History 2014

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History 2014 www.cambridge.org/history2014


Welcome to the History books catalogue 2014. Here you will find new and forthcoming titles, representing the highest level of academic research from renowned authors. Our highlights this year include a range of books published to mark the centenary of the First World War, including the three-volume Cambridge History of the First World War. Other highlights include new editions of The Concise History of Greece and The Concise History of France and The Past is a Foreign Country – Revisited by David Lowenthal. Our publications are available in a variety of formats, including ebooks and print, as well as online collections for institutional purchase via our publishing service University Publishing Online, which incorporates the Cambridge Books Online platform. We also publish a range of leading History journals, includingThe Historical Journal and The Journal of Global History (see back inside page for more information). You can recommend our books, online collections and journals to your librarian by filling out the form at the back of this catalogue. To see more book listings, product information, preview extracts and reviews, and to find out which conferences we are attending, you can find us online at www.cambridge.org/History2014. You can also keep up to date with the latest news and author views from our academic blog at www.cambridgeblog.org/category/history-classics/ We hope that you enjoy reading about our latest publications. For queries, suggestions or proposals, you can find a list of useful contacts at the back of this catalogue.

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Contents History of Britain before 1066 1 History of Britain 1066 – 1450 1 1 History of Britain after 1450 20C history of Britain 4 Early republic and antebellum history 4 History of native American peoples 6 20C American history 6 American history after 1945 8 American history – 1861–1900 8 Latin American history 9 American history (general) 10 European history – 450–1000 11 13 European history – 1000–1450 European history after 1450 15 17 20C European history Russian, East European history 20 21 European history (general) History (general) before 1500 22 22 History (general) after 1500 20C history (general) 24 History after 1945 (general) 25 25 African history South Asian history 27 28 South-East Asian history East Asian history 29 Middle East history 31 Australian history 34 History (general), world history 35 History of medicine 36 History of science and technology 36 Military history 37 Economic history 40 Global history 43 Diplomatic, international history 44 Social, population history 45 Historical theory, historical method and historiography 45 History of ideas and intellectual history 45 Information on related journals Inside back cover

see page 21

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The Cambridge History of the First World War Edited by Jay Winter A major new three-volume reference work, The Cambridge History of the First World is the first comprehensive, transnational history of the Great War. • Transcends European boundaries to provide a truly global account of the military, political, social and cultural aspects of the conflict • Written by a team of leading international historians to provide the most authoritative account of the Great War to date

To mark the centenary of the First World War, Cambridge University Press will publish major new accounts of the performance of British, American, French, Italian, German and Habsburg armies in the Great war of 1914–1918. Setting military events in a broad context, leading military historians analyse every aspect of war from wartime strategy to mutinies and weapon development on the home front.

Find out more at:

www.cambridge.org/WWI


History of Britain before 1066 / History of Britain 1066 – 1450 / History of Britain after 1450

History of Britain before 1066

History of Britain 1066 – 1450

Anglo-Saxon England

Richard II and the Rebel Earl

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sources but also previously neglected official records. Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 93

2013 228 x 152 mm 384pp 3 maps 978-1-107-00726-0 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

Volume 41 Edited by Malcolm Godden University of Oxford

and Simon Keynes University of Cambridge

The forty-first volume of Anglo-Saxon England ranges from the seventh century to the eleventh, from Old English and Insular Latin literature to monetary history, ecclesiastical history, manuscript studies, sculpture, and cookery. Collectively, the articles represent the vitality of Anglo-Saxon studies worldwide. Each article is preceded by a short abstract.

A. K. Gundy University of Cambridge

The reign of Richard II has long been subject to intense debate. This new interpretation of the politics of the late-fourteenth century offers an indepth survey of Richard’s reign from the perspective of one of the leading nobles who came to oppose him, Thomas Beauchamp, the Earl of Warwick. Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series

2013 228 x 152 mm 307pp 5 b/w illus. 978-0-521-83754-5 Hardback £65.00

Anglo-Saxon England, 41

For all formats available, see

2013 228 x 152 mm 425pp 978-1-107-04693-1 Hardback £90.00

www.cambridge.org/9780521837545

For all formats available, see

Nobility and Kingship in Medieval England

www.cambridge.org/9781107046931

Kingship and Consent in Anglo-Saxon England, 871–978 Assemblies and the State in the Early Middle Ages Levi Roach University of Exeter

In the first dedicated treatment of Anglo-Saxon assembly politics since the 1950s, Roach takes into account recent discussions of continental rulership in the early Middle Ages. He investigates the constitutional aspects of assemblies and the symbolic and representational nature of these gatherings, and challenges existing models of the late Anglo-Saxon state. Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 92

2013 228 x 152 mm 314pp 5 maps 4 tables 978-1-107-03653-6 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107036536

The Earls and Edward I, 1272– 1307 Andrew M. Spencer University of Cambridge

Paying particular reference to the Earls of Lancaster, Gloucester, Lincoln, Cornwall, Warenne and Hereford, Nobility and Kingship in Medieval England offers a detailed analysis of the political, governmental, social and military lives of the earls during the reign of Edward I and evaluates their position in thirteenth-century politics. Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 91

2013 228 x 152 mm 317pp 2 maps 13 tables 978-1-107-02675-9 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107026759

English Identity and Political Culture in the Fourteenth Century Andrea Ruddick University of Cambridge

This wide-ranging new analysis of national sentiment and national identity in fourteenth-century England places this important but sometimes controversial topic in the context of late medieval English political culture for the first time, using not only familiar literary

www.cambridge.org/9781107007260

History of Britain after 1450 Elizabeth I and Ireland Edited by Brendan Kane University of Connecticut

and Valerie McGowan-Doyle Kent State University, Ohio

Elizabeth I’s reign represented a crucial moment in the extension of Tudor centralisation and imperial expansion over Ireland. This multidisciplinary collection brings together groundbreaking scholarly work and uses English and Gaelic sources, offering the first sustained consideration of vital yet understudied questions key to understanding relations between the realms. 2014 228 x 152 mm 320pp 978-1-107-04087-8 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication May 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107040878

Legacies of British Slave-ownership Colonial Slavery and the Formation of Victorian Britain Catherine Hall University College London

Keith McClelland University College London

Nick Draper University College London

Kate Donington University College London

and Rachel Lang University College London

This volume re-inscribes slave-ownership in the history of nineteenth century Britain, highlighting the crucial roles played by slave-owners and their immediate families in the formation of Victorian economy and society. It combines approaches from social, cultural, political and economic history to rethink the relationship between metropolitan Britain and colonial slavery. 2014 228 x 152 mm 300pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-107-04005-2 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication May 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107040052

eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/ebookstore


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History of Britain after 1450 An Everyday Life of the English Working Class Work, Self and Sociability in the Early Nineteenth Century Carolyn Steedman University of Warwick

A unique and fascinating account of English working-class life at the turn of the nineteenth century. Through Joseph Woolley and his thoughts on reading and drinking, sex, the law and social relations, leading historian Carolyn Steedman challenges traditional views of how the working man understood himself and society around him. ‘A welcome addition to Carolyn Steedman’s impressive body of work. As ever enlivened by the author’s distinctive voice, this thoughtprovoking account continues her critical dialogue with classic ways of imagining the history of the English working class during the early industrial era.’ Joanna Innes, University of Oxford 2013 228 x 152 mm 350pp 8 b/w illus. 2 tables 978-1-107-04621-4 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-67029-7 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107046214

The Material Culture of the Jacobites Neil Guthrie

An original and thought-provoking study of the material objects produced, acquired and treasured by those who worked for the restoration of the Stuart monarchy, or at least felt strong nostalgia for its passing, in the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. ‘Neil Guthrie presents an impressive range of subject matter and a wealth of learning in this original, erudite, and perceptive book. He is not only well-versed in eighteenth-century history and literature, but also knows the relevant fields of law – necessary for an understanding of the limited room for manoeuvre available to Jacobites – and Latinity, the medium for so many tags, allusions and inscriptions in Jacobite literature.’ Colin Kidd, University of Glasgow 2013 247 x 174 mm 288pp 24 b/w illus. 978-1-107-04133-2 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107041332

Key Reference

The Stationers’ Company and the Printers of London, 1501–1557 Peter W. M. Blayney

This major, revisionist reference work explains for the first time how the Stationers’ Company acquired both a charter and a nationwide monopoly of printing. In the most detailed and comprehensive investigation of the London book trade in any period, Peter Blayney systematically documents the story from 1501, when printing first established permanent roots inside the City boundaries, until the Stationers’ Company was incorporated by royal charter in 1557. Having exhaustively reexamined original sources and scoured numerous archives unexplored by others in the field, Blayney radically revises accepted beliefs about such matters as the scale of native production versus importation, privileges and patents, and the regulation of printing by the Church, Crown and City. His persistent focus on individuals – most notably the families, rivals and successors of Richard Pynson, John Rastell and Robert Redman – keeps this study firmly grounded in the vivid lives and careers of early Tudor Londoners. ‘Blayney’s book is quite an extraordinary feat of scholarship. Any future writing about this period by book historians, bibliographers, students of censorship and of press control, and literary or textual scholars will have to use his book as a starting point.’ John Barnard, University of Leeds 2013 228 x 152 mm 1300pp 38 b/w illus. 4 maps 978-1-107-03501-0 2 Volume Set £150.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107035010

liberty, criminal justice, private law (including contract, tort and restitution) and legal history in general. An introduction traces the development of some of the research represented by the papers, and cross-references and new endnotes have been added. A full bibliography of the author’s works is also included. 2013 228 x 152 mm 1664pp 50 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02043-6 3 Volume Set £250.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107020436

Clothing the Poor in NineteenthCentury England Vivienne Richmond Goldsmiths, University of London

In this pioneering study Vivienne Richmond reveals the importance of dress to the nineteenth-century English poor, who valued clothing not only for its practical utility, but also as a central element in the creation and assertion of collective and individual identities. ‘Vivienne Richmond demonstrates the power of clothing in the lives of the working and indigent poor of nineteenth-century England: children, women and men. This is an innovative exploration of clothing cultures, both those crafted by individuals and those imposed by state and institutional authorities. Subtle and insightful, Richmond brings new perspectives to this important topic.’ Beverly Lemire, University of Alberta 2013 228 x 152 mm 355pp 14 b/w illus. 2 tables 978-1-107-04227-8 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107042278

Britain and the Dutch Revolt 1560–1700 Hugh Dunthorne University of Wales, Swansea

Key Reference

Collected Papers on English Legal History John Baker University of Cambridge

Over the last forty years, Sir John Baker has written on most aspects of English legal history, and this collection of his writings includes many papers that have been widely cited. Providing points of reference and foundations for further research, the papers cover the legal profession, the inns of court and chancery, legal education, legal institutions, legal literature, legal antiquities, public law and individual

The Dutch revolt against Spain in the sixteenth century and Britain’s civil wars in the seventeenth were the first major challenges to royal authority in modern times. Drawing on the pamphlet literature of both upheavals, this book reveals the Netherlands’ lasting impact on Britain’s commercial, religious and political culture. ‘Grounded in an impressive array of primary sources, meticulously researched, and elegantly written, Britain and the Dutch Revolt, 1560–1700 explores the lasting impact of the Dutch Revolt (and of the state, economy, society, and culture that resulted from it) on the inhabitants


History of Britain after 1450 and the institutions of the British Isles. Indispensable reading for all those interested in early modern Britain, the Dutch revolt and the Dutch Golden Age.’ Henk van Nierop, University of Amsterdam

word to make meaning from their experience. ‘… not only important but also engaging …’ Times Higher Education

2013 228 x 152 mm 287pp 17 b/w illus. 2 maps 7 tables 978-0-521-83747-7 Hardback £60.00

2013 228 x 152 mm 241pp 8 b/w illus. 978-1-107-04030-4 Hardback £55.00

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107040304

www.cambridge.org/9780521837477

British Political Culture and the Idea of ‘Public Opinion’, 1867–1914 James Thompson University of Bristol

‘Public opinion’ is a key idea in modern British history. This book, for the first time, provides a comprehensive history of the concept. It reveals the prevalence of an active, deliberative conception of ‘public opinion’ in British politics and sheds new light on the character of Britain’s liberal political culture.

For all formats available, see

Charles I and the Aristocracy, 1625–1642 Richard Cust University of Birmingham

This new perspective on the troubled relationship between Charles I and the English aristocracy explores the effectiveness of Charles’ efforts to cultivate and strengthen the peerage. It analyses how and why most peers supported the King at the outbreak of civil war, challenging notions of aristocratic decline and ‘noble revolt’. 2013 228 x 152 mm 363pp 6 b/w illus. 2 tables 978-1-107-00990-5 Hardback £65.00

For all formats available, see

For all formats available, see

The Memory of the People Custom and Popular Senses of the Past in Early Modern England Andy Wood University of Durham

This is a pioneering account of the intimate connection between landscape, place and identity in early modern England and of how ordinary people ordered their world. Andy Wood charts how custom and popular memory generated a usable past that legitimated claims to rights, space and resources in the present. 2013 228 x 152 mm 408pp 3 b/w illus. 978-0-521-89610-8 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-72067-0 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521896108

The Rise of Prison Literature in the Sixteenth Century Ruth Ahnert Queen Mary, University of London

The first major study of prison literature dating from the early modern period, this book shows how the religious and political instability of the Tudor reigns provided conditions for prison literature to thrive. Ahnert demonstrates how prisoners used the power of the written

by a website hosting forty-eight specially commissioned recordings by the Dufay Collective. Review of the hardback: ‘A real ear-opener of a book. Chris Marsh’s wonderfully engaging panorama of the musical culture of early modern England reconnects us to a vital lost dimension of lived experience. A superb achievement.’ Peter Marshall, University of Warwick

2013 228 x 152 mm 299pp 978-1-107-02679-7 Hardback £65.00 www.cambridge.org/9781107026797

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www.cambridge.org/9781107009905

Evaluating Empire and Confronting Colonialism in EighteenthCentury Britain Jack P. Greene

2013 247 x 174 mm 620pp 58 b/w illus. 978-1-107-61024-8 Paperback £24.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107610248

The State of Freedom A Social History of the British State since 1800 Patrick Joyce University of Edinburgh

What is the state? The State of Freedom offers an important new take on this classic question by exploring what exactly the state did and how it worked. Patrick Joyce asks us to re-examine the ordinary things of the British state and the kinds of people who ran it. ‘[An] acute analysis of the state we’re in.’ Morning Star 2013 228 x 152 mm 387pp 27 b/w illus. 978-1-107-00710-9 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-69455-2 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107007109

The Johns Hopkins University

This book analyzes how Britons celebrated and critiqued their empire during the short eighteenth century, from about 1730 to 1790. It focuses on the emergence of an early awareness of the undesirable effects of British colonialism on both overseas Britons and subaltern people in the British Empire, whether in India, the Americas, Africa or Ireland. 2013 234 x 156 mm 403pp 978-1-107-03055-8 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-68298-6 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107030558

New in Paperback

Music and Society in Early Modern England Christopher Marsh

Princely Education in SixteenthCentury Britain Aysha Pollnitz Rice University, Houston

Liberal education transformed the political and religious culture of early modern Britain. Rather than pursue vainglorious warfare, humanists taught monarchs, including Henry VIII, Elizabeth I, James VI, and Charles I, to wield their pens like swords to extend their imperial authority over church and state. Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History

2014 228 x 152 mm 300pp 978-1-107-03952-0 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication June 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107039520

Queen’s University Belfast

A comprehensive survey of English popular music during the early modern period including musicians, the power of music, broadside ballads, dancing, psalm-singing and bell-ringing. The book is lavishly illustrated and is accompanied

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History of Britain after 1450 / 20C history of Britain / Early republic and antebellum history Print and Public Politics in the English Revolution Jason Peacey University College London

Jason Peacey’s study reassesses the communications revolution of the seventeenth century, demonstrating how new media – from ballads to pamphlets and newspapers – transformed the public’s ability to understand and take part in national political life. This ultimately involved experienceled attempts to rethink the nature of representation and accountability. Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History

2013 228 x 152 mm 464pp 978-1-107-04442-5 Hardback £70.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107044425

Transatlantic Abolitionism in the Age of Revolution An International History of Antislavery, c.1787–1820 J. R. Oldfield Wilberforce Professor of Slavery and Emancipation, University of Hull

Taking a fresh look at anti-slavery debates in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, this book uncovers the structure, dynamics and flexibility of transatlantic abolitionism during the Age of Revolution. It reframes the abolition movement as a broad international network of activists across metropolitan centres and remote outposts. Critical Perspectives on Empire

2013 228 x 152 mm 292pp 10 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03076-3 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107030763

as well as how they influenced broader political developments. ‘Based on extensive archival research, Irish Nationalist Women, 1900–1918 effectively reassesses the significance and diversity of female constitutional and radical nationalism. Set against the backdrop of one of the most pivotal periods in Ireland’s modern history, it provides new insights into women’s politicking before they possessed the right to vote and stand as MPs.’ Diane Urquhart, University of Liverpool 2013 228 x 152 mm 320pp 978-1-107-04774-7 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107047747

Enoch Powell and the Making of Postcolonial Britain Camilla Schofield University of East Anglia

In this radically revisionist reading of the life and political career of Enoch Powell, Camilla Schofield shows how Powell and his supporters illuminate the complex relationship between British social democracy, racism and the domestic politics of imperial decline in post-war Britain. ‘Just when one thinks Enoch Powell lies dead and buried, like a traumatic memory back he comes, hitting the headlines and vibrating across the airwaves. In poised, incisive prose Camilla Schofield explains why this is so. Drawing on exemplary research she places Powell back in the history which made him.’ Bill Schwarz, Queen Mary, University of London 2013 228 x 152 mm 381pp 978-1-107-00794-9 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

20C history of Britain

www.cambridge.org/9781107007949

The Short Story and the First World War Ann-Marie Einhaus

Irish Nationalist Women, 1900–1918 Senia Pašeta University of Oxford

This is a major new history of the experiences and activities of Irish nationalist women in the early twentieth century. Using memoirs, reminiscences, letters and diaries, Senia Paseta reveals how Irish women formed nationalist, cultural and feminist groups of their own

Northumbria University, Newcastle

Using a corpus of several hundred short stories that have not hitherto undergone any systematic critical analysis, this study challenges deeply embedded cultural conceptions about the literature of the First World War. 2013 228 x 152 mm 226pp 978-1-107-03843-1 Hardback £55.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107038431

The War Inside Psychoanalysis, Total War, and the Making of the Democratic Self in Postwar Britain Michal Shapira Tel-Aviv University

This groundbreaking study reveals how British psychoanalysis shaped democracy, childhood and the family during and after the Second World War. It follows the work of psychoanalysts in war nurseries, juvenile courts, state committees and children’s hospitals, showing how experts informed broad social questions in an age of mass violence. Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare, 38

2013 228 x 152 mm 284pp 14 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03513-3 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107035133

Early republic and antebellum history Gender and Race in Antebellum Popular Culture Sarah N. Roth Widener University, Pennsylvania

In the decades leading to the Civil War, popular conceptions of African American men shifted dramatically from the savage slave of 1830s’ novels to the less-threatening humble black martyr of the 1850s. This book looks at how white women, as creators and consumers of popular culture media, played a pivotal role in this demasculinization of black men during the antebellum period. 2014 228 x 152 mm 288pp 14 b/w illus. 978-1-107-04368-8 Hardback c. £65.00 Publication July 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107043688

Slavery, Race, and Conquest in the Tropics Lincoln, Douglas, and the Future of Latin America Robert E. May Purdue University, Indiana

This book reinterprets the causes of the American Civil War. Using Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas’s famed rivalry as a prism, Robert E. May shows that when Lincoln and fellow Republicans opposed slavery in the West, they did so partly because of evidence that slaveholders planned


Early republic and antebellum history to make Cuba, Mexico, and Central America into new slave states. ‘It is a truism that the issue of slavery’s expansion triggered secession and the Civil War. But as Robert May shows in this important study, it was the possible expansion of slavery southward more than the prospect of slavery in Kansas or other Western territories that provoked passionate controversy. This welcome book gives due weight to pro-Cuban annexationists and Central-American filibusters in the coming of war.’ James M. McPherson, Princeton University 2013 228 x 152 mm 304pp 11 b/w illus. 4 maps 978-0-521-76383-7 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-13252-7 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

Free Trade and Sailors’ Rights in the War of 1812 Paul A. Gilje University of Oklahoma

This book examines the political slogan ‘free trade and sailors rights’ and traces its sources to eighteenth-century intellectual thought and Americans’ previous experience with impressment into the British navy. The book details the diplomatic history surrounding the War of 1812 and provides a brief narrative of the conflict itself. 2013 234 x 156 mm 438pp 24 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02508-0 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-60782-8 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107025080

www.cambridge.org/9780521763837

The Many Panics of 1837 People, Politics, and the Creation of a Transatlantic Financial Crisis Jessica M. Lepler University of New Hampshire

This riveting transatlantic cultural history, based on archival research on two continents, reveals how people transformed their experiences of financial crisis into the ‘Panic of 1837’, a single event that would serve as a turning point in American history and an early inspiration for business cycle theory. ‘Finally a historian who understands that panics were caused by people panicking … This masterful telling of a complex tale – Dickensian in its intricacy – walks the reader through a series of moments in which individuals had no choice but to take a position that more often than not guaranteed the frightening outcome they sought to avoid. By rejecting the naturalization of economic theory, Jessica Lepler has vividly captured the world as it must have looked to the governors of the Bank of England, to the bill brokers and cotton factors of New Orleans, to Nicholas Biddle and poor old Philip Hone. The brutal market ‘corrections’ of 1837 (and after) stood as the defining events of the lives of this generation of Americans.’ John Lauritz Larson, Purdue University 2013 228 x 152 mm 272pp 12 b/w illus. 1 map 978-0-521-11653-4 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-64086-3 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

The Cambridge Companion to American Methodism Edited by Jason E. Vickers United Theological Seminary, Ohio

This Cambridge Companion offers a comprehensive introduction to various forms of American Methodism. Written from various disciplinary perspectives, this volume explores the beliefs and practices around which the lives of American Methodist churches have revolved, as well as the ways in which Methodism has both adapted to and shaped American culture. ‘Through wise selection of themes, and broad recruitment of contributors, Vickers has produced the best singlevolume introduction available to the family of Methodist churches in North America. The volume traces both the growth of the movement transplanted from England and its proliferation into multiple strands – ranging from the earliest distinct African-American churches, through the Holinessfocused churches, and beyond. Highly recommended!’ Randy L. Maddox, Duke Divinity School Cambridge Companions to Religion

2013 228 x 152 mm 400pp 15 b/w illus. 978-1-107-00834-2 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-40105-1 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107008342

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Family, Law, and Inheritance in America A Social and Legal History of Nineteenth-Century Kentucky Yvonne Pitts Purdue University, Indiana

Explores nineteenth-century inheritance practices by focusing on testamentary capacity trials in Kentucky in which disinherited family members challenged relatives’ wills, claiming the testator lacked the capacity required to write a valid will. By anchoring the study in the history of local communities and the texts of elite jurists, Pitts demonstrates that ‘capacity’ was a term laden with legal meaning and competing communal values. ‘In the skilful hands of Yvonne Pitts, the law of inheritance becomes a lens through which to consider broader discussions over the fraught relationships among individuals, their families, their communities, and the shape of American society more generally in the nineteenth century. Highly readable and deeply researched, the book highlights the contingencies of social change in this period as people grappled with the implications of emancipation, economic change, and the changing role of women. It also recasts our understanding of people’s relationship to the law, showing how the emotions that drove family conflicts had as much to do in defining the law as the law did in resolving their all-toohuman disputes.’ Laura F. Edwards, Duke University Cambridge Historical Studies in American Law and Society

2013 228 x 152 mm 213pp 2 b/w illus. 1 map 11 tables 978-1-107-03550-8 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107035508

Masters, Slaves, and Exchange Power’s Purchase in the Old South Kathleen M. Hilliard Iowa State University

This book examines the political economy of the master-slave relationship viewed through the lens of consumption and market exchange. What did it mean when human chattel bought commodities, ‘stole’ property, or gave and received gifts? Forgotten exchanges, this study argues, measured the deepest questions of worth and

www.cambridge.org/9780521116534

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Early republic and antebellum history / History of native American peoples / 20C American history value, shaping an enduring struggle for power between slaves and masters. Advance praise: ‘Kathleen Hilliard has written an extraordinary book. In it, she breaks new ground in her investigation of black and white relationships in the antebellum South, and on the internal slave economy, illicit trade, and consumerism. The book is grounded in the careful exploration of excellent sources, especially archival primary materials. There is no question that this book is going to shake up slavery studies drastically. Although the internal economy of slavery has been studied for nearly thirty years now, we’ve never had a study like this.’ Orville Vernon Burton, Creativity Professor of Humanities, Clemson University, and Emeritus University Distinguished Teacher/Scholar, University of Illinois Cambridge Studies on the American South

2014 228 x 152 mm 240pp 6 b/w illus. 12 tables 978-1-107-04646-7 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-63664-4 Paperback £18.99 Publication January 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107046467

Thomas Jefferson’s Ethics and the Politics of Human Progress The Morality of a Slaveholder Ari Helo University of Oulu

Could Jefferson claim any consistency in his advocacy of democracy and the rights of man while remaining one of the largest slaveholders in Virginia? This extensive study of Jefferson’s intellectual outlook suggests that, once we fully acknowledge the premises of his ethical thought and his now outdated scientific views, he could. Cambridge Studies on the American South

2014 234 x 156 mm 280pp 978-1-107-04078-6 Hardback £55.00 Publication January 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107040786

The Merchants’ Capital New Orleans and the Political Economy of the NineteenthCentury South Scott P. Marler University of Memphis

New Orleans, the nineteenth-century South’s only true metropolis, originally derived its prosperity as the chief export point for slave-produced commodities, most notably cotton. This book focuses on the city’s merchants and how their conservative investment mentalities contributed to New Orleans’ unusually

rapid economic downfall during and after the Civil War. Cambridge Studies on the American South

2013 228 x 152 mm 327pp 7 b/w illus. 14 tables 978-0-521-89764-8 Hardback £60.00

concepts for non-specialists. It is as fine a piece of scholarship as any I have ever seen.’ Robbie Ethridge, University of Mississippi

For all formats available, see

2013 228 x 152 mm 316pp 22 b/w illus. 21 maps 2 tables 978-1-107-02213-3 Hardback £60.00

www.cambridge.org/9780521897648

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107022133

Great Lakes Creoles A French-Indian Community on the Northern Borderlands, Prairie du Chien, 1750–1860 Lucy Murphy Ohio State University

A case study of one of America’s many multi-ethnic border communities, Great Lakes Creoles builds upon recent research on gender, race, ethnicity, and politics as it examines the ways that old fur trade families experienced and responded to the colonialism of United States expansion. Studies in North American Indian History

2014 228 x 152 mm 228pp 25 b/w illus. 6 maps 7 tables 978-1-107-05286-4 Hardback c. £60.00 978-1-107-67474-5 Paperback c. £18.00 Publication August 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107052864

History of native American peoples Chiefdoms, Collapse, and Coalescence in the Early American South Robin Beck University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Foreword by Charles M. Hudson University of Georgia

Robin Beck uses a range of archaeological and documentary evidence to offer a new perspective on how Indian nations in the early American South rebuilt their political and social organizations from the ruins of the precolonial world. It is the first book to explain how and why this transformation unfolded in the specific way that it did. ‘Beck not only opens up the Mississippian world of the sixteenth century but also the various historical forces that worked to transform that world during the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. He writes with clarity, confidence, and authority and, without losing any of the power of the evidence or theory, he is careful to explain professional archaeological

20C American history Racial Science Anthropology, Culture, and the Construction of Race in America, 1900–1960 Tracy Teslow University of Cincinnati

This book explores how physical anthropologists struggled to understand variation in bodies and cultures in the twentieth century, how they represented race to professional and lay publics, and how their efforts contributed to an American formulation of race that has remained rooted in both bodies and cultures, as well as heredity and society. 2014 228 x 152 mm 423pp 39 b/w illus. 1 map 978-1-107-01173-1 Hardback c. £55.00 Publication April 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107011731

Disasters and the American State How Politicians, Bureaucrats, and the Public Prepare for the Unexpected Patrick S. Roberts Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

Politicians and bureaucrats claim credit for the federal government’s successes in preparing for and responding to disaster, and they are also blamed for failures outside of government’s control. Despite the rhetoric, however, the federal government’s increasingly bold claims and heightened public expectations are disproportionate to the ability of the federal government to prevent or reduce the damage caused by disaster. 2013 234 x 156 mm 240pp 17 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02586-8 Hardback £55.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107025868


20C American history Rethinking the 1950s How Anticommunism and the Cold War Made America Liberal Jennifer A. Delton Skidmore College, New York

Jennifer A. Delton argues that, far from subverting the New Deal state, anticommunism and the Cold War enabled, fulfilled, and even surpassed the New Deal’s reform agenda. Anticommunism solidified liberal political power and the Cold War justified liberal goals such as job creation, corporate regulation, economic redevelopment, and civil rights. ‘With this genuinely original, important, and provocative book, Jennifer Delton takes on the prevailing wisdom about the eclipse of the New Deal, the decline of liberalism, and the role of conservatism in the postwar era. The conservative 1950s were less conservative than we think, and liberalism proved more of a driving force than the dominant narratives would have us believe. Where many scholars hold the Cold War and anticommunism responsible for the smothering of dissent, she finds in both a critical rationale for domestic social reform. In challenging the consensus view on a variety of fronts, Delton forces us to think very differently about the postwar era.’ Eric Arnesen, George Washington University 2013 228 x 152 mm 204pp 978-1-107-01180-9 Hardback £50.00 978-1-107-62057-5 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107011809

Highlight

When Hollywood Was Right How Movie Stars, Studio Moguls, and Big Business Remade American Politics Donald T. Critchlow Arizona State University

Hollywood was not always a bastion of liberalism. Following World War II, an informal alliance of movie stars, studio moguls and Southern California business interests formed to revitalize a factionalized Republican Party. Coming together were stars such as John Wayne, Robert Taylor, George Murphy and many others, who joined studio heads Cecil B. DeMille, Louis B. Mayer, Walt Disney and Jack Warner to rebuild the Republican Party. They found support among a large group of business leaders who poured money and skills into this effort, which paid off with the election of George Murphy to the US Senate and of Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan to the highest office in the nation. This is an exciting

story based on extensive new research that will forever change how we think of Hollywood politics. ‘When Hollywood Was Right offers a lesson for today of how an embattled, factionalized Republican Party came together to elect a principled and pragmatic conservative, Ronald Reagan, to the presidency. Plus this is a damn good read.’ Barry Goldwater, Jr, former United States Congressman 2013 234 x 156 mm 240pp 16 b/w illus. 978-0-521-19918-6 Hardback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521199186

Antisemitism and the American Far Left Stephen H. Norwood University of Oklahoma

The first systematic study of the American far left’s role in propagating and combating antisemitism. This book covers Communists, Trotskyists, the New Left and its black nationalist allies, and the contemporary remnants of the New Left, analyzing the far left’s antipathy to Jewish culture and its occasional efforts to promote it. 2013 228 x 152 mm 324pp 20 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03601-7 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-65700-7 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107036017

7

American Labor and Economic Citizenship New Capitalism from World War I to the Great Depression Mark Hendrickson University of California, San Diego

In the 1920s, a diverse group of social investigators and policy makers addressed a range of long-standing and seemingly intractable problems, confident that the period provided a unique moment full of opportunities. Led by Herbert Hoover, the group came to understand that a new, fair and prosperous version of capitalism could be achieved through steady economic growth. ‘Mark Hendrickson has crafted an important narrative that explains how early twentieth-century American business leaders, social scientists, and political activists worked to regulate, stabilize, and strengthen a newly configured national economy. He demonstrates how their efforts were ironically paralleled by the emerging resistance of marginalized and underrepresented groups (women, African Americans, and Mexican Americans) to the worst excesses of an economic system that, while possessed of many virtues, also subsisted on inequality and injustice.’ Michael A. Bernstein, Tulane University 2013 228 x 152 mm 332pp 3 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02860-9 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

Contesting the Postwar City Working-Class and Growth Politics in 1940s Milwaukee Eric Fure-Slocum St Olaf College, Minnesota

Focusing on mid-century Milwaukee, Eric Fure-Slocum charts the remaking of political culture in the industrial city. Fure-Slocum shows how two contending visions of the 1940s city – working class politics and growth politics – fit together uneasily and were transformed amid a series of social and policy clashes. 2013 234 x 156 mm 408pp 23 b/w illus. 2 maps 17 tables 978-1-107-03635-2 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107036352

www.cambridge.org/9781107028609

A History of Prejudice Race, Caste, and Difference in India and the United States Gyanendra Pandey Emory University, Atlanta

Gyanendra Pandey compares the historical struggles of two geographically disparate populations – Indian Dalits (once known as Untouchables) and African Americans – to examine the multiple dimensions of prejudice in two leading democracies, revealing the contradictory history of promise and denial that is common to both the official narratives of these nations and the ideologies of many opposition movements. 2013 228 x 152 mm 258pp 9 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02900-2 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-60938-9 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107029002

eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/ebookstore


8

20C American history / American history after 1945 / American history – 1861 – 1900 Open Standards and the Digital Age History, Ideology, and Networks Andrew L. Russell Stevens Institute of Technology, New Jersey

How did the idea of openness become the defining principle for the twentyfirst-century Information Age? This book answers this question by looking at the history of information networks and paying close attention to the politics of standardization. Cambridge Studies in the Emergence of Global Enterprise

2014 228 x 152 mm 288pp 8 b/w illus. 3 tables 978-1-107-03919-3 Hardback c. £60.00 978-1-107-61204-4 Paperback c. £21.99 Publication March 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107039193

American history after 1945 America in the World The Historiography of American Foreign Relations since 1941 Second edition Edited by Frank Costigliola

administrations and assesses its effects on the ongoing redefinition of America’s international role in the post-Vietnam era. 2013 228 x 152 mm 270pp 18 b/w illus. 978-1-107-04108-0 Hardback £60.00 Publication December 2013 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107041080

The Politics of Prohibition

The Drug Wars in America, 1940–1973

American Governance and the Prohibition Party, 1869–1933 Lisa M. F. Andersen

Kathleen J. Frydl

The Julliard School, New York

The Drug Wars in America, 1940–1973 argues that the US government has clung to its militant drug war, despite its obvious failures, because effective control of illicit traffic and consumption were never the critical factors motivating its adoption in the first place.

This book draws on the history of America’s longest-living minor political party – the Prohibition Party – to illuminate how American politics came to exclude minor parties from governance. It looks at pressure groups and ballot reforms, which created a threshold for organization and maintenance that required extraordinary financial and personal resources from parties lacking in both.

‘… a sweeping, complex, and searching history of America’s drug wars. Kathleen J. Frydl’s sophisticated, ‘state-centered’, analysis helps us to understand in new ways the causes of the nation’s greatest social policy failure. A brave and provocative work.’ Gary Gerstle, James G. Stahlman Professor of American History, Vanderbilt University 2013 228 x 152 mm 456pp 9 b/w illus. 978-1-107-01390-2 Hardback £65.00 978-1-107-69700-3 Paperback £24.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107013902

University of Connecticut

and Michael J. Hogan University of Illinois, Springfield

This volume includes historiographical surveys of American foreign relations since 1941 by some of the country’s leading historians. The result is a comprehensive assessment of the historical literature on US foreign policy that highlights recent developments in the field. 2014 228 x 152 mm 384pp 978-1-107-00146-6 Hardback £60.00 978-0-521-17246-2 Paperback £22.99 Publication February 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107001466

The Transformation of American International Power in the 1970s Barbara Zanchetta The Finnish Institute of International Affairs, Helsinki

Barbara Zanchetta analyzes the evolution of American-Soviet relations during the 1970s, from the rise of détente during the Nixon administration to the policy’s crisis and fall during the final years of the Carter presidency. This study traces lines of continuity among the Nixon, Ford and Carter

American history – 1861 – 1900

Music and Protest in 1968 Edited by Beate Kutschke Universität Leipzig

and Barley Norton Goldsmiths, University of London

In fifteen case studies from Europe, the Americas, Africa and Asia, Music and Protest in 1968 presents new global perspectives on the relationship between music and socio-political protest. Chapters cover a wide range of musical styles and genres, including jazz, folk, pop, rock, early, avant-garde and experimental music. ‘… detailed and convincing.’ Times Literary Supplement

‘Lisa Andersen’s thoughtfully conceived and gracefully executed study adds to a growing body of historical analysis that explains how Americans’ political choices have become ever more restricted, while deliberation over policy has become less common and less inclusive. In addition, she shows why dedicated prohibitionists rejected the Eighteenth Amendment and elucidates the complex relationship between women activists and the first national party to declare for woman suffrage. The Politics of Prohibition draws cogent lessons for Americans today from a skilful anatomy of political failure.’ Jack Blocker, Professor Emeritus, University of Western Ontario, and Past President of the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 2013 228 x 152 mm 323pp 978-1-107-02937-8 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107029378

Western Union and the Creation of the American Corporate Order, 1845–1893

Music Since 1900

Joshua D. Wolff

2013 247 x 174 mm 340pp 5 b/w illus. 5 music examples 978-1-107-00732-1 Hardback £65.00

Columbia University, New York

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107007321

This work chronicles the rise of Western Union Telegraph from the early years of telecommunications to its apogee as the first corporation to monopolize an industry on a national scale. The battles over Western Union’s monopoly illuminate the fierce tensions over the rising power of corporations after the


American history – 1861 – 1900 / Latin American history Civil War and the reshaping of the American political economy. ‘Joshua Wolff presents a thoroughly researched, deftly argued, and gracefully written history of America’s first industrial monopoly. He demonstrates that the rise of Western Union cemented the corporate order that characterized economic life in the late nineteenth century and afterward. This book is indispensable to historians of American capitalism.’ David Hochfelder, University at Albany, State University of New York 2013 228 x 152 mm 318pp 978-1-107-01228-8 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107012288

Law’s History American Legal Thought and the Transatlantic Turn to History David M. Rabban University of Texas, Austin

This is a study of the central role of history in late nineteenth-century American legal thought. Unprecedented in its coverage and its innovative conclusions about major American legal thinkers from the Civil War to the present, the book combines transatlantic intellectual history, legal history, the history of legal thought, historiography, jurisprudence, constitutional theory and the history of higher education. ‘This is a pioneering study of American historical jurisprudence in the late nineteenth century. It is comprehensive, meticulous, and deeply learned. It is cosmopolitan, placing the Americans among their European predecessors and counterparts. And it is eye-opening: the standard picture of this era’s legal scholars as political reactionaries and abstract deductive ‘formalists’ cannot possibly survive this splendid and important book.’ Robert W. Gordon, Stanford Law School Cambridge Historical Studies in American Law and Society

2013 234 x 156 mm 577pp 21 b/w illus. 978-0-521-76191-8 Hardback £59.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521761918

Claiming the Union Citizenship in the Post-Civil War South Susanna Michele Lee North Carolina State University

This book examines Southerners’ claims to loyal citizenship in the reunited nation after the American Civil War. Southerners – male and female; elite and non-elite; white, black, and American Indian –

disagreed with the federal government over the obligations citizens owed to their nation and the obligations the nation owed to its citizens.

9

Latin American history

Cambridge Studies on the American South

2014 228 x 152 mm 210pp 9 b/w illus. 8 tables 978-1-107-01532-6 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication February 2014

The Economic and Social History of Brazil since 1889

For all formats available, see

Francisco Vidal Luna

www.cambridge.org/9781107015326

Universidade de São Paulo

and Herbert S. Klein

German Immigrants, Race, and Citizenship in the Civil War Era Alison Clark Efford Marquette University, Wisconsin

Alison Clark Efford’s study reframes Civil War-era history, arguing that the commitment of German Americans to African-American rights pivoted dramatically in 1870 in response to the Franco-Prussian War. This influential group re-evaluated the liberal nationalism underpinning African-American suffrage, influencing other white Northerners and shaping citizenship law. ‘A brilliant study in every respect, full of local texture, of importance for the whole story of a key period in US history, and of powerfully rendered transnational crosscurrents. Efford’s deep research establishes the dramatic connection of German Americans to freedom struggles in the 1850s and 1860s and to the retreat from such commitments in the waning of Reconstruction, convincingly connecting both with the changing history of the land that immigrants left.’ David Roediger, University of Illinois, and coauthor of The Production of Difference (2012)

Stanford University, California

This is the first complete economic and social history of Brazil in the modern period in any language. It provides a detailed analysis of the evolution of the Brazilian society and economy from the end of the empire in 1889 to the present day. 2014 228 x 152 mm 404pp 162 b/w illus. 6 maps 10 tables 978-1-107-04250-6 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-61658-5 Paperback £19.99 Publication April 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107042506

A Concise History of Brazil Second edition Boris Fausto Universidade de São Paulo

With contributions by Sergio Fausto Instituto Fernando Henrique Cardoso

Whereas the first edition of A Concise History of Brazil concluded with Brazil’s transition to democracy from the 1960s to 1980s, this new edition contains a chapter that covers the period from 1990 to the present, focusing on Brazil’s increasing global economic importance as well as its democratic development. Cambridge Concise Histories

2013 228 x 152 mm 274pp 978-1-107-03193-7 Hardback £60.00

2014 216 x 138 mm 400pp 978-1-107-03620-8 Hardback c. £45.00 978-1-107-63524-1 Paperback c. £15.99 Publication April 2014

For all formats available, see

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Publications of the German Historical Institute

www.cambridge.org/9781107031937

www.cambridge.org/9781107036208

Asian Slaves in Colonial Mexico From Chinos to Indians Tatiana Seijas Miami University

This book tracks the complex history of Asian slaves who journeyed to Mexico on the ships of the Manila Galleon in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Tatiana Seijas examines the implications of these individuals’ change in legal status from the bondage of

Visit our website at www.cambridge.org/knowledge


10

Latin American history / American history (general) chino slavery to the freedom of the Mexico City streets as liberated Indians. Cambridge Latin American Studies

of his cult and the events in Peru, the United States and Rome that led to his canonization in 1962.

field of ‘new’ diplomatic history going beyond politics into the popular arenas of gender and cultural studies.’ Günter Bischof, University of New Orleans

2014 228 x 152 mm 233pp 9 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-107-06312-9 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication June 2014

Cambridge Latin American Studies, 99

2014 228 x 152 mm 304pp 16 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03437-2 Hardback £60.00 Publication April 2014

2013 228 x 152 mm 301pp 978-1-107-00566-2 Hardback £65.00

For all formats available, see

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107005662

www.cambridge.org/9781107063129

The Economic History of Latin America since Independence Third edition Victor Bulmer-Thomas Florida International University

This study covers the economic history of Latin America from independence in the 1820s to the present, stressing the differences between Latin American countries while recognizing the external influences to which the whole region has been subject. This revised third edition contains a wealth of new material that draws on the new research in this area. Advance praise: ‘Bulmer-Thomas’s third update of The Economic History of Latin America since Independence is the essential, even canonical, guide for a region of the world long dominated by commodities and their export. Scrupulously detailed and balanced, the book outlines Latin America’s largely disappointing growth record without discounting the region’s economic variety, historical achievements, and social possibilities. Those hoping to re-energize the study of Latin American economic history can start reading here.’ Paul Gootenberg, SUNY Distinguished Professor of History and Sociology, Stony Brook University, and author of Andean Cocaine: The Making of a Global Drug (2009) Cambridge Latin American Studies, 98

2014 228 x 152 mm 604pp 18 b/w illus. 3 maps 76 tables 978-1-107-02690-2 Hardback £75.00 978-1-107-60855-9 Paperback £29.99 Publication February 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107026902

The Life and Afterlife of Fray Martín de Porres, Afroperuvian Saint Celia L. Cussen Universidad de Chile

This is the first scholarly study of the life and cult of the black Peruvian saint, Martín de Porres (1579–1639), the son of a Spaniard and a freed slavewoman from Panamá. It traces the evolution

www.cambridge.org/9781107034372

American history (general) America’s Dirty Wars Irregular Warfare from 1776 to the War on Terror Russell Crandall Davidson College, North Carolina

This book examines the long, complex experience of American involvement in irregular warfare. It begins with the American Revolution in 1776 and chronicles big and small irregular wars for the next two and a half centuries, ending with the recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.

For all formats available, see

The American State from the Civil War to the New Deal The Twilight of Constitutionalism and the Triumph of Progressivism Paul D. Moreno Hillsdale College, Michigan

The story of the breakdown of limited government in America and the rise of the federal state, from the Civil War to the New Deal, this book challenges the predominant academic view that celebrates the rise of government power and shows how the traditional ideas of the founders were undermined in the progressive and New Deal eras. 2013 234 x 156 mm 362pp 978-1-107-03295-8 Hardback £60.00 978-1-107-65501-0 Paperback £19.99

2014 228 x 152 mm 420pp 21 b/w illus. 22 maps 978-1-107-00313-2 Hardback c. £55.00 978-0-521-17662-0 Paperback c. £18.99 Publication May 2014

For all formats available, see

For all formats available, see

The New Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations

www.cambridge.org/9781107003132

U.S.-Habsburg Relations from 1815 to the Paris Peace Conference Sovereignty Transformed Nicole M. Phelps University of Vermont

This study chronicles U.S.-Habsburg relations from the early nineteenth century through the aftermath of World War I, demonstrating the influence of the Habsburg government on the United States’ integration into the nineteenthcentury great power system and the influence of American racial politics on the Habsburg empire’s conceptions of nationalism and democracy. ‘This is a bilateral history that goes way beyond the traditional themes of diplomatic relations, tackling difficult issues of race and migration, racialist influences on Wilson’s peacemaking strategy, and identity and changing notions of citizenship in the transatlantic transfer of migrants. Phelps’s work marks a significant expansion of traditional notions of bilateral relations between nations and makes her a trailblazer in the

www.cambridge.org/9781107032958

Key Reference

William Earl Weeks San Diego State University

Walter LaFeber Cornell University

Akira Iriye Harvard University

and Warren I. Cohen University of Maryland, Baltimore

Since their first publication, the four volumes of the Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations have served as the definitive source for the topic, from the colonial period to the Cold War. The New Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations

2013 228 x 152 mm 1264pp 7 maps 978-1-107-03183-8 4 Volume Set £120.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107031838


American history (general) / European history – 450 – 1000 Key Reference

The New Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations Volume 1: Dimensions of the Early American Empire, 1754–1865 William Earl Weeks

opportunity and informal empire abroad at the expense of international order and stability.’ Joseph A. Fry, University of Nevada, Las Vegas The New Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations

2013 228 x 152 mm 266pp 978-0-521-76752-1 Hardback £35.00

San Diego State University

For all formats available, see

The four volumes of the Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations have served as the definitive source for the topic. This entirely new first volume argues that the British North American colonists’ pre-existing desire for expansion, security and prosperity is the essence of American foreign relations and the root cause for the creation of the United States.

www.cambridge.org/9780521767521

‘William Weeks is to be congratulated on his concise and masterful synthesis relating the rise of the American republic. His account provides the best explanation we have of how the concept of ‘empire’ can integrate both external and internal developments in the formative era of American history. Teachers and students alike will both admire and benefit greatly from the skill with which Weeks accomplishes this task.’ J. C. A. Stagg, University of Virginia The New Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations

2013 228 x 152 mm 336pp 978-1-107-00590-7 Hardback £35.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107005907

Key Reference

The New Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations Volume 2: The American Search for Opportunity, 1865–1913 Walter LaFeber Cornell University, New York

Since their publication, the four volumes of the Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations have served as the definitive source for the topic. This second volume of the updated edition describes the dynamics of United States foreign policy from 1865 to 1913, the era when the United States became one of the four great world powers and the world’s greatest economic power. ‘The American Search for Opportunity is vintage LaFeber: provocatively conceived, forcefully argued, and beautifully written. In this revised edition, LaFeber has retained and strengthened his arresting thesis that U.S. policy makers, prompted by a search for markets and flawed racial views, aggressively pursued

Key Reference

The New Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations

the narrative into the administration of Barack Obama. ‘Warren Cohen qualifies as the dean of America’s diplomatic historians. In this brilliant new volume, he brings to bear all his experience, perspective, and extraordinary insight to describe America’s struggles for primacy in the world over the past seven decades. This book is a remarkable achievement.’ James Mann, The Johns Hopkins University The New Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations

2013 228 x 152 mm 391pp 7 maps 978-0-521-76362-2 Hardback £35.00

Volume 3: The Globalizing of America, 1913–1945 Akira Iriye

For all formats available, see

Harvard University, Massachusetts

European history – 450 – 1000

Since their first publication, the four volumes of The Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations have served as the definitive source for the topic, from the colonial period to the Cold War. This third volume of the updated edition describes how the United States became a global power during the period from 1913 to 1945. ‘A clear overview of American ascendance – cultural, military, and economic – in an era punctuated by war and economic crisis. Iriye’s global perspective helps us understand the rise of the United States in the context of wider challenges to European power; his analysis of deglobalizing forces and reglobalizing efforts casts new light on American leadership in this tumultuous time.’ Kristin Hoganson, author of Consumers’ Imperium: The Global Production of American Domesticity The New Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations

2013 228 x 152 mm 266pp 978-0-521-76328-8 Hardback £35.00 For all formats available, see

11

www.cambridge.org/9780521763622

Northwest Europe in the Early Middle Ages, c.AD 600–1150 A Comparative Archaeology Christopher Loveluck University of Nottingham

Supported by evidence from architecture, relics, manuscript illuminations and texts, Christopher Loveluck explores the radical transformation of Northwest Europe (primarily Britain, France and Belgium) between AD 600 and 1150 in the most comprehensive comparative analysis of the rural and urban archaeological remains for twenty-five years. 2013 247 x 174 mm 488pp 45 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03763-2 Hardback £75.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107037632

www.cambridge.org/9780521763288

Key Reference

The New Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations Volume 4: Challenges to American Primacy, 1945 to the Present Warren I. Cohen University of Maryland, Baltimore

Since their first publication, the four volumes of the Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations have served as the definitive source for the topic, from the colonial period to the Cold War. This updated edition incorporates recent scholarship and revelations and carries

Epic Lives and Monasticism in the Middle Ages, 800–1050 Anna Lisa Taylor University of Massachusetts, Amherst

This is the first book to focus on Latin epic verse saints’ lives in their historical contexts. It examines how these works promoted bonds of friendship and expressed rivalries among writers, monasteries, saints, earthly patrons, teachers and students in Western Europe in the central Middle Ages. 2013 228 x 152 mm 342pp 11 b/w illus. 1 map 978-1-107-03050-3 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107030503

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European history – 450 – 1000 The World of Kosmas Illustrated Byzantine Codices of the Christian Topography Maja Kominko University of Oxford

Focusing on the Christian Topography, a sixth-century illustrated treatise, this book discusses the creation of the Christian cosmography, the reception of ancient science in late antiquity, and the ways in which Christians navigated the contradictions between ‘secular’ and ‘religious’ sources, both written and visual. 2013 247 x 174 mm 408pp 201 b/w illus. 32 colour illus. 1 map 1 table 978-1-107-02088-7 Hardback £75.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107020887

The Huns, Rome and the Birth of Europe Hyun Jin Kim University of Sydney

Argues that the political culture of the Huns was more sophisticated than is often believed and reassesses their role in the creation of early medieval Europe. Their expansion also marked the beginning of a millennium of virtual monopoly of world power by empires originating in the steppes of Inner Asia. ‘Gets my vote for the freshness of its worldview.’ Peter Heather, BBC History Magazine

John Osborne

www.cambridge.org/9781107028340

Landscape and Change in Early Medieval Italy Chestnuts, Economy, and Culture Paolo Squatriti University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

This innovative environmental history of the European chestnut tree and its woods offers valuable new perspectives on the human transition from Roman to medieval Italy. It integrates evidence from botanical and literary sources, individual charters and case studies of specific communities exposing changes in medieval land use. 2013 228 x 152 mm 248pp 4 maps 978-1-107-03448-8 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107034488

Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series

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A Study of the Edictum Theoderici Sean D. W. Lafferty

For all formats available, see

This pioneering study explores Frankish identity in the early Middle Ages as a window into the formation of a postRoman conception of ethnicity. It offers a new basis for comparing the Western history of collective and ethnic identity with the Islamic and Byzantine world.

For all formats available, see

Old Saint Peter’s, Rome

2013 228 x 152 mm 340pp 978-1-107-02834-0 Hardback £65.00

Princeton University, New Jersey

2014 228 x 152 mm 380pp 978-1-107-03233-0 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication July 2014

Law and Society in the Age of Theoderic the Great

Explores the evolution of Roman law and society in Italy from 493 until about 554, challenging long-held assumptions as to just how peaceful, prosperous and Roman-like Theoderic’s Italy really was. Its primary focus is the Edictum Theoderici, a significant document offering valuable historical insights into the period.

Helmut Reimitz

2013 228 x 152 mm 345pp 3 maps 978-1-107-00906-6 Hardback £60.00 www.cambridge.org/9781107009066

Yale University, Connecticut

History, Frankish Identity and the Rise of Western Ethnicity, 550–850

Edited by Rosamond McKitterick University of Cambridge Carleton University, Ottawa

Carol M. Richardson University of Edinburgh

and Joanna Story University of Leicester

The first full study of the original church on the site of St Peter’s Basilica in Rome, from late antique construction to Renaissance destruction. Explores aspects of the basilica’s history, from its physical fabric to the activities that took place within its walls and its relationship with Rome itself. British School at Rome Studies

2013 247 x 174 mm 513pp 103 b/w illus. 16 colour illus. 3 tables 978-1-107-04164-6 Hardback £100.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107041646

Theodosius II Rethinking the Roman Empire in Late Antiquity Edited by Christopher Kelly

www.cambridge.org/9781107032330

Power and Religion in Merovingian Gaul Columbanian Monasticism and the Formation of the Frankish Aristocracy Yaniv Fox University of Cambridge

This is the first thorough investigation of the activities of the Columbanian congregation and their role in the development of Western monasticism. It discusses the tremendous influence Columbanian monasteries had on the formation of the Merovingian elites and on the ways piety and power were expressed in Frankish society. Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series

2014 228 x 152 mm 250pp 978-1-107-06459-1 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication July 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107064591

The Social Life of Hagiography in the Merovingian Kingdom

University of Cambridge

Jamie Kreiner

Theodosius II was the longest reigning Roman emperor. Although often dismissed as mediocre and ineffectual, he ruled an empire which retained its vitality and integrity while the West was broken up by barbarian invasions. This book explores Theodosius’ success in a century that stands between the classical world and Byzantium.

University of Georgia

Cambridge Classical Studies

2013 216 x 138 mm 338pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03858-5 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107038585

This book explains how Christianity influenced the government, how religion was flexible, and how literature became one of the most influential forces in early medieval Gaul. Its picture of post-Roman Europe as a philosophical, collaborative, and experimental society will both attract and surprise fans of ‘barbarian’ and early Christian history. Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series

2014 228 x 152 mm 466pp 978-1-107-05065-5 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication April 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107050655


European history – 450 – 1000 / European history – 1000 – 1450 Reframing the Feudal Revolution

critical study of the literary art by which he is brought intensely alive to personify Byzantine traditions, culture and destiny.

science, and stimulated Christian society to define itself.

Political and Social Transformation Between Marne and Moselle, c.800–c.1100 Charles West

2014 228 x 152 mm 344pp 978-1-107-03722-9 Hardback £65.00 Publication March 2014

2014 228 x 152 mm 400pp 2 b/w illus. 8 maps 978-0-521-88939-1 Hardback c. £50.00 Publication February 2014

University of Sheffield

For all formats available, see

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107037229

www.cambridge.org/9780521889391

Vision, Devotion, and Self-Representation in Late Medieval Art

Mapping Medieval Geographies

Looking beyond the notion of a ‘Feudal Revolution’ in Europe between 800 and 1100, this book reveals that the profound socio-economic changes that took place in the transition from Carolingian to post-Carolingian Europe were a continuation of processes unleashed by Carolingian reform, rather than a result of political failure. ‘The depth and subtlety of its analysis give it much wider relevance.’ Times Literary Supplement Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 90

2013 228 x 152 mm 321pp 3 b/w illus. 1 map 978-1-107-02886-9 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107028869

European history – 1000 – 1450 The Monks of Tiron A Monastic Community and Religious Reform in the Twelfth Century Kathleen Thompson University of Sheffield

Reinterpreting key twelfth-century sources, including the hagiographical Vita Bernardi, this book provides the first comprehensive history of the Order of Tiron. It sheds new light on the Tironensian experience and fills an important gap in our understanding of monasticism in the 12th century.

Alexa Sand Utah State University

This book focuses on one of the most attractive features of late medieval manuscript illumination: the portrait of the book owner at prayer within the pages of her prayer-book. Offering a direct view into the lives of medieval individuals, these are religiously loaded images that strike at the very core of medieval Christian concerns about salvation and the efficacy of prayer. 2014 253 x 177 mm 436pp 95 b/w illus. 7 colour illus. 978-1-107-03222-4 Hardback £65.00 Publication March 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107032224

Byzantine Art and Diplomacy in an Age of Decline Cecily J. Hilsdale McGill University, Montréal

Questions how political decline refigures the visual culture of empire by examining the imperial image and the gift in later Byzantium (1261–1453). Providing a nuanced account of medieval artistic cultural exchange, Dr Hilsdale considers the temporal dimensions of power and the changing fates of empires. 2014 247 x 174 mm 432pp 99 b/w illus. 14 colour illus. 978-1-107-03330-6 Hardback £75.00 Publication February 2014

2014 228 x 152 mm 300pp 978-1-107-02124-2 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication July 2014

For all formats available, see

For all formats available, see

Muslims of Medieval Latin Christendom, c.1050–1614

www.cambridge.org/9781107021242

The Alexiad of Anna Komnene Artistic Strategy in the Making of a Myth Penelope Buckley University of Melbourne

Anna Komnene’s history of her father, the Emperor Alexios I Komnenos, is an enormously important twelfth-century Byzantine text. This is the first full-length

www.cambridge.org/9781107033306

Brian Catlos University of Colorado Boulder

Through crusades and expulsions Muslim communities survived for over 500 years and thrived in Medieval Europe. This is the first book to tell the story of how the presence of Muslim communities transformed Europe from architecture to cooking, literature to

13

Geographical Encounters in the Latin West and Beyond, 300–1600 Edited by Keith Lilley Queen’s University Belfast

Mapping Medieval Geographies explores the connections between geography and cartography during the Middle Ages. Drawing from primary sources, the volume will appeal to historians concerned with visual and textual modes of geographical representation and transmission, as well as the spaces and places of knowledge creation and consumption. ‘In Mapping Medieval Geographies Keith D. Lilley has brought together a broad spectrum of scholars to explore both the medieval engagement with geography as a practice and as a subject of inquiry as well as the imagined geographies of those who inhabited the Latin, Greek, and Arabic worlds of the Middle Ages. These essays are unusual in the respect that they show for the alternate geographies of the Middle Ages even while embedding their analyses within contemporary geographical discourse.’ Patrick J. Geary, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton 2013 228 x 152 mm 345pp 27 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03691-8 Hardback c. £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107036918

New in Paperback

The Collapse of the Eastern Mediterranean Climate Change and the Decline of the East, 950–1072 Ronnie Ellenblum Hebrew University of Jerusalem

This provocative study argues that many well-documented but apparently disparate events of the tenth and eleventh centuries – including drought and famine in Egypt, mass migrations in the steppes of central Asia, and population decline in urban centres such as Baghdad and Constantinople – were

eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/ebookstore


14

European history – 1000 – 1450 triggered by climatic and ecological change. ‘We have long been familiar with the famines that struck Egypt in the mid-1000s, but Ellenblum is the first to show how these are part of a broad regional pattern. This comprehensive and clearly argued book advances our understanding of the complex political, social, and economic processes of the late tenth and eleventh century in SW Asia and, more broadly, our capacity to link these processes to those underway in other parts of Eurasia.’ Stephen Humphreys, University of California, Santa Barbara 2013 229 x 152 mm 284pp 15 b/w illus. 8 maps 2 tables 978-1-107-68873-5 Paperback £19.99 Also available 978-1-107-02335-2 Hardback £62.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107688735

Churchmen and Urban Government in Late Medieval Italy, c.1200–c.1450 Cases and Contexts Edited by Frances Andrews University of St Andrews, Scotland

With Agata Pincelli

A major new study of secular officeholding by churchmen and the negotiation of power between secular and ecclesiastical communities in late medieval Italy. A team of leading historians explores why the city elites of thirteenth-century Italy, infamous in their desire for autonomy, turned to men bound to religious orders. 2013 228 x 152 mm 450pp 10 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-1-107-04426-5 Hardback £75.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107044265

representations and expectations of aristocratic warriors. ‘Dr Taylor has produced a fascinating and important study, drawing on a very wide range of texts and providing new insights into French responses to the Hundred Years War. That he does this through the prism of chivalry adds substantially to our understanding of what martial culture meant, whether in the dark days of defeat or in the ultimate recovery of national pride. His book reveals what ‘the flowers of French chivalry’ expected of themselves as well as what contemporary society expected of them.’ Anne Curry, University of Southampton 2013 228 x 152 mm 358pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-107-04221-6 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

Craig Taylor University of York

This is the first comprehensive study of the unprecedented range of writings on warfare and knighthood produced in France during the Hundred Years War. Craig Taylor sets the debates in context, challenging modern, romantic assumptions about chivalry and investigating the complexities of cultural

Edited by Michael Wyatt

The Renaissance in Italy continues to exercise a powerful hold on the popular imagination. This Companion presents a lively, comprehensive and interdisciplinary approach to a period that witnessed both a significant revalidation of the classical past and the development of new, vernacular and increasingly secular values. Cambridge Companions to Culture

2014 228 x 152 mm 424pp 24 b/w illus. 978-0-521-87606-3 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-69946-4 Paperback £19.99 Publication April 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521876063

www.cambridge.org/9781107042216

John of Brienne King of Jerusalem, Emperor of Constantinople, c.1175–1237 Guy Perry University of Leeds

This study of social and geographical mobility in the ‘Age of the Crusades’ reassesses John of Brienne’s remarkable rise from mid-ranking knightly status to king of Jerusalem and Latin emperor of Constantinople. It explores how families, dynasticism, politics, intrigue, religion and war contributed to his unprecedented career. 2013 228 x 152 mm 232pp 5 b/w illus. 5 maps 3 tables 978-1-107-04310-7 Hardback £55.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107043107

An Environmental History of Medieval Europe Richard Hoffmann York University, Toronto

How did medieval Europeans use and change their environments, think about the natural world, and handle the natural forces affecting their lives? This is a pioneering survey of medieval relations with the natural world which integrates approaches from social and economic history and environmental studies. Cambridge Medieval Textbooks

2014 216 x 138 mm 360pp 29 b/w illus. 14 maps 978-0-521-87696-4 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-70037-5 Paperback £18.99 Publication March 2014 For all formats available, see

Michael Psellos Rhetoric and Authorship in Byzantium Stratis Papaioannou Brown University, Rhode Island

Chivalry and the Ideals of Knighthood in France during the Hundred Years War

The Cambridge Companion to the Italian Renaissance

This first comprehensive study of Michael Psellos, one of the greatest intellectual figures of Byzantine history, offers a survey of Greek rhetoric and autobiography for an audience focused on Greek culture and medieval literatures as well as a wider audience interested in the history of the self, gender and emotion. 2013 228 x 152 mm 359pp 8 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02622-3 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107026223

www.cambridge.org/9780521876964

Central Europe in the High Middle Ages Bohemia, Hungary and Poland, c.900–c.1300 Nora Berend University of Cambridge

Przemysław Urbańczyk Polish Academy of Sciences

and Przemysław Wiszewski Uniwersytet Wroclawski, Poland

Addressing every aspect of the early history of Central Europe, this book explores the formation and early centuries of Bohemia, Hungary and Poland. The authors highlight the specifics of the history of each polity, whilst drawing out similarities and parallels in the region’s political,


European history – 1000 – 1450 / European history after 1450 religious, economic, social and cultural developments. Cambridge Medieval Textbooks

2013 216 x 138 mm 578pp 2 maps 978-0-521-78156-5 Hardback £60.00 978-0-521-78695-9 Paperback £22.99 Publication December 2013 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521781565

Violence and the State in Languedoc, 1250–1400 Justine Firnhaber-Baker University of St Andrews, Scotland

This book provides a new narrative of the rise of the French state, showing that the crown’s centralizing judicial administration co-existed with largescale aristocratic violence. Royal power grew as much through efforts to negotiate and settle these conflicts as it did through efforts to suppress them.

study of medieval history, numismatics and archaeology. ‘This book must be part of EVERY library whose owner intends to deal seriously with medieval numismatics.’ Ursula Kampmann, Coins Weekly Medieval European Coinage, 6

2013 246 x 189 mm 929pp 136 b/w illus. 7 maps 41 tables 978-0-521-26014-5 Hardback £150.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521260145

European history after 1450

The First French Reformation Church Reform and the Origins of the Old Regime Tyler Lange University of California, Berkeley

This new interpretation of the origins of French absolutism connects the fifteenth-century conciliar reform movement in the Catholic Church to the political culture of absolute monarchy that structured French society into the eighteenth century, identifying reasons for the failure of French Protestantism. 2014 228 x 152 mm 300pp 1 b/w illus. 1 table 978-1-107-04936-9 Hardback c. £65.00 Publication May 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107049369

Vesalius: The China Root Epistle

Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 95

Political Economies of Empire in the Early Modern Mediterranean

2014 228 x 152 mm 240pp 4 b/w illus. 1 map 978-1-107-03955-1 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication April 2014

University of Exeter

A New Translation and Critical Edition Andreas Vesalius Edited and translated by Daniel H. Garrison

This exploration of the commercial relationship between Venice and England sets their comparative history in a wider Mediterranean and European context. It shows how Venice’s circumstances shaped the English mercantile community, and how their contrasting fortunes can be seen as the beginnings of European protoglobalisation.

This book provides the first annotated English translation from the original Latin of Andreas Vesalius’ China Root Epistle. Ostensibly his appraisal of a fashionable herbal remedy, the China Root Epistle concentrates on Vesalius’ skeptical appraisal of traditional Galenic anatomy, which was based on animal rather than human dissections.

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107039551

Key Reference

Medieval European Coinage Volume 6: The Iberian Peninsula Miquel Crusafont Societat Catalana d’Estudis Numismatics Barcelona

Anna M. Balaguer and Philip Grierson University of Cambridge

This volume of Medieval European Coinage, is the first English-language survey to bring the latest research on the coinage of Spain and Portugal c.1000–1500 to an international audience. A major work of reference by leading numismatic experts, the volume provides an authoritative and up-todate account of the coinages of Aragon, Catalonia, Castile, Léon, Navarre and Portugal, which have rarely been studied together. It considers how money circulated throughout the peninsula, offering new syntheses of the monetary history of the individual kingdoms and includes an extensive catalogue of the Aragonese, Castilian, Catalan, Leonese, Navarrese and Portuguese coins in the collection of the Fitzwilliam Museum. This major contribution to the field will be a valuable point of reference for the

The Decline of Venice and the Rise of England 1450–1700 Maria Fusaro

2014 228 x 152 mm 340pp 978-1-107-06052-4 Hardback c. £65.00 Publication August 2014 For all formats available, see

Northwestern University, Illinois

2014 228 x 152 mm 286pp 37 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02635-3 Hardback £55.00 Publication April 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107060524

www.cambridge.org/9781107026353

The Dutch Revolt and Catholic Exile in Reformation Europe

Secularism and Religion in NineteenthCentury Germany

Geert Janssen University of Oxford

The history of the flight and exile of Catholics during the Dutch Revolt has long been overlooked. This book explores the forced migration of thousands of Catholic men and women and its profound impact on the course of the Counter-Reformation and the history of the Low Countries. 2014 228 x 152 mm 280pp 978-1-107-05503-2 Hardback c. £65.00 Publication August 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107055032

15

The Rise of the Fourth Confession Todd H. Weir Queen’s University Belfast

Explores the culture, politics, and ideas of the nineteenth-century German secularist movements of Free Religion, Freethought, Ethical Culture, and Monism. The book argues that although secularists challenged church establishment and conservative orthodoxy, they were subjected to the forces of religious competition. 2014 234 x 156 mm 320pp 9 b/w illus. 2 maps 9 tables 978-1-107-04156-1 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication February 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107041561

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16

European history after 1450 The Anatomy of Revolution Revisited

Slave Portraiture in the Atlantic World

A Comparative Analysis of England, France, and Russia Bailey Stone

Edited by Agnes Lugo-Ortiz University of Chicago

and Angela Rosenthal

University of Houston

Dartmouth College, New Hampshire

This study aims to update a classic of comparative revolutionary analysis, Crane Brinton’s 1938 study The Anatomy of Revolution. It invokes the latest research and theoretical writing in history, political science and political sociology to compare and contrast the English Revolution of 1640–60, the French Revolution of 1789–99 and the Russian Revolution of 1917–29.

Slave Portraiture in the Atlantic World is the first book to focus on the individualized portrayal of enslaved people from the time of Europe’s full engagement with plantation slavery in the late sixteenth century to its final official abolition in Brazil in 1888.

Advance praise: ‘Despite covering an enormous and highly contentious historiography for these revolutions, and covering hundreds of years of history, this book is deft, clear, and a good read. Bailey Stone is particularly good at working with the international, religious/ nationalist, and social forces behind every twist and turn of the detailed events. There is nothing else quite like it for telling the story of these three major revolutions in a comparative framework. This is an outstanding book, a worthy sequel to Crane Brinton.’ Jack A. Goldstone, Virginia E. and John T. Hazel, Jr, Professor of Public Policy and Eminent Scholar, George Mason University 2014 228 x 152 mm 544pp 978-1-107-04572-9 Hardback £65.00 Publication January 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107045729

2013 253 x 177 mm 256pp 159 b/w illus. 11 colour illus. 1 map 978-1-107-00439-9 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107004399

Votive Panels and Popular Piety in Early Modern Italy Fredrika Jacobs Virginia Commonwealth University

In the late fifteenth century, votive panel paintings, or tavolette votive, began to accumulate around reliquary shrines and miracle-working images throughout Italy. Fredrika H. Jacobs traces the origins and development of the use of votive panels. She examines the form, context and functional value of votive panels, and how they created meaning for the person who dedicated the image to a saint. 2013 253 x 177 mm 288pp 66 b/w illus. 8 colour illus. 978-1-107-02304-8 Hardback £60.00 www.cambridge.org/9781107023048

The First Knowledge Economy

Between Court and Confessional

Human Capital and the European Economy, 1750–1850 Margaret C. Jacob

The Politics of Spanish Inquisitors Kimberly Lynn

University of California, Los Angeles

Between Court and Confessional explores the lives of Spanish inquisitors, closely examining the careers and writings of five sixteenth- and seventeenth-century inquisitors. Kimberly Lynn probes the lives of individual inquisitors to explain how the theory and regulations of the Inquisition were rooted in local conditions, particular disputes and individual experiences.

2013 228 x 152 mm 400pp 11 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-1-107-04401-2 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-61983-8 Paperback £19.99 Publication December 2013 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107044012

James S. Amelang, Universidad Autónoma, Madrid 2013 228 x 152 mm 406pp 7 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-107-03116-6 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107031166

New in Paperback

Joseph II Volume 2: Against the World, 1780–1790 Derek Beales

This final volume of Derek Beales’s magisterial biography of the emperor Joseph II, first published in 2009, describes the critical period when he was sole ruler of the Austrian monarchy. Explaining his motivation and showing how his ideas developed, Derek Beales reveals that Joseph left an ineffaceable mark on all his lands. ‘… splendid second volume of his biography of Joseph II … This book should restore Joseph II to his rightful position, holding a central place in the history of Austria, the Habsburg monarchy, Germany and central Europe.’ Steven Beller, Times Literary Supplement 2013 229 x 152 mm 754pp 978-1-107-61626-4 Paperback £26.99 Also available 978-0-521-32488-5 Hardback £83.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107616264

For all formats available, see

Highlight

Ever since the Industrial Revolution debate has raged about the sources of the new western prosperity. Margaret Jacob here argues persuasively for the critical importance of knowledge in western Europe’s economic transformation. This is a history of economic development in which culture, minds, books and education become central.

and uniquely complex – figure poised between medieval theocracy and modern bureaucracy.’

Western Washington University

‘The Inquisitor is a figure engulfed in myth, yet about whom very little is actually known. Kimberly Lynn sets the record straight in this thoroughly researched and well-written book. Showcasing individual portraits of five inquisitors from different parts of the early modern Hispanic empire, she offers a lively and convincing composite biography of a unique –

German Expansionism, Imperial Liberalism and the United States, 1776–1945 Jens-Uwe Guettel Pennsylvania State University

This book traces the presence of the United States in German colonial discourse and practice from the late eighteenth century to 1945, focusing on American westward expansion and racial politics. It highlights the effects America’s expanding borders had on German liberalism and colonialism before the outbreak of World War I. ‘This impressive monograph offers a provocative new look at Germany’s imperial imaginary. Jens-Uwe Guettel expertly shows how pre-World War I German liberal imperialists were attracted to the United States because they saw it as a model empire and racial state. Here, then, is a tightly argued intellectual history of a transatlantic connection and its legacy, a history that takes its readers beyond


European history after 1450 / 20C European history notions of national exceptionalism and linear continuities and asks us to rethink both the trajectories of nineteenth-century liberalism and the origins of Nazi imperialism.’ Dirk Bönker, Duke University 2013 216 x 138 mm 292pp 978-1-107-02469-4 Hardback £55.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107024694

The Channel A Border between England and France, 1650–1815 Renaud Morieux University of Cambridge

Rather than a natural frontier between natural enemies, this book approaches the English Channel as a space embodying the ambivalence between England and France in the long eighteenth century and a site of contact and exchange. This is an important reassessment of the history of nationstate building in modern Europe. Cambridge Social and Cultural Histories

2014 228 x 152 mm 350pp 978-1-107-03949-0 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication August 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107039490

Feeding France New Sciences of Food, 1760– 1815 E. C. Spary University of Cambridge

Feeding France offers the first comprehensive study of France’s industrial food industry in the decades surrounding the French Revolution. Complementing histories of gastronomy and the restaurant, this book rewrites the history of the French relationship with food to show that chemistry, industrialisation and the politics of consumption were intimately intertwined. Cambridge Social and Cultural Histories, 19

2014 228 x 152 mm 400pp 28 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03105-0 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication June 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107031050

Revolutionary Writings Reflections on the Revolution in France and the First Letter on a Regicide Peace Edmund Burke Edited by Iain Hampsher-Monk

published thoughts on the revolution as well as his Letter on a Regicide Peace. A comprehensive introduction and thorough annotations open up this classic text to modern readers. Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought

2013 216 x 138 mm 450pp 978-0-521-84393-5 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-60509-0 Paperback £17.99 Publication December 2013 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521843935

The Rise of Heritage Preserving the Past in France, Germany and England, 1789– 1914 Astrid Swenson Brunel University

This richly illustrated book explains the origins of our modern fascination with heritage. Drawing on archival sources from Germany, France and Britain, it uncovers for the first time the fascinating story of international competition, rivalry and collaboration which lay behind the rise of preservation in Europe and the world.

TwentiethCentury Spain A History Julián Casanova Universidad de Zaragoza

and Carlos Gil Andrés

A much-needed new overview of Spanish social and political history which sets developments in Spain within a European context. They chart the country’s experience of democracy, dictatorship and civil war and its dramatic transformation from an agricultural and rural society to an industrial and urban society fullyintegrated into Europe. 2014 228 x 152 mm 340pp 2 maps 978-1-107-01696-5 Hardback c. £45.00 978-1-107-60267-0 Paperback c. £17.99 Publication June 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107016965

The ‘Red Terror’ and the Spanish Civil War Revolutionary Violence in Madrid Julius Ruiz

New Studies in European History

University of Edinburgh

2013 228 x 152 mm 432pp 57 b/w illus. 978-0-521-11762-3 Hardback £65.00 Publication December 2013

Approximately 50,000 Spaniards were extrajudically executed in Republican Spain following the failure of the military rebellion in July 1936. This mass killing of ‘fascists’ – known as the ‘Red Terror’ – seriously undermined attempts by the legally constituted Republican government to present itself in foreign quarters as fighting a war for democracy. This study challenges the common view that executions were the work of criminal or anarchist ‘uncontrollables’.

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521117623

20C European history Highlight

The July Crisis The World’s Descent into War, Summer 1914 Thomas Otte University of East Anglia

Definitive new account of the catalytic events that led to the outbreak of war. Thomas Otte argues that neither martial culture nor the alliance system played a decisive role for much of the crisis. Instead he reveals the fatal flaws, failings, and miscalculations of those who led Europe into war. 2014 216 x 138 mm 240pp 978-1-107-06490-4 Hardback c. £19.99 Publication July 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107064904

17

2014 228 x 152 mm 360pp 3 maps 978-1-107-05454-7 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication April 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107054547

YIVO and the Making of Modern Jewish Culture Scholarship for the Yiddish Nation Cecile Esther Kuznitz Bard College, New York

Using documents believed destroyed by Hitler and Stalin, this book is the first history of YIVO, the original center for Yiddish scholarship. Founded after World War I, YIVO became the apex of secular Yiddish culture and fought for Jewish

University of Exeter

New edition of the leading theoretical articulation against the French Revolution which brings together for the first time Burke’s first and last

Visit our website at www.cambridge.org/knowledge


18

20C European history rights throughout the world at a time of rising anti-Semitism. 2014 228 x 152 mm 320pp 16 b/w illus. 978-1-107-01420-6 Hardback c. £55.00 Publication February 2014

2013 228 x 152 mm 328pp 978-1-107-00865-6 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-40127-3 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107008656

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107014206

Wilhelm II Into the Abyss of War and Exile, 1900–1941 John C. G. Röhl University of Sussex

Translated by Sheila de Bellaigue and Roy Bridge

This final volume in John Röhl’s acclaimed biography of Wilhelm II explores the Kaiser’s role in the international crises leading up to the outbreak of war in 1914. It also charts his experience of exile in Holland and his frustrated hopes that the Nazis would restore him to the throne. 2014 247 x 174 mm 1558pp 71 b/w illus. 978-0-521-84431-4 Hardback £45.00 Publication February 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521844314

Literature of the Holocaust Edited by Alan Rosen

A comprehensive account of how writers across Europe and America have responded creatively to the Holocaust, from diaries written by those in hiding at the time to attempts to rationalise events in the aftermath to imaginative reappraisals by twenty-first century writers with no direct experience of the events. ‘Literature of the Holocaust is an important work. More than an anthology, it is a comprehensive collection of significant essays by distinguished authors, who provide both an overview and deep insights into Holocaust literature in the major languages of the West ordinarily inaccessible to the English reading world … Moreover, it grapples with major issues in Holocaust literature, such as the use of testimony and song, and the use and misuse of history. Each essay provides a rich survey and entry point for the study of Holocaust literature. I thought I knew Holocaust literature well, yet this work has given me years of important reading ahead, for which I am grateful. Comprehensive, consistently excellent, clear and yet also concise … a disquieting work as any good work on the Holocaust must be. It is a work to be cherished.’ Michael Berenbaum, American Jewish University, Los Angeles

The Coming of the Holocaust From Antisemitism to Genocide Peter Kenez University of California, Santa Cruz

The Coming of the Holocaust aims to help readers understand the circumstances that made the Holocaust possible. Peter Kenez shows that three preconditions had to exist for the genocide to occur: modern antiSemitism; an extremist group taking control of a powerful modern state; and the context of a major war. ‘The distinguished UC Santa Cruz historian Peter Kenez has taken on the daunting and complex task of explaining the origins of the ‘Final Solution’. He does so with deep erudition, perfect moral balance, patient reasoning, and crystal-clear prose. The Coming of the Holocaust will surely become the standard introduction to this painful and important subject.’ Norman M. Naimark, Stanford University 2013 228 x 152 mm 318pp 978-1-107-04335-0 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-63684-2 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107043350

The Soviet Occupation of Germany Hunger, Mass Violence and the Struggle for Peace, 1945–1947 Filip Slaveski University of Melbourne

This is a major new account of the Soviet occupation of postwar Germany and the beginning of the Cold War. It shows how in the immediate aftermath of war the Red Army command struggled to contain the violence of soldiers against German civilians and to feed and rebuild the country. 2013 228 x 152 mm 183pp 1 map 7 tables 978-1-107-04381-7 Hardback £55.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107043817

Black Germany The Making and Unmaking of a Diaspora Community, 1884–1960 Robbie Aitken Sheffield Hallam University

and Eve Rosenhaft University of Liverpool

This rich and detailed account traces the development of Germany’s black community, from its origins in colonial Africa to its decimation by the Nazis during World War II. Robbie Aitken and Eve Rosenhaft draw on meticulous research to offer exciting new perspectives on transnational German history. ‘This is a very impressive book that provides fascinating information about the everyday lives of Africans in Germany and sheds new light on a hitherto unknown episode of twentieth-century history. It also makes a more general argument about race, community and Diaspora, based on painstaking archival research.’ Andreas Eckert, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin 2013 228 x 152 mm 379pp 18 b/w illus. 978-1-107-04136-3 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107041363

Red Nations The Nationalities Experience in and after the USSR Jeremy Smith Karelian Institute, University of Eastern Finland

Red Nations is an accessible survey of the experience of the non-Russian USSR populace under communism. Drawing on the latest research, Jeremy Smith offers an important new contribution to the history of the dissolution of the USSR, the reconstruction of post-Soviet society, and its impact on non-Russian residents. ‘Jeremy Smith has given us the first comprehensive account of the turns and twists of Soviet nationality policies from the revolution to the present. An acknowledged expert on the USSR’s practices among non-Russian peoples, Smith shows how nations were constructed and reconstructed by an ostensibly internationalist socialist state that both promoted ethnic cultures but also exiled whole peoples to eradicate perceived threats to the regime. The importance of his story should not be underestimated. The heritage of Soviet aspirations, achievements, and brutal impositions continues after the collapse of communism and remains the ground on which fifteen new states build their future.’ Ronald Grigor Suny, Charles Tilly Collegiate Professor of Social and Political History, University of Michigan


20C European history 2013 228 x 152 mm 408pp 6 tables 978-0-521-11131-7 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-12870-4 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521111317

After the Civil War Making Memory and Re-Making Spain since 1936 Michael Richards University of the West of England, Bristol

The Spanish Civil War was fought out not only on streets and battlefields from 1936 to 1939 but also in terms of memory and trauma in the decades that followed. This fascinating book explores how the memory of Spain’s bloody civil war has been contested from 1939 to the present. ‘Almost forty years after Franco’s death, the history of the Spanish Civil War and dictatorship in Spain remains a cultural and political battleground. Michael Richards, with the same rigour and imagination shown in his previous research, explores in this book the relationship between multiple memory narratives of the Spanish Civil War. The result is a masterpiece of cultural history and the study of historical consciousness.’ Julián Casanova, University of Zaragoza 2013 228 x 152 mm 409pp 8 maps 978-0-521-89934-5 Hardback £60.00 978-0-521-72818-8 Paperback £21.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521899345

Turkey, the Jews, and the Holocaust Corry Guttstadt

This book analyzes the minority politics of the Turkish republic and the country’s ambivalent policies regarding Jewish refugees and Turkish Jews living abroad. Although Turkey stayed neutral during World War II, the country’s policies proved crucial for many Turkish Jews living in various European countries. By examining the fates of the Jews who lived in Turkey before the war, this study shows that Turkey was far from welcoming toward Jews during the Holocaust era. ‘Corry Guttstadt’s excellent book is a vital corrective to some of the myths propagated about Turkey’s record during the Second World War and provides an account that is altogether more compelling.’ Donald Bloxham, University of Edinburgh 2013 228 x 152 mm 370pp 30 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-0-521-76991-4 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521769914

The People’s Game Football, State and Society in the GDR Alan McDougall University of Guelph, Ontario

The People’s Game is the first comprehensive history of football in East Germany. McDougall offers fresh perspectives on how the country’s most popular sport undermined communism. The book combines in-depth knowledge of the GDR with a passion for football, and will appeal to GDR specialists, sports historians, and students alike. 2014 228 x 152 mm 385pp 978-1-107-05203-1 Hardback c. £65.00 Publication June 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107052031

René Cassin and Human Rights From the Great War to the Universal Declaration Jay Winter Yale University, Connecticut

and Antoine Prost Université de Paris I

Through the biography of one extraordinary man at the centre of the human rights movement, this book reveals how the political and intellectual movement emerged from the experiences of a generation who endured two world wars, and gained the momentum to ultimately enshrine the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. ‘Winter and Prost have written a marvelous book about the struggle for human rights as seen through the prism of the remarkable life and achievements of René Cassin ranging throughout the entire twentieth century. It is thoroughly researched, brilliantly presented, honest and humane in its treatment, and sound in its judgments. This is exactly the way that history and biography should be written.’ Paul Gordon Lauren, University of Montana Human Rights in History

2013 228 x 152 mm 397pp 42 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03256-9 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-65570-6 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107032569

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West Germany and the Global Sixties The Anti-Authoritarian Revolt, 1962–1978 Timothy Scott Brown Northeastern University, Boston

Examining how West German 1968 arose out of transnational connections, from the presence of Third World student radicals, to exchanges with European avant-garde movements and the appropriation of Anglo-American cultural forms like rock and roll, this study explores the interplay of radical politics and popular culture in the explosion of ‘1968’. ‘As the West German ‘1968’ finally becomes claimed for history, many fresh perspectives come into play. In Tim Brown’s excitingly original account, the unruly, boundary-crossing complexities of anti-authoritarianism appear in [a] refreshingly new light. West Germany [and] the Global Sixties brings the rhetoric of transnational history compellingly down to the ground.’ Geoff Eley, University of Michigan New Studies in European History

2013 228 x 152 mm 408pp 42 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02255-3 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107022553

Germans to Poles Communism, Nationalism and Ethnic Cleansing after the Second World War Hugo Service University of Oxford

In the aftermath of the Second World War, millions of Germans were uprooted from their homes in Poland’s newly created Western territories and sent back to Germany as these areas were repopulated by Poles. This book charts the processes of postwar displacement and nation-building, revealing the stark regional disparities in experiences. New Studies in European History

2013 228 x 152 mm 387pp 7 maps 978-1-107-67148-5 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107671485

The Aryanization of Private Banks in the Third Reich Ingo Köhler University of Göttingen

This study uses the example of the private banking sector to examine the process of Aryanization in all its complexity – from the manifold discrimination at the outset; to the

eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/ebookstore


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20C European history / Russian, East European history sale, usually under duress and typically at reduced prices, of Jewish-owned businesses to non-Jews; and finally, to the confiscation of residual assets by the Nazi state. Publications of the German Historical Institute

2014 228 x 152 mm 455pp 978-0-521-76662-3 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication June 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521766623

GIs in Germany The Social, Economic, Cultural and Political History of the American Military Presence Edited by Thomas W. Maulucci, Jr State University of New York

and Detlef Junker Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, Germany

The fifteen essays in this volume offer a comprehensive look at the role of American military forces in Germany. Around 22 million US servicemen have been stationed in Germany since WWII, and their presence has contributed to one of the few successful American attempts at democratic nation building in the twentieth century. Publications of the German Historical Institute

2013 228 x 152 mm 378pp 2 tables 978-0-521-85133-6 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521851336

The East German Economy, 1945–2010 Falling Behind or Catching Up? Edited by Hartmut Berghoff German Historical Institute, Washington DC

and Uta Andrea Balbier King’s College London

This volume analyzes both the successes and failures of the East German economy. The contributors consider the economic history of East Germany within its broader political, cultural and social contexts, and trace the present and future of the East German economy, suggesting possible outcomes. ‘This stellar and invaluable volume of essays offers a state-of-theart integrated narrative from the post-division to post-reunification East German economy. Avoiding a simple ‘failure’ story, it shows the contradictory qualities of the East German economy that once appeared as a star performer that might ‘overtake without catching up’ with the West, to use the famous paradoxical promise of Walter Ulbricht. This book reminds us that core parts of Eastern Germany were always ‘Central Germany’

(Mitteldeutschland) and that understanding the fading trajectory of the East German economic experiment is central to understanding German history more generally.’ Jeffrey Fear, University of Glasgow Publications of the German Historical Institute

2013 228 x 152 mm 256pp 978-1-107-03013-8 Hardback £55.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107030138

Business in the Age of Extremes

relevant legal scholarship, profound knowledge of the historical literature, and painstaking archival research. The Fascists and the Jews of Italy is a splendid introduction to issues that remain unresolved – a full seventy years after Fascist Italy’s ignominious end.’ MacGregor Knox, Stevenson Professor of International History Emeritus, London School of Economics and Political Science Studies in Legal History

2014 228 x 152 mm 280pp 8 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02756-5 Hardback £60.00 Publication January 2014 For all formats available, see

Essays in Modern German and Austrian Economic History Edited by Hartmut Berghoff

www.cambridge.org/9781107027565

German Historical Institute, Washington DC

British Soldiers and French Civilians, 1914–1918 Craig Gibson

Jürgen Kocka Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung

and Dieter Ziegler Ruhr-Universität, Bochum, Germany

This collection of essays explores the impact that nationalism, capitalism and socialism had on economics during the first half of the twentieth century. Focusing on Central Europe, contributors examine the role that businesspeople and enterprises played in Germany’s and Austria’s paths to the catastrophe of Nazism. Publications of the German Historical Institute

2013 234 x 156 mm 256pp 978-1-107-01695-8 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107016958

The Fascists and the Jews of Italy Mussolini’s Race Laws, 1938– 1943 Michael A. Livingston

Behind the Front

The dominant impression of the British soldier’s experience on the Western Front is of life in a trench. However Craig Gibson reveals how the relationship of troops with local inhabitants is key to an understanding of fighting on the Western Front and the eventual success of British arms in 1918. Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare, 40

2014 228 x 152 mm 528pp 49 b/w illus. 4 maps 37 tables 978-0-521-83761-3 Hardback £65.00 Publication February 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521837613

Russian, East European history

Rutgers-Camden School of Law

This book describes the history and nature of the Italian Race Laws, a series of anti-Jewish laws adopted by Fascist Italy and in force during the period (1938–43) when Italy was independent of German control. It is the first truly comprehensive survey of the Race Laws written in the English language. Advance praise: ‘Michael A. Livingston brilliantly explores the legal framework, case-level operation, and ominous consequences of Fascist Italy’s racial laws from their introduction in 1938 to the regime’s destruction in 1943. He offers original and often disturbing perspectives on the legal-bureaucratic mechanisms of the Holocaust, the character of modern Italy, and the rule of law. Livingston’s analysis is unrivalled in conceptual sophistication, mastery of the

Making the Soviet Intelligentsia Universities and Intellectual Life under Stalin and Khrushchev Benjamin Tromly University of Puget Sound, Washington

An innovative history of the formation of the Soviet intelligentsia which focusses on universities as key institutions in Soviet society. It reveals the changing place of universities and intellectuals from their strategic importance during the early Cold War to their role as incubators of political opposition under the thaw. New Studies in European History

2013 228 x 152 mm 320pp 978-1-107-03110-4 Hardback £65.00 Publication December 2013 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107031104


Russian, East European history / European history (general) An Environmental History of Russia Paul Josephson Colby College

Nicolai Dronin Moscow State University

Ruben Mnatsakanian Central European University, Budapest

Aleh Cherp

common attempt to construct a present identity.

intellectual and cultural renewals, and international entanglements.

2013 228 x 152 mm 224pp 15 b/w illus. 2 maps 7 tables 978-1-107-01561-6 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-64164-8 Paperback £18.99

Cambridge Concise Histories

For all formats available, see

2014 216 x 138 mm 275pp 20 b/w illus. 978-0-521-87238-6 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-69413-1 Paperback £17.99 Publication February 2014

www.cambridge.org/9781107015616

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521872386

Central European University, Budapest

Slovakia in History

Dmitry Efremenko

Edited by Mikuláš Teich

Russian Academy of Sciences

Robinson College, Cambridge

and Vladislav Larin

Dušan Kováč

Russian Academy of Sciences

Slovak Academy of Sciences

Based on original research and firsthand accounts, this book contains dynamic debates between party officials, scientists and citizens about how best to use the great natural and mineral resources of the USSR and the impact Soviet programs had on the empire’s extensive biodiversity and numerous citizens.

and Martin D. Brown

‘An Environmental History of Russia is the most important English-language environmental study of the former Soviet Union since Douglas Weiner’s Models of Nature and A Little Corner of Freedom. Spanning geography; nature preservation; urban, industrial, and agricultural environments; and policies, practices and pollution, the book provides a broad sweep of a country’s environmental heritage little known in holistic terms. This is worthwhile reading.’ Martin V. Melosi, University of Houston Studies in Environment and History

2013 228 x 152 mm 348pp 11 b/w illus. 978-0-521-86958-4 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-68972-4 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521869584

European history (general) Imagining Europe Myth, Memory, and Identity Chiara Bottici New School for Social Research, New York

and Benoît Challand New York University

What is Europe? What are its boundaries? Is there a specific European identity or is the EU just the name for a group of institutions? This book answers these questions, showing that in Europe’s formation, myth and memory, although distinct, are often merged in a

21

Richmond: The American International University in London

In this unique book in the English language, leading scholars explore the key moments and themes in Slovakia’s history. Charting how Slovak national identity took shape from the Duchy of Nitra’s ninth-century origins to the establishment of independent Slovakia at midnight 1992–3, they chart the ethnic awakening of the Slovak people. ‘Slovakia is a small country, only recently independent. But it is larger, and its history far longer and richer, than might be assumed. For centuries its inhabitants shared in the destinies of the Kingdom of Hungary; then for decades they formed an organic part of the modern state of Czechoslovakia. Here for the first time is a full and satisfactory treatment of that past in English. Authored mainly by Slovaks, it transcends the myopia and prejudice which have often disfigured the historiography of the subject and it incorporates many fresh research findings.’ Robert Evans, Regius Professor of History, Oxford University 2013 229 x 152 mm 434pp 19 b/w illus. 5 maps 978-1-107-67690-9 Paperback £22.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107676909

Highlight

A Concise History of Romania Keith Hitchins University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

This comprehensive and engaging new history charts Romania’s development over 2000 years from its establishment to the present day. Always on the border between East and West, Hitchins considers Romania’s place in European politics, economic and social change,

Highlight

A Concise History of France Third edition Roger Price University of Wales, Aberystwyth

This is the most up-to-date and comprehensive study of French history available ranging from the early middle ages to the present. This third edition has been substantially revised and includes a new chapter on contemporary France. Review of previous edition: ‘… coherent and eminently readable. It is a major – indeed unique – achievement.’ The Times Higher Education Supplement Cambridge Concise Histories

2014 216 x 138 mm 528pp 86 b/w illus. 978-1-107-01782-5 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-60343-1 Paperback £18.99 Publication January 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107017825

Highlight

A Concise History of Greece Third edition Richard Clogg University of Oxford

Now re-issued in a third edition, this book provides an illustrated introduction to the modern history of Greece, from the first stirrings of the national movement in the late eighteenth century to the present day. This edition includes a new final chapter, which analyses contemporary political, economic and social developments. Review of previous edition: ‘Succinct, accurate and graphic … Readers who go no further than this concise history will have at their disposal the basic knowledge to understand Greece and what made it what it is today.’ Times Literary Supplement

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22

European history (general) / History (general) before 1500 / History (general) after 1500 Cambridge Concise Histories

Cambridge Concise Histories

2013 216 x 138 mm 352pp 60 b/w illus. 10 maps 978-1-107-03289-7 Hardback £50.00 978-1-107-61203-7 Paperback £17.99 Publication December 2013

2013 216 x 138 mm 339pp 54 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-0-521-19444-0 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-14382-0 Paperback £16.99

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521194440

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107032897

Highlight

A Concise History of Italy Second edition Christopher Duggan University of Reading

Second edition of Christopher Duggan’s acclaimed introduction to the history of Italy and its struggle to forge itself as a nation state. The new edition has been thoroughly revised to incorporate recent developments and includes a new section on twenty-first-century Italy, a detailed chronology and an extensive bibliographical essay. Cambridge Concise Histories

2013 216 x 138 mm 300pp 41 b/w illus. 4 maps 12 tables 978-0-521-76039-3 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-74743-1 Paperback £16.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521760393

A Concise History of Switzerland Clive H. Church University of Kent, Canterbury

and Randolph C. Head University of California, Riverside

This comprehensive and engaging history of Switzerland traces the uncommon development of its society and state from its medieval origins to the present. The authors provide a fresh view that places Swiss history within a European context, adding a new perspective to the history of Europe as a whole. ‘These two specialists of premodern and modern Switzerland offer a cohesive narrative that not only highlights the particularities of Swiss history, but also its deep interrelations with European and global developments. Regardless of their excellent knowledge of even the most recent Swiss historiography, Head and Church take up a stance of their own in appraising achievements and shortcomings of a small but economically important country.’ Thomas Maissen, Chair of Early Modern History, University of Heidelberg and author of Geschichte der Schweiz

History (general) before 1500 Law and Piety in Medieval Islam Megan H. Reid University of Southern California

The Ayyubid and Mamluk periods were some of the most intellectually fecund in Islamic history. Megan H. Reid’s book recovers the stories of medieval men and women who were renowned not only for their intellectual prowess but also for their devotional piety, uncovering previously unseen trends in voluntary religious practice. Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization

2013 228 x 152 mm 264pp 978-0-521-88959-9 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521889599

Early China A Social and Cultural History Li Feng Columbia University, New York

Li Feng’s new critical interpretation provides a comprehensive and accessible overview of China’s early history. Based on the most recent scholarship and archaeological discoveries from the past thirty years, this is essential reading for anyone who wants to find out more about the foundations of Chinese history and civilization. ‘Li Feng has delivered a highly competent and accessible account of the social, political, and institutional history of early China. The text incorporates the most current state of scholarship in a rapidly developing field and deserves particular praise for its expert inclusion of archaeological evidence. The book will be welcomed by non-specialists and specialists alike.’ Roel Sterckx, University of Cambridge New Approaches to Asian History

2013 228 x 152 mm 350pp 82 b/w illus. 17 maps 1 table 978-0-521-89552-1 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-71981-0 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521895521

History (general) after 1500 The Moral Economy Poverty, Credit, and Trust in Early Modern Europe Laurence Fontaine Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris

The Moral Economy examines the nexus of poverty, credit, and trust in early modern Europe, focusing on lending practices and the values that structured them. Laurence Fontaine creates a dialogue between past and present, contrasting their definitions of poverty, the role of the market, and the mechanisms of microcredit. 2014 228 x 152 mm 234pp 978-1-107-01881-5 Hardback c. £60.00 978-1-107-60370-7 Paperback c. £20.00 Publication April 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107018815

Imperial Rule and the Politics of Nationalism Anti-Colonial Protest in the French Empire Adria K. Lawrence Yale University, Connecticut

In this pathbreaking study of the decolonization era, Adria Lawrence asks why elites in French colonies shifted from demands for egalitarian and democratic reforms to calls for independent statehood, and why mass mobilization for independence emerged where and when it did. 2013 216 x 138 mm 288pp 1 b/w illus. 19 tables 978-1-107-03709-0 Hardback £50.00 978-1-107-64075-7 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107037090

The Sensuous in the CounterReformation Church Edited by Marcia B. Hall Temple University, Philadelphia

and Tracy E. Cooper Temple University, Philadelphia

This book examines the promotion of the sensuous as part of religious experience in the Roman Catholic Church of the early modern period. During the Counter-Reformation, every aspect of religious practice was reviewed and, in attempting to win back the faithful, the Church embraced the sensuous and promoted the use of


History (general) after 1500 theatre as an important part of religious experience. 2013 253 x 177 mm 356pp 76 b/w illus. 978-1-107-01323-0 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107013230

Law and Legal Process Substantive Law and Procedure in English Legal History Edited by Matthew Dyson University of Cambridge

and David Ibbetson University of Cambridge

Humanitarian Intervention A History Edited by Brendan Simms University of Cambridge

and D. J. B. Trim University of Reading

This unique and wide-ranging history of humanitarian intervention examines responses to oppression, persecution and mass atrocities from the emergence of the international state system and international law in the late sixteenth century, to the end of the twentieth century. ‘One of Simms and Trim’s expressed objectives is to show the ‘rich and varied’ history of humanitarian intervention, which is definitely achieved.’ Kate Nevens, International Affairs 2013 229 x 152 mm 426pp 7 maps 978-1-107-67332-8 Paperback £22.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107673328

Slavery and the Enlightenment in the British Atlantic, 1750–1807 Justin Roberts Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia

This book focuses on how Enlightenment ideas shaped plantation management and slave work routines. It shows how work dictated slaves’ experiences and influenced their families and communities on large plantations, and examines plantation management schemes, agricultural routines and work regimes in more detail than other scholars have done. 2013 228 x 152 mm 336pp 31 b/w illus. 27 tables 978-1-107-02585-1 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107025851

economic crises, revolts and drawn-out wars. Contributors: Ebru Boyar, Palmira Brummett, Murat Cizakca, Geza David, Suraiya Faroqhi, Kate Fleet, Gottfried Hagen, Colin Imber, Cigdem Kafescioglu, Selim Kuru, Salih Ozbaran, Gilles Veinstein

Using sources ranging from court records to merchants’ diaries and lawyers’ letters, this collection of papers from the Twentieth British Legal History Conference brings together the work of English legal historians to explore the relationship between substantive law and the reality of the law’s operation.

Cambridge History of Turkey

2013 228 x 152 mm 365pp 1 b/w illus. 8 tables 978-1-107-04058-8 Hardback £60.00

European Colonialism since 1700

For all formats available, see

James R. Lehning

www.cambridge.org/9781107040588

University of Utah

Key Reference

The Cambridge History of Turkey Volume 2: The Ottoman Empire as a World Power, 1453–1603 Edited by Suraiya N. Faroqhi Istanbul Bilgi Üniversitesi

and Kate Fleet Newnham College, Cambridge

Volume 2 of The Cambridge History of Turkey examines the period from the conquest of Constantinople in 1453 to the accession of Ahmed I in 1603. During this period, the Ottoman Empire moved into a new phase of expansion, emerging in the sixteenth century as a dominant political player on the world scene. With territory stretching around the Mediterranean from the Adriatic Sea to Morocco, and from the Caucasus to the Caspian Sea, the Ottomans reached the apogee of their military might in a period seen by many later Ottomans, and historians, as a golden age in which the state was strong, the sultan’s might unquestionable, and intellectual life and the arts flourishing. In this volume, leading scholars assess the considerable expansion of Ottoman power and effervescence of the Ottoman intellectual and cultural world. They also investigate the challenges that faced the Ottoman state, particularly in the later period, as the empire experienced

23

2013 228 x 152 mm 728pp 29 b/w illus. 4 maps 978-0-521-62094-9 Hardback £120.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521620949

Textbook

A much-needed complete survey of European colonialism from 1700 to twentieth century decolonization, bridging, for the first time, the early modern Atlantic colonies and later Asian and African colonies of Spain, Portugal, Britain, France and the Netherlands. For advanced undergraduate and graduate students of history, international studies and political science. ‘Maintaining both a comparative and transnational focus, [Lehning] offers a detailed consideration of the social, economic and cultural changes wrought on societies and communities by the varied impacts of colonial rule. The result is a refreshingly ambitious history that, among other things, will allow students to connect North and South American colonial encounters, ideas and arguments.’ Martin Thomas, University of Exeter

Contents: 1. Introduction; 2. The European empires in the early eighteenth century; 3. The restructuring of the Atlantic empires; 4. The new empires in Oceania and Asia; 5. Africa and the Middle East; 6. Imperial Europe in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries; 7. Decolonisation and postcolonial Europe. New Approaches to European History

2013 228 x 152 mm 320pp 11 b/w illus. 4 maps 978-0-521-51870-3 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-74171-2 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521518703

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24

History (general) after 1500 / 20C history (general) Guano and the Opening of the Pacific World A Global Ecological History Gregory T. Cushman University of Kansas

This book provides a global history of guano, a once little known but vastly important commodity that originates in the Pacific Basin. Gregory T. Cushman argues that this unique resource played an integral role in the Western Industrial Revolution, influencing modern developments such as environmental consciousness and conservation movements, the ascendance of science and technology and world war. ‘This thoroughly researched book is unique and ambitious in its temporal scope and interpretation. The littleknown story of guano – the fertilizer based on seabirds’ excrement that has marked much of Peruvian history – and the fascinating seabirds that produced it, acquire new meanings, new actors, and a global dimension; illuminating the intersection of nature, politics, and science from a contemporary perspective.’ Marcos Cueto, Instituto de Estudios Peruanos Studies in Environment and History

2013 228 x 152 mm 408pp 16 b/w illus. 4 maps 978-1-107-00413-9 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107004139

Key Reference

The Cambridge History of China Volume 5: The Five Dynasties and Sung China, 960–1279 AD Part 2 Edited by John Chaffee and Denis Twitchett

The second of two volumes on the Sung Dynasty, providing a comprehensive history of China from the fall of the T’ang in 907 to the Mongol conquest of 1279. Authoritative topical treatment of key economic, social, cultural and intellectual developments demonstrates the profound significance of this period in Chinese history. The Cambridge History of China

2014 228 x 152 mm 1100pp 3 b/w illus. 4 maps 978-0-521-24330-8 Hardback c. £120.00 Publication June 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521243308

20C history (general) American Grand Strategy in the Mediterranean during World War II Andrew Buchanan University of Vermont

This book argues that the United States had a powerful and sustained grand strategic approach to the countries of the Mediterranean during World War II and that, under the active leadership of Franklin Roosevelt, it attained substantial wartime and post-war advantage by pursuing this course. 2014 228 x 152 mm 320pp 16 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-1-107-04414-2 Hardback £60.00 Publication January 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107044142

The Battle against Anarchist Terrorism An International History, 1878–1934 Richard Bach Jensen Northwestern State University

This is the first global history of the secret international diplomatic and police campaign waged against anarchist terrorism from 1880 to the 1920s. Placing anarchist terrorism in the context of economic and social globalisation, this book considers why some nations dealt with this global phenomenon more effectively than others. 2013 228 x 152 mm 448pp 10 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03405-1 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107034051

global war among industrialised powers, whilst Volumes 2 and 3 explore the social, economic, cultural and political challenges that the war presented to politicians, industrialists, soldiers and civilians. Written by a team of leading international historians, the volumes together reveal the ways in which the war transcended the boundaries of Europe, subsequently to transform the Middle East, Africa, Asia and the Americas, just as much as Europe itself. Advance praise: ‘… formidably comprehensive …’ The Bookseller

Contributors: Jay Winter, Volker Berghahn, Jean-Jacques Becker, Gerd Krumeich, Stephane Audoin-Rouzeau, Robin Prior, Michael Neiberg, Christoph Mick, Bruno Cabanes, Holger Afflerbach, Nicola Labanca, Paul Kennedy, John Morrow, Gary Sheffield, Steve Badsey, John Horne, Bill Nasson, Mustafa Aksakal, Guoqi Xu, Jennifer Keene, Olivier Compagnon, Annette Becker, Annie Deperchin, HansLukas Kieser, Donald Bloxham, Dittmar Dahlmann, David Stevenson, Stig Forster, Richard Bessel, Heather Jones, Alexander Watson, Len Smith, Ian Brown, Frédéric Guelton, Barry Supple, Antoine Prost, Stefan Goebel, Benjamin Ziemann, Hans-Peter Ullmann, Roy Macleod, Alan Kramer, Georges-Henri Soutou, Samuel Kruizinga, Martin Ceadel, Helmut Konrad, Robert Gerwarth, Arndt Weinrich, Martha Hanna, Manon Pignot, Laura Lee Downs, Susan R. Grayzel, Margaret Higonnet, Joanna Bourke, Laurence Van Ypersele, Peter Gatrell, Philippe Nivet, Panikos Panayi, Sophie de Schaepdrijver, Anne Rasmussen, Leo van Bergen, Joy Damousi, Nicolas Beaupre, Adrian Gregory, Laurent Veray, Bruce Scates, Rebecca Wheatley The Cambridge History of the First World War

2013 228 x 152 mm 2340pp 6 b/w illus. 183 colour illus. 34 maps 978-1-107-66058-8 3 Volume Hardback Set £240.00 Publication December 2013 For all formats available, see

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The Cambridge History of the First World War Edited by Jay Winter

The Cambridge History of the First World War is a comprehensive, three-volume work, which provides an authoritative account of the military, political, social, economic and cultural history of the Great War. Reflecting the very latest research in the field, the volumes provide a transnational guide to the course of war and how the dynamics of conflict unfolded throughout the world. Volume 1 surveys the military history, showing the brutal realities of a

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The Cambridge History of the First World War Volume 1: Global War Edited by Jay Winter Yale University, Connecticut

This first volume of The Cambridge History of the First World War provides a comprehensive account of the war’s military history. An international team of leading historians charts how a war made possible by globalization and imperial expansion unfolded into catastrophe, growing year by year in


20C history (general) / History after 1945 (general) / African history scale and destructive power far beyond that which anyone had anticipated in 1914. Adopting a global perspective, the volume analyses the spatial impact of the war and the subsequent ripple effects that occurred both regionally and across the world. It explores how imperial powers devoted vast reserves of manpower and material to their war efforts, and how, by doing so, they changed the political landscape of the world order. It also charts the moral, political and legal implications of the changing character of war and, in particular, the collapse of the distinction between civilian and military targets. Contributors: Jay Winter, Volker Berghahn, Jean-Jacques Becker, Gerd Krumeich, Stephane Audoin-Rouzeau, Robin Prior, Michael Neiberg, Christoph Mick, Bruno Cabanes, Holger Afflerbach, Nicola Labanca, Paul Kennedy, John Morrow, Gary Sheffield, Steve Badsey, John Horne, Bill Nasson, Mustafa Aksakal, Guoqi Xu, Annette Becker, Annie Deperchin, Hans-Lukas Kieser, Donald Bloxham The Cambridge History of the First World War

2013 228 x 152 mm 752pp 1 b/w illus. 64 colour illus. 30 maps 978-0-521-76385-1 Hardback £90.00 Publication December 2013 For all formats available, see

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The Cambridge History of the First World War Volume 2: The State Edited by Jay Winter Yale University, Connecticut

Volume 2 of The Cambridge History of the First World War offers a history of the war from a predominantly political angle and concerns itself with the story of the state. It explores the multifaceted history of state power and highlights the ways in which different political systems responded to, and were deformed by, the near-unbearable pressures of war. Every state involved faced issues of military-civilian relations, parliamentary reviews of military policy, and the growth of war economies; and yet their particular form and significance varied in every national case. Written by a global team of historical experts, this volume sets new standards in the political history of the waging of war in an authoritative new narrative which addresses problems of logistics, morale, innovation in tactics and weapons systems, and the use and abuse of

science, all of which were ubiquitous during the conflict. Contributors: Jay Winter, Jean-Jacques Becker, Gerd Krumeich, Dittmar Dahlmann, David Stevenson, Stig Forster, Richard Bessel, Stéphane Audoin-Rouzeau, Heather Jones, Alexander Watson, Len Smith, Ian Brown, Frédéric Guelton, John Horne, Barry Supple, Antoine Prost, Stefan Goebel, Benjamin Ziemann, Hans-Peter Ullmann, Roy Macleod, Alan Kramer, Georges-Henri Soutou, Samuel Kruizinga, Martin Ceadel, Helmut Konrad, Robert Gerwarth, Arndt Weinrich The Cambridge History of the First World War

2013 228 x 152 mm 792pp 67 colour illus. 3 maps 978-0-521-76653-1 Hardback £90.00 Publication December 2013 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521766531

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The Cambridge History of the First World War Volume 3: Civil Society Edited by Jay Winter Yale University, Connecticut

Volume 3 of The Cambridge History of the First World War explores the social and cultural history of the war and considers the role of civil society throughout the conflict; that is to say those institutions and practices outside the state through which the war effort was waged. Drawing on 25 years of historical scholarship, it sheds new light on culturally significant issues such as how families and medical authorities adapted to the challenges of war and the shift that occurred in gender roles and behaviour that would subsequently reshape society. Adopting a transnational approach, this volume surveys the war’s treatment of populations at risk, including refugees, minorities and internees, to show the full extent of the disaster of war and, with it, the stubborn survival of irrational kindness and the generosity of spirit that persisted amidst the bitterness at the heart of warfare, with all its contradictions and enduring legacies. Contributors: Jay Winter, Stéphane Audoin-Rouzeau, Martha Hanna, Manon Pignot, John Horne, Laura Lee Downs, Susan R. Grayzel, Margaret Higonnet, Joanna Bourke, Heather Jones, Laurence Van Ypersele, Peter Gatrell, Philippe Nivet,

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Panikos Panayi, Sophie de Schaepdrijver, Annette Becker, Anne Rasmussen, Adrian Gregory, Nicolas Beaupre, Laurent Veray, Bruce Scates, Rebecca Wheatley, Antoine Prost The Cambridge History of the First World War

2013 228 x 152 mm 808pp 1 b/w illus. 48 colour illus. 1 table 978-0-521-76684-5 Hardback £90.00 Publication December 2013 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521766845

History after 1945 (general) Allen Dulles, the OSS, and Nazi War Criminals The Dynamics of Selective Prosecution Kerstin von Lingen Universität Heidelberg

Kerstin von Lingen shows how Nazi SS-General Karl Wolff avoided war crimes prosecution because of his role in ‘Operation Sunrise’, negotiations conducted by high-ranking American, Swiss and British officials – in violation of the Casablanca agreements with the Soviet Union – for the surrender of German forces in Italy. ‘Kerstin von Lingen’s most important book sheds light on a fascinating, cinema-like story. For the first time we learn how Karl Wolff, one of the most prominent surviving SS generals, managed to avoid prosecution with the help of the OSS. This well-researched book is essential reading for everyone interested in the astonishing story of German war criminals in the postwar period.’ Sönke Neitzel, London School of Economics and Political Science 2013 228 x 152 mm 340pp 9 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02593-6 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107025936

African history A History of Zimbabwe Alois S. Mlambo University of Pretoria

There is currently no single-volume history of Zimbabwe that provides detailed coverage of the country’s experience from pre-colonial times to the present. This book examines Zimbabwe’s pre-colonial, colonial and postcolonial social, economic and political history and relates historical

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African history factors and trends to more recent developments in the country. 2014 228 x 152 mm 300pp 12 b/w illus. 6 maps 23 tables 978-1-107-02170-9 Hardback c. £55.00 978-1-107-68479-9 Paperback c. £17.99 Publication May 2014 For all formats available, see

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A History of Sub-Saharan Africa Second edition Robert O. Collins

2014 253 x 177 mm 325pp 45 b/w illus. 6 maps 978-1-107-03609-3 Hardback £65.00 Publication January 2014

Late of the University of California, Santa Barbara

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African History through Sources, 1850–1945 Experiences and Contexts Volume 1 Nancy J. Jacobs Brown University, Rhode Island

African History through Sources, 1850– 1945 presents the history of colonial Africa using more than 100 primary sources, each with an introduction to provide context. This work complements standard textbook narratives with varied and nontraditional accounts of life during Africa’s colonial past. Contents: Introduction; 1. Life before the imperialist scramble; 2. Imperial occupation; 3. Colonialism in the everyday; 4. Race, imperial citizenship, and colonial subjecthood; 5. Colonial subjecthood and popular politics; 6. The undoings of empire; 7. Africa’s war for freedom. 2014 228 x 152 mm 300pp 38 b/w illus. 8 maps 978-1-107-03089-3 Hardback c. £50.00 978-1-107-67925-2 Paperback c. £17.99 Publication May 2014 For all formats available, see

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The Long Struggle against Malaria in Tropical Africa James L. A. Webb, Jr Colby College, Maine

This book is the first history of malaria control efforts in tropical Africa. It is a pioneering contribution to the emerging sub-discipline of the historical epidemiology of contemporary disease challenges, integrating materials from the fields of parasitology, entomology, and medicine, and framing the story in the larger context of tumultuous political, social, cultural, and economic change in tropical Africa. 2014 228 x 152 mm 275pp 5 b/w illus. 6 maps 1 table 978-1-107-05257-4 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication April 2014 For all formats available, see

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and James. M Burns Clemson University, South Carolina

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many encounters between living and dead.

The second edition of A History of SubSaharan Africa continues to provide an accessible introduction to the continent’s history for students and general readers. It places events and developments that general readers will be familiar with into a broad context, emphasising the role of environment and geography in shaping the African past. Contents: 1. The historical geography of Africa; 2. Kingdoms on the Nile; 3. The peoples of sub-Saharan Africa: society, culture, language; 4. Crops, cows, and iron; 5. Northeast Africa in the age of Aksum; 6. Empires of the plains; 7. East Africa and the Indian Ocean world; 8. The Lake Plateau of East Africa; 9. Societies and states of the West African forest; 10. Kingdoms and trade in Central Africa; 11. The peoples and states of southern Africa; 12. Africa in world history; 13. Diseases and crops: old and new; 14. Slavery in Africa; 15. The Atlantic slave trade; 16. The Asian slave trade; 17. Imperial Africa; 18. The European conquest of Africa; 19. Southern Africa, 1486–1910; 20. European colonial rule in Africa; 21. The colonial legacy; 22. Independent Africa; 23. The Union of South Africa and the apartheid state; 24. A decade of hope; 25. Cold War Africa; 26. Africa at the beginning of the twentyfirst century. 2014 253 x 177 mm 408pp 27 b/w illus. 35 maps 978-1-107-03780-9 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-62851-9 Paperback £19.99 Publication January 2014 For all formats available, see

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Ancestral Encounters in Highland Madagascar Material Signs and Traces of the Dead Zoë Crossland Columbia University, New York

Nineteenth-century highland Madagascar was a place inhabited by the dead as much as the living. Ghosts, ancestors and the possessed were important historical actors alongside local kings and queens, soldiers, traders and missionaries. This book considers the challenges that such actors pose for writing history, and draws on archaeology, landscape study, oral history and textual sources to trace the

African Voices on Slavery and the Slave Trade Volume 1: The Sources Edited by Alice Bellagamba University of Milan-Bicocca

Sandra E. Greene Cornell University, New York

and Martin A. Klein University of Toronto

To cast light on African perspectives of the history of slavery, top Africanist scholars have examined both conventional historical sources and lessexplored sources of information. African Voices on Slavery and the Slave Trade is the first of two volumes providing a trove of African sources for studying African slavery and slave trade. ‘By combining so many studies that give voice to enslaved Africans into a single forum, Bellagamba, Greene, and Klein have transformed the study of slavery in a way that will require a revolutionary reassessment of what we think about slavery and how we study enslavement and resistance … a tour de force of global significance for historians, students, and all people concerned with social justice.’ Paul E. Lovejoy, Canada Research Chair in African Diaspora History, York University 2013 253 x 177 mm 588pp 23 b/w illus. 23 maps 2 tables 978-0-521-19470-9 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521194709

An African Slaving Port and the Atlantic World Benguela and its Hinterland Mariana P. Candido Princeton University, New Jersey

This book traces the history and development of the port of Benguela, on the coast of Africa, from the early seventeenth to the mid-nineteenth century. In discussing the impact of the trans-Atlantic slave trade on African societies, Mariana P. Candido explores the formation of new elites, the collapse of old states and the emergence of new states. ‘Mariana Candido has written a major study of a slaving port and its linkages both to the South Atlantic system and to its hinterland. She makes a


African history / South Asian history powerful argument about the way the slave trade shaped not only the development of Benguela but also African societies in its hinterland. She also makes an important argument on the role of female entrepreneurs in that process.’ Martin Klein, University of Toronto African Studies, 124

2013 228 x 152 mm 385pp 5 b/w illus. 5 maps 978-1-107-01186-1 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107011861

Slavery and Emancipation in Islamic East Africa From Honor to Respectability Elisabeth McMahon Tulane University, Louisiana

Examining the process of abolition on the island of Pemba off the East African coast in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, this book demonstrates the links between emancipation and the redefinition of honour among all classes of people on the island. African Studies, 126

2013 228 x 152 mm 293pp 5 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02582-0 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107025820

A History of African Motherhood The Case of Uganda, 700–1900 Rhiannon Stephens Columbia University, New York

This is the first book-length treatment of the history of motherhood in precolonial Africa. This book takes a new approach to longue durée African history through a focus on a highly gendered social institution, and changes our understanding of social and political organization in a region depicted as intensely patriarchal. ‘This work is a major contribution to the expanding new, groundbreaking field of African historical studies, which aims to bring to light the hitherto neglected precolonial social history of the continent. The author shows a full and finely tuned grasp of the techniques of linguistic historical reconstruction and a complete knowledge of – and an ability to effectively incorporate – the literature and the historical sources.’ Christopher Ehret, University of California, Los Angeles

African Studies, 127

2013 228 x 152 mm 232pp 1 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-107-03080-0 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

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The Borders of Race in Colonial South Africa The Kat River Settlement, 1829–1856 Robert Ross Rijksuniversiteit Leiden, The Netherlands

This is the detailed narrative of the Kat River Settlement, located on the border between the Cape Colony and the amaXhosa in the Eastern Cape of South Africa during the nineteenth century. The settlement created a fertile landscape and developed a political theology of great political and racial importance to the evolution of the Cape and South Africa as a whole.

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Environmental Infrastructure in African History Examining the Myth of Natural Resource Management in Namibia Emmanuel Kreike Princeton University, New Jersey

This book offers a new approach for analyzing and narrating environmental change. Emmanuel Kreike argues that humans – in collaboration with plants, animals, and other animate and inanimate forces – create environmental infrastructure that is constantly remade and re-imagined in the face of ongoing processes of change. Studies in Environment and History

2013 228 x 152 mm 254pp 6 b/w illus. 1 map 978-1-107-00151-0 Hardback £55.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107001510

African Studies, 128

2013 228 x 152 mm 376pp 24 b/w illus. 6 maps 978-1-107-04249-0 Hardback £65.00 Publication December 2013 For all formats available, see

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Inside African Anthropology Monica Wilson and her Interpreters Edited by Andrew Bank University of the Western Cape, South Africa

Foreign Intervention in Africa From the Cold War to the War on Terror Elizabeth Schmidt Loyola University Maryland

This book chronicles the foreign political and military interventions in Africa from 1956 to 2010, during the periods of decolonisation and the Cold War, as well as during the periods of state collapse and the ‘global war on terror’, helping readers understand the historical roots of Africa’s problems. ‘This book is a meticulously researched study that brings together a vast body of literature in a clear and accessible way and is written by one of the leading scholars of her generation. Above all else it underscores how critical foreign intervention has been in shaping the arc of recent history throughout the continent.’ Allen Isaacman, Regents Professor, University of Minnesota New Approaches to African History, 7

2013 228 x 152 mm 284pp 16 b/w illus. 8 maps 978-0-521-88238-5 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-70903-3 Paperback £17.99 For all formats available, see

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and Leslie J. Bank University of Fort Hare, South Africa

This study offers an incisive biography of the life and work of South Africa’s foremost social anthropologist, Monica Hunter Wilson. By exploring her main fieldwork and intellectual projects in southern Africa between the 1920s and 1960s, the book offers insights into the personal and intellectual life of a leading African anthropologist. The International African Library, 44

2013 228 x 152 mm 369pp 23 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02938-5 Hardback £55.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107029385

South Asian history Islamabad and the Politics of International Development in Pakistan Markus Daechsel Royal Holloway, University of London

A highly original history of the design and development of Pakistan’s capital city; one of the most iconic and ambitious urban reconstruction projects of the 1950s and 1960s. Balancing

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South Asian history / South-East Asian history archival research with fresh theoretical insights, Markus Daechsel surveys the project’s successes and failures, evaluating Islamabad’s place in post-war international development. 2014 228 x 152 mm 320pp 978-1-107-05717-3 Hardback c. £65.00 Publication June 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107057173

Islamic Reform in South Asia Edited by Filippo Osella University of Sussex

and Caroline Osella University of London

This book discusses contemporary Islamic reformism in South Asia in some of its diverse historical orientations and geographical expressions. Urging a more nuanced examination of all forms of reformism and their reception in practice, the contributions here powerfully demonstrate the historical and geographical specificities of reform projects. 2013 228 x 152 mm 535pp 2 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03175-3 Hardback £70.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107031753

Coming of Age in NineteenthCentury India The Girl-Child and the Art of Playfulness Ruby Lal Emory University, Atlanta

In this eloquent history, Ruby Lal traces the coming of age of nineteenth-century Indian women. While in the north Indian patriarchal environment, women’s lives were dominated by domestic duties, Lal reveals that women in the early nineteenth century experienced greater freedoms, playfulness and creativity than their counterparts in the more restricted colonial world at the end of the century. 2013 228 x 152 mm 247pp 4 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-1-107-03024-4 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107030244

The Hindu Family and the Emergence of Modern India Law, Citizenship and Community Eleanor Newbigin School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London

Tracing the historical roots of India’s transition to independence, Newbigin’s highly original study explores the role of economy, gender and religion in the development of representative politics in twentieth-century India. This book will stimulate debate across disciplines, particularly among scholars considering law, gender and economy in colonial and post-colonial societies. Cambridge Studies in Indian History and Society

2013 228 x 152 mm 277pp 2 maps 7 tables 978-1-107-03783-0 Hardback £60.00

Law and Identity in Colonial South Asia Parsi Legal Culture, 1772–1947 Mitra Sharafi University of Wisconsin, Madison

This book explores the legal culture of the Parsis, or Zoroastrians, an ethno-religious community unusually invested in the colonial legal system of British India and Burma. From the mid-nineteenth century until India’s independence in 1947, Parsis became heavy users of colonial law, acting as lawyers, judges, litigants, lobbyists, and legislators. Studies in Legal History

2014 228 x 152 mm 420pp 28 b/w illus. 1 map 978-1-107-04797-6 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication April 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107047976

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107037830

The Sugar Plantation in India and Indonesia Industrial Production, 1770–2010 Ulbe Bosma International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam

In this book, Ulbe Bosma details how the British and Dutch introduced the sugar plantation model in Asia around 1800, when abolitionist campaigns in the Caribbean began, and refashioned it over time. Previously, European markets had almost exclusively relied on Caribbean sugar produced by slave labor. ‘This well-researched global history of a major traditional industry of Asia (sugar) breaks new ground. Departing from the usual preoccupation with plantations, Bosma draws our attention to small-scale production systems and associated property regimes, and connects sugar with empire, India with Indonesia, and colonial developments with postcolonial ones. The book should encourage historians to rethink the notion of industrialization.’ Tirthankar Roy, London School of Economics and Political Science Studies in Comparative World History

2013 228 x 152 mm 336pp 9 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-1-107-03969-8 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107039698

The Economy of Modern India From 1860 to the Twenty-First Century Second edition B. R. Tomlinson School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London

Rapid economic growth has put India at the centre of current debates about the future of the global economy. In this fully revised, up-to-date and comprehensive account of the modern Indian economy, B. R. Tomlinson considers the history of economic growth and change over the last 150 years. The New Cambridge History of India

2013 228 x 152 mm 270pp 6 b/w illus. 20 maps 30 tables 978-1-107-02118-1 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-60547-3 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107021181

South-East Asian history Burma’s Economy in the Twentieth Century Ian Brown School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London

For the first time, Burma’s economic failure in the second half of the twentieth century is set firmly within the context of the country’s earlier colonial period. This is an incomparable introduction to Burma’s political and economic history for students in


South-East Asian history / East Asian history Southeast Asian history, development studies and political science. ‘This important new book could scarcely be better timed. Appearing just as Burma itself is emerging from decades of effective isolation from much of the world, Ian Brown’s account of Burma’s economic travails is both a significant historical work, and a highly valuable contribution to understanding the country’s current (and future) problems and possibilities. A book of immense scholarship worn lightly, Burma’s Economy in the Twentieth Century will prove a seminal contribution to a country that may yet escape the shackles of its past.’ Sean Turnell, Macquarie University 2013 228 x 152 mm 239pp 16 b/w illus. 1 map 4 tables 978-1-107-01588-3 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-68005-0 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107015883

Political Change in Southeast Asia Jacques Bertrand University of Toronto

Jacques Bertrand provides a fresh and highly original survey of politics and political change in Southeast Asia. Against the backdrop of economic development and social transformation in several countries, he uses a comparative framework to explore why some countries have become democratic while others remain persistently authoritarian. ‘At last a book that provides a comprehensive, historically grounded and up-to-date survey of politics in Southeast Asia. Covering the historical origins of the diverse regimes that make up the region, as well as the forces driving political change today, Political Change in Southeast Asia will be welcomed by both experts and students of the region. Paying attention to evolving social structures and complex contingencies, mass social forces and the actions of elites, Jacques Bertrand captures the complex dynamics both driving and retarding political change in this fascinating and politically diverse region.’ Edward Aspinall, Australian National University 2013 228 x 152 mm 255pp 2 b/w illus. 12 tables 978-0-521-88377-1 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-71006-0 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521883771

A History of Modern Indonesia Second edition Adrian Vickers University of Sydney

This account traces the history of Indonesia from the colonial period through revolution and independence to the present, focusing on the experiences of ordinary people. In this new edition, the author revisits his argument as to why Indonesia has yet to realize its potential as a democratic country, while examining the rise of fundamentalist Islam. 2013 228 x 152 mm 320pp 20 b/w illus. 7 maps 978-1-107-01947-8 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-62445-0 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107019478

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East Asian history Chopsticks A Cultural and Culinary History Q. Edward Wang Rowan University, New Jersey

Chopsticks have become a quintessential part of the Japanese, Chinese or Korean culinary experience around the world. This fascinating account of the history of chopsticks explores how they have evolved from an eating implement to a more complex, cultural symbol, providing fresh insights into the cultural history of East Asia. 2014 228 x 152 mm 320pp 978-1-107-02396-3 Hardback c. £25.00 Publication June 2014 For all formats available, see

A History of the Vietnamese K. W. Taylor Cornell University, New York

A groundbreaking new study of Vietnamese history from the earliest times to the present day, based on primary source material and the very latest scholarship. K. W. Taylor combines a comprehensive narrative with a highly original analysis which endeavours to see Vietnam’s past through the eyes of the Vietnamese people. ‘This book is a landmark in scholarship, the product of Keith Taylor’s four decades of intensive and prolonged engagement with Vietnam. There is no other book quite like it: it is the most authoritative work yet written on the full sweep of Vietnamese history. In these pages, stories from this past – whether of cannibals or kings, eunuchs or slaves, queen regents or revolutionaries – are woven into a rich historical account of the Vietnamese past. A magisterial achievement.’ Shawn McHale, George Washington University 2013 247 x 174 mm 709pp 6 b/w illus. 11 maps 11 tables 978-0-521-87586-8 Hardback £75.00 978-0-521-69915-0 Paperback £29.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521875868

www.cambridge.org/9781107023963

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Mao’s Little Red Book A Global History Edited by Alexander C. Cook University of California, Berkeley

On the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of Quotations from Chairman Mao, this edited volume is the first to examine the Little Red Book as a global historical phenomenon, challenging established ideas about the book and re-examining the history of the twentieth-century world. 2014 228 x 152 mm 250pp 9 b/w illus. 978-1-107-05722-7 Hardback £50.00 978-1-107-66564-4 Paperback £17.99 Publication March 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107057227

The Making of a New Rural Order in South China I. Village, Land, and Lineage in Huizhou, 900–1600 Volume 1 Joseph P. McDermott University of Cambridge

Utilising the exceptionally rich sources that survive from Huizhou in southeast China, McDermott traces how the major institutions of village life changed in this region from around 900 to 1600, providing a detailed analysis of premodern Chinese agricultural production, lineage and land management, village religious institutions, and the evolution of economic networks. 2013 228 x 152 mm 360pp 15 tables 978-1-107-04622-1 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107046221

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East Asian history Astrology and Cosmology in Early China Conforming Earth to Heaven David W. Pankenier

New in Paperback

Mao Cult Rhetoric and Ritual in China’s Cultural Revolution Daniel Leese

Lehigh University, Pennsylvania

Freiburg University

In this landmark text, David W. Pankenier introduces readers to a seriously understudied field, illustrating how astronomy shaped the culture of ancient China. Drawing on a broad range of sources, he reveals how astronomical concepts influenced almost every area of social organization, from art and architecture, to political and military decision making.

Although many books have explored Mao’s posthumous legacy, none has scrutinized the massive worship that was fostered around him during the Cultural Revolution. By analyzing secret archival documents, Daniel Leese traces the history of the cult within the Communist Party and at the grassroots level.

‘David Pankenier’s examination of traditional cosmology and astrology in China is the authoritative work in the area. It draws on the latest evidence and most recent scholarship to make a compelling case for the central role of the sky in Chinese religion, philosophy, political thought and social organisation. This book makes a significant contribution both to our understanding of Chinese history and culture, and to the wider history of ideas.’ Dr Nicholas Campion, Sophia Centre for the Study of Cosmology in Culture, University of Wales, Trinity Saint David 2013 228 x 152 mm 611pp 138 b/w illus. 6 maps 9 tables 978-1-107-00672-0 Hardback £85.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107006720

Divination and Prediction in Early China and Ancient Greece Lisa Raphals University of California, Riverside

This book examines early Chinese and Greek divination, including who practised it, who consulted it, the methods used, and the kinds of questions asked. It also examines divination as a subject of rhetorical and political narratives, and its role in the development of systematic philosophical and scientific inquiry. 2013 247 x 174 mm 496pp 26 b/w illus. 3 maps 3 tables 978-1-107-01075-8 Hardback £75.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107010758

‘Leese charts the rise of Mao’s cult in clear stages, with an excellent eye for its intricacies.’ Times Literary Supplement 2013 229 x 152 mm 324pp 15 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-0-521-15222-8 Paperback £18.99 Also available 978-0-521-19367-2 Hardback £57.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521152228

The Peasant in Postsocialist China History, Politics, and Capitalism Alexander F. Day Occidental College, Los Angeles

A radical appraisal of the role of the peasant throughout Chinese history, and how that role has transformed in the reform-era and beyond. Indispensable reading for all those wishing to understand Chinese history and politics, and the debate as to the nature of tomorrow’s China. ‘Rural China, the source of the Chinese Revolution, has suffered marginalization, exploitation, and plunder under developmentalist reform policies since the 1990s, when the PRC leadership decisively embarked on a path of incorporation in global capitalism. In this wellresearched and engaged study, Alexander F. Day critically analyzes the ideological debates occasioned by the ‘agrarian question’, and traces efforts by activists of various political stripes to resolve it. The ‘underside’ of the phenomenal so-called ‘China model’ is recognized widely, including by the regime itself, but is framed more often than not as a problem of sustained development. What makes this study unique and invaluable is bringing to light efforts to remedy it that also aspire to lend some credence to the regime’s ritual claims to socialism.’ Arif Dirlik, Liang Qichao Memorial Distinguished Visiting Professor, Tsinghua University, Beijing

2013 228 x 152 mm 242pp 978-1-107-03967-4 Hardback £55.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107039674

Spying for the People Mao’s Secret Agents, 1949–1967 Michael Schoenhals Lunds Universitet, Sweden

In this fascinating account, Michael Schoenhals reveals the domestic covert operations of Mao’s public security organs through a detailed examination of the cultivation and recruitment of their agents, their training and their operational activities. These revelations, based on hitherto classified documents, enrich our understanding of modern China’s troubled social history. 2013 228 x 152 mm 274pp 20 b/w illus. 978-1-107-01787-0 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-60344-8 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107017870

World War I and the Triumph of a New Japan, 1919–1930 Frederick R. Dickinson University of Pennsylvania

A fascinating new, integrative history of interwar Japan that highlights the wide-ranging impact of the Great War far from the Western Front. Adopting a global context, this book reveals how Japan participated wholeheartedly in new post-war projects of democracy, internationalism, disarmament and peace, shaping Japan’s twentiethcentury world. ‘Dickinson provides a fresh perspective on interwar Japan. His argument is forceful, his prose fluid, and he is sure to spark a heated debate about the nature of change in early twentieth-century Japan.’ Andrew Gordon, Harvard University Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare

2013 228 x 152 mm 231pp 20 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03770-0 Hardback £55.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107037700


Middle East history

Middle East history State, Faith, and Nation in Ottoman and Post-Ottoman Lands Frederick F. Anscombe Birkbeck, University of London

Challenging standard narratives of Ottoman, Balkan and Middle East history, which overemphasise the role of nationalism in the transformation of the region, this book argues that religious affiliation was the most influential shaper of communal identity in the Ottoman era, and that it continues to mould the relationship between state and society today. 2014 228 x 152 mm 320pp 2 b/w illus. 5 maps 978-1-107-04216-2 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-61523-6 Paperback £19.99 Publication March 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107042162

A Critical Introduction to Khomeini Edited by Arshin Adib-Moghaddam SOAS, University of London

As the architect of the Iranian Revolution of 1979, Ayatollah Khomeini remains one of the most inspirational and enigmatic figures of the twentieth century. Written by scholars from varying disciplines, this comprehensive volume covers all aspects of Khomeini’s life and critically examines Khomeini the politician, the philosopher and the spiritual leader. 2014 228 x 152 mm 344pp 21 b/w illus. 1 map 978-1-107-01267-7 Hardback £50.00 978-1-107-67062-4 Paperback £18.99 Publication February 2014 For all formats available, see

offers as sweeping a time frame or as comprehensive a history of this nation.

eyewitness accounts, poetry, fiction, and official documentation into its narrative.

2014 228 x 152 mm 336pp 28 b/w illus. 4 maps 978-1-107-02407-6 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-65473-0 Paperback £19.99 Publication January 2014

2014 228 x 152 mm 304pp 22 b/w illus. 13 maps 978-1-107-03718-2 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-61354-6 Paperback £19.99 Publication January 2014

For all formats available, see

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107024076

www.cambridge.org/9781107037182

Debating Turkish Modernity

The New Middle East

Civilization, Nationalism, and the EEC Mehmet Döşemeci Bucknell University, Pennsylvania

Debating Turkish Modernity explores how Turks spoke about the prospect of joining the European Economic Community between 1959 and 1980. It argues that these debates created deep, bitter divides among Turks by bringing up long-standing questions about Turkey’s past and its ambivalent relationship with Europe. Advance praise: ‘Dösemeci’s meticulously written and lucid book is an excellent historical study that calls for the active imagination of the reader. With a skilful hermeneutical analysis of historical events it invites us to rethink the meanings of modernity through different logics and historicalconceptual sites within which civilization, nation, and Europeanness have been dialogically imagined and debated by Turkish elites. The book powerfully brings to life the impasses and tensions of these debates, shedding a very different light on the much-technicalized discussions of Turkey’s membership to Europe today.’ Meltem Ahiska, Bogaziçi University, Istanbul 2014 228 x 152 mm 206pp 978-1-107-04491-3 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication January 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107044913

www.cambridge.org/9781107012677

A History of Modern Tunisia Second edition Kenneth Perkins

The Israel-Palestine Conflict One Hundred Years of War Third edition James L. Gelvin

University of South Carolina

University of California, Los Angeles

Kenneth Perkins’s new edition of A History of Modern Tunisia examines the history of Tunisia from the midnineteenth century to the present with an emphasis on political, social, economic and cultural developments. No other English-language study of Tunisia

Now in its third edition, James L. Gelvin’s award-winning account is a balanced, compelling, accessible and current introduction for students and general readers. Placing the conflict within the framework of global history, and viewing it as the quintessential nationalist struggle of our time, the book interweaves biographical sketches,

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Protest and Revolution in the Arab World Edited by Fawaz A. Gerges London School of Economics

The New Middle East is one of the first comprehensive books to critically examine the Arab popular uprisings of 2011–12. It contains meticulous and thoughtful reflections on the meanings, causes, drivers and effects of these seminal events on the internal, local and international politics of the Middle East and North Africa. 2014 228 x 152 mm 488pp 12 b/w illus. 3 tables 978-1-107-02863-0 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-61688-2 Paperback £19.99 Publication January 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107028630

Ottoman-Iranian Borderlands Making a Boundary, 1843–1914 Sabri Ateş Southern Methodist University, Texas

The story of the making of the present day Iranian, Iraqi and Turkish boundary, this book details how Russian, Ottoman, British and Iranian commissioners worked intermittently over seven decades to create a boundary in an ethnically, religiously and geographically diverse region. It sheds new light on some of the most contentious issues of the present day. 2013 228 x 140 mm 376pp 13 b/w illus. 12 maps 978-1-107-03365-8 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107033658

The Canonization of Islamic Law A Social and Intellectual History Ahmed El Shamsy University of Chicago

Ahmed El Shamsy’s The Canonization of Islamic Law is a detailed history of the birth of classical Islamic law. It shows how Islamic law and its institutions emerged out of the canonization of the sacred sources of Quran and Sunna

eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/ebookstore


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Middle East history (prophetic practice) in the eighth and ninth centuries CE. 2013 228 x 152 mm 264pp 978-1-107-04148-6 Hardback £55.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107041486

Slavery, the State, and Islam Mohammed Ennaji Mohammed V University

Slavery, the State, and Islam looks at slavery as the foundation of power and the state in the Muslim world. Closely examining major theological and literary Islamic texts, it challenges traditional approaches to the subject. 2013 228 x 152 mm 260pp 978-0-521-11962-7 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-13545-0 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521119627

The Arabs of the Ottoman Empire, 1516–1918 A Social and Cultural History Bruce Masters Wesleyan University, Connecticut

Discussing the role of Arabs in the Ottoman Empire for the four centuries that they were its subjects, this book argues that both Sunni religious scholars and urban notables were willing collaborators in the imperial enterprise, and without their support the Ottoman Empire would not have ruled the Arab lands for as long as they did. 2013 228 x 152 mm 270pp 978-1-107-03363-4 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-61903-6 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107033634

Textbook

A History of Modern Israel Second edition Colin Shindler University of London

The new edition of Colin Shindler’s history of Israel traces the nation’s developments from 1948 to the present day. New content in this sympathetic yet candid portrayal includes the rise of the Israeli far right, Israel’s uneasy dealings with the new administration in the United States and the impact of the Arab Spring. Contents: 1. Zionism and security; 2. The Hebrew republic; 3. New immigrants and first elections; 4. The politics of piety; 5. Retaliation or self-restraint; 6. The rise of the right; 7. The road to Beirut; 8. Dissent at home and abroad; 9. An insurrection before

a handshake; 10. The end of ideology?; 11. The killing of a prime minister; 12. The magician and the bulldozer; 13. He does not stop at the red light; 14. An unlikely grandfather; 15. A brotherly conflict; 16. Bialik’s bequest?; 17. Stagnation and isolationism; 18. An Arab spring and an Israeli winter? 2013 228 x 152 mm 492pp 20 b/w illus. 6 maps 978-1-107-02862-3 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-67177-5 Paperback £17.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107028623

Highlight

Iraq in Wartime Soldiering, Martyrdom, and Remembrance Dina Rizk Khoury George Washington University, Washington DC

Hassan II: the iron fist (1961–1975); 7. The second age of Hassan II: the velvet glove (1975–1999); 8. Summation: in search of a new equilibrium; 9. Postscript: the long decade of Muhammad VI (2000–2011). 2013 228 x 152 mm 328pp 32 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-0-521-81070-8 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-00899-0 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521810708

Economy, Family, and Society from Rome to Islam A Critical Edition, English Translation, and Study of Bryson’s Management of the Estate Simon Swain University of Warwick

Dina Rizk Khoury traces the political, social and cultural processes of the normalization of war in Iraq during the last 23 years of Ba’thist rule. Drawing on Ba’thist state and party documents as well as oral interviews with soldiers and intellectuals, this book tells a multilayered story of a society where war had become the norm.

Family, money and marriage are explored through a crucial text that transforms our knowledge of the culture of ancient Rome in its heyday; the first English translation of Bryson’s work, along with a new edition of the Arabic text in which the book survives.

2013 228 x 152 mm 298pp 20 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-0-521-88461-7 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-71153-1 Paperback £18.99

For all formats available, see

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521884617

Textbook

A History of Modern Morocco Susan Gilson Miller University of California, Davis

This richly documented survey of modern Moroccan history by distinguished historian Susan Gilson Miller begins with the French invasion of Algeria in 1830 and charts Morocco’s loss of independence, France’s forty-four year dominion and the monarchy’s post-independence political paralysis, taking events up to 2012. Concise and readable, this will enthral those searching for the background to present-day events in the region. Contents: 1. The closing of the era of Jihad (1830–1860); 2. Facing the challenges of reform (1860–1994); 3. The passing of the old Makhzan (1894–1912); 4. France and Spain in Morocco (1912–1930); 5. Framing the nation (1930–1961); 6. The first age of

2013 228 x 152 mm 585pp 978-1-107-02536-3 Hardback £100.00 www.cambridge.org/9781107025363

Orientalism and Musical Mission Palestine and the West Rachel Beckles Willson Royal Holloway, University of London

The book explores music in religious and development missions sent from Europe to Arabs in Palestine and Israel from 1840 to 2010. It will be crucial reading for researchers in Orientalism and cultural imperialism, as well as music and ethnomusicology students interested in the sociology of western classical music and the Middle East. 2013 247 x 174 mm 377pp 5 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03656-7 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107036567

The Power and the People Paths of Resistance in the Middle East Charles Tripp University of London

Drawing on recent dramatic developments in the Middle East and parallel moments in its modern history, this book examines how people have united to unseat their oppressors. This brilliant yet unsettling book affords a panoramic view of the twentieth and


Middle East history twenty-first century Middle East through occupation, oppression and political resistance. ‘This spirited account carries conviction and by telling it Tripp has made an important contribution in supplementing the record of national liberation struggles.’ Morning Star 2013 228 x 152 mm 407pp 25 b/w illus. 978-0-521-80965-8 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-00726-9 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521809658

Time in Early Modern Islam

team of contributors reflect the very significant advances that have taken place in Ottoman history and Turkish studies in recent years. Contributors: Kate Fleet, Julian Chrysostomides, Charles Melville, Rudi Paul Lindner, Machiel Kiel, Pál Fodor, Howard Crane, Ahmet Yasar Ocak, Suraiya Faroqhi, Palmira Brummett, Ebru Boyar, Salih Ozbaran, Colin Imber, Murat Cizakca, Geza David, Gilles Veinstein, Gottfried Hagen, Cigdem Kafescioglu, Selim Kuru, Wolf Hütteroth, Christoph K. Neumann, Carter Findley, Virginia Aksan, Linda Darling, Dina Khoury, Fikret Adanir, Bruce Masters, Madeline Zilfi, Minna Rozen, Edhem Eldem, Cem Behar, Tülay Artan, Hatice Aynur, Resat Kasaba, Benjamin Fortna, Sükrü Hanioglu, Hasan Kayali, Andrew Mango, Kemal Kirisci, Levent Soysal, Feroz Ahmad, Sevket Pamuk, Ümit Cizre, Hamit Bozarslan, Jenny White, Ahmet Yükleyen, Yesim Arat, Sibel Bozdogan, Erdag Göknar, Çaglar Keyder

region – Jerusalem, Safad (now in Israel), and Tripoli (now in Lebanon). Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization

2014 228 x 152 mm 288pp 15 b/w illus. 4 maps 2 tables 978-1-107-04884-3 Hardback £60.00 Publication April 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107048843

The New Muslims of Post-Conquest Iran Tradition, Memory, and Conversion Sarah Bowen Savant Aga Khan University

University of Minnesota

Cambridge History of Turkey

Stephen P. Blake compares the Islamic concept of time across the empires of the Safavids, Ottomans and Mughals. Each empire created a new temporal system, fashioning a new solar calendar and a new round of rituals and ceremonies from the cultural resources at hand. This book explains the impact of Islamic science on the West.

2013 228 x 152 mm 1000pp 978-1-107-02950-7 4 Volume Hardback Set £390.00

This book studies Iran’s conversion to Islam in the ninth to eleventh centuries, focussing on the historical consciousness of Iranians at that time. It emphasizes the importance of a shared history for groups and traces the remolding of Iranian history and identity that occurred when Iran’s heritage was re-evaluated in light of Islam.

For all formats available, see

Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization

www.cambridge.org/9781107029507

2013 228 x 152 mm 304pp 11 b/w illus. 6 maps 978-1-107-01408-4 Hardback £55.00

2013 228 x 152 mm 219pp 3 maps 978-1-107-03023-7 Hardback £55.00

Sara Scalenghe

Calendar, Ceremony, and Chronology in the Safavid, Mughal and Ottoman Empires Stephen P. Blake

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107030237

Key Reference

The Cambridge History of Turkey General Editor Metin Kunt Sabanci Üniversitesi, Istanbul

Edited by Kate Fleet University of Cambridge

Suraiya N. Faroqhi Istanbul Bilgi Üniversitesi

and Resat Kasaba University of Washington

The Cambridge History of Turkey represents a monumental enterprise. The History, comprising four volumes, covers the period from the end of the eleventh century, with the arrival of the Turks in Anatolia, through the emergence of the early Ottoman state, and its development into a powerful empire in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, encompassing a massive territory from the borders of Iran in the east, to Hungary in the west, and North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula in the south. The last volume covers its destruction in the aftermath of the First World War, and the history of the modern state of Turkey which arose from the ashes of empire. Chapters from an international

Disability in the Ottoman Arab World, 1500–1800 Loyola University Maryland

This book is the first on the history of both physical and mental disabilities in the Middle East and North Africa during Ottoman rule. The author seeks to explain how blindness, deafness and muteness, intersex conditions, and certain mental impairments were understood and experienced in a specific Arab-Islamic context.

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107014084

Women and the Transmission of Religious Knowledge in Islam Asma Sayeed University of California, Los Angeles, NELC

2014 228 x 152 mm 200pp 978-1-107-04479-1 Hardback c. £55.00 Publication April 2014

Asma Sayeed’s book traces the history of Muslim women’s religious education over the course of nearly ten centuries. This fascinating history is relevant for anyone interested in the history of Muslim women as well as those seeking a fuller understanding of developments in Muslim educational and social history.

For all formats available, see

Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization

www.cambridge.org/9781107044791

2013 228 x 152 mm 239pp 4 tables 978-1-107-03158-6 Hardback £50.00

The Mamluk City in the Middle East

For all formats available, see

Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization

History, Culture, and the Urban Landscape Nimrod Luz The Western Galilee College, Akko, Israel

The Mamluk City in the Middle East offers an interdisciplinary study of urban history, urban experience and the nature of urbanism in the region under the rule of the Mamluk Sultanate (1250–1517), focusing on three less-explored but politically significant cities in the Syrian

33

www.cambridge.org/9781107031586

Empire and Power in the Reign of Süleyman Narrating the Sixteenth-Century Ottoman World Kaya Şahin Indiana University

A revisionist reading of Ottoman history during the reign of Süleyman the Magnificent (1520–1566), examining the life and works of a bureaucrat, Celalzade Mustafa. This book argues that the empire was built as part of the Eurasian momentum of empire building,

Visit our website at www.cambridge.org/knowledge


34

Middle East history / Australian history demonstrating an imperial vision. It shows how the Ottoman-Safavid rivalry redefined Sunni and Shiite Islam, laying the foundations for today’s religious tensions. Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization

as the ‘Asian Century’ gathers pace and commitment in Afghanistan draws to an end, this work is essential reading for anyone interested in understanding the modern context of Australia’s military land force.

2013 228 x 152 mm 307pp 15 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-1-107-03442-6 Hardback £60.00

2014 228 x 152 mm 420pp 978-1-107-04365-7 Hardback £40.00 Publication January 2014

For all formats available, see

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107034426

www.cambridge.org/9781107043657

The Logic of Law Making in Islam

Australia 1943

Women and Prayer in the Legal Tradition Behnam Sadeghi Stanford University, California

This pioneering study examines the process of reasoning in Islamic law. By analysing rulings from the Hanafi school, the author questions whether sacred law operated differently from secular law, why laws changed and how different cultural and historical settings impacted on the development of legal rulings. The result is a fascinating overview of the evolution of Islamic law. Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization

2013 228 x 152 mm 234pp 11 b/w illus. 978-1-107-00909-7 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107009097

Australian history The Australian Army from Whitlam to Howard John Blaxland Australian National University, Canberra

The Australian Army from Whitlam to Howard is the first critical examination of Australia’s post-Vietnam military operations, spanning the 35 years between the election of Gough Whitlam and the defeat of John Howard. John Blaxland explores the ‘casualty cringe’ felt by political leaders following the war and how this impacted subsequent operations. He contends that the Australian Army’s rehabilitation involved common individual and collective training and reaffirmation of the Army’s regimental and corps identities. He shows how the Army regained its confidence to play leading roles in East Timor, Bougainville and the Solomon Islands, and to contribute to combat operations further afield. At a time when the Australian Army’s future strategic role is the subject of much debate, and

The Liberation of New Guinea Edited by Peter Dean Australian National University, Canberra

By January 1943, Australia had emerged from the shadow of war in a strong position. The victories in 1942 at Kokoda, Guadalcanal, Buna, Gona and Sanananda had secured the northern coastlines of Papua and Australia. Australian forces were now poised for a full scale offensive to liberate New Guinea from the Japanese, the largest and most complicated operations in their history. Australia 1943 explores the high point of Australia’s influence on operations and strategy in the South West Pacific, a campaign that has been traditionally overshadowed by the drama of Kokoda. It investigates critical operations from January 1943 to April 1944, including Salamaua, Lae/Nadzab, Finschhafen, Shaggy Ridge, the Markham Valley and the Huon Peninsula. Australia 1943 is the first detailed single-volume study of Australia’s military operations in the Pacific during 1943 – Australia’s ‘finest hour’ in the Second World War. Contributors: Peter Dean, David Horner, Hiroyuki Shindo, Kevin C. Holzimmer, Mark Johnston, Ian Pfenningwerth, Ross Mallett, Karl James, Lachlan Grant, Garth Pratten 2013 228 x 152 mm 280pp 978-1-107-03799-1 Hardback £45.00 Publication December 2013 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107037991

Key Reference

The Cambridge History of Australia Edited by Alison Bashford University of Sydney

and Stuart Macintyre University of Melbourne

The Cambridge History of Australia offers a comprehensive view of Australian history from its pre-European origins to the present day. Over two volumes, this major work of reference tells the nation’s social, political and cultural story. Volume 1 examines Australia’s indigenous and colonial

history through to the Federation of the colonies in 1901. Volume 2 opens with the birth of the twentieth century, tracing developments in the nation through to the present day. Each volume is divided into two parts. The first part offers a chronological treatment of the period, while the second examines the period in light of key themes, such as law, religion, the economy and the environment. Both volumes feature detailed maps, chronologies and lists of further reading. This is a lively and systematic account of Australia’s history, incorporating the work of more than sixty leading historians. It is the ideal work of reference for students, scholars and general readers. Contributors: Peter Veth, Susan O’Connor, Shino Konishi, Maria Nugent, Emma Christopher, Hamish Maxwell-Stewart, Grace Karskens, Lisa Ford, David Andrew Roberts, Ann Curthoys, Jessie Mitchell, David Goodman, Stuart Macintyre, Sean Scalmer, Melissa Bellanta, Helen Irving, Janet McCalman, Rebecca Kippen, Andrea Gaynor, Lionel Frost, Tracey Banivanua Mar, Penelope Edmonds, Julia Horne, Geoffrey Sherington, Mark Finnane, Anne O’Brien, John Gascoigne, Sara Maroske, Penny Russell, Robert Dixon, Jeanette Hoorn, Deryck Schreuder, Marilyn Lake, Cindy McCreery, Kirsten McKenzie, John Hirst, Stephen Garton, Peter Stanley, Frank Bongiorno, Kate Darian-Smith, Judith Brett, Paul Strangio, James Walter, Murray Goot, Graeme Davison, David Carter, Bridget GriffenFoley, Alison Bashford, Peter Hobbins, Shurlee Swain, Katie Holmes, Sarah Pinto, Anna Haebich, Steve Kinnane, Simon Ville, Nicholas Brown, Alison Mackinnon, Helen Proctor, Gregory Barton, Brett Bennett, Agnieszka Sobocinska, Richard White, David Lowe, Carl Bridge, Tomoko Akami, Tony Milner, Mark McKenna 2013 228 x 152 mm 1536pp 7 b/w illus. 6 maps 978-1-107-01155-7 2 Volume Set £200.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107011557


History (general), world history

History (general), world history Highlight

The Past is a Foreign Country – Revisited David Lowenthal University College London

A quarter-century after the publication of his classic account of man’s attitudes to his past, David Lowenthal revisits how we celebrate, expunge, contest and domesticate the past to serve present needs. He shows how nostalgia and heritage now pervade every facet of public and popular culture. 2014 247 x 174 mm 720pp 108 b/w illus. 978-0-521-85142-8 Hardback £60.00 978-0-521-61685-0 Paperback £22.99 Publication February 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521851428

A Movable Feast Ten Millennia of Food Globalization Kenneth F. Kiple Bowling Green State University, Ohio

Pepper was once worth its weight in gold. Onions have been used to cure everything from sore throats to foot fungus. White bread was once considered too nutritious. From hunting water buffalo to farming salmon, A Movable Feast chronicles the globalization of food over the past ten thousand years. This engaging history follows the path that food has taken throughout history and the ways in which humans have altered its course. Beginning with the days of hunter-gatherers and extending to the present world of genetically modified chickens, Kenneth F. Kiple details the far-reaching adventure of food. He investigates food’s global impact, from the Irish potato famine to the birth of McDonald’s. Combining fascinating facts with historical evidence, this is a sweeping narrative of food’s place in the world. Looking closely at geographic, cultural and scientific factors, this book reveals how what we eat has transformed over the years from fuel to art. ‘… brimming with curious titbits: the use of cocoa beans as currency; the accidental domestication of rye, oats and various legumes after they hitched a ride with wheat and barley; Coca-Cola’s origins as a health tonic. Anyone interested in the history of

food for whom The Cambridge World History of Food seems too large a helping will find Mr Kiple’s sprightly summary volume far more palatable.’ The Economist 2013 228 x 152 mm 381pp 978-1-107-65745-8 Paperback £14.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107657458

Genocide and International Relations Changing Patterns in the Transitions of the Late Modern World Martin Shaw University of Sussex

Genocide can be assumed to be a problem of dictatorial regimes. This book shows that targeted violence against population groups is a much larger problem, that patterns of genocide depend on international contexts, and that genocide in the modern world can be stimulated as well as constrained by global change. ‘A pioneer scholar of globalization and contemporary warfare, Martin Shaw now focuses his sharp eye on international relations and genocide. This book’s marrying of these fields challenges both theorists and historians to rethink the categories and temporalities of their analysis. It is an important innovation.’ A. Dirk Moses, European University Institute, Florence 2013 228 x 152 mm 246pp 978-0-521-11013-6 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-12517-8 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521110136

The Body in History Europe from the Palaeolithic to the Future Edited by John Robb University of Cambridge

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Asia, or the New World, the book offers a steady stream of comparative insights. As an experiment in multiscalar analysis, The Body in History is a tantalizing, indispensable model for future work.’ Andrew Shryock, University of Michigan 2013 253 x 177 mm 287pp 179 b/w illus. 27 colour illus. 3 maps 978-0-521-19528-7 Hardback £70.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521195287

Key Reference

The Caucasus A History James Forsyth University of Aberdeen

A fascinating new survey of the Caucasus which provides a unified narrative history of this complex and turbulent region at the borderlands of Europe, Asia and the Middle East, from prehistory to the present. For thousands of years the Caucasus has formed a hub of intersecting routes of migration, invasion, trade and culture and a geographical bridge between Europe and Asia, subject to recurring imperial invasion. Drawing on sources in English, Russian and translations from Persian and Arabic, this authoritative study centres on the region’s indigenous peoples, including Abkhazians, Armenians, Azerbaijanis, Chechens, Daghestanis, Circassians, and Georgians, and their relations with outsiders who still play a part in the life of the region today. The book presents a critical view of the role of Russian imperialism in the Caucasian countries and the desperate struggle of most of its native peoples in their efforts to establish a precarious independence. 2013 228 x 152 mm 938pp 38 b/w illus. 28 maps 978-0-521-87295-9 Hardback £100.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521872959

and Oliver J. T. Harris University of Leicester

This book is a long-term history of how the human body has been understood in Europe from the Palaeolithic to the present day. Drawing on the work of a team of experts, the authors examine how the body has been treated in life, art and death, and what this tells us about who we are today and who we have been in the past. ‘This book is amazing. Robb and Harris take us on a grand tour of the human body, tracing its diverse forms and attachments over a span of 50,000 years. Rarely do so many fascinating ideas come together in one place. For scholars who study the body in Africa,

Anzac Journeys Returning to the Battlefields of World War Two Bruce Scates Monash University, Victoria

Australians have been making pilgrimages to the battlefields and cemeteries of World War Two since the 1940s, from the jungles of New Guinea and South-East Asia to the mountains of Greece and the deserts of North Africa. They travel in search of the stories of lost loved ones, to mourn the dead and to come to grips with the past. With characteristic empathy, Bruce Scates charts the history of

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History (general), world history / History of medicine / History of science and technology pilgrimages to Crete, Kokoda, Sandakan and Hellfire Pass. He explores the emotional resonance that these sites have for those who served and those who remember. Based on surveys, interviews, extensive fieldwork and archival research, Anzac Journeys offers insights into the culture of loss and commemoration and the hunger for meaning so pivotal to the experience of pilgrimage. Richly illustrated with fullcolour maps and photographs from the 1940s to today, Anzac Journeys makes an important and moving contribution to Australian military history.

science to present a new understanding of human history. Studies in Environment and History

2014 228 x 152 mm 492pp 49 b/w illus. 3 maps 7 tables 978-0-521-87164-8 Hardback c. £60.00 978-0-521-69218-2 Paperback c. £20.00 Publication April 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521871648

Prayer in Islamic Thought and Practice Marion Holmes Katz New York University

2013 228 x 152 mm 328pp 82 colour illus. 11 maps 978-1-107-02067-2 Hardback £33.00

Marion Holmes Katz’s richly textured book offers a broad historical survey of the rules, values and interpretations relating to Salat, the five daily prayers of Islam. This innovative study on the subject examines the different ways in which prayer has been understood in Islamic law, Sufi mysticism and Islamic philosophy.

For all formats available, see

Themes in Islamic History, 6

‘Why do Australians pick at the scab of war memory? Bruce Scates explains, in a nice blend of empathetic and analytical.’ Professor Peter Stanley, University of New South Wales

www.cambridge.org/9781107020672

The Cartographic State Maps, Territory, and the Origins of Sovereignty Jordan Branch Brown University, Rhode Island

Today’s maps are filled with uniform states separated by linear boundaries. This book examines the important but overlooked role of cartography in shaping the development of modern states. It explores how maps have altered concepts of political space, organization and authority, and transformed practices of internal rule and international interaction. Cambridge Studies in International Relations, 127

2013 228 x 152 mm 224pp 14 b/w illus. 978-1-107-04096-0 Hardback £55.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107040960

2013 228 x 152 mm 249pp 978-0-521-88788-5 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-71629-1 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521887885

History of medicine Galen: Psychological Writings Avoiding Distress, Character Traits, The Diagnosis and Treatment of the Affections and Errors Peculiar to Each Person’s Soul, The Capacities of the Soul Depend on the Mixtures of the Body Edited by P. N. Singer University of Newcastle upon Tyne

With contributions by Daniel Davies Highlight

Climate Change and the Course of Global History A Rough Journey John L. Brooke Ohio State University

Climate Change and the Course of Global History presents the first global study by a historian to fully integrate the earth-system approach of the new climate science with the material history of humanity. Starting with the role of environmental change in biological and human evolution, the book uses the results of three decades of climate

University of Cambridge

and Vivian Nutton University College London

All Galen’s surviving shorter works on psychology and ethics – including the recently discovered Avoiding Distress, and the neglected Character Traits, extant only in Arabic – are here presented in one volume in a new English translation, with substantial introductions and notes and extensive glossaries. Original and penetrating analyses are provided of the psychological and philosophical thought, both of the above and of two absolutely central works of Galenic philosophy, Affections and Errors and The Capacities of the Soul, by some of the foremost

experts in the field. Each treatise has also been subjected to fresh textual study, taking account of the latest scholarly developments, and is presented with accompanying textual discussions, adding greatly to the value and accuracy of the work without detracting from its accessibility to a wider readership. The volume thus makes a major contribution to the understanding of the ancient world’s most prominent doctorphilosopher in his intellectual context. Cambridge Galen Translations

2013 228 x 152 mm 450pp 2 b/w illus. 978-0-521-76517-6 Hardback c. £75.00 Publication December 2013 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521765176

History of science and technology Discovery and Classification in Astronomy Controversy and Consensus Steven J. Dick National Air and Space Museum

This comprehensive history traces more than 400 years of telescopic observation, exploring how the signal discoveries of new astronomical objects relate to and inform one another, and why controversies such as Pluto’s reclassification as a dwarf planet in 2006 are commonplace in astronomy. ‘A highly accessible collection of narrative case studies that explore how the discipline of astronomy has gone about detecting new classes of phenomena and then has decided if, indeed, these new classes are in fact new, or whether they are actually variations or extremes of previously known classes. The bold ambition of the book, to craft a systematic hierarchical classification of all astronomical phenomena, to aid in forming and reforming taxonomies for future discoveries of new astronomical phenomena is, indeed, a goal that should be of great interest to scientists, historians, sociologists and philosophers.’ David H. DeVorkin, National Air and Space Museum 2013 253 x 177 mm 472pp 60 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03361-0 Hardback £30.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107033610


History of science and technology / Military history Highlight

Complexity and the Arrow of Time Edited by Charles H. Lineweaver Australian National University, Canberra

Paul C. W. Davies Arizona State University

and Michael Ruse Florida State University

There is a widespread assumption that the universe in general, and life in particular, is ‘getting more complex with time’. This book brings together a wide range of experts in science, philosophy and theology and unveils their joint effort in exploring this idea. They confront essential problems behind the theory of complexity and the role of life within it: what is complexity? When does it increase, and why? Is the universe evolving towards states of ever greater complexity and diversity? If so, what is the source of this universal enrichment? This book addresses those difficult questions, and offers a unique cross-disciplinary perspective on some of the most profound issues at the heart of science and philosophy. Readers will gain insights in complexity that reach deep into key areas of physics, biology, complexity science, philosophy and religion. ‘The emergence of complex systems after the Big Bang, from a Universe that started out in a very simple state, is one of the great puzzles of science. This book provides the best single-volume insight into the nature of this puzzle, and hints at its possible resolution. It may be the answer to life, the Universe, and everything.’ John Gribbin, University of Sussex

Contributors: Charles H. Lineweaver, Paul C. W. Davies, Michael Ruse, Eric J. Chaisson, Seth Lloyd, Marcelo Gleiser, Simon Conway Morris, Stuart A. Kauffman, D. Eric Smith, David C. Krakauer, David Wolpert, William C. Wimsatt, Philip Clayton 2013 228 x 152 mm 368pp 14 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02725-1 Hardback £21.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107027251

Key Reference

Encyclopedia of the History of Astronomy and Astrophysics David Leverington

This comprehensive Encyclopedia covers the full history of astronomy from its ancient origins in Africa, South America, the Middle East and China to the latest developments in astrophysics and spacebased research. The initial articles, which are largely organised chronologically,

are followed by numerous thematic historical articles on the constituents of the Solar System, types of stars, stellar evolution, active galaxies, cosmology and much more. These are followed by articles on tools and techniques, from the history of spectroscopy to adaptive optics. The last part of the Encyclopedia is devoted to the history of ground- and space-based telescopes and observatories, covering the full spectral range from gamma-rays through the optical waveband to radio waves. Informative and accessibly written, each article is followed by an extensive bibliography to facilitate further research, whilst consistent coverage from ancient times to the present makes this an ideal resource for scholars, students and amateur astronomers alike. ‘There are few volumes as comprehensive as this one … Invaluable.’ Astronomy Now 2013 279 x 216 mm 530pp 81 b/w illus. 18 tables 978-0-521-89994-9 Hardback £45.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521899949

Key Reference

The Cambridge History of Science Volume 2: Medieval Science David C. Lindberg and Michael H. Shank

This volume in the highly respected Cambridge History of Science series is devoted to the history of science in the Middle Ages from the North Atlantic to the Indus Valley. Medieval science was once universally dismissed as non-existent – and sometimes it still is. This volume reveals the diversity of goals, contexts and accomplishments in the study of nature during the Middle Ages. Organized by topic and culture, its essays by distinguished scholars offer the most comprehensive and up-to-date history of medieval science currently available. Intended to provide a balanced and inclusive treatment of the medieval world, contributors consider scientific learning and advancement in the cultures associated with the Arabic, Greek, Latin and Hebrew languages. Scientists, historians and other curious readers will all gain a new appreciation for the study of nature during an era that is often misunderstood. Contributors: Michael H. Shank, David C. Lindberg, F. Jamil Ragep, J. L. Berggren, Elaheh Kheirandish, Robert G. Morrison, Emilie Savage-Smith, Y. Tzvi Langermann, Anne Tihon, Joan Cadden, Stephen C. McCluskey, Bruce S. Eastwood, Vivian

37

Nutton, Charles Burnett, William R. Newman, Walter Roy Laird, John North, Katherine H. Tachau, A. George Molland, E. J. Ashworth, David Woodward, Karen Meier Reeds, Tomomi Kinukawa, Danielle Jacquart, Katharine Park, George Ovitt The Cambridge History of Science

2013 228 x 152 mm 682pp 51 b/w illus. 978-0-521-59448-6 Hardback £100.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521594486

Military history Highlight

How the War Was Won The Anglo-American Destruction of German and Japanese Power Phillips O’Brien University of Glasgow

There were no decisive battles in World War II. In this compelling new history of the path to victory, Phillips O’Brien argues that in terms of production, technology and economic power, the war was far more a contest of air and sea supremacy than land. He shows how the Allies developed a predominance of air and sea power which put unbearable pressure on Germany and Japan’s entire war-fighting system from Europe and the Mediterranean to the Pacific. Air and sea power dramatically expanded the area of battle, allowing the Allies to destroy over half of the Axis’s equipment before it had even reached the battlefield, decisively determining the course of battles. Ultimately, the war was won because the Allies had far more powerful and better-equipped armed forces than the Axis. Battles such as El Alamein, Stalingrad and Kursk did not win World War II; air and sea power did. 2014 228 x 152 mm 410pp 978-1-107-01475-6 Hardback c. £20.00 Publication July 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107014756

Highlight

The Great War at Sea A Naval History of the First World War Lawrence Sondhaus University of Indianapolis

This is a major new naval history of the First World War which reveals the decisive contribution of the war at sea to Allied victory. In a truly global account, Lawrence Sondhaus traces the course of the campaigns in the North Sea, Atlantic, Adriatic, Baltic and Mediterranean and examines the role

eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/ebookstore


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Military history of critical innovations in the design and performance of ships, wireless communication and firepower. He charts how Allied supremacy led the Central Powers to attempt to revolutionize naval warfare by pursuing unrestricted submarine warfare, ultimately prompting the United States to enter the war. Victory against the submarine challenge, following their earlier success in sweeping the seas of German cruisers and other surface raiders, left the Allies free to use the world’s sea lanes to transport supplies and troops to Europe from overseas territories, and eventually from the United States, which proved a decisive factor in their ultimate victory.

The French Army and the First World War

2014 228 x 152 mm 350pp 978-1-107-03690-1 Hardback c. £25.00 Publication July 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107036901

The Iran-Iraq War A Military and Strategic History Williamson Murray Ohio State University

and Kevin Woods Institute for Defense Analyses

The Iran-Iraq war is one of the largest, yet least documented conflicts of the twentieth century. Drawing from an extensive cache of captured Iraqi government records, this book offers an unparalleled military and strategic account of the war through the lens of the Iraqi regime and its senior military commanders. 2014 228 x 152 mm 450pp 978-1-107-06229-0 Hardback c. £60.00 978-1-107-67392-2 Paperback c. £19.99 Publication July 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107062290

The British Army and the First World War Ian Beckett University of Kent, Canterbury

Timothy Bowman University of Kent, Canterbury

and Mark Connelly University of Kent, Canterbury

A definitive and up-to-date account of all aspects of the British Army during the Great War of 1914–18. Three leading military historians tell the story of an unprecedented expansion of a nation in arms and set the conduct of operations within the context of the greatest mobilisation in British history. 2014 228 x 152 mm 420pp 978-1-107-00577-8 Hardback c. £50.00 Publication June 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107005778

Elizabeth Greenhalgh University of New South Wales, Sydney

relationships that have influenced the character of war in the twenty-first century.’ General David H. Petraeus, former Commander of United States Central Command and Commanding General of the Multi-National Force – Iraq and the NATO International Security Assistance Force, Afghanistan

A comprehensive new account of the French Army’s critical contribution to the Great War. Elizabeth Greenhalgh revises our understanding not only of wartime strategy and fighting, but also of other crucial aspects of France’s war, from mutinies and mail censorship to medical services, railways and weapons development.

2013 228 x 152 mm 350pp 978-1-107-04785-3 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-65423-5 Paperback £18.99

2014 228 x 152 mm 400pp 978-1-107-01235-6 Hardback c. £50.00 978-1-107-60568-8 Paperback c. £18.99 Publication June 2014

Transforming Military Power since the Cold War

For all formats available, see

Britain, France, and the United States, 1991–2012 Theo Farrell

www.cambridge.org/9781107012356

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107047853

The Italian Army and the First World War

King’s College London

John Gooch

and Terry Terriff

University of Leeds

Major new account of the role and performance of the Italian Army in the First World War. Setting military events in a broad context, Gooch explores pre-war Italian military culture, and reveals how an army with a reputation for failure fought a challenging war in appalling conditions – and won. 2014 228 x 152 mm 400pp 6 maps 978-0-521-19307-8 Hardback c. £60.00 978-0-521-14937-2 Paperback c. £18.99 Publication June 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9780521193078

Highlight

The Direction of War Contemporary Strategy in Historical Perspective Hew Strachan University of Oxford

The West’s wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have always been seen as strategic failures resulting from a lack of consistent direction, of effective communication, and of governmental coordination. Leading military historian Sir Hew Strachan argues here that these failures resulted from a fundamental misreading and misapplication of strategy itself. ‘A very thoughtful, enormously stimulating, and hugely thoughtprovoking examination of the strategies, concepts, and civil-military

Sten Rynning University of Southern Denmark University of Calgary

A deeply researched account of how the British, French and US armies have transformed themselves since the end of the Cold War. This is an essential reference for anybody studying contemporary military development, the US military, European defence, and the future of military power. ‘Critically integrating and indisputably surpassing the current literature on military innovation, this is a ‘must have’ book for serious students of military affairs and senior leaders, particularly for those interested in, or responsible for, innovation and force development. Transforming Military Power since the Cold War is also highly relevant to policy makers facing key decisions about reposturing ground forces for joint and coalition warfare after the protracted struggles in Iraq and Afghanistan – and to any leader seeking to induce disruptive changes into large organizations.’ Frank G. Hoffman, National Defense University, Washington, DC 2013 228 x 152 mm 318pp 6 b/w illus. 13 tables 978-1-107-04432-6 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-62144-2 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107044326


Military history New in Paperback

Highlight

Decoding Organization

Wargames

Bletchley Park, Codebreaking and Organization Studies Christopher Grey

From Gladiators to Gigabytes Martin van Creveld

University of Warwick

War and games have always been intimately related in many different ways. This book studies the history of wargames – from the Old Testament to computer games – and explores their development, their links to real warfare, and their role in human culture at large.

How was Bletchley Park made as an organization? What was Bletchley Park’s culture and how was its work co-ordinated? Challenging many popular perceptions, this book examines the hitherto unexamined complexities of how 10,000 people were brought together in complete secrecy during World War II to work on ciphers. 2013 229 x 152 mm 342pp 4 b/w illus. 3 tables 978-1-107-67675-6 Paperback £23.99 Also available 978-1-107-00545-7 Hardback £57.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107676756

Highlight

Counterinsurgency Exposing the Myths of the New Way of War Douglas Porch Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, California

Douglas Porch’s sweeping history of counterinsurgency campaigns, ranging from nineteenth-century colonial conquests to General Petraeus’s ‘Surge’ in Iraq, challenges the contemporary mythologising of counterinsurgency as a humane way of war. The reality, he reveals, is that ‘hearts and minds’ has never been a recipe for lasting stability. ‘In this brilliant volume master historian Douglas Porch shatters the myth of contemporary counterinsurgency by exposing its raw historical roots. American counterinsurgents often preach moralistic sounding bromides like ‘protect and serve the local populations’. Porch deconstructs the mythical universe of counterinsurgency and lays bare the historical truth that they are ultimately wars of death, destruction, and often brute conquest.’ Colonel Gian Gentile, United States Military Academy, West Point 2013 228 x 152 mm 445pp 16 b/w illus. 7 maps 978-1-107-02738-1 Hardback £50.00 978-1-107-69984-7 Paperback £17.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107027381

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

‘No other historian could bring us this marvellous history of wargaming and its relationship to the larger strategic and societal trends that are the critical context for the impact these games have had.’ Paul Bracken, Yale University, and author of The Second Nuclear Age 2013 228 x 152 mm 341pp 978-1-107-03695-6 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-68442-3 Paperback £17.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107036956

Army and Society in Ptolemaic Egypt Christelle Fischer-Bovet University of Southern California

The only substantial and up-to-date reference work on the Ptolemaic army. Illuminates how state-formation and the changing structures of the army in Egypt after Alexander’s conquest had an effect on settlement, land distribution and on the development of social networks between Greeks and Egyptians. Armies of the Ancient World

2014 247 x 174 mm 472pp 34 b/w illus. 4 maps 28 tables 978-1-107-00775-8 Hardback £75.00 Publication February 2014 For all formats available, see

industry’s failure to provide modern weaponry. Armies of the Great War

2014 228 x 152 mm 450pp 978-1-107-01144-1 Hardback c. £50.00 978-1-107-64886-9 Paperback c. £18.99 Publication June 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107011441

Britain’s Two World Wars against Germany The Distortions of Hindsight Brian Bond King’s College London

Britain’s role and performance in the two World Wars continues to generate considerable debate but the wars are rarely considered together. Leading military historian Brian Bond here challenges the popular view of the First World War as catastrophic and futile in contrast to the Second World War as a well-conducted and victorious moral crusade. He focusses on the key issues which have caused controversy and distortion, to demonstrate how these views became deeply rooted in popular culture in the years since 1945. These issues range from policy and strategy, combat experience, the attritional strategies of naval blockade and strategic bombing to British generalship, and gains and losses in the aftermath of both wars. He also considers the learning process of the British Army in both world wars. He boldly concludes that in a number of important respects Britain was more successful in the First World War than in the Second. Cambridge Military Histories

2014 228 x 152 mm 260pp 978-1-107-00471-9 Hardback c. £50.00 Publication July 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107007758

www.cambridge.org/9781107004719

The American Army and the First World War

Combat and Genocide on the Eastern Front

David Woodward Marshall University, West Virginia

Definitive new history of the American Army’s performance in World War One ranging from wartime leadership to training and combat in France and Russia. David Woodward reveals the decisive role played by the Doughboys despite a flawed combat doctrine, logistical breakdowns and American

39

The German Infantry’s War, 1941–1944 Jeffrey Rutherford Wheeling Jesuit University, West Virginia

This book examines how the German infantry divisions both waged war against the Red Army and interacted with civilians in the industrial suburbs of Leningrad and the villages of the Demiansk Pocket by focusing on their participation in the starvation policy and

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Military history / Economic history their role in anti-partisan and forced labour programs. Cambridge Military Histories

2014 228 x 152 mm 400pp 39 b/w illus. 10 maps 978-1-107-05571-1 Hardback c. £55.00 978-1-107-65273-6 Paperback c. £18.99 Publication May 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107055711

The Indian Army on the Western Front India’s Expeditionary Force to France and Belgium in the First World War George Morton-Jack

The Indian army fought alongside the British Expeditionary Force on the Western Front from 1914 to 1918, but analysis of its performance tends to deem this a failure. Examining the tactical, operational and administrative performance of the Indian army, this groundbreaking study reconsiders its contribution and combat effectiveness. Cambridge Military Histories

2014 228 x 152 mm 310pp 978-1-107-02746-6 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication May 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107027466

Haig’s Intelligence GHQ and the German Army, 1916–1918 Jim Beach University of Northampton

This is an important new study of Douglas Haig’s controversial command during the First World War. It reveals how the British Army perceived its enemy and how intelligence influenced strategy and operations. This is essential reading for military historians, intelligence scholars and anyone with an interest in the Great War. Cambridge Military Histories

2013 228 x 152 mm 384pp 17 b/w illus. 3 maps 20 tables 978-1-107-03961-2 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107039612

Bombing the People Giulio Douhet and the Foundations of Air-Power Strategy, 1884–1939 Thomas Hippler Université de Lyon

Giulio Douhet was one of the world’s most important early air-power strategists. This book offers the first comprehensive interpretation of Douhet’s strategic thinking and its broader context. It charts the

development of the strategy of targeting civilian populations from colonial warfare to the wake of World War II. Cambridge Military Histories

2013 228 x 152 mm 291pp 978-1-107-03794-6 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107037946

Economic history Highlight

Creating Global Opportunities

Imperial Germany and the Great War, 1914–1918

Maersk Line in Containerisation 1973–2013 Chris Jephson

Third edition Roger Chickering

and Henning Morgen

Georgetown University, Washington DC

This book traces the rise to prominence of Maersk Line – the world’s leading container operator – putting its extraordinary expansion within the context of the globalisation of trade. With unprecedented access to company archives, interviews and statistical data, it will appeal to students, industry specialists and general business readers.

This book provides a comprehensive survey of Germany’s experience during the First World War and paints a rich portrait of life on the home front. The new edition incorporates more material on action outside Europe, military occupation, prisoners of war, and the memory of war. New Approaches to European History

2014 228 x 152 mm 265pp 978-1-107-03768-7 Hardback c. £60.00 978-1-107-69152-0 Paperback c. £19.99 Publication August 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107037687

The Great War and the Origins of Humanitarianism, 1918–1924 Bruno Cabanes Yale University, Connecticut

Groundbreaking study of the transition from war to peace and the birth of humanitarian rights after the Great War. Bruno Cabanes, a pioneer in the study of the aftermath of war, shows how and when the right to human dignity first became inalienable. Advance praise: ‘We are accustomed to thinking about international law as the creature of realist geopolitics. Cabanes shows how international and transnational humanitarian activism helped build international law ‘from below’, in response to basic human needs. His book constitutes an important investigation of the long-run impact of the idealism rising out of the ashes of the Great War.’ Leonard V. Smith, Oberlin College Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare

2014 228 x 152 mm 350pp 978-1-107-02062-7 Hardback c. £55.00 978-1-107-60483-4 Paperback c. £18.99 Publication March 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107020627

A. P. Moller-Maersk A. P. Moller-Maersk

Advance praise: ‘The global shipping industry has been a major driver and enabler underpinning the massive growth in world trade in recent decades. One of the major players in the sector – and one of the most innovative – has been Maersk Line. This fascinating book provides many insights not only into the development of Maersk itself but also the impact that the industry as a whole has had on the way that the world does business.’ Martin Christopher, Emeritus Professor of Marketing and Logistics, Cranfield School of Management 2014 247 x 174 mm 400pp 92 colour illus. 95 tables 978-1-107-03781-6 Hardback c. £50.00 Publication April 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107037816

Key Reference

The Cambridge History of Capitalism Edited by Larry Neal and Jeffrey Williamson

The Cambridge History of Capitalism is a comprehensive two-volume work that provides an authoritative account of the evolution of capitalism and its spread and impact across the world. Adopting a wide geographical coverage and strong comparative perspective, an international team of leading scholars delve deep into the historical roots of capitalism and provide a definitive reference on the global development of capitalism and the varieties of responses to it. Volume I traces the rise of capitalism from distant origins in ancient


Economic history Babylon to modern times, determining what features of modern capitalism were present at each time and place, and why the various precursors of capitalism did not survive. Volume II explores the global consequences that capitalism has had for industry, agriculture and trade, along with the reactions by governments, firms and markets. These groundbreaking volumes will have widespread appeal amongst historians, economists and political scientists.

address how British mercantilism led to European imitations and American successes, and ultimately, how capitalism became global.

2014 228 x 152 mm 544pp 26 b/w illus. 14 tables 978-1-107-01964-5 Hardback £85.00 Publication January 2014

Contributors: Larry Neal, Michael Jursa, Alain Bresson, Willem M. Jongman, Étienne de la Vaissière, R. Bin Wong, Tirthankar Roy, Şevket Pamuk, Karl Gunnar Persson, Luciano Pezzolo, Oscar Gelderblom, Joost Jonker, Patrick Karl O’Brien, Richard Salvucci, Morten Jerven, Ann M. Carlos, Frank D. Lewis, C. Knick Harley, Jeremy Atack, José Luís Cardoso

www.cambridge.org/9781107019645

Contributors: Larry Neal, Michael Jursa, Alain Bresson, Willem M. Jongman, Étienne de la Vaissière, R. Bin Wong, Tirthankar Roy, Şevket Pamuk, Karl Gunnar Persson, Luciano Pezzolo, Oscar Gelderblom, Joost Jonker, Patrick Karl O’Brien, Richard Salvucci, Morten Jerven, Ann M. Carlos, Frank D. Lewis, C. Knick Harley, Jeremy Atack, José Luís Cardoso, Kevin H. O’Rourke, Jeffrey G. Williamson, Robert C. Allen, Giovanni Federico, Kristine Bruland, David C. Mowery, Ron Harris, Geoffrey Jones, Randall Morck, Bernard Yeung, Ranald Michie, Harold James, Mark Harrison, Jeffry Frieden, Ronald Rogowski, Michael Huberman, Peter H. Lindert, Leandro Prados de la Escosura

2014 228 x 152 mm 592pp 28 b/w illus. 5 maps 13 tables 978-1-107-01963-8 Hardback £85.00 Publication January 2014

2014 228 x 152 mm 1400pp 54 b/w illus. 5 maps 27 tables 978-1-107-03694-9 2 Volume Set £150.00 Publication January 2014

Harvard University, Massachusetts

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107036949

Key Reference

The Cambridge History of Capitalism Volume 1: The Rise of Capitalism: From Ancient Origins to 1848 General Editor Larry Neal University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

and Jeffrey G. Williamson Harvard University, Massachusetts

The first volume of The Cambridge History of Capitalism provides a comprehensive account of the evolution of capitalism from its earliest beginnings. Starting with its distant origins in ancient Babylon, successive chapters trace progression up to the ‘Promised Land’ of capitalism in America. Adopting a wide geographical coverage and comparative perspective, the international team of authors discuss the contributions of Greek, Roman and Asian civilizations to the development of capitalism, as well as the Chinese, Indian and Arab empires. They determine what features of modern capitalism were present at each time and place, and why the various precursors of capitalism did not survive. Looking at the eventual success of medieval Europe and the examples of city-states in northern Italy and the Low Countries, the authors

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107019638

Key Reference

The Cambridge History of Capitalism Volume 2: The Spread of Capitalism: From 1848 to the Present General Editor Larry Neal University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

and Jeffrey G. Williamson

The second volume of The Cambridge History of Capitalism provides an authoritative reference on the spread and impact of capitalism across the world, and the varieties of responses to it. Employing a wide geographical coverage and strong comparative outlook, a team of leading scholars explore the global consequences that capitalism has had for industry, agriculture and trade, along with the reactions by governments, firms and markets. The authors consider how World War I halted the initial spread of capitalism, but global capitalism arose again by the close of the twentieth century. They explore how the responses of labor movements, compounded by the reactions by political regimes, whether defensive or proactive, led to diverse military and welfare consequences. Beneficial results eventually emerged, but the rise and spread of capitalism has not been easy or smooth. This definitive volume will have widespread appeal amongst historians, economists and political scientists. Contributors: Kevin H. O’Rourke, Jeffrey G. Williamson, Robert C. Allen, Giovanni Federico, Kristine Bruland, David C. Mowery, Ron Harris, Geoffrey Jones, Randall Morck, Bernard Yeung, Ranald Michie, Harold James, Gareth Austin, Mark Harrison, Jeffry Frieden, Ronald Rogowski, Michael Huberman, Peter H. Lindert, Leandro Prados de la Escosura, Larry Neal

41

For all formats available, see

The Endurance of Family Businesses A Global Overview Edited by Paloma Fernandez Perez Universitat de Barcelona

and Andrea Colli Bocconi University

The Endurance of Family Businesses offers an overview of the importance and resilience of family-controlled large businesses. This collection of essays discusses the strengths of family businesses: the ways family firms have managed, financed and governed their corporations, as well as the way in which they structure their relationship with the external environment. ‘Family business is everywhere but remains an elusive subject for researchers. The essays in this volume provide a refreshingly broad perspective by engaging deeply with the historical, global, cultural, and gender complexities involved in understanding this vibrant form of business ownership.’ Geoffrey Jones, Isidor Straus Professor of Business History, Harvard Business School 2013 228 x 152 mm 306pp 10 b/w illus. 10 tables 978-1-107-03775-5 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107037755

The Business of Waste Great Britain and Germany, 1945 to the Present Raymond G. Stokes University of Glasgow

Roman Köster University of Glasgow

and Stephen C. Sambrook University of Glasgow

The advent of consumer societies in Britain and West Germany after 1945 led to mass ‘production’ of garbage. This book compares the social, cultural and economic fallout of the growing volume and changing composition of waste in the two countries from 1945 through changes in the business of handling household waste. ‘The Business of Waste presents a penetrating and deeply researched interdisciplinary study of the changing dimensions of waste management in Great Britain and Germany from 1945 to the present. The authors’ detailed examination of the history strongly supports their conclusion

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Economic history that successful waste management policy requires cooperation between the private, public, and third sectors and the prioritization of social and political values over narrow economic ones.’ Joel A. Tarr, Richard S. Caliguiri University Professor of History and Policy, Carnegie Mellon University 2013 234 x 156 mm 343pp 24 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02721-3 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107027213

Constitutional Money A Review of the Supreme Court’s Monetary Decisions Richard H. Timberlake

This book analyzes nine Supreme Court decisions that dealt primarily with money, monetary events and monetary policy, from McCulloch v. Maryland in 1819 to the Gold Clause Cases in 1934–5. It explains how both the gold standard and central bank work and how the Federal Reserve became unconstitutional. ‘Richard H. Timberlake provides a tour de force on the history and unconstitutionality of the US government’s meddling in the US monetary system. Constitutional Money is the definitive reference in its field, a true classic.’ Kevin Dowd, University of Durham 2013 228 x 152 mm 257pp 3 tables 978-1-107-03254-5 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107032545

Making the Modern American Fiscal State Law, Politics, and the Rise of Progressive Taxation, 1877–1929 Ajay K. Mehrotra Indiana University

Making the Modern American Fiscal State chronicles the rise of the US system of direct and progressive taxation, providing historical perspective on the intellectual, legal and administrative foundations of the current US tax regime. Ajay K. Mehrotra explores what tax reformers at the turn of the twentieth century accomplished and how their limited achievements were contested at nearly every turn. ‘Mehrotra has crafted a narrative that is fundamental to understanding the modern American state. By unearthing the intellectual, economic, political, and emotional spade work required to lay the groundwork for a major conceptual change in public policy, he shows how a highly decentralized, politicized, and indirect method of

taxation was transformed into a centralized, neutrally administered, direct method of taxation with great potential to achieve redistributive ends.’ Brian Balogh, University of Virginia Cambridge Historical Studies in American Law and Society

The Foundations of Worldwide Economic Integration Power, Institutions, and Global Markets, 1850–1930 Edited by Christof Dejung Universität Konstanz, Germany

2013 228 x 152 mm 432pp 8 b/w illus. 978-1-107-04392-3 Hardback £60.00

and Niels P. Petersson

For all formats available, see

The essays in this volume discuss worldwide economic integration between 1850 and 1930, challenging the popular description of the period after 1918 as one of deglobalisation. By showing that institutionalism altered its shape in circumstances that challenged international trade, and presenting case studies from various countries, this book offers a fresh perspective on economic globalisation.

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Banking in Crisis The Rise and Fall of British Banking Stability, 1800 to the Present John D. Turner Queen’s University Belfast

Can the lessons of the past help us to prevent another banking collapse in the future? This is the first full account of the rise and fall of British banking stability over two hundred years, shedding new light on why banking systems crash and on the factors underpinning banking stability. Cambridge Studies in Economic History – Second Series

2014 228 x 152 mm 250pp 978-1-107-03094-7 Hardback c. £55.00 978-1-107-60986-0 Paperback c. £19.99 Publication July 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107030947

The International Distribution of News The Associated Press, Press Association, and Reuters, 1848–1947 Jonathan Silberstein-Loeb University of Oxford

This book traces the history of international news agencies and associations around the world from 1848 to 1947. Jonathan SilbersteinLoeb argues that newspaper publishers formed news associations and patronized news agencies to cut the costs of news collection and exclude competitors from gaining access to the news. Cambridge Studies in the Emergence of Global Enterprise

2014 228 x 152 mm 272pp 21 tables 978-1-107-03364-1 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-65783-0 Paperback £19.99 Publication March 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107033641

Sheffield Hallam University

‘It has become commonplace to argue that institutions and rules matter greatly to economic performance. But how did these institutions and rules emerge and take the particular shapes that they did? Christof Dejung and Niels P. Petersson’s significant collection takes a sustained look at global trade in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and shows how European merchants, Indian peasants, imperial statesmen, and others, constructed these institutions and rules. Far from a definite set of tools, the institutions that enabled global trade were the outcome of sustained social contestation on local marketplaces, in national politics, and across ocean-spanning trade networks. Power is back to the debate on institutions – and this book is a must-read for anyone interested in this important story.’ Sven Beckert, Harvard University Cambridge Studies in the Emergence of Global Enterprise

2013 228 x 152 mm 292pp 6 b/w illus. 10 tables 978-1-107-03015-2 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107030152

The Third Industrial Revolution in Global Business Edited by Giovanni Dosi Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna

and Louis Galambos The Johns Hopkins University

The essays in this volume ask whether the widespread adoption of digital technology has led to large-scale or structural changes in modern business systems. The book provides a robust exploration of the impact the third


Economic history / Global history industrial revolution – the digital revolution – had on global business.

politics and sovereignty, and the balance of power in international relations.

Comparative Perspectives in Business History

New Approaches to Economic and Social History

2013 228 x 152 mm 254pp 13 b/w illus. 1 map 20 tables 978-1-107-02861-6 Hardback £55.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107028616

2014 228 x 152 mm 270pp 978-0-521-84974-6 Hardback c. £60.00 978-0-521-61496-2 Paperback c. £18.99 Publication June 2014 For all formats available, see

Questioning Credible Commitment Perspectives on the Rise of Financial Capitalism Edited by D’Maris Coffman

www.cambridge.org/9780521849746

German Merchants in the NineteenthCentury Atlantic

University of Cambridge

Lars Maischak

Adrian Leonard

California State University, Fresno

University of Cambridge

Based on an examination of the merchant elite of the city-republic of Bremen and the trans-Atlantic ties they established in trading with the United States in the nineteenth century, this study illuminates the role of merchant capital in the making of an industrialcapitalist world economy.

and Larry Neal University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Provides academics and practitioners with a broader understanding of the origins of financial capitalism. A specially commissioned group of historians and economists examine and challenge North and Weingast’s (1989) ‘credible commitment’ thesis and show that parliamentary backing of public finance alone is insufficient to create confidence in a state’s credit-worthiness. ‘Credible commitment is fundamental to finance. This volume of excellent essays by financial historians explores the salient institutional theories about the development of credible commitment. In doing so, it illuminates a watershed period in the emergence of the modern economy.’ William N. Goetzmann, Edwin J. Beinecke Professor of Finance and Management Studies, and Director, International Center for Finance, Yale University Macroeconomic Policy Making

2013 234 x 156 mm 298pp 29 b/w illus. 21 tables 978-1-107-03901-8 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

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Textbook

The Rise of the Global Company Robert Fitzgerald Royal Holloway, University of London

This is the first full account of how the multinational enterprise drove globalization and contributed to the making of the modern world. Robert Fitzgerald reveals how the growth of international businesses shaped the economic development of nations, their

‘Lars Maischak’s research on Hanseatic merchant capitalism and its transatlantic economic networks marks a signal achievement in Atlantic World scholarship. By integrating German Hanseatic networks into the Atlantic economy of antebellum America and northern Europe, Maischak throws light on a much-neglected component of nineteenth-century transnationalism. Alive to the cultural attitudes that shaped the business practices of merchant communities, Maischak deftly deploys numerous lenses to study how cosmopolitan conservative patrician traders, in abetting the rise of industrial world markets, brought about their own decline. This insightful and wide-ranging discussion elegantly restores the economic and sociopolitical world of merchant capitalists, whose compelling story runs counter to the dominant narratives of nation-states and industrialization. Well written and conceptually smart, this book speaks to numerous discussions in nineteenth-century studies.’ James M. Brophy, University of Delaware Publications of the German Historical Institute

2013 228 x 152 mm 315pp 7 b/w illus. 3 maps 14 tables 978-1-107-01729-0 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107017290

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The Origins, History, and Future of the Federal Reserve A Return to Jekyll Island Edited by Michael D. Bordo Rutgers University, New Jersey

and William Roberds Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta

This book contains essays presented at the November 2010 conference held to mark the centenary of the famous 1910 Jekyll Island meeting of leading American financiers and the US Treasury. The final chapter records a panel discussion of Fed policy making by the current and former senior Federal Reserve officials. ‘The 2010 Jekyll Island conference assembled preeminent scholars who have spent a lifetime studying central banking and the Federal Reserve. The historical perspective provided by these scholars offers continuing insights into the great issues confronting central banks. Not only students of central banking, but also general readers, will learn from this book.’ Robert Hetzel, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, and author of The Great Recession Studies in Macroeconomic History

2013 228 x 152 mm 439pp 41 b/w illus. 14 tables 978-1-107-01372-8 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107013728

Global history The Struggle for the Eurasian Borderlands From the Rise of Early Modern Empires to the End of the First World War Alfred Rieber University of Pennsylvania

Major new account of the Eurasian borderlands as ‘shatter zones’ where the Habsburg, Russian, Ottoman, Iranian and Qing Empires competed for hegemony. Alfred Rieber charts the rise and expansion of these multicultural, conquest empires from the late medieval period through to their collapse in the early twentieth century. 2014 228 x 152 mm 600pp 12 maps 978-1-107-04309-1 Hardback c. £65.00 978-1-107-61830-5 Paperback c. £21.99 Publication February 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107043091

eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/ebookstore


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Global history / Diplomatic, international history Channelling Mobilities Migration and Globalisation in the Suez Canal Region and Beyond, 1869–1914 Valeska Huber German Historical Institute

This book refines the history of globalisation by considering the variety of mobile people passing through and near to the Suez Canal from its opening in 1869 to the First World War. It reveals how the global shortcut was perceived, staged and controlled and, more broadly, how mobility was channelled. ‘A sophisticated examination of a variety of global connections and systems of control as they impacted the peoples affected by the opening of the Suez Canal. This invaluable contribution to the growing literature on nineteenth-century globalization provides a marvelous model for the study of the interaction of the global and the local everywhere.’ E. Roger Owen, author of State, Power and Politics in the Making of the Modern Middle East 2013 228 x 152 mm 365pp 24 b/w illus. 1 map 978-1-107-03060-2 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107030602

Highlight

Cotton The Fabric that Made the Modern World Giorgio Riello University of Warwick

Today’s world textile and garment trade is valued at a staggering $425 billion. We are told that under the pressure of increasing globalisation, it is India and China that are the new world manufacturing powerhouses. However, this is not a new phenomenon: until the industrial revolution, Asia manufactured great quantities of colourful printed cottons that were sold to places as far afield as Japan, West Africa and Europe. Cotton explores this earlier globalised economy and its transformation after 1750 as cotton led the way in the industrialisation of Europe. By the early nineteenth century, India, China and the Ottoman Empire switched from world producers to buyers of European cotton textiles, a position that they retained for over two hundred years. This is a fascinating and insightful story which ranges from Asian and European technologies and African slavery to

cotton plantations in the Americas and consumer desires across the globe. ‘… a remarkable volume full of insight and originality … Riello deserves a wide audience and the book will be of interest to a readership well beyond the audience for world economic history, including cultural and social history, the histories of art, design, fashion and, of course, textiles themselves.’ Reviews in History (history.ac.uk/reviews) 2013 247 x 174 mm 434pp 103 b/w illus. 46 colour illus. 10 maps 12 tables 978-1-107-00022-3 Hardback £25.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107000223

European Integration and the Atlantic Community in the 1980s Edited by Kiran Klaus Patel Universiteit Maastricht, Netherlands

and Kenneth Weisbrode Bilkent University, Ankara

These essays, by prominent scholars from Europe and the United States, examine political relations in the 1980s and offer an original research agenda for work on the period in multiple fields of political, social, economic and cultural history. 2013 228 x 152 mm 315pp 978-1-107-03156-2 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

Diplomatic, international history An Age of Neutrals Neutrality and Great Power Politics, 1815–1914 Maartje Abbenhuis University of Auckland

Offers a pioneering history of the vital role neutrality played in the nineteenthcentury European world. This fascinating new study shows us how neutrality formed an essential part of the international system; seen as a powerful tool with which to solve disputes, stabilize international relations and promote global European interests. 2014 228 x 152 mm 320pp 978-1-107-03760-1 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication July 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107037601

Beyond the Balance of Power France and the Politics of National Security in the Era of the First World War Peter Jackson University of Glasgow

This is a major new study of French foreign and security policy in the era of the Great War. Peter Jackson examines the interplay between contending conceptions of security based on traditional practices of power politics and the new internationalist doctrines that emerged in the late nineteenth century. 2013 228 x 152 mm 575pp 4 maps 978-1-107-03994-0 Hardback c. £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107039940

www.cambridge.org/9781107031562

The Pathologies of Power Fear, Honor, Glory, and Hubris in U.S. Foreign Policy Christopher J. Fettweis Tulane University, Louisiana

The foreign policy of the United States is guided by deeply held beliefs, few of which are recognized much less subjected to rational analysis, Christopher J. Fettweis writes, in this, his third book. He identifies the foundations of those beliefs, explains how they have inspired poor strategic decisions in Washington and proceeds to discuss their origins. 2013 228 x 152 mm 312pp 978-1-107-04110-3 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-68271-9 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107041103

The Cold War in South Asia Britain, the United States and the Indian Subcontinent, 1945–1965 Paul M. McGarr University of Nottingham

This transnational history of the rise and fall of Anglo-American relations with India and Pakistan during the Cold War offers a new multidisciplinary perspective on the seminal postindependence period. Drawing on unpublished British, American, Indian and Soviet archival records it examines what benefits, if any, intervention conferred, and to whom. 2013 228 x 152 mm 403pp 2 maps 978-1-107-00815-1 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107008151


Diplomatic, international history / Social, population history / Historical theory, historical method and historiography / History of ideas and intellectual history The Great Powers and the International System Systemic Theory in Empirical Perspective Bear F. Braumoeller

making a substantial contribution to understanding Roman provincial society. 2013 228 x 152 mm 272pp 2 b/w illus. 1 map 2 tables 978-1-107-01113-7 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

Cambridge Studies in International Relations

2013 234 x 156 mm 297pp 34 b/w illus. 10 tables 978-1-107-00541-9 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-65918-6 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107005419

Social, population history Youth in the Roman Empire The Young and the Restless Years? Christian Laes Vrije Universiteit Brussel

and Johan Strubbe Rijksuniversiteit Leiden, The Netherlands

Historians of antiquity and others interested in youth, adolescence or family life in the past have debated whether youth in the Roman Empire differed from that of our time. This book examines the lives of Roman boys and girls and explores the possible existence of a separate youth culture. 2014 228 x 152 mm 304pp 7 b/w illus. 978-1-107-04888-1 Hardback £60.00 Publication March 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107048881

The Family in Roman Egypt A Comparative Approach to Intergenerational Solidarity and Conflict Sabine R. Huebner Freie Universität Berlin

This is a book for students and scholars of ancient social history but also historians of other periods interested in the history of the family, capturing the dynamics of everyday family life of the common people and

History of ideas and intellectual history

www.cambridge.org/9781107011137

Ohio State University

A systemic argument that is virtually unknown in international relations. This book describes and tests a fully systemic theory of international politics. Using statistics and diplomatic history, it traces statesmen’s efforts to influence the broad contours of the international system within which they interact.

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New in Paperback Highlight

Green Retreats Women, Gardens and Eighteenth-Century Culture Stephen Bending University of Southampton

This lively and beautifully illustrated account follows some remarkable eighteenth-century women in their gardens. It tells the stories of aristocratic and genteel women through their letters, diaries and journals, and reveals what was at stake for women who stepped beyond the flower garden and created their own landscapes. ‘Well researched … crammed with stories, extracts of letters, diaries and journals.’ History Today 2013 247 x 174 mm 319pp 25 b/w illus. 978-1-107-04002-1 Hardback £25.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107040021

Historical theory, historical method and historiography Experience and Teleology in Ancient Historiography Futures Past from Herodotus to Augustine Jonas Grethlein Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, Germany

This new approach to the temporal dynamic of historiography will appeal to classicists, ancient historians and scholars interested in the theory of history. Its application to major Greek and Roman historians yields a new and often surprising take on individual authors and the history of ancient historiography in general. 2013 228 x 152 mm 431pp 978-1-107-04028-1 Hardback £70.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107040281

Barbarism and Religion Volume 5: Religion: The First Triumph J. G. A. Pocock The Johns Hopkins University

This volume in Pocock’s acclaimed sequence on Barbarism and Religion examines the controversy caused by Gibbon’s treatment of the early Christian church. Pocock challenges the assumption that Decline and Fall was intended as an attack on belief in the Christian revelation, and questions our understanding of the character of ‘enlightenment’. 2014 228 x 152 mm 440pp 978-1-107-66792-1 Paperback c. £22.99 Publication April 2014 Also available 978-0-521-76072-0 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107667921

The Mystic Ark Hugh of Saint Victor, Art, and Thought in the Twelfth Century Conrad Rudolph University of California, Riverside

Conrad Rudolph studies and reconstructs Hugh of Saint Victor’s forty-two-page written work, The Mystic Ark (c.1125–30), which describes the medieval painting of the same name. Almost completely ignored by art historians because of the immense difficulty of its text, The Mystic Ark is among the most unusual sources we have for an understanding of medieval artistic culture. 2014 253 x 177 mm 662pp 49 b/w illus. 29 colour illus. 978-1-107-03705-2 Hardback £75.00 Publication May 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107037052

Key Reference

The Geography of Strabo An English Translation, with Introduction and Notes Translated by Duane W. Roller Ohio State University

The Geography of Strabo is the only surviving work of its type in Greek literature, and the major source for the history of Greek scholarship on geography and the formative processes

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46

History of ideas and intellectual history of the earth. In addition, this lengthy and complex work contains a vast amount of information on other topics, including the journey of Alexander the Great, cultic history, the history of the eastern Mediterranean in the first century BC, and women’s history. Modern knowledge of seminal geographical authors such as Eratosthenes and Hipparchos relies almost totally on Strabo’s use of them. This is the first complete English translation in nearly a century, and the first to make use of recent scholarship on the Greek text itself and on the history of geography. The translation is supplemented by a detailed discussion of Strabo’s life and his purpose in writing the Geography, as well as the sources that he used. 2014 228 x 152 mm 1200pp 2 maps 1 table 978-1-107-03825-7 Hardback c. £120.00 Publication April 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107038257

The Humanist World of Renaissance Florence Brian Maxson East Tennessee State University

This book offers the first synthetic interpretation of the humanist movement in Renaissance Florence in more than fifty years. Brian Jeffrey Maxson shows how this network of humanists enabled the launch of a cultural movement that established Florence as the pre-eminent center of learning in Italy and that spread beyond Italy to the rest of Europe. 2014 228 x 152 mm 306pp 978-1-107-04391-6 Hardback £60.00 Publication February 2014 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107043916

role in Britain’s debate on the French Revolution in the 1790s. Despite the loss of the colonies in the American Revolution, America continued to loom large in the British national imaginary. Verhoeven’s readings of familiar and obscure texts are consistently rewarding. His analyses of the new world degeneracy thesis of Buffon et al.; the ‘progressive agrarianism’ of Crevecoeur, Jefferson, and Imlay; and the Jacobin novel are fresh and insightful; and his rehabilitation of the anti-Jacobin novel brings to the fore a neglected but ‘historically significant body of social critique’. No previous writer has put these texts into conversation, and the interpretative results are striking. The debate over the French Revolution will never look quite the same.’ Peter S. Onuf, University of Virginia 2013 228 x 152 mm 368pp 21 b/w illus. 7 colour illus. 6 maps 978-1-107-04019-9 Hardback £65.00 Publication December 2013 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107040199

Reforming Ideas in Britain Politics and Language in the Shadow of the French Revolution, 1789–1815 Mark Philp University of Oxford

This is an important re-evaluation of British political thought during the French Revolution. It shows how the Revolution and the threat of French invasion gave rise to a dynamic world of popular politics which was at once more chaotic, innovative and open-minded than historians have typically perceived it to be. 2013 228 x 152 mm 352pp 2 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02728-2 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

Americomania and the French Revolution Debate in Britain, 1789–1802 Wil Verhoeven Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, The Netherlands

This book explores the evolution of British identity and participatory politics in the 1790s. Wil Verhoeven argues that in the course of the French Revolution debate in Britain, the idea of ‘America’ came to represent for the British people the choice between two diametrically opposed models of social justice and political participation. Advance praise: ‘Wil Verhoeven makes a strong and original argument, that the idea of ‘America’ played a central, neglected

www.cambridge.org/9781107027282

from Kant, Hegel, Schelling, Fichte, or another key figure, shows how this influenced a thinker or field of study in the subsequent two centuries, and how that influence is felt in contemporary thought. Crossing established scholarly divides, the volumes deal with fields as varied as feminism, architectural history, psychoanalysis, Christology and museum curation, and subjects as diverse as love, evolution, the public sphere, the art of Andy Warhol, the music of Palestrina, the philosophy of Husserl, the literature of Jane Austen, the political thought of fascism and the foundations of international law. ‘This unprecedented collection by scholars from the UK, US, and Europe chronicles the rise of German Idealism and reveals its enduring influence on virtually every area of modern thought and action from philosophy to science, society and politics, the practice, criticism, and theory of the arts, and religion.’ Paul Guyer, University of Pennsylvania

Contributors: Nicholas Boyle, Liz Disley, Dieter Henrich, Karl Ameriks, Michael Friedman, Robert J. Richards, Sebastian Gardner, Christian Emden, Robert Hanna, Dan Dahlstrom, Gary Gutting, David Fergusson, Robert Stern, Peter Hylton, Dina Edmunts, Robert Pippin, John Walker, Onora O’Neill, William Rasch, Chris Thornhill, Douglas Moggach, Steffen Wagner, Stephan Nachtsheim, David Midgley, Fred Rush, Brian O’Connor, Andreas Grossmann, Irene Stolzi, Sabine Doyé, Marion Heinz, Jörn Rüsen, Ian Cooper, Christoph Jamme, Klaus Vieweg, Allen Speight, Stefan Matuschek, Richard Eldridge, Ulrich Pothast, Roger Scruton, Andrew Bowie, Felix Saure, Petra Lohman, Stephen Houlgate, Ivan Gaskell, Nicholas Adams, Martin Wendte, Dale Schlitt, Joel D. S. Rasmussen, Cyril O’Regan, Paul Franks, George S. Williamson, Rowan Williams 2013 247 x 174 mm 1690pp 978-1-107-03986-5 4 Volume Set £240.00 For all formats available, see

Key Reference

The Impact of Idealism The Legacy of Post-Kantian German Thought Edited by Nicholas Boyle University of Cambridge

and Liz Disley University of Cambridge

German Idealism is arguably the most influential force in philosophy over the past two hundred years. This major fourvolume work is the first comprehensive survey of its impact on science, religion, sociology and the humanities, and brings together fifty-two leading scholars from across Europe and North America. Each essay discusses an idea or theme

www.cambridge.org/9781107039865

Key Reference

The Impact of Idealism The Legacy of Post-Kantian German Thought Volume 1: Philosophy and Natural Sciences General Editor Nicholas Boyle University of Cambridge

and Liz Disley University of Cambridge

Edited by Karl Ameriks University of Notre Dame, Indiana

The first study of its kind, The Impact of Idealism assesses the impact of classical German philosophy on science, religion and culture. This volume explores


History of ideas and intellectual history German Idealism’s impact on philosophy and scientific thought. Fourteen essays, by leading authorities in their respective fields, each focus on the legacy of a particular idea that emerged around 1800, when the underlying concepts of modern philosophy were being formed, challenged and criticised, leaving a legacy that extends to all physical areas and all topics in the philosophical world. From British Idealism to phenomenology, existentialism, pragmatism and French postmodernism, the story of German Idealism’s impact on philosophy is here interwoven with man’s scientific journey of self-discovery in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries – from Darwin to Nietzsche to Freud and beyond. Spanning the analytical and Continental divide, this first volume examines Idealism’s impact on contemporary philosophical discussions. Contributors: Nicholas Boyle, Liz Disley, Dieter Henrich, Karl Ameriks, Michael Friedman, Robert J. Richards, Sebastian Gardner, Christian Emden, Robert Hanna, Dan Dahlstrom, Gary Gutting, David Fergusson, Robert Stern, Peter Hylton, Dina Edmunts, Robert Pippin 2013 247 x 174 mm 420pp 4 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03982-7 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107039827

Key Reference

The Impact of Idealism The Legacy of Post-Kantian German Thought Volume 2: Historical, Social and Political Thought General Editor Nicholas Boyle University of Cambridge

and Liz Disley University of Cambridge

Edited by John Walker Birkbeck College, University of London

The first study of its kind, The Impact of Idealism assesses the impact of classical German philosophy on science, religion and culture. This second volume explores German Idealism’s impact on the historical, social and political thought of the nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Each essay focuses on an idea or concept from the high point of German philosophy around 1800, tracing out its influence on the intervening period and its importance for contemporary discussions. New light is shed on key developments of Idealist thought, such as Marxism, Critical Theory and feminism, and previously unexamined areas of Idealism’s influence are discussed for the first time. This unique, interdisciplinary collection traces the impact of Kant, Hegel, Schelling, Fichte and others in Britain,

Europe, North America and beyond. Its insights represent vital contributions to their respective fields, as well as to our understanding of German Idealism itself. Contributors: John Walker, Onora O’Neill, William Rasch, Chris Thornhill, Douglas Moggach, Steffen Wagner, Stephan Nachtsheim, David Midgley, Fred Rush, Brian O’Connor, Andreas Grossmann, Irene Stolzi, Sabine Doyé, Marion Heinz, Liz Disley, Jörn Rüsen 2013 247 x 174 mm 350pp 978-1-107-03983-4 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107039834

Key Reference

The Impact of Idealism The Legacy of Post-Kantian German Thought Volume 3: Aesthetics and Literature General Editor Nicholas Boyle University of Cambridge

and Liz Disley University of Cambridge

Edited by Christoph Jamme Leuphana Universität Lüneburg, Germany

and Ian Cooper University of Kent

The first study of its kind, The Impact of Idealism assesses the impact of classical German philosophy on science, religion and culture. This third volume explores German Idealism’s impact on the literature, art and aesthetics of the last two centuries. Each essay focuses on the legacy of an idea or concept from the high point of German philosophy around 1800, tracing out its influence on the intervening period and its importance for contemporary discussions. As well as a broad geographical and historical range, including Greek tragedy, George Eliot, Thomas Mann and Samuel Beckett, and key musicians and artists such as Wagner, Andy Warhol and Frank Lloyd Wright, the volume’s thematic focus is broad. Engaging closely with the key aesthetic texts of German Idealism, this collection uses examples from literature, music, art, architecture and museum studies to demonstrate Idealism’s continuing influence. Contributors: Ian Cooper, Christoph Jamme, Klaus Vieweg, Allen Speight, Stefan Matuschek, Richard Eldridge, Ulrich Pothast, Roger Scruton, Andrew Bowie, Felix Saure, Petra Lohmann, Ivan Gaskell, Stephen Houlgate 2013 247 x 174 mm 590pp 3 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03984-1 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107039841

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Key Reference

The Impact of Idealism The Legacy of Post-Kantian German Thought Volume 4: Religion General Editor Nicholas Boyle University of Cambridge

and Liz Disley University of Cambridge

Edited by Nicholas Adams University of Edinburgh

The first study of its kind, The Impact of Idealism assesses the impact of classical German philosophy on science, religion and culture. This fourth volume explores German Idealism’s impact on theology and religious ideas in the nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-first centuries. With contributions from leading scholars, this collection not only demonstrates the vast range of Idealism’s theological influence across different centuries, countries, continents, traditions and religions, but also, in doing so, provides fresh insight into the original ideas and themes with which Kant, Hegel, Fichte, Schelling and others were concerned. As well as tracing out the Idealist influence in the work of nineteenth- and twentiethcentury theologians, philosophers of religion, and theological traditions, from Schleiermacher, to Karl Barth, to Radical Orthodoxy, the essays in this collection bring each debate up to date with a strong focus on Idealism’s contemporary relevance. Contributors: Nicholas Adams, Martin Wendte, Dale Schlitt, Joel D. S. Rasmussen, Nicholas Boyle, Cyril O’Regan, John Walker, Paul Franks, George S. Williamson, Rowan Williams 2013 247 x 174 mm 330pp 978-1-107-03985-8 Hardback £65.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107039858

Disobedience in Western Political Thought A Genealogy Raffaele Laudani Università di Bologna

The global age is distinguished by disobedience, from the protests in Tiananmen Square to the fall of the Berlin Wall, to the anti-G8 and antiWTO demonstrations. In this book, Raffaele Laudani offers a systematic review of how disobedience has been conceptualised, supported, and criticised throughout history. 2013 228 x 152 mm 200pp 978-1-107-02264-5 Hardback £50.00 978-1-107-60669-2 Paperback £17.99 For all formats available, see

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History of ideas and intellectual history Just and Unjust Military Intervention European Thinkers from Vitoria to Mill Edited by Stefano Recchia University of Cambridge

and Jennifer M. Welsh European University Institute, Florence

Classical arguments about the legitimate use of force have crucially shaped society. But what lessons can we learn from classical European philosophers and jurists when thinking about the ethics and politics of military intervention today? This book explores the ways in which classical ideas can be applied to contemporary problems. ‘Arguments about whether or not military intervention is justified overshadow much of today’s international agenda. This authoritative collection, encompassing the reflections across four centuries of the major luminaries of European thought, will greatly enrich those debates, as well as documenting an intellectual history in its own right.’ Ian Clark, Aberystwyth University 2013 228 x 152 mm 317pp 978-1-107-04202-5 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

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Democratic Statecraft

Compromise

Political Realism and Popular Power J. S. Maloy

A Political and Philosophical History Alin Fumurescu

Oklahoma State University

Tulane University, Louisiana

While half the world yearns for ‘democracy’, the other half grieves over ‘democratic deficits’. J. S. Maloy suggests that democracy’s troubles arise from excessive idealism and examines key episodes from the history of political realism in the Western tradition, using old materials to assemble a new democratic paradigm.

This book offers a conceptual history of compromise. Fumurescu combines contextual historical analysis of daily parlance and a survey of the usage of the word from the end of the sixteenth century to the beginning of the eighteenth century in both French and English.

‘As democracy has risen to prominence, it has acquired an aura of idealism that has strengthened it, but also stripped it of some of its most powerful traits. In Democratic Statecraft, Jason Maloy poses a bold challenge to the uncritical idealism that characterizes much of contemporary democratic theory. The democratic reason of state that emerges in the process will remind those who have forgotten where democracy has been, and compel those concerned about its future to think hard about where it might go.’ Yannis Evrigenis, Tufts University 2013 216 x 138 mm 243pp 4 b/w illus. 978-0-521-19220-0 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-14558-9 Paperback £18.99 For all formats available, see

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Tyranny A New Interpretation Waller R. Newell Carleton University, Ottawa

This is the first comprehensive exploration of ancient and modern tyranny in the history of political thought. Waller R. Newell traces the varieties of tyranny from the steely determination of reforming conquerors and modernizing despots to the collectivist revolutions of the Jacobins, Bolsheviks, Nazis and Khmer Rouge. ‘Learned, searching essays directed toward the recovery of the notion of tyranny from Machiavelli’s almost successful attempt to suppress it. Anyone who wants to understand modern politics will profit from Waller Newell’s eye-opening analysis.’ Harvey Mansfield, Harvard University and Hoover Institution, Stanford University 2013 228 x 152 mm 552pp 978-1-107-01032-1 Hardback £55.00 978-1-107-61073-6 Paperback £19.99 For all formats available, see

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Mill and Paternalism Gregory Claeys Royal Holloway, University of London

Giving prominence for the first time to Mill’s abiding concern with Malthusianism and its impact on his key arguments respecting liberty, Mill and Paternalism explores Mill’s strong commitment to population control, popular education, feminism and the leading role of intellectual elites, alongside his overarching interests in both liberty and equality. ‘Mill’s On Liberty has been all-too successful with philosophers and political theorists in achieving his goal of writing a ‘philosophic textbook of a single truth’. In this comprehensive reassessment of Mill’s career as social and political commentator, Gregory Claeys shows how Mill’s single truth on the limits of interference in individual lives needs to be modified when the equally urgent concerns of his political economy, feminism, and interest in socialism are brought into the reckoning.’ Donald Winch, University of Sussex 2013 228 x 152 mm 262pp 978-0-521-76108-6 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

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‘In this bold, scrupulous, and wholly original work of political theory, Alin Fumurescu undertakes a genealogy of this crucial but frequently maligned concept. In a fascinating reconstruction of the etymology of compromise, Fumurescu traces the roots of our ambivalence to the early modern world, when a largely positive English view that regards compromise as a healthy attribute of liberal politics diverged sharply from the French contempt for compromise as a betrayal of our innermost conscience. The author moves effortlessly from Athens and Rome to early modern Europe and beyond, connecting back up with today’s philosophical discussions of compromise. By tracing clear lines of influence between early modern intellectual history and our contemporary political tribulations, the author succeeds where many works of political theory fall short. Fumurescu’s insights will be of interest to historians, philosophers, political theorists, and policy makers alike.’ Richard Boyd, Georgetown University 2013 228 x 152 mm 305pp 978-1-107-02943-9 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

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Liberty Abroad J. S. Mill on International Relations Georgios Varouxakis Queen Mary, University of London

Liberty Abroad is the first comprehensive critical study to consider the whole of John Stuart Mill’s pronouncements on international relations. Varouxakis expertly combines Mill’s own writings, the historical contexts in which they were produced, the political and philosophical preoccupations that prompted them, and how they were received among his contemporaries. Ideas in Context

2013 228 x 152 mm 276pp 978-1-107-03914-8 Hardback £60.00 For all formats available, see

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History of ideas and intellectual history

49

New in Paperback

The Cambridge History of Nineteenth-Century Political Thought Edited by Gareth Stedman Jones University of Cambridge

and Gregory Claeys Royal Holloway, University of London

This major work of academic reference provides the first comprehensive survey of political thought in Europe, North America and Asia in the century following the French Revolution. Written by a distinguished team of international scholars, this Cambridge History is the latest in a sequence of volumes firmly established as the principal reference source for the history of political thought. In a series of scholarly but accessible essays, every major theme in nineteenth-century political thought is covered, including political economy, religion, democratic radicalism, nationalism, socialism and feminism. The volume also includes studies of major figures, including Hegel, Mill, Bentham and Marx, and biographical notes on every significant thinker in the period. Of interest to students and scholars of politics and history at all levels, this volume explores seismic changes in the languages and expectations of politics accompanying political revolution, industrialisation and imperial expansion and less-noted continuities in political and social thinking. Contributors: Bee Wilson, John Morrow, John Breuilly, Frederick C. Beiser, Donald R. Kelley, Cheryl B. Welch, Gregory Claeys, Christine Lattek, Frederick Rosen, Lucy Delap, Jeremy Jennings, James P. Young, Wolfgang J. Mommsen, K. Steven Vincent, Douglas Moggach, Gareth Stedman Jones, John E. Toews, Daniel Pick, Lawrence Goldman, James Thompson, Emma Rothschild, Vernon L. Lidtke, Andrezj Walicki, Christopher Bayly, Duncan Bell, Jose F. Harris The Cambridge History of Political Thought

2013 234 x 156 mm 1162pp 978-1-107-67632-9 Paperback £34.99 Also available 978-0-521-43056-2 Hardback £127.99 For all formats available, see

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50

Index A Abbenhuis, Maartje................................44 Adams, Nicholas....................................47 Adib-Moghaddam, Arshin.......................31 African History through Sources, 1850–1945.........................................26 African Slaving Port and the Atlantic World, An............................................26 African Voices on Slavery and the Slave Trade...................................................26 After the Civil War..................................19 Age of Neutrals, An................................44 Ahnert, Ruth............................................3 Aitken, Robbie........................................18 Alexiad of Anna Komnene, The................13 Allen Dulles, the OSS, and Nazi War Criminals.............................................25 America in the World................................8 America’s Dirty Wars..............................10 American Army and the First World War, The.....................................................39 American Grand Strategy in the Mediterranean during World War II......24 American Labor and Economic Citizenship.7 American State from the Civil War to the New Deal, The...............................10 Americomania and the French Revolution Debate in Britain, 1789–1802.........................................46 Ameriks, Karl..........................................47 Anatomy of Revolution Revisited, The.....16 Ancestral Encounters in Highland Madagascar........................................26 Andersen, Lisa M. F...................................8 Andrews, Frances...................................14 Anglo-Saxon England...............................1 Anscombe, Frederick F.............................31 Antisemitism and the American Far Left....7 Anzac Journeys......................................35 Arabs of the Ottoman Empire, 1516–1918, The..................................32 Army and Society in Ptolemaic Egypt......39 Aryanization of Private Banks in the Third Reich, The...................................19 Asian Slaves in Colonial Mexico................9 Astrology and Cosmology in Early China.30 Ateş, Sabri..............................................31 Australia 1943.......................................34 Australian Army from Whitlam to Howard, The........................................34

B Baker, John...............................................2 Balaguer, Anna M...................................15 Balbier, Uta Andrea.................................20 Bank, Andrew........................................27 Bank, Leslie J..........................................27 Banking in Crisis....................................42 Barbarism and Religion..........................45 Bashford, Alison.....................................34 Battle against Anarchist Terrorism, The....24 Beach, Jim..............................................40 Beales, Derek.........................................16 Beck, Robin..............................................6 Beckett, Ian............................................38 Beckles Willson, Rachel..........................32 Behind the Front....................................20 Bellagamba, Alice...................................26 Bellaigue, Sheila de................................18

Bending, Stephen...................................45 Berend, Nora..........................................14 Berghoff, Hartmut...................................20 Bertrand, Jacques...................................29 Between Court and Confessional............16 Beyond the Balance of Power.................44 Black Germany.......................................18 Blake, Stephen P.....................................33 Blaxland, John........................................34 Blayney, Peter W. M..................................2 Body in History, The................................35 Bombing the People...............................40 Bond, Brian............................................39 Borders of Race in Colonial South Africa, The.....................................................27 Bordo, Michael D....................................43 Bosma, Ulbe...........................................28 Bottici, Chiara........................................21 Bowman, Timothy...................................38 Boyle, Nicholas................................. 46, 47 Branch, Jordan.......................................36 Braumoeller, Bear F.................................45 Bridge, Roy.............................................18 Britain and the Dutch Revolt 1560–1700.. 2 Britain’s Two World Wars against Germany.............................................39 British Army and the First World War, The.....................................................38 British Political Culture and the Idea of ‘Public Opinion’, 1867–1914.................3 Brooke, John L........................................36 Brown, Ian.............................................28 Brown, Martin D.....................................21 Brown, Timothy Scott..............................19 Buchanan, Andrew.................................24 Buckley, Penelope...................................13 Bulmer-Thomas, Victor............................10 Burke, Edmund.......................................17 Burma’s Economy in the Twentieth Century...............................................28 Burns, James. M.....................................26 Business in the Age of Extremes.............20 Business of Waste, The...........................41 Byzantine Art and Diplomacy in an Age of Decline............................................13

C Cabanes, Bruno......................................40 Cambridge Companion to American Methodism, The.....................................5 Cambridge Companion to the Italian Renaissance, The.................................14 Cambridge History of Australia, The........34 Cambridge History of Capitalism, The...... .40, 41 Cambridge History of China, The.............24 Cambridge History of NineteenthCentury Political Thought, The..............49 Cambridge History of Science, The...........37 Cambridge History of the First World War, The........................................ 24, 25 Cambridge History of Turkey, The...... 23, 33 Candido, Mariana P................................26 Canonization of Islamic Law, The............31 Cartographic State, The...........................36 Casanova, Julián....................................17 Catlos, Brian..........................................13 Caucasus, The........................................35 Central Europe in the High Middle Ages.. 14 Chaffee, John.........................................24

Challand, Benoît....................................21 Channel, The..........................................17 Channelling Mobilities............................44 Charles I and the Aristocracy, 1625–1642.3 Cherp, Aleh............................................21 Chickering, Roger...................................40 Chiefdoms, Collapse, and Coalescence in the Early American South...................6 Chivalry and the Ideals of Knighthood in France during the Hundred Years War...14 Chopsticks.............................................29 Church, Clive H.......................................22 Churchmen and Urban Government in Late Medieval Italy, c.1200–c.1450......14 Claeys, Gregory................................ 48, 49 Claiming the Union..................................9 Climate Change and the Course of Global History.....................................36 Clogg, Richard.......................................21 Clothing the Poor in Nineteenth-Century England................................................2 Coffman, D’Maris...................................43 Cohen, Warren I............................... 10, 11 Cold War in South Asia, The....................44 Collapse of the Eastern Mediterranean, The.....................................................13 Collected Papers on English Legal History.2 Colli, Andrea..........................................41 Collins, Robert O.....................................26 Combat and Genocide on the Eastern Front...................................................39 Coming of Age in Nineteenth-Century India...................................................28 Coming of the Holocaust, The.................18 Complexity and the Arrow of Time..........37 Compromise..........................................48 Concise History of Brazil, A.......................9 Concise History of France, A....................21 Concise History of Greece, A...................21 Concise History of Italy, A.......................22 Concise History of Romania, A................21 Concise History of Switzerland, A............22 Connelly, Mark.......................................38 Constitutional Money.............................42 Contesting the Postwar City......................7 Cook, Alexander C..................................29 Cooper, Ian............................................47 Cooper, Tracy E.......................................22 Costigliola, Frank......................................8 Cotton...................................................44 Counterinsurgency.................................39 Crandall, Russell.....................................10 Creating Global Opportunities................40 Creveld, Martin van................................39 Critchlow, Donald T...................................7 Critical Introduction to Khomeini, A........31 Crossland, Zoë.......................................26 Crusafont, Miquel..................................15 Cushman, Gregory T................................24 Cussen, Celia L.......................................10 Cust, Richard............................................3

D Daechsel, Markus...................................27 Davies, Daniel........................................36 Davies, Paul C. W....................................37 Day, Alexander F.....................................30 Dean, Peter............................................34 Debating Turkish Modernity....................31 Decoding Organization...........................39


Index Dejung, Christof.....................................42 Delton, Jennifer A.....................................7 Democratic Statecraft.............................48 Dick, Steven J.........................................36 Dickinson, Frederick R.............................30 Direction of War, The..............................38 Disability in the Ottoman Arab World, 1500–1800.........................................33 Disasters and the American State..............6 Discovery and Classification in Astronomy..........................................36 Disley, Liz......................................... 46, 47 Disobedience in Western Political Thought..............................................47 Divination and Prediction in Early China and Ancient Greece.............................30 Döşemeci, Mehmet.................................31 Donington, Kate.......................................1 Dosi, Giovanni........................................42 Draper, Nick.............................................1 Dronin, Nicolai.......................................21 Drug Wars in America, 1940–1973, The....8 Duggan, Christopher..............................22 Dunthorne, Hugh......................................2 Dutch Revolt and Catholic Exile in Reformation Europe, The......................15 Dyson, Matthew.....................................23

E Early China.............................................22 East German Economy, 1945–2010, The.20 Economic and Social History of Brazil since 1889, The.....................................9 Economic History of Latin America since Independence, The...............................10 Economy of Modern India, The................28 Economy, Family, and Society from Rome to Islam.....................................32 Efford, Alison Clark...................................9 Efremenko, Dmitry..................................21 Einhaus, Ann-Marie..................................4 El Shamsy, Ahmed..................................31 Elizabeth I and Ireland..............................1 Ellenblum, Ronnie..................................13 Empire and Power in the Reign of Süleyman............................................33 Encyclopedia of the History of Astronomy and Astrophysics................37 Endurance of Family Businesses, The.......41 English Identity and Political Culture in the Fourteenth Century..........................1 Ennaji, Mohammed................................32 Enoch Powell and the Making of Postcolonial Britain................................4 Environmental History of Medieval Europe, An..........................................14 Environmental History of Russia, An........21 Environmental Infrastructure in African History................................................27 Epic Lives and Monasticism in the Middle Ages, 800–1050......................11 European Colonialism since 1700...........23 European Integration and the Atlantic Community in the 1980s.....................44 Evaluating Empire and Confronting Colonialism in Eighteenth-Century Britain...................................................3 Everyday Life of the English Working Class, An...............................................2

Experience and Teleology in Ancient Historiography.....................................45

F Family in Roman Egypt, The....................45 Family, Law, and Inheritance in America....5 Faroqhi, Suraiya N............................ 23, 33 Farrell, Theo...........................................38 Fascists and the Jews of Italy, The...........20 Fausto, Boris............................................9 Fausto, Sergio...........................................9 Feeding France.......................................17 Feng, Li..................................................22 Fernandez Perez, Paloma........................41 Fettweis, Christopher J............................44 Firnhaber-Baker, Justine..........................15 First French Reformation, The..................15 First Knowledge Economy, The................16 Fischer-Bovet, Christelle..........................39 Fitzgerald, Robert...................................43 Fleet, Kate........................................ 23, 33 Fontaine, Laurence.................................22 Foreign Intervention in Africa..................27 Forsyth, James........................................35 Foundations of Worldwide Economic Integration, The...................................42 Fox, Yaniv...............................................12 Free Trade and Sailors’ Rights in the War of 1812.................................................5 French Army and the First World War, The.....................................................38 Frydl, Kathleen J.......................................8 Fumurescu, Alin......................................48 Fure-Slocum, Eric......................................7 Fusaro, Maria.........................................15

G Galambos, Louis.....................................42 Galen: Psychological Writings.................36 Garrison, Daniel H..................................15 Gelvin, James L.......................................31 Gender and Race in Antebellum Popular Culture..................................................4 Genocide and International Relations.....35 Geography of Strabo, The.......................45 Gerges, Fawaz A.....................................31 German Expansionism, Imperial Liberalism and the United States, 1776–1945.........................................16 German Immigrants, Race, and Citizenship in the Civil War Era..............9 German Merchants in the NineteenthCentury Atlantic...................................43 Germans to Poles...................................19 Gibson, Craig.........................................20 Gil Andrés, Carlos...................................17 Gilje, Paul A..............................................5 GIs in Germany......................................20 Godden, Malcolm.....................................1 Gooch, John...........................................38 Great Lakes Creoles..................................6 Great Powers and the International System, The.........................................45 Great War and the Origins of Humanitarianism, 1918–1924, The......40 Great War at Sea, The.............................37 Green Retreats.......................................45 Greene, Jack P..........................................3 Greene, Sandra E....................................26

51

Greenhalgh, Elizabeth............................38 Grethlein, Jonas.....................................45 Grey, Christopher...................................39 Grierson, Philip.......................................15 Guano and the Opening of the Pacific World..................................................24 Guettel, Jens-Uwe..................................16 Gundy, A. K..............................................1 Guthrie, Neil.............................................2 Guttstadt, Corry.....................................19

H Haig’s Intelligence..................................40 Hall, Catherine.........................................1 Hall, Marcia B.........................................22 Hampsher-Monk, Iain.............................17 Harris, Oliver J. T.....................................35 Head, Randolph C..................................22 Helo, Ari...................................................6 Hendrickson, Mark...................................7 Hilliard, Kathleen M..................................5 Hilsdale, Cecily J.....................................13 Hindu Family and the Emergence of Modern India, The...............................28 Hippler, Thomas......................................40 History of African Motherhood, A............27 History of Modern Indonesia, A...............29 History of Modern Israel, A.....................32 History of Modern Morocco, A................32 History of Modern Tunisia, A...................31 History of Prejudice, A...............................7 History of Sub-Saharan Africa, A.............26 History of the Vietnamese, A...................29 History of Zimbabwe, A...........................25 History, Frankish Identity and the Rise of Western Ethnicity, 550–850.................12 Hitchins, Keith........................................21 Hoffmann, Richard.................................14 Hogan, Michael J......................................8 How the War Was Won..........................37 Huber, Valeska........................................44 Hudson, Charles M...................................6 Huebner, Sabine R..................................45 Humanist World of Renaissance Florence, The.......................................46 Humanitarian Intervention......................23 Huns, Rome and the Birth of Europe, The.12

I Ibbetson, David......................................23 Imagining Europe...................................21 Impact of Idealism, The..................... 46, 47 Imperial Germany and the Great War, 1914–1918.........................................40 Imperial Rule and the Politics of Nationalism.........................................22 Indian Army on the Western Front, The....40 Inside African Anthropology....................27 International Distribution of News, The...42 Iran-Iraq War, The...................................38 Iraq in Wartime......................................32 Irish Nationalist Women, 1900–1918.......4 Iriye, Akira........................................ 10, 11 Islamabad and the Politics of International Development in Pakistan.27 Islamic Reform in South Asia...................28 Israel-Palestine Conflict, The...................31 Italian Army and the First World War, The.....................................................38

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52

Index J Jackson, Peter........................................44 Jacob, Margaret C...................................16 Jacobs, Fredrika......................................16 Jacobs, Nancy J.......................................26 Jamme, Christoph...................................47 Janssen, Geert........................................15 Jensen, Richard Bach..............................24 Jephson, Chris........................................40 John of Brienne......................................14 Joseph II................................................16 Josephson, Paul......................................21 Joyce, Patrick............................................3 July Crisis, The........................................17 Junker, Detlef.........................................20 Just and Unjust Military Intervention.......48

Life and Afterlife of Fray Martín de Porres, Afroperuvian Saint, The.............10 Lilley, Keith.............................................13 Lindberg, David C...................................37 Lineweaver, Charles H.............................37 Literature of the Holocaust.....................18 Livingston, Michael A..............................20 Logic of Law Making in Islam, The..........34 Long Struggle against Malaria in Tropical Africa, The...............................26 Loveluck, Christopher.............................11 Lowenthal, David...................................35 Lugo-Ortiz, Agnes...................................16 Luna, Francisco Vidal................................9 Luz, Nimrod...........................................33 Lynn, Kimberly........................................16

K

M

Kane, Brendan..........................................1 Kasaba, Resat........................................33 Katz, Marion Holmes..............................36 Kelly, Christopher...................................12 Kenez, Peter...........................................18 Keynes, Simon..........................................1 Khoury, Dina Rizk...................................32 Kim, Hyun Jin.........................................12 Kingship and Consent in Anglo-Saxon England, 871–978.................................1 Kiple, Kenneth F......................................35 Klein, Herbert S........................................9 Klein, Martin A.......................................26 Kocka, Jürgen.........................................20 Köhler, Ingo............................................19 Kominko, Maja.......................................12 Köster, Roman........................................41 Kováč, Dušan.........................................21 Kreike, Emmanuel...................................27 Kreiner, Jamie.........................................12 Kunt, Metin............................................33 Kutschke, Beate........................................8 Kuznitz, Cecile Esther.............................17

L Laes, Christian........................................45 LaFeber, Walter................................. 10, 11 Lafferty, Sean D. W..................................12 Lal, Ruby................................................28 Landscape and Change in Early Medieval Italy......................................12 Lang, Rachel............................................1 Lange, Tyler............................................15 Larin, Vladislav.......................................21 Laudani, Raffaele...................................48 Law and Identity in Colonial South Asia..28 Law and Legal Process...........................23 Law and Piety in Medieval Islam.............22 Law and Society in the Age of Theoderic the Great.............................................12 Law’s History............................................9 Lawrence, Adria K...................................22 Lee, Susanna Michele...............................9 Leese, Daniel..........................................30 Legacies of British Slave-ownership..........1 Lehning, James R....................................23 Leonard, Adrian......................................43 Lepler, Jessica M.......................................5 Leverington, David.................................37 Liberty Abroad........................................49

Macintyre, Stuart....................................34 Maischak, Lars.......................................43 Making of a New Rural Order in South China, The...........................................29 Making the Modern American Fiscal State...................................................42 Making the Soviet Intelligentsia..............20 Maloy, J. S..............................................48 Mamluk City in the Middle East, The.......33 Many Panics of 1837, The.........................5 Mao Cult................................................30 Mao’s Little Red Book............................29 Mapping Medieval Geographies.............13 Marler, Scott P..........................................6 Marsh, Christopher...................................3 Masters, Bruce.......................................32 Masters, Slaves, and Exchange..................5 Material Culture of the Jacobites, The........2 Maulucci, Jr, Thomas W...........................20 Maxson, Brian........................................46 May, Robert E...........................................4 McClelland, Keith.....................................1 McDermott, Joseph P..............................29 McDougall, Alan.....................................19 McGarr, Paul M......................................44 McGowan-Doyle, Valerie...........................1 McKitterick, Rosamond...........................12 McMahon, Elisabeth...............................27 Medieval European Coinage...................15 Mehrotra, Ajay K....................................42 Memory of the People, The.......................3 Merchants’ Capital, The............................6 Michael Psellos......................................14 Mill and Paternalism...............................48 Miller, Susan Gilson................................32 Mlambo, Alois S......................................25 Mnatsakanian, Ruben............................21 Monks of Tiron, The................................13 Moral Economy, The...............................22 Moreno, Paul D.......................................10 Morgen, Henning...................................40 Morieux, Renaud....................................17 Morton-Jack, George..............................40 Movable Feast, A....................................35 Murphy, Lucy............................................6 Murray, Williamson.................................38 Music and Protest in 1968........................8 Music and Society in Early Modern England................................................3 Muslims of Medieval Latin Christendom, c.1050–1614......................................13 Mystic Ark, The.......................................46

N Neal, Larry................................. 40, 41, 43 New Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations, The.................... 10, 11 New Middle East, The.............................31 New Muslims of Post-Conquest Iran, The.33 Newbigin, Eleanor..................................28 Newell, Waller R.....................................48 Nobility and Kingship in Medieval England................................................1 Northwest Europe in the Early Middle Ages, c.AD 600–1150.........................11 Norton, Barley..........................................8 Norwood, Stephen H................................7 Nutton, Vivian........................................36

O O’Brien, Phillips......................................37 Old Saint Peter’s, Rome..........................12 Oldfield, J. R.............................................4 Open Standards and the Digital Age.........8 Orientalism and Musical Mission............32 Origins, History, and Future of the Federal Reserve, The............................43 Osborne, John........................................12 Osella, Caroline......................................28 Osella, Filippo........................................28 Otte, Thomas..........................................17 Ottoman-Iranian Borderlands.................31

P Pašeta, Senia............................................4 Pandey, Gyanendra...................................7 Pankenier, David W.................................30 Papaioannou, Stratis...............................14 Past is a Foreign Country – Revisited, The.....................................................35 Patel, Kiran Klaus...................................44 Pathologies of Power, The.......................44 Peacey, Jason...........................................4 Peasant in Postsocialist China, The..........30 People’s Game, The.................................19 Perkins, Kenneth.....................................31 Perry, Guy...............................................14 Petersson, Niels P....................................42 Phelps, Nicole M.....................................10 Philp, Mark............................................46 Pincelli, Agata........................................14 Pitts, Yvonne............................................5 Pocock, J. G. A........................................45 Political Change in Southeast Asia..........29 Political Economies of Empire in the Early Modern Mediterranean................15 Politics of Prohibition, The.........................8 Pollnitz, Aysha..........................................3 Porch, Douglas.......................................39 Power and Religion in Merovingian Gaul.12 Power and the People, The......................32 Prayer in Islamic Thought and Practice....36 Price, Roger............................................21 Princely Education in Sixteenth-Century Britain...................................................3 Print and Public Politics in the English Revolution.............................................4 Prost, Antoine........................................19

Q Questioning Credible Commitment.........43


Index R Rabban, David M......................................9 Racial Science..........................................6 Raphals, Lisa..........................................30 Recchia, Stefano.....................................48 Red Nations...........................................18 Red Terror’ and the Spanish Civil War, The.....................................................17 Reforming Ideas in Britain......................46 Reframing the Feudal Revolution............13 Reid, Megan H.......................................22 Reimitz, Helmut......................................12 René Cassin and Human Rights..............19 Rethinking the 1950s...............................7 Revolutionary Writings...........................17 Richard II and the Rebel Earl.....................1 Richards, Michael...................................19 Richardson, Carol M...............................12 Richmond, Vivienne..................................2 Rieber, Alfred..........................................43 Riello, Giorgio........................................44 Rise of Heritage, The...............................17 Rise of Prison Literature in the Sixteenth Century, The..........................................3 Rise of the Global Company, The.............43 Roach, Levi..............................................1 Robb, John.............................................35 Roberds, William....................................43 Roberts, Justin........................................23 Roberts, Patrick S......................................6 Röhl, John C. G.......................................18 Roller, Duane W......................................46 Rosen, Alan............................................18 Rosenhaft, Eve.......................................18 Rosenthal, Angela..................................16 Ross, Robert...........................................27 Roth, Sarah N...........................................4 Ruddick, Andrea.......................................1 Rudolph, Conrad....................................46 Ruiz, Julius.............................................17 Ruse, Michael.........................................37 Russell, Andrew L.....................................8 Rutherford, Jeffrey..................................39 Rynning, Sten.........................................38

S Sadeghi, Behnam...................................34 Şahin, Kaya............................................33 Sambrook, Stephen C.............................41 Sand, Alexa............................................13 Savant, Sarah Bowen..............................33 Sayeed, Asma.........................................33 Scalenghe, Sara......................................33 Scates, Bruce..........................................35 Schmidt, Elizabeth..................................27 Schoenhals, Michael...............................30 Schofield, Camilla.....................................4 Secularism and Religion in NineteenthCentury Germany................................15 Seijas, Tatiana..........................................9 Sensuous in the Counter-Reformation Church, The.........................................22 Service, Hugo.........................................19 Shank, Michael H...................................37 Shapira, Michal........................................4 Sharafi, Mitra.........................................28 Shaw, Martin..........................................35 Shindler, Colin........................................32

Short Story and the First World War, The...4 Silberstein-Loeb, Jonathan......................42 Simms, Brendan.....................................23 Singer, P. N.............................................36 Slave Portraiture in the Atlantic World.....16 Slavery and Emancipation in Islamic East Africa...........................................27 Slavery and the Enlightenment in the British Atlantic, 1750–1807.................23 Slavery, Race, and Conquest in the Tropics.4 Slavery, the State, and Islam...................32 Slaveski, Filip..........................................18 Slovakia in History..................................21 Smith, Jeremy.........................................18 Social Life of Hagiography in the Merovingian Kingdom, The..................12 Sondhaus, Lawrence...............................37 Soviet Occupation of Germany, The.........18 Spary, E. C..............................................17 Spencer, Andrew M...................................1 Spying for the People.............................30 Squatriti, Paolo.......................................12 State of Freedom, The...............................3 State, Faith, and Nation in Ottoman and Post-Ottoman Lands............................31 Stationers’ Company and the Printers of London, 1501–1557, The.......................2 Stedman Jones, Gareth...........................49 Steedman, Carolyn...................................2 Stephens, Rhiannon................................27 Stokes, Raymond G.................................41 Stone, Bailey..........................................16 Story, Joanna..........................................12 Strachan, Hew........................................38 Strubbe, Johan.......................................45 Struggle for the Eurasian Borderlands, The.....................................................43 Sugar Plantation in India and Indonesia, The.....................................................28 Swain, Simon.........................................32 Swenson, Astrid.....................................17

T Taylor, Anna Lisa.....................................11 Taylor, Craig...........................................14 Taylor, K. W.............................................29 Teich, Mikuláš........................................21 Terriff, Terry............................................38 Teslow, Tracy............................................6 Theodosius II..........................................12 Third Industrial Revolution in Global Business, The.......................................42 Thomas Jefferson’s Ethics and the Politics of Human Progress.....................6 Thompson, James.....................................3 Thompson, Kathleen...............................13 Timberlake, Richard H.............................42 Time in Early Modern Islam.....................33 Tomlinson, B. R.......................................28 Transatlantic Abolitionism in the Age of Revolution.............................................4 Transformation of American International Power in the 1970s, The....8 Transforming Military Power since the Cold War.............................................38 Trim, D. J. B.............................................23 Tripp, Charles.........................................32 Tromly, Benjamin....................................20 Turkey, the Jews, and the Holocaust........19

53

Turner, John D.........................................42 Twentieth-Century Spain........................17 Twitchett, Denis.....................................24 Tyranny..................................................48

U U.S.-Habsburg Relations from 1815 to the Paris Peace Conference..................10 Urbańczyk, Przemysław..........................14

V Varouxakis, Georgios..............................49 Verhoeven, Wil.......................................46 Vesalius, Andreas...................................15 Vesalius: The China Root Epistle..............15 Vickers, Adrian........................................29 Vickers, Jason E........................................5 Violence and the State in Languedoc, 1250–1400.........................................15 Vision, Devotion, and SelfRepresentation in Late Medieval Art.....13 von Lingen, Kerstin.................................25 Votive Panels and Popular Piety in Early Modern Italy........................................16

W Walker, John...........................................47 Wang, Q. Edward...................................29 War Inside, The.........................................4 Wargames..............................................39 Webb, Jr, James L. A................................26 Weeks, William Earl.......................... 10, 11 Weir, Todd H...........................................15 Weisbrode, Kenneth...............................44 Welsh, Jennifer M...................................48 West Germany and the Global Sixties......19 West, Charles.........................................13 Western Union and the Creation of the American Corporate Order, 1845–1893.8 When Hollywood Was Right.....................7 Wilhelm II..............................................18 Williamson, Jeffrey.................................40 Williamson, Jeffrey G..............................41 Winter, Jay................................. 19, 24, 25 Wiszewski, Przemysław..........................14 Wolff, Joshua D........................................8 Women and the Transmission of Religious Knowledge in Islam..............33 Wood, Andy.............................................3 Woods, Kevin.........................................38 Woodward, David...................................39 World of Kosmas, The.............................12 World War I and the Triumph of a New Japan, 1919–1930..............................30 Wyatt, Michael.......................................14

Y YIVO and the Making of Modern Jewish Culture................................................17 Youth in the Roman Empire....................45

Z Zanchetta, Barbara...................................8 Ziegler, Dieter.........................................20

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