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Translating Virgil
A Cultural History of the Western Tradition from the Eleventh Century to the Present
Susanna Morton Braund University of British Columbia, VancouverDescription
Virgil remains one of the most important poets in the history of literature. This emerges in the rich translation history of his poems. Hardly a European language exists into which at least one of his poems has not been translated, from Basque to Ukrainian and Dutch to Turkish. Susanna Braund’s book is the first synthesis and analysis of this history. It asks when, where, why, by whom, for whom and how Virgil’s poems were translated into a range of languages. Chronologically it spans the eleventh- and twelfth-century adaptations of the Aeneid down to present-day translation activity, in which women are better represented than in earlier eras. The book makes a major contribution to western intellectual history. It challenges classicists and other literary scholars to reassess the features of Virgil’s poems to which the translators respond and offers a treasure-trove of insights to translation theorists and classicists alike.
Key Features
• Unique in its extensive chronological and linguistic range
• Organised by topic to offer multiple insights into the reception of Virgil’s poems in European cultures
• Provides detailed navigational aids to help readers find their way around this rich and complex text
Contents
Introduction: First attempts and first principles;
1. Translation, nationalism and transnationalism;
2. The translator’s identity;
3. The economics of translating Virgil;
4. Competition, retranslation and travesty;
5. Poetic careers of Virgil translators;
6. Partial translations of Virgil;
7. Supplements and paratextual material;
8. Fidelity of form: Metre matters;
9. Fidelity of concepts and register;
10. Equivalences and identifications.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students Series: Classics after Antiquity
August 2023 229 x 152 mm c.994pp
9781108470612 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00 / €175.06
Early Latin
Constructs, Diversity, Reception
J. N. AdamsAll Souls College, Oxford
Anna ChahoudTrinity
College Dublin Giuseppe Pezzini Corpus Christi College, OxfordDescription
This is the most detailed and comprehensive study to date of early Latin language, literary and non-literary, featuring twenty-nine chapters by an international team of scholars. ‘Early Latin’ is interpreted liberally as extending from the period of early inscriptions through to the first quarter of the first century BC. Classical Latin features significantly in the volume, although in a restricted sense. In the classical period there were writers who imitated the Latin of an earlier age, and there were also interpreters of early Latin. Later authors and views on early Latin language are also examined as some of these are relevant to the establishment of the text of earlier writers. A major aim of the book is to define linguistic features of different literary genres, and to address problems such as the limits of periodisation and the definition of the very concept of ‘early Latin’.
Key Features
• Through close analysis of textual evidence, illustrates the diversity and complexity of what is meant by ‘Early Latin’

• Includes twenty-nine original in-depth studies on aspects of the language of literary and non-literary texts, ranging from the earliest Latin inscriptions to the reception of ‘early Latin’ in the early modern period
• Questions established assumptions on the periodization and development of Latin
Contents
1. Introduction: What is early Latin?; Part I. General (Morphology, Syntax, Lexicon and Metre):
2. Alphabet, epigraphy, and literacy in central Italy in the 7th /5th c. BC;
3. Identifying Latin in early inscriptions;
4. The Egadi Rostra, a linguistic analysis; 5. Morphology and syntax in early Latin;
6. Early Latin metre; 7. Greek Loanwords in early Latin; 8. Latin edepol ‘by Pollux’: background of a Latin aduerbium iuratiuum;
9. Indirect questions in early Latin; 10. Ecquis in early Latin: aspects of questions; Part II. Authors and Genres:
11. Support verb constructions in Plautus and Terence;
12. Early Latin prayers and aspects of coordination;
13. ‘Early Latin’ lexicon in Terence (and Plautus); 14. Early Latin and the fragments of Atellana Comedy;
15. A comparison of the language of comedy and tragedy in early Latin drama;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
July 2023 228 x 152 mm c.900pp
9781108476584 Hardback £130.00 / US$170.00 / €151.72
16. The language of early Latin epic; 17. How ‘early Latin’ is Lucilius?; 18. Repetition in the fragmentary orators: from Cato to C. Gracchus;
19. Greek influences on Cato’s Latin;
20. Some syntactic features of Latin legal texts;
Part III. Reception:
21. Lucretius and early Latin;
22. Cicero and early dramatic Latin;
23. Early Latin texts in Livy;
24. Pliny rewrites Cato;
25. Gellius’ appreciation and understanding of early Latin;
26. Views on early Latin in grammatical texts;
27. Nonius Marcellus and the shape of early Latin;
28. Early Latin to Neo-Latin: Festus and Scaliger;
Conclusions:
29. Early Latin as a Concept
Latin Military Papyri of Dura-Europos (P.Dura 55–145)
A New Edition of the Texts, with Introduction and Notes
Giulio Iovine Università degli Studi, Bologna, ItalyDescription
This is a full new edition of the Latin papyri from Dura Europos, which provide a wealth of material for several branches of Classical scholarship. They are a priceless source for palaeographers investigating the history of Latin writing, inasmuch as they represent a real archive containing documents produced by scribes who were presumably competent in both Latin and Greek. Historians of the Roman Empire and Roman army are offered a glance inside the everyday life of a Roman camp built within a Hellenized town of Semitic origin with a flourishing Jewish community. The papyri also provide glimpses into spoken Latin and substandard varieties, and the Latin texts survive alongside written samples of eight other languages (Greek, Palmyrenean, Hatrean, Syriac, Parthian and Pehlevi, Hebrew and Safaitic). The editions are accompanied by translations and notes, while the volume also includes a substantial introduction, appendix, and thorough commentary on the Feriale Duranum.
Key Features
• Contains updated texts of all the Latin papyri from Dura in chronological order

• Includes a complete prosopography of the soldiers mentioned in the papyri
• Provides a full assessment of the scripts used in the Latin papyri
Contents
Introduction;
1. Dura-Europos and the Roman garrison;
2. Documentary typologies in the Durene collection;
3. Who’s who in the XX Palmyrenorum;
4. Scripts and scribes in the cohort;
5. The papyri.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
August 2023 244 x 170 mm c.450pp 5 b/w illus. 1 map
9781009183130 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00 / €175.06
A Commentary on Panegyrici Latini II(12)

An Oration Delivered by Pacatus Drepanius before the Emperor Theodosius I in the Senate at Rome, AD 389
Edited and translated by Roger Rees University of St Andrews, ScotlandDescription
The renowned Gallic poet Pacatus Drepanius journeyed to Rome in the summer of AD 389 to deliver a speech to the Emperor Theodosius; both men stood for the first time before the Roman Senators. It was a moment of high political charge. The Latin speech survives and is here presented both in the original and with facing English translation; the introduction and commentary capture the groundbreaking character of the work and set it in its historical, rhetorical and literary contexts.
Key Features
• Makes an important but neglected speech available to classicists and ancient historians
• Considers the place of the speech in the rhetorical tradition
• Argues that epideictic oratory deserves to be taken seriously as a literary form
Contents
Preface; Abbreviations; Introduction; Panegyrici Latini II(12); Commentary; Bibliography; Index locorum; General Index.
Additional Information
Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students
October 2023 216 x 138 mm 400pp
9781107155046 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 / €140.05
The Cambridge Critical Guide to Latin Literature
Roy Gibson University of Durham Christopher Whitton University of CambridgeDescription
The Cambridge Critical Guide to Latin Literature offers a critical overview of work on Latin literature. Where are we? How did we get here? Where to next? Fifteen commissioned chapters, along with an extensive introduction and Mary Beard’s postscript, approach these questions from a range of angles. They aim not to codify the field, but to give snapshots of the discipline from different perspectives, and to offer provocations for future development. The Critical Guide aims to stimulate reflection on how we engage with Latin literature. Texts, tools and territories are the three areas of focus. The Guide situates the study of classical Latin literature within its global context from late antiquity to Neo-Latin, moving away from an exclusive focus on the pre-200 CE corpus. It recalibrates links with adjoining disciplines (history, philosophy, material culture, linguistics, political thought, Greek), and takes a fresh look at key tools (editing, reception, intertextuality, theory).
Key Features
• Situates Roman literature within its global context from Classical Latin to Neo-Latin alongside Greek
• Contemplates ways in which Latin literary scholarship can enrich and be enriched by adjoining disciplines
• Investigates key skills and tools in the discipline, including fresh thinking on national traditions, theories of reading, reception, and editing and intertextuality in the digital age
Contents
1. Introduction: texts, tools, territories;
2. Canons;
3. Periodisations;
4. Author and identity;
5. Intertextuality;
6. Mediaeval Latin;
7. Neo-Latin;
8. Reception;
9. National traditions;
10. Editing;
11. Latin literature and linguistics;
12. Latin literature and material culture;
13. Philosophy;
14. Political thought;
15. Latin literature and roman history;
16. Latin literature and Greek;
17. Envoi.
Additional Information
Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students
October 2023 228 x 152 mm c.1000pp
9781108421089 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00 / €175.06
A Commentary on Ovid’s Metamorphoses
General Editor Alessandro Barchiesi New York University Edited by Phillip Hardie Trinity College, Cambridge E. J. Kenney University of Cambridge Joseph D. Reed Brown University, Rhode Island and Gianpiero Rosati Scuola Normale Superiore, PisaDescription
Comprising fifteen books and over two hundred and fifty myths, Ovid’s Metamorphoses is one of the longest extant Latin poems from the ancient world and one of the most influential works in Western culture. It is an epic on desire and transgression that became a gateway to the entire world of pagan mythology and visual imagination. This, the first complete commentary in English, covers all aspects of the text – from textual interpretation to poetics, imagination, and ideology – and will be useful as a teaching aid and an orientation for those who are interested in the text and its reception. Historically, the poem’s audience includes readers interested in opera and ballet, psychology and sexuality, myth and painting, feminism and posthumanism, vegetarianism and metempsychosis (to name just a few outside the area of Classical Studies).
Key Features
• The first full commentary in English Ovid’s Metamorphoses, revising and updating the earlier Italian edition published by Fondazione Valla (2005-2014)

• Written by five extremely distinguished scholars of Ovid and of Latin poetry
• Aimed at all those (within and outside Classical Studies) who are interested in the text and its reception
Contents
Introduction Alessandro Barchiesi; Commentary on Book 1 Alessandro Barchiesi; Commentary on Book 2 Alessandro Barchiesi; Commentary on Book 3 Alessandro Barchiesi; Commentary on Book 4 Gianpiero Rosati; Commentary on Book 5 Gianpiero Rosati; Commentary on Book 6 Gianpiero Rosati; Bibliography; Introduction to Books 7-9 E.J.Kenney; Commentary on Book 7 E.J.Kenney; Commentary on Book 8 E.J.Kenney; Commentary on Book 9 E.J.Kenney; Preface to Books 10-12 Jay Reed; Commentary on Book 10 Jay Reed; Commentary on Book 11 Jay Reed; Commentary on Book 12 Jay Reed; Bibliography E.J.Kenney and Jay Reed; Commentary on Book 13 Philip Hardie; Commentary on Book 14 Philip Hardie; Commentary on Book 15 Philip Hardie; Bibliography Philip Hardie; Index of Proper Names (Books 1-15); General Index (Books 1-15).
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
October 2023 229 x 152 mm c.1950pp
9781009326452 Multiple copy pack £250.00 / US$325.00 / €291.78
Cicero: Divinatio in Q. Caecilium
Editor (introduction and notes) C.
B. Watson University of OklahomaDescription
This is the first scholarly commentary on Cicero’s Divinatio in Caecilium and the first new critical edition in over 100 years. The commentary demonstrates that the Divinatio was atypical of the genre. In both form and content, the speech is styled as a forensic prosecution rather than a pretrial deliberation. It also functions as an effective piece of literary criticism and a pedagogical treatise to preface the Verrine corpus. Consequently scholars are encouraged to reconsider how published oratory in Rome functioned as teaching aid, personal propaganda, historical record, and literary production. The Divinatio touches on issues with strong resonance for contemporary society: the responsibility of the government to represent and defend marginalised communities, cultural identity and integration in a multi-ethnic society, the perils of persuasive speech, abuses of political and military power, due process of law, and changing notions of intellectual and cultural property.
Key Features
• A new, complete, and accurate critical edition in light of recent manuscript discoveries
• Provides a thorough analysis of Cicero’s rhetorical, legal, and pedagogical techniques in the speech

• Demonstrates the shortcomings of the long-held assumptions about the Roman process of divinatio that were based on an uncritical reading of this speech
Contents
Introduction; Text and Critical Apparatus; Commentary; Appendixes.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries, 66
December 2023 216 x 138 mm c.450pp
9781108844079 Hardback £120.00 / US$160.00 / €140.05
The New Documents in Mycenaean Greek

Description
In 1952 Michael Ventris deciphered the script found on the Linear B tablets from Crete and the Greek mainland, therefore revealing the earliest known form of Greek. In 1956 he and John Chadwick published Documents in Mycenaean Greek, which gave an account of the decipherment, of the language of the tablets, of the society and economy revealed by the documents and a series of chapters giving texts, translations and commentary of the most important tablets. Though partially updated in 1973, Documents is now very much outdated: there has been a vast accrual of bibliography on the subject since 1973, and discoveries of tablets at new sites. This new survey, written by fourteen of the world’s leading experts, will bring the reader fully up-to-date with developments in all aspects of Mycenaean studies, concluding with a new, full glossary of all the most recently discovered words.
Key Features
• Covers all recent significant developments in Mycenaean studies, accompanied by a full glossary of newly-discovered Linear B words
• Authoritative contributions are provided by fourteen international leading scholars in the field
• Ancient texts are presented in translation
Contents
Volume 1. Preface;
Note on marginal annotations; Note on the bibliographies; Note on consistency; Note on absolute values of the symbols for weight and volume;
Note on translations; List of abbreviations;
Part I. History, Script, Language and Culture;
1. The Archaeological and Historical Context;
2. Discovery and Decipherment;
3. Syllabic Scripts in The Aegean and Cyprus in The Second and First Millennia;
4.1-5. The Mycenaean Writing System;
4. 6. The Absolute Values of the Symbols for Weight;
4.7. The Absolute Values of the Symbols for Volume;
5. The Linear B Documents;
6. The Mycenaean Language;
7. Geography;
8. Economy;
9. Mycenaean Society and Political Systems;
10.1. Mycenaean Religion;
10.2. Mycenaean and Classical Greek Religion; Part II. Drawings of Selected Tablets.
Volume 2. List of Illustrations; Part III. Selected Tablets, Transcription, Translation, Commentary;
Introduction: Interpreting Linear B;
11. Lists of Personnel;
12. Livestock;
13. Agricultural Produce;
14.1. Land Tenure;
14.2. The Pylos ‘Dosmos’ Tablets;
15. Taxation ;
16. ‘Industrial’ Production ;
17. Finished Products I: Vessels and Furniture ;
18. Finished Products II: Military Equipment ;
19. Religion, Cults and Ritual;
20. The Inscribed Stirrup Jars ;
21. Miscellaneous Texts ; Part IV. Glossary, Bibliography, Indexes and Concordance; Glossary; Bibliography; General Index; Index of Modern Authors Cited; Index of Ancient Authors Cited; Homeric References; Concordance.
Philo of Alexandria: Quod deterius potiori insidiari soleat
Introduction, Text, Translation, and Commentary
Edited and translated by Adam Kamesar Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion, OhioDescription
Philo’s Quod deterius is a discussion of the Cain and Abel episode in the Bible. Philo follows the Greek translation of the Septuagint, not the Hebrew text, although he may have known traditions that relied on the Hebrew. His treatment of the text is unique, combining elements of traditional Greek commentary on literary texts, moralizing diatribe in highly wrought rhetorical language, midrashic-like exegesis involving the extensive use of other biblical passages, and philosophical theory. The present commentary illuminates these various components of Philo’s discussion, especially by means of parallel texts, pagan, Jewish, and Christian, from across antiquity. Using these sources and paying attention to ancient exegetical thinking, Adam Kamesar attempts to trace the overall direction and coherence of what Philo is saying. This kind of treatment of Philo’s allegorical treatises has rarely been undertaken before on this scale. The volume also includes a new English translation of the work.
Key Features
• Provides the Greek text in a redesigned format along with a new translation
• Investigates and sets out the sources of and parallels to Philo’s exegetical discussions
• Illustrates the structure of the text by means of chapter division and introductory summaries of each chapter’s content
Contents
1. Introduction;
2. Detailed Outline of the Contents of the Quod deterius;
4. Text and Translation;
5. Commentary.
Additional Information
3. List of Departures from the Text of the Cohn-Wendland Edition;
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
December 2023 216 x 140 mm c.700pp
9781009234795 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00 / €175.06
The Cambridge Global History of Fashion
Christopher Breward University of Edinburgh Beverly Lemire University of Alberta Giorgio Riello European University Institute, FlorenceDescription
Split across two volumes, The Cambridge Global History of Fashion provides timely critical analyses of key topics and themes in the history of fashion, dress, and clothing. It foregrounds the trajectories of material and aesthetic transformation, as well as the thematic commonalities across time and space. Featuring over forty essays from experts across the field, the volumes unveil new perspectives on cultural, social, and economic change, and how these changes were expressed through fashion practice. The first volume presents a tight but comprehensive assessment of fashion from antiquity, through the early modern global era to c. 1800, engaging with colonial and imperial themes, as well as race and gender. The second volume advances the critique of ‘modernity’ from the nineteenth century through the twenty-first century, providing analyses of the impact globalisation had on contemporary dress. This global perspective stands as a landmark work in the history of fashion.
Key Features
• Examines the long history of fashion from antiquity to the present day
• Sheds light on contemporary theories that are integral to the understanding of fashion, including capitalist critiques, modernity, sustainability and anti-fashion

• Highlights how global forces define temporal fashion through empires, regional powers, and world communities
Contents
Volume I: From Antiquity to the Nineteenth Century; Volume II: From the Nineteenth Century to the Present
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: The Cambridge History of Fashion
July 2023 228 x 152 mm c.1100pp
9781108752657 2 Volume Hardback Set
£200.00 / US$260.00 / TBA
The Taft Court
Making Law for a Divided Nation, 1921–1930
Volume 10
Robert C. Post
Yale Law School, Connecticut
Description
The Taft Court offers the definitive history of the Supreme Court from 1921 to 1930 when William Howard Taft was Chief Justice. Using untapped archival material, Robert C. Post engagingly recounts the ambivalent effort to create a modern American administrative state out of the institutional innovations of World War I. He shows how the Court sought to establish authoritative forms of constitutional interpretation despite the culture wars that enveloped prohibition and pervasive labor unrest. He explores in great detail how constitutional law responds to altered circumstances. The work provides comprehensive portraits of seminal figures such as Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. and Louis Dembitz Brandeis. It describes William Howard Taft’s many judicial reforms and his profound alteration of the role of Chief Justice. A critical and timely contribution, The Taft Court sheds light on jurisprudential debates that are just as relevant today as they were a century ago.
Key Features
• Provides the authoritative history of the Supreme Court from 1921 to 1930
• Helps clarify modern constitutional debates about how to interpret the Constitution
• Uses untapped archival material
Contents
Prologue Mr. Taft Takes Charge; Part I: Constructing the Taft Court: Appointments;
1. John Hessin Clarke and George Sutherland;
2. William Rufus Day and Pierce Butler;
3. Mahlon Pitney and Edward Terry Sanford;
4. Joseph McKenna and Harlan Fiske Stone; Part II: The Holdover Justices;
5. Oliver Wendell Holmes;
6. Willis Van Devanter;
7. James Clark McReynolds;
8. Louis Dembitz Brandeis;
Part III: The Incomparable Chief Justiceship of William Howard Taft;
9. Taft’s Health;
10. Taft as a Justice;
11. Myers v.United States;
12.The Conference of Senior Circuit Court Judges;
13. Reshaping the Supreme Court;
14. The Changing Role of Chief Justice;
15. The Chief Justice as Chancellor;
16. Lobbying for Judicial Appointments;
Additional Information
17. Creating a New Supreme Court Building; Part IV: The Taft Court as an Institution;
18. Judicial Opinions during the Taft Court;
19. Dissent during the Taft Court;
20. The Authority of the Taft Court; Part V: Social and Economic Legislation;
21. ‘Everything Is on Edge’: World War I and the American State;
22. Cabining the Constitutional Implications of the War;
23. Diminishing Judicial Deference;
24. Adkins v.Children’s Hospital;
25. Price Fixing and Property Affected with a Public Interest;
26. The Protected Realm of Freedom;
27. Ratemaking and Judicial Legitimacy; Part VI: The Positive Law of Prohibition;
28. Prohibition, the Taft Court, and the Authority of Law;
29. Prohibition and Dual Sovereignty;
30. Prohibition and Normative Dualism;
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise History of the Supreme Court of the United States
October 2023 234 x 156 mm c.1700pp
9781009336215 2 Volume Hardback Set TBA / TBA / TBA
31. Prohibition and Positive Law;
32. Prohibition and Law Enforcement;
33. Olmstead v.United States; Part VII: Federalism and the American People;
34. Federalism and World War I;
35. Dual Sovereignty and Intergovernmental Tax Immunities;
36. Normative Dualism and Congressional Power;
37. The Dormant Commerce Clause and the National Market;
38. National Judicial Power and the American People; Part VIII: Labor, Equal Protection, and Race;
39. Labor and the Jurisprudence of Individualism;
40. Labor and the Construction of the National Market;
41. Government by Injunction;
42. Truax v.Corrigan;
43. The Equal Protection Clause and Race; Epilogue Chief Justice Taft Exits the Scene.
The Cambridge History of the Age of Atlantic Revolutions

Description
In three volumes, The Cambridge History of theAge ofAtlantic Revolutions brings together experts on all corners of the Atlantic World who reveal the age in all its complexity. The Age of Atlantic Revolutions formed the transition from an era marked by monarchical rule, privileges, and colonialism to an age that stood out for republican rule, legal equality, and the sovereignty of American nations. The seventy-one chapters included reflect the latest trends and discussions on this transformative part of history, highlighting not only the causes, key events, and consequences of the revolutions, but stressing the political experimentation, contingency, and survival of colonial institutions. The volumes also examine the attempts of enslaved and indigenous people, and free people of color, to change their plight, offering a much-needed revision to R.R. Palmer’s first synthesis of this era sixty years ago.
Key Features
• Connects revolutions across the Atlantic to create a comprehensive overview of this transformative age
• Integrates the actions of enslaved and indigenous people and free people of color
• Introduces new arguments and evidence to provide the most up to date history of the Atlantic World
Contents
Volume I. The Enlightenment and the British Colonies;
Volume II. France, Europe, and Haiti;
Volume III. The Iberian Empires.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: The Cambridge History of the Age of the Atlantic Revolutions
October 2023 229 x 152 mm c.2400pp
9781108567817 3 Hardback Book Set TBA / TBA / TBA
The Cambridge History of the European Union
Mathieu SegersUniversiteit
Maastricht, Netherlands Steven Van Hecke Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, BelgiumDescription
Split into two volumes, The Cambridge History of the EuropeanUnion focuses on European integration from a diachronic, multidisciplinary and multi-institutional angle to provide the most comprehensive and contemporary history of the European Union to date. The volumes do not present a strict timeline of historical events; instead they look at the various themes and changes over time in order to shed light both on the more well-known and on the lesserknown moments in European history. Ranging from the first steps of European integration to the latest developments, the fifty essays from experts across the field provide a wholly unique perspective that changes the way we look at European integration history. This is a much-needed addition to the history of the European Union.

Key Features
• Analyses developments in European integration from the first steps of integration to present day
• Uses a diachronic, multidisciplinary and multi-institutional angle to present the most innovative and contemporary history of the European Union to date
• Explores themes and moments in time rather than chronology to create a wholly unique perspective on European integration
Contents
Volume I: Reflections on the history and historiography of European integration; Part I. Critical Junctures:
1. The emergence of a divided world and a divisible west;
2. European integration and the temporary division of Germany;
3. Europe, de-colonization and the challenge of developing countries;
4. European integration and globalization since the 1970s;
5. A Europe of re-unification?;
6. Moderately failing forward: the EU in the years 2004–2019; Part II. Multilateralism and Geopolitics:
7. A pillar of the golden age? European integration and the Trente Glorieuses;
8. The end of Bretton Woods: origins and European consequences;
9. The vicissitudes of market Europe;
10. European integration and the challenges of free movement;
11. The EU as a global trade power;
12. The role of NATO in Europe integration;
13. European integration and the UN;
14. The European nuclear dimension: from cold war to post-cold war;
15. From ‘Helsinki’ and development aid to multipolar hard ball;
16. European integration, the environment and climate change;
17. The space policy of the EU;
Part III. Perspectives and Ideas:
18. Researching the eurocrats;
19. Elite networks of allegiance;
20. The multi-dimensional nature of public EU attitudes;
21. Ideas of Europe: 1880s to 1910s and beyond;
22. Beginning with culture: a certain idea of Europe;
23. The European union and memory;
24. European culture(s);
25. The catholic narrative of European integration;
26. European integration and the churches; Index. Volume II; Reflections on the history and historiography of European integration; Part I. Milestones:
1. Early forms of European unity;
2. From ‘Messina’ and ‘Rome’ to the single European act;
3. The making of the European union;
4. From ‘Maastricht’ and ‘Copenhagen’ to ‘Amsterdam’ and ‘Nice’;
5. The constitution project, ‘Lisbon’ and beyond;
6. Moving beyond British exceptionalism; Part II. Instruments of Integration:
7. In the name of social stability: the European payments union;
8. Competition versus planning: a battle that shaped European integration;
9. Banks, the Eurodollar market and the beginnings of monetary integration;
10. From Werner-report to the start of the EMU;
11. The euro area crisis: from pre-history to aftermath;
12. The institutional and legal culture of European integration;
13. The formation of the migration regime of the EU;
14. The constitutional dimension: centralization, democratization and the rule of law;
15. EU enlargement: origins and practice; Part III. Narratives and Outcomes:
16. A global perspective on European cooperation and integration since 1918;
17. War, peace and memory: Franco-German reconciliation;
18. The ‘saints’ of European integration: from visionaries to architects;
19. The EU and the narrative of prosperity;
20. Changing Europe’s economic history;
21. Transforming market Europe to social Europe;
22. European solidarity: the difficult art of managing interdependence; 23. Ideologies of EU democracy since 1950;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, undergraduate students
Series: The Cambridge History of the European Union
November 2023 229 x 152 mm c.1422pp
9781009284370 2 Volume Hardback Set £200.00 / US$260.00 / TBA
An Economic History of the Iberian Peninsula, 700–2000
Pedro Lains
Universidade de Lisboa
Leonor Freire Costa
Universidade de Lisboa
Regina Grafe
European University Institute, Florence
Alfonso Herranz-Loncán
Universitat de Barcelona
David Igual-Luis
Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha
Vicente Pinilla
Universidad de Zaragoza
Hermínia Vasconcelos Vilar
Universidade de Évora, Portugal
Description
This is a comprehensive long-run history of economic and political change in the Iberian Peninsula. Beginning with the development of the old medieval kingdoms, it goes on to explore two countries, Portugal and Spain, which during the early modern period possessed vast empires and played an essential role in the global economic and political developments. It traces how and why both countries began to fall behind during the first stages of industrialization and modern economic growth only to achieve remarkable economic development during the second half of the twentieth century. Written by a team of leading historians, the book sheds new light on all aspects of economic history from population, agriculture, manufacturing and international trade to government, finance and welfare. The book include extensive new data and will be an essential work of reference for scholars of Portugal and Spain and also of comparative European economic development.
Key Features
• Provides an empirically rich state of the art overview of the economic history of Spain and Portugal and introduces the reader to the most important debates in the field
• Based on extensive new data on Spanish and Portuguese development from the Middle Ages to the present
• Reflects the very latest scholarship and debates in the field with contributions from an international team of over sixty historians
Contents
Preface: By way of presentation;
Introduction;
Part I. The Making of Iberia, 700-1500;
Section I. The Early Middle Ages, 700–1200:
1. Muslim and Christian polities, 700–1200;
Section II. The Medieval Economy, 1000–1500:
2. Production, 1000–1500;
3. Population, 1000–1500;
4. The polity, 1000–1500;
5. Money, credit and banking, 1000–1500;
6. Technology, 1000–1500;
7. Living standards, 1000–1500;
8. International trade and commerce, 1000–1500;
9. The Iberian economy in global perspective, 700–1500;
Part II. Globalization and Enlightenment (1500–1800):
10. Patterns of Iberian economic growth in the early modern period;
11. Population of Iberian Peninsula in the early modern period: a comparative and regional perspective;
12. Institutions and policy (1500–1800);
13. Early modern financial development in the Iberian Peninsula;
14. Science, knowledge and technology, 1500–1800;
15. Living standards, inequality, and consumption (1500–1800);
16. Trade and the colonial economies, 1500–1828;
17. The economic history of Iberia in a wider context, 1500–1800;
Part III. Industrialization and Catching-Up, 1800–2000:
18. Economic growth and the spatial distribution of income, 1800–2000;
19. Population growth, composition, and educational levels;
20. Economic policies and institutions;
21. Iberian financial system, 1800–2000;
22. Economic growth and structural change in the Iberian economies, 1800-2000;
23. Living standards in Iberia, 1800–2010;
24. Iberian globalization and catching up in the poor South European periphery 1830–2010;
25. The Iberian economy in comparative perspective, 1800–2000.
The New Cambridge History of Japan
Volume 2: Early Modern Japan in Asia and the World, c. 1580–1877
David L. Howell Harvard University, MassachusettsDescription
This major new reference work presents an accessible and innovative survey of the latest developments in the study of early modern Japan. The period from about 1580 to 1877 saw the reunification of Japan after a long period of civil war, followed by two and a half centuries of peace and stability under the Tokugawa shogunate, and closing with the Meiji Restoration of 1868, which laid the foundation for a modern nation-state. With essays from leading international scholars, this volume emphasizes Japan’s place in global history and pays close attention to gender and environmental history. It introduces readers to recent scholarship in fields including social history, the history of science and technology, intellectual history, and book history. Drawing on original research, each chapter situates its primary source material and novel arguments in the context of close engagement with secondary scholarship in a range of languages. The volume underlines the importance of Japan in the global early modern world.
Key Features
• Highlights the cosmopolitan and interdisciplinary work of contemporary historians of Japan
• Draws scholarly attention to the importance of Japan in the global early modern world

• Surveys the state of the field and suggests avenues for future research
Contents
Introduction:
1. Genealogies of Japanese early modernity;
Part I. The Character of the Early Modern State:
2. The end of civil war and the formation of the early modern state in Japan;
3. Politics and political thought in the mature early modern state in Japan, 1650–1830;
4. Regional authority during the Tokugawa period;
5. Tokugawa philosophy: a socio-historical introduction;
6. Foreign relations and coastal defense under the mature Tokugawa regime;
7. The Meiji restoration;
Part II. Economy, Environment and Technology:
8. International economy and Japan at the dawn of the early modern era;
9. The Tokugawa economy: of rulers, producers and consumers;
10. The pacific context of Japan’s environmental history;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
December 2023 228 x 152 mm c.764pp
9781108417938 Hardback £120.00 / US$160.00 / €140.05
11. Scientific communities and the emergence of science in early modern Japan;
12. The problem of western knowledge in late Tokugawa Japan;
13. Technology, military reform and warfare in the Tokugawa–Meiji transition; Part III. Social Practices and Cultures of Early Modern Japan:
14. Religion in the Tokugawa period;
15. The medical revolution in early modern Japan;
16. Flows of people and things in early modern Japan: print culture;
17. Labor and migration in Tokugawa Japan: Moving people;
18. The Tokugawa status order;
19. On the peripheries of the Japanese archipelago: Ryukyu and Hokkaido;
20. The early modern city in Japan;
21. Popular movements in early modern Japan: Petitions, riots, martyrs;
22. Civilization and enlightenment in early Meiji Japan.
The Cambridge Handbook of Third Language Acquisition

Jennifer Cabrelli
University of Illinois, Chicago
Adel Chaouch-Orozco
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Jorge González Alonso
Universidad Nebrija, Spain and UiT, Arctic University of Norway
Sergio Miguel Pereira Soares
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
Eloi Puig-Mayenco
King’s College London
Jason Rothman
UiT, Arctic University of Norway and Universidad Nebrija, Spain
Description
In our increasingly multilingual modern world, understanding how languages beyond the first are acquired and processed at a brain level is essential to design evidence-based teaching, clinical interventions and language policy. Written by a team of world-leading experts in a wide range of disciplines within cognitive science, this Handbook provides a comprehensive overview of the study of third (and more) language acquisition and processing. It features 30 approachable chapters covering topics such as multilingual language acquisition, education, language maintenance and language loss, multilingual code-switching, ageing in the multilingual brain, and many more. Each chapter provides an accessible overview of the state of the art in its topic, while offering comprehensive access to the specialized literature, through carefully curated citations. It also serves as a methodological resource for researchers in the field, offering chapters on methods such as case studies, corpora, artificial language systems or statistical modelling of multilingual data.
Key Features
• Provides introductions to the study of third language acquisition and processing from a wide range of linguistic and cognitive approaches (generative, usage-based, sociolinguistic, etc.)
• Contains state-of-the-art overviews of how multilingualism impacts the many dimensions of the interaction between language and cognition
• Features short chapters with carefully curated citations and approachable explanations, where authors have avoided excessively technical and field-specific language
Contents
1. Multilingualism: language, brain and cognition;
Part I. Theoretical approaches to L3/Ln:
2. Generative approaches;
3. Usage-based approaches; 4. Dynamic systems theory approaches;
5. Sociolinguistic approaches;
Part II. L3/Ln across linguistic domains:
6. Exploring the acquisition of L3 phonology: challenges, new insights and future directions;
7. Characteristics of the L3 lexicon;
8. Processing words in a multilingual lexicon;
9. Full transfer in L3/Ln morphosyntax: evidence from two clusters of studies;
10. Full transfer potential in L3/Ln acquisition: crosslinguistic influence as a property-by-property process;
11. The acquisition and processing of pragmatics in multilinguals and third language learners;
Part III. Becoming and staying multilingual at different ages:
12. 3L1 acquisition during childhood;
13. Multilingualism and education in adulthood;
14. Language attrition and L3/Ln;
15. Heritage speakers as L3 acquirers;
16. The effects of environment change on third languages: the case of returnees; Part IV. L3/Ln in action:
17. Theoretical linguistic approaches to multilingual code-switching;
18. The psycholinguistics of multilingual code-switching;
19. L3/Ln acquisition in the classroom: how to connect theory and practice;
20. Diversity in multilingual learners: How variation in learners and contexts for learning shape the acquisition and processing of an L3/Ln;
Part V. L3/Ln and cognition:
21. Effects of multilingualism on executive functioning,;
22. Multilingualism and cognitive reserve;
23. Structural and functional changes in the multilingual brain;
24. Mechanisms of cognitive ageing and multilingualism;
25. Multilingualism and language impairment;
Part VI. Research methods in L3/Ln:
26. Innovations and challenges in acquisition and processing methodologies for L3/Ln;
27. Corpus research;
28. Case study research in multilingual contexts;
29. Using artificial linguistic systems to study third language acquisition and processing;
30. Statistical modelling in L3/Ln acquisition.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics
July 2023 244 x 170 mm c.820pp
9781108832427 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00 / €175.06
The Cambridge History of Linguistics

Description
The establishment of language as a focus of study took place over many centuries, and reflection on its nature emerged in relation to very different social and cultural practices. Written by a team of leading scholars, this volume provides an authoritative, chronological account of the history of the study of language from ancient times to the end of the 20th century (i.e., ‘recent history’, when modern linguistics greatly expanded). Comprised of 29 chapters, it is split into 3 parts, each with an introduction covering the larger context of interest in language, especially the different philosophical, religious, and/or political concerns and socio-cultural practices of the times. At the end of the volume, there is a combined list of all references cited and a comprehensive index of topics, languages, major figures, etc. Comprehensive in its scope, it is an essential reference for researchers, teachers and students alike in linguistics and related disciplines.
Key Features
• Chronologically covers the history of linguistics from ancient times and places to the end of the 20th century by including selected topics from specific periods of time
• Provides a comprehensive overview of how thinking about language has evolved, including during the ‘recent past’ (1960-2000)
• Includes introductions to each part, to situate work in linguistics in the context of the times
Contents
Introduction: Part I. Ancient, Classical and Medieval Periods: Introduction to Part I: The emergence of linguistic thinking within premodern cultural practices;
1. Ancient near eastern linguistic traditions: Mesopotamia, Egypt;
2. East Asian early linguistic traditions: China; Korea and Japan;
3. History of linguistic analysis in the Sanskrit tradition in premodern India, with a brief discussion of vernacular grammars;
4. Greek linguistic thought and its Roman reception;
5. Early to late medieval Europe;
6. Near eastern linguistic traditions;
6A. The Syriac linguistic tradition;
6B. The Hebrew linguistic tradition;
6C. The Arabic linguistic tradition; Part II. Renaissance to Late Nineteenth Century: Introduction to Part II: The cultural and political context of language studies from the renaissance to the end of the nineteenth century;
7. Universal language schemes;
8. Locke and reactions to Locke, 1700-1780;
9. Rousseau to Kant ;
10. The celebration of linguistic diversity: Humboldt’s anthropological linguistics;
11. Early nineteenth century linguistics;
12. The Neogrammarians and their role in the establishment of the science of linguistics;
Part III. Late Nineteenth through Twentieth Century Linguistics, Introduction to Part III: Late nineteenth through twentieth century linguistics: synopsis of major trends;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
June 2023 244 x 170 mm 900pp
9780521849906 Hardback £125.00 / US$160.00 / €145.89
III-A. Late nineteenth century through the 1950s: synchrony, autonomy and structuralism;
13. Move to synchrony: late nineteenth century to early twentieth century;
14. Structuralism in Europe;
15. British linguistics;
16. American linguistics to 1960: science, data, method;
III-B. To 2000: Formalism, cognitivism, language use and function, interdisciplinarity;
17. Chomsky and the turn to syntax, including alternative approaches to syntax;
18. Functionalist dimensions of grammatical and discourse analysis;
19. Semantics and pragmatics;
20. Language and philosophy, from Frege to the present;
21. Lexicology and lexicography;
22. Generative phonology: its origins, its principles, and its successors;
23. Phonetics and experimental phonology, circa 1950–2000;
24. Historical and universal-typological linguistics;
25. Language and society;
26. Language and anthropology;
27. Language and psychology, 1950–present A brief overview;
28. Semiotics;
29. Applied linguistics; References; Index.
The Cambridge Handbook of Historical Orthography

Description
The study of orthography (spelling and writing systems), and its development over the history of language, is central to many areas of linguistic enquiry, offering insight into syntactic and morphological structures, phonology, typology, historical linguistics, literacy and reading, and the social and cultural context of language use. With contributions from a global team of scholars, this Handbook provides the first comprehensive overview of this rapidly developing field, tracing the development of historical orthography, with special emphasis on the last and present centuries. Chapters are split into five key thematic areas, with a focus throughout on the interplay between theory and practice. It also explores the methods used in studying historical orthography, and the principles involved in the development of a spelling system. Providing a critical assessment of the state of the art in the field, it is essential reading for anyone with an interest in writing systems and historical linguistics.
Key Features
• Provides a comprehensive overview of all the key themes and issues in the rapidly developing field of historical orthography
• Takes an interdisciplinary approach and establishes links between orthography and phonology, morphology, syntax, lexicography, as well as the semantics and pragmatics of language
• Written in an easy-to-read style, making it accessible to scholars and students in other fields of linguistics
Contents
Part I. Introduction:
1. Historical orthography: purposes, ambitions and boundaries;
Part II. Structures and Theories:
2. Classifying and comparing early writing systems;
3. Elements of writing systems;
4. Orthographic conventionality;
5. Theoretical approaches to understanding writing systems;
6. Grapholinguistics;
7. Typologies of writing systems;
Part III. Organization and Development:
8. Comparative historical perspectives;
9. Systems and idiosyncrasies;
10. Multilayeredness and multiaspectuality;
Additional Information
11. Adapting alphabetic writing systems;
12. Variation and change;
13. What is spelling standardization?; Part IV. Empirical Approaches:
14. Studying epigraphic writing;
15. Materiality of writing;
16. Data collection and interpretation;
17. Philological approaches;
18. Exploring orthographic distribution;
19. Comparative and sociopragmatic methods;
20. Reconstructing a pre-historic writing system; Part V. Explanatory Discussions:
21. Scribes and scribal practices;
22. Orthographic norms and authorities;
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics
September 2023 244 x 170 mm c.856pp
9781108487313 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00 / €175.06
23. Networks of practice across English and Dutch corpora;
24. Literacy and the singular history of Norwegian;
25. Authorship and gender;
26. Sociolinguistic variables in English orthography;
27. Sociolinguistic implications of orthographic variation in French;
28. Orthography and language contact;
29. Discourse and sociopolitical issues;
30. Transmission and diffusion;
31. Analogy and extension; Bibliography; Subject index; Name index.
The Cambridge Handbook of Language in Context

Description
For more than a decade, linguistics has moved increasingly away from evaluating language as an autonomous phenomenon, towards analysing it ‘in use’, and showing how its function within its social and interactional context plays an important role in shaping in its form. Bringing together state-of-the-art research from some of the most influential scholars in linguistics today, this Handbook presents an extensive picture of the study of language as it used ‘in context’ across a number of key linguistic subfields and frameworks. Organised into five thematic parts, the volume covers a range of theoretical perspectives, with each chapter surveying the latest work from areas as diverse as syntax, pragmatics, psycholinguistics, applied linguistics, conversational analysis, multimodality, and computermediated communication. Comprehensive, yet wide-ranging, the Handbook presents a full description of how the theory of context has revolutionised linguistics, and how its renewed study is crucial in an ever-changing world.
Key Features
• Approaches the study of language in context from different disciplines, allowing the reader to explore a variety of different ways of developing and applying the theory
• Brings together state-of-the-art research from some of the most influential scholars in their fields
• Includes an up-to-date description of language in context from the most relevant theoretical perspectives
Contents
Introduction: language in context studies;
Part I. Language in Context: A Socio-Historical Perspective:
1. Conversation analysis;
2. Context in historical linguistics;
3. Context in discourse analysis;
Part II. Philosophical, Semantic and Grammatical Approaches to Context:
4. Philosophy of language and action theory;
5. A functional approach to context;
6. The grammar of incremental language production in context;
7. Cognitive linguistics and context;
Part III. Pragmatic Approaches to Context:
8. The role of context in Gricean and Neo-Gricean pragmatics;
9. Sociopragmatics and context;
10. Natural semantic metalanguage and context;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics
November 2023 244 x 170 mm c.544pp
9781108839136 Hardback £130.00 / US$170.00 / €151.72
11. Relevance theory and context;
12. The interplay of linguistic, conceptual and encyclopedic knowledge in meaning construction and comprehension;
13. Corpus pragmatics;
14. Prosodic pragmatics in context;
Part IV. Applications of Context Studies:
15. Language learning and assessment in context;
16. Linguistic creativity and humour in context;
17. Context in translation and interpreting studies;
18. The role of context in clinical linguistics;
Part V. Advances in multi-modal and technological context-based research:
19. Non-verbal communication and context: multi-modality in interaction;
20. AI, human-robot interaction and natural language processing;
21. Social media and computer-mediated communication.
The Cambridge Handbook of Marketing and the Law
Edited by Jacob E. Gersen Harvard Law School, Massachusetts and Joel H. Steckel New York University
Description
This handbook examines a wide range of current legal and policy issues at the intersection of marketing and the law. Focusing on legal outcomes that depend on measurements and interpretations of consumer and firm behavior, the chapters explore how consumers form preferences, perceptions, and beliefs, and how marketers influence them. Specific questions include the following: How should trademark litigation be valued and patent damages assessed? What are the challenges in doing so? What divides certain marketing claims between fact and fiction? Can a litigant establish secondary meaning without a survey? How can one extract evidence on consumer behavior with the explosion of social media? This unique volume at the intersection of marketing and the law brings together an international roster of scholars to answer these questions and more.
Key Features
• Includes contributions from leading academics in both law and marketing
• Integrates legal doctrine with marketing theory and evidence
• Makes specialized legal and marketing concepts accessible for a wide variety of readers
Contents
Introduction;
Part I. Understanding Consumer Behavior:
1. The purchase funnel and litigation;
2. Implications of the consumer journey to traditional consumer surveys for litigation;
3. ‘They ruined popcorn’: on the costs and benefits of mandatory labels;
4. Valuation of personal data: assessing potential harm from unauthorized access and misuse of personal information in consumer class actions;
Part II. Understanding Marketing Phenomena:
5. ‘The persistence of false reference prices: theory and empirical evidence’
6. Brand value, marketing spending, and brand royalty rates;
7. On puffery;
8. Search Engine advertising, trademark bidding, and consumer intent; Part III. Methodological Advances:
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks
July 2023 229 x 152 mm c.500pp
9781108470018 Hardback £160.00 / US$210.00 / €186.74
9. Choice experiments: reducing complexity and measuring behavior rather than perception; 10. Use of conjoint analysis in litigation: challenges, best practices, and common mistakes;
11. Piece problems: component valuation in marketing and in patent and tort law;
12. Marketing analysis in class certification;
13. Damages estimation in consumer deception class action: legal and methodological issues;
14. Taking a second look at secondary meaning: a marketing perspective on circuit court factors;
15. Social media evidence in commercial litigation,; Part IV. How The Law Protects:
16. Law as persuasion;
17. The Coca-Cola bottle: a fragile vessel for building a brand;
18. Poor consumer(s) law: the case of high-cost credit and payday loans;
19. Eating law.
The Cambridge Handbook of Intellectual Property and Social Justice
Steven D. Jamar Howard University (Washington DC) School of Law Lateef MtimaHoward University (Washington DC) School of Law
Description
The Cambridge Handbook of INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND SOCIAL JUSTICE
Protection for intellectual property has never been absolute; it has always been limited in the public interest. The benefits of intellectual property protection are meant to flow to everyone, not just a limited population of creators and the corporations that represent them. Given this social-utility function, intellectual property regimes must address issues of access, inclusion, and empowerment for marginalized and excluded groups. This handbook defines an approach to considering social justice in intellectual property law and regulation. Top scholars in the field offer surveys of social justice implementation in patents, copyright, trademarks, trade secrets, rights of publicity, and other major IP areas. Chapters define Intellectual Property Social Justice theory and include recommendations for reforming aspects of IP law and administration to further social justice by providing better access, more inclusion, and greater empowerment to marginalized groups.
Key Features
• Examines intellectual property from a social justice perspective
• Explains and applies Intellectual Property Social Justice (IP-SJ) theory
• Includes recommendations for IP law reform
Contents
Prolusion: what is intellectual property (And why should you care about it anyway?) –
A layperson’s guide to intellectual property law;
Introduction: intellectual property social justice theory: history, development, and description;
Part I. IP Social Justice Foundations:

1. Mapping the IP social justice frontier;
2. The Indians who were not heard and the band that must not be named: racial formation and social justice in intellectual property law;
3. Intellectual property social justice: a theoretical rationale;
Part II. IP Social Justice in Major Intellectual Property Domains:
4. People are the lifeblood of innovation: IP-SJ and patents;
5. Copyright and the interdependent relationship between social utility and social justice;
6. Trademarks, legal remedies, and social injustices;
7. Trade secrets from an IP social justice perspective;
8. Tattoo use: what does the right of publicity have to do with it?;
Part III. IP Social Justice: Historical Perspectives:
9. Copyright, music, and race: the case of mirror cover recordings;
10. They knew it all along: patents, social justice, and fights for civil rights;
11. Unequal copyright in the 19th century;
Part IV. IP Social Justice in the Political Economy: Engaging Activism;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks
March 2023 254 x 178 mm c.650pp
9781108482738 Hardback £150.00 / US$175.06
Achieving Change:
12. Applying social justice principles in the practice of IP Law;
13. The lead sheet problem in music copyright: Williams and Skidmore revealed the systematic diminution of pop music’s aural composers;
14. Works of ‘Recognized Stature’ under VARA: Recognized by whom?;
15. Intellectual property empowerment and protection for prisoners;
16. User-generated transformation: IP, social justice, and fanworks;
17. Libraries, copyright exceptions, and social justice;
18. A social justice perspective on IP protection for artificial intelligence programs; Part VI. IP Social Justice in Global Perspective:
19. Intellectual property social justice on the international plane;
20. IP, social justice & human development: empowering female entrepreneurs through trademark law;
21. Controversial trademarks: a comparative analysis;
22. Exposing gender bias in intellectual property law: the UK music industries;
23. The role of non-rightsholders advocates and academics in achieving social justice balance in copyright: the case of Colombia; Part VII. IP Social Justice: The Future of the Global IP Ecosystem:
24. IP and social justice futures;
25. Patenting custom fit, aspiring for social justice;
26. A primer on critical race IP;
27. Intellectual property after George Floyd.
The Cambridge Handbook of European Monetary, Economic and Financial Integration
Dariusz Adamski University of Wroclaw Fabian AmtenbrinkErasmus Universiteit Rotterdam
Jakob de Haan
University of Groningen
Description
This Handbook provides a comprehensive analysis of the past, present, and future of the European Economic and Monetary Union in its broader context. It incorporates economic, legal and political science perspectives to provide an in-depth and forward-looking scrutiny of the rationales, the main features and the shortcomings of the economic, monetary and financial integration in the euro area. Studying its complex, highly interconnected governance structures, the authors suggest directions for necessary reforms. With contributions from a diverse group of leading experts in their fields, this volume is truly versatile in its scope and approach, whilst remaining accessible for readers of different academic backgrounds.
Key Features
• Provides an interdisciplinary and multi-disciplinary analysis of the current system governing European Economic and Monetary Union and finds solutions to the main problems that are being identified in the system
• Offers a discussion of the political, economic, and legal rationale for the introduction of European EMU and for the main features of the governance framework
• Provides an overview, backed up by detailed discussions, of the main issues at play concerning the conduct of the single monetary policy by the ECB in the euro area
Contents
Part I. The Economic and Monetary Union: Political, Economic and Legal Rationales:
1. Conceptual foundations of economic and monetary union: the economic dimension;
2. Theorizing economic and monetary union –between concepts and pragmatism;
3. Monetary union and the single currency;
4. On the misalignment of monetary, economic and political integration in European economic and monetary union;
5. Ideas, interests, and power: Germany’s complex balancing act in the process of economic and monetary union in Europe;
6. Coping with economic crises through learning by doing: an evolving policy response;
7. The political economy of reinsurance;
8. Euro crises, the productivity slowdown and the EMU;
Part II. The Monetary Dimension:
9. The overburdened monetary policy mandate of the ECB;
10. Government bond buying by the European Central Bank: leadership versus accountability;
11. ECB monetary policies: the increasing importance of communication;
12. From market to green economics: impact on monetary and financial policies;
13. The politics of monetary union and the democratic legitimacy of the ECB as a strategic Actor;
14. How can courts contribute to accountability in EU monetary policy?;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, legal practitioners
Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks
October 2023 254 x 178 mm c.800pp
9781009364690 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00 / €175.06
Part III. The Economic and Fiscal Dimensions:
15. Reviving the case for policy coordination in EMU;
16. Ten years of the European semester: from sovereign debt crisis to COVID-19 Crisis;
17. The EU fiscal rules: principle, policy and reform prospects;
18. National fiscal policy in EMU: insufficient sustainability and stabilisation?;
19. The politics of fiscal integration in Eurozone reforms and next generation EU;
20. Adjustments in economic crises: the different outcomes of the sovereign debt and pandemic crises in Europe;
21. Designing a permanent EU-wide stabilisation facility;
22. Enhancing private and public risk-sharing: lessons from the Literature and Reflections on the Covid-19 crisis;
Part IV. Financial Integration:
23. Banking regulation in Europe: from reaction to thinking ahead;
24. The politics behind the creation of the banking union;
25. Failing banks within the banking union at the crossroads: a great step forward –with many loose ends;
26. The banking union: supervision and crisis management;
27. The reemergence of market-based finance? The politics of capital markets union;
28. The European strategy on digital finance and its interplay with capital markets integration in the EU;
29. Regulating crypto and cyberware in the EU.
The Cambridge Handbook of Foreign Judges on Domestic Courts
Anna Dziedzic University of Melbourne Simon N. M. Young The University of Hong KongDescription
Foreign judges sit on domestic courts in over fifty jurisdictions worldwide. They serve on ordinary courts, including apex and constitutional courts, as well as specialist courts, such as international commercial courts and hybrid criminal tribunals. This Handbook presents the first global comparative study of this long-standing, diverse and evolving practice, from colonial precedents to new forms of foreign judging in contemporary conditions of globalisation. Chapters by scholars of law, politics and history, and reflections by judges themselves, provide detailed information and critical analysis of foreign judging across Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, Europe, the Middle East and the Pacific. The chapters examine the notion and relevance of foreignness, rationales for foreign judges, and the implications for judicial identity, adjudication, independence and accountability. Focusing on an underexplored issue that features mainly in small states and jurisdictions of the Global South, this Handbook challenges assumptions and expands knowledge about courts and judges.
Key Features
• The first global comparative study of foreign judges on domestic courts, opening up an underexplored phenomenon to comparative and multi-disciplinary study

• Provides comparative legal scholars and social scientists with essential description, context and analysis of how jurisdictions come to have foreign judges and their impact on law and society
• Offers scholars, practitioners and policy makers with a framework to assess foreign judging in their own jurisdictions, informing future reforms and change
Contents
1. An Introduction to Foreign Judges on Domestic Courts; Part I. Rationales, Motivations and Design; Domestic Drivers:
2.My Reflections as a Foreign Judge in the Commonwealth;
3. Judges from other Common Law Jurisdictions on the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal;
4. Foreign Judges in Liechtenstein’s Courts;
5. The SICC, International Judges and International Commercial Dispute Resolution;
6. Foreign Judges in the Macau Special Administrative Region of China: An Emblem and a Guarantee of the ‘One Country, Two Systems’ Principle; International Influences;
7. Foreign Judges in the Constitutional Courts of Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo: ‘Mission Impossible’?;
8. A Judiciary ‘Suspended’ in Transition? A Case Study of Portuguese Judges in East Timor;
9. Foreign Judges in International Corruption Missions in Central America;
10. Mixed Composition in International Criminal Justice: History, Justifications and Challenges; Part II. Implications and Impact: First Hand Accounts;
11. Impartial Adjudicators? The Role of Foreign Judges in Seychelles;
12. What is it to be an Academic French Female Judge in Andorra? Some Personal Thoughts about a Unique Experience;
13. Foreign Judges on Domestic and Regional Courts: The Difference Between What Matters and What Seems to Matter;
14. Foreign Judges in National Courts in the Commonwealth;
15. Reflections;
Judicial Identity and the Judicial Role;
16. Colonial-Era Mixed Courts, the Compensation of Foreigners for Wrongful State Acts and the Emergence of International Judges as Guarantors of Individual Rights;
17. Forging a Judicial Identity: The Colonial Legal Service;
18. Domestic Criticisms of Foreign Judges: The Case of Hong Kong;
19. Judicial Mobilities: Travelling Judges in the Pacific;
Adjudication, Accountability and Independence;
20. Foreign Judging and Securing Judicial Independence in the Anglo Caribbean;
21. Importing Justice: Foreign Judicial Appointments in Southern Africa;
22. Foreign Judges on Domestic Courts in the MENA Region: Challenges and (Missed) Opportunities;
23. Foreign Judges on the Gambian Bench: Implications for Judicial Independence and Rule of Law;
24. The Syariah Factor: One of the Many Challenges for ‘Foreign’ Judges in the Courts of Brunei Darussalam;
25. Foreign Judges: Adjudicating Papua New Guinea’s ‘Home-Grown’ Transformative Constitution;
26. Shaping the Legal Landscape: Foreign Judges in the Federated States of Micronesia.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, legal practitioners
Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks
October 2023 254 x 178 mm c.540pp
9781009098786 Hardback £200.00 / US$260.00 / TBA
Diaspora and Literary Studies
Edited by Angela Naimou Clemson University, South CarolinaDescription
Diaspora is an ancient term that gained broad new significance in the twentieth century. At its simplest, diaspora refers to the geographic dispersion of a people from a common originary space to other sites. It pulls together ideas of people, movement, memory, and home, but also troubles them. In this volume, established and newer scholars provide fresh explorations of diaspora for twenty-first century literary studies. The volume re-examines major diaspora origin stories, theorizes diaspora through its conceptual intimacies and entanglements, and analyzes literary and visual-cultural texts to reimagine the genres, genders, and genealogies of diaspora. Literary mappings move across Africa, the Americas, Middle East, Asia, Europe, and Pacific Islands, and through Atlantic, Pacific, Mediterranean, Gulf, and Indian waters. Chapters reflect on diaspora as a key concept for migration, postcolonial, global comparative race, environmental, gender, and queer studies. The volume is thus an accessible and provocative account of diaspora as a vital resource for literary studies in a bordered world.
Key Features
• Introduces diaspora as a contextually specific, multi-disciplinary concept that has been crucial in literary studies
• Provides historical engagement with the concept of diaspora while updating diaspora theory as a vital resource for multiple fields of literary studies in the twenty-first century, particularly on migration and literature

• Tracks and re-envisions core conceptions of diaspora across a wide variety of methods and literary geographies
Contents
Introduction: Diaspora and Literary Studies; PART I. ORIGINS REVISITED:
1. Displaced in Diaspora? Jewish Communities in the Greco-Roman World;
2. Interoceanic Relational Diasporas: A Caribbean Perspective;
3. The Language of Lakay: Diaspora as Project and Process in Haitian Cultural Production;
4. The Insufficiency of Paradigms: Diaspora in South Asian Literature;
6. Afro-Futurist Speculations and Diaspora; PART II. MAJOR CONCEPTS IN RELATION:
7. The Shock of Relation: Queer Diasporas in Law and Literature;
8. Strangers and Brothers: James Baldwin’s Encounters with Africa;
5. Lynchpins of Sovereignty: Forced Removal and the Deportspora Imaginary;
9. Incommensurability, Inextricability, Entanglement: Stuart Hall and the Question of Palestine;
10. Radical Black Poetics and South-South;
11. Remembering the Uses of Diaspora, or Palestine is Still the Issue;
12. Refugee Ecologies: Narratives of Water in Vietnamese Diaspora;
13. Diaspora and Detention: Behrouz Boochani, Manus Prison and Genres of the Borderscape; Part III. READINGS in Genre, Gender, and GENEALOGIES:
14. Transpacific Noir;
15. From Nothing to Something: Black Speculative Fiction and the Trayvon Generation;
16. Biological and Narrative Reproduction in the Family-saga Novels of Maryse Condé;
17. The Embodied Feminist Futures of Diaspora;
18. Of Origin and Opportunity: Co-narratives of Refugitude in Roxane Gay’s Ayiti;
19. Arabic Diasporic Literary Trajectories: Reinvented Magical Realisms, Biopolitical Ruptures, and Planetarity;
20. Decolonizing Across Borders: Diasporic-Indigenous Encounters and the Predicaments of Arrival.
Additional Information
Level: Graduate students, academic researchers
Series: Cambridge Critical Concepts
July 2023 229 x 152 mm c.350pp
9781108840934 Hardback c. £90.00 / c. US$120.00 / €105.04
Correspondence Primarily on Pamela and Clarissa (1732–1749)
Samuel Richardson
Louise Curran
Trinity College, Oxford
George Justice
University of Tulsa
Sören Hammerschmidt
GateWay Community College, Maricopa Community Colleges
Description
Samuel Richardson was one of the great letter-writers in English. His three great novels, Pamela, Clarissa, and Sir Charles Grandison were written in epistolary form, and Richardson himself was known in his time for the way he used his letters for both professional and personal purposes. As a printer, Richardson corresponded with authors, readers, and other printers and publishers. As a friend, he supported his correspondents when they were personally struggling. As a novelist, he engaged readers both before and after the publication of his works, soliciting their opinion and defending his own methods. Correspondence Primarily on Pamela and Clarissa (1732–1749) gives us Richardson the printer, the friend, and the novelist in the crucial early years of his unexpected success and fame as a literary writer, providing insight into how and why he created innovative works that changed the course of literary history.
Key Features
• Helps to create the full picture of Richardson’s correspondence, complementing the other published works in the Cambridge Edition of the Works of Samuel Richardson

• Includes a full and accessible introduction, of value to general readers, students and scholars alike
• Gives readers a fuller picture than ever before of the importance of the letters in the history of the novel as well as in Richardson’s career
Contents
General editors’ preface; Acknowledgements; Chronology; List of abbreviations; General introduction; Richardson’s Correspondence Primarily on Pamela and Clarissa (1732–1749); Appendix: orders and receipts of payment; Index.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Correspondence of Samuel Richardson, 9
August 2023 229 x 152 mm 600pp
9780521830355 Hardback £95.00 / US$125.00 / €110.97
Women and Medieval Literary Culture

From the Early Middle Ages to the Fifteenth Century Corinne Saunders
Durham University Diane Watt University of SurreyDescription
Focusing on England but covering a wide range of European and global traditions and influences, this authoritative volume examines the central role of medieval women in the production and circulation of books and considers their representation in medieval literary texts, as authors, readers and subjects, assessing how these change over time. Engaging with Latin, French, German, Welsh and Gaelic literary culture, it places British writing in wider European contexts while also considering more distant influences such as Arabic. Essays span topics including book production and authorship; reception; linguistic, literary, and cultural contexts and influences; women’s education and spheres of knowledge; women as writers, scribes and translators; women as patrons, readers and book owners; and women as subjects. Reflecting recent trends in scholarship, the volume spans the early Middle Ages through to the eve of the Reformation and emphasises the multilingual, multicultural and international contexts of women’s literary culture.
Key Features
• Reflects a turning point in scholarly thinking by going beyond women’s writing in isolation to explore the broader world of women’s relationships with literary culture
• Provides a long view, surveying women’s literary culture from the early Middle Ages through to the eve of the Reformation
• Emphasises the multilingual and multicultural contexts of women’s literary culture, looking beyond England to consider wider British, European and global influences
Contents
Introduction;
I. Patrons, Owners, Writers, and Readers in England and Europe:
1. ‘Miserere, meidens’: abbesses and nuns;
2. Creating her own story: queens, noblewomen, and their cultural patronage;
3. Woman-to-woman initiatives between female religious: vertical and horizontal learning;
II. Circles and Communities in England:
4. Ancrene Wisse, the Katherine Group, and the Wooing Group as textual communities, Medieval and modern;
5. Syon Abbey and the Birgittines;
6. What the Paston women read;
III. Health, Conduct, and Knowledge:
7. Embracing the body and the soul: women in the literary culture of Medieval medicine;
8. Gender and class in the circulation of conduct books;
9. Women’s learning and lore: magic, recipes and folk belief;
10. Women and devotional compilations;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
August 2023 229 x 152 mm c.500pp
9781108835916 Hardback c. £120.00 / c. US$160.00 / €140.05
IV. Genre and Gender:
11. Lyrics: meditations, prayers and praises; songs and carols;
12. ‘It satte me wel bet ay in a cave / To bidde and rede on holy seyntes lyves’: women and hagiography;
13. Tears, mediation, and literary entanglement: the writings of Medieval visionary women;
14. Convent and city: Medieval women and drama;
15. Women and romance;
16. Trouble and strife in the Old French fabliaux;
17. Chaucer and Gower;
V. Women as Authors:
18. Marie de France: identity and authorship in translation;
19. Julian of Norwich: a woman’s vision, book, and readers;
20. The communities of The Book of Margery Kemp;
21. Christine de Pizan: women’s literary culture and Anglo-French politics;
22. Beyond borders: women poets in Ireland, Scotland, and Wales up to c. 1500.
Shakespeare Survey 76
Digital and Virtual Shakespeare
Emma Smith University of OxfordDescription
Shakespeare Survey is a yearbook of Shakespeare studies and production. Since 1948, Survey has published the best international scholarship in English and many of its essays have become classics of Shakespeare criticism. Each volume is devoted to a theme, or play, or group of plays; each also contains a section of reviews of that year’s textual and critical studies and of the year’s major British performances. The theme for Volume 76 is ‘Digital and Virtual Shakespeare’. The complete set of Survey volumes is also available online at https:// www.cambridge.org/core/publications/collections/cambridge-shakespeare. This searchable resource enables users to browse by author, essay and volume, search by play, theme and topic and save and bookmark their results.
Key Features
• The 76th in the annual series of volumes devoted to Shakespeare study and production

• The lively theme of Digital and Virtual Shakespeare occupies most of the articles in this issue
• A substantial review section covers books published on Shakespeare during 2022 and productions throughout the UK
Contents
1. All early modern drama is virtual to us;
2. RSC live from stratford-upon-avon: ten things I think I know or, of course we’re making a movie;
3. Digital ariel: an interview with Mark quartley;
4. Staging digital co-presence: Punchdrunk’s hybrid sleep no more (2012) and pandemic-informed pedagogies;
5. Very tragical mirth’: performing a midsummer night’s dream on screen(s) during lockdown;
6. Uneasy lies the head: Michael Almereyda’s halloween Cymbeline;
7. When is king lear not king lear?;
8. Sim-ulating Shakespeare: from stage to computer screen;
9. Meter in the middle distance;
10. What’s in a ‘Quire’? vicissitudes of the virtual in Shakespeare’s Julius caesar and romeo and Juliet;
11. And which the Jew?’: representations of Shylock in meiji Japan (1868-1912);
12. Hamlet, translation and the cultural conditions of thought;
13. The Pietas of dogberry;
14. Taylor Mac’s Gary and Queer Failure in Titus Andronicus;
15. I would cure you’: self-help advice on love in Sidney and Shakespeare;
16. Shakespeare in Arden: pragmatic markers and parallels;
17. Sycorax’s hoop;
18. Shakespeare performances in England 2022: outside London;
19. Shakespeare performances in England 2022: London;
20. Professional Shakespeare productions in the British isles, January-December 2021;
21. The year’s contribution to Shakespeare Studies:
1. Critical Studies reviewed by Ezra Horbury, 2. Performance reviewed by Miranda Fay Thomas, 3. Editions and textual studies reviewed by Emma Depledge.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: Shakespeare Survey, 76
August 2023 246 x 189 mm c.320pp
9781009392785 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 / €105.04
Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition: The 1890s

Description
The 1890s were once seen as marginal within the larger field of Victorian studies, which tended to privilege the realist novel and the authors of the mid-century. In recent decades, the fin de siècle has come to be viewed as one of the most dynamic decades of the Victorian era. Viewed by writers and artists of the period as a moment of opportunity, transition, and urgency, the 1890s are pivotal for understanding the parameters of the field of Victorian studies itself. This volume makes a case for why the decade continues to be an area of perennial fascination, focusing on transnational connections, gender and sexuality, ecological concerns, technological innovations, and other current critical trends. This collection both calls attention to the diverse range of literature and art being produced during this period and foregrounds the relevance of the Victorian era’s final years to issues and crises that face us today.
Key Features
• Enhances our understanding of the 1890s as a distinct historical period, attending to the diverse range of literature and art being produced in order to enrich our sense of the decade
• Highlights critical trends and newer methodologies within the field, and exemplifies new approaches in nineteenth-century studies that can serve as models for future work in this area
• Foregrounds the relevance of work on the 1890s to political issues and crises facing us today, including transnational connections, gender and sexuality, ecology, and technological innovation
Contents
Introduction: The 1890s: Decade of a Thousand Movements;
1. Race and Empire in the 1890s;
2. Island Dandies, Transpacific Decadence, and the Politics of Style;
3. The 1890s and East Asia: Towards a Critical Cosmopolitanism;
4. Indulekha; or The Many Lives of Realism at the Fin De Siècle;
5. Reading World Religions in the 1890s;
6. Night Lights: The 1890s Nocturne;
7. The Green 1890s: World Ecology in Women’s Poetry;
8. ‘Only Nature is a Thing Unreal’: The Anthropocene 1890s;
9. Weird Ecologies and the Limits of Environmentalism;
10. Queer Theories of the 1890s;
11. Eugenics and Degeneration in Socialist-Feminist Novels of the Mid-1890s;
12. The Conservative and Patriotic 1890s;
13. Decadence and the Antitheatrical Prejudice;
14. Religion and Science in the 1890s;
15. Little Magazines and/in Media History;
16. Fin-de-Siècle Visuality (and Textuality) and the Digital Sphere.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, undergraduate students
Series: Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition
August 2023 229 x 152 mm c.371pp
9781316513255 Hardback £90.00 / US$115.00 / €105.04
Wilkie Collins in Context
William BakerNorthern
Illinois University Richard Nemesvari Wilfrid Laurier University, OntarioDescription
This collection of essays by international scholars celebrates the 200th anniversary of Wilkie Collins’s birth by exploring his unconventional life alongside his works, critical responses to his writings and their afterlife, and the literary and cultural contexts which shaped his fiction. Topics discussed include gender, science and medicine, music, law, race and empire, media adaptations, neo-Victorianism, disability, and ethics. Along with an analysis of his novels, the essays included also recognize the importance of his short stories, journalism, and contributions to Victorian theatre, most notably illuminating the strong connections between sensation fiction and melodrama, as well as exploring his influence on film and TV. Engaging with yet also delving far beyond the famous novels, this volume promotes awareness of Collins’ remarkable and diverse writerly achievements and paints a vivid portrait of an author whose fluctuating reputation among contemporary critics stands in stark contrast to his immense and still-enduring popularity.

Key Features
• Expands understanding of Collins’s connections to Victorian culture outside of the boundaries of sensation fiction and reveals his links to such diverse spheres as drama, journalism, and art
• Shows the way in which Collins’s continuing popularity opposed his fluctuating critical reputation and reception, challenging the culturally constructed nature of literary and aesthetic hierarchies
• Provides a wide range of approaches to the writings of Wilkie Collins, using multidisciplinary methods to expand awareness of his varying achievements
Contents
Part I. Life and Works:
1. Life;
2. Letters;
3. Publishers and editions;
4. Early novels;
5. Middle novels;
6. Late novels;
7. Shorter fiction;
8. Journalism;
9. Drama;
Part II. Critical Response and Afterlife:
10. Contemporary;
11. After death to T. S. Eliot;
12. T. S. Eliot to 1990;
Additional Information
13. 1990 to the present;
14. Modern media adaptations;
15. Neo-victorianism Jessica Cox; Part III. Contexts: Literary:
16. Wilkie Collins’s library;
17. Wilkie collins and serialization;
18. Wilkie Collins and sensation fiction;
19. Wilkie Collins and Scott;
20. Wilkie Collins and Dickens;
21. Wilkie Collins, Mary Braddon, and other women writers;
Part IV. Contexts: Cultural and Social:
22. Money;
23. Gender;
Level: Graduate students, academic researchers, undergraduate students
Series: Literature in Context
July 2023 229 x 152 mm c.346pp
9781316510575 Hardback £90.00 / US$115.00 / €105.04
24. Science and medicine;
25. Language;
26. Collins and the artists;
27. Music;
28. Politics;
29. Law;
30. Geography and places;
31. Victorian environments;
32. Race and empire;
33. Class status and social identity;
34. Disability;
35. Ethics; Further Reading; Index.
W. G. Sebald in Context
Uwe Schütte
Georg-August-Universität, Göttingen, Germany
Description
The German academic and writer W. G. Sebald made an astounding ascent into the canon of world literature. In this volume, leading experts from both the English- and the Germanspeaking worlds explore his celebrated prose works published in the short span from 1996 to his premature death in 2001. Special attention is paid to Sebald’s unpublished texts and books awaiting translation into English. The volume – illustrated with many unpublished archive images – scrutinizes the dual nature of Sebald’s life and work, located between Germany and England, academic and literary writing, vilification and idolization. Through nearly forty essays on a broad range of topics, W. G. Sebald in Context achieves a revision of our understanding of Sebald, defying many clichés about him. Particular attention is paid to the manifold ways in which Sebald’s writings exerted a legacy far beyond literature, especially in the areas of art, cinema, and popular music.

Key Features
• Revises established truisms, clichés and myths about Sebald based on anglophone misconceptions or lack of access to the vast body of sources in German
• Draws on a transnational and interdisciplinary mix of contributors to explore both established key themes and hitherto ignored aspects, as well as new trends in the field of Sebald studies
• Places special focus on unpublished and untranslated texts, and includes an extensive selection of hitherto unpublished photographs of or taken by Sebald
Contents
Part I. Biograpical Aspects:
1. Allgäu;
2. Sebald’s grandfather;
3. Manchester;
4. East Anglia;
5. Academia;
6. The British centre for literary translation;
7. Between Germany and Britain; Part II. The Literary Works:
8. Unpublished juvenilia;
9. Film scripts;
10. The ‘Prose project’;
11. Auto-/biography;
12. Natural history and the anthropocene;
Additional Information
13. The corsica project;
14. Poetry;
15. The world war project;
16. Interviews; Part III. Themes and Influences:
17. Critical writings;
18. Minor writing;
19. Franz kafka;
20. Literary predecessors;
21. Walter benjamin;
22. Philosophical models and influences;
23. History;
24. Polemics;
25. Holocaust;
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students, undergraduate students
Series: Literature in Context
August 2023 229 x 152 mm c.346pp
9781316511350 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00 / €99.2
26. Photography;
27. Paintings and ekphrasis;
28. Media theory;
29. Travel writing;
30. Eco-criticism and animal studies;
Part IV. Reception and Legacy:
31. Sebald scholarship;
32. Sebald in translation;
33. The ‘Sebaldian’;
34. Film;
35. Pop music;
36. Literary prizes;
37. Visual arts and exhibitions;
38. The cult of Sebald.
The Nation in British Literature and Culture

Description
The Nation and British Literature and Culture charts the emergence of Britain as a political, social and cultural construct, examining the manner in which its constituent elements were brought together through a process of amalgamation and conquest. The fashioning of the nation through literature and culture is examined, as well as counter narratives that have sought to call national orthodoxies into question. Specific topics explored include the emergence of a distinctively national literature in the early modern period; the impact of French Revolution on conceptions of Britishness; portrayals of empire in popular and literary fiction; popular music and national imagining; the marginalisation and oppression of particular communities within the nation. The volume concludes by asking what implications an extended set of contemporary crises have for the ongoing survival both of the United Kingdom, both as a political unit and as a literary and cultural point of identity.
Key Features
• Provides a comprehensive overview of the historical fashioning of the British state
• Explores in detail the way in which literature and culture can serve the process of national imagining and can also be used to interrogate that process
• Examines how the modern British nation is constituted, politically and culturally, and asks whether it is sustainable in its current form
Contents
Part I. Origins:
1. What is Britain?;
2. Wales in Britain;
3. Scotland in Britain;
4. Ireland in Britain;
5. England in Britain;
Part II. Writing the Nation:
6. Cultural borrowings;
7. Tradition and transformation in literature;
8. Milton and the remaking of the Nation in seventeenth-century England; Part III. Revolutions and Empires:
9. The American revolution;
10. The French revolution;
11. ‘And what should they know of England who only England know?’;
Additional Information
Level: Graduate students, academic researchers
Series: Cambridge Themes in British Literature and Culture
September 2023 229 x 152 mm c.393pp
9781009378857 Hardback £90.00 / US$120.00 / €105.04
12. Rather unpleasant stories: popular fictions of Empire;
13. Sun-drowned streets and wasted lives: imperial decline and the colonial Novel;
Part IV. Making the Modern Nation:
14. ‘It’s being so cheerful that keeps me going’: the nation in the second world war;
15. The new British;
16. Censorship;
17. ‘Wake up the Nation’: modern pop and the quest for a New England;
18. Queer Nation;
Part V. Futures:
19. The future of the Union: a political science perspective;
20. What is British Literature now?;
21. Borderline Britain.
Heidegger and Literary Studies
Andrew Benjamin Monash University, VictoriaDescription
Martin Heidegger is one of the most influential philosophers of the 20th Century, and a key philosophical resource for literary critics. Not only has he written about poetry, generations of poets have engaged his writings. And yet, for Heidegger poetry and literature are separate. An essential part of the project of this book therefore is to show how both the distinction and connection between literature and poetry is staged within Heidegger’s thought. It offers Heidegger’s perspective on a range of key themes, topics, poets, and writers, including Poetry and Poetics, Ancient Greek theatre and tragedies and then specifically Friedrich Hölderlin, Thomas Mann, Paul Celan, Euripides and Sophocles. As the Chapters comprising this book make clear, Heidegger’s work remains indispensable for any serious engagement with either literature or poetry today.
Key Features
• The Most recent collection of material on Heidegger and Literature

• Written by both philosophers and literary scholars, provides readers with essays from a wide range of people working on Heidegger and Literearure
• Provides a comprehensive overview of Heidegger and Literearure that does not need to be supplemented by other readings
Contents
Introduction;
Part I. Literature and Poetry;
1. Heidegger’s literary secret;
2. The event’s foreign vernacular: Denken and Dichten in Heidegger;
3. Shared habits: love, time and the magic mountain in 1925;
4. From tool to poem: the emergence of the antagonism between technics and poetry in Heidegger’s work;
5. Heidegger’s use of poetry; Part II. Heidegger and Greek Literature:
6. Heidegger and sophocles: Antigone’s Êthos of intimating and waiting;
7. Playing with shadows in Heidegger’s reading of Greek tragedy: encountering Oedipus, Antigone and (absent) Medea; Part III. Heidegger and Literary Works:
8. Places of pain: Heidegger’s reading of Trakl;
9. The (Im)possibility of homecoming: Heidegger, Celan and the Aporia of language;
10. Heidegger and Blanchot: ‘Wherefore poets in time of distress?’ (Hölderlin, Rilke)’;
11. Thomas Mann and Martin Heidegger: two distinct paths of the ‘conservative revolution’ in Germany;
12. Travels in Greece: Heidegger and Henry Miller;
13. Hölderlin’s Heidegger, Heidegger’s Mourning.
Additional Information
Level: Graduate students, academic researchers
Series: Cambridge Studies in Literature and Philosophy
September 2023 229 x 152 mm c.400pp
9781316513101 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00 / €99.2
The Cambridge History of European Romantic Literature

Description
This wide-ranging new history of European Romantic Literature presents a pan-European phenomenon which transcended national borders and contributed to a new sense of European cultural identity across the continent. Conceived in the same spirit as Madame de Staël’s cultural and political agenda at a time when her ‘generous idea’ of Europe is being challenged on all sides, the volume pays close attention to the period’s circulation of people, ideas, and texts. It proposes to rethink the period comparatively, focusing on various forms of cultural mediation and transfer, and on productive tensions, synchronicities, and interactions within and across borders. Organized chronologically, its twenty chapters address over five hundred works, proposing a coherent historical narrative without completely erasing individual nations’ specificities. By showcasing in particular the place of Britain within continental culture, the volume hopes to reactivate critical examinations of Romanticism from a historicised European perspective.
Key Features
• Reminds readers of the importance of understanding Romanticism internationally, presenting European Romantic literature as a phenomenon that superseded national borders
• Gives British literature significant coverage and showcases the ways in which Britain both shaped and was shaped by continental European culture
• Ordered chronologically to give readers a more coherent sense of Romanticism’s historical development and to illustrate the vital connections and tensions between different national literatures, introducing a large number of authors and texts in many different genres
Contents
Introduction: inventing a European romanticism; Part I. Romantic Genealogies (1750–1790):
1. The discovery of the past;
2. Discourses of nature;
3. The romantic sublime;
4. Cultures of sensibility;
5. Gothic circulations;
6. The crisis of enlightenment; Part II. Revolution to Restoration (1790–1815):
7. Transcendental revolutions;
8. Citizens of the world;
9. Romantic loss, emigration and exile;
Additional Information
10. Women writers’ networks;
11. Romantic nationalisms;
12. Shakespeare and romantic drama;
13. Classics and romantics; Part III. Restoration to Revolution (1815–1850):
14. The ‘restoration’ of restoration;
15. Late romanticism and print culture;
16. Global romanticisms;
17. No longer at ease: the romantic novel in Europe;
18. Literatures of the north;
19. Russian empire and the territories of romanticism; Acknowledgments.
Level: Graduate students, undergraduate students, academic researchers
November 2023 229 x 152 mm c.800pp
9781108497060 Hardback c. £120.00 / c. US$165.00 / €140.05
Life’s Little Ironies
Thomas Hardy Alan ManfordDescription
Life’s Little Ironies (a phrase coined by Hardy) was Thomas Hardy’s third collection of short stories. The volume’s eight stories and one sequence of shorter tales (presented in a Canterbury Tales-type framework) had all appeared first in magazines before being gathered together in 1894. Not only do they reflect the strengths and themes of his great novels – they are also themselves powerful works, encompassing tragedy and humour. Part of the Cambridge Edition of the Novels and Short Stories ofThomas Hardy, this volume presents an authoritative text which aims to reflect Hardy’s original artistic intentions. A full scholarly apparatus includes every authorial revision, from manuscript (where extant) onwards, enabling readers to trace Hardy’s creative process. An introductory essay gives details of the stories’ composition, publishing history and critical reception; there are comprehensive explanatory notes and a glossary, and the illustrations that accompanied the stories’ magazine publication also provide valuable context.

Key Features
• Presents the text of the stories as contemporary readers would have encountered them, enabling readers to appreciate Hardy’s original artistic intentions
• Provides a thorough account of the stories’ genesis and publication and of the critical reception of the first edition
• Includes a complete record of substantive and accidental variants in all principal texts of the stories, tracing the development of the stories through the different publications and editions in Hardy’s lifetime
Contents
Introduction;
Life’s Little Ironies: The Son’s Veto; For Conscience’ Sake; A Tragedy of Two Ambitions; On the Western Circuit; To Please his Wife; The Melancholy Hussar of the German Legion; The Fiddler of the Reels; A Tradition of Eighteen Hundred and Four; A Few Crusted Characters; Apparatus; Editorial Emendations; Textual Notes; Record of Variants –Accidentals; End-of-line Word Division; Appendices; Explanatory Notes; Glossary of Dialect Terms.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Novels and Stories of Thomas Hardy
November 2023 229 x 152 mm c.350pp
9781108491433 Hardback £90.00 / US$110.00 / €105.04
Men’s Reproductive and Sexual Health throughout the Lifespan
An Integrated Approach to Fertility, Sexual Function, and Vitality
Douglas T. Carrell Utah Center for Reproductive Medicine James M. Hotaling Utah Center for Reproductive Medicine Alexander W. Pastuszak University of UtahDescription
Approximately one in twenty men have sperm counts low enough to impair fertility but little progress has been made in answering fundamental questions in andrology or in developing new diagnostic tools or management strategies in infertile men. Many of these problems increase with age, leading to a growing population of men seeking help. To address this, there is a strong movement towards integrating male reproductive and sexual healthcare involving clinicians such as andrologists, urologists, endocrinologists and counselors. This book will emphasize this integrated approach to male reproductive and sexual health throughout the lifespan. Practical advice on how to perform both clinical and laboratory evaluations of infertile men is given, as well as a variety of methods for medically and surgically managing common issues. This text ties together the three major pillars of clinical andrology: clinical care, the andrology laboratory, and translational research.
Key Features
• Written and edited by clinicians working at the medical center pioneering this approach, this is the definitive guide to integrating male reproductive and sexual healthcare designed to bring readers from a variety of specialties to a shared level of understanding

• Provides practical guidance on how to perform both clinical and laboratory evaluations of infertile men as well as a variety of methods for medically and surgically managing common issues
• Presenting up to date advice and techniques, this is a comprehensive, integrated, ‘one-stop shop’ approach to men’s reproductive and sexual health across the lifespan
Contents
Section I. An Introduction to Men’s Health Care:
1. How has men’s health changed over the past two decades?;
2. The business landscape of men’s health;
3. Urologic men’s health, the internet, and social media;
Section II. The Biology of Male Reproduction and Infertility:
4. Current understanding of the physiology and histology of human spermatogenesis;
5. Male reproductive endocrinology;
6. Sperm chromatin packaging and the toroid linker model;
7. Ejaculation and sperm transport: physiology and clinical concerns;
8. Genetic aspects of male infertility;
9. The mechanistic and predictive utility of sperm epigenetics;
10. Aging and environmental interactions with the sperm epigenome;
11. The effects of aging on male fertility and the health of offspring;
Section III. Clinical Evaluation and Treatment of Male Infertility:
12. Office evaluation of the infertile male;
13. Medical management of male fertility;
14. Surgical management of male infertility;
15. Varicocele repair in the era of ICSI;
16. Implementing genetic testing of male infertility in the clinic;
17. Andrological care of the patient with spinal cord injury;
18. Clinical fertility preservation decision making for prepubertal and postpubertal individuals with male gametes;
19. Mental health considerations in the infertile male and couple; Section IV. Laboratory Evaluation and Treatment of Male Infertility:
20. The modern semen analysis: theory and techniques of ejaculate examination;
21. The future of computer-assisted semen analysis in the evaluation of male infertility;
22. Reactive oxygen species and sperm DNA damage;
23. Clinical value of sperm DNA fragmentation tests;
24. The current use of sperm function assays;
25. Sperm selection in the laboratory;
26. Methods to select ejaculated, epididymal, and testicular spermatozoa for assisted conception;
27. Optimal sperm selection in the ICSI era;
28. Microfluidics for sperm sample preparation and sperm identification;
29. Practical concerns for patient semen banking;
30. The potential future applications of in vitro spermatogenesis in the clinical laboratory;
31. Spermatogonial stem cell culture and future of germline gene editing; Section V. Medical and Surgical Management of Issues of Male Health:
32. Hypogonadism in the male: evaluation and treatment;
33. Selective androgen receptor modulators (SARMs) in the treatment of hypogonadism and men’s health;
34. Male fertility and testosterone therapy;
35. Sleep and men’s health;
36. Molecular biology and physiology of erectile function and dysfunction;
37. Evaluation of the male with erectile dysfunction;
38. Lifestyle modifications for erectile dysfunction;
39. Medical and surgical management of erectile dysfunction;
40. Surgical management of Peyronie’s disease;
41. Medical management of BPH;
42. Chronic orchialgia.
Manual of Botulinum Toxin Therapy
Third edition
Edited by Daniel Truong University of California, RiversideDirk Dressler
Hannover Medical School
Mark Hallett
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Christopher Zachary
University of California, Irvine and Mayank Pathak
Truong Neuroscience Institute
Description
Providing practical, visually oriented guidance on the benefits of botulinum toxin in a wide variety of disorders, some new and unexpected, this new edition of Manual of Botulinum Toxin Therapy is fully updated in scope and detail. Chapters discuss the pathophysiology of each condition, summarizing the rationale for botulinum toxin, and describing the injection approach. Clear illustrations of the injection sites are included, using a ‘clinician’s eye’ perspective, which allows physicians to readily identify anatomical landmarks and approach angles for injection. Dosing tables for available toxin formulations are included. The Manual covers cosmetic treatment of the upper and lower face, as well as aesthetic smile correction. Extensive guidance on how to use ultrasound and how cadaveric dissections can assist localization and targeting of injections is provided. Designed for teaching and bedside guidance, the Manual is useful to a diverse range of clinicians looking to use botulinum toxin in their practice.

Key Features
• Chapters are authored by internationally renowned clinicians and investigators, ensuring content is cutting edge and valuable to professionals worldwide
• Clear and eye-catching illustrations show a ‘clinician’s eye view’ of the injection procedure, allowing practitioners to readily identify anatomical landmarks and approach angles for injection
• Providing extensive instruction in the use of ultrasound, correlating probe positioning, on-screen image and illustrations or dissection photos of injection targets, readers will learn about the fastest growing modality for injection guidance
Contents
1. The pretherapeutic history of botulinum neurotoxin;
2. Botulinum neurotoxin: History of clinical development;
3. Pharmacology of botulinum toxin therapy;
4. Immunological properties of botulinum neurotoxins;
5. Examination and treatment of complex cervical dystonia;
6. Visualization of ultrasound guided intramuscular injections in muscles relevant for cervical dystonia;
7. Ultrasound guidance for botulinum neurotoxin therapy: cervical dystonia;
8. Treatment of cervical dystonia;
9. Treatment of blepharospasm;
10. Botulinum neurotoxin in oromandibular dystonia;
11. Botulinum neurotoxin therapy of laryngeal muscle hyperactivity syndromes;
12.The use of botulinum neurotoxin in otorhinolaryngology;
13. Treatment of Hemifacial Spasm with Botulinum Toxin;
Additional Information
14. Botulinum toxin in treatment of tics;
15. The use of botulinum toxin in tremors;
16. The role of ultrasound for botulinum neurotoxin injection in childhood spasticity;
17. The use of botulinum neurotoxin in spastic infantile cerebral palsy;
18. The use of botulinum neurotoxin in spasticity using ultrasound guidance;
19. The use of botulinum toxin in spasticity;
20. Treatment of stiff-person syndrome with botulinum toxin;
21. Botulinum toxin in ophthalmology;
22. Cosmetic uses of botulinum neurotoxins for the upper face;
23. Botulinum toxin on the lower face;
24. Botulinum Toxin in the treatment of Gummy Smile;
25. Botulinum toxin for the breast;
26. Treatment of depression with botulinum toxin;
27. Hyperhidrosis Berthold: A treatment for ischemic digits and chronic pain;
Level: Medical specialists/consultants, specialist medical trainees
October 2023 280 x 216 mm c.439pp
9781009098663 Hardback £99.99 / US$130.00 / €116.7
28. Botulinum toxin in the treatment for ischemic digits and chronic pain;
29. Botulinum Toxin in Wound Healing;
30. Use of botulinum neurotoxin in neuropathic pain;
31. The Use of botulinum toxin in the management of headache disorders;
32. Use of Botulinum Toxin in Musculoskeletal Pain and Arthritis;
33. Treatment of plantar fasciitis/plantar fasciopathy with botulinum neurotoxins;
34. Use of botulinum toxin in the treatment of low back pain;
35. Use of botulinum neurotoxin in the treatment of piriformis syndrome;
36. Ultrasound guided botulinum toxin injections for thoracic outlet syndrome;
37. Botulinum neurotoxin in the gastrointestinal tract;
38. Botulinum neurotoxin applications in urological disorders;
39. Treatment of focal hand dystonia.
Puccini in Context
Alexandra Wilson Oxford Brookes UniversityDescription
Exploring the many dimensions of Giacomo Puccini’s historical legacy and significance, this book provides new perspectives on the life and work of a much-loved opera composer and demonstrates how political concerns shape the way we approach and perform his works in the present day. Accessibly written chapters by a range of international experts explore Puccini’s interests, attitudes, and relationships, and examine how his works reflected the cultural, political, and social zeitgeist of their time. The essays first map Puccini’s personal and professional networks, the regions and cities that meant so much to him, and his travels for both work and leisure. They go on to probe the composer’s attitudes towards contemporary developments in music, literature, film, and drama and investigate his collaboration with librettists, publishers, singers, and conductors. The book closes with chapters on Puccini’s compositional legacy, performance history, relationship with popular culture, and place in the international operatic canon.
Key Features
• Shows how Puccini’s works were shaped by the political and social currents of his time, and by developments in contemporary literature, drama, and film
• Evaluates the impact of recent debates about race, gender, imperialism, popular culture, and canonicity on how Puccini’s operas are understood and performed today
• Reflects on Puccini’s historical legacy and significance and provides new insights into his interests and personality
Contents
Part I. Formative Influences:
1. Forefathers and teachers;
2. Contemporaries and competitors;
3. Puccini’s women;
Part II. Puccini’s Places:
4. Puccini’s Tuscany;
5. Puccini in Milan;
6. Puccini’s travels: western Europe;
7. Puccini’s travels: central Europe;
8. Puccini the long-distance traveller;
Part III. Influences and Interests:
9. Musical influences, parallels and borrowings;
10. Italian literature of Puccini’s day;
11. Drama and acting in Puccini’s Italy;
12. Puccini and early film;
Additional Information
13. Puccini and technology; Part IV. Bringing Puccini to the Stage:
14. Puccini’s librettists;
15. Music publishing in Puccini’s Italy;
16. Puccini’s theatrical vision;
17. Puccini’s singers;
18. Puccini’s conductors; Part V. Image and Reputation:
19. Puccini in pictures;
20. Puccini’s Italian critics;
21. Memorialisation and biography; Part VI. Puccini Through a Political Lens:
22. Puccini and religion;
23. Puccini and politics;
24. Gender politics in Puccini’s operas;
Level: Graduate students, academic researchers, undergraduate students
Series: Composers in Context
October 2023 228 x 152 mm c.350pp
9781108835589 Hardback c. £79.99 / c. US$99.99 / €93.36
25. The racial politics of Madama Butterfly and Turandot; Part VII. Interpreting Puccini:
26. Editing Puccini;
27. Puccini on video;
28. Interpreting Puccini on stage and on disc;
29. Producing Puccini today; Part VIII. Legacy:
30. Puccini’s legacy, influence and meaning;
31. Puccini in popular culture;
32. Puccini and the canon; Bibliography; Index.
Vaughan Williams in Context
Julian Onderdonk West Chester University, Pennsylvania Ceri Owen University of CambridgeDescription
Challenging residual doubts about Vaughan Williams’s role and significance within twentieth-century music and culture, this book places and explores his life and music in their broad musical, cultural, social, and political contexts. Chapters by scholars from a range of disciplines re-evaluate the composer’s life and career within a world marked by both rapid change and refigured traditions – a world in which cultural and political nationalism was a fact of everyday life. Building on scholarship that has established Vaughan Williams as aesthetically and politically progressive, the book advances a revisionist perspective by broadening understandings of the nature of his responses to modernity. This portrait of a modern composer emerges not merely by focussing on underrepresented interests and pursuits, but also by contextualizing activities that have been misrepresented as merely ‘conservative’ and ‘backwardlooking’.
Key Features
• Explores Vaughan Williams’s life and music in its broad musical, cultural, social, and political contexts
• Advances revisionist perspectives to re-evaluate a composer whose work has been subject to simplification and distortion
• Builds on the latest scholarship and mines new archival materials, bringing to light important new topics and research finding
Contents
Introduction;
Part I. Biography, People, Places:
1. London and the modern City;
2. Personality;
3. Correspondents;
4. Women;
5. Friends outside music;
6. Cambridge; Part II. Inspiration and Expression:
7. Early development;
8. Romanticism;
9. Amateur music and musicians;
Additional Information
10. Performance;
11. Modalities of landscape; Part III. Culture and Society:
12. Politics;
13. Liberalism and landscape;
14. The English folk revival;
15. Christian socialism and the English hymnal;
16. Pageantry;
17. History and the spirit of revivalism;
18. War; Part IV. Arts:
19. Literature; 20. Visual art; 21. Theatre, 1895–1914; 22. Dance; 23. Film; Part V. Institutions: 24. ‘Wanting’ the home-grown composer: opportunities and encouragement after the First World War;
25. Concert life and programming;
Level: Graduate students, academic researchers, undergraduate students
Series: Composers in Context
December 2023 228 x 152 mm c.350pp
9781108493321 Hardback c. £86.99 / c. US$120.00 / €101.53
26. The arts council and evolving public policy;
27. The Second World War: a national figure;
28. Working with the BBC; Part VI. Reception:
29. Reception outside England, 1901–1914;
30. Interwar continental reception;
31. Early recordings;
32. Reception in the USA: a special relationship.
Rawls’s A Theory of Justice at 50

Description
In 1971 John Rawls’s ATheory of Justice transformed twentieth-century political philosophy, and it ranks among the most influential works in the history of the subject. This volume of new essays marks the 50th anniversary of its publication with a multi-faceted exploration of Rawls’s most important book. A team of distinguished contributors reflects on Rawls’s achievement in essays on his relationship to modern political philosophy and 20th-century economic theory, on his Kantianism, on his transition to political liberalism, on his account of public reason and contemporary challenges to it, on his theory’s implications for problems of racial justice, on democracy and its fragility, and on Rawls’s enduring legacy. The volume will be valuable for students and scholars working in moral and political philosophy, political theory, legal theory, and religious ethics.
Key Features
• Wide-ranging essays illuminate the richness of Rawls’s most important book
• Highlights Rawls’s relationship to great figures in the history of political philosophy
• Marks the 50th anniversary of the publication of his ATheory of Justice
Contents
Part I. Rawls and History:
1. ‘Taillight illumination: how Rawlsian concepts may improve understanding of Hobbes’s political philosophy’;
2. ‘The theory Rawls, the 1844 Marx, and the market’;
3. ‘Rawls, Lerner, and the tax-and-spend booby trap: what happened to monetary policy?;
4. ‘Rawls’s principles of justice as a transcendence of class warfare’;
5. ‘The significance of injustice’;
Part II. Developments between A Theory of Justice and Political Liberalism:
6. ‘On being a ‘self-originating source of valid claims’;
7. ‘
Moral independence revisited: a note on the development of Rawls’s thought from 1977-1980 and beyond’;
8. ‘The method of insulation: on the development of Rawls’s thought after a theory of justice’;
9. ‘The stability or fragility of justice’; Part III. Rawls, Ideal Theory and the Persistence of Injustice:
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: Cambridge Philosophical Anniversaries
August 2023 229 x 152 mm c.397pp
9781009214698 Hardback £89.99 / US$120.00 / €105.03
10. ‘The circumstances of justice’;
11. ‘Why Rawls’s ideal theory leaves the well-ordered society vulnerable to structural oppression’;
12. ‘Race, reparations, and justice as fairness’;
13. ‘
On the role of the original position in Rawls’s theory: reassessing the ‘idealization’ and ‘fact-sensitivity’ critiques’; Part IV. Pluralism, Democracy and the Future of Justice as Fairness:
14. ‘Public reason at fifty’;
15. ‘Reasonable political conceptions and the well-ordered liberal society’;
16. ‘Religious pluralism and social unions’;
17. ‘One Person, at least one vote? Rawls on political equality…within limits’;
18. ‘Reflections on democracy’s fragility’;
19. ‘A society of self-respect’; Bibliography; Index.
The Political Writings of George Washington

George Washington
Carson Holloway
University of Nebraska, Omaha
Bradford P. WilsonPrinceton University, New Jersey
Description
The PoliticalWritings of GeorgeWashington includes Washington’s enduring writings on politics, prudence, and statesmanship in two volumes. It is the only complete collection of his political thought, which historically, has received less attention than the writings of other leading founders such as Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, John Adams, and Alexander Hamilton. Covering his life of public service—from his young manhood, when he fought in the French and Indian Wars, through his time as commander-in-chief of the revolutionary army; his two terms as America’s first president, and his brief periods of retirement, during which he followed and commented on American politics astutely—the volumes also include first-hand accounts of Washington’s death and reflections on his legacy by those who knew or reflected deeply on his significance. The result is a more thorough understanding of Washington’s political thought and the American founding.
Key Features
• Provides easy access to all of George Washington’s enduring political writings, and relevant materials, in a single work
• The two-volume format allows the work to be comprehensive (with regard to Washington’s political writings) but also of a manageable size
• Compiles only writings of importance, excluding material that is not of political interest
Contents
Volume I: Introduction;
Part I. From Colonist to Patriot: 1754-1775;
Part II. Commander-in-Chief: 1775-1778;
Part III. The Road to Victory: 1778-1783;
Part IV. From Soldier to Statesman: 1783-1788. Volume II: Introduction;
Part I. First Presidential Term: 1788-1793;
Part 2: Second Presidential Term: 1793-1797;
Part 3: Retirement: 1797-1799;
Appendix: Washington’s Death and Legacy.
Additional Information
Level: Undergraduate students, graduate students, academic researchers
Series: The Political Writings of American Statesmen
August 2023 253 x 177 mm c.1300pp
9781009347297 2 Volume Hardback Set
£210.00 / US$275.00 / €245.09
The Cambridge Handbook of Implicit Bias and Racism
Edited by Jon A. Krosnick Stanford University, California Tobias H. Stark Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands and Amanda L. Scott The Strategy Team, Columbus, OhioDescription
The concept of implicit bias – the idea that the unconscious mind might hold and use negative evaluations of social groups that cannot be documented via explicit measures of prejudice – is a hot topic in the social and behavioral sciences. It has also become a part of popular culture, while interventions to reduce implicit bias have been introduced in police forces, educational settings, and workplaces. Yet researchers still have much to understand about this phenomenon. Bringing together a diverse range of scholars to represent a broad spectrum of views, this handbook documents the current state of knowledge and proposes directions for future research in the field of implicit bias measurement. It is essential reading for those who wish to alleviate bias, discrimination, and inter-group conflict, including academics in psychology, sociology, political science, and economics, as well as government agencies, non-governmental organizations, corporations, judges, lawyers, and activists.
Key Features
• Provides perspectives from a diverse range of scholars who study implicit bias

• Identifies gaps in the literature on implicit bias and opportunities for new research
• Presents new insights regarding ways to conceptualize implicit bias and interpret empirical evidence
Contents
Foreword;
Introduction: taking stock of explicit and implicit prejudice;
1. Report on the NSF conference on implicit bias;
Section 1. What is implicit bias and (how) can we measure it?:
2. Implicit bias: what is it?;
3. Lessons from two decades of project implicit;
4. Aversive racism and implicit bias;
5. Stretching the limits of science: was the implicit-racism debate a ‘bridge too far’ for social psychology?;
Section 2. Predicting behavior and attitudes with measures of implicit bias:
6. The impact of implicit racial bias in racial health disparities: a practical problem with theoretical implications;
7. Revisiting the measurement of group schemas in political science;
8. Implicit bias and discrimination: evidence on causality;
9. What is the unique contribution of implicit measures in predicting political choices?;
10. Predicting biased behavior with implicit attitudes: results from a voting experiment and the 2008 Presidential election;
Section 3. Challenges of research on implicit Bias:
11. The rationality, interpretation and overselling of tests of implicit cognition;
12. Listening to measurement error: lessons from the IAT;
13. IAT Scores, racial gaps, and scientific gaps;
14. Commentary;
Section 4. Improving measurement and theorizing about implicit bias:
15. Methodological issues in the study of implicit attitudes;
16: The bias of crowds: rethinking implicit bias in social context;
17. Latent state-trait analyses for process models of implicit measures;
18. Increasing the validity of implicit measures: new solutions for assessment, conceptualization, and action explanation;
19. A model of moderated convergence between explicit dispositions, implicit dispositions, and behavior;
20: Complications in predicting intergroup behavior from implicit biases: one size does not fit all;
Section 5. How to change implicit bias?:
21. Changing implicit bias vs empowering people to address the personal dilemma of unintentional bias;
22. How can we change implicit bias toward outgroups?; Section 6. Explicit prejudice, alive and well?:
23. A survey researcher’s response to the implicit revolution: listen to what people say;
24. A history of the new racisms: symbolic racism, modern racism, and racial resentment;
25. The relations among explicit prejudice measures: anti-black affect and perceptions of value violation as predictors of symbolic racism and attitudes toward racial policies;
26. Complexities in the measurement of explicit racial attitudes;
27. The continuing relevance of Whites’ explicit bias—and reflections on the tools to measure it; Section 7. The public’s (mis)perception of implicit bias:
28. Public attitudes on implicit bias;
29. The mass public’s view of implicit bias, with implications for scientific communication in a politically polarized age.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology
August 2023 244 x 170 mm c.500pp
9781108840309 Hardback c. £149.00 / c. US$195.00 / €173.9
Biological Implications of Circadian Disruption

A Modern Health Challenge
Laura K. Fonken University of Texas, Austin Randy J. Nelson West Virginia UniversityDescription
Life on earth has evolved under a consistent cycle of light and darkness caused by the earth’s rotation around its axis. This has led to a 24-hour circadian system in most organisms, ranging all the way from fungi to humans. With the advent of electric light in the 19th century, cycles of light and darkness have drastically changed. Shift workers and others exposed to high levels of light at night are at increased risk of health problems, including metabolic syndrome, depression, sleep disorders, dementia, heart disease, and cancer. This book will describe how the circadian system regulates physiology and behavior and consider the important health repercussions of chronic disruption of the circadian system in our increasingly lit world. The research summarized here will interest students in psychology, biology, neuroscience, immunology, medicine, and ecology.
Key Features
• Provides an interdisciplinary approach to understanding the circadian system and how it regulates cellular, tissue, and whole-body level physiology and behavior
• Chapters provide an accessible description of the basic regulation of different body systems
• Includes perspectives from basic research models, clinical work, and epidemiological research
• Provides information on areas for intervention such as minimizing environmental light pollution
Contents
1. Introduction to circadian rhythms;
2. Central clock dynamics: daily timekeeping, photic processing, and photoperiodic encoding by the suprachiasmatic nucleus;
3. Melatonin, light, and the circadian system;
4. Disrupted circadian rhythms, stress, and allostatic load;
5. Disrupted circadian rhythms and mental health;
6. Circadian rhythms and cognitive functioning;
7. Circadian rhythm disruption in aging and Alzheimer’s disease;
8. Circadian rhythms regulate neuroinflammation after traumatic brain injury and spinal cord injury;
9. Disrupted circadian rhythms and neuroendocrine function in fertility;
10. Disrupted circadian rhythms and metabolic function;
11. Disrupted circadian rhythms, time restricted feeding, and Blbood pressure regulation;
12. Disrupted circadian rhythms and immune function;
13. Circadian rhythms and cardiac function;
14. Disrupted circadian rhythms and cancer;
15. Light effects across species in nature: a focus on solutions;
16. Measurement and analysis of exposure to light at night in epidemiology.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
November 2023 254 x 177 mm c.360pp
9781316512081 Hardback £79.99 / US$105.00 / €93.36
The Cambridge History of Ancient Christianity

Description
The first three hundred years of the common era witnessed critical developments that would become foundational for Christianity itself, as well as for the societies and later history that emerged thereafter. The concept of ‘ancient Christianity,’ however, along with the content that the category represents, has raised much debate. This is, in part, because within this category lie multiple forms of devotion to Jesus Christ, multiple phenomena, and multiple permutations in the formative period of Christian history. Within those multiples lie numerous contests, as varieties of Christian identity laid claim to authority and authenticity in different ways. The Cambridge History ofAncient Christianity addresses these contested areas with both nuance and clarity by reviewing, synthesizing, and critically engaging recent scholarly developments. The 27 thematic chapters, specially commissioned for this volume from an international team of scholars, also offer constructive ways forward for future research.
Key Features
• Address early Christian history thematically
• Avoids simplistic categories and taxonomies
• Offers cutting edge scholarly insights
Contents
I. Contested Contexts:
1. The History of Ancient Christian History;
2. The Present and Future of Ancient Christian History;
3. Depicting the Other in Early Christian Polemic: Christian Rhetoric and Identity in the Early Heresiologists;
4. Why Did People Become Christians in the Pre-Constantinian World? Reframing the Question;
II. Contested Figures:
5. Remembering Jesus in Earliest Christianity: The What and How of Sociallyframed Memory;
6. Remembering Jesus in the Second and Third Centuries CE;
7. Paul and His Diverse Champions;
8. Peter and His Diverse Champions;
III. Contested Heritage:
9. Jews and Christians in Pagan Antiquity: From the First through the Third Centuries;
10. The Marcionite Options;
11. The Gnosticising Options: Routes Back to God;
12. Early Christian Involvement in Classical Education, Literature, and Philosophy;
13. Scriptures and Interpretations in Early Christian History;
IV. Contested Cultures:
14. Early Christians and Their Socio-Economic Contexts;
15. Early Christians and Roman Imperial Ideology;
16. Martyrdom between Fiction and Memory;
17. The Emergence(s) of Christian Material Culture(s);
18. Manuscripts and the Making of the New Testament Tommy Wasserman;
V. Contested Beliefs:
19. Contesting Creator and Creation;
20. The Trinity in the Making;
21. Resurrection, Transformation, and Deification;
22. The Eucharist in the First Three Centuries;
23. Office, and Appointment to Office, in Early Christian Circles;
VI. Contested Bodies:
24. Masculinity, Femininity, and Sexuality: The Construct of Self-Control in Early Christianity;
25. Christian Slavery in Theology and Practice: Its Relation to God, Sin, and Justice;
26. Wealth, Almsgiving, and;
27. Power, Authority, The Living and The Dead
9781108427395
The Cambridge History of Reformation Era Theology

Description
The Cambridge History of Reformation EraTheology explores the key developments in both Protestant and Catholic theology ca. 1475-1650. Exploring the various settings and schools in which theology was formulated and taught, and the social backgrounds of its exponents— including women and non-university-trained men, as well as writers both in and outside Europe—it establishes how the major denominations took their positions and participated in a broader discourse. The volume examines specific theological themes from different denominational perspectives, demonstrating how theology affected the lives of believers via pastoral theology, canon law, and spirituality, and how theological ideas were linked to politics, warfare, science, and the arts. Written by an international team of leading scholars in the field, this History expands the range of theological discourse by introducing new topics and spokespersons, as well as global and ecumenical perspectives. It will remain the definitive place to begin any further study of theology during this period for years to come.
Key Features
• Theological topics are viewed in the same essay from Catholic, Lutheran, Reformed, Anglican, and Radical perspectives
• Studies both traditional and non-traditional theologians and the wide range of topics they discussed, including theology outside Europe: Latin America, India, Japan, and China
• Explores the historical context and the factors in which theological ideas were formed
Contents
Introduction;
Part I. Theology in an Age of Cultural Transformation:
1. The printing press and its impact on the production, proliferation, and readership of theological literature;
2. Humanism and theology;
3. The changing role of the bible in theological discourse;
4. The regulation of theology in the reformation era;
5. Political change and theological discourse;
6. Universities, monastic studia, academies, seminaries, and catechesis;
7. Para-academic theology: Theology of the ‘uneducated’;
8. Gender and theology in the reformation era;
9. The theologians and the clergy: Who were they?;
Part II. Schools and Emerging Cultures of Theology: Diversity and Conformity
Within Confessions:10. The faculty of theology of Paris (1474-1682);
11. The school of Salamanca Plans;
12. The schools of Louvain and Douai: The Bible, Augustine and Thomas;
13. Jesuit School of Theology;
14. Theological currents in Latin America (16th Century);
15. Diversity and conformity within early Lutheranism;
16. Reformed schools of theology;
17. Cultures of theology in the British Isles;18. Radical and dissenting groups;
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
September 2023 234 x 156 mm 700pp
9781107044043 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00 / €145.89
19. Christian ecumenical efforts;
20. Western ‘Confessions’ and eastern christianity; Part III. Topics and Disciplines of Theology:
21. Method and ethos of theological instruction and discourse;
22. Biblical theology;
23. Systematic theology;
24. Controversial theology;
25. Sacramental and liturgical theology;
26. Pastoral theology and preaching;
27. Reformation ethics and moral theology;
28. Ecclesiastical law in early modern Europe;
29. Spirituality in the reformation era (1500-1675);30. Catholic christianity and indigenous religions in the Americas;
31. Jesuit catechisms in Japan and India;
32. Theology in China c. 1582- c. 1688;
33. Theology and science;
34. Theology and history;
35. Theology, politics, and warfare;
36. The role of art in the theological discourse of the reformation; Index.
The Intellectual World of Late Antique Christianity
Reshaping Classical Traditions
Lewis Ayres
University of Durham and Australian Catholic University, Melbourne
Michael W. Champion
Australian Catholic University, Melbourne
Matthew R. Crawford
Australian Catholic University, Melbourne
Description
The IntellectualWorld of Late-Antique Christianity explores new perspectives on early Christian epistemology in relation to the changing discourses, institutions, and material culture of late antiquity. Early Christian modes of knowing and ordering knowledge involved complex processes of appropriation, reproduction, and reconfiguration of Jewish and classical epistemologies. This helped Christians develop cultures of interpretation and argument as textually oriented religious communities within the Roman Empire and beyond. It laid an intellectual foundation that would be built upon and modified in a variety of later contexts. Encompassing Greek, Latin, and Syriac Christianity, and an historical arc that stretches from the New Testament to Bede, this volume traces how diverse theological commitments resulted in distinctive Christian accounts of knowing. It foregrounds the myriad ways in which early Christian epistemology was embedded in earlier intellectual traditions and forms of life, and how they established norms for communal life and powerful ways of acting in the world.

Key Features
• Offers original examples and models for studying a broad swathe of early Christian epistemology
• Analyses of a large diversity of early Christian cultural production across Greek, Latin, and Syriac sources in a variety of contexts
• Enables dialogue between multi- and inter-disciplinary perspectives from areas such as Patristics and Early Christian Studies, Historical Theology, Classics, Art History, Ancient Philosophy, Late-Antique Studies (including study of grammar, rhetoric, law, medicine, and philosophy)
Contents
1. Modes of knowing and the ordering of knowledge in early Christianity;
2. The beginnings of a Christian doctrine of the spiritual senses before Origen;
3. Health, medicine, and philosophy in the school of Justin Martyr;
4. The structure of the ascetic self in Irenaeus of Lyons;
5. The order of education and knowledge in clement of Alexandria;
6. Origen’s institutions and the shape of biblical scholarship;
7. Dialogue and catalogue: fate, free-will, and epistemology in the Book of the Laws of the Countries;
8. Iamblichus on divination and prophecy;
9. Cyprian, scripture and socialisation: forming faith in the catechumenate and beyond;
10. Sacrificial knowing: Cyprian and early Christian ritual knowledge;
11. Learning the language of God: tables in early Christian texts;
12. The Aëtian Placita and the church fathers: creative use of a distinctive mode of ordering knowledge;
13. Nicaea’s frame: the organisation of creedal knowledge in late antiquity and modernity;
14. The Arian controversy and the problem of image(s);
15. Imaging Ephrem the author;
16. Homilies as ‘Modes of Knowing’: an exploration on the basis of Greek patristic sermons (ca. 350-ca. 450 CE);
17. Dissemination of biblical narratives, motifs, and figures through early Christian inscriptions and homilies;
18. How to make use of pagan knowledge without separating oneself from the church’s milk: The function of otherness in Gregory of Nyssa’s theory of self-perfection;
19. Female characters as modes of knowing in late imperial dialogues: the body, desire, and the intellectual life;
20. The Christianity of Latin Christian poetry;
21. Ambrose’s hymns as modes of knowing the ‘Real’;
22. Confused voices: sound and sense in the later Augustine;
23. Precision and the limits of human autopsy in Augustine’s critique of pagan divination;
24. Duplex via: authority and reason at cassiciacum;
25. The object of our gaze: visual perception as a mode of knowing;
26. Reconsidering the tholos image in the Eusebian canon tables: symbols, space, and books in the late antique Christian imagination;
27. Condemning the glutton of the monastery: rhetorical strategies and the epistemology of Philoxenus of Mabbug;
28. Evagrius of Ponticus on lupē: Distress and cognition between philosophy, medicine, and monasticism;
29. Liturgical modes of knowing: coming to know God (and oneself) in sixth-century hymns and homilies;
30. Prolegomena to philosophy and the ascetic ordering of knowledge;
31. Bureaucratic modes of knowing in the late Roman Empire;
32. The dissemination and appropriation of legal knowledge in the age of Justinian;
33. The ordering of knowledge in four late patristic Christological handbooks;
34. World and empire: contrasting the cosmopolitan visions of Maximus the Confessor and George of Pisidia in seventh century Byzantium;
35. Boethius on the ordering of knowledge;
36. Ordering emotional communities: modes of knowing in Gregory the Great;
37. Creating knowledge and knowing creation in late antique theological and scientific writing;
38. Hierarchies of knowledge in the works of Bede;
39. Epilogue.
Additional Information
Level: Academic researchers, graduate students
December 2023 244 x 170 mm c.734pp
9781108835299 Hardback £120.00 / US$150.00 / €140.05
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