The latest issue of the Journal of the History of Ideas, volume 9 number 1, is now available in print, and online at Project Muse. The table of contents is as follows:
Tricia M. Ross, “Anthropologia: An (Almost) Forgotten Early Modern History,” 1–22
Albert Gootjes, “The First Orchestrated Attack on Spinoza: Johannes Melchioris and the Cartesian Network in Utrecht,” 23–43
Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkins and Kevin Brookes, “The Many Liberalisms of Serge Audier,” 45–63
Elías Palti, “Revising History: Introduction to the Symposium on the Bicentennial of the Latin American Revolutions of Independence,” 65–71
Jeremy Adelman, “Empires, Nations, and Revolutions,” 73–88
Francisco A. Ortega, “The Conceptual History of Independence and the Colonial Question in Spanish America,” 89–103
Gabriel Entin, “Catholic Republicanism: The Creation of the Spanish American Republics during Revolution,” 105–23
Elías Palti, “Beyond the ‘History of Ideas’: The Issue of the ‘Ideological Origins of the Revolutions of Independence’ Revisited,” 125–41
Federica Morelli, “Race, Wars, and Citizenship: Free People of Color in the Spanish American Independence,” 143–56
João Paulo Pimenta, “History of Concepts and the Historiography of the Independence of Brazil: A Preliminary Diagnosis,” 157–68
Journal authors are always encouraged to submit a blog post about their article—or anything else—to JHIBlog. And if you’re a reader of JHIBlog, why not consider subscribing to the Journal? Subscription information is available at the Penn Press website, including information about special rates for students.
3 replies on “JHI 79:1 Available”
[…] those who’ve already raced through the latest issue of the Journal of the History of Ideas and are still in need of intellectual history, […]
[…] post is a companion piece to Prof. Pimenta’s article in the Journal of the History of Ideas vol. 78, no. 1, “History of Concepts and the Historiography of the Independence of Brazil: A Preliminary […]
[…] https://jhiblog.org/2018/02/16/jhi-791-available/ […]