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141Historiography and enlightenment: A view of their history: J. G. A. PocockModern Intellectual History 5 (1): 83-96. 2008.This essay is written on the following premises and argues for them. “Enlightenment” is a word or signifier, and not a single or unifiable phenomenon which it consistently signifies. There is no single or unifiable phenomenon describable as “the Enlightenment,” but it is the definite article rather than the noun which is to be avoided. In studying the intellectual history of the late seventeenth century and the eighteenth, we encounter a variety of statements made, and assumptions proposed, to w…Read more
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129Quentin Skinner: The History of Politics and the Politics of HistoryCommon Knowledge 10 (3): 532-550. 2004.Pocock, J. G. A. (John Greville Agard) 1924- "Quentin Skinner: The History of Politics and the Politics of History" Common Knowledge - Volume 10, Issue 3, Fall 2004, pp. 532-550
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92Prophet and inquisitor: Or, a church built upon bayonets cannot stand: A comment on Mansfield's "Strauss's Machiavelli"Political Theory 3 (4): 385-401. 1975.
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84Historiography as a form of political thoughtHistory of European Ideas 37 (1): 1-6. 2011.This article seeks to combine two lines of thought that have been little studied: a model history of early modern historiography, and a theory of the impact of historiography on a political society. Under the former heading, it traces the growth of a narrative of European history as a series of sequels to the Roman empire, and a history of historiography as passing from classical narrative to antiquarian study and Enlightened philosophy. Under the latter, it considers the effect on political lif…Read more
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64Machiavelli and Rome : the republic as ideal and as historyIn John M. Najemy (ed.), The Cambridge companion to Machiavelli, Cambridge University Press. 2010.
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60Perceptions of Modernity in Early Modern Historical Thinking 1Intellectual History Review 17 (1): 79-92. 2007.No abstract
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58What Was History? The Art of History in Early Modern EuropeCommon Knowledge 14 (3): 485-487. 2008.
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57The politics of history: The subaltern and the subversiveJournal of Political Philosophy 6 (3). 1998.
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48A History of Histories: Epics, Chronicles, Romances, and Inquiries from Herodotus and Thucydides to the Twentieth CenturyCommon Knowledge 15 (2): 209-210. 2009.
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47Enlightenment and counter-enlightenment, revolution and counter-revolution; a eurosceptical enquiryHistory of Political Thought 20 (1): 125-139. 1999.As part of a programme of disintegrating and re-assembling the concept or concepts of ‘Europe’, there is offered a revision of Franco Venturi's exceptionalist account of England's place in Enlightenment, an alternative to Isaiah Berlin's account of the movement through Enlightenment to historicism. The objective is to enhance the British and English role in European intellectual history, while showing that we must rewrite the concept of ‘Europe’ in order to do so. There persists the ‘Eurosceptic…Read more
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46A response to Samuel James’s ‘J. G. A. Pocock and the Idea of the “Cambridge School” in the History of Political Thought’ (review)History of European Ideas 45 (1): 99-103. 2019.
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41The re-description of enlightenmentIn Pocock J. G. A. (ed.), Proceedings of the British Academy Volume 125, 2003 Lectures, . pp. 101-117. 2004.
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35Two essays: I. The desert and the city: reading the history of civilisation in Ibn Khaldun after Edward Gibbon. II. Rational enthusiasm and angelicality: the concept of prophecy in Ibn Khaldun and Edward Gibbon (review)History of European Ideas 45 (4): 469-508. 2019.ABSTRACTThe Desert and the City and Rational Enthusiasm are experiments in comparative historiography, based on no more evidence than is necessary in order to carry out the comparison, since to pursue either text into its historical context would be to pursue its intended meaning and no longer to compare it with the other. The essays aim to imagine an eighteenth-century judgement on a fourteenth-century text, intended not to support such a judgement, but to imagine what Gibbon would have said of…Read more
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30Hard, soft, and fuzzy historiographyCommon Knowledge 20 (3): 511-517. 2014.In this essay, the author both reviews Scott Sowerby's book Making Toleration: The Repealers and the Glorious Revolution and makes a late contribution to, or comment on, the Common Knowledge symposium “Fuzzy Studies”. Sowerby opposes the “Whig interpretation” that James II was attempting to reinstate Stuart “popery and arbitrary government” and instead presents James II's policies as aimed at liberation of the Stuart monarchy from the borough, county, and clerical elites that had brought it back…Read more
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30Gibbon and the invention of Gibbon: Chapters 15 and 16 reconsideredHistory of European Ideas 35 (2): 209-216. 2009.Before Edward Gibbon began his history of the Christian empire, he ended the first volume of the “Decline and Fall” with two chapters on the rise of Christianity before Constantine. These were believed to deny or ignore its character as revelation. It was also pointed out that this purpose was irrelevant to the history he had set out to write. The church historians he read focussed on the interactions between the Christian gospel and Hellenic philosophy. Gibbon, however, chose to emphasize the C…Read more
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29Afterword: The Machiavellian Moment: A Very Short Retrospect and Re-IntroductionHistory of European Ideas 43 (2): 215-221. 2017.
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27Chinese historicityCommon Knowledge 22 (2): 327-330. 2016.This piece is an essay review of Wang Hui's book China from Empire to Nation-State, which is a translation of the introduction to Wang's four-volume Rise of Modern Chinese Thought. According to the reviewer, Wang studies less the modern history of China than its historicity and does so in the context of China's transition from being an empire, inhabiting a cosmos that is the product of its own self-reflection, to being one among a number of nation-states, inhabiting a number of histories of thei…Read more
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26Gibbon’s second trilogy: an introductory surveyHistory of European Ideas 43 (7): 701-731. 2017.ABSTRACTThis essay is speculative in character. It is the work of a historian who has completed a study, written on certain principles, of the first three volumes of Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire and does not intend to advance to a similar study of the second three. He does, however, believe that such a study would differ profoundly from that he has constructed of the first trilogy and wishes to offer hypotheses as to why this should be so. All hypotheses invite falsification, an…Read more
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25From The Ancient Constitution to Barbarism and Religion; The Machiavellian Moment, the history of political thought and the history of historiographyHistory of European Ideas 43 (2): 129-146. 2017.
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24A method, a model and Machiavelli: history colloquium at Princeton, 19 November 1968History of European Ideas 43 (5): 389-400. 2017.ABSTRACTJohn Pocock gave “A method, a model and Machiavelli” as a talk at Princeton University in 1968. What happened to the text afterwards is uncertain, but it remained in the papers of Professor Donald Weinstein until his death in 2015, when it was identified by his widow Beverly Parker as being of importance. The text is especially revealing about Pocock’s attitudes to the history of ideas/intellectual history in the late 1960s and more especially the state of the grand project that became T…Read more
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22Alasdair MacIntyre: An Intellectual Biography, written by Émile Perreau-SaussineJournal of Moral Philosophy 21 (1-2): 210-213. 2024.
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21Explorations in Connected History: Mughals and Franks, and: Explorations in Connected History: From the Tagus to the Ganges (review)Common Knowledge 13 (2): 459-459. 2007.
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15The Translatability of Cultures: Figurations of the Space Between by Sanford Budick and Wolfgang Iser, edsCommon Knowledge 25 (1-3): 421-421. 2019.
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14Alan MacFarlane, "the origins of English individualism" (review)History and Theory 19 (1): 100. 1980.
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12Barbarism and Religion 2 Volume Paperback SetCambridge University Press. 1999.Barbarism and Religion - Edward Gibbon's own phrase - is the title of an acclaimed sequence of works by John Pocock designed to situate Gibbon, and his Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, in a series of contexts in the history of eighteenth-century Europe. This is a major intervention from one of the world's leading historians of ideas, challenging the idea of 'The Enlightenment' and positing instead a plurality of enlightenments, of which the English was one. Professor Pocock argues that the …Read more
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12The Royalist Revolution: Monarchy and the American FoundingCommon Knowledge 22 (3): 503-505. 2016.
Areas of Interest
Metaphilosophy |
Philosophy of Social Science |
General Philosophy of Science |