Library Highlights Kit January - June 2022

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Library Highlights Kit January - June 2022

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Contents ISBN

FULL TITLE

GBP PRICE

EU PRICE

UK PUB DATE

PAGE

Anthropology 978-1-108-47461-0

The Cambridge Handbook of Material Culture Studies

£120.00

€140.05

Jun-22

5

978-1-108-47151-0

The Cambridge Guide to the Architecture of Christianity

£425.00

€496.02

Jan-22

6

978-1-107-15504-6

A Commentary on Panegyrici Latini II(12)

£120.00

€140.05

Mar-22

8

978-1-108-30372-9

Isokrates: The Forensic Speeches (Nos. 16-21)

£150.00

€ 75.06

Mar-22

9

Art Classical Studies

History 978-1-108-49440-3

The Cambridge Companion to Antisemitism

£85.00

€99.20

Jan-22

10

978-1-316-51593-8

The Hughes Court

£200.00

€233.42

Jan-22

11

978-1-107-14606-8

The Cambridge Economic History of China

£200.00

€233.42

Feb-22

12

978-1-108-42437-0

The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars

£110.00

€128.38

Feb-22

13

978-1-108-41767-9

The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars

£110.00

€128.38

Feb-22

14

978-1-108-48401-5

The Cambridge Handbook of Childhood Multilingualism

£120.00

€145.89

Mar-22

15

978-1-108-48040-6

The Cambridge Handbook of Translation

£120.00

€145.89

Apr-22

16

978-1-108-48579-1

The Cambridge Handbook of Romance Linguistics

£120.00

€145.89

May-22

17

978-1-107-17487-0

The Cambridge Handbook of Language Contact

£200.00

€233.42

Jun-22

18

978-1-108-42709-8

Constitutionalism in Context

£135.00

€157.56

Jan-22

20

978-1-107-08155-0

Rules of Origin in International Trade

£115.00

€134.22

Jan-22

21

978-1-108-83988-4

The Cambridge Handbook of Labor and Democracy

£150.00

€175.06

Jan-22

22

978-1-316-51461-0

German Practice in International Law

£170.00

€198.41

Feb-22

23

978-1-108-48859-4

Measuring Compliance

£145.00

€169.23

Feb-22

24

978-1-00-915272-3

International Law Reports

£170.00

€198.41

Mar-22

25

978-1-107-17195-4

The Cambridge Handbook of Law and Entrepreneurship in the United States

£175.00

€204.24

Mar-22

26

978-1-107-01681-1

The Inheritors and The Nature of a Crime

£94.99

€110.86

Feb-22

27

978-1-107-03073-2

Headlong Hall

£90.00

€105.04

Feb-22

28

978-1-107-02964-4

The Aspern Papers and Other Tales, 1884–1888

£85.00

€105.04

Feb-22

29

978-0-521-83306-6

Sir Charles Grandison

£400.00

€466.84

Mar-22

30

978-1-108-49507-3

African American Literature in Transition, 1750–1800

£89.99

€105.03

Mar-22

31

978-1-108-83416-2

African American Literature in Transition, 1920–1930

£89.99

€105.03

Mar-22

32

978-1-108-47255-5

African American Literature in Transition, 1930–1940

£89.99

€105.03

Mar-22

33

978-1-108-42293-2

African American Literature in Transition, 1960–1970

£70.00

€105.03

Mar-22

34

978-1-108-84092-7

Globalization and Literary Studies

£84.99

€99.19

Apr-22

35

978-1-316-51543-3

Don DeLillo In Context

£85.00

€99.20

May-22

36

978-1-107-03226-2

Melincourt

£90.00

€105.04

Jun-22

37

978-1-108-47927-1

The Death Arts in Renaissance England

£85.00

€99.20

Jun-22

38

978-1-108-83073-7

Handbook of Financial Stress Testing

£110.00

€128.38

Feb-22

39

978-1-316-51203-6

Strongly Regular Graphs

£110.00

€128.38

Feb-22

40

978-1-316-51967-7

Linear State/Signal Systems

£150.00

€175.06

May-22

41

Alzheimer’s Disease Drug Development

£94.99

€110.86

Feb-22

42

Language and linguistics

Law

Literature

Mathematics

Medicine 978-1-108-83866-5


Music 978-1-108-42199-7

A History of Stringed Keyboard Instruments

£110.00

€128.38

Jan-22

44

978-1-108-42030-3

The Cambridge History of Philosophy of the Scientific Revolution

£100.00

978-1-107-06213-9

The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings

£110.00

€116.71

Jan-22

45

€128.38

Feb-22

978-1-316-51114-5

The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings

46

£110.00

€128.38

Feb-22

48

978-1-316-51525-9 978-1-107-15471-1

Cavell’s Must We Mean What We Say? at 50

£79.99

€93.36

Mar-22

49

Proclus: Commentary on Plato’s ‘Republic’

£75.00

€93.36

May-22

50

978-1-108-49515-8

Ludwig Wittgenstein: Writings on Mathematics and Logic, 1937–1944

£84.99

978-1-108-42387-8

The Cambridge Handbook of Cognitive Development

£150.00

€99.19

Jun-22

51

€175.06

Feb-22

52

978-1-108-48963-8

The Cambridge Handbook of Political Psychology

£145.00

978-1-107-16525-0

The Cambridge Handbook of Cyber Behavior

£110.00

€169.23

Feb-22

53

€143

Apr-22

54

978-1-108-84098-9

The Cambridge Handbook of the Learning Sciences

£149.00

€173.90

May-22

55

Philosophy


Anthropology

5

The Cambridge Handbook of Material Culture Studies Edited by Lu Ann De Cunzo University of Delaware

Catharine Dann Roeber Winterthur Museum, Delaware

Description Material culture studies is an interdisciplinary field that examines the relationships between people and their things: the production, history, preservation, and interpretation of objects. It draws on theory and practice from disciplines in the social sciences and humanities, such as anthropology, archaeology, history, and museum studies. Written by leading international scholars, this Handbook provides a comprehensive view of developments, methodologies and theories. It is divided into five broad themes, embracing both classic and emerging areas of research in the field. Chapters outline transformative moments in material culture scholarship, and present research from around the world, focusing on multiple material and digital media that show the scope and breadth of this exciting field. Written in an easy-to-read style, it is essential reading for students, researchers and professionals with an interest in material culture.

Key Features • Offers a comprehensive account of material culture, exploring and challenging disciplinary boundaries • Includes dozens of case studies of material culture from around the world, including tools, human bodies, monuments, dress, household furnishings, books, landscapes, buildings, art, and more • Introduces theories and histories with examples in easy-to-understand language

Contents 1. Suitcases, selfies and the global environment: Material culture, materiality and the new materialism; 2. Materiality; 3. Representation; 4. Disciplinary complicity: The university, material culture studies and global environmental crisis; 5. Social justice: Material drivers of inequality; 6. Engagement and the politics of authority; 7. War and violence: How to rescue a wartime Artifact; 8. Material culture and heritage; 9. Material culture and the politics and profession of preservation and representation; 10. Re-enacting the past; 11. Indigenous heritage; 12. The matter of cultural exchange;

13. Population movements; 14. Identification and agency; 15. Modes of representation; 16. Aesthetics; 17. Objects are alive; 18. Technology; 19. Place; 20. Home and domesticity; 21. The materiality of institutional life; 22. Religion and spirituality; 23. Material culture of the digital; 24. Material/digital boundaries; 25. Boundaries and borderlands, inclusion and holism: Political and relevant material culture studies.

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Anthropology June 2022 244 x 170 mm c.800pp 978-1-108-47461-0 Hardback c. £120.00 / c. US$160.00 / c. €140.05


6

Art

The Cambridge Guide to the Architecture of Christianity Edited by Richard A. Etlin

University of Maryland, College Park

Description The Cambridge Guide to the Architecture of Christianity offers a wide-ranging overview of one of the most important genres of Western architecture, from its origins in the Early Christian era to the present day. Including 103 essays, specially commissioned for this volume and written by an international team of scholars, the volume examines a range of themes and issues, including religious building types, siting, regional traditions, ornament, and structure. It also explores how designers and builders responded to the spiritual needs and cult practices of Christianity as they developed and evolved over the centuries. The volume is richly illustrated with 592 halftones and 70 color plates. Additional images, nearly all in color are available online and are keyed into the text. The most comprehensive and up-to date reference work on this topic, The Cambridge Guide to the Architecture of Christianity will serve as a primary reference resource for scholars, practitioners, and students.

Key Features • The most up to date and comprehensive overview of Christian architecture, East and West, from its origins in Late Antiquity up to the present day currently available • Explores the development of Christian architecture in tandem with the evolution of Christian liturgy and ritual practices over nearly two millenia • Written by an international team of top scholars

Contents Part I. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture: 1. Early Christian pilgrimage and sacred landscapes; 2. Domestic architecture and Christian worship in Late Antiquity; 3. Sacred space and sensory experience Late Antique churches; 4. The conversion of Pagan temples into churches in the Late Antique East; 5. Early Christian monasteries; 6. Early Christian baptisteries; 7. The early Christian churches of Palestine and Arabia; 8. Sacred space in Late Antique and Coptic Egypt; 9. Armenian churches of the seventh century; 10. Typology and scale in byzantine church architecture; 11. Byzantine builders: their crafts and materials; 12. Rite and passage in the medieval Byzantine church; 13. Ritual and authority in Hagia Sophia; 14. The Byzantine church beyond the liturgy; 15. Aesthetics and illumination of Byzantine church architecture; 16. Ekphrasis and symbolism in church architecture; 17. Place, time, and text in the monumental decoration of the middle Byzantine church; 18. Religion in the Byzantine countryside; 19. Patronage of Byzantine churches and monasteries; 20. Byzantine architecture and the monastic experience;

21. Burials and funerary chapels in Byzantium; 22. The architectural setting of pilgrimage in the Byzantine world: learning from Cyprus; 23. Cultural conflict and cultural synergies: crusaders, colonists, and Byzantine churches; 24. Islamicizing motifs in middle Byzantine church decoration; 25. Symbolism and ornament on Byzantine church exteriors, 900–1500; 26. Early Christian Georgian churches; 27. Medieval religious architecture in the Balkans; 28. Byzantine architecture in Italy; Part II. Medieval Christian Architecture: 29. The legacy of the city of Rome to Christian architecture; 30. East and West in the early middle ages: Josef Strzygowski and the Orient oder Rom controversy; 31. Basilicas and centralized churches in the early middle ages; 32. Religious architecture in Gaul in the early middle ages; 33. Monastic Christian architecture; 34. Carolingian architecture; 35. Liturgy and architecture in the middle ages; 36. Christian pilgrimage and medieval architecture; 37. Anglo-Saxon church architecture; 38. The Year 1000 and the promise of a new millennium through church architecture; 39. The notion of Romanesque;

40. Romanesque architecture in its regional manifestations; 41. Early Gothic architecture; 42. Gothic and the medieval quadrivium; 43. The architectural metaphor in Western medieval artistic culture: from the cornerstone to the mystic ark; 44. High Gothic architecture in France, 1190–1240; 45. Gothic structure; 46. The Sainte-Chapelle and Paris as the heavenly Jerusalem; 47. Liturgical furnishings and material splendor in the Gothic church; 48. Regional Gothic in Burgundy; 49. Gothic church building in England; 50. Italian architecture in the high middle ages; 51. Spanish medieval architecture: European currents and regional solutions on the fringe of the Christian world; 52. Shared sacred spaces in the Holy Land; 53. Late Gothic architecture; 54. Gothic architecture and the waning of the middle ages; 55. Gothic towers and spires; 56. Microarchitecture in the medieval West, 800–1500; 57. Numeric symbolism in the medieval cathedral and city; 58. Gargoyles; 59. Wall painting and sacred space in medieval churches;


Art 60. Nature and gothic architecture; 61. Reception of gothic and Romanesque architecture in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries; Part III. Renaissance and Baroque Christian Architecture: 62. The courts and their churches in the Lutheran reformation; 63. Iconoclasm in mid-sixteenth-century France; 64. Early modern church architecture in Paris; 65. Protestant temples in Catholic France; 66. Swedish church architecture after the reformation; 67. Baroque churches of London; 68. Reformation and counter-reformation: architecture in the low countries; 69. Carlo Borromeo: liturgy and sacred architecture after the Council of Trent; 70. The lure of the Christian past in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Rome; 71. The language of Roman Baroque church facades; 72. Urban development as religious imperative in early modern Rome; 73. Christian charity and public hospitals in early modern Rome; 74. Illusionism in early modern church decoration: celestial visions;

75. Votive churches, reliquary chapels, and pilgrimage shrines; 76. Architectural education and early modern religious orders; 77. Architecture of the religious orders: the local Baroques of the Benedictines and Carthusians; 78. Convent architecture in early modern Italy; 79. The architecture of confraternities in Italy; 80. Religious festival architecture in public spaces in early modern Europe; 81. Ephemeral design and international politics in Roman national churches; 82. Architecture of Sacri Monti and villas: devotional landscapes of the Italian counter-reformation; 83. Palace chapels and divine kingship: five European capitals; 84. Religious architecture in early modern Poland, 1500–1800, the architecture of confraternities in Italy; 85. Early modern church architecture in Russia; 86. Transatlantic renaissance and Baroque architecture in Spain and Latin America; 87. Hybrid Baroque in Portuguese and Spanish Asia: architecture and architectural sculpture in Portuguese India, Macao, and the Philippines;

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students January 2022 279 x 216 mm c.850pp 574 b/w illus. 70 colour illus. 978-1-108-47151-0 Hardback £425.00 / US$550.00 / €496.02

7

88. Confessional politics in the German historiography of Baroque church architecture; Part IV. Modern Christian Architecture: 89. Turning points in modern Christian architecture; 90. Frank Lloyd Wright’s religious architecture; 91. Auguste Perret’s Notre-Dame du Raincy: a turning point in church architecture; 92. Architecture in the wake of the liturgical movement; 93. Modern German church architecture; 94. Modern church architecture in Central Europe; 95. Modernism in Irish religious architecture; 96. Modern cemeteries of Europe and North America; 97. Christian architecture in modern Japan; 98. Ritual paths in modern Christian architecture; 99. The churches of Pietro Belluschi; 100. Ukrainian Church architecture in North America; 101. Louis Kahn’s metaphysical legacy; 102. Modern Scandinavian churches; 103. Modern Christian architecture of North America; Glossary; Index.


8

Classical studies

A Commentary on Panegyrici Latini II(12) An Oration Delivered by Pacatus Drepanius before the Emperor Theodosius I in the Senate at Rome, AD 389

Edited and translated by Roger Rees University of St Andrews, Scotland

Description The renowned Gallic poet Pacatus Drepanius journeyed to Rome in the summer of AD 389 to deliver a speech to the Emperor Theodosius; both men stood for the first time before the Roman Senators. It was a moment of high political charge. The Latin speech survives and is here presented both in the original and with facing English translation; the introduction and commentary capture the groundbreaking character of the work and set it in its historical, rhetorical and literary contexts.

Key Features • Makes an important but neglected speech available to classicists and ancient historians • Considers the place of the speech in the rhetorical tradition • Argues that epideictic oratory deserves to be taken seriously as a literary form

Contents Preface; Abbreviations; Introduction; Panegyrici Latini II(12); Commentary; Bibliography; Index locorum; General Index.

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students March 2022 216 x 138 mm 400pp 978-1-107-15504-6 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 / €140.05


Classical studies

9

Isokrates: The Forensic Speeches (Nos. 16-21) Introduction, Text, Translation and Commentary

Editor (introduction and notes) David Whitehead Queen’s University Belfast

Description The Athenian Isokrates (436–338 BC) is well-known for his long career as an educator and pundit; but originally he wrote ‘forensic’ speeches, i.e. for delivery in court. Six of them survive (five from Athens, one from Aigina), on issues including assault, fraud and inheritance. Here for the first time, after a General Introduction, they are presented and analysed in depth as a self-contained group. The Greek text and a facing English translation – both new – are augmented by commentaries which juxtapose this material with other surviving writers in the genre (and with Isocrates’ own later output). In the process, too, the speeches’ historical background, personnel, legal context, rhetorical strategies and all other relevant topics are explored.

Key Features • Offers a thorough introduction to Isokrates and his speeches • Presents a new edition of the Greek text and a new facing-page English translation • The text is accompanied by an extensive commentary, providing in-depth discussion of the background, personnel and issues arising

Contents General introduction; Preamble to the text; Private prosecution of Euthynous for (?) withholding a deposit: support-speech by a friend of the plaintiff Nikias (no.21); Special plea to block Kallimachos’ private prosecution for (?) damages (no.18); Private prosecution of Lochites for battery (no.20); On the horse-team (peri tou zeugous): defence of Alkibiades the Younger against Teisias’ private prosecution for (?) ejectment (no.16); Banking speech (‘trapezitikos’): private prosecution of passion for withholding a (bank-) deposit (no.17); Aiginetan speech (‘Aiginetikos’): claim to inherit the estate of Thrasylochose of Siphnos (no.19).

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students March 2022 978-1-108-30372-9 2 Hardback Volume Set c. £150.00 / c. US$195.00 / c. €175.06


10

History

The Cambridge Companion to Antisemitism Edited by Steven Katz Boston University

Description A History of Anti-Semitism examines the history, culture and literature of antisemitism from antiquity to the present. With contributions from an international team of scholars, whose essays were specially commissioned for this volume, it covers the long history of antisemitism starting with ancient Greece and Egypt, through the anti-Judaism of early Christianity, and the medieval era in both the Christian and Muslim worlds when Jews were defined as ‘outsiders,’ especially in Christian Europe. This portrayal often led to violence, notably pogroms that often accompanied Crusades, as well as to libels against Jews. The volume also explores the roles of Luther and the Reformation, the Enlightenment, the debate over Jewish emancipation, Marxism, and the social disruptions after World War 1 that led to the rise of Nazism and genocide. Finally, it considers current issues, including the dissemination of hate on social media and the internet and questions of definition and method.

Key Features • Provides a comprehensive one-volume study of antisemitism • Written for the non-expert in clear, straightforward language • Covers a range of interdisciplinary topics, including antisemitism in history, literature, art, and politics

Contents Part I. The Classical Period: 1. Antisemitism in the pagan world; 2. New Testament origins of Christian anti-Judaism; 3. Anti-Judaism in early Christian writings; 4. Church fathers and antisemitism from the second century through Augustine (end of 450 CE); 5. Christians, Jews, and Judaism in the Eastern Mediterranean and Near East, c. 150–400 CE; 6. Christianizing the Roman Empire: Jews and the law from Constantine to Justinian, 300–600 CE; 7. Antisemitism in Byzantium, fourth-seventh centuries; Part II. Medieval Times: 8. The medieval Islamic world and the Jews; 9. Medieval Western Christendom; 10. Christian theology and papal policy in the Middle Ages; 11. Crusades, blood libels, and popular violence; 12. Jews and money: medieval origins of a modern stereotype; 13. Jews and anti-Judaism in Christian religious literature;

Additional Information Level: Undergraduate students, graduate students Series: Cambridge Companions to Religion January 2022 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-49440-3 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00 / €99.20

14. Antisemitism in medieval art; Part III. The Modern Era: 15. Martin Luther and the Reformation; 16. The Enlightenment and its negative consequences; 17. Modern antisemitism in Western Europe: romantic nationalism, racism, and racial fantasies; 18. Antisemitism in late Imperial Russia and Eastern Europe up to 1920; 19. Marxism, socialism, and antisemitism; 20. Antisemitism in modern literature and theatre: 20A. French literature; 20B. German literature; 20C. English literature; 21. Antisemitism in America, 1654–2020; 22. Antisemitism in the Weimar Republic and the Third Reich; 23. New Islamic antisemitism: mid-nineteenth to the twenty-first century; 24. Anti-Zionism as antisemitism; 25. New issues; 26. Antisemitism in social media and on the Web; 27. Theories on the causes of antisemitism.


History

11

The Hughes Court From Progressivism to Pluralism, 1930 to 1941

Mark V. Tushnet

Harvard Law School, Massachusetts

Description The Hughes Court: From Progressivism to Pluralism, 1930–1941 describes the closing of one era in constitutional jurisprudence and the opening of another. This comprehensive study of the Supreme Court from 1930 to 1941 – when Charles Evans Hughes was Chief Justice – shows how nearly all justices, even the most conservative, accepted the broad premises of a Progressive theory of government and the Constitution. The Progressive view gradually increased its hold throughout the decade, but at its end, interest group pluralism began to influence the law. By 1941, constitutional and public law was discernibly different from what it had been in 1930, but there was no sharp or instantaneous Constitutional Revolution in 1937 despite claims to the contrary. This study supports its conclusions by examining the Court’s work in constitutional law, administrative law, the law of justiciability, civil rights and civil liberties, and statutory interpretation.

Key Features • Explores the far-ranging work of the Supreme Court, such as constitutional law, statutory interpretation, and civil rights and civil liberties • Combines careful doctrinal analysis with examinations of the political, economic, and social contexts within which the Court’s decisions were situated • The most current appraisal of the important claim that there was a Constitutional Revolution in 1937

Contents Acknowledgments; Introduction; Preface; Part I. The Opening Years: Section A. Setting the Stage; 1. Personnel and Organizing Ideas; 2. Formulas and Conceptions of Basic Needs: An Overview; 3. The Complex World of Simple Formulas; 4. Formulas and Considerations of Basic Needs in Business Regulation Cases; Section B. The False Dawn; 5. Blaisdell; 6. Nebbia; 7. The Gold Clause Cases; Section C. Crisis; 8. Black Monday 1935; 9. Winter 1935–36; 10. Spring 1936; 11. The Court-Packing Plan; 12. Resolution;

13. Was There a ‘Switch in Time’?; Section D. The New Constitutional Regime; 14. After the Storm: Personnel and Organization; 15. Consolidating the Scope of National Power; 16. Consolidating State Regulation of Business; 17. Consolidating Labor Law and Intergovernmental Immunity; 18. Toward a Theory of Pluralism; Part II. Continuities: Section A. Administrative Law; 19. Administrative Law Introduction; 20. Administrative Law Constitutional Limits; 21. Administrative Law Presidential Power; 22. Administrative Law Courts’ Role; Section B. Civil Liberties and Civil Rights; 23. The Uncertainty of Theory; 24. Progressivism, Prohibition, and Organized Crime; 25. Race, Criminal Justice, and ‘Labor Defense’; 26. Race and Strategic Litigation; 27. Radical Political Dissent; 28. Radical Religious Dissent; Section C. Justiciability;

29. Basic Concepts of Justiciability; 30. Sovereign Immunity and Political Questions; 31. Regulating Access to the National Courts; 32. Erie; 33. Erie’s Legacy; 34. Form and Style in Statutory Interpretation; Part III: New Approaches Begin to Emerge: Section A. Economics; 35. New Deal Economics; 36. Regulating Strikes; 37. Regulating the NLRB; 38. The Labor Antitrust Interface; Section B. Civil Liberties After 1937; 39. The Justices and the Theories; 40. Demonstrations, Picketing, and First Amendment Theories; 41. The Jehovah’s Witnesses and First Amendment Theories; 42. Conclusion; Historiographical Essay; Index.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise History of the Supreme Court of the United States, 11 January 2022 234 x 156 mm c.1270pp 978-1-316-51593-8 Hardback c. £200.00 / c. US$300.00 / c. €233.42


12

History

The Cambridge Economic History of China Edited by Debin Ma

Hitotsubashi University, Tokyo

Richard von Glahn

University of California, Los Angeles

Description Building on a wide array of recent scholarship, the two volumes of The Cambridge Economic History of China bring together the fruits of pioneering international studies in all dimensions of economic history, past and present. Exploring themes including political economy, agriculture, industry and trade, technology, ecological change, demography, law, urban development, standards of living, consumption, financial institutions, and national income, the two volumes together provide broad temporal coverage across all of Chinese history, including recent developments in contemporary China.

Key Features • Comprehensive but accessible coverage of all aspects of Chinese economic history • Together the two volumes provide broad temporal coverage across all of Chinese history, including recent developments in contemporary China • Draws on contributions by a diverse range of international experts

Contents Volume I: Introduction to Volume I; Part I. Before 1000: 1. The economy of late pre-imperial China: Archaeological perspectives; 2. Agriculture and its environmental impact; 3. State and economy: Production, extraction, and distribution; 4. Markets, money, and merchants; 5. Economic philosophy and political economy; 6. Silk Road trade and foreign economic influences; Interlude. The Tang-Song transition in Chinese economic history; Part II. 1000 to 1800: 7. Ecological change and resource constraints; 8. Population change; 9. Public finance; 10. Political economy; 11. Law and the market economy; 12. Property rights and factor markets;

13. The rural economy; 14. Cities and the urban economy; 15. The monetary system; 16. Merchants and commercial networks; 17. Foreign trade; 18. Production, consumption, and living standards. Volume II: Introduction to Volume II; Part I. 1800–1950: 1. Ideology and the contours of economic changes in modern China during 1850–1950; 2. Economic transition in the nineteenth century; 3. Agriculture; 4. Handicraft and modern industries; 5. The state and enterprises in late Qing China; 6. Development and expansion of central and regional state enterprises during the first half of the twentieth century; 7. Money and macro-economy; 8. Public finance;

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Economic History of China February 2022 228 x 152 mm 1400pp 978-1-107-14606-8 HB Set £200.00 / US$260.00 / €233.42

9. Financial institutions and financial markets; 10. Chinese business organization; 11. Impact of the west: Findings from the new data; 12. Foreign trade and investment; 13. Transport and communication infrastructure; 14. Education and human capital, 1800–1950; Part II. 1950–Present: 15. The origin of China’s communist institutions; 16. China under the command economy in 1950– 1977; 17. Living standards in Maoist China; 18. The political economy of China’s Great Leap Famine; 19. China’s external economic relations during the Mao era; 20. Chinese economy in the reform era; 21. China’s great boom as a historical process.


History

13

The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars Volume 1: Politics and Diplomacy

Edited by Michael Broers University of Oxford

Philip Dwyer

University of Newcastle, New South Wales

Description Volume I of The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars covers the international foreign political dimensions of the wars and the social, legal, political and economic structures of the Empire. Leading historians from around the world come together to discuss the different aspects of the origins of the Napoleonic Wars, their international political implications and the concrete ways the Empire was governed. This volume begins by looking at the political context that produced the Napoleonic Wars and setting it within the broader context of eighteenth century great power politics in the Age of Revolution. It considers the administration and governance of the Empire, including with France’s client states and the role of the Bonaparte family in the Empire. Further chapters in the volume examine the war aims of the various protagonists and offer an overall assessment of the nature of war in this period.

Key Features • Includes chapters by leading specialists in foreign policy and governance to reflect the latest research on the wars • Integrates themes from the political history of the Napoleonic Wars, creating a rounded picture of the origins of the wars • Uses a wide range of modern scholarship to bring the subject to a wider audience

Contents List of Figures; List of Maps; List of Contributors to Volume I; Acknowledgements; General Introduction; Introduction to Volume I; Part I. The Origins of the Napoleonic Wars: 1. Great Power Politics in the Second Half of the Eighteenth Century; 2. British Colonial Politics in an Age of European War and Creole Rebellion; 3. War in the Eighteenth Century;

4. The Age of Revolutions: Napoleon Bonaparte; 5. From Cosmopolitanism to la Grande Nation: French Revolutionary Diplomacy, 1789–1802; 6. The French Revolutionary Wars; Part II. Napoleon and His Empire: 7. The Bonapartes; 8. The Napoleonic Elites; 9. Administration, Police and Governance; 10. Law, Justice, Policing and Punishment; 11. Napoleonic Wars and Economic Imperialism; 12. Napoleon and The Church; 13. Napoleon’s Client States;

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars February 2022 229 x 152 mm c.625pp 30 b/w illus. 25 maps 978-1-108-42437-0 Hardback c. £110.00 / c. US$175.00 / c. €128.38

Part III. War Aims; 14. French Preponderance and the European System; 15. Habsburg Grand Strategy in the Napoleonic Wars; 16. Prussian Foreign Policy and War Aims, 1790–1815; 17. British War Aims, 1793–1815; 18. Alexander I’s Objectives in the Franco-Russian Wars, 1801–1815; 19. Ottoman War Aims; 20. Spain and Portugal; 21. War Aims: Scandinavia; Bibliographical Essays; Index.


14

History

The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars Volume 3: Experience, Culture and Memory

Edited by Alan Forrest University of York

Peter Hicks

Fondation Napoléon, Paris

Description Volume III of the Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars moves away from the battlefield to explore broader questions of society and culture. Leading scholars from around the globe show how the conflict left its mark on virtually every aspect of society. They reflect on the experience of the soldiers who fought in them, examining such matters as military morale, ideas of honour and masculinity, the treatment of wounds and the fate of prisoners-of-war; and they explore social issues such as the role of civilians, women’s experience, trans-border encounters and the roots of armed resistance. They also demonstrate how the experience of war was inextricably linked to empire and the wider world. Individual chapters discuss the depiction of the Wars in literature and the arts and their lasting impact on European culture. The volume concludes by examining the memory of the Wars and their legacy for the nineteenth-century world.

Key Features • Places emphasise on experience of those who lived through the Napoleonic Wars • Contextualises the history of the wars and their legacy for the nineteenth-century • Takes an interdisciplinary approach by including scholarship in cultural studies, gender history, art and literature

Contents List of Figures; List of Maps; List of Contributors to Volume III; Introduction to Volume III; Part I. The Experience of War: 1. The Soldiers’ Experience of War; 2. Military Values: Heroism and Masculinity; 3. Military Medicine; 4. Women and the Home Front; 5. Prisoners of War; Part II. The Experience of Imperial Rule: 6. Blockade and Economic Warfare; 7. Crossing Borders: Encounters with the Other; 8. Popular Resistance: The Case of Napoleonic Italy; 9. Collaboration: The Case of the Duchy of Warsaw;

10. Military Resistance: Desertion; 11. Liberation: Myth and Reality in Germany; Part III. War, Culture and Memory: 12. Memoirs and the Communication of Memory; 13. Festivals, Ceremonies and Public Commemorations; 14. The Portrayal of Heroism; 15. The Fine Arts and the Napoleonic Wars; 16. Poets and Novelists: Writing the Memory of War; 17. Political Keyboard Music in Revolutionary and Napoleonic France: ‘The Battle’; 18. The Napoleonic Wars in Caricature; 19. The Napoleonic Wars in European Cinema; 20. Nostalgia, or a Ruin with a View; Part IV. The Aftermath and Legacy of the Wars:

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars February 2022 229 x 152 mm c.600pp 25 maps 978-1-108-41767-9 Hardback c. £110.00 / c. US$175.00 / c. €128.38

21. Demobilization, Veterans and Civil Society after the Empire in France; 22. The Impact of the Napoleonic Wars on Europe’s Nineteenth-Century Gender Order; 23. Jomini, Clausewitz and the Theory of War; 24. The Legacy of Counter-Revolution: Conservative Ideology and Legitimism in France; 25. Bonapartism; 26. The Legacy of the Wars for the International System; 27. The Dislocation of the Global Hispanic World; 28. Global Empire: Britain’s Century, 1815–1914; 29. The Napoleonic Wars and Realms of Memory in Europe; Bibliographical Essays; Index.


Language and linguistics

15

The Cambridge Handbook of Childhood Multilingualism Edited by Anat Stavans Beit Berl College, Israel

Ulrike Jessner-Schmid

University of Innsbruck, Austria

Description 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 indepth 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.

Key Features • 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 languages

Contents Introduction: Multilingualism is not Bilingualism +1; Part I. Becoming and Being a Multilingual Child: 1. Infant Bi- and Multilingual Development; 2. The Development of Child Multilingualism in Languages of Different Modalities; 3. Multilingualism in Early Childhood: The Role of the Input; 4. Multilingual Education in Formal Schooling: Conceptual Shifts in Theory, Policy and Practice; Part II. Cognition and Faculties in Multilinguals: 5. Language and Thought in Multilingual Children; 6. Multilingual Exposure and Children’s Effective Communication; 7. Metalinguistic awareness and early multilingual learning; 8. Code-Switching among Bilingual and Trilingual Children; 9. Children’s Perception of their Multilingualism; 10. Multilingualism and Language Play;

Part III. Family Language Policy: 11. Establishing and Maintaining a Multilingual Family Language Policy; 12. Parental Input in the Development of Children’s Multilingualism; 13. 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 languages; 18. Growing up with multilingual literacies and implications on spelling; 19. Assessing Multilinguals; 20. Plurilingualism and Young Children’s Perspectival Cognition;

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics March 2022 244 x 170 mm c.750pp 978-1-108-48401-5 Hardback c. £120.00 / c. US$168.00 / c. €145.89

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 Africa; 25. Growing 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 Interaction; Index.


16

Language and linguistics

The Cambridge Handbook of Translation Edited by Kirsten Malmkjær University of Leicester

Description Translation plays a vital role in society – it allows us to share knowledge and enrich our lives through access to other cultures. Translation studies is a rapidly evolving academic discipline, directly impacted by advances in technological aids, and with close connections between theory and practice. Bringing together contributions from internationally-renowned scholars, this Handbook offers an authoritative, up-to-date account of the many facets of this buoyant discipline. It covers different themes, areas of practice and developing trends, and provides an overview of the major sub-fields, and the connections between them. It is organised into six parts covering the nature of translation, its roles in society, its relationships with other disciplines, a selection of its factual genres, a selection of its art-related genres and, finally, its role in history. Comprehensive yet accessible, it is essential reading for students, teachers and scholars of translation studies, modern languages, linguistics, social studies and literary studies.

Key Features • Provides accessible, authoritative, up-to-date accounts of the many facets of the discipline of translation • Each chapter includes a section on further reading, to facilitate further study • Includes contributions from a global team of internationally renowned scholars

Contents Introduction; Part I. The Nature of Translation: 1. Theories of translation; 2. The translation process; 3. Translation and technology; 4. Self translation; 5. Translated text; Part II. Translation in Society: 6. Translation and translanguaging in (post) multilingual societies; 7. Less translated languages; 8. The translation professions; 9. Translation studies and public policy;

10. Translators’ associations and networks; Part III. Translation in Company: 11. Translation and comparative literature; 12. Translation and linguistics; 13. Translation and philosophy; 14. Translation, gender and sexuality; 15. Translation and education; Part IV. Translation in Practice: Factual Genres; 16. Translating technical texts; 17. Translating academic texts; 18. Translating medical texts; 19. Translating legal text;

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics April 2022 244 x 170 mm c.750pp 978-1-108-48040-6 Hardback c. £120.00 / c. US$168.00 / c. €145.89

20. Translating news; Part V. Translation in Practice: Arts: 21. Translating for the theatre; 22. Audiovisual translation; 23. Translating literary prose; 24. Translating poetry; 25. Translating the texts of songs and other vocal music; Part VI. Translation in History: 26. Translation before the Christian Era; 27. Translation in the first millennium; 28. Translation in the second millennium; 29. Translation in the third millennium.


Language and linguistics

17

The Cambridge Handbook of Romance Linguistics Edited by Adam Ledgeway University of Cambridge

Martin Maiden University of Oxford

Description The Romance languages and dialects constitute a treasure trove of linguistic data of profound interest and significance. Data from the Romance languages have contributed extensively to our current empirical and theoretical understanding of phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, sociolinguistics, and historical linguistics. Written by a team of worldrenowned scholars, this Handbook explores what we can learn about linguistics from the study of Romance languages, and how the body of comparative and historical data taken from them can be applied to linguistic study. It also offers insights into the diatopic and diachronic variation exhibited by the Romance family of languages, of a kind unparalleled for any other Western languages. By asking what Romance languages can do for linguistics, this Handbook is essential reading for all linguists interested in the insights that a knowledge of the Romance evidence can provide for general issues in linguistic theory.

Key Features • Explores what we can learn about linguistics from the study of Romance languages • Highlights how data from Romance languages can contribute extensively to our empirical and theoretical understanding of phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, sociolinguistics, and historical linguistics • Offers insights into the diatopic and diachronic variation exhibited by the Romance family of languages, of a kind unparalleled for any other Western languages • Extensive references are included in the additional resources tab on the book’s webpage

Contents 1. Data, theory, and explanation: The view from romance; Part I. What is a language?: 2. Origins of romance; 3. Documentation and sources; 4. Variation in romance; Part II. Phonetics and phonology: 5. Structure of the syllable; 6. Sandhi phenomena; 7. Effects of stress; 8. The notion of the phoneme; 9. Typologically exceptional phenomena in romance phonology; Part III. Morphology: 10. Phonological and morphological conditioning;

11. The autonomy of morphology; 12. Suppletion; 13. Inflexion, derivation, compounding; 14. Evaluative suffixes; 15. Counting systems; Part IV. Syntax: 16. Argument structure and argument realization; 17. Agreement; 18. Alignment; 19. Complex predicates; 20. Dependency, licensing, and the nature of grammatical relations; 21. Parametric variation; Part V. Semantics and pragmatics:

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics May 2022 247 x 174 mm c.850pp 978-1-108-48579-1 Hardback c. £120.00 / c. US$145.00 / c. €145.89

22. Word meanings and concepts; 23. Key topics in semantics: Presupposition, anaphora, (in)definite nominal phrases, deixis, tense and aspect, negation; 24. Speech acts, discourse, and clause type; 25. Address systems and social markers; 26. Information structure; Part VI. Language, society, and the individual: 27. Register, genre, and style in the romance languages; 28. Contact and borrowing; 29. Diamesic variation; 30. Social factors in language change and; Index.


18

Language and linguistics

The Cambridge Handbook of Language Contact Edited by Salikoko Mufwene University of Chicago

Anna Maria Escobar

University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Description Language contact – the linguistic and social outcomes of two or more languages coming into contact with each other – has been pervasive in human history. Whether or not we are aware of it, we as humans always deal with language contact. Bringing together contributions from an international team of scholars, this two-volume Handbook represents the state-of-theart in the field of language contact. The first volume focuses on population movement and language change, and the second volume looks at multilingualism and population structure. Each of the two volumes start with an introduction outlining the history of the research in the field. They are then organised into thematic parts, and cover the processes, theoretical issues and outcomes involved in a range of language contact situations worldwide. Easy-to-read yet wide-ranging in scope, the Handbook is essential reading for anybody interested in how people behave linguistically in multilingual or multilectal settings.

Key Features • Provides examples of socioeconomic history as a background for the phenomena discussed, along with an extensive and diverse bibliography • Offers examples of interdisciplinary research • Includes illustrations and maps, to help the reader situate the contents geographically

Contents List of contributors; List of figures; List of tables; Preface; Introduction: 1. Introduction: language contact in population structure; Part I. Multilingualism: 2. Societal Multilingualism; 3. Individual bilingualism; 4. Codeswitching and translanguaging; 5. Urban contact dialects; 6. Multilingualism and super-diversity: some historical and contrastive perspectives; 7. Multilingualism and language contact in signing communities; 8. Multilingualism in India, Southeast Asia, and China; 9. Monolingualism vs. multilingualism in Western Europe: language regimes in France, Spain, and the United Kingdom; Part II. Contact, Emergence, and Language Classification: 10. Perspectives on creole formation; 11. Non-European pidgins in early European colonial explorations and trade: mobilian jargon and maritime Polynesian pidgin in contrast; 12. Mixed languages; 13. Reconstructing the sociolinguistic history of expansion languages in the Americas: a research program; 14. On the idiolectal nature of lexical and phonological contact: spaniards, nahuas, and Yoruba in the new world; Part III. Lingua Francas: 15. The emergence of lingua Francas; 16. Colonization and the emergence and spread of indigenous lingua francas in Africa, the Americas and Asia;

Part IV. Language Vitality: 17. Language endangerment, loss, and reclamation today; 18. Contact and shift: colonization and urbanization in the Arctic; 19. The Indian diaspora: language maintenance and loss; 20. Quechua expansion during the Inca and colonial periods; 21. Indigenous and immigrant languages in the US: language contact, change and survival; Part V. Contact and Language Structures: 22. Structural outcomes of language contact; 23. The emergence of Andean Spanish: against the odds; 24. Contact between English and Norman in the Channel Islands; Author index; Subject index. List of contributors; List of figures; List of tables; Preface; Introduction; 1. Language contact: what a rich and intellectually stimulating history since the late 19th century!; Part I. Language Contact and Genetic Linguistics: 2. Language contact and historical linguistics; 3. The chinese expansion and language coexistence in modern China; 4. Tracing language contact in Africa’s past; 5. Populations in contact: linguistic, archaeological, and genomic evidence for indoeuropean diffusion; 6. The impact of autochthonous languages on bantu language variation: a comparative view on southern and central Africa; Part II. Linguistic Areas:


Language and linguistics 7. The Balkans; 8. The amazon basin: linguistic areas and language contact; 9. Migration and trade as drivers of language spread and contact in indigenous Latin America; 10. Language contact in South Asia; Part III. Language Spread: 11. The geographic and demographic expansion of Malay; 12. Geographic and demographic spread of Swahili; 13. Arabic language contact; Part IV. Emergence and Spread of Some European Languages: 14. The emergence and evolution of romance languages in Europe and the Americas; 15. The expansion and evolution of Portuguese;

16. French and English in contact in North America; 17. French in African contact settings; 18. The geographical and demographic expansion of English; Part V. Language Diasporas: 19. Diasporas: an overview; 20. Labor migrations: language change in communities and Diasporas; 21. The Korean diaspora; 22. The Chinese diaspora: language maintenance and loss; 23. The diachrony of Yiddish and judaeo-spanish as contact languages; Author index; Subject index.

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics June 2022 247 x 174 mm 850pp 978-1-107-17487-0 2 Volume Hardback Set c. £200.00 / c. US$270.00 / c. €233.42

19


20

Law

Constitutionalism in Context Edited by David S. Law University of Virginia

Description With its emphasis on emerging and cutting-edge debates in the study of comparative constitutional law and politics, its suitability for both research and teaching use, and its distinguished and diverse cast of contributors, this handbook is a must-have for scholars and instructors alike. This versatile volume combines the depth and rigor of a scholarly reference work with features for teaching in law and social science courses. Its interdisciplinary case-study approach provides political and historical as well as legal context: each modular chapter offers an overview of a topic and a jurisdiction, followed by a case study that simultaneously contextualizes both. Its forward-looking and highly diverse selection of topics and jurisdictions fills gaps in the literature on the Global South as well as the West. A timely section on challenges to liberal constitutional democracy addresses pressing concerns about democratic backsliding and illiberal and/or authoritarian regimes.

Key Features • A highly versatile research handbook that combines broad-ranging, interdisciplinary coverage with support for teaching use • Features hard-to-find coverage of Asia, the Muslim world, and the Global South as well as the West • Features primary sources, online supplementary materials, heavily curated reading lists, and a user’s guide

Contents Part I. Introduction to the Field: 1. Pedagogy and conceptualization of the field; 2. The state of the field; 3. Methodology and research design; Part II. Concepts and Definitions: 4. Constitutions and constitutionalism: China; Part III. Constitutional Drafting and Revision: 5. Constitution-making for divided societies: Afghanistan; 6. Constitutional history and constitutional migration: Nepal; 7. Constitutional transformation: Hungary; 8. International law and constitution-making: Sudan; Part IV. Constitutional Adjudication and Interpretation: 9. Judicial review of constitutional amendments: Taiwan; 10. Nonjudicial constitutional interpretation: Netherlands; 11. Transnational judicial communication: The European Union;

Part V. Rights: 12. Social and economic rights: Argentina; 13. LGBTQ rights: Singapore; 14. Indigenous rights: New Zealand; 15. Citizenship and nationality: Cyprus; 16. Affirmative action: Brazil; Part VI. Structure: 17. Subnational constitutionalism: Hong Kong; 18. Electoral systems: Indonesia; 19. Fourth-branch institutions: South Africa; Part VII. Challenges to Liberal Democratic Constitutionalism: 20. Islamic Constitutionalism: Iran; 21. Military influence on the constitutional order: Turkey; 22. Constitutional backsliding: Colombia; 23. Privatization of constitutional law: Thailand.

Additional Resources: http://www.cambridge.org/9781108427098 Supplementary materials (students and instructors)

Additional Information Level: Graduate Students, academic researchers Series: Comparative Constitutional Law and Policy January 2021 254 x 178 mm c.640pp 978-1-108-42709-8 Hardback £135.00 / US$175.00 / €157.56


Law

21

Rules of Origin in International Trade Second edition

Stefano Inama

United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, Geneva

Description This book provides comprehensive, in-depth analysis of the different sets of rules of origin adopted by major trading partners and worldwide, as well as efforts to establish multilateral rules at WTO and WCO. It discusses the status of non-preferential as well as preferential rules of origin in international trade, their evolution during the last decades and their tendencies and future. With its multidisciplinary approach, this book’s contents provide comparative analysis of the relevant legal and economic features of different rules origin compilation sets, reviewing their drafting differences and their implications and impact on the economic and industrial environments. This edition has been updated and expanded to include the latest developments on rules of origin at multilateral level in WTO and WCO and on rules of origin in recent FTAs. Drawing from his thirty years of experience, Stefano Inama provides insights from trade negotiations along with practical tools for policy makers and practitioners, orientation for the private sector and analytical tools for researchers.

Key Features • Provides a truly multidisciplinary approach and exhaustive review of the legal and economic dimensions of rules of origin to allow readers to penetrate the complexity of this discipline and access negotiating tools and compliance standards • Covers both the intellectual and practical aspects of rules of origin to provide insights and tools on how to draft, negotiate and administer rules of origin drawing upon existing international trade agreements and negotiating texts • Offers a thorough understanding of the dynamics and the evolving nature of rules of origin through a global coverage of the analytical review and exhaustive examples included

Contents Preface; Abbreviations; 1. Efforts to establish multilateral rules; 2. The Uruguay round agreement on rules of origin: the harmonization work programme of non-preferential rules of origin; 3. Preferential rules of origin; 4. The economics of rules of origin; 5. Experiences in drafting preferential rules of origin in GSP schemes, Africa, Asia and Latin America; 6. Drafting rules of origin; 7. The administration of rules of origin.

Additional Information Level: Legal practitioners, academic researchers March 2022 228 x 152 mm 650pp 978-1-107-08155-0 Hardback £115.00 / US$150.00 / €134.22


22

Law

The Cambridge Handbook of Labor and Democracy Edited by Angela B. Cornell Cornell University, New York

Mark Barenberg

Columbia University, New York

Description We are currently witnessing some of the greatest challenges to democratic regimes since the 1930s, with democratic institutions losing ground in numerous countries throughout the world. At the same time organized labor has been under assault worldwide, with steep declines in union density rates. In this timely handbook, scholars in law, political science, history, and sociology explore the role of organized labor and the working class in the historical construction of democracy. They analyze recent patterns of democratic erosion, examining its relationship to the political weakening of organized labor and, in several cases, the political alliances forged by workers in contexts of nationalist or populist political mobilization. The volume breaks new ground in providing cross-regional perspectives on labor and democracy in the United States, Europe, Latin America, Africa, and Asia. Beyond academia, this volume is essential reading for policymakers and practitioners concerned with the relationship between labor and democracy.

Key Features • An interdisciplinary perspective on the intersection of law and democracy • Responds to the threat to democracy around the world and the diminishing role of labor unions • Includes comparative analysis of case studies from the Americas, Europe, Africa, and Asia

Contents Introduction; Part I. Labor and Democracy: Theory and Practice: 1. A new labor law for deep democracy: from social democracy to democratic socialism; 2. Labor and democracy: constructing, deepening, and defending citizenship rights; 3. Labor’s obstacles and democracy’s demise; 4. Right-wing populism, illiberal democracy, trade unions, and workers’ rights; Part II. History, Politics, and Law: 5. Sectoral bargaining in the United States: historical roots of a twenty-first century renewal; 6. The lever and the fulcrum: organizing and bargaining for democracy and the common good; 7. ‘Industrial democracy’ in the United States, past and present; 8. Holding on: the decline of organized labor in the U.S. in historical perspective and the implications for democracy; 9. Unions and the democratic first amendment; Part III. Labor, Diversity, and Democracy: 10. Coming apart: how union decline and workplace disintegration imperil democracy;

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks January 2022 254 x 178 mm c.550pp 978-1-108-83988-4 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00 / €175.06

11. Unions can help white workers become more racially tolerant; 12. Attacking democracy through immigration workplace raids; 13. The care crisis: covid-19, labor feminism, and democracy; Part IV. Country and Regional Perspectives: 14. Labor, workers’ rights, and democracy in Latin America; 15. African perspectives on labor rights as enhancers of democratic governance; 16. Why workers often oppose democracy; 17. Reclaiming democracy: the challenge facing labor in India; 18. A critical assessment of democratic labor unionism in South Korea from a feminist standpoint; Part V. Labor and Democracy Sectoral Case Studies: Platform Workers, Higher Education, and the Care Industry: 19. Pursuing democratic depth in an age of multinational power and soft labor law: the case of platform worker protests; 20. Corporatization of higher education: a crisis of labor and democracy; 21. The fissured welfare state: care work, democracy, and public-private governance.


Law

23

German Practice in International Law 2019 Volume 1

Edited by Stefan Talmon

Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn

Description Customary international law is based on State practice. This book presents the international law practice of Germany, the world’s fourth-largest economy and powerhouse of the European Union, which makes an important contribution to the creation and development of customary international law. It is the first and only presentation of German practice in international law in English. The 2019 volume also provides comprehensive coverage of Germany’s membership of the United Nations Security Council. The book combines a case study approach, providing analysis and commentary on Germany’s practice, with a classic digest of primary materials, including diplomatic correspondence, statements, and court decisions. The book is an ideal complement to other compilations of international law practice and is an essential resource for scholars and practitioners of international law. It will also be of interest to scholars of international relations, politics, and diplomatic studies.

Key Features • Combines the disciplines of law, politics, international relations and diplomatic studies – explains how international law is used in international relations to achieve geopolitical aims, economic interest, and strategic goals • Uses a case study approach – puts the legal questions in their factual and political context and helps the non-expert reader (also in years to come) to better understand both the legal and geopolitical questions involved • Presents the German practice in international law in English – makes German practice accessible to a non-German speaking readership and provides a foreign affairs record for other scholars to use in the future to analyze German’s international relations

Contents 1. Foundations and functions of International Law; 2. States and their organs; 3. Inter-State political and economic relations and transactions; 4. State jurisdiction and immunities; 5. State responsibility and liability; 6. Antarctica, Sea, Air and Space; 7. Individuals, their human rights and their international criminal responsibility; 8. Natural resources and the environment; 9. The United Nations and other international organisations; 10. Use of force, Arms control and disarmament; 11. International disputes and their settlement; Annex 1: Notable statements on international law by Germany during 2019; Annex 2: International agreements concluded by Germany in 2019; Index.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students March 2022 254 x 178 mm c.480pp 978-1-316-51461-0 Hardback c. £170.00 / c. US$220.00 / c. €198.41


24

Law

Measuring Compliance Assessing Corporate Crime and Misconduct Prevention

Edited by Melissa Rorie University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Benjamin van Rooij

University of Amsterdam, School of Law

Description Compliance, or the behavioral response to legal rules, has become an important topic for academics and practitioners. A large body of work exists that describes different influences on business compliance, but a fundamental challenge remains: how to measure compliance or noncompliance behavior itself? Without proper measurement, it’s impossible to evaluate existing management and regulatory enforcement practices. Measuring Compliance provides the first comprehensive overview of different approaches that are or could be used to measure compliance by business organizations. The book addresses the strengths and weaknesses of various methods and offers both academics and practitioners guidance on which measures are best for different purposes. In addition to understanding the importance of measuring compliance and its potential negative effects in a variety of contexts, readers will learn how to collect data to answer different questions in the compliance domain, and how to offer suggestions for improving compliance measurement.

Key Features • Brings together scholar and practitioner perspectives • Provides a comprehensive list of research methodologies • Accessible to people less familiar with compliance scholarship

Contents Introduction: Compliance and Its Measurement; Part I. The Compliance Industry, the State, and Measurement Needs: 2. Legal and Regulatory Use and Measurement of Compliance Programs; 3. Measuring Compliance in the Age of Governance: How the Governance Turn Has Impacted Compliance Measurement by the State; 4. Understanding the Role of Power Distributions in Compliance; Part II. Quantitative Approaches to Measuring Corporate Compliance: 5. Self-Report Surveys and Factorial Survey Instruments; 6. The Use of Randomized Experiments for Assessing Corporate Compliance; 7. A Practical Way to Measure Corporate Compliance Efforts; 8. Measuring Compliance Risk and the Emergence of Analytics; 9. Using Regulatory Inspection Data to Measure Environmental Compliance; 10. Using Outcomes to Measure Aggregate-Level Compliance: Justifications, Challenges, and Practices; Part III. Qualitative Approaches to Measuring Corporate Compliance: 11. Engaging Qualitative Research Approaches to Investigate Compliance Motivations: Understanding the How and Why of Compliance; 12. Admitting noncompliance: Interview strategies for assessing undetected legal deviance; 13. Compliance Ethnography: What gets lost in compliance measurement; Part IV. Mixed Methods and Building on Existing Compliance Research: 14. Mixing and Combining Research Strategies and Methods to Understand Compliance; 15. Using Meta-Analysis/Systematic Review to Examine Corporate Compliance; 16. Data Simulations as a Means of Improving Compliance Measurement.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, legal practitioners, graduate students February 2022 254 x 178 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-48859-4 Hardback £145.00 / US$190.00 / €169.23


Law

25

International Law Reports Volume 197

Christopher Greenwood International Court of Justice

Karen Lee

University of Cambridge

Description Decisions of international courts and arbitrators, as well as judgments of national courts, are fundamental elements of modern public international law. The International Law Reports is the only publication in the world wholly devoted to the regular and systematic reporting in English of such decisions. It is therefore an absolutely essential work of reference. Volume 197 contains the 2019 International Court of Justice judgment on the merits in the Jadhav Case (India v. Pakistan), 2020 judgment of the Court of Justice of the Economic Community of West African States in Incorporated Trustees of Laws and Rights Awareness Initiative v. Nigeria and 2020 judgment of English High Court in Re Al M (Assurances and Waiver).

Key Features • Contains 2019 International Court of Justice judgment on the merits in the Jadhav Case (India v. Pakistan) • Contains 2020 judgment of the Court of Justice of the Economic Community of West African States in Incorporated Trustees of Laws and Rights Awareness Initiative v. Nigeria • Contains 2020 judgment of English High Court in Re Al M (Assurances and Waiver)

Contents 1. Maritime Delimitation in the Indian Ocean (Somalia v. Kenya); 2. Jadhav Case (India v. Pakistan); 3. Anudo v. United Republic of Tanzania; 4. Walusimbi and Others v. Attorney General of Uganda and Others; 5. Media Council of Tanzania, Legal and Human Rights Centre, Tanzania Human Rights Defenders Coalition v. Attorney General of the United Republic of Tanzania; 6. Incorporated Trustees of Laws and Rights Awareness Initiatives v. Federal Republic of Nigeria; 7. LG and Others v. Rina SpA, Ente Registro Italiano Navale; 8. Veeber v. Estonia (No 2); 9. Prosecutor v. Al Mahdi (Situation in the Republic of Mali); 10. Pel-Air Aviation Pty Ltd v. Casey; 11. Febles v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration; 12. Veeber Case; 13. R v. Reeves Taylor; 14. Re Al M (Assurances and Waiver).

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: International Law Reports March 2022 219 x 146 mm c.820pp 978-1-00-915272-3 Hardback c. £170.00 / c. US$220.00 / c. €198.41


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Law

The Cambridge Handbook of Law and Entrepreneurship in the United States D. Gordon Smith

Brigham Young University School of Law

Brian Broughman

Vanderbilt University, Tennessee

Christine Hurt

Brigham Young University School of Law

Description Law plays a key role in determining the level of entrepreneurial action in society. Legal rules seek to define property rights, facilitate private ordering, and impose liability for legal wrongs, thereby attempting to establish conditions under which individuals may act. These rules also channel the development of technology, regulate information flows, and determine parameters of competition. Depending on their structure and implementation, legal rules can also discourage individuals from acting. It is thus crucial to determine which legal rules and institutions best enable entrepreneurs, whose core function is to challenge incumbency. This volume assembles legal experts from diverse fields to examine the role of law in facilitating or impeding entrepreneurial action. Contributors explore issues arising in current policy debates, including the incentive effect of legal rules on startup activity; the role of law in promoting or foreclosing market entry; and the effect of entrepreneurial action on legal doctrine.

Key Features • Develops an analytic framework based on the notion that the core function of entrepreneurs is to challenge incumbency • Provides a broad view of three domains in which law affects entrepreneurial action: lawmaking, governance, and incentives • Offers perspectives from subject-matter experts in a variety of legal specialties

Contents Introduction; 1. Entrepreneurial action; Part I. Regulating, Lawmaking, and Entrepreneurial Action: 2. The rise of regulatory affairs in innovative startups; 3. Gauguin, Darwin and design thinking; 4. Between the devil and the SEC; 5. The politics of entrepreneurial capital-raising; 6. Venture exchange regulation: listing standards, market microstructure, and investor protection; Part II. Governance and Entrepreneurial Action: 7. Relational contracting and business norms in entrepreneurial finance; 8. Biotech strategic alliances in law and entrepreneurship; 9. The entrepreneurial business judgment rule; 10. Entrepreneurial action in family-controlled companies; Part III. Legal Incentives Supporting (and Sometimes Discouraging) Entrepreneurial Action: 11. Entrepreneurship incentives for resource-constrained firms; 12. Corrupting entrepreneurial action; 13. The spinoff advantage: human capital law and entrepreneurship.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, legal practitioners Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks October 2021 229 x 152 mm 600pp 978-1-107-17195-4 Hardback £175.00 / US$225.00 / €204.24


Literature

27

The Inheritors and The Nature of a Crime Joseph Conrad Edited by Jeremy Hawthorn

Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim

In collaboration with Max Saunders King’s College London

Description This volume offers scholars the first authoritative text of two works produced collaboratively by two of the most important modern British novelists. Long hard to obtain and frequently neglected by critics, each can now be appreciated both in its own right and as part of the two authors’ individual oeuvres. This scholarly edition situates both works in the context of the writers’ meeting and ongoing collaboration, providing illuminating literary and historical references and detailing the works’ composition history and reception in the UK and America. As well as establishing definitive texts of both works and of the authors’ prefaces written for the 1924 republication of The Nature of a Crime, this edition also includes Ford’s own 1924 account of his collaboration with Conrad on The Inheritors, as well as the text of Ford’s ‘The Old Story’, a hitherto unpublished early draft of the basic plot of The Nature of a Crime.

Key Features • The first critical edition of both texts, including extensive explanatory material and rich contextual information • Includes a wide-ranging Introduction that outlines the authors’ meeting, friendship and collaborative working methods, relates the texts to other works by the authors and outlines the texts’ early reception in both the UK and the USA • Provides extensive notes explicating allusions and expressions that are likely to escape or baffle the modern reader, shedding light on the social, political and intellectual contexts of the works’ production and reception

Contents List of Illustrations; General Editors’ Preface; Acknowledgements; Chronology: Joseph Conrad; Chronology: Ford Madox Ford; Abbreviations and Note on Editions; Introduction; The Inheritors; The Nature of a Crime; Illustrations; The Texts: An Essay; Apparatus; Textual Notes; Appendix 1: Ford Madox Ford on The Inheritors; Appendix 2: ‘The Old Story’; Explanatory Notes.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Joseph Conrad January 2022 216 x 138 mm 350pp 978-1-107-01681-1 Hardback £94.99 / US$125.00 / €110.86


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Literature

Headlong Hall Thomas Love Peacock Edited by Nicholas Joukovsky Pennsylvania State University

Description Thomas Love Peacock (1785-1866) is one of the most distinctive prose satirists of the Romantic period. The Cambridge Edition of the Novels of Thomas Love Peacock offers the first complete text of these works to appear for more than half a century. Headlong Hall (1816), Peacock’s earliest work of dialogic and satirical fiction, was the most popular of his tales during his lifetime and considered his signature novel. An episodic plot and a country house setting provide the framework for a sparkling intellectual comedy that embraces music, gastronomy, philosophy, politics, craniology, painting, and landscape gardening. This edition supplies an authoritative text and a comprehensive introduction tracing the genesis, composition, publication, reception, and revision of the novel. Extensive explanatory notes throw light on the Welsh backdrop to the fiction as well as on the literary, political, social, and intellectual contexts of Peacock’s innovative topical satire.

Key Features • Provides a substantial introduction and notes, placing Peacock’s satire in context • Appendices contain full texts of Peacock’s manuscript farces The Dilettanti and The Three Doctors • Peacock’s ancient and modern source materials are described and analysed, as is his relationship to classical satire and to the nineteenth-century novel

Contents General Editor’s preface; Chronology; Introduction; Headlong Hall; Appendix A. Peacock’s Preface of 1837; Appendix B. The Dilettanti (1812–13); Appendix C. The Three Doctors (1812–13); Appendix D. A Revised Text of the Headlong ‘Chorus’; Note on the text; Emendations and variants; Ambiguous line-end hyphenations; Explanatory notes; Select bibliography.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Novels of Thomas Love Peacock, 1 February 2022 216 x 138 mm 300pp 978-1-107-03073-2 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 / €105.04


Literature

29

The Aspern Papers and Other Tales, 1884–1888 Henry James Rosella Mamoli Zorzi University of Venice

Simone Francescato

Universita Ca’Foscari, Venezia

Description The Cambridge Edition of the Complete Fiction of Henry James provides, for the first time, a scholarly edition of a major writer whose work continues to be read, quoted, adapted and studied. The nine tales in this volume, published between 1884 and 1888, include ‘The Aspern Papers’, set in Venice and featuring a devious scholar attempting to steal the letters of an American poet from his former lover, and ‘The Liar,’ on the world of painters and their models. These tales exemplify James’s continuing interest in the art of short fiction during a period which saw him responding to the stimulations of French naturalism and successfully reworking the international theme that had made him famous at the end of the 1870s. Extensive explanatory notes enable modern readers to understand the tales’ historical, cultural and literary references.

Key Features • Provides a full critical introduction to ‘The Aspern Papers’, comprising an authoritative text and supported by full textual apparatus including notes, glossary and textual variants • The first scholarly edition of James’ collected short tales, exemplifying his response to French naturalism • Features extensive sections on textual history and contemporary critical reception as well as a comprehensive bibliography

Contents List of Illustrations; Acknowledgements; List of Abbreviations; General Editor’s Preface; General Chronology of James’s Life and Writings; Introduction; Textual Introduction; Chronology of Composition and Production; Bibliography; The Aspern Papers and Other Tales, 1884-188; Glossary of Foreign Words and Phrases; Notes; Textual Variants; Emendations; Appendix A. Extracts from James’s Notebooks; Appendix B. Prefaces to the New York Edition.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Complete Fiction of Henry James, 27 February 2022 228 x 152 mm 650pp 978-1-107-02964-4 Hardback c. £85.00 / c. US$150.00 / c. €105.04


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Literature

Sir Charles Grandison Samuel Richardson E. Derek Taylor

Longwood College, Virginia

Melvyn New

University of Florida

Elizabeth Kraft

University of Georgia

Description One of the most important novels of the eighteenth-century, Sir Charles Grandison [1753] shaped the English courtship novel, and was loved and admired by both Jane Austen and George Eliot. The book follows the life of Sir Charles, a man parallel in virtue with Richardson’s female paragons Clarissa and Pamela; and a response to the fallible protagonist Tom Jones in Fielding’s popular satire of moralising novels. Forming part of the first full scholarly edition of Richardson’s complete works, comprehensive general and textual introductions significantly revise and advance understanding of the composition and printing history of Richardson’s final novel, and reveal the central place of Sir Charles in the literature of the period. Including Richardson’s Historical Index for the first time in any edition, extensive annotations and expansive notes also give readers crucial context, and provides scholars with paths to follow for future research.

Key Features • First scholarly edition of the novel in nearly fifty years. A new general and textual introduction significantly revises and advances understanding of the composition and printing history of Richardson’s final novel • Expansive notes allow readers to understand the novel in its historical and literary contexts, and provide scholars paths to follow for future research • Features Richardson’s original Historical Index, which is not included in any other modern edition

Contents Volume 1: List of Illustrations; General Editors’ Preface; Acknowledgements; Chronology; List of Abbreviations; General Introduction; Textual Introduction;

The History of Sir Charles Grandison (1 & 2). Volume 2: The History of Sir Charles Grandison (3 & 4). Volume 3: The History of Sir Charles Grandison (5 & 6, Concluding note) Volume 4: The History of Sir Charles Grandison (Index: Historical and Characteristical, Similes and Allusions, Unlucky Omission, To the Public);

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Samuel Richardson March 2022 228 x 152 mm 3000pp 978-0-521-83306-6 4 Volume Set £400.00 / US$520.00 / €466.84

Collation of Chapter Numbering; Emendations; Word-division; Bibliographical Descriptions of Early Editions; Explanatory Notes; Index.


Literature

31

African American Literature in Transition, 1750–1800 Volume 1

Edited by Rhondda Robinson Thomas Clemson University, South Carolina

Description This volume provides an illuminating exploration of the development of early African American literature from an African diasporic perspective—in Africa, England, and the Americas. It juxtaposes analyses of writings by familiar authors like Phillis Wheatley and Olaudah Equiano with those of lesser known or examined works by writers such as David Margrett and Isabel de Olvera to explore how issues including forced migration, enslavement, authorship, and racial identity influenced early Black literary production and how theoretical frameworks like Afrofuturism and intersectionality can enrich our understanding of texts produced in this period. Chapters grouped in four sections – Limits and Liberties of Early Black Print Culture, Black Writing and Revolution, Early African American Life in Literature, and Evolutions of Early Black Literature – examine how transitions coupled with conceptions of race, the impacts of revolution, and the effects of religion shaped the trajectory of authors’ lives and the production of their literature.

Key Features • Introduces new analyses of archival material and familiar texts throughout • Includes writings by authors of African descent from the Age of Exploration period, acknowledging and affirming the deeper, more complex roots of the early African American literary tradition • Provides examples of multiple racial markers used by and assigned to authors of African descent in the early American period

Contents Introduction: Impatient of oppression in early African American writing in transition; Part I. Limits and Liberties of Early Black Print Culture: 1. Early black evangelical writing and the radical limitations of print; 2. The circulation of early black Atlantic literature; 3. What makes a text ‘Black’? from authorship to metadata; Part II. Black Writing and Revolution: 4. African Americans writing themselves into history during the age of revolution; 5. African American writing in the era of independence; 6. Black literary engagement with the Haitian revolution; Part III. Early African American Life in Literature: 7. Reading and building a Nation; or everyday living (while Black) in early America; 8. Respectability politics and early African American literature; 9. Early black futures; Part IV. Evolutions of Early Black Literature: 10. Black authors and British National identity, 1763-1791; 11. The competing demands of early African American literature, 1783-1798; 12. Black letters close the eighteenth century; Bibliography.

Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: African American Literature in Transition February 2022 229 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-49507-3 Hardback £89.99 / US$115.00 / €105.03


32

Literature

African American Literature in Transition, 1920–1930 Volume 9

Edited by Miriam Thaggert University of Iowa

Rachel Farebrother Swansea University

Description African American Literature in Transition, 1920-1930 presents original essays that map ideological, historical, and cultural shifts in the 1920s. Complicating the familiar reading of the 1920s as a decade that began with a spectacular boom and ended with disillusionment and bust, the collection explores the range and diversity of Black cultural production. Emphasizing a generative contrast between the ephemeral qualities of periodicals, clothes, and décor and the relative fixity of canonical texts, this volume captures in its dynamics a cultural movement that was fluid and expansive. Chapters by leading scholars are grouped into four sections: ‘Habitus, Sound, Fashion’; ’Spaces: Chronicles of Harlem and Beyond’; ‘Uplift Renewed: Religion, Protest, and Education,’ and ‘Serial Reading: Magazines and Periodical Culture.’

Key Features • Provides readers with an authoritative overview of ideological, historical, and cultural shifts in African American literature in the 1920s • Emphasizing a generative contrast between the ephemeral qualities of periodicals, clothes, and décor and the relative fixity of canonical texts, the volume examines Harlem Renaissance cultural expression in all its variety and complexity • Provides historically grounded textual analysis that resonates with contemporary debates and preoccupations • Goes beyond well-known topics and authors to provide fresh perspectives on the era

Contents Introduction: Expecting more: African American literature in transition, 1920-30; Part I. Habitus, Sound, Fashion: 1. New Negro literary décor: Competing tastes in 1920s; 2. The new Negro movement’s recording imaginary; 3. Sartorial self-fashioning in the Harlem renaissance; Part II. Space: Chronicles of Harlem and Beyond: 4. Going Dutch: From renaissance Haarlem to the Harlem renaissance; 5. The unmaking of the new Mecca; 6. Subversions of Boasian objectivity in Zora Neale Hurston’s great migration fiction and ethnography; 7. W. E. B. Du Bois and the fluid subject: Dark princess and the splendid transnational in the Harlem renaissance; Part III. ‘Uplift’ Renewed: Religion, Protest and Education: 8. ‘The sinful babel of the airshaft’: Rudolph fisher’s fiction and religion, urban space and modernity in the Harlem renaissance; 9. Marcus Garvey: Popular culture and black liberation; 10. Progression or reversion of the black race?: Historically black colleges in Nella; Part IV. Serial Reading: Magazines and periodical culture: 11. The midnight motion picture company goes to Europe: The Harlem renaissance and global white supremacy; 12. African American magazine modernism.

Additional Information Level: Graduate Students, academic researchers Series: African American Literature in Transition February 2022 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-83416-2 Hardback £89.99 / US$115.00 / €105.03


Literature

33

African American Literature in Transition, 1930–1940 Volume 10

Edited by Eve Dunbar Vassar College, New York

Ayesha K. Hardison University of Kansas

Description The volume explores 1930s African American writing to examine Black life, culture, and politics to document the ways Black artists and everyday people managed the Great Depression’s economic impact on the creative and the social. Essays engage iconic figures such as Sterling Brown, Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Dorothy West, and Richard Wright as well as understudied writers such as Arna Bontemps and Marita Bonner, Henry Lee Moon, and Roi Ottley. This book demonstrates the significance of the New Deal’s Works Progress Administration (WPA), the Communist Party of the United States (CPUSA) and Black literary circles in the absence of white patronage. By featuring novels, poetry, short fiction, and drama alongside guidebooks, photographs, and print culture, African American Literature in Transition 1930-1940 provides evidence of the literary culture created by Black writers and readers during a period of economic precarity, expanded activism for social justice, and urgent internationalism.

Key Features • Shows how Black writers were professionalized, the venues they had access to, and how they engaged intertextual dialogues • Demonstrates Black writers’ creative productivity during the Depression • Maps the connections between 1930s Black writers and the literary trends that follow, i.e., 1940s social realism, 1960s Black Arts Movement, and twentieth-century African American literary criticism

Contents Introduction; Part I. Productive Precarity and Literary Realism: 1. Black excesses and deprivations in literature and photography of the 1930s; 2. Arna Bontemps and black literary archives; 3. Black women’s 1930s protest fiction; Part II. New Deal, New Methodologies: 4. Folklore, folk life and ethnography in African American Writing of the 1930s; 5. New deal discourses; 6. Black theatre archives and the making of a black dramatic tradition; Part III. Cultivating (New) Black Readers: 7. Racial representation and the performance of 1930s African American literary history; 8. 1930s black print cultures; Part IV. International, Black and Radical Visions: 9. Democracy unfinished: African Americans writing ‘Africa’; 10. Langston Hughes and the 1930s: From Harlem to the USSR; 11. Communism and African American literature in the great depression.

Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: African American Literature in Transition March 2022 229 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-47255-5 Hardback £89.99 / US$115.00 / €105.03


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Literature

African American Literature in Transition, 1960–1970 Black Art, Politics, and Aesthetics Volume 13

Edited by Shelly Eversley

Baruch College, The City University of New York

Description This volume considers innovations, transitions, and traditions in both familiar and unfamiliar texts and moments in 1960s African American literature and culture. It interrogates declarations of race, authenticity, personal and collective empowerment, political action, and aesthetics within this key decade. It is divided into three sections. The first section engages poetry and music as pivotal cultural form in 1960s literary transitions. The second section explains how literature, culture, and politics intersect to offer a blueprint for revolution within and beyond the United States. The final section addresses literary and cultural moments that are lesser-known in the canon of African American literature and culture. This book presents the 1960s as a unique commitment to art, when ‘Black’ became a political identity, one in which racial social justice became inseparable from aesthetic practice.

Key Features • Provides examples of interdisciplinary cultural analysis • Presents feminism and queer theory as integral to African American cultural studies • Provides a view of art and its necessary relationship to politics

Contents Introduction: Black art in transition; Part I. Poetry and Music: 1. The society of umbra and the coming of the Black aesthetic; 2. Robert Hayden, the Black arts movement, and the politics of aesthetic distance in the 1960s; 3. Sonia Sanchez through the lens of Afro-Latinidad; 4. Reconsidering ‘the revolution in music’; Part II. Culture, and Politics: 5. The rights of Black love; 6. Albert Murray beyond plight and blight; 7. Espionage and the paths of Black radicalism; 8. The necessary violence of Frantz Fanon and Malcolm X in global Black revolution; Part III. Beyond the Canon: 9. Meanwhile, back on the home front; 10. Between the March and Moynihan: reexamining Black female silence and subjectivity in ‘Nothing but a man’; 11. Radio Free Dixie, Black arts radio, and African American women’s activism.

Additional Information Level: Graduate Students, academic researchers Series: African American Literature in Transition March 2022 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-42293-2 Hardback c. £70.00 / c. US$110.00 / c. €105.03


Literature

35

Globalization and Literary Studies Edited by Joel Evans University of Nottingham

Description This book provides a history of the way in which literature not only reflects, but actively shapes processes of globalization and our notions of global phenomena. It takes in a broad sweep of history, from antiquity, through to the era of imperialism and on to the present day. Whilst its primary focus is our own historical conjuncture, it looks at how earlier periods have shaped this by tracking key concepts that are imbricated with the concept of globalization, from translation, to empire, to pandemics and environmental collapse. Drawing on these older themes and concerns, it then traces the germ of the relation between global phenomena and literary studies into the 20th and 21st centuries, exploring key issues and frames of study such as contemporary slavery, the digital, world literature and the Anthropocene.

Key Features • Provides a long history of the way in which literature relates to and shapes globalization • Examines globalization from the perspective of key issues in contemporary culture and older cultures • Shows how literature itself has actively shaped our notions of the global and globalization

Contents Introduction; Origins: 1. The ecology of globalization: Environmental catastrophe and the history of literature; 2. Forms of premodern literary circulation; 3. The end of history: Literature, eschatology and its legacies; 4. Translation: Print culture and internationalism; 5. Empire: The 19th century global novel in English; Developments: 6. Joseph Conrad, the global and the sea; 7. Mutual equality: Modernism and globalization; 8. Edward Said: Literature and the World; 9. The new McWorld order: Postmodernism and corporate globalization; 10. Pharmakon, difference and the Arche-digital; 11. Time-space compression: The long view; 12. The matter of blackness in World literature; 13. World-systems, literature and Geoculture; 14. World author: On exploding Canons and writing towards more equitable literary futures; Applications: 15. The globalization of the enclave; 16. Geopolitics and the novel: The case of the Mediterranean Noir; 17. Spy fiction in the age of the global; 18. The 21st century global slave narrative trade; 19. Planetary poetics; 20. Addressing globalization in the Anthropocene; Bibliography; Index.

Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: Cambridge Critical Concepts April 2022 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-84092-7 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00 / €99.19


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Literature

Don DeLillo In Context Edited by Jesse Kavadlo St Louis University, Missouri

Description Don DeLillo is one of the most important novelists of the late twentieth and early twenty-first century. Yet despite DeLillo’s prolific output and scholarly recognition, much of the attention has gone to his works individually, rather than collectively or thematically. This volume provides separate entries into the wide variety and categories of contexts that surround and help illuminate DeLillo’s writings. Don DeLillo in Context examines how geography, biography, history, media studies, culture, philosophy, and the writing process provide critical frameworks and ways of reading and understanding DeLillo’s prodigious body of work.

Key Features • Breaks down important contexts and frameworks in order to provide the reader with multiple ways into understanding the prodigious body of work • Examines social and cultural constructions, such as race, class, and gender in the novels • Uses a variety of contexts to examine DeLillo’s novels both individually and as a body of work

Contents Introduction: Context, content, conflict; Part I. Places: 1. New York reassessing the topography of newyork city in Don Delillo’s fiction; 2. The Bronx Don Delillo’s underworlds: mystery and manners; 3. The American Southwest ‘Texas is the reason:’ running dog, point omega and Delillo’s ‘southwest’; 4. The World Delillo abroad; Part II. History and Politics: 5. The cold war the rules, norms, games, and professions of Delillo’s cold war; 6. The John F. Kennedy assassination paranoid suspicions; 7. Terrorism terrorism as context in Delillo; 8. The twenty-first century March madness: Don Delillo in the age of global interdependence; 9. Prescience the idea of the future; Part III. Media and Pop Culture: 10. Film Don Delillo, the; 11. Television and mass media ‘the nausea of news and traffic’; 12. Plays and performance dramatic contexts Rebecca Rey; 13. Sports ‘fascinating ways to lose a game’; 14. The internet everything is connected: Delillo and internet culture; 15. Signs print, image, and visual media; Part IV. Literary Contexts: 16. Intertextuality ‘an attempt to find pattern and motive’: text, context, intertext; 17. Genre and genre theory bold new forms: genre and the generic;

18. Modernism and postmodernism a quantum perspective: modernist depths and post-modernist connections; 19. Postmodernism and literary criticism postmodernism and its discontents, or, the cultural logic of Don Delillo; Part V. Material Contexts: 20. Technology science/fiction; 21. The environment postmodern ecology in Don Delillo’s fiction; 22. Materiality violence and the body; 23. Death (not) moving deathward: the living and the undead in Delillo’s late works; Part VI. Social and Cultural Constructions: 24. Religion and spirituality meditations on mystery; 25. Race white male mobility; 26. Ethnicity DeLillo and Italian America; 27. Gender masculine and feminine subjectivity; 28. Time still life; Part VII. Writing and Writers: 29. The concept of authorship self/referentiality; 30. The writing process ‘a book determines its own dimensions’: observing, writing, typing; 31. Advertising copywriting aesthetics; Conclusion: DeLillo’s literary legacy DeLillo as context; Further Reading; Index.

Additional Information Level: Undergraduate students, graduate students Series: Literature in Context May 2022 228 x 152 mm c.375pp 978-1-316-51543-3 Hardback c. £85.00 / c. US$110.00 / c. €99.20


Literature

37

Melincourt Thomas Love Peacock Edited by Gary Dyer Cleveland State University

Description Melincourt (1817), Thomas Love Peacock’s only three-volume novel, is also his most comprehensive work. In it, he explores a broad range of controversies: the dangers of ‘paper money’; British consumers’ complicity in slavery; the inequities of the current system of parliamentary representation; the problem of differentiating between human beings and other animals; and, most centrally, the question of whether and how the human condition might be improved. Peacock’s brilliant synthesis of courtship novel and quest romance can only be fully appreciated against its colourful and fraught historical background, and Gary Dyer expertly equips readers with the historical and literary awareness required to recognise it as one of Peacock’s most stimulating works. Vividly illuminating its remarkable plot – from the suitors’ courtship of Anthelia Melincourt to the rescue party comprised of Sylvan Forester, Mr Fax and the chivalrous ‘oran outang’ Sir Oran Haut-ton – this edition makes Melincourt more accessible than ever before.

Key Features • The first edition of Melincourt to situate Thomas Love Peacock’s most ambitious and comprehensive prose satire in its literary and historical contexts • Features a detailed introduction explaining the political, social, and cultural debates of 1817 that form the novel’s fascinating background • Provides an authoritative text based upon the first edition of 1817

Contents General Editor’s preface; Chronology; Introduction; Melincourt; Appendix A. Peacock’s Preface of 1856; Note on the text; Emendations and variants; Ambiguous line-end hyphenations; Explanatory notes; Select bibliography.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Novels of Thomas Love Peacock, 2 June 2022 216 x 138 mm 600pp 978-1-107-03226-2 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 / €105.04


38

Literature

The Death Arts in Renaissance England A Critical Anthology

Edited by William E. Engel

University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee

Rory Loughnane

University of Kent, Canterbury

Grant Williams

Carleton University, Ottawa

Description

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.

Key Features • 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 • Helps scholars and students navigate the field through modernized editing, topical prefaces, and textual apparatuses

Contents Part I. Preparatory and dying Arts: I.1. To know well to die (1490); I.2. The 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 (1564); I.7. A 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); II.6. The life and death of Sir Philip Sidney (1587);

II.7. The French History (1589); II.8. ‘Doleful Lay of Clorinda’ (1595); II.9. Selected Works (1603, 1604); II.10. ‘A Mirror of Modesty’ (1621); II.11. ‘A Sermon…the 5th of November, 1606’ (1629); 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); 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’ (1625); III.11. Mikrokosmographia (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);

Additional Information Level: Graduate students, undergraduate students, academic researchers June 2022 228 x 152 mm c.380pp 978-1-108-47927-1 Hardback c. £85.00 / c. US$110.00 / c. €99.20

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 (1509); IV.2. The 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 (1578); IV.9. Selected 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’ (1650); IV.16. ‘The Nymph complaining for the death of her Fawn’ (1681); IV.17. Oroonoko (1688).


Mathematics

39

Handbook of Financial Stress Testing J. Doyne Farmer University of Oxford

Alissa M. Kleinnijenhuis University of Oxford

Til Schuermann

Oliver Wyman Limited

Thom Wetzer

University of Oxford

Description Stress tests are the most innovative regulatory tool to prevent and fight financial crises. Their use has fundamentally changed the mathematical modeling of financial systems, financial risk management in the public and private sector, and the policies designed to prevent and mitigate financial crises. When financial crises hit, stress tests take center stage. Despite their centrality to public policy, the optimal design and use of stress tests remains highly contested. Written by an international team of leading thinkers from academia, the public sector and the private sector, this handbook comprehensively surveys and evaluates the state of play and charts the innovations that will determine the path ahead. It is a comprehensive and interdisciplinary resource that bridges theory and practice and places financial stress testing in its wider context. This guide is essential reading for researchers, practitioners and policymakers working on financial risk management and financial regulation.

Key Features • Brings together expertise from academia, the public sector and the private sector to holistically treat the topic of financial stress testing • Assesses the strengths and weaknesses of current regulatory stress tests, offering ideas on how financial stress tests can be improved • Discusses the future role of stress testing in society, including climate stress testing

Contents Foreword; 1. Introduction and overview; Part I. History and Objectives: 2. Objectives and challenges of stress testing; 3. Fit for purpose? The evolving role of stress testing for financial systems; 4. Why banks failed the stress test: A progress report on stress testing ten years on; Part II. Inputs and Outputs: 5. Macrofinancial stress test scenario design – for banks and beyond; 6. The role of heterogeneity in scenario design for financial stability stress testing; 7. Designing coherent scenarios: a practitioner perspective; 8. Stress testing with market data; 9. On market-based approaches to the valuation of capital; 10. Granular data offer new opportunities for stress testing;

11. Stress tests disclosure: theory, practice, and new perspective; 12. Stress testing during times of war; Part III. Microprudential Stress Tests: 13. Stress testing for commercial, investment and custody banks; 14. Microprudential stress testing for asset managers; 15. Stress testing for insurers; 16. Model risk management in stress testing and capital planning; 17. A supervisory perspective on stress testing – The U.S. experience; 18. Strengths and weaknesses of microprudential stress testing for financial institutions; Part IV. A Macroprudential Perspective on the Financial System: 19. The structure of the financial system: Implications for macro-prudential stress testing; 20. Holistic bank regulation;

Additional Information Level: Professionals, academic researchers February 2022 253 x 177 mm c.500pp 978-1-108-83073-7 Hardback £110.00 / US$145.00 / €128.38

21. Leverage and macro prudential policy; 22. Monetary policy and financial stability; 23. Stress testing networks: The case of central counterparties; Part V. Macroprudential Stress Tests: 24. Enhancing stress tests by adding macroprudential elements; 25. Accounting for amplification mechanisms in bank stress test models at the Bank of Canada; 26. Stress testing at the IMF; 27. A comprehensive approach to macroprudential stress testing; 28. A complex systems perspective on macroprudential regulation; 29. Stress testing a central bank’s own balance sheet; Part VI. Concluding Thoughts: The Road Ahead: 30. Stress testing the financial microcosm.


40

Mathematics

Strongly Regular Graphs Andries E. Brouwer

Technische Universiteit Eindhoven, The Netherlands

H. Van Maldeghem

Universiteit Gent, Belgium

Description Strongly regular graphs lie at the intersection of statistical design, group theory, finite geometry, information and coding theory, and extremal combinatorics. This monograph collects all the major known results together for the first time in book form, creating an invaluable text that researchers in algebraic combinatorics and related areas will refer to for years to come. The book covers the theory of strongly regular graphs, polar graphs, rank 3 graphs associated to buildings and Fischer groups, cyclotomic graphs, two-weight codes and graphs related to combinatorial configurations such as Latin squares, quasi-symmetric designs and spherical designs. It gives the complete classification of rank 3 graphs, including some new constructions. More than 100 graphs are treated individually. Some unified and streamlined proofs are featured, along with original material including a new approach to the (affine) half spin graphs of rank 5 hyperbolic polar spaces.

Key Features • The first treatment of the subject in book form, comprehensively structured with unified proofs • Gives the complete classification of rank 3 graphs, previously scattered in the literature • Treats over 100 graphs individually, demonstrating their uses e.g. to test hypotheses, make conjectures or check properties

Contents 1. Graphs; 2. Polar spaces; 3. Graphs related to polar spaces; 4. Buildings; 5. Fischer spaces; 6. Golay codes, Witt designs, and Leech lattice; 7. Cyclotomic constructions; 8. Combinatorial constructions; 9. p-Ranks; 10. Individual graph descriptions; 11. Classification of rank 3 graphs; 12. Parameter table; References; Parameter Index; Author Index; Subject Index.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications, 182 January 2022 234 x 156 mm c.425pp 978-1-316-51203-6 Hardback £110.00 / US$145.00 / €128.38


Mathematics

41

Linear State/Signal Systems Damir Z. Arov

South Ukrainian Pedagogical University

Olof J. Staffans

Åbo Akademi University, Finland

Description The authors explain in this work a new approach to observing and controlling linear systems whose inputs and outputs are not fixed in advance. They cover a class of linear time-invariant state/signal system that is general enough to include most of the standard classes of linear timeinvariant dynamical systems, but simple enough that it is easy to understand the fundamental principles. They begin by explaining the basic theory of finite-dimensional and bounded systems in a way suitable for graduate courses in systems theory and control. They then proceed to the more advanced infinite-dimensional setting, opening up new ways for researchers to study distributed parameter systems, including linear port-Hamiltonian systems and boundary triplets. They include the general non-passive part of the theory in continuous and discrete time, and provide a short introduction to the passive situation. Numerous examples from circuit theory are used to illustrate the theory.

Key Features • Written by leading experts in the field, incorporating years of research • Includes over 60 worked examples to illustrate the theory • Contains a number of new results for linear time-invariant input/state/output systems

Contents 1. Introduction and overview; 2. State/signal systems: trajectories, transformations, and interconnections; 3. State/signal systems: dynamic and frequency domain properties; 4. Input/state/output representations; 5. Input/state/output systems: dynamic and frequency domain properties; 6. Bounded input/state/output systems in continuous and discrete time; 7. Bounded state/signal systems in continuous and discrete time; 8. Semi-bounded input/state/output systems; 9. Semi-bounded state/signal systems; 10. Resolvable input/state/output and state/signal nodes; 11. Frequency domain input/state/output systems; 12. Frequency domain state/signal systems; 13. Internally well-posed systems; 14. Well-posed input/state/output systems; 15. Well-posed state/signal systems; Appendix; Operators and analytic vector bundles in H-spaces; References; Index.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications, 183 May 2022 244 x 170 mm c.1080pp 978-1-316-51967-7 Hardback c. £150.00 / c. US$200.00 / c. €175.06


42

Medicine

Alzheimer’s Disease Drug Development Research and Development Ecosystem

Jeffrey Cummings

University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Jefferson Kinney

University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Howard Fillit

University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Description Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) is a growing global public health challenge. The development of new therapies is urgently needed, and a complex ecosystem of organizations has grown to facilitate AD drug discovery and development. Masterfully collating information on the drug development ecosystem, this book emphasizes the contributions of each aspect in the pipeline with a uniform approach to chapters, enabling readers to access relevant information quickly. Topics covered include the use of non-clinical laboratory studies, biomarker development, artificial intelligence, design and management of clinical trials, and funding and financing models. Also discussed is the critical role of advocacy in both fundraising for drug development. With the approval of aducanumab, function of the ecosystem have become apparent. This is a definitive overview of how the ecosystem works in transferring an AD drug from its discovery in the laboratory through clinical trial testing to regulatory review and eventual marketing.

Key Features • Uniform outline and structure of chapters allows readers to select and digest the information most relevant to them quickly and efficiently. • Provides a definitive overview of the Alzheimer’s disease drug development pipeline, with chapters devoted to the major aspects of drug discovery in sequence. • Tackles a hugely topical subject matter, with almost 6 million Alzheimer’s patients in the US alone and new treatments needed urgently. • Aimed at the many individuals working in Alzheimer’s disease drug development, the book helps readers understand their role and others’ and how they intersect. This includes scientists involved in clinical trials, funding officials in private and public bodies, biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies, as well as students and clinicians working with Alzheimer’s patients. • Provides insight into how a drug such as the recently approved aducanumab is discovered, developed, approved, and marketed.

Contents Part I. Advancing Alzheimer therapies in a collaborative science ecosystem: 1. Alzheimer’s drug development: A research and development ecosystem; 2. Drug development for Alzheimer’s disease: An historical perspective; 3. Alzheimer’s disease drug discovery in academia: From High-Throughput screening to in vivo testing; 4. The Harrington discovery institute and Alzheimer’s disease drug development; 5. Repurposed agents in Alzheimer drug development; 6. Artificial intelligence in Alzheimer’s drug discovery; Part II. Non-Clinical assessment of Alzheimer candidate drugs: 7. Role of animal models in Alzheimer’s disease drug development; 8. Use of iPSC-derived neuronal disease models from EOFAD patients in the drug discovery and preclinical development of Alzheimer’s disease therapeutics; 9. Preclinical longitudinal in vivo biomarker platform for Alzheimer’s disease drug discovery; 10. Biobanking and biomarkers in the Alzheimer disease drug development ecosystem; Part III. Alzheimer clinical trials: 11. Phase I trials in Alzheimer drug development; 12. The importance of phase II in drug development of AD; 13. Alzheimer’s disease drug development in pharmaceutical companies; 14. Trial site infrastructure and management;


Medicine

43

15. ATRI and ACTC: Academic programs to accelerate Alzheimer’s disease drug development; 16. The European prevention of Alzheimer’s disease (EPAD) programme: A public-private partnership to facilitate the secondary prevention of Alzheimer’s dementia; 17. The global Alzheimer’s platform foundation®: Delivering new medicines faster by accelerating clinical trials; 18. Clinical trial development in frontotemporal lobar degeneration; 19. Statistical considerations in the design and analysis of Alzheimer’s disease clinical trials; 20. Alzheimer’s disease trial recruitment and diversifying trial populations; 21. The role of online registries in accelerating Alzheimer’s disease drug development; 22. Data safety monitoring boards (DSMB) in AD trials; 23. Globalization of AD clinical trials; 24. The use and development of clinical measures of Alzheimer’s trials; 25. Tele-Trials, remote monitoring, and trial technology for AD clinical trials; 26. Expanded access and compassionate use in Alzheimer’s drug development; 27. The role of the contract research organization in Alzheimer’s disease: The vital link in the clinical drug development program; 28. The role of regulatory agencies in AD drug development; 29. Alzheimer’s disease clinical trial study partners; 30. From trials to practice: Are we ready for a disease-modifying treatment?; 31. Best practices for clinical trials during COVID; Part IV. Imaging and biomarker development in Alzheimer drug discovery: 32. Development of fluid biomarkers for Alzheimer’s disease; 33. Brain imaging for AD clinical trials; 34. Sharing of Alzheimer’s disease research data in GAAIN; 35. Pharmacogenomics in Alzheimer drug discovery and personalized treatment; 36. The role of electroencephalography (EEG) in AD drug development; Part V. Academic drug development programs: 37. Institutional review boards and oversight of Alzheimer’s disease trials; 38. SPARKing drug development for Alzheimer’s disease in academia; 39. The role professional associations and patient advocacy in advancing Alzheimer’s drug development; Part VI. Public-Private partnerships in Alzheimer drug development: 40. Alzheimer disease neuroimaging initiative (ADNI); Part VII. Funding and financing Alzheimer drug development: 41. Financing Alzheimer’s disease drug development; 42. Valley of death and the role of venture philanthropy in Alzheimer’s drug development; 43. Alzheimer association policy and funding for AD drug development; 44. The role of philanthropy in Alzheimer’s therapeutic development; 45. National institute on aging Alzheimer’s disease translational research program: Diversifying the drug development pipeline for AD/ADRD treatment and prevention; 46. Alzheimer drug discovery and the evolution of start-up biotechnology companies: Cognition therapeutics, Inc. as a case study; 47. Introduction to venture capital in AD drug development; 48. SBIR/STTR and federal support for small businesses pursuing Alzheimer drug development.

Additional Information Level: Specialist medical trainees, academic researchers February 2022 254 x 178 mm c.387pp 978-1-108-83866-5 Hardback c. £94.99 / c. US$125.00 / c. €110.86


44

Music

A History of Stringed Keyboard Instruments Stewart Pollens Description This book explores the history of keyboard instruments from their fourteenth-century origins to the development of the modern piano. It reveals the principles of their design and describes structural and mechanical developments through the medieval and renaissance periods and eighteenth- and nineteenth-centuries, as well as the early music revival. Stewart Pollens identifies and describes the types of keyboard instruments played by major composers and virtuosi through the ages and provides the reader with detailed instructions on their regulating, stringing, tuning and voicing drawn from historical sources.

Key Features • Copiously illustrated, and assists readers in understanding the complex structural and mechanical aspects of keyboard instrument design and construction • Presents historical documents in their original languages and in translation • Re-evaluates previous accounts and provides fresh insights into this rich and fascinating story

Contents 1. Origins of keyboard instruments; 2. Principles of design and construction; 3. The Henri Arnaut manuscript; 4. The renaissance; 5. The Baroque period; 6. Invention of the piano; 7. The classical period; 8. The romantic era; 9. Stagnation and revival; Bibliography; Index.

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, professionals, amateurs/enthusiasts January 2022 254 x 178 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-42199-7 Hardback £110.00 / US$145.00 / €128.38


Philosophy

45

The Cambridge History of Philosophy of the Scientific Revolution Edited by David Marshall Miller Iowa State University

Dana Jalobeanu

University of Bucharest

Description The early modern era produced the Scientific Revolution, which originated our present understanding of the natural world. Concurrently, philosophers established the conceptual foundations of modernity. This rich and comprehensive volume surveys and illuminates the numerous and complicated interconnections between philosophical and scientific thought as both were radically transformed from the late sixteenth to the mid-eighteenth century. The chapters explore reciprocal influences between philosophy and physics, astronomy, mathematics, medicine, and other disciplines, and show how thinkers responded to an immense range of intellectual, material, and institutional influences. The volume offers a unique perspicuity, viewing the entire landscape of early modern philosophy and science, and also marks an epoch in contemporary scholarship, surveying recent contributions and suggesting future investigations for the next generation of scholars and students.

Key Features • Surveys the numerous and complicated interconnections between philosophical and scientific thought from the late sixteenth to the mid-eighteenth century • Addresses everything from mathematics to instrumentation to religion, showing how thinkers responded to an immense range of intellectual, material, and institutional influences • Encapsulates the latest scholarship, which has seen important advances in the last few decades, but also provides novel contributions indicating where the field might go next

Contents Introduction: the disciplinary revolutions of early modern philosophy and science; Part I. The Disciplines: 1. The uses of ancient philosophy 2. Novatores 3. Renaissance aristotelianism(s) 4. What to do with the mechanical philosophy? 5. The later sects: cartesians, gassendists, leibnizians, and newtonians 6. Confessionalization and natural philosophy 7. The rise of a public science? Women and natural philosophy in the early modern period; Part II. Disciplinary Activities: 8. The art of thinking; 9. Astrology, natural magic, and the scientific revolution; 10. Practitioners’ knowledge 11. Medicine and the science of the living body; 12. Experimental natural history 13. Celestial physics 14. Applying mathematics to nature 15. Mathematical innovation and tradition: The cartesian common and the leibnizian new analyses 16. Mechanics in newton’s wake; Part III. Problems and Controversies: 17. Galileo’s sidereus nuncius and its reception 18. Instruments and the senses; 19. Science of mind 20. Circulation and the new physiology 21. From metaphysical principles to dynamical laws 22. The debate about body and extension 23. Space and its relationship to god 24. The vis viva controversy.

Additional Information Level: Graduate Students, academic researchers January 2022 229 x 152 mm c.560pp 978-1-108-42030-3 Hardback £100.00 / US$135.00 / €116.71


46

Philosophy

The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings Volume 3: Christ: Through the Nestorian Controversy

Edited by Mark DelCogliano University of St Thomas, Minnesota

Description The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings provides the definitive anthology of early Christian texts from ca. 100 CE to ca. 650 CE. Its volumes reflect the cultural, intellectual, and linguistic diversity of early Christianity, and are organized thematically on the topics of God, Practice, Christ, Community, Reading, and Creation. The series expands the pool of source material to include not only Greek and Latin writings, but also Syriac and Coptic texts. Additionally, the series rejects a theologically normative view by juxtaposing texts that were important in antiquity but later deemed ‘heretical’ with orthodox texts. The translations are accompanied by introductions, notes, suggestions for further reading, and scriptural indices. The third volume focuses on early Christian reflection on Christ as God incarnate from the first century to ca. 450 CE. It will be an invaluable resource for students and academic researchers in early Christian studies, history of Christianity, theology and religious studies, and late antique Roman history.

Key Features • Provides fresh translations of previously translated texts, and first-time translations of many obscure texts, providing readers with access to texts previously available only to high-level scholars • Includes texts from a range of theological viewpoints, presenting a fair picture of the full range of early Christian diversity • The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings will be the definitive collection of early Christian texts for decades to come

Contents Notes on contributors; Acknowledgments; Note on the texts and translations; Abbreviations; Series introduction; Introduction; Part I. The Beginnings of Christology: 1. Acension of Isaiah 6-11 (Ethiopic version); 2. The Gospel of Peter; 3. The Epistle of the Apostles; 4. The First Letter of Clement (selections); 5. Ignatius of Antioch, Letters (selections); 6. Epistle to Diognetus 1 and 7-12; 7. Justin Martyr, First Apology 23, 30-32, 46, 63 and Second Apology 10, 13; 8. Tatian, Address to the Greeks 4-7; 9. Odes of Solomon 7, 19, 41, and 42; 10. Treatise on Resurrection; 11. A Ptolemaic Theology as Recounted by Irenaeus of Lyons in Against Heresies 1.8.5; 12. Irenaeus of Lyons, Against Heresies (selections); Part II. Developing Christological Traditions: 13. Tertullian of Carthage, Apology 21; 14. Tertullian of Carthage, On the Flesh of Christ 1-16 and 24-25; 15. Tertullian of Carthage, Against Praxeas 1-4 and 27-30; 16. Origen of Alexandria, On First Principles 2.6; 17. Paul of Samosata, Selected Fragments; 18. Aphrahat, Demonstration 17: On the Son; 19. Hilary of Poitiers, On the Trinity 9.1-14;

20. Ephrem the Syrian, Hymns on Faith 4, 10, 24, 31, 36, 51, 54, 77, 78, and 79; Part III. Traditions of Pro-Nicene Christology: 21. Tome to the Antiochenes 7; 22. Athanasius of Alexandria, Christological Letters to Epictetus, Adelphius, and Maximus; 23. Apollinarius of Laodicea, Recapitulation; 24. Apollinarius of Laodicea, Selected Letters; 25. Apollinarius of Laodicea, On the Faith and the Incarnation; 26. Apollinarius of Laodicea, On the Body’s Unity with the Divinity in Christ; 27. Apollinarius of Laodicea, Fragments of Other Writings; 28. Apollinarius of Laodicea, Fragmentary Writings against Diodore and Flavian; 29. Basil of Caesarea, Letters 261 and 262; 30. Basil of Caesarea, Homily on the Holy Birth of Christ; 31. Diodore of Tarsus, Selected Fragments; 32. Gregory of Nazianzus, Letter 101 to Cledonius; 33. Gregory of Nazianzus, Poems 1.1.10-11; 34. Gregory of Nyssa, Oration on the Savior’s Nativity; 35. Theodore of Mopsuestia, On the Incarnation (fragments); 36. Augustine of Hippo, On Eighty-Three Different Questions. Number 80: Against the Apollinarians; 37. Augustine of Hippo, Letter 137; 38. The Leporius Dossier: Leporius, Statement of Amendment;

Augustine of Hippo, Letter 219; John Cassian, On the Incarnation of the Lord, Book 1; 39. Theodoret of Cyrrhus, Exposition of the Orthodox Faith; Part IV. Controversy over Nestorius: 40. Eusebius of Dorylaeum, Protest; 41. Cyril of Alexandria, Second Letter to Nestorius; 42. Nestorius of Constantinople, Second Letter to Cyril; 43. Proclus of Constantinople, Homily on the Holy Virgin Theotokos; 44. Nestorius of Constantinople, Three Letters to Celestine of Rome; 45. John Cassian, On the Incarnation of the Lord against Nestorius 3.1-16 and 5.1-4; 46. Cyril of Alexandria, Third Letter to Nestorius; 47. Nestorius of Constantinople, Letter to John of Antioch; 48. Theodoret of Cyrrhus, Refutation of the Twelve Anathemas; 49. Acts of the Council of Ephesus (June–October, 431): Selected Proceedings; 50. Cyril of Alexandria, Letter of Reunion to John of Antioch; 51. Ibas of Edessa, Letter to Mari the Persian; 52. Cyril of Alexandria, First Letter to Succensus; 53. Cyril of Alexandria, Second Letter to Succensus; 54. Theodoret of Cyrrhus, Eranistes: Epilogue; Suggestions for further reading; Scriptural index.


Philosophy Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings, 3 February 2022 228 x 152 mm 540pp 978-1-107-06213-9 Hardback £110.00 / US$150.00 / €128.38

47


48

Philosophy

The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings Volume 4: Christ: Chalcedon and Beyond

Edited by Mark DelCogliano University of St Thomas, Minnesota

Description The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings provides the definitive anthology of early Christian texts from ca. 100 CE to ca. 650 CE. Its volumes reflect the cultural, intellectual, and linguistic diversity of early Christianity, and are organized thematically on the topics of God, Practice, Christ, Community, Reading, and Creation. The series expands the pool of source material to include not only Greek and Latin writings, but also Syriac and Coptic texts. Additionally, the series rejects a theologically normative view by juxtaposing texts that were important in antiquity but later deemed ‘heretical’ with orthodox texts. The translations are accompanied by introductions, notes, suggestions for further reading, and scriptural indices. The fourth volume focuses on early Christian reflection on Christ as God incarnate from ca. 450 CE to the eighth century. It will be an invaluable resource for students and academic researchers in early Christian studies, history of Christianity, theology and religious studies, and late antique Roman history.

Key Features • Provide fresh translations of previously translated texts, and first-time translations of many obscure texts, providing readers with access to texts previously available only to high-level scholars • Includes texts from a range of theological viewpoints, presenting a fair picture of the full range of early Christian diversity • The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings will be the definitive collection of early Christian texts for decades to come

Contents Notes on contributors; Acknowledgments; Note on the texts and translations; Abbreviations; Series introduction; Introduction; Part I. The Council of Chalcedon and its Reception: 1. The Acts of the Home Synod at Constantinople (November, 448): The Proceedings against Eutyches, Presbyter and Archimandrite; 2. Eutyches, Letter to Leo of Rome; 3. Leo of Rome, The Tome to Flavian of Constantinople; 4. Acts of the Council of Chalcedon (October, 451): Selected Proceedings and the Chalcedonian Definition; 5. Leo of Rome, The Second Tome (Letter to Emperor Leo); 6. Timothy Aelurus, Petition to Emperor Leo; 7. Timothy Aelurus, Against the Council of Chalcedon; 8. Timothy Aelurus, Letter to Claudianus; 9. Emperor Leo, The Henotikon; 10. Pseudo-Dionyius the Areopagite, Fourth Letter; 11. Narsai, Metrical Homily on ‘the Word became Flesh’ (John 1:14);

12. Narsai, Selections from the Metrical Homilies on the Nativity and on the Epiphany; 13. Philoxenos of Mabbug, Letter to the Monks of Senoun (selections); 14. Jacob of Serugh, Metrical Homilies on the Name ‘Emmanuel’ and on How the Lord is Known in Scripture as Food and Drink; 15. Jacob of Serugh, Metrical Homily on the Council of Chalcedon; 16. Jacob of Serugh, Letter 14; 17. Simeon of Beth Arsham, Letter on Bar Ṣawmā and the Heresy of the Nestorians; 18. Emperor Justinian, Edict on the Orthodox Faith (selection); 19. Acts of the Second Council of Constantinople (May–June, 553): Selected Proceedings and the Fourteen Canons; Part II. Christological Perspectives after Constantinople II: 20. Emperor Justin II, The Second Henotikon; 21. Gregory the Great, Selections from his Homilies; 22. Gregory the Great, Letters 1.24, 10.21, and 11.52; 23. Anonymous Apology for Narsai;

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings February 2022 229 x 152 mm c.540pp 978-1-316-51114-5 Hardback £110.00 / US$140.00 / €128.38

24. Babai the Great, On the Union 9 and 17; 25. Sophronius of Jerusalem, Synodical Letter 1.6 and 3.1–17; 26. Ekthesis of Emperor Heraclius; 27. Maximus the Confessor, Ambiguum 31 to John; 28. Maximus the Confessor, Ambiguum 5 to Thomas; 29. Maximus the Confessor, Opusculum 3; 30. Maximus the Confessor, Opusculum 6; 31. Maximus the Confessor, Opusculum 7; 32. Typos of 647/648; 33. Acts of the Lateran Synod (October, 649): Selected Proceedings and the Synodal Definition; 34. Acts of the Third Council of Constantinople (680–681): Selected Proceedings and the Synodal Definition; 35. John of Damascus, On Composite Nature against the Leaderless; 36. John of Damascus, On the Faith against the Nestorians; 37. John of Damascus, An Exact Exposition of the Orthodox Faith 57–58; Suggestions for further reading; Scriptural index.


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49

Cavell’s Must We Mean What We Say? at 50 Edited by Greg Chase

College of the Holy Cross, Massachusetts

Juliet Floyd

Boston University

Sandra Laugier

Université de Paris I Panthéon Sorbonne

Description In 1969 Stanley Cavell’s Must We Mean What We Say? revolutionized philosophy of ordinary language, aesthetics, ethics, tragedy, literature, music, art criticism, and modernism. This volume of new essays offers a multi-faceted exploration of Cavell’s first and most important book, fifty years after its publication. The key subjects which animate Cavell’s book are explored in detail: ordinary language, aesthetics, modernism, skepticism, forms of life, philosophy and literature, tragedy and the self, the questions of voice and audience, jazz and sound, Wittgenstein, Austin, Beckett, Kierkegaard, Shakespeare. The essays make Cavell’s complex style and sometimes difficult thought accessible to a new generation of students and scholars. They offer a way into Cavell’s unique philosophical voice, conveying its seminal importance as an intellectual intervention in American thought and culture, and showing how its philosophical radicality remains of lasting significance for contemporary philosophy, American philosophy, literary studies, and cultural studies.

Key Features • Makes Cavell’s difficult style and thought accessible and clear for a wide range of readers • Places his work in its philosophical and historical context and shows its present relevance • Includes contributions from the major scholars of Cavell studies from a range of disciplines

Contents Introduction: Part I. Ordinary Language and its Philosophy: 1. Must we mean what we say? and ordinary language philosophy; 2. Revolutionary uses of Wittgenstein in must we mean what we say?; 3. Actions and their elaboration; 4. Faces of the ordinary; Part II. Aesthetics and the Modern: 5. Language-games and forms of life: Cavell’s reading of Wittgenstein and its relevance to literary studies; 6. Philosophic and aesthetic appeal: Stanley Cavell on the irreducibility of the first person in aesthetics and in philosophy; 7. Reading into it or hearing it out? Cavell on modernism and the art critic’s hermeneutical risk; 8. Must we sing what we mean?: ‘music discomposed’ and philosophy composed; Part III. Tragedy and the Self: 9. Philosophy as autobiography: From must we mean what we say? to little did I know; 10. The finer weapon: Cavell, philosophy and praise; 11. On Cavell’s on Kierkegaard’s on authority and revelation-with constant reference to Austen; 12. Tragic implication; 13. Gored states and theatrical guises.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Philosophical Anniversaries March 2022 229 x 152 mm c.262pp 978-1-316-51525-9 Hardback £79.99 / US$105.00 / €93.36


50

Philosophy

Proclus: Commentary on Plato’s ‘Republic’ Volume 2

Edited and translated by Dirk Baltzly University of Tasmania

John F. Finamore University of Iowa

Graeme Miles

University of Tasmania

Description The commentary on Plato’s Republic by Proclus (d. 485 CE), which takes the form of a series of essays, is the only sustained treatment of the dialogue to survive from antiquity. This threevolume edition presents the first complete English translation of Proclus’ text, together with a general introduction that argues for the unity of Proclus’ Commentary and orients the reader to the use which the Neoplatonists made of Plato’s Republic in their educational program. Each volume is completed by a Greek word index and an English-Greek glossary that will help non-specialists to track the occurrence of key terms throughout the translated text. The second volume of the edition presents Proclus’ essays on the tripartite soul and the virtues, female philosopher rulers, and the metaphysics and epistemology of the central books of the Republic. The longest of the essays in Volume II interprets the nature and significance of the ‘marriage number’ whose miscalculation leads to the degeneration of the ideal city-state.

Key Features • The only sustained treatment of Plato’s Republic to survive from antiquity • This is its first complete translation into English • This book is fully annotated with a helpful introduction, glossary and index

Contents General Introduction; 1. Introduction to essay 7; 2. Essay 7; 3. Introduction to essays 8 and 9; 4. Essay 8; 5. Essay 9; 6. Introduction to essay 10;

7. Essay 10; 8. Introduction to essay 11; 9. Essay 11; 10. Introduction to essay 12; 11. Essay 12; 12. Introduction to essay 13; 13. Essay 13;

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Proclus: Commentary on Plato’s Republic April 2022 229 x 152 mm 400pp 978-1-107-15471-1 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$130.00 / c. €93.36

14. Introduction to essays 14 and 15; 15. Essay 14; 16. Essay 15; References; English-Greek Glossary; Greek Word Index; General Index.


Philosophy

51

Ludwig Wittgenstein: Writings on Mathematics and Logic, 1937–1944 A German–English Edition Volume 4: June 5, 1941–January 6, 1943

Victor Rodych

University of Lethbridge, Alberta

Timothy Pope

University of Lethbridge, Alberta

Description This five-volume German-English edition presents, for the first time, new translations of all of Wittgenstein’s mature 1937–1944 writings on mathematics and logic. The 1st (1956) and 3rd (1978) editions of Wittgenstein’s Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics omitted, unsystematically, more than half of Wittgenstein’s later writings on mathematics; for that reason, the reader will here read some entire manuscripts for the first time, and other manuscripts for the first time as unabridged, sustained pieces of writing. Philosophers and other interested readers will gain fresh insight into Wittgenstein’s perspectives on a wide range of topics, from Gödelian propositions and the Cantorian conception of real numbers, to the nature of mathematical propositions and the diversity of proof techniques. Other subjects covered include: mathematical sense; axioms and self-evidence; prudish proofs; the functionality of extra-mathematical application; undecided mathematical conjectures; rule-governed unwinding; and G. H. Hardy’s conceptions and claims.

Key Features • Brings together all of Wittgenstein’s later writings on mathematics and logic • Provides comprehensive and faithful translations of each text • Offers insights into Wittgenstein’s views on a vast range of topics, including Georg Cantor’s conception of real numbers and the nature of mathematical propositions

Contents Editor’s introduction; Translators’ introduction; 1. MS 161, Part III; 2. MS 163, Part II; 3. MS 124, Part I; 4. MS 163, Part III; 5. MS 125; 6. MS 126: Treating only logic and mathematics; Endnotes; Tables of variants; Appendix A: RFM content in this volume; Appendix B: The 1st and 3rd editions of RFM and their constituent MSS and TSS; Appendix C: Ludwig Wittgenstein’s original drawings.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students December 2021 229 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-49515-8 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00 / €99.19


52

Philosophy

The Cambridge Handbook of Cognitive Development Olivier Houdé

Université de Paris V

Grégoire Borst

Université de Paris V

Description How does cognition develop in infants, children and adolescents? This handbook presents a cutting-edge overview of the field of cognitive development, spanning basic methodology, key domain-based findings and applications. Part One covers the neurobiological constraints and laws of brain development, while Part Two covers the fundamentals of cognitive development from birth to adulthood: object, number, categorization, reasoning, decision-making and socioemotional cognition. The final Part Three covers educational and school-learning domains, including numeracy, literacy, scientific reasoning skills, working memory and executive skills, metacognition, curiosity-driven active learning and more. Featuring chapters written by the world’s leading scholars in experimental and developmental psychology, as well as in basic neurobiology, cognitive neuroscience, computational modelling and developmental robotics, this collection is the most comprehensive reference work to date on cognitive development of the twenty-first century. It will be a vital resource for scholars and graduate students in developmental psychology, neuroeducation and the cognitive sciences.

Key Features • Features a broad range of approaches, from neurobiology to developmental psychology and education • Makes new discoveries and theories on cognitive development accessible to researchers and graduate students in neuroscience and psychology • Translates basic science on cognitive development to applications at school, and provides principles for evidence-based neuroeducation

Contents Part I. Neurobiological Constraints and Laws of Cognitive Development: 1. How life regulation and feelings motivate the cultural mind: a neurobiological account; 2. Epigenesis, synapse selection, cultural imprints and human brain development: from molecules to cognition; 3. Mapping the human brain from the preterm period to infancy using 3D magnetic resonance imaging: cortical folding and early maturation processes; 4. Development and maturation of the human brain from infancy to adolescence; 5. Genetic and experiential factors in brain development: the examples of executive attention and self-regulation; 6. The brain basis underlying the transition from adolescent to adulthood; Part II. Fundamentals of Cognitive Development from Infancy to Adolescence and Young Adulthood: 7. Differences between humans, great apes and monkeys in cognition, communication, language and morality; 8. Individuating and physical reasoning about objects in infancy; 9. Infant categorization; 10. Infant numerical cognition: does primitive number sense provide a foothold for learning formal mathematics?; 11. How sophisticated is infants’ theory of mind?; 12. Social cognition and moral evaluation in early human childhood; 13. Scientific thinking and reasoning in infants and young children; 14. Computational approaches to cognitive development in infancy: Bayesian and artificial-neural-network models; 15. Development of qualitative thinking: language and categorization; 16. Development of numerical knowledge;

17. Numerical cognition and executive functions: development as progressive inhibitory control of misleading visuospatial dimensions; 18. Developing theory of mind and counterfactual reasoning in children; 19. Development of executive function skills in childhood: relevance for important life-outcomes; 20. Developing executive functions and flexible adaptation during childhood; 21. Reasoning bias and dual process theory: developmental considerations and current directions; 22. Social cognitive development: the intergroup context; 23. Behavioral and neural development of cognitive control and risky decisionmaking across adolescence; 24. The Triadic neural systems model through a machine-learning; Part III. Education and School-learning Domains: 25. Linking cognitive neuroscientific research to educational practice in the classroom; 26. Literacy: understanding normal and impaired reading development through personalized large-scale neurocomputational models; 27. Reasoning in mathematical development: neurocognitive foundations and their implications for the classroom; 28. Children’s scientific reasoning skills in light of general cognitive development; 29. Working memory training: from the laboratory to schools; 30. Interventions for improving executive functions during development: working memory, cognitive flexibility and inhibition; 31. Curiosity-driven learning in development: computational theories and educational applications; 32. Neurocomputational methods: from models of brain and cognition to artificial intelligence in education.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology February 2022 244 x 170 mm c.800pp 978-1-108-42387-8 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00 / €175.06


Philosophy

53

The Cambridge Handbook of Political Psychology Danny Osborne

University of Auckland

Chris G. Sibley

University of Auckland

Description

The Cambridge Handbook of Political Psychology provides a comprehensive review of the psychology of political behaviour from an international perspective. Its coverage spans from foundational approaches to political psychology, including the evolutionary, personality and developmental roots of political attitudes, to contemporary challenges to governance, including populism, hate speech, conspiracy beliefs, inequality, climate change and terrorism. Each chapter features cutting-edge research from internationally renowned scholars who offer their unique insights into how people think, feel and act in different political contexts. By taking a distinctively international approach, this handbook highlights the nuances of political behaviour across cultures and geographical regions, as well as the truisms of political psychology that transcend context. Academics, graduate students and practitioners alike, as well as those generally interested in politics and human behaviour, will benefit from this definitive overview of how people shape – and are shaped by – their political environment in a rapidly changing twenty-first century.

Key Features • Provides an overview of some of the most pressing issues facing democratic governance in contemporary society • Looks beyond the North American context to feature international perspectives, thus broadening our understanding of how political psychology operates in different contexts • Offers an up-to-date review of the literature, while also providing suggestions for future research

Contents Content; Part I. Foundations of Political Psychology: 1. Political psychology: advancing an international perspective on the psychology of political behaviour; 2. The evolutionary basis of political ideology; 3. Genetic contributions to political phenomena; 4. The psychology and neuroscience of partisanship; 5. The personality basis of political preferences; 6. The structure, prevalence, and nature of mass belief systems; 7. The psychology of public opinion; 8. Rational choice and information processing; 9. Emotions and politics; 10. The developmental science of politics: insights from the 2016 US Presidential Election; Part II. The Politics of Intergroup Attitudes: 11. Authoritarianism: conceptualization, research, and new developments; 12. A political psychology of ethnocentrism; 13. Collective narcissism: how being narcissistic about your groups shapes politics, group processes and intergroup relations; 14. Demographic change, White decline, and the changing nature of racial politics in election campaigns; 15. Macro-diversity and intergroup attitudes;

16. The persistence of gender in campaigns and elections; 17. The politics of abortion, pregnancy, and motherhood; 18. Religiosity and openness to authoritarian governance; 19. The consequences of moral conviction in politics: more negative than positive? ; 20. The political psychology of national identity; 21. The political dynamics of immigration opinion worldwide; 22. International and individual differences in support for human rights; Part III. Contemporary Challenges to Democracy: 23. The political psychology of inequality: why rising rates of economic inequality affect our health and democracy; 24. How social class influences political choices; 25. Fear and loathing in American politics: a review of affective polarization; 26. Political extremism; 27. The politics of hate: derogatory language in politics and intergroup relations; 28. Populism; 29. A cultural theory of autocracy-vs-democracy: on the psychological foundations of political regimes;

30. Psychological theories meet the challenge of persuading and mobilizing voters; 31. Collective action for social change: individual, group and contextual factors shaping collective action and its outcomes; 32. Opinion formation and polarization in the news feed era: effects from digital, social, and mobile media; 33. Conspiracy theory belief and conspiratorial thinking; 34. Political psychology and the climate crisis; 35. The political psychology of cyber-terrorism; 36. Reconciliation in the aftermath of collective violence; Part IV. Diversifying Perspectives in Political Psychology: 37. Political psychology in the Global South: collective memory, intergroup relations, ideology, and political participation; 38. Political psychology in the Arab region: a commentary on navigating research in unstable contexts; 39. Critical perspectives in political psychology; 40. Rethinking group dynamics: the Cuban missile crisis revisited; 41. Two sides of the same coin: a new look at differences and similarities across political ideology; Index.

Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology March 2022 244 x 170 mm c.800pp 978-1-108-48963-8 Hardback £145.00 / US$190.00 / €169.23


54

Philosophy

The Cambridge Handbook of Cyber Behavior Volume 1

Edited by Zheng Yan

University at Albany, State University of New York

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

Key Features • The ideal overview of the current state of science on all aspects of cyber behavior • Contains contributions written by 40 groups of international scholars from a variety of disciplines • Introduces and analyzes the work of the key researchers working in this emerged field

Contents Contents; List of figures; List of tables; List of contributors; Preface; Part I. Users in Cyber Behavior: 1. The internet is for everyone; 2. Cyber behavior of the net generation; 3. Digital divide among k-12 students; 4. Cyber behavior for child and adolescent development; 5. Online celebrities and cyber marketing; 6. Cyber-bullying in Greece; 7. Cyber partner abuse; Part II. Technologies in Cyber Behavior: 8. Social media in tourism and hospitality; 9. Serious games and cyber behavior; 10. Mobile games for learning;

11. Computer simulations in science education; 12. Immersive technologies; 13. Virtual worlds through virtual reality and augmented reality; 14. Electronic activity monitoring; 15. Voice-powered artificial intelligence; 16. Emails and cyber work; Part III. Activities in Cyber Behavior: 17. Adolescents’ use of digital health information; 18. Cybertourism; 19. Online reviews and consumer decisions; 20. Generation z and digital marketing; 21. Pitfalls of social interaction in online group learning 22. Social virtual environments for neuroscience and mental health; 23. Social media in the workplace; 24. Social media and political participation; 25.Crisis informatics;

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students, professionals Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology April 2022 253 x 177 mm 600pp 978-1-107-16525-0 Hardback Set c. £110.00 / c. US$175.00 / c. €143

26. Online dating; 27. Digital religion; 28. Cyberbullying; Part IV. Effects in Cyber Behavior: 29. Social media and psychological well-being; 30. Video game effects; 31. Serious games in mental health treatment; 32. Gaming disorder; 33. Problematic mobile phone use; 34. Treatment and interventions for addictive behaviors in cyberspace; 35. Electronic aggression; 36. Cyberbullying in the 21st century schools; 37. Hate speech and adolescents; 38. Cyber racism; 39. Cyberdeception.


Philosophy

55

The Cambridge Handbook of the Learning Sciences Third edition

R. Keith Sawyer

University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Description The interdisciplinary field of the learning sciences encompasses educational psychology, cognitive science, computer science, and anthropology, among other disciplines. The Cambridge Handbook of the Learning Sciences, first published in 2006, is the definitive introduction to this innovative approach to teaching, learning, and educational technology. In this significantly revised third edition, leading scholars incorporate the latest research to provide seminal overviews of the field. This research is essential in developing effective innovations that enhance student learning – including how to write textbooks, design educational software, prepare effective teachers, and organize classrooms. The chapters illustrate the importance of creating productive learning environments both inside and outside school, including after school clubs, libraries, and museums. The Handbook has proven to be an essential resource for graduate students, researchers, consultants, software designers, and policy makers on a global scale.

Key Features • Explores the latest research in the science of how people learn, providing an invaluable source for those who want to understand the science of how people learn. • Provides a comprehensive overview of all major research areas in the learning sciences and each area of research is addressed in a definitive chapter on the topic. • The authors contributing to this handbook are leaders in their chapter topics, meaning readers can be confident that these authors accurately and insightfully represent the research that falls under the chapter’s topic.

Contents Preface; 1. An introduction to the learning sciences; Part I. Foundations: 2. Foundations of the learning sciences; 3. Scaffolding; 4. Project-based learning; 5. Metacognition and self-regulated learning; 6. A history of conceptual change research: Threads and fault lines; 7. Learning in activity; 8. Cognitive apprenticeship; Part II. Methodologies: 9. Design-based research: A methodological toolkit for engineering change; 10. Analyzing collaboration; 11. Microgenetic methods; 12. A learning sciences perspective on the design and use of assessment in education;

13. Learning analytics and educational data mining; Part III. Grounding Technology in the Learning Sciences: 14. Videogames and learning; 15. Embodiment and embodied design; 16. Tangible and Full-body interfaces in learning; 17. Augmented reality in the learning sciences; 18. Mobile learning; Part IV. Learning Together: 19. Knowledge building and knowledge creation; 20. Computer-supported collaborative learning; 21. Arguing to learn; 22. Informal learning in museums; Part V. Learning Disciplinary Knowledge: 23. Research in mathematics education: What can it teach us about human learning?; 24. Science education and the learning sciences: A coevolutionary connection;

Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology May 2022 253 x 177 mm c.800pp 978-1-108-84098-9 Hardback c. £149.00 / c. US$195.00 / c. €173.90

25. Complex systems and the learning sciences: Educational, theoretical, and methodological implications; 26. Learning history; 27. Learning to be literate; 28. Arts education and the learning sciences; 29. Learning as a cultural process: Achieving equity through diversity; 30. Designing for meaningful learning: Interest, motivation, and engagement; 31. Advances in teacher learning research in the learning sciences; 32. Learning sciences and policy: A decade of mutual engagement; 33. The future of learning: Grounding educational innovation in the learning sciences.


Coming soon Archaeology 978-1-108-47134-3

The Art and Archaeology of the Aegean Bronze Age

£195.00 / US$255.00 / €227.58

978-1-107-16769-8

A History of Alexander the Great in World Culture

£120.00 / US$155.00 / €140.05

978-1-108-48180-9

A Guide to the Geography of Pliny the Elder

Classical Studies TBC

Law 978-1-316-51090-2

Iran-US Claims Tribunal Reports

£250.00 / US$325.00 / €291.78

978-1-108-83171-0

The Cambridge Handbook of Competition Law Sanctions

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978-1-108-84310-2

Global Shareholder Stewardship

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978-1-108-47783-3

The Cambridge Handbook of Information Technology, Life Sciences and Human Rights

TBC

978-1-108-47586-0

American Literature in Transition, 1770-1826

TBC

978-1-108-47536-5

American Literature in Transition, 1820-1860

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978-1-108-47750-5

American Literature in Transition, 1876-1910

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Literature

Medicine 978-1-108-58351-0

Autoimmune Encephalitis and Related Disorders of the Nervous System £120.00 / US$160.00 / €140.05

Music 978-1-108-49669-8

Benjamin Britten in Context

£84.99 / US$110.00 / €99.19


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The Cambridge Handbook of Material Culture Studies

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The Art and Archaeology of the Aegean Bronze Age

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A History of Alexander the Great in World Culture

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Rules of Origin in International Trade

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Iran-US Claims Tribunal Reports

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German Practice in International Law

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Measuring Compliance

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The Inheritors and The Nature of a Crime

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African American Literature in Transition, 1930–1940

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African American Literature in Transition, 1960–1970

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Globalization and Literary Studies

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American Literature in Transition 1770–1828

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The Aspern Papers and Other Tales, 1884–1888

39

Lindsay Reckson

American Literature in Transition, 1876–1910

978-1-108-47750-5

Hardback

TBA

TBA

TBA

40

Jesse Kavadlo

Don DeLillo In Context

978-1-316-51543-3

Hardback

£85.00

US$110.00

€99.20

R

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

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

41

Gary Dyer

Melincourt

978-1-107-03226-2

Hardback

£90.00

US$120.00

€105.04

R

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

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

42

William E. Engel

The Death Arts in Renaissance England

978-1-108-47927-1

Hardback

£85.00

US$110.00

€99.20

R

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

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

43

J. Doyne Farmer

Handbook of Financial Stress Testing

978-1-108-83073-7

Hardback

£110.00

US$145.00

€128.38

R

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

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

44

Andries E. Brouwer Strongly Regular Graphs

978-1-316-51203-6

Hardback

£110.00

US$145.00

€128.38

R

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

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

45

Damir Z. Arov

Linear State/Signal Systems

978-1-316-51967-7

Hardback

£150.00

US$200.00

€175.06

R

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

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

46

Jeffrey Cummings

Alzheimer’s Disease Drug Development

978-1-108-83866-5

Hardback

£94.99

US$125.00

€110.86

G

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

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

47

Josep Dalmau

Autoimmune Encephalitis and Related Disorders of the Nervous System 978-1-108-58351-0

Print/online bundle

£120.00

US$160.00

€140.05

M .................

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

R

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

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

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

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

48

Stewart Pollens

A History of Stringed Keyboard Instruments

978-1-108-42199-7

Hardback

£110.00

US$145.00

€128.38

49

Vicki P Stroeher

Benjamin Britten in Context

978-1-108-49669-8

Hardback

£84.99

US$110.00

€99.19

50

David Marshall Miller

The Cambridge History of Philosophy of the Scientific Revolution

978-1-108-42030-3

Hardback

£100.00

US$135.00

€116.71

R

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

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

51

Mark DelCogliano

The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings

978-1-107-06213-9

Hardback

£110.00

US$150.00

€128.38

R

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

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

52

Mark DelCogliano

The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings

978-1-316-51114-5

Hardback

£110.00

US$140.00

€128.38

R

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

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

53

Greg Chase

Cavell’s Must We Mean What We Say? at 50

978-1-316-51525-9

Hardback

£79.99

US$105.00

€93.36

R

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

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

54

Dirk Baltzly

Proclus: Commentary on Plato’s ‘Republic’

978-1-107-15471-1

Hardback

£75.00

US$130.00

€93.36

R

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

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

55

Victor Rodych

Ludwig Wittgenstein: Writings on Mathematics and Logic, 1937–1944

978-1-108-49515-8

Hardback

£84.99

US$110.00

€99.19

R

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

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

56

Olivier Houdé

The Cambridge Handbook of Cognitive Development

978-1-108-42387-8

Hardback

£150.00

US$195.00

€175.06

R

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

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

57

Danny Osborne

The Cambridge Handbook of Political Psychology

978-1-108-48963-8

Hardback

£145.00

US$190.00

€169.23

R

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

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

58

Zheng Yan

The Cambridge Handbook of Cyber Behavior

978-1-107-16525-0

Hardback Set £110.00

US$175.00

€143

R

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

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

59

R. Keith Sawyer

The Cambridge Handbook of the Learning Sciences

978-1-108-84098-9

Hardback

US$195.00

€173.90

R

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

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

£149.00

Subtotal Total for all pages


Notes


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