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Incest and the Stock Exchange

By Contributing Writer John Handel The voluminous records of the London Stock Exchange are filled with complaints. Pages upon pages in minutes books record the day-in and day-out troubles of managing a nineteenth-century financial market. Stockbrokers complained about not receiving… Continue Reading →

 Ruminant machines: a twentieth-century episode in the material history of ideas

This essay is a companion piece by Daniela K. Helbig for the article, ‘Life without toothache’, in the latest issue of the Journal of the History of Ideas, 80/1 (2019), 91-112. Writing tools: between the history of ideas and media theory Openly… Continue Reading →

Marrying the East and the West: The Development of North Korea’s Opera Aesthetic at the Height of the Cold War

By Contributing Writer Alexandra Leonzini Given how outwardly nationalistic the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) is, it may surprise the casual “NK watcher” to find detailed references to the lives and works of eighteenth and nineteenth-century European composers in… Continue Reading →

May 3, 2019 Lovejoy Lecture (Philadelphia)

For those in Philadelphia on May 3rd, feel warmly welcome to attend the 2019 Lovejoy Lecture, sponsored by the JHI. Professor Joy Connolly will discuss “Agency and Imagination in the Making of Classical Canons,” harmonizing with the theme of the… Continue Reading →

Postscript: The Various Afterlives of Global History

by editor Sarah Claire Dunstan

With the support of the Penn History Department and Penn SASGov, we are delighted to announce the program for our inaugural graduate symposium. All are warmly invited to attend the three panels as well as the afternoon workshops, which will… Continue Reading →

The Tortoise and the Haretics

By Guest Contributor Elizabeth Buckheit One of my favorite hypothetical games is to categorize all humanity in the vein of the adage “there are two types of people in the world.” To give a very silly example, I can say… Continue Reading →

The Pedagogy of Global History?

by editor Derek Kane O’Leary

Max Weber and Pakistan

by guest contributor Shahrukh Khan Max Weber was a reluctant modernist. He understood that the major social and political trends of the modern world were irresistible, but this understanding came with a tinge of regret. In January 1919, months after… Continue Reading →

What We’re Reading: March, Part 2

Sarah From childhood we have all been warned against ‘judging a book by its cover.’ I suppose then that I should be somewhat ashamed that I first picked up Julietta Singh’s Unthinking Mastery: Dehumanism and Decolonial Entanglements (Durham: Duke University Press, 2016) precisely… Continue Reading →

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