Skip to main content Accessibility help
×

We’re delighted to announce that all articles accepted for publication in Modern Intellectual History from 23 August 2023 will be ‘open access’; published with a Creative Commons licence and freely available to read online (see the journal’s Open Access Options page for available licence options). The costs of open access publication will be covered through agreements between the publisher and the author’s institution, payment of APCs by funding bodies, or else waived entirely, ensuring every author can publish and enjoy the benefits of OA.  

Please see the journal's Open Access Options page for instructions on how to request an APC waiver. 

See this FAQ for more information. 

News and Announcements

      
  • Pedro Feitoza wins the Antonio Candido Prize for the article “The Middle Line of Truth: Religious and Secular Ideologies in the Making of Brazilian Evangelical Thought, 1870-1930” Find out more


  • Esmat Elhalaby named winner of the inaugural Amílcar Cabral Prize for his article “Empire and Arab Indology.” Find out more



  • "Whither Theory in a Time of Surpassing Disaster?” The co-editors of Modern Intellectual History are delighted to announce that the third MIH lecture will be given by Professor Omnia El Shakry (Yale) on September 27, 2024, from 3.00–5.00pm at KJCC Auditorium, 53 Washington Square South, New York, NY 10012. 
    • You have access: full
    • Open access
  • ISSN: 1479-2443 (Print), 1479-2451 (Online)
  • Editors: Brandon Byrd Vanderbilt University, USA, Manu Goswami New York University, USA, Duncan Kelly University of Cambridge, UK, Tracie M. Matysik University of Texas at Austin, USA, and Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkins Wesleyan University, USA
  • Editorial board
Modern Intellectual History publishes scholarship in intellectual and cultural history from 1650 onwards. MIH concerns itself primarily with apprehending the contextual origins and receptions of texts in order to recover their historical meanings. But we understand ‘texts’ in the broadest sense, so as to encompass multiple forms of intellectual and cultural expression. These include, but are not limited to, political thought, philosophy, religion, literature, both the social sciences and the natural sciences, music, architecture, and the visual arts.

'Modern Intellectual History' Blogs

  • Radical Democracy and/or Ordinary Anarchy?
  • 06 June 2023, Sophie Scott-Brown
  • Journalist Colin Ward (1924-2010) believed anarchism was ordinary with its roots firmly in the small, everyday acts of improvised co-operation that made living...

History blog