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      • Helen Binns Agency

        Foreign Rights Agency specialising in picture books, board books, novelty, activity, craft and children's/ YA fiction titles from UK and North American Children's Publishers and Literary Agencies.

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      • Helen Edwards Rights Agency

        I launched my agency earlier this year on the back of over 25 years of experience selling international rights for Headline and Transworld Publishers (a division of Penguin Random House UK).  I am delighted to be representing the following agencies in North America: Kate Barker Literary Agency, Bell Lomax Moreton, D.H.H. Literary Agency, Kate Hordern Literary Agency (please refer to my website for available titles www.helenedwardsrights.co.uk) and in all languages throughout the world: A for Authors, Barbican Press, Keane Kataria, Peony Agency and Storyline Agency (titles available for translation are listed on this portal too).

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        Fiction
        July 2015

        We Will Have Bread

        by Miao Wei

        “We will have bread, and we will have everything.” This is a motto that helps David Young survive hardship. As his food import company develops, he is wealthy, contented, and has plenty of time to try the best cuisine around the world. During a gourmet travel, he entered into relationship with Helen, a relationship built on shared passion for wining and dining and full of fascinating tasting trips. However, a sudden illness deprived David of his appetite and also his lover. Relying on an utterly healthy diet, David experiences changes not only in his daily routines, but also in his life desires.

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        Children's & YA

        The Little Moody Monster (2). A Four-Legged Visitor

        by Julia Boehme/ Franziska Harvey

        Hurray! Moritz can look after Grandma’s dog Charly because she’s going on holiday. So at last Moritz has a pet of his own, even if it’s only for a few days. Milo, Moritz’s new friend, is also wild about Charly. There’s only one creature who is not at all pleased, and that’s the Moody Monster. Until Charly suddenly disappears…

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        May 1990

        Gottfried-Keller-Kassette: Der grüne Heinrich. Erste Fassung. Mit Zeichnungen Gottfried Kellers und seiner Freunde. Züricher Novellen. Mit einem Nachwort von Werner Weber Die Leute von Seldwyla. Vollständige Ausgabe der Novellensammlung. Mit einem Nachwor

        Drei Bände in Schmuckkassette

        by Gottfried Keller, Gottfried Keller, Werner Weber

        Gottfried Keller, geboren am 19. Juli 1819 in Zürich, studierte nach einer Ausbildung zum Landschaftsmaler in Heidelberg Geschichte, Philosophie und Literatur. Zu seinen bekanntesten Werken gehören Der grüne Heinrich und die Novellensammlung Die Leute von Seldwyla. Gottfried Keller starb 1890 in Zürich. Gottfried Keller, geboren am 19. Juli 1819 in Zürich, studierte nach einer Ausbildung zum Landschaftsmaler in Heidelberg Geschichte, Philosophie und Literatur. Zu seinen bekanntesten Werken gehören Der grüne Heinrich und die Novellensammlung Die Leute von Seldwyla. Gottfried Keller starb 1890 in Zürich.

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        Literature & Literary Studies
        June 2023

        In and out of Bloomsbury

        by Martin Ferguson Smith

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        The Arts
        January 2016

        Face: shape and angle

        Helen Muspratt, photographer

        by Jessica Sutcliffe

        Born into a civil service family in India in 1907, Helen Muspratt was a lifelong communist, a member of the Cambridge intellectual milieu of the 1930s, and a working mother at a time when such a role was unusual for women of her class. She was also a pioneering photographer, creating an extraordinary body of work in many different styles and genres. In partnership with Lettice Ramsey she made portraits of many notable figures of the 1930s in the fields of science and culture. Her experimental photography, using techniques such as solarisation and multiple exposure, bears comparison with the innovations of Man Ray and Lee Miller. This book reproduces some of Helen Muspratt's most important photographic images, including documentary records of the Soviet Union and the Welsh valleys. The accompanying text by Jessica Sutcliffe is an intimate and revealing memoir of her mother that offers a fascinating insight into her life, work and politics. ;

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        Social & cultural history
        January 2016

        Gender, rhetoric and regulation

        Women's work in the Civil Service and the London County Council, 1900–55

        by Helen Glew

        The Civil Service and the London County Council employed tens of thousands of women in Britain in the early twentieth century. As public employers these institutions influenced both each other and private organisations, thereby serving as a barometer or benchmark for the conditions of women's white-collar employment. Drawing on a wide range of archival sources - including policy documents, trade union records, women's movement campaign literature and employees' personal testimony - this is the first book-length study of women's public service employment in this period. It examines three aspects of their working lives - inequality of pay, the marriage bar and inequality of opportunity - and demonstrates how far wider cultural assumptions about womanhood shaped policies towards women's employment and experiences. Scholars and students with interests in gender, British social and cultural history and labour history will find this an invaluable text.

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        Humanities & Social Sciences
        March 2020

        Gender, rhetoric and regulation

        by Helen Glew, Penny Summerfield

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        Humanities & Social Sciences
        May 2024

        Herminie and Fanny Pereire

        Elite Jewish women in nineteenth-century France

        by Helen M. Davies

        Herminie and Fanny Pereire were sisters-in-law, married to the eminent Jewish bankers and Saint-Simonian socialists Emile and Isaac. They were also mother and daughter. This book, a companion to the author's acclaimed Emile and Isaac Pereire (2015), sheds new light on elite Jewish families in nineteenth-century France. Drawing on the family archives, it traces the Pereires across a century of major social and political change, from the Napoleonic period to the cusp of the First World War, revealing the active role they played as bourgeois women both within and outside the family. It offers insights into Jewish assimilation, embourgeoisement and gender relations, through the lens of one of the most fascinating families of the century.

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        Business, Economics & Law
        September 2016

        The British people and the League of Nations

        by Helen McCarthy

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        November 2023

        Theorien des digitalen Kapitalismus

        Arbeit und Ökonomie, Politik und Subjekt

        by Tanja Carstensen, Simon Schaupp, Sebastian Sevignani

        Verändert sich der Kapitalismus grundlegend angesichts der gegenwärtigen Digitalisierungsschübe? Konjunktur haben jedenfalls theoretische Analysen und Zeitdiagnosen, die sich der Charakterisierung eines digitalen Kapitalismus widmen. Der vorliegende Band bietet erstmals einen Überblick über diese unterschiedlichen Theorien und Debatten und lotet entlang der Felder Arbeit und Ökonomie, Politik und Subjekt die Formen und Auswirkungen des Kapitalismus im Zeitalter der Digitalisierung aus. Mit Beiträgen u. a. von Emma Dowling, Helen Hester, Ursula Huws, Kylie Jarrett, Oliver Nachtwey, Nick Srnicek, Philipp Staab und Jamie Woodcock.

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        Literature & Literary Studies
        April 2000

        Modernism and empire

        Writing and British coloniality, 1890–1940

        by Howard Booth, Nigel Rigby

        This is the first book to explore the relationship between literary modernism and the British Empire. Contributors look at works from the traditional modernist canon as well as extending the range of work addresses - particularly emphasising texts from the Empire. A key issue raised is whether modernism sprang from a crisis in the colonial system, which it sought to extend, or whether the modern movement was a more sophisticated form of cultural imperialism. The chapters in Modernism and empire show the importance of empire to modernism. Patrick Williams theorises modernism and empire; Rod Edmond discusses theories of degeneration in imperial and modernist discourse; Helen Carr examines Imagism and empire; Elleke Boehmer compares Leonard Woolf and Yeats; Janet Montefiore writes on Kipling and Orwell, C.L. Innes explores Yeats, Joyce and their implied audiences; Maire Ni Fhlathuin writes on Patrick Pearse and modernism; John Nash considers newspapers, imperialism and Ulysses; Howard J. Booth addresses D.H. Lawrence and otherness; Nigel Rigby discusses Sylvia Townsend Warner and sexuality in the Pacific; Mark Williams explores Mansfield and Maori culture; Abdulrazak Gurnah looks at Karen Blixen, Elspeth Huxley and settler writing; and Bill Ashcroft and John Salter take an inter-disciplinary approach to Australia and 'Modernism's Empire'. ;

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