Journal18: a journal of eighteenth-century art and culture
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    • #1 Multilayered (Spring 2016)
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#20 Clean

#20 Clean

Economies of Waste: Revolutionary Administration and the Afterlives of the Notre-Dame Kings

Assistant
25th November 2025
Economies of Waste: Revolutionary Administration and the Afterlives of the Notre-Dame Kings

Demetra Vogiatzaki In October 2024, the Musée Carnavalet in Paris opened Paris 1793–1794: Une année révolutionnaire, an exhibition tracing how the city was transformed during Year II of the French Republic.[1] Among the objects on display was a limestone head, severed at the neck, that once formed part of a…

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#20 Clean

“Beneath the Waters of a Universal Ocean”: Containing, Contaminating, and Cleaning the Ganges River in Varanasi

Assistant
25th November 2025
“Beneath the Waters of a Universal Ocean”: Containing, Contaminating, and Cleaning the Ganges River in Varanasi

Ushma Thakrar Shortly after being elected to office in a landslide victory in 2014, Narendra Modi, India’s then and current prime minister, appeared on Dashashwamedh Ghat on the banks of the Ganges River in Varanasi, from where he took part in a prayer for the Hindu river deity, Ganga. In…

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#20 Clean

Piss, Poison, and other Paths between Scotland and England in Caricature since 1745

Assistant
25th November 2025
Piss, Poison, and other Paths between Scotland and England in Caricature since 1745

Laura Golobish Urine spills onto the floor. A grimacing man stares out at you while seated with legs inserted into the vent holes of a public latrine (Fig. 1). Charles Mosley etched and published the visceral Sawney in the Bog-house on June 17, 1745, in a London workshop amid news of…

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#20 Clean

The Grammar of Cleaning – A Conversation

Assistant
25th November 2025
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The Grammar of Cleaning – A Conversation

This conversation took place between the editors of this special issue of Journal18: Maarten Delbeke, Noémie Étienne, and Nikos Magouliotis. Nikos Magouliotis (NM): How did “cleaning” become a topic or angle for your research? Noémie Étienne (NE): While writing my first book on the history of conservation in France more…

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