Skip to Content
BERGHAHN BOOKS : What Would Men Be Without Women Scarce Sir Mighty Scarce Mark Twain
Join our Email List Berghahn Books Logo

berghahn New York · Oxford

  • Facebook
  • Bluesky
  • Youtube
  • Instagram
  • About Us »
    • Mission Statement
    • Our History
    • Notable Publications
    • Who's Who
    • Contact Us
    • Awards
    • Partners
    • Privacy Policy
  • Books »
    • For Librarians
    • For Instructors »
      • Course Exam Copies
      • New Paperbacks
      • New eBooks
      • Journal Review Copies
    • For Orders »
      • Customer Service
      • Agents/Reps
      • How to Order
    • Catalogs & Flyers
    • New in Paperback
    • Rights & Permissions
  • eBooks
  • Open Access »
    • Migration & Development Studies Collection
    • Support our OA Initiatives
  • Journals
  • Resources »
    • Conferences/Events
    • Catalogs & Flyers
    • Free Chapter Samplers
    • Blogs
    • Podcast
    • Multimedia Content
    • Newsletter Sign Up
  • Publish with Us
  • Anthropology
  • Archaeology
  • Cultural Studies
  • Environmental Studies
  • Film & Television Studies
  • History
  • Refugee & Migration Studies
  • Sociology
Browse
  • By Author (A-Z) | By Title (A-Z)
  • By Subject
    • Anthropology
      • All titles
      • General Anthropology
      • Anthropology of Religion
      • Applied Anthropology
      • Food & Nutrition
      • Medical Anthropology
      • Political & Economic Anthropology
      • Theory & Methodology
    • Archaeology
      • All titles
    • Cultural Studies
      • All titles
      • General
      • Heritage Studies
      • Museum Studies
      • Literary Studies
      • Media Studies
      • Performance Studies
    • Development Studies
      • All titles
      • Sustainable Development Goals
    • Educational Studies
      • All titles
    • Environmental Studies
      • All titles
    • Film & Television Studies
      • All titles
    • Gender Studies
      • All titles
    • History
      • All titles
      • General
      • Colonial History
      • Genocide History
      • Jewish Studies
      • Memory Studies
      • Medieval/Early Modern
      • 18th-/19th-Century
      • WWI
      • WWII
      • 20th Century to Present
    • Mobility Studies
      • All titles
      • General
      • Refugee & Migration Studies
      • Transport Studies
      • Travel & Tourism
    • Sociology
      • All titles
    • Peace & Conflict Studies
    • Urban Studies
      • All titles
  • By Area
    • Africa
    • Asia
    • Asia-Pacific
    • Middle East/Israel
    • Circumpolar
    • North America
    • Latin America
    • Europe
    • Northern Europe
    • Southern Europe
    • Central/Eastern Europe
    • France
    • Germany
  • By Series

“What would men be without women? Scarce, sir…mighty scarce.” Mark Twain

Quotation of the Week

Posted on September 3, 2012 by Berghahn Books in "Quotation Marks" and tagged mark twain, quotations.

Post navigation

←“The love of learning, the sequestered nooks, And all the sweet serenity of books.” Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
An Excerpt from Patients and Agents: Mental Illness, Modernity and Islam in Sylhet, Bangladesh→

Recent Posts

  • Michael Haneke – 23 March 1942
  • Andrzej Wajda (6 March 1926 – 9 October 2016)
  • International Men’s Day
  • World Philosophy Day
  • Fall of the Berlin Wall, 9 November 1989

18th/19th Century History 20th Century History africa anthropology anthropology of religion archaeology author article books Colonial History Comm Date conference cultural studies development studies environmental studies europe European history film and media studies Film and Television Studies Gender studies and Sexuality Genocide History Germany heritage studies history International Comm Date Jewish studies journal featured journals literary studies Media Studies medical anthropology Memory studies mobility studies museum studies new book releases new books new in paperback Open Access political and economic anthropology politics refugee and migration studies sociology theory and methodology urban studies World Comm Date World War II