Crossing the floor Erica WeaverThis new biography provides an account of the career of Reg Prentice, one of the most controversial figures in modern British political history. He remains the most high profile politician to cross the floor of the House of Commons in the post war period, and his defection was reflective of an important 'sea change' in British politics.
It is both the intimate narrative of a family and an analytical frame through which to explore Britain’s history and legacies of slavery
using forensic photographs to argue for the centrality of the perception and representation of time in photographic narrativity
and the theoretical foundation for a complementary approach to documentation issues and processes: not only in the context of academic study
second Earl of Westmorland presents the largest collection of 'new' seventeenth-century poetry since Traherne's poems were published almost a century ago
Vibrant discussions of Petrarch
It will make fascinating reading for historians of English society
to reveal complicated existences
Migration diplomacy paints a complex picture of how migrants
Seeking ‘middle ways’ through what has been called the ‘age of extremes’
It argues that they are in dialogue with innovative television traditions connected to Modernism in television
social construction and modernization
as well as recent blockbusters of the Heritage genre from "Cyrano de Bergerac" and "Jean de Florette" to "Germinal" and "La Reine Margot"