- Volume 49 Table Of Contents
Articles | |
1 | DAVID M. DIAMOND Sinners and “Standers By:” Reading the Characters of Calvinism in The Pilgrim’s Progress |
17 | MORDECHAI FEINGOLD A Rake’s Progress: William Whiston Reads Josephus |
31 | JENNIFER L. HARGRAVE “To the Glory of the Chinese:” Sinocentric Political Reform in Eliza Haywood’s The Adventures of Eovaai |
117 | J. R. McNEILL Introductory Remarks: The Anthropocene and the Eighteenth Century |
129 | FREDRIK ALBRITTON JONSSON Scottish Tobacco and Rhubarb: The Natural Order of Civil Cameralism in the Scottish Enlightenment |
149 | JAN GOLINSKI Debating the Atmospheric Constitution: Yellow Fever and the American Climate |
167 | CINDY ERMUS The Spanish Plague That Never Was: Crisis and Exploitation in Cádiz During the Peste of Provence |
195 | ERIN DREW “’Tis Prudence to Prevent th’Entire Decay”: Usufruct and Environmental Thought |
211 | ALAN MIKHAIL Enlightenment Anthropocene |
233 | JOPPE VAN DRIEL AND LISSA ROBERTS Circulating Salts: Chemical Governance and the Bifurcation of “Nature” and “Society” |
265 | MELISSA BAILES Literary Plagiarism and Scientific Originality in the “Trans-Atlantic Wilderness” of Goldsmith, Aikin, and Barbauld |
281 | JOHN L. BROOKE AND CHRISTOPHER OTTER Concluding Remarks: The Organic Anthropocene |
329 | ALAN HOUSTON “A Difference in Opinion Is Inevitable”: Franklin, Hemphill, and Modern Toleration |
353 | ERIK L. JOHNSON “Life Beyond Life”: Reading Milton’s Areopagitica through Enlightenment Vitalism |
371 | SABINE N. MEYER “A Strong Antidote against Unbelief and Seduction”: Carl Friedrich Scheibler’s Leben und Schicksale der Pokahuntas (1781) and the German Theological Enlightenment |
391 | COURTNEY E. THOMPSON Questions of Genre: Picturing the Hermaphrodite in Eighteenth-Century France and England |
439 | ANDREAS BLANK D’Holbach on Self-Esteem, Justice, and Cosmopolitanism |
455 | CAROLYN A. DAY AND AMELIA RAUSER Thomas Lawrence’s Consumptive Chic: Reinterpreting Lady Manners’s Hectic Flush in 1794 |
475 | ANNA M. FOY The Convention of Georgic Circumlocution and the Proper Use of Human Dung in Samuel Martin’s Essay upon Plantership |
507 | WAYNE C. RIPLEY “An Age More Curious, Than Devout”: The Counter-Enlightenment Edward Young |
Roundtable Discussion: Was There a Counter-Enlightenment? | |
51 | JEREMY L. CARADONNA There Was No Counter-Enlightenment |
71 | EVA PIIRIMÄE Berlin, Herder, and the Counter-Enlightenment |
77 | GRAEME GARRARD Tilting at Counter-Enlightenment Windmills |
83 | JAMES SCHMIDT The Counter-Enlightenment: Historical Notes on a Concept Historians Should Avoid |
87 | JEREMY L. CARADONNA Roundtable Discussion Conclusion |
Review Articles | |
89 | JEREMY BLACK The Wider World Robert K. Batchelor, London: The Selden Map and the Making of a Global City, 1549–1689; G. J. Bryant, The Emergence of British Power in India, 1600–1784: A Grand Strategic Interpretation; Simon Davies, Daniel Sanjiv Roberts, and Gabriel Sánchez Espinosa, eds., India and Europe in the Global Eighteenth Century; Aaron Spencer Fogleman, Two Troubled Souls: An Eighteenth-Century Couple’s Spiritual Journey in the Atlantic World; Jenna M. Gibbs, Performing the Temple of Liberty: Slavery, Theater, and Popular Culture in London and Philadelphia, 1760–1850 |
91 | JULIE KOSER Women—Writing—Warfare: Literary Negotiations of Conflict around 1800 Stephanie M. Hilger, Gender and Genre: German Women Write the French Revolution; Wendy C. Nielsen, Women Warriors in Romantic Drama |
94 | NORBERT SCHÜRER Print Beyond the Book James Raven, Bookscape: Geographies of Printing and Publishing in London before 1800; James Raven, Publishing Business in Eighteenth-Century England |
415 | MARK G. SPENCER Revolutionary Friends, Fathers, and Feelings Lorri Glover, Founders as Fathers: The Private Lives and Politics of the American Revolutionaries; Cassandra A. Good, Founding Friendships: Friendships between Men and Women in the Early American Republic; Sarah Knott, Sensibility and the American Revolution |
420 | JEFFREY M. LEICHMAN Ways of Watching Pannill Camp, The First Frame: Theatre Space in Enlightenment France; Joseph Harris, Inventing the Spectator: Subjectivity and the Theatrical Experience in Early Modern France |
531 | JAMES P. CARSON Thinking Animals Anita Guerrini, The Courtiers’ Anatomists: Animals and Humans in Louis XIV’s Paris; Joan B. Landes, Paula Young Lee, and Paul Youngquist, eds., Gorgeous Beasts: Animal Bodies in Historical Perspective; Tobias Menely, The Animal Claim: Sensibility and the Creaturely Voice; Ingrid H. Tague, Animal Companions: Pets and Social Change in Eighteenth-Century Britain |
536 | BASILE BAUDEZ Unearthing Piranesi Heather Hyde Minor, Piranesi’s Lost Words; John A. Pinto, Speaking Ruins: Piranesi, Architects, and Antiquity in Eighteenth-Century Rome |
539 | JESS KEISER Speaking... |