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Simple Recipes ChildrenA Celebration of Nordic Skiing AFTER EFFECTS The Steger for an Abundant Life

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A MEMOIR OF

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Inequity in Postwar in Postwar Racism and and Racism Minneapolis Minneapolis NON-CISMASCULINITIES ANDINDIGENOUS GENDEREXPANSIVENESS ALLAN STOEKL the

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MORETON-ROBINSON and Sarah Wasserman in the Age of Precarity Sue Leaf Lukas Ley Catherine Liu Mary Logue Jon Hassler Brooks E. Hefner Carolyn Holbrook and David Mura Julietta Hua and Kasturi Ray David Hugill Caren Irr Jansson Tove Florence Page Jaques Florence Page Jaques Daniel Heath Justice and Jean M. O'Brien Petra Kuppers Elsa L. Fan Foucault Arlette Farge and Michel D. S. Schroeder Meredith Farmer and Jonathan Grant Farred Kennan Ferguson Abram Foley Michel Foucault Andrea Gilats Gary Goodman Linda LeGarde Grover Maurice Hamington and Michael Flower Emma Bedor Hiland Emma Bedor Sandy Isenstadt, Martin Brückner, Matthew Crain S. Ben-Porath Daniel L. Davis and Yossef Despret Vinciane Joshua DiCaglio Smith Jessie Diggins with Todd Lin Enger LaMarche and Jim Anika Fajardo Stories for Interpreting the MMPI-A-RF Ahab Unbound

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Jean M. O’Brien, Editors A Novel A LANSING SHEPARD, DON LUCE, BARBARA COFFIN AND GWEN SCHAGRIN AND GWEN COFFIN BARBARA DON LUCE, LANSING SHEPARD, 4 5 We Are Meant to Rise Raising Ollie Voices for Justice from Minneapolis to the World How My Nonbinary Art-Nerd Kid Changed TOM RADEMACHER AUTHOR OF IT WON’T BE EASY CAROLYN HOLBROOK AND DAVID MURA, EDITORS (Nearly) Everything I Know TOM RADEMACHER RAISING FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

A brilliant and rich gathering of voices on Dakota and Anishinaabe, African American, The account of one radically new school Raising Ollie is dad Tom Rademacher’s story the American experience of this past year Hmong, Somali, Afghani, Lebanese, Korean, year for a Teacher of the Year and for his (really, many stories) of that eventful and and beyond, from Indigenous writers and Vietnamese, Japanese, Puerto Rican, nonbinary, art-obsessed, brilliant child sometimes painful school year, parenting writers of color from Minnesota Colombian, Mexican, transracial adoptees, Ollie and relearning every day what it means OLLIE Voices for Justice Carolyn mixed race, and LGBTQ+ perspectives. Holbrook to be a father and teacher. As Ollie—who is In this significant collection, Indigenous from Minneapolis and “As vulnerable and honest a piece I’ve ever read from an David Mura, Most of the contributors have participated nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns, and How My Nonbinary Art-Nerd Kid writers and writers of color bear witness to to the World Editors educator, Tom Rademacher’s beautiful and conversational in More Than a Single Story, a popular and prefers art to athletics, vegetables to cake, Changed (Nearly) Everything I Know one of the most unsettling years in the history story ought to encourage more of us to dig deeper and insightful conversation series in Minneapolis and animals to most humans—flourishes in of the United States. Essays and poems reflect harder.” that features Indigenous and people of their new school, Rademacher is making an vividly reflect and comment on the traumas —José Luis Vilson, educator, father, executive director of EduColor, color speaking on what most concerns their Carolyn Holbrook is the founder and director of More eye-opening adjustment to a new school of Tom Rademacher is an eighth grade English teacher we endured in 2020, beginning with the arrival and author of This Is Not A Test: A New Narrative on Race, Class, communities. Than a Single Story. She is author of the essay collection his own, one that’s whiter and more suburban in the Minneapolis area. His book It Won’t Be Easy: An of the COVID-19 pandemic crisis, deepened and Education Tell Me Your Names and I Will Testify (Minnesota, 2020), than anywhere he has previously taught, Exceedingly Honest (and Slightly Unprofessional) Love by the blatant murder of George Floyd by We Are Meant to Rise meets the events of a Minnesota Book Award winner, and coauthor of with a history of racial tension that he tries to Letter to Teaching (Minnesota, 2017) was a finalist for a Minneapolis police officers and the uprisings the day, the year, the centuries before, again Dr. Josie R. Johnson’s memoir Hope in the Struggle Seven-year-old Ollie was researching local address and navigate. Minnesota Book Award. His writing has been published that immersed our city into the epicenter and again, with powerful testament to the (Minnesota, 2019). She teaches creative writing at advanced school programs—because every in Education Post, City Pages, MinnPost, and Huffington of passionate, worldwide demands for intrinsic and unique value of the human voice. While Ollie is learning to code, 3D model, Hamline University, the Loft Literary Center, and other second grader does that, right? Ollie, who Post. In 2014 he was honored as Minnesota’s Teacher justice. In inspired and incisive writing these animate, speak Japanese, and finally Contributors: Suleiman Adan, Mary Moore community venues. used to hate weekends because they meant of the Year. contributors speak unvarnished truths not only feel comfortable at school, Rademacher Easter, Louise Erdrich, Anika Fajardo, Safy- no school, was crying on the way to school to the original and pernicious racism threaded David Mura’s most recent book is A Stranger’s increasingly sees how his own educational Hallan Farah, Sherrie Fernandez-Williams, almost every day. Sure, there were the slings EDUCATION/GENDER/PARENTING through the American experience but also to Journey: Race, Identity, and Narrative Craft in Writing. struggles, anxieties, and childhood upbringing $18.95 £14.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1173-7 Pamela R. Fletcher Bush, Shannon Gibney, and arrows of bullies and bad teachers, but, the deeply personal, in essays about family, He is author of two memoirs, Turning Japanese: are reflected in his teaching, writing, and $18.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6637-3 Kathryn Haddad, Tish Jones, Ezekiel Joubert maybe worse, Ollie, a funny, anxious, smart OCTOBER loss, food culture, economic security, and Memoirs of a Sansei, which won the Oakland PEN parenting, as well as in Ollie’s experience. III, Douglas Kearney, Ed Bok Lee, Ricardo kid with a thing for choir and an eye for 200 pages 5 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/4 mental health. Their call and response is Josephine Miles Book Award and was a And with this story of one anything-but- Levins Morales, Arleta Little, Resmaa graphic art, was gravely underchallenged and united here to rise and be heard. Times Notable Book, and Where the Body Meets academic year of inquiry and wonder, doubt Menakem, Tess Montgomery, Ahmad Qais also struggling with identity and how to live Memory. and revelation, he shows us how raising a kid We Are Meant to Rise lifts up the astonishing Munhazim, Melissa Olson, Alexs Pate, Bao totally as themselves. Ollie begged to switch changes everything—and how much raising a variety of BIPOC writers in Minnesota. From Phi, Mona Susan Power, Samantha Sencer- to a new school with “kids like me,” where CREATIVE NONFICTION/RACIAL JUSTICE kid like Ollie can teach us about who we are authors with international reputations to Mura, Said Shaiye, Erin Sharkey, Sun Yung $18.95 £14.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1221-5 they wouldn’t feel so alone, or so bored, and and what we’re doing in the world. newly emerging voices, it features people Shin, Michael Torres, Diane Wilson, Kao Kalia $18.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6647-2 so they made the change. NOVEMBER from many cultures, including Indigenous Yang, and Kevin Yang. 224 pages 5 3/8 x 8 1/4 6 7 Sickening Opioid Reckoning Anti-Black Racism and Health Disparities in the United States Love, Loss, and Redemption in the Rehab State ANNE POLLOCK AMY C. SULLIVAN

FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA SICKENING 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA ANTI-BLACK RACISM AND HEALTH DISPARITIES IN An event-by-event look at how crisis—and even the life-threatening childbirth THE UNITED STATES Examines the complexity and the the crisis through firsthand accounts of people institutionalized racism harms the health experience for tennis star Serena Williams— humanity of the opioid epidemic grappling with the reverberating effects of of African Americans in the twenty-first author Anne Pollock takes readers on a stigma, treatment, and recovery. century journey through the diversity of anti-Black “From the Land of 10,000 Rehabs comes this generous and Sullivan uses her own story as a launching racism operating in healthcare. She goes ANNE POLLOCK heartening testament to the power of empathy and the point to learn how the opioid epidemic beneath the surface to deconstruct the “Anne Pollock offers a model and method for situating wisdom of harm reduction. Living with Amy Sullivan’s challenged longstanding recovery protocols structures that make these events possible, everyday forms of antiblackness within a larger machinery stories of ‘trauma parenting,’ we are compelled to take in Minnesota, a state internationally including mass incarceration, police brutality, of death-making that—whether it grinds people down stock of how our own lives and losses intertwine with recognized for pioneering addiction and the hypervisibility of Black athletes’ slowly or extinguishes them swiftly—counts on our those who people these pages.” treatment. By centering the voices of many bodies. Ultimately, Sickening shows what Anne Pollock is professor of global health and social Amy C. Sullivan, PhD, is a professor of history at inability to connect the dots. Riveting, infuriating, and —Nancy D. Campbell, author of OD: Naloxone and the Politics people who have experienced opioid use, these shocking events reveal about the medicine at King’s College London. She is author Macalester College. essential, Sickening reminds us that neither statistics nor of Overdose treatment, recovery, and loss, Sullivan everyday racialization of health in the United of Medicating Race: Heart Disease and Durable structural analysis will save us, and all those committed to exposes the devastating effects of a one- States. Preoccupations with Difference and Synthesizing Hope: “In this timely book, Amy C. Sullivan illuminates how CURRENT EVENTS/HEALTH social change must heed the stories we tell (and are told) size-fits-all approach toward treatment of $25.95 £19.99 Cloth/jacket ISBN: 978-1-5179-0863-8 Matter, Knowledge, and Place in South African Drug the public health crisis of opioid use disorder cannot be about racism and inequity if we are to get free.” Concluding with a vital examination of opioid dependency. Taking a clear-eyed, $25.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6255-9 Discovery. adequately conveyed through abstract statistics. The OCTOBER —Ruha Benjamin, author of Race after Technology racialized healthcare during the COVID nonjudgmental perspective of every aspect personal narratives and oral histories Sullivan weaves 288 pages 6 x 9 pandemic and the Black Lives Matter of these issues—drug use, parenting, harm RACE AND MEDICINE together tell an indelible story of the trauma, stigma, and, rebellions of 2020, Sickening cuts through $21.95 £16.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1172-0 reduction, medication, abstinence, and A crucial component of anti-Black racism is the above all, humanity of the experience of addiction and the mind-numbing statistics to vividly $88.00xx £70.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1171-3 stigma—Opioid Reckoning questions current unconscionable disparity in health outcomes $21.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6617-5 recovery.” portray healthcare inequalities. In a gripping treatment models, healthcare inequities, and between Black and white Americans. AUGUST —Sarah Gollust, University of Minnesota School of Public Health and passionate style, Pollock shows the 208 pages 8 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 the criminal justice system. Sickening examines this institutionalized devastating reality and consequences of inequality through dramatic, concrete events Opioid Reckoning takes readers into the systemic racism on the lives and health of America’s opioid epidemic continues to ravage from the past two decades, revealing how intimate lives of families, medical and social Black Americans. families and communities, despite intense unequal living conditions and inadequate work professionals, grassroots activists, media coverage, federal legislation, criminal medical care have become routine. and many others impacted by the crisis prosecutions, and harm reduction efforts to who contribute their insights and potential From the spike in chronic disease after prevent overdose deaths. More than 450,000 solutions. In sharing these stories and Hurricane Katrina to the lack of protection Americans have died from opioid overdoses chronicling their lessons, Sullivan offers a path for Black residents during the Flint water since the late 1990s. In Opioid Reckoning, forward that cultivates empathy, love, and Amy C. Sullivan explores the complexity of hope for anyone affected by chaotic drug use and its harms. 8 9 Olav Audunssøn The Dylan Tapes II. Providence Friends, Players, and Lovers Talkin' Early SIGRID UNDSET ANTHONY SCADUTO

TRANSLATED BY TIINA NUNNALLY EDITED BY STEPHANIE TRUDEAU

FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

The second volume in the – Set in a time when royalty and religion The raw material and interviews behind his professional persona and perfected his winning writer’s epic of medieval , vie for power, and bloodlines and loyalties Anthony Scaduto’s iconic biography craft—from folk music, protest songs, and finely capturing Undset’s fluid, natural are effectively law, Providence summons of Bob Dylan draw an intimate and electric rock through the traumatic impact style in a new English , the first a powerful picture of Northern life in the multifaceted portrait of the singer- of a motorcycle crash to his later, more in nearly a century medieval era, as the Swedish Academy songwriter who defined his era self-reflecting songwriting. Echo Helstrom, noted in awarding Undset the Nobel Prize. Dylan’s “Girl from the North Country,” is here, As Norway moves into the fourteenth century, When Anthony Scaduto’s Bob Dylan: An Conveying both the intimate drama of Olav as are Suze Rotolo, who graced the cover the kingdom continues to be racked by Intimate Biography was first published in and Ingunn’s marriage and the epic sweep of the Freewheelin’ album, and Joan Baez, political turmoil and bloody family vendettas 1971, the Nobel Prize–winning songwriter, of their story, it is at once a moving and vivid remembering her relationship “to Bobby.” that serve as the backdrop for Sigrid Undset’s at thirty, had already released some of the recreation of a vanished world tainted by Sigrid Undset (1882–1949) was a prolific Norwegian We hear from Mike Porco, who gave Dylan Anthony Scaduto (1932–2017) was a journalist and masterful story about Olav Audunssøn and most iconic albums of the 1960s, including bloodshed and haunted by sin and retribution. writer and winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in his first gig in ; Sid and Bob biographer of rock musicians who also wrote under Ingunn Steinfinnsdatter. Betrothed as children Highway 61 Revisited and Blonde on Blonde. 1928. From 1940 to 1945, she lived in the United States Gleason, who introduced him to his hero the name Tony Sciacca. Along with his landmark and raised as foster siblings, their unbridled As with her classic Kristin Lavransdatter, Scaduto’s book was one of the first to take in exile during the German occupation of Norway. She Woody Guthrie; folk artists from Greenwich Bob Dylan: An Intimate Biography, he wrote biographies love for each other sets in motion a series of Sigrid Undset immersed herself in legal, an investigative journalist’s approach to its is best known for her epic medieval trilogy Kristin Village, like Phil Ochs and Ramblin’ Jack Eliot; of Mick Jagger, Frank Sinatra, Marilyn Monroe, and dire events—with a legacy of betrayal, murder, religious, and historical writings to create in subject and set the standard for rock music Lavransdatter and the tetralogy Olav Audunssøn. John Hammond Sr., who gave him his first John F. Kennedy, as well as Scapegoat, an investigation and disgrace that will echo for generations. In Olav Audunssøn an astoundingly authentic biography. The Dylan Tapes, compiled from record contract; plus a host of musicians, into the trial of Richard Hauptmann and his execution for Providence, the second of Olav Audunssøn’s and compelling portrait of Norwegian life in Tiina Nunnally is the award-winning translator of works thirty-six hours of interviews, is a behind- activists, folk historians, and archivists—and, the kidnapping and death of Charles Lindbergh’s son in four volumes, Olav settles in at his ancestral the Middle Ages. And as in her translation of , including Sigrid Undset’s the-scenes look at the making of Scaduto’s of course, Dylan himself. which he uncovered evidence that strongly suggested estate of Hestviken and soon brings Ingunn of Kristin Lavransdatter, Tiina Nunnally does Kristin Lavransdatter, which was awarded the PEN/ landmark book—and a close-up encounter Hauptmann’s innocence. home as his wife. Both hope to put their full justice to Undset’s fluid prose. Undset’s Book-of-the-Month Club translation prize. She has with pivotal figures in Dylan’s life. These From these reflections and frank troubles behind them as they start a new life writing style is by turns straightforward translated works by Tove Ditlevsen, Ola Larsmo, Per reel-to-reel tapes, found in a box in Scaduto’s conversations, many published here for the A celebrated actress, singer, and writer, Stephanie Trudeau together, but the crimes and shameful secrets and delicately lyrical, conveying the natural Olov Enquist, and The Complete and Original Norwegian basement, are a never-bootlegged trove of first time, a complex, finely observed picture met Anthony Scaduto in 1972 and was his wife and of the past have a long reach and a tenacious world, the complex culture, and the fraught Folktales of Asbjørnsen and Moe (Minnesota, 2019). archival material about Dylan, drawn from emerges of one of the best known yet most research assistant from 1978 until his death. hold. The consequences of sin, suspicion, and emotional territory against which Olav’s story conversations with those closest to him enigmatic musicians of our time. familial obligations may prove a greater threat inexorably unfolds. FICTION/SCANDINAVIAN during the early years of his career. MUSIC/BIOGRAPHY $17.95 £13.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1160-7 $29.95 £22.99 Cloth/jacket ISBN: 978-1-5179-0815-7 to the pair’s happiness than even their long $17.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6577-2 In the era of ten-second takes, these $29.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6196-5 years of separation. SEPTEMBER NOVEMBER 280 pages 1 map 5 1/2 x 8 1/4 interviews offer uncommon depth and 400 pages 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 immediacy as we listen to friends and lovers recall the Dylan they knew as he created 10 Winter’s Children A Celebration of Nordic Skiing Rodgers RYAN RODGERS Winter’s

ChildrenA Celebration of Nordic Skiing FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA Winter’s Children Winter’s

The story of Nordic skiing in the Midwest— Nordic skiing in the Midwest from its its origins and history, its star athletes and introduction in the late 1800s to its uncertain races, and its place in the region’s social future in today’s rapidly changing climate. fabric and the nation’s winter recreation Along the way he profiles the sport’s stars and stalwarts, from working-class Norwegian In the winter of 1841, a Norwegian immigrant immigrants with a near-spiritual reverence in Wisconsin strapped on a pair of wooden for cross-country skiing to Americans Ryan Rodgers boards and set off across the snow to buy passionately committed to the virtues of flour—leaving tracks that perplexed his competitive sport, and he chronicles races neighbors and marked the arrival of Nordic like the thrilling 1938 Arrowhead Derby (which Ryan Rodgers is a freelance writer and avid skier skiing in America. To this day, the Midwest is ran from Duluth to St. Paul over five days) whose work has been published in Backpacker, The the nation’s epicenter of cross-country skiing, and the American Birkebeiner, the nation’s Sun, Minnesota Conservation Volunteer, Hamline, and sporting a history as replete with athleticism largest cross-country event, which takes place Northern Wilds magazines. The former board president and competitive spirit as it is steeped in every year in northern Wisconsin, snowpack of the Standing Cedars Community Land Conservancy, a old-world lore and cold-world practicality. permitting. 1,500-acre nonprofit land trust along the St. Croix River, This history unfolds in full for the first time in he lives with his family in northern Minnesota. Winter’s Children. Generously illustrated with vintage photography and ski posters, and featuring Nordic skiing first took hold as a sport in the HISTORY/SPORTS firsthand observations drawn from interviews, $34.95 £26.99 Cloth/jacket ISBN: 978-1-5179-0934-5 Upper Midwest at the end of the nineteenth Winter’s Children is an engaging look at the $34.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6353-2 century, giving rise to an early ski league and NOVEMBER earliest ski teams and touring clubs; the a host of star athletes. With the arrival of a 448 pages 306 b&w illustrations 8 x 10 evolution of cross-country skis, gear, and pair of brothers from Telemark, Norway, the fashion; and the ambitious and ongoing effort world’s best skiers at the time, the sport—and to establish and maintain a vast trail network the ski manufacturing industry—reached new across the Minnesota state park system. heights in Minnesota, only to see its fortunes fall after World War II, when downhill skiing surged in popularity. In Winter’s Children Ryan Rodgers traces the rise and fall of 12 13 Many Berry Pie The Steger Homestead Kitchen FALL 2021 FALL Makes one 9-inch pie Simple Recipes for an Abundant Life Raspberry bushes give us bushels of berries every summer. The key to the flakiest crust is to use super-cold butter and to hold back on WILL STEGER AND RITA MAE STEGER the amount of ice water, using as little as possible. Let the dough “rest” to help the gluten in the flour relax, making it easier to roll out. WITH BETH DOOLEY Simple Recipes Crust The Steger for an Abundant Life

UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA PRESS UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2 ½ cups all-purpose flour Homestead Kitchen 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA Will Steger and Rita Mae Steger ~ with Beth Dooley 2 teaspoons plus 2 tablespoons sugar

1 teaspoon salt

½ cup cold butter, cut into small pieces Personal and simple, earthy and warm— The Steger Homestead Kitchen is an inspiring 6 tablespoons very cold vegetable shortening recipes and stories from the Steger and down-to-earth collection of meals and Wilderness Center in Minnesota’s north memories gathered at the Homestead, the 6 to 8 tablespoons ice water woods home of the Arctic explorer and environmental Filling activist Will Steger, located in the north woods near Ely, Minnesota. Founded in 1988, the ½ cup sugar “Will is arguably the world’s greatest living explorer. Now, Steger Wilderness Center was established to with The Steger Homestead Kitchen, he and his niece ½ teaspoon cinnamon model viable carbon-neutral solutions, teach Rita Mae explore with us the power of eating locally and ecological stewardship, and address climate ¼ cup all-purpose flour sustainably, and in the society of others. This gorgeous change. In her role as the Homestead’s chef, Will Steger, explorer and environmental educator, book should have a place in everyone’s kitchen—or on 1 teaspoon grated orange zest Will’s niece Rita Mae creates delicious and is founder of Climate Generation and the Steger every coffee table.” hearty meals that become a cornerstone Wilderness Center and winner of the National 6 cups fresh blueberries, or mix of blueberries and raspberries —Dan Buettner experience for visitors from all over the world, Geographic John Oliver La Gorce Medal. To make the crust, combine flour, 2 teaspoons sugar, and salt in a “The Steger Homestead Kitchen is a very practical nourishing them as they learn and share their Rita Mae Steger is a chef and musician who runs the large bowl. Using your fingers, rub in the butter and shortening until book of recipes, memories, and meals from the visions for a healthy and abundant future. Steger Wilderness Center’s food program. the mixture resembles a coarse meal. Gradually mix in just enough Stegers’ Northwoods Ely kitchen. I love the sustainable, Interwoven with dozens of mouth-watering ice water to create a dough that can be gently pressed into a ball. inspirational, and climate-friendly recipes and menus that Beth Dooley is a James Beard Award–winning author recipes—for generous breakfasts (Almond Flatten into a disk, wrap in plastic, and refrigerate 1 hour. were guided by Beth Dooley, an award-winning Minnesota and coauthor of several cookbooks, including The Sioux Berry Griddlecakes), warming lunches cookbook author. This book is a good and important read.” Chef’s Indigenous Kitchen (Minnesota, 2017), and a To make the filling, preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. In a large (Northwoods Mushroom Wild Rice Soup), —Beatrice Ojakangas, James Beard Cookbook Hall of Fame author memoir, In Winter’s Kitchen. bowl, combine sugar, cinnamon, flour, and orange zest. Toss in elegant dinners (Spatchcock Chicken with

blueberries. Divide the dough in half and roll out one piece on a “Whether we are huddled together in a small tent or Blueberry Maple Glaze), desserts (Very Carrot COOKBOOK/ENVIRONMENT lightly floured surface and fit into a 9-inch pie plate. Place the filling gathered around a big table, food gives us warmth, Cake), and snacks (Steger Wilderness Bars)— $27.95 £20.99 Lithocase ISBN: 978-1-5179-0974-1 in the pie. Roll out the remaining dough, cut ½-inch wide strips, and nourishment, and community. This book is so much more are Will Steger’s exhilarating stories of epic $27.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6411-9 NOVEMBER weave into a lattice top. Seal, trim, and crimp the edges. Sprinkle the than a collection of recipes: it shares wisdom gained over adventures exploring the Earth’s most remote 128 pages 48 color plates 7 x 10 top with the remaining sugar. a remarkable lifetime of exploration and offers a timely and endangered regions. reminder in the era of climate change that a little can go Set the pie on a baking sheet and bake for 30 minutes. Reduce the The Steger Homestead Kitchen opens up the a long way.” temperature to 325 degrees and bake until the crust is just browned Wilderness Center’s hospitality, providing the —Eric Dayton, cofounder and CEO, Askov Finlayson (and Will and the filling is set, about 20 minutes longer. Remove and cool on a practical advice and inspiration to cook up a Steger’s teammate on Arctic Transect 2004) wire rack. good life in harmony with nature. 14 15 Eco Soma Gichigami Hearts [

Pain and Joy in Speculative Performance Encounters E R U T A N R E T F A T R A Stories and Histories from Misaabekong

PETRA KUPPERS LINDA LEGARDE GROVER

] FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

PAIN AND JOY IN SPECULATIVE PERFORMANCE ENCOUNTERS

An autoethnographic discussion of the queer, trans, racialized, and Indigenous art PETRA KUPPERS Award-winning author Linda LeGarde in myth, some in long-ago times, some in an speculative and fantastical elements projects. By offering new ways to think, Grover interweaves family and imagined present, and some in the author’s of performance frame, and feel “environments,” Kuppers history with stories from Misaabekong family history, all with a deep and tenacious focuses on art-based methods of envisioning (the place of the giants) on Lake Superior bond to the land, one another, and the Ojibwe In Eco Soma, Petra Kuppers asks readers to change and argues that disability can offer culture. be alert to their own embodied responses to imaginative ways toward living well and with art practice and to pay attention to themselves “With compelling stories of sacred places, beloved people, Within the larger history, Grover tells the story agency in change, unrest, and challenge. as active participants in a shared sociocultural myths, legends, and treasured memories, Gichigami Hearts of her ancestors’ arrival at the American Fur world. Reading contemporary performance Traditional somatics teach us how to fine-tune is a moving tribute to the Ojibwe past.” Post in far western Duluth more than two encounters and artful engagements, this our introspective senses and to open up the —Carolyn Holbrook, author of Tell Me Your Names and I Will Testify hundred years ago. Their fortunes and the Petra Kuppers is a community performance artist and Linda LeGarde Grover is professor of American Indian book models a disability culture sensitivity to world of our own bodies, while eco soma family’s future are inextricably entwined with disability culture activist. She is professor of English “With stories of the essence of land and people, Linda studies at the University of Minnesota Duluth and a living in a shared world, oriented toward more methods extend that attention toward the tales of marriages to voyageurs, relocations and women’s and gender studies at the University LeGarde Grover weaves a generational history of a member of the Bois Forte Band of Ojibwe. Her books socially just futures. creative possibilities of the reach between to reservation lands, encounters with the of and serves on the faculty of the MFA in sacredness inseparable from place, of the unbroken chain The Road Back to Sweetgrass, Onigamiising: Seasons self, others, and the land. Eco Soma proposes spirits of the lake and wood creatures, the Eco soma methods mix and merge realities on Interdisciplinary Arts at Goddard College. Her most of Anishinaabe existence in Misaabekong. Her powerful of an Ojibwe Year, and In the Night of Memory, all from an art/life method of sensory tuning to the renewal of life—in myth and in art, the the edges of lived experience and site-specific recent books include Theatre and Disability and prose and ethereal poetry wash over the pages like waves Minnesota, have earned numerous awards, including inside and the outside simultaneously, a search for meaning in the transformations performance. Kuppers invites us to become Studying Disability Arts and Culture: An Introduction. along the shore of Lake Superior, revealing a strength of the Native Writers Circle of the Americas First Book method that allows for a wider opening of our day is always vital. Finally, in one moths, sprout gills, listen to our heart’s drum, survival that goes beyond memory and reminding us to Award; Northeastern Minnesota Book Awards for toward ethical cohabitation with human and man’s struggles, age-old tribulations, the and take starships into crip time. And fantasy PERFORMANCE/DISABILITY STUDIES watch, listen, and breathe.” Poetry, Memoir, and Fiction; and a Minnesota Book more-than-human others. $28.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1189-8 intergenerational traumas of extended is central to these engagements: feeling/ —Gwen Westerman, Minnesota State University, Mankato Award for Memoir and Creative Nonfiction. Her book of $112.00xx £89.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1188-1 families and communities, and a uniquely sensing monsters, catastrophes, golden $28.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6687-8 stories The Dance Boots was the winner of the Flannery Ojibwe appreciation for the natural and lines, heartbeats, injured sharks, dotted JANUARY 2022 O’Connor Award and the Janet Heidinger Kafka Prize. 280 pages 27 b&w illustrations, 16 color plates 6 x 8 Long before there was a Duluth, Minnesota, spiritual worlds converge, forging the Ojibwe salamanders, kissing mammoths, and more. Art after Nature series the massive outcropping that divides the worldview and will to survive as his legacy to Kuppers illuminates ecopoetic disability culture CREATIVE NONFICTION/NATIVE AMERICAN city emerged from the ridge of gabbro rock his descendants. $14.95 £10.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1193-5 perspectives, contending that disabled people running along the westward shore of Lake $14.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6625-0 and their co-conspirators make art to live in Blending the seen and unseen, the old and SEPTEMBER Superior. A great westward migration carried a changing world, in contact with feminist, the new, the amusing and the tragic and 200 pages 8 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 the Ojibwe people to this place, the Point of the hauntingly familiar, this lyrical work Rocks. Against this backdrop—Misaabekong, encapsulates a way of life forever vibrant at the place of the giants—the lives chronicled the Point of Rocks. in Linda LeGarde Grover’s book unfold, some

16 17 Our Grateful Dead After Effects Stories of Those Left Behind A Memoir of Complicated Grief VINCIANE DESPRET ANDREA GILATS

TRANSLATED BY STEPHEN MUECKE

AFTER EFFECTS FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

A MEMOIR OF

COMPLICATED GRIEF An award-winning exploration art; or thrive from a shared inheritance or an An intensely moving and revelatory that brought her back to life. In the two of the presence of the dead organ donation. This is supported by dreams memoir of enduring and emerging from years immediately following his death, Gilats in the lives of the living and voices, novels, television and popular exceptional grief wrote Tom daily letters, desperately trying to culture, the work of clairvoyants, and the maintain the twenty-year conversation of their A common remedy after suffering the loss of everyday stories and activities of the living. marriage. Excerpts from these letters reveal a loved one is to progress through the “stages “I am enormously grateful that the world is finally ANDREA GILATS For decades now, in the West, the dead have the depth of her despair but also the glimmer of grief,” with “acceptance” as the final stage welcoming a deeper and more complex understanding been discreet and invisible. Today, especially of an awakening as they also trace a different, in the process. But is it necessary to leave about grief and grieving. Andrea Gilats makes a vital as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, Despret more typical course of the grief experienced death behind, to stop dwelling on the dead, to contribution with this honest account of her husband’s suggests that perhaps we will be willing to by one of Gilats's colleagues, also widowed. get over the pain? Vinciane Despret thinks not. death and her long journey through complicated grief to engage with the dead in ways that bring us Vinciane Despret is associate professor of philosophy Gilats’s struggle to rescue herself takes Andrea Gilats is a writer, educator, artist, and former In her fascinating, elegantly translated book, arrive at her hard-won ‘fringes of happiness.’” happiness despite our loss. at the University of Liège and the Free University of her through the temptation of suicide, the yoga teacher who was the cofounder and longtime this influential thinker argues that, in practice, —Judith Barrington, bestselling author of Writing the Memoir: Brussels. The original French edition of Our Grateful threat of deadly illness, the overwhelming director of the University of Minnesota’s legendary Split people in all cultures continue to enjoy a lively, Despret’s unique method of inquiry makes From Truth to Art Dead (Au bonheur des morts) won the prestigious Prix challenges of work, and the rigor of learning Rock Arts Program, a nationally renowned series of inventive, positive relationship with their dead. her book both entertaining and instructive. des Rencontres Philosophiques de Monaco. Her books and eventually teaching yoga, to a moment residential workshops in visual art and creative writing, Our Grateful Dead offers a new, pragmatic Through her unique storytelling woven from include What Would Animals Say If We Asked the Right To grieve after a profound loss is perfectly of reckoning and, finally, reconciliation to a as well as Split Rock Online Mentoring for Writers. She approach to social and cultural research and ethnographic sources and her own family Questions? and The Dance of the Arabian Babbler: Birth natural and healthy. To be debilitated by grief life without her beloved partner. Her story is is author of Restoring Flexibility: A Gentle Yoga-Based may indeed provide compassionate therapy history, Despret assembles accounts of of an Ethological Theory, both from Minnesota. for more than a decade, as Andrea Gilats informed by the lessons she learned about Practice to Increase Mobility at Any Age and has written for those of us coping with death. those who have found ways to live their daily was, is something else. In her candid, deeply complicated grief as a disorder that, while many articles about aging. Stephen Muecke is professor of creative writing lives with their dead. She rejects the idea moving, and ultimately helpful memoir of intensely personal, can be defined, grappled at Flinders University, South Australia. His many that one must either subscribe to “complete breaking free of death’s relentless grip on with, and overcome. MEMOIR/DEATH AND GRIEF include works by Gilles Deleuze, Roland $19.95 £14.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1218-5 mourning” (in a sense, to get rid of the dead) her life, Gilats tells her story of living with Barthes, and Luce Irigaray. Though complicated grief affects as many as $19.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6635-9 or else fall into fantasy and superstition. She prolonged, or “complicated,” grief and offers NOVEMBER one in seven of those stricken by the loss of explores instead how the dead still play an insight, hope, and guidance to others who 200 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/4 PHILOSOPHY/ANTHROPOLOGY a close loved one, it is little known outside active, tangible role through those who are $22.95 £17.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1141-6 suffer as she did. professional circles. After Effects points living, who might assume their place in a $92.00xx £73.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1140-9 $22.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6593-2 Thomas Dayton, Andrea Gilats’s husband of toward a path of recuperation and provides family or in society; continue their labor or AUGUST twenty years, died at 52 after a five-month solace along the way—a service and a comfort 196 pages 5 1/4 x 8 Posthumanities Series, volume 65 battle with cancer. In After Effects Gilats that is all the more timely and necessary in our describes the desolation that followed and pandemic-ravaged world of loss and isolation. the slow and torturous twenty-year journey 18 19 Reeling The Last Bookseller A Novel A Life in the Rare Book Trade SARAH STONICH GARY GOODMAN

THE FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA A Novel LAST 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

BOOKSELLER ª0Æ A Life in RayAnne’s next adventure takes our dignitaries. Their stories, and a good dose of A wry, unvarnished chronicle of a career early struggles, the remarkable finds, and the theª0Æ Rare Book Trade intrepid heroine, haunted by her beloved the country’s history, are almost enough to in the rare book trade during its last bibliophiles, forgers, book thieves, and book grandmother’s death, to New Zealand to take the edge off RayAnne’s homesickness Golden Age hoarders he met along the way. GARY GOODMAN film a new season of her all-women fishing and grief, to say nothing of jetlag—and it Here we meet the infamous St. Paul Book talk show doesn’t hurt to discover a bird dog who fishes, “The Last Bookseller is a witty book that offers an insider’s Bandit, Stephen Blumberg, who stole 24,000 an anti-fashionista, a pair of sisters fishing What stage of grief is it when your account of a vital, disappearing trade. Packed with wry rare books worth more than fifty million their way through recovery, and . . . grandmother’s ghost keeps popping up on observations of colorful personalities, Gary Goodman not dollars, and the eccentric Melvin McCosh, a Hobbit? Meanwhile, the romantic and your electronic devices? Denial? For RayAnne only captures an important moment in antiquarian book who filled his dilapidated Lake Minnetonka family entanglements she left behind at that seems to be the stage for launching the history—when a small river town in Minnesota becomes mansion with half a million books. In 1990, home haven’t exactly come untangled in her Fishing!, the first installment of RayAnne’s adventures, Gary Goodman is a semi-retired rare book dealer second season of Fishing!—in New Zealand. North America’s first ‘Book Town’—but also asks hard with a couple of partners, Goodman opened absence. is published by Minnesota, as are the first two volumes in Stillwater, Minnesota. He put six kids through Ready or not, she is taking public television’s questions about what has been lost in the wake of new St. Croix Antiquarian Books in Stillwater, one in Sarah Stonich’s Northern Trilogy, Vacationland and college selling secondhand books, a feat that makes first all-women fishing talk show on the road, Those who met RayAnne in Fishing!, Sarah technology. Opening this book is like stepping into an old of the Twin Cities region’s most venerable Laurentian Divide. She is also author of These Granite him a Genuine American Hero. He is coauthor of The putting the cold Minnesota winter in the Stonich’s first outing with the intrepid, bookstore: wonders are around every corner.” bookshops until it closed in 2017. This store Islands (Minnesota, 2013), which has been translated Stillwater Booktown Times and The Secret History of rearview mirror—which, it turns out, Gran is accidental talk-show host, will encounter —Patrick Hicks, author of The Commandant of Lubizec and In the became so successful that Richard Booth, into seven languages and shortlisted for France’s Grand Golf in Scotland. haunting, too. familiar and unexpected pleasures in her Shadow of Dora founder of the “book town” movement in Prix des Lectrices de Elle; a memoir, Shelter: Off the latest antics—and a story whose lighthearted Hay-on-Wye in Wales, declared Stillwater the After a challenging first season, and Grid in the Mostly Magnetic North (Minnesota, 2017); “A beautifully written firsthand account of the adventures of MEMOIR surface and surprising depths will charm First Book Town in North America. $19.95 £14.99 Cloth/jacket ISBN: 978-1-5179-1257-4 RayAnne’s serendipitous ascension to host, and the critically acclaimed novel The Ice Chorus. She a man who was a mover and shaker in the book business readers who now find her for the first time. $19.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6691-5 there’s a lot at stake. With camera-wielding lives on the Mississippi River in Minneapolis. for nearly half a century, The Last Bookseller will be high The internet changed the book business DECEMBER twins Rongo and Rangi along as crew and on the must-read list of book lovers everywhere.” forever, and Goodman details how, after 2000, 200 pages 18 b&w illustrations 5 3/8 x 8 1/4 tour guides, RayAnne and her indefatigable FICTION —Mark Ziegler, author of Wordsongs the internet made stores like his obsolete. $15.95 £11.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0899-7 producer Cassi set out across New Zealand $15.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6304-4 In the 1990s, the Twin Cities had nearly in search of noteworthy women who fish: a OCTOBER fifty secondhand bookshops; today, there When Gary Goodman wandered into a run- skipjack boat captain navigating sexist harbors; 296 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/4 are fewer than ten. As both a memoir and down, used-book shop that was going out of a writer of historical suffragette fiction, a history of booksellers and book scouts, business in East St. Paul in 1982, he had no which is, apparently, a thing; a reclusive criminals and collectors, The Last Bookseller idea the visit would change his life. In The Last Māori octogenarian who ties fishing flies for offers an ultimately poignant account of the Bookseller Goodman describes his sometimes used and rare book business during its final desperate, sometimes hilarious career as a Golden Age. used and rare book dealer in Minnesota—the 20 21 A Natural Curiosity The Story of the Bell Museum LANSING SHEPARD, DON LUCE, BARBARA COFFIN, AND GWEN SCHAGRIN

FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

A richly illustrated tour of Minnesota’s more curious specimens (like the bones premier natural history museum of Philippine orangutans and moonrats, a after 150 years high-flying moose, and a simple fungi sample that saved a man’s life), and the dramatic From its humble start in 1872 as a one- accounts of the critical advances made by the room cabinet of curiosities, the University museum in wildlife telemetry, conservation of Minnesota’s Bell Museum of natural biology, and scientific learning—all in defense LANSING SHEPARD, DON LUCE, BARBARA COFFIN AND GWEN SCHAGRIN history has grown to be one of the state’s of our planet’s threatened biodiversity. In a most important cultural institutions. Within photographic finale, readers will be treated its walls are displayed the natural wonders to a tour of the new, reimagined museum, Lansing Shepard is a writer who specializes in of Minnesota and the world beyond, a complete with the planetarium that inspired conservation, environmental policy, and natural history. standing invitation to explore, understand, and one Minnesota boy to become a NASA He is coauthor of This Perennial Land: Third Crops, appreciate our natural environment—and, for astronaut. Blue Earth, and the Road to a Restorative Agriculture visitors of all ages, both seasoned observers and author of the Northern Plains volume of The and curious onlookers, to experience the From its conception as part of a state- Smithsonian Guides to Natural America series. delight of discovery. A Natural Curiosity is a mandated geological and natural history tale well told, a lively ride across 150 years of survey, to its most recent ventures into Don Luce is Bell Museum curator of exhibits. important scientific advancement. technology, environmental science, and DNA Barbara Coffin is executive producer of the Emmy sequencing, the Bell Museum has informed, Drawing on a wealth of materials unearthed Award–winning television documentary Minnesota: explained, and expanded our relationship to during the museum’s recent move to its A History of the Land and coeditor of Minnesota’s the natural world. Its story, engagingly told new building, this gorgeously illustrated Endangered Flora and Fauna (Minnesota, 1988). in A Natural Curiosity, reveals and explores book chronicles the remarkable discoveries, the profound changes undergone by society, Gwen Schagrin has worked in exhibits research, moments, and personalities that have made science, and the natural landscape over the design, and production at the Bell Museum since 1992. the Bell Museum what it is today. Among museum’s lifetime. the stories of ornithologists, botanists, NATURAL HISTORY/MUSEUMS tycoons, and conservationists, readers will $34.95 £26.99 Cloth/jacket ISBN: 978-1-5179-1036-5 encounter the magnificent dioramas created NOVEMBER 400 pages 310 color plates 9 x 10 by renowned artist Francis Lee Jaques, the adventures behind some of the Bell’s 22 23 Canoe Country Snowshoe Country The Big Island FLORENCE PAGE JAQUES FLORENCE PAGE JAQUES A Story of Isle Royale ILLUSTRATIONS BY ILLUSTRATIONS BY JULIAN MAY FRANCIS LEE JAQUES FRANCIS LEE JAQUES ILLUSTRATIONS BY JOHN SCHOENHERR NOW IN PAPERBACK NOW IN PAPERBACK FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

THE BIG ISLAND

The classic and gorgeous accounts of two legendary naturalists’ journeys through summer and winter in the north country— First published in 1968, this engrossing Complementing this fascinating text, John A Story of Isle Royale in two new stand-alone paperback editions and beautiful picture book about wildlife Schoenherr’s magnificent illustrations convey on Isle Royale is available again the strength of these animals and the beauty BACK IN PRINT of the island that is their home. “These voyaging days are translucent with joy. When we start out in the morning, the earth has such a before-Eden look that it seems a shame to shake the dew from the Isle Royale, “the big island” of this book, is blueberries or strike our paddles into the sleeping water. Thrusting on into sun-filled channels; drifting into green-needled embrasures where chickadees are buoyant; landing a wilderness national park in Lake Superior First published in 1968, and reprinted here on a beach to bathe and read the overnight paw prints—it is all intoxicating.” and home to a unique and fascinating with a new note by renowned wolf expert Julian May ILLUSTRATIONS BY —from Canoe Country ecosystem of animals, most notably the L. David Mech, The Big Island is an John Schoenherr iconic wolf and majestic moose. Here is enchanting introduction to the wilderness author Julian May’s story about the island’s and wildlife of Isle Royale. When Canoe Country and Snowshoe Country were first published, in 1938 and 1944, respectively, readers were charmed by their Julian May (1931–2017) was a popular writer of beginning, the kinds of animals that came to enchanting portrayal of the wilderness of northern Minnesota. Florence Page Jaques and her husband, Francis Lee Jaques, became , fantasy, horror, and children’s books. populate it, and their effects on the pristine celebrated champions of the Boundary Waters and its majestic environs. Now, these classic books are both back in print as paperback She is best remembered for her Saga of Pliocene Exile landscape. Among them were the moose, editions. and Galactic Milieu series books. Between 1956 and who swam to the island from the distant 1981 she wrote more than 250 science and sports A well-traveled New York sophisticate, Florence Page Jaques fell in love with northern Minnesota during her first trips to the region, shore to fend off starvation. The moose found nonfiction books for children and young adults. and she recounted those early experiences in Canoe Country and Snowshoe Country. She writes of the excitement of traveling by conditions on Isle Royale so favorable that foot, canoe, snowshoe, and dogsled. Weeks of solitude canoeing through the Boundary Waters are interrupted by encounters with they reproduced quickly—but then faced John Schoenherr (1935–2010) was a prolific illustrator the denizens of the north country. In these two volumes, her vivid stories are matched by her famous husband’s spectacular drawings; another food shortage. The wolves arrived by of science fiction and children’s picture books. He won Francis Lee Jaques captures the delicate power of Minnesota’s seasons, from the cascading falls of summer to the frozen lakes of floating to the island on an ice floe in winter the 1988 for his illustrations to Owl winter. and soon became important to the island’s Moon by . He was posthumously inducted ecology as successful predators of the moose. into the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame in Florence Page Jaques (1890–1972) was born in New York. A poet and nature writer, she collaborated with her husband on eight books. 2015. Francis Lee Jaques (1887–1969) spent his childhood in Aitkin, Minnesota. His art is world-renowned, with major collections housed in the Museum of Natural History in New York and the Bell Museum at the University of Minnesota. CHILDREN’S PICTURE BOOK $17.95 £13.99 Cloth/jacket ISBN: 978-1-5179-1069-3 OCTOBER 32 pages 15 color plates 10 x 8 MINNESOTA/NATURE WRITING MINNESOTA/NATURE WRITING $14.95 £10.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1272-7 $14.95 £10.99 Paper ISBN 978-1-5179-1273-4 NOVEMBER NOVEMBER 84 pages 23 illustrations 7 1/2 x 10 1/4 120 pages 68 illustrations 7 1/2 x 10 1/4 Fesler-Lampert Minnesota Heritage Book Series Fesler-Lampert Minnesota Heritage Book Series 24 25 Grandmother’s Pigeon Talkin’ Up to the White Woman

LOUISE ERDRICH Indigenous Women and Feminism AILEEN MORETON-ROBINSON ILLUSTRATIONS BY JIM LAMARCHE NEW EDITION FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

Grandmother’s Pigeon

A grandmother’s sudden departure Grandmother was a mysterious woman. A twentieth-anniversary edition of this of Indigenous women and white feminists leaves her family with an even more She could heal with a touch (or with a cup tour de force in feminism and Indigenous illuminates different epistemologies and an puzzling, and wondrous, surprise in of very bitter tea) or scare off a vicious studies, now with a new preface incommensurability in the social construction this enchanting story from the National dog with a look. But when she hitches a BACK IN PRINT of gender. The twentieth anniversary of the original INDIGENOUS Book Award–winning author—at last ride to Greenland on a passing porpoise, AILEEN publication of this influential and prescient Not so much a study of white womanhood, WOMEN AND MORETON-ROBINSON back in print her family is still surprised—and then FEMINISM work is commemorated with a new edition Talkin’ Up to the White Woman instead concerned. The mystery deepens when, Louise Erdrich Illustrations by Jim LaMarche of Talkin’ Up to the White Woman by Aileen reveals an invisible racialized subject position among Grandmother’s collection of birds’ Moreton-Robinson. In this bold book, of its represented and deployed in power relations nests, the family discovers a clutch of Praise for The Range Eternal: time and ahead of its time, whiteness is made with Indigenous women. The subject position eggs hatching. Out pop three passenger Louise Erdrich is the author of fifteen novels as well Aileen Moreton-Robinson is a Goenpul woman visible in power relations, presenting a dialogic occupied by middle-class white women pigeons—birds of a species long extinct, as volumes of poetry, short stories, a memoir of early of the Quandamooka people (Moreton Bay) and "A gentle story told in poetic language (it’s Louse of how white feminists represent Indigenous is embedded in material and discursive supposedly. motherhood, and children’s books, including The Range professor of Indigenous research at RMIT University in Erdrich, after all), illustrated by beautiful, deep women in discourse and how Indigenous conditions that shape the nature of power Eternal (Minnesota, 2020). Her novel The Round House Melbourne, Australia. She is Australia’s first Indigenous jewel-tone paintings, make this book a perfect bridge Through the words of a curious grandchild, women self-present. relations between white feminists and won the National Book Award for Fiction. The Plague of Distinguished Professor and a founding member of the between picture books and early chapter books." and Jim LaMarche’s evocative artwork, Indigenous women—and the unjust structural Doves was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, and she has Moreton-Robinson argues that white Native American and Indigenous Studies Association. —Pioneer Press Grandmother’s legacy unfolds in these relationship between white society and twice won the National Book Critics Circle Award, for feminists benefit from colonization: they In 2020, she was elected an international honorary pages in all its peculiarity and charm. Indigenous society. "A great read-aloud to build community and for family her debut novel Love Medicine and for LaRose. She are overwhelmingly represented and member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Mixing whimsy and gravity with a little gatherings, sharing traditions and memories together." operates Birchbark Books, an independent bookstore in disproportionately predominant, play the and a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Humanities. science and history, the tale of the family’s —Youth Services Book Review Minneapolis. key roles, and constitute the norm, the Her books include The White Possessive: Property, loss, and marvelous find, summons a world ordinary, and the standard of womanhood. Power, and Indigenous Sovereignty (Minnesota, 2015); "A treasure for its warm-hearted writing and luminous as intriguing as it is perfectly clear—a world Jim LaMarche has illustrated The Rainbabies by Laura They do not self-present as white but rather Critical Indigenous Studies: Engagements in First World artwork." animated by Louise Erdrich’s storytelling Kraus Melmed, Albert by Donna Jo Napoli (a New represent themselves as variously classed, Locations; and the Routledge Handbook of Critical —Bookology magic, inviting readers young and old to York Times Best Illustrated Book), and Up and The Raft, sexualized, aged, and abled. The disjuncture Indigenous Studies. follow Grandmother, and to wonder. which he also wrote. He lives in Santa Cruz, California. "Erdrich’s story is simple and eloquent, weaving tales between representation and self-presentation and history through crystal-clear prose." NATIVE STUDIES/WOMEN’S STUDIES CHILDREN’S PICTURE BOOK $27.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1228-4 —Star Tribune $17.95 Cloth/jacket ISBN: 978-1-5179-1147-8 $27.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6689-2 SEPTEMBER OCTOBER 32 pages 18 color plates 11 x 8 1/2 NAM 288 pages 1 b&w illustration 5 x 8 ANZ Indigenous Americas Series 26 27 Cosmic Trip Days Like Smoke Rock Concerts at the Minneapolis Labor Temple, 1969–1970 A Minnesota Boyhood CHRISTIAN A. PETERSON JON HASSLER

EDITED AND WITH A FOREWORD BY WILL WEAVER

AFTERWORD BY PETER A. DONAHUE FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 202 1 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

A trip through Minneapolis rock concert rock club with a 1,200-person capacity and The memoir of a small-town childhood He imagines how Sylvia Pofford spent the history framed through psychedelic hosted famous bands such as the Grateful by one of Minnesota’s favorite writers, night of the prom that they did not attend poster art Dead, Spirit, Ten Years After, Muddy Waters, now published for the first time together, and he recalls Miss Glaswitz, his and the Byrds. Local bands like the Litter and unmarried neighbor “who kept . . . a neat, I’ve always thought of the Red Owl Grocery Jokers Wild were opening acts. overfurnished house on Broadway, in each "Minneapolis has always been a good place for us to Store in Plainview, Minnesota, as my training room of which was a glass-covered dish play. We came back several times, but we never had that Cosmic Trip tells the story of this famed ground, for it was there that I acquired the filled with hard candy,” who “surprised us especial ‘vibe’ that only happened in that particular year club framed through the poster art of Juryj latent qualities necessary to the novelist: from all by selling it and marrying a cattle buyer and in that place. The Labor Temple was a remarkable Ostroushko. His posters were inspired my dear German father, endurance, patience, from St. Paul.” With chapters organized venue, never to be forgotten." by the psychedelic art coming out of San resilience, and sound working habits, and Christian A. Peterson is the former associate curator by simple themes such as houses, Jon Hassler (1933–2008) was writer in residence and —Adolfo “Fito” de la Parra, of Canned Heat Francisco at the time, and each features from my dear Irish mother, the fun of picking of photographs at the Minneapolis Institute of Art and lessons, and groceries, and ever attuned Regents Professor Emeritus at St. John’s University hand-lettered typography that simulates the individuals out of a crowd and the joy of "Nothing like standing between Jeff Beck and Ron Wood as author of a number of books and exhibit catalogues, to the idiosyncrasies of the people around in Collegeville, Minnesota. His many novels and short effects of recreational drugs. This book moves finding the precise words to describe them. a joint gets passed back and forth." including Chaining the Sun: Portraits by Jeremiah him, Hassler reviews his early years and stories were often set in small-town Minnesota. chronologically through every concert at the No one took more nourishment away from —Peter Ostroushko Gurney and Masterpiece Photographs from the occasionally reveals when a particular Labor Temple, with a descriptive review of the that store than I. Will Weaver is author of Sweet Land, Memory Boy, Minneapolis Institute of Arts: The Curatorial Legacy of neighbor, teacher, or friend inspired a "The Labor Temple’s like the Fillmore Auditorium of the concert along with its poster and additional and Red Earth, White Earth. He has also written award- Carroll T. Hartwell, both available from the University of Beloved Minnesota novelist Jon Hassler, character or scene in his writing. Midwest." memorabilia. This duet of music and art is a winning novels and series for young adults. He taught Minnesota Press. who chronicled small-town Midwestern life —Ron “Pigpen” McKernan, of the Grateful Dead trip down memory lane during a trippy time of Will Weaver, another successful writer creative writing and literature at in such popular novels as Staggerford, A Minneapolis rock. devoted to rural Minnesota, first met “Mister and lives in northern Minnesota. MUSIC/MINNESOTA Green Journey, and North of Hope, left the $29.95 £22.99 Paper ISBN: 978-0-9984-8444-0 Hassler” as his older sister’s English teacher In 1969 and 1970 the Minneapolis Labor manuscript for one important story unfinished AVAILABLE in Park Rapids. Weaver gently edited Hassler’s BIOGRAPHY Temple burned bright as the center of the 116 pages 35 b&w illustrations, 61 color plates when he died: his own. Days Like Smoke: A $22.95 £17.99 Cloth/jacket ISBN: 978-1-7361021-1-4 unfinished manuscript and contributed Twin Cities music scene. The ballroom of the 8 1/2 x 11 Minnesota Boyhood is Hassler’s previously SEPTEMBER Distributed for Smart Set, Inc. a moving foreword that gives readers 128 pages 15 b&w illustrations 5 x 8 Labor Temple in Southeast Minneapolis, site unpublished memoir of his youth in rural biographical information about the author as Distributed for Afton Press of union meetings, was transformed into a Minnesota during the 1930s and 40s, giving well as describing the literary connections us his memories and experiences through with his life and, above all, his empathy for a writer’s acute and detailed observations. the real residents and imagined characters of He remembers piano lessons, small-town small-town Minnesota. secrets, his passion for movies, and his holy duties as the only altar boy at St. Joachim’s. 28 29 Envisioning Evil Louis Sullivan’s Reconstructing The Nazi Drawings by Mauricio Lasansky Idea the Garrick TIM SAMUELSON Adler & Sullivan’s Lost Masterpiece RACHEL MCGARRY WITH CHRIS WARE JOHN VINCI, EDITOR WITH TIM SAMUELSON, ERIC NORDSTROM, AND CHRIS WARE FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

The definitive study of this powerful series and historical context for the artist and the A visual compendium revealing the philosophy and life A beautifully designed and lavishly illustrated biography of one of drawings by the influential artist creation of this series in three essays and of America’s renowned architect of Chicago’s greatest lost buildings an illustrated timeline. McGarry also traces Internationally renowned as a printmaker, The story of Louis H. Sullivan is considered one of the great American For six months in 1961, Richard Nickel, John Vinci, and David Norris Holocaust awareness before and after the Mauricio Lasansky (1914–2012) unleashed his tragedies. While Sullivan reshaped architectural thought and practice salvaged the interior and exterior ornamentation of the Garrick Theater, 1961 Eichmann trial and examines the role of brilliant draftsmanship in his self-titled series and contributed significantly to the foundations of modern architecture, Adler & Sullivan’s magnificent architectural masterpiece in Chicago’s art, literature, and popular media in bringing The Nazi Drawings by Mauricio Lasansky The Nazi Drawings. The Argentina-born artist he suffered a sad and lonely death. Many have since missed his aim: theater district. The building was replaced by a parking garage, and its the genocide into public discourse. Rabbi created the body of work largely in the 1960s, that of bringing buildings to life. What mattered most to Sullivan were demolition ignited the historic preservation movement in Chicago. Barry D. Cytron, former chaplain and professor as the televised trial of Nazi war criminal not the buildings but the philosophy behind their creation. Once, he of religious studies at Macalester College, The Garrick (originally the Schiller Building) was built in 1892 and Adolf Eichmann awakened the world to the unconcernedly stated that if he lived long enough, he would get to see contributes an essay on the international Rachel McGarry is associate curator of prints and featured elaborate embellishments, especially in its theater and exterior, depths of Nazi atrocities. Lasansky’s haunting all of his works destroyed. He added: “Only the idea is the important religious response to revelations about Nazi drawings at the Minneapolis Institute of Art. including the ornamentation and colorful decorative stenciling that interpretations reflect his response to the thing.” crimes and their relation to Lasansky’s art. would become hallmarks of Louis Sullivan’s career. Reconstructing the unfolding details. “I was full of hate, poison, ART In Louis Sullivan’s Idea, Chicago architectural historian Tim Samuelson Garrick documents the enormous salvaging job undertaken to preserve and I wanted to spit it out,” he said. Created as a reaction to the crimes committed $39.95 £32.00 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1051-8 and artist/writer Chris Ware present Sullivan’s commitment to his elements of the building’s design, but also presents the full life story against the Jews during the Holocaust, The SEPTEMBER The thirty-three monumental drawings, made 160 pages 37 b&w illustrations, 81 color plates 9 x 13 discipline of thought as the guiding force behind his work, and this of the Garrick, featuring historic and architectural photographs, essays Nazi Drawings endure as a condemnation from charcoal, wash, and collage, examine Distributed for the Minneapolis Institute of Art collection of photographs, original documentation, and drawings all by prominent architectural and art historians, interviews, drawings, against all persecution and extermination of the horrors of the Holocaust, especially the date from the period of Sullivan's life, 1856–1924, that many rarely or ephemera from throughout its lively history and details of its remarkable humanity. suffering of women and children. The series have never seen before. The book includes a full-size foldout facsimile ornamentation—a significant resource and compelling tribute to one of became Lasansky’s most famous and notable reproduction of Louis Sullivan’s last architectural commission and the Chicago’s finest lost buildings. A seventy-two-page facsimile of Richard work and was included among the opening only surviving working drawing done in his own hand. Nickel’s salvage workbook is tipped into the binding. exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of Tim Samuelson is the administrator of his own architectural preservation archive and John Vinci, FAIA, senior partner and practicing architect, Vinci/Hamp Architects, Inc., American Art in 1967. the City of Chicago’s cultural historian. Chris Ware’s work has appeared in the MCA has been an architect in Chicago for more than sixty years. He taught the history of Envisioning Evil accompanies the exhibition of Chicago, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and The New Yorker, and his books architecture at the Illinois Institute of Technology. Tim Samuelson (biography at left). The Nazi Drawings at the Minneapolis Institute have been named year-end top ten fiction selections by the New York Times and Time Eric Nordstrom is founder of Urban Remains and creator of the BLDG. 51 museum of Art in 2021. Curator Rachel McGarry magazine. and gallery. Chris Ware (biography at left). provides comprehensive biographical, cultural, ARCHITECTURE/HISTORY ARCHITECTURE/HISTORY $45.00 £36.00 Cloth/jacket ISBN: 978-1-5179-1279-6 $45.00 £36.00 Cloth/jacket ISBN: 978-1-5179-1280-2 SEPTEMBER SEPTEMBER 384 pages 300 color plates 9 x 11 262 pages 250 color plates 8 x 13 Distributed for the Alphawood Foundation and Wrightwood 659 Distributed for the Alphawood Foundation and Wrightwood 659 30 31

“Plenty of apocalyptic excitement.” —Publishers Weekly American Gospel The Streel Brave Enough A Novel A Deadwood Mystery JESSIE DIGGINS LIN ENGER MARY LOGUE

A Novel WITH TODD SMITH

Author of The High Divide

NOW IN PAPERBACK NOW IN PAPERBACK BRAVE FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

NOW IN PAPERBACK ENOUGH “AN INSPIRING STORY, WORTHY OF GOLD.” —JACKIE JOYNER-KERSEE

Radically personal and quintessentially American, an intimate A young Irish immigrant gets caught in a deadly plot With characteristic grit and candid At Pyeongchang in 2018, Jessie Diggins drama at the heart of an apocalyptic vision in nineteenth-century Deadwood charm, Olympic gold medalist lunged straight into Olympic immortality: Jessie Diggins connects the dots the first cross-country skiing gold medal JESSIE from America’s heartland to for the United States at the Winter Games. WITH “American Gospel is a glorious novel about what people choose to believe—and, more “With a poet’s eye, Mary Logue evokes the harsh world of frontier Deadwood, . TODD international sports history The 26-year-old Diggins, a four-time World SMITH important, why they choose to believe it.” The Streel is both a taut mystery and a cautionary tale of the evils of greed. I loved the Championship medalist, was a world away —Foreword Reviews, starred review redoubtable heroine, Brigid Reardon, and I loved every stunning line of this fine story.” from the small town of Afton, Minnesota, DIGGINS —William Kent Krueger, author of This Tender Land “Brutally honest and powerful . . . a raw, heart-wrenching, “Enger effectively expands on themes of belonging and blind devotion as a group of true where she first strapped on skis. Going nothing-held-back look at the struggles she went through believers face their final day of reckoning. . . . Plenty of apocalyptic excitement.” “The Streel shows Mary Logue at the top of her game.” beyond stories of races and ribbons, she to succeed.” —Publishers Weekly —Ellen Hart, author of Twisted at the Root describes the challenges of becoming A two-time Olympian, Jessie Diggins is the most —Jackie Joyner-Kersee a serious athlete and openly shares her decorated U.S. cross-country athlete in World “Redemption comes in many guises, and that is what this clever, hyperactive story is all “A well-constructed plot, lilting prose, and a heroine who’s determined to escape “World, meet the force that is Jessie Diggins.” harrowing struggle with bulimia. Between Championship history: she is the first American woman about. That it’s set in our own Minnesota makes it doubly endearing.” constricting female roles make this an exceptional regional historical.” —Mikaela Shiffrin, Olympic Champion and World Champion thrilling moments of triumph, Diggins shows to win the World Cup Distance title and the World Cup —Star Tribune —Publishers Weekly, starred review that for all her history-making achievements, Overall Champion title, and she has earned thirty- “A powerful story that shows that striving for excellence “A gritty, charming, clever protagonist whose musings provide a perfect period feel.” she never strayed far from her free-spirited five medals in World Cup competitions. In 2021, she can be essential in sport, yet not even Olympic champions On a small Minnesota farm an old man is waiting for the Rapture, —Kirkus Reviews roots. became the first American to win the prestigious Tour are immune from its unforeseen destructive consequences.” which God has told him will happen in two weeks, on August 19, de Ski. —Kikkan Randall, Olympic Champion and World Champion 1974. Set during a time that resonates with our own tension-filled Mary Logue brings her signature brio and nerve to this story of a young Todd Smith is a sports writer and author of Hockey moment, American Gospel cuts close to the battles occurring within “Diggins has made a mark in one of the toughest races in Irish woman turned reluctant sleuth as she makes her way in a strange Strong. ourselves and for the soul of the nation, radiating light on a dark strain the sport.” and dangerous new world. Logue’s latest thriller conjures the romance in America’s psyche when the false security of dogma competes with —New York TImes and the perils, and the tricky everyday realities, of an immigrant MEMOIR/SPORTS the risky tumult of freedom. $16.95 £12.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0820-1 surviving by her wits and grace in nineteenth-century America. “If you want someone worth rooting for, look no further.” $16.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6200-9 Lin Enger has published two previous novels, Undiscovered Country (Minnesota, —New Yorker AUGUST Mary Logue has published thirteen mysteries, nine in the Claire Watkins series, as 2020) and The High Divide. He teaches English at Minnesota State University 296 pages 26 color plates 5 1/2 x 8 1/4 well as poetry and young adult nonfiction and fiction, including the best-selling Sleep “An uplifting sports memoir told with compassion and Moorhead. like a Tiger, which have won Caldecott and Zolotow honor awards. vulnerability.”

FICTION —Booklist $16.95 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1274-1 FICTION $16.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6572-7 $15.95 £11.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0860-7 OCTOBER $15.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6243-6 264 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/4 NAM JULY 224 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/4 32 33 Lemon Jail Letters from Tove The Silver Box Magical Realism

On the Road TOVE JANSSON An Enchantment Lake Mystery MAGICAL for Non-Believers with the Replacements REALISM EDITED BY BOEL WESTIN MARGI PREUS A Memoir of Finding Family FOR BILL SULLIVAN AND HELEN SVENSSON ANIKA FAJARDO NON-BELIEVERS TRANSLATED BY SARAH DEATH

NOW IN PAPERBACK NOW IN PAPERBACK NOW IN PAPERBACK NOW IN PAPERBACK A MEMOIR OF FINDING FAMILY FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA ANIKA FAJARDO

“A FULL, SATISFYING READ.” — STAR TRIBUNE

A tour diary of life on the road with one of Minnesota’s wildest A memoir in letters by the beloved creator of the Moomins In the final Enchantment Lake mystery, Francie’s search for the A young woman from Minnesota searches out the Colombian bands—with nearly 100 never-before-seen photographs truth about her mother—and herself—plunges her into danger father she’s never known in this powerful exploration of what during a North Woods winter family really means “It’s hard to describe the astonishing achievement of Jansson’s artistry.” “Lemon Jail is at its best in moments that perfectly convey the state of pre-internet —Ali Smith underground music in America, where house parties, college radio, and photocopied “Margi Preus shows her deep knowledge of and appreciation for Minnesota while telling an “Incredibly well written and compelling, Magical Realism for Non-Believers is a remarkable “Twenty years after Jansson’s death, we now have a record of the joys—and strains—of a fanzines could propel a small hometown band into legend.” engaging story with puzzles and action and heart. The Silver Box is truly a celebration of memoir about the search for a father, a culture, a self. I simply couldn’t put it down.” lifetime of correspondence.” —Pitchfork our state—from its North Woods to its Twin Cities landmarks.” —Pablo Medina, author of The Island Kingdom and Cubop City Blues —The New Yorker —Kurtis Scaletta, author of Lukezilla Beats the Game “Sullivan’s entertaining book . . . is a glorified tour diary full of sex, drugs, rock ’n’ roll, more “Anika Fajardo revisits interactions and places with intricately remembered emotion, drugs, and a story about Replacements guitarist Bob Stinson defecating in an ice bucket “A modern Nancy Drew replacement grounded in current technology but largely reliant on making for a delicious dive into the complicated, beautiful messes that love can make.” Tove Jansson’s works fairly teem with letters of one kind or another, and sending it down a hotel’s dumbwaiter.” brain power and courage.” —Booklist from messages in bottles to whole epistolary novels. Her life was no —Boston Globe —Kirkus Reviews different, unfolding as it did in the letters to family, friends, and lovers “Fajardo describes the pain of yearning for something you can’t quite articulate, of getting that make up this volume, a veritable autobiography over the course of what you thought you wanted and finding it less than satisfying. She lays bare the many A raucous tour diary of rock ’n’ roll in the 1980s, Lemon Jail puts us six decades—and the only one Jansson ever wrote. Shifting between One ominous clue after another reveals that Francie possesses complicated ways our family informs who we are and how we interact with the world.” in the van with the Replacements in the early years. Bill Sullivan, the hope and despair, yearning and happiness, the letters describe her something so rare and so valuable that some people are willing to do —BuzzFeed young and reckless roadie, shows what it’s like to keep the band on the immersion in art studies and her ascension to fame with the Moomins. anything to get it. Everything depends on the small, engraved silver road and the wheels on the van—and when to just close your eyes and They speak frankly of friendship and love, loneliness and solidarity, box that she now has—if only she can follow its cryptic clues to the In 1995, Anika Fajardo flew to Colombia to discover a birthplace that hit the gas. and also of politics, art, literature, and society, as well as the critical whereabouts of her missing mother and understand, finally, just maybe, was foreign to her and a father who was a stranger. Vivid and heartfelt, moments of humor, sadness, and grace that mark an artist’s days. the truth about who she really is. Winner of the Devil’s Kitchen Reading Award in Nonfiction Prose her story is brilliantly crafted in its bridging of time and place and Finnish writer, artist, and political cartoonist Tove Jansson (1914–2001) is creator of Margi Preus is a New York Times best-selling author of books for young readers, poignant in its moving depiction of self-transformation. Family, she Bill Sullivan has been on tour since the early 1980s. After the Replacements and the Moomins and author of many books, including The Summer Book. Boel Westin is including Heart of a Samurai, winner of a Newbery Honor, and the award-winning first comes to find, is where you find it and what you make of it. stints with the Del Fuegos and the Cherrybomz, he was tour manager for many bands professor emeritus of literature at Stockholm University and author of Tove Jansson: two books in the Enchantment Lake series, Enchantment Lake and The Clue in the including Soul Asylum, Bright Eyes, Yo La Tengo, Cat Power, and more. Anika Fajardo was born in Colombia and raised in Minnesota. She is author of two Life, Art, Words. Helen Svensson was a literary manager at Schildts Forlag Publishers, Trees, both published by the University of Minnesota Press. middle-grade novels, What If a Fish and the forthcoming Meet Me Halfway. MUSIC/BIOGRAPHY where she was Jansson’s last editor. Sarah Death is a prizewinning literary translator. MIDDLE GRADE FICTION $15.95 £11.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1276-5 MEMOIR $15.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-5730-2 NONFICTION LITERATURE/SCANDINAVIAN STUDIES $11.95 £8.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0969-7 $11.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6404-1 $15.95 £11.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1275-8 AUGUST $19.95 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1010-5 $15.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6062-3 160 pages 86 b&w illustrations 6 x 8 $19.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6382-2 OCTOBER 224 pages 5 1/2 x 8 NOVEMBER JUNE 208 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/4 496 pages 54 b&w illustrations 5 1/3 x 8 1/2 NAM Milton Santos For a New Geography ELSA L. FAN TRANSLATED BY ARCHIE DAVIES

Commodities of

34 CARE A Love Affair Citizen Swain with Birds Tales from a Minnesota Life The Life of Thomas Sadler Roberts TOM H. SWAIN A Love Affair SUE LEAF WITH LORI STURDEVANT with Birds The Life of Thomas Sadler Roberts NOW IN PAPERBACK NOW IN PAPERBACK FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

Sue Leaf

The founding figure of Minnesota ornithology, whose life story An entertaining personal history of the state, told by one of its opens a window on a lost world of nature and conservation leading citizens

“Sue Leaf’s engaging and carefully researched portrait of Thomas Sadler Roberts captures “Swain’s observations and, more important, his exemplary life should command our not just the man but also the place and time in which his passions—medicine and attention.” ornithology—were born. A lively, important biography.” —Star Tribune —William Souder, author of Under a Wild Sky: John James Audubon and the Making of The Birds of “Tom H. Swain is the quintessential Minnesotan. His gifts of old-fashioned honor, abiding America wisdom, endurance, and a genuine love of people are evident in these stories, always told “Anyone with an interest in birds, Minnesota’s natural history, and learning about a singular in his clear and unpretentious voice.” doctor, author, curator, educator, conservationist, and bird enthusiast will find this book a —George Latimer rare treat.” —Star Tribune Tom H. Swain has been a mayor, a University of Minnesota vice president, a chief of staff to a Minnesota governor, and a member and A Love Affair with Birds is the first full biography of Thomas Sadler chair of numerous nonprofit and civic boards. In his memoir Citizen Roberts. Each chapter of his life is also a chapter in Minnesota history, Swain: Tales from a Minnesota Life, he eloquently relates his vibrant from his career as a doctor in late nineteenth-century Minneapolis to presence and meaningful contributions, giving readers a rare glimpse his passion for nature and birds to his role in the establishment of the into the inner workings of institutions and their leaders. SCHOLARLY INTEREST premier Bell Museum of natural history at the University of Minnesota. Tom H. Swain has a résumé, stretching back six decades, full of notable contributions Acclaimed author Sue Leaf—also an avid bird enthusiast and nature Life to higher education, politics, corporate affairs, and health care. He is the recipient of lover—captures a true Minnesota character and his time. numerous local and national awards, including an honorary doctor of law degree from Sue Leaf is author of The Bullhead Queen: A Year on Pioneer Lake; Portage: A Family, the University of Minnesota, an award from the National Governors Association, and an a Canoe, and the Search for the Good Life; and Minnesota’s Geologist: The Life of Outstanding Achievement Award from the University of Minnesota. Lori Sturdevant Newton Horace Winchell (a Minnesota Book Award winner), all from Minnesota. is an editorial writer and columnist for the Minneapolis–St. Paul Star Tribune. NATURAL HISTORY/BIOGRAPHY MINNESOTA/BIOGRAPHY The BusinessEmma of Bedor Hiland $16.95 £12.99 Paper ISBN: 978-0-8166-7565-4 $19.95 £14.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1299-4 $16.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-0-8166-8882-1 $19.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-0-5179-1299-4 SEPTEMBER AVAILABLE 296 pages 30 b&w plates 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 240 pages 32 b&w plates 6 x 9 HIV Testing in China THERAPY The DigitalTHE Transformation of MentalDIGITAL Healthcare TECH artistic responses inIS KIDto STUFF petromodernity Making Creativecaren Laborers irr, editor for a Precarious Economy

JOSEF PlasNGUYEN tic 36 37 For a New Geography Allotment Stories

MILTON SANTOS Indigenous Land Relations under Settler Siege DANIEL HEATH JUSTICE AND JEAN M. O’BRIEN, EDITORS INDIGENOUS LAND TRANSLATED AND WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY ARCHIE DAVIES Milton Santos RELATIONS UNDER SETTLER SIEGE For a New Geography

TRANSLATED BY ARCHIE DAVIES FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

For the first time in English, a key work of space. It is, in short, both a critique of the More than two dozen essays of Indigenous engaged creativity to sustain collective ties, of critical geography Northern, Anglo-centric discipline from within resistance to the privatization and kinship relations, and cultural commitments in Allotment and a systematic critique of its flaws and allotment of Indigenous lands the face of privatization. Originally published in 1978 in Portuguese, assumptions from outside. Stories For a New Geography is a milestone in the Land privatization has been a longstanding Contributors: Jennifer Adese, U of Toronto history of critical geography and it marked the Critical geography has developed in the and ongoing settler colonial process Mississauga; Megan Baker, U of California, Daniel Heath Justice & emergence of its author, Milton Santos (1926– past four decades into a heterogeneous and separating Indigenous peoples from their Los Angeles; William Bauer, U of Nevada, Jean M. O’Brien, Editors 2001), as a major interpreter of geographical creative field of inquiry. Though accruing a traditional homelands, with devastating Las Vegas; Christine Taitano DeLisle, U of thought, a prominent Afro-Brazilian public set of theoretical touchstones in the process, consequences. Allotment Stories delves into Minnesota–Twin Cities; Vicente M. Diaz, U intellectual, and one of the foremost global it has become detached from a longer and this conflict, creating a complex conversation of Minnesota–Twin Cities; Sarah Biscarra Milton Santos (1926–2001) was one of twentieth- Raised in traditional Ute territory in Colorado and now theorists of space. broader history of geographical thought. For out of narratives of Indigenous communities Dilley, U of California, Davis; Marilyn Dumont, century geography’s most creative conceptual living in shíshálh territory in British Columbia, Daniel a New Geography reconciles these divergent resisting allotment and other dispossessive U of Alberta; Munir Fakher Eldin, Birzeit U, Published in the midst of a crisis in thinkers. He played a determining role in the history Heath Justice (Cherokee Nation) is professor of Critical histories. Arriving in English at a time of land schemes. Palestine; Nick Estes, U of ; geographical thought, For a New Geography of critical geography and social science in Brazil. Indigenous Studies and English at the University of renewed interest in alternative geographical Pauliina Feodoroff; Susan E. Gray, Arizona functioned as a bridge between geography’s Santos’s theoretical work provided the framework for From the use of homesteading by nineteenth- British Columbia, xwməθkwəy̓əm territory. He is author traditions and the history of radical geography, State U; J. Kēhaulani Kauanui, Wesleyan past and its future. In advancing his vision a generation of radical Latin American approaches to century Anishinaabe women to maintain their of Why Indigenous Literatures Matter and Our Fire it takes its place in the canonical works of U; Rauna Kuokkanen, U of Lapland and U of a geography of action and liberation, space, urbanity, nature, and globalization. In 1994 he independence to the role that roads have Survives the Storm (Minnesota, 2005). critical geography. of Toronto; Stacy Leeds, U of Arkansas; Santos begins by turning to the roots of won the Vautrin Lud Prize, often called the Nobel of played in expropriating Guam’s Indigenous Sheryl R. Lightfoot, U of British Columbia; Jean M. O’Brien (White Earth Ojibwe) is Distinguished modern geography and its colonial legacies. geography. heritage to the links between land loss and Kelly S. McDonough, U of Texas at Austin; McKnight and Northrop Professor in the Department Moving from a critique of the shortcomings genocide in California, Allotment Stories Archie Davies is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow Ruby Hansen Murray; Tero Mustonen, U of of History at the University of Minnesota within Dakota of geography from the field’s foundations collects more than two dozen chronicles in the Department of Geography at the University of Eastern Finland; Darren O’Toole, U of Ottawa; homelands. Her books include Dispossession by as a modern science to the outline of a new of white imperialism and Indigenous Sheffield. Shiri Pasternak, Ryerson U; Dione Payne, Te Degrees and Firsting and Lasting (Minnesota, 2010). field of critical geography, he sets forth both resistance. Ranging from the historical to the Whare Wānaka o Aoraki–Lincoln U; Joseph an ontology of space and a methodology contemporary and grappling with Indigenous GEOGRAPHY/CRITICAL THEORY M. Pierce, Stony Brook U; Khal Schneider, NATIVE AMERICAN STUDIES/AMERICAN HISTORY for geography. In so doing, he introduces $28.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0908-6 land struggles around the globe, these $28.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0876-8 California State U, Sacramento; Argelia novel theoretical categories to the analysis $112.00xx £89.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0907-9 narratives showcase both scholarly and $112.00xx £89.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0875-1 $28.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6324-2 Segovia Liga, Colegio de Michoacán; Leanne $28.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6270-2 creative forms of expression, constructing NOVEMBER Betasamosake Simpson; Jameson R. Sweet, JANUARY 2022 272 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 a multifaceted book of diverse disciplinary 376 pages 26 b&w illustrations 7 x 9 Rutgers U; Michael P. Taylor, Brigham Young perspectives. Allotment Stories highlights Indigenous Americas Series U; Candessa Tehee, Northeastern State U; how Indigenous peoples have consistently Benjamin Hugh Velaise, Google American

Indian Network. 38 39 Written by the Body Remembering Our Intimacies Gender Expansiveness and Indigenous Non-Cis Masculinities Mo‘olelo, Aloha, ‘Aina, and Ea Jamaica Heolimeleikalani Osorio LISA TATONETTI JAMAICA HEOLIMELEIKALANI OSORIO

FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA WRITTEN 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

Examining the expansive nature of how the body functions as a somatic Recovering Kānaka Maoli (Native that exist for Kānaka Maoli. It uses a close Remerng Indigenous gender representations in archive of Indigenous knowledge in Native Hawaiian) relationality and belonging reading of the moʻolelo (history and literature) history, literature, and film histories, literatures, and activisms—exploring in the land, memory, and body of of Hiʻiakaikapoliopele to provide context and GENDEREXPANSIVENESS representations of Idle No More in the Native Hawai’i interpretation of Hawaiian intimacy and desire O  Itiaces Within Native American and Indigenous ANDINDIGENOUS documentary Trick or Treaty, the all-female NON-CISMASCULINITIES by describing its significance in āK naka Maoli Moʻolelo, Aloha ʻĀina, and Ea studies, the rise of Indigenous masculinities BODY Hawaiian “aloha ʻāina” is often described wildland firefighting crew depicted in Apache epistemology and why this matters profoundly has engendered both productive in Western political terms—nationalism, 8, Chief Theresa Spence, activist Carole Lisa Tatonetti for Hawaiian (and other Indigenous) futures. conversations and critiques. Lisa Tatonetti nationhood, even patriotism. In Remembering laFavor, S. Alice Callahan, Thirza Cuthand, intervenes in this conversation with Written Our Intimacies, Jamaica Heolimeleikalani Offering a new approach to understanding Joshua Whitehead, Carrie House, and more. by the Body by centering how female, queer, Osorio centers in on the personal and one of Native Hawaiians’ most significant Lisa Tatonetti is professor in the Department of Jamaica Heolimeleikalani Osorio is assistant and/or Two-Spirit Indigenous people take up In response to criticisms of Indigenous embodied articulations of aloha ʻāina to values, Remembering Our Intimacies reveals English at Kansas State University. She is author of The professor of Indigenous and Native Hawaiian politics at or refute masculinity and, in the process, offer masculinity studies, Written by the Body detangle it from the effects of colonialism the relationships between the policing of Queerness of Native American Literature (Minnesota, the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, as well as an award- more expansive understandings of gender. de-sutures masculinity from the cis-gendered and occupation. Working at the intersections Indigenous bodies, intimacies, and desires; 2014) and coeditor of Sovereign Erotics: A Collection of winning poet, musician, and a lifelong activist. body and investigates the ways in which of Hawaiian knowledge, Indigenous the disembodiment of Indigenous modes of Written by the Body moves from the Contemporary Two-Spirit Literature. female, trans, and otherwise nonconforming queer theory, and Indigenous feminisms, governance; and the ongoing and ensuing eighteenth- and nineteenth-century archive NATIVE STUDIES/AMERICAN STUDIES masculinities carry the traces of Two-Spirit Remembering Our Intimacies seeks to displacement of Indigenous people. $25.00x £18.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1030-3 to turn-of-the-century and late-twentieth- NATIVE STUDIES/GENDER AND SEXUALITY histories and exceed the limitations of settler $25.00x £18.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0604-7 recuperate Native Hawaiian concepts and $100.00xx £80.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1029-7 century fiction to documentaries, HIV/AIDS $25.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6476-8 colonial imaginings of gender. $100.00xx £80.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0603-0 ethics around relationality, desire, and activism, and, finally, recent experimental film $25.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6595-6 SEPTEMBER belonging firmly grounded in the land, 232 pages 13 tables 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 and literature. Across it all, Tatonetti shows AUGUST 296 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 memory, and the body of Native Hawai’i. Indigenous Americas Series how Indigenous gender expansiveness, Indigenous Americas Series and particularly queer and non-cis gender Remembering Our Intimacies argues for the articulations, moves between and among methodology of (re)membering Indigenous Native peoples to forge kinship, offer forms of intimacies. It does so through the protection, and make change. She charts metaphor of a ʻupena—a net of intimacies that incorporates the variety of relationships 40 41 Settler Colonial City Visibility Interrupted Racism and Inequity in Postwar Minneapolis Rural Queer Life and the Politics of Unbecoming DAVID HUGILL CARLY THOMSEN VISIBILITY INTERRUPTED FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA Settler 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA Colonial Racism and Revealing the enduring link between and mentalities shaped processes of urban A questioning of the belief in the power of Thomsen develops the theory of unbecoming: City Inequity RURAL QUEER LIFE settler colonization and the making of reorganization, animated non-Indigenous DAVID HUGILL in Postwar LGBTQ visibility through the lives of queer interrogating the relationship between that modern Minneapolis “advocacy research,” informed a culture Minneapolis women in the rural Midwest which we celebrate and that which we find AND THE POLITICS OF UNBECOMING of racialized policing, and intertwined with disdainful—the past, the rural, politics—is Colonial relations are often excluded from Today most LGBTQ rights supporters take a broader culture of American imperialism. crucial for developing alternative subjectivities discussions of urban politics and are viewed for granted the virtue of being “out, loud, It reveals how the actions, assumptions, and politics. Unbecoming precedes becoming. Carly Thomsen instead as part of a regrettable past. In Settler and proud.” Most also assume that it would and practices of non-Indigenous people Drawing from critical race studies, disability Colonial City, David Hugill confronts this be terrible to be LGBTQ in a rural place. By in Minneapolis produced and enforced a studies, and queer Marxism, in addition to culture of organized forgetting by arguing considering moments in which queerness and racialized economy of power that directly feminist and queer studies, the insights of that Minnesota’s largest city is enduringly rurality come into contact, Visibility Interrupted contradicts the city’s “progressive” reputation. David Hugill is assistant professor of geography and this book will be useful to scholars theorizing Carly Thomsen is assistant professor of gender, bound up with the power dynamics of settler- argues that both positions are wrong. In the environmental studies at Carleton University in Ottawa, issues far beyond sexuality and place and sexuality, and feminist studies at Middlebury colonial politics. Examining several distinct Ultimately, Settler Colonial City argues that the first monograph on LGBTQ women in the Canada. He is coeditor of Settler City Limits: Indigenous to social justice activists who want to move College. She directed and produced In Plain Sight, a Minneapolis sites, Settler Colonial City tracks hierarchical and racist political dynamics that rural Midwest, Carly Thomsen deconstructs Resurgence and Colonial Violence in the Urban Prairie beyond visibility. documentary short that extends the arguments of how settler-colonial relations were articulated characterized the city’s prosperous beginnings the image of the rural as a flat, homogenous, West. this book. For more information about the film, visit alongside substantial growth in the Twin Cities are not exclusive to a bygone era but rather and anachronistic place where LGBTQ people www.inplainsightdocumentary.com. Learn more Indigenous community during the second are central to a recalibrated settler-colonial necessarily suffer. And she suggests that GEOGRAPHY/NATIVE AMERICAN STUDIES about Thomsen’s research and teaching at half of the twentieth century—creating new politics that continues to shape contemporary $25.00x £18.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0480-7 visibility is not liberation and will not lead to www.carlythomsen.com. geographies of racialized advantage. cities across the United States. $100.00xx £80.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0479-1 liberation. $25.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6629-8 Studying the Phillips neighborhood of OCTOBER Far from being an unambiguous good, LGBTQ STUDIES/AMERICAN STUDIES 216 pages 14 b&w illustrations, 2 maps 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 $25.00x £18.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1064-8 Minneapolis in the decades that followed argues Thomsen, visibility politics can, in $100.00xx £80.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1063-1 the Second World War, Settler Colonial fact, preclude collective action. They also $25.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6510-9 City demonstrates how colonial practices advance metronormativity, postraciality, and JULY 264 pages 3 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 capitalism. To make these interventions, 42 43 The Digital Is Kid Stuff Profit over Privacy Making Creative Laborers for a Precarious Economy How Surveillance Advertising Conquered the Internet How Surveillance Advertising Matthew JOSEF NGUYEN MATTHEW CRAIN Conquered the Internet Crain FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

THE DIGITAL Profit How popular debates about the so-called island fictions of Minecraft, to an older child A deep dive into the political roots of of the internet and marshaled venture capital digital generation mediate anxieties about learning do-it-yourself skills while reading IS KID STUFF advertising on the internet to develop the now-ubiquitous business labor and life in twenty-first-century Make magazine, to a teenager posting selfies model called “surveillance advertising.” Making Creative Laborers The contemporary internet’s de facto business America on Instagram, to a young adult creative laborer He draws on a range of primary resources for a Precarious Economy over model is one of surveillance. Browser cookies imagining technological innovations using from government, industry, and the press “The children are our future” goes the adage, follow us around the web, Amazon targets design fiction. JOSEF and highlights the political roots of internet a proclamation that simultaneously declares NGUYEN us with eerily prescient ads, Facebook and advertising to underscore the necessity of both anxiety as well as hope about youth as Focusing on the constructions and Google read our messages and analyze our political solutions to reign in unaccountable the next generation. In The Digital Is Kid Stuff, valorizations of creativity, entrepreneurialism, patterns, and apps record our every move. commercial surveillance. Privacy Josef Nguyen interrogates this ambivalence and technological savvy, Nguyen argues that In Profit over Privacy, Matthew Crain gives Josef Nguyen is assistant professor of critical media Matthew Crain is assistant professor of media and within discussions about today’s “digital contemporary culture operates to assuage internet surveillance a much-needed origin The dominant business model on the internet, studies at the University of Texas at Dallas. communication at Miami University of . generation” and the future of creativity, profound anxieties about—and to defuse story by chronicling the development of surveillance advertising is the result of

an ambivalence that toggles between the valid critiques of—both emerging digital DIGITAL CULTURE/CHILDHOOD STUDIES its most important historical catalyst: web political choices—not the inevitable march of DIGITAL CULTURE/MEDIA STUDIES techno-pessimism that warns against the technologies and the precarity of employment $27.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1114-0 advertising. technology. Unlike many other countries, the $25.00x £18.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0505-7 harm to children of too much screen time for “creative laborers” in twenty-first-century $108.00xx £86.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1115-7 United States has no internet privacy law. A $100.00xx £80.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0504-0 $27.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6621-2 The first institutional and political history of $25.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-5179-6674-8 and a techno-utopianism that foresees these neoliberal America. fascinating prehistory of internet advertising DECEMBER internet advertising, Profit over Privacy uses SEPTEMBER “digital natives” leading the way to innovation, 304 pages 33 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 giants like Google and Facebook, Profit over 216 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 the 1990s as its backdrop to show how the economic growth, increased democratization, Privacy argues that the internet did not have massive data-collection infrastructure that and national prosperity. to turn out this way and that it can be remade undergirds the internet today is the result of into something better. Nguyen engages cultural histories of twenty-five years of technical and political childhood, youth, and creativity through economic engineering. Crain considers chapters that are each anchored to a particular the social causes and consequences of digital media object or practice. Nguyen the internet’s rapid embrace of consumer narrates the developmental arc of a future monitoring, detailing how advertisers and creative laborer: from a young kid playing the marketers adapted to the existential threat 44 45 Therapy Tech How We Became Sensorimotor The Digital Transformation of Mental Healthcare Movement, Measurement, Sensation EMMA BEDOR HILAND MARK PATERSON FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

HOW WE BECAME A pointed look at the state of tech-based on websites like Facebook and 7 Cups of An engrossing history of the century that confines of the laboratory to those of the mental healthcare and what we must do Tea, shortcomings of popular AI “doctors on transformed our knowledge of the body’s industrial world and even to wild animals and SENSORIMOTOR to change it demand” like Woebot, Wysa, and Joy, and Emma Bedor Hiland inner senses their habitats. He uncovers important stories, even the conscription of therapists into the gig such as how forgotten pain-measurement Proponents of technology trumpet it as the The years between 1833 and 1945 MOVEMENT, MEASUREMENT, SENSATION economy. THERAPY schemes transformed criminology, or how solution to the massive increase in the mental fundamentally transformed science’s The Digital Transformation Penfield’s outmoded concepts of the sensory MARK PATERSON distress that confronts our nation. They Featuring a vital coda that brings Therapy Tech understanding of the body’s inner senses, of Mental Healthcare and motor homunculi of the brain still mar herald the arrival of algorithms, intelligent up to date for the Covid era, this book is the TECH revolutionizing fields like philosophy, the psychology textbooks. chatbots, smartphone applications, telemental first to give readers a large-scale analysis of social sciences, and cognitive science. healthcare services, and more—but are these mental health technologies and the cultural In How We Became Sensorimotor, Mark Complete with original archival research Emma Bedor Hiland is an instructor in the School of Mark Paterson is associate professor of sociology at technological fixes really as good as they changes they have enabled. Both a sobering Paterson provides a systematic account featuring illustrations and correspondence, Communication Studies at James Madison University. the University of Pittsburgh. He is author of The Senses seem? In Therapy Tech, Emma Bedor Hiland dissection of the current state of mental of this transformative period, while also How We Became Sensorimotor shows Her research has been published in Feminist Media of Touch: Haptics, Affects, and Technologies and presents the first comprehensive study of healthcare and a necessary warning of where demonstrating its substantial implications for how the shifting and sometimes contested Studies, Screen Bodies, and Sexuality and Culture. Seeing with the Hands: Blindness, Vision, and Touch how technology has transformed mental things are headed, Therapy Tech makes an current explorations into phenomenology, historical background to our understandings of after Descartes, as well as coeditor of Touching Place, healthcare, showing that this revolution can’t important assertion about how to help those embodied consciousness, the extended mind, the senses are being extended even today. DIGITAL CULTURE/AMERICAN STUDIES Placing Touch. deliver what it promises. in need of mental health services today. $25.00x £18.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1117-1 and theories of the sensorimotor, the body, $100.00xx £80.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1116-4 and embodiment. Far from providing a solution, technological $25.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6633-5 SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY STUDIES/ MEDIA STUDIES mental healthcare perpetuates preexisting OCTOBER Each chapter of How We Became 208 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 $28.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1000-6 disparities while relying on the same failed Sensorimotor takes a particular sense and $112.00xx £89.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0999-4 focus on personal responsibility that has let historicizes its formation by means of recent $28.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6438-6 OCTOBER us down before. Through vivid, in-depth case scientific studies, case studies, or coverage 320 pages 23 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 studies, Therapy Tech reveals these problems, in the media. Ranging among a diverse array covering issues including psychosurveillance of sensations, including balance, fatigue, pain, the “muscle sense,” and what Maurice Merleau-Ponty termed “motricity,” Paterson’s analysis moves outward from the familiar 46 47 The Lab Book Cut/Copy/Paste Situated Practices in Media Studies Fragments from the History of Bookwork fragments DARREN WERSHLER, LORI EMERSON, AND JUSSI PARIKKA THE WHITNEY TRETTIEN the from

LAB FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA history of history bookwork

BOOK

An important new approach to the study examples to show how laboratories have How do early modern media underlie understanding of current media. Tracing the of laboratories, presenting a practical become fundamentally connected to today’s digital creativity? lives and afterlives of amateur “bookwork,”

SITUATED trettien whitney method for understanding labs in all walks changes in the contemporary university. PRACTICES Trettien creates a method for identifying and

In Cut/Copy/Paste, Whitney Trettien of life Its wide reach includes institutions like the IN MEDIA STUDIES comprehending hybrid objects that resist DARREN WERSHLER journeys to the fringes of the London MIT Media Lab, the Tuskegee Institute’s LORI EMERSON familiar bibliographic and literary categories. From the “Big Science” of Bell Laboratories JUSSI PARIKKA print trade to uncover makerspaces and Jesup Wagon, ACTLab, and the Media In the process, she bears witness to the deep to the esoteric world of séance chambers collaboratories where paper media were cut Archaeological Fundus. The authors cover history of radical publishing with fragments to university media labs to neighborhood up and reassembled into radical, bespoke topics such as the evolution and delineation and found materials. makerspaces, places we call “labs” are publications. Bringing these long-forgotten of lab-based communities, how labs’ tools everywhere—but how exactly do we account objects back to life through hand-curated With many of Cut/Copy/Paste’s digital and technologies contribute to defining Darren Wershler is Concordia University Research Whitney Trettien is assistant professor of English for the wide variety of ways that they produce digital resources, Trettien shows how early resources left thrillingly open for additions their space, and a glossary of key hybrid lab Chair in media and contemporary literature, cofounder at the University of Pennsylvania. She is coeditor of knowledge? More than imitations of science experimental book hacks speak to the and revisions, this book reimagines our techniques. of the Media History Research Centre, and director of Digital Sound Studies, author of the creative print/digital and engineering labs, many contemporary contemporary conditions of digital scholarship ideas of publication while fostering a spirit of the Residual Media Depot in the Milieux Institute at project Gaffe/Stutter, and cofounder of the digital zine labs are hybrid forms that require a new Providing rich historical breadth and depth, and publishing. As a mixed-media artifact generosity and inclusivity. An open invitation Concordia University in Montreal. thresholds. methodological and theoretical toolkit to The Lab Book brings into focus a critical, itself, Cut/Copy/Paste enacts for readers what to cut, copy, and paste different histories, it

describe. The Lab Book investigates these but often misunderstood, aspect of the Lori Emerson is associate professor in the Department Trettien argues: that digital forms have the is an inspiration for students of publishing LITERARY CRITICISM/MEDIA STUDIES vital, creative spaces, presenting readers with contemporary arts and humanities. of English and director of the Intermedia Arts, Writing, potential to decenter patriarchal histories of or the digital humanities, as well as anyone $28.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0409-8 the concept of the “hybrid lab” and offering and Performance Program at the University of Colorado print. interested in the past, present, and future of $112.00xx £89.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0408-1 $28.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6631-1 an extended—and rare—critical investigation at Boulder. She is founding director of the Media creativity. From the religious household of Little DECEMBER of how labs have proliferated throughout Archaeology Lab. 328 pages 60 b&w illustrations, 10 color plates 6 x 8 Gidding—whose biblical concordances and culture. Jussi Parikka is professor of technological culture and manuscripts exemplify protofeminist media Organized by interpretive categories such as aesthetics at the Winchester School of Art (University innovation—to the queer poetic assemblages space, infrastructure, and imaginaries, The Lab of Southampton) and founding codirector of the of Edward Benlowes and the fragment albums Book uses both historical and contemporary Archaeologies of Media and Technology research unit. of former shoemaker John Bagford, Cut/Copy/ Paste demonstrates history’s relevance to our MEDIA STUDIES/DIGITAL CULTURE $30.00x £22.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0218-6 $120.00xx £96.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0217-9 $30.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6639-7 DECEMBER 328 pages 41 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 48 49 People, Practice, Power Modelwork Digital Humanities outside the Center The Material Culture of Making and Knowing

ANNE B. MCGRAIL, ANGEL DAVID NIEVES, AND SIOBHAN SENIER, MARTIN BRÜCKNER, SANDY ISENSTADT, Martin Brückner, EDITORS AND SARAH WASSERMAN, EDITORS Sandy Isenstadt, and Sarah Wasserman, Editors FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

An illuminating volume of critical essays Contributors: Matthew Applegate, Molloy How making models allows us to recall serve as invaluable tools across every field of charting the diverse territory of digital College; Taylor Arnold, U of Richmond; Eduard what was and to discover what still cultural development, both historically and in humanities scholarship Arriaga, U of Indianapolis; Lydia Bello, Seattle might be the present day. U; Kathi Inman Berens, Portland State U; The digital humanities have traditionally been Whether looking inward to the intricacies of Modelwork is unique in calling attention Christina Boyles, Michigan State U; Laura considered the domain of only a small number human anatomy or outward to the furthest to modeling’s duality, a dynamic exchange R. Braunstein, Dartmouth College; Abby The Material Culture of of prominent and well-funded institutions. recesses of the universe, expanding the between imagination and matter. This singular R. Broughton; Maria Sachiko Cecire, Bard Making and Knowing However, through a diverse range of critical boundaries of human inquiry depends to collection shows us how models shape our College; Brennan Collins, Georgia State U; essays, this volume serves to challenge a surprisingly large degree on the making ability to ascertain the surrounding world and Kelsey Corlett-Rivera, U of Maryland; Brittany and enlarge existing notions of how digital of models. In this wide-ranging volume, to find new ways to transform it. de Gail, U of Maryland; Madelynn Dickerson, Anne B. McGrail is a faculty member in the English Martin Brückner is professor of English and material humanities research is being undertaken while scholars from diverse fields examine the UC Irvine Libraries; Nathan H. Dize, Vanderbilt department at Lane Community College in Eugene, Contributors: Hilary Bryon, Virginia Tech; culture studies at the University of Delaware. He is also serving as a kind of alternative guide interrelationships between a model’s material U; Quinn Dombrowski, Stanford U; Ashley Oregon. Johanna Drucker, UCLA; Seher Erdoğan author or coeditor of several books, most recently for how it can thrive within a wide variety of foundations and the otherwise invisible things Sanders Garcia, UCLA; Laura Gerlitz; Erin Ford, Temple U; Peter Galison, Harvard U; The Social Life of Maps in America, 1750–1860. institutional spaces. Angel David Nieves is professor of Africana studies, it gestures toward, underscoring the pivotal Rose Glass; Kaitlyn Grant; Margaret Hogarth, Lisa Gitelman, New York U; Reed Gochberg, history, digital humanities, and English at Northeastern role of models in understanding and shaping Sandy Isenstadt is professor and chair of art history Focusing on the complex infrastructure that Claremont Colleges; Maryse Ndilu Kiese, U Harvard U; Catherine Newman Howe, University. the world around us. Whether in the form at the University of Delaware and author or coeditor undergirds the field of digital humanities, of Alberta; Pamella R. Lach, San Diego State Williams College; Christopher J. Lukasik, of reproductions, interpretive processes, or of several books, most recently Electric Light: People, Practice, Power examines the U; James Malazita, Rensselaer Polytechnic Siobhan Senier is professor of English at the University Purdue U; Martin Scherzinger, New York U; constitutive tools, models may bridge the gap An Architectural History. economic, social, and political factors that Institute; Susan Merriam, Bard College; of New Hampshire. Juliet S. Sperling, U of Washington; Annabel between the tangible and the abstract. shape such academic endeavors. The Chelsea Miya, U of Alberta; Jamila Moore Jane Wharton, Duke U. Sarah Wasserman is associate professor of English multitude of perspectives comprising this Pewu, California State U, Fullerton; Urszula DIGITAL CULTURE/AMERICAN STUDIES By focusing on the material aspects of and material culture studies at the University of $35.00x £26.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1068-6 collection offers both a much-needed Pawlicka-Deger, Aalto U, Finland; Jessica $140.00xx £111.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1067-9 models, including the digital ones that would Delaware. She is author of The Death of Things: critique of the existing structures for digital Pressman, San Diego State U; Jana Remy, $35.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6514-7 seem to displace their analogue forebears, Ephemera and the American Novel (Minnesota, 2020). scholarship and the means to generate Chapman U; Roopika Risam, Salem State U; DECEMBER these insightful essays ground modeling as a 480 pages 2 b&w illustrations 7 x 10 broader representation within the field while Elizabeth Rodrigues, Grinnell College; Dylan tactile and emphatically humanistic endeavor. MEDIA STUDIES/SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY Debates in the Digital Humanities Series $30.00x £22.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1090-7 acknowledging the role that small liberal arts Ruediger, American Historical Association; With contributions from scholars in the history $120.00xx £96.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1089-1 colleges, community colleges, historically Rachel Schnepper, Wesleyan U; Anelise of science and technology, visual studies, $30.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6542-0 black colleges and universities, and other Hanson Shrout, Bates College; Margaret musicology, literary studies, and material OCTOBER 312 pages 69 b&w illustrations 7 x 10 underresourced institutions play in its Simon, North Carolina State U; Mengchi Sun, culture, this book demonstrates that models advancement. U of Alberta; Lauren Tilton, U of Richmond; Michelle R. Warren, Dartmouth College. 50 51 Showroom City Spent behind the Wheel

Real Estate and Resistance in the Furniture Capital of the World Real Estate and Resistance in the Drivers’ Labor in the Uber Economy Furniture Capital of the World JOHN JOE SCHLICHTMAN JULIETTA HUA AND KASTURI RAY FOREWORD BY HARVEY MOLOTCH SHOWROOM FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA CITY 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

A unique and engaging account of were increasingly behind downtown High Exploring professional passenger driving but in fact they entrench long-standing local urban decision-making within the Point’s real estate transactions, coordinated and the gig economy through feminist modes of extracting the reproductive labor globalizing world by buyers far removed from the region. theories of labor of their drivers for the benefit of consumer spent behind the wheel Then, in one massive transaction in 2011, a lives. Reproductive labor—conventionally High Point, North Carolina, is known as Are taxi drivers in today’s era of the ride-hail Drivers’ Labor in the Uber Economy firm funded by Bain Capital purchased every understood as feminized labor—is extracted, the “Furniture Capital of the World.” Once app performing care work akin to domestic major showroom building, and the majority of but masked, behind the masculinized, John Joe Schlichtman a manufacturing stronghold, most of its and household labor? So argue the authors of JULIETTA HUA and KASTURI RAY downtown real estate was under one owner. FOREWORD BY HARVEY MOLOTCH racialized bodies of drivers. Professional furniture factories have closed over the past Spent behind the Wheel. Bringing together driving is thus best understood alongside forty years, with production shipped off to Showroom City is a story of exclusionary sociological and legal perspectives with domestic and other gendered service work low-wage countries. Yet as manufacturing growth and unchecked development, of a feminist theoretical insights, Julietta Hua John Joe Schlichtman is associate professor of as reproductive labors devalued and often Julietta Hua is professor of women and gender studies left, the city tightened its hold on a biannual city flailing to fill the void left by its dwindling and Kasturi Ray examine the case study of sociology at DePaul University. He is coauthor of demonetized to benefit the national economy. at San Francisco State University. She is author of global exposition that serves as the world’s factories. But beyond that Schlichtman contemporary professional passenger driving Gentrifier. Trafficking Women’s Human Rights (Minnesota, 2011). furniture fashion runway. At the High Point engages the general lessons behind both in the United States. On the one hand, they Spent behind the Wheel is a must for readers Market, visitors from more than one hundred High Point’s deindustrialization and its Harvey Molotch is emeritus professor of social and show, the rise of the gig economy has brought interested in critical studies of technological Kasturi Ray is associate professor and chair of women nations traverse twelve million square feet stunning reinvention as a furniture fashion, cultural analysis and sociology at New York University. new attention to the industry of professional change and the gig economy, showing how and gender studies at San Francisco State University. of meticulous design. Downtown buildings— merchandising, and design node. With great passenger driving. On the other hand, the drivers’ capacities are drained for the benefit once courthouses, movie theaters, post nuance, he delves deeply to reveal how power SOCIOLOGY/URBAN STUDIES vulnerabilities that professional drivers of riders, corporations, and the maintenance AMERICAN STUDIES/URBAN STUDIES $30.00x £22.99 Paper ISBN: 978-0-8166-9931-5 $25.00x £18.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1185-0 offices, and gas stations—are now chic operates locally and how citizens may affirm, $120.00xx £96.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-0-8166-9930-8 experience remain hidden. of the racial state. $100.00xx £80.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1184-3 showroom spaces, even as many sit empty exploit, influence, and resist the takeover of $29.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6653-3 $25.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6643-4 Drawing on interviews with drivers, labor between each exposition. their community. JANUARY 2022 DECEMBER 384 pages 53 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 organizers, and members of licensing 208 pages 3 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 In Showroom City, John Joe Schlichtman Globalization and Community Series commissions, as well as case law and other applies an ethnographic lens to the global published resources, Hua and Ray argue that exposition’s relationship with High Point after working for ride-hail companies like Uber and it defeated rival Chicago in the 1960s and Lyft shares similarities with driving for taxi became established as the world’s dominant companies in the impact on driver lives. Lyft furniture center. In recent decades, following and Uber sell the idea of industry disruption, trends in global finance, private equity firms 52 53 The Editor Function Ahab Unbound Literary Publishing in Postwar America Melville and the Materialist Turn ABRAM FOLEY Abram Foley MEREDITH FARMER AND JONATHAN D. S. SCHROEDER, EDITORS

AFTERWORD BY SAMUEL OTTER FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

Offering the everyday tasks of literary lists as unique sites for literary inquiry. Pairing Why Captain Ahab is worthy of our fear— along with the racist and environmental editors as inspired sources of postwar histories and analyses of well- and lesser- and our compassion violence caused by categories like the person literary history known figures and publishing formations, from and the human. Herman Melville’s Captain Ahab is perennially Cid Corman’s Origin and Nathaniel Mackey’s Michel Foucault famously theorized “the seen as the paradigm of a controlling, Ahab Unbound makes a compelling case for Hambone to Dalkey Archive Press and author function” in his 1969 essay “What tyrannical agent. Ahab Unbound leaves his both the vitality of materialist inquiry and the Semiotext(e), Foley offers the first in-depth Is an Author?” proposing that the existence Literary Publishing in Postwar America position as a Cold War icon behind, recasting continued resonance of Melville’s work. engagement with major publishing initiatives of the author limits textual meaning. Abram him as a contingent figure, transformed in the postwar United States. Contributors: Branka Arsić, Columbia U; Foley shows a similar critique at work in the by his environment—by chemistry, Christopher Castiglia, Pennsylvania State labor of several postwar editors who sought The Editor Function proposes that from the electromagnetism, entomology, meteorology, Abram Foley is lecturer in literature and the creative U; Colin Dayan, Vanderbilt U; Christian P. Meredith Farmer is assistant teaching professor to question and undo the corporate “editorial/ seemingly mundane tasks of these editors— diet, illness, pain, trauma, and neurons industries at the University of Exeter. He has worked Haines, Pennsylvania State U; Bonnie Honig, in English and the Environmental Program at Wake industrial complex.” Marking an end to the routine editorial correspondence, line editing, firing—in ways that unexpectedly force us to as editorial fellow for Dalkey Archive Press and is the Brown U; Jonathan Lamb, Vanderbilt U; Pilar Forest University. She is author of the forthcoming powerful trope of the editor as gatekeeper, list formation—emerge visions of new, better see him as worthy of our empathy and our founding editor of ASAP/J. Martínez Benedí, U of L’Aquila, Italy; Steve book Melville’s Leaks: Science, Materialism, and the The Editor Function demonstrates how worlds and fresh textual and conceptual compassion. Mentz, St. John’s College; John Modern, Reconstitution of Persons. practices of editing and publishing constitute spaces for collective action. LITERARY THEORY/MEDIA STUDIES In sixteen essays by leading scholars, Franklin and Marshall College; Mark D. their own kinds of thought, calling on us to $25.00x £18.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1167-6 Jonathan D. S. Schroeder is assistant professor Ahab Unbound advances an urgent inquiry Noble, Georgia State U; Samuel Otter, U rethink what we read and how. $100.00xx £80.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1166-9 of English and comparative literary studies at the $25.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6665-6 into Melville’s emergence as a center of of California, Berkeley; Donald E. Pease, University of Warwick. He is editor of the forthcoming The Editor Function follows avant-garde AUGUST gravity for materialist work, reframing Dartmouth College; Ralph James Savarese, 224 pages 10 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 book The United States Governed by Six Hundred American literary editors and the publishing his infamous whaling captain in terms of Grinnell College; Russell Sbriglia, Seton Hall U; Thousand Despots: A True Story of Slavery. practices they developed to compete against pressing conversations in animal studies, Michael D. Snediker, U of Houston; Matthew

the postwar corporate consolidation of the critical race and ethnic studies, disability A. Taylor, U of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Ivy LITERARY CRITICISM/CULTURAL STUDIES publishing industry. Foley studies editing studies, environmental humanities, Wilson, Northwestern U. $28.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0755-6 and publishing through archival readings and medical humanities, political theory, and $112.00xx £89.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0754-9 $28.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6109-5 small press and literary journal publishing posthumanism. By taking Ahab as a focal DECEMBER point, we gather and give shape to the 464 pages 7 b&w illustrations 6 x 9 multitude of ways that materialism produces criticism in our current moment. Collectively, these readings challenge our thinking about the boundaries of both persons and nations, 54 55 Life in Plastic Art and Posthumanism Artistic Responses to Petromodernity Essays, Encounters, Conversations CAREN IRR, EDITOR CARY WOLFE Life FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

artistic responses into petromodernity caren irr, editor

A vital contribution to environmental as material and concept—has affected human A sustained engagement between art rivets our attention on the empirically thick, humanities that explores artistic responses sensibilities and expression. The collection Plas contemporary art and philosophy relating emotionally charged questions of “life” and to the plastic age reveals the place of plastic in reshaping to our place in, and responsibility to, the the “living” amid ecological catastrophe. how we perceive, relate to, represent, and nonhuman world Since at least the 1960s, plastics have been a One of the foremost theorists of reimagine bodies, senses, environment, scale, defining feature of contemporary life. They are How do contemporary art and theory posthumanism, Wolfe pushes that philosophy mortality, and collective well-being. undeniably utopian—wondrously innovative, contemplate the problem of the “bio” out of the realm of the purely theoretical cheap, malleable, durable, and convenient. Ultimately, the contributors to Life in Plastic tic of biopolitics and bioart? How do they to show how a posthumanist engagement Yet our proliferating use of plastics has think through plastic with an eye to imagining understand the question of “life” that binds with particular works and their conceptual also triggered catastrophic environmental our way out of plastic, moving toward a human and nonhuman worlds in their shared underpinnings helps develop more potent Caren Irr is professor of English at Brandeis University. Cary Wolfe is Dunleive Professor of English at Rice consequences. Plastics are piling up in postplastic future. travail? In Art and Posthumanism, Cary ethical and political commitments. She is author or editor of five previous books, among University. He is author of Critical Environments: landfills, floating in oceans, and contributing Wolfe argues for the reconceptualization of Contributors: Crystal Bartolovich, Syracuse them Toward the Geopolitical Novel: US Fiction in the Postmodern Theory and the Pragmatics of the “Outside” to climate change and cancer clusters. nature in art and theory to turn the idea of U; Maurizia Boscagli, U of California, Santa 21st Century and The Suburbs of Dissent: Cultural and What Is Posthumanism? and editor of Zoontologies: They are derived from petrochemicals and the relationship between the human and the Barbara; Christopher Breu, Illinois State U; Politics in the United States and Canada during the The Question of the Animal, all from Minnesota. He enmeshed with the global oil economy, and planet upside down. Loren Glass, U of Iowa; Sean Grattan, U of 1930s. edits the Posthumanities series for Minnesota. they permeate our consumer goods and Kent; Nayoung Kim, Brandeis U; Jane Kuenz, Wolfe explores a wide range of contemporary their packaging, our clothing and buildings, U of Southern Maine; Paul Morrison, Brandeis LITERARY CRITICISM/ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES artworks—from Sue Coe’s illustrations of PHILOSOPHY/ART THEORY our bodies and minds. Plastic reshapes our $27.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0988-8 $28.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1283-3 U; W. Dana Phillips, Towson U in Maryland animals in factory farms and Eduardo Kac’s cultural and social imaginaries. $108.00xx £86.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0987-1 $112.00xx £89.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1282-6 and Rhodes U in Grahamstown, South Africa; $27.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6427-0 bioart to the famous performance pieces of $28.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6656-4 With impressive breadth and compelling Margaret Ronda, UC-Davis; Lisa Swanstrom, NOVEMBER Joseph Beuys and the video installations of DECEMBER 304 pages 25 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 248 pages 26 b&w illustrations, 12 color plates 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 urgency, the essays in Life in Plastic examine U of Utah; Jennifer Wagner-Lawlor, Eija-Liisa Ahtila, among others—examining Art after Nature Series the arts and literature of the plastic age. Pennsylvania State U; Phillip E. Wegner, how posthumanist theory can illuminate, Focusing on post-1960s North America, the U of Florida; Daniel Worden, Rochester and be illuminated by, artists’ engagement collection spans a wide variety of genres, Institute of Technology. with the more-than-human world. Looking at including graphic novels, superhero comics, biological and social systems, the question utopic and dystopic science fiction, poetry, of the animal, and biopolitics, Art and and satirical prose, as well as vinyl records and Posthumanism explores how contemporary visual arts. Essays by a remarkable lineup of cultural theorists interrogate how plastic— 56 57 Scale Theory The Three Sustainabilities A Nondisciplinary Inquiry Energy, Economy, Time

JOSHUA DICAGLIO ALLAN STOEKL

THEORY ALLAN STOEKL

FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA the 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA three NONDISCIPLINARY sustain A pioneering call for a new understanding Because our worldviews and philosophies INQUIRY Bringing the word sustainability back from a social and communitarian charge, an energy abilities SCALEJoshua DiCaglio of scale across the humanities are largely built on nonscalar experience, he the brink of cliché—to a substantive, truly of the “universe” affirmed through, among ENERGY ECONOMY TIME then takes us slowly through the ways scale sustainable future other things, meditation and gifting. Each How is it possible that you are— challenges and reconfigures objects, subjects, of these carves out a different space in the simultaneously—cells, atoms, a body, quarks, Is sustainability a hopelessly vague word, with and relations. relations between objects, humans, and their a component in an ecological network, a meager purpose aside from an ambiguous survival and degradation. Each is necessary, moment in the thermodynamic dispersal of Scale Theory is, in a sense, nondisciplinary— feel-good appeal to the consumer? In The unavoidable, and intimately bound with, and the sun, and an element in the gravitational weaving together a dizzying array of Three Sustainabilities, Allan Stoekl seeks to infinitely distant from, the others. whirl of galaxies? In this way, we routinely sciences (from nanoscience to ecology) (re)valorize the word, for a simple reason: it transform reality into things already outside with discussions from the humanities (from is useful. Sustainability designates objects in Along the way, Stoekl cites a wide range JoshuaA DiCaglio is assistant professor of English at Allan Stoekl is professor emeritus of French and direct human experience, things we hardly philosophy to rhetoric). In the process, a time, their birth or genesis, their consistency, of authors, from philosophers to social Texas A&M University. comparative literature at Pennsylvania State University. comprehend even as we speak of DNA, curious pattern emerges: attempts to face the their survival, their demise. And it raises the thinkers, literary theorists to criminologists, His books include Bataille’s Peak: Energy, Religion, and climate effects, toxic molecules, and viruses. significance of scale inevitably enter terrain question, as no other word does, of the role anthropologists to novelists. This beautifully CRITICAL THEORY/PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE Postsustainability (Minnesota, 2007). How do we find ourselves with these closer to mysticism than science. Rather than $30.00x £22.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1207-9 of humans in the survival of a world that is written, compelling, and nuanced book is disorienting layers of scale? Enter Scale dismiss this connection, DiCaglio examines $120.00xx £96.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1206-2 quickly disappearing—and perhaps in the a must for anyone interested in questions $30.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6649-6 PHILOSOPHY/THEORY Theory, which provides a foundational theory the reasons for it, redefining mysticism in NOVEMBER genesis of another world. of ecology, energy, the environmental $27.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0818-8 of scale that explains how scale works, the terms of scale and integrating contemplative 352 pages 18 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 humanities, contemporary theories of $108.00xx £86.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0817-1 Stoekl considers a range of possibilities for $27.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6198-9 parameters of scalar thinking, and how scale philosophies into the discussion. The result the object, postmodern and posthuman the word, touching on questions of object SEPTEMBER refigures reality—that teaches us how to is a powerful account of the implications and aesthetics, or religion and the sacred in 328 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 ontology, psychoanalysis, urban critique, think in terms of scale, no matter where our challenges of scale, attuned to the way scale relation to community. technocracy, and religion. He argues that interests may lie. transforms both reality and ourselves. there are three varieties of sustainability, seen Joshua DiCaglio takes us on a fascinating from philosophical, cultural, and economic journey through six thought experiments that perspectives. One involves the self-sustaining provide clarifying yet provocative definitions world “without us”; another, the world for scale and new ways of thinking about under our control, which can run the political classic concepts ranging from unity to identity. spectrum from corporatism to Marxism to the Green New Deal; and a third that carries 58 59 Black Pulp An Essay for Ezra Genre Fiction in the Shadow of Jim Crow Racial Terror in America BROOKS E. HEFNER GRANT FARRED AN BLACK ESSAY

FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA FOR 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA PULP EZRA Genre Fiction RACIAL A deep dive into mid-century African everything from romance, hero-adventure, in the Shadow An intensely personal, and philosophical, in our time of social peril. His antiessentialist American newspapers, exploring how and crime stories to westerns and science account of why white America’s racial racial analysis is salient, especially when he TERROR IN Black pulp fiction reassembled genre fiction. Reading these stories, Hefner explores of Jim Crow unconscious is not so unconscious deploys Dave Chappelle as a counterpoint formulas in the service of racial justice how their authors deployed, critiqued, and to Baldwin—and Chappelle’s brilliant comic AMERICA An Essay for Ezra is a critique of terror that reassembled genre formulas—and the philosophic voice jabs at both racial and In recent years, Jordan Peele’s Get Out, begins but by no means ends with the pleasures they offer to readers—in the gender identity. GRANT Marvel’s Black Panther, and HBO’s Watchmen presidency of Donald J. Trump. A father service of racial justice: to criticize Jim Crow Brooks E. Hefner have been lauded for the innovative ways they addresses his son and a boy shares his Standing apart for its willingness to explore FARRED segregation, racial capitalism, and the sexual repurpose genre conventions to criticize white observations in a dynamic dialogistic exchange terror in all its ambivalence, this theoretical exploitation of Black women; to imagine supremacy, celebrate Black resistance, and that is a commentary of and for its time, reflection on racism, knowledge, ethics, and successful interracial romance and collective Brooks E. Hefner is professor of English at James Grant Farred is author of Martin Heidegger Saved My imagine a more racially just world—important taking the measure of racial terror and of being in our neofascist present brings to bear sociopolitical progress; and to cheer Black Madison University. He is author of The Word on Life; In Motion, At Rest: The Event of the Athletic Body; progressive messages widely spread precisely white supremacy both in our moment and as the full weight of philosophical inquiry and agency, even retributive violence in the face of the Streets: The American Language of Vernacular and What’s My Name? Black Vernacular Intellectuals, all because they are packaged in popular genres. historical phenomena. popular cultural critique on black life in the white supremacy. and codirector of the NEH-funded digital from Minnesota. But it turns out that such generic retooling for United States. humanities project Circulating American Magazines. Framed through the experiences of the antiracist purposes is nothing new. These popular stories differ significantly author’s biracial son, An Essay for Ezra is PHILOSOPHY/RACE AND ETHNICITY from contemporaneous, now-canonized $25.00x £18.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1180-5 As Brooks E. Hefner’s Black Pulp shows, this LITERARY CRITICISM/AMERICAN STUDIES intensely personal while also powerfully African American protest novels that $25.00x £18.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1157-7 $100.00xx £80.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1179-9 tradition of antiracist genre revision begins universal. Drawing on the social and political $25.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6641-0 tend to represent Jim Crow America as $100.00xx £80.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1156-0 even earlier than recent studies of Black $25.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6678-6 thought of James Baldwin and Martin Luther NOVEMBER a deterministic machine and its Black 208 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 superhero comics of the 1960s have revealed. DECEMBER King, Grant Farred examines the temptation inhabitants as doomed victims. Widely 248 pages 15 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 Thinking Theory Series Hefner traces it back to a phenomenon and the perils of essentialism and the need consumed but since forgotten, these genre that began in the 1920s, to serialized (and to discriminate—to engage the black mind as stories—and Hefner’s incisive analysis of sometimes syndicated) genre stories written much as the black body. With that dialectic as them—offer a more vibrant understanding of by Black authors in Black newspapers with his starting point, Farred synthesizes the ideas African American literary history. large circulations among middle- and working- of Jameson, Barthes, Derrida, Adorno, Kant, class Black readers. From the pages of the and other thinkers to derive an ethics of being Pittsburgh Courier and the Baltimore Afro- American, Hefner recovers a rich archive of African American genre fiction from the 1920s through the mid-1950s—spanning 60 61 Tolerance and Risk Building on Borrowed Time How U.S. Liberalism Racializes Muslims Rising Seas and Failing Infrastructure in Semarang MITRA RASTEGAR MITRA RASTEGAR LUKAS LEY

FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA BUILDING Rising Seas and How apparently positive representations local New York controversies surrounding A timely ethnography of how Indonesia’s through the temporal lens of a “meantime,” Failing Infrastructure ON in U.S. media cast Muslims as a racial Muslim-led public projects, and social media coastal dwellers inhabit the “chronic a managerial response that means a constant population discourses of the Syrian refugee crisis. present” of a slow-motion natural disaster enduring of the present rather than progress BORROWED Tolerance and Risk demonstrates how toward a better future—a “chronic present.” Portrayals of Muslims as the beneficiaries Ice caps are melting, seas are rising, and in Semarang representations of tolerable or sympathetic of liberal values have contributed to the densely populated cities worldwide are Building on Borrowed Time takes us to a place Muslims produce them as a population TIME racialization of Muslims as a risky population threatened by floodwaters, especially in where a flood crisis has already arrived— with distinct characteristics, capacities, and LUKAS LEY since the September 11 attacks. These Southeast Asia. Building on Borrowed Time is where everyday residents are not waiting for risks, and circulate standards by which the discourses, which hold up some Muslims as a relevant and powerful ethnography of how the effects of climate change but are in fact trustworthiness or threat of individual Muslims worthy of tolerance or sympathy, reinforce people in Semarang, Indonesia, on the north already living with it—and shows that life in must be assessed. Mitra Rastegar is clinical associate professor of liberal Lukas Ley is senior lecturer in the Institute of an unstable good Muslim/bad Muslim binary coast of Java, are dealing with this existential coastal Southeast Asia is defined not by the studies at New York University. Her work has been Anthropology (Centre for Asian and Transcultural where any Muslim might be moved from Tolerance and Risk examines the ways that challenge driven by global warming. In temporality of climate science but by the lived published in GLQ: Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, Studies) at Heidelberg University, Germany. one side to the other. In Tolerance and Risk, discourses of liberal rights, including feminist addition to antiflooding infrastructure breaking experience of tidal flooding. WSQ: Women’s Studies Quarterly, and International Mitra Rastegar explores these discourses as and LGBTQ rights, are mobilized to racialize down, vast areas of cities like Semarang and Feminist Journal of Politics. ANTHROPOLOGY/URBAN STUDIES a component of the racialization of Muslims— Muslims as uncivilized, even as they garner Jakarta are rapidly sinking, affecting the very $27.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0888-1 where Muslims are portrayed as a highly sympathy and identification with some foundations of urban life: toxic water oozes $108.00xx £86.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0887-4 AMERICAN STUDIES/RACE AND ETHNICITY $27.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6289-4 diverse population that nevertheless is seen to Muslims. $27.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0485-2 through the floors of houses, bridges are NOVEMBER contain within it a threat that requires constant $108.00xx £86.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0484-5 submerged, traffic is interrupted. 240 pages 15 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 $27.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6676-2 vigilance. SEPTEMBER As Lukas Ley shows, the residents of 304 pages 13 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 Tolerance and Risk brings together several Muslim International Series Semarang are constantly engaged in case studies to examine the interrelation of maintaining their homes and streets, trying to representations of Muslims abroad and in the live through a slow-motion disaster shaped by United States. These include human-interest the interacting temporalities of infrastructural stories and opinion polls of Muslim Americans, failure, ecological deterioration, and urban media representations of education activist development. He casts this predicament Malala Yousafzai, LGBTQ activist discourses, 62 63 Anime’s Identity Commodities of Care Performativity and Form beyond Japan The Business of HIV Testing in China ELSA L. FAN STEVIE SUAN ELSA L. FAN

Commodities of

FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA CARE 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA anime’s

Performativity identity and Form beyond Japan

A formal approach to anime rethinks a brand of media, the intricacies of anime How global health practices can MSM testing and its effects among these Stevie Suan globalization and transnationality under production occurring across national borders, end up reorganizing practices of care men, arguing that the intervention produced neoliberalism inquiries into the selfhood involved in anime’s for the people and communities new markets of men, driven by the push to character acting, and analyses of various they seek to serve meet testing metrics. Anime has become synonymous with anime works that present differing modes of Japanese culture, but its global reach raises Commodities of Care examines the Fan shows how men who have sex with men The Business of transnationality. HIV Testing in China a perplexing question—what happens when unanticipated effects of global health in China came to see themselves as part anime is produced outside of Japan? Who Anime’s Identity deftly merges theories from interventions, ideas, and practices as they of a global “MSM” category, adopting new actually makes anime, and how can this help media studies and performance studies, unfold in communities of men who have selfhoods and socialities inextricably tied to us rethink notions of cultural production? introducing innovative formal concepts that sex with men (MSM) in China. Targeted for HIV and to testing. Wider trends in global Stevie Suan is associate professor at Hosei University’s Elsa L. Fan is associate professor of anthropology at In Anime’s Identity, Stevie Suan examines connect anime to questions of dislocation on the scaling-up of HIV testing, Elsa L. Fan health programming have shaped national Faculty of Global and Interdisciplinary Studies. Webster University. how anime’s recognizable media-form—no a global scale, creating a transformative new examines how the impact of this initiative public health responses in China and, this

matter where it is produced—reflects the lens for analyzing popular media. CINEMA AND MEDIA STUDIES/POPULAR CULTURE has transformed these men from subjects of book reveals, have radically altered the ways ANTHROPOLOGY/ASIAN STUDIES problematics of globalization. The result is an $30.00x £22.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1178-2 care into commodities of care: through the health, disease, and care are addressed. $25.00x £18.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0765-5 incisive look at not only anime but also the $120.00xx £96.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1177-5 use of performance-based financing tied to $100.00xx £80.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0764-8 $30.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6606-9 $25.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6121-7 tensions of transnationality. OCTOBER HIV testing, MSM have become a source of NOVEMBER 384 pages 60 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 economic and political capital. 216 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 Far from valorizing the individualistic “originality” so often touted in national In ethnographic detail, Fan shows how this creative industries, anime reveals an alternate particular program, ushered in by global type of creativity based in repetition and health donors, became the prevailing strategy variation. In exploring this alternative creativity to control the epidemic in China in the late and its accompanying aesthetics, Suan 2000s. Fan examines the implementation of examines anime from fresh angles, including considerations of how anime operates like 64 65 Care Ethics in the Age of Precarity Practicing Cooperation

MAURICE HAMINGTON AND MICHAEL FLOWER, EDITORS Mutual Aid beyond Capitalism ANDREW ZITCER

FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

How care can resist the stifling force of the Matter movement, this collection presents A powerful new understanding of and patients; and a collectively managed neoliberal paradigm illuminating new ways of considering precarity cooperation as an antidote to alienation Philadelphia experimental dance company, in our world. and inequality founded in the early 1990s and still going In a world brimming with tremendous wealth strong. Through these case studies, Andrew and resources, too many are suffering the Care Ethics in the Age of Precarity offers a From the crises of racial inequity and Zitcer illuminates the range of activities that oppression of precarious existences—and hopeful tone in the growing valorization of capitalism that inspired the Black Lives Matter make contemporary cooperatives successful: with no adequate relief from free market– care, demonstrating the need for an innovative movement and the Green New Deal to the dedicated practitioners, a commitment to driven institutions. Care Ethics in the Age of approach to precarity within entrenched coronavirus pandemic, stories of mutual inclusion, and ongoing critical reflection. Precarity assembles an international group systems of oppression and a change in aid have shown that, though cooperation is He asserts that economic and social of interdisciplinary scholars to explore the priorities around the basic needs of humanity. variegated and ever changing, it is also a form Maurice Hamington is professor of philosophy at cooperation must be examined, critiqued, Andrew Zitcer is assistant professor and program question of care theory as a response to of economic solidarity that can help weather Contributors: Andries Baart, U Medical Center Portland State University. He has authored, coauthored, and implemented on multiple scales if it is director of the Urban Strategy graduate program at market-driven capitalism, addressing the contemporary social and economic crises. Utrecht, Tilburg U, and Catholic Theological or coedited many books, including Care Ethics and to combat the pervasiveness of competitive Drexel University. relationship of three of the most compelling Addressing this theme, Practicing Cooperation U Utrecht, the Netherlands; Vrinda Dalmiya, Poetry, Care Ethics and Political Theory, Socializing Care, individualism. social and political subjects today: care, delivers a trenchant and timely argument that U of Hawaii, Mānoa; Emilie Dionne, U Laval; and Embodied Care. GEOGRAPHY/URBAN STUDIES precarity, and neoliberalism. the way to a more just and equitable society Practicing Cooperation is grounded in the $27.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0980-2 Maggie FitzGerald, U of Saskatchewan; Michael Flower is emeritus professor of lies in the widespread adoption of cooperative voices of practitioners, and the result is $106.00xx £86.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0979-6 While care theory often centers on Sacha Ghandeharian, Carleton U; Eva Feder $27.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6417-1 interdisciplinary science studies at Portland State practices. But what renders cooperation a clear-eyed look at the lived experience questions of individual actions and choices, Kittay, Stony Brook U/SUNY; Carlo Leget, NOVEMBER University. He has worked with Jonas Salk, Daniel ethical, effective, and sustainable? of cooperators from different parts of the 272 pages 17 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 this collection instead connects theory to U of Humanistic Studies in Utrecht, the Callahan, Clifford Grobstein, and Bruno Latour. economy and a guidebook for people on the Diverse Economies and Livable Worlds Series the contemporary political moment and Netherlands; Sarah Clark Miller, Penn State Providing a new conceptual framework for potential of this way of life for the pursuit of public sphere. The contributors address U; Luigina Mortari, U of Verona; Yayo Okano, cooperation as a form of social practice, PHILOSOPHY/THEORY justice and fairness. the link between neoliberal values—such Doshisha U, Kyoto, Japan; Elena Pulcini, U of $27.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1187-4 Practicing Cooperation describes and critiques as individualism, productive exchange, Florence. $108.00xx £86.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-1186-7 three U.S.-based cooperatives: a pair of co-op $27.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6623-6 and the free market—and the pervasive NOVEMBER grocers in Philadelphia, each adjusting to state of precarity and vulnerability in which 344 pages 6 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 recent growth and renewal; a federation of so many find themselves. From disability two hundred low-cost community acupuncture studies and medical ethics to natural-disaster clinics throughout the United States, banded responses and the posthuman, examples together as a cooperative of practitioners from Māori, Dutch, and Japanese politics to the COVID-19 pandemic and the Black Lives 66 67 The Big No Case Studies for Interpreting the

KENNAN FERGUSON, EDITOR MMPI-A-RF THE BIG DANIEL L. DAVIS AND YOSSEF S. BEN-PORATH FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

CASE STUDIES FOR INTERPRETING THE

What it means to celebrate the potential Katerina Kolozova applies this insight to A collection of illustrative adolescent evaluated in clinical and forensic practice. and the power of no the nature of reality itself, arguing that the case studies to aid clinicians in problem In addition, one of the most common uses confusion of thought and reality leads to identification, diagnosis, and treatment for the MMPI-A-RF is in the juvenile court What does it mean to refuse? To not manipulation, automation, and alienation. planning—the only casebook for the setting—a landscape that has also dramatically participate, to not build a better world, to Using poetry and autobiography, Frank MMPI-A-RF changed since the publication of the original not come up with a plan? To just say “no”? Editor Wilderson shows how Black people—their MMPI-A. Case Studies for Interpreting the Against the ubiquitous demands for positive The MMPI-A-RF is linked to current models of bodies and being—are displaced in politics, Kennan Ferguson MMPI-A-RF focuses on detailed forensic solutions, action-oriented policies, and NO psychopathology and personality, and features DANIEL L. DAVIS YOSSEF S. BEN-PORATH replaced and erased by the subjectivities of issues, including legal backgrounds, case law, optimistic compromises, The Big No refuses scales relevant for adolescents in a variety violence, suffering, and absence. Andrew and assessment methods specific to use of to play. Here leading scholars traverse the of clinical, forensic, and school settings. Culp connects these themes of negativity, Kennan Ferguson teaches political theory at the the MMPI-A-RF in juvenile court and related Daniel L. Davis, PhD, ABPP, is a psychologist in private wide range of political action when “no” is in It mirrors the structure of the MMPI-2-RF, comparing and contrasting the refusals of University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, where he is settings. practice in Columbus, Ohio. His practice includes the picture, analyzing topics such as collective resulting in the most up-to-date, empirically antiphilosophy and Afropessimism. professor of political science. He is the author of four assessment and treatment of emotional and behavioral action, antisocialism, empirical science, the based personality assessment for use with Case Studies for Interpreting the MMPI- books, including Cookbook Politics and All in the Family: problems in older children, adolescents, and adults, negative and the affirmative in Deleuze and Thinking critically usually demands adolescents. Written by the authors of the A-RF will assist clinicians in understanding On Community and Incommensurability. marriage and family counseling, and forensic psychology. Derrida, the “real” and the “clone,” Native alternatives: how would you fix things? But, as earlier Case Studies for Interpreting the MMPI-A-RF interpretation, while also being He has served as a senior forensic psychologist with sovereignty, and Afropessimism. The Big No shows, being absolutely critical— MMPI-A, this book continues the goal of a valuable teaching tool for courses in PHILOSOPHY/THEORY Netcare Forensic Center and as the clinical director of declining the demands of world-building—is $25.00x £18.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0929-1 serving as an authentic and illustrative guide assessment. In his Introduction, Kennan Ferguson sums up the Buckeye Ranch, a comprehensive treatment center one necessary response to wrong, to evil. $100.00xx £80.00 Cloth ISBN: 978-1-5179-0928-4 for clinicians in understanding and using the the concept of the “Big No,” arguing for its $25.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6627-4 for youth. It serves as a powerful reminder that the MMPI-A-RF. political importance. Whatever its form—he JANUARY 2022 presumption of political action is always 168 pages 2 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 Yossef S. Ben-Porath, PhD, ABPP, is professor of identifies various strains—the Big No offers Since the publication of the original Case positive. 21st Century Studies Series psychological sciences at Kent State University. He power against systems of oppression. Joshua Studies, much has changed for clinicians who has been involved extensively in MMPI research Clover argues for the importance of Marx Contributors: Joshua Clover, U of California assess and treat adolescents. The interpretive for more than thirty years and is codeveloper of the and Fanon in understanding how people are Davis and U of Copenhagen; Andrew Culp, model described in this book demonstrates MMPI-3, MMPI-2-RF, and MMPI-A-RF and coauthor of alienated and subjugated. Theodore Martin California Institute of the Arts; Katerina how the MMPI-A-RF can assist clinicians in test manuals, books, book chapters, and articles on the explores the attractions of antisociality in Kolozova, Institute of Social Sciences and assessing youth today by highlighting sixteen MMPI instruments. literature and life, citing such novelists as Humanities Skopje; François Laruelle; cases that broadly represent adolescents

Patricia Highsmith and Richard Wright. Theodore Martin, U of California, Irvine; PSYCHOLOGY François Laruelle differentiates nonphilosophy Anthony Paul Smith, La Salle U; Frank B. $40.00x £32.00 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-0532-3 from other forms of French critical theory. Wilderson III, U of California, Irvine. $40.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6694-6 NOVEMBER 280 pages 16 b&w illustrations, 2 tables 8 1/2 x 11 68 69

Virtue Hoarders The Global Shelter DISORDERLY MICHEL FOUCAULT JOHN TAGG The Case against the Professional The BURDEN of REPRESENTATION Imaginary FAMILIES Essays on Photographies and Histories Managerial Class IKEA Humanitarianism INFAMOUS LETTERS CATHERINE LIU and Rightless Relief from the BASTILLE DANIEL BERTRAND MONK ARCHIVES AND ANDREW HERSCHER Arlette NOW IN PAPERBACK NOW IN PAPERBACK NOW IN PAPERBACK FARGE edited by philippe artières, Michel jean-françois bert, mathieu potte-bonneville, FALL 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA FOUCAULT and judith revel edited by NANCY LUXON LANGUAGE, MADNESS, AND DESIRE translated by THOMAS SCOTT-RAILTON translated by robert bononno ON LITERATURE

A denunciation of the credentialed elite class that serves Examines how the humanitarian order advances a message Disorderly Families Language, Madness, The Burden capitalism while insisting on its own progressive heroism of moral triumph and care while abandoning the dispossessed Infamous Letters from the Bastille and Desire of Representation Professional Managerial Class (PMC) elite workers labor in a world Prompted by a growing number of refugees and other displaced Archives On Literature Essays on Photographies and Histories of performative identity and virtue signaling, publicizing an ability people, intersections of design and humanitarianism are proliferating. to do ordinary things in fundamentally superior ways. Catherine Liu From the IKEA Foundation’s Better Shelter to Airbnb’s Open Homes ARLETTE FARGE MICHEL FOUCAULT JOHN TAGG shows how the PMC stands in the way of social justice and economic program, the consumer economy has engaged the global refugee crisis AND MICHEL FOUCAULT EDITED BY PHILIPPE ARTIÈRES, JEAN- redistribution by promoting meritocracy, philanthropy, and other self- with seemingly new tactics that normalize an institutionally sanctioned A powerhouse in photographic theory— EDITED BY NANCY LUXON FRANÇOIS BERT, MATHIEU POTTE- serving operations to abet an individualist path to a better world. politics of evasion. Exploring “the global shelter imaginary,” this book updated and with a new essay BONNEVILLE, AND JUDITH REVEL Virtue Hoarders is an unapologetically polemical call to reject making a charts the ways shelter functions as a form of rightless relief that TRANSLATED BY THOMAS SCOTT- virtue out of taste and consumption habits. expels recognition of the rights of the displaced and advances political RAILTON TRANSLATED BY ROBERT BONONNO “An important and impressive collection of essays.” paradoxes of displacement itself. Catherine Liu is professor of film and media studies at the University of California, —Art History The first English translation of letters Insight into the importance of literature Irvine. Daniel Bertrand Monk is professor of geography and Middle Eastern studies at of arrest from eighteenth-century France for Michel Foucault “An exemplary piece of counterhegemonic history writing.” Colgate University. Andrew Herscher is associate professor of architecture at the —Media, Culture, and Society CULTURAL STUDIES . Arlette Farge and Michel Foucault compile This book brings together previously $10.00x £7.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1225-3 $4.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6604-5 ninety-four letters from ordinary families who unpublished transcripts of oral presentations AVAILABLE POLITICAL SCIENCE/ARCHITECTURE submitted complaints to the king to intervene in which Michel Foucault speaks at length Now with a new essay, The Burden of $10.00x £7.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1222-2 90 pages 5 x 7 and resolve their family or personal disputes. about literature and its links to his principal Representation draws on semiotics, cultural Forerunners: Ideas First Series $4.95 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-6602-1 AVAILABLE themes: madness, language and criticism, and theory, and Foucault and Althusser and argues Arlette Farge is director of research in modern history 75 pages 5 b&w illustrations 5 x 7 truth and desire. for a rigorous analysis of the meaning and Forerunners: Ideas First Series at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, effects of photographs rooted in a historical Paris. Michel Foucault (1926–1984) was a French Michel Foucault (see bio at left). Robert Bononno has grasp of the growth of the modern state. philosopher and chair of the History of Systems of been a translator from French for more than twenty Thought at the Collège de France. Nancy Luxon is years. John Tagg is SUNY Distinguished Professor of Art associate professor of political science at the University History at Binghamton University, State University of of Minnesota. Thomas Scott-Railton is a freelance PHILOSOPHY/LITERARY CRITICISM New York. $20.00x £14.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1277-2 French–English translator. $20.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-4493-7 DECEMBER ART/PHOTOGRAPHY THEORY/HISTORY 176 pages 5 x 8 $30.00x £22.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1223-9 $27.00x £20.99 Paper ISBN: 978-1-5179-1278-9 NOVEMBER $27.00 Retail e-book ISBN: 978-1-4529-5192-8 272 pages 40 b&w illustrations 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 DECEMBER 344 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 70 71 FALL 2021 PRESS FALL JOURNALS UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2021 PRESS FALL JOURNALS UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

Mechademia: Preservation Norwegian-American Verge Critical Ethnic Studies Cultural Critique

Second Arc Education Studies Studies in Global Asias NEDA ATANASOSKI CESARE CASARINO, MAGGIE AND CHRISTINE HONG, EDITORS HENNEFELD, JOHN MOWITT, SANDRA ANNETT AND & Research The Journal of the Norwegian- TINA CHEN, EDITOR AND SIMONA SAWHNEY, EDITORS FRENCHY LUNNING, EDITORS American Historical Association PAUL HARDIN KAPP, EDITOR Journal of the Critical Ethnic Studies ANNA M. PETERSON, EDITOR Winner: PROSE Award for Best New Association The path-breaking journal of cultural Journal in Humanities criticism A groundbreaking exploration of anime, Encouraging public awareness of Critical Ethnic Studies explores the guiding manga, and Japanese popular culture endeavors in preservation education Dedicated to publishing innovative studies Verge: Studies in Global Asias showcases question of the Critical Ethnic Studies Cultural Critique provides a forum for creative of Norwegian migration and related fields scholarship on “Asian” topics from across the Association: how do the histories of and provocative scholarship in the theoretical Mechademia: Second Arc promotes academic Preservation Education & Research (PER) humanities and humanistic social sciences, colonialism and conquest, racial chattel humanities and humanistic social sciences. and professional discourse around East is a journal from the National Council for Since 1926, the Norwegian-American while recognizing that the changing scope of slavery, and white supremacist patriarchies Transnational in scope and transdisciplinary Asian popular cultures. Its scope includes Preservation Education (NCPE) that exchanges Historical Association has detailed and “Asia” as a concept and method is today an and heteronormativities affect, inspire, and in orientation, the journal fosters critical professional and fan-created works influenced and disseminates information and ideas interpreted the Norwegian American object of vital critical concern. Responding to unsettle scholarship and activism in the investigations regarding any aspect of culture by the forms of anime, Japanese manga/ concerning historic environment education, experience in its journal, Norwegian- the ways in which large-scale social, cultural, present? By decentering the nation-state as it expresses itself in words, images, and Korean manhwa/Chinese manhua, cinema, current developments and innovations American Studies. The journal is dedicated and economic concepts like the world, the as a unit of inquiry, focusing on scholarship sounds, across both time and space. television dramas, digital media, video gaming, in conservation, and the improvement of to showcasing the best work in the field, globe, or the universal are reshaping the ways that expands the identity rhetoric of ethnic music, performance arts, and many other historic environment education programs and including the related disciplines of history, Subscription rates: Individuals: $50.00; Institutions: $135.00. we think about the present, the past, and the studies, engaging in productive dialogue with Outside USA add $5.00 for each year’s subscription. forms of popular culture that have proliferated endeavors in the United States and abroad. literature, religion, art, and cultural studies. future, the journal publishes scholarship that indigenous studies, and making critical studies Back issues and single copy rate: Individuals: $15.00; Institutions: $39.00. in East Asia and throughout the world. This The journal publishes original research Digital subscriptions available at JSTOR (http://jstor.org/r/umnpress). NCPE’s objectives include coordinating efforts occupies and enlarges the proximities among of gender and sexuality guiding intellectual journal promotes research on anime, manga, articles alongside discussions of scholarly related to preservation education with public disciplinary and historical fields, from the forces, this journal appeals to scholars >> Cultural Critique is published four times per year. and related pop cultural fields in making key works in progress, the teaching and learning and private organizations and interested ancient to the modern periods. interested in methodologies, philosophies, and articles by East Asian authors accessible to of Norwegian-American studies, reviews of individuals and creating public awareness of discoveries of this new intellectual formation. English-speaking readers. recently published books, and more. Subscription rates: Individuals: $38.00; Institutions: $116.00. endeavors in preservation education. Outside USA add $5.00 for each year’s subscription. Open access edition available at Manifold (http://manifold.umn.edu). Back issues and single copy rate: Individuals: $19.00; Institutions: $54.00. Subscription rates: Individuals: $44.00; Institutions: $87.00. Subscription rates: Individuals: $50.00; Institutions: $100.00. Back issues and single copy rate: Individuals: $21.50; Institutions: $67.50. Subscription rate: $75.00. Digital subscriptions available at JSTOR (http://jstor.org/r/umnpress). For more information on the University of Minnesota Press Outside USA add $5.00 for each year’s subscription. Outside USA add $5.00 for each year’s subscription. Digital subscriptions available at JSTOR (http://jstor.org/r/umnpress). Back issues and single copy rate: Individuals: $21.50; Institutions: $21.50. Outside USA add $5.00 for each year’s subscription. 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once per year. JOURNALS year. 72 73 Buildings & Landscapes Journal of the Vernacular Architecture Forum LYDIA MATTICE BRANDT AND CARL LOUNSBURY, EDITORS

FALL 2021 PRESS FALL JOURNALS UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA Buildings & Landscapes examines the built 2021 PRESS FALL JOURNALS UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA world—houses and cities, churches and Journal of American Native American Wicazo Sa Review Future Anterior Environment, Space, courthouses, subdivisions and shopping malls. Subscription rates: Individuals: $65.00; Institutions: $145.00. Indian Education and Indigenous A Journal of Native American Studies Journal of Historic Preservation Place Outside USA add $5.00 for each year’s subscription. Back issues and single copy rate: Individuals: $40.50; Institutions: $84.00. History, Theory, and Criticism Digital subscriptions available at JSTOR (http://jstor.org/r/umnpress). BRYAN MCKINLEY JONES BRAYBOY Studies LLOYD L. LEE, EDITOR CHELSEA HARRY AND AND TERESA L. MCCARTY, EDITORS JORGE OTERO-PAILOS, EDITOR TROY R. E. 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Langley Ave. Mical Moser c/o Alliance Distribution Services (ADS) Nepal, and Sri Lanka Bill McClung & Associates Phone: (718) 781-­­2770 Chicago, IL 60628 c/o Chicago Distribution Center 9 Pioneer Ave, Tuggerah NSW 2259 NAM For sale only in North America 20540 State Hwy 46W, Suite 115 Fax: (514) 221-3412 Australia DEFECTIVE COPIES NSA For sale only in North and 11030 South Langley Avenue Spring Branch, TX 78070 E-mail: [email protected] Tel: +61 (2) 4390 1300 South America Fax: (888) 311-8932 Accepted at any time for replacement. Chicago, IL 60628 Email: [email protected] OBE World rights except for the Bill McClung ORDERS WITHIN THE UK AND www.newsouthbooks.com.au British Commonwealth Cell: (214) 505-1501 EUROPE MAY BE SENT TO: CLAIMS FOR DAMAGED USA For sale only in the United E-mail: [email protected] OR SHORT SHIPMENTS University of Minnesota Press JAPAN States, its dependencies, and Pubnet Terri McClung c/o Marston Book Services Ltd Claims must be made within 30 days of the Philippines Cell: (214) 676-3161 MHM Limited PUBNET@202-­­5280 160 Eastern Avenue invoice date. Indicate whether you wish X World rights except for the E-mail: [email protected] 1-1-13-4F, Kanda-Jimbocho Milton Park replacement copies or cancellation of order. European Continent Chiyoda-ku Oxfordshire WEST 101-0051, Tokyo OX14 4SB OVERSTOCK RETURNS Sales Call Japan Karel/Dutton Group Tel: +44 (0) 1235 465500 Invoice number, date, and packing If you would like a visit from a Phone: 81-3-3518-9181 RIGHTS INQUIRIES Total order (Select Northern California, Hawaii) Fax: +44 (0) 1235 465555 list with ISBN must accompany ship- Fax: 81-3-3518-9523 Jeff Moen Howard Karel E-mail: [email protected] ment. Returned copies must be clean sales representative, call the Email: [email protected] Rights and Contracts 3145 Geary Blvd. #619 or [email protected] and in saleable condition (no pricing Sales tax Phone: (612) 301-1995 representative for your region San Francisco, CA 94118 residue, bent corners, or shelf-­­worn E-mail: [email protected] Minneapolis addresses add 7.15%, MN (non-­Minneapolis) addresses add 6.5%*; IL addresses add 10.25%; Canadians add 5% GST. (listed at right) or call sales Phone: (415) 668-0829 covers will be accepted). The distribution Our distributor remits GST to Revenue Canada. Fax: (415) 668-2463 center retains the right of final decision Your books will be shipped from inside Canada, and you will not be assessed Canada Post’s border handling fee. manager Matt Smiley Email: [email protected] determining the saleability of returned The University of Minnesota is an equal *Additional local taxes may be applied at time of billing. books. Returns deemed unsaleable will opportunity educator and employer. (Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, at (612) 301-­­1931. be returned to the bookseller at the Wyoming) Member of the Association bookseller’s expense. Shipping Dory Dutton of University Presses Add $6.25 for the first book and $1.75 for each additional book. 111 Pueblito Rd. PERIOD OF ELIGIBILITY FALL 2021 Printed in U.S.A. HOW WE BECAME Corrales, NM 87048 For orders outside the U.S. add $10.00 for the first book and $6.50 for each additional book. Phone: (818) 269-4882 Eighteen months from the invoice date. Fax: (480) 247-5158 Superseded editions returnable up to 90 Total payment Email:[email protected] days after publication of new edition. OSI or OP titles not returnable 60 days after declaration of status. SENSORIMOTOR Total number of books ordered All payments must be in U.S. dollars. Prices subject to change without notice. Code: MN 50510 50511 50512 50513 When ordering by phone, please provide the operator with the above code number. MOVEMENT, MEASUREMENT, SENSATION

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TO ORDER CALL 1-800-621-2736 Rodgers TOM RADEMACHER AUTHOR OF IT WON’T BE EASY Winter’s

Simple Recipes ChildrenA Celebration of Nordic Skiing AFTER EFFECTS The Steger for an Abundant Life

RAISING Children Winter’s Homestead Kitchen Will Steger and Rita Mae Steger ~ with Beth Dooley

A MEMOIR OF

COMPLICATED GRIEF OLLIE Voices for Justice Carolyn Holbrook ANDREA GILATS from Minneapolis and David Mura, How My Nonbinary Art-Nerd Kid to the World Editors Changed (Nearly) Everything I Know Ryan Rodgers FALL 2021