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Fifteen Eighty Four

Academic perspectives from Cambridge University Press

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Who Were Sterilized by the State?

Who were the victims of sterilization policies in the U.S.? Randall Hansen and Desmond King discuss three case studies, among the many they interviewed for their forthcoming book, Sterilized by the State.

4 Oct 2013

Eugenics Where You’d Least Expect It

Take a look into Sterilized by the State by Randall Hansen and Desmond King with the interactive slideshow below.

3 Oct 2013

What the Left and the Right Can Learn from Hollywood Politics

Most people view Hollywood politics today as a bastion of progressivism—for better or worse. Perhaps there is not much to learn from the current political scene in Hollywood other than celebrity and money matter—and Hollywood provides a lot of both. But Hollywood politics was not always so left-wing.

Donald T. Critchlow | 2 Oct 2013

Hemingway’s Europe

Hemingway lived a peripatetic life in Europe: first as a journalist for the Toronto Star, then as a full-time writer based in Paris. We trace the key locales that shaped him and his writing in Volume 2.

1 Oct 2013

Into the Intro: Shakespeare Beyond English

Shakespeare may be England's playwright, but his plays are a household name all over the world. In Shakespeare Beyond English, go behind the scenes of the Globe to Globe Festival where each of Shakespeare's plays was performed by a different international theatre company to explore what Shakespeare's plays mean when extended beyond the English language.

30 Sep 2013

Shakespeare’s Friends and Rivals

Theatre historian, Dr Eva Griffith, talks to us about her latest book 'A Jacobean Company and Its Playhouse' (2013).

29 Sep 2013

Bringing Ancient Greek Drama to Life

..or so Prometheus claims in the ancient Greek tragedy Prometheus Bound. As the first of two features marking Cambridge University Press’ sponsorship of the Cambridge Greek Play 2013, Dr Oliver Thomas explores the enduring fascination of the figure of Prometheus.

28 Sep 2013

Outsourcing Economics

William Milberg and Deborah Winkler, the authors of Outsourcing Economics: Global Value Chains in Capitalist Developments stopped by Cambridge's Manhattan office and answered our questions about their latest book.

27 Sep 2013

What Has Pessimism Ever Done for Us?

Arthur Schopenhauer often gets overlooked when today's philosophers study philosophers of the past, and it has a lot to do with his pessimistic message. Sophia Vasalou, the author of Schopenhauer and the Aesthetic Standpoint makes the case that his pessimistic philosophy is still critical.

Sophia Vasalou | 26 Sep 2013

Why Barry Goldwater Fell Out with Ronald Reagan

Ronald Reagan saw in former presidential candidate Barry Goldwater a friend and a mentor. They corresponded frequently. But Reagan’s 1976 challenge for the Republican presidential nomination caused a deep rift.

Donald T. Critchlow | 25 Sep 2013

The Paris (and Toronto) Years

Volume 2 may span only two years (1923-1923), but it spans a tumultuous period in Hemingway's life: he travels to Spain and discovers bullfighting; he moves his family to Toronto; he resents it so much he moves back to Paris; he publishes his first book of short stories, and begins work on what would become The Sun Also Rises. This timeline presents key events that take place in this installment.

24 Sep 2013

Forensic psychology vs Cybercriminals

Gráinne Kirwan and Andrew Power, authors of Cybercrime: The Psychology of Online Offenders, explain the use of forensic psychology in cybercrime.

Andrew Power, Gráinne Kirwan | 23 Sep 2013