Anti-Empire explores how different writers across Lusophone spaces engage with imperial and colonial power at its various levels of domination, while imagining alternatives to dominant discourses pert
This book is the companion to Public Sculpture of Edinburgh, volume 1, 'The Old Town and South Edinburgh', extending the coverage to the First New Town and its environs, and beyond that to the former
Britain’s foremost scholarly journal dedicated to sculpture in all its aspects, Sculpture Journal provides an international forum for writers and scholars in the field of postclassical and contemporar
Britain’s foremost scholarly journal dedicated to sculpture in all its aspects, Sculpture Journalprovides an international forum for writers and scholars in the field of postclassical and contemporary
Britain’s foremost scholarly journal dedicated to sculpture in all its aspects, Sculpture Journal provides an international forum for writers and scholars in the field of postclassical and contemporar
Globalization has been the topic of heated debate in recent years, with one side asserting it will produce a better standard of living for people around the world, and a fierce opposition arguing that
The resurgence of interest in the history of the English language has prompted this indispensable introductory guide to the scripts used in Old and Middle English writing. The best way to gain a sense
This book represents the first interdisciplinary study of how memory has driven and challenged the political transition of Irish republicanism from armed conflict to constitutional politics through en
Watchmen, Judge Dredd, Hellblazer, Before Watchmen, Razorjack: John Higgins has been the artist or colourist on some of the most iconic comic books of recent years. Here, collected together for the fi
This is the first part of a two-volume textbook offering the basis for a single semester undergraduate-level university course on environmental politics in Latin America and the Caribbean. It offers a
Liverpool was the first British port of call for most American travelers in the nineteenth century—and though some, like sour wordsmith Henry James, preferred to describe the more picturesque Chester,