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Fifteen Eighty Four

Academic perspectives from Cambridge University Press

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Why Have So Many Israeli–Palestinian Peace Initiatives Failed, and How Can Peace Be Achieved?

Every few years, hope briefly returns to the Middle East. Negotiators meet behind closed doors, world leaders speak of a historic opportunity, and commentators predict that peace may finally be within...

Raphael Cohen-Almagor | 3 Jul 2026

Introducing Lexicons of English Religion, 1380–1850

Many years ago I developed an amateur interest in British ecclesiastical history, brought about particularly by reading on holiday Diarmaid MacCulloch’s astonishing biography of Thomas Cranmer (1996);...

Jeremy J. Smith | 3 Jul 2026

Why Good AI Can Afford to Be Fast

Speed matters. Have you ever felt frustrated because an AI system was too slow to respond? If the waiting time were cut in half, the experience would feel much less stressful. Quality matters too....

Ryoma Sato | 2 Jul 2026

Conversations on Rational Choice

Scientific theories have long appeared as polished systems of ideas, presented through equations, models, and textbook explanations. This holds especially for economics. Yet behind every theory there...

Catherine Herfeld | 2 Jul 2026

How did the “Father of Art History” Memorialize Himself?

Italian Renaissance painter, author, architect, and poet Giorgio Vasari (1511-1574) is best known for his multi-volume Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects (1st ed. 1550, 2nd...

Sally J. Cornelison | 1 Jul 2026

Building a Bourbon Millennium

In 2000, while working in the rare books collection of Mexico’s National Library, I encountered something that caught me off guard. As I flipped through the card catalogue of the Fondo Reservado,...

Frances L. Ramos | 26 Jun 2026

Punishment or Pragmatism? Lessons for Dealing with Failure from the Dutch Golden Age

A society’s true measure of success is its capacity to deal with failure. In the mid–seventeenth century, this is just what we can observe in the city of Amsterdam, at the time one of the world’s...

Maurits den Hollander | 26 Jun 2026

Doorways to the Anthropocene

The cover of The Anthropocene and Literature features a photo from an abandoned house in the ghost town of Kolmanskop in Namibia. The former mining town was established in the early twentieth century...

Tore Rye Andersen | 26 Jun 2026

Seekers and Partisans: Americans Abroad

At a moment when many Americans fear the rise of a zealous, sometimes racist, form of populism, when the “bonds of affection” between citizens have demonstrably frayed, and a version of authoritarianism...

David Mayers | 25 Jun 2026

The Future of Holocaust Memory: Migration and Literature in Germany

In the wake of the Hamas attacks on October 7, 2023, and the war in Gaza that followed, political conversations in the United States, Germany, and elsewhere have grown more tense and divisive. Accusations...

Agnes Mueller | 25 Jun 2026

Submarines Cannot Escape the Reach of International Law

Among the many different ways that humans interact with the ocean, submarine operations are instrumental in furthering those activities. Submarines are deployed in scientific exploration, seabed exploitation,...

Natalie Klein, Kate Purcell, Jack McNally | 24 Jun 2026

How D. H. Lawrence Wrote: Performance on the Page by Paul Eggert

For many years I tried, without success, to crack the code of a literary critical puzzle concerning D. H. Lawrence. The tradition of post-World War II Lawrence criticism, remarkable though it was in remaking...

Paul Eggert | 24 Jun 2026