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- Volume 49, Number 1, Fall 2015
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Eighteenth-Century Studies is committed to publishing the best of current writing on all aspects of eighteenth-century culture. The journal publishes different modes of analysis and disciplinary discourses that explore how recent historiographical, critical, and theoretical ideas have engaged scholars concerned with the eighteenth century. Eighteenth-Century Studies is the official publication of the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (ASECS).
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Johns Hopkins University Pressviewing issue
Volume 49, Number 1, Fall 2015Table of Contents
- A Rake’s Progress: William Whiston Reads Josephus
- pp. 17-30
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- There Was No Counter-Enlightenment
- pp. 51-69
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- Berlin, Herder, and the Counter-Enlightenment
- pp. 71-76
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- Tilting at Counter-Enlightenment Windmills
- pp. 77-81
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- Roundtable Discussion Conclusion
- pp. 87-88
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- The Wider World
- pp. 89-91
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- Print Beyond the Book
- pp. 94-97
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- Swift’s Angers by Claude Rawson (review)
- pp. 104-106
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- Goethe’s Allegories of Identity by Jane K. Brown (review)
- pp. 109-110
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- Books Received
- pp. 111-113
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