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Fifteen Eighty Four

Academic perspectives from Cambridge University Press

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Introducing The Cambridge Book Club

The Cambridge Book Club brings you the latest ideas at the forefront of intellectual debate. Each month, a new selection is chosen for its original insight and inquiry into issues at the heart of the arts,...

14 Jun 2011

Laughing at Shakespeare

At gift-giving times of year, Shakespeare professors are mildly cursed by the pop-culture avatars of our scholarly interest.  It is not so much the movies and books that cause problems for us; it’s...

Adam Zucker | 31 May 2011

Gladiator of the Week, Week I

Welcome to “Gladiator of the Week.” The blog expands on the information in my book, The Lure of the Arena: Social Psychology and the Crowd at the Roman Games (Cambridge, 2011) by exploring some of...

Garrett G. Fagan | 9 May 2011

Robert Crosnoe on Fitting in, Standing Out

Watch author Robert Crosnoe discuss his research into the effects of high school bullying and his book, Fitting In, Standing Out: Navigating the Social Challenges of High School to Get an Education. Read More ?

14 Apr 2011

Baseball and the Business of American Innocence for The Chronicle of Higher Education

Football may get the highest television ratings, but no one should doubt that baseball is America’s most literary sport. The game has a natural affinity to narrative: Each contest unfolds like a...

Leonard Cassuto | 4 Apr 2011

A Chat with Leonard Cassuto

Just for opening day, here’s The Cambridge Companion to Baseball coeditor Lenny Cassuto talking about the national pastime, its two pasts, and its troubled present. Play ball! Read More ?

31 Mar 2011

The Cambridge Companion to Baseball Book Launch

Pregame for opening day at The Cambridge Companion to Baseball book launch this Thursday evening at Borders Columbus Circle. Game time is 7 pm. BYO peanuts and Cracker Jacks. Read More ?

30 Mar 2011

Rank Professionalism

Legal education reform is crucial to the project of promoting “the possibility of justice.” And reformers of the profession have long focused on changing the nature and culture of law school to create more public-minded professionals.

Scott L. Cummings | 30 Mar 2011

Green new deals, ecological scarcity, and the lessons of history

  The history of natural resource use and development, from the Agricultural Transition 12,000 years ago to the present, suggests that humankind has had to surmount successive scarcity problems:  From...

Edward B. Barbier | 28 Mar 2011

Physics Fridays with Fuchs: The Quantum is Alive and Well

Every Friday during the month of March, This Side of the Pond will feature correspondence drawn from Coming of Age With Quantum Information: Notes on a Paulian Idea, a collection of more than 500 letters...

25 Mar 2011

Bancroft Prize Winner: Freedom Bound by Christopher Tomlins

Christopher Tomlins has published two other books with the Press, The State and the Unions and Law, Labor and Ideology in the Early American Republic, and is the coeditor of The Cambridge History of Law...

25 Mar 2011

The New York Times Endorses John Kerry’s Infrastructure Bank

Using today’s prime editorial space to endorse the bipartisan backed BUILD Act, the New York Times called the bill – presented last week by Senators Kerry, Hutchinson, and Warner and created under...

21 Mar 2011