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  • Medical Humanities: Criticism and Creativity

    Criticism and Creativity

    ISSN: 2504-5229

    This series showcases innovative research, creativity and pedagogy in the interdisciplinary field of medical humanities. Books in the series explore the complexities of human bodies, minds, illness and wellbeing through analytical frameworks derived from humanistic disciplines and clinical practice. The series publishes a range of materials, including monographs and edited collections on scholarly approaches to medical issues in culture; creative works (accompanied by analytical and educational materials) that engage with medical humanities themes; and critical, engaged or radical pedagogies on focused topics for learners in the medical and health humanities.  Medical Humanities: Criticism and Creativity is intended to provide an informative exchange across disciplines, encouraging theoretical and personal reflections on the condition of the human mind/body and contributing to debates on health-related issues from a broad range of perspectives. The series also invites research that opens up critical conversations on being human at the intersection of other forms of humanistic knowledge, such as environmental and digital humanities. We are especially interested in collaborations between academics in the humanities and healthcare professionals. All book proposals and manuscripts undergo rigorous peer review prior to acceptance and publication. Editorial Board: Havi Carel (University of Bristol), Gretchen Case (University of Utah School of Medicine), Siobhan Conaty (La Salle University), Cheryl Dellasega (Penn State College of Medicine), Daniel George (Penn State College of Medicine), Michael Green (Penn State College of Medicine), Jennifer Henneman (Denver Art Museum), Brian Hurwitz (King’s College London), Brian Johnsrud (Adobe Education), Tess Jones (University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus), Lois Leveen (novelist and independent scholar), Ulrika Maude (University of Bristol), Jules Odendahl-James (Duke University), Molly Osborne (Oregon Health and Science University), Barry Saunders (University of North Carolina School of Medicine), Johanna Shapiro (University of California, Irvine, School of Medicine), Marina Tsaplina (The Betes Organization), Craigan Usher (Oregon Health and Science University), Neil Vickers (King’s College London), Martin Willis (Cardiff University), Charlotte Wu (Boston University School of Medicine)

    9 publications

  • Middle and Early Modern English Texts

    ISSN: 2235-0136

    This series is conceived to facilitate the edition of unpublished scientific treatises written in Late Middle English (late 13th century to the very early 16th century) as well as the publication of monographs dealing with their transmission, palaeographical and dialectal features, and/or their lexical, syntactic and pragmatic characteristics. The second aspect of the series seeks to favour studies specializing in linguistic variation or any of the multi-faceted aspects of the Middle English language even from a diachronic perspective. The Late Middle English Texts series is directed towards a wide scholarly readership that includes Textual Edition, Textual Criticism and Transmission – especially on electronic and digital formats both as standalone and online –, Ecdotics, History of Science, History of the English Language and Linguistics, Late Medieval Studies, History of Cultural Artifacts and Librarianship. The chronological scope we contemplate will range approximately from the mid 1200's to the early 1500's, and will include both manuscripts, incunabula and early prints that have come down to us in English, with the occasional excursion into analogues in other languages. Editions will include codicological and language studies that will enhance the relevance of the text within the cultural transmission European framework. The series includes both scholarly and academic editions and monograph studies with a specialised and comprehensive focus. Thematic and teaching textual anthologies will also be considered for the series. We do not aim primarily at publishing collected papers from conferences, symposia, meetings and other scholarly reunions, unless the occasion had a very relevant topic and was strongly coherent and specialised in its discussions. Each publication is subject to a rigorous blind double peer-review system that involves at least five readers from five different institutions (Universities or Research Institutes). This series is conceived to facilitate the edition of unpublished scientific treatises written in Late Middle English (late 13th century to the very early 16th century) as well as the publication of monographs dealing with their transmission, palaeographical and dialectal features, and/or their lexical, syntactic and pragmatic characteristics. The second aspect of the series seeks to favour studies specializing in linguistic variation or any of the multi-faceted aspects of the Middle English language even from a diachronic perspective. The Late Middle English Texts series is directed towards a wide scholarly readership that includes Textual Edition, Textual Criticism and Transmission – especially on electronic and digital formats both as standalone and online –, Ecdotics, History of Science, History of the English Language and Linguistics, Late Medieval Studies, History of Cultural Artifacts and Librarianship. The chronological scope we contemplate will range approximately from the mid 1200's to the early 1500's, and will include both manuscripts, incunabula and early prints that have come down to us in English, with the occasional excursion into analogues in other languages. Editions will include codicological and language studies that will enhance the relevance of the text within the cultural transmission European framework. The series includes both scholarly and academic editions and monograph studies with a specialised and comprehensive focus. Thematic and teaching textual anthologies will also be considered for the series. We do not aim primarily at publishing collected papers from conferences, symposia, meetings and other scholarly reunions, unless the occasion had a very relevant topic and was strongly coherent and specialised in its discussions. Each publication is subject to a rigorous blind double peer-review system that involves at least five readers from five different institutions (Universities or Research Institutes). This series is conceived to facilitate the edition of unpublished scientific (in the widest sense) treatises written in Late Middle English (late 13th century to the very early 16th century) as well as the publication of monographs dealing with their transmission, palaeographical and dialectal features, and/or their lexical, syntactic and pragmatic characteristics. The second aspect of the series seeks to favour studies specializing in linguistic variation or any of the multi-faceted aspects of the Middle English language even from a diachronic perspective. The Late Middle English Texts series is directed towards a wide scholarly readership that includes Textual Edition, Textual Criticism and Transmission – especially on electronic and digital formats both as standalone and online –, Ecdotics, History of Science, History of the English Language and Linguistics, Late Medieval Studies, History of Cultural Artifacts and Librarianship. The chronological scope we contemplate will range approximately from the mid 1200's to the early 1500's, and will include both manuscripts, incunabula and early prints that have come down to us in English, with the occasional excursion into analogues in other languages. Editions will include codicological and language studies that will enhance the relevance of the text within the cultural transmission European framework. The series includes both scholarly and academic editions and monograph studies with a specialised and comprehensive focus. Thematic and teaching textual anthologies will also be considered for the series. We do not aim primarily at publishing collected papers from conferences, symposia, meetings and other scholarly reunions, unless the occasion had a very relevant topic and was strongly coherent and specialised in its discussions. Each publication is subject to a rigorous blind double peer-review system that involves at least five readers from five different institutions (Universities or Research Institutes).

    7 publications

  • Title: The Concept of Work Ability

    The Concept of Work Ability

    by Lennart Nordenfelt (Author)
    ©2008 Monographs
  • Title: Conditioned Identities

    Conditioned Identities

    Wished-for and Unwished-for Identities
    by Flocel Sabaté (Volume editor) 2015
    ©2015 Edited Collection
  • Title: Conditions of Mediation

    Conditions of Mediation

    Phenomenological Perspectives on Media
    by Tim Markham (Volume editor) Scott Rodgers (Volume editor) 2017
    ©2017 Textbook
  • Title: Employment Conditions of Business in Slovakia

    Employment Conditions of Business in Slovakia

    by Helena Barancová (Author)
    ©2014 Monographs
  • Title: Maternal Conditions

    Maternal Conditions

    Reading Kingsolver, Castillo, Erdrich, and Ozeki
    by Melissa Schoeffel (Author)
    ©2008 Monographs
  • Title: The Late Postcolonial Condition

    The Late Postcolonial Condition

    Twenty-First-Century Reconfigurations in the Literatures of Portuguese-Speaking Africa
    by Emanuelle Rodrigues dos Santos (Author) 2024
    ©2025 Monographs
  • Title: Curriculum in the Postmodern Condition

    Curriculum in the Postmodern Condition

    by Alicia De Alba (Author) Edgar González-Guadiano (Author) Colin Lankshear (Author)
    ©2000 Textbook
  • Title: Medical Interpreting

    Medical Interpreting

    Training the Professionals
    by Almudena Nevado Llopis (Volume editor) Ana Isabel Foulquié Rubio (Volume editor) 2024
    ©2024 Edited Collection
  • Title: «Medical enterprise liability»

    «Medical enterprise liability»

    Rechtsvergleichende Untersuchung zum deutschen und U.S.-amerikanischen Recht
    by Matthias Löhle (Author) 2014
    ©2014 Thesis
  • Title: Distributing medical resources

    Distributing medical resources

    An application of cooperative bargaining theory to an allocation problem in medicine
    by Antje Köckeritz (Author) 2012
    ©2012 Thesis
  • Title: The Nuremberg Medical Trial

    The Nuremberg Medical Trial

    The Holocaust and the Origin of the Nuremberg Medical Code
    by Horst Heinz Freyhofer (Author) 2004
    ©2005 Monographs
  • Title: Interagir pour innover

    Interagir pour innover

    Une technologie médicale au cœur du réseau
    by Régina Leiggener (Author)
    ©2008 Thesis
  • Title: Critical Theory and the Human Condition

    Critical Theory and the Human Condition

    Founders and Praxis
    by Michael Adrian Peters (Volume editor) Colin Lankshear (Volume editor) Mark Olssen (Volume editor)
    ©2003 Textbook
  • Title: The Balkan Conditional in South Slavic

    The Balkan Conditional in South Slavic

    A Semantic and Syntactic Study
    by Masha Belyavski-Frank (Author) 2003
    ©2003 Monographs
  • Title: Maryse Condé

    Maryse Condé

    Ironies, contextes et énonciations
    by Daniel Canda Kishala (Author) 2024
    ©2024 Monographs
  • Title: Middle English Names of Medical Preparations

    Middle English Names of Medical Preparations

    Towards a Standard Medical Terminology
    by Marta Sylwanowicz (Author) 2018
    ©2018 Monographs
  • Title: Communication Strategies in Medical Settings

    Communication Strategies in Medical Settings

    Challenging Situations and Practical Solutions
    by Katalin Varga (Author) 2015
    ©2015 Monographs
  • Title: Insights Into Medical Communication

    Insights Into Medical Communication

    by Maurizio Gotti (Volume editor) Stefania Maria Maci (Volume editor) Michele Sala (Volume editor) 2015
    ©2015 Edited Collection
  • Title: A Medical Companion to Dickens’s Fiction

    A Medical Companion to Dickens’s Fiction

    by Joanne Eysell (Author)
    ©2005 Thesis
  • Title: Maryse Condé et Ahmadou Kourouma

    Maryse Condé et Ahmadou Kourouma

    Griots de l’indicible
    by Jean Ouédraogo (Author) 2024
    ©2004 Monographs
  • Title: Photoecological Conditions of Human Visual Attention in Transport

    Photoecological Conditions of Human Visual Attention in Transport

    Theory and Research
    by Olaf Edmund Truszczyński (Author) 2021
    ©2020 Monographs
  • Title: Promises and perils of emerging technologies for human condition

    Promises and perils of emerging technologies for human condition

    Voices from four postcommunist Central and East European countries
    by Peter Sýkora (Volume editor) 2019
    Edited Collection
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