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Antoine Watteau: perspectives on
the artist and the culture of his time; edited by
Mary D. Sheriff. University of Delaware Press
2006. 201p $62.50
ISBN 0-87413-934-1; LC 2006-00843
These essays examine the life and work of the
eighteenth century French rococo artist Antoine
Watteau, whose paintings for aristocratic patrons
characteristically display many scenes of
festivity, theatricality, and seduction. Among the
topics are Watteau’s role in developing and
refining the rococo style, and Watteau’s art as a
reflection of his social and political milieu.
Beauty and the abject:
interdisciplinary perspectives; edited by Leslie
Boldt-Irons, Corrado Federici, Ernesto Virgulti.
P. Lang 2007. 295p $76.95
ISBN 978-0-8204-8810-3; LC 2006-34893
This collection of eighteen essays explores the
contrast between the beautiful and the abject
(i.e. wretched or degraded) in literature and the
arts, from aesthetic, social, and political
perspectives. Among the topics explored are the
ideal of feminine beauty in Renaissance Italian
painting; the femme fatale in motion pictures such
as Basic instinct; the symbolism of the rejected
goddess portrayed in the Latona Fountain at
Versailles; and the image of the sleeping beauty
in Elegy 1.3 of the Roman poet Propertius.
Behind the bamboo curtain:
China, Vietnam, and the world beyond Asia; edited
by Priscilla Roberts. Woodrow Wilson Center Press;
Stanford University Press 2006. 559p $65.00
ISBN 0-8047-5502-7; LCCN 2006-15450
For this collection of essays, Chinese scholars
have joined with American and European scholars to
present the results of archival research into the
background of the Vietnam War. The relations of
China with Vietnam and Cambodia during that period
are among the topics explored.
Byzantium: faith and power
(1261-1557): perspectives on later Byzantine art
and culture; edited by Sarah T. Brooks.
Metropolitan Museum of Art; Yale University Press
2007. 201p $29.95
ISBN 0-300-11141-X; LCCN 2006-34590
Essays inspired by an exhibition on the art,
culture, and influence of the late Byzantine
Empire, held at the Metropolitan Museum of New
York in 2004. Topics include a discussion of the
transcendent, spiritual qualities of Byzantine
icons; an account of the life and times of Gurji
Khatun, who was born a princess in 13th century
Georgia and became the consort of a powerful
Seljuk sultan and a major patron of the arts; and
an investigation of the historical sources for
Russia’s claim that Moscow was the Third Rome and
heir to the Byzantine Empire in politics and
religion.
Civil-military relations in
today’s China: swimming in a new sea; David M.
Finkelstein and Kristen Guiness, editors. M.E.
Sharpe 2007. 326p $29.95
ISBN 0-7656-1660-2; LCCN 2006-00015
These essays examine the relationship between the
civilian population and the military in
contemporary China. The authors discuss the
changes taking place in Chinese society and in the
People’s Liberation Army, and their impact on the
civil-military relationship.
Critical reflections: essays on
golden age Spanish literature in honor of James A.
Parr; edited by Barbara Simerka and Amy R.
Williamsen. Bucknell University Press 2006. 214p
$44.50
ISBN 0-8387-5642-5; LCCN 2006-07799
A collection of essays on 16th and 17th century
Spanish literature, written by literary scholars
who have been influenced by the criticism and
teaching of James A. Parr. Topics include the Don
Quixote of Cervantes, the theater of Lope de Vega,
and the influence of Roman poet Ovid and English
playwright Christopher Marlowe on golden age
Spanish literature.
The essential Chaplin:
perspectives on the life and art of the great
comedian; edited with an introduction by Richard
Schickel. I.R. Dee, 2006. 315p $16.95
ISBN 1-56663-682-5; LCCN 2005-3725
A collection of thirty-three essays by various
authors discussing all aspects of the cinema of
Charles Chaplin, ranging in date from Chaplin’s
own time to the present day. Some of the more
controversial films (such as Monsieur Verdoux) are
represented by multiple essays that reveal widely
differing critical opinions, and some authors not
usually associated with film criticism (such as
British statesman Sir Winston Churchill and
novelist Graham Greene) display unique
perspectives on Chaplin’s creative work.
Hampton, Howard.
Born in flames: termite dreams, dialectical fairy
tales, and pop apocalypses. Harvard University
Press 2007. 473p $28.95
ISBN 0-674-02317-X; LCCN 2006-43680
Essays originally published in alternative
newspapers and art magazines. The author ranges
over a vast field of topics, with special
attention to contemporary cinema and popular
music. Subjects include analyses of the films
Forrest Gump and Natural born killers, reviews of
the musical groups Metallica and Guns n’ Roses,
and an exploration of the relationship between
current rock music and the new Hollywood.
The life of Hinduism; edited by
John Stratton Hawley and Vasudha Narayanan.
University of California Press 2006. 324p $19.95
ISBN 0-520-24913-5; LCCN 2006-24692
The diverse ways in which the Hindu faith is lived
and practiced in India and abroad are explored in
this collection of essays. The remarkable range of
popular piety and devotion is represented by
essays on open-air Ramayana festivals, modern
Hindu saints, television productions of Indic
epics, life cycle rituals, and the struggles
between militant and tolerant factions of Hinduism
McDonough, Tom.
“The beautiful language of my century”:
reinventing the language of contestation in
postwar France, 1945-1968. MIT Press 2007. 273p
$34.95
ISBN 0-262-13477-2; LCCN 2006-51350
These essays explore the French intellectual
avant-garde movements between the end of World War
II and the Paris uprisings of 1968, with
particular attention to the activities of author
and filmmaker Guy Debord and his situationist
movement. The use of literary and visual montage
under the name of detournement is a key theme.
McFee, Michael. The napkin
manuscripts: selected essays and an interview.
University of Tennessee Press 2006. 207p $29.95
ISBN 1-57233-540-8; LCCN 2006-04519
Twenty-two essays on a variety of topics written
by poet and essayist Michael McFee over the past
several decades. Included are his thoughts on the
value of memorizing poetry; how to deal with
rejection slips; the creative process of writing
and revising a poem; and his critical assessments
of recent work by some of his favorite poets.
Mumford, Lewis,
Mumford on modern art in the 1930s; edited and
with an introduction by Robert Wojtowicz.
University of California Press 2007. 265p $29.95
ISBN 0-520-24858-9; LCCN 2006-09142
A selection of articles originally published in
the New Yorker magazine 1932-1937. The author
comments on established artists such as Matisse
and Brancusi, as well as emerging artists Reginald
Marsh and Georgia O’Keeffe, and presents a
comprehensive picture of the New York art scene
during those years.
Nelson Algren: a collection of
critical essays; edited by Robert Ward. Fairleigh
Dickinson University Press 2007. 188p $42.50
ISBN 0-8386-4108-3; LCCN 2006-16569
This collection of eleven essays examines the life
and work of American novelist Nelson Algren, the
author of such popular works as The man with the
golden arm and A walk on the wild side, whose work
is only now being reexamined after decades of
critical neglect. His naturalist treatment of the
underside of urban life, his pioneering
exploration of social problems such as drug
addiction, and his misidentification as a writer
of pulp fiction due to the lurid presentation of
the paperback versions of his work, are among the
topics discussed.
The new voices of Islam:
rethinking politics and modernity: a reader;
Mehran Kamrava, editor. University of California
Press 2006. 291p $24.95
ISBN 0-520-25098-2; LCCN 2006-50127
These essays by thirteen Muslim authors from
across the Islamic world present a reformist
alternative to fundamentalist Islamic thought. The
authors argue for Islamic renewal in theology,
jurisprudence, civil rights, and gender
relationships, among other topics.
Pagan, Victoria Emma.
Rome and the literature of gardens. Duckworth
2006. 160p $23.50
ISBN 978-0-7156-3506-3
The author explores the depiction of gardens as
the setting for transformations and transgressions
in four works of Roman literature: Columella’s On
agriculture, Horace’s Satire 1.8, Tacitus’ Annals
book 11, and Saint Augustine’s Confessions. A
fifth essay on the modern literary use of gardens
in Tom Stoppard’s plays Arcadia and The invention
of love rounds out the collection.
Plato’s Symposium: issues in
interpretation and reception; edited by J.H.
Lesher, Debra Nails, and Frisbee C.C. Sheffield.
Center for Hellenic Studies, Trustees for Harvard
University 2006. 446p $29.95
ISBN 0-674-02375-7; LCCN 2006-37295
Plato’s Symposium, a dialogue that presents a set
of speeches in praise of love, has been a popular
and influential work from its own time to the
present day. These essays explore the various ways
in which the dialogue has been understood and
interpreted over the centuries, with attention to
its influence on art, literature, and political
thought.
Politics and the passions,
1500-1850; edited by Victoria Kahn, Neil Saccamano,
and Daniela Coli. Princeton University Press 2006.
314p $24.95
ISBN 0-691-118262-0; LCCN 2005-28068
This collection of essays focuses on the new
theories of human motivation that emerged in
Europe during the Renaissance, and traces the
development of these theories through the mid-19th
century. The relationship between politics and the
human emotions is explored in essays on the work
of authors such as Montaigne, Bacon, Spinoza,
Locke, and Rousseau, among others.
Print and power in France and
England, 1500-1800; [edited by] David Adams,
Adrian Armstrong. Ashgate 2006. 157p $89.95
ISBN 0-7546-5591-1; 2006-05996
These essays focus on the public role of the print
media in the early days of printing in France and
England from 1500-1800, during what is known as
the “hand-press period”. Among the topics examined
are the advent of political pamphleteering in
France, the publication of the Calvinist Latin
Bible of Tremellius, and the rise academic
publishing in early modern England.
Pyne, Kathleen.
Modernism and the feminine voice: O’Keeffe and the
women of the Stieglitz circle. University of
California Press 2007. 339p $34.95
ISBN 0-520-24189-4; LCCN 2005-34482
Before 20th century American photographer Alfred
Stieglitz placed painter Georgia O’Keeffe at the
vanguard of his modernist movement in art, several
other talented women in his circle of artists had
already fulfilled this role. The essays in this
book describe the advent of Georgia O’Keefe in the
Stieglitz circle, as well as the lives and work of
her predecessors: artists and photographers
Gertrude Kasebier, Pamela Colman Smith, Anne
Brigham, and Katherine Nash Rhoades.
Rawls, John.
Lectures on the history of political philosophy;
edited by Samuel Freeman. Belknap Press of Harvard
University Press 2007. 476p $35.00
ISBN 0-674-02492-3; LCCN 2006-50934
A collection of lectures for a class in political
philosophy given at Harvard University from the
mid 1960’s until 1995 by the late John Rawls,
transcribed from the author’s own lecture notes.
In addition to the major figures Hobbes, Locke,
Hume, Rousseau, Mill, and Marx, the important
thinkers Henry Sidgwick and Joseph Butler are
discussed, in lectures dealing with the central
topics of ethics, justice, the social contract,
and utilitarianism.
Rebecca West today: contemporary
critical approaches; edited by Bernard Schweizer.
University of Delaware Press 2006. 334p $61.50
ISBN 0-87413-950-3; LCCN 2006-11265
The career and the work of 20th century British
novelist and author Rebecca West are examined in
this collection. The essays are arranged into four
categories, reflecting the critical methodologies
of the authors: historicism, gender studies,
textual analysis, and philosophical approaches.
Re-imagining Ireland; edited by
Andrew Higgins Wyndham. University of Virginia
Press 2006. 273p. $34.95
ISBN 978-0-8139-2544-8; LCCN 2006-01345
As Ireland heads into the 21st century, it finds
itself in an unaccustomed position of growth and
prosperity due largely to its software-based
economy known as “the Celtic tiger”. These essays,
originally presented at a 2003 conference in
Charlottesville, Virginia, discuss Ireland’s
present situation and future prospects in the
areas of social, economic, political, and artistic
development.
Ritual, routine, and regime:
repetition in early modern British and European
cultures; edited by Lorna Clymer. University of
Toronto Press 2006.258p $60.00
ISBN 0-8020-9030-3; LCCN 2007-386265
The essays in this collection explore the ways in
which repetition shaped important modes of thought
and action in early modern British and European
cultures. Repetition is discussed as an essential
element in political rhetoric, musical forms,
religious ritual, portraiture, and literary
translation.
Signing the body poetic: essays
on American Sign Language literature; H-Dirksen L.
Bauman, Jennifer L. Nelson, Heidi M. Rose,
editors. University of California Press 2006. 264p
$29.95
0-520-22975-4; LCCN 2006-16236
The development of non-verbal literature for the
deaf and hearing-impaired through the medium of
American Sign Language is the topic of this
collection of essays. The creation and
presentation of ASL poetry, theater, and
performance art, and the politics involved in
maintaining a separate social identity for the
deaf, are among the topics discussed.
Sound figures of modernity:
German music and philosophy; edited by Jost
Hermand and Gerhard Richter. University of
Wisconsin Press 2006. 267p $39.95
ISBN 0-299-21930-5; LCCN 2006-08595
The relationship (intellectual and/or personal)
between key figures of German philosophy and
German music is the topic of these essays. The
interactions of major philosophers such as
Schelling, Schopenhauer and Nietzsche, with
composers such as Beethoven, Wagner and Schonberg,
are examined.
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