Sketch of microphone

Transactions of the IsisCB: Multimedia May

Issue 1.9

This issue covers the citations added during the month of May. While combing through the list, I made several interesting discoveries. What follows are some deep cuts from the CB. To begin with, we have a concept tag for Chapels—not something I would have expected in a history of science database, but there it is. Also surprising, I found my way through the journal literature this month to the Society for the History of Discoveries. This group, which is just now turning sixty-four years old, supports research on the history of cartography and geographical exploration. Very cool!

What really caught my attention, however, was a collection of what I’m calling extra-textual (ET) citations. Did you know that, in addition to books and articles, the CB staff collect citations to podcasts, films, websites, and other media? These ETs have informed my selection of featured titles below. There are not many of them right now, so there is clearly room to grow. If you are interested in multimedia work related to the history of science and are looking for a fun side project, please write to us at IsisBibliography [at] gmail.com.

Extending a bibliographic framework to ET materials can be challenging. Librarians and information professionals are keenly aware of these challenges, which they have been wrestling with since the 1990s. In particular, they have been developing new standards for resource description to better accommodate web content and object-oriented database structures. Anyone interested in this history might look to the 1995 OCLC metadata workshop that took place in Dublin, Ohio. Some of you might have heard of DublinCore and the RDA (Resource Description and Access) framework; they originated at this conference. These systems have been designed to connect standard bibliography with a broad range of information objects and formats. You can read an early reflection on the mapping process here, and view a recent how-to courtesy of the RDA toolkit here.

These efforts raise questions much beloved by historians of science concerning the limits of abstraction, the orchestration of knowledge networks, and algorithmic rationality, among other things. They are foregrounded through the work of groups like the Commission on Bibliography and Archives of the IUHPS-DHST, whose awardees to date are given directly below.

—Judy Kaplan, Editor

Featured Projects

The CB database includes a few citations for what we call “personal recognition,” citations of academic prizes, awards, and other official designations related to scholars and their scholarship. We would like to expand this material to include all of the projects that have won prizes from the History of Science Society and related organizations. The three projects shown here were winners of the Neu-Whitrow Prize, which is awarded every four years for the “most innovative research tool for managing, documenting and analyzing sources within the history of science and technology.” The next award will be made in 2025, and the Call for Nominations was just posted last month.

Alchemists revealing secrets of the seven seals, from Ripley scroll

Jennifer Rampling was the first awardee, recognizing her work on the Catalog of the Ripley Corpus, described in her paper, “The Catalogue of the Ripley Corpus: Alchemical Writings Attributed to George Ripley (d. ca. 1490),” Ambix 57 (2010): 125-201.

Klaus Hentschel and collaborators at the University of Stuttgart were awarded the Neu-Whitrow Prize in 2017 for the Database of Scientific Illustrators, 1450-1950. It features biographical entries for 13,600 illustrators from 110 countries and is a resource of enduring value.

Book cover of "The Fabrica of Andreas Vesalius," contemplative skeleton

This print version of The Vesalius Census was the most recent winner.

Featured Multimedia

Two operas by Philip Glass have been indexed in the CB database, which I want to call out for your listening pleasure.

Still from video of the opera Galileo Galilei in which excited onlookers watch a ball roll down a wooden ramp.

A scene from Philip Glass’ opera, Galileo Galilei. A recording from Orange Mountain Music is one of the multimedia objects in the CB.

CD cover of the opera Kepler, with a figure in an astronomer's chair and stars in the background.

Kepler was Glass’ third physics-themed opera.

Citations

Books

Just in time for peak summer holidays in North American centers of the history of science, this list features several titles on scientific Travel and exploration. Enjoy!

Adler, William D. Engineering Expansion: The U.S. Army and Economic Development, 1787-1860. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2021. ISBN:9780812253481.

Ahuja, Neel. Planetary Specters: Race, Migration, and Climate Change in the Twenty-First Century. The University of North Carolina Press, 2021. ISBN:9781469664477.

Altić, Mirela . Encounters in the New World: Jesuit Cartography of the Americas. University of Chicago Press, 2022. ISBN:9780226791050.

Amelang, James S. Writing Cities: Exploring Early Modern Urban Discourse. Central European University Press, 2019. ISBN:9789637326530.

Archibald, J. David. Charles Darwin. Reaktion Books, 2021. ISBN:9781789144406.

Aviv, Rachel. Strangers to Ourselves: Unsettled Minds and the Stories That Make Us. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2022. ISBN:9780374600846.

Bass, Emily. To End a Plague: America’s Fight to Defeat AIDS in Africa. PublicAffairs, 2021. ISBN:9781541762435.

Bavel, Bas van, Daniel R. Curtis, Jessica Dijkman, et al. Disasters and History: The Vulnerability and Resilience of Past Societies. Cambridge University Press, 2020. ISBN:9781108477178.

Beiner, Guy. Pandemic Re-awakenings: The Forgotten and Unforgotten ‘Spanish’ Flu of 1918-1919. Oxford University Press, 2021. ISBN:9780192843739.

Best, Makeda. Devour the Land: War and American Landscape Photography Since 1970. Harvard University Art Museums, 2021. ISBN:9780300260083.

Bonnet, Charles and Stephen W. Gaukroger. Analytical Essay on the Faculties of the Soul. Oxford University Press, 2022. ISBN:9780192846778.

Borch-Jacobsen, Mikkel. Freud’s Patients: A Book of Lives. Reaktion Books, 2021. ISBN:9781789144550.

Bosak-Schroeder, Clara. Other Natures: Environmental Encounters with Ancient Greek Ethnography. University of California Press, 2020. ISBN:9780520343481.

Bound, Mensun. The Ship Beneath the Ice: The Discovery of Shackleton’s Endurance. Mariner Books, 2023. ISBN:9780063297401.

Bourke, Joanna. Loving Animals: On Bestiality, Zoophilia and Post-Human Love. Reaktion Books, 2020. ISBN:9781789143102.

Bown, Stephen. Scurvy: How a Surgeon, a Mariner, and a Gentleman Solved the Greatest Medical Mystery of the Age of Sail. The History Press, 2021. ISBN:9780750997409.

Burgess, Colin. Soviets in Space: Russia’s Cosmonauts and the Space Frontier. Reaktion Books, 2022. ISBN:9781789146325.

Cage, Claire. The Science of Proof: Forensic Medicine in Modern France. Cambridge University Press, 2022. ISBN:9781009198332.

Califano, Vincenza Bresciani. Con gli occhi della mente. Letteratura e scienza: l’estetica dell’invisibile. Firenze University Press, 2024. ISBN:9791221503388.

Cashin, Joan E., Lorien Foote, David Gerleman, et al. Animal Histories of the Civil War Era. Louisiana State University Press, 2022. ISBN:9780807176917.

Chu, Pey-Yi. The Life of Permafrost: A History of Frozen Earth in Russian and Soviet Science. University of Toronto Press, 2021. ISBN:9781487501938.

Coodley, Gregg, David Sarasohn, and Ron Wyden. The Green Years, 1964-1976: When Democrats and Republicans United to Repair the Earth. University Press of Kansas, 2021. ISBN:9780700632343.

Corbin, Alain and Susan Pickford. Terra Incognita: A History of Ignorance in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries. Polity Press, 2021. ISBN:9781509546251.

Cortada, James W. Building Blocks of Society: History, Information Ecosystems and Infrastructures. Rowman & Littlefield, 2020. ISBN:9781538148549.

Crawford, Sharika. The Last Turtlemen of the Caribbean: Waterscapes of Labor, Conservation, and Boundary Making. University of North Carolina Press, 2020. ISBN:9781469660202.

Cursi, Marco. Le lettere dell’omo sanza lettere. Leonardo e la comunicazione epistolare. Bardi, 2024. ISBN:9788894810882.

Damodaran, Vinita (ed.) and Rohan D’Souza (ed.). Commonwealth Forestry and Environmental History. Primus Books, 2020. ISBN:9789389850185.

Daniel, Larry J. Engineering in the Confederate Heartland. Louisiana State University Press, 2022. ISBN:9780807177853.

Darwin, Charles Robert, Frederick Burkhardt (ed.), James A. Secord (ed.), et al. The Correspondence of Charles Darwin: Volume 22, 1874. Cambridge University Press, 2015.

Dell’Osso, Liliana and Primo Lorenzi. Una lunga sfida. Snodi nella psichiatria e nell’assistenza psichiatrica in Italia. Alpes, 2024. ISBN:9788865319369.

Dover, Paul M. The Information Revolution in Early Modern Europe. Cambridge University Press, 2021. ISBN:9781316602034.

Drabelle, Dennis. The Power of Scenery: Frederick Law Olmsted and the Origin of National Parks. Bison Books, and Imprint of the University of Nebraska Press, 2021. ISBN:9781496220776.

Erbig, Jeffrey Alan. Where Caciques and Mapmakers Met: Border Making in Eighteenth-Century South America. University of North Carolina Press, 2020. ISBN:9781469655031.

Ferdinand, Malcom, Angela Y. Davis, and Anthony Paul Smith. Decolonial Ecology: Thinking from the Caribbean World. Polity Press, 2022. ISBN:9781509546237.

Francaviglia, Richard V. Cinematic Journeys in Latin America: Geography Through the Lens of Exploration and Discovery Films. McFarland, 2023. ISBN:9781476692524.

Fumian, Carlo. Pane quotidiano. L’invisibile mercato mondiale del grano tra XIX e XX secolo. Donzelli, 2024. ISBN:9788855224123.

Fyfe, Aileen, Noah Moxham, Julie McDougall-Waters, et al. A History of Scientific Journals: Publishing at the Royal Society, 1665–2015. UCL Press, 2023. ISBN:9781800082335.

Giancotti, Emilia. Baruch Spinoza. La ragione, la libertà, l’idea di Dio e del mondo nell’epoca della borghesia e delle nuove scienze. Mimesis, 2024. ISBN:9791222307275.

Goldman, Lawrence. Victorians and Numbers: Statistics and Society in Nineteenth Century Britain. Oxford University Press, 2022. ISBN:9780192847744.

Goldstein, Darra. The Kingdom of Rye: A Brief History of Russian Food. University of California Press, 2022. ISBN:9780520383890.

Gratien, Chris. The Unsettled Plain: An Environmental History of the Late Ottoman Frontier. Stanford University Press, 2022. ISBN:9781503631267.

Haller, John S. Fictions of Certitude: Science, Faith, and the Search for Meaning, 1840–1920. University of Alabama Press, 2020. ISBN:9780817320539.

Halliwell, Martin. American Health Crisis: One Hundred Years of Panic, Planning, and Politics. University of California Press, 2021. ISBN:9780520379404.

Harper, Kyle. Plagues upon the Earth: Disease and the Course of Human History. Princeton University Press, 2021. ISBN:9780691192123.

Hess, Earl J. Civil War Field Artillery: Promise and Performance on the Battlefield. Louisiana State University Press, 2022. ISBN:9780807178003.

Hughes, Jennifer Scheper. The Church of the Dead: The Epidemic of 1576 and the Birth of Christianity in the Americas. New York University Press, 2021. ISBN:9781479802555.

Husain, Faisal. Rivers of the Sultan: The Tigris and Euphrates in the Ottoman Empire. Oxford University Press, 2021. ISBN:9780197547274.

Irmscher, Christoph and Rosamond Wolff Purcell. The Poetics of Natural History. Rutgers University Press, 2019. ISBN:9781978805866.

Jamieson, Alan G. Out of the Depths: A History of Shipwrecks. Reaktion Books, 2022. ISBN:9781789146196.

König, Professor Jason. The Folds of Olympus: Mountains in Ancient Greek and Roman Culture. Princeton University Press, 2022. ISBN:9780691201290.

Linthorst, Johan Alfredo. Research between Science, Society and Politics: The History and Scientific Development of Green Chemistry. Eburon, 2023. ISBN:9789463014342.

Llorens, Hilda. Making Livable Worlds: Afro-Puerto Rican Women Building Environmental Justice. University of Washington Press, 2021. ISBN:9780295749402.

Lorenz, Ralph D. Exploring Planetary Climate: A History of Scientific Discovery on Earth, Mars, Venus and Titan. Cambridge University Press, 2019. ISBN:9781108471541.

Maiorca, Bruno. La cassetta degli attrezzi. La fortuna bibliografica di John Locke nel ‘900 italiano. Aracne, 2024. ISBN:9791221812220.

Mani, Fabrizio. La storia dell’energia nell’avventura umana: il costo del progresso e l’illusione dell’energia pulita. Firenze University Press, 2024. ISBN:9791221501308.

Marcus, Alan I. Land of Milk and Money: The Creation of the Southern Dairy Industry. Louisiana State University Press, 2021.

Marzio, da Narni and Eniko Békés (ed.). De doctrina promiscua. SISMEL edizioni del Galluzzo, 2024. ISBN:9788892903012.

McMahon, Cian T. The Coffin Ship: Life and Death at Sea during the Great Irish Famine. New York University Press, 2021. ISBN:9781479808762.

Millard, Candice. River of the Gods: Genius, Courage, and Betrayal in the Search for the Source of the Nile. Anchor, 2023. ISBN:9780525435648.

Mix, Lucas John. Life Concepts from Aristotle to Darwin: On Vegetable Souls. Palgrave Macmillan, 2018. ISBN:9783319960463.

Morris-Reich, Amos (ed.) and Dirk Rupnow (ed.). Ideas of ‘Race’ in the History of the Humanities. Palgrave Macmillan, 2017. ISBN:9783319499529.

Murray, Charles J. Long Hard Road: The Lithium-Ion Battery and the Electric Car. Purdue University Press, 2022. ISBN:9781612497624.

Nenadic, Stana. Craftworkers in Nineteenth Century Scotland: Making and Adapting in an Industrial Age. Edinburgh University Press, 2021. ISBN:9781474493079.

Perry, Nicole. Policing Sex in the Sunflower State: The Story of the Kansas State Industrial Farm for Women. University Press of Kansas, 2021. ISBN:9780700631889.

Portoghesi, Paolo and Guglielmo Bilancioni (ed.). Guarino Guarini. Edizioni Pendragon, 2024. ISBN:9788833646626.

Rajpal, Shilpi. Curing Madness?: A Social and Cultural History of Insanity in Colonial North India, 1800-1950s. Oxford University Press, 2021. ISBN:9780190128012.

Ramanna, Mridula. Facets of Public Health in Early Twentieth-century Bombay. Primus Books, 2020. ISBN:9789390232888.

Regan-Lefebvre, Jennifer. Imperial Wine: How the British Empire Made Wine’s New World. University of California Press, 2022. ISBN:9780520343689.

Rocca, Al M. Mapping Christopher Columbus: An Historical Geography of His Early Life to 1492. McFarland, 2023. ISBN:9781476687551.

Romizi, Donata. Dem Wissenschaftlichen Determinismus Auf Der Spur: Von Der Klassischen Mechanik Zur Entstehung Der Quantenphysik. Verlag Karl Alber, 2019. ISBN:9783495491034.

Roth, Carla. The Talk of the Town: Information and Community in Sixteenth-Century Switzerland. Oxford University Press, 2022. ISBN:9780192846457.

Salzillo, Giuseppe. Elementi di clinica lacaniana per la costruzione del caso e la direzione della cura. Mimesis, 2024. ISBN:9791222308838.

Sandrini, Maria Grazia. The Philosophy of Rudolf Carnap. Mimesis, 2024. ISBN:9791222311210.

Santoni, Anna. Le costellazioni e i loro miti al tempo di Carlo Magno. Il contributo della tradizione aratea alla conoscenza del cielo in età carolingia. Edizioni ETS, 2024. ISBN:9788846759870.

Schwab, Maren Elisabeth and Anthony T. Grafton. The Art of Discovery: Digging into the Past in Renaissance Europe. Princeton University Press, 2022. ISBN:9780691237145.

Smith, Mark M. A Sensory History Manifesto. Pennsylvania State University Press, 2021. ISBN:9780271090184.

Sorokina, Maria. Les spheres, les astres et les theologiens: L’influence celeste entre science et foi dans les commentaires des Sentences. Brepols Publishers, 2021. ISBN:9782503590868.

Sternberg, Robert J. (ed.) and Wade E. Pickren (ed.). The Cambridge Handbook of the Intellectual History of Psychology. Cambridge University Press, 2019. ISBN:9781108418690.

Strobino, Riccardo. Avicenna’s Theory of Science: Logic, Metaphysics, Epistemology. University of California Press, 2021. ISBN:9780520297470.

Tahan, Mary R. . The Return of the South Pole Sled Dogs: With Amundsen’s and Mawson’s Antarctic Expeditions. Springer, 2021. ISBN:9783030651121.

Tamburini, Elena. Le accademie romane in difesa di Galilei: l’Amor pudico (1614). Bardi, 2023. ISBN:9788821812491.

Tosco, Carlo. Il paesaggio come storia. Il Mulino, 2017. ISBN:9788815337320.

Toyosawa, Nobuko. Imaginative Mapping: Landscape and Japanese Identity in the Tokugawa and Meiji Eras. Harvard University Asia Center, 2019. ISBN:9780674241121.

Tu, Thuy Linh Nguyen. Experiments in Skin: Race and Beauty in the Shadows of Vietnam. Duke University Press, 2021. ISBN:9781478010661.

Vercelloni, Matteo. Breve storia del design italiano. Carocci Editore, 2024. ISBN:9788829022229.

Vergara, Germán. Fueling Mexico: Energy and Environment, 1850–1950. Cambridge University Press, 2021. ISBN:9781108831277.

Walczynski, Mark. Jolliet and Marquette: A New History of the 1673 Expedition. 3 Fields Books, An Imprint of the University of Illinois Press, 2023. ISBN:9780252045219.

Wetherell, Dr Sam. Foundations: How the Built Environment Made Twentieth-Century Britain. Princeton University Press, 2020. ISBN:9780691193755.

White, Wayne L. Cold: Three Winters at the South Pole. Potomac Books, 2022. ISBN:9781640125520.

Wills, Hannah (ed.), Sadie Harrison (ed.), Erika Lynn Jones (ed.), et al. Women in the History of Science: A Sourcebook. UCL Press, 2023. ISBN:9781800084179.

Wilson, Gregory. Poison Powder: The Kepone Disaster in Virginia and Its Legacy. University of Georgia Press, 2023. ISBN:9780820363479.

Wilson, Robin J., John J. Watkins, and David J. Parks. Graph Theory in America: The First Hundred Years. Princeton University Press, 2023. ISBN:9780691194028.

Withey, Alun. Concerning Beards: Facial Hair, Health and Practice in England 1650-1900. Bloomsbury Academic, 2021. ISBN:9781350127845.

Book Chapters

There are three takeaways here this month: (1) the list of publishers—if you are looking for a publisher for an edited volume, check here for companies that might be receptive; (2) chapels—here is that interesting concept tag mentioned above; and (3) it is really striking this month that the period breakdown was not dominated by citations on twentieth- and twenty-first century science!

Publishers
(111) Brill
(48) Routledge
(17) Brepols
(15) Medieval Institute Publications
(13) Amsterdam University Press
(10) OFFICINA LIBRARIA
Concepts
(20) Books and reading
(20) Cross-cultural interaction; cultural influence
(20) Material culture
(19) Science and literature
(15) Artists
(15) Chapels
Time Periods
(57) Early modern
(39) 17th century
(37) Renaissance
(36) Medieval
(29) 16th century
(17) 18th century

Anderson, Joanne W. “Arming the Alps through art: saints, knights and bandits on the early modern road.” In Travel and conflict in the early modern world, edited by Gábor Gelléri (2022)

Araldi, Giovanni. “Transformations sociales et institutionnelles dans une ville pontificale du Mezzogiorno: les statuts de Bénévent de 1203; (Social and institutional transformations in a pontifical villa in the South: the statutes of Bénévent de 1203).” In Comparing Two Italies: Civic Tradition, Trade Networks, Family Relationships between the Italy of Communes and the Kingdom of Sicily, edited by Patrizia Mainoni (2020)

Arce, Javier. “The Late Antique City in Spania—Toledo and Recópolis.” In The power of cities : The Iberian peninsula from late antiquity to the early modern period, edited by Sabine Panzram (2019), 84-104.

Aritonang, Jan S. “Mission Schools in Batakland.” In Education beyond Europe : Models and traditions before modernities, edited by Cristiano Casalini (2021), 71-102.

Aulakh, Pavneet. “”Small things discover great”: “Lower Wisdom” in Paradise Lost.” In Milton and the new scientific age : Poetry, science, fiction, edited by Martin, Catherine Gimelli (2019), 53-76.

Aust, Cornelia. “Transfer of Credit, Mercantile Mobility, and Language among Jewish Merchants in Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century Central and East Central Europe.” In Migrating words, migrating merchants, migrating law: trading routes and the development of commercial law, edited by Stefania Gialdroni (2019), 232-259.

Barbarics-Hermanik, Zsuzsa. “Facing the ‘Turk’ in the Book Culture of Central Europe.” In Print culture at the crossroads : The book and Central Europe, edited by Elizabeth Dillenburg (2021), 195-212.

Bardoneschi, Floriana. “Working Horses in the Northern European Countryside between the Thirteenth and Sixteenth Centuries: What Advantage for a Farm?.” In The horse in premodern European culture, edited by Anastasija Ropa (2020), 27-44.

Barile, Nicola Lorenzo. “Rethinking ‘The Two Italies’: Circulation of Goods and Merchants between Venice and the ‘Regno’ in the Late Middle Ages.” In Comparing Two Italies: Civic Tradition, Trade Networks, Family Relationships between the Italy of Communes and the Kingdom of Sicily, edited by Patrizia Mainoni (2020)

Barry, Fabio. “Between all’Antica and Acheiropoieton: The Cappella Gregoriana in the Ekphrases of Lorenzo Frizolio (1582) and Ascanio Valentino (1583).” In Chapels of the Cinquecento and Seicento in the churches of Rome: form, function, meaning, edited by Chiara Franceschini (2020), 40-63.

Baum, Jacob M. “Abraham Scultetus and the God of Paste: Ritual Conflict and Sensuous Calvinism in the Second German Reformation.” In Embodiment, expertise, and ethics in early modern Europe: entangling the senses, edited by Eberhart, Marlene L. (2022), 100-131.

Bel, Martijn van den and Gérard Collomb. “‘Beyond the Falls’: Amerindian Stance towards New Encounters along the Wild Coast (ad 1595–1627).” In Material encounters and indigenous transformations in the early colonial Americas : Archaeological case studies, edited by Corinne L. Hofman (2019), 333-358.

Bibby, Miriam. “The (Galloway) Horse and His Boy: Le Roman Des Aventures De Fregus and “The Best Breed in the North”?.” In The horse in premodern European culture, edited by Anastasija Ropa (2020), 235-252.

Blair, William P. “The Scientific Legacy of Kepler’s ‘Stella Nova’.” In Kepler’s New Star (1604): Context and Controversy, edited by Boner, Patrick J. (2020), 259-266.

Bond, Katherine. ““Fashioned with Marvellous Skill”: Veils and the Costume Books of Sixteenth-Century Europe.” In Materialized identities in early modern culture, 1450-1750: objects, affects, effects, edited by Susanna Burghartz (2021)

Boner, Patrick J. “Celestial Novelty and the Science of the Stars: Kepler vs. Krabbe on Accuracy and Authority in Early Modern Germany.” In Kepler’s New Star (1604): Context and Controversy, edited by Boner, Patrick J. (2020), 81-106.

Boniface, Katrin. “Bread for My Horses.” In The horse in premodern European culture, edited by Anastasija Ropa (2020), 161-174.

Bonnotte-Hoover, Céline. “Language, mediation, conflict and power in early modern China: the roles of the interpreter in Matteo Ricci’s Journals.” In Travel and conflict in the early modern world, edited by Gábor Gelléri (2022)

Brophy, James M. “The Hand Press and Political Dissent: Forbidden Print in Central Europe, 1800–1848.” In Print culture at the crossroads : The book and Central Europe, edited by Elizabeth Dillenburg (2021), 513-531.

Brownrigg, Gail. “Medieval Horse Harness – The Evidence of the Images.” In The horse in premodern European culture, edited by Anastasija Ropa (2020), 55-68.

Bruce, Marisa. “The ‘Middle Spirits’ of the Moon: Soteriology in Frances Godwin’s The Man in the Moone.” In Milton and the new scientific age : Poetry, science, fiction, edited by Martin, Catherine Gimelli (2019), 150-164.

Buffet, Luis A. Lemoine, Oliver Antczak, Marlena Magdalena Antczak, et al. “Rancherías: Historical Archaeology of Early Colonial Campsites on Margarita and Coche Islands, Venezuela.” In Material encounters and indigenous transformations in the early colonial Americas : Archaeological case studies, edited by Corinne L. Hofman (2019), 146-174.

Burghartz, Susanna, Lucas Burkart, Christine Göttler, et al. “Introduction: Materializing Identities: The Affective Values of Matter in Early Modern Europe.” In Materialized identities in early modern culture, 1450-1750: objects, affects, effects, edited by Susanna Burghartz (2021)

Burghartz, Susanna. “Moral Materials: Veiling in Early Modern Protestant Cities. The Cases of Basel and Zurich.” In Materialized identities in early modern culture, 1450-1750: objects, affects, effects, edited by Susanna Burghartz (2021)

Burkart, Lucas. “Negotiating the Pleasure of Glass : Production, Consumption, and Affective Regimes in Renaissance Venice.” In Materialized identities in early modern culture, 1450-1750: objects, affects, effects, edited by Susanna Burghartz (2021)

Campbell, Karen. “Reading Horses and Writing Chivalry.” In The horse in premodern European culture, edited by Anastasija Ropa (2020), 107-122.

Card, Jeb J. and William R. Fowler Jr.. “Material Encounters and Indigenous Transformations in Early Colonial El Salvador.” In Material encounters and indigenous transformations in the early colonial Americas : Archaeological case studies, edited by Corinne L. Hofman (2019), 197-220.

Carey, Daniel. “Travel, utopia, and conflict: patterns of irony in early modern utopian narratives.” In Travel and conflict in the early modern world, edited by Gábor Gelléri (2022)

Cecchi, Alessandro. “Sfortuna di Raffaellino del Garbo; (Bad luck for Raffaellino del Garbo).” In Filippino Lippi : Beauty, invention, and intelligence, edited by Paula Nuttall (2020), 346-360.

Černý, Jiří. “Mistaken Authorship: A Study of the First Edition and Reprints of the Pamphlet Ein Mandat Jesu Christi.” In Print culture at the crossroads : The book and Central Europe, edited by Elizabeth Dillenburg (2021), 269-287.

Cesar, Layla Jorge Teixeira. “Indigenous Peoples and Colonial Early Modern Education in Brazil.” In Education beyond Europe : Models and traditions before modernities, edited by Cristiano Casalini (2021), 202-218.

Chalk, Brian. ““The Heaviness of Sleep”: Monarchical Exhaustion in King Lear.” In Forming Sleep: Representing Consciousness in the English Renaissance, edited by Nancy L. Simpson-Younger (2020)

Ciccarelli, Pierpaolo. “On the Phenomenological ‘Reactivation’ or ‘Repetition’ of Plato’s Dialogues by Leo Strauss.” In Platonism: Ficino to Foucault, edited by Crasta, Francesca Maria (2020), 275-296.

Cifoletti, Guido. “Lingua Franca and Migrations.” In Migrating words, migrating merchants, migrating law: trading routes and the development of commercial law, edited by Stefania Gialdroni (2019), 84-92.

Clark, John. “Curbing Horsepower: The Archaeology of Curb Bits in Medieval England – and Elsewhere.” (2020), 177-192.

Clines, Robert John. “Between hermits and heretics: Maronite religious renewal and the Turk in Catholic travel accounts of Lebanon after the Council of Trent.” In Travel and conflict in the early modern world, edited by Gábor Gelléri (2022)

Cohen, Mark R. “Migrating Words and Migrating Custom among the Geniza Merchants: Maimonides on Commercial Agency Law.” In Migrating words, migrating merchants, migrating law: trading routes and the development of commercial law, edited by Stefania Gialdroni (2019), 13-27.

Cordes, Albrecht. “The Language of the Law: The Lübeck Law Codes (ca. 1224–1642).” In Migrating words, migrating merchants, migrating law: trading routes and the development of commercial law, edited by Stefania Gialdroni (2019), 137-162.

Corrias, Anna. “Ficino, Plotinus, and the Chameleonic Soul.” In Platonism: Ficino to Foucault, edited by Crasta, Francesca Maria (2020), 32-54.

Cosci, Matteo. “The Correspondence of Clavius, Dal Monte, Magini and Other Italian Astronomers on the Nova of 1604.” In Kepler’s New Star (1604): Context and Controversy, edited by Boner, Patrick J. (2020), 204-258.

Cotterill, Elina H. “How to Make a White Mark on a Black Horse: Middle English Hippiatric Medicine, Common Diseases, and Their Remedies.” In The horse in premodern European culture, edited by Anastasija Ropa (2020), 147-160.

Crăciun, Maria. “The Minister’s Reading List: Religious Books in the Libraries of Transylvanian Lutheran Clergy.” In Print culture at the crossroads : The book and Central Europe, edited by Elizabeth Dillenburg (2021), 34-57.

Crane, Mary Thomas. “Meteorology, embodiment, and environment in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” In Geographies of embodiment in early modern England, edited by Floyd-Wilson, Mary (2020)

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Rees, Valery. “Philosophy on the Defensive: Marsilio Ficino’s Response in a Time of Religious Turmoil.” In Platonism: Ficino to Foucault, edited by Crasta, Francesca Maria (2020), 16-31.

Regier, Jonathan. “Stars, Crystals and Courts: Johannes Kepler and Anselmus Boëtius de Boodt.” In Kepler’s New Star (1604): Context and Controversy, edited by Boner, Patrick J. (2020), 107-128.

Rice, Louise. “The Angelic Balustrade of the Spada Chapel in San Girolamo della Carità.” In Chapels of the Cinquecento and Seicento in the churches of Rome: form, function, meaning, edited by Chiara Franceschini (2020), 166-189.

Ripoll, Gisela. “The Transformation of the City in Hispania between the 4th and the 6th Centuries.” In The power of cities : The Iberian peninsula from late antiquity to the early modern period, edited by Sabine Panzram (2019), 39-83.

Robertson, Charles. “Never Being Boring: Filippino Lippi, Michelangelo and the Concept of Chapel Decoration.” In Filippino Lippi : Beauty, invention, and intelligence, edited by Paula Nuttall (2020), 276-295.

Rojas, Roberto Valcárcel. “European Material Culture in Indigenous Sites in Northeastern Cuba.” In Material encounters and indigenous transformations in the early colonial Americas : Archaeological case studies, edited by Corinne L. Hofman (2019), 102-123.

Rops, Edgars. “The Horse in Welsh and Anglo-Saxon Law.” In The horse in premodern European culture, edited by Anastasija Ropa (2020), 205-218.

Rothman, Aviva Tova. “Kepler’s Astrological Play.” In Kepler’s New Star (1604): Context and Controversy, edited by Boner, Patrick J. (2020), 129-144.

Rothschild, N. Amos. “The Physiology of Free Will: Faculty Psychology and the Structure of the Miltonic Mind.” In Forming Sleep: Representing Consciousness in the English Renaissance, edited by Nancy L. Simpson-Younger (2020)

Rublack, Ulinka. “Performing America: Featherwork and Affective Politics.” In Materialized identities in early modern culture, 1450-1750: objects, affects, effects, edited by Susanna Burghartz (2021)

Rumrich, John. “Does Milton’s God Play dice with the universe?.” In Milton and the new scientific age : Poetry, science, fiction, edited by Martin, Catherine Gimelli (2019), 108-126.

Runce, Inese. “Educational Traditions in the Early Modern Baltics, 1400–1800.” In Education beyond Europe : Models and traditions before modernities, edited by Cristiano Casalini (2021), 299-323.

Sakellariou, Eleni. “Regional Trade and Economic Agents in the Kingdom of Naples (Fifteenth Century).” In Comparing Two Italies: Civic Tradition, Trade Networks, Family Relationships between the Italy of Communes and the Kingdom of Sicily, edited by Patrizia Mainoni (2020)

Sánchez, Gilda Hernández. “Indigenous Pottery Technology of Central Mexico during Early Colonial Times.” In Material encounters and indigenous transformations in the early colonial Americas : Archaeological case studies, edited by Corinne L. Hofman (2019), 284-0307.

Sarcina, Alberto. “Santa María de la Antigua del Darién: the Aftermath of Colonial Settlement.” In Material encounters and indigenous transformations in the early colonial Americas : Archaeological case studies, edited by Corinne L. Hofman (2019), 175-196.

Schoenfeldt, Michael C. “How gardens feel: The natural history of sensation in Spenser and Milton.” In Geographies of embodiment in early modern England, edited by Floyd-Wilson, Mary (2020)

Scuro, Rachele. “Shaping Identity through Glass in Renaissance Venice.” In Materialized identities in early modern culture, 1450-1750: objects, affects, effects, edited by Susanna Burghartz (2021)

Seehafer, Michele. “Shimmering Virtue: Joris Hoefnagel and the Uses of Shell Gold in the Early Modern Period.” In Materialized identities in early modern culture, 1450-1750: objects, affects, effects, edited by Susanna Burghartz (2021)

Serafinelli, Guendalina. “Carving Out Identity: The Boncompagni Family, Alessandro Algardi, and the Chapel in the Sacristy of Santa Maria in Vallicella.” In Chapels of the Cinquecento and Seicento in the churches of Rome: form, function, meaning, edited by Chiara Franceschini (2020), 146-165.

Sharipova, Liudmyla. ““That Little Golden Book”: Eastern Slavic Translations of the Imitation of Christ, 1628–1799.” In Print culture at the crossroads : The book and Central Europe, edited by Elizabeth Dillenburg (2021), 494-512.

Shen, Xia, Yongyan Wang, and Guochang Shen. “School Education in China from 1400 to 1800.” In Education beyond Europe : Models and traditions before modernities, edited by Cristiano Casalini (2021), 33-47.

Silva, Paula Oliveira e. “Francisco de Hollanda on Artistic Creation, the Origin of Ideas, and Demiurgic Painting.” In Platonism: Ficino to Foucault, edited by Crasta, Francesca Maria (2020), 179-195.

Simon, Margaret. “Rest and Rhyme in Thomas Campion’s Poetry.” In Forming Sleep: Representing Consciousness in the English Renaissance, edited by Nancy L. Simpson-Younger (2020)

Simpson-Younger, Nancy L. ““Still in Thought with Thee I Go”: Epistemology and Consciousness in the Sidney Psalms.” In Forming Sleep: Representing Consciousness in the English Renaissance, edited by Nancy L. Simpson-Younger (2020)

Sixtová, Olga. “Publishing Books in Early Modern Jewish Prague.” In Print culture at the crossroads : The book and Central Europe, edited by Elizabeth Dillenburg (2021), 367-386.

Skerrett, Mere. “Interaction between Māori “Indigenous” Educational Systems and the “Imposed” Educational Systems of the West.” In Education beyond Europe : Models and traditions before modernities, edited by Cristiano Casalini (2021), 103-128.

Sládek, Pavel. “Printing of Learned Literature in Hebrew, 1510–1630: Toward a New Understanding of Early Modern Jewish Practices of Reading.” In Print culture at the crossroads : The book and Central Europe, edited by Elizabeth Dillenburg (2021), 387-410.

Sonkajärvi, Hanna. “Laws – Customs – Conventions: French Merchants and French Legal Doctrines in the Brazilian Law Courts in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century.” In Migrating words, migrating merchants, migrating law: trading routes and the development of commercial law, edited by Stefania Gialdroni (2019), 289-309.

Squires, Catherine. “German-East Slavic (Language) Contacts in Legal Texts of the Thirteenth-Fifteenth Centuries.” In Migrating words, migrating merchants, migrating law: trading routes and the development of commercial law, edited by Stefania Gialdroni (2019), 118-136.

Stielau, Allison. “Adding to the Good Silver with Other Trickery’: Purity and Contamination in Clement VII’s Emergency Currency’.” In Contamination and purity in early modern art and architecture, edited by Lauren Jacobi (2021)

Sutton, John R. “Place and memory: History, cognition, phenomenology.” In Geographies of embodiment in early modern England, edited by Floyd-Wilson, Mary (2020)

Szegedi, Edit. “Educational Traditions in the Principality of Transylvania (1541–1691).” In Education beyond Europe : Models and traditions before modernities, edited by Cristiano Casalini (2021), 282-298.

Teplitsky, Joshua. “Trusting Facts, Trusting People: Approbata, Endorsements, and Authoritative Knowledge in the Early Modern Jewish Book Trade.” In Print culture at the crossroads : The book and Central Europe, edited by Elizabeth Dillenburg (2021), 435-450.

Terracciano, Pasquale. “The Platonic Stain: Origen, Philosophy and Censorship between the Renaissance and the Counter Reformation.” In Platonism: Ficino to Foucault, edited by Crasta, Francesca Maria (2020), 149-178.

Tessicini, Dario. “Straight Paths and Evanescent Bodies: The Physics and Dynamics of Celestial Novelties in Kepler’s De stella nova.” In Kepler’s New Star (1604): Context and Controversy, edited by Boner, Patrick J. (2020), 17-40.

Thomas, Drew B. “The Lotter Printing Dynasty: Michael Lotter and Reformation Printing in Magdeburg.” In Print culture at the crossroads : The book and Central Europe, edited by Elizabeth Dillenburg (2021), 245-268.

Tognetti, Sergio. “Businessmen and Social Mobility in Late Medieval Italy.” In Social mobility in medieval Italy : (1100-1500), edited by Isabella Lazzarini (2018)

Toral-Niehoff, Isabel and Alberto León Muñoz. “Ornament of the World: Urban Change in Early Islamic Qurṭuba.” In The power of cities : The Iberian peninsula from late antiquity to the early modern period, edited by Sabine Panzram (2019), 107-160.

Tosini, Patrizia, Steven F. Ostrow, and Chiara Franceschini. “Chapels: An Introduction.” In Chapels of the Cinquecento and Seicento in the churches of Rome: form, function, meaning, edited by Chiara Franceschini (2020), 9-15.

Tosini, Patrizia. “The Frangipani Chapel in San Marcello: Farnesian Devotion, Antiquarian Taste, and Municipal Pride.” In Chapels of the Cinquecento and Seicento in the churches of Rome: form, function, meaning, edited by Chiara Franceschini (2020), 18-39.

Touwaide, Alain. “The Art of Medicine in Byzantium: Disease and Disability in Byzantine Manuscripts.” In Disease and disability in medieval and early modern art and literature, edited by Canalis, Rinaldo Fernando (2021)

Traub, Valerie. “Anatomy, cartography, and the new world body.” In Geographies of embodiment in early modern England, edited by Floyd-Wilson, Mary (2020)

Trubowitz, Rachel. “The Fall and Galileo’s Law of Falling Bodies: Geometrization vs. Observing and Describing Things in Paradise Lost.” (2019), 799-107.

Turner, Timothy A. “Making the Moor: Torture, Sleep Deprivation, and Race in Othello.” In Forming Sleep: Representing Consciousness in the English Renaissance, edited by Nancy L. Simpson-Younger (2020)

Tuz, Anna and Marianna Czapnik. “Early Modern Polish Travellers Purchasing Books in Italy: Ownership Evidence as a Source of Information.” In Print culture at the crossroads : The book and Central Europe, edited by Elizabeth Dillenburg (2021), 177-194.

Ulväng, Göran. “Cabinet makers and chair makers in Stockholm 1730–1850. Production, market and economy in a regulated economy.” In Luxury, fashion and the early modern idea of credit, edited by Jakobsson, Håkan (2021), 151-169.

Viallon, Marina. “An Autopsy of Renaissance Equestrianism: The Materials, Making, and Use of a ca. 1535 War Saddle from the Musée des Beaux-Arts of Rennes.” In The horse in premodern European culture, edited by Anastasija Ropa (2020), 193-202.

Vilkuna, Kustaa H. J. and Riina Turunen. “Hair Professionals in Financial Distress in Stockholm, 1750–1830.” In Luxury, fashion and the early modern idea of credit, edited by Jakobsson, Håkan (2021), 120-135.

Volek, Jan. “Making Erasmus Speak Czech: Female Patronage and Production of the 1533 Czech Translation of the New Testament.” In Print culture at the crossroads : The book and Central Europe, edited by Elizabeth Dillenburg (2021), 125-142.

Wachenfeldt, Paula von. “Rational Follies: Fashion, Luxury and Credit in Eighteenth-Century Paris.” In Luxury, fashion and the early modern idea of credit, edited by Jakobsson, Håkan (2021), 19-33.

Waite, Gary K. “The Artist David Joris (1501-56): The Prophet of the Renewed Senses.” In Embodiment, expertise, and ethics in early modern Europe: entangling the senses, edited by Eberhart, Marlene L. (2022), 71-99.

Weber, Klaus and Torsten dos Santos Arnold. “Ports to “New Worlds”: Lisbon, Seville, Cádiz (15th–18th Centuries).” In The power of cities : The Iberian peninsula from late antiquity to the early modern period, edited by Sabine Panzram (2019), 321-361.

Webster, Erin. “Starry Messengers: Galileo and the Role of the Observer in Paradise Lost.” In Milton and the new scientific age : Poetry, science, fiction, edited by Martin, Catherine Gimelli (2019), 127-149.

Wells, Francis C. “The Role of Architecture and the Decorative Arts in Renaissance Medicine.” In Disease and disability in medieval and early modern art and literature, edited by Canalis, Rinaldo Fernando (2021)

Willie, Rachel. “Lunar travel and lunacy: reading conflict in Aphra Behn’s The Emperor of the Moon.” In Travel and conflict in the early modern world, edited by Gábor Gelléri (2022)

Woldegiyorgis, Ayenachew A. “Ethiopian Traditional Education and Fifteenth-Century Reformist Movements.” In Education beyond Europe : Models and traditions before modernities, edited by Cristiano Casalini (2021), 221-238.

Woodward, Robyn and Shea Henry. “Contact and Colonial Impact in Jamaica: Comparative Material Culture and Diet at Sevilla la Nueva and the Taíno Village of Maima.” In Material encounters and indigenous transformations in the early colonial Americas : Archaeological case studies, edited by Corinne L. Hofman (2019), 84-101.

Wright, Alison. “The Temporary and the Temporal: Suspense in the Strozzi Chapel.” In Filippino Lippi : Beauty, invention, and intelligence, edited by Paula Nuttall (2020), 228-258.

“‘Yet have I in me something dangerous’: On the Interplay of Medicine and Maleficence in Shakespeare’s Hamlet.” In Disease and disability in medieval and early modern art and literature, edited by Canalis, Rinaldo Fernando (2021)

Zambrano, Patrizia. “‘… Di naturale tanto bene che non pare che gli manchi se non la parola.’: Filippino Lippi pittore di ritratti; (Naturally so good that all he seems to lack is speech.’: Filippino Lippi portrait painter).” In Filippino Lippi : Beauty, invention, and intelligence, edited by Paula Nuttall (2020), 152-184.

Zeitlin, Judith Francis. “Learning and Literacy in Mesoamerica: Pre-Hispanic Traditions and the Challenges of Alphabetic Hegemony.” In Education beyond Europe : Models and traditions before modernities, edited by Cristiano Casalini (2021), 181-201.

Journal Articles

I learned about a new (to me) journal in putting together the newsletter this month: Terrae Incognitae. It is the organ of the Society for the History of Discoveries, and its aim is “to examine the history and impact of geographic exploration and cross-cultural interaction around the globe prior to the modern era.” Rarely do journal editors seem to enjoy drafting their “aims and scope” as much as these editors have done:

Geographic discovery is about more than the moment of discovery…It is about theoretical geography put into practice; it is about bankrolling expeditions, whether through the investment of wealthy widows, old age pensions, financiers, or governments; it is about maps and mapmakers; it is about diplomats, missionaries, explorers, scallywags and pirates, naturalists, and merchant-adventurers. Geographic discovery is about people broadening their horizons, encountering one another for the first time, struggling to understand a foreign culture, and braving the unknown in search of a new destiny.

What might you discover in the journal literature added in May?

Almagest

Aechtner, Thomas. “Creationism with an Australian Accent: Politics, Schools, and Global Exportation.” Almagest 12 (2021): 124-148.

Alvarez Jimenez, Carlos. “Some remarks concerning the trisection of an angle. Euclid between Pappus and Viète.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 76-97.

Angleraux, Caroline. “De la métaphysique à la biologie, métamorphose conceptuelle des monades.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 18-26.

Assada, Anne-Lise. “Incommensurabilité dans le changement scientifique, incommensurabilité des épistémologies réalistes et anti-réalistes.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 270-278.

áuregui-Hernández, Anabel. “On Arnauld’s geometry of straight lines.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 176-187.

Barahona, Ana Echeverría. “Erasing borders: a new look at the historiography of science.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 280-288.

Beisbart, Claus. “Can Cosmologists Really Measure the Age of the Universe?.” Almagest 13, no. 2 (2022): 112-139.

Bertoldi, Nicola. “L’empirisme logique est-il toujours d’actualité en philosophie de la biologie ?.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 28-35.

Bracco, Christian and Jean-Pierre Provost. “First-order Relativity: From Fresnel’s 1818 “drag” coefficient to Lorentz’s 1895 “local time” followed by Poincare’s 1900 interpretation, and finally up to Einstein’s 1911-1912 spatially flat metric.” Almagest 13, no. 2 (2022): 96-111.

Brown, C. Mackenzie. “Hindu Creationism.” Almagest 12 (2021): 150-191.

Carman, Christián Carlos. “The Great Martian Catastrophe and how Tycho (Re-)fixed it.” Almagest 13, no. 1 (2022): 42-57.

Castro, Max Fernández de. “Poincaré and Impredicativity.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 150-163.

Chassefière, Éric. “Interprétation des variations barométriques au tournant du XVIIIe siècle : allègement de l’atmosphère par les vapeurs et la pluie.” Almagest 14, no. 1 (2023): 148-173.

Chassefière, Éric. “L’aurore boréale enjeu du mécanisme cartésien et la dispute entre Paris et Montpellier, le choix français.” Almagest 13, no. 1 (2022): 58-78.

Crippa, Davide. “Teaching Elementary Mathematics at the University of Prague: A Study of Latin Compendia from the Second Half of the 18th century.” Almagest 13, no. 1 (2022): 80-141.

Dhombres, Jean. “Faire l’histoire d’un objet ou celle d’un concept mathématique avec les fonctions mathématiques comme cas d’étude privilégié.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 98-135.

Dongyang, Han and Dalong Lu. “The Planetary Latitude Theory of Qizheng Tuibu (1477).” Almagest 14, no. 1 (2023): 40-68.

Edis, Taner. “The Turkish Model of Islam Creationism.” Almagest 12 (2021): 40-65.

Fernández, Begoña. “On Itô’s Integral and the Fundamental Theorem of Stochastic Calculus.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 136-148.

Godart, Gerard Rainier Clinton. “”Evolutionary Theory is the Superstition of Modernity”: Antievolutionary Thought in Wartime Japan.” Almagest 12 (2021): 66-91.

Guicciardini, Niccolò. “Newtonian Absolute Time vs Fluxional Time.” Almagest 13, no. 2 (2022): 68-83.

Haffner, Emmylou. “Relectures et réécritures des textes de B. Riemann dans leur édition par R. Dedekind et H. Weber.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 164-174.

İhsanoğlu, Ekmeleddin. “Introductory Notes on Addressing Issues and Problems of Multireligious-Ethnic Scholars in the Ottoman Science.” Almagest 14, no. 1 (2023): 70-86.

Jones, Alexander. “Precision of Time Observation in Greco-Roman Astrology and Astronomy.” Almagest 13, no. 2 (2022): 12-34.

Jullien, Vincent and Carmen Martínez-Adame. “Foreward.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 6-14.

Jullien, Vincent. “La Dynamica de Leibniz et la science physico-mathématique.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 188-208.

Lachièze-Rey, Marc. “Time Measurements without Time.” Almagest 13, no. 2 (2022): 140-153.

Lu, Dalong and Han Dongyang. “The Planetary Longitude Theory of Qizheng Tuibu (1477).” Almagest 13, no. 1 (2022): 4-41.

Magrone, Paola, Ana Millán Gasca, and Ilaria Zannoni. “Science for the Multitude: Jules Dalsème’s (1845-1904) ‘Natural Geometry” for the Education of All.” Almagest 14, no. 1 (2023): 174-209.

Martínez-Adame, Carmen. “Similarities and differences between some of the integrals of the 20th century.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 210-220.

Martínez-Contreras, Jorge. “Two moments in the history of Primatology: Hanno’s Periplus and Satsue Mito’s legacy.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 36-45.

Morfouli, Meropi. “Introduction.” Almagest 13, no. 2 (2022): 4-10.

Morfouli, Meropi. “La precision dans la mesure du temps et la Nouvelle Philosophie: Étude de cas (Alexandre Koyré & Richard Westfall).” Almagest 13, no. 2 (2022): 36-66.

Nicolaïdis, Efthymios. “Costas B. Krimbas 1932-2021.” Almagest 12 (2021): 228-233.

Nicolaïdis, Efthymios. “Creationism in Today’s Orthodox Community.” Almagest 12 (2021): 208-226.

Park, Hyung Wook and Ronald L. Numbers. “Introduction.” Almagest 12 (2021): 4-11.

Park, Hyung Wook. “Practicing Creationism: Science and the New Religious Practices in South Korea.” Almagest 12 (2021): 12-39.

Perea, Favio Ezequiel Miranda and Lourdes del Carmen González Huesca. “On Conceptual changes in Computer Assisted Proofs.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 222-245.

Provost, Jean-Pierre. “Three historical issues dealing with time and inertia in relation to present physics.” Almagest 13, no. 2 (2022): 84-94.

Ramírez, Dairon Alfonso Rodríguez. “Continuity and exceptionalism in Charles Darwin.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 46-52.

Rey, Olivier. “Comment la statistique est-elle entrée en physique ?.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 246-254.

Rodriguez-Caso, Juan Manuel and Erica Torrens-Rojas. “A.R. Wallace and his “evolutionary diagrams”: first Darwinian schemes?.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 54-63.

Schmit, Christophe and Éric Chassefière. “Météorologie et sciences de l’observatoire à l’Observatoire royal de Paris (1671-1719).” Almagest 14, no. 1 (2023): 88-147.

Stenhouse, John. “Creastionists and Evolutionists in New Zealand, 1800-2010: Science, Religion, Politics, and Race.” Almagest 12 (2021): 92-122.

Valadez, Bernardo Yáñez Macías. “A historiographical perspective on contemporary biological anthropology.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 64-72.

Voulgaris, Aristeidis, Christophoros Mouratidis, and Andreas Vossinakis. “The Initial Calibration Date of the Antikythera Mechanism after the Saros Spiral Mechanical Apokatastasis.” Almagest 14, no. 1 (2023): 4-39.

Wagner, Pierre. “Conceptual change vs disagreement in science.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 300-308.

Wagner, Pierre. “Sortes de changements scientifiques : changements dans les sciences, changement de la science.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 290-298.

Waszek, David. “Le rôle des notations dans la découverte de l’analogie des puissances et des différences de Leibniz.” Almagest 14, no. 2 (2023): 256-266.

Zhang, Zeng-yi. “Creation-Evolution Controversies in China: A Study of Intelligent Design in Social Media.” Almagest 12 (2021): 192-207.

Science, Technology, and Human Values

Alaniz, Rodolfo John . “Before the “Black Box”: The Inputs and Outputs of Nineteenth-century Deep-sea Science.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 4 (2020): 596-617.

Amrute, Sareeta. “Bored Techies Being Casually Racist: Race as Algorithm.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 5 (2020): 903-933.

Baneke, David. “Let’s Not Talk About Science: The Normalization of Big Science and the Moral Economy of Modern Astronomy.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 1 (2020): 164-194.

Benezra, Amber. “Race in the Microbiome.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 5 (2020): 877-902.

Birch, Kean. “Technoscience Rent: Toward a Theory of Rentiership for Technoscientific Capitalism.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 1 (2020): 3-33.

Black, Michael L. “Usable and Useful: On the Origins of Transparent Design in Personal Computing.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 3 (2020): 515-537.

Blouin, Gabriel G. “Data Performativity and Health: The Politics of Health Data Practices in Europe.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 2 (2020): 317-341.

Bocci, Paolo. “Utopian Conservation: Scientific Humanism, Evolution, and Island Imaginaries on the Galápagos Islands.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 6 (2020): 1168-1194.

Brenninkmeijer, Jonna, Tanja Schneider, and Steve Woolgar. “Witness and Silence in Neuromarketing: Managing the Gap between Science and Its Application.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 1 (2020): 62-86.

Cakici, Baki, Evelyn Ruppert, and Stephan Scheel. “Peopling Europe through Data Practices: Introduction to the Special Issue.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 2 (2020): 199-211.

Carlin, Elizabeth and Brandon Kramer. “Hair, Hormones, and Haunting: Race as a Ghost Variable in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 5 (2020): 779-803.

Chilvers, Jason and Matthew B. Kearnes. “Remaking Participation in Science and Democracy.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 3 (2020): 347-380.

Freidberg, Susanne. ““Unable to Determine”: Limits to Metrical Governance in Agricultural Supply chains.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 4 (2020): 738-760.

Froese, Anna and Natalie Mevissen. “Failure through Success: Co-construction Processes of Imaginaries (of Participation) and Group Development.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 3 (2020): 455-487.

Frow, Emma K. “From “Experiments of Concern” to “Groups of Concern”: Constructing and Containing Citizens in Synthetic Biology.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 6 (2020): 1038-1064.

Fyfe, Aileen, Flaminio Squazzoni, Didier Torny, et al. “Managing the Growth of Peer Review at the Royal Society Journals, 1865-1965.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 3 (2020): 405-429.

Grommé, Francisca and Evelyn Ruppert. “Population Geometries of Europe: The Topologies of Data Cubes and Grids.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 2 (2020): 235-261.

Hansen, Helena, Caroline Parker, and Jules Netherland. “Race as a Ghost Variable in (White) Opioid Research.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 5 (2020): 848-876.

Hinterberger, Amy. “Regulating Estrangement: Human–Animal Chimeras in Postgenomic Biology.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 6 (2020): 1065-1086.

Hurlbut, James Benjamin, Ingrid Metzler, Luca Marelli, et al. “Bioconstitutional Imaginaries and the Comparative Politics of Genetic Self-knowledge.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 6 (2020): 1087-1118.

Hurlbut, James Benjamin, Sheila Jasanoff, and Krishanu Saha. “Constitutionalism at the Nexus of Life and Law.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 6 (2020): 979-1000.

Jasanoff, Sheila and Ingrid Metzler. “Borderlands of Life: IVF Embryos and the Law in the United States, United Kingdom, and Germany.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 6 (2020): 1001-1037.

Johnson, David R. “A Differential Association Theory of Socialization to Commercialist Career Paths in Science.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 3 (2020): 381-404.

Karkazis, Katrina and Rebecca M. Jordan-Young. “Sensing Race as a Ghost Variable in Science, Technology, and Medicine.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 5 (2020): 763-778.

Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Sainath Suryanarayanan. “Pollinating Collaboration: Diverse Stakeholders’ Efforts to Build Experiments in the Wake of the Honey Bee Crisis.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 4 (2020): 686-711.

Lee, Catherine Y. and Torsten H. Voigt. “DNA Testing for Family Reunification and the Limits of Biological Truth.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 3 (2020): 430-454.

Lee, Francis and Claes-Fredrik Helgesson. “Styles of Valuation: Algorithms and Agency in High-throughput Bioscience.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 4 (2020): 659-685.

Lennon, Myles. “Postcarbon Amnesia: Toward a Recognition of Racial Grief in Renewable Energy Futures.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 5 (2020): 934-962.

Liao, Tony. “Standards and Their (Recurring) Stories: How Augmented Reality Markup Language Was Built on Stories of Past Standards.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 4 (2020): 712-737.

M’charek, Amade, Victor Toom, and Lisette Jong. “The Trouble with Race in Forensic Identification.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 5 (2020): 804-828.

Marcheselli, Valentina. “The Shadow Biosphere Hypothesis: Non-knowledge in Emerging Disciplines.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 4 (2020): 636-658.

Marris, Claire and Jane Calvert. “Science and Technology Studies in Policy: The UK Synthetic Biology Roadmap.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 1 (2020): 34-61.

Meckin, Robert. “Changing Infrastructural Practices: Routine and Reproducibility in Automated Interdisciplinary Bioscience.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 6 (2020): 1220-1241.

Munyikwa, Michelle. “(De)Racializing Refugee Medicine.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 5 (2020): 829-847.

Oikkonen, Venla. “Entanglements of Time, Temperature, Technology, and Place in Ancient DNA Research: The Case of the Denisovan Hominin.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 6 (2020): 1119-1141.

Pelizza, Annalisa . “Processing Alterity, Enacting Europe: Migrant Registration and Identification as Co-construction of Individuals and Polities.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 2 (2020): 262-288.

Penkler, Michael, Kay Felder, and Ulrike Felt. “Challenging Diversity: Steering Effects of Buzzwords in Projectified Health Care.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 1 (2020): 138-163.

Petrick, Elizabeth. “Building the Black Box: Cyberneticians and Complex Systems.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 4 (2020): 575-595.

Prussing, Erica. “Through a Critical Lens: Expertise in Epidemiology for and by Indigenous Peoples.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 6 (2020): 1142-1167.

Ratner, Helene . “Europeanizing the Danish School through National Testing: Standardized Assessment Scales and the Anticipation of Risky Populations.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 2 (2020): 212-234.

Sample, Matthew , Sebastian Sattler, Stefanie Blain-Moraes, et al. “Do Publics Share Experts’ Concerns about Brain–Computer Interfaces? A Trinational Survey on the Ethics of Neural Technology.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 6 (2020): 1242-1270.

Sanz, Camilo. “Malignant yet Benign: The Political Economy of a Skin Cancer Diagnosis in Colombia.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 1 (2020): 112-137.

Shindell, Matthew Benjamin. “Outlining the Black Box: An Introduction to Four Papers.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 4 (2020): 567-574.

Sparrow, Robert. “Robotics Has a Race Problem.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 3 (2020): 538-560.

Stewart, Hilary and Nick Watson. “A Sociotechnical History of the Ultralightweight Wheelchair: A Vehicle of Social Change.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 6 (2020): 1195-1219.

Ustek-Spilda, Funda. “Statisticians as Back-office Policy-makers: Counting Asylum-Seekers and Refugees in Europe.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 2 (2020): 289-316.

Warin, Megan, Emma Kowal, and Maurizio Meloni. “Indigenous Knowledge in a Postgenomic Landscape: The Politics of Epigenetic Hope and Reparation in Australia.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 1 (2020): 87-111.

Wylie, Caitlin Donahue. “Glass-boxing Science: Laboratory Work on Display in Museums.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 4 (2020): 618-635.

Zarhin, Dana, Maya Negev, Simon Vulfsons, et al. ““Medical Cannabis” as a Contested Medicine: Fighting Over Epistemology and Morality.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 45, no. 3 (2020): 488-514.

Journal for the History of Knowledge

Alexopoulou, Maria. “Ignoring Racism in the History of the German Immigration Society: Some Reflections on Comparison as an Epistemic Practice.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 2, no. 1 (2021): 7-7.

Aradau, Claudia and Tobias Blanke. “Algorithmic Surveillance and the Political Life of Error.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 2, no. 1 (2021): 10-10.

Balmer, Brian. “Intelligence, Ignorance, and Diplomacy in the Cold War: The UK Reaction to the Sverdlovsk Anthrax Outbreak.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 2, no. 1 (2021): 9-9.

Butler, Shane. “Afterword: Know Time?.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 4 (2023)

Dubald, Déborah S. and Catarina Madruga. “Introduction: Situated Nature: Field Collecting and Local Knowledge in the Nineteenth Century.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 3, no. 1 (2022)

Dubald, Déborah S. “Off the Beaten Path? Frédéric Cailliaud’s Bureaucratic Practice of Geological Fieldwork in the Lower Loire, 1836-1869.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 3, no. 1 (2022)

Finney, Vanessa. “Dining on Geologic Fish: Claiming the Australian Ceratodus for Science.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 3, no. 1 (2022)

Flow, Christian Bradley . “Encountering Huberia: Positioning an Eighteenth-Century Professor in Time.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 4 (2023)

Garrido, Elisa. “Trementinaires: Gender, Collecting, and Subsistence in the Pyrenees.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 3, no. 1 (2022)

Green, Leore Joanne. “‘We the Tormentors’: Death, Emotions, and Gender in the Life and Work of the Entomologist Margaret Fountaine.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 3, no. 1 (2022)

Gurevitch, Eric Moses. “When Is Medicine? Contesting the Temporality of Healing in Precolonial South Asia.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 4 (2023)

Hammar, Isak. “Classical Nature: Natural History, Classical Humanism, and the Value of Knowledge in Sweden, 1800–1850.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 2, no. 1 (2021): 1-1.

Hsiung, Hansun . “Complete, Accessible, Now: What Is Living and What Is Dead in the Research Library.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 4 (2023)

Hsiung, Hansun , Laetitia Lenel, and Anna-Maria Therese Meister. “Introduction: Entangled Temporalities.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 4 (2023)

Jajdelska, Elspeth. “Ignorance as a Productive Force in Complex Storyworlds: The Case of Pilgrim’s Progress.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 2, no. 1 (2021): 11-11.

Kassell, Lauren. “Inscribed, Coded, Archived: Digitizing Early Modern Medical Casebooks.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 2, no. 1 (2021): 4-4.

Lenel, Laetitia. “Survivor Testimonies and the Problem of Time.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 4 (2023)

Lukic, Dejan. “Science Education and Bureaucratization of Fieldwork: Creating a Geological Collection in Nineteenth-Century Serbia.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 3, no. 1 (2022)

Madruga, Catarina. ““Authentic provenance”: Locality and Colonial Collecting for the Lisbon Zoological Museum, 1860s-1880s.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 3, no. 1 (2022)

Meister, Anna-Maria Therese. “Chernobyl’s Palimpsestic Shelters: A Concrete Tale of Forms of Delay.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 4 (2023)

Milam, Erika Lorraine. “Periodical Cicadas and the Abundance of Time.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 4 (2023)

Mukharji, Projit Bihari. “No Time for Empathy: Entangled Temporalities of Pediatric Medical Experimentation in Early Postcolonial India.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 4 (2023)

Salman, Jeroen. “Print and the Medical Marketplace in the Early Modern Dutch Republic.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 3, no. 1 (2022)

Secord, James A. “Afterword: Hacking’s Glyptodon.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 3, no. 1 (2022)

Serra, Daniela. “A Naturalist between Two Worlds: Field Collecting in Claude Gay’s Forging of a Scientific Career in Chile and France.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 3, no. 1 (2022)

Time. “The Plasticity of Social Knowledge: Paul F. Lazarsfeld and U.S. Communication Research, 1937–1952.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 4 (2023)

Verburgt, Lukas M. and Peter Burke. “Introduction: Histories of Ignorance.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 2, no. 1 (2021): 5-5.

Verburgt, Lukas M. “History, Scientific Ignorance, and the Anthropocene.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 2, no. 1 (2021): 12-12.

Wehling, Peter. “Why Science Does Not Know: A Brief History of (the Notion of) Scientific Ignorance in the Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Centuries.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 2, no. 1 (2021): 6-6.

Weil, Dror. “Time and Temporalities in Early Modern Chinese Islam.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 4 (2023)

Winnerling, Tobias. “Moving Around in Narrowing Circles: How Four Scholars Got Forgotten in Eighteenth-Century Learned Journals.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 2, no. 1 (2021): 8-8.

Wirtén, Eva Hemmungs. “Patents of Persuasion: Tempo-Metrics and the Shaping of Knowledge about Knowledge.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 4 (2023)

Woods, Rebecca J. H. “Telling Time With Mammoths: Frozen Flesh and Temporal Arrangement in the Science of the North Since 1800.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 4 (2023)

European Physical Journal H

Battimelli, Giovanni and Giovanni Ciccotti. “Berni Alder and the pioneering times of molecular simulation.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 3 (2018): 303-335.

d’Alessandro, Vincenzo, Santolo Daliento, Marco Di Mauro, et al. “Searching for a response: the intriguing mystery of Feynman’s theoretical reference amplifier.” European Physical Journal H 44, no. 4 (2019): 331-347.

Darrigol, Olivier. “The magic of Feynman’s QED: from field-less electrodynamics to the Feynman diagrams.” European Physical Journal H 44, no. 4 (2019): 349-369.

Deser, S. “A brief history (and geography) of Supergravity: the first 3 weeks… and after.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 3 (2018): 281-291.

Diamond, Patrick H., Uriel Frisch, and Yves Pomeau. “Editorial introduction to the special issue “Plasma physics in the 20th century as told by players”.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 4 (2018): 337-353.

Dore, Ubaldo, Pier Loverre, and Lucio Ludovici. “History of accelerator neutrino beams.” European Physical Journal H 44, no. 4 (2019): 271-305.

Escande, D. F. “From thermonuclear fusion to Hamiltonian chaos.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 4 (2018): 397-420.

Frisvad, Jeppe Revall and Helge S. Kragh. “On Ludvig Lorenz and his 1890 treatise on light scattering by spheres.” European Physical Journal H 44, no. 2 (2019): 137-160.

Galvagno, Mariano and Gaston Giribet. “Luis Santaló and classical field theory.” European Physical Journal H 44, no. 4 (2019): 381-389.

Hasegawa, Akira and Kunioki Mima. “Strong turbulence, self-organization and plasma confinement.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 4 (2018): 499-521.

Kikuchi, Mitsuru. “The large tokamak JT-60: a history of the fight to achieve the Japanese fusion research mission.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 4 (2018): 551-577.

Laval, Guy, Denis Pesme, and Jean-Claude Adam. “Wave-particle and wave-wave interactions in hot plasmas: a French historical point of view.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 4 (2018): 421-458.

Levesque, D. and J. P. Hansen. “The origin of computational statistical mechanics in France.” European Physical Journal H 44, no. 1 (2019): 37-46.

Lorenz, Ludvig Valentin. “Light propagation in and outside a sphere illuminated by plane waves of light.” European Physical Journal H 44, no. 2 (2019): 77-135.

Mareschal, Michel. “Early years of Computational Statistical Mechanics.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 3 (2018): 293-302.

Mareschal, Michel. “From Varenna (1970) to Como (1995): Kurt Binder’s long walk in the land of criticality.” European Physical Journal H 44, no. 2 (2019): 161-179.

Mayor, Michel and Davide Cenadelli. “Exoplanets – the beginning of a new era in astrophysics.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 1 (2018): 1-41.

Minenna, Damien F. G., Frédéric André, Yves Elskens, et al. “The traveling-wave tube in the history of telecommunication.” European Physical Journal H 44, no. 1 (2019): 1-36.

Narlikar, Jayant V. “The evolution of modern cosmology as seen through a personal walk across six decades.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 1 (2018): 43-72.

Novosyadlyj, Bohdan. “Century of Λ.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 3 (2018): 267-280.

O’Raifeartaigh, Cormac, Michael O’Keeffe, Werner Nahm, et al. “One hundred years of the cosmological constant: from “superfluous stunt” to dark energy.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 1 (2018): 73-117.

Pagano, Angelo and Emanuele V. Pagano. “A note on Lorentz transformations and simultaneity in classical physics and special relativity.” European Physical Journal H 44, no. 4 (2019): 321-330.

Peruzzi, Giulio and Alessio Rocci. “Tales from the prehistory of Quantum Gravity.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 2 (2018): 185-241.

Rebut, Paul-Henri. “The Joint European Torus (JET).” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 4 (2018): 459-497.

Rickles, Dean. “Geon Wheeler: from nuclear to spacetime physicist.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 3 (2018): 243-265.

Robinson, David C. “Gravitation and general relativity at King’s College London.” European Physical Journal H 44, no. 3 (2019): 181-270.

Sagdeev, Roald Z. and Patrick H. Diamond. “An interview with Roald Sagdeev: his story of plasma physics in Russia, 1956–1988.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 4 (2018): 355-396.

Sauer, Tilman. “Einstein’s working sheets and his search for a unified field theory.” European Physical Journal H 44, no. 4 (2019): 371-379.

Scholz, Erhard. “E. Cartan’s attempt at bridge-building between Einstein and the Cosserats – or how translational curvature became to be known as torsion.” European Physical Journal H 44, no. 1 (2019): 47-75.

Tannenbaum, M. J. “How hadron collider experiments contributed to the development of QCD: from hard-scattering to the perfect liquid.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 2 (2018): 119-183.

Taylor, Thomas, Horst Wenninger, and Antonino Zichichi. “LAA: a project using dedicated funding to develop technology for high-energy physics experiments.” European Physical Journal H 44, no. 4 (2019): 307-319.

Trautman, Andrzej and Donald Salisbury. “Memories of my early career in relativity physics.” European Physical Journal H 44, no. 4 (2019): 391-413.

Wagner, Francis S. “The history of research into improved confinement regimes.” European Physical Journal H 43, no. 4 (2018): 523-549.

History of Psychiatry

Armstrong, Neil and Peter Agulnik. “Happenstance and regulatory culture: the evolution of innovative community mental health services in Oxfordshire in the late twentieth century.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 1 (2023): 64-77.

Besana, Filippo. “Danilo Cargnello and his contribution to the development of phenomenological thought: an overview.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 4 (2023): 470-475.

Brückner, Burkhart. “Emil Kraepelin as a historian of psychiatry – one hundred years on.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 2 (2023): 111-129.

Carpenter, Peter K. “George Wallett, 1775–1845: entrepreneur and asylum doctor.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 3 (2023): 331-349.

Costa de Resende, Pedro Henrique, Alexander Moreira-Almeida, and Humberto Schubert Coelho. “The epistemologies of research on the survival of consciousness after death in the golden era of the Society for Psychical Research (1882–1930).” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 3 (2023): 287-304.

Dahlquist, Caroline and Peter Kinderman. “‘Picture imperfect’: the motives and uses of patient photography in the asylum.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 2 (2023): 130-145.

Daker, Mauricio Viotti. “Personality and mental disorders: sensitive character, melancholic type, and addenda.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 4 (2023): 369-382.

Draper, Brian. “Attempted suicide in older people in New South Wales, Australia, 1870–1908.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 3 (2023): 305-319.

Engstrom, Eric J. “Classic Text No. 136 ‘On the question of unitary psychosis’, by Harry Marcuse (1926).” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 4 (2023): 476-493.

Fees, Craig and David Kennard. “Classic Text No. 133: ‘Maxwell Jones and the Therapeutic Community’, by David Millard (1996).” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 1 (2023): 78-86.

Gough, Joseph. “Understanding understanding in psychiatry.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 3 (2023): 249-261.

Hall, John, Neil Armstrong, Peter Agulnik, et al. “The processes and context of innovation in mental healthcare: Oxfordshire as a case study.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 1 (2023): 3-16.

Hall, John. “The development of supported mental health accommodation and community psychiatric nursing in Oxfordshire.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 1 (2023): 34-47.

Hilton, Claire. “George Stephen Penny (1885–1964): his life and medical encounters before, during and after admission to Broadmoor Criminal Lunatic Asylum.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 2 (2023): 196-208.

Janssen, Diederik F. “Naming psychiatry: apropos earliest use of the term by Karl Friedrich Burdach (1800).” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 3 (2023): 231-248.

Karlén, Malin Hildebrand and Thomas Nilsson. “Possibly mad? Marital murder in the early twentieth century: a matched-case gender analysis of forensic psychiatric investigations in Sweden.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 4 (2023): 451-469.

Keidar, Efrat. “The psychiatric work villages in Israel: a micro working community.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 4 (2023): 383-396.

Kornaj, Jan. “Approaching Polish madness: concepts and treatment of psychosis in Polish psychiatry of the inter-war period.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 4 (2023): 397-416.

Leach, Jonathan, Peter Agulnik, and Neil Armstrong. “The development of a creative work rehabilitation organisation.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 1 (2023): 48-63.

Marková, Ivana S. “Empathy: a case study in the historical epistemology of psychiatry.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 3 (2023): 273-286.

Maximino, Caio. “Biocultural psychopathology as a new epistemology for mental disorders.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 3 (2023): 262-272.

Metzger, Nadine. “A mad yearning for solitude: Timon the Misanthrope and his relevance to the study of ancient psychopathology.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 2 (2023): 146-161.

Millard, David, Peter Agulnik, Neil Armstrong, et al. “Innovation in mental health care: Bertram Mandelbrote, the Phoenix Unit and the therapeutic community approach.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 1 (2023): 17-33.

Nathan, Robert DF. “The psychopathic hospital.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 4 (2023): 417-433.

Pilgrim, David. “British mental healthcare responses to adult homosexuality and gender non-conforming children at the turn of the twenty-first century.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 4 (2023): 434-450.

Schioldann, Johan. “Classic Text No. 134: ‘A case of Wernicke-Bostroem’s expansive autopsychosis’, by Ib Ostenfeld (1944).” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 2 (2023): 209-225.

Schioldann, Johan. “Classic Text No. 135: ‘On inheritance of the insanities’, by Jens Chr. Smith (1924).” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 3 (2023): 350-362.

Scull, Andrew T. “Rosenhan revisited: successful scientific fraud.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 2 (2023): 180-195.

Torbay, Jordan. “The work of Donald Ewen Cameron: from psychic driving to MK Ultra.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 3 (2023): 320-330.

White, Margaret. “Mortality among those certified under lunacy legislation in Scotland during World War I.” History of Psychiatry 34, no. 2 (2023): 162-179.

Terrae Incognitae

Altić, Mirela . “Geographical Knowledge as Power: The Role of the Society of Jesus and the Society of Foreign Missions of Paris in the Early Exploration of Louisiana.” Terrae Incognitae 54, no. 1 (2022): 5-37.

Altić, Mirela . “Jesuit Cartography in the Rockies: Pierre-Jean De Smet and the Mapping of Native Landscapes of the American Northwest.” Terrae Incognitae 55, no. 2 (2023): 133-169.

Chiesa, Paolo, Federica Favero, and Giulia Greco. “Geography in Galvaneus Flamma’s Cronica Universalis.” Terrae Incognitae 54, no. 3 (2022): 228-231.

Chiesa, Paolo. “Two Cartographic Elements in Galvaneus Flamma’s Cronica Universalis.” Terrae Incognitae 54, no. 3 (2022): 280-294.

Covarrubias V., José E. “Humans and Nature in Texas and Tamaulipas Shaded by Sentimental Exoticism: Emmanuel Domenech’s Depictions of North America.” Terrae Incognitae 56, no. 1 (2024): 14-37.

Donati, Valerio Massimo. ““Weather, People, Ship”: The Environment’s Impact on Cook’s First Voyage into the Pacific.” Terrae Incognitae 55, no. 3 (2023): 219-250.

Favero, Federica. “An Exotic Geographical Excursus: Chapters 273-378 of the Third Book of the Cronica Universalis by Galvaneus Flamma.” Terrae Incognitae 54, no. 3 (2022): 232-257.

Francaviglia, Richard V. “River Exploration in Cinema: Some Examples from South America.” Terrae Incognitae 54, no. 2 (2022): 187-213.

Greco, Giulia. “Asia through the Eyes of a Medieval Dominican Friar: Galvaneus Flamma’s Cumulative Reuse of Geographical Sources.” Terrae Incognitae 54, no. 3 (2022): 258-279.

Gross, Richard and Craig P. Howard. “Why La Salle Hung French Fortunes on a Western Branch: The Maps of Franquelin and Coronelli.” Terrae Incognitae 55, no. 3 (2023): 279-306.

Gross, Richard. “Mapping the Chicago Portage: Seventeenth-Century Explorations by Jolliet, Marquette, La Salle, and Joutel.” Terrae Incognitae 54, no. 2 (2022): 162-186.

Johal, Rishma. “Traversing Seas to Evading Proscription: South Asians, Race, and (Im)mobility in Canada and the United States, 1882–1929.” Terrae Incognitae 54, no. 1 (2022): 38-63.

Johnson, Marguerite and Alistair Rolls. “Georges Cuvier’s Autopsy Report on Sara Baartman: A translation and commentary.” Terrae Incognitae 55, no. 2 (2023): 170-195.

Kalyuta, Anastasia V. “In Search of Monsters: Constructing the “Other” in Spanish Chronicles of the Americas and Early Russian Descriptions of Siberia.” Terrae Incognitae 55, no. 2 (2023): 106-132.

Madrid, José María Moreno and David Salomoni. “Nuno Da Silva’s Third Relation: An Unknown Report on Francis Drake’s Voyage (1577–1580).” Terrae Incognitae 54, no. 1 (2022): 64-82.

Martínez, Julieta I. “A Frenchman in the Solitudes of the Mexican Southeast: Désiré Charnay’s use of Landscapes and Emotions in the Construction of his Exploration Narrative and Identity.” Terrae Incognitae 56, no. 1 (2024): 38-56.

McGuirk, Donald L. and Gregory C. McIntosh. “Depicting Cuba, Not North America: Solving the Enigma of America on Early Maps.” Terrae Incognitae 55, no. 1 (2023): 4-64.

McIntosh, Gregory C. “Revisiting the “Admiral’s Map”: What Was It? And Who Was He?.” Terrae Incognitae 55, no. 3 (2023): 251-278.

Quartapelle, Alberto. “Giovanni da Carignano: Fourteenth-Century Cartographic Innovator.” Terrae Incognitae 55, no. 1 (2023): 65-81.

Reyes, Gerardo Manuel Medina. “A Nineteenth-Century French Migrant and Traveler in Northwestern Mexico: Gabriel Ferry’s Romantic Impressions of Landscapes, Economy, and Society.” Terrae Incognitae 56, no. 1 (2024): 57-75.

Weiner, Richard M. “Beyond Fourteenth-Century Discussions of the Americas: New Geographical Revelations from Galvaneus Flamma’s Cronica Universalis.” Terrae Incognitae 54, no. 3 (2022): 225-227.

Weiner, Richard M. “Cartography and Climate in Exploration History: The Cases of Cook, La Salle, and the Admiral’s Map.” Terrae Incognitae 55, no. 3 (2023): 217-218.

Weiner, Richard M. “Disputes in Exploration History: Creating the Caverio Planisphere, Mapping the Chicago Portage, and Exploring South American Rivers.” Terrae Incognitae 54, no. 2 (2022): 107-109.

Weiner, Richard M. “Is Waldseemüller’s “North America” Really Columbus’s Cuba? Investigating a Map Mystery and Other Episodes in the History of Cartography and Exploration.” Terrae Incognitae 55, no. 1 (2023): 1-3.

Weiner, Richard M. “Monsters, Freaks, and Indians: Characters in Exploration Narratives.” Terrae Incognitae 55, no. 2 (2023): 103-105.

Weiner, Richard M. “Neglected Exploration Actors: Amundsen’s Sledge Dogs, Francis Drake’s Pilot Nuna Da Silva, Jesuits in Louisiana, and South Asians in North America.” Terrae Incognitae 54, no. 1 (2022): 1-4.

Antiquity

Andonova, Mila and Vassil Nikolov. “Pots on mats: mat-impressed salt-extraction pottery at Chalcolithic Provadia-Solnitsata, Bulgaria.” Antiquity 96, no. 385 (2022): 51-66.

Bayarsaikhan, Jamsranjav, Tsagaan Turbat, Chinbold Bayandelger, et al. “The origins of saddles and riding technology in East Asia: discoveries from the Mongolian Altai.” Antiquity 98, no. 397 (2024): 102-118.

Bishop, Rosie R., Darren R. Gröcke, Ian Ralston, et al. “Scotland’s first farmers: new insights into early farming practices in North-west Europe.” Antiquity 96, no. 389 (2022): 1087-1104.

Biwer, Matthew E., Willy Yépez Álvarez, Stefanie L. Bautista, et al. “Hallucinogens, alcohol and shifting leadership strategies in the ancient Peruvian Andes.” Antiquity 96, no. 385 (2022): 142-158.

Blanco-González, Antonio, Juan Jesús Padilla-Fernández, and Alberto Dorado-Alejos. “Mobile craftspeople and orientalising transculturation in seventh-century BC Iberia.” Antiquity 97, no. 394 (2023): 908-926.

Boschetti, Cristina, Laura di Siena, Jan Kindberg Jacobsen, et al. “Disease control and the disposal of infectious materials in Renaissance Rome: excavations in the area of Caesar’s Forum.” Antiquity 97, no. 393 (2023): 690-706.

Brown, Antony G., Daniel Fallu, Sara Cucchiaro, et al. “Early to Middle Bronze Age agricultural terraces in north-east England: morphology, dating and cultural implications.” Antiquity 97, no. 392 (2023): 348-366.

Cameron, Judith and Guoping Sun. “Textile production and craft specialisation at Tianluoshan in the lower Yangzi Valley.” Antiquity 96, no. 389 (2022): 1124-1141.

Castillo, Juan Antonio Quirós, Josu Narbarte, and Eneko Iriarte. “What is a village? Agroscapes, collective action and medieval villages in northern Iberia.” Antiquity 97, no. 395 (2023): 1279-1295.

Darvill, Timothy. “Keeping time at Stonehenge.” Antiquity 96, no. 386 (2022): 319-335.

Dodd, Emlyn, Giuliana Galli, and Riccardo Frontoni. “The spectacle of production: a Roman imperial winery at the Villa of the Quintilii, Rome.” Antiquity 97, no. 392 (2023): 436-453.

Finlay, Nyree. “An archaeology of dementia.” Antiquity 96, no. 386 (2022): 422-435.

Fisher, Chelsea. “Monumentality as traditional ecological knowledge in the northern Maya lowlands.” Antiquity 97, no. 392 (2023): 386-402.

Huang, Yunshi, Zhenhua Deng, Hassan Fazeli Nashli, et al. “The early adoption of East Asian crops in West Asia: rice and broomcorn millet in northern Iran.” Antiquity 97, no. 393 (2023): 674-689.

Hunt, Harriet V., Hongen Jiang, Xinyi Liu, et al. “Did crops expand in tandem with culinary practices from their region of origin? Evidence from ancient DNA and material culture.” Antiquity 98, no. 397 (2024): 12-29.

Inskip, Sarah, Craig Cessford, Jenna M. Dittmar, et al. “Pathways to the medieval hospital: collective osteobiographies of poverty and charity.” Antiquity 97, no. 396 (2023): 1581-1597.

Kirchner, Helena, Guillermo García-Contreras, Corisande Fenwick, et al. “Re-thinking the ‘Green Revolution’ in the Mediterranean world.” Antiquity 97, no. 394 (2023): 964-974.

Lane, Kevin, David Beresford-Jones, Luis Coll, et al. “Pre-Hispanic anthropogenic wetlands in the upper Ica drainage, south-central Andes: dating and context.” Antiquity 96, no. 389 (2022): 1251-1271.

Li, Haiming, Yufeng Sun, Ying Yang, et al. “Water and soil management strategies and the introduction of wheat and barley to northern China: an isotopic analysis of cultivation on the Loess Plateau.” Antiquity 96, no. 390 (2022): 1478-1494.

Limbergen, Dimitri Van and Paulina Komar. “Making wine in earthenware vessels: a comparative approach to Roman vinification.” Antiquity 98, no. 397 (2024): 85-101.

McKillop, Heather and E. Cory Sills. “Household salt production by the Late Classic Maya: underwater excavations at Ta’ab Nuk Na.” Antiquity 96, no. 389 (2022): 1232-1250.

Moen, Marianne, Neil S. Price, and Unn Pedersen. “Archaeological knowledge production: reading mortuary reconstructions.” Antiquity 97, no. 391 (2023): 231-240.

Tang, Li, Hongliang Lu, Xinzhou Chen, et al. “Prehistoric agricultural decision making in the western Himalayas: ecological and social variables.” Antiquity 96, no. 389 (2022): 1214-1231.

Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences

Adams, Kimberly. “Loose Attitudes: Politics of Self-Knowledge in Our Bodies, Ourselves and The House of God.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 4 (2023): 381-400.

Alpi, Kristine M, Jordan R Johnson, and Meg E Langford. “Characterizing History of Health Sciences Organizations at Academic Health Sciences Centers.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 1 (2023): 9-19.

Arnold-Forster, Agnes. “Clio in the Operating Theatre: Historical Research, Emotional Health, and Surgical Training in Contemporary Britain.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 1 (2023): 101-113.

Barr, Justin, Theodore N Pappas, Meghan Kennedy, et al. “Medicine and History: a Surgical Model for National Integration.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 1 (2023): 114-120.

Beecher, Ruth. “Children, Sexual Abuse and the Emotions of the Community Health Practitioner in England and Wales, 1970-2000.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 4 (2023): 365-380.

Begley, Philip. “Making a “Happy Hospital”: Emotional Investment and Professional Identity Amongst Anglo-American Hospital Administrators.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 4 (2023): 352-364.

Brock, Claire. “The Child Surgical Patient in the Early Twentieth Century.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 2 (2023): 149-170.

Gabriel, Joseph M. and Sukumar P. Desai. ““The Warmth of His Continuing Interest”: Henry K. Beecher, the Bioethics Revolution, and Pharmaceutical Industry Funding of Academic Medical Science in Cold War America.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 2 (2023): 191-208.

Ignaciuk, Agata and Agnieszka Kościańska. “Regendering Childbirth: Catholicism, Medical Activism, and Birth Preparation in Post-War Poland.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 3 (2023): 249-269.

Lamb, Susan. “History’s Toolbox in Health Professions Education: One Skill-Based Session on Social Determinants of Health.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 1 (2023): 20-33.

Licskai, Megann. “Wounded Healers: Abortion and the Affective Practices of Pro-Life Health Care.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 4 (2023): 401-423.

Lyngs, Allan. “The Professors’ Professor: The American Students of August Krogh.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 2 (2023): 171-190.

Manning, Tequilla, Walter N Ingram, and Christopher W. Crenner. “Commemorative Naming, Renaming, and the Role of Medical History in Academic Medicine.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 1 (2023): 121-130.

Martin, Craig. “Histories of Medieval Plague in Renaissance Italy.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 2 (2023): 131-148.

Moses, Jacob D, Agnes Arnold-Forster, and Samuel V Schotland. “Introduction: Healthcare Practitioners’ Emotions and the Politics of Well-Being in Twentieth Century Anglo-America.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 4 (2023): 341-351.

Podolsky, Scott H. “Attending to Emotions, as both Caregivers and Historians.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 4 (2023): 424-425.

Riddle, Jonathan D. “Physiology, Vitalism, and the Contest for Body and Soul in the Antebellum United States.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 3 (2023): 227-248.

Shin, Youjung . “Screening as Governmental Technology: The Nationwide Collection of Mental Health Data on Students in South Korea.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 3 (2023): 304-327.

Slagstad, Ketil. “Visualizing BDSM and AIDS Activism: Archiving Pleasures, Sanitizing History.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 3 (2023): 270-303.

Stahnisch, Frank W. “Making Medical History Relevant to Medical Students: The First Fifty Years of the Calgary History of Medicine Program and History of Medicine Days Conferences.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 1 (2023): 83-100.

Steere-Williams, Jacob, Justin Barr, Claire D. Clark, et al. “Remaking the Case for History in Medical Education.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 1 (2023): 1-8.

Weber, Alan S. “Clinical Applications of the History of Medicine in Muslim-Majority Nations.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 78, no. 1 (2023): 46-61.

British Journal for the History of Science

Bigg, Charlotte. “Communicating science, mediating presence: reflections on the present, past and future of conferencing.” British Journal for the History of Science 56, no. 4 (2023): 567-577.

Bigg, Charlotte, Jessica Reinisch, Geert Somsen, et al. “The art of gathering: histories of international scientific conferences.” British Journal for the History of Science 56, no. 4 (2023): 423-433.

Bolman, Brad. “What mysteries lay in spore: taxonomy, data, and the internationalization of mycology in Saccardo’s Sylloge Fungorum.” British Journal for the History of Science 56, no. 3 (2023): 369-390.

Boon, Tim. “Presidential Address ‘Some years of cudgelling my brains about the nature and function of science museums’: Frank Sherwood Taylor and the public role of the history of science.” British Journal for the History of Science 56, no. 3 (2023): 283-307.

Grevsmühl, Sebastian Vincent and Régis Briday. “Satellite images as tools of visual diplomacy: NASA’s ozone hole visualizations and the Montreal Protocol negotiations.” British Journal for the History of Science 56, no. 2 (2023): 247-267.

Heering, Peter. “Transformations: the material representation of historical experiments in science teaching.” British Journal for the History of Science 56, no. 3 (2023): 351-368.

Hennepe, Mieneke te. “Van Leeuwenhoek – the film: remaking memory in Dutch science cinema 1925–c.1960.” British Journal for the History of Science 56, no. 3 (2023): 329-349.

Kotsou, Georgiana. “Functional informality: crafting social interaction toward scientific productivity at the Gordon Research Conferences, 1950–1980.” British Journal for the History of Science 56, no. 4 (2023): 519-534.

Medori, Beatriz. “The visual diplomacy of cancer treatments: the mediatic legacy of the Curies in the early transnational fight against cancer.” British Journal for the History of Science 56, no. 2 (2023): 167-183.

Mougey, Thomas. “Negotiating the norms of an international science: standardization work at the International Geological Congress, 1878–1891.” British Journal for the History of Science 56, no. 4 (2023): 435-451.

Sera-Shriar, Efram. “From museumization to decolonization: fostering critical dialogues in the history of science with a Haida eagle mask.” British Journal for the History of Science 56, no. 3 (2023): 309-328.

Somsen, Geert. “‘The goddess that we serve’: projecting international community at the first serial chemistry conferences, 1893–1914.” British Journal for the History of Science 56, no. 4 (2023): 453-467.

Turchetti, Simone and Matthew Adamson. “Introduction: Power to the image! Science, technology and visual diplomacy.” British Journal for the History of Science 56, no. 2 (2023): 135-146.

Zaidi, Waqar H. “The Pugwash scientists’ conferences, Cyrus Eaton and the clash of internationalisms, 1954–1961.” British Journal for the History of Science 56, no. 4 (2023): 503-517.

Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies

Brisman, Shira. “The Madness of Hugo van der Goes: The Troubled Search for Origins in Early Netherlandish Painting.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 51, no. 2 (2021): 321-365.

Camp, Pannill. “May Philosophy Flourish: Pantheisticon, Freemasonry, and Eighteenth-Century Ritual Philosophy.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 51, no. 3 (2021): 553-575.

Chan, Eleanor. “Scrollwork: Visual Cultures of Musical Notation and Graphic Materiality in the English Renaissance.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 53, no. 2 (2023): 347-377.

Coneys, Matthew. “Pilgrimage, Print, and Performance: Giuliano Dati’s Roman Cantari.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 51, no. 1 (2021): 79-104.

Connell, Sarah and Julia Flanders. “Writing, Reception, Intertextuality: Networking Women’s Writing.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 50, no. 1 (2020): 161-180.

Ellinghausen, Laurie. ““A wife or friend at e’ery Port”: The Common Sailor in Ballads of the Early British Empire.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 50, no. 2 (2020): 431-453.

Gucer, Kathryn A. “The Copy Room: Imagining a Huguenot Library in Early Modern London.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 52, no. 2 (2022): 361-385.

Lamal, Nina. “Communicating Conflict: Early Modern Soldiers as Information-Gatherers.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 50, no. 1 (2020): 13-31.

Levine, Laura. “Wicked Mysteries and Notorious Conjurors: Magic, Rape, and Violence in Two Early Modern Pamphlets.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 51, no. 3 (2021): 533-551.

Mitchell, J. Allan. “John Gower Illustrated: The Archer Images, Astronomical Science, and Poetic Identity.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 53, no. 2 (2023): 287-321.

O’Doherty, Marianne. “Holy Land Pilgrimage and Geography in Fifteenth-Century England: Understanding and Devotion in Cambridge, Corpus Christi College Library, MS 426.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 51, no. 1 (2021): 105-139.

Revere, William. “The Conditions of Mercy: Bunyan, Labor, and the Literal Sense.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 50, no. 2 (2020): 403-429.

Waller, Simone. “Provoking Performance: Printed Dialogue and Early Modern Publics in Christopher St. German’s Salem and Bizance.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 51, no. 3 (2021): 431-451.

Yeager, Suzanne M. “Medieval Pilgrimage as Heterotopia: The Pilgrim as Maritime Adventurer and Aspiring Crusader in Saewulf’s Relatio de situ Jerusalem.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 50, no. 2 (2020): 233-268.

American Quarterly

Alam, Eram . “Documenting Difference: Standardizing Foreign Physicians.” American Quarterly 75, no. 1 (2023): 129-151.

Brubaker, Anne M. “Who Counts? Urgent Lessons from Ida B. Wells’s Radical Statistics.” American Quarterly 74, no. 2 (2022): 265-293.

Coppola, Joseph. “The Commodification of Dr. King, or What Intellectual Property Rights Did to Civil Rights.” American Quarterly 75, no. 1 (2023): 103-128.

Fink, Lisa. “Alienated Species and Unsettled Ecologies: Locating “Redneck” Conservation in the Racial Discourse of “Asian” Carp Invasion.” American Quarterly 75, no. 4 (2023): 821-845.

Higashida, Cheryl. “Citizens Band: Surveillance, Dark Sousveillance, and Social Movements.” American Quarterly 74, no. 2 (2022): 317-344.

Holloway, Emily. “Bodies in Transit: Speculation and the Biopolitical Imaginary.” American Quarterly 75, no. 1 (2023): 1-26.

Hughes, Kit and Evan Elkins. “Silicon Valley’s Team: The Golden State Warriors, Datafied Managerialism, and Basketball’s Racialized Geography.” American Quarterly 75, no. 3 (2023): 471-499.

Larson, Max. “At the Border of the Digital Divide: San José Unified School District and Evangelina Vigil-Piñon’s The Computer Is Down.” American Quarterly 74, no. 2 (2022): 345-368.

Morrison, Amani C. “Quotidian Expenses: Residential Repertoires and Domestic Pedagogies in Great Migration Chicago’s Kitchenettes.” American Quarterly 74, no. 1 (2022): 73-94.

Quadri, Zaynab. “War Is Still a Racket: Private Military Contracting, US Imperialism, and the Iraq War.” American Quarterly 74, no. 3 (2022): 523-543.

Roach, Shoniqua. “The Black Living Room.” American Quarterly 74, no. 3 (2022): 791-811.

Saito, Nozomi (Nakaganeku). “Bone and Coral: Ossuopower and the Control of (Future) Remains in Occupied Okinawa.” American Quarterly 74, no. 3 (2022): 567-589.

Sweeney, Miriam E. and Melissa Villa-Nicholas. “Digitizing the “Ideal” Latina Information Worker.” American Quarterly 74, no. 1 (2022): 145-167.

HOPOS

Adomaitis, Laurynas. “Cause and Effect in Leibniz’s Brevis demonstratio.” HOPOS 9, no. 1 (2019): 120-134.

Çimen, Ünsal. “On Saving the Astronomical Phenomena: Physical Realism in Struggle with Mathematical Realism in Francis Bacon, al-Bitruji, and Averroës.” HOPOS 9, no. 1 (2019): 135-151.

Currie, Adrian and Kirsten Walsh. “Frameworks for Historians and Philosophers.” HOPOS 9, no. 1 (2019): 1-34.

Eșanu, Andreea. “Auguste Comte and J. S. Mill on Physical Causes: The Case of Joseph Fourier’s Analytical Theory of Heat.” HOPOS 9, no. 2 (2019): 275-295.

Gubelmann, Reto. “From Shared Stimuli to Preestablished Harmony: The Development of Quine’s Thinking on Intersubjectivity and Objective Validity.” HOPOS 9, no. 2 (2019): 343-370.

Herfeld, Catherine. “Imagination Rather Than Observation in Econometrics: Ragnar Frisch’s Hypothetical Experiments as Thought Experiments.” HOPOS 9, no. 1 (2019): 35-74.

Melogno, Pablo. “The Discovery-Justification Distinction and the New Historiography of Science: On Thomas Kuhn’s Thalheimer Lectures.” HOPOS 9, no. 1 (2019): 152-178.

Noble, Christopher P. “Leibniz on the Divine Preformation of Souls and Bodies.” HOPOS 9, no. 2 (2019): 327-342.

Psillos, Stathis and Eirini Goudarouli. “Principles of Motion and the Absence of Laws of Nature in Hobbes’s Natural Philosophy.” HOPOS 9, no. 1 (2019): 93-119.

Ribera-Martin, Ignacio De. “Movement (Kinêsis) as Efficient Cause in Aristotle’s Generation of Animals.” HOPOS 9, no. 2 (2019): 296-326.

Timmins, Adam. “Between History and Philosophy of Science: The Relationship between Kuhn’s Black-Body Theory and Structure.” HOPOS 9, no. 2 (2019): 371-387.

Wray, K. Brad. “Kuhn, the History of Chemistry, and the Philosophy of Science.” HOPOS 9, no. 1 (2019): 75-92.

Galilaeana: Journal of Galilean Studies

Ávila, Nydia Pineda de. “The Fabric of the Skies: Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora and the Academia Mexicana.” Galilæana: Journal of Galilean Studies 20, no. 1 (2023): 65-82.

Barreca, Francesco. “Between matematici and architetti d’acque: Vincenzo Viviani, Galileo’s legacy, and hydraulic engineering.” Galilæana: Journal of Galilean Studies 20, no. 1 (2023): 121-152.

Bonechi, Sara. “Antonio Favaro e l’edizione nazionale galileiana. Ragguaglio su una teca digitale.” Galilæana: Journal of Galilean Studies 20, no. 2 (2023): 153-166.

Camerota, Michele. “Antonio Favaro e i suoi corrispondenti.” Galilæana: Journal of Galilean Studies 20, no. 2 (2023): 143-152.

Förköli, Gábor. “From chemical atomism to Lutheran orthodoxy: The journey of Johann Sperling’s physics from Wittenberg to the peripheries.” Galilæana: Journal of Galilean Studies 20, no. 2 (2023): 115-142.

Granada, Miguel A. “Owen Gingerich (1930-2023): astronomer, historian, metaphysician.” Galilæana: Journal of Galilean Studies 20, no. 2 (2023): 199-216.

Martínez, Miguel Angel Granada. “Jerónimo Muñoz and Juan Cedillo Díaz: the Sun as the ‘heart of the world’ in the debate on Copernicus.” Galilæana: Journal of Galilean Studies 20, no. 1 (2023): 85-120.

Molina-Betancur, Sebastián. “The New World and the new science. Introduction.” Galilæana: Journal of Galilean Studies 20, no. 1 (2023): 3-8.

Orozco-Echeverri, Sergio H. “Popular science as knowledge: early modern Iberian-American repertorios de los tiempos.” Galilæana: Journal of Galilean Studies 20, no. 1 (2023): 31-64.

Raphael, Renée J. “Inscribing mining practice and theory: conceptions of knowledge production and the Iberian state in Capoche’s and Hinestrosa’s relaciones.” Galilæana: Journal of Galilean Studies 20, no. 1 (2023): 9-30.

Tognoni, Federico. “Vincenzo Viviani: un ritratto ritrovato.” Galilæana: Journal of Galilean Studies 20, no. 2 (2023): 169-188.

Other Journals

Bernstein, Shana. ““True Sustainability”: An Environmental, Worker, and Consumer History of Organic Strawberry Farming in 1990s California.” Agricultural History 95, no. 3 (2021): 500-531.

E. Stanly, Jr. Godbold. “In Memoriam: Roy Vernon Scott, December 26, 1927–August 24, 2021.” Agricultural History 95, no. 4 (2021): 690-691.

Fojtik, Christine. “Growing the Future: The Debate over Agricultural Reconstruction in the Western Zones of Occupied Germany, 1945–1950.” Agricultural History 95, no. 4 (2021): 609-632.

Frank, Mark E. “The Profits of Nature: Colonial Development and the Quest for Resources in Nineteenth-Century China.” Agricultural History 95, no. 4 (2021): 692-694.

Klee, Samuel J. “Assembling “The Camp”: Agricultural Labor and the Wartime Carceral State in Chesterfield, Missouri, 1937–1972.” Agricultural History 95, no. 4 (2021): 633-658.

Laveaga, Gabriela Soto. “Beyond Borlaug’s Shadow: Octavio Paz, Indian Farmers, and the Challenge of Narrating the Green Revolution.” Agricultural History 95, no. 4 (2021): 576-608.

Leyva, José Miguel Chávez. “Powerful Disruptions: Braceros, Campesinos, and the Green Revolution in Mexico, 1940–1965.” Agricultural History 95, no. 3 (2021): 472-499.

Peabody, Tina. ““An Animal Machine”: Secaucus Garbage Feeders and the Rise and Fall of Pork Production in New Jersey, 1880–1960.” Agricultural History 95, no. 3 (2021): 414-443.

Petersen-Rockney, Margiana. “Porcine Providence: Pigs, Space, and Cultural Strategies of Exclusion in the Making of a US City.” Agricultural History 95, no. 4 (2021): 659-689.

Seitz, John Britton. “Imagining Alfalfastan: Plant Exploration, Technopolitics, Colonialism, and the Environment in the American West and Russian Central Asia, 1897–1930.” Agricultural History 95, no. 3 (2021): 444-471.

Carey, David. “Medicine and Health “in the Least Civilized Regions”: Indigenous Healers, Scientific Doctors, and International Interlopers in Twentieth-Century Guatemala and Ecuador.” American Historical Review 127, no. 4 (2022): 1715-1751.

Charles, John. “Jennifer Scheper Hughes. The Church of the Dead: The Epidemic of 1576 and the Birth of Christianity in the Americas..” American Historical Review 127, no. 1 (2022): 523-524.

Damian, Michelle M. “Nobuko Toyosawa. Imaginative Mapping: Landscape and Japanese Identity in the Tokugawa and Meiji Eras..” American Historical Review 127, no. 3 (2022): 1500-1501.

Degroot, Dagomar. “Blood and Bone, Tears and Oil: Climate Change, Whaling, and Conflict in the Seventeenth-Century Arctic.” American Historical Review 127, no. 1 (2022): 62-99.

Janzen, Philip. “Linga’s Dream?: Interpreters, Entextualization, and Knowledge Production in Central Africa.” American Historical Review 127, no. 2 (2022): 755-785.

Roach, Joseph. “Alun Withey. Concerning Beards: Facial Hair, Health and Practice in England 1650–1900..” American Historical Review 127, no. 3 (2022): 1477-1478.

Ron, Ariel. “When Hay Was King: Energy History and Economic Nationalism in the Nineteenth-Century United States.” American Historical Review 128, no. 1 (2023): 177-213.

Thornton, Michael. “A Capitol Orchard: Botanical Networks and the Creation of a Japanese ‘Neo-Europe’.” American Historical Review 127, no. 2 (2022): 573-599.

Wennerlind, Carl. “Atlantis Restored: Natural Knowledge and Political Economy in Early Modern Sweden.” American Historical Review 127, no. 4 (2022): 1687-1714.

Folit-Weinberg, Benjamin. “Disappearing into Thick Aēr: The Function of Aēr in homer and Anaximenes.” American Journal of Philology 144, no. 2 (2023): 183-219.

Gatti, Hilary. “Philosophy as Poetry: Sidney’s An Apology for Poetry and Bruno’s Dialogue 1 (Part 1) of the Heroici furori.” Bruniana & Campanelliana: Ricerche Filosofiche e Materiali Storico-testuali 29, no. 1 (2023): 209-216.

Donato, Maria Pia. “How to Impart Knowledge, Experience and Common Sense: Exempla ficta in Early Modern Surgery.” Archives Internationales d’Histoire des Sciences 73, no. 1 (2023): 86-114.

Lazaris, Stavros. “Considérations sur la période d’activité d’Apsyrtos, hippiatre grec.” Archives Internationales d’Histoire des Sciences 73, no. 1 (2023): 5-37.

Sinkevich, Galina I. “On the Development of a Complex Number Interpretation from the 16th to the End of the 19th century.” Archives Internationales d’Histoire des Sciences 73, no. 1 (2023): 172-207.

Baldin, Gregorio. “Secularisation of Political Theology and the Birth of Modern Political Thought: Paolo Sarpi Teaches Thomas Hobbes.” Bruniana & Campanelliana: Ricerche Filosofiche e Materiali Storico-testuali 29, no. 1 (2023): 145-168.

Biagioni, Mario. “Razionalismo religioso e ateismo nella prima età moderna. Riflessioni su un recente volume di Gianluca Mori.” Bruniana & Campanelliana: Ricerche Filosofiche e Materiali Storico-testuali 29, no. 1 (2023): 275-285.

Biagioni, Mario. “The Reason and the Body: Rationalism and Despair of the Mind in the Age of the Reformation.” Bruniana & Campanelliana: Ricerche Filosofiche e Materiali Storico-testuali 29, no. 1 (2023): 183-194.

Campagnolo, Stefano. “La collezione bruniana della Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale di Roma.” Bruniana & Campanelliana: Ricerche Filosofiche e Materiali Storico-testuali 29, no. 1 (2023): 217-231.

Infelise, Mario. “L’Accademia degli Incogniti e Sarpi.” Bruniana & Campanelliana: Ricerche Filosofiche e Materiali Storico-testuali 29, no. 1 (2023): 49-68.

Uribe Martínez, Ignacio. “La astrología del ingenio en Perú Virreinal (1639-1660).” Bruniana & Campanelliana: Ricerche Filosofiche e Materiali Storico-testuali 29, no. 1 (2023): 259-274.

Allen, Adrian Van . “Entangled Timelines. Crafting Types of Time Through Making Museum Specimens.” Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology 65, no. 2 (2023): 291-312.

Arnold, Ken. “Redeeming the Past, Present, and Future.” Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology 65, no. 2 (2023): 417-425.

Beltrame, Tiziana N. “A Matter of Dust, Powdery Fragments, and Insects. Object Temporalities Grounded in Social and Material Museum Life.” Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology 65, no. 2 (2023): 365-385.

Grünfeld, Martin, Adam Bencard, and Louise Whiteley. “From Mausoleum to Living Room. Practicing Metabolic Carpentry in the Museum.” Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology 65, no. 2 (2023): 387-416.

Grünfeld, Martin and Karin Tybjerg. “Collections, Knowledge, and Time.” Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology 65, no. 2 (2023): 213-234.

Jardine, Boris and Joshua Nall. “The Lab in the Museum. Or, Using New Scientific Instruments to Look at Old Scientific Instruments.” Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology 65, no. 2 (2023): 261-289.

Tybjerg, Karin. “Medical Anamnesis. Collecting and Recollecting the Past in Medicine.” Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology 65, no. 2 (2023): 235-259.

Raynaud, Dominique. “Da Vinci’s Codex Atlanticus, fols. 395r and 686r–686v, refers to Leonardo Pisano volgarizzato, not to Giorgio Valla.” Historia Mathematica 64 (2023): 1-18.

Bondì, Roberto. “Le edizioni del De iride di Telesio.” Bruniana & Campanelliana: Ricerche Filosofiche e Materiali Storico-testuali 29, no. 1 (2023): 287-302.

Boi, Luciano. “Some Mathematical, Epistemological, and Historical Reflections on the Relationship Between Geometry and Reality, Space–Time Theory and the Geometrization of Theoretical Physics, from Riemann to Weyl and Beyond.” Foundations of Science 24, no. 1 (2019): 1-38.

Hohol, Mateusz and Marcin Miłkowski. “Cognitive Artifacts for Geometric Reasoning.” Foundations of Science 24, no. 4 (2019): 657-680.

Magazù, Salvatore, Nella Coletta, and Federica Migliardo. “The Vitruvian Man of Leonardo da Vinci as a Representation of an Operational Approach to Knowledge.” Foundations of Science 24, no. 4 (2019): 751-773.

Rodríguez-Vellando, Pablo. “…and so Euler discovered Differential Equations.” Foundations of Science 24, no. 2 (2019): 343-374.

Bracke, Maud Anne. “Family Planning and Reproductive Agency in France: Demography, Gender, and Race, 1950s–1970s.” French Historical Studies 45, no. 4 (2022): 683-710.

Harrigan, Michael. “Confinement, Environment, and Slave Ships in Early Modern Ocean Voyages.” French Historical Studies 46, no. 1 (2023): 57-88.

Lancereau, Guillaume. “Entre espace public et mondes privés: Les masculinités savantes aux origines de la discipline historique en France, 1870–1914.” French Historical Studies 47, no. 1 (2024): 103-139.

Millington, Chris. “Politicizing Disaster: The Railway Accident at Pomponne, December 23, 1933.” French Historical Studies 47, no. 1 (2024): 141-166.

Priest, Robert D. “Meister and Jupille: Lives and Afterlives of Pasteur’s First Rabies Vaccine Patients, 1885–1940.” French Historical Studies 46, no. 1 (2023): 125-152.

Starling, Drew. ““A Simple, Short, and Exact Account of the Facts”? The Nouvelles Ecclésiastiques in the Eighteenth-Century French Information Press.” French Historical Studies 46, no. 1 (2023): 89-124.

Wurtzel, Ellen. “Passionate Encounters, Public Healing: Medieval Urban Bathhouses in Northern France.” French Historical Studies 46, no. 3 (2023): 331-360.

Baltus, Christopher. “Poncelet’s discovery of homology.” Historia Mathematica 63 (2023): 1-20.

Belcastro, Alessandro and Giuseppina Fenaroli. “A determination of Catalan numbers in 18th century Italy by Giovanni Rizzetti (1675–1751).” Historia Mathematica 64 (2023): 34-47.

Blåsjö, Viktor. “Newton on constructions in geometry.” Historia Mathematica 65 (2023): 14-29.

Buckle, David. “How the estimate of √2 on YBC 7289 may have been calculated.” Historia Mathematica 62 (2023): 3-18.

Heller, Henning. “Felix Klein’s teaching of Galois theory.” Historia Mathematica 63 (2023): 21-46.

Strickland, Lloyd. “How Leibniz tried to tell the world he had squared the circle.” Historia Mathematica 62 (2023): 19-39.

Tuominen, Antti J. V. “Pygmies, Bushmen, and savage numbers – a case study in a sequence of bad citations.” Historia Mathematica 62 (2023): 51-72.

Unger, J. Marshall. “Cyclic quadrilaterals: Solutions of two Japanese problems and their proofs.” Historia Mathematica 65 (2023): 1-13.

Wiescher, Michael. “Julius Plücker – A path from geometry to optics.” Historia Mathematica 64 (2023): 19-33.

Zlatopolski, Dmitry. ““Perfect Arithmetic” by Vaclav Josef Pelikan.” Historia Mathematica 62 (2023): 40-50.

Upstill, Garrett, Thomas H. Spurling, Terence J. Healy, et al. “Realignment and change: CSIRO and industry 2000–10.” Historical Records of Australian Science 34, no. 2 (2023): 109-122.

Alexopoulou, Maria. “Ignoring Racism in the History of the German Immigration Society: Some Reflections on Comparison as an Epistemic Practice.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 2, no. 1 (2021): 7-7.

Aradau, Claudia and Tobias Blanke. “Algorithmic Surveillance and the Political Life of Error.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 2, no. 1 (2021): 10-10.

Balmer, Brian. “Intelligence, Ignorance, and Diplomacy in the Cold War: The UK Reaction to the Sverdlovsk Anthrax Outbreak.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 2, no. 1 (2021): 9-9.

Butler, Shane. “Afterword: Know Time?.” Journal for the History of Knowledge 4 (2023)

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