The latest issue of Central European History went live online on January 3 and should be shipping to individual and institutional subscribers shortly.
Volume 51 / Issue 04, December 2018, pp. i-iii, 527-733.
There is a special Discussion Forum on "The Vanishing Nineteenth Century," organized by Karen Hagemann and Simone Lässig, with contributions by David Blackbourn, James Brophy, Pieter Judson, Roger Chickering, Suzanne Marchand, Sebastian Conrad, Birgit Aschmann, Jürgen Osterhammel, Andrew Zimmerman, and others.
There is also a memorial for Eberhard Jäckel by Peter Hayes.
The issue can be accessed at https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/central-european-history/latest-issue.
Memorial
Eberhard Jäckel (1929-2017) Peter Hayes
Articles
Anatomy for All: Medical Knowledge on the Fairground in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna Alys X. George
Rewriting the Reich: German Women Journalists as Transnational Mediators for Germany’s Rehabilitation Deborah Barton
East Germany’s Red Woodstock: The 1973 Festival between the “Carnivalesque” and the Everyday Katharine White
Discussion ForumThe Vanishing Nineteenth Century in European History?
Introduction: The Shifting Space of the Nineteenth Century in European History Karen Hagemann and Simone Lässig
Nineteenth-Century German History: Dangling in Space? David Blackbourn
A Receding Nineteenth Century in Central European History? James M. Brophy
The Study of the Nineteenth Century in Habsburg Central Europe Pieter M. Judson
Russia’s Nineteenth Century: Thoughts on the State of the Field Alexander M. Martin
The Declining Study of Nineteenth-Century France Lloyd S. Kramer
The Nineteenth Century in British History Alex Chase-Levenson
The History of War and Military Affairs Roger Chickering
A “Jewish Sattelzeit”? Recasting an Era of Upheaval and Transformation Simone Lässig
Celebrating “Boring” Ideas in the Age of Impatience: The Nineteenth Century in Intellectual and Cultural History Suzanne Marchand
Gender and the Rewriting of Nineteenth-Century History Karen Hagemann
Colonizing the Nineteenth Century: Implications of a Paradigm Shift Sebastian Conrad
Comments Birgit Aschmann, Jürgen Osterhammel, Andrew Zimmerman
Featured Review
Noam Zadoff, Gershom Scholem from Berlin to Jerusalem and Back: An Intellectual Biography MARJORIE LAMBERTI
Book Reviews
K. Jan Oosthoek and Richard Hölzl, Managing Northern Europe’s Forests: Histories from the Age of Improvement to the Age of Ecology JEFFREY K. WILSON
Norbert Bachleitner, Die literarische Zensur in Österreich von 1751 bis 1848 JOHN A. MCCARTHY
Daniela Gasteiger, Kuno von Westarp (1864-1945). Parlamentarismus, Monarchismus und Herrschaftsutopien im deutschen Konservatismus HERMANN BECK
Alice Weinreb, Modern Hungers: Food and Power in Twentieth-Century Germany INES PRODÖHL
Keith Jeffrey, 1916: A Global History RICHARD S. FOGARTY
Katrin Paehler, The Third Reich’s Intelligence Services: The Career of Walter Schellenberg BRUCE CAMPBELL
Bill Niven, Hitler and Film: The Führer’s Hidden Passion JONATHAN PETROPOULOS
Matthew D. Mingus, Remapping Modern Germany after National Socialism, 1945-1961 JASON HANSEN
Maria Fritsche, The American Marshall Plan Film Campaign and the Europeans: A Captivated Audience? SUZANNE LANGLOIS
Jeffrey Herf, Undeclared Wars With Israel: East Germany and the West German Far Left, 1967-1989. NOEL D. CARY
CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS ISSUE
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INDICES for Vol. 51