Traces the early history and afterlives of Palestinian and Jewish co-resistant literature, translation and cultural activism under colonial rule.
Interrogates the state-centric approach to Iran's environmental crisis, reframing it as a profoundly political issue.
Sheds new light on the impact of magazine culture on Irish literature from the 1800s to the present.
Offers a reappraisal of Mohammed Racim's significance to a multitude of academic fields and debates.
Presents Spinoza’s contribution to understandings of the imagination, art and creativity.
Analyses photographic portraits of nineteenth-century authors as exemplars of intermedial authorship and modern literary celebrity culture.
Introduces students to 8 ethical theories that aim to tell us what we ought to do and why: normative ethics, utilitarianism, egoism, deontological ethics, the ethics of rights, virtue ethics, particularism and ecological ethics.
A pioneering discussion of Cicero’s case of Curius and its impact on longstanding debates about the “politics” of the Roman republican courts.
Tracks the unlikely collaboration between experimental poets and experimental linguists that gave rise to the earliest collections of poets’ voices.
Explores Virginia Woolf’s engagements with a broad range of religions, including Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism and Quakerism.
Catherine Guisan considers what lessons can be learnt for future conflict resolution, especially the War in Ukraine, from the processes of peacebuilding in Europe since the Second World War.
Reveals and defines the personal essay as a powerful site of contemporary Australian life writing, activism and cultural transformation.