The latest issue of the Journal of the History of Ideas (volume 85, issue 3, July 2024) is now live on Project MUSE. Over the coming weeks, we will publish short interviews with some of the authors featured in this issue... Continue Reading →
by James Baxter On December 10, 1951, a lively party was underway at a luxurious apartment in the Upper East Side of Manhattan. Among those invited were writers Christopher Isherwood, W. H. Auden, Gore Vidal, and Tennessee Williams, publishers Roger... Continue Reading →
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by Siddhesh Gooptu When cellist Yo-Yo Ma co-founded the Silk Road Project in 1998, it was in the context of a particular conjuncture between political and personal factors. On the one hand, Ma's personal story of transnational migration and mixed... Continue Reading →
by Nilab Saeedi Mehmet Şakir Yılmaz is an associate professor in History and Politics at Istanbul Medeniyet University. His book "Koca Nişancı" of Kanuni: Bureaucracy and "Kanun" In The Reign of Suleyman the Magnificent (1520-1566) sheds new light on the... Continue Reading →
by Giovanni Lista When Bernard de Fontenelle published the Entretiens sur la pluralité des mondes in 1686, little did he know that the roaring international success they would meet resulted in the creation of a plurality of worlds by way... Continue Reading →
by Timothy B. Jaeger It must have been a moment of disbelief when the faculty of the University of Göttingen realized the identity of their prize-winning philosopher. In 1912, Edmund Husserl, the founder of phenomenology, established an anonymous essay contest,... Continue Reading →
by Becca Palmer Historians have long recognized religion as a central element of life in the early British colonies in America. Some of these colonies were founded as havens for religious dissenters, making religious liberty central to colonial identities. Nevertheless,... Continue Reading →
by Andrew Barrette Introduction In my last piece for the Journal of the History of Ideas Blog, I suggested that the Belgian Jesuits Joseph Maréchal and Pierre Scheuer provide a method and model for increasing self-knowledge through historical reflection. Turning... Continue Reading →
by Jonathon Catlin Hans Kundnani is former Europe program director at London's Chatham House as well as a visiting fellow at NYU's Remarque Institute. He is the author of Utopia or Auschwitz: Germany's 1968 Generation and the Holocaust (Columbia, 2009)... Continue Reading →