Library Highlights Kit July - December 2021
www.cambridge.org/LibrarianResource
Higher Education from Cambridge University Press Knowledge. Applied. Higher Education from Cambridge University Press offers the highest quality content and resources from leading authors to instructors and students. The website combines the convenience of online institutional access to textbooks, using the same technology as the Cambridge Core platform, with functionality to meet the needs of individual students and instructors. Access to supplementary resources to support instructors and students Enhanced search functionality returns results across Cambridge Core and the Higher Education site Online textbooks read by unlimited concurrent users, with offline reading capability. Notes, highlighting, citation tools and bookmarking functionality makes studying easier
Find out more at cambridge.org/highereducation
Running Head Right
3
Contents ISBN
FULL TITLE
GBP PRICE
UK PUB DATE
PAGE
The Cambridge Guide to the Architecture of Christianity
£425.00
October 2021
5
A Commentary on Panegyrici Latini II(12)
£80.00
December 2021
7
978-1-107-09274-7
Mao Zedong
£125.00
July 2021
8
978-1-108-48305-6
Sources for Byzantine Art History
£200.00
August 2021
9
978-1-107-02504-2
The Cambridge History of Medieval Canon Law
£110.00
December 2021
10
Art 978-1-108-47151-0
Classical Studies 978-1-107-15504-6
History
Language and linguistics 978-1-108-47323-1
A Thesaurus of English Dialect and Slang
£120.00
July 2021
11
978-1-108-49238-6
The Cambridge Handbook of the Philosophy of Language
£125.00
July 2021
12
978-1-108-41730-3
The Cambridge Handbook of Arabic Linguistics
£125.00
September 2021
13
978-1-108-49138-9
The Cambridge Handbook of Task-Based Language Teaching
£120.00
September 2021
14
Law 978-1-108-83898-6
Commentary on the Third Geneva Convention
£350.00
July 2021
15
978-1-108-42351-9
The WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement
£175.00
July 2021
17
978-1-108-48813-6
Fundamental Rights in the EU Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
£150.00
July 2021
18
978-1-108-83746-0
The Cambridge Handbook of Lawyering in the Digital Age
£200.00
July 2021
19
978-1-316-51639-3
International Law Reports
£170.00
July 2021
20
978-1-108-49714-5
The Cambridge Handbook of Privatization
£160.00
August 2021
21
978-1-108-48512-8
Fiduciary Obligations in Business
£150.00
August 2021
22
978-1-108-49478-6
The Right to Life under International Law
£200.00
August 2021
23
978-1-108-49428-1
Schreuer’s Commentary on the ICSID Convention
£250.00
September 2021
24
978-1-108-83721-7
The Cambridge Handbook of Commons Research Innovations
£140.00
September 2021
25
978-1-316-51156-5
International Law Reports
£170.00
September 2021
26
978-1-107-16325-6
The Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership
£69.99
October 2021
27
978-1-107-17195-4
The Cambridge Handbook of Law and Entrepreneurship in the United States
£140.00
October 2021
28
978-1-108-42984-9
Great Christian Jurists in the Low Countries
£100.00
October 2021
29
978-1-108-41808-9
A History of Canadian Fiction
£84.99
July 2021
30
978-1-108-49568-4
Surrealism
£84.99
July 2021
31
978-1-108-49597-4
Elizabeth Bishop in Context
£84.99
July 2021
32
978-1-107-18913-3
A Set of Six
£84.99
August 2021
33
978-1-108-84196-2
The City in American Literature and Culture
£84.99
August 2021
34
978-1-108-48737-5
A History of Chilean Literature
£84.99
August 2021
35
978-1-108-47766-6
Norman Mailer in Context
£84.99
August 2021
36
978-1-316-51712-3
Shakespeare Survey 74
£89.99
August 2021
37
978-1-108-47751-2
Chicago
£85.00
September 2021
38
978-0-521-83306-6
Sir Charles Grandison
£225.00
October 2021
39
978-1-107-02964-4
The Aspern Papers and Other Tales, 1884–1888
£85.00
October 2021
40
Cambridge Handbook of Routine Dynamics
£110.00
August 2021
41
Orthogonal Polynomials in the Spectral Analysis of Markov Processes
£94.99
November 2021
42
Literature
Management 978-1-108-83447-6
Mathematics 978-1-316-51655-3
4
Running Head Left
ISBN
FULL TITLE
GBP PRICE
UK PUB DATE
PAGE
TBA
October 2021
43
Medicine 978-1-108-48888-4
Insular Epilepsies
978-1-107-56742-9
The Cambridge Haydn Encyclopedia
£24.99
July 2021
44
978-1-108-42184-3
Liszt in Context
£84.99
October 2021
45
978-1-108-48918-8
Foundations of American Political Thought
£94.99
August 2021
46
978-1-108-48246-2
Kant’s Early Critics on Freedom of the Will
£74.99
October 2021
47
978-1-108-49515-8
Ludwig Wittgenstein: Writings on Mathematics and Logic, 1937–1944
£74.99
December 2021
48
Music
Philosophy
Psychology 978-1-108-48509-8
The Cambridge Handbook of Lifespan Development of Creativity
£145.00
July 2021
49
978-1-108-49218-8
The Cambridge Handbook of Community Psychology
£145.00
July 2021
50
978-1-108-42674-9
The Cambridge Handbook of Animal Cognition
£150.00
July 2021
51
978-1-108-49497-7
The Cambridge Handbook of Forensic Psychology
£145.00
September 2021
52
978-1-108-48501-2
The Cambridge Handbook of Identity
£145.00
October 2021
53
978-1-108-84158-0
The Cambridge Handbook of Multimedia Learning
£150.00
October 2021
54
The Cambridge History of Judaism
£175.00
July 2021
55
Religion 978-0-521-51717-1 978-1-108-68899-4
The Cambridge History of Atheism
£230.00
July 2021
56
978-1-316-51838-0
Religion in Sixteenth-Century Mexico
£100.00
November 2021
57
Art
5
The Cambridge Guide to the Architecture of Christianity Richard A. Etlin
University of Maryland, College Park
Description The Cambridge Guide to the Architecture of Christianity offers a wide-ranging overview of one of the most important genres of Western architecture, from its origins in the Early Christian era to the present day. Including 103 essays, specially commissioned for this volume and written by an international team of scholars, the volume examines a range of themes and issues, including religious building types, siting, regional traditions, ornament, and structure. It also explores how designers and builders responded to the spiritual needs and cult practices of Christianity as they developed and evolved over the centuries. The volume is richly illustrated with 592 halftones and 70 color plates. Additional images, nearly all in color are available online and are keyed into the text. The most comprehensive and up-to date reference work on this topic, The Cambridge Guide to the Architecture of Christianity will serve as a primary reference resource for scholars, practitioners, and students.
Key Features • The most up to date and comprehensive overview of Christian architecture, East and West, from its origins in Late Antiquity up to the present day currently available • Explores the development of Christian architecture in tandem with the evolution of Christian liturgy and ritual practices over nearly two millenia • Written by an international team of top scholars
Contents Part I. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture: 1. Early Christian pilgrimage and sacred landscapes; 2. Domestic architecture and Christian worship in Late Antiquity; 3. Sacred space and sensory experience Late Antique churches; 4. The conversion of Pagan temples into churches in the Late Antique East; 5. Early Christian monasteries; 6. Early Christian baptisteries; 7. The early Christian churches of Palestine and Arabia; 8. Sacred space in Late Antique and Coptic Egypt; 9. Armenian churches of the seventh century; 10. Typology and scale in byzantine church architecture; 11. Byzantine builders: their crafts and materials; 12. Rite and passage in the medieval Byzantine church; 13. Ritual and authority in Hagia Sophia; 14. The Byzantine church beyond the liturgy; 15. Aesthetics and illumination of Byzantine church architecture; 16. Ekphrasis and symbolism in church architecture; 17. Place, time, and text in the monumental decoration of the middle Byzantine church; 18. Religion in the Byzantine countryside; 19. Patronage of Byzantine churches and monasteries; 20. Byzantine architecture and the monastic experience; 21. Burials and funerary chapels in Byzantium; 22. The architectural setting of pilgrimage in the Byzantine world: learning from Cyprus; 23. Cultural conflict and cultural synergies: crusaders, colonists, and Byzantine churches; 24. Islamicizing motifs in middle Byzantine church decoration; 25. Symbolism and ornament on Byzantine church exteriors, 900–1500; 26. Early Christian Georgian churches; 27. Medieval religious architecture in the Balkans; 28. Byzantine architecture in Italy;
Part II. Medieval Christian Architecture: 29. The legacy of the city of Rome to Christian architecture; 30. East and West in the early middle ages: Josef Strzygowski and the Orient oder Rom controversy; 31. Basilicas and centralized churches in the early middle ages; 32. Religious architecture in Gaul in the early middle ages; 33. Monastic Christian architecture; 34. Carolingian architecture; 35. Liturgy and architecture in the middle ages; 36. Christian pilgrimage and medieval architecture; 37. Anglo-Saxon church architecture; 38. The Year 1000 and the promise of a new millennium through church architecture; 39. The notion of Romanesque; 40. Romanesque architecture in its regional manifestations; 41. Early Gothic architecture; 42. Gothic and the medieval quadrivium; 43. The architectural metaphor in Western medieval artistic culture: from the cornerstone to the mystic ark; 44. High Gothic architecture in France, 1190–1240; 45. Gothic structure; 46. The Sainte-Chapelle and Paris as the heavenly Jerusalem; 47. Liturgical furnishings and material splendor in the Gothic church; 48. Regional Gothic in Burgundy; 49. Gothic church building in England; 50. Italian architecture in the high middle ages; 51. Spanish medieval architecture: European currents and regional solutions on the fringe of the Christian world; 52. Shared sacred spaces in the Holy Land; 53. Late Gothic architecture; 54. Gothic architecture and the waning of the middle ages; 55. Gothic towers and spires;
6
Art
56. Microarchitecture in the medieval West, 800–1500; 57. Numeric symbolism in the medieval cathedral and city; 58. Gargoyles; 59. Wall painting and sacred space in medieval churches; 60. Nature and gothic architecture; 61. Reception of gothic and Romanesque architecture in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries; Part III. Renaissance and Baroque Christian Architecture: 62. The courts and their churches in the Lutheran reformation; 63. Iconoclasm in mid-sixteenth-century France; 64. Early modern church architecture in Paris; 65. Protestant temples in Catholic France; 66. Swedish church architecture after the reformation; 67. Baroque churches of London; 68. Reformation and counter-reformation: architecture in the low countries; 69. Carlo Borromeo: liturgy and sacred architecture after the Council of Trent; 70. The lure of the Christian past in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Rome; 71. The language of Roman Baroque church facades; 72. Urban development as religious imperative in early modern Rome; 73. Christian charity and public hospitals in early modern Rome; 74. Illusionism in early modern church decoration: celestial visions; 75. Votive churches, reliquary chapels, and pilgrimage shrines; 76. Architectural education and early modern religious orders; 77. Architecture of the religious orders: the local Baroques of the Benedictines and Carthusians; 78. Convent architecture in early modern Italy; 79. The architecture of confraternities in Italy; 80. Religious festival architecture in public spaces in early modern Europe; 81. Ephemeral design and international politics in Roman national churches;
82. Architecture of Sacri Monti and villas: devotional landscapes of the Italian counter-reformation; 83. Palace chapels and divine kingship: five European capitals; 84. Religious architecture in early modern Poland, 1500–1800, the architecture of confraternities in Italy; 85. Early modern church architecture in Russia; 86. Transatlantic renaissance and Baroque architecture in Spain and Latin America; 87. Hybrid Baroque in Portuguese and Spanish Asia: architecture and architectural sculpture in Portuguese India, Macao, and the Philippines; 88. Confessional politics in the German historiography of Baroque church architecture; Part IV. Modern Christian Architecture: 89. Turning points in modern Christian architecture; 90. Frank Lloyd Wright’s religious architecture; 91. Auguste Perret’s Notre-Dame du Raincy: a turning point in church architecture; 92. Architecture in the wake of the liturgical movement; 93. Modern German church architecture; 94. Modern church architecture in Central Europe; 95. Modernism in Irish religious architecture; 96. Modern cemeteries of Europe and North America; 97. Christian architecture in modern Japan; 98. Ritual paths in modern Christian architecture; 99. The churches of Pietro Belluschi; 100. Ukrainian Church architecture in North America; 101. Louis Kahn’s metaphysical legacy; 102. Modern Scandinavian churches; 103. Modern Christian architecture of North America; Glossary; Index.
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students October 2021 279 x 216 mm c.850pp 574 b/w illus. 70 colour illus. 978-1-108-47151-0 Hardback £425.00 / US$550.00
Classical studies
7
A Commentary on Panegyrici Latini II(12) An Oration Delivered by Pacatus Drepanius before the Emperor Theodosius II in the Senate at Rome, AD 389
Roger Rees
University of St Andrews, Scotland
Description The renowned Gallic poet Pacatus Drepanius journeyed to Rome in the summer of AD 389 to deliver a speech to the Emperor Theodosius; both men stood for the first time before the Roman Senators. It was a moment of high political charge. The Latin speech survives and is here presented both in the original and with facing English translation; the introduction and commentary capture the groundbreaking character of the work and set it in its historical, rhetorical and literary contexts.
Key Features • Makes an important but neglected speech available to classicists and ancient historians • Considers the place of the speech in the rhetorical tradition • Argues that epideictic oratory deserves to be taken seriously as a literary form
Contents Preface; Abbreviations; Introduction; Panegyrici Latini II(12); Commentary; Bibliography; Index locorum; General Index.
Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students December 2021 216 x 138 mm 400pp 978-1-107-15504-6 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$130.00
8
History
Mao Zedong A Biography Volume 2: 1949–1958
Chongji Jin Xianzhi Pan Foreign Languages Press Description Mao Zedong remains one of the most controversial figures in modern world history. This ‘living legacy’ is the subject of intense, ongoing debate both within China and throughout the rest of the world. Here, volume II of the only biography of Mao written with full access to the Chinese Communist Party Archives to date is presented in English translation for the first time. This volume, undertaken by the historians of the Party Literature Research Office of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, covers Mao’s career in the period 1949–1958. As an extended official account of Mao, and Mao’s thought, this work offers a unique source through which to view the ways in which today’s Chinese Communist Party has understood and portrayed the transformative events of the twentieth century and Mao’s pivotal role therein.
Key Features • Introduces the official Chinese interpretation of the Mao period • Based on archives to which no Western scholars have yet had access • Introductory essay provides context and highlights differences in interpretation
Contents Introduction to the English Edition: Volume II; Further Reading on Mao Zedong; 1. The Chinese People Have Stood Up!; 2. Mao Zedong’s First Visit to the Soviet Union; 3. The Struggle to Restore the Economy; 4. The War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea (Part I); 5. The War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea (Part II); 6. The Struggle against the Three Evils and Five Evils; 7. The General Line for the Transition Period (Part I); 8. The General Line for the Transition Period (Part II); 9. New China’s First Constitution; 10. Opening up the Road to Agricultural Cooperatives in China (Part I); 11. Opening up the Road to Agricultural Cooperatives in China (Part II);
Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: The Cambridge China Library July 2021 228 x 152 mm 600pp 978-1-107-09274-7 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00
12. Success of the Redemption Policy; 13. From the Ten Major Relationships to the Eighth National Party Congress (Part I); 14. From the Ten Major Relationships to the Eighth National Party Congress (Part II); 15. Creating a Peaceful International Environment; 16. ‘On the Correct Handling of Contradictions among the People’, the Rectification Movement and the Anti-Rightist Campaign (Part I); 17. ‘On the Correct Handling of Contradictions among the People’, the Rectification Movement and the Anti-Rightist Campaign (Part II); 18. Mao Zedong’s Second Visit to the Soviet Union; 19. Launching the ‘Great Leap Forward’ (Part I); 20. Launching the ‘Great Leap Forward’ (Part II); 21. The Shelling of Jinmen.
History
9
Sources for Byzantine Art History Volume 3: The Visual Culture of Later Byzantium (1081–c.1350)
Foteini Spingou
University of Edinburgh
Description In this book the beauty and meaning of Byzantine art and its aesthetics are for the first time made accessible through the original sources. More than 150 medieval texts are translated from nine medieval languages into English, with commentaries from over seventy leading scholars. These include theories of art, discussions of patronage and understandings of iconography, practical recipes for artistic supplies, expressions of devotion, and descriptions of cities. The volume reveals the cultural plurality and the interconnectivity of medieval Europe and the Mediterranean from the late eleventh to the early fourteenth centuries. The first part uncovers salient aspects of Byzantine artistic production and its aesthetic reception, while the second puts a spotlight on particular ways of expressing admiration and of interpreting of the visual.
Key Features • Gathers and presents in the original text and in translation a huge number of primary sources on Byzantine visual culture • Identifies the major cultural and social tendencies of later Byzantium • Suggests a new periodization of Byzantine cultural history which sheds light on the intellectual developments between the late eleventh and early fourteenth century
Contents Part I. Art, Aesthetics and Literature: 1. Notions of the image in later Byzantium; 2. Artists and patrons; 3. Eikon and iconography in later Byzantium; 4. Materials; 5. Seeing spaces: responses to built environment; 6. Art and devotion; 7. Memory and art; 8. Beauty; Part II. Literature, Art and Aesthetics: 9. Counting down: inventories; 10. Describing, experiencing, narrating: the use of ekphrasis (ca. 1081–1330s); 11. Speaking: Ethopoiiae; 12. Instructing and dedicating: epigrams on works of art; 13. Reading: book epigrams; 14. Marking: later Byzantine epigraphic culture; 15. Lamenting: tomb epigrams and epitaphs.
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Sources for Byzantine Art History August 2021 228 x 152 mm c.500pp 978-1-108-48305-6 Multiple copy pack £200.00 / US$260.00
10
History
The Cambridge History of Medieval Canon Law Anders Winroth Universitetet i Oslo
John C. Wei Description Canon law touched nearly every aspect of medieval society, including many issues we now think of as purely secular. It regulated marriages, oaths, usury, sorcery, heresy, university life, penance, just war, court procedure, and Christian relations with religious minorities. Canon law also regulated the clergy and the Church, one of the most important institutions in the Middle Ages. This Cambridge History offers a comprehensive survey of canon law, both chronologically and thematically. Written by an international team of scholars, it explores, in non-technical language, how it operated in the daily life of people and in the great political events of the time. The volume demonstrates that medieval canon law holds a unique position in the legal history of Europe. Indeed, the influence of medieval canon law, which was at the forefront of introducing and defining concepts such as ‘equity,’ ‘rationality,’ ‘office,’ and ‘positive law,’ has been enormous, long-lasting, and remarkably diverse.
Key Features • Introduces and explains medieval canon law using as little technical language as possible • Provides a comprehensive survey of medieval canon law, both chronologically and thematically • Includes essays by both established young and senior scholars
Contents 1. Medieval canon law: introduction; Part I. The History of Medieval Canon Law: 2. The early church; 3. Early medieval canon law; 4. Canon law in the long tenth century, 900–1050; 5. The age of reforms: canon law in the century before; 6. The reinvention of canon law in the high middle ages; 7. Canon law in a time of renewal, 1130–1234; 8. The late middle ages: introduction; four remarks regarding the present state of research; 9. The late middle ages: sources; 10. The canon law of the Eastern churches; Part II. The Sources and Dissemination of Medieval Canon Law: 11. Theology and the theological sources of canon law; 12. Church councils; 13. Decretals and lawmaking; 14. Roman law; 15. Law schools and legal education; 16. Local knowledge of canon law, c. 1150–1250;
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students December 2021 229 x 152 mm 550pp 978-1-107-02504-2 Hardback c. £110.00 / c. US$180.00
17. Medieval canon law manuscripts and early printed books; Part III. Doctrine and Society: 18. Procedures and courts; 19. Ecclesiastical property, tithes, spiritualia; 20. The law of benefices; 21. Religious life; 22. The sacraments of baptism, confirmation, and the Eucharist; 23. Confession, penance, and extreme unction; 24. Saints and relics; 25. Marriage: law and practice; 26. Family law; 27. Criminal law; 28. Ecclesiastical discipline: heresy, magic, and superstition; 29. Wars and crusades; 30. Excommunication and interdict; Conclusion; 31. The spirit of canon law; 32. Bibliography of primary sources.
Language and linguistics
11
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
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.
12
Language and linguistics
The Cambridge Handbook of the Philosophy of Language Piotr Stalmaszczyk University of Lodz, Poland
Description The philosophy of language is central to the concerns of those working across semantics, pragmatics and cognition, as well as the philosophy of mind and ideas. Bringing together an international team of leading scholars, this handbook provides a comprehensive guide to contemporary investigations into the relationship between language, philosophy, and linguistics. Chapters are grouped into thematic areas and cover a wide range of topics, from key philosophical notions, such as meaning, truth, reference, names and propositions, to characteristics of the most recent research in the field, including logicality of language, vagueness in natural language, value judgments, slurs, deception, proximization in discourse, argumentation theory and linguistic relativity. It also includes chapters that explore selected linguistic theories and their philosophical implications, providing a much-needed interdisciplinary perspective. Showcasing the cutting-edge in research in the field, this book is essential reading for philosophers interested in language and linguistics, and linguists interested in philosophical analyses.
Key Features • Introduces the main issues in contemporary philosophy of language and linguistics • Offers an interdisciplinary perspective, and shows how research in different disciplines can interact • Provides examples of research in contemporary semantics and pragmatics as well as examples of how philosophical theories are applied to linguistic concepts.
Contents 1. Philosophy of Language: Definitions, Disciplines and Approaches; Part I. The Past, Present, and Future of Philosophy of Language: 2. The History of the Philosophy of Language Before Frege; 3. How the Philosophy of Language Grew out of Analytic Philosophy; 4. Philosophy of Language for the Twenty-First Century; Part II. Some Foundational Issues: 5. Philosophy of Language, Ontology and Logic; 6. Frege’s Legacy in the Philosophy of Language and Mind; 7. Metasemantics and Metapragmatics: Philosophical Foundations of Meaning; 8. Internalist Perspectives on Language; 9. Semantic Content and Utterance Context: A Spectrum of Approaches; 10. Semantic Minimalism and Contextualism in Light of the Logicality of Language; Part III. From Truth to Vagueness: 11. Truth and Theories of Truth; 12. Reference and Theories of Reference; 13. Names in Philosophy; 14. Indexicals and Contextual Involvement; 15. Natural Kind Terms; 16. Vagueness in Natural Language; Part IV. Issues in Semantics and Pragmatics: 17. Entailment, Presupposition, Implicature; 18. Speech Acts, Actions, and Events;
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics July 2021 244 x 170 mm c.800pp 978-1-108-49238-6 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00
19. Propositions, Predication, and Assertion; 20. Events in Semantics; 21. Semantics and Generative Grammar; 22. Metasemantics: A Normative Perspective (and the Case of Mood); 23. The Normativity of Meaning and Content; 24. The Semantics and Pragmatics of Value Judgments; 25. Slurs: Semantic and Pragmatic Theories of Meaning; Part V. Philosophical Implications and Linguistic Theories: 26. Philosophical Implications of Generative Grammar; 27. Conceptual Semantics and its Implications for Philosophy of Language; 28. Relevance Theory and the Philosophy of Language; 29. Mental Files; 30. Contemporary Discourse Studies and Philosophy of Language; Part VI. Some Extensions: 31. The Philosophy of Argument; 32. Negation and Denial; 33. Deception: Lying and Beyond; 34. Types and Definitions of Irony; 35. Philosophy of Language and Metaphor; 36. Analytic Philosophy of Literature; 37. The Many Facets of Linguistic Relativity.
Language and linguistics
13
The Cambridge Handbook of Arabic Linguistics Karin Ryding
Georgetown University, Washington DC
David Wilmsen
American University of Beirut
Description Arabic linguistics encompasses a range of language forms and functions from formal to informal, classical to contemporary, written to spoken, all of which have vastly different research traditions. Recently however, the increasing prominence of new methodologies such as corpus linguistics and sociolinguistics have allowed Arabic linguistics to be studied from multiple perspectives, revealing key discoveries about the nature of Arabic-in-use and deeper knowledge of traditional fields of study. With contributions from internationally renowned experts on the language, this handbook provides a state-of-the-art overview of both traditional and modern topics in Arabic linguistics. Chapters are divided into six thematic areas: applied Arabic linguistics, variation and sociolinguistics, theoretical studies, computational and corpus linguistics, new media studies and Arabic linguistics in literature and translation. It is an essential resource for students and researchers wishing to explore the exciting and rapidly moving field of Arabic linguistics.
Key Features • Provides state-of-the-art research reports with updates and overviews of current research areas and efforts • Introduces the application of theory to new types of Arabic texts • Includes a range of approaches to linguistic issues from generative grammar to social media studies
Contents Introduction and Chapter Summaries; Part I. Arabic Applied Linguistics: 1. Arabic Applied Linguistics; 2. Language Planning in the Arab World; 3. The Study of Arabic Language Acquisition; 4. Issues in Arabic Language Testing and Assessment; 5. Arabic Study Abroad: Critical Contextualization and Research-based Interventions; 6. Models of Arabic Pronunciation; Part II. Arabic Variation and Sociolinguistics: 7. Diglossia, Variation, and Structural Complexity; 8. Sociolinguistic Variation and Variation in Sociolinguistics; 9. What is Formal Spoken Arabic?; 10. Arabic Dialectology; 11. Maltese: A Peripheral Dialect in the Historical Dialectology of Arabic; Part III. Theoretical and Descriptive Studies: 12. Grammaticalization in Arabic;
Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics September 2021 247 x 174 mm c.650pp 978-1-108-41730-3 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00
13. Arabic and Onomastics; 14. The Intonation of Arabic; 15. Case in Arabic; 16. On Arabic Morphosyntax within the Theory of Generative Grammar; 17. Arabic Morphology: Inflectional and Derivational; Part IV. Arabic Computational and Corpus Linguistics: 18. Arabic Computational Linguistics; 19. Arabic Corpus Linguistics and Related Tools: An Overview and Some Critical Observations; 20. The Utility of Arabic Corpus Linguistics; Part V. Arabic Linguistics and New Media Studies: 21. Language Policy and the Arabic Localization of Twitter; 22. Variation and Social Change on Syrian Dissidents’ Social Media; Part VI. Arabic Linguistics in Literature and Translation: 23. Vernacular Varieties in Recent Arabic Literature; 24. Stylistics and Translation: A Corpus-based Case Study of English-Arabic Demonstratives.
14
Language and linguistics
The Cambridge Handbook of Task-Based Language Teaching Mohammad Javad Ahmadian University of Leeds
Michael H. Long
University of Maryland, College Park
Description Task-based language teaching (TBLT) is an innovative approach to language teaching which emphasises the importance of engaging learners’ natural abilities for acquiring language incidentally. The speed with which the field is expanding makes it difficult to keep up with recent developments, for novices and experienced researchers alike. This handbook meets that need, providing a comprehensive, up-to-date overview of the field, written by a stellar line-up of leading international experts. Chapters are divided into five thematic areas, and as well as covering theory, also contain case studies to show how TBLT can be implemented in practice, in a range of global contexts, as well as questions for discussion, and suggested further readings. Comprehensive in its coverage, and written in an accessible style, it will appeal to a wide readership, not only researchers and graduate students, but also classroom teachers working in a variety of educational and cultural contexts around the world.
Key Features • Presents case studies of the implementation of task-based language teaching in different parts of the world • Written in a detailed yet easy-to-read style, making it accessible not only for researchers and graduate students, but also for classroom teachers working in a variety of educational and cultural contexts around the world • Offers comprehensive, up-to-date coverage of the field from leading international scholars
Contents Preface; Part I. The Rationale for TBLT: 1. The (unsatisfactory) status quo in language teaching: a psycholinguistic rationale for TBLT; 2. A pedagogic rationale for TBLT; Part II. Tasks and Needs Analysis: 3. Why tasks? Task as the unit of analysis in language education; 4. Adapting and advancing task-based needs analysis (NA) methodology across diverse language learning contexts; 4A. Developing a task-based approach: a case study of Australian Aboriginal VET students; 4B. A needs analysis for Syrian refugees in Turkey; 4C. TBLT in a Japanese university: from needs analysis to evaluation; 4D. The implementation of a task-based Spanish language program in Qingdao, China: a case study; 5. The L in TBLT: analyzing target discourse; 5A. Blustery with an occasional downpour: an analysis of target discourse in media weather forecasts; 5B. Task-based needs analysis for EAP pragmatics: a corpus approach; Part III. The Task Syllabus and Materials: 6. The Cognition Hypothesis, the Triadic Componential Framework and the SSARC Model: an instructional design theory of pedagogic task sequencing;
7. From needs analysis to task selection, design, and sequencing; 7A. Task-based telecollaborative exchanges between US and Italian students: a case study in program design and implementation; 8. Exploring the nuts and bolts of task design; 8A. Designing pedagogic tasks for refugees learning English to enter universities in the Netherlands; Part IV. Methodology and Pedagogy: 9. A psycholinguistically motivated methodology for TBLT; 10. Technology-mediated TBLT; 10A. Task-based simulations for diplomatic security agents; 10B. Delivering TBLT at scale: a case study of a needsbased, technology-mediated workplace English program; 10C. TBLT and Indigenous Language Revitalisation; Part V. TBLT with School-age Children: 11. Children interacting in task-supported EFL/CLIL contexts; 11A. Tasks for children: using mainstream content to learn a language; 11B. A case study of a task-based approach for schoolage learners in China; Part VI. The Teacher in TBLT: 12. Teacher preparation and support for TBLT;
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics September 2021 244 x 170 mm c.750pp 978-1-108-49138-9 Hardback £120.00 / US$160.00
12A. Connecting teacher training to TBLT implementation: a case study of pre-service teachers in Honduran bilingual schools; 12B. Training for tasks the cooperative way: an online tutored TBLT course for teachers, managers and course designers; Part VII. Task-Based Assessment and Program Evaluation: 13. Task-based, criterion-referenced performance testing; 14. TBLT program evaluation: why and how; 14A. Comparing the effectiveness of TBLT and PPP on L2 grammar learning: a pilot study with Chinese students of Italian L2; 14B. Evaluating the pilot year of a task-based Spanish immersion camp for high schoolers: examining learners’ experience of task motivation and difficulty within and following tasks; 14C. Designing a classroom-based TBLA framework for primary schools: blurring the lines between teaching, learning and assessment; Part VIII. Research Needs and Future Prospects: 15. Methodological issues in (cognitively-oriented) TBLT research: advances and challenges; 16. Innovation in language education: a task-based perspective; 17. The adoption of TBLT in diverse contexts: challenges and opportunities; Conclusion.
Law
15
Commentary on the Third Geneva Convention Convention (III) relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War
International Committee of the Red Cross International Committee of the Red Cross
Description The application and interpretation of the four Geneva Conventions of 1949 and their two Additional Protocols of 1977 have developed significantly in the seventy years since the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) first published its Commentaries on these important humanitarian treaties. To promote a better understanding of, and respect for, this body of law, the ICRC commissioned a comprehensive update of its original Commentaries, of which this is the third volume. The Third Convention, relative to the treatment of prisoners of war and their protections, takes into account developments in the law and practice in the past seven decades to provide up-to-date interpretations of the Convention. The new Commentary has been reviewed by humanitarian law practitioners and academics from around the world. This new Commentary will be an essential tool for anyone involved with international humanitarian law.
Key Features • An article-by-article Commentary on the Third Geneva Convention issued by the International Committee of the Red Cross, capturing contemporary developments in their application and interpretation • Contains thorough and up-to-date interpretations from an extensive process involving both International Committee of the Red Cross and external contributors, as well as peer review by academics and international humanitarian law practitioners from around the world, ensuring coherent content and reflecting main diverging views • Provides practitioners and scholars with easy access to comprehensive, high-quality legal information
Contents Foreword by; Acknowledgements; Abbreviations; Introduction project team; Preamble; Part I. General provisions: Article 1: Respect for the convention; Article 2: Application of the convention; Article 3: Conflicts not of an international character; Article 4: Prisoners of war; Article 5: Beginning and end of application; Article 6: Special agreements; Article 7: Non-renunciation of rights; Article 8: Protecting powers; Article 9: Activities of the ICRC and other impartial humanitarian organizations; Article 10: Substitutes for protecting powers; Article 11: Conciliation procedure; Part II. General protection of prisoners of war: Article 12: Responsibility for the treatment of prisoners and conditions for their transfer to another power; Article 13: Humane treatment of prisoners; Article 14: Respect for the persons and honour of prisoners, with contributions by; Article 15: Maintenance of prisoners; Article 16: Equality of treatment of prisoners;
Part III. Captivity: Section I. Beginning of captivity: Article 17: Questioning of prisoners; Article 18: Property of prisoners; Article 19: Evacuation of prisoners; Article 20: Conditions of evacuation of prisoners; Section II. Internment of prisoners of war: Chapter I. General observations: Article 21: Restriction of liberty of movement and release on parole; Article 22: Places and conditions of internment; Article 23: Security of prisoners; Article 24: Permanent transit camps; Chapter II. Quarters, food and clothing of prisoners of war: Article 25: Quarters; Article 26: Food; Article 27: Clothing; Article 28: Canteens; Chapter III. Hygiene and medical attention: Article 29: Hygiene; Article 30: Medical attention; Article 31: Medical inspections; Article 32: Prisoners engaged on medical duties; Chapter IV. Medical personnel and chaplains retained to assist prisoners of war: Article 33: Rights and privileges of retained personnel; Chapter V. Religious, intellectual and physical activities: Article 34: Religious duties;
Article 35: Retained chaplains assisting prisoners; Article 36: Prisoners who are ministers of religion Jean-Marie Henckaerts; Article 37: Prisoners without a minister of their religion; Article 38: Intellectual, educational and recreational pursuits, sports and games; Chapter VI. Discipline: Article 39: Administration saluting; Article 40: The wearing of badges and decorations; Article 41: Posting of the convention, and of regulations and orders concerning prisoners; Article 42: Use of weapons against prisoners of war; Chapter VII. Rank of prisoners of war: Article 43: Notification of ranks; Article 44: Treatment of officers; Article 45: Treatment of other prisoners of war; Chapter VIII. Transfer of prisoners of war after their arrival in camp: Article 46: Conditions for transfer of prisoners; Article 47: Circumstances precluding transfer of prisoners; Article 48: Procedure for transfer of prisoners; Section III. Labour of prisoners of war: Article 49: General observations on labour of prisoners of war; Article 50: Authorized work; Article 51: Working conditions;
16
Law
Article 52: Dangerous or humiliating labour; Article 53: Duration of labour; Article 54: Working pay. Occupational accidents and diseases; Article 55: Medical supervision; Article 56: Labour detachments; Article 57: Prisoners working for private employers; Section IV. Financial resources of prisoners of war: Article 58: Ready money; Article 59: Amounts in cash taken from prisoners; Article 60: Advances of pay; Article 61: Supplementary pay; Article 62: Working pay; Article 63: Transfer of funds; Article 64: Prisoners’ accounts; Article 65: Management of prisoners’ accounts; Article 66: Winding up of prisoners’ accounts; Article 67: Arrangements between parties to the conflict; Article 68: Claims for compensation; Section V. Relations of prisoners of war with the exterior; Article 69: Notification of measures taken; Article 70: Capture cards; Article 71: Correspondence; Article 72: Relief shipments: General principles; Article 73: Collective relief shipments; Article 74: Relief shipments: Exemption from charges and dues; Article 75: Special means of transport; Article 76: Censorship and examination; Article 77: Preparation, execution and transmission of legal documents; Section VI. Relations between prisoners of war and the authorities: Chapter I. Complaints of prisoners of war respecting the conditions of captivitiy: Article 78: Complaints and requests from prisoners; Chapter II. Prisoner of war representatives: Article 79: Election of prisoners’ representatives; Article 80: Duties of prisoners’ representatives; Article 81: Prerogatives of prisoners’ representatives; Chapter III. Penal and disciplinary sanctions: I. General Provisions: Article 82: Applicable legislation;
Article 83: Choice of disciplinary or judicial proceedings ; Article 84:Courts; Article 85: Offences committed before capture; Article 86: The prohibition against double jeopardy (non bis in idem); Article 87: Penalties Jose Serralvo; Article 88: Execution of penalties; II. Disciplinary Sanctions: Article 89: Forms of disciplinary punishment; Article 90: Duration of disciplinary punishments; Article 91: Successful escape; Article 92: Unsuccessful escape; Article 93: Escapes: Connected offences; Article 94: Escapes: Notification of recapture; Article 95: Disciplinary procedure: Confinement awaiting hearing; Article 96: Disciplinary procedure: Competent authorities and rights of defence; Article 97: Execution of disciplinary punishment: Premises; Article 98: Execution of disciplinary punishment: Essential safeguards; III. Judicial Proceedings: Article 99: Judicial procedure: General principles; Article 100: Death penalty: Article 102: Judicial procedure: Conditions for validity of sentence; Article 103: Judicial investigations and confinement awaiting trial; Article 104: Notification of judicial proceedings; Article 105: Rights and means of defence; Article 106: Appeals; Article 107: Notification of judgments and sentences; Article 108: Execution of judicial penalties: Premises and essential safeguards; Part IV. Termination of captivity: Section I. Direct repatriation and accommodation in neutral countries: Article 109: Direct repatriation and accommodation in neutral countries: General observations; Article 110: Cases of repatriation and accommodation; Article 111: Internment in a neutral country; Article 112: Mixed medical commissions; Article 113: Prisoners entitled to examination by mixed medical commissions; Article 114: Prisoners meeting with accidents; Article 115: Prisoners serving a sentence;
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Commentaries on the 1949 Geneva Conventions August 2021 247 x 174 mm c.2000pp 978-1-108-83898-6 2 Volumes Hardback Set £350.00 / US$500.00
Article 116: Costs of repatriation; Article 117: Activity after repatriation; Section II. Release and repatriation of Prisoners of war at the close of hostilities: Article 118: Release and repatriation; Article 119: Details of repatriation procedure; Section III. Death Of prisoners of war: Article 120: Prescriptions regarding the dead, including wills and death certificates; Article 121: Prisoners killed or injured in special circumstances; Part V. Information bureaux and relief societies for prisoners of war: Article 122: National information bureaux; Article 123: Central tracing agency; Article 124: Exemption from charges of national information bureaux and the central tracing agency; Article 125: Facilities for relief societies and other organizations assisting prisoners of war; Part VI. Execution of the convention: Section I. General provisions: Article 126: Supervision by the protecting powers and the ICRC; Article 127: Dissemination of the convention; Article 128: Translations. implementing laws and regulations; Article 129: Penal sanctions; Article 130: Grave breaches; Article 131: Responsibilities of the contracting parties; Article 132: Enquiry procedure; Section II. Final provisions: Article 133: Languages; Article 134: Relation to the 1929 convention; Article 135: Relation to the 1899 or 1907 hague conventions; Article 136: Signature; Article 137: Ratification; Article 138: Coming into force; Article 139: Accession; Article 140: Notification of accessions; Article 141: Immediate effect; Article 142: Denunciation; Article 143: Registration with the united Nations; Testimonium and signature clause; Sources; Index.
Law
17
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 antidumping 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 August 2021 228 x 152 mm c.500pp 978-1-108-42351-9 Hardback £175.00 / US$225.00
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.
18
Law
Fundamental Rights in the EU Area of Freedom, Security and Justice Sara Iglesias Sánchez
Court of Justice of the European Union
Maribel González Pascual
Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona
Description The development of the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice has transformed the European Union and placed fundamental rights at the core of EU integration and its principles of mutual recognition and trust. The impact of the AFSJ in the development of an EU standard of fundamental rights, which has come to the fore since the Treaty of Lisbon, is a topic of great theoretical and practical importance. This is the first systematic academic study of the AFSJ and its implications from the point of view of fundamental rights. The contributions to this collection examine the normative and jurisprudential development of the AFSJ in order to assess its effects on the overall construction of the scope and standards of protection of EU fundamental rights in this particularly complex and sensitive field of integration. The expert contributors systematically map and critically assess this area of EU law, together with the relevant case-law.
Key Features • Experts from different perspectives and fields examine fundamental rights in the European Union • Provides the reader with an up-to-date account of case-law in a particularly complex field • Includes critical assessment of the AFSJ from a fundamental rights perspective
Contents Preface; Foreword; List of common abbreviations; Introduction: fundamental rights at the core of the EU AFSJ; Part I. The General Framework for Fundamental Rights’ Protection in the AFSJ: 1. The scope of EU fundamental rights in the area of freedom, security and justice; 2. A European standard of fundamental rights’ protection?; 3. The protection of fundamental rights within the AFSJ: through or against mutual trust and mutual recognition?; Part II. Asylum, Migration and Borders 4. Mutual (dis-) trust in EU migration and asylum law: the exceptionalisation of fundamental rights; 5. The right to liberty in the field of migration, asylum and borders; 6. Family life and the best interests of the child in the field of migration; 7. A decade of EU fundamental right to asylum: in search of its legal meaning and effects; 8. Effective remedies and defence rights in the field of asylum, migration and borders; Part III. Judicial Cooperation in Criminal Matters: 9. Mutual recognition in civil and commercial matters: on certified mutual trust;
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, professionals July 2021 246 x 189 mm c.496pp 978-1-108-48813-6 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00
10. The rights of the child and the right to respect for family life in the revised Brussels iibis regulation; 11. Effective remedies and fair trial in civil matters: How to enhance civil justice within the confines of EU powers; 12. Procedural rights (and obligations) of parties to civil proceedings; Part IV. Judicial Cooperation in Criminal Matters and Police Cooperation: 13. Mutual recognition and fundamental rights in EU criminal law; 14. The right to liberty and security in EU criminal law; 15. Defence rights and effective remedies in EU criminal law; 16. Victims of crime in the area of liberty, security and justice; 17. The principle of legality within the area of freedom, security and justice; 18. The interpretation and application of the Ne Bis Iin Idem principle in the EU area of freedom, security and justice of the EU; Part V. Cross-cutting Issues of Fundamental Rights in the AFSJ: 19. Private life and data protection within the area of freedom, security and justice; 20. Citizenship and non-discrimination rights in the area of freedom, security and justice; 21. Vulnerability and fundamental rights in the area of freedom, security and justice; 22. Epilogue: of judges and trust.
Law
19
The Cambridge Handbook of Lawyering in the Digital Age Larry A. DiMatteo University of Florida
André Janssen
Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Pietro Ortolani
Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Francisco de Elizalde IE University Madrid
Michel Cannarsa
Catholic Lyon University
Mateja Durovic
King’s College London
Description With increasing digitalization and the evolution of artificial intelligence, the legal profession is on the verge of being transformed by automated technology (legal tech). This handbook examines these developments and the changing legal landscape by providing perspectives from multiple interested parties, including practitioners, academics, and legal tech companies from different legal systems. Scrutinizing the real implications posed by legal tech, the book advocates for an unbiased, cautious approach for the engagement of technology in legal practice. It also carefully addresses the core question of how to balance fears of industry takeover by technology with the potential for using legal tech to expand services and create value for clients. Together, chapters develop a framework for analyzing the costs and benefits of new technologies before implementing them into legal practice. This interdisciplinary collection features contributions from lawyers, social scientists, institutional officials, technologists, and current developers of e-law platforms and services.
Key Features • Provides an up-to-date analysis of the current and possible uses of technology in legal practice, along with the regulatory initiatives in this area • Covers areas of both public and private law while addressing issues such as the role of government regulation and judicial use of technology • Offers a detailed perspective on the future of legal professions
Contents 1. Lawyering in the Digital Age; Part I. Effects of Technology on Legal Practice: 2. Disruptive effects of legal tech; 3. The effects of technology on legal practice: from punch card to artificial intelligence?; 4. Legal drafting and automation; 5. Emerging rules on artificial intelligence: Trojan horses of ethics in the realm of law?; Part II. Legal Tech and ADR: 6. Legal tech in ADR; 7. A blockchain-based smart dispute resolution method; 8. Digital dispute resolution: blurring the boundaries of ADR; Part III. Legal Tech in Consumer Relations and Small Claims 9. Legal tech in consumer relations and small-value claims: a survey; 10. Regulation of legal services and access to justice in the digital age: a war report; 11. Legal tech and EU consumer law; 12. The two faces of legal tech in B2C relations;
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, legal practitioners Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks July 2021 254 x 178 mm c.500pp 978-1-108-83746-0 Hardback £200.00 / US$260.00
Part IV. Legal Tech and Public Law: 13. Blockchain’s heterotopia: technological infrastructures and lawyering in the public sector; 14. Fundamental rights and the use of artificial intelligence in court; 15. Legal tech in public administration: prospects and challenges; Part V. Legal Ethics and Societal Values Confront Technology: 16. Ethics guidelines for trustworthy AI; 17. Ethical digital lawyering: technical and philosophical insights; 18. Law, disintermediation, and the future of trust; Part VI. Fate of the Legal Professions: 19. Lawyering somewhere between computation and the will to act: a digital age reflection; 20. Surviving the digital transformation – a method for lawyers to approach legal tech; 21. Road forward: promise and danger.
20
Law
International Law Reports Volume 194
Christopher Greenwood International Court of Justice
Karen Lee
University of Cambridge Series: International Law Reports, 194
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 194 is devoted to APDF and IHRDA v. Republic of Mali, Federation of African Journalists and Others v. Republic of Gambia, WAVES and Another v. Sierra Leone, Markin v. Russia, Bayev and Others v. Russia, Carvalho Pinto de Sousa Morais v. Portugal, State Obligations in Relation to Gender Identity and Rights of Same-Sex Couples, ON and DP v. Russian Federation, Re Review of Civil Procedure Code of Russian Federation, Re Review of Administrative Offences Code of Russian Federation, Re Application by the NIHRC Commission for Judicial Review and Northern Ireland Act 1998 (Abortion)
Key Features • Contains 2020 Views of United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women in ON and DP v. Russian Federation. • Contains 2019 judgment of the Court of Justice of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) in Women Against Violence and Exploitation in Society (WAVES) and Child Welfare Society Sierra Leone v. Sierra Leone. • Advisory Opinion OC-24/17 of Inter-American Court of Human Rights in State Obligations in Relation to Gender Identity and Rights of Same-Sex Couples.
Contents Volume 194 is devoted to APDF and IHRDA v. Republic of Mali, African Journalists and Others v. Republic of Gambia, WAVES and Another v. Sierra Leone, Markin v. Russia, Bayev and Others v. Russia, State Obligations in Gender Identity and Rights of Same-Sex Couples, ON and DP v. Russian Federation, Code of Russian Federation, NIHRC Commission
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: International Law Reports, 194 July 2021 4 colour illus. 978-1-316-51639-3 Hardback c. £170.00 / c. US$220.00
Law
21
The Cambridge Handbook of Privatization Avihay Dorfman
Tel Aviv University Law School
Alon Harel
Hebrew University Law School
Description: Some goods and services seem to be fundamentally public, such as legislation, criminal punishment, and fighting wars. By contrast, other functions, such as garbage collection, do not. This volume brings together prominent scholars from a range of academic fields including law, economics, philosophy, and sociology - to address the core question of what makes a certain good or service fundamentally public and why. Sometimes, governments and other public entities are superior because they are more likely to get at the right decisions or follow fair procedures. In other instances, the provision of goods and services by public entities is intrinsically valuable. By analyzing the these answers, the authors also explore the nature of the state and its authority. This handbook explores influential arguments for and against privatization and also develops a number of key studies explaining, justifying, or challenging the legitimacy and the desirability of public provision of goods and services.
Key features: • Provides a systematic classification and analysis of the arguments for and against privatization • Examines the privatization of specific goods and services such as criminal law, regulation, and social services • Explores questions of privatization in the context of political, legal, and economic theory
Contents: Part I. On the Virtues of Public Provision (Agency-Based Approaches): AgencyBased Arguments Against Privatization 1. The Wrong of Privatization: A Kantian Account Chiara Cordelli 2. Privatization, Efficiency, and the Distribution of Economic Power Louis-Philippe Hodgson 3. Public and Private Ownership in Plato and Aristotle Jonny Thakkar Specific Arguments Against Privatization 4. Privatizing Criminal Punishment: What Is at Stake? Malcolm Thorburn 5. Justice and the Market Assaf Sharon and Shai Agmon 6. Outsourcing Border Control: Public Agency and Action in Migration Ashwini Vasanthakumar Objections to Agency-Based Approaches 7. The Moral Neutrality of Privatization as Such Alexander Volokh Part II. On the Virtues of Publicness as a Means to the Realization of Procedural Values (Process-Based Theories):
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks August 2021 978-1-108-49714-5 Hardback £160.00 / US$210.00
8. Privatizing Social Services Martha Minow 9. P rivatization, Constitutional Conservatism, and the Fate of the American Administrative State Jon D. Michaels 10. Privatization and the Intimate Sphere Brenda Cossman Part III. Outcome-Based Theories: On the Virtues and Vices of Public Provision as a Means to Promote Efficiency and Justice: 11. Privatization of Legal Institutions Talia Fisher 12. On Privatizing Police, with Examples from Japan J. Mark Ramseyer 13. Privatization of the Police Hans-Bernd Schäfer and Michael Fehling 14. Privatizing Private Data Lisa Herzog 15. Political Connections, Corruption, and Privatization: Who Gains from Privatization? Mariana Mota Prado 16. Privatization of Regulation: Promises and Pitfalls Yael Kariv-Teitelbaum 17. Privatization of Accounting Standard-Setting Israel Klein.
22
Law
Fiduciary Obligations in Business Arthur B. Laby
Rutgers University School of Law
Jacob Hale Russell
Rutgers University School of Law
Description The scholarship on fiduciary duties in business organizations is often pulled in two directions. While most observers would agree that business organizations are one of the key contexts for the application of the fiduciary obligation, corporate law theorists have often expressed disdain for the role of fiduciary duties, with the result that fiduciary law and theory have been out of step with the business world. This volume aims to rectify this situation by bringing together a range of scholars to analyze fiduciary relationships and the fiduciary obligation in the business context. Contributing authors examine fiduciary obligations in fields ranging from entity structure to bankruptcy to investment regulation. The volume demonstrates that fiduciary law can inform pressing corporate governance debates, including discussions over stakeholder models of the corporation that move beyond shareholder interests.
Key Features • Offers perspectives from 19 leading scholars of business law • Examines both doctrinal and theoretical issues in fiduciary law as applied to business and corporate governance • Brings readers up to date with fiduciary and corporate governance debates over the past several decades
Contents Part I. Identifying Fiduciaries and Their Duties: 1. Fiduciary duties on the temporal edges of agency relationships; 2. Extra large partnerships; 3. The three fiduciaries of Delaware corporate law—and Eisenberg’s error; 4. Trust, discretion, and ERISA fiduciary status; 5. Examining indenture trustee duties; Part II. Gaps and Alternatives in Fiduciary Regimes: 6. Conflicts of interest in investment advice: an expanded view; 7. A system of fiduciary protections for mutual funds; 8. Equitable duty: regulating corporate transactions in the vicinity of insolvency from a comparative perspective; 9. Equity, majoritarian governance, and the oppression remedy; 10. Fiduciary relationships in employee benefit plans;
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, legal practitioners August 2021 254 x 178 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-48512-8 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00
Part III. Historical and Comparative Perspectives: 11. Delaware corporate law and the ‘end of history’ in creditor protection; 12. The independent director in Delaware and German corporate law; 13. For whom are non-profit managers trustees? The contractual revolution in charity governance; 14. Fiduciary law and Japanese nonprofits: a historical and comparative synthesis; Part IV. Stakeholders and Society: 15. Corporations, directors’ duties and the public/private divide; 16. Stakeholder impartiality: a new classic approach for the objectives of the corporation; 17. Shareholder primacy in benefit corporations; 18. Self-interested fiduciaries and invulnerable beneficiaries: when fiduciary duties don’t fit; Index.
Law
23
The Right to Life under International Law An Interpretative Manual
Stuart Casey-Maslen University of Pretoria
Christof Heyns
University of Pretoria
Description The Right to Life under International Law offers the first-ever comprehensive treatment under international law of the foundational human right to life. It describes the history, content, and status of the right, considers jurisdictional issues, and discusses the application of the right to a wide range of groups, such as women, children, persons with disabilities, members of minorities, LGBTI persons, refugees, and journalists. It defines the responsibility of not only governments but also the private sector, armed groups, and non-governmental organisations to respect the prohibition on arbitrary deprivation of life. It also explains the nature and substance of the duty to investigate potentially unlawful death as well as the mechanisms at global and regional level to promote respect for the right to life.
Key Features • Seeks to be comprehensive in its treatment of the right to life across branches of international law • Addresses the specifics of protection across different at-risk groups, such as women, children, LGBTI, persons with disabilities, minorities • Considers application of the right to a range of different actors, including international organisations, companies, armed groups, NGOs, and individuals
Contents An historical introduction to the right to life; Part I. Overview of the Right to Life under International Law: 1. The status of the right; 2. The content of the right; 3. Jurisdiction and the right to life; 4. The relationship between the right to life and other human rights; Part II. Major Themes: 5. Deaths as a result of armed conflict; 6. Jus ad bellum, aggression, and the right to life; 7. Use of force in law enforcement; 8. Counterterrorism; 9. The death penalty; 10. Deaths in custody; 11. Abortion; 12. Euthanasia and suicide; 13. Poverty and starvation; 14. Assemblies, demonstrations, and protests;
15. Arms control and disarmament; 16. Enforced disappearance; 17. Accidents, disease, and natural disasters; 18. Pollution and climate change; 19. Autonomous use of force; 20. Slavery; Part III. The Protection of At-Risk Groups and Individuals: 21. The right to life of women; 22. The right to life of children; 23. Racially motivated killings; 24. LGBTI persons; 25. Persons with disabilities; 26. Older persons; 27. Journalists; 28. Human rights defenders; 29. International migrants; 30. Internally displaced persons; 31. Refugees;
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students August 2021 244 x 170 mm c.960pp 978-1-108-49478-6 Hardback £200.00 / US$260.00
Part IV. Accountability: 32. The right to life and state responsibility; 33. The right to life and responsibility of international organisations; 34. Corporate responsibility and the right to life; 35. The right to life and the responsibility of non-state armed groups; 36. The right to life and non-governmental organisations; 37. The right to life and the responsibility of individuals; Part V. Human rights machinery protecting the right to life; 38. The UN human rights machinery and the right to life; 39. Regional human rights machinery and the right to life; Part VI. Outlook: 40. customary rules pertaining to the right to life; 41. The future of the right to life.
24
Law
Schreuer’s Commentary on the ICSID Convention A Commentary on the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of Other States Third edition
Stephan W. Schill
University of Amsterdam
Loretta Malintoppi 39 Essex Chambers
August Reinisch
Universität Wien, Austria
Christoph H. Schreuer Zeiler Floyd Zadkovich
Anthony Sinclair
Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP
Description This unique compendium offers an article-by-article commentary on the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of Other States. Providing a comprehensive explanation of the functioning of this important mechanism for the settlement of investor-State disputes, it incorporates the preparatory work, the Convention’s text, various rules and regulations adopted under the Convention, the practice of arbitral tribunals under the Convention, and academic writings on the subject. The first and second editions of this Commentary have been relied upon by numerous arbitral tribunals. This third edition follows the same system and approach, but extensive updates and revisions reflect the vast increase in arbitral practice since the publication of the second edition. A number of novel issues that have emerged through this practice are now addressed, making this practice-oriented guide an indispensable tool for anyone dealing with the ICSID Convention. Likewise, the number of contributors to and editors of the third edition has increased.
Key Features • Provides detailed article-by-article coverage of the entire Convention • Fully updated and revised for this new edition • An essential source of reference for international arbitration law scholars and practitioners
Contents 1. International centre for settlement of investment disputes; 2. Jurisdiction of the centre; 3. Conciliation; 4. Arbitration; 5. Replacement and disqualification of conciliators and arbitrators; 6. Cost of proceedings; 7. Place of proceedings; 8. Disputes between contracting states; 9. Amendment; 10. Final provisions.
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, legal practitioners, graduate students September 2021 244 x 170 mm c.1600pp 978-1-108-49428-1 2 Volume Hardback Set c. £250.00 / c. US$325.00
Law
25
The Cambridge Handbook of Commons Research Innovations Sheila R. Foster
Georgetown University School of Law
Chrystie F. Swiney
Georgetown University School of Law
Description The commons theory, first articulated by Elinor Ostrom, is increasingly used as a framework to understand and rethink the management and governance of many kinds of shared resources. These resources can include natural and digital properties, cultural goods, knowledge and intellectual property, and housing and urban infrastructure, among many others. In a world of increasing scarcity and demand – from individuals, states, and markets – it is imperative to understand how best to induce cooperation among users of these resources in ways that advance sustainability, affordability, equity, and justice. This volume reflects this multifaceted and multidisciplinary field from a variety of perspectives, offering new applications and extensions of the commons theory, which is as diverse as the scholars who study it and is still developing in exciting ways.
Key Features • Offers new understandings of the commons theory in the context of contemporary political and social challenges • Spans multiple themes and disciplines, including international affairs, political science, legal theory, and environmental studies • Brings together expert scholars and experienced practitioners in the field of commons
Contents Introduction: Commons research in the 21st century and beyond; Part I. Revisiting the Origins and Evolution of Commons Thought: 1. Linking the origins and extensions of commons theory; 2. The tragedy of Garrett Hardin’s commons; 3. Kinship and commons: the Bedouin experience; Part II. Averting New Tragedies: 4. Averting tragedy of the resource directory anticommons; 5. Time and tragedy: the problem with temporal commons; 6. Transforming climate dilemmas from tragedy to cooperation; Part III. New Forms of Contested Commons: 7. Urban public housing as a commons; 8. Humanitarian aid as a shared and contested common resource; 9. The economic system as a commons: an exploration of shared institutions;
Part IV. Urban Landscape and Infrastructure as a Commons: 10. Seeing New York City’s urban canopy as a commons: a view from the street; 11. City as commons: the case study of Bologna; 12. Urban commons architecture: collaboration spaces innovating learning within cities; Part V. Reassessing Old and New Institutions for Collective Action: 13. Business improvement districts and the urban commons; 14. To have and to hold? Community land trust as commons; 15. Ostromian logic applied to civil society organizations and the rules that shape them; 16. A conceptual model of polycentric resource governance in the 2030 district energy program; Part VI. Managing and Restoring the Commons: 17. Management of facilitated common pool resources in India;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks August 2021 254 x 178 mm c.450pp 978-1-108-83721-7 Hardback £140.00 / US$180.00
18. Social environmental dilemmas and governing the commons: the Itanhém river basin in Southern Bahia, Brazil; 19. Social trust, informal institutions and communitybased wildlife management in Namibia and Tanzania; 20. Restoring the commons; Part VII. Law, Legal Theory and the Commons: 21. Prior appropriations as a response to the tragedy of the commons; 22. Using the public trust doctrine to manage property on the moon; 23. A biotechnology regulatory commons problem; 24. Can affirmative action offer a lesson in fighting enclosure?; Part VIII. Technology, the Internet and the Future of Commons Governance: 25. Can technological change weaken the robustness of common-property regimes; 26. Internet governance in the digital cold war.
26
Law
International Law Reports Volume 195
Christopher Greenwood International Court of Justice
Karen Lee
University of Cambridge
Description Decisions of international courts and arbitrators, as well as judgments of national courts, are fundamental elements of modern public international law. The International Law Reports is the only publication in the world wholly devoted to the regular and systematic reporting in English of such decisions. It is therefore an absolutely essential work of reference. Volume 195 contains the unofficial English translation of 2020 judgment of German Constitutional Court in Greek Debt Restructuring Case, the unofficial English translation of 2020 judgment of Swedish Svea Court of Appeal in Kazakhstan v. Ascom and Stati and the 2020 English High Court judgment of R (Charles and Dunn) v. Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs.
Key Features • Contains unofficial English translation of 2020 judgment of German Constitutional Court in Greek Debt Restructuring Case • Contains unofficial English translation of 2020 judgment of Swedish Svea Court of Appeal in Kazakhstan v. Ascom and Stati • Contains 2020 English High Court judgment of R (Charles and Dunn) v. Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs
Contents 1. Obligation to Negotiate Access to the Pacific Ocean (Bolivia v. Chile); 2. Marchal, Lemaire and Dewez v. Mukeshimana-Ngulunzira and Others, Belgian State v. Mukeshimana-Ngulunzira and Others; 3. Transparency International France v. Mr X; 4. Greek Debt Restructuring Case; 5. State of The Netherlands v. Mothers of Srebrenica and Others; 6. Arigo and Others v. Swift and Others; 7. Re Review of Constitutionality of the Treaty between The Russian Federation and The Republic of Crimea on the Accession of The Republic of Crimea to the Russian Federation and on Forming New Constituent Entities within The Russian Federation that has not Entered into Legal Force; 8. Republic of Kazakhstan Ministry of Finance and National Bank of Kazakhstan v. Ascom Group S.A., Anatoile Stati, Gabriel Stati, Terra Raf Trans Traiding Ltd.; 9. Kontic, Milenkovic and Tomanovic v. Ministry of Defence; 10. Tomanovic and Others v. Foreign Commonwealth Office; 11. The London Steam-ship Owners’ Mutual Insurance Association Ltd. v The Kingdom of Spain (M/T ‘Prestige’); 12. Maduro Board of the Central Bank of Venezuela v. Guaidó Board of the Central Bank of Venezuela; 13. Regina (Charles and Dunn) v. Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs.
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: International Law Reports October 2021 219 x 146 mm c.750pp 978-1-316-51156-5 Hardback £170.00 / US$220.00
Law
27
The Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership Analysis and Commentary
Jorge A. Huerta-Goldman TILPA, Geneva
David A. Gantz
University of Arizona
Description The Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership among eleven key nations of the Pacific Rim has already expanded trade and economic cooperation among the Parties. It also serves to encourage political cooperation among them and has served as a model for future ‘wide and deep’ free trade agreements. The chapters of this book will provide readers with a detailed understanding of the CPTPP’s coverage, including provisions relating to tariff elimination, customs rules of origin, agriculture, sanitary and phytosanitary measures, technical barriers to trade, telecommunications, intellectual property, investment and investor–state arbitration, financial and other services, government procurement, state-owned enterprises, electronic commerce and digital trade, small and medium-sized enterprises, competition law, labor and environmental protection, dispute settlement, and many others. No international lawyer, economist, trade negotiator, or enterprise can afford not to take advantage of the opportunities for business that the CPTPP offers. This book has been written by CPTPP negotiators, experts, and practitioners.
Key Features • Provides comprehensive information on the CPTPP/TPP from experts in the field and government officials who negotiated the agreement • Offers clear and concise analysis of complex subject matter • Includes perspectives from experts in law, economics, international trade, and public policy for interdisciplinary coverage of the CPTPP/TPP
Contents 1. Introduction: the Trans-Pacific Partnership becomes the comprehensive and progressive agreement for TPP; 2. TPP, US Congress and the Trade Promotion Authority; 3. The TPP, a horizontal overview; 4. Market access for trade in goods negotiations in the TPP; 5. Trade provisions as legos? How Chapter 2 of the TPP was influenced by WTO negotiations and prior US trade deals; 6. TPP, agricultural trade and food security; 7. Rules of origin and origin procedures; 8. Trade in textiles and apparel goods; 9. How far beyond the TFA? Trade facilitation in the WTO and the TPP; 10. Treatment of trade remedies under the Trans-Pacific Partnership, Chapter 6; 11. SPS chapter under the TPP agreement and its implications; 12. Technical barriers to trade; 13. Addressing the right to regulate in the CPTPP investment chapter: identifying new treaty practice; 14. Protecting Investment under NAFTA the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the comprehensive and progressive TPP; 15. The Trans-Pacific Partnership as a development of the Australia−United States free trade agreement: services liberalization and investment protection; 16. Services overview: background, strategy and solutions;
Additional Information Level: Graduate students, legal practitioners October 2021 229 x 152 mm 400pp 978-1-107-16325-6 Hardback c. £69.99 / c. US$125.00
17. Cross-border trade in services (Chapter 10) and temporary entry for business persons (Chapter 12); 18. Financial services; 19. Telecommunications chapter in the TPP; 20. Understanding the TPP agreement e-commerce chapter; 21. Government procurement in the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement: a global beachhead for market access and good governance; 22. TPP’s competition policy chapter: towards convergence; 23. Rules for stateowned enterprises in Chapter 17 of the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement: balancing market-oriented discipline and policy flexibility for states; 24. Non-commercial assistance rules in the TPP: a comparative analysis with the SCM Agreement; 25. IP in the TPP: how far beyond the existing FTAs does it go?; 26. Strengthening labor rights in the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement: a lost opportunity?; 27. TPP trade and environment chapter; 28. Horizontal regulatory coherence aspects of the TPP; 29. Transparency and anti-corruption; 30. State-to-state dispute settlement under TPP Chapter 28 and NAFTA Chapter 20; 3 1. Initial provisions, administrative provisions, exceptions and final provisions (TPP Chapters 1, 27, 29 and 30).
28
Law
The Cambridge Handbook of Law and Entrepreneurship in the United States D. Gordon Smith
Brigham Young University School of Law
Brian Broughman
Vanderbilt University, Tennessee
Christine Hurt
Brigham Young University School of Law
Description Law plays a key role in determining the level of entrepreneurial action in society. Legal rules seek to define property rights, facilitate private ordering, and impose liability for legal wrongs, thereby attempting to establish conditions under which individuals may act. These rules also channel the development of technology, regulate information flows, and determine parameters of competition. Depending on their structure and implementation, legal rules can also discourage individuals from acting. It is thus crucial to determine which legal rules and institutions best enable entrepreneurs, whose core function is to challenge incumbency. This volume assembles legal experts from diverse fields to examine the role of law in facilitating or impeding entrepreneurial action. Contributors explore issues arising in current policy debates, including the incentive effect of legal rules on startup activity; the role of law in promoting or foreclosing market entry; and the effect of entrepreneurial action on legal doctrine.
Key Features • Develops an analytic framework based on the notion that the core function of entrepreneurs is to challenge incumbency • Provides a broad view of three domains in which law affects entrepreneurial action: lawmaking, governance, and incentives • Offers perspectives from subject-matter experts in a variety of legal specialties
Contents Introduction; 1. Entrepreneurial action; Part I. Regulating, Lawmaking, and Entrepreneurial Action: 2. The rise of regulatory affairs in innovative startups; 3. Gauguin, Darwin and design thinking; 4. Between the devil and the SEC; 5. The politics of entrepreneurial capital-raising; 6. Venture exchange regulation: listing standards, market microstructure, and investor protection; Part II. Governance and Entrepreneurial Action: 7. Relational contracting and business norms in entrepreneurial finance; 8. Biotech strategic alliances in law and entrepreneurship; 9. The entrepreneurial business judgment rule; 10. Entrepreneurial action in family-controlled companies; Part III. Legal Incentives Supporting (and Sometimes Discouraging) Entrepreneurial Action: 11. Entrepreneurship incentives for resource-constrained firms; 12. Corrupting entrepreneurial action; 13. The spinoff advantage: human capital law and entrepreneurship.
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, legal practitioners Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks October 2021 229 x 152 mm 600pp 978-1-107-17195-4 Hardback c. £140.00 / c. US$225.00
Law
29
Great Christian Jurists in the Low Countries Edited by Wim Decock
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
and Janwillem Oosterhuis
Universiteit Maastricht, Netherlands
Description What impact has Christianity had on law and policies in the Lowlands from the eleventh century through the end of the twentieth century? Taking the gradual ‘secularization’ of European legal culture as a framework, this volume explores the lives and times of twenty legal scholars and professionals to study the historical impact of the Christian faith on legal and political life in the Low Countries. The process whereby Christian belief systems gradually lost their impact on the regulation of secular affairs passed through several stages, not in the least the Protestant Reformation, which led to the separation of the Low Countries in a Protestant North and a Catholic South in the first place. The contributions take up general issues such as the relationship between justice and mercy, Christianity and politics as well as more technical topics of state-church law, criminal law and social policy.
Key Features • Provides examples of multi-confessional dialogue in historical scholarship, including trans-confessional perspectives on the impact of Catholic and Protestant Christianity on Law and Society in the Low Countries • Offers examples of inter-disciplinary scholarship that crosses the boundaries of academic scholarship and legal practice • Includes both well-known and lesser-known authors who contributed to the development of law and society to provide fresh insights into famous historical figures over a period of almost ten centuries
Contents Great Christian jurists in the low countries; 1. Alger of Liège; 2. Arnoldus Gheyloven; 3. Boëtius Epo; 4. Leonardus Lessius Toon Van Houdt; 5. Franciscus Zypaeus; 6. Hugo Grotius; 7. Paulus Voet (1619–1667) – A Christian jurist during the Dutch golden age; 8. Ulrik Huber; 9. Zeger-Bernard van Espen; 10. Dionysius van der Keessel (1738–1816). The defiance of a Christian conservative;
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Law and Christianity October 2021 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-42984-9 Hardback c. £100.00 / c. US$130.00
11. Pieter Paulus (1753–1796); 12. Guillaume Groen van Prinsterer; 13. Edouard Ducpétiaux – A Christian, but also a jurist?; 14. Charles Périn; 15. Léon de Lantsheere (1862–1912); 16. Paul Scholten; 17. Willem Duynstee; 18. Jules Storme (1887–1955), the Catholic jurist and the growing pains of Christian democracy in Belgium; 19. Herman Dooyeweerd; 20. Josse Mertens de Wilmars (1912–2002).
30
Literature
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 July 2021 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-41808-9 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00
Literature
31
Surrealism Natalya Lusty
University of Melbourne
Description This book examines the salient ideas and practices that have shaped Surrealism as a protean intellectual and cultural concept that fundamentally shifted our understanding of the nexus between art, culture, and politics. By bringing a diverse set of artistic forms and practices such as literature, manifestos, collage, photography, film, fashion, display, and collecting into conversation with newly emerging intellectual traditions (ethnography, modern science, anthropology, and psychoanalysis), the essays in this volume reveal Surrealism’s enduring influence on contemporary thought and culture alongside its anti-colonial political position and international reach. Surrealism’s fascination with novel forms of cultural production and experimental methods contributed to its conceptual malleability and temporal durability, making it one of the most significant avant-garde movements of the twentieth century. The book traces how Surrealism’s urgent political and aesthetic provocations have bequeathed an important legacy for recent scholarly interest in thing theory, critical vitalism, new materialism, ontology, and animal/human studies.
Key Features • Situates Surrealism as an expansive international and historical movement • Applies an interdisciplinary focus to the study of surrealism as an artistic, political, and intellectual movement • Brings historical ideas and practices into conversation with recent critical concepts
Contents Part I. Origins Ideas/Concepts/Interventions: 1. The surrealist world; 2. Psychoanalysis; 3. Surrealism and the demand of politics; 4. Modern science; 5. Surrealism and dreams; 6. Surrealism and Eros; Part II. Developments Practices/Cultures/Material Forms: 7. Surrealist collections in Paris and Sussex; 8. Surrealist objects; 9. Collage; 10. Film;
Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: Cambridge Critical Concepts July 2021 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-49568-4 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00
11. Photography in surrealism; 12. Surrealist fashion; 13. Surrealist display practices: repositories outside reason; Part III. Applications Heterodoxies and New Worlds: 14. Surrealism and schizoanalysis; 15. The surrealist bestiary and animal philosophy; 16. Picasso’s habits: André Breton on art, nature and reflexivity; 17. Surrealism and mass observation; 18. Pacific surrealism; 19. Decolonial surrealism; 20. Surrealism and écriture feminine; 21. Subcultural receptions of surrealism in the 1960s international underground press.
32
Literature
Elizabeth Bishop in Context Angus Cleghorn
Seneca College, Canada
Jonathan Ellis
University of Sheffield
Description Elizabeth Bishop is increasingly recognised as one of the twentieth century’s most original writers. Consisting of thirty-five ground-breaking essays by an international team of authors, including biographers, literary critics, poets and translators, this volume addresses the biographical and literary inception of Bishop’s originality, from her formative upbringing in New England and Nova Scotia to long residences in New York, France, Florida and Brazil. Her poetry, prose, letters, translations and visual art are analysed in turn, followed by detailed studies of literary movements such as surrealism and modernism that influenced her artistic development. Bishop’s encounters with nature, music, psychoanalysis and religion receive extended treatment, likewise her interest in dreams and humour. Essays also investigate the impact of twentieth-century history and politics on Bishop’s life writing, and what it means to read Bishop via eco-criticism, postcolonial theory and queer studies.
Key Features • Addresses key contexts for understanding Bishop’s artistic development and her continuing relevance for contemporary poets • Incorporates the latest discoveries in Bishop studies, including analysis of unpublished drafts, notebook entries and letters • Provides thirty-five ground-breaking essays by an international team of established and emerging Bishop scholars
Contents Introduction; Part I. Places: 1. Nova Scotia; 2. New England; 3. New York; 4. Paris, France; 5. Florida; 6. Brazil; Part II. Forms: 7. Lyric poetry; 8. Prose; 9. Letters; 10. Translation; 11. Visual art;
12. Archives; Part III. Literary Contexts: 13. Romantic and Victorian poetry; 14. Surrealism and the Avant-Garde; 15. Modernism; 16. Mid-Century poetics; 17. Brazilian literature; Part IV: Politics, Society and Culture: 18. War; 19. The cold war; 20. Music; 21. Psychoanalysis; 22. Religion; 23. Anthropology;
Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: Literature in Context June 2021 229 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-49597-4 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00
24. Travel; Part V: Identity: 25. Dreams; 26. Humor; 27. Gender; 28. Queerness; 29. Race; 30. Nature; 31. Animals; Part VI. Reception and Criticism: 32. Bishop studies; 33. Criticism and reviews; 34. ‘My saving grace’: on editing Elizabeth Bishop; 35. Bishop’s influence.
Literature
33
A Set of Six Joseph Conrad Allan H. Simmons
St Mary’s University College, London
Michael Foster
St Mary’s University College, London
Owen Knowles
University of North Texas
Description A Set of Six (1908) is one of Conrad’s most versatile and varied compositions, embracing diverse interests and settings, multiple tonal qualities and a medley of short-story forms (ranging from the novella in ‘The Duel’ to the anecdotal tale in ‘The Informer’). The volume’s wide-ranging introduction offers a careful evaluation of the origins and sources of the individual stories, while also measuring their early reception as a published collection. Explanatory notes clarify literary and historical references, identify real-life places and people, and indicate borrowings and Gallicisms. The lengthy textual essay and its accompanying apparatus lay out the history of composition and publication, detailing interventions made by Conrad’s typists, compositors and editors. Also included are appendices, allowing the reader first-hand access to Conrad’s source material; glossaries of nautical and foreign terms; and illustrations in the form of maps and reproductions of early drafts. By returning to (and respecting) Conrad’s own early manuscript and typescript forms, this edition presents the collection and its preface in a form more authoritative than any so far printed.
Key Features • Delivers the first comprehensive critical edition of Joseph Conrad’s A Set of Six • Provides a full and authoritative history of composition and publication for the stories • Includes a rich selection of contextual materials, including explanatory notes and glossaries of foreign and nautical terms
Contents List of illustrations; General Editors’ Preface; Acknowledgements; Chronology; Abbreviations and Note on Editions; Introduction; A Set of Six; The Texts: An Essay; Apparatus; Textual Notes; Appendices; Explanatory Notes; Glossaries; Maps.
Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Joseph Conrad September 2021 216 x 138 mm 450pp 978-1-107-18913-3 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00
34
Literature
The City in American Literature and Culture Kevin R. McNamara
University of Houston-Clear Lake
Description The city’s ‘Americanness’ has been disputed throughout US history. Pronounced dead in the late twentieth century, cities have enjoyed a renaissance in the twenty-first. Engaging the history of urban promise and struggle as represented in literature, film, and visual arts, and drawing on work in the social sciences, The City in American Literature and Culture examines the large and local forces that shape urban space and city life and the street-level activity that remakes culture and identities as it contests injustice and separation. The first two sections examine a range of city spaces and lives; the final section brings the city into conversation with Marxist geography, critical race studies, trauma theory, slow/systemic violence, security theory, posthumanism, and critical regionalism, with a coda on city literature and democracy.
Key Features • Chapters engage the broader discourse on each topic and its history • Offers a comprehensive, up to date, and accessible approach, clarifying discourse for non-specialist readers
Contents Introduction; 1. Antebellum urban publics; 2. Intersections: streets and other democratic spaces; 3. The literature of neighborhood; 4. Writing the ghetto, inventing the slum; 5. Urban borders, open wounds; 6. Gentrification; 7. House rules: the New Yorker and the making of the white suburban liberal woman; 8. Transnational American cities Camilo Mejía’s ar Ramadi, Iraq, and Jason Hall’s Topeka, Kansas; 9. The poetics of rims: New Orleans; 10. American vertigo: the metropolis and the new biopolitical order; 11. Labor’s city; 12. White immigrant trajectories in US urban literature: the Italian American case; 13. Crime and violence, or hard-boiled chronicles of mean streets and their hidden truths; 14. Disaster, apocalypse, and after; 15. Bohemia; 16. The spatial turn and critical race studies; 17. From trauma theory to systemic violence: narratives of post-katrina New Orleans; 18. Security theory; 19. Posthuman cities; 20. Critical regionalism: why Hillbilly Elegy and its critics matter to writing about cities; Coda: city and polis.
Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: Cambridge Themes in American Literature and Culture August 2021 229 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-84196-2 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00
Literature
35
A History of Chilean Literature Ignacio López-Calvo
University of California, Merced
Description This book covers the full range and diversity of Chilean literature from the times of the Spanish conquest to the present. By emphasizing transnational, hemispheric, and global approaches to Chilean literature, it reflects the relevance of themes such as neoliberalism, migration and exile, as well as subfields like ethnic studies, and gender and sexuality studies. It showcases the diversity of Chilean literature throughout all periods, regions, ethnocultural groups and social classes, all the while foregrounding its regional variations. Unlike previous literary histories, it maps a rich heterogeneity by including works by Chileans of indigenous, African, Jewish, Arab, Asian, and Croatian ancestries, as well as studies of literature by LGTBQ authors and Chilean Americans. Ambitious and authoritative, this book is essential reading for scholars of Chilean Literature, Latin American Literature, the Global South, and World Literature.
Key Features • Showcases the diversity and heterogeneity of Chilean literature throughout all periods, regions, ethnocultural groups, and social classes • Shifts critical focus from national identity and issues to a more multifaceted transnational, hemispheric, and global approach • Shifts focus from Transatlantic to Transpacific Studies, emphasizing East-West cross-cultural relations that go back to the times of the Manila Galleon
Contents Introduction; Part I: Proto-Chilean, Colonial Chronicles and Letters: 1. The Evolving Image of the Araucania and Its Conquistadors in Valdivia’s Cartas de Relación and Vivar’s Crónica y relación copiosa y verdadera de los reinos de Chile; 2. Alonso de Ercilla’s La Araucana and Pedro de Oña’s Arauco domado in the National Imaginary; 3. Writing while Walking: Alonso Ovalle and Construction of the World’s End Narrative in An Historical Relation of the Kingdom of Chile (1646); 4. Empathy with the Mapuche: Rosales’s Manifiesto apologético and Pineda y Bascuñán’s Cautiverio feliz; 5. Subalterns Find their Voice: Testimonies by Black and Indigenous Women and Writings by Nuns during the Colonial Period; Part II: Nineteenth-Century Articulations of an Embryonic National Consciousness: 6. Rosario Orrego Castañeda (1831/34–1879) and Women Writers in the Nineteenth Century; 7. The Feuilleton Tradition: Popular Literature Aimed at the Urban Reader; 8. The Historical Novel: Independence, the War of the Pacific and 1891 Chilean Civil War Readings; 9. From the Public to the Private: Autobiographies, Collections of Letters, Memoirs, and Diaries as Intimate Descriptions of the Formation of the Republic; 10. Literature and Literary Markets; 11. Modernization and Culture; Part III: Beyond Chileanness: Heterogeneity and Transculturation in Canonical and Peripheral Twentieth and Twenty-First-Century Literature: 12. Gabriela Mistral, Chilean Women Writers, and Intersectionality;
13. The Verse as Being in the World: Chilean Poetry Before, During and After Pablo Neruda, History, and Politics; 14. Mapuche Poetry: Self-Definitions and Representation of the Chilean Cultures; 15. The Translation Origins of Literary Mapuche Aesthetics; 16. Theatrical Trends and Social Changes in Chile: 1910–2018; 17. Jewish Voices, Chilean Literature; 18. Chilean Arabic Writing: A Desire for Integration into Mainstream Society; 19. Asian Chilean Writing and Film, and Chilean Orientalism; 20. Croatian Chilean Literature: Óscar Barrientos Bradasic’s and Christian Formoso Bavich’s Writing; 21. Chilean American Writing since September 11, 1973; 22. LGBTQ Writing and Cultural Consciousness in Chile; 23. Permutations of Selfhood in the Work of José Donoso; 24. Isabel Allende, the Post-Boom, and Chilean Exile Literature; 25. Roberto Bolaño, His Fiction of History, History of His Fiction; 26. Alejandro Zambra and Recent Chilean Narrative: From the Political to Autobiografiction; 27. Film and Literature in Chile: The Emergence of a Cultural Field; 28. Violence and Memory: Human Rights, Redemocratization, and Literary Culture in Chile; 29. Chilean Digital Literature; 30. Detectives at the End of the World: Approaches in Twentieth-century Chilean Literary Critique.
Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers, academic researchers August 2021 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-48737-5 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00
36
Literature
Norman Mailer in Context Maggie McKinley Harper College
Description This volume offers new insight into the breadth of contexts that inform Norman Mailer’s body of work. It examines important literary, critical, theoretical, cultural, and historical frameworks for Mailer’s writing, highlighting the ways his work reflects the concerns of twentieth and twenty-first century America. This book traces Mailer’s literary influences; his contributions to a variety of literary genres; his participation in the American political sphere; the philosophical, religious, and gendered contexts that shape his work; and the iconic American figures he profiled. The book concludes with reflections on Mailer’s literary and cultural legacy, emphasizing his advocacy for literary freedom and the contemporary resonance of his work.
Key Features • Provides a comprehensive overview of the cultural, political, biographical, critical, and historical contexts of Norman Mailer’s work • Provides readers with a variety of unique perspectives on Mailer’s work, highlighting the diversity of possible emphases and approaches to his work • Provides brief, clear, and concise studies of Mailer in many interdisciplinary contexts
Contents Introduction; Part I. Literary Influences: 1. Early Influences; 2. Mailer and Hemingway; 3. Friendships and Feuds; Part II. Form and Genre: 4. New Journalism; 5. Essays and Columns; 6. The Novel; 7. Criticism; 8. Film; 9. Modernism; 10. Postmodernism; Part III. Political Contexts: 11. Marxism and Malaquais;
12. JFK and Political Heroism; 13. The Vietnam War; 14. 1968 Political Conventions; 15. Left Conservatism; Part IV. Philosophical and Cultural Contexts: 16. Totalitarianism; 17. The Hipster; 18. Manichaeism and Existentialism; 19. Technology; 20. Violence; 21. Race; 22. Judaism; Part V. Gender and Sexuality: 23. Masculinity; 24. The Second Wave Feminist Movement;
Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: Literature in Context August 2021 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-47766-6 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00
25. Sex and Sexuality; Part VI. Profiles and Literary Biographies: 26. Marilyn Monroe; 27. Muhammad Ali; 28. Picasso; 29. The Criminal Mind: Gary Gilmore and Lee Harvey Oswald; Part VII. Mailer’s Legacy: 30. Literary Activism; 31. Mailer in Translation; 32. Letters; 33. Mailer Studies in the 21st century; 34. Political Resonance; Primary Bibliography; Selected Secondary Bibliography; Index.
Literature
37
Shakespeare Survey 74 Shakespeare and Education
Emma Smith
University of Oxford
Description Shakespeare Survey is a yearbook of Shakespeare studies and production. Since 1948, Survey has published the best international scholarship in English and many of its essays have become classics of Shakespeare criticism. Each volume is devoted to a theme, or play, or group of plays; each also contains a section of reviews of that year’s textual and critical studies and of the year’s major British performances. The theme for Volume 74 is ‘Shakespeare and Education. The complete set of Survey volumes is also available online at https://www.cambridge.org/core/what-we-publish/collections/ shakespeare-survey This fully searchable resource enables users to browse by author, essay and volume, search by play, theme and topic and save and bookmark their results.
Key Features • The 74th in the annual series of volumes devoted to Shakespeare study and production • The lively theme of Shakespeare and Education occupies most of the articles in this issue • A substantial review section covers books published on Shakespeare during 2019 and productions throughout the UK
Contents 1. Whither goest thou, Public Shakespearian?; 2. Teaching Shakespeare in a Time of Hate; 3. Playful Pedagogy and Social Justice: Digital Embodiment in the Shakespeare Classroom; 4. Digital Resources, Teaching Online and Evolving International Pedagogic Practice; 5. Teaching Shakespeare with Performance Pedagogy in an Online Environment; 6. PPE for Shakespeareans: Pandemic, Performance, and Education; 7. ‘In India’: Shakespeare and Prison in Kolkata and Mysore; 8. Shakespeare for Cops; 9. Younger Generations and Empathic Communication: Learning to Feel in Another Language with Shakespeare at the Silvano Toti Globe Theatre in Rome; 10. Shakespeare in nineteenth-century Bengal: An Imperative of ‘New Learning’; 11. Forging a Republic of Letters: Shakespeare, politics and a new university in early twentieth-century Portugal; 12. Cultural Inclusivity and Student Shakespeare Performances in Late-Colonial Singapore, 1950-9; 13. Using performance to strengthen the higher education sector: Shakespeare in twenty-first century Vietnam; 14. Counterpublic Shakespeares in the American Education Marketplace;
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Shakespeare Survey August 2021 246 x 189 mm c.650pp 978-1-316-51712-3 Hardback £89.99 / US$115.00
15. Taking Love’s Labour’s Lost seriously; 16. The Thyestean Language of English Revenge Tragedy on the University and Popular Stages; 17. Going to School with(out) Shakespeare: Conversations with Edward’s Boys; 18. Intimacy and Schadenfreude in Reports of Problems in Early Modern Productions; 19. The True Tragedy as a Yorkist Play? Problems in Textual Transmission; 20. Henry VIII and Henry IX: Unlived lives and re-written histories; 21. ‘And his works in a glass case’: The Bard in the Garden and the Legacy of the Shakespeare Ladies Club; 22. Hamlet and John Austen’s Devil with a (Dis)pleasing Shape; 23. Shakespeare, #MeToo, and his New Contemporaries; 24. ‘While memory holds a seat in this distracted globe’: A Look Back at the Arden Shakespeare Third Series; 25. Shakespeare Productions in London; 26. Productions Outside London; 27. Professional Productions in the British Isles, January – December 2019; 28. The Year’s Contribution to Shakespeare Studies: 1. Critical Studies; 2. Editions and Textual Studies.
38
Literature
Chicago A Literary History
Frederik Byrn Køhlert University of East Anglia
Description Chicago occupies a central position in both the geography and literary history of the United States. From its founding in 1833 through to its modern incarnation, the city has served as both a thoroughfare for the nation’s goods and a crossroads for its cultural energies. The idea of Chicago as a crossroads of modern America is what guides this literary history, which traces how writers have responded to a rapidly changing urban environment and labored to make sense of its place in – and implications for – the larger whole. In writing that engages with the world’s first skyscrapers and elevated railroads, extreme economic and racial inequality, a growing middle class, ethnic and multiethnic neighborhoods, the Great Migration of African Americans, and the city’s contemporary incarnation as a cosmopolitan urban center, Chicago has been home to a diverse literature that has both captured and guided the themes of modern America.
Key Features • Provides full account of Chicago literary history from beginning to present day • Provides interdisciplinary engagement with Chicago literary history • Provides many new perspectives on the broad variety of literature written in and about Chicago.
Contents Introduction: The Literary History of Chicago; Part I. The Rise of Chicago and the Literary West: 1. From Prairie to Metropolis: Chicago as the American ‘Shock City’; 2. Birth, Fire, and Rebirth: Edward Payson Roe’s Barriers Burned Away and the Invention of Chicago Literature; 3. ‘This Broad, Free Inland America of Ours’: Hamlin Garland, Chicago, and the Literary West; 4. White City: The World’s Columbian Exposition in Literature; 5. New Realities, New Realisms: Chicago Literature against the Genteel Tradition; Part II. Business Unusual: A New Urban American Literature: 6. Among the Skyscrapers: Henry B. Fuller’s Chicago Novels; 7. The Price of Success: Robert Herrick’s the Memoirs of an American Citizen and the American Business Novel; 8. ‘A Story of Chicago’: The Future of Place in Frank Norris’s The Pit; 9. Amid Forces: Theodore Dreiser’s Chicago; 10. Eugene Field, Finley Peter Dunne, and George Ade: A New Urban Vernacular; Part III. Radicalism, Modernism, and the Chicago Renaissance: 11. Progressive Chicago: Upton Sinclair, Jane Addams, and Social Reform Literature; 12. From the Prairie to the City: Willa Cather’s ‘City of Feeling’; 13. Poetry, the Little Review, and Chicago Modernism; 14. A Spirit of Two Ages: The Romantic Modernism of Carl Sandburg’s Chicago Poems;
Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers September 2021 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-47751-2 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00
15. Building a Movement: Mary Reynolds Aldis and Little Theatre in Chicago; 16. Father to Son: Floyd Dell, Sherwood Anderson, and the Chicago Renaissance; Part IV. A City of Neighborhoods: The Great Depression, Sociology, and the Black Chicago Renaissance: 17. Chicago Ecology and James T. Farrell’s Studs Lonigan; 18. Chicago gets the Blues: Migration, Depression, and the Black Renaissance; 19. Black Chicago: Richard Wright’s South Side; 20. Life in Bronzeville: Humanism and Community in the Work of Gwendolyn Brooks; 21. Hustlers, Junkies, and Prostitutes: Nelson Algren’s White Slums; 22. From Emptyland to Uncanny City: Saul Bellow’s Jewish Chicago; Part V. Traditions and Futures: Contemporary Chicago Literatures: 23. Division Street America: The Nine Chicago Literary Lives of Studs Terkel; 24. Sexual and Other Perversities: David Mamet and Contemporary Chicago Theater; 25. Chicago Crime, Blue Collar and White: Sara Paretsky’s V.I. Warshawski Novels; 26. Drawing Chicago: Chris Ware’s Graphic City; 27. Across Neighborhood and National Boundaries: Ana Castillo, Sandra Cisneros, and Mexican Chicago; 28. Stuart Dybek and the New Chicago’s Literature of Neighborhood; 29. Chicago Now: Aleksandar Hemon, Dmitry Samarov, Erika L. Sánchez and the Contemporary City of Immigrants; 30. Afterword: What Will Become of Us? The Future of Chicago Literatures.
Literature
39
Sir Charles Grandison Samuel Richardson E. Derek Taylor
Longwood College, Virginia
Melvyn New
University of Florida
Elizabeth Kraft
University of Georgia
Description One of the most important novels of the eighteenth-century, Sir Charles Grandison [1753] shaped the English courtship novel, and was loved and admired by both Jane Austen and George Eliot. The book follows the life of Sir Charles, a man parallel in virtue with Richardson’s female paragons Clarissa and Pamela; and a response to the fallible protagonist Tom Jones in Fielding’s popular satire of moralising novels. Forming part of the first full scholarly edition of Richardson’s complete works, comprehensive general and textual introductions significantly revise and advance understanding of the composition and printing history of Richardson’s final novel, and reveal the central place of Sir Charles in the literature of the period. Including Richardson’s Historical Index for the first time in any edition, extensive annotations and expansive notes also give readers crucial context, and provides scholars with paths to follow for future research.
Key Features • First scholarly edition of the novel in nearly fifty years. A new general and textual introduction significantly revises and advances understanding of the composition and printing history of Richardson’s final novel • Expansive notes allow readers to understand the novel in its historical and literary contexts, and provide scholars paths to follow for future research • Features Richardson’s original Historical Index, which is not included in any other modern edition
Contents Volume 1: List of Illustrations; General Editors’ Preface; Acknowledgements; Chronology; List of Abbreviations; General Introduction; Textual Introduction; The History of Sir Charles Grandison (1 & 2). Volume 2: The History of Sir Charles Grandison (3 & 4). Volume 3: The History of Sir Charles Grandison (5 & 6, Concluding note) Volume 4: The History of Sir Charles Grandison (Index: Historical and Characteristical, Similes and Allusions, Unlucky Omission, To the Public); Collation of Chapter Numbering; Emendations; Word-division; Bibliographical Descriptions of Early Editions; Explanatory Notes; Index.
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Samuel Richardson October 2021 228 x 152 mm 3000pp 978-0-521-83306-6 4 Volume Set c. £225.00 / c. US$290.00
40
Literature
The Aspern Papers and Other Tales, 1884–1888 Henry James Rosella Mamoli Zorzi University of Venice
Simone Francescato
Universita Ca’Foscari, Venezia
Description The Cambridge Edition of the Complete Fiction of Henry James provides, for the first time, a scholarly edition of a major writer whose work continues to be read, quoted, adapted and studied. The nine tales in this volume, published between 1884 and 1888, include ‘The Aspern Papers’, set in Venice and featuring a devious scholar attempting to steal the letters of an American poet from his former lover, and ‘The Liar,’ on the world of painters and their models. These tales exemplify James’s continuing interest in the art of short fiction during a period which saw him responding to the stimulations of French naturalism and successfully reworking the international theme that had made him famous at the end of the 1870s. Extensive explanatory notes enable modern readers to understand the tales’ historical, cultural and literary references.
Key Features • Provides a full critical introduction to ‘The Aspern Papers’, comprising an authoritative text and supported by full textual apparatus including notes, glossary and textual variants • The first scholarly edition of James’ collected short tales, exemplifying his response to French naturalism • Features extensive sections on textual history and contemporary critical reception as well as a comprehensive bibliography
Contents List of Illustrations; Acknowledgements; List of Abbreviations; General Editor’s Preface; General Chronology of James’s Life and Writings; Introduction; Textual Introduction; Chronology of Composition and Production; Bibliography; The Aspern Papers and Other Tales, 1884-188; Glossary of Foreign Words and Phrases; Notes; Textual Variants; Emendations; Appendix A. Extracts from James’s Notebooks; Appendix B. Prefaces to the New York Edition.
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Complete Fiction of Henry James, 27 October 2021 228 x 152 mm 650pp 978-1-107-02964-4 Hardback c. £85.00 / c. US$150.00
Management
41
Cambridge Handbook of Routine Dynamics Martha S. Feldman
University of California, Irvine
Brian T. Pentland
Michigan State University
Luciana D’Adderio University of Edinburgh
Katharina Dittrich University of Warwick
Claus Rerup
Frankfurt School of Finance and Management
David Seidl
University of Zurich
Description Over the last two decades, Routine Dynamics has emerged as an international research community that shares a particular approach to organizational phenomena. At the heart of this approach is an interest in examining the emergence, reproduction, replication and change of routines as recognizable patterns of actions. In contrast to other research communities interested in those phenomena, Routine Dynamics studies are informed by a distinctive set of theories (especially practice theory and related process-informed theories). This Handbook offers both an accessible introduction to core concepts and approaches in Routine Dynamics as well as a comprehensive and authoritative overview of research in different areas of Routine Dynamics. The chapters of this Handbook are structured around four core themes: 1) Theoretical resources for research on the dynamics of routines, 2) Methodological issues in studying the dynamics routines, 3) Themes in Routine Dynamics research and 4) Relation of Routine Dynamics to other communities of thought.
Key Features • Offers a state of the art introduction to Routine Dynamics as a distinctive approach to studying organizations • Brings together the key scholars in the field of Routine Dynamics • Offers guidelines on how to do research in Routine Dynamics and directions for future research
Contents 1. What is routine dynamics; Part I. Theoretical Resources for Research Dynamics Research: 2. Practice theory and routine dynamics; 3. Process theorizing and routine dynamics; 4. Ethnomethodology and routine dynamics; 5. Pragmatism and routine dynamics; 6. Actor-network theory and routine dynamics; 7. Materiality and routine dynamics; Part II. Methodological Issues in Research Dynamics Research: 8. Ethnography and routine dynamics; 9. Video methods and routine dynamics; 10. Field experiments in routine dynamics; 11. Agent-based modeling in routine dynamics; 12. Sequence analysis in routine dynamics;
13. Narrative networks in routine dynamics; 14. Bakhtin’s chronotope and routine dynamics; Part III. Themes in Routine Dynamics Research: 15. Truces and routine dynamics; 16. Context, embeddedness and routine dynamics; 17. Routine interdependence: intersections, clusters, ecologies and bundles; 18. Cognition in routine dynamics; 19. Time, temporality and history in routine dynamics; 20. Transfer and replication in routine dynamics; 21. Innovation work and routine dynamics; 22. Design and routine dynamics; 23. Algorithms and routine dynamics; 24. Complexity in routine dynamics; 25. Bodies and routine dynamics; 26. Emotion and routine dynamics;
Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students August 2021 247 x 174 mm c.500pp 978-1-108-83447-6 Hardback c. £110.00 / c. US$150.00
27. Professional identity and routine dynamics; 28. Occupations, professions and routine dynamics; 29. Management practice and routine dynamics; 30. Project-based and temporary organizing and routine dynamics; 31. Self-managed forms of organizing and routine dynamics; 32. Unexpected events and routine dynamics; Part IV. Related Communities of Thought: 33. Carnegie school experiential learning and routine dynamics; 34. Dynamic capabilities and routine dynamics; 35. Strategy as practice and routine dynamics; 36. Path dependence and routine dynamics; 37. Business process management and routine dynamics.
42
Mathematics
Orthogonal Polynomials in the Spectral Analysis of Markov Processes Birth-Death Models and Diffusion
Manuel Domínguez de la Iglesia Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
Description In pioneering work in the 1950s, S. Karlin and J. McGregor showed that probabilistic aspects of certain Markov processes can be studied by analyzing orthogonal eigenfunctions of associated operators. In the decades since, many authors have extended and deepened this surprising connection between orthogonal polynomials and stochastic processes. This book gives a comprehensive analysis of the spectral representation of the most important one-dimensional Markov processes, namely discrete-time birth-death chains, birth-death processes and diffusion processes. It brings together the main results from the extensive literature on the topic with detailed examples and applications. Also featuring an introduction to the basic theory of orthogonal polynomials and a selection of exercises at the end of each chapter, it is suitable for graduate students with a solid background in stochastic processes as well as researchers in orthogonal polynomials and special functions who want to learn about applications of their work to probability.
Key Features • The first text to bring together all the main results on the spectral representation of the most important one-dimensional Markov processes • Many detailed examples of the spectral analysis of birth-death models and diffusion processes and the probabilistic consequences • Accessible to graduate students with a background in probability
Contents 1. Orthogonal polynomials; 2. Spectral representation of discrete-time birth-death chains; 3. Spectral representation of birth-death processes; 4. Spectral representation of diffusion processes; References; Index.
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications, 181 November 2021 234 x 156 mm c.390pp 978-1-316-51655-3 Hardback £94.99 / US$125.00
Medicine
43
Insular Epilepsies Dang Nguyen
Université de Montréal
Jean Isnard
Claude Bernard University Lyon
Philippe Kahane
Grenoble-Alpes University Hospital
Description The role of the insular cortex in epilepsy has been largely neglected until very recently. With growing interest in insular epilepsies, this book provides unique, in-depth coverage of the condition from childhood to adulthood. Detailed description of the anatomy, vascularization, connectivity, and functions of the insula along with complete description of the semiology, neurophysiology, and neuroimaging of insular epilepsy helps clinicians better recognize the condition. Up-to-date treatment avenues are explored, guiding the management of patients, including drug-resistant cases suitable for neurosurgery. Authors come from a range of backgrounds, providing a multidisciplinary perspective essential to all health professionals involved in epilepsy diagnosis and treatment. A scratchoff code in the inside cover allow users access to an online equivalent of the book, featuring videos illustrating the semiology of the various forms of insular seizures. This authoritative overview provides clinicians with the necessary information to treat this underrecognized condition.
Key Features • Entirely devoted to insular cortex epilepsy, this book provides unique, in-depth coverage of the condition lacking in many major epilepsy textbooks, raising awareness of this long-neglected type of epilepsy • Contains detailed descriptions of insular epilepsy semiology, neurophysiology and neuroimaging, allowing readers to better recognize the condition and how best to investigate it • Describes a range of treatment avenues, ensuring readers are aware of the best treatment options available and can tailor them to each patient • Multidisciplinary in nature, a range of health professionals provide key insights into both diagnosis and treatment, as well as explaining the role and functions of the insula from a neuroscience perspective • Gain full HTML access of the whole book, with supplementary videos to illustrate the semiology of the various forms of insular seizures, via a scratch-off code inside the cover
Contents Foreword; 1. A brief history of insular cortex epilepsy; Part I. The human insula: Viewpoint from Epileptology: 2. Anatomy of the insula; 3. Vascularization of the insula: Key points for safe epilepsy surgery; 4. Structural connectivity of the insula; 5. Functional connectivity of the insula; 6. Interoceptive integration in the primate insular cortex; Part II. The spectrum of epilepsies involving the insula: 7. Clinical presentation of opercular-insular epilepsy in adults; 8. Clinical presentation of operculo-insular epilepsy in children;
9. Are painful seizures specific to insular epilepsy?; 10. The role of the insula in temporal lobe epilepsy and temporal lobe ‘plus’ epilepsies; 11. Insular-origin seizures with frontal presentation; 12. The role of the insula in SUDEP; Part III. Non-invasive investigation of insular epilepsy: 13. Non-invasive electrophysiological investigations in insular epilepsy; 14. Structural imaging of insular epilepsy; 15. PET and SPECT in insular epilepsy; 16. Neuropsychology of insular epilepsy; Part IV. Invasive investigation of insular epilepsy: 17. Invasive investigation of insular epilepsy: Indications and preplanning; 18. Invasive investigation of insular epilepsy: Surgical techniques;
Additional Information Level: Medical specialists/consultants, specialist medical trainees October 2021 254 x 178 mm c.243pp 978-1-108-48888-4 Hardback TBA / TBA
19. Qualitative interpretation of intracranial EEG in insular epilepsy; 20. Quantitative intracranial EEG signal analysis in insular epilepsy; 21. Electrical stimulation of the human insular cortex; Part V. Surgical management of insular epilepsy: 22. Insular epilepsy surgery: Surgical techniques and experience of various centers; 23. SEEG-guided radiofrequency thermocoagulation of insular epileptic foci; 24. Neurostimulation for the treatment of insular cortex epilepsy; 25. Laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT) for insular epilepsy.
44
Music
NEWLY AVAILABLE IN PAPERBACK!
The Cambridge Haydn Encyclopedia Caryl Clark
University of Toronto
Sarah Day-O’Connell Skidmore College, New York
Description For well over two hundred years, Joseph Haydn has been by turns lionized and misrepresented – held up as celebrity, and disparaged as mere forerunner or point of comparison. And yet, unlike many other canonic composers, his music has remained a fixture in the repertoire from his day until ours. What do we need to know now in order to understand Haydn and his music? With over eighty entries focused on ideas and seven longer thematic essays to bring these together, this distinctive and richly illustrated encyclopedia offers a new perspective on Haydn and the many cultural contexts in which he worked and left his indelible mark during the Enlightenment and beyond. Contributions from sixty-seven scholars and performers in Europe, the Americas, and Oceania, capture the vitality of Haydn studies today – its variety of perspectives and methods – and ultimately inspire further exploration of one of western music’s most innovative and influential composers.
Key Features • Summarizes and synthesizes current Haydn research, and points to directions for future scholarship • Organized around more than eighty concepts with numerous cross-references to broaden themes and take readers on rewarding journeys of discovery • Includes seven substantial essays by leading scholars to illuminate connections between the A-Z of concepts and suggest ways to rethink familiar categories
Contents Preface and guide to readers; Acknowledgments; List of figures; List of musical examples; List of contributors; Chronology; Abbreviations; List of entries and essays; A-Z entries and essays; Bibliography; Index.
Additional Resources: http://www.cambridge.org/9781107129016 Four video clips of performances to accompany the essay on ‘Performance’
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students July 2021 229 x 152 mm 524pp 32 b/w illus. 1 table 23 music examples 978-1-107-56742-9 Paperback £24.99 / US$32.99
Music
45
Liszt in Context Joanne Cormac
University of Nottingham
Description Liszt in Context explores the political, social, philosophical and professional currents that surrounded Franz Liszt and illuminates the competing forces that influenced his music. Liszt was immersed in the religious, political and cultural debates of his day, and moved between institutions, places, and social circles with ease. All of this makes for a rich contextual tapestry against which Liszt composed some of the most iconic, popular, and also contentious music of the nineteenth century. His significance and astonishing reach cannot be over-stated, and his presence in nineteenth-century European culture, and his continuing influence into the twentieth and twentyfirst centuries, are overwhelming. The focus on context, reception, and legacy that this volume provides reveals the multifaceted nature of Liszt’s impact during his lifetime and beyond.
Key Features • Offers perspectives on Liszt’s world from musicologists all over the world • Highlights the many and varied contexts in which Liszt created and performed his music • Demonstrates Liszt’s prominent role within contemporary events and debates
Contents Preface; Part I. People and Places: 1. Family background; 2. Teachers; 3. Paris; 4. Italy; 5. Liszt and Wagner; 6. The new German school; 7. Weimar; 8. Liszt and his contemporaries; 9. Liszt in Hungary; Part II. Society thought and culture: 10. The ‘War of the Romantics’; 11. Visual art and artists;
12. Literature and literary heroes; 13. Liszt, the women and the European salon culture of the nineteenth century; 14. Liszt as writer; 15. Patronage: the court; 16. Liszt and the network of revolution; 17. Liszt’s national identity: What else is new?; 18. Liszt and religion; Part III. Performance and composition: 19. Pianos and piano builders; 20. Liszt on the road: The rise of the modern virtuoso pianist; 21. Virtuosity; 22. Improvisation;
Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students, undergraduate students Series: Composers in Context October 2021 229 x 152 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-42184-3 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00
23. Transcription; 24. Liszt as conductor; 25. Publishers; 26. Genre; Part IV. Reception and Legacy: 27. Pupils: Liszt as teacher; 28. Critics; 29. Lateness in context; 30. Liszt and the 20th and 21st centuries; 31. Life-writing; 32. Iconography; 33. Liszt in film; Index.
46
Philosophy
Foundations of American Political Thought Readings and Commentary
Alin Fumurescu
University of Houston
Anna Marisa Schön University of Houston
Description American political thought was shaped by a unique combination of theoretical influences: republicanism, liberalism, and covenant theology. This reader shows how these influences came together. Organized chronologically from the Puritans’ arrival in the New World to the Civil War, each chapter includes carefully selected primary sources and substantial commentary to explain the historical context and significance of the excerpts. A coherent interpretative framework is offered by focusing the analysis on the different assumptions of the people – the republican understanding as a corporate whole and the liberal understanding as a multitude of individuals – that were intertwined during the founding. The book features, for the first time, two chapters on non-American authors, who capture the main tenets of republicanism and liberalism and were widely quoted in the era, as well as excerpts from lesser-known sources, including Puritan covenants, the first state constitutions, and Native American speeches.
Key Features • A collection of carefully chosen selections from primary sources • Contextualizes the basic tenets of republicanism, liberalism, conservatism, and populism • Both an effective textbook for courses in political science and history, and a fascinating anthology for interested readers
Contents 1. Introduction – The People’s Two Bodies; 2. Republicanism – The People ‘Is’; 3. Liberalism – The People ‘Are’; 4. The Puritans – The Bi-Dimensional Covenant; 5. Independence – The Negative Founding; 6. The Positive Founding (I): One People or Several Peoples? 7. The Positive Founding (II) – The People as One and Many; 8. The Whole and the Parties; 9. People That Were Left Behind; 10. The United States ‘Is’.
Additional Information Level: Undergraduate students, graduate students, academic researchers July 2021 253 x 177 mm c.400pp 978-1-108-48918-8 Hardback £94.99 / US$125.00
Philosophy
47
Kant’s Early Critics on Freedom of the Will Jörg Noller
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munchen
John Walsh
Martin Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg, Germany
Description This book offers translations of early critical reactions to Kant’s account of free will. Spanning the years 1784-1800, the translations make available, for the first time in English, works by little-known thinkers including Pistorius, Ulrich, Heydenreich, Creuzer and others, as well as familiar figures including Reinhold, Fichte and Schelling. Together they are a testimony to the intense debates surrounding the reception of Kant’s account of free will in the 1780s and 1790s, and throw into relief the controversies concerning the coherence of Kant’s concept of transcendental freedom, the possibility of reconciling freedom with determinism, the relation between free will and moral imputation, and other arguments central to Kant’s view. The volume also includes a helpful introduction, a glossary of key terms and biographical details of the critics, and will provide a valuable foundation for further research on free will in post-Kantian philosophy.
Key Features • Provides original translations for new research in German idealism • Combines historical and systematic perspectives on freedom of the will • Situates the texts within the contexts of German rationalism and German idealism
Contents Note on the Edition and Translation; List of Abbreviations; Historical and Systematic Introduction; Chronology of the Translated Texts and Kant’s Major Works; Part I. Freedom and Determinism: 1. Hermann Andreas Pistorius [Review:] ‘Elucidations of Professor Kant’s ‘Critique of Pure Reason’ by Joh. Schulze, Royal Prussian Court Chaplain. Königsberg: Dengel, 1784. 8, 254 pages.’ 1786; 2. Johann August Heinrich Ulrich, Eleutheriology or On Freedom and Necessity, Jena 1788; 3. Christian Wilhelm Snell, On Determinism and Moral Freedom, Offenbach, 1789; 4. August Ludwig Christian Heydenreich, On Freedom and Determinism and their Compatibility, Erlangen 1793; Part II. Freedom and Imputability: 5. Carl Christian Erhard Schmid, Lexicon for the Easier Use of the Kantian Writings, 1788 (2nd Edition); 6. Carl Christian Erhard Schmid, Attempt at a Moral Philosophy, Jena 1790; 7. Johann Christoph Schwab, ‘On the Two Kinds of I, and the Concept of Freedom in Kant’s Ethics’ Philosophisches Archiv 1(1) (1792), 69–80; 8. Johann Christoph Schwab, ‘On Intelligible Fatalism in the Critical Philosophy’ Philosophisches Archiv 2(2) (1794), 26–33; 9. Karl Leonhard Reinhold, Contributions to the Correction of Previous Misunderstandings of Philosophers: Volume II Concerning the Foundation of Philosophical Knowledge, Metaphysics, Ethics, Moral Religion, and Doctrine of Taste, Jena 1794; Part III: Freedom and Consciousness; 10. Ludwig Heinrich von Jakob, ‘On Freedom’, Berlin 1788;
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students October 2021 229 x 152 mm c.290pp 978-1-108-48246-2 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99
11. Karl Heinrich Heydenreich, ‘On Moral Freedom’ Betrachtungen über die Philosophie der natürlichen Religion, Zweiter Band, Leipzig 1791, 56–69; 12. Johann Heinrich Abicht, ‘On the Freedom of the Will’ Neues Philosophisches Magazin. Ed. by J.H. Abicht and F.G. Born. Leipzig 1789. Vol. 1. Part I (III), 64–85; Part IV. Freedom and Skepticism: Leonhard Creuzer, Skeptical Reflections on Freedom of the Will with Respect to the Most Recent Theories on the Same, Giessen 1793; 13. Friedrich Carl Forberg, On the Grounds and Laws of Free Actions, Jena and Leipzig, 1795; 14. Johann Gottlieb Fichte, [Review:] ‘Skeptical Reflections on Freedom of the Will with Respect to the Most Recent Theories on the Same by Leonhard Creuzer, 1793’ ALZ 303 (1793), col. 201–205; 15. Salomon Maimon, ‘The Moral Skeptic’; 16. Berlinisches Archiv der Zeit und ihres Geschmacks Volume II (1800), pp. 271–292; Part V. Freedom and Choice: Immanuel Kant, Preliminary Notes and Reflections to the Introduction to the Metaphysics of Morals (before 1797); 17. Immanuel Kant, Introduction to the Metaphysics of Morals, 1797; 18. Karl Leonhard Reinhold, ‘Some Remarks on the Concept of the Freedom of the Will, posed by I. Kant in the Introduction to the Metaphysical Foundations of the Doctrine of Right’, 1797 Auswahl vermischter Schriften Volume II, Jena 1797, 364–400; 19. Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling, ‘General Overview of the Most Recent Philosophical Literature’ Philosophisches Journal, Vol. 7/2, Jena and Leipzig, 1797, 105–186; Appendix: Biographical Sketches.
48
Philosophy
Ludwig Wittgenstein: Writings on Mathematics and Logic, 1937–1944 A German–English Edition Volume 4: June 5, 1941–January 6, 1943
Victor Rodych
University of Lethbridge, Alberta
Timothy Pope
University of Lethbridge, Alberta
Description This five-volume German-English edition presents, for the first time, new translations of all of Wittgenstein’s mature 1937–1944 writings on mathematics and logic. The 1st (1956) and 3rd (1978) editions of Wittgenstein’s Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics omitted, unsystematically, more than half of Wittgenstein’s later writings on mathematics; for that reason, the reader will here read some entire manuscripts for the first time, and other manuscripts for the first time as unabridged, sustained pieces of writing. Philosophers and other interested readers will gain fresh insight into Wittgenstein’s perspectives on a wide range of topics, from Gödelian propositions and the Cantorian conception of real numbers, to the nature of mathematical propositions and the diversity of proof techniques. Other subjects covered include: mathematical sense; axioms and self-evidence; prudish proofs; the functionality of extra-mathematical application; undecided mathematical conjectures; rule-governed unwinding; and G. H. Hardy’s conceptions and claims.
Key Features • Brings together all of Wittgenstein’s later writings on mathematics and logic • Provides comprehensive and faithful translations of each text • Offers insights into Wittgenstein’s views on a vast range of topics, including Georg Cantor’s conception of real numbers and the nature of mathematical propositions
Contents Editor’s introduction; Translators’ introduction; 1. MS 161, Part III; 2. MS 163, Part II; 3. MS 124, Part I; 4. MS 163, Part III; 5. MS 125; 6. MS 126: Treating only logic and mathematics; Endnotes; Tables of variants; Appendix A: RFM content in this volume; Appendix B: The 1st and 3rd editions of RFM and their constituent MSS and TSS; Appendix C: Ludwig Wittgenstein’s original drawings.
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students December 2021 229 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-49515-8 Hardback c. £74.99 / c. US$96.99
Psychology
49
The Cambridge Handbook of Lifespan Development of Creativity Edited by Sandra W. Russ
Case Western Reserve University, Ohio
Jessica D. Hoffmann
Yale University, Connecticut
and James C. Kaufman University of Connecticut
Description This handbook focuses on the development and nurturance of creativity across the lifespan, from early childhood to adolescence, adulthood, and later life. It answers the question: how can we help individuals turn their creative potential into achievement? Each chapter examines various contexts in which creativity exists, including school, workplace, community spaces, and family life. It covers various modalities for fostering creativity such as play, storytelling, explicit training procedures, shifting of attitudes about creative capacity, and many others. The authors review research findings across disciplines, encompassing the work of psychologists, educators, neuroscientists, and creators themselves, to describe the best practices for fostering creativity at each stage of development.
Key Features • Focuses on the interplay of creativity and lifespan development • Authored by interdisciplinary experts on the fields of creativity, human development, and their intersection from across the globe • Integrates information about contexts and culture across locations, such as school and the home, as well as modalities including play, writing, and more.
Contents Introduction; Part I. Core Concepts of Lifespan Creativity Development: 1. Basic Concepts of Creativity; 2. The Creative Brain: A Developmental Snapshot; 3. Pretend Play: A Microcosm of Creativity; 4. Lifespan Development of Creativity; Part II. The Development of Creativity: 5. Are Preschoolers Creative? A Review of the Literature; 6. Development of Creativity in School-age Children; 7. The Development and Enhancement of Adolescent Creativity; 8. The Intertwined Development of Identity and Creativity: Immersing in the Digital Self; 9. Creative Development in Children from a Measurement Perspective; 10. Creativity in Adulthood; 11. The Many Faces of Creativity in Old Age; Part III. Modes of Enhancement: 12. Domain Specific Talent Development; 13. Enhancement of Creativity across Lifespan in Mainland China: Theoretical Inquiries and Practical Examples in the New Millennium;
Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology July 2021 254 x 178 mm c.750pp 978-1-108-48509-8 Hardback £145.00 / US$190.00
14. Beyond Flights of Fancy? The Relations Between Children’s Imaginary Companions, Creativity, and Coping; 15. Creating Imaginary Worlds Across the Lifespan; 16. Imaginative Creativity in the Writing and Reading of Stories; 17. The Effects of Video Games on Creativity: A Systematic Review; Part IV. Environments and Contexts: 18. Creative Identity Development in Classrooms; 19. The Creativity in Children’s Museums; 20. Makers and Makerspaces: Developing Inventive Talent; 21. Organizations and Creativity; 22. Creativity Development and Culture; Part V. Special Populations: 23. The Development of Gifted and Talented Students’ Creativity in School Contexts; 24. Creative Play in Children with Neurodevelopmental Disorders: Assessment, Intervention, and Future Directions; 25. Eminent Creators: Early Experiences and Adult Achievement; Epilogue: What Have We Learned?
50
Psychology
The Cambridge Handbook of Community Psychology Interdisciplinary and Contextual Perspectives
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 wellbeing.
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: 1. Promoting Change amidst Systemic Oppression: A Twenty-First Century Call to Action for Communities and Community Psychologists; 2. Community Psychology: Getting to Work; 3. Now Would be a Great Time to Raise your Voice: Empowerment as a Critical Community Psychology Concept; 4. Ethics and Community Psychology; 5. Defining Wellness across World Cultures; Part II. Research, Assessment, and Program Evaluation: Ecological Considerations: 6. Conducting Culturally Responsive Community Needs Assessments; 7. Comprehensive Evaluation of a Rural School Mental Health Program; 8. Constructive Diversity Pedagogy for Challenging Classroom Dialogues: Participatory Action Research with Interdisciplinary Faculty; 9. Critical Language Ethnography as a Community-Centered Research Paradigm; Part III. Community Psychology in Action: Critical Themes and Areas of Application: 10. Women and Leadership: Building Community; 11. Community Resilience: From Broken Windows to Busy Streets; 12. Building Community Resilience and Supporting Disaster Risk Reduction through Social Action Efforts; 13. The Consumer Recovery Movement in the United States: Historical Considerations and Next Steps for Action; 14. Taking Back the Streets: Violence Prevention and Neighborhood Empowerment in the South Ward of Newark; 15. Promoting Adolescent Mental Health: A Transculturally Informed Approach to Engaging Developmental Neuropsychology in the Support of Prevention and Intervention;
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology May 2021 244 x 170 mm c.850pp 978-1-108-49218-8 Hardback £145.00 / US$190.00
16. Gowanus Canal and Public Policy: Community Well-being at a Superfund Site; 17. Family Support Services at Ronald McDonald House Promotes Healing of Seriously Ill Children; 18. Community Psychology and a Fresh Look at Faith Healing Camps: Experiences in Ghana; 19. Community Impact of Social Media; 20. Supporting Communities through Educational Access; 21. Psychological Impact of Climate Change on Communities; 22. Optimal Local Government and Public Service Provision; 23. A Public Health Approach to Delinquency and Incarceration: A Case Study; 24. Public Service Organizations and Community Empowerment: A Toolkit to Develop the School-Family-Community Connection at an Urban Middle School; 25. Women and Immigration; 26. Community-Based Transition Interventions for Adolescents and Young Adults (AYA) with Neurodevelopmental Disabilities; 27. Mental Health on College Campuses; 28. LGBTQ+ Communities: Confronting Discrimination and Gaps in Community Supports; 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.
Psychology
51
The Cambridge Handbook of Animal Cognition Edited by Allison B. Kaufman University of Connecticut
Josep Call
University of St Andrews, Scotland
and 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:
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology July 2021 247 x 174 mm c.700pp 978-1-108-42674-9 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00
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; 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.
52
Psychology
The Cambridge Handbook of Forensic Psychology Second edition
Jennifer M. Brown
London School of Economics and Political Science
Miranda A. H. Horvath Middlesex University, London
Description In the decade since the publication of the first edition of The Cambridge Handbook of Forensic Psychology, the field has expanded into areas such as social work and education, while maintaining the interest of criminal justice researchers and policy makers. This new edition provides cutting-edge and comprehensive coverage of the key theoretical perspectives, assessment methods, and interventions in forensic psychology. The chapters address substantive topics such as acquisitive crime, domestic violence, mass murder, and sexual violence, while also exploring emerging areas of research such as the expansion of cybercrime, particularly child sexual exploitation, as well as aspects of terrorism and radicalisation. Reflecting the global reach of forensic psychology and its wide range of perspectives, the international team of contributors emphasise diversity and cross-reference between adults, adolescents, and children to deliver a contemporary picture of the discipline.
Key Features • Provides an up-to-date analysis of controversies in terrorism research • Takes account of lessons from indigenous restorative justice resolutions • Supplies chapters on theories, assessments, and interventions with violent offenders • Contains practical guidance for continuing professional development • Brings together perspectives from different countries showing where similarities and differences exist • Covers contemporary topics such as asylum seekers, victims of crime, and female offenders
Contents Preface; Forensic psychology: ten years on; Part I. Psychological Underpinnings: 1.1 Cognitive theories of crime; 1.2 Child and adolescent offending; 1.3 Investigative psychology; 1.4 Neurological theories; 1.5 Personality; 1.6 Theories of sexual offending; 1.7 The psychology of violent behaviour; 1.8 Investigative decision making; Part II. Psychology and Criminal Behaviour: 2.1 Current understandings of sex-based harassment and stalking perpetration; 2.2 The behaviour of sex offenders; 2.3 Intimate partner violence; 2.4 Acquisitive crime; 2.5 Terrorism research: current issues and debates; 2.6 Online child sexual exploitation and abuse; 2.7 Arson; 2.8 Serial killings and mass murder;
Part III. Assessment: 3.1 Credibility and investigative interviewing; 3.2 Eyewitness testimony; 3.3 Psychopathic personality disorder; 3.4 Forensic mental health assessments; 3.5 Intellectual disabilities and offending behaviour; 3.6 Head injury and offending; 3.7 Parole decision-making: contemporary practice and challenges; 3.8 Risk and dangerousness in adults; Part IV. Interventions: 4.1 Forensic mental health interventions; 4.2 Restorative justice: drawing from the old to develop new justice alternatives; 4.3 Treatment of persons with sexual offence histories; 4.4 Strength-based approaches to addiction recovery and desistance from crime: broadening the base for community engagement; 4.5 Victimology and victim interventions; 4.6 Interventions with violent offenders; 4.7 Women offenders;
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology September 2021 244 x 170 mm c.800pp 978-1-108-49497-7 Hardback £145.00 / US$190.00
4.8 Preventing delinquency and later criminal offending; Part V. Civil Proceedings: 5.1 Court decisions about the upbringing of children; 5.2 Parenting; 5.3 Immigration, asylum seekers and refugees; 5.4 Occupational stress and traumatic stress; 5.5 Capacity and consent in the criminal and civil contexts; Part VI. Professional Practices: 6.1 Courtroom testimony in cases of disputed confessions; 6.2 Evaluating offending behaviour programmes in prison and probation; 6.3 Working effectively with multicultural offenders in a clinical context; 6.4 Professional training and accreditation; 6.5 Ethics; 6.6 Forensic case formulation; 6.7 Staff supervision in forensic contexts.
Psychology
53
The Cambridge Handbook of Identity Michael Bamberg
Clark University, Massachusetts
Carolin Demuth
Aalborg University, Denmark
Meike Watzlawik
Sigmund Freud University, Berlin
Description While ‘identity’ is a key concept in psychology and the social sciences, researchers have used and understood this concept in diverse and often contradictory ways. The Cambridge Handbook of Identity presents the lively, multidisciplinary field of identity research as working around three central themes: (i) difference and sameness between people; (ii) people’s agency in the world; and (iii) how identities can change or remain stable over time. The chapters in this collection explore approaches behind these themes, followed by a close look at their methodological implications, while examples from a number of applied domains demonstrate how identity research follows concrete analytical procedures. Featuring an international team of contributors who enrich psychological research with historical, cultural, and political perspectives, the handbook also explores contemporary issues of identity politics, diversity, intersectionality, and inclusion. It is an essential resource for all scholars and students working on identity theory and research.
Key Features • Integrates new developments in theorizing and investigating identity around issues such as identity politics, diversity, intersectionality, and inclusion • Relates theoretical considerations to methodological implications and evidences both with concrete examples of research applications • Surveys the diverging strands in identity theory and research, and at the same time centers them on three key themes: sameness vs. difference, agency, and constancy and change
Contents 1. Identity – with or without you? Perspectives and choices guiding this handbook; Part I. The origin and development of the concept of identity: 2. Decentering histories of identity; 3. Challenges in research on self-identity; 4. The mystery of identity: fundamental questions, elusive answers; Part II. New perspectives and challenges: 5. A moral perspective: Identity as self-interpretation; 6. Researching identities as affective discursive practices; 7. The negotiation of continuity and change of Mapuche women weavers in Chile and its implication for (non-eurocentric) identity research; 8. Identity and voices – a language dialogical take; 9. Psychoanalytic perspectives on identity: From ego to life narrative; 10.Erikson, the identity statuses and beyond; Part III. Methodological approaches: 11. A narrative practice approach to identities: Small stories and positioning analysis in digital contexts; 12. Conversation analysis and ethnomethodology: Identity at stake in a kinship carers’ support group; 13. Foucauldian-informed discourse analysis; 14. A methodology to examine identity: Multimodal (Inter)action Analysis;
15. Autoethnography; 16. A sociocultural approach to identity through diary studies; 17. Positioning microanalysis: A method for the study of dynamics in the dialogical self and identity; 18. Synthesized or confused field? A Critical analysis of the state-of-the-art in identity status research methods; 19. Criminals’ narrative identity; 20. Experimentation within the social identity approach: History, highlights, and hurdles; Part IV. Current domains: 21. Clinical psychology: Autistic identities; 22. Gerontopsychology: Dementia and identity; 23. The study of identity in health psychology; 24. Identity scholarship in educational psychology: Towards a complex dynamic systems perspective; 25. Political psychology: Identity development in a traumatic environment; 26. Organisational psychology: When, why and how is identity work (less) important in organisational life?; 27. Conceptualizing the multiple levels of identity and intersectionality; Part V. Conclusion: 28. Where is identity? Reflections on identity conceptualizations, dimensions, and implications.
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology November 2021 244 x 170 mm c.800pp 978-1-108-48501-2 Hardback £145.00 / US$190.00
54
Psychology
The Cambridge Handbook of Multimedia Learning Third edition
Richard E. Mayer
University of California, Santa Barbara
Logan Fiorella
University of Georgia
Description
Digital and online learning is more prevalent than ever, making multimedia learning a primary objective for many instructors. The Cambridge Handbook of Multimedia Learning examines cutting-edge research to guide creative teaching methods in online classrooms and training. Recognized as the field’s major reference work, this research-based handbook helps define and shape this area of study. This third edition provides the latest progress report from the world’s leading multimedia researchers, with forty-six chapters on how to help people learn from words and pictures, particularly in computer-based environments. The chapters demonstrate what works best and establishes optimized practices. It systematically examines well-researched principles of effective multimedia instruction and pinpoints exactly why certain practices succeed by isolating the boundary conditions. The volume is founded upon research findings in learning theory, giving it an informed perspective in explaining precisely how effective teaching practices achieve their goals or fail to engage.
Key Features • • • • •
Provides an up-to-date review of what is known about how to design multimedia instruction Presents evidence-based theories on how people learn from words and graphics Features a diverse collection of chapters written by leading researchers from around the world Supplies a systematic structure for organizing the research base in multimedia learning Lays out both practical and theoretical implications, as well as recommendations for future research
Contents Part I. Background: 1. Introduction to Multimedia Learning; 2. Foundations of Multimedia Learning; 3. Fifteen common but questionable principles of Multimedia Learning; 4. Research methods in Multimedia Learning; Part II. Theoretical Foundations: 5. Cognitive theory of Multimedia Learning; 6. Implications of cognitive load theory for Multimedia Learning; 7. Integrated model of text and picture comprehension; 8. The four component Instructional Design Model for Multimedia Learning; 9. Motivation and affect in Multimedia Learning; 10. Metacognition in Multimedia Learning; Part III. Basic Principles of Multimedia Learning: 11. The Multimedia Principle; 12. The multiple representation principle in Multimedia Learning; 13. The expertise reversal principle in Multimedia Learning; Part IV. Principles for Reducing Extraneous Processing in Multimedia Learning: 14. Principles for reducing extraneous processing in Multimedia Learning: Coherence, signaling, redundancy, spatial contiguity, and temporal contiguity principles;
15. The split attention principle in Multimedia Learning; 16. The redundancy principle in Multimedia Learning; 17. The Signaling (or cueing) principle in Multimedia Learning; 18. The worked example principle in Multimedia Learning; 19. Principles for managing essential processing in Multimedia Learning: Segmenting, pre-training, and Modality principles; 20. The Modality principle in Multimedia Learning; 21. The Transient information principle in Multimedia Learning; Part VI. Principles Based on Social and Affective Features of Multimedia Learning: 22. Principles Based on Social Cues in Multimedia Learning: Personalization, voice, embodiment, and image Principles; 23. The embodiment principle in Multimedia Learning; 24. The immersion principle in Multimedia Learning; 25. The Collaboration principle in Multimedia Learning; 26. The animation composition principle in Multimedia Learning; 27. The Emotional Design principle in Multimedia Learning; Part VII. Principles Based on Generative Activity in Multimedia Learning:
28. The Generative Activity principle in Multimedia Learning; 29. The Mapping principle in Multimedia Learning; 30. The Drawing principle in Multimedia Learning; 31. The Imagination principle in Multimedia Learning; 32. The Self-Explanation principle in Multimedia Learning; 33. The Guided Inquiry principle in Multimedia Learning; 34. The Feedback principle in Multimedia Learning; 35. The Learner Control principle in Multimedia Learning; 36. The Cognitive Load Self-Management principle in Multimedia Learning; Part VIII. Multimedia Learning with Media: 37. Multimedia Learning with online cognitive tutors; 38. Multimedia Learning with Animated Pedagogical agents; 39. Multimedia Learning with simulations and microworlds; 40. Multimedia Learning with Computer games; 41. Multimedia Learning with Instructional video; 41. Multimedia Learning with Instructional video Logan Fiorella; 42. Multimedia Learning in Virtual and Mixed reality; 43. Multimedia Learning with Visual displays; 44. Multimedia Learning from multiple documents; 45. Multimedia Learning in e-Courses; 46. Principles for educational assessment with Multimedia.
Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers, professionals Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology October 2021 279 x 216 mm c.800pp 978-1-108-84158-0 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00
Religion
55
The Cambridge History of Judaism Volume 5: Jews in the Medieval Islamic World
Phillip I. Lieberman
Vanderbilt University, Tennessee
Description Volume 5 examines the history of Judaism in the Islamic World from the rise of Islam in the early sixth century to the expulsion of Jews from Spain at the end of the fifteenth. This period witnessed radical transformations both within the Jewish community itself and in the broader contexts in which the Jews found themselves. The rise of Islam had a decisive influence on Jews and Judaism as the conditions of daily life and elite culture shifted throughout the Islamicate world. Islamic conquest and expansion affected the shape of the Jewish community as the center of gravity shifted west to the North African communities, and long-distance trading opportunities led to the establishment of trading diasporas and flourishing communities as far east as India. By the end of our period, many of the communities on the ‘other’ side of the Mediterranean had come into their own—while many of the Jewish communities in the Islamicate world had retreated from their high-water mark.
Key Features • Examines the history of Judaism in the Islamic World from the rise of Islam in the early sixth century to the expulsion of Jews from Spain at the end of the fifteenth • A definitive exploration of all aspects of Jewish life in the medieval Islamic world • Features essays written by an international team of contributors
Contents Introduction; Part I. Jews in the Medieval Islamic World: 1. The Sources; 2. Jewish perceptions of and attitudes towards Islam and Muslims; 3. Islamic attitudes and policies; 4. The Maghrib and Egypt; 5. The Jews of Muslim Spain; 6. Beyond crescent and cross: Jews in medieval Syria and Sicily; 7. Yemen and India from the rise of Islam to 1500; 8. The Jews of Northern Arabia in early Islam; 9. Judaism in Pre-Islamic Arabia; 10. The Islamic east; Part II. Social and Institutional History: 11. Demography and migrations; 12. Economic activities; 13. Jewish communal and religious organization; 14. Schools and education; 15. The life cycle and the annual cycle in Genizah society;
Additional Information Level: Graduate students, academic researchers Series: The Cambridge History of Judaism July 2021 229 x 152 mm 1060pp 978-0-521-51717-1 Hardback £175.00 / US$225.00
16. The family; Part III. Spiritual and Intellectual History: 17. Karaism; 18. Non-Rabbinic and non-Karaite religious movements; 19. Languages and translations; 20. Book production; 21. Jewish bible exegesis in Muslim lands in the middle ages; 22. Jewish law; 23. Liturgy; 24. Piyyuṭ Tova Beeri; 25. Jewish philosophy; 26. Science and medicine; 27. Magic; 28. Mysticism; 29. Belles-lettres; 30. Jewish-Muslim polemics; 31. Historiography; 32. Material culture and art.
56
Religion
The Cambridge History of Atheism Stephen Bullivant
St Mary’s University, Twickenham, London
Michael Ruse
Florida State University
Description The two-volume Cambridge History of Atheism offers an authoritative and up to date account of a subject of contemporary interest. Comprised of sixty essays by an international team of scholars, this History is comprehensive in scope. The essays are written from a variety of disciplinary perspectives, including religious studies, philosophy, sociology, and classics. Offering a global overview of the subject, from antiquity to the present, the volumes examine the phenomenon of unbelief in the context of Christian, Islamic, Buddhist, Hindu, and Jewish societies. They explore atheism and the early modern Scientific Revolution, as well as the development of Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution and its continuing implications. The History also includes general survey essays on the impact of scepticism, agnosticism and atheism, as well as contemporary assessments of thinking. Providing essential information on the nature and history of atheism, The Cambridge History of Atheism will be indispensable for both scholarship and teaching, at all levels.
Key Features • Comprised of sixty essays by an international team of scholars • Written from a variety of disciplinary perspectives including religious studies, philosophy, sociology, and classics • Indispensable for both scholarship and teaching, at all levels.
Contents Part I. Preliminaries: 1. Linguistic History of the Terms ‘Atheism’ and ‘Atheist’; 2. Histories of Atheism: A History; Part II. Atheisms in History: 3. Israel and the Near East; 4. Pre-modern Japan; 5. Ancient Greece; 6. The Roman Empire; 7. India – 1500 BCE – 1200 CE; 8. Christian Europe; 9. The Islamic World; Part III. Reformation, Renaissance, Enlightenment: 10. Reformation; 11. Early-modern England: Marlowe, Hobbes et al; 12. Spinoza and the Low Countries; 13. Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-century France; 14. The Scientific Revolution; 15. Scottish Enlightenment; 16. Al-Ghazali; Part IV. Classical Modernity: Philosophical and Scientific Currents: 17. Lives of Jesus and Historico-critical Scepticism; 18. Romanticism; 19. John Stuart Mill;
20. The Physical Sciences; 21. Charles Darwin; 22. Freud and the Unconscious; Part V. Classical Modernity: Social and Political Currents: 23. The French Revolution; 24. Freemasons, Atheists, and Anticlericals: Spanish American Struggles for Independence; 25. Marx and Marxisms; 26. Nineteenth-century Russia; 27. Humanism and Secularism; 28. Bertrand Russell; 29. Robert Ingersoll; 30. Early Women’s Movement; 31. Early African-American Secularism; Part VI. Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries: Intellectual and Artistic Currents: 32. Analytic Philosophy; 33. Naturalism; 34. Existentialism; 35. Postmodernist Philosophies; 36. Ayn Rand and Objectivism; 37. Darwinism; 38. Literature; 39. Music; 40. Visual Arts; 41. Film and Television;
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students July 2021 228 x 152 mm c.1000pp 978-1-108-68899-4 2 Volume Hardback Set £230.00 / US$300.00
Part VII. Lived Atheism in the Twentieth- and Twentyfirst Centuries: Case-studies: 42. Latin America; 43. Modern China; 44. Contemporary China; 45. India; 46. The Soviet Union; 47. Modern Germany; 48. The Nordic and Baltic Countries; 49. USA; 50. The Pacific Northwest; 51. Tunisia; 52. Southern Africa; 53. Traditional Societies; Part VIII. Emerging Atheisms in the Twenty-first Century: 54. New Atheism; 55. The Internet and the Social Media Revolution; 56. The Atheist Spring? Emerging Unbelief in the Islamic World; 57. Intersectional Atheism: Sex, Gender and Race; 58. Religion for Atheists? Transhumanism, Mindfulness, and Atheist Churches; 59. Atheism Throughout the World; Part IX. Conclusion: 60. Reflections.
Religion
57
Religion in Sixteenth-Century Mexico A Guide to Aztec and Catholic Beliefs and Practices
Cheryl Claassen
Appalachian State University, North Carolina
Laura Ammon
Appalachian State University, North Carolina
Description Religion in Sixteenth-Century Mexico explores the development of religion as transferred from Spain to Tenochtitlan. The religious world of both Aztecs and Spanish Catholics at time of encounter was organized through large and small scale community, family, and personal devotions. Devotion expressed through cults was the single most salient aspect in the transfer of Catholicism to New World people. This book highlights the role that ideas such as afterlife, apocalypticism, iconoclasm, Marianism, resistance, and saints played in the emergence of Mexican Catholicism in the sixteenth century. The larger Atlantic world context, as seen in the regions of Iberia, Anahuac, and ‘New Spain’, or central Mexico from Zacatecas to Oaxaca, is explored in detail. Beginning with an extensive historical essay to contextualize the pre-contact period, the bulk of this volume contains 118 separate keywords each with three comparative essays examining Aztec and Catholic religious practices before and after contact.
Key Features • Provides context and history of the development of Aztec religion • Connects theological developments concretely with historical events • Provides examples of what the various Christian mendicant orders were doing and why
Contents I. Migrants, Mendicants and Mary: Anahuac to New Spain; II. Keywords; Appendix I. Aztec Feast Cycle; Appendix II. Europeans, Aztecs, and New Spaniards; Glossary.
Additional Information Level: Academic researchers, graduate students November 2021 253 x 177 mm c.450pp 978-1-316-51838-0 Hardback c. £100.00 / c. US$130.00
58
Running Head Left
Coming soon Drama and Theatre 978-1-108-47649-2
A History of Polish Theatre
TBC
978-1-108-41920-8
The Cambridge History of America and the World
TBC
978-1-107-06062-3
ICSID Reports
978-1-316-51136-7
International Law Reports
TBC
978-1-108-42709-8
Constitutionalism in Context
TBC
978-1-108-47255-5
African American Literature in Transition, 1930–1940
TBC
978-1-108-49175-4
British Literature in Transition, 1900–1920: A New Age?
TBC
History Law £230.00
Literature
Mathematics 978-1-108-47906-6
Numerical Ranges of Hilbert Space Operators
£115.00
The EBCOG Postgraduate Textbook of Obstetrics & Gynaecology
£130.00
Medicine 978-1-108-95559-1
Music 978-1-108-42199-7
A History of Stringed Keyboard Instruments
TBC
Library Highlights July - December 2021 Order Form
Booksellers
Your details
Send this form to the Customer Services Department, Cambridge University Press, University Printing House, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8BS, UK. Alternatively, order online at www.cambridge.org/booksellers or www.PubEasy.com
Company name Title Surname First name
Individuals and libraries
Address
Send this form to your usual bookseller or supplier. In case of difficulty, contact Karen Granger, Customer Services Department, Cambridge University Press, University Printing House, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8BS, UK.
Postcode Country Telephone
Review copies
To request a review copy of any of our books, please write to the Customer Services Department, Cambridge University Press, University Printing House, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8BS, UK.
Email Account number Representative Order reference
Prices
The prices shown are usually approximate pre-publication prices. While every effort is made to maintain their accuracy, final prices may differ from those printed here.
Date Delivery instructions
Quantity 1
Richard A. Etlin
Cost
The Cambridge Guide to the Architecture of Christianity
978-1-108-47151-0
Hardback
£425.00
US$550.00
R
.................
.................
R
.................
.................
.................
.................
R
.................
.................
2
Roger Rees
A Commentary on Panegyrici Latini II(12)
978-1-107-15504-6
Hardback
£80.00
US$155.00
3
Katarzyna Fazan
A History of Polish Theatre
978-1-108-47649-2
Hardback
TBA
TBA
4
Chongji Jin
Mao Zedong
978-1-107-09274-7
Hardback
£125.00
US$165.00
5
Foteini Spingou Sources for Byzantine Art History
978-1-108-48305-6
Multiple copy pack
£200.00
US$260.00
R
.................
.................
The Cambridge History of Medieval Canon Law
978-1-107-02504-2
Hardback
£110.00
US$180.00
R
.................
.................
The Cambridge History of America and the World
978-1-108-41920-8
4 Volume Hardback Set
TBA
TBA
.................
.................
.................
.................
6
Anders Winroth
7
Mark Philip Bradley
8
Jonnie Robinson
A Thesaurus of English Dialect and Slang
978-1-108-47323-1
Hardback
£120.00
US$155.00
R
9
Piotr Stalmaszczyk
The Cambridge Handbook of the Philosophy of Language
978-1-108-49238-6
Hardback
£125.00
US$165.00
R
.................
.................
10
Karin Ryding
The Cambridge Handbook of Arabic Linguistics
978-1-108-41730-3
Hardback
£125.00
US$165.00
R
.................
.................
11
Mohammad Javad Ahmadian
The Cambridge Handbook of Task-Based Language Teaching
978-1-108-49138-9
Hardback
£120.00
US$160.00
R
.................
.................
12
International Committee of the Red Cross
Commentary on the Third Geneva Convention
978-1-108-83898-6
2 Volumes Hardback Set
£350.00
US$500.00
R
.................
.................
13
Philippe De Baere
The WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement
978-1-108-42351-9
Hardback
£175.00
US$225.00
R
.................
.................
14
Sara Iglesias Sánchez
Fundamental Rights in the EU Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
978-1-108-48813-6
Hardback
£150.00
US$195.00
R
.................
.................
15
Larry A. DiMatteo
The Cambridge Handbook of Lawyering in the Digital Age
978-1-108-83746-0
Hardback
£200.00
US$260.00
R
.................
.................
Subtotal
.................
Order at www.cambridge.org/booksellers
Quantity
Cost
.................
.................
16
Christopher Greenwood
International Law Reports
978-1-316-51639-3
Hardback
£170.00
US$220.00
17
Jorge Viñuales
ICSID Reports
978-1-107-06062-3
Hardback
£230.00
US$300.00
.................
.................
18
Avihay Dorfman
The Cambridge Handbook of Privatization
978-1-108-49714-5
Hardback
£160.00
US$210.00
R
.................
.................
19
Arthur B. Laby
Fiduciary Obligations in Business
978-1-108-48512-8
Hardback
£150.00
US$195.00
R
.................
.................
20
Stuart CaseyMaslen
The Right to Life under International Law
978-1-108-49478-6
Hardback
£200.00
US$260.00
R
.................
.................
Schreuer’s Commentary on the ICSID Convention
978-1-108-49428-1
2 Volume Hardback Set
£250.00
US$325.00
R
.................
.................
The Cambridge Handbook of Commons Research Innovations
978-1-108-83721-7
Hardback
£140.00
US$180.00
R
.................
.................
21
Stephan W. Schill
22
Sheila R. Foster
23
Christopher Greenwood
International Law Reports
978-1-316-51156-5
Hardback
£170.00
US$220.00
R
.................
.................
24
Jorge A. HuertaGoldman
The Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership
978-1-107-16325-6
Hardback
£69.99
US$125.00
P
.................
.................
25
D. Gordon Smith
The Cambridge Handbook of Law and Entrepreneurship in the United States
978-1-107-17195-4
Hardback
£140.00
US$225.00
R
.................
.................
R
.................
.................
.................
.................
.................
.................
26
Wim Decock
Great Christian Jurists in the Low Countries
978-1-108-42984-9
Hardback
£100.00
US$130.00
27
Christopher Greenwood
International Law Reports
978-1-316-51136-7
Hardback
TBA
TBA
28
David S. Law
Constitutionalism in Context
978-1-108-42709-8
Hardback
TBA
US$175.00
R
29
David Staines
A History of Canadian Fiction
978-1-108-41808-9
Hardback
£84.99
US$110.00
R
.................
.................
30
Natalya Lusty
Surrealism
978-1-108-49568-4
Hardback
£84.99
US$110.00
R
.................
.................
31
Angus Cleghorn
Elizabeth Bishop in Context
978-1-108-49597-4
Hardback
£84.99
US$110.00
R
.................
.................
32
Allan H. Simmons
A Set of Six
978-1-107-18913-3
Hardback
£84.99
US$110.00
R
.................
.................
33
Kevin R. McNamara The City in American Literature and Culture
978-1-108-84196-2
Hardback
£84.99
US$110.00
R
.................
.................
34
Ignacio López-Calvo A History of Chilean Literature
978-1-108-48737-5
Hardback
£84.99
US$110.00
R
.................
.................
35
Maggie McKinley
Norman Mailer in Context
978-1-108-47766-6
Hardback
£84.99
US$110.00
R
.................
.................
36
Emma Smith
Shakespeare Survey 74
978-1-316-51712-3
Hardback
£89.99
US$115.00
R
.................
.................
37
Frederik Byrn Køhlert
Chicago
978-1-108-47751-2
Hardback
£85.00
US$110.00
R
.................
.................
38
Samuel Richardson
Sir Charles Grandison
978-0-521-83306-6
4 Volume Set £225.00
US$290.00
R
.................
.................
39
Henry James
The Aspern Papers and Other Tales, 1884–1888
978-1-107-02964-4
Hardback
£85.00
US$150.00
R
.................
.................
978-1-108-47255-5
Hardback
TBA
TBA
.................
.................
.................
.................
40
Eve Dunbar
African American Literature in Transition, 1930–1940
41
James Purdon
British Literature in Transition, 1900–1920: A New Age?
978-1-108-49175-4
Hardback
TBA
TBA
42
Martha S. Feldman
Cambridge Handbook of Routine Dynamics
978-1-108-83447-6
Hardback
£110.00
US$150.00
43
Hwa-Long Gau
Numerical Ranges of Hilbert Space Operators
978-1-108-47906-6
Hardback
£115.00
US$150.00
44
Manuel Domínguez de la Iglesia
Orthogonal Polynomials in the Spectral Analysis of Markov Processes
978-1-316-51655-3
Hardback
£94.99
US$125.00
45
Tahir Mahmood
The EBCOG Postgraduate Textbook of Obstetrics & Gynaecology
978-1-108-95559-1
2 Volume HB Set
£130.00
R
.................
.................
.................
.................
R
.................
.................
US$170.00
P
.................
.................
46
Dang Nguyen
Insular Epilepsies
978-1-108-48888-4
Hardback
TBA
TBA
-
.................
.................
47
Caryl Clark
The Cambridge Haydn Encyclopedia
978-1-107-56742-9
Paperback
£24.99
US$32.99
R
.................
.................
R
48
Joanne Cormac
Liszt in Context
978-1-108-42184-3
Hardback
£84.99
US$110.00
49
Stewart Pollens
A History of Stringed Keyboard Instruments
978-1-108-42199-7
Hardback
TBA
TBA
.................
.................
.................
.................
50
Alin Fumurescu
Foundations of American Political Thought
978-1-108-48918-8
Hardback
£94.99
US$125.00
R
.................
.................
51
Jörg Noller
Kant’s Early Critics on Freedom of the Will
978-1-108-48246-2
Hardback
£74.99
US$99.99
R
.................
.................
52
Victor Rodych
Ludwig Wittgenstein: Writings on Mathematics and Logic, 1937–1944
978-1-108-49515-8
Hardback
£74.99
US$96.99
R
.................
.................
53
Sandra W. Russ
The Cambridge Handbook of Lifespan Development of Creativity
978-1-108-48509-8
Hardback
£145.00
US$190.00
R
.................
.................
54
Caroline S. ClaussEhlers
The Cambridge Handbook of Community Psychology
978-1-108-49218-8
Hardback
£145.00
US$190.00
R
.................
.................
55
Allison B. Kaufman
The Cambridge Handbook of Animal Cognition
978-1-108-42674-9
Hardback
£150.00
US$195.00
R
.................
.................
Subtotal
.................
61 Quantity
Cost
.................
.................
56
Jennifer M. Brown
The Cambridge Handbook of Forensic Psychology
978-1-108-49497-7
Hardback
£145.00
US$190.00
R
57
Michael Bamberg
The Cambridge Handbook of Identity
978-1-108-48501-2
Hardback
£145.00
US$190.00
R
.................
.................
58
Richard E. Mayer
The Cambridge Handbook of Multimedia Learning
978-1-108-84158-0
Hardback
£150.00
US$195.00
R
.................
.................
59
Phillip I. Lieberman
The Cambridge History of Judaism
978-0-521-51717-1
Hardback
£175.00
US$225.00
R
.................
.................
60
Stephen Bullivant The Cambridge History of Atheism
978-1-108-68899-4
2 Volume Hardback Set
£230.00
US$300.00
P
.................
.................
Religion in Sixteenth-Century Mexico
978-1-316-51838-0
Hardback
£100.00
US$130.00
R
.................
.................
Subtotal
.................
Total for all pages
.................
61
Cheryl Claassen
HIGHLIGHTS from
Graduate Studies, History man Center for the Study of on University
ory, Cornell University
actions of fugitive enslaved el the reader to consider ican Revolutionary Era. omen to the discussion of itivity to the larger narrative he period.”
istory, Southern University
RUNNING FROM BONDAGE
tion, Karen Cook Bell tells s geography of containment to self-liberation. Her deep ing stories of women who ortunity to carry themselves unning from Bondage, no it shows how Black women’s utionary changes.”
Cook Bell
s that the phenomenon of s not idiosyncratic but was, tifully written work centers abolition. A must-read.”
Karen Cook Bell
RUNNING FROM BONDAGE ENSLAVED WOMEN AND THEIR REMARKABLE FIGHT FOR FREEDOM IN
Running from Bondage tells the compelling stories of enslaved women, who comprised one-third of all runaways, and the ways in which they fled or attempted to flee bondage during and after the Revolutionary War. Karen Cook Bell’s enlightening and original contribution to the study of slave resistance in eighteenth-century America explores the individual and collective lives of these women and girls of diverse circumstances, while also providing details about what led them to escape. She demonstrates that there were in fact two wars being waged during the Revolutionary Era: a political revolution for independence from Great Britain and a social revolution for emancipation and equality in which Black women played an active role. Running from Bondage broadens and complicates how we study and teach this momentous event, one that emphasizes the chances taken by these “Black founding mothers” and the important contributions they made to the cause of liberty.
REVOLUTIONARY AMERICA
THE ENABLERS
EARTH DETOX
HOW TEAM TRUMP FLUNKED THE PANDEMIC AND FAILED AMERICA
How and Why We Must Clean Up Our Planet
BARBARA KELLERMAN
JULIAN CRIBB ‘Starkly engaging, beautifully written, and deeply unnerving’ - Geoffrey Holland
Running from Bondage
Earth Detox
The Enablers
Enslaved Women and Their Remarkable Fight for Freedom in Revolutionary America
How and Why We Must Clean Up Our Planet
How Team Trump Flunked the Pandemic and Failed America
Julian Cribb
Barbara Kellerman
Karen Cook Bell
9781108931083 | Paperback | £10.99 | July 2021
9781108838320 | Hardback | £20 | September 2021
9781108831543 | Hardback | £18.99 | July 2021
Attack Higher The
on
Forgotten Lessons of Great Economists
John L. Campbell and John A. Hall
What Capitalism Needs Forgotten Lessons of Great Economists John L. Campbell and John A. Hall 9781108487825 | Hardback | £20 | September 2021
Education
The Dissolution of the American University
Ronald G. Musto
The Attack on Higher Education The Dissolution of the American University
Extinctions Living and Dying in the Margin of Error Michael Hannah 9781108843539 | Hardback | £20 | September 2021
Ronald G. Musto 9781108471923 | Hardback | £19.99 | September 2021
RHOADS
AFTER THE VIRUS Lessons from the Past for a Better Future
Industry Unbound
After the Virus
The Inside Story of Privacy, Data, and Corporate Power
Lessons from the Past for a Better Future
Ari Ezra Waldman
Hilary Cooper and Simon Szreter
9781108492423 | Hardback | £20 | September 2021
9781009005203 | Paperback | £12.99 | September 2021
T H E EC ONOM IST’S V I EW OF T H E WOR L D
Hilary Cooper Simon Szreter
3 5 TH A N N I V E R S A RY E D I T I O N
THE ECONOM IST’S VIEW OF T H E WOR L D And the Qu est fo r Well - B e ing STE V E N E . R HOA DS “A remarkable book [that] non-economists should read to understand what economists know. But [one] economists should also read to understand what they do not.” M A RT I N WO L F, Financial Times
The Economist's View of the World And the Quest for Well-Being Steven E. Rhoads 9781108845946 | Hardback | £20 | October 2021
Running Head Right
63