x

Fifteen Eighty Four

Academic perspectives from Cambridge University Press

Menu

What do NATO and the MCU’s Avengers have in common?

“There may be a causality. Our very strength invites challenge. Challenge incites conflict. And conflict breeds catastrophe.” -Vision, in Captain America: Civil War Who your friends are shapes...

Kyle Beardsley | 13 Jul 2026

Capitalism Creates Abundance. Democracy Must Share It.

We live through a strange paradox. Liberal democracy and the market economy produced the greatest expansion of prosperity in history — yet faith in both is fraying at once, pressed by authoritarianism,...

Gabriel Cepaluni | 13 Jul 2026

Questioning the Self and Nature: The Early German Romantics

A few years ago, I started to question the role and status of the human being in the natural realm. Although we know very well that we are animals, we feel that we occupy a special place in nature—at...

Giulia Valpione | 13 Jul 2026

Out of the Margins: Late Antique Craftworkers in the Making

While a university student, by chance I took an elective course in glassblowing. One of the first things I remember is learning how to hold the heavy metal blowpipe. Against the soundtrack of a loud and...

Hallie G. Meredith | 13 Jul 2026

The Art of Non-Conviction

Have the courage of your convictions. Be a person of conviction. Carry conviction. Stand tall in your conviction. As these idioms attest, we have a strong cultural conviction that conviction is a virtue...

Yasmin Solomonescu | 9 Jul 2026

Educational technology is entering a new stage of evolution

For years, the EdTech ecosystem has been moving towards greater maturity. Researchers are producing stronger evidence about what supports learning. Governments are formalising procurement and demanding...

Natalia I. Kucirkova | 7 Jul 2026

Don’t they know I’m right?

In a moment, I’m going to tell you about my book. But before I do that, I’d like to ask you to perform a quick intellectual exercise: think of something that, in your view, is really terrible....

Jesse Mirotznik | 7 Jul 2026

Miswanting

Can money buy happiness? What is the value of things? How do people measure that value, whether we are speaking of consumer products, health, activities, or time? Free markets have a simple answer:...

Cass R. Sunstein | 6 Jul 2026

Finding Hope in the Climate Crisis: Prioritizing Protection of “Voiceless” Communities

“With all the bad news on climate science and climate governance lately, how do you find hope to persevere?” In the past decade, I have been asked this question with increasing frequency in my climate...

Randall S. Abate | 6 Jul 2026

Demobilising the Far Right: How Societal Actors Counter Far-Right Social Forces

What can be done to counter far-right social forces? These movements, whether attacking foundational liberal tenets of society (often called ‘radical right’) or attacking democratic systems and norms...

Michael C. Zeller | 6 Jul 2026

Why Have So Many Israeli–Palestinian Peace Initiatives Failed, and How Can Peace Be Achieved?

Every few years, hope briefly returns to the Middle East. Negotiators meet behind closed doors, world leaders speak of a historic opportunity, and commentators predict that peace may finally be within...

Raphael Cohen-Almagor | 3 Jul 2026

Introducing Lexicons of English Religion, 1380–1850

Many years ago I developed an amateur interest in British ecclesiastical history, brought about particularly by reading on holiday Diarmaid MacCulloch’s astonishing biography of Thomas Cranmer (1996);...

Jeremy J. Smith | 3 Jul 2026