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Asada, Sadao. Culture shock and
Japanese-American relations: historical essays.
University of Missouri Press 2007. 290p $44.95
In these essays, the author examines the
historical interaction between Japan and the
United States from 1890 to 2006, with particular
attention to World War II and the issues of naval
strategy, racist perceptions, and the American
decision to use the atomic bomb. Both Japanese and
American points of view are considered.
ISBN 978-0-8262-1745-5; LC 2007-4496
City, countryside, and the
spatial organization of value in classical
antiquity; edited by Ralph M. Rosen and Ineke
Sluiter. Brill 2006. 384p $174.00 (Mnemosyne,
bibliotheca classica Batava. Supplementum, 279)
These essays examine rural-urban relations in
ancient Greece and Rome, as evidenced by
literature, philosophy, and archaeology. The
sophisticated city-dweller versus the rustic
country bumpkin is only one contrasting image in
the complex understanding of city and country
relationships in antiquity, in which city life and
country life each had its proponents and
detractors.
ISBN 978-9-0041-5043-0; 9-0041-5043-9;
LC2006-287255
Conflicted boundaries in wisdom
and apocalypticism; edited by Benjamin G. Wright
III and Lawrence M. Wills. Brill 2006. 240p
$125.00 (Society of Biblical Literature symposium
series, no35)
The relationship between wisdom literature and
apocalyptic literature (two categories of genre
and worldview in early Jewish and Christian
literature) is the focus of these essays. The
authors explore the common themes and
interrelationships of these two genres, once
thought to be mutually exclusive. Among the works
discussed are 1 Enoch, 4QInstruction (from the
Dead Sea Scrolls), and canonical scriptures such
as James and Revelation.
ISBN 9-0041-4667-9; 978-9-0041-4667-9; LC
2005-17042
Dumbarton Oaks Colloquium on the
History of Landscape Architecture (27th: 2003).
Performance and appropriation: profane rituals in
gardens and landscapes; edited by Michel Conan.
Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection
2007. 227p $40.00
Because gardens are a controlled environment in
which the gardener can shape the natural world to
reflect cultural ideals, gardens and public parks
have long had a ritualized cultural significance
in many societies. These essays explore such
topics as Freemason gardens in Tuscany,
nineteenth-century British kitchen gardens, and
the public parks of modern Tokyo.
ISBN 0-8840-2313-3; LC 2005-36023
The end of the Pacific war:
reappraisals; edited by Tsuyoshi Hasegawa.
Stanford University Press 2007. 331p $60.00
The authors of these essays explore historical
documents from the archives of Japan, the United
States, and the former Soviet Union in an attempt
to determine the critical factor that led to
Japan’s decision to surrender in the Second World
War. The American atomic bombardment of Japan, and
the Soviet Union’s imminent entry into the war
against Japan, are the two principal factors that
are reevaluated and reassessed in the light of the
archival records.
ISBN 978-0-8047-5427-9; LC 2006-28407
Flower, Harriet I. The art of
forgetting: disgrace & oblivion in Roman political
culture. University of North Carolina Press 2006.
xxiv, 400p $59.95 (Studies in the history of
Greece and Rome)
These essays explore the variety of memory
sanctions used by the ancient Roman government
against leading members of the community who had
fallen into disfavor or disgrace. These sanctions
frequently involved the removal or mutilation of
portraits and public inscriptions. In the first
chapter, the author sets forth the theme by
stating: “Any recalling or recording of the past
involves selection, both deliberate and
unintended. Choosing what to remember must also
entail the choice of what to forget, what to pass
over in silence, and what to obscure.”
ISBN 978-0-8078-3063-5; 0-8078-3063-1; LC
2006-17447
Gersh, Stephen. Neoplatonism
after Derrida: parallelograms. Brill 2006. 223p
$147.00 (Studies in Platonism, Neoplatonism, and
the Platonic tradition, v3)
These essays describe the relation between 20th
century French philosopher Jacques Derrida,
founder of the Deconstruction movement, and the
Neoplatonic philosophical tradition (ancient,
patristic, and medieval). The contrast between
Deconstruction and Neoplatonism and the affinities
of these two systems of thought are explored.
ISBN 9-0041-5155-9; 978-9-0041-5155-0; LC
2006-49064
Globalization and change in
Asia; edited by Dennis A. Rondinelli, John L.
Heffron. L. Rienner 2007. 279p $59.95; $24.50 (pa)
The essays in this book explore the social changes
in Asia resulting from economic and cultural
globalization, and attempt to identify the factors
that can lead to greater prosperity and social
progress in the future.
ISBN 978-1-5882-6473-2; 1-5882-6473-4;
978-1-5882-6497-8 (pa); 1-5882-6497-1 (pa); LC
2006-22407
Graf, E.C. Cervantes and
modernity: four essays on Don Quijote. Bucknell
University Press 2007. 222p $48.50
The four essays in this book examine the fictional
Don Quijote’s anticipation and articulation of the
same values and ideas driving today’s
multiculturalism, feminism, secularism, and
materialism. Cervantes’ influence on thinkers such
as Voltaire and Hobbes is explored.
ISBN 978-0-8387-5655-3; 0-8387-5655-7; LC
2006-14722
Hallman, J.C. The devil is a
gentleman; exploring America’s religious fringe.
Random House 2006. 332p $25.95
In these essays, the author explores the religious
fringe of American society. With frequent
reference to the writings of American religious
thinker William James (who believed in the value
of all forms of religious striving), Hallman
recounts traveling through America to visit the
communities of UFO cults, Druid cults, Satanic
cults, atheists, Scientologists, and Christian
wrestlers, among others.
ISBN 1-4000-6172-5; 978-1-4000-6172-3; LC
2005-50753
Igra, Anna R. Wives without
husbands: marriage, desertion, & welfare in New
York, 1900-1935. University of North Carolina
Press 2007. 175p $49.95; $19.95 (pa) (Gender &
American culture)
The author examines the relationship between
marriage and welfare policy in the early 1900s, as
she details the development of the National
Desertion Bureau, a private Jewish
husband-location agency. The Jewish community as a
source of innovation for national social policy,
and the connections between community activism and
the legislation of social reform, are the focus of
these essays.
ISBN 978-0-8078-3070-3; 0-8078-3070-4;
978-0-8078-5779-3 (pa); 0-8078-5779-3 (pa); LC
2006-26996
Johnson, Jeannine. Why write
poetry?: modern poets defending their art.
Fairleigh Dickinson University Press 2007. 316p
$59.50
The verse defense of poetry (as opposed to the
more familiar prose defense of poetry) is the
topic of this book. These essays examine the
poetic works of such authors as H.D., Wallace
Stevens, W.H. Auden, Adrienne Rich, and Geoffrey
Hill, in which the poets defend and justify the
writing of poetry and the value of their own work.
ISBN 978-0-8386-4105-7; 0-8386-4105-9; LC
2006-17901
Kelley, Mary. Learning to stand
& speak: women, education, and public life in
America’s republic. University of North Carolina
Press 2006. 294p $39.95
The education of women in America from the
post-revolutionary period to the outbreak of the
War Between the States is the focus of these
essays. The education offered at women’s academies
and seminaries in this period enabled women to
develop critical reasoning skills, and eloquence
in composition and oratory, so that by the 1850’s
the majority of women engaged in public life as
educators, writers, and reformers, had received
training in these academies.
ISBN 978-0-8078-3064-2; 0-8078-3064-X; LC
2006-5198
Klein, Marty. America’s war on
sex: the attack on law, lust and liberty; foreword
by Nadine Strossen. Praeger 2006. 212p $29.95
(Sex, love, and psychology)
In these essays, family therapist Marty Klein
explores the legislation of sexual ethics in
modern American society. The author comments on
what he characterizes as the intrusive policies of
the American government in the areas of sex
education, birth control, and censorship, and he
describes the influence of what he terms “the
religious right” in the private affairs of
American adults.
ISBN 0-2759-8785-X; 978-0-2759-8785-5; LC
2006-15708
Kutulas, Judy. The American
Civil Liberties Union & the making of modern
liberalism, 1930-1960. University of North
Carolina Press 2006. 305p $35.00
These essays trace the development of the American
Civil Liberties Union from 1930 to 1960, as the
national perception of the ACLU changed from that
of a radical fringe organization to that of a
reliable upholder of mainstream liberal ideals.
The shift in policy at the ACLU from direct action
on the streets to legal action in the courts, and
ACLU’s expansion from a focus on dissent and
individual rights into areas involving national
security, are among the topics.
ISBN 0-8078-3036-4; 978-0-8078-3036-9; LC
2005-36097
Marr, Timothy. The cultural
roots of American Islamicism. Cambridge University
Press 2006. 309p $75.00
In these essays, the author focuses on America’s
fear and fascination with the non-Christian
“otherness” of the Islamic world reflected in the
politics and culture of the colonial and
antebellum period. The participation of the United
States in the war in Tripoli in 1801-1805 and the
views of Islamic culture expressed in the works of
Herman Melville are among the topics explored.
ISBN 0-5218-5293-5; 978-0-5218-5293-7;
0-5216-1807-X (pa); 978-0-5216-1807-6 (pa); LC
2005-22675
On what cannot be said, v.1:
classic formulations: apophatic discourses in
philosophy, religion, literature, and the arts;
edited with theoretical and critical essays by
William Franke. University of Notre Dame 2007. 401p
$70.00; $35.00 (pa)
Apophasis is a method of logical reasoning by
denial: i.e., a way of describing what something
is by telling what it is not. Having its origin in
Neoplatonic philosophy, apophatic or negative
theology sees God as ineffable (incapable being
expressed in words). The editor has selected key
passages of apophatic philosophy and theology
written by ancient and medieval authors, and has
introduced and commented on each passage,
including works by Plotinus, John of Damascus,
Pseudo-Dionysius, and Thomas Aquinas.
ISBN 978-0-2680-2884-8; 0-2680-2884-2;
978-0-2680-2882-4 (pa); 0-2680-2882-6 (pa); LC
2006-36923
The other half of gender: men’s
issues in development; edited by Ian Bannon and
Marica C. Correia. World Bank 2006. xxvi, 311p
$35.00
These essays describe gender relations and the
changing understanding of masculine identity in
developing countries. The male gender norms in
Latin America, the Caribbean, sub-Saharan Africa
are explored.
ISBN 978-0-8213-6505-2; 0-8213-6505-3; LCCN
2006-45195
The paradox of a global USA;
edited by Bruce Mazlish, Nayan Chanda, and Kenneth
Weisbrode. Stanford University Press 2007. 218p
$50.00; $19.95 (pa)
The conflict in American foreign policy between
the promotion of modernization and open markets on
one hand, and the refusal to heed any form of
globalized authority on the other, is the subject
of these essays. The authors explore the ways in
which the United States has played a role in, and
reacted against, emerging globalization while in
the pursuit of its own national interests.
ISBN 978-0-8047-5155-1; 978-0-8047-5156-8 (pa); LC
2006-28413
Politicotainment: television’s
take on the real; edited by Kristina Riegert. P.
Lang 2007. 296p. $32.95 (Popular culture in
everyday life, v13)
These essays focus on the ways in which modern
political life is defined and distorted by the
images of reality presented as “reality
television,” as well as by game shows, docudramas,
and late-night talk shows. The entertainment
component of modern political culture, and the
connection between the popular vote on television
shows such as American Idol and the popular vote
in the electoral process, are among the topics
explored.
ISBN 0-8204-8114-9; 978-0-8204-8114-2; LC
2006-22467
Politics of orality; edited by
Craig Cooper. Brill 2007. 377p $174.00 (Mnemosyne,
bibliotheca classica Batava. Supplementum, 280)
The transition from an oral society to a literate
culture in ancient Greece is the subject of these
essays. Among the topics are: the forms of Homeric
epic and other epic; the use and manipulation of
the written word to achieve political ends; the
debate over the adoption of writing as the
accepted mode of communication; and the oral
elements of Athenian law.
ISBN 9-0041-4540-0; 978-9-0041-4540-5; LC
2006-51690
Richard Brautigan: essays on the
writings and life; edited by John F. Barber.
McFarland & Co. 2006. 306p $39.95
This collection of essays includes both personal
memoirs and critical assessments of the work of
American novelist Richard Brautigan, author of
Trout fishing in America, and a major
counterculture figure of the 1960s.
ISBN 978-0-7864-2525-9; 0-7864-2525-3; LC
2006-24614
Rosenbaum, Jonathan. Discovering
Orson Welles. University of California Press 2007.
336p $60.00; $24.95 (pa)
This collection of essays, interviews, and reviews
focuses on the incomplete film projects of
American filmmaker Orson Welles. Among the topics
are The big brass ring and The cradle will rock,
two films planned but never realized, as well as
films partially finished or finished but never
released, such as Don Quixote and The other side
of the wind. Welles’ lifelong struggles to acquire
financial backing and to operate outside the
Hollywood system are explored.
ISBN 978-0-5202-4738-3; 0-5202-4738-8;
978-0-5202-5123-6 (pa); 0-5202-5123-7 (pa); LC
2006-21749
Solon of Athens: new historical
and philological approaches; edited by Josine H.
Blok, Andre P.M.H. Lardinois. Brill 2006. 476p
$199.00 (Mnemosyne, bibliotheca classica Batava.
Supplementum, 272)
These essays explore the life and work of Solon,
Athenian poet and statesman in the early 6th
century B.C. The relation between Solon’s poetry
and his role as a lawgiver are examined, and his
political activities are evaluated on the basis of
recent archaeological and documentary research.
ISBN 9-0041-4954-6; LC 2006-296411
Whisnant, Anne Mitchell.
Super-scenic motorway: a Blue Ridge Parkway
history. University of North Carolina Press 2006.
434p $34.95
The author explores the technical and sociological
challenges facing the builders of the scenic Blue
Ridge Parkway through North Carolina and Virginia
in the 1930s. In contrast to the popular belief
that the construction of the road was
conflict-free, the author shows how the Parkway
builders faced many obstacles from local residents
and landowners, in particular with regard to
eminent domain issues. The design and routing of
the road; the relations among landowners, business
interests, and government agencies; and the
environmental impact of the road are among the
topics discussed.
ISBN 0-8078-3037-2; 978-0-8078-3037-6; LC
2006-11351
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