Library Highlights Kit January - June 2021
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Contents ISBN
FULL TITLE
GBP PRICE
USD PRICE
UK PUB DATE
PAGE
American Literature 978-1-108-42747-0
African American Literature in Transition, 1865–1880
£89.99
US$115.00
March 2021
1
978-1-108-42294-9
African American Literature in Transition, 1830–1850
£70.00
US$110.00
April 2021
2
978-1-108-42748-7
African American Literature in Transition
£89.99
US$115.00
March 2021
3
978-1-108-42208-6
African American Literature in Transition, 1900–1910
£89.99
US$115.00
April 2021
4
978-1-108-47873-1
Frederick Douglass in Context
£85.00
US$110.00
April 2021
5
978-1-108-83560-2
Asian American Literature in Transition, 1930–1965
£85.00
US$110.00
May 2021
6
978-1-108-84385-0
Asian American Literature in Transition, 1965–1996
£85.00
US$110.00
May 2021
7
978-1-108-83084-3
Asian American Literature in Transition, 1996–2020
£85.00
US$110.00
May 2021
8
978-1-108-41808-9
A History of Canadian Fiction
£74.99
US$110.00
May 2021
9
Classical Studies 978-1-108-48186-1
Explorations in Latin Literature
£80.00
US$110.00
March 2021
10
978-1-108-48185-4
Explorations in Latin Literature
£80.00
US$110.00
March 2021
11
978-0-521-88335-1
Diogenes Laertius: Lives of Eminent Philosophers
£110.00
US$145.00
May 2021
12
978-1-108-83785-9
Asyndeton and its Interpretation in Latin Literature
£130.00
US$170.00
April 2021
13
Earth and Environmental Sciences 978-1-108-49043-6
Emerging Governance of a Green Economy
£95.00
US$125.00
January 2021
14
978-1-108-49283-6
The Economisation of Climate Change
£75.00
US$99.99
January 2021
15
978-1-108-48452-7
Meteorite Mineralogy
£95.00
US$125.00
November 2020
16
978-0-521-89717-4
Sustainable Development: Asia-Pacific Perspectives
£120.00
US$155.00
July 2021
17
Theory and Applications of Colloidal Suspension Rheology
£120.00
US$155.00
February 2021
18
Engineering 978-1-108-42303-8 978-1-107-10247-7
Reconfigurable Circuits and Technologies for Smart Millimeter-Wave Systems
£110.00
US$140.00
April 2021
19
978-1-108-84075-0
Duct Acoustics
£155.00
US$200.00
April 2021
20
£84.99
US$110.00
December 2020
21
English, European and World Literature 978-1-108-47400-9
Caribbean Literature in Transition, 1970–2020
978-1-108-47588-4
Caribbean Literature in Transition, 1800–1920
£84.99
US$110.00
December 2020
22
978-1-108-49552-3
Caribbean Literature in Transition, 1920–1970
£84.99
US$110.00
December 2020
23
978-1-107-18014-7
Seamus Heaney in Context
£85.00
US$110.00
February 2021
24
978-1-108-49707-7
The Cambridge History of the Novel in French
£120.00
US$155.00
February 2021
25
978-1-108-42220-8
Ibsen in Context
£85.00
US$110.00
May 2021
26
978-1-108-42010-5
Tom Stoppard in Context
£85.00
US$110.00
June 2021
27
The Optical Papers of Isaac Newton
£250.00
US$327.50
February 2021
28
Performing the Gospels in Byzantium
£99.99
US$130.00
March 2021
29
978-1-108-47335-4
The Cambridge History of the Kurds
£120.00
US$155.00
April 2021
30
978-0-521-84067-5
The Cambridge World History of Slavery
TBA
TBA
June 2021
31
General Science 978-1-108-95422-8
History 978-1-108-49139-6
Law 978-1-108-49543-1
International Law Reports
£170.00
US$220.00
January 2021
32
978-1-108-49804-3
International Law and Peace Settlements
£225.00
US$295.00
January 2021
33
978-1-108-48858-7
The Cambridge Handbook of Class Actions
£160.00
US$210.00
February 2021
34
978-1-108-48813-6
Fundamental Rights in the EU Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
£150.00
US$195.00
March 2021
35
978-1-108-42351-9
The WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement
£175.00
US$220.00
March 2021
36
978-1-108-49544-8
International Law Reports
£170.00
US$220.00
March 2021
37
978-1-107-18642-2
The Cambridge Handbook of Twin Peaks Financial Regulation
£195.00
US$255.00
July 2021
38
978-1-108-47712-3
The Cambridge Handbook of Compliance
£190.00
US$250.00
May 2021
39
FULL TITLE
GBP PRICE
USD PRICE
UK PUB DATE
PAGE
978-1-107-06230-6
Spatial Analysis in Field Primatology
£89.99
US$115.00
January 2021
40
978-1-108-83520-6
Scientific Writing and Publishing
£59.99
US$79.99
February 2021
41
978-1-108-47569-3
Cooperation and Conflict
£64.99
US$84.99
January 2021
42
978-1-108-49755-8
Natural Resource Management Reimagined
£89.99
US$115.00
February 2021
43
978-1-108-42887-3
Networks of Networks in Biology
£44.99
US$59.99
March 2021
44
978-1-108-47273-9
Ecosystem Collapse and Recovery
£89.99
US$115.00
March 2021
45
978-1-108-49184-6
Quantitative Analysis of Ecological Networks
£89.99
US$124.99
April 2021
46
978-1-108-84442-0
Animal Population Ecology
£79.99
US$105.00
March 2021
47
978-1-108-47725-3
Statistics for Laboratory Scientists and Clinicians
£69.99
US$89.99
May 2021
48
978-1-107-05639-8
Why DNA?
£49.99
US$64.99
June 2021
49
978-1-108-47633-1
The Languages of Mainland Southeast Asia
£120.00
US$155.00
February 2021
50
978-1-108-47181-7
The Cambridge Handbook of Language Standardization
£120.00
US$155.00
February 2021
51
978-1-108-49910-1
The Cambridge Handbook of Corrective Feedback in Second Language Learning and Teaching
£120.00
US$155.00
March 2021
52
978-1-108-49573-8
The Cambridge Handbook of Phonetics
£125.00
US$165.00
March 2021
53
978-1-108-41891-1
The Cambridge Handbook of Korean Linguistics
£120.00
US$155.00
March 2021
54
978-1-108-84496-3
The Cambridge Handbook of Sociopragmatics
£125.00
US$165.00
April 2021
55
978-1-108-48726-9
The Cambridge Handbook of Heritage Languages and Linguistics
£125.00
US$165.00
May 2021
56
978-0-521-86535-7
Turkic
£105.00
US$145.00
May 2021
57
978-1-108-47480-1
The Cambridge Handbook of Experimental Syntax
£125.00
US$165.00
May 2021
58
978-1-108-47323-1
A Thesaurus of English Dialect and Slang
£120.00
US$155.00
July 2021
59
The Cambridge International Handbook of Lean Production
£170.00
US$220.00
March 2021
60
978-1-108-94953-8
Invariance of Modules under Automorphisms of their Envelopes and Covers
£50.00
US$80.00
March 2021
61
978-1-107-14259-6
Variations on a Theme of Borel
£95.00
US$125.00
April 2021
62
978-1-108-49260-7
Topics in Algorithmic Graph Theory
£89.99
US$125.00
May 2021
63
978-1-108-79442-8
Constrained Willmore Surfaces
£55.00
US$90.00
May 2021
64
978-1-108-48898-3
Neonatal Hematology
£120.00
US$155.00
January 2021
65
978-1-108-84351-5
Liver Disease in Children
£180.00
US$235.00
February 2021
66
978-1-108-97564-3
Differential Diagnosis in Cytopathology
£155.00
US$200.00
March 2021
67
978-1-108-48934-8
Color Atlas of Emergency Trauma
£230.00
US$300.00
April 2021
68
69
ISBN Life Sciences
Linguistics
Management 978-1-108-42431-8
Mathematics
Medicine
Physics and Astronomy 978-1-108-42733-3
Computer-Generated Phase-Only Holograms for 3D Displays
£110.00
US$140.00
January 2021
978-1-108-84140-5
Theory of the Spread of Epidemics and Movement Ecology of Animals
£120.00
US$155.00
December 2020
70
978-0-521-89547-7
Contemporary Kinetic Theory of Matter
£145.00
US$190.00
February 2021
71
978-1-107-18416-9
Star-Formation Rates of Galaxies
£120.00
US$155.00
May 2021
72
The Cambridge Kant Lexicon
£99.99
US$130.00
February 2021
73
978-1-108-48054-3
The Cambridge Handbook of Intelligence and Cognitive Neuroscience
£125.00
US$165.00
February 2021
74
978-1-108-42674-9
The Cambridge Handbook of Animal Cognition
£150.00
US$195.00
April 2021
75
978-1-108-49218-8
The Cambridge Handbook of Community Psychology
£143.00
US$185.00
May 2021
76
Christian Platonism
£99.99
US$130.00
December 2020
77
978-1-107-06865-0
The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea
£120.00
US$155.00
December 2020
78
978-1-108-84074-3
Plays 1682–1696
£89.99
US$120.00
February 2021
79
978-1-107-03777-9
The Return of the Native
£95.00
US$125.00
February 2021
80
978-1-108-83800-9
Shakespeare in Print
£110.00
US$145.00
May 2021
81
Philosophy 978-0-521-19596-6
Psychology
Religion 978-1-108-49198-3
Theatre
American Literature
1
African American Literature in Transition, 1865–1880 Black Reconstructions Volume 5: 1865–1880
Edited by Eric Gardner Saginaw Valley State University
Description This volume offers the most nuanced treatment available of Black engagement with print in the transitional years after the Civil War. It locates and studies materials that many literary historians leave out of narratives of American culture. But as important as such recovery work is, African American Literature in Transition, 1865–1880 also emphasizes innovative approaches, recognizing that such recovery inherently challenges methods dominant in American literary study. At the book’s core is the recognition that many period texts – by writers from Frances Ellen Watkins Harper and William Wells Brown to Mattie Jackson and William Steward – are not only aesthetically striking but also central to understanding key socio-historical and cultural trends in the nineteenth century. Chapters by leading scholars are grouped in three sections – ‘Citizenships, Textualities, and Domesticities’, ‘Persons and Bodies’, and ‘Memories, Materialities, and Locations’ – and focus on debates over race, nation, personhood, and print that were central to Reconstruction.
Key Features • Provides the richest, most nuanced study of African American literature during Reconstruction available • Showcases cutting-edge work by both established and emerging scholars of African American print culture • Treats both better-known figures like Frances Ellen Watkins Harper and William Wells Brown as well as less-studied authors from Mattie Jackson to William Steward in a framework that emphasizes their connections to broader African American literary history
Contents Black Reconstructions: Introduction; Part I. Citizenships, Textualities, and Domesticities: 1. Sketching Black Citizenship on Installment after the 15th Amendment; 2. Stories of Citizenship: The Rise of Narrative Black Poetry During Reconstruction; 3. National Housekeeping: (Re)dressing the Politics of Whiteness in Nineteenth-Century African American Literary History; 4. Reconstructing the Rhetoric of AME Ministry; Part II. Persons and Bodies: 5. Black Reform, Writing, and Resistance: Textual Politics in the Post-War Era; 6. Post-Civil War Black Childhoods; 7. Disabling Freedom: Bloody Shirt Rhetoric in Postbellum Slave Narratives; 8. Radical Respectability and African American Women’s Reconstruction Fiction; Part III. Memories, Materialities, and Locations: 9. The Civil War in African American Memory; 10. African American Literature of the West and the Landscape of Opportunity; 11. Reconstructions of the South in African American Literature; 12. ‘This Is Especially Our Crop’: Blackness, Value, and the Reconstruction of Cotton.
Additional Information Level: Graduate Students, academic researchers Series: African American Literature in Transition March 2021 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-42747-0 Hardback £89.99 / US$115.00 978-1-108-44621-1 Paperback TBA / TBA
2
American Literature
African American Literature in Transition, 1830–1850 Volume 3
Edited by Benjamin Fagan Auburn University, Alabama
Description This volume charts the ways in which African American literature fosters transitions between material cultures and contexts from 1830 to 1850, and showcases work that explores how African American literature and lived experiences shaped one another. Chapters focus on the interplay between pivotal political and social events, including emancipation in the West Indies, the Irish Famine, and the Fugitive Slave Act, and key African American cultural productions, such as the poetry of Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, the writings of David Walker, and the genre of the Slave Narrative. Chapters also examine the relationship between African American literature and a variety of institutions including, the press, and the post office. The chapters are grouped together in three sections, each of which is focused on transitions within a particular geographic scale: the local, the national, and the transnational. Taken together, they offer a crucial account of how African Americans used the written word to respond to and drive the events and institutions of the 1830s, 1840s, and beyond.
Key Features • Offers innovative approaches to African American literature of the period • Introduces readers to understudied works and authors • Highlights leading and emerging scholars of the field
Contents Introduction. The age of David Walker; Part I. Local Transitions: 1. Antebellum literary societies, polite learning, and traditions of modernity; 2. ‘By a Young Lady of Color’: Black women and the antislavery press; 3. The poetics of education in antebellum New Orleans; 4. Gentility, resistance, and the Nat turner’s rebellion in early African American poetry; Part II. National Transitions: 5. Copyright, fugitivity, and the fight for self-ownership in early African American literature; 6. The communications revolution and the networked path to freedom; 7. The fugitive slave act and the United States of slavery; Part III. Transnational Transitions: 8. Cosmopolitanism, character, and the theories of early African American literature; 9. Race, slavery, and emigration in black women’s life writing; 10. The impact of West Indian emancipation on African American poetry; 11. La Escalera, sentiment, and revolution in the antebellum novel; 12. Europe, Mexico, and the African American 1848; 13. The Irish famine and the lessons of environmental history.
Additional Information Level: Graduate Students, academic researchers Series: African American Literature in Transition April 2021 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-42294-9 Hardback c. £70.00 / c. US$110.00 978-1-108-43523-9 Paperback TBA / TBA
American Literature
3
African American Literature in Transition Volume 5: 1850–1865
Edited by Teresa Zackodnik University of Alberta
Description The period of 1850-1865 consists of violent struggle and crisis as the United States underwent the prodigious transition from slaveholding to ostensibly “free” nation. This volume reframes mid-century African American literature and challenges our current understandings of both African American and American literature. It presents a fluid tradition attentive to history, science, politics, economics, space and movement, the visual, and the sonic. Black writing at mid-century was highly conscious of transnational and international politics, textual circulation, and revolutionary imaginaries. Essays explore how Black literature was being produced and circulated; how and why it marked its relation to other literary and expressive traditions; what geopolitical imaginaries it facilitated; and what technologies, including print, enabled African Americans to pursue such a complex and ongoing aesthetic and political project.
Key Features • Links the mid-19th century to literary developments that preceded and followed that period. • Frames mid-19th century African American literature in terms of Black personhood and citizenship, genre and circulation, and space and movement. • Explores mid-19th century African American literature and the concerns currently preoccupying African American literary studies.
Contents Timeline; Volume 4: 1850-1865, Introduction; Part 1. Black personhood and citizenship in transition: Section introduction; 1. Freedom’s accounts—the semi-citizenship narrative; 2. Conduct discourse, slave narratives, and Black male self-fashioning on the eve of the Civil war; 3. Picturing Blackness with and against Stowe’s lens; 4. African American periodicals and the transition to visual intercourse; Part 2. Generic transitions and textual circulation: Section introduction; 5. Overhearing the African American novel, 1850-1865; 6. Black romanticism and the lyric as the medium of the conspiracy; 7. Black newspapers, novels and the racial geographies of transnationalism; 8. Creoles of color, poetry and the periodic press in union occupied New Orleans; 9. The Haitian and American revolutions and Black historical writing at mid-century; Part 3. Black geographies in transition: Section introduction; 10. Freedom to move; 11. Black activism, print culture and literature in Canada 1850-1865; 12. Antislavery activist networks and transatlantic texts; 13. Haiti as diasporic crossroads in transnational African American writing; Bibliography.
Additional Information Level: Graduate Students, academic researchers Series: African American Literature in Transition March 2021 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-42748-7 Hardback £89.99 / US$115.00 978-1-108-44622-8 Paperback TBA / TBA
4
American Literature
African American Literature in Transition, 1900–1910 Volume 7
Edited by Shirley Moody-Turner Pennsylvania State University
Description African American Literature in Transition, 1900–1910 offers a wide ranging, multidisciplinary approach to early twentieth century African American literature and culture. It showcases the literary and cultural productions that took shape in the critical years after Reconstruction, but before the Harlem Renaissance, the period known as the nadir of African American history. It undercovers the dynamic work being done by Black authors, painters, photographers, poets, editors, boxers, and entertainers to shape ‘New Negro’ identities and to chart a new path for a new century. The book is structured into four key areas: Black publishing and print culture; innovations in genre and form; the race, class and gender politics of literary and cultural production; and new geographies of Black literary history. These overarching themes, along with the introduction of established figures and movement, alongside lesser known texts and original research, offer a radical re-conceptualization of this critical, but understudied period in African American literary history.
Key Features • Offers a wide-ranging inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary approach to understanding the development of African American literature and culture at the beginning of the twentieth century • Structured by 4 key areas: Publishing, Genre, Racial/Gender/Class politics, and Geography • Showcases the fertile work done by black painters, photographers, poets, newspaper editors, boxers, and entertainers to shape ‘New Negro’ identity
Contents Acknowledgements; List of images; Introduction; Part I. Transition in African American Authorship, Publishing and the Visual Arts: 1. Black bibliographers and the category of negro authorship; 2. Transitions in African American book publishing and print culture; 3. Re-evaluating African American art before the Harlem renaissance; Part II. New Negro Aesthetic and Transitions in Genre and Form: 4. African American novels and new slavery in the new south; 5. Anti-lynching poetry and the poetics of protest;
Additional Information Level: Graduate Students, academic researchers Series: African American Literature in Transition April 2021 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-42208-6 Hardback £89.99 / US$115.00 978-1-108-43326-6 Paperback TBA / TBA
6. The politics of performance, character, and literary genre in transition; Part III. Modernist Masculinities and Transitions in Black Leadership: 7. Charting the tensions between optimism and despair at mid-decade; 8. W. E. B. Du Bois and transitions in black intellectual thought; 9. Celebrity and black masculinity at the turn into the twentieth century; Part IV. Remapping the Turn of the Twentieth Century: 10. Can the subaltern speak through Alain Locke and Paul Laurence Dunbar?; 11. Race and manhood in African American representations of the frontier; 12. Narratives of black and Chinese citizenship after Plessy v. Ferguson; 13. Black transpacific culture and the migratory imagination.
American Literature
5
Frederick Douglass in Context Edited by Michaël Roy Université Paris Nanterre
Description Frederick Douglass in Context provides an in-depth introduction to the multifaceted life and times of Frederick Douglass, the nineteenth-century’s leading black activist and one of the most celebrated American writers. An international team of scholars sheds new light on the environments and communities that shaped Douglass’s career. The book challenges the myth of Douglass as a heroic individualist who towered over family, friends, and colleagues, and reveals instead a man who relied on others and drew strength from a variety of personal and professional relations and networks. This volume offers both a comprehensive representation of Douglass and a series of concentrated studies of specific aspects of his work. It will be a key resource for students, scholars, teachers, and general readers interested in Douglass and his tireless fight for freedom, justice, and equality for all.
Key Features • Covers and contextualizes every facet of Douglass’s life and work • Consolidates current knowledge about Douglass but also looks forward to future developments in Douglass studies • Internationalizes Douglass and encourages interdisciplinary interplay between historical, literary, and theoretical approaches
Contents List of illustrations; List of contributors; Chronology; List of Abbreviations; Introduction; Part I. Places; 1. Baltimore ; 2. The British Isles; 3. Rochester; 4. Washington, DC; 5. Tour of Europe and Egypt; 6. Haiti; Part II. Genres; 7. Autobiography; 8. Oratory;
9. Journalism; 10. Fiction; 11. Photography; Part III. Activism; 12. Abolition; 13. Temperance; 14. Women’s rights; 15. The civil war; 16. Reconstruction and civil rights; Part IV. Philosophy; 17. Politics ; 18. Law; 19. Education; 20. Religion; 21. Science and technology; 22. Environment;
Additional Information Level: undergraduate students, graduate students Series: Literature in Context April 2021 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-47873-1 Hardback c. £85.00 / c. US$110.00 978-1-108-74613-7 Paperback TBA / TBA
Part V. Networks; 23. The underground railroad; 24. Colored conventions; 25. Family; 26. Correspondence; 27. Intertextuality; Part VI. Afterlifes; 28. Paratexts; 29. Deployments: activism; 30. Deployments: art; 31. Teaching; 32. Bicentennial; Further reading; Index.
6
American Literature
Asian American Literature in Transition, 1930–1965 Volume 2
Edited by Victor Bascara
University of California, Los Angeles
and Josephine Nock-Hee Park University of Pennsylvania
Description This volume is devoted to Asian American Literature between 1930 to 1965, a period of immense social, historical, and cultural transformations that continue to shape the conditions of our world. From the Great Depression to the Second World War to the Civil Rights Movement to landmark immigrations reforms, Asian American literature provides unique and insightful perspectives on these historical developments, all while creatively engaging with globally-dispersed decolonization movements. Each chapter, written a by leading figures in their fields, demonstrates how Asian American writing affectingly reveals our complex world and its contested pasts. Case studies of major authors of this era show this as a time when the figure of the Asian American author became newly significant. This volume provides historical grounding, theoretical interventions, and nuanced textual analysis of Asian American literature in this period.
Key Features • Appreciates the lives and work of a relatively neglected set of authors, offering ways of grasping the stakes and methods of visibility, whether mainstream or subcultural • Appreciates the literary interventions of key Asian American texts of a relatively neglected period • Retells familiar historical moments through Asian American literature
Contents Editors’ introduction; Part I. Transitions Approached through Concepts and History: 1. The popular front and Asiatic modes of cultural production; 2. Asian American realism; 3. On modernism, decolonization, and Asian American literature in transition; 4. The cultures of Japanese internment: a short history of ‘funny’ turns; 5. The 1947 partition, war, and internment: hidden histories of migration and displacement in transnational Asia;
6. Cold War fiction: the flower drum song’s political education; 7. Desert, island, ocean, swamp: cold war ecologies and the Asian American environment; Part II. Transitions Approached through Authors, Texts, Concepts, and History: 8. Lin Yutang and the invention of Asian America, 1949; 9. H. T. Tsiang against the world; 10. ‘A congressman from India’: Dalip Singh Saund in Cold War America; 11. Younghill Kang, transpacific agent;
Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Asian American Literature in Transition May 2021 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-83560-2 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00 978-1-108-81294-8 Paperback TBA / TBA
12. Transition and obliteration: Jose Garcia Villa in the United States; 13. America is in the heart as postcolonial pastoral: an ecocritical case study of Carlos Bulosan; 14. Bienvenido Santos: writing the interstitial spaces of Asian American literature; 15. Women writing war in Asia/America; 16. Japanese incarceration, settler colonialism; 17. Jade Snow Wong and the making of model minority democracy; 18. A little bit of form goes a long way: no-no boy and the ruse of empire; 19. Richard Eun-kook Kim.
American Literature
7
Asian American Literature in Transition, 1965–1996 Volume 3
Edited by Asha Nadkarni
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
and Cathy J. Schlund-Vials University of Connecticut
Description Asian American Literature in Transition Volume Three: 1965–1996 offers a multidisciplinary perspective on the political and aesthetic stakes of what is now recognizable as an Asian American literary canon. It takes as its central focus the connections among literature, history, and migration, exploring how the formation of Asian American literary studies is necessarily inflected by demographic changes, student activism, the institutionalization of Asian American studies within the U.S. academy, U.S foreign policy (specifically the Cold War and conflicts in Southeast Asia), and the emergence of ‘diaspora’ and ‘transnationalism’ as important critical frames. Moving through sections that consider migration and identity, aesthetics and politics, canon formation, and transnationalism and diaspora, this volume tracks predominant themes within Asian American literature to interrogate an ever-evolving field. It features nineteen original essays by leading scholars, and is accessible to beginners in the field and more advanced researchers alike.
Key Features • Takes up the relationship between literature, history and migration in the formation of the Asian American literary canon from 1965-1996 • Turns to multiple literary forms – novels, short stories, poetry, performance, periodicals, and anthologies – to chart the diversity of Asian American cultural production • Employs a transnational approach to trace the relationship between Asian American racial formation at home, and war, displacement, and movements for national liberation abroad
Contents Part I. Immigration, Migration and Movement: 1. Scrutinizing Impossible Subjects; 2. The Model Minority and Debt; 3. Displaced Subjects and Refugee Literature; 4. 1.5 Generation Literature as Asian Americanist Critique; Part II. Politics, Art and Activism: 5. Furious Dialectics: Diasporic Anger in the Poetry of Li-Young Lee; 6. Asian American Literature and the Vietnam War; 7. Cross-Racial Solidarities and Asian American Literature;
8. Re/Collecting Asian American Performance; 9. Multiculturalism and its Discontents; Part III. Institutionalization and Canon Formation: 10. On Recovering Early Asian American Literature; 11. Asian American Poetics; 12. Maxine Hong Kingston’s the Woman Warrior: A Milestone in Asian American Literature; 13. Making a Necessity of Extravagance: Work and Play in the Asian American (ist) Economy; 14. Marking the Difference made by ‘Heterogeneity, Hybridity and Multiplicity’: Lisa Lowe’s Impact on Asian American Studies;
Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Asian American Literature in Transition May 2021 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-84385-0 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00 978-1-108-82686-0 Paperback TBA / TBA
Part IV. Diaspora and the Transnational Turn: 15. Rethinking Nationalistic Attachments through Narratives of Return, 1965–1995; 16. Diasporic Longings; 17. Transnational Sexualities; 18. Intimacy, Imperialism and America: Revisiting Post-47 Postcolonial and Asian American Writing; 19. Hemispheric Imaginings and Global Transitions: The Geopolitics of Asian American Literature in the Americas.
8
American Literature
Asian American Literature in Transition, 1996–2020 Volume 4
Edited by Betsy Huang
Clark University, Massachusetts
and Victor Roman Mendoza University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Description This volume examines the concerns of Asian American literature from 1996 to the present. This period was not only marked by civil unrest, terror and militarization, economic depression, and environmental abuse, but also unprecedented growth and visibility of Asian American literature. This volume is divided into four sections that plots the trajectories of, and tensions between, social challenges and literary advances. Part One tracks how Asian American literary productions of this period reckon with the effects of structures and networks of violence. Part Two tracks modes of intimacy – desires, loves, close friendships, romances, sexual relations, erotic contacts – that emerge in the face of neoimperialism, neoliberalism, and necropolitics. Part Three traces the proliferation of genres in Asian American writing of the past quarter century in new and in well-worn terrains. Part Four surveys literary projects that speculate on future states of Asian America in domestic and global contexts.
Key Features • Provides four overarching themes to approaching Asian American literary criticism • The introduction frames the 25 year time period the volume covers, addressing the critical shifts, optics, themes, and concerns that each of the essays take on • Analyses includes wide range of Asian American literary criticism, looking at literary, social, theoretical, and social concerns
Contents Introduction: Present Tensions, Future Flux; Part I. Neoimperialisms, Neoliberalisms, Necropolitics: 1. Transpacific Ecological Imagination: Envisioning the Anthropocene in Ecocritical Asian North American Literature; 2. Garden in the Machine: Grace Lee Boggs’s Living for Change: An Autobiography and Detroit’s Urban-Agrarian Future; 3. Writing Asia-Latin America: Migrant Intersectionality and Differential Racialization in the Literature of Doris Moromisato and Siu Kam Wen; 4. States of Violence; Part II. Intersections, Intimacies: 5. Between the Heteronormative Model Minority and the Homonormative LGBTQ Subject: Historicizing Contemporary Queer Asian American Literature; 6. Intimacies and Animacies: Queer Ecologies in Asian American Literature; 7. Trans Feminism, Asian America’s Queer Exception?;
Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Asian American Literature in Transition May 2021 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-83084-3 Hardback c. £85.00 / c. US$110.00 978-1-108-82343-2 Paperback TBA / TBA
8. No Home away from Home: Queer Asian North American Heritage Plots; Part III. Genres, Modalities: 9. The Asiatic Model Imagination; 10. Revisualizing Race: Graphic Narratives and Asian American Literature; 11. Contemporary Asian American Women’s Popular Literature and Neoliberal Form; 12. This is Not a Page: The Changing Vehicles of Asian American Literature; Part IV. Movements, Speculations: 13. Asian American Literary Studies and the Challenge of Utopia; 14. What is Asian America to Asians?: Two Episodes of Transpacific Disturbance; 15. Mixed Race Asian American Literature at the Turn into the 21st Century; 16. Global Asias: On the Structural Incoherence of Imaginable Ageography; Finale, or, Alternative Originaries: Imagining an Asian American Superhero of North Korean Origin.
American Literature
9
A History of Canadian Fiction David Staines
University of Ottawa
Description A History of Canadian Fiction is the first one-volume history to chart its development from earliest times to the present day. Recounting the struggles and the glories of this burgeoning area of investigation, it explains Canada’s literary growth alongside its remarkable history. Highlighting the people who have shaped and are shaping Canadian literary culture, the book examines such major figures as Mavis Gallant, Mordecai Richler, Alice Munro, Margaret Atwood, Michael Ondaatje, and Thomas King, concluding with young authors of today whose major successes reflect their indebtedness to their Canadian forbearers.
Key Features • Offers a complete history of Canadian fiction from colonial times through to the present day • Identifies the major trends and problems that accompanied the steady growth of fiction in Canada • Uses the texts, words, and relevant criticisms of Canadian writers to map out the history, growth, and place of Canadian fiction
Contents Introduction; 1. The beginnings; 2. From romance towards realism; 3. Emerging into realism; 4. The foundational fifties; 5. The second feminist wave; 6. The flourishing of the wests; 7. The second century; 8. Indigenous voices; 9. Naturalized Canadian writers; 10. The twenty-first century; Afterword; Endnotes; Acknowledgements.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students May 2021 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-41808-9 Hardback c. £74.99 / c. US$110.00 978-1-108-40646-8 Paperback TBA / TBA
10
Classical Studies
Explorations in Latin Literature Volume 1: Epic, Historiography, Religion
Denis Feeney
Princeton University, New Jersey
Stephen Hinds
University of Washington
Description Denis Feeney is one of the most distinguished scholars of Latin literature and Roman culture in the world of the last half-century. These two volumes conveniently collect and present afresh all his major papers, covering a wide range of topics and interests. Ancient epic is a major focus, followed by Latin lyric, historiography and elegy. Ancient literary criticism and the technology of the book are recurrent themes. Many papers address the problems of literary responses to religion and ritual, with an interdisciplinary methodology drawing on comparative anthropology and religion. The transition from Republic to Empire and the emergence of the Augustan principate form the background to the majority of the papers, and the question of how literary texts are to be read in historical context is addressed throughout. All quotations from ancient and modern languages have now been translated and Stephen Hinds has contributed a foreword.
Key Features • Covers a wide range of ancient literature, showcasing a variety of theoretical approaches • Shows how ancient texts can benefit from an interdisciplinary perspective that goes beyond formal analysis • Illuminates how discussion and debate within classics has evolved in the last generation
Contents Introduction; 1. The taciturnity of Aeneas; 2. The reconciliations of Juno; 3. Epic hero and epic fable; 4. Stat magni nominis umbra: Lucan on the greatness of Pompeius Magnus; 5. History and revelation in Virgil’s underworld; 6. Following after Hercules, in Apollonius and Virgil; 7. Beginning Sallust’s Catiline; 8. Leaving Dido: the appearance(s) of Mercury and the motivations of Aeneas; 9. Epic violence, epic order: killings, catalogues, and the role of the reader in Aeneid 10; 10. Mea tempora: patterning of time in Ovid’s Metamorphoses; 11. Interpreting sacrificial ritual in Roman poetry: disciplines and their models; 12. Tenui…latens discrimine: spotting the differences in Statius’ Achilleid; 13. On not forgetting the ‘Literatur’ in ‘Literatur und Religion’; 14. Virgil’s tale of four cities: Troy, Carthage, Alexandria and Rome; 15. First similes in epic; 16. Fictions of citizenship in Livy’s History.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students March 2021 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-48186-1 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$110.00 978-1-108-74153-8 Paperback TBA / TBA
Classical Studies
11
Explorations in Latin Literature Volume 2: Elegy, Lyric and Other Topics
Denis Feeney
Princeton University, New Jersey
Introduction by Stephen Hinds University of Washington
Description Denis Feeney is one of the most distinguished scholars of Latin literature and Roman culture in the world of the last half-century. These two volumes conveniently collect and present afresh all his major papers, covering a wide range of topics and interests. Ancient epic is a major focus, followed by Latin lyric, historiography and elegy. Ancient literary criticism and the technology of the book are recurrent themes. Many papers address the problems of literary responses to religion and ritual, with an interdisciplinary methodology drawing on comparative anthropology and religion. The transition from Republic to Empire and the emergence of the Augustan principate form the background to the majority of the papers, and the question of how literary texts are to be read in historical context is addressed throughout. All quotations from ancient and modern languages have now been translated and Stephen Hinds has contributed a foreword.
Key Features • Covers a wide range of ancient literature, showcasing a variety of theoretical approaches • Shows how ancient texts can benefit from an interdisciplinary perspective that goes beyond formal analysis • Illuminates how discussion and debate within classics has evolved in the last generation
Contents Introduction; 1. Si licet et fas est: Ovid’s Fasti and the problem of free speech under the Principate; 2. ‘Shall I compare thee ...?’ Catullus 68 and the limits of analogy; 3. Towards an account of the ancient world’s concepts of fictive belief; 4. Horace and the Greek lyric poets; 5. Criticism ancient and modern; 6. The odiousness of comparisons: Horace on literary history and the limitations of synkrisis; 7. Vna cum scriptore meo: poetry, principate, and the traditions of literary history in the Epistle to Augustus; 8. Two Virgilian acrostics: certissima signa? (with Damien Nelis); 9. Catullus and the Roman paradox epigram; 10. Becoming an authority: Horace on his own reception; 11. Fathers and sons: the Manlii Torquati and family continuity in Catullus and Horace; 12. Doing the numbers: the Roman mathematics of civil war in Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra; 13. Crediting Pseudolus: trust, belief, and the credit crunch in Plautus’ Pseudolus; 14. Hic finis fandi: On the absence of punctuation for the endings (and beginnings) of speeches in Latin poetic texts; 15. Representation and the materiality of the book in Catullus’ polymetrics; 16. Catullus 61: Epithalamium and comparison; 17. Ovid’s Ciceronian literary history: end-career chronology and autobiography; 18. Horace and the literature of the past: lyric, epic, and history in Odes 4; 19. Forma manet facti (Ov. Fast. 2.379): aetiologies of myth and ritual in Ovid’s Fasti and Metamorphoses.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students March 2021 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-48185-4 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$110.00 978-1-108-74151-4 Paperback TBA / TBA
12
Classical Studies
Diogenes Laertius: Lives of Eminent Philosophers An Edited Translation
Edited and translated by Stephen White University of Texas, Austin
Description A pioneering work in the history of philosophy, the ancient text of the Lives presents engaging portraits of nearly a hundred Greek philosophers. It blends biography with bibliography and surveys of leading theories, peppered with punchy anecdotes, pithy maxims, and even snatches of poetry, much of it by the philosophers themselves. The work presents a systematic genealogy of Greek philosophy from its origins in the sixth century BCE to its flowering in Plato’s Academy and the Hellenistic schools. In this fully up-to-date and accessible translation, based on the most accurate texts and the latest advances in scholarship, Stephen White provides a valuable resource for students and scholars of ancient philosophy. Highlights include extended treatment of the ‘Seven Sages’ (Book 1), Socrates and his Socratic followers (Book 2), Plato (Book 3), Aristotle and his school (Book 5), Diogenes the Cynic (Book 6), Stoicism (Book 7), Pythagoreans (Book 8), Pyrrhonian skepticism (Book 9), and Epicureanism (Book 10).
Key Features • Offers an accessible translation of a key third-century work which stands as the preeminent surviving ancient history of Greek philosophy • Informed by huge progress in recent philosophical and historical scholarship, making it fully up to date • Presents ancient philosophy as a way of life for leading figures including Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and Epicurus, as well as leading Atomists, Cynics, Stoics, and Skeptics
Contents Acknowledgements; Introduction; Outline of the Lives; Lives of Eminent Philosophers; Book 1. Origins and sages; Book 2. Ionians, Socrates and Socratics; Book 3. Plato; Book 4. Academics; Book 5. Aristotle and Peripatetics; Book 6. Antisthenes and Cynics;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students May 2021 228 x 152 mm 700pp 978-0-521-88335-1 Hardback £110.00 / US$145.00
Book 7. Zeno and Stoics; Book 8. Pythagoras and Pythagoreans; Book 9. Italians and others, Pyrrho and Pyrrhonians; Book 10. Epicurus and Epicureans; Appendix: conspectus of changes to the text; Glossary of philosophical terms; Bibliography; Index of biographies; Index of citations; Index of persons.
Classical Studies
13
Asyndeton and its Interpretation in Latin Literature History, Patterns, Textual Criticism
J. N. Adams
All Souls College, Oxford
Description Asyndetic coordination (omission of coordinators such as but, or, and) is ancient in IndoEuropean languages. Most commentaries on Greek and Latin texts index ‘asyndeton’, but comprehensive treatments of asyndeton across a variety of literary and non-literary genres are largely lacking, and comments are often impressionistic. This book provides the most comprehensive treatment of asyndeton in Latin ever attempted, and it also contains material from Greek and Umbrian. It analyses asyndeta in diverse genres from early Latin to the early Empire, including prayers and laws, and aims to identify types, determinants, generic variations and chronological changes. Since coordinators are easily left out or added by scribes, criteria are discussed that might be used by editors in deciding between asyndeton and coordination. External influences on Latin, such as Greek and Italic, are also considered. The book will be essential for all scholars of Latin language and literature as well as historical linguistics.
Key Features • Analyses asyndeta in a variety of Latin genres spread over half a millennium, thereby allowing comparisons to be made between different writers and genres over time • Allows informed judgments to be made about the influence of Greek writers or genres on Roman, e.g. of Homer on Virgil, New Comedy on Plautus • Offers a typology of Latin asyndetic pairs according to grammatical, semantic and structural features
Contents Part I. Introduction: 1. Asyndetic and syndetic coordination: definitions and types; 2. ‘Asyndeta’ that may not be asyndeta: roles of adjectives; appositional compounds; and ‘asyndetic hendiadys’; 3. Asyndeton versus coordination, an introduction; 4. Lists of two types; 5. Supposed ‘effects’ of asyndeton; Part II. ‘Grammatical’ Types: 6. Asyndetic pairs (mainly of adjectives) of which at least one member is a term with a negative prefix; 7. Simple verb + compound in asyndeton; 8. Juxtaposition of active and passive forms of the same verb; 9. Asyndetic pairs of verbs of different tense or mood;
10. Pairs of imperatives; 11. Masculine-feminine pairs; 12. Recapitulation: ‘Grammatical’ types and their distribution; Part III. Semantic Types: 13. Pairs of opposites; 14. Pairs denoting family members; 15. ‘Semantic’ types: some conclusions; Part IV. Structures: 16. Rule of ascending length (?); 17. Correlative distribution; 18. End-of-list coordination and ‘weak’ asyndeton bimembre; 19. Accumulations of asyndeta: a few patterns; 20. Discontinuous asyndeton and conjunct hyperbaton;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students April 2021 228 x 152 mm c.500pp 978-1-108-83785-9 Hardback £130.00 / US$170.00 978-1-108-93209-7 Paperback TBA / TBA
21. Asyndetic pairs dependent on a single preposition; Part V. Genres and Texts: 22. Laws and prayers; 23. Plautus; 24. Virgil and early high-style poetry; 25. Lucilius; 26. Cicero; 27. Catullus; 28. Caesar, Bellum Ciuile: asyndeton and textual criticism; 29. Horace; 30. The Annalists, Sallust and Tacitus; 31. Livy; Part VI. Conclusions: 32. Asyndeton in Latin.
14
Earth and Environmental Sciences
Emerging Governance of a Green Economy Cases of European Implementation
Edited by Jenny M. Fairbrass University of East Anglia
and Nicholas Vasilakos University of East Anglia
Description The idea of building an economy which supports sustainable development without degrading the environment has been widely debated and broadly embraced by politicians, civil servants, the media, academics and the public alike for several decades. This book explores the measures being trialled at various levels of governance in the European region to reduce the adverse impacts of human behaviour on the environment whilst simultaneously addressing society’s economic and social needs as part of the intended shift towards a ‘green’ economy. It includes European case studies that scrutinise the efforts being undertaken at sub-national, national and regional tiers of governance to facilitate the transition to a low carbon economy. This book will be of interest to graduate students, researchers, practitioners, and policy makers working in environmental governance, European studies, environmental studies, political science, and management studies.
Key Features • Defines relevant terms to provide clarity on the phrases and catchwords used by politicians, business leaders, the media and academics • Provides empirical evidence as well as theoretical insights about the role played by the energy sector in the transition towards a green economy • Follows a multidisciplinary approach to highlight particular issues and different perspectives relating to the ‘greening’ of the European economy
Contents 1. The green economy: Setting out the agenda; 2. The green economy: Changing meanings in a changing world; 3. The green economy as good governance: The right thing to do?; 4. On the verge of a second revolution in the European Union’s utilities market for energy production? The role of social enterprises; 5. ‘Great expectations’: The green economy discourse and practice in Romania; 6. Overcoming structural disadvantages with local green economies? The case of two maritime cities; 7. Shifting models of energy companies towards green economy in Europe; 8. Carbon calculation and the urban green economic opportunity; 9. The green economy: Key lessons and the way forward.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students January 2021 244 x 170 mm c.220pp 978-1-108-49043-6 Hardback £95.00 / US$125.00
Earth and Environmental Sciences
15
The Economisation of Climate Change How the G20, the OECD and the IMF Address Fossil Fuel Subsidies and Climate Finance
Jakob Skovgaard Lund University
Description The effort to address climate change cuts across a wide range of non-environmental actors and policy areas, including international economic institutions such as the Group of Twenty (G20), International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). These institutions do not tend to address climate change so much as an environmental issue, but as an economic one, a dynamic referred to as ‘economisation’. Such economisation can have profound consequences for how environmental problems are addressed. This book explores how the G20, IMF, and OECD have addressed climate finance and fossil fuel subsidies, what factors have shaped their specific approaches, and the consequences of this economisation of climate change. Focusing on the international level, it is a valuable resource for graduate students, researchers, and policymakers in the fields of politics, political economy and environmental policy.
Key Features • Develops and applies the concept of economisation to the climate issues of fossil fuel subsidies and climate finance, appealing to those seeking an in-depth understanding of the relationship between environmental and economic policies • Supplies an analytical framework drawing on different theoretical approaches to provide a comparison between the ways the G20, OECD, and IMF have addressed climate financing and fossil fuel subsidies, including the causes and consequences • Provides students, researchers, policymakers and experts studying fossil fuel subsidies and climate finance with a rich source of empirical material, particularly the under-explored topics of how the G20, the OECD, and IMF have addressed climate financing and fossil fuel subsidies
Contents Preface; Part I. Introduction: 1. Introduction: The economisation of climate change and why it matters in the case of international economic institutions; Part II. Setting the Stage: 2. A framework for studying institutional output and its alignment, causes and consequences; 3. The three institutions, their roles and the environment; Part III. Fossil Fuel Subsidies: 4. Fossil fuel subsidies: Key issues; 5. The G20 and fossil fuel subsidy reform: The catalyst; 6. The OECD and fossil fuel subsidies: The knowledge provider; 7. The IMF and fossil fuel subsidies: The unexpected environmentalist;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, professionals, graduate students January 2021 244 x 170 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-49283-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99
8. The alignment of the economic institutions on fossil fuel subsidies: Synergies, but definitions can be divisive; Part IV. Climate Finance: 9. Climate finance: Key issues; 10. The G20 and climate finance: Introducing finance ministries to the topic; 11. The OECD and climate finance: Development and investment; 12. The IMF and climate finance: Carbon pricing rears its head; 13. The alignment of the economic institutions on climate finance: Efficiency in development and investments, but also carbon pricing; Part V. Conclusions: 14. Conclusions; References; Index.
16
Earth and Environmental Sciences
Meteorite Mineralogy Alan Rubin
University of California, Los Angeles
and Chi Ma Caltech
Description Meteorites are fascinating cosmic visitors. Using accessible language, this book documents the history of mineralogy and meteorite research, summarizes the mineralogical characteristics of the myriad varieties of meteorites, and explains the mineralogical characteristics of Solar System bodies visited by spacecraft. Some of these bodies contain minerals that do not occur naturally on Earth or in meteorites. The book explains how to recognize different phases under the microscope and in back-scattered electron images. It summarizes the major ways in which meteoritic minerals form – from condensation in the expanding atmospheres of dying stars to crystallization in deep-seated magmas, from flash-melting in the solar nebula to weathering in the terrestrial environment. Containing spectacular back-scattered electron images, colour photographs of meteorite minerals, and with an accompanying online list of meteorite minerals, this book provides a useful resource for meteorite researchers, terrestrial mineralogists, cosmochemists and planetary scientists, as well as graduate students in these fields
Key Features • Provides a detailed summary of the mineralogy of all meteorite groups, allowing researchers and collectors to grasp their essential mineralogical features • Includes self-contained and comprehensive definitions of key terms, making the book accessible to those without a background in planetary science • Discusses the history of the fundamental breakthroughs in mineralogy and meteorite research, providing readers with important historical context
Contents 1. Minerals and Meteorites: Historical Foundations and Current Status; 2. Definitions and Explications; 3. Brief review of Crystallography and Crystal Chemistry; 4. Properties of Minerals: Explanations and Applications; 5. Identification of Meteoritic Minerals in Reflected Light, by Back-scattered Electron (BSE) Imaging, and by EDS and EBSD Analyses; 6. Meteorite Classification and Taxonomy; 7. Mineralogy of Major Physical Components of Chondrites; 8. Petrologic and Mineralogical Characteristics of Meteorite Groups; 9. Cosmomineralogy; 10. Formation of Meteoritic Minerals in Gas- and Dust-rich Environments; 11. Formation of Meteoritic Minerals on Parent Bodies; 12. Formation of Meteoritic Minerals in the Terrestrial Environment; 13. The Strange Case of the Aluminum-Copper Alloys; Epilogue; References.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Planetary Science, 26 November 2020 244 x 170 mm c.320pp 149 b/w illus. 978-1-108-48452-7 Hardback £95.00 / US$125.00
Earth and Environmental Sciences
17
Sustainable Development: Asia-Pacific Perspectives Edited by Pak Sum Low Bond University, Queensland
Description The Asia-Pacific region is experiencing especially rapid development and population increase, and issues of global change and sustainable development are likely to be of particular importance in the coming decades. This book presents chapters by leading international experts on the major issues relating to global change and sustainable development from the perspectives of Asia and the Pacific. It also highlights the challenges and opportunities of sustainable development and poverty reduction within the changing ecological, social, cultural and economic environment in this region. The volume is an invaluable reference for all researchers and policy makers with an interest in global change and sustainable development in Asia and the Pacific.
Key Features • Discusses global change not only in terms of climate change, loss of biodiversity and land degradation, but also social, cultural and economic factors • 44 chapters by leading international experts provide an array of detailed studies combining to create an authoritative overview of the Asia-Pacific region • Enables readers to understand how these changes interrelate in a globalized world and their significant implications for sustainable development and poverty reduction • Includes a chapter by Nobel Prize winner Professor Amartya Sen on the impacts of Asian culture and civilization
Contents Notes on Contributors; Peer Reviewers; Editor’s Note; Forewords; Remembering Dr Mostafa K. Tolba; Acronyms and Abbreviations; SI Prefixes; Units Abbreviations; Chemical Formulae; Part I. Sustainable Development: Theories and Practices: 1. Asian Immensities; 2. On Sustainable Development; 3. Sustainability – A Scientific Dilemma; 4. Respect and Reward: Ecology from the Analects of Confucius; 5. Sustainable Development from an East-West Integrative Perspective: Eastern Culture Meets Western Complexity Theory; 6. Sustainable Urbanism: Measuring Long-term Architectural Merit; 7. Sustaining Wooden Architectural Heritage; 8. Green Development in China; 9. Bhutan’s Sustainable Development Initiatives in Pursuit of Gross National Happiness;
10. A Different Form of Sustainable Development in Thailand and Bhutan: Implementation of a Sufficiency Approach; 11. The Sustainability of Food Production in Papua New Guinea; 12. Placemaking Framework for Social Sustainability of Master-planned Communities: A Case Study from Australia; 13. Poverty, Inequity and Environmental Degradation: The Key Issues Confronting the Environment and Development in Asia; 14. The Challenge of Global Climate Change for International Law: An Overview; 15. Sustainable Development and Climate Change Negotiations: Perspectives of Developing Countries’; Part II. Sustainable Development: Challenges and Opportunities: 16. Scientific Responses in an Era of Global Change; 17. Government Communication on Transboundary Haze: The Nexus between Public Health and Tourism; 18. Biomass Energy Prospects: A Promising Fuel for Sustainable Development in Asia and the Pacific; 19. Pathways to a More Sustainable Electricity Sector in India; 20. Gender Equality and Energy Access: Barriers to Maximizing Development Effectiveness in the SAARC Region;
21. The Biosphere and the Interactions between Stratospheric Ozone Depletion and Climate Change; 22. The Political Challenge of Linking Climate Change and Sustainable Development Policies: Risks and Prospects; 23. Social Vulnerability to Climate Change in Cambodia, Lao PDR and Vietnam; 24. Sustainable Development in Bangladesh: Bridging the SDGs and Climate Action; 25. Sustainable Development in Pakistan: Vulnerabilities and Opportunities; 26. Beyond Protected Areas: Biodiversity Conservation and Global Change in Asia and the Pacific; 27. Causes of Land Use Change and Biodiversity Loss in Monsoon; 28. Assessing Linkages between Land Use and Biodiversity: A Case Study from the Eastern Himalayas Using Low-cost, High-return Survey Technology; 29. Where to Invade Next: On Biological Invasions and Sustainable Development in Small Island Developing States (SIDS) of the Tropical South Pacific; 30. Did the Indian Ocean Tsunami Trigger a Shift Towards Disaster Risk Reduction?; 31. Cyclone Nargis and Disaster Risk Management in Myanmar; Index.
Additional Information Departments: July 2021 276 x 219 mm 500pp 200 b/w illus. 978-0-521-89717-4 Hardback c. £120.00 / c. US$155.00
Level: academic researchers, professionals
18
Engineering
Theory and Applications of Colloidal Suspension Rheology Norman J. Wagner University of Delaware
Jan Mewis
KU Leuven, Belgium
Description An essential text on practical application, theory and simulation, written by an international coalition of experts in the field and edited by the authors of Colloidal Suspension Rheology. This up-to-date work builds upon the prior work as a valuable guide to formulation and processing, as well as fundamental rheology of colloidal suspensions. Thematically, theory and simulation are connected to industrial application by consideration of colloidal interactions, particle properties, and suspension microstructure. Important classes of model suspensions including gels, glasses and soft particles are covered so as to develop a deeper understanding of industrial systems ranging from carbon black slurries, paints and coatings, asphalt, cement, and mine tailings, to natural suspensions such as biocolloids, protein solutions, and blood. Systematically presenting the established facts in this multidisciplinary field, this book is the perfect aid for academic researchers, graduate students, and industrial practitioners alike.
Key Features • Written by international experts in the field with broad expertise in colloidal suspension rheology • Brings together approaches to colloid rheology from several disciplines, from experts in the field • Features a new survey of simulation methods in the field
Contents 1. Introduction to colloidal suspension rheology; 2. Theory of colloidal suspension structure, dynamics and rheology; 3. Methods of colloidal simulation; 4. Microstructure under flow; 5. Rheology of colloidal glasses and gels; 6. Suspensions of soft colloidal particles; 7. Biocolloid rheology; 8. Hemorheology; 9. Applications.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students, professionals Series: Cambridge Series in Chemical Engineering February 2021 244 x 170 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-42303-8 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00
Engineering
19
Reconfigurable Circuits and Technologies for Smart Millimeter-Wave Systems Edited by Philippe Ferrari Université de Grenoble
Rolf Jakoby
Technische Universität, Darmstadt, Germany
Onur Hamza Karabey
ALCAN Systems GmbH, Germany
Gustavo Rehder
Escola Politécnica da Universidade de São Paulo
and Holger Maune
Technische Universität, Darmstadt, Germany
Description Get up to speed on the modelling, design, technologies, and applications of tunable circuits and reconfigurable mm-wave systems. Coverage includes smart antennas and frequency-agile RF components, as well as a detailed comparison of three key technologies for the design of tunable mm-wave circuits: CMOS, RF MEMS, and microwave liquid crystals, and measurement results of state-ofthe-art prototypes. Numerous examples of tunable circuits and systems are included that can be practically implemented for the reader’s own needs. Ideal for graduate students studying RF/microwave engineering, and researchers and engineers involved in circuit and system design for new communication platforms such as mm-wave 5G and beyond, high-throughput satellites in GSO, and future satellite constellations in MEO/LEO, as well as for automotive radars, security and biomedical mm-wave systems.
Key Features • The first book to focus on reconfigurable millimeter-wave circuits and systems and the technologies that can develop these circuits • Gives an analysis of key performance parameters and new approaches • Provides practical examples, potential applications and design challenges that can be implemented for the reader’s own needs.
Contents Preface; List of abbreviations; 1. Introduction and Motivation; 2. Reconfigurable Devices and Smart Antennas; 3. CMOS and BiCMOS technologies; 4. RF MEMS Technology; 5. Microwave Liquid Crystal Technology.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, professionals Series: EuMA High Frequency Technologies Series April 2021 247 x 174 mm 300pp 978-1-107-10247-7 Hardback £110.00 / US$140.00
20
Engineering
Duct Acoustics Fundamentals and Applications to Mufflers and Silencers
Erkan Dokumacı Dokuz Eylül University
Description Using a hands-on approach, this self-contained toolkit covers topics ranging from the foundations of duct acoustics to the acoustic design of these devices, through practical modelling, optimization and measurement techniques. Discover in-depth analyses of one- and three-dimensional models of sound generation, propagation and radiation, as techniques for assembling acoustic models of duct systems from simpler components are described. Identify weaknesses of mathematical models in use and improve them by measurement when needed. Cope with challenges in acoustic design, with in-depth understanding of the underlying physics, by using the tools described. An essential reference for engineers and researchers who work on the acoustics of fluid machinery ductworks.
Key Features • Covers systems ranging in size from toy engines to power generation plants • Presents the subject matter in a clear manner, separated into structured sections • Provides frequent reference to applications
Contents Preface; 1. Some preliminaries; 2. Introduction to acoustic block diagrams; 3. Transmission of low frequency sound waves in ducts; 4. Transmission of one-dimensional waves in coupled ducts; 5. Resonators, expansion chambers and silencers; 6. Multi-modal sound propagation in ducts; 7. Transmission of wave modes in coupled ducts; 8. Effects of viscosity and thermal conductity; 9. Reflection and radiation at open duct terminations; 10. Modeling of ducted acoustic sources; 11. Radiated sound pressure prediction; 12. Measurement methods; 13. System search and optimization; Appendix a: basic equations of fluid motion; Appendix b: acoustic properties of rigid-frame fibrous materials; References; Appendix c: impedance of compact apertures; Index.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, professionals, graduate students April 2021 244 x 170 mm c.550pp 978-1-108-84075-0 Hardback £155.00 / US$200.00
English, European and Running WorldHead Literature Right
2121
Caribbean Literature in Transition, 1970–2020 Volume 3
Ronald Cummings Brock University, Ontario
Alison Donnell
University of East Anglia
Description The period from the 1970s to the present day has produced an extraordinarily rich and diverse body of Caribbean writing that has been widely acclaimed. Caribbean Literature in Transition, 1970-2020 traces the region’s contemporary writings across the established genres of prose, poetry, fiction and drama into emerging areas of creative non-fiction, memoir and speculative fiction with a particular attention on challenging the narrow canon of Anglophone male writers. It maps shifts and continuities between late twentieth century and early twenty-first century Caribbean literature in terms of innovations in literary form and style, the changing role and place of the writer, and shifts in our understandings of what constitutes the political terrain of the literary and its sites of struggle. Whilst reaching across language divides and multiple diasporas, it shows how contemporary Caribbean Literature has focused its attentions on social complexity and ongoing marginalizations in its continued preoccupations with identity, belonging and freedoms.
Key Features • Extends the familiar range of Caribbean writers and works to provide a much more comprehensive account of the contemporary period • Develops the connections between Anglophone Caribbean literature and Francophone and Hispanophone authors and texts • Revisits key moments in Caribbean literary history to look at them from new perspectives
Contents Introduction: Caribbean Assemblages: 1970s-2020; Part I. Literary and Generic Transitions: 1. Writing and the Responsibility to Memory: The Role of White Female Planters in Contemporary Caribbean Novels; 2. Caribbean Identities and Diversifying the Creole Mix; 3. Carnival, Calypso, and Dancehall Cultures: Making the Popular Political in Contemporary Caribbean Writing; 4. Life Writing, Gender and Caribbean Narrative 1970-2015: Itinerant Self-Making in the Postcolonial Caribbean; 5. Forwarding Dubpoetry in This Generation: A Grassroots Performance and Neo-Literary Genre in Transition; 6. Postcolonial Ruins, Reconstructive Poetics: Caribbean Urban Imaginaries; 7. Reimagining Caribbean Time and Space: Speculative Fiction; 8. Drama and Performance; 9. Here Are The Others: Caribbean Creative Nonfiction; 10. ‘Let every child run wild’: Cultural Identity and the Role of the Child in Caribbean Children’s and Young Adult Fiction; Part II. Cultural and Political Transitions: 11. Caribbean Feminist Criticism: Towards a New Canon of Caribbean Feminist Theory and Theorizing; 12. Writing of and for a Revolution; 12. Digital Yards: Caribbean Writing on Social Media and Other Digital Platforms; 13. Developing and Sustaining Literary Publics: Prizes, Festivals, and New Writing; Part III. The Caribbean Region in Transition: 14. The Caribbean and Britain; 15. Acts of Trespass and Collapsing Borders: Alternate Landscapes in Contemporary Caribbean-Canadian Literature; 16. The Caribbean and the United States; 17. The Caribbean and the Tourist Gaze; 18. Caribbean Subjects in the World; Part IV. Critical Transitions: 19. Visuality in Caribbean Literature and Visual Culture; 20. From Counter-Textuality to Intertextuality: Continuing the Caribbean Canon; 21. Caribbean Eco-Poetics: The Categorial Imperative and Indifference in the Caribbean Environment; 22. Sexual Subjects; 23. Caribbean Literature and Literary Studies: Past, Present, and Future; Bibliography; Index.
Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Caribbean Literature in Transition December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-47400-9 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00 978-1-108-46327-0 Paperback TBA / TBA
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RunningEuropean English, Head Leftand World Literature
Caribbean Literature in Transition, 1800–1920 Volume 1
Edited by Evelyn O’Callaghan University of the West Indies
and Tim Watson University of Miami
Description This volume examines what Caribbean literature looked like before 1920 by surveying the print culture of the period. The emphasis is on narrative, including an enormous range of genres, in varying venues, and in multiple languages of the Caribbean. Essays examine lesser-known authors and writing previously marginalized as nonliterary: popular writing in newspapers and pamphlets; fiction and poetry such as romances, sentimental novels, and ballads; non-elite memoirs and letters, such as the narratives of the enslaved or the working classes, especially women. Many contributions are comparative, multilingual, and regional. Some infer the cultural presence of subaltern groups within the texts of the dominant classes. Almost all of the chapters move easily between time periods, linking texts, writers, and literary movements in ways that expand traditional notions of literary influence and canon formation. Using literary, cultural, and historical analyses, this book provides a complete re-examination of early Caribbean literature.
Key Features • Proposes a complete re-examination of early Caribbean literature • Employs a fluid temporal frame, despite concentration on specific historical period in formation of ‘Caribbean literature’ • Includes unknown/overlooked authors and writing previously considered ‘non-literary’.
Contents Introduction; Part I. Literary and Generic Transitions: 1. Conquest Narratives; 2. Creole Testimonies in Caribbean Women’s Slave Narratives; 3. Jonkanoo Performances of Resistance, Freedom, and Memory; 4. Caribbean Picturesque from William Beckford to Contemporary Tourism; 5. From Novels of the Caribbean, to Caribbean Novels; 6. Early Caribbean Poetry and the Modern Reader; 7. Towards a West Indian Romance Poetics; Part II. Cultural and Political Transitions: 8. John Jacob Thomas and the Grammar of Freedom; 9. How Barbados Transformed Radical British Author Eliza Fenwick into a Reactionary; 10. Mary Seacole’s Travels and Tales; 11. Genealogy and Nonhistory in Adolphus, A Tale; 12. Obeah, Religion, and Nineteenth-Century Literature of the Anglophone Caribbean; Part III. The Caribbean Region In Transition:
Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Caribbean Literature in Transition December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-47588-4 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00 978-1-108-46920-3 Paperback TBA / TBA
13. Antillean Sovereignty in Pan-Caribbean Writing 14. Caribbean Literature as Diasporic Archive; 15. The Representation of the Caribbean in Nineteenth-Century African American Newspapers; 16. The Impact of the American Civil War on Political Writing in Jamaica and Cuba; 17. South Asian Migration and Settlement Stories, 1800–1920; 18. Francophone-Anglophone Connections in the Nineteenth-Century Caribbean; 19. Cuban Literature before 1920: Antislavery, Historiography, Women’s Writing, and the Nation; 20. José Martí, José Rizal, and their Speculative Extended Caribbean; 21. Translating the Revolution from Haiti to Louisiana; Part IV. Critical Transitions: 22. Creative Rewritings of Early Caribbean Texts; 23. Digital Restaging of Early Caribbean Texts; 24. Lost Mothers in the Caribbean Plantation and Contemporary Black Maternal and Infant Mortality; 25. Reading the Colonial Archive through Joscelyn Gardner’s Creole Portraits I–III.
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Caribbean Literature in Transition, 1920–1970 Volume 2
Edited by Raphael Dalleo Bucknell University, Pennsylvania
and Curdella Forbes
Howard University, Washington DC
Description The years between the 1920s and 1970s are key for the development of Caribbean literature, producing the founding canonical literary texts of the Anglophone Caribbean. This volume features essays by major scholars as well as emerging voices revisiting important moments from that era to open up new perspectives. Caribbean contributions to the Harlem Renaissance, to the Windrush generation publishing in England after World War II, and to the regional reverberations of the Cuban Revolution all feature prominently in this story. At the same time, we uncover lesser known stories of writers publishing in regional newspapers and journals, of pioneering women writers, and of exchanges with Canada and the African continent. From major writers like Derek Walcott, V.S. Naipaul, George Lamming, and Jean Rhys to recently recuperated figures like Eric Walrond, Una Marson, Sylvia Wynter, and Ismith Khan, this volume sets a course for the future study of Caribbean literature.
Key Features • Covers crucial years in the development of Caribbean literature (the 1920s to 1970s) • Revisits key moments in Caribbean literary history to look at them from new perspectives • Includes major scholars in the field as well as emerging voices
Contents Introduction; Part I. Literary and Generic Transitions: 1. Writing at the end of empire; 2. Questioning Modernism: the 1950s—1960s; 4. Towards a national theatre; 5. Orature, performance, and the oral-scribal interface; 6. Explorations of the self; Part II. Cultural and Political Transitions: 7. Debating language; 8. Periodical culture;
9. Decolonizing education: literature, the school system, and the imperatives of political independence; 10. Imaginaries of citizenship and the state; 11. Postcolonial stirrings: the crisis of nationalism; Part III. The Caribbean Region in Transition: 12. A moving centre: the Caribbean in Britain; 13. Canadian routes; 14. New empires: the Caribbean and the United States; 15. Africa and the Caribbean: recrossing the Atlantic;
Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers Series: Caribbean Literature in Transition December 2020 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-49552-3 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00 978-1-108-81867-4 Paperback TBA / TBA
16. Cross-Caribbean dialogues I: Hispanophone; 17. Cross-Caribbean dialogues II: Francophone; Part IV. Critical Transitions: 18. Forging the critical canon; 19. Forgotten trailblazers; 20. Recuperating women writers; 21. Rhizomatic genealogies: Jean Rhys as literary foremother; 22. Writing Indo-Caribbean masculinity; 23. Writing and reading sex and sexuality.
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RunningEuropean English, Head Leftand World Literature
Seamus Heaney in Context Geraldine Higgins
Emory University, Atlanta
Description Few poets have captured the imagination of the world like Seamus Heaney. Recognized as one of the truly outstanding poets of our time, Heaney’s work is both critically acclaimed and popular with the general reader. It is taught in classrooms across the globe and has been translated into more than twenty-seven languages. Presenting original research from an international field of scholars, Seamus Heaney in Context offers new pathways to explore the places, times and influences that made Heaney a poet. Drawing on newly available archival and print sources, these essays situate Heaney in a multitude of contexts that help readers navigate received ideas about his life and work. In mapping intersecting themes in the current terrain of Heaney criticism, this study also signposts new directions for understanding Heaney’s poetry in future contexts.
Key Features • Offers depth and context to the key developments in Heaney’s work • Reconsideration of the places, times and influences that made Seamus Heaney a poet that made Seamus Heaney a poet • Essays are jargon-free, making it suitable for students, scholars, and the general reader
Contents Introduction; Part I. Mapping: 1. Scotland; 2. England; 3. Eastern Europe; 4. America; Part II. Influences and Traditions: 5. Wordsworth and romanticism; 6. Thomas Hardy; 7. W. B. Yeats; 8. T. S. Eliot; 9. Louis MacNeice; Part III. Poetics: 10. Lyric form;
11. Proper nouns; 12. Language; 13. Elegy; 14. Music; Part IV. Publishing: 15. The Belfast group; 16. In print; 17. Field day; 18. Translation; Part V. Frameworks: 19. Catholicism; 20. Classical roots; 21. Politics; 22. Education;
Additional Information Level: undergraduate students, graduate students February 2021 229 x 152 mm 350pp 978-1-107-18014-7 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00 978-1-316-63201-7 Paperback TBA / TBA
23. War and peace; Part VI. Critical Contexts: 24. The feminine; 25. The third phase; 26. Critical audiences; 27. The postcolonial; 28. The Archipelago; Part VII. Legacy: 29. In public; 30. Exhibiting Heaney; 31. The archive; 32. Legacy.
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The Cambridge History of the Novel in French Edited by Adam Watt University of Exeter
Description This History is the first in a century to trace the development and impact of the novel in French from its beginnings to the present. Leading specialists explore how novelists writing in French have responded to the diverse personal, economic, socio-political, cultural-artistic and environmental factors that shaped their worlds. From the novel’s medieval precursors to the impact of the internet, the History provides fresh accounts of canonical and lesser-known authors, offering a global perspective beyond the national borders of ‘the Hexagon’ to explore France’s colonial past and its legacies. Accessible chapters range widely, including the French novel in Sub-Saharan Africa, data analysis of the novel system in the seventeenth century, social critique in women’s writing, Sade’s banned works and more. Highlighting continuities and divergence between and within different periods, this lively volume offers routes through a diverse literary landscape while encouraging comparison and connection-making between writers, works and historical periods.
Key Features • First wide-ranging history of the novel in French for 100 years • Chronological chapters are cross-referenced throughout to enable understanding of continuities and divergence between different periods • Offers a global, comparative perspective – including chapters on the French novel in Canada, the Caribbean, North and subSaharan Africa
Contents 1. Editor’s Introduction; Part I. Beginnings: From the Late Medieval to Mme de Lafayette: 2. Late-Medieval Precursors to the Novel: ‘Aucune Chose de Nouvel’; 3. Cultural Transmission and the Early French Novel; 4. The Rise of the Novel in Sixteenth-Century France?; 5. The Evolution of the Novel System in the Long Seventeenth Century; 6. Seventeenth-Century French Women Writers and the Novel: A Challenge to Literary History; 7. Madame de Lafayette and la Princesse de Clèves as Landmark; Part II. The Eighteenth Century: Learning, Letters, Libertinage: 8. The Early French Novel and the Circum-Atlantic; 9. Anglo-French Relations and the Novel in the Eighteenth Century; 10. The Fiction of Diderot and Rousseau; 11. The Memoir Novel; 12. Epistolary Fiction: The Novel in the Postal Age; 13. The Libertine Novel;
14. Sade and the Novel; Part III. After the Revolution: The Novel in the Long Nineteenth Century: 15. Post-Revolutionary Novels; 16. Private Pain and the Public Temper: The Personal Novel and Beyond; 17. Between Romance and Social Critique: Staël and Women Writers of the Early Nineteenth Century; 18. French Realism and History; 19. Law and the Nineteenth-Century Novel; 20. Colonial Encounters in the Nineteenth-Century Novel; 21. French-Canadian Novels from the Nineteenth into the Twentieth Century; 22. Gender and the Novel from Sand to Colette; Part IV. From Naturalism to the Nouveau Roman: 23. The Republic of Novels: Politics and Late Nineteenth-Century French Fiction; 24. Medicine, Sex and the Novel; Maupassant; Rachilde; 25. The Roman-Fleuve;
Additional Information Level: Graduate Students, academic researchers February 2021 228 x 152 mm c.750pp 978-1-108-49707-7 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 978-1-108-73947-4 Paperback TBA / TBA
26. Marcel Proust’s A la Recherche du Temps Perdu; 27. The Novel in France between the Wars; 28. Existentialism and the Novel; 29. Suspicion and Novelty: The Nouveau Roman; 30. The Holocaust and the Novel in French; Part V. Fictions of the Fifth Republic: from de Gaulle to the Internet Age: 31. Oulipo, Experiment and the Novel; 32. Theories of the Novel; 33. The Caribbean Novel in French 1958–2016; 34. The North African Novel in French; 35. Sub-Saharan Africa and the Novel in French; 36. The Translingual Novel in French; 37. Literary Prizes; 38. Autofiction: Writing Lives; 39. Trends in the Novel in French after 2000; 40. Contemporary Women’s Writing in French; 41. The Novel in French and the Internet; Chronology; Further Reading; Index.
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RunningEuropean English, Head Leftand World Literature
Ibsen in Context Narve Fulsås
University of Tromso, Norway
Tore Rem
Universitetet i Oslo
Description Henrik Ibsen, the ‘Father of Modern Drama’, came from a seemingly inauspicious background. What are the key contexts for understanding his appearance on the world stage? This collection provides thirty contributions from leading scholars in theatre studies, literary studies, book history, philosophy, music, and history, offering a rich interdisciplinary understanding of Ibsen’s work, with chapters ranging across cultural and aesthetic contexts including feminism, scientific discovery, genre, publishing, music, and the visual arts. The book ends by charting Ibsen’s ongoing globalization and gives valuable overviews of major trends within Ibsen studies. Accessibly written, while drawing on the most recent scholarship, Ibsen in Context provides unique access to Ibsen the man, his works, and their afterlives across the world.
Key Features • Short essays on key topics within Ibsen Studies provide students and scholars with an easily digestible reference work • Offers readers access to fresh contributions to Ibsen studies, including a unique amount of material on the playwright’s Scandinavian contexts and some of his most important foreign receptions • Takes an interdisciplinary approach, with contributions from literary scholars, historians, and philosophers
Contents Preface; Acknowledgements; Note on the text; Chronology; Part I. Life and Career: 1. Early years in Norway; 2. From theatre to book; 3. Bourgeois drama; Part II. Culture and Society: 4. Genres; 5. Realism; 6. Theatre; 7. Visual arts; 8. Music;
9. Philosophy; 10. Science; 11. Feminism; 12. Capitalism; Part III. Scandinavian Reception: 13. The Ibsen book; 14. Publishing and readerships; 15. Criticism; 16. Celebrity; Part IV. Internationalization: 17. Copyright; 18. Censorship; 19. German reception; 20. British reception;
Additional Information Level: Undergraduate Students, graduate students, academic researchers Series: Literature in Context May 2021 229 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-42220-8 Hardback c. £85.00 / c. US$110.00 978-1-108-43473-7 Paperback TBA / TBA
21. French reception; 22. Parodies; 23. Early globalization; Part V. Afterlives: 24. Biography; 25. Academic responses; 26. American Ibsens; 27. Japanese Ibsens; 28. Chinese Ibsens; 29. Indian Ibsens; 30. Mass media and popular reception; Further reading; Index.
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Tom Stoppard in Context David Kornhaber
University of Texas, Austin
James N. Loehlin
University of Texas, Austin
Description Tom Stoppard’s work as a playwright and screenwriter has always been notable for mixing ideas with entertainment. From the early success of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead to masterpieces like Arcadia, from radio plays about modern art to the Oscarwinning screenplay for Shakespeare in Love, Stoppard has challenged and delighted audiences with the intellectual and cultural richness of his writing. Tom Stoppard in Context provides multiple perspectives on both the life and works of one of the most important modern playwrights. This collection covers biographical and historical topics, as well as the broad array of intellectual, aesthetic, and political concerns with which Stoppard has engaged. More than thirty essays on subjects ranging from science to screenwriting help illuminate Stoppard’s rich body of work.
Key Features • Over thirty essays covering Stoppard’s interests and influences give readers context for understanding his life and career • Includes a substantial section on Stoppard’s political commitments and human rights work • Highlights the range of Stoppard’s career in screenwriting, radio, television, journalism, and fiction
Contents Part I. Origins: 1. Name, Family, and Identity; 2. Czechoslovakia; 3. Singapore and India; 4. England; Part II. Influences: 5. William Shakespeare; 6. Russian Literature and Culture; 7. Oscar Wilde; 8. Samuel Beckett; 9. Václav Havel; Part III. Ideas: 10. Philosophy;
11. Science; 12. Mathematics; 13. History and Biography; 14. Love and Sexuality; Part IV. Aesthetics: 15. Art and Aesthetics; 16. Classicism and Romanticism; 17. Modernism and the Avant-Garde; 18. Music; Part V. Politics: 19. Ideology; 20. Communism; 21. The Cold War;
Additional Information Level: Undergraduate Students, graduate students Series: Literature in Context June 2021 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-42010-5 Hardback c. £85.00 / c. US$110.00 978-1-108-41304-6 Paperback TBA / TBA
22. Human Rights and Censorship; 23. Empire, Colonialism, and Post-Colonialism; Part VI. Page, Stage, and Screen: 24. Postwar British Theatre; 25. Acting in Stoppard; 26. Adaptations; 27. Journalism and Criticism; 28. Prose Writings; 29. Radio and Television; 30. Screenwriting; 31. Stoppard’s Archives.
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The Optical Papers of Isaac Newton Isaac Newton Alan E. Shapiro
University of Minnesota
Description This complete edition of Newton’s optical papers contains two volumes: the first details his Optical Lectures, delivered at Cambridge University between 1670 and 1672, while the second documents the evolution of the Opticks, the most influential optical and experimental work of the eighteenth century. The Lectures is Newton’s first major scientific treatise, and represents a crucial link between his early years of discovery and his mature publications. The complete text of both surviving versions of the Lectures, an early version and a vastly expanded revision, is included here, together with translation and commentary. The second volume opens with the first edition of the Opticks (1704) and the first draft in Latin. The manuscripts of the queries that Newton added to the Latin translation in 1706 and the second English edition (1717) follow this, accompanied by shorter manuscripts, copious notes and commentary. This is an essential resource for the study of Newtonian science.
Key Features • An essential resource for historians and philosophers of science • Shows the development of Newton’s work and ideas through drafts, later additions and variants • Critical edition including copious notes and commentary
Contents Volume 1: Introduction; Synopsis of the Lectiones opticae and Optica and their major differences; Concordance of article numbers; Lectiones opitcae: Optica: Part I. The Refractions of Light Rays: 1. The refrangibility of rays differs; 2. The measure of refractions; 3. The refractions of planes; 4. The refractions of curved surfaces; Part II. The Origin of Colors: 5. The doctrine of colors is set forth and proved by prismatic experiments; 6. Various phenomena of colors;
Bibliography; Index; Volume 2: 1. Introduction; 2. First edition of the Opticks; 3. Fundamentum Opticae (The Foundation of Optics); 4. Additions to Optice; 5. Queries 17–31 for the second English edition of the Opticks (1717); Bibliography; Index.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers Series: Optical Papers of Isaac Newton February 2021 253 x 177 mm c.1080pp 978-1-108-95422-8 2 Volume Hardback Set c. £250.00 / c. US$327.50
Running HeadHistory Right
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Performing the Gospels in Byzantium Sight, Sound, and Space in the Divine Liturgy
Roland Betancourt
University of California, Irvine
Description Tracing the Gospel text from script to illustration to recitation, this study looks at how illuminated manuscripts operated within ritual and architecture. Focusing on a group of richly illuminated lectionaries from the late eleventh century, the book articulates how the process of textual recitation produced marginalia and miniatures that reflected and subverted the manner in which the Gospel was read and simultaneously imagined by readers and listeners alike. This unique approach to manuscript illumination points to images that slowly unfolded in the mind of its listeners as they imagined the text being recited, as meaning carefully changed and built as the text proceeded. By examining this process within specific acoustic architectural spaces and the sonic conditions of medieval chant, the volume brings together the concerns of sound studies, liturgical studies, and art history to demonstrate how images, texts, and recitations played with the environment of the Middle Byzantine church.
Key Features • Provides a multi-sensory approach to the study of manuscript illumination • Shows how Byzantine artists worked between text, its sonic recitation, and the space of its recitation to produce the illustrations accompanying the text in manuscripts • Lavishly illustrated in full colour
Contents Introduction; Part I. The Lectionary: Image and Text: 1. Beginnings and Initials: Text, Image, and Sound; 2. Miniatures and Marginalia: A Visual Grammar and Syntax; 3. Faltering Images: Iconography between Reading, Error, and Confusion; Part II. The Liturgy: Sound and Architecture: 4. The Reading of the Lectionary: Recitation, Inspiration, and Embodiment; 5. The Sound of the Lectionary: Chant, Architecture, and Salvation; 6. Polyvalent Images: Iconography between Image, Space, and Sound; Epilogue.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students March 2021 244 x 170 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-49139-6 Hardback £99.99 / US$130.00 978-1-108-81203-0 Paperback TBA / TBA
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Running Head Left History
The Cambridge History of the Kurds Edited by Hamit Bozarslan
Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris
Cengiz Gunes
The Open University, Milton Keynes
and Veli Yadirgi
School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London
Description The Cambridge History of the Kurds is an authoritative and comprehensive volume exploring the social, political and economic features, forces and evolution amongst the Kurds, and in the region known as Kurdistan, from the fifteenth to the twenty-first century. Written in a clear and accessible style by leading scholars in the field, the chapters survey key issues and themes vital to any understanding of the Kurds and Kurdistan including Kurdish language; Kurdish art, culture and literature; Kurdistan in the age of empires; political, social and religious movements in Kurdistan; and domestic political developments in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Other chapters on gender, diaspora, political economy, tribes, cinema and folklore offer fresh perspectives on the Kurds and Kurdistan as well as neatly meeting an exigent need in Middle Eastern studies. Situating contemporary developments taking place in Kurdish-majority regions within broader histories of the region, it forms a definitive survey of the history of the Kurds and Kurdistan.
Key Features • The definitive volume on Kurdistan and the Kurds from the fifteenth to the twenty-first century written by leading scholars in the field • Covers key issues and themes including Kurdish language, art and culture, and political, social and religious movements in Kurdistan, alongside chapters on gender, diaspora, political economy, tribes, and folklore • Represents a foundational text for readers and scholar interested in Middle Eastern societies
Contents Introduction: The Kurds and the Kurdish Question in the Middle East; Part I. Historical Legacies: Part II. Regional Political Developments and the Kurds in the 20th and 21st Centuries: Part III. Domestic Political Developments and the Kurds in the 20th and 21st Centuries:
Additional Information Level: undergraduate students, graduate students April 2021 228 x 152 mm c.600pp 978-1-108-47335-4 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 978-1-108-46142-9 Paperback TBA / TBA
Part IV. Religion and Society: Part V. Kurdish Language: Part VI. Art, Culture and Literature Part VII. Transversal Dynamics:
Running HeadHistory Right
The Cambridge World History of Slavery Volume 2: AD 500–AD 1420
Edited by Keith Bradley
University of Notre Dame, Indiana
Paul Cartledge
University of Cambridge
David Eltis
Emory University, Atlanta
and Stanley Engerman
University of Rochester, New York Series: The Cambridge World History of Slavery June 2021 978-0-521-84067-5 Hardback TBA / TBA
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Running Head Left Law
International Law Reports Volume 191
Edited by Christopher Greenwood and Karen Lee 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 191 is devoted to the 2020 Award concerning Preliminary Objections of Russian Federation in the Dispute Concerning Coastal State Rights in the Black Sea, Sea of Azov, and Kerch Strait, the 2020 judgment of the Canadian Supreme Court in Nevsun Resources Ltd v. Araya and Others and the 2020 judgment of the English Court of Appeal in Mahmoud v. Breish.
Key Features • Contains 2020 Award concerning Preliminary Objections of Russian Federation in the Dispute Concerning Coastal State Rights in the Black Sea, Sea of Azov, and Kerch Strait. • Contains 2020 judgment of the Canadian Supreme Court in Nevsun Resources Ltd v. Araya and Others. • Contains 2020 judgment of the English Court of Appeal in Mahmoud v. Breish
Contents 1. Dispute Concerning Coastal State Rights in the Black Sea, Sea of Azov, and Kerch Strait (Ukraine v. the Russian Federation); 2. Certain Criminal Proceedings in France (Republic of the Congo v. France); 3. Immunities and Criminal Proceedings (Equatorial Guinea v. France); 4. Nganyi and Others v. United Republic of Tanzania; 5. Organisation juive européenne, Vignoble Psagot Ltd v Ministre de l’Économie et des Finances; 6. Osmanoğlu and Kocabaş v. Switzerland; 7. Nevsun Resources Ltd v. Araya; 8. C and Others v Director of Immigration and Another; 9. R (Al Rabbat) v Westminster Magistrates’ Court and Others; 10. MM v NA (Declaration as to Marital Status); 11. Mahmoud v Breish and Mohamed Hussein.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: International Law Reports, 191 January 2021 219 x 146 mm c.800pp 4 colour illus. 978-1-108-49543-1 Hardback c. £170.00 / c. US$220.00
Running Head Right Law
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International Law and Peace Settlements Edited by Marc Weller University of Cambridge
Mark Retter
University of Cambridge
and Andrea Varga University of Cambridge
Description International Law and Peace Settlements provides a systematic and comprehensive assessment of the relationship between international law and peace settlement practice across core settlement issues, e.g. transitional justice, human rights, refugees, selfdetermination, power-sharing, and wealth-sharing. The contributions address key crosscutting questions on the legal status of peace agreements, the potential for developing international law, and the role of key actors – such as non-state armed groups, third-state witnesses and guarantors, and the UN Security Council – in the legalisation and internationalisation of settlement commitments. In recent years, significant scholarly work has examined facets of the relationship between international law and peace settlements, through concepts such as jus post bellum and lex pacificatoria. International Law and Peace Settlements drives forward the debate on the legalisation and internationalisation of peace agreements with diverse contributions from leading academics and practitioners in international law and conflict resolution.
Key Features • Addresses key cross-cutting questions concerning the relationship between international law and peace settlement practice • Provides inter-disciplinary perspectives on the relationship between international law and peace settlements and the role of legal tools in settlement practice • A useful reference for practitioners in conflict settlement, whether as negotiators, mediators or legal advisers
Contents 1. Framing the relationship between international law and peace settlements; Part I. Historical Dimensions to Peace Settlement Practice: Part II. Peace Agreements as Legal Instruments: Part III. Key Actors and the Role of International Law: Part IV. Representation, Sovereignty and Governance: Part V. Economic Aspects of Peace Settlements:
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students January 2021 253 x 177 mm c.1120pp 978-1-108-49804-3 Hardback £225.00 / US$295.00
Part VI. Humanitarian Obligations and Human Rights:
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Running Head Left Law
The Cambridge Handbook of Class Actions An International Survey
Edited by Brian T. Fitzpatrick Vanderbilt University School of Law
and Randall S. Thomas
Vanderbilt University School of Law
Description Economic activity is more globally integrated than ever before, but so is the scope of corporate misconduct. As more and more people across the world are affected by such malfeasance, the differences in legal redress have become increasingly visible. This transparency has resulted in a growing convergence towards an American model of robust private enforcement of the law, including the class-action lawsuit. This handbook brings together scholars from nearly two dozen countries to describe and assess the class-action procedure (or its equivalent) in their respective countries and, where possible, to offer empirical data on these systems. At the same time, the work presents a variety of multidisciplinary perspectives on class actions, from economics to philosophy, making this handbook an essential resource to academics, lawyers, and policymakers alike.
Key Features • The first scholarly work to gather and consolidate data on aggregate litigation from across the globe • Covers the most active class action jurisdictions, as well as those with unique features, such as the constitutional guarantee in South Africa and the use of arbitration in Brazil • Discusses who can initiate the class action procedure, in what kinds of cases, and for what types of relief
Contents 1. The U.S. Class Action from a Utilitarian Perspective: Balancing Social Benefits and Social Costs; 2. Civil Rights, Access to Counsel, and Injunctive Class Actions in the United States; 3. Class Action Nuisance Suits: Evidence from Frequent Filer Shareholder Plaintiffs; 4. The Future of Aggregate Litigation in the United States; 5. Mandatory Arbitration of Intra-Corporate Disputes in Brazil: A Beacon of Light for Shareholder Litigation?; 6. Cold Facts from the Great White North: Empirical Truths, Contemporary Challenges and Class Action Reform; 7. Class Action in Brazil: Overview, Current Trends and Case Studies; 8. English Systems of Multi-Party Litigation; 9. Class Actions in Switzerland; 10. Class Actions in Belgium; 11. The New Italian Regulation on Class Actions; 12. Collective Litigation in German Civil Procedure;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students, professionals Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks February 2021 253 x 177 mm c.450pp 978-1-108-48858-7 Hardback £160.00 / US$210.00
13. Class Action à la Française; 14. The Solid Dutch Mechanisms for Collective Settlement; 15. The Emergence and Reform of the New Zealand Class Action; 16. Representative Proceedings in Singapore: Is the Time Ripe for Reform?; 17. Class Action in China: Challenges and Opportunities; 18. Class Actions in Australia; 19. Empirical and Practical Perspectives on 27 Years of Product Liability Class Actions in Australia; 20. Securities Class Actions in Korea; 21. A Review of the Current Status of, and Future Issues Facing, Consumer Class Action Systems in Japan; 22. The Indian Securities Fraud Class Action: Is Class Arbitration the Answer?; 23. Class Actions in South Africa: A Need for Certainty; 24. Class Actions and the Regulatory State – Lessons from Israel; 25. The Israeli Public Class Action Fund: New Approach for Intergrating Business and Social Responsibility.
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Fundamental Rights in the EU Area of Freedom, Security and Justice Edited by Sara Iglesias
Court of Justice of the European Union
and Maribel Pascual
Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona March 2021 978-1-108-48813-6 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00
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The WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement A Detailed Commentary
Philippe De Baere Van Bael & Bellis
Clotilde du Parc Van Bael & Bellis
Isabelle Van Damme Van Bael & Bellis
Description A unique article-by-article commentary on the WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement, offering an essential and comprehensive insight into WTO case-law. This commentary is an indispensable reference tool for government officials, practitioners and academics working on anti-dumping issues. The commentary’s structure allows the reader to identify immediately which disputes are relevant for the interpretation of each provision. It offers a clear analysis of the applicable rules and a comprehensive explanation of what, as a result of the WTO case-law, those rules mean. This commentary has been written by practitioners who have all been directly involved in a large number of WTO disputes and who have extensive experience in anti-dumping investigations and in challenging anti-dumping determinations before the WTO and before national courts.
Key Features • A comprehensive and up-to-date commentary on the WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement, written by practitioners and scholars • Offers an easily accessible tool for understanding the operation and interpretation of the WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement • Takes into account the actual practice of anti-dumping investigations and offers valuable practical insights into how anti-dumping determinations can be successfully challenged before the WTO
Contents Part I. Introduction; Part II. Article 1 – Principles; Part III. Article 2 – Determination of Dumping; Part IV. Article 3 – Determination of Injury; Part V. Article 4 – Definition of Domestic Industry; Part VI. Article 5- – Initiation and Subsequent Investigation; Part VII. Article 6 – Evidence;
Part VIII. Article 7 – Provisional Measures; Part IX. Article 8 – Price Undertakings; Part X. Article 9 – Imposition and Collection of Anti-Dumping Duties; Part XI. Article 10 – Retroactivity; Part XII. Article 11 – Duration and Review of Anti-Dumping Duties and Price Undertakings; Part XIII. Article 12 – Public Notice and Explanation of Determinations;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, legal practitioners March 2021 228 x 152 mm c.500pp 978-1-108-42351-9 Hardback c. £175.00 / c. US$220.00
Part XIV. Article 13 – Judicial Review; Part XV. Article 14 – Anti-Dumping Action on Behalf of a Third Country; Part XVI. Article 15 – Developing Country Members; Part XVII. Article 16 – Committee on Anti-Dumping Practices; Part XVIII. Article 17 – Consultation and Dispute Settlement; Part XIX. Article 18 – Final Provisions.
Running Head Right Law
International Law Reports Volume 192
Edited by Christopher Greenwood and Karen Lee 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 192 is devoted to Islamic Republic of Iran v. United States of America, Legal Consequences of the Separation of the Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius in 1965, Sub-Regional Fisheries Commission (SRFC), PSPP Case, Re Review of Constitutionality of Article 1244 Civil Code and Article 212 Criminal Code of Russian Federation, Re Review of Constitutionality of Provisions of Articles 31.7 and 31.9 of the Code of Administrative Offences of Russian Federation, R (RF) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, R (Bancoult) v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, A local authority v. AG
Key Features • Contains 2020 German Federal Constitutional Court judgment in Public Sector Purchase Programme Case. • Contains 2019 International Court of Justice Advisory Opinion in Separation of the Chagos Case. • Contains 2018 United Kingdom Supreme Court judgment in Bancoult (No 3).
Contents 1. Alleged Violations of the 1955 Treaty of Amity, Economic Relations, and Consular Rights (Islamic Republic of Iran v. United States of America); 2. Legal Consequences of the Separation of the Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius in 1965 (Advisory Opinion); 3. Request for an Advisory Opinion submitted by the Sub-Regional Fisheries Commission (SRFC); 4. Public Sector Purchase Programme (PSPP) Case; 5. Re Review of Constitutionality of Article 1244(3) of the Civil Code of the Russian Federation; 6. Re Review of Constitutionality of Article 212(1) of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation; 7. Re Review of Constitutionality of the Provisions of Article 31.7 and Article 31.9 of the Code of Administrative Offences of the Russian Federation; 8. R (RF) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (Mind and Equality & Human Rights Commission intervening); 9. R (Bancoult) v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (No 3); A local authority v. AG
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: International Law Reports March 2021 219 x 146 mm c.800pp 4 colour illus. 978-1-108-49544-8 Hardback c. £170.00 / c. US$220.00
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The Cambridge Handbook of Twin Peaks Financial Regulation Edited by Andrew Godwin Melbourne Law School
and Andrew Schmulow
University of Wollongong, Australia
Description First proposed in 1994, the Twin Peaks model of financial system regulation employs two specialist peak regulators: one charged with the maintenance of financial system stability, and the other with market conduct and consumer protection. This volume, with contributions from over thirty scholars and senior regulators, provides an in-depth analysis of the similarities and differences in the Twin Peaks regimes that have been adopted around the world. Chapters examine the strengths and weaknesses of the model, provide lessons from Australia (the first to adopt the model), and offer a comparative look at the potential suitability of the model in leading non-Twin Peaks jurisdictions. A key resource for central bankers, public policy analysts, lawyers, economists, politicians, academics and students, this work provides readers with a comprehensive understanding of the Twin Peaks model, and a roadmap for countries considering its adoption.
Key Features • Provides a detailed examination of regulatory theory as it informs financial regulation architecture • Informs the debates and scholarship developing in Twin Peaks theory and practice • Addresses both the theoretical and practical implementation aspects of Twin Peaks adoption
Contents 1. Introduction: the genealogy and topography of Twin Peaks; 2. The three episodes of Twin Peaks; 3. Reflections on twenty years of regulation under Twin Peaks; 4. Twin Peaks and central banks: economics, political economy and comparative analysis; 5. Twin Peaks in Australia – the never-ending trek?; 6. Twin Peaks financial regulation in New Zealand; 7. Identifying lessons and best practices for the Twin Peaks model; 8. Twin Peaks in South Africa; 9. The role of the SARB as central bank in the South African Twin Peaks model; 10. Can the Twin Peaks model of financial regulation serve as a model for Israel?; 11. Towards a Twin Peak regulatory architecture for Hong Kong?;
12. Regulatory structure and the revolving door phenomenon in South Korea: evidence from the 2011 Savings bank crisis; 13. China: considering elements of Twin Peaks to upgrade its financial regulation; 14. Financial regulatory structure in China: challenges and transitioning to Twin Peaks; 15. US financial regulatory structure: beneath the surface of Twin Peaks; 16. A ‘Twin Peaks’ vision for Europe; 17. A complex European financial architecture – ten years on; 18. Twin Peaks and boiling frogs: consumer protection in one or two ponds?; 19. Twin Peaks – how should Macro-cultures be regulated?; 20. Resilience as the organising framework for reform: the dangers of metaphors in financial regulation; 21. Twin Peaks, macroprudential regulation and systemic financial stability.
Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students, legal practitioners Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks July 2021 253 x 177 mm 650pp 978-1-107-18642-2 Hardback £195.00 / US$255.00
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The Cambridge Handbook of Compliance Edited by Benjamin van Rooij
University of California, Irvine School of Law
and D. Daniel Sokol University of Florida
Description Compliance has become key to our contemporary markets, societies, and modes of governance across a variety of public and private domains. While this has stimulated a rich body of empirical and practical expertise on compliance, thus far, there has been no comprehensive understanding of what compliance is or how it influences various fields and sectors. The academic knowledge of compliance has remained siloed along different disciplinary domains, regulatory and legal spheres, and mechanisms and interventions. This handbook bridges these divides to provide the first one-stop overview of what compliance is, how we can best study it, and the core mechanisms that shape it. Written by leading experts, chapters offer perspectives from across law, regulatory studies, management science, criminology, economics, sociology, and psychology. This volume is the definitive and comprehensive account of compliance.
Key Features • Introduces extant literature from across different fields and synthesizes these works for researchers and practitioners • Builds an integrated understanding of compliance that crosses disciplinary boundaries and corrects common misunderstandings • Adopts a broad view of compliance that accounts for different types of rules and for both individual and organizational conduct
Contents 1. Introduction: The Interaction Between Rules and Behavior; Part I. Compliance Concepts and Approaches: Part II. Deterrence and Incapacitation: Part III. Incentives: Part IV: Legitimacy and Social Norms:
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, professionals Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks May 2021 254 x 178 mm c.800pp 978-1-108-47712-3 Hardback £190.00 / US$250.00
Part V: Capacity and Opportunity: Part VI: Compliance and Cognition: Part VII: Management and Organizational Processes: Part VIII: Measuring and Evaluating Compliance: Part IX: Analysis of Particular Fields:
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Spatial Analysis in Field Primatology Applying GIS at Varying Scales
Francine L. Dolins
University of Michigan, Dearborn
Christopher A. Shaffer
Grand Valley State University, Michigan
Leila M. Porter
Northern Illinois University
Jena R. Hickey
University of Georgia
Nathan P. Nibbelink University of Georgia
Description From foraging patterns in a single tree to social interactions across a home range, how primates use space is a key question in the field of primate behavioral ecology. Drawing on the latest advances in spatial analysis tools, this book offers practical guidance on applying geographic information systems (GIS) to central questions in primatology. An initial methodological section discusses niche modelling, home range analysis and agent-based modelling, with a focus on remote data collection. Research-based chapters demonstrate how ecologists apply this technology to a suite of topics including: calculating the intensity of use of both range and travel routes, assessing the impacts of logging, mining and hunting, and informing conservation strategies.
Key Features • The first volume specifically for primatologists on the application of GIS, with practical guidance to encourage use of the technology, such as advice on the best field transmitters • Research-based chapters show how many of the leading spatial ecologists apply this technology to address central questions in primatology in diverse circumstances and research projects • Shows how GIS can help to assess the impact of logging, mining and hunting, and help to inform primate conservation strategies
Contents Part I. GPS for Primatologists: Introduction; 1. Why place matters, and its use in primate behavioral and ecological research; 2. Fundamentals of GPS AND GIS; 3. ‘Next-gen’ tracking in primatology: opportunities and challenges; 4. The ethical implications, and practical consequences, of attaching remote telemetry apparatus to macaques; 5. Processing geospatial data in R: a primer; 6. Estimating travel distance and linearity of primate routes: ideas on how to clean and smooth track data collected with a handheld GPS; Part II. GIS Analysis in Fine-Scale Space: Introduction; 7. Home range analysis: why the methods matter; 8. Quantifying resource dispersion in free-ranging bearded sakis in Guyana: what is a patch?; 9. Interpreting small-scale patterns of ranging by primates: what does it mean, and why does it matter?; 10. Determining the presence of habitual travel route networks in orangutans (pongo pygmaeus morio) in Kutai National Park, Borneo;
11. Finding fruit in a tropical rainforest: a comparison of the foraging patterns of two distinct fruit-eating primates across years; 12. Random walk analyses in primates; 13. The use of small-scale spatial analysis to evaluate primate behavior and welfare in captive settings; 14. The promise of spatially explicit agent-based models for primatology research; Part III. GIS Analysis in Broad-Scale Space: Introduction; 15. Modeling niches and mapping distributions: progress and promise of ecological niche models for primate research; 16. Does reduced habitat quality or increased hunter access explain defaunation of fragmented forests? Bonobos as a case study; 17. Landscape ecology of deforestation processes and lemur biogeography in Madagascar; 18. Quantitative methods for primate biogeography and macroecology; 19. GIS and GPS techniques in an ethnoprimatological investigation of St Kitts green monkey (chlorocebus sabaeus) crop-foraging behavior; 20. Conclusion.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students January 2021 247 x 174 mm 459pp 95 b/w illus. 24 colour illus. 42 tables 978-1-107-06230-6 Hardback £89.99 / US$115.00 978-1-107-69430-9 Paperback £39.99 / US$49.99
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Scientific Writing and Publishing A Comprehensive Manual for Authors
Denys Wheatley
University of Aberdeen
Description Knowing how to prepare, write and publish high-quality research papers can be challenging for scientists at all stages of their career. This manual guides readers through successfully framing and presenting research findings, as well as the processes involved in publishing in learned journals. It draws on the author’s wealth of practical experience, from working in academic research for over 40 years and teaching scientific writing in over 20 countries, to gaining insights as a journal editor. Well-written and logical, it provides clear step-by-step instructions to enable readers to become more effective at writing articles, and navigating difficulties related to journal submission, the review process, editing and publication. It comprehensively covers themes such as publication ethics, along with current topics including Open Access publishing and preprint servers. This is a useful, user-friendly guide for graduate students, early career scientists, and more experienced researchers, particularly in the life and medical sciences.
Key Features • Outlines the complete art of writing and publishing high-quality scientific manuscripts, helping both early career scientists and more experienced researchers • Offers step-by-step instructions in easy-to-read language, making it a logical handbook for both native and non-native English speakers • Provides extensive coverage of the practicalities of all steps involved, including important topics such as copyright and ethics, ensuring readers gain more than just an introductory understanding
Contents Preface, Part I; Part II. Final Preparation of a Paper Before Submission – as Important as Part I!; Part II. Getting Published; 1. General features of a scientific paper – structure and format; 2. The typical scientific paper – a published paper with annotations; 3. Results – presenting your findings; 4. Discussion – the place to argue your case; 5. Introduction – the first main section of a paper; 6. Materials and methods; 7. Abstract – the summary of the main findings;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students February 2021 228 x 152 mm c.225pp 978-1-108-83520-6 Hardback £59.99 / US$79.99 978-1-108-79980-5 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99
8. The ‘smaller’ sections that complete a paper; 9. Figures and tables; 10. Presubmission; 11. Submission of manuscripts; 12. Peer-review – the crux of the problem in publishing papers; 13. The last stages of the editorial process – decisions, revisions, and final editing; 14. From acceptance to publication; 15. Copyright; 16. Ethics and scientific integrity; 17. Epilogue.
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Cooperation and Conflict The Interaction of Opposites in Shaping Social Behavior
Edited by Walter Wilczynski Georgia State University
and Sarah F. Brosnan Georgia State University
Description Understanding the interaction between cooperation and conflict in establishing effective social behaviour is a fundamental challenge facing societies. Reflecting the breadth of current research in this area, this volume brings together experts from biology to political science to examine the cooperation–conflict interface at multiple levels, from genes to human societies. Exploring both the exciting new directions and the biggest challenges in their fields, the authors focus on identifying commonalities across species and disciplines to help understand what features are shared broadly and what are limited to specific contexts. Each chapter is written to be accessible to students and researchers from interdisciplinary backgrounds, with text boxes explaining terminology and concepts that may not be familiar across disciplinary boundaries, while being a valuable resource to experts in their fields.
Key Features • Examines the mechanisms behind cooperative and conflict behaviour, and how these two opposing outcomes are balanced at multiple levels • Covers a breadth of organisms including humans, primates, rodents, birds and insects, as well as gene • Draws on a range of fields including evolutionary biology, social psychology, behavioural ecology, neuroscience and political science
Contents Introduction. Understanding for relationship between cooperation and conflict; Part I. Broad Insights from Political Science to Molecular Behaviour: 1. Reconciliation and civil wars reconsidered; 2. Internalizing cooperative norms in group-structured populations; 3. Reputation: a fundamental route to human cooperation; 4. Finding the right balance: cooperation and conflict in nature; Part II. Neural Mechanisms: 5. Social living and rethinking the concept of ‘prosociality’; 6. The role of the temporal lobe in human social cognition; 7. Role of oxytocin and vasopressin V1a receptor variation on personality, social behavior, social cognition, and the brain in nonhuman primates with a specific emphasis in chimpanzees; Part III. Species Comparisons: 8. Understanding the trade-off between cooperation and conflict in avian societies; 9. Cooperation and conflict in mutualisms with a special emphasis on marine cleaning interaction; 10. Frenemies: the interplay between cooperation and conflict in the evolution and function of insect societies; Index.
Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers January 2021 244 x 170 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-47569-3 Hardback £64.99 / US$84.99 978-1-107-69430-9 Paperback £39.99 / US$49.99
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Natural Resource Management Reimagined Using the Systems Ecology Paradigm
Edited by Robert G. Woodmansee Colorado State University
John C. Moore
Colorado State University
Dennis S. Ojima
Colorado State University
and Laurie Richards Colorado State University
Description The Systems Ecology Paradigm (SEP) incorporates humans as integral parts of ecosystems and emphasizes issues that have significant societal relevance such as grazing land, forestland, and agricultural ecosystem management, biodiversity and global change impacts. Accomplishing this societally relevant research requires cutting-edge basic and applied research. This book focuses on environmental and natural resource challenges confronting local to global societies for which the SEP methodology must be utilized for resolution. Key elements of SEP are a holistic perspective of ecological/social systems, systems thinking, and the ecosystem approach applied to real world, complex environmental and natural resource problems. The SEP and ecosystem approaches force scientific emphasis to be placed on collaborations with social scientists and behavioral, learning, and marketing professionals. The SEP has given environmental scientists, decision makers, citizen stakeholders, and land and water managers a powerful set of tools to analyse, integrate knowledge, and propose adoption of solutions to important local to global problems.
Key Features • Commemorates the 50th Anniversary of the establishment of the Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory (NREL) at Colorado State University (CSU) and its founder, George M. Van Dyne • Addresses real world, complex problems such as, impacts of climate change, local to global carbon dynamics, human altered nitrogen dynamics and biodiversity • Presents the Systems Ecology Paradigm (SEP) as a powerful methodology that is indispensable for resolving real world, complex problems
Contents Preface; 1. The system ecology paradigm; 2. Environmental and natural resource challenges in the 21st century; 3. Evolution of ecosystem science to advance science and society in the 21st century; 4. Five decades of modeling supporting the systems ecology paradigm; 5. Advances in technology supporting the systems ecology paradigm; 6. Emergence of cross-scale structural and functional processes in ecosystem science;
7. Evolution of the systems ecology paradigm in managing ecosystems; 8. Land/atmosphere/water interactions; 9. Humans in ecosystems; 10. A systems ecology approach for community-based decision making: the Structured Analysis Methodology (SAM); 11. Environmental literacy: the Systems Ecology Paradigm (SEP); 12. Organizational and administrative challenges and innovations; 13. Where to from here? unravelling wicked problems.
Additional Information Level: Graduate Students, academic researchers, undergraduate students Series: Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation February 2021 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-49755-8 Hardback £89.99 / US$115.00 978-1-108-74013-5 Paperback £39.99 / US$49.99
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Networks of Networks in Biology Concepts, Tools and Applications
Edited by Narsis A. Kiani Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm
David Gomez-Cabrero King’s College London
and Ginestra Bianconi
Queen Mary University of London
Description Biological systems are extremely complex and have emergent properties that cannot be explained or even predicted by studying their individual parts. The reductionist approach, although successful in the early days of molecular biology, underestimates this complexity. As the amount of available data grows, so it will become increasingly important to be able to analyse and integrate these large data sets. This book introduces novel approaches and solutions to the Big Data problem in biomedicine, and presents new techniques in the field of graph theory for handling and processing multi-type large data sets. By discussing cutting-edge problems and techniques, researchers from a wide range of fields will be able to gain insights for exploiting big heterogonous data in the life sciences through the concept of ‘network of networks’.
Key Features • Introduces novel approaches and solutions to the big data problem, and presents new techniques in the field of graph theory for handling and processing multi-type large data sets • Provides a step-by-step introduction to graph analysis for biologists and, an introduction to graph-based applications in biology for computer scientists and mathematicians, ensuring the content is accessible to a wide readership • Case studies allow the reader to understand how to export multilayer analysis to their own fields
Contents Preface; Part I. Networks in Biology: 1. An Introduction to Biological Networks; 2. Graph Theory; Part II. Network Analysis: 3. Structural Analysis of Biological Networks; 4. Networks From an Information-Theoretic and Algorithmic Complexity Perspective;
5. Integration and Feature Identification in Multi-layer Network using a Heat Diffusion Approach; Part III. Multi-layer Networks: 6. Large Multiplex Networks; 7. Large Existing Tools for Analysis of Multilayer Networks; 8. Large Dynamics on Multilayer Networks; Part IV. Applications:
Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers March 2021 244 x 170 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-42887-3 Hardback £44.99 / US$59.99
9. The Network of Networks Involved in Human Disease; 10. Towards a Multi-Layer Network Analysis of Disease: Challenges and Opportunities Through the Lens of Multiple Sclerosis; 11. Microbiome: A Multi-Layer Network View Is Required; Part V. Conclusion : Concluding Remarks: Open Questions and Challenges; Index.
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Ecosystem Collapse and Recovery Adrian C. Newton Bournemouth University
Description There is a growing concern that many important ecosystems, such as coral reefs and tropical rain forests, might be at risk of sudden collapse as a result of human disturbance. At the same time, efforts to support the recovery of degraded ecosystems are increasing, through approaches such as ecological restoration and rewilding. Given the dependence of human livelihoods on the multiple benefits provided by ecosystems, there is an urgent need to understand the situations under which ecosystem collapse can occur, and how ecosystem recovery can best be supported. To help develop this understanding, this volume provides the first scientific account of the ecological mechanisms associated with the collapse of ecosystems and their subsequent recovery. After providing an overview of relevant theory, the text evaluates these ideas in the light of available empirical evidence, by profiling case studies drawn from both contemporary and prehistoric ecosystems. Implications for conservation policy and practice are then examined.
Key Features • Introduces an extensive ecological literature, integrating information from terrestrial, freshwater and marine ecosystems distributed throughout the world • Provides an overview of relevant ecological theory using verbal descriptions and explanations throughout, including identification of a new set of fundamental propositions • Enables relevance to conservation policy and practice using real-world case studies and examples
Contents 1. Introduction; 2. Ecological Theory; 3. Case Studies from Prehistory; 4. Contemporary Case Studies; 5. Synthesis; 6. Conclusions.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students, undergraduate students Series: Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation March 2021 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-47273-9 Hardback c. £89.99 / c. US$115.00 978-1-108-46020-0 Paperback c. £34.99 / c. US$44.99
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Quantitative Analysis of Ecological Networks Mark R. T. Dale
University of Northern British Columbia
and Marie-Josée Fortin University of Toronto
Description Network thinking and network analysis are rapidly expanding features of ecological research. Network analysis of ecological systems include representations and modelling of the interactions in an ecosystem, in which species or factors are joined by pairwise connections. This book provides an overview of ecological network analysis including generating processes, the relationship between structure and dynamic function, and statistics and models for these networks. Starting with a general introduction to the composition of networks and their characteristics, it includes details on such topics as measures of network complexity, applications of spectral graph theory, how best to include indirect species interactions, and multilayer, multiplex and multilevel networks. Graduate students and researchers who want to develop and understand ecological networks in their research will find this volume inspiring and helpful. Detailed guidance to those already working in network ecology but looking for advice is also included.
Key Features • Provides a background on networks and a guide to quantitative measures of important properties of ecological networks. • Includes a summary and guide to multilayer, multiplex, multilevel (and other ‘multi-’) networks and their applications in ecology. • Contains many simple figures to add clarity and describes a broad range of ecological examples.
Contents Preface; 1. Ecological Processes and Network Systems; 2. Structural Properties of Networks; 3. Quantitative Analysis of Dynamic Networks; 4. Multi-layer, -type, and -level Networks; 5. Tying it all together: Summary and Synthesis.
Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers, professionals April 2021 244 x 170 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-49184-6 Hardback c. £89.99 / c. US$124.99 978-1-108-74071-5 Paperback c. £34.99 / c. US$49.99
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Animal Population Ecology An Analytical Approach
Tomo Royama
Canadian Forest Service
Description Animal population ecology comprises the study of variations, regulation, and interactions of animal populations. This book discusses the fundamental notions and findings of animal populations on which most of the ecological studies are based. In particular, the author selects the logistic law of population growth, the nature of competition, sociality as an antithesis of competition, the mechanism underlying the regulation of populations, predator-prey interaction processes, and interactions among closely related species competing over essential resources. These are the notions that are considered to be well-established facts or principles and are regularly taught at ecology classes or introduced in standard textbooks. However, the author demonstrates that these notions are still inadequately understood, or even misunderstood, creating myths that would misguide ecologists in carrying out their studies. He delves deeply into those notions to reveal their real nature and draws a road map to the future development of ecology.
Key Features • This book is unique in that the author is not only an experienced field ecologist through his life-long studies of birds and insects, but also well known for his contributions to theoretical ecology through the application of stochastic processes. He writes his mathematical arguments right in the ecological context concerned and in such a way that even those readers with little mathematical background can readily follow without losing track • Provides methodological bases for much wider areas of population ecology to be explored by ecologists of future generation • Written in an informal, easy-to-follow manner
Contents 1. Hunting strategies of predators as revealed in field studies of great tits; 2. The paradox of crypsis: is it effective against visual predation?; 3. Logistic law of population growth: what is it really?; 4. Reproduction curves and their utilities; 5. Generalization of the logistic model; 6. Scramble and contest competition: what is the difference?; 7. Regulation of populations: its myths and real nature; 8. Predator-prey interaction processes; 9. Interspecific competition processes; 10. Observations, analyses, and interpretations: a personal view through the spruce budworm studies.
Additional Information Level: graduate students, undergraduate students, academic researchers Series: Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation March 2021 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-84442-0 Hardback c. £79.99 / c. US$105.00 978-1-108-94816-6 Paperback c. £34.99 / c. US$44.99
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Statistics for Laboratory Scientists and Clinicians A Practical Guide
Anne McDonnell Sill
Saint Agnes Hospital, Baltimore, MD
Description Understanding the underlying principles of statistical techniques and effectively applying statistical methods can be challenging for researchers at all stages of their career. This concise, practical guide uses a simple, engaging approach to take scientists and clinicians working in laboratory-based life science and medical research through the steps of choosing and implementing appropriate statistical methods to analyse results. The author draws on her extensive experience of advising students and researchers over the past 30 years, breaking down complex concepts into easy-to-understand units. Practical examples using free online statistical tools are included throughout, with illustrations and diagrams employed to keep jargon to a minimum. Sample size calculations and considerations are covered in depth, and the book refers to the types of experiment and data lab-based scientists are likely to encounter. Straightforward, accessible and encouraging throughout, this is a go-to reference for researchers who want to achieve statistical autonomy.
Key Features • Takes readers through calculations completed using free online statistical tools, with screenshots of steps included, allowing readers to try out the calculations themselves • Simplifies and conveys challenging concepts in a straightforward manner, comforting the reader into knowing how to tease apart statistical concepts and apply statistics in a meaningful manner • Contains many examples of sample size calculations, enabling readers to understand how hypothesis testing, quantifying measurable outcomes and sample size are all linked
Contents Preface; Acknowledgements; Part I. Basic Statistical Concepts: 1. Understanding some Basic Statistical Tests and Concepts; 2. Types of Data and their Distributions; 3. Significance Testing;
Part II. What is the Right Statistical Test for Different Types of Data: 4. Analyzing Continuous Data; 5. Analyzing Non-normally Distributed, Continuous Data – Non-parametric Tests; 6. Analyses for Non-continuous Data; 7. Analyzing a Combination of Data Types;
Part III. Applied Statistics: 8. Applied Statistics for the Laboratorian; 9. Applied Statistics for the Clinician; 10. Interpreting Graphs and Charts; Glossary; Figure Credits; Index.
Additional Resources: http://www.cambridge.org/9781108477253 A supporting document with hyperlinked URLs to key resources, including free online statistical tools, can be found via www.cambridge.org/9781108477253.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students May 2021 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-47725-3 Hardback c. £69.99 / c. US$89.99 978-1-108-70850-0 Paperback c. £27.99 / c. US$35.99
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Why DNA? From DNA Sequence to Biological Complexity
Andrew Travers
University of Cambridge
Description Information is central to the evolution of biological complexity, a physical system relying on a continuous supply of energy. Biology provides superb examples of the consequent Darwinian selection of mechanisms for efficient energy utilisation. Genetic information, underpinned by the Watson-Crick base-pairing rules is largely encoded by DNA, a molecule uniquely adapted to its roles in information storage and utilisation.This volume addresses two fundamental questions. Firstly, what properties of the molecule have enabled it to become the predominant genetic material in the biological world today and secondly, to what extent have the informational properties of the molecule contributed to the expansion of biological diversity and the stability of ecosystems. The author argues that bringing these two seemingly unrelated topics together enables Schrödinger’s What is Life?, published before the structure of DNA was known, to be revisited and his ideas examined in the context of our current biological understanding.
Key Features • A modern interpretation of the classic Schrödinger’s What is Life?, extending Schrödinger’s physical arguments to the modern understanding of DNA-based information systems • Explains why DNA is the predominant vehicle for genetic information vehicle how the DNA sequence contains both analogue and digital information • Describes how increases in DNA-encoded information, and the mechanisms that enable them, drive increases in biological complexity • Presents different perspectives on the evolution of biological complexity, distinguishing between genetically acquired information (DNA) and culturally acquired information
Contents Acknowledgements; Preface; 1. The perennial question; 2. The nature of information – information, complexity and entropy; 3. DNA – the molecule; 4. The evolution of biological complexity; 5. Cooperating genomes; 6. DNA, information and complexity; 7. Origins; 8. The complexity of societies; 9. Why DNA – and not RNA?; General reading and bibliography.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students June 2021 228 x 152 mm 300pp 978-1-107-05639-8 Hardback c. £49.99 / c. US$64.99 978-1-107-69752-2 Paperback c. £19.99 / c. US$25.99
5050
Running Head Left Linguistics
The Languages of Mainland Southeast Asia N. J. Enfield
University of Sydney
Description Mainland Southeast Asia is one of the most fascinating and complex cultural and linguistic areas in the world. This book provides a rich and comprehensive survey of the history and core systems and subsystems of the languages of this fascinating region. Drawing on his depth of expertise in mainland Southeast Asia, Enfield includes more than a thousand data examples from over a hundred languages from Cambodia, China, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam, bringing together a wealth of data and analysis that has not previously been available in one place. Chapters cover the many ways in which these languages both resemble each other, and differ from each other, and the diversity of the area’s languages is highlighted, with a special emphasis on minority languages, which outnumber the national languages by nearly a hundred to one. The result is an authoritative treatment of a fascinating and important linguistic area.
Key Features • Includes detailed descriptions of the nature of mainland Southeast Asian languages, with examples from more than a hundred languages • Provides a rich account of the prehistorical background to human and linguistic diversity in mainland Southeast Asia • Offers a compact and comprehensive overview of the historical relationships between the languages and language families of mainland Southeast Asia
Contents List of Figures; List of Maps; List of Tables; Preface; 1. Context; 2. Language Histories and Classifications; 3. Typological Overview; 4. Phonological systems; 5. Word formation; 6. Reference and Nominal Syntax; 7. Predication and Clausal Syntax; Postface; References; Index.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Language Surveys February 2021 228 x 152 mm c.750pp 978-1-108-47633-1 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 978-1-108-70021-4 Paperback TBA / TBA
Running Head Linguistics Right
5151
The Cambridge Handbook of Language Standardization Edited by Wendy Ayres-Bennett University of Cambridge
and John Bellamy University of Cambridge
Description Language standardization is the process by which conventional forms of a language are established and maintained. Bringing together internationally renowned experts, this Handbook provides a comprehensive overview of standardization, norms and standard languages. Chapters are grouped into five thematic areas: models and theories of standardization, questions of authority and legitimacy, literacy and education, borders and boundaries, and standardization in Late Modernity. Each chapter addresses a specific issue in detail, illustrating it with linguistic case studies and taking into account the particular political, social and cultural context. Showcasing cutting-edge research, it offers fresh perspectives that go beyond traditional accounts of the standardization of national European languages, and affords new insights into minoritized, indigenous and stateless languages. Surveying a wide range of languages and approaches, this Handbook is an essential resource for all those interested in language standards and standard languages.
Key Features • Includes a wide range of languages and contexts beyond the traditional focus on European national languages • Revisits, reviews and refines models and theories of standardization • Covers historical, contemporary and future perspectives, including original research
Contents Introduction: Part I. Revisiting Models and Theories of Language Standardization: Part IV. Beyond the National: Borders and Boundaries: Part II. Legitimacy, Authority and the Written Form: Part V. Standardization in Late Modernity: Beyond Traditional Standardization: Part III. Norms, Literacy and Education:
Additional Resources: http://www.cambridge.org/9781108471817 Colour figures
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students February 2021 244 x 170 mm c.700pp 978-1-108-47181-7 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 978-1-108-45852-8 Paperback TBA / TBA
Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics
5252
Running Head Left Linguistics
The Cambridge Handbook of Corrective Feedback in Second Language Learning and Teaching Edited by Hossein Nassaji
University of Victoria, British Columbia
and Eva Kartchava
Carleton University, Ottawa
Description Corrective feedback is a vital pedagogical tool in language learning. This is the first volume to provide an in-depth analysis and discussion of the role of corrective feedback in second and foreign language learning and teaching. Written by leading scholars, it assembles cutting-edge research and state-of-the-art articles that address recent developments in core areas of corrective feedback including oral, written, computer-mediated, nonverbal, and peer feedback. The chapters are a combination of both theme-based and original empirical studies carried out in diverse second and foreign language contexts. Each chapter provides a concise review of its own topic, discusses theoretical and empirical issues not adequately addressed before, and identifies their implications for classroom instruction and future research. It will be an essential resource for all those interested in the role of corrective feedback in second and foreign language learning and how they can be used to enhance classroom teaching.
Key Features • Presents an accessible yet thorough and up-to-date overview of corrective feedback theory and research in the field • Examines recent developments in core areas of corrective feedback including oral, written, computer-mediated, nonverbal, and peer feedback • Bridges the gap between research and pedagogy by demonstrating how to employ feedback strategies effectively to support language development in second language classrooms
Contents Introduction. Corrective feedback in second language teaching and learning; Part I. Theoretical Perspectives on Corrective Feedback: Part II. Methodological Approaches in the Study of Corrective Feedback: Part III. Different Delivery Modes of Corrective Feedback: Part IV. Feedback Provider, Feedback Focus, and Feedback Timing:
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics March 2021 244 x 170 mm c.750pp 978-1-108-49910-1 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 978-1-108-45057-7 Paperback TBA / TBA
Part V. Corrective Feedback and Language Skills: Part VI. Contexts of Corrective Feedback and their Effects: Part VII. Learners’ and Teachers’ Feedback Perspectives and Preferences: Part VIII. Individual Differences, Tasks, and Other Language and Learner-Related Factors:
Running Head Linguistics Right
5353
The Cambridge Handbook of Phonetics Edited by Rachael-Anne Knight City University London
and Jane Setter University of Reading
Description Phonetics – the study and classification of speech sounds – is a major sub-discipline of linguistics. Bringing together a team of internationally renowned phoneticians, this handbook provides comprehensive coverage of the most recent, cutting-edge work in the field, and focuses on the most widely-debated contemporary issues. Chapters are divided into five thematic areas: segmental production, prosodic production, measuring speech, audition and perception, and applications of phonetics. Each chapter presents an historical overview of the area, along with critical issues, current research and advice on the best practice for teaching phonetics to undergraduates. It brings together global perspectives, and includes examples from a wide range of languages, allowing readers to extend their knowledge beyond English. By providing both state-of-the-art research information, and an appreciation of how it can be shared with students, this handbook is essential both for academic phoneticians, and anyone with an interest in this exciting, rapidly developing field.
Key Features • Provides comprehensive coverage of the state-of-the-art in phonetics, a broad and increasingly multidisciplinary field • Includes illustrative examples from the phonetics of a wide range of languages • Each chapter includes a section devoted to teaching
Contents Introduction; Part I. Segmental Production: 1. Physiological Foundations; 2. Vowels; 3. Consonants; 4. Coarticulation; 5. Processes in Connected Speech; Part II. Prosodic Production: 6. Stress and Rhythm; 7. Lexical Tone; 8. Intonation;
9. Voice Quality; Part III. Measuring Speech: 10. Measuring Vowels; 11. Measuring Consonants; 12. Measuring Speech Rhythm; 13. Fundamental Frequency and Pitch; 14. Observing and Measuring Speech Articulation; 15. Beyond Functional Speech Synthesis; Part IV. Audition and Perception: 16. Neurological Foundations of Phonetic Sciences; 17. Psycholinguistic Aspects; 18. Phonetics and Eye Tracking;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics March 2021 244 x 170 mm c.800pp 978-1-108-49573-8 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00 978-1-108-44859-8 Paperback TBA / TBA
19. Automatic Speech Recognition by Machines; Part V. Applications of Phonetics: 20. Pedagogical Approaches; 21. Pronunciation Teaching; 22. Sociophonetics; 23. Developmental Phonetics of Speech Production; 24. Clinical Phonetics; 25. Forensic Phonetics; 26. The Phonetics of Talk in Interaction; 27. The Phonetics/Phonology Interface.
5454
Running Head Left Linguistics
The Cambridge Handbook of Korean Linguistics Edited by Sungdai Cho
Binghamton University, State University of New York
and John Whitman
Cornell University, New York
Description The ‘Korean wave’ in music and film and Korea’s rise to become the twelfth economic power in the world have boosted the world-wide popularity of Korean language study. The linguistic study of Korean, with its rich syntactic and phonological structure, complex writing system, and unique socio-historical context, is now a rapidly growing research area. Contributions from internationally renowned experts on the language provide a state-of-the-art overview of key current research in Korean language and linguistics. Chapters are divided into five thematic areas: phonetics and phonology, morphology and syntax, semantics and pragmatics, sociolinguistics and psycholinguistics, and language pedagogy. The Handbook includes cross-linguistic data to illuminate the features of Korean, and examples in Korean script, making it suitable for advanced students and researchers with or without prior knowledge of Korean linguistics. It is an essential resource for students and researchers wishing to explore the exciting and rapidly moving field of Korean linguistics.
Key Features • A state-of-the-art overview of contemporary research in Korean Linguistics, covering all key current areas of study • Brings together contributions from a range of internationally renowned experts in Korean language and linguistics • Uses theory from a range of linguistic disciplines to explain features of Korean to researchers and advanced students with no prior experience of the language.
Contents Part I. Korean Overview: 1. Introduction; 2. Phonology: An Overview; 3. Overview of Chapters on Syntax; 4. On the Centrality of Korean in Language Contacts in Northeast Asia; 5. Politeness Strategies in Korean; 6. Korean Kugyŏl; Part II. Phonetics and Phonology: 7. Vowel Harmony; 8. The Phonology and Phonetics of Korean Stop Laryngeal Contrasts; 9. The Phonetic-Prosody Interface and Prosodic Strengthening in Korean; 10. Constituent Structure and Sentence Phonology of Korean;
11. Effects of Linguistic Experience on the Perception of Korean Stops; Part III. Morphology and Syntax: 12. Right-Dislocation in Korean: An Overview; 13. Experimental Insights on the Grammar of Korean Anaphors; 14. Person-Denoting Nominals: Interpretations and Structures; 15. Lexical Nominalizations in Korean; 16. The Processing of a Long-Distance Dependency in Korean: An Overview; Part IV. Semantics and Pragmatics: 17. Subjectivity and Intersubjectivity in Korean Grammar; 18. Discourse Studies in Korean; 19. Metaphoric and Metonymic Patterns with the Body-Part Term Nwun ‘Eye(s)’ in Korean;
Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics March 2021 244 x 170 mm c.800pp 978-1-108-41891-1 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 978-1-108-40854-7 Paperback TBA / TBA
20. Wh-indefinites; 21. ‘Expletive’ Negation in Korean; 22. Case Stacking in Korean: Argument Structure or Information Structure?; Part V. Sociolinguistics and Psycholinguistics: 23. Grammaticalization in Korean; 24. Performing Gender in Korean: Language, Gender, and Social Change; 25. Jejueo: Korea’s Other Language; Part VI. Language Pedagogy: 26. Genre-Based Approach to Korean Language Teaching: A Curriculum Application; 27. Towards Integrated Performance Assessment; 28. Interactional Competence in Korean Language; 29. From Bilingual Speakers to Korean Heritage Language Learners; 30. Language Policy and Its Effect in South Korea.
Running Head Linguistics Right
5555
The Cambridge Handbook of Sociopragmatics Edited by Michael Haugh The University of Queensland
Dániel Z. Kádár
Hungarian Research Institute for Linguistics (NYTI)/Dalian University of Foreign Languages
and Marina Terkourafi
Leiden University, The Netherlands
Description Sociopragmatics is a rapidly growing field and this is the first ever handbook dedicated to this exciting area of study. Bringing together an international team of leading editors and contributors, it provides a comprehensive, cutting-edge overview of the key concepts, topics, settings and methodologies involved in sociopragmatic research. The chapters are organised in a systematic fashion, and span a wide range of theoretical research on how language communicates multiple meanings in context, how it influences our daily interactions and relationships with others, and how it helps construct our social worlds. Providing insight into a fascinating array of phenomena and novel research directions, the Handbook is not only relevant to experts of pragmatics but to any reader with an interest in language and its use in different contexts, including researchers in sociology, anthropology and communication, and students of applied linguistics and related areas, as well as professional practitioners in communication research.
Key Features • Gives a systematic and accessible overview of sociopragmatics • Provides cutting-edge insights and suggests future directions for sociopragmatic research from many of the best-known experts in the field • Covers topics that represent the ‘applied’, socially-relevant aspects of language use
Contents 1. Introduction: directions in sociopragmatics; Part I. Fundamentals of Sociopragmatics: 2. Sociopragmatics: roots and definition; 3. Inference and implicature; 4. Speaker meaning, commitment and accountability; 5. Social actions; 6. Stance and evaluation; 7. Affect and emotion; 8. Reflexivity and meta-awareness; 9. Participation and footing; 10. Conventionalisation and conventions; 11. Synchronic and diachronic pragmatic variability; 12. Activity types and genres;
13. Social groups and relational networks; Part II. Topics and Settings in Sociopragmatics: 14. Face, facework and face-threatening acts; 15. Relationships and relating; 16. Analysing identity; 17. (Im)politeness and sociopragmatics; 18. Power; 19. Morality in sociopragmatics; 20. Conversational humour; 21. Gesture and prosody in multimodal communication; 22. Digitally-mediated communication; 23. Workplace and institutional discourse; 24. Service encounter discourse;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics April 2021 247 x 174 mm c.650pp 978-1-108-84496-3 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00 978-1-108-94930-9 Paperback TBA / TBA
25. Argumentative, political and legal discourse; 26. The pragmatics of translation; Part III. Approaches and Methods in Sociopragmatics: 27. Interpersonal pragmatics; 28. Sociocognitive pragmatics; 29. Conversation analysis and sociopragmatics; 30. Corpus pragmatics; 31. Variational pragmatics; 32. Historical sociopragmatics; 33. Emancipatory pragmatics; 34. Cross-cultural and intercultural pragmatics; 35. Second-language pragmatics.
5656
Running Head Left Linguistics
The Cambridge Handbook of Heritage Languages and Linguistics Edited by Silvina Montrul
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
and Maria Polinsky
University of Maryland, College Park
Description Heritage languages are minority languages learned in a bilingual environment. These include immigrant languages, aboriginal or indigenous languages and historical minority languages. In the last two decades, heritage languages have become central to many areas of linguistic research, from bilingual language acquisition, education and language policies, to theoretical linguistics. Bringing together contributions from a team of internationally renowned experts, this Handbook provides a state-of-the-art overview of this emerging area of study from a number of different perspectives, ranging from theoretical linguistics to language education and pedagogy. Presenting comprehensive data on heritage languages from around the world, it covers issues ranging from individual aspects of heritage language knowledge to broader societal, educational, and policy concerns in local, global and international contexts. Surveying the most current issues and trends in this exciting field, it is essential reading for graduate students and researchers, as well as language practitioners and other language professionals.
Key Features • Provides examples of inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary approaches to heritage languages • Introduces current theoretical and practical issues in heritage languages using ordinary-language explanations and examples throughout • Combines global coverage of heritage languages with an in-depth investigation of linguistic and educational approaches to these languages
Contents Introduction – heritage languages, heritage speakers, heritage linguistics; Part I. Heritage Languages Around the World:
Part II. Research Approaches to Heritage Languages: Part III. Grammatical Aspects of Heritage Languages: Part IV. Heritage Language Education:
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students May 2021 244 x 170 mm c.800pp 978-1-108-48726-9 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00 978-1-108-71999-5 Paperback TBA / TBA
Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics
Running Head Linguistics Right
Turkic
Lars Johanson
Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz, Germany
Description Turkic is one of the world’s major language families, comprising a high number of distinct languages and varieties that display remarkable similarities and notable differences. Written by a leading expert in the field, this landmark work provides an unrivalled overview of multiple features of Turkic, covering structural, functional, historical, sociolinguistic and literary aspects. It presents the history and cultures of the speakers, structures, and use of the whole set of languages within the family, including Turkish, Azeri, Turkmen, Tatar, Kazakh, Uzbek, and Uyghur, and gives a comprehensive overview of published works on Turkic languages, large and small. It also provides an innovative theoretical framework, employing a unified terminology and transcription, to give new insights into the Turkic linguistic type. Requiring no previous knowledge of the Turkic languages, it will be welcomed by both general readers, as well as academic researchers and students of linguistic typology, comparative linguistics, and Turkic studies.
Key Features • Provides an innovative theoretical framework for the study of Turkic, employing a unified terminology and transcription • Gives a comprehensive coverage of the field of descriptive and diachronic Turkic linguistic studies • Makes the distribution of Turkic typological features accessible for comparative and contact-linguistic studies
Contents 1. Introduction; 2. Technicalities; 3. The Turkic language family; 4. Turcia, the Turkic world; 5. Status; 6. Historical backgrounds; 7. Cultures; 8. Linguistic periodizations; 9. Registers of orature and literature; 10. Language contacts; 11. Lexicon; 12. Sound types; 13. Prime syllables; 14. Phonemes in prime syllables; 15. Polysyllabic word forms; 16. Diachronic phonology; 17. Diachrony: vowels; 18. Diachrony: consonants; 19. Writing systems; 20. Morphology: generalities;
21. Nominals: nouns; 22. Nominals: noun inflection; 23. Nominals: adjectives; 24. Nominals: pronominals; 25. Quantifiers and numerals; 26. Postpositions; 27. Copular devices; 28. Verb stems; 29. Postverbial constructions; 30. Finite verbals; 31. Verbals: viewpoint aspect; 32. Old intraterminals: aorists; 33. Focal intraterminals; 34. Postterminals; 35. Terminals; 36. Imperatives; 37. Modality; 38. Voluntatives; 39. Optatives; 40. Hypotheticals;
Additional Information Departments: Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Language Surveys May 2021 229 x 152 mm 600pp 978-0-521-86535-7 Hardback c. £105.00 / c. US$145.00
41. Further modals; 42. Copular particles of thematic bases; 43. Non-finite verbals; 44. Participant nominals; 45. Action nominals; 46. Converbs; 47. Adverbs; 48. Function words; 49. Interjections; 50. Word accents; 51. Syntactic levels; 52. Nominal phrases; 53. Verbal phrases; 54. Main clauses; 55. Non-main clauses; 56. Sentences; 57. Above the sentence level; 58. Prosody; 59. Functional synopses.
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5858
Running Head Left Linguistics
The Cambridge Handbook of Experimental Syntax Edited by Grant Goodall
University of California, San Diego
Description Experimental Syntax is an area that is rapidly growing as linguistic research becomes increasingly focused on replicable language data, in both fieldwork and laboratory environments. The first of its kind, this Handbook provides an in-depth overview of current issues and trends in this field, with contributions from leading international scholars. It pays special attention to sentence acceptability experiments, outlining current best practices in conducting tests, and pointing out promising new avenues for future research. Separate sections review research results from the past 20 years, covering specific syntactic phenomena and language types. The handbook also outlines other common psycholinguistic and neurolinguistic methods for studying syntax, comparing and contrasting them with acceptability experiments, and giving useful perspectives on the interplay between theoretical and experimental linguistics. Providing an up-to-date reference on this exciting field, it is essential reading for students and researchers in linguistics interested in using experimental methods to conduct syntactic research.
Key Features • Reviews what has been accomplished so far in experimental syntax, with sections covering syntactic phenomena and language types • Makes experimental syntax accessible to readers without prior training in performing experiments • Provides a thoughtful perspective on future directions for syntactic research.
Contents Introduction; Part I. General Issues in Acceptability Experiments: 1. Sentence Acceptability Experiments: What, How, and Why; 2. Response Methods in Acceptability Experiments; 3. Approaching Gradience in Acceptability with the Tools of Signal Detection Theory; 4. Variation in Participants and Stimuli in Acceptability Experiments; 5. Acceptability, Grammar, and Processing; 6. Satiation; 7. Acceptability (and Other) Experiments for Studying Comparative Syntax; Part II. Experimental Studies of Specific Phenomena: 8. Resumptive Pronouns in English;
9. Island Effects; 10. The That-Trace Effect; 11. Anaphora: Experimental Methods for Investigating Coreference; 12. Constituent Order and Acceptability; 13. Acceptability Judgments at the Syntax-¬Semantics Interface; Part III. Experimental Studies of Specific Populations and Language Families: 14. Acceptability Studies in L2 Populations; 15. Judgments of Acceptability, Truth and Felicity in Child Language; 16. Acceptability and Truth Value Judgment Studies in East Asian Languages; 17. Acceptability Experiments in Romance Languages;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics May 2021 244 x 170 mm c.800pp 978-1-108-47480-1 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00 978-1-108-46549-6 Paperback TBA / TBA
18. Acceptability Studies in (Non-English) Germanic Languages; 19. Acceptability Studies in Semitic Languages; 20. Experimental Syntax and the Slavic Languages; 21. Acceptability Judgments in Sign Linguistics; Part IV. Experimental Syntax Beyond Acceptability: 22. Theories All The Way Down: Remarks on ‘Theoretical’ and ‘Experimental’ Linguistics; 23. Eye-Tracking and Self-Paced Reading; 24. Nothing Entirely New Under the Sun: ERP Responses to Manipulations of Syntax; 25. Corpus Studies of Syntax; 26. Syntax and Speaking; 27. Neuroimaging.
Running Head Linguistics Right
5959
A Thesaurus of English Dialect and Slang England, Wales and the Channel Islands
Jonnie Robinson British Library, London
Description A thesaurus of present-day vernacular English from Berwick-upon-Tweed to the Channel Islands, this unique record of everyday English celebrates established regional dialects, emerging new varieties and colloquial forms young and old. Based on a prestigious nationwide survey, BBC Voices Recordings, it documents the linguistic landscape of England, Wales and the Channel Islands in the 21st century, and includes over 3000 separate entries, drawn from over 200 locations across the country. Each entry contains information about the term’s origins, location and the social distribution of its users. With links to original sound files and cross-references to complementary dictionary sources, it is an authoritative reference work for academic linguists, but its accessible presentation also makes it suitable for creative audiences and non-specialist language enthusiasts seeking authentic, up-to-date information on British English dialect and slang, and for English language teachers and learners as an invaluable educational tool.
Key Features • Provides comprehensive coverage of entire lexical data captured in BBC Voices Recordings, presented in easily understandable language • All entries are mapped to existing reference works where available, signposting users to other resources that support additional lines of enquiry e.g. provenance, etymology, distribution etc • The thesaurus is based on freely available audio data. The complete set of corresponding sound recordings is available to stream worldwide at sounds.bl.uk
Contents Preface: The Voices Project; Acknowledgements; List of Abbreviations and Transcription Conventions; Introduction; Part I. A Thesaurus of the BBC Voices Recordings in England, Wales and the Channel Islands: 1. How You Feel; 2. What You Do; 3. What You Wear; 4. What You Call Them; 5. Inside and Outside; 6. Getting Personal; Part II. An Inventory of the BBC Voices Recordings Survey in England, Wales and the Channel Islands: A. North East;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, undergraduate students July 2021 244 x 170 mm c.550pp 978-1-108-47323-1 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 978-1-108-46107-8 Paperback TBA / TBA
B. Yorkshire and Humber; C. North West; D. East Midlands; E. West Midlands; F. East Anglia; G. South West; H. South East; I. London; J. Wales; K. Channel Islands; Bibliography; Index.
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Running Head Left Management
The Cambridge International Handbook of Lean Production Diverging Theories and New Industries around the World
Thomas Janoski
University of Kentucky
Darina Lepadatu
Kennesaw State University, Georgia
Description This handbook focuses on two sides of the lean production debate that rarely interact. On the one hand, management and industrial engineering scholars have presented a positive view of lean production as the epitome of efficiency and quality. On the other hand, sociology, industrial relations, and labor relations scholars focus on work speedups, management by stress, trade union positions, and self-exploitation in lean teams. The editors of this volume understand the merits of both views and present them accordingly, bridging the gaps among five disciplines and presenting the best of each perspective. Chapters by internationally acclaimed authors examine the positive, negative and neutral possible effects of lean, providing a global view of lean production while adjusting lean to the cultural and political contexts of different nation-states. As the first multi-lens view of lean production from academic and consultant perspectives, this volume charts a way forward in the world of work and management in our global economy.
Key Features • Provides an interdisciplinary and multi-industry approach to lean production as the new division of labor • Explains how cultural differences around the world affect lean implementation • Offers vital insights to academics in management and the social sciences as well as managers, labor leaders, and workers
Contents 1. Lean Production as the Dominant Division of Labor: Theories, Industries and National Contexts; Part I. Theories Of Lean Production: 2. Lean Production from the View of Management Theory: Functional, Critical and Paradox Approaches; 3. Lean Production-Perspectives from its Primary Caretaker: Industrial Engineering; 4. The Industrial Relations Perspective on Lean Systems and Unions; 5. Contested Views of Lean Production from the Social Sciences Perspective; 6. The Labor Process Theory Critique of Lean Production; Part II. Lean Production Across Industries: 7. Challenges to Lean Implementation from a True Lean Perspective (TPS);
8. Varieties of Lean Production in the Auto Industry; 9. The Innovation Process and Impact of New Technologies on Lean Production; 10. Lean Production in the Telecommunications Industry; 11. Evidence-Based Services and Lean in Hospitals and Service Industries; 12. The Adoption of Lean Thinking by Legal Services Providers; 13. The Implementation of Lean Production in Government; 14. Mass Merchandizing and Lean Production at Walmart, Costco and Amazon; 15. Lean Management Systems and the Use of Financial Information; 16. Lean Production and Quality Control in Software and Programming;
Additional Information Level: Undergraduate Students, graduate students March 2021 253 x 177 mm c.700pp 978-1-108-42431-8 Hardback £170.00 / US$220.00 978-1-108-44005-9 Paperback TBA / TBA
Part III: Lean Production Around The World: 17. Lean in Europe and the US – A New Dominant Division of Labor?; 18. The Implementation of Lean Production in Korea; 19. Transferring Lean to North America; 20. Lean Production in the United Kingdom; 21. Strong Alternative Models and Lean Production in Germany; 22. Tricolore: Traditionalists, Taylorists and Toyotism and the Historical Perspective of Lean in France; 23. The Partial Implementation of Lean Production in China; 24. Lean or Fordist Processes in India and Australia; 25. The Four Stages of Lean in Mexico; 26. Lean Production in former Communist Russia.
RunningMathematics Head Right
6161
Invariance of Modules under Automorphisms of their Envelopes and Covers Ashish K. Srivastava St Louis University, Missouri
Askar Tuganbaev
National Research University ‘Moscow Power Engineering Institute’
and Pedro A. Guil Asensio Universidad de Murcia, Spain
Description The theory of invariance of modules under automorphisms of their envelopes and covers has opened up a whole new direction in the study of module theory. It offers a new perspective on generalizations of injective, pure-injective and flat-cotorsion modules beyond relaxing conditions on liftings of homomorphisms. This has set off a flurry of work in the area, with hundreds of papers using the theory appearing in the last decade. This book gives the first unified treatment of the topic. The authors are real experts in the area, having played a major part in the breakthrough of this new theory and its subsequent applications. The first chapter introduces the basics of ring and module theory needed for the following sections, making it self-contained and suitable for graduate students. The authors go on to develop and explain their tools, enabling researchers to employ them, extend and simplify known results in the literature and to solve longstanding problems in module theory, many of which are discussed at the end of the book.
Key Features • The first book on the theory of modules invariant under automorphisms of their envelopes and covers • Begins with the basics of ring and module theory, making it self-contained and suitable for graduate students • Contains plentiful examples and a whole chapter of open problems to which researchers can apply the theory
Contents 1. Preliminaries; 2. Modules invariant under automorphisms of envelopes; 3. Structure and properties of modules invariant under automorphisms; 4. Automorphism-invariant modules; 5. Modules coinvariant under automorphisms of their covers; 6. Schröder–Bernstein problem; 7. Automorphism-extendable modules; 8. Automorphism-liftable modules; 9. Open problems; References; Index.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series, 466 March 2021 229 x 152 mm c.250pp 978-1-108-94953-8 Paperback £50.00 / US$80.00
6262
Running Head Left Mathematics
Variations on a Theme of Borel An Essay on the Role of the Fundamental Group in Rigidity
Shmuel Weinberger University of Chicago
Description In the middle of the last century, after hearing a talk of Mostow on one of his rigidity theorems, Borel conjectured in a letter to Serre a purely topological version of rigidity for aspherical manifolds (i.e. manifolds with contractible universal covers). The Borel conjecture is now one of the central problems of topology with many implications for manifolds that need not be aspherical. Since then, the theory of rigidity has vastly expanded in both precision and scope. This book rethinks the implications of accepting his heuristic as a source of ideas. Doing so leads to many variants of the original conjecture - some true, some false, and some that remain conjectural. The author explores this collection of ideas, following them where they lead whether into rigidity theory in its differential geometric and representation theoretic forms, or geometric group theory, metric geometry, global analysis, algebraic geometry, K-theory, or controlled topology.
Key Features • Introduces tools from a variety of fields, useful to students and researchers in topology, geometry, operator theory, and geometric group theory • Uses both true and false variations on the conjecture, to gain a deeper understanding of it • Makes much more concrete an area where recent work has been expressed very abstractly
Contents 1. Introduction; 2. Examples of aspherical manifolds; 3. First contact – The proper category; 4. How can it be true?; 5. Playing the Novikov game; 6. Equivariant Borel conjecture; 7. Existential problems; 8. Epilogue – A survey of some techniques; References; Index.
Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics, 213 April 2021 228 x 152 mm 351pp 978-1-107-14259-6 Hardback £95.00 / US$125.00
RunningMathematics Head Right
6363
Topics in Algorithmic Graph Theory Edited by Lowell W. Beineke Purdue University, Indiana
Martin Charles Golumbic University of Haifa, Israel
and Robin J. Wilson
The Open University, Milton Keynes
Description Algorithmic graph theory has been expanding at an extremely rapid rate since the middle of the twentieth century, in parallel with the growth of computer science and the accompanying utilization of computers, where efficient algorithms have been a prime goal. This book presents material on developments on graph algorithms and related concepts that will be of value to both mathematicians and computer scientists, at a level suitable for graduate students, researchers and instructors. The fifteen expository chapters, written by acknowledged international experts on their subjects, focus on the application of algorithms to solve particular problems. All chapters were carefully edited to enhance readability and standardize the chapter structure as well as the terminology and notation. The editors provide basic background material in graph theory, and a chapter written by the book’s Academic Consultant, Martin Charles Golumbic (University of Haifa, Israel), provides background material on algorithms as connected with graph theory.
Key Features • Timely coverage of the rapidly expanding area of algorithmic graph theory • Written by world leaders in the field, with authors from eleven countries and five continents • Provides extensive background material and gives detailed references for each chapter • Covers the main areas of the subject, using a consistent chapter structure, terminology and notation throughout
Contents Foreword; Preface; Preliminaries; 1. Graph Algorithms; 2. Graph Colouring Variations; 3. Total Colouring; 4. Testing of Graph Properties;
5. Cliques, Colouring and Satisfiability: From Structure to Algorithms; 6. Chordal Graphs; 7. Dually and Strongly Chordal Graphs; 8. Leaf Powers; 9. Split Graphs; 10. Strong Cliques and Stable Sets;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications, 178 May 2021 234 x 156 mm c.380pp 978-1-108-49260-7 Hardback c. £89.99 / c. US$125.00
11. Restricted Matchings; 12. Covering Geometric Domains; 13. Graph Homomorphisms; 14. Sparsity and Model Theory; 15. Extremal Vertex-sets; Notes on Contributors; Index.
6464
Running Head Left Mathematics
Constrained Willmore Surfaces Symmetries of a Möbius Invariant Integrable System
Áurea Casinhas Quintino
Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal
Description From Bäcklund to Darboux, this monograph presents a comprehensive journey through the transformation theory of constrained Willmore surfaces, a topic of great importance in modern differential geometry and, in particular, in the field of integrable systems in Riemannian geometry. The first book on this topic, it discusses in detail a spectral deformation, Bäcklund transformations and Darboux transformations, and proves that all these transformations preserve the existence of a conserved quantity, defining, in particular, transformations within the class of constant mean curvature surfaces in 3-dimensional space-forms, with, furthermore, preservation of both the space-form and the mean curvature, and bridging the gap between different approaches to the subject, classical and modern. Clearly written with extensive references, chapter introductions and self-contained accounts of the core topics, it is suitable for newcomers to the theory of constrained Wilmore surfaces. Many detailed computations and new results unavailable elsewhere in the literature make it also an appealing reference for experts.
Key Features • Contains many detailed computations and new results unavailable elsewhere in the literature • Suitable for newcomers to the theory of constrained Willmore surfaces, including graduate students • Clearly written and includes extensive references and a reader-friendly abstract to each chapter
Contents Introduction; 1. A bundle approach to conformal surfaces in space-forms; 2. The mean curvature sphere congruence; 3. Surfaces under change of flat metric connection; 4. Willmore surfaces; 5. The Euler–Lagrange constrained Willmore surface equation; 6. Transformations of generalized harmonic bundles and constrained Willmore surfaces; 7. Constrained Willmore surfaces with a conserved quantity; 8. Constrained Willmore surfaces and the isothermic surface condition; 9. The special case of surfaces in 4-space; Appendix A. Hopf differential and umbilics; Appendix B. Twisted vs. untwisted Bäcklund transformation parameters; References; Index.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series, 465 May 2021 228 x 152 mm c.250pp 978-1-108-79442-8 Paperback £55.00 / US$90.00
Running Head Medicine Right
6565
Neonatal Hematology Pathogenesis, Diagnosis, and Management of Hematologic Problems Third edition
Edited by Pedro A. de Alarcón University of Illinois College of Medicine
Eric J. Werner
Children’s Hospital of the King’s Daughters
Robert D. Christensen University of Utah
and Martha C. Sola-Visner Harvard University, Massachusetts
Description Neonatal hematology is a fast-growing field, and the majority of sick neonates will develop hematological problems. This is an essential guide to the pathogenesis, diagnosis and management of hematologic problems in the neonate. Guidance is practical, including blood test interpretation, advice on transfusions and reference ranges for hematological values. Chapters have been thoroughly revised according to the latest advances in the field for this updated third edition. Topics discussed include erythrocyte disorders, platelet disorders, leukocyte disorders, immunologic disorders and hemostatic disorders. Coverage of oncological issues has been expanded to two separate chapters on leukemia and solid tumors, making information more easily accessible. Approaches to identifying the cause of anemia in a neonate are explained, with detailed algorithms provided to aid clinicians in practice. Covering an important hematologic niche with an ever increasing amount of specialized knowledge, this book is a valuable resource for hematologists, neonatologists and pediatricians.
Key Features • Includes reference ranges for hematological values according to gestational and postnatal age, aiding quick and accurate treatment of patients • Describes a practical approach to common and rare hematological problems in neonates • Focuses on problem-solving, including the interpretation of common blood tests, transfusions, anemias and platelet problems
Contents Foreword; Preface; Part I. Developmental Hematology: 1. A historical review; 2. Hematopoiesis; 3. The development of the human immune system; Part II. Bone Marrow Failure and Immune Disorders: 4. Bone marrow failure syndromes; 5. Immunodeficiency diseases of the neonate; Part III. Erythrocyte Disorders: 6. Newborn genetic screening for blood disorders; 7. A guide to identifying the cause of anemia in a neonate;
8. Anemia of prematurity and indications for erythropoietin therapy; 9. Hemolytic disease of the fetus and newborn; 10. Neonatal hemolysis; 11. Polycythemia and hyperviscosity in the newborn; Part IV. Platelet Disorders: 12. Approach to thrombocytopenia; 13. Acquired thrombocytopenias; 14. Fetal and neonatal alloimmune and isoimmune thrombocytopenias; 15. Congenital thrombocytopenias and thrombocytopathies; Part V. Leucocyte Disorders:
Additional Information Level: medical specialists/consultants, specialist medical trainees, medical students January 2021 254 x 178 mm c.514pp 51 b/w illus. 19 colour illus. 50 tables 978-1-108-48898-3 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00
16. Eosinophils and neutrophils; 17. Functional phagocyte disorders in the neonate; Part VI. Hemostatic Disorders: 18. Bleeding disorders; 19. Neonatal thrombosis; Part VII. Neonatal Transfusion Medicine: 20. Transfusion practices; Part VIII. Neonatal Oncology: 21. Neonatal leukemia; 22. Neonatal and perinatal solid tumors; Part IX. Miscellaneous: 23. Disorders of the feto-maternal unit; 24. Reference intervals in neonatal hematology.
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Running Head Left Medicine
Liver Disease in Children Fifth edition
Edited by Frederick J. Suchy
University of Colorado Children’s Hospital, Denver
Ronald J. Sokol
University of Colorado Children’s Hospital, Denver
and William F. Balistreri
Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, Cincinnati
Edited in association with Jorge A. Bezerra Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, Cincinnati
Cara L. Mack
University of Colorado Children’s Hospital, Denver
and Benjamin L. Shneider Texas Children’s Hospital, Houston
Description Liver disease in children is increasing in prevalence, placing a huge burden on healthcare systems and often requiring long-term management. Offering an integrative approach to the science and clinical practice of pediatric hepatology, this is the definitive reference text for improved diagnosis and treatment strategies. In the new edition of this authoritative text, chapters have been thoroughly revised in line with major advances in the field, such as recognizing the increased frequency of fatty liver disease, and how genetic testing has the potential to establish earlier diagnoses for a variety of diseases. Disorders covered include cholestasis, metabolic disorders and hepatitis, with their presentation across the spectrum of infancy, childhood and adolescence discussed. The indications and surgical aspects of liver transplant are explained and post-transplant care is described in detail. This is a valuable resource for pediatricians, hepatologists, gastroenterologists and all clinicians involved in the care of children with liver diseases.
Key Features • Fully updated to reflect advances in genomics, molecular medicine and personalized therapy, allowing readers to apply this knowledge for improved early diagnoses and treatment • Comprehensively covers every aspect of pediatric liver disease including current approaches to diagnosis and treatment, across the spectrum of infancy, childhood and adolescence • Three new Associate Editors and several new contributors add a fresh perspective and provide additional expertise to the book, complementing the experience of the established authors
Contents Section 1. Pathophysiology of Pediatric Liver Disease: Section 2. Cholestatic Liver Disease:
Additional Information Level: medical specialists/consultants February 2021 276 x 219 mm c.768pp 27 b/w illus. 978-1-108-84351-5 Hardback £180.00 / US$235.00
Section 3. Hepatitis and Immune Disorders: Section 4. Metabolic Liver Disease: Section 5. Other Considerations and Issues in Pediatric Hepatology:
Running Head Medicine Right
6767
Differential Diagnosis in Cytopathology Edited by Ji-Weon Park Rush University, Chicago
Paolo Gattuso
Rush University, Chicago
Vijaya Reddy
Rush University, Chicago
and Shahla Masood University of Florida
Description This fully updated edition incorporates the newest classification systems, such as the Bethesda System for reporting thyroid cytopathology; the Paris System for reporting urinary cytology, and the Milan System for reporting salivary gland cytopathology. Over 1,000 high-quality color photos illustrate the key diagnostic cytological features described. Succinct bullet points condense vital information, making the text more accessible for busy clinicians. The full spectrum of infection, inflammatory, benign and malignant processes throughout the body are presented in detail, including chapters on cervical, breast, and central nervous system diagnostic criteria. Key information pearls and differential diagnosis indicators give insight from experts in the field. Not limited to light microscopic findings, many other genetic, molecular, and immunologic diagnostic modalities are covered in this essential and comprehensive resource. An online version of the book with expandable figures can be accessed on Cambridge Core, via the code printed on the inside of the cover.
Key Features • Over 1,000 high-quality colour images illustrate key diagnostic features, helping readers to improve their diagnostic perception and interpretation • Discussing a wide range of disorders, succinct bullet points condense vital information and make the text more accessible to readers • Readers can gain full HTML access of the whole book with expandable figures via a scratch-off code inside the cover
Contents 1. The Pap Smear; 2. Exfoliative Pulmonary Cytology; 3. Body Cavity Fluids; 4. Gastrointestinal Tract; 5. Urinary Cytology; 6. Cerebrospinal Fluid and Intraocular Cytology; 7. Cytopathology of Central Nervous System;
8. Fine-needle Aspiration of Thyroid Gland; 9. Parathyroid Gland, Head and Neck; 10. Salivary Glands; 11. Cytopathology of the Breast; 12. Fine-needle Aspiration of Lymph Nodes; 13. Fine-needle Aspiration of Lung, Pleura and Mediastinum;
Additional Information Level: medical specialists/consultants, specialist medical trainees March 2021 276 x 219 mm c.756pp 978-1-108-97564-3 Print/online bundle £155.00 / US$200.00
14. Fine-needle Aspiration of Liver; 15. Fine-needle Aspiration of the Pancreas; 16. Fine-needle Aspiration of Soft Tissue and Bone; 17. Fine-needle Aspiration of the Kidney and Adrenal Gland; 18. Cytology of the Gonads; 19. Fine-needle Aspiration Cytology of Tumors of Unknown Origin.
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Running Head Left Medicine
Color Atlas of Emergency Trauma Third edition
Edited by Demetrios Demetriades University of Southern California, Los Angeles
Carl R. Chudnofsky
University of Southern California, Los Angeles
and Elizabeth R. Benjamin
University of Southern California, Los Angeles
Description The third edition of the Color Atlas of Emergency Trauma brings the reader to the bedside of patients with traumatic injuries, at one of the largest and busiest trauma centers in North America. It includes over 1200 images, designed as a comprehensive visual and reference guide to emergency trauma care. Organized by major body regions, this atlas explores the full spectrum of common and uncommon traumatic injuries, including those caused by firearms, stab wounds, blunt trauma, crush injury, and burns. It also covers special patient groups, such as pregnant, pediatric and geriatric populations. Each chapter is augmented with patient images at presentation, radiographic, intraoperative and autopsy images, and color illustrations and photographs showing key anatomy from the cadaver laboratory. With common pitfalls discussed and invaluable tips from a multidisciplinary group of experienced trauma care providers, this book is a useful and practical resource for all those involved in trauma care.
Key Features • In this new edition, more than 300 new images have been added and every chapter has been revised and updated, giving readers an up-to-date view of emergency trauma • New chapters on pediatric trauma, geriatric trauma, trauma in pregnancy and procedure techniques ensure readers gain the comprehensive knowledge and practical skills for performing life-saving procedures in all trauma victims • Draws on the personal experience of a multidisciplinary group of experienced trauma care providers, providing invaluable recommendations and advice
Contents Part I. Injuries: 1. Head injury; 2. Facial injury; 3. Neck injury; 4. Thoracic injury; 5. Abdominal trauma; 6. Musculoskeletal injury; 7. Spinal injuries; 8. Burn injuries; 9. Soft tissue injuries;
10. Extremity compartment syndrome; 11.Disaster medicine; 12. Trauma in pregnancy; 13. Pediatric trauma; 14. Geriatric trauma; 15. Disaster medicine; Part II. Procedures: 16. Central venous access; 17. Intraosseous access techniques; 18. Cricothyroidotomy;
Additional Information Level: medical specialists/consultants April 2021 276 x 203 mm c.368pp 978-1-108-48934-8 Hardback £230.00 / US$300.00
19. Thoracostomy tube insertion; 20. Emergency room resuscitative thoracotomy; 21. Resuscitative endovascular occlusion of the aorta REBOA; 22. Diagnostic peritoneal aspiration; 23. Tourniquet application for extremity bleeding control; 24. Splinting; 25. Ultrasound in trauma.
Physics Running and Head Astronomy Right
6969
Computer-Generated PhaseOnly Holograms for 3D Displays A Matlab Approach
Peter Wai Ming Tsang City University of Hong Kong
Description ‘Phase-only Fresnel holograms,’ which can be displayed on a single SLM without the need for lenses or complicated optical accessories, substantially simplifies 3-D holographic display systems. Exploring essential concepts, theories, and formulations of these phase-only Fresnel holograms, this book provides comprehensive coverage of modern methods for generating such holograms, which pave the way for commercial products such as compact holographic projectors, heads-up displays, and data security enhancement. Relevant MATLAB codes are provided for readers to implement and evaluate the theories and formulations of different methods, and can be used as a quick start framework for further research and development. This is a crucial and up-to-date treatment of phase-only Fresnel holograms for students and researchers in electrical and electronic engineering, computer science/engineering, applied physics, information technology, and multimedia technology, as well as engineers and scientists in industry developing new products on 3-D displays and holographic projection.
Key Features • Comprehensive coverage of the latest techniques for generating phase-only Fresnel holograms • Methods and formulations presented in a simplified manner and using illustrative diagrams to allow fast understanding • Experimental results make abstract methods understandable • The included MATLAB® source codes allow for immediate comprehension and verification of concept, theory, and formulation
Contents Preface; 1. Introduction to Digital Holography; 2. Fast Methods for Computer Generated Holography; 3. Generation of Phase-Only Fresnel Hologram; 4. Conversion of Complex-Valued Holograms to Phase-Only Holograms; 5. Applications of Phase-Only Hologram in Display, Holographic Encryption and Steganography.
Additional Resources: http://www.cambridge.org/9781108427333 MATLAB® codes are provided whenever possible, which are packaged with friendly graphic user interface (GUI)
Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers, professionals January 2021 244 x 170 mm c.265pp 978-1-108-42733-3 Hardback £110.00 / US$140.00
7070
Running Physics and Head Astronomy Left
Theory of the Spread of Epidemics and Movement Ecology of Animals An Interdisciplinary Approach using Methodologies of Physics and Mathematics
V. M. (Nitant) Kenkre University of New Mexico
and Luca Giuggioli University of Bristol
Description Exploiting powerful techniques from physics and mathematics, this book studies animal movement in ecology, with a focus on epidemic spread. Pulmonary syndrome is not only feared in epidemics of recent times, such as COVID-19, but is also characteristic of epidemics studied earlier such as Hantavirus. The Hantavirus is one of the book’s central topics. Correlations between epidemic outbreaks and precipitation events like El Niño are analyzed and spatial reservoirs of infection in off-period of the epidemic, known as refugia, are studied. Predicted traveling waves of infection are successfully compared to field observations. Territoriality in scent-marking animals is presented, with parallels drawn with the theory of melting. The flocking and herding of birds and mammals are described in terms of collective excitations. For scientists interested in movement ecology and epidemic spread, this book provides effective solutions to long-standing problems.
Key Features • Sophisticated, analytical techniques from statistical mechanics and nonlinear science such as Fokker-Planck methods, bifurcation formalism, and Smoluchowski analysis are introduced to the field of ecology • Theoretical research is grounded alongside real-world ecological field observations • Physics concepts seldom used in ecology, such as collective excitations and the theory of melting, are used in the book
Contents 1. Theoretical Framework Underlying the Book; 2. μ-space Approach to the Study of Epidemics: Fisher Equation with Internal States; 3. Abrupt Spatial Transitions: Patchiness and Extinction of Infection and Population; 4. Results from Fisher Variants: Patterns from Long-range Competition and Allee Effect in the Spread of Infection; 5. Extraction of Parameters from Observations, Emergence of Home Ranges, and Applicability of the Fisher Equation for Bacteria; 6. Explicit Incorporation of Home Ranges in the Theory of the Spread of Epidemics; 7. Avoidance Interactions and the Emergence of Spatial Segregation; 8. Attractive Interactions and Flocking; 9. Related Investigations along Miscellaneous Directions; 10. Summary and Future Directions; Appendix A: A Technical Appendix; Appendix B: A Historical Appendix.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers December 2020 244 x 170 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-84140-5 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00
Physics Running and Head Astronomy Right
7171
Contemporary Kinetic Theory of Matter J. R. Dorfman
University of Maryland, College Park
Henk van Beijeren
Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands
and T. R. Kirkpatrick
University of Maryland, College Park
Description Kinetic theory provides a microscopic description of many observable, macroscopic processes and has a wide range of important applications in physics, astronomy, chemistry, and engineering. This powerful, theoretical framework allows a quantitative treatment of many non-equilibrium phenomena such as transport processes in classical and quantum fluids. This book describes in detail the Boltzmann equation theory, obtained in both traditional and modern ways. Applications and generalizations describing non-equilibrium processes in a variety of systems are also covered, including dilute and moderately dense gases, particles in random media, hard sphere crystals, condensed Bose-Einstein gases, and granular materials. Fluctuation phenomena in non-equilibrium fluids, and related non-analyticities in the hydrodynamic equations are also discussed in some detail. A thorough examination of many topics concerning time dependent phenomena in material systems, this book describes both current knowledge as well as future directions of the field.
Key Features • Carefully discusses major developments in modern kinetic theory for multidisciplinary applications • The problems of applying fundamental methods of non-equilibrium statistical mechanics to fluid systems are discussed, to facilitate future contributions to the topic • A comparison of theoretical predictions and results of experimental studies illustrates the importance of the theory in the broader context of physics and engineering
Contents 1. Introduction; 2. The Boltzmann equation 1: Fundamentals; 3. The Boltzmann equation 2: Fluid dynamics; 4. Dilute gas mixtures; 5. The dilute Lorentz gas; 6. Basic tools;
7. Enskog theory: Dense hard sphere systems; 8. The Boltzmann-Langevin equation; 9. Granular gases; 10. Quantum gases; 11. Cluster expansions; 12. Divergences and resummations;
Additional Information Departments: Level: academic researchers, graduate students February 2021 244 x 170 mm 590pp 978-0-521-89547-7 Hardback £145.00 / US$190.00
13. Long time tails; 14. Non-equilibrium steady states; 15. What’s next; Bibliography; Index.
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Runningand Physics Head Astronomy Left
Star-Formation Rates of Galaxies Andreas Zezas University of Crete
Véronique Buat
Université d’Aix-Marseille
Description Star-formation is one of the key processes that shape the current state and evolution of galaxies. This volume provides a comprehensive presentation of the different methods used to measure the intensity of recent or on-going star-forming activity in galaxies, discussing their advantages and complications in detail. It includes a thorough overview of the theoretical underpinnings of star-formation rate indicators, including topics such as stellar evolution and stellar spectra, the stellar initial mass function, and the physical conditions in the interstellar medium. The authors bring together in one place detailed and comparative discussions of traditional and new star-formation rate indicators, star-formation rate measurements in different spatial scales, and comparisons of star-formation rate indicators probing different stellar populations, along with the corresponding theoretical background. This is a useful reference for students and researchers working in the field of extragalactic astrophysics and studying star-formation in local and higher-redshift galaxies.
Key Features • Introductory but comprehensive in its coverage of star formation in galaxies, suitable for advanced undergraduate students and higher • A handy one-volume reference for the many methods used in measuring star formation rates • Bridges several areas of astrophysics, covering traditional as well as emerging probes and new observational capabilities
Contents Preface. Part I. Background: 1. Introduction; 2. The initial mass function of stars and the star-formation rates of galaxies; 3. Stellar populations, stellar evolution and stellar atmospheres; 4. Dust extinction, attenuation, and emission; Part II. SFR Measurements: 5. Star-formation rates from resolved stellar populations; 6. Star-formation measurements in nearby galaxies; 7. Continuum and emission-line star formation rate indicators; 8. Star-formation rates from spectral energy distributions of galaxies; 9. Modelling the spectral energy distribution of star-forming galaxies with radiative transfer methods; 10. Measuring the star-formation rate in active galactic nuclei; 11. High-energy star-formation rate indicators; Index.
Additional Resources: http://www.cambridge.org/9781107184169 Colour figures
Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Astrophysics, 55 May 2021 247 x 174 mm 400pp 978-1-107-18416-9 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00
Running Head Philosophy Right
The Cambridge Kant Lexicon Julian Wuerth
Vanderbilt University, Tennessee
Description Immanuel Kant is widely recognised as one of the most important Western philosophers since Aristotle. His thought has had, and continues to have, a profound effect on every branch of philosophy, including aesthetics, ethics, metaphysics, epistemology, political philosophy, and philosophy of religion. This Lexicon contains detailed and original entries by 130 leading Kant scholars, covering Kant’s most important concepts as well as each of his writings. Part I covers Kant’s notoriously difficult philosophical concepts, providing entries on these individual ‘trees’ of Kant’s philosophical system. Part II, by contrast, provides an overview of the ‘forest’ of Kant’s philosophy, with entries on each of his published works and on each of his sets of lectures and personal reflections. This part is arranged chronologically, revealing not only the broad sweep of Kant’s thought but also its development over time. Professors, graduate students, and undergraduates will value this landmark volume.
Key Features • Contains hundreds of entries, covering all aspects of Kant’s philosophy as well as all of his published works, lecture notes and personal reflections • Includes contributions from 130 of the world’s leading Kant scholars • Provides a broad overview of the development of Kant’s thought
Contents Preface; Acknowledgements; Lists of Abbreviations; Part I. Kant’s Philosophical Concepts: A-Z; Part II. Kant’s Collected Works: Kant’s Published Writings: 1749; 1754; 1755; 1756; 1757; 1758; 1759; 1760; 1762; 1763; 1764; 1765; 1766; 1768; 1770; 1771;
1775; 1776; 1781; 1782; 1783; 1784; 1785; 1786; 1787; 1788; 1790; 1791; 1792; 1793; 1794; 1795; 1796; 1797; 1798; 1799; 1800;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students February 2021 228 x 152 mm 840pp 978-0-521-19596-6 Hardback £99.99 / US$130.00
1802; 1803; 1936, 1938 [posthumous publication]; Opus Postumum; Reflections: Reflections on Anthropology; Reflections on Ethics; Reflections on Metaphysics; Reflections on Philosophy of Right; Reflections on Physics and Chemistry; Reflections on Theology; Lectures: Lectures on Anthropology; Lectures on Ethics; Lectures on Geography; Lectures on Mathematics; Lectures on Metaphysics; Lectures on Natural Right; Lectures on Philosophical Encyclopedia; Lectures on Physics; Lectures on Theology; Contributors; Bibliography.
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7474
Running Head Left Psychology
The Cambridge Handbook of Intelligence and Cognitive Neuroscience Edited by Aron K. Barbey
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Sherif Karama
McGill University, Montréal
and Richard J. Haier
University of California, Irvine
Description This handbook introduces the reader to the thought-provoking research on the neural foundations of human intelligence. Written for undergraduate or graduate students, practitioners, and researchers in psychology, cognitive neuroscience, and related fields, the chapters summarize research emerging from the rapidly developing neuroscience literature on human intelligence. The volume focusses on theoretical innovation and recent advances in the measurement, modelling, and characterization of the neurobiology of intelligence differences, especially from brain imaging studies. It summarizes fundamental issues in the characterization and measurement of general intelligence, and surveys multidisciplinary research consortia and large-scale data repositories for the study of general intelligence. A systematic review of neuroimaging methods for studying intelligence is provided, including structural and diffusion-weighted MRI techniques, functional MRI methods, and spectroscopic imaging of metabolic markers of intelligence.
Key Features • Summarizes fundamental issues in the characterization and measurement of general intelligence, and evaluates multidisciplinary research consortia and large-scale data repositories for the study of general intelligence • Provides a systematic review of neuroimaging methods for studying intelligence, including structural and diffusion-weighted MRI techniques, functional MRI methods, and spectroscopic imaging • Maps out predictive modeling approaches to the study of human intelligence
Contents Part I. Fundamental Issues: Part II. Theories, Models, and Hypotheses:
Part III. Neuroimaging Methods and Findings: Part IV. Predictive Modeling Approaches:
Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers February 2021 254 x 178 mm c.600pp 978-1-108-48054-3 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00 978-1-108-72772-3 Paperback £69.99 / US$89.99
Part V. Translating Research on the Neuroscience of Intelligence into Action:
Running Head Psychology Right
7575
The Cambridge Handbook of Animal Cognition Allison B. Kaufman University of Connecticut
Josep Call
University of St Andrews, Scotland
James C. Kaufman
University of Connecticut
Description This handbook lays out the science behind how animals think, remember, create, calculate, and remember. It provides concise overviews on major areas of study such as animal communication and language, memory and recall, social cognition, social learning and teaching, numerical and quantitative abilities, as well as innovation and problem solving. The chapters also explore more nuanced topics in greater detail, showing how the research was conducted and how it can be used for further study. The authors range from academics working in renowned university departments to those from research institutions and practitioners in zoos. The volume encompasses a wide variety of species, ensuring the breadth of the field is explored.
Key Features • Provides overviews of animal communication and language, memory, social cognition, social learning and teaching, quantitative abilities, innovation, and problem solving • Contains a roster of international experts from renowned university departments, research institutions, and zoos • Includes a wide variety of species as examples from ants to fish to elephants.
Contents Section I. Communication and Language: 1.1 Communication and Language Overview; 1.2 Communication in Ant Societies; 1.3 Symbolic Communication in the Grey Parrot; 1.4 Communication in Dogs and Wolves; Section II. Memory and Recall: 2.6 Memory and Recall Overview; 2.7 A Fish Memory Tale: Memory and Recall in Fish and Sharks; 2.8 Memory in Humming Birds; 2.9 Event Memory in Rats; 2.10 Primate Recall Memory; Section III. Social Cognition: 3.11 Social Cognition Overview; 3.12 Proximate and Ultimate Mechanisms of Cooperation in Fishes;
3.13 Evolutionary and Neural Bases of the Sense of Animacy; 3.14 Raven Social Cognition and Behaviour; 3.15 Reciprocity in Norway Rats (Rattus Norvegicus); 3.16 Exploring the Social Minds of Elephants; 3.17 Dolphin Social Cognition; 3.18 Mirror Self-Recognition: Five Decades of Primate Research; Section IV. Social Learning and Teaching: 4.19 Social Learning and Teaching Overview; 4.20 Tandem-Running Recruitment by Temnothorax Ants as a Model System for Social Learning; 4.21 Fish Social Networks; 4.22 Social Learning in Birds; 4.23 Social Learning in Chimpanzees; Section V. Numerical and Quantative Abilities: 5.24 Numerical and Quantitative Abilities Overview;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology April 2021 247 x 174 mm c.700pp 978-1-108-42674-9 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00 978-1-108-44548-1 Paperback £79.99 / US$105.00
5.25 Numerical Competence in Fish; 5.26 Spatial-Numerical Association in Non-Human Animals; 5.27 Perceptual Categorization in Pigeons; Section VI. Innovation and Problem Solving: 6.28 Innovation and Problem-Solving Overview; 6.29 General Intelligence (g) in Mice; 6.30 Bowerbird Innovation and Problem-Solving; 6.31 Parrot Innovation; 6.32 Innovation in Marine Mammals; 6.33 Innovation in Capuchin Monkeys; 6.34 Innovation and Problem Solving in Orangutans; 6.35 Do Apes and Monkeys Know What They [Don’t] Know? The Question of Metacognition in Primates; 6.36 Decision-Making in Animals: Rational Choices and Adaptive Strategies.
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Running Psychology Head Left
The Cambridge Handbook of Community Psychology Interdisciplinary and Contextual Perspectives
Edited by Caroline S. Clauss-Ehlers Rutgers University, New Jersey
Description This comprehensive handbook provides community psychology approaches to addressing the key issues that impact individuals and their communities worldwide. Featuring international, interdisciplinary perspectives from leading experts, the handbook tackles critical contemporary challenges. These include climate change, immigration, educational access, healthcare, social media, wellness, community empowerment, discrimination, mental health, and many more. The chapters offer case study examples to present practical applications and to review relevant implications within diverse contexts. Throughout, the handbook considers how community psychology plays out around the world: What approaches are being used in different countries? How does political context influence the development and extension of community psychology? And what can nations learn from each other as they examine successful community psychology-based interventions? This is essential reading for researchers, students, practitioners, and policy makers involved with community well-being.
Key Features • Addresses key issues that communities face across the globe • Considers multicultural aspects of community experiences from an international, interdisciplinary perspective • Uses case studies to present practical applications and review relevant implications within diverse contexts
Contents Foreword; Part I. Foundational Concepts: Interdisciplinary, Culturally Responsive, and Contextual Approaches: Part II. Research, Assessment, and Program Evaluation: Ecological Considerations: Part III. Community Psychology in Action: Critical Themes and Areas of Application:
Part IV. Where Do We Go from Here? Gaps and Opportunities for Community Psychology: 29. Responding to Gaps in Research and Practice in Community Psychology; 30. Changing the Community Psychology Narrative: A Contextual, Interdisciplinary, Inclusive, Empowerment Approach.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students May 2021 244 x 170 mm c.850pp 978-1-108-49218-8 Hardback c. £143.00 / c. US$185.00 978-1-108-72909-3 Paperback c. £44.99 / c. US$64.99
Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology
Running Head Religion Right
7777
Christian Platonism A History
Edited by Alexander J. B. Hampton University of Toronto
and John Peter Kenney
Saint Michael’s College, Vermont
Description Platonism has played a central role in Christianity and is essential to a deep understanding of the Christian theological tradition. At times, Platonism has constituted an essential philosophical and theological resource, furnishing Christianity with an intellectual framework that has played a key role in its early development, and in subsequent periods of renewal. Alternatively, it has been considered a compromising influence, conflicting with the faith’s revelatory foundations and distorting its inherent message. In both cases the fundamental importance of Platonism, as a force which Christianity defined itself by and against, is clear. Written by an international team of scholars, this landmark volume examines the history of Christian Platonism from antiquity to the present day, covers key concepts, and engages issues such as the environment, natural science and materialism.
Key Features • Chapter by chapter introduces the key concepts of Christian Platonism, allowing readers to gain a strong grasp of sometimes difficulty concepts • Offers a history of Christian Platonism, with each period treated by an expert in the field • Considers key issues, such as the environment, religion and science, and the meaning of art thus demonstrating the role Christian Platonism plays in central philosophical and ethical debates
Contents Introduction. Christianity and Platonism; Part I. Concepts: 1.1 The perennial value of platonism; 1.2 The ideas as thoughts of God; 1.3 The one and the trinity; 1.4. Creation, begetting, desire, and re-creation in Christian platonism; 1.5 The concept of theology; 1.6 Participation: Aquinas and his Neoplatonic sources; Part II. History: 2.1. The Bible and early Christian platonism; 2.2 Platonism and Christianity in late antiquity; 2.3 The development of Christian platonism in the medieval west; 2.4 Christian platonism in Byzantium;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students December 2020 228 x 152 mm 512pp 978-1-108-49198-3 Hardback £99.99 / US$130.00
2.5 Renaissance Christian platonism and ficino; 2.6 Northern renaissance platonism from Cusa to Böhme; 2.7 Christian platonism in early modernity; 2.8 The counter-enlightenment and romantic platonism; 2.9 Christian platonism and modernity; Part III. Engagements: 3.1 Christian platonism and natural science; 3.2 Christian platonism, nature and environmental crisis; 3.3 Art and meaning; 3.4 Value, dualism and materialism; 3.5 Christian love and platonic friendship; 3.6 Multiplicity in Earth and heaven; Index.
7878
Running Head Left Theatre
The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea Volume 2: Later Collections, Print and Manuscript
Anne Finch Edited by Jennifer Keith
University of North Carolina, Greensboro
and Claudia Thomas Kairoff
Wake Forest University, North Carolina
Description This is the first ever complete critical edition of the writings of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea (1661–1720), including work printed in her lifetime and material left in manuscript form at her death. Textual analysis, based on print and manuscript copies in repositories across the United Kingdom and United States, reveals her revision processes and uses of manuscript and print. Extensive commentary clarifies her techniques, sources, contexts, and diction. A detailed essay traces the history of her works’ reception and transmission. The result is a complete view of her achievements that will promote more accurate assessments of her contributions to literary and cultural shifts, including perspectives on literary value, women’s equality, religion, and affairs of state. This second volume provides established texts of Finch’s later collections in print and manuscript form, Miscellany Poems, on Several Occasions (1713) and The Wellesley Manuscript, as well as uncollected poems and letters.
Key Features • Presents previously unpublished poems and letters • Provides established texts of Finch’s later collections in print and manuscript form • Includes a comprehensive introduction, extensive explanatory notes and thorough textual commentary
Contents List of illustrations; Preface and acknowledgments; Chronology; Abbreviations; Note; General introduction; Textual introduction; Account of the texts; From Miscellany Poems, on Several Occasions; The Wellesley Manuscript; Additional poems; Explanatory and textual notes; Correspondence; A reception and transmission history of Finch’s work: illustrative cases from the eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries; List of source copies; Select bibliography; Index of titles; Index of first lines.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students December 2020 216 x 138 mm 600pp 7 b/w illus. 978-1-107-06865-0 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00
Running Head Theatre Right
7979
Plays 1682–1696 Volume 4: The Plays 1682–1696
Aphra Behn General Editor Elaine Hobby Loughborough University
and Rachel Adcock Keele University
Kate Aughterson University of Brighton
Alan James Hogarth University of Leicester
Anita Pacheco
The Open University, Milton Keynes
Margarete Rubik
Universität Wien, Austria
and Claire Bowditch Loughborough University
Description Aphra Behn (1640-1689) is renowned as the first professional woman of literature and drama in English. Her career in the Restoration theatre extended over two decades, encompassing remarkable generic range and diversity. Her last five plays, written and performed between 1682 and 1696, include city comedies (The City-Heiress, The Luckey Chance), a farce (The Emperor of the Moon), a tragicomedy (The Widdow Ranter), and a comedy of family inheritance (The Younger Brother). These plays exemplify Behn’s skills in writing for individual performers, and exhibit the topical political engagement for which she is renowned. They witness to Behn’s popularity with theatre audiences during the politically and financially difficult years of the 1680s and even after her death. Informed by the most up-to-date research in computational attribution, this fully annotated edition draws on recent scholarship to provide a comprehensive guide to Behn’s work, and the literary, theatrical and political history of the Restoration.
Key Features • Provides fully annotated, trustworthy texts of the works of Aphra Behn (1682-1696), incorporating the latest scholarship • Detailed introductions place Behn’s works in literary and historical contexts, provides a knowledgeable guide both to Behn’s work and to the literary and political cultures of the Restoration • Incorporates cutting-edge research on authorship analysis, informed by both literary and Digital Humanities approaches, enabling readers to evaluate the likely authorship of dubious works that have been historically attributed to Behn
Contents Introduction; Editorial Conventions; 1. The City-Heiress; 2. The Luckey Chance; 3. The Emperor of the Moon; 4. The Widdow Ranter; 5. The Younger Brother.
Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Aphra Behn February 2021 228 x 152 mm c.700pp 11 b/w illus. 978-1-108-84074-3 Hardback £89.99 / US$120.00 978-1-108-81521-5 Paperback TBA / TBA
8080
Running Head Left Theatre
The Return of the Native Thomas Hardy Tim Dolin
Curtin University, Perth
Description This is the first complete scholarly edition of one of Hardy’s greatest novels. The Return of the Native engages ambitiously with contemporary ideas and problems of existence, and would go on to become one of the major ‘Wessex novels’. When composed in 1878, however, Hardy’s Wessex did not yet exist, and this edition, which is based on meticulous analysis of Hardy’s holograph manuscript and every significant print edition of the novel to appear in his lifetime, situates The Return of the Native within the historical context of its first publication, encouraging readers to trace its evolution over the following four decades. Tim Dolin provides a wealth of supporting materials, including an original, authoritative text, comprehensive annotation, commentary and glossary, and illustrated appendices of both Arthur Hopkins’s illustrations and the topography of Egdon Heath, thus creating an invaluable tool for students and scholars of Hardy and nineteenth-century literature alike.
Key Features • The text is given a comprehensive introduction and situated within its wider context • Includes illustrated appendices on the origins and topography of Egdon and also Arthur Hopkinson’s illustrations • Provides an authoritative version of the text, along with detailed commentary and textual notes
Contents List of Illustrations; General Editor’s Preface; Acknowledgements; Chronology; Abbreviations of Texts of The Return of the Native; Introduction; The Return of the Native; Apparatus; Variations in Punctuation and Styling; End-of-Line Word Division; Editorial Emendations; Appendices: Appendix 1. Hardy’s Preface to the Novel; Appendix 2. Description of the Manuscript; Appendix 3. Description of Substantive Editions; Appendix 4. Dialect Glossary and Table of Changes to Standard and Non-standard Speech; Appendix 5. A Note on Hardy’s Note to VI.iii; Appendix 6. Egdon Heath and the Dorset Heathlands; Appendix 7. Illustrations to the Belgravia Serial Edition; Notes; Works Cited in the Notes; Textual Notes; Explanatory Notes.
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Novels and Stories of Thomas Hardy February 2021 216 x 138 mm 850pp 978-1-107-03777-9 Hardback £95.00 / US$125.00
Running Head Theatre Right
8181
Shakespeare in Print A History and Chronology of Shakespeare Publishing Second edition
Andrew Murphy Trinity College Dublin
Description Described by the TLS as ‘a formidable bibliographical achievement … destined to become a key reference work for Shakespeareans’, Shakespeare in Print is now issued in a revised and expanded edition offering a wealth of new material, including a chapter which maps the history of digital editions from the earliest computer-generated texts to the very latest digital resources. Murphy’s narrative offers a masterful overview of the history of Shakespeare publishing and editing, teasing out the greater cultural significance of the ways in which the plays and poems have been disseminated and received over the centuries from Shakespeare’s time to our own. The opening chapters have been completely rewritten to offer close engagement with the careers of the network of publishers and printers who first brought Shakespeare to print, additional material has been added to all chapters, and the chronological appendix has been updated and expanded.
Key Features • Remains the only single volume history of Shakespeare publishing and editing covering the entire period from the 1590s to the present • In this new edition, the history of digital Shakespeare publishing is tracked for the first time • Completely new opening chapters provide a thorough, comprehensive account of early modern publishing in London
Contents List of Illustrations; List of Tables; Preface; Acknowledgements; List of Abbreviations; Part I: Text; Introduction; 1. Bringing Shakespeare to Print; 2. Collecting Shakespeare; 3. The Tonson Era 1: Rowe to Warburton;
4. The Tonson Era 2: Johnson to Malone; 5. Copyright Disputes: English Publishers; 6. Copyright Disputes: Scottish and Irish Publishers; 7. American Editions; 8. Nineteenth-Century Popular Editions; 9. Nineteenth-Century Scholarly Editions; 10. The New Bibliography; 11. Shakespeare in the Modern Era; 12. Shakespeare Beyond Print; Part II: Introduction to the Chronological Appendix;
Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students May 2021 229 x 152 mm c.560pp 978-1-108-83800-9 Hardback £110.00 / US$145.00 978-1-108-94764-0 Paperback TBA / TBA
Chronological Appendix; Index 1: By Play/Poem Title; Index 2: By Series/Edition Title; Index 3: By Editor/Creator; Index 4: By Publisher/Printer/Host; Index 5: By Place of Publication (excluding London); Notes; Bibliography; Main Index.
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Date Delivery instructions
Quantity
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American Literature 1
2
3
4
Eric Gardner
Benjamin Fagan
Teresa Zackodnik
Shirley MoodyTurner
African American Literature in Transition, 1865–1880
African American Literature in Transition, 1830–1850
African American Literature in Transition
African American Literature in Transition, 1900–1910
978-1-108-42747-0
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£89.99
US$115.00
978-1-108-44621-1
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TBA
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978-1-108-42294-9
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£70.00
US$110.00
978-1-108-43523-9
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978-1-108-42748-7
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£89.99
US$115.00
978-1-108-44622-8
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978-1-108-42208-6
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£89.99
US$115.00
978-1-108-43326-6
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£85.00
US$110.00
5
Michaël Roy
Frederick Douglass in Context
978-1-108-47873-1 978-1-108-74613-7
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6
Victor Bascara
Asian American Literature in Transition, 1930–1965
978-1-108-83560-2
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£85.00
US$110.00
978-1-108-81294-8
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7
Asha Nadkarni
Asian American Literature in Transition, 1965–1996
978-1-108-84385-0
Hardback
£85.00
US$110.00
978-1-108-82686-0
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8
Betsy Huang
Asian American Literature in Transition, 1996–2020
978-1-108-83084-3
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£85.00
US$110.00
978-1-108-82343-2
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9
David Staines
A History of Canadian Fiction
978-1-108-41808-9
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US$110.00
978-1-108-40646-8
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Classical Studies 10
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Denis Feeney
Denis Feeney
Explorations in Latin Literature
Explorations in Latin Literature
978-1-108-48186-1
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£80.00
US$110.00
978-1-108-74153-8
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978-1-108-48185-4
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Stephen White
Diogenes Laertius: Lives of Eminent Philosophers
978-0-521-88335-1
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J. N. Adams
Asyndeton and its Interpretation in Latin Literature
978-1-108-83785-9
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Earth and Environmental Sciences 14
Jenny M. Fairbrass
Emerging Governance of a Green Economy
978-1-108-49043-6
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Jakob Skovgaard
The Economisation of Climate Change
978-1-108-49283-6
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Alan Rubin
Meteorite Mineralogy
978-1-108-48452-7
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Pak Sum Low
Sustainable Development: Asia-Pacific Perspectives
978-0-521-89717-4
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Engineering 18
Norman J. Wagner
Theory and Applications of Colloidal Suspension Rheology
978-1-108-42303-8
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Philippe Ferrari
Reconfigurable Circuits and Technologies for Smart Millimeter-Wave Systems
978-1-107-10247-7
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Erkan Dokumacı
Duct Acoustics
978-1-108-84075-0
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English, European and World Literature 21
Ronald Cummings
Caribbean Literature in Transition, 1970–2020
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Evelyn O’Callaghan
Caribbean Literature in Transition, 1800–1920
978-1-108-47588-4 978-1-108-46920-3
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Raphael Dalleo
Caribbean Literature in Transition, 1920–1970
978-1-108-49552-3
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978-1-108-81867-4
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Geraldine Higgins
Adam Watt
Narve Fulsås
David Kornhaber
Seamus Heaney in Context
The Cambridge History of the Novel in French
Ibsen in Context
978-1-107-18014-7
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978-1-316-63201-7
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978-1-108-41304-6
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The Optical Papers of Isaac Newton
978-1-108-95422-8
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£250.00
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Performing the Gospels in Byzantium
978-1-108-49139-6
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Tom Stoppard in Context
General Science 28
Isaac Newton
History 29
Roland Betancourt
30
Hamit Bozarslan
The Cambridge History of the Kurds
978-1-108-47335-4 978-1-108-46142-9
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Keith Bradley
The Cambridge World History of Slavery
978-0-521-84067-5
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International Law Reports
978-1-108-49543-1
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Marc Weller
International Law and Peace Settlements
978-1-108-49804-3
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Brian T. Fitzpatrick
The Cambridge Handbook of Class Actions
978-1-108-48858-7
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Sara Iglesias
Fundamental Rights in the EU Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
978-1-108-48813-6
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Philippe De Baere
The WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement
978-1-108-42351-9
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Christopher Greenwood
International Law Reports
978-1-108-49544-8
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Andrew Godwin
The Cambridge Handbook of Twin Peaks Financial Regulation
978-1-107-18642-2
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Benjamin van Rooij
The Cambridge Handbook of Compliance
978-1-108-47712-3
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Life Sciences 40
41
Francine L. Dolins
Denys Wheatley
Spatial Analysis in Field Primatology
Scientific Writing and Publishing
978-1-107-06230-6
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Walter Wilczynski
Robert G. Woodmansee
Cooperation and Conflict
Natural Resource Management Reimagined
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Narsis A. Kiani
Networks of Networks in Biology
978-1-108-42887-3
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Adrian C. Newton
Ecosystem Collapse and Recovery
978-1-108-47273-9
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Mark R. T. Dale
Tomo Royama
Quantitative Analysis of Ecological Networks
Animal Population Ecology
Anne McDonnell Sill Statistics for Laboratory Scientists and Clinicians
Andrew Travers
Why DNA?
978-1-108-49184-6
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Linguistics 50
N. J. Enfield
The Languages of Mainland Southeast Asia
Wendy AyresBennett
The Cambridge Handbook of Language Standardization
52
Hossein Nassaji
The Cambridge Handbook of Corrective Feedback in Second Language Learning and Teaching
53
Rachael-Anne Knight
The Cambridge Handbook of Phonetics
978-1-108-49573-8 978-1-108-44859-8
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Sungdai Cho
The Cambridge Handbook of Korean Linguistics
978-1-108-41891-1
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Michael Haugh
Silvina Montrul
The Cambridge Handbook of Sociopragmatics
The Cambridge Handbook of Heritage Languages and Linguistics
978-1-108-84496-3
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R
TBA
.................
.................
US$145.00
Hardback
.................
.................
£105.00
Paperback
.................
R
Hardback
978-1-108-47323-1
.................
.................
978-0-521-86535-7
978-1-108-46107-8
.................
.................
Turkic
A Thesaurus of English Dialect and Slang
.................
.................
Lars Johanson
Jonnie Robinson
................. .................
.................
57
59
................. .................
R
.................
.................
.................
.................
.................
.................
.................
.................
.................
.................
.................
.................
X
.................
.................
Management 60
Thomas Janoski
The Cambridge International Handbook of Lean Production
R
Mathematics 61
Ashish K. Srivastava
Invariance of Modules under Automorphisms of their Envelopes and Covers
62
Shmuel Weinberger
Variations on a Theme of Borel
978-1-107-14259-6
Hardback
£95.00
US$125.00
X
.................
.................
63
Lowell W. Beineke
Topics in Algorithmic Graph Theory
978-1-108-49260-7
Hardback
£89.99
US$125.00
R
.................
.................
64
Áurea Casinhas Quintino
Constrained Willmore Surfaces
978-1-108-79442-8
Paperback
£55.00
US$90.00
X
.................
.................
Medicine 65
Pedro A. de Alarcón
Neonatal Hematology
978-1-108-48898-3
Hardback
£120.00
US$155.00
G
.................
.................
66
Frederick J. Suchy
Liver Disease in Children
978-1-108-84351-5
Hardback
£180.00
US$235.00
M .................
.................
£155.00
US$200.00
M .................
.................
£230.00
US$300.00
G
.................
.................
Subtotal
.................
67
Ji-Weon Park
Differential Diagnosis in Cytopathology
978-1-108-97564-3
Print/online bundle
68
Demetrios Demetriades
Color Atlas of Emergency Trauma
978-1-108-48934-8
Hardback
Quantity
Cost
Physics and Astronomy 69
Peter Wai Ming Tsang
Computer-Generated Phase-Only Holograms for 3D Displays
978-1-108-42733-3
Hardback
£110.00
US$140.00
X
.................
.................
70
V. M. (Nitant) Kenkre
Theory of the Spread of Epidemics and Movement Ecology of Animals
978-1-108-84140-5
Hardback
£120.00
US$155.00
X
.................
.................
71
J. R. Dorfman
Contemporary Kinetic Theory of Matter
978-0-521-89547-7
Hardback
£145.00
US$190.00
X
.................
.................
72
Andreas Zezas
Star-Formation Rates of Galaxies
978-1-107-18416-9
Hardback
£120.00
US$155.00
X
.................
.................
The Cambridge Kant Lexicon
978-0-521-19596-6
Hardback
£99.99
US$130.00
R
.................
.................
The Cambridge Handbook of Intelligence and Cognitive Neuroscience
978-1-108-48054-3
Hardback
£125.00
US$165.00
R
.................
.................
978-1-108-72772-3
Paperback
£69.99
US$89.99
P
.................
.................
Philosophy 73
Julian Wuerth
Psychology 74
75
76
Aron K. Barbey
Allison B. Kaufman
Caroline S. ClaussEhlers
The Cambridge Handbook of Animal Cognition
978-1-108-42674-9
Hardback
£150.00
US$195.00
R
.................
.................
978-1-108-44548-1
Paperback
£79.99
US$105.00
P
.................
.................
978-1-108-49218-8
Hardback
£143.00
US$185.00
R
.................
.................
978-1-108-72909-3
Paperback
£44.99
US$64.99
P
.................
.................
Christian Platonism
978-1-108-49198-3
Hardback
£99.99
US$130.00
R
.................
.................
978-1-107-06865-0
Hardback
£120.00
US$155.00
R
.................
.................
R
The Cambridge Handbook of Community Psychology
Religion 77
Alexander J. B. Hampton
Theatre 78
Jennifer Keith
The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea
79
Elaine Hobby
Plays 1682–1696
978-1-108-84074-3
Hardback
£89.99
US$120.00
978-1-108-81521-5
Paperback
TBA
TBA
.................
.................
.................
.................
80
Thomas Hardy
The Return of the Native
978-1-107-03777-9
Hardback
£95.00
US$125.00
R
.................
.................
81
Andrew Murphy
Shakespeare in Print
978-1-108-83800-9
Hardback
£110.00
US$145.00
R
.................
.................
978-1-108-94764-0
Paperback
TBA
TBA
.................
.................
Subtotal
.................
Total for all pages
.................
86
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88
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