Publications 2019–20

Page 1

Publications 2019–20

sas.ac.uk/publications


The University of London Press builds on a century of publishing tradition by disseminating distinctive scholarship at the forefront of the humanities. Based at the School of Advanced Study, the press seeks to facilitate collaborative, inclusive, open access, scholar-led interchange, within and beyond the academy.

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Books

IHR Conference Series

Memory, Migration and (De)colonisation in the Caribbean and beyond

Medieval Londoners

edited by Jack Daniel Webb, Roderick Westmaas, Maria del Pilar Kaladeen and William Tantam

Essays to mark the eightieth birthday of Caroline Barron Edited by Elizabeth A. New and Christian Steer

INSTITUTE OF LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES cover1.indd 3

Memory, migration and (de)colonisation in the Caribbean and beyond Edited by Jack Daniel Webb, Roderick Westmaas, Maria del Pilar Kaladeen and William Tantum Institute of Latin American Studies

05/04/2019 12:26:12

Medieval Londoners: Essays to mark the eightieth birthday of Caroline M. Barron Edited by Elizabeth A. New and Christian Steer IHR Conference Series

Available Open Access

Institute of Historical Research

978-1-908857-65-1 (pb), 340pp, £25

Available Open Access

978-1-908857-66-8 (epub), £20

978-1-912702-14-5 (hb), 300pp, £40

978-1-908857-67-5 (Kindle), £20

978-1-912702-17-6 (epub), £32

978-1-908857-76-7 (PDF)

978-1-912702-16-9 (Kindle), £32

February 2020

978-1-912702-15-2 (PDF)

Memory, migration and (de)colonisation furthers our understanding of the lives of migrants, and the contexts through which they lived and continue to live. In particular, it focuses on the relationship between Caribbean migrants and processes of decolonisation. The chapters in this book range across disciplines and time periods to present a vibrant understanding of the ever-changing interactions between Caribbean peoples and colonialism as they migrated within and between colonial contexts. At the heart of this book are the voices of Caribbean migrants themselves, whose critical reflections on their experiences of migration and decolonisation are interwoven with the essays of academics and activists.

sas.ac.uk/publications

October 2019

Medieval Londoners were a diverse group, some born in the city, and others drawn to the capital from across the realm and from overseas. For some, London became the sole focus of their lives, while others retained or developed networks and loyalties that spread far and wide. The rich evidence for the medieval city, including archaeological and documentary evidence, means that the study of London and its inhabitants remains a vibrant field. Medieval Londoners brings together archaeologists, historians, art-historians and literary scholars whose essays provide glimpses of medieval Londoners in all their variety.

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Books

Civilian Specialists at War Britain’s transport experts and the First World War CHRISTOPHER PHILLIPS

The family firm: monarchy, Civilian specialists at war: mass media and the British Britain’s transport experts and the First World War public, 1932–1953 Edward Owens

Christopher Phillips

RHS New Historical Perspectives Series

RHS New Historical Perspectives Series

Institute of Historical Research

Institute of Historical Research

Available Open Access

Available Open Access

978-1-909646-94-0 (hb), 300pp, £50

978-1-909646-90-2 (hb), 300pp, £50

978-1-909646-98-8 (pb), 300pp, £35

978-1-909646-97-1 (pb), 300pp, £35

978-1-909646-96-4 (epub), £20

978-1-909646-91-9 (epub), £20

978-1-912702-13-8 (Kindle), £20

978-1 909646-92-6 (PDF)

978-1-909646-95-7 (PDF)

July 2020

November 2019

The Family Firm presents the first major historical analysis of the transformation of the royal household’s public relations strategy in the period 1932–1953. Beginning with King George V’s first Christmas broadcast, Buckingham Palace worked with the Church of England and the media to initiate a new phase in the House of Windsor’s approach to publicity. This book also focuses on audience reception by exploring how British readers, listeners, and viewers made sense of royalty’s new media image. It argues that the monarchy’s deliberate elevation of a more informal and familycentred image strengthened the relationship between the public and the royals, and had a unifying effect on national life in the unstable years during and either side of the Second World War.

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The evolving professional relationship between Britain’s transport experts and the military, both in peacetime and during the war, demonstrates the complex and innovative ways in which the army conceptualised industrial warfare and the role played by technical expertise in such a conflict. Civilian specialists at war demonstrates the pioneering management techniques of a force engaged in coalition warfare on foreign soil, and sheds new light on the multiple and diverse contributions of Britain’s transport experts between 1914 and 1918.

sas.ac.uk/publications


SAM MANNING

www.history.ac.uk www.royalhistsoc.org

Masculinity on the Grand Tour SARAH GOLDSMITH

GOLDSMITH

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Books

Decades of decline, 1945–1965

Masculinity on the Grand Tour

Cinemas and cinema-going in the United Kingdom

Cinemas and cinema-going Masculinity on the Grand Tour in the United Kingdom: Sarah Goldsmith decades of decline, RHS New Historical Perspectives Series 1945–1965 Sam Manning RHS New Historical Perspectives Series Institute of Historical Research Available Open Access 978-1-912702-34-3 (hb), 300pp, £50 978-1-912702-35-0 (pb), 300pp, £35 978-1-912702-38-1 (epub), £20 978-1-912702-37-4 (Kindle), £20 978-1-912702-36-7 (PDF) May 2020

Cinema-going was the most popular commercial leisure activity in the first half of the twentieth century, with UK cinema attendance peaking in 1946 at some 1.6 billion recorded admissions. During the 1950s, a range of factors including the growth of television led to a rapid decline in attendance. By the mid1960s, attendances plummeted to 327 million and many cinemas shut their doors. This book traces these decades of decline, assessing cinema-going habits, the reasons for declining admissions, the opening and closure of cinemas, exhibition practices, programming and audience preferences. It emphasises the localised nature of cinema-going and argues that place was as great a determinant of cinema-going practices as other factors such as age, class and gender. sas.ac.uk/publications

Institute of Historical Research Available Open Access

978-1-909646-94-0 (hb), 300pp, £50 978-1-909646-98-8 (pb), 300pp, £35 978-1-909646-96-4 (epub), £20 978-1-912702-24-4 (Kindle), £20 978-1-912702-25-1 (PDF) April 2020

The Grand Tour, a customary trip of Europe undertaken by British nobility and wealthy landed gentry during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, played an important role in the formation of contemporary notions of elite masculinity. Examining testimony as written by Grand Tourists, tutors and their families, Goldsmith demonstrates that the Grand Tour educated elite young men in a wide variety of skills, virtues and masculine behaviours that extended well beyond polite society. Influenced by aristocratic concepts of honour and inspired by military leadership, elites viewed experiences of danger and hardship as powerfully transformative and therefore central to the construction of masculinity. Grand Tourists willingly tackled a variety of geographical and physical perils, scaling mountains, volcanoes and glaciers; and encountering war and disease. 5


Books

Glasgow’s sugar aristocracy Individuals and institutions in medieval in the British-Atlantic scholasticism world, 1776-1838 Stephen Mullen RHS New Historical Perspectives Series Institute of Historical Research Available Open Access 978-1-909646-77-3 (hb), 300pp, £50 978-1-912702-33-6 (pb), 300pp, £35 978-1-909646-93-3 (epub), £20 978-1-909646-78-0 (PDF) June 2020

The wealth generated both directly and indirectly by Caribbean slavery had a major impact on Glasgow and Scotland. Glasgow’s Sugar Aristocracy is the first book to directly assess the size, nature and effects of this. West India merchants and plantation owners based in Glasgow made nationally significant fortunes, some of which boosted Scottish capitalism, as well as the temporary Scottish economic migrants who travelled to some of the wealthiest of the Caribbean islands. This book adds much needed nuance to the argument in a Scottish context; revealing methods of repatriating wealth from the Caribbean as well as mercantile investments in industry, banking and land and philanthropic initiatives.

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Edited by Antonia Fitzpatrick and John Sabapathy RHS New Historical Perspectives Series Institute of Historical Research Available Open Access 978-1-912702-26-8 (hb), 300pp, £50 978-1-912702-27-5 (pb), 300pp, £35 978-1-912702-28-2 (epub), £20 978-1-912702-29-9 (Kindle), £20 978-1-912702-30-5 (PDF) May 2020

How did intellectuals shape their institutions and how were their institutions shaped by them in return? The volume explores the relationship between individuals and institutions in medieval scholasticism between the twelfth and fifteenth centuries, and is intended as an important reference point for future debates on these topics, principally for medieval historians while also raising questions relevant to those working on individualisation and institutionalisation in other periods and disciplines.

sas.ac.uk/publications


Books

IHR Conference Series

Thomas Frederick Tout (1855–1929) Refashioning history for the twentieth century Edited by Caroline A. Barron and Joel T. Rosenthal

Thomas Frederick Tout (1855–1929): refashioning history for the twentieth century Edited by Caroline Barron and Joel Rosenthal IHR Conference Series Institute of Historical Research Available Open Access 978-1-909646-99-5 (hb), 300pp, £40 978-1-912702-02-2 (epub), £32 978-1-912702-32-9 (Kindle), £32 978-1-912702-03-9 (PDF) September 2019

Thomas Frederick Tout (1855–1929) was arguably the most prolific English medieval historian of the early 20th century. The son of an unsuccessful publican, he was described at his Oxford scholarship exam as ‘uncouth and untidy’; however he went on to publish hundreds of books throughout his distinguished career with a legacy that extended well beyond the academy. Tout pioneered the use of archival research, welcomed women into academia and augmented the University of Manchester’s growing reputation for pioneering research. This book presents the first full assessment of Tout’s life and work. Selected essays take a fresh and critical look at Tout’s own historical writing and discuss how his research shaped our understanding of the middle ages. The book concludes with a personal reflection on Tout by his grandson, Tom Sharp. sas.ac.uk/publications

Empty spaces: perspectives on emptiness in modern history Edited by Courtney J. Campbell, Allegra Giovine and Jennifer Keating IHR Conference Series Institute of Historical Research Available Open Access 978‑1‑909646‑49‑0 (hb), £40 978‑1‑909646‑50‑6 (epub), £32 978-1-909646-51-3 (Kindle), £32 978-1-909646-52-0 (PDF) September 2019

How is emptiness made and what historical purpose does it serve? What cultural, material and natural work goes into maintaining ‘nothingness’? This volume draws together contributions from authors working on landscapes and rurality, along with national and imperial narratives, from Brazil to Russia and Ireland. It considers the visual, including the art of Edward Hopper and the work of the British Empire Marketing Board, while concluding with a section that examines constructions of emptiness in relation to capitalism, development and the (re)appropriation of urban space. In doing so, it foregrounds the importance of emptiness as a productive prism through which to interrogate a variety of imperial, national, cultural and urban history.

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Books

The cultural worlds of the Jesuits in colonial Latin America Edited by Linda Newson Institute of Latin American Studies Available Open Access

A Nicaraguan exceptionalism? Debating the legacy of the Sandinista Revolution Edited by Hilary Francis Institute of Latin American Studies

978-1-908857-62-0 (pb), 350pp, £25

Available Open Access

978-1-908857-74-3 (epub), £20

978‑1‑908857‑57‑6 (pb), 300pp, £25

978-1-908857-73-6 (Kindle), £20 978-1-908857-75-0 (PDF) May 2020

The Jesuits’ colonial legacy in Latin America is well known. They pioneered an interest in indigenous languages and cultures, compiling dictionaries and writing some of the earliest ethnographies of the region. They also explored the region’s natural history and made significant contributions to the development of science and medicine. On their estates and in the missions they introduced new plants, livestock, and agricultural techniques, such as irrigation. In addition, they left a lasting legacy on the region’s architecture, art and music. The volume demonstrates the diversity of Jesuit contributions to Latin American culture. This volume is unique in considering not only the range of Jesuit activities but also the diversity of perspectives from which they may be approached. It includes papers from scholars of history, linguistics, religion, art, architecture, cartography, music, medicine and science.

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March 2020

Nicaragua sees lower murder rates and far fewer gang problems when compared with its neighbours. In recent years, child migrants from Central America have arrived in the United States in unprecedented numbers. But whereas minors from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador make the perilous journey to the north, their Nicaraguan peers have remained in Central America. Why is Nicaragua so different? The present government has promulgated a discourse of Nicaraguan exceptionalism, arguing that Nicaragua is unique thanks to the heritage of the 1979 Sandinista revolution. This volume critically interrogates that claim, asking whether the legacy of the revolution is truly exceptional. An interdisciplinary work, the book brings together historians, anthropologists and sociologists to explore the multifarious ways in which the revolutionary past continues to shape public policy – and daily life – in Nicaragua’s tumultuous present.

sas.ac.uk/publications


Books

Cultures of Anti-Racism in Latin America and the Caribbean edited by Peter Wade, James Scorer and Ignacio Aguiló

INSTITUTE OF LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES

Cultures of anti-racism in Latin America and the Caribbean

Creative spaces: urban culture and marginality in Latin America

Edited by Peter Wade, James Scorer and Ignacio Aguilo

Edited by Niall H.D. Geraghty and Adriana Laura Massidda

Institute of Latin American Studies

Institute of Latin American Studies

Available Open Access

Available Open Access

978‑1‑908857‑55‑2 (pb), 300pp, £25

978-1-908857-48-4 (pb), 360pp, £25

978-1-908857-71-2 (epub), £20

978-1-908857-49-1 (epub), £20

978-1-908857-70-5 (Kindle), £20

978-1-908857-50-7 (Kindle), £20

978-1-908857-72-9 (PDF)

978-1-908857-69-9 (PDF)

February 2020

Latin America’s long history of showing how racism can co-exist with racial mixture and conviviality offers useful ammunition for strengthening anti-racist stances. This volume asks whether cultural production has a particular role to play within discourses and practices of anti-racism in Latin America and the Caribbean. The contributors analyse music, performance, education, language, film and art in diverse national contexts across the region. The book also places Latin American and Caribbean racial formations within a broader global context and sets out the premise that the region provides valuable opportunities for thinking about anti-racism when recent political events have made ever more fragile the claims that, at least in Europe and the United States, we exist in a ‘post-racial’ world.

sas.ac.uk/publications

May 2019

Latin American cities are some of the most densely populated in the world. How have the fringes of these bustling cityscapes produced and informed art, film, political organisations and urban policy? Originally viewed as spaces of deprivation and violence, the urban margins were later romanticised as spaces of opportunity and popular empowerment. These sites now constitute an important part of the collective imaginary like never before. The essays in this collection reassess dominant theoretical notions of ‘marginality’ in the region and assess the different ways in which marginal urban spaces have become privileged locations for creativity in Latin America. The volume draws on research from a wide spectrum of disciplines, ranging from cultural and urban studies to architecture and sociology. 9


Books

Bithell Series of Dissertations

Unweaving The Odyssey: Barbara Köhler’s Niemands Frau Rebecca May Johnson

Unweaving The Odyssey: Barbara Köhler’s Niemands Frau

Urban microcosms (1789–1940) Edited by Margit Dirscherl and Astrid Köhler

Rebecca May Johnson

imlr books

Bithell Series of Dissertations 46

Institute of Modern Languages Research

Institute of Modern Languages Research

978‑0‑85457‑266‑3 (pb), 282pp, £25

978-0-85457-270-0 (hb), 260pp, £20 September 2019

How has classical literature shaped culture, knowledge, the thinkable? What happens when a canonical text is translated from his gaze into her, and their, gaze(s)? These are some of the questions Barbara Köhler pursues in her modern epic poem, Niemands Frau (2007), her response to The Odyssey. This study presents the first detailed analysis of Köhler’s poem, tracing the ways in which she re-invents Homer’s text, from the claim that Niemands Frau is a form of ‘translation’ to its complex re-workings of the Homeric figures Penelope, Helen of Troy, Tiresias and Odysseus.

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July 2019

The notion of cities and towns as ‘movers and shakers of civilization’ and ‘engines and agents of change’ (Peter Borsay) will be familiar to anyone working on 19th- or early 20th-century history and culture. One effect of such an approach is to subsume towns under cities; another is to attribute to the imagined urban entity one singular willpower. However, anyone who happens to have lived in both a small town and a big city knows that the two differ considerably both with regard to atmosphere and social fabric. This volume focuses on places, spaces and processes, not on metropolitan molochs but on smaller units of urban life, and seeks to increase our understanding of the changes that happened in the long 19th century in Europe, and hence of modernisation and modernity itself.

sas.ac.uk/publications


Books

Women and the Law Susan Atkins and Brenda Hoggett

Legal records at risk: Women and the law A strategy for safeguarding Susan Atkins and Brenda Hoggett OBserving Law our legal heritage Clare Cowling OBserving Law Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Available Open Access 978-1-911507-14-7 (pb), 422pp, £40 978-1-911507-15-4 (PDF) July 2019

Why do so few institutions in the legal sector have professional records managers or archivists on their staff? This book is the culmination of a three-year project by experienced archivist and records managers on private sector legal records at risk in England at Wales. It summarises the work of the Legal Records at Risk (LRAR) project and its predecessors, diagnoses the problems of preservation of archives in the legal sector in England and Wales and outlines a national strategy for such records.

sas.ac.uk/publications

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Available Open Access 978‑1‑911507-10-9 (pb), 275pp, £25 978-1-911507-11-6 (epub), £15 978-1-911507-13-0 (Kindle), £15 978-1-911507-12-3 (PDF) September 2018

First published in 1984, Women and the law is a pioneering study of the way in which the law has treated women – at work, in the family, in matters of sexuality and fertility, and in public life. The authors examine the origins of British law’s attitude to women, trace the development of the law and ways in which it reflects the influence of economic, social and political forces and the dominance of men. They illustrate that, despite formal measures, deep-rooted problems of encoded gender inequality remain. This edition provides a timely opportunity to revisit their groundbreaking analysis and reflect on how much has changed, and how much has stayed the same.

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Books

Victoria History of Herefordshire: Colwall

Victoria History of Shropshire: Wem

James Bowen

Judith Ann Everard and James Bowen

VCH Shorts

VCH Shorts

Institute of Historical Research

Institute of Historical Research

978-1-912702-07-7 (pb), 116pp, £14

978-1-912702-08-4 (pb), 116pp, £14

978-1-912702-44-2 (epub), £11.20

978-1-912702-41-1 (epub), £11.20

978-1-912702-43-5 (Kindle), £11.20

978-1-912702-42-8 (Kindle), £11.20

May 2020

December 2019

Colwall lies on the western slopes of the Malvern Hills, near the market town of Ledbury. The large village comprises Colwall Stone, Upper Colwall and Colwall Green. On the Herefordshire Beacon, in the south-eastern corner of the parish, is the Iron Age ‘British Camp’. Until the 19th century Colwall’s economy was predominantly agricultural, including cultivation of orchards and hops. From the mid 19th century the northern part of the parish was transformed by the development of the spa at neighbouring Malvern, and by the arrival of the railway in 1861, following the construction of tunnels under the Malvern Hills by local engineer Stephen Ballard. Mineral water from Colwall springs was bottled commercially, and in 1892 Schweppes opened a bottling plant at Colwall Stone. Colwall’s rural location, natural springs and beautiful scenery attracted visitors to the numerous inns, hotels and boarding houses.

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The township of Wem lies on the North Shropshire Plain, about nine miles north of Shrewsbury. The centre of a much larger medieval manor and parish, the township consists of the small medieval market town and its immediate rural hinterland. It was thrust onto the national stage in 1642 when Parliamentarians defeated a Royalist attack and held the town for the duration of the Civil War. The ‘great fire’ of 1677 then destroyed most of the medieval buildings in the town centre, leading to its predominantly Georgian and Victorian appearance today. The decline in agricultural employment and the withdrawal of services and industries from small market towns like Wem in recent decades is a challenge, met by the advantage of the railway station to residents who work elsewhere but choose the town as a place to live.

sas.ac.uk/publications


the victoria history of essex

Books

gh of Harwich, including the parish ourt, lies in the far north-east corner s coastal location as a natural harbour th of the Orwell river dictated that ad a prominent role as a port and from the 14th century onwards. In entury Harwich retained its military particularly during the Napoleonic and wars. The port declined economically of losing the continental packet the 1830s, but it was rejuvenated by g of the railway in 1854. Dovercourt esidential area and seaside resort in half of the 19th century, although the parish retained much of its traditional al character. The opening of the port at keston in 1883 led to a rapid growth in nger traffic and trade to and from the

HARWICH, DOVERCOURT AND PARKESTON IN THE 19TH CENTURY

g the changing character of Dovercourt and Parkeston through of the 19th century, this book sets onomic, social and political history ough. The book provides an overview elopment of areas such as education, d public health with a strong focus on maritime history.

HARWICH, DOVERCOURT AND PARKESTON IN THE 19TH CENTURY Andrew Senter

Andrew Senter

The Victoria History of Essex: Harwich, Dovercourt and Parkeston in the 19th century Andrew Senter

Thou shalt forget: indigenous sovereignty, resistance and the production of cultural oblivion in Canada

VCH Shorts

Pierrot Ross-Tremblay

Institute of Historical Research

Human Rights Consortium

978-1-912702-11-4 (pb), 116pp, £14

Institute of Commonwealth Studies

978-1-912702-39-8 (epub), £11.20

978-1-912250-09-7 (pb), 200pp, £25

978-1-912702-40-4 (Kindle), £11.20 October 2019

The book provides an overview of the development of areas such as education, religion, public health with a strong focus on Harwich’s maritime history. The borough of Harwich, including the parish of Dovercourt, lies in the far north east corner of Essex. Its coastal location as a natural harbour at the mouth of the Orwell river dictated that Harwich had a prominent role as a port and naval base from the 14th century onwards. In the 19th century Harwich retained its military function, particularly during the Napoleonic and Crimean wars. The port declined economically as a result of losing the continental packet service in the 1830s, but it was rejuvenated by the opening of the railway in 1854. Dovercourt grew as a residential area and seaside resort in the second half of the 19th century, although the rest of the parish retained much of its traditional agricultural character.

sas.ac.uk/publications

February 2020

What is ‘cultural oblivion’ and ‘psychological colonialism’, and how have they affected the capacity of First Nation Peoples in Canada to actively resist systematic and territorial oppression by the state? Following a decade-long research project, this new book by Pierrot Ross-Tremblay examines the erasure of the author’s own community, the Essipiunnuat, and their cultural history and heritage from Canadian public consciousness. Using extensive oral history, he conducts a genealogy of the intergenerational silence and subsequent forgetting of an uprising known as the Salmon War that occurred in the 1980s. The book queries how this impacted upon the group’s collective consent and emancipation.

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Books

Greek large-scale bronze statuary: the late archaic and classical periods Edited by Kosmas Dafas

The afterlife of Herodotus and Thucydides Edited by John North and Peter Mack BICS Supplement 139

BICS Supplement 138

Institute of Classical Studies

Institute of Classical Studies

978-1-905670-87-1 (hb), 230pp, £70

978‑1‑905670‑67‑3 (hb), 400pp, £100 June 2019

This book presents a new study of Greek large-scale bronze statuary of the late Archaic and Classical periods. It examines the discovery, origin, style, date, artistic attribution, identification and interpretation of the surviving bronzes, and focuses in particular on their technical features and casting techniques. It contains over 170 plates of photographs and drawings to illustrate its discussion. It also places the development of the casting techniques in connection with the stylistic evolution in Greek free-standing sculpture. During the Classical period, artists preferred bronze to marble when creating their contrapposto figures. Indisputably, bronze gave particular freedom to artists in creating three-dimensional figures. Through the examination of how technical matters affect style, this book presents fresh interpretations of these important monuments of Greek art and offers a new approach in the field of Greek free-standing bronze sculpture.

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November 2019

This is one of the volumes in the series of ‘Afterlives’ of the Classics, which is being produced jointly by the Institute of Classical Studies and the Warburg Institute.

The afterlife of Apuleius Edited by C. Boidin, R. Mouren, and O. Pedeflous BICS Supplement 140 Institute of Classical Studies 978-1-905670-88-8 (hb), 230pp, £70 March 2020

This is the sixth and last of the volumes in the series of ‘Afterlives’ of the Classics, which is being produced jointly by the Institute of Classical Studies and the Warburg Institute.

sas.ac.uk/publications


Featured publications

The concept of the book: the production, progression and dissemination of information

Radical collections: re-examining the roots of collections, practices and information professions

Edited by Cynthia Johnson

Edited by Jordan Landes and Richard Espley

Institute of English Studies

Senate House Library

978-0-9927257-4-7 (pb), £25

Available Open Access

January 2019

978-1-913002-00-8 (pb), 120pp, £15

What is the purpose and essence of a book? If we push the definition of a ‘book’ beyond the traditional form of the codex to encompass cuneiform tablets, papyri, as well as the printed and digital book, we discover that its functionality is as potent and diverse as human endeavour. Featuring contributors from a wide range of disciplines such as art history, medieval studies, ancient Near Eastern history, information management and the history of the book, this ambitious new release explores the biography of the concept of the book, and its function across millennia.

978-1-913002-03-9 (epub), £8 978-1-913002-02-2 (Kindle), £8 978-1-913002-01-5 (PDF) December 2018

Do archivists ‘curate’ history? And to what extent are our librarians the gatekeepers of knowledge? Libraries and archives have a long and rich history of compiling ‘radical collections’ – from Klanwatch Project in the States to the R. D. Laing Archive in Glasgow – but a reexamination of the information professions and all aspects of managing those collections is long overdue. This book brings together some key papers from a conference held at Senate House Library in 2017. It shines a light on pressing topical issues in library and information services to encompass selection, appraisal and accession, through to organisation and classification. Will libraries survive neoliberal marketisation? Do we have a responsibility to collect and document ‘white hate’ in the era of Trump? And how can a predominantly white LIS workforce effectively collect and tell POC histories?

sas.ac.uk/publications

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Featured publications

Envisioning global LGBT human rights: (neo) colonialism, neoliberalism, resistance and hope Edited by Nancy Nicol, Adrian Jjuuko, Richard Lusimbo, Nick Mulé, Susan Ursel, et al. Human Rights Consortium Institute of Commonwealth Studies Available Open Access 978-0-9931102-3-8 (pb), 370pp, £25 978-1-912250-16-5 (Kindle), £20 978-0-9931102-8-3 (PDF)

September 2018 Envisioning global LGBT human rights is an outcome of a five-year international collaboration among partners that share a common legacy of British colonial laws that criminalise same-sex intimacy and gender identity/expression. The chapters are bursting with invaluable first-hand insights from leading activists at the forefront of some of the most fiercely fought battlegrounds of contemporary sexual politics in India, the Caribbean and Africa. Authors from Canada, Botswana and Kenya examine key turning points in the advancement of SOGI issues at the United Nations, and provide critical insights on LGBT asylum in Canada. It is a book for activists and academics in a range of disciplines from postcolonial and sexualities studies to filmmaking, as well as for policy-makers and practitioners committed to envisioning, and working for, a better future. 16

We mark your memory: writings from the descendants of indenture Edited by David Dabydeen, Maria del Pilar Kaladeen and Tina K. Ramnarine Institute of Commonwealth Studies 978‑1‑912250‑07‑3 (pb), 212pp, £11.99 978‑1‑912250‑08‑0 (epub), £8 April 2018

Indenture, whereby individuals entered, or were coerced, into an agreement to work in a colony, was open to abuse from recruitment to plantation. Hidden within this little-known system of 19th- and early 20th-century labour migration are neglected stories of exploited and unfree labour under the British Empire. These include indentured histories from Madeira to the Caribbean, from West Africa to the Caribbean, and from China to the Caribbean, Mauritius and South Africa. To mark the centenary of indenture’s abolition in the British Empire (2017–20) this volume brings together, for the first time, new writing from across the Commonwealth and beyond. It is a unique and important attempt to explore, through the medium of poetry and prose, the indentured heritage of the 21st century.

sas.ac.uk/publications


Institute of Classical Studies Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies Published by Wiley for the Institute of Classical Studies Print ISSN: 0076-0730 Online ISSN: 2041-5370 www.ics.sas.ac.uk/publications/our-journal-bics Institute of Historical Research Historical Research Published by Wiley for the Institute of Historical Research ISSN: 1468-2281 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/ (ISSN)1468-2281 Reviews in History Published by the Institute of Historical Research ISSN: 1749-8155 www.history.ac.uk/reviews Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes Published by The Warburg Institute Print ISSN: 0075-4390 Online: 2044-0014 www.ingentaconnect.com/content/warburg/jwci Institute of Modern Languages Research Yearbook of the Research Centre for German and Austrian Exile Studies Published by Brill/Rodopi in association with the Institute of Modern Languages Research ISSN: 1388-3720 www.rodopi.nl/senj.asp?SerieId=EXILE Journal of Romance Studies Published by Liverpool University Press in association with the Institute of Modern Languages Research ISSN: 1473-3536 http://online.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/loi/jrs

Institute of English Studies Yeats Annual Published by Open Book Publishers in association with the Institute of English Studies ISSN: 0278-7687 www.ies.sas.ac.uk/publications/yeats-annual Institute of Latin American Studies Journal of Latin American Studies Published by Cambridge University Press, with editorial offices at the Institute of Latin American Studies ISSN: 0022-216X www.cambridge.org/LAS Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Digital Evidence and Electronic Signature Law Review Published by the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies ISSN: 2054-8508 journals.sas.ac.uk/deeslr IALS Student Law Review Published by the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies ISSN: 2053-7646 Amicus Curiae: Journal of the Society of Advanced Legal Studies Published by Institute of Advanced Legal Studies ISSN: 1461-2097 journals.sas.ac.uk/amicus European Journal of Law Reform Published by Eleven International Publishing in association with the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies ISSN: 1387-2370

Francosphères Published by Liverpool University Press in association with the Institute of Modern Languages Research Print ISSN: 2046-3820 Online ISSN: 2046-3839 https://online.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/loi/ franc

sas.ac.uk/publications

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Journals

The School of Advanced Study and its nine institutes publish a range of journals. Below you can find a list of journals and more information about how to access them.


Events

The University of London Press hosts pop-up bookshops, events, talks and exhibitions throughout the academic year. Join us for some key events happening in Autumn/Winter 2019 and Spring 2020 terms. Bookshop

Book Launch

Induction Week September 2019 , 10–3pm

Windrush Voices: Memories and Performances across the Generations

SAS foyer, 2nd floor, Senate House

Saturday 16 November, 2pm

Bring your student ID to get 25% off books published by University of London Press.

The Deptford Lounge, Lewisham, SE8 4RJ London

Pop-up Bookshop 2–11 December 2019, Tuesday–Saturday, 10–3pm (closed for lunch 1pm)

Join us for the launch of Memory, Migration & (De)Colonisation in the Caribbean & Beyond published under the Institute of Latin American Studies imprint.

Classics Library foyer, 3rd floor, Senate House Exhibtion

28 November–13 December 2019 Room 101, 1st floor, Senate House Did you know the University of London has a long and fascinating publishing history dating back to 1908? Athlone Press was The University of London’s renowned publishing house between 1948 before it was closed. It boasted ground-breaking and radical authors, such as art historian Ernst Gombrich and pioneering female astrophysicist Cecilia PayneGasposchkin. Come and visit our free winter exhibition to find out more.

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Told through moving oral history, this free event is being held in collaboration with the Being Human Festival to celebrate the Windrush legacy. Join speakers including Dr Lez Henry (University of West London), Mr Gee (poet and radio presenter) and Lainy Malkani (BBC writer and broadcaster) in conversation with Joyce Trotman on her experiences of migrating from Guyana and teaching in London’s East End during the 1960s. To RSVP, please see the Being Human website: https://beinghumanfestival.org/

sas.ac.uk/publications



School of Advanced Study Senate House Malet Street London WC1E 7HU Telephone: +44 (0)20 7862 8753 Email: uolpress@london.ac.uk

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