Books
  • Conversions
  • Spanish identity in the age of nations
  • The naval war film
  • Representation, recognition and respect in world politics
  • This is your hour
  • The hurt(ful) body
  • Understanding governance in contemporary Japan
  • David Malouf
  • Migration into art
  • The post-crisis Irish voter
  • Photographic subjects
  • Unlimited action
  • Living displacement
  • Amitav Ghosh
  • Queen and country
  • Resisting history
  • Our fighting sisters
  • A precarious equilibrium
  • Crisis? What crisis?
  • Northern Ireland in the Second World War
  • Solvent form
  • Charlotte Brontë
  • Inside Accounts, Volume II
  • Watching the World
  • Incest in contemporary literature
  • Into the woods
  • Ekphrastic encounters
  • Tragic encounters and ordinary ethics
  • Northern Ireland and the crisis of anti-racism
  • Chaplains in early modern England
  • The European Union's policy towards Mercosur
  • The experience of occupation in the Nord, 1914–18
  • The Eurogroup
  • Emile and Isaac Pereire
  • The Victorian soldier in Africa
  • Intellectual disability
  • Shakespeare's storms
  • Street theatre and the production of postindustrial space
  • Irish Catholic identities
  • Between two stools
  • Shell-shocked British Army veterans in Ireland, 1918-39
  • Spoiling the peace?
  • Second sight
  • Propaganda and counter-terrorism
  • Precarious childhood in post-independence Ireland
  • Richard Attenborough
  • Theorising Media
  • Creative research communication
  • The politics of airport expansion in the United Kingdom
  • Democratic inclusion
  • Sport in the Black Atlantic
  • France, humanitarian intervention and the responsibility to protect
  • British women of the Eastern Front
  • Tolerance and diversity in Ireland, north and south
  • Empire and enterprise
  • The Judas kiss
  • American foreign policy
  • Socio-ideological fantasy and the Northern Ireland conflict
  • Samuel Richardson and the theory of tragedy
  • Marital violence in post-independence Ireland, 1922–96
  • The wounds of nations
  • South African performance and archives of memory
  • A.S. Byatt
  • The cult of the Duce
  • The territorial Conservative Party
  • Edmund Spenser and the romance of space
  • People, places and identities
  • Nostalgia and the post-war Labour Party
  • The synthetic proposition
  • Aesthetics and subjectivity
  • Stage rights!
  • Sex, politics and empire
  • Independents in Irish party democracy
  • Insanity, identity and empire
  • Empire and nation-building in the Caribbean
  • Beyond the metropolis
  • Shakespeare's cinema of love
  • Modern women on trial
  • The early modern English sonnet
  • The last taboo
  • Children's rights, Eastern enlargement and the EU human rights regime
  • Hermits and anchorites in England, 1200–1550
  • Productive failure
  • Globalisation and Ideology in Britain
  • States of apology
  • The Great Exhibition, 1851
  • In the company of wolves
  • Curing queers'
  • Beginning postcolonialism
  • The same-sex unions revolution in Western democracies
  • Idols of the Odeons
  • Psychological socialism
  • The changing spaces of television acting
  • Julia Margaret Cameron's 'fancy subjects'
  • Migrant architects of the NHS
  • Novelty fair
  • Women art workers and the Arts and Crafts movement
  • From reason to practice in bioethics
  • Hugo Chávez and the Bolivarian Revolution
  • Irish adventures in nation-building
  • Decadent daughters and monstrous mothers
  • The fictions of Arthur Cravan
  • John Dewey
  • The tide of democracy
  • Civilians into soldiers
  • Developing Africa
  • Syria and the chemical weapons taboo
  • Women and Irish diaspora identities
  • Voices from the Underworld
  • Beginning Realism
  • The Scottish Legendary
  • The Debate on the English Reformation
  • Making and unmaking in early modern English drama
  • Fathers, Pastors and Kings
  • The cultural politics of contemporary Hollywood film
  • Race and empire
  • Catherine Breillat
  • Ireland and the Freedom of Information Act
  • In the shadow of Enoch Powell
  • The road to Brexit
  • Islam and identity politics among British-Bangladeshis
  • Historical epistemology and the making of modern Chinese medicine
  • The ancient Greeks at war
  • US public diplomacy in socialist Yugoslavia, 1950–70
  • The Red Cross Movement
  • 'Insubordinate Irish'
  • Jean Epstein
  • The humanities and the Irish university
  • British queer history
  • Household knowledges in late-medieval England and France
  • Political responsibility and the European Union
  • Everyday security threats
  • Children born of war in the twentieth century
  • The international politics of the Middle East
  • Ballads and songs of Peterloo
  • The ideology of the extreme right
  • Networks of sound, style and subversion
  • Beyond observation
  • Martial masculinities
  • Historiography
  • Same–sex desire in early modern England, 1550–1735
  • Anglo-Jewry since 1066
  • After 1851
  • Jim Crace
  • Making and remaking saints in nineteenth-century Britain
  • That devil's trick
  • State of play
  • Foucault's theatres
  • Black middle-class Britannia
  • Critical theory and sociological theory
  • In Time's eye
  • Reformation without end
  • Decentring France
  • The arc and the machine
  • Counter-radicalisation policy and the securing of British identity
  • Europe on the move
  • Medicine, patients and the law
  • Rethinking modern prostheses in Anglo-American commodity cultures, 1820–1939
  • Writing the Welsh borderlands in Anglo-Saxon England
  • Why theory?
  • Divine love
  • The three amigos
  • The European debt crisis
  • The regulation of standards in British public life
  • Political corruption in Ireland 1922–2010
  • The Gothic and death
  • Art after Empire
  • David Lean
  • Islam in British media discourses
  • History, heritage, and colonialism
  • Byron and Italy
  • The Irish regiments in the Great War
  • Robespierre and the Festival of the Supreme Being
  • The European Union in Africa
  • Peacemaking in the twenty-first century
  • Stories of women
  • The British New Wave
  • The Saint Bartholomew's Day massacre
  • Women in the Weimar Republic
  • The Bush administration, sex and the moral agenda
  • Beyond the Happening
  • Understanding Political Islam
  • Mundane Methods
  • Critical theory and epistemology
  • Men with stakes
  • Extending ecocriticism
  • German electoral politics
  • Geoffrey Hill's later work
  • European art and the wider world 1350–1550
  • Liberal realism
  • The implementation of environmental policy in Ireland
  • The Bourdieu paradigm
  • Science, politics and society in early nineteenth-century Ireland
  • Religious Franks
  • Memory and the future of Europe
  • Who cared for the carers?
  • Hartly House, Calcutta
  • Queer Muslim diasporas in contemporary literature and film
  • Making work more equal
  • Foundational Economy
  • Through the keyhole
  • The extended self
  • An archaeology of lunacy
  • The European Union and culture
  • Abject visions
  • The extreme Right in Western Europe
  • From Iceland to the Americas
  • Human rights and humanitarian diplomacy
  • The feminine public sphere
  • Britain and its internal others, 1750–1800
  • Domestic life and domestic tragedy in early modern England
  • Beginning theory
  • Dance and politics
  • Anthony Asquith
  • Incarceration and human rights
  • Madness on trial
  • Groups, representation and democracy
  • Northern Ireland and the politics of boredom
  • Samuel Beckett and the primacy of love
  • Scandinavian politics today
  • Fighting fascism: the British Left and the rise of fascism, 1919–39
  • Inclusion, exclusion and the governance of European security
  • British films of the 1970s
  • Bodies complexioned
  • Law across imperial borders
  • Defense policies of East-Central European countries after 1989
  • Power in modern Russia
  • The victim in the Irish criminal process
  • Framing the moron
  • Science at the end of empire
  • Ireland, West Germany and the New Europe, 1949-73
  • Jimmy McGovern
  • Humanitarian intervention in the long nineteenth century
  • Beautyscapes
  • R. K. Narayan
  • The documentary diaries
  • The shifting border: Legal cartographies of migration and mobility
  • Making the patient-consumer
  • Authority and society in Nantes during the French Wars of Religion, 1558–1598
  • Priestley's England
  • 'Who the Devil taught thee so much Italian?'
  • We are no longer in France
  • Conflict, peace and mental health
  • Direct rule and the governance of Northern Ireland
  • Global citizen and European republic
  • Precarious spectatorship
  • The politics of hunger
  • Lobbying
  • Nudge, nudge, think, think
  • The Jacobites
  • The greening of golf
  • Banished potentates
  • Death and the crown
  • Players' work time
  • Dangerous bodies
  • Ethnography for a data-saturated world
  • Democracy in crisis
  • Might, right, prosperity and consent
  • The law of international organisations
  • Humboldt and the modern German university
  • Critical design in Japan
  • Imagining Caribbean womanhood
  • Carmen de Burgos
  • Teens and territory in 'post-conflict' Belfast
  • Transnational connections in early modern theatre
  • Cultures of decolonisation
  • Flesh and Spirit
  • Using Europe: territorial party strategies in a multi-level system
  • Almost nothing
  • The social construction of Swedish neutrality
  • Philip Roth
  • Early modern war narratives and the Revolt in the Low Countries
  • Immigrant England, 1300–1550
  • Limits of horror
  • Japan's new security partnerships
  • Reading behind the lines
  • Anarchy in Athens
  • Choosing party leaders
  • Cricket and community in England
  • Politics, performance and popular culture
  • US politics today
  • Protest and the politics of space and place, 1789–1848
  • Daniel Calparsoro
  • Sanctuary cities and urban struggles
  • Fashionability
  • A minority and the state
  • Histories of nursing practice
  • Using film as a source
  • Chagos Islanders in Mauritius and the UK
  • Male voices on women's rights
  • Regulating lobbying
  • The making of Thatcherism
  • The English Republican tradition and eighteenth-century France
  • From Republic to Restoration
  • Labour and working-class lives
  • The spatial contract
  • Rereading Chaucer and Spenser
  • On Anachronism
  • Negotiating nursing
  • Prussians, Nazis and Peaceniks
  • Women and ETA
  • Discourses on LGBT asylum in the UK
  • Screening the Paris suburbs
  • The life of mise-en-scène
  • Francophone Africa at fifty
  • Tracing the cultural legacy of Irish Catholicism
  • Space and being in contemporary French cinema
  • Arab liberal thought in the modern age
  • Above sea
  • Immigration and Social Cohesion in the Republic of Ireland
  • Egypt of the Saite pharaohs, 664–525 BC
  • Leaders in conflict
  • Cosmopolitan dystopia
  • Working for the clampdown
  • The challenge of the sublime
  • Howard Barker's art of theatre
  • Reform of the House of Lords
  • Northern Ireland after the troubles
  • The World' and other unpublished works of Radclyffe Hall
  • Explaining local government
  • Poetry for historians
  • Islamic charities and Islamic humanism in troubled times
  • Habermas and European integration
  • History through material culture
  • Wanting and having
  • Culture on drugs
  • Laurent Cantet
  • The Labour Party under Ed Miliband
  • Women and the shaping of British Methodism
  • A history of humanitarianism, 1755–1989
  • How to be a historian
  • Mad money
  • Ireland under austerity
  • One hundred years of wartime nursing practices, 1854–1953
  • Unfolding Irish landscapes
  • Beginning film studies
  • Gothic incest
  • British national identity and opposition to membership of Europe, 1961–63
  • Henri-Georges Clouzot
  • Curatopia
  • Population, providence and empire
  • Paving the Empire Road
  • The politics of old age
  • Working men's bodies
  • Douglas Coupland
  • The quiet contemporary American novel
  • African security in the twenty-first century
  • Fleshing out surfaces
  • Dr Faustus: The A- and B- texts (1604, 1616)
  • Pockets of resistance
  • Beyond Nightingale
  • Worth saving
  • Time, work and leisure
  • Go home?
  • The ignorant bystander?
  • Urban gardening and the struggle for social and spatial justice
  • Discovering Gilgamesh
  • Nordic Gothic
  • Russian-American relations in the post-Cold War world
  • Paranoid visions
  • The European left and the financial crisis
  • The houses of history
  • Film modernism
  • Aesthetic evaluation and film
  • The Political Philosophy of Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  • Cinema, democracy and perfectionism
  • The Europeanisation of Conflict Resolutions
  • The Norman Geras Reader
  • Biblical women in early modern literary culture, 1550–1700
  • Neighbours and strangers
  • Interweaving myths in Shakespeare and his contemporaries
  • Vaccinating Britain
  • Shaping the Royal Navy
  • Disability and the Victorians
  • Ethical and legal debates in Irish healthcare
  • Fictional television and American politics
  • Windows for the world
  • Social change and everyday life in Ireland, 1850–1922
  • The Scots in South Africa
  • Roadworks
  • The Labour Party and the world, volume 2
  • Debating Tudor policy in sixteenth-century Ireland
  • Justice and mercy
  • A strained partnership?
  • The US vs China
  • Schools and the politics of religion and diversity in the Republic of Ireland
  • Physick and the family
  • Bound together
  • Anarchism and eugenics
  • Monarchy, religion and the state
  • Defining events
  • Monstrous media/spectral subjects
  • Image operations
  • Time and memory in reggae music
  • English nationalism, Brexit and the Anglosphere
  • Race and the Obama Administration
  • In pursuit of politics
  • Church polity and politics in the British Atlantic world, c . 1635–66
  • The politics of freedom of information
  • Ian McEwan
  • TV antiquity
  • The politics of alcohol
  • Creating the Opium War
  • Stage women, 1900–50
  • Colonial connections, 1815–45
  • Practising EU foreign policy
  • Castles and colonists
  • British politics today: Essentials
  • The Open University
  • Citizen now
  • Hong Kong and British culture, 1945–97
  • The genres of Renaissance tragedy
  • Spenser and Donne
  • Scottish cinema
  • Neoliberal lives
  • Rocks of nation
  • The European Union in the Asia-Pacific
  • The Existential drinker
  • Love, Intimacy and Power
  • Banning them, securing us?
  • The reality of film
  • Integration in Ireland
  • Chosen peoples
  • Manliness in Britain, 1760–1900
  • Ultras
  • The Spanish Socialist Party and the modernisation of Spain
  • Managing labour migration in Europe
  • Literature and sustainability
  • Watching the red dawn
  • Death machines
  • Britain's Korean War
  • The Länder and German federalism
  • Northern Ireland and the European Union
  • Truth recovery in Northern Ireland
  • Sites of imperial memory
  • Descending with angels
  • The 1989 Revolutions in Central and Eastern Europe
  • Recognition and Global Politics
  • Paul Auster
  • Contemporary Violence
  • Twenty-first-century fiction
  • Suicide and the Gothic
  • Regarding the real
  • Crank it up
  • The story of Alderley
  • The craft of writing in sociology
  • Classical Hollywood cinema
  • Anne Clifford's autobiographical writing, 1590–1676
  • Italian futurism and the machine
  • Shakespeare and the supernatural
  • Women of war
  • Class, ethnicity and religion in the Bengali East End
  • Sunningdale, the Ulster Workers' Council strike and the struggle for democracy in Northern Ireland
  • Laudian and Royalist polemic in seventeenth-century England
  • Romania and the European Union
  • The Cato Street Conspiracy
  • La Parisienne in cinema
  • Barry Hines
  • Kitty Marion
  • Framing referendum campaigns in the news
  • The Enlightenment and religion
  • The ascent of globalisation
  • A history of the Greek resistance in the Second World War
  • China's peaceful rise
  • Licensed larceny
  • Women, dowries and agency
  • Kids and branding in a digital world
  • The British people and the League of Nations
  • Ten Lessons in Modern Chinese History
  • Writing the United Kingdom Constitution
  • Going to the dogs
  • Governing natives
  • The Debate on the Crusades, 1099–2010
  • The international dimension of the failed Algerian transition
  • Mental health nursing
  • Fools and idiots?
  • Fight back
  • A literature of restitution
  • Silvio Berlusconi
  • Pulp fictions of medieval England
  • Comic Spenser
  • Transatlantic traumas
  • Toleration, power and the right to justification
  • The BBC and national identity in Britain, 1922–53
  • William Blake's Gothic imagination
  • Women drinking out in Britain since the early twentieth century
  • Postcolonial minorities in Britain and France
  • Against the grain
  • Mainstreaming co-operation
  • Chinua Achebe
  • Subjects of modernity
  • The entangled city
  • Religion, regulation, consumption
  • Doubtful and dangerous
  • Climate change and the oil industry
  • Beat sound, Beat vision
  • Communists constructing capitalism
  • The International Co-operative Alliance and the consumer co-operative movement in northern Europe, c. 1860-1939
  • Family rhythms
  • South Korean civil movement organisations
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