No masters but God Keith TribeNo masters but God constitutes an in depth study in the writings of a transnational constellation of rabbis, scholars, activists, and theologians active during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It explores how, through the lense of biblical, rabbinic, and kabbalistic literature, they developed themes of anti authoritarianism, antinomianism, nationalism, and pacifism.
Solidly grounded in current historical scholarship
Gendered Transformations offers readers a new foundation from which to reexamine traditional perspectives on gender
The dispute between the two men blew up in the mid-1620s
prisons and minorities
this book traces the lives of Kenya’s ‘white insane’ to focus not on the ‘great white hunters’ and heroic pioneer farmers but on those Europeans who did not manage to emulate the colonial ideal
was fundamentally contingent upon their relationship to and with the various indigenous communities they encountered
is central to Australian national consciousness and this book examines why
Offers the first comprehensive study of the Swiss Reformation and argues that the movement must be understood in terms of the historical evolution of the Swiss Confederation
The printer is identified for the first time
This book redresses the balance
Tales of the Bark Lodges
which explores why they proved so difficult to conclude