Journal of Early Modern Studies
Journal of Early Modern Studies
Publishing House: Zeta Books
Subject(s): Philosophy, Early Modern Philosophy
Frequency: 2 issues
Print ISSN: 2286-0290
Online-ISSN: 2286-0290
Status: Later issues not available
- 2012
- 2013
- 2014
- 2016
- 2017
- 2018
- 2019
- 2020
- Issue No. 1
- Issue No. 1
- Issue No. 2
- Issue No. 1
- Issue No. 2
- Issue No. 1/5
- Issue No. 2/5
- Issue No. 1/6
- Issue No. 2/6
- Issue No. 1/7
- Issue No. 2/7
- Issue No. 1/8
- Issue No. 2/8
- Issue No. 1/9
Articles list
{{ article.TitleOriginalLanguage }}
{{ article.TitleOriginalLanguage }}
({{ article.TitleEnglish }})
- Publication: {{ article.Publisher }} ({{ article.Issue }})
- Author(s): {{ article.Authors }}
- Contributor(s): {{ article.Contributors }}
- Language: {{ article.Language }}
- Subject(s): {{ article.Subjects }}
- Issue: {{ article.Issue }}
- Page Range: {{ article.PageRange }}
- No. of Pages: {{ article.NumberOfPages }}
- Keywords: {{ article.Keywords }}
- Summary/Abstract: {{ article.SummaryAbstract }}
- Price: {{ common.currency(article.Price) }}
Short Description
Edited by the Research Centre “Foundations of Modern Thought”, University of Bucharest The Journal of Early Modern Studies is an interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed journal of intellectual history, dedicated to the exploration of the interactions between philosophy, science and religion in Early Modern Europe. It aims to respond to the growing awareness within the scholarly community of an emerging new field of research that crosses the boundaries of the traditional disciplines and goes beyond received historiographic categories and concepts. JEMS publishes high-quality articles reporting results of research in intellectual history, history of philosophy and history of early modern science, with a special interest in cross-disciplinary approaches. It furthermore aims to bring to the attention of the scholarly community as yet unexplored topics, which testify to the multiple intellectual exchanges and interactions between Eastern and Western Europe during the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The main language of the journal is English, although contributions in French are also accepted.