Skip to content
  • Cultural Studies
    • French Studies
    • Gender Studies
    • Irish Studies
    • Film and TV
    • Theatre and Dance
    • Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies
  • History
    • British History
    • Classics and Ancient History
    • Cultural History
    • Natural History
    • Religious History
    • Scottish History
    • World History
  • Language and Literature
    • Modernism
    • Literary Theory
    • Pre 19th Century Literary Studies
    • Post 19th Century Literary Studies
    • Scottish Literature
    • Atlantic Literature
    • Linguistics
  • Law
    • Comparative Law
    • European Law
    • Islamic Law
    • Roman Law
    • Scots Law
  • Politics, Philosophy and Religion
    • Religion
    • Philosophy
    • Politics
    • Political Philosophy
    • Scottish Politics
    • Film Philosophy
  • Publishing

  • About Us
  • Journals
  • Books
  • SUBSCRIBE TO OUR BLOG
Edinburgh University Press Blog

No results
  • Cultural Studies
    • French Studies
    • Gender Studies
    • Irish Studies
    • Film and TV
    • Theatre and Dance
    • Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies
  • History
    • British History
    • Classics and Ancient History
    • Cultural History
    • Natural History
    • Religious History
    • Scottish History
    • World History
  • Language and Literature
    • Modernism
    • Literary Theory
    • Pre 19th Century Literary Studies
    • Post 19th Century Literary Studies
    • Scottish Literature
    • Atlantic Literature
    • Linguistics
  • Law
    • Comparative Law
    • European Law
    • Islamic Law
    • Roman Law
    • Scots Law
  • Politics, Philosophy and Religion
    • Religion
    • Philosophy
    • Politics
    • Political Philosophy
    • Scottish Politics
    • Film Philosophy
  • Publishing
  • Hezbollah in International Law: Q&A with Mireille Rebeiz

    Mireille Rebeiz recounts Hezbollah’s violence in Lebanon and in the region which prompted her work on the legal status of Hezbollah as a State or a non-State actor.

    November 20, 2025
    Read more: Hezbollah in International Law: Q&A with Mireille Rebeiz

Mass Tourism and New Representations of Gender in Late Francoist Spain

By Mary Nash By the 1960s the right to paid holidays and the development of cheap package tours facilitated mass tourism in Europe. Under the Franco dictatorship Spain then became a major destination attracting tourists to its beaches and warm…

  • eupjournalsblog
  • January 22, 2016

Popular Posts

Hezbollah in International Law: Q&A with Mireille Rebeiz

The Mexican flag flying in the wind.

Q&A: Television Drama in Mexico

Masculinities in Nigerian Fiction: Receptivity and Gender – Q&A with the author

Updating Roman Jakobson’s ‘Poetic Function’ with Vector Semantics

A sunsets below an ocean horizon

The politics of precarious migration

Subscribe To Blog Via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Copyright © 2025 - Edinburgh University Press | All Right Reserved. | Privacy Policy