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craigtalbert's camp_hale [12 articles]

 
Recent papers added to craigtalbert's library classified by the tag camp_hale. You can also see everyone's camp_hale.
 

Skiing at Camp Hale: Mountain Troops during World War II

  [CiTO]
Western Historical Quarterly, Vol. 15, No. 2. (April 1984), pp. 163-174, doi:10.2307/968515
posted to camp_hale by craigtalbert on 2006-10-18 09:55:57 **
 

John Kenneth Knaus: Orphans of the Cold War: America and the Tibetan Struggle For Survival, Public Affairs, New York, 1999, 398p., $27.50

  [CiTO]
International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence, Vol. 13 (April 2000), pp. 215-264, doi:10.1080/08850600050129736
posted to camp_hale by craigtalbert on 2006-10-18 09:50:09 **
 

"God We Had Fun": The CIA in China and Sino-American Relations

  [CiTO]
pp. 113-138
posted to camp_hale immigration tibetan by craigtalbert on 2006-10-18 09:39:58 read
 

Scholarly Reminiscenes

  [CiTO]
posted to camp_hale by craigtalbert on 2006-10-18 09:16:42 *
 

Songs of the Services

  [CiTO]
California Folklore Quarterly, Vol. 3, No. 1. (1944), pp. 36-40
posted to camp_hale by craigtalbert on 2006-10-18 09:15:48 read
 

The United States and the Tibet Issue

  [CiTO]
Asian Survey, Vol. 37, No. 11. (1997), pp. 1062-1077
 

Official Policies and Covert Programs: The U.S. State Department, the CIA, and the Tibetan Resistance

  [CiTO]
Journal of Cold War Studies, Vol. 5, No. 3. (29 July 2003), pp. 54-79
posted to camp_hale immigration tibetan by craigtalbert on 2006-10-18 09:04:27 ****

Abstract

<p>The U.S. government's involvement in Tibetan affairs began over a half- century ago with a series of commitments—both overt and covert—to support the Tibetans in their resistance to the Chinese occupation of their country. The motivation for undertaking these commitments and the scorecard on their fulfillment are mixed. When the State Department and the Central Intelligence Agency abandoned any further efforts in Tibet in the mid-1970s, the Congress and private organizations took over the sponsorship of the Tibetan cause, helping to ...

 

Tibet's Cold War: The CIA and the Chushi Gangdrug Resistance, 1956-1974

  [CiTO]
Journal of Cold War Studies, Vol. 8, No. 3. (26 July 2006), pp. 102-130
posted to camp_hale immigration tibetan by craigtalbert on 2006-10-18 09:03:13 ****

Abstract

<p>This article analyzes the Chushi Gangdrug Tibetan resistance as narrated primarily by Tibetan veterans. The article recounts the origins of the Tibetan resistance forces, their relationship with the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency,&#x00A0;their eventual laying down of arms in 1974, and their legacy in the present-day exile community. Analyses of the Tibetan resistance and the guerrilla war must take account of cultural as well as political and historical factors. The war, pitting a voluntary Tibetan guerrilla movement against the Chinese Communist army, ...

 

Great-Power Rivalries, Tibetan Guerrilla Resistance, and the Cold War in South Asia: Introduction

  [CiTO]
Journal of Cold War Studies, Vol. 8, No. 3. (26 July 2006), pp. 5-14
 

A Conversation with Eric Wolf

  [CiTO]
American Ethnologist, Vol. 14, No. 2. (1987), pp. 346-366, doi:10.1525/ae.1987.14.2.02a00110
posted to camp_hale immigration tibetan by craigtalbert on 2006-10-18 08:58:59 ****
 

The Shadow Circus The Shadow Circus . 1998. 50 minutes, color. A film by Tenzing Sonam and Ritu Sarin , produced by White Crane Films (www.whitecranefilms.com). For more information, contact University of California Extension Center for Media and Independent Learning, 2000 Center Street, Suite 400, Berkeley, CA 94704; http://www.cmil.unex.berkeley.edu/media/.

  [CiTO]
American Anthropologist, Vol. 103, No. 4. (2001), pp. 1154-1156, doi:10.1525/aa.2001.103.4.1154
posted to camp_hale immigration tibetan by craigtalbert on 2006-10-18 08:55:16 ****
 

Truth, Fear, and Lies: Exile Politics and Arrested Histories of the Tibetan Resistance

  [CiTO]
Cultural Anthropology, Vol. 20, No. 4. (2005), pp. 570-600, doi:10.1525/can.2005.20.4.570
posted to camp_hale immigration tibetan by craigtalbert on 2006-10-18 08:45:01 *****

Abstract

Narratives of the Tibetan resistance army are not a part of national history in the Tibetan exile community. Drawing on stories by veterans of the resistance to the Chinese invasion and the explanations they give of its absence in Tibetan national history, I argue that this history has been "arrested" because of the challenges it poses to normative versions of history and community and, in turn, to internal and external representations of Tibet. This practice signifies the postponing of narrating certain ...

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