Historical painting of aristocacy in the park

Online Enlightenment Club

The Online Enlightenment Club is an interdisciplinary reading group for anyone interested in the ideas, culture, and history of Europe in the long eighteenth century. We discuss cutting-edge work across the field of Enlightenment Studies, broadly construed, including work which engages with the Enlightenment from a more global perspective.

Table of contents

We invite speakers across all career stages – the already famous and the ones on their way. Past speakers have had backgrounds in history, philosophy, economics, political science, art history, and cultural and literary studies. People from all branches of scholarship are encouraged to join. The format: we pre-circulate a text from a guest author, read it in the week before the session, and come together as a group to discuss it with its author. To get a sense of what’s on offer, have a look at our previous programs!

We are proud to be the only international, non-institutional club worldwide that discusses Enlightenment Studies.

We hope to merge quality with interest.

Interested in the Enlightenment? We meet online every second week – see our current program – on Thursdays at 18:00-20:00 CET. You can .

Welcome! 

Image: , via Wikimedia Commons 

Spring/Summer Term 2025

All sessions take place via BigBlueButton from 18:00 to c. 20:00 (CET)
24 April Johannes Ljungberg (Linköping) Sabbath crimes in a city of Enlightenment: Religious and commercial (dis)order in eighteenth-century Altona
8 May Caroline Gleason-Mercier (Turin) Melodies, Maternités, and Milk: Lucile Gretry's Le mariage d'Antonio (1782)
22 May Emily Erikson (Yale) Trade and Nation: How Companies and Politics Reshaped Economic Thought
5 June Angus Harwood Brown (Chicago) On the Hidden Constitution: The Fear of Oligarchy in the French Critique of Checks and Balances
19 June Giovanni Lista (Halle) “Eine Neigung vor die neuere Gelehrsamkeit”: Gottsched translating Fontenelle’s Entretiens(1726-1751)
3 July Jonas Gerlings (Rome) The Abolitionist Moment in German Thought from Kant to Hegel
17 July Cindy Ermus (Nebraska-Lincoln) The Great Plague Scare of 1720: Disaster and Diplomacy in the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic World
31 July Avi Lifschitz (Oxford) Limits of Enlightenment: Frederick II and the philosophes on the Common People
14 August Megan Gallagher (Alabama) Against Liberal Individualism (As a Standard for Consent)

Joining information and papers for discussion will be sent out one week before each session. Please email Morgan Golf-French (zcraf48@ucl.ac.uk) to join the mailing list or with any queries.

Organizers

Enlightenment reading club organisers

the Group

Online Enlightenment Club Group Member Collage

Previous Events

Take a look at the past events of the club.