Global Intellectual History (GIH)
Journal Descriptions
How can we define intellectual history? At present scholars who call themselves intellectual historians, or who express an interest in intellectual history, can be found working on a variety of topics, such as the history of identities, time and space, empire and race, sex and gender, natural and popular sciences, the body and its functions, the movements of peoples and the transmission of ideas, the history of publishing and the history of objects, art history and the history of the book, planetary, maritime, and oceanic histories, in addition to the subjects traditionally associated with intellectual history, such as political theory, political economy, and international relations. Intellectual history defies definition, and intellectual historians are at the forefront of the ongoing global, transnational, comparative, spatial, visual, and international turns in the historical profession. Its fluid identity and prominence have led to rich discussion on the practice of intellectual history in a global age and more particularly to the relationship between intellectual history and global history. David Armitage, for example, has argued that intellectual history is very well placed to deal with the most wide-ranging ideas over long spans of time and across cultures, rejecting the assumption that intellectual historians deal only with specific ideological episodes in narrow and precise contexts.
Global Intellectual History (GIH) is :-
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International, Peer-Reviewed, Open Access, Refereed, the history of identities, time and space, empire and race, sex and gender, natural and popular sciences, the body and its functions, planetary, maritime , Online or Print , 8-issues-year Journal
- UGC Approved, ISSN Approved: P-ISSN P-ISSN: 2380-1883, E-ISSN: 2380-1891, Established: 2016, Impact Factor: 0.3
- Provides Crossref DOI
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Not indexed in Scopus, WoS, DOAJ, PubMed, UGC CARE