T&f literature 2018

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ROUTLEDGE

Literature 2018 New and Forthcoming Titles

www.routledge.com/literature


Welcome

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Welcome to the 2018 Literature Catalogue. In this catalogue you will find information on our range of publishing within the field, covering the entire spectrum of literary studies – from medieval through to contemporary. We offer a broad range of text types including textbooks for students, field-defining handbooks, expert scholarly research, and much more. We welcome your feedback on our publishing programme, so please do not hesitate to get in touch – whether you want to read, write, review, adapt or buy, we want to hear from you, so please visit our website below or please contact your local sales representative for more information. www.routledge.com/literature

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Contents Children's Literature .......................................................................................................................................................... 2 Interdisciplinary Literary Studies .................................................................................................................................... 4 Literary/Critical Theory ................................................................................................................................................... 11 Literary Genres ................................................................................................................................................................. 12 Literature by Geographic Area ...................................................................................................................................... 14 Literary History ................................................................................................................................................................. 16 Literature by Period ........................................................................................................................................................ 18 Post-Colonial Studies ...................................................................................................................................................... 28 Shakespeare ..................................................................................................................................................................... 29 Women's Literature ......................................................................................................................................................... 31 Literature (Others) ........................................................................................................................................................... 33 Index ................................................................................................................................................................................... 35


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CHILDREN'S LITERATURE Dummy text to keep placeholder

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African American Children in American Political Life

Graphic Girlhoods

The Literature and Politics of the Impossible

Visualizing Education and Violence

Myisha Priest, New York University, USA Series: Children's Literature and Culture

Elizabeth Marshall Series: Children's Literature and Culture

This book reads Black childhood as represented in literature, social practice, political discourse, and action to argue that literary images of Black children, their appearance as political actors, and the construction of a radical tradition of children’s literature are related strategies addressing the limitations of articulations of black personhood. Priest compares antebellum and Civil Rights era texts to magnify the ways that figures of Black children and writings for them mark heightened states of crisis about the connection between race and freedom, working to theorize black political subjectivity and reimagine foreclosed political horizons.

From fairy tales like "Little Red Riding Hood" to picture books, such as Birmingham, 1963 towomen’s graphic memoirs like One Hundred Demons, this study stakes a claim for paying attention to what texts for and about the girl have been saying about schooling beyond their official presence in educational curricula. Calling upon a dynamic set of graphic texts of girlhood, Elizabeth Marshall identifies the locations, cultural practices, and representational strategies through which the schoolgirl experiences real and metaphorical violence.

Routledge Market: Children's Literature / African American Studies August 2018: 229 x 152: 256pp Hb: 978-1-138-19176-1: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-64029-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138191761

Routledge Market: Literature January 2018: 229 x 152: 144pp Hb: 978-1-138-09270-9: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-10735-6 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138092709

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Children, Childhood, and Musical Theater

Terror and Counter-Terror in Contemporary British Children’s Literature

James Leve and Donelle Ruwe Series: Studies in Childhood, 1700 to the Present This volume examines the ways in which successful children's musicals tap into adult nostalgia for childhood while appealing to the needs and consumer potential of the child. The contributors take up a wide range of musicals, including productions inspired by the works of children's authors such as Roald Dahl, L. Frank Baum, and Dr. Seuss; created by Rodgers and Hammerstein, Lionel Bart, and other leading lights of musical theater; or conceived for a cast made up entirely of children. Divided into two parts, the collection begins by examining musicals that construct childhood and propagate normative attitudes regarding what childhood is or should be.

Blanka Grzegorczyk Series: Children's Literature and Culture Terror and Counter-Terror in Contemporary British Children’s Literature is an investigation of children’s fiction’s capacity to illuminate the limits in Western responses to the era of terror, this book reads contemporary British children’s literature in the context of postcolonial and terrorism studies. It draws attention to the contemporary children’s novel as a socially and politically engaged form that offers powerful fictional interventions into the post-9/11 landscape.

Routledge Market: Literature December 2017: 234x156: 288pp Hb: 978-1-472-47533-6: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472475336

Routledge Market: Literature June 2018: 229 x 152: 192pp Hb: 978-1-138-50174-4: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-14454-2 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138501744

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Creative Writing in Schools

The Aesthetics of Children's Poetry

History, Poetry, Writers and Children

A Study of Children's Verse in English

Mick Gowar, Anglia Ruskin University, UK Series: Children's Literature and Culture

Edited by Katherine Wakely-Mulroney and Louise Joy Series: Studies in Childhood, 1700 to the Present

Focusing on history, language, the child-as-writer, and new media, this book visits changing approaches to creativity in the classroom and the teaching of creative writing in schools. It places the teaching of creative writing within the context of the history of ideas, tracing the idea that pupils should be engaged creatively when learning to write, from the teaching of classical rhetoric in Tudor grammar schools, through the philosophies of Comenius and Pestalozzi, to the ‘progressive’ educational theories of Montessori and Dewey. Gowar considers both ways in which institutions construct and constrain childhood creativity, and how children respond and fashion their own sense of creativity.

Focusing on the literary, aesthetic, theoretical, and philosophical dimensions of children's poetry from the eighteenth century to the present, this collection encompasses central figures like Watts, Carroll, Rossetti, Milne, and Duffy, reasserting the literary significance of landmark but often marginalized authors from the past three centuries. The Aesthetics of Children's Poetry is a cogent reminder of the enduring association between poetry as a genre and childhood as a developmental stage.

Routledge Market: Children's Literature April 2018: 229 x 152: 228pp Hb: 978-0-415-82303-6: £105.00 eBook: 978-0-203-49431-8 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415823036

Routledge Market: Literature November 2017: 234x156: 264pp Hb: 978-1-472-43831-7: £95.00 eBook: 978-1-315-61226-3 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472438317

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The Fairy Tale World

Transdisciplinary Perspectives on Childhood in Contemporary Britain

Edited by Andrew Teverson, Kingston University, UK Series: Routledge Worlds Recent critical attention has transformed the fairy tale genre, away from the romantic notion of timeless tales of good and evil, to culturally astute narratives reflecting the historical and material circumstances of the societies in which they are produced. The 40 new essays in this volume will offer a comprehensive picture of the ‘critical turn’ in fairy tale studies whilst exploring a range of newly emerging directions in fairy tale criticism. Taking a very global perspective, The Fairy Tale World will broaden the international, cultural and critical scope of fairy tale studies, looking at issues such as colonialism, feminism, disability, sexuality, the environment and class. Routledge Market: Literature August 2018 Hb: 978-1-138-21757-7: £165.00 eBook: 978-1-315-10840-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138217577

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The Routledge Companion to Picturebooks Edited by Bettina Kümmerling-Meibauer, University of Tübingen, Germany Series: Routledge Literature Companions

Literature, Media and Society Edited by Sandra Dinter, Bielefeld University, Germany and Ralf Schneider, Bielefeld University, Germany Series: Studies in Childhood, 1700 to the Present th

st

Focusing on the late 20 and the early 21 centuries, this collection assembles contributions concerned with current political, social, and cultural dimensions of childhood in the UK. Chapters address a broad spectrum of contemporary childhood issues, including debates on child protection, school dress codes, the media, parenting strategies, the representation and construction of children in audiovisual media, and literary awards for children’s fiction. Joining perspectives from various disciplines, including art history, education, law, film and TV studies, sociology, and literary studies, this volume endorses a transdisciplinary and meta-theoretical approach to the study of childhood. Routledge Market: Literature November 2017: 229 x 152: 250pp Hb: 978-1-138-23210-5: £115.00 eBook: 978-1-315-31337-5 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138232105

Containing over 50 essays by leading and new scholars, this Companion is the ultimate guide to picturebooks. It contains a detailed introduction by the editor, surveying the history and development of the field and emphasising the international and cultural diversity of picturebooks. Divided into 5 key parts the book covers: concepts – from within picturebooks, but also applied from literary theory; genres – from baby books through to adolescents; interfaces – their relations to other forms such as comics and visual media; domains and theoretical approaches; and adaptations and media. It also contains an extensive bibliography, glossary and a timeline of key picturebooks and milestones. Routledge Market: Literature December 2017: 246x174: 526pp Hb: 978-1-138-85318-8: £175.00 eBook: 978-1-315-72298-6 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138853188

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The Victorian Era in Twenty-First Century Children’s and Adolescent Literature and Culture Edited by Sonya Sawyer Fritz and Sara K. Day Series: Children's Literature and Culture Victorian literature for audiences of all ages provides a broad foundation upon which to explore complex and evolving ideas about young people. In turn, this collection argues, contemporary works for young people that draw on Victorian literature and culture ultimately reflect our own disruptions and upheavals, particularly as they relate to child and adolescent readers and our experiences of them. The essays therein suggest that we struggle now, as the Victorians did then, to assert a cohesive understanding of young readers, and that this lack of cohesion is a result of or a parallel to the disruptions taking place on a larger (even global) scale. Routledge Market: Literature January 2018: 229 x 152: 264pp Hb: 978-1-138-55120-6: £115.00 eBook: 978-1-315-14752-9 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138551206

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Animal Automata and Living Machines in Literature and Philosophy

Contemporary Narratives of Dementia

Robots, Replicants, and Companion Species

Sarah Falcus, University of Huddersfield, UK and Katsura Sako, Keio University, Japan Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature

Mark Paterson, University of Pittsburgh, USA Series: Perspectives on the Non-Human in Literature and Culture This book offers a protohistory of human-machine relations in literature and philosophy focused on automata, robots, and animated nonhuman objects. Chapters focus on representations of interactions between humans and machines at key historical stages in philosophy or literature, and through contemporary film and videogames, cumulatively grounding more complex behavioral ecologies of hybrids of machine and organism, that is, bio-social-technical apparatuses that encompass human and nonhuman robots, replicants, and automata. This interdisciplinary book will appeal to scholars of Animal Studies, Medical Humanities, Science and Technology Studies, Posthumanities, and Media Studies. Routledge Market: Literature/ Animal Studies July 2018: 229 x 152: 228pp Hb: 978-1-138-20485-0: £85.00 eBook: 978-1-315-46741-2 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138204850

Ethics, Ageing, Politics

This book examines narratives of dementia in contemporary literary texts. As part of the increasing visibility of dementia in social and cultural life, these narratives pose ethical, aesthetic, and political questions about subjectivity, agency, and care that help interrogate the cultural discourse of dementia. From auto/biographies and mystery fiction, to children’s books and comic books, the book examines texts from Japan, North American, and Britain. Building on the interdisciplinary tradition in humanistic gerontology, it brings together theoretical perspectives in the studies of ageing and the medical humanities with approaches developed in literary studies and feminist ethics. Routledge Market: Literature / Ageing Studies February 2018: 229 x 152: 228pp Hb: 978-1-138-67065-5: £85.00 eBook: 978-1-315-61753-4 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138670655

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Beards and Masculinity in American Literature

Cross-Border Crime in Contemporary Detective Fiction

Peter Ferry, University of Cordoba, Spain Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature Beards and Masculinity in American Literature presents the social, historical, gender, and political power of facial hair in the representation of masculinities in American prose and poetry. Employing cutting-edge theories from the fields of Gender Studies, Masculinity Studies, and Queer Studies, author Peter Ferry unlocks the sociological symbolism of the growth, wearing, or indeed shaving of American facial hair at key points in the American literary tradition. Such an approach identifies the beard, in all its stylizations, as a device for revealing and reflecting upon the issues that define the performance of American masculinity in American writing. Routledge Market: Literature March 2018: 229 x 152: 216pp Hb: 978-1-138-09376-8: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-10641-0 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138093768

Bodies on the Line Manina Jones, University of Western Ontario, Canada Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature Via border studies and popular detective fiction, this book visits representations of cross-border crime in fiction set in North American and European borderlands. Recent crime novels, TV series, and films attest to anxieties, conflicts, and desires around the permeability and security of bodies and borders. To understand how borders are culturally navigated, Jones considers plots that visit issues of morality, justice, and legality, and perform a discursive "policing" of territories and bordered identities. This study engages literary analysis, popular culture studies, border studies, genre studies, and transnational cultural analysis to ask how fiction shapes our understanding of borders. Routledge Market: Literature/Border Studies February 2018: 229 x 152: 228pp Hb: 978-1-138-83996-0: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-73311-1 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138839960

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Brexit and Literature

Elizabeth Tanfield Cary’s History of Edward II

Critical and Cultural Responses

A Critical Edition

Edited by Robert Eaglestone

Edited by Jesse G. Swan Series: The Early Modern Englishwoman, 1500-1750: Contemporary Editions

Brexit is not simply an economic or administrative event: it is cultural one, too. And this book sheds light for the student and researcher on this crucial cultural aspect of Brexit by drawing on leading contemporary literary scholarship. Implicit in the very title of the discipline, ‘English’, is a concern for culture and national identity, and from the nineteenth century to the present day, English has always addressed or interrogated ideas of nationalism, identity and the wider political processes. The book engages openly and unapologetically with the political and social realities of Brexit and is a fascinating and enlightening read. Routledge Market: Literature March 2018: 198x129: 230pp Hb: 978-0-815-37668-2: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-815-37669-9: £19.99 eBook: 978-1-351-20319-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815376682

The full texts of both 1680 editions of Elizabeth Cary's History of Edward II are here reproduced completely, along with an extensive introduction including biographical, cultural, and literary commentary on Elizabeth Cary, and also background on the debate surrounding the texts' authorship. This volume will be of interest to literary scholars working on Early Modern women as well as to historians and queer theorists, both of whom have made Edward II an important intellectual site in the last generation of scholarship. Routledge Market: Literature & Gender Studies/Women's History December 2017: 234x156: 240pp Hb: 978-0-754-63028-9: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780754630289

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Fantasy

Literature and Emotion

Lucie Armitt, University of Lincoln, UK Series edited by John Drakakis Series: The New Critical Idiom

Patrick Colm Hogan, University of Connecticut, USA Series edited by Guillermina De Ferrari Series: Literature and Contemporary Thought

Fantasy provides an invaluable and accessible guide to the study of this fascinating field. Covering literature, film, television and visual art and featuring a historical overview from Aesop’s Fables to Pan’s Labyrinth, it takes the reader through the key landmark moments in the development of fantasy criticism. This comprehensive guide examines this thriving genre and the important role fantasy plays in our understanding of ‘the real’, from childhood onwards. Written in a clear, engaging style and featuring an extensive glossary of terms, this is the essential introduction to Fantasy Literature.

Literature and Emotion not only provides a defining overview of the field but also engages with emerging trends. Answering key questions such as ‘What is Emotion?’ and ‘Why Emotion and Literature Today?’ Patrick C. Hogan presents a clear and accessible introduction to this exciting topic. Readers should come away from the book with a systematic understanding of recent research on and theorization of emotion, knowledge of the way affective science has impacted literary study, and a sense of how to apply that understanding and knowledge to literary works.

Routledge Market: Literature December 2018: 198x129: 192pp Hb: 978-1-138-67691-6: £70.00 Pb: 978-1-138-67702-9: £15.99 eBook: 978-1-315-55982-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138676916

Routledge Market: Literature December 2017: 216x138: 210pp Hb: 978-1-138-18520-3: £95.00 Pb: 978-1-138-18521-0: £24.99 eBook: 978-1-315-64463-9 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138185210

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TEXTBOOK • READER

From Mind to Text

Literature and Food Studies

Continuities and Breaks Between Cognitive, Aesthetic and Textualist Approaches to Literature Bartosz Stopel Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature From Mind to Text: Continuities in Cognitive Science, Aesthetics, and Literary Theory explores the historical context of theory formation and of its contemporary status, including an overview of debates about theory’s role in literary studies provided both by representatives of theory itself, as well as by those who distance themselves from it.

Amy L. Tigner and Allison Carruth Series edited by Guillermina De Ferrari Series: Literature and Contemporary Thought Literature and Food Studies provides a comparative literary history of the politics of food from the early modern through to the contemporary periods. The book explores how literature has contributed to discourses around pastoralism, agribusiness, taste, foodways, food security and food justice and how these feed back into literature. Tracing their literary enquiries through colonialism, industrialization and globalization, the authors explore primary materials as diverse as John Milton’s Paradise Lost, Ruth Ozeki’s All Over Creation, Hannah Wooley’s seventeenth-century "receipt books" and Vandana Shiba’s recent polemics on genetically modified food.

Routledge Market: Literature November 2017: 229 x 152: 220pp Hb: 978-1-138-55117-6: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-14750-5 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138551176

Routledge Market: Literature / Food Studies November 2017: 216x138: 186pp Hb: 978-0-415-64120-3: £95.00 Pb: 978-0-415-64121-0: £24.99 eBook: 978-1-315-72657-1 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415641210

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Literary Geography

Literature and Social Media

Sheila Hones, University of Tokyo, Japan Series: The New Critical Idiom

Bronwen Thomas Series: Literature and Contemporary Thought

A useful introduction to the field, this book makes work in cultural geography accessible to those working in literary studies. Providing an introductory overview of cultural geography as a subfield in human geography, it introduces literary geography and discusses its connections with spatial theory, literary studies and the humanities. Hones incorporates a wealth of examples of work on literature, space and place from geography and literary studies. Accessible and clear, this comprehensive overview is the essential guide for those interested in literary genres such as travel writing and postcolonial fiction.

Reading social media both in relation to literature, but also as a literary form in its own right, this lively guide demonstrates that social media platforms have produced their own unique and distinctive forms of creative expression. Bronwyn Thomas takes a unique approach examining how authors interact with readers, but also how social media is used to create an ongoing collaborative discourse. This 360˚ approach to the study of contemporary literary practices, cultures and communities will provide a timely account of the state of art, while also exploring the implications for traditional literary forms and practices and interrogating the rhetoric that so often accompanies discussion of the ‘new’ in this context.

Routledge Market: Literature / Geography August 2018: 198x129: 192pp Hb: 978-1-138-01324-7: £80.00 Pb: 978-1-138-01334-6: £15.99 eBook: 978-1-315-77827-3 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138013247

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Routledge Market: Literature September 2018: 216x138: 224pp Hb: 978-0-415-78903-5: £85.00 Pb: 978-0-415-78909-7: £22.99 eBook: 978-1-315-20702-5 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415789035

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Literature, Science and Religion in Constantijn Huygens’ Ooghentroost

Male Adolescence in Mid-Victorian Fiction

Lise Gosseye Series: Literary and Scientific Cultures of Early Modernity

Alice Crossley Series: The Nineteenth Century Series

Using a canonical work of Dutch literature, Ooghentroost (Consolation for the eyes), as a focal point, this books examine the development of literature as a specific discursive domain during the early modern period. Through her analysis of the work, author Lise Gosseye traces how literature begins to be set apart from the scientific and religious domains in early modern discourse and how this development marks the rise of modernity.

Focusing on works by George Meredith, W. M. Thackeray, and Anthony Trollope, Alice Crossley expounds on the emergence of adolescence in the mid-Victorian period as a distinct category of identity and form of experience. She argues that male adolescence provides Thackeray, Trollope, and Meredith with opportunities for self-reflection and social criticism while also working as a paradigm for narrative and imaginative inquiry about motivation, egotism, emotional and physical relationships, and the possibilities of self-creation.

Routledge Market: Literature December 2017: 234x156: 200pp Hb: 978-1-409-45606-3: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409456063

George Meredith, W. M. Thackeray, and Anthony Trollope

Routledge Market: Literature April 2018: 234x156: 224pp Hb: 978-1-472-44557-5: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472445575

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Living Legacies

Mediating Literary Borders: Asian Australian Writing

Edited by Laura Dubek

Edited by Janet Wilson, University of Northampton, UK and Chandani Lokuge, Monash University, Australia

In this timely and dynamic collection of essays, Laura Dubek brings together a diverse group of scholars to explore the literary response to the most significant social movement of the twentieth century. Covering a wide range of genres and offering provocative readings of both familiar and lesser known texts, Living Legacies demonstrates how literature can be used not only to challenge the master narrative of the civil rights movement, but also to inform and inspire the next generation of freedom fighters.

Asian Australian literature is examined in this book as an essential and integral part of Australian mainstream and world literature that is effectively reshaping and redefining the literature, politics and culture of contemporary Australia and the world. This book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Postcolonial Writing.

Literary Responses to the Civil Rights Movement

Routledge Market: Literature April 2018: 254 x 178: 192pp Hb: 978-1-138-09397-3: £110.00 Pb: 978-1-138-09400-0: £29.99 eBook: 978-1-315-10631-1 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138093973

Routledge Market: Asian Australian Literature January 2018: 246x174: 116pp Hb: 978-1-138-57081-8: £105.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138570818

2nd Edition • NEW EDITION

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Love's Labor

Mobility and the Humanities

Essays on Women, Equality and Dependency Eva Feder Kittay Where society is viewed as an association of equal and autonomous persons, the work of caring for dependents figure neither in political theory nor in social policy. While some women have made many gains, equality continues to elude many others, as in large measure, social institutions fail to take into account the dependency of childhood, illness, disability and, frail old age and fail to adequately support those who care for dependents. Eva Feder Kittay explores the significance of dependency work by analyzing John Rawls' influential liberal theory, and two examples of public policy--welfare reform and family leave--to show how theory and policy fail women when they miss the centrality of dependency to issues of justice. This second edition has new material on migrant care workers, and key changes in welfare reform. Routledge July 2018: 234x156 Hb: 978-1-138-08991-4: £110.00 Pb: 978-1-138-08992-1: £27.99 eBook: 978-1-315-10892-6 Prev. Ed Hb: 978-0-415-90412-4 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138089914

Edited by Peter Merriman, Aberystwyth University, UK and Lynne Pearce, Lancaster University, UK This book charts the increasing influence that the mobilities turn is having on the arts and humanities, tracing the importance of questions and feelings of movement to scholars and arts practitioners in fields such as literary studies, historical geography, history, poetry and film. This book was first published as a special issue of Mobilities.

Routledge Market: Humanities / Mobilities January 2018: 246x174: 144pp Hb: 978-0-815-37745-0: £115.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815377450

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Orality

Race Matters, Animal Matters

Tom Wright Series: The New Critical Idiom

Fugitive Humanism in African America, 1838-1934 Lindgren Johnson, Virginia Union University, USA Series: Perspectives on the Non-Human in Literature and Culture

This book offers a comprehensive and accesible guide to orality and orature and will introduce oral literature and orature asterms of increasing currency, and allow readers to trace the development of ideas about speech form the Classical period to the Twenty-First Century. The book will also provide a survey of some of the ways in which speech-making and orality have been central to various global literatures, including indigenous non-written cultures, and end by considering how contemporary understandings of live speech have been transformed in a digital age in which videos of oratory are only a click away. Routledge July 2018 Hb: 978-1-138-29052-5: £70.00 Pb: 978-1-138-29053-2: £15.99 eBook: 978-1-315-26615-2 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138290525

This book challenges the grand narrative of African American studies: that African Americans rejected racist associations of blackness and animality through a disassociation from animality. Taking an animal studies approach to texts written by Frederick Douglass, Charles Chesnutt, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, and James Weldon Johnson, among others, Johnson argues instead that this literature, at pivotal moments, reconsiders and recuperates discourses of animality (and often animals themselves) weaponized against African Americans, thus undermining the binaries that produced racial—and animal—injustice. Routledge Market: Literature November 2017: 229 x 152: 202pp Hb: 978-1-138-95454-0: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-66688-4 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138954540

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Privatised Motherhood Confession and Anxiety in Neoliberal Times

Routledge Companion to Pakistani Literature in English

Ruth Cain Series: Routledge Studies in Contemporary Literature

Edited by Aroosa Kanwal and Saiyma Aslam Series: Routledge Literature Companions

This book takes an interdisciplinary approach to a series of texts that are concerned with maternity; primarily novels and non-fiction books written by women from the 2000s onwards. It also utilizes insights from gender studies, psychoanalytic thought, psychosocial studies and literary and cultural analysis to set out a new paradigm for maternal expression within neoliberal capitalism. Students and academics with interests in contemporary fiction, gender studies, sociology and motherhood specifically will find this an important point of reference.

Pakistani Literature in English has always had a rich heritage, but there has been a recent blossoming of the field, with not just an increase in the number of publications, but many of these winning awards and critical acclaim. Pakistani Literature deals with key issues for global society today, ranging from terrorism, religious extremism, fundamentalism, corruption and intolerance to matters of love, hate, loss, belongingness and identity conflicts – it is bold, brave, and relevant. This Companion brings together many of the top thinkers on the subject and forms a theoretical, comprehensive and critically astute overview of the history and future of Pakistani Literature.

Routledge Market: Literature October 2018: 229 x 152: 208pp Hb: 978-1-138-77738-5: £90.00 eBook: 978-1-315-77267-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138777385

Routledge July 2018: 246x174 Hb: 978-1-138-74552-0: £165.00 eBook: 978-1-315-18061-8 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138745520

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Race

Satire Martin Orkin, University of Haifa, Israel and Alexa Joubin, George Washington University Series edited by John Drakakis Series: The New Critical Idiom

New Critical Idiom: Race offers a comprehensive and compelling introduction to the study of the idiom and charts significant contemporary attempts to go beyond the limits posed by the terms ‘race’ and ‘racism’. Its breadth of coverage, both geographically and temporally, provides readers with an expansive, global understanding of the term from the classical period onwards. Topic covered include: Otherness; Race and Social Theory; Identity, Ethnicity and Immigration Critical Race Theory. This clear and engaging study presents readers with a thought provoking guide, essential for students of Literature, Culture and Race. Routledge Market: Literature and Cultural Studies September 2018: 198x129: 192pp Hb: 978-1-138-90468-2: £70.00 Pb: 978-1-138-90469-9: £15.99 eBook: 978-1-315-69623-2 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138904682

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John T. Gilmore, University of Warwick, UK Series: The New Critical Idiom Combining thematic, theoretical and historical approaches, John T. Gilmore introduces and investigates the tradition of satire from classical models through to the present day.

Routledge Market: Literary Theory and Cultural Studies November 2017: 198x129: 206pp Hb: 978-0-415-48081-9: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-48082-6: £15.99 eBook: 978-0-203-38342-1 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415480826

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Satire in the Elizabethan Era

The Ashgate Research Companion to Anglo-Italian Renaissance Literature and Culture

An Activistic Art William Jones Series: Routledge Studies in Renaissance Literature and Culture This is an immensely valuable study of an important genre of Early Modern literature, but also an inspiring call to students and scholars to embrace a historically and culturally "activist" interpretation of satiric art on a global scale, in a truly interdisciplinary and intercultural way.

Michele Marrapodi This Research Companion provides an authoritative and wide-ranging treatment of the multifaceted ways in which Italy's material world and its iconology is represented, appropriated, and exploited in the literary and cultural domain of early modern England. Written by a team of international scholars and experts in the field, the chapters are grouped into two large areas of influence and intertextuality, seen from the English perspective. Routledge Market: Literature April 2018: 500pp Hb: 978-1-472-41073-3: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472410733

Routledge Market: Literature December 2017: 229 x 152: 168pp Hb: 978-1-138-71022-1: £115.00 eBook: 978-1-351-18108-2 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138710221

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Starring Charles Dickens

The Ashgate Research Companion to Romantic Women Writers

Multi-Media 'Boz' and the Culture of Celebrity Joss Marsh

Ann R Hawkins and Maura Ives

Joss Marsh's stirring book traces the international phenomenon that is cinema's Dickens obsession, from its origins in Dickens's celebrity, through Dickens impact on the pioneers, first masters, and later innovators of the cinema and his enmeshment in the complex of technologies and cultural formations that made up the world of late-Victorian fantasy from the photograph to the magic lantern, from celebrity to time travel.

Recovery efforts in the last 25 years have dramatically expanded our understanding of the numbers of women in the Romantic book trade. Responding to the need for a guide to this important field, The Ashgate Research Companion to Romantic Women Writers provides scholars with a comprehensive introduction to the critical currents of women writers who have already garnered substantive attention and identifies writers who are deserving of further study. In addition to essays focused on individual authors, the Companion includes topical essays relating to the economic, material, and social contexts of women's writing during the period.

Routledge Market: Film Studies/Interdisciplinary Literary Studies December 2017: 234x156: 280pp Hb: 978-1-409-40472-9: £95.00 Pb: 978-1-409-40474-3: £30.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409404729

Routledge June 2018: 480pp Hb: 978-1-472-46842-0: £90.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472468420

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Teaching Space, Place, and Literature

The History and Culture of Breast Milk

Edited by Robert T. Tally Jr., Texas State University, USA

From Greco-Roman Myth to Medieval Mysticism

Teaching Space, Place, and Literature surveys a broad expanse of literary critical, theoretical, historical territories, as it presents both an introduction to teaching spatial literary studies and an essential guide to scholarly research. Divided into sections on key concepts and issues; teaching strategies; urban spaces; place, race and gender and spatiality, periods and genres, this comprehensive book is the ideal way to approach the teaching of space and place in the humanities classroom.

Sarah Alison Miller, Duquesne University, USA Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature

Routledge Market: Literature November 2017: 234x156: 236pp Hb: 978-1-138-04697-9: £110.00 Pb: 978-1-138-04703-7: £29.99 eBook: 978-1-315-17114-2 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138047037

This book explores textual and visual representations of breast milk and breastfeeding across a range of literary and artistic genres, beginning with Classical mythology, moving through late-antique and medieval gynaecological texts on wet nursing, and ending with late-medieval hagiographical and mystical literature. It argues that, while the act of breastfeeding and the fluid of breast milk were often categorized as natural and nourishing, their meanings, uses and risks were also debated, problematized, and used to serve specific cultural, political and textual purposes. Routledge Market: Literature January 2018: 229 x 152: 208pp Hb: 978-0-415-73171-3: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-84964-5 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415731713

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The Literariness of Media Art

The Routledge Companion to Literature and Food

Claudia Benthien, Jordis Lau and Maraike M. Marxsen

Edited by Lorna Piatti-Farnell, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand and Donna Lee Brien Series: Routledge Literature Companions

th

The beginning of the 20 century saw literary scholars from Russia positing a new definition for the nature of literature. Within the framework of Russian formalism, the term "literariness" was coined. The driving force behind this theoretical inquiry was the desire to identify literature—and art in general—as ways of revitalizing human perception, which had been numbed by the automatization of everyday life. This volume uses as its foundation the Russian formalist school of literary theory, with the goal of extending these theories to include contemporary concepts in film and media studies, such as neoformalism, intermediality, remediation, and post-drama. Routledge Market: Literature March 2018: 246x174: 352pp Hb: 978-1-138-09151-1: £105.00 Pb: 978-1-138-09152-8: £21.99 eBook: 978-1-315-10798-1 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138091511

The Routledge Companion to Literature and Food explores the relationship between food and literature in transnational contexts, serving as both an introduction and a guide to the field in terms of literary history, defining characteristics, and development. Balancing a comprehensive view of the long histories and preoccupations of literary food studies with attentiveness to recent developments and shifts, the volume illuminates the aesthetic, cultural, political, and intellectual diversity of the representation of food and eating in literature. Routledge Market: Literature / Food Studies February 2018: 254 x 178: 498pp Hb: 978-1-138-04843-0: £180.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138048430

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The Romantic Fiction Of Mills & Boon, 1909-1995

The Routledge Companion to World Literature and World History

Dixon, Jay and Jay Dixon. Series: Women's and Gender History This study to analyzes romantic fiction's depiction of women as part of the broader history of ideas about women.; Given the success of the Mills & Boon romance, their portrayal of subjects like sex, love, marriage, class, motherhood and femininity are important cultural barometers and make interesting study.

Routledge April 2018: 216x138: 232pp Hb: 978-1-138-17277-7: £90.00 Pb: 978-1-857-28267-2: £26.99 eBook: 978-1-315-07232-6 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138172777

Edited by May Hawas Series: Routledge Literature Companions The Routledge Companion to World Literature and World History is a comprehensive and engaging volume, combining essays from historians and literary academics to create a space for productive cross-cultural encounters between the two fields. In addition to the 27 essays, the Companion includes general introductions from two of the leading scholars of history and literature, David Damrosch and Patrick Manning, as well as personal testimonies from artists working in the area, and editorials asking provocative questions. Routledge Market: Literature April 2018: 246x174: 408pp Hb: 978-1-138-92165-8: £175.00 eBook: 978-1-315-68627-1 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138921658

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The Routledge Companion to Literature and Economics

World Literature and Dissent

Edited by Michelle Chihara and Matt Seybold

World Literature and Dissent reconsiders the role of dissent in the contemporary aesthetics of globalisation. Bringing together scholars from postcolonial and world literatures, the collection addresses themes of knowledge and the epistemology of ignorance, the rhetoric of innocence and enchantment, translation and global justice, and the aesthetics of revolution. The essays reframe the field of contemporary world literature in relation to dissenting politics and aesthetics, asking how we might theorise a world literature that cultivates radical thought and supports uncompromising resistance to the apparatuses of global inequality, furthers social justice and values human expression.

The Routledge Companion to Literature and Economics is the first authoritative guide to the area, drawing together over 45 critics, it offers both an introduction and a springboard to this sometimes complex but highly relevant field. With sections on ‘Critical Traditions’, ‘Histories’, ‘Principles’ and ‘Methods’, the book looks at examples from Medieval literature and Shakespeare, through to slave narratives, the Bloomsbury group and the 2008 financial crisis. As the reality of economic hardship and disparity is widely acknowledged and spreads across disciplines, this Companion offers students and scholars a chance to enter the vibrant debates of this exciting area. Routledge Market: Literary Studies October 2018: 246x174 Hb: 978-1-138-19087-0: £140.00 eBook: 978-1-315-64080-8 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138190870

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Edited by Lorna Burns and Katie Muth

Routledge Market: Literature August 2018 Hb: 978-1-138-56185-4: £110.00 Pb: 978-1-138-56186-1: £24.99 eBook: 978-0-203-71030-2 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138561854

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Writing the Mind Representing Consciousness from Proust to the Present Simon Kemp Writing the Mind: Representing Consciousness from Proust to Darrieussecq explores the works of seven ground-breaking thinkers and novelists of recent history to compare and contrast the varying representations of the conscious and the unconscious mind. Grounding his study in the writings of philosophers like Jean-Paul Sartre and Marcel Proust, Simon Kemp explores the non-literary influences of science, faith and philosophy as presented in their works, demonstrates how writers learn from and sometimes deviate from preceding generations, and how they agree or disagree with their peers. Routledge Market: Literature October 2017: 254 x 178: 202pp Hb: 978-1-138-71026-9: ÂŁ120.00 Pb: 978-1-138-71705-3: ÂŁ28.00 eBook: 978-1-315-19669-5 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138717053

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LITERARY/CRITICAL THEORY TEXTBOOK • READER

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Engagements with Contemporary Literary and Critical Theory

The Ecophobia Hypothesis

Evan Gottlieb, Oregon State University, USA Series: Routledge Engagements with Literature Something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue… Using this fourfold textual structure, Engagements with Contemporary Literary and Critical Theory illuminates the field of theory through a variety of useful and relevant examples. Each chapter explains and introduces an area of critical theory and then elucidates this through ‘engaging’ examples from: a canonical text (old), a contemporary text (new), an adaptation such as film or theatre (borrowed) an aspect of popular culture such as online dating or reality tv (blue). Covering all key theories and theorists, this book looks at the relation of theory to form, discourses, subjectivity, media and networks,

Simon C. Estok, Sungkyunkwan University, South Korea Series: Routledge Studies in World Literatures and the Environment The Ecophobia Hypothesis grows out of a dissatisfaction with the capacity of what has come to be termed "the biophilia hypothesis" to adequately account for the kinds of things that are going on in the world, things so extraordinary that we are increasingly coming to understand the current age as "the Anthropocene." Routledge Market: Literature January 2018: 229 x 152: 160pp Hb: 978-1-138-50205-5: £105.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138502055

and environments. Routledge Market: Literature October 2018 Hb: 978-1-138-85326-3: £80.00 Pb: 978-1-138-85327-0: £19.99 eBook: 978-1-315-72288-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138853263

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Literature and Literary Criticism in Contemporary China

The Politics of Form Edited by Sarah Copland, Macewan University, Edmonton, Canada and Greta Olson, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Germany

Zhang Jiong, Director, the Institute of Literature, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China Series: China Perspectives This book is composed of two parts. Part One studies literary criticism in contemporary China whose development is closely related to the spread of Marxism and the unavoidable collisions between Marxism and other theories. The second part expounds the history of Chinese literature from a macro-level perspective and the challenges facing Chinese literature under the background of economic globalization. This book will attract scholars and students of literary criticism studies and Chinese literary studies. People who are interested in Chinese literature and thought will also benefit from this book. Routledge Market: LITERATURE/MARXISM October 2017: 234x156: 148pp Hb: 978-1-138-89875-2: £130.00 eBook: 978-1-315-70838-6 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138898752

This volume undertakes a project termed ‘a politics of form’, which politicizes formal analysis of narrative texts in various media while retaining the form specificity that is a distinctive feature of narratology. It was originally published as a special issue of the European Journal of English Studies.

Routledge Market: Literary Criticism / Form December 2017: 246x174: 128pp Hb: 978-1-138-56333-9: £115.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138563339

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Reception

Trauma Ika Willis, University of Wollongong, Australia Series edited by John Drakakis Series: The New Critical Idiom

Reception introduces students and academics alike to the study of the way in which texts are received by readers, viewers, or audiences. Organised conceptually and thematically this book provides a much-needed overview of the field, suggests new ways of understanding and configuring the relationships between the various terminologies and theories which comprise reception study, and suggests potential ways forward for study and research in the light of such new configurations. Written in a clear and accessible style with a glossary of key terms and further reading included, this is the ideal introduction to the study of Reception. Routledge Market: Literary Studies October 2017: 198x129: 204pp Hb: 978-1-138-95509-7: £80.00 Pb: 978-1-138-95510-3: £15.99 eBook: 978-1-315-66658-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138955103

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Stef Craps, Ghent Univeristy, Belgium Series: The New Critical Idiom Trauma is one of the most vital emerging fields in contemporary literary studies. In this illuminating and accessible volume, Stef Craps: gives a history of the concept of trauma and its uses in literary and cultural studies, from the late nineteenth century to the present day examines the theoretical debates around the term in their historical and cultural contexts introduces the reader to key thinkers in the field of trauma theory, including Janet, Freud, Adorno, Lacapra and Caruth identifies and explains key issues and tensions in the study of trauma as a cultural phenomenon, including recent critiques and revisions of cultural trauma research. Trauma offers an original and distinctive overview of the subject and is an essential guide for students of Literature and Cultural Studies. Routledge Market: Literary Studies July 2018: 198x129: 192pp Hb: 978-0-415-54041-4: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-54042-1: £15.99 eBook: 978-0-203-38306-3 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415540414

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A Political Biography of John Gay

Border Crossings

Sandro Jung Series: Eighteenth-Century Political Biographies

Essays in Identity and Belonging

John Gay was a dramatist and poet, best-known for writing The Beggar's Opera. Through his membership of the Scriblerus Club, Gay developed lasting friendships with Alexander Pope, Jonathan Swift and John Arbuthnot, all of whom influenced his writing. The study will be invaluable to scholars of eighteenth-century literature and political history. Routledge Market: Literature December 2018: 234x156: 256pp Hb: 978-1-848-93484-9: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781848934849

Edited by Paul Longley Arthur, Western Sydney University, Australia and Leena Kurvet-Kaosaar, University of Tartu, Estonia The border between intimate memory and historical revelation is explored in this collection. Throughout runs the framing theme of memory as the source of all intergenerational transmission of culture and history and the importance of the intimate and personal in that process of handing on. It was first published as a special issue of Life Writing. Routledge Market: Biography / Literature and Culture / Interpersonal Communication February 2018: 246x174: 144pp Hb: 978-1-138-67109-6: £90.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138671096

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A Political Biography of Joseph Addison

British Nautical Melodramas, 1820–1850

Charles Knight Series: Eighteenth-Century Political Biographies

Arnold Schmidt

One of the most durable eighteenth-century writers, Joseph Addison (1672–1719) is best remembered for his sparkling and rangy entries in the Tatler (1709–11) and the Spectator (1711–12), both co-edited with Richard Steele. This biography puts his literary career into a political context. Routledge Market: Literature/European History July 2018: 234x156: 256pp Hb: 978-1-851-96916-6: £105.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781851969166

Until recently, melodramatic plays received little scholarly attention but their value as reflections of Britain’s promulgation of imperial ideology, and its role in constructing and maintaining class, gender, and racial identities, have given discussions of melodrama force and momentum. The plays included in these three volumes have never appeared in a critical anthology and most have not been republished since their original nineteenth-century editions. Each play is transcribed from the original documents with full annotations and comprehensive editorial apparatus. A bibliography, index, appendices and numerous images have been compiled to further aid study. Routledge Market: Literature/Drama July 2018: 234x156: 1200pp Hb: 978-1-848-93564-8: £305.00 eBook: 978-1-315-53013-0 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781848935648

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Body Language Narrating illness and disability Edited by G. Thomas Couser, Hofstra University, NY, USA This volume explores narratives of illness and disability using the latest critical theories and through the perspectives of patients, creative writers, and academics. It examines the intersection of trauma and disability and the ethical dimensions of narrative. It was first published as a special issue of Life Writing.

Christina Rossetti Edited by Simon Humphries A new title in Routledge’s acclaimed Critical Heritage series, this collection brings together critical responses to the work of Christina Rossetti (1830–94), one of the most distinguished of all Victorian poets.

Routledge Market: Literature October 2018: 234x156: 12pp Hb: 978-0-415-55613-2: £205.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415556132 Routledge Market: Life Writing / Disability October 2017: 246x174: 148pp Hb: 978-1-138-69308-1: £115.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138693081

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LITERARY GENRES TEXTBOOK • READER

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Engagements with Graphic Literature

The Limits of Life Writing

Michael Demson, Sam Houston State University, USA Series edited by Daniel Robinson Series: Routledge Engagements with Literature Engagements with Graphic Literature introduces readers to the long and multicultural history of the field as well as covering the major theoretical perspectives. Each chapter includes detailed case studies of a broad range of forms and media: from sacred documents, canonical literature, satirical and subversive agitprop, pornography, online media, and graphic pulp fiction, including comics and graphic novels. The book explores both Eastern and Western graphic narratives as well as highlighting issues of gender, class, and queer studies in relation to graphic narratives.

Edited by David McCooey, Deakin University, Australia and Maria Takolander, Deakin University, Australia In the age of social media, life writing is everywhere. But does this mean that life is limitless? The Limits of Life Writing offers new insights into life writing by attending to the limits that are approached and sometimes crossed by contemporary writers. This book was originally published as a special issue of Life Writing. Routledge Market: Life Writing February 2018: 246x174: 136pp Hb: 978-0-815-39191-3: £115.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815391913

Routledge Market: Literature September 2018: 234x156: 192pp Hb: 978-1-138-66532-3: £80.00 Pb: 978-1-138-66533-0: £19.99 eBook: 978-1-315-61996-5 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138665323

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Selected Letters of Vernon Lee, 1856–1935, Volume 3

Mediating Memory Tracing the Limits of Memoir Edited by Bunty Avieson, Fiona Giles and Sue Joseph, University of Technology Sydney, Australia Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature

Amanda Gagel Series: The Pickering Masters Vernon Lee was the pen name of Violet Paget – a prolific author best known for her supernatural fiction, her support of the Aesthetic Movement and her radical polemics. She was an active correspondent who included many well-known figures among her circle. This scholarly edition of her letters makes a selection from more than 30 archives worldwide. Routledge July 2018: 234x156: 400pp Hb: 978-1-848-93497-9: £110.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781848934979

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The Invention of Female Biography Gina Luria Walker Series: Chawton Studies in Scholarly Editing Mary Hays worked alone in compiling the 302 entries that make up Female Biography (1803). By contrast, producing a modern, critical edition of the work relied on the expertise of 168 scholars across 18 countries. Essays in this collection focus on the exhaustive research, editorial challenges and innovative responses involved in this project.

The argument has been made that memoir reflects and augments the narcissistic tendencies of our neo-liberal age. The Literature of Remembering challenges and dismantles that assumption. Focusing on the history, theory and practice of memoir writing, Editors Bunty Avieson, Fiona Giles and Sue Joseph provide a thorough and cutting-edge examination of memoir through the lenses of ethics, practice and innovation. By investigating memoir across cultural boundaries, in its various guises, and tracing its limits, the Editors convincingly demonstrate the plurality of ways in which memoir is helping us make sense of who we are, who we were and the influences that shape us along the way. Routledge Market: Literature October 2017: 344pp Hb: 978-1-138-09272-3: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-10734-9 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138092723

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The Poetry of Punk The Meaning behind Punk Rock and Hardcore Lyrics Gerfried Ambrosch The Poetry of Punk is an investigation into the Anglophone punk culture, specifically in the UK and the US, where punk originated in the mid-1970s, its focus being on the song lyrics written and performed by punk rock and hardcore artists.

Routledge Market: Literature/Women's October 2017: 229 x 152: 284pp Hb: 978-1-848-93600-3: £70.00 eBook: 978-1-351-26520-1 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781848936003

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Routledge Market: Literature April 2018: 254 x 178: 216pp Hb: 978-1-138-50231-4: £110.00 Pb: 978-1-138-50234-5: £29.99 eBook: 978-1-315-14484-9 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138502314

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Attachment, Place, and Otherness in Nineteenth-Century American Literature

Inventing the Popular in Nineteenth-Century France

New Materialist Representations Jillmarie Murphy, Union College, USA Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature This study examines the role interpersonal and place attachments play in crafting a national identity in American literature. Building on ecocritical and psychoanalytic studies, it integrates the language of empirical science and the physical realities of place, investigating non-human agency and that which exists beyond the material realm. It considers how writers in the early republic constructed modernity by restructuring representations of attachments, which are reimagined, th reconfigured, or rejected by writers in the long 19 century. American perceptions of Otherness are pathologized as a result of insecure attachments, resulting in a restructuring of antiquated notions of difference. Routledge Market: American Literature February 2018: 229 x 152: 160pp Hb: 978-1-138-67326-7: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-56205-6 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138673267

Printing, Politics, and Poetics Bettina R. Lerner Series: Routledge Studies in Nineteenth Century Literature In the first study to show that nineteenth-century working-class writers both resisted and contributed to radical transformations in French popular culture, Bettina R. Lerner mines the archives to examine newspapers, poetry, and memoirs of the 1830s and 40s. Far from being imitations of Romantic models, Lerner argues, these works capitalized on changes in the printing industry to promote specific political and poetic agendas among lowerand middle-market consumers.

Routledge Market: Literature February 2018: 234x156: 184pp Hb: 978-1-409-43676-8: £115.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409436768

TEXTBOOK • READER

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European Literary History

Katherine Philips: Form, Reception, and Literary Contexts

An Introduction Edited by Maarten De Pourcq and Sophie Levie This clear and engaging book offers readers an introduction to European Literary History from antiquity through to the present day. Each chapter discusses a short extract from a literary text, whilst including a close reading and a longer essay examining other key texts of the period and their place within European Literature. Offering a view of Europe as an evolving cultural space and examining the mobility and travel of literature both within and out of Europe this guide offers an introduction to the dynamics of major literary genres, international literary networks, publication cultures and debates, and the cultural history of 'Europe' as a region as well as a concept.

Edited by Marie-Louise Coolahan, National University of Ireland, Galway, Republic of Ireland and Gillian Wright, University of Birmingham, UK This book analyses the work of the literary pioneer Katherine Phillips. It includes literary-historical analyses of her use of form and genre, as well as theoretical, archipelagic and digital humanities approaches to her work. This book was first published as two special issues of Women’s Writing. Routledge Market: Early Modern Literature / Katherine Phillips April 2018: 234x156: 260pp Hb: 978-0-815-36202-9: £115.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815362029

Routledge Market: Literature March 2018: 246x174: 488pp Hb: 978-1-138-88672-8: £110.00 Pb: 978-1-138-88673-5: £32.99 eBook: 978-1-315-71462-2 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138886728

TEXTBOOK • READER

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Introduction to Latina/o Literature

Philanthropy and Early Twentieth-Century Literature

Frederick Luis Aldama, The Ohio State University, USA Series: Routledge Introductions to American Literature In this latest addition to the Routledge Studies in American Literature series, Frederick Luis Aldama, shows the rich, evolving tapestry that makes up Latino/a literature across time as well as geographical and institutional spaces, touching on fundamental backdrops like political issues surrounding migration/immigration to the US as well as Central American, South American, and Caribbean political, social and cultural influences that have each added considerable depth, contrast, and variation to this tapestry. Routledge March 2018: 234x156 Hb: 978-1-138-63516-6: £105.00 Pb: 978-1-138-70086-4: £19.99 eBook: 978-1-315-19105-8 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138635166

Milena Radeva-Castillo Series: Among the Victorians and Modernists Routledge Market: Literature May 2018: 229 x 152 Hb: 978-1-138-06649-6: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-15913-3 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138066496

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TEXTBOOK • READER

Provincializing the Bible

The Routledge Introduction to American Renaissance Literature

Faulkner and Postsecular American Literature Norman W. Jones Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature Religious conviction constitutes one of the most powerful forces shaping our global present and future. Given the increasingly pluralistic cast of American letters as well as declining biblical literacy in American culture, it is telling that many contemporary authors have not simply rejected the Bible as a reactionary and oppressive relic. Instead, as Norman Jones demonstrates in his rigorous new study of the works of William Faulkner, many provincialize the Bible as a means of reevaluating and revalorizing its significance in contemporary American culture. Routledge Market: Literature February 2018: 229 x 152: 176pp Hb: 978-1-138-50212-3: £115.00 eBook: 978-1-315-14475-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138502123

Larry J. Reynolds, Texas A&M University, USA Series: Routledge Introductions to American Literature Examining the most frequently taught works by key writers of the American Renaissance such as Poe, Emerson, Douglass, Hawthorne, Melville, Thoreau, Jacobs, Stowe, Whitman and Dickinson, this engaging and accessible book offers the crucial historical, social and political contexts in which they must be studied. Larry Reynolds usefully groups authors together for more lively and fruitful discussion and engages with current as well as historical theoretical debates on the area. Each chapter starts with essential biographical and historical information to situate and contextualise the literature and ends with a bullet point summary to emphasise key points, while an annotated bibliography and handy glossary offer clarification and points for further study. Routledge Market: American Literature August 2018: 234x156 Hb: 978-1-138-80654-2: £85.00 Pb: 978-1-138-80655-9: £18.99 eBook: 978-1-315-75162-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138806542

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Storytelling as Plague Prevention in Medieval and Early Modern Italy

Tim O'Brien

The Decameron Tradition

Tobey C Herzog Series: Routledge Studies in Contemporary Literature

Martin Marafioti Series: Routledge Studies in Medieval Literature and Culture Through close readings of five Italian collections of novellas written over a 500-year period, Martin Marafioti explores the literary tradition of storytelling, and particularly its efficacy as a healing tool following traumatic visitations from the plague. In this study, Giovanni Boccaccio's Decameron provides the framework for later authors.

The Things He Carries and the Stories He Tells

This collection of seven essays, like the carefully linked collection of vignettes within Tim O’Brien’s most popular book The Things They Carried, contains multiple critical and biographical angles with recurring threads of life events, themes, characters, creative techniques, and references to all of O’Brien’s books. Grounded in through research, Herzog’s work illustrates how O’Brien merges his life experiences with his creative production; he rarely misses an opportunity to introduce these critical life events into his writing. Routledge Market: Literature March 2018: 229 x 152: 216pp Hb: 978-1-138-55201-2: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-14792-5 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138552012

Routledge December 2017: 229 x 152: 138pp Hb: 978-1-409-40641-9: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-61088-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409406419

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The Occult Imagination in Britain, 1875-1947

Travel, War, and the State in Latin America

Edited by Christine Ferguson and Andrew Radford Series: Among the Victorians and Modernists Reflecting the signal array of responses by authors, artists, actors, impresarios and popular entertainers to questions of esoteric spirituality and belief, this interdisciplinary collection demonstrates the enormous interest in the occult during a time typically associated with the rise of secularization and scientific innovation.

Routledge Market: Literature December 2017: 229 x 152: 278pp Hb: 978-1-472-48698-1: £115.00 eBook: 978-1-351-16832-8 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472486981

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The Desertmakers Javier Uriarte, Stony Brook University, USA Series: Routledge Research in Travel Writing This book studies how the rhetoric of travelth introduces conceptualizations of space and time in scenarios of war during the late 19 century, in Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay. By examining accounts of war and travel in the context of the consolidation of state apparatuses, Uriarte underlines the role that war (in connection to empire and capital) has played in the Latin American process of modernization and state formation, analyzing how national spaces are reconfigured, reimagined, and reappropriated. Combining literary analysis, critical geography, political science, and history, this bookwill be of interest to Latin American literature, Travel Writing, and neocolonialism. Routledge Market: Literature / Latin American Studies April 2018: 229 x 152: 228pp Hb: 978-1-138-66892-8: £85.00 eBook: 978-1-315-61839-5 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138668928

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A Cultural History of English Lexicography, 1600-1800

Mediterranean Piracy and Slavery in World Literature

The Authoritative Word

Captivity Genres form Cervantes to Rousseau

Linda C. Mitchell

Edited by Mario Klarer Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature

As this lively new study effectively demonstrates, dictionaries serve as far more than just simple reference tools-they also offer a rich fund of information about people in society. Illuminating how dictionaries encoded social history during the period discussed, Linda C. Mitchell here analyzes the ways in which early modern lexicographers constructed their authority; examines the link between the conservative and the subversive in dictionaries; and charts the shift of linguistic authority from grammarians to lexicographers. Routledge Market: Literature February 2018: 234x156: 192pp Hb: 978-0-754-65828-3: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780754658283

Mediterranean Slavery and World Literature, is a collection of selected essays which brings to light the literary transformations of the captivity experience in major early modern texts of world literature and popular media, including works by Cervantes, de Vega, Defoe, Rousseau, Mozart, and Droste. Where most studies of slavery, until now, have been limited to historial and autobiographical accounts, this mongraph look speicifically at the treatment of literary texts that touch upon on the subject, and does so from a multicutlural perspective. Routledge Market: Literature March 2018: 229 x 152: 256pp Hb: 978-1-138-29123-2: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-26557-5 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138291232

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Instructional Writing in English, 1350-1650

Ouida (1839-1908) in Transnational Popular Culture

Materiality and Meaning

A Literary Life at the Margins

Carrie Griffin Series: Material Readings in Early Modern Culture

Andrew King Series: The Nineteenth Century Series

Drawing on texts in English transmitted from the later Middle Ages to c. 1650, this volume considers textual and material strategies for the presentation and organisation of written knowledge and information during the period. In particular, it investigates the relationship between genre and material form in Anglophone written knowledge and information, with specific reference to that which is usually classified as practical or 'utilitarian'. Carrie Griffin examines textual and material evidence to argue for the disentangling of hitherto mixed genres and forms, and the creation of 'new' texts, as unexplored effects of the arrival of the printing press in the late fifteenth century.

The author of novels, short stories, poems, and nonfiction, Marie Louise Ramé was born in the English provincial town of Bury St. Edmund’s in 1839 and died as Ouida/Louise de la Ramée in the Italian seaside town of Viareggio in 1908. During the intervening years, she invented herself as a cultural aristocrat while becoming one of the best-known and best-selling authors of the nineteenth century. In examining her life and work, Andrew King pays particular attention to the relations of Victorian popular culture to the exclusive and even aristocratic, to the relatively unexplored transnational culture industries that predated Hollywood, and to the present-day reader’s investment in figures such as Ouida as either a disparaged figure of ridicule or as a precursor of an alternative, less-oppressive regime. In taking up these issues, King documents Ouida’s early and literary influences, her publication practices and contributions to the marketing and reception of her work.

Routledge Market: Literature April 2018: 234x156: 250pp Hb: 978-1-409-45262-1: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409452621

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John Bunyan’s Imaginary Writings in Context Nancy Rosenfeld Series: Routledge Studies in Renaissance Literature and Culture Within the last half-century, early scholarly approaches and analysis of John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress have seen siginificant advances in mandating and enabling a more contextualized view of Bunyan’s oeuvre. Utilizing this fresh examination of context, John Bunyan’s Imaginary Writings in Context explores Bunyan’s writings in a double context: his fictional works vis-à-vis his own non-fictional writings, and his fictional writings in the context of written materials by other authors – books, tracts, spiritual biographies, and poems available to Bunyan. Routledge Market: Literature October 2017: 229 x 152: 254pp Hb: 978-1-138-55546-4: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-14955-4 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138555464

Routledge January 2018: 234x156: 0pp Hb: 978-1-409-46640-6: £55.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409466406

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Reading Literary Animals Medieval to Modern Edited by Jane Spencer, Derek Ryan and Karen Edwards Series: Perspectives on the Non-Human in Literature and Culture Reading Literary Animals takes a broad chronological sweep, from medieval times to present day, to explore the literary status and the representation of animals in literature, Editors, Jane Spencer, Derek Ryan and Karen Edwards have assembled some of the field’s leading scholars to demonstrate how reading animals in literature provokes new ways of thinking that break down the old silos and gives answers to some of the most fundamental questions being asked in classrooms today surrounding the presence and absence of animals in canonical works since the Medieval period. Routledge Market: Literature June 2018: 229 x 152: 280pp Hb: 978-1-138-09378-2: £105.00 Pb: 978-1-138-09385-0: £21.99 eBook: 978-1-315-10636-6 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138093782

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The Midwives Book, 1540-1720 The Early-Modern British Sex Manual Edited by Elaine Hobby Series: Literary and Scientific Cultures of Early Modernity Disseminated in cheap octavo formats and in vernacular translations, the early modern midwifery books were an accessible source of information and advice on sexual life. In mapping the development of the English-language midwifery manual, Elaine Hobby begins with the first known example, The Byrth of Mankynde (1540); examines developments stimulated by the work of the civil war radical, Nicholas Culpeper; and concludes with a discussion of post-Restoration manuals such as Jane Sharp's The Midwives Book. Hobby shows how materials that appeared in early-modern midwifery manuals were borrowed from other contemporary works, such as surgeons' manuals, travelogues, and cookery books. Routledge Market: Literature January 2018: 234x156: 288pp Hb: 978-0-754-63819-3: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780754638193

TEXTBOOK • READER

The Routledge Introduction to American War Literature Jennifer Haytock Series: Routledge Introductions to American Literature War and violence have arguably been some of the strongest influences on literature, but the relation is complex: more than just a subject for story-telling war tends to reshape literature and culture. Modern war literature necessarily engages with national ideologies and this volume looks at the specificity of how American literature deals with the emotional, intellectual, social, political, and economic contradictions that evolve into and out of war. This book raises questions about how American ideals of independence and gender affect representations of war while also considering how specifically American experiences of race and class interweave with representations of combat. Routledge Market: Literature April 2018: 234x156: 248pp Hb: 978-1-138-91755-2: £85.00 Pb: 978-1-138-91757-6: £19.99 eBook: 978-1-315-68893-0 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138917552

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Adorno and the Architects of Late Style in India

Edwardian Culture

Rabindranath Tagore, Mulk Raj Anand, Vikram Seth, and Dayanita Singh

Beyond the Garden Party Samuel Shaw, Sarah Shaw and Naomi Carle Series: Among the Victorians and Modernists

Tania Roy Examining works by Rabindranath Tagore, Mulk Raj Anand, and Vikram Seth through the lens of T.W. Adorno's poetics of lateness, Tania Roy reads the category of late style in terms of the "belated" literatures and cultures of the postcolonial world. By linking this key concept in Adorno's work with the postcolonial experience, Roy reflects on how postcolonial studies' apparent redundancy in the context of globalization has been alternately confirmed and lamented over the past 15 years.

Edwardian Culture: Beyond the Garden Party is the first truly interdisciplinary collection of essays dealing with culture in Britain c.1895-1914. Bringing together essays on literature, art, politics, religion, architecture, marketing, and imperial history, the study highlights the extent to which the culture and politics of Edwardian period were closely intertwined.

Routledge Market: Literature June 2018: 234x156: 208pp Hb: 978-1-472-41876-0: £105.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472418760

Routledge Market: Literature November 2017: 229 x 152: 286pp Hb: 978-1-138-50632-9: £115.00 eBook: 978-1-315-14684-3 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138506329

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STUDENT REFERENCE

Adventures in Feminist Dramaturgy

Chaucer: The Basics

The Road Less Traveled

Jacqueline Tasioulas, Clare College, Cambridge, UK Series: The Basics

Laura Hope and Philippa Kelly Laura Hope and Philippa Kelly make use of first-hand interviews with directors, actors, designers, and critics, as well as their own experiences in the theatre, to open up feminist dramaturgy as a field of enquiry and performance possibility. Resisting dogma, the authors cast a critical eye on past and present practices as they argue for the feminist dramaturg's role in shaping a theatre company's sense of its production potential. Routledge Market: Literature September 2018: 234x156: 190pp Hb: 978-1-409-46558-4: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409465584

Chaucer: The Basics is an accessible introduction to the works of Geoffrey Chaucer. It provides a clear critical analysis of the texts, while also providing background to key medieval ideas and the historical period. The language and pronunciation are introduced through close reading in a section dedicated to demystifying this aspect of studying Chaucer. Including a chapter devoted to poetry the book also discusses: The Book of the Duchess, The House of Fame, The Parliament of Fowls, Troilus and Criseyde, The Legend of Good Women, The Canterbury Tales. With glosses and translations of texts, a glossary of key terms and a timeline this book is essential reading for anyone studying Chaucer. Routledge Market: Literature September 2018: 198x129 Hb: 978-1-138-66770-9: £70.00 Pb: 978-1-138-66771-6: £14.99 eBook: 978-1-315-61885-2 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138667709

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Annotating Modernism

Chronicling Ben-Hur's Early Reception

Marginalia and Pedagogy from Virginia Woolf to the Confessional Poets

America’s Favorite Tale, 1880-1924

Amanda Golden

Barbara Ryan

Analyzing archival materials by Sylvia Plath, John Berryman and Anne Sexton, including the poets’ marginalia and underlining in their personal copies of modernist texts, Amanda Golden constructs a new narrative of the relationship between modernism and post-war poetry. She suggests that modernism as a discourse emerges after the Second World War and makes a case for the continuing role of the midcentury poets in shaping and reshaping modernist discourse.

First published in 1880, Lew Wallace’s Ben-Hur is one of the best-selling novels of all time. Employing analytical strategies from the fields of literature, fan studies, reception history, and media research, Barbara Ryan traces Ben-Hur’s popularity from 1880 to 1924. She analyzes fan mail as well as a wide range of manuscript and print sources, using as her starting place two flatteries in which fans declared that they would rather be the author of Ben-Hur than to be President of the United States. Ryan’s discussion of the novel in terms of its contemporary fandom makes it possible for her to dispel misconceptions about the novel’s audience, including its popularity with Christians.

Routledge Market: Literature December 2017: 234x156: 310pp Hb: 978-1-472-41076-4: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472410764

Routledge Market: Literature April 2018: 234x156: 208pp Hb: 978-1-472-45719-6: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472457196

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Coleridge and Cosmopolitan Intellectualism 1794–1804

Essays on Music and Language in Modernist Literature

The Legacy of Göttingen University

Musical Modernism

Maximiliaan van Woudenberg Series: Routledge Studies in Romanticism

Katherine O'Callaghan, Mount Holyoke College, USA Series: Routledge Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature

Viewing Samuel Taylor Coleridge's pursuit of continental intellectualism through the lens of cosmopolitanism, Maximiliaan van Woudenberg argues that Coleridge's pursuit of continental methodologies and networks anticipated the foundation of the modern von Humboldt research-university model. His study suggests that Coleridge can be viewed as a visionary whose cross-cultural dissemination of continental intellectualism in England was ahead of its time and presents an intriguing episode in Cosmopolitan Romanticism by a major canonical figure.

This book explores the role of music as a source of inspiration and provocation for modernist writers. Considering modernist literature within a broad political, postcolonial, and internationalist context, it is an important intervention in the field of Words and Music studies. It expands the critical debate to include lesser-known writers alongside Joyce, Woolf, and Beckett, a wide-ranging definition of modernism, and the influence of contemporary music on modernist writers. From the rhythm of Tagore’s poetry to the influence of jazz improvisation, the tonality of traditional Irish music to the operas of Wagner, these essays reframe our sense of how music inspired

Routledge Market: Literature October 2017: 229 x 152: 340pp Hb: 978-1-472-47238-0: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-57257-4 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472472380

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Literary Modernism. Routledge Market: Literature / Modernism January 2018: 229 x 152: 280pp Hb: 978-1-138-28565-1: £115.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138285651

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Conrad and Nature

Feminist Modernism, Poetics, and the New Economy

A Collection of Essays

Mina Loy, Lola Ridge, and Marianne Moore

Edited by Lissa Schneider-Rebozo, Jeffrey Mathes McCarthy and John G. Peters Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature

Linda A. Kinnahan Series: Among the Victorians and Modernists

From the shadowy wilderness of Africa in Heart of Darkness to the frozen expanse of Russia in Under Western Eyes, natural landscapes and human attitudes toward nature play an important part in the development and meaning of Joseph Conrad’s fiction. This collection of twelve original essays by established and emerging scholars, seeks to explore these landscapes in Conrad’s work and serves as a look into our own recent history at a pivotal time us as we come to realize how our actions, choices and even our mere presence directly impacts the natural world that delicately sustains us.

In Feminist Modernism, Poetics, and the New Economy, Linda A. Kinnahan argues that the work of Mina Loy, Lola Ridge, and Marianne Moore engages with the variations in feminist economic thought and discourse that developed in American culture from the 1890s through the 1920s. Kinnahan positions her study in relationship to the gendered field of economic discourse and cultural change that attended corporate consumer capitalism's astonishing ascendance before the collapse of the Great Depression. Focusing primarily on poetry written and published early in the poets' careers, Kinnahan considers each of the writers alongside a particular strand of the era's feminist economic thought: Mina Loy and debates relating to Emma Goldman, Margaret Sanger, and other contemporary feminists; Lola Ridge and concepts of labor and the working woman; and Marianne Moore and the systems of exchange, value, labor, and possession that underlie tensions between modern consumption and human need.

Routledge Market: Literature March 2018: 229 x 152: 280pp Hb: 978-1-138-71012-2: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-18111-0 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138710122

Routledge January 2018: 234x156: 240pp Hb: 978-1-472-47760-6: £65.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472477606

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Early Modern Travel and the Discourses of English Nationalism

George Orwell on the Radio

Matthew Day

Tim Crook

An exploration of the relationship between early modern travel literature and English nationalism, this book's primary goal is to assess the response of early modern readers to the nationalist sentiments in Richard Hakluyt's Principal Navigations. Matthew Day contends that Hakluyt's collection shaped nationalist thinking, ideas, and notions of identity; and that it influenced nationalist policies and actions in a number of key areas, including politics, navigation, exploration and trade.

Assessing the quality and representation of George Orwell on the radio - the radio dramas he wrote himself and the dramatizations and documentaries of his fiction and nonfiction by others - this book explores the interaction of Orwell’s fiction, journalism and documentary writing with the audio/radio form. As Tim Crook shows, Orwell's participation in radio was informed by his own attentiveness to radio theory and the demands of actual production. Exploring how Orwell helped to shape the very form of radio drama and documentary, Crook begins with Orwell’s own dramatizations of fiction and nonfiction for BBC radio during the Second World War. He follows Orwell’s career and legacy through the dramatizations of Animal Farm, Nineteen Eighty Four, and others of Orwell’s works from 1947 through the present and examines the ’talk’ and documentary output of BBC radio programming after Orwell’s death in 1950.

Routledge Market: Literature May 2018: 234x156: 256pp Hb: 978-0-754-65792-7: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780754657927

His Works in Sound Drama and Documentary

Routledge February 2018: 234x156: 160pp Hb: 978-1-472-41477-9: £105.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472414779

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Henry James, Consciousness, and the Evolution of the Novel

John Morley and the Uses of History in Victorian Liberal Culture

Peter Rawlings

Marco de Waard

Positioning Henry James within his transatlantic and pan-European contexts, Peter Rawlings relocates James and the New Criticism's ideology of organicism in biology rather than in aesthetics. He argues that the novel as a character-driven genre emerged from philosophical and scientific thinking about consciousness and that James's canonization must be reexamined in the context of the philosophical, physiological, and biological discourses on which he drew in his theory and practice as a novelist.

Marco de Waard retrieves the influential literary critic and intellectual historian John Morley's status as a prolific and versatile man of letters whose influence reshaped the nineteenth century's liberal culture. Based on extensive archival research, de Waard's study combines a biographical framework with a close analysis of John Morley's work and ideas that serves as a case study for how Britain refashioned its identity as a modern, liberal nation-state.

Routledge Market: Literature December 2017: 234x156: 250pp Hb: 978-1-409-42305-8: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409423058

Routledge Market: Literature October 2018: 234x156: 270pp Hb: 978-1-409-40601-3: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409406013

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Impressive Shakespeare

Jonathan Edwards, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and the Supernatural Will in Early American Literature

Identity, Authority and the Imprint in Shakespearean Drama Harry Newman Series: Material Readings in Early Modern Culture

Brad Bannon

Shakespeare’s genius and universality is still thought to lie in his work’s capacity to ’impress’, ’imprint’ or ’stamp’ our hearts, minds and souls. But to what extent is Shakespeare’s impressiveness rooted in his own language of impression? Impressive Shakespeare investigates the language and material culture of three ’impressing technologies’ in Shakespearean drama: wax sealing, coining and printing. With book history, material culture and rhetorical theory through historicised close readings of four plays-Coriolanus, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Measure for Measure and The Winter’s Tale-the book analyses Shakespeare’s imprinting metaphors in relation to a variety of early modern texts.

Examining Samuel Taylor Coleridge's reflections on Jonathan Edwards, written over a twenty-year period, Brad Bannon rejects the common critical notion that the influence Coleridge exerted on the American Romantics should be understood as a one-way influx of entirely new ideas. Rather, it is more accurately conceived in light of Coleridge's transatlantic engagement with the philosophical theology of Edwards and the abolitionist theologies of John Woolman and Olaudah Equiano. Bannon resituates our understanding of Poe, Emerson, Hawthorne, and Melville, contending that all of these authors demonstrate a keen awareness of the competing conceptions of the will offered by Coleridge and Edwards.

Routledge Market: Ashgate July 2018: 234x156: 224pp Hb: 978-1-472-46532-0: £105.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472465320

Routledge Market: Literature December 2017: 234x156: 224pp Hb: 978-1-472-47629-6: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472476296

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Jane Austen, George Eliot and the Reflective Tradition

Jonson, Shakespeare, and Aristotle on Comedy

Rose Pimentel Series: The Nineteenth Century Series A common ethical dynamic between Jane Austen and George Eliot and the realist novel, Rose Pimentel argues, both emerged from an emphasis on reflection as introspection that was widespread in the eighteenth century. She reads both authors as part of this reflective tradition, placing their novels in a rich and reflective dialogue that views neither the reflective tradition nor the development of the novel as teleological. Routledge Market: Literature March 2018: 234x156: 240pp Hb: 978-1-409-47043-4: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409470434

Jonathan Goossen Series: Routledge Studies in Shakespeare Jonson, Shakespeare, and Aristotle on Comedy presents an Aristotelian theory of comedy synthesized from recent discoveries in Poetics scholarship and applies it to comparative readings of four disparate comedies by Shakespeare and Ben Jonson. Dr. Jonathan Goossen evaluatates seminal works of early modern English comedy and carefully employs Aristotle’s literary theory as theory, not merely a historical influence on or source for these dramatists; and to find remarkable consonance between Shakespeare’s and Jonson’s comedy by comparing elements of plot and their emotional effect, as described by Aristotle. Routledge Market: Literature December 2017: 229 x 152: 208pp Hb: 978-1-138-71018-4: £115.00 eBook: 978-1-315-15914-0 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138710184

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Literary and Cultural Alternatives to Modernism

Meteorology and Physiology in Early Modern Culture

Unsettling Presences Edited by Kostas Boyiopoulos, Anthony Patterson and Mark Sandy, University of Durham, UK Series: Routledge Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature The 17 essays of Unsettling Presences investigate writers and texts stretching from 1890 to 1939, from both within and outside of the Modernist canon. They explore tensions, convergences, and differences between the dominant Modernists and lesser-known figures. Not only do they examine the alternative vision of populist writers such as Wells and Bennett, but also discuss figures who flirt both with cultural elitism and realism, such as E. M. Forster. The genres discussed include Realist fiction, lyric poetry, Symbolist drama, critical essay, heroic fantasy, epistolary writing, parody, detective fiction, and painting. Routledge Market: Literature January 2018: 229 x 152: 280pp Hb: 978-1-138-71021-4: £105.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138710214

Earthquakes, Human Identity, and Textual Representation Rebecca Totaro Series: Perspectives on the Non-Human in Literature and Culture Meteorology and Physiology in Early Modern Culture: Earthquakes, Human Identity, and Textual Representation provides the first sustained examination of the foundational set of early modern beliefs linking meteorology and physiology.

Routledge Market: Literature December 2017: 229 x 152: 172pp Hb: 978-1-138-09216-7: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-10762-2 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138092167

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Mary Wroth's Pamphilia to Amphilanthus

Milton, Drama, and Greek Texts Edited by Tania Demetriou, University of York and Tanya Pollard, Brooklyn College, CUNY, USA

A Re-Appraisal Ilona Bell In this first full-length study of Pamphilia to Amphilanthus, the first sonnet sequence to be written and published by an English woman, Ilona Bell shows that Mary Wroth is a boldly original lyric poet. Bell traces how Wroth re-conceptualized the private poems of her father Robert Sidney and the influential sonnets of her famous uncle Philip Sidney. Ultimately she discloses that Wroth's innovative use of poetic convention reinterprets and reconfigures male literary tradition and challenges paradigms about early modern English women writers that have erroneously separated them from their continental counterparts. Routledge Market: Literature December 2017: 234x156: 200pp Hb: 978-0-754-66689-9: £105.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780754666899

This collection reconsiders Milton’s engagement with Greek texts, with attention to the theological and theatrical meanings attached to Greek in the early modern period. The collection emphasizes the associations of Greek with both Protestantism and the origins of the theatre. It was published as a special issue of The Seventeenth Century.

Routledge Market: John Milton / Greek Literature December 2017: 246x174: 134pp Hb: 978-1-138-56745-0: £105.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138567450

STUDENT REFERENCE

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Medieval Literature: The Basics

Modern Political Aesthetics from Romantic to Modernist Literature

Angela Jane Weisl, Seton Hall University, USA and Anthony John Cunder Series: The Basics Medieval Literature: The Basics is an engaging introduction to this fascinating body of literature. An overview of the time period provides a social and cultural context and background issues such as literacy, religious and political conflict, the Black Death, and warfare are accompanied by commentary on how they relate to medieval literature. The volume breaks down the genres used in the corpus of medieval literature and makes these texts accessible to readers. It engages with the familiarities present in the narratives and connects these ideas with a contemporary, twenty-first century audience. This book is the ideal introduction for students coming to the subject for the first time. Routledge Market: Medieval Literature April 2018: 198x129: 200pp Hb: 978-1-138-66904-8: £85.00 Pb: 978-1-138-66905-5: £16.99 eBook: 978-1-315-61833-3 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138669048

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Choreographies of Social Performance Tudor Balinisteanu Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature In this new research monograph, Mihai Tudor Balinsteanu draws on concepts of dance to demonstrate how the nonhuman is dealt with in terms of practical politics, that is, choreographies of social performance which emerge at the intersection of literature, art, and embodied life. Drawing on a number of influential texts by William Wordsworth, Joseph Conrad, W. B. Yeats, and James Joyce, this truly interdisciplinary monograph explores the relations between the human and the nonhuman across centuries of literature and as demonstrated in philosophical concepts and social experiments. Routledge Market: Literature May 2018: 229 x 152: 208pp Hb: 978-1-138-30392-8: £105.00 eBook: 978-0-203-73057-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138303928

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Modernism After the Death of God

Modernism, Feminism and Everyday Life

Christianity, Fragmentation, and Unification

Tara Thomson

Stephen Kern Modernism After the Death of God explores seven influential modernists. Friedrich Nietzsche, James Joyce, D. H. Lawrence, André Gide, and Martin Heidegger criticized the destructive impact that they believed Christian sexual morality had on their love life. Although not a Christian, Freud criticized the negative effect that Christian sexual morality had on his clinical subjects, while Virginia Woolf condemned how her society was sanctioned by a patriarchal Christian authority. All seven worked to replace the loss or absence of Christian unity with non-Christian unifying projects in their respective fields. The basic structure of their main contributions to modernist culture was a dynamic interaction of radical fragmentation necessitating radical unification that was always in process and never complete.

Faced with a rapidly changing world, modernist authors turned their attention to the mundane details of everyday life, seeking new discourses and techniques to articulate their experiences of modernity. Drawing on theories of everyday life Tara Thomson explores modernist fiction by women who were afforded new roles and opportunities in a world characterized by social and political change. At the same time the realities of women's everyday lives lagged behind the promises of modernity. Thomson reads the works of Dorothy Richardson, Virginia Woolf, Katherine Mansfield, and Elizabeth Bowen to explore the complex position of women with respect to everyday life throughout the interwar years. Routledge Market: Literature March 2018: 234x156: 224pp Hb: 978-1-472-47981-5: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472479815

Routledge Market: Literature November 2017: 254 x 178: 190pp Hb: 978-1-138-09403-1: £105.00 Pb: 978-1-138-09436-9: £29.99 eBook: 978-1-315-10611-3 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138094031

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TEXTBOOK • READER

Modernism and Latin America

New Historicism and Renaissance Drama Richard Wilson and Richard Dutton Series: Longman Critical Readers

Transnational Networks of Literary Exchange Patricia Novillo-Corvalán, University of Kent at Canterbury, UK Series: Routledge Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature This book explores the relationship betweenthLatin American and European modernisms during the long 20 century. Drawing on comparative, historical, and postcolonial reading strategies, it focuses on the cultural networks and aesthetic dialogues that developed between European and non-European writers. It explores many texts that reflect complex concerns with questions of exile, space, empire, colonization, reception, translation, human subjectivity, and modernist experimentation. By rethinking modernism comparatively and placing it within an expansive transnational framework, this study opens up new perspectives that delineate the construction of a polycentric geography of modernism. Routledge Market: Literature October 2017: 229 x 152: 190pp Hb: 978-1-138-21850-5: £85.00 eBook: 978-1-315-31584-3 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138218505

New Historicism has been one of the major developments in literary theory over the last decade, both in the USA and Europe. In this book, Wilson and Dutton examine the theories behind New Historicism and its celebrated impact in practice on Renaissance Drama, providing an important collection both for students of the genre and of literary theory.

Routledge November 2017: 216x138: 264pp Hb: 978-1-138-16459-8: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-582-04554-5: £40.99 eBook: 978-1-315-50445-2 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138164598

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Modernism and Modernity in British Women’s Magazines

Noir and the Irish Nation

Ultra-Modern Eves

Maureen T. Reddy

Alice Wood, De Montfort University, UK Series: Routledge Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature th

This book explores the treatment of modernism and modernity in early 20 -century British women’s magazines. Tracing modernism’s presence in Vogue (UK), Eve: The Lady’s Pictorial, Good Housekeeping (UK) and Harper’s Bazaar (UK) published from 1916–1940, Wood uncovers how modernism was received, disseminated, and shaped by fashion and domestic titles in this period, and recovers experimental journalism and fiction by writers including Holtby, Macaulay, Stein, and Woolf. Analysis of editorial, feature, and advertising content is alert to interactions between word and image and reveals how modernism was mediated in relation to fashion, modernity, celebrity, and pleasure in these texts.

Contesting Irishness in Crime Fiction Examining the rise of Irish crime novels in the twenty-first century, Maureen Reddy argues that writers such as Ken Bruen, Benjamin Black, Tana French, Niamh O’Connor, Cormac Millar, Stuart Neville, Brian McGilloway, Declan Hughes, and Declan Burke are collectively working through the problem of defining Irishness and grappling with deep anxieties about a society that is rapidly changing in the face of a globalized, late capitalist culture. Routledge Market: Literature March 2018: 234x156: 176pp Hb: 978-1-472-44467-7: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472444677

Routledge Market: Literature March 2018: 229 x 152: 208pp Hb: 978-1-138-28562-0: £105.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138285620

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Novel Creatures

Reading London in Wartime

Animal Life and the New Millennium

Blitz, the People and Propaganda in 1940s Literature

Hilary Thompson Series: Perspectives on the Non-Human in Literature and Culture

William Cederwell Series: Routledge Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature

Novel Creatures takes a close look at the expanding interest in animals in modern fiction and argues that the novels of this time reveal a dramatic shift in conceptions of "creatureliness." Scholars have turned to the term "creaturely" recently to describe shared aspects of human and animal experience, thus moving beyond work that primarily attends to distinctions between the human and the animal. Carrying forward this recent scholarship, Novel Creatures argues that creatureliness has been an intensely millennial preoccupation, but in two contrasting forms—one leading up to the turn of the century, the other after the tragic events of 9/11.

Reading London in Wartime: Blitz, the People and Propaganda in 1940s Literature presents an expansive variety of writers and genres, including non-fiction and film approaches, to build a comprehensive social picture of the atmosphere during wartime London. From blitz and austerity to the nagging insistency of propaganda, this volume examines the representation of London in wartime and early post-war literature through each writer’s unique perspective on the pressures of 1940s city life.

Routledge Market: Literature March 2018: 229 x 152: 176pp Hb: 978-0-815-35689-9: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-351-12207-8 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815356899

Routledge Market: Literature November 2017: 229 x 152: 220pp Hb: 978-0-815-37578-4: £115.00 eBook: 978-1-351-23906-6 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815375784

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Poetics of Angling in Early Modern England

Rethinking G.K. Chesterton and Literary Modernism

Myra E. Wright Series: Perspectives on the Non-Human in Literature and Culture

Parody, Performance, and Popular Culture Michael Shallcross, Durham University, UK Series: Literary Texts and the Popular Marketplace

Myra Writgh takes ecocritical studies on an interdisciplinary turn toward the water with her new research monograph, The Poetics of Angling in Early Modern England. Identifying the lively presence of both literal and metaphorical images of sport fishing in all kinds of early modern writing, this book aims to instill deep sympathy between the art of angling and the art of writing, and for the centrality of fish in early modern conceptions of humanity.

This book studies the relationship between G.K. Chesterton and a range of key literary modernists. When Chesterton and modernism have been considered together the dynamic has been figured as one of mutual hostility, grounded in Chesterton’s advocacy of popular culture and modernism’s appeal to a cultural elite. Shallcross complicates this, establishing the depth and ambivalence of Chesterton’s interaction with modernism, and the reciprocal interest of leading modernist writers in his work. This is an innovative reading of the dynamic play of popular th and ‘high’ culture in early 20 -century British culture, adding a new perspective to current critical debates on the parameters

Routledge Market: Literature June 2018: 229 x 152: 216pp Hb: 978-1-138-30460-4: £105.00 eBook: 978-0-203-73001-0 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138304604

of modernism. Routledge Market: Literature / Modernism November 2017: 234x156: 296pp Hb: 978-1-138-67873-6: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-55875-2 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138678736

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Prosthesis in Medieval and Early Modern Culture

Routledge Companion to Women, Sex, and Gender in the Early British Colonial World

Edited by Chloe Porter, University of Sussex, UK, Katie L. Walter, Sussex University, UK and Margaret Healy, Sussex University, UK This collection considers the history of prosthesis and its implications for contemporary critical responses. It focuses on prosthesis in relation to medieval and early modern theological debate and Reformation controversy, and in medical discourse and practice. It was originally published as a special issue of Textual Practice.

Routledge Market: Early Modern Literature / Prosthesis December 2017: 234x156: 174pp Hb: 978-1-138-09531-1: £105.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138095311

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Edited by Kimberley Anne Coles and Eve Keller Over the past three decades women’s and gender studies have evolved into disciplines that have energized ”and transformed” the study of the early modern period. But the study of women and gender is not the same. As a discipline, feminism begins with the assumption that the sexed body changes the interaction of the subject in political space, regardless of other considerations of subject position. How these other social categories inflect the position of woman as a social actor and political subject does in many ways define the discipline of feminist inquiry, but the sex of the body, irrespective of gender identification, has always informed feminist analysis, which concerns primarily the political uses to which the body is put: in its labor; its social position; its religious identity; its cultural participation. Gender studies, by contrast, typically elides biological sex, inquiring into how gender identity and identification crucially alter social and political engagement. Routledge Market: Literature May 2018: 246x174: 368pp Hb: 978-1-472-47994-5: £175.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472479945

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Shakespeare and the Eighteenth-Century Miscellany

Shelley's Romantic Nonviolence

Christopher Salamone Series: Studies in Publishing History: Manuscript, Print, Digital

Aesthetics and Politics in an Age of Revolution

Through quantitative analysis and comparative close readings, Christopher Salamone investigates patterns in the form, quantity and selection of Shakespeare's texts, exposing the editorial methods by which compilers came to terms with changing cultural conceptions of Shakespeare. Offering readers a buffet of literary extracts, compilers selected isolated and often indexed passages suitable for those wishing to dip into only the pithiest, most eloquent and most useful Shakespearean snippets. Today, many readers also experience Shakespeare in fragments, through soliloquys and specific phrases or couplets that are so well known as to be considered commonplace.

In works such as The Mask of Anarchy and A Philosophical View of Reform, Matthew C. Borushko argues, Percy Bysshe Shelley intervenes in the reformist crisis of agency occasioned by the dramatic historical and political violence that characterized Britain during the Romantic period. He shows how Shelley’s body or work reconceived the possibility of the political possibilities of art and explores the implications of Shelley's nonviolence for later artists and reformers such as George Bernard Shaw to Mohandas K. Gandhi.

Routledge October 2018: 234x156: 272pp Hb: 978-1-472-47706-4: £105.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472477064

Matthew C. Borushko

Routledge Market: Literature March 2018: 234x156: 224pp Hb: 978-1-472-44954-2: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472449542

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Shakespeare at Peace

Signing the Body in Early Modern France

Kyle Pivetti and John S. Garrison

Katherine Dauge-Roth

In the current climate of global military conflict and terrorism, Shakespeare at Peace offers new readings of Shakespeare’s plays illuminating a discourse of peace previously shadowed by war and violence. Using contemporary examples such as Obama’s speeches, popular music, and science fiction adaptations of Shakespeare’s plays, Shakespeare at Peace reads Shakespeare’s plays to illuminate current debates and rhetoric around conflict and peace. In this challenging and evocative book, Garrison and Pivetti re-frame Shakespeare as a proponent of peace, rather than war, and suggest new ways of exploring the vitality of Shakespeare’s work for politics today.

The first major investigation into the rich history and ambiguous status of body art, this study surveys varied forms of corporeal writing, imprinting and marking in France in the early modern period. Author Katherine Dauge-Roth demonstrates that the rise in the importance of body marks from the late sixteenth century through early eighteenth centuries can be understood only in relationship to the growing development of written and print culture, and a specifically early modern science of signs.

Routledge Market: Shakespeare March 2018: 198x129: 192pp Hb: 978-1-138-23088-0: £80.00 Pb: 978-1-138-23089-7: £19.99 eBook: 978-1-315-31660-4 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138230880

Routledge Market: Literature January 2018: 234x156: 256pp Hb: 978-0-754-65772-9: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780754657729

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Shame and Modern Writing

Sound, Space and Civility in the British World, 1700-1850

Edited by Barry Sheils and Julie Walsh Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature Shame and Modern Writing seeks to uncover the presence of shame in and across a vast array of modern writing modalities. This interdisciplinary volume includes essays from distinguished and emergent scholars in the Humanities and Social Sciences, and shorter practice-based reflections from poets and clinical writers. It serves as a timely reflection of shame as presented in modern writing, giving added attention to engagements on race, gender, and the question of new media representation.

Routledge Market: Literature January 2018: 229 x 152: 272pp Hb: 978-1-138-06727-1: £115.00 eBook: 978-1-315-15875-4 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138067271

Bruce Buchan, Peter Denney and Karen Crawley Series: British Literature in Context in the Long Eighteenth Century These essays examine the critical role that judgments about noise and sound played in framing civility in British literature during the long eighteenth century. The volume restores the sonic dimension to conversations about civil conduct by exploring how censured behaviours and recommended practices resonated beyond the written word. Understanding perceptions and valuations of noise allows us to chart how civility was understood in the context of significant political, social and cultural change. Divided into three parts, Sound, Space and Civility in the British World demonstrates how both noise and sound could be recognized by eighteenth-century Britons as expressions of civility. Routledge Market: Literature February 2018: 234x156: 250pp Hb: 978-1-472-46659-4: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472466594

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The Ashgate Research Companion to Medieval Disability Studies

The Hardships of the English Laws in Relation to Wives by Sarah Chapone

John P. Sexton and Kisha G. Tracy The questions posed by disability studies scholarship are increasingly of interest to medieval studies scholars and there have been a wealth of books published on the intersection of these two fields of research over the past two decades. More recently, medieval scholars have developed a framework for considering more specifically medieval ways of thinking about disability, analyzing the medieval conception of the different or ’othered’ body and thinking through ’medieval things’: such as the responses to injury and resulting impairment in contemporary law, literature, and art; the impaired body as a site for miraculous transformation; the presence of physical and mental difference in different cultural modes than exist in the modern world; and the role of theosophical thought in characterizing difference. This is the first volume to survey this field as a whole, bringing together the most notable scholars in the field alongside up-and-coming academics. Routledge January 2018: 384pp Hb: 978-1-472-48385-0: £90.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472483850

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The Ashgate Research Companion to Popular Romance Fiction An Goris, Eric Murphy Selinger and Hsu-Ming Teo That popular romance fiction constitutes the largest segment of the global consumer book market is well-established. Less well-known is the worldwide presence of scholarship that studies this global genre and its remarkable readership. Bringing together an international group of scholars, This research companion offers a state-of-the-art review of scholarship in this still-emerging field. In recognition of the diversity of the form, the Companion provides a history of the genre, an overview of disciplinary approaches to studying romance fiction, and analysis and critical evaluation of important subgenres, themes, and topics, while also highlighting new avenues of inquiry for future research. Routledge Market: Literature January 2018: 234x156: 464pp Hb: 978-1-472-44330-4: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472443304

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Edited by Susan Paterson Glover, Laurentian University, Canada. Series: The Early Modern Englishwoman, 1500-1750: Contemporary Editions Susan Paterson Glover here presents, in modern type, a critical edition of the first printed work by an English woman writer, Sarah Chapone, on the inequity of the common law regime for married women. The text itself is bookended by an extended, original introduction, and a valuable set of appendices providing supplemental historical documents and information relating to Chapone's life and work. Routledge Market: Literature February 2018: 234x156: 146pp Hb: 978-1-409-45077-1: £115.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409450771

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The Last of an Age The Making and Unmaking of a Sixteenth-Century Ottoman Poet Sooyong Kim The sixteenth century was a time when literature written in Turkish rapidly grew in parallel with an expanding bureaucratic state. The growing corpus, particularly of poetry, led to the compilation of a series of biographical dictionaries of poets; but until now, the part that such dictionaries played in the formation of a poetic canon, and by extension a literary canon, has not been fully explored. This book focuses on the work and reception of the poet Zati (1477-1546) during his lifetime and in the decades after.

Routledge Market: Literature December 2017: 229 x 152: 156pp Hb: 978-1-409-44099-4: £115.00 eBook: 978-1-315-54598-1 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409440994

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The Environmental Crisis Novel Ecological Death-facing in Contemporary British and North American Fiction

The Maternal Imaginary in Early Modern Hispanic Culture

Louise Squire Series: Routledge Studies in Contemporary Literature

Emilie Bergmann Series: Women and Gender in the Early Modern World

In the contemporary era, literature has begun to respond to the environmental issues we currently face. In doing so, a new subgenre has emerged -- the environmental crisis novel. This new subgenre is concerned not just with a range of environmental issues but with the human subject as catalyst for these issues. As such, Louise Squire argues that the environmental crisis novel is distinguished by its narrative use of ‘death’ as a thematic device by which to explore these concerns. This use of death, enables fiction to engage with a range of theoretical ideas as well as with popular notions of death and the human condition, as cultural phenomena of the modern West.

Looking beyond Don Quixote and the popular theater, this study brings together non-canonical works from Spanish and Spanish American colonial writers in diverse genres, to illustrate the multi-faceted possibilities and the cultural limitations of representations of mothers and mothering in this period. Routledge Market: Literature February 2018: 234x156: 200pp Hb: 978-1-472-48511-3: £60.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472485113

Routledge Market: Literature March 2018: 229 x 152: 192pp Hb: 978-1-138-30468-0: £105.00 eBook: 978-0-203-72986-1 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138304680

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The Nature of Modernism

The Typographic Imaginary in Early Modern English Literature

Ecocritical Approaches to the Poetry of Edward Thomas, T. S. Eliot, Edith Sitwell and Charlotte Mew Elizabeth Black, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK Series: Routledge Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature This is the first extended study of the relationship between British modernist poetry and the environment. Challenging associations of modernism as predominantly anthropocentric in character and urban in focus, it argues that within British modernist poetry there is a clear interest in the natural world. Readings of Edward Thomas, T. S. Eliot, Edith Sitwell, and Charlotte Mew reveal a shared preoccupation with environmental issues and a common desire to find new ways of achieving physical, psychological, and artistic reconnection with nature. This book shows how green approaches to modernist studies can produce new insights into both individual poets and the modernist movement as a whole. Routledge Market: Literature November 2017: 229 x 152: 222pp Hb: 978-1-138-24409-2: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-23212-6 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138244092

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Rachel Stenner Series: Material Readings in Early Modern Culture The ’typographic imaginary’ is an aesthetic linking authors from William Caxton to Alexander Pope, this study centrally contends. Early modern English literature engages imaginatively with printing and this book both characterizes that engagement and proposes the typographic imaginary as a framework for its analysis. Certain texts, the author states, describe the people, places, concerns, and processes of printing in ways that, over time, generate their own figurative authority. The typographic imaginary is posited as a literary phenomenon shared by different writers, a wider cultural understanding of printing, and a critical concept for unpicking the imaginative otherness that printing introduced to literature. With chapters on printers’ manuals, William Caxton’s paratexts, Robert Copland’s dramatic dialogues, the prose fictions of William Baldwin, George Gascoigne, and Thomas Nashe, and Edmund Spenser’s courtly poetry. Routledge July 2018: 234x156: 208pp Hb: 978-1-472-48042-2: £60.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472480422

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The Routledge Companion to Twenty-First Century Literary Fiction

The Value of Time in Early Modern English Literature

Edited by Robert Eaglestone, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK and Daniel O'Gorman Series: Routledge Literature Companions

The stigma of haste pervaded early modern English culture, more so than the so-called stigma of print. Expressions of haste revealed a conflict between the ideal of slow writing and the reality of fast printing. Previous studies have concentrated on the competing definitions of time and the obsession with how to use time well. Others have considered time as a literary theme. This book is the first to connect ideas of time to writerly haste in an interdisciplinary manner, drawing upon rhetorical theory, book history, poetics, religious studies and early modern moral philosophy, which provide a genuinely deep understanding of why the stigma of haste so preoccupied the early modern mind.

A significant and central intervention into the field of Contemporary Literature, this volume offers essential coverage of writers who established themselves in the last millennium, with chapters serving as both an introduction to an area and a frame for further academic debate. Accessible to experts, students, and general readers, is essential reading for anyone interested in the past, present, and future of contemporary literature. Routledge Market: Literature August 2018: 246x174: 560pp Hb: 978-0-415-71604-8: £165.00 eBook: 978-1-315-88023-5 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415716048

Tina Skouen

Routledge Market: Literature October 2017: 234x156: 234pp Hb: 978-1-472-48805-3: £105.00 eBook: 978-0-203-73302-8 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472488053

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The Routledge Research Companion to Digital Medieval Literature

Trollope Underground

Edited by Jennifer E. Boyle and Helen J. Burgess Working across literature, history, theory and practice, this volume offers insight into the specific digital tools and interfaces, as well as the modalities, theories and forms, central to some of the most exciting new research and critical, scholarly and artistic production in medieval and pre-modern studies. Addressing more general themes and topics such as digitzation, media studies, digital humanities and "big data" the new essays in this handbook also focus on more than 25 keywords such as access, code, virtual, interactivity and network. A useful website hosts examples, links and materials relevant to the book.

Edited by Margaret Markwick and Deborah Denenholz Morse In their provocative examination of Anthony Trollope's novels, Margaret Markwick and Deborah Denenholz Morse, two leading Trollope scholars, explore Trollope's more famous novels, along with his less familiar texts.The authors offer fresh perspectives on Trollopean ideas about gender, family, class, and nation. Among the topics are restriction practices in Trollope and their implications relative to new developments in contraceptive techniques, disgraced relatives in Trollope's fiction, mother-daughter struggles for power and love, ignored wives, unappreciated sisters, Trollope as biographer, debates in the mid-Victorian Church, teaching Trollope, and discarded women and forgotten texts. Routledge Market: Literature March 2018: 234x156: 190pp Hb: 978-1-409-46907-0: £105.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409469070

Routledge Market: Literature December 2017: 246x174: 268pp Hb: 978-1-138-90504-7: £135.00 eBook: 978-1-315-69604-1 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138905047

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Victorian Sustainability in Literature and Culture Edited by Wendy Parkins Series: Among the Victorians and Modernists From a growing awareness of the depletion of energy resources and the perils of environmental degradation to the founding of self-sufficient communities and the establishment of the National Trust, the concept of sustainability began to take on a new importance in the Victorian period. An emerging sense of the fragility of human and natural resources, and the deeply complex interweaving of the two, led many Victorians to consider how to preserve or protect what they valued, and how individuals, communities could survive and flourish in a world of finite resources. Routledge Market: Literature November 2017: 234x156: 238pp Hb: 978-1-472-47098-0: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-54826-5 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472470980

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Vision and Character Physiognomics and the English Realist Novel Eike Kronshage Series: Routledge Studies in Nineteenth Century Literature Vision and Character: Physiognomics and the English Realist Novel offers a study into the physiognomics and aesthetics of 19th and 20th Century English Realist Novels as presented by some of the best known authors in this genre, like Virginia Woolf, Joseph Conrad, Charles Dickens and Jane Austen. In this highly original approach to the issues of representation, visuality and aesthetics in the nineteenth-century realist novel, and even the question of literary interpretation, Eike Kronshage argues that physiognomics has enabled writers to access their characters’ inner lives without interfering in an authoritative way. Routledge Market: Literature November 2017: 229 x 152: 230pp Hb: 978-1-138-71025-2: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-351-23203-6 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138710252

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Women’s Deliberation: The Heroine in Early Modern French Women’s Theater (1650–1750) Theresa Varney Kennedy Deliberating the Heroine in Early Modern French Women’s Theater argues that women playwrights used their heroines as a vehicle through which to question traditional views on women. Denied the powers of cleverness, the authority of deliberation, and the right to speak, heroines were often excluded from central roles in plays by leading male playwrights from this period. Women playwrights, on the other hand, embraced the ideas necessary to expand the boundaries of female heroism. Heroines in tragicomedies, comedies, and tragedies from the mid-seventeenth through the mid-eighteenth centuries reflect a shift in mentalities toward rationality and female agency. Author Theresa Kennedy argues that the ’deliberative heroine,’ emerging at the dawn of the eighteenth century, is the most fully developed, exuding all the characteristics of the modern-day heroine. Though she embodies many of the qualities of her heroine counterparts, she also responds to them. Routledge August 2018: 234x156: 176pp Hb: 978-1-472-48454-3: £60.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472484543

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Critical Branding

Popular Postcolonialisms

Postcolonial Studies and the Market

Discourses of Empire and Popular Culture

Caroline Koegler, University of Münster, Germany Series: Routledge Research in Postcolonial Literatures

Edited by Nadia Atia, Queen Mary, University of London, UK and Kate Houlden, Anglia Ruskin University, UK Series: Routledge Research in Postcolonial Literatures

Merging concepts from business studies, postcolonial studies, queer studies, and literary and cultural studies in an informed way, Critical Branding: Postcolonial Studies and the Market sets on a thorough theoretical footing a range of categories which, while increasingly current, remain surprisingly obscure, such as the market, marketing, branding, and market forces. It provides new concepts with which to think of the market as a dimension of practice, such as brand narratives, brand acts, and brand politics. At a time when the marketization of the university system and the resulting effects on academics are much on our minds, Critical Branding is a timely contribution that explores how diversely postcolonial studies and the market intersect, for better and for worse. Routledge Market: Literature July 2018: 229 x 152: 208pp Hb: 978-1-138-50222-2: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-14482-5 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138502222

Drawing together the insights of postcolonial scholarship and cultural studies, this collection questions the place of ‘the popular’ in the postcolonial paradigm. Multidisciplinary in focus, it explores the extent to which popular forms are infused with colonial logics, and whether they can be employed by those advocating for change. It considers a range of fiction, film, and non-hegemonic cultural forms, engaging with topics such as environmental change, language activism. Building on the work of cultural theorists, it asks whether the popular is where elite conceptions of the world may best be challenged. Routledge Market: Literature January 2018: 229 x 152: 256pp Hb: 978-1-138-12505-6: £85.00 eBook: 978-1-315-64777-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138125056

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Marxism, Postcolonial Theory, and the Future of Critique

The Routledge Diaspora Studies Reader

Critical Engagements with Benita Parry Edited by Sharae Deckard, University College Dublin, Ireland and Rashmi Varma, Warwick University, UK Series: Routledge Research in Postcolonial Literatures Focusing on the intellectual legacy of Benita Parry, this book explores new directions for postcolonial studies, Marxist literary criticism, and world literature in the contemporary moment, seeking to re-imagine the field, and new possibilities for Left critique. As a leading dissident of the poststructuralist turn within postcolonial studies, Parry has reinvigorated the field by bringing critical questions of resistance and struggle to bear on aesthetic forms. The book offers cutting-edge work on peripheral aesthetics, the world-literary system, critiques of global capitalism and capitalist modernity, and the resurgence of Marxism, communism, and liberation theory by a range of scholars.

Edited by Klaus Stierstorfer, University of Muenster, Germany and Janet Wilson, University of Northampton, UK Series: Routledge Literature Readers This book provides a comprehensive resource for students and scholars, tracing the emergence and development of Diaspora Studies, and presenting key critical essays alongside recent pieces, as well as brand new papers. The volume offers substantial introductions to each section that situate each work within its historical, disciplinary and theoretical contexts. This illuminating guide is ideal for established scholars and those new to diaspora, offering an accessible format that includes Further Reading and a Glossary. Sections include Nation, Race, Multiculturalism, Intersectionality, Gender, Home and Belonging, Spaces, Hybridity, Religion, Literature, Visual Culture, and Digital Media.

Routledge Market: Postcolonial Literature June 2018: 229 x 152: 228pp Hb: 978-1-138-18611-8: £105.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138186118

Routledge Market: Literature / Diaspora October 2017: 246x174: 274pp Hb: 978-1-138-78319-5: £110.00 Pb: 978-1-138-78320-1: £32.99 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138783201

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Narrating Postcolonial Arab Nations

Zoë Wicomb & the Translocal

Egypt, Algeria, Lebanon, Palestine

Writing Scotland & South Africa

Lindsey Moore, University of Lancaster, UK Series: Routledge Research in Postcolonial Literatures Narrating Postcolonial Arab Nations significantly enhances the interface between postcolonial literary studies and the hitherto under-studied Arab world. Lindsey Moore brings together canonical and less familiar Arab novels and memoirs from the last half century to consider colonial continuities and consequences. Literary narratives are shown to oppose repressive versions of nationalism and to track desire lines toward more hospitable nations. The literatures discussed in this book enable a deeper historical understanding of twenty-first century Arab uprisings and their aftermaths. The book analyzes four rich sites of literary production: Egypt, Algeria, Lebanon, and Palestine. Moore explores ways in which authors critique particular nation-state formations and decolonizing histories, engage the general problematic of ‘the nation’, and redefine, repurpose, and transcend national literary canons. Routledge Market: Literature/Postcolonial Studies November 2017: 229 x 152: 242pp Hb: 978-1-138-83088-2: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-73700-3 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138830882

Edited by Kai Easton, SOAS University of London, UK and Derek Attridge, University of York, UK Series: Routledge Research in Postcolonial Literatures This is the first book on the fiction of Zoë Wicomb, whose work offers telling insights into questions of race and gender that have worldwide significance in their relation to postcolonialism. Focusing on the translocal, it demonstrates Wicomb’s importance as a novelist, short-story writer, and critic. In tracking contemporary and historical relations between two localities, her fiction reveals a consistent interest in and interrogation of home and belonging, space and place. This book will make a vital contribution to current debates on migrancy and cosmopolitanism taking place in a number of disciplines, including literary studies, geography, politics, sociology, and history. Routledge Market: Literature October 2017: 229 x 152: 230pp Hb: 978-1-138-23741-4: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-28341-8 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138237414

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Shakespeare and Indian Cinemas

Shakespeare’s Suicides

Edited by Poonam Trivedi, University of Delhi, India and Paromita Chakravarti, Jadavpur University, India Series: Routledge Studies in Shakespeare

Dead Bodies That Matter Marlena Tronicke Series: Routledge Studies in Shakespeare

This book explores Shakespeare in Indian cinemas, including less familiar, Indian language cinemas to contribute to current studies in global Shakespeare. Visiting diverse filmic genres and expanding the very notion of ‘Indian cinema’, essays focus on the inter-textualities between Shakespearean theatre, regional cinema, performative traditions, and literary histories in India, analyzing the interplay of aesthetic, historical, socio-political, and theoretical contexts. The book tracks the intra–Indian flows and cross-currents between the various film industries, and intervenes in the politics of multiculturalism and inter/intraculturalism built up around Shakespearean appropriations. Routledge Market: Shakespeare / Film Studies November 2018: 229 x 152: 272pp Hb: 978-1-138-94692-7: £90.00 eBook: 978-1-315-67040-9 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138946927

Shakespeare’s Suicides: Dead Bodies That Matter is the first study in Shakespeare criticism to examine the entirety of Shakespeare’s dramatic suicides. It addresses all plays featuring suicides and near-suicides in chronological order from Titus Andronicus to Antony and Cleopatra, thus establishing that suicide becomes increasingly pronounced as a vital means of dramatic characterisation. In particular, the book approaches suicide as a gendered phenomenon.

Routledge Market: Literature November 2017: 229 x 152: 208pp Hb: 978-0-815-38044-3: £115.00 eBook: 978-1-351-21319-6 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815380443

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Shakespeare and Rome

Shakespearean Tragedy

Graham Holderness Series: Anglo-Italian Renaissance Studies

D. F. Bratchell

Relating Shakespeare's Roman works to a longer history of the city of Rome, author Graham Holderness reads Shakespeare's Roman plays via a double perspective, the ancient and the modern. He argues that for Shakespeare, Rome was not simply the republic and empire of antiquity, but a contemporary place that possessed its own meanings, retained its own legacies from the past, and was in the process of generating new meanings. Routledge Market: Literature February 2018: 234x156: 200pp Hb: 978-1-409-41015-7: £95.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409410157

This volume reflects changing critical perceptions of Shakespeare's works from Renaissance to modern times and celebrates the power of Shakespearean tragedy. The selection of critical reaction covers both the general concept of Shakespearean tragedy and its expression in the major plays, illustrating the main directions of critical approaches to Shakespearean tragedy and enabling the reader to develop an informed response to Shakespeare's dramatic works. An introductory chapter traces the development of the concept of tragedy from classical times, and its dramatic expression in the time of Shakespeare. Each of Shakespeare's great tragedies - Hamlet, Macbeth, Lear, and Othello is considered in turn, and a final chapter summarizes contemporary critical approaches so that the reader can link the best of the critical past with the present critical scene. Routledge April 2018 Hb: 978-1-138-83442-2: £90.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138834422

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Shakespeare's Hamlet in an Era of Textual Exhaustion

Old Words, New Tools

Edited by Sonya Freeman Loftis, Morehouse College, Allison Kellar, Wingate University and Lisa Ulevich, Georgia State University Series: Routledge Studies in Shakespeare Shakespeare's Hamlet in an Era of Textual Exhaustion examines how postmodern audiences continue to reengage with Hamlet in spite of our culture’s oversaturation with this most canonical of texts. Combining adaptation theory and performance theory with examinations of avant-garde performances and other unconventional appropriations of Shakespeare’s play, Post-Hamlet examines Shakespeare’s Hamlet as a central symbol of our era’s "textual exhaustion", an era in which the reader/viewer is bombarded by text—printed, digital, and otherwise. Routledge Market: Literature November 2017: 229 x 152: 248pp Hb: 978-1-138-29127-0: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-26553-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138291270

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Shakespeare's Language in Digital Media Edited by Janelle Jenstad, University of Victoria, Canada, Mark Kaethler and Jennifer Roberts-Smith, University of Waterloo, Canada Series: Digital Research in the Arts and Humanities A growing body of work in the digital humanities allows textual critics to explore new approaches to editing in digital environments, and enables language historians to ask and answer new questions about Shakespeare's words. The authors in this unique book explicitly bring together the two fields of textual criticism and language history in an exploration of the ways in which new tools are expanding our understanding of Early Modern English. Routledge Market: Literature, Shakespeare January 2018: 234x156: 204pp Hb: 978-1-472-42797-7: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-60874-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472427977

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Shakespeare's Tempest and Capitalism The Storm of History Helen C Scott Shakespeare's Tempest attracted countless anti-colonial writers during the period of decolonization in Africa and the Caribbean, and continues to offer material for writers and directors interested in the intimate connections between war and empire. Routledge Market: Literature April 2018: 234x156: 190pp Hb: 978-1-409-40726-3: £105.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409407263

TEXTBOOK • READER

The Complete Poems of Shakespeare Edited by Cathy Shrank and Raphael Lyne Series: Longman Annotated English Poets This is the definitive scholarly edition of Shakespeare's poems and sonnets. It provides an introduction to the place of Shakespeare’s poems within his career and aims to situate his body of work in context. The commentary on the poems is wide-ranging in points of reference and methodology, and creates an argument alongside a reading of the poems. The book includes boxes of information on important relevant topics, such as introductions to key sources, biographies of key figures and general discussions of form. Routledge Market: Literature/Poetry November 2017: 246x189: 782pp Hb: 978-0-415-73707-4: £120.00 Pb: 978-0-582-78410-9: £29.99 eBook: 978-1-315-70794-5 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780582784109

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The Fictional Lives of Shakespeare Kevin Gilvary Series: Routledge Studies in Shakespeare This study begins with a short survey of the history and practice of biography and then surveys the very limited biographical material for Shakespeare. Although Shakespeare gradually attained the status as a national hero during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, there were no serious attempts to reconstruct his life. Any attempt at an account of his life or personality amounts, however, merely to "biografiction". Modern biographers differ sharply on Shakespeare’s apparent relationships with Southampton and with Jonson, which merely underlines the fact that the documentary record has to be greatly expanded through contextual description and speculation in order to appear like a Life of Shakespeare. Routledge Market: Literature December 2017: 229 x 152: 246pp Hb: 978-0-815-39443-3: £115.00 eBook: 978-1-351-18607-0 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815394433

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Domestic Intersections in Contemporary Migration Fiction

Theorizing Ethnicity and Nationality in Chick Lit

At Home in the Metropole Lucinda Newns Series: Routledge Research in Postcolonial Literatures Through close readings of fiction emerging from the African, Caribbean and South Asian diasporas Domestic Intersections in Contemporary Migration Fiction: At Home in the Metropole, reassesses our conception of home in light of contemporary realities of globalisation and forced migration, providing a valuable critique of the celebration of unfixed subject positions that has been a central tenet of postcolonial studies. Routledge Market: Literature June 2018: 229 x 152: 192pp Hb: 978-1-138-30811-4: £110.00 eBook: 978-1-315-14283-8 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138308114

Edited by Erin Hurt Series: Routledge Studies in Contemporary Literature Scholars and readers alike need little help identifying the infamous Bridget Jones or Carrie Bradshaw. While it is no stretch to say that these fictional characters are the most recognizable within the chic lit genre, there are certainly many others that have helped define this body of work. While previous research has focused primarily on white American chick lit, Theorizing Ethnicity and Nationality in the Chick Lit Genre, takes a wider look at the genre, by exploring chick lit novels featuring protagonists from a variety of ethnic backgrounds set both within and outside of the US. Routledge Market: Literature February 2018: 229 x 152: 240pp Hb: 978-1-138-09252-5: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-10740-0 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138092525

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Gender and Short Fiction

Women Writing Across Cultures

Women’s Tales in Contemporary Britain

Present, past, future Edited by Pelagia Goulimari

Edited by Laura Lojo-Rodríguez and Jorge Sacido-Romero Series: Routledge Studies in Contemporary Literature

This collection brings together scholars and practitioners seeking to question and re-theorize woman, writing, women’s writing, writing across cultures. It develops recent feminist, queer and transgender theory and practice, and explores "writing across" in a number of axes. This book was originally published as a special issue of Angelaki.

In their new monograph, Gender and Short Fiction: Women’s Tales in Contemporary Britain, Jorge Sacido-Romero and Laura Mª Lojo-Rodríguez explain why artistically ambitious women writers continue turning to the short story, a genre that has not yet attained the degree of literary prestige and social recognition the novel has had in the modern period. In this timely volume, the editors endorse the view that the genre still retains its potential as a vehicle for the expression of female experience alternative to and/or critical with dominant patriarchal ideology present at the very onset of the development of the modern British short story at the turn of the nineteenth century. Routledge Market: Literature May 2018: 229 x 152: 296pp Hb: 978-1-138-09364-5: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-10648-9 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138093645

Routledge Market: Women's Writing November 2017: 246x174: 326pp Hb: 978-1-138-29576-6: £115.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138295766

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Marmaduke Herbert; or, the Fatal Error

Women's University Narratives, 1890-1945, Part II

by Marguerite Blessington

Anna Bogen

Edited by Susanne Schmid Series: Chawton House Library: Women's Novels

The years 1890-1945 saw an unprecedented outpouring of fiction focused on British university life, a significant subgroup focused on the lives of women students, newly admitted to the structures of higher education system. The novels and short stories collected here were widely discussed in the public sphere during the early twentieth century sparking debate about many wider social and cultural issues. The majority have not been reprinted since their original publication, and until now have been rarely available to scholars. These volumes therefore, provide a major new resource for scholarship in women’s studies, educational history, and literary and cultural modernism.

In the early and mid-nineteenth century, Marguerite Blessington was generally regarded as an important author, but as no literary executor took care of her oeuvre posthumously, she soon fell into obscurity. This volume, part of ‘Chawton House Library: Women's Novels’ series, presents her 1847 novel Marmaduke Herbert; or, the Fatal Error — a highly popular novel reprinted in German, French and American editions within a year of its publication. In addition, editorial apparatus put the novel in its literary and cultural context, discusses its contemporary reception, and provide explanatory notes on the text regarding people, places and terminology as well as a bibliography and appendices. Routledge Market: Literature/Romantic August 2018: 234x156: 400pp Hb: 978-1-848-93588-4: £100.00 eBook: 978-1-315-53429-9 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781848935884

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Routledge Market: Literature/Women's November 2017: 234x156 Hb: 978-1-138-57781-7: £395.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138577817

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Women's University Narratives, 1890–1945, Part II

Women's University Narratives, 1890–1945, Part II Vol 3

Volume I Anna Bogen The years 1890-1945 saw an unprecedented outpouring of fiction focused on British university life, a significant subgroup focused on the lives of women students, newly admitted to the structures of higher education system. The novels and short stories collected here were widely discussed in the public sphere during the early twentieth century sparking debate about many wider social and cultural issues. The majority have not been reprinted since their original publication, and until now have been rarely available to scholars. These volumes therefore, provide a major new resource for scholarship in women’s studies, educational history, and literary and cultural modernism. Routledge Market: Literature/Women's November 2017: 234x156: 164pp Hb: 978-1-138-76683-9: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-44932-6 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138766839

Volume III Anna Bogen The years 1890-1945 saw an unprecedented outpouring of fiction focused on British university life, a significant subgroup focused on the lives of women students, newly admitted to the structures of higher education system. The novels and short stories collected here were widely discussed in the public sphere during the early twentieth century sparking debate about many wider social and cultural issues. The majority have not been reprinted since their original publication, and until now have been rarely available to scholars. These volumes therefore, provide a major new resource for scholarship in women’s studies, educational history, and literary and cultural modernism. Routledge Market: Literature/Women's November 2017: 234x156: 166pp Hb: 978-1-138-76685-3: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-44876-3 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138766853

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Women's University Narratives, 1890–1945, Part II Volume II Anna Bogen The years 1890-1945 saw an unprecedented outpouring of fiction focused on British university life, a significant subgroup focused on the lives of women students, newly admitted to the structures of higher education system. The novels and short stories collected here were widely discussed in the public sphere during the early twentieth century sparking debate about many wider social and cultural issues. The majority have not been reprinted since their original publication, and until now have been rarely available to scholars. These volumes therefore, provide a major new resource for scholarship in women’s studies, educational history, and literary and cultural modernism. Routledge Market: Literature/Women's November 2017: 234x156: 290pp Hb: 978-1-138-76684-6: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-44928-9 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138766846

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Women's University Narratives, 1890–1945, Part II Volume IV Anna Bogen The years 1890-1945 saw an unprecedented outpouring of fiction focused on British university life, a significant subgroup focused on the lives of women students, newly admitted to the structures of higher education system. The novels and short stories collected here were widely discussed in the public sphere during the early twentieth century sparking debate about many wider social and cultural issues. The majority have not been reprinted since their original publication, and until now have been rarely available to scholars. These volumes therefore, provide a major new resource for scholarship in women’s studies, educational history, and literary and cultural modernism. Routledge Market: Literature/Women's November 2017: 234x156: 146pp Hb: 978-1-138-76686-0: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-44872-5 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138766860

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A Cosmopolitan Cure

Latin American Gothic in Literature and Culture

Writing Resort Culture in an Age of Nations BD Morgan From the 1840s until the 1870s German water resorts, and Baden-Baden in particular, were among the most fashionable - and notorious - of Continental destinations, famed for fostering transient and transgressive modes of therapy, sociability and play. This book explores the "classic" watering place's curious fictional afterlives. Routledge Market: filmmaking April 2018: 220pp Hb: 978-1-910-88702-8: £75.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781910887028

Edited by Sandra Casanova-Vizcaíno, Binghamton University, USA and Inés Ordiz, University of Washington, USA Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature This book explores the Gothic mode in the literature, visual arts, and culture of Latin America. Visiting texts from Mexico, Central America, the Caribbean, the Andes, Brazil, and the Southern Cone, the essays illuminate the existence of native representations of the Gothic, while also exploring the presence of universal archetypes of terror and horror. Through the analysis of global and local Gothic topics and themes, they evaluate the reality of a multifaceted territory marked by a shifting colonial and postcolonial relationship with Europe and the US, also acknowledging the effects of "Globalgothic" on a transnational and transcultural level. Routledge Market: Literature October 2017: 229 x 152: 270pp Hb: 978-1-138-23422-2: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-30767-1 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138234222

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Ecogothic in Nineteenth-Century American Literature

Ways of Re-Thinking Literature

Edited by Dawn Keetley, Lehigh University, USA and Matthew Wynn Sivils, Iowa State University, USA Series: Routledge Studies in World Literatures and the Environment The first of its kind to address the ecogothic in American literature, this collection of fourteen articles illuminates a new and provocative literacy category, one that exists at the crossroads of the gothic and the environmental imagination, of fear and the ecosystems we inhabit.

Routledge Market: Literature November 2017: 229 x 152: 238pp Hb: 978-1-138-20645-8: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-46493-0 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138206458

Edited by Donatien Grau and Tom Bishop Ways of Re-Thinking Literature is a collection of inspiring, thoughtful, creative and critical essays by leading scholars and writers including Avital Ronell, Jesse Ball, Joshua Cohen, Brosi Groys, Ben Lerner, Wayne Koestenbaum, Simon Critchley, Stathis Gourgouris, Shelley Jackson, Paul Audi, Emily Apter, Laurent Dubreuil, Donatien Grau, Tristan Garcia, and Camille Toledo, with an opening text that is a new writing by Helene Cixous. It examines the connections and dialogue between the critical and creative in literary studies, showing that the interaction between these two spheres provide moments of extraordinary creativity in literary as well as theoretical terms. Routledge Market: Literature May 2018: 234x156: 260pp Hb: 978-1-138-67574-2: £110.00 Pb: 978-1-138-67575-9: £24.99 eBook: 978-1-315-56048-9 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138675742

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Feminist Perspectives on Contemporary Zombies, Vampires, and Witches

Rethinking the Victim

Radical Monstrosity in Literature, Film, and TV

Anne Brewster and Sue Kossew Series: Routledge Research in Postcolonial Literatures

Heidi Breuer, California State University, San Marcos, USA and Natalie Wilson, California State University, San Marcos, USA Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature This book explores zombies, vampires, and witches in contemporary popular culture from a feminist perspective, analyzing a range of novels, television series, and films. Though some popular texts (from Harry Potter to Twilight) still use historically inherited conventions, many millennial texts (like True Blood, Maleficent, and The Walking Dead) utilize feminist-friendly monster-figures to critique regressive patriarchal ideologies, champion female monstrosity and female agency, and/or envision alternative socio-cultural formations. This book contributes to discussions in feminism, popular culture, gender and sexuality studies, cultural studies, film studies, and contemporary literature. Routledge Market: Literature / Feminist Theory January 2018: 229 x 152: 244pp Hb: 978-1-138-90688-4: £90.00 eBook: 978-1-315-69532-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138906884

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Gendered Violence in Australian Literature

Rethinking the Victim: Gendered Violence in Australian Literature is the first comprehensive investigation of the multiple and interrelated forms of violence which play out across intimate, familial, colonial and militarised zones in Australian women’s literature. Arguing that gendered violence is inflected with sexuality, class, race, ethnicity and many other factors, the book rethinks victimhood and agency from a feminist perspective and resists the spectacularization of violence against women that is often graphically depicted in cinema, news media and pornography. Routledge Market: Literature June 2018: 229 x 152: 208pp Hb: 978-1-138-09259-4: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-10738-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138092594

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The Routledge Companion to Literature and Publishing

Writing the Landscape

Edited by Alison Baverstock, Kingston University, UK, Richard Bradford, University of Ulster at Coleraine, Ireland and Madalena Gonzalez, University of Avignon, France Series: Routledge Literature Companions

Christie Margrave

This volume builds bridges between the traditional focus and methodologies of literary studies and the actualities of contemporary literature, including the realities of professional writing, the conventions and practicalities of the publishing world, and its connections between literary publishing and other media. It enables students and academics to extend the text-based framework of modules on contemporary writing into detailed expositions of the culture and industry which bring these texts into existence, visiting economic considerations alongside creative issues. The volume is a valuable resource for those studying English, Creative Writing, Publishing, and Media Studies.

Women and Nature in the Works of French Female Novelists 1789-1815 Women novelists were among the most popular authors of the First Republic and First Empire, yet they are frequently overlooked in favour of their canonical male counterparts. Their penchant for sentimental novels has led some later critics to take their writing at face value as apolitical and domestic, at odds with France's violent convulsions. Furthermore, their carefully crafted presentation of natural settings has, thus far, been dismissed completely. Routledge Market: History May 2018: 256pp Hb: 978-1-910-88719-6: £75.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781910887196

Routledge Market: Literature / Publishing July 2018: 246x174: 504pp Hb: 978-0-415-75022-6: £130.00 eBook: 978-1-315-77838-9 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415750226

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The Routledge Handbook of International Beat Literature Edited by A. Robert Lee, Nihon University, Japan Series: Routledge Literature Handbooks The Routledge Hadbook of International Beat addresses Beat, and Beat-influenced, writers and works across twenty-five countries, drawn from more than the one hemisphere, and from multi-lingual and multicultural sources. A. Robert Lee delves into the overall contour and variations within the genre as expressed in each national tradition's authors, works, achievements, and respective fashionings of Beat verse, fiction, life-writing, drama, letters et al. Routledge Market: Literature May 2018: 254 x 178: 376pp Hb: 978-0-415-78545-7: £175.00 eBook: 978-1-315-21027-8 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415785457

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The Routledge Handbook to the Ghost Story Edited by Scott Brewster, University of Lincoln, UK and Luke Thurston, Aberystwyth University, UK Series: Routledge Literature Handbooks The Handbook to the Ghost Story sets surveys and extends a new field of criticism which has been taking shape in recent years, centering on the ghost story and bringing together a vast range of interpretive methods and theoretical perspectives. The main task of the volume is to situate the genre within historical and contemporary literary cultures across the globe, and to explore its significance within wider literary contexts as well as those of the supernatural. The Handbook offers a significant contribution to this new critical field to date, assembling some of its leading scholars to examine the key contexts and issues in understanding the emergence and development of the ghost story. Routledge Market: Literature November 2017: 254 x 178: 488pp Hb: 978-1-138-18476-3: £180.00 eBook: 978-1-315-64441-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138184763

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INDEX BY TITLE

A Adorno and the Architects of Late Style in India ......................................................................................... 18 Adventures in Feminist Dramaturgy ......................... 18 Aesthetics of Children's Poetry, The ............................... 2 African American Children in American Political Life ............................................................................................... 2 Animal Automata and Living Machines in Literature and Philosophy ...................................................................... 4 Annotating Modernism .................................................. 18 Ashgate Research Companion to Anglo-Italian Renaissance Literature and Culture, The .................... 8 Ashgate Research Companion to Medieval Disability Studies, The ........................................................................... 25 Ashgate Research Companion to Popular Romance Fiction, The ............................................................................ 25 Ashgate Research Companion to Romantic Women Writers, The .............................................................................. 8 Attachment, Place, and Otherness in Nineteenth-Century American Literature ................ 14

B Beards and Masculinity in American Literature .................................................................................. 4 Body Language ................................................................... 12 Border Crossings ................................................................. 12 Brexit and Literature ............................................................ 4 British Nautical Melodramas, 1820–1850 ............... 12

C Chaucer: The Basics ........................................................... 18 Children, Childhood, and Musical Theater ................ 2 Christina Rossetti ................................................................ 12 Chronicling Ben-Hur's Early Reception ..................... 18 Coleridge and Cosmopolitan Intellectualism 1794–1804 ............................................................................ 19 Complete Poems of Shakespeare, The ...................... 30 Conrad and Nature ........................................................... 19 Contemporary Narratives of Dementia ...................... 4 Cosmopolitan Cure, A ...................................................... 33 Creative Writing in Schools .............................................. 2 Critical Branding ................................................................ 28 Cross-Border Crime in Contemporary Detective Fiction ........................................................................................ 4 Cultural History of English Lexicography, 1600-1800, A ................................................................................................. 16

European Literary History ............................................... 14

Love's Labor ............................................................................ 6

F

M

Fairy Tale World, The ........................................................... 3 Fantasy ..................................................................................... 5 Feminist Modernism, Poetics, and the New Economy ................................................................................ 19 Feminist Perspectives on Contemporary Zombies, Vampires, and Witches .................................................... 33 Fictional Lives of Shakespeare, The ............................ 30 From Mind to Text ................................................................ 5

Male Adolescence in Mid-Victorian Fiction ............... 6 Marmaduke Herbert; or, the Fatal Error ................... 31 Marxism, Postcolonial Theory, and the Future of Critique ................................................................................... 28 Mary Wroth's Pamphilia to Amphilanthus ............. 21 Maternal Imaginary in Early Modern Hispanic Culture, The ............................................................................................ 25 Mediating Literary Borders: Asian Australian Writing ...................................................................................... 6 Mediating Memory ........................................................... 13 Medieval Literature: The Basics .................................... 21 Mediterranean Piracy and Slavery in World Literature ............................................................................... 16 Meteorology and Physiology in Early Modern Culture .................................................................................... 21 Midwives Book, 1540-1720, The ................................... 17 Milton, Drama, and Greek Texts .................................. 21 Mobility and the Humanities ........................................... 6 Modern Political Aesthetics from Romantic to Modernist Literature ......................................................... 21 Modernism After the Death of God ............................ 22 Modernism and Latin America .................................... 22 Modernism and Modernity in British Women’s Magazines ............................................................................. 22 Modernism, Feminism and Everyday Life ................ 22

G Gender and Short Fiction ............................................... 31 George Orwell on the Radio .......................................... 19 Graphic Girlhoods ................................................................ 2

H Hardships of the English Laws in Relation to Wives by Sarah Chapone, The ......................................................... 25 Henry James, Consciousness, and the Evolution of the Novel ........................................................................................ 20 History and Culture of Breast Milk, The ....................... 8

I Impressive Shakespeare .................................................. Instructional Writing in English, 1350-1650 ........... Introduction to Latina/o Literature ............................ Inventing the Popular in Nineteenth-Century France ..................................................................................... Invention of Female Biography, The ..........................

20 16 14 14 13

J Jane Austen, George Eliot and the Reflective Tradition ................................................................................ 20 John Bunyan’s Imaginary Writings in Context ................................................................................... 16 John Morley and the Uses of History in Victorian Liberal Culture ..................................................................... 20 Jonathan Edwards, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and the Supernatural Will in Early American Literature ............................................................................... 20 Jonson, Shakespeare, and Aristotle on Comedy .................................................................................. 20

K

D Domestic Intersections in Contemporary Migration Fiction ..................................................................................... 31

Katherine Philips: Form, Reception, and Literary Contexts ................................................................................. 14

L

E Early Modern Travel and the Discourses of English Nationalism .......................................................................... 19 Ecogothic in Nineteenth-Century American Literature ............................................................................... 33 Ecophobia Hypothesis, The ........................................... 11 Edwardian Culture ............................................................ 18 Elizabeth Tanfield Cary’s History of Edward II .................................................................................................... 4 Engagements with Contemporary Literary and Critical Theory ..................................................................................... 11 Engagements with Graphic Literature ..................... 13 Environmental Crisis Novel, The .................................. 25 Essays on Music and Language in Modernist Literature ............................................................................... 19

Complimentary Exam Copy

Last of an Age, The ............................................................ 25 Latin American Gothic in Literature and Culture .................................................................................... 33 Limits of Life Writing, The ............................................... 13 Literariness of Media Art, The .......................................... 9 Literary and Cultural Alternatives to Modernism ............................................................................ 21 Literary Geography .............................................................. 5 Literature and Emotion ...................................................... 5 Literature and Food Studies ............................................. 5 Literature and Literary Criticism in Contemporary China ....................................................................................... 11 Literature and Social Media ............................................. 5 Literature, Science and Religion in Constantijn Huygens’ Ooghentroost ..................................................... 6 Living Legacies ....................................................................... 6

e-Inspection

N Narrating Postcolonial Arab Nations ........................ Nature of Modernism, The ............................................. New Historicism and Renaissance Drama ............. Noir and the Irish Nation ................................................ Novel Creatures ...................................................................

28 26 22 22 23

O Occult Imagination in Britain, 1875-1947, The ............................................................................................ 15 Orality ........................................................................................ 7 Ouida (1839-1908) in Transnational Popular Culture .................................................................................... 16

P Philanthropy and Early Twentieth-Century Literature ............................................................................... 14 Poetics of Angling in Early Modern England ........... 23 Poetry of Punk, The ............................................................ 13 Political Biography of John Gay, A .............................. 12 Political Biography of Joseph Addison, A ................ 12 Politics of Form, The .......................................................... 11 Popular Postcolonialisms ............................................... 28 Privatised Motherhood ...................................................... 7 Prosthesis in Medieval and Early Modern Culture .................................................................................... 23 Provincializing the Bible .................................................. 15

R Race ............................................................................................ 7 Race Matters, Animal Matters ......................................... 7 Reading Literary Animals ............................................... 16 Reading London in Wartime ......................................... 23 Reception ............................................................................... 11 Rethinking G.K. Chesterton and Literary Modernism ............................................................................ 23 Rethinking the Victim ....................................................... 33

New in Paperback

Romantic Fiction Of Mills & Boon, 1909-1995, The .............................................................................................. 9 Routledge Companion to Literature and Economics, The .............................................................................................. 9 Routledge Companion to Literature and Food, The .............................................................................................. 9 Routledge Companion to Literature and Publishing, The ............................................................................................ 34 Routledge Companion to Pakistani Literature in English ....................................................................................... 7 Routledge Companion to Picturebooks, The ............ 3 Routledge Companion to Twenty-First Century Literary Fiction, The ............................................................................ 26 Routledge Companion to Women, Sex, and Gender in the Early British Colonial World .............................. 23 Routledge Companion to World Literature and World History, The .............................................................................. 9 Routledge Diaspora Studies Reader, The ................. 28 Routledge Handbook of International Beat Literature, The ............................................................................................ 34 Routledge Handbook to the Ghost Story, The ............................................................................................ 34 Routledge Introduction to American Renaissance Literature, The ...................................................................... 15 Routledge Introduction to American War Literature, The ............................................................................................ 17 Routledge Research Companion to Digital Medieval Literature, The ...................................................................... 26

S Satire .......................................................................................... 7 Satire in the Elizabethan Era ............................................ 8 Selected Letters of Vernon Lee, 1856–1935, Volume 3 ................................................................................................. 13 Shakespeare and Indian Cinemas .............................. 29 Shakespeare and Rome ................................................... 29 Shakespeare and the Eighteenth-Century Miscellany ............................................................................. 24 Shakespeare at Peace ...................................................... 24 Shakespeare's Language in Digital Media .............. 29 Shakespeare's Tempest and Capitalism ................... 30 Shakespearean Tragedy .................................................. 29 SHAKESPEARE’S HAMLET IN AN ERA OF TEXTUAL EXHAUSTION ........................................................................ 29 Shakespeare’s Suicides ..................................................... 29 Shame and Modern Writing ......................................... 24 Shelley's Romantic Nonviolence .................................. 24 Signing the Body in Early Modern France ............... 24 Sound, Space and Civility in the British World, 1700-1850 ............................................................................. 24 Starring Charles Dickens ................................................... 8 Storytelling as Plague Prevention in Medieval and Early Modern Italy .............................................................. 15

T Teaching Space, Place, and Literature ........................ 8 Terror and Counter-Terror in Contemporary British Children’s Literature ............................................................. 2 Theorizing Ethnicity and Nationality in Chick Lit .............................................................................................. 31 Tim O'Brien ............................................................................ 15 Transdisciplinary Perspectives on Childhood in Contemporary Britain ......................................................... 3 Trauma ................................................................................... 11 Travel, War, and the State in Latin America ........... 15 Trollope Underground ..................................................... 26 Typographic Imaginary in Early Modern English Literature, The ...................................................................... 26

V

Companion Website

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36

INDEX BY TITLE Value of Time in Early Modern English Literature, The ............................................................................................ 26 Victorian Era in Twenty-First Century Children’s and Adolescent Literature and Culture, The ....................... 3 Victorian Sustainability in Literature and Culture .................................................................................... 27 Vision and Character ........................................................ 27

W Ways of Re-Thinking Literature .................................... 33 Women Writing Across Cultures .................................. 31 Women's University Narratives, 1890-1945, Part II ................................................................................................. 31 Women's University Narratives, 1890–1945, Part II ................................................................................................. 32 Women's University Narratives, 1890–1945, Part II ................................................................................................. 32 Women's University Narratives, 1890–1945, Part II ................................................................................................. 32 Women's University Narratives, 1890–1945, Part II Vol 3 ................................................................................................. 32 Women’s Deliberation: The Heroine in Early Modern French Women’s Theater (1650–1750) ..................... 27 World Literature and Dissent ........................................... 9 Writing the Landscape .................................................... 34 Writing the Mind ................................................................ 10

Z Zoë Wicomb & the Translocal ...................................... 28

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INDEX BY AUTHOR

A Aldama, Frederick Luis ................................................... 14 Ambrosch, Gerfried .......................................................... 13 Armitt, Lucie ............................................................................ 5 Arthur, Paul ............................................................................ 12 Atia, Nadia .............................................................................. 28 Avieson, Bunty ..................................................................... 13

B Balinisteanu, Tudor ........................................................... 21 Bannon, Brad ........................................................................ 20 Baverstock, Alison .............................................................. 34 Bell, Ilona ................................................................................. 21 Benthien, Claudia ................................................................. 9 Bergmann, Emilie .............................................................. 25 Black, Elizabeth .................................................................... 26 Bogen, Anna ......................................................................... 31 Bogen, Anna ......................................................................... 32 Bogen, Anna ......................................................................... 32 Bogen, Anna ......................................................................... 32 Bogen, Anna ......................................................................... 32 Borushko, Matthew C. ..................................................... 24 Boyiopoulos, Kostas ......................................................... 21 Boyle, Jennifer ...................................................................... 26 Bratchell, D. F. ....................................................................... 29 Breuer, Heidi ......................................................................... 33 Brewster, Anne .................................................................... 33 Brewster, Scott .................................................................... 34 Buchan, Bruce ...................................................................... 24 Burns, Lorna ............................................................................. 9

C Cain, Ruth .................................................................................. 7 Casanova-Vizcaíno, Sandra .......................................... 33 Cederwell, William ............................................................ 23 Chihara, Michelle .................................................................. 9 Coles, Kimberley Anne ................................................... 23 Coolahan, Marie-Louise ................................................. 14 Copland, Sarah .................................................................... 11 Couser, G. ................................................................................ 12 Craps, Stef ............................................................................... 11 Crook, Tim .............................................................................. 19 Crossley, Alice ......................................................................... 6

D Dauge-Roth, Katherine ................................................... 24 Day, Matthew ....................................................................... 19 De Pourcq, Maarten ......................................................... 14 Deckard, Sharae .................................................................. 28 Demetriou, Tania ............................................................... 21 Demson, Michael ............................................................... 13 Dinter, Sandra ......................................................................... 3 Dixon, Jay, ................................................................................ 9 Dubek, Laura ........................................................................... 6

E Eaglestone, Robert .............................................................. 4 Eaglestone, Robert ............................................................ 26 Easton, Kai .............................................................................. 28 Estok, Simon ......................................................................... 11

F

Grau, Donatien .................................................................... 33 Griffin, Carrie ......................................................................... 16 Grzegorczyk, Blanka ............................................................ 2

H Hawas, May .............................................................................. 9 Hawkins, Ann .......................................................................... 8 Haytock, Jennifer ................................................................ 17 Herzog, Tobey C ................................................................. 15 Hobby, Elaine ....................................................................... 17 Hogan, Patrick ........................................................................ 5 Holderness, Graham ........................................................ 29 Hones, Sheila ........................................................................... 5 Hope, Laura ........................................................................... 18 Humphries, Simon ............................................................ 12 Hurt, Erin ................................................................................. 31

J Jenstad, Janelle ................................................................... 29 Jiong, Zhang ......................................................................... 11 Johnson, Lindgren ............................................................... 7 Jones, Manina ......................................................................... 4 Jones, Norman W. ............................................................. 15 Jones, William ......................................................................... 8 Jung, Sandro ......................................................................... 12

K Kanwal, Aroosa ....................................................................... 7 Keetley, Dawn ...................................................................... 33 Kemp, Simon ........................................................................ 10 Kennedy, Theresa Varney ............................................. 27 Kern, Stephen ...................................................................... 22 Kim, Sooyong ....................................................................... 25 King, Andrew ........................................................................ 16 Kinnahan, Linda A. ............................................................ 19 Kittay, Eva Feder .................................................................... 6 Klarer, Mario .......................................................................... 16 Knight, Charles .................................................................... 12 Koegler, Caroline ................................................................ 28 Kronshage, Eike ................................................................... 27 Kümmerling-Meibauer, Bettina ................................... 3

L Lee, A. Robert ....................................................................... 34 Lerner, Bettina R. ................................................................ 14 Leve, James .............................................................................. 2 Lojo-Rodríguez, Laura ..................................................... 31

M Marafioti, Martin ................................................................. 15 Margrave, Christie .............................................................. 34 Markwick, Margaret .......................................................... 26 Marrapodi, Michele ............................................................. 8 Marsh, Joss ................................................................................ 8 Marshall, Elizabeth ............................................................... 2 McCooey, David ................................................................. 13 Merriman, Peter ..................................................................... 6 Miller, Sarah Alison .............................................................. 8 Mitchell, Linda C. ................................................................ 16 Moore, Lindsey .................................................................... 28 Morgan, BD ............................................................................ 33 Murphy, Jillmarie ................................................................ 14

R Radeva-Castillo, Milena .................................................. Rawlings, Peter .................................................................... Reddy, Maureen T. ............................................................ Reynolds, Larry J. ................................................................ Rosenfeld, Nancy ............................................................... Roy, Tania ................................................................................ Ryan, Barbara ........................................................................

14 20 22 15 16 18 18

S Salamone, Christopher ................................................... 24 Sawyer Fritz, Sonya .............................................................. 3 Schmid, Susanne ................................................................ 31 Schmidt, Arnold .................................................................. 12 Schneider-Rebozo, Lissa ................................................ 19 Scott, Helen C ...................................................................... 30 Sexton, John P. .................................................................... 25 Shallcross, Michael ............................................................ 23 Shaw, Samuel ....................................................................... 18 Sheils, Barry ............................................................................ 24 Shrank, Cathy ....................................................................... 30 Skouen, Tina .......................................................................... 26 Spencer, Jane ....................................................................... 16 Squire, Louise ....................................................................... 25 Stenner, Rachel ................................................................... 26 Stierstorfer, Klaus ................................................................ 28 Stopel, Bartosz ........................................................................ 5 Swan, Jesse G. ......................................................................... 4

T Tally Jr., Robert ....................................................................... 8 Tasioulas, Jacqueline ....................................................... 18 Teverson, Andrew ................................................................ 3 Thomas, Bronwen ................................................................ 5 Thompson, Hilary .............................................................. 23 Thomson, Tara ..................................................................... 22 Tigner, Amy .............................................................................. 5 Totaro, Rebecca .................................................................. 21 Trivedi, Poonam .................................................................. 29 Tronicke, Marlena .............................................................. 29

U Uriarte, Javier ........................................................................ 15

W Waard, Marco de ................................................................ 20 Wakely-Mulroney, Katherine ......................................... 2 Walker, Gina Luria .............................................................. 13 Weisl, Angela ........................................................................ 21 Willis, Ika .................................................................................. 11 Wilson, Janet ........................................................................... 6 Wilson, Richard .................................................................... 22 Wood, Alice ........................................................................... 22 Woudenberg, Maximiliaan van ................................. 19 Wright, Myra ......................................................................... 23 Wright, Tom ............................................................................. 7

N

Falcus, Sarah ............................................................................ 4 Ferguson, Christine .......................................................... 15 Ferry, Peter ................................................................................ 4 Freeman Loftis, Sonya .................................................... 29

Newman, Harry ................................................................... 20 Newns, Lucinda .................................................................. 31 Novillo-Corvalán, Patricia .............................................. 22

G

O

Gagel, Amanda ................................................................... 13 Gilmore, John T. ..................................................................... 7 Gilvary, Kevin ........................................................................ 30 Glover, Susan Paterson .................................................. 25 Golden, Amanda ................................................................ 18 Goossen, Jonathan ........................................................... 20 Goris, An .................................................................................. 25 Gosseye, Lise ........................................................................... 6 Gottlieb, Evan ....................................................................... 11 Goulimari, Pelagia .............................................................. 31 Gowar, Mick ............................................................................. 2

O'Callaghan, Katherine ................................................... 19 Orkin, Martin ............................................................................ 7

Complimentary Exam Copy

Priest, Myisha ........................................................................... 2

P Parkins, Wendy .................................................................... 27 Paterson, Mark ........................................................................ 4 Piatti-Farnell, Lorna .............................................................. 9 Pimentel, Rose ..................................................................... 20 Pivetti, Kyle ............................................................................. 24 Porter, Chloe ......................................................................... 23

e-Inspection

New in Paperback

Companion Website

37


Taylor & Francis Group 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon. Oxon. OX14 4RN Tel: 02070176000 • Fax: 02071076699 ISBN: 9781138544901


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