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Bibliographical History and Indices of the Comparative Civilizations Review, 1-50 Comparative Civilizations Review Volume 54 Number 54 Spring 2006 Article 10 4-1-2006 Bibliographical History and Indices of the Comparative Civilizations Review, 1-50 Michael Palencia-Roth University of Illinois Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/ccr Recommended Citation Palencia-Roth, Michael (2006) "Bibliographical History and Indices of the Comparative Civilizations Review, 1-50," Comparative Civilizations Review: Vol. 54 : No. 54 , Article 10. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/ccr/vol54/iss54/10 This End Matter is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Comparative Civilizations Review by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Palencia-Roth: Bibliographical History and Indices of the <em>Comparative Civili Indices 79 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY AND INDICES OF THE COMPARATIVE CIVILIZATIONS REVIEW, 1-50 MICHAEL PALENCIA-ROTH UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS The Comparative Civilizations Review (CCR) was launched in Winter 1979 as volume 7, no. 3 of the Comparative Civilizations Bulletin (CCB). Up to that time the CCB had been the main organ of publication and communication for the International Society for the Comparative Study of Civilizations (ISCSC). The decision to begin publishing the journal, and to link it bibliographically to the Bulletin ini- tially, was made at the 7,h annual meeting of the Society, at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, in 1978.' The Society's first American president, Benjamin Nelson, had recently died, and a schol- arly journal dedicated entirely to the comparative study of civilizations had been one of his fondest wishes. To date (August 2005), the Society has published 52 issues of the Review. The following three indices - articles indexed by their authors, book reviews indexed by the book's authors or editors, book reviews indexed by the book's title - cover issues 1 through 50. The editors of the CCR, from its inception to the present, are as fol- lows. Vytautas Kavolis and Edmund Leites were its two founding co- editors, and they continued to share that responsibility through issue 22 (Spring 1990). Upon the departure of Edmund Leites, the position of the other co-editor of the journal was assumed by Wayne Bledsoe. He and Kavolis co-edited the journal from issue 23 (Fall 1990) through issue 34 (Spring 1996). Then Joseph Drew began his tenure as editor of the CCR. He edited issue 35 (Winter 1997) alone. For issues 36 (Spring 1997) and 37 (Fall 1997), he was assisted by Loyd Swenson as co-editor. Then Joseph Drew again assumed sole editorial responsibil- ity with issue 38 (Spring 1998) though 40 (Spring 1999). With issue 41 (Fall 1999), and continuing through issue 44 (Spring 2001), he was 'The bibliographical equivalents between the Review and the Bulletin are as follows: CCR 1 (Winter 1979) is also CCB, vol. 7, no. 3. CCR 2 (Spring 1979) is also CCB, vol. 8, no. 1. CCR 3 (Fall 1979) is also CCB, vol. 8, no. 3. CCR 4 (Spring 1980) is also CCB, vol. 9, no. 1. CCR 5 (Fall 1980) is also CCB, vol. 9, no. 3. CCR 6 (Spring 1981) is also CCB, vol. 10, no. 1. CCR 1 (Fall 1981) is also CCB, vol. 10, no. 3. CCR 8 (Spring 1982) is also CCB. vol. ll.no. 1. CCR 9 (Fall 1982) is also CCB. vol.11, no.2. CCR 10/11 (1983-1984) has no CCB equivalents. CCR 12 (Spring 1985) is also CCB. vol. 13. no. 1. CCR 13/14 (1985-1986) has no CCB equivalents. CCR 15 (Fall 1986) is also CCB. 14, no. 2. CCR 16 (Spring 1987) is also CCB, vol. 15. no. 1. CCR 17 (Fall 1987) is also CCB. vol. 15. no. 2. CCR 18 (Spring 1988) is also CCB, vol. 16. no. 1. From CCR 19 (Fall 1988) to the present, there are no CCB equivalents as the two publications have become completely independent of one another. Published by BYU ScholarsArchive, 2006 1 Comparative Civilizations Review, Vol. 54 [2006], No. 54, Art. 10 80 Comparative Civilizations Review assisted by Elpidio Laguna-Dfaz as co-editor. From issue 46 (Spring 2002) through the last issue indexed here, no. 50 (Spring 2004), the CCR has been the principal responsibility of both Joseph Drew and Laina Farhat-Holzman. A number of special issues of the CCR have been organized and edited by guest editors. Vytautas Kavolis, Edmund Leites, Marie Coleman Nelson and E.V. Walter guest-edited CCR 8 (Spring 1982), a memorial issue in honor of Benjamin Nelson entitled Sociology and Psychoanalysis in Comparative Civilizational Perspective: A Memorial for Benjamin Nelson. Nelson was again memorialized in CCR 10/11 (1983-1984) with a double issue that was also co-published as a sepa- rate book (Humanities Press, 1985) entitled Civilizations East and West: A Memorial Volume for Benjamin Nelson. This item was edited by E.V. Walter (as the principal editor), along with Vytautas Kavolis, Edmund Leites, and Marie Coleman Nelson. CCR 12 (Spring 1985), a special Latin American issue, was guest-edited by Michael Palencia-Roth. CCR 13/14 (1985-1986) appeared both as a double issue and as a book (with the ISCSC as publisher, 1985); it was entitled As Others See Us: Mutual Perceptions East and West. Its editors were Bernard Lewis, Edmund Leites and Margaret Case. The next special issue was no. 30 (Spring 1994), on the subject of "Civilizations and World Systems," guest-edited by Stephen K. Sanderson. The only other special issue of the first 50 was no. 45 (Fall 2001), guest-edited by Michael Palencia- Roth and entitled The Janus Perspective in Comparative Civilizations. Up through issue 18 (Spring 1988), book reviews appeared in the CCR only occasionally, and editing them was the responsibility of the principal editors. Beginning with issue 19 and continuing to the pres- ent, David Wilkinson has been responsible for the book review section, and these reviews have been a regular feature of the Review since Fall 1988. Anomalies: There are two different issues dated Fall 1987. One is issue 16 and the other is issue 17. With no. 18 (Spring 1988), the sea- sonal notation is again correct, and the CCR has continued to be pub- lished on a Fall-Spring timetable. There have been only two exceptions to the Fall-Spring timetable. One is the very first issue (dated Winter 1979). The other is issue 35, published in Winter 1997. The time from issue 34 to 35 was one of transition for the Review, for no. 34 was the last one to be co-edited by Vytautas Kavolis and Wayne Bledsoe, and no. 35 was the first one to be edited by Joseph Drew. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/ccr/vol54/iss54/10 2 Palencia-Roth: Bibliographical History and Indices of the <em>Comparative Civili Indices 81 Articles, Indexed by Authors, CCR, 1 -50 Alatas, Syed Farid. "Reflections on the Idea of Islamic Social Science." 17 (Fall 1987): 60-86. Alatas, Syed Farid. "A Khaldunian Perspective on the Dynamics of Asiatic Societies." 29 (Fall 1993): 29-51. Antoine, Jean-Philippe. "The Art of Memory and its Relation to the Unconscious." 18 (Spring 1988): 1-21. Appert, Lucile G. "The Great Mother and the Great Race: The Importance of Troy in Roman Imperialism." 39 (Fall 1998): 28-43. Arkoun, Mohammad. "Discours Islamiques, discours Orientalistes et pensee scientifique." 13-14 (Fall-Spring 1985-86): 90-110. Bahm, Archie J. "Three Zeros: A Comparative Philosophy of Voids." 26 (Spring 1992): 150-151. Ballhatchet, Kenneth. "Indian Perceptions of the West." 13-14 (Fall- Spring 1985-86): 158-179. Barton, Gregory A. "The Enlightenment Foundations of World Environmentalism." 40 (Spring 1999): 7-30. Beckingham, C.F. "Islam and the West: Some Examples of Myopia." 13-14 (Fall-Spring 1985-86): 56-61. Benesch, Walter. "Comparative Logics and the Comparative Study of Civilizations." 27 (Fall 1992): 88-105. Benesch, Walter and Eduardo Wilner. "Traditions and Civilizations: Another Approach to Understanding Human History." 47 (Fall 2002): 5-24. Ben-Yehuda, Hemda. "The 'Clash of Civilizations' Thesis: Findings from International Crises, 1918-1994." 49 (Fall 2003): 28-42. Bergesen, Albert. "Pre vs. Post 1500ers." 30 (Spring 1994): 81-89. Blaha, Stephen. "Reconstructing Sub-Saharan, Mayan, and Other Prehistoric Civilizations in a Mathematical Macro-Theory of Civilizations." 50 (Spring 2004): 23-46. Bledsoe, Wayne M. "Foreword." 26 (Spring 1992): 1-3. Bledsoe, Wayne M. "Foreword." 28 (Spring 1993): i-iv. Bledsoe, Wayne M. "Vytautas Kavolis: Personal Friend and Mentor." 36 (Spring 1997): 101-103. Published by BYU ScholarsArchive, 2006 3 Comparative Civilizations Review, Vol. 54 [2006], No. 54, Art. 10 82 Comparative Civilizations Review Bledsoe, Wayne M. "Globalization and Comparative Civilizations: Looking Backward to see the Future." 45 (Fall 2001): 13-31. Bosworth, Andrew. "The Genetics of Civilization: An Empirical Classification of Civilizations Based on Writing Systems." 49 (Fall 2003): 9-27. Brauer, Ralph W. "Geography in the Medieval Muslim World: Seeking a Basis for Comparison of the Development of the Natural Sciences in Different Cultures." 26 (Spring 1992): 73-110. Brauer, Ralph W. "The Camel and its Role in Shaping Mideastern Nomad Societies." 28 (Spring 1993): 106-151. Brown, L. Carl. "Movies and the Middle East." 13-14 (Fall-Spring 1985-86): 17-35. Buell, Frederick. "World Studies at Queens College." 26 (Spring 1992): 136-149. Buell, Frederick. "Conceptualizations of Contemporary Global Culture." 27 (Fall 1992): 127-142. Bullough, Vern L. "Sex and Mythology: Some Implications." 6 (Spring 1981): 41-61. Butovskaya, Marina; Ivan Diakonov, Marina Vancatova, and Jaroslava Pavelkova. "Alms-Giving in Modern Urban Societies as a Biosocial Phenomenon: A Cross-Cultural Comparison." 50 (Spring 2004): 5-22.
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