Some nice news that because it is one of the most-read articles in the Journal of the History of Ideas this year, my piece “Foucault and Dumézil on Antiquity” is open access until the end of January 2025. The full list is below:
We are pleased to share some of 2024’s most-read articles from the Journal of the History of Ideas. We hope you will share these articles with colleagues, students, and anyone else that might have an interest in the journal. The articles are free to read through the end of January.
For 10% off a subscription to the Journal of the History of Ideas, use the code HOLIDAYS10 through December 31.
- Women and Intellectual History in the Twentieth Century, Part One: Rethinking the “Origins” of US Intellectual History by Sophie Smith
- Women and Intellectual History in the Twentieth Century, Part Two: Activists, Academics, and the Future by Sophie Smith
- Alternate Edens: History, Evolution, and Origins in UNESCO’s Cultural and Scientific History of Mankind by Emily M. Kern
- Sophie de Grouchy’s Political Thought in the “Letters on Sympathy” (1798) by Minchul Kim
- “Facts” and “Ideas”: Richard Jones, William Whewell, and the Entangled Histories of Science and Political Economy in Early Nineteenth-Century Britainby Upal Chakrabarti
- Prisoner, Sailor, Soldier, Spy: Hobbes on Coercion and Consent by Daniel Luban
- Legal Analogies in Cicero’s Political Thought by Maarten Klink
- Historicizing a Dream of Complete Science by Nasser Zakariya
- Foucault and Dumézil on Antiquity by Stuart Elden
- “Building the Earth”: Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, Science, and the Spirituality of the United Nations by Sarah Shortall
- The Influence of the Principle “Necessitas Non Habet Legem” on Nordic Medieval Laws on Theft by Mia Korpiola and Jørn Øyrehagen Sunde
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