Library Highlights Kit January – June 2023 www.cambridge.org/LibrarianResource
The Works and Worlds of Shakespeare Online
Now including Shakespeare Survey Online!
This means the addition of over 1,000 articles representing the very best in Shakespeare scholarship over the last 70 years, giving a curated archive for instructors to search through for easily assignable articles, as well as a wealth of research material for scholars.
What’s also included?
The complete bestselling New Cambridge Shakespeare series
The New Cambridge Shakespeare: The Early Quartos series
Shakespeare in Production
Essays from The Cambridge Guide to the Worlds of Shakespeare
An exclusive version of Emma Smith’s The Cambridge Shakespeare Guide
Features & functionality
Ability to switch between explanatory, performance-based and textual notes
User friendly navigation
Option to toggle notes on and off View and download content in both HTML and PDF formats
Extensive cross-referencing within and between Shakespeare’s works
cambridge.org/cambridgeshakespeare
N ew content a d d e d
ISBN FULL TITLE FORMAT GBP PRICE EU PRICE UK PUB DATE PAGE Anthropology 9781108482806 The Cambridge Handbook for the Anthropology of Ethics Hardback £120.00 €140.05 Apr-23 5 Classical Studies 9781107155046 A Commentary on Panegyrici Latini II(12) Hardback £120.00 €140.05 Feb-23 6 9781009159517 Galen: Writings on Health Hardback £120.00 €140.05 Mar-23 7 9781108476584 Early Latin Hardback £130.00 €151.72 Mar-23 8 9781108841009 Latin Loanwords in Ancient Greek Hardback £150.00 €175.06 May-23 9 Drama and Theatre 9781108842358 Chekhov in Context Hardback £85.00 €99.20 Feb-23 10 Earth and Environmental Science 9781108423373 Fluvial Megafans on Earth and Mars Hardback £95.00 €110.87 Jan-23 11 9781108422550 Rotation Sensing with Large Ring Lasers Hardback £95.00 €110.87 Jan-23 12 9781108486286 Data Science and Human-Environment Systems Hardback £105.00 €122.55 Feb-23 13 History 9781108226912 The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars 3 Volume Hardback Set £300.00 €350.13 Jan-23 14 9781108759731 The Cambridge World History of Genocide 3 Volume Hardback Set £310.00 €361.8 Feb-23 15 9781108429931 The Cambridge History of the Polar Regions Hardback £120.00 €140.05 Feb-23 16 9781107116481 The Cambridge History of the Mongol Empire 2 Volume Set £255.00 €297.61 Jun-23 17 9781108623865 The Cambridge History of Global Migrations 2 Volume Hardback Set £200.00 €233.42 Jun-23 18 Language and linguistics 9781108844055 The Evolution of Chinese Grammar Hardback £125.00 €145.89 Feb-23 20 9780521849906 The Cambridge History of Linguistics Hardback £125.00 €145.89 Mar-23 21 9781107130456 The Cambridge Handbook of Role and Reference Grammar Hardback £125.00 €145.89 Jun-23 22 Law 9781009300322 International Law Reports Hardback £170.00 €198.41 Jan-23 23 9781108416498 The Cambridge Handbook of Race and Surveillance Hardback £120.00 €140.05 Jan-23 24 9781108378406 Cambridge Compendium of International Commercial and Investment Arbitration 3 Volume Hardback Set £270.00 €315.12 Feb-23 25 9781009331555 International Law Reports Hardback £170.00 €198.41 Mar-23 27 9781108475617 Encyclopedia of Transitional Justice 3 Volume Hardback Set £300.00 €350.13 Mar-23 28 9781108839198 The Cambridge Handbook of Investment-Driven Intellectual Property Hardback £160.00 €186.74 Mar-23 29 9781107023529 Family Law and Gender in the Middle East and North Africa Hardback £80.00 €93.37 May-23 30 Life Sciences 9781009233590 The Correspondence of Charles Darwin Hardback £94.99 €110.86 Jan-23 31 9781108495868 Threatened and Recently Extinct Vertebrates of the World Hardback £84.99 €99.19 Mar-23 32 Literature 9781009100199 Joseph Conrad: Contemporary Reviews Hardback £110.00 €128.38 Jan-23 33 9781316514146 Salman Rushdie in Context Hardback £85.00 €99.20 Feb-23 34 9780521830355 Correspondence Primarily on Pamela and Clarissa (1732–1749) Hardback £95.00 €110.87 Mar-23 35 9781107086487 Watch and Ward Hardback £90.00 €105.04 Mar-23 36 Music 9781108487917 Messiaen in Context Hardback £95.00 €110.87 Jun-23 37 Contents
Psychology 9781107165250 The Cambridge Handbook of Cyber Behavior 2 Volume Hardback Set £110.00 €143 Jan-23 38 9781316515952 The Cambridge Handbook of Creativity and Emotions Hardback £155.00 €180.90 Feb-23 39 9781108485074 The Cambridge Handbook of Computational Cognitive Sciences Multiple Copy Pack £145.00 €169.23 Mar-23 40 9781009243933 The Cambridge Handbook of Consumer Psychology Hardback £160.00 €186.74 Mar-23 41 9781009170284 Moral Education in the 21st Century Hardback £90.00 €105.04 Apr-23 42 9781108831420 The Cambridge Handbook of the Development of Coping Hardback £120.00 €140.05 Jun-23 43 Religion 9781107044043 The Cambridge History of Reformation Era Theology Hardback £125.00 €145.89 May-23 44
The Cambridge Handbook for the Anthropology of Ethics
James Laidlaw University of Cambridge
Description
The ‘ethical turn’ in anthropology has been one of the most vibrant fields in the discipline in the past quarter century. It has fostered new dialogue between anthropology and philosophy, psychology, and theology, and seen a wealth of theoretical innovation and influential ethnographic studies. This book brings together a global team of established and emerging leaders in the field and makes the results of this fast-growing body of diverse research available in one volume. It is split into five parts, covering the philosophical and other intellectual sources of the ethical turn; inter-disciplinary dialogues; emerging conceptualizations of core aspects of ethical agency such as freedom, responsibility, and affect; and the diverse ways in which ethical thought and practice are institutionalized in social life. Authoritative and cutting-edge, it is essential reading for researchers and students in anthropology, philosophy, psychology and theology, and will set the agenda for future research in the field.
Key Features
• Introduces readers to the theoretical diversity of the anthropology of ethics
• Promotes inter-disciplinary dialogue on the study of ethics
• Shows how perspectives from the anthropology of ethics provide unique insights in the study of all aspects of social life
Contents
1. Introduction; Part I. Intellectual Sources and Disciplinary Engagements:
2. Moral and political philosophy;
3. Virtue ethics;
4. Agonistic pluralists;
5. The two faces of Michel Foucault;
6. Phenomenology;
7. Cognitive science;
8. Theology;
Part II. Aspects of Ethical Agency:
9. Making the ethical in social interaction;
10. Freedom;
11. Responsibility;
12. Emotion and affect;
13. Happiness and wellbeing;
14. Suffering and sympathy;
15. Ambiguity and difference;
Part III. Media and Modes of Ethical Practice:
16. Self-cultivation;
Additional Information
Level: Graduate students, academic researchers
Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Anthropology
March 2023 244 x 170 mm c.725pp
9781108482806 Hardback c. £120.00 / c. US$155.00 / €140.05
17. Exemplars;
18. Ritual;
19. Values; 20. Rules; 21. On ethical pedagogies; Part IV. Intimate and Everyday Life:
22. Care;
23. Kinship and love;
24. Cooperation and punishment;
25. Favours;
26. The inimical gaze;
27. Animals; 28. God;
Part V. Institutional Life:
29. Modern capitalism and ethical plurality;
30. The ethics of trade and commerce;
31. Activism and political organization;
32. Philanthropy; 33. Science;
34. Communist morality under socialism.
5 Anthropology
A Commentary on Panegyrici Latini II(12)
An Oration Delivered by Pacatus Drepanius before the Emperor Theodosius I in the Senate at Rome, AD 389
Edited and translated by Roger Rees University of St Andrews, Scotland
Description
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. It was a moment of high political charge. The Latin speech survives and is here presented both in the original and with facing English translation; the introduction and commentary capture the groundbreaking character of the work and set it in its historical, rhetorical and literary contexts.
Key Features
• 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
Contents
Preface; Abbreviations; Introduction; Panegyrici Latini II(12); Commentary; Bibliography; Index locorum; General Index.
Additional Information
Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students
February 2023 216 x 138 mm 400pp
9781107155046 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 / €140.05
6 Classical Studies
Galen: Writings on Health
Thrasybulus and Health (De sanitate tuenda)
Edited and translated by P. N. Singer Birkbeck, University of London
Description
Galen’s Health (De sanitate tuenda) was the most important work on daily exercise, diet and health regimes in antiquity. This book presents the first reliable scholarly translation of this work in English, alongside the related theoretical work Thrasybulus. A substantial introduction and thorough annotation elucidate both works and contextualize them within the framework of ancient health practices, ancient conceptions of the body and debates between medical and philosophical schools. The texts are of enormous interest from three points of view: (1) the wide range of insights they give into ancient everyday lifestyles, especially as regards diet, bathing, exercise and materia medica, as well as aspects of daily intellectual life; (2) the light they shed on ancient debates within medicine and philosophy, on fundamental conceptions of the body and the relationship between body and mind; (3) the enormous influence that Health had in mediaeval and early modern times.
Key Features
• Offers access to two key works by Galen, the most influential ancient medical author, for the non-specialist reader who may not know Greek
• Provides detailed analysis and elucidation of problems of interpretation and textual transmission, thus greatly enhancing understanding of the conceptions and practices discussed
• A substantial introduction and thorough annotation place the works in their intellectual and social-historical contexts
Contents
Introduction; Thrasybulus; Health; Book I; Book II; Book III; Book IV; Book V; Book VI.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: Cambridge Galen Translations
March 2023 229 x 152 mm c.400pp
9781009159517 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 / €140.05
7 Classical Studies
Early Latin
Constructs, Diversity, Reception
Edited by J. N. Adams
All Souls College, Oxford
Anna Chahoud
Trinity College Dublin
Giuseppe Pezzini
Corpus Christi College, Oxford
Description
This is the most detailed and comprehensive study to date of early Latin language, literary and non-literary, featuring twenty-nine chapters by an international team of scholars. ‘Early Latin’ is interpreted liberally as extending from the period of early inscriptions through to the first quarter of the first century BC. Classical Latin features significantly in the volume, although in a restricted sense. In the classical period there were writers who imitated the Latin of an earlier age, and there were also interpreters of early Latin. Later authors and views on early Latin language are also examined as some of these are relevant to the establishment of the text of earlier writers. A major aim of the book is to define linguistic features of different literary genres, and to address problems such as the limits of periodisation and the definition of the very concept of ‘early Latin’.
Key Features
• Through close analysis of textual evidence, illustrates the diversity and complexity of what is meant by ‘Early Latin’
• Includes twenty-nine original in-depth studies on aspects of the language of literary and non-literary texts, ranging from the earliest Latin inscriptions to the reception of ‘early Latin’ in the early modern period
• Questions established assumptions on the periodization and development of Latin
Contents
1. Introduction: What is early Latin?; Part I. General (Morphology, Syntax, Lexicon and Metre):
2. Alphabet, epigraphy, and literacy in central Italy in the 7th /5th c. BC;
3. Identifying Latin in early inscriptions;
4. The Egadi Rostra, a linguistic analysis; 5. Morphology and syntax in early Latin;
6. Early Latin metre;
7. Greek Loanwords in early Latin;
8. Latin edepol ‘by Pollux’: background of a Latin aduerbium iuratiuum;
9. Indirect questions in early Latin; 10. Ecquis in early Latin: aspects of questions; Part II. Authors and Genres:
11. Support verb constructions in Plautus and Terence;
12. Early Latin prayers and aspects of coordination;
13. ‘Early Latin’ lexicon in Terence (and Plautus);
14. Early Latin and the fragments of Atellana Comedy;
15. A comparison of the language of comedy and tragedy in early Latin drama;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
May 2023 228 x 152 mm c.900pp
9781108476584 Hardback £130.00 / US$170.00 / €151.72
16. The language of early Latin epic;
17. How ‘early Latin’ is Lucilius?;
18. Repetition in the fragmentary orators: from Cato to C. Gracchus;
19. Greek influences on Cato’s Latin;
20. Some syntactic features of Latin legal texts;
Part III. Reception:
21. Lucretius and early Latin;
22. Cicero and early dramatic Latin;
23. Early Latin texts in Livy;
24. Pliny rewrites Cato;
25. Gellius’ appreciation and understanding of early Latin;
26. Views on early Latin in grammatical texts;
27. Nonius Marcellus and the shape of early Latin;
28. Early Latin to Neo-Latin: Festus and Scaliger;
Conclusions:
29. Early Latin as a Concept
8 Classical Studies
Latin Loanwords in Ancient Greek
A Lexicon and Analysis
Eleanor Dickey University of Reading
Description
Why, when, and how did speakers of ancient Greek borrow words from Latin? Which words did they borrow? Who used Latin loanwords, and how? Who avoided them, and why? How many words were borrowed, and what kind of word? How long did the loanwords survive? Until now, attempts to answer such questions have been based on incomplete and often misleading evidence, but this study offers the first comprehensive collection of evidence from papyri, inscriptions, and literature from the fifth century BC to the sixth century AD. That collection – included in the book as a lexicon of Latin loanwords – is examined using insights from linguistic work on modern languages to provide new answers that often differ strikingly from earlier ones. The analysis is accessibly presented, and the lexicon offers a firm foundation for future work in this area.
Key Features
• The first comprehensive study of Latin loanwords in Greek
• Contains a complete lexicon of all Latin loanwords in ancient Greek papyri, inscriptions, and literature
• Uses cutting-edge work in modern linguistics to provide new insights into ancient languages
Contents
1. Introduction;
2. The parameters of this study;
3. Lexicon;
4. How were Latin words integrated into Greek? Spelling and inflection;
5. How were Latin loanwords accented in Greek?;
6. Which Latin suffixes were borrowed into Greek?;
7. Why were some Latin words not integrated?;
8. When were loanwords used? 9. Where were loanwords used?;
10. Which words were borrowed?;
11. Overall conclusions and remaining questions;
12. Appendices.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
May 2023 279 x 216 mm c.700pp
9781108841009 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00 / €175.06
9 Classical Studies
Chekhov in Context
Edited by Yuri Corrigan Boston University
Description
Premier playwright of modern theater and trailblazer of the short story, Anton Chekhov was also a practising doctor, journalist, writer of comic sketches, philanthropist and activist. This volume provides an accessible guide to Chekhov’s multifarious interests and influences, with over 30 succinct chapters covering his rich intellectual milieu and his tumultuous socio-political environment, as well as the legacy of his work in over two centuries of interdisciplinary cultures and media around the world. With a Preface by Cornel West, a chronology and Further Reading list, this collection is the essential guide to Chekhov’s writing and the manifold worlds he inhabited.
Key Features
• Surveys a wide array of contexts, from the theater and the arts to medicine and the sciences, and engages with the philosophical and cultural environments of Chekhov’s time, rendering accessible his rich intellectual milieu
• Follows Chekhov’s afterlives and the legacy of his works through the 20th- and 21st-centuries, orienting readers in over two centuries of interdisciplinary cultures and media
• Offers a jargon-free cultural and intellectual history of Chekhov’s Russia, including political and social movements and scientific and cultural advances, offering easy reference even for readers unfamiliar with Russian history
Contents
Preface: The Poet of Catastrophe; Introduction; Part I. Life:
1. Son, brother, husband (in Correspondence);
2. Chekhov’s friends;
3. An ‘Indeterminate Situation’: Chekhov’s illness and death; Part II. Society:
4. Class;
5. Money;
6. Politics;
7. Peasants;
8. The woman question;
9. Sex;
10. Social activism;
11. Environmentalism;
12. Sakhalin Island;
Part III. Culture:
13. Philosophy;
14. Religion;
15. Science;
16. Medicine and the mind-body problem;
17. The arts;
Additional Information
18. Fin de Siècle;
19. The harm that good ideas do; 20. Chekhov’s Intelligentsias; Part IV. Literature:
21. Print culture;
22. Embarrassment;
23. Tolstoy;
24. French literature;
25. Modernism and symbolism;
26. Theatrical traditions;
27. Modern theatre: Resonances and intersections; 28. Chekhov’s Moscow art theatre (1897-1904); Part V. Afterlives:
29. Soviet contexts;
30. Chekhov in England; 31. The American stage;
32. Chekhov in East Asia;
33. Film;
34. In Translation: Chekhov’s path into english; Afterword: Chekhov’s endings; Further reading; Endnotes.
Level: Graduate students, undergraduate students, academic researchers
Series: Literature in Context
March 2023 229 x 152 mm c.372pp
9781108842358 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00 / €99.20
10 Drama and Theatre
Fluvial Megafans on Earth and Mars
Edited by Justin Wilkinson Texas State University, Jacobs JETS Contract, NASA Johnson Space Center
Yanni Gunnell
Université Lumière Lyon II
Description
Megafans are partial cones of river sediment that reach unexpectedly large dimensions, with the largest on Earth being 700 km long. Due to recent developments in space-based observations, global mapping efforts have shown that modern megafan features cover vast landscapes on most continents. This book provides a new inventory of nearly 300 megafans across five continents. Chapters focus on regional studies of megafans from all continents barring North America and Antarctica. The major morphological attributes of megafans and multi-megafan landscapes are discussed, and the principal controls on megafan development are examined. The book also compares megafans with alluvial fans, deltas, floodplains and the recently recognised ‘major avulsive fluvial system’ (MAFS). The final part of the book discusses the application of megafan research to economic geology, aquifers and planetary geology including layered deposits on Mars. This is an invaluable reference for researchers in geomorphology, sedimentology and physical geography.
Key Features
• Compares megafan characteristics with better-known features such as alluvial fans, deltas, floodplains and other fluvial forms and deposits
• Includes an applications section which address the significance of megafans for other sciences including economic geology, aquifer detection and planetary science
• Contains extensive reference lists that provide entry points into the burgeoning literature on modern megafans and their place in the rock record
Contents
1. Megafans as major continental landforms;
2. A Global Megafans Map;
3. Megafans of Africa;
4. Megafans of the Northern Kalahari Basin;
5. The Chaco Megafans;
6. Megafans of the Pantanal Basin, Brazil;
7. Geomorphic and chronological assessment of aggradation patterns on the Río Grande (Guapay) megafan, eastern Bolivia;
8. Megafans of southern and central Europe;
9. The Loire megafan, central France;
10. Megafans of the Gangetic Plains, India;
11. The Kosi megafan, India: morphology, dynamics, and sedimentology;
12. Megafans in Australia: a case study of the Holocene Mitchell megafan, Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia;
13. Megafans of the northern Victorian Riverine Plains, Australia;
14. Geology of fluvial-fan deposits: facies patterns, architectural organisation, and implications for economic geology;
15. An investigation of lithology, hydrogeology, bioturbation and pedogenesis in a cored borehole through the Andoni Formation of the Cubango Megafan, northern Namibia;
16. Megafans on Mars: a fluvial analogue for the Sinus Meridiani layered sediments;
17. Megafans in world landscapes: results of a global survey;
18 Some future megafan research directions;
Index.
Additional Information
Level: Academic Researchers, professionals
February 2023 280 x 216 mm c.500pp
9781108423373 Hardback £95.00 / US$125.00 / €110.87
11 Earth and Environmental Science
Rotation Sensing with Large Ring Lasers
Applications in Geophysics and Geodesy
Ulrich Schreiber
Technische Universität München
Jon-Paul Wells
University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand
Description
Ring lasers are commonly used as gyroscopes for aircraft navigation and attitude control. The largest ring lasers are sensitive enough that they can be used for high resolution inertial rotation sensing of the Earth in order to detect tiny perturbations to the Earth’s rotation caused by earthquakes or global mass transport. This book describes the latest advances in the development of large ring lasers for applications in geodesy and geophysics using the most sensitive and stable devices available. Chapters cover our current knowledge of the physics of the laser gyroscope, how to acquire and analyse data from ring lasers, and what the potential applications are in the geosciences. It is a valuable reference for those working with ring lasers or using the data for applications in geodesy and geophysics; as well as researchers in laser physics, photonics and navigation.
Key Features
• An exhaustive treatment of sensor design, operations and performance as well as high performance data, providing excellent benchmarks for other ring laser related projects
• Discusses both the physics of the laser gyroscope and the novel applications in the geosciences, providing an essential reference for researchers working in both fields
Contents
1. Pre-History of Large Ring Lasers;
2. Aspects of Helium-Neon Based Laser Gyroscopes;
3. Large Scale Helium-Neon Gyroscopes;
4. Data Acquisition and Analysis;
5. Alternative High Resolution Rotation Sensing Concepts;
6. Applications; References; Acronyms; Index.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, professionals
December 2022 244 x 170 mm c.350pp
9781108422550 Hardback £95.00 / US$125.00 / €110.87
12 Earth and Environmental Science
Data Science and Human-Environment Systems
Steven M. Manson University of Minnesota
Description
Transformation of the Earth’s social and ecological systems is occurring at a rate and magnitude unparalleled in human experience. Data science is a revolutionary new way to understand human-environment relationships at the heart of pressing challenges like climate change and sustainable development. However, data science faces serious shortcomings when it comes to human-environment research. There are challenges with social and environmental data, the methods that manipulate and analyze the information, and the theory underlying the data science itself; as well as significant legal, ethical and policy concerns. This timely book offers a comprehensive, balanced, and accessible account of the promise and problems of this work in terms of data, methods, theory, and policy. It demonstrates the need for data scientists to work with human-environment scholars to tackle pressing real-world problems, making it ideal for researchers and graduate students in Earth and environmental science, data science and the environmental social sciences.
Key Features
• Provides the first comprehensive examination of data science and human-environment systems including current and compelling examples of the strengths and weaknesses of existing work
• Introduces core concepts in data, social and environmental sciences in an accessible manner
• Describes useful ways forward for interdisciplinary efforts around data science and human-environment systems, giving researchers a roadmap and the tools to improve their research and conduct interdisciplinary collaborations
Contents
1. Data Science and Human-Environment Systems;
2. Data Gaps and Potential;
3. Big Methods, Big Messes, Big Solutions;
4. Theory and the Perils of Black Box Science;
5. Policy Dilemmas;
6. Ways Forward for the Data Science of Human-Environment Systems; References; Index.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
January 2023 244 x 170 mm c.300pp
9781108486286 Hardback £105.00 / US$135.00 / €122.55
13 Earth and Environmental Science
The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars
General Editor Alan Forrest University of York
Edited by Michael Broers University of Oxford
Philip Dwyer
University of Newcastle, New South Wales
Bruno Colson
Université de Namur, Belgium
Alexander Mikaberidze
Louisiana State University, Shreveport
Peter Hicks
Fondation Napoléon, Paris
Description
The Cambridge History of the NapoleonicWars is a definitive history of the Napoleonic Wars drawing on a wealth of modern scholarship and leading expertise in the field. It offers a comprehensive account of the Wars from their origins in eighteenth-century diplomacy to the memory and political legacy they left behind. The three volumes cover the grand strategies of the combatants, the campaigns they fought, and the composition of the forces at their disposal; they analyse their conflicting ideologies, alliances and diplomacy, and the varieties of resistance and occupation; and they assess their legacy for future generations. They challenge conventional assumptions about the nature of war in the period and apply methodologies derived from social and cultural history as well as from the new military history of recent years. These volumes take full account of the latest research and present a history of the Napoleonic Wars for the twenty-first century.
Key Features
• Integrates the military, political, social and cultural history of the Napoleonic Wars
• Presents a complete view of the Wars as they were experienced by those who lived through them
• Includes contributions from some eighty international experts in the field and places the Wars in a truly global framework
Contents
Volume I. Politics and Diplomacy; Volume II. Fighting the Napoleonic Wars; Volume III. Experience, Culture and Memory.
Additional Information
Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students
Series: The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars
January 2023 228 x 152 mm c.1800pp
9781108226912 3 Volume Hardback Set £300.00 / US$390.00 / €350.13
14 History
The Cambridge World History of Genocide
Ben Kiernan Yale University, Connecticut
Description
Split into three volumes, The CambridgeWorld History of Genocide offers an analytical survey of genocide across six continents from prehistory to the twenty-first century. Combined, they compare and contrast cases in multiple different cultures and contexts, demonstrating common themes and sharp variations that have developed over time. By examining the long-term and immediate causes of genocide, these essays emphasize that genocidal intent has historically been shaped by structural factors and human decision-making. Featuring over 80 essays from experts across the field, together they cover ancient Carthage, the Holocaust, medieval Crusader massacres, Mongol conquests, the extermination of Indigenous peoples in European settler colonies in the Americas, Africa, and Australia, as well as prehistoric mass graves from the Alps to the Andes, and the Rohingya genocide in Myanmar. A much-needed addition to genocide studies, these volumes reveal how genocide is a world historical phenomenon that has operated under different names and capacities, but possesses similar key characteristics.
Key Features
• Documents the long global history of genocide and extermination
• Analyses changes in genocidal ideologies and practices over the centuries
• Provides a framework for analyzing the causes of genocide in a variety of historical, cultural, and political environments
Contents
Volume I. Genocide in the Ancient, Medieval and Premodern Worlds; Volume II. Genocide in the Indigenous, Early Modern and Imperial Worlds, from c.1535 to World War One; Volume III. Genocide in the Contemporary Era, 1914–2020.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: The Cambridge World History of Genocide
February 2023 228 x 152 mm c.2234pp
9781108759731 3 Volume Hardback Set £310.00 / US$400.00 / €361.8
15 History
The Cambridge History of the Polar Regions
Edited by Adrian Howkins University of Bristol
Peder Roberts
KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm
Description
The Cambridge History of the Polar Regions is a landmark collection drawing together the history of the Arctic and Antarctica from the earliest times to the present. Structured as a series of thematic chapters, an international team of scholars offer a range of perspectives from environmental history, the history of science and exploration, cultural history, and the more traditional approaches of political, social, economic, and imperial history. The volume considers the centrality of Indigenous experience and the urgent need to build action in the present on a thorough understanding of the past. Using historical research based on methods ranging from archives and print culture to archaeology and oral histories, these essays provide fresh analyses of the discovery of Antarctica, the disappearance of Sir John Franklin, the fate of the Norse colony in Greenland, the origins of the Antarctic Treaty, and much more. This is an invaluable resource for anyone interested in the history of our planet.
Key Features
• Includes contributions from leading scholars from around the world
• Shows the importance of approaches foregrounding Indigenous communities and other groups often marginalized from histories that focus on exploration
• An invaluable resource for teachers and students of polar history, environmental history, the history of science, global history, area studies, historical geography and cognate disciplines
Contents
1. Introduction;
2. “I watch to see how the land is changing”: An Inuit perspective on changing environments and cultural resilience in the western Canadian Arctic;
3. The evolution of the Antarctic continent and its ice sheet;
4. The initial peopling of the circumpolar north;
5. Archaeology, politics, and Sámi heritage;
6. The Norse settlement of Greenland;
7. Russia, the first Arctic empire, 1000–1917;
8. The discovery of Antarctica from Ptolemy to Shackleton;
9. Sir John Franklin and the Northwest Passage in myth and memory;
10. The heroic age of Antarctic exploration, 1890 to the present;
11. Representing the polar regions through historical fiction;
12. Geography, anthropology, and Arctic knowledge-making;
13. Britain’s polar empire, 1769–1982;
14. Canada and the high Arctic islands, 1880–1950;
15. The genesis of the Spitsbergen/Svalbard Treaty, 1871–1920;
16. Industrial whaling in the Arctic and Antarctic;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
February 2023 228 x 152 mm c.650pp
9781108429931 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 / €140.05
17. A historical archaeology of the first Antarctic labourers (ninteenth century);
18. Mining and colonialism in the circumpolar north;
19. Creating the Soviet Arctic, 1917–1991;
20. Greenland: From colony to self-government, 1721–2021;
21. Cold War environmental knowledge in the polar regions;
22. The international geophysical year and the Antarctic treaty system;
23. The first century of US militarization in Alaska, 1867–1967;
24. Petroleum development and the state in Arctic North America, 1919–1977;
25. The rise of circumpolar political movements;
26. The history of polar environmental governance;
27. The Antarctic extension of Latin America;
28. Moving muskoxen as an Arctic resource in the twentieth century;
29. Boundaries of place and time at the edge of the polar oceans;
30. Restorying from within: Renewing relationships beyond the shadows of polar history;
31. Conclusion.
16 History
The Cambridge History of the Mongol Empire
Edited by Michal Biran Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Hodong Kim
Seoul National University
Description
In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries Chinggis Khan and his progeny ruled over twothirds of Eurasia. Connecting East, West, North and South, the Mongols integrated most of the Old World, promoting unprecedented cross-cultural contacts and triggering the reshuffle of religious, ethnic, and geopolitical identities. The Cambridge History of the Mongol Empire studies the Empire holistically in its full Eurasian context, putting the Mongols and their nomadic culture at the center. Written by an international team of more than forty leading scholars, this two-volume set provides an authoritative and multifaceted history of ‘the Mongol Moment’ (1206–1368) in world history and includes an unprecedented survey of the various sources for its study, textual (written in sisteen languages), archaeological, and visual. This groundbreaking Cambridge History sets a new standard for future study of the Empire. It will serve as the fundamental reference work for those interested in Mongol, Eurasian, and world history.
Key Features
• Provides a comprehensive history of the Mongol Empire, from four angles: political history; thematic history; regional histories and external histories (i.e. the Empire’s impact on regions outside its control)
• Provides an indispensable infrastructure for students and scholars studying different sources (literary, archaeological, and visual) of the Mongol Empire
• Combines insights of more than 40 leading scholars from more than a dozen countries in both East and West
Contents
Volume I. History: Introduction;
Part I. A Political History of the Mongol Empire:
1. The rise of Chinggis Khan and the United Empire, 1206–1260;
2. The empire of the Great Khan –the Yuan Ulus, 1260–1368;
3. The Ilkhanate, 1260–1335;
4. The Golden Horde, ca. 1260–1502;
5. Mongol Central Asia: the Chaghadaids and the Ögödeids, 1260–1370;
Part II. Thematic History:
6. Mongol imperial institutions;
7. Imperial ideology;
8. Military machine;
9. Economic exchange: money, markets and taxation in Mongol Eurasia;
10. Religious exchange;
11. Scientific exchange;
12. Artistic exchange;
13. The climate and environment of the Mongol conquest;
Additional Information
14. Women and gender under Mongol rule; Part III. Views from Edges: Regional Histories:
15. Mongolia in the Mongol empire: from center to periphery;
16. Koryŏ in the Mongol empire;
17. Georgia and the Caucasus;
18. The Mongols and Siberia;
19. The Rus’ principalities; Part IV. External Histories: The Mongols’ Relation with Unsubjugated Regions:
20. The Mongols and Europe;
21. The Mongols and the Arab Middle East;
22. South Asia and the Mongol Empire; Epilogue: The Mongol empire, nomadic culture and world history;
Volume II. Sources: Part I. Literary Sources:
1. Persian sources;
2. Chinese sources;
3. Mongolian sources;
4. Arabic sources;
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
June 2023 229 x 152 mm 1300pp
9781107116481 2 Volume Set c. £255.00 / c. US$315.00 / €297.61
5. Rus’ian-language sources;
6. Western European sources;
7. Armenian sources;
8. Georgian sources;
9. Turkic and Chaghatay sources;
10. Tibetan sources;
11. Korean sources;
12. Syriac sources;
13. Uighur sources;
14. Greek sources;
15. Tangut sources;
16. Hebrew sources; Part II. Archeological and Visual Sources:
17. Archaeological sources: Mongolia and the Yuan;
18. Archaeological sources: the Ilkhanate;
19. Archaeological sources: the Golden Horde;
20. Archaeological Sources: the Chaghadaid Khanate;
21. Visual sources.
17 History
The Cambridge History of Global Migrations
Donna Gabaccia University of Toronto
Description
Split into two volumes, The Cambridge History of Global Migrations explores the lives and evaluates the significance of mobile people from 1400 to the present. Typically viewed as a phenomenon synonymous with nineteenth century globalization, migration was ubiquitous and triggered significant social, economic, technological and cultural transformations across time. Featuring over sixty essays from experts across the field, together the volumes amplify the stories of foragers and herders, pilgrims and missionaries, merchants, slaves, captives and prisoners, wealthy and impoverished jobseekers, and refugees fleeing violence, oppression and environmental change. By evaluating the continuities and changes of migration and globalization, it reveals the long-standing power imbalance between economic elites, imperial and nation states, and the everyday people who wished to have a say in who can be forced, encouraged, prohibited or permitted to migrate. Insightful and comprehensive, these volumes uncover the ever-present tensions of movement and immobility, and the various dynamics of globalization.
Key Features
• Documents the long global history of human movement and globalization
• Evaluates the continuities and changes of migration and globalization, and its impact on economies, society, and culture
• Reveals the importance of migration in defining the functionality of societies
• Brings together scholars across various fields to create a comprehensive history of global migrations
Contents Introduction; Part I. Slavery/Forced Migration:
1. Slavery, captivity and mobilities in the early modern Mediterranean;
2. Africans on the move: the transatlantic slave trade;
3. Debt, bondage and indentured labour in land and maritime empires; Part II. Long Distance Trade:
4. Long-distance trade, the Pacific;
5. Long-distance Japanese trade in the early modern era;
6. Long-distance trade and migration in Central Asia, 1500–1850; Part III. Short Distance Trade:
7. Maritime migrations of the Eastern Mediterranean and the Black Sea;
8. Mobility and migration around the Bay of Bengal;
9. Early modern Japan: a state with limited migration; Part IV. Migration by Land:
10. Indigenous mobility in the lowlands of South America;
11. Chinese expansion in eighteenth-century central Eurasia;
12. Persianate peregrinations: elite migration in Eurasia, from the eleventh to nineteenth centuries; Part V. Migration by Sea:
13. Western European long-distance movements;
14. Emigration, displacement, and forced migration in Indian Ocean Africa;
15. Migration by Sea in the Arabian Sea and the Persian Gulf, 1700–1800; Part VI. Rural/Urban Migrations:
16. Urban migration and gender diversity in Eurasia, 1600–1800;
17. Urbanization and emigration in Coastal South China;
18. Migration in Colonial Latin America; Part VII. Labour Migration:
19. The globality of the Local –(Im)Mobilizing labor regimes under early capitalism and European colonial expansion;
20. Afro-India migrations and the Indianization of East Africa 5000 BCE to 1900 CE;
21. Labour migration in Sub-Saharan Africa Before 1800;
Part VIII. Settler Migration:
22. North America: migrations and settlement (c. 1600 –c. 1800);
23. Turkish migrations in the Greater Turkic-Speaking World, 1450–1830;
24. Dynamics of mobility and settlement in Africa: the horn of Africa, 13th –19th Centuries; Part IX. Religious Migrations:
25. Early modern diasporas;
26. Religious components of Southeast Asian migration;
27. Migrant clerics going East and West; Part X. Refugees:
28. Refugees in Europe and the Atlantic World;
29. ‘Mongol’ and ‘Manchu’ and the great conquest enterprises of Eurasia, 1200–1800;
30. Refugees in Africa (1490–1820); Introduction;
1. Multiscalar approaches and transcultural societal studies;
Part I. Coerced and Free Migrants:
2. Asian indenture migrations;
3. Settler migrations;
4. Entangling labor migration in the Americas, 1840–1940;
Part II. Empires, New Nations, and Migrations:
5. Pacific Islander mobilities from colonial incursions to the present;
6. Japanese imperial migrations;
7. Europe’s postcolonial migrations since 1945;
8. Immigration restriction in the Anglo-American settler World, 1830s–1930s;
Part III. Specialized Migrations and Commercial Diasporas:
9. Soldiers and sailors as migrants;
10. African trade networks and diasporas;
11. Exiles, convicts, and deportees as migrants: Northern Eurasia, nineteenth-twentieth centuries;
Part IV. Circulations of Laborers:
18 History
12. Migration and labor in Sub-Saharan Africa during the colonial period;
13. The state as trafficker: governments and guestworkers in World history;
14. Skilled migrant workers;
15. Global domestic work;
Part V. Transnational Politics and International Solidarities:
16. Immigrants and their homelands;
17. Global migrations and social movements from 1815 to the 1920s;
18. Women’s migration and transnational solidarity in the twentieth century;
Part VI. Displaced Peoples and Refugees:
Additional Information
19. Enduring influence: legal categories of displacement in the early twentieth century;
20. Environmental changes, displacement, and migration;
21. Refugee regimes;
Part VII. Migrant Communities, Cultures, and Networks:
22. Brokerage and migrations during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries;
23. Immigrant cities since the late nineteenth century;
24. Global migrants foodways;
25. Professional migrants, enclaves, and transnational lives;
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: The Cambridge History of Global Migrations
June 2023 229 x 152 mm c.1300pp 20 b/w illus. 30 maps
9781108623865 2 Volume Hardback Set c. £200 / c. US$260 / c. €233.42
Part VIII. Migration Control, Discipline, and Regulation:
26. Migrant illegalities since 1800;
27. An intellectual history of citizenship;
28. Mobilities and regulation in the Schengen zone;
29. Externalization of borders;
Part IX. Technologies of Migration and Communication:
30. Mobility, transport and communication technologies;
31. Migrant communication from the postal age to internet communities.
19 History
The Evolution of Chinese Grammar
Yuzhi Shi National University of Singapore
Description
The Chinese language has the longest well-documented history among all human languages, making it an invaluable resource for studying how languages develop and change through time. Based on a twenty-year long research project, this pioneering book is the English version of an award-winning study originally published in Chinese. It provides an evolutionary perspective on the history of Chinese grammar, tracing its development from its thirteenth-Century BC origins to the present day. It investigates all the major changes in the history of the language within contemporary linguistic frameworks, and illustrates these with a wide range of examples taken from every stage in the language’s development, showing how the author’s findings are relevant to contemporary descriptive, theoretical, and historical linguistics. Shedding light on the essential properties of Chinese and, ultimately, language in general, it is essential reading for academic researchers and students of Asian linguistics, historical linguistics and syntactic theory.
Key Features
• The first book in English to cover all major developments of the 3,300-year history of Chinese, the longest continually documented language among all human languages
• Provides a systematic study of the motivations, mechanisms and regularities in the evolutionary history of Chinese grammar
• Employs the theories of cognitive linguistics, linguistic typology, and functional linguistics, showing how useful different theories are in historical investigation of a language
Contents
Conventions used in the examples; Abbreviations and symbols;
1. Some preliminaries;
2. Copular word and construction;
3. Focus and wh-word;
4. Serial verb construction;
5. Disyllabification;
6. Resultative construction;
7. Information structure;
8. Passive construction;
9. Disposal construction;
10. Verb copying and reduplication;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
April 2023 229 x 152 mm c.500pp
9781108844055 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00 / €145.89
11. Comparative construction;
12. Ditransitive construction; Aspect and tense;
14. Negotiation;
15. Boundedness of predicate;
16. Classifier;
17. Demonstratives from classifiers;
18. Distal demonstratives from phonological derivation;
19. Pronouns, plurals and diminutives;
20. Structural particles;
21. Word order and relative clause;
22. Conclusions.
20 Language and Linguistics
The Cambridge History of Linguistics
Edited by Linda R. Waugh University of Arizona Monique Monville-Burston University of Cyprus
John E. Joseph University of Edinburgh
Description
The establishment of language as a focus of study took place over many centuries, and reflection on its nature emerged in relation to very different social and cultural practices. Written by a team of leading scholars, this volume provides an authoritative, chronological account of the history of the study of language from ancient times to the end of the 20th century (i.e., ‘recent history’, when modern linguistics greatly expanded). Comprised of 29 chapters, it is split into 3 parts, each with an introduction covering the larger context of interest in language, especially the different philosophical, religious, and/or political concerns and socio-cultural practices of the times. At the end of the volume, there is a combined list of all references cited and a comprehensive index of topics, languages, major figures, etc. Comprehensive in its scope, it is an essential reference for researchers, teachers and students alike in linguistics and related disciplines.
Key Features
• Chronologically covers the history of linguistics from ancient times and places to the end of the 20th century by including selected topics from specific periods of time
• Provides a comprehensive overview of how thinking about language has evolved, including during the ‘recent past’ (1960-2000)
• Includes introductions to each part, to situate work in linguistics in the context of the times
Contents
Introduction: Part I. Ancient, Classical and Medieval Periods: Introduction to Part I: The emergence of linguistic thinking within premodern cultural practices;
1. Ancient near eastern linguistic traditions: Mesopotamia, Egypt;
2. East Asian early linguistic traditions: China; Korea and Japan;
3. History of linguistic analysis in the Sanskrit tradition in premodern India, with a brief discussion of vernacular grammars;
4. Greek linguistic thought and its Roman reception;
5. Early to late medieval Europe;
6. Near eastern linguistic traditions;
6A. The Syriac linguistic tradition;
6B. The Hebrew linguistic tradition;
6C. The Arabic linguistic tradition; Part II. Renaissance to Late Nineteenth Century: Introduction to Part II: The cultural and political context of language studies from the renaissance to the end of the nineteenth century;
7. Universal language schemes;
Additional Information
8. Locke and reactions to Locke, 1700-1780;
9. Rousseau to Kant ;
10. The celebration of linguistic diversity: Humboldt’s anthropological linguistics;
11. Early nineteenth century linguistics;
12. The Neogrammarians and their role in the establishment of the science of linguistics; Part III. Late Nineteenth through Twentieth Century Linguistics, Introduction to Part III: Late nineteenth through twentieth century linguistics: synopsis of major trends;
III-A. Late nineteenth century through the 1950s: synchrony, autonomy and structuralism;
13. Move to synchrony: late nineteenth century to early twentieth century;
14. Structuralism in Europe;
15. British linguistics;
16. American linguistics to 1960: science, data, method;
III-B. To 2000: Formalism, cognitivism, language use and function, interdisciplinarity;
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
March 2023 244 x 170 mm 900pp
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17. Chomsky and the turn to syntax, including alternative approaches to syntax;
18. Functionalist dimensions of grammatical and discourse analysis;
19. Semantics and pragmatics;
20. Language and philosophy, from Frege to the present;
21. Lexicology and lexicography;
22. Generative phonology: its origins, its principles, and its successors;
23. Phonetics and experimental phonology, circa 1950–2000;
24. Historical and universal-typological linguistics;
25. Language and society;
26. Language and anthropology;
27. Language and psychology, 1950–present A brief overview;
28. Semiotics;
29. Applied linguistics;
References;
Index.
21 Language and Linguistics
The Cambridge Handbook of Role and Reference Grammar
Edited by Delia Bentley University of Manchester
Ricardo Mairal-Usón
Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia
Wataru Nakamura
Tohoku University, Japan
Robert D. Van Valin, Jr.
Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf
Description
Role and Reference Grammar (RRG) is a theory of language in which linguistic structures are accounted for in terms of the interplay of discourse, semantics and syntax. With contributions from a team of leading scholars, this Handbook provides a field-defining overview of RRG. Assuming no prior knowledge, it introduces the framework step-by-step, and includes a pedagogical guide for instructors. It features in-depth discussions of syntax, morphology, and lexical semantics, including treatments of lexical and grammatical categories, the syntax of simple clauses and complex sentences, and how the linking of syntax with semantics and discourse works in each of these domains. It illustrates RRG’s contribution to the study of language acquisition, language change and processing, computational linguistics, and neurolinguistics, and also contains five grammatical sketches which show how RRG analyses work in practice. Comprehensive yet accessible, it is essential reading for anyone who is interested in how grammar interfaces with meaning.
Key Features
• Introduces the Role and Reference Grammar framework step-by-step, and includes a pedagogical guide for instructors
• Provides in-depth specialist discussions of the linking of syntax and morphology with semantics and discourse
• Illustrates the framework with examples from a wide range of both major and underrepresented languages
Contents
List of figures; List of tables; List of contributors; Pedagogical guide; Introduction; Part I. Overview:
1. Principles of role and reference grammar; Part II. Topics in RRG: Simple sentences;
2. Lexical and grammatical categories in RRG; 3. A conceptually-oriented approach to semantic composition in RRG; 4. Semantic macroroles;
5. Grammatical relations;
6. Argument structure alternations; 7. Case assignment; 8. Morphology in RRG: the layered structure of the word, inflection and derivation; 9. Adverbs, mimetics and ideophones;10. Adposition assignment and adpositional phrase types in RRG;
11. The RRG approach to information structure; 12. Information structure and argument;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics
June 2023 244 x 170 mm 997pp
9781107130456 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00 / €145.89
Part III. Topics in RRG: Complex sentences;
13. The structure and semantics of complex sentences;
14. Linking syntax and semantics in adverbial (adjoined) clauses; 15. Cleft sentences and relative clauses; 16. Extraction restrictions in complex sentences; Part IV. Applications of RRG:
17. Role and reference grammar and diachronic syntax;
18. Functional acquisition processes in child language: links to role and reference grammar; 19. Grammatical aspects of language processing in the brain: a role and reference grammar perspective; 20. Formalization of RRG syntax;
21. Computational implementation and applications of role and reference grammar; Part V. Grammatical sketches:
22. A grammatical sketch of Cheyenne (Plains Algonquian, USA); 23. A grammatical sketch of Yimas (Lower Sepik, Papua New Guinea); 24. A grammatical sketch of Avatime (Kwa, Niger-Congo, Ghana); 25. A grammatical sketch of Amele (Papuan, Papua New Guinea); 26. Case and voice in Amis (Austronesian, Taiwan); Index.
22 Language and Linguistics
International Law Reports
Volume 200
Description
Decisions of international courts and arbitrators, as well as judgments of national courts, are fundamental elements of modern public international law. The International Law Reports is the only publication in the world wholly devoted to the regular and systematic reporting in English of such decisions. It is therefore an absolutely essential work of reference. Volume 200 contains the 2019 International Court of Justice judgment on preliminary objections in Application of the International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing ofTerrorism and of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (Ukraine v. Russian Federation), the 2021 Grand Chamber judgment of the Court of Justice of the European Union in Bolivarian Republic ofVenezuela v. Council of the EuropeanUnion and the translation of 2021 judgment of the German Federal Court of Justice in Functional Immunity of Foreign Officials and Crimes under International Law Case.
Key Features
• Contains 2019 International Court of Justice judgment on preliminary objections in Application of the International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing ofTerrorism and of the International Convention on the Elimination ofAll Forms of Racial Discrimination (Ukraine v. Russian Federation)
• Contains 2021 Grand Chamber judgment of the Court of Justice of the European Union in Bolivarian Republic ofVenezuela v. Council of the EuropeanUnion
• Contains translation of 2021 judgment of the German Federal Court of Justice in Functional Immunity of Foreign Officials and Crimes under International Law Case
Contents
1. Application of the International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism and of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (Ukraine v. Russian Federation);
2. Goa alias Vedastus v. United Republic of Tanzania;
3. Republic of Slovenia v. Republic of Croatia;
4. Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela v. Council of the European Union;
5. Democratic Republic of the Congo v. Belgium;
6. Nasheed v. Republic of Maldives;
7. Ratu v. Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs;
8. United States Embassy Employee Case;
9. Claims Relating to Premises of a Diplomatic Mission Case (Tyngene s.r.o. v. Municipal District Prague-Troja and the Korean Republic –The Embassy of the Republic of Korea);
10. State Immunity from Enforcement Case (MN v. Indian Republic –Embassy of the Indian Republic);
11. Functional Immunity of Foreign Officials and Crimes under International Law Case;
12. Costello v. Government of Ireland, Ireland and the Attorney-General;
13. Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic and The Polisario Front v. The Owner and Charterers of the MV ‘NM Cherry Blossom’ and Others;
14. Country X. v. A____ ;
15. R (Friends of the Earth Ltd and Others) v. Heathrow Airport Ltd;
16. OI European Group B.V. v. Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: International Law Reports
January 2023 219 x 146 mm c.804pp
9781009300322 Hardback £170.00 / US$220.00 / €198.41
23 Law
The Cambridge Handbook of Race and Surveillance
Edited by Michael Kwet Yale University, Connecticut
Description
Featuring chapters authored by leading scholars in the fields of criminology, critical race studies, history, and more, The Cambridge Handbook of Race and Surveillance cuts across history and geography to provide a detailed examination of how race and surveillance intersect throughout space and time. The volume reviews surveillance technology from the days of colonial conquest to the digital era, focusing on countries such as the United States, Canada, the UK, South Africa, the Philippines, India, Brazil, and Palestine. Weaving together narratives on how technology and surveillance have developed over time to reinforce racial discrimination, the book delves into the often-overlooked origins of racial surveillance, from skin branding, cranial measurements, and fingerprinting to contemporary manifestations in big data, commercial surveillance, and predictive policing. Lucid, accessible, and expertly researched, this handbook provides a crucial investigation of issues spanning history and at the forefront of contemporary life.
Key Features
• Provides accounts of race and surveillance that extend across the globe
• Includes a variety of perspectives and histories often neglected by current literature on race and surveillance
• Introduces concepts in accessible, jargon-free language
Contents
1. The golden era of racial surveillance: an introduction;
2. Sorting identity;
3. Imperial mimesis: migration of surveillance from the colonial Philippines to the United States;
4. Separate spheres and the body as an information object: the racialization and surveillance of British women during the long nineteenth century;
5. Linking caste and surveillance: how digital governance has legitimised caste discrimination in India;
6. Surveillance in South Africa: from skin branding to digital colonialism;
7. Israel/Palestine, North America and surveillance;
8. Colonialism’s uneasy legacy: topologies of race and surveillance in São Paulo;
9. China’s surveillance and repression in Xinjiang;
10. Asian Americans as ‘the Perpetual Foreigner’ under scrutiny;
11. The great white father and his little red children: surveillance and race in native America;
12. In a most excellent and perfect order: surveillance, racialization and government practices in colonial Canada;
13. Surveillance and public schools: policing, desegregation and the criminalization of minority youth in Charlotte Mecklenburg schools;
14. Countering violent extremism and surveillance: the experience from schools and colleges in England;
15. Resistance and the politics of surveillance and control;
16. Surveilled subjects and encounters with technologically mediating law enforcement: reflecting on relational concerns.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks
January 2023 229 x 152 mm c.500pp
9781108416498 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 / €140.05
24 Law
Cambridge Compendium of International Commercial and Investment Arbitration
Stefan Kröll
Bucerius Law School, Rechsanwalt Kröll
Andrea Bjorklund
McGill University, Montréal
Franco Ferrari
New York University
Description
The Compendium, like an encyclopedia, contains entries for most of the foundational principles and concepts underlying arbitration. Each entry takes a holistic view of international arbitration, as they tackle core concepts from both a commercial and an investment arbitration perspective, focusing on the fundamental issues underlying the various topics rather than on the solutions adopted in any particular jurisdiction, thus making the Compendium a truly cross-border, transnational resource. This innovative approach will allow readers to identify the commonalities as well as the differences between commercial and investment arbitration, whether and where cross-fertilization has taken place and what consequences it can have. This approach allows the Compendium to be a tool in promoting the creation of a culture of international arbitration that considers commercial arbitration and investment arbitration as part of a whole but with certain distinct features particular to each.
Key Features
• Brings together a diverse group of expert authors from academia and practice, allowing for a broad view of the topics dealt with that goes beyond a purely domestic understanding and combines theory and practice
• Adopts a holistic approach, placing key issues in a broader context, thus allowing readers to broaden their view and understanding of the key challenges
• Covers all main areas of international arbitration from both a commercial and an investment arbitration perspective, addressing all the fundamental issues and concepts underlying the various topics
Contents
Part I. Foundations:
1. Arbitration as a dispute resolution process: historical developments;
2. Theories of international arbitration;
3. Limitations to party autonomy in international arbitration;
4. The legal framework of arbitration: international and national sources;
5. Particularities of investment arbitration;
Part II. Public Law Questions Relating to Arbitration:
6. Human rights in international commercial and investment arbitration;
7. Democracy and international investment law;
8. Investment arbitration and the rule of law;
9. Arbitration and the development of law;
Part III. Stakeholders in Arbitration:
10. Parties and affected others: signatories and nonsignatories in international arbitration agreements;
11. Third-Party funders;
12. Arbitrators;
13. Arbitral institutions;
14. International arbitration and society at large;
15. States as participants in international arbitration;
Part IV. Applicable Law:
16. International commercial arbitration and private international law;
17. Lex Arbitri and the rules of procedure;
18. Applicable law in commercial arbitration;
19. Applicable law in international investment arbitration;
20. The emergence of soft law as an applicable source of procedural and substantive law;
21. Mandatory law: international commercial and investment treaty arbitration;
22. Applicable ethical framework in commercial and investment arbitration;
Part V. Jurisdiction of the Arbitrator:
23. The arbitration agreement: legal nature, the contractual and the jurisdictional aspect;
24. The various forms of ‘consent’ in international arbitration;
25. Protecting and challenging the arbitrator’s jurisdiction;
26. The competence-competence principle’s positive effect;
27. The competence-competence principle’s negative effect;
28. The ‘separability’ of the agreement to arbitrate;
29. Admissibility v. Jurisdiction;
30. Settlement efforts and contract adaptation by arbitral tribunals;
Part VI. The Arbitral Tribunal:
31. Composition of the arbitral tribunal;
32. Arbitrator’s contract Kun Fan;
33. The powers, duties, and rights of international arbitrators;
34. Secretaries to the arbitral tribunal;
35. The role of party-appointed arbitrators v. that of the chairperson;
Part VII. Procedural Questions in Arbi-tration:
36. Implicit consent and unanticipated risk in class, mass and collective arbitration;
37. The principle of equal treatment in international arbitration;
38. Joinder of third parties;
39. Evidentiary issues;
40. Provisional measures by arbitrators and emergency arbitrators;
25 Law
41. Setting the language (or languages) of arbitration
and the impact of language-related imperfections in post-award proceedings; Part VIII. Role of State Courts in Arbitra-tion:
42. Role of state courts in supporting arbitration;
43. Role of state courts in controlling arbitration;
44. Interim relief by state courts;
45. Control of the courts by arbitration; Part IX. Awards:
46. Arbitrator decision making: Heuristics and other unconscious influences;
47. The legal nature of arbitral awards;
48. Turning settlements into arbitral awards; Part X. Post Award Issues:
49. Enforcement of arbitral awards set aside or annulled at the seat of arbitration;
50. Enforcement against state and state entities;
51. The law applicable to post-award issues;
52. Post-award access to justice issues: using investment treaties to enforce commercial arbitration awards;
Part XI. Legal Concepts:
53. Parallel proceedings in international commercial arbitration;
54. Res judicata in international arbitration;
55. International arbitration and transparency;
56. Contract and treaty interpretation in international arbitration;
Part XII. Areas of Concern:
57. Weak parties in international arbitration;
58. Arbitration and insolvency;
59. Global governance’s inescapable legitimacy conundrum: a call to reform international commercial arbitration;
60. Legitimacy of investment arbitration; Part XIII. Arbitration and Related Fields:
61. The promise and peril of empiricism and international investment law disputes;
62. Sociology of arbitrators;
63. Economic analysis of arbitration;
64. Teaching arbitration; Part XIV. EU Law and Arbitration:
65. European Union law in arbitration proceedings –status and methods;
66. The European court of human rights and arbitration;
67. EU law and investment arbitration: of cooperation, conflict and the EU legal order’s autonomy.
–
Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, legal practitioners January 2023 253 x 177 mm c.1750pp 9781108378406 3 Volume Hardback Set c. £270.00 / c. US$350.00 / €315.12 26 Law
International Law Reports
Volume 201
Edited by Christopher Greenwood International Court of Justice
Karen Lee University of Cambridge
Description
Decisions of international courts and arbitrators, as well as judgments of national courts, are fundamental elements of modern public international law. The International Law Reports is the only publication in the world wholly devoted to the regular and systematic reporting in English of such decisions. It is therefore an absolutely essential work of reference. Volume 201 contains the 2019 judgement on preliminary objections of International Court of Justice in Certain Iranian Assets (Iran v. United States), 2020 judgement of Inter-American Court of Human Rights in the Lhaka Honhat v. Argentina case, and 2021 judgement of the United Kingdom Supreme Court in General DynamicsUK Ltd v. Libya.
Key Features
• Contains 2019 judgement on preliminary objections of International Court of Justice in Certain Iranian Assets (Iran v. United States)
• Contains 2020 judgement of Inter-American Court of Human Rights in the Lhaka Honhat v. Argentina case
• Contains 2021 judgement of the United Kingdom Supreme Court in General Dynamics UK Ltd v. Liby
Contents
1. Certain Iranian Assets (Islamic Republic of Iran v. United States of America);
2. Hossou and Adelakoun v. Republic of Benin;
3. Commissaire Général aux Réfugiés et aux Apatrides v. Mostafa Lounani;
4. Indigenous Communities of the Lhaka Honhat (Our Land) Association v. Argentina;
5. International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) Court Fees Case;
6. Regina (Akarcay) v. Chief Constable of West Yorkshire Police;
7. Local Authority B v. X, V and T;
8. London Borough of Barnet v. AG and Others and Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs;
9. Houghton v. USA;
10. General Dynamics United Kingdom Ltd v. State of Libya.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: International Law Reports
March 2023 219 x 146 mm c.745pp
9781009331555 Hardback c. £170.00 / c. US$220.00 / €198.41
27 Law
Encyclopedia of Transitional Justice
Second edition
Edited by Lavinia Stan St. Francis University, Nova Scotia Nadya Nedelsky Macalester College, Minnesota
Description
The Encyclopedia ofTransitional Justice remains the premier reference tool that presents the state of the art in the field of reckoning with the legacy of past gross human rights abuses. Almost 200 scholars and practitioners from all continents summarize country efforts to address and redress the recent past, and present key transitional justice methods, debates, institutions and concepts. Both state and non-state initiatives are concisely overviewed. Written in an accessible style but with an eye to detail and accuracy, the entries include the latest research in the field and provide suggestions for further readings. Widely consulted by academics, practitioners, government officials and civil society representatives, the Encyclopedia is unmatched in the number of countries, institutions, debates, as well as methods, programs and practices it covers.
Key Features
• Collects and summarizes the wealth of information available in the field of transitional justice and offers an accessible overview of transitional justice cases, controversies, concepts, institutions and methods
• Showcases a wide variety of recognized transitional scholars and practitioners who are intimately familiar with the countries, institutions and programs they write about
• Includes information about transitional justice institutions, programs, debates, and concepts and makes the field of transitional justice intelligible for a wide audience
Contents
Volume I:
Additional Information
Level: academic researchers, legal practitioners
March 2023 254 x 177 mm c.1500pp
9781108475617 3 Volume Hardback Set c. £300.00 / c. US$475.00 / €350.13
1.1. Introduction; 1.2. Entries on transitional justice methods, processes, and practices; 1.3. Entries on transitional justice debates, controversies, and key questions; 1.4. Entries on transitional justice concepts and terms; Volume II: 2.1. Alphabetical list of entries; 2.2. Thematic list of entries; 2.3. Entries on countries; Volume III: 3.1. Alphabetical list of entries; 3.2. Thematic list of entries; 3.3. List of transitional justice institutions by country; 3.4. Timeline of transitional justice institutions and organizations; 3.5. Entries on transitional justice institutions and organizations.
28 Law
The Cambridge Handbook of Investment-Driven Intellectual Property
Edited by Enrico Bonadio City, University of London
Patrick Goold City, University of London
Description
This handbook challenges the conventional wisdom that intellectual property is the law of creativity. Traditionally, IP has been instrumental for protecting creations of the mind, with only inventors of original works enjoying exclusive rights. Related, sui generis, and quasi-IP rights, which protect monetary investments and efforts rather than originality and inventiveness, were considered exceptions to the general principles of IP. But increasingly, IP rights are being granted to safeguard corporate investments. This handbook brings together an international roster of contributors to explore this emerging trend. Why are investments the primary driver of legal protection, and often the main requirement to obtain it? Who benefits from such new forms of protection? What should the scope of these new rights be? And are they desirable in the first place? In doing so, the volume is the first to highlight and systematically critique the move from ‘intellectual’ to ‘investment’ property.
Key Features
• Explores the increasingly non-creative and investment-driven nature of intellectual property (IP) law
• Analyzes major jurisdictions such as the US, EU, and UK
• Includes both comparative law analysis and empirical approaches
Contents
Introduction;
1. Introductory chapter; Part I. Science, Technology and Industry:
2. Sui-generis protection of non-creative databases;
3. Pharmaceutical and agro-chemical test data exclusivity;
4. Copyright in computer-generated and artificial-intelligence-produced works;
5. Plant variety protection and investment;
6. Software patenting and copyright;
7. Protecting investments in business methods;
8. Pharmaceutical patents and evergreening;
Part II. Culture and Entertainment:
9. The sui generis publishers’ right under EU law;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks
March 2023 254 x 178 mm c.450pp
9781108839198 Hardback £160.00 / US$200.00 / €186.74
10. Copyright in typographical arrangements of published editions;
11. Copyright protection of phonograms;
12. Copyright in broadcasts;
13. Copyright protection of previously unpublished works;
14. Cinematographic works and copyright;
Part III. Signs, Images and Designs:
15. The investment function of trademarks;
16. The protection of well-known trademarks;
17. Ambush marketing and protection of investments;
18. EU geographical indications and the protection of producers and their investments;
19. Design right: from investment to creativity for ‘industrial copyright’;
20. Connecting the dots: from intellectual property to investment property?
29 Law
Family Law and Gender in the Middle East and North Africa
Change and Stasis since the Arab Spring
Edited by Adrien K. Wing University of Iowa
Hisham A. Kassim Levari, PLLC, Washington, DC
Description
The volume serves as reference point for anyone interested in the Middle East and North Africa as well as for those interested in women’s rights and family law, generally or in the MENA region. It is the only book covering personal status codes of nearly a dozen countries. It covers Muslim family law in the following Middle East/north African countries: Tunisia, Egypt, Morocco, Algeria, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Israel, Palestine, and Qatar. Some of these countries were heavily affected by the Arab Spring, and some were not. With authors from around the world, each chapter of the book provides a history of personal status law both before and after the revolutionary period. Tunisia emerges as the country that made the most significant progress politically and with respect to women’s rights. A decade on from the Arab Spring, across the region there is more evidence of stasis than change.
Key Features
• Covers women’s and family law rights from multiple countries in the Middle East/North Africa `
• Argues that little has changed in the realm of women and family law rights in the Middle East/North Africa since the Arab Spring
• Featuring contributors from around the world each chapter cites specific references in the personal status codes of each country
Contents
Introduction: family law and gender in the Middle East after the Arab Spring;
1. Sustained reforms: family law in Tunisia;
2. Family law in Egypt;
3. Women’s rights in the Moroccan family code: caught between change and continuity ;
4. Postponing equality in the Algerian family code;
5. Juristic and legislative rulemaking: a history of the personal status code of Iraq, 1959–2020;
6. The Syrian law of personal status: spirit and application;
7. The status of Muslim Women in the mosaic of Islamic family law in Lebanon;
8. In circles we go: a brief historical overview of the Jordanian personal status law;
9. The Palestinian minority in Israel;
10. Personal status law in Palestine;
11. Qatari family law, when custom meets Shari’a.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
May 2023 229 x 152 mm 432pp
9781107023529 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$115.00 / €93.37
30 Law
The Correspondence of Charles Darwin
Volume 30: 1882
Charles Darwin
Edited by Frederick Burkhardt American American Council of Learned Societies
James A. Secord University of Cambridge
The Editors of the Darwin Correspondence Project University of Cambridge
Description
This volume is part of the definitive edition of letters written by and to Charles Darwin, the most celebrated naturalist of the nineteenth century. Notes and appendixes put these fascinating and wide-ranging letters in context, making the letters accessible to both scholars and general readers. Darwin depended on correspondence to collect data from all over the world, and to discuss his emerging ideas with scientific colleagues, many of whom he never met in person. The letters are published chronologically. Darwin died in April 1882, but was active in science almost up until the end, raising new research questions and responding to letters about his last book, on earthworms. The volume also contains a supplement of nearly 400 letters written between 1831 and 1880, many of which have never been published before.
Key Features
• The narrative introduction provides a compact but highly readable account of Darwin’s life in 1882, and a review of the supplement of nearly 400 earlier letters
• Complete transcriptions of more than 200 letters Darwin wrote and received in the year 1882, and a supplement of nearly 400 letters written between 1831 and 1880, are of immense value to researchers across a range of disciplines, providing for the first time primary materials on this period of Darwin’s life and work
• Clear and concise explanatory notes make the material accessible to both scholars and general readers
• A biographical register provides brief biographical notes for people mentioned in the letters
Contents
List of Illustrations; List of Letters; Introduction; Acknowledgments; List of Provenances; Note on Editorial Policy; Darwin/Wedgwood Genealogy; Abbreviations and Symbols; The Correspondence; Supplement to the Correspondence, 1831–80;
Appendixes:
Additional Information
1. Translations;
2. Chronology;
3. Darwin’s Funeral; Manuscript Alterations and Comments; Corrigenda;
Chronological List of Letters in Supplements; Biographical Register and Index to Correspondents; Bibliography; Notes on Manuscript Sources; Index.
Level: Academic researchers, amateurs/enthusiasts, graduate students
Series: The Correspondence of Charles Darwin
January 2023 234 x 156 mm c.850pp
9781009233590 Hardback c. £94.99 / c. US$125.00 / €110.86
31 Life Sciences
Threatened and Recently Extinct Vertebrates of the World
A Biogeographic Approach
Matthew
Richardson
Description
Habitat degradation is currently the main anthropogenic cause of species extinctions. The main cause of habitat degradation worldwide is agriculture, with urban sprawl, logging, mining and some fishing practices close behind. The physical destruction of habitat, such as deforestation for land development and burning fossil fuels, are examples of this. This volume provides a comprehensive overview of all threatened and recently-extinct mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fishes within the context of their locations and habitats. The approach takes a systematic examination of each biogeographic realm and region of the world, both terrestrial and marine, but with a particular emphasis on geographic features such as mountains and islands. It reveals patterns useful in conservation and helps to put it all into perspective. It is a baseline from which to compare subsequent developments, as well as a standardization of the way endangered species are studied.
Key Features
• For the first time, readers are able to see all threatened and extinct species on a large canvas
• A modern revision to biogeography, reflecting decades of new information
• Informs people around the globe, by showing them what threatened and/or extinct species live near them (i.e., mountains, lakes, rivers, islands, etc.)
Contents
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, amateurs/enthusiasts
March 2023 279 x 216 mm c.750pp
9781108495868 Hardback c. £84.99 / c. US$110.00 / €99.19
Australian
8. The Polynesian realm;
Nearctic
Caribbean
1. The Arctic realm; 2. The Palearctic realm; 3. The Afrotropical realm; 4. The Madagascan realm; 5. The Indo-Malaysian realm; 6. The Papua-Melanesian realm; 7. The
realm;
9. The
realm; 10. The
realm; 11. The Neotropical realm; 12. The Patagonian realm; 13. The Antarctic realm; 14. The Oceanic realm; 15. Global balance.
32
Life Sciences
Joseph Conrad: Contemporary Reviews
Edited by John G. Peters University of North Texas
Allan H. Simmons St Mary’s University, Twickenham, London
Description
Joseph Conrad:Contemporary Reviews (five volumes) is an indispensable resource for Conrad specialists and students of literary Modernism generally, aiming to provide as complete a view as possible of the contemporary reception of Joseph Conrad’s works in the English-speaking world. These volumes offer insights into early twentieth-century reviewing practices, the marketing of literary fiction and the wide interest in such writing, as reviews of Conrad’s work regularly appeared in provincial and colonial newspapers. Contemporary ReviewsVolume 5 offers previously unavailable reviews spanning Conrad’s career, from Almayer’s Folly (1895) to Last Essays (1926). The nearly one thousand reviews collected here chart the consolidation of Conrad’s reputation as a major English author, recording his impact upon late-Victorian literature and demonstrating how he helped shape literary Modernism. Articulating areas of critical interest that continue to attract readers and commentators today, the Contemporary Reviews confirm Conrad’s growing stature in the colonial literary marketplace.
Key Features
• Completes the Joseph Conrad:Contemporary Reviews series, making it a comprehensive collection of the contemporary reviews of Joseph Conrad’s fiction and, as such, a truly indispensable tool for scholars
• Supplements the generous selection of reviews emanating from Britain and the United States with reviews in the colonial press, enabling readers to appreciate Conrad as a truly international author and appreciate his place in the early twentieth century colonial market and reviewing culture
• Gives easy access to hard-to-locate material, allowing the reader to re-evaluate contemporary reception of Conrad
Contents
General Editors’ Preface; Acknowledgements; Introduction; Chronology; The Reviews: Almayer’s Folly (1895); An Outcast of the Islands (1896); The Nigger of the‘Narcissus’ (1897); Tales of Unrest (1898); Lord Jim (1900); The Inheritors (1901);
Additional Information
Youth:A Narrative and Two Other Stories (1902); Typhoon and Other Stories (1903); Falk,Amy Foster,To-Morrow:Three Stories (1903); Romance (1903); Nostromo (1904); The Mirror of the Sea (1906); The SecretAgent (1907); A Set of Six (1908);
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Joseph Conrad
January 2023 216 x 138 mm c.750pp
9781009100199 Hardback c. £110.00 / c. US$130.00 / €128.38
The Point of Honor (1908); Under Western Eyes (1911); Some Reminiscences (1912); A Personal Record (1912); ‘Twixt Land and Sea (1912); Chance (1914); Within The Tides (1915); Victory (1915); The Shadow-Line (1917); The Arrow of Gold (1919);
The Rescue (1920); Notes on Life and Letters (1921); The Rover (1923); The Nature of a Crime (1924); Tales of Hearsay (1925); Suspense (1925); Last Essays (1926); Index.
33 Literature
Salman Rushdie in Context
Edited by Florian Stadtler University of Bristol
Description
Salman Rushdie in Context discusses Rushdie’s life and work in the context of the multiple geographies he has inhabited and the wider socio-cultural contexts in which his writing is emerging, published and read. This book reveals the evolving political trajectory around transnationalism, multiculturalism and its discontents, so prominently engaged with by Salman Rushdie in relation to South Asia, its diasporas, Britain, and the USA in the late twentieth and early twenty-first century. Focused on the aesthetic, biographical, cultural, creative, historical and literary contexts of his works, the book reveals his deep engagement with processes of decolonization, emergent nationalisms in South Asia, Europe and the USA, and diasporic identity constructions and how they have been affected by globalisation. The book traces how, through his fiction and non-fiction, Rushdie has profoundly shaped the discussion of important questions of global citizenship and migration that continue to resonate today.
Key Features
• Provides thematic and conceptual overviews of Salman Rushdie and his works
• Includes inter-disciplinary perspectives that show readers the multi-directional ways in which Rushdie’s works can be read
• Focuses on aesthetic, biographical, cultural, creative, historical contexts of Salman Rushdie’s work, introducing readers to new critical approaches
Contents
Introduction: Rushdie’s contexts –contextualizing;
Part I. Life:
1. Salman Rushdie, biography and autobiography;
2. Salman Rushdie and the Fatwa;
3. Archival Rushdie;
4. Salman Rushdie as public intellectual; Part II. Literary and Creative Contexts:
5. Salman Rushdie and the Urdu tradition;
6. Art-historical magic realism and Rushdie’s twenty-first century politics;
7. Salman Rushdie and intertextuality;
8. Salman Rushdie and visual art and culture;
9. Rushdie, sound and the auditory imagination; Part III. Historical and Cultural Contexts:
10. Salman Rushdie and history;
11. Religious and ideological mythologies in Salman Rushdie’s novels;
12. Revisiting the city in Rushdie’s fiction;
Additional Information
Level: Undergraduate students, graduate students
Series: Literature in Context
February 2023 229 x 152 mm c.414pp
9781316514146 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00 / €99.20
13. Nationalism and transnationalism in Salman Rushdie’s novels;
14. Rushdie and globalization;
15. Salman Rushdie and diasporic identities;
16 Rushdie and secularism;
17. Orientalism, terrorism and counterinsurgency in Salman Rushdie’s novels;
18 Salman Rushdie’s upwardly mobile, globally migrating middle classes;
19. Scheherazade and her cousins: Rushdie’s women handcuffed to contexts;
20. Filmi contexts: Rushdie and cinema;
21. Salman Rushdie and world-historical capitalism;
22. The Anthropocene and ecological limits in the works of Salman Rushdie; Part IV. Critical Theoretical Contexts:
23. Salman Rushdie and postcolonialism;
24. Salman Rushdie and cosmopolitanism;
25 Salman Rushdie and postmodernism; Part V. Reception, Criticism and Adaption:
26. Salman Rushdie’s audiences, reception and the literary market;
27. Adapting Rushdie: Radio, screen and stage.
34 Literature
Correspondence Primarily on Pamela and Clarissa (1732–1749)
Samuel Richardson
Edited by Louise Curran Trinity College, Oxford
George Justice University of
Tulsa
Sören Hammerschmidt
GateWay Community College, Maricopa Community Colleges
Description
Samuel Richardson was one of the great letter-writers in English. His three great novels, Pamela, Clarissa, and Sir Charles Grandison were written in epistolary form, and Richardson himself was known in his time for the way he used his letters for both professional and personal purposes. As a printer, Richardson corresponded with authors, readers, and other printers and publishers. As a friend, he supported his correspondents when they were personally struggling. As a novelist, he engaged readers both before and after the publication of his works, soliciting their opinion and defending his own methods. Correspondence Primarily on Pamela and Clarissa (1732–1749) gives us Richardson the printer, the friend, and the novelist in the crucial early years of his unexpected success and fame as a literary writer, providing insight into how and why he created innovative works that changed the course of literary history.
Key Features
• Helps to create the full picture of Richardson’s correspondence, complementing the other published works in the Cambridge Edition of the Works of Samuel Richardson
• Includes a full and accessible introduction, of value to general readers, students and scholars alike
• Gives readers a fuller picture than ever before of the importance of the letters in the history of the novel as well as in Richardson’s career
Contents
General editors’ preface; Acknowledgements; Chronology; List of abbreviations; General introduction; Richardson’s Correspondence Primarily on Pamela and Clarissa (1732–1749); Appendix: orders and receipts of payment; Index.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Correspondence of Samuel Richardson, 9
April 2023 229 x 152 mm 600pp
9780521830355 Hardback c. £95.00 / c. US$125.00 / €110.87
35 Literature
Watch and Ward
Henry James
Edited by Pierre A. Walker Salem State University, Massachusetts
Jay S. Spina Salem State University, Massachusetts
Description
The Cambridge Edition of the Complete Fiction of Henry James provides, for the first time, a scholarly edition of a major writer whose work continues to be read, quoted, adapted and studied. While Watch and Ward has long been dismissed as an early apprentice work, it marks an important stage in James’s development as a fiction writer, building upon the stories he wrote during the late 1860s and pointing, at the same time, to the works he would write during the ensuing decade and which would secure his reputation, including ‘Daisy Miller’, The American and The Portrait of a Lady. Extensive explanatory notes enable modern readers to understand the novel’s historical, cultural and literary references.
Key Features
• The first scholarly edition of Henry James’s first novel
• Provides a full critical introduction to Watch and Ward, comprising an authoritative text supported by full textual apparatus including notes, glossary and textual variants
• Features extensive sections on textual history and contemporary critical reception as well as a comprehensive bibliography
Contents
General editors’ preface;
General chronology of James’ life and writings; Introduction;
Contemporary reception of Watch and Ward; Textual introduction; Chronology of composition and production; Bibliography; Watch and Ward; Glossary of foreign words and phrases; Notes; Textual variants; Emendations.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Complete Fiction of Henry James, 3
March 2023 228 x 152 mm 500pp
9781107086487 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 / €105.04
36 Literature
Messiaen in Context
Robert Sholl
Royal Academy of Music, London
Description
Exploring the many dimensions of Messiaen’s life, thought and music, this book provides fresh perspectives on the contexts within which the composer worked, the intellectual currents that influenced him, and the influence he himself exerted on twentieth-century music. It enables a holistic understanding of this ‘mondial’ French composer in relation to the wider world, including his engagement with and refiguration of theology through music, the performance and reception of his work, the ways in which his aesthetics and conceptual universe have been understood by his students, and how his legacy continues to evolve. Reappraising known facts and adding new interpretations from a variety of inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary viewpoints, Messiaen in Context provides a fresh understanding and engagement with one of the most significant musicians of the twentieth century.
Key Features
• Reveals Messiaen’s multi-faceted interests and their interconnections with his creative process
• Refreshes perspectives on the origins, style and poetics of Messiaen’s music
• Enables specialists and non-specialists to engage with and understand the music, aesthetics, and culture of Messiaen’s music
Contents
Part I. Mondial Messiaen:
1. Introduction: the image of Messiaen;
2. Messiaen’s family;
3. Yvonne Loriod;
4. Messiaen and the Paris conservatoire;
5. Messiaen and classical India and Greece;
6. Messiaen and the USA;
7. Messiaen and the idea of Japan;
8. Messiaen and China;
9. Messiaen and Australia: the composer as Lyrebird; Part II. Messiaen and Theology:
10. Messiaen and tournemire;
11. Theology in the interwar works of Olivier Messiaen;
12. Revitalising the spiritual: Messiaen and La Jeune France;
13. The theology and aesthetics of Thomas Aquinas in the compositions of Olivier Messiaen;
14. Messiaen’s musical language of religious symbolism;
15. The composition of glory: Olivier Messiaen and Hans Urs von Balthasar;
16. Messiaen and the franciscan spirit; Part III. Composers, Performers and Critics:
Additional Information
Level: Graduate students, academic researchers, professionals
Series: Composers in Context
June 2023 229 x 152 mm c.350pp
9781108487917 Hardback c. £95.00 / c. US$120.00 / €110.87
17. Before Le Cas: Messiaen in the musical press;
18. Messiaen and borrowing;
19. Messiaen and criticism;
20. Messiaen as organist of la Trinité;
21. Messiaen and the organ recordings;
22. ‘Un sens artistique très développé’: Messiaen’s cahiers as performance aid;
23. Pianism and virtuosity in Messiaen’s vingt regards sur l’Enfant-Jésus;
24. Messiaen as orchestrator;
Part IV. Concepts and Legacy:
25. The simplicity of Messiaen;
26. Messiaen and synaesthesia;
27. The opposite of time: What birds meant for Messiaen;
28. Messiaen and surrealism;
29. An explosive confrontation: Messiaen and the post-war avant-garde;
30. Messiaen and Jacques Charpentier;
31. Messiaen and Boulez;
32. Messiaen and spectralism;
33. Olivier Messiaen and Jean-Louis Florentz: a filiation?;
34. Messiaen in France today.
37 Music
The Cambridge Handbook of Cyber Behavior
Zheng Yan University at Albany, State University of New York
Description
Human behavior in cyber space is extremely complex. Change is the only constant as technologies and social contexts evolve rapidly. This leads to new behaviors in cybersecurity, Facebook use, smartphone habits, social networking, and many more. Scientific research in this area is becoming an established field and has already generated a broad range of social impacts. Alongside the four key elements (users, technologies, activities, and effects), the text covers cyber law, business, health, governance, education, and many other fields. Written by international scholars from a wide range of disciplines, this handbook brings all these aspects together in a clear, user-friendly format. After introducing the history and development of the field, each chapter synthesizes the most recent advances in key topics, highlights leading scholars and their major achievements, and identifies core future directions. It is the ideal overview of the field for researchers, scholars, and students alike.
Key Features
• The ideal overview of the current state of science on all aspects of cyber behavior
• Contains contributions written by 40 groups of international scholars from a variety of disciplines
• Introduces and analyzes the work of the key researchers working in this emerged field
Contents
Contents;
List of figures;
List of tables;
List of contributors; Preface;
Part I. Users in Cyber Behavior:
1. The internet is for everyone;
2. Cyber behavior of the net generation;
3. Digital divide among k-12 students;
4. Cyber behavior for child and adolescent development;
5. Online celebrities and cyber marketing;
6. Cyber-bullying in Greece;
7. Cyber partner abuse;
Part II. Technologies in Cyber Behavior:
8. Social media in tourism and hospitality;
9. Serious games and cyber behavior;
Additional Information
10. Mobile games for learning;
11. Computer simulations in science education;
12. Immersive technologies;
13. Virtual worlds through virtual reality and augmented reality;
14. Electronic activity monitoring;
15. Voice-powered artificial intelligence;
16. Emails and cyber work; Part III. Activities in Cyber Behavior:
17. Adolescents’ use of digital health information;
18. Cybertourism;
19. Online reviews and consumer decisions;
20. Generation z and digital marketing;
21. Pitfalls of social interaction in online group learning
22. Social virtual environments for neuroscience and mental health;
23. Social media in the workplace;
24. Social media and political participation;
Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students, professionals
Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology
25.Crisis informatics;
26. Online dating;
27. Digital religion;
28. Cyberbullying; Part IV. Effects in Cyber Behavior:
29. Social media and psychological well-being;
30. Video game effects;
31. Serious games in mental health treatment;
32. Gaming disorder;
33. Problematic mobile phone use;
34. Treatment and interventions for addictive behaviors in cyberspace;
35. Electronic aggression;
36. Cyberbullying in the 21st century schools;
37. Hate speech and adolescents;
38. Cyber racism;
39. Cyberdeception.
2 Volume Hardback Set c. £110.00 / c. US$175.00 / €143
January 2023 253 x 177 mm 600pp 9781107165250
the cambridge handbook of cyber behavior
38 Psychology
Edited by Zheng Yan
The Cambridge Handbook of Creativity and Emotions
Edited by Zorana Ivcevic Yale University, Connecticut
Jessica D. Hoffmann Yale University, Connecticut
James C. Kaufman University of Connecticut
Description
The Cambridge Handbook of Creativity and Emotions provides a state-of-the-art review of research on the role of emotions in creativity. This volume presents the insights and perspectives of sixty creativity scholars from thirteen countries who span multiple disciplines, including developmental, social, and personality psychology; industrial and organizational psychology; neuroscience; education; art therapy, and sociology. It discusses affective processes – emotion states, traits, and emotion abilities – in relation to the creative process, person, and product, as well as two major contexts for expression of creativity: school, and work. It is a go-to source for scholars who need to enhance their understanding of a specific topic relating to creativity and emotion, and it provides students and researchers with a comprehensive introduction to creativity and emotion broadly.
Key Features
• Offers state of the art review of existing research and proposes crucial directions for future research
• Includes contributions from leading scholars in multiple disciplines, including development, social, and personality psychology; industrial and organizational psychology; neuroscience; education; art therapy, and sociology
• Proposes new theoretical models stimulating scholarship
Contents
Creativity and emotions: Introduction;
Part I. Methods in the Study of Creativity and Emotions:
1. Experimental methods in the study of emotions and creativity;
2. Affect, complexity, and the case study method;
3. Observational methods in the study of creativity and emotions;
4. Assessing creativity and affect in everyday environments: experience-sampling and daily diary methods;
Part II. The Development of Creativity:
5. Affective states and creativity;
6. The neuroscience of creativity and emotion;
7. Attention, affect, and creativity, from mindfulness to mind-wandering;
8. Motivations, emotions, and creativity;
9. Managing difference and uncertainty and creativity;
10. Creativity and emotional intelligence: a complementary pairing;
11. Emotions across the creative process and across domains of creativity;
Additional Information
Part III. Emotions and the Creative Person:
12. Emotion traits and creativity;
13. Gender differences in creativity and emotions;
14. Affect in pretend play and creativity;
15. Creativity, emotions, emotion regulation, and aging: older adults take on life’s challenges with creativity and finesse;
16. Interpersonal relationships, social emotions, and creativity;
Part IV. Environments and Contexts:
17. Emotional creativity: emotional experience as creative product;
18. Affective factors in dark creativity;
19. For emotion’s sake…
The centrality of emotions in the art experience;
20. The affective benefits of creative activities;
21. Everyday creativity as a pathway to meaning and well-being;
22. Creative arts therapies: processes and outcomes for emotional well-being;
23. Developing emotion abilities through engagement with the arts;
Level: Graduate students, academic researchers
Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology
March 2023 254 x 178 mm c.600pp
9781316515952 Hardback c. £155.00 / c. US$195.00 / €180.90
Part V. Emotions and Creativity at School and Work:
24. Anxiety, fear of failure, and creativity;
25. Peers, affect, and creativity at school;
26. Creative curriculum experiences: navigating uncertainties and emotions toward creative expression;
27. Organizational affective climate and creativity at work;
28. Group affect and creativity;
29. Psychological safety and creativity: the glue that binds a creative team;
30. Leadership, creativity, and emotions;
31. A Multilevel model of emotions and creativity in organizations;
32. Creativity and emotion: Connecting the dots.
39 Psychology
The Cambridge Handbook of Computational Cognitive Sciences
Second edition
Edited by Ron Sun Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, New York
Description
The Cambridge Handbook of Computational Cognitive Sciences is a comprehensive reference for this rapidly developing and highly interdisciplinary field. Written with both newcomers and experts in mind, it provides an accessible introduction of paradigms, methodologies, approaches, and models, with ample detail and illustrated by examples. It should appeal to researchers and students working within the computational cognitive sciences, as well as those working in adjacent fields including philosophy, psychology, linguistics, anthropology, education, neuroscience, artificial intelligence, computer science, and more.
Key Features
• Provides an accessible introduction to the field of computational cognitive sciences
• Combines breadth of coverage of the field with in-depth elucidation by leading scientists, thus useful for experts and non-experts alike
• Appeals to researchers and advanced students in related fields including philosophy, psychology, linguistics, neuroscience, artificial intelligence, and more
Contents
Volume 1: Part I. Introduction:
1. An overview of computational cognitive sciences; Part II. Cognitive modeling paradigms:
2. Connectionist models of cognition;
3. Bayesian models of cognition;
4. Symbolic and hybrid models of cognition;
5. Logic-Based modeling of cognition;
6. Dynamical systems approaches to cognition;
7. Quantum models of cognition;
8. Constraints in cognitive architectures;
9. Deep learning;
10. Reinforcement learning; Part III. Computational modeling of basic cognitive functionalities:
11. Computational models of categorization;
12. Computational cognitive neuroscience models of categorization;
13. Models of inductive reasoning;
Additional Information
14. Analogy and similarity;
15. Mental models and the algorithms of deduction;
16. Computational models of decision making;
17. Computational models of skill acquisition;
18. Computational models of episodic memory;
19. Computational neuroscientific models of working memory;
20. Neurocomputational models of cognitive control;
21. Computational models of animal and human associative learning;
22. Computational and cognitive models of reinforcement learning;
Volume 2: Part IV. Computational modeling in various cognitive fields:
23. Computational models of developmental psychology;
24. Computational models in personality and social psychology;
Level: Graduate students, academic researchers
Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology
March 2023 253 x 177 mm c.900pp
9781108485074 Multiple copy pack c. £145.00 / c. US$185.00 / €169.23
25. Computational modeling in industrialorganizational psychology;
26. Computational modeling in psychiatry;
27. Computational psycholinguistics;
28. Natural language understanding and generation;
29. Computational models of creativity;
30. Computational models of emotion and cognitionemotion interaction;
31. Computational approaches to morality;
32. Cognitive modeling in social simulation;
33. Cognitive modeling for cognitive engineering;
34. Modeling vision;
35. Models of multi-level motor control; Part V. General discussion:
36. Model validation, comparison and selection;
37. Philosophical issues in computational cognitive sciences;
38. An evaluation of computational modeling in cognitive sciences.
40 Psychology
The Cambridge Handbook of Consumer Psychology
Second edition
Edited by Cait Lamberton Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
Derek D. Rucker Kellogg School, Northwestern University, Illinois
Stephen A. Spiller Anderson School, University of California, Los Angeles
Description
In the last two years, consumers have experienced massive changes in consumption –whether due to shifts in habits; the changing information landscape; challenges to their identity, or new economic experiences of scarcity or abundance. What can we expect from these experiences? How are the world’s leading thinkers applying both foundational knowledge and novel insights as we seek to understand consumer psychology in a constantly changing landscape? And how can informed readers both contribute to and evaluate our knowledge? This handbook offers a critical overview of both fundamental topics in consumer psychology and those that are of prominence in the contemporary marketplace, beginning with an examination of individual psychology and broadening to topics related to wider cultural and marketplace systems. The Cambridge Handbook of Consumer Psychology, 2nd edition, will act as a valuable guide for teachers and graduate and undergraduate students in psychology, marketing, management, economics, sociology, and anthropology.
Key Features
• Offers cutting-edge insights, breadth, and depth in a single carefully-curated volume for junior and senior scholars alike
• Provides a one-stop compendium of knowledge for both foundational and emerging exploration, making findings in consumer psychology more accessible to scholars in adjacent disciplines
• Shines a spotlight on critical emerging areas of consumer research as well as classic domains
• Presents tools, approaches, and best practices for understanding consumer psychology
Contents
1. Attitudinal advocacy: contemporary insights and new questions;
2. Storytelling and narrative persuasion;
3. Consumer goals and motivation;
4. Consumer financial decision making;
5. Marketplace morality;
6. A triadic framework of luxury consumption;
7. Consumer identity;
8. Compensatory consumption;
9. Artificial intelligence and consumer psychology;
10. Interpersonal influences in consumer psychology;
11. The psychology of consumer social hierarchy and rank signaling;
12. Political ideology and consumer psychology;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, professionals
Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology
March 2023 254 x 178 mm c.800pp
9781009243933 Hardback £160.00 / US$205.00 / €186.74
13. Religion and consumer psychology;
14. The psychology of consumer dignity;
15. The psychology of shared consumption;
16. The psychology of access-based consumption;
17. Word-of-mouth and consumer psychology;
18. Consumer culture;
19. Field studies in consumer psychology;
20. MTurk and online panel research;
21. Meta-analysis: assessing heterogeneity using traditional and contemporary approaches;
22. Netnography for consumer psychologists;
23. A recipe for honest consumer research.
41 Psychology
Moral Education in the 21st Century
Edited by Douglas W. Yacek Universität Dortmund
Mark E. Jonas
Wheaton College, Illinois
Kevin H. Gary Valparaiso University, Indiana
Description
Moral education is an enduring concern for societies committed to the value of justice and the wellbeing of children. What kind of moral guidance do young people need to navigate the social world today? Which theories, perspectives, values, and ideals are best suited for the task? This volume offers educators insight into both the challenges and promises of moral education from a variety of ethical perspectives. It introduces and analyses several important developments in ethics and moral psychology and discusses how some key moral problems can be addressed in contemporary classrooms. In doing so, Moral Education in the 21st Century helps readers develop a deeper understanding of the complexities of helping young people grow into moral agents and ethical people. As such, researchers, students, and professionals in the fields of moral education, moral psychology, moral philosophy, ethics, educational theory, and philosophy of education will benefit from this volume.
Key Features
• Provides accessible conceptual resources for educators and practitioners interested in moral education
• Addresses contemporary moral problems and their educational implications
• Introduces readers to divergent contemporary perspectives on moral philosophy and moral education
• Shows how different disciplines can interact in the moral education of children
Contents
1. Why moral education matters in the 21st century;
Part I. Historical Insights for Contemporary Moral Education:
2. Plato’s significance for moral education;
3. Neo-Aristotelianism and moral education;
4. Neoskepticism and moral education;
5. Nietzsche and moral education;
6. Neo-Kantianism and moral education;
Part II. New Approaches to Moral Education:
7. Liberal authority and moral education;
8. The capability approach as a foundation for moral education;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, professionals, graduate students
April 2023 229 x 152 mm c.300pp
9781009170284 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 / €105.04
9. Recognition theory and moral education;
10. Practicing care ethics in the current context;
11. A non-ideal virtue theory and the centrality of education;
12. Pragmatist moral education;
Part III. Responses to Contemporary Moral Problems:
13. Moral education in and for virtual spaces;
14. The consumerist threat to education and democracy;
15. Moral education and deep disagreement;
16. A character-based perspective on sexual ethics and sex education;
17. The moral eclipse of boredom.
42 Psychology
The Cambridge Handbook of the Development of Coping
Edited by Ellen A. Skinner Portland State University
Melanie J. Zimmer-Gembeck Griffith University, Queensland
Description
Despite broad interest in how children and youth cope with stress and how others can support their coping, this is the first Handbook to consolidate the many theories and large bodies of research that contribute to the study of the development of coping. The Handbook’s goal is field building – it brings together theory and research from across the spectrum of psychological, developmental, and related sciences to inform our understanding of coping and its development across the lifespan. Hence, it is of interest not only to psychologists, but also to neuroscientists, sociologists, and public health experts. Moreover, work on stress and coping touches many areas of applied social science, including prevention and intervention science, education, clinical practice, and youth development, making this Handbook a vital interdisciplinary resource for parents, teachers, clinical practitioners, social workers, and anyone interested in improving the lives of children.
Key Features
• Describes a multi-level human system that operates on the level of action, but draws on underlying processes, from the neurophysiological to the psychological, to cope with stress
• Draws attention to the social forces that shape the development of coping in children and youth, including support from their close social contexts (e.g., family, peers, and schools) and influences from their community, culture, society, and other macrosystems
• Directly connects coping to other major areas of study in the psychological and neurosciences, such as stress neurophysiology, self-regulation, emotion regulation, executive functioning, and resilience
• Addresses and expands theory and scientific methods to outline the parameters of the field and guide future research
• Explores applications of theory and research on coping in multiple arenas, including education, youth development programs, and intervention and prevention efforts
Contents
1. A systems perspective on the development of coping: ‘we’re going to need a bigger boat’;
Part I. Theoretical Perspectives on the Development of Coping:
2. Towards a lifespan theory of coping development: a social ecological approach;
3. Attachment, regulation and the development of coping;
15. The development of accommodative coping: conditions and consequences from a lifespan perspective; 16. The development of temperament and personality traits and coping in childhood and adolescence;
Part V. Social Contexts and the Development of Coping:
4. Social context, psychological needs and the development of coping;
5. Processes of stress resistance, stress resilience: role of behavioral control and the medial prefrontal corte;
Part II. Methods for Studying the Development of Coping:
6. Capturing coping: innovative designs and considerations for studying the topography of adolescents’ coping; 7. Resilience and coping in development: pathways to integration;
Part III. Neurophysiological and Experiential Bases of the Development of Coping:
8. The development of neurobiology underlying stress and coping;
9. Biological systems underlying the development of adaptive functioning and coping;
10. Childhood adversity and the development of coping;
11. Adolescence, physiological adaptation, and the development of stress responses;
Part IV. Psychological Foundations of the Development of Coping:
12. Attention, temperament, self-regulation and the development of coping;
13. The development of emotion regulation and coping in early childhood;
14. Towards a more inclusive, contextualized approach to studying executive functions and self-regulation in the context of coping;
Additional Information
17. Coping development as an everyday interpersonal process: broadening definitions and investigations of coping; 18. Parenting, emotion socialization, and the development of coping; 19. Temperament, family context and the development of coping; 20. Interparental conflict, parental relationship dissolution and the development of children’s coping; 21. Autonomy, self-determination and the development of coping in adolescence;
22. Peer stressors and peer relationship dynamics in the development of coping;
23. Income, income inequality, community and the development of coping: the reformulated adaptation to poverty-related stress model;
24. Culture, diversity, context and the development of coping: a phenomenological perspective;
Part VI. Application and the Development of Coping:
25. Social media use and misuse, stress and the development of coping; 26 Clinical treatments for child emotional disorders and the development of coping: the case of irritability;
27. Fostering the development of academic coping: a multi-level systems perspective;
28. Youth programs and the development of coping.
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology
June 2023 244 x 170 mm c.700pp
9781108831420 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 / €140.05
43 Psychology
The Cambridge History of Reformation Era Theology
Edited by Kenneth G Appold Princeton Theological Seminary, New Jersey Nelson Minnich Catholic University of America, Washington DC
Description
The Cambridge History of Reformation EraTheology explores the key developments in both Protestant and Catholic theology ca. 1475-1650. Exploring the various settings and schools in which theology was formulated and taught, and the social backgrounds of its exponents—including women and non-university-trained men, as well as writers both in and outside Europe—it establishes how the major denominations took their positions and participated in a broader discourse. The volume examines specific theological themes from different denominational perspectives, demonstrating how theology affected the lives of believers via pastoral theology, canon law, and spirituality, and how theological ideas were linked to politics, warfare, science, and the arts. Written by an international team of leading scholars in the field, this History expands the range of theological discourse by introducing new topics and spokespersons, as well as global and ecumenical perspectives. It will remain the definitive place to begin any further study of theology during this period for years to come.
Key Features
• Theological topics are viewed in the same essay from Catholic, Lutheran, Reformed, Anglican, and Radical perspectives
• Studies both traditional and non-traditional theologians and the wide range of topics they discussed, including theology outside Europe: Latin America, India, Japan, and China
• Explores the historical context and the factors in which theological ideas were formed
Contents
Introduction;
Part I. Theology in an Age of Cultural Transformation:
1. The printing press and its impact on the production, proliferation, and readership of theological literature;
2. Humanism and theology;
3. The changing role of the bible in theological discourse;
4. The regulation of theology in the reformation era;
5. Political change and theological discourse;
6. Universities, monastic studia, academies, seminaries, and catechesis;
7. Para-academic theology: Theology of the ‘uneducated’;
8. Gender and theology in the reformation era;
9. The theologians and the clergy: Who were they?;
Part II. Schools and Emerging Cultures of Theology: Diversity and Conformity Within Confessions:10. The faculty of theology of Paris (1474-1682);
11. The school of Salamanca Plans;
12. The schools of Louvain and Douai: The Bible, Augustine and Thomas;
13. Jesuit School of Theology;
14. Theological currents in Latin America (16th Century);
15. Diversity and conformity within early Lutheranism;
16. Reformed schools of theology;
17. Cultures of theology in the British Isles;18. Radical and dissenting groups;
19. Christian ecumenical efforts;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
June 2023 234 x 156 mm 700pp
9781107044043 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00 / €145.89
20. Western ‘Confessions’ and eastern christianity; Part III. Topics and Disciplines of Theology:
21. Method and ethos of theological instruction and discourse;
22. Biblical theology;
23. Systematic theology;
24. Controversial theology;
25. Sacramental and liturgical theology;
26. Pastoral theology and preaching;
27. Reformation ethics and moral theology;
28. Ecclesiastical law in early modern Europe;
29. Spirituality in the reformation era (1500-1675);30. Catholic christianity and indigenous religions in the Americas;
31. Jesuit catechisms in Japan and India;
32. Theology in China c. 1582- c. 1688;
33. Theology and science;
34. Theology and history;
35. Theology, politics, and warfare;
36. The role of art in the theological discourse of the reformation; Index.
44 Religion
Drama and Theatre 9781108487573 Susan Glaspell in Context £90 / US$110.00 / €105.04 Earth and Environmental Science 9781009179447 Conducting Research on Global Environmental Agreement-Making £105.00 / US$135.00 / €122.55 Law 9781009347389 Dispute Settlement Reports 2021 £170.00 / US$220.00 / €198.41 9781108474214 The Cambridge Constitutional History of the United Kingdom TBA 9781108421430 Swiss Contract Law in International Commercial Arbitration TBA Literature 9781316514153 A History of the Surrealist Novel £89.99 / US$120.00 / €105.03 9781316514856 The Cambridge History of the Australian Novel £130.00 / US$170.00 / €151.72
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Notes
Stahl Online from Cambridge University Press cambridge.org/stahlonline Stahl Online is a one-stop shop, covering everything a mental health professional or teacher will ever need to know about neuropsychopharmacology. ...a must for anyone who would like to dive into psychotropics and get a state-of-the-art knowledge in a clear, elegant, and accessible platform. Drug Lookup tool Illustrated guides Case Studies Handbooks And many other Stahl titles! When purchasing Stahl Online, you receive access to: Long established as the preeminent source in its field, the eagerly anticipated fifth edition of Dr Stahl’s essential textbook of psychopharmacology is here! With its use of icons and figures that form Dr Stahl’s unique ‘visual language’, the book is the single most readable source of information on disease and drug mechanisms for all students and mental health professionals seeking to understand and utilize current therapeutics, and to anticipate the future for novel medications. Every aspect of the book has been updated, with the clarity of explanation that only Dr Stahl can bring. The new edition includes over 500 new or refreshed figures, an intuitive color scheme, fourteen new uses for older drugs and eighteen brand new drugs, coverage of Parkinson’s Disease Psychosis, behavioural symptoms of dementia, and mixed features in major depressive episodes, and expanded information on the medical uses of cannabis and hallucinogen assisted psychotherapy. “This fifth edition is not a simple reworking of earlier editions but really a brand new view. It represents a model for the way that we should cover other areas of neuroscience.” Ellen Frank PhD, Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine “Stahl’s Essential Psychopharmacology is without a doubt the leading textbook on the neuroscientific basis of psychopharmacology ... Dr Stahl’s talent is to make complex ideas deceptively easy to grasp. This is no small feat. He does it with pithy explanations, clear diagrams and memorable analogies.” MRCPsych, PhD, DM, Professor of Molecular Psychiatry, King’s College London and Imperial College London “The current edition is even more remarkable than its predecessors for its ability to provide useful and indeed essential information at multiple levels of expertise … This edition has done what thought would be impossible in significantly improving on past editions and in producing something that is even more readable and informative to people with a vast range of experience.” Richard J. Porter Professor of Psychiatry, Head of the Department Psychological Medicine and Director of the Mental Health Clinical Research Unit, University of Otago “Truly the preeminent textbook on the pharmacology of psychotropic drugs.” Dr Richard C. Shelton, Charles Byron Ireland Professor, Director, UAB Depression and Suicide Center, Department of Psychiatry and Behavior Neurobiology, Director of Research, UAB Huntsville Regional Medical Campus, School of Medicine, The University of Alabama at Birmingham “Stahl’s Essential Psychopharmacology, 5th Edition is a masterpiece of impeccable scholarship and the art of education.” Roger S. McIntyre, M.D., FRCPC, Professor of Psychiatry and Pharmacology, University of Toronto, Canada Head, Mood Disorders Psychopharmacology Unit and Chairman and Executive Director, Brain and Cognition Discovery Foundation (BCDF), Toronto, Canada Optional posttests with CME credit are available for a fee (waived for NEI Members). For more information, visit www.neiglobal.com. Stephen M. Stahl, MD, PhD is Professor of Psychiatry and Neuroscience at University of California, Riverside and at University of California, San Diego, Honorary Visiting Senior Fellow, University of Cambridge, UK, Education Institute, Carlsbad. Fifth Edition Stahl’s Essential Psychopharmacology Stahl 9781108838573 PPC. C M Y K PMS Silver Neuroscientific Basis and Practical Applications Stahl’s Essential Psychopharmacology Fifth Edition 25th Anniversary Stephen M. Stahl Stahl Stahl Stahl’s Essential Psychopharmacology Prescriber’s Guide SEVENTH EDITION 9781108926010 Stahl 7th Ed PB C M Y K Stahl’s Essential Psychopharmacology Prescriber’s Guide SEVENTH EDITION Stephen M. Stahl With the range of psychotropic drugs expanding and the usages of existing medications diversifying, we are pleased to present the Seventh Edition of the world’s best-selling formulary in psychopharmacology. The new edition features nine new compounds as well as information about several new formulations of existing drugs. Many important new indications are covered for existing drugs, as are updates to the profiles of the entire content and collection, including new injectable and transdermal formulations, as well as updated warnings and indications. The Pearls have all been refreshed and the antipsychotics section has been completely revised. With its easy-to-use, full-colour template-driven navigation system Prescriber’s Guide combines evidence-based data with clinically informed advice to support everyone who is prescribing in the field of mental health. Stephen M. Stahl is Adjunct Professor of Psychiatry at the University of California, San Diego, Clinical Professor of Psychiatry and Neuroscience at the University of California, Riverside, and Honorary Visiting Senior Fellow in Psychiatry at the University of Cambridge. He has conducted various research projects awarded by the National Institute of Mental Health, Veteran’s Affairs, and the pharmaceutical industry. Author of more than 500 articles and chapters, Dr Stahl is also the author of the bestseller Stahl’s Essential Psychopharmacology. Also available online! Visit www.stahlonline.org for details “This is an exceptional resource for clinicians who prescribe psychiatric drugs for their patients. The unique way it presents the information makes it useful to both prescribers and nonprescribers. Dr Stahl’s presentation of the information makes it useful to physicians, residents, and medical students. Even seasoned psychopharmacologists will find this useful. - Doody’s Reviews “[Dr Stahl] crams a remarkable amount of concisely expressed, up-to-date information into his book ... The combination of up-todate information with such a reader friendly presentation is what makes Dr Stahl’s work so welcome.” - Journal of Clinical Psychiatry “This manual has all the characteristics of a true bestseller. In no other recent text will a clinician find so much information in such a concise and user-friendly format.” - Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica “The art of psychopharmacology is finally given the space it deserves ... This guidebook is an excellent source of information for the art of prescribing psychotropic medications and belongs in every clinician’s library.” - The Annals of Pharmacotherapy “This Guide will be of assistance to any prescribing physician who wishes to obtain a short, clearly presented account of the drugs used in psychiatric practice.” - Human Psychopharmacology Reviews of previous editions: