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Fifteen Eighty Four

Academic perspectives from Cambridge University Press

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FREUD: The GODFULL JEW

In my book on the birth of the psychoanalytic periodicals, I re-read favorite essays by Freud and Jung in the context of an entire issue in reverse chronological order (like Freud told us to do). It...

Maya Balakirsky Katz | 4 Jan 2023

The IPCC under the magnifying glass 

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is known for its comprehensive Assessment Reports about the state of scientific, technical and socio-economic knowledge on climate change, and about...

Kari De Pryck, Mike Hulme | 2 Jan 2023

The Big Lie and Much More

Donald Trump’s presidency has done more damage to America’s political institutions than most people realize.  I explain how in my new book, Institutions Under Siege: Donald Trump’s Attack on...

John L. Campbell | 2 Jan 2023

A moral basis for healthcare funding

Unfortunately economics has a bad reputation. Its policy prescriptions are often seen as unfair, and its methods based on a world of fanciful assumptions. In its application in the public sector, it is...

Stephen Duckett | 27 Dec 2022

Poor White Southerners in the American Imaginary

Travel about twenty-five miles south from my house and eighty-seven years back in time and you’d have a shot at encountering one of the twentieth century’s most influential artists taking the picture...

Jolene Hubbs | 27 Dec 2022

LIVES, LOVES AND LETTERS OF 1845

In my book The Old Enemies (CUP) I described 1845 as ‘a year of religious crises’. Later, when looking at broader trends that year, I was surprised by the sustained intensity of crises that also arose...

Michael Wheeler | 23 Dec 2022

Emotion and the Self in English Renaissance Literature

Well over a decade ago, scholars acknowledged an “affective turn” or “turn to emotions” taking place across disciplines. Yet within the “turn to emotion,” certain types of emotion still turn...

Paul Joseph Zajac | 23 Dec 2022

Science, Religion, and Explanation

Human beings are explanation-seeking creatures. When something happens in our lives or in the world around us, we long for a satisfying understanding of it. That sense of satisfaction usually only emerges...

Peter N. Jordan | 22 Dec 2022

Sex, Drugs, and Rock-n-roll?

The flower children of the 60s are now in their 60s and beyond, but their hippiedom is not just a vague memory of their rebellious youth. My recent study of aging hippies reveals that “once a hippie,...

Galit Nimrod | 15 Dec 2022

A two-way approach to Early Christianity

By writing counter-clockwise, beginning from the Medieval Ages moving backwards towards the beginnings of Christianity. Based on the restrospective account that has been introduced by How to write Early...

Markus Vinzent | 14 Dec 2022

Objects, Memory, and Place: The Background of Gruesome Looking Objects

Historians are people of the paper, always hoping for the revelation of some remarkable event sitting unremarked upon in an archival page. We are equally sure that such revelations are rare, and usually...

Elijah Gaddis | 14 Dec 2022

Writing the North of England in the Middle Ages

At Gateshead, along the A1 south of Newcastle, a 20-meter-high colossus stares out over the landscape. While some passersby have referred to it as the “Gateshead Flasher,” for its outstretched arms...

Joseph Taylor | 13 Dec 2022