CUP Humanities September - December 2018

Page 1

Archaeology 1

History – other areas

14

Art 3

History – cross discipline

18

Classical studies

3

American literature 21

Drama and theatre

8

English literature 22

Film, media and sport

8

European and world literature

American history

8

Music 29

British history 9

Philosophy 31

29

European history 10 Religion 36

HUMANITIES

www.cambridge.org/academic

September - December 2018

New titles

Contents


HUMANITIES

September - December 2018

Contents Archaeology 1 Art 3 Classical studies

3

Drama and theatre

8

Film, media and sport

8

American history

8

British history

9

European history 10 History – other areas

14

History – cross discipline

18

American literature 21 English literature 22 European and world literature

29

Music 29 Philosophy 31 Religion 36

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Archaeology

Archaeology

Humans, Animals and the Craft of Slaughter in Archaeo-Historic Societies

Globalization in Prehistory

Krish Seetah | Stanford University, California

Contact, Exchange, and the ‘People without History’ Edited by Nicole Boivin | University of Jena, Germany

This book is for archaeologists, historians, anthropologists and others interested in the scales of human interaction in prehistoric times. By recasting globalization through the lens of non-state societies, this book illustrates the complex connectivity that shaped the fabric of ancient societies at impressively large scales. • Focuses on the impact and historical role of small-scale (pre-/nonstate) societies • Challenges traditional historical and archaeological discourse about the drivers of social and cultural connectivity in the ancient world • Chapters are authored by leading scholars focused on globally diverse subjects July 2018 253 x 177 mm 368pp 30 b/w illus. 25 maps 978-1-108-42980-1 Hardback £90.00 / US$125.00

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November 2018 253 x 177 mm 283pp 978-1-108-42880-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Ceramics in Circumpolar Prehistory Technology, Lifeways and Cuisine Edited by Peter Jordan | Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, The Netherlands

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Climate, Clothing, and Agriculture in Prehistory Linking Evidence, Causes, and Effects Ian Gilligan | University of Sydney

This book offers the first complete account of the development of clothing as a response to cold exposure during the ice ages. It is aimed at advanced undergraduates and graduates in courses on prehistory, in which climate variation and the origins of agriculture, clothing, and shelter are all important topics. • Draws together evidence from many disciplines • Contains an extensive illustration program that makes the book’s themes more accessible • The book is written in non-technical language September 2018 228 x 152 mm 361pp 95 b/w illus. 5 maps 9 tables 978-1-108-47008-7 Hardback £71.99 / US$99.99 P 978-1-108-45519-0 Paperback £25.99 / US$34.99 P

The Power of Ritual in Prehistory

The book is for archaeologists interested in the adaptations and social lives of people in the prehistoric Circumpolar North. It is also targeted at archaeologists and historians interested in the history of technologies, specifically pottery cooking technologies, and the motivations and obstacles that lay behind their adoption into new regions. • Undertakes a novel investigation into why pottery technology was adopted into the Circumpolar World by prehistoric hunter-gatherer communities • Examines the motivations for adopting pottery and explores some of the challenges involved • Examines the social and cultural roles played by pottery Archaeology of the North

October 2018 253 x 177 mm 253pp 978-1-107-11824-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Burials, Migration and Identity in the Ancient Sahara and Beyond Edited by M. C. Gatto | University of Leicester

Secret Societies and Origins of Social Complexity Brian Hayden | University of British Columbia, Vancouver

This is the only book in eighty years to deal with traditional secret societies from a comparative perspective. It is also the only study undertaken with an archaeological viewpoint. The conclusions will be eye-opening not only for archaeologists but also for anthropologists, students of religion, and political scientists. • Proposes a new view of ritual and religion • Summarizes the material aspects of secret societies in each chapter and gives examples of archaeological applications to prehistoric sites in one of the final chapters • Offers general discussions followed by full documentation of the characteristics of secret societies organized by specific topics August 2018 253 x 177 mm 414pp 64 b/w illus. 4 maps 978-1-108-42639-8 Hardback £90.00 / US$125.00

Situating the relationship between practice, practitioner, and commodity resonates with the large body of scholars interested in food production, assembly, consumption, and the craft of cuisine. The book uses butchery as a point of departure for discussing the changing historical relationships with animal utility, symbolism, and meat consumption. • Provides a much broader social and ecological view of butchers, butchery, and butchering • Re-conceptualises a well-established data set • Examines many ethnographic and archaeo-historic case studies

This text summarises the state of the field of funerary archaeology in the Sahara and its neighbouring regions, setting the agenda for future research on mobility, migration and identity. A seminal reference point for Mediterranean and African archaeologists, historians and anthropologists, and archaeologists interested in burial and migration more broadly. • Presents the state of the field in the funerary archaeology of the Sahara and neighbouring regions • Sets the agenda for future research on mobility, migration and identity • Adopts a ground-breaking view that focuses on the Sahara and looks out from the Sahara to neighbouring regions, rather than the other way round November 2018 247 x 174 mm 500pp 130 b/w illus. 19 maps 22 tables 978-1-108-47408-5 Hardback £100.00 / US$140.00 C

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Archaeology

Archaeology and Urban Settlement in Late Roman and Byzantine Anatolia Euchaïa-Avkat-Beyözü and its Environment Edited by John Haldon | Princeton University, New Jersey

This volume represents the results of a collaborative project that integrates archaeological survey work with other disciplines in a unified approach to the region, both to enhance understanding of the history of Byzantine provincial society and to illustrate the application of innovative approaches to field survey. • Expands the basis for discussion and understanding of the region and its history • Develops our knowledge of the evolution of provincial urban settlement in the Byzantine period • Suggests new strategies for field survey, data management and interpretation

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October 2018 247 x 174 mm 400pp 978-1-108-47115-2 Hardback £90.00 / US$125.00

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Maritime Networks in the Ancient Mediterranean World

Economic Networks and Cultural Ties, from Prehistory to the Early Modern Era Edited by Kristian Kristiansen | Göteborgs Universitet, Sweden

This book provides the first global analysis of the relationship between trade and civilisation from the beginning of civilisation in 3000 BC until the modern era of 1600 AD. • A global coverage allows scholars and students from many disciplines to use the book and compare different epochs and regions • Discusses how trade promotes civilisation and allows readers to engage in a critical discussion of two central concepts to our own time • A long-term perspective from 3000 BC to 1600 AD provides readers with an opportunity to discuss if past conditions have a bearing on our present July 2018 253 x 177 mm 564pp 54 b/w illus. 57 maps 978-1-108-42541-4 Hardback £110.00 / US$140.00

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The Social Archaeology of the Holy Land

Edited by Justin Leidwanger | Stanford University, California

This book uses network ideas to explore how the sea connected communities across the ancient Mediterranean. It looks at the complexity of cultural interaction, and the diverse modes of maritime mobility through which people and objects moved. It will be of interest to Mediterranean specialists, ancient historians, and maritime archaeologists. • Uses case studies from both archaeology and ancient history, across a range of periods • Specifically targets questions of maritime connectivity and mobility • Brings together contributions from both regional specialists and methodological innovators September 2018 253 x 177 mm 296pp 978-1-108-42994-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

Trade and Civilisation

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An Archaeology of the English Atlantic World, 1600–1700 Charles E. Orser, Jr | Vanderbilt University, Tennessee

This book is the first book-length treatment of modern-world historical archaeology. It includes a compendium of information about the archaeology of the English seventeenth century by examining sites in England, the United States, Ireland, and Africa. The writings of seventeenth-century authors support the main contentions of the analysis. • Provides a real-world example of analyzing modernity using archaeological information as a primary source • Uses archaeological information collected from seventeenth-century sites throughout the Atlantic world • Uses abundant sources from seventeenth-century authors to support the ideas presented in modern-world archaeology July 2018 253 x 177 mm 500pp 22 b/w illus. 11 maps 25 tables 978-1-107-13048-7 Hardback £105.00 / US$135.00 C

From Prehistory to the Crusades Edited by Assaf Yasur-Landau | University of Haifa, Israel

This book is intended for undergraduate and graduate students studying the ancient southern Levant (Israel and Palestine) from the earliest prehistory to the historic past. It integrates thematic concerns, such as gender, ethics, metallurgy, bioanthropology, archaeobotany, and presenting the past with chronological changes, from hunter-gatherers to empires. • Presents an holistic approach to the ancient Holy Land • Integrates chronological and thematic approaches • Offers the first substantial survey of southern Levant in twenty years November 2018 253 x 177 mm 668pp 105 b/w illus. 6 maps 978-1-107-15668-5 Hardback c. £100.00 / c. US$150.00 R

Memory and Agency in Ancient China Shaping the Life History of Objects Edited by Francis Allard | Indiana University, Pennsylvania

The case studies in this edited volume will appeal to archaeologists, art historians, and historians interested in the varied factors which guided the development of material culture in China over the past 5,000 years. They also supply comparative material to scholars with broader theoretical interests in the ‘life history’ of objects approach. • Offers new comparative material to scholars interested in the ‘life history’ of objects approach • Applies the concept of object ‘life histories’ to the specific case of China • Makes a distinction between different types of ‘life histories’ December 2018 253 x 177 mm 328pp 74 b/w illus. 10 maps 978-1-108-47257-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C


Art / Classical studies

Art

Classical studies

Collecting Art in the Italian Renaissance Court

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Gender, Identity and the Body in Greek and Roman Sculpture

Objects and Exchanges Leah R. Clark | The Open University, Milton Keynes

This is the first study to examine collecting practices across the Italian courts through the exchange of objects. This book will appeal to scholars of the Renaissance as well as university students (both undergraduate and postgraduate). Fundamentally interdisciplinary, it covers history, art history, economics, and gender. • Proposes a new view of the Italian court • Offers new insight into possessions and Renaissance consumption habits • Proposes a new hierarchy for the arts, looking at a range of media from gems to manuscript illumination, as well as painting and sculpture June 2018 253 x 177 mm 338pp 57 b/w illus. 8 colour illus. 978-1-108-42772-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

The Cross, the Gospels, and the Work of Art in the Carolingian Age Beatrice E. Kitzinger | Princeton University, New Jersey

The book contributes to medieval studies, introducing new material for art history, religious studies, and manuscript studies in particular. The concern with definitions of ritual and time speaks to work by historians, and art-historical studies based especially in the Renaissance. • Introduces a wealth of little-studied and rarely published material • Engages a prominent discussion about the value and function of images in the early medieval church • Pairs ‘high’ and ‘low’-level artistic productions in a thematically unified discussion October 2018 253 x 177 mm 350pp 148 colour illus. 978-1-108-42881-1 Hardback £57.99 / US$79.99

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Vasari’s Words The ‘Lives of the Artists’ as a History of Ideas in the Italian Renaissance Douglas Biow | University of Texas, Austin

This book explores through keywords how Vasari’s Lives is designed to address from beginning to end a variety of compelling ideas circulating in Renaissance Italy. Written in an entertaining, down-to-earth manner for specialists and non-specialists, it places the Lives within the context of the modern discipline of intellectual history. • Proposes a new approach to Vasari’s Lives • Reads the Lives as a work of intellectual history, or as a history of ideas • Enlarges the purview of what constitutes the ‘legitimate’ and ‘traditional’ area of intellectual historical studies focused on Renaissance Italy September 2018 228 x 152 mm 264pp 41 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47205-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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R. J. Barrow | Roehampton University, London

This book offers incisive analysis of selected works of ancient art through a critical use of cuttingedge theory from gender studies, body studies, art history, and other related fields. It will be a key resource for advanced undergraduates and graduate students in courses on classical art, classical civilization, and gender studies. • Provides close analyses of individual works of art • Features new translations of ancient sources • Includes a glossary of Greek and Latin terms • Contains an extensive illustration program September 2018 228 x 152 mm 246pp 33 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03954-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Reuse and Renovation in Roman Material Culture Functions, Aesthetics, Interpretations Edited by Diana Y. Ng | University of Michigan, Dearborn

This book is for those interested in the Roman world. It treats the reuse of sculptural and architectural materials in new contexts, and explores the new associations that these ‘out of place’ materials created for their viewers. Materials were sometimes used to create new meanings, and sometimes for economic expedience. • Argues that the practice of ‘spoliation’ was prevalent in the high Roman empire, earlier than previously supposed, and a natural feature of human manipulation of the physical environment rather than a sign of decay or social pressure • Deals with the social and political contexts of reused materials • Opens new lines of inquiry in the field of classical studies, appealing to scholars of the ancient, late antique, and medieval periods September 2018 253 x 177 mm 304pp 77 b/w illus. 1 map 978-1-108-47389-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C

Roman Architecture and Urbanism From the Origins to Late Antiquity Volume 1 Fikret Yegul | University of California, Santa Barbara

This book affirms the enduring attractions of Roman buildings and environments. Incorporating recent research and perceptive interpretations, it presents developments across the Roman world in a lively and accessible manner. By interrogating the meaning of architecture in daily life, it attracts audiences across diverse fields and backgrounds. • Proposes a comprehensive examination of Roman architecture from Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East • Provides updated information about classical sites including numerous new plans and images, and is comprehensive in its scope and wealth • Values Roman construction and considers how technology and engineering contributes to the making of bold and exceptional spaces and architecture December 2018 310 x 245 mm 882pp 828 b/w illus. 7 maps 978-0-521-47071-1 Hardback c. £215.00 / c. US$295.00 P

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Classical studies

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The Reception of Cicero in the Early Roman Empire

Tragedy, Ritual and Money in Ancient Greece

The Rhetorical Schoolroom and the Creation of a Cultural Legend Thomas J. Keeline | Washington University, St Louis

Selected Essays Richard Seaford | University of Exeter

Cicero was one of the most important figures of the late Roman Republic. This book explores what was remembered of his life and works in the early Roman Empire, and why. It focuses on the crucial role played by rhetorical education in turning him into a literary and political symbol. • Presents a comprehensive study of Cicero’s reception in the early Roman Empire, the foundational period for his subsequent reception • Shows the importance of ancient rhetorical education in mediating and indeed creating memories • Sheds new light on both well-worn and less-studied texts July 2018 228 x 152 mm 400pp 978-1-108-42623-7 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00

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November 2018 228 x 152 mm 496pp 978-1-107-17171-8 Hardback £100.00 / US$140.00

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TEXTBOOK

Homer: Iliad Book XVIII Editor (introduction and notes) R. B. Rutherford | University of Oxford

Cicero and Roman Education The Reception of the Speeches and Ancient Scholarship Giuseppe La Bua | Università degli Studi di Roma ‘La Sapienza’, Italy

A highly informative book of great value to anyone interested in Cicero’s oratory, the history of Roman education and Latin textual criticism. It provides a comprehensive study of the reception of Cicero’s speeches in the ancient schoolroom and a fascinating picture of the Roman educational system. • Offers a comprehensive account of the reception of Cicero’s speeches in the ancient schoolroom • Paints a fascinating picture of Roman education as a complex, dynamic system of social, cultural and historical factors • Combines literary history, textual tradition and ancient scholarship November 2018 228 x 152 mm 400pp 978-1-107-06858-2 Hardback £90.00 / US$125.00

Brings together a wide range of papers written with a single vision. Greek tragedy, the New Testament, representations of the inner self, Greek and Indian philosophy, Wagner: these seemingly disparate phenomena are analysed with special attention to the shaping influence of ritual and of money. • Conveys a unique historical vision of Greek tragedy • Demonstrates the interconnection of religion, drama, and economics • Contains a substantial new paper on the relationship between Greek and Indian philosophy

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Greek Tragedy after the Fifth Century A Survey from ca. 400 BC to ca. AD 400 Edited by Vayos Liapis | Open University of Cyprus

An accessible survey exploring, for the first time in English, both textual and non-textual evidence for the development of Greek tragedy after the fifth century BC. It ranges widely across topics from theatre performance, music and dance to transmission and reception later in antiquity. The book will be essential for classicists and theatre scholars and practitioners. • Offers a single-volume overview of the history of Greek tragedy after its perceived heyday in the fifth century BC, which is the first of its kind in English • The book is comprehensive in its treatment, including all available textual evidence and every aspect of the history of tragedy • Upsets the deep-seated view of Greek tragedy as a genre that, essentially, died with Euripides, and shows its continuing vitality in later times November 2018 228 x 152 mm 410pp 1 b/w illus. 3 tables 978-1-107-03855-4 Hardback £90.00 / US$125.00 C

Book 18 of the Iliad is an outstanding example of the range and power of Homeric epic. This edition provides an introduction, text and commentary suitable for intermediate and advanced students of Greek. It includes grammatical and other aids to translation but lays particular emphasis on interpretation and elucidation. • Presents an edition of this important and widely read text suitable for intermediate and advanced students of Greek • The introduction and commentary include abundant grammatical and linguistic help as well as emphasising questions of literary interpretation • Contains a substantial appendix considering the relation between Iliad 18 and the Babylonian Epic of Gilgamesh Contents: Introduction; 1. Book 18 and the choice of Achilles; 2. Hector; 3. The gods; 4. The shield of Achilles; 5. Homeric language and style: some important features; 6. Metre, grammar, text; Iliad 18; Commentary; Appendix: Gilgamesh and Homer. Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics

December 2018 216 x 138 mm 300pp 978-1-107-06777-6 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$99.99 978-1-107-64312-3 Paperback c. £21.99 / c. US$30.99

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Dionysius of Halicarnassus and Augustan Rome Rhetoric, Criticism and Historiography Edited by Richard Hunter | University of Cambridge

The Augustan Age was the Golden Age of Latin literature. This book explores how a Greek author of Augustan Rome bridged the gap between Greece and Rome, and between historiography and rhetoric. Indispensable for scholars of Augustan Rome and for students of Greek and Latin literature. • Offers the first English volume on the Greek critic, rhetorician and historian Dionysius of Halicarnassus • Interprets the Greek works of Dionysius of Halicarnassus in the context of Augustan Rome • Presents Dionysius’ rhetorical-critical essays and his history of Rome as two parts of one coherent programme Greek Culture in the Roman World

November 2018 228 x 152 mm 304pp 978-1-108-47490-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Classical studies

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Dialectic after Plato and Aristotle

Melissus and Eleatic Monism Benjamin Harriman | University of Edinburgh

Edited by Thomas Bénatouïl | Université de Lille

Ancient dialectic started as an art of refutation and evolved into a science akin to our logic, grammar and linguistics. This book studies the philosophical debates over the objects and uses of dialectic involving Theophrastus, Epicurus, the Stoics, the ancient sceptics, Cicero, Galen and many others. • An international team of scholars study the conceptions of ancient dialectic in the Hellenistic and Imperial periods • Analyses ancient texts that have not yet been studied systematically • The book will appeal to those interested in the development of ancient epistemology and logic October 2018 228 x 152 mm 330pp 978-1-108-47190-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Cambridge Classical Studies

The Roots of Platonism The Origins and Chief Features of a Philosophical Tradition John Dillon | Trinity College Dublin

This book explores the process by which the intellectual speculations pursued by Plato in the Academy assumed the nature of a philosophical system, Platonism. It focuses on a number of key issues, such as monism versus dualism, the metaphysical underpinnings of ethical theory, and the theory of forms. • Explores the process by which the philosophy of Plato gradually became a dogmatic system • Highlights a series of basic features of Platonism, and traces their origins and development • Composed in a lively style as a result of its origin as a set of lectures November 2018 228 x 152 mm 124pp 978-1-108-42691-6 Hardback £19.99 / US$27.99

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Authors and Authorities in Ancient Philosophy

September 2018 216 x 138 mm 288pp 978-1-108-41633-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Antiochus and Peripatetic Ethics Georgia Tsouni | Universität Bern, Switzerland

This book analyses afresh the naturalistic version of Peripatetic ethics preserved in Cicero’s On Ends 5, our major source for the ethical system of the first-century BCE philosopher Antiochus of Ascalon. It shows how he grounds the ‘Old Academic’ conception of the happy life in natural appropriation (oikeiosis). • Presents the first systematic analysis of Antiochus’ ethics (Cicero’s On Ends 5) in terms of its Peripatetic content • Addresses Antiochus’ hermeneutical assumptions regarding the unity of the ‘Old Academic’ tradition and places them in the cultural context of the late Republic • Highlights the way Aristotelian/Peripatetic ideas developed under the influence of a Stoic philosophical agenda and terminology Cambridge Classical Studies

Edited by Jenny Bryan | University of Manchester

Leading scholars explore how ancient Greek and Roman philosophy developed over its long history a sense in which philosophers might acknowledge the authority of some other philosopher or group of philosophers, as well as a number of canonical texts whose discussion itself became a mode of philosophical debate. • Covers a very broad range of thinkers and authors from the Presocratics to Late Antiquity • Suggests new points of comparison and difference between thinkers • Includes translations of all relevant Greek and Latin texts Cambridge Classical Studies

September 2018 216 x 138 mm 384pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-316-51004-9 Hardback £90.00 / US$125.00

The first English-language monograph on Melissus of Samos, the most prominent representative of Eleaticism as inaugurated by Parmenides. It includes a reconstruction of the preserved textual evidence for his philosophy. Important for those working on the Presocratics, fifth-century BCE intellectual life, and the development of philosophical arguments. • The first comprehensive account in English of Melissus, a key figure in early Greek philosophy • Includes a full reconstruction of Melissus’ fragments, enabling a new understanding of his arguments and methods • Explores what Melissus gained from Parmenides and how he helped to establish the tradition of Eleaticism

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November 2018 216 x 138 mm 234pp 978-1-108-42058-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

The Cambridge Companion to Hippocrates Edited by Peter E. Pormann | University of Manchester

Hippocrates is a towering figure in Greek medicine, who has inspired generations of physicians over millennia in both the East and West. This accessible book introduces the legacy of Hippocrates, the man and the writings attributed to him. It is essential reading on courses in classics and the history of medicine. • The first comprehensive introduction to the topic • An international team of contributors provides accessible guides to various approaches and themes • Pays equal attention to ‘Hippocrates’ and the ‘Hippocratic Corpus’, including its rich afterlife Cambridge Companions to Philosophy

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 422pp 978-1-107-06820-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 978-1-107-69584-9 Paperback £26.99 / US$37.99

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Classical studies

Galen: Works on Human Nature

Nero

Volume 1: Mixtures (De Temperamentis) Edited and translated by P. N. Singer | Birkbeck, University of London

Emperor and Court John F. Drinkwater | University of Nottingham

In this book, the Graeco-Roman doctor Galen sets out his influential theory of the ‘mixtures’ of the human body and his ideal of the ‘welltempered’ person, whose perfect balance ensures excellent performance both physically and psychologically. It is a key text in the history of ideas about the human organism. • This book is a new translation and interpretation of one of the most important and influential works of Galen • Provides generous introductory and elucidatory material to understand the work • Provides detailed indices and glossaries

Nero always attracts attention. This book, based on the most recent research and offering radically new interpretations of his character and reign – of the Fire, Christian ‘persecution’, the Golden House, and his ‘madness’ – will appeal to every type of reader, academic and general. • Argues for a new view of Nero’s principate by focusing on those around him and by directly addressing key topics, such as his mental health and the imperial fiscal system, which are usually side-lined or avoided • Takes a particular interest in the role of women in central Roman imperial politics and administration • Assumes little or no prior knowledge of the topic or period and is written in accessible and non-technical language

Cambridge Galen Translations

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December 2018 228 x 152 mm 278pp 2 b/w illus. 978-1-107-02314-7 Hardback c. £90.00 / c. US$125.00

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The World through Roman Eyes

HIGHLIGHT PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Anthropological Approaches to Ancient Culture Edited by Maurizio Bettini | Università degli Studi, Siena

This book showcases the fundamental contribution that anthropology has made to our understanding of ancient Roman culture. It allows the texts of ancient culture to speak in their own terms and privileges the experience of the natives (rather than the horizon of the observer). • Proposes an emic and comparative approach to the study of the ancient world • Makes theoretical assumptions clear and explains them in an accessible way • Illustrates how anthropological theories can be applied to ancient material through case studies September 2018 228 x 152 mm 450pp 11 b/w illus. 978-1-107-15761-3 Hardback c. £100.00 / c. US$130.00

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The Roman Empire in Late Antiquity A Political and Military History Hugh Elton | Trent University, Peterborough, Ontario

This book provides a history of the late Roman Empire (AD 260–641), covering the rise of imperial Christianity, the fall of the West to the barbarians, and the Justinianic reconquest. It focuses on the mechanics of ruling this large state and the interaction of the emperor with the administration. Written with advanced undergraduates in mind. • Provides a detailed and up-to-date history of the late Roman Empire • Focuses on how the Late Roman Empire worked, from the point of view of the emperor • Integrates religious politics into the core of the narrative September 2018 228 x 152 mm 300pp 23 b/w illus. 11 maps 978-0-521-89931-4 Hardback £71.99 / US$99.99 P 978-1-108-45631-9 Paperback £21.99 / US$29.99 P

A History of the Roman Equestrian Order Caillan Davenport | Macquarie University, Sydney

In the Roman social hierarchy, the equestrian order stood second only to the senatorial aristocracy in status and prestige. This book offers the first comprehensive history of the order, covering the period from the eighth century BC to the fifth century AD. • The first comprehensive study of the Roman equestrian order across its entire history from the eighth century BC to the fifth century AD • Provides a dynamic account of the social and institutional aspects of the equestrian order in Rome and the provinces • Offers a new interpretation of the transformation of the equestrian order during the pivotal period of change from the early to late Roman Empire December 2018 247 x 174 mm 678pp 42 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03253-8 Hardback c. £130.00 / c. US$180.00

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 483pp 11 b/w illus. 5 maps 4 tables 978-1-108-47264-7 Hardback £32.99 / US$44.99 G

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Exemplary Ethics in Ancient Rome Rebecca Langlands | University of Exeter

This ground-breaking study reveals the thrill and moral power of the ancient Roman story-world and its ancestral tales of bloody heroism. These famous exempla disseminated widely not only core values such as courage and loyalty but also key ethical debates and controversies which are still relevant for us today. • Provides the first full-length study of the role of Roman exempla in ethics and education to 100 CE • Articulates a new and comprehensive model of Roman ‘exemplary ethics’ as exciting, critical, and philosophically interesting • Bases arguments on a comprehensive survey of Latin literature and extensive close readings of key works August 2018 228 x 152 mm 336pp 978-1-107-04060-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Classical studies

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Writing and Society in Ancient Cyprus

The Novels of Justinian A Complete Annotated English Translation Translated by David J. D. Miller

Philippa M. Steele | Magdalene College, Cambridge

The novels are a vital source for Roman, Byzantine, and early medieval social, economic, political, and legal history. This work provides the first English translation of the original Greek text along with an extensive commentary, making it accessible for the first time to both a general and student readership. • The first complete English translation of the novels and associated texts based on the original Greek, with significant emendations to the standard edition edited by Schoell and Kroll • Provides an extensive legal and historical commentary to explain the contents of the laws and place them in context • Includes a detailed introduction surveying the reign of the Emperor Justinian and the relationship between the novels and his broader programme of imperial renewal September 2018 247 x 174 mm 1400pp 1 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-107-00092-6 Hardback c. £180.00 / c. US$300.00 R

Athenian Democracy at War David M. Pritchard | University of Queensland

Classical Athens perfected direct democracy and ancient theatre. These achievements are rightly revered. Less well known is the other side of this success story. Democratic Athens completely transformed warfare and became a superpower. This book puts the study of Athenian democracy at war on an entirely new footing. • Explores the major reasons for Athenian military success • Studies the ordinary soldiers and sailors who served in the Athenian armed forces • Provides a multifaceted account of war in Athenian democracy December 2018 228 x 152 mm 296pp 17 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42291-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Life in an Egyptian Village in Late Antiquity

Cambridge Classical Studies

October 2018 247 x 174 mm 294pp 74 b/w illus. 3 maps 11 tables 978-1-107-16967-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C

The Perpetual Immigrant and the Limits of Athenian Democracy Demetra Kasimis | University of Chicago

This book argues that immigration politics is a central – but overlooked – object of inquiry in the democratic thought of classical Athens. Thinkers criticized democracy’s strategic investments in nativism, the shifting boundaries of citizenship, and the precarious membership that a blood-based order effects for those eligible and ineligible to claim it. • Demonstrates the centrality of immigration politics to ancient Greek political thought • Analyzes ancient efforts to critique the pull of nativism in democracy • Essential reading for political scientists and all those concerned with issues of race, immigration, and democracy, as well as classicists Classics after Antiquity

Aphrodito before and after the Islamic Conquest Giovanni R. Ruffini | Fairfield University, Connecticut

This book explores the records from Aphrodito, a late Roman village, and provides a micro-history, giving more detail about daily life here than anywhere else in the Roman Empire. It challenges the conventional focus on late antique cultural elites, creating instead a vision of Late Antiquity focused on free peasants and their villages. • Provides a cradle-to-grave journey through daily life in the late Roman Empire • The most detailed micro-level social history available for the Roman Empire • Shows the changes brought to village life by the transition from Roman to Arab rule October 2018 228 x 152 mm 300pp 978-1-107-10560-7 Hardback c. £30.00 / c. US$40.00

A pioneering treatment of the development and importance of writing in ancient Cypriot society, throughout the second and first millennia BC. Exploring questions of literacy and identity, the book will be useful to scholars and students (epigraphists, linguists, archaeologists, historians) and to anyone interested in Cyprus or in writing systems. • Provides a comprehensive account of writing and literacy in Cyprus in the second and first millennia BC • Considers the context of writing through interdisciplinary research involving epigraphic, linguistic, archaeological and historical information and approaches • Well illustrated with over seventy figures

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August 2018 228 x 152 mm 256pp 978-1-107-05243-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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TEXTBOOK

From Caesar to Augustus (c.49 BC–AD 14) Using Coins as Sources Clare Rowan | University of Warwick

Aimed at undergraduate students studying the history of the late Roman Republic and the Principate of Augustus. With almost two hundred coins illustrated and explained, the book provides a self-contained guide to all the relevant numismatic evidence for this period and connects coinage to broader historical debates. • Provides illustrations, explanations and historical context for all of the most important coins from the period, with no prior numismatic knowledge assumed • Helps students understand how to analyse the iconography of coins and the importance of archaeological contexts • Includes a glossary of common Latin terms, as well as technical numismatic terms, and guidance on the use of reference works and online resources Contents: 1. Approaching coinage in the late Roman Republic; 2. Competition, legitimacy and Civil War (49–44 BC); 3. Competition and conflict after Caesar (44–36 BC); 4. The view from the East: Cleopatra and Mark Antony (38–31 BC); 5. Representing the Augustan Principate (31 BC–AD 14); 6. Coins and daily life; Guide to further reading;

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Drama and theatre / Film, media and sport / American history

Appendices: 1. Timeline; 2. Latin numismatic abbreviations; 3. Glossary; 4. Denominational systems; 5. The production of ancient coinage; Bibliography; Index Guides to the Coinage of the Ancient World

TEXTBOOK

October 2018 216 x 138 mm 264pp 195 b/w illus. 4 maps 978-1-107-03748-9 Hardback c. £60.00 / c. US$84.99 X 978-1-107-67569-8 Paperback c. £17.99 / c. US$24.99 X

An Introduction to Communication

Empire and Political Cultures in the Roman World

Prioritizing brevity and clarity, this book integrates theory and practice in easy-to-follow, comprehensive chapters to demystify the complex communication field. Offering a wealth of examples from students’ personal, professional, and online lives, it teaches skills allowing students from all academic backgrounds to understand communication. • Approaches the topic efficiently and concisely • Maintains a consistent focus on communication research • Prioritizes diversity and the effect of culture on communication • Sustains a concentration on the intersection between skill and theory

Emma Dench | Harvard University, Massachusetts

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Film, media and sport

Evaluating a hundred years of scholarship on how empire transformed the Roman world, and advancing a new theory of how the Empire worked and was experienced, this book is accessible to undergraduate and graduate students as well as of interest to all scholars concerned with the rise and fall of the Roman Empire. • Proposes a new view of how the Roman Empire worked • Explores both Rome’s Republican empire and the ‘Empire of the Caesars’ • Focuses on both central Roman history and local experience Key Themes in Ancient History

July 2018 228 x 152 mm 226pp 5 b/w illus. 1 map 978-0-521-81072-2 Hardback £59.99 / US$84.99 978-0-521-00901-0 Paperback £19.99 / US$27.99

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Drama and theatre

Contents: 1. The communication process; 2. Culture and communication; 3. Perception, the self, and communication; 4. Verbal and nonverbal communication; 5. Listening and responding; 6. Interpersonal and relational communication; 7. Communication in small groups and organizations; 8. Social/mass media and communication; 9. Preparing and composing speeches; 10. Audience analysis and speech delivery. October 2018 246 x 189 mm 350pp 978-1-107-15104-8 Hardback £79.99 / US$112.00 978-1-316-60691-9 Paperback £32.99 / US$44.99

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American history

Performing Endurance Art and Politics since 1960 Lara Shalson | King’s College London

Unrequited Toil

Offering a formal account and theory of endurance as a practice in performance art and protest, this book discusses influential performances by Marina Abramovic, Chris Burden, Tehching Hsieh, Yoko Ono, and others, as well as 1960s lunch counter sit-ins and twenty-first-century protest camps. Essential reading in performance theory, art history, and political activism. • Offers new interpretations of influential performance art works and important political protest actions • Argues for the ethics and politics of endurance as a form that engages with key questions of embodiment and relationality • Tracks major debates in performance studies, theatre studies, and art history, offering new directions August 2018 228 x 152 mm 224pp 10 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42645-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Lynn H. Turner | Marquette University, Wisconsin

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A History of United States Slavery Calvin Schermerhorn | Arizona State University

Written as an introduction for undergraduate students, Unrequited Toil explores the history of American slavery from the American Revolution to post-Civil War Reconstruction. Personal narratives are used across twelve chronologically-ordered chapters to explore themes such as politics, economics, labor, literature, rebellion, and social conditions. • Proposes a fresh and multidimensional introduction to slavery in the United States, showing slavery as a process that changed over time in a variety of contexts • Uses personal narratives across twelve thematic and chronologicallyordered chapters • Explores how the labor mobility that made the cotton kingdom possible broke apart African-American families Cambridge Essential Histories

August 2018 228 x 152 mm 264pp 978-1-107-02766-4 Hardback £71.99 / US$99.99 978-1-107-60858-0 Paperback £17.99 / US$24.99

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American history / British history

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

African Americans and the Pacific War, 1941–1945

Murder in the Shenandoah Making Law Sovereign in Revolutionary Virginia Jessica K. Lowe | University of Virginia

Race, Nationality, and the Fight for Freedom Chris Dixon | Macquarie University, Sydney

Jessica K. Lowe tells the story of Commonwealth v. Crane, exposing deep rifts in post-Revolutionary Virginia and using it to unearth Revolutionary America’s gripping debates over justice, criminal punishment, and equality before the law. She shows how post-Revolutionary Virginia was gripped by the question of what it means to make law ‘sovereign’. • Argues for the importance of the lived experience of the law • Demonstrates quickly changing ideas at the time of the American founding about what it meant to establish law in a republic • Shifts the emphasis of Virginian history to the upper Shenandoah Valley, in what is now West Virginia Studies in Legal History

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 232pp 10 b/w illus. 1 table 978-1-108-42178-2 Hardback £39.99 / US$49.99

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Almost Citizens

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 320pp 12 b/w illus. 978-1-107-11269-8 Hardback c. £71.99 / c. US$99.99 978-1-107-53293-9 Paperback c. £21.99 / c. US$29.99

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British history

Puerto Rico, the US Constitution, and Empire Sam Erman | University of Southern California

Almost Citizens traces the struggles over citizenship waged between US officials and Puerto Rican individuals, which led to a seismic constitutional shift away from citizenship, rights, and statehood and toward racist imperial governance. • Provides a gripping, detailed account of the US decision to annex Puerto Rico in 1898 • Focuses on largely unknown historical figures who played central roles in the history of US constitutionalism • Reveals the roots of a key exception to a doctrine that remains at the center of political debate in the United States today Studies in Legal History

November 2018 228 x 152 mm 288pp 9 b/w illus. 978-1-108-41549-1 Hardback £39.99 / US$49.99

This book offers a new perspective of the Pacific War as seen through the experience of African Americans. Chris Dixon explores the relationship between race, American military power, and foreign policy during the Pacific War, paying particular attention to African Americans’ attitudes and interactions with other non-white peoples. • Provides a comprehensive examination of the little-known aspects of African-American history and the history of World War Two • Enables readers to understand how African Americans felt about complex racial and political issues arising from the Pacific War • Draws on a wide array of sources to reconstruct the aspects of life during wartime, including newspapers, oral histories, diaries, and letters

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Birth Control and American Modernity A History of Popular Ideas Trent MacNamara | Texas A & M University

With a novel focus on the words and deeds of ordinary Americans, Trent MacNamara explores the democratic underpinnings of birth control’s legitimacy in America. He charts a mass movement in which men as well as women built a new reproductive ethic around hotly contested ideas about time, money, divinity, family, and health. • Focuses on the everyday actions of ordinary people rather than leaders or political and legal struggles • Offers the first broad survey of birth control history in America since 1978 • Draws on a wealth of sources, including personal correspondence and popular media October 2018 228 x 152 mm 296pp 19 b/w illus. 8 tables 978-1-316-51958-5 Hardback £28.99 / US$39.99 P

Beyond Slavery and Abolition Black British Writing, c.1770–1830 Ryan Hanley | University College London

By extending our view of early black British writing beyond traditional questions of slavery and abolition, Ryan Hanley places black agency at the heart of a new social and cultural history of Georgian Britain. Combining historical research and literary analysis, he shows how black writers helped to make British society. • Places the contribution of black intellectuals at the heart of a broad range of movements • Links histories of slavery and abolition to other aspects of British ‘domestic’ history • Provides new biographical information on eight key figures of the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century black Atlantic November 2018 228 x 152 mm 320pp 978-1-108-47565-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Trust among Strangers Friendly Societies in Modern Britain Penelope Ismay | Boston College, Massachusetts

Friendly societies provided mutual aid to many working-class Britons during the nineteenth century. But these societies were just one iteration of a larger conceptual mode of organizing reciprocity. This book traces the ways in which contemporaries adapted the concept to make promises of collective responsibility effective – even among strangers. • Provides a fresh perspective on friendly societies and on social cooperation and solidarity in modern societies • Illuminates how Britons resolved the problems of trust that made modernity possible • Highlights the malleability of the practice and concept of friendly societies, and how they live on in the modern day August 2018 228 x 152 mm 238pp 6 b/w illus. 2 maps 1 table 978-1-108-47252-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C

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British history / European history

HIGHLIGHT

The Excerpta Constantiniana and the Byzantine Appropriation of the Past

Women of Fortune Money, Marriage, and Murder in Early Modern England Linda Levy Peck | George Washington University, Washington DC

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András Németh | Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana

Women of Fortune tells the compelling story of mercantile wealth, arranged marriages, and merchant heiresses who asserted their rights despite loss, imprisonment, and murder. Following the Bennet and Morewood families across three generations, Linda Levy Peck provides new insight into the social, economic, and cultural history of early modern England. • Casts fresh light on the lives and agency of early modern heiresses beyond their usual roles as transmitters of property • Explains how major elements of the English economy worked in practice in the early modern period through the story of several families across three generations • Provides a vivid account of one woman’s experience of the Grand Tour that encompassed travel, sightseeing, romance, and war September 2018 247 x 174 mm 351pp 978-1-107-03402-0 Hardback c. £29.99 / c. US$39.99

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HIGHLIGHT

Dublin’s Great Wars The First World War, the Easter Rising and the Irish Revolution Richard S. Grayson | Goldsmiths, University of London

The first integrated history of the Dubliners who served in the British military and in republican forces during the First World War and Irish Revolution. Richard S. Grayson reveals the importance of First World War experiences to the Easter Rising as well as to the War of Independence and the Civil War. • The first study of Dubliners’ military service in the First World War • Puts a strong focus on the British army veterans who joined the IRA • Highlights the lost narrative of Dublin loyalism through the history of the 36th (Ulster) Division August 2018 228 x 152 mm 424pp 33 b/w illus. 13 maps 27 tables 978-1-107-02925-5 Hardback c. £20.00 / c. US$35.00 G

European history Cultural Encounters on Byzantium’s Northern Frontier, c.AD 500–700 Coins, Artifacts and History Andrei Gandila | University of Alabama, Huntsville

An interdisciplinary analysis of Byzantine frontier policy in the northern Balkans and the Black Sea region. It explores cultural interaction between Romans and barbarians, warfare, diplomacy, and the creation of identities before the final collapse of the ancient world order. • An interdisciplinary analysis of Byzantine frontier policy, contributing to a better understanding of the last Roman century • Redefines the notion of ‘frontier river’ in Late Antiquity by synthesizing a wide range of textual and archaeological evidence • Challenges previous interpretations of coins found beyond the frontier through an innovative comparative approach October 2018 247 x 174 mm 396pp 69 b/w illus. 19 maps 978-1-108-47042-1 Hardback £90.00 / US$125.00 C

The first comprehensive study of the Excerpta, a sort of ‘Byzantine Google’ which repackaged many key works of Greek historiography stretching back into antiquity, examining how it reshaped Byzantine court culture in the tenth century. The book also tackles wider issues including the history of information management, philological practices and book culture. • The first in-depth analysis of the historical excerpts, including many key historians from classical and late antiquity, in the context of their production in Byzantium • Proposes a new and coherent interpretative framework of several key works produced at the Byzantine Court in the tenth century • Tackles theoretical problems beyond Byzantium, such as the understanding of time, history, textual coherence, the practical reading of history and managing information overload September 2018 228 x 152 mm 320pp 7 b/w illus. 3 maps 4 tables 978-1-108-42363-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C

City and Society in the Low Countries, 1100–1600 Edited by Bruno Blondé | Universiteit Antwerpen, Belgium

Throughout the middle ages and the sixteenth century, the Low Countries counted among the most urbanised societies in Europe. This comprehensive survey unravels the geographical, political, social, religious, cultural and economic entanglements and complexities that shaped a remarkably resilient urban society. • A multi-authored and accessible volume that resulted from a collaborative inter-university project on the social history of the city • Offers a balanced and up-to-date view on relevant debates • Explicitly deals with the spatial and material dimensions of urban history September 2018 228 x 152 mm 320pp 978-1-108-47468-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Donor Portraits in Byzantine Art The Vicissitudes of Contact between Human and Divine Rico Franses | American University of Beirut

This book argues that donor portraits in Byzantine art should instead be considered as contact portraits. It contends that the most important feature of the scenes of supplication between mortals and holy, supernatural interlocutors consists in the active role that they play within the belief systems of the supplicants. • Proposes a new understanding of donor portraits • Adopts approaches drawn from critical theory and post-structuralist theory • Considers the active role that images play within belief systems November 2018 247 x 174 mm 266pp 64 b/w illus. 978-1-108-41859-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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European history

Genealogy and the Politics of Representation in the High and Late Middle Ages

The Cambridge Companion to the Dutch Golden Age Helmer J. Helmers | Universiteit van Amsterdam

Joan A. Holladay | University of Texas, Austin

Addressed to art historians and medievalists, this book examines the forms and functions of family trees and other figural expressions of lineage in twelfth- through fourteenth-century Europe, studying their flexible roles in legitimizing rulers and office-holders, supporting political claims, and commemorating the dead. • Examines a wide range of media and locations • Organizes examples by their function, allowing the reader to think across media, geography, and social status • Provides rare examples from German art October 2018 253 x 177 mm 373pp 143 b/w illus. 11 colour illus. 978-1-108-47018-6 Hardback £90.00 / US$125.00 C

An accessible introduction to one of the most remarkable epochs in European history and an indispensable guide for anyone interested in the political, economic, literary and artistic heritage of the Dutch Republic in the seventeenth century. • A comprehensive and up-to-date introduction to the rich history of the Dutch Republic, written by leading specialists • The book adopts an interdisciplinary approach, integrating the historical, art-historical, and literary scholarship of the period • Highlights the relevance of the Dutch Republic in European and global history Cambridge Companions to Culture

Leo VI and the Transformation of Byzantine Christian Identity

August 2018 228 x 152 mm 340pp 39 b/w illus. 3 maps 2 tables 978-1-107-17226-5 Hardback c. £65.00 / c. US$99.00 P 978-1-316-62353-4 Paperback c. £18.99 / c. US$34.99 P

Writings of an Unexpected Emperor Meredith L. D. Riedel | Duke University, North Carolina

Childhood in Modern Europe

This book examines political strategies employed by Leo VI in his writings and the role of religion as a carrier of communal identity in Byzantium. It highlights differences between Christianity and Islam, the deployment of Christian identity by the Byzantine emperor, and the role of religion during the heyday of history’s longest-lived Christian empire. • Explores important developments for the middle Byzantine period with respect to the increasing focus on Christianity and religion as key identifiers of East Roman imperial rule and society • Shows the increasing emphasis placed on the differences between Christianity and Islam, and the deployment of Christian identity by the Byzantine emperor • Highlights the political and ideological strategies employed by Leo VI in his literary output, with discussions of his most important works September 2018 228 x 152 mm 240pp 978-1-107-05307-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Learning in a Crusader City Intellectual Activity and Intercultural Exchanges in Acre, 1191–1291 Jonathan Rubin | Bar-Ilan University, Israel

Jonathan Rubin explores the intellectual activities and intercultural exchanges that occurred in the city of Acre during the Crusades, drawing on the complete body of evidence from the city. The result is an unprecedentedly rich portrait of a hitherto neglected intellectual centre on the Eastern shores of the medieval Mediterranean. • Systematically explores the complete body of intellectual production of a crusader city • Examines the work done in the city in separate fields, as well as the roles that some key figures and groups played in them • Provides a unique picture of a ‘new’ Latin-dominated centre of intellectual activity Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 110

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 300pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-107-18718-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Colin Heywood | University of Nottingham

This invaluable introduction to the history of childhood in both Western and Eastern Europe c.1700–2000 seeks to give a voice to children as well as adults, wherever possible. It addresses a number of key topics, including conceptions of childhood, ideas about family life, culture, welfare, schooling, and work. • Combines both a chronological and a thematic approach to the history of childhood, making it useful for a broad range of courses • Employs a ‘bottom-up’ as well as a ‘top-down’ approach to give a voice to children as well as adults during this time • Pursues similar themes through three key periods to explore how children’s experiences, and attitudes towards childhood, changed throughout the modern period New Approaches to European History, 56

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 280pp 20 b/w illus. 1 map 978-0-521-86623-1 Hardback £74.99 / US$105.00 P 978-0-521-68525-2 Paperback £21.99 / US$29.99 P

The Politics of Wine in Early Modern France Religion and Popular Culture in Burgundy, 1477–1630 Mack P. Holt | George Mason University, Virginia

Focusing on the local wine industry, Mack P. Holt examines the relationship between the ruling and popular classes and demonstrates how ordinary Burgundians were crucial in turning back the tide of Protestantism in the sixteenth century, until the absolutist policies of Louis XIII curtailed their influence on local politics. • Shows how the popular classes participated in and affected politics in Burgundy between the fifteenth and seventeenth centuries • Explains why Burgundy remained Catholic in the Reformation • Illuminates the important role of the local wine industry in local politics and religion New Studies in European History

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 300pp 26 b/w illus. 3 maps 17 tables 978-1-108-47188-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C

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European history

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Reading and Rebellion in Catholic Germany, 1770–1914

Socialism across the Iron Curtain

Jeffrey T. Zalar | University of Cincinnati

Socialist Parties in East and West and the Reconstruction of Europe after 1945 Jan De Graaf | Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium

In this panoramic study of Catholic book culture in Germany from 1770–1914, Jeffrey T. Zalar exposes the myth that the clergy defined Catholic reading habits. He shows that readers disobeyed the book rules of their church and read diverse literature, including works from the Index of Forbidden Books. • Contains lively and detailed accounts of popular rebellion at the core of the Catholic church as Catholics resisted their church’s book rules • Challenges dominant perceptions by highlighting that the most important structuring force of change in the modern church was popular literacy • Addresses the national integration of a minority group Publications of the German Historical Institute

December 2018 228 x 152 mm 300pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47290-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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New Studies in European History

December 2018 228 x 152 mm 315pp 978-1-108-42508-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

The Holocaust in Greece Edited by Giorgos Antoniou | International Hellenic University, Thessaloniki

During the course of the Second World War, the Axis forces murdered ninety percent of the Jewish population in Greece. With cutting-edge research, the authors show that the scale of this disaster could not have been achieved by the authorities alone without the active participation of Greek Christians. • Presents a new and original interpretation of the Holocaust in Greece • Provides focused case studies, which illuminate how the persecution of Greek Jews – particularly their deportation and theft of their property – took place in particular instances • Makes Greek scholarship on the Holocaust in Greece available to English-speaking audiences for the first time October 2018 228 x 152 mm 348pp 13 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-1-108-47467-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

This innovative pan-European history of post-war socialism shows that the Cold War categories of ‘East’ and ‘West’ cannot be projected back onto post-war Europe. By comparing the socialist and social democratic parties in Czechoslovakia, France, Italy, and Poland, it highlights the many similarities across and divergences within the two putative blocs. • Brings together cases from the East and West to shine fresh light on both national and comparative histories • Challenges much of the current historiography of post-war European socialism and offers a new explanation for the weaknesses of post-war socialist parties • Draws on archival documents in seven different languages

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NEW IN PAPERBACK

The Shaping of Tuscany Landscape and Society between Tradition and Modernity Dario Gaggio | University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Many tourists perceive the Tuscan landscape to be one of timelessness and harmony, yet Tuscany was profoundly reshaped following a surge of upheavals during the twentieth century. Uncovering the experiences of ordinary people, this book tells the story of the region’s beauty as the product of modern conflicts and aspirations. • Offers an engaging and comprehensive history of the region of Tuscany • Shows how the beauty of Tuscany was forged from conflict and compromise rather than inherited from the past • Proposes a new understanding of landscapes shaped by conflicts over senses of place and time 20C European history

November 2018 229 x 152 mm 309pp 25 b/w illus. 1 map 978-1-107-56721-4 Paperback c. £22.99 / c. US$31.99 C Also available 978-1-107-12777-7 Hardback £78.99 / US$105.00 C

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The Emotional Politics of the Alternative Left West Germany, 1968–1984 Joachim C. Häberlen | University of Warwick

This fresh account of new-leftist politics in West Germany after 1968 emphasises how central feelings were, both for leftist critiques of modern capitalism and for their political practices. Joachim C. Häberlen’s book is based on close archival research and is theoretically informed by recent approaches to the history of emotions. • Provides a new perspective on leftist politics in West Germany which will stimulate debates about the place of the alternative left in West German history • Offers a vivid and surprising vision of emotional practices within the alternative left • Combines theoretical approaches to the writing of a history of emotions with close archival research New Studies in European History

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 320pp 9 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47174-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Nation and Loyalty in a German-Polish Borderland Upper Silesia, 1848–1960 Brendan Karch | Louisiana State University

In the borderland of Upper Silesia, between 1848 and 1960, the local population resisted attempts by nationalist activists to compel them to become loyal Germans or Poles, a divide dictated by the two languages they spoke. This study of that resistance will appeal to scholars of European history and nationalism. • Recasts mid-twentieth-century national radicalism as partially motivated by local resistance to nationalization • This interdisciplinary study of nationalism will appeal to scholars of sociology and political science • Provides new insights into the relationship between Nazi Germany and international political organizations on the Jewish question Publications of the German Historical Institute

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 330pp 9 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-108-48710-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C


European history

Turkish Germans in the Federal Republic of Germany

Soviet Russians under Nazi Occupation

Immigration, Space, and Belonging, 1961–1990 Sarah Thomsen Vierra | New England College, New Hampshire

Fragile Loyalties in World War II Johannes Due Enstad | Universitetet i Oslo

Drawing on a diverse array of Turkish- and German-language sources, this book explores the history of Turkish immigrants and their children in West Berlin from 1961 to the early years after reunification. Sarah Thomsen Vierra sheds new light on the relationship between belonging, identity, and everyday life. • Brings the perspectives of Turkish immigrants and their children into the historical narrative by drawing on Turkish-language sources as well as German sources • Focuses on the everyday lives of first- and second-generation Turkish Germans • Uses the methodological framework of space to explore issues of belonging and integration Publications of the German Historical Institute

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 298pp 18 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42730-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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New Studies in European History

July 2018 228 x 152 mm 272pp 12 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-1-108-42126-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Jacob & Esau

German Soldiers and the Occupation of France, 1940–1944

Jewish European History between Nation and Empire Malachi Haim Hacohen | Duke University, North Carolina

Julia S. Torrie | St Thomas University, New Brunswick

For four years, German soldiers not only stood guard over and fought in France, but also lived their lives. While the everyday experiences of the occupied French population are well-documented, we know much less about the occupiers. The lives of ordinary German soldiers offer new insights into the occupation of France and the history of Nazism. • A corrective to standard accounts of the German occupation of France that cover German policy-makers only • Argues that occupied France was integrally linked to the larger war • The book is based on a wide variety of primary sources, including soldiers’ letters, photographs and memoirs Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 300pp 978-1-108-47128-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

A compelling account of northwest Russia under Nazi occupation, this book highlights the fragility of Soviet identity and loyalty during the ‘Great Patriotic War’. Having lived through collectivization and Stalinist terror, many Soviet Russians invested hope and effort in the German promise of a better life without the Bolsheviks. • A clear and readable account of the Russian experience under Nazi rule • Draws on both Soviet and German archival sources, as well as eyewitness accounts, diaries, and memoirs • Reconsiders the relationship of ordinary Russians to Stalinism and to the German occupation

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The Stalinist Era

European histories have traditionally marginalised the Jews, while Jewish history has told an exclusively Jewish story. Malachi Haim Hacohen sets out to redress this through an ambitious and panoramic alternative Jewish European history that re-integrates the cosmopolitan narrative of the Jewish diaspora with traditional Jews and Jewish culture. • A major rereading of Jewish history and culture throughout European history • An overview of two millennia of Jewish-Christian relations • Attempts to ‘Europeanise’ traditional rabbinic discourses November 2018 228 x 152 mm 585pp 10 b/w illus. 978-1-316-51037-7 Hardback c. £69.99 / c. US$104.99 978-1-316-64984-8 Paperback c. £22.99 / c. US$34.99

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The Cambridge History of the Byzantine Empire c.500–1492

David L. Hoffmann | Ohio State University

Edited by Jonathan Shepard | University of Cambridge

Placing Stalinism in its international context, David L. Hoffmann offers a new interpretation of Soviet state intervention and violence. Covering collectivization, industrialization, gender roles, nationality policies, the Gulag, the Second World War, and the Cold War, Hoffmann provides a succinct account of this pivotal period in world history. • Re-interprets Stalinism as an integral part of world history • Synthesizes new research on Stalinism • An accessible, succinct, and engaging book, ideal for undergraduate courses

Byzantium lasted a thousand years, ruled by self-styled ‘emperors of the Romans’. It underwent territorial and structural changes, yet recovered repeatedly from disaster. This book tells the story, tracing political and military events, religious controversy and economic change, with particular attention to relations with the outside world. • The most detailed and authoritative single-volume account of Byzantine history to date • Written by a strong team of leading international scholars, each an expert in his or her own field • Provides even coverage across the whole history of the Byzantine Empire, offering both narrative and in-depth analysis

New Approaches to European History, 57

November 2018 228 x 152 mm 206pp 22 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-107-00708-6 Hardback £57.99 / US$79.99 P 978-0-521-18837-1 Paperback £18.99 / US$26.99 G

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 1228pp 978-1-107-68587-1 Paperback c. £35.00 / c. US$50.00

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History – other areas

History – other areas

A Concise History of Mexico Third edition Brian R. Hamnett | University of Essex

KEY REFERENCE NEW IN PAPERBACK

The Cambridge History of China Volume 5: Sung China, 960–1279 AD Part 2 John W. Chaffee

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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. • A much anticipated addition to the series • Offers the most complete coverage of this time period published in any Western language • Presents an authoritative account of key political, economic, social, cultural and intellectual topics in Sung history History (general) after 1500 | The Cambridge History of China

March 2018 229 x 152 mm 975pp 3 b/w illus. 15 tables 978-1-108-46161-0 Paperback £45.00 / US$60.00 Also available 978-0-521-24330-8 Hardback £130.00 / US$206.00

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The Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal Law, History, and Jurisprudence David Cohen | Stanford University, California

Like its Nuremberg counterpart, the Tokyo trial was foundational in the field of international law. However, the persistent notion of ‘victor’s justice’ in the existing literature has made it difficult to objectively assess. Cohen and Totani redress this by providing a fresh perspective based on careful examination of the trial record. • The first truly comprehensive assessment of the Tokyo trial as a judicial process, separating it from other ideologically motivated studies • Illustrates the Tokyo Trial’s importance for international jurisprudence by placing it in the context of both modern Japanese history and international criminal law • The book is based on often neglected sources, including a draft judgment by Sir William Webb, the President of the Tokyo tribunal October 2018 234 x 156 mm 562pp 978-1-107-11970-3 Hardback £105.00 / US$145.00

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HIGHLIGHT NEW IN PAPERBACK

Cold War Freud Psychoanalysis in an Age of Catastrophes Dagmar Herzog | City University of New York

Dagmar Herzog uncovers the astonishing array of concepts of human selfhood which circulated across the globe in the aftermath of World War II. She reveals how competing theories of desire, anxiety, aggression, guilt, trauma and pleasure were mobilised in a fundamental rethinking of the very nature of the human psyche. • An engaging and wide-ranging cultural, political and intellectual history of the evolution of psychoanalysis • Offers fresh insights into the profound consequences of the Holocaust and the Nazi past on post-war psychoanalysis • Presents new readings of radical, anarchist and utopian Freudianism in the 1960s and 1970s History after 1945 (general)

October 2018 229 x 152 mm 249pp 20 b/w illus. 978-1-107-42087-8 Paperback c. £18.99 / c. US$25.99 Also available 978-1-107-07239-8 Hardback £25.00 / US$35.95

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This concise history provides a broad thematic history of Mexico from political, economic, and cultural perspectives. In this third edition, Hamnett adds new material on changes in the twenty-first century, including the Mexican drug war between government officials and gangs, and the immigration and border crises within the United States. • Provides a comprehensive look at Mexico’s changes over time from the pre-Columbian era to the present day, with new material on the twenty-first century • New illustrations in the third edition help to deepen an understanding of the text • Designed to influence decision-making and policymaking Cambridge Concise Histories

December 2018 228 x 152 mm 400pp 51 b/w illus. 6 maps 978-1-107-17458-0 Hardback c. £64.99 / c. US$99.99 P 978-1-316-62661-0 Paperback c. £19.99 / c. US$29.99 P

Blacks of the Land Indian Slavery, Settler Society, and the Portuguese Colonial Enterprise in South America Edited and translated by James Woodard | Montclair State University, New Jersey

Professors Barbara Weinstein and James Woodard have translated John M. Monteiro’s field-defining work from its original Portuguese into English. The book engages with themes central to slavery studies and ethnohistory and makes clear the degree to which native peoples shaped the colonial history of southeastern Brazil. • Makes available an English translation of a pioneering work on Indian slavery in Portuguese-claimed South America • Serves as a student-friendly text, with additional aids such as a glossary and timeline • The translation is clear and accessible, reflecting the prose of the original Portuguese edition Cambridge Latin American Studies, 112

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 320pp 14 tables 978-1-107-11467-8 Hardback c. £71.99 / c. US$99.99 978-1-107-53518-3 Paperback c. £21.99 / c. US$29.99

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Black British Migrants in Cuba Race, Labor, and Empire in the Twentieth-Century Caribbean, 1898–1948 Jorge L. Giovannetti-Torres | University of Puerto Rico

This book provides a detailed analysis of Afro-Caribbean experiences in Cuba from 1898 to 1948. Paying particular attention to labor, race, politics, and imperial relations, Jorge L. Giovannetti-Torres weaves together a complex story of transnationalism in the African diaspora. • Offers a comprehensive history of British Antilleans in Cuba • Focuses on the pre-World War II era to fill the historical void in twentieth-century analysis of the Afro-Caribbean diaspora • Uses regional newspapers to provide concrete examples of discrimination against Caribbean migrants Cambridge Studies on the African Diaspora

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 288pp 978-1-108-42346-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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History – other areas

The Kongo Kingdom

Imagining Africa

The Origins, Dynamics and Cosmopolitan Culture of an African Polity Edited by Koen Bostoen | Universiteit Gent, Belgium

Whiteness and the Western Gaze Clive Gabay | Queen Mary University of London

Bringing new insights on one of the most famous pre-colonial polities in Central Africa, this unique book provides a cross-disciplinary approach to the history of the Kongo kingdom. Both distinguished and upcoming scholars from areas as diverse as anthropology, archaeology, history, and linguistics share a thematic focus on political space. • Maintains a strong regional and thematic focus • Deals exclusively with the Kongo kingdom, allowing readers to reconstruct the history of a pre-colonial African polity • Uses new bodies of evidence in conjunction with traditional sources of African history, such as linguistic data and archaeological finds October 2018 228 x 152 mm 334pp 29 b/w illus. 9 maps 978-1-108-47418-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Politicizing Sex in Contemporary Africa Homophobia in Malawi Ashley Currier | University of Cincinnati

At times of Western crisis, such as the 2007–8 financial crisis, there has been a sudden growth of Afro-optimism, seemingly predicting Africa’s ‘rise’. Gabay examines British imperial attitudes towards Africa and shows that this phenomenon of positive coverage of Africa is neither unique, unexpected nor unpredictable. • Presents a historical approach to questions concerning change and international order • Places race and racism at the centre of changes in and imaginations of international hierarchies • Focuses ‘inwards’ to the changing contours of whiteness, rather than purely ‘outwards’ to the ways that non-Western regions have been racialised December 2018 228 x 152 mm 304pp 978-1-108-47360-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Colonizing Consent Rape and Political Authority in South Africa in the Nineteenth Century Elizabeth Thornberry | The Johns Hopkins University

By systematically documenting the emergence of politicized homophobia in Malawi, its appropriation by political elites as a strategy to consolidate power, and its effect on different social movements, Currier challenges Western portrayals of Africa as a hotbed of homophobia. • An account of the rise of politicized homophobia in Malawi, designed to show that it is not an intrinsic part of ‘African culture’ • Highlights how homophobia has been deployed as a political weapon by leaders across Africa • Documents how politicized homophobia affects different social movements – HIV/AIDS, human rights, LGBT rights, and women’s movements – and LGBT people

Drawing on more than a thousand cases from a diverse set of courts, Thornberry provides a ground-breaking social and political history of rape in colonial South Africa, as well as an important case study for comparative legal history, histories of sexuality, and public policy on sexual violence. • Incorporates evidence from over five hundred rape cases • Draws on records from civil and criminal courts, customary courts, and church displinary proceedings, thereby capturing a broad legal landscape • Reads evidence of court cases alongside political debates

November 2018 228 x 152 mm 320pp 978-1-108-42789-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

November 2018 228 x 138 mm 304pp 4 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-1-108-47280-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C

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Twentieth-Century South Africa

African Studies, 141

Doing Business in Cameroon

A Developmental History Bill Freund | University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

An Anatomy of Economic Governance Jose Maria Muñoz | University of Edinburgh

Focussing on South Africa’s drive for modernisation and industrialisation throughout the twentieth century, Bill Freund shows that the country can actually be viewed as a ‘developmental state’. This unique history further marries the economic indicators with social history in order to bring the economic data alive with people and places. • Brings to the fore economic development as a key motivating factor in post-1940 South Africa • Shows how economic development can be involved with sustaining and extending inequality • Marries economic indicators with social history to bring back people and places to the realm of economic history

Focusing on four distinct sectors (cattle trade, transport, public contracts and NGO work), Muñoz combines an ethnographic study of business practices with a lucid analysis of policies and legal rules to provide an in-depth look at how businesses and state bureaucracies cope with unpredictability in times of crisis and reform. • Builds on intensive fieldwork engagement sustained over a period of ten years • Makes sense of the legal aspects of doing business • Focuses on diverse economic sectors that are often treated separately

August 2018 228 x 152 mm 288pp 978-1-108-42740-1 Hardback £71.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-44615-0 Paperback £21.99 / US$29.99

The International African Library

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October 2018 228 x 152 mm 304pp 7 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-1-108-42899-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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History – other areas

Abraham’s Luggage A Social Life of Things in the Medieval Indian Ocean World Elizabeth A. Lambourn | De Montfort University, Leicester

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A single, unique document – a list of one merchant’s baggage – is the starting point used to bring to life the twelfth-century Indian Ocean. Drawing connections between material culture, foodstuffs and the construction of identity, Lambourn examines notions of home and mobility at a key moment in world history. • Breaks down geographical and disciplinary boundaries to demonstrate the fundamental interconnectivity of the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean • Deploys innovative interdisciplinary methods and analysis to exploit a genre of document too often overlooked as ephemera • Demonstrates the fundamental importance of the ‘India Book’ documents to broader Genizah study

TEXTBOOK

A History of Modern Iran Second edition Ervand Abrahamian | City University of New York

The first edition of this highly readable narrative of modern Iran was named the Choice Outstanding Academic Title in 2009. This second edition brings the story up to date through 2017, with the Green uprisings of 2009, the second Ahmadinejad administration, the election of Rouhani, and the Iran nuclear deal. • A highly readable narrative of modern Iran; the first edition was named Choice Outstanding Academic Title in 2009 • The new edition includes the Green uprisings of 2009, the second Ahmadinejad administration, the election of Rouhani, and the Iran nuclear deal

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 308pp 9 b/w illus. 2 maps 2 tables 978-1-107-17388-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

Contents: Introduction, 1. ‘Royal despots’: state and society under the Qajars; 2. Reform, revolution, and the Great War; 3. The iron fist of Reza Shah; 4. The nationalist interregnum; 5. Muhammad Reza Shah’s White Revolution; 6. The Islamic Republic; Notes; Bibliography; Further reading; Index.

Making Two Vietnams

August 2018 228 x 152 mm 250pp 34 b/w illus. 2 maps 14 tables 978-1-107-19834-0 Hardback £71.99 / US$99.99 X 978-1-316-64814-8 Paperback £19.99 / US$26.99 X

Asian Connections

War and Youth Identities, 1965–1975 Olga Dror | Texas A & M University

This comparative study of North and South Vietnam, the first of its kind, shows how young Vietnamese were raised during the war. Through the prism of adult-youth relations, it analyzes how the two societies dealt with their wartime experience and strove to shape their futures. • The first systematic comparative study of youth culture in North and South Vietnam during the Vietnam War • Reveals the experiences of non-combatants during the Vietnam War • Based on extensive archival and textual work, and an innovative methodology November 2018 228 x 152 mm 336pp 14 b/w illus. 7 tables 978-1-108-47012-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C KEY REFERENCE NEW IN PAPERBACK

The Cambridge History of China Volume 9: The Ch’ing Dynasty to 1800 Part 2 Willard J. Peterson | Princeton University, New Jersey

A comprehensive account of the Ch’ing Empire during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Across fifteen chapters, a team of leading historians explore how the century’s greatest contiguous empire in terms of geographical size, population, wealth, cultural production, political order and military domination reached its peak and then began to unravel. • Provides the only detailed accounts in English of the emperors’ reigns and the social history of eighteenth-century China • Offers sophisticated consideration of the character and implications of Manchu control of the Ch’ing Empire • Contains analyses of all strata and sectors of Chinese society by leading experts in their specializations East Asian history | The Cambridge History of China

March 2018 229 x 152 mm c.846pp 3 b/w illus. 9 maps 7 tables 978-1-108-46159-7 Paperback £39.99 / US$49.99 R Also available 978-0-521-24335-3 Hardback £126.00 / US$200.00 R

Islam and the Culture of Modern Egypt From the Monarchy to the Republic Mohammad Salama | San Francisco State University

Boasting an in-depth analysis of individual texts over half a century, this intriguing history of the dynamics of Islam and culture in modern Egypt presents the conflict between tradition and secular values in a challenging new light. Including literature and film as crucial sources, this book is accessible to general readers and scholars alike. • Offers a fresh non-historicist account of thinking and writing about Islam and the culture of modern Egypt in the first half of the twentieth century • Defiantly confronts holistic dictates of historical positivism and offers instead local interventions on debates around Islam, modernity, secularism, and the production of knowledge • Shows how an incipient nationalism born in Egypt at the outset of the last century was co-opted by local currents, imperialist powers, and anti-colonial resistance, as well as Islamist and secular ideologies September 2018 228 x 152 mm 288pp 6 b/w illus. 978-1-108-41718-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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The Emergence of Public Opinion State and Society in the Late Ottoman Empire Murat R. Şiviloğlu | University of Cambridge

The emergence of public opinion was perhaps the most important political transformation of the Ottoman Empire during the nineteenth century, with such sweeping ramifications as the creation of a parliament. This book takes an integrated and comprehensive approach to this phenomenon, which has been hitherto considered a uniquely Western experience. • Explores the historical evaluation of the concept of public opinion • Uses previously unused archival and historical sources • Takes a comparative and interdisciplinary approach to what has often been considered as a uniquely Western phenomenon September 2018 228 x 152 mm 256pp 978-1-107-19092-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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History – other areas

The Chief Eunuch of the Ottoman Harem

Ibadi Muslims of North Africa

From African Slave to Power-Broker Jane Hathaway | Ohio State University

Manuscripts, Mobilization, and the Making of a Written Tradition Paul M. Love, Jr | Al Akhawayn University, Morocco

Eunuchs were a common feature of virtually all Islamic empires yet they remain mysterious to modern scholars. Using a wide range of primary sources, Jane Hathaway analyzes the origins of the Chief of the African eunuchs and traces the evolution of this powerful official from the late sixteenth through to the early twentieth century. • Uses an array of sources written in the original languages • Incorporates the Chief Harem Eunuch’s origins in Africa and his ties to Ottoman provinces such as Egypt and Arabia • Places the Chief Harem Eunuch in the context of the Ottoman Empire’s transformations between the sixteenth and early twentieth centuries August 2018 228 x 152 mm 340pp 27 b/w illus. 6 maps 6 tables 978-1-107-10829-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C

Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization

Religious Politics in Turkey

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 288pp 27 b/w illus. 1 map 978-1-108-47250-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C

From the Birth of the Republic to the AKP Ceren Lord | University of Oxford

The AKP period in Turkey has often been understood as a break from the ‘secular’ pattern of state-building. Ceren Lord challenges this by showing how Islamist mobilisation in Turkey has been facilitated by state institutions established during early nation-building, offering a new perspective on the politicisation of religion. • Based on original archival material, this book offers a new analytical framework for understanding state-religion relations in Turkey and the wider Middle Eastern region • Uses new data to propose an alternative account of the historical roots of the AKP period in Turkey • Looks at the expansion of religious infrastructure in Turkey Cambridge Middle East Studies, 54

November 2018 228 x 152 mm 320pp 978-1-108-47200-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

Examining the Ibadi Muslims of North Africa, this book traces the history of Arabic texts to tell the story of how people and their networks build religious traditions. Combining the study of Arabic manuscripts with digital tools, it explains how this religious community created and maintained a tradition over nearly a millennium. • Offers a new and in-depth overview of Ibadi history in North Africa • Situates the Ibadis within the broader historical context of the history of the Maghrib, the Mediterranean, and the Sahara • Develops a model for studying the complementary networks of people and ideas across regions

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Iranian Cosmopolitanism A Cinematic History Golbarg Rekabtalaei | Seton Hall University, New Jersey

In the lead-up to the revolution, Iran’s cinematic culture reveals much about its society and politics. With her unique take, Golbarg Rekabtalaei opens new avenues for the understanding of cosmopolitanism in Iran and the ways in which it became a style of national imagination through the lens of cinema. • Proposes a re-reading of cinematic history to shed fresh light on the cultural and political history of Iran • Shows how Iranian modernity was linked to social and cultural cosmopolitanism • Draws on a wide array of original language primary sources The Global Middle East, 3

Christianity in FifteenthCentury Iraq Thomas A. Carlson | Oklahoma State University

Drawing on a rich variety of sources, Carlson explores Christianity in fifteenth-century Iraq and opens new possibilities for understanding this religiously diverse, pre-industrial society and culture. This book expands the possibilities for global Christianity and shows that ‘Islamic Civilization’ can’t be understood through Muslim sources alone. • Draws on a rich variety of sources, including Arabic, Armenian, Persian, and Syriac sources • Provides a method for analyzing the cultural dimension of social diversity • Broadens the social and geographical horizons for historians of both global Christianity and the Islamic world

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 320pp 978-1-108-41851-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Iran’s Troubled Modernity Debating Ahmad Fardid’s Legacy Ali Mirsepassi | New York University

Ahmad Fardid (1910–94), an ‘anti-Western’ philosopher, became the self-proclaimed philosophical spokesperson for the Islamic Republic, coining the term ‘Westoxification’. With thirteen interviews relating his colourful life and intellectual legacy, Mirsepassi sheds light on Iran’s twentieth-century intellectual and political self-construction. • Contains detailed new research into the colourful life and times of Ahmad Fardid • Uses thirteen extensive interviews to relate the story and provide a conversational quality to the narrative • Presents an extensive study of anti-orientalist discourse and its relationship with the formation of the Islamic Republic

Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization

The Global Middle East, 5

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 316pp 2 b/w illus. 5 maps 978-1-107-18627-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

December 2018 228 x 152 mm 356pp 978-1-108-47639-3 Hardback £90.00 / US$125.00

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History – other areas / History – cross discipline

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The Limits of Peacekeeping

Mapping AIDS

Australian Missions in Africa and the Americas, 1992–2005 Volume 4: The Official History of Australian Peacekeeping, Humanitarian and Post-Cold War Operations Edited by Jean Bou | Australian National University, Canberra

Visual Histories of an Enduring Epidemic Lukas Engelmann | University of Edinburgh

Volume 4 explores the Australian government’s peacekeeping efforts in Africa and the Americas from 1992 to 2005. It is an authoritative and compelling history of Australia’s changing attitudes towards peacekeeping. • This text is an official history of Australia’s peacekeeping operations, interweaving details from government files and personal narratives to create a comprehensive and authoritative volume • The book is written by leading historians in the field • Explores a facet of peacekeeping history not normally examined – the limitations of Australia’s policies June 2018 245 x 170 mm 720pp 12 b/w illus. 112 colour illus. 17 maps 978-1-107-10196-8 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 R

A History of South Australia Paul Sendziuk | University of Adelaide

The first comprehensive, single-volume history of the state to be published in over fifty years, A History of South Australia is an essential and engaging contribution to our understanding of South Australia’s past. • The latest instalment in the Australian State Histories • Spans from the time before European settlement to the present day • The book comprehensively explores the imprint of people on the land, the relationship between European settlers and Indigenous peoples, the advance and retreat of interventionist government and the state’s distinctive socio-political formations May 2018 216 x 138 mm 326pp 21 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-1-107-62365-1 Paperback £24.99 / US$34.99

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This new and unique visual history of AIDS focuses on the AIDS atlas, published by dedicated clinicians between 1986 and 2008. The epidemic’s history is retold through clinical photographs, epidemiological maps and icons of HIV asking how this devastating epidemic has come to be seen as a controllable chronic condition. • Offers an innovative visual approach to the history of HIV and AIDS • Uses a new methodological framework to demonstrate the relevance of photographs, maps and models in furthering medical knowledge • Positions the AIDS atlas as a way to engage with the history of the epidemic Global Health Histories

November 2018 228 x 152 mm 320pp 978-1-108-42577-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Difference and Disease Medicine, Race, and the Eighteenth-Century British Empire Suman Seth | Cornell University, New York

Suman Seth offers dramatically new ways to understand the mutual construction of medicine, race, and empire in the eighteenth century. Readers will find medical writers engaging with abolitionism and the care of the enslaved, and will be able to track the ways that medicine created modern notions of racial difference. • Introduces the term ‘race-medicine’ as an alternative to the term ‘racescience’ • Offers an accessible postcolonial history of colonial medicine • Brings together histories of empire, race, and slavery Global Health Histories

June 2018 228 x 152 mm 336pp 978-1-108-41830-0 Hardback £29.99 / US$39.99

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AVAILABLE OPEN ACCESS

Polio across the Iron Curtain

History – cross discipline PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Reproduction Antiquity to the Present Day Edited by Nick Hopwood | University of Cambridge

This first history of reproduction from antiquity to the present day defines the field for the early twenty-first century. From contraception to cloning and pregnancy to populations, it revises old stories and tells new ones. Authoritative, accessible and richly illustrated, the book invites students and non-specialists to engage and explore. • The first large-scale history of reproduction • Makes the topic accessible to students and non-specialists • Richly illustrated, including numerous striking colour plates November 2018 246 x 189 mm 700pp 163 b/w illus. 40 colour illus. 2 maps 1 table 978-1-107-06802-5 Hardback c. £85.00 / c. US$130.00 R

Hungary’s Cold War with an Epidemic Dóra Vargha | University of Exeter

Hungary was one of the first countries to introduce a national oral vaccination campaign against polio, built on years of scientific collaboration between the East and West. Dóra Vargha uses a series of polio epidemics in communist Hungary to understand the response to a global public health emergency in the midst of the Cold War. This title is also available as Open Access. • Entwines histories of international organizations, national politics, diplomacy, medicine, scientific networks and patient experiences • Presents a new geographical focus that enriches the history of global public health • Explores Cold War interaction and collaboration between the East and West • This title is also available as Open Access Global Health Histories

November 2018 228 x 152 mm 320pp 8 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42084-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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History – cross discipline

HIGHLIGHT

Worlds of Natural History

NEW IN PAPERBACK

Edited by H. A. Curry | University of Cambridge

From Aztec accounts of hibernating hummingbirds to contemporary television spectaculars, human encounters with nature have sparked wonder and delight. This lively introduction to the history of natural history contextualises current discussions of biodiversity and explores an increasingly vital aspect of human history. • Widens the geographical coverage of natural history, with essays relating to Latin America, South Asia and East Asia • Covers the Renaissance to the twenty-first century in an accessible style • Follows the format and approach of the acclaimed Cultures of Natural History (Cambridge, 2008) October 2018 246 x 189 mm 538pp 130 b/w illus. 20 colour illus. 1 table 978-1-316-51031-5 Hardback c. £65.00 / c. US$99.00 P 978-1-316-64971-8 Paperback c. £24.99 / c. US$39.99 P

Indigenous Peoples and the Second World War

The Franco-Prussian War of 1813 Volume 2: The Defeat of Napoleon Michael V. Leggiere | University of North Texas

The first comprehensive history of the decisive Fall Campaign of 1813 that determined control of Central Europe following Napoleon’s catastrophic defeat in Russia the previous year. Michael V. Leggiere reveals how the defeat of Napoleon in Germany was made possible by Prussian victories and highlights the breakdown of his strategy. Volume 2 focuses on the defeat of Napoleon. • The first comprehensive account of Napoleon’s defeat at the hands of Prussia in autumn 1813 • Sheds important new light on Napoleon’s generalship • Combines analysis of military operations, diplomacy and the experience of battle Military history | Cambridge Military Histories

September 2018 229 x 152 mm 901pp 22 b/w illus. 28 maps 978-1-107-43975-7 Paperback c. £27.99 / c. US$36.99 G Also available 978-1-107-08054-6 Hardback £32.00 / US$41.95 G

The Politics, Experiences and Legacies of War in the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand R. Scott Sheffield | University of the Fraser Valley, British Columbia

During the Second World War, Indigenous people in the United States, Australia, New Zealand and Canada mobilised en masse to support the war effort. This is an examination of their participation on the battlefields and home fronts, focusing on their diverse and unique contributions to the war, and its legacies. • Provides a new perspective on the national histories of Indigenous communities through a comparative and transnational lens • Draws heavily on Indigenous oral histories and written sources, as well as policy documents and other archival records • Provides a gendered reading of Indigenous service December 2018 228 x 152 mm 368pp 20 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42463-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

Napoleon and the Struggle for Germany

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HIGHLIGHT NEW IN PAPERBACK

Napoleon and the Struggle for Germany The Franco-Prussian War of 1813 Volume 1: The War of Liberation, Spring 1813 Michael V. Leggiere | University of North Texas

This is the first comprehensive history of the campaign that determined control of Germany following Napoleon’s catastrophic defeat in Russia. Michael Leggiere reveals how, in the spring of 1813, Prussia, the weakest of the Great Powers, led the struggle against Napoleon as a war of national liberation. Volume 1 concentrates on Prussia’s war of liberation. • The first comprehensive account of Prussia’s war of liberation against Napoleon in spring 1813 • Provides a follow-up to the well-known subject of Napoleon’s defeat in Russia by examining a less well-known, but equally catastrophic, segment of Napoleonic history • Combines analysis of military operations, diplomacy and the experience of battle Military history | Cambridge Military Histories

September 2018 229 x 152 mm 500pp 19 b/w illus. 26 maps 978-1-107-43973-3 Paperback c. £24.99 / c. US$32.99 G Also available 978-1-107-08051-5 Hardback £25.99 / US$36.99 G

HIGHLIGHT NEW IN PAPERBACK

Napoleon and the Struggle for Germany The Franco-Prussian War of 1813 Michael V. Leggiere | University of North Texas

This is the first comprehensive history of the campaigns that determined control of Germany following Napoleon’s catastrophic defeat in Russia. Michael Leggiere reveals how, in the spring of 1813, Prussia, the weakest of the Great Powers, led the struggle against Napoleon as a war of national liberation. • Comprehensive two-volume military history of the German campaign during the Napoleonic Wars • Separate volumes examine the two distinctive phases of the spring and fall campaigns in 1813 • An essential contribution to our broader understanding of the Napoleonic Wars and of Napoleon as a commander Military history | Cambridge Military Histories

September 2018 229 x 152 mm 1404pp 41 b/w illus. 54 maps 978-1-107-48409-2 2 Volume Paperback Set c. £45.99 / c. US$59.99 G

Bombing the City Civilian Accounts of the Air War in Britain and Japan, 1939–1945 Aaron William Moore | University of Edinburgh

This comparative study of Japanese and British civilian descriptions of being bombed in World War II serves as a way to understand the universality of total war. Examining issues of gender, class, and regional and urban history, it confronts how ordinary people were both victims of the air war and helped make it possible. • This book is a comparative social history of Britain and Japan in World War II that critically reviews the ‘good vs evil’ views of Axis and Allied nations • Moves the discourse away from the capital cities to focus on the regional cities • Based on extensive research of hundreds of personal accounts from both Britain and Japan Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 272pp 10 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42825-5 Hardback c. £54.99 / c. US$89.99 978-1-108-44652-5 Paperback c. £18.99 / c. US$29.99

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History – cross discipline

Institutional and Organizational Analysis

Assembling the Tropics Science and Medicine in Portugal’s Empire, 1450–1700 Hugh Cagle | University of Utah

Concepts and Applications Eric Alston | University of Colorado Boulder

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What explains the variability in economic growth and political development across countries? This toolkit for institutional analysis looks at the effect of institutions, such as policies and laws, and the process by which those institutions are created. It explains how rules affect the performance of countries, firms, and even families. • Provides a toolkit for, and systemic overview of, institutional analysis • Analyzes institutions and institution-making in many types of organizations, including families, firms, and governments • Combines economics, economic history, law, and political science, while laying out the concepts of institutional analysis in an orderly fashion that is rigorous without being mathematical

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The Pretender of Pitcairn Island

The island occupied by HMAV Bounty’s descendants later became home to a fraud who, with no official remit, became a virtual dictator with an influential vision for British control over the nineteenth-century Pacific Ocean. His story reframes the way we view that period of British imperial history onto a tiny Pacific island. • Expands on the well-known story of the mutiny on the Bounty to tell the history of the colony the mutineers founded at Pitcairn Island • Uses micro-historical examples to reshape our understanding of global British imperialism • Proposes a methodological framework for thinking about both British imperialism in the Pacific and the Pacific’s place in world history P G

The Development Century A Global History Edited by Stephen J. Macekura | Indiana University, Bloomington

This anthology offers cutting-edge perspectives on how international development has shaped the history of the modern world. It focuses on the role of development practices and projects in the history of empire, Cold War competition, decolonization and postcolonial governance, transnational activist movements, and the global environment. • Engages with cutting-edge research of leading scholars to rethink the role of development in the twentieth-century world • Considers how the practices of development shaped ecologies, economic life, and cultural change • Presents a global approach to the history of development through historical narrative, asking what this history might reveal about the origins of our world today

This anthology surveys the neglected environmental dimensions of industrial warfare in World War I. The authors show how the war ushered in enormous changes, including the devastation of rural and urban environments and the consumption of natural resources. They also take a global perspective in exploring the interactions of states, armies, and civilians during this time. • Provides a new environmental perspective on industrial warfare with implications for the twenty-first century • Suggests a decades-long environmental legacy of World War I and provides a narrative of neglected regions of the war • For readers interested in both military and environmental history August 2018 228 x 152 mm 320pp 21 b/w illus. 2 maps 8 tables 978-1-108-42916-0 Hardback £71.99 / US$99.99 P 978-1-108-45319-6 Paperback £21.99 / US$29.99 P PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Traditional Ecological Knowledge Learning from Indigenous Practices for Environmental Sustainability Edited by Melissa K. Nelson | San Francisco State University

This book is for anyone interested in Native American studies, environmental studies, and sustainability studies who wants to learn more about contemporary and historic examples of Indigenous peoples’ ethical and practical relationship to land, place, and the environment. • Offers a diversity of Indigenous voices and cases on the topic of sustainability • Challenges standard approaches to sustainability with more cultural and pragmatic solutions • Proposes a holistic ecophilosophy of indigenous sustainability New Directions in Sustainability and Society

Global and International History

August 2018 228 x 152 mm 320pp 7 b/w illus. 978-1-316-51588-4 Hardback £71.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-45347-9 Paperback £21.99 / US$29.99

Environmental Histories of the First World War Edited by Richard P. Tucker | University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Joshua W. Hill – The Man Who Would Be King among the Bounty Mutineers Tillman W. Nechtman | Skidmore College, New York

August 2018 228 x 152 mm 354pp 14 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42468-4 Hardback £71.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-44080-6 Paperback £21.99 / US$29.99

Studies in Comparative World History

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 400pp 22 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-107-19663-6 Hardback £35.99 / US$49.99 C

New Approaches to Economic and Social History

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 400pp 19 b/w illus. 978-1-107-08637-1 Hardback c. £60.00 / c. US$99.00 978-1-107-45125-4 Paperback c. £18.99 / c. US$32.99

This book charts the convergence of science, culture, and politics across Portugal’s empire, showing how a global geographical concept was born. In accessible, narrative prose, this book explores the unexpected forms that science took in the early modern world. It highlights little-known linkages between Asia and the Atlantic world. • Proposes a new history of the tropics, showing the influence of globalization • Combines the histories of South Asia and Latin America • Explores the contributions of Portugal’s empire to the history of Iberian science

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September 2018 228 x 152 mm 350pp 978-1-108-42856-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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American literature

American literature

American Literature in Transition, 1960–1970

Nathaniel Hawthorne In Context Edited by Monika M. Elbert | Montclair State University, New Jersey

This volume provides an overview of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s life and times and demonstrates why he continues to be a significant figure in American literature. It is a key resource for students and scholars of Hawthorne. It will also be of interest for those studying American literature and American history. • Presents multiple views of Hawthorne’s life, times, and works • Contains social, philosophical, and religious views by Hawthorne in his writings • Places Hawthorne in a national and international framework Literature in Context

September 2018 229 x 152 mm 350pp 22 b/w illus. 978-1-107-10933-9 Hardback c. £65.00 / c. US$110.00

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Mark Whalan | University of Oregon

Rather than focusing on literary interpretations of trauma or memorialization as the most significant effects of World War One, this book shows an empowered federal state as a significant factor in experimental American culture well before the 1930s. This book is for scholars of American modernism and the literature of World War One. • Proposes a new interpretation of the dominant effect of World War One on American literature • Offers new readings of works by some of the most canonical American writers of World War One, and also rehabilitates several neglected texts • Proposes a new way of understanding the politics of American modernism C

American Literature in Transition

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The Cambridge Companion to American Literature of the 1930s Edited by William Solomon | State University of New York, Buffalo

This book re-examines the crucial trends in the decade and places them in their political and economic contexts. It is addressed to undergraduates, graduates and scholars interested in learning more about American literature in the 1930s. • Presents a contemporary reassessment of the significance of the literature of the 1930s • Provides students with an efficient means of learning about the history of the Great Depression • Introduces the central problems, topics and materials that have guided scholars in the past and continue to do so in the present Cambridge Companions to Literature

American Literature in Transition, 1930–1940

September 2018 229 x 152 mm 280pp 978-1-108-42918-4 Hardback c. £65.99 / c. US$90.00 978-1-108-45322-6 Paperback c. £21.99 / c. US$29.99

Edited by Ichiro Takayoshi | Tufts University, Massachusetts

American Literature in Transition, 1930–1940 situates the major themes and aspects of the Depression era’s key literary activities in the long arc of literary history. This is an excellent resource for undergraduate and graduate students, as well as scholars interested in American literary culture of the 1930s. • Proposes a comprehensive view of one of the most widely taught time periods in American literature, the 1930s • This book can be adopted for a wide range of undergraduate courses • Covers dozens of neglected authors in addition to canonical authors, allowing readers to learn how to challenge popular but reductive notions about the era • Written in accessible prose, facilitating the reader’s engagement with the materials American Literature in Transition

August 2018 228 x 152 mm 350pp 978-1-108-42938-2 Hardback £79.99 / US$110.00

This book provides the latest scholarship on the 1960s as seen through the eyes of writers as various as Toni Morrison, Gary Snyder, Michael Herr, Amiri Baraka, Joan Didion, Louis Chu, John Rechy, and Gwendolyn Brooks. It will be a key resource for students and scholars of twentiethcentury American literature interested in this time period. • Proposes a new view of the 1960s as seen through literature • Contains essays by twenty-five leading scholars in the field • Written in accessible prose, facilitating the reader’s engagement with the materials September 2018 229 x 152 mm 350pp 978-1-107-16539-7 Hardback c. £65.00 / c. US$110.00

World War One, American Literature, and the Federal State

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 280pp 7 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47383-5 Hardback £28.99 / US$39.99

Edited by David Wyatt | University of Maryland, College Park

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The Great Gatsby The Manuscript Text F. Scott Fitzgerald Edited by James L. W. West, III | Pennsylvania State University

Tracing its compositional history, this edition of The Great Gatsby presents the novel in its raw format to reveal the development of character and revision of language. Suitable for critics, teachers and students, this scholarly edition conveys an amalgamation of talent, inspiration and selfdiscipline which culminated in Fitzgerald’s masterpiece. • Presents The Great Gatsby in its earliest surviving format • Highlights include an introduction written by Professor James L. W. West, III and spanning the compositional history of the novel • Includes a commentary which reflects upon the novel’s preservation, acquisition and restoration The Cambridge Edition of the Works of F. Scott Fitzgerald

June 2018 216 x 138 mm 258pp 20 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42680-0 Hardback £57.99 / US$79.99

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American literature / English literature

The Value of Herman Melville

After Foucault

Geoffrey Sanborn | Amherst College, Massachusetts

Culture, Theory, and Criticism in the 21st Century Edited by Lisa Downing | University of Birmingham

In this book, Geoffrey Sanborn explores the writings of Herman Melville across his career, focusing in particular on Moby-Dick, ‘Bartleby, the Scrivener’, ‘Benito Cereno’, and Billy Budd, and examines the distinctive qualities of his style. This is a key resource for undergraduates, graduates, and lecturers in American literature courses. • Connects Melville’s stylistic qualities to the political and theoretical dimensions of his works • Provides close readings of passages from Melville’s works • Foregrounds the extravagant and energizing qualities of Melville’s writing • Provides extended readings of Melville’s four most enduring works

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The Value of

September 2018 229 x 152 mm 150pp 978-1-108-47144-2 Hardback £31.99 / US$44.99 978-1-108-45291-5 Paperback £12.99 / US$17.99

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The New Melville Studies

After Series

Twenty-first Century Critical Revisions Edited by Cody Marrs | University of Georgia

This volume collects and assesses all of the major new trends in Melville studies, testing them out in new readings and putting them into conversation with one another. It offers students and faculty alike a fresh view of Herman Melville, presenting him as a philosopher of the mind and the emotions. • Showcases new methods and approaches in Melville studies • Examines the full range of Melville’s career, linking his poetry to his prose • Presents Melville as a theorist in his own right, as a writer who was passionately interested in the pleasures, limits, and possibilities of various reading practices Twenty-First Century Critical Revisions

December 2018 228 x 152 mm 260pp 978-1-108-48403-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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English literature

May 2018 229 x 152 mm 228pp 978-1-107-14049-3 Hardback £64.99 / US$89.99 978-1-316-50604-2 Paperback £19.99 / US$27.99

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After Lacan Literature, Theory and Psychoanalysis in the 21st Century Edited by Ankhi Mukherjee | University of Oxford

This book draws on the distinct phases of Jacques Lacan’s career to show the exfoliation of his way of thinking in and beyond his lifetime. It examines the past, present, and futures of psychoanalysis. This book is for students, graduates, and instructors of literary theory, psychoanalysis, and the works of Lacan. • Combines critical and clinical approaches to understanding and interpreting Lacan • Engages contemporary debates in racism, Islam, disability studies, gender and queer theory, cinema, and new media • Demonstrates the ways in which Lacan’s theory and pedagogy inform each other After Series

The Cambridge History of Travel Writing Edited by Nandini Das | University of Liverpool

This volume traces the history of travel writing from antiquity to the Internet age. With chapters on travel texts of several national or linguistic traditions, it introduces readers to the global contexts of the genre. It is a key resource for scholars and researchers in the field of travel writing. • Includes sections on historical period, global contexts, forms, places, and approaches to travel writing • Contains chapters on travel writing from several countries and regions • Discusses the types of travel writing and ways of approaching them contextually and analytically November 2018 229 x 152 mm 750pp 7 b/w illus. 978-1-107-14818-5 Hardback c. £100.00 / c. US$175.00

Rather than offering either an introduction to Michel Foucault’s work, or a series of interventions aimed specifically at experts, After Foucault clarifies Foucault’s key concepts, explores his critical afterlives, and explains his intellectual legacy to students, academic researchers, and an interested, educated general readership. • Explains key Foucauldian concepts that are crucial for understanding Foucault in the twenty-first century, but that are often misunderstood, such as genealogy and subjectivity • Shows how Foucauldian ideas inform twenty-first-century ideas and concerns, including ecology, neoliberalism, and sexual identity • The third section of the book carries out readings of auto-biographical texts, novels, and works of true crime using a Foucauldian framework, allowing readers to use the chapters in this section of the book as models for doing readings of their own on cultural products and texts, with and through Foucault

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October 2018 229 x 152 mm 240pp 978-1-316-51218-0 Hardback c. £50.00 / c. US$90.00 978-1-108-46648-6 Paperback c. £17.99 / c. US$27.99

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The Cambridge Companion to World Literature Edited by Ben Etherington | University of Western Sydney

This Companion introduces readers to major ideas and practices of world literary studies. Its accessible yet sophisticated essays raise fundamental questions about imagining the totality of literature; comparing literary works across histories, cultures and languages; and understanding how literature is affected by forces such as imperialism. • Provides exemplary essays in world literary criticism • Includes discussion of ancient and modern works from North America, Latin America, Sub-Saharan Africa, East Asia, South Asia, the Middle East, Eastern Europe and Western Europe • Considers a range of genres, forms and modes often excluded from recent world literature debates Cambridge Companions to Literature

September 2018 229 x 152 mm 300pp 978-1-108-47137-4 Hardback £71.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-45784-2 Paperback £21.99 / US$29.99

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English literature

AVAILABLE OPEN ACCESS

KEY REFERENCE

Picture-Book Professors

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Academia and Children’s Literature Melissa Terras | University of Edinburgh

Surveying fictional professors in texts marketed to children, this Element conveys how the stereotypical image of a professor is portrayed as old, white and male. It provides a publishing history of the role of academics in children’s literature. This title is also available, with additional material, as Open Access. Elements in Publishing and Book Culture

July 2018 178 x 127 mm 152pp 978-1-108-43845-2 Paperback £9.99 / US$13.99

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Reading the Late Byzantine Romance A Handbook Edited by Adam J. Goldwyn | North Dakota State University

This is the definitive work on the late Byzantine romances, the dozen or so works of imaginative fiction from the thirteenth to the fifteenth centuries which narrate the trials of aristocratic young lovers. The book demonstrates the cultural value of these works and their centrality to the European and Mediterranean literary traditions. • The first comprehensive assessment of the late Byzantine romances, treating almost all the individual works in the genre • Demonstrates new theoretical and methodological approaches to Byzantine romances • Presents to a wider audience material that is not well known, particularly outside Byzantine studies November 2018 228 x 152 mm 360pp 978-1-107-18779-5 Hardback c. £74.99 / c. US$120.00

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

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

August 2018 228 x 152 mm 250pp 17 b/w illus. 3 tables 978-1-108-42627-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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

Scholars and students of women’s writing, poetry, and seventeenth- and eighteenth-century literature have long called for a complete, critical edition of the works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea. This edition provides, for the first time, authoritative texts, textual apparatus, and commentary for all known works by this important writer. • The first ever complete, critical edition of the works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea (1661–1720) • Provides established texts of all Finch’s poems, plays, and letters, organized by their appearance in Finch’s authorized collections • Includes a comprehensive introduction, extensive explanatory notes, and thorough textual commentary May 2017 216 x 138 mm 1400pp 13 b/w illus. 978-0-521-19622-2 2 Volume Hardback Set c. £160.00 / c. US$275.00 R

Travel and Drama in Early Modern England The Journeying Play Edited by Claire Jowitt | University of East Anglia

This volume on travel and drama in early modern England provides new insights on Renaissance stage practice, performance history, and theatre’s transnational exchanges. It advances our understanding of theatre history, drama’s generic conventions, and what constitutes plays about travel at a time when the professional theatre was rapidly developing. • Re-assesses what constitutes early modern travel and in doing so expands the canon of recognized plays concerned with travel • Provides insight into how plays concerned with travel communicated with their audiences and readers at a time of expanding cultural, political, and economic horizons • Includes analysis from world leading scholars in the field of plays about travel November 2018 228 x 152 mm 290pp 978-1-108-47118-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Shakespeare’s Early Readers A Cultural History from 1590 to 1800 Jean-Christophe Mayer | French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) and Université Paul-Valéry, Montpellier

This is the first dedicated account of the ways in which Shakespeare’s texts were read in the two centuries after they were produced. A close examination of rare, often unpublished material offers a reconsideration of the role of readers in the history of Shakespeare’s rise to fame. • The first dedicated study of the reading reception of Shakespeare’s texts in the two centuries after they were produced • Explores rare, often previously unpublished, material to reconsider the role of readers in the history of Shakespeare’s rise to fame and in the history of canon formation • Presents thirty images, allowing readers to see for themselves the engagements made by readers of Shakespeare’s texts October 2018 228 x 152 mm 266pp 978-1-107-13833-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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English literature

Prayer and Performance in Early Modern English Literature

Romantic Art in Practice Cultural Work and the Sister Arts, 1760–1820 Thora Brylowe | University of Colorado Boulder

Gesture, Word and Devotion Edited by Joseph William Sterrett | Aarhus Universitet, Denmark

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This collection of thirteen newly commissioned essays traces the controversy and value given to the performance of prayer in early modern England, through the body, the spoken word and written text, as well as its representation on stage. • Delivers a fascinating new angle on the history of the Reformation in England and the literature and drama that developed in its wake • Provides close readings from a variety of literary and dramatic sources, from well-known figures including Shakespeare, Donne and Milton, to the private prayer books of men and women of the seventeenth century • Places the act of prayer, and the literature surrounding it, centrally in a work of early modern literary criticism October 2018 228 x 152 mm 250pp 978-1-108-42972-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

Cambridge Studies in Romanticism, 122

August 2018 228 x 152 mm 270pp 22 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42640-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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European Literatures in Britain, 1815–1832

Shakespeare Survey 71 Re-Creating Shakespeare Volume 71 Edited by Peter Holland | University of Notre Dame, Indiana

Romantic Translations Diego Saglia | Università di Parma

The 71st in the annual series of volumes devoted to Shakespeare study and production. The theme is ‘Re-Creating Shakespeare’. • The 71st in the annual series of volumes devoted to Shakespeare study and production Shakespeare Survey, 71

October 2018 246 x 189 mm 440pp 65 b/w illus. 4 tables 978-1-108-47083-4 Hardback £89.99 / US$125.00 R

Miniature and the English Imagination Literature, Cognition, and Small-Scale Culture 1650–1765 Melinda Alliker Rabb | Brown University, Rhode Island

Examining the phenomenon of miniaturization in material culture, literature and theories of cognition, this study examines the appeal and function of the small in the period from 1660 to 1765. Examining two kinds of miniatures – real and imaginary – it provides a rethinking of major and minor writers. • Demonstrates a new relationship between literature and the material world where there is a simultaneous production of miniature objects in fiction and reality • Provides new insights on the relationship between literary and cognitive theory studies • Examines the miniature in the literary work of Jonathan Swift, Alexander Pope and Daniel Defoe, amongst others December 2018 228 x 152 mm 200pp 12 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42583-4 Hardback c. £75.00 / c. US$99.99

This book engages with the professional politics and labour practices of Romantic period artists and craftsmen as they translated creative literary work into visual art. It explores the developing cultural tensions and connections that created a ‘sister-art’ movement in the period of new print technology and mass media. • Undertakes a reframing of the traditional view of the sister-arts movement • Explores many examples of well-known artefacts, such as Wedgwood’s Portland Vase, and casts new light on well-known texts by Blake, Wordsworth and Keats • Examines the professional politics of labouring artists in the Romantic period, including the engraver John Landseer

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This book offers an original approach to the presence of Continental European literatures in post-Napoleonic Britain. In doing so it reconstructs a literary and cultural environment in which patriotic discourse – the expression of a triumphant international power – combined with intensely transformative engagements with foreign literary traditions. • Reconsiders the supposed insularity of British literary culture in the post-Napoleonic period • Demonstrates close relationship between British and Continental European Romantic literature • Investigates how European literatures were transmitted in Romanticera Britain Cambridge Studies in Romanticism, 123

November 2018 228 x 152 mm 310pp 978-1-108-42641-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Romanticism and Theatrical Experience Kean, Hazlitt and Keats in the Age of Theatrical News Jonathan Mulrooney | College of the Holy Cross, Massachusetts

The book uniquely brings together the fields of theater history, print culture, and literature, exploring new contexts around the work of actor Edmund Kean, essayist William Hazlitt, and poet John Keats, and reframing the relationship between theater, essays and poetry in Regency London. • Explores a wealth of previously understudied theatrical criticism to enhance our understanding of Romantic period theatrical culture • Brings into focus the influence of theatrical culture on literary culture in the Romantic period • Provides new insight into the cultural figures such as Edmund Kean (actor), William Hazlitt (critic), and John Keats (poet) Cambridge Studies in Romanticism, 124

December 2018 228 x 152 mm 280pp 6 b/w illus. 978-1-107-18387-2 Hardback c. £64.99 / c. US$99.99

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English literature

The Cambridge Companion to English Melodrama

Malaria and Victorian Fictions of Empire

Edited by Carolyn Williams | Rutgers University, New Jersey

Jessica Howell | Texas A & M University

An original collection providing an accessible overview of the history of English melodrama, an introduction to its formal features, and a wideranging assessment of its ongoing influence today – addressing issues of social analysis (gender, class, race), psychoanalysis, other art forms (film, television, musical theatre), and contemporary culture. • The first ever study of its kind to give an account of melodrama, the most popular form of nineteenth-century English theatre • Gives a full account of the formal features of melodrama, how it was presented and received, and the reasons for its appeal • Traces melodrama’s influence through the twentieth and into the twenty-first century, in theatre, art, reality TV, and sport

This study focuses on the depictions of malaria in nineteenth-century and postcolonial fiction of writers such as Charles Dickens, Henry James, H. Rider Haggard, and Rudyard Kipling, amongst others. It also examines the multivalent and subversive potential of the disease in postcolonial literature of writers such as Amitav Ghosh and Derek Walcott. • Offers the first book-length study of the impact of malaria in nineteenth-century fiction literature • Analyses the connection between nineteenth-century discourses of scientific discovery and fiction • Encourages a more global understanding of health and illness in literature and culture Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture, 114

Cambridge Companions to Literature

December 2018 228 x 152 mm 200pp 4 b/w illus.

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 320pp 13 b/w illus. 1 table 978-1-107-09593-9 Hardback c. £60.00 / c. US$95.00 P 978-1-107-47959-3 Paperback c. £17.99 / c. US$29.99 P

978-1-108-48468-8 Hardback

Idleness and Aesthetic Consciousness, 1815–1900

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Science, Form, and the Problem of Induction in British Romanticism Dahlia Porter | University of Glasgow

Richard Adelman | University of Sussex

This book explores the failure of the Romantic critique of political economy by following changing conceptions of idleness and aesthetic consciousness from Shelley to Freud. Richard Adelman delivers an innovative study of cultural politics between 1815 and 1900 that shines new light on the complex legacy of Romantic thought. • Traces changing perceptions of idleness and aesthetic consciousness across a wide range of intellectual discourses • Draws on a wide range of the nineteenth century’s most influential thinkers, including John Stuart Mill, George Eliot, John Ruskin and Karl Marx • Reconstructs debates over passivity and repose, as well as their influence on cultural politics between 1815 and 1900 Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture, 112

August 2018 228 x 152 mm 250pp 978-1-108-42413-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

£75.00 / US$105.00

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Poetry, Media, and the Material Body Autopoetics in Nineteenth-Century Britain Ashley Miller | Albion College, Michigan

This book investigates the often surprising intersections and overlaps between three infrequently related fields: studies of poetry, studies of media, and studies of the body. At these intersections a neglected nineteenth-century theory of poetry becomes visible, one that imagines the body as a reproductive medium for poetry. • Provides an articulate exploration of the tradition in nineteenth-century that identifies the human body as a material medium for poetry • Combines an exploration of media theory, theories of physiology and literary theory to further understanding of written forms of creativity that appear independent of the author’s will • Includes close readings of the works of nineteenth-century poets including William Wordsworth (1770–1850), Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772–1834) and Alfred Lord Tennyson (1809–92)

Exploring a topic at the intersection of science, philosophy and literature, this book traces the history of induction – manipulating textual evidence by selective quotation – as a writerly practice, and accounts for mixtures of poetry and prose in the work of major Romantic-period writers. • Explores how and why authors of Romantic-era literature adopted compositional practices from experimental science • Delivers a new perspective on a long-standing area of inquiry by reconsidering the importance of Enlightenment empiricism to Romantic period literature • Investigates the connection between contemporary concerns about digital media and early nineteenth-century debates about mass print Cambridge Studies in Romanticism, 120

June 2018 228 x 152 mm 314pp 978-1-108-41894-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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The Reverberator Henry James Edited by Richard Salmon | University of Leeds

In 1888, Henry James turned from realist fiction, The Bostonians and The Princess Casamassima, to a comedy of manners set in Paris and concerning a scandal sheet, ‘The Reverberator’. Featuring comprehensive scholarly apparatus based on original research, this authoritative edition will be essential for scholars and advanced students. • Provides an authoritative edition of one of Henry James’ novels often overlooked by modern critics • Offers a comprehensive textual apparatus including extensive annotations, chronology and introduction to the text • The text is based on the first publication of the book by MacMillan in 1888 The Cambridge Edition of the Complete Fiction of Henry James, 10

August 2018 228 x 152 mm 390pp 2 b/w illus. 978-1-107-00270-8 Hardback £80.00 / US$110.00

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Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture, 113

August 2018 228 x 152 mm 200pp 978-1-108-41896-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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English literature

Desperate Remedies

India, Empire, and First World War Culture

Thomas Hardy Edited by Richard Nemesvari | Wilfrid Laurier University, Ontario

Desperate Remedies (1871) is the first volume in The Cambridge Edition of the Novels and Stories of Thomas Hardy. This critical edition of Hardy’s first published novel offers an authoritative text and wide ranging contextual material including a comprehensive introduction supplemented by textual and explanatory notes. • The first volume in The Cambridge Edition of the Novels and Stories of Thomas Hardy • Desperate Remedies (1871), Hardy’s first published novel, is a detective story with Gothic elements • Offers an authoritative text and textual apparatus, comprehensive introduction, and explanatory notes The Cambridge Edition of the Novels and Stories of Thomas Hardy

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September 2018 228 x 152 mm 628pp 3 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03692-5 Hardback £89.99 / US$125.00

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Literature, Images, and Songs Santanu Das | King’s College London

The book recovers the sensuous worlds of combatants, non-combatants and civilians from undivided India in World War One. Combining extensive archival research with readings of Kipling, Gandhi and Tagore, it is the first cultural and literary history on the subject and opens up war studies to South Asian and postcolonial scholarship. • The first cultural and literary history of India and the First World War • Engages with Indian experience overseas as well as what is happening in the homefront, from its political to intellectual histories • Brings war studies into dialogue with South Asian history • Uses a diverse methodology, comprised of materials from diaries, sound recordings and trench objects, to create a wholly interdisciplinary study September 2018 228 x 152 mm 300pp 57 b/w illus. 6 colour illus. 1 map 978-1-107-08158-1 Hardback c. £50.00 / c. US$90.00 P 978-1-107-44159-0 Paperback c. £19.99 / c. US$27.99 P

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Under the Greenwood Tree

The Remembered Dead

Thomas Hardy Edited by Simon Gatrell | University of Georgia

Poetry, Memory and the First World War Sally Minogue

Under the Greenwood Tree (1872) is the latest book in the Cambridge Edition of the Novels and Stories of Thomas Hardy series. This critical edition of Hardy’s second published novel offers an authoritative text and includes wide-ranging contextual material, including a comprehensive introduction supplemented by textual and explanatory notes. • Delivers a comprehensive scholarly edition of Thomas Hardy’s second published novel as part of The Cambridge Edition of the Novels and Stories of Thomas Hardy • Provides an authoritative text, including Hardy’s own revisions, and for the first time excluding errors introduced by printers • Enables greater understanding of the life of the novel through extensive textual apparatus, an introduction and critical notes The Cambridge Edition of the Novels and Stories of Thomas Hardy

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 546pp 3 b/w illus. 978-1-107-08902-0 Hardback £89.99 / US$125.00

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May 2018 228 x 152 mm 244pp 8 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42867-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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HIGHLIGHT NEW IN PAPERBACK

Heart of Darkness

Modernism and the Reinvention of Decadence

Joseph Conrad Edited by Owen Knowles | University of Hull

Offering a freshly-researched text based on Conrad’s original documents, this edition presents a classic of early modernist fiction in a version that recovers the writer’s preferred wordings, punctuation and narrative structure. The text is supported by a rich context of ancillary documents and annotation, including an introduction, appendices and notes. • Delivers a newly edited, freshly researched text of Joseph Conrad’s most famous short story, Heart of Darkness • This version of the text for the first time recovers Conrad’s preferred wordings, punctuation and narrative structure • Provides a rich context of ancillary documents and annotation, including an introduction, appendices and notes August 2018 216 x 138 mm 280pp 2 maps 978-1-108-42889-7 Hardback c. £65.00 / c. US$89.99 978-1-108-45167-3 Paperback c. £14.99 / c. US$17.99

The Remembered Dead explores the ways poets of the First World War – and later poets writing in the memory of that war – address the difficult question of how to remember, and commemorate, those killed in conflict. It looks closely at the way poets struggled to represent death, trauma, and grief. • Offers a fresh critical approach by looking at both poetry of the First World War and later twentieth-century poetry responding to that war • Integrates discussion of canonical poets with those beyond the canon • Looks closely at loss, mourning, and commemoration as these are explored in poetry, but also puts these in the context of twentiethcentury theories of cultural memory and mourning • Integrates discussion of women and non-combatant male poets

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Vincent Sherry | Washington University, St Louis

In Modernism and the Reinvention of Decadence, Vincent Sherry reveals a new continuity in literary history. This volume encompasses a rich trajectory beginning with an exposition of the English Romantic poets and ending with a re-evaluation of major modernist writers such as Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot. • Serves as a new literary history • Connects the major work of twentieth-century modernist literature to its nineteenth-century precedents • Offers new ways of understanding major modernist authors July 2018 228 x 152 mm 330pp 978-1-107-43750-0 Paperback £17.99 / US$27.99 Also available 978-1-107-07932-8 Hardback £32.99 / US$47.99

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English literature

Ulysses, Film and Visual Culture

D. H. Lawrence in Context

Philip Sicker | Fordham University, New York

Edited by Andrew Harrison | University of Nottingham

Sicker opens a new chapter in the inter-relationship of high art and popular cultural attractions with this detailed analysis of the influence of film and visual technologies on the ultimate modernist text, Ulysses. Beyond Joyce scholars, it will appeal to those interested in the philosophy and/or science of visual perception. • Presents a new reading of Ulysses through visual culture • Traces the influence of specific films that Joyce saw and drew upon • Analyzes modern urban experience through Joyce’s version of the flaneur

This book provides up-to-date insights into the key contexts to D. H. Lawrence’s life, career and legacy. It will appeal to undergraduates, postgraduates and researchers wishing to orientate themselves in Lawrence studies or needing a succinct introduction to the latest state of knowledge about his life and work. • Provides clear accounts of important aspects of his critical reception and legacy • Contains thirty-three essay contributions from leading Lawrence scholars around the world • Breaks Lawrence’s contexts down into six key areas • Contains a selective bibliography which highlights the most influential and reliable critical writing on Lawrence

August 2018 228 x 152 mm 288pp 7 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42840-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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British Literature in Transition, 1920–1940 Futility and Anarchy Edited by Charles Ferrall | Victoria University of Wellington

Literature in Context

Exploring a range of forms of literature in the British Isles from 1920 to 1940, this book will interest undergraduate and graduate students, as well as scholars of drama, English literature, gender studies, and politics. Particular attention is paid to the literatures of Wales, Ireland, and Scotland, and to women’s and queer writing. • Sheds new light on the dynamics between literature, culture, and politics in the interwar years • Takes a transnational approach, paying particular attention to Scottish, Welsh, Irish, and anti-colonial literatures • Reads major authors such as Auden and Woolf alongside underexplored and neglected figures British Literature in Transition

December 2018 228 x 152 mm 350pp 2 b/w illus. 978-1-107-14553-5 Hardback c. £65.00 / c. US$110.00

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British Literature in Transition, 1940–1960 Postwar Edited by Gill Plain | University of St Andrews, Scotland

The writing of this period offers fresh insight into cultural reconstruction and the difficulty of writing about cataclysmic events. Through a historical approach that re-instates forgotten writers and re-evaluates well-known names, readers will see the period anew. This book will be a key resource for scholars of twentieth-century British literature. • Challenges the dominance of ‘modernism’ as a category for reading the period • Uses thematic approaches to introduce new texts and generate fresh perspectives on well-known writers • Challenges the conventional assumption that 1945 represents a break in literary and cultural practice British Literature in Transition

November 2018 228 x 152 mm 350pp 978-1-107-11901-7 Hardback c. £65.00 / c. US$110.00

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September 2018 228 x 152 mm 395pp 978-1-108-42939-9 Hardback c. £70.00 / c. US$110.00

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The Cambridge History of the Graphic Novel Edited by Jan Baetens | KU Leuven, Belgium

This collection provides the complete history of the graphic novel from its origins in the nineteenth century to its rise and startling success in the twentieth and twenty-first century. It will be a key resource for scholars and researchers of the graphic novel and popular culture. • Presents the first in-depth complete history of the graphic novel from its early foundations to its emergence and current success • Opens up relevant new research fields to date which are not yet fully understood, such as wordless graphic novels, drawn novels, beat-pop pin-up art, e-graphic novels, and novels inspired by graphic novels • Contains original and informed critical readings of major creative forces in the field, including Jules Feiffer, Robert Crumb, Art Spiegelman, Chris Ware, Marjane Satrapi, Alison Bechdel, Alan Moore and Neil Gaiman, among others July 2018 229 x 152 mm 750pp 978-1-107-17141-1 Hardback £125.00 / US$175.00

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Modernism beyond the Avant-Garde Embodying Experience Jason M. Baskin | University of Exeter

Jason M. Baskin presents a revisionist account of the transition from modernism to postmodernism through the prism of the theme of embodiment. Drawing on phenomenology and critical theory, he shows how Ezra Pound, Elizabeth Bishop, Ralph Ellison, Raymond Williams and Theodor Adorno used ideas of the body to adapt modernism to the postwar context. • Develops the concept of embodiment in order to read major works of postwar literature in a new way • Offers a historically grounded and theoretically sophisticated reading of postwar literary modernism, in particular by introducing the original concept of modernism ‘beyond the avant-garde’ • Relates literature to philosophy and politics, particularly phenomenology and critical theory October 2018 228 x 152 mm 280pp 978-1-108-42339-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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English literature

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The Cambridge Companion to David Foster Wallace

The Cambridge Companion to the Novel

Edited by Ralph Clare | Boise State University, Idaho

Edited by Eric Bulson | Claremont Graduate School, California

This Companion provides a compelling, comprehensive, and substantive introduction to the work of David Foster Wallace, one of the most important American writers of the contemporary era. The essays within, written by top scholars in the field, will appeal both to the beginning and the more sophisticated Wallace reader. • Provides a comprehensive overview of all of Wallace’s major works • Includes key thematic essays on important and/or recurring themes in Wallace’s work • Brings together some of the top scholars from two generations of Wallace scholarship

The Cambridge Companion to the Novel is for students, professors, and general readers who are looking to understand what this 2,000-year-old genre of the novel is and where it came from, how it works, and where it might be going in the digital age. • Explores the origins, development, and future of the novel • Brings readers up to date on new areas of current research, such as data and digtization’s role in shaping the future of the novel • Essays are written by leading scholars and critics on the cultural history of the novel

Cambridge Companions to Literature

Cambridge Companions to Literature

August 2018 228 x 152 mm 280pp 978-1-107-19595-0 Hardback £64.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-45177-2 Paperback £21.99 / US$29.99

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June 2018 229 x 152 mm 316pp 978-1-107-15621-0 Hardback £64.99 / US$89.99 978-1-316-60977-4 Paperback £19.99 / US$27.99

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Animals, Animality, and Literature

The Sound Sense of Poetry Peter Robinson | University of Reading

Edited by Bruce Boehrer | Florida State University

How do reader and poet work together to create meaning, and how does this allow poetry to make its mark in the world? Acclaimed poet and critic Peter Robinson uses extremely fine-grained readings of both canonical and contemporary poems to make a case for their truth-telling value in culture. • Proposes a newly integrated account of poetry’s workings in relation to the agency of both poets and readers • Brings a distinguished poet’s knowledge of poetic craft to the understanding of a reader’s enabling responsiveness in activating this art’s role in life • Provides extremely fine-grained readings of both canonical and contemporary poems that make a case for their truth-telling value in culture

This collection provides a wide-ranging survey of where the field of literary animal studies currently stands. It will be a key resource for specialists who wish to keep current on developments in the field, and non-specialists who seek to understand how these fields have shaped the relationship between human and non-human animal life. • Provides a one-volume survey of the origin and development of literary animal studies • Balances animal-studies theory with its applications across the full chronological range of English literary history • Showcases the work of nineteen internationally respected scholars in the field

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 240pp 978-1-108-42296-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

Terrorism and Literature

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The Cambridge Introduction to Satire Jonathan Greenberg | Montclair State University, New Jersey

A new history of satire that brings foundational scholarship up to date with the theoretical and historical insights of literary studies from the last three decades, this book is a substantive introduction for undergraduate and graduate students, and an essential gateway to more advanced studies. • Provides a historical overview of satire from classical times to the present • Draws on a broad selection of authors and critical issues • Makes connections across time periods, genres, media, and national traditions Cambridge Introductions to Literature

December 2018 228 x 152 mm 260pp 17 b/w illus. 978-1-107-03018-3 Hardback c. £55.00 / c. US$99.00 978-1-107-68205-4 Paperback c. £14.99 / c. US$27.99

Cambridge Critical Concepts

August 2018 229 x 152 mm 350pp 14 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42982-5 Hardback c. £65.00 / c. US$110.00

CAMBRIDGE CRITICAL CONCEPTS

Edited by Peter C. Herman | San Diego State University

Terrorism Terrorism has long been part of our world, and and Literature the lack of understanding of its history is a major global policy problem. This book explores how literature has represented terrorism from the Renaissance to the present and what it can teach us about the issues we face. • Combines history and literature to provide detailed context for understanding terrorism in literature • Contributors are drawn from a range of countries and perspectives • Brings together works from multiple genres from the Renaissance to today E DI T E D B Y PE T E R H E R M A N

Cambridge Critical Concepts

September 2018 229 x 152 mm 470pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49824-1 Hardback c. £65.00 / c. US$110.00 P P

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European and world literature / Music

European and world literature

The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Historical Performance in Music Edited by Colin Lawson | Royal College of Music, London

German Women’s Life Writing and the Holocaust Complicity and Gender in the Second World War Elisabeth Krimmer | University of California, Davis

This book examines women’s life writing from the Second World War and the Holocaust. Chapters on army auxiliaries, nurses, refugees, rape victims, and Holocaust survivors allow insights into the nature of complicity itself, the emergence of violence in civil society, and the possibility of social justice. • Sheds light on the experiences of ordinary German women during the Second World War • Furthers our understanding of the Third Reich and the Holocaust through a focus on bystanders, rather than perpetrators, and complicity • Examines various forms of German women’s life writings including memoirs, diaries, and autobiographical fiction August 2018 228 x 152 mm 284pp 978-1-108-47282-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Dictionary of Irish Biography James McGuire | University College Dublin

The Dictionary of Irish Biography is brought up to date in volumes 10 and 11, covering over six hundred prominent Irish figures who died between 2003 and 2010. Notable figures include the novelist John McGahern, politicians Charles J. Haughey and David Ervine, the footballer George Best, and the comedian Dave Allen. • Includes over 150 additional ‘missing persons’ not included in the previous nine volumes • An accurate and up-to-date resource covering all of the significant Irish-born figures who died between 2003–10 • Provides substantial and comprehensive biographical treatments of all its subjects July 2018 244 x 170 mm 1613pp 978-1-108-58790-7 2 Volume Hardback Set

c. £150.00 / c. US$210.00 R

Music The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Brass Instruments Edited by Trevor Herbert | The Open University and the Royal College of Music, London

The first of its kind, this definitive guide to all known brass musical instruments covers all periods of western art music as well as antiquity, popular music, jazz and the music of non-western cultures. It contains a vast resource of factual information for students that will be new even to musicians and music academics. • Includes contributions from thirty-two expert authors from fifteen countries • Illustrated with over one hundred photographs, drawings and diagrams • Contains new and unfamiliar material that takes advantage of the latest research on the subject November 2018 246 x 189 mm 576pp 104 b/w illus. 12 tables 94 music examples 978-1-107-18000-0 Hardback c. £95.00 / c. US$125.00 R

An accessible yet scholarly resource for students, teachers and performers, providing a vital reference tool for enabling the understanding and practice of period performance. This ground-breaking Encyclopedia covers the development of style, technique and instruments, as well as the work of performers, scholars, composers and theorists. • This is a comprehensive, up-to-date and illuminating resource for information about the theory and practice of historical musical performance • The book is a valuable scholarly reference tool for performers, teachers, students and specialists • Covers topics including style, techniques, practices and the development of instruments, and key figures including directors, performers, theorists, composers and editors August 2018 228 x 152 mm 587pp 18 b/w illus. 5 tables 50 music examples 978-1-107-10808-0 Hardback £125.00 / US$175.00 R

Opera in Postwar Venice Cultural Politics and the Avant-Garde Harriet Boyd-Bennett | University of Nottingham

Boyd-Bennett investigates the relationship of music and politics in the aftermath of war and dictatorship. Bringing locality into the study of twentieth-century music by focussing on the Italian and Venetian contexts, she shows how music culture was deeply imbedded in the most pressing social and cultural concerns of the post-war period. • Connects music and music culture directly to the most pressing social and cultural concerns of the postwar period • Provides a fresh perspective to a very well-known repertoire • Brings to light previously overlooked repertoires, and previously unseen archival material Cambridge Studies in Opera

August 2018 247 x 174 mm 272pp 8 b/w illus. 8 music examples 978-1-107-16927-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C KEY REFERENCE

Guillaume Du Fay The Life and Works Alejandro Planchart | University of California, Santa Barbara

This authoritative and comprehensive exploration of Du Fay’s music and context will appeal to students, scholars, and others interested in medieval music. The volumes provide analysis of this important composer’s entire corpus, as well as examining the church and musical history of the fifteenth century. • Provides a detailed biography of one of the most important musicians of the fifteenth century, exploring how the increasing professionalization of music enabled Du Fay to construct his own identity as ‘a composer’ • Offers an in-depth examination of all of Du Fay’s music, including a number of recently discovered works, with numerous examples • Presents the most complete description yet of the workings of the Cathedral of Cambrai, one of the major musical institutions of the fifteenth century, which will benefit scholars of both music and liturgy July 2018 247 x 174 mm 950pp 15 b/w illus. 36 tables 69 music examples 978-1-107-16615-8 2 Volume Hardback Set £160.00 / US$225.00 R

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Music

Writing Sounds in Carolingian Europe The Invention of Musical Notation Susan Rankin | University of Cambridge

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KEY REFERENCE

The Cambridge History of Medieval Music Edited by Mark Everist | University of Southampton

A comprehensive examination of the first appearance of detailed musical notations in early medieval Europe. This magisterial study by leading scholar Susan Rankin dates the first appearance of such notations much earlier than has previously been assumed, delivering a crucial new foundational model for the understanding of later western notations. • A comprehensive study of the first appearances of musical notation in early medieval Europe, much earlier than scholars had previously understood • Delivers a crucial foundational model for understanding later western musical notation • Provides a close examination of both passages of notation and individual neumes to explore how Carolingian scripts were shaped by contemporary rationalizations of musical sound

The only authoritative exploration of music in Western Europe during the medieval period for over a quarter-century, this volume is essential for students of the early history of music. Leading names investigate key figures and genres within their social, cultural and geographical contexts and trace the interactions between them. • The first comprehensive study of medieval music in Western Europe for over twenty-five years • Provides thorough coverage of liturgical and vernacular music from notation and instruments to chant, motet and the music of the troubadours • The definitive reference point for scholars of medieval music, featuring up-to-date research from world-leading authors

Cambridge Studies in Palaeography and Codicology, 15

January 2018 228 x 152 mm 1226pp 54 b/w illus. 276 music examples 978-0-521-51348-7 2 Volume Hardback Set £180.00 / US$235.00 R

August 2018 276 x 219 mm 400pp 42 b/w illus. 75 music examples 978-1-108-42140-9 Hardback c. £74.99 / c. US$120.00 C

Polyphony in Medieval Paris The Art of Composing with Plainchant Catherine A. Bradley | Universitetet i Oslo

The Cambridge History of Music

The Cambridge History of Sixteenth-Century Music Edited by Iain Fenlon | King’s College, Cambridge

This book presents new methodologies to explore medieval processes of musical and poetic creation, from plainchant and vernacular French songs to organa, motets and clausulae. It engages with questions of text-music relationships, liturgy and the development of notational technologies, exploring authorship, originality, practices of quotation and reworking. • Proposes a new view of the origins of the motet, a key genre in medieval music that is still flourishing today • Develops methodological blue-prints to analyse medieval polyphony • Cuts across established disciplinary, linguistic and generic boundaries

This volume in The Cambridge History of Music series aims to recover how people in the sixteenth century experienced music as part of their daily lives, and in doing so goes beyond traditional histories of genres, composers or individual countries to shed new light on the varied contexts of Renaissance music. • Provides an alternative to conventional ‘composers and works’ histories of music • Readers can understand the material without having to be able to read music • Offers chapters by ten different authors who are specialists in their respective fields

Music in Context

The Cambridge History of Music

August 2018 247 x 174 mm 270pp 4 b/w illus. 20 tables 61 music examples 978-1-108-41858-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C

November 2018 228 x 152 mm 542pp 36 b/w illus. 4 maps 1 table 978-0-521-19594-2 Hardback c. £120.00 / c. US$150.00 R

Women and Music in Sixteenth-Century Ferrara Laurie Stras | University of Southampton

With new information on four generations of women musicians, this book expands and alters the narratives that scholars and musicians have told about music in sixteenth-century Ferrara. A radical perspective on a familiar repertoire, it proposes a new way of thinking with consequences for music history and performance practice. • Presents a wealth of new archival evidence regarding sixteenth-century music • Examines the music of sixteenth-century Ferrara from three different perspectives: culture, theory and practice • Treats several generations of women’s biographies alongside their musical activities, and brings their stories from the periphery to the centre of the historical narrative New Perspectives in Music History and Criticism, 28

September 2018 247 x 174 mm 350pp 5 b/w illus. 2 tables 88 music examples 978-1-107-15407-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99 C

KEY REFERENCE PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

George Frideric Handel Collected Documents Volume 3: 1734–1742 Edited by Donald Burrows | The Open University, Milton Keynes

Handel’s life and career are intricately documented in a wide range of contemporary sources. This volume begins with Handel’s move to the Covent Garden theatre, during the period of his competition with the Opera of the Nobility, and ends with his season of oratorio performances in Dublin. These years saw the composition of Italian operas including Ariodante, Alcina and Serse but also of the major English works Alexander’s Feast, Saul and Messiah. • A major reference work that includes recently discovered documents as well as the established repertory • Provides complete chronological coverage of contemporary material relating to Handel’s life and music, his performers and environment, including opera performances and music publishing • Includes archive material from an extensive variety of sources on topics such as musical patronage in Rome, the circumstances of the eighteenth-century music professions and concert life in Britain November 2016 247 x 174 mm 780pp 12 b/w illus. 3 music examples 978-1-107-01955-3 Hardback £120.00 / US$180.00 R


Music / Philosophy

The Cambridge Haydn Encyclopedia Edited by Caryl Clark | University of Toronto

Synthesizing current knowledge and provides new interpretive insights into Joseph Haydn’s life, work and cultural influence, this conceptdriven Encyclopedia lends itself to integrative, interdisciplinary thinking and will be of interest to scholars, students, conductors, performers, concertgoers, and music-lovers. • Summarizes and synthesizes current Haydn research, and points directions for future scholarship • Organized around more than eighty concepts with numerous crossreferences to broaden themes and take readers on rewarding journeys of discovery • Includes seven substantial essays by leading scholars to illuminate connections between the A–Z of concepts and suggest ways to rethink familiar categories December 2018 228 x 152 mm 524pp 32 b/w illus. 1 table 23 music examples 978-1-107-12901-6 Hardback c. £120.00 / c. US$150.00 R

Delius and the Sound of Place Daniel M. Grimley | University of Oxford

This book examines the role of place in Delius’ works, challenging existing views on their complex historical and musical contexts. It will appeal to readers familiar with Delius’ music, and to those seeking a detailed guide to selected pieces, as well as those new to his work. • A richly interdisciplinary study of Delius’ life and times • Focuses on Delius’ American works, and addresses their complex historical and musical legacies • Challenges the notion of place as an easy or straightforward category, and reveals a richer and more productive relationship with music Music in Context

December 2018 247 x 174 mm 350pp 2 b/w illus. 61 music examples 978-1-108-47039-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C

Ideology in Britten’s Operas J. P. E. Harper-Scott | Royal Holloway, University of London

This thematic examination of Britten’s operas focuses on the way that ideology is presented on stage. As well as being a record of the ideological world of mid-twentieth-century Britain, these operas continue to diagnose problems in our own time. This book argues that it is timely – if uncomfortable – for current audiences to readdress his music. • A first of its kind interpretation of Britten’s operas in the light of theories of ideology • Provides comprehensive analytical, historical, and critical-theoretical interpretations of Britten’s operas • Offers a richly detailed picture of the ideological situation of Britten’s own time and its continued ramifications in the early twenty-first century Music since 1900

October 2018 247 x 174 mm 272pp 17 b/w illus. 19 music examples 978-1-108-41636-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00 C

Philosophy NEW IN PAPERBACK

The Cambridge World History of Medical Ethics Robert B. Baker | Union College, New York

The Cambridge World History of Medical Ethics, the first book of its kind, takes a global, multicultural, and interdisciplinary approach to the history of medical ethics. The book offers a chronology of major figures and texts, biographies of major figures, a comprehensive bibliography, and a history of the field itself. • The first comprehensive, in-depth, global, multicultural history of medical ethics • Takes a new fundamental approach to the history of medical ethics • Features a full bibliography and new reference materials Ethics

September 2018 280 x 216 mm 924pp 978-1-108-70876-0 Paperback c. £27.99 / c. US$41.99 Also available 978-0-521-88879-0 Hardback £194.00 / US$357.00

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From Principles to Practice Normativity and Judgement in Ethics and Politics Onora O’Neill | University of Cambridge

This collection of essays challenge claims that all inquiry must use either the empirical methods of scientific inquiry or the interpretive methods of the humanities. They argue that practical judgement is essential in all forms of inquiry, and aims to shape, rather than to describe or predict, the way things are. • Takes seriously the differences between action in the world and knowledge of the world • Challenges accounts of inquiry that presuppose ‘two cultures’ frameworks, which focus on empirical methods and interpretation, but ignore the distinctive features of reasoning about action • Presents an account of judgement that is relevant not only to expert and professional life, but to ethics and public affairs September 2018 228 x 152 mm 270pp 978-1-107-11375-6 Hardback c. £60.00 / c. US$99.00 978-1-107-53435-3 Paperback c. £21.99 / c. US$32.99

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The Skillfulness of Virtue Improving our Moral and Epistemic Lives Matt Stichter | Washington State University

This book is for those interested in virtues and moral development. It provides an account of virtues as skills that we can work on improving, based on psychological research on self-regulation and expertise. The book will be of special interest to philosophers and psychologists working in moral psychology and virtue education. • Proposes a new framework for understanding virtue as a skill, grounded in psychological research on self-regulation and expertise • Draws on self-regulation strategies and examples of deliberate practice in skill acquisition to show how we can improve our moral and epistemic virtues • Fosters interdisciplinary work on virtue as skill in moral psychology September 2018 228 x 152 mm 211pp 978-1-108-47237-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Philosophy

NEW IN PAPERBACK

Personalised Medicine, Individual Choice and the Common Good

A History of Modern Aesthetics

Edited by Britta van Beers | Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam

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Personalised medicine is often presented as a beneficial revolution, but raises problems about the ownership of genetic information, reduce individual choice, undermine resources for public health and divert attention from the common good. This book is suitable for readers interested in the development and promotion of individually-tailored medical treatments. • Features critical perspectives from prominent writers in the fields of sociology, bioethics, law and psychology • Discusses highly topical issues, such as biobanks, Big Data, the trade in organs and ‘three-parent babies’, and brings them together using the ‘We’ and ‘Me’ framework • Analyses databases and biobanks, including the UK Biobank and 100,000 Genomes Project, in terms of who owns the data and whether there is a common good in keeping them open and public Cambridge Bioethics and Law

November 2018 228 x 152 mm 250pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47391-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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NEW IN PAPERBACK

A History of Modern Aesthetics

A History of Modern Aesthetics focuses on the ideas that aesthetic experience is important because it is a form of cognition, because of its emotional impact, and because of the sheer pleasure of the free play of our mental powers triggered by works of art and nature. This second volume tells how over the course of the century philosophers in Germany, Britain, and eventually the United States struggled to return to a broader approach to the value of aesthetic experience by finding room for the emotional and playful aspects of art. • The most comprehensive history of aesthetics in more than half a century, and the first focusing on the modern period • Offers both biographical information and extensive interpretation of the best-known figures in the field but also of many now less wellknown but fascinating thinkers • Illustrates its discussion with ample quotation, often providing the first English translation of passages from important works in aesthetics in German, Latin, and French Nineteenth-century philosophy

September 2018 229 x 152 mm 486pp 978-1-108-73382-3 Paperback c. £24.99 / c. US$34.99

Volume 1: The Eighteenth Century Paul Guyer | Brown University, Rhode Island

A History of Modern Aesthetics focuses on the ideas that aesthetic experience is important because it is a form of cognition, because of its emotional impact, and because of the sheer pleasure of the free play of our mental powers triggered by works of art and nature. This first volume recounts how philosophers in Britain, France, and Germany developed these new approaches and searched for ways to combine new approaches with the cognitivism of traditional aesthetics.. • The most comprehensive history of aesthetics in more than half a century, and the first focusing on the modern period • Offers both biographical information and extensive interpretation of the best-known figures in the field but also of many now less wellknown but fascinating thinkers • Illustrates its discussion with ample quotation, often providing the first English translation of passages from important works in aesthetics in German, Latin, and French Eighteenth-century philosophy

September 2018 229 x 152 mm 590pp 978-1-108-73381-6 Paperback c. £26.99 / c. US$37.99

Volume 2: The Nineteenth Century Paul Guyer | Brown University, Rhode Island

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A History of Modern Aesthetics Volume 3: The Twentieth Century Paul Guyer | Brown University, Rhode Island

A History of Modern Aesthetics focuses on the ideas that aesthetic experience is important because it is a form of cognition, because of its emotional impact, and because of the sheer pleasure of the free play of our mental powers triggered by works of art and nature. This third volume shows how philosophers of art in Germany, Britain, and the United States continued the debate over cognitivist versus alternative approaches to aesthetic experience that was at the heart of the discipline in the previous two centuries. • The most comprehensive history of aesthetics in more than half a century, and the first focusing on the modern period • Offers both biographical information and extensive interpretation of the best-known figures in the field but also of many now less wellknown but fascinating thinkers • Illustrates its discussion with ample quotation, often providing the first English translation of passages from important works in aesthetics in German, Latin, and French Twentieth-century philosophy

September 2018 229 x 152 mm 668pp 978-1-108-73383-0 Paperback c. £28.99 / c. US$39.99

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Philosophy

NEW IN PAPERBACK

Newcomb’s Problem

A History of Modern Aesthetics

Edited by Arif Ahmed | University of Cambridge

Paul Guyer | Brown University, Rhode Island

A History of Modern Aesthetics focuses on the ideas that aesthetic experience is important because it is a form of cognition, and because of its emotional impact. The work focuses on both the best-known and lesser-known aestheticians of modern times, focusing on Britain, France, Germany and the United States from the eighteenth century through the twentieth century. • The most comprehensive history of aesthetics in more than half a century, and the first focusing on the modern period • Offers both biographical information and extensive interpretation of the best-known figures in the field but also of many now less wellknown but fascinating thinkers • Illustrates its discussion with ample quotation, often providing the first English translation of passages from important works in aesthetics in German, Latin and French History of philosophy

September 2018 229 x 152 mm 1749pp 978-1-108-46560-1 3 Volume Paperback Set Also available 978-1-107-64322-2 3 Volume Hardback Set

c. £75.00 / c. US$97.50 R £222.00 / US$384.00

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Self-Control, Decision Theory, and Rationality New Essays Edited by José Luis Bermúdez | Texas A & M University

Thinking about self-control takes us to the heart of practical decision-making, human agency, motivation, and rational choice. This interdisciplinary collection of new essays by philosophers, decision theorists, and psychologists offers state-of-the-art perspectives on the rationality of self-control and the different mechanisms for achieving it. • All the essays are newly written by a distinguished group of philosophers, psychologists, and decision theorists • The book is interdisciplinary in focus and thematically unified • Includes a comprehensive introduction by the editor December 2018 228 x 152 mm 260pp 978-1-108-42009-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Resisting Scientific Realism K. Brad Wray | Aarhus Universitet, Denmark

The book provides a balanced and up-to-date contribution to the realism/anti-realism debate in philosophy of science. It reviews the evidence for and against realism and anti-realism, including evidence from the history of science, and various logical considerations. • Includes a thorough examination of the historical evidence and logical considerations that threaten scientific realism • Presents a compelling defense of anti-realism • Provides a sustained study of the Copernican Revolution in astronomy to illustrate some of the key issues in the realism/anti-realism debate, and a study of a hitherto unnoticed revolution in early twentiethcentury chemistry December 2018 228 x 152 mm 250pp 978-1-108-41521-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

Newcomb’s problem is among the most controversial in philosophical discussion. It has a bearing on free will, on the nature and direction of causation, and on the rational psychology of voting. This book is the first collection on Newcomb’s problem to have been published since 1985. • A wide-ranging assessment of a famously intractable philosophical problem • Chapters are written by leading scholars in the field • Includes chapters discussing connections between the central problem and other topics and problems, including issues in voting theory, game theory and the metaphysical problems of causality Classic Philosophical Arguments

October 2018 247 x 174 mm 288pp 8 b/w illus. 35 tables 978-1-107-18027-7 Hardback £71.99 / US$99.99 P 978-1-316-63216-1 Paperback £21.99 / US$29.99 P

Pascal’s Wager Edited by Paul Bartha | University of British Columbia, Vancouver

This volume offers a comprehensive examination of Pascal’s Wager, including its theological framework, its place in the history of philosophy, and its importance to contemporary decision theory. This is the most complete and up-to-date collection on one of the most famous arguments in all of philosophy. • The introduction includes a guide to infinite decision theory • Chapters range over the Wager’s historical context, its continuing influence, and the objections which it has faced • Offers the first new collection of essays on Pascal’s Wager for twentyfive years Classic Philosophical Arguments

October 2018 247 x 174 mm 300pp 2 b/w illus. 65 tables 978-1-107-18143-4 Hardback c. £65.00 / c. US$110.00 P 978-1-316-63265-9 Paperback c. £24.99 / c. US$32.99 P

Capabilities in a Just Society A Theory of Navigational Agency Rutger Claassen | Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands

This book proposes a new philosophical theory of social justice, based on the idea that citizens in a just society are entitled to a set of core human capabilities. It argues that core capabilities are those that enable people to become ‘navigational agents’; that is, individuals who can navigate freely between different social practices. • Proposes a new capability theory of social justice • Suggests a new conception of autonomous agency as ‘navigational agency’ • Makes the capability approach concrete by discussing capabilities for human empowerment, subsistence and democratic participation October 2018 228 x 152 mm 288pp 978-1-108-47326-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Philosophy

TEXTBOOK

Relational Egalitarianism

Philosophy of Language

Living as Equals Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen | Aarhus Universitet, Denmark

Zoltán Gendler Szabó | Yale University, Connecticut

Many contemporary political philosophers reject the so-called distributive paradigm of justice, and believe that it should be replaced with the view that, fundamentally, justice is about social relations. This book refines and assesses this view. It proposes a novel and unique form of egalitarianism, which includes elements from both paradigms. • Provides a deeper understanding of the ideal of relating as equals than is currently available in the literature • Argues that the relational ideal and ideals of distributive justice are compatible and might even both be rooted in a deeper notion of fairness • Shows that relational equality can be valuable for quite different reasons and offers a defense of a particular view on this matter

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September 2018 228 x 152 mm 260pp 3 tables 978-1-107-15890-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Machiavelli in Tumult The Discourses on Livy and the Origins of Political Conflictualism Gabriele Pedullà | University of Rome

Machiavelli in Tumult is the first book-length study entirely devoted to reconstructing the Discourses’ idea that internal conflicts must be praised as a source of strength, its ancient roots, its influence up until and beyond the American and French Revolutions, and its relevance for contemporary political theory. • Offers an alternative grand narrative of western political thought, from Plato to Foucault • Enlarges the field traditionally researched by historians of political thought, using cultural context to better understand canonical works • Tells the history of the rise of political conflictualism in the West, and shows the great relevance of Machiavelli’s original position for contemporary philosophical debates August 2018 228 x 152 mm 284pp 7 b/w illus. 4 tables 978-1-107-17727-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Kant’s Power of Imagination Rolf-Peter Horstmann | Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

This Element is a study of how the power of imagination is, according to Kant, supposed to contribute to cognition. It is meant to be an immanent and a reconstructive endeavor, relying solely on Kant’s own resources when he tries to determine what material, faculties, and operations are necessary for cognition of objects.

Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics

November 2018 247 x 174 mm 342pp 1 b/w illus. 978-1-107-09664-6 Hardback c. £75.99 / c. US$105.00 978-1-107-48062-9 Paperback c. £24.99 / c. US$34.99

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The Gettier Problem Edited by Stephen Hetherington | University of New South Wales, Sydney

When philosophers try to understand the nature of knowledge, they have to confront the Gettier problem. This volume offers a sequence of accessible and distinctive chapters explaining the history of debate surrounding Gettier’s challenge, and where that debate should take us next. • Charts and explains the continuing philosophical challenge of the Gettier problem • Includes an impressive array of authors • Offers clear, accessible, and stimulating chapters November 2018 247 x 174 mm 256pp 2 b/w illus. 2 tables 978-1-107-17884-7 Hardback c. £65.00 / c. US$110.00 P 978-1-316-63110-2 Paperback c. £24.99 / c. US$32.99 P

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Quine, New Foundations, and the Philosophy of Set Theory Sean Morris | Metropolitan State University of Denver

This book places Quine’s set theory, New Foundations, within its general philosophical and historical context and shows its relation to his other work and its continuing relevance to philosophy. It will appeal to scholars and advanced students interested in Quine and in logic more generally. • Presents the first book-length treatment on the interplay between Quine’s technical work in logic and his general philosophy • Provides accessible accounts of the main technical results on Quine’s set theory, New Foundations • Presents New Foundations in its historical and philosophical context, and in the context of philosophy of set theory generally October 2018 228 x 152 mm 240pp 978-1-107-15250-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

Contents: Introduction; Part I. Philosophy of Semantics: 1. Frege and Tarski; 2. Compositionality; 3. Reference and quantification; 4. Tense and modality; 5. Intentionality; Part II. Philosophy of Pragmatics: 6. Austin and Grice; 7. Context and content; 8. Common ground and conversational update; 9. Implicature and figurative speech; 10. Assertion and other speech acts; Part III. Meaning as a Philosophical Problem: 11. Meaning and use; 12. Externalism and internalism; 13. Paradox and vagueness.

Classic Philosophical Arguments

Elements in the Philosophy of Immanuel Kant

May 2018 229 x 152 mm 100pp 978-1-108-46403-1 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

Aimed at both students and professionals of linguistics who seek a deeper understanding of the philosophy of language, as well as philosophers who wish to connect their debates with the practice of linguistics, this book will serve the ever increasing number of courses on philosophy of language for linguistics students. • The first philosophy of language textbook on the market to cater to both linguists and philosophers • Enables linguists and philosophers to identify topics of shared concern and areas for collaboration • Provides a comprehensive glossary of terms, void of unnecessary jargon • Includes a complimentary website of additional resources including handouts for use in class and discussion questions

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Ontological Arguments Edited by Graham Oppy | Monash University, Victoria

This volume provides a comprehensive discussion of ontological arguments, one of the main classes of arguments for the existence of God. Its chapters show clearly how these arguments emerged and developed, how we should think about them, and why they remain important today. • Includes chapters on the history of ontological arguments, including key historical figures • Presents a wide variety of forms of ontological arguments • Contains topics relevant to the assessment of ontological arguments, including conceivability and possibility, begging the question, and the nature of existence Classic Philosophical Arguments

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 273pp 978-1-107-12363-2 Hardback c. £65.00 / c. US$89.99 978-1-107-55912-7 Paperback c. £24.99 / c. US$34.99

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Philosophy

The Cambridge Companion to Medieval Ethics

Kant and his German Contemporaries

Edited by Thomas Williams | University of South Florida

Volume 2: Aesthetics, History, Politics, and Religion Edited by Daniel O. Dahlstrom | Boston University

The first volume examining the full range of medieval ethics in Christian, Islamic, and Jewish philosophy in an accessible way, exploring previously neglected topics including the importance of civil and canon law, mystical ethics, and the role of ethics in theology. It will interest students of ethics and medieval philosophy. • Explores the rich, diverse, and inventive traditions of ethics in the Middle Ages, an area of philosophy that has often been overlooked • Discusses topics and people on their own terms while taking into account the historical context in which ethical thinking developed, as well as making comparisons between the Christian, Jewish, and Islamic traditions • Covers underexplored topics such as economic and mystical ethics as well as central themes including sin, virtue, law, freedom, and happiness Cambridge Companions to Philosophy

November 2018 228 x 152 mm 350pp 978-1-107-16774-2 Hardback c. £64.99 / c. US$89.99 978-1-316-61811-0 Paperback c. £21.99 / c. US$29.99

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Spinoza’s Political Psychology

This book is for readers in Spinoza studies and the history of political thought. It advances a novel, comprehensive interpretation of Spinoza’s political writings, exploring how his analysis of psychology informs his arguments for democracy and toleration. • Advances a comprehensive and novel interpretation of Spinoza’s political works and method • Explores the psychological bases of Spinoza’s arguments for democracy and toleration • Reveals the normative significance of the affects for political life C

The Emergence of Autonomy in Kant’s Moral Philosophy

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Edited by Kate A. Moran | Brandeis University, Massachusetts

This volume brings together a distinguished group of scholars who explore the nature of freedom and spontaneity, the arguments Kant offers surrounding these concepts, and their place in Kant’s larger philosophical system. • A collection of essays on the theme of freedom and spontaneity in Kant’s theoretical and practical philosophy • Authors have a variety of interests and areas of expertise within Kant studies • Readers will find interconnections among the essays in the volume, giving them a deeper understanding of the concepts discussed September 2018 228 x 152 mm 328pp 978-1-107-12593-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

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Kant in the Sources of Metaphysics The Dialectic of Pure Reason Marcus Willaschek | Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität Frankfurt

Edited by Stefano Bacin | Università degli Studi di Milano

Kantian autonomy is one of the central concepts of contemporary moral thought. For Kant scholars, moral philosophers, and human rights theorists – and professional and advanced students – this book offers a thorough historical understanding of how and why Kant introduced the concept of autonomy. • Covers a highly significant topic of Kant scholarship and contemporary moral thought • The first essay collection exclusively on the development of Kant’s notion of autonomy • Provides close philosophical and historical analysis of this central Kantian concept October 2018 228 x 152 mm 242pp 978-1-107-18285-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 304pp 978-1-107-17816-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

Kant on Freedom and Spontaneity

The Taming of Fortune and Fear Justin Steinberg | Brooklyn College, City University of New York

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 254pp 1 b/w illus. 4 tables 978-1-107-14130-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

This book is for students and scholars of the development of philosophical perspectives on aesthetics, history, politics, and religion in eighteenth-century Germany. It concentrates on contemporaries of Immanuel Kant, the era’s leading philosopher, whose achievements have so long overshadowed those of his German contemporaries. • Situates Kant’s thought in the context of his German contemporaries • Re-examines the distinctively German inauguration of aesthetics and art history in the eighteenth century • Identifies creative departures from Kant’s thought in the areas of educational and political philosophy • Explores several pressing religious concerns of the period – from questions of pantheism and immortality to the relation of faith and reason – in light of Kant’s responses to them

In his Critique of Pure Reason, Kant criticizes traditional metaphysics and its proofs of immortality, free will and God’s existence. By contrast, this book explains Kant’s less famous but nonetheless plausible account of why rational beings ask metaphysical questions and why answers to these questions appear rationally compelling to them. • Explains Kant’s account of reason and metaphysics, and highlights its relevance for current debates in philosophy • Presents a new interpretation of the Transcendental Dialectic which appears in Kant’s key work, the Critique of Pure Reason • Provides detailed discussion of some less discussed aspects of the Critique of Pure Reason December 2018 228 x 152 mm 310pp 978-1-108-47263-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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35


Philosophy / Religion

Religion

Heidegger’s Moral Ontology James D. Reid | Metropolitan State University of Denver

James D. Reid brings Heidegger’s early philosophy into fruitful dialogue with the history of ethics, and sheds fresh light on a number of familiar topics. This lively book will appeal to all who are interested in Heidegger’s early phenomenology and in his thought more generally. • Proposes a novel account of the roots of Heidegger’s ontology • This book is the first comprehensive account of the ethical motifs embedded in Heidegger’s early thought • Brings Heidegger’s early philosophy into fruitful dialogue with the history of ethics December 2018 228 x 152 mm c.256pp 978-1-108-42218-5 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Wittgenstein in the 1930s 36

Between the Tractatus and the Investigations Edited by David G. Stern | University of Iowa

Wittgenstein’s ‘middle period’ is often seen merely as a transitional phase connecting his better-known early and later philosophies. These essays focus on both the distinctive character of his teaching and writing in the 1930s, and its pivotal importance for an understanding of his philosophy as a whole. • The first collection of essays in English on Wittgenstein in the 1930s • Written by a group of leading international experts from many different countries and from a wide range of perspectives • Represents the best new work on the topic September 2018 228 x 152 mm 280pp 978-1-108-42587-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Knowledge and Ignorance of Self in Platonic Philosophy Edited by James M. Ambury | King’s College, Pennsylvania

The only available volume of essays on self-knowledge and self-ignorance in Plato’s thought. Its essays from established and rising scholars of every interpretative school, and its bibliography, will be invaluable for scholars and students in philosophy, classics, and history of ideas. • The volume will be the only available collection of essays dedicated to this important theme • Treats a wide variety of different dialogues, and not only those traditionally associated with the question of self-knowledge • Brings together scholars from all schools of Platonic interpretation December 2018 228 x 152 mm 272pp 1 table 978-1-107-18446-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Glory and Longing Christopher Southgate | University of Exeter

The book will be of value to scholars in universities and Christian churches, and also to university students from second-year undergraduates to those at Masters level, and those training for the Christian ministry. It will be of special interest to those focused on theology as an interdisciplinary exploration. • Proposes a new way of understanding divine glory, to be associated with pain, silence and suffering • Allows the development of a three-fold hermeneutical lens – glory in creation, glory at the cross, glory at the eschaton • Uses a highly interdisciplinary approach, involving biblical studies, systematic theology, natural sciences, poetry and mysticism August 2018 228 x 152 mm 292pp 978-1-107-15369-1 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Food and Faith A Theology of Eating Second edition Norman Wirzba | Duke University, North Carolina

This second edition of the go-to book on theology and food expands key insights on the spirituality of eating, the importance of good agricultural practice, and the prospects of convivial and healthy communities. It makes clear that eating is far more than a physiological exercise. In good eating we work to create a better humanity and a fertile world. • Develops the ecological, agricultural, and cultural dimensions to eating, and shows how eating is of profound existential and spiritual significance • Describes eating as a way to heal and renew communities and the earth • A highly interdisciplinary and non-jargon treatment of food production and consumption November 2018 228 x 152 mm 288pp 978-1-108-47041-4 Hardback £71.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-45596-1 Paperback £21.99 / US$29.99

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God and Creation in the Theology of Thomas Aquinas and Karl Barth Tyler R. Wittman | Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Kentucky

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

Plato’s Three-fold City and Soul Joshua I. Weinstein | The Herzl Institute, Jerusalem

In this book, Joshua I. Weinstein explains the Republic’s theory of a tripartite soul and the place of fighting spirit within it, arguing that spirited ambition and competition play an essential role in rational agency. Ideal for scholars and advanced students of ancient political philosophy and ethics. • Unpacks and analyzes Plato’s reasons for including fighting spirit among the three parts of the soul • Offers a new account of the dialogue’s central parallel between the city and the soul, and thus of Plato’s contributions to both psychology and political analysis • Draws on wide scholarship in the sciences and humanities allowing engagement with many aspects of contemporary thought October 2018 228 x 152 mm 260pp 978-1-107-17016-2 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Theology in a Suffering World

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This book explains how Thomas Aquinas and Karl Barth help us understand God’s distinction from and relation to creation through fresh, attentive readings of their theology of God and God’s works and its philosophical entailments. It will interest readers of both figures, contemporary theology and metaphysics, and ecumenical dialogue. • Puts Aquinas and Barth into dialogue on God’s relation to creation, and how we understand God’s being and activity • Sets Barth’s doctrine of God against the background of medieval and Protestant scholastic discussions • Sets forth some of the most influential theological and metaphysical dimensions of God’s relation to creation in classical and contemporary thought November 2018 228 x 152 mm 300pp 978-1-108-47067-4 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Religion

The Providence of God A Polyphonic Approach David Fergusson | University of Edinburgh

This is a critical exploration of the theology of providence in the history of the church. Particular attention is devoted to the practical contexts of providentialism in politics, science and spirituality in the modern era. While critical of traditional formulations and uses, the volume aims to offer a chastened but constructive account. • Overcomes divisions between systematic and practical theology with its focus on lived religion • Revises traditional ideas of providence by attention to their political and pastoral significance • Develops a distributed notion of providence in relation to the three articles of Christian faith – Father, Son and Spirit Current Issues in Theology, 11

August 2018 228 x 152 mm 392pp 978-1-108-47500-6 Hardback £90.00 / US$125.00

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Part V. Judaic Christianity: 26. Judaic Christianity; 27. The letter of James; 28. The Didache; Part VI. Gnostic Christianity: 29. Gnostic Christianity; 30. The Gospel of Thomas; Part VII. Proto-Orthodox Christianity: 31. ProtoOrthodox Christianity; 32. Conflict in the church (1): pastoral epistles; 33. Conflict in the church (2): Jude and 2 Peter; 34. Conflict in the church (3): Johannine Epistles; 35. Conflict in the church (4): letters of Ignatius; 36. Conflict in the church (5): 1 Clement; 37. Relation of Christianity to Judaism (1): Hebrews; 38. Relation of Christianity to Judaism (2): Epistle of Barnabas; 39. Conflict with the Roman world (1): 1 Peter; 40. Conflict with the Roman world (2): Revelation; Appendixes: Appendix 1. Lucian on sacrifices; Appendix 2. The Essenes; Appendix 3. Jewish messianic hopes; Appendix 4. Divine humans and their births; Appendix 5. Apotheoses; Appendix 6. Miracle stories in the ancient world; Appendix 7. The Infancy Gospel of Thomas; Appendix 8. The Gospel of Peter; Appendix 9. The Didache; Appendix 10. Selections from the Gospel of Thomas; Appendix 11. Ignatius to the Smyrnaeans 1–9; Appendix 12. Selections from 1 Clement; Appendix 13. Selections from the Epistle of Barnabas; Appendix 14. Conflict with Rome. Introduction to Religion

December 2018 244 x 170 mm 640pp 65 b/w illus. 12 maps 978-1-107-17278-4 Hardback c. £100.00 / c. US$140.00 X 978-1-316-62494-4 Paperback c. £36.99 / c. US$49.99 X

Gendering War and Peace in the Gospel of Luke Caryn A. Reeder | Westmont College, California

The book explores the representation of peace and the violent destruction of war with pregnant women, nursing mothers, and their children in the Gospel of Luke in the contexts of the biblical and classical worlds. It will be of interest to New Testament and classical scholars, and scholars of war. • Examines the gendered language and imagery of war and peace in the Gospel of Luke • Develops an understanding of the definition of femininity and childhood around the violence of war in the biblical and classical worlds (’militarized femininity’ and ‘militarized childishness’) • Surveys the presence and participation of women and children in stories of war in the Roman world September 2018 228 x 152 mm 274pp 978-1-108-47139-8 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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TEXTBOOK

An Introduction to the New Testament and the Origins of Christianity Second edition Delbert Burkett | Louisiana State University

This book offers an authoritative and accessible introduction to the New Testament and other early Christian literature for anyone interested in the Bible or the origins of Christianity. Designed primarily for undergraduate courses, it provides a balanced, critical overview of the history, literature, and religious diversity of Early Christianity. • Covers all necessary basic texts, including non-canonical materials, for following a course in New Testament studies • Includes a reading guide that directs the student step by step through the primary text with explanatory comments • Identifies key terms and concepts, and uses review questions to focus attention on the central ideas of each chapter

KEY REFERENCE NEW IN PAPERBACK

The New Cambridge History of the Bible Volume 2: From 600 to 1450 Richard Marsden | University of Nottingham

This book discusses the developing identity of the Bible from late Antiquity to the Reformation. These chapters present the reception of the Scriptures in East and West; discuss specialized interpretations such as allegorized spirituality and established forms of glossing; and consider the influence on vernacular poetry, prose, drama and the visual arts. • Includes attention to biblical studies in Eastern Christian, Jewish and Islamic contexts, and will be of interest to students of all Abrahamic faiths • Has a broad scope, examining the role played by biblical accounts in the development of vernacular literatures, drama, art and spiritual traditions • Looks closely at specialized forms of interpretation, offering depth as well as breadth of interest Biblical studies – New Testament | New Cambridge History of the Bible

October 2018 229 x 152 mm 1067pp 21 b/w illus. 978-1-108-70384-0 Paperback c. £27.99 / c. US$41.99 Also available 978-0-521-86006-2 Hardback £180.00 / US$232.00

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Contents: Part I. Historical and Religious Background: 1. Introduction; 2. Jews among Greeks and Romans; 3. Basic Second Temple Judaism; 4. Varieties of Second Temple Judaism; 5. Jewish hopes for the future; 6. Hellenistic religion, philosophy, and world-view; 7. An overview of early Christian history; 8. The making of the New Testament; Part II. Jesus and the Gospels: 9. Introduction to the Gospels; 10. The synoptic problem; 11. The Gospel of Mark; 12. The Gospel of Matthew; 13. The Gospel of Luke; 14. The Gospel of John; 15. The apocryphal Jesus; 16. The quest for the historical Jesus; Part III. Acts: 17. The book of Acts; Part IV. Pauline Christianity: 18. Paul, his letters, and his churches; 19. Gentiles and the law (1): Galatians; 20. Gentiles and the law (2): Romans; 21. Problems of church life: 1 Corinthians; 22. Problems of church life: 2 Corinthians; 23. The imminent parousia: 1 and 2 Thessalonians; 24. Prison Epistles (1): Philippians and Philemon; 25. Prison Epistles (2): Colossians and Ephesians;

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37


Religion

Jesus’ Death and Heavenly Offering in Hebrews

Sufism and Early Islamic Piety Personal and Communal Dynamics Arin Shawkat Salamah-Qudsi | University of Haifa, Israel

R.B. Jamieson | Capitol Hill Baptist Church, Washington, DC

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This book is about the exposition of Christ’s atoning work in the Epistle to the Hebrews. It is for New Testament scholars, theologians, and advanced students of theology and biblical studies. The book examines Jesus’ atoning death on the cross and his self-offering in heaven, at his ascension. • Sets Hebrews’ contribution within the context of other New Testament teaching on atonement, especially Paul • Part I is structured by a taxonomy of five views on the question of when and where Jesus offers himself, offering what will be the most thorough and fine-grained analysis of the positions in this debate to date • Engages explicitly with not only Hebrews’ appropriation of Levitical sacrifice but also the Levitical texts themselves (both Hebrew and Greek), especially Levitcus 16 and Leviticus 17:11 Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series, 172

November 2018 216 x 138 mm 226pp 978-1-108-47443-6 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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State and Religion in Israel The book is intended for two main audiences: those interested in state and religion relations, and those interested in the social and legal reality in Israel. The former will also benefit from the way the philosophical model is applied to Israel, while the latter will gain a wider perspective on state and religion. • Proposes a comprehensive theory about state and religion relations, providing tools to think systematically about questions in this field • Uses a clear philosophical underpinning for its analysis • Contains a detailed case study of the arrangements in Israel which encourages sensitivity to the unique circumstances of different countries C

KEY REFERENCE

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An Introduction to Swaminarayan Hinduism Accessible and relevant to scholars, students, and the public interested in Hinduism, comparative religions, interfaith discourse, immigrants, and transnational movements. This new edition includes up-to-date information about growth, geographic expansion, leadership transitions, and the impact of Swaminarayan institutions in India and abroad. • Includes the history, developments, theology, practices, and current status of the major divisions within Swaminarayan Hinduism • Traces new research and responds to the expansion of Swaminarayan Hinduism as the most prominent form of Hinduism • Provides a valuable case study for recent developments in migration studies, the role of religion in public and political affairs, integration of new immigrants in several countries, and the impact of transnational social media Introduction to Religion

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 308pp 978-1-108-42114-0 Hardback c. £70.00 / c. US$99.99 978-1-108-43151-4 Paperback c. £23.99 / c. US$32.99

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Biblical Poetry and the Art of Close Reading

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

The Cambridge History of Judaism

Edited by J. Blake Couey | Gustavus Adolphus College, Minnesota

Volume 6: The Middle Ages: The Christian World Edited by Robert Chazan | New York University

Volume 6 examines the history of Judaism during the second half of the Middle Ages. From the smallest and weakest of the world’s Jewish centers in the year 1000, the Jewish communities of western Christendom emerged – despite considerable obstacles – as the world’s dominant Jewish center by the end of the Middle Ages. • Features essays written by acknowledged experts in the various subfields of medieval European Jewish history, assuring knowledgeable and dependable syntheses of current scholarship • The volume is usefully organized into three segments: 1) the Jewries of various geographic areas; 2) aspects of Jewish social and communal history; and 3) aspects of Jewish intellectual and spiritual history • Offers a diversity of authorial perspectives, with chapters written by authors from major centers of Jewish scholarship, such as North America and Israel, and by scholars from smaller European centers as well The Cambridge History of Judaism

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 950pp 2 maps 1 table 978-0-521-51724-9 Hardback £175.00 / US$225.00

September 2018 228 x 152 mm 324pp 978-1-108-42271-0 Hardback £75.00 / US$99.99

Third edition Raymond Brady Williams | Wabash College, Indiana

A Philosophical-Legal Inquiry Gideon Sapir | Bar-Ilan University, Israel

December 2018 228 x 152 mm 324pp 978-1-107-15082-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

Primarily addressed to academic specialists in Sufi studies, this book is useful for advanced students in Islamic studies and those who work with a wider spectrum of fields like socio-religion and psychology of religion. Specialists in classical Arabic literature will benefit from the philological analysis of the fresh sources involved. • Investigates the private lives of early Sufis in the period between the ninth and thirteenth centuries • Puts the focus on the communal practices and interrelationships and conflicts of early Sufis, and thereby emphasises that early Sufism was not exactly a quietist or a completely individual mode of piety • Exposes the dynamics between the personal spheres of the early Sufis’ family lives and the communal spheres involving their engagement in Muslim societies in general, and Sufi communities in particular

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This book offers close readings of poems across the Hebrew Bible/ Old Testament. For lovers of poetry generally, as well as for students and scholars, it applies recent developments in the study of biblical poetry and literary theory, demonstrates the value of close reading, and highlights the aesthetic quality of this poetic corpus. • Contains essays by fifteen different scholars with a variety of theoretical perspectives and approaches • Presents close readings of biblical poems and biblical poetic corpus, including Psalms, wisdom poetry, Song of Songs, prophecy, and poetry in biblical narrative • Engages current and relevant trends in literary theory September 2018 228 x 152 mm 328pp 3 tables 978-1-107-15620-3 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

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Religion

Writing and Rewriting the Story of Solomon in Ancient Israel

Scriptures and the Guidance of Language Evaluating a Religious Authority in Communicative Action Steven Smith | Millsaps College, Mississippi

Isaac Kalimi | Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz, Germany

This book explores literary analysis, historical reconstruction, historiographical methods, compositional techniques, editorial reconstruction, and archaeological investigation of the United Israelite Monarchy, and the relationship between the biblical texts within their ancient Near Eastern contexts. • Compares the ways that Solomon is portrayed in the Books of Samuel and Kings on the one hand, and in the Book of Chronicles on the other • Evaluates the significance and limitations of the textual and archaeological materials that are available for reconstructing the period of Solomon • Provides a sense of how each generation has its own historians and unique descriptions of a historical figure (in this case King Solomon) October 2018 228 x 152 mm 369pp 5 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47126-8 Hardback £90.00 / US$125.00

Keith Bodner | Crandall University, Canada

The greatest screenwriters of our age could hardly craft a better script than the Book of Kings, a riveting drama with a vast array of actors from kings and queens to farm workers and military leaders. This study attempts to help readers better understand the reason for the composition of Kings and how it might be interpreted by readers today. • Written in a user-friendly style with a conversational approach • Provides an overview and treatment of the entire narrative within 1 and 2 Kings • Engages with the best recent scholarship in the field Old Testament Theology

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Cosmological Arguments This Element discusses the structure, content, and evaluation of cosmological arguments by investigating their essential features, and positing that their traditional features of appeal to change, causation, contigency, or objective becoming in the world are not significant in their formulation. Elements in the Philosophy of Religion

June 2018 229 x 152 mm 80pp 978-1-108-45692-0 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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Miracles David Basinger | Roberts Wesleyan College, New York

This Element is a critical overview of the manner in which the concept of miracle is understood and discussed in contemporary analytic philosophy of religion. It focuses on key conceptual, epistemological, and theological issues that this definition of the miracles continue to raise. Elements in the Philosophy of Religion

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Expanding Responsibility for the Just War A Feminist Critique Rosemary Kellison | University of West Georgia

This book is of interest to feminist philosophers as well as scholars of religious ethics, ethics of war, and peace studies. It is focused on the moral problem of harms inflicted on civilians during war, including how to prevent, assign responsibility for, and repair such harms. • Focuses on one specific issue in just war reasoning: responsibility for harm to noncombatants • Brings feminist moral philosophy and peace studies into the conversation around ethics of war • Uses examples from the post-9/11 wars, including accounts from actual civilian survivors December 2018 228 x 152 mm 217pp 978-1-108-47314-9 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

October 2018 228 x 152 mm 327pp 978-1-108-47321-7 Hardback £75.00 / US$105.00

Michael Almeida | University of Texas, San Antonio

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The Theology of the Book of Kings

November 2018 216 x 138 mm 216pp 978-1-107-12402-8 Hardback c. £70.00 / c. US$99.99 978-1-107-56870-9 Paperback c. £20.99 / c. US$29.99

Offers general readers a powerful kit of ideas for thinking both appreciatively and critically about the relevance of religious scriptures and their place in our culture without being bound by the standards of one religious tradition or one style of scripturalism. • Uses the concept of guidance to develop a pragmatic view of the powers of language within which scripture plays an arguably necessary role • Uses the concept of guidance to establish a cross-culturally fair definition of scripture and to identify evaluative issues associated with the scripture premise • Examines the possibility of a multiscripturalist human future

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May 2018 229 x 152 mm 76pp 978-1-108-45746-0 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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Religious Disagreement Helen De Cruz | Oxford Brookes University

This Element examines what we can learn from religious disagreement, focusing on disagreement with possible selves and former selves, the epistemic significance of religious agreement, the problem of disagreements between religious experts, and the significance of philosophy of religion. Elements in the Philosophy of Religion

October 2018 229 x 152 mm 74pp 978-1-108-45731-6 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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Atheism and Agnosticism Graham Oppy | Monash University, Victoria

This Element is an elementary introduction to atheism and agnosticism, examining their characterisation and distinguishing them from other things with which they are conflated. It aims for advancement of understanding why some take themselves to have compelling reasons to adopt atheism or agnosticism. Elements in the Philosophy of Religion

May 2018 229 x 152 mm 70pp 978-1-108-45472-8 Paperback £15.00 / US$18.00

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39


Index

40

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D

Abraham’s Luggage.....................................16 Abrahamian, Ervand.....................................16 Adelman, Richard.........................................25 African Americans and the Pacific War, 1941–1945.................................................9 After Foucault..............................................22 After Lacan..................................................22 Ahmed, Arif..................................................33 Allard, Francis................................................2 Almeida, Michael.........................................39 Almost Citizens..............................................9 Alston, Eric...................................................20 Alston, Lee J.................................................20 Ambury, James M.........................................36 American Literature in Transition, 1930–1940...............................................21 American Literature in Transition, 1960–1970...............................................21 Animals, Animality, and Literature.................28 Antiochus and Peripatetic Ethics.....................5 Antoniou, Giorgos........................................12 Archaeology and Urban Settlement in Late Roman and Byzantine Anatolia....................2 Archaeology of the English Atlantic World, 1600 – 1700, An.........................................2 Assembling the Tropics.................................20 Atheism and Agnosticism.............................39 Athenian Democracy at War...........................7 Authors and Authorities in Ancient Philosophy.5

Cagle, Hugh.................................................20 Cambridge Companion to American Literature of the 1930s, The.......................21 Cambridge Companion to David Foster Wallace, The..............................................28 Cambridge Companion to English Melodrama, The.........................................25 Cambridge Companion to Hippocrates, The.....5 Cambridge Companion to Medieval Ethics, The.................................................35 Cambridge Companion to the Dutch Golden Age, The........................................11 Cambridge Companion to the Novel, The......28 Cambridge Companion to World Literature, The............................................22 Cambridge Edition of the Works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea, The.............23 Cambridge Encyclopedia of Brass Instruments, The........................................29 Cambridge Encyclopedia of Historical Performance in Music, The.........................29 Cambridge Haydn Encyclopedia, The.............31 Cambridge History of China, The.............14, 16 Cambridge History of Judaism, The...............38 Cambridge History of Medieval Music, The....30 Cambridge History of Sixteenth-Century Music, The.................................................30 Cambridge History of the Byzantine Empire c. 500–1492, The...........................13 Cambridge History of the Graphic Novel, The.27 Cambridge History of Travel Writing, The.......22 Cambridge Introduction to Satire, The...........28 Cambridge World History of Medical Ethics, The.................................................31 Capabilities in a Just Society.........................33 Carlson, Thomas A........................................17 Ceramics in Circumpolar Prehistory.................1 Chaffee, John W...........................................14 Chaucer’s Scribes.........................................23 Chazan, Robert............................................38 Chief Eunuch of the Ottoman Harem, The.....17 Childhood in Modern Europe........................11 Christianity in Fifteenth-Century Iraq.............17 Cicero and Roman Education..........................4 City and Society in the Low Countries, 1100–1600...............................................10 Claassen, Rutger..........................................33 Clare, Ralph.................................................28 Clark, Caryl..................................................31 Clark, Leah R..................................................3 Climate, Clothing, and Agriculture in Prehistory....................................................1 Cline, Eric H....................................................2 Coffey, Helen................................................30 Cohen, David...............................................14 Cold War Freud............................................14 Collecting Art in the Italian Renaissance Court.3 Colonizing Consent......................................15 Concise History of Mexico, A.........................14 Conrad, Joseph............................................26 Cosmological Arguments..............................39 Couey, J. Blake.............................................38 Cross, the Gospels, and the Work of Art in the Carolingian Age, The..............................3 Cultural Encounters on Byzantium’s Northern Frontier, c. AD 500–700..............10 Currier, Ashley..............................................15 Curry, H. A....................................................19

D. H. Lawrence In Context............................27 Dahlstrom, Daniel O......................................35 Das, Nandini................................................22 Das, Santanu................................................26 Davenport, Caillan..........................................6 Day-O’Connell, Sarah...................................31 De Cruz, Helen.............................................39 De Graaf, Jan................................................12 de Jonge, Casper C.........................................4 de Vogel, Miesje...........................................18 Delius and the Sound of Place......................31 Dench, Emma.................................................8 Desperate Remedies.....................................26 Development Century, The............................20 Dialectic after Plato and Aristotle....................5 Dickenson, Donna........................................32 Dictionary of Irish Biography.........................29 Difference and Disease.................................18 Dillon, John....................................................5 Dionysius of Halicarnassus and Augustan Rome..........................................................4 Dixon, Chris...................................................9 Doing Business in Cameroon........................15 Donor Portraits in Byzantine Art....................10 Downing, Lisa..............................................22 Drinkwater, John F..........................................6 Dror, Olga....................................................16 Dublin’s Great Wars......................................10

B Bacin, Stefano..............................................35 Baetens, Jan.................................................27 Baker, Robert B.............................................31 Barrow, R. J....................................................3 Bartha, Paul.................................................33 Basinger, David............................................39 Baskin, Jason M...........................................27 Bénatouïl, Thomas..........................................5 Bermúdez, José Luis.....................................33 Bettini, Maurizio.............................................6 Beyond Slavery and Abolition..........................9 Biblical Poetry and the Art of Close Reading..38 Biow, Douglas................................................3 Birth Control and American Modernity............9 Black British Migrants in Cuba......................14 Blacks of the Land........................................14 Blondé, Bruno..............................................10 Bodner, Keith................................................39 Boehrer, Bruce..............................................28 Boivin, Nicole.................................................1 Bombing the City.........................................19 Boone, Marc.................................................10 Bostock, Robert..............................................4 Bostoen, Koen..............................................15 Bou, Jean.....................................................18 Boyd-Bennett, Harriet...................................29 Bradley, Catherine A.....................................30 Breen, Bob...................................................18 Brinkman, Inge.............................................15 British Literature in Transition, 1920–1940....27 British Literature in Transition, 1940–1960....27 Bryan, Jenny...................................................5 Brylowe, Thora..............................................24 Bulson, Eric..................................................28 Burials, Migration and Identity in the Ancient Sahara and Beyond.........................1 Burkett, Delbert............................................37 Burrows, Donald...........................................30

E Elbert, Monika M..........................................21 Elton, Hugh................................................2, 6 Emergence of Autonomy in Kant’s Moral Philosophy, The..........................................35 Emergence of Public Opinion, The.................16 Emotional Politics of the Alternative Left, The.12 Empire and Political Cultures in the Roman World..............................................8 Engelmann, Lukas........................................18 Enstad, Johannes Due..................................13 Environmental Histories of the First World War...........................................................20 Erman, Sam....................................................9 Etherington, Ben..........................................22 European Literatures in Britain, 1815–1832..24 Everist, Mark................................................30 Excerpta Constantiniana and the Byzantine Appropriation of the Past, The....10 Exemplary Ethics in Ancient Rome...................6 Expanding Responsibility for the Just War.....39

F Favro, Diane...................................................3 Fenlon, Iain..................................................30 Fergusson, David..........................................37 Ferrall, Charles.............................................27 Finch, Anne..................................................23 Fitzgerald, F. Scott........................................21 Flemming, Rebecca......................................18 Food and Faith.............................................36 Foster, Robert...............................................18 Frachetti, Michael D........................................1 Franses, Rico................................................10 Freund, Bill...................................................15 Frey, Hugo....................................................27 From Caesar to Augustus (c. 49 BC–AD 14)....7 From Principles to Practice............................31


Index

G Gabay, Clive.................................................15 Gaggio, Dario...............................................12 Galen: Works on Human Nature.....................6 Gandila, Andrei............................................10 Gatrell, Simon..............................................26 Gatto, M. C....................................................1 Gender, Identity and the Body in Greek and Roman Sculpture..................................3 Gendering War and Peace in the Gospel of Luke......................................................37 Genealogy and the Politics of Representation in the High and Late Middle Ages..............................................11 George Frideric Handel.................................30 German Soldiers and the Occupation of France, 1940–1944...................................13 German Women’s Life Writing and the Holocaust..................................................29 German, Andy..............................................36 Gettier Problem, The.....................................34 Gibbs, Kevin...................................................1 Gilligan, Ian...................................................1 Giovannetti-Torres, Jorge L............................14 Globalization in Prehistory..............................1 God and Creation in the Theology of Thomas Aquinas and Karl Barth.................36 Goldwyn, Adam J..........................................23 Grayson, Richard S........................................10 Great Gatsby, The.........................................21 Greek Tragedy after the Fifth Century..............4 Greenacombe, John......................................30 Greenberg, Jonathan....................................28 Grimley, Daniel M.........................................31 Guillaume Du Fay.........................................29 Guyer, Paul.............................................32, 33

H Häberlen, Joachim C.....................................12 Hacohen, Malachi Haim................................13 Haldon, John..................................................2 Hamnett, Brian R..........................................14 Hand, Molly.................................................28 Hanley, Ryan..................................................9 Hardy, Thomas..............................................26 Harper-Scott, J. P. E.......................................31 Harriman, Benjamin........................................5 Harrison, Andrew.........................................27 Hathaway, Jane............................................17 Hayden, Brian................................................1 Heart of Darkness........................................26 Heidegger’s Moral Ontology.........................36 Helmers, Helmer J.........................................11 Herbert, Trevor.............................................29 Herman, Peter C...........................................28 Herzog, Dagmar...........................................14 Hetherington, Stephen..................................34 Heywood, Colin............................................11 Hicks, Anthony.............................................30 History of Modern Aesthetics, A..............32, 33 History of Modern Iran, A..............................16 History of South Australia, A.........................18 History of the Roman Equestrian Order, A........6 Hoffmann, David L........................................13 Holladay, Joan A...........................................11 Holland, Peter..............................................24 Holocaust in Greece, The..............................12 Holt, Mack P.................................................11 Homer...........................................................4 Homer: Iliad Book XVIII..................................4

Hopwood, Nick............................................18 Horner, David...............................................18 Horstmann, Rolf-Peter..................................34 Humans, Animals and the Craft of Slaughter in Archaeo-Historic Societies.........1 Hunter, Richard..............................................4

I Ibadi Muslims of North Africa.......................17 Ideology in Britten’s Operas..........................31 Idleness and Aesthetic Consciousness, 1815–1900...............................................25 Ierodiakonou, Katerina...................................5 Imagining Africa...........................................15 India, Empire, and First World War Culture....26 Indigenous Peoples and the Second World War...........................................................19 Institutional and Organizational Analysis.......20 Introduction to Communication, An................8 Introduction to Swaminarayan Hinduism, An.38 Introduction to the New Testament and the Origins of Christianity, An.....................37 Iran’s Troubled Modernity.............................17 Iranian Cosmopolitanism..............................17 Islam and the Culture of Modern Egypt.........16 Ismay, Penelope.............................................9

J Jacob & Esau................................................13 James, Elaine T.............................................38 James, Henry................................................25 Jamieson, R.B...............................................38 Janssen, Geert H...........................................11 Jardine, N.....................................................19 Jesus’ Death and Heavenly Offering in Hebrews....................................................38 Jordan, Peter..................................................1 Jowitt, Claire................................................23

K Kairoff, Claudia Thomas................................23 Kalimi, Isaac.................................................39 Kant and his German Contemporaries...........35 Kant in the Sources of Metaphysics...............35 Kant on Freedom and Spontaneity................35 Kant’s Power of Imagination.........................34 Karch, Brendan............................................12 Kasimis, Demetra............................................7 Kassell, Lauren.............................................18 Keeline, Thomas J............................................4 Keith, Jennifer..............................................23 Keller, Tait.....................................................20 Kellison, Rosemary.......................................39 Kelly, Thomas Forrest....................................30 Kitzinger, Beatrice E........................................3 Knappett, Carl................................................2 Knowledge and Ignorance of Self in Platonic Philosophy...................................36 Knowles, Owen............................................26 Kongo Kingdom, The....................................15 Krimmer, Elisabeth........................................29 Kristiansen, Kristian........................................2

L La Bua, Giuseppe...........................................4 Lambourn, Elizabeth A..................................16 Langlands, Rebecca........................................6 Lawson, Colin..............................................29 Learning in a Crusader City...........................11

Leggiere, Michael V.......................................19 Leidwanger, Justin..........................................2 Leo VI and the Transformation of Byzantine Christian Identity.......................11 Liapis, Vayos...................................................4 Life in an Egyptian Village in Late Antiquity.....7 Limits of Peacekeeping, The..........................18 Lindkvist, Thomas...........................................2 Linduff, Kathryn M..........................................2 Lippert-Rasmussen, Kasper...........................34 Lord, Ceren..................................................17 Love, Jr, Paul M.............................................17 Lowe, Jessica K...............................................9

M Macekura, Stephen J.....................................20 Machiavelli in Tumult....................................34 MacNamara, Trent..........................................9 Making Two Vietnams..................................16 Manela, Erez................................................20 Mapping AIDS..............................................18 Maritime Networks in the Ancient Mediterranean World...................................2 Marrs, Cody..................................................22 Marsden, Richard.........................................37 Massumi, Brian............................................28 Matter, E. Ann..............................................37 Mattingly, D. J.................................................1 Mayer, Jean-Christophe................................23 McGuire, James............................................29 McInnis, David..............................................23 McNeill, Dougal...........................................27 McNeill, J. R.................................................20 Melissus and Eleatic Monism..........................5 Memory and Agency in Ancient China.............2 Miller, Ashley................................................25 Miller, David J. D.............................................7 Miniature and the English Imagination.........24 Minogue, Sally..............................................26 Miracles.......................................................39 Mirsepassi, Ali..............................................17 Modernism and the Reinvention of Decadence................................................26 Modernism beyond the Avant-Garde.............27 Monteiro, John M.........................................14 Moore, Aaron William...................................19 Moran, Kate A..............................................35 Morris, Sean.................................................34 Moses, A. Dirk..............................................12 Mueller, Bernardo.........................................20 Mukherjee, Ankhi.........................................22 Mulrooney, Jonathan....................................24 Muñoz, Jose Maria.......................................15 Murder in the Shenandoah.............................9 Myers, Arnold...............................................29 Myrdal, Janken...............................................2

N Napoleon and the Struggle for Germany.......19 Nathaniel Hawthorne In Context..................21 Nation and Loyalty in a German-Polish Borderland................................................12 Nechtman, Tillman W....................................20 Nelson, Melissa K.........................................20 Nemesvari, Richard.......................................26 Németh, András...........................................10 Nero..............................................................6 New Cambridge History of the Bible, The......37 New Melville Studies, The.............................22 Newcomb’s Problem.....................................33

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41


Index

Newhard, James.............................................2 Ng, Diana Y....................................................3 Nilsson, Ingela.............................................23 Nonnenmacher, Tomas.................................20 Novels of Justinian, The..................................7

O O’Neill, Onora..............................................31 Ontological Arguments.................................34 Opera in Postwar Venice...............................29 Oppy, Graham........................................34, 39 Orser, Jr, Charles E..........................................2

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Palmer, Andrew............................................26 Pascal’s Wager.............................................33 Pasternack, Lawrence...................................33 Peck, Linda Levy...........................................10 Pedullà, Gabriele..........................................34 Performing Endurance....................................8 Perpetual Immigrant and the Limits of Athenian Democracy, The.............................7 Personalised Medicine, Individual Choice and the Common Good.............................32 Peterson, Willard J........................................16 Petrides, Antonis K..........................................4 Philosophy of Language...............................34 Picture-Book Professors................................23 Plain, Gill.....................................................27 Planchart, Alejandro.....................................29 Plato’s Three-fold City and Soul.....................36 Poetry, Media, and the Material Body............25 Polio across the Iron Curtain.........................18 Politicizing Sex in Contemporary Africa..........15 Politics of Wine in Early Modern France, The..11 Polyphony in Medieval Paris..........................30 Pormann, Peter E............................................5 Porter, Dahlia...............................................25 Power of Ritual in Prehistory, The....................1 Pratten, Garth..............................................18 Prayer and Performance in Early Modern English Literature.......................................24 Pretender of Pitcairn Island, The....................20 Pritchard, David M..........................................7 Providence of God, The.................................37

Q Quine, New Foundations, and the Philosophy of Set Theory............................34 Quinn, James...............................................29

R Rabb, Melinda Alliker....................................24 Rankin, Susan..............................................30 Ray, N............................................................1 Reading and Rebellion in Catholic Germany, 1770–1914...............................12 Reading the Late Byzantine Romance...........23 Reception of Cicero in the Early Roman Empire, The.................................................4 Reeder, Caryn A............................................37 Reid, James D...............................................36 Rekabtalaei, Golbarg....................................17 Relational Egalitarianism..............................34 Religious Disagreement................................39 Religious Politics in Turkey............................17 Remembered Dead, The................................26 Reproduction...............................................18 Resisting Scientific Realism...........................33

Reuse and Renovation in Roman Material Culture........................................................3 Reverberator, The..........................................25 Riedel, Meredith L. D....................................11 Riseman, Noah.............................................19 Robinson, Peter............................................28 Roman Architecture and Urbanism..................3 Roman Empire in Late Antiquity, The...............6 Romantic Art in Practice...............................24 Romanticism and Theatrical Experience.........24 Roots of Platonism, The..................................5 Rowan, Clare.................................................7 Rowan, Yorke.................................................2 Rubin, Jonathan...........................................11 Ruffini, Giovanni R..........................................7 Rutherford, R. B..............................................4

S Saglia, Diego................................................24 Salama, Mohammad....................................16 Salamah-Qudsi, Arin Shawkat.......................38 Salmon, Richard...........................................25 Sanborn, Geoffrey........................................22 Sapir, Gideon................................................38 Sarris, Peter....................................................7 Schermerhorn, Calvin.....................................8 Schmid, Martin.............................................20 Science, Form, and the Problem of Induction in British Romanticism................25 Scriptures and the Guidance of Language.....39 Seaford, Richard.............................................4 Secord, J. A...................................................19 Seetah, Krish..................................................1 Self-Control, Decision Theory, and Rationality.33 Sendziuk, Paul..............................................18 Sensen, Oliver..............................................35 Seth, Suman.................................................18 Shakespeare Survey 71.................................24 Shakespeare’s Early Readers.........................23 Shalson, Lara..................................................8 Shaping of Tuscany, The................................12 Sheffield, R. Scott.........................................19 Shepard, Jonathan.......................................13 Sherry, Vincent.............................................26 Shilling, Daniel.............................................20 Short, William Michael....................................6 Sicker, Philip.................................................27 Silk, Michael...................................................3 Simmons, Allan H.........................................26 Singer, P. N.....................................................6 Şiviloğlu, Murat R.........................................16 Skemer, Don C..............................................21 Skillfulness of Virtue, The..............................31 Smith, Steven...............................................39 Social Archaeology of the Holy Land, The........2 Socialism across the Iron Curtain..................12 Solomon, William.........................................21 Sound Sense of Poetry, The...........................28 Southgate, Christopher.................................36 Soviet Russians under Nazi Occupation.........13 Spary, E. C....................................................19 Spinoza’s Political Psychology.......................35 Stalinist Era, The...........................................13 State and Religion in Israel...........................38 Statman, Daniel............................................38 Steele, Philippa M...........................................7 Steinberg, Justin...........................................35 Sterckx, Sigrid..............................................32 Stern, David G..............................................36 Sterrett, Joseph William................................24

Sterry, M........................................................1 Stichter, Matt...............................................31 Stowell, Robin..............................................29 Stras, Laurie.................................................30 Sufism and Early Islamic Piety.......................38 Sun, Yan.........................................................2 Swetnam-Burland, Molly................................3 Szabó, Zoltán Gendler..................................34

T Tabachnick, Stephen E..................................27 Takayoshi, Ichiro...........................................21 Tassinari, Piero...............................................6 Terras, Melissa..............................................23 Terrorism and Literature................................28 Theology in a Suffering World.......................36 Theology of the Book of Kings, The...............39 Thomason, Richmond H................................34 Thomsen Vierra, Sarah..................................13 Thornberry, Elizabeth....................................15 Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal, The.....................14 Torrie, Julia S................................................13 Totani, Yuma................................................14 Trade and Civilisation.....................................2 Traditional Ecological Knowledge..................20 Tragedy, Ritual and Money in Ancient Greece..4 Travel and Drama in Early Modern England...23 Trust among Strangers....................................9 Tsouni, Georgia..............................................5 Tucker, Richard P...........................................20 Turkish Germans in the Federal Republic of Germany...............................................13 Turner, Lynn H.................................................8 Twentieth-Century South Africa....................15 Twitchett, Denis...........................................14

U Ulysses, Film and Visual Culture....................27 Under the Greenwood Tree...........................26 Unrequited Toil...............................................8

V Value of Herman Melville, The.......................22 van Beers, Britta...........................................32 Van Bruaene, Anne-Laure.............................10 van der Eijk, Philip J........................................6 Vargha, Dóra................................................18 Vasari’s Words................................................3

W Wallace, John...............................................29 Wardy, Robert................................................5 Warner, Lawrence.........................................23 Warren, James................................................5 Weinstein, Barbara.......................................14 Weinstein, Joshua I.......................................36 West, III, James L. W.....................................21 West, Richard.................................................8 Whalan, Mark..............................................21 Willaschek, Marcus......................................35 Williams, Carolyn..........................................25 Williams, Raymond Brady.............................38 Williams, Thomas..........................................35 Wirzba, Norman...........................................36 Wistreich, Richard........................................30 Wittgenstein in the 1930s............................36 Wittman, Tyler R...........................................36 Women and Music in Sixteenth-Century Ferrara......................................................30


Index

Women of Fortune.......................................10 Woodard, James...........................................14 World through Roman Eyes, The.....................6 World War One, American Literature, and the Federal State.......................................21 Worlds of Natural History.............................19 Wray, K. Brad...............................................33 Writing and Rewriting the Story of Solomon in Ancient Israel...........................39 Writing and Society in Ancient Cyprus.............7 Writing Sounds in Carolingian Europe...........30 Wyatt, David................................................21

Y Yasur-Landau, Assaf.......................................2 Yegul, Fikret...................................................3 Youngs, Tim..................................................22

43

Z Zalar, Jeffrey T...............................................12 Zimbler, Jarad...............................................22

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Notes

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Notes

Running head right

45

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