The first edited collection dedicated to the historical specifics of Irish shame.
The first full-length scholarly monograph to scrutinize George Borrow’s published prose works, including his modernist afterlives.
Utilises landscape phenomenology to investigate medieval Anatolian social history.
Explores literary representations of ‘women’s work’ to generate new understandings of contemporary working conditions.
How a scandalous actress influenced one of the greatest philosophers of the eighteenth century.
Explores how grief can help to negotiate our loss of affect for liberal democracy
Examines how football and religion act together to shape both identity and society in Muslim contexts
Offers a new reading of D. H. Lawrence’s critical and fictional modernism.
Reconstructs the everyday life of women in the early modern period through the traces they left in the records of English courts of law.
Explores the haptic relations that connect the mothers and wives of the fallen soldiers of the Iran–Iraq war (1980–88) to their sons and husbands as martyrs
A critical study of how emotions structure legal conflicts over LGBT rights.
Considers how the use of landscape in British film can help form a sense of unease.