Studies representations of white illness in Victorian travel narratives about Africa and the Caribbean.
Examines early modern English literary representations of ports, shorelines and littorals at home and abroad.
Expands the study of the Crisis of the Fourteenth Century beyond its conventional Eurocentric focus.
Rethinks the life, writings and legacies of Phillis Wheatley Peters in a global context from the eighteenth century to the contemporary period.
Examines the dynamics of great power competition between the United States, the European Union and Russia in the Euro-Atlantic region.
A first-time focus on the theory of English orthography.
A first-time focus on the theory of English orthography.
The book shows how the Anthropocene and artificial intelligence, fields that have come to define the early decades of the twenty-first century, have mediated practices of violence and transformed how violence is realised, requiring a reworkng of the concept.
Addresses the theoretical, industrial and creative gap in the history and criticism of the international broadcast commercial in respective media cultures.
The first book-length exploration of time loops in contemporary screen media.
Brings together globally diverse perspectives on how the forces shaping the earth, both human and nonhuman, are articulated in art and cultural practice.
Studies how narrative illustrates the complexity, ambivalence and irresolution of recovery.