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Previous article FreeNotes on ContributorsPDFPDF PLUSFull Text Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinked InRedditEmailQR Code SectionsMoreMaria Teresa Costa (PhD, Padua University) is a research scholar at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin. She held positions at, among others, Zentrum für Literatur- und Kulturforschung Berlin, Forum für Kunstgeschichte Paris, Kunsthistorisches Institut Florence (MPI), and Warburg Institute London. Her research lies between philosophy and the history of science. Her current focus is on the history of art history and on visualization in science and art.Lisa Cronjäger is a researcher in cultural history and theory, history of science, and environmental history. She wrote her dissertation on forest cartography and cultural techniques that were considered to be sustainable in nineteenth-century forestry. After studying at Humboldt University of Berlin and University of Helsinki, she was a member of the interdisciplinary research group Media of Exactitude from 2017 to 2021. She currently teaches at the University of Basel.Marcus Harmes is associate director research in the University of Southern Queensland College and teaches legal history and humanities. He has published extensively in the fields of religious and political history, with a particular emphasis on British religious history and constitutional history.Cecilia Hurley teaches the history of museography and the history of collections at the École du Louvre. After completing a thesis on the antiquarian discourse on monuments at the time of the French Revolution, she recently finished a book on masterpiece rooms in nineteenth-century European museums. She works on Swiss art, on historiography, and on the history of museum collections.Ulrike Kistner is extraordinary professor in the Department of Public Law at the University of the Free State in Bloemfontein. She is currently working at intersections between political philosophy, jurisprudence, and psychoanalytic theory. Her recent publications include a collection of essays, coedited with Philippe Van Haute, titled Violence, Slavery and Freedom between Hegel and Fanon (Wits University Press, 2020); and articles on the psychology of (de)colonization, on theories of totalitarianism, on a postcolonial nomos, and on the relation between “race” and “class” in Marx’s thought.Aurea Klarskov is a researcher of the history and theory of art. After her studies in Basel and Berlin, she wrote her dissertation on concepts of time, Bergsonian philosophy, and philosophy of science in Marcel Duchamp’s art. Her research focus is on modern and contemporary art and theory. Currently, she is a fellow at the Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte in Munich.Michiel Leezenberg teaches in the Departments of Philosophy and Classics at the University of Amsterdam and has a visiting position in the Kurdish Studies Department at the Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales/Sorbonne in Paris. Among his research interests are the history and philosophy of the language sciences; the history of sexuality; vernacular languages and learning; and society, culture, and economy of the Kurds.Kaitlyn Lindgren-Hansen is a PhD candidate in the Religious Studies Department at the University of Iowa. She examines the intersections of American religion, literature, and culture in the nineteenth-century United States in her research. Kaitlyn’s dissertation focuses on women’s contributions to spiritualism through writing and writing media, which she argues were central techniques of the spiritualist movement in the United States.Derrick Mosley is a PhD candidate at the University of Cambridge, where he conducts research on the history of information and on the history of the exact sciences in early modern Europe.Hampus Östh Gustafsson is a researcher at the Department of History of Science and Ideas, Uppsala University, currently engaged in a project on collegiality and the history of universities. In 2022, he is also a research fellow at the Vossius Center for the History of Humanities and Sciences, University of Amsterdam. Recent publications include articles in History of Humanities and History of Education Review.Sjang ten Hagen is a historian of the humanities and sciences. His work focuses on the sharing of knowledge between disciplines and across national boundaries in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. He is currently a postdoctoral researcher at Leiden University. Before that, he obtained his PhD at the University of Amsterdam and was a visiting researcher at the University of Bonn, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, and the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin.Dirk van Miert is director of the Huygens Institute for the History and Culture of the Netherlands (Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences) and associate professor of cultural history at Utrecht University. He is principal investigator of a project funded by the European Research Council, SKILLNET: Sharing Knowledge In Learned and Literary NETworks and of the Dutch consortium CLARIAH: Common Lab Research Infrastructure for the Arts and Humanities. He specializes in the early modern history of learning.Antonia von Schöning is a media historian at the chair for the history of science at Humboldt University of Berlin. Her work focuses on the question of how data-based knowledge and critique interact in the humanities and in digital culture. She is author of Die Administration der Dinge: Technik und Imagination im Paris des 19. Jahrhunderts (diaphanes, 2018).Mario Wimmer is a historian and managing director and head of academic programs at the Collegium Helveticum, the joint Institute of Advanced Studies of Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule (ETH) Zurich, the University of Zurich, and the Zurich University of Arts.Blaž Zabel is an assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Ljubljana. His research focuses on the history of literary and classical scholarship in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. He is currently working on a project about the history and politics of Homeric scholarship. Previous article DetailsFiguresReferencesCited by History of Humanities Volume 7, Number 2Fall 2022 Sponsored by the Society for the History of the Humanities Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1086/721321 © 2022 Society for the History of the Humanities. All rights reserved.PDF download Crossref reports no articles citing this article.

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