread:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Index:
[ Author
| Date
| Thread
]
Re: Help: Econ history list?
At 04:36 PM 10/11/97 -0500, dave markland wrote:
>Does anyone know of any lists regarding economic history?
>
>Regards,
>Dave
>
>
Check this out:
>Return-Path: <owner-h-labor@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>Date: Thu, 18 Sep 1997 11:16:58 EDT
>Reply-To: H-Net Labor History Discussion List <H-LABOR@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>Sender: H-Net Labor History Discussion List <H-LABOR@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>From: "Seth Wigderson, U Maine Augusta" <SETHW@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>Subject: NETSOURCES: Current H-Net List of Lists 9-17-97
>To: Multiple recipients of list H-LABOR <H-LABOR@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>
> ***********************************************************
> H-NET: HUMANITIES ON-LINE
> ***********************************************************
>
> H-Net Announces
> 90 Scholarly Lists and Networks for Humanists and Social
> Scientists
>
> September 17, 1997
>
> The Information Revolution is bringing dramatic changes in
>the communications infrastructure worldwide, especially the
>Internet system that links academia together in a fast, free
>and friendly environment. H-Net is an international network
>of scholars in the humanities and social sciences that creates
>and coordinates electronic networks, using a variety of media,
>and with a common objective of advancing humanities and social
>science teaching and research. H-Net was created to provide a
>positive, supportive, equalitarian environment for the
>friendly exchange of ideas and scholarly resources.
>
> Among H-Net's most important activities is its sponsorship
>of 89 free electronic, interactive newsletters ("lists")
>edited by some 200 scholars in North America, Europe, Africa,
>and the Pacific. Subscribers and editors communicate through
>electronic mail messages sent to the group. These messages
>can be saved, discarded, downloaded to a local computer,
>copied, printed out, or relayed to someone else. Otherwise,
>the lists are all public, and can be quoted and cited with
>proper attribution. The lists are connected to their own
>sites on the World Wide Web, that store discussion threads,
>important documents, and links to related sites on the web.
>
> H-Net lists reach over 43,000 subscribers in 70+ countries.
>Subscriptions are screened by the list's editors to promote a
>diverse readership dedicated to friendly, productive,
>scholarly communications. Each list publishes 15-60 messages a
>week. Subscription applications are solicited from scholars,
>teachers, professors, researchers, graduate students,
>journalists, librarians and archivists. Teachers who want to
>put their class on-line should first contact H-Net@H-
>Net.msu.edu.
>
> Each network has its own "personality," is edited by a team
>of scholars, and has a board of editors; most are cosponsored
>by a professional society. The editors control the flow of
>messages, commission reviews, and reject flames and items
>unsuitable for a scholarly discussion group. They also
>control H-Net, which has financial support from the National
>Endowment for the Humanities and the Japan Foundation, and is
>hosted by Michigan State University and several other
>universities.
>
> The goals of H-NET lists are to enable scholars to easily
>communicate current research and teaching interests; to
>discuss new approaches, methods and tools of analysis; to
>share information on electronic databases; and to test new
>ideas and share comments on the literature in their fields.
>Announcements and calls for papers can be much more detailed,
>and much more timely on H-Net. The networks feature dialogues
>in the discipline. They commission original reviews of books,
>articles, software, and museum exhibits. (Subscribe to H-
>REVIEW for these, and visit the review web site, http://h-
>net.msu.edu/_books). They post syllabi, course outlines,
>class handouts, bibliographies, listings of new sources,
>guides to online resources, and reports on new software, data
>sets, cd-roms and World Wide Web sites. Subscribers write in
>with questions, comments, and reports, and often with mini-
>essays of a page or two. Our weekly Job Guide lists history
>jobs worldwide. Our weekly NCC reports from Washington cover
>developments that affect the humanities.
>
> H-Net also integrates its electronic lists with a powerful
>and comprehensive site on the World Wide Web. The site offers
>centralized subscription information, direct mail access to
>the list editors, list archives, links to related resources, a
>comprehensive calendar of conferences and events, and a
>complete archive of H-Net media and book reviews all linked to
>a unified, searchable database. The site is also the home
>base of H-Net's projects on multimedia teaching and book
>reviewing. It is accessible both through any web browser
>program.
>
> The H-Net site also hosts web sites for affiliated
>organizations. Our newest partner is the American Political
>Science Association, (http://www.apsanet.org), which will
>cosponsor web sites and lists in political science.
>
> Visitors should point their web browsers to:
>
> http://h-net.msu.edu
>
> ***********************************************************
>
> H-NET LISTS
> September 17, 1997
>
> (Detailed subscription procedures follow this listing.)
>
>For the following lists, send subscribe to
>LISTSERV@xxxxxxxxxxxxx:
>
> 1. H-AfrArts African expressive culture
> 2. H-Africa African history
> 3. H-Afrlitcine African literature & cinema
> 4. H-AfrTeach Teaching African history and studies
> 5. H-Albion British and Irish history
> 6. H-AmIndian American Indian history and studies
> 7. H-AmRel American religious history
> 8. H-Antisemitism antisemitism
> 9. H-ANZAU Australian & New Zealand history
>10. H-Arete Sport literature
>11. H-ASEH environmental history
>12. H-Asia Asian studies & history
>13. H-Bahai Bahai religion history and studies
>14. H-California California history and studies
>15. H-Cervantes life, times, & works of M. Cervantes Saavedra
>16. H-CLC literary analysis and computing
>17. H-Demog demographic history
>18. H-Diplo diplomatic history, international affairs
>19. H-Film scholarly studies & uses of media
>20. H-German German history
>21. H-Grad for graduate students only
>22. H-High-S teaching high school history/social studies
>23. H-HOLOCAUST Holocaust studies
>24. H-Ideas intellectual history
>25. H-Italy Italian history and culture
>26. H-ItAm American-Italian history and culture
>27. H-Japan Japanese studies
>28. H-Judaic Judaica, Jewish History
>29. H-Labor labor history
>30. H-LatAm Latin American history
>31. H-Mac Macintosh users
>32. H-Michigan Michigan History and Studies
>33. H-Minerva Women and military
>34. H-MMedia high tech teaching; multimedia
>35. H-MusTxt lyrical texts; opera
>36. H-NCC distribution of NCC Washington Reports
>37. H-NEXA Science-humanities convergence forum
>38. H-NILAS Nature in Legend & Story Society
>39. H-OIEAHC colonial; 17-18th century Americas
>40. H-PCAACA Popular Culture Association & American
> Culture Association
>41. H-Pol American political history
>42. H-Review Book review distribution only, no discussion
>43. H-SAE European anthropology
>44. H-SAfrica History of South Africa
>45. H-SAWH Southern Women and Gender
>46. H-SCI-MED-TECH history of science, medicine, technology
>47. H-SHEAR Early American republic
>48. H-Skand Scandinavian history & culture
>49. H-Soz-u-kult Theory and method in social and cultural
> history: German language
>50. H-State history of social welfare
>51. H-Survey teaching US Survey
>52. H-Teach teaching college history
>53. H-Teachpol teaching political science
>54. H-UCLEA labor studies
>55. H-Urban urban history
>56. H-USA international study of the USA
>57. H-War military history
>58. H-West US West, frontiers
>59. H-Women women's history
>60. H-World world history
>61. PSRT-L political science research & teaching
>
>For the following lists, send subscribe message to
>LISTSERV@xxxxxxx:
>
>62. H-AmStdy American studies
>63. H-Canada Canadian history & studies
>64. H-CivWar US Civil War
>65. H-Ethnic ethnicity, immigration & emigration
>66. H-Law legal and constitutional history
>67. H-Local state and local history & museums
>68. H-Rhetor history of rhetoric & communications
>69. H-Rural rural and agricultural history
>70. H-Russia Russian history
>71. H-SHGAPE US Gilded Age & Progressive Era
>72. H-South US South
>73. H-W-Civ teaching Western Civ
>
>For the following lists, send subscribe to
>LISTSERV@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx:
>
>74. H-France French history
>75. Habsburg Austro-Hungarian Empire
>
>For the following affiliated list (reviews only, no discussion),
>write:
>LISTSERV@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx:
>
>76. LPBR-L Law & Politics Book Review
>
>For the following affiliated list write to:
>h-mexico@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx:
>
>77. H-MEXICO Mexican history and studies
>
>For the following affiliated Economic History Net lists at Miami-
>Ohio send subscribe message to:
>lists@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
>78. H-Business business history [cosponsored by H-Net &
> Business History Conference]
>79. Databases design & management of historical
> databases
>80. HES History of Economics Society
>81. Eh.res economic history research
>82. Eh.disc economic history extended discussion
>83. Eh.news economic history news, announcements
>84. Eh.macro macroeconomic history, business cycles
>85. Eh.eastbloc economic history of Eastern Europe
>86. Eh.student students & faculty in economic history
>87. Eh.teach teaching economic history
>88. Global.change economic history dimensions of global
> change
>89. Quanhist.recurrent comparative recurrent phenomena
>90. Oznz.society Economic History Society/ Australia &
> New Zealand
>
> HOW TO SUBSCRIBE TO AN H-NET LIST
>
>To subscribe: Unless instructed otherwise above, send a one-line
>command in an email message to the appropriate listserv address
>(given above):
>
>SUBSCRIBE H-xxxx Firstname Surname, Affiliation
>
>where H-xxxx = list name
>
>Example: To subscribe to H-Africa, send the following line to
>LISTSERV@xxxxxxxxxxxxx:
>
>subscribe H-AFRICA Sam Smith, Southern State U.
>[Note: no comma after H-AFRICA; abbreviate U. = university]
>
>Follow the instructions in the computer generated response.
>
>To send an announcement for distribution to the lists, send it to
>H-ANNOUNCE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx Announcements intended for inclusion
>in the H-Net Events Calendar may also be sent to EVENTS@H-
>NET.MSU.EDU. Job announcements and correspondence should be
>addressed to HJOBS@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx The Job Guide appears weekly.
>We especially solicit part-time, temporary, adjunct and non-
>teaching appointments.
>
> CONTACTING US FOR MORE INFORMATION
>
>On the World Wide Web: http://h-net.msu.edu
>H-Net Gophers: gopher H-NET.msu.edu
>Electronic mail: H-NET@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>Postal mail:
>
>H-Net
>310 Auditorium Building
>Michigan State University
>East Lansing, MI 48824-1120
>Phone: (517) 355-9300
>FAX: (517) 355-8363
>
>Executive Director:
>Prof. Mark Kornbluh, Michigan State University
>E-Mail: hnet3@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
>Associate Director:
>Prof. Peter Knupfer, Kansas State University
>E-Mail: asociate@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>*****************************************************************
>
>
- Thread context:
- Help: Econ history list?,
dave markland Sat 11 Oct 1997, 21:45 GMT
- Reply to Jim Devine on Cuba,
Louis Proyect Sat 11 Oct 1997, 17:38 GMT
- Statement by Sandy Nelson on Supreme Court's Refusal to hear case,
Michael Eisenscher Sat 11 Oct 1997, 17:24 GMT
- dreamland,
Doug Henwood Sat 11 Oct 1997, 15:11 GMT
- <Possible follow-up(s)>
- Re: dreamland,
Patrick Bond Sat 11 Oct 1997, 21:00 GMT
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]