Provides the first comprehensive study of lajvardina as a class of ceramics, their distribution in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries and their reception in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Reframes Baroque performance as a critical laboratory where bodies, materials and environments negotiated global circulation, political legitimacy and ecological imagination.
Provides a rich account of the social, intellectual and architectural worlds of Istanbul’s library patrons and readers.
Reveals how animal rights and species identity are reimagined in literature of the late twentieth century.
Provides the first complete scholarly edition of Mary Elizabeth Coleridge’s poetry, including previously unpublished works.
Identifies philosophical scepticism as a major theme across Wallace’s oeuvre, in both fiction and non-fiction.
Traces the process of industrial decline and urban transformation
Examines the place and function of affect throughout Deleuze’s work.
Offers the first structuralist account of the Naderid Empire’s ideological and institutional foundations.
Examines the importance of expression to the production of meaning in the philosophy of Bergson.
Uncovers the nonhuman turn’s unexpected roots in the avant-gardes and mysticisms of nineteenth-century France.
Explores the effects of illusionism within media representation and contemporary aesthetics with a focus on the uncanny.