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This book examines drinking and attitudes to alcohol consumption in late medieval and early modern England, France, and Italy, especially as they related to sexual and violent behavior and to gender relations.
In Tragedy and Irish Literature, McDonald considers the culture of suffering, loss, and guilt in the work of J.M. He applies external ideas of tragedy to the three dramatists and also discerns particular sorts of tragedy within their own work.
This volume draws on sociologically and ethnographically oriented work from a number of disciplines to allow the... Læs mere
This new, sophisticated analysis of Japanese manufacturing corporations, based on data from over two hundred... Læs mere
This book explores the contemporary nature of Max Weber's work by looking in detail at his key concepts of rationalization and... Læs mere
Alexander Stubb, a participant in the 1996-97 and 2000 Intergovernmental Conferences analyzes the evolution of flexible integration from the early 1970s to the present day and beyond. This book provides a valuable insider's view on historical decisionmaking in the European Union.
Despite their shared underlying interests, Britain and France, the only powers in a position to effectively meet the first overt... Læs mere
This book explores the forms of credit which have historically been associated with the British working class. Taylor seeks to assess the effect of credit on working class communities, and relates this to the debate about community.
The vivid discussion on civil society in Eastern Europe that flourished during the late 1980s and early 1990s has faded somewhat, and been partly replaced by new attempts to conceptualise the nature of social change taking place in these countries.
Exploring relationships between politics, the people and social change, this book assesses the fortunes mainly of Labour, but also of the Communist Party and the New Left in postwar Britain.
William Blake and the Body re-evaluates Blake's central image: the human form. Connolly explores romantic-era contexts like anatomical art, embryology, miscarriage and... Læs mere
Medical texts provide a powerful means of accessing contemporary perceptions of illness and through them assumptions about the nature of the body and identity.