The Twitterverse and the Twitter Averse

The following is a brief essay by OIEAHC Director Karin Wulf. The OI-SEA 2015 Joint Conference has been by almost every measure a great success. A rich, multi-disciplinary program so full of exciting panels that I noted several times I wished I had Hermione Granger’s time turner so I could attend them all. Gorgeous Chicago, with social outings and… Read More

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Interpreting the Interpretation of “Sources and Interpretations”

By Josh Piker— So, I was reading Joyce Chaplin’s “The Other Revolution” in the most recent issue of Early American Studies when I got to Table 1 (p. 297), which breaks down WMQ “Articles by Subfield” for the volume years 1973, 1983, and 1993.  At the bottom of the table, there’s the following caveat: “Note: These numbers do not… Read More

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Further questions around How Trade Works

Today, WMQ author Zachary Dorner reflects upon some of the additional questions the process of writing his article raised for him. Zack writes: My article in the recent issue of the WMQ is an effort to chip away at a question that, I find, is as simple to ask as it is complex to answer: How does trade work? Such… Read More

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From Port to Plantation

In today’s post, WMQ author Nick Radburn writes about the process he used to trace the journeys of several enslaved Africans in the Americas using the papers of slave traders. Nick writes: I ended my recent WMQ piece on slave trader John Tailyour with the stories of Simon, John and Taylor, three of the 17,295 Africans who Tailyour sold into Jamaican… Read More

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Why getting on a plane is sometimes best

WMQ author Joseph Hall shares this post with us about the research that went into his article for the April 2015 edition. In many respects, I am sorry to be done with Gerónimo de la Cruz. I have never had so much fun piecing together a story. What started with puzzling over a curious document about a Spanish expedition in… Read More

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Looking Forward to Early American Legal Histories, May 29-30, 2015

Sally Gordon, Convener of the 2015 WMQ-EMSI Workshop As we prepare for the annual WMQ-EMSI workshop, dedicated this year to legal history, it is fitting to reflect on an earlier undertaking in the same field.  Almost twenty years ago, the first conference on early American law, sponsored by OIEAHC, convened in Williamsburg.  Together with Omohundro editor-par-excellence… Read More

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"Cheap as Chips"

Joshua Piker talks Open Access and Quarterly Subscription Rates Last fall, Karin Wulf, the OI’s Director, met in London with some of the key officials charged with designing and implementing Britain’s Open Access policies.  In the course of that conversation, Karin pointed out that STEM journals and humanities and social science journals have very different subscription rates, and she instanced… Read More

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What does it take? From Submission to Publication at the WMQ

One of the OI’s major goals for the next years is to articulate and share the scholarly values and practices that characterize the work of our community from conferences to publications. I talk with willing and unwilling audiences alike about the specific brand of intensive and collaborative editing practiced at the OI. I talk about our editors and our… Read More

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Conference Field Notes: “New Perspectives on Slaveries in the African World”

Eric Herschthal, OI Regional Editor reports the following— Readers of The William and Mary Quarterly need no reminder of slavery’s centrality to colonial America.  Yet a recent symposium of leading scholars on African slavery brought home just how much we still have to learn.  Being a regional editor for the Omohundro Institute’s Map gave me the… Read More

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Message in a Bottle

OI author Cécile Fromont writes about images and writing for scholars outside the world of art history— As most art historians – at least in my experience – I start reading a book by hungrily flipping through the pages to catch a glimpse of the images. The closer the book to my area of research, the more excitedly I… Read More

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The politics of climate history

by Anya Zilberstein— Like most anything to do with climate these days, climate history is the target of controversy and polemics. A particular community of earnest climate change skeptics sometimes appeals to the historical climatology of the Atlantic world to make their case that global climate change is a process of natural, cyclical variability far beyond humanity’s reach. The… Read More

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Climate History is “The Room of Requirement”

By Joyce E. Chaplin– Let the record show that I was asked to complain. The indulgent staff of the William and Mary Quarterly requested that I blog about what I thought the journal’s recent Forum on climate history, to which I contributed a piece called “Ogres and Omnivores,” might have included, given more time and space. What’s missing? Well, obviously,… Read More

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