November 2015
- Bryan A. Banks, “‘Franklin is Dead’: Celebrity, Genius, and Religion in the Age of Revolutions”
- Jerry Watkins, “Queering the Fourth of July: The Hillyers, Emma Jones, and the Language of Revolution”
- Michael Ruse, “The Darwinian Revolution: Was There a Revolution? Was it Darwinian?”
December 2015
- Cindy Ermus, “Plague Cultures: The Peste of Provence and the Glorious Revolution”
- Erica Johnson, “Rosaries and Revolution: Father Philemon, Catholicism, and the Haitian Revolution”
- Joshua Meeks, “Counter-Revolutionary Corsica: Pasquale Paoli and Diplomacy in the British Mediterranean”
- Bryan A. Banks, “On Benedict Anderson’s Passing: Revolutions, Time, and Imagined Communities”
- Elizabeth Dobson Jones, “Molecules in Mammoths: Revolutions in Paleontology and Resurrections of the Past”
- Joe Perry, “Christmas: A Revolutionary Holiday?”
- Richard J. Siegler III, “Napoleon’s Revolutionary Crown: The Unapologetic Rehabilitation of Hereditary Power”
January 2016
- Robert Taber, “The Mystery of Marie Rose: Family, Politics, and the Origins of the Haitian Revolution”
- Bryan A. Banks, “Reflections on Revolutions at the AHA”
- Kevin Gannon, “The Civil War as a Settler-Colonial Revolution”
- Marlene L. Daut, “‘Genocidal Imaginings’ in the Era of the Haitian Revolution”
February 2016
- David Andress, “Navigating Feelings in the French Revolution”
- Kristen Block, “Translating Mercier in the Atlantic World: Avengers of the Future, Past, and Present”
- Jack R. Censer, “Debating Modern Revolution: A Note on Marxism and Nationalism”
- Erin Zavitz, “The 2015-16 Haitian Elections: Politicizing Dessalines and the Memory of the Haitian Revolution”
- Scott Craig, “Transporting Convicts: The Impact of the American Revolution on the Pacific”
- Tim Compeau, “Dishonoring the Loyalists”
- Zachary M. Stoltzfus, “The Legal Origins of the French Revolution: The Case of Jean-Baptiste Treilhard”
March 2016
- Blake Smith, “Ruins and Revolution: Volney, Palmyra, and ISIS”
- Kacy Tillman, “Loyalist Women and the Fight for the Right to Entry”
- Katlyn Carter, “State Secrecy in the Age of Revolutions”
- Justin J. Masucci, “Balancing Independence and Imperialism: The Panamanian Revolution of 1903″
- Sarah Crabtree, “Quaker, Whaler, Coward, Spy!: William Rotch and the Age of Revolutions”
April 2016
- Naghmeh Sohrabi, “Books as Revolutionary Objects in Iran”
- Lindsay Chervinsky, “Washington’s Presidency: How the Revolutionary War Shaped the Executive Branch”
- Bryan A. Banks, “The Limits of Religious Liberty: Rabaut Saint-Étienne and the French Revolution”
- Rachel Engl, “Masculinity in the Making: Exploring Manhood within the Continental Army”
- Editor interview, “Blogging the Age of Revolutions,” Process (April 28,2016).
May 2016
- Christopher Taylor, “The Black Jacobins: From Great Book to Classic?”
- Blake Smith, “The Citizen-Sultan? A Jacobin Club in India”
- Book Spotlight, Jack Censer’s Debating Modern Revolution
- Bryan A. Banks, “‘New Narratives of Haiti’ at H-Haiti” with excerpt of Erin Zavitz’s “Haiti’s Revolutionary Calendar”
- Atlantic Revolutions Reading List
June 2016
- American Revolution Reading List
- Jonathyne Briggs, “Before Hamilton: Staging the French Revolution in the 1970s”
- French Revolution Reading List
- Erin Zavitz, “Revolutions in the Classroom: Digital Humanities and the U.S. History Survey”
- Haitian Revolution Reading List
- Steven Pincus, “Placing the American Revolution in Global Perspective”
- Paul Clammer, “Touring the Haitian Revolution: A Photo Journal”
- Book Spotlight: 2 Works by Julia Gaffield
July 2016
- Cindy Ermus, “The Cuban Revolution and Me”
- Michelle Chase, “Cuban Revolution Reading List”
- Alex Sayf Cummings, “Information: The Revolution that Didn’t Happen”
- Abby Broughton, Kelsey Corlett-Rivera, & Nathan Dize, “Lessons from A Colony In Crisis: Collaborative Pedagogy and the Digital Humanities”
- William A. Booth, “Curating the Pantheon in Mexico: History and Memory”
- Stephan Fender, “A Revolution Within the Revolución: Global Labor Politics in Mexico City”
August 2016
- Book Spotlight: Caitlin Fitz’s Our Sister Republics
September 2016
- Rebecca Dowd Geoffroy-Schwinden, “A French (R)evolution in Music?”
- James Alexander Dun, “Elizabeth Drinker’s Haitian Revolution”
- Book Spotlight: James Alexander Dun’s Dangerous Neighbors
- Richard J. Siegler III, “The French Revolution and Napoleon Collection at FSU”
- Jose Ragas, “The Revolutionary Roots of Modern ID Cards”
October 2016
- Bryan A. Banks, “Podcasting Revolution: A Revolution in Audio?”
- “Podcasting Revolution: An Interview with Liz Covart”
- “Podcasting Revolution: An Interview with Mike Duncan”
- Jonathan Dusenbury, “Slavery and the Revolutionary Histories of 1848″
- Bryan A. Banks, “Bearing Arms in the Age of Revolution Panel Introduction”
- Robert H. Churchill, “‘Palladium of Liberty’: The Militia and the Right of Revolution in England and America”
- Noah Shusterman, “Bearing Arms and Arming Citizens in the French Revolution”
- Andrew Fagal, “The Promise of American Repeating Arms, 1791-1821″
- Eliga Gould, “Bordering on the Frivolous? The Right to Bear Arms Today and Yesterday”
- “Maoism at the Grassroots: An Interview with Jeremy Brown and Matthew D. Johnson”
- Book Spotlight: Maoism at the Grassroots
- Caroline Wigginton, “Women and Revolution: A Horror Story”
November 2016
- Bryan A. Banks, “Conspiracy and Paranoia in the Age of Trump”
- Milosz Cybowski, “Poland’s Forgotten Novembrists: Youth and a Failed Uprising, 1830″
- Bryan A. Banks and Cindy Ermus, “AoR Anniversary: Celebrating Our First Revolution Around the Sun”
- Bertie Mandelblatt, “Trans-Imperial Geographies of Rum: Production and Circulation”
- Jordan Smith “The False Hope of Corn Stalk Rum During the American Revolution”
December 2016
- Noel Plack, “Intoxication and the French Revolution”
- Frederick H. Smith, “Rum, Oaths, and Slave Uprisings in the Age of Revolution”
- Lauren Arrington, “One Woman’s Irish Revolution: Reading the Bolshevik Revolution in a British Jail”
January 2017
- Nathan Perl-Rosenthal, “Plotting Revolution, Part I: History’s Plots”
- Nathan Perl-Rosenthal, “Plotting Revolution, Part II: Politics of the Past”
- Nathan Perl-Rosenthal, “Plotting Revolution, Part III: Histories of the Present”
- Michelle Chase, “The Making of Fidel Castro: The International Mass Media and the Rebel Army”
- Gordon Barnes, “Revolutionary Jamaica: Interpreting the Politics of the Baptist War”
- Gordon Barnes, “Counter-Revolutionary Jamaica: Contesting Freedom after Slavery”
- J. Michelle Coghlan, “Afterlives of the Paris Commune”
February 2017
- Book Spotlight, “J. Michelle Coghlan’s Sensational Internationalism”
- Hailey Maxwell, “Decapitation in the ‘Low’ Surrealist Revolution”
- Clare Siviter, “Power and the People: Theater in France, 1789–1815″
- Michael J. Bustamante, “#CubanRevolutionSyllabus Introduction”
- Rashauna Johnson, “Slavery’s Metropolis: The Place of Enslaved People in a Revolutionary Age”
March 2017
- Book Spotlight, “Rashauna Johnson’s Slavery’s Metropolis“
- Eric Brandom, “Imagining the Worker’s Revolution: The Case of Georges Sorel”
- Richard D. Brown, “What was Revolutionary in 1776?”
- Book Spotlight, “Brown’s Self-Evident Truths”
- Javier Puente, “Making Peru’s Sendero Luminoso, Part I: The Mega Niño of 1982-3″
- Javier Puente, “Making Peru’s Sendero Luminoso, Part II: The Geography and Ecology of Civil War”
April 2017
- Interview: “Getting into Marie Antoinette’s Head: Will Bashor on Writing Public History”
- Bryan A. Banks, “Revolutionary Review: Armitage’s Civil Wars: A History in Ideas”
- Kacy Tillman, “Writing Rape in the American Revolution”
- Kate Marsden, “Making Modern Gender Roles: The Case of Married Nuns in the French Revolution”
- Jacqueline Couti, “Masculine Desire and Gothic Sex in Post-Revolutionary Caribbean Literature, 1806-1835″
- Scott Larson, “What’s in a Revolution? Revival Sexualities in the Age of Revolutions”
May 2017
- Elyssa Gage, “Taking Haiti to the Court of Empire: Blanchet v. Boyer, 1826-1827″
- E.G. Gallwey, “Ideological Origins at 50: Power, Rights, and the Rise and Fall of Free States”
- Rachel Engl, “Review of Van Buskirk’s Standing in Their Own Light: African American Patriots in the American Revolution”
- Nathan H. Dize, “Framing Slavery in Eighteenth-Century French Portraiture at the Château des Ducs de Bretagne”
June 2017
- Thomas S. Kidd, “A ‘Thorough Deist?’ The Religious Life of Benjamin Franklin”
- Lynn Clement, “The Commune’s Marianne: An Art History of Le Pétroleuse”
- Julia M. Gossard, “Prix de Moralité:” The Inculcation of Young French Citizens”
- Chase Barney, “Land and Liberation: The Legacy of Zimbabwe’s Revolutionary Struggle”
July 2017
- Shira Lurie, “Liberty Poles and the Two American Revolutions”
- “Digitization is the Order of the Day at the Newberry Library”
- Kevin Gannon, “Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of the Oppressed, and a Revolutionary Praxis for Education, Part I”
- Kevin Gannon, “Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of the Oppressed, and a Revolutionary Praxis for Education, Part II”
- Tom Cutterham, “Anarchy and the American Revolution”
- Xavier Marechaux, “Married Priests in France, 1789-1815″
August 2017
- Julia M. Gossard, “Child Gangs and Motherly Duty at the Onset of Revolution”
September 2017
- “(In)forming Revolution Series: Information Networks in the Age of Revolutions” Introduction
- Alyssa Zuercher Reichardt, “Information, Empire, and Roads to Revolutions”
- Joseph M. Adelman, “‘Meer Mechanics’ No More: How Printers Shaped Information in the Revolutionary Age”
- Rob Taber, “Rumor and Report in Affiches Américaines: Saint-Domingue’s American Revolution”
- Jordan Taylor, “Information and Ideology in Henri-Antoine Mézière’s Canadian Age of Revolutions”
- James Alexander Dun, “Le Cap to Carlisle: News of the Early Haitian Revolution in the United States”
- Melanie Conroy, “Visualizing Social Networks: Palladio and the Encyclopédistes, Pt I”
- Melanie Conroy, “Visualizing Social Networks: Palladio and the Encyclopédistes, Part II”
October 2017
- Cristina Soriano, “Newspapers, Sedition, and the Power of Public Opinion in Late-Colonial Venezuela”
- “Information Networks in the Age of Revolutions Bibliography”
- Russian Revolution Reading List
- Ananda Cohen-Aponte, “Genealogies of Revolutionary Iconoclasm, from Tupac Amaru to Central Park, Pt I”
- Ananda Cohen-Aponte, “Genealogies of Revolutionary Iconoclasm, from Tupac Amaru to Central Park, Pt II”
- “Native American Revolutions” Series Introduction
- Karim M. Tiro, “Deconflicting Iroquoia”
- David Andrew Nichols, “The Economic Revolution in Indian Country”
- Andrew K. Frank, “Indigenous South Florida and the American Revolution”
November 2017
- Kathleen DuVal, “Chickasaws and the American Revolution”
- Kate Fullagar, “Cherokees in the Revolutionary Era: A Biographical Perspective”
- Michael Lynch, “Manliness and the Making of the Revolutionary War in Cherokee Country”
- Michael A. McDonnell, “The War in the West: The American Revolution in the pays d’en haut”
- Kate Fullagar and Michael A. McDonnell, “Facing Empire: Indigenous Experiences in a Revolutionary Age”
- Jason W. Herbert, “Native American Revolutions Bibliography”
December 2017
- Michael Bustamante and Jennifer Lambe, “In Fidel’s Shadow: Cuban History (and Futures), One Year On”
- Cindy Ermus and Bryan A. Banks, “A Second Revolution Around the Sun”
- “Fear, Reverence, Terror: An Interview with Carlo Ginzburg”
- Lynn Hunt and Jack R. Censer, “Think Globally, Act Historically: Teaching the French Revolution and Napoleon”
- Bryan A. Banks and Erica Johnson, “Religion and the French Revolution: A Global Perspective”
January 2018
- Gideon Fujiwara, “(In)forming Meiji: 2 Revolutions in 19th-century Japan”
- Alejandro H. Morea, “From Tucumán with Love: Revolution and Marriage in the Argentine War for Independence”
- María A. Cabrera Arús, “For Sale: Cuba’s Revolutionary Figured World”
- Jorge Sánchez Morales, “The French Rural Revolution, 1789-1793″
February 2018
- Jonathan Singerton, “From Lexington to Vienna: Reporting Revolution in an Absolutist State”
- Aidan Beatty, “Social Revolutions Beyond the Volga: Egypt and Ireland”
- “Race and Revolution” Series Introduction
- Bryan A. Banks, Katlyn Carter, and Rob Taber, “Consortium on the Revolutionary Era: 3 Reflections”
March 2018
- Mitch Kachun, “Crispus Attucks: American Revolutionary Hero?”
- Jason McGraw, “Race, or The Last Colonial Struggle in Latin America”
- Bronwen Everill, “Demarginalizing West Africa in the Age of Revolutions”
- Erica Johnson, “White Creole Identity on Trial: The Haitian Revolution and Refugees in Louisiana”
April 2018
- Charlton Yingling, “Lesec, from Brave Mulato into Blackness?: Defection to France and Spanish Racial Regression”
- Nathan H. Dize, “Monumental Louverture: French/Haitian Statuary and the Commemoration of Abolition”
- Chelsea Stieber, “Beyond Race: Civil War, Regionalism, andIdeology in Early Post-Independence Haiti”
- Aurélia Aubert, “Challenging Lafayette’s Legacy: Race and Republicanism in France and the United States”
- Jenna Nigro, “The Revolution of 1848 in Senegal: Emancipation and Representation”
May 2018
- Oleski Miranda Navarro, “The Periodical Patria and Racial Mobilization in the Last War for Cuban Independence”
- Frédéric Spillemaeker, “A Hidden Caribbean Revolution? Race and Revolution in Venezuela, 1789-1817″
- Silvia Escanilla Huerta, “Indigenous People and Peruvian Independence: A Polemical Historiography”
- Elena McGrath, ”National Peasants: The Revolutionary Politics of Identity in MNR’s Bolivia”
June 2018
- Mike Follert, “From Phrygian Cap to Foulard: Looking Back on the Festivals of the Revolution, 1793-1989″
- Niels Eichhorn, “Revolutions: A Thematic Approach to the World Civilizations Survey”
- Jorge Camacho, “The Discourse of Sacrifice in Cuba’s Wars of Independence, 1868-1898″
- Hannah Williams, “Artists in Paris: Digital Mapping and the Cultural Geography of the 18th-Century Art World”
- Christopher M. Church, “Disasters, Citizenship, and the Janus-Faced Nature of the French Revolution”
July 2018
- Joshua Meeks, “Recovering Refugees from 1794 Toulon to Today”
- Naghmeh Sohrabi, “Revolution and Arab Existentialism in the Era of Decolonization: An Interview with Yoav Di-Capua”
- Matthew Rainbow Hale,“Defining Democracy, Challenging ‘Democrats'”
- Katlyn Carter, “The Invention of Representative Democracy”
- Dirk Alkemade, “Radical Republicans and Early-Modern Democrats: Notes on Palmer’s ‘Dutch Case'”
August 2018
- Micah Alpaugh, “The Friends of Freedom and Atlantic Democratization”
- Bryan A. Banks, “Forgetting the Faithful: R.R. Palmer’s Age of Democratic Revolution”
- Pamela C. Nogales C., “The Divided Legacy of Democracy: The Transformation of the Liberal Political Tradition in the Nineteenth Century”
September 2018
- Michelle Orihel, “
#WomenAlsoKnowDemocracy: Women, Print Culture, and Transatlantic Revolution in 1790s America” - Terence Renaud, “An Empty Gesture of Resistance: A History”
- Seth Cotlar, “The Challenges of Writing a History of Nostalgia Set in the Age of Democratic Revolutions”
- Christopher M. Church, “Hurricane Maria One Year Later: “Big Water” and the Spectre of Colonialism”
- Meghan Roberts, “Role-Playing the French Revolution, Reacting to the Past in the Classroom”
October 2018
- Dane Morrison, “Exporting the Revolution: American Revolutionaries in the Indies Trade”
- “‘Making the World Over’: An Interview with a New Age of Revolution Digital Resource”
- Michael Leroy Oberg, “Texas and the Great White-Washing of the American Revolution”
- Robert D. Taber and Charlton W. Yingling “Free Communities of Color in the Revolutionary Caribbean”
- Bryan A. Banks, “A Genealogy of Terror: An Interview with Ronald Schechter”
November 2018
- Bryan A. Banks and Cindy Ermus, “A Third Revolution Around the Sun“
December 2018
- Elena Schneider, “The Struggle of Cuba’s Black Soldiers in an Age of Imperial Wars”
- Anna Lively, “Voynich’s The Gadfly: Exploring Connections between Revolutionary Russia and Ireland”
- Andrew W.M. Smith, “The Gilets Jaunes Protest: A Grand Refusal in an Age of Commuter Democracy”
- Felix Schürmann, “‘A hot dinner and a bloody supper’ St. Helena’s Christmas Rebellions of 1783 and 1811″
January 2019
- Robert Taber, “You Can’t Teach the Age of Revolutions without the Black Intellectual Tradition”
- Aaron R. Hanlon, “Finding Genres of Revolution in the Classroom”
- Bryan A. Banks, “The Power of ‘S’: Diversity and Inclusion in the Age of Revolutions Classroom”
February 2019
- Michaël Roy, “Pamphlet of Protest: Revolution, Exile, and Abolition in Chautard’s Escapes from Cayenne”
- Christine Haynes, “The Occupation of France After Napoleon, or Confessions of a Cultural-Turned-Military Historian”
- Abraham Gibson, “Data Science and the 3-Point Revolution in the NBA”
March 2019
- Kimberly Alexander, “Purchasing Patriotism: Politicization of Shoes, 1760s-1770s”
- Zachary Conn, “Indian Peace Medals and Monarchical Symbolism in Early US Diplomatic Culture”
- Nicole Mahoney, “Presidential Plateau: Putting French Gentility Center Stage”
- Ashli White, “Ribbons and Revolutions: Rethinking Cockades in the Atlantic”
April 2019
- Tabitha McIntosh and Grégory Pierrot, “Henry Christophe Rebound: Juste Chanlatte’s Lost Play ‘Néhri’ and the Afterlife of the Kingdom of Haiti”
- Tabitha McIntosh, “White Ghosts and Silver Bullets: Imaginary Objects and the Haitian Revolution”
- Jacob Ivey, “The Zulu Iklwa: Evidence of an African Military Revolution in the Nineteenth Century”
- Michele Currie Navakas, “Coral, Labor, Slavery, and Silence in the Archives”
- Thomas Lecaque, “Archives Lost: The French Revolution and the Destruction of Medieval French Manuscripts”
May 2019
- Marguerite Helmers, “Irish Autograph Albums: The Arts of Resistance”
- Jayson Maurice Porter, “Growing Pains: Pest Control and Agrochemicals in Mexico Between Revolutions, 1920-1940″
- Siobhan Meï, “Madras and the Poetics of Sartorial Resistance in Caribbean Literature”
June 2019
- Salih Emre Gercek, “Why did Edmund Burke call the French Revolution a Democratic Revolution?”
- Katlyn Carter, “Democracy and Truth: An Interview with Sophia Rosenfeld”
- Kevin Duong, “Flora Tristan: Radical Socialist, Feminist, and First Internationalist”
- Emma Prevignano, “The Metric System: An Enduring Revolutionary Dream”
July 2019
- Ben Marsh, “Gaming and Framing the Age of Revolution (1775-1848) in Thirty Figures”
- Maxime Dagenais, “Across Borders: The Canadian Rebellion and Jacksonian America”
- Daniel Arenas, “Affecting Revolutionary Justice: A Review of We. The Revolution”
- Zachary M. Stoltzfus, “We. The Revolution: A Social History Review”
- Robert D. Taber, “Surviving the Revolution: We. the Revolution and RTTP”
August 2019
- Roxanne Panchasi, “Feel the Fear and Teach the Revolution Anyway: Notes from a Historian of Post-1945 France”
- “Tracing the Aftermath of the American Revolution: An Interview on the Patriot Paths Protect”
- Nathan H. Dize, “Haiti and the Colonial Predicament of Language in Zamoyski’s Napoleon, A Life”
- George Lawson, “The New – Old – Age of Revolutions”
September 2019
- Chanelle Reinhardt, “The Balloon as a Symbol of the Republic”
- Pernille Røge, “Economistes and the Reinvention of Empire: France in the Americas and Africa, c. 1750-1802″
- Jeffrey Ostler, “The Great Fear of 1776″
October 2019
- J.L. Tomlin, “‘As Arbitrary as the Grand Turke:’ Religious Othering and the First American Revolution”
- Brent S. Sirota, “The Other Separation of Church and State: Anglican Ecclesiologies in the Revolutionary Atlantic”
- Jonathan Den Hartog, “Religious Disestablishment in the Era of the American Revolution”
November 2019
- Catherine O’Donnell, “Rebellious Obedience: Choosing Catholicism in the Age of Revolution”
- Corinne Gressang, “Useful Nuns and Revolutionary Possibility”
- Joseph Harmon, “Revolutionary Secularization as Catholic Renewal”
- Cindy Ermus and Bryan A. Banks, “A Fourth Revolution Around the Sun”
December 2019
- Erica Johnson Edwards, “Before Papillon: French Guiana and Deported Catholic Clergy”
- Blake Smith, “The Sacred French Revolution: Emile Durkheim, Lynn Hunt, and Historians”
- Shaun Blanchard, “Rioting Over the Virgin Mary’s Belt: Enlightenment, Reform, and the Religion of the People in Tuscany”
- Thomas Lecaque, “The Last Crusade: Napoleon and the Knights Hospitaller”
- Jason Pearl, “The Real-Life Aeronauts”
January 2020
- Noah Shusterman, “Scenes from Hong Kong: Revolution of Our Time, Histories in Real Time”
- Todd Webb, “Revolution and Counterrevolution Among the Methodists in Early Nineteenth Century British North America”
- Jennifer Popiel, “St. Philomena(‘s) Remains: Religion, Sentiment, and Patriarchy Undermined in Post-Revolutionary France”
- Ian Coller, “Islam and the Revolutionary Age”
February 2020
- James Sidbury, “African Americans and the Problems of Faith in the Age of Revolution”
- Arturo Chang, “Anáhuac & Rome: Converging Indigeneity and Religiosity in Mexico’s Republican Moment”
- Malick W. Ghachem, “The Age of Revolutions and the Impeachment of President Trump: A Post-Mortem”
- Emily Snyder, “Miskitu Moravians in Mesoamerica: Indigeneity, Faith, and Revolution in the 1980s”
- Markus Weidler, “Faith in a Time of Fascism: Heidegger’s Revolutionary Charm”
March 2020
- Christopher N. Phillips, “The Unquiet Hymnbook in the Early United States”
- Ray Ball, “Puritan Self-Examination, Faith, and Conflict: A Post and a Poem”
- Bryan A. Banks, “Religious Visions of Revolutions Past, or ‘Faith in Revolution’ Wrap-Up”
- Rachel Herrmann, “No Useless Mouth: Periodizing Native Americans’ War for Independence”
- Adam A. Blackler, “After the Herero ‘Uprising’: Child Separation and Racial Apartheid in German Southwest Africa”
April 2020
- Thomas Furse, “A Modern Military Revolution: How Airpower Reshaped the Global Diplomatic Order”
- Carrie Glenn, “The Economic Authority of Cap-Français’ Marchandes de Couleur on the Eve of Haitian Independence”
- Weiting Guo, “Living through the Revolution: A Chinese Village Man’s Reflections in the Early Twentieth Century”
- Samantha Wesner, “What Moves the Monster?: Anthropomorphizing Revolution from Darwin’s Colossus to Frankenstein’s Creature”
- Robin Wright, “Give Me Liberty or Give Me COVID-19: A History”
- Andrew R. Detch, “Will the Real George Washington Please Stand Up?”
May 2020
- Jeffrey Wasserstrom, “Fiction, Films, and the Hong Kong Protests of 2014-2019: Three Vignettes”
- Robert H. Blackman, “Sovereignty at Stake in 1789: The French Revolution Begins”
- Crystal Nicole Eddins, “The First Ayitian Revolution”
- Rachel Douglas, “Making The Black Jacobins”
June 2020
- Catherine J. Frieman, “‘Revolutions So Remote’: Revolutionary Thinking and Archaeological Inquiry”
- Blake Smith, “The (Failed) French Revolution against Medical Expertise and Foucault’s Philosophy of History”
- Kerry Sinanan, “BLM 2020: Breathing, Resistance, and the War Against Enslavement”
- “Reading the History of Slavery: 3 Experts Offer Book Recommendations”
- Molly Nebiolo, “Recreating Revolutionary Cities: An Interview with Serena Zabin”
July 2020
- Erica Johnson Edwards, “Unclaimed Runaways and the Power Struggles of Colonial Haiti: Part I, Legislating Nègres Épaves”
- Erica Johnson Edwards, “Unclaimed Runaways and the Power Struggles of Colonial Haiti: Part II, Effects of War on Nègres Epaves”
- Erica Johnson Edwards, “Unclaimed Runaways and the Power Struggles of Colonial Haiti: Part III, Who Were the Nègres Épaves?”
- Ernesto Bassi and Javier Puente, “A Revolution in Knowledge: The Intellectual Legacy of Visa Holders in the United States. A Permanent Work In Progress.”
- Will Little, “Testimonies of Trauma: Enduring Tetanus in Colonial Haiti, 1781-1786”
- Tom Zoellner, “Jamaica on Fire: Haiti and the Problem of Inspiration”
- “Age of Revolutions Webinar on Peru’s Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement”
August 2020
- Vincent Brown, “Routes of Reverberation: Afterlives of Tacky’s Revolt”
- Alyssa Goldstein Sepinwall, “Liberté, Equality, #ICantBreathe! Teaching the Age of Revolutions Using the NBA’s 2020 Summer Restart”
- Asheesh Kapur Siddique, “How Not to Read Bernard Bailyn: The Current Conservative Appropriation of a Monumental Historian Gets Him Wrong”
- Caitlyn Kelly, “Hamilton and the Bibliographical Revolution in the Classroom”
- Ángela Vergara, “Teaching Chile’s Road to Socialism: Topics, Questions, and Assignments”
- Jamie L.H. Goodall, “Pirates of the American Revolution in the Chesapeake Bay: Joseph Wheland Jr. and the Loyalist Picaroons”
- Nathan H. Dize, “Vénus Noire: An Interview with Robin Mitchell”
September 2020
- Gregory S. Brown, “Andrew Dickson White and America’s Unfinished (French) Revolution)”
- Iker Itoiz Ciáurriz, “Hobsbawm on Nationalism and Revolution”
- Erica Johnson Edwards, “L’Ouverture High School: Race, Place, and Memory in Oklahoma”
October 2020
- Kasper Rathjen, “‘He who wielded Medusa’s head on his shield’: A Danish Historic-Poetic Perspective on the French Revolution”
- James Carter, “The Falls of Shanghai”
- Gina Anne Tam, “What Makes a Language Policy Revolutionary?”
- Bronwen Everill, “‘Not Made by Slaves’: A Layman’s Political Economy of Ethical Capitalism”
- Alexis Palomino Navarrete, “Sobre el concepto de despertar social: el reclamo por otra soberanía en las revueltas del 18 de octubre en Chile”
- Amanda C. Waterhouse, “‘La Esperanza de América Latina’: The Ongoing Student Revolution in Colombia”
November 2020
- Miguel La Serna, “‘I Will Return and I Will Be Millions!’ The Many Lives of Túpac Amaru”
- Julia Kornberg & Pablo Pryluka, “The Hegemonic Pact and Radical Politics in Argentina”
- “Scholars of Peru and Latin America Express their Concern about the Political Crisis and Condemn the Parliamentary Coup in Peru”
- Tyson Leuchter, “Les Aristocrates, Mangeurs de Peuple: On Zombies, Revolution, and Netflix’s La Révolution”
- Julio César Guanche, “‘La gloria es suya y nadie puede quitársela’: Estatuas, monumentos y la memoria del racismo en Cuba”
- Gonzalo Romero Sommer, “Peru’s Hydraulic Revolution”
- “A Fifth Revolution Around the Sun”
- Julie Gibbings, “Unfinished Revolutions and the Politics of Postponement in Guatemala”
- Mateo Jarquín, “Reckoning with Revolution in Nicaragua”
- Rohan Chatterjee, “Velasco’s Peru: A Return to a Revolution”
December 2020
- J.L. Tomlin, “’They Chase Specters’”: The Irrational, the Political, and Fear of Elections in Colonial Pennsylvania”
- Farren E. Yero, “An Eradication: Empire, Enslaved Children, and the Whitewashing of Vaccine History”
- Miriam Franchina, “Italians Crossing the Caribbean: Two Case Studies”
January 2021
- J. Patrick Mullins, “”That great Sacrifice was made, through sad Necessity’: Charles Willson Peale’s William Pitt and the Emblemology of Tyrannicide”
- Kelsa Pellettiere, “Friendship and Sociability: A Reexamination of Benjamin Franklin’s Friendship with Madame Brillon de Jouy”
- Abby Chandler, “Loyalists and the Birth of Libraries in New England: The Marriage of Martin and Abigail Howard”
- Alexandra Mairs-Kessler, “Land Grants, Religious Exemptions, and Aid on the Ground: The Role of Local Government in the Resettlement of Loyalist Refugees after the American Revolution”
- Beatrice de Graaf, “Red, White, and Blood: White Terror and Great Fear, 1789-2021”
- Marco Cabrera Geserick, “Conquest Without War: U.S. Expansionism, the Age of Revolution, and the First Filibuster”
- Luiza Duarte Caetano, “Beneath the Hardened Lava: Images of Nature and Revolutionary Violence in Germaine de Staël’s ‘Épître au malheur'”
- Ethan Soefje, “Testing the Narrative of Prussian Decline: The Rhineland Campaign of 1793”
- Christine Adams, “4 Cautionary Tales from the French Revolution for Today”
- Kelly Summers, “A Cross-Channel Marriage in Limbo: Alexandre d’Arblay, Frances Burney, and the Risks of Revolutionary Migration”
- Frances Bell, “‘Thrown into this Hospitable Land’: Saint-Dominguans in Virginia, 1796-1870”
- Jacob Ivey, “‘Born out of Shaka’s spear’: The Zulu Iklwa and Perceptions of Military Revolution in the Nineteenth Century”
- Klaas Tindemans, “Robert Macaire and the Code Civil: The Political Economy of French Theatre after Bonaparte”
- Doina Pasca Harsanyi, “Brigands, Social Bandits, Freedom Fighters: the Portrayal of anti-Napoleonic Rebels in the Historiography of Napoleonic Italy”
February 2021
- Suzanne Krebsbach, “Anne Rossignol, Madame Dumont, and Dr. John Schmidt Junior: Community and Accommodation in Charleston, South Carolina, 1790 – 1840”
- Lindsay Ayling, “Choosing June: Did France’s Second Republic Intentionally Spark a Class War?”
- Joel Herman, “Transnational News and the Irish Free Trade Crisis of 1779”
- Matthew Kerry, “Spain 1934: Fake News and the Revolution that Never Was”
- Benno Weiner, “Socialist Revolution without Class Struggle? Forging a United Front on the Ethnocultural Borderlands of Early-Maoist China”
March 2021
- María Laura Mazzoni, “José Andrés Pacheco de Melo in the Independence of the United Provinces of Rio de la Plata”
- Blake Smith, “The French Revolution Against Caste”
- Julie Harwick, “A Sexual Revolution in the Eighteenth Century?”
- Jeff Horn, “The Making of a Terrorist: Alexandre Rousselin and the French Revolution”
- Julia Gaffield, “Sovereignty and the Haitian Revolution in Jean Casimir’s The Haitians: A Decolonial History”
April 2021
- Alessandro Bonvini, “Patriots without Borders: Towards an Atlantic History of the Risorgimento during the Age of Revolutions”
- Adrián Lerner Patrón, “Moving Images of Revolution: A Critical Forum on Gonzalo Benavente Secco’s “La Revolución y la tierra” (Peru, 2020)”
- Junko Takeda, “The French Republic of Letters, Persia, and the Global Age of Revolutions”
- Tim Bruno, “Transforming Rebellion into Revolution: Rereading Cedric Robinson and Eugene Genovese”
- Crystal Nicole Eddins, “Review of Wicked Flesh: Black Women, Intimacy, and Freedom in the Atlantic World by Jessica Marie Johnson”
- Kacy Dowd Tillman, “Review of Resisting Independence: Popular Loyalism in the Revolutionary British Atlantic by Brad A. Jones (2020)”
May 2021
- Lauren Michalak, “The British Constitution in Crisis: The Gordon Riots and the American Revolution”
- Roberto Breña, “Revoluciones hispánicas and Atlantic History: A Spanish-Language Historiographical Interpretation and Bibliography”
- Strother E. Roberts, “Red Meat for Empire: New England Cattle, the British Empire, and the Disruption of Revolution”
June 2021
- Christine Adams and Tracy Adams, “The Rise and Fall of the French Royal Mistress”
- Emily Sneff, “Spooked Horse or Spooked President? John Gilpin, James Madison, and ‘The Bladensburg Races'”
- Fritz Culp, “The Dogs of War: The Animals of the Internal Armed Conflict in Peru (1980-2000)”
- Erika Vause, “‘The Great Air of Liberty Choked Him’: Finance, Freedom, and the Legendary Death of Colonel James Swan”
July 2021
- J.L. Bell, “Join, or Die: Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?”
- Francesca Langer, “Cato’s Suicide and Civic Martyrdom in Early British and Spanish America”
- Peter Sahlins, “Absolute Animals: The Royal Menagerie and the Royal Labyrinth at Versailles”
- Maria P. Gindhart, “Liberty, Utility, Proximity: Animals and Animaliers at the Jardin des Menagerie in Paris”
August 2021
- Ann Marie Durkan, “The Hare, the Hound, the Chicken, the Pig … Meet Ireland’s Revolutionary Animals”
- Alyssa Goldstein Sepinwall, “Biography, Reclaimed: Looking Back at the Abbé Grégoire and the French Revolution”
- Dean Kostantaras, “Of ‘Discrete Forces’ and ‘Spontaneous Distillations’: Reconsidering Some More General Aspects of Benedict Anderson’s Historical Imagination”
- Beatrice de Graaf, “Feeling Safe and Secure in 1815”
September 2021
- Christina Novakov-Ritchey, “Peasant Artists and Communist Praxis in Interwar Yugoslavia”
- Blake Smith, “The Death of Louis XVI”
- Thomas Lecaque, “Revolutionary Conspiracies, Conspiratorial Gaming: Abbé Barruel and Assassin’s Creed Unity”
October 2021
- Meghan Roberts, “Hats Off for the History of Science: Rethinking the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Claims about the Lavoisier Portrait”
- Megan Maruschke, “Global Studies Gone Global: Teaching the Age of Revolutions in Germany and Ethiopia”
- Megan Gallagher, “Mary Wollstonecraft and the Question of French Character”
November 2021
- Nicolai von Eggers, “Delacroix’s Greek Revolution”
- Christopher J. Smith, “Dancing Revolution in the Caribbean Basin: Expressive and Revolutionary Movement and Moments in the History of New Orleans”
- Andrew Wehrman, “Inoculate Before It Is Too Late: Lessons Drawn from Charles Willson Peale’s Rachel Weeping“
- Bryan A. Banks and Cindy Ermus, “A Sixth Revolution Around the Sun”
- Kyra Sanchez Clapper, “Reading the Gardens at Vallée aux Loups”
December 2021
- J.L. Tomlin, “No Bishops, No Kings: Religious Iconography and Popular Memory of the American Revolution”
- Alyssa Goldstein Sepinwall, “Downloadable Context: Why A Historian of Haiti Came to Study Video Games”
January 2022
- Thomas Lecuque, “‘Slaves are Self-Explanatory'”: Silencing the Past in Empire Total War (2009)”
- Maya Stanfield-Mazzi, “Weapons and Phantasms: The Painted Cloths of Chachapoyas and Peruvian Independence”
- Michel Biard and Marisa Linton, “Questioning the Terror: A Book Talk with Michel Biard and Marisa Linton”
- Éric Morales-Franceschini, “Spectacle and Revolution: Cuba’s ‘Imperfect Cinema'”
- David AJ Murrieta Flores, “Surrealist ‘Counter-Revolution’: S.NOB and the Mexican Revolution of 1962”
February 2022
- Farren Yero, “Divine Interventions: Revolution, Religion, and Smallpox in New Granada (1802-1805)”
- Chris Magra, “Chocolate’s Dark Secret: Valentine’s Day and the Abstraction of Love”
- Thomas Lecaque, “The Enlightenment Strikes Back: Holy War and the Absence of Religious Violence in Empire: Total War”
March 2022
- Katlyn Marie Carter, “24 Hours in Revolutionary Paris: An Interview with Colin Jones”
- Katlyn Marie Carter, “Experiencing the Glory and the Sorrow of the French Revolution: An Interview with Timothy Tackett”
- Erika Vause, “Teaching Students to Read Secondary Sources with Age of Revolutions”
- Julio César Guanche, Spanish Version: “Vindicación de Evaristo Estenoz: Dos documentos encontrados en la historia de Cuba;” English Version: “The Absolution of Evaristo Estenoz: Two Conflicting Documents in the History of Cuba”
April 2022
- Kiley E. Molinari, “Making Indigenous Culture More Accessible in the Digital Age”
- Tom Cutterham, “Fighting the American Revolution: An Interview with Woody Holton”
- Mounira Keghida, “Revolution in Search of a Father: The Return of the Emir Abd el-Kader”
- Tessa de Boer, “The Children’s Crusade: A Teenage Recollection of the American Revolution”
May 2022
- E. Thomas Ewing, Stratis Bohle, Justin Noel, Tim Pfeifer, Chris Porter, and Taylor Wentzel, “The Assassination of the Czar: A Course Project Examining US Newspaper Editorials, March 1881”
- Thomas Lecaque, “‘A Man of His Time’: From Patrick Henry to Samuel Alito in US History”
- Patrick de Oliveara, “Eiffel and the Telling of Technological Stories”
June 2022
- Nigel Ritchie, “Radical Translation as Direct Action”
- Mary D. Lewis, “A Commercial (Neo)Colony? The Role of the Merchant Lobby in France’s Recognition of Haitian Independence”
- Patrick Luck, “Slavery’s Revolutions in Louisiana”
July 2022
- Paul Cohen, “On the Relationship between Journalism and History: Thoughts on the New York Times Haiti Ransom Project”
- Meredith Martin and Gillian Weiss, “Mediterranean Migrations to the French Atlantic”
- Signe Peterson Fourmy, “‘She had smothered her baby on purpose’: Enslaved Women and Maternal Resistance”
August 2022
- Paris Spies-Gans, “Brushes with History: Women Artists in Revolutionary France and Britain”
- Alyssa Sepinwall, “Thoroughly Modern Maxie: Robespierre’s Relevance for Democracy Today”
- Thomas Lecaque, “Our Lady of Victories: Religious Violence and Liturgical Revolution in New France”
- Alyssa Goldstein Sepinwall, “Before Silencing the Past: Michel-Rolph Trouillot’s Stirring the Pot of Haitian History”
- Seth Whitty, “‘A Positive Evil’: The Haitian Revolution and Abolition in the 1834 Tennessee State Constitutional Convention”
September 2022
- Mona El-Ghobashy, “The Arab Uprisings and the Many Meanings of Revolution”
- Eric Morales-Francheschini, “Cuba Libre: On the Revolutionary Epic as Redemptive Impatience”
- Todd C. Couch, “Red Letter Christianity: Liberation Theology and Trumpism Amongst Evangelicals”
October 2022
- Arpita Paul, “When the Subaltern Spoke: Nangeli’s Fight Against Oppressive ‘Breast Tax'”
- Bryan A. Banks, “Putting the French Revolution on the Map”
November 2022
- Gideon Fujiwara, “Community and Spirits in Eighteenth-Century Japan: An Exploration of Grassroots Ethnographic and Japan Studies”
- Jason Daniels, “The American Revolution(s): Digital Tools and Course Redesign in the Age of Covid-19”
- Bryan A. Banks, “A Seventh Revolution Around the Sun”
December 2022
- Benjamin L. Carp, “Mythmaking in Manhattan: Stories of 1776 and Santa Claus”
- Rob Taber, “Ending World History Part One in … 1763?”
- Caroline Hackett, “New Year’s Gifts in Old Regime France: Étrennes Mignonnes and Surviving Revolutionary Bibliocide”
January 2023
- Casey Harison, “The Crowd in History and the January 6, 2021 Attack on the US Capitol”
- Samuel Weber, “The Dissolution of the Jesuits and the Birth of an Antisemitic Conspiracy Theory in the Age of Enlightenment”
- Cathleen Mair, “Germaine de Staël on Literature and Passions in Thermidorian France”
- Erica Johnson Edwards, “George Washington in Barbados?”
February 2023
- Cindy Ermus, “Violent Encounters: Franco-Spanish Aggression in the Early Eighteenth-Century Caribbean”
- Scott Madere, “The Changing View of Charles XII of Sweden in Eighteenth-Century Europe”
- Cho-Chien Feng, “Placing Loyalist Political Arguments in the American Revolutionary Tradition: The Case of Anglican Loyalists in New York”
- Patrick O’Brien, “‘Those Who Did Not Extend Their Connections Were the Happiest’: Loyalist Women, Exile, and Marriage in the Post-Revolutionary World”
- Emily Yankowitz, “‘Negative Patriots’: How Former Loyalists’ Movement Between States Shaped the Development of American Citizenship, 1781-1790”
- Lauren Michalak, “‘They Hoped That the Time Was Approaching, When the Powers of the State Would Be Exerted’: Loyalists’ Interpretation of the 1780 Gordon Riots”
- John Scott, “Polish Whigs on the Moon: The Polish Revolution of 1791 and the British Whig Party”
March 2023
- Derek Kane O’Leary, “James Buchanan’s 1832 Mission to the Tsar, the Plight of Poland, and the Limits of America’s Revolutionary Legacy in Jacksonian Foreign Policy”
- Meredith Martin, “Confronting Slavery in the Museum, from New York to Nantes”
- Emma Hart, Sean Quimby, Karin Wulf, “Archives of Revolution”
- Thomas Lecaque, “Against the Grain? Native Farming Practices and Settler-Colonial Imaginations in Empire: Total War”
April 2023
- M.A. Davis, “American Uranus: The Early Republic and the Seventh Planet”
- Nicole Bauer, “Desire, Dread, and the Grateful Dead: The Bastille, its Cadavers, and the Revolutionary Gothic Imaginary”
- Evan Wilson, “‘A Low, Surly Growl’: Returning to Britain after the Napoleonic Wars”
May 2023
- Karin Wulf, “Making Partus: Law, Power, and Heritable Slavery in 18th-Century British America”
- Friedemann Pestel, “Who Were the French Émigrés? On the Relation between Émigré and Refugee Studies”
June 2023
- Sibylle Fourcaud, “‘Colons de Saint-Domingue réfugiés en France’: State Relief and the Making of an Administrative Label, 1793-1831”
- Megan Maruschke, “‘They were added to the lists of unfortunates’: French Caribbean Refugees in Philadelphia”
Title Image: Bibliothèque de l’Assemblée Nationale, Paris, France.