Recent U.S. tariff policies have made mundane commodities remarkably visible, with almost every week bringing news about the logistics of importing or exporting essential items, from hamburgers to cement. The results are sometimes bizarre: a recent House hearing saw the U.S. commerce secretary insist that ‘we cannot build bananas in America’, in response to a […]
Read MoreThis book tells the story of mass incarceration through the eyes of the writers who lived through it. Long before Michelle Alexander characterized mass incarceration as the new Jim Crow in America, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was in jail protesting Jim Crow in America. King did not live long enough to see the dramatic […]
Read More“Any judgement of MUSSOLINI will be in a measure an act of faith, it will depend on what you believe the man means, what you believe that he wants to accomplish.” — Ezra Pound, Jefferson and/or Mussolini (1935). Poet Ezra Pound was a champion of the modernist literary movement, known for its clean, spare imagery […]
Read MoreÉmile Zola’s Le Rêve—The Dream, in English—appeared in book form in October 1888. It was a strikingly slender novel, by Zola’s standards—the shortest of the twenty volumes that would make up his epic series about the Rougon-Macquart family (1871-93). Yet more curious was its subject: the fantasy life of one foundling Angélique Rougon, whose wayward […]
Read MoreEsperanto, Klingon, Na’vi … these are examples of invented or constructed languages (conlangs for short). Unlike ‘natural’ languages such as English, Swahili, or Navajo, which arise and change organically, conlangs are consciously created; Esperanto by Ludwik L. Zamenhof, Klingon by Marc Okrand, Na’vi by Paul Frommer. Like natural languages, many conlangs boast rich vocabularies in […]
Read MoreReading by her window, “cross-legged, like a Turk,” Jane Eyre transports herself to “Lapland, Siberia, Spitzbergen, Nova Zembla, Iceland, Greenland.” Anywhere but Gateshead, where her life has been one of continual oppression. But the book she reads bears a surprising title: “Bewick’s ‘History of British Birds.’” What is supposedly national turns out to be immediately […]
Read MoreFor anyone interested in the crucial role of money in American literature, it cannot seem anything other than eminently fitting that at the very “navel” of the vessel at the centre of the greatest of all Great American Novels sits a gold coin. Or that this totemic monetary object should speak resoundingly to questions – […]
Read MoreWhy do people so often approach nature with the same kinds of rapt aesthetic and spiritual attention that they bring to works of art? Why do they seek in nature both their most unique (or “true”) personal self and at the same time a defining source of collective identity, such as the spirit of a […]
Read MoreRecent U.S. tariff policies have made mundane commodities remarkably visible, with almost every week bringing news about the logistics of importing or exporting essential items, from hamburgers to cement. The results are sometimes bizarre: a recent House hearing saw the U.S. commerce secretary insist that ‘we cannot build bananas in America’, in response to a […]
Read MoreThis book tells the story of mass incarceration through the eyes of the writers who lived through it. Long before Michelle Alexander characterized mass incarceration as the new Jim Crow in America, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was in jail protesting Jim Crow in America. King did not live long enough to see the dramatic […]
Read More“Any judgement of MUSSOLINI will be in a measure an act of faith, it will depend on what you believe the man means, what you believe that he wants to accomplish.” — Ezra Pound, Jefferson and/or Mussolini (1935). Poet Ezra Pound was a champion of the modernist literary movement, known for its clean, spare imagery […]
Read MoreÉmile Zola’s Le Rêve—The Dream, in English—appeared in book form in October 1888. It was a strikingly slender novel, by Zola’s standards—the shortest of the twenty volumes that would make up his epic series about the Rougon-Macquart family (1871-93). Yet more curious was its subject: the fantasy life of one foundling Angélique Rougon, whose wayward […]
Read MoreEsperanto, Klingon, Na’vi … these are examples of invented or constructed languages (conlangs for short). Unlike ‘natural’ languages such as English, Swahili, or Navajo, which arise and change organically, conlangs are consciously created; Esperanto by Ludwik L. Zamenhof, Klingon by Marc Okrand, Na’vi by Paul Frommer. Like natural languages, many conlangs boast rich vocabularies in […]
Read MoreReading by her window, “cross-legged, like a Turk,” Jane Eyre transports herself to “Lapland, Siberia, Spitzbergen, Nova Zembla, Iceland, Greenland.” Anywhere but Gateshead, where her life has been one of continual oppression. But the book she reads bears a surprising title: “Bewick’s ‘History of British Birds.’” What is supposedly national turns out to be immediately […]
Read MoreFor anyone interested in the crucial role of money in American literature, it cannot seem anything other than eminently fitting that at the very “navel” of the vessel at the centre of the greatest of all Great American Novels sits a gold coin. Or that this totemic monetary object should speak resoundingly to questions – […]
Read MoreWhy do people so often approach nature with the same kinds of rapt aesthetic and spiritual attention that they bring to works of art? Why do they seek in nature both their most unique (or “true”) personal self and at the same time a defining source of collective identity, such as the spirit of a […]
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Johan Adam Warodell is the author of the monograph Conrad’s Decentered Fiction (Cambridge University Press 2022) and numerous articles on Joseph Conrad. He is a Trustee of the Joseph Conrad Society of America and a Research Associate at the University of Sussex.
Montclair State University, New Jersey
Heather Hirschfeld is a Professor of English at the University of Tennessee.
Alice Tranah grew up in Cambridge and, after studying history at University, fell delightely into life as a bookseller, first in London and then here for Cambridge University Press Bookshop.
Canterbury Christ Church University, Kent
Associate Professor in English and Creative Writing, University of Reading
University of Pennsylvania
University of Cambridge
Staff Scientist, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Department of Neurology with affiliation to The Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT.
Speaking Shakespeare Today
Helen Wilcox, Professor of English at Bangor University
Playing Hesiod
Shakespeare’s Possible Worlds
The Cambridge Companion to American Civil Rights Literature
Yeats and European Drama
Nineteenth-Century American Literature and the Long Civil War
Grief and Women Writers in the English Renaissance
Imagining Medieval English
The Cambridge Companion to French Literature
The Cambridge Introduction to Theatre and Literature of the Absurd
Paul Salzman is Emeritus Professor of English at La Trobe University, Australia.
Sarah C. E. Ross is Senior Lecturer in the English Programme, at Victoria University of Wellington.
Stuart Sillars is Professor of English at the University of Bergen, Norway.
Dictionary of Irish Biography
The Cambridge Introduction to William Wordsworth
The Poetry of War
Doubt and Skepticism in Antiquity and the Renaissance
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You Know what I Mean?
Samuel Johnson, the Ossian Fraud, and the Celtic Revival in Great Britain and Ireland
The Cambridge Companion to Bob Dylan
Japan Rising
The Cambridge Companion to Baseball
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College Marketing Associate
The Cambridge Companion to Baseball
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London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
The American 1930s
The Places of Wit in Early Modern English Comedy
The King James Bible after Four Hundred Years
The King James Bible after Four Hundred Years
The Cambridge Companion to Creative Writing
London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550-1750
The Cambridge Introduction to Charles Dickens
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The Letters of Ernest Hemingway, Volume 1
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Literary Criticism from Plato to Postmodernism
From Dickens To Dracula
A Reference Grammar of French
The Short Story and the First World War
Mrs Dalloway
Gender and Race in Antebellum Popular Culture
The Cambridge Companion to Modernist Culture
The Cambridge Companion to American Science Fiction
Popular Literature, Authorship, and the Occult in Late Victorian Britain
Paradise Lost and the Cosmological Revolution
Ovid and Hesiod
Reading and Writing during the Dissolution
Cambridge Companion to Popular Fiction
Cambridge Companion to Popular Fiction
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The Cambridge Companion to \'Pride and Prejudice\'
The Cambridge Companion to Football
Failure and the American Writer
Eating and Ethics in Shakespeare\\\\\\\'s England
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