God’s Artisans
Sam Young explores the complex history of the Jeunesse ouvrière chrétienne, which used Catholic values to advocate for a more humane economy.
Sam Young explores the complex history of the Jeunesse ouvrière chrétienne, which used Catholic values to advocate for a more humane economy.
What do frictions in the founding story of a missionary women's college reveal about Indian women's struggles for education and internationalism? Sneha Krishnan unpacks the history of the Women's Christian College in colonial India.
How do interpersonal encounters shape grassroots internationalism? Andrew Smith on the Larzac struggle.
How did a group of authors, artists musicians and aristocrats in Edwardian Chelsea use the structures of marriage, class and empire to subvert the heterosexual norm and form a network of queer non-monogamy?
How can marginalised stories of internationalism be recovered? This article introduces the new 'Rethinking Internationalisms' featured series.
Read the latest issue of History Workshop Journal - celebrating the journal's 100th issue on its 50th anniversary.
Read Article "HWJ 100"
In this new and free-access Virtual Special Issue, Andrew Whitehead brings together 50 years of writing and reflection on the New Left
Read Article "The New Left"What radical histories can be found in 'working and wandering' from place to place? This series explore itinerance in histories of space, movement and labour, and how historians might imagine news ways of researching itinerantly.
Lola Olufemi and Agnes Cameron revive resistance in the concepts of 'history' and 'technology', through digitally reassembling the archive.
Sabine Hanke examines how Lakota performers challenged and resisted the 'exotic othering' of their identities in the Sarrasani circus.
Chin Kar Yern explores how hawkers have shaped the landscape of hunger in Malaysia.
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Family, Childhood & Life Course
How might playgrounds form part of a spatial justice movement?
How have a small - and declining - group of nuns built grassroots power with immigrant families in East Harlem?
Michaela Benson unpacks the Hong Kong British National (Overseas) visa, and how it has contributed to redrawing humanitarian protection and migration policy after Brexit.
Whether letters, food or ephemera, material objects have acted as radical agents in history. Here, historians, archivists and activists unpack stories of solidarity and everyday lives.
How did a protest by a group of women from a Christian anarchist movement inspire a 1960s American folk song? Victoria Peretitskaya explores the origins of the song, the protest and its feminist legacy.
If you go down to the Thames today, you're sure of a big surprise - printer's type. Peter Wollweber unpacks its radical history.
Family, Childhood & Life Course
Allan Pang explores the diverse and conflicting depictions of Chinese and world history in transregional children's magazines.