History News & Updates
Articles, News, Promotions and Updates from Routledge and the Taylor & Francis Group.
Articles, News, Promotions and Updates from Routledge and the Taylor & Francis Group.
Called ‘a vade mecum for students on all levels,’ The Routledge History of Medieval Christianity is a comprehensive, thematic survey of a vital element of medieval history.
Stop by the stand at the International Medieval Congress in Leeds, July 6-9, for a chance to win a free copy of this new handbook!
In the meantime, find out what intrigues the editor, R.N. Swanson, about Christianity in Europe.
Routledge is pleased to announce that Dr. Candice Goucher, Professor of History at Washington State University Vancouver, will be the keynote speaker at this year's World History Association conference in Savannah, Georgia, June 30-July 2.
Routledge History is delighted to invite you to explore our virtual booklist for the Society for the History of Children and Youth 8th biennial conference, happening from June 24th-26th at the University of British Columbia.
We are pleased to offer a 20% discount across all our titles during and after the conference until July 26th. Simply use the code DC364 at checkout at www.Routledge.com to redeem your discount.
Edited by Ken MacMillan
"Ken MacMillan’s Stories of True Crime is both a treasury of early modern true crime stories and a valuable resource for instructors and students of early modern legal, social and cultural history. The author has painstakingly selected, edited, transcribed and annotated a broad range of early modern criminal accounts: some indeed sensational and bloody, others more prosaic, but all of them compelling and instructive, shedding light on both the legal and larger social and cultural contexts of crime and punishment in late Elizabethan and Stuart England." -Andrea McKenzie, University of Victoria, Canada
Click here to read more.
By Salvatore Garau
This book develops a number of new conceptual tools to tackle some of the most hotly debated issues concerning the nature of fascism, using three profoundly different national contexts in the inter-war years as case studies: Italy, Britain and Norway. It explores how fascist ideology was the result of a sustained struggle between competing internal factions, which created a precarious, but also highly dynamic, balance between revolutionary/totalitarian and conservative/authoritarian tendencies.
By C.H. Lawrence
"C. H. Lawrence’s classic study presents the evolution of monastic life and thought from primitive fourth-century eastern foundations to the variety of medieval orders. Enhancing our understanding of saints’ lives, monastic rules, and pilgrimage narratives, it is a rich resource for students and scholars alike." -Ruth Harwood Cline, Georgetown University, USA
Edited by Jenny Andersson and Eglė Rindzevičiūtė
This book reconsiders the power of the idea of the future. Bringing together perspectives from cultural history, environmental history, political history and the history of science, it investigates how the future became a specific field of action in liberal democratic, state socialist and post-colonial regimes after the Second World War.
Edited by Tina Mai Chen and David S. Churchill
This volume considers the confluence of World History and historical materialism, with the following guiding question in mind: given developments in the field of historical materialism concerned with the intersection of race, gender, labor, and class, why is it that within the field of World History, historical materialism has been marginalized, precisely as World History orients toward transnational socio-cultural phenomenon, micro-studies, or global histories of networks?
Michael Kimaid, author of Modernity, Metatheory, and the Temporal-Spatial Divide: From Mythos to Techne, discusses his research and the importance of time and space in the study of history.
Myles Osborne, co-author with Susan Kingsley Kent of Africans and Britons in the Age of Empires, 1660-1980, discusses how their book contributes to the conversation on the relationship between Africans and Britons.