All Books

Books are listed according to publication date; our most recent titles are listed first.

Oral Literature in the Digital Age: Archiving Orality and Connecting with Communities
Mark Turin, Claire Wheeler and Eleanor Wilkinson (eds.)

"This book addresses a vitally important topic of considerable interest to a broad group of readers." —Dr. Mick Gowar, Anglia Ruskin University

£15.95
Foundations for Moral Relativism
J. David Velleman

In Foundations for Moral Relativism a distinguished moral philosopher tames a bugbear of current debate about cultural difference. J. David Velleman shows that different communities can indeed be subject to incompatible moralities, because thei

£12.95
Yeats Annual No. 18
Warwick Gould (ed.)

The admirable Yeats Annual . . . a powerful base of biographical and textual knowledge. Since 1982 the vade mecum of Yeats. —Bernard O-Donoghue, The Times Literary Supplemen

£18.95
The Passion of Max von Oppenheim: Archaeology and Intrigue in the Middle East from Wilhelm II to Hitler
Lionel Gossman

One of the finest books on this period and topic. The research is thorough, the analysis careful and moderate, and the range of the book is broad. It will appeal to scholars in a variety of fields. The biographical sections on Oppenheim, a fascin

£15.95
Digital Humanities Pedagogy: Practices, Principles and Politics
Brett D. Hirsch (ed.)

Digital Humanities Pedagogy is a compelling and important collection of work on different aspects of pedagogy in the digital humanities, raising an extremely timely set of questions for instructors, advisors, and administrators alike.

£14.95
Virgil, Aeneid, 4.1–299: Latin Text, Study Questions, Commentary and Interpretative Essays
Ingo Gildenhard

Love and tragedy dominate book four of Virgil’s most powerful work, building on the violent emotions invoked by the storms, battles, warring gods, and monster-plagued wanderings of the epic’s opening.

£14.95
A People Passing Rude: British Responses to Russian Culture
Anthony Cross (ed.)

Described by the sixteenth-century English poet George Turbervile as "a people passing rude, to vices vile inclin’d", the Russians waited some three centuries before their subsequent cultural achievements — in music, art and particularly li

£15.95
Is Behavioral Economics Doomed?: The Ordinary versus the Extraordinary
David K. Levine

It is fashionable to criticize economic theory for focusing too much on rationality and ignoring the imperfect and emotional way in which real economic decisions are reached. All of us facing the global economic crisis wonder just how rational econom

£8.95
Oral Literature in Africa
Ruth Finnegan

  What is significant about this revised, online edition is that it makes this ground-breaking, seminal work freely available to all who want to use it. This is particularly significant for the African scholar living in an increasingly t

£15.95
Frontier Encounters: Knowledge and Practice at the Russian, Chinese and Mongolian Border
Franck Billé, Grégory Delaplace and Caroline Humphrey (eds.)

China and Russia are rising economic and political powers that share thousands of miles of border. Yet, despite their proximity, their practical, local interactions with each other — and with their third neighbour

£15.95