Narratology in Practice draws on various cultural domains to explain the ways in which theory illuminates the presence of narrative.
The first book in a new series, Forgotten Things demonstrates the process of archaeological research and explores the culture of fieldwork.
The Spanish Blue Division on the Eastern Front, 1941–1945 addresses the history and memory of the Spanish volunteers that served alongside the German army in the invasion of Russia.
God Made Word is an interdisciplinary study of mystic language across multiple genres and institutional contexts in early modern Spain.
The Sensory Studies Manifesto explores the origin and development of the revolutionary new field of sensory studies.
Behavioral Science in the Wild helps practitioners understand how to use insights from the behavioral sciences to create change in the real world.
In this powerful book, three graphic novelists tell the stories of Holocaust survivors, bringing their testimonies to life and seamlessly connecting the past with the present.
A love story packed with gay history, this dual biography of a sexologist and his student sheds light on the early gay rights movement and the racist and imperial concepts that are embedded in queer politics.
The Crusade of 1456 offers translations of key sources from an often overlooked yet consequential event in fifteenth-century Europe.
Drawing from theory and case studies, Pop Culture and Power takes apart popular culture and reassembles it in ways that empower students to develop analytical sensibilities and design the socially just world they want to live in.
Written by a team of experienced innovators and researchers, Transform with Design provides unique case studies with lessons learned by organizations when building their innovation muscle.
1950s Canada chronicles the social, economic, and cultural developments of Canadian politics and public affairs in the 1950s.