Still French? France and the Challenge of Diversity, Nottingham French Studies Volume 54, Number 3

Still French? France and the Challenge of Diversity, 1985–2015 Nottingham French Studies Volume 54, Number 3 Alec Hargreaves December 2015 Pb • 978 1...
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Still French? France and the Challenge of Diversity, 1985–2015

Nottingham French Studies Volume 54, Number 3 Alec Hargreaves December 2015 Pb • 978 1 4744 0660 4 • £16.99 BIC: CFDM, JFFN, JHMC 128 pp

240 x 165 mm

Dedicated to the entire range of French and Francophone studies

Description

The Editor

In a provocative 1985 cover story featuring the face of Marianne obscured by an Islamic veil, Le Figaro Magazine asked: "Serons-nous encore français dans trente ans?". With those 30 years now spanned, where does France stand in relation to the fears, challenges and opportunities associated with changing perceptions of ethnic and cultural diversity within and beyond the nation’s borders? Is the France of 2015 still French in the same way or to the same degree as the France of 1985? Where do the most significant challenges to "Frenchness" now lie? In Islamism? In the "banlieues"? In European integration? In American hegemony? Is "Frenchness" itself, championed by political elites under the banner of "l’exception culturelle", an outmoded concept, destined to wither in the face of transnational forces? These are among the issues addressed by contributors to this volume, spanning a wide range of topics and disciplinary approaches including politics, literature, film and sport.

Alec Hargreaves, Formerly Director of the Winthrop-King Institute for Contemporary French and Francophone Studies at Florida State University, and Head of the Department of European Studies, Loughborough University, he has authored and edited numerous publications on the cultural and political dynamics of postcolonialiam in the French-speaking world.

Series

Key Features

Nottingham French Studies Special Issues

• Multidisciplinary volume • Contributions by leading authorities on key aspects of current debates • Offers a unique focus and comparison of developments within the past 30 years

Readership Scholars and students within and beyond French and Francophone Studies, including cultural studies, migration studies, contemporary history and world studies.

Film Studies The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

New in Paperback

Films on Ice

Cinemas of the Arctic Edited by Scott MacKenzie and Anna Westerståhl Stenport December 2015 Pb • 978 1 4744 0901 8 • £24.99 BIC: APFA, APFN, JFCA, JFDT 384 pp 234 x 156 mm 52 b&w illustrations Alternative Formats: Hb • 978 0 7486 9417 4 • £70.00 • December 2014 Eb (PDF) • 978 0 7486 9418 1 • £70.00

A comprehensive study of films made in and about one of the world’s most breathtaking landscapes: The Arctic

Description

The Editors

The first book to address the vast diversity of Northern circumpolar cinemas from a transnational perspective, Films on Ice presents the region as one of great and previously overlooked cinematic diversity. With chapters on polar explorer films, silent cinema, documentaries, ethnographic and indigenous film, gender and ecology, as well as Hollywood and the USSR’s uses and abuses of the Arctic, this book provides a groundbreaking account of Arctic cinemas from 1898 to the present and radically alters stereotypical views of the Arctic region.

Scott MacKenzie teaches in the Department of Film and Media, and is cross-appointed to the Graduate Program in Cultural Studies, at Queen’s University, Canada.

Key Features • Transforms the study, reception and reach of Arctic cinema, film and moving image culture • Establishes the significance of the term Global North in relation to film studies • Brings together an international array of European, Russian, Nordic and North American scholars and researchers, with content expertise transcending limited national or regional boundaries

Anna Westerståhl Stenport is Associate Professor of Scandinavian Studies and Media and Cinema Studies, and Director of the European Union Center, at the University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign.

Series Traditions in World Cinema

Readership Students and academics in Film Studies, National Cinemas and Emerging Cinemas.

Film Studies The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

New in Paperback

Films on Ice

Cinemas of the Arctic Edited by Scott MacKenzie and Anna Westerståhl Stenport List of Contributors • Marco Bohr is a photographer, academic and researcher in visual culture. He received his PhD from the University of Westminster in 2011 and was appointed Lecturer in Visual communication at Loughborough University in 2012. • Marian Bredin is Associate Professor in the Department of Communication, Popular Culture and Film, at Brock University in Canada. • Lyubov Bugaeva is Dr hab. in Philology and Associate Professor at St Petersburg State University, Russia. • Marina Dahlquist is an Associate Professor of Cinema Studies at the Department of Media Studies at Stockholm University. • Jan Anders Diesen is Professor of Film History at Lillehammer University College, Norway. • Ann Fienup-Riordan is a cultural anthropologist and independent scholar who has lived and worked in Alaska since 1973. • Rebecca Genauer is a film studies PhD candidate at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. • Sabine Henlin-Strømme received her PhD from the Department of Cinema and Comparative Literature at the University of Iowa in 2012. She currently teaches French at the Bergen Community College. • Caroline Forcier Holloway is an Audio-Visual Archivist at Library and Archives Canada. • Johanne Haaber Ihle holds a BA degree in Arabic from the University of Copenhagen and a MA degree in Visual Anthropology from the University of Manchester. • Gunnar Iversen is Professor of Film Studies in the Department of Art and Media Studies at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. • Anne Mette Jørgensen has an MA in anthropology and is a PhD candidate at the Department of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies, University of Copenhagen and the National Museum of Denmark. • Pietari Kääpä is a Lecturer in Media and Communications at the Department of Communications, Media and Culture, University of Stirling. • Lill-Ann Körber, Dr phil., is an Assistant Professor at the Nordeuropa-Institut, Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin. • Eva la Cour holds a degree from the Jutland Art Academy in Denmark and from Media & Visual Anthropology at Freie Universitat in Berlin. Currently she is artist-in-residence at Global High-Schools in Denmark, teaching the course ‘Mediating the Arctic’. • Helga Hlaðgerður Lúthersdóttir holds a PhD in Comparative Literature from University of Colorado, Boulder. She currently runs the Icelandic BA Programme at the Department of Scandinavian Studies, University College London. • Scott MacKenzie teaches film and media at Queen’s University, where he is cross-appointed to the Graduate Program in Cultural Studies, and a Visiting Research Associate at the Danish Film Institute (2013–17). • Monica Kim Mecsei is a PhD candidate in the Department of Art and Media Studies at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. • Sarah Neely is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Arts and Humanities at the University of Stirling, where she is a member of the Centre for Scottish Studies and the Centre for Gender and Feminist Studies. • Björn Norðfjörð is an Associate Professor in Film Studies at the University of Iceland. • Russell A. Potter writes about the depiction of the Arctic the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and teaches English and Media Studies at Rhode Island College. • Mark Sandberg is Professor of Film and Scandinavian Studies at the University of California-Berkeley. • Oksana Sarkisova, PhD, is Associate Researcher at Central European University working on the issues of socialist cultural history, memory and representation, film history and amateur photography. • Daria Shembel earned her PhD in Slavic Studies and Film from the University of Southern California, Los Angeles. Since 2005 she has been teaching European Studies, New Media and Film at San Diego State University. • Anna Westerståhl Stenport (PhD, University of California, Berkeley) is Associate Professor of Scandinavian Studies and Media and Cinema Studies at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and a visiting research associate at the Danish Film Institute (2013–17). • Kirsten Thisted is an Associate Professor at Copenhagen University, Institute of Film Studies Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies, Minority Studies Section. • Ebbe Volquardsen is a Doctoral Fellow at Justus-Liebig-Universitat The Tun – Holyrood Road, Giessen (Germany). 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

Textbook

Slow Cinema Edited by Tiago de Luca and Nuno Barradas Jorge

December 2015 Pb • 978 0 7486 9604 8 • £24.99 BIC: APFA, APFB, APFN 320 pp

234 x 156 mm

Alternative Formats: Hb • 978 0 7486 9602 4 • £70.00 Eb (PDF) • 978 0 7486 9603 1 • £70.00 Eb (epub) • 978 0 7486 9605 5 • £24.99

Situates, theorises and maps out cinematic slowness within contemporary global film production and across world cinema history

Description

The Editors

In the context of a frantic world that celebrates instantaneity and speed, a number of cinemas steeped in contemplation, silence and duration have garnered significant critical attention in recent years, thus resonating with a larger sociocultural movement whose aim is to rescue extended temporal structures from the accelerated tempo of late-capitalism. Although not part of a structured film movement, directors such as Carlos Reygadas, Tsai Ming-liang, Béla Tarr, Pedro Costa and Kelly Reichardt have been largely subsumed under the term ‘slow cinema’. But what exactly is slow cinema? Is it a strictly recent phenomenon or an overarching cinematic tradition? And how exactly do slow cinemas interrelate on an aesthetic, technical and political level?

Tiago de Luca is Lecturer in Film Studies at the University of Liverpool.

Deploying the concept of slowness as an umbrella category under which filmmakers and traditions from different historical and geographical backgrounds can fruitfully converge, this innovative collection of essays interrogates and expands the frameworks that have generally informed slow cinema debates. Repositioning the term in a broader theoretical space, the book combines an array of fine-grained studies that will provide valuable insight into the notion of slowness in the cinema, while mapping out past and contemporary slow films across the globe.

Readership

Nuno Barradas Jorge is PhD candidate in the Department of Culture, Film and Media at the University of Nottingham.

Series Traditions in World Cinema Undergraduate students in Film Studies and World Cinema.

Key Features • Establishes the significance of slow cinema studies in film scholarship • Illuminates the interconnectedness of past and present-day world cinemas through the methodological and comparative prism of slowness • Provides in-depth critical analyses of a wide variety of world cinema traditions and practices • Intervenes in, and contributes to, key debates in current film scholarship: new technologies, art cinema, realism

Film Studies The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

Textbook

Slow Cinema Edited byTiago de Luca and Nuno Barradas Jorge Table of Contents Illustrations Foreword, Julian Stringer Introduction: From Slow Cinema to Slow Cinemas, Tiago De Luca & Nuno Barradas Jorge Part I: Historicising Slow Cinema 1: The Politics of Slowness and the Traps of Modernity, Lúcia Nagib 2: The Slow Pulse of the Era: Carl Th. Dreyer’s Film Style, C. Claire Thomson 3: The First Durational Cinema and the Real of Time, Michael Walsh 4: ‘The Attitude of Smoking and Observing’: Slow Film and Politics in the Cinema Of Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet, Martin Brady Part II: Contextualising Slow Cinema 5: Temporal Aesthetics of Drifting: Tsai Ming-Liang and a Cinema of Slowness, Song Hwee Lim 6: Stills and Stillness in Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s Cinema, Glyn Davis 7: Melancholia: The Long, Slow Cinema of Lav Diaz, William Brown 8: Exhausted Drift: Austerity, Dispossession and the Politics of Slow in Kelly Reichardt’s Meek’s Cutoff, Elena Gorfinkel 9: If These Walls Could Speak: From Slowness to Stillness in the Cinema of Jia Zhangke, Cecília Mello Part III: Slow Cinema And Labour 10: Wastrels of Time: Slow Cinema’s Labouring Body, The Political Spectator, and the Queer, Karl Schoonover 11: Living Daily, Working Slowly: Pedro Costa’s in Vanda’s Room, Nuno Barradas Jorge 12: Working/Slow: Cinematic Style as Labour in Wang Bing’s Tie Xi Qu: West Of The Tracks, Patrick Brian Smith 13: ‘Slow Sounds’: Duration, Audition and Labour in Liu Jiayin’s Oxhide and Oxhide II, Philippa Lovatt Part IV: Slow Cinema and the Nonhuman 14: It’s About Time: Slow Aesthetics in Experimental Ecocinema and Nature Cam Videos, Stephanie Lam 15: Natural Views: Animals, Contingency and Death in Carlos Reygadas’s Japón and Lisandro Alonso’s Los Muertos, Tiago de Luca 16: The Sleeping Spectator: Nonhuman Aesthetics in Abbas Kiarostami’s Five: Dedicated to Ozu, Justin Remes Part V: The Ethics and Politics of Slowness 17: Béla Tarr: The Poetics and the Politics of Fiction, Jacques Rancière 18: Ethics of the Landscape Shot: A.K.A Serial Killer and James Benning's Portraits of Criminals, Julian Ross 19: Slow Cinema and the Ethics of Duration, Asbjørn Grønstad Part VI: Beyond ‘Slow Cinema’ 20: Performing Evolution: Immersion, Unfolding and Lucile Hadžihalilović’s Innocence, Matilda Mroz 21: The Slow Road to Europe: The Politics and Aesthetics of Stalled Mobility in Hermakono and Morgen, Michael Gott 22: Crystallising the Past: Slow Heritage Cinema, Rob Stone and Paul Cooke

List of Contributors Martin Brady, King’s College London. William Brown, University of Roehampton, London. Paul Cooke, University of Leeds. Glyn Davis, University of Edinburgh. Elena Gorfinkel, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Michael Gott, University of Cincinnati. Asbjørn Grønstad, University of Bergen. Song Hwee Lim, University of Exeter. Stephanie Lam, Harvard University. Philippa Lovatt, University of Stirling. Cecília Mello, University of São Paulo. Matilda Mroz, University of Greenwich. Lúcia Nagib, University of Reading. Jacques Rancière, Université de Paris (St. Denis). Justin Remes, Iowa State University.

Julian Ross is a researcher, curator and writer based in Amsterdam. Karl Schoonover, University of Warwick. Patrick Brian Smith, Concordia University. Rob Stone, University of Birmingham. Julian Stringer, University of Nottingham. C. Claire Thomson, University College London. Michael Walsh, University of Hartford.

Film Studies The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

Towards a Feminist Cinematic Ethics

Claire Denis, Emmanuel Levinas and Jean-Luc Nancy Kristin Hole December 2015 Hb • 978 1 4744 0327 6 • £70.00 BIC: APFA, APFB, HPQ 208 pp 234 x 156 mm 40 b&w illustrations Alternative Formats: Eb (PDF) • 978 1 4744 0328 3 • £70.00 Eb (epub) • 978 1 4744 0952 0 • £70.00

Develops an account of non-normative feminist cinematic ethics and a fresh methodological approach to film-philosophy

Description

The Author

Towards a Feminist Cinematic Ethics develops an account of non-normative ethics that can be used to think about filmmaking and viewing, using two philosopher – Emmanuel Levinas and Jean-Luc Nancy, and the work of filmmaker Claire Denis. In an accessible and engaging manner, it offers new readings of Denis’ films, situating them within larger feminist, postcolonial and queer debates about identity and difference. Using a generative methodology, the book works towards a mutually challenging and productive relationship between cinematic ideas and philosophical concepts.

Kristin Hole is Lecturer in the School of Theater and Film at Portland State University.

Readership Advanced undergraduate students, postgraduate students and scholars in Film-Philosophy.

Key Features • Develops a generative methodology for theorising a more mutually challenging and productive relationship between cinematic ideas and philosophical concepts • Contributes to ongoing attempts to theorise a post-phenomenological, yet embodied account of spectatorship using Levinas and Nancy, both of whom are underexamined within film studies • Articulates a philosophically rigorous account of non-normative ethics and applies it to filmmaking and viewing • Offers new readings of Claire Denis’ films and situates them within larger feminist, postcolonial and queer debates about identity and difference

Film Studies The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

Muslims in Western Europe Jonas Otterbeck Original author Jørgen S. Nielsen 4th Edition December 2015 Pb • 978 1 4744 0933 9 • £24.99 BIC: HRHP 232 pp

234 x 156 mm

Alternative Formats: Eb (PDF) • 978 1 4744 0934 6 • £24.99 Eb (epub) • 978 1 4744 0935 3 • £24.99

Previous Edition: Pb • 978 0 7486 1844 6 • £24.99 • 2004 • Sold 1,150 copies

The only textbook that both introduces and analyses the situation for Muslims in Western Europe

Description

The Author

A useful introduction to the social, political, cultural and religious position of Muslims living in contemporary Europe. It describes the history of early European Muslims and outlines the causes and courses of 20th-century Muslim immigration. Explaining how Muslim communities have developed in individual countries, the book examines their origins, their present day ethnic composition, distribution and organisational patterns, and the political, legal and cultural contexts in which they exist. It also provides a comparative consideration of issues common to Muslims in all Western European countries, namely the role of the family, and the questions of worship, education and religious thought.

Jonas Otterbeck is Professor of Islamic Studies at Lunds University, Sweden.

In the fourth edition all country-related chapters have been substantially updated. A new chapter has also been added on Southern Europe, where the maturity of a new generation has seen moves towards political integration. This new chapter will reflect the extensive research of the past decade in this area.

New for this Edition

Jørgen S. Nielsen is Honorary Professor of Islamic Studies at the University of Copenhagen.

Series The New Edinburgh Islamic Surveys

Readership Courses on Muslims in Europe; Ethnic Minorities; Religious Minorities; Migration; Integration.

• All 6 country-related chapters (France, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands and Belgium, Scandinavia, Southern Europe) are substantially updated • The chapter on family, law and culture is revised to include the work from recent studies • The chapter on Muslim organisations now covers groups and movements that have developed in the last decade • The chapter on European Muslims in a new Europe now covers the cartoon crisis, Eurabia-Islamophobia and new radical nationalism • All statistics are updated

Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

Muslims in Western Europe Jonas Otterbeck Original author Jørgen S. Nielsen

Table of Contents Preface 1. A Brief History 2. France 3. Germany 4. United Kingdom 5. The Netherlands and Belgium 6. Scandinavia 7. Southern Europe 8. Family, Law and Culture 9. Muslim Organisations 10. European Muslims in a New Europe? A Note on Statistics Bibliographical Essay Index

Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

Islam and Colonialism

Becoming Modern in Indonesia and Malaya Muhamad Ali December 2015 Hb • 978 1 4744 0920 9 • £75.00 BIC: HBJF, HRHP, JP 320 pp 2 b&w maps

234 x 156 mm

Alternative Formats: Eb (PDF) • 978 1 4744 0921 6 • £75.00 Eb (epub) • 978 1 4744 0922 3 • £75.00

Explores the ways in which Islam and European colonialism shaped modernity in the Indo-Malay world

Description

The Author

Focusing on Indonesia and Malaysia, this book looks at how European colonial and Islamic modernising powers operated in the common and parallel domains of government and politics, law and education in the first half of the 20th century. It shows that colonialisation was able to co-exist with Islamisation, arguing that Islamic movements were not necessarily antithetical to modernisation, nor that Western modernity was always anathema to Islamic and local custom. Rather, in distinguishing religious from worldly affairs, they were able to adopt and adapt modern ideas and practices that were useful or relevant while maintaining the Islamic faith and ritual that they believed to be essential.

Muhamad Ali is Associate Professor of Islamic Studies at the University of California, Riverside.

In developing an understanding of the common ways in which Islam was defined and treated in Indonesia and Malaysia, we can gain a new insight to Muslim politics and culture in Southeast Asia.

Readership Academics and researchers in Islamic & Middle Eastern Studies, Islam in Southeast Asia, Indonesian Studies, Islam and Modernity.

Key Features • Shows how Asian Muslims and European Christians developed modern approaches to politics, law and education which formed the basis for governance and civil society in the independent nations of Indonesia and Malaysia • Adds to a more nuanced understanding of the relationship between Islam and the West • Demonstrates that colonial–Islamic relations were less confrontational, both conceptually and institutionally, than has been previously believed • Uses comparative history to emphasise common and parallel features between diverse forces for change

Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

Reassessing Legal Humanism and its Claims Petere Fontes?

Edited by Paul J. du Plessis and John W. Cairns December 2015 Hb • 978 1 4744 0885 1 • £60.00 BIC: LAB, LAZ 448 pp

234 x 156 mm

Alternative Formats: Eb (PDF) • 978 1 4744 0886 8 • £60.00 Eb (epub) • 978 1 4744 0887 5 • £60.00

14 essays challenging the nature and legacy of legal humanism

Description

The Editors

Fundamentally reassessing the nature and impact of legal humanism on the narratives of European legal history, this volume brings together the foremost international experts in related fields of legal and intellectual history to debate the central issues.

Paul J. du Plessis is Senior Lecturer in Civil Law at the University of Edinburgh.

Contributors John W. Cairns, Edinburgh Paul J. Du Plessis, Edinburgh Alain Wijffels, Leuven Douglas Osler, Frankfurt-Am-Main Guido Rossi, Edinburgh Xavier Prévost, Paris Susan L. Karr, Cincinnati Wim Decock, Leuven Martine Van Ittersum, Dundee Bernard Stolte, Groningen Éva Jakab, Szeged Jasmin Hepburn, Edinburgh David Ibbetson, Cambridge Ian Maclean, Oxford Karen G. Baston, Edinburgh

John W. Cairns is Professor of Civil Law at the University of Edinburgh.

Series Edinburgh Studies in Law

Readership Undergraduates, postgraduates and academics in Legal History and Jurisprudence.

Law The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

Virginia Woolf Ambivalent Activist Clara Jones December 2015 Hb • 978 1 4744 0192 0 • £75.00 BIC: DN, DSK 272 pp 234 x 156 mm 5 b&w illustrations Alternative Formats: Eb (PDF) • 978 1 4744 0193 7 • £75.00 Eb (epub) • 978 1 4744 1029 8 • £75.00

The first full-length study of Virginia Woolf’s activism

Description

The Author

Virginia Woolf taught history at Morley College for adult education; addressed envelopes in an adult suffrage office in 1910; she was the treasurer of the Rodmell Women’s Institute and had a life-long affiliation with the Women’s Cooperative Guild. Yet the compelling details of this activity have been critically neglected owing to an emphasis on the politics of Woolf’s writing, rather than her actual participation. Responding to this significant gap in Woolf scholarship and drawing on a wealth of archival material, this book establishes the details of Woolf’s participation with these four organisations and sets this activism within the contexts of the institutional moments in which she worked.

Clara Jones is Lecturer in Modern Literature at King's College London.

As well as tracing Woolf’s career as an activist across 45 years, this book also explores the consistent but often contradictory way in which this participation is written into a range of Woolf’s short stories, novels and essays including ‘Report on Teaching at Morley College’, ‘Memoirs of a Novelist’, ‘The Journal of Mistress Joan Martyn’, Melymbrosia, The Voyage Out, Night and Day, The Years, ‘Introductory Letter’, ‘On Being Ill’, ‘Cook Sketch’, the ‘Dreadnought Hoax Talk’, ‘The Leaning Tower’, and Between the Acts.

Readership Academics, researchers, postgraduates, upper-level undergraduates in Modernism, Modernist Literature, Virginia Woolf, Women Writers, Twentieth-Century Literature, Literature and Politics.

Key Features • Based on original archival research and includes two new transcriptions of previously unpublished material by Woolf: the ‘Report on Teaching at Morley College’ (‘Morley Sketch’), and the ‘Cook Sketch’ • Provides insights into the histories of neglected institutions through accounts of Woolf’s activism • Introduces significant new contexts for reading Woolf’s texts, challenging established critical assumptions • Explores a range of texts, reading across genres in productive and imaginative ways which are alert to class and gender politics in each case

Literary Studies The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

Fighting France

From Dunkerque to Belfort Edith Wharton Edited by Alice Kelly December 2015 Hb • 978 1 4744 0692 5 • £70.00 BIC: DN, DSB, DSK 224 pp 234 x 156 mm 38 b&w illustrations, 1 colour illustration Alternative Formats: Eb (PDF) • 978 1 4744 0693 2 • £70.00 Eb (epub) • 978 1 4744 0694 9 • £19.99

A new edition of Edith Wharton’s war reportage from the First World War

Description

The Author

Edith Wharton was one of the first woman writers to be allowed to visit the war zones in France. This resulting collection of 6 essays presents a fascinating and unique perspective on wartime France by one of America’s great novelists. Written with Wharton’s distinctive literary skills to advocate American intervention in the war, this little-known war text demonstrates that she was a complex and accomplished propagandist. However, these eyewitness accounts also demonstrate a troubling awareness of the human cost of war.

Edith Wharton (1862–1937) was an American novelist and short-story writer, and the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize.

This new critical edition aims to bring this neglected text into the field of Wharton studies, allowing critics and enthusiasts to re-evaluate her contribution as a war writer and to assess the significance of this period for her literary development.

Key Features

The Editor Alice Kelly is Visiting Scholar at Yale University.

Readership Academics, postgraduates, upper-level undergraduates, general readers.

• The first scholarly edition of a highly important work in Wharton’s oeuvre • Restores the original photographs which accompanied the text • Provides extensive critical apparatus for understanding the text including a scholarly introduction and authoritative annotation in each chapter • Includes archival research in the Edith Wharton Collection at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University, and the Edith Wharton Manuscripts, Firestone Library, Princeton University

Literary Studies The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

On Good and Evil and the Grey Zone Alex Danchev December 2015 Hb • 978 1 4744 1031 1 • £70.00 BIC: AC, JPS, JFM, 192 pp 234 x 156 mm 20 b&w illustrations Alternative Formats: Eb (PDF) • 978 1 4744 1032 8 • £70.00 Eb (epub) • 978 1 4744 1033 5 • £70.00

Mixes art, thought, politics and ethics to explore the terrors of the modern age, from Auschwitz to Abu Ghraib

Description

The Author

What are we to make of good and evil in the modern world? How can works of the imagination help us? These essays put art to work in the service of political and ethical inquiry. They treat the artist as a crucial moral witness of our troubled times. Like Alex Danchev’s widely acclaimed previous collection for EUP, On Art and War and Terror (2009), they take their inspiration from Seamus Heaney’s dictum that ‘the imaginative transformation of human life is the means by which we can most truly grasp and comprehend it’.

Alex Danchev is Professor of International Relations at the University of Nottingham.

Readership Advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students, general public.

Key Features •

A distinctive mix of art and politics



A tremendous range of art and ethical and political questions



An engagement with fundamental and controversial issues of international life: terror, torture, secrecy, privacy, memory and identity



A signature style – and some new coinages (‘the vacuity of evil’)

Politics The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

New in Paperback

Europe after Derrida Crisis and Potentiality

Edited by Agnes Czajka and Bora Isyar December 2015 Pb • 978 1 4744 1076 2 • £19.99 BIC: HPS, JPA 192 pp

234 x 156 mm

Alternative Formats: Hb • 978 0 7486 8336 9 • £75.00 • December 2013 Eb (PDF) • 978 0 7486 8337 6 • £75.00 Eb (epub) • 978 0 7486 8339 0 • £19.99

Having anticipated a crisis-to-come, what can Derrida offer Europe now that the crisis has come?

Description

The Editors

Is Europe’s crisis just a financial one – or is there a deeper problem? Tackling issues ranging from Europe’s legal, institutional and cultural identity to its border, citizenship and integration policies, and looking forward to its legacy for the future, the contributors to this volume interrogate the various dimensions and contours of the European crisis. By revisiting Derrida’s diagnosis of the crisis of European identity, they simultaneously propose a new direction for Europe, and an alternative response to today’s crisis.

Agnes Czajka is Lecturer in Politics and International Studies at the Open University, Milton Keynes.

Key Features

Readership



Interrogates the multiple dimensions of Europe’s identity crisis



Tackles issues ranging from Europe’s legal, institutional and cultural identity to its citizenship and integration policies, and from its border to what its legacy will be

MA students and researchers in Politics and Philosophy.



Applies Derrida’s thought on hospitality, debt, cosmopolitanism, autoimmunity and more to Europe’s critical condition

Bora Isyar is Lecturer in Political Theory at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland.

Selling Point •

The hardback (2013) has sold over 160 copies

Politics The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

New in Paperback

Europe after Derrida Crisis and Potentiality

Edited by Agnes Czajka and Bora Isyar Related Titles The Ethics of Deconstruction Derrida and Levinas, 3rd Edition Simon Critchley 2014 Pb • 978 0 7486 8932 3 • £19.99 • Sales: 535 Derrida and Hospitality Theory and Practice Judith Still 2012 Pb • 978 0 7486 6963 9 • £24.99 • Sales: 216 Derrida’s Voice and Phenomenon Vernon W. Cisney 2014 Pb • 978 0 7486 4420 9 • £19.99 • Sales: 272

Politics The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

Liberty, Property and Popular Politics

England and Scotland, 1688–1815. Essays in Honour of H. T. Dickinson Edited by Gordon Pentland and Michael T. Davis December 2015 Hb • 978 1 4744 0567 6 • £45.00 BIC: HBJD1 240 pp 12 b&w tables

234 x 156 mm

Alternative Formats: Eb (PDF) • 978 1 4744 0568 3 • £45.00 Eb (epub) • 978 1 4744 0569 0 • £45.00

A uniquely broad collection highlighting recent approaches to Britain’s long 18th century

Description

The Editors

Few scholars can claim to have shaped the historical study of the long 18th century more profoundly than Professor H. T. Dickinson, who, until his retirement in 2006, held the Sir Richard Lodge Chair of British History at the University of Edinburgh. This collection comprises 14 chapters based on contributions from Professor Dickinson’s students, friends and colleagues from around the world, providing both an illuminating range of perspectives on Britain’s long 18th century and a tribute to a remarkable scholarly career.

Gordon Pentland is Reader in History in the School of History, Classics and Archaeology at the University of Edinburgh.

Key Features • Focused essays by a genuinely international team of contributors • Provides a ‘snapshot’ of current research agendas in 18th-century history • 14 chapters engaging with a range of historical sub-disciplines (including intellectual, parliamentary, political, ecclesiastical and naval history)

Michael T. Davis is Lecturer in the School of Humanities at Griffith University.

Readership Undergraduates and postgraduates in Scottish & British History.

Scottish Studies The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

Academic Trade

Church and University in the Scottish Enlightenment The Moderate Literati of Edinburgh Richard B. Sher 2nd Edition December 2015 Pb • 978 1 4744 0743 4 • £19.99 BIC: HBJD1 424 pp 216 x 138 mm 7 b&w illustrations Alternative Formats: Eb (PDF) • 978 1 4744 0744 1 • £19.99 Eb (epub) • 978 1 4744 0745 8 • £19.99

A major contribution to the social history of ideas in the Scottish Enlightenment

Description

The Author

Since its original publication in 1985, Church and University in the Scottish Enlightenment has come to be regarded as a classic work in 18th-century Scottish history and Enlightenment studies. It depicts Hugh Blair, Alexander Carlyle, Adam Ferguson, John Home, and William Robertson as an intimate coterie that played a central role in the Scottish Enlightenment, seen here not only as an intellectual but as a cultural movement. These men were among the leaders in the University of Edinburgh, in the Moderate party in the Church of Scotland, and in Edinburgh’s thriving clubs. They used their institutional influence and their books, plays, sermons, and pamphlets to promulgate the tenets of Moderatism, including polite Presbyterianism, Christian Stoicism, civic humanism, social and political conservatism, and the tolerant, cosmopolitan values of the international Enlightenment. Using a wide variety of sources and an interdisciplinary methodology, this collective biography portrays these "Moderate literati" as zealous activists for the cause in which they believed, ranging from support for a Scots militia, Ossian, and Roman Catholic relief to opposition to the Jacobite rebellion of 1745 and the American and French Revolutions.

Richard B. Sher is Distinguished Professor of History in the Federated History Department of New Jersey Institute of Technology and Rutgers University, Newark.

Series Edinburgh Classic Editions

Readership General readership in Scottish History; undergraduates and postgraduates of Enlightenment studies

Key Features • • • •

New preface sets the book in its historical context Key title in Scottish Enlightenment history Takes a biographical approach to influence in the history of ideas Ground-breaking historiography of profoundly Scottish philosophy

Scottish Studies The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

New in Paperback

Scottish Gods

Religion in Modern Scotland 1900–2012 Steve Bruce December 2015 Pb • 978 1 4744 0840 0 • £19.99 BIC: HRAM, HRAX 256 pp

234 x 156 mm

Alternative Formats: Hb • 978 0 7486 8289 8 • £70.00 • March 2014 Eb (PDF) • 978 0 7486 8290 4 • £70.00 Eb (epub) • 978 0 7486 8291 1 • £19.99

The how and why of over a century of religious and cultural change

Description

The Author

Steve Bruce explores Scotland’s transformation from the largely devout Presbyterian country of 1900, with the church as a major social force, to the diverse, more secular society of today, when less than 10 per cent of Scots attend church. He bases his study on a career’s worth of historical, ethnographic and statistical research, to provide both a coherent description of Scotland’s current religious complexion and a considered explanation of the forces that shaped it.

Steve Bruce is Professor of Sociology at the University of Aberdeen.

Scottish Gods is both a fascinating summary of over a century of religious and cultural change, and a searing analysis of the state of religion in Scotland today by one of our leading social historians.

Readership Scots interested in their own country, Scottish clergy, students of Scottish history and religion and sociologists of religion worldwide.

Key Features • Explores how religion has become more varied over time: growth in Catholicism and Charismatic Christian fellowships; easternisation of Scotland’s religious vocabulary through Buddhism and Hinduism; the growth of the Muslim population; and pursuit of spiritual interests once considered pagan • Looks at the decline in the Protestant-Catholic divide • Discusses controversies over the proper public place of religion

Selling Points • Winner of The Saltire Scottish History Book of the Year Award 2014 • A rare overarching analysis of religion in Scotland in the 20th century • A highly readable account of the changing nature and place of religion in a society which places less and less importance on religion • Non-partisan in perspective • Informed by substantial statistical evidence • The author is one of Scotland’s leading social scientists

Scottish Studies The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry, Edinburgh EH8 8PJ tel: +44 (0)131 650 4218 fax: +44 (0)131 650 3286 [email protected] www.euppublishing.com

Edinburgh University Press Series

Nottingham French Studies Special Issues Series Editors: Stephen Bamforth, University of Nottingham

Founded in 1961, Nottingham French Studies publishes articles in English and French and themed special issues covering all of the major fields of the discipline – literature, culture, postcolonial studies, gender studies, film and visual studies, translation, thought, history, politics, linguistics – and all historical periods from medieval to the 21st century. The journal’s Editorial Board is composed of the members of the Department of French and Francophone studies at the University of Nottingham, supported by an international Advisory Board. Through the publication of general and special numbers covering a range of thematic and theoretical perspectives, the journal aims to represent established as well as new and emerging areas of research in the field of French studies. http://www.euppublishing.com/series/nfss

Forthcoming

Available

Still French? France and the Challenge of Diversity, 1985–2015 Nottingham French Studies Volume 54, Number 3 Alec G. Hargreaves Pb 978 1 4744 0660 4 £16.99 December 2015

Photography in Contemporary French and Francophone Cultures Nottingham French Studies Volume 53, Number 2 Edited by Kathrin Yacavone Pb 978 0 7486 9366 5 £16.99 July 2014

Edinburgh University Press Series

Traditions in World Cinema

Series Editors: Linda Badley, Middle Tennessee State University and R. Barton Palmer, Clemson University

This series presents diverse and fascinating movements in world cinema. Each volume concentrates on a set of films from a different national, regional or, in some cases, cross-cultural cinema which constitute a particular tradition. www.euppublishing.com/series/tiwc

Forthcoming

Available

Contemporary Japanese Cinema Since Hana-Bi Adam Bingham Hb 978 0 7486 8373 4 £70.00 June 2015

Nordic Genre Film Small Nation Film Cultures in the Global Marketplace Edited by Tommy Gustafsson and Pietari Kääpä Hb 978 0 7486 9318 4 £75.00 May 2015

Chinese Martial Arts Cinema The Wuxia Tradition 2nd Edition Stephen Teo Pb 978 1 4744 0008 4 £24.99 Hb 978 1 4744 0386 3 £70.00 November 2015 Slow Cinema Edited by Tiago de Luca and Nuno Barradas Jorge Pb 978 0 7486 9604 8 £24.99 Hb 978 0 7486 9602 4 £70.00 December 2015 NEW IN PAPERBACK Films on Ice Cinemas of the Arctic Pb 978 1 4744 0901 8 £24.99 December 2015 Hb 978 0 7486 9417 4 £70.00 December 2014

New Taiwanese Cinema in Focus Wilson Flannery Pb 978 1 4744 0557 7 £24.99 May 2015 Hb 978 0 7486 8201 0 £70.00 March 2014 International Noir Edited by Homer Pettey and R. Barton Palmer Hb 978 0 7486 9110 4 £65.00 November 2014

Edinburgh University Press Series

Traditions in World Cinema

Series Editors: Linda Badley, Middle Tennessee State University and R. Barton Palmer, Clemson University Post-beur Cinema Maghrebi-French and North African Emigre Filmmaking in France since 2000 Will Higbee Pb 978 0 7486 9737 3 £24.99 August 2014 Hb 978 0 7486 4004 1 £70.00 July 2013 Italian Post-Neorealist Cinema Luca Barattoni Pb 978 0 7486 8592 9 £24.99 December 2013 Hb 978 0 7486 4054 6 £65.00 September 2012 Italian Neorealist Cinema Torunn Haaland Pb 978 0 7486 3612 9 £24.99 December 2013 Hb 978 0 7486 3611 2 £70.00 June 2012 Magic Realist Cinema in East Central Europe Aga Skrodzka Pb 978 0 7486 8594 3 £24.99 February 2014 Hb 978 0 7486 3916 8 £65.00 October 2012 Spanish Horror Film Antonio Lázaro-Reboll Pb 978 0 7486 3639 6 £19.99 March 2014 Hb 978 0 7486 3638 9 £65.00 November 2012 American Smart Cinema Claire Perkins Pb 978 0 7486 7908 9 £19.99 January 2013 Hb 978 0 7486 4074 4 £70.00 January 2012 The International Film Musical Corey K. Creekmur and Linda Y. Mokdad Pb 978 0 7486 3477 4 £19.99 January 2013 Hb 978 0 7486 3476 7 £70.00 January 2012

New Neopolitan Cinema Alex Marlow-Mann Pb 978 0 7486 6877 9 £22.99 September 2012 Hb 978 0 7486 4066 9 £70.00 February 2011 Czech and Slovak Cinema Theme and Tradition Peter Hames Pb 978 0 7486 2082 1 £24.99 August 2010 Hb 978 0 7486 2081 4 £85.00 June 2009 Chinese Martial Arts Cinema The Wuxia Tradition Stephen Teo Pb 978 0 7486 3286 2 £26.99 Hb 978 0 7486 3285 5 £80.00 March 2009 Palestinian Cinema Landscape, Trauma and Memory Nurith Gertz amd George Khleifi Pb 978 0 7486 3408 8 £24.99 Hb 978 0 7486 3407 1 £80.00 January 2008 African Filmmaking North and South of the Sahara Roy Armes Pb 978 0 7486 2124 8 £24.99 Hb 978 0 7486 2123 1 £70.00 August 2006 Traditions in World Cinema Edited by Linda Badley, R. Barton Palmer and Steven Jay Schneider Pb 978 0 7486 1863 7 £24.99 December 2005 New Punk Cinema Edited by Nicholas Rombes Pb 978 0 7486 2035 7 £24.99 May 2005 Japanese Horror Cinema Jay McRoy Pb 978 0 7486 1995 5 £24.99 Hb 978 0 7486 1994 8 £105.00 March 2005

Edinburgh University Press Series

Edinburgh Studies in Law

Series Editor: Elspeth Reid, University of Edinburgh

Edinburgh Studies in Law was launched by Edinburgh University Press in 2005 in association with the Edinburgh Law Review Trust. The series provides a forum for high quality academic writing on contemporary substantive law, private and public, and for legal theory and legal history. A distinctive feature is a focus on Scots law and legal culture from an international and comparative perspective. Scots law is among the handful of legal systems that combines common law with civil law, and some of the initial volumes in the series explore aspects of such 'mixed' legal systems. www.euppublishing.com/series/esil

Forthcoming

Available

Trusts and Patrimonies Edited by Remus Valsan Hb 978 0 7486 9774 8 £60.00 June 2015

Law Making and the Scottish Parliament The Early Years Elaine E. Sutherland, Kay E. Goodall, Gavin F. M. Little and Fraser P. Davidson Pb 978 0 7486 9676 5 £24.99 May 2014 2011: Hb 978 0 7486 4019 5 £60.00

Law, Lawyers, and Humanism Selected Essays on the History of Scots Law, Volume 1 John W. Cairns Hb 978 0 7486 8209 6 £60.00 July 2015 Enlightenment, Legal Education, and Critique Selected Essays on the History of Scots Law, Volume 2 John W. Cairns Hb 978 0 7486 8213 3 £60.00 July 2015 Reassessing Legal Humanism and its Claims Petere Fontes? Edited by John W. Cairns and Paul J. du Plessis Hb 978 1 4744 0885 1 £60.00 December 2015

The Consequences of Possession Edited by Eric Descheemaeker Hb 978 0 7486 9364 1 £60.00 May 2014 MacCormick's Scotland Neil Walker Hb 978 0 7486 4380 6 £60.00 March 2012 Essays in Criminal Law in Honour of Sir Gerald Gordon Edited by James Chalmers, Fiona Leverick and Lindsay Farmer Hb 978 0 7486 4070 6 £70.00 October 2010 The Creation of the Ius Commune From Casus to Regula Edited by John W. Cairns and Paul J. du Plessis Hb 978 0 7486 3897 0 £70.00 July 2010 Mixed Jurisdictions Compared Private Law in Louisiana and Scotland Edited by Vernon Palmer and Elspeth Reid Hb 978 0 7486 3886 4 £80.00 October 2009

Roman Law, Scots Law and Legal History Selected Essays William Gordon Hb 978 0 7486 2516 1 £90.00 October 2007 Exploring the Law of Succession Studies National, Historical and Comparative Edited by Kenneth Reid, Marius de Waal and Reinhard Zimmermann Hb 978 0 7486 3290 9 £80.00 October 2007 Beyond Dogmatics Law and Society in the Roman World Edited by John W. Cairns and Paul J. du Plessis Hb 978 0 7486 2793 6 £85.00 May 2007 European Contract Law Scots and South African Perspectives Edited by Hector MacQueen and Reinhard Zimmerman Hb 978 0 7486 2425 6 £100.00 February 2006 A Mixed Legal System in Transition T. B. Smith and the Progress of Scots Law Edited by Elspeth Reid and David Carey Miller Hb 978 0 7486 2335 8 £85.00 July 2005

Edinburgh University Press Series

Edinburgh Classic Editions

The Edinburgh Classic Editions series publishes influential works from the archive in context for a contemporary audience. These works shifted boundaries on first publication and are considered essential groundings in their disciplines. New introductions from contemporary scholars explain the cultural and intellectual heritage of these classic editions to a new generation of readers. www.euppublishing.com/series/ece

Forthcoming

Available

Historic New Lanark The Dale and Owen Industrial Community since 1785 2nd Edition Ian Donnachie and George Hewitt Pb 978 1 4744 0781 6 £19.99 November 2015

Kingship and Unity Scotland 1000–1306 2nd Edition G. W. S. Barrow Pb 978 1 4744 0181 4 £19.99 April 2015

Church and University in the Scottish Enlightenment The Moderate Literati of Edinburgh 2nd Edition Richard B. Sher Pb 978 1 4744 0743 4 £19.99 December 2015 Common Law and Feudal Society in Medieval Scotland 2nd Edition Hector MacQueen Pb 978 1 4744 0746 5 £19.99 March 2016

Robert Bruce And the Community of the Realm of Scotland: An Edinburgh Classic Edition G. W. S. Barrow Pb 978 0 7486 8522 6 £19.99 November 2013 The Democratic Intellect 2nd Edition George Davie, Lindsay Paterson, Richard Gunn, Murdo Macdonald Pb 978 0 7486 8478 6 £19.99 June 2013

Edinburgh University Press Series

The New Edinburgh Islamic Surveys Series Editor: Carole Hillenbrand, University of Edinburgh

The New Edinburgh Islamic Surveys is a well-established and highly regarded series of over 30 volumes introducing key areas within Islamic Studies. Each book is written by an expert in the field, offering an overview of its subject as well as presenting original thinking, making it suitable for students and academics alike. www.euppublishing.com/series/isur

Forthcoming

Available

Contemporary Issues in Islam Asma Afsaruddin Pb 978 0 7486 3277 0 £24.99 Hb 978 0 7486 3276 3 £75.00 August 2015

Muslim Spain Reconsidered From 711 to 1502 Richard Hitchcock Pb 978 0 7486 3960 1 £24.99 Hb 978 0 7486 3959 5 £75.00 February 2014

Muslims in Western Europe 4th edition Jonas Otterbeck Original Author Jørgen S. Nielsen Pb 978 1 4744 0933 9 £24.99 December 2015 Islamic Astronomy and Astrology Stephen Blake Pb 978 0 7486 4909 9 £24.99 Hb 978 0 7486 4910 5 £75.00 May 2016

Twelver Shiism Unity and Diversity in the Life of Islam, 632 to 1722 Andrew J. Newman Pb 978 0 7486 3331 9 £24.99 Hb 978 0 7486 3330 2 £75.00 November 2013 An Introduction to Islamic Archaeology Marcus Milwright Pb 978 0 7486 2311 2 £24.99 Hb 978 0 7486 2310 5 £85.00 February 2010 The Muslims of Medieval Italy Alex Metcalfe Pb 978 0 7486 2008 1 £26.99 Hb 978 0 7486 2007 4 £80.00 September 2009 The Genesis of Literature in Islam From the Aural to the Read Gregor Schoeler and Shawkat M. Toorawa Pb 978 0 7486 2468 3 £23.99 Hb 978 0 7486 2467 6 £70.00 January 2009

Edinburgh University Press Series

The New Edinburgh Islamic Surveys Series Editor: Carole Hillenbrand, University of Edinburgh Available Sufism The Formative Period Ahmet T. Karamustafa Pb 978 0 7486 1919 1 £23.99 Hb 978 0 7486 1918 4 £70.00 April 2007

Islamic Aesthetics An Introduction Oliver Leaman Pb 978 0 7486 1735 7 £31.00 Hb 978 0 7486 1734 0 £125.00 May 2004

Medieval Islamic Medicine Peter Pormann and Emilie Savage-Smith Pb 978 0 7486 2067 8 £24.99 Hb 978 0 7486 2066 1 £85.00 January 2007

Islam An Historical Introduction 2nd Edition Gerhard Endress Pb 978 0 7486 1620 6 £26.99 November 2002

Modern Arabic Literature Paul Starkey Pb 978 0 7486 1290 1 £24.99 Hb 978 0 7486 1291 8 £85.00 July 2006 Medieval Islamic Political Thought Patricia Crone Pb 978 0 7486 2194 1 £24.99 September 2005 Hb 978 0 7486 1870 5 £50.00 January 2004 Islamic Law From Historical Foundations to Contemporary Practice Mawil Izzi Dien Pb 978 0 7486 1459 2 £26.99 Hb 978 0 7486 1458 5 £95.00 September 2004 The New Islamic Dynasties A Chronological and Genealogical Manual C. E. Bosworth Pb 978 0 7486 2137 8 £33.00 September 2004 Muslims in Western Europe 3rd edition Jørgen S. Nielsen Pb 978 0 7486 1844 6 £26.99 July 2004 Shi'ism 2nd edition Heinz Halm Pb 978 0 7486 1888 0 £28.99 July 2004

A History of Christian-Muslim Relations Hugh Goddard Pb 978 0 7486 1009 9 £29.99 April 2000 Persian Historiography Julie Scott Meisami Pb 978 0 7486 1276 5 £35.00 Hb 978 0 7486 0743 3 £125.00 July 1999 A Short History of the Ismailis Traditions of a Muslim Community Farhad Daftary Pb 978 0 7486 0687 0 £32.00 Hb 978 0 7486 0904 8 £125.00 June 1998

Introduction to the Qur'an William Montgomery Watt and Richard Bell Pb 978 0 7486 0597 2 £26.99 February 1995 An Introduction to the Hadith John Burton Pb 978 0 7486 0435 7 £31.00 January 1995 Islamic Creeds William Montgomery Watt Pb 978 0 7486 0513 2 £33.99 Hb 978 0 7486 0522 4 £65.00 August 1994 A History of Islamic Law Noel Coulson Pb 978 0 7486 0514 9 £31.00 July 1994 The Influence of Islam on Medieval Europe William Montgomery Watt Pb 978 0 7486 0517 0 £28.99 July 1994 Islamic Science and Engineering Donald R. Hill Pb 978 0 7486 0455 5 £33.99 May 1994

Islamic Political Thought William Montgomery Watt Pb 978 0 7486 1098 3 £26.99 April 1998

Media Arabic Julia Bray Pb 978 0 7486 0367 1 £29.99 October 1993

Islamic Medicine Manfred Ullmann Pb 978 0 7486 0907 9 £19.99 February 1997

Islamic Names An Introduction Anne-Marie Schimmel Pb 978 0 7486 0688 7 £45.00 Hb 978 0 85224 563 7 £70.00 February 1990

A History of Islamic Spain William Montgomery Watt and Pierre Cachia Pb 978 0 7486 0847 8 £26.99 July 1996

Islamic Philosophy and Theology 2nd Edition William Montgomery Watt Pb 978 0 7486 0749 5 £32.00 January 1987