Workplace Hours: T.B.D.
Emma Rothschild is Jeremy and Jane Knowles Professor of Historical past at Harvard College. She is Director of the Joint Heart for Historical past and Economics, a fellow of Magdalene Faculty, Cambridge, and professeur invitée on the Centre d’Histoire de Sciences Po, Paris. She is concerned in collaborative analysis initiatives, on the College of Cambridge and at Harvard, on Exchanges of Financial, Authorized and Political Concepts and on Visualizing Historic Networks. She can be an Affiliated School member at Harvard Regulation College. Publications embody “Financial Historical past and Nationalism” (Capitalism, Winter 2021), “A (New) Financial Historical past of the American Revolution?” (New England Quarterly, March 2018), “Isolation and Financial Life in Eighteenth-Century France” (American Historic Assessment, October 2014), Economic Sentiments: Adam Smith, Condorcet and the Enlightenment (Harvard College Press, 2001), The Inner Life of Empires: An Eighteenth-Century History (Princeton College Press, 2011), and An Infinite History: The Story of a Family in France Over Three Centuries (Princeton College Press, 2021).
https://www.infinitehistory.org
Chosen Publications
- An Infinite Historical past: The Story of a Household in France Over Three Centuries (Princeton College Press, 2021).
- The Internal Lifetime of Empires: An Eighteenth-Century Historical past (Princeton College Press, 2011)
- “Isolation and Financial Life in Eighteenth-Century France,” American Historic Assessment, vol. 119, no. 4 (October, 2014), pp. 1055-1082.
- “The Archives of Common Historical past” in Journal of World Historical past, Vol. 19, No. 3 (September 2008), pp. 375-401
- “A Horrible Tragedy within the French Atlantic” in Previous and Current, No. 192 pp. 67-108 (August 2006)
- “Adam Smith” in The Cambridge Companion to Adam Smith with Amartya Sen (2005)
- “World Commerce and the Query of Sovereignty within the 18th Century Provinces” in Fashionable Mental Historical past, Vol 1, No. 1 pp 3-25 (April 2004)
- Financial Sentiments: Adam Smith, Condorcet and the Enlightenment (Harvard College Press, 2001)