Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
June 2020
June 01 2020
“A City-State on a Hill: A Roundtable on Mark Peterson's The City-State of Boston”
Jared Ross Hardesty
Jared Ross Hardesty
Jared Ross Hardesty is associate professor of history at Western Washington University and is the author of Unfreedom: Slavery and Dependence in Eighteenth-Century Boston and Black Lives, Native Lands, White Worlds, A History of Slavery in New England.
Search for other works by this author on:
Jared Ross Hardesty
Jared Ross Hardesty is associate professor of history at Western Washington University and is the author of Unfreedom: Slavery and Dependence in Eighteenth-Century Boston and Black Lives, Native Lands, White Worlds, A History of Slavery in New England.
Online Issn: 1937-2213
Print Issn: 0028-4866
© 2020 by The New England Quarterly
2020
The New England Quarterly
The New England Quarterly (2020) 93 (2): 213–216.
Citation
Jared Ross Hardesty; “A City-State on a Hill: A Roundtable on Mark Peterson's The City-State of Boston”. The New England Quarterly 2020; 93 (2): 213–216. doi: https://doi.org/10.1162/tneq_a_00812
Download citation file:
Sign in
Don't already have an account? Register
Client Account
You could not be signed in. Please check your email address / username and password and try again.
Sign in via your Institution
Sign in via your InstitutionEmail alerts
71
Views
0
Citations
Advertisement
Cited By
Related Articles
Judging Boston
The New England Quarterly (June,2020)
Making Boston Strange
The New England Quarterly (June,2020)
Roundtable on the Critical Archive
ARTMargins (October,2014)
A Dynamic Neural Network Architecture by Sequential Partitioning of the Input Space
Neural Comput (November,1994)
Related Book Chapters
The Names "ASCC" and "Mark I"
Howard Aiken: Portrait of a Computer Pioneer
Marking the Mental: Where Brain, Body, and Culture Conflate
How Things Shape the Mind: A Theory of Material Engagement
Marking Time
Lessons from the Lobster: Eve Marder's Work in Neuroscience
The Mark of the Cognitive
The New Science of the Mind: From Extended Mind to Embodied Phenomenology