Radical History Review
{{Infobox journal
| title = Radical History Review
| cover = Radical History Review 2020 cover.png
|caption = Cover of January 2020 issue
| editor =
| discipline = History
| peer-reviewed =
| language = English
| former_names =
| abbreviation = Radic. Hist. Rev.
| publisher = Duke University Press
| country = United States
| frequency = Triannual
| history = 1974-present
| openaccess =
| license =
| impact =
| impact-year =
| website = http://www.radicalhistoryreview.org/
| link1 = http://rhr.dukejournals.org/content/current
| link1-name = Online access
| link2 = http://rhr.dukejournals.org/content/by/year
| link2-name = Online archive
| link3 = https://muse.jhu.edu/journal/173
| link3-name = Project MUSE (2001-2004)
| OCLC = 985576992
| LCCN =
| CODEN =
| ISSN = 0163-6545
| eISSN = 1534-1453
| boxwidth =
}}
Radical History Review is a scholarly journal published by Duke University Press.[http://chnm.gmu.edu/rhr/rhr.htm Radical History Review]
The journal describes its position as "at the point where rigorous historical scholarship and active political engagement converge"."[http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/rhr/ Radical History Review]". Project MUSE. muse.jhu.org. Retrieved 2018-02-21. In 1979, the journal advertised that it "publishes the best marxist and non-marxist radical scholarship in jargon-free English".{{cite journal
|title = Marcuse and Feminism
|last = Cerullo
|first = Margaret
|journal = New German Critique
|publisher = Duke University Press
|issn = 1558-1462
|volume = 18
|year = 1979
|issue = 18
|pages = 21–3
|doi = 10.2307/487846
|jstor = 487846
|s2cid = 147495131
}}
Articles in the journal cover the relationships that "issues of gender, race, sexuality, imperialism, and class" have with histories. In 1999, the editors described "the journal's recent move toward a more overtly political discussion of historical topics".Radical History Review: Liberalism and the Left, by RHR Collective
Reception
The New Criterion describes RHR as "a publication that plainly states it 'rejects conventional notions of scholarly neutrality and 'objectivity,' and approaches history from an engaged, critical, political stance.'"[http://www.newcriterion.com/articles.cfm/radicalhistory-klehrhaynes-1940 "Radical History" by Harvey Klehr & John Earl Haynes]
Jon Wiener in the 1991 book Professors, Politics, and Pop wrote, "The journal has recently distinguished itself by publishing a series of interviews with (several historians) exploring the relationship in their work between historical scholarship and political commitment."Professors, Politics, and Pop, by Jon Wiener, 1991, p. 207"