
Moving the Social 62/2019
Journal of social history and the history of social movements
Moving the Social – Journal of Social History and the History of Social Movements is a multi-disciplinary, international and peer-reviewed journal. It focuses on transnational and comparative perspectives on the history of social movements set in a wider context of social history. It appears twice yearly. During the last evaluation of the ESF Standing Committee for the Humanities (2011), the Journal was ranked INT2 (international with significant visibility).
Moving the Social publishes research at the cutting edge of social history, broadly defined. This involves in particular the analysis of the diversity of economic, social, political and mental structures of social movements, from historical and social science perspectives, and the introduction of new research that is relevant to the field of social movement studies.
Jürgen Schmidt: Cultures of Physical and Political Work in 19th-Century Germany
Samantha Christiansen: The Language of Student Power and Space: Building a Spatialised Social Movement Identity in East Pakistan, 1948–1954
Richa Raj: Of Swadeshi, Self-Reliance and Self-Help: A Study of the Arya Samaj in Colonial Punjab, 1890–1920s
Review: Stefan Berger: What’s New in the History of Social Movements: a Review Article
Moving the Social. Journal of Social History and the History of Social , Band 62
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort versandfertig, Lieferzeit ca. 1-3 Werktage
- Artikel-Nr.: 22211
Moving the Social – Journal of Social History and the History of Social Movements is a multi-disciplinary, international and peer-reviewed journal. It focuses on transnational and comparative perspectives on the history of social movements set in a wider context of social history. It appears twice yearly. During the last evaluation of the ESF Standing Committee for the Humanities (2011), the Journal was ranked INT2 (international with significant visibility).
Moving the Social publishes research at the cutting edge of social history, broadly defined. This involves in particular the analysis of the diversity of economic, social, political and mental structures of social movements, from historical and social science perspectives, and the introduction of new research that is relevant to the field of social movement studies.
Jürgen Schmidt: Cultures of Physical and Political Work in 19th-Century Germany
Samantha Christiansen: The Language of Student Power and Space: Building a Spatialised Social Movement Identity in East Pakistan, 1948–1954
Richa Raj: Of Swadeshi, Self-Reliance and Self-Help: A Study of the Arya Samaj in Colonial Punjab, 1890–1920s
Review: Stefan Berger: What’s New in the History of Social Movements: a Review Article
Moving the Social. Journal of Social History and the History of Social , Band 62