2021 History catalogue

Page 1

2021

HISTORY www.cambridge.org/academic


HISTORY

CATALOGUE 2021

Contents American History

1

British and Irish History

6

European History

16

History - Cross Discipline

32

History - Other Areas

50

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American History

American History 20C American History Injury Impoverished Workplace Accidents, Capitalism, and Law in the Progressive Era Nate Holdren | Drake University, Iowa

Combining archival research, critical theory, and gender- and disability-analysis, Nate Holdren argues that Progressive Era reform to employee injury law created new employment discrimination against disabled people and a new injury culture that treated employees and their injuries instrumentally. • Approaches Gilded Age compensation laws from a critical perspective • Shows how gender, disability, and class intersect in the issue of workplace injury • Offers tools and concepts to analyze the complexity of justice and injustice Cambridge Historical Studies in American Law and Society 300pp 2 tables April 2020 9781108488709 Hardback GBP 47.99 / USD 59.99 eISBN 9781108657730

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LBJ’s 1968 Power, Politics, and the Presidency in America’s Year of Upheaval Kyle Longley | Arizona State University

Drawing on an extensive trove of written and oral sources, Longley explores how President Lyndon Baines Johnson perceived the most significant events of 1968 and how he responded. He highlights many of the challenges faced by the president during this year, which LBJ characterized as a ‘year of a continuous nightmare’. • Analyzes the crisis management style of a President • Features modern continuities in policymaking and political discourse, providing readers with a better understanding of the ongoing debates in today’s political sphere • Highlights the challenges facing a president after five years of almost non-stop change and a rising conservative backlash 374pp 12 b/w illus. January 2020 9781316643471 Paperback GBP 18.99 / USD 15.95 April 2018 9781107193031 Hardback GBP 23.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781108140379

Nature at War American Environments and World War II Thomas Robertson

This anthology is the first sustained examination of American involvement in World War II through an environmental lens, focusing on how the War remade American landscapes, institutions, and environmental thinking, and how wartime developments shaped the contours of postwar American environments and environmental thinking. • Offers an in-depth examination of the twelve dimensions of the wartime environmental experience in the United States • Reveals how transportation networks, mines, farms, factories, and training camps transformed the US into an ‘Arsenal of Democracy’ • Contributes to the understanding of the military-industrial complex and the roots of the Great Acceleration and the Cold War 387pp 24 b/w illus. 6 maps 10 tables April 2020 9781108419765 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 April 2020 9781108412070 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 eISBN 9781108304146

African American History Advocates of Freedom African American Transatlantic Abolitionism in the British Isles Hannah-Rose Murray | University of Edinburgh

Focusing on unexplored testimony, this book highlights numerous ways in which African Americans challenged slavery on British soil. Written with a wide audience in mind, it appeals to those who have an interest in American slavery and abolition, black activism, and the transatlantic journeys of African Americans to Britain. • Creates a framework for analysing activist resistance to slavery in the British Isles • Highlights anti-slavery activism in Britain after the American Civil War, an area vastly neglected by scholars • Updates and radically alters the scholarly field on transatlantic abolitionism after 1865 Slaveries since Emancipation 378pp September 2020 9781108487511 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108767057

American Slavery, American Imperialism US Perceptions of Global Servitude, 1870–1914 Catherine Armstrong | Loughborough University

Armstrong charts the legacy of slavery in the United States by tracing the representations of global slavery’s victims and perpetrators in popular culture after the Civil War. In doing so, she reveals the rhetorical manoeuvres that were used to justify exploitation and forced labour both in the US and globally. • Considers the global implications of U.S. slavery and demonstrates its relevance to the contemporary world • Draws on newspapers, cartoons, and popular media to understand the legacy of slavery • Explains how global trends were key to the economic and cultural aftermath of slavery Slaveries since Emancipation 412pp 87 b/w illus. 26 tables 300pp 9 b/w illus. July 2020 9781108477093 Hardback GBP 47.99 / USD 59.99 eISBN 9781108663908

As If She Were Free A Collective Biography of Women and Emancipation in the Americas Erica L. Ball | Occidental College, Los Angeles

Based on original archival sources, this sweeping and groundbreaking work brings together the biographies of twenty-four women of African descent to reveal how enslaved and recently freed women sought, imagined, and found freedom in the Americas from the sixteenth through the nineteenth centuries. • Offers a new history of freedom by showing how women acted as agents of emancipation • Takes a comparative and comprehensive approach to the history of slavery and emancipation, rather than focusing on one nation or region • All chapters are original work and written by senior and rising women historians 320pp October 2020 9781108493406 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 October 2020 9781108737036 Paperback GBP 26.99 / USD 34.99 eISBN 9781108623957

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American History

NEW IN PAPERBACK

The Anticolonial Front The African American Freedom Struggle and Global Decolonisation, 1945–1960 John Munro | Saint Mary’s University, Nova Scotia

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A transnational history of the activist and intellectual network that connected the Black freedom struggle in the United States to liberation movements across the globe in the aftermath of World War II. This book recasts the postwar history of the United States in the light of global decolonisation and racial capitalism. • Engages in scholarly literature of diplomatic history and American studies • Proposes a new interpretation of the interaction between the post-war African American freedom struggle and decolonisation • This book makes arguments, but pays attention to narrative

Critical Perspectives on Empire 345pp 18 b/w illus. March 2020 9781316638415 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 29.99 September 2017 9781107188051 Hardback GBP 30.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781316946350

American History-1861-1900 Black Resettlement and the American Civil War Sebastian N. Page | University of Oxford

Black Resettlement and the American Civil War is the first comprehensive, comparative account of nineteenth-century America’s efforts to resettle African Americans outside the United States. It synthesizes a wealth of individual, state-level, and national considerations to reorient the field and set a new standard for Atlantic history. • Examines the scale and complexity of black resettlement projects and proposals between the adoption of the U.S. Constitution in 1787 and the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868 • Re-narrates colonization into the center of American political and social life • Challenges the dominant historical narrative of America’s racial progress and of the American Civil War as a forerunner of the modern civil rights era Cambridge Studies on the American South 312pp February 2021 9781107141773 Hardback GBP 47.99 / USD 59.99 eISBN 9781316493915

The Destruction of the Bison An Environmental History, 1750–1920 Andrew C. Isenberg | University of Kansas

The Destruction of the Bison offers a concise environmental history of the near-extinction of the bison. This twentieth-anniversary edition includes a foreword that connects the book to developments in the field over the last two decades and an afterword that brings the story of the bison up to the present. • The first and only book-length environmental history of the bison • Interdisciplinary analysis synthesizes ecology, anthropology, and history • Connects developments in environmental, western, gender, transnational and Native American history over the last two decades Studies in Environment and History 232pp March 2020 9781108816724 Paperback GBP 18.99 / USD 24.99 eISBN 9781108848879

American History after 1945 Pulp Vietnam War and Gender in Cold War M!en’s Adventure Magazines Gregory A. Daddis | San Diego State University

Pulp Vietnam argues that Cold War-era men’s adventure magazines crafted a particular version of martial masculinity that shaped GIs’ expectations and perceptions of war in Vietnam by idealizing wartime heroism and the sexual conquest of women. • Explores the possible connection between representations of masculinity in men’s adventure magazines in the 1950s and 1960s and sexual violence committed by US soldiers in Vietnam • Relevant to current discussions of sexual harassment and assault in today’s military and to toxic masculinity in society at large • Daddis is both a historian and a retired US Army colonel, having served in both Operations Desert Storm and Iraqi Freedom • Features nearly sixty images from the pulps to illustrate how the ideal man was depicted as both heroic warrior and sexual conqueror Military, War, and Society in Modern American History 358pp October 2020 9781108493505 Hardback GBP 24.00 / USD 29.95 eISBN 9781108655774

Razing Kids Youth, Environment, and the Postwar American West Jeffrey C. Sanders | Washington State University

Analyzing the linked histories of childhood, the West, and the environment after World War II, Razing Kids argues that in wartime mobilization, post-war defense, public health, anti-poverty programs, and environmental activism, adults consistently paired youth and environment with their visions of the social and environmental good. • Fills an important gap in environmental history by examining youth and environment in the second half of the twentieth century • Draws on five case studies that explore US history at the intersection of youth and the environment from 1943 to 1990 • Uncovers the roots of youth environmental movements in post-war America, with parallels to today’s school strikes and climate activism 256pp December 2020 9781107110588 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 December 2020 9781107527546 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781316275412


American History

Reagan, Congress, and Human Rights Contesting Morality in US Foreign Policy Rasmus Sinding Søndergaard | Lunds Universitet, Sweden

This book traces the role of human rights concerns in US foreign policy during the 1980s, focusing on the struggle among the Reagan administration and members of Congress. It explores how executivelegislative relations shaped attention to human rights in US foreign policy and how the issue of human rights, in turn, impacted governmental relations. • Provides the first comprehensive history of human rights in American foreign relations in the 1980s centered on the relationship between the Reagan administration and members of Congress • Introduces influential but often-overlooked members of Congress to the history of human rights to offer an examination of how individual members of Congress shaped US human rights policy • Combines a broad assessment of human rights in American foreign relations with in-depth case studies of how human rights shaped US foreign policy toward Soviet Jewry, South African apartheid, and Nicaragua Human Rights in History 324pp 7 b/w illus. April 2020 9781108495639 Hardback GBP 47.99 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108862455

Atlantic History Becoming Free, Becoming Black Race, Freedom, and Law in Cuba, Virginia, and Louisiana Alejandro de la Fuente | Harvard University, Massachusetts

Becoming Free, Becoming Black offers the first comparative study of law, race, and freedom in the Americas from the sixteenth to mid-nineteenth centuries. Slaveholders linked blackness and slavery in the law, but by the mid-nineteenth century the social meaning of blackness varied over time and under different legal regimes. • Examines the development of the legal regimes of slavery and race in Cuba, Virginia, and Louisiana from the sixteenth century to the dawn of the Civil War • Demonstrates that the law of freedom, not slavery, determined the way race developed over time • Draws on a variety of primary sources, including local court records, original trial records of freedom suits, legislative cases, and petitions Studies in Legal History 294pp 17 b/w illus. 6 maps 2 tables January 2020 9781108480642 Hardback GBP 19.99 / USD 24.95 eISBN 9781108612951

In a Sea of Empires NEW IN PAPERBACK

Science and American Foreign Relations since World War II Greg Whitesides | University of Colorado, Denver

This book explores the history of science in American foreign relations since World War II. From atomic energy and space sciences to genetic engineering and global warming, Greg Whitesides demonstrates that the sciences were central to American diplomacy during and after the Cold War. • Provides an extensive treatment of science in American foreign relations from World War II to the present day • Addresses topics of popular interest, including the atomic bomb, Sputnik, healthcare, global warming, and intellectual property rights • Uses topical headlines so readers can easily access specific sections for reference Cambridge Studies in US Foreign Relations 352pp 3 b/w illus. May 2020 9781108409919 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 January 2019 9781108420440 Hardback GBP 39.99 / USD 49.99 eISBN 9781108303965

Networks and Crossings in the Revolutionary Caribbean Jeppe Mulich | London School of Economics and Political Science

By exploring transnational networks involved in smuggling, privateering, slave trade, marronage, and corruption, Jeppe Mulich illuminates the entangled nature of imperial politics and colonial law in the maritime borderlands of the Caribbean during the age of revolutions. • An innovative approach to global and imperial history emphasizing cross-border networks and integration across empires • Builds on multi-sited research in archives across Europe and the Americas, using sources in Danish, English, French, and Swedish • Draws on historical sociology, international relations, and global history to provide a reinterpretation of imperial integration and early nineteenth-century globalization Cambridge Oceanic Histories 300pp July 2020 9781108489720 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108779289

The Smell of Slavery Olfactory Racism and the Atlantic World Andrew Kettler | University of California, Los Angeles

In the Atlantic World, different groups were aromatically classified in opposition to other ethnic, gendered, and class assemblies due to an economic necessity that needed certain bodies to be defined as excremental. African subjects were defined as scented objects, appropriated as filthy to create ownership through forceful sensory discourse. • Uses smell as a frame of analysis for constructions and perceptions of race and environment in the age of Atlantic slavery • Demonstrates that the roots of racism transgressed intellectual and political arenas and included the realm of senses • Offers a transnational framework for understanding the connections between olfactory discourse and blackness before the nineteenth century 254pp May 2020 9781108490733 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108854740

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American History

Urban Slavery in the Age of Abolition

Early Republic and Antebellum History

Volume 28 Part 1 Karwan Fatah-Black | Universiteit Leiden

Bawdy City

When the full abolition of slavery appeared on the political agenda in the Atlantic world, the institutional arrangements that underpinned it changed dramatically. This volume explores how cities were part and parcel of slave societies, and how methods of control as well as routes to emancipation changed in the century before emancipation. • Contributions to this volume re-examine slavery in an urban context, exploring the relationship between cities and slave societies • Contributions look in depth at cities in the British and French Caribbean, West-Central Africa, Brazil, the United States, and South Africa • A range of topics are covered, including marronage, freedom of movement, and the legacy of slavery

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International Review of Social History Supplements 248pp July 2020 9781108825757 Paperback GBP 19.99 / USD 34.99 eISBN 9781108919128

Colonial American History Female Husbands A Trans History Jen Manion | Amherst College, Massachusetts

The first book-length history of female husbands: people assigned female at birth who transed gender to live fully as men in the United States and United Kingdom. Jen Manion draws on a wealth of sources to offer a dynamic, varied, and complex history of the LGBTQ past. • Charts the rise and fall of female husbands from the 1740s to the 1910s in a clear and accessible way • Reveals key turning points in the history of gender and sexuality in the United States and the United Kingdom • Draws on a diverse source base that includes all references to female husbands in US and British print culture

350pp 26 b/w illus. March 2020 9781108483803 Hardback GBP 17.99 / USD 24.95 eISBN 9781108652834

Puritans Behaving Badly Gender, Punishment, and Religion in Early America Monica D. Fitzgerald

Explores how church disciplinary practices gendered Puritanism and challenged ideas of ministers. Laymen punished men for public behavior that threatened the peace, and women for private sins that allegedly revealed their spiritual corruption. These practices transformed ‘the errand into the wilderness’ as the normative Puritan became female. • Examines largely unexplored church disciplinary records, which reveal the lives of ordinary people through vignettes of confessions • Makes the history of early American religion and gender accessible to a wider readership through narrative style and storytelling • Contributes to the recent inquiries into gender and lived religion, religious declension, public speech and masculinity studies 186pp May 2020 9781108478786 Hardback GBP 39.99 / USD 49.99 eISBN 9781108778817

Commercial Sex and Regulation in Baltimore, 1790–1915 Katie M. Hemphill | University of Arizona

This vivid social history of Baltimore’s prostitution trade centers women in a story of how sexual commerce and debates over its regulation shaped an American city. A critical addition to the current literature addressing women’s history, the history of gender and sexuality, and labor history in nineteenth-century America. • Presents a history of capitalism that focuses on women’s labor and its relationship to the broader urban economy • Provides an overview of the sex trade’s development • Fills a significant gap in the historiography, allowing readers to broaden their ideas about who counted as an agent in economic development Cambridge World Archaeology 352pp 1 b/w illus. 3 maps January 2020 9781108489010 Hardback GBP 46.99 / USD 59.99 eISBN 9781108773669

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Moral Contagion Black Atlantic Sailors, Citizenship, and Diplomacy in Antebellum America Michael A. Schoeppner | University of Maine, Farmington

During the Antebellum era, thousands of free black sailors were arrested for violating the Negro Seamen Acts. In retelling the harrowing experiences of free black sailors, Moral Contagion highlights the central roles that race and international diplomacy played in the development of American citizenship. • Analyzes the history of African American citizenship beginning in the antebellum era • Provides the first comprehensive treatment of the Negro Seamen Acts • Draws heavily on primary sources, including state laws, legal cases, newspapers, and family papers Studies in Legal History 266pp July 2020 9781108455121 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 9781108469999 Hardback GBP 42.99 / USD 59.99 eISBN 9781108695404

January 2019

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Murder in the Shenandoah Making Law Sovereign in Revolutionary Virginia Jessica K. Lowe | University of Virginia

Jessica K. Lowe tells the story of Commonwealth v. Crane, exposing deep rifts in post-Revolutionary Virginia and using it to unearth Revolutionary America’s gripping debates over justice, criminal punishment, and equality before the law. She shows how post-Revolutionary Virginia was gripped by the question of what it means to make law ‘sovereign’. • Argues for the importance of the lived experience of the law • Demonstrates quickly changing ideas at the time of the American founding about what it meant to establish law in a republic • Shifts the emphasis of Virginian history to the upper Shenandoah Valley, in what is now West Virginia Studies in Legal History 224pp 10 b/w illus. 1 table June 2020 9781108432290 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 February 2019 9781108421782 Hardback GBP 39.99 / USD 49.99 eISBN 9781108377812


American History

NEW IN PAPERBACK

The Constitutional Origins of the American Civil War Michael F. Conlin

In an incisive analysis of over two dozen clauses as well as several ‘unwritten’ rules and practices, The Constitutional Origins of the American Civil War shows how the conflicting constitutional interpretations of ordinary and elite Americans aggravated the sectional conflict over slavery to the point of civil war. • Addresses the cause of the Civil War in a new and compelling way • Explains the complex legal history of the relationship between slavery and the Constitution in an accessible manner • Provides the first quantitative account of the historic three-fifths clause’s effect on the House of Representatives and the Electoral College Cambridge Historical Studies in American Law and Society 349pp June 2020 9781108459969 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 July 2019 9781108495271 Hardback GBP 39.99 / USD 49.99 eISBN 9781108575522

The Deviant Prison Philadelphia’s Eastern State Penitentiary and the Origins of America’s Modern Penal System, 1829–1913 Ashley T. Rubin | University of Hawaii, Manoa

Using Philadelphia’s Eastern State Penitentiary as a case study, The Deviant Prison supplements the dominant narrative by looking at what an atypical prison tells us about prison reform more generally, bringing to light the challenges of nineteenth-century prison administration that helped embed our prison system as we know it today. • Accounts for the rise and fall of Eastern State Penitentiary, covering the period from 1829–1913 • Draws on institutional history and theory to explain the reasons for Eastern’s unique system and the myths that have grown up around it • Interprets and uses data from prison records to provide rich illustrations of prison life, the institution, and key actors Cambridge Historical Studies in American Law and Society 320pp December 2020 9781108484947 Hardback GBP 39.99 / USD 59.99 eISBN 9781108754095

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The Underground Railroad and the Geography of Violence in Antebellum America Robert H. Churchill | University of Hartford, Connecticut

The story of fugitives from enslavement and their travels on the Underground Railroad is a story of violence. This book tells the story of violent encounters between slave catchers, fugitives, Underground activists, and Northern communities and how these encounters contributed to sectional alienation and the coming of the Civil War. • Divides patterns of behavior and attitudes toward abolition into three Northern regions determined by their distance to the South • Stresses the cultural and political implications of these divisions as decisive factors that led to the Civil War • Introduces the concept of a culture of violence to better contextualize the conflicts between slave catchers and antislavery crowds 266pp 11 maps 1 table January 2020 9781108489126 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 January 2020 9781108733465 Paperback GBP 19.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781108773997

Williams’ Gang A Notorious Slave Trader and his Cargo of Black Convicts Jeff Forret | Lamar University, Texas

Williams’ Gang explores a Washington, DC slave trader’s legal misadventures associated with transporting convict slaves through New Orleans. Drawing on court records, newspapers, governors’ files, slave narratives, and penitentiary data, Jeff Forret examines slave criminality, the coastwise domestic slave trade, and Southern jurisprudence. • Provides the first study of a shipment of convict slaves, delving into previously unexplored legal issues surrounding the slave trade • Offers a comprehensive portrait of the Antebellum era by situating the slave trade within the economy, society, and politics of the time • Draws on a variety of resources, including court records, newspapers, governors’ files, slave manifests, slave narratives, travelers’ accounts, and penitentiary data 482pp 9 b/w illus. 5 maps 3 tables January 2020 9781108493031 Hardback GBP 22.00 / USD 29.95 eISBN 9781108651912

The Genesis of America US Foreign Policy and the Formation of National Identity, 1793–1815 Jasper M. Trautsch | Universität Regensburg, Germany

Interprets American nationalism as an external demarcation process and early US foreign policy as a vital instrument of nation-building. It introduces a new perspective on the ideological foundations of American foreign relations and the origins and nature of American nationalism, making it relevant to all historians of the early republic. • Reconsiders the conventional narrative of the emergence of the American nation, by emphasizing the importance of foreign enemies and external threats • Covers many major political and diplomatic events and developments of the early republic, from Washington’s Neutrality Proclamation to the War of 1812, and illuminates how intricately domestic politics and foreign policy were intertwined by putting identity debates at the center of the analysis • Engages myriad sources ranging from newspapers and pamphlets to congressional debates and diplomatic correspondence

Cambridge Studies in US Foreign Relations 328pp May 2020 9781108453547 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 September 2018 9781108428248 Hardback GBP 39.99 / USD 49.99 eISBN 9781108635301

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American History / British And Irish History

History of Native American Peoples NEW IN PAPERBACK

Sharks upon the Land Colonialism, Indigenous Health, and Culture in Hawai’i, 1778–1855 Seth Archer | Utah State University

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This book is for readers interested in Indigenous responses to European and American colonialism. The study illuminates Hawaiian cultural change - in Native religion, medicine, and gender - amid the incursion of Western diseases and their side effects, including infertility, infant mortality, and chronic ill health. • Proposes a new model for understanding colonialism in indigenous society - the overlap of colonialism, health, and culture • Provides a useful case study for health in the Native American and Pacific past, with findings that can be tested and applied to other cases • Makes Native voices central in the narrative, providing unique native viewpoints on colonialism, health, and cultural change • Adds indigenous health as a crucial factor in the transformation (and eventual US occupation) of Hawai’i Studies in North American Indian History 301pp January 2020 9781316626603 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 April 2018 9781107174566 Hardback GBP 34.99 / USD 49.99 eISBN 9781316795934

British and Irish History 20C History of Britain Amnesty International and Human Rights Activism in Postwar Britain, 1945–1977 Tom Buchanan | University of Oxford

Tom Buchanan traces the development of the human rights movement in post-war Britain, examining its origins as a coalition of activists, the birth of Amnesty International in 1961 up to Amnesty’s receipt of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1977, and how these activists were able to effect major changes in public and political attitudes. • Contains the broadest survey of human rights activism to date, allowing for greater insight into the careers of individual activists and the interconnections between different campaigns • Sheds new light on the development of human rights activism over time and how groups such as Amnesty International were able to emerge from a wider activist milieu • Highlights how events in post-war Britain were crucial in influencing the future development of human rights activism Human Rights in History 358pp April 2020 9781107127517 Hardback GBP 64.99 / USD 84.99 April 2020 9781107566552 Paperback GBP 21.99 / USD 28.99 eISBN 9781316422397

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Civil Liberties and Human Rights in TwentiethCentury Britain Chris Moores | University of Birmingham

A history of civil liberties activism in twentiethcentury Britain, focusing primarily on the National Council for Civil Liberties (NCCL). This study traces the NCCL’s development over the past eighty years. It accounts for the emergence of human rights in political discourse and offers insights into Britain’s changing political culture. • Presents a new history of civil liberties activism in the United Kingdom • Offers a longitudinal analysis of the National Council for Civil Liberties • Places the emergence of human rights on a global scale within a British context 346pp 2 b/w illus. 2 tables April 2020 9781107459700 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 February 2017 9781107088610 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105 eISBN 9781316105085

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Dublin’s Great Wars The First World War, the Easter Rising and the Irish Revolution Richard S. Grayson | Goldsmiths, University of London

The first integrated history of the Dubliners who served in the British military and in republican forces during the First World War and Irish Revolution. Richard S. Grayson reveals the importance of First World War experiences to the Easter Rising as well as to the War of Independence and the Civil War. • The first study of Dubliners’ military service in the First World War • Puts a strong focus on the British army veterans who joined the IRA • Highlights the lost narrative of Dublin loyalism through the history of the 36th (Ulster) Division 484pp 27 b/w illus. 13 maps 26 tables October 2020 9781108930628 Paperback GBP 14.99 / USD 19.95 August 2018 9781107029255 Hardback GBP 20.00 / USD 34.95 eISBN 9781139248877

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Feminism and the Servant Problem Class and Domestic Labour in the Women’s Suffrage Movement Laura Schwartz | University of Warwick

With this first history of suffrage to look at contributions by domestic servants, Laura Schwartz brings a feminist perspective to labour history. Feminism and the Servant Problem offers a new understanding of the class politics of the suffrage movement, and challenges traditional notions of who made up the British working class. • The first history of suffrage that looks at the contributions of domestic servants and that movement’s debates on the ‘servant problem’ • Will appeal to readers interested in ‘history from below’, placing primary importance on servants’ voices and perspectives • Brings a feminist perspective to labour history, offering a welcome alternative to labour movement histories that focus on men 245pp June 2020 9781108457743 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 31.99 July 2019 9781108471336 Hardback GBP 75 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108603263


British And Irish History

Irish Women and the Great War Fionnuala Walsh | University College Dublin

The first full-length study to explore the impact of the Great War on the lives of women in Ireland. Fionnuala Walsh examines women’s mobilisation for the war effort, and the impact of the war on their employment opportunities, family and domestic life, social morality and politicisation. • Provides the first complete overview of the experiences of Irish women in the First World War • Places Irish women’s war experience within its international context • Draws on a wide range of diverse archival sources and accounts of individual women’s war experiences Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare 277pp July 2020 9781108491204 Hardback GBP 75 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108867924

Many Mouths The Politics of Food in Britain from the Workhouse to the Welfare State Nadja Durbach | University of Utah

This compelling study of two centuries of British government food programs explores the political, economic and cultural factors behind them, challenging assumptions that they were progressive and based primarily on scientific advances in nutrition, and asks why the State chose to feed some of its subjects, but not others. • Provides the first account of British government food programs over the entire 19th and 20th centuries, to offer a long-term view of British food policy • Uses the crucial relationship between the state and food - the most critical scarce resource -to explore how government works both ideologically and in practice • Demonstrates how the government’s policies actually worked in practice and how people shaped and experienced food policy in their everyday lives 440pp 15 b/w illus. March 2020 9781108483834 Hardback GBP 34.99 / USD 44.99 eISBN 9781108594189

Popular Conservatism and the Culture of National Government in Inter-War Britain Geraint Thomas

Exploring how British Conservatives adapted to the challenges of mass democracy after 1918, this is the first study to explain how and why, despite their suspicion of coalitions, the Conservatives championed the cross-party National Government of 1931–40. • Shows for the first time how the fortunes and character of popular Conservatism differed by region and locality, and explains how and why – despite their suspicion of coalitions – the Conservatives championed the cross-party National Government of 1931-40 • Places the work of government on domestic policy and economic management at the centre of inter-war popular politics and the study of political culture • Explores the contributions of important Conservative figures, including Neville Chamberlain, Walter Elliot, Oliver Stanley, and Kingsley Wood 320pp November 2020 9781108483124 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108672849

Sounds of War Music in the British Armed Forces during the Great War Emma Hanna | University of Kent, Canterbury

This groundbreaking study, sitting at the intersection of cultural and military history, examines the formal and informal uses of music in all three British forces during the Great War. Emma Hanna argues that music was omnipresent in servicemen’s wartime existence and was a vital element for the maintenance of morale. • Provides new insights into the cultures of Britain’s armed forces from 1914 to 1918 • Extensive research uncovers previously unheard voices of both men and women who served in the Great War • Provides an unprecedented survey of music and musical activities in the British Army, Royal Navy and Royal Flying Corps/Royal Air Force Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare 320pp 29 b/w illus. March 2020 9781108480086 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108609449

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The British End of the British Empire Sarah Stockwell | King’s College London

How did decolonization impact on Britain? And how did Britain manage its transition from colonial power to postcolonial nation? These questions are explored in an account of the ways in which domestic institutions reconfigured their activities for a postcolonial world, and continued to assert influence after the end of empire. • Students and scholars of development in the postcolonial era will benefit from a new and original perspective illuminating the early development of British technical and military assistance to new Commonwealth states • Shows how British institutions evolved their own versions of ‘imperialism’ at the end of empire, as they sought to substitute new roles for their established ones within the imperial system • Proposes a new model of the British imperial system by showing how domestic institutions on the margins of the imperial state had become stakeholders in it Cambridge Library Collection - Egyptology 351pp 22 b/w illus. 9 tables January 2020 9781107680883 Paperback GBP 26.99 / USD 34.99 August 2018 9781107070318 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781107707382

The Case for Scottish Independence A History of Nationalist Political Thought in Modern Scotland Ben Jackson | University of Oxford

Scottish nationalism is a powerful movement in contemporary politics, yet the goal of Scottish independence emerged surprisingly recently into public debate. This engaging and accessible study investigates the development of the ideology of modern Scottish nationalism from the 1960s to the Scottish independence referendum in 2014. • Connects present-day debates on Scottish independence with their historical predecessors • Draws on a wide range of published and unpublished sources largely untapped by other treatments of the topic • Accessible to non-specialists and to readers who are not experts on Scottish history or politics. 220pp July 2020 9781108835350 Hardback GBP 59.99 / USD 79.99 July 2020 9781108793186 Paperback GBP 18.99 / USD 28.99 eISBN 9781108883733

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British And Irish History

The Intelligence War against the IRA Thomas Leahy | Cardiff University

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Thomas Leahy investigates whether British intelligence and their informers forced the IRA into peace by 1998. The book is ideal for those who want to know more about the IRA, explore why peace emerged in Northern Ireland, and understand British intelligence’s role against the IRA. • The first extended book evaluating the effectiveness and failures of the British intelligence campaign against the IRA during the Troubles • Provides the first in-depth regional study of the IRA’s campaign across the entire conflict • Uses the example of the IRA’s campaign to shed new light on broader questions in intelligence and security studies 350pp March 2020 9781108487504 Hardback GBP 54.99 / USD 69.99 March 2020 9781108720403 Paperback GBP 18.99 / USD 24.99 eISBN 9781108767033

History of Britain - 1066 - 1450 NEW IN PAPERBACK

Church Building and Society in the Later Middle Ages Gabriel Byng | University of Cambridge

Almost every English town and village has a parish church, but how was its construction financed and managed? This original and authoritative study explains how economic change, local politics and architectural creation combined in late-medieval England to complete one of the most demanding tasks that any parish could undertake. • Offers fascinating insights into the human story behind the construction of England’s parish churches, and shows how profoundly political it was • Explores who financed the construction of parish churches and how this changed during the medieval period • Sets medieval architecture in the context of contemporary society, economics and local politics Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series 336pp 31 b/w illus. 19 tables June 2020 9781108827454 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 December 2017 9781107157095 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316661765

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Cultural Exchange and Identity in Late Medieval Ireland The English and Irish of the Four Obedient Shires Sparky Booker | Queen’s University Belfast

Cultural exchange between English and Irish neighbours in the ‘four obedient shires’ went both ways. Sparky Booker examines the nature of these complex interactions, the tensions that existed between assimilation and the preservation of distinct cultural identities, and the impact this had on English identity in Ireland. • Places Ireland in a broad context and avoids the specialist language that separates Irish historiography from the historiography of the medieval world more generally • Integrates the experiences of non-elite groups into its analysis to help readers get a more accurate understanding of colonial society, at all levels, in Ireland • Incorporates both ecclesiastical and secular developments and institutions to reveal the close and complex relationships between the secular and religious in medieval society Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series 314pp 2 maps March 2020 9781107567375 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 33.99 March 2018 9781107128088 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781316422519

England’s Northern Frontier Conflict and Local Society in the FifteenthCentury Scottish Marches Jackson Armstrong | University of Aberdeen

This first book-length study of England’s northern borderlands in the fifteenth century addresses issues of conflict, kinship, lordship, law, justice, and governance. Examining the region at different social levels, this book expands our understanding of late medieval English political society, within its broader chronological and European context. • The first book-length study of England’s far north and the AngloScottish borderlands in the fifteenth century • Frames the region in a broad English, European and chronological context, c.1300–c.1600 • Integrates the study of conflict in late medieval England into the wider European historiography of feud, contrary to the view of England’s development as exceptional and distinct Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series 414pp November 2020 9781108472999 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108561686


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Famine and Scarcity in Late Medieval and Early Modern England The Regulation of Grain Marketing, 1256–1631 Buchanan Sharp | University of California, Santa Cruz

Buchanan Sharp examines governmental and crowd responses to famine, from the late Middle Ages through to the early modern era. This wide-ranging book will be of interest to academic researchers and graduate students studying the social, economic, cultural and political make-up of medieval and early modern England. • Charts governmental and crowd responses to famine, from the late Middle Ages through to the early modern era • Analyses some of the oldest surviving archival evidence of public response to famine • Provides a detailed account of poor relief in the late Middle Ages and links it to the development of the Poor Law in the sixteenth century 276pp June 2020 9781107551787 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 31.99 September 2016 9781107121829 Hardback GBP 70.99 / USD 110.00 eISBN 9781316401200

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Felony and the Guilty Mind in Medieval England Elizabeth Papp Kamali | Harvard Law School, Massachusetts

Drawing on a wide array of sources, including plea rolls, guides for confessors, and popular literature of the era, this book argues that issues of mind were central to jurors’ determinations of whether a particular defendant should be convicted, pardoned, or acquitted outright in thirteenth- and fourteenth-century England. • Examines what factors juries weighed in sorting the guilty from the innocent in the first two centuries of the criminal trial jury • Situates the medieval English law of felony in a broader cultural, social, and religious setting • Speaks to current controversies in the field of criminal law, such as the role of intentionality in determining the bounds of criminal responsibility Studies in Legal History 352pp July 2020 9781108712743 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 August 2019 9781108498791 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108670890

The House of Commons 1422– 1461 7 Volume Hardback Set Linda Clark

These volumes provide a comprehensive guide to Parliament in a period of defeat overseas and encroaching civil war. A detailed analysis of the composition of the Commons, based on biographies of the MPs in 22 Parliaments and surveys of their constituencies, leads to an exploration of its role alongside that of the Crown and the Lords. • An authoritative guide to Parliament during the reign of Henry VI containing the biographies of over 2000 Members of the Commons set alongside surveys of their constituencies • Features notable figures including many prominent military leaders of the final phase of the Hundred Years’ War and literary figures such as Sir Thomas Mallory • An invaluable resource capable of transforming the study not only of parliaments and politics, but of the social, economic and cultural history of late medieval England The History of Parliament 6256pp April 2020 9781108882002 7 Hardback books GBP 550.00 / USD 715.00 eISBN 9781108894432

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The Medieval Gift and the Classical Tradition Ideals and the Performance of Generosity in Medieval England, 1100–1300 Lars Kjær

This interdisciplinary study explores how classical ideals of generosity influenced the writing and practice of gift giving in medieval Europe. Focusing on classical texts, such as those by Seneca the Younger and Cicero, Lars Kjær reveals how historians have underestimated the influence of classical literature and philosophy on medieval culture. • The interdisciplinary approach enables a new understanding of the role of generosity in medieval culture and political life • Explores the connections between ritualised communication in medieval Europe and that culture’s intellectual traditions • Provides a strong foundation for comparing the culture of gift giving in medieval Europe with those studied by social anthropologists in other parts of the world Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series 235pp August 2020 9781108439329 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 August 2019 9781108424028 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108539579

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British And Irish History

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The Political Bible in Early Modern England

The Cambridge History of Ireland

Kevin Killeen | University of York

Volume 4 1880 to the Present Thomas Bartlett | University of Aberdeen

This illuminating new study considers the Bible as a political document in seventeenth-century England, revealing how the religious text provided a key language of political debate and played a critical role in shaping early modern political thinking. • Explores the Bible as an important source of political thought throughout the seventeenth century • Sheds new light on political discourse across classes that is wholly distinct from the classical languages of political thought • Draws on a large cross-section of little-known writing from the seventeenth century to help readers make sense of the large amount and strangeness of early modern biblical writing Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History 322pp March 2020 9781107518421 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 December 2016 9781107107977 Hardback GBP 84.99 / USD 114.95 eISBN 9781316257388

Copiously illustrated, this volume situates the Irish story, or stories - for much of these decades two Irelands are in play - in a variety of contexts, Irish and Anglo-Irish, of course, but also European, Atlantic and, latterly, global. A landmark publication by the most recent generation of historians of Ireland. • Places the Irish experience in the broader context of modern European and global developments, allowing for comparisons and contrasts with other countries to emerge • Contains new and original perspectives from the leading scholars in the field • Written in an accessible style and supported by full scholarly apparatus and carefully selected maps, tables and illustrations The Cambridge History of Ireland 1000pp March 2020 9781107534155 Paperback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 April 2018 9781107113541 Hardback GBP 100.00 / USD 130 eISBN 9781316286470

History of Britain (General) Parnell and his Times Technology, Lifeways and Cuisine Joep Leerssen | Universiteit van Amsterdam

Marked by names such as W. B. Yeats, James Joyce and Patrick Pearse, the decade 1910–1920 was a period of revolutionary change in Ireland. Leading experts in Irish history, literature and culture address Ireland’s entrance into modernity as a response to the lingering memory of the national leader Charles Stewart Parnell. • Examines the modernization of Ireland from a new perspective • Integrates literary, culture-historical, and political-historical perspectives, providing examples from different fields of how Ireland negotiated its entrance into modernity • Reassesses Parnell in terms of the void he left behind 300pp 17 b/w illus. October 2020 9781108495264 Hardback GBP 31.99 / USD 45.00 eISBN 9781108861786

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The Cambridge History of Ireland Volume 1 600–1550 Brendan Smith | University of Bristol

The thousand years explored in this book witnessed developments in the history of Ireland that resonate to this day. Interspersing narrative with detailed analysis of key themes, the first volume in the Cambridge History of Ireland presents the latest thinking on key aspects of the medieval Irish experience. • Places the Irish experience in the broader context of medieval European developments, allowing for comparisons and contrasts with other countries to emerge • Contains new and original perspectives from the leading scholars in the field • Written in an accessible style and supported by full scholarly apparatus and carefully selected maps, tables and illustrations The Cambridge History of Ireland 680pp 36 b/w illus. 4 maps 2 tables March 2020 9781107527560 Paperback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 April 2018 9781107110670 Hardback GBP 100.00 / USD 130.00 eISBN 9781316275399

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The Cambridge History of Ireland Volume 3 1730–1880 James Kelly | Dublin City University

Provides new and original interpretations of a crucial phase in the history of Ireland that, while focused firmly on the island and its traditions, transcends and moves beyond the nationalist narrative of the twentieth century to provide a history of late early modern Ireland for the twentyfirst century. • Offers new perspectives on Ireland during the era of Protestant Ascendancy, a complex phase of historical change, and presents what can be perceived as a necessary ‘post-revisionist’ narrative of Irish history • Places the Irish experience in the broader context of late early modern European and global developments, allowing for comparisons and contrasts with other countries to emerge • Written in an accessible style and supported by full scholarly apparatus and carefully selected maps, tables and illustrations The Cambridge History of Ireland 874pp 54 b/w illus. 2 maps March 2020 9781107535596 Paperback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 April 2018 9781107115200 Hardback GBP 100.00 / USD 130.00 eISBN 9781316335680


British And Irish History

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The Cambridge History of Ireland

History of Britain after 1450 Armed with Sword and Scales

Volume 2 1550–1730 Jane Ohlmeyer | Trinity College Dublin

Law, Culture, and Local Courtrooms in London, 1860–1913 Sascha Auerbach | University of Nottingham

Offers fresh perspectives on the political, military, religious, social, cultural, intellectual, economic, and environmental history of early modern Ireland, within their global and comparative contexts, to explain in an accessible manner how and why people acted as they did in the transformative and tumultuous years between 1550 and 1730. • Places the Irish experience in the broader context of early modern European and global developments, allowing for comparisons and contrasts with other countries to emerge • Contains new and original perspectives from the leading scholars in the field • Written in an accessible style and supported by full scholarly apparatus and carefully selected maps, tables and illustrations

Examines the relationship between the creation of modern courtrooms and their widespread portrayal in journalism, literature, and popular culture. Sascha Auerbach argues that London’s municipal courtrooms shaped the social experience and cultural meanings of law, contested moral norms, and helped determine boundaries of government authority. • The first book to focus specifically on the courtroom as a distinct feature of modern life • Introduces the courtroom as a discrete subject of analysis in historical, legal, and cultural scholarship • Illuminates why the courtroom is portrayed so ubiquitously in newspapers, novels, plays, movies, and television

The Cambridge History of Ireland 796pp 33 b/w illus. 4 maps 10 tables March 2020 9781107540460 Paperback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 April 2018 9781107117631 Hardback GBP 100.00 / USD 130 eISBN 9781316338773

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The Cambridge History of Ireland 4 Paperback Volume Set Thomas Bartlett | University of Aberdeen

This authoritative and engaging four-volume history vividly presents the Irish story - or stories - from c.600 to the present, within its broader Atlantic, European, imperial and global contexts. Written by an international team of experts, this landmark history reflects recent developments in the field and sets the agenda for future study. • A landmark survey of Irish history from c.600 to the present day, which will be an essential reference set for anyone seeking to understand Ireland’s tangled history • Written by a team of more than 120 leading historians from around the world, this is the most comprehensive and authoritative history of Ireland yet attempted • Combines narrative and thematic chapters to provide a fresh and upto-date view of 1500 years of Irish history The Cambridge History of Ireland 2800pp March 2020 9781316617830 4 Paperback books GBP 100.00 / USD 130.00 April 2018 9781107167292 4 Hardback books GBP 350.00 / USD 450.00 eISBN 9781316711668

Transactions of the Royal Historical Society Volume 29 Andrew Spicer | Oxford Brookes University

Transactions of the Royal Historical Society is an annual collection of major articles representing some of the best historical research by some of the world’s most distinguished historians. This volume includes articles on Saladin’s ‘spin doctors’, Wales and nuclear power during the 1980s, and self-help for women in post-war Britain. • Provides an annual collection of major articles that represents some of the best historical research by some of the world’s most distinguished historians • Covers a wide range of topics including Saladin, the response to Chernobyl in 1980s Wales, and the 1918–19 influenza epidemic in India • Presents a diverse range of historical, geographical and social contexts

Studies in Legal History 336pp February 2021 9781108491556 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108863711

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Beyond Slavery and Abolition Black British Writing, c.1770–1830 Ryan Hanley | University College London

By extending our view of early black British writing beyond traditional questions of slavery and abolition, Ryan Hanley places black agency at the heart of a new social and cultural history of Georgian Britain. Combining historical research and literary analysis, he shows how black writers helped to make British society. • Places the contribution of black intellectuals at the heart of a broad range of movements • Links histories of slavery and abolition to other aspects of British ‘domestic’ history • Provides new biographical information on eight key figures of the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century black Atlantic

281pp June 2020 9781108468756 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 31.99 November 2018 9781108475655 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108616997

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Broken Idols of the English Reformation Margaret Aston

Why were so many religious images and objects broken and damaged in the course of the Reformation? Margaret Aston’s magisterial new book charts the conflicting imperatives of destruction and rebuilding throughout the English Reformation from the desecration of images, rails and screens to bells, organs and stained glass windows. • A major new contribution to our understanding of the English Reformation • Analyses the causes and effects of iconoclasm and illuminates why certain types of images were particularly targeted • Sets iconoclasm within a wider process of religious revolution designed to create new generations of believers and new ways of belief

1109pp 99 b/w illus. June 2020 9781108744201 Paperback GBP 34.99 / USD 44.99 November 2015 9780521770187 Hardback GBP 145.00 / USD 204.95 eISBN 9781139032834

Royal Historical Society Transactions 316pp January 2020 9781108490696 Hardback GBP 40.00 / USD 75.00 eISBN 9781108854627

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British And Irish History

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Empire of Sentiment The Death of Livingstone and the Myth of Victorian Imperialism Joanna Lewis | London School of Economics and Political Science

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Empire of Sentiment opens up a new area of the emotional history of imperialism, showing why a history of the emotions is crucial to understanding how an empire was built, run and understood. It offers new perspectives on the Victorians, imperial culture, the role of humanitarianism, heroic exploration and death. • Proposes a new understanding of the role of emotion in the history of colonial rule in Africa and its legacy • Highlights the role of myth and memory for Europeans and Africans in their understanding of colonial rule • Explains why the British Empire was seen as a liberating and humanitarian empire for so long 304pp 16 b/w illus. 3 maps October 2020 9781316648230 Paperback GBP 27.99 / USD 36.99 January 2018 9781107198517 Hardback GBP 30.00 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108182591

England Re-Oriented How Central and South Asian Travelers Imagined the West, 1750–1857 Humberto Garcia

Examines how Central and South Asian travelers provincialized Britishness between 1750 and 1857 and how, by appropriating metropolitan media, they recalibrated Eurasian ways of behaving and knowing to counter a chauvinistic British imperialism with Indo-Persian masculine gentility. • Demonstrates how Persian knowledges and behaviours intersected with British culture, art, news media, and literature to give rise to British orientalism. • Introduces a queer methodology based on examples of British-Asian sociability. • Proposes alternatives to the West-East binary in Postcolonial theory and criticism. Critical Perspectives on Empire 345pp November 2020 9781108495646 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108862486

Faith, Hope and Charity English Neighbourhoods, 1500–1640 Andy Wood | University of Durham

A study of English neighbourhoods based on a rich variety of hitherto largely unstudied sources, engages with the interaction of social ideals and everyday experience in Tudor and early Stuart neighbourhoods with emphasis on popular religion, notions of gender, locality and belonging between 1500 and 1640. • Focuses on key notions of popular religion, gender, locality and belonging in Tudor and early Stuart neighbourhoods • Highlights the particular processes of inclusion and exclusion within the construction and experience of communities • Demonstrates how communities held together in the face of economic hardship, social change, religious conflict, plague and death 400pp October 2020 9781108840668 Hardback GBP 64.99 / USD 84.99 October 2020 9781108814454 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781108886765

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Female Friends and the Making of Transatlantic Quakerism, 1650–1750 Naomi Pullin | University of Cambridge

This original interpretation of the lives and social interactions of Quaker women in the British Atlantic between 1650 and 1750 highlights the unique ways in which adherence to the movement shaped women’s lives, as well as the ways in which female Friends transformed seventeenth- and eighteenth-century religious and political culture. • The first comprehensive history of early transatlantic Quakerism • Provides historical agency to women traditionally excluded from Quaker history • Uses rich documentary evidence to reveal women’s relationships within the family, the local Quaker community, as Friends, and with the nonQuaker world Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History 318pp 5 b/w illus. 5 tables June 2020 9781316649626 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 May 2018 9781316510230 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108225069

History and the Law A Love Story Carolyn Steedman | University of Warwick

Focusing on everyday legal experiences, from that of magistrates, novelists and political philosophers, to maidservants, pauper men and women, downat-heel attorneys and middling-sort wives, History and the Law reveals how people thought about, used, manipulated and resisted the law between the eighteenth and the twentieth centuries. • Describes a period of English history (c.1700–1900) when there appears to have been a high level of law consciousness among `ordinary’ people • Explores the relationship between `history’ and the `law’, particularly within historical writing • Makes historical, legal and narrative theory accessible to students by presenting it within a narrative framework 294pp January 2020 9781108486057 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 January 2020 9781108736985 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781108623506

Ireland’s Empire The Roman Catholic Church in the EnglishSpeaking World, 1829–1914 Colin Barr | University of Aberdeen

Ireland’s Empire examines the complex relationship between Roman Catholicism and the global Irish diaspora in the nineteenth century. Tracing the spread of Irish Roman Catholicism across the English-speaking world and drawing on more than 100 archives on five continents, this is the first truly global history of this phenomenon. • Offers the first global, comprehensive examination of the spread of Catholicism across the English speaking world • Draws on an unparalleled range of archives to reveal the development of the Catholic Church in each country or region in a global context • Explains the endurance of Irish identity in the English-speaking world 580pp January 2020 9781107040922 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781139644327


British And Irish History

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Martial Law and English Laws, c.1500–c.1700

Ruling the World

John M. Collins

Freedom, Civilisation and Liberalism in the Nineteenth-Century British Empire Alan Lester | University of Sussex

John M. Collins presents the first comprehensive history of martial law in the early modern period. Rather than being a state of exception from law, martial law was understood and practiced as one of the King’s laws, and was a vital component of England’s domestic and imperial legal order. • Examines some of the greatest constitutional conflicts of the seventeenth century through the prism of law • Highlights how martial law was transformed by military innovations on the European Continent • Discusses the relationship between law and emergency, rebutting claims that martial law is a form of exception from law

Provides a more balanced understanding of the British Empire and reveals how the men in charge of the most diverse empire in history enforced their ideas of freedom, civilization and liberalism around the world as they managed some of the greatest crises of the Victorian period. • Reassesses nineteenth-century colonial governance during a series of key moments in the development of the British Empire • Provides a more complete understanding of the diverse colonies under British rule • Develops a new perspective on governmentality and offers a new framework for understanding key episodes in British imperial history

Memory and the English Reformation

The Letters of Paul de Foix, French Ambassador at the Court of Elizabeth I, 1562–66

Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History 333pp 1 table March 2020 9781107469488 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 May 2016 9781107092877 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 104.95 eISBN 9781316143513

Brian Cummings | University of York

The Reformation was a battleground over memory. This volume investigates the history and literature of early modern England to reveal how people remembered – and forgot – the religious past, and forged new ways of understanding the present and future. • Presents the Reformation as a complex arena within memory studies, involving ideas of construction, denial, repression, fiction and forgetting • Includes multidisciplinary accounts of the conflicts between Catholicism and Protestantism in Early Modern England • Offers new ways of understanding the cultural history of religion 425pp November 2020 9781108829991 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120 eISBN 9781108900157

Public Opinion in Early Modern Scotland, c.1560–1707 Karin Bowie | University of Glasgow

Explores the dynamics of opinion politics in the era of Reformation and Anglo-Scottish union - a period of religious and constitutional tension through protestations, petitions, oaths, oral and written modes of public communication, offering a historicised understanding of public opinion and its rise in prominence. • Uses Scotland as a case study to illustrate a new approach which will be highly relevant to other early modern polities • Provides a new way of thinking about early modern Scottish history • Moves away from an overfocus on printed communications to consider how other tools and forms of communication were reinvented in this period Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History 320pp December 2020 9781108843478 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108918787

510pp January 2021 9781108426206 Hardback GBP 69.99 / USD 89.99 January 2021 9781108444897 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781108584227

David Potter | University of Kent, Canterbury

This volume presents the surviving correspondence of the French ambassador to the court of Elizabeth I from 1562–66, Paul de Foix. His letters and reports provide insight into the Queen’s demeanour as a negotiator, on the question of her marriage and on the role of an ambassador in a period of extreme instability both in France and England. • Presents the surviving correspondence of the French ambassador to the court of Elizabeth I from 1562–66, Paul de Foix. Correspondence for this volume has been taken from two separate archives, Bibliothèque nationale in Paris and the L’Aubespine archive • De Foix himself was an intriguing figure, a Catholic reformer and scholar who was the trusted agent of Catherine de Medici • Provides valuable insights into Elizabethan politics and society at a time of extreme instability, both in England and France Camden Fifth Series 300pp January 2020 9781108495493 Hardback GBP 45.00 / USD 80 eISBN 9781108850018

The Making of an Imperial Polity Civility and America in the Jacobean Metropolis Lauren Working | University of Oxford

Bringing to life the interaction between America, its peoples, and statesmen in early seventeenthcentury England, this book offers new perspectives on Jacobean tastes and political culture, confronting the histories of colonialism and domestic political development. This title is also available as Open Access. • Offers a significant reassessment of Jacobean political culture that collapses the divide between early colonial history and metropolitan politics • Provides an interdisciplinary approach to Jacobean political culture, combining archaeological, anthropological and textual approaches • This title is also available as Open Access Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History 266pp 8 b/w illus. January 2020 9781108494069 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108625227

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British And Irish History

The Papers of John Hatsell, Clerk of the House of Commons Volume 59 Peter J. Aschenbrenner

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John Hatsell (1733–1820) was Clerk of the House of Commons from 1768 to 1820. In his letters and Memorabilia entries, Hatsell brought to bear his intimate familiarity with high politics during the reign of George III. His wry humour is often on display as he reveals the lighter side of social and political life in Great Britain. • The collected letter and Memorabilia entries of John Hatsell, Clerk of the House of Commons from 1768 to 1820 • John Hatsell’s position as Clerk of the House of Commons gave him an intimate level of familiarity with high politics during the reign of George III, a period of great constitutional change • His correspondents include Pitt the Younger, Charles Abbot (speaker 1802–1817), and William Eden (diplomat and President of the Board of Trade in the Ministry of All the Talents, 1806–1807) Camden Fifth Series 300pp August 2020 9781108842457 Hardback GBP 45.00 / USD 80.00 eISBN 9781108903431

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The Reformation of the Decalogue Religious Identity and the Ten Commandments in England, c.1485–1625 Jonathan Willis | University of Birmingham

Providing new insights into the history of the English Reformation and the role of the Ten Commandments, this book covers topics such as monarchy and law, sin and salvation, and puritanism and popular religion. It will be ideal for anyone with an interest in the history or theology of Tudor England. • The first study to provide a comprehensive view of the entire Decalogue • Introduces a new genre of source material by identifying and analysing surviving examples of Elizabethan and early Stuart ‘commandment boards’ in parish churches • The book is multi-disciplinary in approach, incorporating sources and methods from art history, musicology, and literary and material culture studies, alongside history and theology

Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History 408pp 18 b/w illus. 3 tables March 2020 9781108403993 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 October 2017 9781108416603 Hardback GBP 94.99 / USD 126 eISBN 9781108241526

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The Right to Rule and the Rights of Women Queen Victoria and the Women’s Movement Arianne Chernock | Boston University

Queen Victoria is often cast as a foe of the women’s movement; she famously declared women’s rights to be a ‘mad, wicked folly’. Arianne Chernock analyses the ruler’s surprising role in the women’s movement and reveals Victoria as a ruler who captivated nineteenth-century feminists, with profound cultural and political consequences. • Offers a comprehensive and historical account of Queen Victoria’s role in the women’s movement • Uses a diverse range of key primary sources from the period including Royal Archive records, suffrage correspondence, flyers, memorabilia and petitions • Places women’s and gender history within its broader social, cultural and political context 261pp August 2020 9781108735377 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 August 2019 9781108484848 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108652384

The Rule of Manhood Tyranny, Gender, and Classical Republicanism in England, 1603–1660 Jamie A. Gianoutsos

Exploring the connection between concepts of power and masculinity in seventeenth-century England, this study shows how stories of ancient tyranny were deployed in dialogues concerning monarchy and rule between 1603 and 1660, and the extent to which these shaped English classical republican thought. • Deepens our understanding of the influence of the classical, and particularly Roman, heritage on the seventeenth century • Attends to ideas of gender, and especially of masculinity, in political discourse before and after the English Revolution • Draws on extensive research in contemporary printed texts to show how classical stories of ancient tyranny were reimagined in dialogues around monarchy and classical republicanism between 1603 and 1660 Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History 350pp November 2020 9781108478830 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108778916

History of Britain before 1066 Anglo-Saxon England Volume 47 Rosalind Love | University of Cambridge

The contributions to the forty-seventh volume of Anglo-Saxon England focus on various aspects of Anglo-Saxon culture and history across a period from the sixth to the thirteenth century, from skaldic art at Cnut’s court to the Germanic context of Beowulf. Each article is preceded by a short abstract. • A collection of original research covering various aspects of AngloSaxon culture and history, from the sixth to the thirteenth century • This volume covers a broad range of topics, from the Germanic context of Beowulf to the ‘old books of Glastonbury’ and the Muchelney breviary fragment • Also included is a record of the Eighteenth Conference of the International Society of Anglo-Saxonists, held in 2017 Anglo-Saxon England 434pp May 2020 9781108830041 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 175.00 eISBN 9781108908634


British And Irish History

Crime and Punishment in Anglo-Saxon England Andrew Rabin | University of Louisville, Kentucky

The legal texts of pre-Conquest England reveal the capacities and limits of the king’s regulatory power, and provide key evidence for the process by which disparate kingdoms merged to become a unified English state. They offer unparalleled insight into Anglo-Saxon England’s diverse inhabitants – those who enforced the law and those subject to it.

Elements in England in the Early Medieval World 75pp September 2020 9781108932035 Paperback GBP 15.00 / USD 20.00 eISBN 9781108943109

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Writing, Kingship and Power in Anglo-Saxon England Rory Naismith | King’s College London

This book brings together new research that represents current scholarship on the nexus between authority and written sources from AngloSaxon England. Ranging from the seventh to the eleventh century, the chapters in this volume offer fresh approaches to a wide range of linguistic, historical, legal, diplomatic and palaeographical evidence. • A new view of the workings of the royal and ecclesiastical authority in Anglo-Saxon England offers readers new interpretations of various textual sources from the Anglo-Saxon period • Chapters engage with different genres of source and different scholarly disciplines, allowing readers to see how different genres of text constructed view of kingship and ecclesiastical authority • Offers new interpretations of important models of Anglo-Saxon kingship, providing readers with new perspectives of fundamental issues of kingship 1127pp 17 b/w illus. June 2020 9781108744782 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 November 2017 9781107160972 Hardback GBP 94.99 / USD 126 eISBN 9781316676066

Irish History De Valera and Roosevelt Irish and American Diplomacy in Times of Crisis, 1932–1939 Bernadette Whelan | University of Limerick

This first comprehensive history of American and Irish diplomacy during the 1930s examines how all aspects of formal and informal diplomacy operated between the administrations of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Éamon de Valera, focusing on the diplomats based in Washington DC and Dublin respectively. • Analyses formal and informal diplomatic life to revise our current understanding of the relationship between the American and Irish administrations • Details the many ways that Irish issues irritated State Department and White House officials, and the persistent British influence in official America’s views of and approaches to Ireland • Explains how diplomats worked on behalf of their governments to implement their foreign policies

Irish Divorce A History Diane Urquhart | Queen’s University Belfast

Spanning the island of Ireland over three centuries, this first history of Irish divorce places the human experience of marriage breakdown centre stage to explore the impact of a highly restrictive and gendered law, and its reform, on Irish society. • The first history of Irish divorce to use the human experience of marriage breakdown as its primary focus • Explores the impact of highly restrictive and gendered divorce laws and their reform on Irish society • Makes divorce law and legal process accessible to non-specialist readers without the need for prior legal knowledge 294pp 2 b/w illus. February 2020 9781108493093 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 February 2020 9781108717250 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781108675536

Marriage in Ireland, 1660–1925 Maria Luddy | University of Warwick

This first comprehensive history of marriage in Ireland across three centuries focuses on the middle and lower classes. It offers a multi-faceted exploration of how marriage was perceived, negotiated and controlled by the church and state, as well as by individual men and women within Irish society. • This wide-ranging history of marriage in Ireland looks below the level of elite society for the first time • Revises current understandings of marriage law, courtship, marital relations, desertion, separation and divorce within Ireland • Clarifies complicated marriage laws in the context of the various religious denominations and their relationship with the State 460pp 20 b/w illus. 11 tables June 2020 9781108486170 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 9781108731904 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 eISBN 9781108645164

June 2020

Women, Crime and Punishment in Ireland Life in the Nineteenth-Century Convict Prison Elaine Farrell | Queen’s University Belfast

Focusing on women’s relationships, lifecircumstances and agency, Elaine Farrell reveals the voices, emotions and decisions of incarcerated women and those affected by their imprisonment, offering an intimate insight into their experiences of the criminal justice system across urban and rural post-Famine Ireland. • Enriches our understanding of life in nineteenth-century Ireland with fascinating archival research • Offers a rare and intimate insight into women’s lives before, during and after imprisonment • Demonstrates how individual stories of diverse women at different stages of their lifecycles or criminal careers are revealing of the lives of inhabitants more generally 330pp October 2020 9781108839501 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108884242

350pp November 2020 9781108830171 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108909204

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15


European History

European History 20C European History After the Deportation Memory Battles in Postwar France Philip Nord | Princeton University, New Jersey

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160,000 people, a mix of résistants and Jews, were deported from France to camps in Central and Eastern Europe during the Second World War. Philip Nord addresses how the Deportation, and how it was remembered, became politicized against the backdrop of changing domestic and international contexts. • Focuses on both Jews and non-Jews who were deported from France in large numbers during the Second World War • Provides a fresh perspective on source materials, using politics, films and literature as key sources • Considers the religious dimension of post-war memorialization in France Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare 450pp November 2020 9781108478908 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108781398

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Eating Nature in Modern Germany Food, Agriculture and Environment, c.1870 to 2000 Corinna Treitel | Washington University, St Louis

A fascinating new account of eating naturally as an aspect of German biopolitics. Corinna Treitel explores the allure of vegetarianism, organic farming, and other such practices to a wide variety of Germans, from socialists, liberals, and radical anti-Semites in the nineteenth century to fascists, communists, and Greens in the twentieth century. • Examines the complex historical roots of a contemporary trend • Shows how developments in science, medicine, agriculture, popular culture, and politics produced and sustained this historical phenomenon • Explores the connections between eating naturally and other major biopolitical projects such as eugenics, racial hygiene, and pro-natalism, broadening the discussion of biopolitics in European history

404pp 22 b/w illus. March 2020 9781316638392 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 April 2017 9781107188020 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781316946312

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Christian Democratic Workers and the Forging of German Democracy, 1920–1980 William L. Patch | Washington and Lee University, Virginia

Why has democracy flourished in the Federal Republic of Germany? This book illuminates the pivotal role played by the half million veterans of the Christian trade unions of the Weimar Republic, who sought with great success after 1945 to alleviate class conflict through welfare legislation and worker participation in management. • Painstaking archival research uncovers new evidence unknown even to specialists in the field • Integrates the analysis of party politics, labor history and labor relations, and Catholic Church history • Illuminates what German political actors truly learned from the dissolution of the Weimar Republic and the experience of the Third Reich 341pp October 2020 9781108439367 Paperback GBP 28.99 / USD 37.99 March 2018 9781108424110 Hardback GBP 75 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108539753

Democracy, Nazi Trials, and Transitional Justice in Germany, 1945–1950 Devin O. Pendas | Boston College, Massachusetts

Revising our understanding about how transitional justice works, this study analyses and compares Nazi trials in post-war East and West Germany from 1945 to 1950 to challenge assumptions about the political outcomes of prosecuting mass atrocities. • Examines the experience of transitional justice in West and East Germany between 1945 and 1950 • Shows how ‘bad trials’ have promoted democracy in West Germany, while ‘good trials’ helped legitimate a new dictatorship in East Germany • Shows that transitional justice trials can lead to both democracy and new dictatorships, challenging conventional wisdom 230pp September 2020 9780521871297 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781139021074

Enterprising Empires Russia and Britain in Eighteenth-Century Eurasia Matthew P. Romaniello | Weber State University, Utah

Matthew P. Romaniello charts how commercial competition between Britain and Russia became entangled in a critical era of empire. He reveals how geopolitical developments affected trade more than commercial regulations, while also challenging depictions of this period as a straightforward era of Russian economic decline. • Uncovers the people and history of the British Russia Company in the eighteenth century • Highlights British trade in Asia and the North Pacific, rather than focusing on the economy of the Atlantic • Moves Russia from the global ‘semi-periphery’ to the center of the global economy 307pp 7 b/w illus. 3 maps 7 tables November 2020 9781108703086 Paperback GBP 26.99 / USD 35.99 February 2019 9781108497572 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108628600

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German Soldiers and the Occupation of France, 1940–1944 Julia S. Torrie

For four years, German soldiers not only stood guard over and fought in France, but also lived their lives. While the everyday experiences of the occupied French population are well-documented, we know much less about the occupiers. The lives of ordinary German soldiers offer new insights into the occupation of France and the history of Nazism. • A corrective to standard accounts of the German occupation of France that cover German policy-makers only • Argues that occupied France was integrally linked to the larger war • The book is based on a wide variety of primary sources, including soldiers’ letters, photographs and memoirs Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare 290pp February 2020 9781108457590 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 October 2018 9781108471282 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105 eISBN 9781108658935


European History

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Germany’s Empire in the East Germans and Romania in an Era of Globalization and Total War David Hamlin | Fordham University, New York

One of the signal events of the twentieth century was Germany’s effort to construct an empire in Europe modeled on the European experience outside Europe. David Hamlin argues that this effort was a strategic choice taken to grapple with the global economic and political power of England and the US and manifested itself first in World War One. • Puts German policy toward Romania and the German East generally in a broader, global context, emphasizing the significance of global markets • Embeds occupation and war aims in economic concerns, highlighting how German domestic crisis of supply both shaped German policy and provided institutional model for occupation • Highlights how German domestic crisis of supply both shaped German policy and provided an institutional model for occupation 360pp 12 b/w illus. 1 map 3 tables May 2020 9781316648070 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 July 2017 9781107198197 Hardback GBP 90 / USD 120 eISBN 9781108182218

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Helmut Schmidt and British-German Relations A European Misunderstanding Mathias Haeussler | Universität Regensburg, Germany

This major reinterpretation of British-German relations in the 1970s explores why the two countries rarely saw eye to eye over European integration. It shows how at the heart of bilateral tensions lay profoundly competing visions for postwar Europe, and reveals their surprisingly close cooperation in pursuing joint interests on the global stage. • Provides vital historical context about the deeper historical reasons behind the different British and German attitudes towards post-war European integration, highly relevant to contemporary debates over Brexit • Offers a fresh and stimulating perspective on one of post-war Germany’s most prominent and well-known politicians • Uses recently declassified sources from a range of countries, as well as rare materials from Schmidt’s private archive 265pp 8 b/w illus. June 2020 9781108710800 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 March 2019 9781108482639 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108697132

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Italy’s Jews from Emancipation to Fascism Shira Klein | Chapman University, California

Shira Klein’s deeply researched book on Italian Jews will appeal to anyone interested in Italy, modern Jewish history, Fascism and World War II, and the Holocaust. This cultural history offers an unusually broad scope, spanning over a century and extending from Italy to Palestine and America. • Draws on previously unstudied sources on Italian Jewry, giving voice to the stories of women and children so often lost in historical accounts • Offers a new perspective on one of modern Italy’s most enduring myths - Italian benevolence towards Jews during World War II • Expands the traditional boundaries of European Jewish history to appeal to anyone interested in both the prewar and postwar periods 379pp 13 b/w illus. January 2020 9781108439350 Paperback GBP 26.99 / USD 34.99 January 2018 9781108424103 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120 eISBN 9781108539739

Love between Enemies Western Prisoners of War and German Women in World War II Raffael Scheck | Colby College, Maine

Based on thousands of court cases, this innovative study explores the love stories between enemy prisoners of war and German women during the Second World War. It portrays an intimate picture of life in wartime Nazi Germany, from an international perspective, with a particular focus on German women’s experiences. • Offers an intimate perspective on the Second World War • Exposes the human drama of love in the midst of the most destructive war in world history • Explores how both parties came to terms with their forbidden relationships in the aftermath of war 400pp November 2020 9781108841757 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108894821

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My Opposition The Diary of Friedrich Kellner - A German against the Third Reich Friedrich Kellner

A remarkable account of Nazi Germany at war and of one man’s struggle against totalitarianism. Friedrich Kellner’s diary unflinchingly charts the country’s path to dictatorship and genocide, and demonstrates just how much ordinary Germans really knew about the actions of the Nazi regime. • A remarkable first-hand account of everyday life under National Socialism during the Second World War which documents just how widespread awareness was of the unfolding of the Holocaust • A timeless portrayal of the individual’s struggle against totalitarianism which still resonates today • Includes the dramatic story of the Kellner family and of how the diary was brought to light by Robert Scott Kellner, Friedrich’s grandson • The author’s writings are interspersed with contemporary clippings from the German press 620pp 53 b/w illus. January 2020 9781108406963 Paperback GBP 13.99 / USD 17.95 January 2018 9781108418294 Hardback GBP 27.99 / USD 34.99 eISBN 9781108289696

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European History

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Nation and Loyalty in a German-Polish Borderland Upper Silesia, 1848–1960 Brendan Karch | Louisiana State University

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In the borderland of Upper Silesia between 1848 and 1960, the local population resisted attempts by nationalist activists to compel them to become loyal Germans or Poles, a divide dictated by the two languages they spoke. This study of that resistance will appeal to scholars of European history and nationalism. • Recasts mid-twentieth-century national radicalism as partially motivated by local resistance to nationalization • This interdisciplinary study of nationalism will appeal to scholars of sociology and political science • Provides new insights into the relationship between Nazi Germany and international political organizations on the Jewish question Publications of the German Historical Institute 347pp 9 b/w illus. 3 maps March 2020 9781108463980 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 33.99 October 2018 9781108487108 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108560955

Remaking Ukraine after World War II The Clash of Local and Central Soviet Power Filip Slaveski | Deakin University, Victoria

Drawing on recently declassified Soviet sources, this examines Soviet Ukraine’s transition from war to ‘peace’ in the long aftermath of World War II, exploring the battle for land, resources and power among collective farmers, local and central Soviet authorities in reconstructing post-war Ukraine. The consequences of this battle resonate today. • Draws on recently declassified Soviet sources to shed new light on the post-war period • Brings to light the struggle of ordinary people against the local government that sought to destroy them • Connects the past to the present, by tracing Ukraine’s experience from the 1940s to today New Studies in European History 200pp December 2020 9781108840255 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108879293

Sixties Europe Timothy Scott Brown | Northeastern University, Boston

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Private Life and Privacy in Nazi Germany Elizabeth Harvey | University of Nottingham

It is often assumed that there was no such thing as private life under Nazi rule. This volume challenges that view by showing how non-Jewish Germans asserted their privacy and asking how far the regime encouraged such aspirations. At the same time, it traces how ‘ethnic Germans’ and Jews in occupied Poland sought to defend their privacy. • Challenges assumptions that there was no such thing as private life under Nazi rule • Raises wider questions about the nature of privacy and private life in twentieth-century societies 410pp June 2020 9781108719032 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 July 2019 9781108484985 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108754859

Project Europe A History Kiran Klaus Patel | Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munchen

A bracing re-examination of the myths and realities of European integration which challenges conventional wisdoms of Europhiles and Eurosceptics alike. Kiran Klaus Patel explores the EU’s contribution to peace, prosperity, and democracy, its impact on peoples’ lives and the lessons of the past for its contemporary crisis. • Provides an ambitious and innovative analysis of the impact of European integration on peoples’ lives • Assesses each of the core dimensions associated with European integration on a chapter-by-chapter basis to offer fresh insights on the EU’s strengths and weaknesses • Discusses technical issues regarding European integration in an accessible way to make the topic more appealing to a broader audience 388pp 11 b/w illus. 4 maps 6 tables April 2020 9781108494960 Hardback GBP 19.99 / USD 26.95 eISBN 9781108848893

A social, political and cultural history of left-wing social movements in 1960s Europe, Sixties Europe examines the border-crossing uprisings of the 1960s on both sides of the Iron Curtain, placing them in the broader context formed by Third World liberation struggles and Cold War geopolitics. • Offers a social, political and cultural history of Europe across a transformative decade • Treats 1968 in Europe as a whole, examining 1960s social movements in both the capitalist West and the state socialist East • Places European developments within a broader global and transnational context formed by Third World liberation struggles and Cold War geopolitics New Approaches to European History 250pp August 2020 9781107122383 Hardback GBP 59.99 / USD 79.99 August 2020 9781107552906 Paperback GBP 19.99 / USD 25.99 eISBN 9781316388327

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Socialism across the Iron Curtain Socialist Parties in East and West and the Reconstruction of Europe after 1945 Jan De Graaf | Ruhr-Universität, Bochum, Germany

This innovative pan-European history of postwar socialism shows the Cold War categories of ‘East’ and ‘West’ cannot be projected back onto post-war Europe. By comparing the socialist and social democratic parties in Czechoslovakia, France, Italy, and Poland, it highlights the many similarities across and divergences within the two putative blocs. • Brings together cases from East and West to shine fresh light on both national and comparative histories • Challenges much of the current historiography of post-war European socialism and offers a new explanation for the weaknesses of post-war socialist parties • Draws on archival documents in seven different languages New Studies in European History 332pp June 2020 9781108441179 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 January 2019 9781108425087 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108639781


European History

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The Battle for the Catholic Past in Germany, 1945–1980

The Emotional Politics of the Alternative Left

Mark Edward Ruff | St Louis University, Missouri

West Germany, 1968–1984 Joachim C. Häberlen | University of Warwick

Were Pope Pius XII and the Catholic Church in Germany unduly singled out for their conduct during the National Socialist era? Mark Edward Ruff explores the bitter controversies that broke out in the Federal Republic of Germany from 1945 to 1980 over the Catholic Church’s relationship to the Nazis. • Explains why the Catholic Church’s position during the Nazi era became a particular target of post-war criticism, as opposed to that of the Protestant churches • Explores how historical images arise out of personal experiences of persecution, and will appeal to those seeking to understand the complexities of religious identity • Historicizes war, appealing both to scholars with an interest in the cultural casualties of conflict, and to those who have experienced them 410pp 25 b/w illus. March 2020 9781316640760 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 31.99 July 2017 9781107190665 Hardback GBP 36.99 / USD 41.99 eISBN 9781108116107

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The East German Economy, 1945–2010 Falling Behind or Catching Up? Hartmut Berghoff | German Historical Institute, Washington DC

This volume analyzes both the successes and failures of the East German economy. The contributors consider the economic history of East Germany within its broader political, cultural and social contexts, and trace the present and future of the East German economy, suggesting possible outcomes. • Analyzes the German Democratic Republic’s economic history in the context of the twentieth century, from pre-socialism to post-Unification • Brings together international scholars • Provides an interdisciplinary approach to the German Democratic Republic’s economic history

Publications of the German Historical Institute 259pp March 2020 9781108792615 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 December 2013 9781107030138 Hardback GBP 62.99 / USD 103.00 eISBN 9781139343206

This fresh account of new-leftist politics in West Germany after 1968 emphasises how central feelings were, both for leftist critiques of modern capitalism and for their political practices. Joachim C. Häberlen’s book is based on close archival research and theoretically informed by recent approaches to the history of emotions. • Provides a new perspective on leftist politics in West Germany which will stimulate debates about the place of the alternative left in West German history • Offers a vivid and surprising vision of emotional practices within the Alternative Left • Combines theoretical approaches to the writing of a history of emotions with close archival research New Studies in European History 317pp 9 b/w illus. June 2020 9781108458375 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 September 2018 9781108471749 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105 eISBN 9781108559201

The German Right, 1918–1930 Political Parties, Organized Interests, and Patriotic Associations in the Struggle against Weimar Democracy Larry Eugene Jones | Canisius College, New York

This important contribution to the history of Weimar Germany examines the role that the non-Nazi Right played in the destabilization and paralysis of Weimar democracy, and why it failed to achieve the unity that was essential to hold in check the more radical challenge to Weimar democracy by Adolf Hitler’s Nazi Party. • Makes a significant contribution to the history of Weimar Germany • Offers a comprehensive account of the non-Nazi German Right from 1918 to 1930 by placing its political fortunes within the broader context of the socio-economic developments of the post-war period • Examines the role of both human agency and long-range structural and cultural factors in the collapse of Weimar democracy 640pp 16 b/w illus. April 2020 9781108494076 Hardback GBP 110.00 / USD 140.00 eISBN 9781108643450

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The Holocaust in Greece Giorgos Antoniou | Aristotle University, Thessaloniki

During the course of the Second World War, the Axis forces murdered ninety percent of the Jewish population in Greece. With cutting edge research, the authors show that the scale of this disaster could not have been achieved by the authorities alone, without the active participation of Greek Christians. • Presents a new and original interpretation of the Holocaust in Greece • Provides focused case studies, which illuminate how the persecution of Greek Jews - particularly their deportation and theft of their property took place in particular instances • Makes Greek scholarship on the Holocaust in Greece available to English-speaking audiences for the first time 395pp 13 b/w illus. 2 maps March 2020 9781108465281 Paperback GBP 27.99 / USD 36.99 November 2018 9781108474672 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108565776

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19


European History

The Human Rights Dictatorship Socialism, Global Solidarity and Revolution in East Germany Ned Richardson-Little | Universität Erfurt, Germany

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By exposing the forgotten history of human rights in East Germany, this study places the history of the Cold War, Eastern European dissidents and the revolutions of 1989 in a new light, and demonstrates how even a communist dictatorship could imagine itself to be a champion of human rights. • Challenges popular narratives on the fall of the Berlin Wall and proposes a new interpretation of the role of human rights in the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War • Debunks the myth of Western liberal democracies as the sole arbiters of human rights, and provides a unique perspective on the history of human rights by focusing on the agency of actors in East Germany and socialist Eastern Europe • Highlights the global nature of human rights politics in a field that is deeply Eurocentric by illuminating the influence of decolonization and the Third World on the Eastern bloc Human Rights in History 284pp April 2020 9781108424677 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 April 2020 9781108440783 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781108341295

The Hunger Winter Fighting Famine in the Occupied Netherlands, 1944–1945 Ingrid de Zwarte | Wageningen Universiteit, The Netherlands

In this pioneering study, Ingrid de Zwarte offers a comprehensive and multifaceted view of the socio-political context and consequences of the Dutch Hunger Winter of 1944–45. Based on extensive research, she examines the causes and demographic impact of the famine and how it was confronted at different societal levels. • Offers a comprehensive and multifaceted view of the socio-political context in which the Dutch famine emerged and was confronted • Situates the Dutch ‘Hunger Winter’ within a broader frame of Nazi hunger politics in occupied Europe • Examines how a modern society with a highly-developed economy such as the Netherlands coped with food shortage and famine • Critically assesses the politics and practices of Allied relief for the occupied Netherlands Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare 315pp 45 b/w illus. 4 maps 12 tables July 2020 9781108836807 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108872515

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The Rights of the Roma The Struggle for Citizenship in Postwar Czechoslovakia Celia Donert | University of Cambridge

A new interpretation of citizenship in socialist Eastern Europe and non-Western histories of human rights, based upon the vivid social and political history of Roma in Czechoslovakia. Celia Donert rewrites Roma as agents, not victims, of social citizenship, drawing on extensive original research in Czech and Slovak archives. • Demonstrates the centrality of the Romani experience to understanding the history of citizenship, statelessness, genocide and minority rights in contemporary Europe • Contributes a new perspective to histories of citizenship and the legacies of genocide in postwar Europe • Provides a history of Roma in Czechoslovakia based on a wide range of local archives, ethnographies, memoirs and interviews Human Rights in History 309pp 13 b/w illus. May 2020 9781316629369 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 December 2017 9781107176270 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316811641

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The Struggle for the Streets of Berlin Politics, Consumption, and Urban Space, 1914–1945 Molly Loberg | California Polytechnic State University

Molly Loberg reconstructs the vibrant, volatile, and lost topography of interwar Berlin. She charts the contests for Berlin’s streets during the Weimar Republic and Third Reich and their transformation into a means of communication, lens of perception, and stage of action for both commercial and political life. • The interdisciplinary approach draws on lively and diverse primary sources, including police reports, commercial and political advertising, artwork, film, and citizens’ letters • Through the lens of the city, it brings together political, economic, social, and cultural history, which will appeal to readers in any of these subfields • Encompasses the whole period from 1914 to 1945, crossing the typical barriers of chronology and periodization in German and interwar history

339pp 20 b/w illus. February 2020 9781108405546 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 March 2018 9781108417648 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108278058


European History

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Transnational Nazism

European History - 1000 - 1450

Ideology and Culture in German-Japanese Relations, 1919–1936 Ricky W. Law | Carnegie Mellon University, Pennsylvania

Blood Royal

This study of the 1930s German-Japanese alliance employs sources in both languages to reveal the role of mass media in shaping and promoting an ideology which, by creating a niche for Japan in the Nazi worldview, convinced German Nazis to identify with non-Aryans and non-Germans to become adherents of Hitler. • Uses both German and Japanese primary sources, many of which have been previously neglected • Explains interwar German-Japanese rapprochement from ideological and cultural perspectives, and the role of the national media of both countries • Offers an incisive look at how the seemingly narrow Nazi ideology gained broad prominence and popularity beyond its obvious core demographic

This engaging history of dynastic power in medieval Europe explores the role of family dynamics and family consciousness in the politics of royal and imperial dynasties. From royal marriages and the birth of sons, to female sovereigns, mistresses and wicked uncles, Robert Bartlett casts fresh light on an essential feature of the medieval world. • Demonstrates the central importance of dynastic rule in the political cultures of medieval Europe • Covers the whole of Latin Christendom and Byzantium from 500 to 1500 • Featuring lots of colourful and surprising anecdotes and examples, this is a tour de force from a master historian

Publications of the German Historical Institute 359pp 21 b/w illus. June 2020 9781108465151 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 29.99 May 2019 9781108474634 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120 eISBN 9781108565714

Dynastic Politics in Medieval Europe Robert Bartlett | University of St Andrews, Scotland

The James Lydon Lectures in Medieval History and Culture 672pp 23 b/w illus. 1 map 2 tables July 2020 9781108490672 Hardback GBP 24.99 / USD 34.95 eISBN 9781108854559

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Turkish Germans in the Federal Republic of Germany Immigration, Space, and Belonging, 1961–1990 Sarah Thomsen Vierra

Drawing on a diverse array of Turkish- and German-language sources, this book explores the history of Turkish immigrants and their children in West Berlin from 1961 to the early years after reunification. Sarah Thomsen Vierra sheds new light on the relationship between belonging, identity, and everyday life. • Brings the perspectives of Turkish immigrants and their children into the historical narrative by drawing on Turkish-language sources as well as German sources • Focuses on the everyday lives of first and second generation Turkish Germans • Uses the methodological framework of space to explore issues of belonging and integration Publications of the German Historical Institute 281pp 18 b/w illus. March 2020 9781108446051 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 October 2018 9781108427302 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108691475

Byzantine Jewry in the Mediterranean Economy Joshua Holo | Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion, California

Joshua Holo’s Byzantine-Jewish economic history challenges two prevailing historical claims. Byzantine Jews, leveraging exclusive trade structures to advance their integration into Byzantine markets, belie the assumption of segregation and integration as competing forces. Moreover, this mercantile success also contradicts the claim of Jewish economic decline during the Commercial Revolution. • A new approach to the integration of Byzantine Jews into regional history, with startling results • Appendix of ancient sources explores the actual primary sources and revisits these sources that have been only partially translated or that have not been recently treated • Appendix B of the images, settles important disputes about the content of the manuscripts discussed 297pp May 2020 9781108745086 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 November 2009 9780521856331 Hardback GBP 72.00 / USD 113.00 eISBN 9780511691652

Cities of Strangers Making Lives in Medieval Europe Miri Rubin | Queen Mary University of London

Examining how ‘strangers’ - settling newcomers as well as settled ethnic and religious minorities were treated in urban communities between 1000 and 1500, Cities of Strangers explores pathways to citizenship and arrangements for those unlikely to become citizens during a period of formative urban growth and its aftermath in medieval Europe. • Offers an historical vantage point on the reception of strangers into cities, in conversation with contemporary concerns • Traces the development of urban institutions, with attention to regional differences and the diverse nature of medieval cities • Draws on a wide range of sources to create a complex picture of urban life in a period of growth as well as in one of contraction The Wiles Lectures 204pp 5 b/w illus. 2 maps March 2020 9781108481236 Hardback GBP 57.99 / USD 74.99 March 2020 9781108740531 Paperback GBP 18.99 / USD 24.99 eISBN 9781108666510

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21


European History

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City and Society in the Low Countries, 1100–1600 Bruno Blondé | Universiteit Antwerpen, Belgium

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Throughout the middle ages and the sixteenth century the Low Countries counted among the most urbanised societies in Europe. This comprehensive survey unravels the geographical, political, social, religious, cultural and economic entanglements and complexities that shaped a remarkably resilient urban society. • A multi-authored and accessible volume that resulted from a collaborative inter-university project on the social history of the city • Offers a balanced and up-to-date view on relevant debates • Explicitly deals with the spatial and material dimensions of urban history 321pp June 2020 9781108469548 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 October 2018 9781108474689 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105 eISBN 9781108645454

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Government and Political Life in England and France, c.1300–c.1500 Christopher Fletcher | Université de Paris I

How did the kings of England and France govern their kingdoms? This volume, the product of a ten-year collaborative project, brings together specialists in late-medieval England and France to provide a richly textured description of the social, political, economic and cultural underpinnings of royal power. • An unprecedented cooperative project co-written by specialists on the kingdoms of England and France in the later Middle Ages • Offers a genuinely comparative and in-depth perspective on complex questions of historiography and sources • Tightly focused on royal government, with analysis informed by the lessons of social, economic and cultural history c92pp April 2020 9781107461758 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 April 2015 9781107089907 Hardback GBP 84.99 / USD 137 eISBN 9781316106112

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Conciliarism and Heresy in Fifteenth-Century England Collective Authority in the Age of the General Councils Alexander Russell | University of Warwick

The general councils of the fifteenth century constituted a remarkable political experiment, which used collective decision-making to tackle important problems facing the church. This book offers a fundamental reassessment of England’s relationship with these councils, revealing how political thought, heresy, and collective politics were connected. • Combines analysis of political theory, institutional developments and religious culture • Challenges older interpretations of England’s diplomatic and intellectual isolation with regard to the general councils • Provides a new context for the study of the history of medieval political thought Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series 233pp March 2020 9781108813877 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 July 2017 9781107172272 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316771570

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Excommunication for Debt in Late Medieval France The Business of Salvation Tyler Lange | University of California, Berkeley

Using quantitative and qualitative methods to re-evaluate the role of late medieval church courts, Tyler Lange examines the relatively common occurrence of excommunicated debtors. This reveals how day-to-day credit functioned in the late Middle Ages, what debt meant to contemporaries, and how believers understood the Church. • Re-evaluates the functioning of late medieval church courts from the perspective of the litigant • Uses quantitative methods to benefit from previously neglected archival sources, including analysis of more than 11,000 sanctions • Examines legal, economic, and cultural aspects of excommunication for debt in local contexts 321pp 15 b/w illus. 1 map 17 tables June 2020 9781108814225 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 March 2016 9781107145795 Hardback GBP 70.99 / USD 110.00 eISBN 9781316536162

Hell in the Byzantine World 2 Volume Hardback Set A History of Art and Religion in Venetian Crete and the Eastern Mediterranean Angeliki Lymberopoulou | The Open University, Milton Keynes

The imagery of Hell, the Christian account of the permanent destinations of the human soul after death, has fascinated people over the centuries since the emergence of the Christian faith. These landmark volumes provide the first large-scale investigation of this imagery found across the Byzantine and postByzantine world. • Adopts an interdisciplinary approach to a cultural and religious subject of high relevance to the history of Christianity • Includes a large amount of unpublished material and material which is very difficult to access • Testifies to the richness and diversity of Byzantine art and presents new aspects of the society that commissioned and created it 936pp 119 b/w illus. 137 colour illus. 7 maps September 2020 9781108690706 2 Hardback books GBP 200.00 / USD 260.00 eISBN 9781108596831

Latin and Greek Monasticism in the Crusader Statesin Ancient Greece Bernard Hamilton | University of Nottingham

Monasticism was the dominant form of religious life in the medieval West and in the Byzantine world. Latin and Greek Monasticism in the Crusader States explores the parallel histories of monasteries and monasticism in western and Byzantine traditions in the Near East during the Crusader period c.1050-1300. • A rigorously researched comprehensive survey of monasteries and monasticism in the Near East during the ‘Crusader’ period • Innovative approach enabling a new understanding of indigenous religious institutions and culture in the Crusader states • Examines Latin and Greek monasticism side by side

300pp 10 b/w illus. October 2020 9780521836388 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781139016230


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Learning in a Crusader City

Petrarch’s War

Intellectual Activity and Intercultural Exchanges in Acre, 1191–1291 Jonathan Rubin | Bar-Ilan University, Israel

Florence and the Black Death in Context William Caferro | Vanderbilt University, Tennessee

Jonathan Rubin explores the intellectual activities and intercultural exchanges that occurred in the city of Acre during the Crusades, drawing on the complete body of evidence from the city. The result is an unprecedentedly rich portrait of a hitherto neglected intellectual centre on the Eastern shores of the medieval Mediterranean. • Systematically explores the complete body of intellectual production of a crusader city • Examines the work done in the city in separate fields, as well as the roles that some key figures and groups played in them • Provides a unique picture of a ‘new’ Latin-dominated centre of intellectual activity Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series 234pp 1 b/w illus. March 2020 9781316637715 Paperback GBP 21.99 / USD 27.99 September 2018 9781107187184 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316941096

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Medieval European Coinage Volume 12 Northern Italy William R. Day, Jr | University of Cambridge

This is the first comprehensive survey of the coinage of north Italy, c.950–1500. The volume reveals for the first time the wider trends that shaped the coinages of the region, incorporating a fully illustrated catalogue of the Fitzwilliam Museum’s unrivalled collection of north Italian coins and numerous detailed appendices. • The first comprehensive survey of the medieval coinages of north Italy • Makes previously inaccessible specialist work available to an international audience • The illustrated catalogue enables easy comparison and familiarisation, including coins from the world-famous Grierson collection Medieval European Coinage 1165pp 152 b/w illus. 6 maps 61 tables February 2020 9781107568747 Paperback GBP 27.99 / USD 41.99 November 2016 9780521260213 Hardback GBP 193.00 / USD 292.00 eISBN 9781139027205

Medieval Self-Coronations The History and Symbolism of a Ritual Jaume Aurell | Universidad de Navarra, Spain

This original and comprehensive study of the practice of royal self-coronations from late antiquity to the present exposes as myth the idea that Napoleon was the first to perform the act of self-coronation, vividly demonstrating that self-coronations were not as transgressive or unconventional as has been imagined. • The first systematic study of the practice of royal self-coronations, from Ancient Persia to contemporary Hawaii • Blends theory and practice to unravel the symbolism of the ritual of self-coronations over the longue duree • Offers a fresh perspective on the crucial issue of the legitimation of the power 400pp June 2020 9781108840248 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108879279

A compelling and revisionist account of the economic, literary and social history of Florence in the immediate aftermath of the Black Death. Organised around Petrarch’s ‘war’ against the Ubaldini of 1349–1350, by connecting warfare with the plague narrative, William Caferro offers an important contribution to the history of Renaissance Florence. • Proposes a new understanding of the impact of the Black Death in Florence • An integrated study of the impact of war on Florence, which examines its effect on public finance, the economy, and political institutions • Contextualises Florentine history and crosses disciplinary boundaries, connecting literature and history through the surprisingly neglected phenomenon of war 240pp March 2020 9781108439305 Paperback GBP 21.99 / USD 27.99 May 2018 9781108424011 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108539555

Princely Power in Late Medieval France Jeanne de Penthièvre and the War for Brittany Erika Graham-Goering

The first critical study of Jeanne de Penthièvre (c.1326–1384), duchess of Brittany and an important political player of the early Hundred Years’ War, sheds light on status, gender, and cooperation as crucial components of late medieval power structures. • The first critical study of Jeanne de Penthièvre (c.1326–1384), duchess of Brittany and an important political player of the early Hundred Years’ War • Sheds light on women’s rulership as a component of power structures in the early Hundred Years’ War • Will appeal to students and scholars of medieval France, social, political, and gender history Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series 302pp April 2020 9781108489096 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108773904

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The Eucharist in Medieval Canon Law Thomas M. Izbicki | Rutgers University, New Jersey

Thomas Izbicki presents a new analysis of the medieval Church’s teaching about and the regulation of the practice of the Eucharist. Examining the relationship between the adoration of the sacrament and canon law, Izbicki draws on canon law collections and commentaries, synodal enactments, legal manuals and books about ecclesiastical offices. • Links the doctrine of the real presence of Christ to discipline and how it impacted local practice • Looks at the larger picture by presenting European-wide examples of local law and practice, from Germany, Cyprus, Moravia, Castile, and other places • Offers a systematic review of the sources, such as canon law collections and commentaries 288pp May 2020 9781107561809 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 October 2015 9781107124417 Hardback GBP 70.99 / USD 110.00 eISBN 9781316408148

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The Liturgical Past in Byzantium and Early Rus Sean Griffin | Dartmouth College, New Hampshire

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Original and engaging, this substantial contribution to the study of the Rus Primary Chronicle, the most important piece of evidence for the history of the Rus in the eleventh and twelfth centuries, includes the first English-language translations of key Slavonic sources. • Includes English translations of all primary sources, including many published here for the first time • Provides a major contribution to the study of the written history of East Slavic civilization • Demonstrates how these chronicle stories were later used for political as well as religious purposes Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series 285pp August 2020 9781108814843 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 August 2019 9781107156760 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781316661543

Thinking about Animals in Thirteenth-Century Paris Theologians on the Boundary Between Humans and Animals Ian P. Wei | University of Bristol

Exploring the diverse ways in which theologians at the University of Paris in the thirteenth century understood the differences and similarities between humans and animals, this book analyses key theological works to demonstrate how thinking about animals became a crucial tool for generating knowledge of God and the whole of creation. • Resonates with current debates about what defines humanity and how humans should relate to other creatures • Presents extended close reading of key texts, including by William of Auvergne, Bonaventure, Albert the Great and Thomas Aquinas • Demonstrates the crucial importance of animals for understanding medieval attitudes towards the whole of creation and the creator 330pp August 2020 9781108830157 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108907552

European History - 450 - 1000 After Charlemagne Carolingian Italy and its Rulers Clemens Gantner | Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien

Bringing together the foremost scholars of early medieval Italy, After Charlemagne offers new perspectives on the politics, culture, society and economy of ninth-century Italy and paints a vivid picture of a multifaceted peninsula with complex international relations, a fascinating but neglected period of Italian history. • Offers a comprehensive and accessible history of ninth-century Italy in English • Brings together a wide range of international experts and presents their cutting-edge research • Emphasises the diversity of the Italian peninsula, exploring topics at a regional level as well as within the broader Italian or international context 350pp January 2021 9781108840774 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108887762

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Carolingian Catalonia Politics, Culture, and Identity in an Imperial Province, 778–987 Cullen J. Chandler

Using a range of evidence, Chandler addresses the political development of the Carolingian Spanish March as part of the Carolingian ‘experiment’. Tracing the region’s relationship with the monarchy over two centuries, he revises traditional views of ethnic motivations for action and prior interpretations of the constitutional birth of Catalonia. • Presents a general and analytical overview of the history of the Carolingian Spanish March • Revises traditional interpretations of the early political and constitutional history of Catalonia • Explores the concept of identity in the Early Middle Ages Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series 337pp 1 b/w illus. 3 maps April 2020 9781108465199 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 January 2019 9781108474641 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108565745

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Conquest and Christianization Saxony and the Carolingian World, 772–888 Ingrid Rembold | University of Oxford

The political integration and Christianization of Saxony has long been counted among Charlemagne’s failures. This accessible account of the conquest re-evaluates this view and shows how the success of this transformation has important implications for how we view governance, the institutional church, and Christian communities in the early Middle Ages. • Offers a new synthesis of the history of Saxony in the Carolingian period • Suggests a more grassroots model of Christianization • Accessible to students and non-specialist readers Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series 295pp 1 b/w illus. 5 maps March 2020 9781316647202 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 December 2017 9781107196216 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108164597

Cultivating the City in Early Medieval Italy Caroline Goodson | University of Cambridge

Concentrating on a period of social, economic, and political change in the Italian peninsula, Caroline Goodson demonstrates the centrality of foodgrowing gardens to the cultural lives and economic realities of early medieval cities, and shows how urban gardening transformed Roman ideas and economic structures into new, medieval values. • Challenges conventional ideas about the Fall of Rome • Offers a new way to see and analyse urban experience in early medieval cities • Unites textual and material evidence for urban horticulture 336pp January 2021 9781108489119 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108773966


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Epitaph for an Era Politics and Rhetoric in the Carolingian World Mayke de Jong | Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands

Epitaph for an Era is the first major study of the Epitaphium Arsenii, a polemical dialogue defending the courtier Wala’s revolt in 830–833 against Emperor Louis the Pious. Mayke de Jong explores the impact of these controversial rebellions on the ideals and values of the Frankish leadership in the next generation. • Challenges the divide between political and literary history • Offers an in-depth analysis of the literary representations of the text as well as the political consequences, to appeal across disciplines • Explains complex issues such as rhetorical theory and Latin political vocabulary in a way that is accessible to historians and non-specialists alike 284pp 1 map 4 tables May 2020 9781108813884 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 May 2019 9781107014312 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781139013710

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Law and Authority in the Early Middle Ages The Frankish leges in the Carolingian Period Thomas Faulkner

This study provides an examination of the role of the barbarian law codes in the Carolingian period. Thomas Faulkner contributes to debates about written law, dispute settlement, ethnic identities and kingship in the age of Charlemagne and his successors, and provides new interpretations of key texts, and a thorough assessment of their manuscripts. • Examines the uses of the leges barbarorum in Carolingian Europe, contributing to a long-standing debate in English and German historiography on the use of written law codes in early medieval Europe • Contributes to the study of early medieval kingship, dispute settlement, ethnic identity and literacy • Brings German scholarship to the attention of English speakers, providing Anglophone readers with a guide to otherwise inaccessible work Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series 314pp 8 b/w illus. 10 tables April 2020 9781107446892 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 February 2016 9781107084919 Hardback GBP 70.99 / USD 110.00 eISBN 9781316027097

Literary Circles in Byzantine Iconoclasm Patrons, Politics and Saints Óscar Prieto Domínguez | Universidad de Salamanca, Spain

The first book to comprehensively examine the literature of Byzantine Iconoclasm and its aftermath not as isolated phenomena, but within their own social, cultural and political contexts. Argues for the key role played by literary circles emerging both during the persecution and immediately after the restoration of icons in 843. • Pioneering study of the literary nature of the texts produced during Iconoclasm • Emphasises the texts’ use as ideological tools by different circles, such as ecclesiastical institutions and imperial power structures • Adopts a multidisciplinary approach combining sociology of literature, religious and cultural studies, political history and source criticism 420pp January 2021 9781108491303 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108868129

Rome and the Invention of the Papacy The Liber Pontificalis Rosamond McKitterick | University of Cambridge

The remarkable papal history known as the Liber pontificalis permanently shaped perceptions and the memory of Rome, the popes, and the many-layered past of both city and papacy within Western Europe. Rosamond McKitterick offers pioneering insights into the evolution of this extraordinary source, and its significance. • Offers a new perspective on the early medieval popes and the history of Rome • Explains how the Liber pontificalis was the fundamental building block of papal ideology rather than just an occasional source of information • Situates the theme of papal authority in a Roman context, showing how the text reflects the changing conditions of the city The James Lydon Lectures in Medieval History and Culture 288pp June 2020 9781108836821 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108872584

Rome in the Eighth Century A History in Art John Osborne | Carleton University, Ottawa

Combines the evidence of written texts with ‘material culture’ (primarily buildings and their decoration) to present a more complete picture of a pivotal century in the city’s history that has long been viewed as a ‘dark age’. For all those interested in medieval Italy and the city of Rome. • Adopts a multi-disciplinary approach to the history of the city of Rome in the early Middle Ages, with a primary focus on ‘material culture’ • Demonstrates the persistence of Mediterranean culture in Rome even after the political ties with Constantinople had been broken • Utilizes numerous ‘case studies’ of individual monuments, which are treated as historical documents British School at Rome Studies 312pp 52 b/w illus. 10 colour illus. July 2020 9781108834582 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108876056

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The World of Kosmas Illustrated Byzantine Codices of the Christian Topography Maja Kominko | University of Oxford

Focusing on the Christian Topography, a sixthcentury illustrated treatise, this book discusses the creation of the Christian cosmography, the reception of ancient science in late antiquity, and the ways in which Christians navigated the contradictions between ‘secular’ and ‘religious’ sources, both written and visual. • Proposes a new holistic approach to this important text, considering text and image together • Investigates in full the intellectual milieu in which it was created, and in particular its marriage of ancient science and Biblical exegesis to create a new Christian image of the universe • Examines the history of text illustration in late antiquity and of the transmission of illustrated manuscripts into the Middle Ages 423pp 201 b/w illus. 33 colour illus. 1 map 1 table May 2020 9781108816373 Paperback GBP 27.99 / USD 36.99 September 2013 9781107020887 Hardback GBP 89.99 / USD 142.00 eISBN 9781139107983

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Writing the Early Medieval West

Bavarian Tourism and the Modern World, 1800–1950

Elina Screen | University of Oxford

Adam T. Rosenbaum

This innovative collection by fifteen leading scholars re-evaluates the function and significance of the written word in early medieval Europe in light of recent research, setting the field on a new footing and showcasing new directions. • Showcases the diversity of the written word in early medieval Europe over a range of genres and media • Dedicated to Rosamond McKitterick, this title brings together a diverse range of historians working across several different countries • Integrates detailed and specific study with wider conceptual framing

Bavarian Tourism and the Modern World, 1800–1950 examines the connections between Bavarian tourism and German modernity during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries using a variety of tourist propaganda. By promoting an image of ‘grounded modernity’, Bavarian tourism reconciled continuity with change, tradition with progress, and nature with science. • Defines tourism as a coping mechanism which helped modern citizens to come to terms with rapid socioeconomic changes • Demonstrates how the marketing of tourism could engage with broader discourses about history and modernity • Deemphasizes regionalism as an explanatory trope with a more nuanced way of thinking about national and sub-national identities

331pp March 2020 9781316648162 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 33.99 May 2018 9781107198395 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108182386

European History after 1450

Publications of the German Historical Institute 296pp 14 b/w illus. March 2020 9781107530850 Paperback GBP 21.99 / USD 27.99 February 2016 9781107111950 Hardback GBP 70.99 / USD 110.00 eISBN 9781316282359

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1789: The French Revolution Begins Robert H. Blackman

The first comprehensive and accessible study of the critical constitutional debates in the Estates General and National Assembly of 1789 through which the National Assembly became a sovereign body. Robert H. Blackman uses diverse primary sources to create a compelling, narrative-driven account of events leading up to the French Revolution. • Analyses the critical constitutional debates in the Estates General and National Assembly of 1789 in unprecedented detail • Draws on a wide range of previously underused sources including letters, eye witness accounts and deputies’ diary entries • Demonstrates the importance of Louis XVI’s actions in driving the Revolutionaries to take action to reform the French constitution and state New Studies in European History 297pp August 2020 9781108716673 Paperback GBP 21.99 / USD 29.99 August 2019 9781108492447 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108591447

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Citizenship and Antisemitism in French Colonial Algeria, 1870–1962 Sophie B. Roberts | University of Kentucky

An innovative study of antisemitic violence and hotly contested debates over the nature of French identity and rights of citizenship in French Algeria. This investigation reveals the experience of Algerian Jews and their evolving identity as citizens as they competed for control over the scarce resources of the colonial state. • Explores meanings of citizenship and identity in multicultural contexts • Raises awareness of different forms of antisemitism in the modern world • Draws attention to municipal government as a focal point of political power and patronage, highlighting the significance of local venues for the expression of major political ideas and policies 393pp 9 b/w illus. 2 maps 2 tables May 2020 9781316638446 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 33.99 December 2017 9781107188150 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781316946411

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An Exiled Generation German and Hungarian Refugees of Revolution, 1848–1871 Heléna Tóth | Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munchen

Focusing on émigrés from Baden, Württemberg and Hungary in four host societies (Switzerland, the Ottoman Empire, England and the United States), Tóth considers exile in the aftermath of the revolutions of 1848–9 as a European phenomenon with global dimensions, with insights into patterns of social and political interaction. • Looks at exile in a broad social context • Presents new archival material • Written in a simple and accessible manner

310pp 3 b/w illus. 3 maps 2 tables October 2020 9781107682290 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 October 2014 9781107046634 Hardback GBP 79.99 / USD 125.00

eISBN 9781107110335

Debating Sex and Gender in Eighteenth-Century Spain Marta V. Vicente | University of Kansas

Vicente analyses the philosophical, medical and legal debates about sexual difference in eighteenth-century Spain to demonstrate how formal definitions of man and woman often clashed with the reality of sex and gender, utilising case studies to trace the lives of particular individuals with ambiguous sexual and gender traits. • Proposes that modern notions of sex and gender arose in the eighteenth century • Demonstrates how eighteenth-century notions of sex and gender have shaped current feminist debates • Offers important new contributions to the current discussion about transgender issues and debates over biological basis for sexual difference 230pp June 2020 9781108814218 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 31.99 October 2017 9781107159556 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316671689


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Debating the Woman Question in the French Third Republic, 1870–1920 Karen Offen | Stanford University, California

Karen Offen offers a magisterial reconstruction and analysis of the heated debates around relations between women and men, how they are constructed, and how they should be organized or reorganized, that raged in France and its French-speaking neighbors during the French Third Republic. • Proposes an innovative, gendered, thematic view of French history during the first fifty years of the Third Republic • Provides and analyzes the actual debates on the woman question as they took place over small periods of time, with attention to defenders of the masculine-dominated status quo as well as to the challengers who contested male hegemony • Written in narrative prose, without theoretical jargon or conceit; no theoretical template has been imposed New Studies in European History 710pp December 2020 9781316638408 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 29.99 January 2018 9781107188044 Hardback GBP 39.99 / USD 49.99 eISBN 9781316946336

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Diplomacy in Renaissance Rome The Rise of the Resident Ambassador Catherine Fletcher | University of Sheffield

Renaissance Rome was the diplomatic centre of Europe, the Brussels of its day. This new study, the first comprehensive survey of its topic for sixty years, analyses the rise of modern, permanent diplomacy at the papal court, setting its structures, practices and personnel in context. • Provides a comprehensive overview of Renaissance diplomatic practice • Revisits the classic narrative of the rise of resident diplomacy in light of trends in ‘new diplomatic history’ • Focuses on historical sources and detailed primary research from European archives 200pp 3 b/w illus. May 2020 9781107515789 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 October 2015 9781107107793 Hardback GBP 70.99 / USD 110.00 eISBN 9781316256541

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Economistes and the Reinvention of Empire France in the Americas and Africa, c.1750–1802 Pernille Røge | University of Pittsburgh

This history of the struggles to regenerate France’s colonial empire in the eighteenth century reveals how political economists, colonial administrators and planters shaped the recalibration of empire in the Americas and Africa, unearthing connections between Ancien Régime colonial innovation and the French Revolution’s republican imperial agenda. • Offers a fresh interpretation of the French colonial empire in the late eighteenth century • Explores continuities between France’s first and second colonial empires • Will appeal broadly to historians of economic thought, colonial policy and practice, and the Age of Revolutions

English Convents in Catholic Europe, c.1600–1800 James E. Kelly | University of Durham

Highlighting the significance of the English convents in exile as part of, and contributors to, national and European Catholic culture, James E. Kelly situates the English Catholic experience within the wider context of the Catholic Reformation and Catholic Europe, and thus transforms our understanding of the convents. • Serves as the entry point to the world of the nuns over the two centuries of their existence in exile • Covers the full conventual movement for the whole exile period • Situates the English convents in relation to the transnational Catholic Church, to help decentre the Catholic Reformation 232pp January 2020 9781108479967 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108846851

Exiled Among Nations German and Mennonite Mythologies in a Transnational Age John P. R. Eicher

How do migrants and refugees fashion group identities in the modern world? Following two communities of German-speaking Mennonites across four continents between 1870 and 1945, this transnational study explores how religious nomads selectively engaged with nationalism to secure practical objectives and create local mythologies. • Provides a truly transnational account of German and North/South American Mennonite relationships to twentieth-century nationalism • Illuminates how millions of overseas Germans selectively promoted and abandoned their identifications as agrarian, Christian, German, and ‘white’, to adapt to the homogenizing - though ever-shifting demands of national citizenship • Explains how and why conservative Mennonites used transnational means for their own anti-national ends, and why they chose to live as premodern, agrarian subjects rather than as modern, nationalized citizens Publications of the German Historical Institute 356pp January 2020 9781108486118 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108626392

Fighting Terror after Napoleon How Europe Became Secure after 1815 Beatrice de Graaf | Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands

Europe was forged out of the ashes of the Napoleonic wars by means of a collective fight against revolutionary terror. The Allied Council created a culture of in- and exclusion, of people that were persecuted and those who were protected, using secret police, black lists, border controls and fortifications, and financed by European capital holders. • Helps us to understand how a unified Europe came to be constructed around the collective fight against terror after 1815 • Examines the Allied Council, and its history, on the basis of new archives • Uncovers the emergence of secret police, black lists, border control and fortifications, and financial securities, in and around Europe 440pp October 2020 9781108842068 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108895873

New Studies in European History 312pp 2 b/w illus. 5 maps August 2020 9781108716413 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 August 2019 9781108483131 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108672900

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Forests in Revolutionary France

Making Archives in Early Modern Europe

Conservation, Community, and Conflict, 1669–1848 Kieko Matteson | University of Hawaii, Manoa

Proof, Information, and Political RecordKeeping, 1400–1700 Randolph C. Head | University of California, Riverside

This book investigates the bitterly contested development of environmental conservation in France from the seventeenth to the nineteenth century, suggesting that conflicts over forests between the state, landowning elites, and the peasantry reflected escalating demand for this most vital of natural resources and shaped the country’s revolutionary struggles. • Integrates the history of political upheaval and far-reaching policy changes • Reinterprets one of the world’s most important historical events (the French Revolution) in light of environmental struggles that still resonate today • Appeals to readers interested in law, politics, rural society, and economics

Drawing on a wide range of archives, from Lisbon to Vienna to Berlin, this detailed comparative study shows how recorded political knowledge was understood, organised and managed in chancelleries and repositories across Western Europe from the High Middle Ages to the Enlightenment. • The first fully comparative study of European political archives between the Middle Ages and modernity • Systematically investigates what records nascent European states kept, how they were kept, and how they became accessible (or not) • Draws extensively on the latest archival theory, incorporating an interdisciplinary perspective

Studies in Environment and History 325pp 3 b/w illus. 2 maps February 2020 9781107690813 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 April 2015 9781107043343 Hardback GBP 72.99 / USD 112.00 eISBN 9781107338197

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Judging Faith, Punishing Sin Inquisitions and Consistories in the Early Modern World Charles H. Parker | St Louis University, Missouri

The first comparative analysis of Catholic inquisitions and Calvinist consistories from the fifteenth to eighteenth centuries, both institutions with critical roles in the social upheaval of the Reformation. This volume offers a new framework for analysing religious reform and social discipline in the early modern world. • Offers the first sustained comparative study of religious discipline in the early modern period from both Catholic and Protestant dimensions • Provides a new framework for analysing religious reform and social discipline in the great Christian age of reformation • Re-evaluates historical understandings of religious discipline during the Reformation

411pp 4 maps 2 tables June 2020 9781316505861 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 29.99 March 2017 9781107140240 Hardback GBP 94.99 / USD 126.00 eISBN 9781316492659

366pp August 2020 9781108462525 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 June 2019 9781108473781 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108620659

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Marking the Jews in Renaissance Italy Politics, Religion, and the Power of Symbols Flora Cassen | University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Beginning with a sartorial study - how the Jews were marked on their clothing and what these marks meant - the book offers an in-depth analysis of anti-Jewish discrimination across three Italian city-states: Milan, Genoa, and Piedmont. It also examines the place of Jews and Jewry law in Early Modern European politics. • The first book-length treatment of the Jewish badge in over one hundred years, appealing to readers who want to understand the history of the Jewish badge and the history of antisemitism • Studies the social, economic, and political ramifications of discriminatory policies in Renaissance Italy, and will be of interest to social and cultural history readers, and those interested in the history of Jews in Europe • The focus on the badge as a physical marker allows readers to explore the symbolism behind the marker and its implications then and through time 233pp March 2020 9781316627471 Paperback GBP 23.99 / USD 31.99 August 2017 9781107175433 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316798492


European History

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Monarchy Transformed Princes and their Elites in Early Modern Western Europe Robert von Friedeburg | Bishop Grosseteste University, Lincoln

A decisive contribution to the long-running debate about the dynamics of state formation and elite transformation in early modern Europe, Monarchy Transformed brings together twelve leading scholars from nine countries to examine the new monarchies that emerged during the course of the ‘long seventeenth century’. • Brings together leading scholars from nine countries to synthesise major developments in historiography across Western and Northern Europe • Challenges anachronistic views of the shape of European states and the inevitability of modern maps of Europe • Offers a fresh account of the way elites articulated their understanding of royal power and its limits 405pp March 2020 9781316649633 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 August 2017 9781316510247 Hardback GBP 94.99 / USD 126.00 eISBN 9781108225083

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Murder in Renaissance Italy Trevor Dean | Roehampton Institute, London

This invaluable collection explores the many faces of murder and its cultural presences across the Italian peninsula in the Renaissance. Dealing with a range of murders and informed by the latest criminological research on homicide, the book brings together research by an international team of specialists in a traditionally understudied field. • Allows readers to see how murder permeated Renaissance society and culture • Links the study of historical murder with contemporary attitudes to types of murder • Brings together leading experts in the field to offer a comprehensive portrait of the law, literature, and imagery of murder 325pp 23 b/w illus. March 2020 9781316501962 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 July 2017 9781107136649 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316480045

Protestant Empires Globalizing the Reformations Ulinka Rublack | University of Cambridge

Protestantism during the early modern period is predominantly presented as a European story. Through its wide geographical and chronological scope, this volume advances a new approach to understanding the Protestant Reformations, demonstrating the crucial role of global interactions, placing Protestant ideas and practices in a comparative context. • Replaces Euro-centric accounts of Protestantism for the early modern period • Connects the history of Protestant Europe with global history • Underlines the importance of the history of slavery and of the emotions for the history of Protestantism before 1800 350pp September 2020 9781108841610 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108894449

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Reading and Rebellion in Catholic Germany, 1770–1914 Jeffrey T. Zalar | University of Cincinnati

In this panoramic study of Catholic book culture in Germany from 1770–1914, Jeffrey T. Zalar exposes the myth that the clergy defined Catholic reading habits. He shows that readers disobeyed the book rules of their church and read diverse literature, even works from the Index of Forbidden Books. • Contains lively and detailed accounts of popular rebellion at the core of the Catholic church as Catholics resisted their church’s book rules • Challenges dominant perceptions by highlighting that the most important structuring force of change in the modern church was popular literacy • Addresses the national integration of a minority group Publications of the German Historical Institute 400pp 1 b/w illus. June 2020 9781108460743 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 29.99 November 2018 9781108472906 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108561648

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Piero di Lorenzo de’ Medici and the Crisis of Renaissance Italy Alison Brown | Royal Holloway, University of London

This life of Lorenzo the Magnificent’s eldest son provides a portrait of an aspiring Renaissance ruler, and explains the crisis in Italy that caused his political downfall and exile. A musician, poet, sportsman, patron of the arts and exile, Piero illuminates the Renaissance at the moment of its transition from a civic to a princely culture. • An interdisciplinary examination of Renaissance Italy, combining political, social and cultural history • A biographic focus roots broader themes of the period to the lived experience and contextualises the patronage, politics and culture of the period • Provides a new perspective on a relatively understudied period of crisis in Renaissance Italy 350pp January 2020 9781108489461 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120 eISBN 9781108783798

Storied Places Pilgrim Shrines, Nature, and History in Early Modern France Virginia Reinburg | Boston College, Massachusetts

Pilgrim shrines were places of healing, holiness, and truth in early modern France. By analyzing the creation of these shrines as natural, legendary, and historic places whose authority provided a new foundation for post-Reformation Catholic life, Virginia Reinburg examines the impact of the Reformation and religious wars on French society. • Combines religious and environmental history • Proposes a new approach to pilgrimage by focusing on the shrines and places, rather than the pilgrims • Provides a new angle on the religious history of France after the religious wars 273pp 47 b/w illus. 6 maps June 2020 9781108716390 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 April 2019 9781108483117 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108672795

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29


European History

NEW IN PAPERBACK

The Convent of Wesel The Event that Never was and the Invention of Tradition Jesse Spohnholz | Washington State University

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The Convent of Wesel was long believed to be a foundational but clandestine assembly of Protestant leaders. Jesse Spohnholz shows that this idea was a myth perpetuated by historians and record keepers since the 1600s and then explores what this means for the study of history. • Offers a microhistory of a document produced in the sixteenth century that stands at the centre of a 450-year old mystery • Offers a macrohistory of historical thinking about a specific topic over four centuries • Provides a concrete example of historical methodology for advanced students of history, so that readers can more effectively see the practical impact of methodological choices 297pp 13 b/w illus. 1 map January 2020 9781316643549 Paperback GBP 21.99 / USD 29.99 September 2017 9781107193116 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108140492

The Dutch Overseas Empire, 1600–1800 Pieter C. Emmer | Universiteit Leiden

This pioneering history of the Dutch Empire provides a new comprehensive overview of Dutch colonial expansion from a comparative and global perspective. It also offers a fascinating window into the early modern societies of Asia, Africa and the Americas through their interactions. • Offers the first full survey of the Dutch overseas empire over two centuries – an important but neglected element of colonial and global history • Overturns a colonial approach by offering a comparative and indigenous perspective on Dutch overseas expansion • Uses regional histories to understand the process of Dutch overseas expansion and early modern globalisation 400pp October 2020 9781108428378 Hardback GBP 69.99 / USD 89.99 October 2020 9781108449519 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781108647403

The Intellectual World of Sixteenth-Century Florence Humanists and Culture in the Age of Cosimo I Ann E. Moyer | University of Pennsylvania

This study provides an overview of Florentine intellectual life and community in the late Renaissance. It shows how studies of language helped Florentines to develop their own story as a people distinct from ancient Greece or Rome. • Provides overview of intellectual life and community in 16th-c Florence • Shows how the studies of language, history, and art related and supported each other in later Renaissance • Helps locate the arguments about the nature of the Renaissance in the era of the Renaissance itself 350pp August 2020 9781108495479 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108849937

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The Politics of Wine in Early Modern France Religion and Popular Culture in Burgundy, 1477–1630 Mack P. Holt | George Mason University, Virginia

Focusing on the local wine industry, Mack Holt examines the relationship between the ruling and popular classes and demonstrates how ordinary Burgundians were crucial in turning back the tide of Protestantism in the sixteenth century, until the absolutist policies of Louis XIII curtailed their influence on local politics. • Shows how the popular classes participated in and affected politics in Burgundy between the fifteenth and seventeenth centuries • Explains why Burgundy remained Catholic in the Reformation • Illuminates the important role of the local wine industry in local politics and religion New Studies in European History 368pp 26 b/w illus. 3 maps 17 tables March 2020 9781108456814 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 33.99 September 2018 9781108471886 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108620017

The Purchase of the Past Collecting Culture in Post-Revolutionary Paris c.1790–1890 Tom Stammers | University of Durham

Surveying the collecting culture from the French Revolution to the Belle Époque, this study explores how material things became a central means by which the past was accessed and imagined in nineteenth-century Paris, revealing how the Revolution triggered the rise of a new market for antiques and new struggles over the custody of France’s heritage. • Offers the first broad survey of the development of the culture of collecting over the long nineteenth century, from the French Revolution to the Belle Époque • Demonstrates how the French Revolution triggered the emergence of the modern market in collecting art, books and antiques, centred in Paris • Analyses the frictions that emerged from the parallel growth of public and private collecting over the period, which shaped the politics around cultural heritage

370pp 30 b/w illus. June 2020 9781108478847 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108781268

The Shaping of French National Identity Narrating the Nation’s Past, 1715–1830 Matthew D’Auria | University of East Anglia

Casts new light on the intellectual origins of the’official’ French nineteenth-century national narrative by examining how historians and philosophers conceived of the French past from the early eighteenth century to the Restoration, reshaping the myths, symbols, and memories of pre-modern communities. • Reveals continuities and discontinuities in French intellectual history before and after the Revolution • Explores the relationship between national narratives and definitions of race, national character, and class in early-modern and modern France • Considers the impact of changes in historical scholarship, as well as the emotive strength of nationalism, on French identity in the long eighteenth century New Studies in European History 325pp December 2020 9781107128095 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781316423189


European History

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Thieves in Court The Making of the German Legal System in the Nineteenth Century Rebekka Habermas | Georg-August-Universität, Göttingen, Germany

Ideal for legal historians and scholars interested in the evolution of legal systems, Habermas offers a fresh look at thievery in the German countryside in the nineteenth century and shows how these instances influenced the emergence of the modern legal system and a new conception of property emerged. • Proposes a new understanding of legal systems providing readers an alternative to classic narratives of legal development, state building, and modern notions of the rule of law • Offers a transdisciplinary approach by combining legal, criminal, and media history, and history of knowledge • The focus on case-studies in nineteenth-century rural Germany gives an innovative insight into how ordinary people and events influence large scale legal structures Publications of the German Historical Institute 361pp 3 tables March 2020 9781107624887 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 31.99 November 2016 9781107046771 Hardback GBP 82.99 / USD 132.00 eISBN 9781107110755

War and Citizenship Enemy Aliens and National Belonging from the French Revolution to the First World War Daniela L. Caglioti | Università degli Studi di Napoli ‘Federico II’

Daniela L. Caglioti shows how states at war, when faced with real or alleged security threats, redrew the boundaries between members and nonmembers, thus redefining belonging and the path to citizenship. A key text for those interested in questions of citizenship, human rights, immigration, national borders, international law and security. • Combines global, comparative, transnational and trans-imperial approaches to help redefine citizenship and belonging • Provides a multi-disciplinary approach, connecting history with sociology, law and international relations • Considers the impact of war on a wide range of actors, including states and armies, but also diplomats, lawyers and ordinary people caught by war or changing national boundaries Human Rights in History 430pp October 2020 9781108489423 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108776493

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Wine, Sugar, and the Making of Modern France Global Economic Crisis and the Racialization of French Citizenship, 1870–1910 Elizabeth Heath | Bernard M. Baruch College, City University of New York

This is an innovative study of how race and empire transformed French republican citizenship during the early Third Republic. Integrating the histories of metropolitan and colonial France, Elizabeth Heath reveals how global market integration and economic crisis redefined French republican citizenship, creating the foundations of the modern French racial state. • Places French empire within the context of nineteenth-century globalization, paving the way for rethinking the relationship between imperialism and globalization • Rethinks the role of race in the making of modern France, reframing the discussion by placing the French racial state within a global context • Offers a new interpretation of nation-building in the early Third Republic, combining its history with that of empire-building New Studies in European History 326pp 1 b/w illus. 2 maps 2 tables March 2020 9781107688582 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 33.99 October 2014 9781107070585 Hardback GBP 72.99 / USD 112.00 eISBN 9781107707498

Women’s Criminality in Europe, 1600–1914 Manon van der Heijden | Universiteit Leiden

Placing female criminality within its everyday context, this authoritative volume brings together the most current research on the relationship between crime and gender, and examines the urban socio-economic and cultural contexts that produced and circumscribed criminal agency in the Western world between 1600 and 1914. • Treats female criminality on its own terms rather than as always exceptional • Offers a broad Western geographical scope to reveal differences and similarities across the Western world • Provides a long-term perspective, connecting scholarship on the early modern and modern periods 270pp January 2020 9781108477710 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108774543

Russian, East European History NEW IN PAPERBACK

Antisemitism and the Russian Revolution Brendan McGeever | Birkbeck College, University of London

This study offers the first book-length analysis of how the Bolsheviks responded to antisemitism during the Russian Revolution. Brendan McGeever uncovers the surprising depth of antisemitism within sections of the working class, peasantry and Red Army, and reveals the explosive overlap between revolutionary politics and antisemitism. • Introduces an overlooked chapter in the history of anti-Jewish violence in eastern Europe • Offers a new perspective on how antisemitism can overlap with class relations • Uses archival sources to challenge previously held assumptions about antisemitism and the Russian Revolution 259pp September 2020 9781316647165 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 September 2019 9781107195998 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108164498

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European History / History - Cross Discipline

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Sexual Liberation, Socialist Style

32

History - Cross Discipline

Communist Czechoslovakia and the Science of Desire, 1945–1989 Kateřina Lišková | Masaryk University, Czech Republic

Diplomatic, International History

This is the first account of sexual liberation in Eastern Europe during the Cold War. Analyzing rich archival sources covering forty years of state socialism, it shows how sexologists and other experts advised the state on population development, marriage and the family to shape the most intimate aspects of people’s lives. • The first systematic analysis of sexuality and gender in postwar Czechoslovakia • Reverses Western narratives of sexual liberation, revealing how in the state-socialist East progressive measures came early, often advanced by expertise • Reinterprets the histories of the Cold War, showing that it was not simply a case of the state oppressing society, but that the experts influenced state policies that in turn shaped people’s lives

Writing Cold War History in Human Rights Litigation Natalie R. Davidson | Tel-Aviv University

293pp May 2020 9781108440844 Paperback GBP 23.99 / USD 31.99 May 2018 9781108424691 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108341332

The Russian Conquest of Central Asia A Study in Imperial Expansion, 1814–1914 Alexander Morrison | New College, Oxford

Russia’s conquest of Central Asia was perhaps the nineteenth century’s most dramatic and successful example of European imperial expansion. Alexander Morrison provides a definitive diplomatic and military history, explaining how and why a vast region of steppe, desert, mountain and oasis, mainly populated by Muslims, came under Russian rule. • Provides multiple perspectives on the conquest, giving a voice and agency to Central Asian actors • Combines Russian and English-language archival sources with memoir literature and Persianate chronicles • Based on extensive research in Russia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Georgia and India 480pp December 2020 9781107030305 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 135.00 eISBN 9781139343381

American Transitional Justice

Revisits two seminal human rights cases in the United States under the Alien Tort Statute, Filártiga and Marcos, exploring how these lawsuits operated as transitional justice mechanisms in the former Western bloc. Essential reading for scholars of international law, politics, social movements, human rights, globalization, history and memory. • Offers a new interpretation of the Alien Tort Statute and two of its foundational cases, Filártiga and Marcos • Demonstrates how stories told in court in one country can be reinterpreted and transformed in other countries, and how the press shapes our understanding of human rights litigation • Examines human rights lawsuits using the methodologies of law, history, anthropology and communication studies to show how interdisciplinary analysis can contribute to understanding the history of human rights and planning human rights activism Human Rights in History 270pp July 2020 9781108477703 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108774529

Cold Wars Asia, the Middle East, Europe Lorenz M. Lüthi | McGill University, Montréal

This ambitious study provides a new interpretation of the Cold War from the perspective of smaller and middle powers in Asia, the Middle East and Europe and addresses the long-term political, economic, intellectual and religious developments in these regions that continue to shape the world to this day. • Proposes a radical reinterpretation of the Cold War from the perspective of middle and smaller powers in Asia, the Middle East, and Europe • Features new archival sources from two dozen archives in four different continents • Analyses long-term economic, intellectual, and religious developments in multiple world regions to help us to comprehend the complexities of current times 784pp 10 maps March 2020 9781108418331 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 March 2020 9781108407069 Paperback GBP 26.99 / USD 34.99 eISBN 9781108289825


History - Cross Discipline

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Diplomacy Meets Migration US Relations with Cuba during the Cold War Hideaki Kami | Kanagawa University, Japan

Shows how migration influenced American foreign policy in Cuban-American relations during the Cold War. Drawing on multi-archival research, this study demonstrates how the US government reformulated its Cuban policy in response to the emergence of the Cuban-American community as a new, politically mobilized constituency. • Traces the historical trajectory of American-Cuban relations • Includes a historical analysis of migration and diplomacy, based on multi-archival research, giving readers first-hand knowledge of how migration would shape diplomacy • Proposes a new interpretation of diplomatic and international history, showing how new forces shaped American and international politics Cambridge Studies in US Foreign Relations 376pp 9 b/w illus. 1 map January 2020 9781108437547 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 August 2018 9781108423427 Hardback GBP 39.99 / USD 49.99 eISBN 9781108526043

International Jewish Humanitarianism in the Age of the Great War Jaclyn Granick | Cardiff University

Jaclyn Granick reveals the untold story of how American Jews reinvented modern humanitarianism during the Great War and rebuilt Jewish life in Jewish homelands. She provides insights into the origins of American Jewish philanthropy and politics and its implications for understanding modern humanitarianism as a whole. • Synthesizes Jewish and international history within one narrative • Reveals unexplored global power dynamics, international connections, and political positioning in a world of nation-states • Uses detailed, multi-archival research to provide a new and astonishing narrative about international Jewish humanitarianism Human Rights in History 380pp January 2021 9781108495028 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108860697

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Nuclear Threats, Nuclear Fear and the Cold War of the 1980s Eckart Conze | Philipps-Universität Marburg, Germany

Bringing together cutting-edge scholarship from the United States and Europe, Nuclear Threats, Nuclear Fear and the Cold War of the 1980s is an interdisciplinary anthology addressing the political and cultural responses to the arms race of the 1980s, thereby making a fundamental contribution to the emerging historiography of the 1980s. • Brings together scholarship from the United States and Europe to examine the dynamics of anti-nuclear protest movements in the West in the 1980s • Contributes to the emerging historiography of the 1980s by focusing on an under-researched aspect of the decade • Attests to the vital role of culture in communicating and popularizing anti-nuclear messages, with bearing on transformations in culture in the 1980s as a whole Publications of the German Historical Institute 386pp 3 b/w illus. March 2020 9781316501788 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 31.99 February 2017 9781107136281 Hardback GBP 99.99 / USD 132.00 eISBN 9781316479742

Plotting for Peace American Peacemakers, British Codebreakers, and Britain at War, 1914–1917 Daniel Larsen | University of Cambridge

Daniel Larsen reveals the dramatic role of British codebreaking during the First World War - leading to a revolutionary re-interpretation of U.S. President Woodrow Wilson’s diplomacy, British Prime Ministers H.H. Asquith’s and David Lloyd George’s war leaderships, British intelligence, and the Anglo-American economic relationship during the war. • Provides a dramatic re-interpretation of the role of British codebreaking during the First World War • Weaves together diplomatic, political, economic, and intelligence history • Explores the impact of US efforts to achieve a diplomatic end to the war on British war strategy and economic policy 400pp January 2021 9781108486682 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108761833

Jewish Internationalism and Human Rights after the Holocaust

Rogue Diplomats

Nathan A. Kurz | Birkbeck College, University of London

Historians have long ignored America’s record of diplomatic indiscipline. Rogue Diplomats redresses that deficiency, demonstrating that titanic accomplishments such as the Louisiana Purchase resulted in great part because diplomats refused to follow instructions. • Finds that many of the most important political, territorial, economic, and geostrategic triumphs during America’s first two hundred years of national existence came about because American diplomats intentionally disobeyed orders • Adopts a biographical approach, with each chapter focusing on the actions of one diplomat during one a pivotal foreign relations crisis • Draws on a variety of sources, including government archives, presidential libraries, and the private papers of diplomats

Nathan A. Kurz examines the separation between Jewish advocacy organizations and international human rights after Israel’s creation.A key text for those interested in the global politics of Israel, international advocacy of non-governmental organizations, political relations between diasporas and homelands, and the recent history of human rights. • Weaves together Jewish and international history • Provides a case-study of non-governmental organizations in action • Covers a broad geographical range to enable the reader to draw connections between regions and locales Human Rights in History 300pp September 2020 9781108834926 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108870429

The Proud Tradition of Disobedience in American Foreign Policy Seth Jacobs | Boston College, Massachusetts

Cambridge Studies in US Foreign Relations 406pp May 2020 9781107079472 Hardback GBP 26.99 / USD 34.99 eISBN 9781139941884

Visit our website at www.cambridge.org/academic

33


History - Cross Discipline

Economic History

Unravelled Dreams

Boom and Bust

Silk and the Atlantic World, 1500–1840 Ben Marsh

A Global History of Financial Bubbles William Quinn | Queen’s University Belfast

34

Why do stock and housing markets sometimes experience amazing booms followed by massive busts and why is this happening more and more frequently? Boom and Bust reveals why bubbles happen, and why some bubbles have catastrophic economic, social and political consequences, whilst others have actually benefited society. • Ranges across three hundred years of bubbles from the South Sea Bubble of 1720 to the sub-prime crisis and Chinese stock market crash • Provides tangible approaches that investors and governments can take to predict and address bubbles • Shows that not all bubbles are economically destructive and that some have actually benefited society 296pp 27 b/w illus. 13 tables August 2020 9781108421256 Hardback GBP 18.99 / USD 24.95 eISBN 9781108367677

GATT and Global Order in the Postwar Era Francine McKenzie | University of Western Ontario

In this international and institutional history of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, Francine McKenzie shows how trade was implicated in foreign policy and international relations in the postwar era. This accessibly written and timely study revises our understanding of the liberal international order. • Places global trade at the forefront of international relations and shows how trade was implicated in foreign policy, relations between states, and global order • Revises conventional narratives of the nature, dynamics, drivers, priorities and functioning of post-1945 international relations and the liberal international order • Explains why trade elicits divisive and controversial reactions from different people, organizations and states at different times and in different contexts 336pp 9 b/w illus. 3 tables April 2020 9781108494892 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108860192

A fascinating account of attempts to cultivate silk across New Spain, New France, British North America and the early United States. Ben Marsh shows how commodity failure, as much as success, can offer new insights into the aspirations, environment, and economic life in colonial societies. • A unique account of commodity failure in contrast to the much more heavily-studied success stories of silver, sugar, tobacco, rice, and cotton • Sheds new light on the distinctive features of British, French and Spanish Atlantic settlements and environments and demonstrates how failed schemes nonetheless contributed to colonial life and landscapes • Stresses the human challenges and improvisations at the household level, and how different populations sought to surmount the difficulties of establishing raw silk production with particular attention to the role of women and non-white labour 500pp April 2020 9781108418287 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108289672

Why Democracy Failed The Agrarian Origins of the Spanish Civil War James Simpson | Universidad Carlos III de Madrid

This distinctive new history of the origins of the Spanish Civil War tackles the highly-debated issue of why it was that Spain’s democratic Second Republic failed. James Simpson and Juan Carmona explore the interconnections between economic growth, state capacity, rural social mobility and the creation of mass competitive political parties. • Shows the restrictions imposed on young democracies by the levels of state capacity and systems of political organization that they inherited • Includes inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary perspectives showing the interconnections between political change and economic development • Explains how individuals with moderate political views became disillusioned with the Second Republic and were driven towards the extremes of the political spectrum Cambridge Studies in Economic History - Second Series 316pp May 2020 9781108487481 Hardback GBP 69.99 / USD 89.99 May 2020 9781108720380 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781108766999

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The Economic Consequences of the War West Germany’s Growth Miracle after 1945 Tamás Vonyó | Università Commerciale Luigi Bocconi, Milan

For many, Germany’s post-war economic power was based on liberal market reforms and the Marshall Plan. This book disputes this old myth. Quantitative evidence shows instead how the re-emergence of Germany as a leading industrial power was founded in the Second World War itself and the conditions it left behind. • Combines vast amounts of research, comprising contemporary economic and statistical analyses and historical studies that are not easily obtainable • The book’s rich quantitative evidence is presented in an accessible form and placed into a broader historical context with the data being of interest to both economists and historians • Each chapter focuses on a unique aspect of Germany’s economic development, making the information easy to navigate Cambridge Studies in Economic History - Second Series 292pp 27 b/w illus. 26 tables May 2020 9781107568716 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 February 2018 9781107128439 Hardback GBP 75 / USD 99 eISBN 9781316414927

Environmental History Social Sustainability, Past and Future Undoing Unintended Consequences for the Earth’s Survival Sander van der Leeuw | Arizona State University

For a professional, educated non-academic audience, this book asks how our societies were caught in a socio-economic dynamic causing the sustainability conundrum. It develops an original view of social evolution as the history of human information-processing, studying the past to understand the present in order to deal with the future. This title is also available as Open Access. • Proposes a new approach to integrated socio-environmental science • Views human history as a co-evolution of cognition, demography, social organization, technology and interaction with the environment • This title is also available as Open Access New Directions in Sustainability and Society 350pp 72 b/w illus. 33 colour illus. February 2020 9781108498692 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108595247


History - Cross Discipline

The American Steppes The Unexpected Russian Roots of Great Plains Agriculture, 1870s–1930s David Moon | University of York

Between the 1870s and 1930s, there were transfers of people, plants, agricultural sciences, and techniques from Russia’s steppes to the similar environment of North America’s Great Plains. Drawing on archival research in the US, Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan, this book explores the unexpected Russian roots of Great Plains agriculture. • Offers the first transnational environmental history of the North American Great Plains and the Eurasian steppes • Explores unexpected transfers of science and technology, specifically from Russia to the United States, in order to challenge stereotypes of Russian inferiority and American exceptionalism • Draws extensively on Russian- and German-language sources, making findings more accessible to historians of the United States Studies in Environment and History 352pp 1 b/w illus. 6 maps 1 table April 2020 9781107103603 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781316217320

The Power of the Periphery How Norway Became an Environmental Pioneer for the World Peder Anker | New York University

What is the source of Norway’s culture of environmental harmony in our troubled world? Exploring the role of Norwegian scholar-activists of the late twentieth century, Anker shows how their portrayal of Norway as a pristine natural environment of the periphery led to it being fashioned as an idealised ecological microcosm. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core. • Brings together the Norwegian history of anthropology, philosophy, theology, environmental studies, management, geology and economics • Demonstrates the global impact of environmental scholar-activists • Shows how collaboration between the sciences and the humanities has advanced the environmental cause • This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core Studies in Environment and History 300pp May 2020 9781108477567 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99\ eISBN 9781108763851

Global History A History of Humanity The Evolution of the Human System Patrick Manning | University of Pittsburgh

Integrates approaches from world history, environmental studies, biological and cultural evolution, social anthropology, sociology, and evolutionary linguistics to trace the evolution of humans and our complex social system, demonstrating how the strength of human institutions nevertheless brought us to the crises of today. • Demonstrates how human capabilities and social institutions arose through various processes of biological and cultural evolution, migration, and social evolution - resulting in the unique character of human society • Explores how the development of the human system now threatens the natural world of Gaia and threatens social conflict within and among societies • Integrates a wide range of disciplines and approaches in natural and social sciences, including history, evolutionary biology, cultural evolution, linguistics, systems theory, paleontology, environmental studies, psychology, history of science, popular culture, and philosophy

376pp 13 maps February 2020 9781108478199 Hardback GBP 59.99 / USD 79.99 February 2020 9781108747097 Paperback GBP 18.99 / USD 24.99 eISBN 9781108784528

Colonialism in Global Perspective Kris Manjapra | Tufts University, Massachusetts

This vibrant, compelling relational history of colonialism explores one of the most enduring and contested social, political, and cultural phenomena of all time. Here Manjapra communicates the research of expansive and interdisciplinary fields in clear and accessible ways for all readers wishing to understand the making of the modern world. • Introduces interlocking histories and dynamics of colonialism and its contestation • Reveals the entangled legacies of settler colonialism, racial slavery, and empire across Asia through to the present day • Communicates the research of expansive and interdisciplinary fields of study in a clear and accessible way 288pp May 2020 9781108425261 Hardback GBP 69.99 / USD 89.99 May 2020 9781108441360 Paperback GBP 18.99 / USD 24.99 eISBN 9781108560580

Feeding the People The Politics of the Potato Rebecca Earle | University of Warwick

Almost no one knew what a potato was in 1500. Today everyone eats them. This book traces the global journey of this popular foodstuff from the Andes to everywhere. En route it helps explain why we feel so ambivalent about governmental dietary guidelines and celebrates the contributions of ordinary people to shaping how we eat. • Offers a fresh account of how a plant that in 1500 was eaten by less than 5% of the world’s population is now the fourth most important global food crop • Places food (and especially potatoes) at the heart of the profound transformations that have created the world we live in today • Demonstrates the central role played by ordinary people in shaping how we eat today and the historical importance of mundane activities (such as eating) and ordinary things (such as potatoes) 308pp 33 b/w illus. June 2020 9781108484060 Hardback GBP 17.99 / USD 24.95 eISBN 9781108688451

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History - Cross Discipline

Humanitarianism in the Modern World The Moral Economy of Famine Relief Norbert Götz | Södertörns Högskola, Sweden

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Takes a fresh look at the history of famine relief and humanitarianism through a novel moral economy approach, drawing on case studies of the Great Irish Famine in the 1840s, the famine in Soviet Russia in 1921–3, and the famine in Ethiopia in the mid-1980s. This book is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core. • Provides innovative narratives of how humanitarianism has developed over the past two centuries • Takes a fresh look at humanitarian action by applying a reframed moral economy approach that focuses on aid appeals, the allocation of relief, and aid accounts • Presents three case studies of famine relief in different periods, geographical locations, and political circumstances: the Great Irish Famine of the 1840s, the famine in Soviet Russia in 1921–3, and the famine in Ethiopia in the mid-1980s • This book is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core 320pp July 2020 9781108493529 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108655903

Nationals Abroad Globalization, Individual Rights, and the Making of Modern International Law Christopher A. Casey | University of California, Berkeley

A broad-ranging and ambitious study of the changing relationships between countries and their nationals abroad, and the impact that mass migration played in shaping modern international law and politics. • Explores the concept of nationality and its changing role in organizing the international legal order • Provides a thorough exploration of the history of diplomatic protection • Contrasts the success of international property rights against the seeming failure of other international individual rights regimes Human Rights in History 316pp July 2020 9781108489454 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108784047

Race, Rights and Reform Black Activism in the French Empire and the United States from World War I to the Cold War Sarah C. Dunstan | Queen Mary University of London

Sarah C. Dunstan constructs a narrative of black struggles for rights and citizenship that spans most of the twentieth century, encompassing a wide range of people and movements from not only France and the United States, but also the French Caribbean and African colonies. • Reveals the rich and ongoing collaborations between black peoples as they fought for access to citizenship rights • Utilizes a range of sources from archives in North America and across Europe, including private correspondence, literary works, government documents and journals • Enriches and de-provincializes the study of black activism in the United States and France Global and International History 320pp March 2021 9781108486972 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108764971

Refugee Crises, 1945-2000 Political and Societal Responses in International Comparison Jan Jansen | German Historical Institute, Washington DC

This timely study examines responses to mass refugee movements by a range of actors from local communities to supranational organizations. Bringing together ten case studies from around the world, it pays particular attention to receiving societies in the Global South and to the long-term consequences of ‘refugee crises’. • Examines the ways receiving societies have handled the sudden inflow of large numbers of refugees between 1945 and 2000 • Includes cases studies from Asia, Africa and the Middle East, emphasizing that ‘refugee crises’ are not confined to affluent Western nations • A timely study published during a period of intense public debate surrounding Europe’s ‘refugee crises’ and the challenges posed for EU member states Publications of the German Historical Institute 350pp October 2020 9781108835138 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108891745

The Cambridge World History of Violence 4 Volume Hardback Set Phillip Dwyer | University of Newcastle, New South Wales

The Cambridge World History of Violence presents readers with an overview of the nature and the extent of violence across time and place, examining its causes, and considering the reasons for particular levels of violence at given moments of history. All four volumes are written by contributors who are experts in their fields. • Provides the first long-term study of violence, allowing us to place today’s world and its social problems in a much broader chronological context • Provides an accessible compendium to non-specialist readers; a readable account of the history of this crucial phenomenon; and a forward-looking project, exploring where current trends in research might, or should, lead over the coming years • The latest scholarship in a dynamic field, taking a specifically historical stance and focusing squarely on the changing nature of violence from pre-historic times to the present The Cambridge World History of Violence 2805pp March 2020 97813166268874 Hardback books GBP 385.00 / USD 500.00 eISBN 9781316626863

The Limits of Universal Rule Eurasian Empires Compared Yuri Pines | Hebrew University of Jerusalem

This volume explores the dynamics of expansion and contraction of major continental empires in Eurasia. It is the first comparative study that systematically addresses the factors - ideological, ecological, military, economical, and other - that shaped the empires’ space. • State-of the art analyses of major imperial enterprises in Eurasian history from antiquity to the early modern • Provides systematic comparisons of the spatial trajectories of major Eurasian empires • Brings together an international team of leading specialists 350pp January 2021 9781108488631 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108771061


History - Cross Discipline

The Origins of the British Empire in Asia, 1600–1750 David Veevers | Queen Mary University of London

This is a revisionist account of the origins of the British Empire in Asia in the early modern period. David Veevers shows that it was the integration of Europeans into non-European economies, states and societies which was central to British imperial and commercial success rather than national or mercantilist enterprise. • Provides a chronological and narrative-driven analysis of the British presence in Asia between 1600 and 1750 • Brings together diverging historiographical strands in imperial history, integrating both European and Asian histories of empire and state formation • Uses a wealth of archival sources to challenge long-established, Eurocentric views on imperial expansion and colonialism in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries 318pp 4 maps June 2020 9781108483957 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99

eISBN 9781108669344

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The Right to Dress Sumptuary Laws in a Global Perspective, c.1200–1800 Giorgio Riello | University of Warwick

The regulation of dress had a profound effect on global consumption and the shaping of the modern world. Leading scholars reveal why items of dress became aspirational goods, how they were lobbied for and marketed, and how people asserted their right to choose how they dressed as a ‘human right’. • Offers a new view of social change and the history of human rights by focusing on the regulation of dress in history • Challenges the current view that ordinary people before 1800 were uninterested in expressing identity through clothing • Includes more than fifty illustrations, vividly bringing to life a much neglected field of inquiry 523pp February 2020 9781108469272 Paperback GBP 29.99 / USD 38.99 January 2019 9781108475914 Hardback GBP 95.00 / USD 125.00 eISBN 9781108567541

History of Ideas and Intellectual History Constituent Power A History Lucia Rubinelli | University of Cambridge

Tracing the history of constituent power over five key moments from the French Revolution onwards, Lucia Rubinelli considers the history of the idea in relation to the state and its institutions, and asks why constituent power is so often conflated with sovereignty. • The first in-depth treatment of the history of the language of constituent power • Offers a clear analysis of the difference between constituent power and ideas of sovereignty • Will appeal equally to historians, who tend to confuse constituent power with notions of sovereignty, political theorists, who often disregard its history, and to scholars in public and constitutional law Ideas in Context 276pp May 2020 9781108485432 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108757119

Counsel and Command in Early Modern English Thought Joanne Paul | University of Sussex

Counsel and Command in Early Modern English Thought establishes the precise role political counsel played during the ‘monarchy of counsel’, from the end of the Wars of the Roses to the end of the English Civil War, and its relation to the discourse of sovereignty, through analysis of the relevant texts in their social and political contexts. • The first comprehensive exploration of early modern English political counsel in the Tudor and Stuart periods • Goes beyond the traditional ‘canonical’ thinkers in the history of political thought by considering a broader range of political commentators and actors in this period • Suggests a new understanding of the origins of a modern politics of sovereignty in the early modern discourse of counsel Ideas in Context 264pp February 2020 9781108490177 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108780407

Emotion, Sense, Experience Rob Boddice | Freie Universität Berlin

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What Is a Slave Society? The Practice of Slavery in Global Perspective Noel Lenski | Yale University, Connecticut

This book examines the widely accepted binary distinction between ‘slave societies’ and ‘societies with slaves’ as a paradigm for understanding the global practice of slaveholding. Top scholars engage in lively debate over the usefulness of this distinction and its applicability to societies across the world and through time. • Assembles leading international scholars who specialize in the study of slavery • Offers a cross-cultural and trans-historical perspective • Proposes a reexamination of the traditional binary distinction used to examine slaveholding societies • Covers extensive ground and speaks at a level of general interest, such that the volume can serve as a textbook

A call for historians of emotions and the senses to converge on a new history of experience. Unpicking some assumptions about affective and sensory experience, the human being is re-imagined as both biocultural and historical, reclaiming the analysis of human experience from biology and psychology and seeking new collaborative efforts.

Elements in Histories of Emotions and the Senses 75pp October 2020 9781108813631 Paperback GBP 15.00 / USD 20.00 eISBN 9781108884952

526pp 22 b/w illus. 8 maps December 2020 9781316508039 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 37.99 May 2018 9781107144897 Hardback GBP 105.00 / USD 135.00 eISBN 9781316534908

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History - Cross Discipline

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Freedom and the Construction of Europe

Historicism and the Human Sciences in Victorian Britain

Volume 1 Religious Freedom and Civil Liberty Quentin Skinner | Queen Mary University of London

Mark Bevir | University of California, Berkeley

An internationally distinguished team of contributors explore the richness, diversity and complexity of ideas about freedom across early modern Europe, shedding fresh light on the tension between religious freedom and constitutional liberties, debates about the relationship between free persons and free states, and freedom as the ideal of citizenship. • Truly world-class team of contributors assembled by two of the world’s leading historians of ideas • Discussion ranges across the length and breadth of Europe, exploring a wide range of thinkers, political systems and Protestant, Catholic and Islamic states • Sheds fresh light on a neglected part of Europe’s intellectual heritage, which is as resonant today as in centuries past 427pp June 2020 9781108817776 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 29.99 March 2013 9781107033061 Hardback GBP 70.00 / USD 108.00 eISBN 9781139519281

This book studies the rise and nature of historicist approaches to life, race, character, language, political economy, and empire. Arguing that Victorians understood life and society as developing historically in a way that made history central to public culture, it will appeal to those interested in Victorian Britain, historiography, and intellectual history. • Shows how widespread historicism is in the study of human life and society, and reveals wider trends and parallels between particular disciplines • Highlights the distinctive and developmental nature of Victorian historicism and situates it in the context of romanticism and Enlightenment historicism • Brings together ten leading international scholars, representing a range of disciplines, to discuss developmental historicism across the human sciences 279pp June 2020 9781108814164 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 31.99 March 2017 9781107166684 Hardback GBP 67.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316711286

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Freedom and the Construction of Europe Volume 2 Free Persons and Free States Quentin Skinner | Queen Mary University of London

An internationally distinguished team of contributors explore the richness, diversity and complexity of ideas about freedom across early modern Europe, shedding fresh light on the tension between religious freedom and constitutional liberties, debates about the relationship between free persons and free states, and freedom as the ideal of citizenship. • Truly world-class team of contributors assembled by two of the world’s leading historians of ideas • Discussion ranges across the length and breadth of Europe, exploring a wide range of thinkers, political systems and Protestant, Catholic and Islamic states • Sheds fresh light on a neglected part of Europe’s intellectual heritage, which is as resonant today as in centuries past 421pp June 2020 9781108817783 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 29.99 March 2013 9781107033078 Hardback GBP 73.99 / USD 113.00 eISBN 9781139519298

Gendering the Renaissance Commonwealth Anna Becker | Aarhus Universitet, Denmark

This pioneering and innovative study challenges modern assumptions of what constitutes the political and the public in Renaissance thought. Offering gendered readings of a wide array of fifteenth- and sixteenth-century political thinkers, Anna K. Becker argues that the foundations of the modern state were significantly shaped by gendered concerns. • Women are often strangely absent from histories of political thought, so this book fills a significant gap • Looks beyond conventional narratives of the political participation of women to look at gender holistically • Resets the standard framework of the history of political thought to enable a fuller understanding of Renaissance thought in its complexity Ideas in Context 282pp January 2020 9781108487054 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108765404

In the Shadow of Leviathan John Locke and the Politics of Conscience Jeffrey R. Collins | Queen’s University, Ontario

Offering a vivid account of the revolutionary times through which they lived, this book revolutionises our understanding of Hobbes and Locke. Focused on their own era, it reveals a great deal about how religious toleration and religious politics developed within modern liberalism, and explores tensions that are with us still. • Reopens the old and neglected question of Hobbes’s influence over Locke with new evidence and interpretive methods • Develops and explains not just the arguments of Hobbes and Locke, but their political context, the circulation and reception of their ideas, and the print history of their books • Draws out the significance of early modern intellectual history to modern, liberal thinking around religious toleration Ideas in Context 456pp February 2020 9781108478816 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108778879

Liberal Ideas in Tsarist Russia From Catherine the Great to the Russian Revolution Vanessa Rampton | McGill University, Montréal

• Adds an important yet neglected dimension to the history of political liberalism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries • Places the Russian experience in a global context and makes it accessible to readers without specialist training • Contributes a valuable perspective at a time when nationalistic populist ideologies are resurgent Ideas in Context 252pp February 2020 9781108483735 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108652353


History - Cross Discipline

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Modernism and the Social Sciences

Parliament the Mirror of the Nation

Anglo-American Exchanges, c.1918–1980 Mark Bevir | University of California, Berkeley

Representation, Deliberation, and Democracy in Victorian Britain Gregory Conti | Princeton University, New Jersey

This wide-ranging and original study reveals how prevalent modernism has become in the study of the social sciences. It explores the rise and nature of modernism tropes and approaches within social sciences such as economics, econometrics, behaviourism, sociology, international relations, administrative science, linguistics, history and anthropology. • Shows how widespread modernism has become in the social sciences, revealing wider trends and parallels to scholars who specialise in particular disciplines • Situates various synchronic and formal styles of analysis in the contest of the rise of modernism, providing readers with the opportunity to relate the accounts of social science disciplines to well-known broader cultural and artistic movements • Highlights the connections between many superficially different forms of explanation, so that readers can locate current methodological disputes in a much wider historical context 273pp 1 table June 2020 9781316626306 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 September 2017 9781107173965 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316795514

Newborn Imitation The Stakes of a Controversy Ruth Leys | The Johns Hopkins University, Maryland

Newborn imitation has recently become the focus of a major controversy in the human sciences. New studies have reexamined the evidence and found it wanting. This Element offers a critical assessment of the theories of newborn imitation and the stakes involved.

Elements in Histories of Emotions and the Senses 75pp July 2020 9781108826730 Paperback GBP 15.00 / USD 20.00 eISBN 9781108920308

Oliver Wendell Holmes A Willing Servant to an Unknown God Catharine Pierce Wells | Boston College, Massachusetts

Reassessing one of the most influential figures in American law, Wells examines all aspects of Holmes’s life to provide a new understanding of his multifaceted personality. This analysis of the Supreme Court Justice will appeal to legal scholars, historians, philosophers, and general readers interested in biography and American history. • Written in clear, non-technical language • Examines Emersonian transcendentalism and its effect on Holmes • Discusses Holmes’ constitutional theories as well as his relationship with the founders of American pragmatism Cambridge Historical Studies in American Law and Society 222pp January 2020 9781108475952 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 December 2020 9781108469302 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781108686839

How did the Victorian era - the epoch when the modern democratic state was made - understand democracy, parliamentary representation, and diversity? Here, Gregory Conti examines how the Victorians conceived the representative and deliberative functions of the House of Commons and what it meant for parliament to be the ‘mirror of the nation’. • Produces a new history of British political thought during one of the most critical periods of modernity: the transition from elite parliamentarism to mass democracy • Offers the first theoretical reconstruction and analysis of the British movement for proportional representation • Provides a new window on the concept of ‘representation’ and the relationship between democracy, diversity, deliberation, and liberalism Ideas in Context 432pp January 2020 9781108450959 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 34.99 April 2019 9781108428736 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108582469

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Parliamentarism From Burke to Weber William Selinger | University College London

Offering novel interpretations of canonical liberal authors, including Burke, Constant, and Mill, this history of liberal political ideas suggests a new paradigm for interpreting the development of modern political thought, inspiring fresh perspectives on historical issues from the eighteenth to the early twentieth centuries. • Offers novel interpretations of an extraordinary variety of canonical authors including Burke, Constant, Mill, and Bagehot • Presents a thorough treatment of liberal politics and political theory from the eighteenth to the early twentieth centuries • Demonstrates the broad significance of parliament and the theory of parliamentarism in the development of European political thought, and its relevance for contemporary representative government Ideas in Context 267pp June 2020 9781108468855 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 July 2019 9781108475747 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108585330

Playful Virtual Violence An Ethnography of Emotional Practices in Video Games Christoph Bareither | Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

Violence in video games has been a controversial object of public discourse for several decades. Building upon an extensive ethnographic study of players’ emotional practices,this Element provides new insights into the complexity and pleasures of player experiences, contributing to societal and academic debate on a critical aspect of video gaming.

Elements in Histories of Emotions and the Senses 75pp November 2020 9781108819435 Paperback GBP 15.00 / USD 20.00 eISBN 9781108873079

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History - Cross Discipline

Polish Republican Discourse in the Sixteenth Century Dorota Pietrzyk-Reeves | Jagiellonian University, Krakow

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This landmark study provides conceptual and contextual analysis of political literature and debate in sixteenth-century Poland-Lithuania and its contribution to early modern republicanism. It demonstrates the republican character of Polish discourse and the originality of Polish concepts such as the relationship between law, liberty and virtue. • Demonstrates the original contribution of Polish discourse to the early modern republican tradition • Situates Polish republican discourse within both the classical and early modern republican traditions • Explains how republican political ideas developed in early modern Europe in response to new political and institutional developments and the impact of civic humanism Ideas in Context 292pp April 2020 9781108493239 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108695008

Radical Conduct Politics, Sociability and Equality in London 1789-1815 Mark Philp | University of Warwick

Radical Conduct reinterprets literary and political radicalism in London at the time of the French Revolution. It explores the tensions between the world people took for granted and their aspirations for change, exploring language, sociability, gender relations, music and dance. • Presents the period in a new way that sheds new light on major figures of English radicalism and feminism, questioning common assumptions about the literary and political world of the 1790s • Knits together social and cultural history with intellectual history through a fresh interpretation of literary sources • Illuminates the tensions between the world that the radicals imagined and sought to bring into being, and the social conventions and norms of their time that undercut their ambitions 290pp September 2020 9781108842181 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108898768

Recognition A Chapter in the History of European Ideas Axel Honneth | Columbia University, New York

The idea that we are mutually dependent on the recognition of our peers is perceived in different ways throughout the world, according to different cultural and political conditions. This study explores the complex history of ‘Recognition’ in Britain, France and Germany and its place in modern political and social self-understanding. • Explains the historical origins of an idea that is central to contemporary understandings of the self • Traces the exchange and transfer of leading ideas within Western Europe and clarifies the cultural differences between France, Britain and Germany • Places the key idea of ‘recognition’ within the context of the development of the fundamental political ideas of a modern democracy The Seeley Lectures 200pp October 2020 9781108836869 Hardback GBP 59.99 / USD 79.99 October 2020 9781108819305 Paperback GBP 19.99 / USD 24.99 eISBN 9781108872775

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Religious Freedom and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights Linde Lindkvist | Uppsala Universitet, Sweden

Focusing on Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the book provides a groundbreaking and multi-layered account of the most influential statement on religious freedom in human history. It examines the origins, background, key players, and outcomes of Article 18. • Provides a multi-layered account of the Universal Declaration’s Article 18 on religious freedom, benefiting those who wish to understand more about the Article, its history and its consequences • Locates human rights in different political and intellectual contexts, providing the reader with a solid history of Article 18 and the Declaration in general • Written in an accessible style, which gives the book a wider, interdisciplinary appeal Human Rights in History 188pp May 2020 9781316612224 Paperback GBP 20.99 / USD 26.99 August 2017 9781107159419 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316671542

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Revolutionary Thought after the Paris Commune, 1871–1885 Julia Nicholls | King’s College London

This first comprehensive account of revolutionary and socialist thought after France’s nineteenthcentury revolution with new interpretations of the French revolutionary tradition. Drawing together material from around the world, Nicholls pieces together the nature and content of French revolutionary thought in this often overlooked era. • Transcends national and imperial boundaries to offer a global and transnational history of nineteenth-century ideas • Moves away from the study of only ‘canonical’ thinkers by drawing on a wide range of previously unstudied sources including newspapers, police reports, plays and pamphlets • Features new interpretations of key historical and political ideologies such as Marxism Ideas in Context 330pp August 2020 9781108713344 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 July 2019 9781108499262 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108634199


History - Cross Discipline

Satire and the Public Emotions Robert Phiddian | Flinders University

Phiddian explores the distinction between satirical and comic laughter, and the role of satire in licensing public expression of harsh emotions defined in neuroscience as the CAD (contempt, anger, disgust) triad. With a focus on eighteenthcentury satirists such as Jonathan Swift, he reveals the importance of satire to free political expression. • Reveals the centrality of the harsh emotions defined in neuroscience as the CAD (contempt, anger, disgust) triad to political satire • Makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the works of Jonathan Swift (particularly Gulliver’s Travels) and other eighteenthcentury satirists • Exposes the tension between the aims and the effects of political satire and reflects on satire’s role in recent US politics and the digital age Elements in Histories of Emotions and the Senses 75pp February 2020 9781108798839 Paperback GBP 15.00 / USD 20.00 eISBN 9781108869263

Scholastic Affect Gender, Maternity and the History of Emotions Clare Monagle | Macquarie University, Sydney

The history of the Virgin Mary in medieval theology is one of an ideologically useful vision of womanhood. This Element deploys the intellectual history of medieval thought to map the moves made in codifying Mary’s perfection. It then uses contemporary gender and affect theory, mapping the emotional regimes of the medieval past upon the present.

Elements in Histories of Emotions and the Senses 75pp August 2020 9781108814263 Paperback GBP 15.00 / USD 20.00 eISBN 9781108886406

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The 1848 Revolutions and European Political Thought Douglas Moggach | University of Ottawa

The 1848 Revolutions in Europe marked a turningpoint in the history of political thought, raising fundamental questions of democracy, nationhood, freedom and social cohesion, and helping to define liberal, socialist, and conservative ideological currents that continue to orient contemporary politics. This volume examines 1848 and its legacy in a pan-European perspective. • Offers a comparative and comprehensive examination of the 1848 Revolutions in pan-European perspective • Includes essays from international experts from five countries to highlight various national and disciplinary angles • Studies the emergence of essential modern issues, such as democracy, nationalism, religion, and the economy 498pp March 2020 9781108819381 Paperback GBP 27.99 / USD 36.99 February 2018 9781107154742 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781316650974

The English Republican Exiles in Europe during the Restoration Gaby Mahlberg | University of Warwick

Offers a transnational perspective on 17th-century English republicanism through an intimate portrait of the lives of three English republicans - Edmund Ludlow, Henry Neville, and Algernon Sidney - who went into exile in Europe after the Restoration. • Vividly connects English political thought with the European experience • Offers an accessible history of seventeenth-century English republicanism with a study of the exiles’ lived experience • Draws on previously unpublished primary sources from a broad range of English and continental European archives Ideas in Context 300pp October 2020 9781108841627 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108894463 NEW IN PAPERBACK

The History of the Arthaśāstra Sovereignty and Sacred Law in Ancient India Mark McClish | Northwestern University, Illinois

The Arthaśāstra is the foundational text of Indic political thought. By analyzing its early history, Mark McClish overturns prevailing beliefs that ancient India was governed by religion and shows that this text originally espoused a political philosophy characterized by empiricism and pragmatism, ignoring the sacred mandate of dharma altogether. • Proposes a new theory of the composition of the Arthaśāstra • Demonstrates the onset of a new kind of political theology in the late classical period • Offers a concrete historical argument about the development of political thought in ancient India, particularly charting out the rise of Brāhmaņism as a political force Ideas in Context 307pp September 2020 9781108701747 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 July 2019 9781108476904 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108641586 NEW IN PAPERBACK

The Intellectual World of the Italian Renaissance Language, Philosophy, and the Search for Meaning Christopher S. Celenza | Georgetown University, Washington DC

This book serves as a key resource for students and scholars seeking an introduction to Italian Renaissance intellectual life. Focusing on philosophy and literature, and Latin and Italian sources, it brings together recent scholarship, makes an original contribution to the field, and works beyond traditional disciplinary boundaries. • Proposes a new view of the history of philosophy, allowing readers clear, concise, jargon-free introduction to a new way of thinking abut philosophy in the Renaissance • Offers a new view of the history of Italian literature in a little-studied period, filling a century-long research gap between Petrarch and Machiavelli with clear case studies • Offers a new view of Italian Renaissance intellectual life by integrating sources in Italian and Latin but does not require any knowledge of those languages 454pp February 2020 9780521177122 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 34.99 January 2018 9781107003620 Hardback GBP 94.99 / USD 126.00 eISBN 9781139051613

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History - Cross Discipline

The Persistence of Party Ideas of Harmonious Discord in EighteenthCentury Britain Max Skjönsberg | University of Liverpool

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This fundamental re-evaluation of the origins and importance of the idea of ‘party’ in British political thought and politics in the eighteenth century draws on the writings of Rapin, Bolingbroke, David Hume, John Brown and Edmund Burke to demonstrate that attitudes to party were more complex and penetrating than previously thought. • Demonstrates the importance of the concept of party in the eighteenth century, providing a new focus in the history of political thought • Besides books, pamphlets and newspapers, the books draws extensively on archival sources along with printed and private correspondence • Brings together political thought and political history Ideas in Context 350pp January 2021 9781108841634 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108894500

Women’s International Thought: A New History Patricia Owens | University of Oxford

This cross-disciplinary history of women’s international thought brings together some of the foremost historians and scholars of international relations today to recover and analyse the path-breaking work of eighteen leading thinkers of international politics from the early to midtwentieth century. • Recovers and analyzes the important work of Black diasporic, AngloAmerican, and European historical women who are missing from existing histories of international thought • Systematically analyses the work of eighteen leading thinkers of international politics in the early and mid-twentieth century • Opens new vistas to scholars and students of international history and theory, intellectual history and women’s and gender studies, and provides a framework for future research 360pp December 2020 9781108494694 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 December 2020 9781108796873 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781108859684

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Thinking with Rousseau From Machiavelli to Schmitt Helena Rosenblatt | City University of New York

Although indisputably one of the most important thinkers in the Western intellectual tradition, Rousseau’s actual place in that tradition, and the legacy of his thought, remains hotly disputed. This volume reconsiders Rousseau’s contribution through a series of essays exploring the relationship between Rousseau and other ‘great thinkers’. • Explores the relationship between Rousseau and other philosophers, both his predecessors and his successors, allowing readers to see how ideas are transformed and new ones are generated • Reconsiders Rousseau’s place within the Western intellectual tradition, giving readers fresh perspectives on specific historical contexts • Includes discussions of thinkers who were highly influential in their time, but have been forgotten since 338pp 8 b/w illus. 1 table June 2020 9781107513594 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 June 2017 9781107105768 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316226490

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Utilitarianism in the Age of Enlightenment The Moral and Political Thought of William Paley Niall O’Flaherty | King’s College London

Charts the evolution of ‘theological utilitarianism’, one of the most influential traditions in eighteenthcentury Anglophone moral and political thought, and addresses the contested issue of whether there was an ‘English Enlightenment’, through the life and thought of moral philosopher and clergyman, William Paley (1743–1805). • The first book-length treatment of an immensely influential tradition in moral philosophy • Offers a case study of mainstream social, political and religious thought in a momentous period in British and European history • Proposes a new view of the intellectual culture of the Enlightenment Ideas in Context 360pp June 2020 9781108464680 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 29.99 December 2018 9781108474474 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108662048

History of Medicine NEW IN PAPERBACK

Difference and Disease Medicine, Race, and the Eighteenth-Century British Empire Suman Seth | Cornell University, New York

Suman Seth offers dramatically new ways to understand the mutual construction of medicine, race, and empire in the eighteenth century. Readers will find medical writers engaging with abolitionism and the care of the enslaved, and will be able to track the ways that medicine created modern notions of racial difference. • Introduces the term ‘race-medicine’ as an alternative to the term ‘racescience’ • Offers an accessible postcolonial history of colonial medicine • Brings together histories of empire, race, and slavery Global Health Histories 340pp May 2020 9781108407007 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 June 2018 9781108418300 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108289726

Healing Knowledge in Atlantic Africa Medical Encounters, 1500–1850 Kalle Kananoja | University of Oulu, Finland

In this ambitious analysis of medical encounters in West Africa during the Atlantic slave trade, Kananoja considers both African and European perceptions of health, disease and healing. Arguing that the period was characterised by continuous knowledge exchange, he shows that indigenous natural medicine was used by locals and non-Africans alike. • Places Atlantic Africa in a global historical context • Argues that Africa and Africans were engaged in multidirectional exchanges of healing knowledge • Shows how local knowledge was central in shaping responses to illness Global Health Histories 320pp February 2021 9781108491259 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108868020


History - Cross Discipline

Hidden Histories of the Dead Disputed Bodies in Modern British Medical Research Elizabeth T. Hurren | University of Leicester

This discipline-redefining study of secretive British medical research cultures after World War Two retraces the harvesting and recycling of bodies and body-parts for tissue culture and pathology labs, transplantation surgery facilities, brain banks, and dissection teaching spaces between 1945 and 2000. This title is also available as Open Access. • Provides a trans-disciplinary study of the medical sciences in action • Maps bodies, body parts, organs, brains, on their post-mortem journeys • Provides a novel reframing of the medical ethics of networks, actors, and economics • This title is also available as Open Access 350pp February 2021 9781108484091 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108633154

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Mapping AIDS Visual Histories of an Enduring Epidemic Lukas Engelmann | University of Edinburgh

This new and unique visual history of AIDS focuses on the AIDS atlas, published by dedicated clinicians between 1986 and 2008. The epidemic’s history is retold through clinical photographs, epidemiological maps and icons of HIV asking how this devastating epidemic has come to be seen as a controllable chronic condition. • Offers an innovative visual approach to the history of HIV and AIDS • Uses a new methodological framework to demonstrate the relevance of photographs, maps and models in furthering medical knowledge • Positions the AIDS Atlas as a way to engage with the history of the epidemic Global Health Histories 266pp November 2020 9781108444057 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 November 2018 9781108425773 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108348959

Military Medicine and the Making of Race Life and Death in the West India Regiments, 1795–1874 Tim Lockley | University of Warwick

This book demonstrates how Britain’s black soldiers helped shape attitudes towards race throughout the nineteenth century. Using militarymedical literature about the West India Regiments, Lockley shows how Britain’s black soldiers were central to intellectual debates around ideas of blackness and whiteness in the Atlantic world. • Highlights the importance of the West India Regiments in changing attitudes towards race • Demonstrates the crucial role of black soldiers in the evolution of racial thought over the nineteenth century • Links racial thought with medical thought to show how race became fixed in the body in the nineteenth century 220pp 2 b/w illus. 2 maps April 2020 9781108495622 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108862417

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Shell-Shock and Medical Culture in First World War Britain Tracey Loughran | University of Essex

This book is a study of the formation of the medical diagnosis of shell-shock in First World War Britain. Dr Loughran examines the intellectual resources doctors drew on as they struggled to make sense of nervous collapse and reveals the contribution of shell-shock on the development of psychoanalytic approaches to mind and behaviour. • Provides a detailed account into the diagnosis of shell-shock and medical culture in First World War Britain • Places shell-shock within the longer historical context of British psychological medicine • Explores the role of mind-body relations, gender, willpower and instinct within the diagnosis of shell-shock Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare 291pp May 2020 9781107569478 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 March 2017 9781107128903 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316415672

The Cult of Youth Anti-Ageing in Modern Britain James F. Stark | University of Leeds

This study engages with histories of modern Britain, as well as science, technology, medicine, gender, and advertising to examine how antiageing became part of mainstream culture. It connects scientific and medical theories of how the body works and ages with the commercial world of anti-ageing products and procedures. • The first historical account of the ideas and practices associated with anti-ageing, or rejuvenation, in interwar Britain • Examines how anti-ageing became part of mainstream culture during the interwar years • Draws on a unique constellation of commercial archives, as well as newspapers and published scientific and medical texts, to provide an insight into the interaction between commercial and scientific activities 262pp March 2020 9781108484152 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108695428

The Origins of AIDS Second Edition Jacques Pépin | Université de Sherbrooke, Canada

It is now forty years since the discovery of AIDS, but its origins continue to puzzle doctors and scientists. In this updated edition of his acclaimed book, Jacques Pépin traces the origins and amplification of AIDS, and describes the events that transformed a chimpanzee virus into a global pandemic. • This revised and updated edition incorporates nearly a decade’s worth of new research on AIDS • Offers a unique combination of epidemiology and history in tracing the origins and amplification of AIDS within Africa and then worldwide • Explains the complex routes of the virus and how the extension of World War I to Africa might have allowed HIV to make its fateful journey from Southeast Cameroon to Léopoldville 315pp January 2021 9781108487498 Hardback GBP 59.99 / USD 79.99 January 2021 9781108720397 Paperback GBP 19.99 / USD 25.95 eISBN 9781108767019

Visit our website at www.cambridge.org/academic

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History - Cross Discipline

The Yellow Flag Quarantine and the British Mediterranean World, 1780–1860 Alex Chase-Levenson | University of Pennsylvania

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Alex Chase-Levenson examines British engagement with the Mediterranean quarantine system from 1780 to 1860, demonstrating how quarantine fostered early forms of European integration, laid the foundation for modern public health, and shaped Western perceptions of the ‘East’. • The first English-language examination of the Mediterranean quarantine system during its period of greatest reach • Uses a diverse range of literary, commercial, diplomatic, administrative, and naval source material • Reveals an international genealogy for the history of public health reform in Britain Global Health Histories 318pp 23 b/w illus. April 2020 9781108485548 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108751773

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Vernacular Medicine in Colonial India Family, Market and Homoeopathy Shinjini Das | University of Oxford

Combining insights from the history of colonial medicine and the cultural histories of family in British India, Shinjini Das examines the processes through which Western homeopathy was re-interpreted in the colony as a specific Hindu worldview, an economic vision and a disciplining regimen. • Broadens the history of colonial medicine in India beyond studies of British state medicine and studies of Indian traditional medicine, such as Ayurveda • Foregrounds the role of family as both producer and consumer in the history of colonial medicine • Based on both official archival sources and Indian language vernacular sources

306pp 16 b/w illus. November 2020 9781108430692 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 March 2019 9781108420624 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108354905

War Against Smallpox Edward Jenner and the Global Spread of Vaccination Michael Bennett | University of Tasmania

Michael Bennett offers the first global history of the spread of vaccination during the Napoleonic Wars, focusing on the experience of smallpox, the hopes invested in vaccination by doctors and parents in the early nineteenth century, and the children put arm-to-arm in the war against smallpox. • Provides a global history of the spread of vaccination • Offers new insights into the hopes and fears of parents and children, as well as the ambitions of medical men • Discusses early vaccine hesitancy and anti-vaccination movements 434pp June 2020 9780521765671 Hardback GBP 89.99 / USD 120.00 June 2020 9780521147880 Paperback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781139019569

History of Science and Technology A Singular Remedy Cinchona Across the Atlantic World, 1751–1820 Stefanie Gänger | Universität Heidelberg

Stefanie Gänger explores how medical knowledge was shared across diverse societies tied to the Atlantic World between 1751 and 1820. Centred on Peruvian bark or cinchona, from which quinine is derived, she provides fresh perspectives on knowledge exchange and connections in the realm of medicine between the Atlantic empires and beyond. • Provides fresh perspectives on knowledge exchange, expertise and therapeutic connections in the Atlantic empires and beyond • Revises assumptions about non-elite participants in the history of medicine • Provides a valuable window into the realm of medicine at the turn of the nineteenth century Science in History 300pp October 2020 9781108842167 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108896269

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German Science in the Age of Empire Enterprise, Opportunity and the Schlagintweit Brothers Moritz von Brescius | Universität Bern, Switzerland

A study of German scientists who travelled to other nations’ empires to observe, record, and collect rich materials that shaped European views of the East. This lavishly illustrated book provides a gripping account of trans-cultural overseas exploration, colonial science, and Anglo-German cooperation and conflicts in the nineteenth century. • Combines European and indigenous perspectives and agency in colonial exploration • The book is based on sources written in eight languages, from seven countries, and collected from more than fifty museums and archives • This lavishly illustrated book includes more than thirty-five colour figures Science in History 428pp 50 colour illus. November 2020 9781108446068 Paperback GBP 26.99 / USD 34.99 March 2019 9781108427326 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108579568

Imperial Science Cable Telegraphy and Electrical Physics in the Victorian British Empire Bruce J. Hunt | University of Texas, Austin

A vast network of telegraph cables spread around the globe in the second half of the nineteenth century. By showing how deeply this network shaped work in electrical physics, Bruce J. Hunt sheds new light on both the history of the Victorian British Empire and the relationship between science and technology. • Examines how telegraph technology and electrical physics interacted in the nineteenth century • Provides a fresh perspective on the development of the Victorian British Empire • Sheds new light on the relationship between science and technology Science in History 320pp January 2021 9781108830669 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108902700


History - Cross Discipline

NEW IN PAPERBACK

Physics and Psychics The Occult and the Sciences in Modern Britain Richard Noakes | University of Exeter

In this first systematic exploration of the intriguing connections between Victorian physical sciences and what we now call the paranormal, Richard Noakes challenges our view of the history of physics, and deepens our understandings of the relationships between science and the occult, and science and religion. • Includes many of the most celebrated figures in the history of British physics • Questions entrenched distinctions between science and pseudo-science • Exposes new aspects of Victorian scientific creativity Science in History 419pp June 2020 9781316638569 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 October 2019 9781107188549 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781316882436

Social Mendelism Genetics and the Politics of Race in Germany, 1900–1948 Amir Teicher | Tel-Aviv University

In this ground-breaking study, Amir Teicher explores the ways genetics informed Nazi racial and eugenic policies, presenting a new paradigm for understanding links between genetics and racism, and between biological and social thought. • Challenges long-accepted ‘truths’ in popular notions of twentieth-century biology and Nazi policies • Utilizes a rich variety of evidence to investigate the relationship between biological and social thought • Offers a clear, accessible approach to the social impact of science in history 280pp 24 b/w illus. 1 table February 2020 9781108499491 Hardback GBP 26.99 / USD 34.99 eISBN 9781108583190

Technology in the Industrial Revolution Barbara Hahn | Texas Tech University

Placing the British Industrial Revolution in global context, Barbara Hahn explores the role of technological change in world history. Tracing this transformative moment from the north of England to slavery, cotton plantations, the Anglo-Indian trade and beyond, Hahn provides a new perspective on the relationship between technology and society. • Offers an accessible and concise history of the classic case of rapid and revolutionary technological change • Explains the relationship between technological and social change in simple terms • Places the technologies of the Industrial Revolution in their global settings New Approaches to the History of Science and Medicine 236pp 21 b/w illus. 1 map January 2020 9781107186804 Hardback GBP 69.99 / USD 89.99 January 2020 9781316637463 Paperback GBP 18.99 / USD 24.99 eISBN 9781316900864

The Cambridge History of Science Volume 8 Modern Science in National, Transnational, and Global Context Hugh Richard Slotten | University of Otago, New Zealand

Brings together a group of highly respected specialists to provide the most comprehensive and up-to-date history of modern science in national, transnational, and global contexts. Exploring local contexts of science and analyzing science using national and regional frameworks, the essays introduce the latest thinking in the history of science. • Analyzes the history of modern science during the late eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth and early twenty-first centuries • Covers the entire world, with essays on all major countries or regions • Valuable in university courses in the history of science, technology, and medicine The Cambridge History of Science 870pp April 2020 9780521580816 Hardback GBP 120.00 / USD 155.00 eISBN 9781139044301

TEXTBOOK

The Origins of Modern Science From Antiquity to the Scientific Revolution Ofer Gal | University of Sydney

The first textbook covering the history of science from antiquity through the Scientific Revolution. Providing students of all backgrounds with the tools to study science like a historian, Gal covers everything from Pythagorean mathematics to Newton’s Principia, introducing the complex relationships between institutions, beliefs and politics. • Readers are introduced to scientific reasoning and practices in accessible and engaging ways • Non-humanities students are provided with the tools to understand science through a historical lens • Readers gain new insights into the complex relations between institutions, beliefs and political structures and practices 350pp February 2021 9781316510308 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 119.99 February 2021 9781316649701 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108225205

The Science of Useful Nature in Central America Landscapes, Networks and Practical Enlightenment, 1784–1838 Sophie Brockmann | De Montfort University, Leicester

Following material practices and scientific exchanges through local and global networks, Sophie Brockmann demonstrates how interactions with landscape and environment played a key role in constructing ideas of patriotism and nation in Enlightenment Central America. • Combines intellectual history and the history of science with historical geography and environmental history • Traces the impact of Enlightenment ideas and late-colonial reformers’ projects on the independent nations of Central America • Situates the global history of Enlightenment in a place usually considered ‘peripheral’ in world history and even within the Spanish empire 320pp September 2020 9781108421232 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108367615

Visit our website at www.cambridge.org/academic

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History - Cross Discipline

Military History Britain and Italy in the Era of the First World War Defending and Forging Empires Stefano Marcuzzi | University College Dublin

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Drawing on a broad range of new archival material, Stefano Marcuzzi analyses the British strategy of imperial defence and the Italian strategy of imperial expansion within the context of World War I, the Peace Conference and the Fiume crisis. • Provides an original account of World War I by using Anglo-Italian bilateral relations as a lens through which to analyse Allied grand strategy • Includes examinations of both the war and the peace conference to highlight how war strategy and peace-making were intertwined • Reassesses Italian foreign policy and military and naval efficiency Cambridge Military Histories 348pp December 2020 9781108831291 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108924009

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Communications and British Operations on the Western Front, 1914–1918 Brian N. Hall | University of Salford

This is a major new study of the role of communications in shaping the outcome of British military operations on the Western Front during World War 1. It argues that communications were not only a leading cause of the trench stalemate of 1915–17, but were also crucial in helping break the deadlock in 1918. • Includes end-of-chapter summaries, allowing readers to monitor their understanding of the material presented • Includes both thematic and chronological chapters, providing readers with a broader and deeper understanding of the subject matter • Will become a core text for both undergraduates and postgraduates studying military history, strategic studies and the First World War in particular Cambridge Military Histories 362PP 33 b/w illus. 1 map 5 tables May 2020 9781316623695 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 33.99 June 2017 9781107170551 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781316771747

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Britain’s Pacification of Palestine The British Army, the Colonial State, and the Arab Revolt, 1936–1939 Matthew Hughes | Brunel University

More than just a military history of Britain’s suppression of the Arab revolt in Palestine, this is a dissection of how the British empire worked to supress dissent and how subject peoples resisted colonial rule. • Will appeal to those who need a full history of the Palestinian insurgents and the counter-insurgency arrayed against them • New regimental archival material provides new perspectives on the Arab revolt • Contextualises the pacification of Palestine in the 1930s to the British colonial emergency state and other imperial pacification operations Cambridge Military Histories 504pp December 2020 9781107501492 Paperback GBP 31.99 / USD 41.99 January 2019 9781107103207 Hardback GBP 34.99 / USD 49.99 eISBN 9781316216026

Charles E. Callwell and the British Way in Warfare Daniel Whittingham | University of Birmingham

Daniel Whittingham presents the first comprehensive study of one of Britain’s most important military thinkers, Major-General Sir Charles E. Callwell. His book explores the development of British military thought to shed new light on colonial warfare, counterinsurgency, the South African War, tactics, maritime strategy, and the First World War. • The first comprehensive biography of one of Britain’s great military thinkers, Charles E. Callwell • Provides a new perspective on the ‘British way in warfare’ and British military thought • Considers both Callwell’s famous works, such as Small Wars and Military Operations and Maritime Preponderance, and his lesser-known works which have not been cited before Cambridge Military Histories 286pp January 2020 9781108480079 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108628846

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Decades of Reconstruction Postwar Societies, State-Building, and International Relations from the Seven Years’ War to the Cold War Ute Planert

‘New wars’ of the present day have raised awareness about the importance of transformation between war and peace, which are shaped by substantial changes in economy, politics, society and culture. Examining the decades of reconstruction following wars from the eighteenth to the twentieth century in international comparison, this book demonstrates why foreign and domestic policy cannot be separated. • Proposes a new view of transitions from war to peace which will benefit those who are uncomfortable with the view of a ‘zero hour’ in postwar eras • Sets transitions from war to peace in long-term and global perspectives, allowing readers to put the postwar experience after 1945 into a broader historical context • Combines pioneering archival research with broad perspectives on historical turning-points and trends, appealing to specialists and the educated public • Aids temporal and geographic comparability by focusing on ten-year periods following the conclusion of major military conflicts in world history, thus providing focus and breadth Publications of the German Historical Institute 393pp 4 b/w illus. May 2020 9781316617083 Paperback GBP 26.99 / USD 34.99 June 2017 9781107165748 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781316694091


History - Cross Discipline

Expertise, Authority and Control The Australian Army Medical Corps in the First World War Alexia Moncrieff | University of Leeds

This book charts the development of Australian military medicine in the First World War and examines how the role of the Australian Army Medical Corps was transformed by these experiences. It focuses on the provision of medical care through casualty clearance and evacuation, rehabilitation and the prevention and treatment of venereal disease. • The first major study of the Australian Army Medical Corps in over seventy years • Takes an exhaustive approach, mapping the provision of medical care through casualty clearance and evacuation, rehabilitation and the prevention and treatment of venereal disease • Reassesses Australian military medicine and maps the transition to an infrastructure for the AIF in the field, especially in response to conflicts with traditional imperial, military and medical hierarchies Australian Army History Series 236pp February 2020 9781108478151 Hardback GBP 45.00 / USD 59.99 eISBN 9781108784382

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Fighting the People’s War The British and Commonwealth Armies and the Second World War Jonathan Fennell | King’s College London

Jonathan Fennell captures for the first time the true wartime experience of the ordinary soldiers from across the empire who made up the British and Commonwealth armies. He analyses why the great battles were won and lost and how the men that fought went on to change the world. • Integrates the military, political and social histories of Britain, Australia, Canada, India, New Zealand and South Africa • Uses 925 censorship reports based on 17 million soldiers’ letters to shed new light on their experiences, performance and political beliefs • Provides new explanations for the performance of the British and Commonwealth armies in campaigns, including the crises of 1940–42, Cassino, D-Day and Normandy • The first comprehensive history of the British and Commonwealth armies in the Second World War Armies of the Second World War 0pp 42 b/w illus. 38 maps 21 tables May 2020 9781107609877 Paperback GBP 18.99 / USD 24.95 January 2019 9781107030954 Hardback GBP 25.00 / USD 34.95 eISBN 9781139380881

Forgotten Wars Central and Eastern Europe, 1912–1916 Włodzimierz Borodziej | Uniwersytet Warszawski, Poland

Examines the origins, outbreak and early campaigns of the First World War in Central and Eastern Europe to reconstruct the experiences, changes in minds, behaviour and habits of people, uniformed or not, males and females, from multiple nations located in an imagined triangle between Helsinki, Bucharest and Vienna. • Reintegrates the story of the Eastern fronts between 1912 and 1916 into the history of the First World War • Focuses on the impact of wartime experiences on both individuals and communities • Demonstrates both the obvious differences and the forgotten similarities between ‘East’ and ‘West’

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Indigenous Peoples and the Second World War The Politics, Experiences and Legacies of War in the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand R. Scott Sheffield

During the Second World War, Indigenous people in the United States, Australia, New Zealand and Canada mobilised en masse to support the war effort. This is an examination of their participation on the battlefields and home fronts, focusing on their diverse and unique contributions to the war, and its legacies. • Provides a new perspective on the national histories of Indigenous communities through a comparative and transnational lens • Draws heavily on Indigenous oral histories and written sources, as well as policy documents and other archival records • Provides a gendered reading of Indigenous service 365pp 20 b/w illus. May 2020 9781108440745 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 33.99 December 2018 9781108424639 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00

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Morale and Discipline in the Royal Navy during the First World War Laura Rowe | University of Exeter

This is the first detailed study of the social history of the Royal Navy during and immediately after the First World War. Laura Rowe uses the experiences of men who fought at sea to shed new light on the relationship between discipline, leadership, and the strength of the fleet. • The issues of morale and discipline are considered within a naval context, rather than the typical trench warfare one • Military and civilian naval history are looked at in tandem to give a more overarching historical reading of the period • Uses both qualitative and quantitative methodologies to lessen the limitations of taking only one approach Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare 278pp 8 b/w illus. 16 tables October 2020 9781108409421 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 33.99 August 2018 9781108419055 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108296816

Sisters in Arms Women in the British Armed Forces during the Second World War Jeremy A. Crang | University of Edinburgh

During the Second World War many thousands of women joined the women’s auxiliary services to perform important military tasks for the RAF, army and Royal Navy. This book traces the wartime history of these auxiliary services and the integration of women into the British armed forces. • Covers all three women’s auxiliary services: the WAAF, ATS and WRNS • Combines an organisational history of the women’s auxiliary services with the personal experiences of servicewomen • Explores both the gender advances - and the limits of those advances as represented by the women’s auxiliary services Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare 352pp September 2020 9781107013476 Hardback GBP 25.00 / USD 34.95 eISBN 9781139004190

Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare 345pp March 2021 9781108837156 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108938495

Visit our website at www.cambridge.org/academic

47


History - Cross Discipline

Strangling the Axis The Fight for Control of the Mediterranean during the Second World War Richard Hammond | Brunel University

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This is a major reassessment of the role of the war at sea in Allied victory in the Mediterranean. Richard Hammond demonstrates how the antishipping campaign was the fulcrum about which strategy in the theatre pivoted, and the vital enabling factor ultimately leading to Allied victory in the region. • Reassesses the contribution of Allied anti-shipping operations in the Mediterranean towards Allied victory in the Second World War • Helps to understand how both the Allied and Axis powers perceived the relationship between the war on land and the war at sea • Includes a wide range of new multinational, multilingual source material Cambridge Military Histories 290pp June 2020 9781108478212 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108784566

Surviving the Great War Australian Prisoners of War on the Western Front 1916–18 Aaron Pegram | Australian War Memorial

Surviving the Great War is the first detailed analysis of Australians in German captivity in WW1. By placing the hardships of prisoners of war in a broader social and military content, this book adds a new dimension to the national wartime experience and challenges popular representations of Australia’s involvement in the First World War. • Provides the first detailed analysis of Australians in German captivity in the First World War on the Western Front • Places the experiences of prisoners of war in a broader social and military context, thus adding a new dimension to the national wartime experience • Challenges popular representations of Australia’s involvement in the First World War Australian Army History Series 284pp 28 b/w illus. 14 colour illus. 2 maps 4 tables February 2020 9781108486194 Hardback GBP 44.99 / USD 59.99 eISBN 9781108643559

The Cambridge History of War Volume 2 War and the Medieval World Anne Curry | University of Southampton

An expert account of war in the medieval period world-wide, showing how war is ubiquitous yet ever changing across space and time. Each chapter is written by a recognised expert in the field and demonstrates the place of war in society as well as examining how it was fought. • Each chapter is written by experts in the field to provide up-to-date scholarship across a wide range of topics and a large number of geographical areas • Takes war in its broadest definition to offer informative synthesis as well as much fascinating detail • Readers can trace the relationships between strategy, tactics, weapons technology, logistics, military institutions and financing, social structures, and cultural influences Cambridge History of War 650pp 22 b/w illus. 16 maps October 2020 9780521877152 Hardback GBP 120.00 / USD 156.00 eISBN 9781139025492

The Cambridge History of Warfare Second Edition Geoffrey Parker | Ohio State University

The new edition of The Cambridge History of Warfare offers an updated comprehensive account of Western warfare, from its origins in classical Greece and Rome, through the Middle Ages and the early modern period, down to the wars of the twenty-first century in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria. • Offers a fully updated account of war in the West, with a new chapter on modern warfare • Continues to demonstrate that military and naval superiority was crucial to the rise of the West • Focuses on Western military progress but explores the military effectiveness of other regions 608pp 20 maps June 2020 9781107181595 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 June 2020 9781316632765 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781316855089

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The Civilianization of War The Changing Civil–Military Divide, 1914–2014 Andrew Barros | Université du Québec, Montréal

This volume provides a new understanding of an issue at the heart of contemporary conflicts: distinguishing between civilians and combatants. A multi-disciplinary study of over a dozen case studies from across the world and over the last century, it upends current orthodoxies by showing the civil–military divide to be extremely dynamic. • Provides new insights into why levels of civilian exposure to war violence have remained so fluid, and why its avoidance is, in practice, so difficult to achieve • Presents valuable case studies and a global perspective on the treatment of civilian populations in war • Includes a multi-disciplinary collaboration of international historians, political scientists, and international lawyers Human Rights in History 344pp 4 tables October 2020 9781108453042 Paperback GBP 28.99 / USD 37.99 August 2018 9781108429658 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108643542

The Great War in History Debates and Controversies, 1914 to the Present Second Edition Jay Winter | Yale University, Connecticut

This revised and updated edition provides the first survey of historical interpretations of the Great War from 1914 to 2020. It demonstrates how the history of the Great War has now gone global, and how the internet revolution has affected the way we understand the conflict. • The first up-to-date and fully global account of historical interpretations of the Great War from 1914 to 2020 • Charts the positive and negative effects of the digital revolution on the writing of the history of the Great War • Surveys how history and memory overlap, informing professional history, history in museums, in films, on stage, and in re-enactments Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare 300pp October 2020 9781108843164 Hardback GBP 64.99 / USD 84.99 October 2020 9781108823968 Paperback GBP 21.99 / USD 28.99 eISBN 9781108914970


History - Cross Discipline

The Unknown Enemy

War’s Logic

Counterinsurgency and the Illusion of Control Christian Tripodi | King’s College London

Strategic Thought and the American Way of War Antulio J. Echevarria II

Western counterinsurgency doctrine proposes that improved socio-cultural understanding enables a greater chance of success in counterinsurgency warfare. Tripodi illustrates that in fact it often leads to the reverse. The Unknown Enemy illustrates how the drive for such knowledge results not in better outcomes but in a costly illusion of control. • Considers how attempts to better understand the sociocultural surrounds of the operating environment can influence counterinsurgency and stabilisation operations • Utilizes a mixture of historical and theoretical analysis to examine why certain types of military operation fail • Draws upon a range of in-depth case studies from different eras of warfare to highlight recurring behaviours and outcomes across time

Antulio J. Echevarria II reveals how successive generations of American strategic theorists have thought about war. Analyzing the work of twelve leading theorists, he uncovers the logic that underpinned each theorist’s critical concepts, core principles, and basic assumptions about the nature and character of war. • Describes the paradigms that underpinned how leading twentiethcentury American strategic theorists thought about war • Illustrates the relationship between a theorist’s core strategic principles and the nature of war • Situates American strategic thinking within its critical sociocultural contexts

300pp November 2020 9781108424608 Hardback GBP 69.99 / USD 89.99 November 2020 9781108440714 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781108341110

Cambridge Military Histories 300pp March 2021 9781107091979 Hardback GBP 60.00 / USD 90.00 March 2021 9781107465015 Paperback GBP 18.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781316135730

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The Veterans’ Tale British Military Memoirs of the Second World War Frances Houghton | University of Manchester

Reveals how veteran memoirs serve as rich repositories of information about the ways in which former servicemen remembered, understood, and recounted the Second World War, shedding new light on experiences of battle and the veteran’s sense of wartime self, as well as the emotional meanings war memoirists attached to their narratives. • Explains how Second World War veterans remembered, interpreted, and told their wartime experiences • Examines military memoirs as a tool to review wartime experience • Positions veteran memoirs as the guardians of memories of the Second World War, through which the writers actively sought to contest ‘erroneous’ representations of the war Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare 305pp October 2020 9781108739061 Paperback GBP 27.99 / USD 36.99 January 2019 9781108496919 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108690164

Violence in Defeat The Wehrmacht on German Soil, 1944–1945 Bastiaan Willems | University College London

Explores the diverse intra-ethnic violence that gripped the country in the months prior to Germany’s defeat, and examines the interplay between the Wehrmacht and the Nazi Party to shed important new light on the roles both played in shaping German society at the end of the war. • Introduces the German Wehrmacht as a committed actor in statesponsored violence in the final stage of the Second World War • Explores the regional dynamics of this phenomenon • Examines the evacuation measures in Eastern Germany as a dialogue between the safeguarding of the population and the army’s operational conduct Cambridge Military Histories 340pp February 2021 9781108479721 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108856270

Women as Veterans in Britain and France after the First World War Alison S. Fell | University of Leeds

This is the story of how women in France and Britain between 1915 and 1933 appropriated the cultural identity of female war veteran in order to have greater access to public life and a voice in a political climate in which women were rarely heard on the public stage. • Proposes a bottom-up approach to the question of the impact of the war on women’s lives by focusing on individual women’s letters, diaries, memoirs, articles and speeches • Is the first history of the period, which tend to focus on single nations, to compare the histories of women in two nations, here France and Britain, allowing for a broader understanding of war’s impact on women • Draws on a wide range of documents, publications and artefacts to explore the experiences of women from a wide range of social backgrounds Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare 236pp 23 b/w illus. February 2020 9781108444026 Paperback GBP 21.99 / USD 27.99 July 2018 9781108425766 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108348935

World War II A New History Second Edition Evan Mawdsley | University of Glasgow

A revised and updated edition of Evan Mawdsley’s acclaimed global history of World War II. Accessibly written and well-illustrated with maps and photographs, the book also includes insightful short studies of the figures, events and battles that shaped the war, as well as fully updated guides to further reading. • Provides a global approach to the history of the Second World War, integrating events in Asia and the Pacific, India, North Africa, Europe, Russia and America • Includes a fully revised further reading section with many new sources published since 2009 • Features extensive maps and illustrations, text boxes outlining key individuals, events, and themes, timelines at the start of each chapter, suggestions for further reading and links to relevant websites 410pp April 2020 9781108496094 Hardback GBP 79.99 / USD 105.00 April 2020 9781108791403 Paperback GBP 26.99 / USD 34.99 eISBN 9781108866026

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History - Other Areas

History - Other Areas 20C History (General) NEW IN PAPERBACK

Austrian Banks in the Period of National Socialism Gerald D. Feldman | University of California, Berkeley

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This book gives a detailed account of how two major banks - the Creditanstalt-Wiener Bankverein and the Länderbank Wien - profited from their service to the Nazi regime. It traces their involvement in the dispossession of Jewish business owners and in financing industrial firms vital to the Third Reich’s war effort. • Written by a pre-eminent, prolific historian • This is the first time this text has appeared in English translation • Bolstered by a new introduction for this English edition Publications of the German Historical Institute 591pp March 2020 9781108799263 Paperback GBP 32.99 / USD 42.99 December 2015 9781107001657 Hardback GBP 93.00 / USD 144.00 eISBN 9781139051569

Christianity and Human Rights Reconsidered Sarah Shortall | University of Notre Dame, Indiana

This volume showcases the work of a new generation of scholars interested in the historical connection between religion and human rights in the twentieth century, offering a truly global perspective on the internal diversity, theological roots, and political implications of Christian human rights theory. • Highlights the global turn in the history of human rights. • Showcases a range of interdisciplinary work on the relationship between religion and human rights. • Transforms our understanding of both human rights theory and the history of Christianity. Human Rights in History 300pp September 2020 9781108424707 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108341356

Decolonization, SelfDetermination, and the Rise of Global Human Rights Politics A. Dirk Moses | University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

This is the first global history of human rights politics in the age of decolonization. Leading scholars demonstrate how human rights were embraced and deployed by a diverse collection of actors, including both nationalists and imperialists, activists and diplomats, in contesting self-determination and national independence. • Challenges orthodox historical narratives to provide a deeper, and multi-polar, examination of the origins and use of human rights across numerous sites of struggle • Features a variety of case studies, spanning much of the globe, each investigating human rights claims as reality, not abstraction • Provides an insight into what constituted ‘human rights’ for particular peoples, places, and circumstances to allow for a greater appreciation of the diversity of causes, struggles, and movements which embraced human rights Human Rights in History 450pp July 2020 9781108479356 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108783170

Humanitarianism and Human Rights A World of Differences? Michael N. Barnett | George Washington University, Washington DC

Human rights and humanitarianism are two totems of global ethics and politics in today’s world, but they have a complicated relationship that is not always understood or appreciated. To capture that past, present, and future, this volume explores what each hopes to attain and how those ambitions converge or diverge. • Unpacks and interrogates the relationship between human rights and humanitarianism • Explores different notions of humanity and the tensions and conflicts that this can create • Provides a philosophical and practical consideration of global ethics Human Rights in History 340pp November 2020 9781108836791 Hardback GBP 69.99 / USD 89.99 November 2020 9781108819206 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781108872485

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The Cambridge History of Communism Volume 1 World Revolution and Socialism in One Country 1917–1941 Silvio Pons | Università degli Studi di Roma ‘Tor Vergata’

Volume One of The Cambridge History of Communism deals with the tumultuous events from the Russian Revolution of 1917 to the Second World War, analyzing the roots, impact, and development of communism, historical personalities such as Lenin, Stalin, and Trotsky, and the development of the movement on a global scale. • Charts the rise of communism as a global force from the Russian Revolution and Civil War to the Spanish Civil War and the outbreak of the Second World War • Situates Communist history in the context of the aftermath of the First World War, the crisis of empires, the Great Depression, and the rise of Fascism in Europe • Written by a team of leading international contributors from a range of disciplines The Cambridge History of Communism 676pp April 2020 9781107467361 Paperback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 September 2017 9781107092846 Hardback GBP 120.00 / USD 150.00 eISBN 9781316137024


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The Cambridge History of Communism Volume 2 The Socialist Camp and World Power 1941–1960s Norman Naimark | Stanford University, California

Volume Two of The Cambridge History of Communism explores the rise of Communist states and movements after World War II. Key themes include the relationship between East European parties and Moscow, and the spread of communism in Asia, Africa and Latin America, as nationalism fed anti-imperialist sentiment. • Charts the onset of the Cold War and the growth of communism across Europe, Asia, Africa and Latin America • Analyzes the transformative and tumultuous geopolitics, political economy, society and culture of Communist revolutions and movements around the globe • Written by a team of leading international contributors from a range of disciplines The Cambridge History of Communism 700pp April 2020 9781107590014 Paperback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 September 2017 9781107133549 Hardback GBP 120.00 / USD 150.00 eISBN 9781316459850

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The Cambridge History of Communism Volume 3 Endgames? Late Communism in Global Perspective, 1968 to the Present Juliane Fürst | University of Bristol

Volume Three of The Cambridge History of Communism charts the global Cold War in its last two decades, the collapse of Soviet socialism, the resurgence of China as a global power, and the transformation of the geopolitics and political economy of Cold War conflict. • Charts the rise of China as a global power and the collapse of Soviet socialism • Proposes new historical perspectives on the fifty year decline and eventual fall of Communist revolutions in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, and questions the continuing legacies of the Communist era • Written by a team of leading international contributors from a range of disciplines The Cambridge History of Communism 660pp April 2020 9781316501597 Paperback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 September 2017 9781107135642 Hardback GBP 120.00 / USD 150.00 eISBN 9781316471821

The Cambridge History of Communism 3 Volume Paperback Set Silvio Pons | Università degli Studi di Roma ‘Tor Vergata’

The Cambridge History of Communism is an unprecedented global history of communism in the twentieth century. This three volume reference work examines communism in the context of wider political, social, cultural, and economic processes, while at the same time revealing how communism contributed to shaping them. • The first global survey of the Communist movement, utilizing the mass of material that has become available since the fall of the Soviet Union • Written by a team of leading international contributors from a range of disciplines • Analyzes the successes and failures of Communism, its leaders, key events and ideological differences The Cambridge History of Communism 0pp April 2020 9781316634578 3 Paperback books GBP 79.99 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781316634561

The Cambridge World History of Violence Volume 4 1800 to the Present Louise Edwards | University of New South Wales, Sydney

Why do humans continue to inflict both mass and interpersonal violence upon each other? This comprehensive, global study examines violence and its consequences as produced in nation-states, colonies, institutions, and families alongside analyses of its commemoration and representation and significance in leisure. • Facilitates a comparative understanding of violence as a significant common phenomenon across all human societies • Explains how new technology and new forms of social organization enhance or constrain violence • Presents new insights into the changing social, political and economic significances of violence in human society The Cambridge World History of Violence 694pp 7 b/w illus. 1 map March 2020 9781107151567 Hardback GBP 120.00 / USD 155.00 eISBN 9781316585023

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The Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal Law, History, and Jurisprudence David Cohen | Stanford University, California

Like its Nuremberg counterpart, the Tokyo trial was foundational in the field of international law. However, the persistent notion of ‘victor’s justice’ in the existing literature has made it difficult to objectively assess. Cohen and Totani redress this by providing a fresh perspective based on careful examination of the trial record. • The first truly comprehensive assessment of the Tokyo trial as a judicial process, separating it from other ideologically motivated studies • Illustrates the Tokyo Trial’s importance for international jurisprudence by placing it in the context of both modern Japanese history and international criminal law • The book is based on often neglected sources, including a draft judgment by Sir William Webb, the President of the Tokyo tribunal 559pp May 2020 9781108820684 Paperback GBP 32.99 / USD 42.99 November 2018 9781107119703 Hardback GBP 105.00 / USD 145.00 eISBN 9781316348659

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World War One The Global Revolution Second Edition Lawrence Sondhaus | University of Indianapolis

This revised and updated interpretation of World War I highlights the revolutionary nature and legacy of the conflict of 1914–1919. It examines the political, economic, social and cultural history of the war at home as well as the war’s origins, ending and subsequent legacy. • Demonstrates the revolutionary global impact of World War I • Includes a range of pedagogical features including images, timelines, key documents from the war, online essays and guides to further reading • Contains a range of sources, including first-hand accounts of the war, to provide students with an understanding of the impact of the war on the lives of ordinary people 495pp 49 b/w illus. 14 maps November 2020 9781108496193 Hardback GBP 64.99 / USD 84.99 November 2020 9781108791632 Paperback GBP 29.99 / USD 38.99 eISBN 9781108866354

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History - Other Areas

African History A History of the Republic of Biafra Law, Crime, and the Nigerian Civil War Samuel Fury Childs Daly | Duke University, North Carolina

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Based on research using an original archive of legal records and oral histories, this accessible study examines the history of the Nigerian Civil War and its aftermath from the perspective of the courtroom, demonstrating how the conditions of the Nigerian Civil War paved the way for the country’s long experience of crime that was to follow. • An accessible account of the Nigerian Civil War using previously unexamined legal records and oral histories • Examines the connection between warfare and crime, both in postcolonial Africa and within a global context • Demonstrates how the conditions of the Nigerian Civil War paved the way for the country’s long experience of crime that was to follow 300pp 10 b/w illus. 1 map August 2020 9781108840767 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108887748

A History of West Central Africa to 1850 John K. Thornton | Boston University

An original interpretative history for students or scholars of West Central Africa from earliest times to 1852 which benefits from comprehensive and in-depth treatment of internal histories, inter-state interactions, and external relationships for an original approach to regional histories. • An accessible interpretative history of West Central Africa from earliest times to 1852 • Equal focus is given to both internal histories or inter-state interactions and external dynamics and relationships • Features an expanded regional focus including treatment of the Portuguese colony of Angola New Approaches to African History 384pp 7 maps March 2020 9781107127159 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 March 2020 9781107565937 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781316411568

Abolition in Sierra Leone Re-Building Lives and Identities in NineteenthCentury West Africa Richard Peter Anderson | University of Exeter

Exploring the origins, experiences and identities of 100,000 Africans who landed in Sierra Leone following Britain’s abolition of the trans-Atlantic slave trade, this history of colonial Africa and examination of the African diaspora explores the links between emancipation, colonization, and identity formation in the Black Atlantic. • A new approach to a major field of the history of British anti-slavery, studied not as a history of legal victories (abolitionism) but of enforcement and lived experience (abolition) • Unites two major historiographical fields within the history of colonial Africa and of the African diaspora • Explores the linkages between emancipation, colonization, and identity formation in the Black Atlantic African Identities: Past and Present 306pp 3 b/w illus. 3 maps 12 tables January 2020 9781108473545 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108562423

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African Voices on Slavery and the Slave Trade Volume 2 Essays on Sources and Methods Alice Bellagamba

This volume explores diverse sources such as oral testimonies and African intellectual writings to discover what they can tell us about slavery and the slave trade in Africa. It will be invaluable for students and researchers interested in the history of slavery, the slave trade and post-slavery in Africa. • Explores the potentials and limits of diverse sources such as oral testimonies, possession rituals, Arabic language sources, European missionary, administrative and court records, and African intellectual writings • Stimulates historians to think critically about the methods needed to use these sources • Offers guidelines on how to uncover African voices about slavery when sources do not readily yield them 216pp 3 b/w illus. May 2020 9780521145299 Paperback GBP 21.99 / USD 27.99 April 2016 9780521199612 Hardback GBP 70.99 / USD 110.00 eISBN 9781139043359

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Colonial Buganda and the End of Empire Political Thought and Historical Imagination in Africa Jonathon L. Earle | Centre College, Danville, Kentucky

This book offers an intellectual history of colonial Buganda, using previously unseen archival material to recast the end of empire in East Africa. It will be ideal for researchers, upper-level undergraduate and graduate students interested in the cultural, intellectual, religious and political history of modern East Africa. • The first global intellectual history of colonial Buganda, giving readers an alternative perspective of the region’s history • Uses previously-unseen private and institutional archive material on colonial literacy to offer readers a new understanding of the end of empire in East Africa • Tackles three separate subjects within colonial Buganda: colonial literacy, the end of empire, and nationalist historiography, appealing to a wide range of readers African Studies 299pp 25 b/w illus. 2 maps 1 table February 2020 9781108404365 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 August 2017 9781108417051 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108264723


History - Other Areas

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Colonizing Consent

Hasan al-Turabi

Rape and Governance in South Africa’s Eastern Cape Elizabeth Thornberry | The Johns Hopkins University

Islamist Politics and Democracy in Sudan W. J. Berridge | University of Newcastle upon Tyne

Drawing on more than a thousand cases from a diverse set of courts, Thornberry provides a ground breaking social and political history of rape in colonial South Africa, as well as an important case study for comparative legal history, histories of sexuality, and public policy on sexual violence. • Incorporates evidence from over 500 rape cases • Draws on records from civil and criminal courts, customary courts, and church displinary procedings, thereby capturing a broad legal landscape • Reads evidence of court cases alongside political debates African Studies 379pp 4 b/w illus. 2 maps June 2020 9781108460316 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 December 2018 9781108472807 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108659284

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Doing Business in Cameroon An Anatomy of Economic Governance José-María Muñoz | University of Edinburgh

Focusing on four distinct sectors (cattle trade, transport, public contracts and NGO work), Muñoz combines an ethnographic study of business practices with a lucid analysis of policies and legal rules to provide an in-depth look at how businesses and state bureaucracies cope with unpredictability in times of crisis and reform. • Builds on intensive fieldwork engagement sustained over a period of ten years • Makes sense of the legal aspects of doing business • Focuses on diverse economic sectors that are often treated separately The International African Library 241pp 7 b/w illus. 2 maps November 2020 9781108452823 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 September 2018 9781108428996 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108684477

France’s Wars in Chad Military Intervention and Decolonization in Africa Nathaniel K. Powell | King’s College London

The first comprehensive narrative of French involvement in Chad’s civil wars in the first two decades of its independence between 1960 and 1982, this study explores France’s counterinsurgency efforts to protect the regime of François Tombalbaye and its contribution to the rise to power of Hissène Habré, one of Africa’s most notorious dictators. • The first comprehensive narrative of French involvement in Chad’s civil wars in the first two decades of its independence between 1960 and 1982 • Provides context for better understandings of ongoing military involvement in the Sahel • Of interest to students and scholars looking at the impact of foreign interventions in civil wars and the limits of counterinsurgency strategies in weak states African Studiesl 336pp November 2020 9781108488679 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108771610

A comprehensive study of the life and political thought of Sudanese Islamist scholar and politician Hasan al-Turabi, for undergraduate and graduate students studying the modern Sudanese state and Islamic government and politics in Africa and the Middle East, and journalists and policy-makers focused on core debates on democracy, Islamism and Jihad. • A full, comprehensive overview of al-Turabi’s life and political thought through which the author offers new perspectives on the key concepts of Jihad, democracy and Islamism • Applies post-colonial theory to the study of Islamism, allowing readers to move away from ‘crypto-Fascist’ or ‘crypto-Marxist’ readings of Islamism, recognising the colonial origins of Islamism • Offers a local Islamist narrative, focusing on the specific dynamics of Sudanese government and its relationship with Islamism 365pp February 2020 9781316632406 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 33.99 August 2017 9781107180994 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316848449

Hunting Game Raiding Politics in the Central African Republic Louisa Lombard | Yale University, Connecticut

The first ethnographic and historical study of raiding in the Central African Republic. By treating raiding as a political mode, this fascinating study investigates forceful acquisition, revealing the evolution of raiding skills, examples of encounters and its consequences over the last 150 years. • The first ethnographic and historical study of raiding in the Central African Republic (CAR) • Examines the skills, encounters, and consequences associated with raiding as a political mode in its own right • Shows readers how harmful popular theories and buzzwords such as ‘failed state’ are The International African Library 270pp March 2020 9781108478779 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108778794

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Imagining Africa Whiteness and the Western Gaze Clive Gabay | Queen Mary University of London

At times of Western crisis, such as the 2007–8 financial crisis, there has been a sudden growth of Afro-optimism, seemingly predicting Africa’s ‘rise’. Gabay examines British imperial attitudes towards Africa and shows that this phenomenon of positive coverage of Africa is neither unique, unexpected nor unpredictable. • Presents a historical approach to questions concerning change and international order • Places race and racism at the centre of changes in and imaginations of international hierarchies • Focuses ‘inwards’ to the changing contours of whiteness, rather than purely ‘outwards’ to the ways that non-Western regions have been racialised 282pp June 2020 9781108461924 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 31.99 November 2018 9781108473606 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108652582

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History - Other Areas

Islam in a Zongo Muslim Lifeworlds in Asante, Ghana Benedikt Pontzen

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Drawing on empirical and archival research, this ethnography is an exploration of the diversity and complexity of ‘everyday’ lived religion among Muslims in Ghana’s Asante region, demonstrating the interconnectedness of Islam with people’s lives in a zongo community. • Explores the diversity and complexities of lived Islam by immersing the reader into everyday Islam and Muslim lifeworlds • Focuses on three Islamic phenomena encountered in the zongos: Islamic prayer practices, the authorisation of Islamic knowledge, and ardently contested divination and healing practices • Draws on empirical and archival research, oral histories, and academic studies to demonstrate the interconnectedness of Islam with the lives of people in this unique community The International African Library 325pp January 2021 9781108830249 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108900706

Islam, Ethnicity, and Conflict in Ethiopia The Bale Insurgency, 1963-1970 Terje Østebø | University of Florida

Discussing an armed insurgency in south-eastern Ethiopia from 1963-1970, a time when a range of liberation struggles emerged across the Horn of Africa, this in-depth study offers a new perspective for understanding relations between religion, interreligious relations, ethnicity, and ethno-nationalism during conflicts. • An in-depth study of armed insurgency in Ethiopia during the 1960s within the context of armed struggles in the broader Horn of Africa • New perspectives on how to understand the relationship between religion and ethnicity through the concept peoplehood • Resists talking about ethnic and religious groups as mutually exclusive categories, arguing for an integrated approach which recognizes the role of embodied experiences and emplaced realities in shaping ethnic and religious identities African Studies 300pp October 2020 9781108839686 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108884839

Nigeria and World War II Colonialism, Empire, and Global Conflict Chima J. Korieh | Marquette University, Wisconsin

Recounting the extraordinary and often neglected story of the Nigerian people in World War II, this history of colonial interactions in Nigeria during the largest global conflict of the twentieth century draws on hitherto unexplored archival resources, challenging the perception that it was primarily a European conflict. • Challenges the dominant perception that the Second World War was primarily a European conflict • Recounts the extraordinary and often neglected story of the Nigerian people who were drawn into a global war • Provides detailed accounts of what Nigerian men, women, and children from all walks of life were doing and thinking on the home front and abroad in service of the empire 310pp 11 b/w illus. 2 maps 9 tables March 2020 9781108425803 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108579650

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Politicizing Sex in Contemporary Africa Homophobia in Malawi Ashley Currier | University of Cincinnati

By systematically documenting the emergence of politicized homophobia in Malawi, its appropriation by political elites as a strategy to consolidate power, and its effect on different social movements, Currier challenges Western portrayals of Africa as a hotbed of homophobia. • An account of the rise of politicized homophobia in Malawi, designed to show that it is not an intrinsic part of ‘African culture’ • Highlights how homophobia has been deployed as a political weapon by leaders across Africa • Documents how politicized homophobia affects different social movements - HIV/AIDS, human rights, LGBT rights, and women’s movements - and LGBT people 318pp June 2020 9781108448376 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 November 2018 9781108427890 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108551984

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Politics and Violence in Burundi The Language of Truth in an Emerging State Aidan Russell | Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva

Telling a neglected history of decolonisation and violence in Burundi, Aidan Russell examines the political language of truth that drove extraordinary change, from democracy to genocide. His study is the only English account of the first postcolonial genocide on the African continent. • Reveals the history behind contemporary political events in Burundi through analysis of internal and regional construction of postcolonial states • Draws on both African and European language source material • Provides the only detailed English account of the first postcolonial genocide in Africa African Studies 330pp November 2020 9781108713412 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 October 2019 9781108499347 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108581530

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Power and the Presidency in Kenya The Jomo Kenyatta Years Anaïs Angelo | Universität Wien, Austria

Reconstructing Jomo Kenyatta’s political biography and presidency in order to explore the links between his emergence as an uncontested leader and the deeper colonial and postcolonial history of Kenya, this is the first study to use Kenyatta as a basis for examining the origins of presidentialism in Africa. • Reconstructs Jomo Kenyatta’s political biography to examine the links between his leadership and Kenya’s deeper colonial history • Offers new perspectives on the origins and history of presidentialism in Kenya through the study of one man’s rise to power and the presidency • Will appeal to historians and political scientists interested in both African and Kenyan postcolonial history, political history and biographical writing African Studies 323pp November 2020 9781108713832 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 October 2019 9781108494045 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108625166


History - Other Areas

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Quranic Schools in Northern Nigeria Everyday Experiences of Youth, Faith, and Poverty Hannah Hoechner | Université Libre de Bruxelles

An ethnographic study of Qur’anic schools in northern Nigeria that debunks stereotypes about such schools being recruitment grounds for Boko Haram and other violent groups. Drawing on extensive fieldwork, Hannah Hoechner explores through the eyes of students the true nature of being young, poor, and Muslim in a context of pervasive inequality. • Provides valuable insights into the role that religion plays in the everyday lives of poor, young Qur’anic students • Offers a novel perspective by bringing research from education studies, poverty research, and youth studies to bear on debates about Islamic education • Uses ethnographic and participatory methods to uncover the real perspectives of Qur’anic students and their communities in northern Nigeria The International African Library 291pp 10 b/w illus. June 2020 9781108441735 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 31.99 March 2018 9781108425292 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108348270

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Radio Soundings South Africa and the Black Modern Liz Gunner | University of Johannesburg

How did Zulu Radio in apartheid South Africa, intended to stifle debate, become one of the largest stations in Africa? Gunner maps the fashioning of a modernising Black culture through radio and highlights links between these media figures with writers and political leaders from Harlem to the American South. • Maps out a new field of literary and media history in Africa • Demonstrates radio’s role in linking progressive forces across the Black Atlantic, Britain and post-colonial Africa • Sheds light on how radio became part of a modernizing popular culture cutting through apartheid repression The International African Library 241pp January 2020 9781108456357 Paperback GBP 18.99 / USD 28.99 January 2019 9781108470643 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108556903

Sultan, Caliph, and the Renewer of the Faith Aḥmad Lobbo, the Tārīkh al-fattāsh and the Making of an Islamic State in West Africa Mauro Nobili | University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Representing a significant re-examination of the Tārīkh al-fattāsh, proved to be one the most important nineteenth-century sources for the history of West Africa, this study makes use of previously unpublished Arabic manuscripts to reveal the true author of the chronicle and its place in the evolution of West African civilization. • Examines the chronicle Tārīkh al-fattāsh, one of the most important sources on West African history, that has been misunderstood and misused by scholars for more than a century • The first monograph in English to look at the Caliphate of Ḥamdāllahi, presenting to an English-speaking audience one of the most important, yet neglected states of pre-colonial West Africa • Makes extensive use of previously unpublished Arabic manuscripts written by West African Muslim intellectuals African Studies 288pp 10 b/w illus. March 2020 9781108479509 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108804295

The Army and Politics in Zimbabwe Mujuru, the Liberation Fighter and Kingmaker Blessing-Miles Tendi | University of Oxford

An essential record of one of the most controversial figures within the history of African liberation politics, and an important figure in Robert Mugabe’s ruling ZANU PF party, this biography of General Solomon Mujuru is based on unparalleled primary interviews with informants in the army, intelligence services, police and ZANU PF elites. • The first full-length biographical account of one of the most illustrious figures in modern Zimbabwean military and political history • Features oral accounts conveyed by Solomon Mujuru, his family and associates • Based on the author’s unparalleled primary interviews with informants in the army, intelligence, police and ZANU PF elites 348pp 12 b/w illus. January 2020 9781108472890 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108561600

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Shaping the African Savannah

The Cambridge History of South Africa

From Capitalist Frontier to Arid Eden in Namibia Michael Bollig

Volume 1 From Early Times to 1885 Carolyn Hamilton | University of Cape Town

A history of 150 years of social-ecological transformations in one of southern Africa’s most sought after exotic tourism destinations, often dubbed as ‘Arid Eden’. It demonstrates the impacts of colonialism, capitalism and creative local adaptations of environmental infrastructures in the region. • Provides a case study of 150 years of environmental history of one specific region • Marks the impacts of colonialism, capitalism and creative local adaptations of environmental infrastructures on the region’s people and animals • Discusses the possible futures and future-making agendas for an arid landscape which will be hit hard by global climate change

Coming fourteen years after South Africa’s achievement of majority rule, this book takes a critical and searching look at the country’s past. The book’s chapters, by ten of the best historians of South Africa, represent a reassessment of the major historical events, developments, and records of South Africa and will be an important new tool for students and professors of African history worldwide. • Includes new material on identity and consciousness and Boer-African relations • Written in an objective, clear and refreshing manner which will be accessible to students • Written by ten of the best historians of the country, presenting their new data, interpretations and perspectives on the South African past

African Studies 336pp 7 b/w illus. 20 maps July 2020 9781108488488 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108764025

Cambridge History of South Africa 487pp January 2020 9781108791991 Paperback GBP 26.99 / USD 39.99 May 2010 9780521517942 Hardback GBP 103.00 / USD 170.00 eISBN 9781139056083

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History - Other Areas

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The Cambridge History of South Africa Volume 2 1885–1994 Robert Ross | Universiteit Leiden

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This book surveys South African history from the discovery of gold in the Witwatersrand in the late nineteenth century to the first democratic elections in 1994. Written by many of the leading historians of the country, it pulls together four decades of scholarship to present a detailed overview of South Africa during the twentieth century. • Many of the best historians of South Africa present four decades of scholarship on South Africa in the twentieth century • Brings together analysis of political, economic, social and intellectual history • An important reassessment of all the major historical events in South Africa Cambridge History of South Africa 736pp 16 b/w illus. 6 maps 18 tables January 2020 9781108798433 Paperback GBP 26.99 / USD 39.99 November 2011 9780521869836 Hardback GBP 125.00 / USD 204.00 eISBN 9780511851995

The Idea of Development in Africa A History Corrie Decker | University of California, Davis

An innovative approach to examining the history and culture of development which has been an essential component of the ‘idea of Africa’ in western discourses since the early 1800s, this engaging coursebook provides detailed case study analysis to enhance understanding of key theoretical and historical concepts. • An accessible and engaging course book containing a balance between historical overview and analysis of case studies with each chapter providing at least one detailed case study to demonstrate key themes • Provides a refreshing take on the history and culture of development that begins with the foundations of the idea of development in nineteenth-century imperialism and colonialism • Offers important and useful historical context for students and scholars working in African development today New Approaches to African History 280pp November 2020 9781107103696 Hardback GBP 69.99 / USD 89.99 November 2020 9781107503229 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781316217344 NEW IN PAPERBACK

The Kongo Kingdom The Origins, Dynamics and Cosmopolitan Culture of an African Polity Koen Bostoen | Universiteit Gent, Belgium

Bringing new insights on one of the most famous pre-colonial polities in Central Africa, this unique book provides a cross-disciplinary approach to the history of the Kongo kingdom. Both distinguished and upcoming scholars from areas as diverse as anthropology, archaeology, history, and linguistics share a thematic focus on political space. • Maintains a strong regional and thematic focus • Deals exclusively with the Kongo kingdom, allowing readers to reconstruct the history of a pre-colonial African polity • Uses new bodies of evidence in conjunction with traditional sources for African history, such as linguistic data and archaeological finds 334pp 29 b/w illus. 9 maps March 2020 9781108463928 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 November 2018 9781108474184 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108564823

The Path to Genocide in Rwanda Security, Opportunity, and Authority in an Ethnocratic State Omar Shahabudin McDoom | London School of Economics and Political Science

Rwanda has become a touchstone case in genocide studies. This study evaluates the myriad theories behind the genocide. Combining original field data with some of the best existing evidence, it offers a rigorous and comprehensive explanation of how and why the genocide occurred, and how and why so many Rwandans participated in it. • A rigorous and comprehensive explanation of how and why the genocide in Rwanda occurred, and how and why so many Rwandans participated in it • Draws on extensive original field data, including interviews with over three hundred Rwandans, both killers and non-killers, and comparative case studies of violence in six local communities • Provides a broader engagement with key theoretical debates in the study of genocides and ethnic conflict African Studies 350pp November 2020 9781108491464 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108868839

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The Politics of Poverty Policy-Making and Development in Rural Tanzania Felicitas Becker | Universiteit Gent, Belgium

A long-term analysis of development projects in rural Tanzania, tracing the improvised, reactive nature of small-scale interventions, aimed at staving off the threat posed by acute poverty to local governments’ legitimacy and effectiveness. • Challenges prevailing assumptions about the political role of development in Africa • Focuses on the role of environmental, practical, financial and political limitations in shaping development intervention, bringing out overarching patterns in the implementation of policy • Offers accounts of villagers’ own attitudes towards poverty and inequality, giving us an in-depth understanding of their priorities African Studies 380pp 11 b/w illus. 1 map September 2020 9781108739245 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 June 2019 9781108496933 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108690485


History - Other Areas

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The Struggle over State Power in Zimbabwe Law and Politics since 1950 George Hamandishe Karekwaivanane | University of Edinburgh

This book examines the role of the law in the constitution and contestation of state power in Zimbabwean history. It is for researchers interested in the history of the state in Southern Africa, as well as those interested in African legal history. • Offers readers a unique long-term study of law and politics in Zimbabwe, providing an extensive overview in one key text • By avoiding technical legal concepts, the book offers a multidisciplinary approach to Zimbabwean law and history • Taking forward important debates in the social and political history of law in Africa, it will appeal to students and scholars interested in historiographical debates in African history African Studies 292pp 14 b/w illus. 3 tables March 2020 9781316640333 Paperback GBP 23.99 / USD 31.99 November 2017 9781107190207 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316996898

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The Value of Disorder Autonomy, Prosperity, and Plunder in the Chadian Sahara Julien Brachet

Based on long-term research in an area long closed to researchers, this book provides an internal account of trans-border connectivity, armed conflict, labour and gender relations, and aspirations to political autonomy in northern Chad. It sheds light on current Saharan political developments, and adds a new perspective to Saharan studies. • Provides original research on an area that is little known, but hotly contested • Challenges some of the main assumptions of the social sciences, about the nature of exchange, wealth creation, violent conflict and political order • Thematically organised, this book provides vivid historical and ethnographic accounts, and contains original maps and illustrations African Studies 371 June 2020 9781108449342 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 May 2019 9781108428330 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108566315

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The Temne of Sierra Leone African Agency in the Making of a British Colony Joseph J. Bangura | Kalamazoo College, Michigan

An in-depth study examining the agency and influence of indigenous Temne-speakers in the making of the Sierra Leone Colony. It is ideal for students, researchers, and scholars interested in the foundations of colonial Sierra Leone and its social, political and economic history, and Colonial Studies and African history more widely. • Offers readers a new, alternate perspective of the development of the Sierra Leone colony in West Africa, shifting focusing on the role of nonCreole ethnic groups in the country • Challenges current literature by shifting focus on the foundation of Sierra Leone from a western-centric perspective to the contributions of rural intellectuals, ethnonationalists and Islamic elites • Examines contemporary concepts of identity politics, class and tribal conflicts in multi-ethnic African societies through a colonial and postcolonial lens 235pp June 2020 9781316647967 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 31.99 November 2017 9781107197985 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108182010

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Transforming Sudan Decolonization, Economic Development, and State Formation Alden Young | Drexel University, Philadelphia

This book traces the development of a new Sudanese state during the postcolonial era, following how economic development fostered state formation and civil war. It is for historians of colonial and postcolonial Africa. It offers important archival research for those examining the economic history of Sudan and the wider region. • Provides the reader with a historical treatment of debates on postcolonial state formation which intervenes in social science debates on bureaucrats in African and Middle Eastern states, bridging gaps between multiple disciplines • Explains Sudan’s civil wars through the lens of economic and development policy, disputing the claim in existing literature that postcolonial civil war was not the result of ethnic or religious tensions • Provides an easy introduction to development studies and economic history across Sudan and the wider region, ideal for non-specialists African Studies 195pp 1 b/w illus. 2 maps February 2020 9781316623848 Paperback GBP 21.99 / USD 27.99 December 2017 9781107172494 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316779071

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History - Other Areas

Australian History TEXTBOOK

A Concise History of Australia Fifth Edition Stuart Macintyre | University of Melbourne

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The fifth edition of A Concise History of Australia brings together the long narrative of Australia’s First Nations’ peoples; the arrival of Europeans and the era of colonies, convicts, gold and free settlers; the foundation of a nation state; and the social, cultural, political and economic developments that created a modern Australia. • Written by one of Australia’s most respected historians • A lively and clear narrative history accessible to general readers • The fifth edition explores contemporary Australia, and recent scholarship in the fields of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander histories Cambridge Concise Histories 420pp 48 b/w illus. 6 maps October 2020 9781108728485 Paperback GBP 19.99 / USD 24.95 eISBN 9781108628914

Empire and the Making of Native Title Sovereignty, Property and Indigenous People Bain Attwood | Monash University, Victoria

Bain Attwood re-examines the historical treatment of indigenous peoples’ sovereignty and property rights in Australia and New Zealand, demonstrating that it was primarily the outcome of political struggles between multiple players at the metropolitan centre and the peripheries of empire, rather than the workings of abstract norms. • Sheds new light on the ways an imperial power treated the sovereignty and property rights of indigenous peoples • Pays careful attention to historical context and historical circumstances to reveal why native title was made in some colonies but not others • Challenges accounts that emphasise the importance of abstract norms by paying careful attention to legal politics at the centre of empire and forces on the ground 454pp July 2020 9781108478298 Hardback GBP 34.99 / USD 44.99 eISBN 9781108776424

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Taking Liberty Indigenous Rights and Settler Self-Government in Colonial Australia, 1830–1890 Ann Curthoys | Australian National University, Canberra

At last a history of how indigenous dispossession and survival underlay and shaped the birth of Australian democracy. Set within the broader context of colonial politics, it shows how Britain’s policies influenced the treatment of indigenous Australians and how indigenous people began to engage in their own ways with the new political institutions. • Australia’s nineteenth-century history is set within a global context, expanding on the traditional national narrative • Connects and compares British imperial and settler government policies concerning indigenous dispossession and governance • The first history to connect indigenous dispossession, governance and survival with the arrival of democracy in the Australian colonies Critical Perspectives on Empire 446pp 2 maps May 2020 9781107446847 Paperback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 October 2018 9781107084858 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316027035

The Long Search for Peace Observer Missions and Beyond, 1947–2006 Volume 1 The Official History of Australian Peacekeeping, Humanitarian and Post-Cold War Operations Peter Londey | Australian National University, Canberra

In The Long Search for Peace, Peter Londey, Rhys Crawley and David Horner weave a rich and compelling tapestry of official government files and personal narratives of peacekeeping veterans to present this authoritative account of the origins of Australian peacekeeping. • Provides an overview of Australian peacekeeping missions from 1947 to 2006 • Interweaves official government documents and the personal narratives of veterans to present an authoritative history of the origins of Australian peacekeeping • Details all major decolonisation efforts (Kashmir, Cyprus, the Middle East, Indonesia, Korea and Rhodesia) as well as smaller-scale missions in the Congo, West New Guinea, Yemen, Uganda and Lebanon 940pp 6 b/w illus. 130 colour illus. January 2020 9781108482981 Hardback GBP 110.00 / USD 145.00 eISBN 9781108628938

East Asian History After the Korean War An Intimate History Heonik Kwon | University of Cambridge

This ground-breaking study investigates the history and legacy of the Korean War within the realm of intimate human social experience. In doing so, it boldly reclaims kinship as a vital category in historical and political enquiry and examines how Korea’s civil war memories remain present in the Korean consciousness. • Provides a fresh perspective of the Korean War and Korea’s Cold War experience from the ground up • Introduces the concept of kinship into an analysis of modern history and politics to help understand the human experience of the Cold War and its aftermath • Draws upon newly available historical and testimonial evidence, as well as a sensitive, long-term participant observation Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare 246pp April 2020 9781108487924 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108768313

An Early Modern Economy in China The Yangzi Delta in the 1820s Bozhong Li | Peking University, Beijing

The first English translation of Li Bozhong’s pioneering study An Early Modern Economy in China, which uses sophisticated analysis to reconstruct the GDP of the Lower Yangzi Delta. An innovative economic history that contributes to the Great Divergence debate, Li draws comparisons the Netherlands in the same period. • Makes available in English the ground-breaking work of one of China’s leading economic historians • The first attempt to apply methods of HSNA (historical system of national account) study to pre-modern Chinese GDP • Establishes a benchmark for future reconstructions of regional economies through GDP The Cambridge China Library 360pp 6 maps 75 tables September 2020 9781108479202 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108782753


History - Other Areas

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Animals through Chinese History Earliest Times to 1911 Roel Sterckx | University of Cambridge

This volume opens a door into the rich history of animals in China. Drawing on an extensive array of primary sources, the essays explore not only developments in the human-animal relationship but the ways in which the Chinese have thought about the world with and through animals. This title is also available as Open Access. • These essays move beyond the issue of animal symbolism, instead placing animals in the context of evolving knowledge paradigms • Takes a longue durée view rather than focusing on a particular historical period • Based on hitherto unstudied materials from China • This title is also available as Open Access 291pp 21 b/w illus. 2 tables May 2020 9781108446112 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 December 2018 9781108428156 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108551571

Chinese Culture and the Chinese Military Haizong Lei

This is the first English translation of Lei Haizong’s iconic study of the Chinese army. First published in 1940 in the midst of the Second Sino-Japanese War, Lei examines the rise and fall of ideas about militarism in China in a global context. • The first English translation of a classic study of Chinese military culture • Written and published during the Second Sino-Japanese War • Will be of interest to a wide range of historians and teachers of twentieth-century history The Cambridge China Library 282pp 1 b/w illus. 6 tables April 2020 9781108479189 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108782715

Chinese Diasporas A Social History of Global Migration Steven B. Miles | Washington University, St Louis

In this concise and compelling survey of internal and external Chinese migration from the sixteenth century to the present day, Steven B. Miles traces the experiences of Chinese migrants and their families. Essential reading for those interested in the history of the Chinese diaspora and the history of migration more broadly. • Introduces concepts and debates in migration history • Compelling case studies focus on individual migrants and their descendants • Provides an integrated history of internal and external Chinese migration New Approaches to Asian History 278pp 10 b/w illus. 5 maps 2 tables February 2020 9781107179929 Hardback GBP 69.99 / USD 89.99 February 2020 9781316631812 Paperback GBP 19.99 / USD 25.99 eISBN 9781316841211

Dialect and Nationalism in China, 1860–1960 Gina Anne Tam | Trinity University, Texas

Challenging the widely accepted narrative that national languages create national identity, Tam narrates the history of the Chinese nation and Chinese nationalism from the perspective of fangyan - dialects or regional languages distinct from Mandarin - and in so doing, shows how they were central to the making of modern nationalism in China. • Challenges the widely accepted historical narrative that language standardization creates national citizens • Introduces a novel way of studying nationalism that highlights diverse visions of the nation without ignoring those who seek to maintain it as a homogenous concept • Encourages readers to expand the history of information methodology to consider both how knowledge is constructed and how that knowledge is filtered down and subsequently shapes all areas of public and private life 272pp 20 b/w illus. March 2020 9781108478281 Hardback GBP 75 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108776400

Disability in Contemporary China Citizenship, Identity and Culture Sarah Dauncey | University of Nottingham

Through innovative analysis of sources from film to literature and life writing, media and state documents, Dauncey explores disability and citizenship in China from 1949 to the present. She proposes a dynamic relationship of identity and belonging, encompassing both the perils of difference and the potential for empowerment. • Analyses a wide variety of Chinese cultural genres • Offers a dynamic and objective framework for understanding disability and citizenship in different societies • Reveals perspectives dependent upon closeness to the disability experience and highlights the gendered nature of disability 300pp 4 b/w illus. September 2020 9781107118539 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781316339879

Economic Thought in Modern China Market and Consumption, c.1500–1937 Margherita Zanasi | Louisiana State University

Margherita Zanasi argues that ideas of market and consumption linked to economic liberalism emerged in China in the late 1500s, roughly a century and half earlier than in Europe. This book is for those interested in modern Chinese history and in economic thought, theories of economic modernization and economic globalization. • Places the development of Chinese economic thought in a comparative/global perspective • Focuses the relationship between economic ideas and economic circumstances to stimulate conversation between economic historians and historians of ideas • Bridges interpretative gaps between the Ming-Qing and Republican period 252pp 2 maps May 2020 9781108499934 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108752787

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History - Other Areas

Gender Politics at Home and Abroad Protestant Modernity in Colonial-Era Korea Hyaeweol Choi | University of Iowa

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Arguing that religion cannot be separated from modernity, Choi demonstrates how twentiethcentury Korea exemplifies the role global Protestant networks played in shaping modern gender ideology, reforming domestic practices, instilling a sense of locality and the world, and claiming new space for women in the public sphere. • Considers the influence of multiple cultures in shaping modern gender relations in Korea • Illustrates how Protestant global networks played a significant role in shaping gendered modernity • Demonstrates colonial and postcolonial roots of gender norms and practices in modern Korea 320pp July 2020 9781108487436 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108766838

Honor and Shame in Early China Mark Edward Lewis | Stanford University, California

Shedding new light on the history of the early Chinese empires, Mark Edward Lewis explores the evolution of ideas about honor and shame. He shows that honor-shame discourse had a farreaching impact on political structures, family and gender roles, and the public reception of writing in early China. • Demonstrates the important role of the honor-shame discourse in the development of the imperial Chinese state • Carefully examines a comprehensive variety of early Chinese texts • Includes comparisons with other empires, most importantly the Roman Empire 350pp January 2021 9781108843690 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108919678

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Japan’s Carnival War Mass Culture on the Home Front, 1937–1945 Benjamin Uchiyama | University of Southern California

This cultural history of the Japanese home front during the Asia-Pacific War challenges ideas of the period as one of unrelenting repression. Uchiyama demonstrates that ‘carnival war’ coexisted with the demands of total war to promote consumerist desire alongside sacrifice and fantasy alongside nightmare, helping mobilize the war effort. • Provides a fresh glimpse into Japanese mass culture during the war years beyond well-known government propaganda • Examines familiar but under-studied tropes of wartime Japan, such as the kamikaze pilot and the soldier • Explores the Japanese home front experience in World War II 292pp 27 b/w illus. March 2020 9781316637449 Paperback GBP 23.99 / USD 31.99 March 2019 9781107186743 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781316899823

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Japan’s Castles Citadels of Modernity in War and Peace Oleg Benesch | University of York

An innovative examination of heritage politics in Japan, showing how castles have been used to re-invent and recapture competing versions of the pre-imperial past and project possibilities for Japan’s future. The transformation of castles from symbols of Japan’s martial spirit into cultural heritage sites charts changing understandings of the past. • Provides the first history of Japan’s castles in the modern period • Examines castles in a wide range of locales from the nineteenth century to the present • Lavishly illustrated 376pp 42 b/w illus. March 2020 9781108741651 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 31.99 May 2019 9781108481946 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108680578

Japan’s Living Politics Grassroots Action and the Crises of Democracy Tessa Morris-Suzuki | Australian National University, Canberra

By exploring the little-known world of informal grassroots political action in Japan, Tessa Morris-Suzuki sheds light on a range of fascinating twentieth-and twenty-first-century social experiments with particular relevance in the context of today’s global crisis of democracy. • Explores little-known cases of grassroots self-help activism in modern Japan • Provides new insights into cross-border networking by informal politics groups • Contributes to international debates about democratic alternatives in the twenty-first-century world 246pp May 2020 9781108490078 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108780049

Mao Zedong A Biography Volume 1 1893–1949 Pang Xianzhi

Volume 1 of the official Chinese Communist Party biography of Mao Zedong. This volume covers Mao’s career in the pre-revolutionary period, 1893–1949. This is a unique source through which to view the ways in which the transformative events of the twentieth century have been understood and portrayed in contemporary China. • Introduces the official Chinese interpretation of the Mao period • Based on archives to which no Western scholars have yet had access • An introductory essay provides context and highlights differences in interpretation The Cambridge China Library 1018pp 21 b/w illus. 3 maps February 2020 9781107092723 Hardback GBP 125.00 / USD 160.00 eISBN 9781316136492


History - Other Areas

Mao’s Third Front The Militarization of Cold War China Covell F. Meyskens | Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, California

Covell Meyskens reveals a little-known chapter of Chinese history in this examination of the ways that socialism, militarism, and economic development became intertwined in a giant industrial campaign to protect socialist China from the military dangers of the Cold War. • A vivid account of how Cold War security tensions became woven into the political economy and everyday life of Mao’s China • Examines a Chinese social engineering campaign when the geopolitical friction of the Cold War in Asia was at its most intense • The first detailed exploration of the most expensive industrialization initiative undertaken in China during the Mao era 292pp May 2020 9781108489553 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108784788

Ming China and its Allies Imperial Rule in Eurasia David M. Robinson | Colgate University, New York

The book is for anyone interested in the Mongol Empire, Chinese history, and the ways politicians exploit historical memory to win legitimacy at home and abroad. David M. Robinson shows that even the world’s most powerful rulers such as the Ming emperor needed allies and were willing to pay for them. • Contextualizes China in global history, breaking out of ‘isolated China’ historical narrative • Provides a full analysis of Chinese diplomacy and international leadership in the early modern period • Provides compelling new ways of thinking about power and legitimacy in the pre-modern world 258pp 2 maps January 2020 9781108489225 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108774253\

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Rethinking China’s Rise A Liberal Critique Jilin Xu | Shanghai Normal University

This volume is a vision of contemporary China from the inside. Eight recent essays by the prominent public intellectual Xu Jilin offer a liberal reaction to China’s economic rise, critiquing China’s rejection of universal values, the nation’s embrace of particularism and the cult of the state. • A fascinating insight into contemporary China’s intellectual world • A fresh critique of China’s ascendancy • The first volume of Xu Jilin’s work available in English translation The Cambridge China Library 250pp May 2020 9781108456586 Paperback GBP 21.99 / USD 27.99 July 2018 9781108470759 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108556965

Rumor in the Early Chinese Empires Zongli Lu | Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

This is the first English translation of Lu Zongli’s study of how rumor formed and spread through non-official channels in early Chinese history. Utilising popular songs, mythology and prophetic texts, Lu explores rumors in all their diverse forms, dissecting their nature, function and implications for politics and culture. • The first English translation of a major work of Chinese scholarship • Highlights the significance of public opinion and how it formed and spread through non-official channels in Chinese politics • Explores early Chinese history using an interdisciplinary framework The Cambridge China Library 396pp September 2020 9781108479264 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108782913

The Chinese Communist Party A Century in Ten Lives Timothy Cheek | University of British Columbia, Vancouver

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Qing Travelers to the Far West Diplomacy and the Information Order in Late Imperial China Jenny Huangfu Day | Skidmore College, New York

This is the first English-language study of China’s first travelers, envoys and diplomats to Europe and the United States. This fundamentally new interpretation of the Qing reveals how SinoWestern engagements transformed literary traditions, diplomatic institutions, networks of communications and intellectual orientations. • Demonstrates how perspectives from literature, communication studies, intellectual history, and cultural history can inform the study of diplomacy and information order • Examines the period between the Opium Wars and the Sino-Japanese War to provide a fresh explanation for the explosion of interest in foreign policy, international affairs, and institutional reform after 1895 • Proposes a new narrative of Sino-Western relationships in the late Qing through the personal stories of travelers to the West

Ten engaging personal histories introduce readers to what it was like to live in and with the most powerful political machine ever created: the Chinese Communist Party. These essays reveal the Party’s one-hundred year history, reflecting on power, setbacks, adaptability and change, and illuminating possible paths for China’s future. • Lively and accessible introduction to one-hundred years of Chinese history • Presents innovative personal histories of the Chinese Communist Party • Brings together an international team of leading historians 250pp June 2021 9781108842778 Hardback GBP 60.00 / USD 75.00 June 2021 9781108822619 Paperback GBP 18.99 / USD 24.99 eISBN 9781108904186

283pp 12 b/w illus. 1 table March 2020 9781108457729 Paperback GBP 23.99 / USD 31.99 December 2018 9781108471329 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108571005

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History - Other Areas

The City of Blue and White Chinese Porcelain and the Early Modern World Anne Gerritsen | University of Warwick

Anne Gerritsen demonstrates the key role Chinese porcelain played in the creation of early modern global connections. Through its manufacture and global consumption, China participated in the early modern world. Drawing on research in multiple languages, this beautifully illustrated book situates porcelain in both a local and global context. • Provides a new way of approaching global history by connecting the global and the local • Demonstrates the key role of Chinese porcelain in the circulation of global material culture • Examines the long history of China’s connections with the wider world

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354pp 4 b/w illus. 53 colour illus. 8 maps 1 table May 2020 9781108499958 Hardback GBP 26.99 / USD 44.99 eISBN 9781108753104

The Great Exodus from China Trauma, Memory, and Identity in Modern Taiwan Dominic Meng-Hsuan Yang | University of Missouri, Columbia

Yang uncovers the traumatic aftermath of the Chinese civil war by examining the lives of ordinary people who were displaced from China to Taiwan in 1949. He presents a trajectory of repeated traumatization and a search for home, belonging, and identity that reconsiders notions of trauma, memory, diaspora, and reconciliation. • Uncovers the painful aftermath of Chinese civil war from the perspective of those traumatized and displaced by it • Discusses conflicting cultural traumas/historical memories between Taiwan and China • Offers a powerful critique of the Eurocentric notions of trauma and memory 320pp September 2020 9781108478120 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108784306

The History of Famine Relief in China Yunte Deng

This is the first English translation of Deng Yunte’s classic study of famine relief in Chinese history. Richly researched, Deng both plots the history of famine from ancient times to the Republican period and provides a fascinating example of historical scholarship from twentieth-century China. • The first English translation of Deng Yunte’s classic study of famine relief throughout the history of China • A deeply researched study of famine in China spanning more than three millennia • A valuable example of historical scholarship from t wentieth-century China The Cambridge China Library 660pp 41 tables July 2020 9781108479905 Hardback GBP 120.00 / USD 155.00 eISBN 9781108801065

The Making of a New Rural Order in South China Volume 2 Merchants, Markets, and Lineages, 1500–1700 Joseph P. McDermott | University of Cambridge

This book is written for anyone interested in Chinese history, Chinese business, banking, family structure, and local society over two crucial centuries in the making of modern China. It reveals how some Chinese families acquired and retained great wealth and power over the Chinese economy. • Provides a holistic framework and analysis of Chinese society and its economy, both rural and urban • Shows how kinship affects business practice and organization • Analyses how Chinese merchants carved niches for their commercial activities within the Chinese government and relates this to the development of distinctive forms 497pp 2 maps 13 tables July 2020 9781107048515 Hardback GBP 105.00 / USD 99.00 eISBN 9781107261471

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The Making of Japanese Settler Colonialism Malthusianism and Trans-Pacific Migration, 1868–1961 Sidney Xu Lu | Michigan State University

This innovative study demonstrates how Japanese empire-builders invented and appropriated the anxiety about overpopulation to justify settler colonialism. Lu reveals the ideological ties, human connections, and institutional continuities between Japanese colonial migration in Asia and Japanese emigration in Hawaii, North and South America. This title is also available as Open Access. • Examines the nexus between Japanese colonial expansion in Asia and Japanese migration to Hawaii and the Americas • Analyzes the discourse of ‘Malthusian expansionism’ and places it at the center of the logic of modern settler colonialism • Reveals how Japanese expansion developed in tandem with the history of Anglo-American settler colonialism in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries • This title is also available as Open Access 329pp 30 b/w illus. 4 tables June 2020 9781108712316 PaperbackGBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 July 2019 9781108482424 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108687584

The Making of Song Dynasty History Sources and Narratives, 960–1279 CE Charles Hartman | University at Albany, State University of New York

Charles Hartman undertakes a detailed revisionist analysis of the major sources that survive as vestiges of the official dynastic historiography of the Chinese Song dynasty (960–1279), deconstructing the master narratives that emerge from these sources as products of political discourse. • Presents a comprehensive introduction to the major sources for Song dynasty history • Offers the first analysis of the received narratives of Song history from a deconstructionist perspective • Provides a new governance model for middle period China 400pp October 2020 9781108834834 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108877176


History - Other Areas

The Meiji Restoration Japan as a Global Nation Robert Hellyer | Wake Forest University, North Carolina

An international team of historians employ global history in novel ways to offer new economic, social, cultural, and military perspectives on the Meiji Restoration, Japan’s modern revolution, and the subsequent creation of a globally-cast Japanese nation-state in the closing decades of the nineteenth century. • Brings together cutting-edge research by twelve historians from North America, Europe, and Japan • Reveals the ways in which global contexts defined how institutions and individuals navigated and experienced the Meiji Restoration • Explores the global contexts that shaped new institutions created after the Meiji Restoration 298pp 18 b/w illus. 4 tables May 2020 9781108478052 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108775762

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The Politics of the Past in Early China Vincent S. Leung | Lingnan University, Hong Kong

This is a study of the political uses of the past in early China. Engaging with a variety of historical materials, including inscriptional records, excavated manuscripts, and transmitted texts, it is a wideranging exploration of the fraught relationship between politics and historical imagination in ancient China. • Furthers our understanding of the history of early China and the ancient world • Contributes to our understanding of historiography from the Bronze Age to the first millenium BCE • The book is based on a diverse set of primary sources, including inscriptional materials and excavated manuscripts 214pp February 2020 9781108443241 Paperback GBP 18.99 / USD 28.99 July 2019 9781108425728 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108348843

Unending Capitalism How Consumerism Negated China’s Communist Revolution Karl Gerth | University of California, San Diego

With the establishment of the PRC in 1949, the Chinese Communist Party aimed to end capitalism. Karl Gerth argues that despite the socialist rhetoric of class warfare, Communist Party policies developed capitalism and expanded consumerism. This negated the goals of the Communist Revolution across the Mao era (1949–1976) down to the present. • Challenges conventional histories of capitalism and consumerism • Presents a provocative new interpretation of China - and the world - in the Mao era • Provides fresh, engaging material to explain complex concepts and topics 394pp May 2020 9780521868464 Hardback GBP 59.99 / USD 79.99 May 2020 9780521688468 Paperback GBP 18.99 / USD 24.99 eISBN 9781139025225

World History and National Identity in China The Twentieth Century Xin Fan

Xin Fan utilizes a variety of archival sources to tell the story of four generations of Chinese historians who created the field of world history in China over the course of the twentieth century, and offers a long-term view of the rise of nationalism in China today. • Provides a narrative of Chinese intellectual history over the course of the entire twentieth century • Considers the influence of critics of narrow nationalism on the formation of Chinese identity • Evaluates the legacy of world-historical studies in China

11000pp February 2021 9781108842600 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108903653

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History (General) after 1500 The Cambridge World History of Violence Volume 3 AD 1500–AD 1800 Robert Antony

Violence is a universal theme in human history and a major problem facing society today. In order to confront it, it is essential that we understand it. This volume shows how many of the problems that the world faces today are rooted in the first age of globalisation: the period between 1500 and 1800. • Not simply a summation of expert current knowledge, but provides original explanatory frameworks for understanding the problem of violence • Takes a thematic approach that provides a template for thinking about violence in a global context • A comprehensive introduction shows the potential of world history for rethinking traditional historical problems in new and productive ways across time and space The Cambridge World History of Violence 732pp 24 b/w illus. 4 maps 1 table March 2020 9781107119116 Hardback GBP 120.00 / USD 155.00 eISBN 9781316340592

The Problems of Genocide Permanent Security and the Language of Transgression A. Dirk Moses | University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

A. Dirk Moses historically delineates the problems of genocide as a concept in relation to rival categories of mass violence, like crimes against humanity and war crimes, and suggests an alternative understanding of the causes and categorization of civilian destruction. • The first intellectual history of genocide that frames the concept as a problem rather than as an achievement • Shows how genocide functions to mask and normalize other kinds of violence against civilians • Highlights the function of ‘permanent security’ as the driver of civilian destruction Human Rights in History 288pp January 2021 9781107103580 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 January 2021 9781107503120 Paperback GBP 26.99 / USD 34.99 eISBN 9781316217306

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History - Other Areas

History (General) before 1500 The Cambridge World History of Violence Volume 1 The Prehistoric and Ancient Worlds Garrett G. Fagan | Pennsylvania State University

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Covering the Palaeolithic through to the end of classical antiquity, this volume moves beyond the study of ancient warfare alone, taking a broader look at violence on a world-wide scale. Volume 1 will be of particular interest to anyone fascinated by archaeology and the ancient world. • Looks at violence globally across a wide range of human history enabling a comparative perspective • At the cutting edge of the history of violence, taking into account the latest scholarship • Provides a wide range of interpretations by both recognized authorities in the field and up-and-coming scholars across an array of disciplines, including archaeology, history, art history, ethnography and literature The Cambridge World History of Violence 756pp 42 b/w illus. 1 map 3 tables March 2020 9781107120129 Hardback GBP 120.00 / USD 155.00 eISBN 9781316341247

The Cambridge World History of Violence Volume 2 AD 500–AD 1500 Matthew Gordon | University of Miami

This volume set takes a broad look at violence on a world-wide scale. It looks specifically at what is often termed the Middle Millennium (roughly 5000–1500 CE), and analyzes violence from Japan and China in the east, across Central Asia and North Africa, to Western Europe, with two additional chapters on Aztec and Mayan culture. • Takes a thematic approach that provides a template for thinking about violence in a global context • At the cutting edge of the history of violence, taking into account the latest scholarship • Provides a wide range of interpretations by both recognized authorities in the field and up-and-coming scholars across an array of disciplines, including archaeology, history, art history, ethnography and literature The Cambridge World History of Violence 722pp 31 b/w illus. March 2020 9781107156388 Hardback GBP 120.00 / USD 155.00 eISBN 9781316661291

History (General), World History Arabian Boundaries New Documents 1966–1975 18 Volume Hardback Set Richard Schofield

Library Editions reprints make available CAE originals in a new format. This collection of illuminating Foreign and Commonwealth Office documents chronicle the most critical decade in the territorial evolution of the Arabian Peninsula and Gulf region, a wholly unique area in geopolitical terms. • This title is part of an unofficial series with three sets:Arabian Boundaries 1853-1960; Arabian Boundaries New Documents 1961-1965;Arabian Boundaries New Documents 1966-1975 • Provides a unique tie-in of historical primary source documents and representative contemporary maps • Provides a uniquely curated collection of historical primary source documents from British archive sources

11000pp August 2020 9781788068963 18 Hardback books GBP 6300.00 / USD 8370.00

History after 1945 (General) The Past Can’t Heal Us The Dangers of Mandating Memory in the Name of Human Rights Lea David | University College Dublin

Lea David goes against the well-embedded belief that ‘proper’ remembrance leads to a better appreciation of human rights values, helping us to understand how the human rights memorialization agenda developed globally and why it often ends up strengthening nationalist sentiment and shaping social inequalities on the ground. • Introduces a new theoretical approach to assess the impact the human rights memorialization agenda has had in conflict and post-conflict settings • Highlights the intersection of historical events, discourses and practices that have enabled the rise of moral remembrance • Offers thought-provoking insights into some of the dangers and pitfalls of the human rights memorialization agenda on the ground Human Rights in History 300pp July 2020 9781108495189 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108861311

Latin American History A Silver River in a Silver World Dutch Trade in the Rio de la Plata, 1648–1678 David Freeman | University of Missouri, Kansas City

A study for scholars of colonial Latin American, Dutch, and economic history that explores the nature and extent of Dutch trade during an understudied period of Spanish America’s history. It raises questions about foreign ‘contraband’ traders and ‘corrupt’ officials, underscoring that their activities frequently proceeded within the law. • Explores an understudied region and era of colonial America so that new entities are introduced into the historiography of colonization • Focuses on the impact Dutch traders had on colonial South America’s economy through trade transactions • Stresses the legitimacy with which these transactions were carried out in order to challenge popular narratives surrounding colonial trade Cambridge Latin American Studies 238pp 2 maps April 2020 9781108417495 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108277754

Agrarian Puerto Rico Reconsidering Rural Economy and Society, 1899–1940 César J. Ayala | University of California, Los Angeles

An examination of the evolution of land tenure and social structure in various economic zones of Puerto Rico during the early twentieth century. Archival data show that the integration of Puerto Rico into the US economy led to overwhelmingly diverse outcomes in different socioeconomic regions of the island. • Avoids dominant historical narratives to pursue a nuanced understanding of the impacts of colonialism on Puerto Rico’s economy under US control • Takes advantage of empirical data to correct common perceptions of Puerto Rican socioeconomics • Emphasizes the importance of land tenure structures which provides a unique perspective useful to scholars trying to revisit the island’s colonial past 322pp January 2020 9781108488464 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108763981


History - Other Areas

Anarchists of the Caribbean Countercultural Politics and Transnational Networks in the Age of US Expansion Kirwin R. Shaffer | Pennsylvania State University

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Corruption and Justice in Colonial Mexico, 1650–1755 Christoph Rosenmüller | Middle Tennessee State University

Kirwin R. Shaffer examines the Caribbean anarchist networks of the early 1900s and demonstrates how transnational networks of radicals linked the Caribbean with Spain, the US, Mexico, South America, and Central America. He uncovers how these groups challenged local and national elites as well as US political, military, and economic expansion. • Explores anarchism from a transnational perspective • Demonstrates the central tension between US foreign policy and anarchist anti-imperialism • Places a special emphasis on the biographies of anarchists who were key in developing transnational networks and shaping anarchist culture

This book provides the first detailed analysis of the evolving concept of corruption in colonial Mexico. Drawing on fresh archival material from historical, legal, religious, and political documents, Christoph Rosenmüller explores the enigma of corruption, its meanings, and its temporal differences. • Provides the first detailed analysis of corruption in colonial Mexico • Utilizes a variety of fresh resources, including judicial treatises and royal legislation, to trace the historical meaning of corruption • Places corruption charges in colonial Mexico within the legal, cultural, and political history of the Atlantic world

Global and International History 322pp May 2020 9781108489034 Hardback GBP 39.99 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108773706

Cambridge Latin American Studies 361pp June 2020 9781108701938 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 May 2019 9781108477116 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108756761

Beyond Babel

Empire on Edge

Translations of Blackness in Colonial Peru and New Granada Larissa Brewer-García | University of Chicago

The British Struggle for Order in Belize during Yucatan’s Caste War, 1847–1901 Rajeshwari Dutt

This analysis of writings about the experiences of black Christians in seventeenth-century Peru and New Granada shows that black linguistic and spiritual intermediaries bridged divisions among the populations implicated in the slave trade, exerting influence over colonial Spanish American writings and racial hierarchies in the Atlantic world. • Offers a strong counter-narrative to the emergence of racism and racial hierarchy in the period by outlining the emergence of a discourse of blackness as an attribute of beauty, virtue, and holiness • Focuses on two major cities in seventeenth-century Spanish America: Cartagena de Indias and Lima • Brings several notable documents to light for the first time, including first-person accounts by Afro-latino subjects and text such as the 1629 Oraciones traducidas en la lengua del Reino de Angola

This transnational account of colonialism at the margins reveals why frontiers are key to understanding imperial anxieties and conflicts. This book is the first monograph to explore Yucatán’s Caste War of 1847–1901 in the context of frontiers and borderlands studies, British history, and imperial and colonial studies. • Offers the first transnational study of how the Caste War of Yucatán transformed neighboring Belize • Allows readers to grapple with questions of colonialism, empire, conflict, ethnicity, and identity through an accessible and readable case study • Explores intersections between British imperial history and Latin American history

Afro-Latin America 321pp 16 b/w illus. 2 tables August 2020 9781108493000 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108632416

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Black British Migrants in Cuba Race, Labor, and Empire in the TwentiethCentury Caribbean, 1898–1948 Jorge L. Giovannetti-Torres | University of Puerto Rico

This book provides a detailed analysis of AfroCaribbean experiences in Cuba from 1898 to 1948. Paying particular attention to labor, race, politics, and imperial relations, Jorge L. Giovannetti-Torres weaves together a complex story of transnationalism in the African Diaspora. • Offers a comprehensive history of British Antilleans in Cuba • Focuses on the pre-World War II era to fill the historical void in twentieth-century analysis of the Afro-Caribbean diaspora • Uses regional newspapers to provide concrete examples of discrimination against Caribbean migrants Cambridge Studies on the African Diaspora 323pp April 2020 9781108437585 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 December 2018 9781108423465 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108526128

198pp March 2020 9781108493420 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108642309

Finding Afro-Mexico Race and Nation after the Revolution Theodore W. Cohen | Lindenwood University, Missouri

Interrogating the racial, cultural, and political foundations of Mexican nationality and the African Diaspora, Theodore W. Cohen reveals how Mexicans, African Americans, and Cubans have understood black identity in Mexico since the 1910 Revolution. This study provides crucial context for the position of Afro-Mexicans in today’s society. • Bridges the rich historical literature on slavery and race in the colonial period with scholarship on the contemporary politics of Blackness • Traces the long history of African-American intellectual engagements with Mexico • Contributes to the expanding literature on the politics of racial comparison and connection along sub-national, national, and transnational lines Afro-Latin America 348pp 15 b/w illus. 12 maps May 2020 9781108493017 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108632430

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History - Other Areas

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Islanders and Empire

Modernity in Black and White

Smuggling and Political Defiance in Hispaniola, 1580–1690 Juan José Ponce Vázquez | University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa

Art and Image, Race and Identity in Brazil, 1890–1945 Rafael Cardoso | Freie Universität Berlin

Islanders and Empire is a pioneering and comprehensive examination of the role smuggling played in the economic and socio-political transformation of Hispaniola from the late sixteenth to seventeenth centuries that will interest students and scholars of the Caribbean, colonial Latin American, and the Atlantic World. • Provides a rare, on-the-ground study of a Spanish Caribbean society in the seventeenth century, a previously understudied period and region • Discusses significant examples of colonial peripheries and borderlands in shaping overall imperial governance • Features a strong narrative style as a key feature of historical inquiry

Rafael Cardoso provides a groundbreaking account of artistic modernization in Brazil in his first singleauthored English-language publication. He puts popular culture and racial tensions at the center, situating cultural debates within the broader currents of Brazilian life, such as the rise of favelas, carnival, mass media, and dictatorship. • A comprehensive and meticulously researched introduction to artistic modernization in Brazil • Analyzes the tension in Brazil between Western definitions of ‘the modern’ and Brazil’s largest African-descended population, from which popular cultural markers such as carnival dominate • Showcases a vast archive of images across a range of visual cultural production, including painting, graphic art, and photography

Cambridge Latin American Studies 320pp October 2020 9781108477659 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108776967

Laboring for the State Women, Family, and Work in Revolutionary Cuba, 1959–1971 Rachel Hynson

Contrary to claims that socialism opposed the family unit, Rachel Hynson argues that the revolutionary Cuban government engaged in social engineering to redefine the nuclear family and organize citizens to serve the state, drawing on Cuban newspapers and periodicals, government documents and speeches, long-overlooked laws, and oral histories. • Offers an in-depth, historical treatment of the internal dynamics of four early revolutionary campaigns that sought to control women’s reproduction, promote marriage, end prostitution, and compel men into state-sanctioned employment • Advances new arguments based on primary source material, archival research, and personal interviews • Focuses on individual beliefs and responses to campaigns as opposed to just state prerogatives and impositions to provide evidence of both the government’s grand narrative and citizens’ counter narratives Cambridge Latin American Studies 332pp 14 b/w illus. January 2020 9781107188679 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108105330

Modern Brazil A Social History Herbert S. Klein | Columbia University, New York

The most detailed social history of Brazil to date, this book is the first to examine all aspects of the region’s transition from a predominantly rural and illiterate society in 1950, to an urban, industrialized one. An indispensable resource for scholars and students of Brazilian and Latin American politics and history. • Draws upon extensive quantitative research while providing an excellent survey of the secondary literature • An exemplary model of a modern social history that offers a macro perspective on societal changes • Provides a valuable tool for scholars comparing Brazil to other BRIC countries and analyzing the modernization process 432pp 90 b/w illus. 3 maps 95 tables March 2020 9781108489027 Hardback GBP 79.99 / USD 105.00 March 2020 9781108733298 Paperback GBP 26.99 / USD 34.99 eISBN 9781108773683

Afro-Latin America 288pp November 2020 9781108481908 Hardback GBP 39.99 / USD 49.99 eISBN 9781108680356

Our Time is Now Race and Modernity in Postcolonial Guatemala Julie Gibbings | University of Edinburgh

Merging the histories of capitalism with political and cultural analysis, Gibbings demonstrates how the struggle between indigenous people and settlers to manage contested ideas of modern politics, economics, and social norms was central to the rise of coffee capitalism in Guatemala and to twentieth century populist dictatorship and revolution. • Examines Q’eqchi Maya efforts to forge an alternative vision of modernity via indigenous traditions, politics, culture, economics, and general worldviews during a period of unrest in postcolonial Guatemala • Demonstrates the ways that historical time was central to contests over race and aspects of political modernity including citizenship, labor, and nation • Uses sources including oral histories, municipal and national archives, newspapers, poetry and novels, popular histories and photographs, and plantation records Cambridge Latin American Studies 419pp 8 b/w illus. 3 maps 1 table June 2020 9781108489140 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108774048


History - Other Areas

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The Mexican Revolution’s Wake The Making of a Political System, 1920–1929 Sarah Osten | University of Vermont

A social and political history of regional socialist parties that set critical precedents for the creation of Mexico’s single-party system following the Mexican Revolution. For scholars and students of modern Latin America across disciplines. • Includes a four-state comparison of socialist parties in Southeast Mexico, which contributes a truly regional perspective to a field dominated by locally-specific histories • Addresses the origins of Mexico’s idiosyncratic post-revolutionary political system, and facilitates comparisons with histories of stateformation elsewhere in the world • Highlights the political histories of less-studied states in Mexico, and offers background on relevant figures and events, complicating and enriching previous interpretations of this history with new data Cambridge Latin American Studies 303pp 8 b/w illus. 2 maps January 2020 9781108401289 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 February 2018 9781108415989 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108235570

The Sexual Question A History of Prostitution in Peru, 1850s–1950s Paulo Drinot | University College London

Exploring the links between sexuality, society, and state formation, this is the first history of prostitution and its regulation in Peru. Scholars and students interested in Latin American history, the history of gender and sexuality, and the history of medicine and public health will find Drinot’s study engaging and thoroughly researched. • Based on extensive, rich sources that include letters written by prostitutes themselves • Presents analysis which is empirically driven and engaging • Enhances strong scholarship on the history of prostitution in Latin America and beyond Cambridge Latin American Studies 328pp 8 b/w illus. 2 maps March 2020 9781108493123 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 March 2020 9781108717281 Paperback GBP 23.99 / USD 31.99 eISBN 9781108675659

Middle East History

Arabic Poetics Aesthetic Experience in Classical Arabic Literature Lara Harb | Princeton University, New Jersey

Revealing how an aesthetic of wonder underlies classical Arabic treatments of poetry, the Quran, and Aristotelian poetics, this fresh look at the question of literary quality, using the framework of aesthetic theory, is essential reading for scholars and students of Arabic literature, Islamic Studies, literary theory and Islamic art history. • Gives the modern reader tools to read and appreciate classical Arabic literature, the Quran, and to understand the idiosyncratic interpretation of Aristotle’s Poetics in Arabic • Engages with, and deepens understanding of aesthetic theory and classical Arabic literary theory • Considers works from the thirteenth and fourteenth century, which have received much less attention in modern scholarship on classical Arabic literature Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization 318pp May 2020 9781108490214 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108780483

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Arabic Thought beyond the Liberal Age Towards an Intellectual History of the Nahda Jens Hanssen | University of Toronto

This volume offers a fundamental overhaul and revival of modern Arab intellectual history. It reassesses Arabic cultural production and political thought in the light of current scholarship and extends the analysis beyond Napoleon’s invasion of Egypt and the outbreak of World War II. • Assesses the impact of the doyen of the field, the late Albert Hourani, fifty years after his seminal book Arabic Thought in the Liberal Age 1798–1939 (Cambridge, 1962) • Introduces the paradigmatic Arabic term Nahda for Hourani’s liberal age and relates it to the emerging field of global intellectual history • Proposes a paradigmatic shift in the study of modern Middle Eastern history and Arabic literature, offering conceptual innovation, greater geographical coverage and deeper historical probing into the origins and transformations of Arab modernity 461pp January 2020 9781316501825 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 34.99 December 2016 9781107136335 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781316479827

A History of Jeddah The Gate to Mecca in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Ulrike Freitag

Seen from the perspective of its diverse population, this first biography of Jeddah traces the city’s urban history and cosmopolitanism from the late Ottoman period to its present-day claim to multiculturalism, within the conservative environment of the Arabian Peninsula. • An urban history considered through the perspective of Jeddah’s diverse population comprised of long-distance merchants, shipping magnates and ex-slaves • Will appeal to historians of the modern Middle East, as well as those with an interest in urban history and the social and political history of Saudi Arabia • Re-evaluates Jeddah’s place in the Middle East against the backdrop of modernisation and Saudi nation-building 404pp March 2020 9781108478793 Hardback GBP 34.99 / USD 44.99 eISBN 9781108778831

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Child Custody in Islamic Law Theory and Practice in Egypt since the Sixteenth Century Ahmed Fekry Ibrahim | McGill University, Montréal

In this longitudinal history of Islamic child custody law, Ahmed Fekry Ibrahim challenges Euro-American exceptionalism and unveils developments akin to the Euro-American concept of the best interests of the child, enshrined in the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC). • A longitudinal study of child custody in Egypt, showing the parallels between pre-colonial and post-colonial family ideologies and legal change • Offers a new perspective on pre-modern legal practice • Provides a non-Euro-American history of child custody Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization 279pp June 2020 9781108456197 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 31.99 August 2018 9781108470568 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108648042

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History - Other Areas

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Christianity in FifteenthCentury Iraq

Egypt and the Struggle for Power in Sudan

Thomas A. Carlson | Oklahoma State University

From World War II to Nasserism Rami Ginat | Bar-Ilan University, Israel

Drawing on a rich variety of sources, Carlson explores Christianity in fifteenth-century Iraq and opens new possibilities for understanding this religiously-diverse pre-industrial society and culture. This book expands the possibilities for global Christianity and shows that ‘Islamic Civilization’ can’t be understood through Muslim sources alone. • Draws on a rich variety of sources, including Arabic, Armenian, Persian, and Syriac sources • Provides a method for analyzing the cultural dimension of social diversity • Broadens the social and geographical horizons for historians of both global Christianity and the Islamic world Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization 323pp 2 b/w illus. 5 maps June 2020 9781316637135 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 31.99 September 2018 9781107186279 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781316888919

Collective Liability in Islam The ‘Aqila and Blood Money Payments Nurit Tsafrir | Tel-Aviv University

Offering the first close analysis of the ‘Aqila, a group jointly liable for blood money payments on behalf of its members, this study traces the transformation of this important institution from pre-Islamic custom to the Shari‘a, and follows its further re-shaping through the modern period, in relation to Islamic religion, state, and society. • Provides the first analysis of the Shari’a institution of the ‘Aqila, a group collectively liable for blood money payments • Presents a clear, detailed outline of the law’s evolution from its preIslamic origins through to the modern day • Places legal theory within the context of historical transformations in religion, state and society Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization 188pp January 2020 9781108498647 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108654241

Cosmopolitan Radicalism The Visual Politics of Beirut’s Global Sixties Zeina Maasri | University of Brighton

Exploring the intersections of visual culture, design and politics in 1960s Beirut, this compelling and original study examines a critical period in Lebanon’s history, now celebrated as the ‘golden age’. It draws from uncharted archives of visual and print culture, filling a major gap in the literature on the history of the postcolonial Arab East. • Provides a new understanding of the cultural politics of decolonization in transnational circuits and global contexts • Examines unexplored primary sources and archives of visual culture, shedding light on graphic design practices and the visual politics of print media • Develops new interdisciplinary frameworks for the analysis of visual and print culture and makes a compelling case for applying these methods in future studies The Global Middle East 342pp 39 b/w illus. 40 colour illus. August 2020 9781108487719 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108767736

This book is a revised history of Egypt’s doctrine of the unity of the Nile Valley, tracing its struggle from monarchy to revolution. It is for scholars and students of Middle Eastern and African history, studying courses on colonial and imperial history, and social movements, and for general readers. • The first study to comprehensively investigate Egypt’s struggle to unite the Nile Valley under its rule, attracting interest from students and scholars in both Middle Eastern and African history • Uniquely examines Egyptian methods and assertions to prove categorically that the Sudan in its entirety was an integral part of Egypt, making a useful read for those studying colonialism, imperialism and third worldism • Presents a variety of socio-political perspectives on the issue of unity in the Nile Valley, for those studying nationalism, political Islam, communism, radical ideologies, social movements, federalism and emigration 292pp March 2020 9781316647929 Paperback GBP 23.99 / USD 31.99 August 2017 9781107197930 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108181952

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Friends of the Emir Non-Muslim State Officials in Premodern Islamic Thought Luke B. Yarbrough | University of California, Los Angeles

The rulers of the premodern Islamic world employed vast numbers of non-Muslim officials. Jews, Christians, Zoroastrians, and others rose to positions of influence at the courts of Muslim caliphs and sultans. This book traces and analyzes how Muslims thought and wrote about these nonMuslim officials who helped to administer their governments. • Proposes a new model for the development of exclusionary political views in Islamic history • Uncovers a wide range of sources from chronicles and law to belles lettres, polemic, and poetry • Offers a wide range of examples from across the premodern Islamic world: from Europe and the Middle East to East Asia Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization 378pp September 2020 9781108721745 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 June 2019 9781108496605 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108634274


History - Other Areas

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Ibadi Muslims of North Africa Manuscripts, Mobilization, and the Making of a Written Tradition Paul M. Love, Jr

Examining the Ibadi Muslims of North Africa, this book traces the history of Arabic texts to tell the story of how people and their networks build religious traditions. Combining the study of Arabic manuscripts with digital tools, it explains how this religious community created and maintained a tradition over nearly a millennium. • Offers a new and in-depth overview of Ibadi history in North Africa • Situates the Ibadis within the broader historical context of the history of the Maghrib, the Mediterranean, and the Sahara • Develops a model for studying the complementary networks of people and ideas across regions Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization 231pp 27 b/w illus. 1 map June 2020 9781108459013 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 31.99 September 2018 9781108472500 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108560498

Iran’s Reconstruction Jihad Rural Development and Regime Consolidation after 1979 Eric Lob | Florida International University

Based on over one hundred and thirty interviews with government officials, revolutionary activists, war veterans, and development experts, this is the first study to examine the significant yet understudied organization and ministry, Reconstruction Jihad, as a key institution in the political and socioeconomic development of the Iranian Republic. • The first full-length study of a significant yet understudied organization and ministry, Reconstruction Jihad, from the 1979 revolution to the present day • Based on over one hundred and thirty interviews with government officials, revolutionary activists, war veterans, development experts, and local residents • Will be of interest to Middle East and Iran specialists, historians, social scientists, development experts, policymakers, and practitioners 404pp 13 b/w illus. 16 tables February 2020 9781108487443 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108766852

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Iranian Cosmopolitanism A Cinematic History Golbarg Rekabtalaei | Seton Hall University, New Jersey

In the lead-up to the revolution, Iran’s cinematic culture reveals much about its society and politics. With her unique take, Golbarg Rekabtalaei opens new avenues for the understanding of cosmopolitanism in Iran and the ways in which it became a style of national imagination through the lens of cinema. • Proposes a re-reading of cinematic history to shed fresh light on the cultural and political history of Iran • Shows how Iranian modernity was linked to social and cultural cosmopolitanism • Draws on a wide array of original language primary sources The Global Middle East 319pp September 2020 9781108407465 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 January 2019 9781108418515 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108290289

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Iranian Masculinities

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Iran’s Troubled Modernity Debating Ahmad Fardid’s Legacy Ali Mirsepassi | New York University

Ahmad Fardid (1910–94), an ‘anti-Western’ philosopher, became the self-proclaimed philosophical spokesperson for the Islamic Republic, coining the term ‘Westoxication’. With thirteen interviews relating his colourful life and intellectual legacy, Mirsepassi sheds light on Iran’s twentieth-century intellectual and political selfconstruction. • Contains detailed new research into the colourful life and times of Ahmad Fardid • Uses thirteen extensive interviews to relate the story and provide a conversational quality to the narrative • Presents an extensive study of anti-orientalist discourse and its relationship with the formation of the Islamic Republic The Global Middle East 381pp November 2020 9781108700269 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 December 2018 9781108476393 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 125.00 eISBN 9781108566124

Gender and Sexuality in Late Qajar and Early Pahlavi Iran Sivan Balslev | Hebrew University of Jerusalem

This unique study spotlights the role of masculinity in Iranian history by examining how men under the reign of Reza Shah dressed, acted, spoke, and thought differently from when under Qajar rule. Balslev finds that the notion of what made a ‘proper Iranian man’ shifted with changes in wider Iranian society. • An in-depth exploration of the role masculinity played in Iranian history • Re-examines nationalism, modernisation and westernisation in Iran, through this lens of masculinity • Draws on a wide variety of sources, including visual sources 330pp September 2020 9781108456333 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 March 2019 9781108470636 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108556880

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History - Other Areas

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Islam and the Culture of Modern Egypt From the Monarchy to the Republic Mohammad Salama | San Francisco State University

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Boasting an in-depth analyses of individual texts over half a century, this intriguing history of the dynamics of Islam and culture in modern Egypt presents the conflict between tradition and secular values in a challenging new light. Including literature and film as crucial sources, this book is accessible to general readers and scholars alike. • Offers a fresh non-historicist account of thinking and writing about Islam and the culture of modern Egypt in the first half of the twentieth century • Defiantly confronts holistic dictates of historical positivism and offers instead local interventions on debates around Islam, modernity, secularism, and the production of knowledge • Shows how an incipient nationalism born in Egypt at the outset of the last century was co-opted by local currents, imperialist powers, anticolonial resistance, as well as Islamist and secular ideologies

238pp 6 b/w illus. June 2020 9781108404679 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 31.99 November 2018 9781108417181 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108265027 NEW IN PAPERBACK

Islam in Israel Muslim Communities in Non-Muslim States Muhammad Al-Atawneh | Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel

Focussing on the evolving role of Islamic law in the construction of a Muslim minority identity in Israel, this valuable contribution to the literature on Islam in Israel, as well as Islamic studies and Israel studies in general, will be of great interest to scholars and students alike. • Provides important up-to-date data about Muslims living in Israel • Suggests a unique window through which to view the most influential Islamic organizations in Israel today • Examines personal, social, and geographic factors influencing evolving Muslim identities in Israel 212pp 4 b/w illus. 124 tables March 2020 9781108436007 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 27.99 January 2018 9781108423267 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108525671 NEW IN PAPERBACK

Islam, Literature and Society in Mongol Anatolia A. C. S. Peacock | University of St Andrews, Scotland

Bringing together previously unpublished sources in Arabic, Persian and Turkish, Peacock focuses on the period of Mongol domination in Anatolia in the thirteenth-fourteenth centuries to offer new understanding of the process of Islamisation in Anatolia and integrate its study with that of the broader Islamic world. • Analyses literature, religion and society during a crucial yet neglected period in Anatolian history, that of Mongol domination in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries • Contributes to new understanding of the emergence of the Ottoman Empire and ultimately the modern Republic of Turkey by marking a decisive phase in the process of the Islamisation of medieval Anatolia • Brings together sources in Arabic, Persian and Turkish to integrate the study of Anatolia with that of the broader Islamic world Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization 323pp November 2020 9781108713481 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 October 2019 9781108499361 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108582124

Islamic Knowledge and the Making of Modern Egypt Hilary Kalmbach | University of Sussex

For 130 years, tensions have raged over the place of Islamic ideas and practices within modern Egypt. This history focuses on a pivotal yet understudied school, Dar al-Ulum, whose alumni became authoritative arbiters of how to be modern and authentic within a Muslim-majority community, including by founding the Muslim Brotherhood. • A ground-breaking study of a pivotal, yet understudied school, Dar al-’Ulum, an institution that has not been published on for thirty-five years • Demonstrates the importance of Arabic and Islamic knowledge to performances of authority, belonging, and authenticity within a modernising Muslim-majority community • Establishes a 130-year history for tensions over the place of Islamic ideas and practices within modernized public spheres, tensions that were central to the outcomes of the 2011 Arab Uprisings 288pp October 2020 9781108423472 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108526142 NEW IN PAPERBACK

Islamic Law of the Sea Freedom of Navigation and Passage Rights in Islamic Thought Hassan S. Khalilieh | University of Haifa, Israel

In this pioneering research, Hassan S. Khalilieh sheds light on the often ignored Islamic law of the sea, and customary practices that were influential in the development of many of the fundamental principles of the pre-modern international law governing the legal status of the high seas and the territorial sea. • Approaches the subject of Islamic international law from the maritime perspective • Focusses on three legal themes: the territorial sea, the high seas, and maritime piracy • Cites Qur’anic verses, prophetic traditions, and the 630 CE Treaty in the original Arabic Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization 304pp 2 maps September 2020 9781108722391 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 May 2019 9781108481458 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108630702 NEW IN PAPERBACK

Kemalist Turkey and the Middle East International Relations in the Interwar Period Amit Bein | Clemson University, South Carolina

This book offers a multifaceted perspective of Turkey’s international relations during the interwar period. It is for scholars, students and researchers of Middle Eastern history and politics, international relations, as well as general readers interested in the wider Middle East. • Offers readers a revised view of regional dynamics in the history of the Modern Middle East, moving away from overly Eurocentric approaches to the period • Shows readers how Kemalist Turkey’s international relations in the interwar period has had a lasting influence on the region’s current politics • Corrects misconceptions regarding Turkey’s engagement with the Middle East in the early post-Ottoman period, offering readers an accurate historical perspective 305pp 17 b/w illus. 8 maps March 2020 9781316647981 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 November 2017 9781107198005 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108182072


History - Other Areas

King Abdul Aziz: Diplomacy and Statecraft 1902–1953 4 Volume Hardback Set Diplomacy and Statecraft 1902–1953 A Burdett

Library Editions reprints make available CAE originals in a new format. This collection of primary source documents evidences the methods, policies and diplomacy employed by Abdul Aziz Al Saud in extending and then consolidating the Saudi state. It traces his relations with Arab rulers, Britain, the United States and other European powers. • Contains collections of key documents from the India Office Library • Previously unknown or fragmented material is now available in a coherent collection • This title is one of a pair with ‘King Abdul Aziz: Political Correspondence 1904–1953’, which has a slightly different focus with many original Arabic documents. This title has no Arabic documents. 2000pp August 2020 9781788062107 4 Hardback books GBP 1400.00 / USD 1860.00

Kuwait Political Agency 12 Hardback Set Arabic Documents 1899–1949 M. Asser

Library Editions reprints make available CAE originals in a new format. This collection constitutes a comprehensive publication of the Arabic documents found in the files of the British Political Agency, Kuwait and a valuable research resource for Kuwaiti, Saudi and the Arab Gulf. Arranged in chronological order and with detailed documents listing. • Previously unknown or fragmented material is now brought together in a coherent collection • The collection is arranged in chronological order and is complemented by the addition of a detailed contents list describing every document • The majority of the correspondence passed between the Ruler and the Political Agency in Kuwait but the volume and range of material is extensive concerning the Persian Gulf waters and islands, Iran, and Saudi Arabia 8000pp August 2020 9781788067102 12 Hardback books GBP 4550.00 / USD 6045.00

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Law and Politics under the Abbasids An Intellectual Portrait of al-Juwayni Sohaira Z. M. Siddiqui

Abu Ma’ali al-Juwayni (d. 478/1085) is a lauded figure in Islamic intellectual history but his thought remains underexplored. Living during a politically precarious period, he became preoccupied with questions of religious certainty and continuity. Siddiqui reveals the dynamism of his thinking on the relationship between theology, law and politics. • Adopts an interdisciplinary approach to Islamic studies, revealing connections between theology, law and politics • Challenges the notion of al-Juwayni being a prototypical Ash’ari theologian and Shafi’i jurist • Shows that Islamic political thought was not solely focused on the power of the imam • Provides a new way for conceptualizing the Shari’a in varying social and political circumstances Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization 329pp June 2020 9781108721950 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 April 2019 9781108496780 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108654784

Leaving Zion Jewish Emigration from Palestine and Israel after World War II Ori Yehudai Ohio State University

Explores Jewish emigration from Palestine and Israel during the critical period between 1945 and the late 1950s by weaving together the perspectives of governments, aid organizations, Jewish communities and the personal stories of individual migrants. • Looks at the land of Israel not only as a country of Jewish immigration but also of emigration • Pays close attention to the personal stories of individual migrants to reconstruct the migration process from a new angle • Uses previously unexamined primary sources collected from twenty-two archives in six countries to bring to light a hitherto unknown chapter in Israel’s history 280pp May 2020 9781108478342 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108777490

Life after the Harem Female Palace Slaves, Patronage and the Imperial Ottoman Court Betül Ipsirli Argit

The first study exploring the lives of female slaves of the Ottoman imperial court, it demonstrates the diversity of experiences in non-dynastic femaleagency in the early-modern Ottoman world. It focuses particularly on the period following their manumission and transfer from the imperial palace. • The first study to explore the lives of female slaves of the Ottoman imperial court, including the period following their manumission and transfer from the imperial palace. • Demonstrates the diversity of experiences and agency of non-dynastic female members of the imperial courts • Opens new horizons for those interested in the roles of palace women, the nature of patronage relationships, and personal and political dynamics in the Ottoman imperial court 304pp 5 b/w illus. 1 map 9 tables October 2020 9781108488365 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108770316 NEW IN PAPERBACK

Mapping Kurdistan Territory, Self-Determination and Nationalism Zeynep N. Kaya | London School of Economics and Political Science

Addressing the lack of rigorous research and analysis of Kurdish politics from an international perspective, this study examines how the map of Kurdistan, which represents the ideal of a unified Kurdish homeland in an ethnically and geographically complex region, was created within international political history. • Tells the story of the map of Kurdistan, and how its historical construction informs the Kurdish sense of territory, identity and homeland • Takes a non-political approach to notions of nationhood and territoriality for a systematic and historically engaged study of Kurdish politics and Kurdish engagement with the international community • Of importance to those interested in the renewed media focus on the Kurds, plus scholars and students of international relations, nationalism and Middle Eastern studies 243pp 7 maps June 2020 9781108474696 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108629805

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Mapping the Ottomans Sovereignty, Territory, and Identity in the Early Modern Mediterranean Palmira Brummett | Brown University, Rhode Island

Maps serve as centerpieces for discussions of early modern space, time, borders, stages of travel, information flows, invocations of authority, and cross-cultural relations. Enriched by examples of Ottoman self-mapping, this book examines how the Ottoman Empire was mapped in the narrative and visual imagination of early modern Europe’s Christian kingdoms. • Contains multiple illustrations of early modern maps • Provides comparisons to Ottoman self-mapping • The evidence ranges widely across area, time, and genre

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383pp 95 b/w illus. 17 colour illus. 1 map May 2020 9781107462953 Paperback GBP 21.99 / USD 32.99 July 2015 9781107090774 Hardback GBP 35.99 / USD 57.00 eISBN 9781316117316

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Muhammad’s Heirs The Rise of Muslim Scholarly Communities, 622–950 Jonathan E. Brockopp | Pennsylvania State University

This book describes the emergence of Muslim scholarly communities from the origins of Islam until the mid-tenth century through the examination of early Muslim texts and discourse. It is for scholars and advanced students studying Middle Eastern history, Islamic studies, Islamic law and early Islamic literature. • Offers a wide array of primary sources (including significant excerpts from texts) to provide an overview of the history of early Muslim scholarly communities • Sets the rise of Islam in a multi-religious context through the use of sources from a variety of religious viewpoints, making it ideal for readers of multiple faiths and disciplines • Presents the first published overview of important early Islamic manuscripts in a separate appendix Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization 247pp 17 b/w illus. February 2020 9781107514379 Paperback GBP 21.99 / USD 27.99 August 2017 9781107106666 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316227145

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Non-Muslim Provinces under Early Islam Islamic Rule and Iranian Legitimacy in Armenia and Caucasian Albania Alison Vacca | University of Tennessee, Knoxville

This book explores the Christian provinces of Armenia and Caucasian Albania as caliphal provinces and part of the larger Iranian cultural sphere. It is aimed at historians of Islam, Iran and the Caucasus, and for those studying themes of memory, diversity and Muslim-Christian relations in the Near East. • Analyzes Armenia and Albania as provinces under Islamic rule, shifting away from previous literature that usually places them in a Byzantine context • Balances both Christian and Arabic sources, often unexplored by Islamic historians, to offer a more all-encompassing view of the period • Focuses on the transition from Sasanian to caliphal rule, offering a novel example for the transition to Islamic rule in the region Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization 289pp 7 b/w illus. March 2020 9781316638552 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 September 2017 9781107188518 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316979853

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Ottoman Women during World War I Everyday Experiences, Politics, and Conflict Elif Mahir Metinsoy

The book studies the experience of Ottoman Muslim women during the First World War, focusing on the everyday problems of life on the home front and the role of women in shaping wartime social policy. It is an ideal read for researchers of gender history, Middle Eastern and social history. • Provides a concise, accessible overview of the lives of Ottoman women during the First World War, free of academic jargon, for both scholars and the general reader • Uses previously unseen archive sources to propose a new view of Ottoman and Turkish women’s history, exploring the role of women from all social circumstances in shaping Ottoman history • Draws conclusions on life on the Ottoman home front, and the role of women in shaping social and political developments, that can be applied to the modern day events shaping the Middle East 289pp March 2020 9781316648391 Paperback GBP 23.99 / USD 31.99 November 2017 9781107198906 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108182850

Palestine and Transjordan Administration Reports 1918–1948 R. Jarman

Library Editions reprints make available CAE originals in a new format. This is an essential research source providing facsimile documents regarding British administration in Palestine and Transjordan, on the continuous tensions of the period between the Arab and Jewish populations, on civil disorders and the eventual unworkability of the Mandate. • Complete for the first time: the series includes the pre-Mandate reports of 1918–1923, the Mandate and Departmental Annual Reports from 1923–1947/8, (including the unpublished Mandate Reports for 1940 and 1941), the extensive Survey of Palestine 1946–7 and the formal papers covering the termination of the Mandate in 1948 • Included in this set are various historical memoranda produced by the Palestine and British Governments for the United Nations Special Committee on Palestine, giving an overall view of the mandate period 11500pp August 2020 9781788067300 16 Hardback books GBP 5600.00 / USD 7440.00

Persian Historiography across Empires The Ottomans, Safavids, and Mughals Sholeh A. Quinn

The first comparative study of Persian historiography of the early modern Islamic empires, the Ottomans, Safavids and Mughals, presenting in-depth case analyses alongside a wide array of primary sources to illustrate the extensive universe of literary-historical writing that Persian historiography can be found within. • This first comparative study of Persian historiography from the 16th17th centuries • Presents in-depth case analyses alongside a wide array of primary sources written under the Ottomans, Safavids, Mughals • Draws attention to the importance of placing these historical chronicles within their previously neglected historiographical context 250pp January 2021 9781108842211 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108906975


History - Other Areas

Political Repression in Bahrain Marc Jones

This rich 100-year modern history of Bahrain uses multiple sources, from freedom of information requests, interviews, and social media data to show how and why the Bahrain regime has used different techniques of political repression to maintain power since the 1920s. With new insights, this book challenges existing knowledge on Bahrain. • An interdisciplinary analysis of political repression in Bahrain • Provides a concise and accessible history of Bahrain over 100 years • Will appeal to Gulf area experts, historians, social movement scholars, those interested in post-colonial studies, social justice as well as policymakers and the general reader Cambridge Middle East Studies 400pp July 2020 9781108471435 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 July 2020 9781108458009 Paperback GBP 26.99 / USD 34.99 eISBN 9781108558822

Port Cities of the Eastern Mediterranean Urban Culture in the Late Ottoman Empire Malte Fuhrmann

A fascinating history of nineteenth century Eastern Mediterranean port cities, which re-examines the European influence over the urban space, leisure practises, and the formation of class, gender and national identity, providing an alternative view of the relationship between the Islamic World and Europe. • A fascinating history of nineteenth century Eastern Mediterranean port cities including Constantinople, Smyrna, and Salonica • Provides new perspectives on the region by featuring lower class and subaltern perspectives • Examines urban space, leisure practises, and the formation of class, gender, and national identities for an alternate view on the relationship between the Islamic World and Europe 444pp October 2020 9781108477376 Hardback GBP 75 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108769716

Records of the Emirates 19661971 6 Volume Hardback Set Anita Burdett

Library Editions reprints make available CAE originals in a new format. Great Britain had been responsible for the various emirates’ external affairs for over 150 years. This collection concentrates on the central development of the Emirates infrastructure and government including coverage of the process of achieving union of the separate emirates. • Provides a unique collection of key historical primary source documents from British archive sources • Previously unknown or fragmented material is now available in a coherent collection • Builds on the original collection Records of the Emirates 1820–1960, and connects with the further extension Records of the Emirates 1961–65 3000pp August 2020 9781788065269 6 Hardback books GBP 2100.00 / USD 2790.00

Records of Yemen 1798–1960 16 Volume Hardback Set Doreen Ingrams

Library Editions reprints make available CAE originals in a new format. The important historical material in this work, including privileged access to ancient and fragile archives now closed to public view provides scholars with an extensive and importance repertoire of primary documents reflecting the history of the Yemen. • This publication provides a uniquely curated collection of historical primary source documents from British archive sources • Having lived in Yemen as part of the British governmental apparatus, and being permitted access to fragile papers now closed, the two editors were uniquely positioned to create a work of unusually high status 12000pp August 2020 9781788065481 16 Hardback books GBP 5600.00 / USD 7440.00

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Religious Politics in Turkey From the Birth of the Republic to the AKP Ceren Lord | University of Oxford

The AKP period in Turkey has often been understood as a break from the ‘secular’ pattern of state-building. Ceren Lord challenges this by showing how Islamist mobilisation in Turkey has been facilitated by state institutions established during early nation-building, offering a new perspective on the politicisation of religion. • Based on original archival material, offers new analytical framework for understanding state-religion relations in Turkey and the wider Middle Eastern region • Uses new data to propose an alternative account of the historical roots of the AKP period in Turkey • Looks at the expansion of religious infrastructure in Turkey Cambridge Middle East Studies 386pp March 2020 9781108458924 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 November 2018 9781108472005 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108638906

Reversing the Colonial Gaze Persian Travelers Abroad Hamid Dabashi | Columbia University, New York

Moving beyond the Eurocentric approach to travel narratives, this comprehensive and transformative account of the adventures of more than a dozen Persian travelers in the nineteenth century rediscovers and reclaims the world as seen through their rich travelogues, removing the colonial borders within which their narratives had been placed. • Counters Eurocentric approaches to travel writing, reclaiming the world through the narratives of Persian travelers abroad in the nineteenth century • Features detailed analysis of critical sources within travel literature, and postcolonial and postmodern theory • Will be of interest not only to college and graduate students and researchers of the Middle East and Iran and India, but also to those interested in travel writing beyond the Western world The Global Middle East 408pp 15 b/w illus. January 2020 9781108488129 Hardback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108768986

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Revolution and its Discontents

Slavery and Empire in Central Asia

Political Thought and Reform in Iran Eskandar Sadeghi-Boroujerdi | University of Oxford

Jeff Eden | Cornell University, New York

Starting with the end of the Iran-Iraq War in August 1988 and the death of Ayatollah Khomeini in 1989, Sadeghi-Boroujerdi looks at the rise and evolution of reformist thought in Iran and how it came to rethink the nature of political and religious authority under the Islamic Republic. • Presents an in-depth intellectual history of Iran’s reform movement • Highlights Muslim thinkers’ contributions to political and theological debates in modern Iran • Connects Iran’s intellectual history to the wider intellectual debates of the global Cold War The Global Middle East 455pp 1 table June 2020 9781108445061 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 February 2019 9781108426343 Hardback GBP 105.00 / USD 135.00 eISBN 9781108681834

This in-depth study of the slave trade that spurred the Russian conquest of Central Asia offers an unprecedented window into slaves’ lives from eyewitness accounts, autobiographies, and newlyuncovered interviews which demonstrate that the slaves brought about their own emancipation by fomenting the largest slave uprising in the region’s history. • Challenges the consensus that it was the Russian Empire that liberated Central Asia’s slaves and offers a compelling new theory • Sheds new light on slaves’ lives and human trafficking in Central Asia on the eve of the Russian conquests • Draws extensively on slaves’ own testimonies, including autobiographies and interviews Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization 240pp March 2020 9781108456111 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 July 2018 9781108470513 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108637329

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Russia’s Turn to Persia

Temporary Marriage in Iran

Orientalism in Diplomacy and Intelligence Denis V. Volkov | University of Manchester

Gender and Body Politics in Modern Iranian Film and Literature Claudia Yaghoobi | University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Drawing on recently declassified and previously unpublished archival documents, Denis V. Volkov presents an in-depth analysis of Russian and Soviet Iranian studies as a leading sub-domain within the broader field of Oriental studies in the period from the 1850s to 1941, and analyses its involvement in Russia’s foreign policy towards Iran. • Studies various aspects of the relations between Iran and Russia from different levels of society • Investigates the relationships between state and scholarly knowledge • Advances the Foucauldian approach for scholarly enquiry into Russia’s Oriental studies 283pp 12 b/w illus. June 2020 9781108446693 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 31.99 August 2018 9781108490788 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108645270

Security in the Gulf Local Militaries before British Withdrawal Ash Rossiter

A reinterpretation of how Britain maintained order, protected its interests and carried out its defence obligations in the Gulf before its withdrawal from the region in 1971, benefitting from the extensive use of recently declassified British Government archival documents and India Office records. • A new interpretation of how Britain maintained order to protect its interests and carried out its defence obligations in the Gulf in the decades before its withdrawal from the region in 1971 • Explores the successes and failures of Britain’s approach to security in the Gulf, using previously unexamined declassified government documents • Ideal for courses on Gulf studies, late imperial history, and of interest to scholars and students of military and security studies, and of the Middle East 306pp June 2020 9781108488372 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108770330

Analysing the representation of women in modern novels, short stories and cinema, this study is an examination of the controversial social institution of sigheh or temporary marriage in Iran, not just as an institution but also as a set of practices, identities and meanings that have transformed over the last two centuries. • Brings feminist theories of embodiment to bear on the Iranian literary and cinematic tradition to understand the concept and practise of temporary marriage in Iran • Examines the representation of sigheh women within novels and short stories from the Pahlavi era and cinematic works produced after the Islamic Revolution • Breaks away from standard narratives about Iranian female sexuality to offer a new perspective on definitions of Iranian womanhood The Global Middle East 308pp January 2020 9781108488105 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108768948

The Caravan Abdallah Azzam and the Rise of Global Jihad Thomas Hegghammer | Universitetet i Oslo

The much-awaited book about Abdallah Azzam, one of the jihadi movement’s most important figures. It explains why jihadism went international in the 1980s, paving the way for the events of 9/11. Azzam’s extraordinary life story makes for compelling reading and should appeal to readers far outside specialist circles. • Tells the entertaining story of Azzam’s extremely eventful life, culminating in his extremely mysterious death • Explains why the jihadi movement went international in the 1980s, improving our understanding about this ideology and the people behind it • Revises early history of al-Qaida through the use of previously untapped primary sources 718pp 26 b/w illus. 4 maps March 2020 9780521765954 Hardback GBP 24.99 / USD 34.99 eISBN 9781139049375


History - Other Areas

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The Chief Eunuch of the Ottoman Harem

The First of the Modern Ottomans

From African Slave to Power-Broker Jane Hathaway | Ohio State University

The Intellectual History of Ahmed Vasif Ethan L. Menchinger | University of Toronto

Eunuchs were a common feature of virtually all Islamic empires yet remain mysterious to modern scholars. Using a wide range of primary sources, Jane Hathaway analyzes the origins of the Chief of the African eunuchs and traces the evolution of this powerful official from the late sixteenth through the early twentieth century. • Uses an array of sources written in the original languages • Incorporates the Chief Harem Eunuch’s origins in Africa and his ties to Ottoman provinces such as Egypt and Arabia • Places the Chief Harem Eunuch in the context of the Ottoman Empire’s transformations between the sixteenth and early twentieth centuries

This book explores Ottoman intellectual life, politics and reform during the eighteenth century through the study of the key statesmen and historian Ahmed Vâsıf. It is for students and researchers of intellectual history, the Enlightenment period, the Ottoman Empire and the Middle East. • Covers a pivotal period in the Ottoman Empire and the wider Middle East, allowing readers to better understand the challenges faced by the Empire at the time • Uses the life story of central intellectual and political figure Ahmed Vâsıf to provide a narrative backdrop to explorations of modernity in the Ottoman Empire • Explores important intellectual debates among Ottomans of the times, highlighting changes in a concise and easy-to-follow manner

339pp 27 b/w illus. 6 maps 6 tables March 2020 9781107519206 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 August 2018 9781107108295 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316257876

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The Crisis of Kingship in Late Medieval Islam Persian Emigres and the Making of Ottoman Sovereignty Christopher Markiewicz | University of Birmingham

Examines how ideological and administrative crises within Islamic lands in the late fifteenth century brought about a new conception of kingship for the early modern period. Through Idris Bidlisi, a major intellectual and statesman, this book paints a picture of a changing Ottoman Empire: shifting from regional dynastic kingdom to global empire. • Analyses a wide range of sources from Arabic, Persian and Turkish manuscripts in an accessible and approachable way • By using the life of Idris Bidlisi as a departure point, it grounds global and intellectual trends in individual lived experience • Contextualises imperial Ottoman political and intellectual developments within the wider events and processes of Islamic lands Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization 364pp September 2020 9781108710572 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 August 2019 9781108492140 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781108684842

Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization 356pp February 2020 9781316647943 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 33.99 August 2017 9781107197978 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108181990

The Origins of the ArabIranian Conflict Nationalism and Sovereignty in the Gulf between the World Wars Chelsi Mueller | Tel-Aviv University

Examining the triangular relationship between Iran, Britain and the Gulf Arab shaykhdoms, this is the first book to investigate the origins of the presentday Arab-Iranian conflict in the interwar period, filling a gap in the literature on the history of ArabIranian relations in the Gulf and Iran’s Persian Gulf policy during Reza Shah’s rule. • Examines the triangular relationship between Iran, Britain and the Gulf Arab shaykhdoms to reveal the origins of the present-day Arab-Iranian conflict • Pays particular attention to Bahrain in charting the revival of Iranian claims to sovereignty during the interwar period • Fills a significant gap in the literature on the history of Arab-Iranian relations in the Gulf and Iran’s Persian Gulf policy during the Reza Shah period 298pp August 2020 9781108489089 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108773881

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The Emergence of Public Opinion State and Society in the Late Ottoman Empire Murat R. Şiviloğlu | Trinity College Dublin

The emergence of public opinion was perhaps the most important political transformation of the Ottoman Empire during the nineteenth century, with such sweeping ramifications as the creation of a parliament. This book takes an integrated and comprehensive approach to this phenomenon, which has been hitherto considered a uniquely Western experience. • Explores the historical evaluation of the concept of public opinion • Uses previously unused archival and historical sources • Takes a comparative and interdisciplinary approach to what has often been considered as a uniquely Western phenomenon 331pp June 2020 9781316641392 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 31.99 October 2018 9781107190924 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108120371

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History - Other Areas

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The Ottoman ‘Wild West’ The Balkan Frontier in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries Nikolay Antov | University of Arkansas

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An analysis of Balkan Islam and the formation of Muslim communities in the early modern Ottoman Balkans. This book will be of interest to Balkan, Ottoman and Islamic World historians, as well as scholars of early modern empires, political scientists, and sociologists and anthropologists of religion. • The first monograph-length study of the formation of one of the most significant Muslim communities in the Balkans, helping the reader develop their knowledge of the origins of Balkan Islam and Islamic ‘indigenization’ • Explores the interplay of Islamization in a regional, frontier setting, and the impact of Ottoman state policies on these processes, contributing to the reader’s understanding of Islamization and Islamic expansion • Uses administrative, legal, and literary-ideational sources to provide a methodological model for the use of typologically diverse sources in early modern Ottoman and Islamic world historiography 344pp March 2020 9781316633748 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 December 2017 9781107182639 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781316863084

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The Rebel and the Imām in Early Islam Explorations in Muslim Historiography Najam Haider | Barnard College, New York

Engaging with contemporary debates about the sources that shape our understanding of the early Muslim world, Najam Haider proposes a new model for Muslim historical writing that draws on Late Antique historiography to question why we impose modern notions of history on a pre-modern society. • Contains an accessible and comprehensive overview of current controversies in the study of early Islamic history • Employs three specific case studies to shed light on broad historiographical questions • Challenges modern assumptions about the critical sources shaping our understanding of the early Muslim world 318pp October 2020 9781108708142 Paperback GBP 25.99 / USD 33.79 September 2019 9781107026056 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781139199223

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The Rise of the Egyptian Middle Class Socio-economic Mobility and Public Discontent from Nasser to Sadat Relli Shechter | Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel

The Middle Eastern oil boom during the 1970s–80s led to swift economic growth and increased socio-economic mobility in Egypt. Here, Relli Shechter offers a local version of a wider Middle Eastern and international story: the global formation of middle-class societies, whose members strove for respectable lives with only partial success. • Presents a revisionist explanation of the fast expansion of the Egyptian middle class • Uses Egypt as a case study to document broader and global social and economic change • Examines statistical evidence, as well as accounting for how public commentators explained contemporary transitions 285pp 16 b/w illus. September 2020 9781108464703 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 December 2018 9781108474481 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108672627

The Unforgettable Queens of Islam Succession, Authority, Gender Shahla Haeri | Boston University

Explores the lives and legacies of several Muslim women rulers from different cultures and historical periods who were at the forefront of the political scene, contesting patriarchal rules of dynastic succession and electoral competition to become sovereign leaders in medieval Yemen and India, and modern Pakistan and Indonesia. • Takes a cross-cultural and ethno-historical perspective to explore the lives and legacies of several Muslim women rulers from medieval to modern times • Challenges both the western stereotypes and Islamist religious and political arguments against Muslim women political leadership • Makes the striking history of the lives of charismatic Muslim women rulers accessible to a broad readership 278pp 12 b/w illus. March 2020 9781107123038 Hardback GBP 69.99 / USD 89.99 March 2020 9781107554894 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781316389300

Utopia and Civilisation in the Arab Nahda Peter Hill

Examining the massive social changes that reshaped the Middle East over the long nineteenth century, this study of the ‘Nahda’, a cultural renaissance in the Arab world, presents a crucial and often overlooked part of the Arab world’s encounter with global capitalist modernity. • The first in-depth study of the little-known early phase of the Arab Nahda movement in the mid nineteenth-century • Situates the Arab Nahda within a global historical context • Combines intellectual and literary material with elements of social history

318pp 5 b/w illus. January 2020 9781108491662 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108666602


History - Other Areas

South Asian History A Genealogy of Terrorism Colonial Law and the Origins of an Idea Joseph McQuade | University of Toronto

Using India as a case study, Joseph McQuade traces the genealogy of the political and legal category of terrorism. He demonstrates how the modern concept of terrorism was shaped by colonial emergency laws dating back into the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. • Traces the genealogy of counter-terrorism laws in colonial India • Shows how the idea of terrorism built on older criminal categories such as thugs and pirates • Demonstrates the role of violence in shaping the Indian nationalist movement and colonial responses 300pp November 2020 9781108842150 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108896238

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Citizen Refugee Forging the Indian Nation after Partition Uditi Sen | University of Nottingham

Uditi Sen explores how partition refugees were used as agents of nation-building in post-colonial India. Utilising archival records and oral histories, Sen analyses official policies towards Hindu refugees, and their own perspectives ‘from below’. This book expands our understanding of popular politics and citizenship in post-partition India. • Gives equal weighting to oral history and archival research, bringing the policies of resettlement to life • Uses a pan-Indian analytical framework to transcend the conventional East versus West regional division that characterises partition studies • The personal accounts of refugees reveal unexplored aspects of everyday citizenship and identity formation 303pp 8 b/w illus. 2 maps 5 tables August 2020 9781108441094 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 August 2018 9781108425612 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108348553

A History of Bangladesh Second Edition Willem van Schendel | Universiteit van Amsterdam

This revised and updated edition reveals the vibrant, colourful past of Bangladesh, chiefly known in the West through media images of poverty, underdevelopment and disasters. Based on the latest academic research and richly illustrated, this is a fascinating and highly readable account of life in Bangladesh over the last two millennia. • Brings together social, economic, political, cultural and environmental history to explain the history of Bangladesh • Accessible for a wide audience - Lonely Planet lists the first edition as ‘the best nonfiction book’ on Bangladesh • Includes many previously unpublished illustrations and maps, biographies of key political figures, a glossary to help the reader with pronunciation and suggestions for further reading 456pp July 2020 9781108473699 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 July 2020 9781108462464 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 eISBN 9781108684644

A Hygienic City-Nation Space, Community, and Everyday Life in Colonial Calcutta Nabaparna Ghosh

This book offers the first comprehensive history of everyday urban spaces – that is, spaces planned by the people, and not the state – in a colonial South Asian city. It will interest students, researchers, and faculty of history, South Asian studies, empire and colonialism, nationalism, comparative cities, architecture, and city-planning. • This is the first academic monograph on the everyday spaces of colonial Calcutta’s neighbourhoods or paras • The book explains urbanization as a pedagogic process that targeted both spaces and bodies in the city • It points to the conflation of urbanism and nationalism in nationalist (Swarajist) discourses on public health and the city 250pp September 2020 9781108489898 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108779654

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Governing Gender and Sexuality in Colonial India The Hijra , c.1850–1900 Jessica Hinchy | Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

Jessica Hinchy examines the colonial and postcolonial governance of gender and sexuality through the history of transgender Hijras in north India. She argues that gender, sexual and cultural practices were criminalised not simply through imported British norms, but due to a complex set of local factors, including elite Indian attitudes. • Examines the history and social practices of the nineteenth-century transgender Hijra community • Analyses colonial archival practices and the formation of colonial knowledge • Based on extensive archival research in India and the UK, including previously unexamined documents 323pp March 2020 9781108716888 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 April 2019 9781108492553 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108592208

Imagining Afghanistan The History and Politics of Imperial Knowledge Nivi Manchanda | Queen Mary University of London

An innovative examination of knowledge production relating to Afghanistan in the imperial imagination. Focusing on representations of gender, state and tribes, Manchanda argues that the development of pervasive tropes in Western conceptions of Afghanistan have enabled both colonial and contemporary foreign intervention in the region. • Provides an interdisciplinary framework through which to study modern Afghanistan • Uses a methodologically diverse toolkit to explore the ‘history of the present’ • Develops postcolonial theory grounded in the empirically rich ‘case’ of Afghanistan 266pp 11 b/w illus. July 2020 9781108491235 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108867986

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History - Other Areas

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India’s Revolutionary Inheritance Politics and the Promise of Bhagat Singh Chris Moffat | Queen Mary University of London

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This innovative account of revolutionary thought in South Asia explores the long-term legacies of militant violence and the politics of commemoration in a post-colonial context. Asking how anti-colonial martyrs have come to ‘haunt’ the independent state, Chris Moffat provides an exciting new window into contemporary Indian politics. • Presents the first critical study of the multifarious afterlives of iconic anti-colonial revolutionary Bhagat Singh • Proposes a new framework for understanding the relationship between anti-colonial histories and post-colonial politics in the modern world • Foregrounds the importance of martyrdom, myth and memory in the global history of revolutionary politics

294pp 33 b/w illus. July 2020 9781108739016 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 January 2019 9781108496902 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108655194

Language and the Making of Modern India Nationalism and the Vernacular in Colonial Odisha, 1803–1956 Pritipuspa Mishra | University of Southampton

Mishra explores the history of the first linguistically organized province in India, Odisha, to illustrate the relationship between linguistic politics and nationalism. She considers the ways the state has dealt with multilingualism and the role of languages in the constitution of the Indian nation. This title is also available as Open Access. • Provides a nuanced framework for understanding regional history in India • Situates the regional history of Odisha within broader national and global trends to help readers understand how language and nation interact in post-colonial contexts • Presents a coherent history of multilingualism in India relevant to global debates about linguistic justice and governance of multilingualism • This title is also available as Open Access 256pp 7 maps January 2020 9781108425735 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108591263

Let there be Light Engineering, Entrepreneurship and Electricity in Colonial Bengal, 1880–1945 Suvobrata Sarkar

Let There Be Light focusses on the hitherto unexplored vernacular sources, and emphasizes that the history of technology in India is basically a history of India, and the history of its people, and not simply a history of the Indian techno-scientific tradition as proposed by the literature emerging from the West. • Brings back the use of vernacular sources to understand Indian appropriation of modern technoscience • Explores the uncharted terrain of electrification in a colonial context 320pp September 2020 9781108835985 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108874205

Making a Muslim Reading Publics and Contested Identities in Nineteenth Century North India S. Akbar Zaidi

Post 1857, colonial India witnessed the emergence of numerous new forms of Muslim identities, some emerging as new Islamic ‘sects’ (maslaks), and others based on educational priorities. This book critically examines, how a feeling of utter humiliation - zillat - acted as an agentive force allowing Muslims to remake their many identities. • Uses previously unseen Urdu sources to further our knowledge and understanding of Muslim North India • Challenges the definition of unitary Muslim quam and identity • Acknowledges zillat as an agentive force in the remaking of Muslim identities in North India after 1857. 300pp December 2020 9781108490535 Hardback GBP 80.00 / USD 110.00 eISBN 9781108781152

Negotiating Mughal Law A Family of Landlords across Three Indian Empires Nandini Chatterjee | University of Exeter

In this innovative, micro-historical approach to law, empire and society in India from the Mughal to the colonial period, Nandini Chatterjee explores the dramatic, multi-generational story of a family of Indian landlords negotiating the laws of three empires: Mughal, Maratha and British. This title is also available as Open Access. • Combines quantitative methods with micro-historical analysis to explore law, empire and society • Provides a people-centred story of one of the greatest Islamic empires of all times • Incorporates a wide range of sources, including a reconstructed archive of Persian, Hindi and Marathi documents • This title is also available as Open Access 310pp 8 b/w illus. 2 maps April 2020 9781108486033 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108623391

Revolutionary Pasts Communist Internationalism in Colonial India Ali Raza | Lahore University of Management Sciences, Pakistan

In this history of the communist movement in South Asia from the eve of the First World War to Independence, Ali Raza reveals the lives, dreams, geographies, and anti-colonial struggles of Indian revolutionaries and their utopian visions of remaking the world. • Presents a compelling narrative of communist internationalism in Colonial India • Offers a methodologically innovative social and intellectual history of Indian communism • Charts the entanglement of local, regional, and global politics in the Indian independence movement 294pp April 2020 9781108481847 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108693875


History - Other Areas

Sex, Law, and the Politics of Age Child Marriage in India, 1891–1937 Ishita Pande | Queen’s University, Ontario

Ishita Pande’s innovative study tells a wide-ranging story about the importance of debates over child protection to India’s coming of age, examining India’s Child Marriage Restraint Act (1929) and the establishment of ‘age’ as a political category governing intimate life in late colonial India. • Provides the first history of ‘age’ in colonial India • Brings theoretical perspectives and methods from the history of childhood, legal history, queer theory and critical secular studies to bear on the history of child marriage • Uses the archives of colonial India to engage broader debates on the history of age, childhood, sexuality and legal personhood 320pp July 2020 9781108489744 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108779326

The ‘Early Medieval’ Origins of India Manu V. Devadevan

This book posits that India as an idea is neither a colonial construct nor a phenomenon as old as the Vedas or the Harappan age, but a historical reality that had its beginnings in the ‘early medieval’ times. It is a mustread for anyone interested in the meaning of India’s past. • Provides a fresh assessment of the early medieval period and its point of departure from the early historical period • Expands the thematic scope of early medieval historiography by including aspects such as identities (caste, language, religion and territory) and ideas that governed science, literature and performative arts • Identifies the early medieval as the period when institutions, ideas and identities associated with India began to evolve 420pp September 2020 9781108494571 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 September 2020 9781108748513 Paperback GBP 29.99 / USD 39.99 eISBN 9781108781176

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The Courts of the Deccan Sultanates Living Well in the Persian Cosmopolis Emma J. Flatt | University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Emma J. Flatt shows the centrality of courtliness in the political and cultural life of the Deccan in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. She argues that a shared courtly disposition facilitated travel, knowledge acquisition and encounters in the Persian-speaking world. This became a route to employment, worldly success and ethical refinement. • Draws attention to the history of courts, rather than kings, in Indian history • Allows a more complex understanding of ethical life in pre-colonial Indo-Persian societies • Utilises understudied sources, such as those on magic and astrology 338pp June 2020 9781108741644 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 July 2019 9781108481939 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108680530

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The Decline of the Caste Question Jogendranath Mandal and the Defeat of Dalit Politics in Bengal Dwaipayan Sen | Amherst College, Massachusetts

This revisionist exploration of the decline of castebased politics in twentieth-century Bengal argues that it was as much the result of coercion as of consent. It traces this process through the political career of Jogendranath Mandal, the leader of the Dalit movement, over the transition of Partition and Independence. • Utilises Jogendranath Mandal’s private papers and freshly discovered archival materials • Traverses the watershed of Independence in 1947, and joins themes often treated distinctly, such as caste, partition, communalism, and the transfer of power • Presents a new explanation for the puzzling absence of caste-based politics in Bengal 317pp 7 b/w illus. 1 table November 2020 9781108405706 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 July 2018 9781108417761 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108278348

The Frontier Complex Geopolitics and the Making of the India-China Border, 1846–1962 Kyle J. Gardner | George Washington University, Washington DC

Kyle J. Gardner reveals how colonial bordermaking practices in the Himalayas transformed a historical crossroads into a disputed borderland and geography into politics. Despite a century of attempts, experts failed to produce a border through the mountainous Himalayas, leading to war between India and China in 1962. • Offers a new history of the rise of geopolitics • Based on a wide range of archival research in multiple languages • Highlights how ongoing border disputes between India and China are rooted in colonial British border-making practices 300pp February 2021 9781108840590 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108886444

The Frontier in British India Space, Science, and Power in the Nineteenth Century Thomas Simpson | University of Cambridge

An innovative account of how distinctive forms of colonial power and knowledge developed at the territorial fringes of British India. Thomas Simpson considers the role of frontier officials as surveyors, cartographers and ethnographers, military violence in frontier regions and the impact of the frontier experience on colonial administration. • The first connected and comparative analysis of frontiers in northwest and northeast colonial India • Advances an innovative framework for understanding colonial power and knowledge • Moves beyond conventional disciplinary boundaries and critically engages with various distinct fields of theory and historiography 350pp January 2021 9781108840194 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108879156

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History - Other Areas

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The Insecurity State Punjab and the Making of Colonial Power in British India Mark Condos | Queen Mary University of London

Condos explores the ‘dark underside’ of the ideologies that sustained British rule in India. He argues that India’s colonial overlords were obsessively fearful, and plagued by an unreasoning belief in their own vulnerability as rulers. These enduring anxieties precipitated, and justified, an all too frequent recourse to violence. • A provocative, new view of the British Empire in India • Based on rich archival research • Contributes to the major debates on colonial state-building, colonial violence, imperial sovereignty, and postcolonial legacies of empire

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272pp 11 b/w illus. May 2020 9781108407014 Paperback GBP 21.99 / USD 27.99 August 2017 9781108418317 Hardback GBP 78.99 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108289740

The Making of the Indo-Islamic World c.700–1800 CE André Wink | University of Wisconsin, Madison

André Wink offers a new interpretation of the long-term history of India and the Indian Ocean region from the perspective of world history and geography, situating the history of the Indianized territories of South Asia and Southeast Asia within the wider history of the Islamic world. • Provides a world-historical perspective on the history of South and Southeast Asia • Introduces an environmental and geographical dimension to Indian history • Situates the history of the Indianized territories of South Asia and Southeast Asia within the wider history of the Islamic world 308pp August 2020 9781108417747 Hardback GBP 74.99 / USD 99.99 August 2020 9781108405652 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 31.99 eISBN 9781108278287

South-East Asian History A History of Manners and Civility in Thailand Patrick Jory | University of Queensland

Patrick Jory presents the first ever history of manners in Thailand. Utilising Thai etiquette manuals dating from the early nineteenth century to the late twentieth century, he explores how societies have regulated personal and social behaviour over time. • Presents the first history of manners in Thailand • Places the history of manners in Thailand within a global historical framework • Based on a wide range of little-known primary source materials 350pp February 2021 9781108491242 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108868006

Islam and Asia A History Chiara Formichi | Cornell University, New York

A new history of Asia and Islam from the seventh century to today, approached as an interconnected space of encounters and interactions. Challenging the assumed dominance of the Middle East in the development of Islam, Formichi argues for Asia’s centrality in the development of global Islam as a religious, social and political reality. • Provides a transnational history of Asia and Islam grounded in specific case-studies • Facilitates discussion in the classroom, and makes abstract concepts accessible to readers • Includes a range of pedagogical features including introductions to key personalities and concepts, primary sources, illustrations, maps and suggestions for further reading New Approaches to Asian History 348pp 14 b/w illus. 7 maps May 2020 9781107106123 Hardback GBP 69.99 / USD 89.99 May 2020 9781107513976 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781316226803

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Making Two Vietnams War and Youth Identities, 1965–1975 Olga Dror | Texas A & M University

This comparative study of North and South Vietnam, the first of its kind, shows how young Vietnamese were raised during the war. Through the prism of adult-youth relations, it analyzes how the two societies dealt with their wartime experience and strove to shape their futures. • The first systematic comparative study of youth culture in North and South Vietnam during the Vietnam War • Reveals the experiences of non-combatants during the Vietnam War • Based on extensive archival and textual work and an innovative methodology 340pp 14 b/w illus. 7 tables November 2020 9781108455244 Paperback GBP 24.99 / USD 32.99 November 2018 9781108470124 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 105.00 eISBN 9781108556163

Miracles and Material Life Rice, Ore, Traps and Guns in Islamic Malaya Teren Sevea

Through a close textual analysis of hitherto overlooked Malay Islamic manuscripts, Teren Sevea reveals the economic, environmental and religious significance of Islamic miracle workers (pawangs) across the Indian Ocean world and on the frontier of the British Empire in the nineteenth and twentieth century. • Takes a new approach to understanding connections between miracles and magic, and material life, labour, production, extraction and technology • Reveals a universe of peripatetic, professional Islamic miracle workers and Sufis in the past and the present, in the Malay world and beyond • Draws on hitherto untranslated Malay and Sufi manuscripts, providing readers with access to little-known esoteric content Asian Connections 290pp 10 b/w illus. 2 maps July 2020 9781108477185 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108569781


History - Other Areas

Saigon at War South Vietnam and the Global Sixties Heather Stur | University of Southern Mississippi

South Vietnamese activists, intellectuals, students, and professionals had multiple visions for Vietnam’s future as an independent nation. In expressing their views in the press and in public demonstrations, they performed democracy even as the Saigon government and US intervention stymied the development of democratic institutions. • Highlights the diversity of the Saigon intellectual scene while illustrating American attempts, struggles, and failures to make sense of the urban political milieu • Fills a gap in the existing literature by introducing South Vietnamese voices into the Vietnam War narrative • Draws on a plethora of Vietnamese archival materials, including South Vietnamese government and military documents, newspapers and magazines, intelligence reports, and letters from citizens to various government officials in the 1960s and 1970s

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Cambridge Studies in US Foreign Relations 292pp June 2020 9781107161924 Hardback GBP 69.99 / USD 89.99 June 2020 9781316614112 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 eISBN 9781316676752

The Economics of World War II in Southeast Asia Economy and Society under Japanese Occupation Gregg Huff | University of Oxford

Gregg Huff presents the first comprehensive account of the economic and social impact of Japanese occupation on Southeast Asia during World War II.This is vital reading for anyone wishing to understand the history and economies of Southeast Asia before, during, and in the decades after the Pacific War. • Provides the first comprehensive study of Southeast Asian economy and society during the 1941-1945 Japanese occupation • Features an extraordinarily wide range of archive material drawn from 25 archives over three continents • Includes economic, social and historical analysis to assess the longterm impact of the Pacific War and Japanese occupation on Southeast Asia 450pp October 2020 9781107099333 Hardback GBP 90.00 / USD 120.00 eISBN 9781316162934

The Politics of Heritage in Indonesia A Cultural History Marieke Bloembergen

This study offers a new approach to the history of sites, archaeology, and heritage formation in Asia, through the lens of colonial and post-colonial Indonesia. It focuses on the mobility of heritage as a multi-sited phenomenon that engages with, and goes beyond, the interests of states. • Uncovers how heritage sites and their politics transcend national boundaries • Examines the politics of heritage, orientalism, and mobility from an Asian perspective • Provides a fresh perspective on the international debate about heritage formation and cultural knowledge production Asian Connections 338pp 29 b/w illus. January 2020 9781108499026 Hardback GBP 75.00 / USD 99.99 eISBN 9781108614757

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