History of Humanities

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Topic and agenda

The journal was founded on the basis of the belief that, in contrast to the history of science, the various humanities disciplines had rarely been studied in an interconnected manner, which may partly have contributed to current sentiments of a "crisis" in the humanities. [1] In the first issue (2016), the editors state that: [2]

“Our journal is meant to stand for the fact that scholarly practices of a type today labeled “humanities” have been an essential part of the process of knowledge making ever since human inquisitiveness sought to enhance our understanding of the world and ourselves. This long history has been studied in fruitful and illuminating ways, but the focus has been on either the natural sciences or on single disciplines within the humanities, such as history writing and linguistics. The fundamental contribution of the humanities to the intricate web of knowledge that scholars, thinkers, and researchers have spun in the course of several millennia has thus been poorly recognized and is consequently undervalued. We intend to redress the imbalance in the historiography of the search for knowledge that mankind has been engaged in for so long. A more balanced picture, we believe, will show that the ways we arrive at knowledge are complex, varied, and unpredictable and often involve the transmission of methods and insights from one field of investigation to another."

The journal is the brainchild of the Society for the History of the Humanities [3] which also organizes a series of conferences, “The Making of the Humanities,” in Amsterdam (2008, 2010, 2018), Rome (2012, 2014), Baltimore (2016), Oxford (2017), Cape Town (2019), Barcelona (2021), Pittsburgh (2022), and Lund (2024). [4] It has earlier published a trilogy, The Making of the Humanities (Amsterdam University Press), which tested the ground for the founding of the journal in 2016. [5] [6] [7]

Indexing

Articles that appear in History of Humanities are indexed in the following abstracting and indexing services:

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References

  1. "How a New Field Could Help Save the Humanities", The Chronicle Review of Higher Education, February 19, 2017 https://www.chronicle.com/article/How-a-New-Field-Could-Help/239209
  2. A New Field: History of Humanities. Rens Bod, Julia Kursell, Jaap Maat, and Thijs Weststeijn, History of Humanities 2016 1:1, 1-8, https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/toc/hoh/2016/1/1
  3. "Society for the History of the Humanities". www.historyofhumanities.org.
  4. "Conference Report on "The Making of the Humanities III" by Laura Meneghello".
  5. Maat, Jaap; Bod, Rens; Weststeijn, Thijs (January 28, 2010). Bod, Rens; Maat, Jaap; Weststeijn, Thijs (eds.). The Making of the Humanities : Volume I - Early Modern Europe. Amsterdam University Press. doi:10.5117/9789089642691. ISBN   9789089642691 via www.oapen.org.
  6. Maat, Jaap; Bod, Rens; Weststeijn, Thijs (January 28, 2012). The Making of the Humanities : Volume II - From Early Modern to Modern Disciplines. Amsterdam University Press. doi:10.26530/OAPEN_429447. ISBN   9789089644558 via oapen.org.
  7. Maat, Jaap; Bod, Rens; Weststeijn, Thijs (January 28, 2014). The Making of the Humanities, Volume III. The Modern Humanities. Amsterdam University Press. doi:10.26530/OAPEN_500288. ISBN   9789089645166 via www.oapen.org.