Explores the importance of public health for understanding the transformation of American power, both domestically and internationally, over the past century.
Explores how affect and emotion create new ways of understanding contemporary Chinese politics.
Studies the emotional culture of corporate religious rituals in post-Reformation Scotland.
Examines the life-affirming and enchanting aspects of Woolf’s and Rhys’s modernism with feminist, affect and new materialist theories.
Studies the rise and decline of the global Orange Order since its beginning in 1795.
A survey style introduction to contemporary Native American literature aimed at students with little or no experience of the subject, or of Native American culture or history.
Asks how a (world) community can be created to allow structural minorities equitable access to hermeneutical and material resources.
Traces how social change transformed Scotland from the 1970s, expressed through politics, culture and identity.
Traces how social change transformed Scotland from the 1970s, expressed through politics, culture and identity.
Studies the intertwined manner in which Arabic and Turkish literatures took shape as national traditions.
Bringing together leading scholars, this volume is the first of its kind to address the growing global phenomenon of transnational repression – using tactics that include surveillance, coercion, harassment and physical violence – in a comparative perspective.
Re-evaluates the fragments of Duris, Phylarchus and Agatharchides.