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  • av Angelo Poliziano
    407

    Angelo Poliziano (1454-1494) was one of the great scholar-poets of the Renaissance and a leading figure in the Florence during the Age of the Medici. This I Tatti edition contains all of his Greek and Latin poetry (with the exception of the Silvae in ITRL 14) translated into English for the first time.

  • - Commerce, Politics, and the Birth of the East India Company
    av Rupali Mishra
    477

    Around 1800, the English East India Company controlled half of the world's trade and deployed a vast network of political influencers. Yet the story of its 17th-century beginnings has remained largely untold. Rupali Mishra's account of the Company's formative years sheds light on one of the most powerful corporations in the history of the world.

  • av Facundo Alvaredo
    361

    World Inequality Report 2018 is the most authoritative and up-to-date account of global trends in inequality. Researched, compiled, and written by a team of the world's leading economists, it presents-with unrivaled clarity and depth-information and analysis that will be vital to policy makers and scholars everywhere.

  • - Travel Writing in the Modern Age
    av Roberta Micallef
    261

    Through engaging characters-China-bound missionaries, an Indo-Persian diplomat, a Turkish exile in India, a French teacher in America, Arab students in Moscow, a Japanese woman writer in Europe-Illusion and Disillusionment examines travel writing beyond colonialism, imperialism, and Orientalism, focusing on the experience of travel itself.

  • - The Scholarship and Legacy of James T. Monroe
    av Michelle M. Hamilton
    307

    The Study of al-Andalus explores the many ways in which James T. Monroe's scholarship has inspired further study in topics including Hispano-Arabic, Hebrew, and Romance literatures, Persian epic poetry, the impact of Andalusi literature in Egypt and the Arab East, and the lasting legacy of the expulsion of Spain's last Muslims.

  • - Reading Characterization in Homer
    av Andrew Porter
    307

    Andrew Porter explores characterization in Homer, from an oral-traditional point of view, through the resonance of words, themes, and "back stories" from the past and future. He analyzes Agamemnon's character traits in the Iliad, including his qualities as a leader, against events such as his tragic homecoming in the Odyssey.

  • - Decadence, Modernism, and Postcolonial Poetry
    av Robert Stilling
    837

    Robert Stilling shows how aestheticism's decadence became a key idea in postcolonial thought, describing the failures of revolutionary nationalism and asserting cosmopolitanism in poetry and art. Breaking down the boundaries around decadent literature, he takes it outside Europe and emphasizes the global reach of its imaginative transgressions.

  • av Oscar Wilde
    317

    Serving prison time with hard labor for the crime of gross indecency, Oscar Wilde wrote some of his most powerful works. A savage indictment of society, and testimony to private sufferings, his prison writings-illuminated by Nicholas Frankel's notes-reveal a different man from the dandy and aesthete who shocked or amused the English-speaking world.

  • - Literacy, Numeracy, and the Religion-Science Divide
    av Michael E. Hobart
    507

    Michael Hobart locates the great rift between science and religion not in ideological disagreement but in advances in mathematics and symbolic representation that moved past language to open new windows onto the natural world. His work connects the cognitive breakthroughs of the past with intellectual debates ongoing in the twenty-first century.

  • - Privacy Reimagined for a Public World
    av Jennifer Rothman
    491

    From athletes to victims of revenge porn, people have been transformed into intellectual property. Who controls one's identity? Jennifer Rothman uses the right of publicity-a little-known law-to answer this question. By tracing the right's origins to privacy laws in the 1800s, she finds a way to reclaim privacy for a public world.

  • - Law and Empire
    av Jennifer Pitts
    601

    It is commonly believed that international law originated in respectful relations among free and equal European states. But as Jennifer Pitts shows, international law was forged as much through Europeans' domineering relations with non-European states and empires, leaving a legacy visible in the unequal structures of today's international order.

  • av Michael Fried
    561

    If literary impressionism is anything, it is the project to turn prose into vision. But vision of what? Michael Fried argues that the impressionists compelled readers not only to see what was described and narrated but also to see writing itself: the upward-facing page, pen and ink, the written script, the act of inscription.

  • av Julian Yolles
    417

    Medieval Latin Lives of Muhammad helps trace the persistence of old cliches as well as the evolution of new attitudes toward Islam and its prophet over five centuries in Western culture. This volume brings together a highly varied and fascinating set of Latin narratives and polemics never before translated into English.

  • - Spain and the Making of Modern Moroccan Culture
    av Eric Calderwood
    721

    The widespread belief that Spain and Morocco are joined through their Andalusi past-from a time when Christians, Muslims, and Jews "coexisted" in medieval Iberia-actually arose in the 1800s, as Spain's justification for colonizing Morocco. Eric Calderwood shows how a piece of Spanish propaganda gradually became a tenet of Moroccan nationalism.

  • - The Cultural Evolution of Thinking
    av Cecilia Heyes
    401

    Adult humans have impressive pieces of cognitive equipment, but in Cecilia Heyes's view these cognitive gadgets are not programmed in the genes. They are constructed over the course of childhood through social interaction. From birth, our malleable minds learn from our culture-soaked human environment not only what to think but how to think it.

  • - Protecting Work and Workers in the Twenty-First Century
    av Michael J. Piore
    441

    Work is more deadly than war, and the U.S. has one of the highest rates of occupational fatality in the developed world. Why, after a century of reform, are U.S. workers growing less secure? Michael Piore and Andrew Schrank show how regulation can be a generative force for both workers and employers, rather than the job-killer of neoliberal theory.

  • - A Twenty-First-Century Portrait of Our Closest Kin
    av Craig Stanford
    407

    Drawing on extensive observations of wild chimpanzees' behavior and social dynamics, Craig Stanford portrays a complex and more humanlike ape than the chimps Jane Goodall popularized more than a half century ago-one that plots political coups, strategizes for resources, and passes on cultural traditions to younger generations.

  • - Jealousy of Trade and the History of Political Thought
    av Bela Kapossy
    897

    When Istvan Hont died in 2013 the world lost a giant of intellectual history. Markets, Morals, Politics brings together a celebrated cast of Hont's contemporaries to explore his influence, ideas, and methods-a work of interpretation that does justice to Hont's influence while developing its own provocative, illuminating arguments.

  • - Politics, Governance, and the Rise of the British Navy
    av Sarah Kinkel
    537

    Sarah Kinkel shows that the rise of British naval power was neither inevitable nor unquestioned: it was the outcome of fierce battles over the shape of Britain's empire and the bonds of political authority. The Navy was one of many battlefields where British subjects debated whether the empire would be ruled from Parliament down or the people up.

  • - A New Understanding of the Big Bang and the Emergence of Life
    av Roy R. Gould
    307

    Offering a fresh take on what brought the world-and us-into being, Roy Gould helps us see the universe as the master of its own creation, not tethered to a singular event but burgeoning as new space and energy stream into existence. He explores whether life itself-rather than a mere cosmic afterthought-may be written into the basic laws of nature.

  • - Alcibiades and the Fall of Athens
    av David Stuttard
    367

    Alcibiades was one of the most dazzling figures of Athens' Golden Age. A friend of Socrates, he was spectacularly rich, bewitchingly handsome and charismatic, a skilled general, and a ruthless politician. He was also a serial traitor. David Stuttard tells a spellbinding story of Alcibiades' life and the turbulent world he set out to conquer.

  • - A New Understanding of How Cancer Evolves inside Us
    av James DeGregori
    501

    James DeGregori proposes a way of thinking about cancer as a disease of evolution-one in which mutated cells outcompete healthy cells in the ecosystem of the body's tissues. By tying cancer's progression to natural selection and evolved strategies for reproductive success, his theory goes far in explaining who gets cancer, when it appears, and why.

  • - From the Canon of Poetry to the Lyrics of the Song Dynasty
    av Michael A. Fuller
    521 - 747

    Michael A. Fuller's innovative textbook for learning classical Chinese poetry moves beyond the traditional anthology of poems translated into English and instead brings readers-including those with no knowledge of Chinese-as close as possible to the texture of the poems in their original language.

  • Spara 10%
    - Intertextual Modes of Making Meaning in Early Medieval China
    av Wendy Swartz
    507

    Early medieval writers in China understood and manipulated a shared intellectual lexicon to produce meaning. Wendy Swartz explores how these writers developed a distinctive mosaic of ways to participate in their cultural heritage by weaving textual strands from a shared and expanding store of literary resources into new patterns and configurations.

  • - Bao Shichen and Reform in Nineteenth-Century China
    av William T. Rowe
    467

    The Qing Empire in the early nineteenth century faced bureaucratic corruption, food shortages, infrastructure decay, domestic rebellion, adverse balances of trade, and a previously inconceivable foreign threat from the West. William T. Rowe uses literati reformer Bao Shichen as a prism to understand contemporary response to this general crisis.

  • - The Refugee Exodus to the French Caribbean
    av Eric T. Jennings
    446

    Early in World War II, thousands of refugees traveled from France to Vichy-controlled Martinique, en route to safer shores in North, Central, and South America. While awaiting transfer, the exiles formed influential ties with one another and with local black dissidents. As Eric T. Jennings shows, what began as expulsion became a kind of rescue.

  • - How Christians Inspired, Condemned, and Embraced Rock 'n' Roll
    av Randall J. Stephens
    521

    Randall Stephens traces rock's inspiration to the Pentecostal churches where Elvis, Little Richard, and others worshipped. Faith, which served as a vehicle for whites' fears, led them to condemn the godless music of blacks and hippies. But in a reversal of strategy, evangelicals later embraced Christian rock as a way to project Jesus's message.

  • - Philology, Security, Authentication
    av Brian Lennon
    837

    Cryptology, the science of ciphers and codes, and philology, the study of languages, are typically understood as separate domains. But Brian Lennon contends that computing's humanistic applications, no less than its technical ones, are marked by the priorities of security and military institutions devoted to fighting wars and decoding intelligence.

  • - Garbage and Growth in India
    av Assa Doron
    361

    Assa Doron and Robin Jeffrey argue that in India the removal and reuse of waste lays waste to human lives. People at the bottom are injured and stigmatized as they work with sewage, toxic chemicals, and rotting garbage. If India is to emerge as a model for the world, its policies will have to reach beyond the environment, to encompass empathy.

  • - Spirituality and the Search for Invisible Dimensions
    av Christopher G. White
    422

    Christopher White points to ways that both spiritual practices and scientific speculation about multiverses and invisible dimensions are efforts to peer into the hidden elements and even existential meaning of the universe. Creatively appropriated, these ideas can restore a spiritual sense that the world is greater than anything our eyes can see.

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