x

Fifteen Eighty Four

Academic perspectives from Cambridge University Press

Menu

The Climate Change Capital of the World is Not Where You Think

If you’d like to visit the front lines of climate change, you need not travel as far as the North Pole, the nearest melting glacier, or the most recently inundated island.  Easier to access by road...

Brian Stone, Jr. | 20 Jun 2012

Can the Anglo-American “Special Relationship” Survive the Bicentennial of the War of 1812?

The bicentennial of the War of 1812 is now upon us. It might be supposed, after the passage of two centuries, that all the emotions surrounding the conflict have subsided and that American, British, and...

J. C. A Stagg | 18 Jun 2012

Henrietta Darwin’s Diary: The Correspondence of Charles Darwin, Part One

A small lockable leather diary in the archive at Cambridge University Library has led to a reassessment of one of the key relationships in Charles Darwin’s life. The Darwin Correspondence Project, with the permission of Darwin’s family, is making public for the first time the short but intense—and intensely revealing—personal journal of Darwin’s daughter, Henrietta.

15 Jun 2012

London, Then and Now: A Slideshow

From Westminster Abbey to St. Paul’s Cathedral, many of London’s famed monuments have survived fires, smog, flooding, and other natural and man-made disasters. In this slideshow, we take a look at some of the city’s most enduring icons.

13 Jun 2012

The Cambridge Book Club features London, A Social and Cultural History, 1550-1750

If all the world’s a stage, then all eyes will be on London this summer. With the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee and the Summer Olympics, it seems everywhere you look London is in the headlines. Here at the Cambridge Book Club, we’re getting into the spirit by featuring London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550-1750 by Robert Bucholz and Joseph Ward.

11 Jun 2012

Being a Historian in the 21st Century: An Op-Ed

When I entered graduate school at Columbia University in 1960, two distinct expectations governed its history department’s faculty and students. One was that one group of its students, mostly even if...

James M. Banner Jr. | 4 Jun 2012

A Dictionary of Bible Plants

Over the course of the quarter century I researched this book I have had the privilege of seeing every plant mentioned in the Bible and Quran first hand.  As a result I am sometimes asked which plant...

Lytton John Musselman | 30 May 2012

Robert O. Bucholz on the rise of London

In an exclusive interview, co-author Robert O. Bucholz explains why he and Joseph P. Ward chose to focus on this particular period in the history on this capital city.

26 May 2012

A History of Singing, Part Two

From chazzanut to flamenco to Chinese opera, John Potter takes us on a journey around the world in A History of Singing. In part one, he and co-author Neil Sorrell discussed their inspiration for tackling...

John Potter, Neil Sorrell | 25 May 2012

Susan-Mary Grant on writing a new history of America and the persistent tensions therein

In an exclusive interview, Susan-Mary Grant, author of ‘A Concise History of the United States of America‘, talks about the challenges of writing a new history of America and the persistent...

Susan-Mary Grant | 24 May 2012

Test Your Good Thinking

What do economists mean when they refer to you as a “rational agent”? Why might a psychologist label your idea a “creative insight”? And how can different scientists disagree on the results of...

23 May 2012

Charles Dickens, Translator of Experiences

Last month, as part of our year-long celebration of Charles Dickens, Cambridge University Press invited high school students to participate in an essay contest inspired by the iconic author. Many of us...

21 May 2012