Author Archives: alexchadwick

Recent lectures by Quentin Skinner in Sweden

Professor Quentin Skinner recently visited the Department of History of Stockholm University, delivering an open lecture (3rd October) and conducting a graduate seminar (4th October). He also delivered a lecture at the invitation of the Historical Institute, Uppsala University, on Wednesday 5th October.

Richard Bourke on New Books Network

Professor Richard Bourke recently discussed Empire and Revolution: The Political Life of Edmund Burke in a New Books in Intellectual History podcast. To listen to the podcast, please click here.

Richard Bourke awarded the István Hont Book Prize

Professor Richard Bourke was jointly awarded the 2015 István Hont Book Prize for his Empire and Revolution: The Political Life of Edmund Burke. The prize is awarded by the University of St. Andrews Institute of Intellectual History for the best book published in intellectual history in any calendar year. For further details on the prize, please click here. The István Hont Book Prize is the most recent accolade for Empire and Revolution, which has also received an Honourable Mention for the 2016 PROSE Award in Biography and Autobiography (Association of American Publishers), and is considered to be among the Best Books of 2015 by publications such as the Irish TimesThe Guardian and The Spectator.

Karl Marx: Greatness and Illusion book launch

To celebrate the publication of the important new biography Karl Marx: Greatness and Illusion (Allen Lane) by Professor Gareth Stedman Jones, the School of History, Queen Mary, is hosting a debate between Professor Stedman Jones and Dr Tristram Hunt MP, author of a recent biography of Friedrich Engels. To RSVP for the event, click here.

Update: A video of the event is now available online. Please follow this link to watch it.

5th London Summer School in Intellectual History

The programme for the annual London Summer School in Intellectual History has been announced — click here to view the full list of masterclasses, panel discussions and presentations that will be taking place from 5 – 8 September 2016.

Please note that while these sessions are only open to registered participants, the public is welcome to attend the opening keynote lecture by Prof. David Armitage (Harvard) on ‘Cosmopolitanism and Civil War’ and the final keynote lecture by Prof. Quentin Skinner (QMUL) on ‘Why Shylock loses his case: judicial rhetoric in The Merchant of Venice‘. Both keynote lectures will be held at PP1, People’s Palace, QMUL.

Important update: The venue for the final keynote lecture on the 8th of September has changed to Bancroft 2.40 (2nd floor of the Bancroft Building). As there is another building with a similar name on the Mile End campus, please note that the Bancroft Building has blue windows and is located at the end of the Jewish cemetery.

Honorary Degree for Prof. (Emeritus) J. G. A. Pocock

J. G. A. Pocock was awarded an honorary doctorate of letters in absentia by Queen Mary University of London on the 20th of July 2016. The following is his message on this occasion:

Message from J. G. A. Pocock, On Receiving an Honorary Doctorate of Letters at Queen Mary University of London:

I have to thank Queen Mary first for the honor you are doing me; second for your generous forbearance in allowing me to accept it in absentia; and thirdly, for all you are doing as a center of learning to maintain and keep active an intellectual discipline in which I and others, including members of your most distinguished faculty, have been engaged for many years. In accepting this degree, I am conscious of speaking as a member of a company, some no longer with us, others present today, and others I am sure active in joining us, making up a continuum it is an honor to represent on this occasion. It has been, and still is, an active fellowship, and my memories of it go back nearly seventy years, to universities I should name on this occasion—Canterbury, Cambridge, Washington in St. Louis, Johns Hopkins, to name only those with which I had the privilege of association; the list could be indefinitely prolonged and has not done growing.

The fellowship’s activity has been the study of politics, or rather the study of the study of politics: politics as lived in, thought about, written about and imagined; a study going on in history, having and writing a history of its own, and doing much to create both the history we are, and the history we think we are, living in. That we happen to be meeting today at a particularly discouraging moment in history in most of these senses is a reason for enlarging the activity and criticizing its foundations but not a reason for giving it up. That in the seventy years I am able to recall, this study has focused mainly on the early modern periods and on the civilization we call western is true but no matter for apology; we are beginning to study what went on in other civilizations and to ask the intellects of those civilizations to challenge and instruct us, and if we find that the parameters of political thought have been geographically and historically finite, that will be what we have found out.

In accepting this doctorate, I must name others, living and dead, without whose work I should not be here, even in absentia today, and should never have done anything deserving your attention. Here at Queen Mary you have Quentin Skinner, who laid foundations in 1969 and is building on them still. You have Richard Bourke, whose monumental work on his great namesake studies Burke’s writings in their order and shows how they built the life of a mind in politics. When I permit my memory to look back, I see a legion of faces, and know that I could have called up many others, composing in several countries the fellowship of which I have spoken: Herbert Butterfield, Peter Laslett, Jack Hexter, Donald Kelley, Thomas Kuhn, Michael Oakeshott, Hans Baron, Caroline Robbins, John Wallace, William Lamont, Franco Venturi, Felix Gilbert, Nicholas Phillipson, Richard Sher, Istvan Hont, John Burrow. I give you these names in no particular order, and could have gone on adding to them until your patience ran out. Such is the richness of the field in which I have spent my life. Permit me to add two societies and a couple of names with them: the Conference for the Study of Political Thought, co-founded with Melvin Richter in the 1960s, and the Folger Institute Center for the History of British Political Thought, co-founded in the 1980s with Gordon Schochet, Lena Cowan Orlin and Lois Greene Schwoerer. These names may be transient in your memory today, but you are honoring them as well as me, for which I thank you.

J. G. A. Pocock

Richard Bourke on BBC Radio 4’s In Our Time

Professor Richard Bourke appeared on BBC Radio 4’s In Our Time on the 30th of June 2016 alongside Melissa Lane (Princeton) and Tim Stanton (York) to discuss the idea of sovereignty. A link to a recording of the radio programme can be found on our ‘Resources’ page.