September - December 2020
New titles HUMANITIES www.cambridge.org/academic
HUMANITIES NEW TITLES
September - December 2020
Contents Art 3 Archaeology 3 Classical Studies 5 Drama and Theatre 12 History – American History
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History – British History
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History – European History
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History – Other Areas
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History – Cross Discipline
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Literature – American Literature
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Literature – English Literature
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Literature – European and World Literature 33 Music 34 Philosophy 35 Religion 39
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Art / Archaeology
Art
Mobile Technologies in the Ancient Sahara and Beyond Edited by C. N. Duckworth | University of Newcastle upon Tyne
Venus and the Arts of Love in Renaissance Florence Rebekah Compton
College of Charleston, South Carolina
Venus and the Arts of Love offers the first survey of Venus in the art, culture, and governance of Florence from 1300–1600. In the course of deconstructing Venus’s trajectory, this book critically examines the materials and techniques that artists employed to fulfill and even enhance the goddess’s iconographic demands. • Provides examples of inter-disciplinary art history in action • Introduces readers to technical art history, discussing pigments, binders, supports, drawings, conservation, and restoration reports in an accessible and informative manner • Offers perspectives of early modern theories of gender and sexuality January 2021 253 x 177 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-84291-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Athens Edited by Jenifer Neils | American School of Classical Studies, Athens
The Varieties of Architectural Experience David Karmon | College of the Holy Cross, Massachusetts
This book offers an innovative approach to Renaissance buildings and cities by reassessing the Renaissance understanding of the senses and the function of this architecture as an ‘experiential trigger.’ The experience of Renaissance architecture extends beyond scholarly investigations to engage and inspire anyone who encounters these sites. • The first book length study of Renaissance architecture that directly engages with multisensory experience • The author combines personal first-hand experience of buildings and places with historical analysis • Offers a new reading of Renaissance architecture, shifting the way we approach the field C
Archaeology
This book is a comprehensive introduction to ancient Athens, its topography, monuments, inhabitants, cultural institutions, religious rituals, and politics. Drawing from the newest scholarship on the city, this volume examines how the city was planned, how it functioned, and how it was transformed from a democratic polis into a Roman urbs. • Provides readers with an overview new archaeological discoveries and interpretations in the city that have occurred in the last twenty years in particular • Introduces the religious, cultural, and political institutions of ancient Athens through archaeological, literary, and epigraphic evidence • Demonstrates the impact of the Archaic and Classical periods on Athens in subsequent periods and today Cambridge Companions to the Ancient World
December 2020 244 x 170 mm c.450pp 978-1-108-48455-8 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00
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A Comparative Study of Rock Art in Later Prehistoric Europe Richard Bradley | Institute of Archaeology
In prehistoric Europe natural surfaces in the landscape were often painted or carved. It happened between the adoption of farming and the origins of the state, but these images are rarely integrated into wider accounts of prehistoric archaeology. This Element reviews new research and attempts to remedy this problem.
Power and Place in Etruria The Spatial Dynamics of a Mediterranean Civilization, 1200–500 BC Volume 1 Simon Stoddart | Magdalene College, Cambridge
Elements in the Archaeology of Europe
This book will interest prehistorians, anthropological archaeologists, anthropologists, geographers, classicists and historians. Readers will discover an unexpected example of political history read from the spatial dynamics of settlement history. It will provide rich understanding of politics read from landscape without resorting to text or image. • Provides a novel example of landscape based state formation • Takes a quantitative approach to the evidence • Brings examples of Etruria into the modern world of scholarship October 2020 253 x 177 mm 350pp 978-0-521-38075-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
Trans-Saharan Archaeology
September 2020 247 x 174 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-83054-6 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00
Architecture and the Senses in the Italian Renaissance
March 2021 253 x 177 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-47798-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
Through in-depth examinations of a range of technologies, this book demonstrates that the ancient and Medieval Sahara was as much a connective tissue as a barrier, and was teeming with innovation and knowledge exchange between mobile and sedentary groups. It is of value to historians, archaeologists, Africanists, and anthropologists. • The first large-scale analysis of the archaeology of Saharan technological knowledge, change and innovation • Provides in-depth analyses of a range of technologies, including irrigation, animal husbandry, weaving, and pyrotechnologies, and considers the ways in which these different technologies interacted with one another • Blends previously unpublished results of scientific and archaeological analysis with their social interpretations
September 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 30 b/w illus. 978-1-108-79449-7 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Archaeology
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A History of World Egyptology
The Making of Empire in Bronze Age Anatolia
Edited by Andrew Bednarski | University of Cambridge
Hittite Sovereign Practice, Resistance, and Negotiation Claudia Glatz | University of Glasgow
This book appeals to amateurs and professionals interested in the history of Egyptology around the world. Its detail spanning some 150 years and two-dozen countries, this multi-authored, transnational volume shows where and how the study of ancient Egypt has developed, and why people have been both interested in, and inspired by, it. • Provides a holistic study of the study of ancient Egypt • Gives individual territories involved with Egyptology’s development their own voice • Includes socio-cultural in addition to academic interactions with ancient Egypt October 2020 253 x 177 mm 450pp 3 maps 978-1-107-06283-2 Hardback £135.00 / US$175.00
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Kingship, Power, and Legitimacy in Ancient Egypt
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Writing and Reading in Late Bronze-Age Anatolia (1650–1200 BC) Theo van den Hout | University of Chicago
This book presents a history of ancient Egyptian kingship in the Old Kingdom and its re-formation in the early Middle Kingdom. Lisa Sabbahy examines the basis of kingship and its legitimacy. It appeals to scholars interested in ancient Egyptian history. • Offers a complete discussion of Egypt before the old kingdom • Incorporates discussion of art and architecture into kinship, offering a well-rounded view of kingship • Emphasizes the role of female goddesses, providing a different view of the religion and kingship C
The Amorites and the Bronze Age Near East
For all those interested in literacy and script usage in general and in the ancient world in particular. As the first, comprehensive overview, it sketches the development of literacy and of literature in Hittite Anatolia (2000/1650–1200 BC) and situates them in the history of the kingdom. • The first comprehensive overview of the subject, the product of a lifetime of research and thinking • Provides a good introduction to both the Hittite cuneiform and Anatolian hieroglyphic writing systems • Offers new solutions to a number of longstanding problems in the field of Hittite/Anatolian studies October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.448pp 51 b/w illus. 1 map 35 tables 978-1-108-49488-5 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 C PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED
The Organization of Ancient Economies
The Making of a Regional Identity Aaron A. Burke | University of California, Los Angeles
This study summons historical, archaeological, and iconographic data from Bronze Age Mesopotamia, the Levant, and Egypt to address the legacy of Amorites. • Provides a unique and synthetic perspective on the formation and maintenance of the identity of a familiar people group in ancient Near Eastern history and biblical studies • Articulates a working approach to identity at different levels of social hierarchy, through time, and across a large geographic region • A book-length study that exposes the role played by environmental changes and niche exploitation in the creation and maintenance of group identity December 2020 253 x 177 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-49596-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
September 2020 253 x 177 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-49110-5 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$105.00
A History of Hittite Literacy
From the Old Kingdom to the Middle Kingdom Lisa K. Sabbahy | American University of Cairo
December 2020 253 x 177 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-83091-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
The volume provides a new, critical account of the Hittite imperial network of Late Bronze Age Anatolia (c. 1600-1180 BCE) through detailed analyses of a wide range of archaeological, iconographic, and textual sources. • Provides a comprehensive synthesis of a wide range of archaeological, textual and iconographic data pertaining to Late Bronze Age Anatolia and northern Syria • Presents the first theoretically informed analysis of the Hittite empire, its practices of sovereignty, local reactions to them, and long-term political development • Provides a model for a multi-scalar and multi-proxy analysis of early imperial production and development
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A Global Perspective Kenneth Hirth | Pennsylvania State University
This book is about how ancient economies were organized to get work done. It is written for eclectic readers and life-long learners interested in the broad sweep of economic history. It explores how ancient economies developed and mobilized the resources necessary to support the institutions of civilization throughout antiquity. • Provides a comparative analysis of the domestic and political economies in ancient and premodern societies • Examines and compares the economic structures of forager, pastoral and agricultural societies ranging from simple bands and tribes to complex states • Provides a framework with which to examine and compare the structures of ancient and premodern economies September 2020 253 x 177 mm 462pp 978-1-108-49470-0 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99
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Classical Studies
Classical Studies
Classical Philology and Theology Entanglement, Disavowal, and the Godlike Scholar Edited by Catherine Conybeare | Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania
Painting, Poetry, and the Invention of Tenderness in the Early Roman Empire Herica Valladares | University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
This book’s subject and interdisciplinary approach will interest scholars in several subfields of Classics: art history, archaeology, literary and cultural studies. Its focus on pictorial and poetic representations of love stories will also appeal to academics who study the history of emotions, and the wider public intrigued by ancient Rome. • Analyses Roman wall painting and Latin love elegy through an interdisciplinary lens that highlights previously unexamined connections between early imperial art and literature • Prior knowledge of Greek and Roman art and literature is not assumed; all Greek and Latin passages are translated into English • Delineates the emergence and dissemination of a new amatory ideal in early imperial art and literature, calling attention to long overlooked connections between Roman representations of love stories and later poetic and pictorial iterations of these narratives December 2020 253 x 177 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-83541-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Greek and Latin Letters in Late Antiquity The Christianisation of a Literary Form Pauline Allen | University of Pretoria
The first general book on Greek and Latin letterwriting in Late Antiquity (400-600 CE). Allen and Neil examine early Christian Greek and Latin literary letters, their nature and function, the mechanics of their production and dissemination and their crucial importance to the society of their time. • The first ever comprehensive treatment of Greek and Latin letterwriting in Late Antiquity • Takes the reader through the genre of the letter, the process of writing letters and the materials used, and their dissemination down to our own times • Demonstrates that, with the Christianisation of the letter, its pagan antecedents were not ignored but adapted September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.224pp 978-1-316-51013-1 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-316-64950-3 Paperback £18.99 / US$24.99
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Modern disciplinary silos tend to separate classical philology and theology. This book explores for the first time the deep and significant interactions between them, revealing the often hidden or disavowed reliance of two major ways of understanding the world. • Explores the crucial history of two major disciplines and their interactions • Develops fascinating test cases which reveal the two disciplines’ reliance on one another • Showcases the distinct and contrasting approaches of nine distinguished scholars September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.288pp 978-1-108-49483-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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The Rhetoric of Roman Transportation Vehicles in Latin Literature Jared Hudson | Harvard University, Massachusetts
Offers the first systematic study of Roman vehicles in Latin literary texts. Examining key modes of transport including carts, carriages, chariots, and litters, Jared Hudson shows how Roman authors articulate ideas about power, gender, and empire through vivid vehicular portrayals. • Offers the first systematic examination of the literary portrayal of Roman vehicles • Analyzes recurring depictions of Roman transportation across a wide range of Latin texts • Contributes to the Latin lexicography of Roman vehicles January 2021 228 x 152 mm c.348pp 978-1-108-48176-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Cicero’s Political Personae Joanna Kenty
Argues that Cicero assumed eight distinctive personae in the speeches of the latter half of his career to maximize political leverage and persuasion. Provides new insights into his political manoeuvring and the subtleties of his Latin prose. Accessible to students and non-specialists as well as scholars. • Addresses all of the speeches from the second half of Cicero’s career • Explores Cicero’s use of literary and rhetorical techniques to intervene in specific political and historical circumstances • Includes close philological readings of ancient texts with an appreciation for linguistic subtleties September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-83946-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Classical Studies
Music and Metamorphosis in Graeco-Roman Thought
Catullus and Roman Comedy
Pauline A. LeVen | Yale University, Connecticut
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Examines aesthetic and ontological questions raised by Greco-Roman myths of human metamorphosis into non-human musical beings. Placing the myths within their ancient intellectual contexts, it reads them in dialogue with contemporary questions about what it means to be human. Aimed at classicists, musicologists, and scholars of the posthumanities. • Examines important questions of musical aesthetics from a new perspective (that of mythical narratives of musical metamorphosis) and in a period rarely examined (the first to third centuries CE) • Engages with contemporary critical theory (in the posthumanities, animal studies, and sound studies) from an ancient perspective • Provides for the first time an intellectual history of musical metamorphosis November 2020 228 x 152 mm 228pp 978-1-107-14874-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
December 2020 229 x 152 mm c.232pp 978-1-108-83981-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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A Literary Commentary on Panegyrici Latini VI(7)
Representing the Unruly Body Sarah Olsen | Williams College, Massachusetts
This is the first investigation of solo dancers in Archaic and Classical Greek literature. It demonstrates that dancing alone signifies transgression and vulnerability in the Greek cultural imagination, and that the solo dancer is a powerful figure for literary exploration and experimentation in a wide variety of Greek genres. • Offers the first investigation of solo dance in Archaic and Classical Greek literature and culture • Interrogates the relationship between dance and literature across a range of genres • Compares ancient Greek representations of dance to performances and theories drawn from other times and places C
An Oration Delivered before the Emperor Constantine in Trier, ca. AD 310 Edited and translated by Catherine Ware | University College Cork
This oration from AD 310, which covers Maximian’s rebellion, Constantine’s claim of descent from Claudius II and his vision of Apollo, is crucial for understanding Constantine’s early career. The commentary examines the literary context and the role of the classical literary and rhetorical tradition in creating a new imperial persona. • Provides full commentary on the speech, examining in detail the presentation of key events • Illustrates the continuing importance of the classical tradition in late antique Gaul, the role of rhetoric, the knowledge of earlier authors and the use of allusion and intertextuality • Places the speech in the context of the corpus as a whole, showing how the orator uses earlier speeches to shape the persona of Constantine December 2020 228 x 152 mm 336pp 978-1-107-12369-4 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$115.00
The Grotesque in Roman Love Elegy Mariapia Pietropaolo | McMaster University, Ontario
Explores the theme of corporeal, intellectual, and social degradation in Latin elegy from the vantage point of its aesthetic of grotesque imagery. Shows how and why the simultaneous occurrence of feelings of repugnance and admiration is a fundamental aesthetic premise of the genre. • Introduces the fundamental aspects of grotesque aesthetics and shows their relevance to the genre of love elegy • Demonstrates that grotesque and refined images constitute the polarities of a dialectic – epistemological and ontological as well as artistic – that is at the core of Roman love elegy • Uses close readings of well-known poems to reveal hidden complexities in their composition in the light of these new insights September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.248pp 978-1-108-48869-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
Argues that the largest extant theatrical tradition of the third and second centuries BCE continued to be vital for writers of the first century BCE, especially in helping them to communicate strange and difficult ideas about their personal anxieties and concerns to public audience. • Analyzes Catullus’ engagement with Roman comedy, revealing the intersection of two genres and literary periods that have often been understudied • Provides a fresh interpretation of Catullus’ poetic program in light of the comic elements he incorporates • Relates Catullus’ literary practice with contemporary assumptions and ideas about theater’s role in elite Roman social life
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Solo Dance in Archaic and Classical Greek Literature
December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-48503-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
Theatricality and Personal Drama in the Late Republic Christopher B. Polt | Boston College, Massachusetts
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Classical Studies
TEXTBOOK PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED
TEXTBOOK
A Hellenistic Anthology
Livy: Ab urbe condita Book XXII
Second edition Editor (introduction and notes) Neil Hopkinson | Trinity College, Cambridge
Editor (introduction and notes) John Briscoe
Book XXII, narrating Hannibal’s defeats of Rome at Trasimene and Cannae, is Livy’s most dramatic book in which he transformed Polybius’ source material into a rhetorical masterpiece. A new text is provided and the introduction and commentary treat historical, religious, literary and linguistic matters. It is suitable for students at all levels. • Provides the first detailed commentary on this book for half a century • Provides a new text as well as an Introduction and Commentary suitable for undergraduates and graduate students • Gives full treatment of historical, linguistic and stylistic matters as well as aids to translation Contents: Introduction; 1. Livy’s life and work; 2. Course of the war; 3. Sources; 4. Structure; 5. Chronology; 6. Language and style; 7. Literary aspects; 8. Religion in Livy; 9. Roman politics and Fabian strategy; 10. Manpower; 11. The text; Livy Book XXII; Commentary.
Makes accessible a wide range of important poetic texts from the third and second centuries BC. It provides help with the background to these writers and with the Greek of these often allusive and challenging works. This second edition has been thoroughly updated and substantially expanded. • Helps students gain an overall picture of the range of poetry produced during this important but often unfamiliar period so that they can relate the authors and poems one with another • Provides full notes on matters of syntax and unfamiliar vocabulary and with allusions to Homer and other poets • This second edition has been thoroughly updated and includes three hundred more lines of Greek text Contents: 1. Introduction; 2. The apparatus criticus; Commentary; Appendix. Doric dialect; Indexes. Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics
September 2020 216 x 138 mm c.300pp 3 maps 978-1-108-47240-1 Hardback £79.99 / US$105.00 978-1-108-45956-3 Paperback £24.99 / US$32.99
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Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics
October 2020 216 x 138 mm c.320pp 4 maps 978-1-108-48014-7 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-72708-2 Paperback £24.99 / US$32.99
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The Resurrection of Homer in Imperial Greek Epic Quintus Smyrnaeus’ Posthomerica and the Poetics of Impersonation Emma Greensmith | University of Oxford
The first literary and cultural reading of Quintus Smyrnaeus’ Posthomerica, a major Greek epic from the height of the Roman Empire which tells the story ‘in between’ Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey, and reveals the aesthetic and identity politics of the era. Important for understanding Homer and epic in Greco-Roman culture. • Provides a literary and cultural-historical analysis of the Posthomerica, which has too often fallen outside of contextualized study due to a lack of precise information about its providence • Connects Quintus’ Posthomerica with a far wider range of ancient literature: not only poetry but also (and unlike previous scholarship) prose historiography, rhetoric, educational papyri; and not only Greek, but also Latin • Moves away from the individualized study of imperial Greek authors to a joined-up understanding of this era of epic as a corpus engaging dialogically with the same issues of empire and cultural change
Oppian’s Halieutica Charting a Didactic Epic Emily Kneebone | University of Nottingham
Demonstrates the sophistication, influence, and cultural centrality of an understudied imperial Greek didactic epic. Written for students and scholars of imperial Greek literature and culture (including the ancient novel), ancient heroic and didactic epic poetry, and those interested in human-animal relations in the ancient world. • Offers the first sustained and comprehensive literary reading of the Halieutica • Contextualises the poem within a range of ancient perspectives and debates • Addresses the poem’s place within ancient attitudes towards humananimal relations Greek Culture in the Roman World
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.432pp 978-1-108-84083-5 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00
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Greek Culture in the Roman World
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.380pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-108-83033-1 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00
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Classical Studies
TEXTBOOK
Galen and the Arabic Reception of Plato’s Timaeus
Plato: Menexenus Editor (introduction and notes) David Sansone | University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
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Aileen R. Das | University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
In Menexenus Plato depicts an elderly Socrates reciting an inspiring funeral oration learned from his teacher Aspasia, although such a scenario is entirely fictional. The work reveals Plato’s mastery of prose style and his critique of rhetoric and democratic ideology. Suitable for intermediate and advanced students of ancient Greek. • Integrates literary, rhetorical, and historical discussion and comments in order to show how Plato uses rhetorical means to misrepresent and distort historical reality • Provides grammatical help for students as well as introducing techniques of discourse analysis • Helps students appreciate the radically divergent interpretations of the text proposed by scholars
Explores the Timaeus’ impact on pre-modern Greek and Arabic conceptualizations of medicine and will appeal to classicists, medievalists, and historians of philosophy, science, and the Middle East. Its five case studies examine how thinkers such as Galen and Avicenna used Plato’s dialogue to define their expertise and professional identities. • Explores diverse historical contexts in assessing Galen’s impact on medieval Arabic readings of Plato’s Timaeus • Promotes a reception-based approach to the study of Greco-Roman texts and ideas in medieval Islamic, Christian, and Jewish contexts • Employs methodologies from Science, Technology and Society Studies (STS) to examine how Plato’s Timaeus provoked new ways of thinking about knowledge categories
Contents: Introduction; 1. The Athenian state funeral; 2. The epitaphios logos; 3. The Menexenus of Plato; A note on the presentation of the text; Text; Commentary; Bibliography.
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-49948-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics
August 2020 216 x 138 mm 202pp 978-1-108-49940-8 Hardback £79.99 / US$105.00 978-1-108-73056-3 Paperback £26.99 / US$34.99
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TEXTBOOK
Hellenistic Epigrams A Selection Editor (introduction and notes) Alexander Sens | Georgetown University, Washington DC
Greek ‘literary’ epigrams constitute one of the most versatile and dynamic poetic forms in the Hellenistic period. This edition introduces students to this variable genre. It provides substantial grammatical and linguistic help to less experienced readers of Greek, whilst its interpretive material will also be of interest to scholars. • Provides substantial help with difficult grammar and vocabulary suitable for the advanced undergraduate and graduate student • Illustrates the way the individual poems play with generic conventions to create meaning • Each poem is preceded by an interpretive essay discussing the relationship of form to content Contents: Introduction: 1. The Origins of Literary Epigram; 2. ‘Genres’ of Hellenistic Epigram; 3. ‘Fictive’ and ‘Inscribed’ Epigrams; 4. Formal and Literary Aspects of Hellenistic Epigrams; 5. Transmission; 6. Organizing Principles of this Anthology; Epigrams; Commentary. Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics
November 2020 216 x 138 mm 320pp 978-0-521-84955-5 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-0-521-61481-8 Paperback £24.99 / US$32.99
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Pseudo-Aristotle: De Mundo (On the Cosmos) A Commentary Edited by Pavel Gregoric | Institute of Philosophy in Zagreb, Croatia
De mundo is a protreptic to philosophy and a work of both cosmology and theology, inspired by Aristotle. It is unique in presenting both a scientific explanation of the universe and a philosophical account focusing on the supreme cause of the universe’s coherence and stability, God. • One of the first extended studies of De mundo to focus on its philosophical content rather than issues of authorship, dating and style • Argues that the work provides an interpretation of Aristotle’s position about God and his relation to the universe which is at once philosophically compelling and methodologically interesting for the author’s use of analogy • Offers a glimpse into the philosophical debates in the Hellenistic period and late antiquity, but also into the genre of popular philosophy characteristic of the time December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 8 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-1-108-83478-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C
Productive Knowledge in Ancient Philosophy The Concept of Technê Edited by Thomas Kjeller Johansen | Universitetet i Oslo
Sets out for the first time the ancient views and debates about productive knowledge or technê through the whole period of antiquity, covering all the major schools of ancient philosophy. Readers will come to understand the central role that technê played in ancient intellectual life. • Explains in detail what ancient philosophers thought technê was • Shows the wide use of technê as a model for ethics, rhetoric, the arts, politics and cosmology • Traces debates through the history of ancient philosophy from the fifth century BC to the fifth century AD December 2020 229 x 152 mm c.348pp 978-1-108-48584-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Classical Studies
Aristotle on Language and Style
Rulers and Ruled in Ancient Greece, Rome, and China
The Concept of Lexis Ana Kotarcic | Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
Edited by Hans Beck | Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, Germany
The first systematic analysis of Aristotle’s concept of lexis, which is approached on three interconnected levels: the first dealing with language as a system, the second with actual language usage, and the third with prescriptions for the kind of language to be used in poetic and rhetorical compositions. • The first systematic analysis of Aristotle’s concept of lexis • Discusses other major concepts featuring in Aristotle’s works, like mimēsis, phantasia and energeia, to show the importance of lexis for his thought in general • Written accessibly for a wide range of scholars and students, with all Greek and Latin translated
Explores the creative potential of juxtaposing the cultural foundations of the Mediterranean world and ancient China. Embarking from the observation that Greek, Roman, and Han-Chinese societies were governed by comparable features, the contributors to this volume explain the dynamic interplay between political rulers and the ruled masses. • Captures the political cultures of the two largest civilizations in antiquity • Focusses on the relation between political leaders and the masses • Fosters a new comparative approach to the ancient world
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.288pp 978-1-108-49952-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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The Education of an Elite Citizenry Matthew R. Christ | Indiana University
Greek Philosophy, Latin Reception, and Christian Contexts Gretchen Reydams-Schils | University of Notre Dame, Indiana
The first study to assess in its entirety the fourthcentury Latin commentary on Plato’s Timaeus by the otherwise unknown Calcidius, as well as features of his Latin translation. The text represents a distinctive cultural encounter between the Greek and the Roman philosophical traditions, and between non-Christian and Christian currents of thought. • The first analysis of the text in its entirety • Sheds new light on the interactions between the so-called ‘pagan’ and Christian traditions • Presents an overview of the reception of Plato’s cosmology in his Timaeus, also in the Latin tradition
Fresh examination of how Xenophon instructs his elite readers concerning the values, knowledge, and practical skills they need to lead the Athenian democracy. Of interest to all those concerned with the role of elites in democracies, ancient and modern. • Explores the significant continuities in Xenophon’s political thinking across his Athenian works • Contextualizes Xenophon’s writings in the aftermath of the disastrous reign of the oligarchic Thirty (404/ 3 BC), and explores their significance for contemporary elite Athenian readers • Translates all Greek into English and uses clear language throughout in order to maximize accessibility September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.260pp 978-1-108-49576-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Social Control in Late Antiquity
Relative Change Matthew Duncombe | University of Nottingham
A relative change occurs when some item changes a relation. This Element examines how Plato, Aristotle, Stoics and Sextus Empiricus approached relative change. Elements in Ancient Philosophy
September 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-71342-9 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Xenophon and the Athenian Democracy
Calcidius on Plato’s Timaeus
September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.232pp 978-1-108-42056-3 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99
January 2021 228 x 152 mm c.448pp 978-1-108-48577-7 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00
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The Violence of Small Worlds Edited by Kate Cooper | Royal Holloway, University of London
Explores power relations in the households, schools, and monasteries of late antiquity in light of social theory, in a way that will be of interest to advanced undergraduates and postgraduate historians, as well as to scholars in the humanities and social sciences with interests in religion, law, and the family. • Sheds light on the small-scale environments such as households, schools, and monasteries, where ancient people spent much of their daily lives • Documents the experience of low-status people including women, children, and slaves • Offers an interdisciplinary view of late Roman social life informed by modern social science October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.348pp 978-1-108-47939-4 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00
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Classical Studies
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Benefactors and the Polis
The Future of Rome
The Public Gift in the Greek Cities from the Homeric World to Late Antiquity Edited by Marc Domingo Gygax | Princeton University, New Jersey
Roman, Greek, Jewish and Christian Visions Edited by Jonathan J. Price | Tel-Aviv University
Fresh analysis of elite public giving in the Greek cities in all periods of ancient history, highlighting it as a structural feature of polis society. Surveys the main scholarly debates on the phenomenon and continuities and changes between periods, and provides new theories and insights. • Provides a long-term perspective on the practice of public giving in the ancient Greek city • Introduces the current debates surrounding the practice both in general terms and for specific periods • Employs a range of theoretical perspectives and many different kinds of ancient evidence January 2021 228 x 152 mm c.348pp 978-1-108-84205-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Demonstrates that Romans, Greeks, Jews and Christians imagined the future of Rome in strikingly different ways, revealing profound differences in their conceptions of history and historical time, the purpose of history, the meaning of written words and oral traditions. • A cutting-edge volume on a topic never before systematically explored • Reveals profound differences between the views of the different peoples living under the Roman Empire on the same fundamental question • Explores concepts of historical time and other modes of time October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-49481-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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A Commentary on Panegyrici Latini II(12) An Oration Delivered by Pacatus Drepanius before the Emperor Theodosius II in the Senate at Rome, AD 389 Edited and translated by Roger Rees | University of St Andrews, Scotland
The Scribes of Rome A Cultural and Social History of the Scribae Benjamin Hartmann | Universität Zürich
Explores the lives of Rome’s public scribes, the scribae. In analysing a wide range of source material, it examines the cultural significance of these literate experts and their work and its implication for their position in Roman society and the state. • The first book-length treatment of the subject • Adopts a thematic rather than a chronological approach • Focuses on cultural and social history within an overarching theoretical framework
The renowned Gallic poet Pacatus Drepanius journeyed to Rome in the summer of AD 389 to deliver a speech to the Emperor Theodosius; both men stood for the first time before the Roman Senators. This edition provides a complete Latin text and English translation, with extensive introduction and full commentary. • Makes an important but neglected speech available to classicists and ancient historians • Considers the place of the speech in the rhetorical tradition • Argues that epideictic oratory deserves to be taken seriously as a literary form July 2020 216 x 138 mm 400pp 978-1-107-15504-6 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$130.00
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September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.252pp 8 b/w illus. 1 table 978-1-108-49396-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C
The Social Dynamics of Roman Imperial Imagery
PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED
Edited by Amy Russell | Brown University, Rhode Island
Women and Society in the Roman World A Sourcebook of Inscriptions from the Roman West Emily A. Hemelrijk | Universiteit van Amsterdam
Offers a lively view into a wide range of activities, occupations and social and family roles of women in the cities of the Roman West on the basis of translated inscriptions. Makes this material accessible for students, scholars and anyone interested in the history of women and gender. • The most wide-ranging and comprehensive sourcebook of inscriptions relating to the lives of women published to date • Presents a representative sample of inscriptions by, for and about women, with brief introductions, accessible translations and references to further reading • The accompanying webpage provides the original texts in the same order as in the book with added layout and punctuation October 2020 244 x 170 mm 450pp 72 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-107-14245-9 Hardback £99.99 / US$130.00
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The visual language of the Roman Empire was remarkably consistent. These images were made, used, and reinterpreted at all social levels, and often for local purposes. From a historical and archaeological perspective, this book explores the visual contribution of ordinary people across Rome’s empire. • Explores the contributions of all levels of society to imperial imagery and image-making around the Mediterranean • Moves beyond top-down and bottom-up communication to consider peer-to-peer interactions • Introduces theories of social dynamics with wide potential application to the study of ancient history November 2020 244 x 170 mm c.348pp 978-1-108-83512-1 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$105.00
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Classical Studies
TEXTBOOK
Children and Family in Late Antique Egyptian Monasticism
The Athenian Empire Using Coins as Sources Lisa Kallet | University of Oxford
Caroline T. Schroeder | University of Oklahoma
The first book about children in one of the birthplaces of Christian monasticism, Egypt. Uses diverse written and visual sources to demonstrate how early Egyptian monasteries provided an intergenerational continuity of social, cultural, and economic capital while also contesting the traditional family’s claims to these forms of social continuity. • The first book about children in one of the birthplaces of Christian monasticism • Adopts an interdisciplinary approach drawing on history, religious studies, papyrology, literary studies, gender studies, and art history • Examines the symbolism of children in literature and art as well as the social history of children September 2020 228 x 152 mm 248pp 10 b/w illus. 978-1-107-15687-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Skilled Labour and Professionalism in Ancient Greece and Rome This book is a history of ancient professionals: the makers of ancient Greek and Roman artworks, the authors of classical literature and the performers at ancient dramatic, musical and athletic contests. These individuals were specialist workers deemed to possess rare skills, for which they had undergone a period of training. • Provides a definition of professionalism and other terminology in the introduction and throughout • Provides a detailed discussion of specialization in ancient Athens and Ostia and details 276 distinct occupations in Athens • Provides surveys and case studies of major professions, including ancient theatrical performers, doctors, philosophers, sculptors and artists C
Plato’s Pigs and Other Ruminations
October 2020 216 x 138 mm 200pp 198 b/w illus. 2 maps 3 tables 978-1-107-01537-1 Hardback £54.99 / US$71.99 X 978-1-107-68670-0 Paperback £17.99 / US$22.99 X
Warfare in the Roman World A. D. Lee | University of Nottingham
Situates warfare in its broader political, social and economic context in the Roman world, and is distinctive in integrating consideration of developments during Late Antiquity alongside those during earlier periods of Roman history. Important for all students, instructors and scholars of ancient and military history. • Situates warfare in its broader political, social and economic context in the Roman world • Gives fuller attention to developments during Late Antiquity alongside earlier periods of Roman history • Adopts a thematic approach which better reveals continuities and changes across a millennium of Roman history Key Themes in Ancient History
Ancient Guides to Living with Nature M. D. Usher | University of Vermont
Plato’s Pigs is a rarity: a compelling, engaging book of broad learning and careful scholarship that is fully accessible to general audiences. Its subject – the origin of modern ideas about systems and sustainability in Classical life and thought – is timely, and its arguments important for human flourishing in the Anthropocene. • Introduces readers interested in the environment, ecology, and sustainable living to the important contributions made to these topics by the ancient Greeks and Romans • Engages seriously with modern science and ecology as well as the Classical sources • Full of lively anecdotal detail based on personal experience October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-83958-7 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99
Contents: 1. Introduction; 2. The Silver Owl Coinage of Athens; 3. Coinages of the Allied Cities; 4. Numismatic Narratives in the Pentecontaetia, 479-431 BC; 5. The Archidamian War, 431-421 BC; 6. The Peace of Nikias and the Rethinking of Monetary Policy, 421-413 BC; 7. The Ionian War and Loss of Empire, 412-404 BC; 8. Epilogue: From Tribute to Taxation. Guides to the Coinage of the Ancient World
Edited by Edmund Stewart | University of Nottingham
September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 20 b/w illus. 978-1-108-83947-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
This extensively illustrated book addresses the significance of coins as historical documents in the larger narrative of the empire and those who came into conflict with it. While written principally for an undergraduate audience, much of the coin evidence is new and will also interest a more advanced readership. • Presents a new narrative of the Athenian empire with an emphasis on its economic and monetary foundations and drawing heavily on significant recent research • Includes images of nearly 100 Greek coinages that illuminate the detailed history of Aegean Greece in the fifth century BC • Written accessibly for undergraduate students and their instructors
September 2020 228 x 152 mm 200pp 6 b/w illus. 5 maps 978-1-107-01428-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 P 978-1-107-63828-0 Paperback £17.99 / US$23.99 P
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Drama and Theatre / History – American History
Drama and Theatre
Razing Kids Youth, Environment, and the Postwar American West Jeffrey C. Sanders | Washington State University
Performance, Modernity and the Plays of J. M. Synge Helene Lecossois | Université de Lille
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Offers new perspectives on Synge’s well-known plays by situating them in less familiar historical contexts. Exploring concepts of performance, modernity and progress, this book opens up Synge criticism to the insights of performance studies. It will be of interest to scholars and students of Irish studies, English drama, theatre and performance. • Highlights the performativity of Irish Revivalist dramatist J. M. Synge’s plays in the context of fin-de-siècle capitalist modernity • Places well-known plays by Synge alongside less familiar historical contexts to offer new perspectives on the corpus of his work • Combines performance theory and detailed, contextualized case studies to highlight aspects of performativity and modernity October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.250pp 6 b/w illus. 978-1-108-48779-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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 December 2020 228 x 152 mm 256pp 978-1-107-11058-8 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-107-52754-6 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99
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Pulp Vietnam War and Gender in Cold War Men’s Adventure Magazines Gregory A. Daddis | San Diego State University
The Cambridge Companion to Theatre and Science Edited by Kirsten E. Shepherd-Barr | University of Oxford
This Companion is for undergraduates, postgraduates, scholars, and theatre makers as well as general readers interested in the relationship between theatre and science. It covers topics such as climate change drama, theatre technology, animal studies, and performance and cognition, as well as many periods of theatre history. • Provides a broad chronological span, considering theatre and science from their early pre-modern interactions to the present day • Covers a wide range of topics, including issues such as climate change, animal studies, and cognition • Brings together examples of performance and texts to highlight the importance of considering both in academic discussion of theatre’s interaction with science Cambridge Companions to Theatre and Performance
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 8 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47652-2 Hardback c. £64.99 / c. US$84.99 978-1-108-70098-6 Paperback c. £22.99 / c. US$29.99
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History – American History
Military, War, and Society in Modern American History
September 2020 228 x 152 mm 358pp 978-1-108-49350-5 Hardback £24.00 / US$29.95
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As If She Were Free A Collective Biography of Women and Emancipation in the Americas Edited by Erica L. Ball | Occidental College, Los Angeles
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
December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-48494-7 Hardback £39.99 / US$59.99
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
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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 October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-49340-6 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-73703-6 Paperback £26.99 / US$34.99
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History – American History / History – British History
Urban Slavery in the Age of Abolition
American Slavery, American Imperialism
Volume 28 Part 1 Edited by Karwan Fatah-Black | Universiteit Leiden
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
July 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 9 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47709-3 Hardback £47.99 / US$59.99
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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
July 2020 228 x 152 mm 248pp 978-1-108-82575-7 Paperback £19.99 / US$34.99
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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
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The Smell of Slavery
July 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-48972-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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History – British History
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 May 2020 228 x 152 mm 254pp 978-1-108-49073-3 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99
International Review of Social History Supplements, 28
In a Sea of Empires
Advocates of Freedom
September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.378pp 978-1-108-48751-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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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Anglo-Saxon England Volume 47 Edited by 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
May 2020 228 x 152 mm 434pp 978-1-108-83004-1 Hardback £90.00 / US$175.00
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History – British History
Crime and Punishment in Anglo-Saxon England
Ruling the World
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
September 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-93203-5 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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England’s Northern Frontier 14
Conflict and Local Society in the Fifteenth-Century 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, 118
November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.414pp 978-1-108-47299-9 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00
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Memory and the English Reformation Edited by 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 October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.425pp 978-1-108-82999-1 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00
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Freedom, Civilisation and Liberalism in the Nineteenth-Century British Empire Alan Lester | University of Sussex
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 December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.510pp 978-1-108-42620-6 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-44489-7 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99
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England Re-Oriented How Central and South Asian Travelers Imagined the West, 1750–1857 Humberto Garcia | University of California, Merced
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
September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.345pp 978-1-108-49564-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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The Rule of Manhood Tyranny, Gender, and Classical Republicanism in England, 1603–1660 Jamie A. Gianoutsos | Mount Saint Mary’s University
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
November 2020 229 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-47883-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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History – British History / History – European History
PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED
De Valera and Roosevelt
Dublin’s Great Wars
Irish and American Diplomacy in Times of Crisis, 1932–1939 Bernadette Whelan | University of Limerick
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 August 2018 228 x 152 mm 484pp 27 b/w illus. 13 maps 26 tables 978-1-107-02925-5 Hardback £20.00 / US$34.95 G
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
Popular Conservatism and the Culture of National Government in Inter-War Britain
October 2020 229 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-83017-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
Geraint Thomas | Peterhouse, University of Cambridge
Edited by Joep Leerssen | Universiteit van Amsterdam
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
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
November 2020 229 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-48312-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
Parnell and his Times
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October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 17 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49526-4 Hardback c. £31.99 / c. US$45.00
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History – European History Cultivating the City in Early Medieval Italy
Women, Crime and Punishment in Ireland
Caroline Goodson | University of Cambridge
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 October 2020 229 x 152 mm c.330pp 978-1-108-83950-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Concentrating on a period of social, economic, and political change in the Italian peninsula, Caroline Goodson demonstrates the centrality of food-growing 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 November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.336pp 978-1-108-48911-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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History – European History
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Latin and Greek Monasticism in the Crusader States
The Dutch Overseas Empire, 1600–1800
Bernard Hamilton | University of Nottingham
Pieter C. Emmer | Universiteit Leiden
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
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
September 2020 244 x 170 mm 300pp 10 b/w illus. 978-0-521-83638-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Thinking about Animals in Thirteenth-Century Paris
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The Intellectual World of Sixteenth-Century Florence
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 August 2020 228 x 152 mm c.330pp 978-1-108-83015-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-42837-8 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-44951-9 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99
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 August 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-49547-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Protestant Empires Globalizing the Reformations Edited by Ulinka Rublack | University of Cambridge
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 September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.440pp 978-1-108-84206-8 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99
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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 September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-84161-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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History – European History
War and Citizenship
Sixties Europe
Enemy Aliens and National Belonging from the French Revolution to the First World War Daniela L. Caglioti | Università degli Studi di Napoli ‘Federico II’
Timothy Scott Brown | Northeastern University, Boston
Daniela L. Caglioti shows how states at war, when faced with real or alleged security threats, redrew the boundaries between members and non-members, 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
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.430pp 978-1-108-48942-3 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99
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August 2020 228 x 152 mm 250pp 978-1-107-12238-3 Hardback £59.99 / US$79.99 978-1-107-55290-6 Paperback £19.99 / US$25.99
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Memory Battles in Postwar France Philip Nord | Princeton University, New Jersey
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 C
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
December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.450pp 978-1-108-47890-8 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99
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The Russian Conquest of Central Asia A Study in Imperial Expansion, 1814–1914 Alexander Morrison | New College, Oxford
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 October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-84175-7 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99
New Approaches to European History
After the Deportation
Democracy, Nazi Trials, and Transitional Justice in Germany, 1945–1950
September 2020 234 x 156 mm 230pp 978-0-521-87129-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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
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 December 2020 228 x 152 mm 480pp 978-1-107-03030-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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History – Other Areas
History – Other Areas
Christianity and Human Rights Reconsidered
TEXTBOOK
Edited by Sarah Shortall | University of Notre Dame, Indiana
World War One The Global Revolution Second edition Lawrence Sondhaus | University of Indianapolis
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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 Contents: Introduction; 1. The world in 1914 and the origins of the war; 2. The July Crisis, 1914; 3. The European war unfolds, August-December 1914; 4. The world war: East Asia, the Pacific, Africa; 5. The deepening stalemate: Europe, 1915; 6. The home fronts, 1914–16; 7. Raising the stakes: Europe, 1916; 8.The war at sea, 1915–18; 9. Wilson, Lenin, and visions for peace; 10. Upheaval and uncertainty: Europe, 1917; 11. The home fronts, 1916–18; 12. The world war: the Middle East and India; 13. Endgame: Europe, 1918; 14. The Paris Peace Conference; 15. Legacy; Conclusion. November 2020 244 x 170 mm c.495pp 49 b/w illus. 14 maps 978-1-108-49619-3 Hardback £64.99 / US$84.99 X 978-1-108-79163-2 Paperback £29.99 / US$38.99 X
Humanitarianism and Human Rights A World of Differences? Edited by 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
September 2020 229 x 152 mm c.340pp 978-1-108-83679-1 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-81920-6 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99
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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
September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-42470-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Islanders and Empire Smuggling and Political Defiance in Hispaniola, 1580–1690 Juan José Ponce Vázquez | University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa
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 Cambridge Latin American Studies, 121
October 2020 229 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-47765-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Modernity in Black and White Art and Image, Race and Identity in Brazil, 1890–1945 Rafael Cardoso | Freie Universität Berlin
Rafael Cardoso provides a groundbreaking account of artistic modernization in Brazil in his first single-authored 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 Afro-Latin America
November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.288pp 978-1-108-48190-8 Hardback £39.99 / US$49.99
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History – Other Areas
The Path to Genocide in Rwanda
A History of the Republic of Biafra
Security, Opportunity, and Authority in an Ethnocratic State Omar Shahabudin McDoom | London School of Economics and Political Science
Law, Crime, and the Nigerian Civil War Samuel Fury Childs Daly | Duke University, North Carolina
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 August 2020 229 x 152 mm c.300pp 10 b/w illus. 1 map 978-1-108-84076-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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African Studies, 152
November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-49146-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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The Idea of Development in Africa
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 Studies, 150
November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.336pp 978-1-108-48867-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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
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Islam, Ethnicity, and Conflict in Ethiopia
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
November 2020 228 x 152 mm 280pp 978-1-107-10369-6 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-107-50322-9 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99
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The Bale Insurgency, 1963-1970 Terje Østebø | University of Florida
The ‘Early Medieval’ Origins of India
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
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
Manu V. Devadevan | Indian Institute of Technology, Mandi
September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.420pp 978-1-108-49457-1 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-74851-3 Paperback £29.99 / US$39.99
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African Studies, 151
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-83968-6 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00
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History – Other Areas
A Hygienic City-Nation Space, Community, and Everyday Life in Colonial Calcutta Nabaparna Ghosh | Babson College, Wellesley, USA
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
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September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.250pp 978-1-108-48989-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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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 August 2020 228 x 152 mm 308pp 978-1-108-41774-7 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-40565-2 Paperback £24.99 / US$31.99
A Genealogy of Terrorism
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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 November 2020 229 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-84215-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Let there be Light Engineering, Entrepreneurship and Electricity in Colonial Bengal, 1880–1945 Suvobrata Sarkar | Rabindra Bharati University, Kolkata
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 September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-83598-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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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 October 2020 228 x 152 mm 450pp 978-1-107-09933-3 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00
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Gender Politics at Home and Abroad Protestant Modernity in Colonial-Era Korea Hyaeweol Choi | University of Iowa
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 July 2020 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-48743-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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History – Other Areas
Life after the Harem
Disability in Contemporary China
Female Palace Slaves, Patronage and the Imperial Ottoman Court Betül Ipsirli Argit | Marmara University, Istanbul
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
The first study exploring the lives of female slaves of the Ottoman imperial court, it demonstrates the diversity of experiences in nondynastic female-agency 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
September 2020 228 x 152 mm 300pp 4 b/w illus. 978-1-107-11853-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.304pp 5 b/w illus. 1 map 9 tables 978-1-108-48836-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C
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King Abdul Aziz: Diplomacy and Statecraft 1902–1953
The Making of Song Dynasty History
Diplomacy and Statecraft 1902–1953 Edited by A Burdett
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 October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-83483-4 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00
August 2020 246 x 160 mm c.2000pp 978-1-78806-210-7 4 Volume Hardback Set
£1400.00 / US$1860.00 R
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Port Cities of the Eastern Mediterranean
The Great Exodus from China Trauma, Memory, and Identity in Modern Taiwan Dominic Meng-Hsuan Yang | University of Missouri, Columbia
Urban Culture in the Late Ottoman Empire Malte Fuhrmann | Leibniz-Zentrum Moderner Orient (ZMO)
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 September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-47812-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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.
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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 November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.444pp 978-1-108-47737-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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History – Other Areas
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Islamic Knowledge and the Making of Modern Egypt
Empire and the Making of Native Title
Hilary Kalmbach | University of Sussex
Sovereignty, Property and Indigenous People Bain Attwood | Monash University, Victoria
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 August 2020 228 x 152 mm c.288pp 978-1-108-42347-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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 July 2020 228 x 152 mm 454pp 978-1-108-47829-8 Hardback £34.99 / US$44.99
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Persian Historiography across Empires
A Concise History of Australia
The Ottomans, Safavids, and Mughals Sholeh A. Quinn | University of California, Merced
Fifth edition Stuart Macintyre | University of Melbourne
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
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
January 2021 229 x 152 mm c.250pp 978-1-108-84221-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Records of Yemen 1798–1960 Edited by 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 August 2020 246 x 160 mm c.12000pp 978-1-78806-548-1 16 Volume Hardback Set
£5600.00 / US$7440.00 R
Contents: 1. Beginnings, c. 50,000 years before the present–c. 1600; 2. Newcomers, c. 1600–1792; 3. Coercion, 1793–1821; 4. Conquest, 1822–1850; 5. Progress, 1851–1888; 6. Reconstruction, 1889–1913; 7. Sacrifice, 1914–1945; 8. Golden age, 1946–1975; 9. Rectification, 1976–1996; 10. Outcomes, 1997–2019. Cambridge Concise Histories
October 2020 216 x 138 mm c.420pp 48 b/w illus. 6 maps 978-1-108-72848-5 Paperback £19.99 / US$24.95 G
Arabian Boundaries New Documents 1966–1975 Edited by 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 19611965; 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 August 2020 246 x 160 mm c.11000pp 978-1-78806-896-3 18 Volume Hardback Set
£6300.00 / US$8370.00 R
History – Cross Discipline
History – Cross Discipline
Women in the British Armed Forces during the Second World War Jeremy A. Crang | University of Edinburgh
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 September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-42123-2 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99
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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
December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-84216-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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The Unknown Enemy Counterinsurgency and the Illusion of Control Christian Tripodi | King’s College London
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 November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-42460-8 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-44071-4 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99
Sisters in Arms
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
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Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare
September 2020 228 x 152 mm 352pp 978-1-107-01347-6 Hardback £25.00 / US$34.95
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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
September 2020 228 x 152 mm 650pp 22 b/w illus. 16 maps 978-0-521-87715-2 Hardback £120.00 / US$156.00 R
Britain and Italy in the Era of the First World War Defending and Forging Empires Stefano Marcuzzi | University College Dublin
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
November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.348pp 978-1-108-83129-1 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00
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History – Cross Discipline
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The Great War in History
Radical Conduct
Debates and Controversies, 1914 to the Present Second edition Jay Winter | Yale University, Connecticut
Politics, Sociability and Equality in London 1789-1815 Mark Philp | University of Warwick
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
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
Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-84316-4 Hardback £64.99 / US$84.99 978-1-108-82396-8 Paperback £21.99 / US$28.99
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September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.290pp 978-1-108-84218-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Refugee Crises, 1945-2000 Political and Societal Responses in International Comparison Edited by 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
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
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-84162-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Publications of the German Historical Institute
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-83513-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Jewish Internationalism and Human Rights after the Holocaust Nathan A. Kurz | Birkbeck College, University of London
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
September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-83492-6 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99
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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
July 2020 228 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-82673-0 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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History – Cross Discipline / Literature – American Literature
Scholastic Affect
The Cambridge History of Native American Literature
Gender, Maternity and the History of Emotions Clare Monagle | Macquarie University, Sydney
Volume 1 Edited by Melanie Benson Taylor | Dartmouth College, New Hampshire
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.
This book is intended for scholars and students of Native American literature, US & Canadian literature, comparative literature, literary theory, multi-ethnic studies, cultural studies, and American studies. Expert commentaries represent a variety of disciplines and come from the US, Canada, England, and Europe. • Advances a provocative narrative about Native American literature as uniquely sited and constructed within US settler space and economies • Assembles a collection of authoritative perspectives from within and outside of the field • Offers important perspectives from individuals within the publishing industry and creative process
Elements in Histories of Emotions and the Senses
August 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-81426-3 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Literature – American Literature
September 2020 228 x 152 mm 562pp 978-1-108-48205-9 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00
The New Hemingway Studies
A History of American Puritan Literature
Edited by Suzanne del Gizzo | Chestnut College
Edited by Kristina Bross | Washington University, St Louis
This book captures and the reconfigures understanding of puritan literature and its history. It offers a sense of where puritan studies stands with pointers toward where they might go next – an account of American puritan literature accessible and useful to a broad range of students, teachers, scholars, and readers. • Resituates puritan New England in in the context of a much more interconnected Atlantic and global world • Introduces readers to the changed understanding of American exceptionalism and puritan origin stories • Captures the renaissance in puritan studies and presents the reconfigured understanding to readers at multiple levels of expertise September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.375pp 978-1-108-84003-3 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00
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Hemingway continues to command attention in popular culture and in literary studies. The New Hemingway Studies outlines Hemingway’s continued relevance for the twenty-first century scholars and readers, highlights the latest critical trends, and indicates the paths yet to be taken. • Provides an overview of recent scholarly trends in Hemingway studies • Re-imagines Hemingway studies in new contexts • Demonstrates gaps in current scholarship and adumbrates possible paths for future inquiry Twenty-First-Century Critical Revisions
September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.318pp 978-1-108-49484-7 Hardback £89.99 / US$120.00
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Apocalypse in American Literature and Culture
A History of American Literature and Culture of the First World War Edited by Tim Dayton | Kansas State University
The collection explores the various, often conflicting representations of the war offered by US writers, artists, intellectuals, and political figures. This multidisciplinary study, a collaboration of premier scholars, serves readers and students interested in American literature, history, and politics as well as specialists in these subjects. • Presents the latest research on US literature and culture of the First World War by premier scholars • Covers multiple genres and media: poetry, fiction, film, drama, memoir, journalism, music, architecture, and visual art • Reconsiders the longstanding assumption of American disillusionment with the war November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-47532-7 Hardback c. £89.99 / c. US$120.00
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Edited by John Hay | University of Nevada, Las Vegas
This book is for students and instructors of American literature and culture. It features two dozen scholarly essays on different aspects of the theme of apocalypse in America, from the colonial era to the present. Imagining the end of the world has always been a popular pastime, especially in America. • Specifically addresses many key texts and periods commonly covered in undergraduate survey courses • Organized according both to key aspects of Apocalypse and to notable periods in American literary history • Offers twenty-five essays on many different periods and aspects of American literary history Cambridge Themes in American Literature and Culture
December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-49384-0 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00
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Literature – American Literature / Literature – English Literature
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War and American Literature
The New Feminist Literary Studies
Edited by Jennifer Haytock | State University College, Brockport, New York
Edited by Jennifer Cooke | Loughborough University
War and American Literature examines representations of war throughout American literary history, providing a firm grounding in established criticism and opening up new lines of inquiry. Readers will find accessible yet sophisticated essays that lay out key questions and scholarship in the field. • Makes connections among literature about all major US wars • Introduces new lines of inquiry, explaining five of the latest theoretical approaches and how these approaches can illuminate the subject of war in American literature • Provides grounding in literature and scholarship of major US wars
This book presents sixteen essays by feminists of theory and literature. It is useful to academics and students of feminism, gender studies, queer theory, and contemporary literature. Its essays both account for the current state of the field and sub-disciplines they tackle as well as making fresh critical interventions. • Intervenes in feminist debates and the subfields with which it intersects • Organized into useful sections – Frontiers, Fields, and Forms – making it easy to use and to find relevant essays easily • Presents both established and emerging feminist voices
Cambridge Themes in American Literature and Culture
Twenty-First-Century Critical Revisions
December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.375pp 978-1-108-49680-3 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$110.00
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Literature – English Literature
Rock Art and Landscape in the Altai Mountains of Mongolia Esther Jacobson-Tepfer | University of Oregon
Culture, Theory and Criticism in the 21st Century Edited by Sherryl Vint | University of California, Riverside
After the Human documents the emergence of posthumanist ideas in the fractures within traditional disciplines, examines the new objects of analysis that thus came into prominence, and theorizes new interdisciplinary methods of study that followed. • Contextualizes the shifting terminology that shapes this area of study, and clarifies a history of various terms, from antihumanism to posthumanism, transhumanism, critical posthumanism and beyond • Demonstrates that there are a certain shared set of premises across a range of posthumanist thinkers, but also points to areas of tension or omission among them • Describes a trajectory of how scholarly enquiry has been changed in both its objects of analysis and its methods of theorization via the emergence of a diverse set of philosophical perspectives, situated analyses, and ethical frameworks loosely categorized as posthumanism After Series, 6
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Analysis of Petroglyphic rock art in three valleys of Mongolia’s Altai Mountains begins to explain the rhythm of cultural manifestations: where rock art appears, when it disappears, and why. The material and this remote arena offer an ideal laboratory to study the intersection of prehistoric culture and paleoenvironment. Elements in Environmental Humanities
March 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 50 b/w illus. 978-1-108-79008-6 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Can We Be Wrong? The Problem of Textual Evidence in a Time of Data Andrew Piper | McGill University, Montréal
This Element combines a machine learning-based approach to detect the prevalence and nature of generalization across tens of thousands of sentences from different disciplines alongside a robust discussion of potential solutions to the problem of the generalizability of textual evidence. Elements in Digital Literary Studies
September 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 13 b/w illus. 978-1-108-92620-1 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
Beyond the Anthropological Difference
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The Environmental Humanities and the Ancient World
Matthew Calarco | California State University, Fullerton
This Element provides a novel framework for understanding the nature of violence against animals. The author argues that the search for human uniqueness (an ‘anthropological difference’) is at the heart of this violence and should be replaced by a way of life based on the notion of human and animals being indistinct.
Questions and Perspectives Christopher Schliephake | Universität Augsburg
Elements in Environmental Humanities
July 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-79737-5 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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The Anatomy of Deep Time
After the Human
December 2020 229 x 152 mm c.260pp 978-1-108-83666-1 Hardback £79.99 / US$105.00 978-1-108-81916-9 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99
October 2020 229 x 152 mm c.260pp 978-1-108-47193-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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This Element aims to show why the ancient tradition still matters in the Anthropocene. Revisiting ancient materials alongside central concepts of contemporary environmental theory, Schliephake offers new perspectives and argues that classical ecological knowledge is a powerful resource for creating alternative world views. Elements in Environmental Humanities
July 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-74904-6 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Literature – English Literature
TEXTBOOK
The Cambridge Companion to Queer Studies
The Tragedy of King Lear
Edited by Siobhan B. Somerville | University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
This Companion provides a guide to queer inquiry in literary and cultural studies. The essays gathered here represent work in queer studies in the vital present, suggesting new and emerging areas, including transgender studies. It will appeal to undergraduates, tutors, and lecturers studying and teaching Queer Studies. • Reflects the newest areas of queer studies scholarship, including queer of color critique, indigenous studies, disability studies, and transgender studies • Emphasizes queer literary and cultural studies, with essays on topics such as poetics, narrative, popular culture, performance studies, and digital culture • Familiarizes readers with the history of queer literary and cultural studies, as well as the most current debates Cambridge Companions to Literature
June 2020 228 x 152 mm 276pp 978-1-108-48204-2 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-74189-7 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99
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The Edited Collection Pasts, Present and Futures Peter Webster | Webster Research Consulting
Contents: Introduction; Textual Analysis; Preface by Brian Gibbons; Textual Analysis, Part 1; A Note on the Text; List of Characters; The Play; Textual Analysis, Part 2; Appendix: Passages Unique to the First Quarto; Reading List. The New Cambridge Shakespeare
May 2020 228 x 152 mm 312pp 19 b/w illus. 978-1-107-19586-8 Hardback £49.99 / US$61.99 978-1-316-64697-7 Paperback £8.99 / US$11.95
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Texts, Artefacts and Beliefs Andrew Wallace | Carleton University, Ottawa
Elements in Publishing and Book Culture
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All the Sonnets of Shakespeare William Shakespeare Edited by Paul Edmondson | The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
Intended for all readers of Shakespeare, this beautiful and ground-breaking book arranges Shakespeare’s sonnets printed in 1609 in chronological order and intersperses the sonnets from the plays among them. A lively introduction provides essential background, while explanatory notes and modern English paraphrases illuminate the sonnets’ meanings. • A breath of fresh air which encourages readers to engage anew with Shakespeare as a writer in sonnet form • Encourages new insights into the relationship between Shakespeare’s life and work • Significantly enhances comprehension of these often difficult poems through easily intelligible summaries and paraphrases September 2020 216 x 138 mm 306pp 978-1-108-49039-9 Hardback £12.99 / US$17.95
For this updated critical edition of King Lear, Lois Potter has written a completely new introduction, taking account of recent productions and reinterpretations of the play, with a particular emphasis on its afterlife in global performance and adaptation. • A completely fresh introduction equips students to analyse the language and staging of the play for themselves • Provides a guide to key critical interpretations of the play, including philosophical, political, feminist and ecocritical readings • Equips students to think about the play in performance and adaptation around the world
The Presence of Rome in Medieval and Early Modern Britain
Edited collections are widely supposed to contain lesser work than scholarly journals. After examining the origins of this critique, this Element explores the modern history of the edited collection and the particular roles it has played as a model of collaboration, trust and mutual obligation. June 2020 178 x 127 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-73937-5 Paperback £9.99 / US$12.99
Third edition William Shakespeare Introduction by Lois Potter | University of Delaware, Emeritus
This study will appeal to students and scholars of literature, history, and culture who are interested in Rome’s persistence in medieval and early modern Britain. • Provides a nuanced and multi-disciplinary account of the persistence of Rome in Britain • Puts the persistence of Rome in Britain in an extremely wide historicalcultural frame of reference, keeping texts written in Britain in dialogue with continental texts ranging from antiquity to the early modern period • Places medieval texts in a range of languages (Latin, medieval Welsh, Old English, Old French) in conversation with texts written in early modern English and humanistic Latin September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 5 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49610-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Literature – English Literature
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Paper in Medieval England
The Afterlife of St Cuthbert
From Pulp to Fictions Orietta Da Rold | University of Cambridge
Place, Texts and Ascetic Tradition, 690–1500 Christiania Whitehead | Universities of Warwick and Lausanne
Detailed analysis of the coming of paper to medieval England, and its influence on the literary and non-literary culture of the period. In this analysis, book production is one of the elements of a wider story. The book considers a wider matrix of historical, economic, social and cultural interrelations and people’s networks. • Gives the most expert advice and information on how to approach the study of medieval paper, providing a step-by-step approach • Provides a multi-disciplinary analysis on the use of paper in medieval manuscript production including multilingual examples of how disciplines must interact to understand the complex affordances of paper • Demonstrates the importance of the study of paper for manuscript in historical and literary studies
Introduces readers interested in insular spirituality and hagiography to the major texts associated with the cult of the great northern English saint, Cuthbert. The first sustained analysis of this textual tradition from 690-1500, emphasizing his ascetic evolution, and association with changing perceptions of northernness and nationhood. • The first book to tell the entire story of the textual tradition of St Cuthbert’s cult, from the seventh to the fifteenth centuries • Gives the reader insight into northern eremiticism over an expansive time scale, exploring how the distinctive characteristics of Cuthbert’s eremitic lifestyle and spirituality change in visibility and value • Explores environmental contexts: Cuthbert’s connections with a series of northern spaces, including the landscape, the monastery, the diocese, the eremitic island, and the Anglo-Scottish border
Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature, 112
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.280pp 978-1-108-84057-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-49035-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Ben Jonson and Posterity Reception, Reputation, Legacy Edited by Martin Butler | University of Leeds
Imagining the Medieval Afterlife Edited by Richard Matthew Pollard | Université du Québec à Montréal
This first comprehensive study in English of the many and variegated ways the afterlife was envisioned in the Middle Ages presents exciting new interpretations that will interest literary scholars, (art) historians, and theologians. • Offers the first comprehensive treatment in English of how the afterlife was envisioned, from Antiquity to the end of the Middle Ages • Includes the most up to date scholarship on the medieval afterlife, with fresh perspectives that push the field in new directions • Features a range of perspectives from leading historians, art historians, literary scholars, classicists and theologians to afford a crossdisciplinary perspective Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature, 114
November 2020 228 x 152 mm 320pp 978-1-107-17791-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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October 2020 229 x 152 mm c.260pp 978-1-108-84268-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Shakespeare and Emotion
The Cambridge Companion to Medieval British Manuscripts
Edited by Katharine Craik | Oxford Brookes University
Edited by Orietta Da Rold | University of Cambridge
This book orientates students in the complex, multidisciplinary study of medieval book production and contemporary display of manuscripts. It illustrates the major methodologies and explains why skills in understanding early book production are so critical for reading, editing, and accessing a rich cultural heritage. • Chapters by leading specialists in the specific area of manuscript studies • Interdisciplinary scholars take readers through the how and why of working with manuscripts from Britain, c.600–1500 • Extensive in coverage and clearly written, including all aspects of what manuscript studies can achieve for practitioners Cambridge Companions to Literature
September 2020 228 x 152 mm 340pp 978-1-107-10246-0 Hardback c. £59.99 / c. US$79.95 978-1-107-50014-3 Paperback c. £18.99 / c. US$24.95
Bringing together leading scholars and multiple critical perspectives, this collection provides new insights into Jonson’s reception and legacy over four centuries, benefitting students and scholars of Jonson and early modern literary studies, as well as all those interested in intertextuality and reception from the Renaissance to the present. • Aligns leading scholars who have contributed to major editions and studies of Jonson in the past decade • Explores questions regarding Jonson’s reputation and reception over four centuries • Cross-examines the history of Jonson’s reputation and what it reveals about our relationship with the early modern past
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These twenty-three new essays by an international team of experts will be essential reading for students and scholars working on Shakespeare, the history of the body and emotions, and performance theory or practice. It brings the current surge of interest in affective life into conversation with current debates in Shakespeare studies. • Explores emotional experience as a central feature of Shakespeare’s works, offering innovative approaches to the plays and poems • Forges new insights into the vibrant field of the early modern history of the emotions • Builds on Shakespeare’s enduring legacy to make links between past and present emotional experience, considering the real-world benefit of Shakespeare’s creativity for today’s geo-political realities October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-41616-0 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99
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Literature – English Literature
PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED
Taste and Knowledge in Early Modern England
The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea
Elizabeth L. Swann | Durham University
This book will be of use to students, postgraduates, and scholars with interests in the history of the senses and in Renaissance and early modern literature and culture. It offers new readings of influential texts by authors including Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, Amelia Lanyer, and Robert Boyle. • Offers the first full and detailed account of the sense of taste in early modern England • Draws on texts from a vast spectrum of genres in order to offer a wideranging, interdisciplinary account of taste • Makes use of, and engages critically with, the influential approach known as ‘historical phenomenology,’ reframing this as a methodological tool
Anne Finch Edited by Jennifer Keith | University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Scholars and students of women’s writing, poetry, and seventeenth- and eighteenth-century literature have long called for a complete, critical edition of the works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea. This edition provides, for the first time, authoritative texts, textual apparatus and commentary for all known works by this important writer. • The first ever complete, critical edition of the works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea (1661–1720) • Provides established texts of all Finch’s poems, plays, and letters, organized by their appearance in Finch’s authorized collections • Includes a comprehensive introduction, extensive explanatory notes and thorough textual commentary September 2020 216 x 138 mm 1400pp 978-0-521-19622-2 2 Volume Hardback Set
£200.00 / US$260.00
November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.280pp 978-1-108-48765-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Sarah Lewis | King’s College London
Lewis examines cultural and theatrical intersections between early modern temporal concepts and early modern gendered identities. Through close readings of the works of Shakespeare, Middleton, Dekker, Heywood and others, she shows how temporal tropes are used to delineate masculinity and femininity on the early modern stage. • Sheds new light on Shakespeare by reading his works alongside less well-known plays • Explores how culturally constructed ideas of time and gender are connected in early modern drama and society • Focuses on the performance of gender and of temporality through the framework of three key concepts: patience, prodigality, and revenge C
Shakespeare and Senecan Tragedy Curtis Perry | University of Illinois
A new approach to understanding the relationship between Shakespearean tragedy and Senecan tragedy, this book has implications for our understanding Shakespeare’s major tragedies, for our understanding of tragedy as a genre, and for our understanding of early modern classical reception. • Brings recent advances in understanding Senecan drama from Classics into Shakespeare Studies • Combines philology with up-to-date theoretical sophistication about classical reception, political theory, early modern race-making, and the history of the self • Rethinks Shakespeare and periodization by remapping the intersecting reception histories of Senecan and Shakespearean tragedy October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-49617-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
Shakespeare, Blackface and Race Different Perspectives Coen Heijes | Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, The Netherlands
Through several case studies the author analyses the interaction between blackface and (institutional) racism in Dutch society and theatre and how Othello has become an active player in this debate.
Time and Gender on the Shakespearean Stage
September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.280pp 978-1-108-84219-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Elements in Shakespeare Performance
September 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-82782-9 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare on Screen Russell Jackson | University of Birmingham
The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare on Screen offers critical introductions by a team of distinguished scholars on a diverse range of screen adaptations of Shakespeare from around the world. The volume provides crucial contexts for undergraduate and graduate students of Shakespeare and media. • Chapters encompass diverse critical and historical approaches to topics, providing a valuable introduction for non-specialist readers to different critical strategies • Featuring lively and engaging chapters on the history of cinema, television adaptations, major directors, world cinema and ‘live’ Shakespeare broadcast • Up-to-date analysis of recent films and digital adaptations of Shakespeare with a broad range of productions released in the last ten years Cambridge Companions to Literature
November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-42116-4 Hardback c. £59.99 / c. US$74.99 978-1-108-43155-2 Paperback c. £19.99 / c. US$24.99
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About Shakespeare Bodies, Spaces and Texts Robert Shaughnessy | University of Surrey
Drawing upon the work of the Royal Shakespeare Company, Shakespeare’s Globe and the Schaubühne Berlin, About Shakespeare examines theatrical bodies, the spaces inhabited by actors and audiences, and the texts that circulate around and between them. Elements in Shakespeare Performance
September 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-72548-4 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Literature – English Literature
Romantic Cartographies
Physical Disability in British Romantic Literature
Mapping, Literature, Culture, 1789–1832 Edited by Sally Bushell | Lancaster University
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Romantic Cartographies is the first collection to fully explore the reach and significance of cartographic practice in Romantic-period culture. Revealing the diverse ways in which the period mapped itself, the volume also considers our contemporary engagements with Romanticism from the perspective of our own spatialised culture. • Provides a range of interdisciplinary approaches and perspectives on the practice and cultural significance of cartographic work in the romantic period • Interrogates and opens up a deeper understanding of the concept of the map, including its place in wider cultural networks and its relation to other texts and bodies of knowledge • Clearly structured around three perspectives: historical, material and present day – including digital and other technologies October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 29 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47238-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Essaka Joshua | University of Notre Dame, Indiana
This book is for Romantic era scholars/students interested in revising their view on major Romantic texts by reading with sensitivity to ideas and concepts around disability; and for literary disability studies’ scholars and students wishing to extend their understanding of the eighteenth or nineteenth centuries. • Provides an overview of scholarship in the field of critical disability studies; and an overview of literary criticism on disability, making a disability studies approach accessible to Romanticists • Uses a series of case studies of single authors, groups of writers, and single texts allowing readers insight into how a disability studies reading might work in a range of contexts • Eschews anachronistic terminology and concepts, providing new period-appropriate terminology for ‘disability’ and period-appropriate concepts of disability Cambridge Studies in Romanticism, 130
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.250pp 978-1-108-83670-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
Romanticism: 100 Poems
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Edited by Michael Ferber | University of New Hampshire
Choosing one hundred poems from what many consider to be the greatest era of poetry is no small feat. Michael Ferber’s refreshing collection includes seminal Romantic poems alongside lesser-known gems. Embodying the urgent international contexts of the Romantic movement, this transatlantic anthology features poetry translated from six languages. • A uniquely international anthology of romantic poetry spanning many languages and nations across Europe • Includes helpful notes with engaging headnotes for poets and a concise, accessible introduction to orient general readers in the history, context, and meanings of ‘Romantic’ poetry • Uniquely concise, attractive, and affordable anthology of Romantic poems that will serve general readers as an engaging entry point or as an enriching supplementary text for secondary and university literature students October 2020 198 x 129 mm c.200pp 978-1-108-49105-1 Hardback c. £12.99 / c. US$16.99
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Rethinking the Secular Origins of the Novel The Bible in English Fiction 1678–1767 Kevin Seidel | Eastern Mennonite University, Virginia
Crises of Identification Marisa Palacios Knox | University of Texas Rio Grande Valley
This book explores how Victorian women readers strategically identified with literature to defy stereotypes and inspire their action and creativity. Engaging with nineteenth-century English literature and culture, the book engages with theories and histories of reading that appeal to literary scholars and educators. • Clarifies the complex concept of literary identification, providing a history of its feminization and depreciation as a reading practice despite its ubiquity as a reading experience • Illuminates examples of deliberate reading by Victorian women that inspired public and professional action, countering prevalent stereotypes about women’s reading • Includes a chapter on the pedagogical and critical applications of identification, connecting critical analysis and history of nineteenthcentury literature to current teaching praxis Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture
Unsettling the usual ways we think about the relationship between religion and secularism, and focusing on scenes where the Bible shows up as a physical object in eighteenth-century English fiction, this book powerfully argues that the English novel rose with the Bible, not after it. • Takes up recent, interdisciplinary discourse on secularism and applies it to literary studies, providing new ways to think about secularity in literature • Productively connects histories of the novel and histories of the Bible • Explores the Bible as a material object, not just a text, to understand its plural and varied authority within the novel and among various social practices connected to the Bible October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.280pp 978-1-108-49103-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
Victorian Women and Wayward Reading
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October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.250pp 978-1-108-49616-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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The Victorian Cult of Shakespeare Bardology in the Nineteenth Century Charles LaPorte | University of Washington
This book will interest anyone who is curious about how Shakespeare became the presiding deity of English literature. It describes the Victorians’ quasi-Biblical culture surrounding Shakespeare’s work and discusses why Victorian devotion had an enduring impact upon English studies in the Western world. • Demonstrates the religious dimensions of Victorian Shakespeare criticism • Places Victorian reverence for Shakespeare in the light of nineteenthcentury Biblical criticism • Presents in clear and non-specialist language the implications of modern biblical criticism Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.260pp 978-1-108-49615-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Literature – English Literature
Postcognitivist Beckett
Tragedy and the Modernist Novel
Olga Beloborodova | Universiteit Antwerpen, Belgium
Manya Lempert | University of Arizona
This book brings together the study of modern fiction, tragedy, chance, and the natural world. It will appeal to graduate students and researchers interested in British and European modernism, philosophy, science and literature, and classical reception studies. It will also interest scholars studying the novel or tragedy more generally. • Explains how modern novelists thought about ancient and modern tragedy • Unveils the similarities between Greek tragedy and Darwinian evolution • Explores modernist authors’ depictions of nihilism, suicide, and political violence and apathy as cautionary tales for readers today, showing how fiction can endorse and condemn different ethical and political positions September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.290pp 978-1-108-49602-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Modernism and the Idea of the Crowd Judith Paltin | University of British Columbia, Vancouver
This book argues that literary modernists engaged creatively with modernity’s expanding forms of collective experience and performative identities; their work clarifies how popular subjectivity evolves from a nineteenth-century liberal citizenry to the contemporary sense of a range of political multitudes struggling with conditions of oppression. • Examines and analyzes crowds, political agency, and group performativity across a set of canonical and lesser known modernist works • Offers a comprehensive anatomy of the social mind as theorized from within modernist studies, democracy studies, and literary studies • Engages with a variety of period archives including fiction, drama, poetry, music, painting, newspapers, police and government records, published correspondence, manifestos, private writings, and exhibitions November 2020 229 x 152 mm c.290pp 978-1-108-84223-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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A reassessment of Beckett’s alleged Cartesianism using the theoretical framework of extended cognition. The argument defended here is that Beckett’s fictional minds are not isolated ‘skullscapes’: they are grounded in interaction with their fictional storyworlds, however impoverished those may have become in the later part of his writing career. Elements in Beckett Studies
June 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-70861-6 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Experimental Beckett
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Contemporary Performance Practices Nicholas E. Johnson | Trinity College Dublin
How do twenty-first century theatre practitioners negotiate the dynamics of tradition and innovation across the works of Samuel Beckett? Reading recent performances for creative uses of embodiment, environment, and technology reveals the increasingly interdisciplinary, international, and intermedial character of contemporary Beckettian practice. Elements in Beckett Studies
April 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-73779-1 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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The New Modernist Studies Edited by Douglas Mao | The Johns Hopkins University
This is the first book devoted to the history and prospects of the new modernist studies. It will be a key resource for readers seeking an authoritative account of the field’s early years and for those seeking out new directions in modernist scholarship. • Includes detailed accounts of intellectual milieu into which the new modernist studies emerged as well as a rich institutional history of the early years of the field • Explores new directions in modernist studies and offers readers a sense of where the new modernist studies may be headed in the near future • Chapters provide an enthusiastic, informed take on a continuously evolving field Twenty-First-Century Critical Revisions
Modernism in the Metrocolony
November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.280pp 978-1-108-48706-1 Hardback c. £70.00 / c. US$110.00 978-1-108-73214-7 Paperback c. £18.99 / c. US$29.99
Urban Cultures of Empire in Twentieth-Century Literature Caitlin Vandertop | University of the South Pacific
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This book considers the place of the British colonial city in modernist fiction. While modernism is often linked to the cultural transformations of the Euro-American metropolis, Modernism in the Metrocolony shows how writers responded to empire’s urban legacies, tracing an alternative, peripheral history of the modernist city. • Provides examples of interdisciplinary approaches to modernist literature, postcolonial studies and urban history • Produces an innovative theoretical overview outlining the significance of peripheral urbanism to modernism, drawing primarily on theorists from the global South • Intervenes in debates over the cultural, political and ecological legacies of colonial urbanism November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.280pp 978-1-108-83562-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Free online data delivery at http://datashop.cambridge.org
Literature – English Literature
The Cambridge Companion to Nineteen Eighty-Four
Decadence A Literary History Edited by Alex Murray | Queen’s University Belfast
Edited by Nathan Waddell | University of Birmingham
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The Cambridge Companion to Nineteen EightyFour is aimed at undergraduates, postgraduates, and academics. Situating the novel in multiple frameworks, including contextual considerations and literary histories, the book asks new questions about the novel’s significance in an age in which authoritarianism finds itself freshly empowered. • Provides analyses of Nineteen Eighty-Four across multiple media, including literature, film and television, radio, songs, dance, comics, and video games • The book is structured around four key emphases: contexts, histories, questions, and media • Situates Nineteen Eighty-Four not only in new conceptual and literaryhistorical contexts, but also in relation to the rest of his writing
This book will appeal to undergraduates, postgraduates, and faculty who work across Victorian Studies and twentieth-century literature. A comprehensive overview of Decadence, it also expands the methodological, geographical, and temporal coordinates of the movement, with a renewed focus on the role played by women writers. • Offers a new history of Decadence • Provides a focus on translation and transnationalism • Corrects the historical neglect of female authors, returning them at the centre of the movement • Speaks to scholars working in modernism and post-1945 literary studies
Cambridge Companions to Literature
September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-42629-9 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.280pp 978-1-108-84109-2 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-81471-3 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99
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The Value of Poetry Eric Falci | University of California, Berkeley
Jacob’s Room Virginia Woolf Edited by Stuart N. Clarke | Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain
This edition is for students and academics of Woolf’s works. It aims to be as comprehensive as possible in providing an authoritative text, hundreds of explanatory notes and an extensive introduction describing the composition of the novel and its critical reception 1922–41. • Provides hundreds of explanatory notes, helping readers understand the historical and literary resonances of objects, phrases, and scenes • The introduction gives a detailed account of the composition of the novel, together with a separate timeline • Details the critical reception of the novel from publication to Woolf’s death (1922–41)
The Value of Poetry shows how and why poetry matters in the contemporary world and demonstrates what poems can offer to twentyfirst century readers. It argues that poems are vital spaces in which the complexities of thought, feeling, and memory are shaped and displayed, and that poems offer unique and crucial forms of readerly experience. • Provides a concise but rich account of the major critical and theoretical work that has shaped poetry and poetry criticism • Offers detailed and lively readings of significant contemporary poems that consider all major matters of form, style, and genre • Provides an original presentation of the importance of poetry in the twenty-first century The Value of
October 2020 216 x 140 mm c.170pp 978-1-108-42955-9 Hardback £49.99 / US$64.99 978-1-108-45447-6 Paperback £19.99 / US$24.99
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The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Virginia Woolf
September 2020 216 x 138 mm 500pp 978-0-521-84674-5 Hardback £105.00 / US$135.00
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Volume 1: Gothic in the Long Eighteenth Century Volume 1: Gothic in the Long Eighteenth Century Edited by Angela Wright | University of Sheffield
Book, Text, Medium Cross-Sectional Reading for a Digital Age Garrett Stewart | University of Iowa
This book assess the transformative arc between medieval books and today’s e-books. It will appeal to graduates and researchers working in the 21st century literary studies generally, in the relationships between the book and the digital age specifically. • Brings together book studies and the history of book arts with textual readings, literary theory, and the philosophy of language • Makes direct connections between art history, including painting and conceptual sculpture, and the nuances of literary process in an age of digital poetics • Develops an interdisciplinary concept of medium that challenges or augments many leading contemporary theories in the field Cambridge Studies in Twenty-First-Century Literature and Culture
December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.280pp 978-1-108-83459-9 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$105.00
The Cambridge History of the Gothic
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This volume offers a comprehensive account of the Gothic in Western civilisation, from the Gothic sacking of Rome in 410 AD, through seventeenthcentury Gothic politics, and up to the end of the long eighteenth century. Interdisciplinary in its focus, it includes essays on literature, architecture, politics and fine art. • Provides a thorough and comprehensive historical overview of the Gothic, from antiquity to the end of the long eighteenth century, exploring new areas of criticism • Explores the Gothic in a range of different interdisciplinary contexts, tracking its imbrication in literature, architecture, fine art and politics • Shows the extent to which Gothic both responds to, and is an active participant in, some of the most important historical events in Western civilisation The Cambridge History of the Gothic
August 2020 228 x 152 mm 516pp 978-1-108-47270-8 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00
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Literature – English Literature / Literature – European and World Literature
PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED
The Cambridge History of the Gothic
The New Irish Studies Edited by Paige Reynolds | College of the Holy Cross, Massachusetts
Volume 2: Gothic in the Nineteenth Century Edited by Dale Townshend | Manchester Metropolitan University
Comprising twenty-one essays by leading international scholars, this volume offers a comprehensive account of Gothic culture in Britain, America and Continental Europe in the nineteenth century. Interdisciplinary in its focus, it includes chapters on literature, architecture, science, theatre, historiography and popular entertainment. • Provides a thorough and comprehensive historical overview of the Gothic in British, American and European culture in the nineteenth century • Explores the Gothic in a range of different interdisciplinary contexts, from literature and architecture to science and popular entertainment • Shows the extent to which Gothic both responds to, and is an active participant in, some of the most important historical events in Western civilisation in the period 1800–1900 The Cambridge History of the Gothic
August 2020 228 x 152 mm 558pp 14 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47271-5 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00
Literature – European and World Literature The City of Poetry Imagining the Civic Role of the Poet in Fourteenth-Century Italy David Lummus | University of Notre Dame, Indiana
This book is for students and scholars of medieval literature and for readers interested in the public intellectuals of the past. It provides new accounts of major authors like Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio, and invites readers to make comparisons with current debates about the public humanities. • Unites the major authors of the medieval Italian literary canon in a single analytical frame that includes both canonical and oftenoverlooked texts • Clarifies key aspects of medieval literary culture that have been obfuscated by national literary histories and by Romantic notions of poetry and the poet • Makes difficult and often-obscure texts accessible to readers interested in the history of the public intellectual November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-83945-7 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$99.99
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Twenty-First-Century Critical Revisions
September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-47399-6 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99
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Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature
This book offers a pioneering critical account of twenty-first-century Irish literature and culture, underscoring the crucial role that contemporary writing plays in representing and influencing rapidly changing conditions in Ireland and Northern Ireland. It unsettles presumptions about what constitutes an Irish classic. • Gives an authoritative overview of contemporary Irish literature in chapters that focus on texts, performances, institutions, historical conditions, and practices • Traces contemporary Irish literature from a range of perspectives and different critical approaches, including age studies, feminism, biodigital poetics, queer theory, neoliberalism, and globalism • Highlights the engagement and activism of contemporary Irish writers and considers the function of Irish writing in reflecting and influencing rapidly changing contemporary cultural conditions
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The Cambridge Companion to Rabindranath Tagore Edited by Sukanta Chaudhuri | Jadavpur University, Kolkata
This is the first one-volume guide in English, or indeed in Bengali, to the full spectrum of Tagore’s multi-faceted genius. It will cater to students and scholars of Indian and world literature, even those who know Bengali; also of Indian history, culture, philosophy, music, art, and South Asia studies. • All of Tagore’s fields of creation and activity covered and related to each other in a single volume • Takes into account the whole range of Tagore’s works, in Bengali and English. Most English studies of Tagore confine themselves, in practice if not declaredly, only to material available in English • Draws on the best scholarship in the field, including Bengali experts who do not often write for English publications but might have the greatest expertise on Tagore • Presents this material in a contemporary international critical idiom • Brings together specialists in other fields where appropriate – historians, social scientists, artists, environmentalists, scientists etc. Cambridge Companions to Literature
June 2020 228 x 152 mm c.515pp 978-1-108-48994-2 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-74773-8 Paperback £34.99 / US$44.99
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Insurgent Imaginations World Literature and the Periphery Auritro Majumder | University of Houston
This book redefines the non-Western roots of world literature. A humanist imagination negotiated the struggles of groups outside the West. A wide range of aesthetic forms resisted nationalism: tracing the notion of peripheral internationalism across a range of cultural forms connecting India, Soviet Union, China, Africa, and the Americas. • Provides a situated account of non-Western literary cultures and intellectual histories of world literature • Illuminates connections between India/South Asia and other regions such as China, Latin America and Africa • Broadens the existing scope of scholarship on modernism, realism, and globalization in culture with a wide array of lesser-known sources December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.280pp 978-1-108-47757-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Music
Music
PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED
Fauré Studies Edited by Carlo Caballero | University of Colorado Boulder
The Cambridge Companion to Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen Edited by Mark Berry | Royal Holloway, University of London
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An essential Companion for those both familiar and unfamiliar with Der Ring des Nibelungen. It provides a concise introduction to both the composer and the work. Subsequent chapters focus on musical topics such as ‘leitmotif’ and ‘structure’, as well as popular culture, Nazism, notable stage productions and critical analysis of the work. • Opening with a concise introduction to Wagner as a cultural figure, this Companion provides a thorough overview of the Ring before analysing key aspects of the work • Includes a history of notable stage productions from the world premiere in 1876 to the most recent stagings in Bayreuth and elsewhere • Offers new approaches to interpretation, exploring themes such as gender, anti-Semitism, and environmentalism Cambridge Companions to Music
September 2020 247 x 174 mm 350pp 5 b/w illus. 30 music examples 978-1-107-10851-6 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 P 978-1-107-51947-3 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99 G
Music and Musicians at the Collegiate Church of St Omer Crucible of Song, 1350–1550 Andrew Kirkman | University of Birmingham
Northern France and the Low Countries formed the crucible of Europe’s most sophisticated music in the later Middle Ages. That music and its makers were sought from France to Italy and Bohemia. Focusing on the rich musical institution of one wealthy medieval church, this book reveals the values and social structures that shaped its cultivation. • The first in-depth study of a leading late-medieval song school whose alumni were employed at major institutions throughout Europe • Reveals the detailed ritual and social workings of a large late medieval church, and the ways it articulated larger political forces as well as theological concerns relating to death and remembrance • Shows how and why music was made in a late medieval church’s musical establishment, and how this music was able to achieve a high state of sophistication and international influence September 2020 244 x 170 mm c.320pp 16 b/w illus. 1 map 978-1-108-83972-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C
Showcases new research by leading scholars on the life and music of Gabriel Fauré, contemporary of Monet and Mallarmé and one of the most influential of all French composers. This book encompasses hermeneutics, musical analysis, aesthetic theory, critical theory, and social history. • Showcases the latest research on Gabriel Fauré, representing a new surge of scholarly interest in this influential French composer of the fin de siècle • Includes a wide range of scholarly approaches from music theory to aesthetics • Provides a valuable insight and evaluation of Fauré research from the composer’s lifetime to the present day Cambridge Composer Studies
May 2020 247 x 174 mm c.320pp 8 b/w illus. 4 tables 37 music examples 978-1-108-42919-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED
The Cambridge Stravinsky Encyclopedia Edited by Edward Campbell | University of Aberdeen
Details the life, works, writings and aesthetic relationships of Igor Stravinsky, whose music epitomises the stylistic crisis of twentiethcentury music. His Russian, neo-classical and serial periods along with his writings and wide-ranging creative engagements are presented in over 430 entries by more than fifty international contributors. • Includes over 430 concise but detailed entries on Stravinsky’s work and creative and personal relationships • Provides comprehensive and up-to-date coverage of Stravinsky’s musical works, writings and creative collaboration from a range of international perspectives • Explores Stravinsky’s inter-disciplinary work and engagements with other musicians, writers, visual artists, dancers and impresarios December 2020 228 x 152 mm 580pp 2 tables 19 music examples 978-1-107-14087-5 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 R
Stravinsky in Context Edited by Graham Griffiths | City, University of London
Igor Stravinsky’s strikingly original compositions continue to fascinate scholars and music-lovers across the globe. This volume brings together a collection of 35 short, specially commissioned essays that illuminate the varied contexts from which emerged Stravinsky’s impressive catalogue of innovative and richly creative music. • Thirty-five specially commissioned short essays explore the varied and eventful life-tapestry from which Stravinsky’s compositions emerged • Offers a range of perspectives on this supremely cosmopolitan composer, revealing the impact upon Stravinsky’s creativity of his association with many of the 20th century’s leading artistic figures • Each essay is followed by an ‘Author’s Recommendation’ that highlights a particularly relevant Stravinsky work as the ideal complement to the experience of reading the chapter Composers in Context
November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 10 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42219-2 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00
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Music / Philosophy
A Huge Revolution of Theatrical Commerce
Epistemology and Methodology in Ethics
Walter Mocchi and the Italian Musical Theatre Business in South America Matteo Paoletti | Università degli Studi di Genova
Tristram McPherson | Ohio State University
In the early twentieth century, South America became the most important market for European opera and musical theatre and this Element explores Walter Mocchi’s transoceanic role in this revolution. He staged world premieres of works by Italian superstars in Argentina, offering an early example of what Stephen Greenblatt calls ‘cultural mobility’. Elements in Musical Theatre
August 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-79048-2 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
Topics include skeptical challenges in ethics, epistemic arguments in metaethics, what (if anything) is epistemically distinctive of the ethical. Also considered are methodological questions in ethics, including questions about which ethical concepts we should investigate, and what our goals should be in ethical inquiry. Elements in Ethics
June 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-71340-5 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Moore’s Ethics William H. Shaw
Philosophy
A critical survey of the full range of G. E. Moore’s ethical thought, including his rejection of naturalism in favor of the view that ‘good’ designates a simple indefinable property, his understanding of intrinsic value, his doctrine of organic wholes, and his critique of egoism and subjectivism.
The Ethics of Social Punishment
Elements in Ethics
The Enforcement of Morality in Everyday Life Linda Radzik | Texas A & M University
This book extends philosophical discussions of punishment to a new topic: the ways ordinary people enforce morality in everyday life. Readers interested in moral, legal and social issues will find tools for critically evaluating contemporary practices, including calling wrongdoers out, boycotting, and public shaming on social media. • Examines the overlooked moral phenomenon of social punishment in everyday life • Develops a distinctive account of desert that can be applied to topics beyond social punishment, including legal punishment • Extends the existing philosophy of punishment to contemporary phenomena such as ‘call-out culture’ and public shaming on social media October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.200pp 978-1-108-83606-7 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-79929-4 Paperback £21.99 / US$28.99
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Thomas Reid on the Ethical Life Terence Cuneo | University of Vermont
Presenting Thomas Reid’s agency-centered ethical theory. This means, one according to which agency intersects with the subject matter of ethics in a sufficiently wide range of important ways that we cannot satisfactorily engage in ethical theorizing without committing ourselves to and, ultimately developing, particular understandings of agency. Elements in Ethics
August 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-70689-6 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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August 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-70654-4 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Ethical Subjectivism and Expressivism Neil Sinclair | University of Nottingham
Ethical subjectivists hold that moral judgements are descriptions of our attitudes. Expressivists hold that they are expressions of our attitudes. Can these views accommodate three central features of moral practice: practicality of moral judgements, phenomenon of moral disagreement, and mind-independence of some moral truths? Elements in Ethics
September 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-70651-3 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Ethics and the Media An Introduction Second edition Stephen J. A. Ward | University of British Columbia, Vancouver
Now revised and containing several new chapters, this book provides comprehensive ethical principles and methods of reasoning for digital, global media. It describes the turbulent state of media ethics in ordinary language and through clear examples, addressing crucial issues like social media racism, intolerant groups, and global disinformation. • Provides a rich overall perspective on the issues of digital media today and why there is a need to reform how media ethics is practiced • Proposes a set of moral principles and a step-by-step method of reasoning about media in the digital age • Suggests practical guidelines for reporting on specific and urgent issues such as social media racism, extremism, demagogic leaders and fake news Cambridge Applied Ethics
October 2020 244 x 170 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-48976-8 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-74750-9 Paperback £20.99 / US$26.99
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Order at www.cambridge.org/booksellers or PubEasy.com
Philosophy
Ars Erotica
Inheritance Systems and the Extended Synthesis
Sex and Somaesthetics in the Classical Arts of Love Richard Shusterman | Florida Atlantic University
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Eva Jablonka | Tel-Aviv University
This book is for students and researchers in the fields of philosophy, sexuality and gender studies, aesthetics, and comparative culture and religious studies. It examines erotic theory in the major pre-modern cultural and religious traditions that shaped our modern views of love and lovemaking. • Presents detailed analysis of the classical erotic theories of the major world cultural traditions (from antiquity through the Renaissance) by situating them in their philosophical, historical, and social background • Provides multidisciplinary and transdisciplinary accessible narrative and non-technical analysis using the tools of philosophy, history, literary criticism, cultural theory, religion research, sex and gender studies, and somaesthetics • Contains insights on lovemaking from multiple ancient cultures November 2020 228 x 152 mm 325pp 978-1-107-00476-4 Hardback £79.99 / US$105.00 978-0-521-18120-4 Paperback £26.99 / US$34.99
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Current knowledge of the genetic, epigenetic, behavioural and symbolic systems of inheritance challenges the gene-based, ‘Modern Synthesis’ version of Darwin’s evolutionary theory. The implications of a broad view of heredity are discussed and its theoretical and philosophical ramifications are examined. Elements in the Philosophy of Biology
June 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-71602-4 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Reduction and Mechanism Alex Rosenberg | Duke University, North Carolina
Reductionism is a methodology, a metaphysical and an epistemological claim. This volume expound the philosophical debate surrounding reductionism and its transformation into one about mechanism. Elements in the Philosophy of Biology
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June 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-74231-3 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00 P
The Cambridge Heidegger Lexicon Edited by Mark A. Wrathall | University of Oxford
This is the largest, most comprehensive lexicon of Heidegger’s work in existence. Each entry clearly and concisely defines a key term, and then explores in depth the meaning of each concept and explains how it fits into Heidegger’s wider philosophical thought. The volume will be indispensable for all Heidegger scholars. • The largest and most comprehensive lexicon of Heidegger’s terminology in existence, containing over 220 entries • Each entry begins with a concise definition before exploring concepts and debates in greater depth • Specific terms are cross-referenced with any alternative translations, and there is a German-English glossary of key words October 2020 228 x 152 mm 900pp 978-1-107-00274-6 Hardback £94.99 / US$125.00
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Lotteries, Knowledge, and Rational Belief Essays on the Lottery Paradox Edited by Igor Douven | Université Paris-Sorbonne
A book for readers interested in the latest theories about knowledge and rational belief, with an emphasis on how outright belief relates to degrees of certainty. The most straightforward connection between those has given rise to a paradox, which is central to all of the essays in this volume. • Covers various approaches to the lottery paradox • Includes contributions from mainstream as well as formal epistemologists • Provides an excellent overview of research on the lottery paradox from the last three decades December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.311pp 4 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42191-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
How to Study Animal Minds
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Kristin Andrews | York University, Toronto
Attempts to avoid bias in comparative psychology have harmed the science by limiting research topics and minimising animal consciousness. We can advance by treating animals as sentient research participants, and through a greater integration of the subdisciplines of comparative psychology, such as field and lab approaches to chimpanzee cognition.
The Transmission of Knowledge John Greco | Georgetown University, Washington DC
Elements in the Philosophy of Biology
June 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-72746-4 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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This book examines the interpersonal relations and social structures which enable and inhibit the sharing of knowledge within and across epistemic communities, drawing on resources from moral theory, the philosophy of language, action theory and the cognitive sciences. It will interest students and scholars of social epistemology. • Examines the interpersonal relations and social structures that enable and inhibit the sharing of knowledge • Throws new light on existing problems in social epistemology and the epistemology of testimony • Investigates issues in social epistemology by using resources from ethics, philosophy of language, action theory and cognitive sciences August 2020 228 x 152 mm c.260pp 978-1-108-47262-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Philosophy
TEXTBOOK
Free Will and the Rebel Angels in Medieval Philosophy
An Introduction to the Theory of Knowledge
Tobias Hoffmann | The Catholic University of America, Washington DC
Second edition Noah Lemos | College of William and Mary, Virginia
Now revised and containing three new chapters, this book provides an accessible introduction to the fundamental problems in the theory of knowledge. Written primarily for students taking a first course in epistemology, it will be of interest to anyone wanting to know more about this important area of philosophy. • Introduces a wide array of problems in contemporary epistemology and considers their attempted solutions clearly and systematically • Includes in-depth discussion of the Gettier problem, theories of justification, skepticism, a priori knowledge and naturalized epistemology • Contains three new chapters on externalism and internalism, epistemic circularity and testimony and disagreement Contents: Preface to the second edition; 1. Knowledge, truth, and justification; 2. The traditional analysis and the Gettier problem; 3. Foundationalism; 4. The coherence theory of justification; 5. Reliabilism and virtue epistemology; 6. Internalism and externalism about justification; 7. Epistemic circularity; 8. Skepticism; 9. The problem of the criterion; 10. The a priori; 11. Naturalized epistemology; 12. Testimony and disagreement. Cambridge Introductions to Philosophy
November 2020 244 x 170 mm c.290pp 978-1-108-49867-8 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-72440-1 Paperback £29.99 / US$38.99
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An Introduction to Latin American Philosophy Susana Nuccetelli | St Cloud State University, Minnesota
This introduction provides a comprehensive and accessible overview of the central topics in Latin American philosophy. It explores not only the unique insights offered by Latin American thinkers into pre-established fields of Western philosophy, but also the many ‘isms’ developed as a direct result of Latin American thought. • Focuses on the issues and arguments of Latin American philosophy, rather than simply on philosophy in Latin America • Features chapters of balanced length, pedagogical aids, suggestions for further reading and a glossary of terms • Shows readers what distinguishes Latin American philosophy from other branches of philosophy Cambridge Introductions to Philosophy
October 2020 247 x 174 mm 212pp 978-1-107-06764-6 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-107-66718-1 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99
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This is the first book in English investigating the medieval debate about free will, one of the central themes in medieval philosophy. It sheds new light particularly on how medieval thinkers dealt with the most difficult test case for free will: the possibility of angels – i.e., ideal agents – choosing evil. • Provides a comprehensive overview of the free will debate by Christian medieval thinkers, and considers its theoretical presuppositions as proposed by Aristotle and Augustine • Discusses a wide range of authors, including not only well-known thinkers such as Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus and William of Ockham but also numerous authors whose contributions to the free will debate deserve to be rediscovered today • Pays special attention to some of the most difficult problems faced by medieval philosophers and theologians: the origin of evil, and the possibility of rational agents who enjoy optimal psychological conditions doing evil October 2020 228 x 152 mm 320pp 978-1-107-15538-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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John Locke’s Christianity Diego Lucci | American University in Bulgaria
In this book, Diego Lucci offers a thorough analysis and reassessment of Locke’s unique, heterodox, internally coherent version of Protestant Christianity. Critically examining all of the main aspects of his unorthodox theological ideas, Lucci calls attention to Locke’s influences and explores in depth the reception of his work. • Provides a comprehensive examination of Locke’s religious thought • Examines and clarifies Locke’s religious ideas by taking into account his influences, motivations, and legacy • Elucidates the originality, heterodoxy and internal coherence of Locke’s version of Christianity October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.260pp 978-1-108-83691-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Kant’s Reform of Metaphysics The Critique of Pure Reason Reconsidered Karin de Boer | University of Leuven
This is the first book-length study to interpret the Critique of Pure Reason in view of Kant’s sustained efforts to turn Wolffian metaphysics into a science. It not only sheds new light on key chapters of Kant’s work, but also reconstructs the outline of his projected ‘system of pure reason’. • Offers fresh and in-depth analyses of Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason • Situates the Critique within the context of eighteenth-century German metaphysics • Reconstructs the main features of the system of pure reason that Kant announced repeatedly, but never published September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.310pp 4 b/w illus. 978-1-108-84217-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Philosophy
PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED
A Centenary Celebration
Kant’s Critique of Taste The Feeling of Life Katalin Makkai | Bard College, Berlin
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This book offers a new interpretation of Kant’s aesthetics in the Critique of Judgment that shows its relevance to contemporary debates. It is aimed at philosophers, primarily those interested in Kant or in aesthetics, but it will also interest scholars of art theory, criticism, and cultural theory. • Offers an in-depth study that pays close attention to Kant’s texts, including their original German • Shows the relevance of Kant’s work for contemporary aesthetics and art theory • Engages with both the continental and the analytic philosophical traditions June 2020 228 x 152 mm c.210pp 16 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49779-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Anscombe, Foot, Midgley, Murdoch Volume 87 Edited by Anthony O’Hear | Royal Institute of Philosophy, London
This volume celebrates the centenary of the birth of Elizabeth Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Mary Midgley and Iris Murdoch, demonstrating the ways they individually and collectively changed the direction of philosophy in the English speaking world in the mid-twentieth-century and how they continue to influence it one hundred years after their birth. • This volume is a celebration of the centenary of the birth of Elizabeth Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Mary Midgley and Iris Murdoch • Papers in this book are all by prominent philosophers who spoke at the Royal Institute of Philosophy’s annual lecture series from 2018-9 • This volume covers the philosophical careers of Elizabeth Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Mary Midgley and Iris Murdoch, highlighting areas of philosophy to which they made notable and distinctive contributions Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplements, 87
July 2020 228 x 152 mm 290pp 978-1-108-92827-4 Paperback £23.99 / US$39.00
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Hegel’s Ontology of Power The Structure of Social Domination in Capitalism Arash Abazari | Sharif University of Technology
Wittgenstein on Aspect Perception
Mobilizing ideas from Marx and Adorno, this book develops a genuinely critical theory of capitalism based on Hegel’s Science of Logic. It will appeal to a wide audience: those interested in Hegel, or Marx, or critical theory, and more generally anyone who wants to understand capitalism. • The first systematic study of Hegel’s ontological conception of power in English • Uses Hegel’s logic to develop a genuinely critical theory of capitalism • Draws upon ideas from Marx and Adorno to make sense of Hegel’s seemingly impenetrable ‘logic of essence’ July 2020 228 x 152 mm c.260pp 978-1-108-83486-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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On Philosophy and Philosophers
This Element begins with a grammatical and phenomenological characterization of Wittgensteinian ‘aspects.’ It concludes by proposing that aspect perception reveals the distinction between the world as perceived and the world as objectively construed, and the role we play in the constitution of the former. Elements in the Philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein
November 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-81315-0 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Wittgenstein’s Heirs and Editors Christian Erbacher | Universität Siegen, Germany
Unpublished Papers, 1960–2000 Richard Rorty
On Philosophy and Philosophers is a volume of unpublished papers by Richard Rorty, a central figure in late-twentieth-century philosophy and a primary force behind the resurgence of American pragmatism. These previously unseen papers advance novel views on metaphysics, ethics, epistemology, philosophical semantics and the social role of philosophy. • Contains unpublished papers by Richard Rorty on topics ranging from ethics to metaphysics • Includes an introduction from the editors, outlining the papers’ novel approaches to contemporary philosophical debates • Of interest both to specialists and generalists, containing both technical essays and popular lectures September 2020 228 x 152 mm 260pp 978-1-108-48845-7 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-72636-8 Paperback £17.99 / US$23.99
Avner Baz | Tufts University, Massachusetts
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Ludwig Wittgenstein is one of the most widely read philosophers of the twentieth century. But, with one exception, the books in which his philosophy was published were posthumously edited from the writings he left to posterity. This Element explores how his 20,000 pages of philosophical writing became published volumes. Elements in the Philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein
September 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-81320-4 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Religion
Religion
Law and the Rule of God A Christian Engagement with Shari’a Joshua Ralston | University of Edinburgh
Eucharist and Receptive Ecumenism From Thanksgiving to Communion Kimberly Hope Belcher | University of Notre Dame, Indiana
Discussions between Christians from different traditions often focus on doctrine, but for many Christians, differences in practice and worship are much more central and important. By looking at the eucharist as thanksgiving, this book bridges Catholic and Protestant practice and theology and shows a new approach to Christian unity. • Receptive ecumenism is a relatively new approach to dialogue between Christians from different denominations.; this book is both an exercise in the method and a demonstration of scholarly humility in action • The historical context of theological development, especially what Christians were doing and what they thought they ought to be doing, is used to contextualize contentious doctrines and debates like transubstantiation and sacrifice • The author’s approach both expands our understanding of the eucharist and illuminates the role of thanksgiving in our daily and spiritual life September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-83956-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Aspects of Truth A New Religious Metaphysics Catherine Pickstock | University of Cambridge
This bold new work offers a discussion of the topic of truth from simultaneously philosophical and theological perspectives. It argues for the value of a metaphysical approach to truth. This approach defends the notion that truth cannot be separated from what the author calls ‘the reality of the thinking soul’. • Advances a daring and original new argument about truth that unites philosophy and theology as well as premodern and postmodern perspectives • The author, an originator of the controversial Radical Orthodoxy movement, is one of the most creative and best known theological thinkers at work today • Moves towards a notion of truth that gets beyond the limitations of epistemological argument, and as such will be of great interest to theologians and philosophers alike October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.275pp 978-1-108-84032-3 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99
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Ambrose, Augustine, and the Pursuit of Greatness J. Warren Smith | Duke University, North Carolina
Two important theologians of early Christianity were Ambrose of Milan and Augustine of Hippo. Both were intellectually formed by philosophers, such as Cicero, who taught that virtue was the way to greatness. Yet they saw contradictions between Roman and Christian ethical ideals. Could these competing visions of greatness be reconciled? • Examines the Classical and Hellenistic cultural backgrounds for the development of Christian theology and ethics in late antiquity • Examines how two major Latin theologians, Ambrose and Augustine, used the language of greatness to distinguish Christian virtue from pagan virtue • Provides an account of the development of the idea of greatness and the ideal of the great-souled man after Aristotle October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-49074-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
This book presents a new comparative approach to the relationship between law, politics, secularism, and religion in Christianity and Islam. Academics and students in theology, Islamic Studies, religion and politics, and law will benefit from this study of how sharī’a and Christian theology have been debated across the centuries. • This is the first book length academic study of sharī’a and law in Christian-Muslim dialogue • Proposes a new method of comparative political theology to engage Christian, Muslim, and secular debates on law, religion, and politics • Advances a theological account of public law that is both particular to the Christian tradition and open to dialogue with Islamic political theology Current Issues in Theology, 15
September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-48982-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Human Anguish and God’s Power David Kelsey | Yale University, Connecticut
This book is for seminary and doctrinal students in theology, theologically reflective clergy, and anyone else who is troubled by the suggestion that because God is unrestricted power, God must be the explanation of ‘why’ horrendous suffering happens. • Uses traditional Christian Trinitarian terms to characterize God’s power • Addresses the suggestion that because God is unrestricted power, God must be the explanation of ‘why’ horrendous suffering happens • Opens up space to legitimize an avowed ‘faithful agnosticism’ about ‘why’ we experience both profound suffering and the Triune God’s grace Current Issues in Theology, 16
November 2020 216 x 138 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-83697-5 Hardback c. £29.99 / c. US$39.99
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The Origins of Early Christian Literature Contextualizing the New Testament within Greco-Roman Literary Culture Robyn Faith Walsh | University of Miami, Coral Gables
Conventional approaches to the Synoptic gospels argue that the gospel authors acted as literate spokespersons for religious communities, akin to the Romantic poet speaking for the common folk. This book argues that they were written by educated elites in dialogue with Greco-Roman literature, not exclusively by and for Christian communities. • Offers an interdisciplinary approach to the Synoptic gospels using methods from classics and literary theory, as well as religious studies • Demonstrates how the field of New Testament studies remains indebted to methods practiced since the era of German Romanticism • Offers novel readings of the Synoptic gospels, comparing them with allied Greek and Latin literature November 2020 228 x 152 mm c.325pp 978-1-108-83530-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Religion
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An Apostolic Gospel
Salafism and Traditionalism
The ‘Epistula Apostolorum’ in Literary Context Francis Watson | University of Durham
Scholarly Authority in Modern Islam Emad Hamdeh | Embry-Riddle University
This book is intended for scholars and students of the New Testament and early Christianity, and highlights the significance of an early gospellike text that has been neglected owing to the inadequacy of previous translations. A new translation is provided, and links with other early Christian literature are explored. • Provides a new translation of the Epistula Apostolorum, drawn from the Coptic, Ethiopic, and fragmentary Latin manuscripts, with a textual apparatus in English listing textual variants • Includes in-depth studies of key theological themes, locating them in their wider early Christian literary context • Includes extensive additional notes on issues of text, translation and exegesis, keyed to the translation
This book highlights the heated debates between Muslim scholars in the Modern Muslim world, especially between Salafis and Traditionalists. It covers the emergence of modern reform movements, the role of print and the internet, Islamic education, the production of scholarly authority, and the different approaches to Islamic scripture and law. • The first book that focuses exclusively on the debates that took place between Muhammad Nasir al-Din al-Albānī, the 20th century’s most influential Salafi, and his Traditionalists critics • Contextualizes the history of Islamic scholarship and scholarly authority in the 20th century • Provides a detailed analysis on the debate surrounding the authority of the Muslim schools of law (madhhabs). In other words, does one understand scripture on its own or through scholarly tradition?
Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series, 179
December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.325pp 978-1-108-84041-5 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$105.00
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December 2020 229 x 152 mm c.256pp 978-1-108-48535-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
Clement of Alexandria and the Shaping of Christian Literary Practice
AVAILABLE OPEN ACCESS
War, Memory, and National Identity in the Hebrew Bible
Miscellany and the Transformation of GrecoRoman Writing J. M. F. Heath | University of Durham
Jacob L. Wright | Emory University, Atlanta
For readers of Patristics, Classics, and Early Christian Studies, this book offers the fullest treatment of Clement of Alexandria’s literary form and its relationship to his theology since the 1960s, and is the only one that draws much on comparative evidence from Roman imperial authors. • Compares Clement as a Christian miscellanist with particular examples from Classical tradition • Contextualises Clement’s Stromateis within his larger literary project, as the third work in a sequence that begins with the Protrepticus and Paedagogus • Combines literary, theological, and cultural historical approaches December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-84342-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Drawing on the intriguing interdisciplinary research on war commemoration, the book shows that war pervades the pages of the Bible because its authors were engaged in an effort to forge a corporate identity for Israel, one that can both transcend deep divisions within the population and withstand military conquest by imperial armies. • Demonstrates how the biblical authors worked in the framework of a common narrative to create a new political identity • Includes inter-disciplinary and comparative perspectives, including ‘war commemoration’ and brings the biblical narratives into conversation with political theory and political theology • Highlights distinctive features of the biblical corpus, and reflects on persisting concerns for political communities including kinship, marginalized others, volunteerism, and conflict resolution July 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-48089-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
The Church and the Law Volume 56 Edited by Rosamond McKitterick | University of Cambridge
This volume explores the legal issues and legal consequences underlying relations between secular and religious authorities in the context of the Christian Church, deepening our understanding of interactions between the churches and the legal systems in which they existed in the past and continue to exist now. • Explores the long and complex history of the relationship between the Church and the law, from the emergence of the Christian Church within Roman Palestine through to the present day • Features a wide range of leading scholars in the field • Contains contributions on a diverse range of historical and regional contexts, including the Anglican Church in nineteenth-century South China; excommunications in twelfth-century England, and the Slavic Nomocanon in the thirteenth century Studies in Church History
July 2020 228 x 138 mm 544pp 978-1-108-83963-1 Hardback £65.00 / US$105.00
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The Theology of the Books of Haggai and Zechariah Robert Foster | University of Georgia
This book serves readers interested in an academic analysis of the theological message of the Books of Haggai and Zechariah. Those interested in an in-depth discussion of key theological themes and the ethical message of the prophets of the Old Testament, especially the minor prophets, will benefit from this book. • Provides a focused and thorough discussion of the key theological teachings of the books of Haggai and Zechariah • Offers a summary of theological ethics of each major section of the books of Haggai and Zechariah, as well as how these interact with the theological ethics of the books of the Old Testament • Discusses the theology of the Book of Zechariah in terms of its final form, to help the reader see its unified message while acknowledging its development across time Old Testament Theology
October 2020 216 x 140 mm c.250pp 978-1-108-47550-1 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-46858-9 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99
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Religion
Divine Aggression in Psalms and Inscriptions
Life, Land, and Elijah in the Book of Kings
Vengeful Gods and Loyal Kings Collin Cornell | University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee
Daniel J. D. Stulac | Duke University, North Carolina
Students of theology, the Bible, and the Ancient Near East know that the biblical god acted destructively against his own client king and country. This book rereads familiar biblical psalms within their ancient contexts to determine if this theological vision was unique – or if other gods were just as vengeful. • Provides a sustained comparison between royal biblical psalms and ancient inscriptions • Demonstrates the distinctive features of the biblical god, especially in terms of his aggression against his own client king and country • Argues for the loyalty of kings to their specific patron god Society for Old Testament Study Monographs
October 2020 216 x 140 mm c.325pp 978-1-108-84267-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Addresses a key question in biblical studies: the Elijah narratives’ contribution to the theological vision of the book of Kings. Using a canonical-agrarian approach, this book challenges longstanding assumptions to offer a new concept of the narratives’ rhetorical and theological contribution and insights into Elijah’s iconographical character. • Provides a simple description of and rationale for both a ‘canonical approach’ to the Bible (often misunderstood) and an ‘agrarian hermeneutic’, an emerging lens on biblical literature • Offers a cogent description of the narrative rhetoric and theological vision of the Elijah narratives (1 Kings 17-2 Kings 2) • Reveals a coherent interpretation of the Elijah narratives that bears directly on theological and social issues such as care for the earth Society for Old Testament Study Monographs
January 2021 216 x 140 mm c.325pp 978-1-108-84374-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
Royal Illness and Kingship Ideology in the Hebrew Bible Isabel Cranz | University of Pennsylvania
Royal illness as portrayed in the Hebrew Bible anticipates the failure of kingship resulting in the destruction of Israel and Judah. This is the first systematic study of royal illness in this context. It will be of interest to students and scholars of history in the ancient Near East, biblical studies, medical humanities, and disability studies. • Presents a comprehensive study of royal illness in the Books of Samuel, Kings and Chronicles • Applies a diachronic approach in combination with medical humanities and disability studies • Demonstrates how the motif of the sick king functions both symbolically and pragmatically, while being adapted to different ideological frameworks Society for Old Testament Study Monographs
October 2020 216 x 140 mm c.275pp 978-1-108-83049-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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New Perspectives on Texts, Artifacts, and Culture Brett E. Maiden | Emory University, Atlanta
Integrating the Biblical and Philosophical Traditions Arthur Jan Keefer | Eton College
In giving undivided attention to biblical virtue, this book opens the way for new avenues of study in biblical ethics, including law, narrative, and other aspects of biblical instruction and wisdom. It will be of interest to researchers and scholars within both biblical and philosophical disciplines. • Offers a new interpretation of the book of Proverbs from the standpoint of virtue ethics • Uses an innovative method to compare biblical and philosophical texts, explaining the moral theories of each within their respective sociohistorical contexts • Provides an in-depth and contextual reading of the ethics of the book of Proverbs C
Gender and Christian Ethics Adrian Thatcher | University of Exeter
Recent tools and findings from the cognitive sciences illuminate religious thought and behaviour in ancient Israel and the Bible. Primarily intended for scholars of the Bible and religion, it is also relevant to cognitive scientists, researchers, and graduate students interested in the intersection of cognition and culture. • Offers an accessible introduction to the current state of the cognitive study of religion, especially for biblical scholars and historians of religion • Provides theoretical discussion and concrete examples, in the form of case studies, of interdisciplinary scholarship in action • Examines different interrelated topics in the study Israelite religion, including theoretical, artistic, and textual Society for Old Testament Study Monographs
October 2020 216 x 138 mm c.300pp 8 b/w illus. 978-1-108-48778-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
The Book of Proverbs and Virtue Ethics
October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.325pp 978-1-108-83977-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
Cognitive Science and Ancient Israelite Religion
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This book is for students of theology, Christian ethics, and religious and gender studies; and everyone longing for the full acceptance of women and LGBTIQ people in the churches and beyond. It exposes the roots of prejudice against women and sexual minorities, and offers constructive proposals for gender justice. • Analyses gender as the relations between women and men, as a symbolic system, and as personal identity • Exposes the inadequacy of binary models of gender and challenges notions of ‘complementarity’ and the ‘war on gender’ in contemporary Christian thought • Offers a non-binary model of gender based on core Christian doctrines New Studies in Christian Ethics
September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-83948-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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Religion
Heidegger and His Jewish Reception Daniel M. Herskowitz | University of Oxford
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Offering a breadth unmatched by any other study to date, this book deals with the intense Jewish engagement with Martin Heidegger’s philosophy. It demonstrates that while his anti-Semitism made his Jewish reception inevitably fraught, no other philosopher has impacted and fomented twentieth century Jewish European thought more than Heidegger. • Demonstrates the centrality of Heidegger’s philosophy for twentieth century European Jewish thought • Sets the Jewish encounter with Heidegger alongside other twentieth century philosophical and religious strands • Brings together leading Jewish philosophers alongside many lessknown figures, from a number of different geographical locations, over an extended period of time, and introduces new materials October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-84046-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
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The Antichrist
Aquinas, Bonaventure, and the Scholastic Culture of Medieval Paris Preaching, Prologues, and Biblical Commentary Randall Smith | University of St Thomas, Houston
Employing an in-depth study of the prologues and preaching skills of Thomas Aquinas and Bonaventure, this book will spur a fundamental reconsideration of the scholastic culture of the High Middle Ages and of the educational culture that informed their impressive body of work whose influence is still widespread today. • Reveals the ‘protreptic’ character of thirteenth century prologues, both in terms of the artistry of its style and its theological significance • Provides the reader with the knowledge and resources to read medieval sermons through an in-depth analysis of the development in the skill of preaching of Aquinas and Bonaventure • Provides the reader with the knowledge and resources to read Bonaventure’s notoriously difficult Collations with greater ease and understanding December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.325pp 978-1-108-84115-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
A New Biography Philip C. Almond | University of Queensland
Tibetan Demonology
This is the first full history of the Antichrist in twenty-five years. Written for the general reader, it tells of the history of the Antichrist in both Eastern and Western Christianity from his beginnings in the New Testament through to the present. • The first full treatment for 25 years of a subject that continues to generate enormous interest • Offers new interpretations of the continuing significance of the Antichrist in popular culture • The author’s earlier book on the Devil (IB Tauris) was a widely reviewed academic bestseller
This Element discusses the rich taxonomy of gods and demons encountered in Tibet. These spirits are often exhorted for diverse violent and wrathful activities. The author explores the role of divinities and demons in oracular possession, illness, astrology, ritual calendars, the landscape and as protectors of religious and political institutions.
September 2020 216 x 138 mm 354pp 16 b/w illus. 16 colour illus. 978-1-108-47965-3 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99 P
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Christopher Bell | Stetson University, Florida
Elements in Religion and Violence
July 2020 178 x 127 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-71267-5 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Hindu Monotheism Gavin Dennis Flood | Yale University, Connecticut
From the Material to the Mystical in Late Medieval Piety The Vernacular Transmission of Gertrude of Helfta’s Visions Racha Kirakosian | Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, Germany
Challenging the long-standing idea that translations do not bear the same literary or historical weight as the supposed originals upon which they are based, this book shows that vernacular manuscripts tell us a great deal about medieval culture, especially as textiles and other material objects came to infuse devotional piety. • Provides examples of textiles which have influenced devotional culture • Discusses collective writing over long periods of time and in a manuscript culture • Makes the point that the transmission history of texts encompasses redactions which are as valuable as the text sources upon which they are modelled January 2021 253 x 177 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-84123-8 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$105.00
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If by monotheism we mean the idea of a single transcendent God who creates the universe out of nothing, then that is not found in the history of Hinduism. But if we mean a supreme, transcendent deity who impels the universe, an ultimate source of all other gods who are her or his emanations, then this can be found in Hinduism. Elements in Religion and Monotheism
August 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-73114-0 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Religious Terrorism Heather Gregg | Naval Postgraduate School
How can the world’s religions, which propagate peace and love, promote violence and the killing of innocent civilians through terrorist acts? This Element aims to provide insights into this puzzle by reviewing current debates, terrorist resources gained through religion, examples of cross-faith terrorism and a synopsis of deradicalization programs. Elements in Religion and Violence
July 2020 178 x 127 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-73089-1 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Religion
The Bahá’í Faith, Violence, and Non-Violence Robert H. Stockman | Wilmette Institute
Both violence and non-violence are important themes in the Bahá’í Faith, but their relationship is not simple. The Bahá’í sacred writings see violence in the world as being a consequence of the immature state of human civilization. This Element explores how Bahá’í scriptures provide a blueprint for building a new culture where violence is rare. Elements in Religion and Violence
August 2020 178 x 127 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-70627-8 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Monotheism and Religious Diversity Roger Trigg | University of Oxford
If there is one God, why are there so many religions? This Element argues that monotheism provides the basis for a belief in objective truth. Human understanding is fallible and partial, without the idea of one God, there is no foundation for a belief in one reality or a common human nature. The shadow of monotheism lies over everything. Elements in Religion and Monotheism
September 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-71445-7 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Monotheism and Hope in God William J. Wainwright | University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
This Element examines aspects of monotheism and hope. Distinguishing monotheism from nontheistic religions, it explores how God transcends terms used to describe the religious ultimate. Wainwright examines the loves prized in Islam, Christianity and theistic Hinduism, and defends the sort of love valorized by them against some charges against it. Elements in Religion and Monotheism
September 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-70809-8 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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Divine Ideas Thomas M. Ward | Baylor University, Texas
This Element defends a version of the classical theory of divine ideas; the containment exemplarist theory. This holds that God’s own nature is the examplar of all possible creation, so God’s ideas are ideas of himself. Containment exemplarism offers a montheism fit for metaphysics, as it is coherent, simple and explanatorily powerful. Elements in Religion and Monotheism
September 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-81969-5 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00
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