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Bibliography of urban history 2023

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 January 2024

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Abstract

Type
Bibliography
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

The present bibliography is a continuation of and a complement to those published in the Urban History Yearbook 1974–91 and Urban History from 1992. The arrangement and format closely follows that of previous years. The list of abbreviations identifies only those periodicals from which articles cited this year have been taken, though many other journals are also checked.

I General

Research methods, aids and materials

Maps and plans

Archives – descriptions and examples

Urban history, definitions and aims

Historiography

History, growth and fortunes of individual towns

II Population

General features of urban population

Natality and mortality

Disease

Medicine

Urban public health

Migration to, from and between towns

III Physical structure

Research methods, aids and materials

Physical and structural characteristics of towns

Architecture

Housing

Space and place

Heritage and the historic environment

IV Social structure

Urban social identity

Class structure

Social life

Religion

Recreation

Crime and policing

Minority groups

Race

Family life

Gender

Sexualities

Social organizations, clubs and societies

V Economic activity

Urban economic activity

Industry

Food supply

Finance, banking and services

Consumption

Working conditions

Labour organization

VI Urban networks

Knowledge networks

Transport

VII Politics and administration

Aspects of urban administration

Political activism

VIII Shaping the urban environment

Research methods, aims and materials

Town planning

Environment and the city

Environmental disaster

War and the urban environment

Animals and the city

Urban renewal

IX Urban culture

Urban culture

Urban culture and entertainment

Education

Emotions and the senses

Attitudes towards cities

Views of the city in literature/graphics/drama

Journals abbreviations used

A

Antiquity

AAAG

Annals of the American Association of Geographers

AgH

Agricultural History

AHR

American Historical Review

AHS

Australian Historical Studies

ANH

Archives of Natural History

Arc

Archives

ArchH

Architectural History

B & L

Buildings and Landscapes

BHM

Bulletin of the History of Medicine

BJHS

British Journal for the History of Science

BOEC

Book of the Old Edinburgh Club

BQ

Baptist Quarterly

BuH

Business History

CBH

Contemporary British History

CEH

Contemporary European History

ChH

Church History

CHR

Catholic Historical Review

CitC

City and Community

CSSH

Comparative Studies in Society and History

CulSH

Cultural and Social History

EAmS

Early American Studies

EcHR

Economic History Review

ECS

Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies

Emus

Early Music

EnH

Environmental History

EnvH

Environment and History

EPA

Environment and Planning A

EPB

Environment and Planning B

EPC

Environment and Planning C

EPD

Environment and Planning D

EPE

Environment and Planning E

ES

Enterprise and Society

FCH

Family and Community History

FH

French History

FHR

Financial Historical Review

FHS

French Historical Studies

G & H

Gender and History

GeH

German History

GFH

Global Food History

H

History

HA

History Australia

HF

History of the Family

HJ

Historical Journal

HJM

Historical Journal of Massachusetts

HM

Historical Methods

HR

Historical Research

HRC

History of Retailing and Consumption

HT

History Today

HU

Histoire urbaine

HWJ

History Workshop Journal

I & M

Immigrants & Minorities

IAR

Industrial Archaeology Review

IESH

Irish Economic and Social History

IESHR

Indian Economic and Social History Review

IHS

Irish Historical Studies

IJHA

International Journal of Historical Archaeology

IJHerS

International Journal of Heritage Studies

IJHS

International Journal of the History of Sport

IJMH

International Journal of Maritime History

IJRLH

International Journal of Regional and Local History

ILWCH

International Labor and Working-Class History

IM

Imago Mundi

IRSH

International Review of Social History

ISR

Irish Studies Review

JA

Journal of Architecture

JAEH

Journal of American Ethnic History

JASc

Journal of Archaeological Science

JBAA

Journal of the British Archaeological Association

JBS

Journal of British Studies

JeH

Jewish History

JFH

Journal of Family History

JHC

Journal of the History of Collections

JHelS

Journal of Hellenic Studies

JHG

Journal of Historical Geography

JHMAS

Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Services

JICH

Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History

JIH

Journal of Interdisciplinary History

JMEMS

Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies

JMH

Journal of Medieval History

JPH

Journal of Planning History

JSeAS

Journal of South East Asian Studies

JSocH

Journal of Social History

JUH

Journal of Urban History

L & HR

Law and History Review

LHR

Labour History Review

LJ

London Journal

LocH

Local Historian

MAsS

Modern Asian Studies

MedH

Medical History

MES

Middle Eastern Studies

MidH

Midland History

MS

Moderne Stadtgeschichte

MuHJ

Museum History Journal

NCTF

Nineteenth Century Theatre and Film

NH

Northern History

P & P

Past & Present

PaedH

Paedagogica Historica

PH

Pennsylvania History

PLP

Planning Perspectives

SaA

Slavery and Abolition

SH

Social History

SHMed

Social History of Medicine

Spec

Speculum

SpiH

Sport in History

TCBH

Twentieth Century British History

UH

Urban History

UHR

Urban History Review

US

Urban Studies

VPR

Victorian Periodicals Review

WH

Water History

WomHR

Women’s History Review

YAJ

Yorkshire Archaeological Journal

I General

Research methods, aims and materials

  1. 1 LOW K E Y, Reconfiguring coastal urbanities – discourse, practice and theory. In DE ZOYSA R S, LOW K E Y, ABDULLAH N & HORNIDGE A-K eds, Coastal urbanities: mobilities, meanings, manoeuvrings. Leiden: Brill 2022. 225–32.

  2. 2 RACETTE J-C, Écrire l’histoire des savoirs urbains. UHR 49 2 (2022) 194–216.

  3. 3 VULPIUS R, Russländische Städte des 18. Jahrhunderts und das Imperium. Abschlieβende Überlegungen. MS 19 2 (2022) 96–101.

Maps and plans

  1. 4 BARTOLETTI T, Cartography in translation between Ouro Preto and Gotha, c. 1850–1860. IM 74 1 (2022) 63–81.

  2. 5 MONTAGUE J, New light on John Rocque: his career as artist-engraver and his two great city maps of London (1746) and Dublin (1756). IM 74 1 (2022) 31–62.

Archives – descriptions and examples

  1. 6 BURGUM S, This city is an archive: squatting history and urban authority. JUH 48 3 (2022) 504–22.

  2. 7 MELIN E, Construction monarchique et archives urbaines: entre consentement et contrainte. L’exemple de Reims (xiiie–xve siècles). HU HS2 (2022) 71–86.

  3. 8 ROBINSON D, A Thamesside town in the early fifteenth century: Kingston upon Thames and its people. Arc 57 1 (2022) 1–40.

  4. 9 TONG K-L, Archiving social movement memories amidst autocratization: a case study of Hong Kong’s Umbrella Movement visual archive. IJHerS 28 6 (2022) 733–51.

Urban history, definitions and aims

  1. 10 BATTY M, Mumford’s recurring challenge: what is a city? EPB 49 2 (2022) 387–90.

  2. 11 BÉRUBÉ H, L’histoire urbaine au Québec: état des lieux et perspectives. UHR 50 1–2 (2022) 30–44.

  3. 12 CARON M, The location of Canadian urban history: sex, environment, indigeneity. UHR 50 1–2 (2022) 64–75.

  4. 13 CLARK P, Vera Bácskai and urban history: life, work and impact. UH 49 3 (2022) 549–54.

  5. 14 FOURCHARD L, Par-delà le colonial: repenser l’urbain depuis l’Afrique. HU 63 2 (2022) 5–20.

  6. 15 GARZELLA G, Urban history, topography, and social organization. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 187–215.

  7. 16 HARRIS R, The state of urban history in Canada. UHR 50 1–2 (2022) 5–15.

  8. 17 HARRIS R, Concluding comments. UHR 50 1–2 (2022) 82–5.

  9. 18 MACKINTOSH P G, On the excising of (urban) historical geography from Canadian geography departments: a reflection. UHR 50 1–2 (2022) 16–29.

  10. 19 NEUMANN T, A view from the South: Canadian urban history in North American and global context. UHR 50 1–2 (2022) 76–81.

  11. 20 SZÍVÓS E & SZENDE K, Vera Bácskai and urban history: life, work and impact. UH 49 3 (2022) 476–83.

Historiography

  1. 21 BUYLAERT F, VAN DER MEULEN J, VERHOEVEN G, VERMOESEN R & VERLAAN T, Review of periodical articles. UH 49 2 (2022) 435–57.

  2. 22 HARKES R C, Sociological approaches and the urban history of medieval England: research trends and new perspectives (2017–2022). UH 49 3 (2022) 648–56.

  3. 23 LARKHAM P J, Planning history and everyday urban change: an appreciation of J.W.R. Whitehand (1938–2021). PLP 37 1 (2022) 205–9.

  4. 24 LARKHAM P J, Replanning and rebuilding cities damaged by catastrophe: the Planning Perspectives contribution. PLP 37 5 (2022) 1097–102.

  5. 25 MABIN A, The past, present and future of African cities: commemorating the life and work of Bill Freund. PLP 37 1 (2022) 191–203.

  6. 26 RODGER R, Professor R.J. Morris. BOEC 18 1 (2022) vii–viii.

  7. 27 TONG M, LI B & LI Z, Retrospect and prospect: a review of research contributions on China’s planning history (2011–2020). PLP 37 3 (2022) 615–27.

Empirical studies of urbanization

  1. 28 CHOUIN G, Sous les tropiques, la ville: repenser l’urbanisation dans le Golfe de Guinée avant le XVIe siècle. HU 63 2 (2022) 21–41.

  2. 29 DICKSON D, The first Irish cities: an eighteenth-century transformation. New Haven: Yale University Press 2022. pp 352.

  3. 30 GREEN E, Creating the Cape Colony: the political economy of settler colonization. London: Bloomsbury Academic 2022. pp 192.

  4. 31 MCLEAN A & RUBIO-CAMPILLO X, Beyond least cost paths: circuit theory, maritime mobility and patterns of urbanism in the Roman Adriatic. JASc 138 (2022).

  5. 32 RUSSELL T, Before Constantinople. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 17–32.

  6. 33 SZENDE K, The birth of oppida: small towns in Hungary in the Angevin period. UH 49 3 (2022) 484–501.

  7. 34 TYACK G, The making of our urban landscape. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2022. pp 384.

History, growth and fortunes of individual towns

This section is arranged alphabetically by the name of the town

  1. 35 NICULA A-S, BOȚAN C N & COCIŞ E-A, Celebrating the Great Union through smart digital solutions: lessons from Alba Iulia, Romania. JUH 48 2 (2022) 425–43.

  2. 36 LAY P, Second city: Birmingham and the forging of modern Britain. HT 72 11 (2022) 96–7.

  3. 36 ODEGARD R, Maritime India in Dutch sources: the Dutch East India Company port records of Cochin and Bimilipatnam. IJMH 34 2 (2022) 340–8.

  4. 37 BASSETT S, Introduction. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 1–14.

  5. 38 PURCHLA J, Kraków 1989 and since. In PURCHLA J ed, Urban change in Central Europe: the case of Kraków. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 5–17.

  6. 39 SANETRA-SZELIGA J, Kraków: an eventful city. In PURCHLA J ed, Urban change in Central Europe: the case of Kraków. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 73–90.

  7. 40 BÖMELBURG H-J, Lodz: geschichte einer multikulterellen Industriestadt im 20. Jarhundert. Leiden: Brill 2022. pp vi + 502.

  8. 41 FORRANT R, The rise, fall and (possible) resurrection of Lowell, Massachusetts. HJM 50 1–2 (2022) 106–47.

  9. 42 ABULAFIA D, Prologue: Pisa in perspective. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 17–36.

  10. 43 ALBERTI A, Pisa and the early medieval period. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 81–106.

  11. 44 CARDINI F, The iconic status of medieval Pisa and its urban form. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 497–518.

  12. 45 MATHEWS K R & BUSCH S O, Introduction: the legacy of medieval Pisa. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 1–16.

  13. 46 CHICK J, Urban society and monastic lordship in Reading, 1350–1600. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer 2022. pp 217.

  14. 47 SAND J, Building Tokyo: social and political histories. JUH 48 5 (2022) 959–65.

  15. 48 KELLY S, Worcester’s own history: an account of the foundation of the See and a summary of benefactions, AD 680–1093. In TINTI F & WOODMAN D A eds, Constructing history across the Norman Conquest: Worcester, c. 1050–c. 1150. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer 2022. 121–49.

II Population

General features of urban population

  1. 49 LAN T, VAN DIJK J & LONGLEY P, Family names, city size distributions and residential differentiation in Great Britain, 1881–1901. US 59 10 (2022) 2110–28.

  2. 50 PAINE G, THOMPSON S, PRIOR J, CONNON I & KENT J L, Bringing history forward: learning from historical context when translating contemporary health evidence into planning practice. JPH 21 2 (2022) 107–31.

Natality and mortality

  1. 51 DEROSAS R & MUNNO C, The place to heal and the place to die. Patients and causes of death in nineteenth-century Venice. SHMed 35 4 (2022) 1140–61.

  2. 52 KING S A, Remembering the dead poor in the Midlands, 1750s to 1880s. MidH 47 3 (2022) 292–312.

  3. 53 REVUELTA-EUGERCIOS B, CASTENBRANDT H & LØKKE A, Older rationales and other challenges in handling causes of death in historical individual-level databases: the case of Copenhagen, 1880–1881. SHMed 35 4 (2022) 1116–39.

  4. 54 SARCAR A, A demographer’s urban village: testing demographic transition theory, Delhi 1950–1970. JHG 76 (2022) 56–67.

Disease

  1. 55 ALFANO V & SGOBBI M, A fame, peste et bello libera nos Domine: an analysis of the Black Death in Chioggia in 1630. JFH 47 1 (2022) 24–40.

  2. 56 BUIL C M, Lisbon after quarantines: urban protection against international diseases. In SIMÕES A & DIOGO M P eds, Science, technology and medicine in the making of Lisbon (1840–1940). Leiden: Brill 2022. 203–29.

  3. 57 CAMARA S & ECAR A L, The Spanish flu epidemic in the press: health and education in the cities of Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo (Brazil) in the years 1918–1919. PaedH 58 5 (2022) 610–25.

  4. 58 DEVITA T N, Fighting a plague: doctors’ stories of challenge and innovation combatting the AIDS epidemic in 1980s New York City. JHMAS 77 3 (2022) 316–42.

  5. 59 JOHNSON B L, The Johnes of Glasgow: searching, plague and early modern municipal power. SHMed 35 4 (2022) 1162–82.

  6. 60 OLIVARIUS K, Necropolis: disease, power, and capitalism in the Cotton Kingdom. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press 2022. pp 352.

  7. 61 RAFTAKIS M, A ‘silent’ pandemic? 1918–1919 influenza pandemic in Greece: evidence from Hermoupolis, Syros. SHMed 35 3 (2022) 793–817.

Medicine

  1. 62 DOBBING C, Pauper lunatics at home in the asylum, 1845–1906. In HARLEY J, HOLMES V & NEVALAINEN L eds, The working class at home, 1790–1940. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 193–211.

  2. 63 GREENLEES J, They didnae tell you nothin’: the failings of sex education, antenatal care, and welfare bureaucracies in Glasgow, c. 1970s–2000. TCBH 33 4 (2022) 547–70.

  3. 64 KING S, ‘Still about the town’: constructing disability in small town nineteenth century England. FCH 25 2 (2022) 98–120.

  4. 65 MARTYR P, A town without pity? Three stories of public exposure, print media, and family histories of madness in Western Australia. HA 19 1 (2022) 54–72.

  5. 66 MEYER M, Crimes of passion and psychiatry in early twentieth-century Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. JHMAS 77 2 (2022) 131–57.

  6. 67 WILDMAN S, ‘Were they to have petticoat government in the hospital?’ The reform of nursing in nineteenth-century Lincoln. WomHR 31 4 (2022) 741–59.

  7. 68 WILDMAN S & BADGER F, ‘Nothing more or less than a discharged convict’: the career of Dr Thomas Millerchip of Coventry, 1874–1912. FCH 25 3 (2022) 201–18.

  8. 69 ZANERI T & GELTNER G, The dynamics of healthscaping: mapping communal hygiene in Bologna, 1287–1383. UH 49 1 (2022) 2–27.

Urban public health

  1. 70 BARON B, Colliding bodies: prostitutes, soldiers, and venereal diseases in colonial Egypt. BHM 96 2 (2022) 211–36.

  2. 71 BIZA A, KOOY M, MANUEL S & ZWARTEVEEN M, Sanitary governmentalities: producing and naturalizing social differentiation in Maputo City, Mozambique (1887–2017). EPE 5 2 (2022) 605–24.

  3. 72 CHONG Y-S, Toilet as business for the hygiene of the Chinese community in colonial Hong Kong. Singapore: Springer Singapore 2022. pp xvii + 175.

  4. 73 COHEN-HANEGBI N, A healthy Christian city: Christianising health care in the late fourteenth-century Seville. JMH 48 5 (2022) 664–85.

  5. 74 CUNNINGHAM E & BLACK J, Healing the sick city: local guides, visiting nurses, and vernaculars of pain on New York’s Lower East Side. JUH 48 2 (2022) 285–301.

  6. 75 HORNER D, Behind strong palings: producing knowledge in the modern city at Montreal’s emigrant sheds, 1832–1852. UHR 49 2 (2022) 172–93.

  7. 76 MAS C, ‘Falling-out’ in Miami and the history of culture in American medicine. BHM 96 1 (2022) 102–34.

  8. 77 O’CONNELL L K & BOTCHWEY N, From urban renewal to the BeltLine: Atlanta’s use of public health narratives to reshape the city. JPH 21 1 (2022) 10–27.

  9. 78 SCHUBERT D, WAGENAAR C & HEIN C, ‘The hoist of the yellow flag’: vulnerable port cities and public health. JPH 21 1 (2022) 56–78.

Migration to, from and between towns

  1. 79 BÉCHINI T, Construire l’espace urbain de la diaspora. Les Italiens dans l’Ouest de Buenos Aires (années 1850 – années 1880). HU 64 3 (2022) 53–72.

  2. 80 DEORA S & SEKHSARIA P, Conceptualising small watersheds as infrastructures of immobility to address distress induced rural–urban migration in India. EnvH 28 1 (2022) 9–16.

  3. 81 FEYS T, The impact of the American foreland on the European trans-Atlantic migrant trade via the port of New York. In LEE R & MCNAMARA P eds, Port-cities and their hinterlands: migration, trade and cultural exchange from the early seventeenth century to 1939. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 195–229.

  4. 82 FRIEDLANDER D & OKUN B S, Demographic transition and the industrial revolution in England: inverse rural and urban processes. JFH 47 4 (2022) 401–12.

  5. 83 GRENET M, GUÉNA P & RIDEAU-KIKUCHI C, Faire diaspora en ville (XIVe–XIXe siècle). HU 64 3 (2022) 5–16.

  6. 84 GU H & XU Z, Kaleidoscope visualisation of China’s internal migration, 1985–2020. EPB 49 4 (2022) 1341–4.

  7. 85 RAVAGNOLI V, The building of Chinese ethnicity in Rome: networks without borders. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. pp vii + 192.

  8. 86 VALENCIA A, Rabat after the Morisco migration: a Maghrebi port city’s footprints, 1609–99. In LEE R & MCNAMARA P eds, Port-cities and their hinterlands: migration, trade and cultural exchange from the early seventeenth century to 1939. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 45–72.

  9. 87 WINTER A, Circuits of migration to a port in the making: Antwerp, 1760–1860. In LEE R & MCNAMARA P eds, Port-cities and their hinterlands: migration, trade and cultural exchange from the early seventeenth century to 1939. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 165–94.

III Physical structure

Research methods, aims and materials

  1. 88 LOPEZ S, A personal reflection on people as ‘subjects’ for built environment research. B & L 29 2 (2022) 25–35.

  2. 89 NEVOLA F, Sources and methods for studying historical streets. In VAN DEN HEUVEL D ed, Early modern streets: a European perspective. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 26–48.

  3. 90 SEN A, Making a case for serendipity in architectural fieldwork. B & L 29 2 (2022) 36–50.

  4. 91 STILES E B, Fieldwork futures: historic preservation. B & L 29 2 (2022) 15–24.

  5. 92 WILKENS D S, The craft and care of reality capture. B & L 29 2 (2022) 2–14.

Physical and structural characteristics of towns

  1. 93 BARROS A J M, An imposed co-operation: Porto and its hinterland between the Middle Ages and the early modern period. In LEE R & MCNAMARA P eds, Port-cities and their hinterlands: migration, trade and cultural exchange from the early seventeenth century to 1939. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 73–98.

  2. 94 BENAVIDES C C, The enclosure of the ejidos of Bogotá: imperial wars and the end of common lands in colonial New Granada. JUH 48 4 (2022) 760–81.

  3. 95 CRYMBLE A, The decline and fall of an early modern slum: London’s St Giles ‘Rookery’, c. 1550–1850. UH 49 2 (2022) 310–34.

  4. 96 EHRLICH J, The meanings of a port city boundary: Calcutta’s Maratha Ditch, c. 1700–1950. P & P 257 1 (2022) 168–208.

  5. 97 LEE R, Port-towns, their hinterlands and forelands: a critical review. In LEE R & MCNAMARA P eds, Port-cities and their hinterlands: migration, trade and cultural exchange from the early seventeenth century to 1939. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 1–44.

  6. 98 POURSHARIATI P, Ctesiphon and its surroundings, precursors of Baghdād. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 111–42.

  7. 99 ROSEAU N, The shape of things to come, Hong Kong’s infrastructural city fabric: 1989–2020. PLP 37 2 (2022) 369–99.

  8. 100 SCHEINER J & TORAL I, Baghdād’s topography and social composition. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 1–43.

Architecture

  1. 101 ABDON D, Sheltering refugees: ephemeral architecture and mass migration in early modern Venice. UH 49 4 (2022) 725–45.

  2. 102 ABREEK-ZUBIEDAT F & AVERMAETE T, Concrete conflicts: the vicissitudes of an ordinary material in modernizing Gaza City. JUH 48 5 (2022) 1159–73.

  3. 103 BERMAN D, ‘Good taste’ and the making of Duke House: francophilia, architecture, and adaptation. In COHEN J-L, BERMAN D & RITTER J eds, Duke House and the making of modern New York: lives and afterlives of a Fifth Avenue mansion. Leiden: Brill 2022. 183–227.

  4. 104 BIGGS E, ‘A cloister of curious workmanship’: the patronage of St. Stephen’s cloisters within the Palace of Westminster in the early sixteenth century. HR 95 269 (2022) 309–33.

  5. 105 BJELANOVIĆ A, PALINIĆ N & FRANKOVIĆ M, Structures of the first industrial age in Rijeka, Croatia – from timber to iron. IAR 44 1 (2022) 19–35.

  6. 106 BONACCORSO G, L’architetto integrale and Gustavo Giovannoni’s role in education and cultural dissemination. PLP 37 3 (2022) 477–95.

  7. 107 BOYD G A, ‘Shining temples of health’: pithead bath architecture in Britain 1921–1939. JA 27 2–3 (2022) 176–203.

  8. 108 CHUANG G, Commissioning interiors: Carlhian and Duveen at Duke House. In COHEN J-L, BERMAN D & RITTER J eds, Duke House and the making of modern New York: lives and afterlives of a Fifth Avenue mansion. Leiden: Brill 2022. 229–58.

  9. 109 CHURELLA A J, Putting a station in its place: 30th Street Station and its relationship to Philadelphia’s urban fabric. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 201–13.

  10. 110 COHEN J-L, Dukes to profs: Robert Venturi’s primum opus on 78th Street. In COHEN J-L, BERMAN D & RITTER J eds, Duke House and the making of modern New York: lives and afterlives of a Fifth Avenue mansion. Leiden: Brill 2022. 259–90.

  11. 111 COLLEONI P, A gothic vision: James Goold, William Wardell and the building of St Patrick’s Cathedral, Melbourne, 1850–97. ArchH 65 1 (2022) 227–60.

  12. 112 DARK K, The earliest English church? A reconsideration of the Chapel of St Pancras at St Augustine’s Abbey, Canterbury. JBAA 175 1 (2022) 13–36.

  13. 113 DE OLIVEIRA COUTO MUSZYŃSKI M, Primary school and public bathhouse of the Castle, Lincoln: a proposal of encounter and continuity. JA 27 2–3 (2022) 225–59.

  14. 114 ETXEPARE L, Tunisian works (1927–1936) of Joseph Hiriart: completing the architectural career of an Art Deco master. JA 27 2–3 (2022) 296–321.

  15. 115 FABBRI R, The contextual linkage: visual metaphors and analogies in recent Gulf museums’ architecture. JA 27 2–3 (2022) 372–97.

  16. 116 FAIR A, Privacy, the Housing Research Unit at the University of Edinburgh and the Courtyard House, 1959–70. ArchH 65 1 (2022) 327–58.

  17. 117 FLECK C A, Reimagining Jerusalem’s architectural identities in the later Middle Ages. Leiden: Brill 2022. pp xviii + 402.

  18. 118 GARVIN D, Colonie architecture and fascism’s cult of youth. In SCAPOLO A & PORCARELLI A eds, Interpreting urban spaces in Italian cultures. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press 2022. 157–82.

  19. 119 GOURNAY I, Beaux-Arts architects and their mansions. In COHEN J-L, BERMAN D & RITTER J eds, Duke House and the making of modern New York: lives and afterlives of a Fifth Avenue mansion. Leiden: Brill 2022. 117–50.

  20. 120 GRAML C, Wandering maidens in the Acropolis Propylaia: some considerations on the spatial setting of the cults of the Charites, Artemis and Hermes, their administration and related cult images. JHelS 142 (2022) 274–97.

  21. 121 GROTEN M, The architecture of empire in modern Europe: space, place and the construction of an imperial environment, 1860–1960. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press 2022. pp 340.

  22. 122 HAFER A, Ancient magnificence and modern design: Roman architecture and identity in the printed works of Alessandro Specchi (1666–1729) and Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720–1778). In SCAPOLO A & PORCARELLI A eds, Interpreting urban spaces in Italian cultures. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press 2022. 111–38.

  23. 123 HEROLD S, Architecture and the collective: structures and the processes of architectural work in the GDR. ArchH 65 1 (2022) 105–22.

  24. 124 HILL A M, The York Unitarian Baptist Church. BQ 53 1 (2022) 36–44.

  25. 125 HILL N, The Romanesque roof structure of Westminster Hall. JBAA 175 1 (2022) 67–107.

  26. 126 HOLDEN R N, The work of Stott & Sons for the linotype company at Altrincham 1: the works. IAR 44 1 (2022) 2–18.

  27. 127 İMAMOĞLU B, Between bureaucratic tradition and professional discourse: Turkey and the case of SİSAG, 1969–77. ArchH 65 1 (2022) 61–80.

  28. 128 JORDAN K, Urban churches in an infrasecular landscape: three case studies from the Anglican diocese of London. JA 27 2–3 (2022) 346–71.

  29. 129 LESLIE T, Chicago’s other skyscrapers: grain elevators and the city, 1838–1957. JUH 48 1 (2022) 3–34.

  30. 130 MACKECHNIE A, Inventing Scotch baronial Edinburgh: the role of Walter Scott. BOEC 18 1 (2022) 15–38.

  31. 131 MATHEWS K R, Pisan Bacini and the churches of Pisa. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 456–75.

  32. 132 METZ C, A township complete in itself: the London County Council architects and the building of Becontree, 1919–34. ArchH 65 1 (2022) 39–60.

  33. 133 MILNER L, The seals of Lincoln Cathedral Chapter. JBAA 175 1 (2022) 1–12.

  34. 134 MITCHELL C, Renovation and illumination: Richard Kelly at the Institute. In COHEN J-L, BERMAN D & RITTER J eds, Duke House and the making of modern New York: lives and afterlives of a Fifth Avenue mansion. Leiden: Brill 2022. 291–314.

  35. 135 MORRISON K A, East India House: visualising lost interiors. LJ 47 3 (2022) 260–81.

  36. 136 MUSGRAVE E & GOAD P, Tropical modernism in Australia’s Top End: climate, generic models and Harry Seidler’s Paspaley House, Darwin. JA 27 5–6 (2022) 778–807.

  37. 137 NUNES J C A, Hybrid features at Lisbon’s new lazaretto (1860–1908). In SIMÕES A & DIOGO M P eds, Science, technology and medicine in the making of Lisbon (1840–1940). Leiden: Brill 2022. 150–78.

  38. 138 PALLOTTINO E, Building Roma Capitale: knowing and interpreting the city of the past (1870–1925). PLP 37 3 (2022) 445–75.

  39. 139 PAPAZARKADAS N, Wastias: the lion of Thebes. JHelS 142 (2022) 298–316.

  40. 140 PAYNE M & GOODALL J, Elizabeth Woodville and the Chapel of St Erasmus at Westminster Abbey. JBAA 175 1 (2022) 235–65.

  41. 141 PÉREZ A V, The Algerian sphinx: Le Corbusier’s other colonialism in the M’Zab. JA 27 2–3 (2022) 322–45.

  42. 142 PIERCE K, New spaces for a new midwifery at the Lying-In Hospital of the City of New York. B & L 29 1 (2022) 33–66.

  43. 143 PRUDON T, Preservation on the Cook Block: an architect’s perspective. In COHEN J-L, BERMAN D & RITTER J eds, Duke House and the making of modern New York: lives and afterlives of a Fifth Avenue mansion. Leiden: Brill 2022. 315–38.

  44. 144 RADMAN A, Generalised chromaticism: the ecologisation of architecture. JA 27 4 (2022) 517–38.

  45. 145 REEVE M M, An epithalamium in stone: the west façade of Wells Cathedral. JBAA 175 1 (2022) 149–82.

  46. 146 SARIÇAYIR E, ‘Against the privatised, the preconditioned, and the asylum-like’: Frank van Klingeren’s challenge to open architecture. JA 27 2–3 (2022) 204–24.

  47. 147 SCARLETT S F & ROULEAU L W, Object lesson: architecture at Pullman National Monument as both an agent of division and collective identity. B & L 29 2 (2022) 99–117.

  48. 148 SCHIBILLE N, LEHUÉDÉ P, BIRON I, BRUNSWIC L, BLONDEAU E & GRATUZE B, Origins and manufacture of the glass mosaic tesserae from the great Umayyad Mosque in Damascus. JASc 147 (2022).

  49. 149 SCHOFIELD J, Buildings in the City of London after the Great Fire of 1666. IJHA 26 2 (2022) 401–33.

  50. 150 SECKER D, Southminster: a secondary minster in Essex. JBAA 175 1 (2022) 37–66.

  51. 151 SHASORE N, Designs on democracy: architecture and the public in interwar London. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2022. pp 464.

  52. 152 SIGGE E, Bureaucratic reforms as triggers of experimental design: KBS and public building in Sweden, 1963–74. ArchH 65 1 (2022) 123–42.

  53. 153 SPINA D, The bureaucratisation of architecture in post-war Italy: SGI under Aldo Samaritani, 1945–73. ArchH 65 1 (2022) 81–104.

  54. 154 STABILE F R, Shaping early twentieth century Rome: the AACAR and the contributions of Filippo Galassi and Gustavo Giovannoni. PLP 37 3 (2022) 551–81.

  55. 155 STERNBERG M, Hans Döllgast, post-war reconstruction and modern architecture. JA 27 2–3 (2022) 260–95.

  56. 156 STEWART J, The chantry chapels of Cardinal Beaufort and Bishop Waynflete in Winchester Cathedral. JBAA 175 1 (2022) 203–34.

  57. 157 TEERDS H, ‘The space between’: an architectural examination of Hannah Arendt’s notions of ‘public space’ and ‘world’. JA 27 5–6 (2022) 757–77.

  58. 158 THOMANN J, More-to-know I: the foundation of al-Manṣūr’s palatial city and its horoscope. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 98–101.

  59. 159 VAN DE MAELE J, ‘As efficient as a factory’: architectural and managerial discourses on government office buildings in Belgium, 1919–39. ArchH 65 1 (2022) 21–38.

  60. 160 WESAM AL ASALI M, Modernism under load: experimental vaults in Cuba after the Revolution (1959–1963). JA 27 5–6 (2022) 652–72.

  61. 161 WIŚNIEWSKI M, Kraków architecture and globalisation. In PURCHLA J ed, Urban change in Central Europe: the case of Kraków. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 139–63.

  62. 162 ZANINI E, Constantinople: building and maintenance. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 102–16.

Housing

  1. 163 BERGER A & NIEWÖHNER P, Residential Constantinople. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 150–65.

  2. 164 BEZEMER P M & MARTIN A M, Planning versus reality: building ‘native’ housing estates in Lomé and Douala, late nineteenth century till 1940. PLP 37 6 (2022) 1147–78.

  3. 165 BRODERICK M, Mr. Duke builds his dream house. In COHEN J-L, BERMAN D & RITTER J eds, Duke House and the making of modern New York: lives and afterlives of a Fifth Avenue mansion. Leiden: Brill 2022. 151–82.

  4. 166 CARTWRIGHT A, Landlordism on trial: rent tribunals and resistance in post-war London, 1946–64. TCBH 33 4 (2022) 593–621.

  5. 167 CHARITONIDOU M, Housing programs for the poor in Addis Ababa: urban commons as a bridge between spacial and social. JUH 48 6 (2022) 1345–64.

  6. 168 CHILES A, Building in ‘splendid style’: Duke House and the development of the Cook Block. In COHEN J-L, BERMAN D & RITTER J eds, Duke House and the making of modern New York: lives and afterlives of a Fifth Avenue mansion. Leiden: Brill 2022. 91–115.

  7. 169 CHYNOWETH T, Diligence and dissipation: the maid servant’s bed chamber in the late eighteenth century. In HARLEY J, HOLMES V & NEVALAINEN L eds, The working class at home, 1790–1940. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 173–91.

  8. 170 FERNÁNDEZ L A & GONZÁLEZ A B, The transformation of private space in the later Middle Ages: rooms and living standards in the Kingdom of Valencia (1280–1450). JUH 48 4 (2022) 782–806.

  9. 171 GÜLHAN S T, Neoliberalism and neo-dirigisme in action: the state–corporate alliance and the great housing rush of the 2000s in Istanbul, Turkey. US 59 8 (2022) 1443–58.

  10. 172 GUSTAFSSON J, ‘They had already sold’: uncovering relations among the local state, the market and the public in the case of municipal housing privatization in Rosengård, Sweden. EPA 54 2 (2022) 247–64.

  11. 173 HØGHØJ M, The politics of everyday life: urban materialities, modernity and conflictual interactions on two Danish mass housing estates in the 1970s. UH 49 3 (2022) 631–47.

  12. 174 HOLDEN R N, The work of Stott & Sons for the linotype company at Altrincham 2: the works. IAR 44 2 (2022) 133–48.

  13. 175 HOLZNER M & HUBERMAN M, Red Vienna: a social housing experiment, 1923–1933. JIH 53 1 (2022) 49–88.

  14. 176 JACOBY S, ARANCIBIA A & ALONSO L, Space standards and housing design: typological experimentation in England and Chile. JA 27 1 (2022) 94–126.

  15. 177 K’MEYER T E, To live peaceably together: the American Friends Service Committee’s campaign for open housing. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2022. pp 240.

  16. 178 MUSIL R, BRAND F, HUEMER H & WONASCHÜTZ M, The Zinshaus market and gentrification dynamics: the transformation of the historic housing stock in Vienna, 2007–2019. US 59 5 (2022) 974–94.

  17. 179 NORD C, Post-colonial architecture: deterritorialisation of apartheid township housing and mass-housing. JA 27 1 (2022) 71–93.

  18. 180 PINTO T, The Greater London Council’s Homesteading Scheme: housing rehabilitation and the urban imaginary of Conservative politics in London, 1977–81. TCBH 33 3 (2022) 319–44.

  19. 181 VASUDEVAN A, Tenant trouble: resisting precarity in Berlin’s Märkisches Viertel, 1968–1974. AAAG 112 6 (2022) 1537–52.

  20. 182 YILGÜR E, Formation of informal settlements and the development of the idiom teneke mahalle in the late-Ottoman Istanbul. JUH 48 3 (2022) 608–37.

Space and place

  1. 183 AHMAD S, Muslim pasts and presents: displacement and city-making in a Delhi neighbourhood. MAsS 56 6 (2022) 1872–900.

  2. 184 ARMAND C & HENRIOT C, Paris in the Orient: a spatial micro-history of the French in Shanghai (1942). UH 49 1 (2022) 171–89.

  3. 185 BELLINGRADT D & HEISE C, Reconstructing the early modern news world: urban space, political conflict, and local publishing in Hamburg. In NEVOLA F, ROSENTHAL D & TERPSTRA N eds, Hidden cities: urban space, geolocated apps and public history in early modern Europe. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 61–84.

  4. 186 BOBBIO T, Informality, temporariness, and the production of illegitimate geographies: the rise of a Muslim sub-city in Ahmedabad, India (1970s–2000s). MAsS 56 1 (2022) 142–75.

  5. 187 BRUCE G, Resistance and daily life in East Germany: District Gransee as ‘place’. GeH 40 2 (2022) 239–57.

  6. 188 CEMBRZYŃSKI P & RADOMSKI M, ‘Empty’ space in Central European medieval towns through an interdisciplinary perspective. UH 49 1 (2022) 211–31.

  7. 189 EU R, Sunlight and gaslight: mapping light in mid-nineteenth-century New York City. JUH 48 2 (2022) 243–64.

  8. 190 HARIKRISHNAN S, Social spaces and the public sphere: a spatial-history of modernity in Kerala. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. pp 252.

  9. 191 HARRISON L, Dangerous amusements: leisure, the young working class and urban space in Britain, c. 1870–1939. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2022. pp 272.

  10. 192 HOSKINS L & PRESTON R, Chickens, ducks, rabbits, and me dad’s geraniums: the use and meanings of yards, gardens and other outside spaces of urban working-class homes, 1890–1930. In HARLEY J, HOLMES V & NEVALAINEN L eds, The working class at home, 1790–1940. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 145–69.

  11. 193 HOWLETT J J, Ordering the city: revolution, modernity and road renaming in Shanghai, 1949–1966. UH 49 3 (2022) 612–30.

  12. 194 HUSSEY G, Spatialising antagonism: a post-foundational analysis of the spatial dynamics of violence in nineteenth century Derry. EPC 40 8 (2022) 1677–92.

  13. 195 IORI E, From mining site to mining city. A spatial reading of Mes Aynak, Afghanistan. MS 19 1 (2022) 56–68.

  14. 196 JOHNSON M W, The legacies of 1936: Hitler’s Olympic grounds and Berlin’s bid to host the 2000 Olympic Games. GeH 40 2 (2022) 258–77.

  15. 197 JÖNSSON R, PRIES J & MITHCELL D, ‘The People’s Park is bigger, more freely located, more beautiful and – our own park’: workers, parks, and the spaces of class struggle in turn of the century Norrköping, Sweden. EPD 40 6 (2022) 1100–21.

  16. 198 MCSPADDEN J, Between grassroots pressure and local polycracy: street renaming in Nazi Berlin. GeH 40 3 (2022) 384–404.

  17. 199 NJERU A M, Carfree streets as negotiated play spaces in Tokyo. JUH 48 4 (2022) 896–912.

  18. 200 OSBORNE K, Stewarding civic spaces: place and social mobility in Elizabethan Exeter. In NEVOLA F, ROSENTHAL D & TERPSTRA N eds, Hidden cities: urban space, geolocated apps and public history in early modern Europe. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 150–68.

  19. 201 REIMANN C, Amusement leaves the port: pleasure institutions and the reshaping of Gothenburg’s material and nonmaterial borders, 1860s–1923. JUH 48 6 (2022) 1211–29.

  20. 202 ROSPOCHER M & VALSERIATI E, ‘Trento, the last chance for a beer’: mobility, material culture, and urban space in an early modern transit city. In NEVOLA F, ROSENTHAL D & TERPSTRA N eds, Hidden cities: urban space, geolocated apps and public history in early modern Europe. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 125–49.

  21. 203 SEVEA T, Exilic journeys and lives: paths leading to a Mughal grave in Rangoon. IESHR 59 2 (2022) 133–69.

  22. 204 SIDDIQI A, Atomized urbanism: secrecy and security from the Gulag to the Soviet closed cities. UH 49 1 (2022) 190–210.

  23. 205 THATRA G, Dalit chembur: spatializing the caste question in Bombay, c. 1920s–1970s. JUH 48 1 (2022) 63–97.

  24. 206 VAN DEN HEUVEL D, Framing the street. In VAN DEN HEUVEL D ed, Early modern streets: a European perspective. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 1–25.

  25. 207 VANWAGENEN J, Le piazze d’Italia: De Chirico’s prophetic vision of public space in destination Italy. In SCAPOLO A & PORCARELLI A eds, Interpreting urban spaces in Italian cultures. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press 2022. 139–56.

  26. 208 WIŚNIEWSKI M, Kraków spatial development after 1989. In PURCHLA J ed, Urban change in Central Europe: the case of Kraków. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 91–114.

  27. 209 WONG S W, TANG B-S & LIU J, Rethinking China’s rural revitalization from a historical perspective. JUH 48 3 (2022) 565–77.

  28. 210 ZHAO W, The evolution process and the cause of the spatial distribution of cinemas in the Shanghai settlements (1919–1943). UH 49 1 (2022) 149–70.

Heritage and the historic environment

  1. 211 ADAMS D & LARKHAM P, Contesting urban monuments: future directions for the controversial monumental landscapes of civic grandeur. IJHerS 28 8 (2022) 891–906.

  2. 212 AFFAKI M S, Lost between legislation and application: a critical reading of Czech post-war architectural conservation policies. IJHerS 28 11–12 (2022) 1255–70.

  3. 213 ALLAHHAM A, The myth of Islamic heritage versus authentic tradition. JUH 48 2 (2022) 319–35.

  4. 214 ANDONOVA M & NIKOLOV V, Pots on mats: mat-impressed salt-extraction pottery at Chalcolithic Provadia-Solnitsata, Bulgaria. A 96 385 (2022) 51–66.

  5. 215 AYLETT S, Legacies of an imperial city: the Museum of London 1976–2007. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. pp 234.

  6. 216 BADHAM S, A lost carved cadaver monument to a member of the Norton family at St Peter’s, Bristol. JBAA 175 1 (2022) 183–202.

  7. 217 BEISAW A M, TATUM III W P, BUECHELE V & MCADOO B G, Mapping a poorhouse and pauper cemetery as community engaged memory work. IJHA 26 3 (2022) 599–622.

  8. 218 BELOVA D & SCHOFIELD J, Collaborative experimentation in the urban process: activism and everyday heritage in Krasnoyarsk (Siberia, Russia). IJHerS 28 4 (2022) 538–58.

  9. 219 BEMMANN J, LINZEN S, REICHERT S & MUNKHBAYAR L, Mapping Karakorum, the capital of the Mongol Empire. A 96 385 (2022) 159–78.

  10. 220 BEN-HAMOUCHE M, Mapping mosques of old Algiers before the French colonial demolitions: through Albert Devoulx manuscript (1870). JUH 48 6 (2022) 1324–44.

  11. 221 BUCHCZYK M, Transforming legacies, habits and futures: reshaping the collection at the Museum of European Cultures. IJHerS 28 5 (2022) 563–77.

  12. 222 BUCHHEIM E, The motif of tears: representations of activism and suffering in the Liji Alley Museum in Nanjing. WomHR 31 6 (2022) 914–32.

  13. 223 BUCKING S, FUKS D, DUNSETH Z C, SCHWIMER L & ERICKSON-GINI T, The Avdat in Late Antiquity Project: uncovering the Early Islamic phases of a Byzantine town in the Negev Highlands. A 96 387 (2022) 754–61.

  14. 224 BURNETT J J, Seeking radical solidarity in heritage studies: exploring the intersection of black feminist archaeologies and geographies in Oak Bluffs, MA. IJHA 26 1 (2022) 53–78.

  15. 225 CARADONNA V, ‘All the things happening outside of the museum push me back in’: thinking through memory and belonging in Amsterdam’s Tropenmuseum. IJHerS 28 1 (2022) 59–73.

  16. 226 COLES T, Hidden in plain sight? AR apps and the sustainable management of urban heritage tourism. In NEVOLA F, ROSENTHAL D & TERPSTRA N eds, Hidden cities: urban space, geolocated apps and public history in early modern Europe. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 209–30.

  17. 227 COLOMBIJN F, Colonial heritage as bricolage: interpreting the colonial built environment in Surabaya, Indonesia. JSeAS 53 4 (2022) 617–40.

  18. 228 COLOMER L, Memorializing forced migration and beyond. Commemorating Salvador Allende in Barcelona as memory-work in the context of civic memory and the politics of belonging. IJHerS 28 1 (2022) 92–108.

  19. 229 COOPER D, NEVOLA F, CAPULLI C & BRUNKE L, 3D models and locative AR: Hidden Florence 3D and experiments in reconstruction. In NEVOLA F, ROSENTHAL D & TERPSTRA N eds, Hidden cities: urban space, geolocated apps and public history in early modern Europe. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 231–48.

  20. 230 DAMJANOVIĆ D, MIKLOŠEVIĆ Ž & POČANIĆ P, Representing the capital of a nation: Zagreb City Museum between Austria-Hungary and Yugoslavia. MuHJ 15 1 (2022) 57–76.

  21. 231 DANG Z, LI C, ZHANG X, XU Y, LI Y, TIAN D & ZHANG C, Early urban occupation in the Tarim Basin: recent fieldwork results from the fortified site of Kuiyukexiehai’er (Koyuk Shahri). A 96 386 (2022) 463–70.

  22. 232 DE CUPERE B, SPELEERS L, MITCHELL P D, DEGRAEVE A, MEGANCK M, BENNION-PEDLEY E, JONES A K, LEDGER M L & DEFORCE K, A multidisciplinary analysis of cesspits from late medieval and post-medieval Brussels, Belgium: diet and health in the fourteenth to seventeenth centuries. IJHA 26 3 (2022) 531–72.

  23. 233 DE ZOYSA R S & BIN SALLEH J, Sanded: sedimented pasts and shored futures in ‘outer’ Singapore. In DE ZOYSA R S, LOW K E Y, ABDULLAH N & HORNIDGE A-K eds, Coastal urbanities: mobilities, meanings, manoeuvrings. Leiden: Brill 2022. 180–201.

  24. 234 DIMITRIOU M, Assessing the significance of industrial heritage: the case of Volos, Greece. IAR 44 2 (2022) 106–19.

  25. 235 DINLER M, A political framework for understanding heritage dynamics in Turkey (1950–1980). UH 49 2 (2022) 364–82.

  26. 236 EDWARDS S, ‘To imperishable memory’: Lancaster’s Crimean War monument, c. 1855–1862. NH 59 2 (2022) 239–60.

  27. 237 ERŐSS A, HOLÁNYI A & TÁTRAI P, Toponymic politics and the role of heritagisation in multiethnic cities in Romania. IJHerS 28 6 (2022) 763–77.

  28. 238 FOLKERTS S & LAWRENCE R, The Hidden Cities apps: digital engagement through geolocating museum collections. In NEVOLA F, ROSENTHAL D & TERPSTRA N eds, Hidden cities: urban space, geolocated apps and public history in early modern Europe. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 191–208.

  29. 239 FUHRMANN M, Save Haydarpaşa: a train station as object of conflicting visions of the past. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 241–55.

  30. 240 GATTIGLIA G, Medieval archaeology and excavations. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 107–35.

  31. 241 GIL M S, The conservation of railway stations in Mexico: a pending issue. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 256–70.

  32. 242 GLEESON F, Memory, community and the end of empire on the Isle of Dogs, 1980–2004. HR 95 270 (2022) 538–55.

  33. 243 GLEESON F, Stories from London’s Docklands: heritage encounters, deindustrialization, and the end of empire. JBS 61 4 (2022) 970–95.

  34. 244 GRIMSHAW L & MATES L, ‘It’s part of our community, where we live’: urban heritage and children’s sense of place. US 59 7 (2022) 1334–52.

  35. 245 GUSTAVSSON A, Revisiting and reframing ethnographic praxis. The return of visual collections from Gothenburg to the Argentine Chaco. IJHerS 28 11–12 (2022) 1242–54.

  36. 246 HAVIK K & ARLANDIS A A, Choreography as a tool to understand architectural situatedness: a mediating intervention at Hiedanranta industrial heritage site, Finland. JA 27 4 (2022) 539–57.

  37. 247 HEIN-KIRCHER H & VAHTIKARI T, City museums in the emerging cities of Eastern Europe, 1880–1939: introduction. MuHJ 15 1 (2022) 1–11.

  38. 248 HINTON G, War memorials and culture wars in mid-nineteenth century Sunderland. NH 59 2 (2022) 261–80.

  39. 249 HOPKINS P D, Finding place in the archive: a case study of St. John [Colored] Missionary Baptist Church, 1866–1900. H 107 375 (2022) 337–55.

  40. 250 ILLSLEY W R, Digital surrogacy: politics and aesthetics in visualising the historical past of a city. IJHerS 28 2 (2022) 216–34.

  41. 251 IRA J, Displaying city and nation in the Prague City Museum (1883–1938). MuHJ 15 1 (2022) 33–56.

  42. 252 JANAKIRAMAN A, Constructing national identity through World Heritage: the international and intranational politics of the built environment in Ahmadabad. IJHerS 28 2 (2022) 235–51.

  43. 253 KAMAT M, Building with a conscience? Heritage, design and urban space in Bombay. In TALBOT I & RANJAN A eds, Urban development and environmental history in modern South Asia. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 58–74.

  44. 254 KAZLAUSKAITĖ R, Embodying ressentimentful victimhood: virtual reality re-enactment of the Warsaw uprising in the Second World War Museum in Gdańsk. IJHerS 28 6 (2022) 699–713.

  45. 255 LEADER G M, DE PAOLA P, MINA L, HAYDA S, MORAN K S, BEATRICE J & DHODY A, Threads of evidence: polarized light microscopy for funerary textile identification from an eighteenth and nineteenth century Philadelphia burial ground. IJHA 26 3 (2022) 951–73.

  46. 256 LESH J, Values in cities: urban heritage in twentieth-century Australia. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. pp 338.

  47. 257 LESH J & MYERS K, ‘Beyond repair’: modernism, renewal and the conservation of Melbourne’s Queen Victoria Market, 1967–76. PLP 37 2 (2022) 217–42.

  48. 258 ŁUPIENKO A, A museum or a sanctuary of memory? The impact of a non-existent city museum in Russian Warsaw (1905–1915). MuHJ 15 1 (2022) 12–32.

  49. 259 MCNEILL J, Bishop Roger, St John Hope, and Old Sarum Cathedral. JBAA 175 1 (2022) 104–48.

  50. 260 MACPHAIL R I, CAREY C J & ALLAN J P, Contrasting the use of space in post-Roman Exeter: geoarchaeology of dark earth and medieval deposits below Exeter Cathedral. A 96 386 (2022) 487–93.

  51. 261 MASSETI M, Gazelles (Gazella spp) depicted in frescoes and sculpture from Herculaneum and Pompeii. ANH 49 2 (2022) 259–68.

  52. 262 MITTER A & LOEW P O, Exhibiting city, region and Germanness: Erich Keyser and the State Regional Museum of Danzig History (1927–1939). MuHJ 15 1 (2022) 94–113.

  53. 263 MONTANINI M, L’impossible musée. Controverses et protestations autour du projet du Red Location Museum, à Port Elizabeth (Afrique du Sud). HU 63 2 (2022) 171–88.

  54. 264 MORRISON J, Heritage, digital placemaking and user experience: an industry perspective. In NEVOLA F, ROSENTHAL D & TERPSTRA N eds, Hidden cities: urban space, geolocated apps and public history in early modern Europe. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 39–60.

  55. 265 MOZAFFARI A & BARRY J, Heritage and territorial disputes in the Armenia–Azerbaijan conflict: a comparative analysis of the carpet museums of Baku and Shusha. IJHerS 28 3 (2022) 318–40.

  56. 266 MUNAWAR N A & SYMONDS J, Post-conflict reconstruction, forced migration & community engagement: the case of Aleppo, Syria. IJHerS 28 9 (2022) 1017–35.

  57. 267 MURPHY E, Putting neoliberalism in a place: a memory site, urban restructuring, and property’s entanglements in Chile. CSSH 64 2 (2022) 446–77.

  58. 268 NIGRO L, The sacred pool of Ba’al: a reinterpretation of the ‘Kothon’ at Motya. A 96 386 (2022) 354–71.

  59. 269 NOL H, Settlement and urbanization in early Islamic Palestine, 7th–11th centuries: texts and archaeology contrasted. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. pp 318.

  60. 270 NOMEIKAITE L, Street art and evental heritage: from failure to discovery. IJHerS 28 8 (2022) 923–39.

  61. 271 PERRING D, London in the Roman world. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2022. pp 592.

  62. 272 PIEKALSKI J, SAWICKI J & DUMA P, Archaeology and quality of life in Central-European, pre-industrial towns (fourteenth to eighteenth centuries). IJHA 26 4 (2022) 1132–58.

  63. 273 PITELKA M, Reading medieval ruins: urban life and destruction in sixteenth-century Japan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. pp 242.

  64. 274 PORFYRIOU H & ZUCCONI G V, The art of preserving and building cities in Italy (1860–1930): legacies and actors. PLP 37 3 (2022) 433–44.

  65. 275 REID L C, ‘It’s not about us’: exploring white-public heritage space, community, and commemoration on Jamestown Island, Virginia. IJHA 26 1 (2022) 22–52.

  66. 276 ROSENTHAL D, Revisioning the city: public history and locative digital media. In NEVOLA F, ROSENTHAL D & TERPSTRA N eds, Hidden cities: urban space, geolocated apps and public history in early modern Europe. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 21–38.

  67. 277 SAMUELS J T, COHEN S, JOHNSON T, MOSES V, NAGLAK M, OPITZ R, BANDUCCI L, D’ACRI M, MOTTA L, RITTERSHAUS A & STEWART E, Reimaging urban success: rhythms of activity at Gabii, 800 BC–-AD 600. A 96 385 (2022) 103–22.

  68. 278 SHALLY-JENSON M & VIVIAN A, A cultural encyclopedia of lost cities and civilizations. London: Bloomsbury Publishing 2022. pp 360.

  69. 279 SPERA S A, FRANKLIN M S, ZIZZAMIA E A & SMITH R K, Recovering a black cemetery: automated mapping of hidden gravesites using an sUAV and GIS in East End Cemetery, Richmond, VA. IJHA 26 4 (2022) 1110–31.

  70. 280 STEINBERG N, Every goddamn day: a highly selective definitely opinionated, and alternatingly humorous and heartbreaking historical tour of Chicago. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2022. pp 408.

  71. 281 STERK D, The forgotten museum of Hong Kong: a place of unfulfilled ambitions (1869–1933). MuHJ 15 2 (2022) 161–75.

  72. 282 SUMARTOJO S, Approaching heritage sites atmospherically. JA 27 4 (2022) 558–72.

  73. 283 SWENSEN G, STAFSENG V E & NIELSEN V K S, Visionscapes: combining heritage and urban gardening to enhance areas requiring regeneration. IJHerS 28 4 (2022) 511–37.

  74. 284 SZERLE M, The port city of Gdynia and its City Museum in the 1930s. MuHJ 15 1 (2022) 77–93.

  75. 285 TALBI A & BOUZAHER S, Towards recognition of industrial heritage in Algeria: the square concrete grain silos of Setif. IAR 44 2 (2022) 96–105.

  76. 286 TOMLINSON L G & BURKE S, The archaeology of resilience: a case study from Peel Town, Western Australia, 1829–30. IJHA 26 2 (2022) 379–400.

  77. 287 WEI R, Tyrannical participation approaches in China’s regeneration of urban heritage areas: a case study of Baitasi District, Beijing. IJHerS 28 3 (2022) 279–96.

  78. 288 WEINSTEIN B, Heritage, civilisation and oblivion in inter-war Britain: the case of the city churches. CulSH 19 1 (2022) 39–55.

IV Social structure

Urban social identity

  1. 289 ALLEN N, Indo-Mozambicans in Maputo, 1947–1992: oral narratives on identity and migration. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. pp xi + 245.

  2. 290 ANSELMI J J, Out here on our own: an oral history of an American boomtown. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press 2022. pp 192.

  3. 291 AŞUR F, KULEKCI E A & PERIHAN M, The role of urban landscape in the formation of urban identity and urban memory relations: the case of Van/Turkey. PLP 37 4 (2022) 841–57.

  4. 292 BAKER A R H, The personality of Paris: landscape and society in the long-nineteenth century. London: Bloomsbury Academic 2022. pp 248.

  5. 293 BARKE M & TAYLOR P J, Narrative heroes and civic builders in Newcastle city region during the nineteenth century. UH 49 1 (2022) 88–107.

  6. 294 BARRACLOUGH R, Reassessing Joseph Bonomi the Elder: the Hawksmoor Prize Essay 2021. ArchH 65 1 (2022) 195–226.

  7. 295 BELGE B, Bestätigung, Wissen, Nationalstolz. Funktionen der Erinnerung an das 18. Jahrhundert im imperialen Odessa. MS 19 2 (2022) 82–95.

  8. 296 BERRY C, The margins of late medieval London, 1430–1540. London: University of London Press 2022. pp 350.

  9. 297 CIXOUS H, Well-kept ruins. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2022. pp 156.

  10. 298 EARNER-BYRNE L & PURDUE O, ‘Please pardon me for taking the liberty’: poverty letters as negotiating spaces in 1920s and 1930s Belfast and Dublin. CulSH 19 5 (2022) 567–85.

  11. 299 GADE T, Sunni city: Tripoli from Islamist utopia to the Lebanese ‘Revolution’. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. pp 286.

  12. 300 GERRARD D, ‘A large population, famous for their military qualities’: Londoners at war, c. 1000–1200. UH 49 4 (2022) 690–708.

  13. 301 GIALDINI A, Bookbinders in the early modern Venetian book trade. HJ 65 4 (2022) 901–21.

  14. 302 IZDEBSKA K & KOZLOWSKA U, The cultural landscape and maritime identity of Szczecin: the past and present of a port city. IJMH 34 1 (2022) 83–100.

  15. 303 JHA A, Social city: urban experience and belonging in Surat. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. pp 248.

  16. 304 KALDELLIS A, The people of Constantinople. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 50–64.

  17. 305 LOW K E Y, Sensory and embodied narratives of sea lives and displacement: the Orang Laut in Singapore. In DE ZOYSA R S, LOW K E Y, ABDULLAH N & HORNIDGE A-K eds, Coastal urbanities: mobilities, meanings, manoeuvrings. Leiden: Brill 2022. 27–49.

  18. 306 MIERAU K, Transient marginal identities and networks in early modern Madrid: the 1614 case of the ‘Armenian’, ‘Greek’ and ‘Turkish’ counterfeiters. UH 49 1 (2022) 28–43.

  19. 307 PRIDUAUX T, Navigating family welfare and dwelling space for mercantile migrants in Venice, 1550–1770. CulSH 19 4 (2022) 371–87.

  20. 308 ROTH C, The talk of the town: information and community in sixteenth-century Switzerland. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2022. pp 208.

  21. 309 SKOCIC M & NELSON R L, Blood and honey: culinary nationalism and Yugonostalgia in a Canadian city. GFH 8 1 (2022) 56–77.

  22. 310 SMURRA R & ORLANDI M, The role of women in the shaping of civic identity in Edwardian Leicester: Edith Gittins and the Anglo-Saxon past of Æthelflæd’s fountain. Historical reconstruction and 3D visualization. UH 49 2 (2022) 335–63.

  23. 311 STARLING N, ‘Victims of intemperance’: status politics and clerical drunkenness in the second-wave temperance societies of colonial Sydney. AHS 53 1 (2022) 43–60.

  24. 312 TACKETT T, The glory and the sorrow: a Parisian and his world in the age of the French Revolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2022. pp 232.

  25. 313 TAYLOR S, National identity in mid-nineteenth century Birmingham. MidH 47 1 (2022) 129–49.

  26. 314 THELEN E M, Urban histories of Rajasthan: religion, politics and society (1550–1800). Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2022. pp 261.

  27. 315 WION A & NOÛS C, Droit foncier urbain et structuration sociale à Aksum (Éthiopie, XVe–XXe siècles). HU 63 2 (2022) 43–62.

  28. 316 YIM S H, Cultural heritage through the lens of community psychology and narrative therapy: a community project on Chinese and Vietnamese diaspora in London. IJHerS 28 8 (2022) 970–83.

Class structure

  1. 317 BERRY J, Keeping up appearances in the nineteenth century in Moseley, a middle-class Birmingham suburb, 1850–1900. MidH 47 2 (2022) 169–90.

  2. 318 BREATHNACH C, Ordinary lives, death, and social class: Dublin City Coroner’s Court, 1876–1902. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2022. pp 288.

  3. 319 PROBOLUS-CEDRONI K, Bright flight: desegregating Boston’s elite public schools, 1960–2000. JUH 48 3 (2022) 657–77.

  4. 320 SINHA N, Domestic servants and master–servant regulations in colonial Calcutta, 1750s–1810s. P & P 255 1 (2022) 141–188.

  5. 321 WORSNICK M, A ‘gilded stall’ for the Progressive Era: fabricating aristocracy on Fifth Avenue. In COHEN J-L, BERMAN D & RITTER J eds, Duke House and the making of modern New York: lives and afterlives of a Fifth Avenue mansion. Leiden: Brill 2022. 69–9.

Social life

  1. 322 ARNAUD C, La rue est à nous: le rôle des voisins dans l’entretien des chaussées à Bologne (XIIIe–XVIIIe siècles). HU 64 3 (2022) 115–32.

  2. 323 BRANDENBURG U, Transnational solidarities and competing visions of Europe: Vienna’s vote on the Russo-Japanese War. H 107 378 (2022) 885–909.

  3. 324 CORFIELD P J, Fleeting gestures and changing styles of greeting: researching daily life in British towns in the long eighteenth century. UH 49 3 (2022) 555–67.

  4. 325 HOLMES V, Pulling back the covers: uncovering beds in the Victorian working-class home. In HARLEY J, HOLMES V & NEVALAINEN L eds, The working class at home, 1790–1940. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 73–95.

  5. 326 MEDINA-ALBALADEJO F J & PUJOL-ANDREU J, Social economy and living standards: consumer cooperatives in Barcelona, 1891–1935. IRSH 67 2 (2022) 317–42.

  6. 327 STONE T, LAFRENIERE D & HILDEBRANDT R, Deep mapping the daily spaces of children and youth in the industrial city. HM 55 4 (2022) 209–27.

  7. 328 WEINTRITT A D, Marketplace encounters: social mixing on the streets of early modern Florence. In SCAPOLO A & PORCARELLI A eds, Interpreting urban spaces in Italian cultures. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press 2022. 19–38.

Religion

  1. 329 ABU-MOUNES R, Muslim–Christian relations in Damascus amid the 1860 riot. Leiden: Brill 2022. pp xii + 256.

  2. 330 ANDREWS R M, Nicholas Wiseman, The Dublin Review, and the Oxford Movement: a study with reference to John Henry Newman, 1836 to 1845. ChH 91 2 (2022) 332–59.

  3. 331 BASHARIN P, The Ṣūfī school of Baghdād. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 633–81.

  4. 332 BEHAL R P, Amritsar. Syncretic and sectarian traditions among Muslims, Sikhs and Hindus in an urban conflict. MS 19 1 (2022) 84–97.

  5. 333 BENNETT D, More-to-know VI rational theologians. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 629–32.

  6. 334 CARR A W, Pilgrimage to Constantinople. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 310–23.

  7. 335 CARROLL J T, Neighbors to the east of the river: cast of leaders in the Diocese of Brooklyn, 1920–1960. CHR 108 2 (2022) 267–86.

  8. 336 ČERNUŠÁK T, The strategy of Papal Nuncios in the sacred space of Prague against the backdrop of the confessional transformation of the city at the turn of seventeenth century. CHR 108 3 (2022) 509–33.

  9. 337 CHRIST M, Friedhöfe in gemischtkonfessionellen deutschen Städten der Frühen Neuzeit. MS 19 1 (2022) 23–38.

  10. 338 CORBELLINI S, BOONSTRA P & HOOGVLIET M, Navigating places of knowledge: the modern devotion and religious experience in late medieval Deventer. In NEVOLA F, ROSENTHAL D & TERPSTRA N eds, Hidden cities: urban space, geolocated apps and public history in early modern Europe. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 103–24.

  11. 339 DAVIES E, Reformed but not converted: Paolo Sarpi, the English mission in Venice and conceptions of religious change. HR 95 269 (2022) 334–47.

  12. 340 DELBEKE M, Sforza Pallavicino: a Jesuit life in Baroque Rome. In DELBEKE M ed, Sforza Pallavicino: a Jesuit life in Baroque Rome. Leiden: Brill 2022. 1–31.

  13. 341 DEMPSEY S T, City of dignity: Christianity, liberalism, and the making of global Los Angeles. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2022. pp 224.

  14. 342 DU ROY G, Les zabbālīn du Muqattam: ethnohistoire d’une hétérotopie au Caire (979–2021). Leiden: Brill 2022. pp xiv + 376.

  15. 343 DURKIN-MEISTERERNST D, Zoroastrians, Manichaeans and gnostics in Baghdād and its hinterland. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 765–83.

  16. 344 FARIA A S & MENDIRATTA S L, Conflicted identities: Bombay’s Catholic communities, its buildings and the press. In FARIA A S, SHELLEY A & LOBO S A eds, The built environment through the prism of the colonial periodical press. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 194–216.

  17. 345 FOA J, From sounding the tocsin to ringing the doorbell: some reflections on Saint Bartholomew as a neighbourhood massacre. FH 36 4 (2022) 401–12.

  18. 346 FREITAG U, Der Friedhof für Nichtmuslime in Dschidda, Saudi-Arabien. MS 19 1 (2022) 39–55.

  19. 347 FUCHS M, Metropolitaner Kontext und neue religiöse Bewegungen. Formen hinduistischer kosmopolitischer Urbanität. MS 19 1 (2022) 98–111.

  20. 348 GRAUBART K B, Republics of difference: religious and racial self-governance in the Spanish Atlantic world. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2022. pp 320.

  21. 349 ISSAR S, Property, custom, and religion in early nineteenth-century Bombay. JIH 52 3 (2022) 401–21.

  22. 350 IVANIĈ S, Religion in the streets. In VAN DEN HEUVEL D ed, Early modern streets: a European perspective. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 161–86.

  23. 351 IZBICKI T M, Using justice and mercy: Antoninus of Florence on the punishment of heresy. CHR 108 2 (2022) 287–305.

  24. 352 JOHNSON M J, Sacred dimensions: death and burial. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 214–28.

  25. 353 KELLER S, Religion and urban waterscape in South Asia. Kankaria or the Ghāt re-semanticised. MS 19 1 (2022) 69–83.

  26. 354 KRAUSMÜLLER D, Sacred dimensions: Constantinopolitan monasticism. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 200–13.

  27. 355 LEMUT M L C, The Pisan churches and the cult of saints. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 383–400.

  28. 356 LYNCH K, ‘We Protestants in masquerade’: burning the pope in London. LJ 47 1 (2022) 103–26.

  29. 357 LYONS M, Defenestration in Prague. HT 72 7 (2022) 27.

  30. 358 MARINIS V, Sacred dimensions: church building and ecclesiastical practice. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 180–99.

  31. 359 MELCHERT C, The formation of Sunnī and Shīʿī traditionalism. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 597–628.

  32. 360 MILLER B J, From ‘jungles of terror’ to ‘God will begin a healing in this city’: Billy Graham and evangelicals on cities and suburbs. JUH 48 2 (2022) 302–18.

  33. 361 MORONY M, Christian communities in Baghdād and its hinterland. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 682–730.

  34. 362 NEWMAN M, The Catholic way: the Catholic diocese of Dallas and desegregation, 1945–1971. JAEH 41 3 (2022) 5–36.

  35. 363 NOTHAFT C P E, Worcester and the English reception of Marianus Scotus. In TINTI F & WOODMAN D A eds, Constructing history across the Norman Conquest: Worcester, c. 1050–c. 1150. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer 2022. 150–73.

  36. 364 O’SULLIVAN R, The 1844 Philadelphia Bible Riots and the American Irish Catholic press. PH 89 2 (2022) 194–227.

  37. 365 PEETERS T, Trust in the Catholic Reformation: Genoa 1594–1664. Leiden: Brill 2021. pp x + 338.

  38. 366 RAU S & RÜPKE J, Urbanität und Religion. Neue Perspektiven auf Religion in europäischen, süd- und westasiatischen Städten. MS 19 1 (2022) 3–22.

  39. 367 ROBERTS P, ‘This beautiful appearance…has gradually transformed and become altogether monstrous’: the massacre at Troyes as a foreseeable tragedy. FH 36 4 (2022) 413–27.

  40. 368 RONZANI M, Bishops, archbishops, and religious institutions from the ninth to the fifteenth century. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 361–82.

  41. 369 ROSENTHAL J T, The English Hospice in Rome: a late medieval home away from home. CHR 108 1 (2022) 1–43.

  42. 370 SARKISIAN A G, Their daily dread: Russian Orthodox Christians in Red Scare Detroit, 1918–1920. JAEH 41 4 (2022) 37–73.

  43. 371 SAWKINS J W & SAWKINS A J, Servant keeping and residential neighbourhood composition: presbyterian ministers in late nineteenth-century Edinburgh. BOEC 18 1 (2022) 71–80.

  44. 372 STAMPFER Y Z, Jews in Baghdād during the ʿAbbāsid Period. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 731–64.

  45. 373 SUMAN A K, Colonial state and indigenous Islamic learning: a case study of Calcutta Madrasa. PaedH 58 4 (2022) 486–503.

  46. 374 TINTI F & WOODMAN D A, Framing the past: charters and chronicles at Worcester, c. 1050–c. 1150. In TINTI F & WOODMAN D A eds, Constructing history across the Norman Conquest: Worcester, c. 1050–c. 1150. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer 2022. 1–30.

  47. 375 TRÉLAT P, Les chrétiens orientaux dans les villes chypriotes (fin XIIe–XVIe siècle). Implantation urbaine et quête identitaire. HU 64 3 (2022) 17–36.

  48. 376 WALTER J, The ‘Recusancy Revolt’ of 1603 revisited, popular politics, and the civic Catholicism in early modern Ireland. HJ 65 2 (2022) 249–74.

  49. 377 YASUHIRA G, Transforming the urban space: Catholic survival through spatial practices in post-Reformation Utrecht. P & P 255 1 (2022) 39–86.

Recreation

  1. 378 DIXON C & PICCINI J, Over sexed, over paid and over here…again? Americans on R&R in Vietnam-era Sydney. AHS 53 3 (2022) 433–51.

  2. 379 GRUNDLINGH L, Municipal modernity: the politics of leisure and Johannesburg’s swimming baths, 1920s to 1930s. UH 49 4 (2022) 771–90.

  3. 380 HUGGINS M, Urbs in rure: race-grounds, grandstands and the commercialized consumption of urban leisure, 1750–1805. UH 49 1 (2022) 44–60.

  4. 381 JUST A L, Forgotten fun: recollecting the working-class pleasurescape of Hamburg’s East End, 1880s–1950s. JUH 48 6 (2022) 1281–303.

  5. 382 NAHA S, Gender, power, and cricket spectators in Calcutta, 1960s–1990s. HJ 65 3 (2022) 774–96.

  6. 383 QUIN G, The hotelier, the politician and the skier. On the founding moment of alpine skiing in St Moritz. SpiH 42 2 (2022) 213–34.

  7. 384 ROMYN M, ‘For them it was just a game but for us it was more’: black identity and the making of basketball in urban Britain. HWJ 93 1 (2022) 69–94.

  8. 385 SINI R, The social, cultural, and political value of play: Singapore’s postcolonial playground system. JUH 48 3 (2022) 578–607.

Crime and policing

  1. 386 BOHIGIAN S, ‘Not so much Orwellian as Kafkaesque’: the war on crime, information sharing systems, and the limits of criminal justice modernization and surveillance in Los Angeles County. JUH 48 2 (2022) 381–98.

  2. 387 CAMPHUIJSEN F, Scripting justice in late medieval Europe: legal practice and communication in the law courts of Utrecht, York and Paris. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press 2022. pp 312.

  3. 388 CHATTHA I & QASMI A U, City of ‘red assassins’? Crime, control, and resistance in colonial Lahore. HWJ 94 2 (2022) 109–29.

  4. 389 CHESTER J, ‘…or els to bridewell’: the different roles sustained by Coventry’s House of Correction, 1580–1680. MidH 47 1 (2022) 3–20.

  5. 390 DE NYS-KETELS S, Colonial policing and urban space in the notorious Commune Rouge of Lubumbashi, Democratic Republic of Congo. UH 49 1 (2022) 129–48.

  6. 391 DEAN T & SKINNER P, Marked men: identity and surveillance in late medieval Italy (Perugia, 1411–45). HWJ 94 2 (2022) 130–52.

  7. 392 FOGG S L, A landscape of loss: the furniture operation and the geography of looting and restitution in Paris, 1942–1946. HU 62 1 (2022) 59–78.

  8. 393 FREEDMAN J, Fear, anger, and rebellion: policing and affect in eighteenth-century Paris. FHS 45 4 (2022) 591–624.

  9. 394 GLAZE A, Sanctioned and illicit support networks at the margins of a Scottish town in the early seventeenth century. SH 45 1 (2022) 26–51.

  10. 395 HERZIG T, Slavery and interethnic sexual violence: a multiple perpetrator rape in seventeenth-century Livorno. AHR 127 1 (2022) 194–222.

  11. 396 JOHNSON D, Crime in the city of brotherly love. HT 72 1 (2022) 28–39.

  12. 397 LANDOLFI F, Politics, police and crime in New York during prohibition: Gotham and the age of recklessness, 1920–1933. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. pp 428.

  13. 398 PÉREZ-OLIVARES A, Struggling for bread, policing the streets: urban public (dis)order and control of resources in post-war Spain (1939–1948). JHG 77 (2022) 160–72.

  14. 399 PLUSKOTA M & MUURLING S, Street crimes. In VAN DEN HEUVEL D ed, Early modern streets: a European perspective. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 187–212.

  15. 400 RIBEIRO A S, Violence in eighteenth-century European port-cities and their hinterlands: Porto as a case study. In LEE R & MCNAMARA P eds, Port-cities and their hinterlands: migration, trade and cultural exchange from the early seventeenth century to 1939. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 125–41.

  16. 401 STELMACH A, ‘It was pandemonium let loose’: rioting, resistance and punishment at the early twentieth-century Girls’ Reformatory at Redruth, South Australia. HA 19 3 (2022) 468–86.

  17. 402 VON GERMETEN N, The enlightened patrolman: early law enforcement in Mexico City. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press 2022. pp 350.

  18. 403 YANNAKAKIS Y, Taking the courts to the fields: law, violence, and agrarian custom in colonial Oaxaca, Mexico. L & HR 40 3 (2022) 513–32.

Minority groups

  1. 404 AMEZCUA M, Making Mexican Chicago: from postwar settlement to the age of gentrification. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2022. pp 320.

  2. 405 BACKOUCHE I, GENSBURGER S & LE BOURHIS E, Persécution des juifs et espace urbain: Paris, 1940–1946. HU 62 1 (2022) 5–13.

  3. 406 BACKOUCHE I, GENSBURGER S & LE BOURHIS E, Spoliation et voisinage: le logement à Paris, 1943–1944. HU 62 1 (2022) 79–102.

  4. 407 BREATHNACH C, Immigrant Irishwomen and maternity services in New York and Boston, 1860–1911. MedH 61 1 (2022) 3–23.

  5. 408 CARNEVALE N C, White ethnicity in the urban crisis: Newark’s Italian Americans. JSocH 55 4 (2022) 1001–30.

  6. 409 DE LEON A, Frank Mancao’s ‘Pinoy Image’: photography, masculinity, and respectability in Depression-era California. JAEH 41 2 (2022) 58–94.

  7. 410 DHUPELIA-MESTHRIE U, Waiting on Cape Town in the apartheid era: life histories of Indian waiters and barmen. SH 45 4 (2022) 522–47.

  8. 411 DREHER S, Abgehängt? Die Ausländergemeinden in der Hafenstadt Archangel’sk unter dem Eindruck der Handelsrestriktionen von 1721–1762. MS 19 2 (2022) 28–41.

  9. 412 GRANGE C, Réquisitions, spoliations et pillages dans les demeures de la grande bourgeoisie juive parisienne pendant l’Occupation: Les exemples de l’avenue de Iéna et de la place des États-Unis. HU 62 1 (2022) 103–28.

  10. 413 HALPERN S, ‘A problem of some delicacy’: Chinese sovereignty, Jewish refugees, and the West, 1945–1946. In OSTOYICH K & XIA Y eds, The history of Shanghai Jews: new pathways of research. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 173–202.

  11. 414 HANDIN H S, La réinsertion socioéconomique troublée des juifs parisiens après la Shoah: le cas des conflits entre locataires au 66 rue René Boulanger, 1944–1946. HU 62 1 (2022) 129–44.

  12. 415 HOWITT R, Māori workers in colonial New South Wales, c. 1803–40. HWJ 93 1 (2022) 117–37.

  13. 416 JOLY L, ‘Ils ont emmené votre maman et votre petite sœur…’ La grande rafle du 16 juillet 1942 à l’échelle d’un quartier du 3e arrondissement de Paris. HU 62 1 (2022) 37–57.

  14. 417 KANNO K, The designated area for stateless refugees in Shanghai: exploring aftereffects using unpublished documents of Captain Toshiro Saneyoshi. In OSTOYICH K & XIA Y eds, The history of Shanghai Jews: new pathways of research. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 75–96.

  15. 418 KUŹMA-MARKOWSKA S, Achieving their goals and adopting new norms: Polish immigrant women and American institutions in early twentieth-century and interwar Chicago. JAEH 41 4 (2022) 5–36.

  16. 419 LAZIN F A, The plight of European Jewish refugees in post-Second World War Shanghai, August 1945–April 1948. In OSTOYICH K & XIA Y eds, The history of Shanghai Jews: new pathways of research. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 203–33.

  17. 420 LE NOC M, Présences, proximités et disparitions: une approche spatiale de la persécution des Juifs à Paris 1940–1944. HU 62 1 (2022) 15–36.

  18. 421 MACLELLAN R, Prisoners, sanctuary-seekers, and workers: Jews at the Tower of London, 1189–1290. H 107 378 (2022) 815–35.

  19. 422 MEYERSON M D, Accusation and innuendo: oligarchic Jewish politics in fourteenth century Valencia. JeH 36 1–2 (2022) 25–61.

  20. 423 MORENO J G, Ethnic student radicalism and activism: the Chicana/o studies movement at the University of Washington, 1968–1980. JAEH 41 3 (2022) 65–83.

  21. 424 PANAYI P & VARNAVA A, The bewildered peasant: family, migration and murder in the Greek Cypriot community in London. HR 95 267 (2022) 82–103.

  22. 425 PÉNARD E, ATTALI M & GOMET D, The Sporting Club Maccabi de Paris in the interwar period (1924–1939): the path of a Zionist club. IJHS 39 11 (2022) 1219–39.

  23. 426 RABINOWITZ R, Objects of love and regret: a Brooklyn story. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press 2022. pp 352.

  24. 427 RAVERA C & RICH-ABAD A, Benedictus’ Summer’s Night Dream: the journey of a Jew from Barcelona to Chios (1391–1404). CulSH 19 4 (2022) 461–74.

  25. 428 RENSHAW D, Old prejudices and new prejudices: state surveillance and harassment of Irish and Jewish communities in London – 1800–1930. I & M 40 1–2 (2022) 79–105.

  26. 429 ROBERTS L M, Relative resistance: fascist aryanization practices and the bond of victimhood in the antifascist animation A Jewish Girl in Shanghai. In OSTOYICH K & XIA Y eds, The history of Shanghai Jews: new pathways of research. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 237–70.

  27. 430 SIMPSON I, Global forces and local responses: the case of the Mongolia ‘Riot’, Sydney, 1908. AHS 53 3 (2022) 379–96.

  28. 431 TAVERNER C, Feeding the community: London’s immigrants and their food, 1650–1800. JSocH 56 2 (2022) 326–51.

  29. 432 WALCH T, With an iron broom: cleansing Berlin’s Bülowplatz of ‘Judeo-Bolshevism’, 1933–1936. GeH 40 1 (2022) 61–87.

  30. 433 WYSMUŁEK J, Change and adaption. Jewish households in Lviv, Worms and Poznan in early modern times. HF 27 1 (2022) 145–80.

  31. 434 XIA Y & OSTOYICH K, The Shanghai Jewish refugees: history and commemoration. In OSTOYICH K & XIA Y eds, The history of Shanghai Jews: new pathways of research. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 271–88.

  32. 435 XIN X, Jews in China and their contributions. In OSTOYICH K & XIA Y eds, The history of Shanghai Jews: new pathways of research. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 23–42.

  33. 436 ZOU H, A community divided: the Ho lawsuit and Chinese San Franciscans’ search for education equality and racial inclusion. JAEH 41 3 (2022) 84–114.

Race

  1. 437 ASAAJU M, ‘They gave me nothing’: marriage, slavery and divorce in twentieth-century Abeokuta. SaA 43 2 (2022) 346–65.

  2. 438 BOYD K D, A ‘body of business makers’: the Detroit Housewives League, black women entrepreneurs, and the rise of Detroit’s African American business community. ES 23 1 (2022) 164–205.

  3. 439 DE JONG G, Making desegregation work: citizen participation and bureaucratic resistance in the Boston public schools, 1974–85. JSocH 56 2 (2022) 463–89.

  4. 440 DRAGO E, Street diplomacy: the politics of slavery and freedom in Philadelphia, 1820–1850. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press 2022. pp 304.

  5. 441 FRIENDLY A & WALKER A P P, Legacy participation and the buried history of racialised spaces: hypermodern revitalisation in Rio de Janeiro’s port area. US 59 6 (2022) 1167–84.

  6. 442 GARCIA D G, YOSSO T J & SANTOS R E, In pursuit of ‘equality of opportunity’: Ernesto and Karla Galarza challenge school segregation, Washington, DC, 1947. JAEH 41 3 (2022) 37–64.

  7. 443 GEIRINGER D & OWENS A, Anglicanism, race and the inner city: parochial domesticity and anti-racism in the long 1980s. HWJ 94 2 (2022) 223–45.

  8. 444 GUTGOLD I, Black destiny in the minds of Philadelphia sailmaker James Forten and Liberian governor Jehudi Ashmun. PH 89 4 (2022) 580–621.

  9. 445 HAGAN J, MCCARTHY B & HERDA D, Chicago’s reckoning: racism, politics, and the deep history of policing in an American city. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2022. pp 248.

  10. 446 HARRIS J, The last slave ships: New York and the end of the middle passage. New Haven: Yale University Press 2022. pp 312.

  11. 447 HILLIARD C, Mapping the Notting Hill Riots: racism and the streets in post-war Britain. HWJ 93 1 (2022) 47–68.

  12. 448 HUESKEN JR G G, The fight to ban The birth of a nation in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. PH 89 1 (2022) 102–28.

  13. 449 JONES B, The Tuskegee student uprising: a history. New York: New York University Press 2022. pp 264.

  14. 450 KAFKA J & MATHENY C, Racial integration, white appropriation, and school choice: the demise of the colored schools of late nineteenth century Brooklyn. JUH 48 1 (2022) 35–62.

  15. 451 KEYSOR A M, Racial borders of belonging: community care, African Americans, and citizenship in Charlestown (MA), 1780–1810. HJM 50 1–2 (2022) 80–105.

  16. 452 LOOKER B, Neighbourhood exceptionalism and racial liberalism in the Great Society city: integration as civic showpiece at St Louis’ LaClede Town. UH 49 2 (2022) 401–34.

  17. 453 NEWMAN S P, Sugar planters and freedom seekers in seventeenth-century London. EAmS 20 4 (2022) 755–74.

  18. 454 NOTTER I R & LOGAN J R, Residential segregation under Jim Crow: whites, blacks, and mulattoes in southern cities, 1880–1920. CitC 21 1 (2022) 42–61.

  19. 455 NÚÑEZ COLLADO J R & MERWOOD-SALISBURY J, Stones and slaves: labour, rave and spatial exclusion in colonial Santo Domingo. UH 49 4 (2022) 746–70.

  20. 456 PELEGRINO A, From slaves to Índios: empire, slavery, and race (Maranhão, Brazil, c. 1740–90). L & HR 40 4 (2022) 789–815.

  21. 457 PETERSEN C, Capitalizing on heritage: St. Augustine, Florida, and the landscape of American racial ideology. CitC 21 3 (2022) 193–213.

  22. 458 PRAKASH A, Empire on the Seine: the policing of North Africans in Paris, 1925–1975. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2022. pp 288.

  23. 459 SEILER S & CHEPYATOR-THOMSON J R, The (not so) United Soccer of Atlanta: an early history of class distinction and racial separatism in organized youth soccer. IJHS 39 2 (2022) 210–39.

  24. 460 SMITHSIMON G, Liberty Road: black middle-class suburbs and the battle between civil rights and neoliberalism. New York: New York University Press 2022. pp 312.

  25. 461 THOROLD J, Black political worlds in port cities: Garveyism in 1920s Britain. TCBH 33 1 (2022) 1–28.

  26. 462 WILLIS R, A historical narrative of high school athletics amongst ‘coloured’ communities in Cape Town, South Africa, with special reference to the Western Province Senior Schools Sports Union, 1956–1972. IJHS 39 2 (2022) 174–92.

  27. 463 YU S, Placing racial triangulation, triangulating place and race: Chinese grocery stores in the Mississippi Delta during the Jim Crow era. AAAG 112 1 (2022) 97–122.

Family life

  1. 464 CARBONI M, Financing marriage in early modern Italy: innovative dowry funds in Florence and Bologna. HF 27 2 (2022) 221–42.

  2. 465 HARLEY J & HOLMES V, Introduction: the working class at home, 1790–1940. In HARLEY J, HOLMES V & NEVALAINEN L eds, The working class at home, 1790–1940. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 1–21.

  3. 466 KING L, Remembering deceased children in family life: the school case of poor Harold (1920–31). HWJ 93 1 (2022) 225–44.

  4. 467 LOPES A M, The invisibility of Portuguese stepfamilies: the relationships between stepparents, stepchildren and half-siblings in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Porto. HF 27 3 (2022) 521–45.

  5. 468 MORAN M, Stepmothers and stepdaughters in early modern Florence. HF 27 3 (2022) 575–95.

  6. 469 ŐRI P, Parental loss in 18th–19th century Hungary: the impact of the parents’ widowhood and remarriage on their children’s survival, Zsámbék, 1720–1850. HF 27 3 (2022) 453–79.

  7. 470 PETRIZZO F, Wars of our fathers: Hauteville kin networks and the making of Norman Antioch. JMH 48 1 (2022) 1–31.

  8. 471 PETTIER J-B, ‘A question of bank notes, cars, and houses!’ Matchmaking and the moral economy of love in urban China. CSSH 64 2 (2022) 510–36.

Gender

  1. 472 ALLEMANDI C L, Gender, ethnicity, and circulation of children: domestic service in the city of Buenos Aires in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. ILWCH 101 (2022) 118–43.

  2. 473 ARVIDSSON M & PINTO A B, Public toilets for women: how female municipal councillors expanded the right to the city in Sweden, c. 1910–1925. WomHR 31 3 (2022) 476–95.

  3. 474 BRANCIFORTE L, The women’s peace camp at Comiso, 1983: transnational feminism and the anti-nuclear movement. WomHR 31 2 (2022) 316–43.

  4. 475 CUMING M, Spaces of girlhood: autobiographical recollections of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century working class. In HARLEY J, HOLMES V & NEVALAINEN L eds, The working class at home, 1790–1940. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 99–121.

  5. 476 DILENA P, ‘The beginning of feminism’: the RCAE Study Centre and feminism in Albury–Wodonga in the 1970s and 1980s. HA 19 4 (2022) 789–806.

  6. 477 EIDINGER A, ‘Do I need to sit beside the man to be equal to him’? Second-wave feminism and Jewish women in Montreal, 1962–1980. G & H 34 2 (2022) 339–54.

  7. 478 KARABAĞ M, From stay-at-home women to career-minded women: the Istanbul YWCA, 1919–1930. WomHR 31 3 (2022) 496–521.

  8. 479 KING A, Gender, food and ‘the right to the city’ in the Ghanaian marketplace. G & H 34 3 (2022) 810–26.

  9. 480 LAKE J, Protecting ‘injured female innocence’ or furthering ‘the rights of women?’ The sexual slander of women in New York and Victoria (1808–1887). WomHR 31 3 (2022) 451–75.

  10. 481 LOWRIE C, Murder and the working lives of Chinese male servants in colonial Singapore, 1910s–1930s. IRSH 67 1 (2022) 43–64.

  11. 482 MCCABE C, Charwomen and Dublin’s secondary labour force in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. SH 45 2 (2022) 193–217.

  12. 483 MCDONOUGH S, Moving beyond sex: prostitutes, migration and knowledge in late-medieval Mediterranean port cities. G & H 34 2 (2022) 401–19.

  13. 484 MARIANO J L M & GEBRAN R A, Let us truly be Brazilian women: representations and teaching practices of normal school female students of São Paulo in the 20th century. PaedH 58 2 (2022) 272–89.

  14. 485 MILEO M M, Sweet femininities: women and the confectionery trade in eighteenth-century Barcelona. G & H 34 3 (2022) 574–89.

  15. 486 PANATA S, L’espace public d’Ibadan (Nigéria) à l’épreuve de la crise de l’Ouest (1962–1966): le genre des violences politiques. HU 63 2 (2022) 123–46.

  16. 487 PARKER A, Women, bridal girdles, and the household in Renaissance Prague. HJ 65 2 (2022) 225–48.

  17. 488 RAGHUNATHAN R, Migrant intimacies and ambiguities of law: the case of wife enticement among Indians in colonial Singapore, 1900–1940. G & H 34 1 (2022) 135–52.

  18. 489 RICHWINE L, Comity at the crossroads: how friendships between Moravian and Native women sustained the Moravian mission at Shamokin, 1745–1755. PH 89 1 (2022) 74–101.

  19. 490 ROMBOUGH J & STROCCHIA S, City of women: mapping movement, gender, and enclosure in Renaissance Florence. In NEVOLA F, ROSENTHAL D & TERPSTRA N eds, Hidden cities: urban space, geolocated apps and public history in early modern Europe. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 169–90.

  20. 491 ROONEY S, The politics of commemorating the woman suffrage movement in New York City: on the Women’s Rights Pioneers Monument. JUH 48 2 (2022) 265–84.

  21. 492 SIMONTON D, Gender in the European town: ancien regime to the modern. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. pp 416.

  22. 493 STUART-BENNETT J, Motherhood, respectability and baby-farming in Victorian and Edwardian London. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. pp 160.

  23. 494 SWAIN S, Women in the city: identifying the gynocentric zone in Melbourne and Sydney, 1880s to 1920s. AHS 53 2 (2022) 178–95.

  24. 495 TOMLINSON J, The First World War in a ‘women’s town’: Dundee 1914–1922. WomHR 31 2 (2022) 173–97.

  25. 496 WICKSTEAD H & KNOWLES P, Men-only clubs and museums: associational culture and the gendering of Herne Bay’s museum between the wars. MuHJ 15 2 (2022) 115–41.

Sexualities

  1. 497 COOK M & ORAM A, Queer beyond London. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2022. pp 288.

  2. 498 CORRETTI C & DESAI S P, Fornication and illegitimacy in Reformation Geneva: cases from the Consistory, 1542–1558. JFH 47 4 (2022) 452–65.

  3. 499 JANES D, The ‘curious effects’ of acting: homosexuality, theatre and female impersonation at the University of Cambridge, 1900–39. TCBH 33 2 (2022) 169–202.

  4. 500 JANES D, The varsity drag: gender, sexuality, and cross-dressing at the University of Cambridge, 1850–1950. JSocH 55 3 (2022) 695–723.

  5. 501 MALCOLM N, Forbidden love in Istanbul: patterns of male–male sexual relations in the early-modern Mediterranean world. P & P 257 1 (2022) 55–88.

  6. 502 RUSTERHOLZ C, Youth sexuality, responsibility, and the opening of the Brook Advisory Centres in London and Birmingham in the 1960s. JBS 61 2 (2022) 315–42.

  7. 503 YANNEY L J, In the heart of the lesbian nation: Iowa City, Iowa, and the building of a lesbian community. WomHR 31 1 (2022) 154–60.

Social organizations, clubs and societies

  1. 504 ALLEN J S, A civil society: the public space of Freemason women in France, 1744–1944. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press 2022. pp 374.

  2. 505 COLLINGS-WELLS S, From black power to broken windows: liberal philanthropy and the carceral state. JUH 48 4 (2022) 739–59.

  3. 506 DELMAN R M, The vowesses, the anchoresses and the aldermen’s wives: Lady Margaret Beaufort and the devout society of late medieval Stamford. UH 49 2 (2022) 248–64.

  4. 507 FRASER J, Elevating the poor: the origin, activities and evolution of the Edinburgh Association for Improving the Condition of the Poor c. 1868–1906. BOEC 18 1 (2022) 51–70.

  5. 508 LEGON E, The Lord Mayor’s Show and the politics of London’s Clothworkers’ Company in the mid-seventeenth century. LJ 47 3 (2022) 241–59.

  6. 509 MCCARTHY C, Who were the members of Springfield’s League of Gileadites? HJM 50 1–2 (2022) 148–97.

  7. 510 MILLER T S, Philanthropic institutions. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 245–62.

  8. 511 REYNOLDS E W, Coffeehouse culture in the Atlantic world, 1650–1789. London: Bloomsbury Academic 2022. pp 264.

  9. 512 RIVINGTON K, The London Emancipation Society and transatlantic abolitionism in the Civil War era, 1859–1865. SaA 43 4 (2022) 798–818.

  10. 513 SPANG C W, The German East Asiatic Society (OAG) in Shanghai, 1931–1945. In OSTOYICH K & XIA Y eds, The history of Shanghai Jews: new pathways of research. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 43–73.

V Economic activity

Urban economic activity

  1. 514 ARMAND C, Équiper sans encombrer: le mobilier publicitaire à Shanghai dans la première moitié du XXe siècle. HU 64 3 (2022) 155–76.

  2. 515 BALARD M, Trade and interactions with Outremer: the Pisans in the East from the eleventh to the fourteenth century. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 296–316.

  3. 516 BARDYN A, Constrained opportunities: women’s involvement in the capital markets of late medieval Brabant. SH 45 3 (2022) 275–303.

  4. 517 BENGTSSON E, OLSSON M & SVENSSON P, Mercantilist inequality: wealth and poverty in Stockholm, 1650–1750. EcHR 75 1 (2022) 157–80.

  5. 518 BODENHORN H, Were small-town New Yorkers life-cycle savers? HF 27 2 (2022) 293–325.

  6. 519 BROŃSKI K, Kraków in the face of the transformation: the economic life of the city. In PURCHLA J ed, Urban change in Central Europe: the case of Kraków. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 51–72.

  7. 520 BULLIET R W, The economic parameters of Baghdād and its hinterland. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 316–36.

  8. 521 CAMPOPIANO M, Maritime expansion into the Western Mediterranean. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 277–95.

  9. 522 CAMPOS E P, The metamorphosis of Barceloneta: the effects of industrialisation and liberalism on the maritime district of Barcelona. In DELIS A, IBARZ J, SYDORENKO A & BARBANO M eds, Mediterranean seafarers in transition. Leiden: Brill 2022. 175–203.

  10. 523 DE SMET C, Marketing the French Revolution? Revolutionary auction advertisements in comparative perspective (Paris, 1778–1793). FH 36 1 (2022) 68–99.

  11. 524 DECLERCQ R, A return ticket to the world market? The Leipzig fur industry, internationalism and the case of the International Fur Exhibition (IPA) in 1930. BuH 64 3 (2022) 610–25.

  12. 525 DUNN S, ‘No objection to go abroad’: servants’ travel advertisements in The Morning Post, London, 1815. ECS 45 3 (2022) 487–506.

  13. 526 DURAK K, Commercial Constantinople. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 166–79.

  14. 527 FARR D, Brokerage and networks in London’s global world: kinship, commerce and communities through the experience of John Blackwell. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. pp 360.

  15. 528 GALANI K, From traditional maritime communities to maritime centres. Urbanization, social hierarchies and the labour market in the age of steam. In DELIS A, IBARZ J, SYDORENKO A & BARBANO M eds, Mediterranean seafarers in transition. Leiden: Brill 2022. 264–92.

  16. 529 IBARZ J & VON BRIESEN B J, From corporations to companies: the development of capitalism in maritime cargo handling in the Port of Barcelona (ca. 1760–1873). ILWCH 102 (2022) 200–24.

  17. 530 ISSAR S, The financialisation of floor space, Mumbai 1880–2015. US 59 15 (2022) 3150–66.

  18. 531 JIMÉNEZ-MONTES G, A dissimulated trade: northern European timber merchants in Seville (1574–1598). Leiden: Brill 2022. pp xiv + 260.

  19. 532 KANG W, KNAAP E & REY S, Changes in the economic status of neighbourhoods in US metropolitan areas from 1980 to 2010: stability, growth and polarisation. US 59 13 (2022) 2774–800.

  20. 533 KASTINAKIS P, The Ottoman port of Chania during the transition from sail to steam. In DELIS A, IBARZ J, SYDORENKO A & BARBANO M eds, Mediterranean seafarers in transition. Leiden: Brill 2022. 264–92.

  21. 534 KEFFORD A, The life and death of the shopping city: public planning and private redevelopment in Britain since 1945. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. pp 340.

  22. 535 KORCHMINA E, Peer pressure: the puzzle of aristocrats’ tax compliance in early nineteenth-century Moscow. EcHR 75 3 (2022) 779–800.

  23. 536 KŌSEI H, Tokyo’s black markets as an alternative urban space: occupation, violence, and disaster reconstruction. JUH 48 5 (2022) 1046–65.

  24. 537 KRUSE T A, TODD S K & WALKER M D, Innovation in urban transit at the start of the twentieth century: a case study of Metropolitan Street Railway’s stealth hostile takeover of Third Avenue Railroad. ES 23 2 (2022) 357–407.

  25. 538 LLORET S, Des nations dans la ville: les marchands français à Alicante, Valence et Malaga au XVIIIe siècle. HU 64 3 (2022) 37–51.

  26. 539 MACKINNEY A G, Duplicates under the hammer: natural-history auctions in Berlin’s early nineteenth-century collection landscape. BJHS 55 3 (2022) 319–39.

  27. 540 MANEVITZ A, ‘A great injustice’: urban capitalism and the limits of freedom in nineteenth-century New York City. JUH 48 6 (2022) 1365–82.

  28. 541 MELVILLE J, Edinburgh and slavery. BOEC 18 1 (2022) 39–50.

  29. 542 MONTENACH A, Street economies. In VAN DEN HEUVEL D ed, Early modern streets: a European perspective. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 134–60.

  30. 543 MULLEN S, The Glasgow sugar aristocracy: Scotland and Caribbean slavery, 1775–1838. London: University of London Press 2022. pp 340.

  31. 544 O’FLANAGAN P, Iberian trade monopolies and their impact on non-metropole ports and their hinterlands. In LEE R & MCNAMARA P eds, Port-cities and their hinterlands: migration, trade and cultural exchange from the early seventeenth century to 1939. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 99–124.

  32. 545 PELZL L & ZUIJDERDUIJN J, Saving the best for last? Old age retirement among the urban middle classes in Leiden and Regensburg (c. 1650 – c. 1800). HF 27 2 (2022) 326–49.

  33. 546 PLATH T, ‘Fremde Negocianten’ in St. Petersburg und Riga im 18. Jahrhundert als Herausforderung des russländischen Merkantilismus. MS 19 2 (2022) 14–27.

  34. 547 QUERTIER C, The Pisan economy from the tenth to the fifteenth century: a parabolic trajectory. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 245–76.

  35. 548 RASICO P D, Auctions and the making of the Nabob in late eighteenth-century Calcutta and London. HJ 65 2 (2022) 349–70.

  36. 549 RODGER R, Property and inequality: housing dynamics in a nineteenth-century city. EcHR 75 4 (2022) 1151–81.

  37. 550 SANGAMESWARAN P, Contending claims and uses of land: unpacking the trajectory of a mortgage in Thane. IESHR 59 4 (2022) 507–33.

  38. 551 SHURLOCK B & WINSTANLEY M, The commercial world of the Basingstoke draper Thomas Burberry (1835–1926). LocH 52 4 (2022) 354–8.

  39. 552 SIMÕES A & DIOGO M P, Introduction: science, technology and medicine in the making of Lisbon (1840–1940). In SIMÕES A & DIOGO M P eds, Science, technology and medicine in the making of Lisbon (1840–1940). Leiden: Brill 2022. 95–119.

  40. 553 SIMPSON I, ‘A brilliant future of floating islands’: sea level rise as new profit frontier. In DE ZOYSA R S, LOW K E Y, ABDULLAH N & HORNIDGE A-K eds, Coastal urbanities: mobilities, meanings, manoeuvrings. Leiden: Brill 2022. 202–224.

  41. 554 SUAY-MATALLANA I, The customs laboratory of Lisbon from the 1880s to the 1930s: chemistry, trade and scientific spaces. In SIMÕES A & DIOGO M P eds, Science, technology and medicine in the making of Lisbon (1840–1940). Leiden: Brill 2022. 179–202.

  42. 555 SUGIURA M, Port cities and inland distribution: merchants’ functional divisions between early modern Amsterdam and its hinterlands. In LEE R & MCNAMARA P eds, Port-cities and their hinterlands. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 142–64.

  43. 556 VAIHEKOSKI M, Helsinki Stock Exchange: trading and listed securities, 1912–1981. FHR 29 3 (2022) 326–41.

  44. 557 VASILAKI K, The port of La Ciotat and its maritime community towards industrialisation (1836–1916). In DELIS A, IBARZ J, SYDORENKO A & BARBANO M eds, Mediterranean seafarers in transition. Leiden: Brill 2022. 204–29.

  45. 558 VERHOEVEN G, Filling the bottomless pit: financing the construction of the Royal Museums of Art and History in interwar Belgium (1919–39). MuHJ 15 2 (2022) 142–60.

  46. 559 WASSERMAN M L E, Debts facing death. Discovering everyday credit practices through testaments in seventeenth-century Buenos Aires. HF 27 2 (2022) 350–69.

  47. 560 WEBSTER I, Making the municipal capital market in nineteenth-century England. EcHR 75 1 (2022) 56–79.

  48. 561 WRIGHT C, Popular radicalism and the unemployed in Chicago during the Great Depression. London: Anthem Press 2022. pp 264.

  49. 562 YANAGIHARA N, Creation of the railway culture through marketing and consumption: a case study of Tama, West Tokyo. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 307–21.

  50. 563 YEE S, Undertaking Pittsburgh: the makings of the casket industry in the Steel City, 1865–1910. PH 89 4 (2022) 622–47.

Industry

  1. 564 MCCARTHY H, Flexible workers: the politics of homework in postindustrial Britain. JBS 61 1 (2022) 1–25.

  2. 565 MURRAY G, Working through industrial absence: Scotland’s community business movement and the moral economies of deindustrialisation in the 1980s and 1990s. CBH 36 3 (2022) 380–402.

  3. 566 TOMLINSON J, PHILLIPS J & WRIGHT V, De-industrialization: a case study of Dundee, 1951–2001, and its broad implications. BuH 64 1 (2022) 28–54.

  4. 567 VACCARI O, The Mediterranean port system of Pisa: role, management, and evolution. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 337–58.

Food supply

  1. 568 BYRNE J, Beyond trawlertown: memory, life and legacy in the wake of the Cod Wars. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press 2022. pp 256.

  2. 569 DE VRIESE D, Steering the free market through a food crisis? Fiscal policy and meat consumption in Brussels during the 1840s. HRC 8 1 (2022) 31–48.

  3. 570 FRANKLIN-LYONS A & KELLEHER M A, Framing Mediterranean famine: food crisis in fourteenth-century Barcelona. Spec 97 1 (2022) 40–76.

  4. 571 FUERTES P & GOMEZ-ESCODA E M, Supplying Barcelona: the role of public market halls in the construction of the urban food system. JUH 48 5 (2022) 1121–39.

  5. 572 ORR T J, Mechanical harvesting, globalization, and the fate of citrus farmworkers in Florida and São Paulo, 1965–1985. ILWCH 102 (2022) 76–93.

  6. 573 TAVERNER C, Licensing the informal economy in early modern Europe: food hawkers in London and Naples. LJ 47 2 (2022) 159–80.

  7. 574 VAN DAM R, The supply of food to Constantinople. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 87–101.

Finance, banking and services

  1. 575 ANSFIELD B, Born in flames: arson, racial capitalism, and the reinsuring of the Bronx in the late twentieth century. ES 23 4 (2022) 923–7.

  2. 576 BARNES V, NEWTON L & SCOTT P, A ‘quiet victory’: National Provincial, Gibson Hall, and the switch from comprehensive redevelopment to urban preservation in 1960s London. ES 23 1 (2022) 33–67.

  3. 577 COFFMAN D, STEPHENSON J Z & SUSSMAN N, Financing the rebuilding of the City of London after the Great Fire of 1666. EcHR 75 4 (2022) 1120–50.

  4. 578 DE JONG A, JONKER J & POUKENS J, From free-for-all to self-governing monopoly: market organization and price information at the Amsterdam Stock Exchange, 1796–1940. FHR 29 3 (2022) 376–91.

  5. 579 DE VICQ A, Exploring the limits of the limited partnership: the case of the Bank of Twente, 1860s–1920s. ES 23 4 (2022) 1122–47.

  6. 580 DENZEL M A, The Hamburg marine insurance, 1736–1859. Leiden: Brill 2022. pp xvi + 419.

  7. 581 HANDEL J, The material politics of finance: the ticker tape and the London Stock Exchange, 1860s–1890s. ES 23 3 (2022) 857–87.

  8. 582 MATRINGE N, Early inventory management practices in the foreign exchange market: insights from sixteenth-century Lyon. EcHR 75 3 (2022) 739–78.

  9. 583 NAKAYA S, Credit practices and networks in the medieval Italian city: the memoriale of Dr Iacopo di Coluccino of Lucca. JMH 48 5 (2022) 686–713.

  10. 584 PERRITON L & HENDERSON S, For all intents and purposes: depositor behavior and strategy in a London savings bank. ES 23 2 (2022) 289–324.

  11. 585 POMPERMAIER M, Credit and poverty in early modern Venice. JIH 52 4 (2022) 513–36.

  12. 586 POUKENS J & BUELENS F, Stock exchange regulation and the official price lists of the stock exchanges of Brussels and Antwerp, 1801–1935. FHR 29 3 (2022) 342–57.

  13. 587 REYES A, Recent evolution of housing finance policy and development agendas in Mexico. PLP 37 2 (2022) 415–25.

  14. 588 RIVA A, Market access and transparency: the Genoa and Milan stock exchanges from Italian Unification to World War I. FHR 29 3 (2022) 358–75.

Consumption

  1. 589 CECCHINI I, The lure of shopping: the mercerie in early modern Venice and the city as a permanent mall. In SCAPOLO A & PORCARELLI A eds, Interpreting urban spaces in Italian cultures. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press 2022. 81–110.

  2. 590 DENTON C & WEBER H, Rethinking waste within business history: a transnational perspective on waste recycling in World War II. BuH 64 4 (2022) 855–81.

  3. 591 HARLEY J, ‘I can barely provide the common necessaries of life’: material wealth over the life-cycle of the English poor, 1790–1834. In HARLEY J, HOLMES V & NEVALAINEN L eds, The working class at home, 1790–1940. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 25–45.

  4. 592 OMANS K, The Belfast boycott: consumerism and gender in revolutionary Ireland (1920–1922). IHS 46 169 (2022) 101–18.

  5. 593 POUILLARD V & DOROGOVA W, Couture ltd: French fashion’s debut in London’s West End. BuH 64 3 (2022) 587–609.

Working conditions

  1. 594 AGARWAL P, The war at the workplace: Calcutta’s dockworkers and changing labour regime, 1939–1945. IRSH 67 3 (2022) 407–34.

  2. 595 AGARWAL P, ‘Workers’ way’: moments of labor in late 1940s Calcutta. ILWCH 102 (2022) 225–47.

  3. 596 GRAY L, The Penrith Workhouse and Addingham, Cumbria: local children, fostering and the boarding-out policy 1820–1930. LocH 52 3 (2022) 207–17.

  4. 597 HOWARD J H, Beyond repression and resistance: worker agency and corporatism in occupied Nanjing. MAsS 56 1 (2022) 309–49.

  5. 598 IBARZ J, Dock workers and employers in loading and unloading in the port of Barcelona after the end of the guild system, 1850–90. In DELIS A, IBARZ J, SYDORENKO A & BARBANO M eds, Mediterranean seafarers in transition. Leiden: Brill 2022. 125–50.

  6. 599 JONES P, Looking through a different lens: microhistory and the workhouse experience in late nineteenth-century London. JSocH 55 4 (2022) 925–47.

  7. 600 KING M, Slips, trips and tumbles in public places: accidental falls in Wolverhampton 1850–1910. LocH 52 4 (2022) 329–41.

  8. 601 LUDWIG A, The labor of care in carceral spaces: the work of resistance in the New York City jails. ILWCH 101 (2022) 64–76.

  9. 602 MANGER C, Behind the scenes: urban secretaries as managers of legal and diplomatic conflicts in the Baltic region, c. 1470–1540. JMH 48 4 (2022) 571–86.

  10. 603 NEVALAINEN L, Flexible, portable and communal domesticity: everyday domestic practices of Finnish sailors and logging workers, c. 1800s to 1930s. In HARLEY J, HOLMES V & NEVALAINEN L eds, The working class at home, 1790–1940. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 213–35.

  11. 604 RABIG J, Dangerous librarians: the survival of branch libraries in New York’s fiscal crisis. JUH 48 4 (2022) 715–38.

  12. 605 RYLAND-EPTON L, A contrary view of workhouses: Westbury on Trym 1800–1834. LocH 52 2 (2022) 154–64.

  13. 606 SHARPLES J, The workers who built the University of Glasgow, 1867–71. ArchH 65 1 (2022) 261–92.

Labour organization

  1. 607 COLLINSON M, The Loughborough ‘Mansfield Hosiery’ Strike, 1972: deindustrialization, post-war migration, and press interpretation. MidH 47 1 (2022) 77–95.

  2. 608 COMUZZI E, Guild formation and the artisanal labour market: the example of Castelló d’Empúries, 1260–1310. JMH 48 3 (2022) 368–95.

  3. 609 COQUELIN O, ‘A strikers’ “Soviet” in Belfast’? The Great Belfast Strike of 1919. LHR 87 3 (2022) 255–275.

  4. 610 FIGUEROA S L, Negotiating place and power through union grievance in post-war New York City cafeterias. G & H 34 3 (2022) 838–58.

  5. 611 PIERCE J L, ‘We were democracy mad’: clerical workers’ unionism, antiracism, and feminism at the University of California, Berkeley, 1966–1972. ILWCH 102 (2022) 181–99.

  6. 612 SCALICE J, A deliberately forgotten battle: the Lapiang Manggagawa and the Manila Port Strike of 1963. JSeAS 53 1–2 (2022) 226–51.

  7. 613 STRENGA G, Donations, discipline and commemoration. Creating group identity in the transport workers guilds of mid fifteenth-century Riga. JMH 48 1 (2022) 103–28.

VI Urban networks

Urban networks

  1. 614 BRASSIL G, Feminist networks connecting Dublin and London: Sarah Atkinson, Bessie Rayner Parkes, and the power of the nineteenth-century periodical press. VPR 55 1 (2022) 27–50.

  2. 615 BRUSCHI F, Ports as bridges between civilisations: the case of the Four Communes of Senegal, 1659–1914. In LEE R & MCNAMARA P eds, Port-cities and their hinterlands: migration, trade and cultural exchange from the early seventeenth century to 1939. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 230–55.

  3. 616 DMITRIEV K & OSCHEMA K, Abbāsid caliphs and Frankish kings. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 371–98.

  4. 617 GRUWEIS-KOVALSKY O R, Jerusalem 1948–1952 as a ‘no man’s land’: the Israeli policy in Jerusalem as an arena of the Cold War. MES 58 1 (2022) 103–19.

  5. 618 HEILO O, The ʿAbbāsids and the Byzantine Empire. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 339–70.

  6. 619 HENLEY G, Networks of chronicle writing in western Britain: the case of Worcester and Wales. In TINTI F & WOODMAN D A eds, Constructing history across the Norman Conquest: Worcester, c. 1050–c. 1150. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer 2022. 227–70.

  7. 620 JOHN S, Productive European cooperation between Britain and Germany: the Swansea-Mannheim town twinning partnership and exchanges between Wales and Baden-Württemberg, 1950–2000. CBH 36 4 (2022) 552–90.

  8. 621 KAUKIAINEN Y, Hanseatic twilight? Lübeck’s shipping networks in the latter half of the eighteenth century. IJMH 34 3 (2022) 361–94.

  9. 622 MALESZKA A & CZAJA R, The urban networks of Anglo-Norman Meath and the Teutonic Order’s Kulmerland: a comparative analysis. UH 49 4 (2022) 672–89.

  10. 623 MANNONI C, ‘Ordinary’, ‘insignificant’ and ‘useless’ artefacts from Rome and Athens: trading antiquities and reshaping scholarship in the long nineteenth century. JHC 34 1 (2022) 85–94.

  11. 624 MIODUNKA P, Kraków and its region: mutual relations after 1989. In PURCHLA J ed, Urban change in Central Europe: the case of Kraków. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 115–38.

  12. 625 NIGHTINGALE C H, Earthopolis: a biography of our urban planet. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. pp 810.

  13. 626 SCHOTTENHAMMER A, More-to-know III Sino-ʿAbbāsid relations in the eighth and ninth centuries. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 399–404.

Knowledge networks

  1. 627 GONZÁLEZ M C G, Spain in the international networks: the case of César Cort (1893–1978). JUH 48 1 (2022) 120–41.

  2. 628 ISSAIAS T, Imperial spectacle and emergency shelters: the American Red Cross programmes presented at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco, 1915. PLP 37 5 (2022) 889–920.

  3. 629 KAISER K, Duplicate networks: the Berlin botanical institutions as a ‘clearing house’ for colonial plant material, 1891–1920. BJHS 55 3 (2022) 279–96.

  4. 630 LI H, Soviet specialists’s urban planning technical assistance to China, 1949–1959. PLP 37 4 (2022) 815–39.

  5. 631 POLA A-P, Global experts for historic towns: Leonardo Benevolo and Giorgio Lombardi’s contributions to UNDP/UNESCO Andean region programme. PLP 37 5 (2022) 1051–72.

  6. 632 SZÍVÓS E, The historic city and the East–West exchange: architecture, urban renewal and international knowledge transfers under state socialism in Hungary. UH 49 3 (2022) 523–48.

Transport

  1. 633 DODGSON J, Can we find historical evidence of the existence of wider benefits from urban rail projects? The case of the Liverpool Overhead Railway. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 374–89.

  2. 634 GRANT H R, Railroads and the urban trans-Chicago West, 1865–1925. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 144–54.

  3. 635 GUNN S, Spatial mobility in later twentieth-century Britain. CBH 36 1 (2022) 1–22.

  4. 636 KERR I J, Bombay and its hinterland(s): railways and the making of colonial Western India, 1853–c. 1900. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 155–68.

  5. 637 MANN A, A symbiotic relationship: the Delhi Metro Rail and the nation capital region. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 438–56.

  6. 638 MORAGLIO M, Light rail renaissance in European cities: urban mobility agenda and city renewals. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 416–37.

  7. 639 ROTH R, The city and the railway in the world: looking back over two centuries. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 9–120.

  8. 640 WEBER D, Birth of a consumer society: workingmen’s trains in Belgium, 1870–1914. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 359–73.

  9. 641 WERNER A, From viaducts to vandalism: the London and Greenwich Railway, 1834–1840. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 322–33.

VII Politics and administration

Aspects of urban administration

  1. 642 ADRIAN D, Effets d’échelle: les villes d’Empire et la souveraineté. HU HS2 (2022) 99–116.

  2. 643 ALSHAAR N, Baghdād under Būyid rule. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 194–226.

  3. 644 ARNOLD-FORSTER T, Journalism and corruption in Chicago, 1912–1931. HJ 65 5 (2022) 1374–96.

  4. 645 BELGE B & HOFMEISTER U, Einleitung: Die Stadt und das Russländische Imperium im 18. Jahrhundert. MS 19 2 (2022) 5–14.

  5. 646 BIRAN M, Baghdād under Mongol rule. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 285–315.

  6. 647 BLOCKMANS W, Villes et monarchies: complémentarité et rivalité entre commerce et politique. HU HS2 (2022) 7–30.

  7. 648 BOVE B, Paris et Tours: deux modèles politiques antinomiques? HU HS2 (2022) 43–70.

  8. 649 BRUNI S, The origins: the Etruscan polis and Roman civitas. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 59–77.

  9. 650 CAFERRO W, Comparative economy and martial corporatism: toward an understanding of Florentine City Leagues, 1332–92. Spec 97 4 (2022) 1073–100.

  10. 651 DAVIDSON M & WARD K, Post-great recession municipal budgeting and governance: a mixed method analysis of budget stress and reform. EPA 54 4 (2022) 634–52.

  11. 652 DESILVA J M, The office of ceremonies and advancement in curial Rome, 1466–1528. Leiden: Brill 2022. pp xiv + 254.

  12. 653 DUMINY J & PARNELL S M, The shifting interface of public health and urban policy in South Africa. JPH 21 1 (2022) 86–102.

  13. 654 DUNNING C, Nonprofit neighborhoods: an urban history of inequality and the American state. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2022. pp 336.

  14. 655 EWEN S & REINARZ J, Lessons from a forgotten disaster: the Queen Victoria Street Fire, 1902. LJ 47 2 (2022) 198–218.

  15. 656 GARY-TOUNKARA D, Quand les anciens maîtres du pays conservent le pouvoir: Les chefs de quartier d’une ville sans municipalité: Sikasso (Mali), 1875–1959. HU 63 2 (2022) 83–101.

  16. 657 GILLI-ELEWY H, Baghdād under the late ʿAbbāsid caliphs. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 265–84.

  17. 658 GILOTH R, From community coalitions to city hall: shaping policy in Chicago with Mayor Harold Washington. JPH 21 3 (2022) 228–48.

  18. 659 GKOUTZIOKOSTAS A, The administration of Constantinople. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 231–44.

  19. 660 HOŁUJ D, Municipal self-government 1990–2019. In PURCHLA J ed, Urban change in Central Europe: the case of Kraków. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 34–50.

  20. 661 IQBAL I, Locating the riparian commons in Eastern South Asia: a translocal perspective. In TALBOT I & RANJAN A eds, Urban development and environmental history in modern South Asia. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 107–18.

  21. 662 KUNZ Y & HORNIDGE A-K, Governability of air: beyond water and land in coastal urbanities. In DE ZOYSA R S, LOW K E Y, ABDULLAH N & HORNIDGE A-K eds, Coastal urbanities: mobilities, meanings, manoeuvrings. Leiden: Brill 2022. 132–53.

  22. 663 LANTSCHNER P, City states in the later medieval Mediterranean world. P & P 254 1 (2022) 3–49.

  23. 664 LEE I, From reciprocity to territoriality: extradition, the Opium War, and the idea of British sovereignty in Hong Kong, 1842–44. L & HR 40 3 (2022) 437–58.

  24. 665 MCNAMARA P, A hinterland rejected: the Free City of Danzig, Poland and the League of Nations, 1933–39. In LEE R & MCNAMARA P eds, Port-cities and their hinterlands: migration, trade and cultural exchange from the early seventeenth century to 1939. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 284–318.

  25. 666 MAGDALINO P, Imperial Constantinople. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 135–49.

  26. 667 MAHO I, The first elected leaders in Japan’s capital city: former Shogunal retainers in the Tokyo Prefectural Assembly. JUH 48 5 (2022) 988–1002.

  27. 668 MEGUMI M, Edo-Tokyo and the Meiji Revolution. JUH 48 5 (2022) 966–87.

  28. 669 MICHNEY T M, How the city survey’s redlining maps were made: a closer look at HOLC’s mortgagee rehabilitation division. JPH 21 4 (2022) 316–44.

  29. 670 MITCHELL L, The railways and the city in the history of Indian political practice. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 229–40.

  30. 671 MOK F, Town talk: enchancing the ‘eyes and ears’ of the colonial state in British Hong Kong, 1950s–1975. HR 95 268 (2022) 287–308.

  31. 672 MOLINA G R, Decoding debate in the Venetian Senate: short stories of crisis and response on Albania (1392–1402). Leiden: Brill 2022. pp x + 256.

  32. 673 MONNET P, Focus sur les villes dans l’Empire (1250–1500). HU HS2 (2022) 87–97.

  33. 674 MORRIS R J, General Gage comes to Salem: interests, ideologies, identities, and family alliances collide on the eve of the American Revolution. EAmS 20 2 (2022) 263–304.

  34. 675 PATTERSON C F, Urban government and the early Stuart state: provincial towns, corporate liberties, and royal authority in England, 1603–1640. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer 2022. pp 317.

  35. 676 POLONI A, Politics, institutions, and society in Pisa during the communal era (late eleventh to late fourteenth century). In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 139–62.

  36. 677 PURCHLA J, Kraków’s metropolitan functions. In PURCHLA J ed, Urban change in Central Europe: the case of Kraków. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 214–26.

  37. 678 ROMERA M A M, Popolo and Sindacato in the city of Siena: rethinking popular agency in medieval Italy. JSocH 56 2 (2022) 265–93.

  38. 679 SCAMUZZI S, Deindustrialization in Turin and the role of local government for economic and urban change. In BERGER S, MUSSO S & WICKE C eds, Deindustrialization in twentieth-century Europe: the northwest of Italy and the Ruhr region in comparison. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 287–311.

  39. 680 SCHEINER J, The early ʿAbbāsid caliphs as commanders and constructors. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 143–93.

  40. 681 SINGH A, Creation of a port authority in nineteenth century British India: organisational structure and administrative procedures in the Port of Calcutta. IJMH 34 3 (2022) 395–417.

  41. 682 TAHAR-DJEBBAR A, The Bill Clinton rationale for welfare reform: examining implications of race, class, and gender using documents. JUH 48 2 (2022) 399–424.

  42. 683 TAYLOR E & LARIN T, Zoning damned whores and God’s police: maintaining prostitution through land use and euphemism in Victoria, Australia. JPH 21 1 (2022) 28–55.

  43. 684 TSUI C C M, From public interest to public obligation: compulsory land expropriation for capital reconstruction in Nationalist China. UH 49 2 (2022) 383–400.

  44. 685 VAN GELDER M, Street politics. In VAN DEN HEUVEL D ed, Early modern streets: a European perspective. Abingdon: Routledge 2022.

  45. 686 VAN RENTERGHEM V, Baghdād under the Saljūqs. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 227–64.

Political activism

  1. 687 BERVOETS L & DUMOLYN J, Urban protest in thirteenth-century north-western Europe: a comparative approach. JMH 48 1 (2022) 75–102.

  2. 688 CONNORS S T, Mass petitioning, education reform, and the development of political culture in Madras, 1839–1842. HJ 65 2 (2022) 393–414.

  3. 689 CORKE C, Prisoners of the world unite: the internationalism of the 2 June movement from Berlin Moabit Prison. GeH 40 3 (2022) 425–39.

  4. 690 DEL HIERRO P, The neofascist network and Madrid, 1945–1953: from city of refuge to transnational hub and centre of operations. CEH 31 2 (2022) 171–94.

  5. 691 DEROUIN M, La matérialité du voyage de souveraineté de Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte: L’étape de Tours du 15 octobre 1852. HU 64 3 (2022) 133–54.

  6. 692 GATRELL V, Conspiracy on Cato Street: a tale of liberty and revolution in regency London. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. pp 452.

  7. 693 HOŁUJ D, Civil society: from ‘Solidarity’ to urban activism. In PURCHLA J ed, Urban change in Central Europe: the case of Kraków. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 18–33.

  8. 694 KING R, Networked insurgence and an anti-electoral democracy: Bangkok space 2014–2020. EPC 40 4 (2022) 895–912.

  9. 695 KIRIAKOU H, La ville est à nous! Engagements des jeunes à Brazzaville pendant les premières années de la révolution congolaise (1963–1965). HU 63 2 (2022) 103–22.

  10. 696 MATHER R, Politicising the English working-class home, c. 1790–1820. In HARLEY J, HOLMES V & NEVALAINEN L eds, The working class at home, 1790–1940. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 47–72.

  11. 697 MUGGERIDGE A, Women and politics in Smethwick, 1918–1929. MidH 47 2 (2022) 191–207.

  12. 698 NETTLING P, Tenant activism and the demise of urban renewal: tenants, governance, and the struggle for recognition at Habitations Jeanne-Mance in Montreal. JUH 48 3 (2022) 523–40.

  13. 699 SERNEELS H, Making space for resistance: the spatiality of popular protest in the late medieval Southern Low Countries. UH 49 4 (2022) 709–24.

  14. 700 SORESINA M, Experiences of political mobilization and popular participation in Milan’s working-class neighbourhoods: 1945–1967. UH 49 4 (2022) 791–809.

  15. 701 SPENCE M, Suburban labour: the Labour party in Penge to 1919. LHR 87 3 (2022) 227–53.

  16. 702 THORNTON T, The Island of Lundy and the Treaties of York (1464) and Nottingham (1484): lordship, sovereignty, and politics in fifteenth-century international relations. IJRLH 17 1 (2022) 1–17.

  17. 703 YI S, Brothers, comrades or competitors? The Communist Party and Youth League in Shanghai, 1925–1927. H 107 374 (2022) 121–42.

  18. 704 ZHANG B, Staging Chinese student activism in Cold War Singapore: performing Chineseness and embodying the Malayan nation, 1950s–60s. JSeAS 53 4 (2022) 786–806.

VIII Shaping the urban environment

Research methods, aims and materials

  1. 705 BONNELL J & KHERAJ S, Urban environmental history in Anglophone Canada: omissions and opportunities. UHR 50 1–2 (2022) 45–52.

  2. 706 DAGENAIS M, Quand l’histoire urbaine et l’histoire environnementale se rencontrent: un survol des travaux récents au Québec. UHR 50 1–2 (2022) 53–63.

  3. 707 GIMENO-SÁNCHEZ A, Urbanism of zines: the potential of environmentalist zines as sources for planning history. PLP 37 6 (2022) 1115–46.

  4. 708 KILBURN-TOPPIN J, TIERNEY E & WILDMAN C, Researching urban space and the built environment. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2022. pp 232.

Town planning

  1. 709 ABESSER M, An incomplete merger. Rostov-on-Don and Nakhichevan as peculiar urbanization projects in the Russian Empire’s south. MS 19 2 (2022) 68–81.

  2. 710 BERGER A, Urban development and decline, fourth–fifteenth centuries. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 33–49.

  3. 711 BORGES J C, LOPES S S, DEL PINO FERNANDES R & MARAT-MENDES T, Planning at the edge: urbanism and socio-political transition in Chelas, Lisbon. PLP 37 4 (2022) 761–93.

  4. 712 BROSSEAU E G, The birth of the Colonia del Carmen in Coyoacán during the Porfiriato (1890–1910): an ideological analysis. JUH 48 1 (2022) 98–119.

  5. 713 CARBONE A, Epidemics, the issue of control and the grid: a nineteenth-century perspective from Buenos Aires. PLP 37 1 (2022) 9–26.

  6. 714 CASTRO-VARELA A, ‘Infrastructing’ pleasure: Montjuïc before and after the lights of the 1929 Barcelona International Exhibition. JUH 48 6 (2022) 1230–46.

  7. 715 CHIGURUPATI R, Urban mega projects and civic conflict: the case of the Hyderabad Metro Rail Project in India. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 457–72.

  8. 716 CODINI E K, Creating a new forma urbis: Pisa’s evolving cityscape from the Golden Age to the Florentine conquest. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 216–42.

  9. 717 COLLINS J A & LEKKAS P, Consumption crusade: the influence of tuberculosis on the emergence of town planning in South Australia, 1890–1918. PLP 37 1 (2022) 77–102.

  10. 718 CONTERIO J, Controlling land, controlling people: urban greening and the territorial turn in theories of urban planning in the Soviet Union, 1931–1932. JUH 48 3 (2022) 479–503.

  11. 719 DAVIES L, Yaba housing scheme and the colonial ‘re-planning’ of Lagos, 1917–1952. PLP 37 2 (2022) 267–92.

  12. 720 DAVIS J, Epidemics, planning and the city: a special issue of Planning Perspectives. PLP 37 1 (2022) 1–8.

  13. 721 DE ZOYSA R S & HORNIDGE A-K, Tidal turns: coastal urbanities in Island Southeast Asia. In DE ZOYSA R S, LOW K E Y, ABDULLAH N & HORNIDGE A-K eds, Coastal urbanities: mobilities, meanings, manoeuvrings. Leiden: Brill 2022. 1–23.

  14. 722 DELLARIA S, A new town and a numbers game: Runcorn, Merseyside, and Liverpool. PLP 37 2 (2022) 243–65.

  15. 723 DOS SANTOS G L & GONÇALVES J, The Olympic effect in strategic planning: insights from candidate cities. PLP 37 4 (2022) 659–83.

  16. 724 FOX S, The socialist bratwurst: East German urbanism and its reemergence in the present. JUH 48 3 (2022) 541–64.

  17. 725 FREEMARK Y, BLISS A & VALE L J, Housing Haussmann’s Paris: the politics and legacy of Second Empire redevelopment. PLP 37 2 (2022) 293–317.

  18. 726 FREESTONE R & PULLAN N, ‘Will-o’-the-wisp’: the extended campaign for town planning legislation in New South Wales. AHS 53 2 (2022) 196–221.

  19. 727 GALL M, Toun’s college or college’s toun? A study into the social effects of the Edinburgh University comprehensive development area. BOEC 18 1 (2022) 91–110.

  20. 728 GALLI J, Hypochondria as a form factor: the role of colonial anxieties as shapers of buildings and urban spaces in British Africa. PLP 37 1 (2022) 103–26.

  21. 729 GÓMEZ N A M, The cleanliness of otherness: epidemics, informal urbanization and urban degeneration in early twentieth-century Madrid. PLP 37 1 (2022) 127–47.

  22. 730 GOODE C E, The enduring importance of strategic vision in planning: the case of the West Midlands Green Belt. PLP 37 6 (2022) 1231–59.

  23. 731 HAMILOĞLU C, Modernity and leisure: the construction of Florya Beach in Istanbul (1935–1960). JUH 48 6 (2022) 1261–80.

  24. 732 HEATHORN S, ‘The battle of the bridges’: temporal modernity in the reimagining of interwar London’s cityscape. JBS 61 4 (2022) 863–83.

  25. 733 JACKSON I, Development visions in Ghana: from design schools and building research to Tema New Town. ArchH 65 1 (2022) 293–326.

  26. 734 JARVIS A, Engineering in the port cities of British India: the notion of the intellectual hinterland. In LEE R & MCNAMARA P eds, Port-cities and their hinterlands: migration, trade and cultural exchange from the early seventeenth century to 1939. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 256–83.

  27. 735 KEFFORD A, The Arndale Property Company and the transformation of urban Britain, 1950–2000. JBS 61 3 (2022) 563–98.

  28. 736 KNUDSEN M, (Re)locating the ‘danger zone’: post-disaster planning and class-based displacement in Tacloban City, Philippines. In DE ZOYSA R S, LOW K E Y, ABDULLAH N & HORNIDGE A-K eds, Coastal urbanities: mobilities, meanings, manoeuvrings. Leiden: Brill 2022. 85–108.

  29. 737 KOLANKIEWICZ V, NICHOLS D & TAYLOR E, Where will all the new citizens live?: the satellite development of Sunbury, Victoria, 1959–70. AHS 53 2 (2022) 242–65.

  30. 738 KOPPER C M, The German Federal Railway (Deutsche Bundesbahn) and the process of suburbanisation after 1945. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 405–15.

  31. 739 KULCZYKOWSKI W, Urban water supply infrastructure in Grudziądz (northern Poland): from the Middle Ages to the pre-modern times. WH 14 1 (2022) 41–59.

  32. 740 KULIĆ V, Ford’s network: the American–Yugoslav project and the circulation of urban planning expertise in the Cold War. PLP 37 5 (2022) 1001–27.

  33. 741 KVIDA M, Railways in Prague: tying and cutting the Gordian knot. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 186–200.

  34. 742 LEWITTES D, Shaping the city to come: rethinking modern architecture and town planning in England, c. 1934–51. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press 2022. pp 320.

  35. 743 LORENZ W F, TRUSLER A K & BERNSTETTER TOTSCH J N, Ancient water management in the casa dell’Efebo in Pompeii. WH 14 2 (2022) 211–32.

  36. 744 MAMASSIS N, CHRYSOULAKI S, BENDERMACHER-GEROUSSIS E, EVANGELOU T, KOUTIS P, PEPPAS G, DEFTERAIOS P, ZARKADOULAS N, KOUTSOYIANNIS D & GRIVA E, Representing the operation and evolution of ancient Piraeus’ water supply system. WH 14 1 (2022) 123–44.

  37. 745 MARTIN S, The pathogenic city: disease, dirt and the planning of Dublin’s wholesale fruit and vegetable markets. PLP 37 1 (2022) 149–68.

  38. 746 MAYER O & ROBINS A, Private railways as urban developers in Japan. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 273–87.

  39. 747 MERCURE-JOLETTE F, Le destin contrarié de l’urbanisme de Jean-Claude La Haye. UHR 49 2 (2022) 126–48.

  40. 748 MITCHELL T R, Tracks laid in muddy streets: Chicago’s perilous transition from frontier town to industrial city. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 123–32.

  41. 749 MWATHUNGA E & DONALDSON R, Urban planning history of Malawi: case study of the capital Lilongwe. PLP 37 4 (2022) 713–33.

  42. 750 NEMES R, River regulation, infrastructure, and small-town modernity on the Hungarian Danube, 1870–1945. WH 14 3 (2022) 335–54.

  43. 751 NILSEN M, Brussel’s Jonction as the heart valve in Belgium’s splintered body. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 346–58.

  44. 752 PIGHIN A, Politiques de l’authenticité, cité utopique Bodys Isek Kingelez: origines. HU 63 2 (2022) 147–69.

  45. 753 PINTO P T, MILHEIRO A V, MIRANDA E & PINTO P L, From monumentality to diversity – Lourenço Marques between the urban plans of Aguiar and Azevedo (1950–1970). PLP 37 2 (2022) 401–14.

  46. 754 REDAELLI E & CHIASSON G, Planning capital cities: a cultural district in Canada’s capital region. PLP 37 2 (2022) 319–39.

  47. 755 REDI F, The port structures of medieval Pisa: organization, form, and functionality. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 319–36.

  48. 756 REHMAN N, Unsettling a sanitary enclave: malaria at Mian Mir (1849–1910). PLP 37 1 (2022) 27–52.

  49. 757 REICHER C, Urban development under conditions of deindustrialization. Approaches from the Ruhr region in Germany. In BERGER S, MUSSO S & WICKE C eds, Deindustrialization in twentieth-century Europe: the northwest of Italy and the Ruhr region in comparison. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 251–69.

  50. 758 RENARD T, For the defence of Florence: site-specific urbanism versus sanitary planning. PLP 37 3 (2022) 529–50.

  51. 759 RITTER J, The city beautiful, zoning, and preservation on New York’s Upper East Side. In COHEN J-L, BERMAN D & RITTER J eds, Duke House and the making of modern New York: lives and afterlives of a Fifth Avenue mansion. Leiden: Brill 2022. 39–67.

  52. 760 RU S H, Historical geographies of Korea’s incorporation: the rise of undeveloped and modernized colonial port cities. JHG 76 (2022) 42–55.

  53. 761 SAGER T, Advocacy planning: were expectations fulfilled? PLP 37 6 (2022) 1205–30.

  54. 762 SAND J, Land, lumber, labor, and excrement: a slumlord’s view of Tokyo at the turn of the twentieth century. JUH 48 5 (2022) 1017–30.

  55. 763 SATAM M, Influenza pandemic and the development of public health infrastructure in Bombay city, 1919–1935. PLP 37 1 (2022) 53–76.

  56. 764 SCHEINER J, More-to-know II was Madīnat al-Salām a round city? In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 102–7.

  57. 765 SCHLEY D H, The B&O Railroad and the changing use of streets in Baltimore, Maryland, 1829–1865. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 334–45.

  58. 766 SELF S, ‘It’s bedlam down there’: tracing the history of a Cheltenham trading estate. LocH 52 2 (2022) 140–53.

  59. 767 SOUSA M L, Crossing urban and transport expertise to pave Lisbon’s future urban sprawl. In SIMÕES A & DIOGO M P eds, Science, technology and medicine in the making of Lisbon (1840–1940). Leiden: Brill 2022. 120–44.

  60. 768 SZYDLOWSKI T, Skelmersdale: design and implementation of a British new town, 1961–1985. PLP 37 2 (2022) 341–68.

  61. 769 TAGUCHI T, The post-war rebirth of Yokohama: the planner Akira Tamura’s contributions to municipal reform. PLP 37 5 (2022) 1073–95.

  62. 770 TAKASHIMA S, Development of private railway companies and areas on railway lines in Greater Toyko metropolitan areas. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 288–306.

  63. 771 TALOCCI G, BROWN D & YACOBI H, The biogeopolitics of cities: a critical enquiry across Jerusalem, Phnom Penh, Toronto. PLP 37 1 (2022) 169–89.

  64. 772 THARP W R, Roads, race, and retail: the transformation of Short Pump, Virginia. B & L 29 2 (2022) 74–98.

  65. 773 TOLIĆ I, News from the modern front: Constantinos A. Doxiadis’s Ekistics, the United Nations, and the post-war discourse on housing, building and planning. PLP 37 5 (2022) 973–99.

  66. 774 TSUI C C M, Housing the nascent middle class: the first high-rise planned community in post-war Hong Kong. PLP 37 4 (2022) 735–59.

  67. 775 TURCO M G, Building the capital city: Maria Ponti Pasolini, the Passeggiata Archeologica and the planning of Rome (1887–1917). PLP 37 3 (2022) 497–527.

  68. 776 VALE L J, Gordon Cherry memorial lecture 2022: the design-politics of planning equitably resilient capital cities. PLP 37 6 (2022) 1269–84.

  69. 777 VAN HEESVELDE P, Inventing the future. Early railway station planning and Mechelen’s ‘Central Station’, 1835–1845. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 171–85.

  70. 778 VEGA P M, Plaze mayor vs aesthetic liberalism: alternative models of public space in Seville. JA 27 5–6 (2022) 808–26.

  71. 779 WADE M, Urban futures: spectral time in the Archipelago. In DE ZOYSA R S, LOW K E Y, ABDULLAH N & HORNIDGE A-K eds, Coastal urbanities: mobilities, meanings, manoeuvrings. Leiden: Brill 2022. 157–79.

  72. 780 WILLIAMS S A & HIPP J R, The shape of neighborhoods to come: examining patterns of gentrification and holistic neighborhood change in Los Angeles County, 1980–2010. EPA 54 2 (2022) 265–94.

  73. 781 WILLIAMSON C P, ‘Fountain’, from Victorian necessity to modern inconvenience: contesting the death of public toilets. US 59 3 (2022) 641–62.

  74. 782 XIE Y & WALKER P, Planning a Christian campus in quasi-colonial China: Lingnan University, Guangzhou, 1904–1931. PLP 37 4 (2022) 685–712.

  75. 783 YIP M, New town planning as diplomatic planning: scalar politics, British–Chinese relations, and Hong Kong. JUH 48 2 (2022) 361–80.

  76. 784 YUSUF S T, A comparative study of the impact of railway stations on Madobi and Kwankwaso towns in the Kura district of Kano Emirate. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 133–43.

  77. 785 ZUCCONI G, Planning Venice after the Italian unification: the development of a space-based identity. PLP 37 3 (2022) 583–614.

Environment and the city

  1. 786 BINI M & ROSSI V, Pisa and its natural environment. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 39–58.

  2. 787 BRAIDEN H, ‘Far from uninteresting’: getting to know the St. Lawrence River at Montreal during the construction of the Victoria Bridge. UHR 49 2 (2022) 194–216.

  3. 788 BROWN P J, Supplying a medieval metropolis: water management and agriculture in the hinterland of early Islamic Basra. WH 14 3 (2022) 379–98.

  4. 789 BROWNING E G, Nature’s laboratory: environmental thought and labor radicalism in Chicago, 1886–1937. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press 2022. pp 280.

  5. 790 CABAU B, HERNANDEZ-LAMAS P & WOLTJER J, Regent’s Canal cityscape: from hidden waterway to identifying landmark. LJ 47 3 (2022) 282–307.

  6. 791 CHITRA V, Remembering the river: flood, memory and infrastructural ecologies of stormwater drainage in Mumbai. US 59 9 (2022) 1855–71.

  7. 792 COOK M, FROST L, GAYNOR A, GREGORY J, MORGAN R A, SHANAHAN M & SPEARRITT P, Cities in a sunburnt country: water and the making of urban Australia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. pp 280.

  8. 793 CROW J, Waters for a capital: hydaulic infrastructure and use in Byzantine Constantinople. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 67–86.

  9. 794 CROWLEY T, Writing in stone: political geologies of small-town India. In TALBOT I & RANJAN A eds, Urban development and environmental history in modern South Asia. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 27–44.

  10. 795 GRAS M-C, Entre nuages et éclaircies: La gestion des événements climatiques extrêmes à Rouen au XVIIIe siècle. HU 64 3 (2022) 95–114.

  11. 796 HAUTAMÄKI R, From sparse to compact city – shifting notions of nature in post-war residential landscapes in the Helsinki region. PLP 37 6 (2022) 1179–203.

  12. 797 HIGHAM N, Turning on the waterworks. HT 72 10 (2022) 16–18.

  13. 798 HOLLERAN M, Water qualities and usage in the zanjas of Los Angeles, 1781–1904. EnH 27 3 (2022) 491–518.

  14. 799 IVERMEE R, The Hooghly River and the incomplete mastery of the natural world in British Colonial India. In TALBOT I & RANJAN A eds, Urban development and environmental history in modern South Asia. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 75–89.

  15. 800 JONES K R, Green lungs and green liberty: the modern city park and public health in an urban metabolic landscape. SHMed 35 4 (2022) 1200–22.

  16. 801 JORDAN S, Edward Bindon Marten: sanitation engineering and industrial safety in the Black Country. MidH 47 2 (2022) 150–68.

  17. 802 KERMOAL N, La présence métisse à Edmonton dans les années 1930: de l’éclipse à l’émergence. UHR 49 2 (2022) 149–71.

  18. 803 KOCH N, Wastelanding Arabia: America’s ‘Garden of Eden’ in Al Kharj, Saudi Arabia. JHG 77 (2022) 13–24.

  19. 804 LIM S, Bangkok electric. JSeAS 53 3 (2022) 398–415.

  20. 805 LITZENBURGER L, L’adaptation des villes de la dorsale européenne aux changements climatiques: L’exemple des crises de subsistances (1430–1540). HU 64 3 (2022) 73–93.

  21. 806 METCALF A C, SMITH S M & WRIGHT KENNEDY S, ‘A mere gutter!’ The Carioca Aqueduct and water delivery in mid-nineteenth-century Rio de Janeiro. UH 49 1 (2022) 61–87.

  22. 807 MOHAMED M & INAZ M, Evolving islandscapes in a changing climate: Malé City, Maldives. In TALBOT I & RANJAN A eds, Urban development and environmental history in modern South Asia. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 119–36.

  23. 808 MOLINA D, The forced retirement of a hard worker: the rise and fall of eucalyptus in Bogotá. EnH 27 1 (2022) 58–85.

  24. 809 MOMBAUER D & WIJENAYAKE V, Analysing human-environment coexistence: urban development and the Colombo wetland complex. In TALBOT I & RANJAN A eds, Urban development and environmental history in modern South Asia. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 137–52.

  25. 810 MUBAYI Y, Water and historic settlements: the making of a cultural landscape. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. pp 150.

  26. 811 NAG S, Deforestation, declining rainfall, and desiccation in North East India with special reference to Cherrapunji, the ‘rainiest spot on the globe’. In TALBOT I & RANJAN A eds, Urban development and environmental history in modern South Asia. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 153–67.

  27. 812 POWELL M, Harnessing the great acceleration: connecting local and global environmental history at the Port of Singapore. EnH 27 3 (2021) 441–66.

  28. 813 RANJAN A, Political economy of dams in colonial and early postcolonial India. In TALBOT I & RANJAN A eds, Urban development and environmental history in modern South Asia. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 90–106.

  29. 814 RODRIGUES A D & SIMÕES A, A liberal garden: the Estrela Garden and the meaning of being public. In SIMÕES A & DIOGO M P eds, Science, technology and medicine in the making of Lisbon (1840–1940). Leiden: Brill 2022. 294–322.

  30. 815 SYNOWIECKI J, Plantes sous serres: acclimatation, conservation de la nature et savoirs végétaux à Paris au XVIIIe siècle. ECS 45 3 (2022) 323–49.

  31. 816 TALBOT I, Partition, the environment, and the early post-independence development of Lahore. In TALBOT I & RANJAN A eds, Urban development and environmental history in modern South Asia. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 12–26.

  32. 817 VALENTI S, Water in the making of a socio-natural landscape: Rome and its surroundings, 1870–1922. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. pp 216.

  33. 818 VENA N B, Cleaning streams in Cook County, IL: forest preserves, water pollution, and interwar environmentalism in the Chicago region. JPH 21 3 (2022) 249–78.

  34. 819 WALCOTT S M, Reconstructing Thimphu: balancing tradition and transition in Bhutan. In TALBOT I & RANJAN A eds, Urban development and environmental history in modern South Asia. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 168–84.

  35. 820 WALSH C, Hydraulic opulence: artesian wells and bathing in Mexico, 1850–1900. WH 14 1 (2022) 85–100.

  36. 821 WANG A, The search for a permanent channel: environmental transformation of the Dagu Bar, 1897–1928. JUH 48 5 (2022) 1066–83.

Environmental disaster

  1. 822 HOROWITZ A, Katrina: a history, 1915–2015. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press 2022. pp 296.

  2. 823 HURLEY A & MURRAY E, Visions, plans, and schemes: reconstructing African American St. Louis after the 1927 tornado. JPH 21 4 (2022) 295–315.

  3. 824 JUN S, How disasters made the modern city of Tokyo. JUH 48 5 (2022) 1003–16.

  4. 825 LEVY D S, Manhattan phoenix: the great fire of 1835 and the emergence of modern New York. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2022. pp 544.

  5. 826 RAFLIANA I & ARIF A, A tsunami of anxiety: the 57-metre wave that shook Jakarta and Western Java. In DE ZOYSA R S, LOW K E Y, ABDULLAH N & HORNIDGE A-K eds, Coastal urbanities: mobilities, meanings, manoeuvrings. Leiden: Brill 2022. 109–31.

  6. 827 SENG L K & PANTE M D, Controlling nature, disciplining human nature: floods in Singapore and metro Manila, 1945–1980s. In DE ZOYSA R S, LOW K E Y, ABDULLAH N & HORNIDGE A-K eds, Coastal urbanities: mobilities, meanings, manoeuvrings. Leiden: Brill 2022. 63–81.

War and the urban environment

  1. 828 ANSARI A, The fall of Isfahan. HT 72 3 (2022) 76–83.

  2. 829 BELAN M, Recruitment in provincial towns. Social relations and the evolution of political culture during the Napoleonic Wars. MS 19 2 (2022) 55–67.

  3. 830 BISKUPSKA J, Survivors: Warsaw under Nazi occupation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. pp 330.

  4. 831 ELŻANOWSKI J & ENSS C M, Cartographies of catastrophe: mapping World War II destruction in Germany and Poland. UH 49 3 (2022) 589–611.

  5. 832 GARNER I, The unbreakable city. HT 72 8 (2022) 28–43.

  6. 833 HOSLER J D, Jerusalem falls: seven centuries of war and peace. New Haven: Yale University Press 2022. pp 384.

  7. 834 LU S, Japanese atrocities in Nanjing: the Nanjing Massacre and post-massacre social conditions recorded in German diplomatic documents. Singapore: Springer Singapore 2022. pp xi + 446.

  8. 835 LYONS M, The conquest of Lisbon. HT 72 10 (2022) 27.

  9. 836 MCGEER R, The defence of Constantinople. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 117–32.

  10. 837 ORTUÑO P T & BES J M, A new map of the Napoleonic project after the Siege of Tarragona in 1811. IM 74 2 (2022) 287–93.

  11. 838 PÉREZ-OLIVARES A, Force and the city: occupying and controlling Madrid in the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War. UH 49 1 (2022) 108–28.

  12. 839 PETRALIA G, The late Middle Ages and the Florentine conquest. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 163–83.

  13. 840 TUSCHINSKI N, Militärische Sicherung und wirtschaftlicher Nutzen. Cherson und der Städtebau im Süden des Russländischen Reiches am Ende des 18. Jahrhunderts. MS 19 2 (2022) 42–54.

Animals and the city

  1. 841 GOMES I, Allies or enemies? Dogs in the streets of Lisbon in the second half of the nineteenth century. In SIMÕES A & DIOGO M P eds, Science, technology and medicine in the making of Lisbon (1840–1940). Leiden: Brill 2022. 323–43.

  2. 842 GUIDA M, Songbirds in East London homes, from Henry Mayhew to Charles Booth. In HARLEY J, HOLMES V & NEVALAINEN L eds, The working class at home, 1790–1940. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 123–43.

  3. 843 LONG M, ‘Accustomed to female domination’: women, mass media, and animal intimacy in interwar Britain. EnH 27 1 (2022) 140–54.

  4. 844 ROBICHAUD A, Brighton Fair: the life, death, and legacy of an animal suburb. JUH 48 3 (2022) 638–56.

  5. 845 ZHANG L, Urbanizing camels: camels in Beijing, 1900–1937. JUH 48 4 (2022) 913–27.

Urban renewal

  1. 846 BIGATTI G, Milan, the story of an urban metamorphosis. In BERGER S, MUSSO S & WICKE C eds, Deindustrialization in twentieth-century Europe: the northwest of Italy and the Ruhr region in comparison. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 271–85.

  2. 847 BREßLER J, Protecting the historical city – urban regeneration in Eastern Germany during the 1990s as a starting point for a sustainable urban development? PLP 37 6 (2022) 1285–99.

  3. 848 HARRISON E, Making the railways pay: the redevelopment of Euston Station, Labour and Conservative visions of public sector property speculation in the 1960s and 1970s. TCBH 33 4 (2022) 571–92.

  4. 849 HOGBEN P, Imagining Manila’s future: advertising ideals for postwar reconstruction. JSeAS 53 1–2 (2022) 277–308.

  5. 850 HOLLAND D, Pittsburgh’s urban renewal: industrial park development, freeway construction, and the rise of the Civil Rights movement. PH 89 2 (2022) 163–93.

  6. 851 RIUS-ULLDEMOLINS J & KLEIN R, From a barrio chino urban stigma to the Raval cultural brand: urban memory and cultural policies in the renewal of central Barcelona. JUH 48 6 (2022) 1407–23.

  7. 852 SUMMER R, Comparing mid-century historic preservation and urban renewal through Washington, D.C.’s alley dwellings. JPH 21 2 (2022) 132–58.

  8. 853 WETHERELL S, Sowing seeds: garden festivals and the remaking of British cities after deindustrialization. JBS 61 1 (2022) 83–104.

IX Urban culture

Urban culture

  1. 854 ANAGNOST A, Spatial orders, social forms: art and the city in modern Brazil. New Haven: Yale University Press 2022. pp 248.

  2. 855 AUDARD A, Un Klondike aux colonies. Migrations d’aventure et affirmations cosmopolites à Diego-Suarez (Madagascar, 1898–1916). HU 63 2 (2022) 63–82.

  3. 856 AVERETT M K, ‘Noble edifices’: the urban image of papal Rome, 1417–1667. In SCAPOLO A & PORCARELLI A eds, Interpreting urban spaces in Italian cultures. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press 2022. 39–64.

  4. 857 BANTI O, Culture literature in Pisa from the eighth to the fourteenth century. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 403–34.

  5. 858 BAPTIST V, Nostalgia for urban vices: cultural reminiscences of a demolished port city pleasure neighborhood. JUH 48 6 (2022) 1304–23.

  6. 859 BARBAZA R E, The boat will rise, too: on the necessity, allure, and terror of water. In DE ZOYSA R S, LOW K E Y, ABDULLAH N & HORNIDGE A-K eds, Coastal urbanities: mobilities, meanings, manoeuvrings. Leiden: Brill 2022. 50–62.

  7. 860 BARBER B, Doncaster Mansion House portraits: a pictorial tour. YAJ 94 1 (2022) 148–66.

  8. 861 BOLUFER M, GOMIS J & LLANES B, Making disability visible in digital humanities: blind street singers in early modern Valencia. In NEVOLA F, ROSENTHAL D & TERPSTRA N eds, Hidden cities: urban space, geolocated apps and public history in early modern Europe. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 85–102.

  9. 862 CASTELO C, The colonial garden and the colonial agricultural museum: education, research and ‘tropical illusion’ in the imperial metropolis. In SIMÕES A & DIOGO M P eds, Science, technology and medicine in the making of Lisbon (1840–1940). Leiden: Brill 2022. 230–60.

  10. 863 CLEAVER L, History books at Worcester, c. 1050–1150, and the making of the Worcester Chronicle. In TINTI F & WOODMAN D A eds, Constructing history across the Norman Conquest: Worcester, c. 1050–c. 1150. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer 2022. 174–99.

  11. 864 COLLARETA M, Art in Pisa in the Middle Ages. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 435–55.

  12. 865 CZOCH G, The origins of the negative historical representations of burghers in Hungary. UH 49 3 (2022) 502–22.

  13. 866 D’ANCONA MODENA L L, The ‘beautiful enigma’: a case-study of German–Jewish women in collector networks in Rome (1880–1914). JHC 34 3 (2022) 507–19.

  14. 867 DILLEN K, Porpoise, punishment and partnership: the meaning of presenting and consuming a marine mammal in late medieval coastal Flanders. UH 49 3 (2022) 568–88.

  15. 868 DONATO M P, City, church, and court: Roman culture in the age of Sforza Pallavicino. In DELBEKE M ed, Sforza Pallavicino: a Jesuit life in Baroque Rome. Leiden: Brill 2022. 32–50.

  16. 869 EIDELMAN G & HOKE M, The life, death, and legacy of the Toronto Bureau of Municipal Research, 1914–1983. JUH 48 5 (2022) 1084–99.

  17. 870 FIDELIS M, Imagining the world from behind the Iron Curtain: youth and the global sixties in Poland. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2022. pp 272.

  18. 871 FINDLEY D M, Of two-tailed lizards: spells, folk-knowledge, and navigating Manila, 1620–1650. JSocH 56 2 (2022) 294–325.

  19. 872 FREEMAN K, The town of Vichy and the politics of identity: stigma, victimhood and decline. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. pp xviii + 139.

  20. 873 GAMITO-MARQUES D, Intellectuals and the city. Private matters in the public space. In SIMÕES A & DIOGO M P eds, Science, technology and medicine in the making of Lisbon (1840–1940). Leiden: Brill 2022. 344–65.

  21. 874 GODINHO C & SÁNCHEZ A, Urbanising the history of ‘discoveries’: the 1940 Portuguese World Exhibition and the making of a new imperial capital. In SIMÕES A & DIOGO M P eds, Science, technology and medicine in the making of Lisbon (1840–1940). Leiden: Brill 2022. 261–87.

  22. 875 GRUENDLER B, City of poets, poets of the city. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 426–38.

  23. 876 GUCER K A, The copy room: imagining a Huguenot library in early modern London. JMEMS 52 2 (2022) 361–85.

  24. 877 HANKINS K, Framing the litterbug: picturing and policing cleanliness in mid-twentieth century Philadelphia. JUH 48 6 (2022) 1383–406.

  25. 878 HANZL M, Jewish culture and urban form: a case study of Central Poland before the Holocaust. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. pp 360.

  26. 879 HERMAN N, ‘A matter of love’: L. V. Randall (1893–1972), Montreal collector and academic visionary. JHC 34 1 (2022) 175–94.

  27. 880 HEROLD J, Preserving records and writing history in Worcester’s conquest-era archives. In TINTI F & WOODMAN D A eds, Constructing history across the Norman Conquest: Worcester, c. 1050–c. 1150. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer 2022. 61–91.

  28. 881 HOWARD E, ‘Keeping Christmas’ on the page: The Adelaide Observer, Alice in Wonderland, and the Australian periodical at play. VPR 55 1 (2022) 1–26.

  29. 882 JONES C, Investigating the small ads: the elusive Dr Swedour of Liverpool. LocH 52 3 (2022) 258–62.

  30. 883 KAFESCIOĞLU Ç, Byzantium in early modern Istanbul. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 339–57.

  31. 884 LASKOWSKI A, Kraków cultural heritage: on the way to globalising the national potential. In PURCHLA J ed, Urban change in Central Europe: the case of Kraków. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 164–90.

  32. 885 LUENGO P, Global architecture for eighteenth-century Beijing: building Qing enlightenments. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press 2022. pp 296.

  33. 886 LYNA D, Restrained freedom? Widows, blended families and inheritance in eighteenth-century urban Sri Lanka. HF 27 3 (2022) 596–617.

  34. 887 MA H, The missing intangible cultural heritage in Shanghai cultural and creative industries. IJHerS 28 5 (2022) 597–608.

  35. 888 MACARTHUR-SEAL D-J, States of drunkenness: bar-life in Istanbul between empire, occupation, and republic, 1918–1923. MES 58 2 (2022) 271–83.

  36. 889 MACKINNEY A G & GLAUBRECHT M, Unpacking a(nother) voyage round the world: Adelbert von Chamisso’s donation of the Rurik collection to Berlin’s natural history museums. JHC 34 2 (2022) 259–74.

  37. 890 MAKOWSKA-WĄS J, RZEPIELA A & PODOLAK I, Florian Sawiczewski (1797–1876), founder of the pharmacognostic collection in Kraków. JHC 34 2 (2022) 275–86.

  38. 891 MAUUARIN A, Visual duplication: specimens, works of art and photographs at the Musée d’ethnographie du Trocadéro (1928–1935). BJHS 55 3 (2022) 365–88.

  39. 892 MENNINGER M E, A serious matter and true joy: philanthropy, the arts, and the state in Leipzig (1750–1918). Leiden: Brill 2022. pp xvi + 380.

  40. 893 NEWMAN A D, Painting Flanders abroad: Flemish art and artists in seventeenth-century Madrid. Leiden: Brill 2022. pp xxiv + 325.

  41. 894 NOVAES A R, Displaying encounters: Jaime Cortesão’s São Paulo exhibition and indigenous knowledge in Brazilian history. JHG 76 (2022) 1–13.

  42. 895 O’DONNELL T, Identities in community: literary culture and memory in Worcester. In TINTI F & WOODMAN D A eds, Constructing history across the Norman Conquest: Worcester, c. 1050–c. 1150. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer 2022. 31–60.

  43. 896 O’KANE B, Islamic art and architecture in pre-Mongol Baghdād. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 66–97.

  44. 897 O’REGAN S, Songs in Irish popular politics: Cork election songs 1818–1837. ISR 30 2 (2022) 136–59.

  45. 898 OSTI L, Sketches of court culture in Baghdād. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 407–25.

  46. 899 PANG A T F, Stamping ‘imagination and sensibility’: objects, culture, and governance in late colonial Hong Kong. JICH 50 4 (2022) 789–816.

  47. 900 PETERSON M, Boston in New England, intoxicant town. HJ 65 1 (2022) 167–84.

  48. 901 PETTY A M, The honey pond and the flapjack tree: the USDA at two World Fairs, 1933–1940. AgH 96 1–2 (2022) 1–28.

  49. 902 PIRRIE R, Identity, imagination and George IV in Edinburgh. BOEC 18 1 (2022) 1–14.

  50. 903 PREVOST-MARCILHACY P, Rodolphe (1845–1905) and Maurice Kann (1839–1906): two collectors who conquered the fin-de-siècle Parisian art market. JHC 34 3 (2022) 481–94.

  51. 904 ROSENTHAL N G, Indigenizing urban landscapes: northwest coast artists and cities in the late twentieth century. JUH 48 1 (2022) 142–62.

  52. 905 ROULSTON F, Belfast punk and the Troubles: an oral history. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2022. pp 208.

  53. 906 SANETRA-SZELIGA J, Kraków: a creative city. In PURCHLA J ed, Urban change in Central Europe: the case of Kraków. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 191–213.

  54. 907 SCHNYDER M, Drinking, eating and dancing: Swiss merchants’ lobbying in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Lyon. FH 36 1 (2022) 24–43.

  55. 909 SIGANPORIA H, Walking from Dandi: in search of Vikas. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2022. pp 310.

  56. 909 SILVESTRU O O, ‘Capital politics’ through railways: the opening ceremonies of railway stations in nineteenth-century Bucharest. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 214–28.

  57. 910 SINGH R N, Dead in Banaras: an ethnography of funeral travelling. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2022. pp 184.

  58. 911 SMITH C, The great Chester cat hoax: creating an urban legend in the Anglosphere press, 1815–1955. H 107 374 (2022) 74–96.

  59. 912 STEEDMAN C, Waiting: Arnold Wesker and The Nottingham Captain. SH 45 1 (2022) 81–114.

  60. 913 TANZER F, European fantasies: modernism and Jewish absence at the Venice Biennale of Art, 1948–1956. CEH 31 2 (2022) 243–58.

  61. 914 TINTI F, Constructing narrative in the closing folios of Hemming’s Cartulary. In TINTI F & WOODMAN D A eds, Constructing history across the Norman Conquest: Worcester, c. 1050–c. 1150. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer 2022. 92–120.

  62. 915 TORAL I, Legends about the foundation of a marvelous city. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 47–65.

  63. 916 TORAL I, Prose writing in Baghdād. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 439–65.

  64. 917 TORAL I, More-to-know IV a ‘Golden Age’ in Baghdād? In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 466–9.

  65. 918 TORTAJADA E M, The South Kensington Museum’s purchase of the Altarpiece of St George: a case-study of the changing fortunes of medieval Spanish art in the nineteenth century. JHC 34 1 (2022) 23–32.

  66. 919 VALENTINES-ÁLVAREZ J & SASTRE-JUAN J, A fascist Coney Island? Salazar’s dictatorship, popular culture and technological fun (1933–1943). In SIMÕES A & DIOGO M P eds, Science, technology and medicine in the making of Lisbon (1840–1940). Leiden: Brill 2022. 391–418.

  67. 920 WOODMAN D A, Poetry in the Worcester Chronicula (TCD MS 503). In TINTI F & WOODMAN D A eds, Constructing history across the Norman Conquest: Worcester, c. 1050–c. 1150. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer 2022. 200–26.

  68. 921 WORKING L, Tobacco and the social life of conquest in London, 1580–1625. HJ 65 1 (2022) 30–48.

  69. 922 XIONG Y, Shanghai urban life and its heterogeneous cultural entanglements. Leiden: Brill 2022. pp 401.

  70. 923 YŪKO F, Urban riots and the everyday practice of male laborers in prewar Japan. JUH 48 5 (2022) 1031–45.

Urban culture and entertainment

  1. 924 ARTS M, The experience of employment in a 1930s East End cinema. LJ 47 3 (2022) 308–26.

  2. 925 BARBIERI P, Violin-making in Rome, 1700–1830: new archival investigations. Emus 50 2 (2022) 227–41.

  3. 926 BLANKENAU K, ‘As well by the English as by the strangers’: performing a multicultural London in The Magnificent Entertainment. LJ 47 1 (2022) 49–65.

  4. 927 BURLOCK H, Party politics: dancing in London’s West End, 1780–9. LJ 47 2 (2022) 181–97.

  5. 928 DELVEROUDI E A, Transnational factors in the shaping of the early Greek cinema business, 1896–1908. In DIETZE A & VARI A eds, Urban popular culture and entertainment: experiences from northern, east-central, and southern Europe, 1870s–1930s. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 80–108.

  6. 929 DIETZE A & VARI A, Introduction: transnational and transregional histories of urban popular culture in Europe. In DIETZE A & VARI A eds, Urban popular culture and entertainment: experiences from northern, east-central, and southern Europe, 1870s–1930s. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 1–25.

  7. 930 EASTERLING H, ‘Surging like the sea’: re-thinking the spectacle of the crowd in early modern London. LJ 47 1 (2022) 36–48.

  8. 931 FRANKE P, ‘Nobody came to Monte Carlo to be bored’: the scripting of the Monte Carlo pleasurescape 1880–1940. JUH 48 6 (2022) 1247–60.

  9. 932 GEMMANI L, Perspective cities: staging transferable spaces in learned comedy. In SCAPOLO A & PORCARELLI A eds, Interpreting urban spaces in Italian cultures. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press 2022. 65–80.

  10. 933 GORDON A & HILL T, Moving London: pageantry and performance in the early modern city. LJ 47 1 (2022) 1–12.

  11. 934 GUDIS C, Walking the talk: art, history, and the politics of public participatory memory in L.A.’s Skid Row. HWJ 94 2 (2022) 153–80.

  12. 935 HOMAN S & ROSE J, The Catcher: Melbourne’s 1960s discotheques and law and order. HA 19 3 (2022) 523–40.

  13. 936 HOOGLAND R, The rise and fall of a theater king: Albert Ranft and the commercialization of the Swedish theater field between the 1890s and 1920s. In DIETZE A & VARI A eds, Urban popular culture and entertainment: experiences from northern, east-central, and southern Europe, 1870s–1930s. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 109–37.

  14. 937 KAETHLER M, The triumphs of repition: living places in early modern mayoral shows. LJ 47 1 (2022) 66–84.

  15. 938 KINSELLA R, The bebop scene in London’s Soho, 1945–1950: post-war Britain’s first youth subculture. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. pp xv + 275.

  16. 939 KOIVISTO-KASSIK N & RANTANEN S, A cosmopolitan music city: early twentieth-century transnational networks in Vybord. In DIETZE A & VARI A eds, Urban popular culture and entertainment: experiences from northern, east-central, and southern Europe, 1870s–1930s. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 51–79.

  17. 940 KORBEL S, Mobilities and national indifference: popular entertainment in Habsburg Central Europe around 1900. In DIETZE A & VARI A eds, Urban popular culture and entertainment: experiences from northern, east-central, and southern Europe, 1870s–1930s. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 26–50.

  18. 941 KOSOK L, Pleasurescapes on the edge: performing modernity on urban waterfronts (1880–1960). JUH 48 6 (2022) 1199–210.

  19. 942 MCMAHAN M J, To catch a joke thief, or copyrighting Vaudeville acts in the New York Clipper registry. NCTF 49 1 (2022) 6–28.

  20. 943 MAYO S, Performances ‘in no other city possible’: mountebanks and theatrical vagrancy in seventeenth-century London. LJ 47 1 (2022) 85–102.

  21. 944 PACZKOWSKI S, Francesco Ballerini’s opera licence for Vienna. Emus 50 2 (2022) 181–98.

  22. 945 PIOTROWSKA A G, Jazzy, ‘gypsy’, and jolly: in search of a formula for Polish popular music in the interwar period. In DIETZE A & VARI A eds, Urban popular culture and entertainment: experiences from northern, east-central, and southern Europe, 1870s–1930s. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 233–58.

  23. 946 RASTRICK Ó, The reception of jazz in Iceland in the 1920s and 1930s: transnational anxieties, nation-building, and race. In DIETZE A & VARI A eds, Urban popular culture and entertainment: experiences from northern, east-central, and southern Europe, 1870s–1930s. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 290–316.

  24. 947 RAUTMAN M, Entertainment. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 277–92.

  25. 948 RIVERS SCOTT C, Civic culture at the cinema: local public life and cinemagoing in inter-war Britain. CulSH 19 5 (2022) 547–65.

  26. 949 RODRIGUEZ-LORENZO G A, Bandstands and modernity: constructing Spanish cities musically. JUH 48 5 (2022) 1140–58.

  27. 950 SHMYGOL M, Jacobean mock sea-fights on the River Thames: nautical theatricality in performance and print. LJ 47 1 (2022) 13–35.

  28. 951 SYNOWIECKI J, A Colisée in Paris: grandeur and the decline of the commercialization of leisure (1769–78). FH 36 2 (2022) 169–90.

  29. 952 TRIGUEROS R P, & DE PEDRO ÁLVAREZ C, Madrid nightlife and popular leisure: between globalizing cosmopolitanism and social transgression, 1900s to the 1930s. In DIETZE A & VARI A eds, Urban popular culture and entertainment: experiences from northern, east-central, and southern Europe, 1870s–1930s. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 169–200.

  30. 953 VARI A, From ambivalence to the disuse craze: French–Hungarian cultural exchanges through chanson, 1880s–1930s. In DIETZE A & VARI A eds, Urban popular culture and entertainment: experiences from northern, east-central, and southern Europe, 1870s–1930s. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 138–68.

  31. 954 VESIĆ I, Popular culture and cultural policies and narratives in interwar Yugoslavia. In DIETZE A & VARI A eds, Urban popular culture and entertainment: experiences from northern, east-central, and southern Europe, 1870s–1930s. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 201–32.

  32. 955 WOODALL G C, Constant town sounds: multidirectional movement of early jazz in the 1920s. In DIETZE A & VARI A eds, Urban popular culture and entertainment: experiences from northern, east-central, and southern Europe, 1870s–1930s. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 259–89.

  33. 956 ZUCKER A, Postscript: the open street. LJ 47 1 (2022) 127–33.

Education

  1. 957 AKPINAR M, More-to-know V. Medinan scholars in early ʿAbbāsid Baghdād. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 521–30.

  2. 958 BANGASH Y K & VIRDEE P, Partitioning the University of the Panjab, 1947. IESHR 59 4 (2022) 423–45.

  3. 959 BASSANO M, De maître à élève. Enseigner le droit à Orléans (c. 1230-c. 1320). Leiden: Brill 2022. pp 960.

  4. 960 BOL P K, Localizing learning: the literati enterprise in Wuzhou, 1100–1600. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press 2022. pp 416.

  5. 961 BORRMAN K, Studying friendship in housing the MIT School of Architecture at MIT in the postwar years. JUH 48 5 (2021) 1100–20.

  6. 962 BOURKE J, Birkbeck: 200 years of radical learning for working people. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2022. pp 656.

  7. 963 BREVES A, PEREIRA G & DA CRUZ M T G, António da Costa Paiva (Barão de Castelo de Paiva) (1806–1879): his malacological collection from Madeira in Universidade de Coimbra, Portugal. ANH 49 2 (2022) 311–18.

  8. 964 D’ALMEIDA P B, MARAT-MENDES T & TOUSSAINT M, Portugal’s rising research in architecture and urbanism: the influence of international research centres and authors. JUH 48 4 (2022) 807–34.

  9. 965 DODDS P, The geographies of Enlightenment Edinburgh. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer 2022. pp 366.

  10. 966 GAMITO-MARQUES D, The golden age (1862–1910) of the Zoological Section of the Museu Nacional de Lisboa (National Museum of Lisbon), Portugal. ANH 49 1 (2022) 160–74.

  11. 967 GAUL N, Schools and learning. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 263–76.

  12. 968 GOLDSTEIN A & HAGER T, Identification and alienation: Aliza Levenberg’s educational work in Kiryat Shmona in the early 1960s. PaedH 58 4 (2022) 466–85.

  13. 969 GÜNTHER S, Knowledge and learning in Baghdād. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 473–520.

  14. 970 HOCHSTADT S, The Kadoorie School: educating refugee children in Shangahi. In OSTOYICH K & XIA Y eds, The history of Shanghai Jews: new pathways of research. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 99–131.

  15. 971 JANOS D, Philosophical and scientific learning in Baghdād. In SCHEINER J & TORAL I eds, Baghdād: from its beginnings to the 14th century. Leiden: Brill 2022. 531–93.

  16. 972 LIN J-J, YAI T & CHEN C-H, Temporal changes of transit-induced gentrification: a forty-year experience in Tokyo, Japan. AAAG 112 1 (2022) 247–65.

  17. 973 ŁUKASIEWICZ S, Invisible umbrella of American bishops: aid for the Catholic University of Lublin in the early Cold War context. CHR 108 3 (2022) 534–59.

  18. 974 MELLER R E, Bruno Loewenberg and the Lion Book Shop. In OSTOYICH K & XIA Y eds, The history of Shanghai Jews: new pathways of research. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 133–69.

  19. 975 OH D Y, The university and East Asian cities: the variegated origins of urban universities in colonial Seoul and Singapore. JUH 48 2 (2022) 336–60.

  20. 976 PETRIDOU V, The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) experts’ contribution in the establishment of the University of Patras. PLP 37 5 (2022) 1029–49.

  21. 977 RAGLAND E R, Making physicians: tradition, teaching, and trials at Leiden University, 1575–1639. Leiden: Brill 2022. pp xii + 457.

  22. 978 SIMÕES A & DIOGO M P, Working-class universities: itinerant spaces for science, technology, and medicine in republican Lisbon. In SIMÕES A & DIOGO M P eds, Science, technology and medicine in the making of Lisbon (1840–1940). Leiden: Brill 2022. 366–90.

  23. 979 TAYLOR J, New horizons and new challenges: developments in the modern languages in the University of Leeds, 1914–18. NH 59 1 (2022) 116–36.

  24. 980 TOMS D, Reading and print cultures in Waterford, 1865–1939. IESH 49 1 (2022) 80–97.

  25. 981 TURNBULL J, The role of glass in chemistry, especially in Edinburgh. BOEC 18 1 (2022) 81–90.

  26. 982 VIEIRA C, MUCHAGATA J, GASPAR R, GONÇALVES H, MATEUS S & FONSECA M J, Biological models and replicas in Museu de História Natural e da Ciência da Universidade do Porto, Portugal. ANH 49 2 (2022) 269–84.

Emotions and the senses

  1. 983 ARNOUT A, Comfort and safety: an intersensorial history of shopping streets in nineteenth-century Amsterdam and Brussels. In DYER S ed, Shopping and the senses, 1800–1970: a sensory history of retail and consumption. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 79–100.

  2. 984 RAINS S, The politics of sitting down: women, cafés and public toilets in Dublin. In DYER S ed, Shopping and the senses, 1800–1970: a sensory history of retail and consumption. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 59–77.

  3. 985 REINECKE C, Into the cold: neighborliness, class, and the emotional landscape of urban modernism in France and West Germany. JUH 48 1 (2022) 163–81.

  4. 986 RICHARDSON C, Sensing the street. In VAN DEN HEUVEL D ed, Early modern streets: a European perspective. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 81–109.

  5. 987 ROBERTS C, Synergy and dissonance of the senses: negotiating fashion through second-hand dealing, jumble sales and street market trading in 1930s East End London. In DYER S ed, Shopping and the senses, 1800–1970: a sensory history of retail and consumption. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2022. 145–68.

  6. 988 RUDY J, FAHRNI M & KENNY N, Railways and the urban soundscape: Montreal, 1850s–1950s. UHR 49 2 (2022) 217–40.

Attitudes towards cities

  1. 989 CANNAMELA D & CASTALDO A, Narratives of a ‘city under siege’: bodies and discourses of the 1977 movement in Bologna. In SCAPOLO A & PORCARELLI A eds, Interpreting urban spaces in Italian cultures. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press 2022. 225–44.

  2. 990 GILLEN S, Fare la vita grigia: the industrial city of Italo Calvino and Luciano Bianciardi. In SCAPOLO A & PORCARELLI A eds, Interpreting urban spaces in Italian cultures. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press 2022. 183–206.

  3. 991 HANSEN G B, The experience and image of American elevated railways: rapid transit infrastructure in the urban consciousness. In ROTH R & VAN HEESVELDE P eds, The city and the railway in the world from the nineteenth century to the present. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 390–402.

  4. 992 JANSEN J, Branding in practice, or how an Amsterdam publisher used the city to promote Gerbrand Bredero (1585–1618). UH 49 2 (2022) 265–87.

  5. 993 KAMRAN T, A shift from the ‘devotional’ to the ‘natural’ in nineteenth-century Lahore’s art education. In TALBOT I & RANJAN A eds, Urban development and environmental history in modern South Asia. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 45–57.

  6. 994 KOUTRAKOU N, Medieval travellers to Constantinople wonders and wonder. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 295–309.

  7. 995 LAUERMANN J, The declining appeal of mega-events in entrepreneurial cities: from Los Angeles 1984 to Los Angeles 2028. EPC 40 6 (2022) 1203–18.

  8. 996 MASON D, The role of London’s urban foundation legends in late-medieval historical and political cultures. LJ 47 2 (2022) 141–58.

  9. 997 ROBERTS S, Encountering and inventing Constantinople in early modern Europe. In BASSETT S ed, The Cambridge companion to Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2022. 324–38.

  10. 998 ŠEDIVÝ M, The German response to Austria’s annexation of Cracow in 1846. GeH 40 3 (2022) 340–60.

  11. 999 SMITH S, From city of empire to city of diversity: a visual journey. MidH 47 1 (2022) 98–100.

  12. 1000 WEIR S, Salvador Dalí in Rem Koolhaas’ Delirious New York. JA 27 2–3 (2022) 398–419.

Views of the city in literature/graphics/drama

  1. 1001 BOWEN J P, Arnold Bennett (1867–1931), Anna of the Five Towns (1902) and the Staffordshire Potteries. LocH 52 1 (2022) 53–67.

  2. 1002 BOWIE L, Berlin not for sale: the film lens as a tool of urban exploration in 1960s West Berlin. JUH 48 4 (2022) 835–60.

  3. 1003 CAGIANELLI C, The image of Pisa in the medieval figurative arts. In MATHEWS K R, BUSCH S O & BRUNI S eds, A companion to medieval Pisa. Leiden: Brill 2022. 476–96.

  4. 1004 CALARESU M, Representing the street in words and images. In VAN DEN HEUVEL D ed, Early modern streets: a European perspective. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 49–80.

  5. 1005 CRINSON M, Shock city: image and architecture in industrial Manchester. New Haven: Yale University Press 2022. pp 239.

  6. 1006 DALY N, Inventing the American city: Dion Boucicault, John Brougham, and transatlantic urban melodrama. NCTF 49 2 (2022) 108–25.

  7. 1007 DROR O, Normalising Hồ Chí Minh in Vietnamese cinema, 1990–2020: ideology, popular appeal, and the market economy. JSeAS 53 3 (2022) 534–61.

  8. 1008 ILOVAN O-R, The development discourse during socialist Romania in visual representations of the urban area. JUH 48 4 (2022) 861–95.

  9. 1009 KISIEL P, Picturing an industrial city: green and modern? Postcards from Chemnitz and Lodz (1880s–1980s). UH 49 2 (2022) 288–309.

  10. 1010 NOOTEBOOM C, Venice: the lion, the city and the water. New Haven: Yale University Press 2022. pp 304.

  11. 1011 PATAT E, Exploring urban space: Terzani’s In Asia (1965–1997). In SCAPOLO A & PORCARELLI A eds, Interpreting urban spaces in Italian cultures. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press 2022. 245–64.

  12. 1012 PIKÓ L & LEWI H, The making of Canberra as captured on film (1900–1945). PLP 37 4 (2022) 795–814.

  13. 1013 SHELLEY A, British empire building on the terrace at Shepheard’s Hotel, Cairo. In FARIA A S, SHELLEY A & LOBO S A eds, The built environment through the prism of the colonial periodical press. Abingdon: Routledge 2022. 111–34.

  14. 1014 SIOLI A, Watermarks of architecture. JA 27 4 (2022) 500–16.

  15. 1015 SUTNIK M-M, Memory unearthed: the Lodz Ghetto photographs of Henryk Ross. New Haven: Yale University Press 2022. pp 244.

  16. 1016 THOLL B, Il mondo è meglio non vederlo che vederlo: Naples as urban dystopia in Un paio di occhiali. In SCAPOLO A & PORCARELLI A eds, Interpreting urban spaces in Italian cultures. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press 2022. 207–24.