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Bibliography of urban history 2015

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 September 2015

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Extract

The present bibliography is a continuation of and a complement to those published in the Urban History Yearbook 1974–91 and Urban History from 1992. The arrangement and format closely follows that of previous years. The list of abbreviations identifies only those periodicals from which articles cited this year have been taken, though many other journals are also checked.

Type
Bibliography
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 

The present bibliography is a continuation of and a complement to those published in the Urban History Yearbook 1974–91 and Urban History from 1992. The arrangement and format closely follows that of previous years. The list of abbreviations identifies only those periodicals from which articles cited this year have been taken, though many other journals are also checked.

I General

Research methods, aids and materials

Printed documentary sources

Maps and plans

Archives – descriptions and examples

Guides to the literature and printed documentary sources

Urban history, definitions and aims

Historiography

Theory of urbanization

Empirical studies of urbanization

History, growth and fortunes of individual towns

Portraits of towns – literary, photographic

Literary portrayals and personal reminiscences

Graphic and photographic portrayals

II Population

General features of urban population

Natality and mortality

Disease

Medicine

Migration to, from and between towns

Family and household structure

III Physical structure

Research methods, aids and materials

Physical and structural characteristics of towns

Physical and structural characteristics of areas

Land ownership

Architecture

Housing

IV Social structure

Research methods, aids and materials

Social organization, clubs and societies

Class structure

Social life

Social life, customs and traditions

Religion

Recreation

Social problems and deviance

Social reforms and improvement

Minority groups

Family life

Gender

V Economic activity

Urban economic activity

Industry

External trade

Food supply

Retailing

Finance, banking and industry

Consumption

Earnings

Standard of living

Labour organization

Exchange of information

VI Communications

Inter-urban communications

Intra-urban communications

VII Politics and administration

Aspects of urban administration

VIII Shaping the urban environment

Research methods, aids and materials

Town planning (and environmental control)

Utopian planning and experiments

Housing improvement

Urban renewal

IX Urban culture

Research methods, aids and materials

Social life, customs and traditions

Urban culture and entertainment

Forms of entertainment

Exchange of information

Education

X Attitudes towards cities

Research methods, aids and materials

Attitudes towards cities

Views of the city in literature, graphics and drama

Journals abbreviations used

A

Antiquity

A & A

Arms & Armour

AC

Archaeologia Cantiana

ADH

Annals de Démographie Historique

AgH

Agricultural History

AH

Architectural Heritage

AJ

Archaeological Journal

AnJ

Antiquaries Journal

AnQ

Anthropological Quarterly

AnS

Annals of Science

ArchH

Architectural History

ArtB

Art Bulletin

AS

African Studies

AtlSt

Atlantic Studies

B & L

Buildings and Landscapes

BJMES

British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies

BOEC

Book of the Old Edinburgh Club

BookH

Book History

BPol

British Politics

Brit

Britannia

BuH

Business History

CathA

Catholic Ancestor

CEH

Central European History

CGeog

Cultural Geographies

ChH

Church History

ChP

Childhood in the Past

CitC

City and Community

Com

Comitatus

ContC

Continuity and Change

ContEH

Contemporary European History

Cos

Costume

CulSH

Cultural and Social History

DAJ

Durham Archaeological Journal

DC

Dutch Crossing

DoJo

Docomomo Journal

DR

Drama Review

EAmS

Early American Studies

EC

Eighteenth Century

EcHR

Economic History Review

ECL

Eighteenth Century Life

ECM

Eighteenth Century Music

ECS

Eighteenth Century Studies

EHR

English Historical Review

EI

Éire-Ireland

EME

Early Medieval Europe

EMus

Early Music

EnvH

Environment and History

EP

Environment and Planning

EPVC

Early Popular Visual Culture

ERS

Ethnic & Racial Studies

ES

Enterprise and Society

EurJCS

European Journal of Cultural Studies

EurREH

European Review of Economic History

EurRH

European Review of History

F

Fort

FCH

Family and Community History

FH

French History

FHS

French Historical Studies

FmE

Feminist Economics

G & H

Gender and History

GeH

German History

GenM

Genealogists’ Magazine

H

History

HAust

History Australia

HC

History Compass

HE

History of Education

HEQ

History of Education Quarterly

HF

History of the Family

HiAfr

History in Africa

HIre

History Ireland

Hisp

Hispania: revista española de historia

HistScot

History Scotland

HJ

Historical Journal

HLQ

Huntington Library Quarterly

HM

Historical Methods

HR

Historical Research

HSci

History of Science

HSIR

Historical Studies in Industrial Relations

HT

History Today

HWJ

History Workshop Journal

I & C

Information and Culture

IAR

Industrial Archaeology Review

IBG

Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers

IESHR

Indian Economic and Social History Review

IHS

Irish Historical Studies

IJHA

International Journal of Historical Archaeology

IJHerS

International Journal of Heritage Studies

IJHET

International Journal for the History of Engineering and Technology

IJHS

International Journal of the History of Sport

IJMH

International Journal of Maritime History

IJRLH

International Journal of Regional and Local History

IJURR

International Journal of Urban and Regional Research

IM

Imago Mundi

IMin

Immigrants and Minorities

InHR

Indian Historical Review

InnR

Innes Review

IRSH

International Review of Social History

ISLNC

19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century

ISR

Irish Studies Review

JACH

Journal of Australian Colonial History

JAEH

Journal of American Ethnic History

JASc

Journal of Archaeological Science

JBAA

Journal of the British Archaeological Association

JBCT

Journal of British Cinema and Television

JBS

Journal of British Studies

JCH

Journal of Contemporary History

JEA&H

Journal of Educational Administration & History

JECS

Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies

JeH

Jewish History

JEMH

Journal of Early Modern History

JFH

Journal of Family History

JHC

Journal of the History of Collections

JHG

Journal of Historical Geography

JHMAS

Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences

JHS

Journal of Historical Sociology

JICH

Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History

JIH

Journal of Interdisciplinary History

JLH

Journal of Liberal History

JMarH

Journal of Maritime History

JMedB

Journal of Medical Biography

JMH

Journal of Medieval History

JModH

Journal of Modern History

JPH

Journal of Planning History

JPMS

Journal of Popular Music Studies

JPopC

Journal of Popular Culture

JSHS

Journal of Scottish Historical Studies

JSocH

Journal of Social History

JTH

Journal of Tourism History

JUH

Journal of Urban History

JVC

Journal of Victorian Culture

L & IH

Library and Information History

LandH

Landscape History

LCH

Law, Crime and History

Lib

Library

LJ

London Journal

LocH

Local Historian

LPS

Local Population Studies

M & L

Music & Letters

MAsS

Modern Asian Studies

MedH

Media History

MES

Middle Eastern Studies

MidH

Midland History

MuHJ

Museum History Journal

NCC

Nineteenth Century Contexts

NCTF

Nineteenth Century Theatre and Film

NH

Northern History

NHR

New Hibernia Review

NMS

Nottingham Medieval Studies

NPP

Northamptonshire Past & Present

NQ

Notes and Queries

NS

Northern Scotland

NTQ

New Theatre Quarterly

NYH

New York History

OHR

Oral History Review

OJA

Oxford Journal of Archaeology

P & P

Past & Present

PaedH

Paedagogica Historica

Pare

Parergon

PH

Pennsylvania History

PlP

Planning Perspectives

PMA

Post-Medieval Archaeology

PQ

Print Quarterly

R & C

Race and Class

RCRMA

Research Chronicle, Royal Musical Association

RethH

Rethinking History

RHR

Radical History Review

RS

Renaissance Studies

SAs

South Asia

SCH

Studies in Church History

Setep

Sciences et Techniques en Perspective

SGJ

Scottish Geographical Journal

SH

Social History

SHGDL

Studies in the History of Gardens & Design Landscapes

SHMed

Social History of Medicine

SLR

Scottish Literary Review

Spec

Speculum

SpiH

Sport in History

SpiS

Sport in Society

TCBH

Twentieth Century British History

TCWAAS

Transactions of the Cumberland & Westmorland Antiquarian & Archaeological Society

TH

The Historian

ThJ

Theatre Journal

ThN

Theatre Notebook

ThS

Theatre Survey

TRHS

Transactions of the Royal Historical Society

UH

Urban History

UHR

Urban History Review

US

Urban Studies

VCB

Visual Culture in Britain

W & MQ

William & Mary Quarterly

W & MS

Wesley & Methodist Studies

WA

World Archaeology

WANHM

Wiltshire Archaological & Natural History Magazine

WHR

Welsh History Review

WomHR

Women's History Review

YAJ

Yorkshire Archaeological Journal

I General

Research methods, aids and materials

  1. 1. COHEN M & MADELINE F eds, Space in the medieval west: places, territories, and imagined geographies. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp xix + 266.

  2. 2. CULVER L, Confluences of nature and culture: cities in environmental history. In ISENBERG A ed, The Oxford handbook of environmental history. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2014. 553–72.

  3. 3. FEDMAN D & KARACAS C, The optics of urban ruination: toward an archaeological approach to the photography of the Japan air raids. JUH 40 5 (2014) 1–26.

  4. 4. FORDHAM HG, Maps: their history, characteristics and uses: a hand-book for teachers. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp xii + 112.

  5. 5. GARRETT B, Undertaking recreational trespass: urban exploration and infiltration. IBG 39 1 (2014) 1–13.

  6. 6. GULDI J & ARMITAGE D, The history manifesto. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp ix + 165.

  7. 7. HALL T & HUBBARD P, ‘Birmingham needs you, you need Birmingham’: cities as actors and actors in cities. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 285–300.

  8. 8. HOLZ-RAU C, SCHEINER J & SICKS K, Travel distances in daily travel and long-distance travel: what role is played by urban form? EP 46 2 (2014) 488–507.

  9. 9. JEFFRIES N, FEATHERBY R, WROE-BROWN R, BETTS I, HARRINGTON S & RICHARDSON B, ‘Would I were in an alehouse in London!’: a finds assemblage sealed by the Great Fire from Rood Lane, City of London. PMA 48 2 (2014) 261–84.

  10. 10. KALANTIDOU E & FRY T, Design in the borderlands. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp viii + 198.

  11. 11. KUCK N, Anti-colonialism in a post-imperial environment: the case of Berlin, 1914–33. JCH 49 1 (2014) 134–59.

  12. 12. MARTI-HENNEBERG J, The time dimension in geography: historical data for unstable boundaries. HM 47 4 (2014) 163–6.

  13. 13. MORIN E, RODIER X, LAURENT-DEHECQ A & MACAIRE J, Morphological and sedimentary evolution of an alluvial floodplain in an urban area: geoarchaeological approaches and applications (Tours, France). JASc 46 (2014) 255–69.

  14. 14. PICHLER S, Life in the proto-urban style: the identification of parasite eggs in micromorphological thin sections from the Basel-Gasfabrik late Iron Age settlement, Switzerland. JASc 43 (2014) 55–65.

  15. 15. ROBSON B, Maps and mathematics: ranking the English boroughs for the 1832 Reform Act. JHG 46 (2014) 66–79.

  16. 16. SCOTT T, The city-state in Europe, 1000–1600: hinterland, territory, region. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2014. pp 396.

  17. 17. SCULLIN D & BOYD B, Whistles in the wind: the noisy Moche city. WA 46 3 (2014) 362–79.

  18. 18. STEINITZ C, The beginnings of geographical information systems: a personal historical perspective. PlP 29 2 (2014) 239–54.

  19. 19. STREBEL I, Re-specifying geographical quantification: problems of order in street interviews. IBG 39 2 (2014) 278–90.

  20. 20. TAYLOR M, The age of Asa: Lord Briggs, public life and history in Britain since 1945. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2014. 328.

  21. 21. VILLARREAL C, BETTENHAUSEN B, HANSS E & HERSH J, Historical health conditions in major U.S. cities: the HUE data set. HM 47 2 (2014) 67–80.

  22. 22. YOUNG J, Evidence for identifying the handwriting of Thomas Cotes, seventeenth-century stationer and parish clerk. NQ 61 3 (2014) 357–8.

  23. 23. ZIPF C, Research notes: the trials and tribulations of mapping colonial Newport. B & L 21 2 (2014) 113–20.

Printed documentary sources

  1. 24. DAVIES M ed, London and Middlesex 1666 hearth tax. London: British Record Society 2014. 2 vols.

  2. 25. DE ARCE RP, Urban transformations and the architecture of additions. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp xxv + 116.

  3. 26. DE CASSERES JM, Principles of planology: Grondslagen der planologie. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp xxiii + 148.

  4. 27. DENBY E, Europe rehoused. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp xxii + 342.

  5. 28. GIBSON J ed, An alphabetical digest of Rusher's Banbury, Oxfordshire trades and occupations directory 1832–1906. Banbury: Banbury Historical Society 2014. pp xxiii + 135.

  6. 29. GLADSTONE CULPIN E, The garden city movement up-to-date. London: Taylor & Francis 2014. pp 134.

  7. 30. GOLDRING E, EALES F, CLARKE E, ARCHER J & NICHOLS J, John Nichols's The progresses and public processions of Queen Elizabeth I: a new edition of the early modern sources. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2014. 5 vols.

  8. 31. KEENE D & ARCHER I eds, The singularities of London, 1578. London: London Topographical Society 2014. pp viii + 288.

  9. 32. MCVEIGH S, Calendar of London concerts 1750–1800, advertised in the London daily press. ECM 11 2 (2014) 317–18.

  10. 33. NOLEN J, New ideals in the planning of cities, towns and villages. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp xviii + 168.

  11. 34. RICHARDS EP, The condition, improvement and town planning of the city of Calcutta and contiguous areas: the Richards report. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp xxi + 492.

  12. 35. ROGERS N, Manning the Royal Navy in Bristol: liberty, impressment and the state, 1739–1815. Bristol: Bristol Records Society 2014. pp xxvi + 349.

  13. 36. SIMON E, SIMON S, ROBSON WA & JEWKES J, Moscow in the making. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp 298.

  14. 37. TAYLOR G, Town planning for Australia. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp 182.

Maps and plans

  1. 38. BOWER D, Speed's town-mapping itineraries. IM 66 1 (2014) 95–104.

  2. 39. BROTTON J, Maps online: digital historical geographies. JHG 43 (204) 169–74.

  3. 40. COLE D, How mapping the Lowy of Tonbridge can further our understanding of its origin, nature and extent. AC 135 (2014) 75–92.

  4. 41. COLLELLDEMONT E, Tracing the evolution of education through street maps and town plans: educational institutions in the maps of Edinburgh during the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. PaedH 50 5 (2014) 651–67.

  5. 42. FERRETTI F, Pioneers in the history of cartography: the Geneva map collection of Élisée Reclus and Charles Perron. JHG 43 (2014) 85–95.

  6. 43. HALL PA, Counter-mapping and globalism. In KALANTIDOU E & FRY T eds, Design in the borderlands. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 132–50.

  7. 44. HEFFERNAN M, A paper city: on history, maps, and map collections in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Paris. IM 66 supplement 1 (2014) 5–20.

  8. 45. KEYZER MJONGEPIER I & SOENS T, Consuming maps and producing space: explaining regional variations in the reception and agency of mapmaking in the Low Countries during the medieval and early modern periods. ContC 29 2 (2014) 209–40.

  9. 46. KU H, Representations of ownership: the nineteenth-century painted maps of Shatrunjaya, Gujarat. SAs 37 1 (2014) 3–21.

  10. 47. PERKINS C, Plotting practices and politics: (im)mutable narratives in OpenStreetMap. IBG 39 2 (2014) 304–17.

  11. 48. SLINGSBY A, KELLY M & DYKES J, OD maps for showing changes in Irish female migration between 1851 and 1911. EP 46 12 (2014) 2795–7.

Archives – descriptions and examples

  1. 49. ALBAN J R, Sources in the Norfolk Record Office which relate to the history of Norfolk and the Low Countries. DC 38 2 (2014) 101–15.

  2. 50. MEERES F, Records relating to the strangers at the Norfolk Record Office. DC 38 2 (2014) 132–53.

  3. 51. TIERNEY D, KEHOE S K & CAMERON E, The Scottish Catholic Archives and Scottish historical studies. InnR 65 2 (2014) 79–94.

Guides to the literature and printed documentary sources

  1. 52. EHMER J, Attitudes to work, class structures, and social change: a review of recent historical studies. IRSH 59 1 (2014) 99–117.

  2. 53. FORDHAM H G, The road-books and itineraries of Great Britain 1570 to 1850: a catalogue. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp xviii + 92.

  3. 54. HAYNES D, Rethinking the twentieth-century history of Mumbai. MAsS 48 5 (2014) 1435–49.

  4. 55. PLUSKOTA M, Research in urban history: recent Ph.D. theses on gender and the city, 1550–2000. UH 41 3 (2014) 537–46.

  5. 56. RIDNER J, Using the historical society of Pennsylvania's ‘Irish immigrant letters home’ to teach nineteenth-century Irish immigrant history. JAEH 33 4 (2014) 56–60.

Urban history, definitions and aims

  1. 57. CHATTOPADHYAY S & WHITE J eds, City halls and civic materialism: towards a global history of urban public space. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp xxii + 310.

  2. 58. HENTHORN T, Experiencing the city: experiential learning in urban environments. JUH 40 3 (2014) 450–61.

  3. 59. KING PN, Preserving places, making spaces in Baltimore: seeing the connections of research, teaching, and service as justice. JUH 40 3 (2014) 425–49.

  4. 60. LEWINNEK E, Commentary on ‘the new metropolitan history’. JUH 40 1 (2014) 3–5.

  5. 61. MERINGOLO D, The place of the city: collaborative learning, urban history, and transformations in higher education. JUH 40 3 (2014) 419–24.

  6. 62. MOONEY-MELVIN P, Engaging the neighborhood: the East Rogers Park neighborhood history project and the possibilities and challenges of community-based initiatives. JUH 40 3 (2014) 462–78.

Historiography

  1. 63. FORTNER M J, The ‘silent majority’ in black and white: invisibility and imprecision in the historiography of mass incarceration. JUH 40 2 (2014) 252–82.

  2. 64. PAGE A, ‘Foreshadows and repercussions’: histories of air war and the recasting of cities and citizens. ContEH 23 4 (2014) 645–55.

  3. 65. STEEGE P, Crisis, normalcy, fantasy: Berlin and its borders. ContEH 23 3 (2014) 469–84.

Theory of urbanization

  1. 66. ALMANDOZ A, Modernization, urbanization and development in Latin America, 1900s – 2000s. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp xvi + 264.

  2. 67. BOEHAM L & COREY S, America's urban history. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp ix + 414.

  3. 68. BROWN J, City versus countryside in Mao's China: negotiating the divide. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp xiv + 270.

  4. 69. GULLIVER K & TÓTH H eds, Cityscapes in history: creating the urban experience. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp xix + 254.

  5. 70. HARRIS B & MCKEAN C, The Scottish town in the age of Enlightenment, 1740–1820. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press 2014. pp xx + 604.

  6. 71. ISAIA M SINISCALCO C & BADINO G, From rural to urban: landscape changes in north-west Italy over two centuries. LandH 35 1 (2014) 73–6.

  7. 72. JENKS H, Seasoned long enough in concentration: suburbanization and transnational citizenship in southern California's South Bay. JUH 40 1 (2014) 6–30.

  8. 73. JERRAM L, Germany's other modernity: Munich and the making of metropolis, 1895–1930. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2014. pp 240.

  9. 74. KIM JI, Making cities global: the new city development of Songdo, Yujiapu and Lingang. PlP 29 3 (2014) 329–56.

  10. 75. LARKHAM P & CONZEN M, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp xxiii + 360.

  11. 76. LEE T, Southern Appalachia's nineteenth-century bright tobacco boom: industrialization, urbanization, and the culture of tobacco. AgH 88 2 (2014) 175–206.

  12. 77. LUZ N, The Mamluk city in the Middle East: history, culture, and the urban landscape. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp 278.

  13. 78. MAKKER K, Village improvement and the development of small town America, 1853–1893. JPH 13 1 (2014) 68–87.

  14. 79. MASSELOS J, Empire and city: the imperial presence in urban India. In ALDRICH R & MCKENZIE K eds, The Routledge history of western empires. London: Routledge 2014. 330–45.

  15. 80. MOHANTY P, Mapping the public space: discourses on hegemonies, identities and cultural politics at colonial Cuttack, 1803–1947. InHR 41 2 (2014) 235–70.

  16. 81. NARAYANAN Y, Religion, heritage and the sustainable city: Hinduism and urbanisation in Jaipur. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp xv + 235.

  17. 82. RHODES D, Building colonialism: archaeology and urban space in East Africa. London: Bloomsbury 2014. pp xiv + 167.

  18. 83. RØE P G, Analysing place and place-making: urbanization in suburban Oslo. IJURR 38 2 (2014) 498–515.

  19. 84. SHOTTER D, Roman Cumbria: Rome's ‘wild west’? In STRINGER K ed, North-west England from the Romans to the Tudors: essays in memory of John Macnair Todd. Great Britain: Cumberland & Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society 2014. 1–28.

  20. 85. SMITH M, Peasant mobility, local migration and premodern urbanization. WA 46 4 (2014) 516–33.

  21. 86. SMITH MUR J & FEINMAN G, Jane Jacobs' ‘Cities First’ model and archaeological reality. IJURR 38 4 (2014) 1525–35.

  22. 87. SMITH R, Beyond the global city concept and the myth of ‘command and control’. IJURR 38 1 (2014) 98–115.

  23. 88. WALLACE J, Cities and stability: urbanization, redistribution, and regime survival in China. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2014. pp 266.

  24. 89. WHITE CE, CHESSON MS & SCHAUB RT, A recipe for disaster: emerging urbanism and unsustainable plant economies at early Bronze Age Ras an-Numayra, Jordan. A 88 340 (2014) 363–77.

Empirical studies of urbanization

  1. 90. HELLER M, Suburbia, marketing and stakeholders: developing Ilford, Essex, 1880–1914. UH 41 1 (2014) 62–80.

  2. 91. WICKERSHAM ME & YEHL R, The cotton mill village turned city: a retrospective analysis of three of Georgia's smallest cities. JUH 40 5 (2014) 917–32.

  3. 92. WRIGLEY EA, Urban growth in early modern England: food, fuel and transport. P & P 225 1 (2014) 79–112.

History, growth and fortunes of individual towns

This section is arranged alphabetically by the name of the town

  1. 93. BANERJEE P, Between the political and the non-political: the Vivekananda moment and a critique of the social in colonial Bengal, 1890s–1910s. SH 39 3 (2014) 323–39.

  2. 94. FANTOM P, Zeppelins over the Black Country: the Midlands' first blitz. MidH 39 2 (2014) 136–54.

  3. 95. MOORE J, Making Cairo modern? Innovation, urban form and the development of suburbia, c. 1880–1922. UH 41 1 (2014) 81–104.

  4. 96. BROWN N, A history of Canberra. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp x + 296.

  5. 97. VERNON C, Daniel Burnham and Australia's federal capital, 1893–1912. PlP 29 4 (2014) 501–25.

  6. 98. HELM R & WEEKES J, The early development of a Canterbury suburb? Romano-British and medieval archaeology at nos. 19 and 45–47 Wincheap. AC 135 (2014) 235–50.

  7. 99. JOHNSON D, The failure of restored British rule in revolutionary Charleston, South Carolina. JICH 42 1 (2014) 22–40.

  8. 100. ROBERTS J, Christchurch, a city of dreams. HT 64 5 (2014) 47–8.

  9. 101. MCDONALD J, What happened to and in Detroit? US 51 16 (2014) 3309–29.

  10. 102. DICKSON D, Dublin: the making of a capital city. London: Profile Books 2014. pp xviii + 718.

  11. 103. MORRIS B, In defence of oblivion: the case of Dunwich, Suffolk. IJHerS 20 2 (2014) 196–216.

  12. 104. BROWN AT, Estate management and institutional constraints in pre-industrial England: the ecclesiastical estates of Durham, c. 1400–1640. EcHR 67 3 (2014) 699–719.

  13. 105. MEDDENS F & DRAPPER G, ‘Out on a limb’: insights into Grange, a small member of the Cinque Ports Confederation. AC 135 (2014) 1–32.

  14. 106. SHELTON B, KARAKIEWICZ J & KVAN T, The making of Hong Kong: from vertical to volumetric. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp vii + 184.

  15. 107. KENNEDY A, The urban community in Restoration Scotland: government, society and economy in Inverness, 1660–c.1688. NS 5 (2014) 26–49.

  16. 108. ASHER C, Jaipur: city of tolerance and progress. SAs 37 3 (2014) 410–30.

  17. 109. MORRIS D & COZENS K, London's sailortown 1600–1800: a social history of Shadwell and Ratcliff, an early modern London riverside suburb. London: East London History Society 2014. pp viii + 207.

  18. 110. MUNT H, The holy city of Medina: sacred space in early Islamic Arabia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (2014) pp xvii + 241.

  19. 111. WILSON R, New York and the First World War. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp xiii + 274.

  20. 112. GRAHAM M, Oxford in the Great War. Sheffield: Pen and Sword Books 2014. pp 176.

  21. 113. REINBERGER M, Peachtree City, Georgia: improvisation and progressivism in a post-war southern new town. JPH 13 3 (2014) 247–72.

  22. 114. WICKHAM C, Medieval Rome: stability and crisis of a city, 900–1150. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2014. pp 536.

  23. 115. LANGLANDS A, Placing the burh in Searobyrg: rethinking the urban topography of early medieval Salisbury. WANHM 107 (2014) 91–105.

  24. 116. SMITH V, ‘Barbed Wire Island’: Sheppey and the defended ports of the Thames and Medway during the First World War. F 42 (2014) 141–75.

  25. 117. CLAMP F, Southend-on-Sea in the Great War. Sheffield: Pen and Sword Books 2014. pp 112.

  26. 118. DODDS G, ‘As new as an Australian or Yankee settlement’: Sunderland in the years 1831–1881. DAJ 19 (2014) 133–61.

  27. 119. DIMMOCK M, HADFIELD A & QUINN P eds, Art, literature and religion in early modern Sussex: culture and conflict. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp xv + 286.

  28. 120. MAROM N, Relating a city's history and geography with Bourdieu: one hundred years of spatial distinction in Tel Aviv. IJURR 38 4 (2014) 1344–62.

  29. 121. GARRARD G, Washington is burning. HT 64 8 (2014) 37–43.

  30. 122. ORAM R, MARTIN P, MCKEAN C & ANDERSON S, Historic Wigtown: archaeology and development. York: Council for British Archaeology and Historic Scotland 2014. pp xv + 136.

  31. 123. BACHRACH D, The histories of a medieval German city, Worms c. 1000–c. 1300: translation and commentary. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp vii + 190.

  32. 124. LANE A, Wroxeter and the end of Roman Britain. A 88 340 (2014) 501–15.

Portraits of towns – literary, photographic

This section is arranged alphabetically by the name of the town

  1. 125. KNOWLES S, Suburban identity in Paul Maitland's paintings of Cheyne Walk. JVC 19 1 (2014) 43–62.

  2. 126. FREITAG S, A visual history of three Lucknows. SAs 37 3 (2014) 431–53.

Literary portrayals and personal reminiscences

  1. 127. DIEFENDORF J, Memories of the bombing of German cities in World War II. GeH 32 4 (2014) 615–32.

  2. 128. EVANS H, Neglect of a neighbourhood: oral accounts of life in ‘old Beijing’ since the eve of the People's Republic. UH 41 4 (2014) 686–704.

  3. 129. HOLLAND K, Disputed heroes: early accounts of the siege of Londonderry. NHR 18 2 (2014) 21–41.

  4. 130. MCMAHON C, Recrimination and reconciliation: Great Famine memory in Liverpool and Montreal at the turn of the twentieth century. AtlSt 11 3 (2014) 344–64.

  5. 131. O'CONNELL S, Violence and social memory in twentieth-century Belfast: stories of Buck Alec Robinson. JBS 53 3 (2014) 734–56.

  6. 132. PERKISS A, Reclaiming the past: oral history and the legacy of integration in West Mount Airy, Philadelphia. OHR 41 1 (2014) 77–107.

  7. 133. SIMPSON L, Oral history: heritage outrage: Wood Quay. HIre 22 2 (2014) 46–8.

  8. 134. SMITH J, Memories of childhood in post-war Grimsby. ChP 7 2 (2014) 82–94.

  9. 135. STARECHESKI A, Squatting history: the power of oral history as a history-making practice. OHR 41 2 (2014) 187–216.

Graphic and photographic portrayals

  1. 136. BROOKE S, Revisiting Southam Street: class, generation, gender, and race in the photography of Roger Mayne. JBS 53 2 (2014) 453–96.

  2. 137. CAROLAN V, The shipyard worker on screen 1930–1945. In REDFORD D ed, Maritime history and identity: the sea and culture in the modern world. London: I.B. Tauris 2014. 142–62.

  3. 138. DAVIS-HAYES K, African-American photography in Chicago and New Orleans in the first half of the twentieth century. JAEH 33 2 (2014) 88–92.

  4. 139. HANNA E, Reading Irish women's lives in photograph albums: Dorothy Stokes and her camera, 1925 to 1953. CulSH 11 1 (2014) 89–109.

  5. 140. MORRISON J, Painting labour in Scotland and Europe, 1850–1900. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp xi + 194.

  6. 141. ROBEY E, John Vanderlyn's view of Versailles: spectacle, landscape, and the visual demands of panorama painting. EPVC 12 1 (2014) 1–21.

  7. 142. OOHEY J, Four Cartes De Visite by William Friese-Greene. EPVC 12 1 (2014) 73–81.

II Population

General features of urban population

  1. 143. BARDSLEY S, Missing women: sex ratios in England, 1000–1500. JBS 53 2 (2014) 273–309.

  2. 144. JOHNSTON RPOULSON M & FORREST J, London's changing ethnic landscape, 2001–2011: a cartographic exploration. LPS 92 (2014) 38–57.

  3. 145. KOWALESKI M, Medieval people in town and country: new perspectives from demography and bioarchaeology. Spec 89 3 (2014) 573–600.

  4. 146. LOCKLEY T, Slaveholders and slaves in Savannah's 1860 census. UH 41 4 (2014) 647–63.

Natality and mortality

  1. 147. BARBEZAT M, The fires of hell and the burning of heretics in the accounts of the executions at Orleans in 1022. JMH 40 4 (2014) 399–420.

  2. 148. BOULTON J, Traffic in corpses and the commodification of burial in Georgian London. ContC 29 2 (2014) 181–208.

  3. 149. BOURNE J, Burslem and its roll of honour 1914–1918. MidH 39 2 (2014) 202–18.

  4. 150. BUTLER G, Yet another inquiry into the trust-worthiness of the eighteenth-century bills of mortality: the Newcastle and Gateshead bills, 1736–1840. LPS 92 (2014) 58–72.

  5. 151. NEWTON G & SMITH R, Convergence or divergence? Mortality in London, its suburbs and its hinterland between 1550 and 1700. ADH 126 2 (2014) 17–49.

Disease

  1. 152. CARMICHAEL A, Plague and the poor in Renaissance Florence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp xv + 198.

  2. 153. LORD E, The Great Plague: a people's history. New Haven: Yale University Press 2014. pp xi + 173.

  3. 154. TSANG C, Hong Kong's floating world: disease and crime at the edge of empire. In PECKHAM R ed, Disease and crime: a history of social pathologies and the new politics of health. New York: Routledge 2014. 21–39.

  4. 155. VARLIK N, Plague, conflict, and negotiation: the Jewish broadcloth weavers of Salonica and the Ottoman central administration in the late sixteenth century. JeH 28 3–4 (2014) 261–88.

Medicine

  1. 156. BADGER F, Illuminating nineteenth-century English urban midwifery: the register of a Coventry midwife. WomHR 23 5 (2014) 683–705.

  2. 157. BOULTON J & SCHWARZ L, The medicalisation of a parish workhouse in Georgian Westminster: St Martin in the Fields, 1725–1824. FCH 17 2 (2014) 122–40.

  3. 158. CAUDLE J & BUNDOCK M, A newly identified apothecary in Boswell's Life of Johnson: Edward Ferrand (1691–1769). JMedB 22 2 (2014) 71–80.

  4. 159. CRONIN N, The medical profession and the exercise of power in early nineteenth-century Cork. Dublin: Four Courts 2014. pp 72.

  5. 160. CUMMINSKEY J, Drugs, race and tuberculosis control in Baltimore, 1950–1978. SHMed 27 4 (2014) 728–50.

  6. 161. DOYLE B, The politics of hospital provision in early twentieth-century Britain. 2014. pp xi + 297.

  7. 162. HARDY M, Figures of authorship in Mathew Carey's transatlantic yellow fever pamphlets. BookH 17 (2014) 221–49.

  8. 163. MCINTOSH T, ‘I'm not the tradesman’: a case study of district midwifery in Nottingham and Derby 1954–1974. SHMed 27 2 (2014) 221–40.

  9. 164. NAYLOR I, Medicines for surgical practice in fourteenth-century England: the judgement against John le Spicer. In KIRKHAM A & WARR C eds, Wounds in the Middle Ages. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 175–96.

  10. 165. RITCH A, English Poor Law institutional care for older people: identifying the ‘aged and infirm’ and the ‘sick’ in Birmingham workhouse, 1852–1912. SHMed 27 1 (2014) 64–85.

  11. 166. STOLBERG M, Bedside teaching and the acquisition of practical skills in mid-sixteenth-century Padua. JHMAS 69 4 (2014) 633–64.

  12. 167. WALKER D, POWERS N & FOWLER L, Resurrection: who is it good for? The price of achievement at the London Hospital. PMA 48 2 (2014) 388–97.

  13. 168. WALSH K, Marketing midwives in seventeenth-century London: a re-examination of Jane Sharp's The Midwives Book. G & H 26 2 (2014) 223–41.

Migration to, from and between towns

  1. 169. BALINT R, Industry and sunshine: Australia as home in the displaced persons' camps of postwar Europe. HAust 11 1 (2014) 102–27.

  2. 170. BURGESS G, The foreign presence in the early-industrial Haut-Rhin, 1820–22: a short history from the ‘pre-history’ of immigration to France. FH 28 3 (2014) 366–84.

  3. 171. CHEN M, A cultural crossroads at the ‘bloody angle’: the Chinatown tongs and the development of New York City's Chinese American community. JUH 40 2 (2014) 357–79.

  4. 172. DILL V & JIRJAHN U, Ethnic residential segregation and immigrants’ perceptions of discrimination in West Germany. US 51 16 (2014) 3330–47.

  5. 173. DUNCAN C, ‘A debt contracted in Italy’: Ferdinando Tenducci in a London court and prison. EMus 42 2 (2014) 219–29.

  6. 174. ESPAHANGIZI R, Migration and urban transformations: Frankfurt in the 1960s and 1970s. JCH 49 1 (2014) 183–208.

  7. 175. FRANCESCO M, Peruvians in Paterson: the growth and establishment of a Peruvian American community within the multiethnic immigrant history of Paterson, New Jersey. JUH 40 3 (2014) 497–513.

  8. 176. GHOBRIAL J, The secret life of Elias of Babylon and the uses of global microhistory. P & P 222 1 (2014) 51–93.

  9. 177. GOYETTE K, ICELAND J & WEININIGER E, Moving for the kids: examining the influence of children on white residential segregation. CitC 13 2 (2014) 158–78.

  10. 178. HANANIA D, The impact of the Palestinian refugee cisis on the development of Amman, 1947–1958. BJMES 41 4 (2014) 461–82.

  11. 179. KALMAN J, Mansions in Maroubra: making a Jewish South African home in Australia. HAust 11 1 (2014) 175–96.

  12. 180. LANNON D, Reaction to WW1 Belgian refugees: a case study – Salford diocese. Part 1. CathA 15 3 (2014) 149–55.

  13. 181. LOCKWOOD M, ‘Love ye therefore the strangers’: immigration and the criminal law in early modern England. ContC 29 3 (2014) 349–71.

  14. 182. MOHRING M, Food for thought: rethinking the history of migration to West Germany through the migrant restaurant business. JCH 49 1 (2014) 209–27.

  15. 183. O'HANLON S, A little bit of Europe in Australia: Jews, immigrants, flats and urban and cultural change in Melbourne, c. 1935–1975. HAust 11 3 (2014) 116–33.

  16. 184. PARKER G, Probate inventories of French immigrants in early modern London. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp 334.

  17. 185. RAI R, Indians in Singapore, 1819–1945: diaspora in the colonial port-city. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2014. pp 332.

  18. 186. RATNAPALAN L M, Before and after 1983: the impact of theorising Sri Lankan Tamil migration history around the 1983 Colombo riots. SAs 37 2 (2014) 281–91.

  19. 187. SILVER K, The peasants of Paris: Limousin migrant masons in the nineteenth century. FH 28 4 (2014) 498–519.

  20. 188. SIMIC Z, Bachelors of misery and proxy brides: marriage, migration and assimilation, 1947–1973. HAust 11 1 (2014) 149–74.

Family and household structure

  1. 189. ELLIOTT K, Birth control clinics in Scotland, 1926 – c.1939. JSHS 34 2 (2014) 199–217.

  2. 190. HURL-EAMON J, Did soldiers really enlist to desert their wives? Revisiting the martial character of marital desertion in eighteenth-century London. JBS 53 2 (2014) 356–77.

  3. 191. LANE M, Not the boss of one another: a reinterpretation of working-class marriage in England, 1900 to 1970. CulSH 11 3 (2014) 441–58.

  4. 192. O'BRIEN K, Companions of heart and hearth: hardship and the changing structure of the family in early modern English townships. JFH 39 3 (2014) 183–203.

III Physical structure

Research methods, aids and materials

  1. 193. COOK S, Characterising the use of urban space: a geochemical case study from Calleva Atrebatum (Silchester, Hampshire, UK) Insula IX during the late first/early second century AD. JASc 50 (2014) 108–16.

  2. 194. DIENER A & HAGEN J eds, From socialist to post-socialist cities: cultural politics of architecture, urban planning, and identity in Eurasia. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp 196.

  3. 195. HEATH K, Viewpoint: buildings as cultural narratives. B & L 21 2 (2014) 1–30.

  4. 196. KROPF K, Agents and agency, learning, and emergence in the built environment: a theoretical excursion. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 303–22.

  5. 197. MIEG H & OEVERMANN H eds, Industrial heritage sites in transformation: clash of discourses. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp viii + 222.

  6. 198. OEVERMANN H & MIEG H, Transformations of industrial heritage sites: heritage and planning. In MIEG H & OEVERMANN H eds, Industrial heritage sites in transformation: clash of discourses. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 3–11.

  7. 199. OEVERMANN H & MIEG H, Studying transformations of industrial heritage sites: synchronic discourse analysis of conservation, urban development, and architectural production. In MIEG H & OEVERMANN H eds, Industrial heritage sites in transformation: clash of discourses. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 12–28.

  8. 200. VOROBYEV D & SHTIGLITZ M, Industrial heritage issues in a conflict case: Okhta Center in St. Petersburg, Russia. In MIEG H & OEVERMANN H eds, Industrial heritage sites in transformation: clash of discourses. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 110–25.

Physical and structural characteristics of towns

  1. 201. BJORKMAN L, Becoming a slum: from municipal colony to illegal settlement in liberalization-era Mumbai. IJURR 38 1 (2014) 36–59.

  2. 202. CONZEN M, Colonial regime change and urban form: how Russian novo-arkangel'sk became American Sitka. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 114–34.

  3. 203. GOLD J, In search of new syntheses: urban form, late flowering modernism, and the making of megastructural Cumbernauld. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 251–66.

  4. 204. GU K, Morphological processes, planning, and market realities: reshaping the urban waterfront in Auckland and Wellington. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 267–84.

  5. 205. LILLEY K, Royal authority and urban formation: King Edward I and the making of his ‘new towns’. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 27–45.

  6. 206. MINTZKER Y, The defortification of the German city, 1689–1866. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp xvi + 302.

  7. 207. MOORE E H & OSIRI N, Urban forms and civic space in nineteenth- to early twentieth-century Bangkok and Rangoon. JUH 40 1 (2014) 158–77.

  8. 208. RODWELL D, Liverpool: heritage and development – bridging the gap? In MIEG H & OEVERMANN H eds, Industrial heritage sites in transformation: clash of discourses. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 29–46.

  9. 209. SIMMS A, Urban corporate governance and the shaping of medieval towns. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 63–80.

  10. 210. SLATER T, Ecclesiastical authorities and the form of medieval towns. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 46–62.

  11. 211. THOMAS K, Absolute decisions: towns fit for a king. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 83–96.

Physical and structural characteristics of areas

  1. 212. ANDREW P, ‘A venerable and romantic ruin’: St Anthony's chapel and its place in Edinburgh's historical and visual image. BOEC 10 (2014) 1–16.

  2. 213. CROOT P, A place in town in medieval and early modern Westminster: the origins and history of the palaces in the Strand. LJ 39 2 (2014) 85–101.

  3. 214. EWART G & GALLAGHER D, Fortress of the kingdom: archaeology and research at Edinburgh Castle. Edinburgh: Historic Scotland 2014. pp 186.

  4. 215. GUIRY E, HARPLEY B, JONES Z & SMITH C, Integrating stable isotope and zooarchaeological analyses in historical archaeology: a case study from the urban nineteenth-century commonwealth block site, Melbourne, Australia. IJHA 18 3 (2014) 415–40.

  5. 216. HOWKINS A, The use and abuse of the English commons, 1845–1914. HWJ 78 1 (2014) 107–32.

  6. 217. JAIN J, Industrial heritage in Mumbai: the case of Parel and the eastern waterfront. In MIEG H & OEVERMANN H eds, Industrial heritage sites in transformation: clash of discourses. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 185–200.

  7. 218. KARGE T & MAKARENKO A, Bottom-up transformation of Furnze35 in Kiev: the role of NGOs for industrial heritage. In MIEG H & OEVERMANN H eds, Industrial heritage sites in transformation: clash of discourses. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 94–109.

  8. 219. LOMBARDO N, White-collar workers and neighbourhood change: Jarvis Street in Toronto, 1880–1920. UHR 43 1 (2014) 5–20.

  9. 220. O'DONOVAN M, A tale of one city: creative destruction, spatial fixes, and ideology in Binghamton, New York. IJHA 18 2 (2014) 284–98.

  10. 221. PACIONE M, Residential differentiation in nineteenth-century Glasgow: a morphogenetic study of Pollockshields garden suburb. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 173–92.

  11. 222. PELED K, The social texture of the Baqa Well: drawing history from an old well in a Palestinian Arab town in Israel. MES 50 5 (2014) 810–25.

  12. 223. RUBIN E, Amnesiopolis: from Mietskaserne to Wohnungsbauserie 70 in East Berlin's northeast. CEH 47 2 (2014) 334–74.

  13. 224. SALVATI L, Exurban development and landscape diversification in a Mediterranean suburban area. SGJ 130 1 (2014) 22–34.

  14. 225. TELFER A & WESTMAN A, The ‘banana’ wall, former Export Dock, West India Docks, Canary Wharf, London E14. PMA 48 2 (2014) 311–19.

  15. 226. TRAPP M, The Georgian history of the Strand Lane ‘Roman’ bath. LJ 39 2 (2014) 142–67.

  16. 227. UGGLA Y, Protecting urban greenery: the case of Stockholm's national city park. CitC 13 4 (2014) 360–80.

  17. 228. WERGELAND E, From high voltage to high density: the urban dynamism of Cable Street, Oslo. In MIEG H & OEVERMANN H eds, Industrial heritage sites in transformation: clash of discourses. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 47–61.

  18. 229. YASUMOTO S, JONES A & SHIMIZU C, Longitudinal trends in equity of park accessibility in Yokohama, Japan: an investigation into the role of causal mechanisms. EP 46 3 (2014) 682–99.

Land ownership

  1. 230. HARRIS R, The imprint of the owner-builder on American suburbs. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 193–216.

  2. 231. LOUGHRAN K, Parks for profit: the high line, growth machines, and the uneven development of urban public spaces. CitC 13 1 (2014) 49–68.

  3. 232. ONWUZURUIGBO I, Space of power and power of space: Islam and conflict over cemetery space in colonial Ibadan. JUH 40 2 (2014) 301–17.

  4. 233. RETZLAFF R & SISSER S, Property rights and coastal protection: the case of Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council. PlP 29 3 (2014) 275–300.

  5. 234. TAMAYOSE B & TAKAHASHI L, Land privatization in Hawai'i: an analysis of governmental leases and court cases in Hawai'i 1830s–1910s. JPH 13 4 (2014) 322–40.

Architecture

  1. 235. AVERMAETE T, From Knoxville to Bidonville: ATBAT and the architecture of the French welfare state. In SWENARTON M, AVERMAETE T & VAN DEN HEUVEL D eds, Architecture and the welfare state. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 219–36.

  2. 236. BOSMA K, New socialist cities: foreign architects in the USSR 1920–1940. PlP 29 3 (2014) 301–28.

  3. 237. CALDER B, Brutal enemies? Townscape and the ‘hard’ moderns. In PENDLEBURY J, ERTEN E & LARKHAM P eds, Alternative visions of post-war reconstruction: creating the modern townscape. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 199–215.

  4. 238. CLARKE P, The history and architectural development of the Old Bishop's Palace, Rochester. AC 134 (2014) 1–35.

  5. 239. CLARKE S, Rosamond's bower, the Pryor's bank, and the long shadow of Strawberry Hill. JHC 26 2 (2014) 287–306.

  6. 240. DIEFENDORF J, Rebuilding city halls in postwar Germany: architectural form and identity. In CHATTOPADHYAY S & WHITE J eds, City halls and civic materialism: towards a global history of urban public space. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 78–96.

  7. 241. DOWNES K, Averlo Formato Perfettamente: Borromini's first two years at the Roman oratory. ArchH 57 (2014) 109–40.

  8. 242. FAIR A, ‘Brutalism among the ladies’: modern architecture at Somerville College, Oxford, 1947–67. ArchH 57 (2014) 357–92.

  9. 243. GENT L, Elizabethan architecture: a view from rhetoric. ArchH 57 (2014) 73–108.

  10. 244. GIFFORD J, The National Monument of Scotland. AH 25 1 (2014) 43–83.

  11. 245. GOLD JR, New architecture and the search for modernity: exhibiting the planned city in 1930s Britain. In FREESTONE R & AMATI M eds, Exhibitions and the development of modern planning culture. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 81–96.

  12. 246. GUEDES P, Free plan for the 1850s: forgotten imagined architectures from mid-century. ArchH 57 (2014) 239–76.

  13. 247. GUERCI M, From Northampton to Northumberland: the Strand Palace during the Suffolk ownership and the transformations of Algernon Percy, tenth earl of Northumberland, 1614–68. AnJ 94 (2014) 211–51.

  14. 248. HOME R, European colonial architecture and town planning (c. 1850–1970): a conference, a repository, a network, and an exhibition. PlP 29 4 (2014) 571–2.

  15. 249. HOYLE R, The Shambles in Settle marketplace, its date and builder. YAJ 86 1 (2014) 228–36.

  16. 250. KAL H, Seoul spectacle: the city hall, the plaza and the public. In CHATTOPADHYAY S & WHITE J eds, City halls and civic materialism: towards a global history of urban public space. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 276–94.

  17. 251. KARGON J, A symbolic landscape for suburbia: Baltimore Chizuk Amuno's ‘Hebrew culture garden’. JUH 40 4 (2014) 762–91.

  18. 252. KING A, ‘Not fullye so loftye’: excavations at the Royal Fort, St Michael's Hill, Bristol. PMA 48 1 (2014) 1–44.

  19. 253. KNOTKOVA V & SVATOSOVA H, The old town hall in Prague: an unresolved architectural challenge. In CHATTOPADHYAY S & WHITE J eds, City halls and civic materialism: towards a global history of urban public space. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 97–114.

  20. 254. LEPINE A, The persistence of medievalism: Kenneth Clark and the Gothic Revival. ArchH 57 (2014) 323–56.

  21. 255. LINDFIELD P, Serious Gothic and ‘doing the ancient buildings’: Batty Langley's ancient architecture and ‘principal geometric elevations’. ArchH 57 (2014) 141–74.

  22. 256. LUXFORD J, Architecture and environment: St Benet's Holm and the fashioning of the English monastic gatehouse. ArchH 57 (2014) 31–72.

  23. 257. MARZOT N, Modernism against history: understanding building typology and urban morphology among Italian architects in the twentieth century. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 219–29.

  24. 258. MATTSSON H, Where the motorways meet: architecture and corporatism in Sweden 1968. In SWENARTON M, AVERMAETE T & VAN DEN HEUVEL D eds, Architecture and the welfare state. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 155–76.

  25. 259. MCKIE D, Ian Nairn: neglected no more. HT 64 1 (2014) 4–5.

  26. 260. MOLINARI L, Matteotti village and Gallaratese 2: design criticism of the Italian welfare state. In SWENARTON M, AVERMAETE T & VAN DEN HEUVEL D eds, Architecture and the welfare state. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 259–76.

  27. 261. NIA MHURCHADHA M, Dublin after dark: glimpses of life in an early modern city. Dublin: Dublic City Public Libraries 2014. pp 24.

  28. 262. NIELL P, Neoclassical architecture in Spanish colonial America: a negotiated modernity. HC 12 3 (2014) 252–62.

  29. 263. PEPPER S, The beginnings of high-rise social housing in the long 1940s: the case of the LCC and the Woodberry Down estate. In SWENARTON M, AVERMAETE T & VAN DEN HEUVEL D eds, Architecture and the Welfare State. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 69–92.

  30. 264. REICHEN B, Paris, Belford, St. Denis: architectural transformation of industrial heritage sites – an architect's perspective. In MIEG H & OEVERMANN H eds, Industrial heritage sites in transformation: clash of discourses. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 154–66.

  31. 265. RIDOUT O, Reediting the architectural past. B & L 21 2 (2014) 88–112.

  32. 266. RODGER J, McCaig's Tower and a Scottish monumental tradition. JSHS 34 1 (2014) 90–106.

  33. 267. ROSELLINI A, Louis I Kahn: towards the zero degree of concrete, 1960–1974. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp 500.

  34. 268. ROWE N, The Jew, the cathedral and the medieval city: synagoga and ecclesia in the thirteenth century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp 340.

  35. 269. SCHOENEFELDT H, The temporary Houses of Parliament and David Boswell Reid's architecture of experimentation. ArchH 57 (2014) 175–216.

  36. 270. SLATER L, Finding Jerusalem in medieval Pontefract. NH 51 2 (2014) 211–20.

  37. 271. SMITH T, WATSON B, MARTIN C & WILLIAMS D, Suffolk Place, Southwark, London: a Tudor palace and its terracotta architectural decoration. PMA 48 1 (2014) 90–132.

  38. 272. SNYDER D, Rhetorics and politics: Polish architectural modernism in the early post-war years. In PENDLEBURY J, ERTEN E & LARKHAM P eds, Alternative visions of post-war reconstruction: creating the modern townscape. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 161–78.

  39. 273. STANEK L, Who needs ‘needs’? French post-war architecture and its critics. In SWENARTON M, AVERMAETE T & VAN DEN HEUVEL D eds, Architecture and the welfare state. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 113–32.

  40. 274. STEWART C A, Architectural innovation in early Byzantine Cyprus. ArchH 57 (2014) 1–30.

  41. 275. URBAN F, The markisches viertel in west Berlin. In SWENARTON M, AVERMAETE T & VAN DEN HEUVEL D eds, Architecture and the welfare state. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 177–98.

  42. 276. WALL C, CLARKE L, MCGUIRE C & MUNOZ-ROJAS O, Building the Barbican, 1962–1982: taking the industry out of the dark ages. London: University of Westminster 2014. 55.

  43. 277. WALTON S & BOOTHBY T, What is straight cannot fall: gothic architecture, scholasticism, and dynamics. HSci 52 4 (2014) 347–76.

  44. 278. WATTERS D, The beautiful and the good: classical school architecture and educational elitism in early nineteenth-century Edinburgh. ArchH 57 (2014) 277–322.

  45. 279. WEINSTEIN B, Questioning a late Victorian ‘dyad’: preservationism, demolitionism, and the City of London churches, 1860–1904. JBS 53 2 (2014) 400–425.

  46. 280. WHELAN A, George Gilbert Scott: a pioneer of constructional polychromy? ArchH 57 (2014) 217–38.

  47. 281. WHITE J, Los Angeles city hall: space, form, and gesture. In CHATTOPADHYAY S & WHITE J eds, City halls and civic materialism: towards a global history of urban public space. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 177–98.

  48. 282. WISEMAN T, The Temple of Apollo and Diana in Rome. OJA 33 3 (2014) 327–38.

  49. 283. WOLPER E, Islamic architecture and institutions in the late medieval city. HC 12 12 (2014) 912–23.

  50. 284. WOODMAN F, The Cathedral Church of St Nicholas, Newcastle: ‘a tangled story’, or ‘cutting the Geordian knot’. JBAA 167 1 (2014) 154–76.

Housing

  1. 285. BARTON S, From community control to professionalism: social housing in Berkeley, California, 1976–2011. JPH 13 2 (2014) 160–82.

  2. 286. BENEDIKTSSON M, Territories of concern: vacant housing and perceived disorder on three suburban blocks. CitC 13 3 (2014) 191–213.

  3. 287. GLENDINNING M, From European welfare state to Asian capitalism: the transformation of ‘British public housing’ in Hong Kong and Singapore. In SWENARTON M, AVERMAETE T & VAN DEN HEUVEL D eds, Architecture and the welfare state. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 299–320.

  4. 288. GLENDINNING M, The densification of modern public housing in Hong Kong and Singapore. DoJo 50 (2014) 44–51.

  5. 289. GORDON LASNER M, Architect as developer and the postwar U.S. apartment, 1945–1960. B & L 21 1 (2014) 27–55.

  6. 290. HIPP J & SINGH A, Changing neighborhood determinants of housing price trends in southern California, 1960–2009. CitC 13 3 (2014) 254–74.

  7. 291. HORST J, Shantytown revolution: slum clearance, rent control, and the Cuban state, 1937–1955. JUH 40 4 (2014) 699–718.

  8. 292. JOHN-ALDER K, Toward a new landscape: modern courtyard housing and Ian McHarg's urbanism. JPH 13 3 (2014) 187–206.

  9. 293. KARP M, The St. Louis rent strike of 1969: transforming black activism and American low-income housing. JUH 40 4 (2014) 648–70.

  10. 294. KOTER M & KULESZA M, Shaping the housing of industrialists and workers: the textile settlements of Ksiezy Mlyn (Lodz) and Zyrardow in Poland. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 152–72.

  11. 295. LEECH R, The town house in medieval and early modern Bristol. Swindon: English Heritage 2014. pp x + 440.

  12. 296. LINEBAUGH D, Tradition, culture, and memory in a foreign land. B & L 21 1 (2014) 56–87.

  13. 297. LIVSEY T, ‘Suitable lodgings for students’: modern space, colonial development and decolonization in Nigeria. UH 41 4 (2014) 664–85.

  14. 298. LOMBARDO T, The battle of Whitman Park: race, class, and public housing in Philadelphia, 1956–1982. JSocH 47 2 2014. 401–28.

  15. 299. MCNELIS S, Making progress in housing: a framework for collaborative research. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp xxii + 288.

  16. 300. NEVELL M, Legislation and reality: the archaeological evidence for sanitation and housing quality in urban workers' housing in the Ancoats area of Manchester between 1800 and 1950. IAR 36 1 (2014) 48–74.

  17. 301. ROSEN E, Rigging the rules of the game: how landlords geographically sort low-income renters. CitC 13 4 (2014) 310–40.

  18. 302. RUBIN E, Viewpoint: new in town. B & L 21 1 (2014) 1–26.

  19. 303. SHAPELY P, The politics of housing: power, consumers and urban culture. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2014. pp 240.

  20. 304. SHKUDA A, Housing the ‘front office to the world’: urban planning for the service economy in Battery Park City, New York. JPH 13 3 (2014) 234–46.

IV Social structure

Research methods, aids and materials

  1. 305. ADVELA E, Toward a Greek history of the Jews of Salonica? JeH 28 3–4 (2014) 405–10.

  2. 306. AYMARD M, Salonica's Jews in the Mediterranean: two historiographical perspectives (1945–2010). JeH 28 3–4 (2014) 411–29.

  3. 307. CHRONAKIS P, De-Judaizing a class, Hellenizing a city: Jewish merchants and the future of Salonica in Greek public discourse, 1913–1914. JeH 28 3–4 (2014) 373–403.

  4. 308. ELDEM E, Salonica and its Jewish history in Turkish historiography. JeH 28 3–4 (2014) 431–8.

  5. 309. FLEMING K, ‘Salonica's Jews’: a metropolitan history. JeH 28 3–4 (2014) 449–55.

  6. 310. KAYA D, ‘Living off others’ aid’: the socioeconomic structure of Salonica's Jews in the mid-nineteenth century. JeH 28 3–4 (2014) 313–36.

  7. 311. RICHARDS-RISSETTO H, Movement as a means of social (re)production: using GIS to measure social integration across urban landscapes. JASc 41 (2014) 356–75.

  8. 312. RODRIGUE A, Salonica in Jewish historiography. JeH 28 3–4 (2014) 439–47.

Social organization, clubs and societies

  1. 313. BOWMAN M, Writers and readers: Melbourne's Bohemians and its Athenaeum. JACH 16 (2014) 147–64.

  2. 314. CREWE S, What about the workers? Works-based sport and recreation in England c. 1918 – c. 1970. SpiH 34 4 (2014) 544–68.

  3. 315. CUNNINGHAM S, American politics in the postwar sunbelt: conservative growth in a battleground region. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp xii + 304.

  4. 316. LAW R, Between the state and the people: civil society organizations in interwar Japan. HC 12 3 (2014) 217–25.

  5. 317. ROSS K, Winning women's votes: defending animal experimentation and women's clubs in New York, 1920–1930. NYH 95 1 (2014) 26–40.

Class structure

  1. 318. FYNN-PAUL J, Let's talk about class: towards an institutionalist typology of class relations in the cities of pre-modern Europe (c. 1200 – c. 1800). UH 41 4 (2014) 582–605.

  2. 319. GREENE J, Urban restructuring, homelessness, and collective action in Toronto, 1980–2003. UHR 43 1 (2014) 21–40.

  3. 320. GRIFFIN E, The making of the Chartists: popular politics and working-class autobiography in early Victorian Britain. EHR 129 538 (2014) 578–605.

  4. 321. HEYNEN H & GOSSEYE J, The welfare state in Flanders: de-pillarization and the nebulous city. In SWENARTON M, AVERMAETE T & VAN DEN HEUVEL D eds, Architecture and the welfare state. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 51–68

  5. 322. IWAMA T, Parties, middle-class voters, and the urban community: rethinking the Halifax parliamentary borough elections, 1832–1852. NH 51 1 (2014) 91–112.

  6. 323. LOFTUS D, Work, poverty and modernity in Mayhew's London. JVC 19 4 (2014) 507–19.

  7. 324. MANGION C, Housing the ‘decayed members’ of the middle classes: social class and St Scholastica's Retreat, 1861–1901. ContC 29 3 (2014) 373–98.

  8. 325. PARRY J, Sex, bricks and mortar: constructing class in a central Indian steel town. MAsS 48 5 (2014) 1242–75.

  9. 326. QIAN J, Performing the public man: cultures and identities in China's grassroots leisure class. CitC 13 1 (2014) 26–48.

  10. 327. SHAIKH J, Imaging caste: photography, the housing question and the making of sociology in colonial Bombay, 1900–1939. SAs 37 3 (2014) 491–514.

  11. 328. STAUB A, The road to upward mobility: urbanity and the creation of a new middle class in postwar West Germany. JUH 40 3 (2014) 563–84.

  12. 329. UTSA R, Consumption and the making of the middle-class in South Asia. HC 12 1 (2014) 11–19.

  13. 330. VISWANATH R, Rethinking caste and class: ‘labour’, the ‘depressed classes’, and the politics of distinctions, Madras 1918–1924. IRSH 59 1 (2014) 1–37.

  14. 331. WOMACK EC, Victorian miser texts and potential energy. NCC 36 5 (2014) 565–78.

Social life

  1. 332. BALDERSTONE L, Semi-detached Britain? Reviewing suburban engagement in twentieth-century society. UH 41 1 (2014) 141–60.

  2. 333. BEEMYN G, A queer capital: a history of gay life in Washington D.C. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp 270.

  3. 334. CHALUS E, Cette fusion annuelle: cosmopolitanism and identity in Nice, c. 1815–1860. UH 41 4 (2014) 606–26.

  4. 335. CHENIER E, Sex, intimacy, and desire among men of Chinese heritage and women of non-Asian heritage in Toronto, 1910–1950. UHR 42 2 (2014) 29–43.

  5. 336. COOK M & EVANS J eds, Queer cities, queer cultures: Europe since 1945. London: Bloomsbury 2014. pp xii + 316.

  6. 337. CROWTHER L, Crafting suburbia: the community as craft object. In HELLEND J, LEMIRE B & BUIS A eds, Craft, community and the material culture of place and politics, 19th–20th century. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 177–96.

  7. 338. EDELBERG P, The queer road in Frisind: Copenhagen 1945–2012. In COOK M & EVANS J eds, Queer cities, queer cultures: Europe since 1945. London: Bloomsbury 2014. 55–74.

  8. 339. EMERSON R & MACLEOD J, The Musick Club and the Edinburgh Musical Society. BOEC 10 (2014) 45–105.

  9. 340. ENGBERTS C, The rise of associational activity: early twentieth-century German sailors' homes and schools in Antwerp and Rotterdam. IMin 32 3 (2014) 293–314.

  10. 341. EVANS J, Harmless kisses and infinite loops: making space for queer place in twenty-first-century Berlin. In COOK M & EVANS J eds, Queer cities, queer cultures: Europe since 1945. London: Bloomsbury 2014. 75–94.

  11. 342. FAIRE L & MCHUGH D, The everyday usage of city-centre streets: urban behaviour in provincial Britain ca. 1930–1970. UHR 42 2 (2014) 18–28.

  12. 343. GADD T, Conflict and conciliation in the parish of St George, Gloucestershire, 1750–1850. MidH 39 1 (2014) 69–89.

  13. 344. GILBERTSON A, A fine balance: negotiating fashion and respectable femininity in middle-class Hyderabad, India. MAsS 48 1 (2014) 120–58.

  14. 345. GRAYZEL S, At home and under fire: air raids and culture in Britain from the great war to the blitz. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp xii + 356.

  15. 346. GREENE K, ‘Just a dream’: Big Bill Broonzy, the blues, and Chicago's black metropolis. JUH 40 1 (2014) 116–36.

  16. 347. GREENE T, Gay neighbourhoods and the rights of the vicarious citizen. CitC 13 2 2014. 99–118.

  17. 348. HAKALA W, A sultan in the realm of passion: coffee in eighteenth-century Delhi. ECS 47 4 (2014) 371–88.

  18. 349. HEALEY D, From Stalinist pariahs to subjects of ‘managed democracy’: queers in Moscow 1945 to the present. In COOK M & EVANS J eds, Queer cities, queer cultures: Europe since 1945. London: Bloomsbury 2014. 95–117.

  19. 350. HOFMAN E, An obligation of conscience: gossip as social control in an eighteenth-century Flemish town. EurRH 21 5 (2014) 653–70.

  20. 351. HOLMES V, Accommodating the lodge: the domestic arrangements of lodgers in working-class dwellings in a Victorian provincial town. JVC 19 3 (2014) 314–31.

  21. 352. HUGHES J, The idea of home. HAust 11 1 (2014) 197–205.

  22. 353. JONES C, The smile revolution: in eighteenth-century Paris. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2014. pp 256.

  23. 354. KORVER-GLENN E, Middle-class Mexican Americans, neighborhood affect, and redevelopment in Houston's northside Barrio. CitC 13 4 (2014) 381–402.

  24. 355. MCWILLIAM R, Elsa Lanchester and bohemian London in the early twentieth century. WomHR 23 2 (2014) 171–87.

  25. 356. MORRIS RJ, The 1960s: days of innocence. In HARRIS T & O'BRIEN CASTRO M eds, Preserving the sixties: Britain and the ‘decade of protest’. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2014. 33–50.

  26. 357. NEFF C, Placement practices of the Kingston (Ontario) orphans’ home, 1857–1876. JFH 39 4 (2014) 330–63.

  27. 358. PAPANIKOLAOU D, Mapping/unmapping: the making of queer Athens. In COOK M & EVANS J eds, Queer cities, queer cultures: Europe since 1945. London: Bloomsbury 2014. 151–70.

  28. 359. RUBINOV I, Migrant assemblages: building postsocialist households with Kyrgyz remittances. AnQ 87 1 (2014) 183–215.

  29. 360. SARGEANT A, London life and romance on the home front: Patricia Brent, spinster (Geoffrey H. Malins, 1919). EPVC 12 4 (2014) 407–24.

  30. 361. SARMENTO J & KAZEMI Z, Hammams and the contemporary city: the case of Isfahan, Iran. IJHerS 20 2 (2014) 138–56.

  31. 362. SCHEER C, The importance of Cheltenham: imperialism, liminality and Gustav Holst. JVC 19 3 (2014) 365–82.

  32. 363. SRIRAMAN T, A petition-like application? Rhetoric and rationing documents in wartime Delhi, 1941–45. IESHR 51 3 (2014) 353–82.

  33. 364. WALCOT C, Mrs Hobart's routs: town house hospitality in 1790s London. HLQ 77 4 (2014) 453–77.

  34. 365. WESSENFORF S, ‘Being open, but sometimes closed’: conviviality in a super-diverse London neighbourhood. EurJCS 17 4 (2014) 392–405.

  35. 366. WHELAN Y, Landscape and politics. In JACKSON A ed, The Oxford handbook of modern Irish history. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2014. 83–103.

  36. 367. ZE'EV NB, Sites of assimilation into urban lfe: rural migrants' clubs in Haifa under the Mandate, 1939–48. JICH 42 1 (2014) 114–33.

Social life, customs and traditions

  1. 368. BRAUN H & PÉREZ-MAGALLÓN J eds, The transatlantic Hispanic Baroque: complex identities in the Atlantic world. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp xiv + 330.

  2. 369. CESSFORD C, An assemblage of collegiate ceramics: mid-nineteenth-century dining at Trinity Hall, Cambridge. AJ 171 1 (2014) 340–80.

  3. 370. ELLIS P & KING R, Gloucester: the Wotton cemetery excavations, 2002. Brit 45 (2014) 53–120.

  4. 371. GRIFFITHS J, Imperial culture in antipodean cities, 1880–1939. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2014. pp xiii + 306.

  5. 372. HICKMAN M, Reflecting on gender and generation differences in celebrating St Patrick's Day in London. In MACPHERSON D & HICKMAN M eds, Women and Irish diaspora identities: theories, concepts and new perspectives. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2014. 112–29.

  6. 373. JENKINS B, ‘Queen of the Bristol Channel ports’: the intersection of gender and civic identity in Cardiff, c. 1880–1914. WHR 23 6 (2014) 903–21.

  7. 374. LUEBKE D, Ritual, religion, and German home towns. CEH 47 3 (2014) 496–504.

  8. 375. ORME T, Toasting fox: the fox dinners in Edinburgh and Glasgow, 1801–1825. H 99 337 (2014) 588–606.

  9. 376. RUGG J, STIRLING F & CLAYDEN A, Churchyard and cemetery in an English industrial city: Sheffield, 1740–1900. UH 41 4 (2014) 627–46.

  10. 377. SKINNER G, ‘A tattling town like Windsor’: negotiating proper relations in Frances Burney's early court journals and letters (1786–87). ECL 38 1 (2014) 1–17.

  11. 378. STEER C, A royal grave in a fifteenth-century London parish church. In CLARK L ed, Exploring the evidence: commemoration, administration and the economy. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press 2014. 31–40.

Religion

  1. 379. ÇALIŞ-KURAL BD, Şehrengiz, urban rituals and deviant Sufi mysticism in Ottoman Istanbul. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp 290.

  2. 380. CONNOR M, The priory of Christ Church Canterbury and its connections with London in the late Middle Ages. AC 135 (2014) 33–46.

  3. 381. DAVIS P, Popery and publishing in the Restoration crisis: a Whig gentry family's credit account with their London bookseller, 1680–1683. Lib 15 3 (2014) 261–91.

  4. 382. GARRIOCH D, The Huguenots of Paris and the coming of religious freedom, 1685–1789. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp xii + 307.

  5. 383. HESSAYON A, The Ranters and their sources: the question of Jacob Boehme's supposed influence. Setep 16 2 (2014) 77–101.

  6. 384. HUGHES A, A moderate puritan preacher negotiates religious change. JeH 65 4 (2014) 761–79.

  7. 385. HUGHES A, Preachers and hearers in revolutionary London: contextualising parliamentary fast sermons. TRHS 24 (2014) 57–77.

  8. 386. JOHNSON SF, Monastic women and religious orders in late medieval Bologna. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp xi + 271.

  9. 387. KOOPMANS R, Early sixteenth-century stained glass at St. Michael-le-Belfrey and the commemoration of Thomas Becket in late medieval York. Spec 89 4 (2014) 1040–100.

  10. 388. MADDOX R, John Wesley's earliest published defence of the emerging revival in Bristol. W & MS 6 (2014) 124–53.

  11. 389. MILLS N, The tartan kirkie: 150 years of St. Mary's Episcopal Church, Aberdeen. Aberdeen: Kellas Cat Press 2014. pp 120.

  12. 390. POSTER C, Rhetoric, education and economics as practical theology: Archbishop Richard Whately's Irish policies. In BUTTON M & SHEETZ-NGUYEN J eds, Victorians and the case for charity. Jefferson, NC: McFarland 2014. 77–93.

  13. 391. ROBERTS E, Flodoard, the will of St Remigius and the see of Reims in the tenth century. EME 22 2 (2014) 201–30.

  14. 392. ROSS E, St. Francis in Soho: Emmeline Pethick, Mary Neal, the west London Wesleyan mission, and the allure of ‘simple living’ in the 1890s. ChH 83 4 (2014) 843–83.

  15. 393. SANYAL R, Hindu space: urban dislocations in post-partition Calcutta. IBG 39 1 (2014) 38–49.

  16. 394. SCHOFIELD R, Methodist spiritual condition in Georgian northern England. JeH 65 4 (2014) 780–802.

  17. 395. SOYER F, Manuel I of Portugal and the end of the toleration of Islam in Castile: marriage diplomacy, propaganda, and Portuguese imperialism in Renaissance Europe, 1495–1505. JEMH 18 4 (2014) 331–56.

  18. 396. STANDING R, Charles Garrett and the birth of the Wesleyan central mission movement. W & MS 6 (2014) 89–123.

  19. 397. TAYLOR AG, ‘Are you a Billy, or a Dan, or an old tin can?’: street violence and relations between Catholics, Jews and Protestants in the Gorbals during the inter-war years. UH 41 1 (2014) 124–40.

  20. 398. TREE I, A house for the living Goddess: on the dual identity of the Kumari Chen in Kathmandu. SAs 37 1 (2014) 156–78.

  21. 399. WEIR JRW, Through changing scenes: Belfast Central Mission, the story of the first 125 years, 1889–2014. Belfast: Belfast Central Mission 2014. pp 66.

  22. 400. WILSON L, ‘Domestic charms, business acumen, and devotion to Christian work’: Sarah Terrett, the Bible Christian Church, the household and the public sphere in late Victorian Bristol. SCH 50 (2014) 405–15.

Recreation

  1. 401. GEORGIOU D, Leisure in London's suburbs, 1880–1939. LJ 39 3 (2014) 175–86.

  2. 402. GEORGIOU D, ‘The drab suburban streets were metamorphosed into a veritable fairyland’: spectacle and festivity in the Ilford hospital carnival, 1905–1914. LJ 39 3 (2014) 227–48.

  3. 403. GREGSON K & HUGGINS M, Ashbrooke whit sports, Sunderland and its records: a case study of amateurism in late Victorian and Edwardian athletic and cycling competition. IJHS 31 9 (2014) 994–1011.

  4. 404. JOHANSEN M, ‘Good feeling and brotherliness’: leisure, the suburbs and the Society of Public Librarians in London (1895–1930). LJ 39 3 (2014) 249–64.

  5. 405. OLDFIELD S, Running pedestrianism in Victorian Manchester. SpiH 34 2 (2014) 223–48.

  6. 406. PRESTON R, The pastimes of the people: photographing house and garden in London's small suburban homes, 1880–1914. LJ 39 3 (2014) 205–26.

  7. 407. SCHATTNER A, ‘For the recreation of gentlemen and other fit persons of the better sort’: tennis courts and bowling greens as early leisure venues in sixteenth- to eighteenth-century London and Bath. SpiH 34 2 (2014) 198–222.

Social problems and deviance

  1. 408. ANDERSSON P, ‘Bustling, crowding, and pushing’: pickpockets and the nineteenth-century-street crowd. UH 41 2 (2014) 291–310.

  2. 409. ATHERTON J, ‘Nothing but a Birmingham jury can save them’: prosecuting rioters in late eighteenth-century Britain. MidH 39 1 (2014) 90–109.

  3. 410. CHURCHILL D, ‘I am just the man for upsetting you bloody bobbies’: popular animosity towards the police in late nineteenth-century Leeds. SH 39 2 (2014) 248–66.

  4. 411. CLARK G, Everyday violence in the Irish civil war. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp xix + 240.

  5. 412. FREY J, Lascars, the Thames Police Court and the Old Bailey: crime on the high seas and the London courts, 1852–8. JMarH 16 2 (2014) 196–211.

  6. 413. HALL J, With criminal intent? Forgers at work in Roman London. Brit 45 (2014) 165–94.

  7. 414. HERRING C, The new logics of homeless seclusion: homeless encampments in America's west coast cities. CitC 13 4 (2014) 285–309.

  8. 415. JACKSON L, Policing youth: Britain, 1945–70. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2014. pp 256.

  9. 416. KILDAY A, ‘Criminally poor?’ investigating the link between crime and poverty in eighteenth-century England. CulSH 11 4 (2014) 507–26.

  10. 417. MILLINGTON C, Street-fighting men: political violence in inter-war France. EHR 129 538 (2014) 606–38.

  11. 418. PLUSKOTA M, Genesis of a red-light district: prostitution in Nantes between 1750 and 1810. UH 41 1 (41) 22–41.

  12. 419. SCHRIERUP CÅLUND A & KINGS L, Reading the Stockholm riots: a moment for social justice? R & C 55 3 (2014) 1–21.

  13. 420. SCOLLAN M, Gladys Lilian King and the work of the women police in London's Strand 1918–19: a memoir. WomHR 23 2 (2014) 256–71.

  14. 421. SETTLE L, The Kosmo Club case: clandestine prostitution during the interwar period. TCBH 25 4 (2014) 562–84.

  15. 422. SUTHERLAND D, Justice and murder: massacres in the provinces, Versailles, Meaux and Reims in 1792. P & P 222 1 (2014) 129–62.

  16. 423. WATT T, The corruption of the law and popular violence: the crisis of order in Dublin, 1729. IHS 153 (2014) 1–23.

  17. 424. WOOD J, The constables and the ‘garage girl’: the police, the press and the case of Helene Adele. MedH 20 4 (2014) 384–99.

Social reforms and improvement

  1. 425. BOWLER A, LEON C & LILLEY T, ‘What shall we do with the young prostitute? Reform her or neglect her?’: domestication as reform at the New York state reformatory for women at Bedford, 1901–1913. JSocH 47 2 (2014) 458–81.

  2. 426. BULLOCK N, West Ham and the welfare state 1945–70, a suitable case for treatment? In SWENARTON M, AVERMAETE T & VAN DEN HEUVEL D eds, Architecture and the welfare state. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 93–110.

  3. 427. BUTTON M, Protecting Canterbury's poor: city missions and the Protestant laity. In BUTTON M & SHEETZ-NGUYEN J eds, Victorians and the case for charity: essays on reponses to English poverty by the state, the church and the literati. Jefferson, NC: McFarland 2014. 184–99.

  4. 428. DAVIDSON R, ‘Dreams of Utopia’: the infant welfare movement in interwar Croydon. WHR 23 2 (2014) 239–55.

  5. 429. EGAN M, ‘Something for the poor’: London women, religious and social reform in the 1840s. In BUTTON M & SHEETZ-NGUYEN J eds, Victorians and the case for charity: essays on responses to English poverty by the state, the church and the literati. Jefferson, NC: McFarland 2014. 249–62.

  6. 430. RASMUSSEN C, ‘A web of tension’: the 1967 protests in New Brunswick, New Jersey. JUH 40 1 (2014) 137–57.

  7. 431. SCHULMAN V, Managing subjects, manufacturing citizens: picturing sites of social control in nineteenth-century America. EPVC 12 2 (2014) 104–26.

  8. 432. SESSOLO S, An epic of riots: the multitude as hero in handsworth songs. JPopC 47 4 (2014) 742–59.

  9. 433. WILLIAMSON C, ‘To remove the stigma of the Poor Law’: the ‘comprehensive’ ideal and patient access to the municipal hospital service in the city of Glasgow, 1918–1939. H 99 334 (2014) 73–99.

Minority groups

  1. 434. AZFAR F, Beastly sodomites and the shameless urban future. EC 55 4 (2014) 391–410.

  2. 435. BELCHEM J, Before the Windrush: race relations in twentieth-century Liverpool. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press 2014. pp xxi + 298.

  3. 436. BUETTNER E, ‘This is Staffordshire not Alabama’: racial geographies of Commonwealth immigration in early 1960s Britain. JICH 42 4 (2014) 710–40.

  4. 437. CARROLL F, The racial politics of place: Jim Crow, the New Deal, and suburban housing on the Virginia Peninsula. JUH 40 3 (2014) 514–35.

  5. 438. CLEMINSON R, MEDINA-DOMENECH R & VELEZ I, The queer margins of Spanish cities, 1939–2010. In COOK M & EVANS J eds, Queer cities, queer cultures: Europe since 1945. London: Bloomsbury 2014. 15–35.

  6. 439. CROSS W, The Abergavenny witch hunt: an account of the prosecution of over twenty homosexuals in a small Welsh town in 1942. Newport: Book Midden Publishing 2014. pp 310.

  7. 440. FITZGERALD S, The Chinese in Sydney, then and now. HAust 11 3 (2014) 215–16.

  8. 441. GINIO E, Jews and European subjects in eighteenth-century Salonica: the Ottoman perspective. JeH 28 3–4 (2014) 289–312.

  9. 442. HEIN J, The urban ethnic community and collective action: politics, protest, and civic engagement by Hmong Americans in Minneapolis–St. Paul. CitC 13 2 (2014) 119–39.

  10. 443. JAMES M, Whiteness and loss in outer East London: tracing the collective memories of diaspora space. ERS 37 4 (2014) 652–67.

  11. 444. JOU C, Neither welcomed, nor refused: race and restaurants in postwar New York City. JUH 40 2 (2014) 232–51.

  12. 445. KUHMAR R, Ljubijana: The tales of the queer margins of the city. In COOK M & EVANS J eds, Queer cities, queer cultures: Europe since 1945. London: Bloomsbury 2014. 135–50.

  13. 446. MAGUIRE R, Presenting the history of Africans in provincial Britain: Norfolk as a case study. H 99 338 (2014) 819–38.

  14. 447. MUGHAL A, The expectations of South Asian immigrants: adapting to life in Bradford 1950–1980. LocH 44 2 (2014) 134–45.

  15. 448. MURRAY T, Winifred M. Patton and the Irish revival in London. ISR 22 1 (2014) 22–33.

  16. 449. OPIE F D, Upsetting the apple cart: black-latino coalitions in New York City from protest to public office. New York: Columbia University Press 2014. 312.

  17. 450. PERRY K, Black Britain and the politics of race in the 20th century. HC 12 8 (2014) 651–63.

  18. 451. POOLE R, Istanbul: queer desires between Muslim tradition and global pop. In COOK M & EVANS J eds, Queer cities, queer cultures: Europe since 1945. London: Bloomsbury 2014. 171–90.

  19. 452. PRICKETT P, Contextualizing from within: perceptions of physical disorder in a south central L.A. African American mosque. CitC 13 3 (2014) 214–32.

  20. 453. THRUSH C, The iceberg and the cathedral: encounter, entanglement, and isuma in Inuit London. JBS 53 1 (2014) 59–79.

Family life

  1. 454. ALLON F, At home in the suburbs: domesticity and nation in postwar Australia. HAust 11 1 (2014) 13–36.

  2. 455. BOURDIEU J & KESZTENBAUM L, ‘The true social molecule’: industrialization, paternalism and the family: half a century in Le Creusot (1836–86). HF 19 1 (2014) 53–76.

  3. 456. CHANG I, Queer politics, sexual anarchism, and nationalism: the Chinese male mother and the queer family in He is my wife, he is my mother. DR 58 1 (2014) 89–107.

  4. 457. COLANTONIO SKUFFER C & NAZER J, Marriage in Córdoba City (Argentina) in the late-colonial and early-independent periods: homogamy and surnames as emerging features. JFH 39 1 (2014) 22–39.

  5. 458. GEHRMANN R, German towns at the eve of industrialization: household formation and the part of the elderly. HF 19 1 (2014) 13–28.

  6. 459. LIN X CYANG W & CHUANG Y, Another marriage choice: a study of uxorilocal marriage in Taiwan, comparative research of Taipei (urban) and Xinchu (rural), 1906–1944. JFH 39 4 (2014) 338–403.

  7. 460. MARTINI M & BELLAVITIS A, Household economies, social norms and practices of unpaid market work in Europe from the sixteenth century to the present. HF 19 3 (2014) 273–82.

  8. 461. MAZUMDAR R, ‘I do not envy you’: mixed marriages and immigration debates in the 1920s and 1930s Rangoon, Burma. IESHR 51 4 (2014) 497–527.

  9. 462. NEWTON G, Clandestine marriage in early modern London: when, where and why? ContC 29 2 (2014) 151–80.

  10. 463. OBERLY J, Julius Drachsler's intermarriage in New York City: a study in historical replication. HM 47 2 (2014) 95–111.

  11. 464. OVERLEAT K, Replacing the family? Beguinages in early modern western European cities: an analysis of the family networks of beguines living in Mechelen (1532–1591). ContC 29 3 (2014) 325–47.

  12. 465. PUSCHMANN P & SOLLI A, Household and family during urbanization and industrialization: efforts to shed new light on an old debate. HF 19 1 (2014) 1–12.

  13. 466. PUSCHMANN P, GRONBERG P, SCHUMACHER R & MATTHIJS K., Access to marriage and reproduction among migrants in Antwerp and Stockholm: a longitudinal approach to processes of social inclusion and exclusion, 1846–1926. HF 19 1 (2014) 29–52.

  14. 467. SEALE Y, Family and finances in fifteenth-century Dublin. HIre 22 3 (2014) 16–19.

Gender

  1. 468. AASLESTAD K, Citizenship in action: Hanseatic women's wartime associations. In COWMAN K, KOEFOED N & SJÖGREN Å eds, Gender in urban Europe: sites of political activity and citizenship, 1750–1900. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 124–42.

  2. 469. ÅGREN M, Emissaries, allies, accomplices and enemies: married women's work in eighteenth-century urban Sweden. UH 41 3 (2014) 394–414.

  3. 470. APETREI S, Masculine virgins: celibacy and gender in later Stuart London. In APETREI S & SMITH H eds, Religion and women in Britain, c. 1660–1760. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 41–59.

  4. 471. BARCLAY K, Singing, performance, and lower-class masculinity in the Dublin magistrates' court, 1820–1850. JSocH 47 3 (2014) 746–68.

  5. 472. BARCLAY K, Manly magistrates and ctizenship in an Irish town: Carlow, 1820–1840. In COWMAN K, KOEFOED N & SJÖGREN Å eds, Gender in urban Europe: sites of political activity and citizenship, 1750–1900. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 58–74.

  6. 473. BENNETT J & MCSHEFFREY S, Early, erotic and alien: women dressed as men in late medieval London. HWJ 77 1 (2014) 1–25.

  7. 474. BREITENBACH E & WRIGHT V, Women as active citizens: Glasgow and Edinburgh c. 1918–1939. WomHR 23 3 (2014) 401–20.

  8. 475. CAIRNS J, ‘A parliament of man become a parliament of women’: performing femininity and the state through mediated civic ritual in Ontario, 1900–1940. JHS 27 1 (2014) 25–48.

  9. 476. CHALUS E, The Burcot bear: gender, power and belonging in the Wells election of 1765. In COWMAN K, KOEFOED N & SJÖGREN Å eds, Gender in urban Europe: sites of political activity and citizenship, 1750–1900. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 77–92.

  10. 477. CHAMBERLAIN U, Honour or control?: female recipients of Prussian state decorations in a civic context. In COWMAN K, KOEFOED N & SJÖGREN Å eds, Gender in urban Europe: sites of political activity and citizenship, 1750–1900. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 194–209.

  11. 478. COOK M, Capital stories: local lives in queer London. In EVANS J & COOK M eds, Queer cities, queer cultures: Europe since 1945. London: Bloomsbury 2014. 36–54.

  12. 479. COOK M, Queer domesticities: homosexuality and home life in twentieth-century London. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2014. pp xviii + 326.

  13. 480. COWMAN K, Women, locality and politics in nineteenth-century Britain. In COWMAN K, KOEFOED N & SJÖGREN Å eds, Gender in urban Europe: sites of political activity and citizenship, 1750–1900. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 210–26.

  14. 481. COWMAN K, KOEFOED N & SJÖGREN Å, Gender in urban Europe: sites of political activity and citizenship, 1750–1900. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp xii + 236.

  15. 482. DUDINK S, ‘For the defense of our liberty’: gender in Dutch civic militancy (1780–1800). In COWMAN K, KOEFOED N & SJÖGREN Å eds, Gender in urban Europe: sites of political activity and citizenship, 1750–1900. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 108–23.

  16. 483. FRANK G, The colour of the unborn: anti-abortion and anti-bussing politics in Michigan, United States, 1967–1973. G & H 26 2 (2014) 351–78.

  17. 484. GREENHALGH J, ‘Till we hear the last all clear’: gender and the presentation of self in young girls' writing about the bombing of Hull during the Second World War. G & H 26 1 (2014) 167–83.

  18. 485. HEKMA G, Queer Amsterdam 1945–2010. In COOK M & EVANS J eds, Queer cities, queer cultures: Europe since 1945. London: Bloomsbury 2014. 118–34.

  19. 486. HINKS J, The representation of ‘baby-farmers’ in the Scottish city, 1867–1908. WHR 23 4 (2014) 560–76.

  20. 487. JENKINS S, Aliens and predators: miscegenation, prostitution and racial identities in Cardiff, 1927–47. CulSH 11 4 (2014) 575–96.

  21. 488. KABEER N & KHAN A, Cultural values or universal rights? Women's narratives of compliance and contestation in urban Afghanistan. FmE 20 3 (2014) 1–24.

  22. 489. KOEFOED N, Local philanthropy as an arena for practising and negotiating citizenship in late nineteenth-century Denmark. In COWMAN K, KOEFOED N & SJÖGREN Å eds, Gender in urban Europe: sites of political activity and citizenship, 1750–1900. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 162–77.

  23. 490. LEWIS D, A sisterhood powerful for motherhood: Ellen Ranyard's ‘Biblewomen’ & ‘Biblewomen Nurses’. In BUTTON M & SHEETZ-NGUYEN J eds, Victorians and the case for charity: essays on responses to English poverty by the state, the church and the literati. Jefferson, NC: McFarland 2014. 159–83.

  24. 491. LUCKINS T, Domesticating cosmopolitanism: Charmian Clift's women's column in ‘Sydney Morning Herald’ and Melbourne ‘Herald’ in the 1960s. HAust 11 3 (2014) 97–115.

  25. 492. MACIAS-GONZALEZ V, The transnational homophile movement and the development of domesticity in Mexico City's homosexual community, 1930–70. G & H 26 3 (2014) 519–44.

  26. 493. MCKINLEY M, Illicit intimacies: virtuous concubinage in colonial Lima. JFH 39 3 (2014) 204–21.

  27. 494. MILLS S, Youth on streets and bob-a-job week: urban geographies of masculinity, risk, and home in postwar Britain. EP 46 1 (2014) 112–28.

  28. 495. MUNKHOFF R, Poor women and parish public health in sixteenth-century London. RS 28 4 (2014) 579–96.

  29. 496. NARANYANAN Y, Quo vadis, Delhi? Urban heritage and gender: towards a sustainable urban future. IJHerS 20 5 (2014) 488–99.

  30. 497. NEWBY A, On their behalf no agitator raises his voice: the Irish distressed ladies fund. In COWMAN K, KOEFOED N & SJÖGREN Å eds, Gender in urban Europe: sites of political activity and citizenship, 1750–1900. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 178–93.

  31. 498. REINKE-WILLIAMS T, Women, work and sociability in early modern London. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2014. pp viii + 225.

  32. 499. RICHMOND V, Crafting inclusion for ‘invalid’ women: the Girls’ Friendly Society central needlework depôt, 1899–1947. In HELLAND J, LEMIRE B & BUIS A eds, Craft, community and the material culture of place and politics, 19th–20th century. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 161–76.

  33. 500. SAGUI S, The hue and cry in medieval English towns. HR 87 236 (2014) 179–93.

  34. 501. SCHJERNING C, Feeling civic: emotions, gender and civic identity in late eighteenth-century Copenhagen. In COWMAN K, KOEFOED N & SJÖGREN Å eds, Gender in urban Europe: sites of political activity and citizenship, 1750–1900. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 33–41.

  35. 502. SEED J, Did the subaltern speak? Mayhew and the coster-girl. JVC 19 4 (2014) 536–49.

  36. 503. SIMONTON DL, ‘To merit the countenance of the magistrates’: gender and civic identity in eighteenth-century Aberdeen. In COWMAN K, KOEFOED N & SJÖGREN Å eds, Gender in urban Europe: sites of political activity and citizenship, 1750–1900. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 17–32.

  37. 504. SJÖGREN Å, Citizenship, poor relief and the politics of gender in Swedish cities and towns at the turn of the nineteenth century. In COWMAN K, KOEFOED N & SJÖGREN Å eds, Gender in urban Europe: sites of political activity and citizenship, 1750–1900. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 147–61.

  38. 505. SORAINEN A, Two cities of Helsinki? One liberally gay and one practically queer? In COOK M & EVANS J eds, Queer cities, queer cultures: Europe since 1945. London: Bloomsbury 2014. 211–39.

  39. 506. TAKACS J, Queering Budapest. In COOK M & EVANS J eds, Queer cities, queer cultures: Europe since 1945. London: Bloomsbury 2014. 191–210.

  40. 507. WHITTLE J, Enterprising widows and active wives: women's unpaid work in the household economy of early modern England. HF 19 3 (2014) 283–300.

  41. 508. WILDMAN C, Irish-Catholic women and modernity in 1930s Liverpool. In MACPHERSON D ed, Women and Irish diaspora identities: theories, concepts and new perspectives. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2014. 72–91.

  42. 509. WOHLCKE A, The ‘perpetual fair’: gender, disorder and urban amusement in eighteenth-century London. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2014. pp x + 246.

V Economic activity

Urban economic activity

  1. 510. BECKERS P & KLOOSTERMAN R, Open to business? An exploration of the impact of the built environment and zoning plans on local businesses in pre-war and post-war residential neighbourhoods in Dutch cities. US 51 1 (2014) 153–69.

  2. 511. COWELL M, Dealing with deindustrialization: adaptive resilience in American midwestern regions. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp xii + 132.

  3. 512. CRANKSHAW O & BOREL-SALADIN J, Does deindustrialisation cause social polarisation in global cities? EP 46 8 (2014) 1852–72.

  4. 513. DAVIDS K & DE MUNCK B, Innovation and creativity in late medieval and early modern European cities. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp xviii + 424.

  5. 514. ELSORADY D, The economic value of heritage properties in Alexandria, Egypt. IJHerS 20 2 (2014) 107–22.

  6. 515. FOSSA G, Milan: creative industries and the use of heritage. In MIEG H & OEVERMANN H eds, Industrial heritage sites in transformation: clash of discourses. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 62–78.

  7. 516. HACKETT S, From rags to restaurants: self-determination, entrepreneurship and integration amongst Muslim immigrants in Newcastle upon Tyne in comparative perspective, 1960s–1990s. TCBH 25 1 (2014) 132–54.

  8. 517. HAMARK J, Technology and productivity in the port of Gothenburg c. 1850–1965. IJMH 26 2 (2014) 265–87.

  9. 518. JENSEN O, The travels of John Magee: tracing the geographies of Britain's itinerant print-sellers, 1789–1815. CulSH 11 2 (2014) 195–216.

  10. 519. KASABOV E & SUDARAM U, An institutional account of governance structures in early modern business history: the Coventry business (hi)story. BuH 56 4 (2014) 592–622.

  11. 520. LIDOLA M, Negotiating integration in Berlin's waxing studios: Brazilian migrants’ gendered appropriation of urban consumer spaces and ‘ethnic’ entrepreneurship. JCH 49 1 (2014) 228–51.

  12. 521. LINDEMANN M, The merchant republics: Amsterdam, Antwerp, and Hamburg, 1648–1790. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp xv + 347.

  13. 522. LIOKAFTOS D, Professional bodybuilding and the business of ‘extreme’ bodies: the Mr Olympia competition in the context of Las Vegas's leisure industries. SpiH 34 2 (2014) 318–39.

  14. 523. PERRY N, REYBOLD LE & WATERS N, ‘Everybody was looking for a good government job’: occupational choice during segregation in Arlington, Virginia. JUH 40 4 (2014) 719–41.

  15. 524. SHIN H, The art of advertising railways: organisation and coordination in Britain's railway marketing, 1860–1910. BuH 56 2 (2014) 187–213.

  16. 525. SPAULDING RM, Rethinking ‘great commerce’ and the hometown economy. CEH 47 3 (2014) 513–22.

  17. 526. STANFORS M, Women in a changing economy: the misleading tale of participation rates in a historical perspective. HF 19 4 (2014) 513–36.

  18. 527. TERRA P, Free and unfree labour and ethnic conflicts in the Brazilian transport industry: Rio de Janeiro in the nineteenth century. IRSH 59 22 (2014) 113–32.

  19. 528. TOMOTY L, Competition and regulation in the early history of the London gas industry, 1800–1830. LJ 39 2 (2014) 120–41.

  20. 529. TYSON B, The William Banck and Christopher Woodburne charities for poor apprentices of Kendal; their origins, management, beneficiaries and problems. TCWAAS 14 (2014) 139–59.

Industry

  1. 530. CHAND A, Conflicting masculinities? Men in reserved occupations in Clydeside 1939–45. JSHS 34 2 (2014) 218–36.

  2. 531. EVANS C, A world of copper: introducing Swansea, globalization and the Industrial Revolution. WHR 27 1 (2014) 85–91.

  3. 532. EVANS C, El Cobre: Cuban ore and the globalization of Swansea copper, 1830–70. WHR 27 1 (2014) 112–31.

  4. 533. GORDAN J, John Nutt: trade publisher and printer ‘in the Savoy’. Lib 15 3 (2014) 243–60.

  5. 534. GUTBERLET T, Mechanization and the spatial distribution of industries in the German Empire, 1875 to 1907. EcHR 67 2 (2014) 463–91.

  6. 535. LAMBERT B & PAJIC M, Drapery in exile: Edward III, Colchester and the Flemings, 1351–1367. H 99 338 (2014) 733–53.

  7. 536. MILLER I, Wearside Pottery: a 20th-century potworks in Sunderland. IAR 36 1 (2014) 24–31.

  8. 537. MOORE S, Gender and class formation: women's mobilization in the industrialization of the Bradford worsted industry, 1780–1845. HSIR 35 (2014) 1–31.

  9. 538. PANZA L, De-industrialization and re-industrialization in the Middle East: reflections on the cotton industry in Egypt and in the Izmir region. EcHR 67 1 (2014) 146–69.

  10. 539. PRADO S, Yeast or mushrooms? Productivity patterns across Swedish manufacturing industries, 1869–1912. EcHR 67 2 (2014) 382–408.

  11. 540. SARKAR A, The tie that snapped: bubonic plague and mill labour in Bombay, 1896–1898. IRSH 59 2 (2014) 181–214.

  12. 541. SIEBENGA R, Crafts and industry in early films of British India: contrasting album and process films. EPVC 12 3 (2014) 342–56.

  13. 542. SOUTHWICK L, New lght on the swordmakers, goldsmiths and jewellers, John Ray and James Montague, active in partnership in London 1800–1821, with a new and extended list of their known work. A & A 11 2 (2014) 90–141.

  14. 543. TOMLINSON J, The political economy of globalization: the genesis of Dundee's two ‘united fronts’ in the 1930s. HJ 57 1 (2014) 225–45.

  15. 544. TOMLINSON J, Dundee and the empire: ‘Juteopolis’ 1850–1939. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press 2014. pp 240.

External trade

  1. 545. ALLEN J & BROWNE M, Road freight transport to, from, and within London. LJ 39 1 (2014) 59–75.

  2. 546. AYTON A & LAMBERT C, A maritime community in war and peace: Kentish ports, ships and mariners, 1320–1400. AC 134 (2014) 67–103.

  3. 547. BUCHNEA E, Transatlantic transformations: visualizing change over time in the Liverpool–New York trade network, 1763–1833. ES 15 4 (2014) 687–721.

  4. 548. DAUVERD C, Imperial ambition in the early modern Mediterranean: Genoese merchants and the Spanish crown. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp xii + 310.

  5. 549. FARMER S, Medieval Paris and the Mediterranean: the evidence from the silk industry. FHS 37 3 (2014) 383–419.

  6. 550. HELL M, Trade, transport, and storage in Amsterdam inns (1450–1800). JUH 40 4 (2014) 742–61.

  7. 551. ROWLANDS J, Investment in shipping: north Cardiganshire in the nineteenth century. WHR 27 1 (2014) 53–84.

  8. 552. TAZZARA C, Managing free trade in early modern Europe: institutions, information, and the free port of Livorno. JModH 86 3 (2014) 493–529.

Food supply

  1. 553. BERGLUND M, Food riots in nineteenth-century Sweden. In COWMAN K, KOEFOED N & SJÖGREN Å eds, Gender in urban Europe: sites of political activity and citizenship, 1750–1900. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 93–107.

  2. 554. BRINKLEY C & VITIELLO D, From farm to nuisance: animal agriculture and the rise of planning regulation. JPH 13 2 (2014) 113–35.

  3. 555. DONOFRIO G, Attacking distribution: obsolescence and efficiency of food markets in the age of urban renewal. JPH 13 2 (2014) 136–59.

  4. 556. FULLILOVE C, The price of bread: the New York City flour riot and the paradox of capitalist food systems. RHR 118 (2014) 15–41.

  5. 557. KORNFIELD D, Bringing good food in: a history of New York City's greenmarket program. JUH 40 2 (2014) 345–56.

  6. 558. ORTON D, MORRIS J, LOCKER A & BARRETT J, Fish for the city: meta-analysis of archaeological cod remains and the growth of London's northern trade. A 88 340 (2014) 516–30.

  7. 559. VITIELLO D & BRINKLEY C, The hidden history of food system planning. JPH 13 2 (2014) 91–112.

Retailing

  1. 560. BAILEY M, Retailing and the home in 1960s Sydney. HAust 11 1 (2014) 59–81.

  2. 561. HALLIDAY S, Underneath the arches. HT 64 4 (2014) 4–5.

  3. 562. KUPPINGER P, A neighborhood shopping street and the making of urban cultures and economies in Germany. CitC 13 2 (2014) 140–57.

  4. 563. MACMASTER R, Philadelphia merchants, backcountry shopkeepers, and town-making fever. PH 81 3 (2014) 342–63.

  5. 564. SHREEVE S, The hodson shop. Cos 48 1 (2014) 82–97.

  6. 565. VAN BOCHOVE C, Seafarers and shopkeepers: credit in eighteenth-century Amsterdam. ECS 48 1 (2014) 67–88.

Finance, banking and industry

  1. 566. BELL A, BROOKS C & MOORE T, The credit relationship between Henry III and merchants of Douai and Ypres, 1247–70. EcHR 67 1 (2014) 123–45.

  2. 567. HELLER M & KAMLEITNER B, Salaries and promotion opportunities in the English banking industry, 1890–1936: a rejoinder. BuH 56 2 (2014) 270–86.

  3. 568. HENDRIKSE R & SIDAWAY J, Financial wizardry and the golden city: tracking the financial crisis through Pforzheim, Germany. IBG 39 2 (2014) 195–208.

  4. 569. HIGHSMITH A, Beyond corporate abandonment: General Motors and the politics of metropolitan capitalism in Flint, Michigan. JUH 40 1 (2014) 31–47.

  5. 570. JAFFE S & LAUTIN J, Capital of capital: money, banking, and power in New York City, 1784–2012. New York: Columbia University Press 2014. pp 304.

  6. 571. POPP A, The broken cotton speculator. HWJ 78 1 (2014) 133–56.

  7. 572. SCHENK C, Summer in the city: banking failures of 1974 and the development of international banking supervision. EHR 129 540 (2014) 1129–56.

Consumption

  1. 573. BRETT V, Bertrand's toyshop in Bath: luxury retailing 1685–1765. Wetherby: Oblong 2014. pp 363.

  2. 574. CRAWFORD R, Blueprints for the future: advertising and the home. HAust 11 1 (2014) 37–58.

  3. 575. DE MUNCK B, Artisans, products and gifts: rethinking the history of material culture in early modern Europe. P & P 224 1 (2014) 39–74.

  4. 576. DYER S, Shopping and the senses: retail, browsing and consumption in 18th-century England. HC 12 9 (2014) 694–703.

  5. 577. LOBERG M, The fortress shop: consumer culture, violence, and security in Weimar Berlin. JCH 49 4 (2014) 675–701.

  6. 578. MITCHELL I, Tradition and innovation in English retailing, 1700 to 1850: narratives of consumption. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp xvi + 223.

  7. 579. PODAVITTE C, Pompeian red ware in Roman London: insights on pottery consumption in colonial environments. In PLATTS H, PEARCE J, BARRON C, LUNDOCK J & YOO J eds, TRAC 2013: proceedings of the twenty third annual Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference. Oxford: Oxbow Books 2014. 122–39.

Earnings

  1. 580. SCHMIDT A, The profits of unpaid work: ‘assisting labour’ of women in the early modern urban Dutch economy. HF 19 3 (2014) 301–22.

Standard of living

  1. 581. BAER W, Using housing quality to track change in the standard of living and poverty for seventeenth-century London. HM 47 1 (2014) 1–18.

  2. 582. BOWDEN S, JALLES J, PEREIRA A & SADLER A, Respiratory tuberculosis and standards of living in postwar Europe. EurREH 18 1 (2014) 57–81.

  3. 583. LOEWENBERG F, Poverty in eighteenth-century New York City: a Jewish pauper demands Kosher meals. NYH 95 3 (2014) 432–45.

  4. 584. MEERKERK E & TEEUWEN D, The stability of voluntarism: financing social care in early modern Dutch towns compared with the English Poor Law, c. 1600–1800. EurREH 18 1 (2014) 82–105.

  5. 585. PEMBERTON N, The rat-catcher's prank: interspecies cunningness and scavenging in Henry Mayhew's London. JVC 19 4 (2014) 520–35.

  6. 586. TODD S, Family welfare and social work in post-war England, c. 1948–c. 1970. EHR 129 537 (2014) 362–87.

  7. 587. UCENDO JIA & GARCIA RL, Prices and real wages in seventeenth-century Madrid. EcHR 67 3 (2014) 607–26.

Labour organization

  1. 588. ARRINGTON L, Socialist republican discourse and the 1916 Easter Rising: the occupation of Jacob's biscuit factory and the South Dublin Union explained. JBS 53 4 (2014) 992–1010.

  2. 589. COHEN L, Making a new deal: industrial workers in Chicago, 1919–1939. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp xxx + 556.

  3. 590. GARB M, The great Chicago waiters’ strike: producing urban space, organizing labor, challenging racial divides in 1890s Chicago. JUH 40 6 (2014) 1079–98.

  4. 591. GRANDI G, The first great railway strike: rereading the early labour movement in São Paulo. IRSH 59 22 (2014) 161–83.

  5. 592. LONDON DH, Outside the world of tomorrow: New York labor and the public sphere in the 1939–1940 New York World's Fair. JUH 40 6 (2014) 1011–27.

  6. 593. MCDOWELL L, ANITHA S & PEARSON R, Striking narratives: class, gender and ethnicity in the ‘Great Grunwick Strike’, London, UK, 1976–1978. WomHR 23 4 (2014) 595–619.

  7. 594. O'CONNOR E, Derry labour in the age of agitation, 1889–1923: new unionism and old, 1889–1906. Dublin: Four Courts 2014. pp 64.

  8. 595. OWEN J, Labour and the caucus: working-class radicalism and organised liberalism in England, 1868–1888. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press 2014. pp viii + 244.

  9. 596. PERCY R, Picket lines and parades: labour and urban space in early twentieth-century London and Chicago. UH 41 3 (2014) 456–77.

  10. 597. PILOSSOF R, Labor relations in Zimbabwe from 1900 to 2000: sources, interpretations, and understandings. HiAfr 41 (2014) 337–62.

  11. 598. SCRIMGEOUR A, ‘We only want our rights and freedom’: the Pilbara pastoral workers strike, 1946–1949. HAust 11 2 (2014) 101–24.

Exchange of information

  1. 599. BARKE M, The north east coast exhibition of 1929: entrenchment or modernity? NH 51 1 (2014) 153–76.

  2. 600. MISKELL L, From Copperopolis to Coquimbo: international knowledge networks in the copper industry of the 1820s. WHR 27 1 (2014) 92–111.

VI Communications

Inter-urban communications

  1. 601. ALLISON T, Freight-handling technologies and industrial building design: freighthouse and warehouse facilities of the Chicago junction railway, 1900–30. IAR 36 2 (2014) 109–27.

  2. 602. AVILA E, L.A.’s invisible freeway revolt: the cultural politics of fighting freeways. JUH 40 5 (2014) 831–42.

  3. 603. BILES R, Expressways before the interstates: the case of Detroit, 1945–1956. JUH 40 5 (2014) 843–54.

  4. 604. BILES R, MOHL R & ROSE M, Revisiting the urban interstates: politics, policy, and culture since world war II. JUH 40 5 (2014) 827–30.

  5. 605. DUKE A, Eavesdropping on the correspondence between the strangers, chiefly in Norwich, and their families in the Low Countries 1567–70. DC 38 2 (2014) 116–31.

  6. 606. FEIN M, Realignment: hghways and livability policy in the post-interstate era, 1978–2013. JUH 40 5 (2014) 855–69.

  7. 607. GERHOLD D, The development of stage coaching and the impact of turnpike roads, 1653–1840. EcHR 67 3 (2014) 818–45.

  8. 608. ISHIBASHI Y, In pursuit of accurate timekeeping: Liverpool and Victorian electrical horology. AnS 71 4 (2014) 474–96.

  9. 609. JOBY C, The role of London and other English cities in the development of early modern Dutch language and literature. DC 38 1 (2014) 4–19.

  10. 610. KRIM A, Squeezing railroads into cities: creating variable solutions in Britain and the United States, 1820–1900. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 137–51.

  11. 611. MEGANCK T, Chorography and antiquity between the Low Countries and the British Isles (1568–1606). Setep 16 2 (2014) 51–76.

  12. 612. MOHL R, Citizen activism and freeway revolts in Memphis and Nashville: the road to litigation. JUH 40 5 (2014) 870–93.

  13. 613. MOORE K, State impediments to transit-centered planning in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 1916–1928. JUH 40 2 (2014) 318–44.

  14. 614. MULLER E, Acceptably pleasing: the urban advisors and the struggle to improve freeway design. JUH 40 5 (2014) 894–916.

  15. 615. ZELEF M H, Impacts of seaplanes and seaports on the perception and conception of the modern city: the case of Istanbul. JUH 40 6 (2014) 1028–53.

Intra-urban communications

  1. 616. ANDERSON K, Glasgow underground: the Glasgow district subway. Chalford: Amberley Publishing 2014. pp 96.

  2. 617. BAYMAN A, Thomas Dekker and the culture of pamphleteering in early modern London. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp 160.

  3. 618. COOPER N, London Underground at war. Stroud: Amberley 2014. pp 128.

  4. 619. LAW M, ‘The flashy strings of neon lights unravelled’: motoring leisure and the potential for technological sublimity on the Great West Road. LJ 39 3 (2014) 281–94.

  5. 620. LAW MJ, The experience of suburban modernity: how private transport changed interwar London. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2014. pp 288.

  6. 621. MOSS H, ZHANG Y & ANDERSON A, Assessing the impact of the inner belt: MIT, highways, and housing in Cambridge, Massachusetts. JUH 40 6 (2014) 1054–78.

  7. 622. PANTE M, Mobility and modernity in the urban transport systems of colonial Manila and Singapore. JSocH 47 4 (2014) 855–77.

  8. 623. SCOTT D, When the motorman mayor met the cable car ladies: engendering transit in the city that knows how. JUH 40 1 (2014) 97–115.

  9. 624. TERNI J, The omnibus and the shaping of the urban quotidian: Paris, 1828–60. CulSH 11 2 (2014) 217–42.

  10. 625. WEBSTER G, The railways of Glasgow: post-Beeching. Stroud: The History Press 2014. pp 160.

VII Politics and administration

Aspects of urban administration

  1. 626. AGEE C, The streets of San Francisco: policing and the creation of a cosmopolitan liberal politics, 1950–1972. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2014. pp 256.

  2. 627. BARRIE D & BROOMHALL S, Police courts in nineteenth-century Scotland, vol. I: magistrates, media and the masses. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp xv + 534.

  3. 628. BARRIE D & BROOMHILL S, Police courts in nineteenth-century Scotland, vol. II: Boundaries, behaviours and bodies. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp xi + 296.

  4. 629. BASMAJIAN C, Jimmy Carter and Joe Frank Harris: creating growth management planning in Georgia, 1971–1989. PlP 29 4 (2014) 447–73.

  5. 630. BENNETT R, Alignments, interests and tensions over ‘reform’ in eighteenth-century Britain: the Manchester Committee of Trade, 1774–1786. NH 51 1 (2014) 61–90.

  6. 631. BENNETT R, Searching for new models of business representation: the Liverpool Committee or Board of Trade, 1775–1794. NH 51 2 (2014) 263–89.

  7. 632. BENSON D, Ripples from the French Revolution in Tewkesbury. LocH 44 1 (2014) 26–34.

  8. 633. BERG M, Reinventing ‘Red Vienna’ after 1945: habitus, patronage, and the foundations of municipal social democratic dominance. JModH 86 3 (2014) 603–32.

  9. 634. BLAU E, From red superblock to green megastructure: municipal socialism as model and challenge. In SWENARTON M, AVERMAETE T & VAN DEN HEUVEL D eds, Architecture and the welfare state. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 27–50.

  10. 635. CAMPBELL N, A history of Castlebar: municipal government 1613–2014. Castlebar, Co. Mayo: Castlebar Town Council 2014. 201.

  11. 636. CHABEL E, Managing the postcolony: minority politics in Montpellier, c. 1960–c. 2010. ContEH 23 2 (2014) 237–58.

  12. 637. CHRONOPOULOS T, The Lindsay administration and the sanitation crisis of New York City, 1966–1973. JUH 40 6 (2014) 1138–54.

  13. 638. CONNOR MA, ‘These communities have the most to gain from valley cityhood’: color-blind rhetoric of urban secession in Los Angeles, 1996–2002. JUH 40 1 (2014) 48–64.

  14. 639. CREIGHTON S, John Archer: Battersea's black progressive and labour activist 1863–1932. London: History & Social Action Publications 2014. pp 48.

  15. 640. DOOLITTLE I, ‘The great refusal’: why does the City of London Corporation only govern the square mile? LJ 39 1 (2014) 21–36.

  16. 641. DOUGAN Q, Dublin's loyal volunteers. HIre 22 3 (2014) 36–8.

  17. 642. FEDER L, ‘New York in the Assembly!’: character politics and the election of 1768 in New York City. NYH 95 2 (2014) 154–71.

  18. 643. FEWSTER J, The earls of Carlisle and Morpeth: a turbulent pocket borough. NH 51 2 (2014) 242–62.

  19. 644. FINLAYSON JC, Thomas Heywood's panegyric to London's ‘University’ in Londini Artium & Scientiarum Scaturigo: or, Londons Fountaine of Arts and Sciences (1632). LJ 39 2 (2014) 102–19.

  20. 645. FORTESCUE WI, James Ker, member of parliament for Edinburgh, 1747–1754. BOEC 10 (2014) 17–44.

  21. 646. GAULT H, Making the heavens hum: Kingsley Wood and the art of the possible 1881–1924. Cambridge: Gretton 2014. pp xii + 276.

  22. 647. HESS C, Nigra crux mala crux: a comparative perspective on urban conflict in Gdansk in 1411 and 1416. UH 41 4 (2014) 565–81.

  23. 648. HORNBY F, Voters' occupations in Northampton city 1830. GenM 31 5 (2014) 186–90.

  24. 649. JIMENEZ C, Courting the council: the municipal palace and the popular petition in Morelia, Mexico, 1880–1930. In CHATTOPADHYAY S & WHITE J eds, City halls and civic materialism: towards a global history of urban public space. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 136–58.

  25. 650. JONES JG, Lloyd George and the Carnarvon boroughs, 1890–95. JLH 82 (2014) 26–36.

  26. 651. JUSIONYTE I, For social emergencies ‘we are 9–1–1’: how journalists perform the state in an Argentine border town. AnQ 87 1 (2014) 151–81.

  27. 652. KIDD M, Labour and socialism in Northampton during the Great War. NPP 67 (2014) 79–83.

  28. 653. KOLBE L, Civic or national pride?: the city hall as a communal ‘hotel’ in Scandinavian capital cities. In CHATTOPADHYAY S & WHITE J eds, City halls and civic materialism: towards a global history of urban public space. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 56–77.

  29. 654. KUSNO A, Jakarta's city hall: a political history. In CHATTOPADHYAY S & WHITE J eds, City halls and civic materialism: towards a global history of urban public space. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 255–75.

  30. 655. LANG S, ‘I have never known such undisguised arson’: the ladysmith rag, the Mafeking bonfire and the battle for order in late nineteenth-century Cambridge. IJRLH 9 1 (2014) 1–26.

  31. 656. LANTSCHNER P, Revolts and the political order of cities in the late Middle Ages. P & P 225 1 (2014) 3–46.

  32. 657. LEICHTMAN E, Smedley D. Butler and the militarisation of the Philadelphia police, 1924–1925. LCH 4 2 (2014) 48–69.

  33. 658. MAIS SPB, Fifty years of the L.C.C.. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp xi + 208.

  34. 659. MARJORIBANKS R, Edinburgh portrait: Sir John Marjoribanks, bart, MP (1763–1833). BOEC 10 (2014) 151–6.

  35. 660. MORRIS R, The mayor of Northampton's fund for the housebound and the poor children's Christmas dinner fund. FCH 17 1 (2014) 3–20.

  36. 661. MOSTERT M & ADAMSKA A eds, Writing and the administration of medieval towns: medieval urban literacy. Turnhout: Brepols 2014. pp xv + 365.

  37. 662. NEDERVEEN MEERKERK EV & TEEUWEN D, The stability of voluntarism: financing social care in early modern Dutch towns compared with the English Poor Law, c. 1600–1800. EurREH 18 1 (2014) 82–105.

  38. 663. NEUMANN T, Privatization, devolution, and Jimmy Carter's national urban policy. JUH 40 2 (2014) 283–300.

  39. 664. PAYLING D, ‘Socialist Republic of South Yorkshire’: grassroots activism and left-wing solidarity in 1980s Sheffield. TCBH 25 4 (2014) 602–27.

  40. 665. PUGH M, ‘Centralisation has its draw backs as well as its advantages’: the surrounding burghs' resistance to Glasgow's municipal expansion, c. 1869–1912. JSHS 34 1 (2014) 40–66.

  41. 666. RALLINGS C, THRASHER M & COWLING D, Mayoral referendums and elections revisited. BPol 9 1 (2014) 2–28.

  42. 667. ROGER E, Blakberd's treasure: a study in fifteenth-century administration at St. Bartholomew's Hospital, London. In CLARK L ed, Exploring the evidence: commemoration, administration and the economy. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press 2014. 81–107.

  43. 668. ROGERS A, The parliamentary representation of Stamford from Edward IV to Henry VII. NMS 18 (2014) 185–252.

  44. 669. ROGERS E, From socialism to liberal unionism: J. L. Mahon in Edwardian Dublin. HWJ 77 1 (2014) 137–59.

  45. 670. RYAN M, ‘A laudable pride in the whole of us’: city halls and civic materialism. In CHATTOPADHYAY S & WHITE J eds, City halls and civic materialism: towards a global history of urban public space. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 17–55.

  46. 671. SCHMIDT J, Public services in Erfurt and Frankfurt am Main compared (c. 1890–1914): capabilities in Prussia? UH 41 2 (2014) 247–64.

  47. 672. SOLÓRZANO TELECHEA J, The politics of the urban commons in northern Atlantic Spain in the later Middle Ages. UH 41 2 (2014) 183–203.

  48. 673. STONE I, The rebel barons of 1264 and the commune of London: an oath of mutual aid. EHR 129 536 (2014) 1–18.

  49. 674. SWEETINBURGH S, Placing the hospital: the production of St. Lawrence's Hospital registers in fifteenth-century Canterbury. In CLARK L ed, Exploring the evidence: commemoration, administration and the economy. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press 2014. 109–29.

  50. 675. TAYLOR D, Protest and consent in the policing of the ‘wild’ West Riding of Yorkshire, c. 1850–1875: ‘the police v. the people’. NH 51 2 (2014) 290–310.

  51. 676. TENNANT M, Fields of struggle: a Bourdieusian analysis of conflicts over criminal justice in England, c. 1820–50. SH 39 1 (2014) 36–55.

  52. 677. VIGNESWARAN D, Protection and conviviality: community policing in Johannesburg. EurJCS 17 4 (2014) 471–86.

  53. 678. WARD R, The strange death of Liberal Birmingham. JLH 82 (2014) 16–25.

VIII Shaping the urban environment

Research methods, aids and materials

  1. 679. KALMAN H, Heritage planning: principles and process. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. Pp xvi + 344.

  2. 680. KNOX H, Footprints in the city: models, materiality, and the cultural politics of climate change. AnQ 87 2 (2014) 405–29.

  3. 681. WAKEMAN R, Rethinking postwar planning history. PlP 29 2 (2014) 153–63.

Town planning (and environmental control)

  1. 682. ALEXANDER A R, Safety by design: engineers and entrepreneurs invent fire safety in Mexico City, 1860–1910. UH 41 3 (2014) 435–55.

  2. 683. AMATI M, Engagement and exhibitionism in the era of high modernism: Otto Neurath and the example of 1940s Bilston. In FREESTONE R & AMATI M eds, Exhibitions and the development of modern planning culture. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 149–62.

  3. 684. BANISTER J & WIDDFIELD S, The debut of ‘modern water’ in early 20th-century Mexico City: the Xochimilco potable waterworks. JHG 46 (2014) 36–52.

  4. 685. BODENSCHATZ H, Urban design for Mussolini, Stalin, Salazar, Hitler and Franco (1922–1945). PlP 29 3 (2014) 381–92.

  5. 686. BONFANTE F & PALLINI C, The role of a historic townscape in city reconstruction: pans for Milan, Turin and Genoa after World War II. In PENDLEBURY J, ERTEN E & LARKHAM P eds, Alternative visions of post-war reconstruction: creating the modern townscape. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 142–60.

  6. 687. CAVERT W, The environmental policy of Charles I: coal smoke and the English monarchy, 1624–40. JBS 53 2 (2014) 310–33.

  7. 688. CLIFFORD B & TEWDR-JONES M, The collaborating planner? Practitioners in the neoliberal age. Bristol: Policy Press 2014. pp 304.

  8. 689. COWAN S, Model for the nation: exhibiting post-war reconstruction at the Festival of Britain 1951. In FREESTONE R & AMATI M eds, Exhibitions and the development of modern planning culture. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 177–92.

  9. 690. DARIN M, Haussman: reconsidering his role in the transformation of Paris. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 97–113.

  10. 691. DILLS R, Cracks in the granite: paternal care, the imperial façade, and the limits of authority in the 1824 St. Petersburg flood. JUH 40 3 (2014) 479–96.

  11. 692. EWEN S, Sheffield's Great Flood of 1864: engineering failure and the municipalisation of water. EnvH 20 2 (2014) 177–207.

  12. 693. EWEN S, Socio-technological disasters and engineering expertise in Victorian Britain: the Holmfirth and Sheffield floods of 1852 and 1864. JHG 46 (2014) 13–25.

  13. 694. FLANAGAN M, Private needs, public space: public toilets provision in the Anglo-Atlantic patriarchal city: London, Dublin, Toronto and Chicago. UH 41 2 (2014) 265–90.

  14. 695. FREESTONE R & AMATI M eds, Exhibitions and the development of modern planning culture. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp xvi + 303.

  15. 696. GONZALES M & GUERRERO S, The National Federation of Town Planning and Housing, 1939–1954: a network for town planners and architects in Franco's Spain. JUH 40 6 (2014) 1099–122.

  16. 697. GRAY M, Urban sewage and green meadows: Berlin's expansion to the south 1870–1920. CEH 47 2 (2014) 275–306.

  17. 698. GRUDGINGS S & TYMKÓW P, Water-raising technologies of the Chelsea Water Works Company prior to the introduction of their first Boulton and Watt steam engine. IJHET 84 1 (2014) 88–104.

  18. 699. GUARDIA MROSSELLÓ M & GARRIGA S, Barcelona's water supply, 1867–1967: the transition to a modern system. UH 41 3 (2014) 415–34.

  19. 700. HASEGAWA J, Drafting of the 1968 Japanese city planning law. PlP 29 2 (2014) 231–8.

  20. 701. HEDGCOCK D & PIDALA A M, Education, practice and professionalism: a comparative history of the development of urban and regional planning in Italy and Australia. PlP 29 4 (2014) 527–42.

  21. 702. HEIN C, The exchange of planning ideas from Europe to the USA after the Second World War: introductory thoughts and a call for further research. PlP 29 2 (2014) 143–51.

  22. 703. HESS D & HIOB M, Preservation by neglect in Soviet-era town planning in Tartu, Estonia. JPH 13 1 (2014) 24–49.

  23. 704. HEWITT L & PENDLEBURY J, Local associations and participation in place: change and continuity in the relationship between state and civil society in twentieth-century Britain. PlP 29 1 2014. 25–44.

  24. 705. HILLIER J, Implementation without control: the role of the private water companies in establishing constant water in nineteenth-century London. UH 41 2 (2014) 228–46.

  25. 706. JACKSON I & OPPONG R, The planning of late colonial village housing in the tropics: Tema Manhean, Ghana. PlP 29 4 (2014) 475–99.

  26. 707. JANSSEN J, LUITEN E, RENES H & ROUWENDAL J, Heritage planning and spatial development in the Netherlands: changing policies and perspectives. IJHerS 20 1 (2014) 1–21.

  27. 708. JOCH A, ‘Must our cities remain ugly?’ America's urban crisis and the European city: transatlantic perspectives on urban development, 1945–1970. PlP 29 2 (2014) 165–87.

  28. 709. JUNG S, Oswald Nagler, HURPI, and the formation of urban planning and design in South Korea: the South Seoul Plan by HURPI and the Mok-dong Plan. JUH 40 3 (2014) 585–605.

  29. 710. KATZ Y & BIGON L, Urban development in the ‘garden city’: examples from late Ottoman-era Palestine and the late British Mandate. In BIGON L & KATZ Y eds, Garden cities and colonial planning: transnationality and urban ideas in Africa and Palestine. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2014. 144–66.

  30. 711. LARKHAM P, Exhibiting planning in wartime Britain. In FREESTONE R & AMATI M eds, Exhibitions and the development of modern planning culture. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 131–48.

  31. 712. LAURENCE P, Jane Jacobs, the Townscape movement and the emergence of critical urban design. In PENDLEBURY J, ERTEN E & LARKHAM P eds, Alternative visions of post-war reconstruction: creating the modern townscape. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 216–26.

  32. 713. LEE J, Piped water supplies managed by civic bodies in medieval English towns. UH 41 3 (2014) 369–93.

  33. 714. LEE N, The changing nature of border, scale and the production of Hong Kong's water supply system since 1959. IJURR 38 3 (2014) 903–21.

  34. 715. LEMES DE OLIVIERA F, Green wedges: origins and development in Britain. PlP 29 3 (2014) 357–79.

  35. 716. MAROM N, Planning as a principle of vision and division: a Bourdieusian view of Tel Aviv's urban development, 1920s–1950s. EP 46 8 (2014) 1908–26.

  36. 717. MAULSBU L, Transformation of public space in Fascist Italy. In CHATTOPADHYAY S & WHITE J eds, City halls and civic materialism: towards a global history of urban public space. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 217–36.

  37. 718. MORRIS RJ, Notes on the rebuilding of Europe since 1945. Remembering and forgetting: the British experience. In WAGNER-KYORA G ed, Rebuilding European cities: reconstructions, modernity and the local politics of identity construction since 1945. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner 2014. 64–79.

  38. 719. NAVAPAN N, Absolute monarchy and the development of Bangkok's urban spaces. PlP 29 1 (2014) 1–24.

  39. 720. ORILLARD C, The transnational building of urban design: interplay between genres of discourse in the Anglophone world. PlP 29 2 (2014) 209–29.

  40. 721. PENDLEBURY J, Making the modern townscape: the reconstruction plans of Thomas Sharp. In PENDLEBURY J, ERTEN E & LARKHAM P eds, Alternative visions of post-war reconstruction: creating the modern townscape. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 125–41.

  41. 722. PHILLIPS H, Locating the location of a South African location: the paradoxical pre-history of Soweto. UH 41 2 (2014) 311–32.

  42. 723. POLING K, Shantytowns and pioneers beyond the City Wall: Berlin's urban frontier in the nineteenth century. CEH 47 2 (2014) 245–74.

  43. 724. REED P, Acid rain and the rise of the environmental chemist in nineteenth-century Britain: the life and work of Robert Angus Smith. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp 226.

  44. 725. REGO RL, Imagining the model, designing the city: planning diffusion in twentieth-century Brazil. PlP 29 4 (2014) 557–69.

  45. 726. ROBB S, The public washhouses of Edinburgh. BOEC 10 (2014) 127–50.

  46. 727. ROSENTHAL L, The river pollution dilemma in Victorian England: nuisance law versus economic efficiency. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp xiv + 253.

  47. 728. SAUMAREZ SMITH O, Graeme Shankland: a sixties architect-planner and the political culture of the British left. ArchH 57 (2014) 393–422.

  48. 729. SELIM G, Instituting order: the limitations of Nasser's post-colonial planning visions for Cairo in the case of the indigenous quarter of Bulaq (1952–1970). PlP 29 1 (2014) 67–89.

  49. 730. SHOSHKES E, Visualizing the core of an ideal democratic community: Jaqueline Tyrwhitt and post-war planning exhibitions. In FREESTONE R & AMATI M eds, Exhibitions and the development of modern planning culture. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 193–208.

  50. 731. SKELTON L, Beadles, dunghills and noisome excrements: regulating the environment in seventeenth-century Carlisle. IJRLH 9 1 (2014) 44–62.

  51. 732. SWENARTON M, Politics versus architecture: the Alexandra Road public enquiry of 1978–1981. PlP 29 4 (2014) 423–46.

  52. 733. TANG B & HO W, Cross-sectoral influence, planning policy, and industrial property market in a high-density city: a Hong Kong study 1978–2012. EP 46 12 (2014) 2915–31.

  53. 734. TAYLOR I, Not going through the motions: Sevenoaks, sewage and selfless ambition, 1871–1882. IJRLH 9 2 (2014) 123–39.

  54. 735. TEWDWR-JONES M, From town hall to cinema: documentary film as planning propaganda in post-war Britain. In FREESTONE R & AMATI M eds, Exhibitions and the development of modern planning culture. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 163–78.

  55. 736. TOMORY L, The question of water quality and London's new river in the eighteenth century. SHMed 27 3 (2014) 488–507.

Utopian planning and experiments

  1. 737. BOUCHE P, Patrick Geddes's (e)utopian Belvedere in Southern France. PlP 29 1 (2014) 91–102.

  2. 738. CHARKIN E, ‘Building the natural society of the future’: the Peckham Experiment (1943) as an anarchist account of childhood and education. PaedH 50 4 (2014) 414–32.

  3. 739. COOK I, WARD S & WARD K, A springtime journey to the Soviet Union: postwar planning and policy mobilities through the Iron Curtain. IJURR 38 3 (2014) 805–22.

  4. 740. ELLIS H & HENDERSON K, Rebuilding Britain: planning for a better future. Bristol: Policy Press 2014. pp ix + 120.

  5. 741. LARKHAM P, A new vision: the role of municipal authorities and planners in replanning Britain after the Second World War. In LARKHAM P & CONZEN M eds, Shapers of urban form: explorations in morphological agency. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 230–50.

  6. 742. MYERS G & MUHAJIR M, The afterlife of the Lanchester Plan: Zanzibar as the garden city of tomorrow. In BIGON L & KATZ Y eds, Garden cities and colonial planning: transnationality and urban ideas in Africa and Palestine. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2014. 98–122.

  7. 743. PROVOOST M, Exporting new towns: the welfare city in Africa. In SWENARTON M, AVERMAETE T & VAN DEN HEUVEL D eds, Architecture and the welfare state. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 277–98.

  8. 744. REGO RL, Brazilian garden cities and suburbs: accommodating urban modernity and foreign ideals. JPH 13 4 (2014) 276–95.

  9. 745. REITAN M, Beauty controlled: the persistence of city beautiful planning in Los Angeles. JPH 13 4 (2014) 296–321.

  10. 746. VAN DEN HEUVEL D, The open society and its experiments: the case of the Netherlands and Piet Blom. In SWENARTON M, AVERMAETE T & VAN DEN HEUVEL D eds, Architecture and the welfare state. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 133–54.

  11. 747. ZAIDMAN M & KARK R, Garden cities and suburbs in Palestine: the case of Tel Aviv. In BIGON L & KATZ Y eds, Garden cities and colonial planning: transnationality and urban ideas in Africa and Palestine. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2014. 167–89.

Housing improvement

  1. 748. BAUROTH N, The possibility of a housing authority: elite negotiations and the establishment of an urban renewal relocation plan in Fargo, North Dakota. JPH 13 4 (2014) 341–56.

  2. 749. BRADLEY Q, The Tenants' Movement: resident involvement, community action and the contentious politics of housing. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp xii + 188.

  3. 750. CHRONOPOULOS T, Robert Moses and the visual dimension of physical disorder: efforts to demonstrate urban blight in the age of slum clearance. JPH 13 3 (2014) 207–33.

  4. 751. MANIAQUE-BENTON C, Alternatives to welfare state: self-build and do-it-yourself. In SWENARTON M, AVERMAETE T & VAN DEN HEUVEL D eds, Architecture and the welfare state. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 199–216.

  5. 752. MORRIS RJ, Ramsay garden: ‘Professor Geddes's new buildings’. BOEC 10 (2014) 107–26.

  6. 753. SWENARTON M, High density without high rise: housing experiments of the 1950s by Patrick Hodgkinson. In SWENARTON M, AVERMAETE T & VAN DEN HEUVEL D eds, Architecture and the welfare state. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 237–58.

  7. 754. DIEHL C, Envisioning Nagasaki: from ‘atomic wasteland’ to ‘international cultural city’, 1945–1950. UH 41 3 (2014) 497–516.

Urban renewal

  1. 755. HYDE Z, Omnivorous gentrification: restaurant reviews and neighbourhood change in the downtown eastside of Vancouver. CitC 13 4 (2014) 341–59.

  2. 756. NEILL W, MURRAY M & GRIST B eds, Relaunching Titanic: memory and marketing in the new Belfast. London: Routledge 2014. pp xvi + 142.

  3. 757. PENDLEBURY J, ERTON E & LARKHAM P, Alternative visions of post-war reconstruction: creating the modern townscape. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp xv + 257.

  4. 758. TALEN E, Housing demolition during urban renewal. CitC 13 3 (2014) 233–53.

  5. 759. TELESCA G, Dealing with the past and planning the future: the urban renewal of Rome and Barcelona through the Olympic Games. EurRH 21 1 (2014) 19–36.

  6. 760. VON HOFFMAN A et al., Forum: urban renewal. JUH 40 4 (2014) 631–47.

  7. 761. WAGNER P, New life for American downtowns? The 1958 international seminar on urban renewal and the travel of planning ideas in the North Atlantic World. PlP 29 2 (2014) 189–208.

IX Urban culture

Research methods, aids and materials

  1. 762. BARTOLINI N, Critical urban heritage: from palimpsest to brecciation. IJHerS 20 5 (2014) 519–33.

Social life, customs and traditions

  1. 763. BARTLETT R & PAYNE R, Britain's Crimean War trophy guns: the case of Ludlow and the Marches. H 99 337 (2014) 652–69.

  2. 764. BASTON K, Harlequin Highlander: spectacular geographies at the Edinburgh Equestrian Circus, 1790–1800. EPVC 12 3 (2014) 283–303.

Urban culture and entertainment

  1. 765. BATSLEER J & HUGHES J, Looking from the other side of the street: youth, participation and the arts in the edgelands of urban Manchester. In KALANTIDOU E & FRY T eds, Design in the borderlands. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 156–72.

  2. 766. BELLANTA M & SLEIGHT S, The Leary Larrikin: street style in colonial Australia. CulSH 11 2 (2014) 263–83.

  3. 767. BIDDLE-PERRY G, Fashioning suburban aspiration: awheel with the Catford Cycling Club, 1886–1900. LJ 39 3 (2014) 187–204.

  4. 768. BIDDLE-PERRY G, The rise of ‘The world's largest sport and athletic outfitter’: a study of Gamage's of Holborn, 1878–1913. SpiH 34 2 (2014) 295–317.

  5. 769. BRIGSTOKE J, The life of the city: space, humour, and the experience of truth in fin-de-siècle Montmartre. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp xv + 246.

  6. 770. CAMPBELL M, Theatre building, building theatre: fostering disruption and community through arts and education. DR 58 1 (2014) 9–15.

  7. 771. CHARLTON D, New light on the bouffons in Paris (1752–1754). ECM 11 1 (2014) 31–54.

  8. 772. CONCEISON C, China's axperimental mainstream: the Badass theatre of Meng Jinghui. DR 58 1 (2014) 64–88.

  9. 773. COWMAN K, Touring behind the lines: British soldiers in French towns and cities during the Great War. UH 41 1 (2014) 105–23.

  10. 774. DEBENHAM M, Joseph Merlin in London, 1760–1803: the man behind the mask. New documentary sources. RCRMA 45 1 (2014) 130–63.

  11. 775. EYLES A & SKONE K, London's West End cinemas. Swindon: English Heritage 2014. pp 208.

  12. 775. FEE A, ‘Gaumont offers “La Russie rouge” and all Paris takes sides’: working-class activism in Paris cinemas, 1921–1922. EPVC 12 2 (2014) 238–59.

  13. 776. FOSTER S, BLACKWELL A & GOLDBERG M, The legacy of nineteenth-century replicas for object cultural biographies: lessons in duplication from 1830s Fife. JVC 19 2 (2014) 137–60.

  14. 777. FRASER F, Orchestrating the metropolis: the creation of the Sydney Symphony Orchestra as a modern cultural institution. HAust 11 2 (2014) 196–221.

  15. 778. GAUNSON S, Marvellous Melbourne: lady filmgoers, Spencer's pictures and Cozens Spencer. EPVC 12 1 (2014) 22–36.

  16. 779. GEORGE D, Hamlet and the Southwark ghost. NQ 61 2 (2014) 244–6.

  17. 780. GRAY A, The glamorous Gorbals. HistScot 14 1 (2014) 24–7.

  18. 781. GREWCOCK D, Performing heritage (studies) at the Lord Mayor's show. IJHerS 20 7–8 (2014) 760–81.

  19. 782. GURR A & KARIM-COOPER F eds, Moving Shakespeare indoors: performance and repertoire in the Jacobean playhouse. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp xiii + 284.

  20. 783. HAMERA J, Domestic(-ated) desires, tanked city. DR 58 4 2014. 12–22.

  21. 784. HE Q, Between accommodation and resistance: Pingtan storytelling in 1960s Shanghai. MAsS 48 3 (2014) 524–49.

  22. 785. HECK T, Guitarists in the balconies and rafters: the musical frescoes of Genoa's Spinola palaces. EMus 42 1 (2014) 85–93.

  23. 786. HUFF S, The impresarios of Beale Street: African American and Italian American theatre managers in Memphis, 1900–1915. ThS 55 1 (2014) 22–47.

  24. 787. INCE B, Pierrots perfected: Louis Rihll and artistic developments in concert party entertainment on the London and provincial stage, 1900–1930. ThN 68 2 (2014) 87–119.

  25. 788. JAMES R, Popular culture and working-class taste in Britain, 1930–39: a round of cheap diversions? Manchester: Manchester University Press 2014. pp 282.

  26. 789. LASIC B, Going east: the Wallace Collection at Bethnal Green, 1872–1875. JHC 26 2 (2014) 249–61.

  27. 790. LOCK G & WORRALL D, Cross-dressed performance at the theatrical margins: Hannah Snell, the manual exercise, and the New Wells Spa theater, 1750. HLQ 77 1 (2014) 17–36.

  28. 791. LOWERRE K ed, The lively arts of the London stage, 1675–1725. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp xv + 306.

  29. 792. MAHMOUD J, Brooklyn's experimental frontiers: a performance geography. DR 58 3 (2014) 97–123.

  30. 793. MANLEY L, London and urban popular culture. In HADFIELD A, DIMMOCK M & SHINN A eds, The Ashgate research companion to popular culture in early modern England. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 357–72.

  31. 794. MANLEY L & MACLEAN S, Lord Strange's men and their plays. New Haven: Yale University Press 2014. pp xi + 475.

  32. 795. MEE L & WALKER J eds, Cinema, television and history: new approaches. Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2014. pp vii + 284.

  33. 796. OGRAJENSEK S, Appreciating Bononcini's Astianatte (1727): an Italian opera for the London stage. In LOWERRE K ed, The lively arts of the London stage, 1675–1725. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 209–42.

  34. 797. REHMAN N, Description, display and distribution: cultivating a garden identity in late nineteenth-century Lahore. SHGDL 34 2 (2014) 176–86.

  35. 798. ROCK A, The ‘khaki fever’ moral panic: women's patrols and the policing of cinemas in London, 1913–19. EPVC 12 1 (2014) 57–72.

  36. 799. RUSSELL D, Glimpsing La Dolce Vita: cultural change and modernity in the 1960s English cabaret club. JSocH 47 2 (2014) 297–318.

  37. 800. SAGLAM BG, Rocking London: youth culture as commodity in The Buddha of Suburbia. JPopC 47 3 (2014) 554–70.

  38. 801. SÁNCHEZ TROLLIET A, ‘Buenos Aires beat’: a topography of rock culture in Buenos Aires, 1965–1970. UH 41 3 (2014) 517–36.

  39. 802. SONNE W, The enduring concept of civic art. In PENDLEBURY J, ERTEN E & LARKHAM P eds, Alternative visions of post-war reconstruction: creating the modern townscape. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 14–32.

  40. 803. SUMARTOJO S, ‘Dazzling relief’: floodlighting and national affective atmospheres on VE Day 1945. JHG 45 (2014) 59–69.

  41. 804. SUN WH, Shalom Shanghai. DR 58 1 (2014) 141–66.

  42. 805. THORNTON M, When the lights go down: the story of cinemas of a Midlands town. Ely: Melrose Books 2014. pp x + 196.

  43. 806. TITTLER R, Early Stuart Chester as a centre for regional portraiture. UH 41 1 (2014) 3–21.

  44. 807. TOULMIN V, ‘Bid me discourse, I will enchant thine ear’: Frank Matcham in Blackpool (1889–1920). EPVC 12 1 (2014) 37–56.

  45. 808. TRUSSLER S, Charles Marowitz in London: twenty-five years hard: Marowitz in the sixties. NTQ 30 3 (2014) 203–6.

  46. 809. WALKER K, Spectatorship and vision in the York Corpus Christi plays. Com 45 (2014) 169–89.

  47. 810. WATT P & RABINOVICI, Alexandra Palace: music, leisure, and the cultivation of ‘higher civilization’ in the late nneteenth century. M & L 95 2 (2014) 183–212.

Forms of entertainment

  1. 811. BALDWIN O & WILSON T, The singers of the Judgement of Paris. In LOWERRE K ed, The lively arts of the London stage, 1675–1725. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 11–26.

  2. 812. BHASIN C, Prostitutes, nuns, actresses: breaking the convent wall in seventeenth-century Venice. ThJ 66 1 (2014) 19–35.

  3. 813. BISSIONETTE M, The right to write; or, Colley Cibber and the Drury-Lane monster. In LOWERRE K ed, The lively arts of the London stage, 1675–1725. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 243–58.

  4. 814. CABLE J, Composing after the Italian manner: the English cantata 1700–1710. In LOWERRE K ed, The lively arts of the London stage, 1675–1725. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 63–84.

  5. 815. CHEUNG J H Y, Response to Ananya Kabir, ‘Oceans, cities, islands: site and routes of Afro-diasporic rhythm cultures’. AtlSt 11 1 (2014) 125–7.

  6. 816. CLAPSON M, Global sport in the suburbs: the Regent Street Polytechnic's sports facilities at Chiswick, 1888–1938. LJ 39 3 (2014) 265–80.

  7. 817. DWYER J, Remembering Alexander Hamilton: the political impact of street theatre in the early republic. NYH 95 2 (2014) 223–42.

  8. 818. HILLIARD C, Popular reading and social investigation in Britain, 1850s–1940s. HJ 57 1 (2014) 247–71.

  9. 819. HINDSON C, ‘Gratuitous assistance’?: the West End theatre industry, late Victorian charity, and patterns of theatrical fundraising. NTQ 30 1 (2014) 17–28.

  10. 820. JAMES G & DAY D, The emergence of an Association Football culture in Manchester 1840–1884. SpiH 34 1 (2014) 49–74.

  11. 821. KABIR AJ, Oceans, cities, islands: sites and routes of Afro-diasporic rhythm cultures. AtlSt 11 1 (2014) 106–24.

  12. 822. LEIBENLUFT M & JOHANSSON WANG M, Spiritual farming: performance at Shanghai's downstream garage. DR 58 1 (2014) 24–41.

  13. 823. LIANG S, Performing dream or reality: the dilemma of Chinese community-based theatre. DR 58 1 (2014) 16–23.

  14. 824. LOWERRE K, ‘Quotation is the sincerest form of. . .’?: signature songs as inter-theatrical references. In LOWERRE K ed, The lively arts of the London stage, 1675–1725. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 259–90.

  15. 825. MARTIN C, Performing the city. DR 58 3 2014. 10–17.

  16. 826. NANNESTAD I, ‘Bubbles’, ‘Abe my boy’ and ‘the Fowler war cry’: singing at the Vetch Field in the 1920s. SpiS 17 3 (2014) 320–9.

  17. 827. NEUFELDT T, Music, magic, and morality: stage reform and the pastoral mode. In LOWERRE K ed, The lively arts of the London stage, 1675–1725. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 129–48.

  18. 828. PAYNE M, Going to the pictures: a short history of cinema in Nottingham. Nottingham: Nottingham Civic Society 2014. pp 74.

  19. 829. PHILLIPS C & BOUCHIER N, Building and re-building a city through sport: Hamilton, Ontario and the British Empire and Commonwealth Games, 1930–2003. SpiH 34 3 (2014) 390–410.

  20. 830. RED M, Who are the ‘emos’ anyway? Youth violence in Mexico City and the myth of the revolution. JPMS 26 1 (2014) 101–20.

  21. 831. ROBINSON A, Knocking for air: the diving bell and interactivity in nineteenth-century London. NCTF 41 1 (2014) 38–53.

  22. 832. ROCK A, ‘We must go about it in our own way and have complete control’: the British film industry and the Metropolitan Police press bureau, 1919–1938. In MEE L & WALKER J eds, Cinema, television and history: new approaches. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2014. 26–46.

  23. 833. SCHIPPER I, City as performance. DR 58 3 (2014) 18–26.

  24. 834. SMITH J, Bleak House on London's East End stage, 1853: George Dibdin Pitt and Dickens at the Royal Pavilion Theatre. NCTF 41 1 (2014) 2–20.

  25. 835. SUN WH, Performing Shanghai and beyond: an introduction. DR 58 1 (2014) 7–8.

  26. 836. THORP J, From Scaramouche to Harlequin: dances ‘in grotesque characters’ on the London stage. In LOWERRE K, The lively arts of the London stage, 1675–1725. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. 113–28.

  27. 837. WILCOX E, Meaning in movement: adaptation and the Xiqu body in intercultural Chinese theatre. DR 58 1 (2014) 42–63.

  28. 838. ZHUANG J, DR 58 1 (2014) 118–40.

Exchange of information

  1. 839. ABBAS H, ‘A fund of entertaining and useful information’: coffee houses, early public libraries, and the print trade in eighteenth-century Dublin. L & IH 30 1 (2014) 41–61.

  2. 840. ASLANIAN S, Port cities and printers: reflections on early modern global Armenian print culture. BookH 17 (2014) 51–93.

  3. 841. CRAWFORD J, ‘The high state of culture to which this part of the country has attained’: libraries, reading, and society in Paisley, 1760–1830. L & IH 30 3 (2014) 172–94.

  4. 842. DOS SANTOS M, A note from Brazil: looking at the production of design knowledge in Brazil. In KALANTIDOU E & FRY T eds, Design in the borderlands. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 151–5.

  5. 843. FELDMAN R, Dyeing and the London Dyers' Company: membership, craft, and knowledge transmission, 1649–1829. LJ 39 1 (2014) 37–58.

  6. 844. FEOLA V, Antiquarianism, astrology, and the press in William Lilly's network. Setep 16 2 (2014) 187–203.

  7. 845. HAREL Y, Ha-Mizrah/al-Sharq: a Zionist newspaper in Damascus during the reign of Faysal in 1920. MES 50 1 (2014) 129–43.

  8. 846. HEFFERNAN M, Geography and the Paris Academy of Sciences: politics and patronage in early 18th-century France. IBG 39 1 (2014) 62–75.

  9. 847. HILL T, Owners and collectors of the printed books of the early modern Lord Mayors' shows. L & IH 30 3 (2014) 151–71.

  10. 848. HILLIARD C, The twopenny library: the book trade, working-class readers, and ‘middlebrow’ novels in Britain, 1930–42. TCBH 25 2 (2014) 199–220.

  11. 849. JOBY C, The Dutch language in early modern Norfolk: a social history. DC 38 2 (2014) 154–88.

  12. 850. JOBY C, Dutch poetry in early modern Norfolk. DC 38 2 (2014) 189–203.

  13. 851. LANGEN U, Defending citizenship, defining citizenship: rumours, pamphleteering & the general public in late eighteenth-century Copenhagen. In COWMAN K, KOEFOED N & SJÖGREN Å eds, Gender in urban Europe: sites of political activity and citizenship 1750–1900. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 42–57.

  14. 852. MAXSON B, The humanist world of Renaissance Florence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014. pp x + 301.

  15. 853. MORTON A, Intensive ephemera: the Catholick Gamesters and the visual culture of news in Restoration London. In DAVIES S & FLETCHER P eds, News in early modern Europe: currents and connections. Leiden: Brill 2014. 115–40.

  16. 854. NOBLETT W, Cheese, stolen paper, and the London book trade, 1750–99. ECL 38 3 (2014) 100–110.

  17. 855. PAISLEY F, History lessons in Hyde Park: embodying the Australian frontier in interwar London. In REID K & PAISLEY F eds, Critical perspectives on colonialism: writing the Empire from below. New York: Routledge 2014. 85–101.

  18. 856. POOLEY C, Migrants and the media in nineteenth-century Liverpool. LPS 92 (2014) 24–37.

  19. 857. REGISTER W, Some truths about the rumors, gossip, hearsay, and innuendo surrounding the Freeport murder mystery of 1914. RethH 18 1 (2014) 50–67.

  20. 858. SALZBERG R, Ephemeral city: cheap print and urban culture in Renaissance Venice. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2014. pp 240.

  21. 859. STOKER D, Another look at the Dicey-Marshall publications: 1736–1806. Lib 15 2 (2014) 111–57.

  22. 860. SZRAJBER T, Henry Monnier's letters from London in 1825. PQ 31 3 (2014) 299–308.

  23. 861. VAN DER HAVEN C, The performance of commercial knowledge in eighteenth-century Dutch and German urban drama. DC 38 1 (2014) 39–58.

  24. 862. WATSON R, Literacy as a style of life: garveyism and gentlemen in colonial Ibadan. AS 73 1 (2014) 1–21.

  25. 863. WOLF N, Advocacy, the enlightenment, and the Catholic print trade in Mathew Carey's Dublin. EI 49 3–4 (2014) 224–69.

  26. 864. WOLF N & BANKHURST B, Introduction: Mathew Carey and Dublin. EI 49 3–4 (2014) 172–5.

Education

  1. 865. DELMONT M, Working toward a working-class college: the long campaign to build a community college in Philadelphia. HEQ 54 4 (2014) 429–64.

  2. 866. GARTNER N, The end of Hamburg's anglophilia: Wilhelmine Hamburg attitudes viewed through school examination essays and a university lecture (1912–1914). HE 43 5 (2014) 579–91.

  3. 867. GERRARD T & WEEDON A, Working-class women's education in Huddersfield: a case study of the Female Educational Institute Library, 1856–1857. I & C 49 2 (2014) 234–64.

  4. 868. GRAY D, Putting undergraduates on trial: using the Old Bailey Online as a teaching and assessment tool. LCH 4 1 (2014) 104–13.

  5. 869. HARDCASTLE J, MEDWAY P, BREWIS G & CROOK D, English teachers in a postwar democracy: emerging choice in London schools, 1945–1965. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2014. pp xviii + 243.

  6. 870. HULONCE L, ‘These valuable institutions’: educating blind and deaf children in Victorian and Edwardian Swansea. WHR 27 2 (2014) 310–37.

  7. 871. JACKSON S, ‘In accord with British traditions’: the rise of compulsory religious education in Ontario, Canada, and Victoria, Australia, 1945–50. JICH 42 4 (2014) 693–709.

  8. 872. MCKERR L & MURPHY E, Tales out of school: the ‘hidden curriculum’ in national schools in the north of Ireland during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. ChP 7 1 (2014) 49–71.

  9. 873. MIGGINS E, ‘No crystal stair’: the Cleveland public schools and the struggle for equality, 1900–1930. JUH 40 4 (2014) 671–98.

  10. 874. MORGAN M, A field of great promise: teachers’ migration to the urban far west, 1890–1930. HEQ 54 1 (2014) 70–97.

  11. 875. REES-JONES S, Civic literacy in later medieval England. In MOSTERT M & ADAMSKA A eds, Writing and the administration of medieval towns: medieval urban literacy. Turnhout: Brepols 2014. 219–30.

  12. 876. SCHWER A, Oxford for factory workers: the People's College of Sheffield. In BUTTON M & SHEETZ-NGUYEN eds, Victorians and the case for charity: essays on reponses to English poverty by the state, the church and the literati. Jefferson, NC: McFarland 2014. 200–24.

  13. 877. TAYLOR L, Literacy and book ownership in seventeenth-century Faversham. AC 134 (2014) 205–19.

  14. 878. WALKER M, ‘Earnest students anxious to acquire a practical knowledge suited to the trade of the district’: the growth and development of the Mechanics' Institute movement with particular reference to Huddersfield 1824–1890. JEA&H 46 1 (2014) 38–56.

  15. 879. WILLIAMS K, Re-shaping teacher identity? The Liverpool Teachers’ Centre 1973–1976. HE 43 6 (2014) 820–38.

X Attitudes towards cities

Research methods, aids and materials

  1. 880. AKKACH S, Moderning and design in the Arab world: professional identity and social responsibility. In KALANTIDOU E & FRY T eds, Design in the borderlands. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 61–75.

  2. 881. FRY T, China vs China: conflict and translation. In KALANTIDOU E & FRY T eds, Design in the borderlands. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 12–36.

  3. 882. FRY T, Timor-Leste: unlearning in order to be. In KALANTIDOU E & FRY T eds, Design in the borderlands. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 76–90.

  4. 883. KALANTIDOU E, Back to the third world: the Greek experience. In KALANTIDOU E & FRY T eds, Design in the borderlands. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 37–60.

  5. 884. PEREIRA H & GILLETT C, Africa: designing as existence. In KALANTIDOU E & FRY T eds, Design in the borderlands. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 109–31.

Attitudes towards cities

  1. 885. ASHWORTH GJ & GRAHAM B, Heritage and the reconceptualization of the postwar European city. In STONE D ed, The Oxford handbook of postwar European history. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2014. 582–99.

  2. 886. ASTON N, Queen Anne and Oxford: the Royal Visit of 1702 and its aftermath. JECS 37 2 (2014) 171–84.

  3. 887. ATKINSON H, ‘The first modern townscape’? The Festival of Britain, townscape and the picturesque. In PENDLEBURY J, ERTEN E & LARKHAM P eds, Alternative visions of post-war reconstruction: creating the modern townscape. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 72–89.

  4. 888. BALDERSTONE L, MILNE G & MULHEARN R, Memory and place on the Liverpool waterfront in the mid-twentieth century. UH 41 3 (2014) 478–496.

  5. 889. BAUER R, The mendicants in the new world city. EC 55 4 (2014) 431–4.

  6. 890. BECKETT JV, Inventing and reinventing the modern city: the 2012 city status competition in the United Kingdom. UH 41 4 (2014) 705–20.

  7. 891. BERGMAN J, The Paris Commune in Bolshevik mythology. EHR 129 541 (2014) 1412–41.

  8. 892. BLACKMORE R, The ship, the river and the ocean sea: concepts of space in the seventeenth-century London maritime community. In REDFORD D ed, Maritime history and identity: the sea and culture in the modern world. London: I.B. Tauris 2014. 98–119.

  9. 893. BULLOCK N, Charting the changing approaches to reconstruction in France: urbanisme 1941–56. In PENDLEBURY J, ERTEN E & LARKHAM P eds, Alternative visions of post-war reconstruction: creating the modern townscape. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 181–98.

  10. 894. CARNEVALE N, Italian American and African American encounters in the city and in the suburb. JUH 40 3 (2014) 536–62.

  11. 895. CHATTOPADHYAY S, Politics, plannng, and subjection: anticolonial nationalism and public space in colonial Calcutta. In CHATTOPADHYAY S & WHITE J eds, City halls and civic materialism: towards a global history of urban public space. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 199–216.

  12. 896. CHENG ELI A & MA S, Resistance, engagement, and heritage conservation by voluntary sector: the case of Penang in Malaysia. MAsS 48 3 (2014) 617–44.

  13. 897. CHIN A, Diasporic memories and conceptual geography in post-colonial Hong Kong. MAsS 48 6 (2014) 1566–93.

  14. 898. CHOPRA P, The Bombay town hall: engaging the function and quality of public space, 1811–1918. In CHATTOPADHYAY S & WHITE J eds, City halls and civic materialism: towards a global history of urban public space. London: Routledge 2014. 158–76.

  15. 899. CHURCHILL D, Living in a leisure town: residential reactions to the growth of popular tourism in Southend, 1870–1890. UH 41 1 (2014) 42–61.

  16. 900. CONN S, Americans against the city: anti-urbanism in the twentieth century. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2014. pp 392.

  17. 901. COOK M, Agents of memorialization: Gunter Demnig's Stolpersteine and the individual (re-)creation of a Holocaust landscape in Berlin. JHG 43 (2014) 138–47.

  18. 902. CORRADINI R, Pieces of a puzzle: time and history in Walahfrid's Vademecum. EME 22 4 (2014) 476–91.

  19. 903. CROSBY A, Perceptions of Liverpool 1530–2010: the historical evidence of contemporary observers. LocH 44 1 (2014) 51–68.

  20. 904. DANTAS M, Narrating the early modern American city: a historical prequel to the global city. JUH 40 5 (2014) 993–9.

  21. 905. DE SAPIO J, Modernity and meaning in Victorian London: tourist views of the imperial capital. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2014. pp v + 204.

  22. 906. DEMSHUK A, Godfather cities: West German Patenschaften and the lost German east. GeH 32 2 (2014) 224–55.

  23. 907. DOUGLAS G, Do-it-yourself urban design: the social practice of informal ‘improvement’ through unauthorized alteration. CitC 13 1 (2014) 5–25.

  24. 908. DYMITROW M, The effigy of urbanity or a rural parody? A visual approach to small-town public space. CGeog 31 1 (2014) 1–31.

  25. 909. ECHLIN A, Dynasty, archaeology and conservation: the Bourbon rediscovery of Pompeii and Herculaneum in eighteenth-century Naples. JHC 26 2 (2014) 145–59.

  26. 910. ERTEN E, Townscape as a project and strategy of cultural continuity. In PENDLEBURY J, ERTEN E & LARKHAM P eds, Alternative visions of post-war reconstruction: creating the modern townscape. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 35–53.

  27. 911. EVELEV J, Rus-urban imaginings: literature of the American park movement and representations of social space in the mid-nineteenth century. EAmS 12 1 (2014) 174–201.

  28. 912. FAN L, International influence and local response: understanding community involvement in urban heritage conservation in China. IJHerS 20 6 (2014) 651–62.

  29. 913. FRIEDRICHS C, How German was the German home town? CEH 47 3 (2014) 488–95.

  30. 914. GANTNER C, Romana urbs: levels of Roman and imperial identity in the city of Rome. EME 22 4 (2014) 461–75.

  31. 915. GENTRY K, Curating a capital. HAust 11 2 (2014) 240–2.

  32. 916. GORDON A, What to see and how to see it: tourists, residents, and the beginnings of the walking tour in nineteenth-century Quebec City. JTH 6 1 2014. 74–90.

  33. 917. GREGORY J, Town halls in Australia: sites of conflict and consensus. In CHATTOPADHYAY S & WHITE J eds, City halls and civic materialism: towards a global history of urban public space. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 115–35.

  34. 918. GREGORY J & GRANT J, The role of emotions in protests against modernist urban redevelopment in Perth and Halifax. UHR 42 2 (2014) 44–62.

  35. 919. GRUWEIS-KOVALSKY O, The relocation of the Israeli Foreign Ministry in 1953 and the Jerusalem question. JHG 46 (2014) 80–91.

  36. 920. HIRT S & ZAHM D eds, The urban wisdom of Jane Jacobs. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. pp xvi + 272.

  37. 921. HOFER A, The Sulzer/SLM site in Winterhur, Switzerland: from factory to the new town – the reinvention of the city. In MIEG H & OEVERMANN H eds, Industrial heritage sites in transformation: clash of discourses. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 79–94.

  38. 922. JACKISCH B, The nature of Berlin: green space and visions of a new German capital, 1900–45. CEH 47 2 (2014) 307–33.

  39. 923. JÜTTE D, Entering a city: on a lost early modern practice. UH 41 2 (2014) 204–27.

  40. 924. KENNY N, Emotions and city life. UHR 42 2 (2014) 5–7.

  41. 925. KOROBIENIKOV D, Byzantium and the Turks in the thirteenth century. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2014. pp 400.

  42. 926. LARKHAM P & LILLEY K, Townscape and scenery: conceptualizing and communicating the new urban landscape in British post-war planning. In PENDLEBURY J, ERTEN E & LARKHAM P eds, Alternative visions of post-war reconstruction: creating the modern townscape. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 108–22.

  43. 927. LAVERY C, DIXON D & HASSALL L, The future of ruins: the baroque melancholy of Hashima. EP 46 11 (2014) 2569–84.

  44. 928. MCKITTERICK R, The pleasures of the past: history and identity in the early Middle Ages. EME 22 4 (2014) 388–405.

  45. 929. MACKRODT U & KALANDIDES A, Competing yet supplementing narratives in Berlin: creative branding and heritage policies in Berlin's post-industrial development. In MIEG H & OEVERMANN H eds, Industrial heritage sites in transformation: clash of discourses. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 126–45.

  46. 930. MARTOCCIO M, Ideal types and negotiated identities: a comparative approach to the city-state. JIH 45 2 (2014) 187–200.

  47. 931. MEIG H & OEVERMANN H, Discussing industrial heritage conservation and planning. In MIEG H & OEVERMANN H eds, Industrial heritage sites in transformation: clash of discourses. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 201–18.

  48. 932. MELTON S, Toyi-toying in Birmingham: the challenges of global antiapartheid commemoration. RHR 119 (2014) 179–90.

  49. 933. MINNERY J, Off the shelf or tailor-made? Sources of ideas for the creation of Greater Brisbane in 1924. IJRLH 9 2 (2014) 107–22.

  50. 934. MORRISON T, Albrecht Dürer and the ideal city. Pare 31 1 (2014) 137–60.

  51. 935. MUIR P, Gordon Matta-Clark's conical intersect: sculpture, space, and the cultural value of urban imagery. Farnham: Ashgate 2014. pp ix + 198.

  52. 936. MUSI M, The international heritage doctrine and the management of heritage in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina: the case of the Commission to Preserve National Monuments. IJHerS 20 1 (2014) 54–71.

  53. 937. MUSSELWHITE P, Annapolis aflame: Richard Clarke's conspiracy and the imperial urban vision in Maryland, 1704–8. W & MQ 71 3 (2014) 361–400.

  54. 938. MYERS GA, Moving beyond colonialism: town halls and Sub-Saharan Africa's postcolonial capitals. In CHATTOPADHYAY S & WHITE J eds, City halls and civic materialism: towards a global history of urban public space. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 237–54.

  55. 939. NAAR D, Fashioning the ‘mother of Israel’: the Ottoman Jewish historical narrative and the image of Jewish Salonica. JeH 28 3–4 (2014) 337–72.

  56. 940. NAZEMI P, Necessity of urban transformation in introverted historic textures: the ancient Persian city of Yazd. JPH 13 1 (2014) 50–67.

  57. 941. OTTO S, A garden from ashes: the post-9/11 Manhattan city-shrine, the triangle fire memorial march, and the educative value of mourning. JSocH 47 3 (2014) 573–92.

  58. 942. PANTE M, Rickshaws and Filipinos: transnational meanings of technology and labor in American-occupied Manila. IRSH 59 22 (2014) 133–59.

  59. 943. POHL W, Romanness: a multiple identity and its changes. EME 22 4 (2014) 406–18.

  60. 944. POLLHEIMER M, Preaching Romanness in the early Middle Ages: the sermon De litaniis from the Eusebius Gallicanus collection. EME 22 4 (2014) 419–32.

  61. 945. POLYAK L, Recycling the industrial between west and east: heritage and the politics of urban memory in New York and Budapest. In MIEG H & OEVERMANN H eds, Industrial heritage sites in transformation: clash of discourses. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 167–84.

  62. 946. POPE R, Building Jerusalem: nonconformity, Labour and the social question in Wales, 1906–1939. Cardiff: University of Wales Press 2014. pp 288.

  63. 947. RAY S, Colonial frames, ‘native’ claims: the Jaipur economic and industrial museum. ArtB 96 2 (2014) 196–212.

  64. 948. RUDDIN L, The ‘firsts’ world war: a history of the morale of Liverpudlians as told through letters to Liverpool editors, 1915–1918. IJRLH 9 2 (2014) 79–93.

  65. 949. SANDWEISS E, ‘History and reality have become the same thing’: city museums and city plans in London, 1912–2012. MuHJ 7 1 (2014) 2–17.

  66. 950. SCHAAL D, Museums and industrial heritage: history, functions, perspectives. In MIEG H & OEVERMANN H eds, Industrial heritage sites in transformation: clash of discourses. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 146–53.

  67. 951. STOYLE M, Water in the city: the aqueducts and underground passages of Exeter. Exeter: University of Exeter Press 2014. pp 320.

  68. 952. THODY L, From working class to hipster flash: locating Newcastle City in Newcastle Brown Ale. VCB 15 2 (2014) 173–91.

  69. 953. THOMPSON V, An alarming lack of feeling: urban travel, emotions, and British national character in post-revolutionary Paris. UHR 42 2 (2014) 8–17.

  70. 954. TOTAH F, ‘Nothing has changed’: social continuity and the gentrification of the old city of Damascus. AnQ 87 4 (2014) 1201–27.

  71. 955. TROUILLE D, Fencing a field: imagined others in the unfolding of a neighbourhood park conflict. CitC 13 1 (2014) 69–87.

  72. 956. URUSHIMA A F, Everyday unavoidable modernization and the image of hell: visual planning in the writings of Nishiyama Uzō. In PENDLEBURY J, ERTEN E & LARKHAM P eds, Alternative visions of post-war reconstruction: creating the modern townscape. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 90–107.

  73. 957. VAN ASSCHE K, Ernest Oberholtzer and the art of boundary crossing: writing, life and the narratives of conservation and planning. PlP 29 1 (2014) 45–65.

  74. 958. WALTER N, From values to narrative: a new foundation for the conservation of historic buildings. IJHerS 20 6 (2014) 634–50.

  75. 959. WANG C, How does a house remember? Heritage-ising return migration in an Indonesian-Chinese house museum in Guangdong, PRC. IJHerS 24 4 (2014) 454–74.

  76. 960. WARD G, All roads lead to Rome? Frechulf of Lisieux, Augustine and Orosius. EME 22 4 (2014) 492–505.

  77. 961. WEEBERS R & AHMED Y, Interpretation of Simon Stevin's ideas on the Verenigde Oostindische Compagnie (United East Indies Company) settlement of Malacca. PlP 29 4 (2014) 543–55.

  78. 962. WHITE S, The gold diggers of 1833: African American dreams, fortune-telling, treasure-seeking, and policy in antebellum New York City. JSocH 47 3 (2014) 673–95.

  79. 963. WOLFE E, Paris as periphery: Vicente do Rego Monteiro and Brazil's discrepant cosmopolitanism. ArtB 96 1 (2014) 98–119.

  80. 964. YAP F, A ‘new sngle of vision’: British imperial reappraisal of Hong Kong during the Second World War. JICH 42 1 (2014) 86–113.

  81. 965. YOUSEFIAN S, Picnics for patriots: the transnational activism of an Armenian hometown association. JAEH 34 1 (2014) 31–52.

Views of the city in literature, graphics and drama

  1. 966. ACERBI P, ‘A long poem of walking’: flâneurs, vendors, and chronicles of post-abolition Rio de Janeiro. JUH 40 1 (2014) 97–115.

  2. 967. BELL K, Civic spirits? Ghost lore and civic narratives in nineteenth-century Portsmouth. CulSH 11 1 (2014) 51–68.

  3. 968. BELLVER C, Confronting the urban nightmare: La pared transparente by Ernestina de Champourcin. Hisp 97 1 (2014) 81–90.

  4. 969. BRANNIGAN J, ‘For the readies’: Brendan Behan, crime fiction, and the Dublin underworld. EI 49 1–2 (2014) 92–105.

  5. 970. BROWN I G, Reekiana: ‘spectator of the busy scene’: a visitor of 1793 experiences Edinburgh outside and in. BOEC 10 (2014) 157–64.

  6. 971. BURKE D, The Lawn Road flats: spies, writers and artists. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press 2014. pp xx + 271.

  7. 972. CANNIFFE E, Neo-Realism: urban form and La Dolce Vita in post-war Italy 1945–75. In PENDLEBURY J, ERTEN E & LARKHAM P eds, Alternative visions of post-war reconstruction: creating the modern townscape. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 227–44.

  8. 973. CUBITT E, ‘The screaming streets’: voice and the spaces of gossip in Tales of mean streets (1894) and Liza of Lambeth (1897). ISLNC 18 (2014) 1–23.

  9. 974. DE PIERI F, Visualizing the historic city: planners and the representation of Italy's built heritage. In PENDLEBURY J, ERTEN E & LARKHAM P eds, Alternative visions of post-war reconstruction: creating the modern townscape. Abingdon: Routledge 2014. 54–71.

  10. 975. EWERS C, Roads as regions, networks and flows: Waverley and the ‘periphery’ of romance. JECS 37 1 (2014) 97–112.

  11. 976. FISCHER A, Reflecting Romanness in the Fredegar Chronicle. EME 22 4 2014. 433–45.

  12. 977. GORAK J, Angels, dancers, mermaids: the hidden history of Peckham in Muriel Spark's The Ballad of Peckham Rye. SLR 6 1 (2014) 29–46.

  13. 978. GRIFONI C, A new witness of the third recension of ps.-Methodius' Revelationes: Winithar's manuscript St Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, MS 238 and the role of Rome in human history. EME 22 4 (2014) 446–60.

  14. 979. KARGAN J, One city's ‘urban cosmography’. PlP 29 1 (2014) 103–20.

  15. 980. LEMAHIEU D, ‘Scholarship boys’ in twilight: the memoirs of six humanists in post-industrial Britain. JBS 53 4 (2014) 1011–31.

  16. 981. MARTIN MC, In market, mansion or mountain: representations of disability in reading for the young in rural and urban contexts, 1850–1950. ChP 7 1 (2014) 35–48.

  17. 982. MINTZKER Y, The paradox of visual and material cultures in Mack Walker's German home towns. CEH 47 3 (2014) 505–12.

  18. 983. NIXON L, Marginalized memories: Carmen Sylva in Llandudno. IJRLH 9 2 (2014) 94–106.

  19. 984. QURESHI B, A hierophany emergent: the discursive reconquest of the urban landscape of Jerusalem in Latin pilgrimage accounts from the twelfth century. TH 76 4 (2014) 725–49.

  20. 985. SEGRE V, New research on a rare fresco map of Jerusalem. IM 66 2 (2014) 224–35.

  21. 986. TRAVIS T, ‘Belching it forth their sooty jaws’: John Evelyn's vision of a ‘volcanic’ city. LJ 39 1 (2014) 1–20.

  22. 987. VERSTEEGH A, ‘Another night that London knew’: Dante Gabriel Rossetti's ‘Jenny’ and the poetics of urban insomnia. NCC 36 5 (2014) 551–63.

  23. 988. WILLIAMS R, ‘The past isn't dead. . .it's deadly’: horror, history and locale in Whitechapel. JBCT 11 1 (2014) 68–85.