History Journals

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Cold War History Cultural & Social History Diplomatic History
  • Modern Murders: The Turn-of-the-Century’s Backlash Against Melodramatic and Sensational Representations of Murder, 1880–1914
    Source: Cultural and Social History By Richard Jones University of SalfordDr Richard Jones is Director of Journalism, Politics and Contemporary History at the University of Salford. A former journalist with Sky News and the BBC among others, he is most recently the author of Reporting the Courts (2024), part of the Routledge Research in Journalism series. The book examines how court journalism is practiced amid an era of financial pressure and technological change in both media and criminal justice.
  • Virtue Capitalists: The Rise and Fall of the Professional Class in the Anglophone World, 1870-2008
    Source: Cultural and Social History By Christina de Bellaigue Exeter College, Oxford UniversityChristina de Bellaigue’s research focuses on education, class, social mobility, professionalisation and on the history of childhood in the nineteenth-century Britain and France. She is Associate Professor in History at Exeter College, Oxford.
  • Media and Mediation in the Eighteenth Century
    Source: Cultural and Social History By Christoph Streb Institut historique allemand, ParisChristoph Streb is a postdoctoral researcher at the Institut historique allemand in Paris. His book Radical Writers and the Media Revolution in the late Enlightenment was published with Liverpool University Press (Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment) in December 2024.
  • Between Popular Education and Academic Science: The Sinhalese Human Exhibitions on the Route from Lviv to Kyiv (1891)
    Source: Cultural and Social History By Dominika Czarnecka Dagnosław Demski Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, PolandDominika Czarnecka is Assistant Professor at the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw. Her research focuses on visual anthropology; the mechanisms of conceptualizing otherness; history of science. Her previous publications include the edited collection Staged Otherness: Ethnic Shows in Central and Eastern Europe 1850–1939 (2021).Dagnosław Demski is Associate Professor at the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw. His research interests include concepts and practices of othering, history of science, the broad areas of Central and Eastern Europen and South Asian studies. His recent published work is the co-edited volume Staged Otherness: Ethnic Shows in Central and Eastern Europe 1850–1939 (2021).
  • Permission to Screen? American Sexual Hygiene Pictures, British Censorship and Local Film Culture 1919–1950
    Source: Cultural and Social History By Sian Barber Department of Arts, English and Languages, Queen’s University Belfast, Belfast, UKSian Barber is a Reader in Film Studies at Queen’s University Belfast. Her work focuses on British film history, particularly censorship, controversy and cinema. Key publications include Censoring the 1970s: The BBFC and the Decade that Taste Forgot, (Cambridge Scholars Press, 2011), Capital, Culture and Creativity: The British Film Industry in the 1970s (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013) and Using Film as a Source (Manchester University Press, 2015). Her fourth monograph will be published by Manchester University Press in April 2025 as Beyond the BBFC: Local and regional film censorship in the UK.
  • Military Piping in British Malaya: Cultural Transfer and Colonial Defense Traditions, 1840–1971
    Source: Cultural and Social History By Andrew Yu Ka Chun Lin a Literatures, Languages & Cultures, The University of Edinburgh, United Kingdomb School of Professional and Continuing Education, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, ChinaAndrew Yu obtained his PhD from the University of Edinburgh. He is an ethnomusicologist interested in the history and culture of former British colonies in the Far East. He also holds a Fellowship Diploma of the London College of Music.Ka Chun Li completed a PhD on wind band history and is currently teaching at the University of Hong Kong. With extensive experience in the wind music industry, he is also an examiner for the Hong Kong Arts Development Council, approving funding for music activities.
  • ‘One of us’: Class and Conscientious Objection in Britain During the Second World War
    Source: Cultural and Social History By Linsey Robb Humanities - History, Northumbria University, Newcastle Upon Tyne, UKLinsey Robb is Associate Professor in Modern British History at Northumbria University. Her work focuses on cultural, social and gendered histories of the Second World War. Key publications include Men At Work (2015), Men in Reserve (2017), Men, Masculinities and Male Culture in the Second World War (2018) and British Humour and the Second World War (2023). She is currently working on a cultural and social history of conscientious objection in Britain during the Second World War, research which is was funded by an AHRC Research, Development and Engagement Fellowship.
  • Expulsion, Incarceration, Incapacitation. Policing Drinking Women in Poland and Britain in the Second Half of the 19th Century
    Source: Cultural and Social History By Dorota Dias-Lewandowska Craig Stafford a Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Polandb Department of History, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UKDorota Dias-Lewandowska, anthropologist and historian, holds a PhD from the Nicolaus Copernicus University (Poland) and University Bordeaux Montaigne (France), where she examined the cultural history of French wine in early modern Poland. Co-editor of the series “Studia z historii wina w Polsce” (Studies in the History of Wine in Poland) and co-lead of the Drinking Studies Network „Women and Alcohol” research cluster. Currently she is Principal investigator on the „Between the drunken ‘mother of destruction’ and the sober ‘angel of the house’. Hidden representations of women’s drinking in Polish and British public discourses in the second half of the 19th century” and “Alcohol, Sobriety and Drunkenness: Discourses on the Boundaries of Drinking in the 19th century Post-Partition Poland” projects where she leads an interdisciplinary research team.Craig Stafford gained his PhD from University of Liverpool in 2019, where he studied the policing and sentencing of women for drunkenness in Victorian Lancashire. He is currently a Lecturer in History at University of Liverpool and has also taught at several universities in the north-west of England. He is co-investigator on the “Between the drunken ‘mother of destruction’ and the sober ‘angel of the house’. Hidden representations of women’s drinking in Polish and British public discourses in the second half of the 19th century” research project. His research interests concern crime and punishment in nineteenth century Britain, particularly relating to female offending.

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Feminist Media Histories Film History History: Reviews

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The Historian (OAH) J of American History J of Interdisciplinary History

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J of Cold War Studies J of Military History J of Social History

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J of War & Culture Studies Media History Radical History Review
  • Food and Drink and the War of Words During the Great War: Poilus, Pinard, and Pain KK
    Source: Journal of War & Culture Studies By Elizabeth Stice Department of history, Palm Beach Atlantic University, West Palm Beach, FL, USAElizabeth Stice is a professor of history at Palm Beach Atlantic University, where she also serves as the assistant director of the Frederick M Supper Honors Program. She is the editor-in-chief of the review Orange Blossom Ordinary. She earned her PhD at Emory University in 2012.
  • Dr. Strangelove is Back: Gender, Laughter, and AI in US Policy Discourses on the Development of Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems
    Source: Journal of War & Culture Studies By Lindsay C. Clark University of Sussex, Brighton, UKLindsay C. Clark is a Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Sussex. Her research focuses on the gendered dimensions of new technologies of war. More broadly, Lindsay’s research uses novel methodological frameworks to examine the intersection between gender and security and gender and technology.
  • Non-Human Animals as Resources for Political Communication During War: The Case of Ukraine
    Source: Journal of War & Culture Studies By Arita Holmberg Javiera Ortega Zepeda Swedish Defence University, Stockholm, SwedenArita Holmberg (PhD, Stockholm University, Sweden) is an associate professor and senior lecturer in political science at the Department for Political Science at the Swedish Defence University. She has published within the field of security and defence transformation, military organizations, and resistance. Her current research concerns security and sustainability, food security, and animals and security. Some of her recent articles appear Defence Studies, Critical Military Studies, and Critical Studies on Security among other journals.Javiera Ortega Zepeda has been a research assistant at the Department for Political Science at the Swedish Defence University in Stockholm. She holds a bachelor's degree in Political Science from Umeå University and a master’s degree in International Relations from Stockholm University. Her research interests lie in international relations, security studies, environmental and climate policy, and animal studies. In the future, she aims to pursue a PhD that aligns with her research interests.
  • The Representation of Absence: Race and Nation in Hollywood’s Depiction of the Atomic Bomb, 1947–1952
    Source: Journal of War & Culture Studies By Andrew Phillip Young Department of Critical Media Practices, University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, CO, USAAndrew Young’s research includes a wide range of topics including Latin American cinema, television history, and film style/structure, in addition to his background in documentary production, production ethics and new media theory and practice. He has published articles dealing with social network game design, counterculture and representation, dream space, commercial talk radio and hate speech social networks. His research currently focuses on Rwandan society and cultural production as they relate to continued underlying ethnic and political tensions, by interrogating the geographical and rhetorical systems governing Rwanda’s media industries.
  • Cold War Visual Legacies
    Source: Journal of War & Culture Studies By Thy Phu Erina Duganne Dat Nguyen Kylie Thomas a Department of Arts, Culture and Media, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canadab School of Art and Design, Texas State University, San Marcos, TX, USAc NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Amsterdam, the Netherlandsd Radical Humanities Laboratory and School of History, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland
  • Cold War Photographic Diplomacy: Darren Newbury in Conversation with Kylie Thomas
    Source: Journal of War & Culture Studies By Kylie Thomas Darren Newbury a University College Cork, Irelandb NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies, the Netherlandsc College of Arts and Humanities, University of Brighton, UKKylie Thomas, Senior Lecturer, University College Cork, Ireland, and Guest Researcher, NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies, the Netherlands.Darren Newbury, Professor of Photographic History and Director of Postgraduate Studies in the College of Arts and Humanities, University of Brighton, UK.
  • The Politics of Salon Photography: The Ideological Function of East Asian Photography in the Cold War Era
    Source: Journal of War & Culture Studies By Jeehey Kim Art History Program, School of Art, University of Arizona, USAJeehey Kim is an assistant professor in the art history programme at the School of Art, University of Arizona. She has published on Korean photography, including her first book, Photography and Korea, and writes about vernacular photographic practices, documentary films, and visual culture in relation to the Cold War and gender politics in East Asia.
  • Military Farewells: The Legacies of the Soviet-Era Dembel’ Album
    Source: Journal of War & Culture Studies By Oksana Sarkisova Olga Shevchenko Maria Gourieva 1 OSA Archivum, Budapest, Hungary2 Williams College, USA3 Independent ResearcherOksana Sarkisova is a Research Fellow at Vera and Donald Blinken OSA Archivum, Budapest. Email: sarkisovao@ceu.eduOlga Shevchenko is a Paul H. Hunn '55 Professor in Social Studies at the Department of Anthropology and Sociology at Williams College. Email: oshevche@williams.eduMaria Gourieva is an Independent Researcher residing in Russia who has decided to remain anonymous for security reasons. Correspondence to: Maria Gourieva, Independent Researcher. Email: maria.gourieva@gmail.com

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strong>Social History 20th C British History War in History

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