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The Journal of the History of Ideas will award the Morris D. Forkosch Prize ($2000) for the best book in intellectual history published in 2008.

The awards committee favors books which are published in English and which display some interdisciplinary range, demonstrate sound scholarship, and make an original contribution to the history of thought and culture.

Submissions are limited to the first book published by any author and to books published in English (no translations or collections of essays) pertaining to one or more of the major disciplines associated with “intellectual history” broadly conceived: viz., history (including the history of various arts and sciences), philosophy (including the philosophy of science, aesthetics, and other fields), political thought (including economics, social science and anthropology), and literature (including literary criticism and theory). The judges will favor publications displaying sound scholarship, original conceptualization, and significant chronological and interdisciplinary scope.

For more information about submitting a book please contact the editorial office of the Journal of the History of Ideas atjhi@history.upenn.edu; tel. 215–746–7946.

The Journal of the History of Ideas is pleased to announce the winner of the Morris D. Forkosch Prize ($2000) for the best book in intellectual history published in 2007:

Julian Bourg, for his From Revolution to Ethics: May 1968 and Contemporary French Thought (McGill-Queen’s University Press).

The Journal of the History of Ideas is pleased to announce the winner of the Selma V. Forkosch Prize ($500) for the best article published in the Journal of the History of Ideas each year. The winner for 2007 is Richard Schaefer, “Infallibility and Intentionality: Franz Brentano’s Diagnosis of German Catholicism,” Volume 68, Number 3, pages 477–99. [End Page 189]

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