Gazelle Forthcoming February 2018
BAYLOR UNIVERSITY PRESS MONASH UNIVERSITY PUBLISHING OTAGO UNIVERSITY PRESS SUSSEX ACADEMIC PRESS UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA PRESS UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY PRESS WILFRID LAURIER UNIVERSITY PRESS
Gazelle Books
Kristyn Harman Everyone knows Australia was once a penal colony, but few realise that New Zealand prisoners were sent there. During the midnineteenth century at least 110 people were transported from New Zealand to serve time as convict labourers in the penal colony of Van Diemen’s Land (Tasmania). Even more were sentenced by colonial judges to the harsh punishment of transportation, but somehow managed to avoid being sent across the Tasman Sea. In examining the remarkable experiences of unremarkable people, this fascinating book provides insights into the lives of people like William Phelps Pickering, a self-made entrepreneur turned criminal; Margaret Reardon, a potential accomplice to murder and convicted perjurer; and Te Kumete, a Maori warrior transported as a rebel. Their stories, and others like them, reveal a complex society overseen by a governing class intent on cleansing the colony of what was considered to be a burgeoning criminal underclass. This lively book also offers insights into penal servitude in Van Diemen’s Land as revealed through the lived experiences of the men and sole woman transported from New Zealand. Whether Maori men serving time for political infractions, white-collar criminals, labourers, vagrants or the soldiers sent to fight the empire’s wars, each convict’s experiences reveal something about the way in which the British Empire sought to discipline, punish and reform those who trespassed against it. 284 pages * 155x230mm * photos * February 2018 * PB * 9781988531069 * £19.95 * Otago University Press Subject: Australasian & Pacific History Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
Matthew L Skinner This book draws readers deep inside the New Testament by providing a basic orientation to its literary contours and its ways of talking about theological matters. Designed especially for students learning to navigate the Bible as Christian Scripture, the Companion serves as an accessible, reliable, and engaging guide to each New Testament book's contents. It explores these books' capacity for informing Christian faith and life -- among ancient audiences and also within Christian communities through time. Individual chapters offer thorough overviews of each New Testament book, helping readers to consider its historical setting, cultural assumptions, literary dynamics, and theological points of view. The Companion consistently illustrates how social conditions and community identities left their marks on the particular theological rhetoric of the New Testament. Author Matthew Skinner draws on his extensive teaching experience to orient readers to theological convictions and social realities reflected in Scripture. He pays special attention to the New Testament's use of the Old Testament, the Roman Empire's influence on Christian ideas and practices, the place of women in the early church's life and teachings, the influence of Jewish apocalyptic themes on the New Testament, and ways that certain New Testament emphases have shaped basic Christian beliefs. Although they sit at the end of the New Testament's order, the last nine books in the Bible -- Hebrews through Revelation -- are hardly optional reading. This third volume of the Companion demonstrates that these books provide valuable glimpses into the lives, hopes, troubles, and worries of ancient Christian communities as they sought to make their way through a changing landscape that appeared rife with threats. None of the documents is exactly like the others; they speak in a variety of voices while drawing from a variety of traditions to express their convictions and to make their case. Taken together, the final books provide an enduring reminder of the diversity, change, vitality, and occasional struggles that left enduring impressions on churches' efforts to understand who they were, how they should live, and what they should expect for their future. 160 pages * 155x230mm * February 2018 * PB * 9781481307871 * ÂŁ25.99 * Baylor University Press Subject: Biblical Studies & Exegesis Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
Matthew L Skinner A Companion to the New Testament draws readers deep inside the New Testament by providing a basic orientation to its literary contours and its ways of talking about theological matters. Designed especially for students learning to navigate the Bible as Christian Scripture, the Companion serves as an accessible, reliable, and engaging guide to each New Testament book's contents. It explores these books' capacity for informing Christian faith and life--among ancient audiences and also within Christian communities through time. Individual chapters offer thorough overviews of each New Testament book, helping readers consider its historical setting, cultural assumptions, literary dynamics, and theological points of view. The Companion consistently illustrates how social conditions and community identities left their marks on the particular theological rhetoric of the New Testament. Author Matthew Skinner draws on his extensive teaching experience to orient readers to theological convictions and social realities reflected in Scripture. He pays special attention to the New Testament's use of the Old Testament, the Roman Empire's influence on Christian ideas and practices, the place of women in the early church's life and teachings, the influence of Jewish apocalyptic themes on the New Testament, and ways that certain New Testament emphases have shaped basic Christian beliefs. This second volume of the Companion focuses on Paul and the thirteen letters in the New Testament attributed to him. Readers learn that the letters provided specific pastoral and practical instruction to ancient Christian communities. The letters make their case by relying upon and appealing to a range of theological convictions, usually focusing on who God is, what God accomplishes through Jesus Christ, and the new existence that believers now inhabit. Studying the letters alongside one another, as a collection, allows readers to consider the ways in which Paul attempted to provide pastoral care to various congregations, as well as how Paul's widespread influence may have prompted his admirers to carry his legacy forward after his death. 316 pages * 155x230mm * February 2018 * PB * 9781481307833 * ÂŁ34.50 * Baylor University Press Subject: Biblical Studies & Exegesis Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
Heather O'Neill & Kit Dobson Acclaimed novelist Heather O’Neill structures her book around several key lessons she learned in childhood from her father. Wryly humorous and generous, she shares memories and stories that illustrate why it is good to steal things, why one should learn to play the tuba, and why one should never keep a journal, among other things. Her unusual mentors went well beyond her janitor father to include ex-bank robbers and homeless men. These eccentric teachers taught her about the circuitous alleyways of semantics and the depth of moral philosophy. O’Neill’s intimate recollections make Wisdom in Nonsense the perfect companion to her widely praised debut novel, Lullabies for Little Criminals (HarperCollins). 64 pages * February 2018 * PB * 9781772123777 * £8.50 * University of Alberta Press Subject: Biography: Literary Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
Jane L Bownas The idea of the hero originates in myths from the distant past and has been applied to many different concepts in different societies, cultures and historical time periods. As a mythical signifier the meaning of the word ‘hero’ changes according to the intentions of the user, and this study examines some of the ways in which heroic myths have been created, either to justify the actions of those in power or to produce an imaginary ideal to which the majority can aspire. The warrior heroes of Greek legend fighting for individual glory and honour have little in common with the soldiers fighting in the wars of the twentieth century, resulting in the creation of a new hero myth, that of the patriotic, dutiful and obedient soldier. As a result of wars and the emergence of new states there is a need for new myths depicting heroes who fight and if necessary die in order to defend their nation. Heroic myths are important for those seeking power and this study considers the extent to which Germanic myths played a part in the emergence of Hitler as a ‘heroic’ leader. In recent times the idea of the hero with which people most readily identify is the ‘extreme altruist’ -- someone who is ready to risk their own life to save the life of another person. The possible origins of and reasons for such behaviour are examined. All humans possess the potential to act in ways which might be considered to be heroic, even when this involves living an ordinary life with courage and endurance. 224 pages * 155x230mm * February 2018 * PB * 9781845199029 * £25.00 * Sussex Academic Press Subject: Cultural Studies Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
Afiya S Zia Are secular aims, politics, and sensibilities impossible, undesirable and impracticable for Muslims and Islamic states? Should Muslim women be exempted from feminist attempts at liberation from patriarchy and its various expressions under Islamic laws and customs? Considerable literature on the entanglements of Islam and secularism has been produced in the post-9/11 decade and a large proportion of it deals with the “Woman Question”. Many commentators critique “the secular” and “Western feminism”, and the racialising backlash that accompanied the occupation of Muslim countries during the “War on Terror” military campaign launched by the U.S. government after the September 11 attacks in 2001. Implicit in many of these critical works is the suggestion that it is Western secular feminism that is the motivating driver and permanent collaborator -- along with other feminists, secularists and human rights activists in Muslim countries -- that sustains the West’s actual and metaphorical “war on Islam and Muslims”. The book addresses this post-9/11 critical trope and its implications for women’s movements in Muslim contexts. The relevance of secular feminist activism is illustrated with reference to some of the nation-wide, working-class women’s movements that have surged throughout Pakistan under religious militancy: polio vaccinators, health workers, politicians, peasants and artists have been directly targeted, even assassinated, for their service and commitment to liberal ideals. Afiya Zia contends that Muslim women’s piety is no threat against the dominant political patriarchy, but their secular autonomy promises transformative changes for the population at large, and thereby effectively challenges Muslim male dominance. This book is essential reading for those interested in understanding the limits of Muslim women’s piety and the potential in their pursuit for secular autonomy and liberal freedoms. 224 pages * 155x230mm * February 2018 * HB * 9781845199166 * £50.00 * Sussex Academic Press Subject: Gender Studies: Women Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
Eitan Ginzberg It was not the original intention of the Spanish to harm the Hispanic-American natives. The Spanish Crown, Councils and Church considered the natives free and intelligent vassals entitled to be embraced by Christianity and by the Hispanic civil culture. However, it was the same (Spanish) monarchy’s decision to exploit the natives as taxpayers and as a reservoir of forced labour that made its rule in America exceptionally destructive. The recruitment of the natives to serve the interests of the Spanish Empire under what can only be considered near to slave conditions, compounded by systematic annihilation of their cultures and by cyclical epidemics, led to the near total eradication of the Indians. A Genocidal Encounter narrates the story of the Spanish conquest and the widespread violations against the Hispanic-American natives. The author ponders on the question why the Spanish Crown and the Church failed to apply the necessary measures to effectively protect the natives, particularly during the first years of the conquest and its aftermath as exploitation practices were gradually formed and implemented, despite a constant flow of reports emphasising the clear and present danger to the very existence of the natives. Based upon primary sources and current research on the relationship between colonialism and genocide, this book examines whether the Spanish actions were genocidal. What lies at the heart of the issue is whether the wide range of exploitative acts imply Crown and Council ministerial responsibility, or whether the destruction of a peoples resulted from unplanned but acute circumstances, making it impossible to place the blame on specific persons or institutions. 272 pages * 155x230mm * illus * February 2018 * HB * 9781845198138 * £60.00 * Sussex Academic Press Subject: Hispanic & Latino Studies Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
Joel Baetz For Canadians, the First World War was a dynamic period of literary activity. Almost every poet wrote about the war, critics made bold predictions about the legacy of the period’s poetry, and booksellers were told it was their duty to stock shelves with war poetry. Readers bought thousands of volumes of poetry. Twenty years later, by the time Canada went to war again, no one remembered any of it. Battle Lines traces the rise and disappearance of Canadian First World War poetry, and offers a striking and comprehensive account of its varied and vexing poetic gestures. As eagerly as Canadians took to the streets to express their support for the war, poets turned to their notebooks, and shared their interpretations of the global conflict, repeating and reshaping popular conceptions of, among other notions, national obligation, gendered responsibility, aesthetic power, and deathly presence. The book focuses on the poetic interpretations of the Canadian soldier. He emerges as a contentious poetic subject, a figure of battle romance, and an emblem of modernist fragmentation and fractiousness. Centring the work of five exemplary Canadian war poets (Helena Coleman, John McCrae, Robert Service, Frank Prewett, and W W E Ross), the book reveals their latent faith in collective action as well as conflicting recognition of modernist subjectivities. Battle Lines identifies the Great War as a long-overlooked period of poetic ferment, experimentation, reluctance, and challenge. 256 pages * 155x230mm * February 2018 * HB * 9781771123198 * £65.50 * Wilfrid Laurier University Press Subject: Literary Studies Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
Rebecca Varley-Winter This book begins with the question: How are literary fragments defined as such? As a critical term, ‘fragment’ is more of a startingpoint than a definition: Is part of the manuscript missing? Is it grammatically incomplete, using unfinished sentences? Is it made to look unfinished? ‘Fragment’ and ‘fragmentation’ have been used to describe damaged manuscripts; drafts; notes; subverted grammatical structures; the emergence of vers libre from formal verse; texts without linear plots; translations; quotations; and works titled ‘Fragment’ regardless of how formally complete they might appear. This book offers a phenomenological reading of modernist literary fragments, arguing that fragments create states of conflicted embodiment in which mind and body cannot cleanly separate. Drawing on the concept of aestheticism as an overstimulated body, each chapter connects fragments to experiences of physical and emotional ambiguity, exploring difficulties in speaking, writing and translating; spasms of laughter; and disrupted vision. The author introduces fragmentation as an aspect of what Julia Kristeva and Hélène Cixous term ‘écriture féminine’, and offers new readings of the texts that Stéphane Mallarmé struggled to finish, associating his fragmentation with translation and the ‘Crise’ (Crisis) of vers libre. The author then considers the fragmentary affects of humour, ranging from Henri Bergson to Mina Loy and T. S. Eliot. Urban fragmentation is explored in Hope Mirrlees’ Paris: A Poem, John Maynard Keynes’ The Economic Consequences of the Peace, Félix Fénéon’s Nouvelles en trois lignes, Apollinaire’s Zone, and Walter Benjamin’s Arcades Project. The author ultimately weighs the claim of literary fragmentation as an ethical commitment to detail, embedded in the living body, against a view of fragments as more numbed traces or disembodied remnants. 256 pages * 155x230mm * February 2018 * HB * 9781845198954 * £55.00 * Sussex Academic Press Subject: Literature: History & Criticism Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
Iris Newbold & Bruce Newbold Private James Herbert (Herb) Gibson was 26 years old when he volunteered for service in the Canadian Expeditionary Force in the First World War. Born near Perth, Ontario, and descended from Scottish settlers, Gibson enlisted against his father’s wishes because he viewed the war as justified and felt he needed to do his part. “Without fear and with a manly heart” collects his personal letters and diaries as well as those sent to him by family and friends. They reveal his beliefs, hopes, realisations, and tragedies through an account of his contribution to the war. The letters trace Gibson’s wartime service from 1916 to 1919, from his enlistment and training with the 130th (Lanark and Renfrew) Battalion to his service on the Western Front with the 75th Battalion. Gibson was wounded twice, first near Vimy during the Gas Raid of March 1917 and again more seriously during a night patrol in July 1918, the injury that ended his war. He also had to deal with tragedy on the home front from afar. Gibson’s religious beliefs significantly influenced and sustained him through his darkest hours. He felt himself a gentle man caught up “on an errand the full consequences of which we did not realise. 300 pages * 155x230mm * 20 b/w illus * February 2018 * PB * 9781771123457 * £23.50 * Wilfrid Laurier University Press Subject: Military History Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
E D Blodgett In a series of poems inspired by Gustav Mahler’s Kindertotenlieder, E.D. Blodgett searches for meaning amidst grief. In the contemplative gentleness of his words, he finds the special light children possess in their state of unknowing as they encounter the world. These sparse poems move through acceptance and resignation to the solace that exists in the word. Blodgett’s poetry will speak to readers who have experienced loss, are exploring grief, or want to find a way to connect with stillness as they meditate on the unfathomable nothingness of death. 88 pages * February 2018 * PB * 9781772123692 * £15.50 * University of Alberta Press Subject: Poetry by Individual Poets Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
Alice Major Alice Major continues her long engagement with science and math as means for finding significance in human life and in the universe. In these poems, she observes the comedy and the tragedy of this human-dominated moment on Earth. Major’s most persistent question -- “Where do we fit in the universe?” -- is made more urgent by the ecological calamity of human-driven climate change, and challenges us to find some humility in our overblown sense of our cosmic significance. These poems question human hierarchies, loyalties, and consciousness, and invite readers to join the conversation. 96 pages * February 2018 * PB * 9781772123685 * £15.50 * University of Alberta Press Subject: Poetry by Individual Poets Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
Alexander Bligh & Gadi Hitman This book analyses the changes that have taken place in the mutual relationship between the Israeli establishment and the Arab minority since the early 1990s. Changing internal political circumstances on both sides, often led by external world events, have shaped action/reaction and made relations complex. Special attention is paid to the central government's engagement from a security-based dialogue to one encompassing civil policy. 256 pages * 155x230mm * February 2018 * HB * 9781845196493 * ÂŁ65.00 * Sussex Academic Press Subject: Politics & Government Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
Silvia Dell'Orco Theoretical studies and experimental research in the fields of psychology and cognitive neurosciences have demonstrated the role of unpredictability and uncertainty in decisions that individuals make in everyday life. The process of decision-making in the real world does not correspond to any formal model, even when it occurs in “idealâ€? conditions (eg: after lengthy reflection or on the basis of available and pertinent information), but rather is conditioned by distorted representation, generated by a host of chaotic and fluctuating factors, making an optimal responses highly unlikely. Research has shown that our brain does not use normative models of reasoning, but rather a sort of evolutive rationality, an ongoing process since the beginning of the species to be adaptively more effective. In addition, subjective and inter-individual factors also act on the decision: the willingness to take on the task; its risk assessment; the courage and personality of the decision-maker; his or her decision-making styles; the fear of possible future consequences; and more. Asymmetries between models of rational choice and the concrete behaviour of people are evident also in the field of law, such as canon law -- with its demonstration of consent, and in the matrimonial institution, which may be subject to coercive influences -- as well as in other law-related areas. Expert contributors, from fields of neuroscience and psychology, examine the possible defects in the informal choice criteria -- as determined by the interface and interference of cognitive and contextual elements in the evaluation of the problem to hand and of available information -- in order to determine measurable degrees of certainty/uncertainty. 140 pages * 155x230mm * February 2018 * PB * 9781845199128 * ÂŁ22.95 * Sussex Academic Press Subject: Psychology : Law Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
Whitney Lackenbauer, Adam Lajeunesse, Frederic Lasserre & James Manicom This is the first book to address China’s ever increasing interest in the Arctic, and in Canada’s Far North in particular. It offers a holistic approach to the subject - covering resource development, shipping, scientific research, governance, and military strategy - to better understand both Chinese motivations and the potential impacts of a greater Chinese presence in the circumpolar region. The book draws on extensive research into published Chinese government documentation, secondary source analysis, business and media reports, and the existing academic literature. 240 pages * 155x230mm * 11 illus & maps * February 2018 * PB * 9781552389010 * £26.99 * University of Calgary Press Subject: Regional Studies Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
Anthony Taylor How Australians fund schooling has been a source of bitter political, social and religious division for almost two hundred years. And it remains so. The latest attempt to resolve the issue has been the Gonski Review, a 2012 report urging all jurisdictions to move towards consensus on a needs-based and socially just education system. The review almost immediately encountered forms of political obstruction that, in their class-based character, have their origins in the Menzies era. By examining the principles, the motives and the means of those who, since Menzies, have fought to develop and maintain a class-based education system at the expense of a broader view of social justice, this book explains how and why Australian education policy remains mired in political controversy. 155x230mm * February 2018 * PB * 9781925495461 * ÂŁ19.50 * Monash University Publishing Subject: Social Theory Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
Gazelle Books
Lisa Warrington & David O’Donnell This book celebrates 30 years of Pasifika theatre in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Pacific Underground, Pacific Theatre, The Laughing Samoans, The Conch, The Naked Samoans, Kila Kokonut Krew – the distinctive style and themes of Pasifika theatre have been developed by many individuals and theatre companies in New Zealand. Authors Lisa Warrington and David O’Donnell have interviewed over 30 theatre practitioners to tell the story of Pasifika theatre in Aotearoa from 1984 to 2015. This lively book showcases playwrights, directors and performers whose heritage lies in Samoa, Niue, Fiji, Tonga, Tokelau and the Cook Islands. Extracts from the interviews are threaded throughout the book, providing often entertaining insights into their history and creative practice. While the immigrant experience of living in two worlds is often seen as troubled, the authors suggest that this ‘inbetween-ness’ has been turned to advantage in Pasifika theatre to create a unique and often subversive performance phenomenon. Not only is Pasifika theatre a success story within the performing arts in New Zealand, it is also an intriguing case study of migrant theatre that has international resonance. 284 pages * 155x235mm * colour photos * February 2018 * PB * 9781988531076 * £24.00 * Otago University Press Subject: Theatre Studies Gazelle Book Services Ltd /+44(0) 1524 528500 / sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / www.gazellebookservices.co.uk
GAZELLE ACADEMIC ORDER FORM: FEBRUARY 2018 RELEASES Please send all TRADE ORDERS to: Gazelle, White Cross Mills, Hightown, LANCASTER, LA1 4XS, UK Tel: +44 (0) 1524 528500 / Email: sales@gazellebookservices.co.uk / URL: www.gazellebookservices.co.uk SALES REP BOOKSHOP NAME ADDRESS
TELEPHONE NO
FAX NUMBER
BUYER'S NAME
BUYERS SIGNATURE
ORDER REF
DATE
CLEANSING THE COLONY (PB)
9781988531069
£19.95
Otago University Press
Australasian & Pacific History
COMPANION TO THE NEW TESTAMENT: GENERAL LETTERS (PB)
9781481307871
£25.99
Baylor University Press
Biblical Studies & Exegesis
COMPANION TO THE NEW TESTAMENT: PAUL & PAULINE (PB)
9781481307833
£34.50
Baylor University Press
Biblical Studies & Exegesis
WISDOM IN NONSENSE (PB)
9781772123777
£8.50
University of Alberta Press
Biography: Literary
MYTH OF THE MODERN HERO (PB)
9781845199029
£25.00
Sussex Academic Press
Cultural Studies
FAITH & FEMINISM IN PAKISTAN (HB)
9781845199166
£50.00
Sussex Academic Press
Gender Studies: Women
DESTRUCTION OF THE INDIGENOUS PEOPLES OF HISPANO AMERICA (HB)
9781845198138
£60.00
Sussex Academic Press
Hispanic & Latino Studies
BATTLE LINES (HB)
9781771123198
£65.50
Wilfrid Laurier University
Literary Studies
READING FRAGMENTS & FRAGMENTATION IN MODERNIST LITERATURE (HB)
9781845198954
£55.00
Sussex Academic Press
Literature: History & Criticism
WITHOUT FEAR & WITH A MANLY HEART (PB)
9781771123457
£23.50
Wilfrid Laurier University
Military History
SONGS FOR DEAD CHILDREN (PB)
9781772123692
£15.50
University of Alberta Press
Poetry by Individual Poets
WELCOME TO THE ANTHROPOCENE (PB)
9781772123685
£15.50
University of Alberta Press
Poetry by Individual Poets
NATIONAL SCHISM & CIVIL INTEGRATION (HB)
9781845196493
£65.00
Sussex Academic Press
Politics & Government
DECISION-MAKING & LAW (PB)
9781845199128
£22.95
Sussex Academic Press
Psychology : Law
CHINA'S ARCTIC AMBITIONS AND WHAT THEY MEAN FOR CANADA (PB)
9781552389010
£26.99
University of Calgary Press
Regional Studies
CLASS WARS (PB)
9781925495461
£19.50
Monash University Publishing
Social Theory
FLOATING ISLANDERS (PB)
9781988531076
£24.00
Otago University Press
Theatre Studies
PRICES & PUBLICATION DATE CORRECT AT TIME OF PRINTING BUT CAN CHANGE WITHOUT PRIOR NOTIFICATION