SSHA CALL FOR PAPERS
Macrohistorical Dynamics Network
36th Annual Meeting of the Social Science History Association
Boston, Massachusetts 17-20 November 2011
Submission Deadline: 15 February 2011
"Generation to Generation"
We invite you to take part in Macrohistorical Dynamics (MHD) panels of the 36th annual meeting of the Social Science History Association, November 17-20, 2011 in Boston. For more information on the meeting as well as the call for proposals, please refer to the SSHA website:
The deadline for paper and/or panel submissions is February 15, 2011.
The members of the Social Science History Association share a common interest in interdisciplinary and systematic approaches to historical research.
The thematic topic of the 2011 annual meeting is “Generation to Generation” – a theme that works very well with the research interests of many of the scholars involved in the Macrohistorical Dynamics network.
Macrohistorical Dynamics (MHD) is an interdisciplinary social science research field that focuses on problems of large-scale, comparative historical inquiry. Contributors to the field have brought perspective on a wide variety of problem areas, including Eurasian comparisons; macro- and historical sociology; comparative histories; world history; world-system analysis; comparative study of civilizations; philosophy of history; and studies of long-term socio-ecological, technological, demographic, cultural, and political trends and transformations. The Macrohistorical Dynamics network brings a rigorous perspective to bear on questions having to do with “large” history.
Possible topics that illustrate some of the general themes of Macrohistorical Dynamics include …
- Comparative Methods in Macrohistory
- Eurasian comparisons
- Large-scale historical causes: climate, population, geography
- Cultural and National Identities in Large-scale Historical Change
- Theory in Macro-history: Are There Successful Macrosociological Theories?
- Macro-, Meso-, Micro- in Historical Explanations
- Empires and Peoples
- Globalization and World Cities
- Social Evolution and Systemic Transformations in World History
The list of MHD panel themes for 2011 is open, and we encourage you to submit proposals for paper topics or panel themes.
SSHA requests that submissions be made by means of its web conference management system. Paper title, brief abstract, and contact information should be submitted on the site www.ssha.org, where the general SSHA 2011 call for papers is also available. (If you haven’t used the system previously you will need to create an account, which is a very simple process.) Here is the direct link for submissions:
The online system is now accepting submissions. If you have any questions, please contact either of the MHD co-chairs (Peter Perdue, James Lee, Dan Little).
NOTE: There is an SSHA rule concerning book sessions. For a book session to proceed, the author (or at least one of multiple authors) MUST be present. Proposals for book sessions should only be submitted if there is high confidence that the author will be able to travel to Boston November 17-20, 2011.
Visit the SSHA Facebook site at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Social-Science-History-Association/146259262094506?ref=ts&v=wall.
Feel free to contact the MHD network organizers for further information.
Prof. Peter Perdue
Department of History, Yale University
Prof. James Lee
School of Humanities and Social Science, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
jqljzl@gmail.com