AMERICAN STUDIES
The Eddie Cantor Story: A Jewish Life in Performance and Politics by David Weinstein (Brandeis University Press/University Press of New England; 302 pages; $29.95). A biography of the entertainer (1892-1964) that explores his open identification and activism as a Jew.
ANTHROPOLOGY
Children of the Camp: The Lives of Somali Youth Raised in Kakuma Refugee Camp, Kenya by Catherine-Lune Grayson (Berghahn Books; 233 pages; $120). Examines the experiences and aspirations of Somali youth, aged 16 to 26, who have spent most of their lives as refugees in Kenya.
Chinook Resilience: Heritage and Cultural Revitalization on the Lower Columbia River by Jon D. Daehnke (University of Washington Press; 256 pages; $90 hardcover, $30 paperback). Offers a collaborative ethnography of the Chinook Indian Nation, which has struggled for federal recognition; discusses the tribe’s role in archaeological and historical work, as well as in revitalizing canoe culture in the Pacific Northwest.
Culture Change and Ex-Change: Syncretism and Anti-Syncretism in Bena, Eastern Highlands, Papua New Guinea by Regina Knapp (Berghahn Books; 299 pages; $140). Explores the perception and performance of cultural change among the Napamogona, a community of Bena-speaking people in the Eastern highlands.
Monrovia Modern: Urban Form and Political Imagination in Liberia by Danny Hoffman (Duke University Press; 232 pages; $94.95 hardcover, $26.95 paperback). Examines post-conflict Liberian society through discussion of the ruins of four iconic modernist buildings in the capital---the E. J. Roye tower, the Hotel Africa luxury resort, and the unfinished Ministry of Defense and Liberia Broadcasting System buildings.
Power in Practice: The Pragmatic Anthropology of Afro-Brazilian Capoeira by Sergio Gonzalez Varela (Berghahn Books; 166 pages; $120). Draws on fieldwork in Salvador, Bahia, in a study of the power embodied by mestres or teachers of the martial art of capoeira Angola.
Spiritual Citizenship: Transnational Pathways from Black Power to Ifa in Trinidad by N. Fadeke Castor (Duke University Press; 240 pages; $89.95 hardcover, $24.95 paperback). Documents how upheavals in the 1970s set the stage for African diasporic religions to enter the mainstream in Trinidad.
ARCHAEOLOGY
The Archaeology of Utopian and Intentional Communities by Stacy C. Kozakavich (University Press of Florida; 240 pages; $79.95). Includes discussion of such groups and communities as the Shakers, Brook Farm, the Kaweah Colony, and the Harmony Society.
ART AND ARCHITECTURE
African Photographer J. A. Green: Reimagining the Indigenous and the Colonial edited by Martha G. Anderson and Lisa Aronson (Indiana University Press; 381 pages; $40). A study of the Nigerian photographer Jonathan Adagogo Green (1873-1905).
American Interventions and Modern Art in South America by Olga U. Herrera (University Press of Florida; 319 pages; $79.95). Documents how modern art was used as a demonstration of American values to counter Axis influence in campaigns by the art section of the office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs during World War II.
A Generous Vision: The Creative Life of Elaine de Kooning by Cathy Curtis (Oxford University Press; 292 pages; $34.95). A biography of the Abstract Expressionist painter (1918-89).
Justinianic Mosaics of Hagia Sophia and Their Aftermath by Natalia B. Teteriatnikov (Dumbarton Oaks, distributed by Harvard University Press; 355 pages; $90). Discusses the original mosaics of the Constantinople church and their restoration after the earthquake of 557.
No Man’s Land: The Life and Art of Mary Riter Hamilton by Kathryn A. Young and Sarah M. McKinnon (University of Manitoba Press, distributed by Michigan State University Press; 288 pages; $31.95). A biography of the Canadian artist (1868-1954), who in 1919 painted battlefields in northern France and Belgium, documenting the aftermath of war.
Still Modernism: Photography, Literature, Film by Louise Hornby (Oxford University Press; 243 pages; $74). Uses examples from each medium to explore photographic stillness as an aesthetic category in modernism; juxtaposes, for example, the motion studies of Eadweard Muybridge, Joyce’s sequencing and pace in Ulysses, and Charlie Chaplin’s walk.
The Trial of Gustav Graef: Art, Sex, and Scandal in Late Nineteenth-Century Germany by Barnet Hartston (Northern Illinois University Press; 290 pages; $55). Examines the political and cultural debates provoked by the 1885 trial of a 64-year-old German artist on charges of perjury and sexual impropriety with underage models.
Vivian Maier: A Photographer’s Life and Afterlife by Pamela Bannos (University of Chicago Press; 362 pages; $35). A biography of Maier (1926-2009) that counters the mythology that surrounded her posthumous fame as a photographer when her work was discovered in storage lockers after her death; argues that Maier was not an eccentric Chicago nanny who moonlighted as a photographer, but rather a photographer who supported herself as a nanny.
CLASSICAL STUDIES
The Odyssey by Homer, translated by Emily Wilson (W.W. Norton & Company; 582 pages; $39.95). Iambic pentameter verse translation of the epic; matches the number of lines in the Greek original in an approach intended to reproduce Homer’s fleet pacing.
Pindar’s Eyes: Visual and Material Culture in Epinician Poetry by David Fearn (Oxford University Press; 318 pages; $99). Focuses on Nemean 5, Nemean 8, and Pythian 1 in a study of the Greek lyric poet’s evocations of visual and material culture; includes comparative discussion of Simonides and Bacchylides.
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
The Rise of Big Data Policing: Surveillance, Race, and the Future of Law Enforcement by Andrew Guthrie Ferguson (New York University Press; 257 pages; $28). A study of how new surveillance and other technologies are shaping policing.
CULTURAL STUDIES
A Theory of Minimalism by Marc Botha (Bloomsbury Academic; 279 pages; $114). Draws on such thinkers as Kant, Danto, Agamben, Badiou, and Meillassoux.
ECONOMICS
How Global Currencies Work: Past, Present, and Future by Barry Eichengreen, Arnaud Mehl, and Livia Chitu (Princeton University Press; 272 pages; $39.50). Topics include how several national monies can share international currency status.
Sovereign Wealth Funds in Resource Economies: Institutional and Fiscal Foundations by Khalid Alsweilem and Malan Rietveld (Columbia University Press; 285 pages; $65). Combines scholarly and practitioner perspectives in a study of the funds’ use in governments’ resource-revenue management.
FILM STUDIES
Lewd Looks: American Sexploitation Cinema in the 1960s by Elena Gorfinkel (University of Minnesota Press; 311 pages; $112 hardcover, $28 paperback). Discusses salacious but non-hard core films made on the margins of Hollywood during the decade.
Spanish Lessons: Cinema and Television in Contemporary Spain by Paul Julian Smith (Berghahn Books; 168 pages; $95). Explores didactic aspects of Spanish film and TV, including an LGBT fiction series produced in Catalonia, and three TV series whose plots involve the economic crisis caused by Spain’s construction bubble in recent years.
Warriors, Witches, Whores: Women in Israeli Cinema by Rachel S. Harris (Wayne State University Press; 336 pages; $35.99). Draws on feminist film theory in a study of changes in Israeli cinema since the 1990s, including portrayals of women’s experience previously marginalized or silenced.
FOLKLORE
Superman in Myth and Folklore by Daniel Peretti (University Press of Mississippi; 190 pages; $65). Discusses tattoos, humor, costuming, myth, and other realms in a study of the comic-book superhero’s role in folk culture.
GENDER STUDIES
Mostly Straight: Sexual Fluidity Among Men by Ritch C. Savin-Williams (Harvard University Press; 236 pages; $27.95). Examines the experiences and self-perceptions of young men who see themselves as straight, but feel some degree of romantic or sexual desire toward other men.
GEOGRAPHY
Diplomatic Material: Affect, Assemblage, and Foreign Policy by Jason Dittmer (Duke University Press; 174 pages; $84.95 hardcover, $23.95 paperback). A work in political geography that explores how international relations are shaped by the transnational circulation of media, bodies, objects, and practices; topics include the British Foreign Office and paper storage.
The Priority of Injustice: Locating Democracy in Critical Theory by Clive Barnett (University of Georgia Press; 366 pages; $89.95 hardcover, $28.95 paperback). Topics include what the use of spatial tropes reveals about the concerns of certain theories of radical democracy.
HISTORY
The American and British Debate Over Equality, 1776-1920 by James L. Huston (Louisiana State University Press; 288 pages; $47.95). Contrasts the British embrace of clear class hierarchies with the professed, if in actuality limited, allegiance to equality in the United States.
The Best Gun in the World: George Woodward Morse and the South Carolina State Military Works by Robert S. Seigler (University of South Carolina Press; 288 pages; $49.95). Discusses technically innovative firearms produced for the state armory using designs by Morse, who perfected the first metallic, center-fire, pre-primed cartridge.
Bound to the Fire: How Virginia’s Enslaved Cooks Helped Invent American Cuisine by Kelley Fanto Deetz (University Press of Kentucky; 177 pages; $29.95). Combines archaeological, textual, and other sources in a study of plantation cooks and their impact on American foodways.
Dangerous Subjects: James D. Saules and the Rise of Black Exclusion in Oregon by Kenneth R. Coleman (Oregon State University Press; 240 pages; $19.95). Discusses a black sailor who, shipwrecked off the coast of Oregon, settled in the territory in 1841; focuses on how the multiethnic milieu he encountered was soon transformed by racial exclusion laws enacted by newly arrived white Oregon Trail migrants.
From Fascism to Populism in History by Federico Finchelstein (University of California Press; 328 pages; $29.95). Combines historical and contemporary perspectives to dispute the conflation of fascism and populism while exploring their genealogical links.
Long Awaited West: Eastern Europe since 1944 by Stefano Bottoni, translated by Sean Lambert (Indiana University Press; 292 pages; $40). Topics include the cultural and political separation of Eastern Europe from the rest of the continent.
Long Journeys Home: American Veterans of World War II, Korea, and Vietnam by Michael D. Gambone (Texas A&M University Press; 288 pages; $45). Contrasts the experiences of the veterans of the three wars and finds more commonality than often acknowledged between those of World War II and those of the later conflicts.
Medical Imperialism in French North Africa: Regenerating the Jewish Community of Colonial Tunis by Richard C. Parks (University of Nebraska Press; 196 pages; $55). Topics include the background of the French colonial decision to demolish the hara or traditional Jewish community in the capital city.
More Argentine Than You: Arabic-Speaking Immigrants in Argentina by Steven Hyland Jr. (University of New Mexico Press; 304 pages; $65). Focuses on the northwestern province of Tucaman in a study of the migration of Christians, Muslims, and Jews from the Ottoman “greater Syria” to Argentina, where they became one of the largest immigrant groups.
Sanitized Sex: Regulating Prostitution, Venereal Disease, and Intimacy in Occupied Japan, 1945-1952 by Robert Kramm (University of California Press; 299 pages; $70). Topics include the cooperation of U.S. military and local Japanese police in implementing new laws regulating prostitution.
Street Occupations: Urban Vending in Rio de Janeiro, 1850--1925 by Patricia Acerbi (University of Texas Press; 216 pages; $90 hardcover, $29.95 paperback). Discusses the transition of street vending from enslaved to free---and often immigrant---labor and describes the struggles of venders in relation to state regulation.
They Should Stay There: The Story of Mexican Migration and Repatriation During the Great Depression by Fernando Saul Alanis Enciso, translated by Russ Davidson (University of North Carolina Press; 246 pages; $90 hardcover, $29.95 paperback). Translation of a 2007 study that offers a Mexican perspective on the forced repatriation of hundreds of thousands of ethnic Mexicans, including U.S. citizens.
A Thirst for Empire: How Tea Shaped the Modern World by Erika Rappaport (Princeton University Press; 549 pages; $39.50). Explores the interplay of tea and the British Empire in a study of the global production, marketing, reception, and reinvention of an imperial commodity.
The Wars Inside Chile’s Barracks: Remembering Military Service Under Pinochet by Leith Passmore (University of Wisconsin Press; 279 pages; $79.95). Draws on previously unpublished sources in a study of conscripts who suffered various abuses in the former dictator’s army and decades later are seeking reparations.
HISTORY OF SCIENCE
On the Arctic Frontier: Ernest Leffingwell’s Polar Explorations and Legacy by Janet R. Collins (Washington State University Press; 297 pages; $27.95). A biography of the American geologist (1875-1971), who explored and mapped Alaska’s north coast and pioneered research on permafrost.
LINGUISTICS
Discourses of Men’s Suicide Notes: A Qualitative Analysis by Dariusz Galasinski (Bloomsbury Academic; 202 pages; $128). Draws on an archive of more than 600 suicide notes in Poland in an analysis of men’s construction of self and the act of self-destruction in such writings.
LITERATURE
Aging in Slavic Literatures: Essays in Literary Gerontology edited by Dagmar Gramshammer-Hohl (Transcript Verlag, distributed by Columbia University Press; 283 pages; $45). Essays on representations of aging in Polish, Russian, Slovak, Slovene, Ukrainian, and Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian fiction, autobiography, and other texts; writers discussed include Valentin Rasputin, Jurij Trifonov, Petar Hectarovic, Adelaida Gercyk, Vitomil Zupan, and Vedrana Rudan.
Delirious Consumption: Aesthetics and Consumer Capitalism in Mexico and Brazil by Sergio Delgado Moya (University of Texas Press; 340 pages; $90 hardcover, $29.95 paperback). A study of postwar artists and writers in both countries and their ambivalent position in relation to consumer culture in late capitalism; focuses on David Alfaro Siqueiros, Octavio Paz, Lygia Clark, and the Brazilian concrete poets.
Dostoevsky and the Riddle of the Self by Yuri Corrigan (Northwestern University Press; 238 pages; $120 hardcover, $39.95 paperback). Traces the evolution of the Russian writer’s view of personality and selfhood beginning with the early short story “A Weak Heart” and extending through such works as The Insulted and Injured, The Idiot, Demons, The Adolescent, and The Brothers Karamazov.
Editing the Soul: Science and Fiction in the Genome Age by Everett Hamner (Penn State University Press; 264 pages; $94.95 hardcover, $27.95 paperback). Discusses both literary and popular culture in a study of how fictional accounts of bioengineering shape public views of such technology.
From Paris to Tlon: Surrealism as World Literature by Delia Ungureanu (Bloomsbury Academic; 332 pages; $120 hardcover, $34.95 paperback). Explores Surrealism’s impact on fiction in its spread as a global artistic movement; pays particular attention to such writers as Jorge Luis Borges, Vladimir Nabokov, Orhan Pamuk, and Mircea Cartarescu.
The Illiberal Imagination: Class and the Rise of the U.S. Novel by Joe Shapiro (University of Virginia Press; 278 pages; $75 hardcover, $35 paperback). Focuses on works in the subgenres of the Bildungsroman, episodic travel narrative, sentimental novel, frontier romance, and anti-slavery novel by such authors as Charles Brockden Brown, Hugh Henry Brackenridge, Catharine Maria Sedgwick, James Fenimore Cooper, and Harriet Beecher Stowe.
The Institutions of Russian Modernism: Conceptualizing, Publishing, and Reading Symbolism by Jonathan Stone (Northwestern University Press; 304 pages; $120 hardcover, $39.95 paperback). Discusses Symbolism as Russia’s entrance into artistic modernity and describes how Valerii Briusov and other writers and publishers of Symbolist poetry shaped the public’s reception of the movement.
J. M. Synge and Travel Writing of the Irish Revival by Giulia Bruna (Syracuse University Press; 220 pages; $60 hardcover, $29.95 paperback). Focuses on how the playwright’s travel writings about the Aran Islands, West Kerry, Wicklow, and elsewhere in Ireland stand up as ethnography and journalism and challenge ideas of place associated with nationalist and imperialist discourse.
La Petite Fadette by George Sand, translated by Gretchen van Slyke (Penn State University Press; 181 pages; $79.95 hardcover, $19.95 paperback). Translation of Sand’s 1848 novel, which is narrated in the voice of a Berrichon peasant, reflecting the countryside of Berry where Sand spent much time as a child.
The Late Cantos of Ezra Pound: Composition, Revision, Publication by Michael Kindellan (Bloomsbury Academic; 276 pages; $114). Draws on previously unpublished letters, drafts, and other materials in a study of the composition, revision, and dissemination of the American poet’s Section: Rock-Drill (1955) and Thrones (1959).
The Mongol Conquests in the Novels of Vasily Yan: An Intellectual Biography by Dmitry Shlapentokh (Columbia University Press; 136 pages; $30). Uses a study of Yan (1874-1954), a Russian/Soviet writer of historical novels, to examine the role of ideology in totalitarian society.
Orhan Pamuk: Critical Essays on a Novelist between Worlds edited by Taner Can, Berkan Ulu, and Koray Melikoglu (Ibidem, distributed by Columbia University Press; 251 pages; $40). Essays on Snow, The Museum of Innocence, The Red-Haired Woman, and other works by the Nobel Prize-winning Turkish author; topics include his portrayal of tensions between Western secularism and traditional Islam.
The Plural of Us: Poetry and Community in Auden and Others by Bonnie Costello (Princeton University Press; 262 pages; $45). Explores the significance of the British-born American poet’s use of the first-person plural “we.”
Political Appetites: Food in Medieval English Romance by Aaron Hostetter (Ohio State University Press; 191 pages; $79.95). Explores portrayals of food and cooking in works from the ninth to the 15th centuries, with a focus on Andreas, The Roman de Silence, Havelok the Dane, and Sir Gowther.
Prizing Debate: The Fourth Decade of the Booker Prize and the Contemporary Novel in the UK by Anna Auguscik (Transcript Verlag, distributed by Columbia University Press; 397 pages; $45). Uses works by Aravind Adiga, Margaret Atwood, Sebastian Barry, Mark Haddon, DBC Pierre, and Zadie Smith to examine the Man Booker prize and its impact on a novel’s media and academic coverage.
Translation in African Contexts: Postcolonial Texts, Queer Sexuality, and Cosmopolitan Fluency by Evan Maina Mwangi (Kent State University Press; 336 pages; $59.95). Focuses on East African texts written in English, Sheng, Kiswahili, and Gikuyu, with a focus on such writers as Ngugi wa Thiong’o and Gakaara wa Wanjau.
Trauma in First Person: Diary Writing during the Holocaust by Amos Goldberg, translated by Shmuel Sermoneta-Gertel and Avner Greenberg (Indiana University Press; 296 pages; $68 hardcover, $35 paperback). Combines literary and psychoanalytic perspectives in a a “helpless consciousness” during the Holocaust and diary writing as “life history enactments”; juxtaposes, among other texts, the writings of the well-known diarists Victor Klemperer and Chaim Kaplan.
MUSIC
Woody Guthrie’s Modern World Blues by Will Kaufman (University of Oklahoma Press; 312 pages; $32.95). Draws on previously unpublished archival sources in a study of Guthrie beyond his well-known persona as folk singer to explore his work in abstract painter and sculptor, and his writings on the atomic age, mass media, mass transit, and other aspects of modernity.
PHILOSOPHY
Bare Architecture: A Schizoanalysis by Chris L. Smith (Bloomsbury Academic; 206 pages; $114). Draws on poststructuralist thought in a study of architecture and the body.
Brentano’s Mind by Mark Textor (Oxford University Press; 302 pages; $60). A study of the German thinker Franz Brentano (1838-1917) that focuses on his intentionalism and his metaphysics of consciousness.
The Concept in Crisis: “Reading Capital” Today edited by Nick Nesbitt (Duke University Press; 320 pages; $94.95 hardcover, $26.95 paperback). Essays on the legacy and continued relevance of Reading Capital, a 1965 work by Louis Althusser and other French thinkers that is considered a watershed in Marxist philosophy.
Confucian Ethics in Western Discourse by Wai-ying Wong (Bloomsbury Academic; 279 pages; $114). Sets Chinese and Western philosophy in dialogue, including discussion of such figures as Aristotle, Cheng Ho, and Cheng Yi.
Experiencing William James: Belief in a Pluralistic World by James Campbell (University of Virginia Press; 398 pages; $75 hardcover, $35 paperback). Emphasizes the whole of the American philosopher’s thought.
Literature and the Experience of Globalization: Texts Without Borders by Svend Erik Larsen, translated by John Irons (Bloomsbury Academic; 323 pages; $114). Topics include how literature engages the concrete human experience of globalization.
The New Mechanical Philosophy by Stuart Glennan (Oxford University Press; 266 pages; $40). Defends a view of both natural and social phenomena as the product of mechanisms.
Normal Rationality: Decisions and Social Order by Edna Ullmann-Margalit, edited by Avishai Margalit and Cass R. Sunstein (Oxford University Press; 320 pages; $65). Edition of writings by the Israeli philosopher (1946-2010).
Politics with Beauvoir: Freedom in the Encounter by Lori Jo Marso (Duke University Press; 253 pages; $94.95 hardcover, $25.95 paperback). New and previously published writings on the French philosopher that, among other things, set her in dialogue with figures before and beyond her era, from the Marquis de Sade to Lars von Trier.
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Contract Workers, Risk, and the War in Iraq: Sierra Leonean Labor Migrants at US Military Bases by Kevin J.A. Thomas (McGill-Queen’s University Press; 256 pages; US$110 hardcover, $29.95 paperback). Discusses laborers from the West African country who work as low-skilled contract labor on U.S. military bases.
The Policy State: An American Predicament by Karen Orren and Stephen Skowronek (Harvard University Press; 253 pages; $25.95). Focuses on how policy making evolved to become the central operation of government, dislodging other needed forms of governance.
The Political Economy of Pension Policy Reversal in Post-Communist Countries by Sarah Wilson Sokhey (Cambridge University Press; 254 pages; $99.99). Includes case studies of reversals of pension reforms in Russia, Hungary, and Poland.
Your Next Government? From the Nation State to Stateless Nations by Tom W. Bell (Cambridge University Press; 268 pages; $110 hardcover, $34.99 paperback). Examines the trend toward special jurisdictions, including, for example, economic zones with the autonomy of city-states.
RELIGION
Ambrosiaster’s Commentary on the Pauline Epistles: Romans translated by Theodore S. de Bruyn (Society of Biblical Literature; 319 pages; $57.95). Translation of a commentary on the New Testament book by an unknown fourth-century writer whose name was coined in the early modern era.
The Dangerous God: Christianity and the Soviet Experiment edited by Dominic Erdozain (Northern Illinois University Press; 277 pages; $39). Essays on such topics as the Russian Orthodox liturgy as political resistance.
Everyday Mysticism: A Contemplative Community at Work in the Desert by Ariel Glucklich (Yale University Press; 288 pages; $45). Combines scholarly and personal perspectives in a study of Neot Smadar, an “intentional” farming community founded in Israel’s southern desert that combines elements of Buddhist and Hindu thought.
Mimetic Theory and World Religions edited by Wolfgang Palaver and Richard Schenk (Michigan State University Press; 456 pages; $29.95). Essays in which scholars of Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism engage the mimetic theory of the late French scholar Rene Girard.
Race and the Making of the Mormon People by Max Perry Mueller (University of North Carolina Press; 333 pages; $90 hardcover, $32.50 paperback). Topics include how the church’s politics and theologies on race were shaped by early members of African and American Indian descent.
RHETORIC
Kenneth Burke + the Posthuman edited by Chris Mays, Nathaniel A. Rivers, and Kellie Sharp-Hoskins (Penn State University Press; 237 pages; $89.95 hardcover, $32.95 paperback). Essays that link writings by Burke (1897-1993) on the mind and technology and such posthuman concepts as coevolution.
Race, Nation, and Refuge: The Rhetoric of Race in Asian American Citizenship Cases by Doug Coulson (State University of New York Press; 285 pages; $90). A critical rhetorical analysis of legal discourse on racial eligibility for U.S. naturalization in the late 19th and early to mid 20th centuries.
SOCIOLOGY
The Making of a Teenage Service Class: Poverty and Mobility in an American City by Ranita Ray (University of California Press; 304 pages; $85 hardcover, $29.95 paperback). Draws on the experiences of 16 black and Latino teenagers---13 young women, three young men--- attempting to better their lives in “Port City,” the name given a town in the Northeast.
A Place Called Home: The Social Dimensions of Homeownership by Kim R. Manturuk, Mark R. Lindblad, and Roberto G. Quercia (Oxford University Press; 173 pages; $24.95). Presents data documenting the financial and non-financial benefits of home ownership for low-income and minority Americans, including better health and more community trust and involvement.
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