Political Science & Politics — special journal section on Archives in the History of Political Thought and Beyond

The latest issue of PS: Political Science & Politics (January 2024) includes a special section on Archives in the History of Political Thought and Beyond.

Introduction: The Archival Turn in Political Theory
Verena Erlenbusch-Anderson

Political Theory, the Archive, and the Problem of Authority
Matthew Longo

Anarchives: The Labadie Collection
Kathy E. Ferguson

The Archives of Colonial Trauma: Politics and Psychiatry in North Africa
Nancy Luxon

Archival Silence: How Do We Write the History of the Subaltern Who Cannot Speak?
Kevin Olson

“Does it Matter…?” Political Theory in the Archives of William F. Buckley, Jr.
Nicholas Buccola

Murder in the Archive
Alison McQueen

Conclusion: Working in a “Living” Archive
Peter J. Verovšek

New Issue: Collections

Collections Volume: 20, Number: 1 (March 2024)
(partial open access)

Focus Issue: Collections Cataloging in the Twenty-First Century: Case Studies of Evolving Practice, Multiple Voices, New Meanings

Introduction
Introduction to the Focus Issue Collections Cataloging in the Twenty-First Century: Case Studies of Evolving Practice, Multiple Voices, New Meanings
Juilee Decker and Barbara Wood

Collections Cataloging in the Twenty-First Century: Case Studies of Evolving Practice, Multiple Voices, New Meanings

Moving On: Rethinking Practice and Transforming Data at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge
Lucie Carreau and Imogen Gunn

Toward Centering Indigenous Knowledge in Museum Collections Management Systems
Kara Lewis

Collaborative Approach to Updating Object Records at the David Livingstone Birthplace Museum
Alasdair Campbell and Rachael Smith

Enriching Museum Collection with Virtual Design Objects and Community Narratives: Pop-up-VR Museum
Lily Díaz-Kommonen, Leena Svinhufvud, Susanna Thiel, and Gautam Vishwanath

Hosting and Integrating a Hawaiian Language Taxonomy in the British Museum’s Collection Database
Alice Christophe, N. Haʻalilio Solomon, Hina Kneubuhl, Victoria Donnellan, and Leah Caldeira

Finding the Marginal in Marginalia: The Importance of Including Marginalia Descriptions in Catalog Entries
Zoe Screti

Documenting the Divine: The Future of Sacred Objects in Museum Databases
Emma Cieslik

Museums Will Forget: Critical Approaches to Catalog-Centered Historical Research
Tehmina Goskar

Cataloging Architectural Drawings: Challenges and Opportunities in the Digital Age
Tom Drysdale

Defining Digital Design in the National Collection
Jessica Walthew, Andrea Lipps, and Wendy Rogers

Provisional Semantics: Addressing the Challenges of Representing Multiple Perspectives Within Public Collections
Anjalie Dalal-Clayton and Ananda Rutherford

Reflections

Inclusive Description in the Glasgow School of Art Library’s Published Catalog
Carissa Chew

Acknowledging the Colonial Bias in Early Museum Collection Records
Tharron Bloomfield

New Issue: IFLA Journal

IFLA Journal Volume 49, No.4 (December 2023)
(open access)

Essay
AI policies across the globe: Implications and recommendations for libraries
Leo S. Lo

Original Articles
Digital reading in Vietnamese universities: The situation and influencing factors
Lan Thi Nguyen and Kulthida Tuamsuk

Leadership styles, organisational rewards and employees’ commitment in academic libraries
Clement Ola Adekoya and Isioma Rita Guobiazor

Community engagement of public libraries for ensuring tribal women’s health literacy in Bangladesh
Shamima Yesmin, Md Abdul Karim and Md Atikuzzaman

The role of academic libraries in facilitating friendships among students
Adebowale Jeremy Adetayo, Sowemimo Ronke Adekunmisi, Florence Onyeisi Otonekwu and Olabisi Fadeke Adesina

Performance indicators framework for assessment of national libraries using the analytic hierarchy process
Elaheh Hassanzadeh

Public libraries in language assimilation policies: The Swedish Tornedalian example
Joacim Hansson

New Issue: Code4Lib Journal

A recent issue of Code4Lib Journal has several articles related to archives.

Code4Lib Journal Issue 58 (December 2023)

Pipeline or Pipe Dream: Building a Scaled Automated Metadata Creation and Ingest Workflow Using Web Scraping Tools
Matthew Krc and Anna Oates Schlaack

Leveraging Aviary for Past and Future Audiovisual Collections
Tyler Mobley and Heather Gilbert

Islandora for archival access and discovery
Sarah Jones, Cory Lampert, Emily Lapworth, and Seth Shaw

Developing a Multi-Portal Digital Library System: A Case Study of the new University of Florida Digital Collections
Todd Digby, Cliff Richmond, Dustin Durden, and Julio Munoz

Comparative analysis of automated speech recognition technologies for enhanced audiovisual accessibility
Dave Rodriguez and Bryan J. Brown

New/Recent Publications

Articles

Maja Krtalić and Jesse David Dinneen. “Information in the personal collections of writers and artists: Practices, challenges and preservation.” Journal of Information Science Volume 50, Issue 1, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1177/01655515221084.

I-Chin Wu, Pertti Vakkari, Bo-Xian Huang. “An exploration of search-as-learning in digital archives of an online museum.” Journal of Documentation 80, no. 1 (2024).

Andrew Whitworth. “Marks of usage: discerning information literacy practices from medieval European manuscripts.” Journal of Documentation 80, no. 1 (2024).

Patrick Egan. “Interacting with Archival Resources of Digital Audio: A Survey of the Experiences of Irish Traditional Musicians in North America.” DH Unbound 2022, SelectedPapers,” ed. Barbara Bordalejo, Roopika Risam,and Emmanuel Château-Dutier, special issue.Digital Studies/Le champ numérique 13(3): 1–24.

Bartliff, Z., Kim, Y. & Hopfgartner, F. “Towards privacy-aware exploration of archived personal emails.” International Journal on Digital Libraries (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00799-024-00394-5.

Julia Meier. “Physical Preservation of 35 mm Slides: Methods and Standards.” SILS Connecting Volume 12, Issue 1 (2023).

Lauren Moore. “Fanfiction today: An analysis of publishing trends on Archive of Our OwnSILS Connecting Volume 12, Issue 1 (2023).

June Chow, Jennifer Douglas. “From Salvage to Strategy: A conversation with Paul Yee on Archival Consciousness and the Chinese Canadian Archival Record.” BC Studies No. 218: Summer 2023.

Makoto Nakayama, Eli Hustad, Norma Sutcliffe, Merri Beckfield. “Organic transformation of ERP documentation practices: Moving from archival records to dialogue-based, agile throwaway documents.” International Journal of Information Management 74 (February 2024).

Quentin Lobbé. “Continuity and discontinuity in web archives: a multi-level reconstruction of the firsttuesday community through persistences, continuity spaces and web cernes.” Internet Histories 7:4, 354-385, DOI: 10.1080/24701475.2023.2254050.

Emily Maemura. “Sorting URLs out: seeing the web through infrastructural inversion of archival crawling.” Internet Histories 7:4, 386-401, DOI: 10.1080/24701475.2023.2258697

Books

Viola, L., & Spence, P. (Eds.). (2023). Multilingual Digital Humanities. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003393696

Yael A. Sternhell. War on Record: The Archive and the Afterlife of the Civil War. Yale University Press, 2023.

Diana Kamin. Picture-Work: How Libraries, Museums, and Stock Agencies Launched a New Image Economy. MIT Press, 2023.

Henry Leutwyler. The Tiffany Archives. Steidl, 2023.

Edited By Bijan Rouhani, Xavier Romão. Managing Disaster Risks to Cultural Heritage
From Risk Preparedness to Recovery for Immovable Heritage
. Routledge, 2024.

Edited by Kristopher Lovell. RecordCovid19: Historicizing Experiences of the Pandemic. De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2023.

Edited by P.J.M. Marks and Stephen Parkin. The Book by Design: The Remarkable Story of the World’s Greatest Invention. University of Chicago Press, 2023.

Bruno Fuligni. Le Génie Humain: Les Archives Des Inventeurs, de 1791 à Nos Jours. [Human Genius: The Archives of Inventors, From 1791 to the Present Day.] Gründ Fine Books, 2023.

Danielle Taschereau Mamers. Settler Colonial Way of Seeing: Documentation, Administration, and the Interventions of Indigenous Art. Fordham University Press, 2023.

Edited By Benedetta Borello, Laura Casella. Paper Heritage in Italy, France, Spain and Beyond (16th to 19th Centuries): Collector Aspirations & Collection Destinies. Routledge, 2024.

Laura Hughes. Archival Afterlives: Cixous, Derrida, and the Matter of Friendship. Northwestern University Press, 2023.

Edited By Kate Guy, Hajra Williams, Claire Wintle. Histories of Exhibition Design in the Museum: Makers, Process, and Practice. Routledge 2024.

Reports

Collections as Data: Part to Whole Final Report
Padilla, Thomas, Scates Kettler, Hannah, Shorish, Yasmeen

Podcast

Remnants of Resistance: Queer Studies Scholars Mine the Archives
CSU Northridge, 2023

New Issue: Archeion

Archeion, 2023, 124
(Poland, open access)

Archival contexts
Eric Ketelaar

Parsing privacy for archivists
Trudy Huskamp Peterson

The transnational archival memory of European integration
Dieter Schlenker

Managing “the shapeless mass” in the digital age
Laura Millar

McDonaldization of archives (an introduction to discussion)
Hadrian Ciechanowski

Privacy of documents – documents of privacy. Remarks on personal sources in historical and archival studies
Waldemar Chorążyczewski, Stanisław Roszak

Egodocumentality of personal file: personality – mentality – world of values. On the example selected archives of the 20th century
Piotr Falkowski, Kamila Siuda

Egodokumentalne ślady człowieka w Internecie i ich archiwizacja
Bartłomiej Konopa, Agnieszka Rosa

Diplomatic archives: the Polish segment (1918–1991) in the Ukrainian archives
Iryna Matyash

Towards a new archival science. Anthropologising the archive and the archival materials
Wojciech Piasek

O źródłach inspiracji archiwistyką w książce, która nie stała się podręcznikiem. Refleksje na marginesie publikacji W. Chorążyczewskiego Zachęta do archiwistyki, Wydawnictwo Naukowe UMK, Toruń 2022, ss. 360
Paweł Perzyna

Katja Müller, Digital archives and collections. Creating online access to cultural heritage, series Anthropology of Media, v. 11, ISBN 978-1-80073-185-1, Berghahn Books, New York 2021, pp. 250, DOI.org/10.2307/j.ctv29sfzfx
Jessica Bushey

Scott Cline, Archival virtue. Relationship, obligation, and the just archives, ISBN 978-1-945246-73-9, Society of American Archivists, Chicago 2021, pp. 212
Christopher M. Laico

Jen Hoyer, Nora Almeida, The Social Movement Archive, ISBN: 978-1-63400-089-5, Litwin Books, Sacramento 2021, pp. 244
Meghan R. Rinn

Marcin Smoczyński, Walczmy o usprawnienie administracji! Komisje dla usprawnienia administracji publicznej i ich rola w racjonalizacji polskiej biurowości do roku 1956, ISBN: 978-83-231-5070-1, Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Mikołaja Kopernika, Toruń 2023, ss. 472
Adam Grzegorz Dąbrowski

InterPARES Summer School San Benedetto (Włochy), 7–11 lipca 2023 r.
Kamila Pawełczyk-Dura

New Issue: Restaurator. International Journal for the Preservation of Library and Archival Material

Restaurator. International Journal for the Preservation of Library and Archival Material, 44 no. 4.
(open access)

Latent Acidification of Books Composed of Alkaline Text Papers
Yukiko Mochizuki, Hiroshi Itsumura, Toshiharu Enomae

A Comparative Study of the Performance of Handmade Papers Used for Mounting in China, Korea, and Japan
Dongyoung Yoo, Chengquan Qiao, Decai Gong

Characteristics of Traditional Persian Lacquered Bindings and Specific Deterioration Issues
Mandana Barkeshli, Mostafa Rostami, Sadra Zekrgoo

Dyes Used for Colouring Manuscripts and Their Effect on Cellulose Degradation
Emel Akyol, Pınar Çakar Sevim

New Issue: Archival Science

Archival Science Volume 24, Issue 1 March 2024
(open access)

The lost historical archives of the City of Szczecin
Paweł Gut Radosław Gaziński

Results of archival appraisal: a study of a Finnish City
Pekka Henttonen Saara Packalén

Working with care leavers and young people still in care: ethical issues in the co-development of a participatory recordkeeping app
Peter Williams Elizabeth Shepherd Elizabeth Lomas

Persisting through friction: growing a community driven knowledge infrastructure
Alexandria J. Rayburn Ricardo L. Punzalan Andrea K. Thomer

Motivations for personal recordkeeping practices: the roles of personal factors, recordkeeping literacy and the affordances of records
Viviane Frings-Hessami

Breaking out of the box: increasing the representation of disability within archive science
Abigail Pearson Miro Griffith Ezgi Taşcıoğlu

New Issue: Archives & Manuscripts

The most recent issue of Archives and Manuscripts (Volume 51, Number 1) was published in December 2023. This is a special issue Guest Edited by Adrian Cunningham titled ‘Documenting Australian Society Redux’.

The full issue is available online, and always open access. Print copies will be sent to members in early 2024.

Vol 51 No 1 (2023): Documenting Australian Society Redux

Documenting Australian Society: Progress Report on an Initiative of the UNESCO Australian Memory of the World Committee
Adrian Cunningham

Documenting Australian Society – Performing Arts Community of Practice
Jenny Fewster

Honouring Stories of Struggle: Reassessing Australia’s Records of Disadvantage – Hearing the Voices of Those Who Struggle
Robyn Sutherland

Building a Participatory Archive With an Australian Suburb: Case Study of Canberra’s Biggest Bogan Suburb, Kambah
Louise Curham

COVID-19: What Needs to be Documented? Insights from the Pneumonic Influenza of 1918–1919
Anthea Hyslop

Documenting COVID-19 in Australia: An Interdisciplinary Perspective
Terhi Nurmikko-Fuller

Call for Abstracts: Close Encounters in War Journal

War has been the object of narration and storytelling since ancient times. Epics, myths, and legends transmitted the memory of heroes’ deeds, thus shaping and consolidating the cultural identities of local communities and ethnic enclaves and later nation-states and empires. Mythical storytelling evolved into historical narration as wars began to be recorded and accounted for systematically by early historians like Herodotus, Thucydides, or in Rome’s Annales. The public narration of war was an effective instrument of political and ideological cohesion as it displayed power and fueled patriotic sentiments. However, the narration of war remained confined to the domain of public discourse despite armies consisting of individuals who contributed to the war directly and with personal sacrifice. The first personal account of war in the Western cultural tradition is Odysseus’s tale of the fall of Troy, which he shares with the Phaeaces. Thucydides referred to singular episodes involving specific individuals in his narration of the Peloponnesian Wars, though his discourse excludes any form of direct and personal narration. The first case of an extensive autobiographical war narrative is Julius Caesar’s De bello gallico. Despite being narrated in the third person, this work provides an individual-centred perspective about the military campaigns led by Caesar between 58 and 50 BC, culminating with the conquest of Gallia and Britannia. For the first time, the historian, the storyteller, and the protagonist of the tale coexist in the figure of the anonymous narrator/chronicler who accounts for Caesar’s deeds in the third person.

Personal narratives about war have seldom reached the public before the nineteenth century. This caused scholars to believe that anonymous soldiers, who constituted the core of all armies in any historical period, never wrote about their experiences. Writing, on the other hand, was a skill far from being achieved by everyone in the pre-modern era. Only a few combatants could account for their war experiences in writing, for example, through letters, diaries and memoirs, a small number of which has reached the public as books. Furthermore, while personal accounts of war mostly remained confined to military, political, and intelligence communication – and are therefore stored in archives and mostly accessible as historical sources – the first testimonies of war that became works of public interest did not appear in the form of autobiographies or memoirs. An author like Tobias Smollett transfigured his war experiences as a navy surgeon in his novel The Adventures of Roderick Random (1748). Something similar did Herman Melville in White Jacket (1850), an autobiographical work inspired by the author’s experience as a sailor on the frigate USS United States. In general, it can be stated that the Napoleonic wars (1800-1815) triggered an incredible proliferation of autobiographical personal accounts since the 1820s.[1] This is not surprising, if one thinks that modern autobiography – as a genre and as a philosophical form of reflection on the “self” – begins in the seventeenth century with Rousseau’s Confessions (1782),[2] whose “revolution” transformed the subject into a “unique and unrepeatable psychical interiority, which was accessible only through introspective writing.”[3]

If the nineteenth century was characterised by an increasing interest in war personal narratives, the phenomenon assumed a mass scale with the outbreak of the Great War, mainly for two reasons: the enormous mass of soldiers involved in the conflict on a global scale for over four years; and the diffusion of literacy among the mass of enlisted soldiers. Scholars claim that between 1914 and 1918, over 65 billion letters circulated between the frontlines and Italy, France, Germany, and Great Britain.[4] If personal narratives from the nineteenth-century wars amount to hundreds, above all distributed in Western countries, autobiographical accounts of the Great War amount to many thousands, spread all over the world. New groups of authors appear in this recent tradition, such as prisoners of war (POWs), women, and members of colonial troops. One striking phenomenon that characterised the response of some combatants to the Great War was the blooming of poetry in all countries, with remarkable achievements in the UK with the so-called “war poets” Wilfred Owen, Rupert Brooke, and Siegfried Sassoon, in Austria with Georg Trakl, and in Italy with the Futurists, Gabriele D’annunzio, and Giuseppe Ungaretti, only to mention a few examples. Moreover, the technological nature of the war caused all armies to create specialised corps such as pilots, tankers, submarine crews, drivers, and chemical companies, whose members published several personal narratives that enlightened the aspects of the “new” warfare. During and after the Second World War, further groups of witnesses appeared, such as the victims of political and racial persecution and deportation and the members of armed resistance (partisans) against the Nazi and the Fascist authorities in several European countries.

As wars became more and more global, during the twentieth century, so did the more and more established genre of war narratives, which eventually became a consistent section of contemporary literature (despite the debate that saw literary scholars question the literariness of personal narratives), or at least of the international book market. One can recall several personal narratives that have become classics of twentieth-century literature like Henri Barbusse’s Le feu (1916), Ernst Jünger’s In Stahlgewittern (1920), Thomas Edward Lawrence’s Seven Pillars of Wisdom (1926), Anne Frank’s Diary (1947), Primo Levi’s Se questo è un uomo (1958), Elie Wiesel’s La Nuit (1958), Elechi Amadi’s Sunset in Biafra (1973), Eugene Sledge’s, With the Old Breed (1981), Eric Lomax’ The Railway Man (1995), Isaac Fadoyebo’s A Stroke of Unbelievable Luck (1999), Keiko Tamura’s Michi’s Memoirs (2001), and many more worldwide.

As a genre, personal narratives have evolved over two centuries, passing from being almost exclusively memoirs written by high-ranking officers (mostly noble) to consisting of a much more multifaceted variety of expressive forms including letters, diaries, autobiographical sketches, poems, published or unpublished memoirs, oral histories and autobiographical fiction. After a long-lasting prejudice that banned personal narratives from the history of war and conflict, which was relegated to the disciplinary field of Military History, since the 1960s historians have begun to look at these narrations as valid and valuable sources of historical knowledge, thus giving impulse, after the so-called “cultural” and “narrative” turns after the 1970s, to the birth of sub-disciplines such as Micro-History, History of Mentality, Cultural History, Oral History and more recently the History of the Emotions. Working with personal narratives is a challenging scholarly enterprise due to the flickering and multifaceted nature of this kind of written expression, which is transversal to literary genres while including forms, styles, and registers typical of the spoken language. Personal narratives can hardly provide an overall comprehension and depiction of war, as they can inform about events that occurred on a smaller scale and the perception that human beings have of the war as a direct experience. Therefore, working with personal narratives often requires intellectual flexibility and the ability to blend different disciplinary approaches by borrowing diverse methodological, critical and analytical tools.

Issue n. 7 of the CEIWJ aims to investigate the theme of the close encounters in war in connection with the universe of personal narratives to study how people have accounted for their personal experience of war in ancient, pre-modern, modern and contemporary periods. To do so, we invite the submission of articles focused on the investigation of testimonies from a broad spectrum of theoretical and critical perspectives in the fields of Aesthetics, Anthropology, Classics, Comparative Literature, Cultural History, Ethics, Epistemology, Ethnology, Gender Studies, History of Art, History of Ideas, Linguistics, Memory Studies, Modern Languages, Oral History, Philosophy of Language, Psychology, Religion, Social Sciences, and Trauma Studies.

We invite, per the scientific purpose of the journal, contributions that focus on human dimensions and perspectives on this topic. We, therefore, seek articles that analyse the close encounters in war in diaries, letters, autobiographies, memoirs, autobiographical fiction, oral histories and other egodocuments such as juridical testimonies and memoirs, bulletins and reports (military, medical, technical, and so on), photographic albums, drawings and paintings. The following aspects (among others) may be considered:

  • Representation and perception of the “self” in the context of war;
  • Language, public and private (e.g. the use of dialect or foreign languages; encrypted writing; metaphors, symbols and allegories; alternative forms of communication);
  • Propaganda and ideology (e.g. political perspectives; racism; nationalism; religious fanaticism);
  • Ethical and moral aspects (e.g. personal development; self-understanding; the relation with the others; justification of violence; acceptance of suffering and death);
  • Censorship and self-censorship in personal narratives;
  • Literary aspects of personal narratives (e.g. use of literary models and styles; editorial re-elaboration of personal narratives for publication; the relationship between fiction and autobiographical writing; personal narrative and the literary canon);
  • Personal narratives as historical sources (e.g. methodological and deontological  issues; epistemological value of personal narratives; rhetoric and logic);
  • Anti-war attitudes (e.g. pacifism; criticism of violence; desertion and conscience objection; sabotage);
  • Feelings and emotions in personal narratives;
  • Personal narratives and trauma;
  • Identity and diversity (e.g. gender; ethnicity; cultural heritage);
  • Personal narratives in pop culture (e.g. film; TV; journalism; cultural heritage);
  • Personal narratives and the culture of memory (local and collective) (e.g. archives and repositories; Public History; sites of memory; public use of personal narratives through the Internet);

CEIWJ encourages inter/multidisciplinary approaches and dialogue among different scientific fields to promote discussion and scholarly research. The blending of different approaches will be warmly welcomed. Contributions from established scholars, early-career researchers, doctoral students, witnesses of war (e.g. veterans, journalists, reporters, etc.) and practitioners who have dealt with or used personal narratives in the course of their activities will be considered. Case studies may include different historical periods and geographic areas.

The editors of the Close Encounters in War Journal invite the submission of abstracts of 250 words in English by 31 March 2024 to ceiwj@nutorevelli.org. The authors invited to submit their works will be required to send articles of 8,000-10,000 words (endnotes included, bibliographical references not included in word count), in English by 14 June 2024. All articles will undergo a process of double-blind peer review. We will notify the results of the review in September 2024. Final versions of revised articles will be submitted in November 2024. Please see the submission guidelines at: https://closeencountersinwar.org/instruction-for-authors-submissions/.

[1]     See, for example, http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/browse?type=lcsubc&key=Napoleonic%20Wars%2C%201800%2D1815%20%2D%2D%20Personal%20narratives%2C%20French (Napoleonic wars 1800-1815), http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book//browse?type=lcsubc&key=Crimean%20War%2C%201853%2D1856%20%2D%2D%20Personal%20narratives (Crimean war 1853-1856), and https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/166546.First_hand_accounts_of_the_Napoleonic_Wars. See also the repository of personal narratives from the American Civil War of the University of Maryland at https://lib.guides.umd.edu/c.php?g=326774&p=2197450 (all websites last accessed on 11th January 2024).

[2]     James Goodwin, in “Narcissus and Autobiography”, Genre, 12, 1 (1979): 69-92; Andrea Battistini, Lo specchio di Dedalo. Autobiografia e biografia, Bologna, il Mulino, 103-104.

[3]     Gianluca Cinelli, Ermeneutica e scrittura autobiografica. Primo Levi, Nuto Revelli, Rosetta Loy, Mario Rigoni Stern, Milan, Unicopli, 2008, 12.

[4]     Carlo Stiaccini, War Letters (Italy), in International Encyclopedia of the First World War (8 January 2017): 2. https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/war_letters_italy.

Contact Information

Gianluca Cinelli giancin77@yahoo.it

Patrizia Piredda patrizia.piredda@oxfordalumni.org

Simona Tobia s.tobia@univ-pau.fr

Fabio Caffarena fabio.caffarena@unige.it

Contact Email

ceiwj@nutorevelli.org

URL

https://closeencountersinwar.org/2024/01/17/call-for-articles-for-issue-n-7-202…