The Isaiah Berlin Catalogue
Mori, Tatsuya, ‘Isaiah Berlin to seijiteki riarizumu no chōryū’ [‘Isaiah Berlin and the Tide of Political Realism’], Seiji tetsugaku [Political Philosophy] 25 (2019), 1–25
Polanowska-Sygulska, Beata, ‘The Crucifix Dispute and Value Pluralism’, Analyse & Kritik 41 no. 2 (November 2019), 301–20
- See also OA.1238, George Crowder, ‘Value Pluralism: Crucial Complexities’
Polanowska-Sygulska, Beata, ‘Diversity and Decency’, Analyse & Kritik 42 no. 1 (November 2019), 241–54
- reply to George Crowder, ‘Value Pluralism: Crucial Complexities’ (2019) (OA.1238)
Tutor de Ureta, Andrés, ‘Pluralismo sin relativismo: una propuesta alternativa al modelo de Isaiah Berlin’, Revista de Estudios Políticos no. 184 (April–June 2019), 13–40
Crowder, George, The Problem of Value Pluralism: Isaiah Berlin and Beyond (New York, 2019: Routledge)
Müller, Jan-Werner (ed.), Isaiah Berlin’s Cold War Liberalism (London, 2019: Palgrave Pivot)
- essays by the editor, Jan-Werner Müller, Joshua L. Cherniss, and Jonathan Riley
Ma, Hualing, From Freedom to Serfdom: The Debate between Isaiah Berlin and Leo Strauss (Taipei, 2019: Linking Publishing Co.)
- In Chinese
Bi Xiao, ‘The Intellectual History of Pluralism: From the Counter-Enlightenment to the Russian Golden Age’, Ph.D. thesis, Si-Mian Institute for Advanced Studies in Humanities, East China Normal University, 2019
- to be published as ‘The Pluralist Venture: Isaiah Berlin’s Issue of Intellectual History and Beyond’ (East China Normal University Press)
‘The Role of the Intelligentsia’, Listener 79 (1968), 563–5 (etc.)
Thai
Trans. Netiwit Chotiphatphaisal and Chayanggoon Thamma-un, in Intelligentsia no. 2 [‘So What Thailand?’] (2019), 24–35
Discovering Isaiah Berlin (short version of item B.120)
- ‘This interview tells the story of how the writings of one of the most engaging and humane minds of the twentieth century were made available to the public by one most gifted and committed editors of contemporary times. In other words, it’s the tale of how Henry Hardy edited over twenty volumes of Isaiah Berlin’s works, including four volumes of letters’ (Johnny Lyons)
- Premiere: 6.00 p.m. 17/1/2020, Corpus Christi College, Oxford; followed by a Q & A with Johnny Lyons, Henry Hardy, Robert Cottrell (convenor), Richard Lindley
- Duration: 1 hour 5 minutes
- Presenter: Johnny Lyons
- Camera: Paul-Michel Ledoux
- Transcript: see item B.120
- Recording: YouTube
What About Daphne? Correspondence with H. G. Nicholas - An interim working Glossary of Proper Names
Four Lectures on Russian Historicism
A collection of the unpublished transcripts of four versions of a talk, those being:
- Bib.101(b) ‘The Addiction of Russian Intellectuals to Historicism’ (1962)
- B.37(a) 'The Russian Preoccupation with Historicism' (1967)
- B.42(a) 'The Russian Obsession with History and Historicism' (1971)
- B.53 'The Russian Preoccupation with History' (1974)
‘The Israel Letters’ (letters to Bob Silvers, from the New York Review of Books archive), ed. David Herman, Jewish Quarterly, May 2021, 67–87
- The letters span 1967 to 1984
- They can be found in the relevant online supplements to the Letters, i.e.
Discovering Isaiah Berlin (long version of item B.119)
- ‘This film tells the story of Isaiah Berlin’s life, times and legacy through the lens of his editor and friend Dr Henry Hardy’ (Johnny Lyons)
- Duration: 2 hours 6 minutes 53 seconds
- Presenter: Johnny Lyons
- Camera: Paul-Michel Ledoux
- Transcript: on this site
- Recording: YouTube (film title as above; YouTube title ‘Isaiah Berlin’)
Ackroyd, John, ‘The Deepest Strand: Isaiah Berlin and the Intellectual History of Russia’, Central and Eastern European Review 14 (2020), 34 pp.
Abstract:
- 'Isaiah Berlin’s essays on the nineteenth-century Russian intelligentsia throw light not only on their subject – the role of that group in preparing the ideational ground for the coming revolutions – but more broadly on Berlin’s central philosophical preoccupations and historiographical and hermeneutical assumptions and method. I try to show this – the centrality to his overall project of Berlin’s work on the Russians – by contextualising that work within the broader framework of his philosophical and historical thought.'
de Bolla, Peter, and others, ‘The Idea of Liberty, 1600–1800: A Distributional Concept Analysis’, Journal of the History of Ideas 81 no. 3 (July 2020), 381–406
Ferrell, Jason, ‘Isaiah Berlin on Monism’, in G. Callahan and K. B. McIntyre (eds), Critics of Enlightenment Rationalism (London, 2020: Palgrave Macmillan), 237–49
Jeffrey Friedman (ed.), Symposium on Isaiah Berlin, Critical Review 32 (2020) no. 4
- Later published as Friedman, Jeffrey (ed.), Isaiah Berlin (Abingdon and New York, 2022: Routledge) (i.e. OB.74)
Hardy, Henry, ‘Hardy on Polanowska-Sygulska on Hardy on Berlin on Pluralism and Religion’
- A reply to a review of Hardy’s In Search of Isaiah Berlin
- both the review and the reply are in Archiwum Filozofii Prawa i Filozofii Spolecznej 2019 no. 2, 89–99 (in English), and a further exchange appears in ibid. 2020 no. 3, 127–32
- the review and reply, and the further exchanges, in Archiwum Filozofiiare can be read here in PDF ('View Document' below)
Hart, David Bentley, ‘Isaiah Berlin’ (letters), The Times Literary Supplement, 26 June 2020, 6; 17 July 2020, 6