ToC: Business History 58, 1 (2016) now available

Please note that this issue features an editorial on the special issue policy for the journal!

Business History, Volume 58, Issue 1, January 2016 is now available online on Taylor & Francis Online.

Special Issue: Business Groups around the World

This new issue contains the following articles:

Articles
Editorial: special issues in Business History
Andrea Colli, Stephanie Decker, Abe de Jong, Paloma Fernández Pérez, Neil Rollings & Ray Stokes
Pages: 1-5
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1060961

Business groups around the world: an introduction
María Inés Barbero & Nuria Puig
Pages: 6-29
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1051530

The only way to grow? Italian Business groups in historical perspective
Andrea Colli, Alberto Rinaldi & Michelangelo Vasta
Pages: 30-48
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1044518

Business groups in Portugal in the Estado Novo period (1930–1974): family, power and structural change
Álvaro Ferreira da Silva, Luciano Amaral & Pedro Neves
Pages: 49-68
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1044520

Business groups, entrepreneurship and the growth of the Koç Group in Turkey
Asli M. Colpan & Geoffrey Jones
Pages: 69-88
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1044521

Imprints of an Entrepreneur and Evolution of a Business Group, 1948–2010
Mehmet Erçek & Öner Günçavdı
Pages: 89-110
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1044522

The nexus between business groups and banks: Mexico, 1932–1982
Gustavo A. Del Angel
Pages: 111-128
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1044519

‘Interlocked’ business groups and the state in Chile (1970–2010)
Erica Salvaj & Juan Pablo Couyoumdjian
Pages: 129-148
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1044517

Book Reviews
Reimagining business history
Robin Holt
Pages: 149-153
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1031325

Veuve Guérin & fils. Banque et soie. Une affaire de famille (Saint-Chamond-Lyon, 1716–1932)
Hubert Bonin
Pages: 153-155
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1016299

Historical and international comparison of business interest associations, 19th–20th Centuries
Hubert Bonin
Pages: 155-158
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1017288

ToC History & Theory October 2015 issue and new journal Historical Encounters

History & Theory is one of the leading journals in the area of historical theory and publishes interesting contributions that have wider relevance for historical research in other fields.
A related journal with a slightly different orientation has just been launched called Historical Encounters.

Historical Encounters is a peer-reviewed, open access, interdsiciplinary journal dedicated to the empirical and theoretical study of:

  • historical consciousness (how we experience the past as something alien to the present; how we understand and relate, both cognitively and affectively, to the past; and how our historically-constituted consciousness shapes our understanding and interpretation of historical representations in the present and influences how we orient ourselves to possible futures);
  • historical cultures (the effective and affective relationship that a human group has with its own past; the agents who create and transform it; the oral, print, visual, dramatic, and interactive media representations through which it is lived, and by which it is disseminated; the personal, social, commercial, and political uses to which it is put; and the processes of reception that shape encounters with it);
  • history education (how we know, teach, and learn history through: schools, universities, museums, public commemorations, tourist venues, heritage sites, local history societies, and other formal and informal settings).
  • Submissions from across the fields of public history, history didactics, curriculum & pedagogy studies, cultural studies, narrative theory

Details of how to access the articles below can be found on the History & Theory website: http://www.historyandtheory.org/recent.html

ARTICLES:

BRANKO MITROVIĆ, Historical Understanding and Historical Interpretation as Contextualization
BERBER BEVERNAGE, The Past Is Evil/Evil Is Past: On Retrospective Politics, Philosophy of History, and Temporal Manichaeism
PETER BAEHR, Stalinism in Retrospect: Hannah Arendt

FORUM: FOUCAULT AND NEOLIBERALISM:

MATTHEW SPECTER, Introduction 

MICHAEL C. BEHRENT, Can the Critique of Capitalism Be Antihumanist?

MITCHELL DEAN, Foucault Must Not Be Defended

SERGE AUDIER, Neoliberalism through Foucault’s Eyes

REVIEW ESSAYS:

JAN E. GOLDSTEIN on Michael S. Roth, Memory, Trauma, and History: Essays on Living with the Past

VERA SCHWARCZ on Otto Dov Kulka, Landscapes of the Metropolis of Death: Reflections on Memory and Imagination, and Thomas Trezise, Witnessing Witnessing: On the Reception of Holocaust Survivor Testimony

WILLIAM JOHNSTON on Katsuya Hirano, The Politics of Dialogic Imagination: Power and Popular Culture in Early Modern Japan

DAVID P. JORDAN on Patrice Gueniffey, Bonaparte, 1769–1802 and Andrew Roberts, Napoleon, A Life