Pre-Modern Scholarship

Bibliography of Pre-Modern Scholarship in Radical History Review

A bibliography on pre-modern scholarship presents some difficulties, since the very periodization of the pre-modern/modern divide is itself contested, as many of articles published in the pages of RHR have demonstrated.  As an arbitrary, general guideline, the works listed here have at least some important content relevant for historians whose work concentrates on periods before 1800.  However, many of the key themes relevant to the journal and historians whose interests overlap with those of the journal – such as the histories of capitalism, colonialism, empire, gender, and/or slavery – span the so-called “early modern” and “modern” periods.  Thus, regardless of whether we choose to frame modernity around the bourgeois and national revolutions of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, steam-driven industrialization, the stages of capitalism, or some other historical indicator, we have included pieces that intentionally bridge the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, especially if the authors articulated the impact of the “pre-modern” upon modern political, social, and cultural structures and forms.  Finally, some of the works cited below focus on the ways that pre-modernity has been represented in modern cultural forms, from film to novels to museum exhibitions.

 

A. Articles and Essays

 

Jean-Christophe Agnew, “The Threshold of Exchange: Speculations on the Market.” Radical History Review 21 (Fall 1979): 99-118.

Betsy Blackmar, “Re-walking the Walking City: Housing and Property Relations in New York City, 1780–1840.” Radical History Review 21 (Fall 1979): 131-148.

Aurora Bosch, “Why is There No Labor Party in the United States? A Comparative New World Case Study: Australia and the U.S., 1783–1914.” Radical History Review 67 (Winter 1997): 35-78.

John Brewer, “Theater and Counter-Theater in Georgian Politics: The Mock Elections at Garrat.”  Radical History Review 22 (Winter 1979-80): 7-40.

Edmund Burke III, “Islam and World History: The Contribution of Marshall Hodgson.” Radical History Review 39 (Fall 1987): 117-123.

Joseph M. Butwin, “Seditious Laughter.”  Radical History Review 18 (Fall 1978): 17-34.

Edward Countryman and Susan Deans, “Independence and Revolution in the Americas: A Project for Comparative Study.” Radical History Review 27 (1983): 144-171.

Edward Countryman, “John Ford’s Drums Along the Mohawk: The Making of an American Myth.” Radical History Review 24 (Fall 1980): 93-112.

Sarah Crabtree, “’A Beautiful and Practical Lesson of Jurisprudence’: The Transatlantic Quaker Ministry in an Age of Revolution.” Radical History Review 99 (Fall 2007): 51-79.

James Cronin, “Creating a Marxist Historiography: The Contribution of Hobsbawm.” Radical History Review 19 (Winter 1978-79): 87-109.

Alan Dawley, “E.P. Thompson and the Peculiarities of the Americans.” Radical History Review 19 (Winter 1978-79): 33-59.

Laurent Dubois, “Haunting Delgrès.” Radical History Review 78 (Fall 2000): 166-177.

Dora Dumont, “Women and Guilds in Bologna: The Ambiguities of ‘Marginality’.” Radical History Review 70 (Winter 1998): 4-25.

Robert S. DuPlessis, “The Partial Transition to World-Systems Analysis in Early Modern European History.” Radical History Review 39 (Fall 1987): 11-27.

Robert DuPlessis, “Class and Class-Consciousness in Western European Cities, 1400-1650.”  Radical History Review 9-10 (Fall/Winter 1975): 74-91.

Robert S. DuPlessis, “From Demesne to World-System: A Critical Review of the Literature on the Transition from Feudalism to Capitalism.” Radical History Review 13 (Winter 1977): 3-41.

Nadia Abu El-Haj.  “Reflections on Archaeology and Israeli Settler-Nationhood.” Radical History Review 86 (Spring 2003): 149-164.

Steve Garner, “Ireland: From Racism without ‘Race’ to Racism without Racists.”  Radical History Review 104 (Spring 2009): 41-56.

Stuart Hall, “Marxism and Culture,” Radical History Review 18 (Fall 1978): 5-14.

Gwendolyn Midlo Hall, “Comment on Karen Spalding’s ‘Class Structures in the Southern Peruvian Highlands, 1750-1920’.”  Radical History Review 9-10 (Fall/Winter 1975): 28-29.

Max Harris, “Disguised Reconciliations; Indigenous Voices in Early Franciscan Missionary Drama in Mexico.” Radical History Review 53 (Spring 1992): 13-25.

Johan Heinsen, “’Nothing but Noyse’: The Political Complexities of English Maritime and Colonial Soundscapes.” Radical History Review 121 (2015): 106-122

Susan Henderson, “Out of the Ashes: The Great Fire and the Transformation of London’s Public Markets.” Radical History Review 21 (Fall 1979): 119-130.

Nathan I. Huggins, “The Deforming Mirror of Truth: Slavery and the Master Narrative of American History.” 
Radical History Review Winter 1991 (49): 25-48.

Bogumil Jewsiewicki, “The African Prism of Immanuel Wallerstein.” Radical History Review 39 (Fall 1987): 50-68.

Susan Kellogg, “Hegemony Out of Conquest: The First Two Centuries of Spanish Rule in Central Mexico.” Radical History Review 53 (Spring 1992): 27-46.

Brooke Larson and Robert Wasserstrom, “Coerced Consumption in Colonial Bolivia and Guatemala.” Radical History Review 27 (1983): 49-78.

Brooke Larson, “Shifting Views of Colonialism and Resistance.”Radical History Review 27 (1983): 3-20.

Jesse Lemisch, “Bailyn Besieged in His Bunker.” Radical History Review 13 (Winter 1977):  72-83.

Stephen E. Lewis, “Myth and the History of Chile’s Araucanians.” Radical History Review 58 (Winter 1994): 113-141.

Leonard P. Liggio, “English Origins of Early American Racism.”  Radical History Review 11 (Spring 1976): 1-36.

Peter Linebaugh, “Jubilating; Or, How the Atlantic Working Class Used the Biblical Jubilee against Capitalism, with Some Success.” Radical History Review 50 (1991): 143-180.

Peter Linebaugh, “Enclosures from the Bottom Up.” Radical History Review 108 (Fall 2010): 11-27.

Keith Luria, “The Paradoxical Carlo Ginzburg.” Radical History Review 35 (Spring 1986): 80-87.

Ben Maddison, “Radical Commons Discourse and the Challenges of Colonialism.” Radical History Review 108 (Fall 2010): 29-48.

Patrick Manning, “Primitive Art and Modern Times.” Radical History Review 33 (1985): 165-181.

Michael Merrill, “Cash is Good to Eat: Self-Sufficiency and Exchange in the Rural Economy of the United States,” Radical History Review 13 (Winter 1977): 42-71.

Sidney W. Mintz, “Caribbean Marketplaces and Caribbean History.” Radical History Review 27 (1983): 110-120.

Ruth A. Morgan and James L. Smith, “Premodern Streams of Thought in Twenty-First-Century Water Management.” Radical History Review Spring 116 (2013): 105-129.

Frances Moulder, “The Asiatic Mode of Production and Late Imperial China: A Society without Class Conflict and Social Change?” Radical History Review 9-10 (Fall/Winter 1975): 44-55.

Rachel Sarah O’Toole, “Devotion, Domination, and the Work of Fantasy in Colonial Peru.” Radical History Review (123) 2015: 37-59.

Robert A. Padgug, “Sexual Matters: On Conceptualizing Sexuality In History.” Radical History Review 20 (Spring/Summer 1979): 3-23.

Lyndal Roper, “Will and Honor: Sex, Words and Power in Augsburg Criminal Trials.” Radical History Review 43 (Winter 1989): 45-71.

Peter W. Rose, “A Dialectical View of Greek Tragic Form,” Radical History Review 18 (Fall 1978): 77-94.

Kelvin Santiago-Valles, “’Bloody Legislations,’ ‘Entombment,’ and Race Making in the Spanish Atlantic: Differentiated Spaces of General(ized) Confinement in Spain and Puerto Rico, 1750-1840,” Radical History Review 96 (Fall 2006): 33-57.

Patricia Seed, “On Caribbean Shores: Problems of Writing History of the First Contact.” Radical History Review 53 (Spring 1992): 5-11.

Jennifer D. Selwyn, “’Procur[ing] in the Common People These Better Behaviors’: The Jesuits’ Civilizing Mission in Early Modern Naples 1550–1620.” Radical History Review 67 (Winter 1997): 5-34.

Lorelle D. Semley, “To Live and Die, Free and French: Toussaint Louverture’s 1801 Constitution and the Original Challenge of Black Citizenship.” Radical History Review 115 (Winter 2013): 65-90.

Michael Sizer, “Murmur, Clamor, and Tumult: The Soundscape of Revolt and Oral Culture in the Middle Ages.” Radical History Review (121) 2015: 9-31.

Andor Skotnes, “Reply to Immanuel Wallerstein.”  Radical History Review Winter 49 (1991): 17-22.

J.W. Smit, “Comment on Robert DuPlessis, “Class and Class-Consciousness in Western European Cities, 1400-1650.”  Radical History Review 9-10 (Fall/Winter 1975): 91.

Alan K. Smith, “Where was the Periphery?: The Wider World and the Core of the World-Economy.” Radical History Review 39 (Fall 1987): 28-48.

Karen Spalding, “Class Structures in the Southern Peruvian Highlands, 1750-1920.”  Radical History Review 9-10 (Fall/Winter 1975): 5-27.

Carolyn Steedman. “The Price of Experience: Women and the Making of the English Working Class.”  Radical History Review 59 (Spring 1994): 108-119.

Steve J. Stern, “The Struggle for Solidarity: Class, Culture, and Community in Highland Indian America.” Radical History Review 27 (1983): 21-45.

David Sweet, “Native Resistance in Eighteenth-Century Amazonia: The ‘Abominable Muras’ in War and Peace.” Radical History Review 53 (Spring 1992): 49-80.

Mark Swislocki, “Nutritional Governmentality: Food and the Politics of Health in Late Imperial and Republican China.” Radical History Review 110 (Spring 2011): 9-35.

Hillary Taylor, “’Branded on the Tongue’: Rethinking Plebeian Inarticulacy in Early Modern England.” Radical History Review (121) 2015: 91-105

Nicholas Terpstra, “Sex and the Sacred: Negotiating Spatial and Sensory Boundaries in Renaissance Florence.”  Radical History Review (121) 2015: 71-90.

Michael Wallace, “Visiting the Past: History Museums in the United States.” Radical History Review 25 (1981): 63-96.

Immanuel Wallerstein, “Beyond Annales?” Radical History Review 49 (Winter 1991): 7-15.

Immanuel Wallerstein, “Fernand Braudel, Historian, ‘homme de la conjoncture’.” Radical History Review 26 (1982): 105-119.

William Appleman Williams, “Empire as a Way of Life.”
Radical History Review 50 (1991): 71-102, especially 72-76.

 

B. Forums and Reflections

 

Forum: Converted Spaces

Edward E. Andrews, “‘Creatures of Mimic and Imitation’: The Liberty Tree, Black Elections, and the Politicization of African Ceremonial Space in Revolutionary Newport, Rhode Island.” Radical History Review 99 (Fall 2007): 121-139.

Anna Bigelow, “Unifying Structures, Structuring Unity: Negotiating the Sharing of the Guru’s Mosque.” Radical History Review 99 (Fall 2007): 158-172.

Kaylin Goldstein, “Citadel into David’s Tower: Palestinian Memory and the Multicultural Fantastic.”  Radical History Review 99 (Fall 2007): 173-186.

Jacqueline Holler, “Conquered Spaces, Colonial Skirmishes: Spatial Contestation in Sixteenth-Century Mexico City.” Radical History Review 99 (Fall 2007): 107-120.

 

Reflections;  Many Worlds, Many Histories, Many Historians

Duane J. Corpis, “Introduction: Many Worlds, Many Histories, Many Historians.” Radical History Review Winter 91 (2005): 91-93.

Abolade Adeniji, “Universal History and the Challenge of Globalization to African Historiography.”  Radical History Review 91 (Winter 2005): 98-103.

Vijaya Teelock, “Breaking the Wall of Silence: Slavery in Mauritian Historiography.” Radical History Review Winter 91 (2005): 104-109.

Vinay Lal, “Much Ado about Something: The New Malaise of World History.” Radical History Review Winter 91 (2005): 124-130.

 

Slavery and the Master Narrative of American History

Nathan I. Huggins, “The Deforming Mirror of Truth: Slavery and the Master Narrative of American History.” 
Radical History Review Winter 1991 (49): 25-48.

Peter H. Wood, Peter Dimock, and Barbara Clark Smith, “Three Responses to Nathan Huggins’s ‘The Deforming Mirror of Truth’.” 
Radical History Review Winter 1991 (49): 49-59.

 

Moving Beyond Beard:  A Symposium

Barbara Clark Smith, Alfred F. Young, Linda K. Kerber, Michael Merrill, Peter Dimock, William Forbath, and James Henretta, “Moving Beyond Beard: A Symposium.” Radical History Review 42 (Fall 1988): 7-47.

 

 

Forum:  Agendas for Radical History

Margaret C. Jacob and Ira Katnzelson. “Introduction: Agendas for Radical History.” Radical History Review 36 (1986): 26-27.

Eric Hobsbawm, Christopher Hill, Perry Anderson, E.P. Thompson, and Joan Wallach Scott. “Agendas for Radical History.” Radical History Review 36 (1986): 27-45.

 

Forum:  On Herbert Gutman’s The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom

Leon Fink, George Rawick, and Evelyn Brooks Barnett, “On Herbert Gutman’s ‘The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom’.” Radical History Review 14-15 (Spring/Summer 1977): 76-108.

 

 

Book, Film and Museum Reviews, Review Essays

Patricia C. Albers and William R. James, “Historical Fiction as Ideology: The Case of Hanta Yo.” Radical History Review 25 (1981): 149-161.

George Reid Andrews, “No Revolution in the Historiography of the Revolution.” Radical History Review 27 (1983): 174-184.

Michael A. Bellesiles, “History on the Periphery: Bernard Bailyn’s Anglo-American Synthesis.” Radical History Review Fall 48 (Fall 1990): 143-152.

Edward Benson, “The Look of the Past: Le retour de Martin Guerre.” Radical History Review 28-30 (1984): 125-135.

Susan Porter Benson, “Social History in the Museum.” Radical History Review 48 (Fall 1990): 118-133.

Paul Breines, “Toward an Uncertain Marxism: A Review Essay.” Radical History Review 22 (Winter 1979-80): 100-116.

Joshua Brown, “Into the Minds of Babes: A Journey through Recent Children’s History Books.” Radical History Review 25 (1981): 127-145.

James A. Brundage, “The Gay Middle Ages?” Radical History Review 64 (Winter 1996): 100-104.

Edwin G. Burrows, “The Transition Question in Early American History: A Checklist of Recent Books, Articles, and Dissertations.” Radical History Review 18 (Fall 1978): 173-190.

Mark Carey, “Commodities, Colonial Science, and Environmental Change in Latin American History.” Radical History Review 107 (Spring 2010): 185-194.

Christopher Clark. “Politics, Language, and Class.” Radical History Review 34 (1986): 78-85.

Eileen J. Findlay, “Gender, Generation, and Honor in Colonial Mexican History.”  Radical History Review 53 (Spring 1992): 81-89.

David Geggus, “Haiti and Its Revolution: Four Recent Books.” Radical History Review 115 (Winter 2013): 195-202.

Diane F. George, “Colonization by Documentation: British Representations of Ireland in Maps, Archives, and Travelogues.” Radical History Review 104 (Spring 2009): 153-158.

Robert A. Padgug, “Missing: Alexander the Great.” Radical History Review 28-30 (1984): 217-227.

Patrice Higonnet, “Art and Politics in Pre-Revolutionary France.” Radical History Review 41 (Spring 1988): 145-154.

Patricia Hilden, “Marriage in Times Past.”  Radical History Review 38 (Fall 1987): 126-134.

David Hunt, “From the Millennial to the Everyday: James Scott’s Search for the Essence of Peasant Politics.” Radical History Review 42 (Fall 1988): 155-172.

David Hunt, “Andrzej Wajda and the ‘Reign of the People’.”  Radical History Review 28-30 (1984): 141-150.

Joseph Interrante and Carol Lasser, “Victims of the Very Songs they Sing: A Critique of Recent Work on Patriarchal Culture and the Social Construction of Gender.” Radical History Review 20 (Spring/Summer 1979): 25-40.

Jeffrey Kaplow, “Peasants into Socialists.” Radical History Review 28-30 (1984): 494-501.

Theodore Koditschek, “A Tale of Two Thompsons.” Radical History Review 56 (Spring 1993): 68-84.

Peter Linebaugh, “Commonists of the World Unite!” Radical History Review 56 (Spring 1993): 59-67.

Michael Lowy, “Renaissance Man.” Radical History Review 22 (Winter 1979-80): 167-171.

Robert B. Marks, “World Environmental History: Nature, Modernity, and Power.” Radical History Review 107 (Spring 2010): 209-224.

Gary B. Nash, “The Incomplete Revolution.” Radical History Review 28-30 (1984): 417-421.

Judith Newton, “Family Fortunes: ‘New History’ and ‘New Historicism’.” Radical History Review 43 (Winter 1989): 5-22.

Philip Nord, “La révolution est finie.” Radical History Review 48 (Fall 1990): 161-167.

Robert Padgug, “Slavery and Social Life,” Radical History Review 31 (1984): 85-92.

Robert A. Padgug, “Missing: Alexander the Great.” Radical History Review 28-30 (1984): 217-227.

Carla Pasquinelli, “Sex, Power, and Knowledge.” Radical History Review 22 (Winter 1979-80): 173-179.

Jennifer Pitts, “’Their Dominion, or Their Depredations’: Sovereignty, Governance, Law, and Liberalism in Recent Scholarship on the British Empire in India.”  Radical History Review 112 (Winter 2012): 193-200.

Marcus Rediker, “Getting Out of the Graveyard: Perry Anderson, Edward Thompson and the Arguments of English Marxism.” Radical History Review 26 (1982): 120-131.

Ronald Schultz, “Pirates and Proletarians: Authority, Labor, and Capital Accumulation in the First British Empire.” Radical History Review 44 (Spring 1989): 167-174.

Michael Sprinker, “The House that Akbar Built.” Radical History Review 59 (Spring 1994): 190-194.

E.P. Thompson, “Happy Families.” Radical History Review 20 (Spring/Summer 1979): 42-50.

Sharon R. Ullman, “Making Sense of Sex.” Radical History Review 52 (Winter 1992): 114-120.

Joanna Waley-Cohen, “The New Qing History.” Radical History Review 88 (Winter 2004): 193-206.

Immanuel Wallerstein, “Maps, Maps, Maps.”  Radical History Review 24 (Fall 1980): 155-159.

Kathleen Wilson, “Old Imperialisms and New Imperial Histories: Rethinking the History of the Present.” Radical History Review 95 (Spring 2006): 211-234.

Eli Zaretsky, “Peasants and Shepherds in Montaillou.” Radical History Review 22 (Winter 1979-80): 181-187.

 

 

  1. Teaching Radical History, Pedagogical Essay

 

Thomas G. Andrews, “Contemplating Animal Histories: Pedagogy and Politics across Borders.” Radical History Review 107 (Spring 2010): 139-165.

Sharon Block, “Early American Sexuality: Race, Colonialism, Power, and Culture.” Radical History Review 82 (Winter 2002): 159-169.

Mansour Bonakdarian, “Teaching Islam & the West.”  Radical History Review 71 (Spring 1998): 137-149.

Alice Conklin, “From World-Systems to Post-Coloniality: Teaching the History of European Imperial Encounters in the Modern Age.” Radical History Review 71 (Spring 1998): 150-163.

Yücel Demirer, “Shifts in the Classroom Environment After September 11: Notes from Islam Classes of the Mainland Security United States.”  Radical History Review 99 (Fall 2007): 227-241.

Bruce Dorsey, “History of Manhood in America, 1750–1920.” Radical History Review 64 (Winter 1996): 19-30.

Lisa Duggan, “Gender and Cultural History.”  Radical History Review 64 (Winter 1996): 31-37.

Miriam Formanek-Brunell and Lidwien Kapteijns, “History in Global Perspective: Cultures in Contact and Conflict.” 
Radical History Review 59 (Spring 1994): 129-135.

Michael A. Gomez, “African Identity and Slavery in the Americas.” Radical History Review 75 (Fall 1999): 111-120.

Greg Grandin, “Teaching Five Hundred Years of Struggle.” Radical History Review 70 (Winter 1998): 106-118.

Deborah E. Harkness. “Beyond Midwives: Teaching Gender, Science, and Medicine from Antiquity to the Present.” Radical History Review 74 (Spring 1999): 162-172.

Leila Hudson, “Beyond Culture: Teaching Histories of Islam.” Radical History Review 86 (Spring 2003): 175-182.

Jesse Lemisch, “Syllabus: The Bicentennial of the American Revolution.”  Radical History Review 11 (Spring 1976): 61-62.

Mark Naison, “Course Syllabus: Afro-American History 1512–1865.” Radical History Review 9-10 (Fall/Winter 1975): 92-95.

Julio César Pino, “History of Civilization I.” Radical History Review 59 (Spring 1994): 136-141.

Geoffrey Reaume, “Mad People’s History.” Radical History Review 94 (Winter 2006): 170-182.

Kevin Reilly, “Notes on Revising a Radical World History Textbook.” Radical History Review 39 (Fall 1987): 124-130.

Pete Sigal, “To Cross the Sexual Borderlands: The History of Sexuality in the Americas.” Radical History Review Winter 82 (2002): 171-185.

Mrinalini Sinha, “Teaching Imperialism as a Social Formation.” Radical History Review 67 (Winter 1997): 175-186;

Ulrike Strasser and Heidi Tinsman, “Engendering World History.” Radical History Review 91 (Winter 2005): 151-164.

James H. Sweet, “Teaching the Modern African Diaspora: A Case Study of the Atlantic Slave Trade.” Radical History Review 77 (Spring 2000): 106-122.

John Thornton, “Teaching Africa in an Atlantic Perspective.” Radical History Review 77 (Spring 2000): 123-134.

Villa-Flores, “Religion, Politics, and Salvation: Latin American Millenarian Movements.” Radical History Review 99 (Fall 2007): 242-251.

Merry Wiesner-Hanks, “Women’s History and World History Courses.” Radical History Review 91 (Winter 2005): 133-150.

Alex Zukas, “Teaching the Age of Empire.” Radical History Review 67 (Winter 1997): 132-146.

 

C. Interviews

 

Elaine Abelson, David Abraham, and Marjorie Murphy, “Interview with Joan Scott.” Radical History Review 45 (Fall 1989): 41-59.

Pat Aufderheide, “Interview with Natalie Davis.”
Radical History Review 28-30 (1984): 136-139.

Judy Coffein and Robert Harding.  “Politics, Progeny and French History: An Interview With Natalie Zemon Davis.” Radical History Review 24 (Fall 1980): 115-139.

[Natalie Davis] Pat Aufderheide, “Interview with Natalie Davis.”
Radical History Review 28-30 (1984): 136-139.

[Natalie Zemon Davis] Judy Coffein and Robert Harding.  “Politics, Progeny and French History: An Interview With Natalie Zemon Davis.” Radical History Review 24 (Fall 1980): 115-139.

Nelcya Delanoë, “France Celebrates the Bicentennial: Interview with Madeleine Rebérioux.”  Radical History Review 48 (Fall 1990): 134-141.

[Laurent Dubois] Gary Wilder, “Telling Histories: A Conversation with Laurent Dubois and Greg Grandin.” Radical History Review 115 (Winter 2013): 11-25.

[Carlo Ginzburg] Keith Luria and Romulo Gandolfo, “Carlo Ginzburg: An Interview.” Radical History Review 35 (Spring 1986): 89-111.

[Greg Grandin] Gary Wilder, “Telling Histories: A Conversation with Laurent Dubois and Greg Grandin.” Radical History Review 115 (Winter 2013): 11-25.

[Eric Hobsbawm] Pat Thane and Liz Lunbeck, “An Interview With Eric Hobsbawm,” Radical History Review 19 (Winter 1978-79): 111-131.

Keith Luria and Romulo Gandolfo, “Carlo Ginzburg: An Interview.” Radical History Review 35 (Spring 1986): 89-111.

Michael Merrill, “An Interview with E.P.Thompson.” Radical History Review 12 (Fall 1976): 4-25.

[Madeleine Rebérioux] Nelcya Delanoë, “France Celebrates the Bicentennial: Interview with Madeleine Rebérioux.”  Radical History Review 48 (Fall 1990): 134-141.

[Joann Scott] Elaine Abelson, David Abraham, and Marjorie Murphy, “Interview with Joan Scott.” Radical History Review 45 (Fall 1989): 41-59.

Pat Thane and Liz Lunbeck, “An Interview With Eric Hobsbawm,” Radical History Review 19 (Winter 1978-79): 111-131.

[E.P. Thompson] Michael Merrill, “An Interview with E.P.Thompson.” Radical History Review 12 (Fall 1976): 4-25.

Gary Wilder, “Telling Histories: A Conversation with Laurent Dubois and Greg Grandin.” Radical History Review 115 (Winter 2013): 11-25.

 

D. Obituarites

Paul Buhle, “C.L.R. James, Revolutionary Historian, 1901–1988.” Radical History Review 46-47 (1990): 445-446.

Eric Hobsbawm, “E. P. Thompson.” Radical History Review 58 (Winter 1994): 157-159.

Teresa Meade, “Eric Hobsbawm, 1917 – 2012.”  Radical History Review 116 (Spring 2013): 197-198.

Michael Merrill, “E. P. Thompson: In Solidarity.” Radical History Review 58 (Winter 1994): 152-156.

L. Webb, “A Thoroughly English Dissident.” Radical History Review 58 (Winter 1994): 160-164