New Call for Authors and Writers for World History Resources

Andrew Gyory's picture

Your network editor has reposted this from H-Announce. The byline reflects the original authorship.

Type: 
Call for Papers
Date: 
May 6, 2021 to May 6, 2022
Location: 
New York, United States
Subject Fields: 
African History / Studies, Asian History / Studies, Australian and New Zealand History / Studies, Latin American and Caribbean History / Studies, World History / Studies

NEW CALL FOR AUTHORS AND WRITERS FOR WORLD HISTORY RESOURCE

Issues & Controversies in History

Infobase/Facts On File is hiring historians and writers on a freelance basis to contribute original articles to Issues & Controversies in History, a new database in world history targeted to high school and college students. Each article will focus on a specific pro/con question encapsulating a debate or conflict in global history. Compensation is provided for all articles upon acceptance.

Topics

Most topics will be considered and can be geared to a historian's field of expertise. Among those still available are Colonialism, Disease, Economy, Empire, Environment, Gender, Human Rights, Imperialism, Indigenous Rights, Labor, Migration, Race, Religion, Revolution, Slavery, Technology, and War. Both traditional and nontraditional subjects are being sought. ESPECIALLY SEEKING TOPICS on British Commonwealth Nations (Australia, Canada, India, New Zealand, South Africa, etc.), Asia, Latin America, and non-Western History.

Overview

Issues & Controversies in History places students at the center of the great debates and conflicts in global history. It brings history to life not as a mere recitation of names and dates but as a set of turning points where the future hung in the balance and opinions raged on all sides. By exploring the issues as the key players saw them, or, in some cases, as historians have interpreted them, the database will build a deeper understanding of how historical events and conflicts have shaped world history. In the process, it will teach students to analyze primary sources and answer document-based questions.

Goal

The goal of Issues & Controversies in History is to present history as a dynamic process of controversies, conflicts, and issues that people debated and experienced and ultimately made choices about. The “issues and controversies” approach will help personalize the engagement with global perspectives, reminding students and educators that world history doesn’t have to take a distanced point of view, but rather can also be about linking local individual actions and events to the larger global experience. Students will learn that in spite of the vastness of the past, the daily lives of individuals also comprise the building blocks of world history and that the choices made by individuals—be they rulers, merchants, farmers, or slaves—have shaped world history for thousands of years.

Format

Each article poses a single historical question and is presented in pro/con format. Some of these focus on specific controversies and events, such as:

  • Reign of Hatshepsut: Ambitious Usurper or Successful Ruler?
  • Ancient Rome: Should Rome Restore a Republican Form of Government or Become an Empire?
  • Voyages of Zheng He: Should China End Its Maritime Expeditions?
  • The Haitian Revolution: Did This Uprising Successfully Advance or Thwart the Cause of Human Rights?
  • Polygamy and Lobola in Natal: Should the Colonial Government Use Its Legal Power to Change Indigenous Customs?
  • Ending World War II: Should President Truman Drop the Atomic Bomb on Japan?

Other articles focus on broader historical issues and comparative questions, such as:

  • Creation Myths: Were Ancient Origin Stories Derived from Observations of Nature and Interpretations of the Cosmos, or Were They Reflections of Human Society and the Need to Sanction Political Authority?
  • Spread of Early World Religions: Did Missionaries or Merchants Play the Main Role?
  • Europe’s “Dark Ages”: Were the Early Middle Ages an Era of Crisis or of Continuity?
  • Founding of the State of Israel: Should a Jewish State Be Established in the Middle East?
  • European Witch Trials: Motivated Mainly by Religion or by Gender?
  • Iranian Coup: Did the United States and Great Britain Back the Overthrow of Iran's Government to Stop a Communist Takeover or to Control Access to the Nation's Oil?

The pro/con sections of each article are document-based. The author needs to gather these primary sources (or excerpts) and quote them as evidence to argue and "prove" specific points. These sources can include traditional documents, such as speeches, letters, manifestoes, and laws, as well as innovative and graphic ones, such as statues, posters, paintings, coin inscriptions, editorial cartoons, and tomb engravings.

Each article provides all the essential information to enable a student to both understand the issue and its significance and answer the question in specific world history contexts. Every article contains an introductory highlight box summarizing the issue and the two competing positions; a narrative essay providing historical background of the issue/event; an argument section presenting both sides of the controversy, with quotations from primary sources used as evidence to support each point and position; a selection of primary sources (on which the arguments are based and which are referenced and quoted in the article); a chronology; two sidebars; discussion questions; bibliography; and a “what if” section contemplating what could or might have happened had the alternative side prevailed.

Scope

As a whole, articles are designed with an aim toward achieving a balance among historical eras and the broadest possible coverage of geographical regions and peoples worldwide. All eras and global regions are open and available, but non-Western regions are particularly being sought.

Contact

Infobase/Facts On File is currently seeking authors for this exciting new database, and many topics and subjects are still available. If you are interested in being an author or would like more information, please contact Andrew Gyory, Ph.D., at agyory@infobase.com or Infobase, 132 West 31st Street, New York, N.Y. 10001.

Contact Info: 

Andrew Gyory, Ph.D.

132 West 31st Street

New York, N.Y. 10001

973 818-9467

Contact Email: 
Categories: Announcement
Keywords: announcement