This essay provides an overview of the disciplinary and analytical significance of David Armitage's Foundations of Modern International Thought in the context of the new international history, and the so-called ‘international turn’. It then goes on to discuss the significance of the absence of women in this new sub-field of intellectual history
More than a decade after the revolutions of 1989, we can see these as a high point of a new, worldwi...
Jeremy Bentham's career as a writer spanned almost seventy years, from the Seven Years' War to the e...
The chapter provides an overview of Global History as a field within history and identifies its rele...
Throughout the 20th century, women were leading intellectuals on International Relations (IR). They ...
For most of the life-span of the historical profession, in most parts of the world, historians were ...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International LicenseLike other branc...
This article offers a fresh assessment of the current condition of ‘culturalist’ international histo...
Throughout the 20th century, women were leading intellectuals on International Relations (IR). They ...
The recent transnational, global and cultural turns have challenged international historians to reco...
International history as a discipline has a solid and lasting background. This article identifies tw...
The 'long nineteenth century' (1776–1914) was a period of political, economic, military and cultural...
Gendered critiques by historians and feminist international relations scholars have been animating i...
Methodologies of textual and linguistic analysis have long held sway in Anglo-American practices of ...
This essay has been written to serve as a prolegomenon for a new journal in Global History. It opens...
Intellectual history, and especially the branch sometimes identified as the Cambridge school, contin...
More than a decade after the revolutions of 1989, we can see these as a high point of a new, worldwi...
Jeremy Bentham's career as a writer spanned almost seventy years, from the Seven Years' War to the e...
The chapter provides an overview of Global History as a field within history and identifies its rele...
Throughout the 20th century, women were leading intellectuals on International Relations (IR). They ...
For most of the life-span of the historical profession, in most parts of the world, historians were ...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International LicenseLike other branc...
This article offers a fresh assessment of the current condition of ‘culturalist’ international histo...
Throughout the 20th century, women were leading intellectuals on International Relations (IR). They ...
The recent transnational, global and cultural turns have challenged international historians to reco...
International history as a discipline has a solid and lasting background. This article identifies tw...
The 'long nineteenth century' (1776–1914) was a period of political, economic, military and cultural...
Gendered critiques by historians and feminist international relations scholars have been animating i...
Methodologies of textual and linguistic analysis have long held sway in Anglo-American practices of ...
This essay has been written to serve as a prolegomenon for a new journal in Global History. It opens...
Intellectual history, and especially the branch sometimes identified as the Cambridge school, contin...
More than a decade after the revolutions of 1989, we can see these as a high point of a new, worldwi...
Jeremy Bentham's career as a writer spanned almost seventy years, from the Seven Years' War to the e...
The chapter provides an overview of Global History as a field within history and identifies its rele...