Tom Menger
@tommenger.bsky.social
Historian of colonial violence and war, transimperial history c. 1880-1914. Forthcoming book: https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/colonial-way-of-war/0F3E02F14036481275F425952E91BD5C#fndtn-information
Herzlichen Glückwunsch!
October 28, 2025 at 12:47 PM
Herzlichen Glückwunsch!
Have a good journey! Looking forward to meeting tomorrow
September 9, 2025 at 6:18 PM
Have a good journey! Looking forward to meeting tomorrow
No, day train - started 6 AM today in Munich and am scheduled to arrive this evening - but you took the night train, then?
September 9, 2025 at 2:10 PM
No, day train - started 6 AM today in Munich and am scheduled to arrive this evening - but you took the night train, then?
Thank you! I would be honoured!
September 5, 2025 at 7:17 PM
Thank you! I would be honoured!
That's what the cover ended up being after the rejection of seven previous proposals… 😅
September 5, 2025 at 4:45 PM
That's what the cover ended up being after the rejection of seven previous proposals… 😅
… finally reveals how specific practices of violence, such as colonial genocide or scorched earth, can be best understood from a transimperial perspective.
September 5, 2025 at 11:57 AM
… finally reveals how specific practices of violence, such as colonial genocide or scorched earth, can be best understood from a transimperial perspective.
…not only traces shared practices of colonial violence but equally conceptualises a shared body of thought behind this violence. In a 2nd step, it explores how transimperial connectivity, in publications and in human mobility, contributed to bringing this shared thought&practice into being. It...
September 5, 2025 at 11:57 AM
…not only traces shared practices of colonial violence but equally conceptualises a shared body of thought behind this violence. In a 2nd step, it explores how transimperial connectivity, in publications and in human mobility, contributed to bringing this shared thought&practice into being. It...
The AI-generated podcast grasped most of the article’s points and mastered academic speech, but (as I think is often the case with AI) it also remained strangely superficial and somewhat unfocused and kept circling back slightly redundantly to the same points
July 15, 2025 at 6:57 PM
The AI-generated podcast grasped most of the article’s points and mastered academic speech, but (as I think is often the case with AI) it also remained strangely superficial and somewhat unfocused and kept circling back slightly redundantly to the same points