‘Translating Cultures in the Early Modern World’ is concerned with cultural encounters, transfers and entanglements in the early modern world (15th–19th centuries). Works in this series will explore the different ways in which individuals and communities interact in a wide diversity of contexts, situations and geographical areas. The series proposes critical approaches to the heterogeneous and complex nature of common and individual identities, as well as the values, practices, and institutions that inform them. The series welcomes original research in the fields of early modern intellectual and cultural history, material and visual culture, the history of knowledge, diaspora studies, diplomatic history, microhistory, and urban history.
The series publishes scholarly monographs, collections of essays and critical editions (to be included as part of broader studies) of previously unpublished or out-of-print relevant primary sources.
Authors are cordially invited to submit book proposals and/or full manuscripts to the Publisher at Brill, Arjan van Dijk.
Giancarlo Casale, European University Institute Florence
José María Pérez Fernández, Universidad de Granada
Giovanni Tarantino, Università degli Studi di Firenze
Ann Thomson, European University Institute Florence
Editorial Board:
Antonella Alimento, Università di Pisa
Monica Bolufer, European University Institute
Veronika Čapská, Charles University, Prague
Emmanuelle de Champs, Université de Cergy-Pontoise
Jorge Flores, Universidade de Lisboa
Stuart Gillespie, University of Glasgow
Ronnie Po-Chia Hsia, Pennsylvania State University
Wen Jin, East China Normal University, Shanghai
Dimitris Kastritsis, University of St Andrews
Rajeev Kinra, Northwestern University
Valentina Lepri, Polish Academy of Sciences
Rolando Minuti, Università di Firenze
Kenta Ohji, University of Tokyo
Stefano Pellò, Università Ca’ Foscari, Venice
Jakelin Troy, The University of Sydney
Charles Zika, The University of Melbourne
All interested in global history; intellectual history; translation studies, cultural history; early modern history, connected histories; trans-regional history; translation; circulation and cultural reappropriation; global visual and material culture; history of knowledge, cross-cultural networks.