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Books in the The Macat Library series

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  • by Monique Diderich & Elizabeth Mamali
    £7.99 - 20.49

    Recognizing that companies went bust when the market for their products dried up, Levitt set out to learn why. The manifesto he produced aimed to upend conventional wisdom that viewed a company's product as paramount.

  • by Laura E.B. Key & Brittany Pheiffer Noble
    £20.49

    Edited and produced from the lecture notes of his students at the University of Geneva, the Course in General Linguistics was first published in 1916, three years after its author's death. The book sets out Saussure's theory that all languages share the same underlying structure, regardless of historical or cultural context.

  • - Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland
    by James Chappel & Tom Stammers
    £7.99

    Before Browning's 1992 book, most Holocaust scholarship focused either on the experience of the victims or on the Nazi political ideology driving the slaughter. Browning investigates something else: the men who carried out acts of extreme violence. Who were they? How could they end up committing such unspeakable acts?

  • - Vol. 1: The Will to Knowledge
    by Rachele Dini & Chiara Briganti
    £7.99 - 20.49

    Like Foucault's earlier works, The History of Sexuality (1976) is ground-breaking and controversial. His claim that sexuality is more a social concept than the product of biological instincts challenges the accepted idea that it was the rise of modernity and capitalism that resulted in repression of sexualities.

  • - The World the Slaves Made
    by Cheryl Hudson & Eva Namusoke
    £7.99 - 20.49

    Roll Jordan Roll (1974) is a study of the relationship between master and slave in the United States in the late 18th and 19th centuries. Genovese looks beyond the idea of paternalism-where owners limited slaves' freedoms for their own good-suggesting the relationship was more complex.

  • - Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness
    by Ryan Moore
    £7.99

    The United States has the world's largest prison population, with more than two million behind bars. Alexander says this is mainly due to America's 'war on drugs,' launched in 1982. In The New Jim Crow, she explains how this government initiative has led to America's black citizens being imprisoned on a colossal scale.

  • by Nicholas Piercey & Tom Stammers
    £20.49

    Postmodernist thinkers consider history to be not very far removed from a work of fiction, something dependent on historians' own interpretations of the past. Evans, however, argues that we can trust history and it is possible to be objective about what happened and what caused it to happen.

  • by Etienne Stockland & Pilar Zazueta
    £7.99 - 20.49

    In His book Gender and the Politics of History (1998), Scott draws attention to the fact that despite gender equality's long-term recognition there has been no genuinely revolutionary change unlike economic, social, and class inequalities.

  • by Duncan Money & Jason Xidas
    £7.99 - 20.49

    Slavery had been accepted in Western culture for centuries. So why did a movement suddenly rise up in the industrial era calling for its abolition? Could it be that people had suddenly become more enlightened and humanitarian? Or were there other, more compelling and perhaps self-serving reasons for this sudden about-turn?

  • - Thoughts on the Nature of Mass Movements
    by Jonah S. Rubin
    £7.99

    Hoffer began writing The True Believer in the 1940s, as Nazism and fascism spread across Europe. Most analysts studying how these movements became so powerful focused on their leaders and the ideas they trumpeted. Hoffer focused on the followers. He saw that people joining mass movements all had common traits.

  • - American Families in the Cold War Era
    by Jarrod Homer
    £7.99 - 20.49

    With the ending of World War II in 1945, the Soviet Union and the United States began the decades-long confrontation known as the Cold War. American foreign policy focused on 'containment'-preventing the communist USSR from gaining more ground-and many people looked at the geographical and political implications of this policy.

  • by John Collins
    £7.99 - 20.49

    Classical economics suggests that market economies are self-correcting in times of recession or depression, and tend toward full employment and output. But English economist John Maynard Keynes disagrees. In his ground-breaking 1936 study The General Theory, Keynes argues that traditional economics has misunderstood the causes of unemployment.

  • by James Orr
    £7.99 - 20.49

    What is justice? How should an individual and a society behave justly? And how do they learn how to do so? These are just some of the core questions explored in The Republic, considered by many to be Plato's most important work.

  • by Astrid Noren-Nilsson
    £20.49

    Before the publication of Nature's Metropolis in 1991, historians generally treated urban and rural areas as distinct from one another, following separate lines of development and maturity.

  • by Jason Xidias & Lorenzo Fusaro
    £7.99 - 20.49

    An important Marxist work, Prison Notebooks (1948) argues that we must understand societies both in terms of their economic relationships and their cultural beliefs.

  • by The Macat Team
    £7.99 - 20.49

    William worked on The Principles of Psychology throughout the 1880s, while teaching psychology and philosophy at Harvard University.

  • by John Collins
    £7.99 - 20.49

    200 years after it was written, Adam Smith published The Wealth of Nations is still debated by governments internationally. Smith argued that 'mercantilism'-the theory that the national economy exists solely to strengthen the government, thus the government should regulate the economy-was wrong.

  • by Jason Xidias & Mano Toth
    £7.99 - 20.49

    Originally published in 1866, Civil Disobedience asks when - and in what circumstances - an individual should actively oppose government and its justice system. Thoreau's argument is that opposition is legitimate whenever government actions or institutions are unacceptable to an individual's conscience.

  • by Janna Miletzki & Nick Broten
    £7.99

    Sen's 1997 work argues that the success or failure of international development cannot be measured by income alone. Having grown up in India, Sen brings his own understanding of poverty to the issue, arguing that the end goal of development must be human freedom.

  • - The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination
    by Rebecca Pohl
    £7.99 - 20.49

  • by Stoyan Stoyanov
    £7.99 - 20.49

    Maslow's 1943 essay established his idea of humanistic psychology as a "third force" in the field. While psychoanalysts sought to understand behaviour by uncovering subconscious desires and behaviourists through analysis of conditioned behaviours.

  • - Racism in Conrad's Heart of Darkness
    by Clare Clarke & Lindsay Scorgie-Porter
    £7.99 - 20.49

    Few works of scholarship have so comprehensively recast an existing debate as Chinua Achebe's essay on Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness.

  • by Rachele Dini
    £7.99 - 20.49

    "Black Skin, White Masks offers a radical analysis of the psychological effects of colonization on the colonized. Fanon witnessed the effects of colonization first hand both in his birthplace, Martinique, and again later in life when he worked as a psychiatrist in another French colony, Algeria.

  • by Nikki Springer
    £7.99

    Carson's 1962 work Silent Spring was one of the first books ever to highlight environmentalist issues. Focusing on the negative, widespread, and long-lasting effects of human activity on the environment-particularly through the use of chemical pesticides in agriculture-Carson argued that we are all morally obliged to look after the environment.

  • by Mark Scarlata
    £7.99 - 20.49

    Lewis's 1952 Mere Christianity-originally printed in pamphlet form during World War II-documents a complex journey from atheism to faith. Lewis's fresh, lively, and often humorous presentation of Christian doctrine helped to make him arguably the greatest defender of Christianity of the 20th century.

  • - Understanding How Good People Turn Evil
    by Alexander O'Connor
    £7.99

    Philip Zimbardo is fascinated by why people can behave in awful ways. uSome psychologists believe those who commit cruelty are innately evil. Zimbardo disagrees.

  • - Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life
    by Christine Ma & Michael Schapira
    £7.99

    Published in 1994, The Bell Curve caused uproar. Herrnstein and Murray claim that intelligence is the key factor in determining success in life and that it is genetic and, more controversially still, that some ethnic groups are more intelligent than others.

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