Rethinks the place of film theory in a global context.
Provides the first in-depth examination of complaints issues through the lens of access to informal justice and alternative dispute resolution.
Reshapes the narrative and its trajectory in how the working class is discussed in relation to British Cinema.
The life story of Esther Inglis, a French Huguenot refugee and one of the most creative women working in early modern Britain.
Cinematicity in Media History makes visible the complex ways in which media anticipate, interfere with and draw on one other, demonstrating how cinematicity makes itself felt in practices of seeing, reading, writing and thinking both before and after the ‘birth’ of cinema.
Theories of Memory provides a comprehensive introduction to the rapidly expanding field of memory studies.
The first critical edition of J. G. Lockhart’s classic biography of Walter Scott.
Traces the influence of early modern theology, particularly Protestant theology, on cultural understandings of and reactions to sensory disability in the period.
Reveals the influence of Transcendentalism in the Southern Hemisphere, focusing on Latin America, South Africa, Australia and the South Pacific.
Investigates reading, writing and associational culture in the industrial workplace in Scotland and Northern England from the 1840s to the 1920s.
Offers a fresh approach to one of the towering intellectuals of the early modern period, Erasmus of Rotterdam.
The first critical edition of J. G. Lockhart’s classic biography of Walter Scott.