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Fifteen Eighty Four

Academic perspectives from Cambridge University Press

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A History of Music in the Czech Lands

The idea of the “Czech lands” has never been simple. These regions have carried many titles in various languages throughout history and sometimes held radically different meanings, including “the...

Kelly St. Pierre | 20 Nov 2025

Lend me your ears

In Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, Marc Antony famously begins his funeral oration by exclaiming, “Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears.” This is an elegant way of asking for...

Kent Lehnhof | 19 Nov 2025

Escaping Justice: Why States Still Get Away with Human Rights Violations

Two enduring truths shape the study of human rights. First, states violate the rights of their own citizens at an alarmingly high rate. Second, these same states are rarely held accountable for their...

Cyanne E. Loyle | 19 Nov 2025

Following the (imperfect) evidence on suicide prevention

Catherine Robinson, Murad Khan and I have edited a new book on suicide prevention. Does the world need it when there already loads of books on suicide? We think so. Many academics in mental health...

Rob Poole | 19 Nov 2025

The Maddeningly Beautiful Legacy of Lucia di Lammermoor

Gaetano Donizetti’s 1835 tragic opera Lucia di Lammermoor is known for a lot of things: its Scottish setting, its beautiful bel canto melodies, its tale of forbidden love and a final lover’s...

Mark A. Pottinger | 19 Nov 2025

Trump’s Challenges to the Law of War

In a high-profile address to US generals earlier this week, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth declared, “We don’t fight with stupid rules of engagement. We untie the hands of our war fighters to intimidate,...

Thomas Gift | 18 Nov 2025

The Autumnal Experience of Work in Early Modern England

Autumn is most definitely here: leaves crunch underfoot; the air is crisp and cool; pumpkin and apple spices waft from the coffee shops. But while the season brings many changes, it does not alter work...

Taylor Aucoin | 18 Nov 2025

Exploring Law and Literature in the Long Eighteenth Century

The law underwent significant developments in eighteenth-century Britain as jurists and legislators adapted older doctrines to fit the needs of an increasingly commercial, industrial, and imperial society....

Melissa J. Ganz | 18 Nov 2025

Ancient Assyrian Identities

Social groups dominate public discourse. The news, social media, scientific reports, and everyday conversations all refer to groups of every kind: women, conservatives, Muslims, immigrants, Nigerians,...

Jonathan Valk | 18 Nov 2025

The Prompts You Need to Help You Write the Book You Want to Write

When we wrote our handbook for fiction writers (The Book You Need to Read to Write the Book You Want to Write, published by CUP in 2022) we excluded a component of our taught courses, the writing exercise...

Sarah Burton, Jem Poster | 6 Nov 2025

Insight-Driven Problem Solving: Analytics Science to Improve the World

Why Analytics Matters Now More Than Ever In today’s world, data and algorithms are everywhere, but real impact comes not from numbers alone—it comes from how we use them. That belief is at the...

Soroush Saghafian | 31 Oct 2025

Can Governments Trust Their Citizens? The Paradox of Voluntary Compliance

Every policymaker knows the dilemma: should governments trust people to do the right thing, or make sure they do it? The safer option has usually been enforcement. Write the rules, monitor behavior, punish...

Yuval Feldman | 20 Oct 2025