x

Fifteen Eighty Four

Academic perspectives from Cambridge University Press

Menu

Discourse Syntax

Why a textbook? For both of us, Discourse Syntax is our first textbook. We have both published critical monographs, research articles, and chapters for edited volumes, but, after two decades in...

Heidrun Dorgeloh, Anja Wanner | 31 Oct 2022

Ruminating on Ruin: The Renaissance Kinship between Memory and Mortality

It seems to be a contemporary truism that remembrance provides a comforting analgesic, if not a restorative, for the pain of loss. We seek refuge in the playground of memories to escape death’s increasing...

Grant Williams | 31 Oct 2022

A Practical Guide for Professionals

Our new publication with CUP, ‘Seeking Asylum and Mental Health is a practical guide to working with people seeking asylum.  It is aimed at professionals and services in a range of statutory and...

Chris Maloney, Julia Nelki, Alison Summers | 26 Oct 2022

Sovereign defaults during and after the Russian invasion of Ukraine

Sovereign states usually go into default when they are unable to repay their debts owed to creditors as a result of a balance-of-payment crisis. Both Argentina, amidst the historical financial crisis...

Kei Nakajima | 25 Oct 2022

UNDERSTANDING NATURAL SELECTION

Thomas Hardy, author of Tess of the d’Urbervilles and other great novels, was also a poet.  Born and raised a member of the Church of England, his faith was shattered on reading Charles Darwin’s...

Michael Ruse | 25 Oct 2022

Iran Then and Now: What Similarities in Protests in 2009 and 2022 Demonstrate

There is much speculation about what will be the outcome of the current protests underway in Iran. While it is impossible to predict the future, Iran’s recent history of social movement activity and...

Pouya Alimagham | 21 Oct 2022

‘The Gospel of Jesus’s Wife’

On 18 September 2012, Rome played host to the quadrennial conference of the International Congress of Coptic Studies. On the evening of that day, the Harvard-based feminist historian Karen King (1054-)...

Philip C. Almond | 20 Oct 2022

Coming to Terms with our Finite Existence

Whoever you are reading this, however rich, powerful, educated, knowledgeable, successful, or otherwise, one thing is certain: you are limited. Your wealth, success, knowledge, power, and education are...

Barnabas Aspray | 20 Oct 2022

Outer Space: 100 Poems

I first had the idea for this anthology right before the 50th anniversary of the moon landing. The 100 Poems series seemed like the perfect way to highlight both the progression of poetry about outer...

Midge Goldberg | 18 Oct 2022

Why words matter

Whilst writing the book ‘Seeking Asylum and Mental Health’, we had to think a lot about words. At the outset we decided to avoid the term ‘asylum seeker’. It is problematic on two counts. Firstly,...

Chris Maloney, Julia Nelki, Alison Summers | 18 Oct 2022

How Gender Quotas Broaden the Political Agenda

Quota laws increase numbers of women across parties, and they lead to policies that better reflect women’s preferences for balancing work and family. In 2013, a Christian democratic politician from...

Ana Catalano Weeks | 18 Oct 2022

NOT ONLY EVIDENCE BUT ALSO COMMITMENT TO GOD AND THE GOOD: LET US TAKE A SPIRITUAL TURN IN EPISTEMOLOGY

It is commonly believed that to attain knowledge, one should always be ready to replace one’s previously held convictions with beliefs that appear to be supported by more evidence. I call this view...

Roberto Di Ceglie | 14 Oct 2022