Guest Post

Finding Oneself in Art’s Visionary Moment

Finding Oneself in Art’s Visionary Moment

This is a guest post by Sidney Homan, author of Art’s Visionary Moment I speak here only for myself, not out of modesty or even a fear of generalization, but because I have had increasing doubts about the value of my own scholarship—I stress, again, the “my own.” In point of fact, I envy those […]

Guest Post

Wittgenstein’s Philosophy of Others

Wittgenstein’s Philosophy of Others

This is a guest post by Constantine Sandis, author of Wittgenstein on Other Minds: Strangers in a Strange Land If some people looked like elephants and others like cats, or fish, one wouldn’t expect them to understand each other and things would look much more like what they really are. Ludwig Wittgenstein, letter to Piero […]

Guest Post

A long-term view of feelings about immigrants

A long-term view of feelings about immigrants

This is a guest post by Ben Braber, author of Changes in Attitudes to Immigrants in Britain, 1921-2021: From Alien to Migrant The public debate about immigration is raging in Britain and abroad, but English language use keeps changing. That usage denotes changing attitudes to immigrants. Academic researchers have noticed this phenomenon, but they usually […]

Guest Post

The Power of Literature: ‘Colette and the Incest Taboo’

The Power of Literature: ‘Colette and the Incest Taboo’

This is a guest post by Carol Mastrangelo Bové, author of Colette and the Incest Taboo. Julia Kristeva’s book Colette sparked my interest in an author I had not understood when I first read her decades ago. So literary critics may well influence our tastes and also our values, I am convinced in this post-election […]

Guest Post

The Second Cold War and Beyond

The Second Cold War and Beyond

This is a guest post by Richard Sakwa, author of The Culture of the Second Cold War Three decades ago, we believed that the era of the Cold War had come to an end. How wrong we were. The style of politics associated with the Cold War lives on. In the end, this gave rise […]

Guest Post

Farewell Oppenheimer

This is a guest post by Peder Anker, author of For The Love of Bombs It is often said that history is written by its winners, and the history of the atomic bomb is no exception. From 6 August 1945 – the day the United States dropped the bomb on Hiroshima – the victorious narrative […]

Guest Post

Russian Studies Will Never Be Irrelevant

Russian Studies Will Never Be Irrelevant

This is a guest post by Lee A. Farrow, author of Potential Russia When the Soviet Union officially ceased to exist in 1991, I had just completed my master’s degree and my first summer in Russia. Immediately, people assumed that my field was now pointless and irrelevant, and casually commented that no one would be […]

Guest Post

Visualising Climate Change Effects on Urban and Rural Habitat in African Cinema and Urbanism

Visualising Climate Change Effects on Urban and Rural Habitat in African Cinema and Urbanism

This is a guest post by Marie-Paule Macdonald, author of African Cinema and Urbanism. The African continent, estimated to contribute less than 3% to global emissions while experiencing fast-increasing population growth and corresponding urbanisation, faces the effects of climate change on human habitats. Its youthful population holds the potential to reshape many realms, launch new […]

Author Interview

Islamic Leadership and the State in Eurasia: A Historical Perspective

Islamic Leadership and the State in Eurasia: A Historical Perspective

This is an interview by Galina M. Yemelianova, author of Islamic Leadership and the State in Eurasia Q1: Why did you write this book now? Answer: Since the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington in 2001, Islam and Islamism have been at the centre of media, political and academic debate in the West. This […]