Reference Works Catalogue January-June 2020

Page 1

Library Highlights Kit January - June 2020

www.cambridge.org/MRWC


HOT TOPICS Interdisciplinary ebook collections Titles across a wide range of subjects, reflecting the latest research trends

New collections include:

Climate

Decolonising the Curriculum

Gender Studies

Research Methods & Experimental Design

Explore more: cambridge.org/hot-topics


Contents ISBN

FULL TITLE

GBP PRICE

UK PUB DATE

PAGE

The Art of Sculpture in Fifteenth-Century Italy

£74.99

January 2020

3

Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics Book X

£94.99

December 2019

7 4

Art 978-1-108-42884-2

Classical Studies 978-1-107-10440-2 978-1-108-48137-3

Libanius: Ten Mythological and Historical Declamations

£85.00

January 2020

978-1-108-49989-7

Gargilius Martialis: The Agricultural Fragments

£110.00

March 2020

5

978-0-521-88335-1

Diogenes Laertius: Lives of Eminent Philosophers

£150.00

April 2020

6

8

History 978-1-107-09272-3

Mao Zedong

£80.00

March 2020

978-1-316-62688-7

The Cambridge World History of Violence

£385.00

March 2020

9

978-0-521-58081-6

The Cambridge History of Science

£90.00

March 2020

10

Law 978-1-108-49768-8

International Law Reports

£170.00

January 2020

13

978-1-108-49770-1

International Law Reports

£170.00

March 2020

14

978-1-107-01358-2

International Protection of Investments

£220.00

June 2020

11

978-1-108-49885-2

A Commentary on the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights

£200.00

June 2020

12

Linguistics 978-1-108-42969-6

The Cambridge Handbook of Intercultural Communication

£120.00

February 2020

16

978-1-108-42186-7

The Cambridge Handbook of Germanic Linguistics

£120.00

March 2020

15

978-1-108-48883-9

Cormac McCarthy in Context

£94.99

December 2019

23

978-1-108-47260-9

Mark Twain in Context

£84.99

December 2019

24

978-1-108-42451-6

Affect and Literature

£89.99

January 2020

18

Literature

978-1-108-41699-3

Mary Wollstonecraft in Context

£85.00

January 2020

19

978-1-107-01143-4

The Princess Casamassima

£150.00

February 2020

20

978-1-108-48048-2

Irish Literature in Transition, 1830–1880

£87.99

February 2020

27

978-1-108-48044-4

Irish Literature in Transition, 1940–1980

£89.99

February 2020

29

978-1-107-06949-7

A Cultural History of Modern Chinese Literature

£150.00

February 2020

31

978-1-107-17668-3

The Beats

£29.99

March 2020

21

978-1-108-47081-0

New York

£26.99

March 2020

22

978-1-108-42750-0

Irish Literature in Transition, 1700–1780

£89.99

March 2020

25

978-1-108-49298-0

Irish Literature in Transition, 1780–1830

£89.99

March 2020

26

978-1-108-48045-1

Irish Literature in Transition, 1880–1940

£89.99

March 2020

28

978-1-108-47404-7

Irish Literature in Transition: 1980–2020

£89.99

March 2020

30

978-1-108-42630-5

Magical Realism and Literature

£96.00

April 2020

17

The Cambridge Handbook of Workplace Affect

£135.00

June 2020

32

Geometric Regular Polytopes

£99.99

March 2020

33

Management 978-1-108-49403-8

Mathematics 978-1-108-48958-4

Medicine 978-1-108-76654-8

Non-Neoplastic Pathology of the Gastrointestinal Tract

£170.00

March 2020

34

978-1-107-11314-5

Stroke Prevention and Treatment

£84.99

June 2020

35

978-1-107-17777-2

Geriatric Forensic Medicine and Pathology

£160.00

July 2020

36

978-1-108-41911-6

The Beatles in Context

£74.99

January 2020

37

Music


ISBN

FULL TITLE

GBP PRICE

UK PUB DATE

PAGE

Philosophy 978-1-108-42483-7

Varieties of Democracy

£74.99

January 2020

39

978-1-107-00274-6

The Cambridge Heidegger Lexicon

£94.99

February 2020

38

The Cambridge Handbook of Evolutionary Perspectives on Human Behavior

£150.00

February 2020

40

Psychology 978-1-316-64282-5 978-1-107-18984-3

The Cambridge Handbook of Research Methods in Clinical Psychology

£180.00

February 2020

45

978-1-108-42434-9

The Cambridge Handbook of Personality Disorders

£180.00

March 2020

46

978-1-108-41763-1

The Cambridge Handbook of the Changing Nature of Work

£150.00

March 2020

47

978-1-108-42834-7

The Cambridge Handbook of Cognitive Aging

£155.00

April 2020

41

978-1-108-42924-5

The Cambridge Handbook of the Imagination

£145.00

May 2020

44

978-1-108-41596-5

The Cambridge Handbook of Applied School Psychology

£110.00

June 2020

43

978-1-108-47303-3

The Cambridge Handbook of the International Psychology of Women

£135.00

July 2020

42

John Calvin in Context

£84.99

November 2019

48

The New Handbook of Political Sociology

£175.00

March 2020

49

Religion 978-1-108-48240-0

Sociology 978-1-107-19349-9


Art

3

The Art of Sculpture in Fifteenth-Century Italy Edited by Amy R. Bloch

State University of New York, Albany

and Daniel M. Zolli

Pennsylvania State University

Description Fifteenth-century Italy witnessed sweeping innovations in the art of sculpture. Sculptors rediscovered new types of images from classical antiquity and invented new ones, devised novel ways to finish surfaces, and pushed the limits of their materials to new expressive extremes. The Art of Sculpture in Fifteenth-Century Italy surveys the sculptural production created by a range of artists throughout the peninsula. It offers a comprehensive overview of Italian sculpture during a century of intense creativity and development. Here, nineteen historians of Quattrocento Italian sculpture chart the many competing forces that led makers, patrons, and viewers to invest sculpture with such heightened importance in this time and place. Methodologically wide-ranging, the essays, specially commissioned for this volume, explore the vast range of techniques and media (stone, metal, wood, terracotta, and stucco) used to fashion works of sculpture. They also examine how viewers encountered those objects, discuss varying approaches to narrative, and ponder the increasing contemporary interest in the relationship between sculpture and history.

Key Features • Offers a complete account of fifteenth-century Italian sculpture, especially in its introduction, which surveys the century’s sculpture tout court • Essays cover a wide array of media and focus on a range of artists active throughout the Italian peninsula, from the canonical (such as Donatello and Luca della Robbia) to the less well-known (such as Bartolomeo Bellano and Antonio Rizzo) • Illuminates sculpture from traditional ‘centers’ of art-historical scholarship (such as Florence, Venice, Rome), while also alerting readers to less well-studied arenas of sculptural production (for example Milan and Naples)

Contents Introduction. Making and unmaking sculpture in fifteenth-century Italy; Part I. Surface Effects: 1. The color of white in fifteenth-century Tuscan sculpture; 2. The colors of monochrome sculpture; 3. New light on Luca della Robbia’s glazes; Part II. Sculptural Bodies: 4. Donatello, Alberti, and the free-standing statue in fifteenth-century Florence; 5. Complicating matters; 6. Sculptural transformations in Quattrocento Italy;

Part III. Sculptural Norms, Made and Unmade: 7. The body, space, and narrative in Central and Northern Italian sculpture; 8. Rethinking style in fifteenth-century Italian sculpture; 9. Bellano’s invention at the Santo; Part IV. Sculpture as Performance: 10. Sculpture and sacrifice; 11. Performative light; 12. Tullio Lombardo, Antonio Rizzo, and sculptural audacity in Renaissance Venice; Part V. Sculpture in the Expanded World:

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students January 2020 279 x 216 mm c.350pp 112 colour illus. 978-1-108-42884-2 Hardback £74.99

13. Substance and surface; 14. Conjoining economy and ritual; 15. Solidified saints; 16. Candelabra-columns and the Lombard architecture of sculptural assemblage; Part VI. Sculpture and history: 17. Jacopo della Quercia’s Fonte Gaia; 18. Virgil’s forge; 19. Trust in sculpture.


4

Classical Studies

Libanius: Ten Mythological and Historical Declamations Introduction, Translation, and Notes

Edited and translated by Robert J. Penella Fordham University, New York

Description This book offers translations of ten rhetorical declamations of the fourth-century AD sophist Libanius of Antioch and some related texts, almost all appearing for the first time in a modern language. In these works the declaimer impersonates such mythological or historical figures as Poseidon, Paris, Achilles, and Orestes, either in court (as prosecutor or defendant) or by trying to persuade his audience to take a course of action. The texts illustrate the sophist’s eloquence and had an educational purpose in the schools, but were also delivered before adult audiences. They also put the Hellenic past on display for audiences of the Greek East in the Roman Empire. The annotated translations are accompanied by analyses of their themes, structure, and argumentation.

Key Features • The first modern language translation of nine declamations of Libanius and two related Byzantine translations • Analyzes the declamations’ themes, argumentative strategies, and structure • The texts included effectively illustrate the ways in which prominent mythological and historical figures were turned into fiction in Late Antiquity

Contents 1. General introduction; 2. Introduction to the mythological declamations; 3. The mythological declamations; 4. Introduction to the historical declamations; 5. The historical declamations.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students January 2020 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-48137-3 Hardback £85.00


Classical Studies

Gargilius Martialis: The Agricultural Fragments Edited by James L. Zainaldin Harvard University, Massachusetts

Description In the third century CE, the North African polymath, soldier, and provincial official Q. Gargilius Martialis (died 260) wrote a treatise on the cultivation and medical use of fruits, vegetables, and herbs. The agricultural part of this work survives in a fragmentary state in a single manuscript. Despite this impediment, the agricultural writings are noteworthy for the clear marks both of their meticulous research and of the application of independent judgement and experience. Gargilius furthermore presents his advice in a stylized and literary form that strives for elegance through the use of prose rhythm, rhetorical variatio, and figurative language. The fragments will be valuable for those interested in ancient agriculture, in Greco-Roman authorship on the technai or artes, and in the history and sociolinguistics of Latin. This volume offers a new edition and the first English translation of Gargilius’ agricultural fragments as well as an introduction and full-scale commentary.

Key Features • Provides a new edition of the Latin text and the first English translation of Gargilius Martialis’ agricultural fragments • The introduction explains the position of Gargilius’ writings in the tradition of agricultural writing at Rome and deals with linguistic, literary, historical, technical/scientific, and philosophical issues • The commentary fully explains the content, structure and language of the Latin text and presents much material of broader interest to classical scholars

Contents Introduction: I. Gargilius Martialis: life and work; II. Gargilius in the agricultural tradition; III. Structure and method; IV. Understanding the agriculture of De arboribus pomiferis; V. Language and style; Vi. Reception; VII. History of the text;

VIII. Previous editions; IX. Conventions adopted in this edition, translation, and commentary; Text, critical apparatus, and translation: Sigla; Text, critical apparatus, and translation; Commentary: I. De cydoneis; II. De persicis; III. De amygdalis;

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries, 60 March 2020 216 x 138 mm c.406pp 3 b/w illus. 16 colour illus. 5 tables 978-1-108-49989-7 Hardback £110.00

IV. De castaneis; Appendices: I. The Latin text shared by N (De arboribus pomiferis) and the manuscripts of Medicinae ex holeribus et pomis; II. Manure in the agricultural authors; III. Spelling errors in the manuscript.

5


6

Classical Studies

Diogenes Laertius: Lives of Eminent Philosophers An Edited Translation

Edited and translated by Stephen White University of Texas, Austin

Description A pioneering work in the history of philosophy, the ancient text of the Lives presents engaging portraits of nearly a hundred Greek philosophers. It blends biography with bibliography and surveys of leading theories, peppered with punchy anecdotes, pithy maxims, and even snatches of poetry, much of it by the philosophers themselves. The work presents a systematic genealogy of Greek philosophy from its origins in the sixth century BCE to its flowering in Plato’s Academy and the Hellenistic schools. In this fully up-to-date and accessible translation, based on the most accurate texts and the latest advances in scholarship, Stephen White provides a valuable resource for students and scholars of ancient philosophy. Highlights include extended treatment of the ‘Seven Sages’ (Book 1), Socrates and his Socratic followers (Book 2), Plato (Book 3), Aristotle and his school (Book 5), Diogenes the Cynic (Book 6), Stoicism (Book 7), Pythagoreans (Book 8), Pyrrhonian skepticism (Book 9), and Epicureanism (Book 10).

Key Features • Offers an accessible translation of a key third-century work which stands as the preeminent surviving ancient history of Greek philosophy • Informed by huge progress in recent philosophical and historical scholarship, making it fully up to date • Presents ancient philosophy as a way of life for leading figures including Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and Epicurus, as well as leading Atomists, Cynics, Stoics, and Skeptics

Contents Acknowledgements; Introduction; Outline of the Lives; Lives of Eminent Philosophers; Book 1. Origins and sages; Book 2. Ionians, Socrates and Socratics; Book 3. Plato;

Book 4. Academics; Book 5. Aristotle and Peripatetics; Book 6. Antisthenes and Cynics; Book 7. Zeno and Stoics; Book 8. Pythagoras and Pythagoreans; Book 9. Italians and others, Pyrrho and Pyrrhonians; Book 10. Epicurus and Epicureans;

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students April 2020 228 x 152 mm 700pp 978-0-521-88335-1 Hardback c. £150.00

Appendix: conspectus of changes to the text; Glossary of philosophical terms; Bibliography; Index of biographies; Index of citations; Index of persons.


Classical Studies

7

Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics Book X Translation and Commentary

Edited and translated by Joachim Aufderheide King’s College London

Description Accompanied by a new translation of Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics X, this volume presents a hybrid between a traditional commentary and a scholarly monograph. Aristotle’s text is divided into one hundred lemmata which not only explore comprehensively the content and strength of each of these units of thought, but also emphasise their continuity, showing how the smaller units feed into the larger structure. The commentary illuminates what Aristotle thinks in each lemma (and why), and also shows how he thinks. In order to bring Aristotle alive as a thinker, it often explores several possible ways of reading the text to enable the reader to make up their own mind about the best interpretation of a given passage. The relevant background in Plato’s dialogues is discussed, and a substantial Introduction sets out the philosophical framework necessary for understanding Book X, the final and most arresting section of the Ethics.

Key Features • The first modern commentary on Book X of the Nicomachean Ethics • Contains a new translation that brings out Aristotle’s most important arguments while remaining balanced on key debates • Enables readers to experience Aristotle as a philosopher who reacts to, and engages with, his predecessors and contemporaries by setting his thinking in its intellectual context

Contents Introduction; Analytical table of contents; Translation; Commentary; Epilogue.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students December 2019 228 x 152 mm 294pp 978-1-107-10440-2 Hardback £94.99


8

History

Mao Zedong A Biography Volume 1: 1893–1949

Chongji Jin

Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, Party Literature Research Office

Foreign Languages Press Description Mao Zedong remains one of the most controversial figures in modern world history. This ‘living legacy’ is the subject of intense, ongoing debate both within China and throughout the rest of the world. Here, volume 1 of the only biography of Mao written with full access to the Chinese Communist Party Archives to date is presented in English translation. This volume, the first of three undertaken by the historians of the Party Literature Research Office of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, covers Mao’s career in the pre-revolutionary period, 1893–1949. As an extended official account of Mao, and Mao’s thought, this work offers a unique source through which to view the Chinese Communist Party’s portrayal of the transformative events of the twentieth century and Mao’s pivotal role therein.

Key Features • Introduces the official Chinese interpretation of the Mao period • Based on archives to which no Western scholars have yet had access • An introductory essay provides context and highlights differences in interpretation

Contents Preface; Introduction; 1. Leaving home; 2. The college student; 3. Baptized by the great tide of the May Fourth Movement; 4. Man of action in the early years of party building; 5. Work inside the Guomindang; 6. March towards the Peasant Movement; 7. The thunder of an uprising; 8. Ascent to Jinggang mountains; 9. Opening base areas in South Jiangxi and West Fujian; 10. Opposing bookism; 11. The Red Army attacks not Nanchang but Ji’an; 12. Smashing three ‘encirclement and suppression’ campaigns;

13. Chairman of the Chinese Soviet Government (I); 14. Chairman of the Chinese Soviet Government (II); 15. The long march; 16. Laying a foundation in the Northwest; 17. Before and after the Xi’an incident; 18. Summing up historical experience; 19. Outbreak of the nationwide War of Resistance against Japanese aggression; 20. Guiding armed resistance behind enemy lines and ‘on protracted war’; 21. From the September meeting to the Sixth Plenary Session; 22. The struggle against friction; 23. The theory of new democracy; 24. Before and after the Southern Anhui incident; 25. Building up the border region and surmounting difficulties;

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: The Cambridge China Library March 2020 228 x 152 mm 600pp 21 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-107-09272-3 Hardback c. £80.00

26. The rectification Movement (I); 27. The rectification Movement (II); 28. Proposal for a coalition government; 29. Struggling for final victory in the War of Resistance; 30. Chongqing Negotiations; 31. Peace or war?; 32. After the outbreak of a Nationwide Civil War; 33. Greeting the new high tide of the Chinese Revolution; 34. Going over to the strategic offensive; 35. Eastwards to Xibaipo; 36. Eve of the decisive battle; 37. In the days of the Great Decisive Battle (I); 38. In the days of the Great Decisive Battle (II); 39. Carrying the revolution through to the end; 40. Preparing the founding of new China.


History

9

The Cambridge World History of Violence Edited by Phillip Dwyer

University of Newcastle, New South Wales

and Joy Damousi

University of Melbourne

Description This four-volume Cambridge World History of Violence is the first collection of its kind to look at violence across different periods of human history and different regions of the world. It capitalises on the growing scholarly interest in the history of violence, which is emerging as one of the key intellectual issues of our time. The volumes take into account the latest scholarship in the field and comprises the work of nearly 140 scholars, who have contributed substantial chapters to provide an authoritative treatment of violence from a multiplicity of perspectives. The collection thus offers the reader a wide-ranging thematic treatment of the historical contexts of different types of violence, as well as a compendium of experience shared by peoples across time.

Key Features • Provides the first long-term study of violence, allowing us to place today’s world and its social problems in a much broader chronological context • Offers an accessible compendium to non-specialist readers; a readable account of the history of this crucial phenomenon; and a forward-looking project, exploring where current trends in research might, or should, lead over the coming years • Presents the latest scholarship in a dynamic field, taking a specifically historical stance and focusing squarely on the changing nature of violence from pre-historic times to the present

Contents Volume 1. The Prehistoric and Ancient Worlds. 978-1-107-12012-9 Volume 2. AD 500–AD 1500. 978-1-107-15638-8 Volume 3. AD 1500–AD 1800. 978-1-107-11911-6 Volume 4. 1800 to the Present. 978-1-107-15156-7

Additional Information Level: academic researchers Series: The Cambridge World History of Violence March 2020 228 x 152 mm 2805pp 978-1-316-62688-7 4 Volume Hardback Set £385.00


10

History

The Cambridge History of Science Volume 8: Modern Science in National, Transnational, and Global Context

Edited by Hugh Richard Slotten University of Otago, New Zealand

Ronald L. Numbers

University of Wisconsin, Madison

and David N. Livingstone Queen’s University Belfast

Description This volume in the highly respected Cambridge History of Science series is devoted to exploring the history of modern science using national, transnational, and global frames of reference. Organized by topic and culture, its essays by distinguished scholars offer the most comprehensive and up-to-date nondisciplinary history of modern science currently available. Essays are grouped together in separate sections that represent larger regions: Europe, Africa, the Middle East, South Asia, East and Southeast Asia, the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Oceania, and Latin America. Each of these regional groupings ends with a separate essay reflecting on the analysis in the preceding chapters. Intended to provide a balanced and inclusive treatment of the modern world, contributors analyze the history of science not only in local, national, and regional contexts but also with respect to the circulation of knowledge, tools, methods, people, and artifacts across national borders.

Key Features • Analyzes the history of modern science during the late eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth and early twenty-first centuries • Covers the entire world, with essays on all major countries or regions • Valuable in university courses in the history of science, technology, and medicine

Contents Part I. Transnational, International, and Global; Part II. National and Regional.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge History of Science March 2020 228 x 152 mm 870pp 978-0-521-58081-6 Hardback c. £90.00


Law

11

International Protection of Investments The Substantive Standards

August Reinisch University of Vienna

and Christoph Schreuer Zieler Partners, Vienna

Description This book outlines the protection standards typically contained in international investment agreements as they are actually applied and interpreted by investment tribunals. It thus provides a basis for analysis, criticism, and stocktaking of the existing system of investment arbitration. It covers all main protection standards, such as expropriation, fair and equitable treatment, full protection and security, the non-discrimination standards of national treatment and MFN, the prohibition of unreasonable and discriminatory measures, umbrella clauses and transfer guarantees. These standards are covered in separate chapters providing an overview of textual variations, explaining the origin of the standards and analysing the main conceptual issues as developed by investment tribunals. Relevant cases with quotations that illustrate how tribunals have relied upon the standards are presented in depth. An extensive bibliography guides the reader to more specific aspects of each investment standard permitting the book’s use as a commentary of the main investment protection standards.

Key Features • Provides a broad overview of the jurisprudence of investment tribunals and enables a more thorough understanding of the actual interpretation of core concepts of investment protection • Analyses the application and interpretation of the main protection standards contained in international investment agreements and examines how tribunals have addressed arguments and interests of parties and stakeholders in the area of investment arbitration • Thoroughly discusses expropriation, fair and equitable treatment, full protection and security, the non-discrimination standards of national treatment and MFN, the prohibition of unreasonable and discriminatory measures, umbrella clauses and transfer guarantees

Contents 1. Expropriation; 2. Fair and equitable treatment; 3. Full protection and security; 4. National treatment; 5. Most-favoured-nation treatment; 6. Protection against arbitrary or discriminatory measures; 7. Umbrella clause; 8. Transfer clauses.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, legal practitioners June 2020 247 x 174 mm 1170pp 978-1-107-01358-2 Hardback c. £220.00


12

Law

A Commentary on the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights The UN Human Rights Committee’s Monitoring of ICCPR Rights

Paul M. Taylor

University of Queensland

Description A new and an essential reference work for any international human rights law academic, student or practitioner, A Commentary on the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights spans all substantive rights of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), as approached from the perspective of the ICCPR as an integrated, coherent scheme of rights protection. In detailed coverage of the Human Rights Committee’s output when monitoring ICCPR compliance, Paul M. Taylor offers extraordinary access to forty years of its concluding observations, views and general comments organised thematically. This Commentary is a solid and practical introduction to any and all of the civil and political rights in the ICCPR, and a rare resource explaining the requirements for domestic implementation of ICCPR standards. An indispensable research tool for any serious enquirer into the subject, the Commentary speaks to the accomplishments of the ICCPR in striving for universal human rights standards.

Key Features • Renders accessible in thematic form more than forty years of the UN Human Rights Committee’s concluding observations, views and general comments, as well as related materials • Conveys the Committee’s expectations for domestic implementation • Informs the reader, even with minimal technical understanding, of the nature and reach of each International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) right, and its intended purpose, as enjoyed individually, collectively and within a democratic society

Contents 1. Self determination; 2. To ‘respect and to ensure’ covenant rights; 3. The equal right of men and women to the enjoyment of Covenant rights; 4. Derogation in times of officially proclaimed public emergency threatening the life of the nation; 5. Bar on interpreting the Covenant in abuse of rights; 6. The right to life; 7. Torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment; 8. Slavery, servitude and forced or compulsory labour;

9. Liberty and security; 10. Treatment of those deprived of their liberty; 11. Imprisonment for inability to fulfil a contractual obligation; 12. Freedom of movement of the person; 13. Procedural safeguards in the expulsion of aliens; 14. Fair trial rights; 15. Retroactive criminal law; 16. Recognition as a person before the law; 17. Privacy, home, correspondence; 18. Honour and reputation; 19. Freedom of thought, conscience and religion;

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students June 2020 253 x 177 mm c.780pp 978-1-108-49885-2 Hardback £200.00

20. Freedom of expression; 21. Propaganda for war and hate speech; 22. Freedom of assembly; 23. Freedom of association; 24. Protection for the family; 25. Protection required for children; 26. Right to participate in public affairs, electoral rights and access to public service; 27. Equality before the law, equal protection of the law; 28. Ethnic, religious and linguistic minorities.


Law

13

International Law Reports Volume 185

Edited by Christopher Greenwood International Court of Justice

and 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 185 is devoted to the International Court of Justice’s 2017 Order on Provisional Measures in 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), 2019 judgment of the Norwegian Supreme Court in SIA North Star Ltd v. Public Prosecution Authority and the 2018 judgment of the United States Supreme Court in Animal Science Products Inc v. Hebei Welcome Pharmaceutical Co Ltd.

Key Features • Reports on the International Court of Justice’s 2017 Order on Provisional Measures in 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) • Contains the 2019 judgment of Norwegian Supreme Court in SIA North Star Ltd v. Public Prosecution Authority • Covers the 2018 judgment of United States Supreme Court in Animal Science Products Inc v. Hebei Welcome Pharmaceutical Co Ltd

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. Bosphorus Queen Shipping Ltd Corp. v. Rajavartiolaitos; 3. Russian National Extradition Case; 4. Martinson Case; 5. SIA North Star Ltd v. Public prosecution authority; 6. Re Review of Constitutionality of Article 1 of the Federal Law ‘On Ratifying the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and Protocols Thereto’;

7. Minister of Home Affairs and Others v. Tsebe and Others, Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Another v. Tsebe and Others; 8. Government of the Republic of Zimbabwe v. Fick and Others; 9. Law Society of South Africa and Others v. President of the Republic of South Africa and Others; 10. Svenska Petroleum Exploration AB v. Government of the Republic of Lithuania and Another (No 2); 11. AA-R (Iran) v. Secretary of State for the Home Department; 12. Ford v. Malaysian Airline Systems Berhad; 13. R v. Gul;

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: International Law Reports, 185 January 2020 219 x 146 mm c.904pp 978-1-108-49768-8 Hardback £170.00

14. R v. Lama; 15. R (Nour) v. Secretary of State for Defence; 16. Pearl Petroleum Co Ltd v Kurdistan Regional Government of Iraq; 17. Youssef v. Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs; 18. Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela and Others v. Helmerich and Payne International Drilling Co. and Others; 19. Jesner and Others v. Arab Bank, PLC; 20. Animal Science Products Inc and Others v. Hebei Welcome Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd and Others.


14

Law

International Law Reports Volume 186

Edited by Christopher Greenwood International Court of Justice

and 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 186 is devoted to the Frontier Dispute (Burkina Faso/Niger), APDH v. Côte d’Ivoire, Umuhoza v.Rwanda, Anchugov and Gladkov v. Russia, Re Execution of the Judgment of the European Court of Human Rights in the Case of Anchugov and Gladkov v. Russia, Avotiņš v. Latvia, BAC v. Greece, Fontevecchia and D’amico v. Argentina, Fontevecchia Case, Request under Regulation 46(3) of the Regulations of the Court, Decision on the ‘Prosecution’s Request for a Ruling on Jurisdiction under Article 19(3) of the Statute’ ‘Rohingya Case’), Ezokola v. Canada, B010 v. Canada, Google Inc. v. Equustek Solutions Inc. and Others, Dhakal and Others v. Nepal Government and Others, Re Application by Finucane for Judicial Review.

Key Features • Judgment of Russian Federation Constitutional Court in Judgment No 12-P/2016 and related judgment of European Court of Human Rights in Anchugov • Judgments of Argentinian Supreme Court and Inter-American Court of Human Rights in Fontevecchia Case • 2019 judgment of United Kingdom Supreme Court in Re Application by Finucane for Judicial Review

Contents 1. Frontier Dispute (Burkina Faso/Niger); 2. Actions pour la Protection des Droits de l’Homme (APDH) v. Republic of Côte d’Ivoire; 3. Umuhoza v. Republic of Rwanda; 4. Anchugov v. Gladkov v. Russia; 5. Re Execution of the Judgment of the European Court of Human Rights in the Case of Anchugov and Gladkov v. Russia; 6. Avotiņš v. Latvia; 7. BAC v. Greece; 8. Fontevecchia and D’amico v. Argentina;

9. Fontevecchia Case; 10. Request under Regulation 46(3) of the Regulations of the Court; 11. Ezokola v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration); 12. B010 v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration); 13. Google Inc. v. Equustek Solutions Inc. and Others; 14. Dhakal and Others v. Nepal Government and Others; 15. Re Application by Finucane for Judicial Review.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: International Law Reports March 2020 219 x 146 mm c.667pp 978-1-108-49770-1 Hardback c. £170.00


Linguistics

15

The Cambridge Handbook of Germanic Linguistics Edited by Michael T. Putnam Pennsylvania State University

and B. Richard Page

Pennsylvania State University

Description The Germanic language family ranges from national languages with standardized varieties, including German, Dutch and Danish, to minority languages with relatively few speakers, such as Frisian, Yiddish and Pennsylvania German. Written by internationally renowned experts of Germanic linguistics, this Handbook provides a detailed overview and analysis of the structure of modern Germanic languages and dialects. Organized thematically, it addresses key topics in the phonology, morphology, syntax, and semantics of standard and nonstandard varieties of Germanic languages from a comparative perspective. It also includes chapters on second language acquisition, heritage and minority languages, pidgins, and urban vernaculars. The first comprehensive survey of this vast topic, the Handbook is a vital resource for students and researchers investigating the Germanic family of languages and dialects.

Key Features • The benchmark survey of the structure and usage of modern Germanic languages • Avoids overly technical theory, making the volume accessible to students as well as researchers • Covers a very wide range of examples including Scandinavian languages

Contents Introduction; Part I. Phonology: 1. Phonological processes in Germanic languages; 2. Germanic syllable structure; 3. The role of foot structure in Germanic; 4. Word-stress in Germanic; 5. Quantity in Germanic languages; 6. Germanic laryngeal phonetics and phonology; 7. Tone accent in North and West Germanic; 8. Intonation in Germanic; Part II. Morphology and Agreement Systems: 9. Verbal inflectional morphology in Germanic; 10. Inflectional morphology: nouns; 11. Principles of word formation; 12. Grammatical gender in modern Germanic languages;

13. Case in Germanic; 14. Complementizer agreement; Part III. Syntax: 15. VO/OV-base ordering; 16. The placement of finite verbs; 17. Germanic infinitives; 18. The unification of object shift and object scrambling; 19. Unbounded dependency constructions in Germanic; 20. The voice domain in Germanic; 21. Binding: the morphology, syntax, and semantics of reflexive and non-reflexive pronouns; 22. Verbal particles, results, and directed motion; 23. Structure of noun (NP) and determiner phrases (DP); Part IV. Semantics and Pragmatics:

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics March 2020 247 x 174 mm c.1000pp 34 b/w illus. 7 maps 52 tables 978-1-108-42186-7 Hardback £120.00

24. Modality in Germanic; 25. Tense and aspect in Germanic languages; 26. Prepositions and particles: place and path in English, German, and Dutch; 27. Negative and positive polarity items; 28. Grammatical reflexes of information structure in Germanic languages; Part V. Language Contact and Non-Standard Varieties: 29. Second language acquisition in Germanic languages; 30. Urban speech styles of Germanic languages; 31. The West Germanic dialect continuum; 32. The North Germanic dialect continuum; 33. Heritage Germanic languages in North America; 34. Minority Germanic languages; 35. Germanic contact languages.


16

Linguistics

The Cambridge Handbook of Intercultural Communication Edited by Guido Rings

Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge

and Sebastian Rasinger

Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge

Description A highly interdisciplinary overview of the wide spectrum of current international research and professional practice in intercultural communication, this is a key reference book for students, lecturers and professionals alike. Key examples of contrastive, interactive, imagological and interlingual approaches are discussed, as well as the impact of cultural, economic and socio-political power hierarchies in cultural encounters, essential for contemporary research in critical intercultural communication and postcolonial studies. The Handbook also explores the spectrum of professional applications of that research, from intercultural teaching and training to the management of culturally mixed groups, facilitating use by professionals in related fields. Theories are introduced systematically using ordinary language explanations and examples, providing an engaging approach to readers new to the field. Students and researchers in a wide variety of disciplines, from cultural studies to linguistics, will appreciate this clear yet in-depth approach to an ever-evolving contemporary field.

Key Features • Provides a broad overview to intercultural communication research by discussing key approaches and including multi-disciplinary perspectives • Explores the wider spectrum of professional applications, facilitating use by professionals in related fields, such as intercultural trainers or human resource managers • Uses ordinary language explanations and examples to introduce the theory step by step, meaning no specialized training in the field is needed

Contents Part I. Introducing Intercultural Communication; Part II. Theoretical Approaches; Part III. Methods; Part IV. Application; Part V. Assessment.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics February 2020 247 x 174 mm c.544pp 978-1-108-42969-6 Hardback £120.00


Literature

17

Magical Realism and Literature Edited by Christopher Warnes University of Cambridge

and Kim Anderson Sasser Wheaton College, Illinois

Description Magical realism can lay claim to being one of most recognizable genres of prose writing. It mingles the probable and improbable, the real and the fantastic, and it provided the late-twentieth century novel with an infusion of creative energy in Latin America, Africa, Asia, and beyond. Writers such as Alejo Carpentier, Gabriel García Márquez, Isabel Allende, Salman Rushdie, Ben Okri, and many others harnessed the resources of narrative realism to the representation of folklore, belief, and fantasy. This book sheds new light on magical realism, exploring in detail its global origins and development. It offers new perspectives of the history of the ideas behind this literary tradition, including magic, realism, otherness, primitivism, ethnography, indigeneity, and space and time.

Key Features • Offers new perspectives on the history of ideas related to magic, realism, primitivism, ethnography, selfhood, time and space • Presents a robust global perspective on the development of magical realism in many particular regions • Generates new insights into topics of major contemporary relevance, including religion, trauma, film, ecology, diaspora, the city, and the literary market

Contents Introduction; Part I. Origins: 1. Magic and otherness; 2. Primitivism, ethnography, and magical realism; 3. Magical realism and indigeneity: from appropriation to resurgence; 4. Insubstantial selves in magical realism in the Americas; 5. Space, time and magical realism; Part II. Development: 6. Magical realism and the ‘boom’ of the Latin American novel;

7. Magical realism: the European trajectory; 8. Beautiful lies: magical realism in Australasia; 9. Myth, orality and the African novel; 10. Breaking boundaries: the tale of North American magical realism; 11. East Asian magical realism; 12. Magic and realism in South Asia; 13. Fantastic cohabitations: magical realism in Arabic and Hebrew; Part III. Application: 14. From the inside of belief: magic and religion;

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Cambridge Critical Concepts April 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-42630-5 Hardback c. £96.00

15. Word, image, and cinematic ekphrasis in magical realist trauma narratives; 16. Scheherazade in the diaspora: home and the city in Arab migrant fiction; 17. Ecomagical realism in Alexis Wright’s Carpentaria and Linda Hogan’s People of the Whale; 18. Proximate magic: magical realism in Haruki Murakami’s 1Q84; 19. Magic and the literary market; Bibliography; Index.


18

Literature

Affect and Literature Edited by Alex Houen University of Cambridge

Description This book considers how ‘affect’, the experience of feeling or emotion, has developed as a critical concept within literary studies in different periods and through a range of approaches. Stretching from the classical to the contemporary, the first section of the book, ‘Origins’, considers the importance of particular areas of philosophy, theory, and criticism that have been important for conceptualizing affect and its relation to literature. Includes ancient Greek and Roman philosophy, eighteenth-century aesthetics, Marxist theory, psychoanalysis, queer theory, and postcolonial theory. The chapters of the second section, ‘Developments’, correspond to those of the previous section and build on their insights through readings of particular texts. The final ‘Applications’ section is focused on contemporary and future lines of enquiry, and revolves around a particular set of concerns: media and communications, capitalism, and an environment of affective relations that extend to ecology, social crisis, and war.

Key Features • Presents cutting-edge research on concepts of affect in terms of a range of literary genres: fiction, poetry, drama • Explores a large range of positive, negative, and aesthetic affects • Considers different interdisciplinary approaches to affect theory

Contents Introduction: affect and literature; Part I. Origins: 1. Poetic fear-related affects and society in GrecoRoman antiquity; 2. Secondary affect in Lessing, Mendelssohn, and Nicolai; 3. Affect and life in Spinoza, Nietzsche, and Bergson; 4. Feelings under the microscope: new critical affect; 5. ‘We manufacture fun: capital and the production of affect; 6. Jacques Lacan’s evanescent affects; 7. The durability of affect and the ageing of gay male queer theory;

8. Affect, meaning, becoming, and power: Massumi, Spinoza, Deleuze, and neuroscience; 9. Translating postcolonial affect; 10. Making sorrow sweet: emotion and empathy in the experience of fiction; Part II. Developments: 11. Feeling feelings in early modern England; 12. Laughable poetry; 13. Modernism, formal innovation, and affect in some contemporary Irish novels; 14. The antihumanist tone; 15. Bette Davis’s eyes and minoritarian survival: camp, melodrama, and spectatorship;

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Cambridge Critical Concepts January 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-42451-6 Hardback £89.99

16. Affective form; 17. Subaltern affects; Part III. Applications: 18. Affect and environment in contemporary ecopoetics; 19. Contemporary crisis fictions: twenty-first century disaffection; 20. Shiny happy imperialism: an affective exploration of ‘ways of life’ in the war on terror; 21. The digital’s amodal affect; 22. Digital special affects: on exhilaration and the Stun in CGI blockbuster films; 23. Cartesian affect.


Literature

19

Mary Wollstonecraft in Context Edited by Nancy E. Johnson

State University of New York, New Paltz

and Paul Keen

Carleton University, Ottawa

Description Mary Wollstonecraft (1759–1797) was one of the most influential and controversial women of her age. No writer, except perhaps her political foe, Edmund Burke, and her fellow reformer, Thomas Paine, inspired more intense reactions. In her brief literary career before her untimely death in 1797, Wollstonecraft achieved remarkable success in an unusually wide range of genres: from education tracts and political polemics, to novels and travel writing. Just as impressive as her expansive range was the profound evolution of her thinking in the decade when she flourished as an author. In this collection of essays, leading international scholars reveal the intricate biographical, critical, cultural, and historical context crucial for understanding Mary Wollstonecraft’s oeuvre. Chapters on British radicalism and conservatism, French philosophes and English Dissenters, constitutional law and domestic law, sentimental literature, eighteenth-century periodicals and more elucidate Wollstonecraft’s social and political thought, historical writings, moral tales for children, and novels.

Key Features • Chapters on biographical context unpack Wollstonecraft’s life and relationships with family, friends, and other intellectuals • Explains the reception of Wollstonecraft’s work, from her contemporaries to the twenty-first century, with references to the most important historical analyses of her works • Provides the most wide-ranging explanation yet of the historical period in which Wollstonecraft wrote, and its influence on her writing • Includes chapters on British radicalism and conservatism, the rights of women debate, social and political theory, law, education, and literature

Contents Part I. Life and Works: 1. Biography; 2. Correspondence; 3. Family; 4. Joseph Johnson; Part II. Critical Fortunes: 5. Early critical reception; 6. Nineteenth-century critical reception; 7. 1970s critical reception; 8. Recent critical reception; Part III. Historical and Cultural Contexts: 9. Writing the French Revolution; 10. Radical societies; 11. Radical publishers;

12. British conservatism; 13. Jacobin reformers; 14. Liberal reformers; 15. Conservative reformers; 16. French philosophes; 17. Dissenters; 18. Jean-Jacques Rousseau; 19. Edmund Burke; 20. William Godwin; 21. Political theory; 22. Feminist theory; 23. The constitution; 24. Property law; 25. Domestic law;

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Literature in Context January 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-41699-3 Hardback £85.00

26. Slavery and abolition; 27. The Bluestockings; 28. Conduct literature; 29. Theories of education; 30. Sentimentalism and sensibility; 31. English Jacobin novels; 32. Anti-Jacobin novels; 33. Children’s literature; 34. Gothic literature; 35. Travel writing; 36. History writing; 37. Periodicals; 38. Translations; Suggested further reading; Index.


20

Literature

The Princess Casamassima Henry James Edited by Adrian Poole University of Cambridge

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. Published in three volumes in 1886, The Princess Casamassima follows Hyacinth Robinson, a young London craftsman who carries the stigma of his illegitimate birth, and his French mother’s murder of his patrician English father. Deeply impressed by the poverty around him, he is driven to association with political dissidents and anarchists including the charismatic Princess Casamassima – who embodies the problems of personal and political loyalty by which Hyacinth is progressively torn apart. This edition is the first to provide a full account of the context in which the book was composed and received. Extensive explanatory notes enable modern readers to understand its nuanced historical, cultural and literary references, and its complex textual history.

Key Features • The first scholarly edition of this major nineteenth-century work explains the significance of the novel’s composition and first reception in the context of the time, 1885–6 • An extensive record of textual variants enables readers to trace the compositional process from manuscript to revisions for the New York Edition (1908–9) • Substantial explanatory notes assist the understanding of historical, cultural and literary references unfamiliar to the modern reader

Contents List of illustrations; Acknowledgments; List of abbreviations; General editors’ preface; General chronology of James’s life and writings; Introduction; Textual introduction; Chronology of composition and production;

Bibliography; The Princess Casamassima; Glossary of foreign words and phrases; Notes; Textual variants; Emendations; Appendix: preface to the New York Edition.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Complete Fiction of Henry James, 9 February 2020 228 x 152 mm 1076pp 978-1-107-01143-4 Hardback £150.00


Literature

21

The Beats A Literary History

Steven Belletto

Lafayette College, Pennsylvania

Description Kerouac. Ginsberg. Burroughs. These are the most famous names of the Beat Generation, but in fact they were only the front line of a much more wide-ranging literary and cultural movement. This critical history takes readers through key works by these authors, but also radiates out to discuss dozens more writers and their works, showing how they all contributed to one of the most far-reaching literary movements of the post-World War II era. Moving from the early 1940s to the late 1960s, this book explores key aesthetic and thematic innovations of the Beat writers, the pervasiveness of the Beatnik caricature, the role of the counterculture in the post-war era, the involvement of women in the Beat project, and the changing face of Beat political engagement during the Vietnam War era.

Key Features • Offers a new synthetic history of the Beat literary movement • Expands the ‘Beat canon’ beyond the most well-known names • Focuses on texts rather than biographies

Contents Part I. Get Hip, My Soul: How It All Started (1944–1948): 1. The wild outré gang of Columbia campus: the beginnings of a movement; 2. Write for them about them personally: the Beats and avant-garde literary networks at midcentury; Part II. Underground to Literary Celebrity (1948–1957): 3. Hipsters in the zoo: how the Beats came up from the underground;

4. The rise of the Beat novel: factualism to spontaneity; 5. The rise of Beat poetry: raw experience meets raw language; Part III. The Beatnik Era and the Profusion of Beat Literature (1958–1962): 6. The establishment strikes back: Beat becomes Beatnik; 7. Little magazines and subterranean networks; 8. The opening of the field;

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students March 2020 229 x 152 mm 459pp 978-1-107-17668-3 Hardback £29.99

9. Revisions of the real; 10. Ignus: from the Beat Hotel to Pull My Daisy; Part IV. Beat Politics (1962–1969): 11. The women who said something; 12. Liberating language; 13. The Vietnam effect; Coda.


22

Literature

New York A Literary History

Edited by Ross Wilson University of Nottingham

Description New York City’s streets, parks, museums, architecture, and its people appear in an array of literary works published from New York’s earliest settlement to the present day. The exploration of the city as both a symbol and as a reality has formed the basis of New York’s literature. Using the themes of adaptation, innovation, identity, and hope, this history explores novels, poetry, periodicals, and newspapers to examine how New York’s literature can be understood through the notion of movement. From the periodicals of the nineteenth century, the Arabic writers of the city in the early twentieth century, the literature of homelessness, childhood, and the spaces of tragedy and resilience within the metropolis, this diverse assessment opens up new areas of research within urban literature. It provides an innovative examination of how writing has shaped the lives of New Yorkers and how writing about the city has shaped the modern world.

Key Features • Connects the city’s literature through themes and issues rather than chronology, to explain the changes in the city’s literary traditions in an innovative way • Provides readers with greater insight into the global authorship and readership that constitutes New York’s literature • Uses a broader understanding of literature to move beyond the novel and consider how poetry, periodicals, and newspapers have all shaped the metropolis

Contents Introduction; 1. Introduction: a history of New York literature; Part I. Adaptation and Adjustment: 2. Changing culture: the contribution of European immigrants to New York City literature, 1870–1940; 3. Agitators and intellectuals: radical Jewish storytellers; 4. The mirror of the West: Arab-American literature in early twentieth century New York City; 5. Writing the Big Apple in Chinese and Chinese American literature; Part II. Innovation and Inspiration: 6. Sharing social space: New York as a city of the housed and unhoused;

7. Health reform in the mid-nineteenth-century New York periodical press; 8. Neoliberal New York: contemporary literature and the politics of urban redevelopment; 9. The marvellous and the mundane: ekphrastic New York novels; Part III. Identity and Place: 10. Growing up in Manhattan: children’s literature and New York City; 11. Wartime reading in the city, 1914–1918; 12. The periodical and the flâneur in early New York writing; 13. Multiple voices: New York City poetry; 14. The New York School: toward a definition;

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers March 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-47081-0 Hardback £26.99

Part IV. Tragedy and Hope: 15. The spatial drama of hope and desire in contemporary New York City literature; 16. New and Old Amsterdam in twenty-first century fiction; 17. Beats, black culture and bohemianism in midtwentieth century New York City; 18. ‘The sixth borough’: imagining New York after 9/11; 19. Walking the modern city: emotion and space in New York; 20. Afterword.


Literature

23

Cormac McCarthy in Context Edited by Steven Frye

California State University, Bakersfield

Description Cormac McCarthy is a writer informed by an intense curiosity. His interests range from the natural world, to philosophy and religion, to history and culture. Cormac McCarthy in Context offers readers the opportunity to understand how various influences inform his rich body of work. The collection explores the relationship McCarthy has with his favourite authors, writers such as Herman Melville, William Faulkner, and Ernest Hemingway. Other contexts are tremendously informative, including the American Romance tradition of the nineteenth century as well as modernity and the modernist literary movement. Influence and context are of absolute importance in understanding McCarthy, who is now being understood as one of the most significant authors of the contemporary period.

Key Features • Offers details on the various contexts that informed McCarthy’s work, including religious, philosophical, and cultural • Presents limited but substantive close readings that apply those contexts to various works • Provides readers with an understanding of various historical, cultural, scientific materials together and separate from their understanding of McCarthy’s work

Contents Part I. Environments: 1. Life and career; 2. The South; 3. The Southwest; 4. The Santa Fe Institute; Part II. Literary Contexts: Sources, Influences, Allusions: 5. William Faulkner; 6. Ernest Hemingway; 7. Herman Melville and the American Romance tradition; 8. Romanticism; 9. Naturalism; 10. The Bible;

11. Allusion and allegory; Part III. Intellectual Contexts: 12. The Judeo-Christian tradition; 13. Gnosticism; 14. Classical and pre-classical philosophy; 15. Nineteenth and twentieth-century philosophy; 16. Formal aesthetic choices; 17. Science and technology; Part IV. Social and Cultural Contexts: 18. American politics; 19. Race and cultural difference; 20. Ecology; 21. Modernity; 22. A visual artist on McCarthy;

Additional Information Level: undergraduate students, graduate students Series: Literature in Context December 2019 228 x 152 mm 418pp 978-1-108-48883-9 Hardback £94.99

23. Cinematic adaptations; 24. Cinematic influences; Part V. Archives, Critical History, Translation: 25. The archives and the Tennessee years, I: The Orchard Keeper and Outer; 26. The archives and the Tennessee years, II: Child of God, The Gardener’s Son, and Suttree; 27. The San Marcos archives: Blood Meridian and the West; 28. Letters and correspondence; 29. Critical history; 30. Translation and international reception, I ; 31. Translation and international reception, II.


24

Literature

Mark Twain in Context Edited by John Bird

Winthrop University, South Carolina

Description Mark Twain In Context provides the fullest introduction in one volume to the multifaceted life and times of one of the most celebrated American writers. It is a collection of short, lively contributions covering a wide range of topics on Twain’s life and works. Twain lived during a time of great change, upheaval, progress, and challenge. He rose from obscurity to become what some have called ‘the most recognizable person on the planet’. Beyond his contributions to literature, which were hugely important and influential, he was a businessman, an inventor, an advocate for social and political change, and ultimately a cultural icon. Placing his life and work in the context of his age reveals much about both Mark Twain and America in the last half of the nineteenth century, the twentieth century, and the first decades of the twenty-first century.

Key Features • Provides a broad and deep examination of Mark Twain’s life, work, and era • Introduces readers to key topics that are necessary for a contextual understanding of Mark Twain • Shows how deeply and widely Twain was involved in the issues and concerns of his era, reacting to great change and contributing to the national conversation

Contents Part I. Life: 1. Life; 2. Reading; 3. Autobiography; 4. Biographies; Part II. Literary Contexts: 5. Southwestern humor; 6. Literary comedians; 7. Local color and regionalism; 8. Early periodical writing; 9. Travel writing; 10. Short fiction; 11. Publishing; 12. Lectures and speeches;

13. Contemporary writers; 14. Realism and naturalism; Part III. Historical and Cultural Contexts: 15. Politics; 16. Business and economics; 17. Religion; 18. Science and technology; 19. Race and ethnicity: African Americans; 20. Race and ethnicity: native Americans; 21. Race and ethnicity: Chinese; 22. Cosmopolitanism; 23. Gender issues: women and domesticity; 24. Gender issues: sexuality; 25. History;

Additional Information Level: undergraduate students, graduate students Series: Literature in Context December 2019 228 x 152 mm 422pp 6 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47260-9 Hardback £84.99

26. Animals and animal rights; 27. Nationalism and anti-Imperialism; 28. Philosophy; Part IV. Reception and Criticism: 29. Contemporary and early reception and criticism (to 1960); 30. Reception and criticism (1960-present); 31. Translation and international reception; Part V. Historical, Creative, and Cultural Legacies: 32. Film, television, and theater adaptations; 33. Copyright, trademark, and brand; 34. Mark Twain sites.


Literature

25

Irish Literature in Transition, 1700–1780 Volume 1

Edited by Moyra Haslett Queen’s University Belfast

Description This volume examines eighteenth-century Irish literature, highlighting the diversity of texts, authors and approaches that characterises contemporary studies of the period. Chapters consider the contexts of history, politics, language, philosophy, gender, sexuality, and the environment while situating Irish literature in relation to Ireland, Britain, Europe and beyond. Well-known authors (Jonathan Swift, Edmund Burke and Oliver Goldsmith) are read alongside less familiar writers (including Mary Barber, William Chaigneau, Frances Sheridan, and Samuel Whyte) and popular and ephemeral literatures take their place with formerly canonical texts. It demonstrates the exciting vitality and richness of eighteenth-century Irish literature – written and performed – as well as its complex intersections with different communities and traditions. This book will be a key resource to scholars and students of Irish eighteenth-century studies as well as readers generally interested in questions of Anglophone and Irish-language culture, representations of gender and sexuality, and national and trans-national identities.

Key Features • Includes considerations of contemporary topics, such as gender and sexuality, environmentalism, and trans-cultural and transnational dimensions • Captures the excitement of the field with the study of less familiar authors • Showcases the diversity of texts, authors, and approaches characterizing contemporary studies

Contents Part I. Starting Points: 1. Starting-points and moving targets: transition and the early modern; 2. ‘We Irish’: writing and national identity from Berkeley to Burke; 3. Re-viewing Swift; Part II. Philosophical and Political Frameworks: 4. The prejudices of Enlightenment; 5. The Molyneux problem and Irish Enlightenment; 6. Samuel Whyte and the politics of eighteenthcentury Irish private theatricals; Part III. Local, National and Transnational Contexts: 7. Land and landscape in Irish poetry in English, 1700–1780;

8. The idea of an eighteenth-century national theatre; 9. Transnational influence and exchange: the intersections between Irish and French sentimental novels; 10. ‘An example to the whole world’: patriotism and imperialism in early Irish fiction; Part IV. Gender and Sexuality: 11. The province of poetry: women poets in early eighteenth-century Ireland; 12. Queering eighteenth-century Irish writing: Yahoo, Fribble, Freke; 13. ‘Brightest wits and bravest soldiers’: Ireland, masculinity, and the politics of paternity; 14. Fictions of sisterhood in eighteenth-century Irish literature;

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Irish Literature in Transition March 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 6 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42750-0 Hardback £89.99

Part V. Transcultural Contexts: 15. The popular criminal narrative and the development of the Irish novel; 16. Gaelic influences and echoes in the Irish novel, 1700–1780; 17. New beginning or bearer of tradition? Early Irish fiction and the construction of the child; Part VI. Retrospective Readings: 18. Re-imagining feminist protest in contemporary translation: The Lament for Art O’Leary and The Midnight Court; 19. ‘Our darkest century’: the Irish eighteenth century in memory and modernity.


26

Literature

Irish Literature in Transition, 1780–1830 Volume 2

Edited by Claire Connolly University College Cork

Description The years between 1780 and 1830 are vital decades in the history of Irish writing in English. This book charts the confluence of Enlightenment, antiquarian, and romantic energies within Irish literary culture and shows how different writers and genres absorbed, dispersed and remade those interests during five decades of political change. During those same years, literature made its own history. By the 1840s, Irish writing formed a recognizable body of work, which later generations would draw on, quote, anthologize and dispute. Questions raised by novels, poems and plays of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries – the politics of language and voice, the relationship between literature and locality, and the possibility of literature as a profession – resonated for many Irish writers over the centuries that followed and continue to matter today. This comprehensive volume will be a key reference for scholars and students of Irish literature and romantic literary studies.

Key Features • Features a combination of historical, thematic, and author-based chapters • Will help readers locate Irish literature within a global historical context • The first account of the emergence of modern Irish literature as a distinct cultural category

Contents Making maps, Irish literature in transition, 1780–1830; Part I. Origins: 1. Gaelic literature in transition 1780–1830; 2. Irish literature and classical modes; Part II. Transitions: 3. Conceptual frameworks: Irish literary theory, from politeness to politics; 4. Whigs, weavers and fire-worshippers: anglophone Irish poetry in transition; 5. Metropolitan theatre; 6. Harps and pepperpots, songs and pianos: music and Irish poetry;

7. Enlightened Ulster, Romantic Ulster: Irish magazine culture of the Union era; Part III. Reputations: 8. Placing Mary Tighe in Irish literary history: from manuscript culture to print; 9. Edgeworth and realism; 10. Lady Morgan and ‘the babbling page of history’: cultural transition as performance in the Irish national tale; 11. ‘The diabolical eloquence of horror’: Maturin’s wanderings; 12. English Ireland/Irish Ireland: the poetry and translations of J. J. Callanan; 13. Thomas Moore and the social life of forms;

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Irish Literature in Transition March 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49298-0 Hardback £89.99

14. ‘English, Irished’: Union and violence in the fiction of John and Michael Banim; 15. The transition of reputation: Gerald Griffin; 16. William Maginn: the Cork correspondent; Part IV. Futures: 17. ‘My country takes her place among the nations of the earth’: Ireland and the British archipelago in the age of the Union; 18. Mentalities in transition: Irish Romanticism in European context; 19. Ireland and Empire: popular fiction in the wake of the Union; 20. Transatlantic influences and futures; 21. The literary legacies of Irish Romanticism.


Literature

27

Irish Literature in Transition, 1830–1880 Volume 3

Edited by Matthew Campbell University of York

Description Ireland’s experience in the nineteenth century was quite different from that of Victorian Britain. Its fictions were written in differing forms – like the gothic or historical novel – and its poetry and drama were populated with ballad and song. Its writers were by turns nationalist or unionist, anglophile or de-anglicising. If the effects of famine and emigration were catastrophic for mid-nineteenth-century Irish culture, they initiated a literary story that spread across the diaspora. Despite the decline of spoken Irish, literature continued to be published, while scholarly endeavours such as translation or the Ordnance Survey preserved much from the Gaelic past. This rich volume examines the many forms of new writing that thrived throughout this period. Utilizing a thematic and historical approach, it addresses a broad anglophone readership in Victorian literature. Essays consider the Irish authors in America and India, women’s writing, and the resilience of Irish literature before the revival.

Key Features • Assesses the innovations and successes of nineteenth-century writing • Offers an authoritative overview of nineteenth-century Irish literature • Utilizes a thematic and historical approach, addressing a broad anglophone readership in Victorian literature

Contents 1. Victorian Ireland, 1830–1880: a transition state; 2. Satire, fiction and innovation between Dublin, Edinburgh and London; 3. Young Irelanders, Fenians, Land Leaguers: young Ireland and beyond; 4. Naming the place: the Ordnance Survey and its afterlives; 5. Political economy? The economics and sociology of famine;

6.Newman’s Irish University; 7. The charms of Ireland: travel writing and tourism; 8. England and Ireland, Tory and Whig: Thackeray, Trollope, Arnold; 9. The Irish in the Empire: Moore, Lever, Duffy; 10. An exiled history: Mitchel to O’Leary; 11. The writing of Irish-America;

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Irish Literature in Transition February 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-48048-2 Hardback c. £87.99

12. Antiquarians and authentics: survival and revival in Gaelic writing; 13. Poetry and its audiences: club, street, ballad; 14. Gothic, allegory, realism: the Irish ‘Victorian’ novel; 15. The rise of the woman writer; 16. Dion Boucicault and the gobalized Irish stage; 17. The popular prints.


28

Literature

Irish Literature in Transition, 1880–1940 Volume 4

Edited by Marjorie Elizabeth Howes Boston College, Massachusetts

Description The years between 1880 and 1940 were a time of unprecedented literary production and political upheaval in Ireland. It is the era of the 1916 Easter Rising, the Irish Revival, and a time when many major Irish writers – Yeats, Joyce, Beckett, Lady Gregory – profoundly impacted Irish and world literature. Recent research has uncovered new archives of previously neglected texts and authors. Organized according to multiple categories, ranging from single author to genre and theme, this volume allows readers to imagine multiple ways of re-mapping this crucial period. The book incorporates different, even competing, approaches and interpretations to reflect emerging trends and current debates in contemporary scholarship. As ongoing research in the field of Irish studies discovers new materials and critical strategies for interpreting them, our sense of Irish literary history during this period is constantly shifting. This volume seeks to capture the richness and complexity of the years 1880–1940 for our current moment.

Key Features • Suggests multiple ways of mapping the period rather than enforcing a single interpretation • Examines one of the most famous and richly productive periods in Irish literary history • Provides an accessible way for readers to make sense of a complex, changing literary landscape

Contents 1. Introduction; Part I. Revisionary Foundations: 2. The apotheosis of the vernacular: dialects and the Irish revival; 3. Origins of modern Irish poetry, 1880–1922; 4. Theatrical Ireland: new routes from the Abbey Theatre to the Gate Theatre; 5. Recovery and the ascendancy novel 1880–1932; Part II. Revoutionary Forms: 6. Print culture landscapes 1880–1922; 7. Revolutionary lives in the rearview mirror: memoir and autobiography;

8. The Hugh Lane controversy and the Irish revival; 9. New Irish women and new women’s writing; Part III. Major Figures in Transition: 10. Aging Yeats: from fascism to disability; 11. ‘I myself delight in Miss Edgeworth’s novels’: gender, power, and the domestic in Lady Gregory’s work; 12. Synge and disappearing Ireland; 13. Drumcondra modernism: Joyce’s suburban aesthetic; 14. London Irish: Wilde, Shaw and Yeats; Part IV. Aftermaths and Outcomes:

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Irish Literature in Transition March 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-48045-1 Hardback £89.99

15. Reimagining realism in post-independence Irish writing; 16. The free state of poetry; 17. Live wires and dead noise: revolutionary communications; 18. The dead, the undead, and the half-alive: the transition from narrative plot to formal trope in late modern Irish writing; Part V. Frameworks in Transition: 19. Irish literary criticism during the revival; 20. Retrospective readings: the rise of global Irish studies.


Literature

29

Irish Literature in Transition, 1940–1980 Volume 5

Edited by Eve Patten Trinity College Dublin

Description This volume explores the history of Irish writing between the Second World War (or the ‘Emergency’) in 1939 and the re-emergence of violence in Northern Ireland in the 1970s. It situates modern Irish writing within the contexts of cultural transition and transnational connection, often challenging pre-existing perceptions of Irish literature in this period as stagnant and mundane. While taking into account the grip of Irish censorship and cultural nationalism during the mid-twentieth century, these essays identify an Irish literary culture stimulated by international political horizons and fully responsive to changes in publishing, readership, and education. The book combines valuable cultural surveys with focussed discussions of key literary moments, and of individual authors such as Seán O’Faoláin, Samuel Beckett, Edna O’Brien, and John McGahern.

Key Features • Outlines fresh conceptual frameworks for approaching twentieth century Irish literary culture • Presents a combination of survey and author-based case studies in accessible discussion essays • Maintains a guiding editorial emphasis throughout on concepts of transition, evolution, and connection in the literary history of twentieth century Ireland

Contents Introduction; Part I. After the War: Ideologies in Transition: 1. The Second World War and its literary legacies; 2. Outside the whale: Seán O’Faoláin and the European public intellectual; 3. Irish writers and Europe; 4. Becoming a Republic: Irish writing in transition; Part II. Genres in Transition: 5. Intermodernism and the middlebrow in Irish writing; 6. Transitional life writing: Frank O’Connor and the autobiographical tradition;

7. Somehow it is not the same: Irish theatre and transition; 8. Samuel Beckett, Flann O’Brien and the literature of absurdity; Part III. Sex, Politics and Literary Protest: 9. Censorship, law and literature; 10. Sex, dissent and Irish fiction: reading John McGahern; 11. History, memory and protest in Irish theatre; 12. Violence, politics and the poetry of the troubles; Part IV. Identities and Connections: 13. State, space and experiment in Irish language prose writing;

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Irish Literature in Transition February 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-48044-4 Hardback £89.99

14. Anglo-Ireland: the big house novel in transition; 15. American-Irish literary relations; 16. ‘Home rule in our literature’: Irish-British poetic relations; Part V. Retrospective Frameworks: Criticism in Transition: 17. Literary biography in transition; 18. Publishing, Penguin and Irish writing; 19. Curriculum to canon: Irish writing and education; 20. Critics, criticism and the formation of an Irish literary canon.


30

Literature

Irish Literature in Transition: 1980–2020 Volume 6

Edited by Eric Falci

University of California, Berkeley

and Paige Reynolds

College of the Holy Cross, Massachusetts

Description Irish Literature in Transition, 1980–2020 elucidates the central features of Irish literature during the twentieth century’s long turn, covering its significant trends and formations, reassessing its major writers and texts, and providing path-making accounts of its emergent figures. Over the past forty years, life in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland has been transformed by new material conditions in each polity and by ideological shifts in the way people understand themselves and their relation to the world. Amid these remarkable changes, culture on both sides of the border has emerged as a global phenomenon, one that both reflects and intervenes in rapidly changing contemporary conditions. This volume accounts for broad patterns of literary and cultural production in this period and demonstrates the value of Irish contemporary literature within anglophone and European traditions and as a body of work that has kept its eye trained on the particularities of the island and its inhabitants.

Key Features • Gives an authoritative overview of contemporary Irish literature in chapters that focus on texts, performances, institutions, historical conditions, and practices • Situates Irish literature in a range of contexts relevant to larger understandings of the contemporary moment, a moment that is increasingly diverse, mobile, digital, and global • Offers incisive readings of recent work by contemporary Irish writers and cultural practitioners

Contents Introduction; Part I. Times: 1. The contemporary conditions of Irish language literature; 2. The cultures of poetry in contemporary Ireland; 3. Troubles literature and the end of the troubles; 4. Contemporary Irish theatre and media; 5. Writing childhood: young adult and children’s literature; Coda: Eavan Boland and Seamus Heaney; Part II. Spaces: 6. Habitations: space, place, real estate;

7. Crossings: Northern Irish literature from Good Friday to Brexit; 8. Adaptations: commemoration and contemporary Irish theatre; 9. Relocations: diaspora, travel, migrancy; 10. Arrivals: inward migration and Irish literature; Coda: Tom Murphy and Brian Friel; Part III. Forms of Experience: 11. The Irish realist novel; 12. Faith, secularism, and sacred institutions; 13. Writing the tiger: economics and culture; 14. Violence, trauma, recovery;

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Irish Literature in Transition March 2020 228 x 152 mm c.375pp 978-1-108-47404-7 Hardback £89.99

15. Modes of witnessing and Ireland’s institutional history; Coda: Edna O’Brien and Eimear McBride; Part IV. Practices, Institutions, and Audiences: 16. Mediation and translation in Irish language literature; 17. Irish studies and its discontents; 18. Historical transitions in Ireland on screen; 19. Irish blockbusters and literary stars at the end of the millenium; 20. Contemporary literature and public value; Coda: The Irish Times, Tramp Press, and the future present.


Literature

31

A Cultural History of Modern Chinese Literature Fuhui Wu

Peking University, Beijing

Description This is an illustrated cultural history of the emergence of modern literature in China from the late nineteenth century through the early years of the Chinese Republic, the 1930s and the war period, ending in 1949. Wu Fuhui takes an interdisciplinary approach to the topic, drawing in book production, translation, popular and elite texts, international influences and political history. Presented here in English translation for the first time, Wu argues that this was a transformative period in Chinese literature informed both by developments in China’s domestic history and the dynamics of global circulation and encounter.

Key Features • Makes available the work of one of China’s leading literary scholars in English for the first time • Presents an innovative, interdisciplinary approach to literary history • Richly illustrated

Contents List of illustrations; List of maps; List of tables; Introduction to the English edition; Preface; Part I. Promise of New Opportunities: 1. Wangping Street – Fuzhou Road: change of the scene of Chinese literature; 2. Vernacular newspapers and transformation of the written language of literature; 3. Earliest intellectuals with global outlook; 4. The ‘new literary style’ movement, a political motion in origin; 5. Chronicle of literary events in the year 1903 (an era of literary accumulation); 6. The rising of urban popular novels in an emerging international trading centre; 7. Emerging elites of the south society; 8. From Suzhou and Yangzhou to Shanghai: literature of the Mandarin Duck and Butterfly Literary School; Part II. The May Fourth Enlightenment Movement: 9. Introduction of spoken drama into China: the earliest theatre performances; 10. Building a bridge to world literature; 11. Incubation of a literary revolution home and abroad; 12. Rise of radicals from the New Youth and Peking University and Conservatives’ Counter Claims; 13. Chronicle of literary events in the year 1921 (an era of literary enlightenment);

14. A literary niche created by newspapers, magazines and publishing houses of Beijing and Shanghai; 15. Leading breakthroughs in modern vernacular poetry and short stories; 16. A history of the dissemination and acceptance of ‘The True Story of Ah Q’; 17. ‘Yu Si’, ‘casual talks’ and vernacular prose style; 18. Discovery of peasants and local colours by earlier native-soil literature; 19. Literary solace for urban citizens; Part III. The Coexistence of Diverse Types of Literature: 20. To the South: the return of literary centre; 21. Popularity, deepening and disputes of the leftwing literature; 22. Novels strongly characteristic of the era; 23. The successive boom of era-specific and individualized literary writings; 24. The graceful beauties of Belles-lettres by Beijing School Authors; 25. The new sensations of Shanghai School in the modern metropolis; 26. The literary horizon of two types of civilian society; 27. The professional theatre spoken drama in its mature stage; 28. Chronicle of literary events in the year 1936 (an era of diversification);

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge China Library February 2020 246 x 189 mm 932pp 117 b/w illus. 6 maps 978-1-107-06949-7 Hardback £150.00

29. Interactions between cinematographic art and literature; 30. Timely and overall embrace of world literature; Part IV. Under the Clouds of War: 31. Forming of multiple literary centres under the clouds of war; 32. Intellectuals’ economic conditions and their writing lifestyle; 33. Chongqing: national salvation literature, from boom to split; 34. Yan’an: from the wartime art and literature for the masses to the guiding principle of art and literature for workers, peasants and soldiers; 35. Guilin: the upsurge of theatre and publishing phenomenon of the wartime ‘cultural city’; 36. Kunming: reflections on personal experience of the era; 37. Shanghai and others: the pain of homelessness and the roundabout development of urban popular literature; 38. Hong Kong and Taiwan: separation, autonomy and growth of new literature; 39. From peasants to urban citizens: new momentum for the development of popular literature; 40. Chronicle of literary events in the year 1948 (an era of transition); Select bibliography; Index.


32

Management

The Cambridge Handbook of Workplace Affect Edited by Liu-Qin Yang Portland State University

Russell Cropanzano University of Colorado

Catherine S. Daus

Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville

and Vicente Martínez-Tur Universitat de València, Spain

Description Are you struggling to improve a hostile or uncomfortable environment at work, or interested in how such tension can arise? Experts in organizational psychology, management science, social psychology, and communication science show you how to implement interventions and programs to manage workplace emotion. The connection between workplace affect and relevant challenges in our society, such as diversity and technological changes, is undeniable; thus learning to harness that knowledge can revolutionise your performance in tackling workday issues. Applying major theoretical perspectives and research methodologies, this book outlines the concepts of display rules, emotional labour, work motivation, well-being, and discrete emotions. Understanding these ideas will show you how affect can promote team effectiveness, leadership, and conflict resolution. If you require a foundation for understanding workplace affect or a springboard into deeper, more interdisciplinary research, this book presents an integrative approach that is indispensable.

Key Features • Shows how applications of emotion research can improve organizational effectiveness, in terms of employee behavior, teamwork, leadership, and organizational climate • Offers ideas and potential solutions to scholars and workplace leaders who design and implement interventions and programs to manage workplace emotion more effectively • Presents an integrative approach to affect and emotion, spanning different scholarly disciplines • Maps out several research methodologies used to investigate workplace affect and emotion

Contents Part I. Theoretical and Methodological Foundations; Part II. Workplace Affect and Individual Worker Outcomes; Part III. Workplace Affect and Interpersonal and TeamLevel Processes; Part IV. Workplace Affect and Organizational, Social and Cultural Processes; Part V. Discrete Emotions at Work; Part VI. New Perspectives on Workplace Affect.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology June 2020 253 x 177 mm c.600pp 978-1-108-49403-8 Hardback c. £135.00


Mathematics

33

Geometric Regular Polytopes Peter McMullen

University College London

Description Regular polytopes and their symmetry have a long history stretching back two and a half millennia, to the classical regular polygons and polyhedra. Much of modern research focuses on abstract regular polytopes, but significant recent developments have been made on the geometric side, including the exploration of new topics such as realizations and rigidity, which offer a different way of understanding the geometric and combinatorial symmetry of polytopes. This is the first comprehensive account of the modern geometric theory, and includes a wide range of applications, along with new techniques. While the author explores the subject in depth, his elementary approach to traditional areas such as finite reflexion groups makes this book suitable for beginning graduate students as well as more experienced researchers.

Key Features • Provides the first comprehensive coverage of the modern geometric theory • Uses an elementary approach to topics and collects basic theory in one place, making it suitable for graduate students • Introduces new techniques for the use of researchers

Contents Foreword; Part I. Regular Polytopes: 1. Euclidean space; 2. Abstract regular polytopes; 3. Realizations of symmetric sets; 4. Realizations of polytopes; 5. Operations and constructions; 6. Rigidity; Part II. Polytopes of Full Rank:

7. Classical regular polytopes; 8. Non-classical polytopes; Part III. Polytopes of Nearly Full Rank: 9. General families; 10. Three-dimensional apeirohedra; 11. Four-dimensional polyhedra; 12. Four-dimensional apeirotopes; 13. Higher-dimensional cases; Part IV. Miscellaneous Polytopes:

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications, 172 March 2020 234 x 156 mm c.619pp 43 b/w illus. 19 colour illus. 3 tables 978-1-108-48958-4 Hardback £99.99

14. Gosset–Elte polytopes; 15. Locally toroidal polytopes; 16. A family of 4-polytopes; 17. Two families of 5-polytopes; Afterword; References; Symbol index; Author index; Subject index.


34

Medicine

Non-Neoplastic Pathology of the Gastrointestinal Tract A Practical Guide to Biopsy Diagnosis

Edited by Roger M. Feakins

Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust

Description This book concisely summarises non-neoplastic gastrointestinal (GI) pathology and provides histopathologists aiming to refresh or expand their knowledge with a practical approach to the interpretation of biopsies. It focuses on GI biopsies, but also covers the pathology of resections and other organs where appropriate. The editor and contributors bring their expertise as practicing diagnostic pathologists across Europe and the US. Examples of topics include inflammatory bowel disease, infections, vascular disorders, and inflammatory conditions specific to various anatomical sites. Fact sheets, practice points and tables facilitate rapid assimilation of information and enhance the reader’s experience, and with additional access to the full online version, including expandable images on Cambridge Core, achieve accuracy every time. High-quality illustrations are also numerous, and references are relevant and reliable. This book is a practical, readable and up-to-date asset for any pathologist encountering GI biopsies.

Key Features • Contributions from experienced diagnostic pathologists working across Europe and the US optimise the book’s clinical relevance • Readers can gain full HTML access of the whole book, with expandable figures and resources, via a scratch-off code inside the cover • Concise text, clear summaries, high-quality illustrations, fact sheets, practice points and tables help readers to absorb information quickly • Provides a unique focus on inflammatory GI biopsies, rather than tumours, and describes normal appearance

Contents Introduction; Acknowledgements; Dedication; 1. The value of gastrointestinal (GI) biopsy; 2. Gastrointestinal involvement by systemic disease; 3. Radiation effect; 4. Transplantation, immunodeficiency and immunosuppression; 5. Drug-induced disease; 6. Ischaemia and vascular disorders; 7. Paediatric conditions; 8. Dysplasia;

9. Normal oesophageal, gastric and duodenal mucosa; 10. Gastro-oesophageal reflux and Barrett’s oesophagus; 11. Infective oesophagitis and special types of oesophagitis; 12. Assessment of gastric biopsies; 13. Types of gastritis; 14. Duodenitis and related conditions; 15. Coeliac disease and its mimics; 16. Involvement of the upper gastrointestinal tract by inflammatory bowel disease; 17. Normal lower gastrointestinal mucosa;

Additional Information Level: medical specialists/consultants, specialist medical trainees March 2020 276 x 219 mm c.562pp 570 b/w illus. 570 colour illus. 978-1-108-76654-8 Hardback with Online Resource £170.00

18. Infective disorders of the lower gastrointestinal tract; 19. Jejunitis and ileitis; 20. Microscopic colitis; 21. Inflammatory bowel disease: diagnosis; 22. Inflammatory bowel disease: histological mimics; 23. Inflammatory bowel disease: complications; 24. Inflammatory bowel disease: an approach to reporting; 25. Ileal pouch anal anastomosis; 26. Diverticular disease, mucosal prolapse and related conditions; 27. Anal lesions; Index.


Medicine

35

Stroke Prevention and Treatment An Evidence-based Approach Second edition

Edited by Jeffrey L. Saver and Graeme J. Hankey Royal Perth Hospital

Description Stroke is the second leading cause of death and a leading cause of disability worldwide. This invaluable reference provides clinicians caring for stroke patients with ready access to the optimal evidence for best practice in stroke prevention, acute stroke treatment, and stroke recovery. Now an edited volume, the editors and authors, many of whom are members of the Cochrane Stroke Review Group, describe all available medical, endovascular, and surgical treatments; the rationale for using them; and the strength of the evidence for their safety and effectiveness. New chapters cover key, rapidly advancing therapeutic topics, including prehospital stroke care and regionalized stroke systems, endovascular reperfusion therapy, and electrical and magnetic brain stimulation to enhance recovery. This is an essential resource for clinicians translating into practice the many dramatic advances that have been made in the treatment and prevention of stroke, and suggesting the most appropriate interventions.

Key Features • Discussion of the results of systematic reviews of randomized controlled trials of interventions provides clinicians with a current, evidence-based overview of stroke care • Interpretation of the current evidence by an international panel of leading experts facilitates translation of best evidence into best practice • New coverage of primary prevention of stroke, and stroke rehabilitation and recovery, in addition to continued in-depth coverage of secondary stroke prevention and acute stroke treatment, ensures clinicians can find the advice relevant to their patients’ needs

Contents Part I. Foundations: 1. Stroke: the size of the problem; 2. Understanding evidence; Part II. Systems of Care: 3. Prehospital stroke care and regionalized stroke systems; 4. Organized acute inpatient stroke care; Part III. Acute Treatment of Ischemic Stroke and Transient Ischemic Attack: 5. Supportive care during acute cerebral ischemia; 6. Reperfusion of the ischemic brain by intravenous thrombolysis; 7. Reperfusion of the ischemic brain by endovascular thrombectomy and thrombolysis; 8. Collateral flow enhancement: blood pressure lowering and alteration of blood viscosity;

9. Acute antiplatelet therapy for the treatment of ischemic stroke and transient ischemic attack; 10. Acute anticoagulant therapy for the treatment of acute ischemic stroke and transient ischemic attack; 11. Treatment of brain edema; 12. Neuroprotection for acute brain ishemica; Part IV. Acute Treatment of Hemorrhagic Stroke: 13. Acute treatment of intracerebral hemorrhage; 14. Acute treatment of subarachnoid hemorrhage; Part V. Prevention: 15. Prevention of stroke by lowering blood pressure; 16. Prevention of stroke by lowering blood cholesterol concentrations; 17. Prevention of stroke by modification of additional vascular and lifestyle risk-factors;

Additional Information Level: medical specialists/consultants June 2020 246 x 189 mm 512pp 192 b/w illus. 978-1-107-11314-5 Hardback c. £84.99

18. Drugs, devices and procedural therapies to prevent recurrent cardiogenic embolic stroke; 19. Long-term antithrombotic therapy for large and small artery occlusive disease; 20. Carotid and vertebral artery revascularization; 21. Cervical artery dissections and cerebral vasculitis; 22. Prevention of intracerebral and subarachnoid hemorrhage; Part VI. Stroke Rehabilitation and Recovery: 23. Evidence-based motor rehabilitation after stroke; 24. Language and cognitive rehabilitation after stroke; 25. Using pharmacotherapy to enhance stroke recovery; 26. Electrical and magnetic brain stimulation to enhance post-stroke recovery.


36

Medicine

Geriatric Forensic Medicine and Pathology Edited by Kim A. Collins LifePoint Inc, South Carolina

and Roger W. Byard University of Adelaide

Description Forensic pathologists are increasingly faced with challenges when it comes to geriatric cases, due to an aging population and increased co-morbidities in the elderly. This text provides an up-to-date guide to all facets of geriatric forensic pathology, with contributions from experts from a variety of disciplines. Packed with color illustrations and case examples, chapters cover inflicted, self-inflicted and accidental trauma, as well as natural conditions leading to unexpected death. In addition, specific chapters cover a wide range of difficult and topical areas, from elder abuse, dementias and nutrition to pharmacology and toxicology issues, long-term care facilities and scene investigation. Topics such as euthanasia are also explored to provide the reader with a rich, contemporary understanding of medicolegal issues. This is an invaluable resource not only for pathologists, but also for medical practitioners and lawyers dealing with geriatric cases. The book comes packaged with online access to the text and high-resolution images.

Key Features • A unique reference text solely dedicated to the pathology and autopsy of elderly patients • Each chapter of the book is a stand-alone resource, helping readers to find pertinent information easily • Covers a very broad range of specific geriatric diseases and conditions, many of which have not been synthesized before with a forensic focus

Contents 1. A history of geriatric medicine and geriatric pathology; 2. Pathophysiology of ageing; 3. Medicolegal investigation of elder maltreatment and deaths; 4. The autopsy; 5. Fatal and non-fatal accidents; 6. Euthanasia; 7. Starvation, dehydration, malnutrition, and neglect; 8. Physical abuse and elder homicide; 9. The ageing foot – forensic considerations; 10. Forensic entomology; 11. Non-lethal elder abuse; 12. Sexual assault in the elderly;

13. Hypothermia and hyperthermia in the geriatric population; 14. Suicide and social isolation in elders; 15. Cardiovascular diseases in the elderly; 16. Lungs; 17. Infectious conditions and the immune system in the elderly; 18. Neurodegenerative diseases in the elder; 19. Other neurological conditions and age-related changes; 20. Genitourinary conditions; 21. The elder organ and tissue donor; 22. Conditions in gastrointestinal tract; 23. Hematologic conditions; 24. The oral cavity of the elder;

Additional Information Level: medical specialists/consultants, specialist medical trainees July 2020 276 x 219 mm 400pp 978-1-107-17777-2 Hardback with Online Resource £160.00

25. The anthropology of aging; 26. Endocrinology and diabetes; 27. Geriatric toxicology; 28. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation related injuries in elders; 29. Imaging of elders; 30. The ‘virtual autopsy’ and special radiographic applications; 31. Iatrogenic deaths; 32. Residential care facility deaths; 33. Morbid obesity and frailty; 34. Ancillary testing and special dissections; 35. The legal regulation of the consequences of aging; 36. Death certification.


Music

37

The Beatles in Context Edited by Kenneth Womack Monmouth University, New Jersey

Description Since their first performances in 1960, The Beatles’ cultural influence grew in unparalleled ways. From Liverpool to Beatlemania, and from dance halls to Abbey Road Studios and the digital age, the band’s impact exploded during their heyday, and has endured in the decades following their disbandment. Beatles fashion and celebrity culture, politics, psychedelia and the Summer of Love, all highlight different aspects of the band’s complex relationship with the world around them. With a wide range of short, snapshot chapters, The Beatles in Context brings together key themes in which to better explore The Beatles’ lives and work and understand their cultural legacy, focusing on the people and places central to The Beatles’ careers, the visual media that contributed to their enduring success, and the culture and politics of their time.

Key Features • Documents the varied contexts of The Beatles’ unparalleled cultural achievements • Focuses on the people and places central to The Beatles’ careers, the visual media that contributed to their enduring success, the culture and politics of their time, and their reception and legacy • Includes a biographical chronology and a list of resources for further reading

Contents Part I. Beatle People and Beatle Places: 1. Britain at mid-century and the rise of The Beatles; 2. The Beatles in Liverpool; 3. The Beatles on the Reeperbahn; 4. Brian Epstein, Beatlemania’s architect; 5. Love, love, love: tracing the contours of Tthe Beatles’ inner circle; Part II. The Beatles in Performance: 6. The love there that’s sleeping: guitars of the early Beatles; 7. From dance hall days to stadium tours; 8. Beatlemania!; 9. The end of the road; Part III. The Beatles on TV, Film, and the Internet: 10. From Juke-Box Jury to The Ed Sullivan Show; 11. Projecting the visuality of The Beatles: A Hard Day’s Night and Help!;

12. Beatletoons: moxie, music, and the media; 13. Documentary, rockumentary: Let It Be and the rooftop concert; 14. The Beatles redux: the Anthology series and the video age; 15. Pop goes the internet; Part IV. The Beatles’ Sound: 16. Abbey Road Studios; 17. Producing sound pictures with Sir George Martin; 18. Rock and Roll music!: The Beatles and the rise of the Merseybeat; 19. Positively Bob Dylan: The Beatles and the folk movement; 20. Listen to the colour of your dreams: The Beatles writ psychedelic; 21. Getting back; 22. On the record!: (dis)covering The Beatles;

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Composers in Context January 2020 228 x 152 mm c.356pp 10 b/w illus. 978-1-108-41911-6 Hardback £74.99

Part V. The Beatles as Sociocultural and Political Touchstones: 23. The Beatles, fashion, and cultural iconography; 24. The rise of celebrity culture and fanship with The Beatles in the 1960s; 25. Psychedelia, ‘swinging London’, and the Summer of Love (Kathryn Cox); 26. Leaving the West behind: The Beatles and India; Part VI. The Beatles’ Critical Reception and Cultural Legacy: 27. Phantom band: The Beatles after The Beatles; 28. The Beatles, Apple, and the business of music publishing; 29. Rebooting Beatlemania in the digital age; 30. The Beatles in the new millennium.


38

Philosophy

The Cambridge Heidegger Lexicon Edited by Mark A. Wrathall University of Oxford

Description Martin Heidegger (1889–1976) was one of the most original thinkers of the twentieth century. His work has profoundly influenced philosophers including Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida, Hannah Arendt, Hans-Georg Gadamer, Jürgen Habermas, Charles Taylor, Richard Rorty, Hubert Dreyfus, Stanley Cavell, Emmanuel Levinas, Alain Badiou, and Gilles Deleuze. His accounts of human existence and being and his critique of technology have inspired theorists in fields as diverse as theology, anthropology, sociology, psychology, political science, and the humanities. This Lexicon provides a comprehensive and accessible guide to Heidegger’s notoriously obscure vocabulary. Each entry clearly and concisely defines a key term and explores in depth the meaning of each concept, explaining how it fits into Heidegger’s broader philosophical project. With over 220 entries written by the world’s leading Heidegger experts, this landmark volume will be indispensable for any student or scholar of Heidegger’s work.

Key Features • The largest and most comprehensive lexicon of Heidegger’s terminology in existence, containing over 220 entries • Each entry begins with a concise definition before exploring concepts and debates in greater depth • Specific terms are cross-referenced with any alternative translations, and there is a German-English glossary of key words

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students February 2020 228 x 152 mm 900pp 978-1-107-00274-6 Hardback £94.99


Philosophy

39

Varieties of Democracy Measuring Two Centuries of Political Change

Michael Coppedge

University of Notre Dame, Indiana

John Gerring

University of Texas, Austin

Adam Glynn

Emory University, Atlanta

Carl Henrik Knutsen Universitetet i Oslo

Staffan I. Lindberg

Göteborgs Universitet, Sweden

Daniel Pemstein

North Dakota State University

Brigitte Seim

University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Svend-Erik Skaaning

Aarhus Universitet, Denmark

and Jan Teorell

Lunds Universitet, Sweden

Description Varieties of Democracy is the essential user’s guide to the Varieties of Democracy project (V-Dem), one of the most ambitious data collection efforts in comparative politics. This global research collaboration sparked a dramatic change in how we study the nature, causes, and consequences of democracy. This book is ambitious in scope: more than a reference guide, it raises standards for causal inferences in democratization research and introduces new, measurable, concepts of democracy and many political institutions. Varieties of Democracy enables anyone interested in democracy – teachers, students, journalists, activists, researchers and others – to analyze V-Dem data in new and exciting ways. This book creates opportunities for V-Dem data to be used in education, research, news analysis, advocacy, policy work, and elsewhere. V-Dem is rapidly becoming the preferred source for democracy data.

Key Features • Offers increased accessibility via guidance to users: what pitfalls to avoid and best practices for getting the most from these distinctive data • Can be used across fields by scholars specializing in political science, economics, sociology, law and history

Contents 1. Introduction: the story of Varieties of Democracy; 2. Conceptual scheme; 3. Data collection; 4. The measurement model and reliability; 5. Dimensions and components of democracy; 6. Data validation; 7. Explanatory analysis with Varieties of Democracy data.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students January 2020 229 x 152 mm c.246pp 44 b/w illus. 36 tables 978-1-108-42483-7 Hardback £74.99


40

Psychology

The Cambridge Handbook of Evolutionary Perspectives on Human Behavior Edited by Lance Workman University of South Wales

Will Reader

Sheffield Hallam University

and Jerome H. Barkow

Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia

Description The transformative wave of Darwinian insight continues to expand throughout the human sciences. While still centered on evolution-focused fields such as evolutionary psychology, ethology, and human behavioral ecology, this insight has also influenced cognitive science, neuroscience, feminist discourse, sociocultural anthropology, media studies, and clinical psychology. This handbook’s goal is to amplify the wave by bringing together world-leading experts to provide a comprehensive and up-to-date overview of evolution-oriented and influenced fields. While evolutionary psychology remains at the core of the collection, it also covers the history, current standing, debates, and future directions of the panoply of fields entering the Darwinian fold. As such, The Cambridge Handbook of Evolutionary Perspectives on Human Behavior is a valuable reference not just for evolutionary psychologists but also for scholars and students from many fields who wish to see how the evolutionary perspective is relevant to their own work.

Key Features • Brings together experts from a wide range of fields, including evolutionary psychology, ethology, human behavioral ecology, sociocultural anthropology, biology, neuroscience, and media studies • Introduces both theoretical and applied issues, making these accessible to students and scholars without specialized training in evolutionary theory • Includes up-to-date findings with regard to mechanisms underlying evolutionary change

Contents Part I. The Comparative Approach; Part II. Sociocultural Anthropology and Evolution; Part III. Evolution and Neuroscience; Part IV. Group Living – The Evolution of Social and Moral Behavior; Part V. Evolution and Cognition;

Part VI. Evolution and Development; Part VII. Sexual Selection and Human Sex Differences; Part VIII. Abnormal Behavior and Evolutionary Psychopathology; Part IX. Applying Evolutionary Principles; Part X. Evolution and the Media.

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology February 2020 279 x 216 mm c.604pp 22 b/w illus. 21 tables 978-1-316-64282-5 Hardback £150.00


Psychology

41

The Cambridge Handbook of Cognitive Aging A Life Course Perspective

Edited by Ayanna K. Thomas Tufts University, Massachusetts

and Angela Gutchess

Brandeis University, Massachusetts

Description Decades of research have demonstrated that normal aging is accompanied by cognitive change. Much of this change has been conceptualized as a decline in function. However, age-related changes are not universal, and decrements in older adult performance may be moderated by experience, genetics, and environmental factors. Cognitive aging research to date has also largely emphasized biological changes in the brain, with less evaluation of the range of external contributors to behavioral manifestations of age-related decrements in performance. This handbook provides a comprehensive overview of cutting-edge cognitive aging research through the lens of a life course perspective that takes into account both behavioral and neural changes. Focusing on the fundamental principles that characterize a life course approach – genetics, early life experiences, motivation, emotion, social contexts, and lifestyle interventions – this handbook is an essential resource for researchers in cognition, aging, and gerontology.

Key Features • Explores cognitive aging through both lifespan and life course perspectives • Highlights the influence of non-cognitive factors on cognitive aging • Includes targeted summaries of sub-sections to further explain more complex points • Considers both behavioral and neural changes with aging

Contents Part I. Overview of Models of Cognitive Aging; Part II. Overview of Models of Cognitive Aging; Part III. Aging in a Social Context; Part IV. Early Life and Biological Factors; Part V. Later Life and Interventions.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology April 2020 247 x 174 mm c.774pp 978-1-108-42834-7 Hardback £155.00


42

Psychology

The Cambridge Handbook of the International Psychology of Women Edited by Fanny M. Cheung City University of Hong Kong

and Diane F. Halpern

Claremont McKenna College, California

Description There is a growing knowledge base in understanding the differences and similarities between women and men, as well as the diversities among women and sexualities. Although genetic and biological characteristics define human beings conventionally as women and men, their experiences are contextualized in multiple dimensions in terms of gender, sexuality, class, age, ethnicity, and other social dimensions. Beyond the biological and genetic basis of gender differences, gender intersects with culture and other social locations which affect the socialization and development of women across their life span. This handbook provides a comprehensive and up-to-date resource to understand the intersectionality of gender differences, to dispel myths, and to examine gender-relevant as well as culturally relevant implications and appropriate interventions. Featuring a truly international mix of contributors, and incorporating cross-cultural research and comparative perspectives, this handbook will inform mainstream psychology of the international literature on the psychology of women and gender.

Key Features • Builds upon and expands the existing scholarship in the field by taking a broader perspective and using an international framework • Draws upon the expertise of international scholars to examine gender differences • Provides a thorough, contemporary and cross-cultural comparison of effects of intersecting factors such as income/class, ethnicity, sexuality, age, and functionality on the situation of women

Contents Part I. The Underpinnings of Sex and Gender and How to Study Them; Part II. Developmental Perspectives of the International Psychology of Women; Part III. Cognitive and Social Factors; Part IV. Work and Family Issues; Part V. Inequality and Social Justice; Part VI. Health and Well-being.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology July 2020 279 x 216 mm c.700pp 18 b/w illus. 1 table 978-1-108-47303-3 Hardback c. £135.00


Psychology

43

The Cambridge Handbook of Applied School Psychology Edited by Frank C. Worrell University of California, Berkeley

Tammy L. Hughes

Duquesne University, Pittsburgh

and Dante D. Dixson Michigan State University

Description Practice books are often simple ‘how to’ lists or straightforward ‘recipes’ and the practitioner still does not know why the activity is related to the outcome they seek. In essence, they lose how the specifics of the practice are related to the theory of change or the theory of how the problem developed in the first place. This leads to practitioners potentially removing crucial elements of best practice procedures when making modifications to tackle new or different problems in an unfamiliar context. By understanding the theoretical underpinnings, practitioners can better plan for adjustments because they know how the outcomes they seek are informed by the theory. Engagingly written and perfect for day-to-day use, this book translates state-of-the-art research and interdisciplinary theory into practical recommendations for those working with children and adolescents.

Key Features • Translates theory concerning childhood challenges into practical recommendations to ensure better outcomes • Contains lists of resources at the end of each chapter • Connects empirical findings to best practice indicators and highlights how such research informs and supports professional decision-making

Contents Part I. Individual-Level academic interventions; Part II. Teacher and system-level interventions; Part III. Interventions from Educational and Social/ Personality Psychology; Part IV. Behavioral and social emotional interventions; Part V. Health and Pediatric Interventions; Part VI. Family Connections and lLfe Transitions; Part VII. Special Populations; Part VIII. Conclusion.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology June 2020 253 x 177 mm c.600pp 978-1-108-41596-5 Hardback c. £110.00


44

Psychology

The Cambridge Handbook of the Imagination Edited by Anna Abraham Leeds Beckett University

Description The human imagination manifests in countless different forms. We dream the possible and the impossible. How do we do this so effortlessly? Why did the capacity for imagination evolve and seem to manifest uniquely in our species? This handbook reflects on such questions by collecting perspectives from leading experts. It showcases a rich and detailed analysis on how the imagination is understood across several disciplines of study, including anthropology, archaeology, medicine, neuroscience, psychology, philosophy and the arts. An integrated theoretical-empirical-applied picture of the field is presented, which informs researchers, students and practitioners about the issues of relevance across the board. With each chapter, human imagination is explained – what it entails, how it evolved, and why it singularly defines us as a species.

Key Features • Written by experts in neuroscience, philosophy, psychology and the arts • Supplies a comprehensive and multidisciplinary analysis of human imagination • Presents an integrated theoretical-empirical-applied picture of the field of imagination

Contents 1. Surveying the imagination landscape; Part I. Theoretical Perspectives on the Imagination: 2. The evolution of a human imagination; 3. Material imagination: an anthropological perspective; 4. The archaeological imagination; 5. Philosophical perspectives on imagination in the Western tradition; 6. Imagination in classical India: a short introduction; 7. From prediction to imagination; 8. Memory and imagination: perspectives on constructive episodic simulation; 9. Capturing the imagination; 10. A sociocultural perspective on imagination; 11. Artificial intelligence and imagination; Part II. Imagery-Based Forms of Imagination: 12. The visual imagination; 13. Musical imagery; 14. Neurophysiological foundations and practical applications of motor imagery; 15. Temporal mental imagery; 16. Emotional mental imagery; 17. Multisensory perception and mental imagery; 18. Evocation: how mental imagery spans across the senses; Part III. Intentionality-Based Forms of Imagination:

19. Continuities and discontinuities between imagination and memory: the view from philosophy; 20. Imagining and experiencing the self on cognitive maps; 21. The neuroscience of imaginative thought: an integrative framework; 22. Imagination and self-referential thinking; 23. Imaginary friends: how imaginary minds mimic real life; 24. Imagination and moral cognition; 25. Moral reasoning: a network neuroscience perspective; 26. The future-directed functions of the imagination: from prediction to metaforesight; Part IV. Novel Combinatorial Forms of Imagination: 27. On the interaction between episodic and semantic representations: constructing a unified account of imagination; 28. How imagination supports narrative experiences for textual, audiovisual, and interactive narratives; 29. Development of the fantasy-reality distinction; 30. Imagining the real: Buddhist paths to wholeness in Tibet; 31. Hypothetical thinking; 32. The counterfactual imagination: the impact of alternatives to reality on morality;

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology May 2020 253 x 177 mm c.848pp 978-1-108-42924-5 Hardback £145.00

33. A look back at pioneering theories of the creative brain; Part V. Phenomenology-Based Forms of Imagination: 34. Imagination in the philosophy of art; 35. Imagination in aesthetic experience; 36. The arts and human symbolic cognition: art is for social communication; 37. Aesthetic engagement: lessons from art history, neuroscience, and society; 38. Dance and the imagination: be a butterfly!; 39. Imagination, intersubjectivity and a musical therapeutic process: a personal narrative; Part VI. Altered States of Imagination: 40. Dreaming beyond imagination and perception; 41. Dreaming is imagination roaming freely, based on embodied simulation, and subserved by an unconstrained default network; 42. Aphantasia; 43. Hypnosis and imagination; 44. Hallucinations and imagination; 45. The psychiatry of imagination; 46. Meditation and imagination; 47. Flow in performance and creative cognition: an optimal state of task-based adaptation; 48. The force of the imagination.


Psychology

45

The Cambridge Handbook of Research Methods in Clinical Psychology Edited by Aidan G. C. Wright University of Pittsburgh

and Michael N. Hallquist Pennsylvania State University

Description This book integrates philosophy of science, data acquisition methods, and statistical modeling techniques to present readers with a forward-thinking perspective on clinical science. It reviews modern research practices in clinical psychology that support the goals of psychological science, study designs that promote good research, and quantitative methods that can test specific scientific questions. It covers new themes in research including intensive longitudinal designs, neurobiology, developmental psychopathology, and advanced computational methods such as machine learning. Core chapters examine significant statistical topics, for example missing data, causality, meta-analysis, latent variable analysis, and dyadic data analysis. A balanced overview of observational and experimental designs is also supplied, including preclinical research and intervention science. This is a foundational resource that supports the methodological training of the current and future generations of clinical psychological scientists.

Key Features • Integrates philosophy of science, data acquisition methods, and statistical modeling techniques • Supplies clear links between conceptual underpinnings, study design, and analysis • Provides a forward-thinking perspective on the rapidly changing landscape of clinical science

Contents Section I. Clinical Psychological Science: An Evolving Field; Section II. Observational Approaches; Section III. Experimental and Biological Approaches; Section IV. Developmental Psychopathology and Longitudinal Methods; Section V. Intervention Approaches; Section VI. Intensive Longitudinal Designs; Section VII. General Analytic Considerations.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology February 2020 253 x 177 mm 600pp 65 b/w illus. 29 tables 978-1-107-18984-3 Hardback £180.00


46

Psychology

The Cambridge Handbook of Personality Disorders Edited by Carl W. Lejuez University of Kansas

and Kim L. Gratz

University of Toledo, Ohio

Description This Handbook provides both breadth and depth regarding current approaches to the understanding, assessment, and treatment of personality disorders. The five parts of the book address etiology, models, individual disorders and clusters, assessment, and treatment. A comprehensive picture of personality pathology is supplied that acknowledges the contributions and missteps of the past, identifies the crucial questions of the present, and sets a course for the future. It also follows the changes the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM–5) has triggered in the field of personality disorders. The editors take a unique approach where all chapters include two commentaries by experts in the field, as well as an author rejoinder. This approach engages multiple perspectives and an exchange of ideas. It is the ideal resource for researchers and treatment providers at all career stages.

Key Features • Addresses both categorical and dimensional perspectives • Explains etiology, models, individual disorders and clusters, assessment, and treatment • Has a broad appeal across multiple disciplines and for researchers or treatment providers ranging from trainees to those who have shaped the field • Each chapter has two commentaries and a rejoinder, which provides multiple perspectives and an exchange of ideas

Contents List of figures; List of tables; List of contributors; Introduction to the Cambridge Handbook of Personality Disorders; Part I. Etiology: 1. Neuroimaging in personality disorders; 2. Issues and new directions in personality disorder genetics; 3. Environmental and sociocultural influences on personality disorders; 4. Personality pathology in youth; Part II. Models: 5. Controversies in the classification and diagnosis of personality disorders;

6. Categorical models of personality disorders; 7. The five-factor model of personality disorders; 8. Interpersonal models of personality pathology; Part III. Individual Disorders and Clusters: 9. Cluster a personality disorders; 10. Borderline personality disorder; 11. An integrative biobehavioral trait perspective on antisocial personality disorder and psychopathy; 12. Narcissistic and histrionic personality disorders; 13. Cluster C anxious-fearful personality pathology and avoidance; Part IV. Assessment: 14. Methods and current issues in dimensional assessments of personality pathology;

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology March 2020 279 x 216 mm c.542pp 978-1-108-42434-9 Hardback £180.00

15. Categorical assessment of personality disorders: considerations of reliability and validity; 16. Assessment of mechanisms in personality disorders; Part V. Treatment: 17. Cognitive behavioral approaches; 18. Psychoanalytic/psychodynamic approaches to personality disorders; 19. Using DSM-5 and ICD-11 personality traits in clinical treatment; 20. Brief therapeutic approaches for personality disorders; 21. Recent developments in the pharmacologic management of personality disorders; Index.


Psychology

47

The Cambridge Handbook of the Changing Nature of Work Edited by Brian J. Hoffman University of Georgia

Mindy K. Shoss

University of Central Florida

and Lauren A. Wegman Twitter

Description This handbook provides an overview of the research on the changing nature of work and workers by marshalling interdisciplinary research to summarize the empirical evidence and provide documentation of what has actually changed. Connections are explored between the changing nature of work and macro-level trends in technological change, income inequality, global labor markets, labor unions, organizational forms, and skill polarization, among others. This edited volume also reviews evidence for changes in workers, including generational change (or lack thereof), that has accumulated across domains. Based on documented changes in work and worker behavior, the handbook derives implications for a range of management functions, such as selection, performance management, leadership, workplace ethics, and employee well-being. This evaluation of the extent of changes and their impact gives guidance on what best practices should be put in place to harness these developments to achieve success.

Key Features • Summarizes empirical evidence for what has actually changed by marshalling interdisciplinary research on changes in the nature of work • Provides data-driven evidence and figures to document changes in work and workers over the past several decades • Draws from empirical evidence to derive implications for a range of management functions, such as selection, performance management, leadership, and well-being

Contents Part I. Introduction to the Changing Nature of Work; Part II. What Has Changed?; Part III. Implications for Talent Management and Impact on Employees.

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology March 2020 253 x 177 mm c.636pp 978-1-108-41763-1 Hardback c. £153.00


48

Religiom

John Calvin in Context Edited by R. Ward Holder

Saint Anselm College, New Hampshire

Description John Calvin in Context offers a comprehensive overview of Calvin’s world. Including essays from social, cultural, feminist, and intellectual historians, each specially commissioned for this volume, the book considers the various early modern contexts in which Calvin worked and wrote. It captures his concerns for Northern humanism, his deep involvement in the politics of Geneva, his relationships with contemporaries, and the polemic necessities of responding to developments in Rome and other Protestant sects, notably Lutheran and Anabaptist. The volume also explores Calvin’s tasks as a pastor and doctor of the church, who was constantly explicating the text of scripture and applying it to the context of sixteenth-century Geneva, as well as the reception of his role in the Reformation and beyond. Demonstrating the complexity of the world in which Calvin lived, John Calvin in Context serves as an essential research tool for scholars and students of early modern Europe.

Key Features • Places Calvin in his social and cultural context, drawing on his life in the sixteenth century • Places Calvin in his intellectual context, as part of an intellectual millieu rather than as a solitary figure • Identifies some of the ways Calvin has been received, drawing on the traditions of reading Calvin that both help and hinder the modern view of him and his work

Contents Introduction. John Calvin in context; Part I. France and its Influence: 1. John Calvin’s life; 2. French Christianity in the early 1500s; 3. The University of Paris during Calvin’s life; 4. French humanism; 5. French religious politics; 6. The French wars of religion; Part II. Switzerland, Southern Germany, and Geneva: 7. The Swiss Confederation in the age of John Calvin; 8. Strasbourg in the sixteenth century; 9. Geneva and its protectors; 10. Daily life in Geneva; 11. Reforming the city-state: government in Geneva; 12. Consistories and discipline; 13. Reformed education and the Genevan Academy; 14. Worship, pastorale, and diaconate in early modern life; Part III. Empire and Society: 15. The politics of the emperors;

16. Judaism in Europe during the late Middle Ages and Renaissance; 17. Refugees; 18. Calvin and women; Part IV. The Religious Question: 19. Western ideals of religious reform; 20. The Luther affair; 21. Religious colloquies; 22. The Council of Trent and the Augsburg interirm; 23. Biblical scholarship; 24. The printed word; 25. Polemic’s purpose; 26. The style of theology: editions of the institutes; 27. Baptism; 28. The Eucharist; 29. Predestination in early modern thought; 30. The challenge of heresy: Servetus and Stancaro; 31. Idolatry; 32. Trinitarian controversies; 33. Nicodemism and libertinism;

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students November 2019 228 x 152 mm 246pp 2 maps 978-1-108-48240-0 Hardback £84.99

Part V. Calvin’s Influences: 34. Calvin and Luther; 35. Calvin and Melanchthon; 36. Calvin and the Swiss and South German evangelicals; 37. Calvin’s friends: Farel, Viret, and Beza; 38. Calvin’s critics: Bolsec and Castellio; 39. Calvin’s Lutheran critics; 40. Calvin’s Catholic critics; 41. Calvin and the Anabaptists; Part VI. Calvin’s Reception: Our Context: 42. International Calvinism; 43. Calvin legends: hagiography and demonology; 44. Calvin in the British Isles and the colonies; 45. Calvin in the Netherlands and the Dutch Atlantic world; 46. Calvin in Asia; 47. Calvin’s theoretical legacy in the seventeenthnineteenth centuries; 48. Calvin’s fortunes in the twentieth century; Conclusion. Calvin and Calvinism.


Sociology

49

The New Handbook of Political Sociology Edited by Thomas Janoski University of Kentucky

Cedric de Leon

University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Joya Misra

University of Massachusetts, Amherst

and Isaac William Martin University of California, San Diego

Description Political sociology is a large and expanding field with many new developments, and The New Handbook of Political Sociology supplies the knowledge necessary to keep up with this exciting field. Written by a distinguished group of leading scholars in sociology, this volume provides a survey of this vibrant and growing field in the new millennium. The Handbook presents the field in six parts: theories of political sociology, the information and knowledge explosion, the state and political parties, civil society and citizenship, the varieties of state policies, and globalization and how it affects politics. Covering all subareas of the field with both theoretical orientations and empirical studies, it directly connects scholars with current research in the field. A total reconceptualization of the first edition, the new handbook features nine additional chapters and highlights the impact of the media and big data.

Key Features • Covers all the subareas of political sociology with both theoretical orientations and a strong basis in empirical studies of many topics • Connects scholars with actual research being done on the subareas of sociology so that theory and research can be assessed together rather than simply relying on theory or critical endeavors • Focuses strongly on the new impact of political parties through articulation theories, showing the refocusing of political sociology on how political parties shape public opinion and the demands of various groups in society

Contents Part I. Theories of Political Sociology; Part II. Media Explosion, Knowledge as Power, and Demographic Reversals; Part III. The State and its Political Organizations; Part IV. Civil Society: The Roots and Processes of Political Action; Part V. Established and New State Policies and Innovations; Part VI. Globalization and New and Bigger Sources of Power and Resistance.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students March 2020 253 x 177 mm 1152pp 14 b/w illus. 8 tables 978-1-107-19349-9 Hardback £175.00


50

Index

A

F

M

Abraham, Anna......................................44 Affect and Literature..............................18 Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics Book X.....7 Art of Sculpture in Fifteenth-Century Italy, The................................................3 Aufderheide, Joachim...............................7

Falci, Eric................................................30 Feakins, Roger M....................................34 Foreign Languages Press........................ 8 Frye, Steven............................................23

Magical Realism and Literature...............17 Mao Zedong............................................8 Mark Twain in Context...........................24 Martínez-Tur, Vicente..............................32 Mary Wollstonecraft in Context...............19 McMullen, Peter.....................................33 Misra, Joya.............................................49

B Barkow, Jerome H...................................40 Beatles in Context, The...........................37 Beats, The..............................................21 Belletto, Steven......................................21 Bird, John...............................................24 Bloch, Amy R............................................3 Byard, Roger W.......................................36

C

G Gargilius Martialis: The Agricultural Fragments.............................................5 Geometric Regular Polytopes..................33 Geriatric Forensic Medicine and Pathology............................................36 Gerring, John.........................................39 Glynn, Adam..........................................39 Gratz, Kim L...........................................46 Greenwood, Christopher................... 13, 14 Gutchess, Angela....................................41

Cambridge Handbook of Applied School Psychology, The...................................43 Cambridge Handbook of Cognitive Aging, The...........................................41 Cambridge Handbook of Evolutionary Perspectives on Human Behavior, The...40 Cambridge Handbook of Germanic Linguistics, The....................................15 Cambridge Handbook of Intercultural Communication, The............................16 Cambridge Handbook of Personality Disorders, The......................................46 Cambridge Handbook of Research Methods in Clinical Psychology, The.....45 Cambridge Handbook of the Changing Nature of Work, The............................47 Cambridge Handbook of the Imagination, The..................................44 Cambridge Handbook of the International Psychology of Women, The.....................................................42 Cambridge Handbook of Workplace Affect, The...........................................32 Cambridge Heidegger Lexicon, The.........38 Cambridge History of Science, The...........10 Cambridge World History of Violence, The.................................................... 9 Campbell, Matthew................................27 Cheung, Fanny M...................................42 Collins, Kim A.........................................36 Commentary on the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, A........................................................12 Connolly, Claire......................................26 Coppedge, Michael................................39 Cormac McCarthy in Context..................23 Cropanzano, Russell...............................32 Cultural History of Modern Chinese Literature, A.........................................31

H

D

L

Damousi, Joy.......................................... 9 Daus, Catherine S...................................32 de Leon, Cedric......................................49 Diogenes Laertius: Lives of Eminent Philosophers..........................................6 Dixson, Dante D.....................................43 Dwyer, Phillip......................................... 9

Hallquist, Michael N...............................45 Halpern, Diane F.....................................42 Hankey, Graeme J...................................35 Haslett, Moyra........................................25 Hoffman, Brian J.....................................47 Holder, R. Ward......................................48 Houen, Alex...........................................18 Howes, Marjorie Elizabeth......................28 Hughes, Tammy L....................................43

I International Law Reports................. 13, 14 International Protection of Investments...11 Irish Literature in Transition, 1700– 1780...................................................25 Irish Literature in Transition, 1780– 1830...................................................26 Irish Literature in Transition, 1830– 1880...................................................27 Irish Literature in Transition, 1880– 1940...................................................28 Irish Literature in Transition, 1940– 1980...................................................29 Irish Literature in Transition: 1980– 2020...................................................30

J James, Henry..........................................20 Janoski, Thomas.....................................49 Jin, Chongji..............................................8 John Calvin in Context............................48 Johnson, Nancy E...................................19

K Keen, Paul..............................................19 Knutsen, Carl Henrik...............................39

Lee, Karen........................................ 13, 14 Lejuez, Carl W........................................46 Libanius: Ten Mythological and Historical Declamations.........................4 Lindberg, Staffan I..................................39 Livingstone, David N...............................10

N New Handbook of Political Sociology, The.....................................................49 New York...............................................22 Non-Neoplastic Pathology of the Gastrointestinal Tract...........................34 Numbers, Ronald L.................................10

P Page, B. Richard.....................................15 Patten, Eve.............................................29 Pemstein, Daniel....................................39 Penella, Robert J.......................................4 Poole, Adrian..........................................20 Princess Casamassima, The.....................20 Putnam, Michael T..................................15

R Rasinger, Sebastian................................16 Reader, Will............................................40 Reinisch, August.....................................11 Reynolds, Paige......................................30 Rings, Guido...........................................16

S Sasser, Kim Anderson..............................17 Saver, Jeffrey L........................................35 Schreuer, Christoph................................11 Shoss, Mindy K.......................................47 Slotten, Hugh Richard.............................10 Smith, Brendan........................................8 Stroke Prevention and Treatment............35

T Taylor, Paul M.........................................12 Thomas, Ayanna K..................................41

V Varieties of Democracy...........................39

W Warnes, Christopher...............................17 Wegman, Lauren A.................................47 White, Stephen.........................................6 William Martin, Isaac..............................49 Wilson, Ross..........................................22 Womack, Kenneth..................................37 Workman, Lance....................................40 Worrell, Frank C......................................43 Wrathall, Mark A....................................38 Wright, Aidan G. C..................................45 Wu, Fuhui..............................................31

Y Yang, Liu-Qin.........................................32


Index Z Zainaldin, James L. ..................................5 Zolli, Daniel M. ........................................3

51


January - June 2020

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Art 3

Amy R. Bloch

The Art of Sculpture in Fifteenth-Century Italy

978-1-108-42884-2

Hardback

£74.99

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Classical Studies 4

Robert J. Penella

Libanius: Ten Mythological and Historical Declamations

978-1-108-48137-3

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£85.00

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James L. Zainaldin

Gargilius Martialis: The Agricultural Fragments

978-1-108-49989-7

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£110.00

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Stephen White

Diogenes Laertius: Lives of Eminent Philosophers

978-0-521-88335-1

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Joachim Aufderheide

Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics Book X

978-1-107-10440-2

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Mao Zedong

978-1-107-09272-3

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History 8

Chongji Jin

9

Phillip Dwyer

10

Hugh Richard Slotten

The Cambridge World History of Violence

978-1-316-62688-7

4 Volume Hardback Set

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The Cambridge History of Science

978-0-521-58081-6

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Law 11

August Reinisch

International Protection of Investments

978-1-107-01358-2

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Paul M. Taylor

A Commentary on the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights

978-1-108-49885-2

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Christopher Greenwood

International Law Reports

978-1-108-49768-8

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Christopher Greenwood

International Law Reports

978-1-108-49770-1

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Michael T. Putnam

The Cambridge Handbook of Germanic Linguistics

978-1-108-42186-7

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Guido Rings

The Cambridge Handbook of Intercultural Communication

978-1-108-42969-6

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Literature 17

Christopher Warnes

Magical Realism and Literature

978-1-108-42630-5

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Alex Houen

Affect and Literature

978-1-108-42451-6

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Nancy E. Johnson

Mary Wollstonecraft in Context

978-1-108-41699-3

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Adrian Poole

The Princess Casamassima

978-1-107-01143-4

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Steven Belletto

The Beats

978-1-107-17668-3

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Ross Wilson

New York

978-1-108-47081-0

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Steven Frye

Cormac McCarthy in Context

978-1-108-48883-9

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John Bird

Mark Twain in Context

978-1-108-47260-9

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Irish Literature in Transition, 1700–1780

978-1-108-42750-0

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Claire Connolly

Irish Literature in Transition, 1780–1830

978-1-108-49298-0

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£89.99

R

27

Matthew Campbell

Irish Literature in Transition, 1830–1880

978-1-108-48048-2

Hardback

£87.99

R

.................

.................

28

Marjorie Elizabeth Howes

Irish Literature in Transition, 1880–1940

978-1-108-48045-1

Hardback

£89.99

R

.................

.................

29

Eve Patten

Irish Literature in Transition, 1940–1980

978-1-108-48044-4

Hardback

£89.99

R

.................

.................

30

Eric Falci

Irish Literature in Transition: 1980–2020

978-1-108-47404-7

Hardback

£89.99

R

.................

.................

31

Fuhui Wu

A Cultural History of Modern Chinese Literature

978-1-107-06949-7

Hardback

£150.00

C

.................

.................

The Cambridge Handbook of Workplace Affect

978-1-108-49403-8

Hardback

£135.00

R

.................

.................

Geometric Regular Polytopes

978-1-108-48958-4

Hardback

£99.99

R

.................

.................

Non-Neoplastic Pathology of the Gastrointestinal Tract

978-1-108-76654-8

Hardback with Online Resource

£170.00

G

.................

.................

Stroke Prevention and Treatment

978-1-107-11314-5

Hardback

£84.99

P

.................

.................

Geriatric Forensic Medicine and Pathology

978-1-107-17777-2

Hardback with Online Resource

£160.00

G

.................

.................

The Beatles in Context

978-1-108-41911-6

Hardback

£74.99

R

.................

.................

Management 32

Liu-Qin Yang

Mathematics 33

Peter McMullen

Medicine 34

Roger M. Feakins

35

Jeffrey L. Saver

36

Kim A. Collins

Music 37

Kenneth Womack

Philosophy 38

Mark A. Wrathall

The Cambridge Heidegger Lexicon

978-1-107-00274-6

Hardback

£94.99

R

.................

.................

39

Michael Coppedge

Varieties of Democracy

978-1-108-42483-7

Hardback

£74.99

R

.................

.................

The Cambridge Handbook of Evolutionary Perspectives on Human Behavior

978-1-316-64282-5

Hardback

£150.00

R

.................

.................

978-1-108-42834-7

Hardback

£155.00

R

.................

.................

Psychology 40

Lance Workman

41

Ayanna K. Thomas

The Cambridge Handbook of Cognitive Aging

42

Fanny M. Cheung

The Cambridge Handbook of the International Psychology of Women

978-1-108-47303-3

Hardback

£135.00

R

.................

.................

43

Frank C. Worrell

The Cambridge Handbook of Applied School Psychology

978-1-108-41596-5

Hardback

£110.00

R

.................

.................

44

Anna Abraham

The Cambridge Handbook of the Imagination

978-1-108-42924-5

Hardback

£145.00

R

.................

.................

45

Aidan G. C. Wright

The Cambridge Handbook of Research Methods in Clinical Psychology

978-1-107-18984-3

Hardback

£180.00

R

.................

.................

46

Carl W. Lejuez

The Cambridge Handbook of Personality Disorders

978-1-108-42434-9

Hardback

£180.00

R

.................

.................

47

Brian J. Hoffman

The Cambridge Handbook of the Changing Nature of Work

978-1-108-41763-1

Hardback

£150.00

R

.................

.................

John Calvin in Context

978-1-108-48240-0

Hardback

£84.99

R

.................

.................

The New Handbook of Political Sociology

978-1-107-19349-9

Hardback

£175.00

R

.................

.................

Subtotal

.................

Total for all pages

.................

Religion 48

R. Ward Holder

Sociology 49

Thomas Janoski

Order at www.cambridge.org/booksellers


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Extensive media library of over 800 components spanning the 8 modules Original DVD content fully optimised for all devices and screen sizes View animations and interact with virtual labs MathJax enabled for good reproduction of mathematical/ technical symbols

Multimedia Fluid Mechanics has been developed with the support of the National Science Foundation.

Find out more why Multimedia Fluid Mechanics online is the ideal supplement to your fluid mechanics course at cambridge.org/MFMO

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Multimedia Fluid Mechanics

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The Works and Worlds of Shakespeare Online A brand new platform hosted on Cambridge Core Discover the complete works of Shakespeare together with a wealth of integrated, prize-winning critical and reference material What’s included? The complete bestselling New Cambridge Shakespeare series The New Cambridge Shakespeare: The Early Quartos series

Features & functionality Ability to switch between explanatory, performance-based and textual notes User friendly navigation

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Over 300 essays from The Cambridge Guide to the Worlds of Shakespeare

View and download content in both HTML and PDF formats

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Extensive cross-referencing within and between Shakespeare’s works

Multimedia resources for each of Shakespeare’s works, curated by the Shakespeare Folger Library

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