Notes on Contributors
Q2 Arts and Humanities
{"title":"Notes on Contributors","authors":"","doi":"10.1086/727206","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Previous article FreeNotes on ContributorsPDFPDF PLUSFull Text Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmailPrint SectionsMoreAsaph Ben-Tov (PhD 2007, habilitation 2019) is an early modern historian. His research focuses mostly on the classical tradition and the history of oriental studies. He is the author of Lutheran Humanists and Greek Antiquity (2009) and Johann Ernst Gerhard (1621–1668): The Life and Work of a Seventeenth-Century Orientalist (2021). He is also the coeditor (with Martin Mulsow) of Knowledge and Profanation in Early Modern Europe (2019).Rens Bod is professor of digital humanities and history of the humanities at the University of Amsterdam. He has published on (computational) linguistics, the history of the humanities, and the history of knowledge. Among his books is A New History of the Humanities (2013); his latest book is World of Patterns: A Global History of Knowledge (2022).Rodrigo Cacho is professor of early modern Iberian and Latin American literature at the University of Cambridge. His research focuses on Renaissance and baroque cultures and Spanish American colonial literature. His scholarship has been concerned with literary genres such as burlesque and epic poetry and the works of Francisco de Quevedo. He is a recipient of the Philip Leverhulme Prize.Kevin Chang works on a variety of subjects: science and medicine in early modern Europe, the history of media and publication, comparative studies of the humanities (philology and linguistics in particular), and global history of higher education. He received his PhD in history from the University of Chicago and has since been working at the Institute of History and Philology at Academia Sinica, Taiwan’s national academy.Moritz Föllmer is associate professor of modern history at the University of Amsterdam. He has previously taught at the University of Leeds, Humboldt University Berlin, and the University of Chicago. His publications on Nazi Germany include Individuality and Modernity in Berlin: Self and Society from Weimar to the Wall (Cambridge University Press, 2013) and Culture in the Third Reich (Oxford University Press, 2020).Hampus Östh Gustafsson is a postdoctoral researcher in history at Lund University and in history of science and ideas at Uppsala University. After defending his doctoral thesis on the legitimacy of the humanities in twentieth-century Sweden, he has been engaged in a project on governance and temporalities in the history of universities. With Anders Ekström, he recently edited The Humanities and the Modern Politics of Knowledge (Amsterdam University Press, 2022).Isak Hammar is associate professor of history at Lund University. His current project is funded by the Swedish Research Council and analyzes the impact of scholarly journals for the formation of the humanities circa 1840–1920. Together with Johan Östling, he is the editor of the forum section “The Circulation of Knowledge and the History of Humanities” in History of Humanities 6, no. 2 (2021).Inger Kuin is assistant professor of classics at the University of Virginia. Her research concerns the intellectual history of ancient Greece and Rome. In addition to numerous articles, book chapters, and coedited and coauthored volumes, Kuin has published a monograph titled Lucian’s Laughing Gods: Religion, Philosophy, and Popular Culture in the Roman East (2023), and two books: Diogenes: Leven en denken van een autonome geest (2022) and Leven met de goden: Religie in de oudheid (2018).Joep Leerssen is emeritus professor at the universities of Maastricht and Amsterdam. A comparatist by training, he works on the cultural and intellectual history of national thought and nationalism. Among his books are the Encyclopedia of Romantic Nationalism in Europe (2nd ed., 2022), National Thought in Europe (3rd ed., 2018), and Comparative Literature in Britain (2019).Suzanne Marchand (PhD, University of Chicago, 1992) is Boyd (University) Professor of European Intellectual History at Louisiana State University. She has written three major monographs, Down from Olympus (1996), German Orientalism in the Age of Empire (2009), and Porcelain: A History from the Heart of Europe (2020) and numerous essays. She is now working on a book tentatively titled Herodotus and the Instabilities of Western Civilization.David L. Marshall is an intellectual historian of Europe from the seventeenth century to the present. He is the author of Vico and the Transformation of Rhetoric in Early Modern Europe (Cambridge University Press, 2010) and The Weimar Origins of Rhetorical Inquiry (University of Chicago Press, 2020). He is professor of communication at the University of Pittsburgh and codirector of the Humanities Center there.Herman Paul is professor of the history of the humanities at Leiden University, where he directs the research project “Scholarly Vices: A Longue Durée History.” He is the author, most recently, of Historians’ Virtues: From Antiquity to the Twenty-First Century (Cambridge University Press, 2022) and the editor of Writing the History of the Humanities: Questions, Themes, and Approaches (Bloomsbury, 2023).Thor Rydin is lecturer in cultural history at Utrecht University. His research concerns the cultural history of European philosophy, aesthetics, and historical thought in the nineteenth and twentieth century. His first book, The Works and Times of Johan Huizinga (1872–1945): Writing History in the Age of Collapse, is to appear with Amsterdam University Press in late 2023.David R. Shumway is professor of English and director of literary and cultural studies at Carnegie Mellon University, where he is also founding director of the Humanities Center. His books include Creating American Civilization: A Genealogy of American Literature as an Academic Discipline. He is currently working on an institutional history of theory in literary studies in the United States.Helen Small is Merton Professor of English at the University of Oxford. Her books include The Value of the Humanities (2013), which identifies and tests the arguments most often relied upon by advocates for the humanities. Recent work includes The Function of Cynicism at the Present Time (2022) and an afterword to George Levine, ed., The Question of the Aesthetic (2022) on the significance of disagreement in evaluating aesthetic experience.Sverker Sörlin is professor and cofounder of the KTH Environmental Humanities Laboratory, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm. He is a defining public and scholarly voice on the past, present, and future of humanities knowledge and has served on advisory boards of research, environmental, and climate policy for the Swedish government. Among his recent books is Ice Humanities: Living, Thinking, and Working in a Melting World (with Klaus Dodds, Manchester University Press, 2022).Lieske Tibbe is an art historian and was assistant professor at the institute of art history at Radboud University Nijmegen from 1976 until her retirement in 2012. She specializes in art, art theory, and political theory and their mutual relations around 1900, as well as in the history of collections and exhibitions of applied art, on which topics she has published widely.Bas van Bommel is a fellow of classics and literature at University College Utrecht and a university lecturer in classics at Utrecht University. His research focuses on the history of classical scholarship, the Gymnasium, and humanism. 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Abstract
Previous article FreeNotes on ContributorsPDFPDF PLUSFull Text Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmailPrint SectionsMoreAsaph Ben-Tov (PhD 2007, habilitation 2019) is an early modern historian. His research focuses mostly on the classical tradition and the history of oriental studies. He is the author of Lutheran Humanists and Greek Antiquity (2009) and Johann Ernst Gerhard (1621–1668): The Life and Work of a Seventeenth-Century Orientalist (2021). He is also the coeditor (with Martin Mulsow) of Knowledge and Profanation in Early Modern Europe (2019).Rens Bod is professor of digital humanities and history of the humanities at the University of Amsterdam. He has published on (computational) linguistics, the history of the humanities, and the history of knowledge. Among his books is A New History of the Humanities (2013); his latest book is World of Patterns: A Global History of Knowledge (2022).Rodrigo Cacho is professor of early modern Iberian and Latin American literature at the University of Cambridge. His research focuses on Renaissance and baroque cultures and Spanish American colonial literature. His scholarship has been concerned with literary genres such as burlesque and epic poetry and the works of Francisco de Quevedo. He is a recipient of the Philip Leverhulme Prize.Kevin Chang works on a variety of subjects: science and medicine in early modern Europe, the history of media and publication, comparative studies of the humanities (philology and linguistics in particular), and global history of higher education. He received his PhD in history from the University of Chicago and has since been working at the Institute of History and Philology at Academia Sinica, Taiwan’s national academy.Moritz Föllmer is associate professor of modern history at the University of Amsterdam. He has previously taught at the University of Leeds, Humboldt University Berlin, and the University of Chicago. His publications on Nazi Germany include Individuality and Modernity in Berlin: Self and Society from Weimar to the Wall (Cambridge University Press, 2013) and Culture in the Third Reich (Oxford University Press, 2020).Hampus Östh Gustafsson is a postdoctoral researcher in history at Lund University and in history of science and ideas at Uppsala University. After defending his doctoral thesis on the legitimacy of the humanities in twentieth-century Sweden, he has been engaged in a project on governance and temporalities in the history of universities. With Anders Ekström, he recently edited The Humanities and the Modern Politics of Knowledge (Amsterdam University Press, 2022).Isak Hammar is associate professor of history at Lund University. His current project is funded by the Swedish Research Council and analyzes the impact of scholarly journals for the formation of the humanities circa 1840–1920. Together with Johan Östling, he is the editor of the forum section “The Circulation of Knowledge and the History of Humanities” in History of Humanities 6, no. 2 (2021).Inger Kuin is assistant professor of classics at the University of Virginia. Her research concerns the intellectual history of ancient Greece and Rome. In addition to numerous articles, book chapters, and coedited and coauthored volumes, Kuin has published a monograph titled Lucian’s Laughing Gods: Religion, Philosophy, and Popular Culture in the Roman East (2023), and two books: Diogenes: Leven en denken van een autonome geest (2022) and Leven met de goden: Religie in de oudheid (2018).Joep Leerssen is emeritus professor at the universities of Maastricht and Amsterdam. A comparatist by training, he works on the cultural and intellectual history of national thought and nationalism. Among his books are the Encyclopedia of Romantic Nationalism in Europe (2nd ed., 2022), National Thought in Europe (3rd ed., 2018), and Comparative Literature in Britain (2019).Suzanne Marchand (PhD, University of Chicago, 1992) is Boyd (University) Professor of European Intellectual History at Louisiana State University. She has written three major monographs, Down from Olympus (1996), German Orientalism in the Age of Empire (2009), and Porcelain: A History from the Heart of Europe (2020) and numerous essays. She is now working on a book tentatively titled Herodotus and the Instabilities of Western Civilization.David L. Marshall is an intellectual historian of Europe from the seventeenth century to the present. He is the author of Vico and the Transformation of Rhetoric in Early Modern Europe (Cambridge University Press, 2010) and The Weimar Origins of Rhetorical Inquiry (University of Chicago Press, 2020). He is professor of communication at the University of Pittsburgh and codirector of the Humanities Center there.Herman Paul is professor of the history of the humanities at Leiden University, where he directs the research project “Scholarly Vices: A Longue Durée History.” He is the author, most recently, of Historians’ Virtues: From Antiquity to the Twenty-First Century (Cambridge University Press, 2022) and the editor of Writing the History of the Humanities: Questions, Themes, and Approaches (Bloomsbury, 2023).Thor Rydin is lecturer in cultural history at Utrecht University. His research concerns the cultural history of European philosophy, aesthetics, and historical thought in the nineteenth and twentieth century. His first book, The Works and Times of Johan Huizinga (1872–1945): Writing History in the Age of Collapse, is to appear with Amsterdam University Press in late 2023.David R. Shumway is professor of English and director of literary and cultural studies at Carnegie Mellon University, where he is also founding director of the Humanities Center. His books include Creating American Civilization: A Genealogy of American Literature as an Academic Discipline. He is currently working on an institutional history of theory in literary studies in the United States.Helen Small is Merton Professor of English at the University of Oxford. Her books include The Value of the Humanities (2013), which identifies and tests the arguments most often relied upon by advocates for the humanities. Recent work includes The Function of Cynicism at the Present Time (2022) and an afterword to George Levine, ed., The Question of the Aesthetic (2022) on the significance of disagreement in evaluating aesthetic experience.Sverker Sörlin is professor and cofounder of the KTH Environmental Humanities Laboratory, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm. He is a defining public and scholarly voice on the past, present, and future of humanities knowledge and has served on advisory boards of research, environmental, and climate policy for the Swedish government. Among his recent books is Ice Humanities: Living, Thinking, and Working in a Melting World (with Klaus Dodds, Manchester University Press, 2022).Lieske Tibbe is an art historian and was assistant professor at the institute of art history at Radboud University Nijmegen from 1976 until her retirement in 2012. She specializes in art, art theory, and political theory and their mutual relations around 1900, as well as in the history of collections and exhibitions of applied art, on which topics she has published widely.Bas van Bommel is a fellow of classics and literature at University College Utrecht and a university lecturer in classics at Utrecht University. His research focuses on the history of classical scholarship, the Gymnasium, and humanism. Previous article DetailsFiguresReferencesCited by History of Humanities Volume 8, Number 2Fall 2023 Sponsored by the Society for the History of the Humanities Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1086/727206 © 2023 Society for the History of the Humanities. All rights reserved.PDF download Crossref reports no articles citing this article.
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上一篇文章撰稿人免费笔记pdf全文添加到收藏列表下载CitationTrack citationspermissions转载分享在facebook twitterlinkedinredditemailprint SectionsMoreAsaph本-托夫(博士2007,habilitation 2019)是一位早期现代历史学家。他的研究主要集中在古典传统和东方研究的历史。他是《路德人文主义者和希腊古代》(2009)和《约翰·恩斯特·格哈德(1621-1668):一位17世纪东方学家的生活和工作》(2021)的作者。他也是《近代早期欧洲的知识与亵渎》(2019)的合著者(与马丁·穆索合著)。Rens Bod是阿姆斯特丹大学数字人文和人文历史教授。他发表过关于(计算)语言学、人文历史和知识历史的著作。他的著作包括《人文新历史》(2013);他的最新著作是《模式的世界:知识的全球历史》(2022年)。罗德里戈·卡乔是剑桥大学早期现代伊比利亚和拉丁美洲文学教授。他的研究主要集中在文艺复兴和巴洛克文化和西班牙美洲殖民文学。他的学术研究一直关注文学流派,如滑稽剧、史诗和弗朗西斯科·德·克维多的作品。他是菲利普·莱弗休姆奖的获得者。张凯文的研究领域广泛,包括近代早期欧洲的科学和医学、媒体和出版史、人文学科比较研究(特别是语言学和语言学)以及全球高等教育史。他在芝加哥大学获得历史学博士学位,此后一直在台湾国立中央研究院历史与文献学研究所工作。莫里茨Föllmer是阿姆斯特丹大学近代史副教授。他曾任教于利兹大学、柏林洪堡大学和芝加哥大学。他关于纳粹德国的著作包括《柏林的个性与现代性:从魏玛到柏林墙的自我与社会》(剑桥大学出版社,2013)和《第三帝国的文化》(牛津大学出版社,2020)。Hampus Östh Gustafsson是隆德大学历史和乌普萨拉大学科学史和思想史的博士后研究员。在为他关于20世纪瑞典人文学科合法性的博士论文进行答辩后,他一直致力于研究大学历史上的治理和时间性。与安德斯Ekström,他最近编辑的人文和知识的现代政治(阿姆斯特丹大学出版社,2022年)。Isak Hammar是隆德大学历史学副教授。他目前的项目是由瑞典研究委员会资助的,并分析了大约1840-1920年学术期刊对人文学科形成的影响。他与Johan Östling共同担任《人文学史》第6期“知识的流通与人文学的历史”论坛版块的编辑。2(2021)。英格·奎恩(Inger Kuin)是弗吉尼亚大学古典文学助理教授。她的研究涉及古希腊和罗马的思想史。除了大量的文章、书籍章节以及合编和合著的书籍外,Kuin还出版了专著《卢西安的笑神:罗马东部的宗教、哲学和流行文化》(2023),以及两本书:《第欧根尼:Leven en denken van een autonome geest》(2022)和《Leven met de golden: Religie In de oudheid》(2018)。Joep leersen是马斯特里赫特大学和阿姆斯特丹大学的名誉教授。作为一名训练有素的比较学家,他研究民族思想和民族主义的文化和思想史。他的著作包括《欧洲浪漫民族主义百科全书》(第二版,2022年)、《欧洲民族思想》(第三版,2018年)和《英国比较文学》(2019年)。Suzanne Marchand(1992年毕业于芝加哥大学)是路易斯安那州立大学欧洲思想史博伊德教授。她撰写了三部主要专著:《从奥林匹斯山下来》(1996年)、《帝国时代的德国东方主义》(2009年)和《瓷器:来自欧洲心脏的历史》(2020年)以及许多论文。她现在正在写一本暂定名为《希罗多德与西方文明的不稳定》的书。大卫·l·马歇尔是一位研究17世纪至今欧洲历史的知识分子史学家。他著有《维科与近代早期欧洲修辞学的转变》(剑桥大学出版社,2010年)和《修辞探究的魏玛起源》(芝加哥大学出版社,2020年)。他是匹兹堡大学传播学教授,也是该校人文中心的联合主任。赫尔曼·保罗(Herman Paul)是莱顿大学(Leiden University)的人文历史教授,在那里他指导了一个名为“学术恶习:一段漫长的杜尔杰史”的研究项目。 他的最新著作是《历史学家的美德:从古代到二十一世纪》(剑桥大学出版社,2022年),也是《书写人文历史:问题、主题和方法》(布卢姆斯伯里出版社,2023年)的编辑。托尔·赖丁是乌得勒支大学文化史讲师。他的研究涉及19世纪和20世纪欧洲哲学、美学和历史思想的文化史。他的第一本书《约翰·惠伊津加(1872-1945)的作品与时代:在崩溃时代书写历史》将于2023年底由阿姆斯特丹大学出版社出版。大卫·r·沙姆韦(David R. Shumway)是卡内基梅隆大学(Carnegie Mellon University)的英语教授和文学与文化研究主任,也是该校人文中心(Humanities Center)的创始主任。他的著作包括《创造美国文明:作为一门学科的美国文学谱系》。他目前正在研究美国文学研究理论的制度史。海伦·斯莫尔是牛津大学默顿英语教授。她的著作包括《人文学科的价值》(The Value of The Humanities, 2013),该书对人文学科倡导者最常依赖的论点进行了识别和检验。最近的作品包括《当代玩世不恭的功能》(2022)和乔治·莱文(George Levine)编著的《美学问题》(2022)的后记,讨论了在评估审美经验时分歧的重要性。Sverker Sörlin是斯德哥尔摩皇家理工学院KTH环境人文实验室的教授和联合创始人。他对人文知识的过去、现在和未来有着明确的公共和学术见解,并曾在瑞典政府的研究、环境和气候政策咨询委员会任职。他最近的著作包括《冰人文:在一个融化的世界里生活、思考和工作》(与克劳斯·多德合作,曼彻斯特大学出版社,2022年)。Lieske Tibbe是一名艺术史学家,从1976年到2012年退休,她一直担任奈梅亨大学艺术史研究所的助理教授。她擅长研究1900年前后的艺术、艺术理论和政治理论及其相互关系,以及应用艺术的收藏和展览历史,并就此主题发表了大量文章。Bas van Bommel是乌得勒支大学学院古典文学研究员,乌得勒支大学古典文学讲师。他的研究重点是古典学术、体育馆和人文主义的历史。上一篇文章详情图参考文献《人文学史》第8卷第2期2023秋季由人文学历史学会主办文章DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1086/727206©2023人文学历史学会。Crossref报告没有引用这篇文章的文章。
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