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A Book of Battle: Marcelino Menéndez y Pelayo and La ciencia española

By Editor Spencer J. Weinreich Marcelino Menéndez y Pelayo’s La ciencia española (first ed. 1876) is a battlefield long after the guns have fallen silent: the soldiers dead, the armies disbanded, even the names of the belligerent nations changed beyond… Continue Reading →

The challenge of contingency and Leibniz’s cybernetic thinking

By guest contributor Audrey Borowski According to the philosopher of science Alexandre Koyré, the early modern period marked the passage ‘from the world of more-or-less to the universe of precision’. Not all thinkers greeted the mathematization of epistemology with the… Continue Reading →

What We’re Reading: Week of 29th January

Here are some pieces from around the internet that have caught the eyes of our editorial team this week: Derek: “Garbage, Genius, or Both? Three Ways of Looking at Infinite Jest” (LitHub) Editors, “Debating the Uses and Abuses of ‘Neoliberalism’:… Continue Reading →

Holiday Reading: JHI Blog’s Best of 2017

We’re taking a brief sabbatical for a week during the festive season. Here is a list of our most popular posts this year to keep you in reading until we return in the New Year. Happy Holidays Everyone! “In Dread… Continue Reading →

What We’re Reading: Week of 18th December.

Sarah: Colin Gordon, “The Legacy of Taft-Hartley,” (Jacobin) Bella Li, “December in Poetry,” (overland) Patricia Lockwood, “It Was Gold,” (LRB)   Eric: Christine Buci-Glucksmann, “May ’68 and the Crisis of Marxism (1978)” (Viewpoint). John Ganz, “The Forgotten Man: On Murray… Continue Reading →

Arndt vs. Mortimer: Clash of the Dominant Strands of Australian Developmental Thought

by Contributing Writer Nicholas Ferns Throughout 1972, a series of seminars were held at Monash University in Melbourne to examine “Indonesian society and politics” under the Suharto regime. Organized by the Monash University Association of Students, these seminars resulted in… Continue Reading →

Argentina’s First Modern Terrorist

By Contributing Writer Craig Johnson Alberto Ignacio Ezcurra Uriburu, the leader of Argentina’s first modern terrorist organization, was a frail, dark-haired, long-faced seminary dropout rarely seen without his thick black glasses. Right-wing power and ideology ran in his family. His… Continue Reading →

What We’re Reading: Week of 11th December.

Captivée by Lesrel Adolphe Alexandre. Derek Emily Badger, “What Happened to the American Boomtown?” (New York Times) Michael J. Lewis, “Cedar Grove, restored” (New Criterion) Jeanine Michna-Bales, “The Long Road to Freedom” (Oxford American) Gordon Wood (podcast interview), “The World… Continue Reading →

Make Acrostics Magical Again? Part II

by Contributing Writer Sarah Scullin THE ART OF THE WORD Between the period of Biblical/Babylonian acrostics and those of the Christian era, the Greeks and, later, the Romans, used acrostics in their literature in ways that were as difficult to… Continue Reading →

A “Usefull (Indeed Most Usefull) Thing” and the Fortunes of a Scholarly Petitioner in Interregnum England

By Simon Brown In November 1647, the dispossessed cleric Thomas Harrison wrote yet another petition to the Parliamentary Committee for Plundered Ministers, imploring them this time to use his innovative note-taking system for ordering all their records taken “since these… Continue Reading →

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