
| Connecting people, Trade and Orders of Knowledge: Mediality and Intermediality of Early Modern Auction Catalogues |
| The Genealogy of a Collection: Working with Manuscript Library Catalogues |
| Giulia Falato, Alfonso Vagnone’s Tongyou Jiaoyu, Brill 2020: reviewed by Elisa Frei |
| ‘Good Things […] from Bristol and Ireland’: Dietary Ambiguities in the British Caribbean (1790s-1850s) |
| An Interview with Giancarlo Casale |
| Introduction: Approaches to the Paper Revolution: The Registration and Communication of Knowledge, Value and Information |
| Introduction: The Social (Re)production of Diversity |
| Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra, Robert Aleksander Maryks, and Ronnie Po-chia Hsia, eds, Encounters Between Jesuits and Protestants in Asia and the Americas, Brill 2018: reviewed by Elisa Frei |
| Luca Scholz, Borders and Freedom of Movement in the Holy Roman Empire, Oxford University Press 2020: reviewed by Ian F. Hathaway |
| Maia Wellington Gahtan, Eva-Maria Troelenberg, eds, Collecting and Empires, Harvey Miller Publishers 2019: reviewed by Angelo Cattaneo |
| Paolo Sachet, Publishing for the Popes, Brill 2020: reviewed by Geri Della Rocca De Candal |
| Paper, Commerce, and the Circulation of News: A Case-Study from Early Modern Malta |
| Paper in Motion: Communication, Knowledge and Power: Case Studies for an Interdisciplinary Approach |
| Peter C. Mancall, The Trials of Thomas Morton, Yale University Press 2019: reviewed by Silvia Cinnella Della Porta |
| (Re)Searching the Morlachs and the Uskoks: The Challenges of Writing about Marginal People from the Border Region of Dalmatia (Sixteenth Century) |
| Remarks on Foreignness in Eighteenth-Century German Cookbooks |
| Stefan Bauer, The Invention of Papal History, Oxford University Press 2020: reviewed by Stefan Schöch |
| The Strategic Mobilisation of the Border in Gibraltar: The Postcolonial (Re)Production of Privilege and Exclusion |