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History 2009www.cambridge.org/history
A new addition to CambridgeHistorical political documents, expertly brought together to make your research easier
www.archiveeditions.co.uk
Cambridge Archive Editions is an exciting new imprint for Cambridge University Press. Formerly known as Archive Editions, it researches and publishes historical political documents, brought together in beautifully bound multi-volume collections. International in scope, the documents are primarily from the 19th and 20th centuries, although some collections go as far back as the 17th century, and offer unrivalled primary source reference.
The collections relate to three main regions:
Near and Middle East
Slavic and Balkan states
East and South East Asia
Find out more
Over 100 collections can be browsed at www.archiveeditions.co.uk
Contact us to find out more: 01753 646633 [email protected]
Or contact your regular supplier or library.
Country Histories 1Cambridge Histories 2Reference 7Cambridge Archive Editions 9Ancient History 10Medieval Britain and Europe 11Early Modern Britain and Europe 14
Britain and Ireland 14Europe 15
Modern Britain and Europe 18Britain and Ireland 18Europe 20
World History 27America 28
Colonial American History 28Early Republic and Antebellum
American History 31Modern American History 32
Latin America 34Asia 34Middle East 36Islam 37Africa 38Australia 39History of War 39Economic History 42History of Religion 42History of Ideas 43History of Science 47History of Medicine 48Environmental History and
Historical Geography 48Information on related journals
Inside back coverr
This catalogue contains a selection of our most recent publishing in this area. Please visit our website for a full and searchable listing of all our titles in print and also an extensive range of news, features and resources. Our online ordering service is secure and easy to use.
Useful contactsBook proposals: Modern, Early Modern, Economic, Military, Anglo-Saxon and Medieval History: Michael Watson ([email protected]); Middle East, Asia and Islamic Studies: Marigold Acland ([email protected]); Ancient and Byzantine History: Michael Sharp ([email protected])Further information about History titles: Hannah Ellis-Jones ([email protected])
All other enquiries: telephone +44 (0) 1223 312393 or email [email protected] and publication dates are correct at the time of going to press but are subject to alteration without notice.
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eBooks from Cambridge University Press
We offer an extensive catalogue of eBooks across all subject disciplines.
These are made available through carefully selected third party vendors and our own eBookstore.
Contents Highlights
➤ See page 27
➤ See page 18
➤ See page 6
➤ See page 1
➤ See page 36➤ See page 40
Country Histories 1
eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/online
Country Histories
A History of Modern IranErvand AbrahamianCity University of New York
In a radical reappraisal of Iran’s modern history, Ervand Abrahamian traces its traumatic journey across the twentieth century. While he negotiates the twists and turns of the country’s politics, at the heart of his book are the people of Iran who survived the impact of war and revolution.
‘Ervand Abrahamian has done for Iran what de Tocqueville did for France, showing how the revolution continued the work of the ancien regime, through the ever increasing power of the state.’Edward Mortimer, Senior Vice-President, Salzburg Global Seminar, and author of Faith and Power: the Politics of Islam
2008 228 x 152 mm 264pp 29 tones 2 maps 13 tables 2 figures 978-0-521-82139-1 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-52891-7 Paperback £14.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521821391
Forthcoming
A History of Saudi ArabiaSecond editionMadawi al-RasheedUniversity of London
This second edition analyses the challenges, both internal and external, facing Saudi Arabia in the twenty-first century. Two new chapters and an updated conclusion bring the history of Saudi Arabia up to the present day, analysing the political, economic and social developments in the aftermath of 9/11.2009 228 x 152 mm 344pp 8 tones 2 maps 3 tables 4 graphs 978-0-521-76128-4 Hardback c. £55.00 978-0-521-74754-7 Paperback c. £18.99 Publication November 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521761284
A History of Modern BurmaMichael W. CharneyUniversity of London
Michael Charney’s book – the first general history of modern Burma in over five decades – traces the highs and lows of Burma’s history from its pre-colonial past to the ‘Saffron Revolution’ of 2007 and, by exploring key themes, explains
the forces that have made the country what it is today.
‘Michael Charney’s new book is a timely and very welcome contribution to the study of Burma or Myanmar. A History of Modern Burma is an accessible, well organized, and extensively researched account of Burma’s recent past by one of today’s leading scholars in the field. At a time of increasing international awareness of Burma, the book will be of interest not only to students and researchers but to anyone wanting to learn more about the country.’Thant Myint-U
2009 228 x 152 mm 256pp 12 tones 3 maps 978-0-521-85211-1 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-61758-1 Paperback £14.99www.cambridge.org/9780521852111
A History of BangladeshWillem van SchendelUniversiteit van Amsterdam
Bangladesh did not exist as an independent state until 1971. Willem van Schendel’s history navigates the extraordinary twists and turns that created modern Bangladesh through ecological disaster, colonialism, partition and a war of independence. This is an eloquent introduction to a fascinating country and its resilient and inventive people.2009 228 x 152 mm 372pp 101 tones 12 maps 1 table 1 graph 978-0-521-86174-8 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-67974-9 Paperback £15.99www.cambridge.org/9780521861748
Forthcoming
A History of ThailandSecond editionChris Bakerand Pasuk PhongpaichitChulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand
The second edition of A History of Thailand brings the Thai story up to date. It draws on new Thai-language research and reveals how a world of mandarin nobles and unfree labour evolved into a rural society of smallholder peasants and an urban society populated mainly by migrants from southern China.2009 228mm x 152mm 336pp 2 graphs 978-0-521-76768-2 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-75915-1 Paperback £16.99www.cambridge.org/9780521767682
new edition
A Concise History of South AfricaSecond editionRobert RossUniversiteit Leiden
This is a succinct synthesis of Southern African history from the introduction of agriculture about 1 500 years ago up to and including the government of Thabo Mbeki. Stressing economic, social, cultural and environmental matters as well as political history, it shows how South Africa has become a single country.Cambridge Concise Histories
2008 216 x 138 mm 272pp 5 maps 978-0-521-72026-7 Paperback £15.99www.cambridge.org/9780521720267
A History of Modern SudanRobert O. CollinsUniversity of California, Santa Barbara
Chronological account of Sudan’s history from 1821 to the present, showing how ethnic divisions and failed leadership have sustained conflicts. 2008 228 x 152 mm 360pp 24 tones 14 maps 978-0-521-85820-5 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-67495-9 Paperback £15.99www.cambridge.org/9780521858205
A History of NigeriaToyin FalolaUniversity of Texas, Austin
and Matthew M. HeatonVirginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
An exploration of Nigeria’s pre-colonial and colonial past, and its journey from independence to statehood.2008 228 x 152 368pp 22 tones 6 maps 978-0-521-86294-3 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-68157-5 Paperback £15.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521862943
A History of Modern IsraelColin ShindlerUniversity of London
An examination of the 60 years of Israel’s existence, 1948–2008.2008 228 x 152 mm 400pp 19 tones 6 maps 978-0-521-85028-5 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-61538-9 Paperback £14.99www.cambridge.org/9780521850285
2 Country Histories / Cambridge Histories
A Concise History of SwedenNeil KentUniversity of Cambridge
A comprehensive history of Sweden covering events from the Stone Age to the present day.Cambridge Concise Histories
2008 216 x 138 mm 320pp 1 line figure 15 tones 3 maps 978-0-521-81284-9 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-01227-0 Paperback £14.99www.cambridge.org/9780521812849
Forthcoming
A Concise History of AustraliaThird editionStuart MacintyreUniversity of Melbourne
The third edition of this acclaimed book recounts the key factors – social, economic and political – that have shaped modern-day Australia. It covers the rise and fall of the Howard government, the 2007 election and the apology to the stolen generation.
‘At long last here is an accessible, sensible, learned and digestible history of Australia. It is a triumph of Stuart Macintyre’s notable scholarship that he has come up with a book that is concise – not brief, not abbreviated – sharp and to the point … this is a tremendously useful tool for locals and outsiders. It should sit on every Australian’s bookshelf, next to the dictionary and the atlas.’ Nick Richardson, Herald-Sun
Cambridge Concise Histories
2009 216 x 138mm 368pp 978-0-521-51608-2 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-73593-3 Paperback £15.99 Publication July 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521516082
the Set
Forthcoming
A History of Portugal and the Portuguese EmpireFrom Earliest Times to 1807A. R. DisneyLa Trobe University, Victoria
A History of Portugal and the Portuguese Empire offers English-speaking readers a comprehensive overview and reinterpretation of the history of
Portugal and its empire up to the start of the nineteenth century.2009 228 x 152 mm 365pp 978-0-521-76232-8 2 vol. HB Set £90.00 978-0-521-74612-0 2 vol. PB Set £31.99www.cambridge.org/9780521762328
Forthcoming
A History of Portugal and the Portuguese EmpireFrom Beginnings to 1807Volume 1: PortugalA. R. DisneyLa Trobe University, Victoria
2009 978-0-521-84318-8 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-60397-3 Paperback £16.99www.cambridge.org/9780521843188
Forthcoming
A History of Portugal and the Portuguese EmpireFrom Beginnings to 1807Volume 2: The Portuguese EmpireA. R. DisneyLa Trobe University, Victoria
2009 978-0-521-40908-7 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-73822-4 Paperback £16.99www.cambridge.org/9780521409087
Cambridge HistoriesEvery student and academic in your university or college could get electronic access to Cambridge Histories via a new reference resource, Cambridge Histories Online. Visit histories.cambridge.org to find out more
the Set
Forthcoming
The Cambridge History of the Cold WarEdited by Melvyn P. LefflerUniversity of Virginia
and Odd Arne WestadLondon School of Economics and Political Science
The Cambridge History of the Cold War is a comprehensive, international history of the conflict that dominated world politics in the twentieth century. The three-volume series, written by leading international experts in the field, elucidates how the Cold War evolved from the geopolitical, ideological, economic, and socio-political environment of the two World Wars and
the interwar era, and explains the global dynamics of the Cold War international system. It emphasises how the Cold War bequeathed conditions, challenges and conflicts that shape international affairs today. With discussions of demography and consumption, women and youth, science and technology, ethnicity and race, the volumes encompass the social, intellectual, and economic history of the twentieth century, shedding new light on the evolution of the Cold War. Through its various geographical and national angles, the series signifies a transformation of the field from a national – primarily American – to a broader international approach.Contributors: VOLUME I: Odd Arne Westad, David C. Engerman, Charles S. Maier, Melvyn P. Leffler, Vladimir O. Pechatnov, Anne Deighton, Hans-Peter Schwarz, William I. Hitchcock, Norman Naimark, Svetozar Rajak, Niu Jun, Sayuri Guthrie-Shimizu, William Stueck, Robert J. McMahon, Vojtech Mastny, Csaba Békés, Shu Guang Zhang, David Holloway, Jessica C. E. Gienow-Hecht, Laura McEnaney, David Priestland, Mark Philip Bradley, David S. Painter, VOLUME II: John Lewis Gaddis, Robert Jervis, Richard N. Cooper, James G. Hershberg, William Burr, David Alan Rosenberg, Frank Costigliola, William Taubman, Svetlana Savranskaya, Frédéric Bozo, N. Piers Ludlow, Jussi M. Hanhimäki, Anthony Kemp-Welch, Ennio Di Nolfo, Michael E. Latham, Fredrik Logevall, Douglas Little, Piero Gleijeses, Sergey Radchenko, Robert D. Schulzinger, Francis J. Gavin, Christopher Andrew, Nicholas J. Cull, Jeremi Suri, Marc Trachtenberg, Wilfried Loth, VOLUME III: Jan-Werner Müller, Giovanni Arrighi, Silvio Pons, Nancy Mitchell, Vladislav M. Zubok, Amin Saikal, Olav Njølstad, Chen Jian, Michael Schaller, John H. Coatsworth, Chris Saunders, Sue Onslow, Archie Brown, Beth A. Fischer, John W. Young, Jacques Lévesque, Helga Haftendorn, Alex Pravda, David Reynolds, Matthew Evangelista, J. R. McNeill, Rosemary Foot, Matthew Connelly, Emily S. Rosenberg, Adam Roberts, G. John IkenberryThe Cambridge History of the Cold War
2009 228 x 152 mm 1976pp 117 tones 14 maps 2 tables 7 graphs 978-0-521-83938-9 3 Volume Set c. £275.00 Publication November 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521839389
Cambridge Histories 3
For regular email alerts visit www.cambridge.org/alerts
Forthcoming
The Cambridge History of the Cold WarVolume 1: Origins, 1945–1962Edited by Melvyn P. LefflerUniversity of Virginia
and Odd Arne WestadLondon School of Economics and Political Science
2009 978-0-521-83719-4 Hardback c. £100.00 Publication November 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521837194
Forthcoming
The Cambridge History of the Cold WarVolume 2: Conflicts and Crises, 1962–1975Edited by Melvyn P. LefflerUniversity of Virginia
and Odd Arne WestadLondon School of Economics and Political Science
2009 978-0-521-83720-0 Hardback c. £100.00 Publication November 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521837200
Forthcoming
The Cambridge History of the Cold WarVolume 3: Endings, 1975–1991Edited by Melvyn P. LefflerUniversity of Virginia
and Odd Arne WestadLondon School of Economics and Political Science
2009 978-0-521-83721-7 Hardback c. £100.00 Publication November 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521837217
Forthcoming
the Set
The New Cambridge History of IslamGeneral Editor Michael CookPrinceton University, New Jersey
Edited by Chase F. RobinsonUniversity of Oxford
Maribel FierroConsejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas, Madrid
David MorganUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison
Anthony ReidNational University of Singapore
Robert IrwinUniversity of London
The New Cambridge History of Islam is a comprehensive history of Islamic civilization, tracing its development from its beginnings in seventh-century Arabia to its wide and varied presence in the globalised world of today. The
six volumes reflect the geographical distribution and the cultural, social and religious diversity of the peoples of the Muslim world. Four volumes cover historical developments and two are devoted to themes that cut across geographical and chronological divisions, ranging from social, political and economic relations to the arts, literature and learning. Each volume’s introduction sets the scene for the ensuing chapters and examines relationships with adjacent civilizations. Written by a team combining established authorities and rising scholars in the field, this will be the standard reference for students, scholars and all those with enquiring minds for years to come.Contributors: VOLUME 1: Chase F. Robinson, John Haldon, Mark Whittow, Josef Wiesehöfer, Michael Lecker, Paul M. Cobb, Tayeb El-Hibri, Michael Bonner, Hugh Kennedy, Ella Landau-Tasseron, Elton L. Daniel, R. Stephen Humphreys, Michael Brett, Eduardo Manzano Moreno, Fred M. Donner, Stefan Heidemann, Marcus Milwright; VOLUME 2: Maribel Fierro, María Jesús Viguera-Molins, Michael Brett, Fernando Rodríguez Mediano, Anne-Marie Eddé, Yaacov Lev, Amalia Levanoni, Esther Peskes, Gary Leiser, Kate Fleet, Colin Imber, Suraiya Faroqhi, Bruce Masters, Bernard Haykel, Stephen Cory, Ulrich Rebstock, Houari Touati, Mercedes García-Arenal, Albrecht Fuess, Olivia Remie Constable, John L. Meloy, Manuela Marín; VOLUME 3: David Morgan, Anthony Reid, Edmund Bosworth, André Wink, Peter Jackson, Beatrice Forbes Manz, Maria E. Subtelny, Sholeh A. Quinn, R. D. McChesney, Stephen Dale, Michael Pearson, Geoffrey Wade, Dru Gladney, Michael Feener, Gene Garthwaite, Richard W. Bulliet, Reuven Amitai, Scott C. Levi, Muhammad Qasim Zaman; VOLUME 4: Robert Irwin, Jonathan Berkey, Alexander Knysh, Farhad Daftary, Wael B. Hallaq, David J. Wasserstein, Richard Bulliet, Said Arjomand, Hugh Kennedy, Andrew M. Watson, Suraiya N. Faroqhi, Warren C. Schultz, Manuela Marin, Francis Robinson, Richard Taylor, Sonja Brentjes, Robert G. Morrison, S. Nomanul Haq, Jonathan Bloom, Julia Bray, Dick Davis, Cigdem Balim, Shamsur Rahman Faruqi, Li Guo, Michael Cooperson, Marcus Milwright, Amnon Shiloah, David Waines, Michael Bonner, Gottfried Hagan; VOLUME 5: Francis Robinson, Carter Vaughn Findley, Kenneth M. Cuno, Knut S. Vikor, Paul Dresch, Ali M. Ansari, Adeeb Khalid, Nazif M. Shahrani, William Gervase Clarence-Smith, Roman Loimeier, Resat Kasaba, Charles Tripp, Joel Gordon, Carolyn Fluehr-Lobban, Richard A. Lobban, Jr., Kenneth J. Perkins, David Commins, Misagh Parsa, Muriel Atkin, Nazif M. Shahrani, Vali Nasr, Robert W. Hefner, John H. Hanson, Dru C. Gladney, Humayun Ansari; VOLUME 6: Robert W. Hefner, R. Michael Feener, Clement M. Henry, Ahmad S. Dallal, John O. Voll, Saïd Amir Arjomand,
Peter Mandaville, John Bowen, Karen Isaksen Leonard, Robert Launay, Sami Zubaida, Frank E. Vogel, Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na‘im, Muhammad Qasim Zaman, Bruce B. Lawrence, L. Carl Brown, Lynn Welchman, Nikki R. Keddie, Timur Kuran, Jens Hanssen, S. Nomanul Haq, Ami Ayalon, Venetia Porter, Walter Armbrust, Jon W. AndersonThe New Cambridge History of Islam
2010 228 x 152 mm 4328pp 3 line figures 131 tones 58 maps 12 figures 31 genealogical tables 978-0-521-51536-8 6 Volume Set c. £600.00 Publication April 2010www.cambridge.org/9780521515368
the Set
The Cambridge History of Law in AmericaEdited by Christopher Tomlinsand Michael Grossberg
Law stands at the center of modern American life. Since the 1950s, American historians have produced an extraordinarily rich and diverse account of law and legal institutions in American history. But even though our knowledge has increased enormously, few attempts have been made to draw its many parts together in a summary and synthesis of the history of law in America. The Cambridge History of Law in America has been designed for just this purpose. Sixty of the leading historians of law in the United States have been brought together in one enterprise to present the most comprehensive and authoritative account possible of the history of American law. The Cambridge History of Law in America has been made possible by the generous support of the American Bar Foundation.
‘The publication of the three volumes of the Cambridge History of Law in America is undoubtedly a publishing tour de force and provides an unrivalled expression of current thinking on how and why American law and its institutions developed from the earliest settlements through to the early twenty-first century.’The Historical Association
Contributors: Anthony Pagden, Katherine A. Hermes, Mary Sarah Bilder, Richard J. Ross, David Thomas Konig, Michael Meranze, Christopher Tomlins, Sally E. Hadden, Holly Brewer, Mark McGarvie, Elizabeth Mensch, Bruce H. Mann, Claire Priest, Jack P. Greene, Jack N. Rakove, Saul Cornell, Gerald Leonard, James A. Henretta, Mark R. Wilson, Hugh C. MacGill, R. Kent Newmyer, Alfred S. Konefsky, Kermit L. Hall, Elizabeth Dale, Kunal M. Parker, David E. Wilkins, Norma Basch, Ariela Gross, Laura F. Edwards, Barbara Young Welke, Nan Goodman, Sarah Barringer Gordon, Tony
4 Cambridge Histories
A. Freyer, B. Zorina Khan, Karen Orren, Jonathan Lurie, Eileen P. Scully, William E. Forbath, Daniel R. Ernst, William W. Fisher III, Robert W. Gordon, Edward A. Purcell, Jr., Lawrence M. Friedman, Michael Willrich, Leslie J. Reagan, Barry Cushman, Eileen Boris, Gwendolyn Mink, Samantha Ann Majic, Leandra Zarnow, Mark Tushnet, Michael J. Klarman, Margot Canaday, Betsy Mendelsohn, Victoria Saker Woeste, John Henry Schlegel, Gregory A. Mark, Norman L. Rosenberg, Mary L. Dudziak, Yves Dezalay, Bryant G. GarthThe Cambridge History of Law in America
2008 228 x 152 mm 2624pp 978-0-521-80304-5 3 volume set £195.00www.cambridge.org/9780521803045
The Cambridge History of Law in AmericaVolume 1: Early America (1580–1815)Edited by Christopher Tomlinsand Michael Grossberg2008 978-0-521-80305-2 Hardback £75.00www.cambridge.org/9780521803052
The Cambridge History of Law in AmericaVolume 2: The Long Nineteenth Century (1789–1920)Edited by Christopher Tomlinsand Michael Grossberg2008 978-0-521-80306-9 Hardback £75.00www.cambridge.org/9780521803069
The Cambridge History of Law in AmericaVolume 3: The Twentieth Century and After (1920–)Edited by Christopher Tomlinsand Michael Grossberg2008 978-0-521-80307-6 Hardback £75.00www.cambridge.org/9780521803076
the Set
Forthcoming
Cambridge History of ChristianityThis series offers a comprehensive chronological account of the development of Christianity in all its aspects – theological, intellectual, social, political, regional, global – from its beginnings to the present day. Each volume makes a substantial contribution in its own right to the scholarship of its period and the complete History constitutes a major work of academic reference. Far from being merely a history of Western European Christianity and its offshoots, the History aims to provide a global perspective. Eastern
and Coptic Christianity are given full consideration from the early period onwards, and later, African, Far Eastern, New World, South Asian and other non-European developments in Christianity receive proper coverage. The volumes cover popular piety and non-formal expressions of Christian faith and treat the sociology of Christian formation, worship and devotion in a broad cultural context. The question of relations between Christianity and other major faiths is also kept in sight throughout.Contributors: Margaret M. Mitchell, Frances M. Young, Augustine Casiday, Frederick W. Norris, Thomas F. X. Noble, Julia M. H. Smith, Miri Rubin, Walter Simons, Michael Angold, Ronnie Po-Chia Hsia, Stewart J. Brown, Timothy Tackett, Brian Stanley, Sheridan Gilley, Hugh McLeodCambridge History of Christianity
2009 228 x 152 mm 6648pp 58 tones 34 maps 2 music examples 978-0-521-76817-7 9 volume Set c. £850.00 Publication August 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521768177
Cambridge History of ChristianityVolume 3: Early Medieval Christianities, c.600–c.1100Edited by Thomas F. X. NobleUniversity of Notre Dame, Indiana
and Julia M. H. SmithUniversity of Glasgow
The key focus of this book is the vitality and dynamism of all aspects of Christian experience from late antiquity to the First Crusade. By putting the institutional and doctrinal history firmly in the context of Christianity’s many cultural manifestations and lived formations everywhere from Afghanistan to Iceland, this volume of The Cambridge History of Christianity emphasizes the ever-changing, varied expressions of Christianity at both local and world level. The insights of many disciplines, including gender studies, codicology, archaeology and anthropology, are deployed to offer fresh interpretations which challenge the conventional truths concerning this formative period. Addressing eastern, Byzantine and western Christianity, it explores encounters between Christians and others, notably Jews, Muslims, and pagans; the institutional life of the church including law, reform and monasticism; the pastoral and sacramental contexts of worship, belief and morality; and finally its cultural and
theological meanings, including heresy, saints’ cults and the afterlife.
‘…an excellent addition to an invaluable series.’The Historical Association
Contributors: Peter Brown, Philip Rousseau, Andrew Louth, Igor Dorfmann-Lazarev, Thomas M. Charles-Edwards, Lesley Abrams, Jonathan Shepard, Bat-Sheva Albert, Hugh Kennedy, Sidney H. Griffith, Tia M. Kolbaba, Ian N. Wood, Thomas F. X. Noble, Anne-Marie Helvétius, Michel Kaplan, Janet L. Nelson, Rosemary Morris, Julia Barrow, Dominique Iogna-Prat, Frederick S. Paxton, Rob Meens, Peregrine Horden, Lynda L. Coon, Arnold Angenendt, Éric Palazzo, Alain Boureau, E. Ann Matter, Guy Lobrichon, Leslie Brubaker, Mary B. Cunningham, Julia M. H. Smith, Jane Baun, John H. Van EngenCambridge History of Christianity
2008 228 x 152 880pp 5 tones 5 maps 978-0-521-81775-2 Hardback £100.00www.cambridge.org/9780521817752
Forthcoming
The Cambridge History of ChristianityVolume 4: Christianity in Western Europe, c.1100–c.1500Edited by Miri RubinQueen Mary, University of London
and Walter SimonsDartmouth College, New Hampshire
During the early middle ages, Europe developed complex and varied Christian cultures, and from about 1100 secular rulers, competing factions and inspired individuals continued to engender a diverse and ever-changing mix within Christian society. This volume explores the wide range of institutions, practices and experiences associated with the life of European Christians in the later middle ages. The clergy of this period initiated new approaches to the role of priests, bishops and popes, and developed an ambitious project to instruct the laity. For lay people, the practices of parish religion were central, but many sought additional ways to enrich their lives as Christians. Impulses towards reform and renewal periodically swept across Europe, led by charismatic preachers and supported by secular rulers. This book provides accessible accounts of these complex historical processes and entices the reader towards further enquiry.Contributors: Henrietta Leyser, Anthony Perron, Beverly Mayne Kienzle, Brian Patrick McGuire, Lesley Smith, Anders Winroth, Brigitte Resl, Janet Burton, Katherine Jansen, Ora Limor, David Nirenberg, Megan McLaughlin, Alan E. Bernstein, Miri Rubin, Susan Boynton, Sara Lipton, Rachel Fulton,
Cambridge Histories 5
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Amy Hollywood, Walter Simons, André Vauchez, Marcus Bull, John Arnold, Joseph Ziegler, Michael Stolz, Koen Goudriaan, Alain Boureau, Kantik Ghosh, Bert Roest, Roberto Rusconi, Christopher OckerCambridge History of Christianity
2009 228 x 152 mm 592pp 9 tones 4 maps 2 music examples 978-0-521-81106-4 Hardback £100.00 Publication July 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521811064
Forthcoming
The Cambridge History of the Book in BritainVolume 5: 1695–1830Edited by Michael F. Suarez SJCampion Hall, Oxford
and Michael L. TurnerBodleian Library, Oxford
This volume covers the history of printing and publishing from the lapse of government licensing of printed works in 1695 to the development of publishing as a specialist commercial undertaking and the industrialization of book production around 1830. During this period, literacy rose and the world of print became an integral part of everyday life, a phenomenon that had profound effects on politics and commerce, on literature and cultural identity, on education and the dissemination of practical knowledge. Written by a distinguished international team of experts, this study examines print culture from all angles: readers and authors, publishers and booksellers; books, newspapers and periodicals; social places and networks for reading; new genres (children’s books, the novel); the growth of specialist markets; and British book exports, especially to the colonies. Interdisciplinary in its perspective, this book will be an important scholarly resource for many years to come.Contributors: Michael F. Suarez, S. J., Michael Twyman, James Raven, Mark Rose, Dustin Griffin, Isobel Grundy, James Mosley, John Bidwell, Keith Maslen, Tim Clayton, Nicolas Barker, Nicholas Pickwoad, Michael L. Turner, Maureen Bell, John Hinks, Iain Beavan, Warren McDougall, Charles Benson, James J. Caudle, Asa Briggs, Michael Harris, C. Y. Ferdinand, John McCusker, James Tierney, Brian Maidment, P. G. Hoftijzer, O. S. Lankhorst, Marcus Wood, John Topham, Alice Walters, John Valdimir Price, Shef Rogers, Wilfrid Prest, Robin Myers, Graham Shaw, B. J. McMullin, Bernhard Fabian,
Marie-Luis Spieckermann, James N. Green, Scott Mandelbrote, Isabel Rivers, Antonia Forster, Kathryn Sutherland, Marcus Walsh, Tom Bonnell, Richard Landon, Yolande Hodson, Andrea Immel, David HunterThe Cambridge History of the Book in Britain
2009 228 x 152 mm 1096pp 53 tones 22 graphs 978-0-521-81017-3 Hardback £120.00 Publication September 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521810173
The Cambridge History of the Book in BritainVolume 6: 1830–1914Edited by David McKitterickUniversity of Cambridge
The years 1830–1914 witnessed a revolution in the manufacture and use of books as great as that in the fifteenth century. Using new technology in printing, paper-making and binding, publishers worked with authors and illustrators to meet ever-growing and more varied demands from a population seeking books at all price levels. The essays by leading book historians in this volume show how books became cheap, how publishers used the magazine and newspaper markets to extend their influence, and how book ownership became universal for the first time. The fullest account ever published of the nineteenth-century revolution in printing, publishing and bookselling, this volume brings the Cambridge History of the Book in Britain up to a point when the world of books took on a recognisably modern form.Contributors: David McKitterick, Michael Twyman, Graham Law, Robert L. Patten, Patrick Leary, Andrew Nash, Catherine Seville, Stephen Colclough, David Vincent, Michael Ledger-Lomas, Christopher Stray, Gillian Sutherland, Brian Alderson, Andrea Immel, Simon Eliot, Andrew Nash, James A. Secord, Victoria Cooper, Dave Russell, Aileen Fyfe, John Barnes, Bill Bell, Rimi Chatterjee, Wallace Kirsop, Michael Winship, Richard Freebury, William St ClairThe Cambridge History of the Book in Britain
2009 228 x 152 mm 826pp 23 tones 978-0-521-86624-8 Hardback £100.00www.cambridge.org/9780521866248
Forthcoming
The Cambridge History of Canadian LiteratureEdited by Coral Ann HowellsUniversity of Reading
and Eva-Marie KröllerUniversity of British Columbia, Vancouver
From Aboriginal writing to Margaret Atwood, this volume is the first multi-authored English-language history of Canadian writing in English and French.
Paying special attention to works from the 1960s and after, it also includes a separate section discussing major genres in French, a detailed chronology, and an extensive bibliography.2009 228 x 152 mm 810pp 13 tones 2 maps 978-0-521-86876-1 Hardback £90.00 Publication September 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521868761
The Cambridge History of English Romantic LiteratureEdited by James Chandler
This History presents an engaging account of six decades of literary production around the turn of the nineteenth century and reflects the most up-to-date research. With a comprehensive bibliography, timeline and index, this volume will be an important resource for research and teaching in the field.The New Cambridge History of English Literature
2009 228 x 152 mm 794pp 978-0-521-79007-9 Hardback £90.00www.cambridge.org/9780521790079
Forthcoming
The Cambridge History of TurkeyVolume 1: Byzantium to Turkey, 1071–1453Edited by Kate Fleet
This volume examines the rise of Turkish power in Anatolia from the arrival of the first Turks at the end of the eleventh century to the fall of Constantinople in 1453. Taking the period as a whole, the volume covers the political, economic, social, intellectual and cultural history of the region as the Byzantine empire crumbled and Anatolia passed into Turkish control to become the heartland of the Ottoman empire. In this way, the authors emphasise the continuities of the era rather than its dislocations, situating Anatolia within its geographic context at the crossroads of Central Asia, the Middle East and the Mediterranean. The world which emerges is one of military encounter, but also of cultural cohabitation, intellectual and diplomatic exchange, and political finesse. This is a state-of-the-art work of reference on an understudied period in
6 Cambridge Histories
Turkish history by some of the leading scholars in the field.Contributors: Kate Fleet, Julian Chrysostomides, Charles Melville, Rudi Paul Lindner, Machiel Kiel, Pál Fodor, Howard Crane, Ahmet Yasar OcakCambridge History of Turkey
2009 228 x 152 mm 542pp 28 tones 3 maps 978-0-521-62093-2 Hardback £100.00www.cambridge.org/9780521620932
The Cambridge History of TurkeyVolume 4: Turkey in the Modern WorldEdited by Re at KasabaUniversity of Washington
Volume 4 of The Cambridge History of Turkey, tracing the modernization of Turkey.Cambridge History of Turkey
2008 228 x 152 mm 600pp 23 tones 2 maps 2 tables 4 graphs 978-0-521-62096-3 Hardback £100.00www.cambridge.org/9780521620963
Forthcoming
The Cambridge History of Inner AsiaThe Chinggisid AgeEdited by Nicola Di CosmoInstitute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey
Allen J. Frankand Peter B. GoldenRutgers University, New Jersey
This volume centres on the history and legacy of the Mongol World Empire founded by Chinggis Khan and his sons, including its impact upon the modern world. An international team of scholars examines the political and cultural history of the Mongol empire, its Chinggisid successor states, and the non-Chinggisid dynasties that came to dominate Inner Asia in its wake. Geographically, it focuses on the continental region from East Asia to Eastern Europe. Beginning in the twelfth century, the volume moves through to the establishment of Chinese and Russian political hegemony in Inner Asia from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries. Contributors use recent research and new approaches that have revitalized Inner Asian studies to highlight the world-historical importance of the regimes and states formed during and after the Mongol conquest. Their conclusions testify to the importance of
a region whose modern fate has been overshadowed by Russia and China.Contributors: Nicola Di Cosmo, Allen J. Frank, Peter B. Golden, Peter Jackson, Michal Biran, István Vásáry, Arsenio Peter Martinez, Devin DeWeese, Tom Allsen, Veronic Veit, Beatrice Forbes Manz, Stephen Dale, Yuri Bregel, Allen J. Frank, James Millward, Robert McChesney, Christian Noack, Nicola Di Cosmo, Yuri Bregel2009 228 x 152 mm 520pp 9 maps 1 genealogical table 978-0-521-84926-5 Hardback c. £110.00 Publication August 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521849265
The Cambridge History of the Byzantine Empire c.500–1492Edited by Jonathan ShepardUniversity of Cambridge
Byzantium lasted a thousand years, ruled to the end by self-styled ‘emperors of the Romans’. It underwent kaleidoscopic territorial and structural changes, yet recovered repeatedly from disaster: even after the near-impregnable Constantinople fell in 1204, variant forms of the empire reconstituted themselves. The Cambridge History of the Byzantine Empire tells the story, tracing political and military events, religious controversies and economic change. It offers clear, authoritative chapters on the main events and periods, with more detailed chapters on particular outlying regions, neighbouring powers or aspects of Byzantium. With aids such as a glossary, an alternative place-name table and references to English translations of sources, it will be valuable as an introduction. However, it also offers stimulating new approaches and important new findings, making it essential reading for postgraduates and for specialists.Contributors: Jonathan Shepard, Andrew Louth, Zeev Rubin, R. W. Thomson, I. Conrad, John Moorhead, Marie-France Auzépy, Shaun Tougher, Sergey A. Ivanov, T. W. Greenwood, Walter E. Kaegi, Michael McCormick, Thomas S. Brown, Mark Whittow, G. A. Loud, Michael Angold, Paul Magdalino, Paul Stephenson, D. A. Korobeinikov, David Jacoby, Alain Ducellier, Angeliki E. Laiou, Michel Balard, Anthony Bryer2009 228 x 152 mm 1228pp 2 line figures 77 tones 52 maps 7 tables 1 plan 978-0-521-83231-1 Hardback £120.00www.cambridge.org/9780521832311
Forthcoming
The Cambridge History of ScienceVolume 6: Modern Life and Earth SciencesEdited by Peter J. BowlerThe Queen’s University of Belfast
and John V. PickstoneUniversity of Manchester
This book in the highly respected Cambridge History of Science series is devoted to the history of the life and earth sciences since 1800. It provides comprehensive and authoritative surveys of historical thinking on major developments in these areas of science, on the social and cultural milieus in which the knowledge was generated, and on the wider impact of the major theoretical and practical innovations. The articles are written by acknowledged experts who provide concise accounts of the latest historical thinking coupled with guides to the most important recent literature. In addition to histories of traditional sciences, the book covers the emergence of newer disciplines such as genetics, biochemistry and geophysics. The interaction of scientific techniques with their practical applications in areas such as medicine is a major focus of the book, as is its coverage of controversial areas such as science and religion, and environmentalism.Contributors: Peter Bowler, John Pickstone, David Allen, Roy M. MacLeod, Mary P. Winsor, Keith R. Benson, Jonathan Harwood, Paul Lucier, John P. Swan, Michael Warboys, Mott T. Greene, David R. Oldroyd, Ronald Rainger, Mario di Gregorio, Eugene Cittadino, Susan C. Lawrence, Nick Hopwood, Olga Amsterdamska, Richard L. Kramer, Russell C. Maulitz, Jonathan Hodge, Richard M. Burian, Doris T. Zallen, Pascal Acot, Thomas Soderquist, Craig Stillwell, Mark Jackson, J.P. Gaudilliere, Anne Harrington, Robert F. Bud, Henry Frankel, Jeff Schank, Charles Twardy, James Moore, Susan E. Lederer, Stephen A. BockingThe Cambridge History of Science
2009 228 x 152 mm 688pp 3 tables 978-0-521-57201-9 Hardback £90.00www.cambridge.org/9780521572019
The Cambridge History of ChinaVolume 5: The Sung Dynasty and its Precursors, 907–1279 Part 1Edited by Denis Twitchettand Paul Jakov Smith
This first of two volumes on the Sung Dynasty (960–1279) and its Five Dynasties and Southern Kingdoms precursors presents the political history of China from the fall of the T’ang
Cambridge Histories / Reference 7
eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/online
Dynasty in 907 to the Mongol conquest of the Southern Sung in 1279. Its twelve chapters survey the personalities and events that marked the rise, consolidation, and demise of the Sung polity during an era of profound social, economic, and intellectual ferment. The authors place particular emphasis on the emergence of a politically conscious literati class during the Sung, characterized by the increasing importance of the examination system early in the dynasty and on the rise of the tao-hsueh (Neo-Confucian) movement toward the end. In addition, they highlight the destabilizing influence of factionalism and ministerial despotism on Sung political culture and the impact of the powerful steppe empires of the Khitan Liao, Tangut Hsi Hsia, Jurchen Chin, and Mongol Yüan on the shape and tempo of Sung dynastic events.Contributors: Paul Jakov Smith, Naomi Standen, Hugh R. Clark, Lau Nap-yin, Huang K’uan-chung, Michael McGrath, Ari Daniel Levine, Tao Jing-shen, Gong Wei Ai, Richard L. DavisThe Cambridge History of China
2009 228 x 152 mm 1128pp 12 tables 978-0-521-81248-1 Hardback £110.00www.cambridge.org/9780521812481
the Set
The Cambridge History of Latin AmericaEdited by Leslie BethellUniversity of Oxford
The 12-volume Cambridge History of Latin America, the first large-scale authoritative survey of Latin American history from ca. 1500 to the present day, is a work of international collaborative scholarship. It aims to provide a high-level synthesis of existing knowledge in chapters written by leading scholars in their fields. Each chapter is accompanied by a bibliographical essay.The Cambridge History of Latin America
2009 228 x 152 mm 10327pp 978-0-521-51596-2 Hardback Set £1450.00www.cambridge.org/9780521515962
The Cambridge History of Latin AmericaVolume 9: Brazil since 1930Edited by Leslie Bethell
The Cambridge History of Latin America, the first large-scale authoritative survey of Latin American history from ca. 1500 to the present day, is a work of international collaborative scholarship. It aims to provide a high-level synthesis of existing knowledge in chapters written by leading scholars in their
fields. Each chapter is accompanied by a bibliographical essay. Volume IX, Brazil since 1930, is the final volume of the 12 volume History to be published. It examines the profound political, economic, and social changes experienced by Brazil in the 70 years from 1930 to the present day. Part I consists of four chapters on politics in Brazil: 1930–1945, 1945–1964, 1964–1985, and 1985–2002. Part II consists of three chapters on the Brazilian economy: 1930–1980, 1980–1994, and 1994–2004, and one chapter on social continuity and social change in Brazil from 1930 to 2000.Contributors: Leslie Bethell, Celso Castro, Jairo Nicolau, Marcelo de Paiva Abreu, Rogerio L. F. Werneck, Nelson do Valle SilvaThe Cambridge History of Latin America
2008 228 x 152 mm 632pp 978-0-521-39524-3 Hardback £80.00www.cambridge.org/9780521395243
Forthcoming
The Cambridge History of South AfricaVolume 1: c. 200 AD–1885Edited by Carolyn HamiltonUniversity of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
Bernard MbengaNorth-West University, South Africa
and Robert RossUniversiteit Leiden
Coming fifteen years after South Africa’s achievement of majority rule, this book takes a critical and searching look at the country’s past. It presents South Africa’s past in an objective, clear, and refreshing manner. With chapters contributed by ten of the best historians of the country, the book elaborately weaves together new data, interpretations, and perspectives on the South African past, from the Early Iron Age to the eve of the mineral revolution on the Rand. Its findings incorporate new sources, methods, and concepts, for example providing new data on the relations between Africans and colonial invaders and rethinking crucial issues of identity and consciousness. This book represents an important reassessment of all the major historical events, developments, and records of South Africa – written, oral, and archaeological – and will be an important new tool for students and professors of African history worldwide.Contributors: Robert Ross, Carolyn Hamilton, Bernard Mbenga, John Parkington, Simon Hall, John Wright, Martin Legassick, Norman Etherington, Paul Landau2009 228 x 152 mm 325pp 1 line figure 1 tone 23 maps 978-0-521-51794-2 Hardback c. £70.00 Publication October 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521517942
the Set
The New Cambridge Medieval HistoryEdited by Paul FouracreRosamond McKitterickUniversity of Cambridge
Timothy ReuterDavid LuscombeJonathan Riley-SmithDavid Abulafia
The publication of the complete 7 volume set of The New Cambridge Medieval History is a major landmark in the field of historical publishing. Written by leading international scholars and incorporating the very latest research, the History is the essential reference tool for anyone interested in the medieval world. The original Cambridge Medieval History was published between 1911 and 1936. That famous series is now out of print and has been replaced by The New Cambridge Medieval History which presents a reliable, detailed history from late antiquity to c. 1500. Published in seven volumes, with Volume IV divided into two parts, it provides a unique, authoritative guide to medieval life and thought.The New Cambridge Medieval History
2005 228 x 152 mm 8186pp 30 line figures 172 tones 137 maps 7 plates 48 tables 978-0-521-85360-6 Hardback Set £730.00www.cambridge.org/9780521853606
Reference
the Set
The Heads of Religious HousesEngland and Wales, 940–1540Edited by C. N. L. BrookeUniversity of Cambridge
David KnowlesUniversity of Cambridge
Vera Londonand David M. SmithUniversity of York
Three volume set providing fully documented, critical lists of monastic superiors from 940 to 1540.The Heads of Religious Houses
2008 228 x 152 mm 2118pp 978-0-521-89727-3 Set £245.00www.cambridge.org/9780521897273
8 Reference
The Heads of Religious HousesEngland and Wales, III. 1377–1540Edited by David M. SmithUniversity of York
Final volume of Heads of Religious Houses: England and Wales takes the lists from 1377 to 1540.The Heads of Religious Houses
2008 228 x 152 mm 912pp 978-0-521-86508-1 Hardback £120.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521865081
Records of the Salem Witch-HuntBernard Rosenthal
This book represents the first comprehensive record of all legal documents pertaining to the Salem witch trials, in chronological order. Numerous newly discovered manuscripts, as well as records published in earlier books that were overlooked in other editions, offer a comprehensive narrative account of the events of 1692–93, with supplementary materials stretching as far as the mid-18th century. The book can be used as a reference book or read as an unfolding narrative. All legal records are newly transcribed, and included in this edition is a historical introduction, a legal introduction, and a linguistic introduction. Manuscripts are accompanied by notes that, in many cases, identify the person who wrote the record. This has never been attempted, and much is revealed by seeing who wrote what, when.
‘This monumental new work of collaborative historical scholarship presents nearly a thousand legal documents relating to that outbreak, freshly edited with scrupulous care and introduced with a series of helpful essays. … Records of the Salem Witch-Hunt will be welcomed not only by legal scholars, linguists, American Colonial historians, and students of witchcraft, but by all who continue to be drawn to the dark events that unfolded in a New England village more than three centuries ago.’Paul Boyer, co-author with Stephen Nissenbaum of Salem Possessed: The Social Origins of Witchcraft
Contributors: Bernard Rosenthal, Richard Trask, Peter Grund, Risto Hiltunen, Leena Kahlas-Tarkka, Merja Kytö, Matti Peikola, Matti Rissanen, Margo Burns, Marilynne K. Roach, Gretchen Adams, Ben Ray2009 279 x 215 mm 1010pp 978-0-521-66166-9 Hardback £85.00www.cambridge.org/9780521661669
new in PaPerback
A Dictionary of Jewish-Christian RelationsEdited by Edward Kesslerand Neil Wenborn
An A to Z companion to 2,000 years of encounter between Judaism and Christianity, A Dictionary of Jewish-Christian Relations is a pioneering work which explores and defines the many factors which characterise the historic and ongoing relationship between the two traditions. From Aaron to Zionism, the editors have brought together over 700 entries – including events, institutions, movements, people, places and publications – contributed by more than 100 internationally renowned scholars. The Dictionary offers a focus for the study and understanding of Jewish-Christian relations internationally, both within and between Judaism and Christianity. It provides a comprehensive single reference to a subject which touches on numerous areas of study.
‘Arguably no relationship of any two faith communities in the course of history has been both so close and so far apart as that of Jewry and Christendom. Yet this new era has both produced and affords a relationship between the two ... in which both the profound differences as well as the ‘shared patrimony’ can be genuinely appreciated. This Dictionary will have a special place in reflecting and facilitating this process.’Rabbi David Rosen, President, the International Jewish Committee for Interreligious Consultation
2008 247 x 174 mm 544pp 978-0-521-73078-5 Paperback £18.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521730785
Science and Civilisation in ChinaVolume 5: Chemistry and Chemical Technology Part 11: Ferrous MetallurgyDonald B. WagnerUniversity of Copenhagen
Traces the production and use of iron and steel in China from ca. 1000 BC.Science and Civilisation in China
2008 246 x 189 mm 512pp 114 line figures 73 tones 4 tables 978-0-521-87566-0 Hardback £120.00www.cambridge.org/9780521875660
FinaL VoLUme
The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of JerusalemA CorpusVolume 4: The Cities of Acre and Tyre with Addenda and Corrigenda to Volumes I-IIIDenys PringleCardiff School of History and Archaeology
This is the fourth and final volume in a series which presents a complete corpus of all the church buildings that were built, rebuilt or simply in use in the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem between the capture of Jerusalem by the First Crusade in 1099 and the loss of Acre in 1291. This volume deals with the major coastal cities of Acre and Tyre, which were both in Frankish hands for almost two centuries, and also contains addenda and corrigenda to volumes 1–3. It describes and discusses some 120 churches and chapels that are attested by documentary or surviving evidence, accompanied where possible by plans, elevation drawings and photographs. This is an indispensable work of reference to all those concerned with the medieval archaeology of the Holy Land, the history of the Church in the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem and the art and architecture of the Latin East.The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem
2009 276 x 219 mm 340pp 148 tones 22 plans 978-0-521-85148-0 Hardback £110.00www.cambridge.org/9780521851480
the Set
The Historical Statistics of the United StatesMillennial Edition Edited by Susan B. CarterUniversity of California, Riverside
Scott Sigmund GartnerUniversity of California, Davis
Michael R. HainesColgate University, New York
Alan L. OlmsteadUniversity of California, Davis
Richard SutchUniversity of California, Riverside
and Gavin WrightStanford University, California
Long the standard source for quantitative indicators of American history, a new edition of Historical Statistics of the United States is something that reference librarians, historians, and social scientists have long awaited. Not since the Bicentennial Edition was published in 1975 has new data and material been available. Utilizing information
Reference / Cambridge Archive Editions 9
Visit our website at www.cambridge.org
from the 2000 Census, this essential reference has been updated for the new millennium providing rich materials for both contemporary and historical researchers. This is a monumental work of collaborative scholarship providing a comprehensive compendium of statistics from over 1,000 sources recording every aspect of the history of the United States from population to prices; from voting patterns to Vietnam veterans; from energy to education; from abortions to zinc and everything in between. Over 80 scholars have contributed their efforts and expertise to select, assemble, and document the data, to write the introductory essays, and to analyze the material.
‘Historical Statistics of the United States: Millennial Edition … a compendium of statistics from over 1000 sources … has been expanded to include over 37,000 data series-three times more than in the previous edition-and dozens of new topics, among them slavery, American Indians, and poverty. The monumental five-volume work will be available in both print and electronic formats.’Library Journal Reference Roundup
2006 279 x 215 mm 5000pp 2000 tables 978-0-521-81791-2 5 Volume Set £593.00www.cambridge.org/9780521817912
onLine edition
The Historical Statistics of the United StatesMillennial EditionEdited by Susan B. CarterUniversity of California, Riverside
Scott Sigmund GartnerUniversity of California, Davis
Michael R. HainesColgate University, New York
Alan L. OlmsteadUniversity of California, Davis
Richard SutchUniversity of California, Riverside
and Gavin WrightStanford University, California
Long the standard source for quantitative indicators of American history, a new edition of Historical Statistics of the United States is something that reference librarians, historians, and social scientists have long awaited. Not since the Bicentennial Edition was published in 1975 has new data and material been available. Available online for the first time, this comprehensive and thoroughly revised edition reflects thirty years of information and new scholarship, providing a comprehensive compendium of statistics from over 1,000 sources, recording every aspect of the history of
the United States. The electronic edition has been designed to give users a variety of means to search and navigate the vast amount of data available. Users will be able to graph individual tables or to combine data from different tables into ‘custom tables’ and to download tables for use in spreadsheets and other applications. Visit www.cambridge.org/historicalstats for further information and to discover more.2006 2000 tables 978-0-511-13297-1 Online Edition £1800.00 / TBAwww.cambridge.org/9780511132971
Set and onLine edition
The Historical Statistics of the United StatesMillennial Edition Price Band B: University Libraries to 15KEdited by Susan B. CarterUniversity of California, Riverside
Scott Sigmund GartnerUniversity of California, Davis
Michael R. HainesColgate University, New York
Alan L. OlmsteadUniversity of California, Davis
Richard SutchUniversity of California, Riverside
and Gavin WrightStanford University, California
Long the standard source for quantitative indicators of American history, a new edition of Historical Statistics of the United States is something that reference librarians, historians, and social scientists have long awaited. Not since the Bicentennial Edition was published in 1975 has new data and material been available. Now in print and online for the first time, this thoroughly revised edition reflects thirty years of information and new scholarship, providing a comprehensive compendium of statistics from over 1,000 sources, recording every aspect of the history of the US. The electronic edition has been designed to give users a variety of means to search and navigate the vast amount of data available. Users will be able to graph individual tables or to combine data from different tables into ‘custom tables’ and to download tables for use in spreadsheets and other applications. Visit www.cambridge.org/historicalstats for further information and to discover more.
‘Historical Statistics of the United States … contains an indispensable collection of data on every conceivable subject in American
history, from population shifts to economic production, motor vehicle deaths to sources of energy.’Eric Foner, Professor of History, Columbia University
2006 279 x 215 mm 5000pp 2000 tables 978-0-511-13311-4 5 Volume Set and Online Edition Pack £1947.00 / TBAwww.cambridge.org/9780511133114
Cambridge Archive EditionsA new imprint offering historical political documents, expertly brought together in multi-volume collections. See www.archiveeditions.co.uk
ShanghaiPolitical and Economic Reports 1842–1943Edited by R. Jarman
The remarkable and durable institution of the International Settlement allowed the British to report in detail on political and economic matters in Shanghai and China. This collection of primary documents establishes a comprehensive series of despatches, in the main from the British consul in Shanghai to the British ambassador to China based usually in Peking, but in the 1930s based in Shanghai itself. The form and extent of communications vary during the period, and include annual reports and trade returns, judicial reviews, despatches on topics of interest and telegrams on urgent matters. After 1920 series of quarterly political reports and six-monthly intelligence summaries are initiated, and some other irregular periodic reports emerge. The collection of documents ends with the winding up of the Settlement under wartime Japanese occupation, and numerous papers in 1942 carry discussion of this conclusion.2008 245 x 160 mm 978-1-84097-210-8 18 Volume Set £5495.00www.cambridge.org/9781840972108
The Red Sea RegionSovereignty, Boundaries and Conflict, 1839–1967Edited by S. Smith
This collection documents the political and territorial changes within and between states bordering the Red Sea, or linked with it, including islands and European colonies. Interstate and civil conflict, often, though not invariably,
10 Cambridge Archive Editions / Ancient History
the result of such changes, is also well to the fore, with some attention to port development and oil concessions – except in the Gulf of Suez, there was no exploitation of coastal or seabed oil reserves before 1967, and has been none subsequently. The dates chosen inevitably reflect the British provenance of the records, corresponding as they do with Britain’s acquisition of Aden in 1839 and departure from it in 1967, a period that saw the development and then the recession of European influence in the Red Sea. The European presence was not finally extinguished until 1977, when the Afars and Issas, the former French Somaliland, gained independence from France.Documentary Studies in Arabian Geopolitics
2008 245 x 160 mm 978-1-84097-230-6 6 Volume Set £2495.00www.cambridge.org/9781840972306
Forthcoming
Arabian Boundaries 1966–1975Edited by Richard SchofieldKing’s College London
The Arabian Boundaries set is one of the foundation stones of Cambridge Archive Editions’ Middle East collection. The original set, Arabian Boundaries 1853–1960, set out clearly to trace the creation and subsequent changes to the boundaries of the Gulf and peninsula states using primary documents researched from the British Government archives. Regular release of the Government material means that updates to the status of the boundaries examined become available and we have already produced Arabian Boundaries 1961–1965. A further 10-year period of files has become available. The new material is of particular interest covering, as it does, the intense period of diplomatic activity engendered by the announcement of the British Government, in 1968, of their intention to withdraw from the Gulf States by 1971. The material will be arranged boundary by boundary, in the same order as the previous collection and will consist of approximately 11000 pages.2009 240 x 160 mm 11000pp 30 maps 978-1-84097-240-5 Set £4795.00www.cambridge.org/9781840972405
Ancient History
Slave SystemsAncient and ModernEdited by Enrico Dal LagoNational University of Ireland, Galway
and Constantina KatsariUniversity of Leicester
Compares features of slavery in ancient Greece and Rome and in the modern Atlantic world.2008 228 x 152 mm 390pp 17 tables 10 graphs 978-0-521-88183-8 Hardback £55.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521881838
The Making of Roman IndiaGrant ParkerStanford University, California
Discusses ancient Greek and Roman perceptions of India during a thousand year period.Greek Culture in the Roman World
2008 228 x 152 mm 376pp 11 tones 3 maps 978-0-521-85834-2 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521858342
Roman Military ServiceIdeologies of Discipline in the Late Republic and Early PrincipateSara Elise Phang
Sara Phang explores the ideals and realities of Roman military discipline.2008 228 x 152 mm 334pp 978-0-521-88269-9 Hardback £50.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521882699
new in PaPerback
Plague and the End of AntiquityThe Pandemic of 541–750Edited by Lester K. LittleSmith College, Massachusetts
Plague was a key factor in the waning of Antiquity and the beginning of the Middle Ages. 2008 228 x 152 mm 382pp 978-0-521-71897-4 Paperback £15.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521718974
Social Networks in Byzantine EgyptGiovanni Roberto RuffiniFairfield University, Connecticut
First book-length application of network analysis (the mapping of relationships and transactions within communities) to the ancient world. Using the abundant papyrological evidence from sixth-century Oxyrhynchos and Aphrodito in Egypt, it combines a prosopographical survey with computer analyses to reveal much about these communities’ social structure.2008 228 x 152 mm 288pp 28 tables 7 figures 2 genealogical tables 978-0-521-89537-8 Hardback £55.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521895378
Forthcoming
Roman WarfareJonathan P. RothSan José State University, California
Roman Warfare surveys the history of Rome’s fighting forces from their inception in the 7th century BCE to the fall of the Western Empire in the 5th century CE. In non-technical, lively language, Jonathan Roth examines the evolution of Roman war over its thousand-year history.Cambridge Introduction to Roman Civilization
2009 228 x 152 mm 292pp 36 tones 5 maps 28 plates 978-0-521-83028-7 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-53726-1 Paperback £13.99 Publication August 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521830287
Forthcoming
Ludic ProofGreek Mathematics and the Alexandrian AestheticReviel NetzStanford University, California
Describes the relationship between science and poetry in the Hellenistic period by analysing the stylistic features of Hellenistic mathematics and then showing how they can be understood within the context of Hellenistic poetry. The result transforms our understanding of the origins of Western mathematics.2009 228 x 152 mm 272pp 978-0-521-89894-2 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521898942
Ancient History / Medieval Britain and Europe 11
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Forthcoming
The Roman House and Social IdentityShelley HalesUniversity of Bristol
Examines house types from Britain to Syria to understand how people imagined and articulated their place in the Roman world. Employing a wide range of approaches to the study of the house and acculturation in the Roman Empire, this book serves as the first synthesis of Roman domestic architecture.
‘The author … explores the way in which many such paintings were fantastical manipulations of nature, and were not so much pale imitations of reality, but actually surpassed reality.’JACT
2009 253 x 177 mm 320pp 978-0-521-73509-4 Paperback £17.99 Publication July 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521735094
Forthcoming
Social Mobility in Late Antique GaulStrategies and Opportunities for the Non-EliteAllen E. JonesAuburn University, Alabama
This book explores the situation of the non-elite living in Gaul during the late fifth and sixth centuries. Viewing the society as a whole, and taking into account specific social groups, Jones creates an image of Barbarian Gaul as an honor-driven, brutal, and flexible society defined by social mobility. His work also addresses topics such as social engineering and competition, magic and religion, and the cult of saints.2009 228 x 152 mm 350pp 1 map 978-0-521-76239-7 Hardback c. £45.00 Publication September 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521762397
Forthcoming
The Breakdown of the Roman RepublicFrom Oligarchy to EmpireChristopher S. MackayUniversity of Calgary
Christopher Mackay recounts the last century of the Roman Republic in a readable, narrative treatment. He analyses the breakdown of the traditional Republican form of government as a result of the administrative and political crises brought about by the Roman conquest
of the Mediterranean basin in the Middle Republic.2009 228 x 152 mm 494pp 40 tones 5 maps 978-0-521-51819-2 Hardback £50.00 Publication October 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521518192
Forthcoming
Ancient TiwanakuJohn Wayne JanusekVanderbilt University, Tennessee
In the first major synthesis on the subject in nearly fifteen years, John Wayne Janusek explores Tiwanaku civilization in its geographical and cultural setting. This fascinating book will appeal to upper-undergraduates, graduates and professionals interested in American anthropology and the history of Native American peoples.Case Studies in Early Societies, 9
2008 228 x 152 mm 378pp 978-0-521-81635-9 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-01662-9 Paperback £15.99www.cambridge.org/9780521816359
Medieval Britain and Europe
textbook
Forthcoming
The Making of PolitiesEurope, 1300–1500John WattsCorpus Christi College, Oxford
The first major survey of political life in late medieval Europe for more than thirty years. Offering a full introduction to political events and processes from the fourteenth century to the sixteenth, this book combines a broad, comparative account with discussion of individual regions and states.
‘This is a work of genuine importance, excellently constructed and rigorously thought out, combining accessibility with great originality. It is a wise, mature, thought-provoking book. This book injects new life into the study of late medieval politics; it offers a highly stimulating and easily accessible overview of political conduct in the late Middle Ages; it is rich in new ideas and will be a fundamental point of reference for future discussion of the politics of the period.’David Abulafia, Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge
Contents: 1. Introduction; 2. Europe in 1300: the political inheritance; 3. The fourteenth century; 4. The fifteenth century; 5. Conclusion; Bibliographical notes.Cambridge Medieval Textbooks
2009 216 x 138 mm 482pp 2 maps 978-0-521-79232-5 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-79664-4 Paperback £17.99www.cambridge.org/9780521792325
Forthcoming
new in PaPerback
Henry IKing of England and Duke of NormandyJudith A. GreenUniversity of Edinburgh
This first comprehensive biography of Henry I, an elusive figure for historians, provides a rich and compelling account of his tumultuous life and reign and presents a significant new perspective on his court, showing how it was shaped by his fascinating, if repellent, personality.
‘Judith Green provides us with the best available biography of Henry I … Green’s biography … shows the richness derived from having lived with study of the king for decades, and it skilfully provides an account of the reign and his kingship that is both detailed and accessible.’BBC History Magazine
2009 228 x 152 mm 402pp 1 tone 9 maps 9 tables 978-0-521-74452-2 Paperback £19.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521744522
CharlemagneThe Formation of a European IdentityRosamond McKitterickUniversity of Cambridge
Charlemagne is often claimed as the greatest ruler in Europe before Napoleon. In this magisterial new study, Rosamond McKitterick reexamines Charlemagne the ruler and his reputation. This is a major contribution to Carolingian history which will be essential reading for anyone interested in the medieval past.
‘… this erudite study sheds much new light on Charlemagne.’NRC Handelsblad
2008 228 x 152 mm 478pp 8 maps 11 tables 978-0-521-88672-7 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-71645-1 Paperback £15.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521886727
12 Medieval Britain and Europe
The Natural and the Supernatural in the Middle AgesRobert BartlettUniversity of St Andrews, Scotland
An exploration of the way in which the world was categorized in the medieval period, concentrating on the division between the natural and the supernatural. This book discusses the mentalities of medieval writers and thinkers and raises the question of how to deal with beliefs we may not share.
‘… engaging, accessible and thought-provoking … The book eloquently indicates the complexity of medieval ideas.’BBC History Magazine
The Wiles Lectures
2008 228 x 152 mm 180pp 13 tones 978-0-521-87832-6 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-70255-3 Paperback £17.99www.cambridge.org/9780521878326
Medieval DomesticityHome, Housing and Household in Medieval EnglandEdited by Maryanne KowaleskiFordham University, New York
and P. J. P. GoldbergUniversity of York
What did ‘home’ mean to men and women in the period 1200–1500? This volume explores the concept of domesticity, and addresses its many cultural, material and ideological dimensions. Leading scholars argue that, during this period, England witnessed the emergence of a distinctive bourgeois ideology of domesticity.2008 228 x 152 mm 332pp 8 tones 1 map 978-0-521-89920-8 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521899208
Law, Marriage, and Society in the Later Middle AgesArguments about Marriage in Five CourtsCharles Donahue, Jr.Harvard University, Massachusetts
Marriage litigation in York, Ely, Paris, Cambrai, and Brussels during the medieval period.2008 234 x 156 mm 696pp 37 tables 978-0-521-87728-2 Hardback £80.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521877282
Hellenism in ByzantiumThe Transformations of Greek Identity and the Reception of the Classical TraditionAnthony KaldellisOhio State University
Examines what it meant to be ‘Greek’ in late antiquity and Byzantium.Greek Culture in the Roman World
2008 228 x 152 mm 480pp 978-0-521-87688-9 Hardback £65.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521876889
The Occitan WarA Military and Political History of the Albigensian Crusade, 1209–1218Laurence W. MarvinBerry College, Georgia
A political and military history of the Albigensian Crusade of 1209–1218.2008 228 x 152 mm 354pp 10 maps 978-0-521-87240-9 Hardback £55.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521872409
new in PaPerback
A Social History of the Deccan, 1300–1761Eight Indian LivesRichard M. EatonUniversity of Arizona
A rich narrative history of the Deccan, portrayed through eight Indian lives.The New Cambridge History of India
2008 228 x 152 mm 236pp 6 maps 16 plates 3 tables 4 genealogical tables 978-0-521-71627-7 Paperback £17.99www.cambridge.org/9780521716277
War and Peace in Ancient and Medieval HistoryEdited by Philip de SouzaUniversity College Dublin
and John FranceUniversity of Wales, Swansea
Study of the making and breaking of peace treaties and truces from Classical Greece to the High Middle Ages.2008 228 x 152 mm 260pp 2 tables 978-0-521-81703-5 Hardback £55.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521817035
Canon Law, Careers and ConquestEpiscopal Elections in Normandy and Greater Anjou, c.1140–c.1230Jörg PeltzerRuprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, Germany
A study of the politics of episcopal elections in twelfth and thirteenth-century Normandy and Greater Anjou that brings together legal theory and practice, local custom and politics. Jörg Peltzer examines each election in context and compares electoral practices in Normandy and Greater Anjou before and after the Capetian conquest.Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 71
2008 228 x 152 mm 352pp 11 maps 8 tables 978-0-521-88062-6 Hardback £60.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521880626
Being ByzantineGreek Identity Before the Ottomans, 1200–1420Gill PageIndependent scholar
New interpretation of the medieval history of Greece over the period 1200–1420, focusing particularly on the ethnic identity of the Greeks during this period and their relationship with their western rulers. The book argues that there was less ethnic conflict than has often been supposed.2008 228 x 152 mm 344pp 6 tones 2 maps 978-0-521-87181-5 Hardback £55.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521871815
Byzantium Between the Ottomans and the LatinsPolitics and Society in the Late EmpireNevra Necipo luBogaziçi University, Istanbul
Examines Byzantine political attitudes towards the Ottomans and western Europeans during the critical last century of Byzantium. It explores the political orientations of aristocrats, merchants, the urban populace, peasants, and members of ecclesiastical and monastic circles in three major areas of the Byzantine Empire in their social and economic context.2009 228 x 152 mm 372pp 3 maps 978-0-521-87738-1 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521877381
Medieval Britain and Europe 13
eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/online
new in PaPerback
Monastic Life in Anglo-Saxon England, c. 600–900Sarah FootChrist Church, Oxford
This major new history of English monasticism explores the history of the Church between the conversion to Christianity in the sixth century and a monastic revival in the tenth. Sarah Foot argues that historians have been wrong to see minsters in the light of ideals of Benedictine monasticism.
‘A beautifully structured and magisterial treatment of a major subject in early medieval English history by the outstanding early medieval historian of her generation.’Professor Nicholas Brooks, University of Birmingham
2009 246 x 189 mm 414pp 15 tones 978-0-521-73908-5 Paperback £19.99www.cambridge.org/9780521739085
The Penitential StateAuthority and Atonement in the Age of Louis the Pious, 814–840Mayke de JongUniversiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands
A major re-evaluation of Emperor Louis the Pious’ reign which examines the background and context of Louis’ public penance in 833. Through a profound re-reading of contemporary texts that reflected on legitimate authority in times of crisis, Mayke de Jong reveals that self-humiliation served to enhance royal authority.2009 228 x 152 mm 340pp 1 tone 2 maps 3 genealogical tables 978-0-521-88152-4 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521881524
City and Community in Norman ItalyPaul OldfieldManchester Metropolitan University
This pioneering study of urban society in twelfth-century Italy challenges traditional views that the Normans stifled urban development. Examining the self-governing role of urban communities, their social ordering, identities and communal activities, this book reveals that south Italian urban communities still had a level of autonomy under the Norman monarchy.Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 72
2009 228 x 152 mm 310pp 1 tone 1 map 978-0-521-89804-1 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521898041
Forthcoming
Legal Practice and the Written Word in the Early Middle AgesFrankish Formulae, c. 500–1000Alice RioUniversity of Cambridge
Legal formularies provide modern historians with information on many aspects of ordinary life in early medieval Europe, from labour and land agreements to cases which we would nowadays associate with criminal law. This book provides a detailed analysis of formularies, setting out their problems and possibilities as historical sources.Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 75
2009 228 x 152 mm 312pp 5 tables 978-0-521-51499-6 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521514996
Forthcoming
Dominicans, Muslims and Jews in the Medieval Crown of AragonRobin VoseSt Thomas University, Canada
Medieval Dominican efforts to convert non-Christian populations have often been considered instrumental in worsening relations between Christians, Muslims and Jews. The study shows that their prime concern was to protect the spiritual well-being of the Christian faithful through preaching, censorship, and maintenance of existing faith barriers to interfaith communications.Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 74
2009 228 x 152 mm 310pp 2 maps 3 tables 978-0-521-88643-7 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521886437
Forthcoming
The Wandering Heretics of LanguedocCaterina BruschiUniversity of Birmingham
By analysing medieval records of the trial of Cathar and Waldensian heretics in the South of France, Caterina Bruschi sheds new light on itinerancy within heretical movements, challenges old methodologies in the study of dissent and examines the different fears felt by
deponents and how those fears affected their actions.Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 73
2009 228 x 152 mm 232pp 978-0-521-87359-8 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521873598
Forthcoming
Commercial Agreements and Social Dynamics in Medieval GenoaQuentin Van DoosselaereNuffield College, Oxford
Drawing on 20,000 notarial records, this book traces commercial partnerships in Genoa from 1150 to 1435. Combining detailed historical reading with network modeling to analyze the change in long-distance trade relationships, van Doosselaere argues that economic transformation to the Renaissance was driven by changes in trading patterns and social choices.2009 234 x 156 mm 280pp 28 line figures 9 tables 978-0-521-89792-1 Hardback £50.00www.cambridge.org/9780521897921
Forthcoming
An Economic and Social History of Later Medieval Europe, 1000–1500Steven A. EpsteinUniversity of Kansas
This book examines the most important themes in European social and economic history from around 1000 to the first wave of global exchange in the 1490s. Surveying the full extent of Europe, Steven Epstein illuminates family life, economic and social thought, war, technologies, and developments in trade, crafts, and agriculture.
‘The clarity and precision of Steven Epstein’s survey of the history of the later medieval economy are without doubt two of its most wonderful features. Students and seasoned scholars alike will actually relish reading the book. … This book is synthesis of a very high order.’ William Chester Jordan, Dayton-Stockton Professor of History, Princeton University and author of The Great Famine: Northern Europe in the Early Fourteenth Century (Princeton, 1996)
14 Medieval Britain and Europe / Early Modern Britain and Europe
2009 228 x 152 mm 296pp 23 line figures 13 tones 10 maps 1 table 978-0-521-88036-7 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-70653-7 Paperback £17.99www.cambridge.org/9780521880367
Forthcoming
A Commonwealth of the PeoplePopular Politics and England’s Long Social Revolution, 1066–1649David RollisonUniversity of Sydney
This book argues that the succession of crises from the Norman Conquest to the English Revolution were causal links and chains of collective memory in a populist movement which saw state institutions and elites made answerable to a greater community that was once called ‘commonwealth’ but is now called ‘society’.
‘Ranging across language, landscape, politics, poetry and literature, David Rollison provides an important and powerful history of the development of pre-modern England. A Commonwealth of the People is a fascinating account of the development of the politics of ‘commonweal’: how, from the fourteenth to the seventeenth century, the voices of common people became both ‘English’ and ‘communal’. In its scope and imagination, this is an exemplary work of socio-cultural history, both deeply reflective on the process of doing history, and profoundly engaged with the historical landscape it seeks to uncover.’ John Arnold, Professor of Medieval History, Birkbeck College
2009 228 x 152 mm 496pp 1 tone 978-0-521-85373-6 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication December 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521853736
Forthcoming
Canon Law and the Letters of Ivo of ChartresChristof RolkerUniversität Konstanz, Germany
A major new study of Ivo of Chartres, his works and his role in the intellectual, religious and political culture of medieval Europe. It provides a new interpretation of the authorship of canon law collections attributed to Ivo, revealing that he did not compile
the Panormia contrary to current assumptions.Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 76
2009 228 x 152 mm 400pp 1 table 978-0-521-76682-1 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication December 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521766821
Early Modern Britain and Europe
Britain and Ireland
Lost LondonsChange, Crime, and Control in the Capital City, 1550–1660Paul GriffithsIowa State University
By focusing on policing, prosecution, and the language and perceptions of the authorities and the underclasses, Paul Griffiths explores the swift growth and transformation of early modern London. The book provides the first full study of petty crime before 1660, analysing worlds and words of crime, criminal rings and cultures.
‘… an immensely rich analysis of Tudor and Stuart London’s underclass and of the fears, projects and policies of those officials and officers who struggled against it. Lost Londons is a major contribution to the history of the capital. Times Literary Supplement
Cambridge Social and Cultural Histories, 13
2008 228 x 152 552pp 6 maps 22 tables 978-0-521-88524-9 Hardback £50.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521885249
Gender, Work and Wages in Industrial Revolution BritainJoyce BurnetteWabash College, Indiana
Major new study of the role of women in the labor market of Industrial Revolution Britain. Joyce Burnette demonstrates that gender differences in occupations and wages were largely driven by market forces and resulted from actual differences in productivity. She shows that rather than harming women competition actually helped them.
‘Professor Joyce Burnette has produced a major new work; one in which her arguments are supported
and reinforced by comprehensive statistical evidence. For anyone studying women’s history this is necessary reading.’ Don Vincent, The Open University History Society
Cambridge Studies in Economic History – Second Series
2008 228 x 152 390pp 58 tables 24 figures 978-0-521-88063-3 Hardback £55.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521880633
The Culture of GivingInformal Support and Gift-Exchange in Early Modern EnglandIlana Krausman Ben-AmosBen Gurion University of the Negev, Israel
Study of gift-giving, informal support and charity in England between the late sixteenth and the early eighteenth centuries.Cambridge Social and Cultural Histories, 12
2008 228 x 152 mm 454pp 1 tone 5 tables 978-0-521-86723-8 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521867238
Hunting and the Politics of Violence before the English Civil WarDaniel C. BeaverPennsylvania State University
Study of English forests and hunting in early modern England.Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History
2008 228 x 152 192pp 4 maps 978-0-521-87853-1 Hardback £48.00www.cambridge.org/9780521878531
Heart Religion in the British EnlightenmentGender and Emotion in Early MethodismPhyllis MackRutgers University, New Jersey
Challenging traditional, negative depictions of early Methodism, this revisionist study sheds new light on the daily life and spirituality of early Methodist men and women through an analysis of a vast array of primary sources. In examining ordinary people’s experiences it places particular emphasis on the experience of women.
‘This is an important revisionist study that will necessitate a re-evaluation of the eighteenth century development of Methodism and an expression of its dynamism.’ The Historical Association
Early Modern Britain and Europe 15
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2008 228 x 152 mm 344pp 1 tone 978-0-521-88918-6 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521889186
The Correspondence of Henry Cromwell, 1655–1659British Library Lansdowne ManuscriptsEdited by Peter GauntUniversity of Chester
This volume of Henry Cromwell’s correspondence contains full and annotated transcripts of most of the 536 items in the collection held by the British Library. These letters shed fresh light on Henry Cromwell’s Irish administration, political developments in England and the relationship between the Lord Protector, his Council and parliament.Camden Fifth Series, 31
2008 228 x 152 mm 558pp 978-0-521-89604-7 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521896047
Law, Politics and Society in Early Modern EnglandChristopher W. Brooks
This innovative and authoritative study transcends traditional distinctions between social, legal and political history. Brooks examines the development of legal thought and practice from the later middle ages through to the mid-seventeenth century, and explains how law mediated and constituted a variety of social and economic relationships.2009 228 x 152 mm 468pp 978-0-521-32391-8 Hardback £65.00www.cambridge.org/9780521323918
Martial Power and Elizabethan Political CultureMilitary Men in England and Ireland, 1558–1594Rory RappleUniversity of Notre Dame, Indiana
This groundbreaking study examines the careers and political thinking of Elizabethan martial men, whose ambitions were thwarted by a quietist foreign policy. The book also considers its consequences for military rule in Ireland, and presents a lively and sophisticated reinterpretation of this complex, controversial subject.Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History
2009 228 x 152 mm 350pp 1 map 978-0-521-84353-9 Hardback £60.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521843539
Enforcing the English Reformation in IrelandClerical Resistance and Political Conflict in the Diocese of Dublin, 1534–1590James MurrayNational Qualifications Authority of Ireland, Dublin
A study of Tudor attempts to enforce the Reformation in the heartland of English Ireland during the sixteenth century. It shows how the loyal Pale community ultimately rejected the Reformation and Protestantism because it perceived them to be irreconcilable with its own traditional English culture and medieval Catholic identity.Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History
2009 228 x 152 mm 374pp 978-0-521-77038-5 Hardback £60.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521770385
Marital Litigation in the Court of Requests 1542–1642Volume 32Edited by Tim StrettonSaint Mary’s University, Nova Scotia
This volume reproduces twenty litigation suits from the Court of Requests during the final century of its operation. These extraordinary cases provide rich details about the complexity of separated couples’ rights, the development of alimony (for both men and women) and the variety of human failings that could devastate marriages.Camden Fifth Series, 32
2008 228 x 152 mm 288pp 978-0-521-80001-3 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521800013
Forthcoming
Marriage Law and Practice in the Long Eighteenth CenturyA ReassessmentRebecca ProbertUniversity of Warwick
Using a wide range of sources, this book provides a radical reassessment of eighteenth-century marriage. It analyses what was required for a valid marriage, both before and after the Clandestine Marriages Act of 1753, fundamentally rewriting what scholars previously
believed was the law and practice of the time.Cambridge Studies in English Legal History
2009 216 x 138 mm 300pp 2 tables 3 graphs 978-0-521-51615-0 Hardback £55.00 Publication July 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521516150
Forthcoming
The Art of HearingArnold HuntUniversity of Oxford
Throughout most of Christian history, the sermon has been the main vehicle for the transmission of religious ideas. This book assesses the effectiveness of the sermon as a means of spreading Protestant ideas, looking in detail at the difference between the sermon as preached and the sermon as printed.Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History
2009 228 x 152 mm 360pp 978-0-521-89676-4 Hardback c. £55.00 Publication December 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521896764
Forthcoming
The Politics and Culture of Honour in Britain and Ireland, 1541–1641Brendan KaneUniversity of Connecticut
Exploring ‘honour politics’ in the early modern period, Brendan Kane reveals that honour played a powerful role in determining the character of Anglo-Irish society, politics and cultural contact, and brings a cultural perspective to our understanding of English imperialism in Ireland and of the Irish responses to it.Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History
2010 228 x 152 mm 300pp 7 tones 978-0-521-89864-5 Hardback c. £55.00 Publication January 2010www.cambridge.org/9780521898645
Europe
textbook
Women and Gender in Early Modern EuropeThird editionMerry E. Wiesner-HanksUniversity of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
This new edition of Merry Wiesner-Hanks’ prize-winning book incorporates the newest scholarship and features a new chapter on gender and race in the colonial world; expanded coverage
16 Early Modern Britain and Europe
of eighteenth century developments including the Enlightenment; and enhanced discussions of masculinity, single women, same-sex relations, humanism, and women’s religious roles.Contents: Introduction; 1. Ideas and laws regarding women; Part I. Body: 2. The female life-cycle; 3. Women’s economic role; Part II. Mind: 4. Literacy and learning; 5. Women and the creation of culture; Part III. Spirit: 6. Religion; 7. Witchcraft; 8. Gender and power; 9. Gender in the Colonial World.New Approaches to European History, 41
2008 228 x 152 mm 360pp 16 tones 1 map 978-0-521-87372-7 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-69544-2 Paperback £15.99www.cambridge.org/9780521873727
A Revolution in TasteThe Rise of French Cuisine, 1650–1800Susan PinkardGeorgetown University, Washington DC
This book traces the development of modern French habits of cooking, eating, and drinking from their roots in the Ancien Regime. Pinkard examines the interplay of material culture, social developments, medical theory, and Enlightenment thought in the development of French cooking, which culminated in the creation of a distinct culture of food and drink.2008 228 x 152 mm 334pp 15 tones 978-0-521-82199-5 Hardback £20.00www.cambridge.org/9780521821995
Joseph IIVolume 2: Against the World, 1780–1790Derek Beales
This final volume of Derek Beales’s magisterial biography of the emperor Joseph II describes the critical period when he was sole ruler of the Austrian Monarchy. Explaining his motivation and showing how his ideas developed, Derek Beales reveals that Joseph left an ineffaceable mark on all his lands.2009 228 x 152 mm 754pp 23 tones 5 maps 8 tables 1 genealogical table 978-0-521-32488-5 Hardback £80.00www.cambridge.org/9780521324885
A Social and Cultural History of Early Modern FranceWilliam BeikEmory University, Atlanta
Magisterial new history of French society between the end of the Middle Ages and the Revolution, by one of the world’s leading authorities on early modern France, that restores the ancien régime
as a key epoch in its own right and not simply as the prelude to the Revolution.2009 228 x 152 mm 420pp 40 tones 1 map 6 tables 1 genealogical table 978-0-521-88309-2 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-70956-9 Paperback £16.99www.cambridge.org/9780521883092
Carnal Commerce in Counter-Reformation RomeTessa StoreyUniversity of Leicester
Study of the daily lives and material culture of prostitutes and their clients in Rome, 1566-1656.New Studies in European History
2008 228 x 152 mm 314pp 28 tones 2 maps 9 tables 978-0-521-84433-8 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521844338
Christopher Plantin and Engraved Book Illustrations in Sixteenth-Century EuropeKaren L. Bowenand Dirk ImhofPlantin-Moretus Museum, Antwerp
Study of Christopher Plantin’s role in the production of books with engraved and etched illustrations.2008 246 x 189 mm 474pp 114 tones 3 graphs 978-0-521-85276-0 Hardback £70.00www.cambridge.org/9780521852760
The Continuities of German HistoryNation, Religion, and Race Across the Long Nineteenth CenturyHelmut Walser SmithVanderbilt University, Tennessee
Smith reexamines German continuities and sheds new light on nationalism, anti-Semitism and genocide. 2008 228 x 152 mm 256pp 978-0-521-89588-0 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-72025-0 Paperback £15.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521895880
Heirs, Kin, and Creditors in Renaissance FlorenceThomas KuehnClemson University, South Carolina
A previously unexamined serial registry of repudiations of inheritance provides a greater understanding of law and society in Renaissance Florence.2008 228 x 152 mm 256pp 12 tables 978-0-521-88234-7 Hardback £45.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521882347
The Politics of Jewish CommerceEconomic Thought and Emancipation in Europe, 1638–1848Jonathan KarpState University of New York, Binghamton
By focusing on economic attitudes toward Jews, this book illuminates European intellectual approaches toward economic modernity, measured against traditional political and constitutional ideals. By elucidating these general debates, it renders contemporary Jewish economic self-conceptions fully explicable for the first time.
‘Jonathan Karp’s book is an erudite, elegant, and insightful study of the centrality of economics to political thought in western Europe from the seventeenth through nineteenth centuries. Skillfully blending together a vast range of primary sources in six languages, Karp argues convincingly that Judaism and the Jews served as prisms through which the spectrum of Enlightenment thought was filtered.’Derek Penslar, University of Toronto
2008 228 x 152 mm 376pp 978-0-521-87393-2 Hardback £50.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521873932
Guilds, Innovation and the European Economy, 1400–1800Edited by S. R. EpsteinLondon School of Economics and Political Science
and Maarten PrakUniversiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands
A re-examination of the role of guilds in the early modern European economy. Leading economic historians argue that industry before the Industrial Revolution was much more innovative than previous studies have allowed for and explore the new products
Early Modern Britain and Europe 17
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and production techniques that were launched and developed in this period.
‘This is undoubtedly an important collection of essays that brings the vibrancy of the early modern industry to the fore.’The Historical Association
2008 228 x 152 mm 360pp 978-0-521-88717-5 Hardback £55.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521887175
Language and Statecraft in Early Modern VeniceElizabeth HorodowichNew Mexico State University
This book demonstrates that a crucial component of statebuilding in Venice was the management of public speech.2008 228 x 152 mm 258pp 7 tones 978-0-521-89496-8 Hardback £50.00www.cambridge.org/9780521894968
new in PaPerback
Renaissance FlorenceA Social History Edited by Roger J. CrumUniversity of Dayton, Ohio
and John T. PaolettiWesleyan University, Connecticut
This book examines the social history of Florence from the fourteenth through to sixteenth centuries. 2008 228 x 152 mm 692pp 70 tones 978-0-521-72787-7 Paperback £22.99www.cambridge.org/9780521727877
Poor Relief and Welfare in Germany from the Reformation to World War ILarry FrohmanState University of New York, Stony Brook
This book considers poor relief, charity, and social welfare in Germany from the Reformation through World War I, arguing that preventive social welfare programs evolved out of traditional poor relief. Frohman emphasizes the role of progressive reformers and local, voluntary initiative in this process.2008 234 x 156 mm 272pp 1 tone 3 tables 978-0-521-50603-8 Hardback £50.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521506038
The Construction of Authority in Ancient Rome and ByzantiumThe Rhetoric of EmpireSarolta A. TakácsRutgers University, New Jersey
Examines the role of the Roman emperor and how political rhetoric shaped the ancients’ reality and played a part in the upkeep of their political structures. Takács isolates a reccurring cultural pattern, a conscious appropriation of symbols and signs (verbal and visual) belonging to the Roman Empire.2008 228 x 152 mm 192pp 978-0-521-87865-4 Hardback £40.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521878654
Women, Armies, and Warfare in Early Modern EuropeJohn A. Lynn IIUniversity of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Women, Armies, and Warfare in Early Modern Europe examines the important roles of women who campaigned with armies from 1500 to 1815. Lynn argues that, before 1650, women were fundamental to armies because they were integral to the pillage economy that maintained troops in the field.
‘An important study not only for gender specialists but also for military historians. Lynn is most interesting on the role of women in the pillage economy while his work offers a new perspective on the vexed question of the Military Revolution and its dating.’Jeremy Black, University of Essex
2008 228 x 152 mm 252pp 25 tones 978-0-521-89765-5 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-72237-7 Paperback £13.99www.cambridge.org/9780521897655
Converting BohemiaForce and Persuasion in the Catholic ReformationHoward LouthanUniversity of Florida
Few regions in European history have experienced such a complete religious transformation as Bohemia. This wide-ranging examination of its history and culture, ranging from art, architecture and literature to music, philosophy and hagiography, sheds new light on the Counter-Reformation and the nature of early modern Catholicism.New Studies in European History
2009 228 x 152 mm 368pp 25 tones 978-0-521-88929-2 Hardback £60.00www.cambridge.org/9780521889292
Enlightenment and the Creation of German CatholicismMichael PrintyWesleyan University, Connecticut
This book explores the ways in which the German Catholic Enlightenment reconceived the relationship between religion, society, and the state. Educated Catholics in the Holy Roman Empire questioned not only what it meant to be Catholic, but also what it meant to be German. In the process, they created German Catholicism.
‘A scholarly and thoughtful contribution to an important but neglected topic.’Tim Blanning, University of Cambridge
2009 228 x 152 mm 254pp 978-0-521-47839-7 Hardback £45.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521478397
Forthcoming
Murder in AubagneLynching, Law, and Justice during the French RevolutionD. M. G. SutherlandUniversity of Maryland, College Park
This is a study of faction, lynching, murder, terror and counter-terror during the French Revolution. It uses the techniques of micro-history to tell the story of the small town of Aubagne, examining how local factionalism produced the murders and prison massacres of 1795–8, and how local activism converged with official terror from above.
‘One of the world’s leading historians of the French Revolution has written a detailed, original and convincing picture of what living through the Revolution meant for ordinary people in a distinctive region of France. It will be widely hailed among students of the period as a remarkable addition to our knowledge and understanding of the complex and violent repercussions of the Terror.’William Doyle, University of Bristol
2009 228 x 152 mm 336pp 2 line figures 23 tables 978-0-521-88304-7 Hardback c. £48.00www.cambridge.org/9780521883047
18 Early Modern Britain and Europe / Modern Britain and Europe
Forthcoming
Pythagoras and Renaissance EuropeFinding HeavenChristiane L. Joost-GaugierWayne State University
In this book, Christiane L. Joost-Gaugier offers the first systematic study of Pythagoras and his influence on mathematics, astronomy, philosophy, religion, medicine, music, the occult, and social life – as well as on architecture and art – in the late medieval and early modern eras.2009 253 x 215 mm 350pp 65 tones 978-0-521-51795-9 Hardback £50.00 Publication October 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521517959
Forthcoming
German Histories in the Age of Reformations, 1400–1650Thomas A. Brady Jr.University of California, Berkeley
This book studies the connections between the political reform of the Holy Roman Empire and the German lands around 1500 and the sixteenth-century religious reformations. It argues that the character of the political changes blocked both a general reformation of the Church before 1520 and a national reformation thereafter, resulting in an arrangement that maintained the public peace through politically structured religious communities.
‘This extraordinary book provides the reader with the best account of late medieval and early modern German history available in any language … This is a post-confessional history in which religion retains its centrality but not its polemical edge, a modern history that has been released from the shackles of modernization, and a history in which ordinary villagers and townsmen take their places in a story that was most often dictated by princes and nobles. And it is a story with a powerful narrative arc. What an achievement.’H. C. Erik Midelfort, University of Virginia
2009 228 x 152 mm 432pp 17 tones 5 maps 978-0-521-88909-4 Hardback c. £50.00 978-0-521-71778-6 Paperback c. £17.99 Publication August 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521889094
Forthcoming
The Origins of Racism in the WestEdited by Miriam Eliav-FeldonTel-Aviv University
Benjamin IsaacTel-Aviv University
and Joseph ZieglerUniversity of Haifa, Israel
Is it possible to speak of western racism before the eighteenth century? Leading historians argue that racism can be traced back to the attitudes of the ancient Greeks towards their Persian enemies and that it was adopted, adjusted and re-formulated by Europeans right through until the dawn of the Enlightenment.2009 228 x 152 mm 360pp 42 tones 978-0-521-88855-4 Hardback £55.00 Publication August 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521888554
new edition
Forthcoming
The State in Early Modern FranceSecond editionJames B. CollinsGeorgetown University, Washington DC
This new edition of James Collins’s acclaimed textbook has been revised throughout, incorporating the extensive recent scholarship on the French state. It examines the recent debates on ‘absolutism’; presents fresh interpretations of the Fronde and of French society in the eighteenth century; and includes a new chapter on Louis XIV.
‘The reader who savours the full pleasures of this book will be able to feel that he or she, at the end of it all, has a real grasp of both what happened in the old Bourbon state and how it functioned, changed and came apart. One could scarcely ask more of an introductory work; and one can only regret that more supposedly ‘introductory’ textbooks do not come up to Professor Collins’s exacting standards.’ French History
New Approaches to European History, 42
2009 228 x 152 mm 412pp 1 tone 3 maps 978-0-521-11314-4 Hardback c. £55.00 978-0-521-13025-7 Paperback c. £17.99 Publication October 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521113144
Forthcoming
The InquisitionA Global History 1479–1834Francisco BethencourtKing’s College London
and Jean Birrell
In this first global comparative study, Francisco Bethencourt examines the Inquisition’s activities in Spain, Italy, Portugal and overseas Iberian colonies. He forcefully challenges revisionist accounts to underline the fundamental role of the Inquisition in the Counter-Reformation and in shaping the Catholic Church, Southern European societies and the colonial Iberian world.Past and Present Publications
2009 228 x 152 mm 500pp 46 tones 3 maps 11 tables 978-0-521-84793-3 Hardback c. £60.00 978-0-521-74823-0 Paperback c. £21.99 Publication December 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521847933
Modern Britain and Europe
Britain and Ireland
Making EmpireColonial Encounters and the Creation of Imperial Rule in Nineteenth-Century AfricaRichard PriceUniversity of Maryland, College Park
The dramatic story of the construction of empire in Southern Africa in the nineteenth century. It charts how an imperial regime developed both in the minds of the colonizers and in the everyday practice of power and how the British imperial presence was shaped by the encounter with the Xhosa.
‘In this exceptionally rich and sensitive study, Richard Price examines the clash between the British and the Xhosa in nineteenth-century South Africa … This book offers as insightful an analysis of the colonial encounter and as moving an assessment of its costs as any I have read in some time.’Dane Kennedy, George Washington University
2008 228 x 152 mm 416pp 17 tones 5 maps 978-0-521-88968-1 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-71819-6 Paperback £18.99www.cambridge.org/9780521889681
Modern Britain and Europe 19
eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/online
An Empire on TrialRace, Murder, and Justice under British Rule, 1870–1935Martin J. WienerRice University, Houston
This book explores interracial homicide in the British Empire during its height. It analyzes the tensions that underlay British rule and delves into how the problem of maintaining a liberal empire manifested itself during this period. It also demonstrates the importance of the processes of criminal justice to the empire’s history and the advantage of a trans-territorial approach to understanding its workings.
‘With characteristic sagacity and verve, Martin Weiner tackles one of the central themes of modern British imperial history – the relationship between liberalism and empire. His wide-ranging and richly documented study of colonial interracial murder trials gives a human face to a subject too often approached as a theoretical abstraction. Vivid, nuanced, and provocative, this book challenges us to look more closely and think more carefully about racial domination and the rule of law in the British Empire.’Dane Kennedy, George Washington University
2009 228 x 152 mm 270pp 978-0-521-51365-4 Hardback £35.00 978-0-521-73507-0 Paperback £14.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521513654
The British Industrial Revolution in Global PerspectiveRobert C. AllenUniversity of Oxford
This landmark global economic history explains why the Industrial Revolution occurred in Britain by highlighting the ways in which Britain was different from other countries in Europe and Asia. Combining economic, social, technological and business history, Allen shows the importance of globalisation in explaining the divergence of East and West.
‘Robert Allen has for decades been one of the broadest-ranging and most imaginative scholars in economic history. In this highly original and superbly-researched book, he has set new standards for the study of one of the most critical episodes of human history, the British Industrial Revolution. A must-read for scholars ranging from eighteenth century history to the economics of modern growth.’Joel Mokyr, author of The Gifts of Athena and The Enlightened Economy
New Approaches to Economic and Social History
2009 228 x 152 mm 344pp 10 tones 21 tables 38 graphs 978-0-521-86827-3 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-68785-0 Paperback £16.99www.cambridge.org/9780521868273
Forthcoming
Journeys to EmpireEnlightenment, Imperialism, and the British Encounter with Tibet, 1774–1904Gordon T. StewartMichigan State University
This compelling account of two British missions to Tibet in 1774 and 1904 provides a unique perspective on the relationship between the Enlightenment and European colonialism. Stewart traces the shifting ideologies, economic interests and political agendas that lay behind British empire-building from the late eighteenth century to the twentieth century.2009 228 x 152 mm 296pp 19 tones 3 maps 978-0-521-51502-3 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-73568-1 Paperback £18.99www.cambridge.org/9780521515023
Forthcoming
The Empire ProjectThe Rise and Fall of the British World-System, 1830–1970John DarwinNuffield College, Oxford
Magisterial global history of the rise and fall of the British empire during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. John Darwin charts how the empire was first strengthened, then weakened and finally severed on the rollercoaster of global economic, political and geostrategic upheaval on which it rode from beginning to end.2009 228 x 152 mm 808pp 11 maps 978-0-521-30208-1 Hardback c. £25.00 978-0-521-31789-4 Paperback TBA / TBA Publication October 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521302081
Examining the WorldA History of the University of Cambridge Local Examinations SyndicateEdited by Sandra RabanTrinity Hall, Cambridge
The first full-length history of the University of Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate.2008 228 x 152 mm 216pp 50 tones 1 map 978-0-521-88414-3 Hardback £35.00 978-0-521-70942-2 Paperback £12.99www.cambridge.org/9780521884143
University PoliticsF.M. Cornford’s Cambridge and his Advice to the Young Academic PoliticianSecond editionGordon JohnsonUniversity of Cambridge
Cornford’s satire about Cambridge University politics, still as relevant as ever in its centenary year.2008 246 x 189 mm 122pp 19 tones 1 plan 978-0-521-89789-1 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-72373-2 Paperback £14.99www.cambridge.org/9780521897891
Central CambridgeA Guide to the University and CollegesSecond editionKevin TaylorCambridge University Press
Foreword by H. R. H. The Prince Philip
A fully revised and updated second edition of this best-selling guidebook.2008 247 x 174 mm 138pp 95 line figures 5 tones 5 maps 2 tables 978-0-521-88876-9 Hardback £25.00 / TBA 978-0-521-71718-2 Paperback £9.99www.cambridge.org/9780521888769
Twentieth-Century DiplomacyA Case Study of British Practice, 1963–1976John W. YoungUniversity of Nottingham
This innovative study examines how diplomacy was conducted in Britain during a time of change in diplomatic practice, and draws comparisons with other countries, especially the United States. In doing so, John Young provides a valuable case study that sheds light on the means of diplomacy rather than the ends.2008 228 x 152 mm 256pp 978-0-521-83916-7 Hardback £55.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521839167
‘The Affairs of Others’The Diaries of Francis Place, 1825–1836Volume 30Edited by James A. JaffeUniversity of Wisconsin, Whitewater
The previously unpublished diary of political activist Francis Place, written between 1825 and 1836.Camden Fifth Series
2008 228 x 152 mm 374pp 978-0-521-88341-2 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521883412
20 Modern Britain and Europe
Dublin Castle and the First Home Rule CrisisThe Political Journal of Sir George Fottrell, 1884–1887Volume 33Edited by Stephen BallUniversity of London
A first-hand account of British attempts to negotiate a settlement of the Irish question. These valuable sources reveal the British Government’s response to Irish nationalism during 1884–1887, and suggest that Gladstone’s adoption of home rule was more significantly influenced by warnings of revolution in Ireland than has been previously thought.Camden Fifth Series, 30
2008 228 x 152 mm 354pp 978-0-521-51921-2 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521519212
English Political Writings 1711–1714‘The Conduct of the Allies’ and Other WorksEdited by Bertrand A. GoldgarLawrence University, Wisconsin
and Ian GaddBath Spa University
This volume collects Swift’s political writings from the early 1710s, including most notably The Conduct of the Allies and The Publick Spirit of the Whigs. The volume includes an introduction drawing on current scholarly interpretations, detailed contextual explanatory notes, and a comprehensive account of the textual history of each work. The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Jonathan Swift, 8
2008 228 x 152 mm 576pp 12 tones 978-0-521-82929-8 Hardback £75.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521829298
Forthcoming
West Indian Slavery and British Abolition, 1783–1807David Beck RydenUniversity of Houston
This book examines the political and economic motivations behind the final decision to abolish the British slave trade. Ryden’s research illustrates that a faltering sugar economy after 1799 tipped the scales in favour of the
abolitionist argument and helped secure the passage of abolition.
‘Ryden’s elegant study is a major achievement, transforming our understanding of how the slave trade came to be abolished in 1807.’Trevor Burnard, University of Warwick
2009 228 x 152 mm 346pp 15 line figures 2 tones 21 tables 978-0-521-48659-0 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521486590
Forthcoming
IrelandA HistoryThomas BartlettUniversity of Aberdeen
A magisterial new history of Ireland from prehistory to the present. Examining Irish politics, society, culture and economic history, Tom Bartlett traces the long evolution of the two Irish states which emerged in the early twentieth century as well as the problems that confront them both in the twenty-first century.2009 580pp Hardback c. £25.00
Forthcoming
Cosmopolitan IslandersBritish Historians and the European ContinentRichard J. EvansUniversity of Cambridge
Richard J. Evans traces the evolution of British interest in the history of Continental Europe from the Enlightenment to the twentieth century. He discusses why the many British historians who work on Europe have chosen to do so and why this very distinguished tradition is now under threat.2009 216 x 138 mm 272pp 978-0-521-19998-8 Hardback £35.00 978-0-521-13724-9 Paperback £12.99www.cambridge.org/9780521199988
Europe
Revolution and the People in Russia and ChinaA Comparative HistoryS. A. SmithUniversity of Essex
A comparative account of the roots of Communist revolution in Russia and China.The Wiles Lectures
2008 228 x 152 258pp 978-0-521-88637-6 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-71396-2 Paperback £17.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521886376
Russia’s Peasants in Revolution and Civil WarCitizenship, Identity, and the Creation of the Soviet State, 1914–1922Aaron B. RetishWayne State University, Detroit
How did peasants experience and help guide Russia’s war, revolution, and civil war? Aaron Retish reveals that the fateful decision by individuals to join the Revolution gave the Bolsheviks the resources and philosophical foundation on which to build the Soviet experiment and reshape international politics.2008 228 x 152 mm 312pp 11 tones 1 map 6 tables 978-0-521-89689-4 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521896894
Beyond TotalitarianismStalinism and Nazism ComparedEdited by Michael GeyerUniversity of Chicago
and Sheila FitzpatrickUniversity of Chicago
These essays rethink the nature of Stalinism and Nazism and establish a new methodology for viewing their histories that goes well beyond outdated twentieth-century models of totalitarianism, ideology, and personality. They offer a new understanding of the intertwined trajectories of socialism and nationalism in European and global history.2009 234 x 156 mm 548pp 978-0-521-89796-9 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-72397-8 Paperback £17.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521897969
Modern Britain and Europe 21
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The Two Cultures ControversyScience, Literature and Cultural Politics in Postwar BritainGuy OrtolanoUniversity of Virginia
The ‘two cultures’ dispute between C. P. Snow and F. R. Leavis continues to be evoked in discussions about the relationship between the arts and science. However, Guy Ortolano shows that this was not simply a disciplinary debate but was instead an ideological conflict between competing visions of British society and culture.
‘The Two Cultures Controversy provides a full and persuasive account of Snow’s public roles during his years of fame and a thoughtful exploration of the ramifications of the debate surrounding his celebrated lecture. On these grounds, it will be of considerable value to cultural, educational and political historians of the period, as well as of interest to a wider readership curious about the origins and continuing significance of a famous phrase.’Twentieth Century British History
2009 228 x 152 mm 308pp 2 tones 978-0-521-89204-9 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521892049
From the Soviet Bloc to the European UnionThe Economic and Social Transformation of Central and Eastern Europe since 1973Ivan T. BerendUniversity of California, Los Angeles
The conditions surrounding the Soviet Union’s dramatic collapse have long fascinated historians, but few studies have covered the subject in its entirety. This is an authoritative account of the region’s turbulent history, and considers the European Union’s crucial role in shaping its economic and social development since 1973.2009 247 x 174 mm 316pp 24 tables 33 graphs 978-0-521-49365-9 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-72950-5 Paperback £19.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521493659
Forthcoming
Agrarian Reform in RussiaThe Road from SerfdomCarol LeonardSt Antony’s College, Oxford
This book on Russia examines the history of reforms and state interventions affecting agriculture. It looks at the reform process in a crisis and analyzes the short-run effects of economic adversity. It also examines agricultural production and rural institutions in the long run from 1861 to the present.2009 228 x 152 mm 287pp 23 line figures 2 tones 8 maps 37 tables 978-0-521-85849-6 Hardback c. £45.00 Publication October 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521858496
To the Threshold of Power, 1922/33Origins and Dynamics of the Fascist and National Socialist DictatorshipsVolume 1MacGregor Knox
This work seeks to explain the origins and dynamics of the Fascist and National Socialist dictatorships. 2008 234 x 156 mm 464pp 10 tables 978-0-521-87860-9 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-70329-1 Paperback £14.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521878609
Mussolini and his GeneralsThe Armed Forces and Fascist Foreign Policy, 1922–1940John GoochUniversity of Leeds
Study of the relationship between the military and foreign policies of Fascist Italy, 1922 to 1940.Cambridge Military Histories
2008 228 x 152 mm 666pp 9 tones 3 maps 978-0-521-85602-7 Hardback £25.00www.cambridge.org/9780521856027
Poland under CommunismA Cold War HistoryA. Kemp-WelchUniversity of East Anglia
History of Poland from the Second World War until the fall of Communism.2008 228 x 152 mm 460pp 978-0-521-88440-2 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-71117-3 Paperback £19.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521884402
The Fall of NapoleonVolume 1: The Allied Invasion of France, 1813–1814Michael V. LeggiereLouisiana State University, Shreveport
This book provides the first complete, English-language study of the invasion of France along a front that extended from Holland to Switzerland.Cambridge Military Histories
2008 228 x 152 mm 704pp 978-0-521-87542-4 Hardback £25.00www.cambridge.org/9780521875424
Every Day Lasts A YearA Jewish Family’s Correspondence from PolandEdited by Christopher R. BrowningUniversity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Richard S. Hollanderand Nechama Tec
The story of Richard Hollander’s Polish family, taken from letters written between 1939 and 1942.2008 228 x 152 mm 286pp 978-0-521-88274-3 Hardback £16.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521882743
Solidarity without the State?Business and the Shaping of the Swiss Welfare State, 1890–2000Matthieu LeimgruberThe Swiss National Science Foundation
The first comprehensive, comparative study of the Swiss welfare system, based on extensive research in business archives.2008 228 x 152 mm 330pp 16 tables 11 graphs 978-0-521-87540-0 Hardback £45.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521875400
Russia on the Eve of ModernityPopular Religion and Traditional Culture under the Last TsarsLeonid HeretzBridgewater State College, Massachusetts
Pioneering history of the ordinary Russians and their pre-modern, non-Western culture in late Imperial Russia.New Studies in European History
2008 228 x 152 mm 278pp 978-0-521-88177-7 Hardback £55.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521881777
22 Modern Britain and Europe
textbook
Women and Achievement in Nineteenth-Century EuropeLinda L. ClarkMillersville University, Pennsylvania
A history of European women’s professional activities and organizational roles between 1789 and 1914.
‘The book will be a worthwhile addition to any women’s history student’s library.’Don Vincent, The Open University History Society
Contents: Introduction: women and achievement, reality and rhetoric; 1. Women and the revolutionary era: negotiating public and private spaces, 1760s–early 1800s; 2. Women and literature: authorship, publication, audience; 3. Women and the arts: training, performance, fame; 4. Caring and power: from charity to social reform; 5. Extending education: learning and teaching; 6. From education to other professions; 7. Organizing for women’s rights: leaders and supporters; Epilogue: looking beyond 1914; Further reading and reference works.New Approaches to European History, 40
2008 228 x 152 mm 312pp 23 tones 978-0-521-65098-4 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-65878-2 Paperback £15.99www.cambridge.org/9780521650984
Zionism and Anti-Semitism in Nazi GermanyFrancis R. NicosiaUniversity of Vermont
This is a study of the ideological and political relationship between Zionism and anti-Semitism in modern Germany. It analyzes the nature of modern German anti-Semitism, the decision-making process precipitating the Nazi mass murder of European Jews, and the role of German Zionism in German-Jewish history before the Holocaust.2008 234 x 156 mm 344pp 978-0-521-88392-4 Hardback £50.00www.cambridge.org/9780521883924
Inside IG FarbenHoechst During the Third ReichStephan H. Lindner
IG Farben became synonymous with German industry’s participation in the crimes of the Nazi regime. This book deals in depth with one of IG Farben’s leading factories, Hoechst, during the Third Reich. Throughout, the author
sheds light on the motivations of those involved.2008 228 x 152 mm 424pp 978-0-521-88766-3 Hardback £30.00www.cambridge.org/9780521887663
British Business in the Formative Years of European Integration, 1945–1973Neil RollingsUniversity of Glasgow
Neil Rollings offers a new account of European integration and British business.Cambridge Studies in the Emergence of Global Enterprise
2008 228 x 152 mm 294pp 978-0-521-88811-0 Hardback £45.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521888110
Seduced by SecretsInside the Stasi’s Spy-Tech WorldKristie MacrakisGeorgia Institute of Technology
Seduced by Secrets reveals the secret technical sources and methods of the Stasi (East German Ministry for State Security).2008 228 x 152 mm 392pp 978-0-521-88747-2 Hardback £19.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521887472
Never Sang for HitlerThe Life and Times of Lotte Lehmann, 1888–1976Michael H. KaterYork University, Toronto
Lotte Lehmann ranks among the most celebrated singers of the twentieth century, famous for the unique quality of her lyric soprano. Rather than a traditional biography, this book is both a descriptive narrative of Lehmann’s life and a critical analysis of the interconnections of the artist and society.2008 234 x 156 mm 416pp 978-0-521-87392-5 Hardback £19.99www.cambridge.org/9780521873925
Kennedy in BerlinAndreas W. DaumState University of New York, Buffalo
The story of John F. Kennedy’s visit to Berlin in June 1963.Publications of the German Historical Institute
2008 228 x 152 mm 406pp 978-0-521-85824-3 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-67497-3 Paperback £14.99www.cambridge.org/9780521858243
Stalinism on the Frontier of EmpireWomen and State Formation in the Soviet Far EastElena ShulmanTexas Tech University
Fascinating stories of female settlers in the socialist frontiers of the Soviet Far East shed new light on the nature of Soviet society and Stalinism in the 1930s, revealing the instrumental part these migrants played in the extension of Soviet state power and the complexities of women’s lives under Stalin.2008 228 x 152 mm 280pp 3 line figures 15 tones 1 map 2 tables 978-0-521-89667-2 Hardback £55.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521896672
Ostpolitik, 1969–1974European and Global ResponsesEdited by Carole FinkOhio State University
and Bernd SchaeferGerman Historical Institute, Washington DC
The Ostpolitik of Chancellor Willy Brandt not only redefined Germany’s relation with its Nazi past but also altered the global environment of the Cold War. This book examines the years 1969–1974, when Brandt broke the Cold War stalemate in Europe with the practice of Ostpolitik, with significant impact on world history.Publications of the German Historical Institute
2009 228 x 152 mm 314pp 8 tones 978-0-521-89970-3 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521899703
Nazi Crimes and the LawEdited by Nathan StoltzfusFlorida State University
and Henry FriedlanderBrooklyn College, City University of New York
This book examines the use of national and international law to prosecute Nazi crimes, the centerpiece of twentieth-century state-sponsored genocide and mass murder. Its various essays reconstruct the historical setting of crimes sponsored by Nazi Germany and discuss the limitations placed on the national and international judicial forums responsible for prosecuting German perpetrators.Publications of the German Historical Institute
2009 228 x 152 mm 238pp 978-0-521-89974-1 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521899741
Modern Britain and Europe 23
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Jews in the Russian Army, 1827–1917Drafted into ModernityYohanan Petrovsky-ShternNorthwestern University, Illinois
This book is the first study of the social, cultural, and military experience of the Jews who served in the Russian Army between 1827 and 1917. Petrovsky-Shtern explores how conscription integrated Jews into the state transforming the repressed Jewish victims of the draft into modern imperial Russian Jews.
‘Jews in the Russian Army is a bold, original, and provocative work that challenges deep-seated assumptions about Russian-Jewish history.’Derek J. Penslar, University of Toronto, Author of Shylock’s Children: Economics and Jewish Identity in Modern Europe
2008 234 x 156 mm 326pp 11 tones 17 tables 978-0-521-51573-3 Hardback £50.00www.cambridge.org/9780521515733
The Ottoman Road to War in 1914The Ottoman Empire and the First World WarMustafa AksakalAmerican University, Washington DC
Why did the Ottoman Empire enter the First World War, months after the war’s devastations had become clear? Mustafa Aksakal’s dramatic study demonstrates that responsibility went far beyond the war minister, Enver Pasha, and that the road to war was paved by the demands of a politically interested public.Cambridge Military Histories
2008 228 x 152 mm 232pp 3 maps 978-0-521-88060-2 Hardback £55.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521880602
The Politics of Everyday Life in Vichy FranceForeigners, Undesirables, and StrangersShannon L. FoggMissouri University of Science and Technology
The book examines the effects of material distress on attitudes toward the Vichy government and on the treatment of outsiders in France during the Second World War. Fogg contends that the period’s severe material shortages and refugee situation fundamentally reshaped France’s social structure,
shaping the manner in which native and refugee populations interacted.
‘Social history at its best, this engaging study of daily life illuminates big political, economic and social issues. … [Fogg’s] insightful approach reveals how ordinary people’s struggle to survive shaped their relationship with the Vichy regime.’Sarah Fishman, University of Houston
2009 228 x 152 mm 248pp 5 tones 4 maps 978-0-521-89944-4 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521899444
Robbing the JewsThe Confiscation of Jewish Property in the Holocaust, 1933–1945Martin DeanUnited States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies
This book discloses the mechanisms by which the Nazis and their allies confiscated Jewish property, demonstrating the close relationship between robbery and the Holocaust. Dean traces the intensification of this spoliation and reveals instances when robbery acted as a catalyst for genocide, accelerating the progression from pogrom to mass murder.2008 234 x 156 mm 448pp 5 tones 978-0-521-88825-7 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521888257
new in PaPerback
Hitler’s African VictimsThe German Army Massacres of Black French Soldiers in 1940Raffael Scheck
When it invaded France in 1940, the German army massacred thousands of black POWs belonging to units drafted in France’s colonies. The book for the first time documents these war crimes on the basis of extensive research in French and German archives.
‘During its campaign against France in 1940, the German army massacred several thousand black POWs belonging to units drafted in France’s West African colonies. This book for the first time documents these war crimes …’African Business
2008 216 x 138 mm 218pp 978-0-521-73061-7 Paperback £15.99www.cambridge.org/9780521730617
new in PaPerback
Tales from SpandauNazi Criminals and the Cold WarNorman J. W. GodaOhio University
Tales from Spandau describes the four-decade tug of war between the Soviet Union and the Western Allies over the fate of Nazi Germany’s top officials.2008 234 x 156 mm 404pp 978-0-521-73062-4 Paperback £16.99www.cambridge.org/9780521730624
new in PaPerback
Jewish Forced Labor Under the NazisEconomic Needs and Racial Aims, 1938–1944Wolf GrunerInstitute of Contemporary History, Munich and Berlin
Forced labor was a key feature of Nazi anti-Jewish policy and shaped the daily life of almost every Jewish family in occupied Europe. For the first time, this book systematically describes the implementation of forced labor for Jews in Germany, Austria, the Protectorate, and the various occupied Polish territories.2008 228 x 152 mm 346pp 978-0-521-74357-0 Paperback £16.99www.cambridge.org/9780521743570
new in PaPerback
The Currency of SocialismMoney and Political Culture in East GermanyJonathan R. ZatlinBoston University
In this groundbreaking study, Jonathan R. Zatlin explores the East German attempt to create a perfect society by eliminating money and explains the reasons for its failure. The Currency of Socialism offers a novel explanation for the collapse of communism in East Germany and a highly original interpretation of German unification.Publications of the German Historical Institute
2008 234 x 156 mm 398pp 978-0-521-74360-0 Paperback £19.99www.cambridge.org/9780521743600
24 Modern Britain and Europe
new in PaPerback
Sweeping the German NationDomesticity and National Identity in Germany, 1870-1945Nancy R. ReaginPace University, New York
German housekeepers have an international reputation characterized by thrift, order, and extreme cleanliness. But where did this stereotype come from, and what is its history? This book explores how Germans defined and developed a particular style of domesticity in the late 19th century, and how it became crucial to German national identity.2008 228 x 152 mm 262pp 978-0-521-74415-7 Paperback £16.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521744157
new in PaPerback
Conflict and Stability in the German Democratic RepublicAndrew I. PortWayne State University
This book is a local study about East Germany that tries to explain the longevity of the post-World War II Communist regime by looking at a variety of conflicts at the grass roots. It examines everyday opposition and discontent as well as the often conciliatory way in which authorities responded to various forms of protest and nonconformity.
‘[Port’s] study makes a significant contribution to the history of the GDR and to scholarly debate about the relationship between state and society in Stalinist states.’Donna Harsch, Carnegie Mellon University
2008 234 x 156 mm 326pp 978-0-521-74417-1 Paperback £18.99www.cambridge.org/9780521744171
new in PaPerback
Delusions of IntelligenceEnigma, Ultra, and the End of Secure CiphersR. A. Ratcliff
In 1974, the British government admitted that its WWII secret intelligence organization had read Germany’s ciphers on a massive scale. This book, the first comparative study of WWII SIGINT (Signals Intelligence), analyzes the characteristics that allowed the Allies SIGINT success and
that fostered the German blindness to Enigma’s compromise.
‘This book is a major addition to the existing literature on code breaking during the Second World War, and may well create a stir among historians of cryptology, especially in Europe.’Intelligence of National Security
2008 228 x 152 mm 332pp 978-0-521-73662-6 Paperback £14.99www.cambridge.org/9780521736626
Forthcoming
The Resurrection and Collapse of Empire in Habsburg Serbia, 1914–1918Jonathan E. GumzUnited States Military Academy
This book examines the Habsburg Army’s occupation of Serbia from 1914 through 1918, arguing that it was radically different from other great power colonial projects or occupations during the 20th century. Unlike these projects and occupations, the Habsburg Army sought to denationalize and depoliticize Serbia, to gradually reduce the occupation’s violence, and to fully integrate the country into the Empire.
‘This book effectively refutes the argument that Austria-Hungary’s occupation of Serbia constituted an unrestrained war of national destruction. It also challenges recent scholarship that views wartime occupation practices in Eastern Europe through a lens of colonization that anticipated Nazi atrocities in the Second World War. Jonathan Gumz argues that unlike many of their peers elsewhere in Europe, Austria-Hungary’s conservative military leaders in fact rejected total war policies that merged war and home fronts. Gumz clearly elaborates this traditional military culture, demonstrating its workings at both the casual village level in occupied Serbia and in the highest Imperial councils in Vienna. He elucidates the key conflicts that set the military against the imperial bureaucracies during the War, and that by 1918 had helped to destroy the regime’s legitimacy among its citizens. Above all, his comparative approach produces important insights onto wartime practices, not only in Austria-Hungary but throughout Europe. This is military history at its best, broadly conceived, clearly applicable beyond specifically military situations, and above all, superbly grounded in archival research.’Pieter Judson, Swarthmore College
Cambridge Military Histories
2009 228 x 152 mm 288pp 9 tones 978-0-521-89627-6 Hardback £45.00 Publication July 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521896276
Missiles for the FatherlandPeenemünde, National Socialism, and the V-2 MissileMichael B. PetersenScience Applications International
Missiles for the Fatherland is the first scholarly investigation of the culture underpinning missile development at Germany’s secret missile base at Peenemünde. Michael Petersen’s research reveals a complex interaction of professional ambition, internal cultural dynamics, military pressure, and political coercion, which coalesced daily life at the facility.
‘Michael Petersen offers a new and disturbing account of the German missile community under the Nazis at the clandestine Peenemünde facility that developed the V-2 rocket. … An essential look at the perilous relationship between science and dictatorship.’Norman J. W. Goda, author of Tales from Spandau: Nazi Criminals and the Cold War, Cambridge University Press, 2006
Cambridge Centennial of Flight
2009 228 x 152 mm 288pp 14 tones 1 map 978-0-521-88270-5 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521882705
Forthcoming
Nazi Cinema’s New WomenJana F. BrunsLong Island University, New York
This book examines the careers of three of Nazi cinema’s preeminent movie actresses, painting a unique portrait of mass entertainment and stardom under Nazi rule. This analysis focuses on female stars – an important but largely unexplored area – because they were mostly responsible for Nazi cinema’s spectacular commercial success and political failure.
‘Studies in this pathbreaking book which combines commendable archival research with sophisticated theoretical analysis. She demonstrates conclusively that the film roles played by three representative female stars during the golden age of UFA studios – Marika Rökk, queen of the popular review film genre, sensuous Zarah Leander, model of sacrifice for the national cause, and Kristina Söderbaum, a beautiful Nordic woman
Modern Britain and Europe 25
eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/online
who repeatedly falls victim to the forces of evil – all reflect the deep complexity and moral ambiguity of issues when viewed through the lens of national socialist ideology.’Jay W. Baird, author of Hitler’s War Poets
2009 234 x 156 mm 288pp 32 tones 978-0-521-85685-0 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521856850
Crisis, Revolution, and Russian JewsJonathan FrankelHebrew University of Jerusalem
This collection of essays examines the politicization and the politics of the Jewish people in the Russian empire during the late tsarist period. Frankel describes the dynamics of the Russian revolution and the leading role of the intelligentsia as revolutionaries, ideologues, and observers.2009 228 x 152 mm 334pp 978-0-521-51364-7 Hardback £40.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521513647
new in PaPerback
Black Market, Cold WarEveryday Life in Berlin, 1946–1949Paul SteegeVillanova University, Pennsylvania
This book explains how and why Berlin became the symbolic capital of the Cold War. Paul Steege anchors his account of this emerging global conflict in the terrain of a city literally shattered by World War II. In this history of everyday life, he claims for Berliners a vital role in making possible Berlin’s iconic Cold War status.2008 234 x 156 mm 372pp 978-0-521-74517-8 Paperback £16.99www.cambridge.org/9780521745178
Forthcoming
The Kaiser Wilhelm Society under National SocialismSusanne HeimInstitut für Zeitgeschichte München-Berlin
Carola SachseUniversität Wien, Austria
and Mark WalkerUnion College, New York
The Kaiser Wilhelm Society was the most important scientific institution in Germany in the first half of the twentieth century. This book surveys the history of the Society’s scientific research institutes under Hitler, illustrating the cooperation, if not collaboration, between scientists and National
Socialists in order to further the goals of autarky, racial hygiene, war, and genocide.2009 228 x 152 mm 505pp 1 line figure 978-0-521-87906-4 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521879064
Forthcoming
The Legacy of the French Revolutionary WarsThe Nation-in-Arms in French Republican MemoryAlan Forrest
This major contribution to the study of collective identity and memory in France examines the French republican myth that the nation can be adequately defended only by its own citizens by analysing the image of the citizen army reflected in political speeches, textbooks, art and literature across the nineteenth century.Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare, 29
2009 228 x 152 mm 286pp 978-0-521-81062-3 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521810623
Forthcoming
European Legal HistoryA Cultural and Political PerspectiveRandall LesafferUniversiteit van Tilburg
Translated by Jan Arriens
This historical introduction to the civil law tradition considers the political and cultural context of Europe’s legal history from its Roman roots. Political, diplomatic and constitutional developments are discussed, and the impacts of major cultural movements, such as scholasticism, humanism, the Enlightenment and Romanticism, on law and jurisprudence are highlighted.2009 228 x 152 mm 544pp 1 table 978-0-521-87798-5 Hardback £65.00 978-0-521-70177-8 Paperback £27.99 Publication July 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521877985
Forthcoming
LiberatorsThe Allies and Belgian Society, 1944–1945Peter SchrijversUniversity of New South Wales, Sydney
In 1944 Belgium was liberated at lightning speed. Past accounts have focussed on the stunning Allied victories and the initial euphoria of liberation but chronic food and fuel shortages, rampant venereal disease, and
deteriorating discipline followed leading many Belgians to lament ‘from the liberators, oh Lord, liberate us’.Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare, 31
2009 228 x 152 mm 360pp 26 tones 2 maps 978-0-521-51482-8 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-73557-5 Paperback £19.99 Publication July 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521514828
new in PaPerback
Hungary from the Nazis to the SovietsThe Establishment of the Communist Regime in Hungary, 1944–1948Peter KenezUniversity of California, Santa Cruz
This is the first book in a Western language to describe in detail the establishment of a Communist regime in Hungary. Peter Kenez describes the methods of Communist conquest of power in one country in Eastern Europe and therefore allows us to better understand the origin of the Cold War.2009 228 x 152 mm 322pp 978-0-521-74724-0 Paperback £16.99www.cambridge.org/9780521747240
Forthcoming
The Image of EuropeVisualizing Europe in Cartography and Iconography throughout the AgesMichael WintleUniversiteit van Amsterdam
This richly-illustrated study of visual representations of Europe, from the classical world to the present day, charts how visualizations of the continent have altered over time and how they relate to as well as affect changing ideas of the extent and nature of Europe in relation to the other continents.Cambridge Studies in Historical Geography, 44
2009 246 x 189 mm 528pp 147 tones 11 maps 33 plates 978-0-521-88634-5 Hardback c. £65.00 Publication September 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521886345
26 Modern Britain and Europe
Forthcoming
The Final BattleSoldiers of the Western Front and the German Revolution of 1918Scott StephensonUnited States Army Command and General Staff College, Kansas
Examining the role of front-line soldiers in the German revolution of 1918, Scott Stephenson considers why their response to the revolution was so different from the rest of the army and the implications this would have for the course of the German Revolution and for the Weimar Republic itself.Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare, 30
2009 228 x 152 mm 376pp 30 tones 4 maps 978-0-521-51946-5 Hardback c. £55.00 Publication August 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521519465
Forthcoming
The Nuremberg SS-Einsatzgruppen Trial, 1945–1958Atrocity, Law, and HistoryHilary EarlNipissing University, Ontario
This book offers the first historical examination of the arrest, trial, and punishment of the leaders of the SS-Einsatzgruppen. The book examines recent historiographical trends and perpetrator paradigms, expounds on such contested issues as the timing and genesis of the Final Solution, the perpetrators’ route to crime and their motivation for killing, and extends the discussion to the tensions between law and history.2009 228 x 152 mm 344pp 10 tones 11 tables 978-0-521-45608-1 Hardback £50.00www.cambridge.org/9780521456081
Forthcoming
The Third Reich in the Ivory TowerComplicity and Conflict on American CampusesStephen H. NorwoodUniversity of Oklahoma
This is the first systematic exploration of the nature and extent of sympathy for Nazi Germany at American universities during the 1930s. Norwood contrasts the significant American grass-roots protest against Nazism that emerged
as soon as Hitler assumed power with campus quiescence.
‘Stephen Norwood’s groundbreaking research and eloquent pen have added immeasurably to our understanding of how Americans responded to Nazism in the 1930s. The Third Reich in the Ivory Tower reveals a painful but important chapter in our nation’s history.’David S. Wyman, author of The Abandonment of the Jews: America and the Holocaust, 1941–1945
2009 228 x 152 mm 352pp 21 tones 978-0-521-76243-4 Hardback £20.00 Publication June 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521762434
Forthcoming
Yalta 1945Europe and America at the CrossroadsFraser J. HarbuttEmory University, Atlanta
This book examines Allied diplomacy from 1941 to 1946, challenging Americocentric views and highlighting the significance of Europe’s diplomatic role. Harbutt argues that the Yalta conference of February 1945 was a pivotal moment that signaled a shift from a pre-existing ‘Europe/America’ framework to the ‘East/West’ conception that led to the Cold War.2009 234 x 156 mm 390pp 978-0-521-85677-5 Hardback c. £22.00 Publication December 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521856775
Forthcoming
Dictatorship of the AirAviation Culture and the Fate of Modern RussiaScott W. PalmerWestern Illinois University
Focusing on one of the last untold chapters in the history of human flight, Dictatorship of the Air is the first book to explain the true story behind twentieth-century Russia’s quest for aviation prominence. Based on nearly a decade of scholarly research, but written with general readers in mind, this is the only account to answer the question ‘What is ‘Russian’ about Russian aviation?’
‘This is a commendable and interesting book, illustrated with contemporary photographs and posters.’The Slavonic and East European Review (SEER)
Cambridge Centennial of Flight
2009 228 x 152 mm 328pp 978-0-521-13043-1 Paperback £18.99www.cambridge.org/9780521130431
Forthcoming
Operation Barbarossa and Germany’s Defeat in the EastDavid Stahel
A fundamental reassessment of Germany’s 1941 campaign against the Soviet Union – a key turning point of the Second World War. David Stahel highlights the enormous internal problems of the vital panzer forces and reveals that their demise in the earliest phase of the war undermined the whole German invasion.Cambridge Military Histories
2009 228 x 152 mm 512pp 20 tones 16 maps 2 tables 7 graphs 978-0-521-76847-4 Hardback c. £55.00 Publication September 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521768474
Forthcoming
Inventing a Socialist NationHeimat and the Politics of Everyday Life in the GDR, 1945–90Jan PalmowskiKing’s College London
Jan Palmowski shows how ‘national’ identity was invented in the German Democratic Republic and how citizens engaged with it, exposing the reasons why individuals found it hard to identify with the GDR and explaining how an apparently stable society fell apart with such ease when the revolution came.New Studies in European History
2009 228 x 152 mm 376pp 25 tones 2 maps 978-0-521-11177-5 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication November 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521111775
Forthcoming
Italian VicesNation and Character from the Risorgimento to the PresentSilvana PatriarcaFordham University, New York
Shedding new light on Italian political culture, this fascinating study of Italian national character and its vices shows how they first became a political issue during the struggle for national independence and that they were consequently shaped by foreign images, stereotypes of the Italians and changing political and intellectual contexts.2010 228 x 152 mm 350pp 9 tones 978-0-521-76101-7 Hardback c. £55.00 Publication January 2010www.cambridge.org/9780521761017
World History 27
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World History
Networks of EmpireForced Migration in the Dutch East India CompanyKerry WardRice University, Houston
In this examination of the Dutch East India Company, Ward grapples with the theoretical nature of empire, examines how empires exist through the movement and control of people within their realms, and proposes a new concept of diaspora, demonstrating how all empires have unique networks of free and forced migration.Studies in Comparative World History
2009 228 x 152 mm 356pp 6 maps 978-0-521-88586-7 Hardback £45.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521885867
Global LivesBritain and the World, 1550–1800Miles OgbornQueen Mary, University of London
Fascinating account of Britain’s rise as a global imperial power told through dramatic biographical narratives of over forty individuals. Gives new life to the exploration of the history and geography of changing global relationships, including the slave trade, piracy, scientific voyaging in the Pacific and the settlement of North America.
‘Today’s most enthralling histories tell grand narratives of empires, oceans and peoples but can often lose touch with the human scale. Like some panoramic Plutarch, Miles Ogborn uses parallel lives to illustrate global processes. Global Lives weaves more than forty succinct biographies – some familiar, like those of Sir Walter Ralegh and Captain Cook, others hitherto obscure, like the Madras merchant Kasi Viranni’s and the Jamaican slave-woman Sarah Affir’s – into a kaleidoscopic account of Britain’s rise to world power. Ogborn’s remarkable book brings an empire to life through the lives that built the empire.David Armitage, Lloyd C. Blanfkein Professor of History, Harvard University
Cambridge Studies in Historical Geography, 41
2008 247 x 174 mm 368pp 40 tones 26 maps 7 tables 978-0-521-84501-4 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-60718-6 Paperback £17.99www.cambridge.org/9780521845014
textbook
The Atlantic WorldEuropeans, Africans, Indians and Their Shared History, 1400–1900Thomas BenjaminCentral Michigan University
The Atlantic World provides a comprehensive and lucid history of one of the most important and impactful cross-cultural encounters in human history. It describes the transformation of European, African, and American societies and the growth of new peoples, cultures, economies, and ideas between 1400 and 1900.Contents: Part I. The Oceans Shall Unloose the Bonds of Things: 1. Antecedents: the Americas, Africa and Europe in the fifteenth century; 2. Commencement: the European opening of the Atlantic ocean; 3. Conquests: forging the Iberian empires in Africa and the Americas; 4. Realms: the overseas empires of Spain and Portugal; Part II. Europe Supported by Africa and America: 5. Incursions: French, English and Dutch invasions of the Iberian Atlantic; 6. Engagement: the entangled worlds of Indians and Europeans; 7. Uprooted: West Africa, the Americas, and the Atlantic slave trade; 8. Bondage: the Atlantic plantation complex and the cultures of slaves; 9. Partners: women and men in the making of the Atlantic world; Part III. A New Order of the Ages: 10. Rivals: Britain and France in the long eighteenth century; 11. Liberty: the Atlantic world in the age of revolution; 12. Equality: the Atlantic world in the age of revolution; 13. Freedom: the abolition of the Atlantic slave trade and new world slavery.2009 253 x 177 mm 752pp 60 tones 40 maps 37 tables 978-0-521-85099-5 Hardback £60.00 978-0-521-61649-2 Paperback £24.99www.cambridge.org/9780521850995
Drawing the Global Colour LineWhite Men’s Countries and the International Challenge of Racial EqualityMarilyn LakeLa Trobe University, Victoria
and Henry ReynoldsUniversity of Tasmania
Pioneering study of the construction of self-styled white men’s countries from South Africa, to North America and Australasia.Critical Perspectives on Empire
2008 228 x 152 mm 382pp 978-0-521-88118-0 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-70752-7 Paperback £17.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521881180
Humour and Social ProtestEdited by Dennis BosUniversiteit Leiden
and Marjolein t’HartUniversiteit van Amsterdam
Examines the power of humour in framing social and political protest.2008 228 x 152 mm 312pp 978-0-521-72214-8 Paperback £17.99www.cambridge.org/9780521722148
The Return of the GuildsVolume 16Edited by Tine De MoorUniversiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands
Jan LucassenInternationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis, Amsterdam
and Jan Luiten van ZandenInternationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis, Amsterdam and Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands
New approaches in economic, social, labour and institutional history are revealing why guilds were established, and why they could maintain themselves for such a long time. This volume attempts to set up a comparative framework to analyse guilds in the period between Classical Antiquity and the Industrial Revolution.International Review of Social History Supplements
2009 228 x 152 mm 276pp 978-0-521-73765-4 Paperback £17.99www.cambridge.org/9780521737654
Transactions of the Royal Historical SocietySixth SeriesVolume 17Edited by Ian W. ArcherUniversity of Oxford
A collection of major articles representing some of the best historical research.Royal Historical Society Transactions, 17
2009 228 x 152 mm 232pp 14 tones 978-0-521-89605-4 Hardback £40.00www.cambridge.org/9780521896054
28 World History / America
Transactions of the Royal Historical SocietySixth SeriesVolume 18Edited by Ian W. ArcherUniversity of Oxford
The Transactions of the Royal Historical Society publish an annual collection of major articles representing some of the best historical research by some of the world’s most distinguished historians.Royal Historical Society Transactions
2009 228 x 152 mm 284pp 978-0-521-42965-8 Hardback £40.00www.cambridge.org/9780521429658
Historical Justice in International PerspectiveHow Societies are Trying to Right the Wrongs of the PastEdited by Manfred BergRuprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, Germany
and Bernd SchaeferGerman Historical Institute, Washington DC
This book makes a valuable contribution to recent debates on redress for historical injustices, offering a broad array of case studies from nine different countries on five continents. Its essays highlight the diversity of claims and movements and of the ways in which societies have tried to right past wrongs. Publications of the German Historical Institute
2008 228 x 152 mm 332pp 978-0-521-87683-4 Hardback £50.00www.cambridge.org/9780521876834
Securing the PastConservation in Art, Architecture and LiteraturePaul EggertUniversity of New South Wales at ADFA, Canberra
The concept and practice of restoration in all its forms are entangled in many contemporary theoretical debates and problems. This book is the first concerted effort to examine together the linked philosophies of the different arts of preserving and uncovering the past.2009 228 x 152 mm 302pp 29 tones 978-0-521-89808-9 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-72591-0 Paperback £17.99www.cambridge.org/9780521898089
Forthcoming
The Horse in Human HistoryPita Kelekna
This book assesses the impact of the horse on human society from 4000 BC to AD 2000, by first describing initial horse domestication on the Pontic-Caspian steppes and the early development of driving and riding technologies. It traces the radiation of newly mobile equestrian cultures across Europe, Asia, and North Africa. It then documents the transmission of steppe chariotry and cavalry to sedentary states, the high economic importance of the horse, and the socio-political evolution of equestrian empires, which from antiquity into the modern era expanded across continents.2009 228 x 152 mm 474pp 38 tones 5 maps 978-0-521-51659-4 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-73629-9 Paperback £19.99www.cambridge.org/9780521516594
America
Colonial American History
Exiles and PioneersEastern Indians in the Trans-Mississippi WestJohn P. BowesDartmouth College, New Hampshire
Exiles and Pioneers focuses on the experiences of Shawnee, Delaware, Wyandot, and Potawatomi Indians from the late 1700s to the 1860s.Studies in North American Indian History
2008 228 x 152 mm 286pp 978-0-521-85755-0 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-67419-5 Paperback £16.99www.cambridge.org/9780521857550
PaPerback Forthcoming
American SovereignsThe People and America’s Constitutional Tradition Before the Civil WarChristian G. FritzUniversity of New Mexico
American Sovereigns is a path-breaking interpretation of America’s political history and constitutionalism that analyzes the understanding of how the American people were to rule as a collective sovereign. National and state political controversies produced choices that shaped the current American view
of the meaning of the sovereignty of the people.
‘In one of the most significant contributions to rethinking the nature and function of constitutionalism that this reviewer has encountered in many years, promising historian-lawyer Fritz (Univ. of New Mexico) has taken a new look at the role of popular sovereignty in conflicts over the nature of constitutionalism in the US … A highly accessible, nicely produced, and beautifully researched and written book that is a must read for historians and teachers of public law.’S. N. Katz, Princeton University
Choice Outstanding Academic Title 2008 – Winner
Cambridge Studies on the American Constitution
2008 234 x 156 mm 440pp 978-0-521-88188-3 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-12560-4 Paperback £18.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521881883
The Crisis of ImprisonmentProtest, Politics, and the Making of the American Penal State, 1776–1941Rebecca M. McLennanUniversity of California, Berkeley
This book offers a sweeping reinterpretation of American penal history between the Revolution and World War II.Cambridge Historical Studies in American Law and Society
2008 228 x 152 mm 520pp 978-0-521-83096-6 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-53783-4 Paperback £19.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521830966
Women, Work and Family in the Antebellum Mountain SouthWilma A. DunawayVirginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
The nature of female labor in the antebellum Appalachian South was shaped by race, ethnicity, and/or class positions.2008 234 x 156 mm 320pp 10 tables 978-0-521-88619-2 Hardback £50.00www.cambridge.org/9780521886192
America 29
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A Population History of the Huron-Petun, A.D. 500–1650Gary Warrick
This is the first population history to trace a Native American group from their origins to their first European contact.Studies in North American Indian History
2008 228 x 152 mm 312pp 22 tables 978-0-521-44030-1 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521440301
Slavery, Capitalism and Politics in the Antebellum RepublicVolume 2: The Coming of the Civil War, 1850–1861John AshworthUniversity of Nottingham
This book asks why the United States experienced a civil war in 1861 and analyses the descent into war in the final decade of peace.2008 228 x 152 mm 694pp 978-0-521-88592-8 Hardback £60.00 978-0-521-71369-6 Paperback £21.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521885928
new in PaPerback
Dred Scott and the Problem of Constitutional EvilMark A. GraberUniversity of Maryland, College Park
Dred Scott and the Problem of Constitutional Evil offers a new interpretation of the constitutional law and politics of slavery.Cambridge Studies on the American Constitution
2008 234 x 156 mm 288pp 978-0-521-72857-7 Paperback £13.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521728577
Military Education and the Emerging Middle Class in the Old SouthJennifer R. GreenCentral Michigan University
Green argues that military education was an important institution in the development of the southern middle class in the late antebellum years. She explores class formation, professionalization, and social mobility in the 1840s and 1850s to define the middle class on a national level, while identifying regionally specific
characteristics of the emerging southern middle class.
‘Jennifer Green’s smart new book, Military Education and the Emerging Middle Class in the Old South, puts social class front and center on the southern history table. … This well-written volume strikes a fine balance between establishing the importance of military education in the Old South and highlighting its critical role in the development of a southern middle class, and is a welcome and important contribution to all studies on social mobility.’Michele Gillespie, Wake Forrest University
2008 228 x 152 mm 314pp 10 tones 5 tables 978-0-521-89493-7 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521894937
Creating AbundanceBiological Innovation and American Agricultural DevelopmentAlan L. OlmsteadUniversity of California, Davis
and Paul W. RhodeUniversity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
This book demonstrates that American agricultural development was far more dynamic than generally portrayed. In the two centuries before World War II, a stream of biological innovations revolutionized the crop and livestock sectors, increasing both land and labor productivity.
‘This is an important book! It traces the stream of biological innovation that over a period of two centuries has transformed the technical landscape of American agriculture. … It will be the standard against which the next generation of research in the history of agricultural technology will be evaluated.’Vernon W. Ruttan, Regents Professor Emeritus, Department of Applied Economics and Department of Economics, University of Minnesota
2008 228 x 152 mm 480pp 35 tones 7 plates 978-0-521-85711-6 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-67387-7 Paperback £15.99www.cambridge.org/9780521857116
James Madison and the Spirit of Republican Self-GovernmentColleen A. SheehanVillanova University, Pennsylvania
In the first study that combines an in-depth examination of Madison’s National Gazette essays of 1791–92 with a study of The Federalist, Colleen
Sheehan traces the evolution of Madison’s conception of the politics of communication and public opinion throughout the Founding period, demonstrating how ‘the sovereign public’ would form and rule in America.
‘Sheehan’s engaging account of America’s beginnings enlarges our understanding of the hopes and fears, successes and failures, not only of a notable man but of a generation of founders.’Ralph Lerner, University of Chicago
2009 228 x 152 mm 224pp 10 tables 978-0-521-89874-4 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-72733-4 Paperback £15.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521898744
Forthcoming
John Brown’s War against SlaveryRobert E. McGloneUniversity of Hawaii, Manoa
Drawing on both new and neglected evidence, this book reconstructs Old John Brown’s aborted ‘war’ to free the 3.8 million slaves in the American South before the Civil War. It critiques misleading sources that either exalt Brown’s ‘heroism’ and noble purpose or condemn his ‘monomania’ and ‘lawlessness’.
‘Robert McGlone, in his compelling new study of John Brown, has resituated a major figure in American history. John Brown’s War on Slavery carefully dissects the ideals and motives of the controversial Brown. Rejecting conclusions that have polarized our national understandings, McGlone instead presents a nuanced interpretation of John Brown that is thoroughly exhaustive in terms of research, but at the same time, in that most difficult of achievements, immensely readable.’Jean H Baker, Goucher College
2009 234 x 156 mm 464pp 32 tones 978-0-521-51443-9 Hardback £25.00 Publication July 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521514439
Mass Migration Under SailEuropean Immigration to the Antebellum United StatesRaymond L. CohnIllinois State University
Dr Cohn provides a comprehensive analysis of the economic history of European immigration to the antebellum United States. This analysis centers on the three most important source countries – Ireland, Germany, and Great
30 America
Britain – and examines the volume of immigration; where the immigrants came from within each country; their trip to the United States, including estimates of mortality on the Atlantic crossing; and the economic effects on both the immigrants and the United States.
‘An absorbing, lucid, and beautifully crafted book. … This is international economic history at its best.’Cormac Ó Gráda, University College Dublin, author of Famine: A Short History
2009 228 x 152 mm 270pp 11 line figures 1 map 27 tables 978-0-521-51322-7 Hardback £45.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521513227
Mastering AmericaSouthern Slaveholders and the Crisis of American NationhoodRobert E. BonnerDartmouth College, New Hampshire
Mastering America recounts efforts of ‘proslavery nationalists’ to navigate the nineteenth-century geopolitics of imperialism, federalism, and nationalism and to articulate themes of American mission in overtly proslavery terms. Bonner’s research sheds new light on the relationship between the conservative Unionism of the 1850s and the key formulations of Confederate nationalism that arose during war in the 1860s.
‘The American Civil War was, above all, a contest over competing nationalist claims to independence and union. In this fascinating book Robert Bonner offers the first in-depth analysis of the intellectual framework for the South’s claim to nationhood. It is an impressive display of research and interpretation that casts an entirely new light on the debates over slavery, race, region, and nation. As we approach the sesquicentennial of the Civil War, this is a book everyone with an interest in the subject will want to read.’Don H. Doyle, University of South Carolina
Cambridge Studies on the American South
2009 228 x 152 mm 368pp 14 tones 978-0-521-83395-0 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-54177-0 Paperback £15.99www.cambridge.org/9780521833950
Forthcoming
A Government Out of SightThe Mystery of National Authority in Nineteenth-Century AmericaBrian BaloghUniversity of Virginia
A Government Out of Sight revises our understanding of the ways in which Americans turned to the national government throughout the nineteenth century. It fundamentally alters our perspective on American political development in the twentieth century, shedding light on government programs and subsidies that even today remain ‘out of sight.’
‘Brian Balogh recasts our understanding of the role of government in the United States. His ambitious and elegant interpretation changes the plot line of American history, replacing fantasies of ungoverned freedom and iconoclastic reformers with a deeper story, cutting against some of the most enduring myths of American history.’Edward L. Ayers, University of Richmond
2009 228 x 152 mm 432pp 978-0-521-82097-4 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-52786-6 Paperback £13.99www.cambridge.org/9780521820974
Forthcoming
The Reign of Terror in AmericaVisions of Violence from Anti-Jacobinism to AntislaveryRachel Hope ClevesNorthern Illinois University
The Reign of Terror in America argues that American fears of the violence of the French Revolution led to antislavery, antiwar, and public education movements in the nineteenth-century United States. It is the first history of how Americans perceived the Reign of Terror, and reveals how significantly fears of French violence changed the United States.
‘Historians have had a long debate over the implications of the Calvinist-Federalist response to the French Revolution. In The Reign of Terror in America, Rachel Hope Cleves definitively answers this question by focusing on their passionate condemnation of Jacobin violence and its enduring influence. Federalists feared the spread of violent mayhem to the United States, but as the Jacobin threat waned, they and their children began to turn their sights on the violence of slavery. Cleves establishes beyond
dispute the complex ways in which the anti-Jacobin political culture shaped antebellum northern opinion, informing opposition to the War of 1812, the rise of a peace movement, the abolitionist response to slavery, and the northern mobilization for war in 1861. The Reign of Terror in America makes a major contribution to the history of violence in America, and to the history of American political culture.’John L. Brooke, Ohio State University
2009 228 x 152 mm 312pp 8 tones 1 table 978-0-521-88435-8 Hardback £50.00www.cambridge.org/9780521884358
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The Democratization of InventionPatents and Copyrights in American Economic Development, 1790–1920B. Zorina KhanBowdoin College, Maine
This book examines the evolution and impact of American intellectual property rights during the ‘long nineteenth century.’ America is compared to Britain and France, whose institutions reflected their oligarchic origins. The United States created the first modern patent system and its politics were the most liberal world wide toward inventors.2009 228 x 152 mm 340pp 978-0-521-74720-2 Paperback £19.99www.cambridge.org/9780521747202
Forthcoming
The Untilled GardenNatural History and the Spirit of Conservation in America, 1740–1840Richard W. JuddUniversity of Maine, Orono
This study follows a generation of American naturalists across the Appalachian Mountains and into the middle-western frontier and lays before the reader their impressions of a vast natural world soon to become a domesticated landscape of fields, meadows, and pastures.Studies in Environment and History
2009 228 x 152 mm 300pp 14 tones 978-0-521-50998-5 Hardback c. £50.00 978-0-521-72984-0 Paperback c. £17.99 Publication July 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521509985
America 31
eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/online
Early Republic and Antebellum American History
Church and State in AmericaThe First Two CenturiesJames H. HutsonLibrary of Congress, Washington DC
Hutson examines ideas and public policies relating to the relationship between government and religion from 1607 to 1837.Cambridge Essential Histories
2008 228 x 152 mm 220pp 978-0-521-86493-0 Hardback £35.00 978-0-521-68343-2 Paperback £17.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521864930
Slavery in White and BlackClass and Race in the Southern Slaveholders’ New World OrderElizabeth Fox-Genoveseand Eugene D. Genovese
In the Old South a doctrine emerged – ‘Slavery in the Abstract’, which declared enslavement the best possible condition for all labor regardless of race. They joined the Socialists in believing that the free-labor system, wracked by worsening class warfare, was collapsing. This book asks, to what extent did the people of the several social classes of the South accept so extreme a doctrine?2008 234 x 156 mm 332pp 978-0-521-89700-6 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-72181-3 Paperback £14.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521897006
Political Moderation in America’s First Two CenturiesRobert McCluer CalhoonUniversity of North Carolina, Greensboro
Political Moderation in America’s First Two Centuries corrects the popular misconception of moderation as timidity and caution. The author examines the structure of moderate political thought; analyzes moderate apprehensions, values, and visions of the future; and depicts moderation, not as a life long conviction, but as a journey from other political stances toward the moral center of politics.
‘Raymond Chandler observed that there are no dull subjects, only dull minds. Political moderation must seem the dullest of subjects, but in the hands of Robert Calhoon, a gifted
historian, it emerges not only as illuminating history but as imperative for an understanding of our own tortured times.’Eugene D. Genovese, author of Roll, Jordan, Roll and Mind of the Master Class, with Elizabeth Fox-Genovese, (Cambridge University Press, 2005)
2008 228 x 152 mm 310pp 978-0-521-51554-2 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-73416-5 Paperback £16.99www.cambridge.org/9780521515542
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The First Way of WarAmerican War Making on the Frontier, 1607–1814John GrenierUnited States Air Force
This book explores the evolution of Americans’ first way of war, to show how war waged against Indian noncombatant population and agricultural resources became the method early Americans employed and, ultimately, defined their military heritage.2008 228 x 152 mm 246pp 978-0-521-73263-5 Paperback £16.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521732635
Quaker Constitutionalism and the Political Thought of John DickinsonJane E. CalvertUniversity of Kentucky
Seventeenth-century Quakers originated a unique strain of constitutionalism, based on their theology and ecclesiology. They imagined a permanent, written constitution that was amendable through popular peaceful protest, something that most scholars believe did not exist until the American Founding. Out of this theory came the practice of civil disobedience.2009 234 x 156 mm 396pp 13 tones 978-0-521-88436-5 Hardback £55.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521884365
Jewish Immigrants and American Capitalism, 1880–1920From Caste to ClassEli LederhendlerHebrew University of Jerusalem
In Jewish Immigrants and American Capitalism, 1880–1920: From Caste to Class, Eli Lederhendler revises common assumptions about the immigration of Russian Jews to the United States,
demonstrating that the characteristics responsible for their image as a ‘model’ immigrant minority were not inherent but developed through a realignment of Jewish social values in response to their new experiences.
‘The level of scholarship is superb … This is an outstanding, original study that will, quite possibly, fundamentally change the way we think about American Jewish history.’Tony Michels, University of Wisconsin-Madison
2009 228 x 152 mm 248pp 2 line figures 5 tones 1 map 7 tables 978-0-521-51360-9 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-73023-5 Paperback £16.99www.cambridge.org/9780521513609
Forthcoming
The Fisherman’s CauseAtlantic Commerce and Maritime Dimensions of the American RevolutionChristopher P. MagraCalifornia State University, Northridge
In the first book-length examination of the connections between the commercial fishing industry in colonial America and the American Revolution, Christopher Magra considers why colonial fishermen and fish merchants resisted British authority during the imperial crisis and how the fishing industry was mobilized for the war effort, underscoring the pivotal maritime activities that secured American independence.
‘Christopher Magra demonstrates the significance of the Atlantic context during the era of the American Revolution. He examines the economic importance of New England’s Atlantic fishery and how the British government’s attempts to curb that enterprise led directly to American independence. Magra also reveals the signal contributions that Massachusetts fishermen and fish merchants made to the origins of the United States Navy. Thoroughly researched and clearly written, The Fisherman’s Cause will appeal to anyone interested in the Atlantic world and the American Revolution as well as students of economic, maritime, and naval history.’Carl E. Swanson, East Carolina University
2009 228 x 152 mm 256pp 978-0-521-51838-3 Hardback £40.00www.cambridge.org/9780521518383
32 America
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Transatlantic EncountersAmerican Indians in Britain, 1500–1776Alden T. VaughanColumbia University, New York
Transatlantic Encounters highlights the remarkably disparate men, women, and children who went as captive showpieces (common in the early years), slaves (especially in the middle years), or ambassadors to the British monarchy (numerous after 1710). Many died abroad, but most survived for months or years and returned to America with vital information to impart and heightened influence to use for – or against – the British Empire.
‘This book has been needed for a long time. Transatlantic Encounters is groundbreaking in the range and thoroughness of its coverage. … For years to come it will serve as an indispensable resource for the study of Indians in Britain and of Indian-English contact, not to mention the many individuals treated in its pages.’Journal of American Ethnic History
2009 228 x 152 mm 364pp 978-0-521-73817-0 Paperback £14.99www.cambridge.org/9780521738170
Forthcoming
National Security and Core Values in American HistoryWilliam O. Walker IIIUniversity of Toronto
William O. Walker III presents a new interpretation of the history of American exceptionalism. He argues that a political economy of expansion and the quest for security led officials to equate prosperity and safety with global engagement. They consequently developed a ‘security ethos,’ which ultimately damaged the nation’s core values and impaired popular participation in public affairs.2009 228 x 152 mm 352pp 978-0-521-51859-8 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-74010-4 Paperback £15.99www.cambridge.org/9780521518598
Modern American History
The Myth of the Eastern FrontThe Nazi-Soviet War in American Popular CultureRonald SmelserUniversity of Utah
and Edward J. Davies llUniversity of Utah
Some Americans are receptive to a positive interpretation of German military conduct on the Russian front in World War II. 2008 228 x 152 mm 342pp 978-0-521-83365-3 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-71231-6 Paperback £14.99www.cambridge.org/9780521833653
A Faustian Foreign Policy from Woodrow Wilson to George W. BushDreams of PerfectibilityJoan HoffMontana State University
This book critiques U.S. foreign policy since 1920 by showing how moralistic diplomacy has increasingly assumed Faustian overtones. 2008 234 x 156 mm 316pp 978-0-521-87905-7 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-71404-4 Paperback £15.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521879057
Nuclear ImplosionsThe Rise and Fall of the Washington Public Power Supply SystemDaniel Pope
Daniel Pope follows the collapse of a small public agency’s attempts to build five nuclear power plants in the 1970s.2008 228 x 152 mm 302pp 7 tables 978-0-521-40253-8 Hardback £55.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521402538
The Cold War and the United States Information AgencyAmerican Propaganda and Public Diplomacy, 1945–1989Nicholas J. CullUniversity of Southern California
Published at a time when the U.S. government’s public diplomacy is in crisis, this book tells how it used to be done. The United States Information Agency was created in 1953 to ‘tell
America’s story to the world’ and became an essential element of American Cold War foreign policy.
‘At a time when public diplomacy is more important than ever before, Nick Cull has provided a comprehensive examination that should be of great value to professionals, scholars, and concerned citizens.’Melvyn P. Leffler, Stettinius Professor of American History, University of Virginia
2008 228 x 152 mm 600pp 978-0-521-81997-8 Hardback £60.00www.cambridge.org/9780521819978
Inventing VietnamThe United States and State Building, 1954–1968James M. CarterDrew University, New Jersey
Carter argues that the Vietnam war resulted from failed U.S. state-building efforts in Vietnam.2008 228 x 152 mm 276pp 15 tones 978-0-521-88865-3 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-71690-1 Paperback £15.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521888653
After BushThe Case for Continuity in American Foreign PolicyTimothy J. LynchInstitute for the Study of the Americas, University of London
and Robert S. SinghBirkbeck College, University of London
In a provocative argument, running counter to the majority of analyses, Lynch and Singh support the foreign policy of the George W. Bush administration and make the case for continuity. They suggest that the Bush doctrine should remain the basis which shapes America’s approach in the future.
‘Lynch and Singh make a compelling case that the Bush doctrine will outlast the current American president, and they assemble considerable evidence to show that fundamental components of the doctrine are consistent with foreign policy tradition. The authors skilfully depersonalize the debate about American foreign policy in order to move beyond the current obsession with George W. Bush.’Robert J. Lieber, Professor of Government and International Affairs, Georgetown University
2008 228 x 152 mm 396pp 1 line figure 6 graphs 978-0-521-88004-6 Hardback £20.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521880046
America 33
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Making a New DealIndustrial Workers in Chicago, 1919–1939Second editionLizabeth CohenHarvard University, Massachusetts
This book examines what it meant for ordinary factory workers to become effective unionists and national political participants by the mid-1930s. Through decisions such as whether to attend ethnic benefit society meetings or go to the movies, they declared their loyalty in ways that would ultimately have political significance. 2008 228 x 152 mm 568pp 37 tones 2 maps 15 tables 978-0-521-88748-9 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-71535-5 Paperback £17.99www.cambridge.org/9780521887489
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America TransformedSixty Years of Revolutionary Change, 1941–2001Richard M. AbramsUniversity of California, Berkeley
This book examines the period 1941–2001 during which time the character of American life changed rapidly.2008 234 x 156 mm 368pp 978-0-521-72211-7 Paperback £16.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521722117
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From Roosevelt to TrumanPotsdam, Hiroshima, and the Cold WarWilson D. MiscambleUniversity of Notre Dame, Indiana
Was there essential continuity in policy from FDR to Truman or did Truman’s arrival in the Oval Office prompt a sharp reversal away from the approach of his illustrious predecessor? This study explores this controversial issue and in the process casts important light on the outbreak of the Cold War.
‘Wilson D. Miscamble has explored this transition to good effect in a meticulously researched and forcefully argued work of diplomatic history. … From Roosevelt to Truman provides a vigorous, detailed and orthodox account of a pivotal period in US foreign policy and world history, and demonstrates that even a well-trodden area of research can be re-enlivened to stimulate further thought and debate.’Contemporary Review
2008 234 x 156 mm 416pp 978-0-521-72858-4 Paperback £14.99www.cambridge.org/9780521728584
Religion and American Foreign Policy, 1945–1960The Soul of ContainmentWilliam InbodenThe Legatum Institute
The Cold War was in many ways a religious war. Presidents Truman and Eisenhower and many other Americans opposed communism because of its hostility to religion. Since American Protestant churches were divided, American political leaders constructed a new civil religion to mobilize domestic support, to determine the boundaries of containment, to unite people against communism, and to undermine communist governments abroad.
‘This is an essential book for historians of recent foreign policy and students of the contemporary religious scene.’Leo Ribuffo, George Washington University
2008 228 x 152 mm 368pp 978-0-521-51347-0 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521513470
Nixon, Kissinger, and U.S. Foreign Policy MakingThe Machinery of CrisisAsaf SiniverUniversity of Birmingham
Siniver examines the workings of the Washington Special Actions Group during four Nixon-era foreign policy crises. His examination of previously classified material about the group reveals much about the linkage between structures, processes, and personalities in crisis decision-making, and potential its impact on the quality and outcome of foreign policy decisions. 2008 228 x 152 mm 270pp 17 tones 978-0-521-89762-4 Hardback £45.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521897624
The Limits of VoluntarismCharity and Welfare from the New Deal through the Great SocietyAndrew J. F. MorrisUnion College, New York
This book demonstrates how charities embraced public welfare in the era following the New Deal. Relieved of providing money to the needy, charities instead offered counseling and other therapeutic services. Morris traces the
creation and erosion of this public/private division of labor and suggests its implications for contemporary public policy.
‘Andrew Morris shows the persistence of the voluntary agency in America’s social welfare provision in this engaging and well-researched book. In the process he makes a contribution that will alter the course of scholarship on the American welfare state.’Edward D. Berkowitz, George Washington University
2009 228 x 152 mm 284pp 9 tones 978-0-521-88957-5 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521889575
Forthcoming
All the Way with LBJThe 1964 Presidential ElectionRobert David JohnsonBrooklyn College, City University of New York
All the Way with LBJ examines the full range of LBJ tapes, analysing the 1964 presidential campaign and the political culture of the mid-1960s. The book looks at the impact of race on the political process, the question of politicians’ personal and political ethics, and the tensions between politics and public policy.
‘Robert David Johnson makes expert use of the White House tapes to add a whole new dimension to our understanding of a key historical event. His nuanced account of the 1964 election reminds us that political history can be both entertaining and enlightening.’Edward Berkowitz, George Washington University
2009 228 x 152 mm 324pp 17 tones 978-0-521-42595-7 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-73752-4 Paperback £14.99www.cambridge.org/9780521425957
The G.I. BillKathleen J. FrydlUniversity of California, Berkeley
In the first comprehensive study of the GI Bill to use the records of the Veterans Administration, Kathleen J. Frydl demonstrates the multiple ways in which the GI Bill illustrates important aspects of federal power, including its reach, limits, and effects.
‘Kathleen Frydl’s history of the G.I. Bill illuminates both the legislation itself and the way Congress operated in the mid-1940s. She has also fused her study of the political history of the Act to an examination of its social and cultural origins and effects as it
34 America / Latin America / Asia
became, in popular parlance, the G.I. Bill of Rights. It is an exceptionally impressive work of scholarship.’Alan Brinkley, Columbia University
2009 228 x 152 mm 396pp 4 tones 978-0-521-51424-8 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521514248
Forthcoming
The Permissive SocietyAmerica, 1941–1965Alan PetignyUniversity of Florida
In contrast to those who see the 1950s as essentially a conservative period, The Permissive Society points to the emergence of a liberalizing impulse during the Truman and Eisenhower years. The book shows how, during the 1950s, a traditionalist moral framework was beginning to give way to a less authoritarian approach to moral issues.2009 228 x 152 mm 232pp 3 line figures 29 tones 2 tables 978-0-521-88896-7 Hardback c. £45.00 978-0-521-75722-5 Paperback c. £14.99 Publication September 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521888967
Forthcoming
Triumph ForsakenThe Vietnam War, 1954-1965Mark MoyarMarine Corps University
Drawing on a wealth of new evidence from all sides, Triumph Forsaken overturns most of the historical orthodoxy on the Vietnam War. The book provides many new insights into the overthrow of South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem and the policy options that could have enabled South Vietnam to continue the war without a massive US troop infusion.
‘The most noteworthy aspect of Triumph Forsaken is surely the depth and range of its research … Moyar has provided those who take their history seriously with a stunning performance, and plenty to think about.’Times Literary Supplement
2009 228 x 152 mm 544pp 4 line figures 10 tones 4 maps 978-0-521-75763-8 Paperback £14.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521757638
Latin America
Bankruptcy of EmpireMexican Silver and the Wars Between Spain, Britain and France, 1760–1810Carlos MarichalColegio de México
Emphasizes that the expenditures of the imperial wars were so great they eventually bankrupted the monarchy.Cambridge Latin American Studies, 91
2008 228 x 152 mm 336pp 28 tables 978-0-521-87964-4 Hardback £45.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521879644
Chica da SilvaA Brazilian Slave of the Eighteenth CenturyJúnia Ferreira FurtadoFederal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil
A fascinating study of Chica da Silva, a freed woman of color in a Brazilian town. Her story reveals the world she inhabited, and the myths that were later created around her. She came to symbolise both racial democracy, and the stereotypes attributed to the Brazilian black or mulatta female.New Approaches to the Americas
2009 228 x 152 mm 348pp 978-0-521-88465-5 Hardback £35.00 978-0-521-71155-5 Paperback £15.99www.cambridge.org/9780521884655
The Political Economy of Argentina in the Twentieth CenturyRoberto Cortés CondeUniversidad de San Andres, Argentina
In this work, Roberto Cortés Conde describes and explains the decline of the Argentine economy, its evolution, and its consequences. This work of historical analysis defines the most important problems faced by the Argentine economy. Some of these problems were fundamental, while others occurred without being properly considered, but in their entirety, Cortés Conde demonstrates how they had a deleterious effect on the country.Cambridge Latin American Studies, 92
2009 228 x 152 mm 404pp 3 tones 4 maps 94 tables 978-0-521-88232-3 Hardback £50.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521882323
Asia
The Asian Military RevolutionFrom Gunpowder to the BombPeter A. LorgeVanderbilt University, Tennessee
This extraordinarily ambitious book traces the history of the invention of gunpowder by the Chinese in the 800s, and its impact on the surrounding Asian world from the ninth through the twentieth century. It is packed with information about military strategy, interregional warfare and the development of armaments.
‘This is an important study that students and teachers will find both informative and challenging. I thoroughly recommend it.’The Historical Association
New Approaches to Asian History, 3
2008 228 x 152 mm 200pp 9 maps 978-0-521-84682-0 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-60954-8 Paperback £15.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521846820
Cold War IslandQuemoy on the Front LineMichael SzonyiHarvard University, Massachusetts
During the height of the Cold War in the 1950s the small island of Quemoy in the Taiwan Strait was the front line in the military standoff between Chiang Kai-shek’s Republic of China and Mao Zedong’s People’s Republic. Michael Szonyi discusses the history of the island during this period.
‘…a thought-provoking antidote to all the literature that focuses on the ‘high politics’ of the Cold War, while ignoring its impact on local communities. Informative, well-written, and entertaining, it approaches the Cold War through local eyes, thus making a significant contribution to our understanding of the impact of this conflict around the globe.’Beth A. Fischer, University of Toronto
2008 228 x 152 mm 328pp 2 line figures 30 tones 2 maps 978-0-521-89813-3 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-72640-5 Paperback £17.99www.cambridge.org/9780521898133
Notes 35
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The Chinese Cultural RevolutionA HistoryPaul ClarkUniversity of Auckland
Clark analyzes the Cultural Revolution through the conflict between innovation and a top-down enforcement of modernity.2008 228 x 152 mm 368pp 978-0-521-87515-8 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-69786-6 Paperback £15.99www.cambridge.org/9780521875158
Japan RisingThe Iwakura Embassy to the USA and EuropeEdited by Chushichi TsuzukiHitotsubashi University, Tokyo
and R. Jules Young
In 1871 Japan sent a delegation to the USA and Europe. The report of this journey played a key role in Japan’s transformation into an industrial nation. This abridgement makes the report accessible to a wider range of scholars and students, and those interested in the rise of modern Japan.2009 228 x 152 mm 558pp 978-0-521-51385-2 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-73516-2 Paperback £17.99www.cambridge.org/9780521513852
Japanese Society at WarDeath, Memory and the Russo-Japanese WarNaoko ShimazuBirkbeck College, University of London
The Russo-Japanese War was the first international conflict of the twentieth century. Presenting fascinating insights into the attitudes of ordinary Japanese people towards the war, this innovative study sheds new light on the social and political complexities of Japanese society during this period and the war’s implications for modern Japan.Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare, 28
2009 228 x 152 mm 354pp 35 tones 2 maps 978-0-521-85934-9 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521859349
Forthcoming
China’s Early EmpiresA Re-appraisalEdited by Michael NylanPrinceton University, New Jersey
and Michael LoeweUniversity of Cambridge
Shows how archaeological discoveries of recent decades have widened and enriched our perception of the political and cultural history of China in the classical era (in particular 323 BCE-316 CE) and reflects the very newest scholarship by a team of international experts.University of Cambridge Oriental Publications, 67
2009 247 x 174 mm 700pp 123 tones 9 maps 20 plates 978-0-521-85297-5 Hardback c. £85.00 Publication October 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521852975
Forthcoming
The Japanese ConsumerAn Alternative Economic History of Modern JapanPenelope FrancksUniversity of Leeds
Penelope Francks’ book offers an alternative account of Japan’s modern economic history from the perspective of the consumer. Tracing Japan’s economy from the eighteenth century to the present, she shows how history has conditioned what Japanese people consume today and compares their experiences with those of Europe and North America.
‘… will provide an excellent introduction for all those with an interest in Japanese economic and social history … should find a place in courses aimed at both undergraduate and graduate students.’Janet Hunter, London School of Economics and Political Science
2009 228 x 152 mm 272pp 30 tones 1 map 7 tables 978-0-521-87596-7 Hardback c. £55.00 978-0-521-69932-7 Paperback c. £19.99 Publication November 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521875967
Bureaucracy and the State in Early ChinaGoverning the Western ZhouLi FengColumbia University, New York
Redefines the bureaucracy of Ancient Chinese society during the Western Zhou period. The analysis is based on inscriptions of royal edicts from the period carved into bronze vessels. The
inscriptions clarify the political and social construction of the Western Zhou and the ways in which it exercised its authority.
‘A significant study of systematic government in pre-imperial China that adds greatly to our understanding not only of Western Zhou but also of the early imperial period. The book fills what has been a serious gap in our knowledge in an impressive way.’Michael Loewe
2008 247 x 174 mm 400pp 18 line figures 18 tones 2 maps 6 tables 978-0-521-88447-1 Hardback £65.00www.cambridge.org/9780521884471
The Idea of IndonesiaA HistoryR. E. ElsonUniversity of Queensland
Traces the development of the idea of Indonesia from its origins to the present.2008 228 x 152 mm 394pp 33 tones 1 map 978-0-521-87648-3 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521876483
new in PaPerback
SuhartoA Political BiographyR. E. ElsonUniversity of Queensland
Fascinating insights into a man who rose to exert extraordinary power over a complex and volatile nation.2008 228 x 152 mm 432pp 978-0-521-61657-7 Paperback £19.99www.cambridge.org/9780521616577
Forthcoming
Islam and the Army in Colonial IndiaSepoy Religion in the Service of EmpireNile GreenUniversity of California, Los Angeles
A ground-breaking study of the cultural world of the Muslim soldiers of colonial India. Set in Hyderabad in the mid-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the book focuses on the soldiers’ relationships with the faqir holy men who protected them and the British officers they served.
‘This fascinating study of religious practice and religious change amongst the Muslim sepoys of the British Indian army confirms Nile Green’s position as one of the most gifted young scholars of South Asian History.’Francis Robinson, Royal Holloway, University of London
36 Notes / Middle East
Cambridge Studies in Indian History and Society, 16
2009 228 x 152 mm 236pp 10 tones 1 map 978-0-521-89845-4 Hardback £50.00www.cambridge.org/9780521898454
Forthcoming
The Partition of IndiaIan TalbotUniversity of Southampton
and Gurharpal SinghUniversity of Birmingham
An account of the partition of India detailing the events that led up to it, the terrors that accompanied it, and migration and resettlement. Accompanied by photographs, maps and a chronology of events, it is intended for students as a portal into the history and politics of the Asian region.New Approaches to Asian History
2009 228 x 152 mm 248pp 11 tones 5 maps 978-0-521-85661-4 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-67256-6 Paperback £17.99 Publication August 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521856614
Forthcoming
Imperial AlchemyNationalism and Political Identity in Southeast AsiaAnthony ReidNational University of Singapore
Using Southeast Asia as an example, this book tests contemporary theory about the relation between modernity, nationalism, and ethnic identity. The author develops his own typology to better fit the formation of political identities such as the Indonesian, Malay, Chinese, Acehnese, Batak and Kadazan.
‘Imperial Alchemy is a masterful historical account of how homogenizing ideologies and structures of the modern state transformed an already diverse set of identities into the current myriad forms of nationalist and political identities. Using his remarkable depth as one of the most respected historians of Southeast Asia, Reid skillfully traces the evolution of diverse political identities in various locations of the region, from their colonial legacies to the modern day, without sacrificing the richness of precision and detail. This book is a major contribution to the study of nationalism and ethnic identity in Southeast Asia.’Jacques Bertrand, University of Toronto
2009 228 x 152 mm 264pp 9 tones 3 maps 7 tables 978-0-521-87237-9 Hardback c. £55.00 978-0-521-69412-4 Paperback c. £17.99 Publication December 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521872379
Middle East
Iran’s Intellectual RevolutionMehran KamravaGeorgetown University, Washington DC
Since the 1979 revolution in Iran Kamrava argues that three competing ideologies have emerged – conservative, reformist and secular. These developments, which amount to an intellectual revolution, will have profound and far-reaching consequences for the future of the Islamic republic, its people and very probably for countries beyond its borders.Cambridge Middle East Studies, 29
2008 228 x 152 mm 288pp 4 tables 978-0-521-89799-0 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-72518-7 Paperback £32.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521897990
Forthcoming
The Far EnemyWhy Jihad Went GlobalSecond editionFawaz A. GergesSarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, New York
Fawaz Gerges’ book on al Qaeda and the jihadist movement has become a classic in the field since it was published in 2005. Revisiting The Far Enemy in this new edition, Gerges shows that not only have the jihadists split ranks, but those who previously supported al Qaeda are condemning its tactics as violent, unethical, and out of accord with the true meaning of jihad.2009 228 x 152 mm 400pp 978-0-521-51935-9 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-73743-2 Paperback £16.99www.cambridge.org/9780521519359
Sexual Politics in Modern IranJanet AfaryPurdue University, Indiana
Charts the history of Iran’s sexual revolution from the nineteenth century to today. The resilience of the Iranian people forms the basis of this sexual revolution, one that is promoting reforms in marriage and family laws, and
demanding more egalitarian gender and sexual relations.
‘… the work is seminal and extraordinary. Janet Afary has raised a high bar on the many, many issues surrounding the politics of gender and sexuality in Iran.’Thomas Ricks, Professor of Modern Iranian History
2009 228 x 152 mm 442pp 53 tones 1 map 978-0-521-89846-1 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-72708-2 Paperback £18.99www.cambridge.org/9780521898461
Mahdis and MillenariansShiite Extremists in Early Muslim IraqWilliam F. TuckerUniversity of Arkansas
Mahdis and Millenarians is a study of early extremist Shiites in Iraq and Iran. 2008 216 x 138 mm 204pp 978-0-521-88384-9 Hardback £50.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521883849
The War for PalestineRewriting the History of 1948Second editionEdited by Eugene L. RoganUniversity of Oxford
and Avi ShlaimUniversity of Oxford
The updated second edition of The War for Palestine presents the genesis of the Arab-Israeli conflict.Cambridge Middle East Studies, 15
2008 228 x 152 mm 310pp 3 maps 978-0-521-87598-1 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-69934-1 Paperback £16.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521875981
Forthcoming
Histories of City and State in the Persian GulfManama since 1800Nelida FuccaroUniversity of London
An examination of the political and social life of the Gulf city and its coastline, as exemplified by Manama in Bahrain. Written as an ethnography of space, politics and community, it addresses the changing relationship between urban development, politics
Middle East / Islam 37
eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/online
and society before and after the discovery of oil.Cambridge Middle East Studies, 30
2009 228 x 152 mm 240pp 21 tones 5 maps 978-0-521-51435-4 Hardback c. £55.00 Publication September 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521514354
Forthcoming
The Struggle for Arab IndependenceRiad el-Solh and the Makers of the Modern Middle EastPatrick Seale
Tells the story of the making of the modern Middle East through the life of Riad el-Solh, a Lebanese politician who grew into the outstanding Arab statesman of his time. The book pieces together the history of the Arab struggle for independence through the lives of those most directly involved.2009 228 x 152 mm 600pp 2 line figures 55 tones 6 maps 978-0-521-19137-1 Hardback c. £20.00 Publication November 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521191371
Forthcoming
Contending Visions of the Middle EastThe History and Politics of OrientalismSecond editionZachary LockmanNew York University
The second edition of Professor Lockman’s book brings his original analysis up to date by considering how the study of the Middle East has evolved in the intervening years, in the context of the U.S. occupation of Iraq and the ‘global war on terror’.The Contemporary Middle East, 3
2009 228 x 152 mm 320pp 6 maps 978-0-521-11587-2 Hardback c. £50.00 978-0-521-13307-4 Paperback c. £18.99 Publication December 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521115872
new edition
Money, Oil, and Empire in the Middle EastSterling and Postwar Imperialism, 1944–1971Steven G. Galpern
Examining events such as the Iranian oil nationalization crisis and the Suez crisis, this is an important new history of the unravelling of the British Empire in the Middle East and its connections to the decline of sterling as a leading
international currency and British oil policy in the region.2009 228 x 152 mm 344pp 11 tones 11 tables 978-0-521-76790-3 Hardback c. £55.00 Publication November 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521767903
Islam
Forthcoming
The Muslim Empires of the Ottomans, Safavids, and MughalsStephen F. DaleOhio State University
Between 1453 and 1526 Muslims founded three major states in the Mediterranean, Iran and South Asia: respectively the Ottoman, Safavid, and Mughal empires. This book is the first comparative study of the politics, religion, and culture of these three empires between 1300 and 1923.New Approaches to Asian History
2010 228 x 152 mm 320pp 22 tones 18 maps 978-0-521-87095-5 Hardback c. £45.00 978-0-521-69142-0 Paperback c. £15.99 Publication January 2010www.cambridge.org/9780521870955
Charity in Islamic SocietiesAmy SingerTel-Aviv University
An in-depth tour of the history of charity in Islamic societies from the beginnings of Islam to the present day. This book demonstrates how historical circumstances, social status, gender, age and other factors interacted with religious ideals to create a rich variety of charitable practices.
‘Weaving many anecdotes and personal experiences into her narrative, in addition to careful textual readings, Singer captures the psychological subtleties that characterise nearly all aspects of charitable giving and demonstrates how these have manifested themselves throughout history. As a consequence, her book has a freshness and relevancy that is not always found in scholarly works.’Haaretz, Israeli Daily Newspaper
Themes in Islamic History
2008 228 x 152 mm 264pp 17 tones 978-0-521-82164-3 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-52912-9 Paperback £15.99www.cambridge.org/9780521821643
Forthcoming
Sharî’aTheory, Practice, TransformationsWael B. HallaqMcGill University, Montréal
Wael Hallaq’s magisterial overview of Shari’a examines the doctrines and practices of Islamic law from the seventh century to the present. In a compelling narrative, the author unravels the complexities of his subject to reveal a deep knowledge of the law which will engage and challenge both student and scholar.
‘This masterpiece, to which Wael Hallaq brings the full force of his unparalleled knowledge of the Shari`a … supplies a riveting account of the history of Islamic legal institutions and doctrines, as well as the lived experience of the law. His discussions … mark the coming to full fruition of a new and compelling paradigm in Islamic legal studies. This book promises to be the seminal work in the field for many years to come.’Judith E. Tucker, Professor of History and Director, Academic Programs in Arab Studies, Georgetown University
2009 228 x 152 mm 624pp 978-0-521-86147-2 Hardback £75.00 978-0-521-67874-2 Paperback £35.00www.cambridge.org/9780521861472
Forthcoming
An Introduction to Islamic LawWael B. HallaqMcGill University, Montréal
Wael Hallaq, a leading scholar and practitioner of Islamic law, guides students through the intricacies of the subject in this absorbing introduction. This book will be the first stop for those who wish to understand the fundamentals of Islamic law and its history.
‘This path-breaking new history of Islamic law will become a standard introduction to the subject. Professor Hallaq has provided a magnificent overview of the topic, drawing on his wide reading in primary sources and his many important publications on the history of Islamic law and Islamic legal thought.’Joseph E. Lowry, University of Pennsylvania
2009 228 x 152 mm 216pp 978-0-521-86146-5 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-67873-5 Paperback £17.99 Publication August 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521861465
38 Islam / Africa
Women, Family, and Gender in Islamic LawJudith E. TuckerGeorgetown University, Washington DC
In an analysis of Islamic law through the prism of gender, Judith Tucker tackles questions relating to the position of women in Islamic society, and to the ways in which the legal system impacted on the family, property rights, space and sexuality, from classical and medieval times to the present.
‘Judith Tucker’s book is a welcome addition to Cambridge University Press’ series on Islamic law under the editorship of Wael B. Hallaq.’ Times Higher Education Supplement
Themes in Islamic Law, 3
2008 228 x 152 mm 264pp 2 maps 978-0-521-83044-7 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-53747-6 Paperback £17.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521830447
Kingship and Ideology in the Islamic and Mongol WorldsAnne F. BroadbridgeUniversity of Massachusetts, Amherst
What were the attitudes to diplomacy and kingship in the medieval Islamic world? Anne Broadbridge explores the ideologies of two different powers, the Mongol Khanates of the Golden Horde in Iran and Anatolia and the Mamluk Sultans of Syria and Egypt, who ruled from the thirteenth to the fifteenth century. Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization
2008 228 x 152 mm 256pp 12 tones 2 maps 4 tables 978-0-521-85265-4 Hardback £50.00www.cambridge.org/9780521852654
Justice, Punishment and the Medieval Muslim ImaginationChristian LangeUniversity of Edinburgh
An in-depth study of the phenomenon of punishment, both divine and human, in eleventh-to-thirteenth-century Islamic society. The book examines the relationship between state and society in meting out justice, Muslim attitudes to hell and the legal dimensions of punishment. Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization
2008 228 x 152 mm 304pp 978-0-521-88782-3 Hardback £50.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521887823
Islam and Social Change in French West AfricaHistory of an Emancipatory CommunitySean HanrettaStanford University, California
Exploring the history of a group of Muslim Sufi mystics and their religious community in colonial French West Africa, this study shows the relationship between religious, social, and economic change in the region. It highlights the role that the people played in shaping social and cultural change and illuminates the specific religious ideas and political contexts that gave their efforts meaning.African Studies, 110
2009 234 x 156 mm 328pp 3 line figures 2 tones 3 maps 978-0-521-89971-0 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521899710
Forthcoming
An Empire of FactsColonial Power, Cultural Knowledge and Islam in Algeria, 1870–1914George R. Trumbull IVDartmouth College, New Hampshire
A fascinating account of the formation of French conceptions of Islam in Algeria. George Trumbull places narratives by travellers, bureaucrats, scholars and writers at the heart of the production of colonial knowledge and misconceptions about Islam that determined the imperial cultural politics of Algeria and its interactions with republican France.
‘A richly rewarding analysis that demonstrates convincingly how constructions of cultural knowledge about late nineteenth century Algeria by colonial anthropologists, explorers, and aspirant writers stigmatized entire communities as, at once, inherently criminal and desperately in need of civilization through colonization. In his focus on influential, yet amateur ethnographers – figures whose observations and representations of Algerian social practices typically owed more to orientalist literature than to scientific enquiry – George Trumbull compels us to reconsider the connections between the transmission of ethnographic ‘knowledge’, the politicization of colonial identities, and the consolidation of colonial states. The result is a clinical dissection of why and how French men
and women came to think as they did about colonial Algeria, its culture, its religion, and its people.’ Martin Thomas, Exeter University, author of Empires of Intelligence: Security Services and Colonial Disorder after 1914
Critical Perspectives on Empire
2009 228 x 152 mm 328pp 18 tones 1 map 978-0-521-51654-9 Hardback c. £55.00 978-0-521-73434-9 Paperback c. £19.99 Publication November 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521516549
Africa
Guns, Race, and Power in Colonial South AfricaWilliam Kelleher StoreyMillsaps College, Mississippi
In this book, William Kelleher Storey shows that guns and discussions about guns during the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries were fundamentally important to the establishment of racial discrimination in South Africa.African Studies, 109
2008 228 x 152 mm 400pp 10 tones 1 map 3 tables 978-0-521-88509-6 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521885096
On Trans-Saharan TrailsIslamic Law, Trade Networks, and Cross-Cultural Exchange in Nineteenth-Century Western AfricaGhislaine LydonUniversity of California, Los Angeles
This study explores the history of trans-Saharan trade in western Africa in the nineteenth century. It documents the internal dynamics of a trade network system based on a case study of the Wad Nun traders, who specialized in outfitting camel caravans in this period. Through an examination of original source material, Lydon shows how traders used their literacy skills and recourse to experts of Islamic law to regulate long-distance transactions.2009 228 x 152 mm 496pp 5 tones 6 maps 12 tables 978-0-521-88724-3 Hardback £55.00www.cambridge.org/9780521887243
Africa / Australia / History of War 39
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Fabrication of EmpireThe British and the Uganda Kingdoms, 1890–1902D. A. LowAustralian National University, Canberra
During the 1890s, the Scramble for Africa created the new country of Uganda. This inland territory carved out by British agents first encompassed some 20-30 African kingdoms. Anthony Low’s magisterial new study examines how and why the British were able to dominate these rulerships and establish a colonial government.2009 228 x 152 mm 382pp 7 maps 978-0-521-84351-5 Hardback £60.00www.cambridge.org/9780521843515
Forthcoming
Ocean of LettersLanguage and Creolization in an Indian Ocean DiasporaPier M. LarsonThe Johns Hopkins University
This unique history of imperialism, language, and creolization in the largest African diaspora of the Indian Ocean reveals the roles of slavery, travel, Christian missions, and European colonialism in the making of a vernacular literary tradition in the islands of the western Indian Ocean during the age of slavery.Critical Perspectives on Empire
2009 228 x 152 mm 398pp 18 tones 5 maps 3 tables 1 graph 978-0-521-51827-7 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-73957-3 Paperback £19.99www.cambridge.org/9780521518277
Forthcoming
The Great African WarCongo and Regional Geopolitics, 1996–2006Filip ReyntjensUniversiteit Antwerpen
This book examines a decade-long period of instability, violence and state decay in Central Africa from 1996, when the war started, to 2006, when elections formally ended the political transition in the Democratic Republic of Congo. It seeks to provide an in-depth analysis of concurrent developments in Zaire/DRC, Rwanda, Burundi and Uganda in African and international contexts and attempts to show the dynamics of the interrelationships between these realms.2009 228 x 152 mm 240pp 9 line figures 9 maps 978-0-521-11128-7 Hardback c. £40.00 Publication August 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521111287
Australia
A Military History of AustraliaThird editionJeffrey GreyAustralian Defence Force Academy at the University of New South Wales
A revised and updated edition of one of the most acclaimed accounts of Australian military history.2008 228 x 152 mm 348pp 20 maps 978-0-521-87523-3 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-69791-0 Paperback £22.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521875233
The Battle for WauNew Guinea’s Frontline 1942–1943Phillip Bradley
Bradley describes the early WWII conflicts in New Guinea, from the Japanese landing at Salamaua in 1942 to the defeat at Wau in 1943. Drawing on recollections from over seventy veterans and first-hand knowledge of the region, all aspects are brought together in one readable volume.Australian Army History Series
2008 228 x 152 mm 304pp 48 tones 978-0-521-89681-8 Hardback £30.00www.cambridge.org/9780521896818
The Proud 6thAn Illustrated History of the 6th Australian Division 1939–1946Mark JohnstonScotch College
This book is the first history published on the 6th Australian Division. Through photographs and an authoritative text, this book tells the story of the commanders of the 6th Division and of the proud, independent and tough troops they commanded.Australian Army History Series
2009 237 x 180mm 284pp 978-0-521-51411-8 Hardback £25.99www.cambridge.org/9780521514118
Forthcoming
Australian PeacekeepingSixty Years in the FieldEdited by David HornerAustralian National University, Canberra
Peter LondeyAustralian War Memorial
and Jean BouAustralian National University, Canberra
Peacekeeping has been a significant part of Australia’s overseas military engagement since the end of the Second World War. This book approaches Australian peacekeeping from four angles: its history, its agencies, some personal reflections, and its future.2009 228 x 152 mm 352pp 7 graphs 978-0-521-73592-6 Paperback £22.99www.cambridge.org/9780521735926
Forthcoming
Captain Cook Was HereMaria NugentNational Museum of Australia
This book tells the story of the first landing of Captain Cook and The Endeavour on the east coast of Australia in 1770, bringing together for the first time all the known surviving objects and artefacts, as well as much of the artwork produced during Cook’s time on shore.2009 234 x 156mm 200pp 978-0-521-76240-3 Hardback £16.99www.cambridge.org/9780521762403
History of War
Forthcoming
Rommel’s Desert WarWaging World War II in North Africa, 1941–1943Martin KitchenSimon Fraser University, British Columbia
The first comprehensive English-language history of the Axis campaign in North Africa offers an entirely new account of the battles of 1941–1943, Rommel’s generalship, the divisions that undermined the Axis coalition and the place of the campaign within the broader strategic context of the war.
‘Rommel’s Desert War brings fresh sources and a fresh perspective to the North African campaign. Kitchen’s skillful blend of policy and strategy, operations and tactics, pulls no punches. His stringent, well documented critique of Rommel’s
40 History of War
performance in particular makes this a significant contribution to the literature on the Second World War.’ Dennis Showalter, Colorado College, author of Patton and Rommel: Men of War in the Twentieth Century
Cambridge Military Histories
2009 228 x 152 mm 600pp 25 tones 24 maps 978-0-521-50971-8 Hardback c. £25.00 Publication August 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521509718
Forthcoming
World War IIA New HistoryEvan MawdsleyUniversity of Glasgow
A major new global history of the Second World War. Evan Mawdsley shows that this was a battle for supremacy between the old world order and the new and that it was as much an Asian or Pacific war as a European one.
‘This objective account of grand strategy of victors and losers in WWII is a direct hit. What emerges is an original thesis, a new insight into the complicated story of the global conflict between 1937 and 1945: factually reliable, cogently argued and concisely written. Magnificent … A new Weinberg is born.’Jürgen Förster, University of Freiburg
Contents: Introduction; 1. The world in 1937; 2. Japan and China, 1937–1940; 3. Hitler’s border wars, 1938–1939; 4. Germany re-fights World War I, 1939–1940; 5. Wars of ideology, 1941–1942; 6. The Red Army versus the Wehrmacht, 1941–1944; 7. Japan’s lunge for empire, 1941–1942; 8. Defending the perimeter: Japan, 1942–1944; 9. The ‘world ocean’ and Allied victory, 1939–1945; 10. The European periphery, 1940–1944; 11. Wearing down Germany, 1942–1944; 12. Victory in Europe, 1944–1945; 13. End and beginning in Asia, 1945; Conclusion.2009 247 x 174 mm 472pp 46 tones 14 maps 8 tables 978-0-521-84592-2 Hardback c. £50.00 978-0-521-60843-5 Paperback c. £16.99 Publication September 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521845922
Douglas Haig and the First World WarJ. P. HarrisRoyal Military Academy, Sandhurst
A new biography of Sir Douglas Haig, one of the most controversial commanders in British military history. Paul Harris decisively answers the contested issue of whether Haig’s tactics cost the lives of hundreds of thousands of British soldiers during the First World
War or were essential to the Allied victory.
‘Paul Harris has not only written the definitive biography of Field Marshal Douglas Haig, but the most important book on the First World War to appear in over a decade.’Williamson Murray, Institute for Defense Analysis
Templer Medal Book Prize 2008 – Winner
Cambridge Military Histories
2008 228 x 152 mm 664pp 19 tones 24 maps 978-0-521-89802-7 Hardback £25.00www.cambridge.org/9780521898027
The Last Great WarBritish Society and the First World WarAdrian GregoryUniversity of Oxford
What was it that the British people believed they were fighting for in 1914–18? This compelling history of the British home front during the First World War offers an entirely new account of how British society understood and endured the war.
‘Adrian Gregory has provided the best brief account we have of the history of the Great War. Using an astonishing array of sources uncovering wartime life at the front and at home, Gregory tells the story of the war in a manner which is engaging, combative, and authoritative. Here is an original, tough-minded and thoughtful book, written by an historian unafraid of exploding the myths which still surround the 1914–18 conflict.’ Jay Winter, Yale University
2008 228 x 152 mm 362pp 18 tones 978-0-521-45037-9 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-72883-6 Paperback £17.99www.cambridge.org/9780521450379
Enduring the Great WarCombat, Morale and Collapse in the German and British Armies, 1914–1918Alexander WatsonUniversity of Cambridge
A comparative history of how German and British soldiers endured the horror of the First World War.
In manuscript form, Institute of Contemporary History and Wiener Library’s Fraenkel Prize 2006 – Joint winner
Cambridge Military Histories
2008 228 x 152 312pp 20 tones 1 map 7 tables 5 graphs 978-0-521-88101-2 Hardback £50.00www.cambridge.org/9780521881012
new in PaPerback
The Unfinished Peace after World War IAmerica, Britain and the Stabilisation of Europe, 1919–1932Patrick O. CohrsHistory Department, Yale University
A revisionist account of the role of America and Britain in Europe from 1919–1932.2008 228 x 152 mm 708pp 1 map 978-0-521-72343-5 Paperback £18.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521723435
reViSed and UPdated
The Cambridge Illustrated History of WarfareEdited by Geoffrey ParkerOhio State University
Now available in a revised and updated version, The Cambridge Illustrated History of Warfare provides a unique account of Western warfare from antiquity to the present day. The book treats the history of all aspects of the subject and places in context particular key events in the history of armed engagement.
‘Highly polished and well illustrated, this book is a comprehensive history of the Western (European) way of war, spanning ancient Greece to today’s modern methods and policies of destruction … The text is superbly supported by numerous and handy sidebars providing details, insights, and anecdotes … Parker’s conclusion is historically based and particularly chilling.’Library Journal
History of War 41
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Cambridge Illustrated Histories
2008 253 x 203 mm 432pp 978-0-521-73806-4 Paperback £19.99www.cambridge.org/9780521738064
textbook
Understanding Modern WarfareDavid JordanKing’s College London
James D. KirasSchool of Advanced Air and Space Studies, Maxwell Air Force Base, USA
David J. LonsdaleUniversity of Reading
Ian SpellerNational University of Ireland, Maynooth
Christopher TuckKing’s College London
and C. Dale WaltonMissouri State University
Using relevant examples from recent history, this book provides a complete introduction to the issues, ideas, concepts, context and vocabulary necessary to develop an understanding of the theory and conduct of warfare in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. An invaluable text for military professionals and students of military history.
‘Such a clear and readable exposition of the multifaceted aspects of warfare is long overdue. It is invaluable, not only as an aid to comprehending warfare as it is conducted now, and why, but also how we arrived here, and where we might be going. Anyone connected with the business of defence and war fighting, be they: scholar, warrior, commentator, or politician, would profit by reading and absorbing what the authors have to say.’Major General Julian Thompson CB OBE
Contents: Introduction; 1. Strategy; 2. Land warfare; 3. Naval warfare; 4. Air and space warfare; 5. Irregular warfare; 6. Weapons of mass destruction.2008 247 x 174 mm 392pp 32 tones 7 figures 978-0-521-87698-8 Hardback £60.00 978-0-521-70038-2 Paperback £22.99www.cambridge.org/9780521876988
Ghosts of War in VietnamHeonik KwonUniversity of Edinburgh
Explores the collective memory of the Vietnam War through popular imaginings about ghosts of war.Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare, 27
2008 228 x 152 mm 232pp 978-0-521-88061-9 Hardback £25.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521880619
The Making of PeaceRulers, States, and the Aftermath of WarEdited by Williamson MurrayUnited States Naval Academy, Virginia
and Jim LaceyInstitute of Defense Analyses, Virginia
The Making of Peace represents a unique contribution to the study of war: namely, the difficulties that statesmen have confronted in attempting to put back together the pieces after a major conflict. It contains a number of case studies by many leading historians in the United States and the United Kingdom.2009 228 x 152 mm 404pp 7 maps 978-0-521-51719-5 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-73193-5 Paperback £15.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521517195
new in PaPerback
FirearmsA Global History to 1700Kenneth Chase
This book asks why Europeans perfected firearms when the Chinese had invented them by looking at how firearms were used throughout the world.2008 228 x 152 mm 308pp 978-0-521-72240-7 Paperback £14.99www.cambridge.org/9780521722407
Nuclear WeaponsWhat You Need to KnowJeremy Bernstein
Nuclear Weapons is designed to give a layperson an understanding of both the history and technology of nuclear weapons.2008 228 x 152 mm 312pp 2 tables 978-0-521-88408-2 Hardback £16.99www.cambridge.org/9780521884082
Hitler’s War PoetsLiterature and Politics in the Third ReichJay W. BairdMiami University
Jay W. Baird demonstrates how poets and writers responded enthusiastically to Hitler’s summons to artists to create a cultural revolution commensurate with the political radicalism of the new state.2008 228 x 152 mm 300pp 978-0-521-87689-6 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521876896
The Collins Class Submarine StorySteel, Spies and SpinPeter YuleUniversity of Melbourne
and Derek WoolnerAustralian National University, Canberra
This book examines the most expensive and controversial project ever undertaken by the Australian Defence Force.2008 234 x 156 mm 390pp 978-0-521-86894-5 Hardback £30.00www.cambridge.org/9780521868945
Survivors’ SongsFrom Maldon to the SommeJon StallworthyUniversity of Oxford
For fifty years, Jon Stallworthy has been writing about the literary and autobiographical voices of those caught up in war. In these linked essays, he sets the poetry and prose of the First World War and its aftermath in the context of writing about warfare from Troy to Vietnam.
‘Jon Stallworthy writes with absolute authority about war literature from Aneirin to Owen and beyond. That historical reach is complemented by the precision of his close readings as he detects ancient ideas of chivalry at the Somme or the Battle of Britain. Stallworthy’s passionate and authoritative survey deserves to become essential reading for anyone who cares to explore the No Man’s Land where art and violence collide.‘Tim Kendall, University of Exeter
2008 216 x 138 mm 240pp 978-0-521-89906-2 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-72789-1 Paperback £14.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521899062
42 Economic History / History of Religion
Economic History
The Industrious RevolutionConsumer Behavior and the Household Economy, 1650 to the PresentJan de VriesUniversity of California, Berkeley
De Vries examines how the activation and evolution of consumer demand shaped the course of economic development, focusing specifically on the household economy. His research traces how this ‘industrious revolution’ fundamentally altered the material cultures of Europe and North America and suggests important revisions to existing consumer theory.
‘… this book will interest all concerned with human behaviour in its many forms … it contains interesting insights into the ways behaviour has changed over the past couple of centuries …’The Financial Times
2008 228 x 152 mm 344pp 978-0-521-89502-6 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-71925-4 Paperback £15.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521895026
Banking on Global MarketsDeutsche Bank and the United States, 1870 to the PresentChristopher Kobrak
This book uses the story of the U.S. business and political dealings of Deutsche Bank to illuminate important developments in the ongoing globalization of major financial institutions.Cambridge Studies in the Emergence of Global Enterprise
2008 228 x 152 mm 504pp 9 tables 978-0-521-86325-4 Hardback £40.00www.cambridge.org/9780521863254
Global ElectrificationMultinational Enterprise and International Finance in the History of Light and Power, 1878–2007William J. HausmanCollege of William and Mary, Virginia
Peter HertnerMartin Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenburg, Germany
and Mira WilkinsFlorida International University
This book offers a fresh analysis of multinational enterprise throughout the world by examining the spread of electrification.Cambridge Studies in the Emergence of Global Enterprise
2008 228 x 152 mm 510pp 9 tables 978-0-521-88035-0 Hardback £48.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521880350
Entertainment IndustrialisedThe Emergence of the International Film Industry, 1890–1940Gerben BakkerLondon School of Economics and Political Science
The first study of the emergence and economic development of the film industry in Britain, France and the United States between 1890 and 1940. Investigating the commercialisation of entertainment and the subsequent arrival of motion pictures, it argues that cinema industrialised live entertainment by automating it and making it tradeable.Cambridge Studies in Economic History – Second Series
2008 228 x 152 mm 472pp 57 tables 60 figures 978-0-521-89854-6 Hardback £55.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521898546
new in PaPerback
A History of Central Banking in Great Britain and the United StatesJohn H. WoodWake Forest University, North Carolina
This book shows that important continuities in central bankers’ behavior – response to incentives, desire for financial stability, and susceptibility to government pressures – go a long way toward understanding them, from their beginnings in the Bank of England in 1694 and the first Bank of the United
States in 1791, to the present Bank and Federal Reserve.
‘The forces and personalities shaping the development of central banking are carefully detailed in this excellent and readable book on central banking in the United States and Great Britain.’Lee Hoskins, Former President, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Studies in Macroeconomic History
2009 228 x 152 mm 458pp 7 tables 978-0-521-74131-6 Paperback £18.99www.cambridge.org/9780521741316
Forthcoming
The Origins of English Financial MarketsInvestment and Speculation before the South Sea BubbleAnne L. MurphyUniversity of Exeter
Anne Murphy examines the establishment of the institutions, such as the Bank of England, on which London’s financial system was built during this crucial period in English financial history, and, for the first time, reveals the choices and actions of the investors who enthusiastically embraced the new investment opportunities.Cambridge Studies in Economic History – Second Series
2009 228 x 152 mm 312pp 3 tones 29 tables 18 graphs 978-0-521-51994-6 Hardback c. £55.00 Publication November 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521519946
History of Religion
The Monks and Monasteries of Constantinople, ca. 350–850Peter HatlieUniversity of Dallas
A complete history of the growth and development of monasticism in Constantinople from 350 to 850. 2008 228 x 152 mm 566pp 25 tones 5 maps 978-0-521-84821-3 Hardback £65.00www.cambridge.org/9780521848213
History of Religion / History of Ideas 43
eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/online
The Reformation of RightsLaw, Religion and Human Rights in Early Modern CalvinismJohn Witte, JrEmory University, Atlanta
Calvin’s teachings spread rapidly throughout Western Europe shaping the law of early modern Protestant lands.2008 222 x 152 mm 408pp 6 line figures 1 tone 978-0-521-81842-1 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-52161-1 Paperback £15.99www.cambridge.org/9780521818421
The Cambridge Companion to the JesuitsEdited by Thomas WorcesterCollege of the Holy Cross, Massachusetts
Explores the religious and cultural significance of the Society of Jesus or ‘Jesuits’.Cambridge Companions to Religion
2008 228 x 152 mm 374pp 13 tones 978-0-521-85731-4 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-67396-9 Paperback £17.99www.cambridge.org/9780521857314
Salvation and Globalization in the Early Jesuit MissionsLuke ClosseySimon Fraser University, British Columbia
A global study of the Society of Jesus’s early missions. Luke Clossey follows trails of personnel, money, relics and information between missions in seventeenth-century China, Germany and Mexico, and explores how the Jesuits understood their universal mission, demonstrating that the global perspective is essential to understanding the Jesuits.2008 228 x 152 mm 336pp 6 tables 2 figures 978-0-521-88744-1 Hardback £55.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521887441
new in PaPerback
St. Peter’s in the VaticanEdited by William TronzoTulane University, Louisiana
St. Peter’s in the Vatican has a long and turbulent history. First constructed in the fourth century to honor the tomb of St. Peter, the Early Christian edifice was gradually torn down and replaced by the new structure now in place. This volume presents an overview of St. Peter’s
history from the late antique period to the twentieth century.
‘This book will add greatly to the knowledge of anyone who cherishes this glory of Western Civilization.’Contemporary Review
2008 279 x 215 mm 336pp 978-0-521-73210-9 Paperback £30.00www.cambridge.org/9780521732109
History of Ideas
Strategic Rivalries in World PoliticsPosition, Space and Conflict EscalationMichael P. ColaresiMichigan State University
Karen RaslerIndiana University
and William R. ThompsonIndiana University
Examines cases of strategic rivalries and identifies the extent of their effect on international conflict.2008 228 x 152 mm 328pp 18 line figures 54 tables 978-0-521-88134-0 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-70761-9 Paperback £17.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521881340
French Political Thought from Montesquieu to TocquevilleLiberty in a Levelled Society?Annelien de DijnKatholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
A major contribution to the understanding of one of the most important strands of modern political thought.Ideas in Context, 89
2008 228 x 152 mm 230pp 978-0-521-87788-6 Hardback £50.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521877886
Friedrich Nietzsche and the Politics of HistoryChristian J. EmdenRice University, Houston
Explores Nietzsche’s understanding of modern political culture and his position in the history of modern political thought.Ideas in Context, 88
2008 228 x 152 mm 412pp 978-0-521-88056-5 Hardback £50.00www.cambridge.org/9780521880565
Hobbes and Republican LibertyQuentin SkinnerUniversity of Cambridge
A dazzling comparison of two rival theories about the nature of human liberty.2008 216 x 138 mm 270pp 19 tones 978-0-521-88676-5 Hardback £35.00 978-0-521-71416-7 Paperback £12.99www.cambridge.org/9780521886765
new in PaPerback
Barbarism and ReligionBarbarians, Savages and EmpiresVolume 4J. G. A. PocockThe Johns Hopkins University
The fourth volume of Barbarism and Religion, which focuses on eighteenth-century Europe.2008 228 x 152 384pp 978-0-521-72101-1 Paperback £17.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521721011
textbook
Emerson: Political WritingsEdited by Kenneth S. SacksBrown University, Rhode Island
A study of Emerson’s political thought set in the context of the American Civil War.Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought
2008 216 x 138 mm 256pp 978-0-521-88369-6 Hardback £35.00 978-0-521-71002-2 Paperback £12.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521883696
textbook
American GovernmentBalancing Democracy and RightsSecond editionMarc LandyBoston College, Massachusetts
and Sidney M. MilkisUniversity of Virginia
A detailed analysis on the American government using the American Political Development approach. 2008 234 x 156 mm 854pp 23 tables 978-0-521-86275-2 Hardback £65.00 978-0-521-68128-5 Paperback £38.00www.cambridge.org/9780521862752
44 History of Ideas
Passion and PreferencesWilliam Jennings Bryan and the 1896 Democratic ConventionRichard Franklin BenselCornell University, New York
Bensel argues that Bryan’s ‘Cross of Gold’ address exploited a climate of political passion.2008 234 x 156 mm 336pp 17 tables 978-0-521-88888-2 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-71762-5 Paperback £17.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521888882
The Philosophy of Simone de BeauvoirAmbiguity, Conversion, ResistancePenelope DeutscherNorthwestern University, Illinois
Professor Deutscher studies Beauvoir’s philosophy on ‘otherness’ not just through her famous views on gender (in her celebrated 1949 work The Second Sex), but also through her less documented ideas on race and on ageing and generational difference.Ideas in Context, 91
2008 228 x 152 mm 222pp 978-0-521-88520-1 Hardback £45.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521885201
The Mind of JihadLaurent MurawiecHudson Institute, Washington, D.C
Examines contemporary jihad as a cult of violence and power. Murawiec compares this belief structure to that of Europe’s medieval millenarians and apocalyptics and traces their political technologies to the Bolsheviks, using history, anthropology, and theology to understand the mind of jihad, which has declared war on the West.2008 234 x 156 mm 350pp 978-0-521-88393-1 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-73063-1 Paperback £14.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521883931
Liberal BeginningsMaking a Republic for the ModernsAndreas KalyvasNew School for Social Research, New York
and Ira KatznelsonColumbia University, New York
The book examines the origins and development of the modern liberal tradition and explores the relationship between republicanism and liberalism between 1750 and 1830. Kalyvas and Katznelson argue that leading thinkers
of the period transformed the republican ideas into a doctrine for a modern and surprisingly liberal republic.2008 216 x 138 mm 200pp 978-0-521-89946-8 Hardback £30.00 978-0-521-72828-7 Paperback £14.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521899468
Against Throne and AltarMachiavelli and Political Theory Under the English RepublicPaul A. RaheHillsdale College, Michigan
Examines the political thinking of four men – John Milton, Marchamont Nedham, James Harrington, and Thomas Hobbes.2008 234 x 156 mm 432pp 978-0-521-88390-0 Hardback £50.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521883900
European Union and the Deconstruction of the Rhineland FrontierMichael LoriauxNorthwestern University, Illinois
In an original study of the history and politics of the Rhineland region, Michael Loriaux argues that the European Union is about frontier deconstruction, but that deconstruction has stopped half-way. While political frontiers have been deconstructed, cultural separators are still in place and compromise the development of the European Union.2008 228 x 152 mm 350pp 9 tones 41 maps 2 tables 978-0-521-88084-8 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-70707-7 Paperback £18.99www.cambridge.org/9780521880848
Liberal ValuesBenjamin Constant and the Politics of ReligionHelena RosenblattCity University of New York
Benjamin Constant’s life spanned the Enlightenment, the French Revolution, Napoleon’s rise and rule, and the Bourbon Restoration. Professor Rosenblatt analyses Constant’s key role in many of this era’s heated debates over the role of religion in politics.Ideas in Context, 92
2008 228 x 152 mm 296pp 978-0-521-89825-6 Hardback £50.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521898256
Party Polarization in CongressSean M. TheriaultUniversity of Texas, Austin
Theriault examines more than 30 years of congressional history to understand how it is that the Democrats and Republicans on Capitol Hill have become so divided. His research traces the rise in party polarization to procedures used during the legislative process and examines their origins and effects on legislative politics.2008 228 x 152 mm 254pp 17 tables 978-0-521-88893-6 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-71768-7 Paperback £17.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521888936
The Colonial American Origins of Modern Democratic ThoughtJ. S. MaloyOklahoma State University
Maloy’s examination of seventeenth-century American political ideas concludes that the origins of distinctively modern democratic thinking can be located, not in eighteenth-century America and France, but in the tiny New England colonies in the previous century, and that the key idea was not electoral consent but rather non-electoral accountability.
‘Jason Maloy’s book is a superb exercise in historical retrieval. But his book should be interest far more than specialists in early American political thought; his book offers excitingly different ways of looking at the general issues of political representation and elections that are worth thinking about in the 21st century.’Sanford Levinson, University of Texas Law School and author of Our Undemocratic Constitution
2008 216 x 138 mm 224pp 1 map 978-0-521-51438-5 Hardback £45.00
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521514385
Union and UnionismsPolitical Thought in Scotland, 1500–2000Colin KiddUniversity of Glasgow
A major survey of Scotland’s dominant political ideology over the past three centuries by one of its leading historians. Colin Kidd engages with central themes in modern British history, tracing the history of Scottish unionist ideas from the sixteenth century onwards and
History of Ideas 45
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focussing especially on the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.2008 216 x 138 mm 322pp 978-0-521-88057-2 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-70680-3 Paperback £15.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521880572
Political Thought and HistoryEssays on Theory and MethodJ.G.A. PocockThe Johns Hopkins University
John Pocock is arguably the most influential historian of ideas of modern times. These essays are selected from a lifetime of thinking about political thought, and how we should study it in history. Together they constitute a collection that any serious student of politics and intellectual history needs to possess.2009 228 x 152 mm 296pp 978-0-521-88657-4 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-71406-8 Paperback £15.99www.cambridge.org/9780521886574
textbook
Fichte: Addresses to the German NationEdited by Gregory MooreUniversity of St Andrews, Scotland
Fichte’s account of the distinctiveness of the German people and his belief in the native superiority of its culture helped to shape German national identity throughout the nineteenth century and beyond. With an extensive contextualising introduction, this edition brings an important and seminal work to a modern readership.Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought
2009 216 x 138 mm 254pp 978-0-521-44404-0 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-44873-4 Paperback £15.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521444040
Neoclassical Realism, the State, and Foreign PolicyEdited by Steven E. LobellUniversity of Utah
Norrin M. RipsmanConcordia University, Montréal
and Jeffrey W. TaliaferroTufts University, Massachusetts
The first systematic survey of the neoclassical realist approach in international relations. It argues that variables such as international anarchy, the distribution of military capability, and international threats set parameters for state behaviour in the international
system, but that the internal dynamics of states also explain different countries’ foreign policies.
‘This important book fills a significant gap in the International Relations sub-field, and it will be widely read and cited.’Colin Elman, Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University
2009 228 x 152 mm 322pp 6 tables 7 graphs 978-0-521-51705-8 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-73192-8 Paperback £17.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521517058
Wealth and LifeEssays on the Intellectual History of Political Economy in Britain, 1848–1914Donald WinchUniversity of Sussex
Studying those intellectual pursuits that have shaped the understanding of Britain as an industrial society and continue to influence cultural responses to the moral questions posed by economic life, Donald Winch addresses the ‘bitter argument between economists and human beings’ provoked by Britain’s industrial revolution.Ideas in Context, 95
2009 228 x 152 mm 440pp 17 tones 978-0-521-88753-3 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-71539-3 Paperback £18.99www.cambridge.org/9780521887533
Forthcoming
Tocqueville on America after 1840Letters and Other WritingsEdited and translated by Aurelian CraiutuIndiana University, Bloomington
and Jeremy JenningsUniversity of London
Following the publication of the second volume of Democracy in America in 1840 until his death in 1859, Alexis de Tocqueville continued to monitor American political developments, expressing his thoughts through letters, articles, and speeches. Tocqueville on America after 1840 provides access to this neglected part of Tocqueville’s work, revealing his shift in thinking and growing disenchantment with America.2009 228 x 152 mm 578pp 978-0-521-85955-4 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-67683-0 Paperback £19.99www.cambridge.org/9780521859554
Political Ideology in the Arab WorldAccommodation and TransformationMichaelle L. BrowersWake Forest University, North Carolina
Discusses some of the most significant ideological debates that have animated the Arab world over the last two decades; from the ‘Arab age of ideology’, through an ‘age of ideological transformation’, demonstrating how the recent flow of ideas from one group to another have their roots in the past.Cambridge Middle East Studies, 31
2009 228 x 152 mm 210pp 978-0-521-76532-9 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-74934-3 Paperback £17.99www.cambridge.org/9780521765329
Forthcoming
Why NATO EnduresWallace J. ThiesCatholic University of America, Washington DC
Why NATO Endures examines military alliances and their role in international relations. Wallace J. Thies argues that NATO marks an important departure from all pre-1939 alliances, whose members viewed their alliance partners with suspicion and rivalry. In contrast, NATO’s democratic members have formed a mutually supportive alliance fostered by a need for one another’s approval in conducting foreign policy, which allows NATO to endure.
‘For almost two decades, NATO’s persistence has confounded continual predictions of its timely demise. Now, Wallace Thies tells us why. In this historically informed and theoretically insightful book, he shows why NATO is different from previous international alliances, why an alliance of democracies has resilience, and why NATO is likely to endure. This is one of the most important books on NATO since the end of the Cold War.’Robert Art, Brandeis University
2009 234 x 156 mm 320pp 978-0-521-76729-3 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-74979-4 Paperback £17.99 Publication August 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521767293
Forthcoming
God and the FoundersMadison, Washington, and JeffersonVincent Phillip MuñozTufts University, Massachusetts
God and the Founders explains the church-state political philosophies of James Madison, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson. It answers the
46 History of Ideas
question, ‘What would the Founders do?’ for the most pressing church-state issues, including prayer in public schools, government support of religion, and legal burdens on individuals’ religious consciences.
‘Vincent Philip Muñoz begins this fine book by pointing to a notorious scandal – that there is no evident logic to the opinions handed down over the last sixty years by the U. S. Supreme Court regarding church and state and that over time the confusion sown by the court has grown more seriousness. This state of affairs he traces to the fact that the Justices always cite the Founders in their opinions on this matter and get them wrong. To encourage greater clarity and thoughtfulness in their judicial deliberations, he demonstrates that George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison were, in fact, at odds; he encourages the Justices to make a fully-informed choice between their positions; and he indicates which choice he thinks most reasonable.’Paul Rahe, Hillsdale College
2009 228 x 152 mm 225pp 20 tables 978-0-521-51515-3 Hardback c. £45.00 978-0-521-73579-7 Paperback c. £15.99 Publication August 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521515153
Forthcoming
Louis Brandeis and the Making of Regulated Competition, 1900–1932Gerald BerkUniversity of Oregon
This book provides an innovative interpretation of industrialization and statebuilding in the U.S. by tracing the development of regulated competition. Conceptualized by Brandeis and implemented by trade associations and the Federal Trade Commission, regulated competition checked economic power by channelling competition from predation into improvement in products and production processes.
‘Berk’s nuanced study of Brandeis is about the rejection of preordained categories and rigid formulas, by extraordinary policymakers and also by social scientists who seek to understand them. Ultimately, it is about the limitless possibility of politics to reorder familiar arrangements of state and economy in the interests of a differently-conceived world. Its publication could hardly be more timely.’Karen Orren, University of California, Los Angeles
2009 228 x 152 mm 296pp 5 line figures 2 tables 978-0-521-42596-4 Hardback £50.00 Publication July 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521425964
Forthcoming
Alexis de Tocqueville, the First Social ScientistJon ElsterColumbia University, New York
The book proposes a new interpretation of Alexis de Tocqueville that views him first and foremost as a social scientist rather than a political theorist. Consistently going beyond exegetical commentary, he argues that Tocqueville is eminently worth reading today for his substantive and methodological insights.
‘Elster’s jeweler’s eye has seen into the hidden intricacies and profundities of Tocqueville the political psychologist and comparative social historian. A sumptuous, stringent and path-breaking book.’Stephen Holmes, New York University School of Law
2009 228 x 152 mm 216pp 978-0-521-51844-4 Hardback £40.00 978-0-521-74007-4 Paperback £12.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521518444
Forthcoming
Orientalism and IslamEuropean Thinkers on Oriental Despotism in the Middle East and IndiaMichael CurtisRutgers University, New Jersey
This book reveals the complex positive and negative interaction between Europe and the Orient, arguing that the European concept of Oriental despotism was based not on arbitrary prejudicial observation, but rather on perceptions of real processes and behavior in Eastern systems of government.
‘Michael Curtis has written a discerning, authoritative book of intellectual history. He takes us back to the greats – Burke and Mill and Marx and Tocqueville and Weber – and throws a floodlight on the present. He has read widely and thoughtfully. From his pages, and from the company of those intellectual giants, we return with a new understanding of the civilizational conflicts that mark our contemporary world. This is a book of deep scholarship and learning, but it is written with ease and grace. A book of political theory, and of history as well.
An essential book, for it retrieves for us a big piece of Western intellectual history and thought.’Fouad Ajami, Johns Hopkins University
2009 234 x 156 mm 392pp 978-0-521-76725-5 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-74961-9 Paperback £14.99 Publication July 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521767255
Forthcoming
Adam Smith and the Character of VirtueRyan Patrick HanleyMarquette University, Wisconsin
Hanley revisits the moral and political philosophy of Adam Smith to recover his understanding of morality in a market age. Focusing on Smith’s analysis of the psychological and social ills endemic to commercial society, Hanley argues he sought to combat corruption by cultivating the virtues of prudence, magnanimity and beneficence.
‘Ryan Patrick Hanley’s excellent Adam Smith and the Character of Virtue succeeds in bringing a fresh perspective to the study of Smith’s works. It offers a brilliant reinterpretation of Smith’s moral philosophy that not only unifies Smith’s work but offers larger lessons for us today. In an increasingly crowded field, Adam Smith and the Character of Virtue distinguishes itself as one of the most important books on Smith in more than a decade.’James Otteson, Yeshiva University
2009 228 x 152 mm 232pp 978-0-521-44929-8 Hardback £45.00 Publication July 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521449298
Forthcoming
Auguste ComteAn Intellectual BiographyVolume 2Mary PickeringSan José State University, California
This volume explores the life and works of Auguste Comte from 1842 to 1852, when he transformed his positive philosophy into a religious and political movement. Mary Pickering assesses Comte’s intellectual development in its historical context, his correspondence with John Stuart Mill and other luminaries, and his relationship with his muse, Clotilde de Vaux.
‘Mary Pickering has now completed what has to be regarded as one of the great biographies of a major nineteenth-century French thinker. What is most obviously impressive about this work is its thoroughness,
History of Ideas / History of Science 47
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its mastery of the details of Comte’s life and thought. It is clearly the result of a prodigious effort of research. Hardly less impressive are the depth, the coherence, and the originality of the picture of Auguste Comte that emerges from this biography.’Jonathan Beecher, University of California, Santa Cruz
Auguste Comte Intellectual Biography
2009 228 x 152 mm 656pp 978-0-521-51325-8 Hardback c. £50.00 Publication August 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521513258
Forthcoming
Auguste ComteAn Intellectual BiographyVolume 3Mary PickeringSan José State University, California
This volume explores the life and works of Auguste Comte from 1852 to 1857, the last years of his so-called second career. Focusing on the Système de politique positive, Mary Pickering connects Comte’s intellectual development to the history of the Second Empire and to tensions within the positivist movement. She also examines Comte’s impact around the world.Auguste Comte Intellectual Biography
2009 228 x 152 mm 656pp 978-0-521-11914-6 Hardback c. £50.00 Publication September 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521119146
Forthcoming
Empire of DifferenceThe Ottomans in Comparative PerspectiveKaren BarkeyColumbia University, New York
A comparative study of imperial organization and longevity in the Ottoman Empire. Barkey’s research demonstrates that the flexible techniques by which the Ottomans maintained their legitimacy, the cooperation of their diverse elites, and their control over economic and human resources were responsible for the longevity of this ‘negotiated empire’.2008 234 x 156 mm 358pp 2 line figures 2 tables 978-0-521-88740-3 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-71533-1 Paperback £16.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521887403
History of Science
MuseumThe Macleays, their Collections and the Search for OrderRobyn StaceyUniversity of Western Sydney
and Ashley Hay
Museum presents a new telling of the richness of Australia’s natural history.2008 340 x 245 mm 196pp 100 plates 978-0-521-87453-3 Hardback £45.00www.cambridge.org/9780521874533
Grape vs. GrainA Historical, Technological, and Social Comparison of Wine and BeerCharles BamforthUniversity of California, Davis
This is the first book to compare beer and wine from several important perspectives.2008 228 x 152 mm 224pp 7 tables 978-0-521-84937-1 Hardback £16.99
eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521849371
Quantum Theory at the CrossroadsReconsidering the 1927 Solvay ConferenceGuido BacciagaluppiUniversity of Aberdeen
and Antony ValentiniImperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, London
This book contains a complete translation of the original proceedings of the 1927 Solvay conference, with background essays and an extensive analysis in light of current research. This book will be of interest to graduate students and researchers in physics, and the history and philosophy of quantum theory.2009 247 x 174 mm 608pp 2 tones 978-0-521-81421-8 Hardback £70.00 Publication July 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521814218
On Space and TimeEdited by Shahn MajidQueen Mary, University of London
With contributions by Alain ConnesMichael HellerRoger PenroseJohn Polkinghorneand Andrew Taylor
What is the true nature of space and time? These concepts are at the heart of science, but they remain wrapped in enigma. This unique volume brings together leaders in cosmology, particle physics, quantum gravity, mathematics, philosophy and theology to provide fresh insights into the structure of space and time.
‘… a unique collection of essays. … The non-specialist might struggle with some of the mathematic vocabulary but the philosophical content is thought provoking … a worthwhile read.’Federation of Astronomical Societies Newsletter
2008 228 x 152 mm 320pp 15 line figures 30 tones 978-0-521-88926-1 Hardback £13.99www.cambridge.org/9780521889261
Discovering the Expanding UniverseHarry NussbaumerSwiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zürich
and Lydia BieriHarvard University, Massachusetts
Foreword by Allan SandageObservatories of the Carnegie Institution, California
The discovery of the expanding universe is one of the most exciting exploits in astronomy. This book explores its development from Einstein, through to Lemaître, Hubble and Humason. It is of interest to scientists, students, and all those interested in the history of astronomy and cosmology.2009 247 x 174 mm 244pp 49 tones 978-0-521-51484-2 Hardback £30.00www.cambridge.org/9780521514842
Forthcoming
On the Origin of SpeciesEdited by Jim EndersbyUniversity of Sussex
Jim Endersby’s major new scholarly edition debunks some of the myths that surround Darwin’s book, and expores how it was originally written, published and read. Endersby provides a new, up-to-date and very readable introduction to this classic text and a level of
48 History of Science / History of Medicine / Environmental History and Historical Geography
scholarly apparatus unmatched by any other edition.2009 228 x 152 mm 520pp 12 tones 978-0-521-86709-2 Hardback £70.00www.cambridge.org/9780521867092
History of Medicine
Unnatural HistoryBreast Cancer and American SocietyRobert A. AronowitzUniversity of Pennsylvania
Traces the changing definitions and understandings of breast cancer.Cambridge Studies in the History of Medicine
2008 234 x 156 mm 378pp 978-0-521-82249-7 Hardback £25.00www.cambridge.org/9780521822497
Forthcoming
Pulse Diagnosis in Early Chinese MedicineThe Telling TouchElisabeth HsuUniversity of Oxford
This is a study of the earliest extensive account of Chinese pulse diagnosis, or more accurately, the examination of mai. Dr Hsu focuses on a biography of Chunyu Yi, a doctor of the early Han, and presents the first complete translation into English of the Memoir by Sima Qian.University of Cambridge Oriental Publications, 68
2009 228 x 152 mm 400pp 1 map 978-0-521-51662-4 Hardback c. £60.00 Publication October 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521516624
Humanity’s BurdenA Global History of MalariaJames L. A. Webb, Jr.Colby College, Maine
Humanity’s Burden provides a panoramic overview of the history of malaria. It traces the long arc of malaria out of tropical Africa into Eurasia, its transfer to the Americas during the early years of the Columbian exchange, and its retraction from the middle latitudes into the tropics since the late nineteenth century.
‘No disease is more indicative of social and environmental change than malaria. Its geographical distribution and incidence have been intimately related to all fields of human endeavour, from the production of food to upheavals such as war
and mass migration. James Webb’s ecological history of malaria provides keen insights into this persistent affliction and into the history of humanity itself. His magisterial synthesis will be admired by historians and malariologists alike.’Mark Harrison, University of Oxford
Studies in Environment and History
2009 228 x 152 mm 248pp 2 tones 8 maps 978-0-521-85418-4 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-67012-8 Paperback £14.99www.cambridge.org/9780521854184
Cambridge Illustrated History of SurgeryHarold EllisCharing Cross & Westminster Medical School, London
Written in a lively and engaging style, this book provides a fascinating introduction to the development of surgery through the ages. Heavily illustrated in colour, The Cambridge Illustrated History of Surgery is the only serious choice for a reader wanting a lively and informative single-volume introduction to surgical history.2008 246 x 189 mm 288pp 280 figures 978-0-521-89623-8 Hardback £75.00 978-0-521-72033-5 Paperback £35.00www.cambridge.org/9780521896238
Environmen-tal History and Historical Geography
Nature and PowerA Global History of the EnvironmentJoachim RadkauUniversität Bielefeld, Germany
Translated by Thomas Dunlap
Nature and Power explores the interaction between humanity and the natural environment from prehistoric times to the present. Publications of the German Historical Institute
2008 234 x 156 mm 448pp 978-0-521-85129-9 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-61673-7 Paperback £14.99www.cambridge.org/9780521851299
Cities in ModernityRepresentations and Productions of Metropolitan Space, 1840–1930Richard DennisUniversity College London
An exploration of the connections between culture, economy and built environment in cities during the period 1840–1930, focusing principally on London, New York and Toronto. The book discusses both the cultural experience of modernity and the material modernization of cities, as well as the gendered experience of place.
‘… a very erudite and incisive piece of work, which draws strength from the rich and diverse research that informs it. It expertly negotiates and synthesizes work within architectural history, geography, building, cultural and feminist studies, sociology, business, and finance, creating an accessible, engaging, and informative work, of interest to a broad spectrum of scholars, researchers, and students.’H-HistGeog
Cambridge Studies in Historical Geography, 40
2008 247 x 174 mm 440pp 48 tones 19 maps 5 tables 1 figure 5 plans 978-0-521-46470-3 Hardback £60.00 978-0-521-46841-1 Paperback £21.99www.cambridge.org/9780521464703
Forthcoming
Geographies of EmpireEuropean Empires and Colonies c.1880–1960Robin A. Butlin
A comprehensive overview of the ways in which individual European imperial powers and indigenous peoples experienced imperialism and colonisation in the period 1880–1960. In this richly-illustrated comparative account Robin Butlin explores the complex processes and discourses of colonialism, conquest and resistance from the height of empire through to decolonisation.
‘Professor Butlin’s new book is ambitious in scope and rich in historical and geographical detail. It showcases for a wide audience historical and cultural geographies of late 19th and 20th Century imperialism and colonialism that have afforded new insights into postcolonial, gender and indigenous perspectives. With its encyclopaedic coverage of the spatial aspects of European empires and colonies and its novel approach to the historiographical basis of writing about imperialism and colonialism,
Environmental History and Historical Geography 49
eBooks available at www.cambridge.org/online
the book is a welcome addition to scholarship on European High Imperialism.’Cheryl McEwan, Durham University
Cambridge Studies in Historical Geography, 42
2009 247 x 174 mm 689pp 30 tones 37 maps 978-0-521-80042-6 Hardback £70.00 978-0-521-74055-5 Paperback £29.99 Publication July 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521800426
Forthcoming
Geographies of RegulationPolicing Prostitution in Nineteenth-Century Britain and the EmpirePhilip HowellUniversity of Cambridge
This study of British authorities’ attempts to regulate prostitution both at home and abroad challenges our understanding of colonial regulation. Considering the similarities and differences between colonial and metropolitan practices, Philip Howell argues that the British administration of commercial sexuality was deeper and more extensive than is conventionally portrayed.Cambridge Studies in Historical Geography, 43
2009 228 x 152 mm 320pp 7 tones 19 maps 7 tables 3 figures 4 graphs 978-0-521-85365-1 Hardback c. £55.00 Publication August 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521853651
Forthcoming
Questioning CollapseHuman Resilience, Ecological Vulnerability, and the Aftermath of EmpireEdited by Patricia A. McAnanyUniversity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
and Norman YoffeeUniversity of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Questioning Collapse challenges those scholars and popular writers who advance the thesis that societies – past and present – collapse because of behavior that destroyed their environments or because of overpopulation. In a series of highly accessible and closely argued essays, a team of internationally recognized scholars bring history and context to bear in their radically different analyses of iconic events.2009 228 x 152 mm 400pp 29 line figures 62 tones 22 maps 978-0-521-51572-6 Hardback c. £25.99 978-0-521-73366-3 Paperback c. £14.99 Publication October 2009www.cambridge.org/9780521515726
50 Index
A Abrahamian, Ervand ................................1Abrams, Richard M. ...............................33Abulafia, David .......................................7Adam Smith and the Character of Virtue 46Afary, Janet ...........................................36Affairs of Others, The .............................19After Bush .............................................32Against Throne and Altar .......................44Agrarian Reform in Russia .....................21Aksakal, Mustafa ..................................23al-Rasheed, Madawi ................................1Alexis de Tocqueville, the First Social
Scientist .............................................46All the Way with LBJ ..............................33Allen, Robert C. .....................................19America Transformed .............................33American Government ...........................43American Sovereigns .............................28Ancient Tiwanaku ..................................11Arabian Boundaries 1966–1975 ............10Archer, Ian W. .................................. 27, 28Aronowitz, Robert A. .............................48Arriens, Jan ...........................................25Art of Hearing, The ................................15Ashworth, John .....................................29Asian Military Revolution, The ................34Atlantic World, The ................................27Auguste Comte ............................... 46, 47Australian Peacekeeping ........................39
B Bacciagaluppi, Guido .............................47Baird, Jay W. ..........................................41Baker, Chris ............................................1Bakker, Gerben ......................................42Ball, Stephen .........................................20Balogh, Brian ........................................30Bamforth, Charles .................................47Banking on Global Markets ...................42Bankruptcy of Empire ............................34Barbarism and Religion .........................43Barkey, Karen ........................................47Bartlett, Robert .....................................12Bartlett, Thomas ....................................20Battle for Wau, The ................................39Beales, Derek ........................................16Beaver, Daniel C. ...................................14Beik, William .........................................16Being Byzantine ....................................12Ben-Amos, Ilana Krausman ....................14Benjamin, Thomas .................................27Bensel, Richard Franklin .........................44Berend, Ivan T. .......................................21Berg, Manfred .......................................28Berk, Gerald ..........................................46Bernstein, Jeremy ..................................41Bethell, Leslie ..........................................7Bethencourt, Francisco ...........................18Beyond Totalitarianism ..........................20Bieri, Lydia ............................................47Birrell, Jean ...........................................18Black Market, Cold War .........................25Bonner, Robert E....................................30Bos, Dennis ...........................................27Bou, Jean ..............................................39Bowen, Karen L. ....................................16Bowes, John P. .......................................28Bowler, Peter J. ........................................6
Bradley, Phillip ......................................39Brady Jr., Thomas A. ...............................18Breakdown of the Roman Republic, The .11British Business in the Formative Years
of European Integration, 1945–1973 ..22British Industrial Revolution in Global
Perspective, The ..................................19Broadbridge, Anne F. ..............................38Brooke, C. N. L. ........................................7Brooks, Christopher W. ..........................15Browers, Michaelle L. .............................45Browning, Christopher R. .......................21Bruns, Jana F. ........................................24Bruschi, Caterina ...................................13Bureaucracy and the State in Early China 35Burnette, Joyce ......................................14Butlin, Robin A. .....................................48Byzantium Between the Ottomans and
the Latins ...........................................12
C Calhoon, Robert McCluer ......................31Calvert, Jane E. ......................................31Cambridge Companion to the Jesuits,
The ....................................................43Cambridge History of Canadian
Literature, The .......................................5Cambridge History of China, The ..............6Cambridge History of Christianity .............4Cambridge History of Christianity, The ......4Cambridge History of English Romantic
Literature, The .......................................5Cambridge History of Inner Asia, The ........6Cambridge History of Latin America, The ..7Cambridge History of Law in America, The 3Cambridge History of Science, The ............6Cambridge History of South Africa, The ....7Cambridge History of the Book in
Britain, The ...........................................5Cambridge History of the Byzantine
Empire c.500–1492, The .......................6Cambridge History of the Cold War, The ...2Cambridge History of Turkey, The .......... 5, 6Cambridge Illustrated History of Surgery 48Cambridge Illustrated History of
Warfare, The .......................................40Canon Law and the Letters of Ivo of
Chartres .............................................14Canon Law, Careers and Conquest ........12Captain Cook Was Here .........................39Carnal Commerce in Counter-
Reformation Rome..............................16Carter, James M. ....................................32Carter, Susan B. ................................... 8, 9Central Cambridge ................................19Chandler, James ......................................5Charity in Islamic Societies .....................37Charlemagne ........................................11Charney, Michael W. ................................1Chase, Kenneth .....................................41Chica da Silva .......................................34China’s Early Empires ............................35Chinese Cultural Revolution, The ............35Christopher Plantin and Engraved Book
Illustrations in Sixteenth-Century Europe ...............................................16
Church and State in America .................31Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of
Jerusalem, The ......................................8Cities in Modernity ................................48
City and Community in Norman Italy .....13Clark, Linda L. .......................................22Clark, Paul ............................................35Cleves, Rachel Hope ..............................30Clossey, Luke .........................................43Cohen, Lizabeth ....................................33Cohn, Raymond L. .................................29Cohrs, Patrick O. ....................................40Colaresi, Michael P. ...............................43Cold War and the United States
Information Agency, The ......................32Cold War Island .....................................34Collins Class Submarine Story, The .........41Collins, James B. ....................................18Collins, Robert O. .....................................1Colonial American Origins of Modern
Democratic Thought, The .....................44Commercial Agreements and Social
Dynamics in Medieval Genoa ..............13Commonwealth of the People, A ............14Concise History of Australia, A .................2Concise History of South Africa, A ............1Concise History of Sweden, A ...................2Conde, Roberto Cortés ..........................34Conflict and Stability in the German
Democratic Republic ...........................24Connes, Alain ........................................47Construction of Authority in Ancient
Rome and Byzantium, The ...................17Contending Visions of the Middle East ...37Continuities of German History, The .......16Converting Bohemia ..............................17Cook, Michael .........................................3Correspondence of Henry Cromwell,
1655–1659, The .................................15Cosmopolitan Islanders .........................20Craiutu, Aurelian ...................................45Creating Abundance ..............................29Crisis of Imprisonment, The ....................28Crisis, Revolution, and Russian Jews ......25Crum, Roger J. .......................................17Cull, Nicholas J. .....................................32Culture of Giving, The ............................14Currency of Socialism, The .....................23Curtis, Michael ......................................46
D Dal Lago, Enrico ....................................10Dale, Stephen F. .....................................37Darwin, Charles .....................................47Darwin, John .........................................19Daum, Andreas W. .................................22Davies ll, Edward J. ................................32de Dijn, Annelien ..................................43de Jong, Mayke .....................................13De Moor, Tine ........................................27de Souza, Philip .....................................12de Vries, Jan ..........................................42Dean, Martin .........................................23Delusions of Intelligence ........................24Democratization of Invention, The ..........30Dennis, Richard .....................................48Deutscher, Penelope ..............................44Di Cosmo, Nicola .....................................6Dictatorship of the Air ...........................26Dictionary of Jewish-Christian Relations,
A .........................................................8Discovering the Expanding Universe.......47Disney, A. R. ............................................2
Index 51
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Dominicans, Muslims and Jews in the Medieval Crown of Aragon .................13
Donahue, Jr., Charles .............................12Douglas Haig and the First World War ....40Drawing the Global Colour Line .............27Dred Scott and the Problem of
Constitutional Evil ..............................29Dublin Castle and the First Home Rule
Crisis ..................................................20Dunaway, Wilma A. ...............................28Dunlap, Thomas .....................................48
E Earl, Hilary ............................................26Eaton, Richard M. ..................................12Economic and Social History of Later
Medieval Europe, 1000–1500, An .......13Eggert, Paul ..........................................28Eliav-Feldon, Miriam ..............................18Ellis, Harold ...........................................48Elson, R. E. ............................................35Elster, Jon ..............................................46Emden, Christian J. ................................43Emerson: Political Writings .....................43Empire of Difference ..............................47Empire of Facts, An ................................38Empire on Trial, An ................................19Empire Project, The ................................19Endersby, Jim ........................................47Enduring the Great War .........................40Enforcing the English Reformation in
Ireland ...............................................15English Political Writings 1711–1714 .....20Enlightenment and the Creation of
German Catholicism ...........................17Entertainment Industrialised ..................42Epstein, S. R. .........................................16Epstein, Steven A. ..................................13European Legal History ..........................25European Union and the Deconstruction
of the Rhineland Frontier ....................44Evans, Richard J. ....................................20Every Day Lasts A Year ...........................21Examining the World .............................19Exiles and Pioneers ................................28
F Fabrication of Empire.............................39Fall of Napoleon, The .............................21Falola, Toyin ............................................1Far Enemy, The ......................................36Faustian Foreign Policy from Woodrow
Wilson to George W. Bush, A ..............32Feng, Li .................................................35Fichte: Addresses to the German Nation 45Fierro, Maribel .........................................3Final Battle, The .....................................26Fink, Carole ...........................................22Firearms ................................................41First Way of War, The..............................31Fisherman’s Cause, The ..........................31Fitzpatrick, Sheila ..................................20Fleet, Kate ...............................................5Fogg, Shannon L. ...................................23Foot, Sarah ............................................13Forrest, Alan ..........................................25Fouracre, Paul ..........................................7Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth ........................31France, John ..........................................12
Francks, Penelope ..................................35Frank, Allen J. ..........................................6Frankel, Jonathan ..................................25French Political Thought from
Montesquieu to Tocqueville ................43Friedlander, Henry ..................................22Friedrich Nietzsche and the Politics of
History ...............................................43Fritz, Christian G. ...................................28Frohman, Larry ......................................17From Roosevelt to Truman .....................33From the Soviet Bloc to the European
Union .................................................21Frydl, Kathleen J. ...................................33Fuccaro, Nelida .....................................36Furtado, Júnia Ferreira ...........................34
G G.I. Bill, The ...........................................33Gadd, Ian ..............................................20Galpern, Steven G..................................37Gartner, Scott Sigmund ........................ 8, 9Gaunt, Peter ..........................................15Gender, Work and Wages in Industrial
Revolution Britain ...............................14Genovese, Eugene D. .............................31Geographies of Empire ..........................48Geographies of Regulation ....................49Gerges, Fawaz A. ...................................36German Histories in the Age of
Reformations, 1400–1650 ..................18Geyer, Michael ......................................20Ghosts of War in Vietnam ......................41Global Electrification .............................42Global Lives ..........................................27God and the Founders ...........................45Goda, Norman J. W. ...............................23Goldberg, P. J. P. ....................................12Golden, Peter B. ......................................6Goldgar, Bertrand A. ..............................20Gooch, John ..........................................21Government Out of Sight, A ...................30Graber, Mark A. .....................................29Grape vs. Grain .....................................47Great African War, The ...........................39Green, Jennifer R. ..................................29Green, Judith A. .....................................11Green, Nile ............................................35Gregory, Adrian .....................................40Grenier, John .........................................31Grey, Jeffrey ..........................................39Griffiths, Paul ........................................14Grossberg, Michael..................................3Gruner, Wolf ..........................................23Guilds, Innovation and the European
Economy, 1400–1800 ........................16Gumz, Jonathan E. ................................24Guns, Race, and Power in Colonial
South Africa .......................................38
H H. R. H. The Prince Philip ........................19Haines, Michael R. ............................... 8, 9Hales, Shelley ........................................11Hallaq, Wael B. ......................................37Hallaq, Wael B. .....................................37Hamilton, Carolyn ...................................7Hanley, Ryan Patrick ..............................46Hanretta, Sean ......................................38
Harbutt, Fraser J. ...................................26Harris, J. P. .............................................40Hatlie, Peter ..........................................42Hausman, William J. ..............................42Hay, Ashley ...........................................47Heads of Religious Houses, The ............ 7, 8Heart Religion in the British
Enlightenment ....................................14Heaton, Matthew M. ...............................1Heim, Susanne ......................................25Heirs, Kin, and Creditors in Renaissance
Florence .............................................16Hellenism in Byzantium .........................12Heller, Michael ......................................47Henry I ..................................................11Heretz, Leonid .......................................21Hertner, Peter ........................................42Historical Justice in International
Perspective .........................................28Historical Statistics of the United States,
The .................................................. 8, 9Histories of City and State in the Persian
Gulf ...................................................36History of Bangladesh, A ..........................1History of Central Banking in Great
Britain and the United States, A ..........42History of Modern Burma, A ....................1History of Modern Iran, A .........................1History of Modern Israel, A ......................1History of Modern Sudan, A .....................1History of Nigeria, A ................................1History of Portugal and the Portuguese
Empire, A ..............................................2History of Saudi Arabia, A ........................1History of Thailand, A ...............................1Hitler’s African Victims ...........................23Hitler’s War Poets ..................................41Hobbes and Republican Liberty ..............43Hoff, Joan ..............................................32Hollander, Richard S. ..............................21Horner, David ........................................39Horodowich, Elizabeth ...........................17Horse in Human History, The ..................28Howell, Philip ........................................49Howells, Coral Ann ..................................5Hsu, Elisabeth .......................................48Humanity’s Burden ................................48Humour and Social Protest ....................27Hungary from the Nazis to the Soviets ...25Hunt, Arnold .........................................15Hunting and the Politics of Violence
before the English Civil War ................14Hutson, James H. ...................................31
I Idea of Indonesia, The............................35Image of Europe, The .............................25Imhof, Dirk ............................................16Imperial Alchemy ...................................36Inboden, William ...................................33Industrious Revolution, The ....................42Inquisition, The ......................................18Inside IG Farben ....................................22Introduction to Islamic Law, An ..............37Inventing a Socialist Nation ...................26Inventing Vietnam .................................32Iran’s Intellectual Revolution ..................36Ireland ..................................................20Irwin, Robert ...........................................3Isaac, Benjamin .....................................18
52 Index
Islam and Social Change in French West Africa .................................................38
Islam and the Army in Colonial India ......35Italian Vices ...........................................26
J Jaffe, James A. .......................................19James Madison and the Spirit of
Republican Self-Government ...............29Janusek, John Wayne .............................11Japan Rising ..........................................35Japanese Consumer, The ........................35Japanese Society at War ........................35Jarman, R. ...............................................9Jennings, Jeremy ...................................45Jewish Forced Labor Under the Nazis .....23Jewish Immigrants and American
Capitalism, 1880–1920 ......................31Jews in the Russian Army, 1827–1917 ...23John Brown’s War against Slavery ..........29Johnson, Gordon ...................................19Johnson, Robert David ...........................33Johnston, Mark .....................................39Jones, Allen E. .......................................11Joost-Gaugier, Christiane L. ...................18Jordan, David ........................................41Joseph II ...............................................16Journeys to Empire ................................19Judd, Richard W. ....................................30Justice, Punishment and the Medieval
Muslim Imagination ............................38
K Kaiser Wilhelm Society under National
Socialism, The .....................................25Kaldellis, Anthony ..................................12Kalyvas, Andreas ...................................44Kamrava, Mehran ..................................36Kane, Brendan .......................................15Karp, Jonathan ......................................16Kasaba, Re at ..........................................6Kater, Michael H. ...................................22Katsari, Constantina ..............................10Katznelson, Ira ......................................44Kelekna, Pita .........................................28Kemp-Welch, A. .....................................21Kenez, Peter ..........................................25Kennedy in Berlin ..................................22Kent, Neil ................................................2Kessler, Edward .......................................8Khan, B. Zorina ......................................30Kidd, Colin ............................................44Kingship and Ideology in the Islamic and
Mongol Worlds ...................................38Kiras, James D. ......................................41Kitchen, Martin .....................................39Knowles, David........................................7Knox, MacGregor ..................................21Kobrak, Christopher ...............................42Kowaleski, Maryanne .............................12Kröller, Eva-Marie ...................................5Kuehn, Thomas ......................................16Kunitake, Kume .....................................35Kwon, Heonik .......................................41
L Lacey, Jim ..............................................41Lake, Marilyn ........................................27Landy, Marc ..........................................43
Lange, Christian ....................................38Language and Statecraft in Early
Modern Venice ...................................17Larson, Pier M. ......................................39Last Great War, The ................................40Law, Marriage, and Society in the Later
Middle Ages .......................................12Law, Politics and Society in Early
Modern England .................................15Lederhendler, Eli ....................................31Leffler, Melvyn P. ......................................2Legacy of the French Revolutionary
Wars, The ...........................................25Legal Practice and the Written Word in
the Early Middle Ages .........................13Leggiere, Michael V. ...............................21Leimgruber, Matthieu ............................21Leonard, Carol ......................................21Lesaffer, Randall ....................................25Liberal Beginnings .................................44Liberal Values ........................................44Liberators ..............................................25Limits of Voluntarism, The ......................33Lindner, Stephan H. ...............................22Little, Lester K. .......................................10Lobell, Steven E. ....................................45Lockman, Zachary .................................37Loewe, Michael .....................................35Londey, Peter ........................................39London, Vera ...........................................7Lonsdale, David J. ..................................41Lorge, Peter A. .......................................34Loriaux, Michael ....................................44Lost Londons .........................................14Louis Brandeis and the Making of
Regulated Competition, 1900–1932 ...46Louthan, Howard ..................................17Low, D. A. ..............................................39Lucassen, Jan ........................................27Ludic Proof ............................................10Luscombe, David .....................................7Lydon, Ghislaine ....................................38Lynch, Timothy J. ....................................32Lynn II, John A. ......................................17
M Macintyre, Stuart .....................................2Mack, Phyllis .........................................14Mackay, Christopher S. ..........................11Macrakis, Kristie ....................................22Magra, Christopher P. ............................31Mahdis and Millenarians .......................36Majid, Shahn .........................................47Making a New Deal...............................33Making Empire ......................................18Making of Peace, The .............................41Making of Polities, The ...........................11Making of Roman India, The ..................10Maloy, J. S. ............................................44Marichal, Carlos ....................................34Marital Litigation in the Court of
Requests 1542–1642 .........................15Marriage Law and Practice in the Long
Eighteenth Century .............................15Martial Power and Elizabethan Political
Culture ...............................................15Marvin, Laurence W. ..............................12Mass Migration Under Sail.....................29Mastering America ................................30Mawdsley, Evan.....................................40
Mbenga, Bernard ....................................7McAnany, Patricia A. ..............................49McGlone, Robert E.................................29McKitterick, David ...................................5McKitterick, Rosamond ...................... 7, 11McLennan, Rebecca M. ..........................28Medieval Domesticity ............................12Military Education and the Emerging
Middle Class in the Old South .............29Military History of Australia, A ................39Milkis, Sidney M. ...................................43Mind of Jihad, The .................................44Miscamble, Wilson D. .............................33Missiles for the Fatherland .....................24Monastic Life in Anglo-Saxon England,
c. 600–900 ........................................13Money, Oil, and Empire in the Middle
East ...................................................37Monks and Monasteries of
Constantinople, ca. 350–850, The .......42Moore, Gregory .....................................45Morgan, David ........................................3Morris, Andrew J. F. ................................33Moyar, Mark ..........................................34Muñoz, Vincent Phillip ...........................45Murawiec, Laurent ................................44Murder in Aubagne ...............................17Murphy, Anne L. ....................................42Murray, James .......................................15Murray, Williamson ................................41Museum................................................47Muslim Empires of the Ottomans,
Safavids, and Mughals, The .................37Mussolini and his Generals ....................21Myth of the Eastern Front, The ...............32
N National Security and Core Values in
American History ................................32Natural and the Supernatural in the
Middle Ages, The ................................12Nature and Power .................................48Nazi Cinema’s New Women ...................24Nazi Crimes and the Law .......................22Necipo lu, Nevra ....................................12Neoclassical Realism, the State, and
Foreign Policy .....................................45Networks of Empire ...............................27Netz, Reviel ...........................................10Never Sang for Hitler .............................22New Cambridge History of Islam, The .......3New Cambridge Medieval History, The .....7Nicosia, Francis R. .................................22Nixon, Kissinger, and U.S. Foreign Policy
Making ..............................................33Noble, Thomas F. X. .................................4Norwood, Stephen H. ............................26Nuclear Implosions ................................32Nuclear Weapons ..................................41Nugent, Maria .......................................39Nuremberg SS-Einsatzgruppen Trial,
1945–1958, The .................................26Nussbaumer, Harry ................................47Nylan, Michael ......................................35
O Occitan War, The ....................................12Ocean of Letters ....................................39Ogborn, Miles .......................................27
Index 53
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Oldfield, Paul .........................................13Olmstead, Alan L. .......................... 8, 9, 29On Space and Time ................................47On the Origin of Species ........................47On Trans-Saharan Trails ..........................38Operation Barbarossa and Germany’s
Defeat in the East ...............................26Orientalism and Islam ............................46Origins of English Financial Markets, The 42Origins of Racism in the West, The .........18Ortolano, Guy ........................................21Ostpolitik, 1969–1974 ..........................22Ottoman Road to War in 1914, The ........23
P Page, Gill...............................................12Palmer, Scott W. .....................................26Palmowski, Jan ......................................26Paoletti, John T. .....................................17Parker, Geoffrey .....................................40Parker, Grant .........................................10Partition of India, The ............................36Party Polarization in Congress ................44Passion and Preferences ........................44Patriarca, Silvana ...................................26Peltzer, Jörg ...........................................12Penitential State, The .............................13Penrose, Roger ......................................47Permissive Society, The ...........................34Petersen, Michael B. ..............................24Petigny, Alan .........................................34Petrovsky-Shtern, Yohanan .....................23Phang, Sara Elise ...................................10Philosophy of Simone de Beauvoir, The ...44Phongpaichit, Pasuk ................................1Pickering, Mary .....................................46Pickering, Mary ....................................47Pickstone, John V. ....................................6Pinkard, Susan ......................................16Plague and the End of Antiquity .............10Pocock, J. G. A. ......................................43Pocock, J.G.A. ........................................45Poland under Communism .....................21Political Economy of Argentina in the
Twentieth Century, The .......................34Political Ideology in the Arab World ........45Political Moderation in America’s First
Two Centuries ....................................31Political Thought and History ..................45Politics and Culture of Honour in Britain
and Ireland, 1541–1641, The ..............15Politics of Everyday Life in Vichy France,
The ....................................................23Politics of Jewish Commerce, The ...........16Polkinghorne, John ................................47Poor Relief and Welfare in Germany
from the Reformation to World War I ...17Pope, Daniel ..........................................32Population History of the Huron-Petun,
A.D. 500–1650, A ..............................29Port, Andrew I. ......................................24Prak, Maarten .......................................16Price, Richard ........................................18Pringle, Denys .........................................8Printy, Michael ......................................17Probert, Rebecca ...................................15Proud 6th, The .......................................39Pulse Diagnosis in Early Chinese
Medicine ............................................48Pythagoras and Renaissance Europe ......18
Q Quaker Constitutionalism and the
Political Thought of John Dickinson .....31Quantum Theory at the Crossroads ........47Questioning Collapse ............................49
R Raban, Sandra .......................................19Radkau, Joachim ...................................48Rahe, Paul A. .........................................44Rapple, Rory ..........................................15Rasler, Karen .........................................43Ratcliff, R. A. ..........................................24Reagin, Nancy R. ...................................24Records of the Salem Witch-Hunt .............8Red Sea Region, The ................................9Reformation of Rights, The .....................43Reid, Anthony .................................... 3, 36Reign of Terror in America, The ...............30Religion and American Foreign Policy,
1945–1960 ........................................33Renaissance Florence ............................17Resurrection and Collapse of Empire in
Habsburg Serbia, 1914–1918, The ......24Retish, Aaron B. .....................................20Return of the Guilds, The .......................27Reuter, Timothy........................................7Revolution and the People in Russia and
China .................................................20Revolution in Taste, A ............................16Reynolds, Henry ....................................27Reyntjens, Filip ......................................39Rhode, Paul W. ......................................29Riley-Smith, Jonathan ..............................7Rio, Alice ...............................................13Ripsman, Norrin M. ...............................45Robbing the Jews ..................................23Robinson, Chase F. ..................................3Rogan, Eugene L. ..................................36Rolker, Christof ......................................14Rollings, Neil .........................................22Rollison, David ......................................14Roman House and Social Identity, The ....11Roman Military Service ..........................10Roman Warfare .....................................10Rommel’s Desert War ............................39Rosenblatt, Helena ...............................44Rosenthal, Bernard ..................................8Ross, Robert ........................................ 1, 7Roth, Jonathan P....................................10Rubin, Miri ..............................................4Ruffini, Giovanni Roberto .......................10Russia on the Eve of Modernity ..............21Russia’s Peasants in Revolution and Civil
War ....................................................20Ryden, David Beck .................................20
S Sachse, Carola .......................................25Sacks, Kenneth S. ...................................43Salvation and Globalization in the Early
Jesuit Missions ...................................43Sandage, Allan ......................................47Schaefer, Bernd ............................... 22, 28Scheck, Raffael ......................................23Schofield, Richard ..................................10Schrijvers, Peter .....................................25Science and Civilisation in China ..............8Seale, Patrick .........................................37
Securing the Past...................................28Seduced by Secrets ................................22Sexual Politics in Modern Iran ................36Shanghai.................................................9Shar ‘a ..................................................37Sheehan, Colleen A. ..............................29Shepard, Jonathan...................................6Shimazu, Naoko ....................................35Shindler, Colin .........................................1Shlaim, Avi ............................................36Shulman, Elena .....................................22Simons, Walter ........................................4Singer, Amy ...........................................37Singh, Gurharpal ...................................36Singh, Robert S. .....................................32Siniver, Asaf ...........................................33Skinner, Quentin ....................................43Slave Systems ........................................10Slavery in White and Black .....................31Slavery, Capitalism and Politics in the
Antebellum Republic...........................29Smelser, Ronald .....................................32Smith, David M. ................................... 7, 8Smith, Helmut Walser ............................16Smith, Julia M. H. ....................................4Smith, Paul Jakov ....................................6Smith, S. ..................................................9Smith, S. A. ............................................20Social and Cultural History of Early
Modern France, A ...............................16Social History of the Deccan, 1300–
1761, A ..............................................12Social Mobility in Late Antique Gaul .......11Social Networks in Byzantine Egypt .......10Solidarity without the State? ..................21Speller, Ian ............................................41St. Peter’s in the Vatican ........................43Stacey, Robyn ........................................47Stahel, David .........................................26Stalinism on the Frontier of Empire ........22Stallworthy, Jon .....................................41State in Early Modern France, The ..........18Steege, Paul ..........................................25Stephenson, Scott..................................26Stewart, Gordon T. .................................19Stoltzfus, Nathan ...................................22Storey, Tessa ..........................................16Storey, William Kelleher .........................38Strategic Rivalries in World Politics .........43Stretton, Tim ..........................................15Struggle for Arab Independence, The ......37Suarez SJ, Michael F. ................................5Suharto .................................................35Survivors’ Songs ....................................41Sutch, Richard ..................................... 8, 9Sutherland, D. M. G. ..............................17Sweeping the German Nation ................24Swift, Jonathan .....................................20Szonyi, Michael .....................................34
T t’Hart, Marjolein ....................................27Takács, Sarolta A. ..................................17Talbot, Ian .............................................36Tales from Spandau ...............................23Taliaferro, Jeffrey W. ...............................45Taylor, Andrew .......................................47Taylor, Kevin ..........................................19Tec, Nechama ........................................21Theriault, Sean M. .................................44
54 Index
Thies, Wallace J. .....................................45Third Reich in the Ivory Tower, The..........26Thompson, William R. ............................43To the Threshold of Power, 1922/33 .......21Tocqueville on America after 1840 .........45Tomlins, Christopher ................................3Transactions of the Royal Historical
Society ......................................... 27, 28Transatlantic Encounters ........................32Triumph Forsaken ..................................34Tronzo, William ......................................43Trumbull IV, George R. ...........................38Tsuzuki, Chushichi .................................35Tuck, Christopher ..................................41Tucker, Judith E. .....................................38Tucker, William F. ...................................36Turner, Michael L. ....................................5Twentieth-Century Diplomacy ................19Twitchett, Denis.......................................6Two Cultures Controversy, The ...............21
U Understanding Modern Warfare .............41Unfinished Peace after World War I, The .40Union and Unionisms ............................44University Politics ..................................19Unnatural History ..................................48Untilled Garden, The ..............................30
V Valentini, Antony ...................................47
Van Doosselaere, Quentin ......................13van Schendel, Willem ...............................1van Zanden, Jan Luiten ..........................27Vaughan, Alden T. ..................................32Vose, Robin ...........................................13
W Wagner, Donald B. ...................................8Walker III, William O. .............................32Walker, Mark .........................................25Walton, C. Dale .....................................41Wandering Heretics of Languedoc, The ...13War and Peace in Ancient and Medieval
History ...............................................12War for Palestine, The ............................36Ward, Kerry ...........................................27Warrick, Gary ........................................29Watson, Alexander ................................40Watts, John ...........................................11Wealth and Life .....................................45Webb, Jr., James L. A. .............................48Wenborn, Neil .........................................8West Indian Slavery and British
Abolition, 1783–1807 ........................20Westad, Odd Arne ...................................2Why NATO Endures ...............................45Wiener, Martin J. ...................................19Wiesner-Hanks, Merry E. ........................15Wilkins, Mira .........................................42Winch, Donald ......................................45Wintle, Michael .....................................25Witte, Jr, John ........................................43
Women and Achievement in Nineteenth-Century Europe ................22
Women and Gender in Early Modern Europe ...............................................15
Women, Armies, and Warfare in Early Modern Europe ..................................17
Women, Family, and Gender in Islamic Law ....................................................38
Women, Work and Family in the Antebellum Mountain South ...............28
Wood, John H. .......................................42Woolner, Derek......................................41Worcester, Thomas.................................43World War II ..........................................40Wright, Gavin ...................................... 8, 9
Y Yalta 1945 ............................................26Yoffee, Norman .....................................49Young, John W. ......................................19Young, R. Jules ......................................35Yule, Peter .............................................41
Z Zatlin, Jonathan R. ................................23Ziegler, Joseph .......................................18Zionism and Anti-Semitism in Nazi
Germany ............................................22
Notes 55
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