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© MHRA 2008
Page updated 22 May 2008

Books

 

The MHRA Critical Texts series offers affordable scholarly editions of lesser-known texts that are not currently in print or are hard to find.

 

 

 

 

 

In October 2004 the MHRA took on responsibility, in partnership with Maney Publishing, for publication of the acclaimed Legenda imprint and has been eager to continue to fulfil the series' goals, building upon the outstanding scholarship of the existing list.

 

 


The prestigious Publications of the MHRA series is devoted to major works of outstanding scholarly merit.

Volume 17 (December 2005) comprises letters A--E of the Second Edition of the Anglo-Norman Dictionary, the only dictionary compiled with the specific aim of facilitating the understanding of the particular variety of French culture that pervaded medieval England.

 

 

Established in 1970, the MHRA Texts and Dissertations series helps younger scholars at the first stage of their career by allowing the most accomplished doctoral research to be published with guidance from distinguished editors.

The series exists to publish carefully selected theses of especial merit.

 

 



The second edition of the MHRA Style Guide (successor to the bestselling MHRA Style Book) is an indispensable tool for scholarly authors and editors. Over 50,000 copies of the Style Book (all editions) have been sold worldwide.

The Guide is available in print for just £6, or may be downloaded free-of-charge as a PDF file.




University Theses in Russian, Soviet, and East European Studies 1907–2006: A Centennial Bibliography of Research in the British Isles -- published in 2008 -- is the third volume in the MHRA Bibliographies series.



Style Guide cover



The aim of the MHRA New Tudor Translations is to create a representative library of works translated into English during the early modern period for the use of scholars and students.

The series aims to restore to view a major part of English Renaissance literature which has become relatively inaccessible and to present these texts as literary works in their own right. It will have a similar scope to that of the original Tudor Translations published early in the last century.

 

 

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