@article{D'Aprile2014, author = {D'Aprile, Iwan-Michelangelo}, title = {Mediums of communication and the development of an European constitutional discourse at the dawn of the nineteenth century}, series = {Ayer : revista de historia contempor{\´a}nea}, journal = {Ayer : revista de historia contempor{\´a}nea}, number = {94}, publisher = {Asociaci{\´o}n de Historia Contempor{\´a}nea}, address = {Madrid}, issn = {1134-2277}, pages = {49 -- 69}, year = {2014}, abstract = {In this article, entangled media history is presented as an approach to combine recent methodological developments towards an international turn in intellectual history on the one hand with the social history of ideas on the other. By concentrating on press networks, publishers, and media formats the various processes of constitutionalization and nationalization in the aftermath of the French Revolution and the Napoleonic period can be reconstructed as part of an emerging European public sphere. This is exemplified by the example of the political discourse of that time in Germany. In a first step, the international networks around the two most important German publishers, Johann Friedrich Cotta and Friedrich Arnold Brockhaus, are reconstructed. In the second part, the crucial role of translations and adaptations of political articles in two decisive media formats of the political discourse, the historical-political journals and the "Conversationslexikon" is examined. And finally in a third step, the specific significance of the reception of the Spanish revolution of the "trienio liberal" for the development of a constitutional vocabulary in Germany is sketched.}, language = {es} } @article{Hassler2014, author = {Haßler, Gerda}, title = {Los tiempos verbales y sus denominaciones en las gram{\´a}ticas espa{\~n}olas desde el siglo XVII hasta el siglo XX}, series = {M{\´e}todos y resultados actuales en Historiograf{\´i}a de la Ling{\"u}{\´i}stica}, volume = {1}, journal = {M{\´e}todos y resultados actuales en Historiograf{\´i}a de la Ling{\"u}{\´i}stica}, publisher = {Nodus Publikationen}, address = {M{\"u}nster}, isbn = {978-3-89323-020-4}, pages = {349 -- 360}, year = {2014}, abstract = {In this paper, the names of the Spanish verb forms are examined with emphasis on the forms of the so-called past tense and the relationship of their conceptual potential to the function of these forms. The names of the verb forms in Spanish grammars from the 17th to the 20th century are determined by Latin grammar, but also by theoretical positions of their authors.}, language = {es} } @article{Miller2014, author = {Miller, Nicholas}, title = {Spaces of thought: transnational history, intellectual history and the enlightenment}, series = {Ayer : revista de historia contempor{\´a}nea}, journal = {Ayer : revista de historia contempor{\´a}nea}, number = {94}, publisher = {Asociaci{\´o}n de Historia Contempor{\´a}nea}, address = {Madrid}, issn = {1134-2277}, pages = {97 -- 120}, year = {2014}, abstract = {This article offers a theoretical overview of transnational history in relation to the history of ideas, a field that certain specialists of transnational history have singled out as a promising field of future transnational research. Recent historiographical discussions within Enlightenment studies are offered to throw light about the actual novelty that a transnational perspective would offer for the history of ideas. Rather than being an entirely new outlook, transnational types of analysis can be understood as lying at the heart of classical, universalistic Enlightened scholarship, a perspective that was challenged according to the fundamental problem of context.}, language = {es} } @article{Simal2014, author = {Simal, Juan Luis}, title = {Exile, nation and liberalism (1776-1848): a transnational approach}, series = {Ayer : revista de historia contempor{\´a}nea}, journal = {Ayer : revista de historia contempor{\´a}nea}, number = {94}, publisher = {Asociaci{\´o}n de Historia Contempor{\´a}nea}, address = {Madrid}, issn = {1134-2277}, pages = {23 -- 48}, year = {2014}, abstract = {This article interrogates the application of a transnational perspective to the study of exile in the Age of Revolutions. The purpose is two-fold: 1) to acknowledge the benefits of the transnational approach for studying the phenomenon of exile in Europe and the Americas in this period, especially in order to understand the parallel formation of international liberalism and European counterrevolution; 2) to question some of the limitations of this approach, especially if it means neglecting the national framework in a context of intense nation-building, like the late 18th- and early 19th-centuries. An interpretation that understands exiles merely as transnational agents misses how important for them the nation was, for it shaped both their politics and their identities.}, language = {es} }