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Academic Perspectives from Cambridge University Press.

September 5th 2024 0

John Cleland Plays Dead?

John Cleland, best remembered as the author of the erotic novel Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure (1748-49), was a tricksy and entertaining correspondent. His letters, just published by Cambridge University Press, reveal his attempts to insinuate himself wit…

August 22nd 2024

Is Musical Modernism Western?

This year’s edition of the annual World New Music Days by the International Society for Contemporary Music (ISCM) took place on the Faroe Islands. Alongside the host nation, the opening concert featured works by composers from South Africa, Norway, …

August 21st 2024

America’s French Orphans: Mobilization, Humanitarianism, and the Protection of France during World War

Months before the United States entered the war, American men, women, and children mobilized to “adopt” France’s orphans. Through a binational humanitarian relief organization known as the Fatherless Children of France Society (FCFS), Am…

August 20th 2024

Energy Transitions in Central and Eastern Europe: The Political Economy of Climate and Energy Policy

Even before the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine put energy security at the centre of EU policy, countries from Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) considered this issue to be crucial part of not only energy policy, but also national security. Energy Transit…

August 19th 2024

The Martyr’s Many Faces

In 2012, I first heard about the spate of self-immolations happening in the traditional lands of Tibet. It seemed every day more people burned themselves to death while publicly condemning the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and praying for the Dalai Lama&r…

August 14th 2024

Playing with Fire: Parties and Political Violence in Kenya and India

Political parties play vital roles in the healthy functioning of democratic regimes. They form the government and the opposition, provide structure to the electoral process, aggregate and channel citizens’ preferences, and promote democratic account…

August 14th 2024

Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition: The 1830s

Not long after we submitted this book for production, Zadie Smith’s new novel, The Fraud, was published. It was something of a surprise, largely a welcome one, that it seemed to have so many references in common with the book we had just finished. T…

August 14th 2024

The Archaeology of Southern Africa

Southern Africa is in the news: South Africa’s recent elections have seen the ruling African National Congress lose its majority in parliament for the first time since apartheid ended in 1994, producing a much more volatile political scene, while Zi…

August 13th 2024

Performing Ethics in English Revenge Drama

Performing Ethics in English Revenge Drama: Wild Play seeks to demonstrate that the overwhelming popularity of revenge drama in the English Renaissance is best understood in the context of the unique ethical effects it generates in its intended audience d…

August 13th 2024

Literary Vegetarianism & Veganism

‘Diet’ is derived from the Greek diaita, meaning ‘way of life’, so that what we eat is intimately connected with who we perceive ourselves to be. Historically, those who chose to abstain from the eating of animal flesh were outside…

Cambridge Core

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Advancing learning, knowledge and research.

September 13th 2024 0

Post Nubes Lux: introduction to The Aeronautical Journal Special Issue

Beyond the Clouds There is Light.  This is an appropriate descriptor of our industry. It is now emerging from the dark clouds of the Covid-19 pandemic, stronger and with a primary aim to improve environmental performance. 

September 10th 2024 0

To Be Bipolar

In the September edition of Muses – the arts blog from BJPsych International  – Dr Dami Ajayi reviews Nigerian writer Tukura John Daniel’s memoir about his lived experience with Bipolar Affective Disorder, How to Spell Bip…

September 10th 2024 0

Using the illustrative process to reconstruct ceramic design

Following my participation in an extensive illustration project in 2001 of precontact decorated ceramics from the Hohokam site of Snaketown that were curated at the Arizona State Museum, I wrote an article published by AAP in 2014 called Representation an…

September 6th 2024 0

Meet the Editors: Q&A with TJ Odom, Social Media Editor for Parasitology.

Welcome to our “Meet the Editors” series, where we interview the editorial team about their work and their relationship to the journal.…

September 5th 2024 1

Gypsy, Roma, and Traveller communities: mental health services need to do better

There has been a rightful focus on equity in healthcare systems, and drives to co-produce services in a culturally informed manner with those who use them. In my experience, this has not been equal in approach, and a group, or groups of people, who remain…

September 5th 2024 0

DEAD TICK CLADE WALKING

Before 1935, ticks were composed of the hard (Ixodidae) and soft (Argasidae) tick families. In 1931, Gerald Bedford described a peculiar tick species named Nuttalliella namaqua, which he considered a missing link between the two families, since it shared …

September 5th 2024 1

Purple Inclusion in Tourism: A Possibility or a Pipe Dream for India?

Stephen Hawking’s struggle with wheelchair inaccessibility at the Taj Mahal in 2001 remains a potent symbol of India’s persistent failure to foster disability (purple) inclusion in tourism sector.…

September 3rd 2024 0

Why do we devalue the suffering of informal caregivers?

A study conducted at the Centre for Psychological Research and Social Intervention (CIS-Iscte) revealed that the dehumanization of informal caregivers and individuals’ perceptions of justice can contribute to the devaluation of informal caregivers&r…

August 28th 2024 1

After 59 Years, who are you Indeed? A Glimpse of Singapore’s Developmental Status from an International Law Perspective

Introduction In his National Day Message 2024 delivered on 8 August, the Prime Minister of Singapore Lawrence Wong referred to the current status of Singapore: “[W]e transformed Singapore into a first-world success story…As a developed…

August 21st 2024 0

Conversations with Authors: Geo-Political Rivalry and Anti-Immigrant Sentiment: A Conjoint Experiment in 22 Countries

In this “Conversation with Authors,” we spoke with APSR author Andreas Wimmer about his open access article “Geo-Political Rivalry and Anti-Immigrant Sentiment: A Conjoint Experiment in 22 Countries”, co-authored with Bart Bonikows…

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