Articles
Hobbes in France, Gallican Histories, and Leviathan's Supreme PastorAmy Chandranpp 359–387
The “Social Question” as a Democratic Question: Louis Blanc's Organization of LaborSalih Emre Gerçekpp 388–416
Political Thought and the Emotion of Shame: John Stuart Mill and the Jamaica Committee during the Governor Eyre ControversyJake Subryan Richardspp 417–437
Totalitarian Encounters: The Reception of Stalinism and the USSR in Fascist Italy, 1928–1936Jorge Dagninopp 438–459
Arendt and AlgeriaAdam Y. Sternpp 460–483
Getting Tough or Rolling Back the State? Why Neoliberals Disagreed on a Guaranteed Minimum IncomeDaniel Colemanpp 484–511
“Dear Professor”: Exploring Lay Comments to Milton FriedmanMaurice Cottierpp 512–535
After the New Left: On Tsumura Takashi's Early Writings and Proto-“Contemporary Thought” in JapanJeremy Woolseypp 536–558
Forum: History and the Present
Introduction: Whose Present? Which History?Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkinspp 559–570
Intellectual History and the Fascism Debate: On Analogies and PolemicUdi Greenbergpp 571–581
Historical Sankofa: On Understanding Antiblack Violence in the Present through the African Diasporic PastAlaina M. Morganpp 582–591
Losing the Present to HistoryFaisal Devjipp 592–600
Always Already and Never Yet: Does China Even Have a Present?Fabio Lanzapp 601–611
Past and Present in Japanese Historiography: Four Versions of PresentismLouise Youngpp 612–629
Dialogues between Past and Present in Intellectual Histories of Mid-Twentieth-Century AfricaEmma Hunterpp 630–638
Practices Make Pertinent: Prospecting and Histories of the PresentTodd Shepardpp 639–650
The Present as a Foreign Country: Teaching the History of NowPatrick Iber, Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagenpp 651–662
Essay
For a New Social History of the Enlightenment: Authors, Readers, and Commercial CapitalismDavid A. Bellpp 663–687
Corrigendum
Introduction: Whose Present? Which History?Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkinspp 688–688
Intellectual History and the Fascism Debate: On Analogies and PolemicUdi Greenbergpp 689–689