Humanities Autumn Catalogue 2019

Page 1

Archaeology 1

History – Cross Discipline

22

Art 3

American Literature

Classical Studies

3

English Literature

Drama and Theatre

7

European and World Literature 35

American History

8

Music 36

British and Irish History

9

Philosophy 39

European History

11

Religion 42

History – Other Areas

16

27 29

HUMANITIES www.cambridge.org/academic

September – December 2019

New titles

Contents


Archaeology 1 Art 3 Classical Studies

3

Drama and Theatre

7

American History

8

British and Irish History

9

European History

11

History – Other Areas

16

History – Cross Discipline

22

American Literature

27

English Literature

29

European and World Literature 35 Music 36 Philosophy 39 Religion 42

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September – December 2019

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Running Archaeology head right

Archaeology

Birds and the Culture of the European Bronze Age Theoretical and Cultural Perspectives Joakim Goldhahn | Linnéuniversitetet, Sweden

Archaeological Science An Introduction Michael Richards | Simon Fraser University, British Columbia

This book provides an easily accessible introduction to often complex scientific methods that are increasingly applied in archaeology. It will be invaluable to students and professionals in archaeology who need to understand these essential methods, and it explains these approaches clearly and simply using relevant archaeological examples. • Covers a wide range of methods included under the title of ‘Archaeological Science’ which is not usual for other books • Provides excellent introductions to other methods within this field beyond the specialty of the purchaser • Chapters are accessible for undergraduate and postgraduate students and professional field archaeologists Archaeological science

This book provides new insights about the relationship between humans and birds in Northern Europe during the Bronze Age. It argues that birds as well as humans have an agency of their own which was contemplated in everyday practices as well as in histories, legends, myths and Bronze Age cosmologies. • The first in-depth study of Bronze Age societies in Northern Europe from an ontological perspective • Presents a new theoretical model to apply in the study of humans’ relations to birds in which birds are perceived with an agency of their own • Uses different strands of archaeological material and evidences assembled from different contexts, such as bird bones from settlement and burial contexts, bronze iconography, and rock art, to explore humans’ relationship with birds in the Bronze Age Archaeology of Europe, Near and Middle East

November 2019 253 x 177 mm 400pp 54 b/w illus. 978-0-521-19522-5 Hardback £95.00 / US$125.00

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978-0-521-14412-4 Paperback £32.99 / US$42.99

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August 2019 253 x 177 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-49909-5 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$110.00

Consciousness, Creativity, and Self at the Dawn of Settled Life

Subsistence and Society in Prehistory

Edited by Ian Hodder | Stanford University, California

New Directions in Economic Archaeology Alan K. Outram | University of Exeter

Using globally diverse examples, this book examines how to integrate new biomolecular and microscopic techniques with long-established forms of archaeobotanical and zooarchaeological data to reconstruct prehistoric diet and subsistence in different environments leading to a comprehensive picture of the tapestry of past human cultural variation. • Presents a clear vision of how economic approaches tell us about wider cultural issues • Provides a comprehensive review of the latest scientific techniques in the field in a way that can be appreciated by non-scientists • Includes two case study chapters that address key issues in domestication, early farming and pastoralism

Over recent years, a number of scholars have argued that the human mind underwent a cognitive revolution in the Neolithic. The proposed volume seeks to test these claims at the Neolithic site of Çatalhöyük in Turkey and in other Neolithic contexts in the Middle East. • Proposes a new view of cognitive evolution in the Neolithic of the Middle East • Based on detailed data collected by a large team over twenty-five years at Çatalhöyük • Brings together a new group of archaeologists and cognitive scientists Archaeology of Europe, Near and Middle East

November 2019 253 x 177 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-48492-3 Hardback c. £71.00 / c. US$99.99

Prehistory

The Textile Revolution in Bronze Age Europe

November 2019 228 x 152 mm 304pp 37 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-1-107-12877-4 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00 C

Production, Specialisation, Consumption Serena Sabatini | Göteborgs Universitet, Sweden

The Pasts of Roman Anatolia Interpreters, Traces, Horizons Felipe Rojas | Brown University, Rhode Island

The book is aimed at readers interested in the eastern Mediterranean during the Roman period. It examines what the Romans and their contemporaries thought about ruins and other physical traces of even older pasts, including, for example, the city of Troy, the fossilized bones of prehistoric creatures, and cuneiform and hieroglyphs. • Expands the range of ancient people engaged in making history • Collects and presents diverse data demonstrating that interest in the physical traces of the past was pervasive in Roman Anatolia • Extends discussion about the nature and practice of antiquarianism into the classical past Classical archaeology

November 2019 253 x 177 mm c.248pp 978-1-108-48488-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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The book is primarily for archaeologists, anthropologists, students in archaeology and anthropology, and cultural heritage workers both within and outside academia. It fills a significant gap in our understanding of Europe’s prehistory, namely the cultural, social, and economic impact of textile economies in shaping societies. • Provides examples of methodological and theoretically informed studies of the archaeological evidence for textile production and specialization • Includes inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary perspectives, showing the benefit of each discipline as well as that of combining multiple perspectives • Provides a set of articles that discuss results, methodologies, theoretical, and source critical issues Archaeology of Europe, Near and Middle East

December 2019 253 x 177 mm c.350pp 17 tables 978-1-108-49359-8 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$105.00

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Running head left Archaeology

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The Archaeology of the Iberian Peninsula

The Archaeology of the Bronze Age Levant

From the Paleolithic to the Bronze Age Katina T. Lillios | University of Iowa

From Urban Origins to the Demise of CityStates, 3700–1000 BCE Raphael Greenberg | Tel-Aviv University

This book provides an up-to-date synthesis of the rich histories of the peoples who lived on the Iberian Peninsula between 1,400,000 (the Paleolithic) and 3,500 years ago (the Bronze Age). It will be of interest to archaeologists, students, and tourists visiting Spain and Portugal, and is amply illustrated. • Presents key archaeological findings in Iberian prehistory and connects them to broader debates in world archaeology • Integrates the archaeology of both Portugal and Spain • Contains an illustration program that helps readers visualize the spaces where sites are located and the richness of artifacts made in the ancient past Archaeology of Europe, Near and Middle East | Cambridge World Archaeology

November 2019 253 x 177 mm 300pp 978-1-107-11334-3 Hardback c. £65.00 / c. US$105.00

Ancient Near East | Cambridge World Archaeology

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Ancient Egyptian Phonology James Allen | Brown University, Rhode Island

Complements the author’s widely-used Middle Egyptian: An Introduction to the Language and Culture of Hieroglyphs, 3rd edition (Cambridge, 2014). Uses an approachable treatment for linguists and scholars/students of ancient Near Eastern languages as well as Egyptologists. • The author is one of the top authorities on Ancient Egyptian language and the author of several books on this topic, among them, Middle Egyptian, now in its third edition • New, up to date methodology is used, which enables reconstruction of the sound of Ancient Egyptian • Prioritizes language-internal evidence, allowing Egyptian to be understood independently of related languages Egyptology

October 2019 216 x 140 mm c.150pp 978-1-108-48555-5 Hardback £59.99 / US$79.99 978-1-108-70730-5 Paperback £19.99 / US$25.99

A richly documented and illustrated survey of the archaeology of a crucible of world culture, covering the earliest urban cultures and the emergence of states. This book is a key resource for students of the ancient Near East and the Bronze Age Mediterranean, and a valuable reference work for scholars in related disciplines. • A detailed, fact-based synthesis that addresses broad themes and trajectories, and bridges the divide between ‘empirical’ and ‘theoretical’ approaches • Up-to-date and thoroughly referenced to the latest field research, as well as current interpretative approaches • Transcends long-standing divisions based on modern borders

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The Archaeology of Egypt in the Third Intermediate Period

September 2019 253 x 177 mm 400pp 978-1-107-11146-2 Hardback c. £70.00 / c. US$110.00 978-1-107-52913-7 Paperback c. £25.99 / c. US$39.99 AVAILABLE OPEN ACCESS

Sacred Heritage Monastic Archaeology, Identities, Beliefs Roberta Gilchrist | University of Reading

Critically evaluates the concept of sacred heritage, drawing on multi-disciplinary, global perspectives to clarify the multiple values of sacred heritage to spiritual and humanist audiences. Forges innovative connections between medieval archaeology and heritage studies, revealing new perspectives on medieval monasticism, identity, and healing. This title is also available as Open Access. • Evaluates key concepts including authenticity, materiality, identity and heritage value in relation to medieval sacred heritage • Develops a new approach to medieval monastic archaeology through the material study of religion • Considers the role of archaeology in ‘Golden Age’ myths associated with medieval sacred sites including Glastonbury Abbey • This title is also available as Open Access Archaeology (general)

November 2019 — USA size only: c.274pp 978-1-108-49654-4 Hardback c. £85.00 / c. US$110.00

James E. Bennett

The Archaeology of Food

This book is aimed at students, teachers, and academics who have an interest in the study of urbanism in Egypt and the ancient world. This book provides for the first time, an up-to-date, comprehensive analysis of Egyptian urbanism during the Third Intermediate Period (1076–664 BCE). • Provides one of the most comprehensive assessments of settlement data for the Third Intermediate Period, using both ancient texts and archaeological excavations • Provides a framework for the study of ancient settlements for ancient Egyptian intermediate periods in general • Gives an up-to-date typological analysis of domestic material culture from Egyptian settlements of the Third Intermediate Period

Identity, Politics, and Ideology in the Prehistoric and Historic Past Katheryn C. Twiss | State University of New York, Stony Brook

Egyptology

September 2019 253 x 177 mm c.350pp 41 b/w illus. 19 maps 6 tables 978-1-108-48208-0 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00 C

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The Archaeology of Food explores food and culture in the past. It explains how archaeologists reconstruct what people were eating hundreds and even thousands of years ago, and discusses how ancient foodways related to economic strategies, political ambitions, ethnic identities, racial tensions, gender norms, religious affiliations, and more. • Surveys the field of food archaeology, explaining core topics and interesting research areas • Provides an up-to-date overview of the archaeological methods used to study food in the past • Includes examples and ideas from a wide range of areas and time periods • Engages readers interested in public service, sustainability, health, and other topics of global concern Archaeology (general)

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.248pp 15 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47429-0 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-46406-2 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99

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Art Running / Classical head Studies right

Art

Virgil’s Fourth Eclogue in the Italian Renaissance L. B. T. Houghton | Rugby School

The Art of Sculpture in Fifteenth-Century Italy Edited by Amy R. Bloch | State University of New York, Albany

Featuring essays by top scholars and an expansive introduction, this volume surveys fifteenth-century Italian sculpture. It offers the most comprehensive treatment of the topic to date, in its range of artists and media, and its geography: from great centers like Florence and Venice to lesser-studied cities like Milan and Naples. • Offers a complete account of fifteenth-century Italian sculpture, especially in its introduction, which surveys the century’s sculpture tout court • Essays cover a wide array of media and focus on a range of artists active throughout the Italian peninsula, from the canonical (such as Donatello and Luca della Robbia) to the less well-known (such as Bartolomeo Bellano and Antonio Rizzo) • Illuminates sculpture from traditional ‘centers’ of art-historical scholarship (such as Florence, Venice, Rome), while also alerting readers to less well-studied arenas of sculptural production (for example Milan and Naples) Western art

December 2019 279 x 216 mm c.350pp 112 colour illus. 978-1-108-42884-2 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99

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Classical Studies Ancient Theatre and Performance Culture Around the Black Sea David Braund | University of Exeter

Combines archaeological evidence with literary analysis of key plays linked to the region to broaden the study of theatre outside fifth-century BCE Athens and allow comparison with the similarly colonial world of Southern Italy. Also offers a new route into Black Sea Greek and nonGreek culture(s) on the colonial periphery. • Presents the first comprehensive exploration of theatre and performance culture in the ancient Black Sea region • Sets key plays in a new context and discusses a wealth of previously unknown material evidence • Offers new routes into understanding Greek culture in the region and Greek colonialism around the ancient world Classical literature

October 2019 247 x 174 mm 400pp 194 b/w illus. 978-1-107-17059-9 Hardback c. £74.99 / c. US$120.00

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The first book-length study of any aspect of the reception of one of the most prominent and influential poems in European culture. It will appeal to students and scholars of Latin literature and classical reception, of political, religious and cultural history, and of early modern literature and art. • The first book-length study of the reception of one of the most prominent and influential poems in European culture, presenting new readings of some central texts and artworks • Reveals for the first time the full extent of Virgilian influence in art and literature of the Italian Renaissance • Makes a major contribution to the growing fields of neo-Latin studies and classical reception studies Classical literature

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.378pp 16 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49992-7 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00

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The Cultural History of Augustan Rome Texts, Monuments, and Topography Edited by Matthew P. Loar | University of Nebraska, Lincoln

This volume explores the interrelationship of the literature, monuments, and urban landscape of Augustan Rome. Targeting scholars of both literature and material culture, its interdisciplinary studies range from canonical authors (such as Cicero, Livy, and Ovid) to iconic monuments (such as the Rostra, Pantheon, and Meridian of Augustus). • Includes cutting-edge research on the city of Rome and the interrelationship of its literature, monuments, and urban landscape • Demonstrates interdisciplinary approaches to Roman culture and history, making use of different methodologies • Explores the advantages and limitations of bringing literary and material evidence into dialogue with each other Classical literature

May 2019 228 x 152 mm 204pp 978-1-108-48060-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Abused Bodies in Roman Epic Andrew M. McClellan | San Diego State University

Greco-Roman martial epic poetry, from Homer and Virgil to Neronian and Flavian epic, is obsessed with the treatment of dead bodies. This book provides an extensive survey and analysis of corpse mistreatment and funeral violation in Latin epic poetry, thereby enabling a fundamental reevaluation of violence and warfare. • Provides the first systematic study of the mistreatment of the dead in Greek and Latin epic poetry • Blends close reading of ancient texts with discussion of socio-historical, political, aesthetic, and religious contexts • Includes translations of all Latin and Greek passages quoted Classical literature

July 2019 228 x 152 mm 318pp 978-1-108-48262-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Running Studies Classical head left

Scale, Space and Canon in Ancient Literary Culture

The Language of Roman Letters

Reviel Netz | Stanford University, California

Bilingual Epistolography from Cicero to Fronto Olivia Elder | University of Cambridge

How many authors were there in antiquity? Where did they work? How was the ‘canon’ made? This book provides an account of ancient culture in terms of such quantifiable questions. The end result explains why the Greeks were unique in creating a culture based on pluralistic debate. • Provides a bold new overarching history of ancient literary culture as a whole • Combines both literary and specialized/scientific genres • Provides a mass of statistics on ancient culture and so will become a source of reference as well as a starting-point for debate concerning its quantitative analysis

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Classical literature

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.1000pp 13 b/w illus. 30 maps 82 tables 978-1-108-48147-2 Hardback c. £45.00 / c. US$60.00 P

The Cambridge Guide to Homer

Classical literature | Cambridge Classical Studies

Edited by Corinne Ondine Pache | Trinity University, San Antonio

The Cambridge Guide to Homer traces the influence and meaning of Homeric poetry from its earliest incarnation as ancient Greek song to its current status in world literature, presenting the information in a synthetic manner that allows the reader to gain an understanding of the different strands of Homeric studies. • Includes longer essays for broader synthesis, and shorter essays to explore topics in more depth • The book is divided into three main sections, giving readers an immediate sense of the connection between different approaches to Homeric epic – textual, archaeological, and reception • Accessible to general readers as well as specialists Classical literature

October 2019 253 x 177 mm 800pp 35 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02719-0 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00

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Persuasion, Rhetoric and Roman Poetry Irene Peirano Garrison | Yale University, Connecticut

This pioneering analysis of the relationship between rhetoric and poetry offers both a fresh take on key texts from the Greco-Roman rhetorical tradition (including authors such as Cicero, Seneca the Elder and Quintilian) and a new approach towards theorizing the role of the rhetorical in literature and literary criticism. • Offers an innovative analysis of the relationship between rhetoric and poetry in Roman culture • Moves away from the traditional focus on elements deemed ‘rhetorical’ in poetic texts and examines instead the poets’ own perspective on the role of the rhetorical medium • Provides a new and comprehensive analysis of the role of poetry and the poetic in rhetorical theory Classical literature

August 2019 228 x 152 mm 300pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-107-10424-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Roman correspondence reveals ancient lives, relationships, politics and identities. This book explores the way the bilingual authors Cicero, Pliny, Suetonius, Fronto and Marcus Aurelius switch from Latin to Greek in their letters, and demonstrates how they manipulate language to make and break friendships, resolve problems and express Romanness. • The first systematic analysis of developments in bilingual letter writing between the first century BC and the second century AD • Combines macro-level comparison across corpora with close reading of code-switches in individual epistolary relationships, time periods, and letters • Combines sociolinguistic and historical approaches to ancient letters and develops a new methodology for studying code-switching in literature

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September 2019 216 x 138 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-48016-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Venantius Fortunatus: Vita Sancti Martini Prologue and Books I–II N. M. Kay

A critical edition of part of Venantius Fortunatus’ Vita Sancti Martini, which paraphrases in epic verse Sulpicius Severus’ famous prose hagiography of St Martin and represents one of the last flowerings of a recognisably classical Latin tradition. Deals extensively with matters of exegesis, textual criticism, language, metre and much else. • The first full commentary on the first part of Vita Sancti Martini, an important poetic work of late antiquity • Provides a new text and apparatus criticus and the first English translation of the first part of Vita Sancti Martini • Includes the texts of the relevant parts of the Vitae Martini of Sulpicius Severus and Paulinus of Périgueux, on which the poem was based Classical literature | Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries, 59

October 2019 216 x 138 mm c.500pp 978-1-108-42584-1 Hardback c. £100.00 / c. US$130.00

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TEXTBOOK

Greek Elegy and Iambus A Selection Editor (introduction and notes) William Allan | University of Oxford

A selection of the work of ten poets with detailed introduction and linguistic, literary and cultural commentary suitable for upper-level undergraduates and graduate students, but also of interest to scholars. Includes some major pieces, such as the recently discovered Plataea elegy of Simonides and Telephus elegy of Archilochus. • Provides an excellent introduction to these important forms of Greek literature through a representative sample of the work of ten poets • Includes some recent discoveries such as Simonides’ Plataea elegy and Archilochus’ Telephus elegy • The up-to-date introduction and commentary provide linguistic help as well as literary and cultural analysis Contents: Introduction; 1. Elegy and iambus as poetic forms; 2. Performance and mobility; 3. Poets and personae; 4. Society and culture; 5. Language, style, metre; 6. Transmission of the text; Greek


Running Classical head Studies right

elegy and Iambus: A Selection: Archilochus; Semonides; Callinus; Tyrtaeus; Mimnermus; Solon; Theognis; Xenophanes; Hipponax; Simonides; Commentary. Classical literature | Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics

August 2019 216 x 138 mm 278pp 1 map 978-1-107-12299-4 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-107-55997-4 Paperback £23.99 / US$31.99

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TEXTBOOK

Homer: Iliad Book III Editor (introduction and notes) A. M. Bowie | University of Oxford

Book III is one of the most diverse in the Iliad. This edition discusses the historical, literary and religious backgrounds to the work and gives a full historical account of Homeric language. The commentary explores the styles of Homeric narrative as well as providing linguistic and metrical help. • Provides comprehensive coverage of linguistic, sociological and archaeological features, as well as a clear account of Homeric metre and the creation of the text • Gives a clear and accessible account of the relevant Near Eastern and Indo-European cultural features to show how Homer fits into the cultural milieu of his time, and discusses the historicity of the Trojan War • Discusses the styles of Homeric narrative, illustrating especially its economy and sophistication Contents: Introduction; Iliad book III; Commentary; Glossary. Classical literature | Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics

August 2019 216 x 138 mm 300pp 1 table 978-1-107-06301-3 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-107-69802-4 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99

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Euripides: Ion

Biofiction and the Reception of Latin Poetry Nora Goldschmidt | University of Durham

Brings innovations in modern life-writing studies to Roman poetry and its reception. While its core fields are Latin poetry and reception studies, this interdisciplinary book will interest all those working on life-writing. Individual chapters focus on topics in medieval studies, Renaissance studies, Victorian literature, and modernist literature. • Brings the study of antiquity and modern life-writing studies into mutually informing dialogue • Develops new methodologies for the study of Roman poetry and its reception, focusing on the ‘biofictional’ lives of poets • Contains in-depth and accessible case studies of key moments in the biofictional reception of Roman poetry Classical literature | Classics after Antiquity

December 2019 247 x 174 mm 246pp 2 b/w illus. 978-1-107-18025-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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The Aesthetics of Hope in Late Greek Imperial Literature Methodius of Olympus’ Symposium and the Crisis of the Third Century Dawn LaValle Norman | Australian Catholic University, Melbourne

Sheds light on a relatively dark period of literary history, the late third century CE, by examining how some early Christian writers tried to reorient literature. Methodius of Olympus’ dialogic Symposium exposes an era’s new concerns, with its insistence that the future is more interesting than the past. • Demonstrates how Christian literature was part of the literary networks of the Imperial period • Shows how a literary text can be used to give insight into an historical era with few other surviving ancient sources • Provides an engaging reading of an understudied period Classical literature | Greek Culture in the Roman World

John C. Gilbert | University of Colorado Boulder

By attending to language, style, meter, dramatic technique, and context, this up-to-date edition makes an appealing and under appreciated play accessible to students, scholars, and readers of Greek at all levels. While recognizing the play’s light touches, it takes its exploration of Apollo’s oracle, Ion’s piety, and Creusa’s suffering seriously. • Offers a comprehensive and up-to-date commentary on one of Euripides’ most lively and appealing plays • Addresses issues of language, style, meter, and dramatic technique, and gives contextual detail on myth, religion, politics, and society • Pays close attention to the Greek so that readers of all levels will benefit from a better understanding of Euripides’ poetry Contents: Introduction; 1. Euripides: life and works; 2. Myth; 3. Setting, staging, and production; 4. Structure and dramatic technique; 5. The Chorus and the characters; 6. Political identity; 7. Ritual and religion; 8. Revelation and deception; 9. Genre and tone; 10. Transmission of the text; A note on the text and critical apparatus; Ion; Commentary. Classical literature | Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics

November 2019 216 x 138 mm 386pp 978-0-521-59361-8 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$99.99 978-0-521-59656-5 Paperback c. £25.99 / c. US$33.99

Afterlives of the Roman Poets

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December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.288pp 1 table 978-1-108-49417-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Sophocles P. J. Finglass | University of Bristol

This volume of New Surveys in the Classics examines Sophocles’ reputation as a dramatic poet both in his own day and later in antiquity, and considers how it was that some of his plays survived from his time down to ours. It investigates the qualities of those plays, focusing on key aspects of Sophoclean dramaturgy such as stagecraft, narrative, rhetoric, and heroism. • Examines Sophocles’ dramatic poetry, which vividly depicts unforgettable characters confronted with emotional crises, moral dilemmas, and the inscrutable ways of the gods • Incorporates both the seven plays that survive in full and major fragments that have been discovered in recent years • All Greek has been translated, meaning that this volume is accessible to anyone with an interest in Sophocles and his work Classical literature | New Surveys in the Classics, 44

July 2019 234 x 156 mm c.200pp 978-1-108-70609-4 Paperback £16.99 / US$29.99

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Aristotle on Matter, Form, and Moving Causes

Death and Immortality in Ancient Philosophy

The Hylomorphic Theory of Substantial Generation Devin Henry | University of Western Ontario

A. G. Long | University of St Andrews, Scotland

Articulates, develops, and significantly revises the traditional interpretation of Aristotle’s theory of generation, thereby improving our understanding of how the doctrine of form and matter – hylomorphism – informs his understanding of how new substances come into being. It will be of interest to scholars of ancient philosophy and the history of biology. • Provides the first full-length treatment of Aristotle’s comprehensive theory of generation • Includes an extensive examination of Aristotle’s views on the role of matter, form, and moving causes in the generation of substances • Features discussion of topics in the history of biology as well as exploring substantial generation within Aristotle’s wider philosophy Ancient philosophy

November 2019 228 x 152 mm c.252pp 978-1-108-47557-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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June 2019 228 x 152 mm 240pp 978-1-107-08659-3 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99

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The Kharga and Dakhla Oases in Antiquity Edited by Roger S. Bagnall | Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, New York

Aristoxenus of Tarentum: The Pythagorean Precepts (How to Live a Pythagorean Life) An Edition of and Commentary on the Fragments with an Introduction Carl A. Huffman | DePauw University, Indiana

A major new resource for students of ancient philosophy who want to understand the Pythagorean way of life in the time of Plato. Includes a new Greek text and detailed commentary on The Pythagorean Precepts, as well as an English translation and accessible overview of the Pythagorean ethical system. • Presents an accessible overview of the principles of the Pythagorean way of life and its relationship to Pythagorean thought in the time of Plato and Aristotle • Provides the first edition and translation of and the first detailed commentary on all the fragments of The Pythagorean Precepts of Aristoxenus of Tarentum • Explains how The Pythagorean Precepts fit into the Pythagorean tradition as a whole Ancient philosophy

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Cicero on the Philosophy of Religion On the Nature of the Gods and On Divination J. P. F. Wynne | University of Utah

Examining Cicero’s engagement with Hellenistic (Stoic, Epicurean, and sceptical) philosophy of religion (the ‘science and religion debate’) in his two dialogues, On the Nature of the Gods and On Divination, this book makes a major contribution towards a new, higher estimation of the Roman statesman Cicero’s philosophical writings. • Brings to life Cicero’s exciting interpretations of Hellenistic philosophers on the gods and religion • Argues forcefully for Cicero’s worth as a careful philosophical author • Shows how the traditional religion of the late Roman Republic, and the scientific and philosophical world of Hellenistic thought, give Cicero original perspectives on the big questions in the philosophy of religion Ancient philosophy

October 2019 228 x 152 mm 321pp 978-1-107-07048-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Ancient philosophy | Key Themes in Ancient Philosophy

The Great Oasis of Egypt

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

September 2019 216 x 138 mm c.700pp 978-1-108-42531-5 Hardback £130.00 / US$170.00

A concise and accessible new account of the variety and subtlety of Greek and Roman philosophy of death and immortality, from Homer to Marcus Aurelius. Explores key figures, ideas and debates in Epicurean, Stoic, Presocratic and Platonic philosophy, and relates them to contemporary debates on the philosophy of death. • Explores the varied and often subtle conceptions of immortality in Greek and Roman philosophy, from Homer to Stoicism • Provides an original account of death in Epicureanism and of immortality in the thought of Plato • The book is accessible and of great interest to upper-level students of ancient philosophy as well as those interested in contemporary debates on death

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The Great Oasis of Egypt studies societies of the oases in the western desert, hundreds of miles distant from the Nile but closely tied to it, including how people used underground water for agriculture, developed their own slant on Egyptian religion, and adopted Greek and Roman literary and artistic culture. • Treats both the Dakhla and Kharga oases in the same volume, allowing a broader view of their history • Presents dozens of images of recent archaeological work otherwise available only in technical publications • Includes only contributors who are active participants in recent and current fieldwork Ancient history

July 2019 247 x 174 mm 362pp 26 b/w illus. 11 maps 6 tables 978-1-108-48216-5 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 C

A Social and Economic History of the Theatre to 300 BC Volume 2: Theatre beyond Athens: Documents with Translation and Commentary Eric Csapo | University of Sydney

The first comprehensive historical study of the process by which the ancient theatre became a panhellenic and international cultural institution. Fully presents all relevant evidence, offering critical texts with translation, discussion of all important documents, and illustrations and commentary for the important material evidence. • Collects, presents and discusses in detail all the documentary and material evidence for theatre outside Athens before 300 BC • Offers the first full study of the early spread of theatrical culture • Examines the social, economic and political factors that motivated Greek and non-Greek states to embrace theatre culture Ancient history

October 2019 247 x 174 mm 850pp 52 b/w illus. 5 maps 978-0-521-76557-2 Hardback c. £110.00 / c. US$200.00

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Classical Studies / Running Drama and head Theatre right

Greek Military Service in the Ancient Near East, 401–330 BCE

Women and Embodied Mythmaking in Irish Theatre Shonagh Hill | University College Dublin

Jeffrey Rop | University of Minnesota, Duluth

Challenges the view that Greek soldiers serving in ancient Persia and Egypt were mercenaries hired for their superior military skills. Avoiding technical jargon and including clear translations, maps, diagrams, and historical context, it is accessible to specialists in related fields and to non-academics interested in ancient military history. • Proposes a new view of Greco-Persian relations in the fourth century BCE that helps explain the military successes of Alexander the Great • Includes new reconstructions of several ancient battles, with diagrams • Argues for a new interpretation of the military significance of the Greek heavy infantry Hoplite Ancient history

June 2019 228 x 152 mm 290pp 978-1-108-49950-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

European theatre

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-48533-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Historiography and Space in Late Antiquity

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Rediscovering Stanislavsky Maria Shevtsova | Goldsmiths, University of London

Peter Van Nuffelen | Universiteit Gent, Belgium

Space is as much a geographical reality as a representation of the world. For centuries the Roman Empire, depicting itself as the centre of world, had shaped the mindset of its inhabitants. In Late Antiquity, mindset as well as map slowly adapted to political and religious change. • Provides the first book on the representation of space in late ancient historiography • Explores how the ‘fall of Rome’ and the fragmentation of its empire changed historians’ understanding of the world • Includes case studies drawn from Greek, Latin, Syriac and Armenian histories Ancient history

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.248pp 2 b/w illus. 1 table 978-1-108-48128-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Explores how women in Irish theatre in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries have employed mythic narratives to expose the gap between women’s material lives and idealised myths of femininity. This book will speak to students and academics with an interest in theatre, Irish studies and gender studies. • Presents a tradition of women in Irish theatre that spans the twentieth and twenty-first centuries • Proposes a genealogy of women’s performance by tracing the connections, resonances, and divergences in their mythmaking • Critically analyses works that have received little scholarly attention, introducing readers to a wealth of new material and drawing on extensive original and archival research

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Konstantin Stanislavsky (1863–1938) was one of the most prominent and innovative directors of modern theatre, and his system and related practices continue to be studied and used in universities and in theatres. This book explores the extraordinary political contexts in which he resisted authoritarian pressures and developed his life’s work. • Presents the first interdisciplinary approach to Stanislavsky’s theatre practice, bringing together the political, cultural and theatre contexts within which he worked • Includes Russian archival sources never previously published in English, details from scores and plans of Stanislavsky’s early and 1920s productions, as well as rehearsal lessons from his last studio • Rediscovers little-known areas of Stanislavsky’s new type of theatre and its immersion in the visual arts, dance and opera European theatre

November 2019 228 x 152 mm 306pp 978-1-107-02339-0 Hardback c. £26.99 / c. US$29.99

Drama and Theatre

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

British Enlightenment Theatre

The Faust Legend

Dramatizing Difference Bridget Orr | Vanderbilt University, Tennessee

The first study of popular eighteenth-century English theatre to engage with voices of radical dissent that argued for religious toleration, attacked imperial invasion and forced conversion of indigenous peoples and challenged social hierarchy. This book tells the story of freemasons who served as theatrical ‘shock troops of the Enlightenment’. • Situates Restoration and eighteenth-century English plays in relation to Enlightenment ideas • Shows how eighteenth-century English drama gave voice to radical critique on behalf of oppressed groups including colonized peoples, the Irish, Muslims and the labouring classes • Reveals for the first time how central freemasonry was to eighteenthcentury theatre British theatre

November 2019 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 6 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49971-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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From Marlowe and Goethe to Contemporary Drama and Film Sara Munson Deats | University of Southern Florida

Explores dramatic and filmic adaptations of the Faust legend from Marlowe‘s Doctor Faustus and Goethe’s Faust to lesser known works. With detailed comparison and analysis tracing the development of the Faust topos, it will appeal to students of early modern drama, eighteenth- and nineteenth-century German literature, and film studies. • Explores dramatic and filmic adaptations of the Faust legend, from seminal dramatic works on the subject, to lesser known plays and films • Compares Christopher Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s adaptation of the Faust legend • Provides an analysis of the ways in which the Faust legend has been adapted to reflect topical questions of the period in which they were written Theatre (general)

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 7 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47585-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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American History

The Cambridge History of the American Civil War Aaron Sheehan-Dean | Louisiana State University

Carolina’s Golden Fields Inland Rice Cultivation in the South Carolina Lowcountry, 1670–1860 Hayden R. Smith | College of Charleston, South Carolina

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This book examines the environmental and technological complexity of South Carolina inland rice plantations from their inception at the turn of the seventeenth century to the brink of their institutional collapse at the eve of the Civil War. • Proposes a new interpretation of South Carolina Lowcountry and South Atlantic history to help readers better understand the development and evolution of the plantation complex • Documents the close connection between environment, technology, and culture • Provides resources for readers to understand larger historical issues, such as environmental change, the political economy, and cultural contributions Early republic and antebellum history | Cambridge Studies on the American South

November 2019 228 x 152 mm c.250pp 978-1-108-42340-3 Hardback £39.99 / US$49.99

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American history – 1861 – 1900 | The Cambridge History of the American Civil War

October 2019 228 x 152 mm 2400pp 978-1-107-15458-2 2 Volume Hardback Set

£310.00 / US$400.00

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The Cambridge History of the American Civil War

Crack Rock Cocaine, Street Capitalism, and the Decade of Greed David Farber | University of Kansas

Crack tells the story of the young men who bet their lives on the rewards of selling ‘rock’ cocaine, the people who gave themselves over to the crack pipe, and the merciless authorities who incarcerated legions of African Americans caught in the crack cocaine underworld. • Provides a compelling and engaging synthesis of the crack cocaine years in late twentieth-century America • Explains how and why the sale of crack cocaine became a major business opportunity for poor people in Reagan’s America • Explores the politicized and legalistic responses to the so-called crack epidemic and how they targeted predominantly young African American men American history after 1945

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.220pp 11 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42527-8 Hardback £19.99 / US$24.95

The Cambridge History of the American Civil War provides the most comprehensive analysis of the War to date. The three volume reference work covers the full range history of the conflict, from military campaigns and major battles to social changes and cultural reactions. • Provides the most complete single history of the American Civil War • Integrates the military, political, and social history of the American Civil War to present the fullest view of the war as experienced by those who lived it • Coverage of the environment, global history, and the state enables readers to connect the story of the war to ongoing issues in American history

Volume I: Military Affairs Volume 1: Military Affairs Aaron Sheehan-Dean | Louisiana State University

This volume narrates the major battles and campaigns of the conflict, conveying the full military experience during the Civil War. The chapters explore the contingencies that governed each encounter while also explaining the outcomes and significance. • Conveys the full military experience of the Civil War, narrating major battles and campaigns • Offers contributions from twenty-eight prominent historians • Explains the significance of military events rather than the technical side of military history American history – 1861 – 1900 | The Cambridge History of the American Civil War

October 2019 228 x 152 mm 800pp 28 maps 978-1-107-14889-5 Hardback £120.00 / US$150.00

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In the Shadow of the Cold War American Foreign Policy from George Bush Sr. to Donald Trump Timothy J. Lynch | University of Melbourne

The Cambridge History of the American Civil War Volume 2: Affairs of the State Aaron Sheehan-Dean | Louisiana State University

This book examines American engagement with the world from the fall of Soviet communism through the opening years of the Trump administration. While Timothy J. Lynch argues that the Cold War cast a shadow on every president that came after it, he finds that the US remained the world’s dominant power. • Uses a narrative-driven argument to re-evaluate the central episodes of US foreign policy • Argues against the prevailing notion of US decline and failure in the post-Cold War era • Offers a scholarly assessment of President Trump, allowing readers to place his presidency within a larger historical framework

This volume explores the political and social dimensions of the Civil War in both the North and South. Chapters explore the military leadership of each side and analyze a variety of wartime processes and systems, such as technology, discipline, finance, the environment, and health and medicine. • Explores the political and social dimensions of the Civil War for Americans living on the home front • Offers contributions from twenty-five prominent historians • Demonstrates that regular people played a much larger role in the politics and military action of the conflict

American history after 1945 | Cambridge Essential Histories

October 2019 228 x 152 mm 800pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-107-15453-7 Hardback £120.00 / US$150.00

December 2019 228 x 152 mm 293pp 978-0-521-19987-2 Hardback c. £76.99 / c. US$99.99 978-0-521-13676-1 Paperback c. £19.00 / c. US$24.99

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American history – 1861 – 1900 | The Cambridge History of the American Civil War

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American History / British Running and Irish head History right

The Cambridge History of the American Civil War

The Medieval Gift and the Classical Tradition

Volume III: Affairs of the People Volume 3: Affairs of the People Aaron Sheehan-Dean | Louisiana State University

Ideals and the Performance of Generosity in Medieval England, 1100–1300 Lars Kjær | New College of the Humanities, London

This volume considers how the Civil War reshaped Americans’ spiritual, cultural, and intellectual habits. It analyzes the ways that participants made sense of the conflict and its impact on their lives, uncovering how the war changed attitudes about gender, religion, ethnicity, and race. • Examines the cultural and intellectual experiences of Americans during and after the Civil War • Offers contributions from twenty-three prominent historians • Analyzes the broader impact of the war, including considerations of wartime reconstruction and the changes to American law and governance

This interdisciplinary study explores how classical ideals of generosity influenced the writing and practice of gift giving in medieval Europe. Focusing on classical texts, such as those by Seneca the Younger and Cicero, Lars Kjær reveals how historians have underestimated the influence of classical literature and philosophy on medieval culture. • The interdisciplinary approach enables a new understanding of the role of generosity in medieval culture and political life • Explores the connections between ritualised communication in medieval Europe and that culture’s intellectual traditions • Provides a strong foundation for comparing the culture of gift giving in medieval Europe with those studied by social anthropologists in other parts of the world

American history – 1861 – 1900 | The Cambridge History of the American Civil War

History of Britain – 1066 – 1450 | Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 114

October 2019 228 x 152 mm 800pp 4 b/w illus. 8 colour illus. 978-1-107-15454-4 Hardback £120.00 / US$150.00 R

British and Irish History The Moral Economy of the Countryside Anglo-Saxon to Anglo-Norman England Rosamond Faith | University of Cambridge

Shows how the ‘moral economy’ of medieval England was transformed after the Norman Conquest, when ‘feudal thinking’ superseded traditional values of rank, reciprocity and worth. • Presents a new approach to understanding early medieval society through the shared values of the ‘moral economy’ • Makes use of previously unpublished and neglected source materials • Looks at human relationships in the English countryside between the end of the Roman period and the year 1200 History of Britain before 1066

November 2019 228 x 152 mm c.280pp 978-1-108-48732-0 Hardback c. £71.99 / c. US$99.99 978-1-108-72006-9 Paperback c. £24.99 / c. US$32.99

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Ireland’s Empire The Roman Catholic Church in the EnglishSpeaking World, 1829–1914 Colin Barr | University of Aberdeen

Ireland’s Empire examines the complex relationship between Roman Catholicism and the global Irish diaspora in the nineteenth century. Tracing the spread of Irish Roman Catholicism across the English-speaking world and drawing on more than 100 archives on five continents, this is the first truly global history of this phenomenon. • Offers the first global, comprehensive examination of the spread of Catholicism across the English speaking world • Draws on an unparalleled range of archives to reveal the development of the Catholic Church in each country or region in a global context • Explains the endurance of Irish identity in the English-speaking world History of Britain after 1450

October 2019 228 x 152 mm 330pp 978-1-107-04092-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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The Right to Rule and the Rights of Women Queen Victoria and the Women’s Movement Arianne Chernock | Boston University

Anglo-Saxon England Volume 46 Edited by Rosalind Love | University of Cambridge

The contributions to the forty-sixth volume of Anglo-Saxon England focus on various aspects of Anglo-Saxon culture and history across a period from the seventh to the eleventh century, from the role of music in Anglo-Saxon England to the Old English language and the challenges of lexicography. Each article is preceded by a short abstract. • A collection of original research covering various aspects of AngloSaxon culture and history, from the seventh to the seventeenth century • Brings together some of the leading academics currently working in the field • Covers a broad range of topics, from music in Anglo-Saxon England to the influence of Asser’s Life of King Alfred on the tenth-century Welsh poem Armes Prydein Vawr History of Britain before 1066 | Anglo-Saxon England, 46

May 2019 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-49935-4 Hardback £90.00 / US$125.00

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.236pp 978-1-108-42402-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Queen Victoria is often cast as a foe of the women’s movement; she famously declared women’s rights to be a ‘mad, wicked folly’. Arianne Chernock analyses the ruler’s surprising role in the women’s movement and reveals Victoria as a ruler who captivated nineteenth-century feminists, with profound cultural and political consequences. • Offers a comprehensive and historical account of Queen Victoria’s role in the women’s movement • Uses a diverse range of key primary sources from the period including Royal Archive records, suffrage correspondence, flyers, memorabilia and petitions • Places women’s and gender history within its broader social, cultural and political context History of Britain after 1450

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.266pp 978-1-108-48484-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Running British and head Irishleft History

Art and Identity in Scotland A Cultural History from the Jacobite Rising of 1745 to Walter Scott Viccy Coltman | University of Edinburgh

This lively and erudite cultural history of Scotland, from the Jacobite defeat of 1745 to the death of an icon, Sir Walter Scott, in 1832, weaves together previously unpublished archival materials, visual and material culture, dress and textile history to examine how Scottish identity was experienced and represented in novel ways. • The book is richly illustrated and draws on a large number of previously unpublished archival materials from public and private collections • Offers a welcome corrective to outdated and clichéd ideas of Scottishness and identity • Integrates the histories of London, Europe, and empire with the history of Scotland History of Britain after 1450

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October 2019 247 x 174 mm c.338pp 66 b/w illus. 32 colour illus. 978-1-108-41768-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

The Battle for Christian Britain Sex, Humanists and Secularisation, 1945–1980 Callum G. Brown | University of Glasgow

Revealing how conservative Christians acted as moral vigilantes from 1945–65, this study exposes Britain’s most powerful vigilante body, the Public Morality Council, an appendage of the Church, and how they badgered government and local councils into censoring sexual knowledge and atheist viewpoints until their spectacular collapse from 1965–80. • Reveals the dramatic contest between conservative Christians and the forces seeking to overthrow their control of British culture • Offers an alternative, secular narrative of twentieth-century British history • Exposes previously-hidden systems of cultural control in Britain, such as the Public Morality Council 20C history of Britain

The Poverty of Disaster

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.339pp 978-1-108-42122-5 Hardback c. £65.00 / c. US$85.00 978-1-108-43161-3 Paperback c. £22.99 / c. US$29.99

Debt and Insecurity in Eighteenth-Century Britain Tawny Paul | University of Exeter

Eighteenth-century Britain saw significant numbers of the middle classes imprisoned for debt, with many motivated by a fear of financial failure rather than a desire for upward social mobility. This study examines the role that debt insecurity played within society, and the fragility of the credit relations that underpinned it. • Tells the history of the eighteenth-century British economy through human stories and experiences • Offers a new perspective on economic growth and class formation in early modern Britain • Integrates histories of emotions and gender with the history of debt to appeal to those interested in both cultural and economic history History of Britain after 1450 | Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.302pp 978-1-108-49694-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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AVAILABLE OPEN ACCESS

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The Americanisation of Ireland Migration and Settlement, 1841–1925 David Fitzpatrick | Trinity College Dublin

This rigorous and accessible study explores the transformative impact of reverse migration from America to post-Famine Ireland. Using Irish census schedules and American passport applications to assemble a vivid picture of a changing Irish society, this book offers surprising insights into Ireland’s growing population of American-born residents. • The first study of an important aspect of the Irish diaspora, of interest to all students of migration as well as of Irish history • Offers a rich, well-balanced, and often surprising perspective on modern Irish history • Presents complex arguments and statistical data alongside personal examples for a detailed yet accessible examination of reverse migration and its impact

The Making of an Imperial Polity

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Civility and America in the Jacobean Metropolis Lauren Working | University of Liverpool

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.285pp 82 b/w illus. 10 maps 978-1-108-48649-1 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99 P

Bringing to life the interaction between America, its peoples, and statesmen in early seventeenth-century England, this book offers new perspectives on Jacobean tastes and political culture, confronting the histories of colonialism and domestic political development. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core. • Offers a significant reassessment of Jacobean political culture that collapses the divide between early colonial history and metropolitan politics • Provides an interdisciplinary approach to Jacobean political culture, combining archaeological, anthropological and textual approaches • This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core History of Britain after 1450 | Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.284pp 8 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49406-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Feminism and the Servant Problem Class and Domestic Labour in the Women’s Suffrage Movement Laura Schwartz | University of Warwick

With this first history of suffrage to look at contributions by domestic servants, Laura Schwartz brings a feminist perspective to labour history. Feminism and the Servant Problem offers a new understanding of the class politics of the suffrage movement, and challenges traditional notions of who made up the British working class. • The first history of suffrage that looks at the contributions of domestic servants and that movement’s debates on the ‘servant problem’ • Will appeal to readers interested in ‘history from below’, placing primary importance on servants’ voices and perspectives • Brings a feminist perspective to labour history, offering a welcome alternative to labour movement histories that focus on men 20C history of Britain

July 2019 228 x 152 mm 243pp 978-1-108-47133-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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British and Irish HistoryRunning / European head History right

European History

The Quest for Security Sovereignty, Race, and the Defense of the British Empire, 1898–1931 Jesse Tumblin | Boston College, Massachusetts

Papal Jurisprudence c.400

Colonial hierarchy and race fueled rapid militarization in the British Empire that shaped the violent course of the twentieth century. This innovative study reveals the colonial backstory of a century that witnessed total war, resulting in new political norms that enthrone ‘national security’ as the dominating feature of contemporary politics. • Argues for a colonial origin of contemporary security politics • Places older literature on politics and constitutional theory in dialog with new literature on race and power in colonialism • Recharacterizes the place of World War I in modern history 20C history of Britain

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 3 b/w illus. 1 table 978-1-108-49874-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

From Social Democracy to Market Liberalism through an English New Town Guy Ortolano | New York University

Situating Britain’s new towns programme of urban development within a global context, Thatcher’s Progress revises our understanding of the welfare state. Guy Ortolano reveals a dynamic social democracy during its decade of crisis, while also showing how public sector actors begrudgingly accommodated the alternative politics of market liberalism. • Places Britain’s new towns programme within a global context • Offers fresh interpretations of the welfare state, social democracy, and market liberalism – three of the most significant subjects in twentiethcentury historiography • Ranges widely across urban, architectural, political, and intellectual history 20C history of Britain | Modern British Histories

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European history – 450 – 1000

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Flodoard of Rheims and the Writing of History in the Tenth Century Edward Roberts | University of Kent, Canterbury

Flodoard of Rheims (893/4–966) is one of the tenth century’s most intriguing but neglected historians, who wrote in the tumultuous decades that followed the collapse of the pan-European Carolingian empire. This important re-appraisal of his life and work casts new light on the political and cultural history of tenth-century Europe. • The first major study in English of one of the tenth century’s most important authors, making this interesting but obscure author accessible to a wider audience • Provides a vital point of reference for Flodoard’s writings and the development of historical writing in medieval Europe • Brings new literary and cultural perspectives to the history of western Europe following the break-up of the Carolingian empire European history – 450 – 1000 | Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 113

Protestant Nationalists in Ireland, 1900–1923

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.290pp 3 tables 978-1-316-51039-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Conor Morrissey | University of Oxford

From the turn of the twentieth century to the end of the Irish Civil War, Protestant nationalists forged a distinct counterculture within an increasingly Catholic nationalist movement. This ambitious, wide-ranging book describes the experiences of Protestant advanced nationalists in Ireland, and describes the ultimate failure of this tradition. • Includes new and surprising insights into the relationship between religion and national identity in Ireland • Emphasises the important role played by Protestant women in Irish nationalism during this period • The first analysis of Protestant nationalist activism to uncover the role of Protestant servicemen in the National Army Irish history

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.268pp 978-1-108-47386-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

These accessible translations of papal documents from Late Antiquity offer a new understanding of attitudes towards key religious issues within canon law. Most papal documents were responses to questions from bishops, and not initiated from Rome. Papal Jurisprudence, c.400 reveals what bishops were asking, and why the replies mattered. • Offers the first critical translations of the papal legal documents transmitted in the first canon law collections, in Late Antiquity • Makes original Latin sources accessible to students and scholars • Explains the papal contribution to the genesis of canon law, and will be essential reading for legal as well as religious and social historians October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.294pp 978-1-108-47293-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Thatcher’s Progress

June 2019 228 x 152 mm 316pp 17 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-108-48266-0 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99

Sources of the Canon Law Tradition D. L. d’Avray | University College London

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The Rhetoric of Free Speech in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages Irene van Renswoude | Universiteit van Amsterdam

This in-depth and accessible analysis of the rhetoric of dissidents, outsiders and truth-tellers challenges preconceptions about free speech and political criticism in the early Middle Ages, revealing that there was room for political dissent in this period, as long as critics employed the right rhetoric and adhered to scripted roles. • Studies the rhetoric of controversial dissidents, outsiders and truthtellers, with contemporary political resonance • Presents rhetoric as a cultural performance in ways which do not require familiarity with technical vocabulary • Studies patterns of continuity and change over several centuries, to appeal also to non-specialists who are interested in the history of ideas and the historical development of political concepts European history – 450 – 1000 | Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 115

October 2019 228 x 152 mm 296pp 978-1-107-03813-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Search Batch thecan Cambridge save youcatalogue time and online money.atSee www.cambridge.org www.batch.co.uk

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Medieval Meteorology

Life in a Time of Pestilence

Forecasting the Weather from Aristotle to the Almanac Anne Lawrence-Mathers | University of Reading

The Great Castilian Plague of 1596–1601 Ruth MacKay

The practice of weather forecasting underwent a crucial transformation in the Middle Ages. Exploring how meteorology spread and flourished from c.700–c.1600, this study reveals these dramatic changes in forecasting and how scientifically-based weather forecasting was introduced to Western Europe in the twelfth century. • Places the history of meteorology and weather-forecasting within the broader social and cultural context of medieval Europe • Shows how astronomy, astrology and Christian teaching were brought together in order to make annual forecasts for the benefit of society • Presents examples of the procedures used in making medieval, astrometeorological weather forecasts alongside actual weather records for comparison European history – 1000 – 1450

November 2019 228 x 152 mm c.280pp 978-1-108-41839-3 Hardback c. £64.99 / c. US$99.99 978-1-108-40600-0 Paperback c. £21.99 / c. US$29.99

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Sean Griffin | Dartmouth College, New Hampshire

Original and engaging, this substantial contribution to the study of the Rus Primary Chronicle, the most important piece of evidence for the history of the Rus in the eleventh and twelfth centuries, includes the first English-language translations of key Slavonic sources. • Includes English translations of all primary sources, including many published here for the first time • Provides a major contribution to the study of the written history of East Slavic civilization • Demonstrates how these chronicle stories were later used for political as well as religious purposes European history – 1000 – 1450 | Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 112

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The Canons of the Third Lateran Council of 1179

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.297pp 5 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-108-49820-3 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99

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A Renaissance of Violence With evidence from over 700 homicide trials, Colin Rose demonstrates how and why incidents of violence – in small rural communities, in crowded urban centers and within tightly-knit families – grew so rapidly in North Italy in the seventeenth century. • Combines quantitative and qualitative analysis to show how broader socio-economic and environmental factors shape violence • Brings Italy into broader debates about violence in early modern Europe for the first time • Based on an extensive selection of over 700 trials for homicide in Northern Italy European history after 1450

November 2019 228 x 152 mm c.264pp 38 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-1-108-49806-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

Black Saints in Early Modern Global Catholicism Erin Kathleen Rowe | The Johns Hopkins University, Maryland

Their Origins and Reception Danica Summerlin | University of Sheffield

Despite the growing centralisation of medieval papal government, this study argues that twelfth-century papal councils – a critical mechanism for contemporary papal government – relied on input from local clerics to formulate the conciliar decrees and, later, ensure their dissemination, thereby limiting the influence of the papacy. • Offers the first comprehensive evaluation of manuscripts from the 1179 conciliar decrees • Uses medieval canon law to examine twelfth-century papal government in an accessible way • Combines legal and church history to offer a deeper insight into the medieval papacy European history – 1000 – 1450 | Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 116

November 2019 228 x 152 mm 316pp 978-1-107-14582-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

European history after 1450

Homicide in Early Modern Italy Colin Rose | Brock University, Ontario

The Liturgical Past in Byzantium and Early Rus

August 2019 228 x 152 mm 298pp 978-1-107-15676-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

From the Middle Ages onwards, deadly epidemics swept through Spain repeatedly, but the Castilian Plague of 1596 was especially terrible. Rejecting traditional interpretations, this places the epidemic in communities’ long-standing political practices, culture, and law to understand how it was experienced, understood, and managed by everyday people. • Offers a fresh perspective on the social, political, and economic history of early modern Spain • Resists characterising the period as one of death and destruction, instead focusing on how the people of Castile carried on living, even in the midst of chaos • Engagingly written and full of surprises, vividly combining social, legal, and political history

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This is the untold story of how black saints – and the slaves who venerated them – transformed the early modern church. It speaks to race, the Atlantic slave trade, and global Christianity, and provides new ways of thinking about blackness, holiness, and cultural authority. • Uses a multifaceted approach to understand the relationship between ideas about race and salvation • Questions commonplace images of the Catholic Church as a ‘topdown’ institution, showing that even the lowest status members could influence it • Presents photos of dozens of black saints in sacred art and features more than seventy colour plates European history after 1450

November 2019 247 x 174 mm c.342pp 18 b/w illus. 79 colour illus. 7 maps 978-1-108-42121-8 Hardback c. £34.99 / c. US$49.99 C


Running European head History right

Transitions to Capitalism in Early Modern Europe

1789: The French Revolution Begins

Economies in the Era of Early Globalization, c.1450 – c.1820 Second edition Robert S. DuPlessis | Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania

Robert H. Blackman | Hampden-Sydney College

Revised, updated and expanded, this second edition of Robert S. DuPlessis’ bestselling account of European economic development from the Renaissance to the Industrial Revolution analyzes agrarian, industrial, and commercial structures and practices within a global context, introducing classic interpretations, current debates and new scholarship. • Completely revised, updated and expanded, this second edition includes two new chapters, additional maps and tables, and fresh lists of suggested readings • Explains classic interpretations of European economic development alongside current debates and new scholarship • Covers the crucial period from the Renaissance to the Industrial Revolution within a global context European history after 1450 | New Approaches to European History

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.384pp 978-1-108-41765-5 Hardback c. £59.99 / c. US$89.99 978-1-108-40555-3 Paperback c. £18.99 / c. US$32.99

European history after 1450 | New Studies in European History

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July 2019 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-49244-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Economistes and the Reinvention of Empire

TEXTBOOK

The Habsburg Monarchy, 1618–1815

France in the Americas and Africa, c.1750–1802 Pernille Røge | University of Pittsburgh

Third edition Charles W. Ingrao | Purdue University, Indiana

Established as the leading textbook on the subject, this expanded third edition incorporates a quarter of a century of new, international scholarship which gives greater attention to ‘peripheral’ territories and high culture, and suggests links between the early modern monarchy and challenges facing contemporary Europe. • A much expanded third edition of a leading and highly acclaimed textbook • Incorporates a quarter of a century of new scholarship, including contributions by a new generation of Czech, Hungarian, Croatian and Serbian historians • Offers expanded coverage of the monarchy’s periphery and of its musical and cultural heritage Contents: 1. The distinctiveness of Austrian history; 2. The Thirty Years’ War (1618–1648); 3. Facing East: Hungary and the Turks (1648–1699); 4. Facing West: the second Habsburg Empire (1700–1740); 5. The Prussian challenge: war and government reform (1740–1763); 6. Discovering the people: the triumph of cameralism and enlightened absolutism; 7. The Age of Revolution (1789–1815); 8. Decline or disaggregation? European history after 1450 | New Approaches to European History, 21

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.332pp 978-1-108-49925-5 Hardback £79.99 / US$105.00 978-1-108-71333-7 Paperback £25.99 / US$33.99

The first comprehensive and accessible study of the critical constitutional debates in the Estates General and National Assembly of 1789 through which the National Assembly became a sovereign body. Robert H. Blackman uses diverse primary sources to create a compelling, narrative-driven account of events leading up to the French Revolution. • Analyses the critical constitutional debates in the Estates General and National Assembly of 1789 in unprecedented detail • Draws on a wide range of previously underused sources including letters, eye witness accounts and deputies’ diary entries • Demonstrates the importance of Louis XVI’s actions in driving the Revolutionaries to take action to reform the French constitution and state

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This history of the struggles to regenerate France’s colonial empire in the eighteenth century reveals how political economists, colonial administrators and planters shaped the recalibration of empire in the Americas and Africa, unearthing connections between Ancien Régime colonial innovation and the French Revolution’s republican imperial agenda. • Offers a fresh interpretation of the French colonial empire in the late eighteenth century • Explores continuities between France’s first and second colonial empires • Will appeal broadly to historians of economic thought, colonial policy and practice, and the Age of Revolutions European history after 1450 | New Studies in European History

July 2019 228 x 152 mm c.302pp 2 b/w illus. 5 maps 978-1-108-48313-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Allied Internment Camps in Occupied Germany Extrajudicial Detention in the Name of Denazification, 1945–1950 Andrew H. Beattie | University of New South Wales, Sydney

This first in-depth study of Allied internment compares the detainment of Germans by all four occupying powers in the post-war period. It challenges common assumptions about divergent western and Soviet approaches to detainees, revealing how the process of denazification was more complex and severe than previously believed. • The first in-depth and comparative treatment of internment by all four occupying powers, offering an important corrective to previous accounts • Challenges assumptions about the differences between western and Soviet approaches to internment and denazification • Uses internment to make broader arguments about the Allied occupation and transitional justice 20C European history

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.340pp 1 b/w illus. 1 map 4 tables 978-1-108-48763-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

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Running head European History left

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Learning Empire

1989

Globalization and the German Quest for World Status, 1875–1919 Erik Grimmer-Solem | Wesleyan University, Connecticut

A Global History of Eastern Europe James Mark | University of Exeter

The First World War marked the end point of a process of German globalization that began in the 1870s. Learning Empire looks at German worldwide entanglements to recast how we interpret German imperialism, the origins of the First World War, and the rise of Nazism. • Highlights Germany’s entanglement with the world since the 1870s, particularly the importance of the United States, Japan, and China in the development of German imperialism • Recasts the pre-war imperial rivalries between Germany and the other great powers as a response to the challenges of global trade, investment, and migration • Connects German liberal imperialism with German war aims and with the interwar German right and National Socialism, to explain why ‘the German question’ was resolved after 1945, but not after 1918 20C European history

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.655pp 19 b/w illus. 12 maps 978-1-108-48382-7 Hardback c. £29.99 / c. US$39.99 P

20C European history | New Approaches to European History, 59

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.402pp 978-1-108-42700-5 Hardback £64.99 / US$84.99 978-1-108-44714-0 Paperback £18.99 / US$26.99

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Student Revolt in 1968 France, Italy and West Germany Ben Mercer | Australian National University, Canberra

After the Berlin Wall Memory and the Making of the New Germany, 1989 to the Present Hope M. Harrison | George Washington University, Washington DC

The history and meaning of the Berlin Wall remain controversial, even three decades after its fall. Drawing on a range of archival sources and interviews, this book charts the development of new narratives of the recent German past and explores the significance of the commemoration of the Berlin Wall in defining German national identity. • The book is being published to coincide with the thirtieth anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall • Draws on an extensive range of archival sources and more than 100 primary interviews • Considers multiple approaches to remembering the Wall, including memorials, trials, films and music 20C European history

This comparative and transnational study of three student revolts in France, Italy and West Germany in the 1960s examines the origins, course and dissolution of these protests, arguing that the student protests of 1968 should be understood as a conflict between different forms of democratisation. • Provides a comparative and transnational history of social protest in the 1960s, and its impact • Offers a new account of the meaning of cultural and political democracy in the 1960s • Explains how student protest emerged simultaneously in three different states in the late 1960s 20C European history | New Studies in European History

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-48448-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Designing Memory

September 2019 228 x 152 mm 444pp 27 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-107-04931-4 Hardback £29.99 / US$34.99 P

The Architecture of Commemoration in Europe, 1914 to the Present Sabina Tanovic | Technische Universiteit Delft, The Netherlands

The Holocaust and New World Slavery A Comparative History Steven T. Katz | Boston University

The Holocaust is regularly compared to other historical events in order to make comparisons that deny its uniqueness. This study claims the opposite. Those interested in comparative history, philosophy, slavery, African-American studies, women’s studies, and the Holocaust will find this book to be essential reading. • The first in depth comparison of the Holocaust and new world slavery • A fundamental re-examination of Jewish slave labor during World War II • Fully examines the unique treatment of women and children in the contexts of both new world slavery and the Holocaust 20C European history

May 2019 253 x 177 mm c.1000pp 28 tables 978-1-108-41508-8 2 Volume Hardback Set £210.00 / US$275.00

Marking the thirtieth anniversary of the revolutions of 1989, this original and wide-ranging study places the transformation of Eastern Europe in a global context, providing new perspectives on the relationship between globalisation and the collapse of communism in the late twentieth century, and the rise of populism in the twenty-first. • Published to coincide with the thirtieth anniversary of the Eastern European revolutions of 1989 • Placing Eastern Europe in global context, it provides new perspectives on the relationship between political, economic, and cultural globalisation and the collapse of communism • Provides new historically-grounded explanations for the rise of populism and anti-Westernism in Eastern Europe and beyond in the twenty-first century

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This innovative study of memorial architecture investigates how design can translate memories of human loss into tangible structures. It explores the purpose behind creating a memorial and its materialisation. The result is a distinctive contribution to the literature on history and memory, and on architecture as a space for remembering. • Interdisciplinary perspectives show how the issue of commemoration can be approached in different ways • Takes a close look into the processes of designing memorials and how these translate memories and experiences of human loss into an architectural space • Aims to establish a relevant framework for analysing contemporary memorial projects 20C European history | Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare

October 2019 247 x 174 mm c.288pp 52 b/w illus. 978-1-108-48652-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Running European head History right

The Firebird and the Fox

Armenia

Russian Culture under Tsars and Bolsheviks Jeffrey Brooks | The Johns Hopkins University, Maryland

Political and Ethnic Boundaries 1878–1948 A. Burdett

Showcasing the genius of Russian art, literature, music, and dance over a century of turmoil, Jeffrey Brooks uses the emblematic characters of the firebird and the fox to demonstrate the shared traditions, mutual influences and enduring themes that made up the dynamic cultural ecosystem that shaped these works. • Beautifully illustrated, with a colour plate section including many illustrations which have never before been republished • Explores how Russia moved from the periphery of European culture to the cutting edge • Places classic works by Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Chekhov, Akhmatova, Malevich, Chagall, and other Russian ‘greats’ in their cultural context

Library Editions reprints make available Cambridge Archive Edition originals in a new format. This collection of documents and maps from British government archives provides an independent research publication which illustrates key events in defining Armenian territory. These seventy years are crucial in the formation of the boundaries. • Provides a unique tie-in of historical primary source documents and representative contemporary maps • Contains collections of key documents from British archive sources • Previously unknown or fragmented material is now available in a coherent collection European history (general)

July 2019 246 x 160 mm c.1000pp 978-1-78806-893-2 2 Volume Hardback Set

£700.00 / US$930.00

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Russian, East European history

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.356pp 32 b/w illus. 16 colour illus. 978-1-108-48446-6 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99 P

Ethnic Minorities in the Balkan States, 1860–1971 Edited by B. Destani

The Lawful Empire Legal Change and Cultural Diversity in Late Tsarist Russia Stefan B. Kirmse | Leibniz-Zentrum Moderner Orient, Berlin

This book combines an analysis of law with a discussion of autocratic rule over a multicultural empire. It shows that Tsarist Russia was far more ‘lawful’ than generally assumed and sheds new light on the integration of Muslims by focusing on Crimea and the ancient Tatar capital of Kazan. • Analyses law and empire in Tsarist Russia from a bottom-up, regional perspective, using a wealth of new data from local archives • Challenges representations of Tsarist Russia as unlawful or outside the rule of law • Integrates Muslims into debates over the Russian Empire’s legal system and judiciary Russian, East European history

Library Editions reprints make available Cambridge Archive Edition originals in a new format. This collection of British memoranda, despatches and reports has been brought together in an attempt to add a depth of understanding to consideration of the ethnic conflicts within the Balkan region, and beyond, over the last 150 years. • Treatment of ethnic minorities is at the forefront of current political discussion – this provides historical primary source documents • Previously unknown or fragmented material, from British archive sources, is now available in a coherent collection • Documents have been carefully selected and described for maximum value to researchers and scholars European history (general)

May 2019 246 x 160 mm c.4400pp 978-1-78806-650-1 6 Volume Hardback Set

November 2019 228 x 152 mm c.345pp 3 b/w illus. 4 maps 978-1-108-49943-9 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$110.00 C

£2100.00 / US$2790.00 R

Albania and Kosovo

Antisemitism and the Russian Revolution

Political and Ethnic Boundaries 1867–1946 B. Destani

Brendan McGeever | Birkbeck College, University of London

This study offers the first book-length analysis of how the Bolsheviks responded to antisemitism during the Russian Revolution. Brendan McGeever uncovers the surprising depth of antisemitism within sections of the working class, peasantry and Red Army, and reveals the explosive overlap between revolutionary politics and antisemitism. • Introduces an overlooked chapter in the history of anti-Jewish violence in eastern Europe • Offers a new perspective on how antisemitism can overlap with class relations • Uses archival sources to challenge previously held assumptions about antisemitism and the Russian Revolution

Library Editions reprints make available Cambridge Archive Edition originals in a new format. This collection includes British political reports, diplomatic correspondence, treaties and maps, to give a modern perspective on the main historical developments in territorial relations between Albania, Kosovo, Serbia, Montenegro, Macedonia and Greece from 1867 to 1946. • Provides a unique tie-in of historical primary source documents and representative contemporary maps • Contains collections of key documents from British archive sources • Previously unknown or fragmented material is now presented in a coherent collection European history (general)

July 2019 246 x 160 mm c.1100pp 978-1-78806-882-6 2 Volume Hardback Set

£700.00 / US$930.00

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Russian, East European history

September 2019 228 x 152 mm 266pp 978-1-107-19599-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Running– head History Otherleft Areas

History – Other Areas

Atomic Junction Nuclear Power in Africa after Independence Abena Dove Osseo-Asare | University of Texas, Austin

For Christ and Country Militant Catholic Youth in Post-Revolutionary Mexico Robert Weis | University of Northern Colorado

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Examines the religious beliefs and practices of a generation of Catholics who came of age in the aftermath of the Mexican Revolution. It centers on José de León Toral, who killed revolutionary leader Álvaro Obregón to combat anticlerical laws and bring on a millenarian vision of the Kingdom of Christ. • Explores the life experiences of a generation of Mexicans who came of age in the aftermath of the Mexican Revolution • Offers a different narrative of the Mexican Revolution by analyzing the beliefs and practices of people who opposed it • Highlights the importance of religion in revolutionary reforms, which typically emphasize land, labor, and politics Latin American history | Cambridge Latin American Studies, 115

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.217pp 978-1-108-49302-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Wolfgang Gabbert | Leibniz Universität Hannover

This book analyzes the extent and forms of violence in one of the most significant indigenous rural revolts in nineteenth-century Latin America. Combining historical, anthropological, and sociological research, it shows how violence played a role in the establishment and maintenance of order and leadership within the contending parties. • Links studies of the Caste War to the anthropology and sociology of violence and war • Draws on a variety of primary sources from the war and its indigenous and European-descended combatants • Examines both the structural features of political, society, and the economy and the situational factors that facilitated the use of violence within and between the Mayans and Yucateros Latin American history | Cambridge Latin American Studies, 116

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Laboring for the State Women, Family, and Work in Revolutionary Cuba, 1959–1971 Rachel Hynson

Contrary to claims that socialism opposed the family unit, Rachel M. Hynson argues that the revolutionary Cuban government engaged in social engineering to redefine the nuclear family and organize citizens to serve the state, drawing on Cuban newspapers and periodicals, government documents and speeches, long-overlooked laws, and oral histories. • Offers an in-depth, historical treatment of the internal dynamics of four early revolutionary campaigns that sought to control women’s reproduction, promote marriage, end prostitution, and compel men into state-sanctioned employment • Advances new arguments based on primary source material, archival research, and personal interviews • Focuses on individual beliefs and responses to campaigns as opposed to just state prerogatives and impositions to provide evidence of both the government’s grand narrative and citizens’ counter narratives Latin American history | Cambridge Latin American Studies, 117

November 2019 228 x 152 mm 342pp 978-1-107-18867-9 Hardback c. £30.99 / c. US$39.99

African history

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.292pp 28 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47124-4 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-45737-8 Paperback £24.99 / US$32.99

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Making Identity on the Swahili Coast

Violence and the Caste War of Yucatán

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.354pp 978-1-108-49174-7 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00

Examining the quest for nuclear power in Africa through the case of Ghana’s Atomic Energy Commission, this comprehensive history of nuclear research places archival sources alongside interviews with town leaders, physicists and entrepreneurs to explore the impact of these scientific pursuits on Ghanaian society. • Provides a comprehensive history of the first nuclear programme in Africa after independence, which has wider implications for the future of nuclear physics in Africa • Describes the impact of nuclear research on both local and national levels • Combines primary sources including interviews with archival records for an engaging mix of historical research, personal and ethnographic observations

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Urban Life, Community, and Belonging in Bagamoyo Steven Fabian | State University of New York

Combining extensive archival research with local fieldwork in the port of Bagamoyo, Tanzania, this first full history of the town re-examines and re-conceptualises the notion of urban identity as it has been traditionally understood on the Swahili Coast. • The first published examination of the thriving caravan and port town of Bagamoyo, Tanzania from the pre-colonial era to independence • Seeks a new framework for understanding the formation of community and identity along the Swahili Coast • Combines extensive archival research in African and European archives with local fieldwork African history | African Identities: Past and Present, 1

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.386pp 10 b/w illus. 4 maps 978-1-108-49204-1 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 C

Politics and Violence in Burundi The Language of Truth in an Emerging State Aidan Russell | Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva

Telling a neglected history of decolonisation and violence in Burundi, Aidan Russell examines the political language of truth that drove extraordinary change, from democracy to genocide. His study is the only English account of the first postcolonial genocide on the African continent. • Reveals the history behind contemporary political events in Burundi through analysis of internal and regional construction of postcolonial states • Draws on both African and European language source material • Provides the only detailed English account of the first postcolonial genocide in Africa African history | African Studies, 145

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.330pp 978-1-108-49934-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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History Running – Other headAreas right

Power and the Presidency in Kenya

Boundaries of Belonging Localities, Citizenship and Rights in India and Pakistan Sarah Ansari | Royal Holloway, University of London

The Jomo Kenyatta Years Anaïs Angelo | Universität Wien, Austria

Reconstructing Jomo Kenyatta’s political biography and presidency in order to explore the links between his emergence as an uncontested leader and the deeper colonial and postcolonial history of Kenya, this is the first study to use Kenyatta as a basis for examining the origins of presidentialism in Africa. • Reconstructs Jomo Kenyatta’s political biography to examine the links between his leadership and Kenya’s deeper colonial history • Offers new perspectives on the origins and history of presidentialism in Kenya through the study of one man’s rise to power and the presidency • Will appeal to historians and political scientists interested in both African and Kenyan postcolonial history, political history and biographical writing

South Asian history

November 2019 228 x 152 mm 334pp 15 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-107-19605-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

African history | African Studies, 146

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.327pp 978-1-108-49404-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Boundaries of Belonging explores citizenship, rights and belonging in post-Independence South Asia. Focusing on Uttar Pradesh, India and Sindh, Pakistan, and investigating citizenship’s meanings for ordinary people, Ansari and Gould suggest key commonalities and even interdependence between regions and cities of each state. • Explores the longer-term consequences of the 1947 Partition for India and Pakistan • One of very few studies that explore this critical phase of Indian and Pakistani history in the same frame • Investigates notions of citizenship in India and Pakistan from a popular perspective

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TEXTBOOK

Reversing Sail A History of the African Diaspora Second edition Michael A. Gomez | New York University

Beginning with antiquity, Reversing Sail: A History of the African Diaspora captures the essential political, cultural, social, and economic developments that shaped the black experience. The second edition updates the text of the previous edition to be current with the most recent research on the African Diaspora. • Updates the text of the first edition with the most recent research on the African Diaspora • Expands its temporal boundaries to include developments into the twenty-first century, including a sustained analysis of African wars of independence and immigration since World War II • Widens the geographic span to include Latin America, while incorporating more material on the African experience in Europe, North Africa, and the Persian Gulf Contents: Part I. ‘Old’ World Dimensions and the First Wave: 1. Antiquity; 2. Africans and the Bible; 3. Africans and the Islamic World; Part II. ‘New’ World Realities and Diaspora’s Second Wave (to 1945): 4. Transatlantic moment and the dawn of modernity; 5. Enslavement; 6. Asserting the right to be; 7. Reconnecting; Part III. Empire’s Dismantling and the Third Wave (since 1945): 8. Movement people; 9. Global Africa in the era of Mandela and Obama; Epilogue; Index. African history | Cambridge Studies on the African Diaspora

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.304pp 30 b/w illus. 8 maps 978-1-108-49871-5 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 X 978-1-108-71243-9 Paperback £21.99 / US$29.99 X

Landscape, Culture, and Belonging Writing the History of Northeast India Edited by Neeladri Bhattacharya | Jawaharlal Nehru University

This collection of essays is an important contribution to the new literature on frontier studies and the historiography of Northeast India. It raises substantive questions about the idea of the frontier and the border, the primitive and the modern, the tribal and the settled, and the local and the trans-local. • Explores how practices of exploring, mapping, surveying, categorising, and representing constitute the identity of a region • Shows the intimate link between the politics of religion and the politics of identity formation • Opens up new sources of research, and new ways of thinking, on Northeast India and frontier histories South Asian history

May 2019 228 x 152 mm c.338pp 978-1-108-48129-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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War over Words Censorship in India, 1930-1960 Devika Sethi | Indian Institute of Technology, Mandi

War over Words recovers, narrates, and interrogates the history of censorship of publications in India over three crucial decades, encompassing the Gandhian anti-colonial movement, the Second World War, Partition, and the early years of independent India. • Examines the apparently easy association of censorship with race and nationality in a colonial context • Discusses books by non-Indian authors which were banned in colonial India • Portrays the politics behind censoring news during the Second World War South Asian history

May 2019 228 x 152 mm c.325pp 978-1-108-48424-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Running– head History Otherleft Areas

Imperial Sovereignty and Local Politics

Indonesia’s Islamic Revolution Kevin W. Fogg | University of Oxford

The Bhadauria Rajputs and the Transition from Mughal to British India, 1600–1900 Tripurdaman Singh | St John’s College, University of Cambridge

Using the relationship between the Bhadauria Rajputs and the Mughal, Maratha and British Empires as a prism to evaluate the constitution of sovereignty and the process of state formation, Singh demonstrates the enduring relevance of symbolism and ritual, and the continuing importance of local power networks to imperial projects. • Focuses extensively on primary sources from the Maratha and British periods • Engages with the Bhadawar family history

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South Asian history

May 2019 228 x 152 mm 258pp 978-1-108-49743-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Empire, Civil Society, and the Beginnings of Colonial Education in India Jana Tschurenev | Georg-August-Universität, Göttingen, Germany

In the nineteenth century, Indian education underwent a radical transformation. Indigenous education was substituted by the colonial education system. This book focuses on an imperial civil society movement which initiated these processes. It offers a new, interaction-centred, connected history perspective on the making of colonial schooling in India. • Contains several visual representations of the actors and their networks analysed in the book • Includes visuals sources (pictures of different types of schools), which help to illustrate the radical transformation of Indian education in the nineteenth century South Asian history

May 2019 228 x 152 mm 386pp 978-1-108-49833-3 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00

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Banishment and Belonging Exile and Diaspora in Sarandib, Lanka and Ceylon Ronit Ricci | Hebrew University of Jerusalem

This is a study of exile and diaspora – and their multiple manifestations across religions, language worlds, and time – as they relate to the island known as Sarandib, Lanka and Ceylon. Utilising a rich array of sources, including Malay manuscripts and Javanese chronicles, Ricci explores entwined histories and imaginings of displacement. • A ground-breaking study of exile and diaspora in history • Presents a new way of thinking about the diverse meanings of space and place across time and cultures • Based on extremely rich sources in Javanese, Malay, Arabic and Dutch South Asian history | Asian Connections

November 2019 228 x 152 mm c.289pp 21 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-108-48027-7 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 P 978-1-108-72724-2 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99 P

The decolonization of Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim country, was seen by up to half of the population as a religious struggle. Utilizing a combination of oral history and archival research, Kevin W. Fogg presents a new understanding of the Indonesian revolution and of Islam as a revolutionary ideology. • Documents religious aspects of the most pivotal event in modern Indonesian history • Examines the basis of the demands for an Islamic state in Indonesia • Incorporates findings from oral history alongside archival research South-East Asian history

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.275pp 978-1-108-48787-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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The Politics of Heritage in Indonesia A Cultural History Marieke Bloembergen | Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde, Leiden

This study offers a new approach to the history of sites, archaeology, and heritage formation in Asia, through the lens of colonial and postcolonial Indonesia. It focuses on the mobility of heritage as a multi-sited phenomenon that engages with, and goes beyond, the interests of states. • Uncovers how heritage sites and their politics transcend national boundaries • Examines the politics of heritage, orientalism, and mobility from an Asian perspective • Provides a fresh perspective on the international debate about heritage formation and cultural knowledge production South-East Asian history | Asian Connections

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 29 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49902-6 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$99.99

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Shanghai Political and Economic Reports 1842–1943 R. Jarman

Library Editions reprints make available Cambridge Archive Edition originals in a new format. The remarkable institution of the International Settlement allowed the British to report in detail on political and economic matters in Shanghai and China. This primary document collection establishes a comprehensive series of despatches on the government of the Settlement. • Provides a unique collection of historical primary source documents from British archive sources • Previously unknown or fragmented material is now available here in a coherent collection • The British Government had unique access to the remarkable institution of the International Settlement which allowed them to report in detail on contemporary political and economic matters in Shanghai and China, so these English-language records are uniquely important East Asian history

July 2019 246 x 160 mm c.14500pp 978-1-78806-503-0 16 Volume Hardback Set

£6300.00 / US$8370.00 R


History Running – Other headAreas right

In the Shadow of the Mongol Empire

The Cambridge History of China

Ming China and Eurasia David M. Robinson | Colgate University, New York

Volume 2: The Six Dynasties, 220–589 Albert E. Dien | Stanford University, California

In 1368, at the founding of the Ming Dynasty, all Eurasia knew of the Mongol empire. The Ming used this to tell a story that ‘proved’ that their dynasty was the Mongols’ inevitable, legitimate successor. This study is for anyone interested in the Mongols, Chinese history, and the uses of historical memory. • Proposes a radically new view of the early Ming dynasty • Contextualizes China in global history • Demonstrates how the Chinese court used historical memory and political rhetoric to achieve its objectives

An international team of leading scholars provide the most comprehensive and extensive Englishlanguage treatment of China’s Six Dynasties period (220–589 BCE). The essays focus not only on the period’s complicated political history, but also its vibrant and diverse society, transformative arts, and the arrival and impact of organized religions. • Presents a long awaited and pivotal volume in the renowned Cambridge History of China series • The book is broad and comprehensive in focus, and written in a style to make it accessible to all readers • Contributors represent a wide, international range of perspectives and backgrounds

East Asian history

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 3 maps 978-1-108-48244-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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East Asian history | The Cambridge History of China

Across the Great Divide

November 2019 228 x 152 mm 920pp 58 b/w illus. 9 maps 978-1-107-02077-1 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 R

The Sent-down Youth Movement in Mao’s China, 1968–1980 Emily Honig | University of California, Santa Cruz

This revisionist history of China’s sent-down youth movement draws on rich archival research to show how participants in the movement – the sentdown youth, their parents, and local government officials – disregarded, circumvented, and manipulated state policy, ultimately undermining a decade-long Maoist project. • Presents highly original research based on new material from local archives • Integrates a rural perspective into the history of the sent-down youth movement • Questions received narratives privileging the voices of urban youth

Arab Dissident Movements, 1905–1955 A. Burdett

Library Editions reprints make available Cambridge Archive Edition originals in a new format. These 3000 pages of primary source material contain a detailed study, researched from British Government archives, relating to twentieth-century subversive groups and individuals, Arab nationalists and pan-Arabists, and anti-régime dissidents in the Middle East. • Provides a unique collection of key historical primary source documents • Previously unknown or fragmented material is now available in a coherent collection • Offers unusual access to a topic-based collection on dissidence in the Middle East

East Asian history | Cambridge Studies in the History of the People’s Republic of China

Middle East history

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.226pp 978-1-108-49873-9 Hardback c. £79.99 / c. US$99.99 978-1-108-71249-1 Paperback c. £18.99 / c. US$28.99

July 2019 246 x 160 mm c.3000pp 978-1-78806-885-7 4 Volume Hardback Set

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Mao Zedong A Biography Volume 1: 1893–1949 Chongji Jin | Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, Party Literature Research Office

Volume 1 of the official Chinese Communist Party biography of Mao Zedong. This volume covers Mao’s career in the pre-revolutionary period, 1893–1949. This is a unique source through which to view the ways in which the transformative events of the twentieth century have been understood and portrayed in contemporary China. • Introduces the official Chinese interpretation of the Mao period • Based on archives to which no Western scholars have yet had access • An introductory essay provides context and highlights differences in interpretation East Asian history | The Cambridge China Library

December 2019 228 x 152 mm 600pp 21 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-107-09272-3 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$130.00 R

£1400.00 / US$1860.00 R

Minorities in the Middle East Muslim Minorities in Arab Countries 1843–1973 B. Destani

Library Editions reprints make available Cambridge Archive Edition originals in a new format. These four volumes, concerning Muslim minority communities from 1843 to 1973, consist of contemporary political despatches, correspondence and reports composed by British diplomats, providing a continuity of evidence for how little has changed from historical to modern times. • Treatment of ethnic minorities is at the forefront of current political discussion, and this collection provides historical primary source documents • Previously unknown or fragmented material is now available here in a coherent collection • Documents have been carefully selected and edited for maximum value to researchers and scholars Middle East history

July 2019 246 x 160 mm c.2400pp 978-1-78806-661-7 4 Volume Hardback Set

£1400.00 / US$1860.00 R

Search Batch thecan Cambridge save youcatalogue time and online money.atSee www.cambridge.org www.batch.co.uk

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Running– head History Otherleft Areas

The Rebel and the Imām in Early Islam

Records of Jordan, 1919–1965 J. Priestland

Explorations in Muslim Historiography Najam Haider | Barnard College, New York

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Engaging with contemporary debates about the sources that shape our understanding of the early Muslim world, Najam Haider proposes a new model for Muslim historical writing that draws on Late Antique historiography to question why we impose modern notions of history on a pre-modern society. • Contains an accessible and comprehensive overview of current controversies in the study of early Islamic history • Employs three specific case studies to shed light on broad historiographical questions • Challenges modern assumptions about the critical sources shaping our understanding of the early Muslim world

£4900.00 / US$6510.00 R

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Islam Political Impact, 1908–1972

Iran’s Reconstruction Jihad

J. Priestland

Rural Development and Regime Consolidation after 1979 Eric S. Lob | Florida International University

Based on over one hundred and thirty interviews with government officials, revolutionary activists, war veterans, and development experts, this is the first study to examine the significant yet understudied organization and ministry, Reconstruction Jihad, as a key institution in the political and socioeconomic development of the Iranian Republic. • The first full-length study of a significant yet understudied organization and ministry, Reconstruction Jihad, from the 1979 revolution to the present day • Based on over one hundred and thirty interviews with government officials, revolutionary activists, war veterans, development experts, and local residents • Will be of interest to Middle East and Iran specialists, historians, social scientists, development experts, policymakers, and practitioners Middle East history

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 13 b/w illus. 16 tables 978-1-108-48744-3 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 C

Islam beyond Borders

Library Editions reprints make available Cambridge Archive Edition originals in a new format. This work presents a survey of the impact of Islam, with particular reference to its political and international dimensions, with a broad research base of primary materials for the modern period reflecting Islamic affairs and expansion in the Middle East, Africa and Asia. • Presents a large collection of primary source documents surveying the political impact of Islam, not only in the heartland of Islam and the Arabian peninsula, but across a large number of countries, including Egypt, Libya and the Maghreb; Sudan and Nigeria; the Soviet Union; the Balkan region; Iran, Central Asia and India; Indonesia; China and Japan • Previously unknown or fragmented material, from British archive sources, is now available in a coherent collection with primary source documents carefully selected and described for maximum value to researchers and scholars Middle East history

July 2019 246 x 160 mm c.8000pp 978-1-78806-618-1 12 Volume Hardback Set

£4200.00 / US$5580.00 R

Iran

The Umma in World Politics James Piscatori | Australian National University, Canberra

Assuming a central place in Muslim life, the Qur’an speaks of one community of the faith, the umma. Despite this, there is little agreement on its meaning, and political self-interest and sectarian differences continue to undermine pan-Islamic aspirations. This study explores the search for a unified Muslim world that is rarely, if ever, achieved. • Focuses on the role of the umma, the notion of one community of faith in Islam • Uses specific case studies of Saudi Arabia, Iran and ISIS for an insight into modern Muslim politics • Employs scriptural references to understand different interpretations of the umma in Muslim life Middle East history

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.221pp 978-1-108-48125-0 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-74055-5 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99

Middle East history

July 2019 246 x 160 mm c.10000pp 978-1-78806-568-9 14 Volume Paperback Set

Middle East history

September 2019 228 x 152 mm 322pp 978-1-107-02605-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Library Editions reprints make available Cambridge Archive Edition originals in a new format. 10,000 pages of detailed British Government records provide documentary evidence of key events and issues in the first forty-five years of Jordanian history, exploring relations with neighbour states and providing invaluable background for study of the modern Middle East. • Provides key historical primary source documents from British archive sources • Previously unknown or fragmented material is now available in a coherent collection • Jordan is unusual in the Middle East, a key country accepting refugees from the Arab-Israeli war in the 1960s – this title will provide some perspective on the more recent waves of refugees who have taken refuge in Jordan

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A Social and Political History since the Qajars Yann Richard | Université de la Sorbonne Nouvelle

Understanding events and key actors in Iran has been pivotal to understanding global history and politics, and this is ever-more evident now. With this introduction to Iranian history since 1800, Yann Richard offers a comprehensive and powerful narrative of the challenges encountered by Iranians in modern times. • An introductory text on Iranian history from 1800 to the present day • Offers insight into key events, exploring how Iranian society reacted to these • Yann Richard is an expert in the field; the research and sources he brings to this is unparalleled Middle East history

June 2019 228 x 152 mm 366pp 978-1-108-47683-6 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-70162-4 Paperback £21.99 / US$27.99

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History Running – Other headAreas right

A History of Jordan

Islam, Literature and Society in Mongol Anatolia

Second edition Philip Robins | University of Oxford

Covering over a century of the political history of the Jordanian state, this second edition benefits from new chapters, original research and an expanded chronology forming a comprehensive and systematic case study of Jordan, a country which has found itself at the centre of conflict for much of its existence. • Provides a succinct and systematic survey of the domestic political, economic and social developments of Jordan over the last century • Features additional chapters and an expanded chronology, making it an up-to-date account of Jordanian political history • Analyses Jordan’s place in the international order by referencing major events such as the US invasion of Iraq, the Syrian civil war, and the Arab-Israeli peace process Middle East history

A.C.S. Peacock | University of St Andrews, Scotland

Bringing together previously unpublished sources in Arabic, Persian and Turkish, Peacock focuses on the period of Mongol domination in Anatolia in the thirteenth-fourteenth centuries to offer new understanding of the process of Islamisation in Anatolia and integrate its study with that of the broader Islamic world. • Analyses literature, religion and society during a crucial yet neglected period in Anatolian history, that of Mongol domination in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries • Contributes to new understanding of the emergence of the Ottoman Empire and ultimately the modern Republic of Turkey by marking a decisive phase in the process of the Islamisation of medieval Anatolia • Brings together sources in Arabic, Persian and Turkish to integrate the study of Anatolia with that of the broader Islamic world

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.290pp 24 b/w illus. 3 maps 5 tables 978-1-108-42791-3 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 P 978-1-108-44838-3 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99 P

Middle East history | Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization

What is ‘Islamic’ Art?

Collective Liability in Islam

Between Religion and Perception Wendy M. K. Shaw | Freie Universität Berlin

Investigating what is Islamic about Islamic art through analysis of the Qur’an, Hadith, Sufi texts, ancient philosophy, and a rich corpus of transcultural poetry, Shaw challenges the historicism, secularism, and regionalism of traditional art history with new means of perceiving Islamic painting, music, and geometric pattern. • Provides introductions to central debates within art history and Islam • Offers an alternate framework to Western approaches to understanding artistic objects • Defines and explains specialist art history and Islamic studies terms in an engaging, accessible way Middle East history

October 2019 244 x 170 mm c.336pp 34 b/w illus. 16 colour illus. 978-1-108-47465-8 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99 P

The Crisis of Kingship in Late Medieval Islam

The ‘Aqila and Blood Money Payments Nurit Tsafrir | Tel-Aviv University

Offering the first close analysis of the ’Aqila, a group jointly liable for blood money payments on behalf of its members, this study traces the transformation of this important institution from pre-Islamic custom to the Shari’a, and follows its further re-shaping through the modern period, in relation to Islamic religion, state, and society. • Provides the first analysis of the Shari’a institution of the ’Aqila, a group collectively liable for blood money payments • Presents a clear, detailed outline of the law’s evolution from its preIslamic origins through to the modern day • Places legal theory within the context of historical transformations in religion, state and society Middle East history | Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.186pp 978-1-108-49864-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Reversing the Colonial Gaze

Persian Emigres and the Making of Ottoman Sovereignty Christopher Markiewicz | University of Birmingham

Persian Travelers Abroad Hamid Dabashi | Columbia University, New York

Examines how ideological and administrative crises within Islamic lands in the late fifteenth century brought about a new conception of kingship for the early modern period. Through Idris Bidlisi, a major intellectual and statesman, this book paints a picture of a changing Ottoman Empire: shifting from regional dynastic kingdom to global empire. • Analyses a wide range of sources from Arabic, Persian and Turkish manuscripts in an accessible and approachable way • By using the life of Idris Bidlisi as a departure point, it grounds global and intellectual trends in individual lived experience • Contextualises imperial Ottoman political and intellectual developments within the wider events and processes of Islamic lands Middle East history | Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.362pp 978-1-108-49214-0 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 25 b/w illus. 4 maps 978-1-108-49936-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

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Moving beyond the Eurocentric approach to travel narratives, this comprehensive and transformative account of the adventures of more than a dozen Persian travelers in the nineteenth century re-discovers and reclaims the world as seen through their rich travelogues, removing the colonial borders within which their narratives had been placed. • Counters Eurocentric approaches to travel writing, reclaiming the world through the narratives of Persian travelers abroad in the nineteenth century • Features detailed analysis of critical sources within travel literature, and postcolonial and postmodern theory • Will be of interest not only to college and graduate students and researchers of the Middle East and Iran and India, but also to those interested in travel writing beyond the Western world Middle East history | The Global Middle East

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.411pp 978-1-108-48812-9 Hardback c. £29.99 / c. US$39.99

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Running– head History Otherleft Areas / History – Cross Discipline

History – Cross Discipline

Iran’s Quiet Revolution The Downfall of the Pahlavi State Ali Mirsepassi | New York University

Challenging the prevailing view of pre-Revolution Iran, this new perspective on Iranian politics and culture in the 1960s and 70s documents how the Pahlavi State adopted ‘Westoxification’ discourses to present ideological alternatives to modern and Western-inspired cultural attitudes in Iran. • Offers a radical re-interpretation of Iran’s politics and culture in the 1960s and 1970s • Challenges current scholarly accounts of Iran’s attitudes towards the West and modernity before the Iranian Revolution • Contextualises political events within a broader time-frame of twentieth century Iranian political history

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Middle East history | The Global Middle East, 9

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.262pp 978-1-108-48589-0 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-72532-3 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99

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PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

The Long Search for Peace Observer Missions and Beyond, 1947–2006 Volume 1: The Official History of Australian Peacekeeping, Humanitarian and Post-Cold War Operations Peter Londey | Australian National University, Canberra

In The Long Search for Peace, Peter Londey, Rhys Crawley and David Horner weave a rich and compelling tapestry of official government files and personal narratives of peacekeeping veterans to present this authoritative account of the origins of Australian peacekeeping. • Provides an overview of Australian peacekeeping missions from 1947 to 2006 • Interweaves official government documents and the personal narratives of veterans to present an authoritative history of the origins of Australian peacekeeping • Details all major decolonisation efforts (Kashmir, Cyprus, the Middle East, Indonesia, Korea and Rhodesia) as well as smaller-scale missions in the Congo, West New Guinea, Yemen, Uganda and Lebanon Australian history

October 2019 244 x 170 mm c.940pp 6 b/w illus. 130 colour illus. 978-1-108-48298-1 Hardback £110.00 / US$145.00 G

Human Rights in Twentieth-Century Australia Jon Piccini | Australian Catholic University, Melbourne

This groundbreaking study unpicks a tangled web of activists, bureaucrats, writers and politicians who championed, engaged with, critiqued or ignored what are today held to be the unassailable truths of universal human rights. Today’s debates about freedom of religion, offshore detention and indigenous recognition have a long human rights history. • Presents the first critical history of how human rights emerged in Australia • Locates how key moments in Australian history engaged with, were informed by or rejected the idea of human rights • Contributes to an emerging scholarship that situates the emergence of human rights not in the longue duree of Western civilization but in contemporary events Australian history | Human Rights in History

November 2019 228 x 152 mm c.222pp 978-1-108-47277-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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TEXTBOOK PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Technology and Society A World History Andrew Ede | University of Alberta

Technology and Society: A World History, ranging from the age of stone tools to the digital revolution, offers an introduction to the history of technology for students in history programs; science, technology and society (STS) programs; and engineering-humanities courses. It will also appeal to history or social studies teachers as a resource. • Technology is presented as a system, not as a series of objects • Readers gain an appreciation of the historical importance of both intellectual ability and community action • Integrates discussion of a range of philosophical and historiographical positions with common historical conditions of change Contents: 1. Introduction: thinking about technology; 2. Technology and our ancient ancestors; 3. Origins of civilizations; 4. The Eastern age; 5. The Mediterranean world to the Islamic Renaissance; 6. The European agrarian revolution and the proto-industrial revolution; 7. The Industrial Revolution and the rise of European power; 8. The Atlantic era I; 9. Domestic technology: bringing new technology to the people; 10. The second Industrial Revolution and globalization; 11. The digital age; 12. Conclusion: technological challenges; References; Index. History of science and technology

September 2019 247 x 174 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-42560-5 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$99.00 978-1-108-44108-7 Paperback c. £29.99 / c. US$39.99

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AVAILABLE OPEN ACCESS

The Whipple Museum of the History of Science Objects and Investigations, to Celebrate the 75th Anniversary of R. S. Whipples’s Gift to the University of Cambridge Joshua Nall | University of Cambridge

This collection of essays by noted historians provides examples of the study of the material culture of science. The essays demonstrate how the study of scientific objects offers a window into cultures of scientific practice not afforded by textual sources alone. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core. • Showcases the holdings of the Whipple Museum of the History of Science • Based on a range of types of historical sources, including material, documentary, and visual • Shares examples of state-of-the-art research on the substance of science • This title is also available as Open Access History of science and technology

August 2019 247 x 174 mm c.400pp 61 b/w illus. 2 maps 4 tables 978-1-108-49827-2 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 C


History Running – Crosshead Discipline right

The Politics of Chemistry

Charles E. Callwell and the British Way in Warfare

Science and Power in Twentieth-Century Spain Agustí Nieto-Galan | Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Nieto-Galan explores the links between chemistry and industrial and military projects, national rivalries and international endeavours in twentieth-century Spain. He unveils the chemists’ positions of power and their engagement in fierce ideological battles, drawing out elements of co-production between science and politics. • Explores the role of chemistry as a modernising agent in the twentieth century • Highlights the inherently political nature of science, and its links with different political regimes, from dictatorships to democracies • Enriches our knowledge about the history of Spain in the twentieth century History of science and technology | Science in History

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.314pp 36 b/w illus. 1 map 978-1-108-48243-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Daniel Whittingham | University of Birmingham

Daniel Whittingham presents the first comprehensive study of one of Britain’s most important military thinkers, Major-General Sir Charles E. Callwell. His book explores the development of British military thought to shed new light on colonial warfare, counterinsurgency, the South African War, tactics, maritime strategy, and the First World War. • The first comprehensive biography of one of Britain’s great military thinkers, Charles E. Callwell • Provides a new perspective on the ‘British way in warfare’ and British military thought • Considers both Callwell’s famous works, such as Small Wars and Military Operations and Maritime Preponderance, and his lesser-known works which have not been cited before Military history | Cambridge Military Histories

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December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.296pp 978-1-108-48007-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Physics and Psychics The Occult and the Sciences in Modern Britain Richard Noakes | University of Exeter

History of science and technology | Science in History

October 2019 228 x 152 mm 398pp 33 b/w illus. 2 tables 978-1-107-18854-9 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 C

The Culture of Military Organizations Edited by Peter R. Mansoor | Ohio State University

This examination of military culture shows how it underpins the effectiveness of military organizations. Sixteen case studies focusing on armies, navies, and air forces from the Civil War to the Iraq War help to explain why some organizations succeed while others fail in the ultimate arbitration of war. • Presents new perspectives on how culture influences the effectiveness of military organizations • Provides new insights as to why the US military, the most powerful in the world, failed to achieve its goals in Iraq and Afghanistan • Examines in a historical context how culture has affected military organizations from the Civil War to the present September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.450pp 1 b/w illus. 3 tables 978-1-108-48573-9 Hardback c. £69.99 / c. US$99.99 P 978-1-108-72448-7 Paperback c. £23.99 / c. US$32.99 P

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NEW IN PAPERBACK

In this first systematic exploration of the intriguing connections between Victorian physical sciences and what we now call the paranormal, Richard Noakes challenges our view of the history of physics, and deepens our understandings of the relationships between science and the occult, and science and religion. • Includes many of the most celebrated figures in the history of British physics • Questions entrenched distinctions between science and pseudo-science • Exposes new aspects of Victorian scientific creativity

Military history

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Exhibiting War The Great War, Museums, and Memory in Britain, Canada, and Australia Jennifer Wellington | University College Dublin

How and why do societies exhibit war? Jennifer Wellington offers an illuminating portrayal of how national and imperial war museums in Britain, Canada and Australia developed diverging narratives of the First World War and how representations of mass violence have changed from the aftermath of the war to the present. • Explores the process of creating historical narratives and forming popular memories from the aftermath of the First World War to the recent centenary • Considers three related national cases to offer a new perspective on how war memory is constructed • Proposes a new view of how individuals and states create popular understandings of mass violence which will enable readers to critically engage with the politics of war and violence Military history | Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare, 53

July 2019 229 x 152 mm 365pp 50 b/w illus. 978-1-316-50102-3 Paperback £24.99 / US$32.99 Also available 978-1-107-13507-9 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00

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Central Bank Independence and the Legacy of the German Past Simon Mee

This is a study of how German monetary history – in the form of the lessons learned from Germany’s experience of inflation in 1922–3 and 1936–45 – became politicised in the post-war era and transformed into a political weapon in debates surrounding the establishment of West Germany’s central bank and who should control monetary policy. • Offers a new explanation of why Germany’s political culture is preoccupied with inflation • Sheds new light on contemporary debates about monetary policy and the role of a central bank in the Eurozone • Highlights the extent to which a politicised version of Germany’s history was exported to the European continent in the form of the European Central Bank’s establishment Economic history

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.340pp 13 b/w illus. 3 tables 978-1-108-49978-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

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Running– head History Crossleft Discipline

Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe

The Worlds of the Indian Ocean

Maarten Prak | Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands

A Global History Volume 1: From the Fourth Century BCE to the Sixth Century CE Philippe Beaujard | Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris

This is the first European history of apprenticeship before the Industrial Revolution. It reveals how human capital formation – a key explanation for economic development – operated across the continent. A comparative set of cutting-edge local and national case-studies uncovers a Europeanwide system of skills education. • Identifies the underlying features of apprenticeship across Europe • Has a wide-ranging geographical scope, with chapters covering Spain, Italy, Germany, Finland, the Netherlands, Belgium, England and France • Offers a major contribution to debates about the role of training in economic development and economic divergence

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Economic history

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.330pp 16 b/w illus. 6 maps 30 tables 978-1-108-49692-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

Fiscal Capacity and the Colonial State in Asia and Africa, c.1850–1960 Ewout Frankema | Wageningen Universiteit, The Netherlands

Through the lens of fiscal capacity building, a team of leading historians provides a comparative overview of how colonial states set up their administrative systems in operations that involved local people and elites. This sheds light on the political and economic context of colonial state formation, and the long-term effects of colonial rule. • Addresses the emergence and development of colonial fiscal states in Asia and Africa against the backdrop of the changing imperial world order • Explores how colonial legacies of fiscal development have long-term implications for both political and socio-economic development • Provides one of the first comparative studies on colonial fiscal development Economic history | Cambridge Studies in Economic History – Second Series

November 2019 228 x 152 mm c.314pp 978-1-108-49426-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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The Worlds of the Indian Ocean A Global History Philippe Beaujard | Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris

The Indian Ocean replaces Europe at the center of the globalization of the pre-modern world in this examination of how the region’s networks of trade, labor, technology, institutions, ideas and culture shaped a pre-modern world system. • Thoroughly revised and updated by the author for the first Englishlanguage edition, including a wide range of full-color maps and plates • Offers a new model for the world-system approach by examining the possibility that globalization processes existed in ancient world economies • Re-assesses Braudel’s approach and Wallerstein’s theory for regions outside Europe prior to the sixteenth century Global history

October 2019 279 x 216 mm c.1100pp 978-1-108-34127-1 2 Volume Hardback Set

c. £150.00 / c. US$240.00 R

The Indian Ocean replaces Europe at the center of the globalization of the pre-modern world in this first volume examination of how the region’s networks of trade, labor, technology, institutions, ideas and culture shaped a pre-modern world system. • Volume 1 has been thoroughly revised and updated by the author for the first English language edition, including a wide range of full color maps and plates • Offers a new model for the world-systems approach by examining the possibility that globalization processes existed in ancient world economies • Re-assesses Braudel’s approach and Wallerstein’s theory for regions outside of Europe prior to the sixteenth century Global history

October 2019 279 x 216 mm c.550pp 978-1-108-42456-1 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$120.00

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The Worlds of the Indian Ocean A Global History Volume 2: From the Seventh Century to the Fifteenth Century CE Philippe Beaujard | Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris

The Indian Ocean replaces Europe at the center of the globalization of the pre-modern world in this second volume examination of how the region’s networks of trade, labor, technology, institutions, ideas and culture shaped a pre-modern world system. • Volume 2 has been revised and updated by the author for the first English-language edition, including a wide range of full color maps and plates • Offers a new model for the world-systems approach by examining the possibility that globalization processes existed in ancient world economies • Re-assesses Braudel’s approach and Wallerstein’s theory for regions outside of Europe prior to the sixth century Global history

October 2019 279 x 216 mm c.550pp 31 b/w illus. 24 maps 8 tables 978-1-108-42465-3 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$120.00 R


History Running – Crosshead Discipline right

A Concise History of Revolution

British Envoys to the Kaiserreich, 1871–1897

Mehran Kamrava | Georgetown University, Qatar

Volume 2: 1884–1897 Edited by Markus Mößlang | German Historical Institute, London

An innovative and comprehensive exploration of revolutions from the French Revolution of 1789 to the most recent 2011 Arab uprisings, which presents a new framework for the study of revolutions, and marks not only the political conditions leading to revolution but also the human emotion bound up in these tumultuous events. • An innovative and comprehensive study of the French, Russian, Chinese, Vietnamese, Cuban, Iranian, South African and recent 2011 Arab revolutions • Presents a new, multidisciplinary framework for the study of the history of revolutions • Provides an accessible, jargon-free examination of the social and political conditions that lead to revolutions, as well as those that follow revolutions

British Envoys to the Kaiserreich, 1871–1897 concentrates on Anglo-German history prior to German Weltpolitik. The second volume presents official diplomatic reports from the British embassy at Berlin (German Empire) and from the four minor diplomatic missions in Darmstadt, Dresden, Stuttgart, and Munich during the years 1884 to 1897. • Presents official diplomatic reports from the British embassy at Berlin and the four minor diplomatic missions in Darmstadt, Dresden, Stuttgart, and Munich from 1884 to 1897 • Reports in the volume illustrate increasingly complex Anglo-German relations during a period of great diplomatic activity • Offers new perspectives on the rise of German colonialism and imperialism

Global history

Diplomatic, international history | Camden Fifth Series, 56

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.240pp 978-1-108-48595-1 Hardback £59.99 / US$79.99 978-1-108-72538-5 Paperback £18.99 / US$24.99

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The Memoirs of William Hare, Fifth Earl of Listowel Edited by H. Kumarasingham | University of Edinburgh

The Politics of Empathy across the British Empire Jane Lydon | University of Western Australia, Perth

Emotions are not universal, but are experienced and expressed differently across cultures and times. Jane Lydon examines how emotions were used to justify, advance or contest imperialism by creating relationships between British subjects across the globe, but also by excluding specific groups. • A useful introduction to emotions theory and a substantive history of imperial emotions, linking emotions research and imperial history • Provides a new cultural perspective on imperialism differing from a previous concentration on its economic, political or policy dimensions • Reveals how emotions achieve political impact, and powerfully shape governance and law Global history | Critical Perspectives on Empire

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British World Policy and the Projection of Global Power, c.1830–1960 T. G. Otte | University of East Anglia

This volume throws into sharp relief the material elements of British power, such as economic, military and naval force, but also its less tangible components, such as financial and diplomatic ties. It deepens our understanding of the global nature of British power. • Offers a synoptic overview of the nature of Britain’s global power position from c.1830 to c.1960 • Focuses on different key regions of British overseas interests • Combines aspects of ‘hard’ and ‘soft’ power, and highlights the varied nature of British power and interests in this period Diplomatic, international history

September 2019 228 x 152 mm 332pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-107-19885-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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The Rise of Labour and the Fall of Empire

Imperial Emotions

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.224pp 978-1-108-49836-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

May 2019 216 x 138 mm 616pp 978-1-108-48496-1 Hardback £45.00 / US$80.00

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At the time of his death, William Francis Hare (1906–1997), fifth Earl of Listowel, was the longest serving member of the House of Lords and the Privy Council. His career, recorded through these memoirs, both witnessed and influenced some of the most remarkable events in twentieth-century British history. • Presents the memoirs of William Francis Hare, fifth Earl of Listowel • The Earl of Listowel was a long-serving member of the House of Lords and the Privy Council who witnessed and influenced some of the most remarkable events in twentieth-century British history • Gives an insight into the climactic end of Britain’s Indian Empire and subsequent emergence of the modern states of India, Pakistan and Burma Diplomatic, international history | Camden Fifth Series, 57

July 2019 216 x 138 mm 352pp 978-1-108-48761-0 Hardback £45.00 / US$80.00

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AVAILABLE OPEN ACCESS

Social Sustainability, Past and Future Undoing Unintended Consequences for the Earth’s Survival Sander van der Leeuw | Arizona State University

For a professional, educated non-academic audience, this book asks how our societies were caught in a socio-economic dynamic causing the sustainability conundrum. It develops an original view of social evolution as the history of human information-processing, studying the past to understand the present in order to deal with the future. This title is also available as Open Access. • Proposes a new approach to integrated socio-environmental science • Views human history as a co-evolution of cognition, demography, social organization, technology and interaction with the environment • This title is also available as Open Access Environmental history | New Directions in Sustainability and Society

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-49869-2 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$110.00

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SearchOrder the Cambridge at www.cambridge.org/booksellers catalogue online at www.cambridge.org or PubEasy.com

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Running– head History Crossleft Discipline

The Guts of the Matter A Global History of Human Waste and Infectious Intestinal Disease James L. A. Webb, Jr. | Colby College, Maine

The Guts of the Matter investigates our oldest ecological challenge. This engaging interdisciplinary study will provide students of public health, environmental history, global history, and medicine with an incisive analysis of the key issues in our ongoing struggle against the transmission of infectious intestinal diseases. • Revises our understandings of the impacts of the sanitation revolution • Uses evidence from the biological, archaeological, and historical sciences to contextualize the challenges of human waste disposal and infectious disease transmission • Offers an overview of the influence of biomedical interventions in reducing childhood mortality from intestinal disease Environmental history | Studies in Environment and History

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December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.232pp 978-1-108-49343-7 Hardback c. £76.99 / c. US$99.99

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Free and Unfree Labor in Atlantic and Indian Ocean Port Cities (1700–1850)

The Evolution of Affect Theory The Humanities, the Sciences, and the Study of Power Donovan O. Schaefer | University of Pennsylvania

Designed for scholars thinking about affect and emotion in the humanities and social sciences, this Element also draws on the life sciences to reveal how affect theory can be used to analyse systems of power. History of ideas and intellectual history | Elements in Histories of Emotions and the Senses

May 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-73211-6 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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Revolutionary Thought after the Paris Commune, 1871–1885 Julia Nicholls | King’s College London

Edited by Pepijn Brandon | International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam

Colonial and post-colonial port cities in the Atlantic and Indian Ocean regions brought together laboring populations of many different backgrounds and statuses, from soldiers and sailors to convicts and slaves. This volume examines gender, race and status to present a vibrant picture of social relations and working-class cultures in port cities. • Explores free and unfree labor in port cities in the Atlantic and Indian Ocean through nine case studies • Presents a vibrant picture of the laboring populations of a diverse range of port cities, from pre-colonial Bengal to nineteenth-century Rio de Janeiro • From the seventeenth to the nineteenth century these laboring populations made port cities crucial hubs of the emerging capitalist world market and centers of imperial infrastructure

This first comprehensive account of revolutionary and socialist thought after France’s nineteenthcentury revolution with new interpretations of the French revolutionary tradition. Drawing together material from around the world, Nicholls pieces together the nature and content of French revolutionary thought in this often overlooked era. • Transcends national and imperial boundaries to offer a global and transnational history of nineteenth-century ideas • Moves away from the study of only ‘canonical’ thinkers by drawing on a wide range of previously unstudied sources including newspapers, police reports, plays and pamphlets • Features new interpretations of key historical and political ideologies such as Marxism History of ideas and intellectual history | Ideas in Context, 120

July 2019 228 x 152 mm 330pp 978-1-108-49926-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Gendering the Renaissance Commonwealth

Social, population history | International Review of Social History Supplements, 27

Anna K. Becker | University of Copenhagen

June 2019 228 x 152 mm 266pp 978-1-108-70856-2 Paperback £19.99 / US$34.99

This pioneering and innovative study challenges modern assumptions of what constitutes the political and the public in Renaissance thought. Offering gendered readings of a wide array of fifteenth- and sixteenthcentury political thinkers, Anna K. Becker argues that the foundations of the modern state were significantly shaped by gendered concerns. • Women are often strangely absent from histories of political thought, so this book fills a significant gap • Looks beyond conventional narratives of the political participation of women to look at gender holistically • Resets the standard framework of the history of political thought to enable a fuller understanding of Renaissance thought in its complexity

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Alfarabi’s Book of Dialectic (Kitab al-Jadal) On the Starting Point of Islamic Philosophy David M. DiPasquale | Boston College, Massachusetts

This book presents the first complete English translation of Alfarabi’s Book of Dialectic, regarded as a foundational text of the Islamic philosophical tradition. With meticulously researched commentary and extensive notes, David M. DiPasquale challenges accepted scholarly interpretations and opens up novel ways of viewing Alfarabi’s work. • The first complete English translation of this central text in the Islamic philosophical tradition • Demonstrates Alfarabi’s wide-ranging influence, on Jewish and Greek thought as well as Islamic philosophy and history • A meticulously researched edition including a full commentary and notes on the text History of ideas and intellectual history

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.374pp 978-1-108-41753-2 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00

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History of ideas and intellectual history | Ideas in Context, 123

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.274pp 978-1-108-48705-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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History – Cross Discipline / American Running head Literature right

Raymond Aron and Liberal Thought in the Twentieth Century

The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought

Iain Stewart | University College London

Raymond Aron is one of the most important liberal political thinkers of the twentieth century. The first historical account of his place in the liberal tradition, this book will appeal to readers interested in modern French history and the intellectual history of the Cold War. • The first intellectual history of Raymond Aron’s role in the reconfiguration of liberal thought in the twentieth century • Provides an original contribution to emerging historiographies of the ‘French liberal revival’ and Cold War liberalism • Takes a critical perspective, replacing laudatory proclamations of Aron’s importance in the history of liberal thought with a critical explanation of his position in this history History of ideas and intellectual history | Ideas in Context, 124

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.327pp 978-1-108-48444-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Volume 2 surveys twentieth-century European intellectual history, conceived as a crisis in modernity. It focuses on figures such as Freud, Heidegger, Adorno and Arendt, surveys major schools of thought including phenomenology, existentialism, conservatism and critical movements including decolonization, structuralism and poststructuralism. • Presents an authoritative survey of twentieth-century intellectual history written by leading scholars in the field • Organized in roughly chronological fashion to provide an accessible introduction to European intellectual history • Balances coverage of the classic themes of European intellectual history with explorations of European and non-European figures and movements History of ideas and intellectual history | The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought

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September 2019 228 x 152 mm 582pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-107-09778-0 Hardback £120.00 / US$160.00

The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought Warren Breckman | University of Pennsylvania

This two-volume history offers a comprehensive survey of the major themes, thinkers, and movements that shaped our intellectual world from the late eighteenth century to the present. It explores not only individual figures, but also the political, social, institutional and disciplinary contexts within which they developed their ideas. • Presents an authoritative survey of nineteenth- and twentieth-century intellectual history written by leading scholars in the field • Organized in roughly chronological fashion to provide an accessible introduction to European intellectual history • Balances coverage of the classic themes of European intellectual history with explorations of European and non-European figures and movements History of ideas and intellectual history | The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.1200pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-108-67746-2 2 Volume Hardback Set £200.00 / US$260.00

Volume 2: The Twentieth Century Peter E. Gordon | Harvard University, Massachusetts

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The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought

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American Literature Wallace Stevens and the Poetics of Modernist Autonomy Gül Bilge Han | Stockholms Universitet

Provides a new perspective on Wallace Stevens’ poetry and the significant notion of modernist autonomy. Appeals not only to experts and junior scholars who want to gain a deeper understanding of Stevens’ work, but also to those interested in new critical interventions in modernist studies, American literature, and aesthetic theory. • Presents a new conception of autonomy in modernism and aesthetic theory by focusing on the work of Wallace Stevens, one of the most renowned poets of the twentieth century • Provides new and close readings of Stevens’ work including poems from different stages of the poet’s career • Focuses on a particularly turbulent and critical moment in American literature and culture: the 1930s and 1940s American literature

Volume 1: The Nineteenth Century Warren Breckman | University of Pennsylvania

Volume 1 surveys late eighteenth- and nineteenthcentury European intellectual history, focusing on the profound impact of the Enlightenment. It covers figures such as Wollstonecraft and Darwin, major political and intellectual movements such as Romanticism, liberalism, feminism, and schools of thought such as historicism, philology and decadence. • Presents an authoritative survey of late eighteenth- and nineteenthcentury intellectual history written by leading scholars in the field • Organized in roughly chronological fashion to provide an accessible introduction to European intellectual history • Balances coverage of the classic themes of European intellectual history with explorations of European and non-European figures and movements

June 2019 228 x 152 mm 204pp 978-1-108-49177-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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History of ideas and intellectual history | The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought

September 2019 228 x 152 mm 514pp 978-1-107-09775-9 Hardback £120.00 / US$160.00

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Running head American Literature left

The American Scene

Nineteenth-Century American Women’s Serial Novels

Henry James Edited by Peter Collister

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A cultural and social critique of early-twentieth-century America, addressing issues of race, ethnicity, class and nationhood, and reflecting on the nature of interpretation and representation. This fully annotated edition will appeal to scholars and advanced students of Henry James studies, American literature and twentieth-century culture. • Provides a reliable text of The American Scene as well as appended information on earlier published versions and manuscript material, demonstrating how the text developed, what choices James made and how the material was revised • Informative notes based on original research will aid the reader in understanding historical and cultural references, and to appreciate key areas of ongoing critical interest within a complex text • Relates emerging themes and ideas to other works by Henry James, allowing the reader to contextualise and understand James’ development American literature

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.600pp 978-1-108-47117-6 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.191pp 10 b/w illus. 978-1-108-48654-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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American Literature and Immediacy

A Literary History T. R. Johnson | Tulane University, Louisiana

This book offers a comprehensive literary history of New Orleans. It will be of great interest to graduates and scholars working on American Southern literature and African American literature. It will appeal to all working in African American literature and American literature respectively. • Presents comprehensive coverage of the literary history of New Orleans • Includes a very diverse group of scholarly approaches and styles • Presents in-depth discussion of historical contexts and specific texts American literature

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Literary Ambition and the African American Novel Michael Nowlin | University of Victoria, British Columbia

This book is for readers interested in how the modern African American novel entered and changed the mainstream of American literature. It tells the story of the ambitious, competitive authors who wrote the landmark African American novels while also struggling against the positions they had won as ‘Negro authors’. • Proposes a new account of how an African American literary canon emerged • Offers compelling accounts of the struggles of some of the trailblazing African American novelists to establish their careers within the literary world • Attends to some of the more uncharacteristic, unpublished, and projected works of writers who struggled to resist limiting conceptions of African American authorship American literature

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.274pp 978-1-108-48207-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

This book shows how serials deployed the repetition of plots and the traumas representing the sources of women’s anxieties and pain. It addresses how American literature scholars engaged with expanding the range of nineteenthand early twentieth-century women’s novels, especially as those fictions are available on HathiTrust and other digital services. • Introduces US women’s serial writing in the nineteenth century and major topics in US magazine fiction, such as ‘the suffering plot’ • Focuses on career-long analyses of four major US serial novelists, offering a new way of reading how serials work together over a course of a writer’s career • Details the narrative strategies of serial fiction and provides a reason as to why serial writers used repetition as a hook for new audience members American literature | Cambridge Studies in American Literature and Culture, 183

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New Orleans

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.406pp 25 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49819-7 Hardback £35.00 / US$44.95

Dale M. Bauer | University of Illinois

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Literary Innovation and the Emergence of Photography, Film, and Television Heike Schaefer | University of Education Karlsuhe

This book combines close literary readings with detailed considerations of visual media to demonstrate that key American authors of the past two centuries created new literary forms by reworking the immediacy effects of photography, film, and TV. It will appeal to scholars of American literature. • Uses a historical long-range perspective to show that American writers in the past two hundred years typically have responded to the emergence of new visual media with innovative experiments in literary form • Identifies a common pattern of response across multiple eras, genres, and media • Combines the perspectives of literary studies, cultural studies, and media studies American literature | Cambridge Studies in American Literature and Culture, 184

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-48738-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Thomas Pynchon in Context Edited by Inger H. Dalsgaard | Aarhus Universitet, Denmark

This book guides readers through the global scope and prolific imagination of Pynchon’s canonical work, providing the most up-to-date and authoritative scholarly analyses of his writing. It will be of interest to students, graduates and instructors studying and teaching Thomas Pynchon. • Organized to help readers target their reading thematically • Essays provide a wide array of possible perspectives on Thomas Pynchon’s work • Contains a chronology and biographical essay that provide two different entryways to Pynchon’s life and career: timeline and bullet points for quick comprehension and narrative description with more details and explanations American literature | Literature in Context

June 2019 228 x 152 mm 410pp 978-1-108-49702-2 Hardback £89.99 / US$120.00

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American LiteratureRunning / Englishhead Literature right

The New Walt Whitman Studies

Capital Letters The Economics of Academic Bookselling J. M. Hawker | Blackwell Bookshop, Edinburgh

Matt Cohen | University of Nebraska, Lincoln

This book is for students and scholars of American literature. Asking how Whitman can be relevant in the era of electronic communication and global political upheaval, it features essays from a variety of literary and historical approaches. It includes revelatory new work from both established and emerging Whitman scholars. • Advances the field of American literary studies by introducing new – and sometimes conflicting – perspectives on the place of Whitman’s work in cultural history and American society today • Addresses Whitman’s potential to re-animate literary criticism across a range of approaches, such as feminism, critical race studies, and digital humanities • Highlights the latest currents in Whitman scholarship American literature | Twenty-First-Century Critical Revisions

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.270pp 978-1-108-41906-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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English Literature Decadence and Literature Edited by Jane Desmarais | Goldsmiths, University of London

Decadence and Literature explains how the concept of decadence has developed since Roman times into a major cultural trope with broad explanatory power. No longer just a term of opprobrium for mannered art or immoral behaviour, decadence today describes complex cultural and social responses to modernity in all its forms. • Shows the relationship of decadence to non-literary culture • Clarifies the range of meanings of decadence in multiple contexts • Emphasises the conceptual (and, in some cases, foundational) relevance of decadence to different forms of discourse and intellectual areas • Provides a broad historical overview of decadence Literary theory | Cambridge Critical Concepts

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 10 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42624-4 Hardback £89.99 / US$120.00

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Defines the academic bookshop, text, and market. Examines change drivers in worldwide markets. Draws on current research from commercial publishers and publishing interest groups. Includes quantitative and qualitative research data from academic booksellers. Argues that academic booksellers can lead a sustainable and equitable future for the academic text. Publishing, printing history, history of the book | Elements in Publishing and Book Culture

June 2019 178 x 127 mm c.75pp 5 colour illus. 978-1-108-71723-6 Paperback £9.99 / US$12.99

The Forever Fandom of Harry Potter

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Balancing Fan Agency and Corporate Control Marianne Martens | Kent State University, Ohio

Harry Potter fans contribute their immaterial and affective labor in multiple arenas. Fan participation in the Harry Potter universe has contributed to its success. Outlines the context and theoretical frameworks that support an analysis of the fan experience and examines tensions between fans and Warner Bros. Publishing, printing history, history of the book | Elements in Publishing and Book Culture

June 2019 178 x 127 mm c.75pp 9 b/w illus. 978-1-108-46988-3 Paperback £9.99 / US$12.99

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AVAILABLE OPEN ACCESS

The Anglo-Norman Historical Canon Publishing and Manuscript Culture Jaakko Tahkokallio | University of Helsinki

Contributes to the ongoing debate on what it meant to publish a book in manuscript. Offers case-studies of twelfth-century Anglo-Norman historians. Argues that their contemporary success was a result of successfully conducted publishing activities. This Element is also available as Open Access. Publishing, printing history, history of the book | Elements in Publishing and Book Culture

The Work and the Reader in Literary Studies

June 2019 178 x 127 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-71377-1 Paperback £9.99 / US$12.99

Scholarly Editing and Book History Paul Eggert | Loyola University, Chicago

The General Reader and the Academy

Paul Eggert remaps the concept of literary critique, providing new justification for close reading and bringing scholarly editions and book history into the centre of literary studies. This book will appeal to students, researchers and editors interested in textual editing, book history, literary theory and the history of reading. • Offers a new theoretical defence of close reading – a central practice of literary critical training which has been lacking justification for decades • Demonstrates how textual studies (book history, scholarly editing, editorial theory) can be incorporated into a newly defined form of literary studies • Shows how redefining the concept of the literary work helps to conceptualise and organise digital forms of the scholarly edition which will assist in archival and editorial practices

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Medieval French Literature and Penguin Classics Leah Tether | University of Bristol

Demonstrates that rather than Penguin Classics’ frequently cited ‘general reader’, a more academic market contributed to the success of these titles. Investigates the publication of medieval French literature on this list and shines a light on the drivers, motivations, negotiations and decisionmaking processes behind it. Publishing, printing history, history of the book | Elements in Publishing and Book Culture

May 2019 178 x 127 mm c.100pp 978-1-108-72017-5 Paperback £9.99 / US$12.99

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Publishing, printing history, history of the book

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.210pp 9 b/w illus. 978-1-108-48574-6 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$105.00

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Search Free theonline Cambridge data delivery catalogue at http://datashop.cambridge.org online at www.cambridge.org


RunningLiterature English head left

Young Adult Fantasy Fiction

Medieval Historical Writing

Conventions, Originality, Reproducibility Kim Wilkins | University of Queensland

Britain and Ireland, 500–1500 Jennifer Jahner | California Institute of Technology

Considering young adult fantasy (YA fantasy) texts alongside the way they are circulated and marketed, this Element aims to show that the YA fantasy genre is a dynamic formation that takes shape and reshapes itself responsively in a continuing process over time.

This expert survey of historical writing in medieval Britain and Ireland introduces readers to a rich subfield of medieval literature. It will appeal to scholars and students of the literature, culture and history of medieval Britain and Ireland, manuscript studies and the history of the book. • Explores the ways in which medieval historical writers negotiated and reconstructed their own past • Uses diverse methodologies derived from literary criticism, art history, political and legal history, critical race theory and gender studies • Includes chapters on Ireland, Scotland and Wales to show how medieval history writing crosses linguistic and geographical borders, and uncovers the dynamics of national myth-making over many centuries

Publishing, printing history, history of the book | Elements in Publishing and Book Culture

August 2019 178 x 127 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-44532-0 Paperback £9.99 / US$12.99

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NEW IN PAPERBACK

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The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain

English literature – Anglo-Saxon and Medieval

Volume 1: c.400–1100 Edited by Richard Gameson | University of Durham

A comprehensive account of the changing forms and functions of books and literary culture in Britain in relation to their historical context, from Roman through Anglo-Saxon to early Norman times. • The first comprehensive treatment of the book in Britain from Roman to early Norman times • Contributions by world experts in the field provide authoritative information and interpretation • A plate section illustrates the physical features of early medieval books Publishing, printing history, history of the book | The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain

September 2019 229 x 152 mm c.896pp 80 b/w illus. 978-1-108-74604-5 Paperback £27.99 / US$41.99

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TEXTBOOK

The First Quarto of ‘The Merry Wives of Windsor’ David Lindley | University of Leeds

A modernised edition of one of the most controversial early texts of a Shakespeare play. With a full introduction discussing the various theories of its origins. • A modernised text of the most neglected of the problematic quartos of Shakespeare plays • Provides a thorough introduction surveying the history of the text’s reception, and the various theories of its origin • Offers a full collation and textual notes Contents: Introduction; The play. Literature – editions, texts | The New Cambridge Shakespeare: The Early Quartos

September 2019 228 x 152 mm 100pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-107-04409-8 Hardback c. £55.00 / c. US$90.00

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October 2019 228 x 152 mm 550pp 5 b/w illus. 2 tables 978-1-107-16336-2 Hardback c. £90.00 / c. US$150.00

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PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Chaucer’s Scribes London Textual Production, 1384–1432 Lawrence Warner | King’s College London

The importance of scribes in the production of Chaucer’s poetry has become increasingly apparent. Challenging widely accepted narratives and conclusions of recent scholarship through meticulously detailed argument, Lawrence Warner delivers an important intervention in the field of Middle English studies. • Delivers a challenge to widely accepted narratives on the identity of Chaucer’s scribe • Meticulous research provides new knowledge that illuminates the lives of scribes working in London in the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries • Questions the earlier methodological approaches that have led to widely accepted orthodoxies on the subject of textual production in London at the formation of the canon English literature – Anglo-Saxon and Medieval | Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 240pp 17 b/w illus. 3 tables 978-1-108-42627-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C

Literary Value and Social Identity in the Canterbury Tales Robert J. Meyer-Lee | Agnes Scott College, Decatur

Focusing on the Clerk, Merchant, Franklin and Squire sequence in The Canterbury Tales, this book explores Chaucer’s meditation on the fraught relation between the value of literature and the values underlying various non-literary ways of earning a living. It will appeal to scholars and students of medieval studies. • The first reading of a sequence of four tales at the heart of The Canterbury Tales • Considers the concept of literary value in a novel fashion, elucidating the complexity of the concept as it enters into the creative process • Explores the implications that the conditions of The Canterbury Tales manuscripts have for principles of interpretation of the work, focusing particularly on the state of the earliest manuscripts and the limits on interpretation that they suggest English literature – Anglo-Saxon and Medieval | Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature, 108

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 1 table 978-1-108-48566-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Performances at Court in the Age of Shakespeare

The Afterlife of Shakespeare’s Sonnets

Sophie Chiari | Clermont Auvergne University, France

Jane Kingsley-Smith | Roehampton University, London

Shakespeare wrote most of his plays with a court audience in mind. This volume sheds fresh light on court entertainment and provides fascinating insights into what was then a multimedia phenomenon encompassing dance, music and performance. It will appeal to scholars and graduate students of early modern theatre. • Introduces and analyses specific dimensions of performances at court in the early modern period, including music, dance, architecture, painted cloths and shows within • Offers recent and innovative research on aristocratic entertainment in Shakespeare’s time from literary, historical, cultural and political perspectives • Features chapters on Shakespeare’s predecessors as well as his contemporaries, with a special focus on Ben Jonson

This is a unique study of how readers have engaged with Shakespeare’s Sonnets over four centuries. Jane Kingsley-Smith reveals the fascinating cultural history of individual Sonnets and explores their belated entry into the Shakespeare canon. The work will appeal to specialists in Shakespeare studies, English poetry and Renaissance literature. • Examines the scholarly editions and anthologies through which the Sonnets were presented to the world, as well as the poetry, prose fiction and drama which they inspired • Challenges the division of the Sonnets between those directed to a man and those directed to a woman, opening up questions of their meaning in terms of gender, sexuality and race • Argues that Shakespeare’s cultural status was achieved at the expense of his poems, encouraging readers to consider how the poetry fits into the construction of the Shakespeare icon

English literature – Renaissance and early modern to 1700

November 2019 228 x 152 mm c.290pp 2 b/w illus. 1 table 978-1-108-48667-5 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$105.00 C

Latin Erotic Elegy and the Shaping of SixteenthCentury English Love Poetry

English literature – Renaissance and early modern to 1700

Lascivious Poets Linda Grant | Royal Holloway, University of London

Shakespeare’s Englishes

September 2019 228 x 152 mm 280pp 7 b/w illus. 978-1-107-17065-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

A dedicated study of how classical Latin erotic elegy was read in the Renaissance and helped shape the emergence of English love poetry. This book will be of interest to scholars of early modern literature and classical literature, in particular love, gender, sex and the body. • Offers fresh and original readings of both Latin and Renaissance poetry as well as exploring the sometimes surprising and unexpected connections between them • Widens the contours of erotic love and revitalises the debates about what love is, does and means in literary terms • Develops and extends reception methodology to revitalise how we think about the relationships and points of intertextual contacts between texts English literature – Renaissance and early modern to 1700

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.270pp 978-1-108-49386-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Against Englishness Margaret Tudeau-Clayton | Université de Neuchatel, Switzerland

This urgent and original book shows how Shakespeare’s early comedies and the second tetralogy of history plays resist an emergent exclusionary idea of (the) ‘true’ English with its attendant violence towards others, proposing rather an inclusive idea of ‘our English’. • Provides a range of fresh historical contexts for analysis of Shakespeare’s linguistic practices and an original argument about their cultural and ideological significance • Proposes original readings of several plays, notably The Merry Wives of Windsor and the second tetralogy of history plays • Offers new readings of many specific words and phrases used by Shakespeare English literature – Renaissance and early modern to 1700

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December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.249pp 3 b/w illus. 1 table 978-1-108-49373-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea

The Restoration Transposed Poetry, Place and History, 1660–1700 Gillian Wright | University of Birmingham

Presenting uncollected poems and letters, some of which are unpublished, this second volume in the first complete, critical edition of the works of Anne Finch, Countess of Wilchelsea, provides established texts of her later collections in print and manuscript form, Miscellany Poems, on Several Occasions (1713) and The Wellesley Manuscript. • Presents previously unpublished poems and letters • Provides established texts of Finch’s later collections in print and manuscript form • Includes a comprehensive introduction, extensive explanatory notes and thorough textual commentary

Countering stereotypes of Restoration poetry as the topical preoccupations of elite London-based men, this book demonstrates how the period established English as a historically-conscious and diverse global literature. Appealing to scholars and students of early modern, long eighteenth-century literature, eco-criticism and women’s literature. • Offers extensive discussion of overlooked aspects of Restoration literature: its interest in literary history, the growth of Irish poetry, and poetry about the natural world • Highlights the pivotal role of female authors, integrating writing by and about women into a broader narrative of literary history • Wide ranging, covering many little-known writers and offering new perspectives on canonical poets such as Dryden, Rochester, Cowley, Milton, Marvell and Behn

English literature – Renaissance and early modern to 1700

English literature – Renaissance and early modern to 1700

Volume 2: Later Collections, Print and Manuscript Edited by Jennifer Keith | University of North Carolina, Greensboro

December 2019 216 x 138 mm 600pp 7 b/w illus. 978-1-107-06865-0 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00

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October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.320pp 978-1-108-49397-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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For promotional offersSearch and bulk the purchasing, Cambridge catalogue contact your online Cambridge at www.cambridge.org Sales Manager.

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RunningLiterature English head left

Haunting History Onstage

Shakespeare Survey 72

Shakespeare in the USA and Canada Regina Buccola | Roosevelt University, Illinois

Volume 72: Shakespeare and War Emma Smith | University of Oxford

Scholars of Shakespeare’s history plays, Shakespeare in performance, and fans of The Hollow Crown will all be drawn to this exploration of two marathon productions of Shakespearean histories. With an emphasis on details of the productions, the book explores their impact, still resonating as the performances themselves recede into history.

The 72nd in the annual series of volumes devoted to Shakespeare study and production. The theme is ‘Shakespeare and War’. • A new editor, Emma Smith, of Hertford College, Oxford, takes over editing from Peter Holland, from volume 72 • The lively and always current theme of Shakespeare and War occupies most of the articles in this issue • A substantial review section covers books published on Shakespeare during 2018 and productions both in and beyond London

English literature – Renaissance and early modern to 1700 | Elements in Shakespeare Performance

August 2019 178 x 127 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-71484-6 Paperback c. £15.00 / c. US$18.00

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September 2019 246 x 189 mm c.440pp 34 b/w illus. 5 tables 6 music examples 978-1-108-49928-6 Hardback £89.99 / US$125.00 R

Stocism as Performance in Much Ado about Nothing Acting Indifferently Donovan Sherman | Seton Hall University, New Jersey

This Element demonstrates how Much Ado about Nothing models an understanding of the philosophy of Stoicism as performance, rather than as intellectual doctrine. It explores how a performative understanding lived on in one of the most influential texts of the era and ends with a sustained reading of Much Ado about Nothing to demonstrate how the play acts as a Stoic exercise. English literature – Renaissance and early modern to 1700 | Elements in Shakespeare Performance

August 2019 178 x 127 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-70729-9 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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Shakespeare on Screen: King Lear Victoria Bladen | University of Queensland

Offers up-to-date coverage of screen versions of King Lear, featuring films, TV productions, translations, free retellings and appropriations from around the world. This book will appeal to libraries and specialists working on King Lear in courses within Shakespeare studies, Shakespeare in performance and Shakespeare on screen. • An in-depth study of Shakespeare’s King Lear on screen, showing the enduring relevance of the play and the themes it tackles • Explores films and TV productions from the US and UK and explores translations, free retellings and appropriations from Japan, Australia, France, Poland and Russia • Emphasizes the new media, transmedia and constant evolution of technologies in the production, reception and dissemination of ‘Shakespeare on film’ English literature – Renaissance and early modern to 1700 | Shakespeare on Screen

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.278pp 13 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42692-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

English literature – Renaissance and early modern to 1700 | Shakespeare Survey, 72

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Revising the EighteenthCentury Novel Authorship from Manuscript to Print Hilary Havens | University of Tennessee, Knoxville

Analyzes novel manuscripts and authors’ revisions to construct a new narrative about eighteenthcentury authorship, influenced by the networks in which writers lived and worked. Will appeal to researchers, scholars and students interested in eighteenth-century literature, the English novel, and the history of the book, of publishing, and of reading. • Proposes a new model of eighteenth-century authorship and its dependence on the networks in which writers lived and worked • Uses the act of revision to formulate new interpretations and understandings of Samuel Richardson, Frances Burney, Jane Austen, and Maria Edgeworth, as well as Laurence Sterne, Matthew Lewis, and William Godwin • Discusses many previously unexplored manuscripts and uses digital paleography to recover deleted portions of manuscripts English literature – 1700 – 1830

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.241pp 2 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49385-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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The Origins of the English Marriage Plot Literature, Politics and Religion in the Eighteenth Century Lisa O’Connell | University of Queensland

Examines how and why marriage plots became the English novel’s most popular form in the eighteenth century. This book will be of interest to students and researchers of eighteenth and early nineteenth-century English literature and culture as well as feminist literary history. • Offers a novel account of the marriage plot’s political, cultural and religious contexts, explaining both the complexity of the genre’s origins and its centrality to the development of the realist novel • Considers the importance of sham marriages, mock marriages, clandestine weddings and Gretna Green elopements to the English literary tradition • Deepens our understanding of Samuel Richardson, Henry Fielding and Jane Austen who were the English marriage plot’s most important early practitioners English literature – 1700 – 1830

July 2019 228 x 152 mm 320pp 5 b/w illus. 978-1-108-48568-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Jane Austen’s Style

Plagiarizing the Victorian Novel

Narrative Economy and the Novel’s Growth Anne Toner | University of Cambridge

A study of the innovative stylistic features of Jane Austen’s writing, relatively unexplored to date. This book is suitable for a broad range of readers, including students and scholars of Austen and anyone with an interest in questions of prose style or the history of the English novel. • Presents new readings of Austen’s narrative style and an in-depth analysis of her innovative writing techniques • Considers Austen’s early writing, including her juvenilia, helping readers to engage with the development of her fiction over time • Examines some relatively unexplored features of Austen’s narrative style that can be extended to other authors English literature – 1700 – 1830

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.256pp 13 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42415-8 Hardback £59.99 / US$74.99 978-1-108-43940-4 Paperback £18.99 / US$24.99

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Imitation, Parody, Aftertext Adam Abraham | Virginia Commonwealth University

Explores the notion of plagiarism in Victorian fiction and how many writers of this period stole, altered or parodied the characters and plots of previous texts. This book will appeal to students and researchers of nineteenth-century literature and culture, and readers interested in issues of plagiarism, copyright, and intellectual property. • Studies literary imitation in Victorian Britain with a focus on the work of Charles Dickens, George Eliot, and Edward Bulwer-Lytton • Recovers plagiaristic works that have been neglected by critics over the years • Argues that the way in which famous writers responded to imitations and assaults of their work shaped the view we have of them today English literature – 1830 – 1900 | Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture, 118

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.250pp 6 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49307-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Lord Byron in Context

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Clara Tuite | University of Melbourne

This book guides the reader through the intersecting fields of biography, literary culture and reception, and the intellectual and cultural movements informing the history and politics of the Romantic period and in turn the life and works of Lord Byron (1788–1824). • Delivers a comprehensive yet accessible guide to the multiple contexts in which to understand the life and work of George Gordon, the sixth Lord Byron (1788–1824) • Presents introductory essays on relevant topics, written by leading scholars from around the globe • Supported by a chronology of Lord Byron’s life and a guide to further reading English literature – 1700 – 1830 | Literature in Context

October 2019 228 x 152 mm 372pp 978-1-107-18146-5 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$100.00

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Literature, Print Culture, and Media Technologies, 1880–1900

Growing Old from Dickens to Woolf Jacob Jewusiak | Newcastle University

This book argues that the realist novel compresses the duration of aging into descriptive intervals, constructing senescence as a shameful event to be hidden. It will appeal to students and researchers of nineteenthcentury literature and culture, the Victorian novel and to those with an interest in representations of age in literature. • Argues that the conventions of the realist novel repress the process of aging, and provides a new account of realism that incorporates theories of time and affect to foreground previously understudied elements of narrative • Chapters focus on aspects of nineteenth-century literature and culture, including aging masculinity, ‘redundant’ women, queer sexuality, and dystopia • Links the plots of the Victorian novel to the politics of age, gender, and class by reflecting on the politics of inclusion and exclusion of marginalized characters English literature – 1830 – 1900 | Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture, 120

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.218pp 978-1-108-49917-0 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$105.00

Many Inventions Richard Menke | University of Georgia

Richard Menke links media innovation to imaginative literature, making the case for writers from Whitman to Twain, Kipling to Bram Stoker and Marie Corelli as the era’s media theorists. This book will appeal to scholars, students and researchers of nineteenth-century literature and culture, the history of printing, and media and technology. • Places literary history in dialogue with media archaeology to help readers understand the emerging discipline of media archaeology and how it can suggest new ways of interpreting literature • Includes new approaches to well-known texts and problems as well as examining less familiar works and issues • Features an extended case study of the history and fate of the threevolume novel – a classic issue in book history English literature – 1830 – 1900 | Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.285pp 17 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49294-2 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$110.00

Aging, Duration, and the English Novel

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The Commodification of Identity in Victorian Narrative Autobiography, Sensation, and the Literary Marketplace Sean Grass | Rochester Institute of Technology, New York

The first book to study the rise of Victorian autobiography as a marketplace phenomenon rather than a vehicle for constructing identity, and to relate life-writing to broader cultural impulses to imagine identity as a textual thing. It will particularly appeal to scholars of nineteenthcentury literature, book history and material culture. • Extensive archival research reveals the diversity and complexity of Victorian autobiographical texts, facilitating new perspectives of the genre • Situates autobiographical writing in the context of book history, and innovatively analyses autobiographical texts with nineteenth-century novels • Offers new readings of key writers of the period, including Dickens, Braddon, Eliot, Collins and Reade English literature – 1830 – 1900 | Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture, 121

November 2019 228 x 152 mm c.306pp 6 b/w illus. 978-1-108-48445-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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RunningLiterature English head left

Interwar Modernism and the Liberal World Order

The New Ezra Pound Studies Mark Byron | University of Sydney

Offices, Institutions, and Aesthetics after 1919 Gabriel Hankins | Clemson University, South Carolina

Addressed to scholars of modernism, this book tells a story about the origins of liberal international order in modernist circles that will engage readers interested in the prehistory of our own moment of crisis in liberal world order. • Proposes a new institutional approach to the relationship between politics and literature between the wars • Develops a new concept of ‘interwar’ modernism • Puts modernist literature within a world history context English literature – 1900 – 1945

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September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.290pp 978-1-108-49456-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

James Smith | University of Durham

This Companion explores an extensive range of 1930s authors, contexts, themes, and literary debates. Informed by current scholarly approaches and analysing the state of the field, it will be an important resource for students and scholars of twentieth-century literature. • Evaluates a full spectrum of 1930s British literature in light of current approaches to the field • Covers specific literary forms as well as broader contexts and themes • Gives sustained attention to major authors as well as many others who have come to more recent scholarly attention English literature – 1900 – 1945 | Cambridge Companions to Literature

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The Cambridge Companion to Ian McEwan Edited by Dominic Head | University of Nottingham

This volume offers a sense of McEwan’s standing in the canon on international contemporary fiction, and enriches understanding of McEwan’s work by presenting complementary perspectives on the most complex novels. It will be a key resource for students, graduates, and scholars studying and teaching Ian McEwan. • Brings readers up-to-date with the prevailing themes in McEwan criticism • Offers alternative perspectives on complex novels • Assesses McEwan’s full career English literature – 1945 and beyond | Cambridge Companions to Literature

July 2019 228 x 152 mm 230pp 978-1-108-48033-8 Hardback £64.99 / US$84.99 978-1-108-72729-7 Paperback £19.99 / US$25.99

The Sacred Fount Henry James

The first critical edition of Henry James’s The Sacred Fount, featuring a full critical apparatus including introduction, notes, glossary, textual variants and bibliography. The volume will be of interest to researchers, scholars and students of Henry James, and of nineteenth- and twentieth-century British and American fiction and literature. • Provides a full critical introduction to The Sacred Fount, comprising an authoritative text and supported by full textual apparatus including notes, glossary and textual variants • Based on original archival research, this edition will enable future researchers access to the fullest account in existence of the genesis, composition, publication, reception and critical history of The Sacred Fount • Examines how The Sacred Fount continues to intrigue subsequent generations of readers, who see it as an oblique discussion of the decadent movement of ‘modernity’ and of constructions of gender and sexuality in the years after the trial of Oscar Wilde English literature – 1900 – 1945 | The Cambridge Edition of the Complete Fiction of Henry James, 16

September 2019 228 x 152 mm 400pp 978-1-107-03263-7 Hardback c. £60.00 / c. US$99.00

English literature – 1900 – 1945 | Twenty-First-Century Critical Revisions

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.260pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49901-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

The Cambridge Companion to British Literature of the 1930s

December 2019 229 x 152 mm c.280pp 978-1-108-48108-3 Hardback c. £50.00 / c. US$90.00 978-1-108-70379-6 Paperback c. £19.99 / c. US$29.99

These essays develop key advances in Pound studies. They respond to the new availability of primary sources and bring new insights to the analysis of Pound’s poetry and prose. The essays integrate recent developments in literary studies, such as transnationalism, gender and sexuality, sound studies, and textual genetics. • Informs readers of new developments in Pound studies and its potential future • The book’s extensive range of topics and methods cover major aspects of Pound’s aesthetic interests and techniques in writing poetry • Provides readers with key insights into Pound and East Asian aesthetics, gender, musicology, historiography, and digital textuality

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The Market Logics of Contemporary Fiction Paul Crosthwaite | University of Edinburgh

This book shows how interrelated shifts in the global financial system and the global publishing industry have transformed the production of contemporary fiction in Britain and the USA. It will appeal to graduate students and researchers working in twenty-first-century literary studies, especially scholars of contemporary British and American fiction. • Offers one of the first sustained studies of the impact on fiction of the financial restructuring of the twenty-first-century publishing industry and literary marketplace • Identifies, defines, and theorizes the major emerging literary mode of market metafiction’ • Shows how analyses of literary form enrich social-scientific understandings of the roles of affect, belief, and imagination in economic and financial systems English literature – 1945 and beyond | Cambridge Studies in Twenty-First-Century Literature and Culture

July 2019 228 x 152 mm 316pp 978-1-108-49956-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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English Literature / European and Running Worldhead Literature right

Sylvia Plath in Context Tracy Brain | Bath Spa University

The book reveals the wide range of personal, artistic, political, historical and geographical influences that shaped Sylvia Plath’s work. The primary readers envisioned are students, scholars, and instructors of Plath and twentieth century poetry more generally. • Illuminates the ways that Plath drew on popular culture and different forms of media, including fashion, television, cinema, the visual arts, and radio • Situates Plath’s writing within a wide frame of references that reach beyond any single notion of self • Essays are written by an exciting mix of traditional academics and creative practitioners English literature – 1945 and beyond | Literature in Context

August 2019 216 x 138 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-47013-1 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00

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The Cambridge World History of Lexicography John Considine | University of Alberta

This volume delivers the first comprehensive history of all the dictionaries which have been made across the world in the last five thousand years. Leading scholars provide insight into the dictionaries of hundreds of languages, and into the imaginative worlds of those who used or observed them. • Offers the first comprehensive account of the full history of lexicography spanning five thousand years • Provides a truly global history of dictionaries, covering about three hundred languages • Delivers engaging and accessible contributions from leading scholars in the field English literature (general)

August 2019 228 x 152 mm 850pp 978-1-107-17886-1 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00

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Orientalism and Literature Geoffrey P. Nash | School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London

This book reviews the evolution of the concept of Orientalism as it has been explored, imagined and narrated in literature. Building upon existing scholarship, it aims to give readers a comprehensive grasp of the origins and present contours of Orientalism, and to point out future directions in this field. • Presents a new, major re-assessment of Orientalism and literature • Shows that Orientalism functions in a variety of historical and contemporary writings • Provides a solid grasp of Orientalism’s origins, development, and continuing application

European and World Literature Framing Roberto Bolaño Poetry, Fiction, Literary History, Politics Jonathan Beck Monroe | Cornell University, New York

This is one of the first books to trace the development of Roberto Bolaño’s work from the beginning to the end of his career. It will appeal to graduates and researchers working on Bolaño and Latin American literature generally, particularly the novel, and twentieth- and twenty-first-century literature. • Offers an original approach to Bolaño’s poet- and poetry-centered novels focused on the prose poem’s sustained, integral role in their development • Argues the importance of poetry, fiction, literary history, and politics for an understanding of the scope and scale of Bolaño’s achievement • Contributes to an expanded understanding of Bolaño’s importance as a writer beyond the Latin American context, situating himself within the larger contexts of both hemispheric studies and world literature Latin American literature

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.262pp 978-1-108-49825-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 978-1-108-73556-8 Paperback c. £29.99 / c. US$45.00

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Literature and Religion in the German-Speaking World From 1200 to the Present Day Ian Cooper | University of Kent, Canterbury

This volume presents a relationship between literature and religion that is unique in Europe and is vital to our understanding of modernity and post-modernity. It will appeal to advanced undergraduate and post-graduate students of German, comparative literary studies and German ideas and thoughts, and to academics in modern languages. • The first systematic treatment of the relationship of literature and religion to German modernity and post-modernity • Combines expert analysis of historical and intellectual context while focusing on close reading of texts • Engages with theories of secularisation in a new way European literature

November 2019 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-108-41810-2 Hardback £94.99 / US$125.00

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English literature (general) | Cambridge Critical Concepts

September 2019 229 x 152 mm c.396pp 978-1-108-49900-2 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00

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Search Batch thecan Cambridge save youcatalogue time and online money.atSee www.cambridge.org www.batch.co.uk

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Running head left Music

Music

The Royal College of Music and its Contexts An Artistic and Social History David C. H. Wright | Royal College of Music, London

The Cambridge History of Music Criticism Christopher Dingle | Birmingham Conservatoire

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A reference work for all those approaching music history through the lens of music criticism, from undergraduates to established scholars and professionals. As well as giving authoritative accounts of traditional regions such as Britain, France and Germany, the book substantially expands the timeframe, genre and geographical reach of the field. • Expands the boundaries of what the study of music criticism might encompass, giving a much needed perspective on a rapidly growing area of musicology • Goes beyond previous studies of music criticism, with a significantly broader timeframe, more extensive geographical reach and the inclusion of a wide range of themes • Provides a catalyst to new areas of study in the field of music criticism by introducing the latest thinking and provocations in the field Music criticism | The Cambridge History of Music

August 2019 228 x 152 mm 852pp 2 b/w illus. 2 tables 1 music example 978-1-107-03789-2 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 R

Music performance | Music since 1900

October 2019 247 x 174 mm 403pp 10 b/w illus. 10 tables 978-1-107-16338-6 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 C AVAILABLE OPEN ACCESS

The Cambridge Companion to Music in Digital Culture Nicholas Cook | University of Cambridge

The impact of digital technologies on music has been vast: both the practice of music and thinking about it have changed almost beyond all recognition. Through chapters written by academics and ‘personal takes’ by knowledgeable practitioners in the field, this book provides a comprehensive Companion to the place of music within digital culture. • Provides a one-volume introduction to the impact of digital culture on music • Addresses topics including social networking, virtuality, copyright, surveillance, post-humanism and new business models for music production • In addition to chapters by experts in music studies, the book includes ‘personal takes’ which offer practitioner perspectives on life and work in digital cultures Music performance | Cambridge Companions to Music

September 2019 247 x 174 mm 354pp 5 b/w illus. 978-1-107-16178-8 Hardback £64.99 / US$84.99 978-1-316-61407-5 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99

An insightful account of a fascinating musical environment by an historian with experience of music colleges and universities. Investigates the standpoints of British conservatoire music education, its musical culture (and its conflicts) and the funding that paid (very poorly) for it. For readers interested in society, culture and music. • The first institutional history of a British music college to be set within its formative social, economic, educational and cultural contexts; and to explore how these have shaped the institution itself • Discusses the differences between conservatoire and university music education since 1883, and the impact of the Higher Education Reform Act of 1988 to music colleges in the British education system • Presents the RCM not only in terms of its star performers but in the many successive generations of its students (the often ‘hidden musicians’) who have shaped the music life and the musical education of communities and schools across the country

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German Operetta on Broadway and in the West End, 1900–1940 Derek B. Scott | University of Leeds

A study of a neglected but crucial part of the history of the West End and Broadway. The stage works presented here connect to major topics of the twentieth century including modernity, cosmopolitanism and media technology. This book is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core. • The first rigorous scholarly study of the cultural transfer of operetta from the German stage to Britain and the USA and its role in the development of musical theatre • Presents readers with a lucid and ground breaking study of the English-language adaptions of German operettas • Investigates the relationship between twentieth-century stage works and a variety of social topics of the period – individual chapters address issues such as modernity, cosmopolitanism, gender relations, new technology and new media • This book is also available as Open Access Opera

July 2019 247 x 174 mm 392pp 25 b/w illus. 1 table 24 music examples 978-1-108-48458-9 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 C


Running headMusic right

The Cambridge Companion to Operetta Anastasia Belina | University of Leeds

The subject of musical theatre usually brings to mind the Broadway musical, but this collection of essays reveals that operetta was the preeminent musical-theatrical entertainment on the urban stage from the 1850s to the early 1930s. The authors explore operetta’s production and reception in more than a dozen countries. • Provides an accessible and informative overview of the cultural history of operetta in different countries and its place in the history of musical theatre • Introduces the reader to the way operetta was received by diverse audiences • Offers the first collection of essays in English by an international group of scholars on the subject of operetta – spanning its composition, music and performance Opera | Cambridge Companions to Music

Music and the Benefit Performance in Eighteenth-Century Britain Matthew Gardner | Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen, Germany

Explores the history of the benefit performance in eighteenth-century Britain, revealing how benefits helped musicians establish themselves within the commercial structures of Britain’s urban centres. This book is for anyone interested in British musical history, particularly its performers, audiences, and institutions. • Reveals how benefits helped eighteenth-century musicians establish themselves within the commercial enterprises of Britain’s urban centres • Offers a holistic approach to understanding musical life in eighteenthcentury Britain, with equal focus on performers, composers, and audiences • Combines cultural history, social history, economic history, musicology, and theatre history to understand better the many facets of this distinctive phenomenon

November 2019 247 x 174 mm 320pp 11 b/w illus. 2 tables 6 music examples 978-1-107-18216-5 Hardback c. £54.99 / c. US$79.99 P 978-1-316-63334-2 Paperback c. £19.99 / c. US$32.99 P

Eighteenth-century music

Singing to the Lyre in Renaissance Italy

Instrumental Music in an Age of Sociability

Memory, Performance, and Oral Poetry Blake Wilson | Dickinson College, Pennsylvania

Vernacular poetry in Renaissance Italy was typically created and disseminated by improvising singer-poets. This is the first comprehensive study of cantare ad lyram (singing to the lyre), the dominant form of solo singing in Italy prior to the mid-sixteenth century, and of the related oral practices of memory and improvisation. • Expands traditional views of Renaissance musical and literary culture by highlighting the synergy between writing and orality • Proposes a new view of Italian Renaissance musical and literary culture in which oral practices are detailed and presented as having inherent qualities • Brings together a wealth of documents and secondary sources unfamiliar to most scholars of Italian Renaissance culture Medieval and Renaissance music

December 2019 247 x 174 mm c.470pp 11 b/w illus. 16 tables 978-1-108-48807-5 Hardback £105.00 / US$135.00 C

Compositional Artifice in the Music of Henry Purcell Alan Howard | Selwyn College, Cambridge

Addressing established scholars and advanced students of Purcell, this book proposes the first analytical approach to Purcell’s music to be based on examination of his compositional methods alongside historically contemporary theory. It will be of interest to analysts and music theorists of seventeenth-century music, and of early music. • Presents a close analytical reading of Purcell’s music, grounded in the parallel study of the music theory of his time • Places Purcell’s compositional interests in the context of wider artistic concerns in the Restoration, and of eighteenth-century reception • Includes generous use of music examples to engage readers fully in the book’s analytical arguments Seventeenth-century music | Musical Performance and Reception

October 2019 247 x 174 mm 376pp 11 b/w illus. 8 tables 185 music examples 978-1-107-00666-9 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 C

December 2019 247 x 174 mm c.290pp 2 b/w illus. 6 tables 6 music examples 978-1-108-49293-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

Haydn, Mozart and Friends W. Dean Sutcliffe | University of Auckland

For those who want an overdue fresh perspective on a much loved, yet in some ways misunderstood, musical repertoire, this book surveys a much wider panorama of compositional activity than is normally offered, combining the familiar territory of Vienna with many other centres and musical figures. • Proposes a new encompassing perspective on one of the best-known eras of classical music, the era of Haydn and Mozart • Covers a very wide range of later eighteenth-century instrumental music, while also treating Haydn as the pivotal figure of the study • Adopts a novel approach using the categories of ‘technical’ and ‘affective’ sociability to provide a fresh take on what is (in part) a very familiar musical canon Eighteenth-century music

October 2019 247 x 174 mm 666pp 2 tables 80 music examples 978-1-107-01381-0 Hardback £135.00 / US$175.00 C NEW IN PAPERBACK

Mozart in Context Edited by Simon P. Keefe | University of Sheffield

This comprehensive and accessible book focuses on the professional, cultural and historical environments in which Mozart operated, and how they influenced his output. The concise, topicbased essays will appeal to students, researchers and music lovers wishing to deepen their understanding of this outstanding composer and his world. • A thorough and up-to-date resource on the historical, cultural and professional contexts of Mozart’s music, enabling deeper understanding of his works • Structured by topic to allow easy access to particular aspects of eighteenth-century music and society, and Mozart’s life, interests and influence • Thirty-five concise essays by leading scholars present information in a lively and accessible format that will appeal to students and music lovers alike Eighteenth-century music | Composers in Context

October 2019 229 x 152 mm 351pp 978-1-316-63244-4 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99 Also available 978-1-107-18105-2 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99

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Nineteenth-Century Opera and the Scientific Imagination

The Cambridge Companion to the Rolling Stones

David Trippett | University of Cambridge

Victor Coelho | Boston University

This innovative book will appeal to anyone interested in the cultural, musical and scientific history of the nineteenth century – from undergraduates to professional researchers. Chapters explore topics such as hypnosis, vocal physiology, stage machinery, histories of listening and the interaction of opera with nineteenthcentury scientific theories. • Establishes a new interdisciplinary field of opera and science studies to inform and shape future work that brings musicology and opera studies closer to the history and philosophy of science • Brings together contributors from history and philosophy of science and from musicology, and includes chapters on vocal physiology, material culture, sensory communication, stage technologies, theories of listening, electricity, hypnotism, and biological degeneration • Continues the development of new ways of thinking about the history of material culture for music studies and includes well-grounded examples of how historians can work in this hybrid field

The first collection of academic essays devoted to the Rolling Stones. Designed for use by students, rock scholars, and serious fans, it discusses the Stones’ music and history from a wide range of interpretive perspectives, and covers the entire span of the group’s career. • The first collection of essays to be commissioned from leading scholars that focuses entirely on the musical, historical, cultural and media impact of the Rolling Stones • New research on the group is presented along with fresh perspectives on the core recordings, influences, impact and historical contexts • Provides a valuable resource for many fields of study that focus on the history of rock, the aesthetics of pop, and the Rolling Stones

Nineteenth-century music

Music behind the Iron Curtain

August 2019 247 x 174 mm 398pp 25 b/w illus. 2 tables 15 music examples 978-1-107-11125-7 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 C

The Cambridge Companion to Gershwin Anna Harwell Celenza | Georgetown University, Washington DC

The music of George Gershwin was shaped by American political, intellectual, cultural and business interests. As a composer and performer, he embraced technological advances and broke new ground in music business practices. This Companion describes the making of George Gershwin’s ‘American’ identity and its legacy after his death. • Illuminates the links between Gershwin’s talents in the realms of composition, performance and the music industry • Discusses Gershwin’s life and musical works in an interdisciplinary context, addressing how issues such as technology, politics, economics, business and immigration practices influenced the origins and development of his music • Demonstrates the continued relevance of George Gershwin and his music to contemporary society • Describes George Gershwin’s involvement in the development of folk studies in 1930s America Twentieth-century and contemporary music | Cambridge Companions to Music

July 2019 247 x 174 mm c.356pp 5 b/w illus. 9 music examples 978-1-108-42353-3 Hardback £64.99 / US$84.99 P 978-1-108-43764-6 Paperback £22.99 / US$29.99 G

Twentieth-century and contemporary music | Cambridge Companions to Music

September 2019 247 x 174 mm 248pp 16 b/w illus. 7 tables 978-1-107-03026-8 Hardback £64.99 / US$84.99 P 978-1-107-65111-1 Paperback £15.99 / US$24.99 G

Weinberg and his Polish Contemporaries Daniel Elphick | Royal Holloway, University of London

Mieczyslaw Weinberg’s music has been undergoing a revival since his death; this book explains his music in the context of Cold War Polish-Soviet cultural relations. It will appeal to scholars of East European music and cultural identity, as well as audiences who have been intrigued by the composer’s music. • Introduces Weinberg’s music, and its key elements, to a wide readership (both specialists and readers without specialized training), with a special focus on string quartets • Illustrates the complex trajectory of Polish-Soviet cultural relations with case studies and translations of previously unpublished articles • Features interviews with key composers, like Szymański and Meyer, and introduces many others as yet unfamiliar to non-specialists Twentieth-century and contemporary music | Music in Context

October 2019 247 x 174 mm c.318pp 5 b/w illus. 13 tables 74 music examples 978-1-108-49367-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

John Cage and Peter Yates Correspondence on Music Criticism and Aesthetics Martin Iddon | University of Leeds

The correspondence between John Cage and Peter Yates represents the final part of Cage’s three most significant exchanges of letters. Cage argued ‘composing’s one thing, performing’s another, listening’s a third’: in this exchange he engages directly with the last part of that triad of musical elements. • Provides a complete record of the correspondence between John Cage and the critic Peter Yates • Represents the final part of John Cage’s three most significant exchanges of letters, following those with Pierre Boulez and with David Tudor (Cambridge) • Demonstrates the way in which Cage’s ideas rely on and are informed, sometimes tacitly, by his dialogue with critical friends like Yates Twentieth-century and contemporary music | Music since 1900

December 2019 247 x 174 mm c.342pp 978-1-108-48006-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Running Philosophy head right

Philosophy

Ecological Models Jay Odenbaugh | Lewis and Clark College, Portland

The Cambridge Companion to Natural Law Ethics Tom Angier | University of Cape Town

This volume contains cutting-edge work on natural law ethics. It will appeal to philosophers, theologians, political theorists, bioethicists and economists, whether students or researchers. The book addresses both theoretical and applied ethical issues, centring on the question: are ethical norms derived from human nature, God, both or neither? • Provides a single, up-to-date collection of the best current thinking on natural law ethics • Addresses challenging questions from a practical perspective, while avoiding technical language • Explores topics that will be of interest to historians, theologians, economists and political theorists, as well as philosophers Ethics | Cambridge Companions to Philosophy

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.374pp 978-1-108-42263-5 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-43561-1 Paperback £19.99 / US$25.99

What are ecological models? How are they tested? How do ecological models inform environmental policy and politics? Through several case studies, we see how these representations which idealize and abstract can be used to explain and predict complicated ecological systems. Additionally, we see how they bear on environmental policy and politics. Philosophy of science | Elements in the Philosophy of Biology

August 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-72869-0 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

The Role of Mathematics in Evolutionary Theory

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Mark A. Wrathall | University of Oxford

This is the largest, most comprehensive lexicon of Heidegger’s work in existence. Each entry clearly and concisely defines a key term, and then explores in depth the meaning of each concept and explains how it fits into Heidegger’s wider philosophical thought. The volume will be indispensable for all Heidegger scholars. • The largest and most comprehensive lexicon of Heidegger’s terminology in existence, containing over 220 entries • Each entry begins with a concise definition before exploring concepts and debates in greater depth • Specific terms are cross-referenced with any alternative translations, and there is a German-English glossary of key words

Philosophy of science | Elements in the Philosophy of Biology

History of philosophy

Philosophy of science | Elements in the Philosophy of Biology

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Mechanisms in Molecular Biology

September 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-72785-3 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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The Darwinian Revolution Michael Ruse | Florida State University

What is the Darwinian revolution and why is it important for philosophers? These are the questions tackled in this Element. In four sections, the topics covered are the story of the revolution, the question of whether it really was a revolution, the nature of the revolution, and the implications for philosophy, both epistemology and ethics.

May 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-72783-9 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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Paleoaesthetics and the Practice of Paleontology

Tudor Baetu | University of Bristol

Derek D. Turner | Connecticut College

In this Element, Tudor Baetu explores the metaphysical inquiry into how mechanisms relate to issues such as causation, capacities and levels of organization, and epistemic issues related to the discovery of mechanisms and the intelligibility of mechanistic representations. He shows how the gap between them can be bridged.

This Element argues that knowledge of something’s history makes a difference to how we engage with it aesthetically. This means that investigation of the deep past can contribute to aesthetic aims. Aesthetic engagement with fossils and landscapes is also crucial to explaining paleontology’s epistemic successes.

Philosophy of science | Elements in the Philosophy of Biology

August 2019 229 x 152 mm c.100pp 5 b/w illus. 978-1-108-74230-6 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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Jun Otsuka | Kyoto University, Japan

The role of mathematical modeling in modern evolutionary theory has raised concerns on how abstract formulae can say anything about empirical phenomena of evolution. This Element introduces philosophical approaches to this problem and proposes a new account according to which evolutionary models are based on causal and mathematical assumptions.

The Cambridge Heidegger Lexicon

December 2019 228 x 152 mm 900pp 978-1-107-00274-6 Hardback £94.99 / US$125.00

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Philosophy of science | Elements in the Philosophy of Biology

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October 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-72782-2 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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Running head left Philosophy

A Concise History of Mathematics for Philosophers

Kant on the Rationality of Morality

John Stillwell | University of San Francisco

Paul Guyer | Brown University, Rhode Island

Presents an outline of mathematics and its history, with particular emphasis on events that shook up its philosophy. Ranges from ancient Greece to the nineteenth- and twentieth-century discoveries on the nature of infinity and proof. Recurring themes are intuition and logic, meaning and existence, and the discrete and the continuous.

Shows how Kant attempted to derive the fundamental principle and goal of morality from the general principles of reason as such, defined by the principles of non-contradiction and sufficient reason and the ideal of systematicity.

Philosophy of science | Elements in the Philosophy of Mathematics

July 2019 229 x 152 mm c.88pp 978-1-108-43881-0 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

June 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 20 b/w illus. 978-1-108-45623-4 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

Philosophy texts | Elements in the Philosophy of Immanuel Kant

Scientific Knowledge and the Deep Past 40

History Matters Adrian Currie | University of Exeter

Scientific Knowledge and the Deep Past: History Matters is an accessible tour of the philosophy of the historical sciences. Examining how dinosaurs grew and the emergence of flowering plants in the midCretaceous, it analyses the relationship between knowledge and the past, explaining why narratives play a prominent role in history. Philosophy of science | Elements in the Philosophy of Science

August 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-108-73055-6 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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David Arndt | St Mary’s College, California

A clear introduction to Hannah Arendt and a new interpretation of her work, this book shows how her reconceptualizations of political theory shed new light on the past and present of American politics. It is the first to explore in detail her profoundly original reading of the Declaration of Independence. • Provides the clearest account so far of Hannah Arendt’s phenomenological approach to political theory • Presents the first ever detailed exploration of her profoundly original reading of the Declaration of Independence • Shows, in a clear and accessible way, not just what she thought but how she thought Political philosophy

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The Political Philosophy of Refuge

Peace-making as the Moral Vocation of Humanity Philip J. Rossi | Marquette University, Wisconsin

Explores how Kant’s account of religion provides the church with a role in establishing a cosmopolitan order of peace. In this context, politics and religion are social modalities in which humanity enacts its moral vocation to bring lasting peace among all peoples. Philosophy texts | Elements in the Philosophy of Immanuel Kant

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The Practice of Argumentation Effective Reasoning in Communication David Zarefsky | Northwestern University, Illinois

This book shows how to create arguments, deploy them effectively to justify beliefs and influence others, test them, and attack and defend them. It not only offers a set of techniques but also investigates the underlying assumptions and commitments we make when we argue. • Integrates logical, dialectical, and rhetorical perspectives on argumentation • Makes argumentation concepts accessible to beginners, but without oversimplifying the theory • Provides clear guidelines and tests for different kinds of arguments, helping readers become better analysts of argumentation Logic

David Miller | University of Oxford

In this rigorous but accessible volume, fresh insights are offered into the political and moral complexities of how to assess and deal with the claims of millions of displaced people to find refuge and asylum in safe and prosperous countries. • Makes the philosophical discussion about refuge and asylum accessible to readers without training in political philosophy • Widens the debate to include questions not often raised in public debate about the refugee crisis • Includes diverse and opposing perspectives on the source and nature of obligations towards refugees Political philosophy

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.273pp 978-1-108-47215-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

The Ethical Commonwealth in History

July 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-43863-6 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

Arendt on the Political

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.310pp 978-1-108-49831-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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August 2019 228 x 152 mm 272pp 25 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03471-6 Hardback £64.99 / US$84.99 978-1-107-68143-9 Paperback £19.99 / US$25.99

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Running Philosophy head right

Free Will Skepticism in Law and Society

Knowledge from Non-Knowledge

Challenging Retributive Justice Elizabeth Shaw | University of Aberdeen

Inference, Testimony and Memory Federico Luzzi | University of Aberdeen

This collection explores the practical implications of free will skepticism for law and society. Essays focus on alternatives to retributive punishment, explore what changes are needed for the criminal justice system, and ask whether we should be optimistic or pessimistic about the practical implications of free will skepticism. • Explores the real-world implications of free will skepticism for law and society • Spells out alternatives to retributive justice, providing practical tools and theoretical foundations for more humane policies • Engages with ideas about criminal behavior and the criminal justice system, making this book important for legal scholars and practitioners

This is the first monograph devoted to the topic of knowledge from non-knowledge, arguing against the widespread view that knowledge of a conclusion without knowledge of essential premises is impossible. The book provides state-of-the-art discussion of memory, testimony and inference and will interest anyone working in contemporary epistemology. • Presents arguments against the idea that knowledge of a conclusion requires knowledge of essential premises • Provides the first comprehensive and systematic introduction to the concept of knowledge from non-knowledge • Contains state-of-the-art discussions of three key topics in epistemology: inference, testimony and memory

Legal philosophy

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.254pp 978-1-108-49347-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Epistemology and metaphysics

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The Knowledge Argument

July 2019 228 x 152 mm c.209pp 978-1-108-49191-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Sam Coleman | University of Hertfordshire

Trust, Accountability and Purpose

This set of cutting-edge essays by top philosophers explores a central debate in philosophy of mind, breaking new ground as well as featuring comprehensive discussion of historical developments in the debate. It will be essential reading for students new to the topic and will also appeal to scholars. • Adopts new approaches to the knowledge argument and to related questions in philosophy of mind • Provides a comprehensive and up-to-date treatment of Frank Jackson’s famous modern thought experiment • Combines new discussion of this influential debate with clear retrospective analysis of its history

The Regulation of Corporate Governance Justin O’Brien

Philosophy of mind and language | Classic Philosophical Arguments

A Developmental and Critical Analysis Henry E. Allison | University of California, San Diego

September 2019 247 x 174 mm 300pp 2 b/w illus. 1 table 978-1-107-14199-5 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 P 978-1-316-50698-1 Paperback £24.99 / US$32.99 P

Second Thoughts and the Epistemological Enterprise Hilary Kornblith | University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Collected essays showing how social psychology illuminates epistemological problems, focusing on issues of self-knowledge and the nature of human reason. The book features specific examples of sceptical problems and also includes two entirely new essays. It will appeal to pyschologists as well philosophers. • Collects key essays together for the first time, providing a holistic perspective on questions of human reason and self-knowledge • Draws on social psychology to illuminate traditional epistemological issues, making the book important for psychologists as well as philosophers • Presents examples of empirically motivated skeptical problems and shows how they are of theoretical and practical value

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How to rebuild corporate trust in distrusting times? Integrity, responsibility and accountability must be embedded into mission statements, values and codes of conduct. This Element explores how corporations can rebuild trust through organisational and regulatory design across interlocking themes: legal, regulatory, managerial, ethical and social. Philosophy of social science | Elements in Corporate Governance

August 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-74850-6 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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Kant’s Conception of Freedom This volume traces the development of Kant’s views on free will from his earliest discussions of it in the 1750s through to his last accounts in the 1790s, and shows how central the concept of freedom is both to his theoretical and practical philosophy. • Illustrates the process of reasoning that lies behind Kant’s conception of free will • Considers a wide range of contemporary and present-day objections to Kant’s account • Provides a comprehensive overview of Kant’s views on freedom, without sacrificing detail Eighteenth-century philosophy

December 2019 228 x 152 mm 552pp 978-1-107-14511-5 Hardback £110.00 / US$140.00

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Epistemology and metaphysics

June 2019 228 x 152 mm 272pp 978-1-108-49851-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Running head Philosophy / Religion left

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Nietzsche’s Metaphilosophy

Kant’s Philosophy of Mathematics

The Nature, Method, and Aims of Philosophy Paul S. Loeb | University of Puget Sound, Washington

Volume 1: The Critical Philosophy and its Roots Carl Posy | Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Kant’s views about mathematics are central to his philosophical thought. This book presents a comprehensive picture of current scholarship on the development of Kant’s philosophy of mathematics, together with discussions of its place in his overall philosophy. It treats both broad historical issues and fine-grained questions of interpretation. • Engages with a lively and emerging field which will connect Kantian studies with mathematical philosophy in innovative ways • Brings together authors from different schools of thought to provide readers with a full spectrum of contemporary approaches to Kant’s philosophy of mathematics • Explores how Kant’s mathematical thought developed over time, with chapters organised thematically to aid readers’ navigation of the issues Eighteenth-century philosophy

September 2019 228 x 152 mm 328pp 5 b/w illus. 978-1-107-04290-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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The Cambridge Companion to the Scottish Enlightenment

Nineteenth-century philosophy

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.304pp 1 b/w illus. 1 table 978-1-108-42225-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

The Cambridge History of Philosophy, 1945–2015 Kelly Becker | University of New Mexico

Second edition Alexander Broadie | University of Glasgow

New edition offering a philosophical perspective on an eighteenth-century movement that profoundly influenced western culture. Distinguished contributors examine the writings of Hume, Smith and many more. With five entirely new chapters and widespread updates elsewhere, it is essential for students of modern philosophy and intellectual history. • Provides a philosophical perspective on the full range of achievements of the Scottish Enlightenment, addressing themes within theology, economics, anthropology, natural science, law and the arts • Explores the breadth of influence of the thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment, including figures such as David Hume, Adam Smith, Thomas Reid and Adam Ferguson • Contains five new chapters and almost all of the others are significantly revised or updated from the first edition Eighteenth-century philosophy | Cambridge Companions to Philosophy

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.384pp 978-1-108-42070-9 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-43078-4 Paperback £18.99 / US$24.99

This book will appeal to those interested in Nietzsche’s philosophy and in thinking about the nature, method, and aims of philosophy itself. A group of distinguished scholars carefully explore Nietzsche’s role as a philosopher and his desire to challenge standard conceptions of what philosophy actually is. • Distinguished scholars introduce readers to a wide variety of sophisticated and thoughtful perspectives on important questions in Nietzsche studies • Highlights Nietzsche’s quest to challenge standard notions of what philosophy is • Chapters will appeal to readers interested in philosophy, German studies and intellectual history

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PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Nietzsche’s Moral Psychology Mark Alfano | Delft University of Technology

This highly innovative book employs digital corpus analysis and visualization to allow us to interpret and systematize Nietzsche and his work. The book shows how virtues emerge from instincts and explores five essential Nietzschean virtues: curiosity, courage, sense of humor, and contemptuousness both toward oneself and toward one’s society. • Uses a combination of close reading and digital analysis to provide an innovative interpretation of Nietzsche • Explores the concept of personal virtues in relation to philosophy and psychology • Takes into account the whole of Nietzsche’s writings Nineteenth-century philosophy

August 2019 228 x 152 mm 312pp 23 b/w illus. 21 tables 978-1-107-07415-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

World-renowned experts explain the most important developments in philosophical thought and practice from 1945 to 2015, covering the analytic, comparative, and Continental schools and exploring major and rising topics of interest. This accessible and authoritative guide to contemporary philosophy will interest students and scholars of all levels. • Explores, in depth, the development of contemporary philosophical thought and practice in a way that is both accessible and wide-ranging • Features world experts in post-War philosophy presenting up-to-date and insightful work on major topics and burgeoning areas of interest • Covers mainstream analytic philosophy, Continental philosophy, and ‘bridge-building’ philosophy, revealing common ground and bringing in other disciplines such as comparative philosophy Twentieth-century philosophy

October 2019 228 x 152 mm 912pp 2 b/w illus. 978-1-107-17303-3 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00

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Religion Bonaventure, the Body, and the Aesthetics of Salvation Rachel Davies | Australian Catholic University, Melbourne

This book is for students and teachers of theology, Christian spirituality, and Franciscan studies. It explores the crucial relationship between Bonaventure’s concept of beauty and body-soul integrity, and will help readers grasp medieval conceptions of salvation while suggesting ways of encountering bodily suffering with honesty and hope. • Shows how Bonaventure can help us rethink and revise difficult tendencies in Christian thought, such as its often negative portrayal of the body • Demonstrates a way of relating to bodily diminishment that is open to transformation while remaining honest about the destructive nature of suffering • Draws from texts like the Collations on the Six Days, the Tree of Life, and the Major Life of Francis, and explores how Bonaventure thinks the body participates in and in some ways even instigates the soul’s journey Theology

December 2019 216 x 138 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-48537-1 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$105.00

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Running head Religion right

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Jesus the Jew in Christian Memory

Participation in God

Theological and Philosophical Explorations Barbara U. Meyer | Tel-Aviv University

A Study in Christian Doctrine and Metaphysics Andrew Davison | University of Cambridge

Few ideas have excited greater interest among theologians in recent decades than the idea of ‘participation’: the idea that everything comes from, and depends upon, God, in a way that invites use of the language of sharing, or of an exemplar and its images. This book is an extensive and cohesive exploration of this theme to date. • Written with both the specialist and more general readership in mind by including an accessible main text and more detailed points of discussion • Provides a worked example of the relation between foundational metaphysical and doctrinal convictions to their practical repercussions • Addresses a full range of theological themes (topics in systematic theology) and the interconnection between theological vision and a way of life • Spans many of the principal divides in theological writing – doctrine, philosophy and scripture – and considers applied themes, such as ethics, prayer, and the way we apprehend and respond to the world around us Theology

July 2019 228 x 152 mm c.396pp 978-1-108-48328-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Divine Action and the Human Mind Sarah Lane Ritchie | University of Edinburgh

Theologians will commonly insist that the human mind is uniquely spiritual or open to divine influence, and yet this intuition of dualism is out of step with contemporary science. This book challenges theological models of divine action that locate God’s activity in human mind, instead emphasizing the relationship between God and all of nature. • Suggests the plausibility and theological acceptability of physicalist conceptions of mind, questioning the validity of intuitive dualism • Rigorously engages the scientific details of contemporary divine action theories • Suggests various models of the God-nature relationship without being prescriptive, bringing alternatives to the question of divine action Theology | Current Issues in Theology, 14

July 2019 216 x 138 mm 384pp 978-1-108-47651-5 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00

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Humor, Resistance, and Jewish Cultural Persistence in the Book of Revelation Roasting Rome Sarah Emanuel | Colby College, Maine

Will appeal to those interested in the book of Revelation, humor and the Bible, the Jewishness of the New Testament, and contemporary and critical approaches to the New Testament. This book positions Revelation within an ancient Jewish context and demonstrates the ways in which the author used humor as a means of resisting Roman power. • Includes readings of Revelation that combine multiple contemporary critical lenses, for example humor theory, trauma theory and postcolonial theory, with traditional historical-critical ones • Highlights historically the Jewishness of the early Christ-centered movement and how Jews in antiquity related to their Jewishness • Provides readings that are both ‘with’ and ‘against’ the grain of Revelation scholarship

The last forty years have witnessed a revolution in the historical study of Jesus’ Jewishness but little on how this scholarship can revitalize Christian memory and theological discourse. This book shows how awareness of Jesus’ Jewishness enables a striking rethinking of Christian approaches to otherness, law and ethics, vulnerability and suffering. • Moves beyond the existing focus on the historical contextualization of Jesus’ Jewishness to show its broader implication for interreligious thought • Discusses the Jewishness of Jesus in comparison with his blackness, thus taking liberation and contextual theologies seriously • Develops contemporary dogmatic thinking in conversation with Jewish and Muslim interlocutors and reveals fresh theological dimensions to the study of Abrahamic religions Biblical studies – New Testament

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-49889-0 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$105.00

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Narrative and Drama in the Book of Revelation A Literary Approach Lourdes García Ureña | Universidad CEU San Pablo

This book is aimed at biblical and classical scholars. It resolves one of the most striking questions about the Book of Revelation: what is its literary genre? John chooses a literary form, similar to that of the short story, allowing him to use time-space coordinates flexibly, to dramatize the text and to take his time in describing his visions. • Presents a new method for reading the Book of Revelation • Proposes a new literary genre for the Book of Revelation, engaging with the use of time and place and the prominence of strange characters • Considers John’s writings as a visual and auditory experience to be read aloud in liturgical contexts Biblical studies – New Testament | Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series, 175

August 2019 216 x 138 mm c.300pp 5 tables 978-1-108-48386-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Eschatology and the Saviour The ‘Gospel of Mary’ among Early Christian Dialogue Gospels Sarah Parkhouse | Australian Catholic University, Melbourne

This book offers an analysis of the genre ‘dialogue gospels’ and their relationship to themes in New Testament texts. It then focuses on the ‘Gospel of Mary’, evaluates this gospel in light of the genre, argues for a christocentic reading of its eschatology, and provides new translations. • Offers new insights into both New Testament texts and dialogue gospels, highlighting the complexity and diversity of early Christian gospel literature • Includes Greek and Coptic text as well as translations, including appendices of translations and comparisons of the manuscripts of the ‘Gospel of Mary’ • Presents in-depth analysis of narrative frame and eschatology of the ‘Gospel of Mary’ Biblical studies – New Testament | Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series, 176

September 2019 216 x 138 mm c.324pp 978-1-108-49893-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Biblical studies – New Testament

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-49659-9 Hardback c. £71.00 / c. US$99.99

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Running head left Religion

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The Gospel of John and the Future of Israel

The Impact of Jesus in First-Century Palestine

Mark Blumhofer | Duke University, North Carolina

Textual and Archaeological Evidence for Longstanding Discontent Rosemary Margaret Luff | Clare Hall, Cambridge

For decades, scholars have examined the Gospel of John from historical, literary, and theological angles. Mark Blumhofer offers an interpretation of the Gospel that draws together these various strands in ways that will advance the understanding of John among scholars, pastors, and other readers of the Gospel. • Shows the reader what it would look like to read almost the whole of the Gospel of John in a fresh way • Combines literary, historical, and theological insights into a synthetic reading of the Gospel of John • Focuses on the text of the Gospel rather than long discussions of secondary literature, thus revealing common themes and interests throughout the text Biblical studies – New Testament | Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series, 177

December 2019 216 x 138 mm c.247pp 978-1-108-49355-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Examines Jesus’ Jewish background through archaeological remains relating to religious, socioeconomic, and health issues, bringing into sharper focus the textual evidence presented concerning the emergence of his ministry and concern for the needy. This integrative approach is unique, appealing to specialists and non-specialists alike. • Will appeal to a wide range of specialists (covering New Testament studies, Judaism, Roman archaeology and history) but is also easily understandable to the non-specialist • Readers can easily follow the line of argument as each chapter answers a specific objective itemized in the introduction; these objectives are resolved in the conclusion • Each textual chapter is clearly linked to an archaeological chapter (using end of chapter references), thus allowing Jesus to be viewed within the context of late Second Temple Judaism Church history

John Calvin in Context

August 2019 228 x 152 mm c.272pp 10 b/w illus. 3 maps 1 table 978-1-108-48223-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

R. Ward Holder | Saint Anselm College, New Hampshire

John Calvin in Context supports the readers’ understanding of the world that Calvin lived in. Calvin’s world is illustrated through contributions from social, cultural, feminist, and intellectual historians. His life is made far more accessible and the organization of the volume makes it an essential research tool. • Places Calvin in his social and cultural context, drawing on his life in the sixteenth century • Places Calvin in his intellectual context, as part of an intellectual millieu rather than as a solitary figure • Identifies some of the ways Calvin has been received, drawing on the traditions of reading Calvin that both help and hinder the modern view of him and his work Church history

September 2019 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 2 maps 978-1-108-48240-0 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00

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Class and Power in Roman Palestine The Socioeconomic Setting of Judaism and Christian Origins Anthony Keddie | University of British Columbia, Vancouver

Investigates changing socioeconomic relations in early Roman Palestine (63 BCE–70 CE). It is the most up-to-date synthesis of archaeological and literary evidence of socioeconomic change in this context and serves as an indispensable resource for students and scholars of ancient Judaism, Christian origins, Roman history, and classical archaeology. • Provides straightforward discussion of key issues in the study of socioeconomics in early Roman Palestine (the setting of Second Temple Judaism and Christian origins), clearly and concisely defining its terms of analysis and theoretical framework • Closely examines a wide range of literary and archaeological evidence from early Roman Palestine, including little-known and recently discovered materials, often illuminating these sources through discussion of similar materials from other provinces • Advances a sociohistorical argument about relations between elites and non-elites in early Roman Palestine that depends on transparent methods and the widest possible range of evidence Church history

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.384pp 3 b/w illus. 3 maps 2 tables 978-1-108-49394-9 Hardback c. £90.00 / c. US$120.00 C

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

An Introduction to the Desert Fathers John Wortley | University of Manitoba, Canada

An accessible introduction exploring how the earliest Christian monks lived and taught in the Egyptian deserts in the fourth to the seventh centuries AD, using their own tales and sayings. Shows the gradual transformation of their essentially solitary existence into communal coexistence which defined the monasteries of the Middle Ages. • Discusses when, where and why Christian monasticism emerged • Explores the daily lives and teaching practices of the early monks, including how they prayed, worked, ate and slept • Uses the monks’ own words as preserved in the Sayings of the Desert Fathers, making them accessible to non-specialists Church history

June 2019 228 x 152 mm 208pp 2 maps 978-1-108-48102-1 Hardback £59.99 / US$79.99 978-1-108-70372-7 Paperback £17.99 / US$23.99

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Churches and Education Edited by Morwenna Ludlow | University of Exeter

This volume reflects the long and complex history of the various relationships between churches and education, exploring the ways in which churches have sought to educate, catechise and instruct, from the very earliest communities’ teaching of those about to be baptised, to present-day churches’ involvement in schools and higher education. • Explores the long and complex history of the relationship between the Church and education • Features a wide range of leading scholars in the field • Contains contributions on a diverse range of historical, social and regional contexts, including the early Quaker movement, the Māori education system in the nineteenth century and British Sunday Schools in the early twentieth century Church history | Studies in Church History, 55

July 2019 228 x 138 mm 628pp 978-1-108-48708-5 Hardback £65.00 / US$105.00

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Running head Religion right

A History of the Talmud David C. Kraemer | Jewish Theological Seminary, New York

It is impossible to exaggerate the importance of the Talmud in Judaism and beyond, yet its difficulty renders it inaccessible to most modern readers. This book offers a sophisticated but accessible introduction to the Talmud, its origins, and its status through history, accounting for the insights of recent scholarship. • Offers, for the first time, an in-depth and sophisticated history of the Talmud from its origins to the present day • Transcends the artificial categories of Jewish (and other) scholarship – for example ‘ancient Judaism’, ‘medieval Judaism’, and ‘Jewish book history’ – by examining the continuities and shifts represented by a single body of work • Written for the general sophisticated reader: students of religion, Judaica, and interested others Judaism

July 2019 246 x 189 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-48136-6 Hardback c. £70.00 / c. US$120.00

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Augustine and the Economy of Sacrifice Ancient and Modern Perspectives Joshua S. Nunziato | University of Colorado Boulder

Augustine’s theory of the church shows how contemporary economic culture might translate losses into opportunities for collective acknowledgment. This book expands Augustinian thought to argue that sacrifices in business exchange can serve the common good. It engages with Augustinian studies, philosophy of exchange, and economic ethics. • Expands the horizon of scholarly thinking about what Augustine has to contribute to current cultural reflection • Re-interprets the logic of sacrifice implicit in all economic exchanges by appealing to a rich philosophical and theological account of the common good • Opens a new perspective on the spiritual significance of business which is rooted in the teaching and community of the Christian church and open – in receptive hospitality – to all Philosophy of religion

The Revival of Islamic Rationalism

October 2019 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-48139-7 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$110.00

Logic, Metaphysics and Mysticism in Modern Muslim Societies Masooda Bano | University of Oxford

God and Abstract Objects

This book presents an in-depth analysis of a movement, led by a network of Islamic scholars in the West, which is leading to revival of Islamic rationalism. The book defines Islamic rationalism, explains why it is argued to present the Sunni orthodoxy, and why it is proving very popular among young Muslims. • Records the revival of Islamic rationalism among second and third generation Muslims in the West challenging existing concerns about Muslims’ lack of integration • Traces a network of rationalist scholars, mostly converts, who, while gaining attention, have not been studied as a network • Exposes the changing dynamics of Islamic authority whereby Muslim communities in the West are producing knowledge and networks that are influencing modern educated Muslims in Muslim majority-countries Islam

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 2 maps 1 table 978-1-108-48531-9 Hardback c. £29.99 / c. US$39.99

Einar Duenger Bøhn | Universitet i Agder, Norway

This book clarifies the concepts involved and the problem that arises from believing in both God and abstract objects. Presents the possible kinds of solutions to that problem. Discusses a new kind of solution to the problem, according to which reality is most fundamentally made of information. Philosophy of religion | Elements in the Philosophy of Religion

August 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-45744-6 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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Religious Fictionalism Robin Le Poidevin | University of Leeds

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Tanakh Epistemology Knowledge and Power, Religious and Secular Douglas Yoder

The Tanakh’s approach to knowledge is cohesive, bold, and unexpected. This book argues that an understanding of Tanakh epistemology can lead to new appraisals of religious and secular life throughout the modern world and provides a new foundation for Jewish, Christian, Muslim, and secular readers to better understand themselves and each other. • Uses the tools of modern and postmodern philosophy and biblical criticism to elucidate the epistemology of the Tanakh • Examines how philosophers such as Spinoza, Hume, and Kant interacted with the concepts such as the genre of the apocalypse which are found within or derive from the epistemic texts of the Tanakh • Explores new possibilities of interreligious understanding Biblical studies – Old Testament, Hebrew Bible

December 2019 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-49860-9 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$105.00

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This Element is an introduction to contemporary religious fictionalism, its motivation and challenges. Among the issues raised are: can religion be viewed as a game of make-believe? And can fictionalism provide an adequate understanding of the characteristic features of the religious life, such as worship, prayer, moral commitment? Philosophy of religion | Elements in the Philosophy of Religion

May 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-45747-7 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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God, Soul and the Meaning of Life Thaddeus Metz | University of Johannesburg

Critically explores the potential relevance of God or a soul for life’s meaning as discussed in recent Anglo-American philosophical literature. Familiarizes readers with the four broad views, presents objections to them, points out gaps in research agendas and suggests argumentative strategies that merit development. Philosophy of religion | Elements in the Philosophy of Religion

May 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-45745-3 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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Running head left Religion

The Problem of Evil

Monotheism and the Meaning of Life

Michael Tooley | University of Colorado Boulder

Addresses some important preliminary issues before exploring the question of how an incompatibility argument from evil is best formulated, and possible responses to such arguments. Then focuses on skeptical theism. Finally discusses evidential arguments from evil, and four different kinds of evidential argument are set out and critically examined.

T. J. Mawson | University of Oxford

Monotheism and the Meaning of Life explores the role of God, and the relationship to the question ‘What is the meaning of life?’ for adherents of the main monotheistic religions. Mawson argues that there are various questions implicit in the notion of the meaning of life. Religion (general) | Elements in Religion and Monotheism

Philosophy of religion | Elements in the Philosophy of Religion

August 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 5 b/w illus. 978-1-108-74905-3 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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Leigh C. Vicens | Augustana College, South Dakota

Michael Ruse | Florida State University

Considers the relationship between the traditional view of God as all-powerful, all-knowing and wholly good on the one hand, and the idea of human free will on the other. Focuses on the potential threats to human free will arising from two divine attributes: God’s exhaustive foreknowledge and God’s providential control of creation.

In this Element, Michael Ruse offers a critical analysis of contemporary atheism. He puts special emphasis on the work of so-called ‘New Atheists’: Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, Daniel Dennett, and Christopher Hitchins, whose views are contrasted with those of Edward O. Wilson. Religion (general) | Elements in Religion and Monotheism

August 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-73149-2 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

Philosophy of religion | Elements in the Philosophy of Religion

July 2019 229 x 152 mm c.100pp 978-1-108-45754-5 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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The Battles of Zion Patrick Q. Mason | Claremont Graduate University, California

Early Modern Conversion, Mission, and the Construction of Identity Robert John Clines | Western Carolina University

Critically assesses the relationship of Mormonism and violence through a close examination of Mormon history and scripture, focusing on the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Pays special attention to violence in the Book of Mormon and the history of the movement, from the 1830s to the present.

This exploration of a Jewish-born Catholic missionary in the Ottoman Empire is ideal for students, scholars, and anyone interested in gaining a better understanding of the experiences of converts in the early modern Mediterranean and beyond, and the larger implications of conversion for the identities of individuals and societies. • Engages with the experiences of converts in the early modern Mediterranean and beyond, and the larger implications of conversion for the identities of individuals and societies • Analyses primary sources, including Eliano’s personal letters, missionary reports, and autobiography, together with scholarship on conversion in the early modern Mediterranean world • Uses the story of individual interpersonal interactions to introduce the reader to the larger scholarship of the early modern Mediterranean History of religion

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Religion (general) | Elements in Religion and Violence

May 2019 178 x 127 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-70628-5 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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Religious Culture and Violence in Traditional China Barend ter Haar | Universität Hamburg

Summarizes the most important aspects of the role of violence in Chinese religious culture. These include counteracting the threat and fear of demonic attacks, maintaining norms and values, and expressing respect through sacrificial gifts of meat. Explores how violence was justified as positive use of physical force. Religion (general) | Elements in Religion and Violence

Buddhism and Monotheism

May 2019 178 x 127 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-70623-0 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

Peter Harvey | University of Sunderland

This Element explores ideas on trans-polytheism and Nirvana, along with overlaps in Buddhist and monotheist ideas and practices, the development of more theist-like ideas in Mahayana Buddhism, Buddhist critiques of the idea of a creator God, and some contemporary Buddhist views and appreciations of monotheisms. Religion (general) | Elements in Religion and Monotheism

July 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-73137-9 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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Mormonism and Violence

A Jewish Jesuit in the Eastern Mediterranean

November 2019 228 x 152 mm c.272pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-108-48534-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Monotheism and Contemporary Atheism

God and Human Freedom 46

July 2019 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-73117-1 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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Running headIndex right

-9 1789: The French Revolution Begins..............13 1989...........................................................14

A Abraham, Adam...........................................33 Abused Bodies in Roman Epic.........................3 Across the Great Divide................................19 Aesthetics of Hope in Late Greek Imperial Literature, The..............................................5 After the Berlin Wall.....................................14 Afterlife of Shakespeare’s Sonnets, The..........31 Afterlives of the Roman Poets.........................5 Aging, Duration, and the English Novel.........33 Albania and Kosovo.....................................15 Alfano, Mark................................................42 Alfarabi’s Book of Dialectic (Kitab al-Jadal)...26 Allan, William.................................................4 Allen, James...................................................2 Allied Internment Camps in Occupied Germany...................................................13 Allison, Henry E............................................41 American Literature and Immediacy..............28 American Scene, The.....................................28 Americanisation of Ireland, The.....................10 Ancient Egyptian Phonology...........................2 Ancient Theatre and Performance Culture Around the Black Sea..................................3 Angelo, Anaïs...............................................17 Angier, Tom..................................................39 Anglo-Norman Historical Canon, The............29 Anglo-Saxon England.....................................9 Ansari, Sarah................................................17 Antisemitism and the Russian Revolution......15 Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe.........24 Arab Dissident Movements, 1905–1955.......19 Archaeological Science...................................1 Archaeology of Egypt in the Third Intermediate Period, The..............................2 Archaeology of Food, The...............................2 Archaeology of the Bronze Age Levant, The.....2 Archaeology of the Iberian Peninsula, The.......2 Arendt on the Political..................................40 Aristotle on Matter, Form, and Moving Causes.6 Aristoxenus of Tarentum: The Pythagorean Precepts (How to Live a Pythagorean Life)....6 Armenia.......................................................15 Arndt, David.................................................40 Art and Identity in Scotland..........................10 Art of Sculpture in Fifteenth-Century Italy, The.3 Atomic Junction...........................................16 Augustine and the Economy of Sacrifice........45

B Baetu, Tudor.................................................39 Bagnall, Roger S.............................................6 Banishment and Belonging...........................18 Bano, Masooda............................................45 Barr, Colin......................................................9 Battle for Christian Britain, The.....................10 Bauer, Dale M...............................................28 Beattie, Andrew H........................................13 Beaujard, Philippe........................................24 Beck Monroe, Jonathan................................35 Becker, Anna K.............................................26 Becker, Kelly.................................................42 Belina, Anastasia..........................................37 Bennett, James E............................................2 Bergerbrant, Sophie........................................1

Bhattacharya, Neeladri.................................17 Birds and the Culture of the European Bronze Age..................................................1 Black Saints in Early Modern Global Catholicism...............................................12 Blackman, Robert H......................................13 Bladen, Victoria............................................32 Bloch, Amy R..................................................3 Bloembergen, Marieke..................................18 Blumhofer, Mark...........................................44 Bogaard, Amy................................................1 Bøhn, Einar Duenger....................................45 Bonaventure, the Body, and the Aesthetics of Salvation...............................................42 Booth, Anne.................................................24 Boundaries of Belonging..............................17 Bowie, A. M....................................................5 Brain, Tracy...................................................35 Brandon, Pepijn............................................26 Braund, David................................................3 Breckman, Warren........................................27 British Enlightenment Theatre.........................7 British Envoys to the Kaiserreich, 1871–1897.25 British World Policy and the Projection of Global Power, c.1830–1960......................25 Britton, Kate...................................................1 Broadie, Alexander.......................................42 Brooks, Jeffrey..............................................15 Brown, Callum G..........................................10 Buccola, Regina............................................32 Buddhism and Monotheism..........................46 Burdett, A...............................................15, 19 Byron, Mark.................................................34

C Cambridge Companion to British Literature of the 1930s, The.......................34 Cambridge Companion to Gershwin, The......38 Cambridge Companion to Ian McEwan, The..34 Cambridge Companion to Music in Digital Culture, The...............................................36 Cambridge Companion to Natural Law Ethics, The.................................................39 Cambridge Companion to Operetta, The.......37 Cambridge Companion to the Rolling Stones, The................................................38 Cambridge Companion to the Scottish Enlightenment, The....................................42 Cambridge Edition of the Works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea, The.............31 Cambridge Guide to Homer, The.....................4 Cambridge Heidegger Lexicon, The...............39 Cambridge History of China, The...................19 Cambridge History of Modern European Thought, The.............................................27 Cambridge History of Music Criticism, The.....36 Cambridge History of Philosophy, 1945–2015, The........................................42 Cambridge History of the American Civil War, The..................................................8, 9 Cambridge History of the Book in Britain, The.30 Cambridge World History of Lexicography, The...........................................................35 Canons of the Third Lateran Council of 1179, The..................................................12 Capital Letters..............................................29 Carolina’s Golden Fields.................................8 Caruso, Gregg D...........................................41 Celenza, Anna Harwell.................................38

Central Bank Independence and the Legacy of the German Past........................23 Charles E. Callwell and the British Way in Warfare.....................................................23 Chaucer’s Scribes.........................................30 Chernock, Arianne..........................................9 Chiari, Sophie...............................................31 Churches and Education...............................44 Cicero on the Philosophy of Religion...............6 Class and Power in Roman Palestine.............44 Clines, Robert John.......................................46 Coelho, Victor...............................................38 Cohen, Matt.................................................29 Coleman, Sam..............................................41 Collective Liability in Islam............................21 Collister, Peter..............................................28 Coltman, Viccy.............................................10 Commodification of Identity in Victorian Narrative, The............................................33 Compositional Artifice in the Music of Henry Purcell.............................................37 Concise History of Mathematics for Philosophers, A..........................................40 Concise History of Revolution, A...................25 Consciousness, Creativity, and Self at the Dawn of Settled Life....................................1 Considine, John............................................35 Cook, Nicholas.............................................36 Cooper, Ian..................................................35 Covach, John................................................38 Crack.............................................................8 Crawley, Rhys...............................................22 Crisis of Kingship in Late Medieval Islam, The.21 Crosthwaite, Paul.........................................34 Csapo, Eric.....................................................6 Cultural History of Augustan Rome, The..........3 Culture of Military Organizations, The...........23 Currie, Adrian...............................................40

D d’Avray, D. L.................................................11 Dabashi, Hamid............................................21 Dalsgaard, Inger H........................................28 Darwinian Revolution, The............................39 Davies, Rachel..............................................42 Davison, Andrew..........................................43 Death and Immortality in Ancient Philosophy..6 Deats, Sara Munson.......................................7 Decadence and Literature.............................29 Designing Memory.......................................14 DeSimone, Alison.........................................37 Desmarais, Jane............................................29 Destani, B...............................................15, 19 Dien, Albert E...............................................19 Dingle, Christopher.......................................36 DiPasquale, David M.....................................26 Divine Action and the Human Mind..............43 DuPlessis, Robert S.......................................13

E Ecological Models........................................39 Economistes and the Reinvention of Empire..13 Ede, Andrew.................................................22 Eggert, Paul.................................................29 Eickhoff, Martijn...........................................18 Elder, Olivia....................................................4 Elphick, Daniel.............................................38 Emanuel, Sarah............................................43 Empire, Civil Society, and the Beginnings of Colonial Education in India....................18

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47


Running head left Index

Eschatology and the Saviour.........................43 Ethical Commonwealth in History, The...........40 Ethnic Minorities in the Balkan States, 1860–1971...............................................15 Evolution of Affect Theory, The......................26 Exhibiting War..............................................23

F

48

Fabian, Steven..............................................16 Faith, Rosamond............................................9 Farber, David..................................................8 Faust Legend, The...........................................7 Feminism and the Servant Problem...............10 Finch, Anne..................................................31 Finglass, P. J....................................................5 Firebird and the Fox, The...............................15 First Quarto of ‘The Merry Wives of Windsor, The..............................................30 Fiscal Capacity and the Colonial State in Asia and Africa, c.1850–1960...................24 Fitzpatrick, David..........................................10 Flodoard of Rheims and the Writing of History in the Tenth Century.......................11 Fogg, Kevin W...............................................18 For Christ and Country..................................16 Foreign Languages Press..............................19 Forever Fandom of Harry Potter, The..............29 Framing Roberto Bolaño...............................35 Frankema, Ewout..........................................24 Free and Unfree Labor in Atlantic and Indian Ocean Port Cities (1700–1850).......26 Free Will Skepticism in Law and Society........41 Frykman, Niklas............................................26

G Gabbert, Wolfgang.......................................16 Gameson, Richard........................................30 García Ureña, Lourdes..................................43 Gardner, Matthew........................................37 Gendering the Renaissance Commonwealth.26 General Reader and the Academy, The..........29 German Operetta on Broadway and in the West End, 1900–1940...............................36 Gilchrist, Roberta...........................................2 God and Abstract Objects.............................45 God and Human Freedom.............................46 God, Soul and the Meaning of Life................45 Goldhahn, Joakim..........................................1 Goldschmidt, Nora.........................................5 Gomez, Michael A........................................17 Gordon, Peter E............................................27 Gospel of John and the Future of Israel, The..44 Gould, William.............................................17 Grant, Linda.................................................31 Grass, Sean..................................................33 Great Oasis of Egypt, The................................6 Greek Elegy and Iambus.................................4 Greek Military Service in the Ancient Near East, 401–330 BCE.....................................7 Greenberg, Raphael.......................................2 Griffin, Sean.................................................12 Grimmer-Solem, Erik.....................................14 Guyer, Paul...................................................40

H Habsburg Monarchy, 1618–1815, The..........13 Haider, Najam..............................................20 Hall, Edith......................................................3 Han, Gül Bilge..............................................27

Hankins, Gabriel...........................................34 Harrison, Hope M.........................................14 Harvey, Peter................................................46 Hatchuel, Sarah............................................32 Haunting History Onstage.............................32 Havens, Hilary..............................................32 Hawker, J. M.................................................29 Head, Dominic..............................................34 Henry, Devin...................................................6 Hill, Shonagh..................................................7 Historiography and Space in Late Antiquity.....7 History of Jordan, A......................................21 History of the Talmud, A................................45 Hodder, Ian....................................................1 Holder, R. Ward............................................44 Holocaust and New World Slavery, The..........14 Homer...........................................................5 Homer: Iliad Book III.......................................5 Honig, Emily.................................................19 Horner, David...............................................22 Houghton, L. B. T............................................3 Howard, Alan...............................................37 Huffman, Carl A..............................................6 Human Rights in Twentieth-Century Australia.22 Humor, Resistance, and Jewish Cultural Persistence in the Book of Revelation.........43 Hynson, Rachel.............................................16

I Iacob, Bogdan C...........................................14 Iddon, Martin...............................................38 Impact of Jesus in First-Century Palestine, The...........................................................44 Imperial Emotions........................................25 Imperial Sovereignty and Local Politics..........18 In the Shadow of the Cold War.......................8 In the Shadow of the Mongol Empire............19 Indonesia’s Islamic Revolution......................18 Ingalls, Monique M.......................................36 Ingrao, Charles W.........................................13 Instrumental Music in an Age of Sociability...37 Interwar Modernism and the Liberal World Order..............................................34 Introduction to the Desert Fathers, An...........44 Iran..............................................................20 Iran’s Quiet Revolution.................................22 Iran’s Reconstruction Jihad...........................20 Ireland’s Empire.............................................9 Islam beyond Borders...................................20 Islam Political Impact, 1908–1972................20 Islam, Literature and Society in Mongol Anatolia....................................................21

J Jahner, Jennifer............................................30 James, Henry..........................................28, 34 Jane Austen’s Style.......................................33 Jarman, R.....................................................18 Jesus the Jew in Christian Memory................43 Jewish Jesuit in the Eastern Mediterranean, A.46 Jewusiak, Jacob............................................33 Jin, Chongji..................................................19 John Cage and Peter Yates............................38 John Calvin in Context..................................44 Johnson, T. R................................................28

K Kairoff, Claudia Thomas................................31 Kamrava, Mehran.........................................25

Kant on the Rationality of Morality...............40 Kant’s Conception of Freedom......................41 Kant’s Philosophy of Mathematics................42 Katz, Steven T...............................................14 Kay, N. M.......................................................4 Keddie, Anthony...........................................44 Keefe, Simon P..............................................37 Keith, Jennifer..............................................31 Keynes, Simon................................................9 Kingsley-Smith, Jane.....................................31 Kirmse, Stefan B...........................................15 Kittle, Simon.................................................46 Kjær, Lars.......................................................9 Knapp, Keith N.............................................19 Knowledge Argument, The............................41 Knowledge from Non-Knowledge.................41 Kornblith, Hilary...........................................41 Kraemer, David C..........................................45 Kumarasingham, H.......................................25

L Laboring for the State...................................16 Landscape, Culture, and Belonging...............17 Language of Roman Letters, The.....................4 Latin Erotic Elegy and the Shaping of Sixteenth-Century English Love Poetry........31 LaValle Norman, Dawn...................................5 Lawful Empire, The.......................................15 Lawrence-Mathers, Anne..............................12 Le Poidevin, Robin........................................45 Learning Empire...........................................14 Life in a Time of Pestilence............................12 Lillios, Katina T................................................2 Lindley, David...............................................30 Literary Ambition and the African American Novel.........................................28 Literary Value and Social Identity in the Canterbury Tales........................................30 Literature and Religion in the GermanSpeaking World.........................................35 Literature, Print Culture, and Media Technologies, 1880–1900.........................33 Liturgical Past in Byzantium and Early Rus, The...........................................................12 Loar, Matthew P..............................................3 Lob, Eric S....................................................20 Loeb, Paul S..................................................42 Londey, Peter...............................................22 Long Search for Peace, The...........................22 Long, A. G......................................................6 Lord Byron in Context...................................33 Love, Rosalind................................................9 Ludlow, Morwenna.......................................44 Luff, Rosemary Margaret...............................44 Lustig, T. J.....................................................34 Luzzi, Federico..............................................41 Lydon, Jane..................................................25 Lynch, Timothy J..............................................8

M MacKay, Ruth...............................................12 Making Identity on the Swahili Coast............16 Mansoor, Peter R..........................................23 Mao Zedong................................................19 Mark, James.................................................14 Market Logics of Contemporary Fiction, The..34 Markiewicz, Christopher...............................21 Martens, Marianne.......................................29 Mason, Patrick Q..........................................46 Mawson, T. J.................................................46


Running headIndex right

McClellan, Andrew M.....................................3 McGeever, Brendan......................................15 Mechanisms in Molecular Biology.................39 Medieval Gift and the Classical Tradition, The..9 Medieval Historical Writing...........................30 Medieval Meteorology..................................12 Mee, Simon..................................................23 Menke, Richard............................................33 Mercer, Ben..................................................14 Methuen, Charlotte......................................44 Metz, Thaddeus............................................45 Meyer-Lee, Robert J......................................30 Meyer, Barbara U..........................................43 Meyer, Matthew...........................................42 Miller, David.................................................40 Minorities in the Middle East........................19 Mirsepassi, Ali..............................................22 Monotheism and Contemporary Atheism......46 Monotheism and the Meaning of Life...........46 Moral Economy of the Countryside, The...........9 Mormonism and Violence.............................46 Morrissey, Conor..........................................11 Mößlang, Markus.........................................25 Mozart in Context........................................37 Mucciolo, John.............................................31 Mullen, Alex...................................................4 Murphy, Donald...........................................43 Murray, Sarah C..............................................3 Murray, Williamson.......................................23 Music and the Benefit Performance in Eighteenth-Century Britain.........................37 Music behind the Iron Curtain......................38

N Nall, Joshua.................................................22 Narrative and Drama in the Book of Revelation.................................................43 Nash, Geoffrey P...........................................35 Netz, Reviel....................................................4 New Ezra Pound Studies, The........................34 New Orleans................................................28 New Walt Whitman Studies, The...................29 Nicholls, Julia...............................................26 Nieto-Galan, Agustí......................................23 Nietzsche’s Metaphilosophy..........................42 Nietzsche’s Moral Psychology.......................42 Nineteenth-Century American Women’s Serial Novels.............................................28 Nineteenth-Century Opera and the Scientific Imagination................................38 Noakes, Richard...........................................23 Nowlin, Michael...........................................28 Nunziato, Joshua S.......................................45

O O’Brien, Justin..............................................41 O’Connell, Lisa.............................................32 Odenbaugh, Jay...........................................39 Orchard, Andy................................................9 Orientalism and Literature............................35 Origins of the English Marriage Plot, The.......32 Orr, Bridget....................................................7 Ortolano, Guy...............................................11 Osseo-Asare, Abena Dove.............................16 Otsuka, Jun..................................................39 Otte, T. G......................................................25 Outram, Alan K...............................................1

P Pache, Corinne Ondine...................................4 Pachuau, Joy L. K..........................................17 Paleoaesthetics and the Practice of Paleontology.............................................39 Papal Jurisprudence c.400............................11 Parkhouse, Sarah..........................................43 Participation in God......................................43 Pasts of Roman Anatolia, The..........................1 Paul, Tawny..................................................10 Peacock, A.C.S..............................................21 Peirano Garrison, Irene...................................4 Pereboom, Derk...........................................41 Performances at Court in the Age of Shakespeare..............................................31 Persuasion, Rhetoric and Roman Poetry..........4 Physics and Psychics.....................................23 Piccini, Jon...................................................22 Piscatori, James............................................20 Plagiarizing the Victorian Novel....................33 Political Philosophy of Refuge, The................40 Politics and Violence in Burundi....................16 Politics of Chemistry, The..............................23 Politics of Heritage in Indonesia, The.............18 Posy, Carl.....................................................42 Poverty of Disaster, The.................................10 Power and the Presidency in Kenya...............17 Practice of Argumentation, The.....................40 Prak, Maarten..............................................24 Priestland, J..................................................20 Problem of Evil, The......................................46 Protestant Nationalists in Ireland, 1900–1923...............................................11

Q Quest for Security, The..................................11

R Raymond Aron and Liberal Thought in the Twentieth Century.....................................27 Rebeggiani, Stefano.......................................3 Rebel and the Imam in Early Islam, The.........20 Rechter, Ofra................................................42 Records of Jordan, 1919–1965.....................20 Rediscovering Stanislavsky..............................7 Religious Culture and Violence in Traditional China.......................................46 Religious Fictionalism...................................45 Renaissance of Violence, A............................12 Restoration Transposed, The..........................31 Reversing Sail...............................................17 Reversing the Colonial Gaze.........................21 Revising the Eighteenth-Century Novel.........32 Revival of Islamic Rationalism, The................45 Revolutionary Thought after the Paris Commune, 1871–1885.............................26 Rhetoric of Free Speech in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages, The..................11 Ricci, Ronit...................................................18 Richard, Yann...............................................20 Richards, Michael...........................................1 Right to Rule and the Rights of Women, The...9 Rise of Labour and the Fall of Empire, The.....25 Ritchie, Sarah Lane.......................................43 Roberts, Edward...........................................11 Robins, Philip...............................................21 Robinson, David M.......................................19 Røge, Pernille.........................................13, 26 Rojas, Felipe...................................................1

Role of Mathematics in Evolutionary Theory, The................................................39 Rop, Jeffrey....................................................7 Rose, Colin...................................................12 Rossi, Philip J................................................40 Rowe, Erin Kathleen.....................................12 Royal College of Music and its Contexts, The.36 Rupprecht, Tobias.........................................14 Ruse, Michael.........................................39, 46 Russell, Aidan...............................................16

S Sabatini, Serena.............................................1 Sacred Fount, The.........................................34 Sacred Heritage..............................................2 Saikal, Amin.................................................20 Scale, Space and Canon in Ancient Literary Culture........................................................4 Schaefer, Donovan O.....................................26 Schaefer, Heike.............................................28 Schwartz, Laura............................................10 Scientific Knowledge and the Deep Past........40 Scott, Derek B.........................................36, 37 Second Thoughts and the Epistemological Enterprise..................................................41 Sethi, Devika................................................17 Shakespeare on Screen: King Lear.................32 Shakespeare Survey 72.................................32 Shakespeare’s Englishes...............................31 Shanghai.....................................................18 Shaw, Elizabeth............................................41 Shaw, Wendy M. K.......................................21 Sheehan-Dean, Aaron.................................8, 9 Sherman, Donovan.......................................32 Shevtsova, Maria............................................7 Singh, Tripurdaman.......................................18 Singing to the Lyre in Renaissance Italy.........37 Smith, Craig.................................................42 Smith, Emma................................................32 Smith, Hayden R.............................................8 Smith, James................................................34 Social and Economic History of the Theatre to 300 BC, A...................................6 Social Sustainability, Past and Future............25 Sophocles......................................................5 Spaskovska, Ljubica......................................14 Spicer, Andrew.............................................44 Steiner, Emily................................................30 Stewart, Iain.................................................27 Stillwell, John...............................................40 Stoicism as Performance in Much Ado about Nothing...........................................32 Straehle, Christine........................................40 Student Revolt in 1968.................................14 Subsistence and Society in Prehistory..............1 Summerlin, Danica.......................................12 Sutcliffe, W. Dean.........................................37 Sylvia Plath in Context..................................35

T Tahkokallio, Jaakko.......................................29 Tallet, Gaëlle..................................................6 Tanakh Epistemology....................................45 Tanovi , Sabina.............................................14 Taub, Liba....................................................22 Technology and Society................................22 ter Haar, Barend...........................................46 Tether, Leah..................................................29 Textile Revolution in Bronze Age Europe, The..1 Thatcher’s Progress......................................11

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49


Running head left Index

Thomas Pynchon in Context..........................28 Thomson, Iain D...........................................42 Toner, Anne..................................................33 Tooley, Michael............................................46 Transitions to Capitalism in Early Modern Europe......................................................13 Trippett, David........................................36, 38 Trust, Accountability and Purpose.................41 Tsafrir, Nurit.................................................21 Tschurenev, Jana..........................................18 Tudeau-Clayton, Margaret............................31 Tuite, Clara...................................................33 Tumblin, Jesse..............................................11 Turner, Derek D.............................................39 Twiss, Katheryn C...........................................2 Tyler, Elizabeth M.........................................30

50

V van der Leeuw, Sander.................................25 Van Nuffelen, Peter........................................7 van Renswoude, Irene..................................11 Venantius Fortunatus: Vita Sancti Martini Prologue and Books I–II...............................4 Vicens, Leigh C.............................................46 Vienne-Guerrin, Nathalie..............................32 Violence and the Caste War of Yucatán.........16 Virgil’s Fourth Eclogue in the Italian Renaissance................................................3

W Walker, John.................................................35 Wallace Stevens and the Poetics of Modernist Autonomy.................................27 Wallis, Patrick...............................................24 Walton, Benjamin.........................................38 War over Words...........................................17 Warner, Lawrence.........................................30 Weir, David...................................................29 Weis, Robert.................................................16 Wellington, Jennifer......................................23 What is ‘Islamic’ Art?....................................21 Whipple Museum of the History of Science, The...............................................22 Whittingham, Daniel....................................23 Wilkins, Kim.................................................30 Willmoth, Frances.........................................22 Wilson, Blake...............................................37 Wilson, Peter..................................................6 Women and Embodied Mythmaking in Irish Theatre................................................7 Work and the Reader in Literary Studies, The.29 Worlds of the Indian Ocean, The...................24 Wortley, John...............................................44 Wrathall, Mark A..........................................39 Wright, David C. H........................................36 Wright, Gillian..............................................31 Wyles, Rosie...................................................3 Wynne, J. P. F..................................................6

Y Yoder, Douglas.............................................45 Young Adult Fantasy Fiction..........................30

Z Zarefsky, David.............................................40 Zhao, Xiaojian..............................................19 Zolli, Daniel M................................................3


Notes

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