History of Humanities publishes a manifesto-style volume of the Comparative Global Humanities initiative at MIT, coedited by Wiebke Denecke, Alexander Forte, and Tristan Brown

Published on: June 12, 2024

History of Humanities, Volume 9, Number 1 – Spring 2024 with Intro by Prof Wiebke Denecke

History of Humanities, Volume 9, Number 1, Spring 2024

Co-edited by Wiebke Denecke, Alexander Forte, and Tristan Brown

THEME: SHARED PASTS FOR SHARED FUTURES; PROTOTYPING A COMPARATIVE GLOBAL HUMANITIES

This volume argues for a comparative and global reimagination of the humanities in their intellectual, disciplinary, and larger institutional forms. We seek to expand the geographical scope and temporal depth of inquiry while challenging Eurocentric biases through the promotion of neglected traditions and their conceptual vocabularies. Crucial to the success of our “comparative global humanities” is scholarship that fully embraces the complexities and diversities of human pasts.

Read the introduction by the co-editors HERE.

From the introduction: From Crisis to New Adjectives

We cannot not hear that the humanities are in crisis. Retrenched. Out-STEMed. Demoralized. But we are also hearing: the humanities are resurrecting. Blossoming in unexpected corners. Becoming seriously public. Critical to this critical moment. Until a decade ago, for decades, the outcry was: Crisis!

Now we have the luxury to ask, Which humanities? Adjectives abound. Public, applied, old, new, medical, environmental, digital, positive, planetary, global, even “blue” (maritime)!1 This proliferation of qualifiers signals vitality, but also a frantic quest for new semantic framings of an old European protean noun.