Explores the creative and commercial developments of the Harry Potter franchise during the 2010s.
Explores the Romantic-era ballad revival in Britain, Germany and Scandinavia as a transnational phenomenon.
This book offers a clear and coherent analysis of Deleuze and Guattari’s collaborations and argues that their work contains a distinct philosophical methodology that is designed to express the transformative nature of reality.
Can the digitalisation of courts be more people centric?
Conducts the first genealogy of the philosophy of the anexact in twentieth century culture, introducing the concept as a means of understanding modernist avant-garde art and literature in the long mid-century (c. 1922–1972).
Questions Thomas Moore’s association with cultural nationalism by tracing his interest in motion and the transatlantic.
Brings together Shakespearean performance, audio drama studies and media history to offer the first detailed examination of Shakespeare productions on British radio.
Argues that temporality and affect are critical dimensions of the proliferation of second-person narratives in the twenty-first century.
Examines the subject matter of the Republic and the full internal responsion of its parts.
Examines how contemporary documentary films depict the individual performing the self.
Identifies how comics, manga and graphic novels reshape Shakespeare’s works in manners unavailable to other media.
The first full-length scholarly monograph to scrutinize George Borrow’s published prose works, including his modernist afterlives.