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After the storm: black
intellectuals explore the meaning of Hurricane
Katrina; edited by David Dante Troutt. The New
Press 2006 164p $22.95
ISBN 1-59558-116-2; LC 2006-08883
Thirteen African-American scholars comment on
Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath, with
particular attention to the role of the black
community of New Orleans, the racial politics
involved in the evacuation of the city, and the
reporting of the event.
Bishir, Catherine W.
Southern built: American architecture, regional
practice. University of Virginia Press 2006 332p
$35.00
ISBN 0-8139-2538-X; 0-8139-2539-8; LC 2005-37586
Catherine W. Bishir describes how the people of
the American South created their own unique
domestic and civic architecture using Northern and
European models, while simultaneously developing
local, vernacular forms. The subjects range in
variety from gracious plantation manor houses to
practical brick jailhouses; included are
discussions of the architects, patrons, and
laborers, both pre- and post-Civil War.
Boarding school blues:
revisiting American Indian educational
experiences; edited and with an introduction by
Clifford E. Trafzer, Jean A. Keller, and Lorene
Sisquoc. University of Nebraska Press 2006 256p pa
$20.00
ISBN 0-8032-9463-8; LC 2006-04484
This collection of essays focuses on the Native
American off-reservation boarding schools, which
were established by the United States government
in the 19th century for the education and
assimilation of American Indians into American
society. Basing their research upon primary
documents and interviews with former students, the
authors explore the histories of the individual
schools that were established (such as Carlisle
Indian Industrial School), the different tribes
that were involved, and the significant
personalities that emerged.
Casting gender: women and
performance in intercultural contexts; edited by
Laura Lengel & John T. Warren. P. Lang 2005
(Critical intercultural communication studies, v7)
214p pa $29.95
ISBN 0-8204-7419-3; LC 2004-11679
These essays discuss the role of women in the
performing arts, focusing on women’s cultural
identities as expressed in theater, film, and
performance art. The use of performance as a means
of intercultural communication and as a vehicle
for social change is a major theme.
Crossing waters, crossing
worlds: the African diaspora in Indian country;
edited by Tiya Miles and Sharon P. Holland. Duke
University Press 2006 pa $23.95
ISBN 0-8223-3865-3; LC 2006-11042
These essays explore the intersection of Native
American and African American cultures, past and
present. Topics include the aftermath of black
slavery in the Choctaw and Chickasaw nations, the
status of Afro-Indians in colonial Mexico, and the
controversy surrounding the ethnic identity of the
1998 Miss Navajo Nation, who had an
African-American father.
Crowds; edited by Jeffrey T.
Schnapp and Matthew Tiews. Stanford University
Press 2006 439p $24.95
ISBN 0-8047-5480-2; LC 2005-26558
The crowd (AKA the multitude, the mob, the throng)
is the common theme of
these essays. The social and political aspects of
crowds, the representation of crowds in
literature and film, and crowd behavior at
sporting events, political rallies, and rock
concerts, are among the topics examined.
Davis, Mary E.
Classic chic: music, fashion, and modernism.
University of California Press 2006
(California studies in 20th-century music) 332p
$39.95
ISBN 0-520-24542-3; LC 2005-35586
The world of high fashion design and the world of
creative musicianship coincide in this
study of the arts in the early twentieth century.
Fashion’s requirements of originality and
constant change were shared by the composers of
the period. The personal and creative
connections between figures as diverse as Coco
Chanel and Igor Stravinsky, the Ballet
Russe and Vogue magazine, are examined.
Enlightenment and emancipation;
edited by Susan Manning and Peter France. Bucknell
University Press 2006 (Bucknell studies in
eighteenth-century literature and culture)
233p $51.50
ISBN 0-8387-5619-0; LC 2006-05879
Scholars from various disciplines address the
question: “Was the Enlightenment a force
for emancipation?” The view that the Enlightenment
was a return to reason and a
liberation from superstition and custom is
countered by the view that the “mind-forged
manacles” of Enlightenment thinkers imprisoned the
free and irrational spirit, hampering
creative thought and expression.
Excavating Asian history:
interdisciplinary studies in archaeology and
history; Norman
Yoffee and Bradley L Crowell, editors. University
of Arizona Press 2006 352p $55.00
ISBN 0-8165-2418-1; LC 2006-06346
This work explores the relationship between
history and archaeology in the study of
pre-modern Asia. Case studies and theoretical
articles reveal how the two disciplines
support each other while sometimes coming into
conflict over rival claims to knowledge.
Gabara, Rachel
From split to screened selves: French and
francophone autobiography in the third
person. Stanford University Press 2006 213p $55.00
ISBN 0-8047-5356-3; LC 2006-04626
A study of recent autobiographies by French and
French-speaking literary authors and filmmakers,
all of whom shun the use of traditional
first-person narrative in favor of experimentation
with alternate narrative forms.
Gyasi, Kwaku A.
The francophone African text: translation and the
postcolonial experience. P. Lang 2006 (Francophone
cultures and literatures, v48) 133p $59.95
ISBN 0-8204-7830-X; LC 2004-27469
This work focuses on African writers’ use of the
French language, a process of creative translation
in which the French words refer back to the
indigenous African languages for meaning.
Hippolyte, Jean-Louis
Fuzzy fiction. University of Nebraska Press 2006
(Stages, v21) 319p $45.00
ISBN 0-8032-2429-X; LC 2006-11670
Hippolyte examines the novels of the avant-garde
French writers Jean-Philippe Toussaint, Marie
Redonnet, Eric Chevillard, Francois Bon, and
Antoine Volodine, who exemplify the use of
vagueness in contemporary French literature.
Guercio, Gabrielle
Art as existence: the artist’s monograph and its
project. The MIT Press 2006 378p $50.00
ISBN 0-262-07268-8; LC 2005-54485
Gabriele Guerico examines the literary form known
as the “artist’s monograph”: i.e., the description
of the life and work of individual visual artists,
which had its origin in the 16th century with
Giorgio Vasari’s Lives of the painters, sculptors,
and architects. How this literary form differs
from standard biography, and what methods the
authors use as they attempt to link the creative
work of the artist with the mundane facts of the
artist’s life and times, is the subject of these
essays.
In the agora: the public face of
Canadian philosophy; edited by Andrew D. Irvine
and John S. Russell, with a foreword by John
Ralston Saul. University of Toronto Press 2006
486p $75.00, pa $32.95
ISBN 0-8020-3895-6; 0-8020-3717-4; LC 2006-286004
A collection of short essays by Canadian
philosophers who have made important contributions
to the public debate on contemporary issues. Among
the many topics discussed are free speech, free
trade, citizenship, terrorism, and the
environment.
Law and the sacred; edited by
Austin Sarat, Lawrence Douglas, and Martha Merrill
Umphrey. Stanford University Press 2007 (Amherst
series in law, jurisprudence, and social thought)
192p $45.00
ISBN 978-0-8047-5575-7; 0-8047-5575-2; LC
2006-6012939
These essays explore the complex interdependence
of law and religion. Moving beyond the traditional
categories of sacred and secular, the authors
examine topics as diverse as the sacralization of
law (as in “our sacred Constitution”), the
applications of Islamic legal theory, and the
modern foundations of sovereign political power.
Letting be: Fred Dallmayr’s
cosmopolitical vision; edited by Stephen F.
Schneck. University of Notre Dame Press 2006 382p
pa $35.00
ISBN 978-0-268-04124-3; 0-268-04124-5; LC
2006-18618
Essays presented in honor of political theorist
Fred Dallmayr on the occasion of his seventy-fifth
birthday. Topics include critical assessments of
modernity, discussions of comparative political
theory, and examinations of the need for
establishing a global “cosmopolitical”
understanding of civilization.
Raaflaub, Kurt A.
Origins of democracy in ancient Greece; [by] Kurt
A. Raaflaub, Josiah Ober, and Robert W. Wallace,
with chapters by Paul Cartledge and Cynthia
Farrar. University of California Press 2007 (Joan
Palevsky imprint in classical literature) 242p
$34.95
ISBN 978-0-520-24562-4; 0-520-24562-8; LC
2006-26246
The origins of democracy in ancient Athens is the
subject of this book. The authors of the essays
address such questions as: Why did democracy first
develop in Greece and not elsewhere? Was democracy
“invented” or did it develop over time? What were
the social and political foundations that made
this development possible?
Religion and the new ecology:
environmental responsibility in a world of flux;
edited by David M. Lodge & Christopher Hamlin;
foreword by Peter H. Raven. University of Notre
Press 2006 325p pa $40.00
ISBN 978-0-268-03404-7; 0-268-03404-7; LC
2006-18597
These essays, offered by authors who think of
nature as a dynamic process rather than as a
static entity, ask the reader to abandon the old
philosophical dichotomy between stable nature and
disruptive human activity, and to reconsider the
intellectual foundations of theories concerning
human responsibility to nature.
Returning to Irigaray: feminist
philosophy, politics, and the question of unity;
edited by Maria C. Cimitile, Elaine P. Miller.
State University of New York Press, 2007 (SUNY
series in gender theory) 334p pa $28.95
ISBN 0-7914-6920-4; LC 2005-37171
These essays offer a critical assessment of the
relation of the early critical and poetic writings
of Luce Irigaray (influential philosopher and
theorist in the field of feminist thought) to her
later writings on politics and practical
philosophy.
Romanowski, Sylvie.
Through strangers’ eyes: fictional foreigners in
old regime France. Purdue University Press 2005
(Purdue studies in Romance literatures, v33) 257p
pa $43.95
ISBN 1-55753-406-3; LC 2005-13496
The author explores the depiction of foreigners in
French literature, beginning with Montaigne’s 1580
essay “Des cannibales” and continuing into the
18th century, including Montesquieu’s Lettres
persanes.
Rossetti, Gina M.
Imagining the primitive in naturalist and
modernist literature. University of Missouri Press
2006 196p $37.50
ISBN 0-8262-1625-0; LC 2005-29965
The author discusses the depiction of “primitive”
characters in early 20th century American
literature in literary and sociological terms,
focusing on works by Jack London, Frank Norris,
Eugene O’Neill, Theodore Dreiser, Willa Cather,
Ernest Hemingway, Gertrude Stein, and Nella
Larsen.
Saul, Joanne.
Writing the roaming subject: the biotext in
Canadian literature. University of Toronto Press
2006 175p $45.00
ISBN 0-8020-9012-5; LC 2006-299638
This work focuses on a group of Canadian writers
who pose questions about cultural differences and
national identity when writing about their own
lives and their experiences of displacement. The
authors in question are Michael Ondaatje, Daphne
Marlatt, Roy Kiyooka, and Fred Wah.
Scambray, Kenneth
Queen Calafia’s paradise: California and the
Italian American novel. Fairleigh Dickinson
University Press 2007 211p
ISBN 0-8386-4117-2; LC 2006-17912
This work examines the fiction of Italian-American
authors set in California.
Visionary observers:
anthropological inquiry and education; edited by
Jill B.R. Cherneff and Eve Hochwald, foreword by
Sydel Silverman. University of Nebraska Press 2006
(Critical studies in the history of anthropology)
261p pa $29.95
ISBN 0-8032-6464-X; LC 2006-09265
These essays examine the relationship between
anthropology and public policy. The authors
consider the careers of nine twentieth century
American anthropologists who made significant
contributions to discussions of race, ethnicity,
socialization, and education.
Siegel, Lee
Falling upwards: essays in defense of the
imagination. Basic Books 2006 337p $25.00
ISBN 978-0-465-07800-4; 0-465-07800-1; LC
2006-24173
Essays by Lee Siegel on contemporary literature
and arts, in which he celebrates works that show
imagination, intuition, and true feeling in
opposition to dry intellect and artistic
orthodoxy.
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