Monthly Archives: October 2011

Review of Warrior Pursuits by Robert A. Nye

A new review by Professor Robert A. Nye of my book, Warrior Pursuits: Noble Culture and Civil Conflict in Early Modern France, has just appeared in the Journal of Interdisciplinary History. I am pleased to read Professor Nye’s critique of … Continue reading

Posted in Civil Conflict, Current Research, Early Modern Europe, Early Modern World, European Wars of Religion, French History, French Wars of Religion, History of Violence, Languedoc and Southern France, Noble Culture and History of Elites, Religious Violence, War, Culture, and Society | Leave a comment

History of the World in 100 Objects

The British Museum offers a history of the world through some of its celebrated objects. The museum is publishing a book entitled, A History of the World in 100 Objects, based on a BBC Radio 4 program on the same … Continue reading

Posted in Art History, Digital Humanities, Early Modern World, Globalization, History in the Media | Leave a comment

Oligarchies and Wealth Defense

The Occupy Wall Street movement has brought great attention to the problems of wealth concentration and income disparities in the United States. An understanding of American elites has been missing from the debates over tax policies and financial reform following … Continue reading

Posted in Globalization, History in the Media, Noble Culture and History of Elites | Leave a comment

L’Histoire globale

World history and global thematic perspectives have become integral parts of European history, at least as practiced in the United States. Historians in France are now increasingly grappling with how to mesh global historical interpretations with French national history, which … Continue reading

Posted in Conferences, Early Modern Europe, Early Modern World, European History, French History, Globalization, Mediterranean World | Leave a comment

Braudel Revisited

My latest book review, of a collective volume entitled Braudel Revisited: The Mediterranean World, 1600-1800, has been published online in H-France Review. Here is the full citation: Gabriel Piterberg, Teofilo F. Ruiz, and Geoffrey Symcox, eds., Braudel Revisited: The Mediterranean … Continue reading

Posted in Current Research, Early Modern Europe, Early Modern World, European History, Mediterranean World | Leave a comment

Early Modern Workshop at the University of Chicago

The Early Modern Workshop at the University of Chicago is an active community of researchers on early modern European and global history. I have attended presentations at the Early Modern Workshop periodically over the past five years, since taking up … Continue reading

Posted in Conferences, Early Modern Europe, Early Modern World, European History, French Wars of Religion | Leave a comment

Amazon Now Publishes Books

Publishers and editors worldwide have been adjusting to developments in e-publishing, cutbacks in library acquisitions, the spread of e-readers, the growth of online booksellers, and the decline of independent bookstores. Now, publishers face new challenges from Amazon, which has begun … Continue reading

Posted in Academic Publishing, Digital Humanities, Humanities Education | Leave a comment

Friendship in Premodern Europe

This weekend, I am participating in a conference on Friendship in Premodern Europe (1300-1700), hosted by the Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies (CRRS) at the University of Toronto. This conference has been organized by historian Konrad Eisenbichler and the … Continue reading

Posted in Conferences, Early Modern Europe, Early Modern World, European History, Renaissance Art and History | 2 Comments

What’s a Poor French Noble to Do?

Poor nobles apparently abound in today’s France. There are still many nobles living in 21st-century France, and supposedly a number of them have fallen on hard times. Luckily for these poor nobles there is a charitable association, the Association d’Entreaide … Continue reading

Posted in Early Modern Europe, European History, European Union, French History, Languedoc and Southern France, Noble Culture and History of Elites, Political Culture | 1 Comment

French Intellectuals in the Media

France has long had a robust history of public intellectuals—Renaissance essayists  such as Michel de Montaigne, Enlightenment philosophes such as Voltaire, and modern philosophers such as Sartre. Tony Judt and other French historians have traced the developments in modern French … Continue reading

Posted in Academic Publishing, European History, French History, History in the Media, History of the Book, Human Rights | Leave a comment