Radical History Review is a scholarly journal published by Duke University Press.[1]
Discipline | History |
---|---|
Language | English |
Publication details | |
History | 1974-present |
Publisher | |
Frequency | Triannual |
Standard abbreviations | |
ISO 4 | Radic. Hist. Rev. |
Indexing | |
ISSN | 0163-6545 (print) 1534-1453 (web) |
OCLC no. | 985576992 |
Links | |
The journal describes its position as "at the point where rigorous historical scholarship and active political engagement converge".[2] In 1979, the journal advertised that it "publishes the best marxist and non-marxist radical scholarship in jargon-free English".[3]
Articles in the journal cover the relationships that "issues of gender, race, sexuality, imperialism, and class" have with histories.[2] In 1999, the editors described "the journal's recent move toward a more overtly political discussion of historical topics".[4]
Reception
editThe New Criterion describes RHR as "a publication that plainly states it 'rejects conventional notions of scholarly neutrality and 'objectivity,' and approaches history from an engaged, critical, political stance.'"[5]
Jon Wiener in the 1991 book Professors, Politics, and Pop wrote, "The journal has recently distinguished itself by publishing a series of interviews with (several historians) exploring the relationship in their work between historical scholarship and political commitment."[6]
References
edit- ^ Radical History Review
- ^ a b "Radical History Review". Project MUSE. muse.jhu.org. Retrieved 2018-02-21.
- ^ Cerullo, Margaret (1979). "Marcuse and Feminism". New German Critique. 18 (18). Duke University Press: 21–3. doi:10.2307/487846. ISSN 1558-1462. JSTOR 487846. S2CID 147495131.
- ^ Radical History Review: Liberalism and the Left, by RHR Collective
- ^ "Radical History" by Harvey Klehr & John Earl Haynes
- ^ Professors, Politics, and Pop, by Jon Wiener, 1991, p. 207"