Historicizing the global: an interdisciplinary perspective edited by Neus Rotger, Diana Roig-Sanz, Marta Puxan-Oliva
Editorial
Introduction: towards a cross-disciplinary history of the global in the humanities and the social sciences, Neus Rotger, Diana Roig-Sanz, Marta Puxan-Oliva, pp. 325-334
Articles
Long-term and decentred trajectories of doing history from a global perspective: institutionalization, postcolonial critique, and empiricist approaches, before and after the 1970s, Katja Naumann, pp. 335-354
What makes globalization really new? Sociological views on our current globalization, Romain Lecler, pp. 355-373
The global/local tension in the history of anthropology, Gustavo Lins Ribeiro, pp. 375-394
The global process of thinking global literature: from Marx’s Weltliteratur to Sarkozy’s littérature-monde, Jernej Habjan, pp. 395-412
Art history and the global: deconstructing the latest canonical narrative, Béatrice Joyeux-Prunel, pp. 413-435
Historicizing media, globalizing media research: infrastructures, publics, and everyday life, Ralph Schroeder, pp. 437-453
Reviews
Roundtable Review Discussion, Simon Jackson, pp. 455-456
Empires, guns, and economic growth: thoughts on the implications of Satia’s work for economic history, Judy Z. Stephenson, pp. 456-458
Consuming empires in the eighteenth century, Kate Smith, pp. 459-460
An Africanist’s perspective on Priya Satia’s Empire of guns, Giacomo Macola, pp. 461-462
Locating Britain’s ‘empire’ in Satia’s Empire of guns, Devyani Gupta, pp. 463-465
Author response, Priya Satia, pp. 465-469
The making of an Indian Ocean world economy, 1250–1650, by Ravi Palat. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015. Pp. xii + 305. Hardback £79.99, ISBN: 978-1-137-54219-9, Simon Layton, pp. 471-473
Corrigendum
Vivekananda, Sarah Farmer, and global spiritual transformations in the fin de siècle – CORRIGENDUM, Ruth Harris, p. 475