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Radical History Review 2008 2008(101):198-210; DOI:10.1215/01636545-2007-046
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TEACHING RADICAL HISTORY

Gender, Colonialism, and Feminist Collaboration

Antoinette Burton and Jean Allman

This essay discusses the syllabus for "Gender and Colonialism," a graduate seminar we have offered at the University of Illinois, both jointly and individually, over the course of the past six years. We recount its conception and execution as a feminist collaborative process by historians trained in different fields—Burton identifies as a British empire historian, Allman as an Africanist—as we have grappled with the limits and possibilities of the transnational as a historical concept and a feminist analytical tool in the context of thinking through what the combination of gender with colonialism might mean.


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Copyright 2008 by MARHO: The Radical Historians' Organization, Inc.