History and Theory

Papers
(The TQCC of History and Theory is 1. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2020-11-01 to 2024-11-01.)
ArticleCitations
HISTORICAL FUTURES24
KOSELLECK'S TIMES18
FOSSILIZATION, OR THE MATTER OF HISTORICAL FUTURES*11
DIGITAL DOPING FOR HISTORIANS: CAN HISTORY, MEMORY, AND HISTORICAL THEORY BE RENDERED ARTIFICIALLY INTELLIGENT?11
CIRCULATION, ARENAS, AND THE QUEST FOR PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE: HISTORIOGRAPHICAL CURRENTS AND ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORKS11
PREDICTIONS WITHOUT FUTURES*10
NATURAL HISTORIES FOR THE ANTHROPOCENE: KOSELLECK'S THEORIES AND THE POSSIBILITY OF A HISTORY OF LIFETIMES9
INTO THE UNKNOWN: CLUES, HINTS, AND PROJECTS IN THE HISTORY OF KNOWLEDGE8
EXTINCTION AND THE END OF FUTURES*7
1. TIMES OF THE EVENT: AN INTRODUCTION6
PREFIGURATIVE HUMANITIES5
3. LAW AND THE TIME OF ANGELS: INTERNATIONAL LAW'S METHOD WARS AND THE AFFECTIVE LIFE OF DISCIPLINES5
5. CONTROVERSIAL CHRONOLOGIES: THE TEMPORAL DEMARCATION OF HISTORIC EVENTS5
CHRONOS, KAIROS, KRISIS: THE GENESIS OF WESTERN TIME4
POTENTIAL HISTORY: READING ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE FROM INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGES*4
WEIGHING CONTEXT AND PRACTICES: THEODOR MOMMSEN AND THE MANY DIMENSIONS OF NINETEENTH‐CENTURY HUMANISTIC KNOWLEDGE4
2. DESPITE SINGULARITY: THE EVENT AND ITS MANIFOLD STRUCTURES OF REPETITION4
KNOWLEDGE IN MEDIAS RES: TOWARD A MEDIA HISTORY OF SCIENCE, MEDICINE, AND TECHNOLOGY4
“STARING INTO THE SINGULARITY” AND OTHER POSTHUMAN TALES: TRANSHUMANIST STORIES OF FUTURE CHANGE4
GETTING BACK TO NORMAL: ON NORMATIVITY IN HISTORY AND HISTORIOGRAPHY3
THE ESSENTIAL TENSION: HISTORICAL KNOWLEDGE BETWEEN PAST AND PRESENT3
OPENING DOORS: A TURN TO KNOWLEDGE3
THE CRITICAL PROMISES OF THE HISTORY OF KNOWLEDGE: PERSPECTIVES FROM EAST ASIAN STUDIES3
TOWARD THE RECOGNITION OF ARTIFICIAL HISTORY MAKERS3
PUTTING CLIO BACK IN CLIOMETRICS3
KOSELLECK ON “HISTORIES” VERSUS “HISTORY”; OR, HISTORICAL ONTOLOGY VERSUS HISTORICAL EPISTEMOLOGY3
VIRTUAL HISTORIOGRAPHY: OPENING HISTORY TOWARD THE FUTURE2
OPENING THE BLACK BOX OF INTERPRETATION: DIGITAL HISTORY PRACTICES AS MODELS OF KNOWLEDGE2
STILL PLAYING WITH THE PAST: HISTORY, HISTORIANS, AND DIGITAL GAMES2
APPROXIMATING ALGORITHMS: FROM DISCRIMINATING DATA TO TALKING WITH AN AI2
EPISTEMIC WOUNDED ATTACHMENTS: RECOVERING DEFINITIONAL SUBJECTIVITY THROUGH COLONIAL LIBRARIES2
THE TIME OF POLITICS, THE POLITICS OF TIME, AND POLITICIZED TIME: AN INTRODUCTION TO CHRONOPOLITICS2
MARKING TIME AND WRITING HISTORIES2
REOPENING THE FUTURE: EMERGING WORLDS AND NOVEL HISTORICAL FUTURES*2
HISTORICAL PRACTICE IN THE ERA OF DIGITAL HISTORY1
UNINTENTIONAL MONUMENTS, OR THE MATERIALIZING OF AN OPEN PAST1
THE ENDLESS ACCUMULATION OF HISTORY IN FINANCIAL TIMES1
2. ON THE DOMESTICATION OF CRITICAL LEGAL HISTORY1
DELEUZE'S FOUCAULT: ON THE POSSIBILITY OF AN OUTSIDE OF KNOWLEDGE/POWER1
COMPOSING HISTORY FOR THE WEB: DIGITAL REFORMULATION OF NARRATIVE, EVIDENCE, AND CONTEXT1
DECONSTRUCTING HISTORICIST TIME, OR TIME'S SCRIBE1
THE COUNTED TIME: TECHNICAL TEMPORALITIES AND THEIR CHALLENGES TO HISTORY1
4. THEORIZING CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY1
WHAT, AT LONG LAST, IS HISTORICAL THEORY FOR? REFLECTIONS ON HISTORICAL THEORY IN A POST‐TRUTH WORLD1
NIETZSCHE'S EARLY AND LATE CONCEPTIONS OF TIME AND ETERNAL RECURRENCE1
AN AFROPESSIMIST ACCOUNT OF HISTORY1
IMPLICATED GAMING: CHOICE AND COMPLICITY IN LUDIC HOLOCAUST MEMORY1
CLASS OR COMMUNITY? MARX, THE RUSSIAN COMMUNE, AND CONTEMPORARY CRITICAL THEORY1
THE THORN OF HISTORY: UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES AND SPECULATIVE PHILOSOPHY OF HISTORY1
HISTORY'S NARRATIVE EXPLANATION UNDER THE LOGIC OF CAUSAL IMPUTATION: AN ESSAY IN HONOR OF MAX WEBER'S DEATH CENTENARY1
3. BEYOND REPRESENTATION: PICTORIAL TEMPORALITY AND THE RELATIONAL TIME OF THE EVENT1
PRINCIPLES OF NARRATIVE REASON1
HISTORY AS ANTIDOTE: THE ARGUMENT FOR DOCUMENTATION IN DIGITAL HISTORY1
VICO'S NEW SCIENCE AND A NEW POETIC PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE1
“WHAT HAS POSTERITY EVER DONE FOR ME?”: FUTURE GENERATIONS, INTERGENERATIONAL JUSTICE, AND THE CHRONOPOLITICS OF DISTANT FUTURES1
WHOEVER ARE HISTORIES FOR? PLURALIZATION, BORDER THINKING, AND POTENTIAL HISTORIES1
4. EVENTS GETTING AHEAD OF THEMSELVES: RETHINKING THE TEMPORALITY OF EXPECTATIONS1
HISTORY OF EMOTIONAL SUFFERING: FROM EMOTIONS TO NEEDS IN THE HISTORY OF EMOTIONS1
AN APOLOGIA FOR ARTHUR LOVEJOY'S LONG‐RANGE APPROACH TO THE HISTORY OF IDEAS1
5. FAMILY LAW MATTERS1
RECONCEIVING THE PRACTICE OF HISTORY: FROM REPRESENTATION TO TRANSLATION1
REQUIRED: A THEORY OF ALLOWABLE GAPS1
REPRESENTING SPATIAL CONCEPTS: MODERN EAST ASIAN HISTORY IN A DIGITAL PUBLICATION FORMAT1
HISTORY AND POLITICS AS IF WE STILL LIVED IN THE HOLOCENE1
METAPHYSICS IN HISTORY: NOTES ON THE ORIGINS OF AUTHORITARIANISM AND POPULISM1
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