1
Ames MM. Cannibal tours and glass boxes: the anthropology of museums. [2nd ed.]. Vancouver: UBC Press 1992.
2
Appadurai A, editor. The social life of things: commodities in cultural perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1986.
3
Bal M. Double exposures: the subject of cultural analysis. London: Routledge 1996.
4
Bal M. Exhibition as film. In: Macdonald S, Basu P, eds. Exhibition experiments. Malden, MA: Blackwell 2007:71–93.
5
Belk RW. Collecting in a consumer society. London: Routledge 1995.
6
Bounia A. The nature of classical collecting: collectors and collections, 100 BCE-100 CE. Aldershot: Ashgate 2004.
7
Bouquet M, Porto N, editors. Science, magic and religion: the ritual processes of museum magic. New York: Berghahn Books 2005.
8
Bal M. Looking in: the art of viewing. Amsterdam: G+B Arts International 2001.
9
Butler SR, Lehrer E, editors. Curatorial dreams: critics imagine exhibitions. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press 2016.
10
Candlin F, Guin R, editors. The object reader. London: Routledge 2009.
11
Carbonell BM, editor. Museum studies: an anthology of contexts. Blackwell 2004.
12
Corsane G, editor. Heritage, museums and galleries: an introductory reader. London: Routledge 2005.
13
Kingery WD, editor. Learning from things: method and theory of material culture studies. London: Smithsonian Institution Press 1996.
14
DeMarrais E, Gosden C, Renfrew C, editors. Rethinking materiality: the engagement of mind with the material world. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research 2004.
15
Dudley SH, editor. Museum objects: experiencing the properties of things. London: Routledge 2012.
16
Dudley SH, editor. Museum materialities: objects, engagements, interpretations. London: Routledge 2010.
17
Elsner J, Cardinal R, editors. The cultures of collecting. London: Reaktion Books 1994.
18
Erskine-Loftus P, editor. Reimagining museums: practice in the Arabian Peninsula. Edinburgh: MuseumsEtc 2013.
19
Erskine-Loftus P, editor. Museums and the material world: collecting the Arabian Peninsula. Edinburgh: MuseumsEtc 2014.
20
Erskine-Loftus P, Hightower VP, Al-Mulla MI, editors. Representing the nation: heritage, museums, national narratives, and identity in the Arab Gulf States. London: Routledge 2016.
21
Exell K. The global spectacular: contemporary museum architecture in China and the Arabian peninsula. London: Lund Humphries 2018.
22
Exell K, Rico T, editors. Cultural heritage in the Arabian Peninsula: debates, discourses and practices. Farnham: Ashgate 2014.
23
Exell K. Modernity and the museum in the Arabian peninsula. London: Routledge 2016.
24
Exell K, Wakefield S, editors. Museums in Arabia: transnational practices and regional processes. Oxfordshire, [England]: Routledge 2016.
25
Falk JH, Dierking LD. The museum experience revisited. Walnut Creek, Calif: Left Coast Press 2013.
26
Findlen P. Possessing nature: museums, collecting, and scientific culture in early modern Italy. University of California Press 1996.
27
Golding V, Modest W, editors. Museums and communities: curators, collectors and collaboration. Oxford: Berg 2013.
28
Harrison R, Byrne S, Clarke A, editors. Reassembling the collection: ethnographic museums and indigenous agency. Santa Fe: School for Advanced Research Press 2013.
29
Harvey P, editor. Objects and materials: a Routledge companion. Abingdon: Routledge 2014.
30
Hein GE. Learning in the museum. New York: Routledge 1998.
31
Henderson A, Kaeppler AL, editors. Exhibiting dilemmas: issues of representation at the Smithsonian. London: Smithsonian Institution Press 1997.
32
Henning M. Museums, media and cultural theory. Maidenhead: Open University Press 2006.
33
Hooper-Greenhill E, editor. Museum, media, message. Abingdon: Routledge 1995.
34
Lavine S, Karp I, editors. Exhibiting cultures: the poetics and politics of museum display. London: Smithsonian Institution Press 1991.
35
Karp I, editor. Museum frictions: public cultures/global transformations. Durham: Duke University Press 2006.
36
Knell SJ, editor. National museums: new studies from around the world. London: Routledge 2011.
37
Knell SJ, MacLeod S, Watson S, editors. Museum revolutions: how museums change and are changed. London: Routledge 2007.
38
Kreps CF. Liberating culture: cross-cultural perspectives on museums, curation, and heritage preservation. London: Routledge 2003.
39
Latham KF, Simmons JE. Foundations of museum studies: evolving systems of knowledge. Santa Barbara, California: Libraries Unlimited 2014.
40
Lidchi H. The poetics and politics of exhibiting other cultures. In: Hall S, ed. Representation : cultural representations and signifying practices. London: SAGE 1997:199–219.
41
Luke TW. Museum politics: power plays at the exhibition. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press 2002.
42
Sharon Macdonald and Helen Rees Leahy [general editors], editor. The international handbooks of museum studies. Chichester: Wiley Blackwell 2015.
43
Macdonald S, editor. A companion to museum studies. Malden, Mass: Blackwell 2006.
44
Macdonald S, Basu P, editors. Exhibition experiments. Malden, Mass: Blackwell 2007.
45
Macleod S, editor. Reshaping museum space: architecture, design, exhibitions. London: Routledge 2005.
46
Marstine J, editor. The Routledge companion to museum ethics: redefining ethics for the twenty-first-century museum. Abingdon: Routledge 2011.
47
Mejcher-Atassi S, Schwartz JP, editors. Archives, museums and collecting practices in the modern Arab world. Farnham: Ashgate 2012.
48
Miller D. The comfort of things. Cambridge: Polity 2008.
49
Noordegraaf J. Strategies of display: museum presentation in nineteenth and twentieth-century visual culture. Rotterdam: Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen 2012.
50
Pearce, S. et al., editor. The collector’s voice: critical readings in the practice of collecting. Aldershot: Ashgate 2000.
51
Psarra S. Architecture and narrative: the formation of space and cultural meaning. London: Routledge 2009.
52
Schubert K. The curator’s egg: the evolution of the museum concept from the French Revolution to the present day. London: RAM Publications 2009.
53
Shelton A, editor. Collectors: expressions of self and other. London: Horniman Museum and Gardens 2001.
54
Sherman DJ, editor. Museums and difference. Bloomington: Indiana University Press 2008.
55
Daniel J. Sherman and Irit Rogoff, editors. Museum culture: histories, discourses, spectacles. London: Routledge 1994.
56
Stewart S. On longing: narratives of the miniature, the gigantic, the souvenir, the collection. Durham: Duke University Press 1993.
57
Stocking, Jr GW, editor. Objects and others: essays on museums and material culture. Madison, Wis: University of Wisconsin Press 1985.
58
Thomas N. Entangled objects: exchange, material culture, and colonialism in the Pacific. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press 1991.
59
Tilley C, editor. Reading material culture: structuralism, hermeneutics and post-structuralism. Oxford: Basil Blackwell 1990.
60
Tilley C, editor. Handbook of material culture. London: SAGE 2006.
61
Vergo P, editor. The new museology. London: Reaktion 1989.
62
Woodward I. Understanding material culture. London: SAGE Publications 2007.
63
Abt J. The origins of the public museum. In: Macdonald S, ed. A companion to museum studies. Malden, MA: Blackwell 2006:115–34.
64
Macdonald S. Collecting practices. In: Macdonald S, ed. A companion to museum studies. Malden, MA: Blackwell 2006:81–97.
65
Mason R, Robinson A, Coffield E. First principles. Museum and gallery studies: the basics. Routledge 2018.
66
Gosden C, Marshall Y. The cultural biography of objects. World Archaeology. 1999;31:169–78.
67
Knell SJ, MacLeod S, Watson S, editors. Museum revolutions: how museums change and are changed. London: Routledge 2007.
68
Latham KF, Simmons JE. Foundations of museum studies: evolving systems of knowledge. Santa Barbara, California: Libraries Unlimited 2014.
69
Schubert K. The curator’s egg: the evolution of the museum concept from the French Revolution to the present day. London: RAM Publications 2009.
70
Stewart S. Objects of desire. On longing: narratives of the miniature, the gigantic, the souvenir, the collection. Durham: Duke University Press 1993:132–69.
71
Vergo P, editor. The new museology. London: Reaktion 1989.
72
Exell K. Building nations in a modern Middle East. Modernity and the museum in the Arabian Peninsula. London, [England]: Routledge 2016.
73
Exell K. Staging identity in a globalised world. Modernity and the museum in the Arabian Peninsula. London, [England]: Routledge 2016.
74
Al-Mulla MI. The development of the first Qatar National Museum. In: Exell K, Rico T, eds. Cultural heritage in the Arabian Peninsula: debates, discourses and practices. Farnham, Surrey, England: Ashgate 2014.
75
Aronsson P, Elgenius G, editors. National museums and nation-building in Europe, 1750-2010: mobilization and legitimacy, continuity and change. London: Routledge 2015.
76
Bouchenaki M. The Extraordinary Development of Museums in the Gulf States. Museum International. 2011;63:93–103. doi: 10.1111/muse.12010
77
Erskine-Loftus P, Hightower VP, Al-Mulla MI, editors. Representing the nation: heritage, museums, national narratives, and identity in the Arab Gulf States. London: Routledge 2016.
78
Knell SJ. National museums and the national imagination. National museums: new studies from around the world. London: Routledge 2011.
79
Boumansour F. The role of museums in Emirati culture. Museum International. 2011;63:11–25. doi: 10.1111/muse.12002
80
Cooke M. Building the brand. Tribal modern: branding new nations in the Arab Gulf. Berkeley: University of California Press 2014.
81
Crinson M. Nation-building, collecting and the politics of display: the National Museum, Ghana. Journal of the History of Collections. 2001;13:231–50. doi: 10.1093/jhc/13.2.231
82
Duncan C. From the princely gallery to the public art museum; the Louvre Museum and the National Gallery. In: Preziosi D, Farago C, eds. Grasping the world : the idea of the museum. Aldershot: Ashgate 2004.
83
Fibiger T. Global display—local dismay. Debating "globalized heritage” in Bahrain. History and Anthropology. 2011;22:187–202. doi: 10.1080/02757206.2011.558582
84
Kaplan FES, editor. Museums and the making of ‘ourselves’: the role of objects in national identity. London: Leicester University Press 1994.
85
Kennedy RG. Some thoughts about national museums at the end of the century. In: Wright G, ed. The formation of national collections of art and archaeology. Hanover, N.H: National Gallery of Art 1996:159–63.
86
Kreps C. Non-western models of museums and curation in cross-cultural perspective. In: Macdonald S, ed. A companion to museum studies. Malden, MA: Blackwell 2006:457–76.
87
Levitt P. Artifacts and allegiances: how museums put the nation and the world on display. Oakland, California: University of California Press 2015.
88
MacDonald SJ. Museums, national, postnational and transcultural identities. Museum and society. 2003;1:1–16.
89
Mason R. National museums, globalization, and postnationalism: imagining a cosmopolitan museology. Museum Worlds. 2013;1:40–64.
90
Rice M. National museum of Qatar, Doha. Museum International. 1977;29:78–87. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-0033.1977.tb02077.x
91
Steiner CB. Museums and the politics of nationalism. Museum Anthropology. 1995;19:3–6. doi: 10.1525/mua.1995.19.2.3
92
Kreps CF. Indigenous models of museums, curation, and concepts of cultural heritage preservation. Liberating culture: cross-cultural perspectives on museums, curation, and heritage preservation. London: Routledge 2003:46–78.
93
Clifford J. Museums as contact zones. Routes: travel and translation in the late twentieth century. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press 1997:188–219.
94
Exell K. Collecting an alternative world: the Sheikh Faisal bin Qassim Al Thani Museum in Qatar. In: Exell K, Rico T, eds. Cultural heritage in the Arabian Peninsula: debates, discourses and practices. Farnham: Ashgate 2014.
95
Crooke E. The "active museum”: how concern with community transformed the museum. In: Macdonald S, Rees Leahy H, eds. The International Handbooks of Museum Studies. Oxford, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd 2013:481–502.
96
Kreps CF. Appropriate museology in theory and practice. Museum Management and Curatorship. 2008;23:23–41. doi: 10.1080/09647770701865345
97
Wintle C. Decolonising the museum: the case of the Imperial and Commonwealth Institutes. Museum & Society. 2013;11:185–201.
98
Golding V, Modest W, editors. Museums and communities: curators, collectors and collaboration. Oxford: Berg 2013.
99
Joy Hendry. Being ourselves for us: some transformative indigenous ideas of ethnographic display. Journal of Museum Ethnography. Published Online First: 2002.
100
Hendry J. Reclaiming culture: indigenous people and self-representation. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2005.
101
Kamel S, Gerbich C. On uncertain ground: visitor research and community involvement in a regional museum project in Yemen. In: Erskine-Loftus P, ed. Reimagining museums: practice in the Arabian Peninsula. Edinburgh: MuseumsEtc 2013:238–83.
102
Peers LL, Brown AK, editors. Museums and source communities: a Routledge reader. London: Routledge 2003.
103
Schultz L. Collaborative museology and the visitor. Museum Anthropology. 2011;34:1–12.
104
Shatanawi M. Engaging Islam: working with Muslim communities in a multicultural society. Curator: The Museum Journal. 2012;55:65–79. doi: 10.1111/j.2151-6952.2011.00121.x
105
Simon N. Principles of participation. The participatory museum. San Francisco, Calif: Museum 2.0 2010:1–32.
106
Watson S, editor. Museums and their communities. Abingdon: Routledge 2007.
107
Witcomb A. ‘A place for all of us’? Museums and communities. In: Watson S, ed. Museums and their communities. London: Routledge 2007:133–56.
108
Logan W, Reeves K. Introduction: remembering places of pain and shame. Places of pain and shame: dealing with ‘difficult heritage’. London: Routledge 2008.
109
Macdonald S. Is ‘difficult heritage’ still ‘difficult’? Museum International. 2015;67:6–22.
110
Cooper S, Exell K. Bin Jelmood House: narrating an intangible history in Qatar. In: Stefano ML, Davis P, eds. The Routledge companion to intangible cultural heritage. London: Routledge 2016:371–84.
111
Cameron F. Beyond surface representations: museums, edgy topics, civic responsibilities and modes of engagement. Open museum journal. Published Online First: 2006.
112
Kidd J. Introduction: challenging history in the museum. In: Kidd J, Cairns S, Drago A, et al., eds. Challenging history in the museum: international perspectives. London: Routledge 2014:1–17.
113
Drago A. Part 1: The emotional museum. In: Kidd J, Cairns S, Drago A, et al., eds. Challenging history in the museum: international perspectives. London: Routledge 2014:19–22.
114
Kidd J, Cairns S, Drago A, et al. Challenging ourselves: uncomfortable histories and current museum practices. In: Kidd J, Cairns S, Drago A, et al., eds. Challenging history in the museum: international perspectives. London: Routledge 2014:87–99.
115
Cameron F, Kelly L, editors. Hot topics, public culture, museums. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars 2010.
116
Huyssen A. Present pasts: urban palimpsests and the politics of memory. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press 2003.
117
Macdonald S. Difficult heritage: negotiating the Nazi past in Nuremberg and beyond. Abingdon: Routledge 2009.
118
Moshenska G. Curated ruins and the endurance of conflict heritage. Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites. 2015;17:77–90. doi: 10.1179/1350503315Z.00000000095
119
Young JE. The counter-monument: memory against itself in Germany today. Critical Inquiry. 1992;18.
120
Sandell, R. and Nightingale, E. (eds.). Museums, equality and social justice. Hoboken: Taylor and Francis 2013.
121
Sandell R. Museums and the combating of social inequality: roles, responsibilities, resistance. Museums, society, inequality. London: Routledge 2002:3–23.
122
Message K. The disobedient museum: writing at the edge. London: Routledge 2018.
123
Sandell R. On ethics, activism and human rights. Routledge companion to museum ethics: redefining ethics for the twenty-first-century museum. London: Routledge 2011:129–45.
124
Silverman LH. In the service of society. The social work of museums. London: Routledge 2010.
125
Silverman LH. Solve et coagula. The social work of museums. London: Routledge 2010.
126
Message K. Museums and racism. London: Routledge 2018.
127
Abram RJ. History is as history does: the evolution of a mission-driven museum. In: Janes RR, Conaty GT, eds. Looking reality in the eye: museums and social responsibility. Calgary, Alberta: University of Calgary Press 2005:19–42.
128
Belfiore E. Art as a means of alleviating social exclusion: does it really work? A critique of instrumental cultural policies and social impact studies in the UK. International Journal of Cultural Policy. 2002;8:91–106. doi: 10.1080/102866302900324658
129
Bishop C, Perjovschi D. Radical museology, or, What’s contemporary in museums of contemporary art? London: Koenig Books 2013.
130
Chatterjee H, Noble G. Museums, health and well-being. Farnham, Surrey, England: Ashgate 2013.
131
Chatterjee HJ. Museums and art galleries as settings for public health interventions. In: Clift S, Camic PM, eds. Oxford Textbook of Creative Arts, Health, and Wellbeing. Oxford University Press 2015:281–90.
132
Dodd J, Jones C. Mind, body, spirit: how museums impact health and wellbeing. Leicester: Research Centre for Museums and Galleries (RCMG), School of Museum Studies, University of Leicester 2014.
133
Newman A, McLean F. Presumption, policy and practice. International Journal of Cultural Policy. 2004;10:167–81. doi: 10.1080/1028663042000255790
134
O’Neill M. Cultural attendance and public mental health ‐ from research to practice. Journal of Public Mental Health. 2010;9:22–9. doi: 10.5042/jpmh.2010.0700
135
Sandell R. Museums, moralities and human rights. London: Routledge 2017.
136
West C, Smith CHF. "We are not a Government Poodle” 1: Museums and social inclusion under New Labour. International Journal of Cultural Policy. 2005;11:275–88. doi: 10.1080/10286630500411259
137
Wexler A. Museum culture and the inequities of display and representation. Visual Arts Research. 2007;33:25–33.
138
Alivizarou, Marilena. Intangible heritage and erasure: rethinking cultural preservation and contemporary museum practice. International Journal of Cultural Property. 2011;18:37–60.
139
Alivizatou M. Debating heritage authenticity: kastom and development at the Vanuatu Cultural Centre. International Journal of Heritage Studies. 2012;18:124–43. doi: 10.1080/13527258.2011.602981
140
Kirshenblatt-Gimblett B. Intangible heritage as metacultural production. Museum International. 2004;56:52–65.
141
Alivizatou, Marilena. Intangible heritage and the museum: new perspectives on cultural preservation. Walnut Creek, Calif: Left Coast Press 2012.
142
Bortolotto C. From objects to processes: UNESCO’s ‘intangible cultural heritage’. Journal of Museum Ethnography. Published Online First: 2007.
143
Denes A, Koanantakool PC, Davis P, et al. Critical reflections on safeguarding culture: the intangible cultural heritage and museums field school in Lamphun, Thailand. Heritage & Society. 2013;6:4–23. doi: 10.1179/2159032X13Z.0000000004
144
Geismar H. Copyright in context: carvings, carvers, and commodities in Vanuatu. American Ethnologist. 2005;32.
145
Geismar H. Treasured possessions: indigenous interventions into cultural and intellectual property. Durham: Duke University Press 2013.
146
Silverman H, Ruggles DF, editors. Intangible heritage embodied. New York, NY: Springer New York 2009.
147
Stefano ML, Davis P, Corsane G. Safeguarding intangible cultural heritage. Woodbridge: Boydell Press 2012.
148
Tubb KW. Irreconcilable differences? Problems with unprovenanced antiquities. Papers from the Institute of Archaeology. 2007;18. doi: 10.5334/pia.294
149
Sánchez Laws AL. Museums online, from repositories to forums. Museum websites and social media: issues of participation, sustainability, trust, and diversity. New York: Berghahn 2015:25–60.
150
Taylor J, Gibson LK. Digitisation, digital interaction and social media: embedded barriers to democratic heritage. International Journal of Heritage Studies. 2017;23:408–20. doi: 10.1080/13527258.2016.1171245
151
Ridge M. From Tagging to Theorizing: Deepening Engagement with Cultural Heritage through Crowdsourcing. Curator: The Museum Journal. 2013;56:435–50. doi: 10.1111/cura.12046
152
Moshenska G, editor. Key concepts in public archaeology. London: UCL Press 2017.
153
Cameron F, Kenderdine S, editors. Theorizing digital cultural heritage: a critical discourse. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press 2007.
154
Fouseki K, Vacharopoulou K. Digital museum collections and social media: ethical considerations of ownership and use. Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies. 2013;11. doi: 10.5334/jcms.1021209
155
Hogsden C, Poulter EK. The real other? Museum objects in digital contact networks. Journal of Material Culture. 2012;17:265–86. doi: 10.1177/1359183512453809
156
Jones-Garmil K, editor. The wired museum: emerging technology and changing paradigms. Washington, D.C.: American Association of Museums 1997.
157
Kalay YE, Kvan T, Affleck J, editors. New heritage: new media and cultural heritage. London: Routledge 2008.
158
Marty PF, Jones KB, editors. Museum informatics: people, information, and technology in museums. New York: Routledge 2008.
159
McCarthy J, Wright P. Technology as experience. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press 2007.
160
Lilley A, Moore P. Counting what counts: what big data can do for the cultural sector. 2013.
161
Parry R, editor. Museums in a digital age. London: Routledge 2010.
162
Parry R. Digital heritage and the rise of theory in museum computing. Museum Management and Curatorship. 2005;20:333–48. doi: 10.1016/j.musmancur.2005.06.003
163
Parry R. Recoding the museum: digital heritage and the technologies of change. London: Routledge 2007.
164
Sánchez Laws AL. Museum websites and social media: issues of participation, sustainability, trust, and diversity. New York: Berghahn 2015.
165
Tallon L, Walker K, editors. Digital technologies and the museum experience: handheld guides and other media. Lanham: AltaMira Press 2008.
166
Thomas S, Mintz A, editors. The virtual and the real: media in the museum. Washington, D.C.: American Association of Museums 1998.
167
Alraouf AA. One nation, one myth and two museums: heritage, architecture and culture as tools for assembling identity in Qatar. In: Erskine-Loftus P, Hightower VP, Al-Mulla MI, eds. Representing the nation: heritage, museums, national narratives, and identity in the Arab Gulf States. London: Routledge 2016.
168
Alraouf AA. Museums as a catalyst for a new urban and cultural identity in Qatar: interrogating the case of the Museum of Islamic Art. Museums in Arabia: transnational practices and regional processes. Oxfordshire, [England]: Routledge 2016.
169
MacLeod S. Rethinking museum architecture: towards a site-specific history of production and use. Reshaping museum space : architecture, design, exhibitions. London: Routledge 2005.
170
Duncan C. The art museum as ritual. Civilizing rituals : inside public art museums. London: Routledge 1995:7–18.
171
Giebelhausen M. The architecture is the museum. In: Marstine J, ed. New museum theory and practice: an introduction. Malden, MA: Blackwell 2006:41–63.
172
Giebelhausen M. Museum architecture: a brief history. In: Macdonald S, ed. A companion to museum studies. Malden, MA: Blackwell 2006:223–44.
173
Hillier B, Tzortzi K. Space syntax: the language of museum space. In: Macdonald S, ed. A companion to museum studies. Malden, MA: Blackwell 2006:282–301.
174
O’Doherty B. Notes on the gallery space. Inside the white cube: the ideology of the gallery space. Berkeley: University of California Press 1999:16–34.
175
Psarra S. Architecture and narrative: the formation of space and cultural meaning. London: Routledge 2009.
176
Tzortzi K. Museum space: where architecture meets museology. Farnham, Surrey, England: Ashgate 2015.
177
Greenway T. Delivered. embraces failure with…Dr. Samuel West. Delivered. Published Online First: 2018.
178
Knell SJ. Introduction: the museum in the global contemporary. In: Knell SJ, ed. The contemporary museum: shaping museums for the global now. London: Routledge 2019:1–10.
179
Newell, J. R. & Wehner, K. (eds.). Curating the future: museums, communities and climate change. Abingdon: Routledge 2017.
180
McLeod, S. Austin, T., Hale, J. and Hing Kay, O. (eds.). The future of museum and gallery design: purpose, process, perception. Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge 2018.