The most sustained analysis of Kant’s thinking on obligations and desires, connecting his readings of ancient philosophy with pressing questions in contemporary environmental philosophy.
Centres the ulema in the late Ottoman Empire’s history of revolution, constitutionalism and modernity.
Studies the interaction between Perso-Islamic sedentary concepts and Mongolian nomadic traditions in the context of Ilkhanid capital cities.
Looks at cultures of deterrence and ‘war-ending’ weapons and suggests their longer role within the development and stasis of the Anglosphere.
Explores the dialogue between Victorian literature and one of the nineteenth century’s most popular modes of performance: conjuring.
Why do some Arab Spring uprisings led to reforms and others to revolutions?
The first English language book-length study of trees in cinema.
Substantially reworks accounts of gothic and globalisation, to examine located gothic engagements with global histories and phenomena.
The first academic study dedicated to three innovative but underexplored Japanese women directors - Ando Momoko, Ninagawa Mika, and Miyake Kyoko.
Boldly explores the multiple kinds of ‘modern’ that have contributed to English literary tradition from the medieval era to the twenty-first century.
Reveals how Milton’s poetry deploys the reciprocal forces of ‘first matter’ in order to access the experience of co-existent being
Untangles the mechanisms through which ideology affected Byzantine society following the Crusades.