Library Highlights Kit Jul - Dec 2022

Page 29

Library Highlights Kit July - December 2022 www.cambridge.org/LibrarianResource

Evidence AcquisitionBased(EBA) at Cambridge Making data-driven decisions

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Contents ISBN FULL TITLE GBP PRICE EU PRICE UK PUB DATE PAGE Art 9781316511015 The Villa Farnesina £94.99 €110.86 Oct-22 5 Classical Studies 9781107155046 A Commentary on Panegyrici Latini II(12) £120.00 €140.05 Sep-22 6 9781316514795 Expositio Notarum £110.00 €128.38 Nov-22 7 9781107015159 Historia Animalium Book X £110.00 €128.38 Sep-22 8 9781316510940 Living Theatre in the Ancient Roman House £120.00 €140.05 Nov-22 9 9781108423229 Platonic Love from Antiquity to the Renaissance £85.00 €99.2 Aug-22 10 9781107053229 Procopius of Caesarea: The Persian Wars £130.00 €151.72 Sep-22 11 9781107165700 Procopius of Caesarea: The Persian Wars £75.00 €87.53 Nov-22 12 9781108423618 The Roman Emperor and His Court c. 30 BC–c. AD 300 £190.00 €221.75 Oct-22 13 Drama and Theatre 9781009098366 An Apology for the Life of Mr Colley Cibber, Comedian and Late Patentee of the Theatre Royal £89.99 €105.03 Jul-22 14 History 9781108611336 The Cambridge History of Socialism £200.00 €233.42 Aug-22 15 9781108539227 The Cambridge History of the Pacific Ocean £200.00 €233.42 Nov-22 16 9781108429931 The Cambridge History of the Polar Regions £120.00 €140.05 Nov-22 18 Language and linguistics 9781108494090 Language Development £125.00 €145.89 Jul-22 19 9781108484015 The Cambridge Handbook of Childhood Multilingualism £125.00 €145.89 Jul-22 20 9781108420075 The Cambridge Handbook of Chinese Linguistics £125.00 €145.89 Jul-22 21 9781108839532 The Cambridge Handbook of Intercultural Pragmatics £125.00 €145.89 Oct-22 22 9781108845342 The Cambridge Handbook of Working Memory and Language £120.00 €140.05 Jul-22 23 Law 9781316512807 The Cambridge Handbook of Artificial Intelligence £145.00 €169.23 Aug-22 24 9781108488570 The Cambridge Handbook of Disaster Law and Policy £145.00 €169.23 Sep-22 25 9781009207867 The Cambridge Handbook of Responsible Artificial Intelligence £150.00 €175.06 Sep-22 26 9781108499224 The Cambridge Legal History of Australia £125.00 €145.89 Jul-22 28 Literature 9781009100649 A History of World War One Poetry £89.99 €105.03 Aug-22 29 9781316513323 David Foster Wallace in Context £85.00 €99.2 Oct-22 30 9781009169455 Latin American Literature in Transition 1800–1870 £97.99 €114.36 Oct-22 31 9781108838740 Latin American Literature in Transition 1870–1930 £97.99 €114.36 Oct-22 32 9781009177764 Latin American Literature in Transition 1930–1980 £97.99 €114.36 Oct-22 33 9781108838764 Latin American Literature in Transition 1980–2018 £97.99 €114.36 Oct-22 34 9781108838832 Latin American Literature in Transition Pre-1492–1800 £97.99 €114.36 Oct-22 35 9781108835671 Roberto Bolaño In Context £84.99 €99.19 Aug-22 36 9781009245821 Shakespeare Survey 75 £89.99 €105.03 Aug-22 37 9781108479271 The Death Arts in Renaissance England £85.00 €99.2 Jul-22 38 9781108479240 Tolstoy in Context £85.00 €99.2 Aug-22 40 9781107003897 Washington Square £89.99 €105.03 Sep-22 41 9781108833219 Wittgenstein and Literary Studies £85.00 €99.2 Nov-22 42 Music 9781316511060 A History of Welsh Music £79.99 €93.36 Sep-22 43

Psychology 9781108845434 Primate Cognitive Studies £99.99 €116.7 Jul-22 44 9781107165250 The Cambridge Handbook of Cyber Behavior £110.00 €143 Sep-22 45 9781108833196 The Cambridge Handbook of Dyslexia and Dyscalculia £145.00 €169.23 Jul-22 46 9781108939850 The Cambridge Handbook of Evolutionary Perspectives on Sexual Psychology £345.00 €402.65 Jun-22 47 9781108835718 The Cambridge Handbook of Parenting £145.00 €169.23 Aug-22 49 9781108843904 The Cambridge Handbook of Stigma and Mental Health £145.00 €169.23 Jul-22 50 9781108481564 The Thalamus £150.00 €175.06 Sep-22 51 Religion 9781107044043 The Cambridge History of Reformation Era Theology £125.00 €145.89 Nov-22 52 9781108832458 The Roman Mass £89.99 €105.03 Jul-22 53

Contents 1. ‘Antique’Introduction;Imagination and the Creation

5. The Second Phase, 1518-1519: The ‘Hall of Perspectives’, the

sua, molto belle’; 4. 1512 Overtures: The Villa, the Landscape Architecture and

di

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students October 2022 279 x 216 mm c.400pp 9781316511015 Hardback £94.99 / US$125.00 / €110.86

and Peruzzi’s

Key

Literature

5Art

The Villa Farnesina Palace of Venus in Renaissance Rome

• Includes

2. The Stanza del

3. The Lost Façade-Paintings: ‘Di terretta con storie di

Description

The first comprehensive study in English of the Villa Farnesina Thoroughly researched, this book examines almost every document, drawing and published source on the topic abundant visual documentation drawing on some ninety-five sites, museums, libraries and private art collections – some images never published before of the Villa-Palazzo: Origins and Precursors; Fregio first architectural wall-painting; man the of Celebration; Nuptial Suite and the Loggia Psiche.

James Grantham Turner University of California, Berkeley

The frescoes of Peruzzi, Raphael and Sodoma still dazzle visitors to the Villa Farnesina, but they survive in a stripped-down environment bereft of its landscape, sealed so it cannot breathe. Turner takes you outside that box, restoring these canonical images to their original context, when each element joined in a productive conversation. He is the first to reconstruct the architect-painter Peruzzi’s original, well-proportioned, well-appointed building and to re-visualize his lost façade decoration-erotic scenes and mythological figures who make it come alive and soar upward. More comprehensively than any previous scholar, he reintegrates painting, sculpture, architecture, garden design, topographical prints and drawings, archaeological discoveries and literature from the brilliant circle around the patron Agostino Chigi, the powerful banker who ‘loved all virtuosi’ and commissioned his villa-palazzo from the best talents in multiple arts. It can now be understood as a Palace of Venus, celebrating aesthetic, social and erotic pleasure. Features

Latini II(12) An

rhetorical

• Considers the place of the speech in the rhetorical tradition • Argues that epideictic oratory deserves to be taken seriously as a literary form Contents PanegyriciIntroduction;Abbreviations;Preface;Latini II(12); GeneralIndexBibliography;Commentary;locorum;Index. Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students September 2022 216 x 138 mm 400pp 9781107155046 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 / €140.05

commentary

6 Classical Studies

Description The

A Commentary on Panegyrici Oration Delivered by Pacatus Drepanius before the Emperor Theodosius I in the Senate at Rome, AD 389 Roger Rees University of St Andrews, Scotland renowned Gallic poet Pacatus Drepanius journeyed to Rome in the summer of AD 389 to deliver a speech to the Emperor Theodosius; both men stood for the first time before the Roman Senators. It was a moment of high political charge. The Latin speech survives and is presented both in the original and with facing English translation; the introduction and capture the groundbreaking character of the work and set it in its historical, and literary contexts. classicists and ancient historians

here

Key Features • Makes an important but neglected speech available to

Key Features • Unique, previously unpublished text, unlike

• Juxtaposes keywords

• Includes a full introduction, appendices and indices,

Contents TextIntroduction;Abbreviations;Preface;oftheExpositio Notarum with notes; Appendix I. Possible additional items; Appendix II. Linguistic overview; Appendix III. Concordance with Anglo-Saxon glossaries; Appendix IV. Concordance with Notae Tironianae; Appendix V. Placidus; Appendix VI. Festus General index (includes Special indices 1-4); Special 2. Words1. Properindices:names;condemned as not Latin; 3. Words only otherwise in CNT or glossaries, if at all; 4. Greek in the Expositio; 5. Antiquities. Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries, 64 November 2022 216 x 138 mm c.350pp 10 b/w illus.  10 tables   9781316514795 Hardback £110.00 / US$145.00 / €128.38

Description This is

Expositio Notarum

7Classical Studies

A. C. Dionisotti King’s College London the first edition of a Latin text unlike any other surviving one : at first sight an extensive, jumbled list of words with explanations, on closer inspection a window on the teaching of Latin shorthand in North Africa c. AD 400, when we find notarii, those trained in shorthand, prominently employed everywhere in state and church. The text reveals in detail how that training could relate to literary Latin and the classical Roman past. The single manuscript of it in our possession descends from a copy that must have been in Anglo-Saxon England by AD 700, and we can see how it was used for the earliest Latin glossary from that context. The edition seeks to make this story accessible both in general and in detail, with copious indices for those who may wish to consult it from various viewpoints: classical and later Latin, linguistic and historical. anything else surviving from antiquity from the zenith of the pagan Roman empire with explanations from the time of St Augustine making the volume accessible to scholars of both classical and later Latinity

• Argues

Contents OutlineSigla;Introduction;ofplan of HA X; CommentaryTranslation;Text; Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries, 61 September 2022 216 x 138 mm 376pp 9781107015159 Hardback £110.00 / US$145.00 / €128.38

Historia Animalium Book X

8 Classical Studies

This is the first modern edition of Book X of the Historia Animalium. It argues that the first five chapters are a summary, from the hand of Aristotle, of a medical treatise by a physician practicing in the fourth-century BCE. This gives short shrift to Hippocratic staples such as trapped menses and the wandering womb, and describes a woman’s climax during sex in terms that can be easily mapped onto modern accounts. In summarizing the treatise and examining its claims in the last two chapters, Aristotle follows the method described in the Topics for a philosopher embarking on a new field of study. Here we see Aristotle’s ruminations over the conundrum of a woman’s contribution to conception at an early stage in the development of his theory of reproduction. Far from being an insignificant pseudepigraphon, this is a central text for understanding the development of ancient gynaecology and Aristotelian methodology. that the text exemplifies the method of philosophic investigation outlined by Aristotle in the Topics that the medical theories in the text have progressed beyond those of Hippocratic gynaecology there was some genuine interest in female sexual pleasure and satisfaction

Key Features • Demonstrates

• Illustrates that

Aristotle’s Endoxon, Topos and Dialectic on On Failure to Reproduce Lesley Dean-Jones University of Texas, Austin Description

Richard C. Beacham King’s College London Hugh Denard King’s College London

theatrical entertainments; 4. Politics and patronage at

Description

First major study of the theatricality of life and décor in ancient Roman houses and villas The research and its conclusions are extensively illustrated with contemporary and archival photographs The book makes extensive use of computer-based visualizations and 3-D modelling to explore and demonstrate the theatricalism of domestic décor, space, and activity Pompeii; Pompeii the range of Roman Pompeii;

For the Romans, much of life was seen, expressed and experienced as a form of theatre. In their homes, patrons performed the lead, with a supporting cast of residents and visitors. This illustrated book, the result of extensive interdisciplinary research, is the first to explore, describe and illustrate how ancient Roman houses and villas, in their décor, spaces, activities and function, were highly-theatricalised environments, indeed, a sort of ‘living theatre’. Their layout, purpose, and use reflected and informed a culture in which theatre was both a major medium of entertainment and communication, and an art form drawing upon myths expressing the core values and beliefs of ancient society. For elite Romans, their homes – as veritable stage-sets – served as a major visible and tangible expression of their prestige, importance, and achievement. The Roman home was a carefully crafted realm in which to display themselves, while ‘stage-managing’ the behaviour and responses of visitor-spectators. Features

9Classical Studies

sumptuously

Contents 1. Roman theatricality and theatricalism; 2. Theatrical life at

3. Performance at

and

Key

5. Theatricalism and the Roman house; 6. Skenographia: theatricality and theatricalism in Second Style frescoes; 7. Skenographia at Boscoreale, Oplontis and Pompeii; 8. Skenographia on the Palatine and at Pompeii; 9. Fourth Style Skenographia; 10. Triclinium theatricality. Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students November 2022 279 x 216 mm c.450pp 9781316510940 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 / €140.05

Theatricalism

Living Theatre in the Ancient Roman House in the Domestic Sphere

Contents Introduction: platonic love; Part I. Love in Plato: 1. Plato on love; 2. The selfishness of platonic love?; 3. Love and rhetoric as types of psychagôgia; 4. Plato on the love of wisdom; Part II. Development of Platonic Love in Antiquity: 5. Plutarch: expanding the horizons of platonic love; 6. Love in Plotinus’ thought; 7. A platonist ‘ars amatoria’; 8. Desire and love in Augustine; Part III. Love and Metaphysics during the Middle Ages: 9. Divine love and platonic beauty in Dionysius the Areopagite; 10. Love in the thought of John Scotus Eriugena; 11. Thomas Aquinas on the connatural, the supernatural, love, and charity; Part IV. Platonic Love during the Renaissance: 12. Human and divine love in Marsilio Ficino; 13. Marsilio Ficino and Leone Ebreo on beauty; 14. Pico della Mirandola on platonic love; 15. The Contra-Amorem tradition in the Renaissance; 16. Castiglione and platonic love; 17. Platonic love in Renaissance discussions of friendship. Information Academic Researchers, graduate students

Level:

August 2022 228 x 152 mm c.450pp 9781108423229 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00 / €99.2

Additional

• Provides translations of all Greek, Latin and Italian texts

• Presents an interdisciplinary approach, combining the latest approaches in ancient philosophy, history of theology, Italian literature, gender studies and social history

Platonic Love from Antiquity to the Renaissance

Carl Séan O’Brien Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, Germany John Dillon Trinity College Dublin Description

Platonic love is a concept that has profoundly shaped Western literature, philosophy and intellectual history for centuries. First developed in the Symposium and the Phaedrus, it was taken up by subsequent thinkers in antiquity, entered the theological debates of the Middle Ages, and played a key role in the reception of Neoplatonism and the etiquette of romantic relationships during the Italian Renaissance. In this wide-ranging reference work, a leading team of international specialists examines the Platonic distinction between higher and lower forms of eros, the role of the higher form in the ascent of the soul and the concept of Beauty. They also treat the possibilities for friendship and interpersonal love in a Platonic framework, as well as the relationship between love, rhetoric and wisdom. Subsequent developments are explored in Plutarch, Plotinus, Augustine, Pseudo-Dionysius, Eriugena, Aquinas, Ficino, della Mirandola, Castiglione and the contra amorem tradition.

Key Features

10 Classical Studies

• Tracks the development of Platonic love from antiquity via the Middle Ages through to the Renaissance

Procopius was the major historian of the reign of Justinian and one of the most important historians of Late Antiquity. This is the first extensive commentary on his Persian Wars since the nineteenth century. The work is among the most varied of the author, incorporating the history and geography not only of Mesopotamia and the Caucasus, but also of southern Arabia and Ethiopia, Iran and Central Asia, and Constantinople itself. Each major section is introduced by a section on the history of the events concerned and on the treatment of these events by Procopius and other sources. The volume is equipped with an introduction, three appendices, and numerous maps and plans. All sections of the work that are commented on are translated. The book will therefore be of use to specialists and the general reader alike. A complete translation of the work, with lighter annotation, is being published separately. on one of Procopius’ most important and varied works guidance all aspects of the work, with an extensive bibliography the work are commented on

Procopius of Caesarea: The Persian Wars

11Classical Studies

Contents CommentaryTablesIntroduction;ofnames;onBook I; Commentary on Book II; Appendix 1: The Perso-Arabic Tradition; Appendix 2: Procopius’ Stade; Appendix 3: Nonnosus and Roman missions to southern Arabia and Ethiopia; Indices.Bibliography; Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students September 2022 228 x 152 mm 800pp 9781107053229 Hardback c. £130.00 / c. US$170.00 / €151.72

on

• Translates all sections of

Geoffrey Greatrex University of Ottawa

that

A Historical Commentary

Description

Key Features • The first detailed commentary

• Offers

Key Features ·

· Ideal for

· Fully

Contents ExplanationTablesConclusion;Introduction;ofNames;ofthe Notes; List of Primary Sources; Index.BookBookGlossary;1;2:Nonnosus; Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students, undergraduate students November 2022 228 x 152 mm 300pp 9781107165700 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 / €87.53

12 Classical Studies

Geoffrey Greatrex University of Ottawa Averil Cameron University of Oxford Description Procopius was the major historian of the reign of Justinian and one of the most important historians of Late Antiquity. This is the first stand-alone English translation of his work Persian Wars. It offers a new translation, which has at its basis one published fifty years ago by Averil Cameron. The Persian Wars, despite the title, is a wide-ranging work that reports the history and geography not only of Mesopotamia and the Caucasus, but also of southern Arabia and Ethiopia, Iran and Central Asia, and Constantinople itself. This book is equipped with notes, maps and plans, an introduction, and a translation of a further Greek text, that of Nonnosus, which overlaps with Procopius’. It will be of benefit to specialists and the general reader alike.

The first stand-alone English translation of Procopius’ Persian Wars, a work fundamental for understanding relations between the Roman Empire and Sasanian Persia annotated, and equipped with maps and an introduction students and general readers alike

Procopius of Caesarea: The Persian Wars

Translation, with Introduction and Notes

13Classical Studies

Benjamin

Contents Volume 2. Hellenistic1. Introduction;I:influences

5. The

The Roman Emperor and His Court c. 30 Essays A Sourcebook Kelly York University, Toronto Angela Hug York University, the centre of the Roman empire stood the emperor and the court surrounding him. The systematic investigation of this court in its own right, however, has been a relatively late development in the field of Roman history, and previous studies have focused on narrowly defined aspects or on particular periods of Roman history. This book makes a major contribution to understanding the history of the Roman imperial court. The first volume presents nineteen original essays covering all the major dimensions of the court from the age of Augustus to the threshold of Late Antiquity. The second volume is a collection of the ancient sources that are central to studying that court. The collection includes: translations of literary sources, inscriptions, and papyri; plans and computer visualizations of archaeological remains; and photographs of archaeologic sites and artworks depicting the emperor and his court. the long-term continuities and cycles in the history of the Roman court Offers comparisons between the Roman court and monarchical courts of other times and places Volume 2 provides a collection of the key sources relevant to the study of the Roman imperial court, including translated textual sources and images of items of material culture on Roman court culture; Precursors; Imperial family; Roman aristocracy at court; the the Imperial Court; Imperial Court; a reflection of social courtly the Roman and the court; and security at court; and divination at court; and performers at court; patronage and the Roman Imperial Court from Augustus to the Severan adornment, and self-presentation; Continuity and change at the Roman Imperial Court; 1. ConceptualizingII: the Roman court;

court; 7. Foreign royals at

9. The Imperial Palaces on the Palatine Hill: Architecture as

15. Violence

19. Dress,Dynasty;

practices and imperial authority; 10. Imperial villas; 11. Imperial journeys; 12. The court and ceremonial; 13. Dining and hunting as

and

2. Court 6. Narratives5. Picturing4. Rituals3. Relationships;spaces;andceremonial;thecourt;ofcourtcrises. Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students October 2022 244 x 170 mm c.860pp 9781108423618 Hardback £190.00 / US$250.00 / €221.75

Key Features • Highlights

16. Religion

8. Domestic servants in the

activities in

BC–c. AD 300 Historical

6. Administration, finances, and

Toronto Description At

Empire; 14. Sexuality

3. Republican

18. Literary

17. Performance

4. The

20. Epilogue:

Volume

14 Drama and Theatre

An Apology for the Life of Mr Colley Cibber, Comedian and

Key Features • Presents

Contents An Apology for the Life of

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, undergraduate students July 2022 229 x 152 mm c.530pp 9781009098366 Hardback £89.99 / US$120.00 / €105.03

Late Patentee of the Theatre Text

• Offers

Royal A Modernized

David Roberts Birmingham City University Description Colley Cibber was one of the most derided men in eighteenth-century London. Mocked for his work in the theatre and as Poet Laureate, he was nevertheless a prolific actor and playwright, and co-managed the Theatre Royal Drury Lane for 24 years. His response to his critics, AnApology for the Life of Mr Colley Cibber, is often described as the first theatrical autobiography, and even as the first secular autobiography in English. But what kind of text is it – intimate confession or cunning pose? History of the stage or political polemic? Rambling or purposeful? Or perhaps, even, the first celebrity memoir? Including comprehensive notes and a detailed scholarly introduction, this modernised text makes Cibber’s enigmatic literary landmark accessible to a wide readership for the first time and allows both specialists and general readers to explore Cibber’s extraordinary career against the rich, turbulent background of London theatre in the eighteenth century. a modernised text that renders the Apology accessible to a new wider audience, facilitating study and research that has proven too impractical until now Includes comprehensive, on-page annotation and cross-referencing, as well as a detailed index, explaining many references for the first time and making use of the most up-to-date resources a thorough new introduction to the text that takes account of recent work on Cibber while presenting an original reading of the Apology and its significance Mr Colley Cibber.

Contents Volume I: Introduction to Volume I; Part I. 1. MazdakSection Beginnings;1. Egalitarianism:andlateantiquity ‘socialism’; 2. Egalitarianism in Islamic thought and praxis; 3. Egalitarianism in Europe:

Key Features • Offers

Description Divided

The Cambridge History of Socialism

15History

Marcel van der Linden International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam into two volumes, The Cambridge History of Socialism offers an up-to-date critical survey of the socialist movements and political practices throughout the world that have arisen thus far. A much-needed corrective of the current state of the study of socialism from a historical perspective, the volumes use a wider geographical and temporal focus to track the changes and trends in global socialisms and move beyond the European trajectory. Together they cover anarchism, syndicalism, social democracy, Labour, the New Left, and alternative socialist movements in the Global South in one encompassing reconstruction. Featuring 55 essays by experts across the field, the volumes will serve as examples of the rich variety of socialist histories and, together, endeavour to reveal the major contours of its development. a much-needed corrective of the current state of the study of socialism from a historical perspective A rich collection of 55 essays written by experts within the field A comprehensive history of anarchism, syndicalism, social democracy, Labour, the New Left, and alternative trajectories in the Global South in one encompassing reconstruction Pays serious attention to the gendered nature of all movements Hussites, Anabaptists, Racovians, Hutterites and Diggers; 4. The Taiping land program: creating a moral Sectionenvironment;2. Early Socialisms: and Saint-Simonism; 6. Robert Owen and Owenism; 7. Charles Fourier and Fourierism; 8. Etienne Cabet and the Icarian movement in France and the United States; 9. Wilhelm Weitling and early German socialism; Section 3. The Arrival of the Hostile Siblings: Marxism and 10. TheAnarchism:International Working Men’s Association 11. Karl(1864–1876/77);Marx,Friedrich Engels, and early workers’ 12. Pierre-Josephmovements; Proudhon’s mutualist social science; 13. Mikhail Bakunin and social anarchism; 14. Peter Kropotkin and communist anarchism; Part II. Negating State-Power; Section 4. The North-Atlantic Region: 15. Anarchism and syndicalism in France; 16. Spain in revolt: the revolutionary legacy of anarchism and anarcho-syndicalism; 17. Anarchism and syndicalism in Italy; 18. Anarchism and syndicalism in the United Kingdom; 19. Anarchism and syndicalism in the United States; Section 5. Africa, Asia and Latin America: 20. Mexican 21. Anarchismsocialism;andsyndicalism in Argentina; 22. Anarchism and syndicalism in Brazil; 23. Anarchism and syndicalism in South Africa; 24. Anarchism and syndicalism in China; Section 6. Worldwide Connections: 25. Anarchist transnationalism; 26. The global revival of anarchism and syndicalism. Volume II: Introduction to Volume II; Part I. Transforming State-Power; Section 1. Social Democratic Routes in Europe: 1. Social Democracy in Germany; 2. Social Democracy in Austria; 3. Social Democracy in Sweden; 4. The British Labour Party; 5. Social Democracy in Georgia; 6. The General Jewish Workers’ Bund; Section 2. Social Democratic Routes in Australia, the Americas and Asia: 7. The Australian Labor Party; 8. Social Democracy in Argentina; 9. The Partido dos Trabalhadores in Brazil; 10. Still small voice: the persistence of the socialdemocratic idea in United States history; 11. Social Democracy in Japan; Section 3. Worldwide Connections: 12. The Second International (1889–1914); 13. The Second International Reconstituted: the Labour and Socialist International (1923–1940); 14. The rise and fall of the Asian Socialist Conference 15. The(1952–56);Socialist International (1951–) and the Progressive Alliance (2013–); 16. Municipal socialism; Section 4. Southern Trajectories: 17. Socialism, Zionism, and settler colonialism in 18. SocialismIsrael/Palestine;in India Madhavan; 19. The Lanka Sama Samaja Party; 20. African Socialism; 21. Arab 22. Chavismo:Socialism;revolutionary Bolivarianism in SectionVenezuela;5. Left Socialisms: 23. The London Bureau; 24. European left-socialist parties since the 1950s; 25. The New Left as a global current since the late 1950s; Part II. Transversal Perspectives: 26. Socialism and colonialism; 27. Socialism, gender and the emancipation of 28. Socialismwomen; and ecology; 29. Crises and futures of social democracy.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge History of Socialism August 2022 228 x 152 mm c.1400pp 9781108611336 2 Hardback Book Set c. £200.00 / c. US$275.00 / €233.42

5. Saint-Simon

These volumes present a comprehensive survey of the history of the Pacific Ocean, an area making up around one third of the Earth’s surface, from initial human colonization to the present day. Reflecting a wide range of cultural and disciplinary perspectives, this two-volume work details different ways of telling and viewing history in a Pacific world of exceptionally diverse cultural traditions, over time spans that require multidisciplinary and multicultural collaborative perspectives. The central importance of nations touched by the Pacific in contemporary world affairs cannot be understood without recourse to the deep history of interactions on and across the Pacific. In reflecting the diversity and dynamism of the societies of this blue hemisphere, these volumes seek to enhance world histories and broaden readers’ perspectives on forms of historical knowledge and expression. Volume I explores the history of the Pacific Ocean pre-1800 and Volume II examines the period from 1800 to the present day. Features

4. Weaving

Key

• Details different and diverse ways of viewing history General Editor’s Introduction; Preface to Volume I; Part I. Rethinking the Pacific: 1. Te Moana nui a Kiwa: The original ocean; 2. The Pacific region in deep time;3. The history of humans and whales in the Pacific: Leviathan’s families; women’s stories: Restoring women and indigenous perspectives into Chuukese history; Pacific world: Doing history from lagoons to the deep; Part II. Humans and the Natural World in the Pacific Ocean:6. Indigenous knowledge/science of climate and the natural world;7. Atolls, experiments, and the origin of islands: Science as a way of knowing the Pacific since 1766; 8. The birth and development of Pacific islands to 1800 CE; 9. Natural hazards, risks, and peoples in the Pacific world; Part III. Deep Time: Sources for the Ancient History of the Pacific:10. Biological anthropology and genetics in Pacific history;11. The word as artefact: What linguistics can and cannot tell us about the prehistory of the Pacific;12. Oral traditions in Pacific history; 13. The evolution of Pacific island societies; 14. Ancient voyaging capacity in the Pacific: Lessons for the future; 15. Revitalizing ‘traditional’ navigation systems in the contemporary Pacific; Part IV. The Initial Colonization of the Pacific:16. Pleistocene voyaging and maritime dispersals in the Pacific; maritime trade and cultures from Southern China: Taiwan to the Philippines, 6000 to 2000 BCE; 18 New guinea’s past: The last 50,000 years; 19. Austronesian colonization of the Pacific islands, 1000 BCE–1250 CE; 20. Seafaring and colonization in the Southern Ocean, 1000 CE–1850 CE; in Central-South Chile: Sailing eastwards; Part V. The evolution of Pacific communities: 22. Towards a unified theory for Pacific colonization, exchange, and social complexity; 23. The evolution of China’s political economy of the sea, 960–1900; 24. China and the sea in literature, 1644-1839;

Paul D’Arcy Australian National University, Canberra Ryan Tucker Jones University of Oregon Matt K. Matsuda Rutgers University, New Jersey Anne Perez Hattori University of Guam Jane Samson University of Alberta

• Brings together for the first time the extensive corpus of studies of the interaction of Pacific societies with the ocean Allows readers to better understand emerging environmental and political conflicts over Pacific Ocean spaces

17. Early

5. The

Contents

21. Polynesians

Description

The Cambridge History of the Pacific Ocean

16 History

17History 25. Pacific history viewed from Eastern Indonesia: The eastern archipelago of southeast Asia and the sea in the early modern period 1400–1830’s; 26. The maritime cultures of the northwest Pacific seaboard of the Americas; 27. Mesoamerican–south American Pre-Columbian Pacific contacts: Evidence, objects and traditions, 1500 BCE–1532 CE; Part VI. Europe’s Maritime Expansion into the Pacific: 28. Iberian conceptions of the Pacific; 29. Naval rivalry in the Western Pacific: Portugal, England, Holland, and Koxinga, 1600–1720;30. The resurgence of Chinese mercantile power in maritime East Asia, 31. The1500–1700;enduring sea cultures of Southeast Asia, seventh–nineteenth centuries CE; Bibliography to Volume I; GeneralIndex. Editor’s Introduction; Preface to Volume II; Part VII. Rethinking the Pacific: 32. Climate change, rising seas, and endangered island nations; 33. Authority, identity, and place in the Pacific ocean and its hinterlands, c. 1200 to c. 2000; 34. Europe’s other? Academic discourse on the Pacific as a cultural space; 35. The phantom empire: Japan in oceania and oceania in Japan from the 1890’s onward; 36. Blue continent to blue Pacific; Part VIII. Approaches, Sources, and Subaltern Histories of the Modern Pacific: 37. Archives and community memory in the Pacific; 38. Missing in action: Women’s under-representation and decolonizing the archival experience; 39. Rethinking gender and identity in Asia and the Pacific; 40. Fifty years of the Hawaiian nation: Integrations of resistance, language, and the love of our land; 41. Pacific literature and history; 42. Film and Pacific history; 43. The visual and performing arts of the Pacific: A historical overview; Part IX. Culture Contact and the Impact of Pre-colonial European Influences: 44. The Pacific in the age of revolutions; 45. Disease in Pacific history: ‘The fatal impact’?; 46. Culture and christian missions in the Pacific; 47. Trading nature in the Pacific: Ecological exchange prior to 1900; 48 Seaborne ethnography to the science of race, 1521–1850 Bronwen Douglas; Part X. The Colonial Era in The Pacific: 49. Political developments in the Pacific islands in the nineteenth century; 50. Timorese islanders and the Portuguese empire in the Indonesian archipelago; 51. Pacific bodies and personal space redefined, 1850–1960; 52. The Pacific in the age of steam, undersea cables. and wireless telegraphy, 1860–1930; 53. Latin America’s Pacific ambitions, 1571 to the present; Part XI. The Pacific Century? : 54. The USA and the Pacific since 1800: Manifestly facing west; 55. World war II and the Pacific; 56. The nuclear Pacific: From Hiroshima to Fukushima, 1945–2018; 57. Shrinking the Pacific since 1945: Containerships, jets, and internet; 58. China and the Pacific since 1949; 59. Pacific island nations since independence: 1960 to the present; Part XII. Pacific Futures: 60. Ancestral voices of the sea: Hearing the past to lead the future; 61. Defining the contours of the lagoon: Political strategies towards post-nouméa accord political futures in New Caledonia; 62. New Pacific voyages since independence: 1960 onwards; 63. Creating sustainable Pacific environments during the Anthropocene: The lessons of Pacific History; 64. Concluding Reflection: ‘Choppy Waters’; Bibliography to Volume II; Index. Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge History of the Pacific Ocean November 2022 228 x 152 mm c.1600pp 9781108539227 2 Volume Hardback Set £200.00 / US$260.00 / €233.42

13. Britain’s

11. Representing

31. Conclusion.history; Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students November 2022 228 x 152 mm c.650pp 9781108429931 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 / €140.05

18 History

16. Industrial

7. Russia,

The Cambridge History of the Polar Regions

8. The

3. The

KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm

Contents 2. “I1. Introduction;Watchtosee

9. Sir

5. Archaeology,

10. The

12. Geography,

14. Canada

15. The

The Cambridge History of the Polar Regions is a landmark collection drawing together the history of the Arctic and Antarctica from the earliest times to the present. Structured as a series of thematic chapters, an international team of scholars offer a range of perspectives from environmental history, the history of science and exploration, cultural history, and the more traditional approaches of political, social, economic, and imperial history. The volume considers the centrality of Indigenous experience and the urgent need to build action in the present on a thorough understanding of the past. Using historical research based on methods ranging from archives and print culture to archaeology and oral histories, these essays provide fresh analyses of the discovery of Antarctica, the disappearance of Sir John Franklin, the fate of the Norse colony in Greenland, the origins of the Antarctic Treaty, and much more. This is an invaluable resource for anyone interested in the history of our planet.

4. The

Key Features Includes contributions from leading scholars from around the world Shows the importance of approaches foregrounding Indigenous communities and other groups often marginalized from histories that focus on exploration An invaluable resource for teachers and students of polar history, environmental history, the history of science, global history, area studies, historical geography and cognate disciplines how the land is changing”: An Inuit perspective on changing environments and cultural resilience in the western Canadian Arctic; evolution of the Antarctic continent and its ice sheet; initial peopling of the circumpolar north; politics, and Sámi heritage; Norse settlement of Greenland; the first Arctic empire, 1000–1917; discovery of Antarctica from Ptolemy to Shackleton; John Franklin and the Northwest Passage in myth and memory; heroic age of Antarctic exploration, 1890 to the present; the polar regions through historical fiction; anthropology, and Arctic knowledge-making; polar empire, 1769–1982; and the high Arctic islands, 1880–1950; genesis of the Spitsbergen/Svalbard Treaty, 1871–1920; whaling in the Arctic and Antarctic; 17. A historical archaeology of the first Antarctic labourers (ninteenth century); 18. Mining and colonialism in the circumpolar north; 19. Creating the Soviet Arctic, 1917–1991; 20. Greenland: From colony to self-government, 1721–2021; 21. Cold War environmental knowledge in the polar regions; 22. The international geophysical year and the Antarctic treaty system; 23. The first century of US militarization in Alaska, 1867–1967; 24. Petroleum development and the state in Arctic North America, 1919–1977; 25. The rise of circumpolar political movements; 26. The history of polar environmental governance; 27. The Antarctic extension of Latin America; 28. Moving muskoxen as an Arctic resource in the twentieth century; 29. Boundaries of place and time at the edge of the polar oceans; from within: Renewing relationships beyond the shadows of polar

Adrian Howkins Colorado State University Peder Roberts

Description

6. The

30. Restorying

The majority of children acquire language effortlessly but approximately 10% of all children find it difficult especially in the early or preschool years with consequences for many aspects of their subsequent development and experience: literacy, social skills, educational qualifications, mental health and employment. With contributions from an international team of researchers, this book is the first to draw together a series of new analyses of data related to children’s language development, primarily from large-scale nationally representative population studies, and to bring a public health perspective to the field. The book begins with a section on factors influencing the patterns of language development. A second section explores continuity and change in language development over time. The third explores the impact on individuals with developmental language disorders (DLD), the effectiveness of available interventions, and broader issues about the need for equity in the delivery of services to those with DLD.

Language Development

2. Social

Individual Differences in a Social Context

James Law University of Newcastle upon Tyne Sheena Reilly Griffith University, Queensland Cristina McKean University of Newcastle upon Tyne

Description

19Language and Linguistics

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students August 2022 244 x 170 mm c.750pp 9781108494090 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00 / €145.89

Contents Part I. 1. Language Introduction:development:

• Discusses the origins of the individual differences in children’s language development and how this changes over time

12. Patterns

11. Language

Key Features

• Develops a new conceptual framework for looking at individual differences in children’s language development and language disorders and makes concrete links as to how this understanding informs policy and intervention Shows the truly interdisciplinary nature of the field and collates the current ‘state of the science’ across these disciplines with respect to our understanding of child language development and its drivers Individual differences in a social context; Contexts and Language Development: Past, Present, and Future; Part II. Factors Influencing Language Development: 3. Genetic Studies of Language Disorders; 4. Hearing and Language; 5. Comorbidity between language difficulties and common conditions in childhood; 6. Language and Cognition; 7. Growing Up in Multilingual Communities; 8. Parent-child interaction and language learning; 9. Cognitive Competencies and Signals of Risk; 10. Creating Equitable Opportunities for Language and Literacy Development in Childhood and Adolescence; Part III. Continuity and Change: Trajectories in Childhood: The Nature and Drivers of Individual Differences and their Implications for Intervention; of Language Development from Childhood to Adulthood and the Associated Long-Term Psychosocial Outcomes; 13. Social Inequalities in Vocabulary and the Role of Reading; 14. The Dynamic Nature of Predictors and Outcomes in Children’s Language Development throughout Childhood; Part IV. Impact Intervention and Equity: 15. Communication, Participation and Cohort Studies; 16. Capturing the Voice of Parents and Children: The Potential Impact for the Design and Implementation of Research and Services; 17. Oral Language Skills as a Foundation for Learning to Learn; 18. The Economic Impact of Low Language Ability in Childhood; 19. A Review of Interventions to Promote Language Development in Early 20. InterventionsChildhood; to Promote Language Development in Typical and Atypical 21. ThePopulations;Effect of Kindergarten Instructional Policies on Reading and Math Achievement 22. EducationalGaps;Interventions Targeting Language Development; 23. Equity and Access to Services for Children with Language Difficulties; Index.

• Showcases the dynamic and unique faculty of child multilingualism through the state of the art work of leading experts Provides a mosaic of language repertoires in multilingual children throughout the multilingual childhood Exhibits child and childhood multilingualism throughout different areas I the world Presents a scientifically grounded inter- and multi-disciplinary perspective on early multilingualism in children growing with more than two is not Bilingualism +1; Part I. Becoming and Being a Multilingual Child: Bi- and Multilingual Development; Development of Child Multilingualism in Languages of Different Modalities; in Early Childhood: The Role of the Education in Formal Schooling: Conceptual Shifts in Theory, Policy and Practice; Part II. Cognition and Faculties in Multilinguals: and Thought in Multilingual Children; Exposure and Children’s Effective awareness and early multilingual among Bilingual and Trilingual Perception of their Multilingualism; 10. Multilingualism and Language Play; Part III. Family Language Policy: 11. Establishing and Maintaining a Multilingual Family Language 12. ParentalPolicy;Input in the Development of Children’s 13. Multilingualism,Multilingualism; Emotion, and Affect; 14. Siblings’ Multilingual Discourse; Part IV. Language(s) and Literacy of Multilingual Children through Schooling: 15. Being Pluriilingual in the Language Classroom; 16. Literacy Development in the Multilingual Child: From Speaking to Writing; 17. Attitudes, motivations, and enjoyment of reading in multiple 18. Growinglanguages;upwithmultilingual literacies and implications on spelling; 19. Assessing Multilinguals; 20. Plurilingualism and Young Children’s Perspectival Cognition; Part V. Socialization in Childhood Multilingualism: 21. Building a Multilingual Identity; 22. Multilingual Parenting in the United States: Language, Culture and Emotion; 23. The Development of the Heritage Language in Childhood Bi/Multilingualism; 24. Social cohesion and childhood multilingualism in South 25. GrowingAfrica; up in Multilingual Societies: Violations of Linguistic Human Rights in Education; Part VI. Multilingual Children’s Landscape: 26. Linguistic landscapes in the home: Multilingual children’s toys, books and games; 27. Linguistic Landscapes in School; 28. Children’s Perception of Multilingual Landscapes in Index.Interaction;

2. The

3. Multilingualism

1. Infant

5. Language

Key Features

9. Children’sChildren;

Description

20 Language and Linguistics

Childhood multilingualism has become a norm rather than an exception. This is the first handbook to survey state-of-the-art research on the uniqueness of early multilingual development in children growing up with more than two languages in contact. It provides in-depth accounts of the complexity and dynamics of early multilingualism by internationally renowned scholars who have researched typologically different languages in different continents. Chapters are divided into six thematic areas, following the trajectory, environment and conditions underlying the incipient and early stages of multilingual children’s language development. The many facets of childhood multilingualism are approached from a range of perspectives, showcasing not only the challenges of multilingual education and child-rearing but also the richness in linguistic and cognitive development of these children from infancy to early schooling. It is essential reading for anyone interested in deepening their understanding of the multiple aspects of multilingualism, seen through the unique prism of children.

6. Multilingual

languages Contents Introduction: Multilingualism

The Cambridge Handbook of Childhood Multilingualism Anat Stavans Beit Berl College, Israel Ulrike Jessner-Schmid University of Innsbruck, Austria

4. MultilingualInput;

7. MetalinguisticCommunication;

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics July 2022 244 x 170 mm c.750pp 9781108484015 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00 / €145.89

8. Code-Switchinglearning;

Chu-Ren Huang Hong Kong Polytechnic University Lin Michigan State University Chen University of California, Berkeley Hsu Hong Kong Polytechnic University

• Introduces

2. Semantic

I-Hsuan

Yen-Hwei

Yu-Yin

The linguistic study of Chinese, with its rich morphological, syntactic and prosodic/tonal structures, its complex writing system, and its diverse socio-historical background, is already a long-established and vast research area. With contributions from internationally renowned experts in the field, this Handbook provides a state-of-the-art survey of the central issues in Chinese linguistics. Chapters are divided into four thematic areas: writing systems and the neuro-cognitive processing of Chinese, morpho-lexical structures, phonetic and phonological characteristics, and issues in syntax, semantics, pragmatics, and discourse. By following a context-driven approach, it shows how theoretical issues in Chinese linguistics can be resolved with empirical evidence and argumentation, and provides a range of different perspectives. Its dialectical design sets a state-of-the-art benchmark for research in a wide range of interdisciplinary and cross-lingual studies involving the Chinese language. is an essential resource for students and researchers wishing to explore the fascinating field of Chinese linguistics. Features the key linguistics issues in the study of Chinese linguistics on the empirical and theory-neutral argumentation for significant positions on the linguistic issues of Chinese researchers and advanced research students in linguistics and language sciences with discussion and solutions to the fundamental issues awareness, orthography and learning to reading Chinese; awareness and disyllabicity Chinese; as basic lexical units and mono-syllabicity in Chinese; Chinese and how to identify them; in in Chinese and why?; and inflectional affixes in Chinese and their morphosyntactic poverty of affixation in Chinese: Rarely derivational and hardly theory of word-formation in Chinese and beyond; is semantics-driven in Chinese; morphophonology of Chinese affixation; Chinese syllable structure and phonological similarity: Perception and production studies; processes defined as articulatory-based contextual tonal variation; processes defined as tone sandhi; processes conditioned by morphosyntax, 16. Tone and intonation; 17. Evidence for stress and metrical structure in Chinese; 18. Perceptual normalization of lexical tones: Behavioral and neural evidence; 19. SVO as the canonical word order in modern Chinese; 20. SVO as the canonical word order in modern Chinese; 21. Semantic and pragmatic conditions on word order variation in Chinese; 22. The case for case in Chinese; 23. The case without case in Chinese: Issues and alternative approaches; 24. The syntax of classifiers in Mandarin; 25. The Chinese classifier system as a lexical-semantic system; 26. Syntax of sentence-final particles in Chinese; 27. Sentence final particles: Sociolinguistic and discourse perspectives; 28. Topicalization defined by syntax; 29. An interactive perspective on topic constructions in Mandarin: Some new findings based on natural conversation; 30. Grammatical acceptability in Mandarin Chinese.

6. Gaps

11. The

13. Tonal

7. Derivational

parts-of-speech

12. Mandarin

• Focuses

8. Theproperties;extreme

Key

in reading Chinese; 3. Wordhood

14. Tonal

9. Onaffixational;anintegral

15. Tonal

4. Characters

10. Compounding

The

21Language and Linguistics

It

The Cambridge Handbook of Chinese Linguistics

• Provides

5. Parts-of-speech in

The

Description

unsolved

Contents 1. Phonological

in

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics July 2022 247 x 174 mm c.650pp 9781108420075 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00 / €145.89

Istvan Kecskes State University of New York, Albany

Intercultural pragmatics addresses one of the major issues of human communication in the globalized world: how do people interact with each other in a language other than their native tongue, and with native speakers of the language of interaction? Bringing together a globally-representative team of scholars, this Handbook provides an authoritative overview to this fascinating field of study, as well as a theoretical framework. Chapters are grouped into 5 thematic areas: theoretical foundation, key issues in Intercultural Pragmatics research, the interface between Intercultural Pragmatics and related disciplines, Intercultural Pragmatics in different types of communication, and language learning. It addresses key concepts and research issues in Intercultural Pragmatics, and will trigger fresh lines of enquiry and generate new research questions. Comprehensive in its scope, it is essential reading not only for scholars of pragmatics, but also of discourse analysis, cognitive linguistics, communication, sociolinguistics, linguistic anthropology, and second language teaching and learning.

The Cambridge Handbook of Intercultural Pragmatics

8. Creativityinteractions;

5. TheResearch:cultural,

10. Common

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics October 2022 244 x 170 mm c.800pp 9781108839532 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00 / €145.89

Description

2. Relevancecommunication;theory

ground; 6. Role

3. Cognitive

Contents Part I. Theoretical

Key Features Provides a comprehensive theoretical framework that reflects the interdisciplinary nature of the field Gives an overview of key concepts and research issues in intercultural pragmatics Presents an alternative way of thinking about interaction by shifting attention from L1 communication to intercultural Offers a stimulus for further research in the field and generates new research questions Foundation: pragmatics for intercultural and intercultural interaction; psychology in pragmatics; theoretical framework of intercultural Issues in Intercultural Pragmatics contextual and computational of common of context; of (mis)understanding in intercultural and idiomaticity in intercultural in intercultural communication; ground in linguistic theory and internet pragmatics: forms of dynamic, multicultural interaction; 11. Vague language from a pragmatic perspective; 12. Humor in intercultural interactions; 13. Emotion in intercultural interactions; 14. Research methods in intercultural pragmatics; Part III. Interface of Intercultural Pragmatics and Related 15. SemioticsDisciplines:andintercultural pragmatics; 16. Sociopragmatics and intercultural interaction; 17. An English-as-a-lingua-franca perspective on intercultural 19. Politeness18. Interculturalpragmatics;rhetoric;andrapport management; 20. Corpus-based intercultural pragmatic research; Part IV. Intercultural Pragmatics in Different Types of 21. VisualCommunication:andmultimodal communication across 22. Interculturalcultures; teamwork via videoconferencing technology: A multimodal (inter)action analysis; 23. Intercultural communication in computer-mediated 24. Interculturaldiscourse; aspects of business communication; 25. Intercultural pragmatics in healthcare 26. Academiccommunication;and professional discourse in intercultural pragmatics; 27. The dynamic model of meaning approach: Analyzing the interculturality of conspiracy theory in far-right populist discourses; Part V. Language Learning: 28. Pragmatic competence; 29. Pragmatic awareness in intercultural language 30. Interculturalitylearning; and the study abroad experience: Pragmatic and sociolinguistic development; 31. Intercultural mediation in language learning; 32. Interaction in the multilingual classrooms.

4. The

dimensions

pragmatics; Part II. Key

9. Metaphorsinteractions;

1. Post-Gricean

22 Language and Linguistics

communication •

7. Sources

Key Features Introduces key models of working memory from cognitive science in relation to language Incorporates multiple perspectives from cognitive science, language sciences, neuroscience, and education theory, research, assessment, and practice memory and language: an overview of key topics; Part I. and the challenge of language; Part II. Theoretical Models and Measures: evolution of working memory and language; phonological loop as a ‘language learning device’: an update; Embedded-Processes Model and language use; working memory and language neuroscience of working memory and models of working memory for resource sharing model of working memory for language; Ease of Language Understanding Model; children’s working memory; individual differences in working memory capacity and attention control and their contribution to language comprehension; Part III. Linguistic Theories and Frameworks: 13. Have grammars been shaped by working memory and if so, working memory: a cross-linguistic approach; 15. Working memory and natural syntax; 16. The role of working memory in shaping syntactic dependency structures; 17. Working memory in the Modular Cognition 18. Short-termFramework; and working memory capacity and the language device: chunking and parsing complexity; Part IV. First Language Processing: 19. Working memory in word reading; 20. The role of working memory in language comprehension and production: evidence from 21. Workingneuropsychology;memory and high-level text comprehension processes; 22. Working memory and speech planning; 23. How do novice and skilled writers engage working memory?; Part V. Bilingual Acquisition and Processing: 24. How measures of working memory relate to L2 25. Workingvocabulary; memory and L2 grammar development in 26. Workingchildren; memory and L2 grammar learning among 2adults;7. Working memory and L2 sentence processing; 28. Methodological issues in research on working memory and L2 reading comprehension; 29. Working memory and second language speaking 30. Workingtasks; memory in second language interaction; 31. Working memory and interpreting studies; 32. A methodological synthesis of working memory tasks in L2 research; Part VI. Language Disorders, Interventions, and 33. SpecificInstruction: learning disorders as a working memory 34. Adeficit;new perspective on the connection between memory and sentence comprehension in children with developmental language disorder; 35. Working memory and childhood deafness; 36. Working memory training in the classroom; 37. Working memory and classroom learning; 38. Cognitive load theory and instructional design for language 39. Workinglearning;memory training: meta-analyses and clinical implications; Part VII. 40. Towards Conclusion:anintegrated account of working memory and Index.language;

2. Working Introduction:memory

3. The

11. Assessing

10. The

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics June 2022 244 x 170 mm c.800pp 9781108845342 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 / €140.05

John W. Schwieter Wilfrid Laurier University Zhisheng (Edward) Wen Macao Polytechnic University together cutting-edge research, this Handbook is the first comprehensive text to examine the pivotal role of working memory in first and second language acquisition, processing, impairments, and training. Authored by a stellar cast of distinguished scholars from around the world, the Handbook provides authoritative insights on work from diverse, multi-disciplinary perspectives, and introduces key models of working memory in relation to language. Following an introductory chapter by working memory pioneer Alan Baddeley, the collection is organized into thematic sections that discuss working memory in relation to: Theoretical models and measures; Linguistic theories and frameworks; First language processing; Bilingual acquisition and processing; and Language disorders, interventions, and instruction. The Handbook is sure to interest and benefit researchers, clinicians, speech therapists, and advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students in linguistics, psychology, education, speech therapy, cognitive science, and neuroscience, or anyone seeking to learn more about language, cognition and the human mind.

seamlessly Contents 1. Working

8. Computationallanguage;

23Language and Linguistics

9. Thelanguage;time-based

The Cambridge Handbook of Working Memory and Language

12. Measuring

14. Branchinghow?;and

7. Thecomprehension;cognitive

Description Bringing

6. Long-term

4. The

• Integrates

5. The

The Cambridge Handbook of Artificial Intelligence Global Perspectives on Law and Ethics

1. Artificial

Key Features

Contents Part I.

24 Law

2. Essence

Description

3. AI

The technology and application of artificial intelligence (AI) throughout society continues to grow at unprecedented rates, which raises numerous legal questions that to date have been largely unexamined. Although AI now plays a role in almost all areas of society, the need for a better understanding of its impact, from legal and ethical perspectives, is pressing, and regulatory proposals are urgently needed. This book responds to these needs, identifying the issues raised by AI and providing practical recommendations for regulatory, technical, and theoretical frameworks aimed at making AI compatible with existing legal rules, principles, and democratic values. An international roster of authors including professors of specialized areas of law, technologists, and practitioners bring their expertise to the interdisciplinary nature of AI.

Larry A. DiMatteo University of Florida Cristina Poncibò Università degli Studi di Torino, Italy Michel Cannarsa Catholic University of Lyon, France

7. Are

14. Liability

• Provides commentary on existing AI systems, focusing on its enhancing and disruptive effects on the current state of law Offers insight regarding the function of law in a future of advanced AI or super intelligence Discusses the dimensions of human intelligence and artificial intelligence from both legal, societal, and ethical perspectives  AI. Development and Trends: intelligence: the promise of disruption; of AI; what is AI?; in the legal profession Christy Ng; Part II. AI. Contracting and Corporate Law: 4. AI in negotiating and entering into contracts; 5. AI and contract performance; 6. AI and company law; Part III. AI and Liability: existing tort theories ready for AI? An American perspective; 8. Are existing tort theories ready for AI? A continental European perspective; 9. Liability for AI decision-making; 10. AI and data protection; 11. AI as agents: agency law; Part IV. AI and Physical Manifestations: 12. Liability for autonomous vehicle accidents; 13. Interconnectivity and liability: AI and the internet of things; standards for medical robotics and AI: the price of autonomy; Part V. AI and Intellectual Property Law: 15. Patenting AI: the US perspective; 16. Patentability of AI: inventions in the European Patent Office; 17. AI as inventor; 18. AI and copyright law: the European perspective; Part VI. Ethical Framework for AI: 19. AI, consumer data protection and privacy; 20. AI and legal personhood; 21. AI, ethics, and law: a way forward; 22. Standardizing AI: The European Commission’s proposal for an ‘Artificial Intelligence Act’; Part VII. Future of AI: 23. AI 24. Combatingjudges; bias in AI and machine learning in consumer facing-services; 25. Keeping AI legal; 26. Colluding through smart technologies: understanding agreements in the age of 27. Thealgorithms;follyof regulating against AI’s existential threat; 28. AI and the law: interdisciplinary challenge and comparative perspectives.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks August 2022 254 x 178 mm c.400pp 9781316512807 Hardback £145.00 / US$190.00 / €169.23

8. AnChina;adaptive

• Describes

10. Financing

practitioners Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks December 2031 254 x 178 mm c.500pp 9781108488570 Hardback £145.00 / US$190.00 / €169.23

This

island 5. Regulatoryeffect;

Key Features • Provides

3. Governance

The Cambridge Handbook of Disaster Law and Policy Risk, Recovery and Redevelopment

9. LocalApproaches:resilience,

Ryan

4. Governance

Contents Part I. Critical Perspectives on the Evolution of Disaster Law and Policy: 1. Catastrophe is not the end but the beginning; 2. The flood: Political economy and disaster; Part II. Effective

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students,

Susan Kuo University of South Carolina School of Law

John Travis Marshall Georgia State University College of Law Rowberry Georgia State University College of Law

25Law

• Highlights

11. Disaster,

Part III.

concerns

Description century’s major disasters from Hurricane Katrina and the Fukushima nuclear meltdown to devastating Nepalese earthquakes and the recent crippling volcanic eruptions and tsunamis in Tonga have repeatedly taught that government institutions are ill-prepared for major disaster events, leaving the most vulnerable among us unprotected. These tragedies represent just the beginning of a new era of disaster – an era of floods, heatwaves, droughts, and pandemics fueled by climate change. Laws and government institutions have struggled to adapt to the scope of the challenge; old models of risk no longer apply. This Handbook provides timely guidance, taking stock of the field of disaster law and policy as it has developed since Hurricane Katrina. Experts from a wide range of academic and practical backgrounds address the root causes of disaster vulnerability and offer solutions to build more resilient communities to ensure that no one is left behind. detailed examples of new and proposed laws and policies to address threats posed by disaster events and examines a range of laws and policies from around the world ideas for law and policy interventions in disaster planning that have cross-national applicability Governance as an Imperative for Responsive Disaster Law and Policy: structures for recovery and resilience; strategies for mitigating urban heat institutional challenges to prevent mining dam disasters in Brazil; disaster risk reduction and climate in the greater bay area of South legal framework for water security in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao greater bay area;  Law’s Role in Promoting Hazard Mitigation: Intergovernmental, International, National, and Local land use law, and disaster planning; city resilience; land use, and European Union law; 12. Covid-19 and cooperation in times of disaster; 13. Disaster recovery in rural communities; 14. Wildfire federalism; 15. A comparative review of hazard-prone housing acquisition laws, policies, and programs in the United States and Aotearoa New Zealand; 16. Urban transformation as a resilience strategy; 17. How green cities prevent disasters?; 18. Constructing a resilient energy supply; 19. Building a resilient power grid; 20. Weaponizing private property and the chilling effect of regulatory takings jurisprudence in combating global warming; Part IV. Private Sector Initiatives to Promote Disaster Resilience and Recovery: 21. Averting disasters through watershed policy 22. Insuringadvocacy; natural catastrophes in America; 23. Corporate compliance and climate change; Part V. Lawyers as Disaster Law and Policy Leaders: Training for Students and Guidance for Practitioners: 24. Creating blueprints for law school responses to natural 25. Lawdisasters;andlawyers in disaster response; Part VI. Cultural Heritage Protection and CrossDisciplinary Opportunities for Advancing Disaster Law and 26. ScheduledPolicy: monuments and sites at risk of coastal 27. Heritage-relatederosion; disaster policy in the United 28. LoveStates; for heritage in the time of Covid-19; 29. Reflections on urban cultural heritage, public health, and public participation; Part VII. Disasters and Vulnerable Communities: 30. After the storm; 31. Social construction of disaster survivors and displaced populations; 32. From Covid-19 to climate change; 33. Disasters and disability. legal

6. Integrating

7. Climatechange; resilience

11. Intellectual Debt –

26 Law

• Available as

6. ArtificialGovernance:Intelligence

8. Fostering

The Cambridge Handbook of Responsible Artificial

10. Towards

Silja Voeneky Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, Germany

Wolfram Burgard Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, Germany

Description In the past decade, artificial intelligence (AI) has become a disruptive force around the world, offering enormous potential for innovation but also creating hazards and risks for individuals and the societies in which they live. This volume addresses the most pressing philosophical, ethical, legal, and societal challenges posed by AI. Contributors from different disciplines and sectors explore the foundational and normative aspects of responsible AI and provide a basis for a transdisciplinary approach to responsible AI. This work, which is designed to foster future discussions to develop proportional approaches to AI governance, will enable scholars, scientists, and other actors to identify normative frameworks for AI to allow societies, states, and the international community to unlock the potential for responsible innovation in this critical field. This book is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core. perspectives from different disciplines (robotics, mathematics, law, philosophy, ethics, economics etc) to exemplify interdisciplinary research in the field of AI governance an overview of current discussions about fundamental problems in the area of AI governance and regulation, as bias and discrimination Open Access on Cambridge Core Contents Introduction; Part I. Foundations of Responsible AI: Intelligence –Key Technologies and Opportunities; Supervision of AI Delegates; Moral Agents –Conceptual Issues and Ethical Controversy; Imposition by Artificial Agents –The Moral Proxy Problem; Intelligence and its Integration into the Human Lifeworld; Part II. Current and Future Approaches to AI and the Past, Present and Future of Democracy; New Regulation of the European Union on Artificial Intelligence –Fuzzy Ethics Diffuse into Domestic Law and Sideline International Law; the Common Good An Adaptive Approach Regulating High-Risk AI-Driven Normative Systems for Responsible AI –Soft Law Hard Law; a Global Artificial Intelligence Charter; With Great Power Great Ignorance; Part III. Responsible AI Liability Schemes: 12. Liability for Artificial Intelligence –The Need to Address both Safety Risks and Fundamental Rights Risks; 13. Forward to the Past –A Critical Evaluation of the European Approach to Artificial Intelligence in Private International Law; Part IV. Fairness and Non-Discrimination in AI 14. DifferencesSystems; that Make a Difference –Computational Profiling and Fairness to Individuals; 15. Discriminatory AI and the Law –Legal Standards for Algorithmic Profiling; Part V. Responsible Data Governance: 16. Artificial Intelligence and the Right to Data 17. ArtificialProtection; Intelligence as a Challenge for Data Protection Law –And Vice Versa; 18. Data Governance and Trust –Lessons from South Korean Experiences Coping with COVID-19; Part VI. Responsible Corporate Governance of AI 19. FromSystems: Corporate Governance to Algorithm Governance –Artificial Intelligence as a Challenge for Corporations and their 20. AutonomizationExecutives;and Antitrust –On the Construal of the Cartel Prohibition in the Light of Algorithmic Collusion; 21. Artificial Intelligence in Financial Services –New Risks and the Need for More Regulation?; Part VII. Responsible AI Healthcare and Neurotechnology Governance: 22. Medical AI –Key Elements at the International Level; 23. ‘Hey Siri, How Am I Doing?’ –Legal Challenges for Artificial Intelligence Alter Egos in 24. NeurorightsHealthcare; –A Human-Rights Based Approach for Governing 25. AI-SupportedNeurotechnologies;Brain-Computer Interfaces and the Emergence of ‘Cyberbilities’; Part VIII. Responsible AI for Security Applications and in Armed 26. ArtificialConflict:Intelligence, Law and National Security; 27. Morally Repugnant Weaponry? Ethical Responses to the Prospect of Autonomous Weapons; 28. On ‘Responsible AI’ in War –Exploring Preconditions for Respecting International Law in Armed Conflict.

• Provides

Products and Services; 9. China’s

to

Oliver Mueller Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, Germany

Key Features • Includes

7. The

From

Intelligence Interdisciplinary Perspectives

4. Risk

Comes

Philipp Kellmeyer Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, Germany

2. Automating

3. Artificial

1. Artificial

5. Artificial

27Law Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks September 2022 254 x 178 mm c.500pp 9781009207867 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00 / €175.06

The Cambridge Legal History of Australia

Key Features

Contents 1. Editor’s

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students July 2022 229 x 152 mm c.750pp 9781108499224 Hardback c. £125.00 / c. US$165.00 / €145.89

28 Law

• Demonstrates the importance of socio-legal analysis in legal history by tracing the various contexts, from imperial to environmental, that shaped Australian law introduction; Part I. Cultures of Law: 2. Plural Legal orders: concept and practice; 3. English legal culture in the late 18th century: institutions and values; 4. Lawful; Part II. Public Authority: 5. Colonial settlement to colony; 6. Colonial self government; 8. Constitutionalism7. Federation; in Australia; 9. Indigenous governance; 9.1 Mparntwe/Alice Springs: Towards a history of indigenous and settler jurisdictions; 9.2 Gunditjmara and Ngarrindjeri: Case studies of indigenous self-government; Part III. Public Authorities in Encounter: 10. The challenge of indigenous polities; 11. Australia as empire; 12. Australia and the World; Part IV. Land and Environment: 13. Settlement and dispossession; 14. Australian land law; 15. Aboriginal land rights, subjection and the law; 16. Land 17. Environment;justice; Part V. Social Organisation: 18. Colonial law and its control of aboriginal and Torres Strait islander families; 19. The legal history of non-indigenous marriage; 20. Protection regimes; 21. Economic and social welfare; 22. Civil rights and indigenous people; 24. Citizenship23. Rights; and immigration; Part VI. Social Ordering: 25. Criminal law and the administration of justice in early New South Wales and van diemen’s land; 26. Criminal justice after the convicts: A history of the long twentieth century; 27. Indigenous peoples and settler criminal law; 28. Civil 30. Place29. Labourwrongs;law;andrace in Australian copyright law: May gibbs’ and albert namatjira’s copyright; Part VII. 31. Indigenous Reckonings:legaltraditions and Australian legal 32. Reckoningeducation; with the past.

• Outlines the development of a uniquely Australian law through processes of adapting British law and legislation to Australian circumstances, showing doctrinal continuity and discontinuity in Australian history

Description Featuring contributions from leading lawyers, historians and social scientists, this path-breaking volume explores encounters of laws, people, and places in Australia since 1788. Its chapters address three major themes: the development of Australian settler law in the shadow of the British Empire; the interaction between settler law and First Nations people; and the possibility of meaningful encounter between First laws and settler legal regimes in Australia. Several chapters explore the limited space provided by Australian settler law for respectful encounters, particularly in light of the High Court’s particular concerns about the fragility of Australian sovereignty. Tracing the development of a uniquely Australian law and the various contexts that shaped it, this volume is concerned with the complexity, plurality, and ambiguity of Australia’s legal history.

Peter Cane University of Cambridge Lisa Ford University of New South Wales, Sydney Mark McMillan RMIT University, Melbourne

• Promotes understanding of the plural sources of law and legal structure in Australia by exploring encounters of laws, people and places since 1788

Description Situating First World War poetry in a truly global context, this book reaches beyond the British soldier-poet canon.A History ofWorldWar One Poetry examines popular and literary, ephemeral and enduring poems that the cataclysm of 1914-1918 inspired. Across Europe, poets wrestled with the same problem: how to represent a global conflict, dominated by modern technology, involving millions of combatants and countless civilians. For literary scholars this has meant discovering and engaging with the work of men and women writing in other languages, on other fronts, and from different national perspectives. Poems are presented in their original languages and in English translations, some for the very first time, while a Coda reflects on the study and significance of First World War poetry in the wake of the Centenary. A History ofWorldWar One Poetry offers a new perspective on the literary and human experience of 1914-1918.

Poetry Jane Potter Oxford Brookes University

29Literature

Key Features

A History of World War One

• Provides examples of transnational poetic creation in time of global conflict to demonstrates how the canon of First World War Poetry, largely based around the British soldier-poetry, needs to be widened and diversified by presenting the poetry of the war in its global environment Analyses a range of First World War poetry in the original language and in English translation in an accessible and scholarly manner poetry from diverse perspectives, including artistic movements, individual poets and nations, and publishing history

• Considers

Contents Introduction; Part I. Literary Contexts; 1. The Poetic Marketplace; 2. Poetic Tradition and Innovation: Georgians and 3. PoeticOthers; Avant-Garde: Modernism and Little 4. PoeticMagazines;Cultural Exchange: Continental European Literary 5. PoeticScene;Form and Language; Part II. Nations and Voices; 6. Germany and Austria-Hungary; 7. Czech War Poetry; 17. Australia16. South15. Italy;14. USA;13. Serbia;12. Russia;11. Ireland;10. Great9. Belgium;8. France;Britain;Africa;and New Zealand; 19. South18. Canada;Asian Poetry; Part III. Poets; 20. Non-combatant and Others; 21. Edward Thomas (1878-1917); 22. Guillaume Apollinaire (1880-1918); 23. Siegfried Sassoon (1886-1967) and Edmund Blunden 30. David29. Wilfred28. Ivor27. Isaac26. Georg25. Mary24. Anna(1896-1974);Akhmatova(1886-1966);Borden(1886-1968);Trakl(1887-1914);Rosenberg(1890-1918);Gurney(1890-1937);Owen(1893-1918);Jones(1895-1974); Part IV. Coda: Legacies of World War One Poetry. Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers August 2022 229 x 152 mm c.425pp 9781009100649 Hardback £89.99 / US$120.00 / €105.03

11. After

Contents Introduction; Part I. Context: 1. David

Nabokov and the ethics of empathy; 3. Writing in a material world:

9. Visual

David Foster Wallace in Context Hayes-Brady University Dublin

30 Literature

Description

David Foster Wallace is regarded as one of the most important American writers of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. This book introduces readers to the literary, philosophical and political contexts of Wallace’s work. An accessible and useable resource, this volume conceptualizes his work within long-standing critical traditions and with a new awareness of his importance for American literary studies. It shows the range of issues and contexts that inform the work and reading of David Foster Wallace, connecting his writing to diverse ideas, periods and themes. Essays cover topics on gender, sex, violence, race, philosophy, poetry and geography, among many others, guiding new and long-standing readers in understanding the work and influence of this important writer. of contextual explorations of the work of David Foster Wallace non-specialist to the dominant strains of criticism in Wallace studies, allowing readers and students without critical training to become familiar with themes and contexts of his work that will appeal to a non-specialist readership Foster Wallace David Foster Wallace, Vladimir David Foster Wallace Foster Wallace Foster Wallace and poetry; and I hope you like it: David Foster Wallace and entertainment; culture; Part II. attention; analysis: notes on the new sincerity from Wallace to 12. PerfectionismKnausgaard;andthe ethics of failure; 13. The pragmatist possibility in David Foster Wallace’s 14. Awritings;tale of two theses: system J and The Broom of the 15. FreeSystem;will and determinism; 16. Mathematics of the infinite; 17. Wallace and existentialism; 18. David Foster Wallace and religion; 19. Mr. Consciousness; Part III. Bodies: 20. No ordinary love: David Foster Wallace and sex; 21. ‘The Limits of His Seductively Fine Mind’: Wallace, whiteness and the feminine; 22. Wallace and masculinity; 23. Theorizing the other; 24. Wallace and disability; 25. Queering Wallace: on the queer history of addiction fiction; Part IV. 26. Infinite Systems:jestas opiate fiction; 27 David Foster Wallace and racial capitalism; 28. Language and self-creation: David Foster Wallace’s many ways of sounding American; 29. Very old land: David Foster Wallace and the myths and systems of agriculture; 31. ‘I30. Ecologies;Could,If You’d Let Me, Talk and Talk’: Institutions, dialogue and citizenship in David Foster Wallace; 32. David and Dutch: Wallace, Reagan and the US 33. WallacePresidency; and publishing; 34. Author here, there and everywhere: Wallace and biography.

• Written in accessible language

Key Features • Provides a broad range

and 1980s 4. Confidencefiction;man: Wallace and the American nineteenth century; 5. David

advanced

College

and 2. Anarratology;meeting of minds:

and European literature; 6. David

8. Thanks7. ‘Non’-fiction;everybody

• Introduces

10. Wallace Ideas:and

Additional Information Level: Undergraduate students, graduate students Series: Literature in Context October 2022 229 x 152 mm c.375pp 9781316513323 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00 / €99.2

Clare

readers

Contents Part I. Aesthetics

6. Literature

19. Uncle

11. The

16. Narratives

Description

Andean; 12. The Material

Imagination; 23. Humboldt’s

Latin American Literature in Transition 1800-1870 uses affect as an analytical tool to uncover the countervailing forces that shaped Latin American literatures and cultures during the first six decades of the nineteenth century. Chapters provide perspectives on colonial violence and its representation, on the development of the national idea, on communities within and beyond the nation, and on the intersectional development of subjectivity during and after processes of cultural and political independence. This volume includes interdisciplinary approaches to nineteenth-century Latin American cultures that range from visual and art history to historiography to comparative literature and the study of literary and popular print culture. This book engages with the complex and sometimes counterintuitive relationship between felt ideas of community and the political changes that shaped these affective networks and communities. Provides examples of transatlantic and transnational approaches to nineteenth-century cultural studies in Latin America Thinks beyond standard periodization through the critical lense of affect and emotion Provides a wide variety of critical perspectives including affect, intersectionality, transoceanic studies, transatlantic studies, visual culture and gender studies of Disorder: Paraguayan War imagined; of New World Authority; and Affective Labor; (In) the Streets; and Print Culture; and Political Corruption; Political Ethnography; Disruptive and Cultural Politics of Good Manners and the Body; Identity and the Subjectivities: Enslavement, and Identity; from Enslavement; and Racial Ambivalence; Race and Gender; Tom’s Cabin in Consciousness: Travel Writing; Modernity; and the Transatlantic Aesthetic Darwinists.

15. Shame,

21. Hydraulic

7. Emotions and Politics in the Era of Caudillos; Part II. Affective Communities: 8. Imagining Popular Sovereignty; 9. The Arithmetic of Sentiment; 10. Costumbrismo as

Latin American Literature in Transition 1800–1870 Peluffo University of California, Irvine Ronald Briggs Barnard College, New York

31Literature

22. History

Public

Nation; Part III. Intersectional

Key Features •

Brazil; Part IV. Transoceanic

Publishing; 13. Hygiene,

2. Networks

3. Artisans

5. Publicity

17. Masculinities

Volume 2 Ana

4. Reading

18. Childhood,

1. The

14. Intimacy,

20. Women’s

Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: Latin American Literature in Transition October 2022 228 x 152 mm c.375pp 9781009169455 Hardback c. £97.99 / c. US$120.00 / €114.36

Populations; 24. Argentine

Key

32 Literature

Javier Uriarte Stony Brook University, State University of New York

Latin American Literature in Transition 1870–1930

Fernando Degiovanni City University of New York

Description

• Provides and in-depth analysis of aesthetic trends, authors, genres from a comparative and transnational perspective Part I. 6. Yerba;5. Sugar;4. Plantains3. Coffee;2. Guano1. Rubber; Commodities:andnitrates;andbananas; Part II. 11. Feminisms;10. Diasporas;9. Chinoiseries;8. Cosmopolitanisms;7. Latin Networks:Americanisms; Part III. 12. Anarchisms; Uprisings: 15. Rural14. Abolitionism;13. Indigenismos;insurgencies; Part IV. 19. War;18. Travel;17. Bodies;16. Money; Connectors: 21. Visual20. Science;Culture; Part V. 24. San23. Manaus,22. Iquique, Cities:Chile;Brazil;Juan,Puerto Rico; 25. Ciudad Juárez-El Paso.

Contents Introduction;

Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: Latin American Literature in Transition October 2022 229 x 152 mm c.350pp 9781108838740 Hardback c. £97.99 / c. US$120.00 / €114.36

• Explores theoretical perspectives centered on varied forms of material and symbolic circulation

Latin American Literature in Transition 1870-1930 examines how the circulation of goods, people, and ideas permeated every aspect of the continent’s cultural production at the end of the nineteenth century. It analyzes the ways in which rapidly transforming technological and labour conditions contributed to forging new intellectual networks, exploring innovative forms of knowledge, and reimagining the material and immaterial worlds. This volume shows the new directions in turn-of-the-century scholarship that developed over the last two decades by investigating how the experience of capitalism produced an array of works that deal with primitive accumulation, transnational crossings, and an emerging technological and material reality in diverse geographies and a variety of cultural forms. Essays provide a novel understanding of the period as they discuss the ways in which particular commodities, intellectual networks, popular uprisings, materialities, and non-metropolitan locations redefined cultural production at a time when the place of Latin America in global affairs was significantly transformed. Features Accounts for the complexity and diversity of Latin American cultural production in the period 1870-1930

• Provides detailed examples of Latin American literary currents before and after the ‘boom’

Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: Latin American Literature in Transition October 2022 229 x 152 mm c.350pp 9781009177764 Hardback c. £97.99 / c. US$120.00 / €114.36

Description

Key Features

33Literature

Latin American Literature in Transition 1930–1980

Latin American Literature in Transition 1930-1980 explores the literary landscape of the mid-twentieth-century and the texts that were produced during that period. It takes four core areas of thematic and conceptual focus – solidarity, aesthetics and innovation, war, revolution and dictatorship, metropolis and ruins – and employs them to explore the complexity, heterogeneity and hybridity of form, genre, subject matter and discipline that characterised literature from the period. In doing so, it uncovers the points of transition, connection, contradiction, and tension that shaped the work of many canonical and non-canonical authors. It illuminates the conversations between genres, literary movements, disciplines and modes of representation that underpin writing form this period. Lastly, by focusing on canon and beyond, the volume visibilizes the aesthetics, poetics, politics, and social projects of writing, incorporating established writers, but also writers whose work is yet to be examined in all its complexity.

Volume 4 Amanda Holmes McGill University, Montréal Par Kumaraswami University of Reading

7. Mexican-Miracle

• Offers new readings of literature based on exploring non-canonical writers and texts, or understanding literary texts in other ways, allowing readers to think beyond the usual categories for literary analysis to uncover the concept of literature as a dynamic and complex phenomenon Contents I. War, Revolution, Dictatorship: 1. Revolutions and Literary Transitions: the 1960s; 2. Jorge Luis Borges: Probing the Limits of World War; 3. Antifascism and Literature in Brazil: The Many Wars of Antônio Callado; 4. Disaster Innovation in the Mid-Century Spanish-American Novel: Carpentier, Asturias, 5. StruggleDonoso;atthe Margins: The Intersections of Gender, Race, and Sexuality in Brazil’s Literature of Revolution; II. Metropolis and Ruins: 6. Economic, Political and Ecological Disasters: The Metropolis and its Ruins in Latin American Poetry in the 1960s and 1970s; Modernism; 8. Crime and the City: A Critical Walk through Latin American Crime Fiction and Urban Places; III. 9. ‘DarSolidarity:testimonio’ as a Form of Solidarity and a Lens for Rethinking the Mexican Literary 10. LandscapesCanon; of Heterogeneity in a Mid-Twentieth Century Quechua Poem; 11. Beyond the Nation Frame: Rethinking the Presence of Indigenous Literatures in the Spanish-American Novel circa 1950; 12. Femininity in Flux: Gabriela Mistral’s Madwomen; 13. The Representation of Afro-Cuban Orality by Fernando Ortiz, Lydia Cabrera and Nicolás Guillén; IV. Aesthetics and Innovation: 14. Eros: After Surrealism and Before the Revolution (1945-1967); 15. Alejo Carpentier: Some Brief Bio-Bibliographical Notes Rafael Rodríguez Beltrán and The Return of the Galleons: Transitions in the Work of Alejo Carpentier; 16. ‘Un híbrido de halcón y jicotea.’ Testimonio and its Challenge to the Latin American Literary Canon; 17. Literature and Revolution in Transition: An Aesthetics of Singularity; 18. Confluence and Divergence: Avant-garde Poetics in Twentieth-Century Spanish America and 19. Cortázar’sBrazil;Transitional Poetics: Experiments in Verse behind Experiments in Prose.

• Offers a complex understanding of how Latin American literature evolved in the mid-twentieth century, allowing readers to understand the connections and differences between and across a range of cultural and political contexts for literature in the continent

and

in

Literature in the present • Contributors come from a wide variety of fields and perspectives, providing readers

11. New poetry, fresh approaches; Part III. Mobilities: 12. New

Key Features • Proposes a new trans-regional perspective on contemporary Latin

Latin American Literature in Transition San National Scientific and Technical Research Council, A. Castillo University, address the idea of the literary now at the end of the second decade in the 21st century? Many traditional categories obscure overlook significant contemporary forms of cultural production. This volume looks at literature and culture in general in this American Literature in Transition 1980-2018 examines the ways literary culture complicates national or area studies understandings of cultural production. point to fresh, intersectional understandings of cultural practice, while keeping mind the ongoing stakes in a struggle over material and intangible cultural and political borders that are being reinforced in formidable ways. American literatures study of genres authors, accounting for the vitality and diversity of Latin American with diverse and interdisciplinary literature in Latin America from school to marketplace and beyond; history of comics creation; Latinx/Chicanx thought; 13. The boundless dramas of dancing Mulatas; 14. Contemporary stories of deportation and migration; 15. The Language Shift of Literary Studies on Abiayala; 16. South Asia and Latin America/comparative booms; Part IV. 17. Linguistic Positionalities:andliterary tensions in contemporary Paraguay Carla Daniela Benisz remaking of the “New Man” in queer Cuban cinema; 19. Dissident sexualities in Southern-Cone literature; 20. Queer feminism in Latin American hip hop; 21. Figures of the impersonal in contemporary Latin American Culture; Part V. LA literature in Global Markets: 22. Latin American literature and criticism in the global market; 23. Doing Brazilian Digital Cultural studies; 24. Mexican transnational cinema in the 21st century.

• Provides an in-depth

or

10. Graphing9. Performance8. Paraliterature;studies;ahemispheric

latinx

1980–2018 Volume 5 Mónica Szurmuk Universidad Nacional de

34 Literature

18. Theand;

Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: Latin American Literature in Transition October 2022 229 x 152 mm c.350pp 9781108838764 Hardback c. £97.99 / c. US$120.00 / €114.36

Argentina Debra

Cornell

Martín and

representative

New York Description How do we

Topics

essays Contents Introduction; Part I. 2. Literature,1. Geological Security:writings;trauma,and human rights; 3. Literatura de Hijos in post-dictatorship South America; 4. Mexican narconarratives after ‘Narcos’; Part II. New 6. Latin5. SpeculativeGenres:fiction;Americandigital literatura; 7. Children’s

hinge period. Latin

Rocío Quispe-Agnoli Michigan State University Amber Brian University of Iowa Description

Key

Contents Part I. Land, Space, Territory: 1. Migrations and foundations in the literature of New Spain; 2. Defining Portuguese America: The first depictions of Brazil within the context of overseas expansion; 3. The conquest of space in the Relación del descubrimiento del Rio Marañon by Geronimo de Ypori (c. 1630); 4. Disturbing place: Afro-Iberian herbalists interrupt imperial Cartagena de Indias; Part II. Body: 5. The Health of the Soul: Religious guidance and medical practice in early colonial 6. ViceroyMexico; Valero’s heart: A traveling relic, and an embodied metaphor in transit to the 7. HumoralismIndies; and colonial subjugation: Indians and medical knowledge in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; 8. Assaulted bodies: The case of two female slaves in the port city of Santa María de los Ángeles de Buenos Aires, 1772-1778; Part III. Belief Systems: 9. The flood story in the Huarochirí manuscript and other early colonial Andean texts; 10. Idol or Martyr: Sacredness and symbol in the religiosity of the Indies; 11. Creole religiosity in colonial Mexico: Devotional cultures in transition; 12. The empire beyond Spanish America: Spanish Augustinians in the Pacific World; 13. Indigenous peoples and Catholicism in eighteenth-century Mexico City; Part IV. 14. Transcultural Literacies:intertextuality in colonial Latin America; 15. Becoming a book: The reproduction, falsification, and digitalization of colonial 16. Fromcodices; print to public performance to relaciones de fiestas: Don Quixote in viceregal 17. Colonialfestivals;Latin American bibliography and the indigenous text Clayton; Part V. 18. Technologies Languages:of communication in transition: Indigenous orality and writing in colonial Mexico; 19. A Baroque arte: Horacio Carochi and the Tradition of Nahuatl Grammars; 20. Acquiring a voice: The Plebs speak in early colonial Río de La Plata; 21. Knowledge in transition: Rethinking the science of sameness in Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz’s New Spain; Part VI. 22. Textual Identities:figures and modalities of change: The Soldier, the Translator, the Plebeian, and the woman chronicler; 23. Diego Muñoz Camargo and the destabilization of the Relación Geográfica: Adaptation and variation in the Mestizo Chronicle; 24. Representing/erasing the other in colonial Brazil’s eighteenth-century epic poetry.

The year 1492 invokes many instances of transition in a variety of ways that intersected, overlapped, and shaped the emergence of Latin America. For the diverse Native inhabitants of the Americas as well as the people of Europe, Africa, and Asia who crossed the Atlantic and Pacific as part of the early-modern global movements, their lived experiences were defined by transitions. The Iberian territories from approximately 1492-1800 extended from what is now the US Southwest to Tierra del Fuego, and from the Iberian coasts to the Philippines and China. Built around six thematic areas that underline key processes that shaped the colonial period and its legacies – space, body, belief systems, literacies, languages, and identities – this innovative volume goes beyond the traditional European understanding of the lettered canon. It examines a range of texts including books published in Europe and the New World and manuscripts stored in repositories around the globe that represent poetry, prose, judicial proceedings, sermons, letters, grammars, and dictionaries. Features

35Literature

Latin American Literature in Transition Pre-1492–1800

• Provides readers with examples of the hemispheric, transatlantic and transpacific manifestations of colonial Latin American textual production

• Helps readers understand the broadening of materials to be studied by Discussing the notion of literature beyond the traditional European understanding of the lettered canon

• Provides examples on interdisciplinary approaches to a gamut of colonial Latin American texts

Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: Latin American Literature in Transition October 2022 229 x 152 mm c.350pp 9781108838832 Hardback c. £97.99 / c. US$120.00 / €114.36

Contents Part I. Geographical, Social and Historical Contexts: 1. Mapping Bolaño’s worlds; 2. Chile, 1953–1973; 3. The Pinochet era, 1973–1990; 4. Dictatorships in the Southern Cone; 5. Mexico City, 1968; 6. Mexico City, Paris, and life versus art; 7. Spain, Europe, 1977–2003; 8. Transatlantic currents: Europe and the Americas; Part II. Shaping Events and Literary History: 9. France, Spain, 1938; 10. The Cold War; 11. After the fall of the wall: 1989–2001; 12. Latin American literature; 13. French 14. Germanconnections;andRussian precursors; 15. After the two 9/11s: Santiago de Chile, 1973, New York, 2001; Part III: Genres, Discourses, Media: 16. Essays and short stories; 17. Poetry I: the ghost that runs through the writing; 18. Poetry II: parody and the question of history; 19. The novel and the canon; 20. Detective fiction; 21. Journalism, media, mass culture; 22. Literary criticism and literary history; Part IV. Aesthetics, Culture, and Politics: 23. The abomination of literature; 24. Religion and politics; 25. Gender and sexuality; 26. Race and ethnicity; 27. Trauma and collective memory; 28. Fictions of the avant-gardes; 29. Love and friendship; 30. World literature: twenty-first-century legacies.

• It provides a comprehensive mapping of the pivotal contexts, events, stages, and influences shaping Bolaño’s writing from his birth in 1953 to his death in 2003

The book offers essays on the entirety of Bolaño’s work by 28 distinguished scholars with wide-ranging backgrounds and expertise

Jonathan B. Monroe Cornell University, New York

Roberto Bolaño In Context

Description

Increasingly recognized not only in Latin America, but as a major figure in World Literature, Bolaño is an essential writer for the 21st century world. This volume provides a comprehensive mapping of the pivotal contexts, events, stages, and influences shaping Bolaño’s writing. As the wide-ranging investigations of this volume’s 28 distinguished scholars show, Bolaño’s influence and impact will shape literary cultures worldwide for years to come.

From his first fifteen years in Chile, to his nine years in Mexico City from 1968 to 1977, to the quarter of a century he lived and worked in the Blanes-Barcelona area on the Costa Brava in Spain through his death in 2003, Roberto Bolaño developed into an astonishingly diverse, prolific writer. He is one of the most consequential and widely read of his generation in any language.

Key Features

36 Literature

• It further establishes and consolidates the case for Bolaño as a writer of global importance for the late 20th and early 21st century

Additional Information Level: Undergraduate students, graduate students Series: Literature in Context August 2022 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 9781108835671 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00 / €99.19

16. ‘Looking

17. ‘Grafted

20. ‘Viola’s Telemachy’; 21. ‘New analogical evidence

26. The Year’s contribution to Shakespeare studies: 1. Critical Studies , 2. Performance , 3. Editions and Textual Studies. Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Shakespeare Survey August 2022 246 x 189 mm c.450pp 9781009245821 Hardback c. £89.99 / c. US$115.00 / €105.03

Shakespeare Survey 75

23. Shakespeare performances in

6. ‘Othello:

22. ‘But when extremities speak’:

www.cambridge.org/core/what-we-publish/collections/shakespeare-survey

Othello Emma Smith University of Oxford Description Survey is a yearbook of Shakespeare studies and production. Since 1948, Survey has published the best international in English and many of its essays have become classics of Shakespeare criticism. Each volume is devoted to a theme, or play, or group of plays; each also contains a section of reviews of that year’s textual and critical studies and of the year’s major British performances. The theme for Volume 75 is ‘Othello’. The complete set of Survey volumes is also available online at https:// This fully searchable resource enables users to browse by author, essay and volume, search by play, theme and topic and save and bookmark their results. the annual series of volumes devoted to Shakespeare study and production Othello occupies most of the articles in this issue substantial review section covers books published on Shakespeare during 2020 and productions throughout the UK Iago (2009): Clientelism, Corruption, Politics; marginality: The curious case of India’s Othello screen adaptations’; Kin: Legacy, Belonging, and The fortunes of the Moor; fair than black’: Othellos on British radio’; fair paper’: Othello and the Artists’ book’; A dialogue with the built environment’; maid called barbary:’ Othello, Moorish maidservants, and the black presence in early modern England’; Moor’s abused by some most villainous knave, some base notorious knave, some scurvy fellow’: Legal spaces, Racial trauma, and Othello’; Jonson’s Sejanus and Shakespeare’s Othello: Two Plays Performed by the King’s Men in c.1603’; and the clown: Disassembling the vice in Othello’; desdemona in Folio Othello: Race, Gender, and the willow song’; honest friend’; ecstasy: Othello and the drama of displacement’; sympathies: Emotion, Agency, and identification’; the Stage: Shakespeare’s mid-scene entrance conventions’; for perdita in Ali Smith’s summer’; to the Moor: Anglo-Spanish dynastic marriage and miscegenated whiteness in The winter’s tale’; History, and Memory in A Mirror for Magistrates and Henry VI’; Gascoigne to Benson’s Shakespeare’; for Cymbeline’s folkloric composition in the medieval icelandic Ála flekks saga’; Harley Granville-Barker, Coriolanus, the world wars and the state of exception’; England 2021: London; England 2021: outside London; the British Isles, January-December 2020;

25. Professional Shakespeare productions in

14. ‘Othello’s

15. ‘Warning

2. ‘Circumventing

11. ‘Pitying

24. Shakespeare performances in

Shakespeare

3. ‘Othello’s

Contents 1. Understanding

4. ‘More

7. ‘‘[A]

10. ‘Lago

37Literature

5. ‘This

9. ‘Ben

18. ‘Rhyme,

8. ‘The

• A

scholarship

19. ‘Bad’ Love lyrics and poetic hypocrisy from

Key Features • The 75th in

12. ‘Desdemona’s

13. ‘Suffering

II.10. ‘A Mirror of Modesty’ (1621); II.11. ‘A Sermon…the 5th of November, 1606’ (1629);

• Features a carefully-curated selection of representative and often overlooked authors and sources dealing with the early modern death arts, both widening readers’ understanding of the subject and suggesting avenues for further research Includes an introduction that situates the featured textual and visual materials within the cultural, religious, and epistemological parameters of the period while also connecting these to ongoing critical issues in the humanities, including race, sexuality, and gender scholars and students navigate the field through modernized editing, topical prefaces, and textual apparatuses  Preparatory and dying Arts: I.1. To know well to die I.2. The(1490);Calendar of Shepherds (1518); I.3. The way of dying well (1534); I.4. The Lamentation of a Sinner (1547); I.5. ‘A Meditation of a penitent Sinner’ (1560); I.6. A Fruitful treatise…against the fear of Death I.7. A(1564);Spiritual Consolation (1578); I.8. The repentance of Robert Greene (1592); I.9. A Salve for a Sick Man (1595); I.10. The Mother’s Blessing (1616); I.11. Selected Works (1628, 1635); I.12. ‘The unnatural Wife’ (1628); I.13. An antidote against purgatory (1634); I.14. Holy dying (1651); I.15. The virgin’s pattern (1661); I.16. A Token for Children (1676); I.17. ‘A True account of…last dying speeches’ (1690); Part II. Funereal and Commemorative Arts: II.1.Chronicles (1548); II.2. ‘The Order for the burial of the dead’ (1549); II.3. The Primer set forth at large (1559); II.4. Acts and Monuments (1576); II.5. The Glorious Martyrdom of twelve Priests (1582);

The first-ever critical anthology of the death arts in Renaissance England, this book draws together over 60 extracts and 20 illustrations to establish and analyse how people grappled with mortality in the 16th and 17th centuries. As well as providing a comprehensive resource of annotated and modernized excerpts, this engaging study includes commentary on authors and overall texts, discussions of how each excerpt is constitutive and expressive of the death arts, and suggestions for further reading. The extended Introduction takes into account death’s intersections with print, gender, sex, and race, surveying the period’s far-reaching preoccupation with, and anticipatory reflection upon, the cessation of life.

For researchers, instructors, and students interested in medieval and early modern history and literature, the Reformation, memory studies, book history, and print culture, this indispensable resource provides at once an entry point into the field of early modern death studies and a springboard for further research.

II.7. The French History (1589); II.8. ‘Doleful Lay of Clorinda’ (1595); II.9. Selected Works (1603, 1604);

The Death Arts in Renaissance England A Critical Anthology

Contents Part I.

• Helps

University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee Rory Loughnane University of Kent, Canterbury Grant Williams Carleton University, Ottawa

II.6. The life and death of Sir Philip Sidney (1587);

38 Literature

Description

Part III. Knowing and Understanding Death: III.1. The despising of the World (1532); III.2. A Preservative against Death (1545); III.3. A Godly Meditation (1548); III.4. A Mirror for Magistrates (1587); III.5. The Haven of Health (1588); III.6. Protection for Woman (1589); III.7. Montaigne’s Essays (1603); III.8. The Works of Seneca (1614); III.9. Navmachia (1622); III.10. ‘Of Death’ III.11. Mikrokosmographia(1625); (1631); III.12. ‘A View of the present State of Ireland’ (1633); III.13. A View of all Religions in the World (1653); III.14. Natural and Political Observations (1662); III.15. Philosophical Letters (1664); III.16. Lucretius’s Six Books (1683); III.17. Principles of the most Ancient and Modern Philosophy (1692); Part IV. Death Arts in Literature: IV.1. The Ship of Fools IV.2. The(1509);Summoning of Everyman (1528); IV.3. The Dance of Death (1554); IV.4. ‘Complaint of a Dying Lover’ (1557); IV.5. ‘A Strange Punishment’ (1566); IV.6. ‘Gascoigne’s Goodnight’ (1573); IV.7. ‘The Manner of her Will’ (1573); IV.8. The Mirror of Princely deeds and Knighthood IV.9. Selected(1578); Works (1594, 1604); IV.10. Selected Works (1606, 1614); IV.11. Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum (1611); IV.12. Selected Works (1611, 1613); IV.13. The Tragedy of Mariam (1613); IV.14. Urania (1621); IV.15. ‘The last Will and Testament of Philip Herbert’ IV.16. ‘The(1650); Nymph complaining for the death of her Fawn’ IV.17. Oroonoko(1681); (1688)

II.12. The Phoenix of these late times (1637); II.13. Eikon Basilike (1649); II.14. ‘An Elegy on the Lady Markham’ (1653); II.15. A String of Pearls (1657); II.16. Poems (1669); II.17. ‘An Essay upon Death’ (1696);

William E. Engel

Key Features

39Literature Additional Information Level: Graduate students, undergraduate students, academic researchers July 2022 228 x 152 mm c.380pp 9781108479271 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00 / €99.2

8. The

Contents Part I. The Man: 1. The Life; 2. The 4. Estate3. Tolstoy’sDeath;family;cultureand

Tolstoy in Context

reading,

5. Peasantscontexts:

Additional Information Level: Graduate students, undergraduate students, academic researchers Series: Literature in Context August 2022 229 x 152 mm c.300pp 9781108479240 Hardback c. £85.00 / c. US$110.00 / €99.2

15. The

Description Likened

14. The13. Clothing;12. Tolstoyans;woman

6. Emancipation

11. War10. Politics;9. Law;and

7. Nobility

Key Features • Divided

• Includes

chapters,

40 Literature

Anna A. Berman McGill University, Montréal to a second Tsar in Russia and attaining prophet-like status around the globe, Tolstoy made an impact on literature and the arts, religion, philosophy, and politics. His novels and stories both responded to and helped to reshape the European and Russian literary traditions. His non-fiction incensed readers and drew a massive following, making Tolstoy an important religious force as well as a stubborn polemicist in many fields. Through his involvement with Gandhi and the Indian independence movement, his aid in relocating the Doukhobors to Canada, his correspondence with American abolitionists and his polemics with scientists in the periodical press, Tolstoy engaged a vast array of national and international contexts of his time in his life and thought. This volume those contexts and situates Tolstoy—the man and the writer—in the rich and tumultuous period in which his intellectual and creative output came to fruition. into informative yet manageable providing an excellent accessible point of entry for those approaching Tolstoy for the first time a chronology which orients the reader in three areas: Tolstoy’s life and works, Russian history and literature, and world history and literature further offering a useful resource for students keen to know more yasnaya polyana; Part II. Russian social and political and Folklore; and the great reforms; and the Russian class system; Russian Orthodox Church; the military; question; Family; Part III. Literature, The Arts, and intellectual life: 16. Tolstoy’s Oeuvre; 17. Peasant schools and education; 18. Russian philosophy; 19. The Russian literary scene; 20. European literature; 21. European philosophy; 24. The23. Music;22. Theater;visual arts; Part IV. Science and technology: 25. The mechanized world; 26. The natural world; 27. Darwin and natural science; 28. Medical science; Part V. Beyond Russia 29. Pacifism and the doukhobors; 33. English32. Eastern31. India;30. America;Religion;varietiesof religious experience; Part VI. Tolstoy’s afterlife: 34. Tolstoy’s complete works; 35. Tolstoy in English translation; 36. Film 39. Tolstoy38. Biographies;37. Musicaladaptations;adaptations;assubjectofArt: Portraits, films, novels.

• Provides a list of suggested

introduces

Square • Substantial explanatory notes provide

illustrations

Washington Square

Key Features • First scholarly edition of

41Literature

Henry James Gert Buelens Universiteit Gent, Belgium Susan M. Griffin University of Louisville, Kentucky 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 two volumes in 1880, Washington Square dramatises the plight of Catherine Sloper, a rich heiress, whose father, a successful doctor, identifies her one suitor, Morris Townsend, as a fortunehunter. The novel thus draws on the sentimental tradition, which it develops with subtle, sympathetic irony, in a realist direction. This the first to provide a full account of the context in which the book was composed and received, and to include the original by Punch-cartoonist George Du Maurier. Extensive explanatory notes enable modern readers to understand its nuanced historical, cultural and literary references, and its complex textual history. Washington a richer biographical and socio-historical context than ever before George Du Maurier

Description The

edition is

• Includes all original illustrations by

Contents General editors’ preface; General chronology of James’s life and writings; ChronologyTextualIntroduction;introduction;ofcomposition and production; WashingtonBibliography;Square;Glossaryofforeignwords and phrases; TextualNotes; variants; List of Appendices.emendations; Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Complete Fiction of Henry James September 2022 229 x 152 mm 275pp 9781107003897 Hardback £89.99 / US$120.00 / €105.03

Description is often regarded as the most important philosopher of the twentieth century, and in recent decades, his work has begun to play a prominent role in literary studies, particularly in debates over language, interpretation, and critical judgment. and Literary Studies solidifies this critical movement, assembling recent critics and philosophers who understand Wittgenstein as a counterweight to longstanding tendencies in both literary studies and philosophical aesthetics. The essays here cover a wide range of topics. Why have contemporary writers been so drawn to Wittgenstein? What is a Wittgensteinian response to New Historicism, Post-Critique, and other major critical movements? How does Wittgenstein help us understand the nature of style, fiction, poetry, and the link between ethics and aesthetics? As the volume makes clear, Wittgenstein’s work provides a rare bridge between professional philosophy and literary studies, offering us a way out of entrenched positions and their denials-what Wittgenstein himself called ‘pictures’ ‘that held us captive.’ readers to a Wittgensteinian perspective on a range of themes, and allows them to grasp both the unity and flexibility of Wittgensteinian thinking about aesthetics written by both philosophers and literary scholars. Every chapter includes sustained discussions of both academic fields a wide range of literary topics, and is not restricted to specific authors or periods

Wittgenstein

42 Literature

• Chapters are

Robert Chodat Boston University John Gibson University of Louisville, Kentucky

Wittgenstein and Literary Studies

Wittgenstein

Key Features • Introduces

• The volume covers

Contents 1. WritingIntroduction;after Wittgenstein; 2. A Wittgensteinian phenomenology of criticism; 3. Appreciating material: criticism, science, and the very idea of method; 4. A vision of language for literary historians: forms of life, context, use; 5. Wittgenstein and the prospects for a contemporary literary humanism; 6. Storied thoughts: Wittgenstein and the reaches of fiction; 7. Wittgenstein and lyric; 8. Life, logic, style: on late Wittgenstein; 9. Wittgenstein’s apocalyptic subjectivity. Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: Cambridge Studies in Literature and Philosophy November 2022 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 9781108833219 Hardback c. £85.00 / c. US$110.00 / €99.2

4. Secular

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, amateurs/enthusiasts September 2022 229 x 152 mm c.420pp 9781316511060 Hardback c. £79.99 / c. US$105.00 / €93.36

From

3. Music

5. The

The Open University, Milton Keynes Helen Barlow

tradition; 6. Women and

and

The Open University, Milton Keynes

Contents 1. Music

Trevor Herbert Royal College of Music, London Martin V. Clarke

century; 10. Nonconformists and their music; 11. Professionalisation in the twentieth century; 12. Composing Cymru: Art music since 1940; 13. Traditions and interventions:

1840-1940; 14. New traditions:

• Helps

2. Words

A History of Welsh Music

15. Singing

Description early medieval bards to the bands of the ‘Cool Cymru’ era, this book looks at Welsh musical practices and traditions, the forces that have influenced and directed them, and the ways in which the idea of Wales as a ‘musical nation’ has been formed and embedded in popular consciousness in Wales and beyond. Beginning with early medieval descriptions of musical life in Wales, the book provides both an overarching study of Welsh music history and detailed consideration of the ideas, beliefs, practices and institutions that shaped it. Topics include the eisteddfod, the church and the chapel, the influence of the Welsh language and Welsh cultural traditions, the scholarship of the Celtic Revival and the folk song movement, the impacts of industrialization and digitization, and exposure to broader trends in popular culture, including commercial popular music and sport.

Key Features •

folk song; 7. Instrumental traditions after 1650; 8. The Celtic revival; 9. Musical communications in the long

43Music

Crowd; 16. Postscript:

into

The first history of Welsh music to provide a broad overview ranging from early medieval music to contemporary pop Caters to the growing interest in Welsh cultural history and the place of music in the construction of Welsh identity readers understand the many, varied historical influences on Welsh music and its trajectories in Welsh history; for music: describing musical practices in medieval Welsh literature; in worship before 1650; music before 1650; eisteddfod Welsh nineteenth popular music Welsh popular music the twenty-first century; Welshness: Sport, music the Contemporary Wales, devolution and digitisation.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students August 2022 244 x 170 mm c.500pp 9781108845434 Hardback £99.99 / US$130.00 / €116.7

Key

Description Researchers

This book tackles pressing issues such as replicability, research ethics, and open science. With contributors from a broad range of comparative, cognitive, neuroscience, developmental, ecological, and ethological perspectives, the volume provides a state-of-the-art review pointing to new avenues for integrative research. Features Integrates research on cognitive domains such as memory and problem-solving with ecological considerations like foraging and competition Assesses the current state of the field, with contributions from international experts Addresses pressing meta-scientific concerns of replicability, ethics and open science purpose of primate cognitive studies; history of primates studying primates; and environmental influences on Chimpanzee brain and cognition; evolution of cognition in primates, including humans; of the field: developmental primate cognition; perspectives on primate perception; comparative study of categorization; cognition in non-human primates; natural history of primate spatial cognition: an organismic perspective; and prospects in primate tool use and cognition; artificial grammar, and recursion in primates; evolution of episodic cognition: the sense of time; the conceptual gap between inferential reasoning and problem solving in primates; 15. The eyes have it: using non-invasive eye tracking to advance comparative social cognition research; 16. Social cooperation in primates; 17. Primate communication: affective, intentional, or both?; 18. Theory of mind in nonhuman primates; 19. A requiem for ape language research: the cognitive foundations of language; 20. Primate empathy: a flexible and multi-componential phenomenon; 21. Replication and reproducibility in primate cognition research; 22. Ethical considerations in conducting primate cognition research; 23. Collaboration and open science initiatives in primate research; 24. Studying primate cognition: from the wild to captivity and back; 25. Do monkeys belong in the ape house? Comparing cognition across primate species.

Contents 1. The

4. The

13. Metacognition; 14. Bridging

Readers

2. A

6. Current

3. Genetic

8. Numerical

11. Sequencing,

Bennett L. Schwartz Florida International University Michael J. Beran Georgia State University have studied non-human primate cognition along different paths, including social cognition, planning and causal knowledge, spatial cognition and memory, and gestural communication, as well as comparative studies with humans. This volume describes how primate cognition is studied in labs, zoos, sanctuaries, and in the field, bringing together researchers examining similar issues in all of these settings and showing how each benefits from the others. will discover how lab-based concepts play out in the real world of free primates.

12. The

10. Progress

44 Psychology

9. The

5. State

Primate Cognitive Studies

7. The

30. Video

9. Serious

37. Hate

8. Social

10. Mobile

36. Cyberbullying35. Electroniccyberspace;aggression;inthe21st

12. Immersive

5. Onlinedevelopment;celebrities

Contents Preface;ListListListContents;offigures;oftables;ofcontributors; Part I. Users in Cyber Behavior: 1. The internet is for everyone; 2. Cyber behavior of the net generation; 3. Digital divide among k-12 students; 4. Cyber

6. Cyber-bullying in Greece; 7. Cyber

Part II. Technologies

Key Features

Description

15. Voice-powered

31. Serious

Human behavior in cyber space is extremely complex. Change is the only constant as technologies and social contexts evolve rapidly. This leads to new behaviors in cybersecurity, Facebook use, smartphone habits, social networking, and many more. Scientific research in this area is becoming an established field and has already generated a broad range of social impacts. Alongside the four key elements (users, technologies, activities, and effects), the text covers cyber law, business, health, governance, education, and many other fields. Written by international scholars from a wide range of disciplines, this handbook brings all these aspects together in a clear, user-friendly format. After introducing the history and development of the field, each chapter synthesizes the most recent advances in key topics, highlights leading scholars and their major achievements, and identifies core future directions. It is the ideal overview of the field for researchers, scholars, and students alike.

45Psychology

11. Computer

Volume 1 Zheng

34. Treatment

The Cambridge Handbook of Cyber Behavior Yan University at Albany, State University of New York

32. Gaming 33. Problematicdisorder;mobile

38. Cyber 39. Cyberdeception.racism; Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students, professionals Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology September 2022 253 x 177 mm 600pp 9781107165250 Hardback Set c. £110.00 / c. US$175.00 / €143

13. Virtual

The ideal overview of the current state of science on all aspects of cyber behavior Contains contributions written by 40 groups of international scholars from a variety of disciplines Introduces and analyzes the work of the key researchers working in this emerged field behavior for child and adolescent and cyber marketing; partner abuse; in Cyber Behavior: media in tourism and hospitality; games and cyber behavior; games for learning; simulations in science education; technologies; worlds through virtual reality and augmented 14. Electronicreality;activity monitoring; artificial intelligence; 16. Emails and cyber work; Part III. Activities in Cyber Behavior: 17. Adolescents’ use of digital health information; 19. Online18. Cybertourism;reviews and consumer decisions; 20. Generation z and digital marketing; 21. Pitfalls of social interaction in online group 22. Sociallearning virtual environments for neuroscience and mental 23. Socialhealth;media in the workplace; 24. Social media and political participation; 25.Crisis 28. Cyberbullying;27. Digital26. Onlineinformatics;dating;religion; Part IV. Effects in Cyber Behavior: 29. Social media and psychological well-being; game effects; games in mental health treatment; phone use; and interventions for addictive behaviors in century schools; speech and adolescents;

physicians and

models and technical terms within a cross-cultural perspective,

Description In this handbook, the world’s leading researchers answer

• Accessibly written to be useful to both non-experts and practitioners • Relevant to individuals with different national, educational and cultural backgrounds Contents List of Figures and Tables; List of GeneralAcknowledgements;Contributors;introduction; Part I. Theoretical

reading

Michael

Genetic

Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers, professionals Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology July 2022 254 x 178 mm c.420pp 9781108833196 Hardback £145.00 / US$190.00 / €169.23

It

difficulties;

and dyscalculia based on authoritative reviews

46 Psychology

research topics ranging

Key Features • A comprehensive overview of the

4. Cognitivemanifestations:profiles

for researchers, instructors, students, policymakers,

1. Theoriesmodels: of dyslexia; 2. Theories

from

practice. With clear explanations

3. Computationaldyscalculia;models

from

The Cambridge Handbook of Dyslexia and Dyscalculia A. Skeide Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences fundamental questions about dyslexia of the scientific literature. provides an overview the basic science foundations to best practice in schooling and educational policy, covering from genes, environments, and cognition to prevention, intervention and educational of scientific concepts, research methods, statistical this book will be a go-to reference educators, teachers, therapists, psychologists, those affected by learning difficulties. field basic science to best practice frameworks and computational of of and mathematical Part II. profiles and behavioral and co-occurrence of dyslexia and and mathematics anxiety; Part III. and environmental influences: 6. Genetic and environmental influences on dyslexia and 7. Pre-dyscalculia;andpostnatal environmental effects on learning to read and mathematical learning; Part IV. Neurodevelopmental foundations: 8. Neurogenetic insights into the origins of dyslexia and 9. Longitudinaldyscalculia;neural observation studies of dyslexia; 10. Longitudinal neural observation studies of 11. Neuroplasticitydyscalculia; in response to reading intervention; 12. Neuroplasticity in response to mathematical intervention; Part V. Gender, ethnicity and socioeconomic 13. Genderbackground:and sex differences in dyslexia and 14. Thedyscalculia;role of socioeconomic and ethnic disparities for dyslexia and dyscalculia; Part VI. Cultural unity and diversity: 15. Cross-cultural unity and diversity of dyslexia; 16. Cross-cultural unity and diversity of dyscalculia; Part VII. Early prediction: 17. Early prediction of learning outcomes in reading; 18. Early prediction of learning outcomes in mathematics; Part VIII. Intervention and compensation: 19. Randomized controlled trials in dyslexia and 20. Cognitivedyscalculia; enhancement and brain stimulation in dyslexia and 21. Persistencedyscalculia;andfadeout of responses to reading and mathematical interventions; Part IX. Best practice: diagnostics and prevention: 22. Diagnosis of dyslexia and dyscalculia: challenges and 23. Preventioncontroversies;ofdyslexia and dyscalculia; Part X. Best practice: schooling and educational 24. Dyslexiapolicy: and the dyslexia-like picture: Supporting all children in primary school; 25. Best practice and policy in math education in Generalschool; IndexReferences;summary;

5. Readingdyscalculia;

Cognitive

2. Sexual 4. Adaptive3. Inclusiveselection;fitnesstheory;problemsinthe

6. Evolved

fields Contents Part I. Foundations

Description

The interface of sexual behavior and evolutionary psychology is a rapidly growing domain, rich in psychological theories and data as well as controversies and applications. With nearly eighty chapters by leading researchers from around the world, and combining theoretical and empirical The Cambridge Handbook of Evolutionary Perspectives on Sexual Psychology is the most comprehensive and up-to-date reference work in the field. Providing a broad yet in-depth overview of the various evolutionary principles that influence all types of sexual behaviors, the handbook takes an inclusive approach that draws on a number of disciplines and covers nonhuman and human psychology. It is an essential resource to both established researchers and students in psychology, biology, anthropology, medicine, and criminology, among other fields. most comprehensive handbook addressing evolution and sexual psychology, providing readers with the fullest treatment available on the relevant topics Features contributions from leading researchers in the field Its interdisciplinary approach will appeal to readers in psychology, biology, anthropology, medicine, and criminology among other of Evolution: selection; domain of human sexuality; Byproducts, and Spandrels; psychological mechanisms: Properties and Evidence, Misconceptions and Mismatches;  Middle-level Theories: 7. Parental investment theory; 8. Parent-offspring conflict; 9. Theory and evidence for reciprocal altruism; 10. Life history theory and mating strategies; 11.Sperm competition theory; 12.Sexual conflict theory; 13. Cross-species comparisons; 14. Cross-cultural methods in sexual psychology; 15. Behavioral genetics; 16. Sex differences and sex similarities; 17. Individual differences in sexual psychology; 18. Experimental methods in sexual psychology; Index.Part I. Pre-copulatory Adaptations: 19. Sexual preferences; 20. Men’s extra-pair sexual interest; 21. Male sexual attraction tactics; 22. Men’s intrasexual competition; 23. Domains of female choice; 24. Sexual coercion and rape; 25.Mate poaching by men; Part II. Copulatory Adaptations: 26. Sexual 28. Copulatory27. Ejaculation;fantasy;thrusting in males; 29. Men’s provisioning of oral sex; 30. Inducing female orgasm; 31. Copulatory urgency; Part III. 32. Post-ejaculatory adaptations to self-semen displacement; 33. Mate retention; 34. Shifts in partner attractiveness: Evolutionary and social factors;35. Emotional commitment; 36. Sexual jealousy in males: The evolution of a specific mechanism for sexual 37.Men’sJealousy; attachment-related needs in the sexual arena; 38. Paternal care; 39. Paternal filicide; Index Part I. Pre-copulatory Adaptations: 40. Women’s preferences: Pre-copulatory adaptations; 41. Female sexual attraction tactics;42. Extrapair sexual interest; 43. Female intrasexual competition; 44. Female intersexual selection; 45. Evolution of precopulatory defense from rape and coercion in women; 46. Mate poaching; Part II. Copulatory adaptations: 47. Sexual 49. Female48. Copulatoryfantasies;thrusting;provisionoforal sex; 50.The adaptive value of women’s orgasm;

1. Natural

5. Adaptations,

47Psychology

The Cambridge Handbook of Evolutionary Perspectives on Sexual Psychology

perspectives,

Key Features • The

Part II.

Todd K. Shackelford Oakland University, Michigan

48 51. CopulatoryPsychologyurgency:Anevolutionary perspective of women’s sexual desire; Part III. Post-copulatory adaptations: 52. Mate retention; 53. Shifts in partner attractiveness; 54. Emotional commitment; 55. Sexual jealousy; 56. On attachment and evolution: Recounting the story of, and stories in, attachment Index57. Maternaltheory;filicide; Part I. Controversies and unresolved issues: 58. The female sexual orientation spectrum in evolutionary perspective; 59. The evolution of female same-sex attraction; 60. Male 61. Femalebisexuality;bisexuality; 62. Masturbation in primates; Part II. Applications to health, law, and pornography; 63. Male reproductive health; 64. Women’s menstrual cycles and ovulation provide balanced estradiol and progesterone for fertility and lifelong health; 65. Female genital cutting; 66. Costs of polygyny; 67. Male sexual disorders; 68. An evolutionary perspective on female sexual concerns and dysfunctions; 69. Evolutionary perspectives on male sexual offending; 70. Pornography and male sexual psychology; Part III. Non-human primate sexual behavior: 71. Chimpanzee sexual behavior; 72. Bonobo sexual psychology; 73. Orangutan sexual behavior; 74. Gibbon evolved sexual psychology; 75. Sexual behavior in Marmosets in the context of cooperative breeding; 76. Capuchin sexual behavior; 77. Sexual behaviour in Neanderthals; Index. Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, undergraduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology July 2022 244 x 170 mm c.3000pp 9781108939850 4 Volume Hardback Set £345.00 / US$450.00 / €402.65

Each chapter addresses the implications of parenting research for practice and policy Includes interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary perspectives

15. The

Index. Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology August 2022 244 x 170 mm c.800pp 9781108835718 Hardback £145.00 / US$190.00 / €169.23

Amanda Sheffield Morris Oklahoma State University Julia Mendez Smith University of North Carolina, Greensboro

Contents

Parenting is a critical influence on the development of children across the globe. This handbook brings together scholars with expertise on parenting science and interventions for a comprehensive review of current research. It begins with foundational theories and research topics, followed by sections on parenting children at different ages, factors that affect parenting such as parental mental health or socioeconomic status, and parenting children with different characteristics such as depressed and anxious children or youth who identify as LGBTQ. It concludes with a section on policy implications, as well as prevention and intervention programs that target parenting as a mechanism of change. Global perspectives and the cultural diversity of families are highlighted throughout. Offering in-depth analysis of key topics such as risky adolescent behavior, immigration policy, father engagement, family involvement in education, and balancing childcare and work, this is a vital resource for understanding the most effective policies to support parents in raising healthy children.

26. Technology

Key Features

1. Foundational

22. Parent

49Psychology

16. Understanding

17. Parenting

The Cambridge Handbook of Parenting

• Explains the data on the most effective parenting strategies at each developmental stage Part I. Foundations of Parenting: theories and the establishment of parenting science research; 2. Parenting, Challenges, Brain development and attachment strategies; 3. Parenting and brain development; 4. Parenting and children’s social and emotional development: Emotion socialization across childhood and adolescence; 5. Parenting and children’s cognitive and language development; 6. Discipline and punishment in child development; 7. Parenting from a cultural and global perspective: A Review of theoretical models and parenting research in diverse cultural contexts; Part II. Parenting Across Development: Social, Emotional and Cognitive Influences: 8. Bolstering the Bond: Policies and programs that support parenatal bonding and the transition to parenting; 9. Parenting during infancy and early childhood; 10. Parenting that promotes positive Social, Emotional and Behavioral Development in Middle Childhood; 11. Parenting adolescents; 12. Parenting during emerging adulthood; Part III. Parental Factors that Impact Parenting: 13. Mental health and parenting; 14. Ethnicity and race as a context for parenting: An examination of academic socialization, cultural socialization, and teachings about discrimination; role of fathers in caregiving; parenting through a family systems lens; Part IV. Child Factors that Impact Parenting: children with disabilities; 18. Parenting children with externalizing behavior and ADHD; 19. Parenting in the context of child anxiety and depression; 20. Parenting LGBTQ children and adolescents; 21. Parenting children with a history of adversity; Part V. Parent Education, Intervention and Policy: and family engagement in early education programs; policies and parenting in the United States and Germany; 24. Parents as earners: What parental work means for parenting and the role of public policy; 25. Parenting of children involved in the child welfare system; and parenting: Challenges and opportunities; 27. Preventing risk behaviors in adolescence;

23. Refugee

Description

13. Unpacking

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, professionals Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology July 2022 253 x 177 mm c.550pp 9781108843904 Hardback £145.00 / US$185.00 / €169.23

6. Consequences

Contents 1. Introduction

The persistence of stigma of mental illness and seeking therapy perpetuates suffering and keeps people from getting the help they need and deserve. This volume, analysing the most up-to-date research on this process and ways to intervene, is designed to give those who are working to overcome stigma a strong, research-based foundation for their work. Chapters address stigma reduction efforts at the individual, community, and national levels, and discuss what works and what doesn’t. Others explore how holding different stigmatized identities compounds the burden of stigma and suggest ways to attend to these differences. Throughout, there is a focus on the current state of the research knowledge in the field, its applications, and recommendations for future research. The Handbook provides a compelling case for the benefits reaped from current research and intervention, and shows why continued work is needed.

David L. Vogel Iowa State University

10. The

15. Understanding

50 Psychology

Nathaniel G. Wade Iowa State University

The Cambridge Handbook of Stigma and Mental Health

Description

9. Intellectual

11. Stigma

14. All

Key Features •

4. Measurement

2. Theoretical

5. Time

The most detailed exploration of stigma and mental health to date Describes established and emerging interventions to reduce stigma Explores intersectional stigma and the way people with different identities experience its effects to the handbook of stigma and mental health; models to understand stigma of mental illness; mental illness and help seeking stigmas; of mental illness stigma and discrimination; trends in public stigma; of the self-stigma of mental illness; of seeking help: A meta-analysis; and suicide; disability stigma: The state of the evidence; intersection of mental health stigma and marginalized identities; and mental health in ethnic minority populations; health stigma amongst LGBTQ+ populations; cultural influences on stigma of people with mental illness between group oriented and individual-oriented cultures; the world’s a stage: men, masculinity, and mental health stigma; and reducing the stigma of mental health problems and of treatment among military personnel; 16. Stigma of seeking mental health services and related constructs in older versus younger 17. Stigmaadults;and mental health in the abrahamic religious traditions; 18. Interventions to reduce mental illness stigma and discrimination at the personlevel for individuals and small groups; 19. Population-based interventions to reduce the stigma of mental illness; 20. Interventions to reduce help-seeking stigma for mental health conditions; 21. Self-affirmation interventions; 22. Mindfulness and self-compassion interventions to address mental health 23. Whatstigma; is left to be done: key points, future directions, and new innovations.

3. Disentangling

7. Self-stigma

8. Stigma

12. Mental

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, undergraduate students September 2022 280 x 216 mm c.1000pp 9781108481564 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00 / €175.06

7. Development Development:ofthe

1. A

The thalamus is a key structure in the mammalian brain, providing a hub for communication within and across distributed forebrain networks. Research in this area has undergone a in the last decade, with findings that suggest an expanded role for the thalamus in sensory processing, motor control, arousal regulation, and cognition. Moving beyond previous studies of anatomy and cell neurochemistry, scientists have expanded into investigations of cognitive function, and harness new methods and theories of neural computation. This book provides a survey of topics at the cutting edge of this field, covering basic anatomy, evolution, development, physiology and computation. It is also the first book to combine these disciplines in one place, highlighting the interdisciplinary nature of thalamus research, and will be an essential resource for students and experts in biology, medicine and computer science. state-of-the-art survey of the burgeoning field of thalamus research Contains chapters on the evolution of the thalamus Covers all thalamocortical systems, from structure to function, with a computational perspective Part I. History: brief history of the thalamus; Part II. thalamic inputs; output pathways; circuitry matters; Part III. and functional evolution of the thalamus; thalamus and beyond; Part IV. thalamocortical systems; of thalamic GABAergic neurons; Part V. Sensory in primary visual cortex; feedback in vision; 11. The vibrissa sensorimotor system of rodents: A view from the sensory thalamus; 12.Corticothalamic pathways in the somatosensory system; 13. Thalamocortical circuits for auditory processing, plasticity and perception; Part VI. Motor Control: 14. Motor thalamic interactions with brainstem and basal ganglia; 15.Thalamic-Cerebellar Interactions; Part VII. Cognition: 16. The thalamus in cognitive control; 17. The thalamus in attention; 18. The thalamus in navigation; Part VIII. 20. Central19. Thalamus Arousal:andsleep;thalamiccontributions to arousal regulation; Part IX. Computation: 21. A dynamical systems perspective on thalamic circuit function; 22. Computational contributions of the thalamus to learning and memory.

2. Organization Anatomy:of

4. Thalamocortical

8. Ontogeny

Key Features • A

6. Lamprey

10. Corticothalamic

51Psychology

The Thalamus Michael M. Halassa Massachusetts Institute of Technology

revolution

3. Thalamic

9. Thalamocorticalprocessing:interactions

5. Morphological, Evolution:developmental

Contents Preface;

Description

3. The

The Cambridge History of Reformation EraTheology explores the key developments in both Protestant and Catholic theology ca. 1475-1650. Exploring the various settings and schools in which theology was formulated and taught, and the social backgrounds of its exponents—including women and non-university-trained men, as well as writers both in and outside Europe—it establishes how the major denominations took their positions and participated in a broader discourse. The volume examines specific theological themes from different denominational perspectives, demonstrating how theology affected the lives of believers via pastoral theology, canon law, and spirituality, and how theological ideas were linked to politics, warfare, science, and the arts. Written by an international team of leading scholars in the field, this History expands the range of theological discourse by introducing new topics and spokespersons, as well as global and ecumenical perspectives. It will remain the definitive place to begin any further study of theology during this period for years to come.

Key Features

Kenneth G Appold Princeton Theological Seminary, New Jersey Nelson Minnich Catholic University of America, Washington DC

11. The

17. Cultures

• Studies both traditional and non-traditional theologians and the wide range of topics they discussed, including theology outside Europe: Latin America, India, Japan, and China

• Explores the historical context and the factors in which theological ideas were formed

The Cambridge History of Reformation Era

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students November 2022 234 x 156 mm 700pp 9781107044043 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00 / €145.89

Contents Introduction; Part I. Theology in an Age of Cultural Transformation: printing press and its impact on the production, proliferation, and readership of theological literature; 2. Humanism and theology; changing role of the bible in theological discourse; 4. The regulation of theology in the reformation era; change and theological discourse; 6. Universities, monastic studia, academies, seminaries, and catechesis; theology: Theology of the ‘uneducated’; 8. Gender and theology in the reformation era; 9. The theologians and the clergy: Who were they?; Part II. Schools and Emerging Cultures of Theology: Diversity and Conformity Within Confessions:10. The faculty of theology of Paris (1474-1682); school of Salamanca Plans; 12. The schools of Louvain and Douai: The Bible, Augustine and Thomas; 13. Jesuit School of Theology; 14. Theological currents in Latin America (16th Century); 15. Diversity and conformity within early Lutheranism; 16. Reformed schools of theology; of theology in the British Isles; 18. Radical and dissenting groups; 19. Christian ecumenical efforts; 20. Western ‘Confessions’ and eastern christianity; Part III. Topics and Disciplines of Theology: 21. Method and ethos of theological instruction and discourse; 22. Biblical 25. Sacramental24. Controversial23. Systematictheology;theology;theology;andliturgical theology; 26. Pastoral theology and preaching; 27. Reformation ethics and moral theology; 28. Ecclesiastical law in early modern Europe; 29. Spirituality in the reformation era (1500-1675);30. Catholic christianity and indigenous religions in the Americas; 31. Jesuit catechisms in Japan and India; 32. Theology in China c. 1582- c. 1688; 33. Theology and science; 34. Theology and history; 35. Theology, politics, and warfare; 36. The role of art in the theological discourse of the reformation; Index.

5. Political

7. Para-academic

1. The

Theology

52 Religion

Theological topics are viewed in the same essay from Catholic, Lutheran, Reformed, Anglican, and Radical perspectives

Description

Description

Contents 2. The1. TheIntroduction;lastsupper;Eucharistin the early church; 3. Development of Eucharistic prayers in the third and

Key

The Roman Mass From Early Christian Origins to Tridentine Reform

Uwe Michael Lang St Mary’s University, Twickenham, London

53Religion

Lang unites classical liturgical history with insights from a variety of other disciplines that have drawn attention to the ritual performance and reception of the mass. He also presents liturgical developments within the broader historical and theological contexts that affected the celebration and experience of the sacramental rite that is still at the heart of Catholic Christianity. Aimed at scholars from a broad swathe of subjects, including religious studies, history, art history, literature, and music, Lang’s volume serves as a comprehensive history of the Roman Mass over the course of a millenium. Features

century; 4. The formative period of Latin liturgy; 5. Roman stational liturgy; 5. The expansion and adaptation of the Roman liturgy in the Carolingian Age; 7. From the Ottonian Revival to the High Middle Ages; 8. Decline and vitality in the later Middle Ages; 9. The Tridentine Reform; Epilogue. Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students July 2022 229 x 152 mm c.400pp 9781108832458 Hardback £89.99 / US$120.00 / €105.03

This volume offers a new, synthetic overview of the structure and ritual shape of the Roman Mass from its formative period in late antiquity to its post-Tridentine standarisation. Starting with the Last Supper and the origins of the Eucharist, Uwe Michael Lang constructs a narrative that explores the intense religious, social, and cultural transformations that shaped the Roman Mass.

• Offers a concise and up-to-date account of the common structure and ritual shape of the Roman Mass in a single volume Unites classical liturgical history with insights and results from a variety of other disciplines, which have drawn attention to the ritual performance and reception of the Mass Makes an important historical and theological contribution to the ongoing discussions on the ‘Tridentine Mass’ in the Roman Catholic Church fourth

Drama and Theatre 9781108493215 Molière in Context TBA / TBA / TBA History 9781108759731 The Cambridge World History of Genocide TBA / TBA / TBA Law 9781009152594 German Practice in International Law TBA / TBA / TBA 9781009230919 International Law Reports £170.00 / US$220.00 / TBA 9781108833943 The Cambridge Handbook of Investor Protection £175.00 / US$225.00 / TBA 9781108477338 The Cambridge Handbook of the Sustainable Development Goals and International Law £125.00 / US$165.00 / TBA Literature 9781108477505 American Literature in Transition, 1876–1910 £89.99 / US$115.00 / TBA 9781108836760 Nature and Literary Studies £89.99 / US$120.00 / €105.03 9781108843409 Shakespeare and Virtue TBA / TBA / TBA Coming soon

Quantity Cost 1 James Grantham Turner The Villa Farnesina 9781316511015 Hardback £94.99 US$125.00 €110.86 R 2 Roger Rees A Commentary on Panegyrici Latini II(12) 9781107155046 Hardback £120.00 US$155.00 €140.05 R 3 A. C. Dionisotti Expositio Notarum 9781316514795 Hardback £110.00 US$145.00 €128.38 R 4 Lesley Dean-Jones Historia Animalium Book X 9781107015159 Hardback £110.00 US$145.00 €128.38 R 5 Richard C. Beacham Living Theatre in the Ancient Roman House 9781316510940 Hardback £120.00 US$155.00 €140.05 R 6 Carl Séan O’Brien Platonic Love from Antiquity to the Renaissance 9781108423229 Hardback £85.00 US$110.00 €99.2 R 7 Geoffrey Greatrex Procopius of Caesarea: The Persian Wars 9781107053229 Hardback £130.00 US$170.00 €151.72 R 8 Geoffrey Greatrex Procopius of Caesarea: The Persian Wars 9781107165700 Hardback £75.00 US$99.99 €87.53 R 9 Benjamin Kelly The Roman Emperor and His Court c. 30 BC–c. AD 300 9781108423618 Hardback £190.00 US$250.00 €221.75 R 10 David Roberts An Apology for the Life of Mr Colley Cibber, Comedian and Late Patentee of the Theatre Royal 9781009098366 Hardback £89.99 US$120.00 €105.03 R 11 Jan Clarke Molière in Context 9781108493215 Hardback TBA TBA TBA 12 Marcel van der Linden The Cambridge History of Socialism 9781108611336 2 BookHardbackSet £200.00 US$275.00 €233.42 R 13 Paul D’Arcy The Cambridge History of the Pacific Ocean 9781108539227 2 SetHardbackVolume £200.00 US$260.00 €233.42 R 14 Adrian Howkins The Cambridge History of the Polar Regions 9781108429931 Hardback £120.00 US$155.00 €140.05 R 15 Ben Kiernan The Cambridge World History of Genocide 9781108759731 3 SetHardbackVolume TBA TBA TBA 16 James Law Language Development 9781108494090 Hardback £125.00 US$165.00 €145.89 R Subtotal Booksellers Send this form to the Customer Services Department, Cambridge University Press, University Printing House, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8BS, UK. Alternatively, order online at www.cambridge.org/booksellers or www.PubEasy.com Individuals and libraries Send this form to your usual bookseller or supplier. In case of difficulty, contact Karen Granger, Customer Services Department, Cambridge University Press, University Printing House, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8BS, UK. Review copies To request a review copy of any of our books, please write to the Customer Services Department, Cambridge University Press, University Printing House, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8BS, UK. Prices The prices shown are usually approximate pre-publication prices. While every effort is made to maintain their accuracy, final prices may differ from those printed here. Your details Company name DeliveryDateOrderRepresentativeAccountEmailTelephoneCountryPostcodeAddressFirstSurnameTitlenamenumberreferenceinstructions Library Highlights July - December 2022 Order Form Order at www.cambridge.org/booksellers

56Quantity Cost 17 Anat Stavans The Cambridge Handbook of Childhood Multilingualism 9781108484015 Hardback £125.00 US$165.00 €145.89 R 18 Chu-Ren Huang The Cambridge Handbook of Chinese Linguistics 9781108420075 Hardback £125.00 US$165.00 €145.89 R 19 Istvan Kecskes The Cambridge Handbook of Intercultural Pragmatics 9781108839532 Hardback £125.00 US$165.00 €145.89 R 20 John W. Schwieter The Cambridge Handbook of Working Memory and Language 9781108845342 Hardback £120.00 US$155.00 €140.05 R 21 Stefan Talmon German Practice in International Law 9781009152594 Hardback TBA TBA TBA 22 GreenwoodChristopher International Law Reports 9781009230919 Hardback £170.00 US$220.00 TBA R 23 Larry A. DiMatteo The Cambridge Handbook of Artificial Intelligence 9781316512807 Hardback £145.00 US$190.00 €169.23 R 24 Susan Kuo The Cambridge Handbook of Disaster Law and Policy 9781108488570 Hardback £145.00 US$190.00 €169.23 R 25 Arthur B. Laby The Cambridge Handbook of Investor Protection 9781108833943 Hardback £175.00 US$225.00 TBA R 26 Silja Voeneky The Cambridge Handbook of Responsible Artificial Intelligence 9781009207867 Hardback £150.00 US$195.00 €175.06 R 27 Jonas Ebbesson The Cambridge Handbook of the Sustainable Development Goals and International Law 9781108477338 Hardback £125.00 US$165.00 TBA R 28 Peter Cane The Cambridge Legal History of Australia 9781108499224 Hardback £125.00 US$165.00 €145.89 R 29 Jane Potter A History of World War One Poetry 9781009100649 Hardback £89.99 US$120.00 €105.03 R 30 Lindsay Reckson American Literature in Transition, 1876–1910 9781108477505 Hardback £89.99 US$115.00 TBA R 31 Clare Hayes-Brady David Foster Wallace in Context 9781316513323 Hardback £85.00 US$110.00 €99.2 R 32 Ana Peluffo Latin American Literature in Transition 1800–1870 9781009169455 Hardback £97.99 US$120.00 €114.36 R 33 DegiovanniFernando Latin American Literature in Transition 1870–1930 9781108838740 Hardback £97.99 US$120.00 €114.36 R 34 Amanda Holmes Latin American Literature in Transition 1930–1980 9781009177764 Hardback £97.99 US$120.00 €114.36 R 35 Mónica Szurmuk Latin American Literature in Transition 1980–2018 9781108838764 Hardback £97.99 US$120.00 €114.36 R 36 Rocío AgnoliQuispe- Latin American Literature in Transition Pre-1492–1800 9781108838832 Hardback £97.99 US$120.00 €114.36 R 37 Peter Remien Nature and Literary Studies 9781108836760 Hardback £89.99 US$120.00 €105.03 R 38 Jonathan B. Monroe Roberto Bolaño In Context 9781108835671 Hardback £84.99 US$110.00 €99.19 R 39 Julia LuptonReinhard Shakespeare and Virtue 9781108843409 Hardback TBA TBA TBA 40 Emma Smith Shakespeare Survey 75 9781009245821 Hardback £89.99 US$115.00 €105.03 R 41 William E. Engel The Death Arts in Renaissance England 9781108479271 Hardback £85.00 US$110.00 €99.2 R 42 Anna A. Berman Tolstoy in Context 9781108479240 Hardback £85.00 US$110.00 €99.2 R 43 Henry James Washington Square 9781107003897 Hardback £89.99 US$120.00 €105.03 R 44 Robert Chodat Wittgenstein and Literary Studies 9781108833219 Hardback £85.00 US$110.00 €99.2 R 45 Trevor Herbert A History of Welsh Music 9781316511060 Hardback £79.99 US$105.00 €93.36 R 46 Bennett L. Schwartz Primate Cognitive Studies 9781108845434 Hardback £99.99 US$130.00 €116.7 R 47 Zheng Yan The Cambridge Handbook of Cyber Behavior 9781107165250 Hardback Set £110.00 US$175.00 €143 R 48 Michael A. Skeide The Cambridge Handbook of Dyslexia and Dyscalculia 9781108833196 Hardback £145.00 US$190.00 €169.23 R 49 Todd K. Shackelford The Cambridge Handbook of Evolutionary Perspectives on Sexual Psychology 9781108939850 4 Volume Set £345.00 US$450.00 €402.65 R 50 Amanda Sheffield Morris The Cambridge Handbook of Parenting 9781108835718 Hardback £145.00 US$190.00 €169.23 R 51 David L. Vogel The Cambridge Handbook of Stigma and Mental Health 9781108843904 Hardback £145.00 US$185.00 €169.23 R 52 Michael M. Halassa The Thalamus 9781108481564 Hardback £150.00 US$195.00 €175.06 R 53 Kenneth G Appold The Cambridge History of Reformation Era Theology 9781107044043 Hardback £125.00 US$165.00 €145.89 R 54 Uwe Michael Lang The Roman Mass 9781108832458 Hardback £89.99 US$120.00 €105.03 R allTotalSubtotalforpages

Notes

For more information about CLR, including setting up a free trial, contact your usual library sales representative or email: In the Americas: online@cambridge.org Rest of World: library.sales@cambridge.org CAMBRIDGELAWREPORTS Collectio n With the move to Core, there are a number of functionality improvements: • enhanced reporting capabilities • easier and more powerful searching • improved accessibility standards • enriched multi-device readingJoiningexperiencethewealth of Law books and journals on Cambridge Core, Cambridge Law Reports Collection (CLR) is the home for International Law Reports (ILR) and International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes Reports (ICSID) online. Current years volumes available for perpetual access purchase, archive volumes available as an annual lease or perpetual purchase Bundled pricing, for ILR and ICSID 1-year current subscription, with or without lease to their archives; also for archive purchases We can provide special offers to the online archive years, where ILR or ICSID is already owned in print NEW FOR THE VOLUMES!2022

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