European History Quarterly

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European History Quarterly
DisciplineHistory
LanguageEnglish
Edited byProfessor Julian Swann
Publication details
Former name(s)
European Studies Review (until 1984; ISSN 0014-3111)
History1971-present
Publisher
FrequencyQuarterly
0.093 (2012)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Eur. Hist. Q.
Indexing
CODENEHIQEH
ISSN0265-6914 (print)
1461-7110 (web)
LCCN84643695
OCLC no.123479187
Links

European History Quarterly is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal that publishes articles in the field of history. The journal was established in 1971 as the European Studies Review and obtained its current title in 1984. It covers a range of subjects from the later Middle Ages to post-1945.

Articles published in 2013 include:

Jennifer Foray,'A New Order, a New Empire: The Global Designs of the Dutch Nazi Party'.

Maria Thomas, 'The faith and the fury: The construction of anticlerical collective identities in early twentieth-century Spain'.

Claudia Stein 'Images and Meaning-Making in a World of Resemblance: The Bavarian-Saxon Kidney Stone Affair of 1580'.

Sarah E. Shurts, 'Resentment and the right: a twentieth-century cycle of reaction, revaluation, and retreat by the French extreme right'.

Peter Polak-Springer, 'Jammin’ with Karlik’: the German-Polish radio war and the ‘Gleiwitz provocation,’1925-1939'.

Bradley W. Hart, 'Science, politics, and prejudice: The dynamics and significance of British anthropology’s failure to confront Nazi racial ideology'.

Mathias Persson, 'The utility of the ‘other’ German representations of Sweden in the second half of the eighteenth century'.

Joan Tumblety,‘Rethinking the fascist aesthetic: mass gymnastics, political spectacle and the stadium in 1930s France’.

European History Quarterly Prize.

The journal awards an annual prize for the best article published each year. In 2012, the prize was awarded to Dr Paul R. Keenan for his article 'Card playing and gambling in eighteenth-century Russia', EHQ Vol. 42, number 3, July 2012.

In 2013, the prize was awarded to Dr Claudia Stein for her article 'Images and Meaning-Making in a World of Resemblance: The Bavarian-Saxon Kidney Stone Affair of 1580', EHQ Vol. 43, number 2, April 2013.

Abstracting and indexing

European History Quarterly is abstracted and indexed in Social Sciences Citation Index. According to the Journal Citation Reports, its 2012 impact factor is 0.093, ranking it 147th out of 157 in Political Science, and 59 out of 69 in History.[1]

References

  1. ^ "ISI JCR (EHQ)". 2010 Journal Citation Reports. Thompson Reuters. Retrieved 7 September 2011.

External links