A uniquely comprehensive, groundbreaking two-volume study of Loy’s relationship to the human body and soul.
A Gedenkschrift to one of Scotland's most prominent jurists and legal thinkers.
A compact introduction and reader's guide to the Qur'an.
A new and significantly expanded edition of the first systematic reading of Hegel's political philosophy.
Challenges the myths about apathy and smugness surrounding British literature of the period.
This book demonstrates how Deleuze's philosophy provides us with a novel and important notion of historical creativity - that is, a way of thinking about history as an ontological force of creativity.
Provides a nuanced understanding of literary imaginings of masculinity and femininity in the context of the 'national' canon of Egypt.
This book marks a critical intervention in the medical humanities that takes issue with its understanding of empathy as something that one has.
This is the first of two volumes containing Boswell's correspondence with more than 200 people, including Pitt, Rousseau, Paoli, John Wilkes, Sir Alexander Dick, Baretti and numerous women friends.
In his ever-popular romance of Tudor England, Scott brilliantly recreates all the passion, brutality, verve and vitality of the Elizabethan world.
Lay Sermons offers, playfully, a series of lay sermons on good principles and good breeding - the last thing that one would expect from the pen of Blackwood's Ettrick Shepherd
The General Correspondence of James Boswell, 1766-1769