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Cambridge Scholars Publishing is an academic publisher aiming to promote knowledge and learning through the production and distribution of valuable academic works. We have recently made plans to expand our coverage which will now include all areas of the arts and humanities. We have an interest in publishing proceedings of established or promising new conferences, research monographs, and edited volumes of academic work. We do not at present publish textbooks or non-academic manuscripts.
CSP has a policy of actively seeking and commissioning works in areas in which it has a publishing interest but at the same time invites and will consider unsolicited manuscripts in all of the areas in which it publishes. The publishing house constitutes the fruit of the ideas of a group of scholars who attended Cambridge University - lecturers, research fellows and doctoral students, but it has no formal connections to the University and is not related in any way to Cambridge University Press. We publish around 500 new academic titles a year and have produced numerous editions of collected works of literary figures, including a 56 volume set of the works of Conan-Doyle and a 53 volume set of the works of Anthony Trollope. We are proud to be able to claim the contributions to our publications of such figures as HRH The Prince of Wales (The Venice Charter, ISBN 1847186882 and New Architecture and Urbanism, ISBN 1443818698), Former US President Jimmy Carter (Nuclear Proliferation and the Dilemma of Peace, ISBN 1443819174), and the scholar and novelist Umberto Eco (Joyce in Progress, ISBN 1-4438-1235-8).
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From Border States in the Work of Tom Mac Intyre: A Paleo-Postmodern Perspective
''Catriona Ryan has more than achieved what she set out to do.She has emphatically presented Tom Mac Intyre as a writer with a distinctive voice who not only provides a crucial link in the chain that goes back through Kavanagh to Yeats, but as a bridging figure, a transgressive author whose reflections on the Irish literary scene, and on writing more generally, have much to tell us about the ways in which constrictive critical currents can cut off living literary streams. It is clear from Catriona Ryan's painstaking excavation that Mac Intyre has been wrongly neglected. Her thoughtful and perceptive critical intervention will remedy that wrong.'' - Willy Maley, Litteraria Pragensia, 22:44 (2013), 131-134, p. 134.
“This is a critically independent piece of work that very much constructs and defines its own project, and maps an intellectual terrain of its own. It is an impressively original and also critically self-assured piece. It is marked by a sense of intellectual brio and also by the excitement of discovery.” – Dr Steven Vine, Swansea University
“Since Tom Mac Intyre is a writer and dramatist who has received very little critical attention, this work intervenes in an under-researched area and offers an innovative and valuable extension of the frontier of knowledge in the field of Irish literary and dramatic studies.” – Dr Aidan Arrowsmith, Manchester Metropolitan University
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