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PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS

Fall and winter 2017 Fall and winter 2017

About the Press contents Penn State University Press fulfills the academic books for mission of The Pennsylvania State University by pub- lishing peer-reviewed books and journals for national ...... 2 and international reading communities. Recognized the trade for supporting first-class scholarship and demanding exceptional editorial and design standards, the press celebrated its sixtieth year in 2016. The press’s award- new in winning publication program focuses on American and European history, animal studies, art and archi- paperback . .14 tectural history, rhetoric and communication studies, Latin American studies, medieval studies, philosophy, Jewish studies, and religious studies. Moreover, the scholarly ...... 28 press takes seriously its mission to publish books and journals of interest and benefit to the citizens of Pennsylvania and the mid-Atlantic region. A vigor- ous journals program, now comprising more than recently fifty journals, places the press on the cutting edge of research in the arts and humanities. released ...... 56 Examination Copy Policy See www.psupress.org/ordering...... 58 subject index Desk Copy Policy unlocked Animal Studies ...... 4, 18, 32 See www.psupress.org/ordering. ...... 44 Review Copy Policy ...... 60 Architecture ...... 24–25, 51–53 Submit review copy requests via email to Cate Fricke, journals Art History ...... 19, 22–23, 46–53 Publicity Manager, [email protected]. Biography & Memoir ...... 12, 33, 42 Online Communication Studies ...... 27, 40, 43 Visit us online: psupress.org Education ...... 36 Facebook: facebook.com/PennStateUniversityPress THE PENNSYLVANIA Gender Studies ...... 20 Twitter: twitter.com/PSUPress General Interest ...... 4–13 STATE UNIVERSITY In cooperation with Penn State University Libraries, Penn Graphic Studies ...... 12 PRESS State University Press will donate 10 percent of proceeds from History ...... 16–18, 23–24, 26, 32–33, 37, 53 820 N. University Drive all orders placed directly on its website to help defray the high Image credits: Pages 2–3: football scrimmage on Old Beaver Humor ...... 7 cost of student textbooks. Field (The Pennsylvania State University Archives); 5: Sibylle usb 1, Suite C Peretti, St. Francis, reproduced by permission of the artist (Mike Latin American Studies ...... 44–45, 53 All books published by Penn State University Press are available Smith); 6: illustration by Hallie Bateman (halliebateman.com), University Park, PA 16802 through bookstores, wholesalers, or directly from the pub- Literature ...... 16, 20, 30–31, 38–39 reproduced by permission of the artist; 8: Armillaria solidipes t: 814.865.1327 lisher, and are available worldwide, except where noted. Titles, (Bill Russell); 10: New Beaver Field, early 1950s, and Beaver Math & Science ...... 19, 34 publication dates, and prices announced in this catalogue are f: 814.863.1408 Stadium with north-end upper deck (The Pennsylvania State Medieval & Early Modern Studies .16-17, 19, 24-25, 51-52 subject to change without notice. Most books are available on University Archives); 28–29: Miki Hayakawa, Untitled (Young Toll Free Orders: 800-326-9180 popular ebook platforms. Man Playing Ukulele), n.d., Collection Monterey Museum of Art. Museum Studies ...... 41, 50 Toll Free Fax: 877-778-2665 Abbreviations Gift of Mateo Lettunich, 2004.062. Nature ...... 4, 9 www.psupress.org tr: trade discount; sh: short discount Philosophy ...... 21, 34–35 Penn State is an affirmative action, equal opportunity Political Science ...... 21, 42 University. U. Ed. LIB. 17-506. Religion ...... 17, 26–27, 35–37, 39, 44, 47, 49 Rhetoric ...... 40–41, 43 Sports ...... 11 Sales Information ...... 78 Index ...... 79 f | w 2017

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is a must- , Schmidt O. Justin agricultural practices and insecticides. Where read for lovers of nature, of lovers for read bees, and books.” bees in modern light of part and entirely quest, environment our of plight portrays the of plight passion and a lively blend blend and a lively passion is part philosophy—it in the face modern of love song, part lament, love engaging. Just as engaging. RachelJust chemicals, Heather Swan of prose, poetry, art, and poetry, prose, of The Sting of the Wild Sting author of The Carson dramatized the

Honeybees Thrive “This story is woven with“This woven story is —

978-0-271-07741-3 176 pages | 34 color illustrations 6.75 × 8.5 | October isbn tr $29.95/£21.95/€28.95 paper: Animalibus: Of Cultures and Animals General Interest/Nature/Animal Studies traces the global traces Thrive Honeybees Where

A luminous journey from the worlds of honey of honey the worlds from A luminous journey is a lecturer at the University of at the University is a lecturer Heather Swan - envi she teaches where Wisconsin–Madison, and writing. She is also a literature ronmental beekeeper. web of efforts to secure a sustainable future for a sustainable future to secure efforts of web ourselves. honeybees—and producers, urban farmers, and mead makers mead makers and urban farmers, producers, of those of beekeepers to States of the United in southern and researchers Sichuan, China, Africa, bees live—which includes and nonhuman bees live—which - of com ways it also suggests alike—but actors and tackling a host of other conflicts prehending and the natural postindustrial society between full- closes with an illustrative chapter Each world. artwork. of bee-related gallery color Heather Swan Thrive stories from the field Where Honeybees Honeybees Where tells the stories of the beekeepers, farmers, farmers, of the beekeepers, the stories tells Through a lyrical combination of creative of creative a lyrical combination Through

Colony Collapse Disorder, ubiquitous pesticideubiquitous Disorder, Collapse Colony - habitat reduc use, industrial agriculture, causing of the issues just a few tion—these are popula- in honeybee trauma unprecedented book, In this artfully illustrated tions worldwide. voyage on a narrative embarks Heather Swan the understand solutions to—and discover to plight of honeybees. of—the sources Honeybees Where nonfiction and visual imagery, Thrive - and other advo artists, ecologists, entomologists, and reverse the damage stem to working cates Using her own this critical pollinator. for course as a starting point, Swan understanding quest for and strategies projects highlights the innovative to Her mosaic approach employ. these groups not only reveals with the environment engaging in which political ecology complex the incredibly Where Thrive Honeybees Field from the Stories Heather Swan

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978-0-271-07971-4 A Keystone Book® Interest/HumorGeneral 224 pages| 5 × 8 | October isbn $19.95/£14.95/€19.95paper: tr This humorous peek at life in a college town smack-dab in the middle of rural Pennsylvania Pennsylvania in the middle of rural smack-dab town in a college peek at life humorous This run Eve” Year’s a “Nude plastic cups in the bushes to and red furniture porch of missing tales From Among the Woo People Woo the Among Town A Survival a College Guide in for Living Frank Russell town kids in a three raise to California in rural left life a peaceful Frank In the mid-nineties, Russell Among crowds. football rowdy haunts, and food fast undergrad late-night fraternities, with saturated the Pennsylvania, College, decades living—and surviving—in State his two recounts People the Woo University. State often-chaotic of Penn home of journal- decades. A professor eventful of two the course over a changing community chronicles StateCollege. , and a local website, Times Daily the Centre the local newspaper, for ism and columnist on the tribe of a university—especially on living in the shadow has a unique perspective Frank com, - mode of celebra their signature so named for people,” as the “Woo adults known of nomadic young embrace of his hectic household as they the routines into readers He invites communication. tory and peculiarities the challenges sports, relates of intercollegiate the culture home, skewers their new and, most important, be amused us to teaches universities, largest at one of the nation’s of teaching as we even accomplishments, their academic and real-world appreciate antics and to at college-kid end. until semester’s anxiously tick off the days are essays hilarious, insightful Frank’s of summer, relief the sweet to of forty-somethings an octet by life. college-town and enjoy appreciate, survive, to who wants anyone indispensable for Outsiders believe the neighbors must be Among the Woo People by Russell People Frank the Woo Among from —Excerpted are diurnal. Generally, these tensions are Generally, diurnal. are Woo that agreement a tacit through managed nights two the to will be limited festivities days of their neighbors’ preceding the week held on other festivities are When of rest. nights of the neighbors call the week, upon arrival whose mere uniformed peacekeepers, promptly to Woo the causes Woolands in the of the volume lower their music. people. a boisterous such among dwell to mad surmise. this notdispute do neighbors The of “woos” they will emit loud Occasionally, “If you as, translated best are which own, their join ’em.” ’em, beat can’t The Woo take their name from the the from name their Woo take The begin in festivities Woo the night At

exultant cries that pierce the Wooland night, night, Wooland the pierce that cries exultant It active. most are Woo the is when which mean, cries these what clear entirely is not as translated variously been have they but fermented many drunk “Behold, I have “Rejoice, our for champions and beverages” field the on opponents their vanquished have of ritual combat.” Theserevels earnest. sometimes generate non-Woo the and Woo the between friction most of whom ofresidents Woolands, the Meet the Woo People the Woo Meet went family my month, this ago years Ten of people Central Woo the among live to learned have we is what Here Pennsylvania. about their lifeways.

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FIELD GUIDE TO BILL RUSSELL AND THE MID-ATLANTIC of Pennsylvania Pennsylvania of Wild Mushrooms Wild Mushrooms 978-0-271-07780-2 revised and expanded edition revised and 284 pages | 125 color/5 b&w/1 map 4.5 × 9 | August isbn tr $24.95/£17.95/€24.95 paper: A Keystone Book® Interest/Nature General From the Morel to the Chanterelle to the aptly named Chicken the aptly named Chicken to Chanterelle the to the Morel From - and distill illustrations full-color one hundred over Featuring has been giving mushroom workshops, walks, and talks walks, workshops, has been giving mushroom Bill Russell meth- unique mushroom-cultivation 1960. In 1992 he developed since Laboratories, Kingdom Mushroom in his business, ods that resulted of wild mushrooms. propagation in the commercial which specializes Mushroom Pennsylvania of the Central and past president Founder Pennsylvania. College, of State is a longtime Russell resident Society, at http://www.brmushrooms.com. more Learn Field Guide to Wild Mushrooms of Mushrooms Wild to Guide Field and the Mid-Atlantic Pennsylvania and ExpandedRevised Edition Bill Russell expert Bill edition of mushroom and expanded revised This and of Pennsylvania Mushrooms Wild Guide to popular Field Russell’s mushroom and experienced both novice provides the Mid-Atlantic than about more information with detailed, easy-to-use foragers varieties including twenty-five species of these fungi, one hundred guide. in the previous not found of the Woods, mushrooms of the mid-Atlantic region can be region of the mid-Atlantic mushrooms of the Woods, Each entry in look. to where know if you and enjoyed, harvested scientific contains a detailed description, current this field guide stud- recent from and information updates key classification, aid in identification. to photographs color ies, and high-quality to how you the guide shows season, by organized Thoughtfully in the region mushrooms and identify the most common locate do with edible what to explains look-alikes—and and recognize them. found you’ve once mushrooms in hunting, studying, andexperience of years fifty ing Russell’s of Mushrooms Wild to Guide Field about wild mushrooms, teaching for is an indispensable reference and the Mid-Atlantic Pennsylvania - and myco chefs, biologists, adventurous amateur curious hikers, philes of all stripes. f | w 2017 books for the trade 11 -

A Matter of Simple Justice: of Simple Justice: A Matter

978-0-271-07776-5 224 pages color/126 | 74 b&w illustrations 10 × 9 | August isbn cloth: $29.95/£21.95/€28.95 tr A Keystone Book® Interest/Sports General is a celebration of the ways of the ways of the Lion is a celebration Lair Packed with archival photos and fascinating and fascinating photos with archival Packed is Professor Emeritus of Civil Emeritus of Civil is Professor Harry H. West is Librarian Emeritus at the Penn Emeritus at the Penn is Librarian Stout Lee have experienced home games from the 1880s to from home games experienced have ished traditions. ished traditions. in which Penn State fans, students, and athletes fans, State in which Penn the present day, and of the monumental structure and of the monumental structure day, the present call home. that the Lions now Engineering at Penn State University, co-recipient co-recipient University, State Engineering at Penn facilities to the history of Penn State and its cher State of Penn the history to facilities University Press. University stories, stories, and construction challenges of the stadium and challenges and construction these the importance of reveal athletic fields and , also available from Penn State Penn from , also available Good Women Few of the American Award Moissieff of the 1970 Society of Civil Engineers, and recipient of the and recipient Engineers, of Civil Society State University Libraries. He is the author of Ice Libraries. University State

Cream U: The Story of the Nation’s Most Successful Most Successful of the Nation’s Story U: The Cream and Creamery Collegiate 1996 Teaching Fellow Award of the Penn State State of the Penn Award Fellow 1996 Teaching Alumni Association. The Untold Story of Barbara Hackman Franklin and a Hackman Franklin of Barbara Story Untold The - LION

HARRY H. WEST HARRY H. OF THE LEE STOUT AND A HISTORY OF BEAVER STADIUM BEAVER OF A HISTORY - and engineering profes Stout Lee Historian LAIR far the beyond gridiron. They present a and friends attended never have who a foot to interest those even University alumni located northeast of Old Main, and “New” Beaver Beaver northeastlocated of Old Main, and “New” ball game Beaver at Stadium.” into the State Penn character that extend illustrated and researched book tells the story tells book researched and illustrated Stadium. Beaver iconic in 1909. Stout and West explore the engineering explore and West in 1909. Stout university’s celebrated football program: the program: football celebrated university’s Football is an unmistakable part of the culture of part is an unmistakable of the culture Football of a Nittany though the experience State, Penn and tail- the crowds Lions home game—from Field, built on the northwest corner of campus corner built on the northwest Field, gates to the spectacle of the game itself—has itself—has the spectacle of the game to gates wonderfully entertaining story likely that’s sor Harry H. West show how Beaver Stadium Beaver how show sor Harry H. West Lee Stout and HarryLee Stout H. West of the structure that has evolved along with the that has evolved of the structure changed significantly over the years. This richly years. the over significantly changed came to be, including a look at its predecessors, be, including a look at its predecessors, came to Illustrated History Illustrated Lair of the Lion the of Lair

A History Stadium Beaver of “Stout and West’s narrative offers“Stout andinsights West’s “Old” Beaver Field, built in 1893 on a site centrally centrally on a site built in 1893 Field, “Old” Beaver Penn State: An State: —Michael Bezilla, author of Penn PSU quarterback (1992–1996) Beaver Stadium on the west side of modern- its side to campus west the on Stadium Beaver day state on the opposite end.” the on state day is the seminal work on the beginnings of beginnings the on work Lair seminal of the is the Lion and former Club Letterman’s PSU Football , Director, Richardson —Wally “ s | s 2017 books for the trade 13 lasting power comes from its recognition that the that recognition its from comes power lasting is astonishing, unsettling, and strange—much like like strange—much and unsettling, is astonishing, the weird, beautiful visions intruding on the central central the on intruding visions beautiful weird, the shimmering layers of coarse waxy crayon. The effect The crayon. waxy of coarse layers shimmering comics creators working anywhere in the world. A world. in the anywhere working creators comics and great The book’s of view world. the character’s An of people. ordinary most in the be found can achievement.” extraordinary darkest shadows—and darkest the brightest wonders— is entirely rendered in rendered is entirely Castles Coloured Thousand —Dylan Horrocks, author of Hicksville —Dylan Horrocks, “Gareth Brookes is one of the most surprising of surprising is one most the Brookes “Gareth

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978-0-271-07927-1 | cloth: $22.95 tr 208 pages | 6.75 × 9.5 | August isbn Graphic Medicine Series Editions Myriad Co-published with Available in North America only Graphic Studies/Biography & Memoir/ Interest General , won the Best Original , won Black Project The ing the frustration and fear that arise as a result as a result that arise and fear ing the frustration Royal College of Art. His most recent graphic graphic of Art. His most recent College Royal Bonnet syndrome, a condition in which a person in which a person a condition Bonnet syndrome, is a graphic novelist, printmaker, printmaker, novelist, is a graphic Brookes Gareth unexpected beauty. unexpected novel, novel, rich, artistic crayon drawings pull the reader into pull the reader drawings rich, artistic crayon show world, and unnerving vibrant Myriam’s Graphic Novel Award from Broken Frontier. Visit Visit Frontier. Broken from Award Novel Graphic www.gbrookes.com for more information. more for www.gbrookes.com with partial or severe blindness has complex, has complex, blindness with partial or severe and textile artist who studied fine artand textile at the of this unique condition—and the moments of of this unique condition—and often bizarre hallucinations. Gareth Brookes’s Brookes’s hallucinations. Gareth often bizarre - The surreal lives side by side with the every side by lives surreal The

begins to notice something “off” something about the notice begins to instincts she has only her own door, house next - set, and thousands of col television her from to trust: can she tell the difference between a between the difference trust: can she tell to crime? and a real trick of the eyes Mild-mannered Myriam is diagnosed with Mild-mannered but that in her right eye, macular degeneration visions are a bunch of nonsense, and her family a bunch of nonsense, and her family visions are walls. Her husband Fred is certain that Myriam’s is certain that Myriam’s Her husband Fred walls. seeing: children in bright red helmets dancing in bright red seeing: children old age and an addled mind. So when Myriam old age ored castles forming patterns on her kitchen kitchen on her patterns forming castles ored on the doctor’s ceiling, exotic vines growing vines growing exotic ceiling, on the doctor’s day in this graphic novel about life with Charles with Charles about life novel in this graphic day dismisses her odd observations as the results of as the results her odd observations dismisses doesn’t explain the strange things she’s been things she’s the strange doesn’t explain Gareth Brookes Gareth

A Thousand Coloured Castles A Thousand Coloured

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS PRESS UNIVERSITY STATE PENN psupress.org 12 f | w 2017

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, Sabine Hyland and the Priest Chankas The Drawing on a remarkable collection of docu- collection on a remarkable Drawing living among native villagers in colonial ? Peru? in colonial villagers living among native like for the Chankas under this corrupt and brutal corrupt under this the Chankas for like ioners, amassing a personal fortune at their fortune a personal amassing ioners, ity that would characterize Chanka political and Chanka characterize that would ity is Reader in Anthropology at the in Anthropology Sabine Hyland is Reader to 1611. During his reign of terror over his Andean over of terror 1611. During his reign to and church the colonial tale, she vividly portrays the changing nature of Chanka politics and kin- of Chanka the changing nature Penn State University Press. University State Penn How does society deal with a serial killer in its with a serial killer in deal does society How priest is a Catholic What if the murderer midst? parish, Albadán was guilty of murder, sexual of murder, guilty parish, Albadán was Bautista de Albadán, a Spanish priest to the Spanish priest to Bautista de Albadán, a in the Americas and in archives ments found of Albadán’s cache a rare including Europe, - the instabil his actions sparked priest, and how University of St. Andrews. She is the author of of St. Andrews. University for these crimes by deceiving and outwitting his and outwitting deceiving these crimes by for Highland Peru Highland superiors in the colonial government and church and church government in the colonial superiors social history for the next 123 years. Through this Through 123 years. the next for social history of Chanka history as the as well of Peru, state ship from the fifteenth to the eighteenth century. the fifteenthto the eighteenth ship from abuse, sadistic torture, and theft from his parish- and theft from abuse, sadistic torture, administration. , also published by , also published by and Andean Christianity Religion expense. For ten years, he escaped punishment years, ten For expense. ethnicity, the nature of Spanish colonialism, and of Spanish colonialism, the nature ethnicity, chronicles the horrifying story of Father Juan of Father the horrifying story chronicles was what life Hyland reveals letters, candid family Chanka people of Pampachiri in Peru from 1601 from in Peru people of Pampachiri Chanka Sabine Hyland

In Gods of the : An Early Jesuit Account of Inca Jesuit Account Gods of the Andes: An Early A Tale of Murder of andExile in A Tale The Chankas and the Priest the and Chankas The

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978-0-271-04880-2 p r i e s t

Also of Interest Andes: the of Gods An Early Jesuit Account of Andean and Religion Inca Christianity Sabine Hyland isbn paper: $24.95/£17.95/€24.95 sh Latin American Originals Series c h a n k a s

t h e Sabine Hyland in Highland Peru

Sabine Hyland Sabine A Tale of Murder and Exile of Murder and Exile A Tale t h e latin american originals american latin Gods of the Andes the Gods of a n d An Early Jesuit Account of Inca Religion and Andean Christianity of Andean and Inca Religion Account Jesuit Early An 978-0-271-07123-7 | paper: $24.95/£17.95/€24.95 sh $24.95/£17.95/€24.95 paper: | 978-0-271-07123-7 and written in a style that general readers, historians, and anthropologists will appre History/Religion large public libraries.” ciate, this book belongs in academic and isbn 224 pages | 27 b&w illustrations/2 maps | 6 × 9 | December “Basedon remarkable archival materials —M. A. Burkholder, Choice - corrects corrects of the Conquest Continuity The Wendy Marie Hoofnagle explores the Marie Hoofnagle explores Wendy understanding to approach new An engaging lized culture, replacing a tribal Germanic society a tribal Germanic society replacing culture, lized have traditionally been seen both as rapacious seen both as rapacious been traditionally have ing that the Normans’ literature of kingship ing that the Normans’ literature certain aspects of the Normans’ influenced the impact of the past on the Normans them- the impact of the past these oversights. and propaganda, architecture symbolic through of the culture and of Norman identity the nature Northern Iowa. practices. Many of the scholarly arguments of the scholarly arguments Many practices. - argu England after Conquest, the Norman on the glories of ways rule modeled in many of conver including a program ruling approach, and will enlighten Norman England, this volume is Associate Professor Professor Marie Hoofnagle is Associate Wendy selves. selves. political domination “allurement,” sion through of Languages and Literatures at the University of the University at and Literatures of Languages and English history. and its customs with more refined Continental refined with more and its customs overlook their influence about the Normans and ideals that and literary of historical aggregate as forest of a sense of the royal and the creation court. of the royal an extension envisioned government as a form of imperial as a form government envisioned in Anglo- of succession writing and the problems early modern, on medieval, enrich scholarship Imperialism developed about Charlemagne after his death about Charlemagne developed colonizers and as the harbingers of a more civi- of a more and as the harbingers colonizers Carolingian aspects of Norman influence in aspects of Norman influence Carolingian that the She argues and his reign. Charlemagne Conquest Charlemagne and Anglo-Norman

Wendy Marie HoofnagleWendy The Norman conquerors of Anglo-Saxon England of Anglo-Saxon Norman conquerors The The Continuity of the of The Continuity -

Charlemagne Charlemagne and Anglo-Norman Imperialism Marie Hoofnagle Wendy

978-0-271-07402-3 | paper: $34.95 /£24.95/€33.95 sh The Continuity of the Conquest

The Continuity of the Conquest further and emperor loomed large in the imagi forces us to reconceptualize think what we nations the of Anglo-Normans, in ways History/Literature both tacit Hoofnagle and explicit. Wendy expands the horizons an of already expanding on the body medieval work of England itself, in the central Middle Ages.” isbn we know aboutwe Englishness, and indeed Charlemagne legend.Frankish That king 208 pages | 6 × 9 | December

“ , Virginia Tech Gabriele, Virginia —Matthew

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978-0-271-06390-4 Also of Interest Instruments: Its and Vision Art, Science, and Early in Technology Europe Modern Edited by Alina Payne isbn paper: $42.95/£30.95/€41.95 sh

edited by alina payne edited by early modern europe early art, science, and technology in in science, and technology art, vision and its instruments its Breaking from medieval and Renaissance and Renaissance medieval from Breaking , Raz Chen-Morris dem- , Raz Chen-Morris Shadows Measuring is Senior Lecturer in History at in History is Senior Lecturer Raz Chen-Morris his astronomical observations, advanced the advanced observations, his astronomical ity, and for mathematical language to describeto mathematical language and for ity, - his astronomi understanding to is essential the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. University the Hebrew the formation of images on the retina and the and retina on the of images the formation sensory upon direct that insisted traditions the seventeenth-century astronomer posited astronomer the seventeenth-century reflections, and refractions. and reflections, instruments for advocated Kepler perception, - this kind of knowl only through motion. It was people during that how it affected but retina, world the and understood period approached new ways to view scientific truth and knowledge. truth and knowledge. scientific view to ways new geometrics of the camera obscura, as well as as well obscura, of the camera geometrics In Kepler’s Optics of Invisibility Optics of Kepler’s Raz Chen-Morris argument that physical reality could only be could reality that physical argument - real and physical the eye between as mediators them. around and epistemological traditions and shows how how shows and traditions and epistemological edge, he argued, that observation could produce produce could that observation he argued, edge, of vision and the early modern understanding onstrates that a close study of Kepler’s Optics study of Kepler’s that a close onstrates scientific from break radical Kepler’s explores described through artificially produced shadows, shadows, artificially produced described through certainty about the heavens. Not only was this Not only was about the heavens. certainty the advancing crucial to of visibility conception cal work and his scientific epistemology. He and his scientific epistemology. cal work Measuring Shadows Measuring Chen-Morris reveals how Kepler’s ideas about Kepler’s how reveals Chen-Morris

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978-0-271-07099-5 | paper: $34.95/£24.95/€33.95 sh Kepler’s Optics science historians, and graduate-level students in the are who involved study of university and college libraries and major public libraries.” public optics and Kepler derived how his plan etary motion of laws will benefit from this isbn work. It is It alsowork. a valuable acquisition for 264 pages | 12 b&w illustrations | 6 × 9 | October Art History/Science “Students the of history astronomy, of , Choice —C. G. Wood shows how pets how shows Animal Companions Drawing on a broad array of sources, includ- of sources, array on a broad Drawing While Europeans kept pets long before the pets long before kept While Europeans is Associate Dean of Arts, is Associate Ingrid H. Tague became both increasingly visible indicators of visible indicators became both increasingly ing natural histories, periodicals, visual and histories, ing natural in Europe, with a new understanding of religion, of religion, understanding with a new in Europe, themselves, themselves, the Enlightenment and the end of the Malthusianthe Enlightenment Humanities, and Social Sciences and Associate and Associate Humanities, and Social Sciences of Denver. at the University of History Professor rights and wrongs of human-animal relationships. rights and wrongs owners of pet and the testimony culture, material Pets and Social Change in Eighteenth- in andPets Social Change spreading prosperity and catalysts for debates for and catalysts prosperity spreading so was at best frivolous and at worst downright downright and at worst at best frivolous so was - and unprec cultures and non-European science, anxiety that were reflected in debates over the over in debates reflected that were anxiety soci- different of the radically about the morality and shaped broader cultural debates. cultural and shaped broader ety emerging in eighteenth-century Britain. in eighteenth-century emerging ety of the eighteenth century, pets offered a unique a pets offered century, of the eighteenth articulate be human and to what it meant to way of the dawn With look like. ought to what society nation England became the wealthiest ous eras, of all kinds. goods consumer to access edented eighteenth century, many believed that doing believed many century, eighteenth ways in which conversation about them reflected about them reflected in which conversation ways dangerous. Ingrid Tague argues that for Britons that for argues Tague Ingrid dangerous. - previ that marked dearth of and famine cycle century British society perceived pets and the pets and perceived British society century Ingrid H. Tague Century Britain

Animal Companions explores how eighteenth- how explores Animal Companions These transformations generated excitement and excitement generated transformations These

978-0-271-06589-2 | paper: $29.95/£21.95/€28.95 sh

hierarchy from the human end the of spectrum, finding touching significantand stable certain. nor approaches Tague this History/Animal Studies History/Animal between ‘animal’ and ‘human’ is neither in the eighteenth century as pet keeping evolved from a proscribedevolved to an approved cultural practice.” challenged the animal-human relationship isbn ways inways which human pet owners reifiedor 320 pages | 38 b&w illustrations | November | 6 × 9 Animalibus: Of Cultures and Animals

“Thanks to animal studies, the difference American Historical Review Historical , American Morey —Ann-Janine

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978-0-271-06591-5 Also of Interest Man or Citizen: and Forgiveness, Anger, Rousseau in Authenticity Pagani Karen isbn paper: $29.95/£21.95/€28.95 sh

or demonstrates that his ambitious failure that his ambitious failure demonstrates Karen Pagani This engaging study is founded on two basic on two study is founded engaging This While Rousseau may raise our hopes only to raise may While Rousseau Anger, Forgiveness, and Authenticity in Rousseau Forgiveness, Anger, Citizen Man believed it was fundamentally unsolvable—that fundamentally unsolvable—that it was believed but important questions: what do we want out of want but important questions: what do we achieve able to we and are human relationships, tions: the problem of self-interest implicit in all of self-interest tions: the problem tions with purpose and meaning, only to show show tions with purpose and meaning, only to through wholeness of reaching the impossibility through the contours of Rousseau’s thought on of Rousseau’s contours the through love, of relationships—sexual types distinct three critical act. the limits of Rousseau’s tion and into ness to a self-interested human being. a self-interested to ness - imbue social rela to readers inspires Rousseau friendship, and civil or political association—as friendship, In this volume, John Warner grapples with one grapples Warner John In this volume, social relationships. Not only did Rousseau never never Rousseau Not only did social relationships. but he also argues, Warner this problem, solve whole- restore never could social relationships such as that of the neo-Kantian Rawlsian school. such as that of the neo-Kantian Rawlsian such relationships. - chief preoccupa Rousseau’s of Jean-Jacques what we are after? Warner traces his answers his answers traces after? Warner are what we of Rousseau, interpretations alternate as well condi- the human insight into unexpected offers Rousseau and the Problem of Human and the Problem dash them, Rousseau Relations Rousseau and the Problem of Problem the and Rousseau Human Relations Science at State University. at Kansas State Science

is Assistant Professor of Political of Political Professor is Assistant John M. Warner The result is an insightful exploration of the way of the way exploration is an insightful result The John M. Warner -

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| paper: $39.95/£28.95/€38.95 sh $39.95/£28.95/€38.95 paper: | human species, rather than primarily free Philosophy/Political Science Philosophy/Political represents an interpretation Rousseau’s of ing for ‘wholeness,’ or unity, or ing in the for ‘wholeness,’ asocial engagement with other interpretations Rousseau,of especially the judicious criticism.” oeuvre from the standpoint the of long discussion the of problems with the neo- dom, or moral autonomy, for example. . . . moral or dom, autonomy, Kantian-Rawlsian school of Rousseau isbn 978-0-271-07101-5 isbn 272 pages | 6 × 9 | December This book is also available as open access. See page 59. The The best partsof the book are author’s the “Thiswell-written, well-researched book W. J. Coats, Choice J. Coats, —W. This fresh account of French women poets’ women of French account fresh This nine- studies of to contribution A prodigious , Adrianna M. Paliyenko uncovers uncovers Paliyenko M. , Adrianna Genius Envy ing thinkers, critics, and literary historians to historians critics, and literary ing thinkers, uncovers the multiple ways in which women in which women the multiple ways uncovers uted the phenomenon of genius to masculinity masculinity to genius the phenomenon of uted book Paliyenko’s poetry, French teenth-century - is an encoun result The their critical reception. such as writers of celebrated with the texts ter Professor of French at Colby College. Her most College. at Colby of French Professor and with Joseph Acquisto book, coedited recent poets sought to define their place in history. define their place poets sought to - poets invigo these female how shows Paliyenko and of genius about the origins the debate rated women of poetry by the reception reexamines place in the canon. place for their creativity and bold aesthetic ideas. their creativity for garnered considerable recognition in their time in their recognition considerable garnered gender specific, thus advocating for their rightful specific, thus advocating gender In Marceline Desbordes-Valmore, Anaïs Ségalas, Anaïs Ségalas, Desbordes-Valmore, Marceline and Louise Siefert, Louisa Malvina Blanchecotte, anced and comprehensive treatment of their work of their work treatment and comprehensive anced voices. Conservative critics of the time attrib- Conservative voices. as authors of female the work and dismissed a forgotten history: the multiplicity and diversity and diversity the multiplicity history: a forgotten erase women from the pages of literary history, history, literary of the pages from women erase bal- This its original context. within and beyond of nineteenth-century French women’s poetic women’s French of nineteenth-century women that these show career of each poet’s as the notion of genius challenged explicitly contributions to literature probes the history of the history probes literature to contributions Poets as Readers in Nineteenth- as Readers is Poets Catherine Witt, Genius Envy

. France Century is Charles A. Dana A. Dana is Charles M. Paliyenko Adrianna Women Shaping French Poetic History, History, Poetic Shaping French Women 1801–1900 Ackermann. Glimpses at the different stages stages Glimpses at the different Ackermann. Adrianna M.Adrianna Paliyenko “feminine literature.” Despite the efforts of lead- the efforts Despite literature.” “feminine

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ADRIANNA M. PALIYENKO - , is long overdue in, is overdue long Envy Genius Envy Women Shaping Women History, Poetic French 1801–1900 GENIUS 978-0-271-07709-3 | paper: $37.95/£26.95/€36.95 sh

than widely more celebrated male writers.” studies circles. Her incisive reexamination temporaries Lamartine, of Gautier, Hugo, Literature/Gender Studies recent scholarship puts about it to rest for professional nineteenth-century French French nineteenth-century professional ment of poetry of ment composed theorized or by good the myth that female poets—con of thisof undervalued literary corpus and Baudelaire, Rimbaud, and Mallarmé— isbn were somehow less somehow aestheticallywere significant women, women, Unbound: The Rise of Pluralism in Literature and in Literature Rise of Pluralism Unbound: The 368 pages | 19 b&w illustrations | 7 × 10 | September Criticism This book is also available as open access. See page 59.

“Adrianna Paliyenko’s major new assess major new “Adrianna Paliyenko’s Difference , author of Difference Metzidakis —Stamos

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS PRESS UNIVERSITY STATE PENN psupress.org 20 f | w 2017 new in paperback 23

sheds new critical light on the essential sheds new In his introduction, Kenneth Haltman provides Haltman provides Kenneth In his introduction, Making accessible a text that has until now now that has until a text Making accessible (1911–1948) was an antiquarian dealer was Brimo (1911–1948) René is H. Russell Pitman Professor Professor Pitman Haltman is H. Russell Kenneth by Gaston Bachelard. Gaston by the Sorbonne and a docteur ès lettres from the from ès lettres the Sorbonne and a docteur tory by explaining larger cultural transformations transformations cultural larger explaining by tory States. in the United of collecting the history text is a detailed examination of collecting in of collecting detailed examination is a text in American of Taste Evolution of The translation Looking Close Close including Looking books, the author of many published by Penn State University Press, and criti- Press, University State Penn published by nate the European art market. This work helped work This art market. the European nate published in French in 1938, Brimo’s foundational Brimo’s in 1938, published in French formed a turning point and initiated a new area area a new a turning point and initiated formed University of Paris. University introduction by Kenneth Haltman Kenneth introduction by shape the then-fledgling field of American art his- shape the then-fledgling and a graduate of the École du Louvre, as well as as well du Louvre, of the École and a graduate and Harvard from degrees of master’s a recipient René Brimo as manifested in the collecting habits of American in the collecting as manifested a biographical study of the author and his social a biographical and the United milieu in France and intellectual and art collecting in the United States. Originally States. United and art in the collecting of Art History at the University of Oklahoma and of Art University at the History elites. It remains the most substantive account of account the most substantive It remains elites. of academic study: the history of artof academic study: the history collecting. elegant Haltman’s in French, only been available scholar. but overlooked this extraordinary of work of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century patronage patronage and nineteenth-century of eighteenth- cal translations from the French, notably of works notably of works the French, from cal translations critical translation of René Brimo’s classic study classic Brimo’s of René critical translation States. He also explores how Brimo’s work work Brimo’s how He also explores States. and Seeing Far: Samuel Seymour, Titian Ramsay Peale, Peale, Ramsay Titian Samuel Seymour, and Seeing Far: 1818–1823 Expedition, , alsoand the Art of the Long

Collecting Collecting - domi came to I, when American collectors War America from colonial times to the end of World the end of World times to colonial America from American Collecting The Evolution of Taste in American Collecting is a new Collecting American in of Taste Evolution The Translated, edited, an and with Translated, The Evolution of Taste in Taste of Evolution The

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RENÉ BRIMO

Translated, edited, and with an introduction by Kenneth Haltman edited, and with an introduction Translated, . Brimo’s encyclopedic. Brimo’s knowledge The Evolution of TasteAmerican in TheEvolution of 978-0-271-07325-5 | paper: $29.95/£21.95/€28.95 sh in American Collecting The The Evolution Taste of forgotten scholar and his opus magnum, admire and much scholarly of value in hitherto virtually unknown to students of tors, dealers, and institutions. Haltman’s from the Foundation Terra for American Art International brings to light an extraordinary if mainly introduction is a research tour force de that Publication Program of the College Art Association. of hisof subject results in penetrating a host of observations about artists, critics, collec Kenneth translation Haltman’s René of isbn Brimo’s Mary Studies Emeritus, The College of William and of William College Studies Emeritus, The Art History/History Art Collecting This publication has been made possible through support Art and Art History and Professor of American Art and Art and Professor History 424 pages | 43 b&w illustrations | 7 × 10 | November American art and history.” “The judiciousreader will muchfind to , Ralph H. Wark Professor of Professor , Ralph H. Wark —Alan Wallach -

takes Warburg as its main subject, but as its main Warburg takes Faithfully and thoughtfully translated by by translated and thoughtfully Faithfully lished by Penn State University Press. University State Penn lished by arts. landscape, and the decorative is a professional translator translator Mendelsohn is a professional Harvey book shop specializing in scarce and out-of-print and out-of-print book shop specializing in scarce planning, city of architecture, on the history books - sym of time, memory, conceptions historians’ art and the between bols, and the relationship The Surviving became a “humanistic” discipline. The in 2002, is the result of Georges Didi-Huberman’s Didi-Huberman’s of Georges is the result in 2002, the philosophical nature of art history. the philosophical nature ters and diaries, Didi-Huberman demonstrates diaries, Didi-Huberman demonstrates and ters and importance of the complexity unequivocally to understand the “life” of images. Drawing Drawing of images. the “life” understand to École des hautes études en sciences sociales in études en sciences des hautes École Angelico: in English include Fra His books Paris. Harvey Mendelsohn, this first English-language English-language Mendelsohn, this first Harvey rational and irrational forces of the psyche. forces irrational and rational pology, psychoanalysis, and philosophy in order in order and philosophy psychoanalysis, pology, Phantoms of Time of Phantoms and Time of History Art of Warburg’s Aby Phantoms: Mendelsohn Fine European Books, an antiquarian Books, European Mendelsohn Fine is on the faculty of the Didi-Huberman is on the faculty Georges Ends of a Certain History of Art History - , the last also pub Ends of a Certain of H. L. and German and the proprietor of French also addresses broader questions regarding art questions regarding broader also addresses Dissemblance and Figuration; Invention of Hysteria: of Hysteria: Invention and Figuration; Dissemblance edition of Didi-Huberman’s masterful study of masterful edition of Didi-Huberman’s was both distorted and diffused as art history was - anthro from an art that drew envisioned history unpublished let of Warburg’s on a wide range - of foun and work the life into research extensive dational art historian Aby Warburg. Warburg Warburg Warburg. dational art Aby historian Image Confronting Images: Questioning the ; and Confronting Salpêtrière

Charcot and the Photographic Iconography of the Iconography and the Photographic Charcot Warburg is a stirring and significant treatise on treatise is a stirring and significant Warburg Warburg’s ideas and the ways in which his legacy in which his legacy ideas and the ways Warburg’s Georges Didi-Huberman , originally published in French published in French Surviving Image, originally The Translated by Harvey Mendelsohn by Translated The Surviving Image

TRANSLATED BY HARVEY MENDELSOHN HARVEY BY TRANSLATED GEORGES DIDI-HUBERMAN GEORGES 978-0-271-07209-8 | paper: $34.95/£24.95/€33.95 sh PHANTOMS OF TIME AND TIME OF PHANTOMS: ABY WARBURG’S HISTORY OF ART ABY WARBURG’S THE SURVIVING IMAGE THE SURVIVING

as Ernst Erwin Cassirer, and Panofsky, notions,’ not to mention generalnotions,’ not a more readings and criticism such of scholars of a psychologically oriented analysis of culture. Didi-Huberman offers insightful denunciation unnamed of practitioners a of Ernst Gombrich, accused trafficking of in isbn Burckhardt, and other notable pioneers with works Friedrich of Nietzsche, Jakob Art History Art Warburg’s writing,Warburg’s showing its connection 432 pages | 93 b&w illustrations | 7 × 10 | October

‘positivist’ art history.” ‘canons, ideal‘canons, entities and transcendental “A painstakingly“A detailed examination of W. Cahn, Choice —W.

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS PRESS UNIVERSITY STATE PENN psupress.org 22 f | w 2017 new in paperback 25 - Analyzing a range of documentary and liter Analyzing a range studied sound- these rarely exploring By are made to speak.” how sound—from thehow acoustic regime of stones Florence only of not alivecome but the power of new digitalthe new of power tools to visualize the Florentine soundscape, Atkinson shows is Assistant Professor of Art Professor is Assistant Niall Atkinson between buildings and bodies. Exploiting bell ringing to the the of cacophony street— brought the Renaissance city into being. became a foundation in the creation and main- in the creation became a foundation the rhythm of prayer, and the murmur of rumor of prayer, the rhythm as much as just of the urban community tenance buildings. Sound in this space physical the city’s and of social behaviors a wide variety triggered used sound to navigate space and society. space navigate used sound to urban conditions in the early modern period. urban conditions History at the University of Chicago. at the University History Florence. The dissemination of official messages, official messages, of dissemination The Florence. spiritual, and religious. political, domestic, sexual, From the strictly regimented church bells to the bells to church the strictly regimented From but of built not just of stone a city was Florence freewheeling chatter of civic life, Renaissance Renaissance of civic life, chatter freewheeling Inthis original and imaginative book, the spatial relations: hierarchical, personal, communal, personal, hierarchical, spatial relations: sound as well. An evocative alternative to the to alternative An evocative sound as well. be both to Florence shows scapes, Atkinson Urban Life Niall Atkinson Niall and gossip combined to form a soundscape that form to combined and gossip ary evidence, art and architectural historian Niall historian art and architectural ary evidence, an exceptional and an exemplary case study of an exemplary and an exceptional dominant visual understanding of urban spaces, of urban spaces, dominant visual understanding Nunneries in Renaissance Florence Nunneries in Renaissance city as an acoustic phenomenon in which citizens phenomenon in which citizens as an acoustic city Sound, Architecture, and Florentine

Atkinson creates an “acoustic topography” of topography” an “acoustic creates Atkinson examines the premodern the premodern examines Renaissance Noisy The The Noisy Renaissance “A brilliant“A exploration the of dialogue , author of Nuns and Strocchia —Sharon

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Niall Atkinson Niall 978-0-271-06503-8 Also of Interest From Giotto to Botticelli: ArtisticThe Patronage of the Humiliati Florence in Julia I. Miller and Taylor-Mitchell Laurie isbn cloth: $74.95/£53.95/€72.95 sh

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T urie Taylor-Mi a GIOTTO BOTTICELLI Julia l [ sound, architecture, and florentine urban life ] and florentine urban architecture, [ sound, 978-0-271-07120-6 | paper: $39.95/£28.95/€38.95 sh $39.95/£28.95/€38.95 paper: 978-0-271-07120-6 | THE NOISY RENAISSANCE THE NOISY aural signals and celebrations rung from scape early of Florence—a dynamicof field its many church and civic bells—Niall important subject.” deft analysis, and imaginative writing. isbn 280 pages | 50 color/110 b&w illustrations 10 | 9 × | October Architecture/History Time: From Giotto to Alberti to Giotto Oblivion and Modern From Time: Atkinson combines wide-ranging research, Anything noise but on a highly original and “In this compelling study the of lost sound , author of Building-in- Trachtenberg —Marvin will remain for generations to come Focusing on the early thirteenth the late to Focusing an essential point reference of for all who from the American Society for Hispanic Art Toledo state our of common knowledge. Toledo learning and as a home to sizable Jewish, Muslim, Jewish, sizable learning and as a home to multifaceted scholarship, piece of thus making a superb contribution to the broader narratives of change in the arts, culture, of change narratives broader the growth of the cathedral in the city as well as as well in the city cathedral of the the growth within the cathe- places of sacred the evolution of the medi- and the artthe city and architecture London. Toledo outside Spain. In Toledo little known Europe—is of its location in Toledo, monument in terms the importance also addresses period. Nickson fourteenth centuries, he examines over two hun- two over he examines centuries, fourteenth Building Histories in Medieval Castile Medieval Building in Histories wish to embark on the study medieval of Medieval Toledo is famous as a center of Arabic of Arabic as a center is famous Toledo Medieval and ideology of the late medieval period in Spain medieval and ideology of the late as a whole. Europe and in Mediterranean and Christian communities. Yet its cathedral—one its cathedral—one Yet communities. and Christian art and architecture. of the cathedral’s analysis to cathedral Toledo’s of significance and symbolic of the largest, richest, and best preserved in all of richest, and best preserved of the largest, it fits in with how showing Iberian Peninsula, eval dred years of change and consolidation, tracing tracing and consolidation, of change years dred this substantial consider on to He goes itself. dral Spain’s most cosmopolitan city in the medieval in the medieval city most cosmopolitan Spain’s

is Lecturer in Medieval Art and in Medieval is Lecturer Nickson Tom , Tom Nickson provides the first in-depth the first provides Nickson , Tom Cathedral Cathedral: Building Histories in Medieval Medieval Histories in Building Cathedral: Castile Historical StudiesHistorical Toledo and ‘Gothic’ (if we must) Spain.” and must) ‘Gothic’ we (if Toledo Architecture at The Courtauld Institute of Art, Institute Courtauld at The Architecture Winner Eleanor of Award the 2016 Tufts Tom Nickson Tom Toledo Cathedral Toledo “Nickson has produced magnificent a and The Medieval Review Medieval , The —Cynthia Robinson

- - tom nickson tom TOLEDO TOLEDO Building Histories in Medieval Castile Medieval in Histories Building CATHEDRAL 978-0-271-06646-2 | paper: 39.95/£28.95/€38.95 sh 39.95/£28.95/€38.95 paper: | 978-0-271-06646-2

from cover to cover. It is It a mosaic differ of from to cover. cover and the claims the of cathedral to power Nickson gives usand an primacy. . Tom . . highly detailed also but well-accomplished needs to dip into rather it than attempt to give us an merely not analysis stone of to absorb its contents a sitting. at Perhaps related to the architectural origins each of piece of research.” part the of building. The intendingreader evidence for multiple aspects identity, of expert analysis, superbly illustrated, in a ent studies dealing with disparate themes Nickson’s most valuable contributionNickson’s is isbn work but a very but lucidwork presentation the of 324 pages | 60 color/80 b&w illustrations | 9 × 10 | September Architecture/History

“This superbvolume is unlikely to readbe Times Literary Supplement Literary Kamen, Times —Henry

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS PRESS UNIVERSITY STATE PENN psupress.org 24 f | w 2017 new in paperback 27 - examine the ways in which new centers centers new in which the ways examine An insightful combination of theoretical of theoretical combination An insightful The contributors are Karina Kosicki Bellotti, Karina Kosicki are contributors The satile collection that could be utilized in a lar instances of media production and reception reception and of media production lar instances by Lynn Schofield Clark. Schofield Lynn by The Media and Religious Media and Religious The to contributors The it? Latin America, and North in Asia, Africa, is Professor of Media Studies, is Professor M. Hoover Stewart Professor Adjoint of Religious Studies, and of Religious Adjoint Professor Media, for of the Center and Director Founder of Colorado, at the University and Culture Religion, in the book is Religion His most recent Boulder. religion in various places affect the prospects, the prospects, affect places various in religion religious authority: Where does it come from? from? does it come Where authority: religious might be changing is it established? What How of particu studies - their in-depth, incisive Putting - among the media, reli relationships the rethink Lee, Joonseong Kraemer, Christine Hoff Horsfield, gion is on the rise, leading to questions about to gion is on the rise, leading and individual case studies, The groundwork gion, and culture. variety of settings.” of variety seek to “brand” themselves in the media age. in the media age. themselves “brand” seek to Missouri, and Emily Zeamer, with an afterword with an afterword and Emily Zeamer, Missouri, Edited by Stewart M. Stewart by Edited Hoover volume explores how evolving mediations of mediations evolving how explores volume authority of religious and durability aspirations, the globe. across of power and influence are emerging as religions as emerging are and influence of power - of reli visibility the cultural expand, to continue . Media Age invites us to us to invites Authority Media and Religious

America into conversation with one another, the with one another, conversation America into Aza Montré Maroon, Alf Linderman, Bahíyyah As the availability and use of media platforms and use of media platforms As the availability Peter Hope Cheong, Pauline Boutros, Alexandra Authority Authority Authority The Media and Religious The and Media Religious “A fascinating“A mélange essays, of and a ver Reading Religion , Reading E. Hess —Mary

r The The Media and Religious Authority E Hoov M. wart brings together the minutiae of E d by St EditE 978-0-271-07323-1 | paper: $39.95/£28.95/€38.95 sh $39.95/£28.95/€38.95 paper: | 978-0-271-07323-1 and insightful, TheMedia and Religious a cutting-edge theoretical perspective that by livedby media practices. Clearly written in the field could achieve.” illustrates authority how is constituted institutions. argues Hoover against this by everyday lived religion with an overarching Communication Studies/Religion Communication isbn vision that only the of one leading scholars weaving together diverse case studies into Carolina at Greensboro Carolina 304 pages | 4 b&w illustrations | 6 × 9 | August Authority “Often, authority is assumed to be by held , University of North , University Price Grieve —Gregory - explores the closely interwoven the closely interwoven explores Plowshares Plowshares Plowshares activists continue to carry out to activists continue Plowshares is currently Visiting Assistant Visiting is currently Tobey Kristen ing nuclear weapons. use of performance to achieve its goals. It looks It looks its goals. achieve to use of performance trials that at the legal behavior the Plowshares’ their motivations, logic, identity, and ultimate goal. ultimate and identity, logic, motivations, their Professor of Religious Studies at John Carroll Studies at John Carroll of Religious Professor made their way into a Pennsylvania General General a Pennsylvania into way made their parts nuclear missiles. Electric plant housing for these activists pounded guards, security Evading shall nation; they against up sword not take war.” know again never religious and social significance of the group’s group’s of the and social significance religious the Bible Interpreting these protests. from result toward work the Plowshares political resistance, University. In September 1980, eight Catholic activists activists 1980, eight Catholic In September Protest, Performance, and Religious such “divine obediences” against facilities where where facilities against obediences” such “divine Kristen Tobey and their spears into pruning hooks. Nation shall Nation shall pruning hooks. into and their spears at the group’s acts of civil disobedience, such acts of civil disobedience, at the group’s at the GE plant in 1980, and as that undertaken through kingdom enact God’s to as a mandate actions, this volume helps us better understand helps us better actions, this volume on missile nose cones with hammers and then and then with hammers nose cones on missile to their answer was resistance of nonviolent equipment used in the production or deployment or deployment equipment used in the production or stored. is manufactured of nuclear weapons Identity Nuclear the in Age covered the cones in their own blood. This act act blood. This in their own the cones covered in the Old Testament: witness prophetic calls for Plowshares

Whether one agrees or disagrees with their or disagrees Whether one agrees “They shall beat their swords into plowshares, plowshares, into their swords shall beat “They “symbolic disarmament,” with the aim of eradicat disarmament,” “symbolic - KRISTEN TOBEY

is successful in its efforts to PLOWSHARES Protest, Performance, Performance, Protest, and Religious Identity in the Nuclear Age 978-0-271-07673-7| paper: $19.95/£14.95/€19.95 sh

Plowshares activists comprehensible to readers. also It History/Religion shows theshows value the of disciplinary toolset make the motives and conduct these of gion, peace studies, and political activism of religiousof studies for doing this type of case . . . Scholars study. American of reli isbn will find this book beneficial towork.” their 184 pages | 6 × 9 | December

“ , Reading Religion , Reading May Barnes —Isaac

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS PRESS UNIVERSITY STATE PENN psupress.org 26 f | w 2017 scholarly f | w 2017 scholarly 31

978-0-271-07932-5 | cloth: $94.95/£67.95/€91.95 sh 978-0-271-07933-2 | paper: $27.95/£19.95/€26.95 sh Looking closely at a wide range of literary of literary closely at a wide range Looking - of the interrelation exploration A compelling is Associate Professor of English Professor Hamner is Associate Everett Illinois University. at Western 256 pages | 19 b&w illustrations | 6 × 9 | October isbn isbn AnthropoScene: The SLSA Book Series Literature Editing the Soul the Editing Science andGenome the Fiction in Age Hamner Everett life- editing for gene testing, genome Personal the stuff once life: synthetic diseases, threatening twenty-first and twentieth- fiction, of science blur the lines between advancements century exami- This fact. and scientific scientific narrative in popular and literary nation of bioengineering on of science influence that the shows culture we might than reciprocal fiction is more science expect. and Atwood such as Margaret authors by work and serialcomics, as film, as well Powers, Richard Hamner such as Orphan Black, Everett television both is transforming age the genome how shows sophisticated and the most the most commercial - of human person about the core tell we stories public garner hood. As sublime technologies they fiction shelves, the genre beyond awareness “slipstream” like categories literary new inspire definitions of the human, theand shape new and the artificial. In turn, whatanimal, the natural, of bioengineering via popular and literary learn we its official adoption for the way prepares culture - additional representa for or restriction—and between imagining the connections tions. By and editing capacities and testing gene emergent and about freedom longstanding conversations help build a cultural these stories determinism, vision balanced more in which a sharper, zeitgeist might thrive. agency of predisposed and self, popular culture, ships among science, the Soul sheds vital light on what theEditing come. to us, and what’s means to age genome - - cal timescale, the idea that are changing the planet and its environments in radical and irreversible has ways pro cross-disciplinary of kinds new voked thinking about relationships among the arts, human technologies, and nature. The depth the represents series AnthropoScene and breadth being scholars by work of done in literature, science, and the arts, putting innovative juxtapositions within reach of specialists and nonspecialists alike. AnthropoScene is book series a new from StatePenn University Press, published in collaboration with the Society for Literature, Science, and the Arts. While allnot scientists accepted have the term as part“Anthropocene” the of geologi - to contemporary dystopian dystopian contemporary to Tempest The Accessibly written and representing a range a range and representing written Accessibly Jeffrey include Juliana Chow, Contributors Entering into conversation with geologists and geologists with conversation into Entering The Animal Claim: Sensibility and the Creaturely and the Creaturely Sensibility Animal Claim: The literary history and critical method. and critical history literary Anthropocene Reading Reading Anthropocene record. lithostratigraphic in the sciences, humanities, and public sphere public sphere and humanities, sciences, in the in the appears human “signature” in which a ing dialogue between imaginative literature and literature imaginative ing dialogue between in this volume unfold what it means to read read to what it means unfold in this volume the University of California, Davis, and the author Davis, of California, the University than the Anthropocene, the proposed epoch the proposed than the Anthropocene, the convergence of the social institutions, energy of the social the convergence scientists, how and show the earth sciences the carbon cycle. the contributions literary analysis may make in make may analysis literary the contributions texts, of literary a range how examine tributors Few terms have garnered more recent attention recent more garnered have terms Few novels to the poetry of Emily Dickinson, mediate the poetry of Emily Dickinson, to novels that support the and planetary systems regimes, the longstand- explore They of life. reproduction of intersections and poets represent novelists, François, Noah Heringman, Matt Hooley, Noah Heringman, Matt Hooley, François, past in relation to the anthropogenic transfor the anthropogenic to past in relation while showcasing mation of the earth system, from from geological and human timescales, the deep past and human timescales, geological geographers, this volume reinterprets the cultural the cultural reinterprets this volume geographers, at the University of Washington in Seattle and the of Washington at the University London The of Our Manufacture: Sky author of The of Mentz, Benjamin Morgan, Justin Neuman, Mentz, Benjamin Morgan, . Woolf to Dickens from in British Fiction Fog and a posthuman future, political exigency and political exigency and a posthuman future, of methodological perspectives, the essays the essays of methodological perspectives, considers the implications of this concept on of this concept the implications considers cultural texts alongside our biosphere in the alongside our biosphere texts cultural - con The event. this geohistorical conceptualizing Stephanie LeMenager, Dana Luciano, Steve Steve Luciano, Dana LeMenager, Stephanie

is Associate Professor of English at of Professor Menely is Associate Tobias is Assistant Professor of English Professor is Assistant Oak Taylor Jesse . Voice Anthropocene. Jerome Cohen, Thomas H. Ford, Anne-Lise H. Ford, Thomas Cohen, Jerome Jennifer Wenzel, and Derek Woods. and Derek Wenzel, Jennifer

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Edited by Tobias Menely and Jesse Oak Taylor Edited by Tobias Literary History in Geologic Times Literary History in Geologic Anthropocene ReadingAnthropocene 978-0-271-07872-4 $99.95/£70.95€96.95 cloth: | sh 978-0-271-07873-1 | paper:$29.95/£21.95/€28.95 sh

to literary studies.” Literature beyond their beyond familiar terrain. The book plines, from geology geography to history, isbn isbn Literary History Geologic in Times will appeal to readers from disci a host of It takesIt the Anthropocene debates well Edited by Tobias Menely and Tobias by Edited Environmentalism of the Poor Environmentalism 264 pages | 3 b&w illustrations | 6 × 9 | November AnthropoScene: The SLSA Book Series Anthropocene Reading Anthropocene Jesse Oak Taylor Jesse Oak

“An ambitious and exhilarating“An collection. Slow Violence and the Violence , author of Slow Nixon —Rob

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978-0-271-07928-8 | cloth: $89.95/£63.95/€86.95 sh DeBerdt Reed’s life yields remarkable insight yields remarkable life Reed’s DeBerdt and built on pri- comprehensive, Engaging, is a Distinguished Professor of is a Distinguished Professor Ireland Owen at College York, of New University at State History and Ethnicity, and the author of Religion, Brockport , in Pennsylvania the Constitution Ratifying Politics: Press. University State Penn also published by 264 pages | 6 × 9 | December isbn History/Biography At the time of her death in 1780, British-born 1780, death in time of her the At today— know name few Reed—a DeBerdt Esther politically important one of the most women was “The America. Her treatise in Revolutionary articulated of an American Woman” Sentiments patriots, and the Ladies of female the aspirations she founded, Philadelphia, which of Association - trans to how of women taught generations action. into their political responsibilities late and political social connections Reed’s DeBerdt her husband, transform sophistication helped the a military leader into from Joseph Reed, Council Executive of the Supreme president the to a position analogous of Pennsylvania, governor. of modern office in influence political of women’s the scope into the strict social norms struc- ruled by an age story and motherhood. The religion by tured and political career marriage, of her courtship, and political lives sheds light both on the private and on how during the Revolution of women as a new interacted and gender religion, society, identity. build its own nation struggled to Reed’s DeBerdt that allows material mary source expertly researched shine, Ireland’s to voice own her among revolutionary rightly places biography Sargent Judith Adams, such as Abigail sisters Otis Warren. and Mercy Murray, -

AMERICAN REVOLUTION

ESTHER DEBERDT REED REED DEBERDT ESTHER and the IRELAND OWEN S. BRITISH-AMERICAN BRITISH-AMERICAN WOMAN SENTIMENTS SENTIMENTS of a tive, Reed’s life is both a tale female of in out the played and love self-invention of the of shadows Revolutionary crisis.” Sentiments of a British- Woman American Esther DeBerdt Reed and American the Revolution Owen S. Ireland and comprehensive . . . moving study. “A Improbable, inspirational, and instruc , author of Revolutionary Zagarri —Rosemarie American in the Early and Politics Backlash: Women Republic - Performing Animals questions what it Animals Performing In exploring the human-animal relationship the human-animal relationship In exploring to animals that warhorses to fleas From are the contributors the editors, In addition to is Professor of English at the Raber is Professor Karen book is Her most recent of Mississippi. University . Culture Animal Bodies, Renaissance of English Literature is Instructor Monica Mattfeld of Northern British at the University and History Centaur: and the author of Becoming Columbia and English Masculinity Eighteenth-Century State Penn , also published by Horsemanship Press. University from the early modern period to the nineteenthto the early modern period from century, how examines “perform,” an animal to means for time, and over evolved have these conceptions human understanding and how whether explores - pres an animal’s by is changed of performance animals of the role discuss contributors The ence. his- natural plays, as medieval as varied in venues raise and banquets, and they dissections, tories, questions about animals’ agency. provocative the innovative demonstrate In so doing, they the boundaries of of thinking beyond potential that dismantle the barriers to in order the present animal. divided human from traditionally have after death, this delightfully even “perform” of examples brings together volume varied that challenge in ways “act” animals made to is an result The notions of performance. obvious - of human-animal rela exploration eye-opening to that will appeal greatly tionships and identity and students of animal studies, perfor scholars Kim Marra, Cuneo, F. Pia Borlik, Andrew Todd Wakeman, Rob E. Parker, Sarah Nash, Richard Wolfe. and Jessica Kari Wiel, From bears on the Renaissance stage to the to stage Renaissance on the bears From hunt, nineteenth-century of the pageantry equine in human-orchestrated been used animals have essays The history. entertainments throughout of case studies an array present in this volume animal of interpreting ways new that inspire in the agency of animal role and the performance relationship. performing studies, and posthuman studies. mance

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about relations between humanity and animality.” agency and performativity. Employing theo studies to the materialisms, new these the most fecund places from which to think retical frameworks ranging from animal leading scholars and historians to explore essays demonstrate that the varied and vari ous sites animal of performance are among cutting-edge questions surrounding animal isbn History, Agency, Theater Agency, History, Edited by Karenby RaberEdited and Monica Mattfeld Performing Animals 200 pages | 22 b&w illustrations | 7 × 10 | October Animal Studies/HistoryAnimal Animalibus: Of Cultures and Animals Through Animals: Identity, Difference, Indistinction Difference, Animals: Identity, Through

“This superb collection brings together Thinking , author of Thinking Calarco —Matthew

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS PRESS UNIVERSITY STATE PENN psupress.org 32 f | w 2017 scholarly 35 - - This book begins with an overview of the book begins with an overview This of scholar a lifelong by argued Engagingly F. Samuel Brainard is an independent scholar of Samuel Brainard F. He is and philosophy. religion Asian and Western , also Experience and Mystical the author of Reality Press. University State Penn published by Science, religion, philosophy: these three cat three these philosophy: religion, Science, humankind’s organized have of thought egories time immemorial. meaning from for search that case a compelling presents Fugue Reality’s - often seen as com of understanding, these ways that cannot be puzzle part of a larger peting, are alone. of reality one account by rendered philosophical difficul- and the of reality concept itfor account to with attempts ties associated clarifying the By worldview. single any through third-person, first-person, distinction between Samuel F. of reality, and dualist understandings ways predominant the three repurposes Brainard these among differences of making sense of the can be one worldview (only exclusionist views: other worldviews right), inclusivist (viewing incorporate to lens of one in order the through them all, and thus distorting them), and pluralist no universals, are (holding that there or relativist mode of His alternative and truth is relative). meta- uses Douglas Hofstadter’s understanding different phor of a musical fugue that allows coex to and “melodies” of worldviews “voices” while each and conversation, ist in counterpoint the above with none privileged distinct, remains Brainard in this way, reality Approaching others. a multivoiced for opens up the possibility argues, chal- the skeptical that can overcome perspective positions face. that metaphysical lenges edifying this and global religions, philosophy of of the nature exploration and accessible deeply meaningful questions addresses reality a and being for reconciliation, about belief, audience. broad

E 978-0-271-03021-0 U Also of Interest Mystical and Reality Experience SamuelF. Brainard isbn sh paper: $30.95 sale in the U.K., Europe, Not for and South Africa G F. Samuel Brainard F. U [from Italian fuga, flight; from Latin fugere, Latin fugere, fuga, flight; from Italian [from A musical composition technique in which in which technique composition 1. A musical Reconciling Worldviews in in Worldviews Reconciling A type of psychological disorder. 2. A type psychological of F Philosophy, Religion, and Science Religion, Philosophy, succession and developed in counterpoint. in counterpoint. developed and succession (fyüg) n one or more themes and their variations are introduced in in introduced are theirvariations and themes more or one fugue to flee]to ) (1597 REALITY’S REALITY’S 978-0-271-07931-8 | paper: $29.95/£21.95/€28.95 sh Reality’s Fugue Reality’s Philosophy, in Worldviews Reconciling Religion, and Science Samuel Brainard F. 272 pages | 8 b&w illustrations | 6 × 9 | October isbn Philosophy/Religion is is is h at ow h a t t Th close h

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david b. wilson wilson b. b. david david 978-0-271-07849-6 | cloth: $199.95 sh Natural Philosophy in the Scottish Enlightenment Scottish the in Philosophy Natural Seeking Nature’s Logic Logic Seeking Nature’s Seeking Nature’s Edinburgh Edition of Thomas Reid Series Philosophy/Math & Science Co-published with Edinburgh University Press University Edinburgh with Co-published isbn Available in North America only 488 pages | 6 × 9 | August Seeking Nature’s Logic

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lice ently r A r ood W cu l dies. tu au University P also S Marion 1189 eup Wood_JKT_13179 eup Haakonssen 23/08/2016 19:11 Page 1 19:11 23/08/2016 eup Haakonssen Wood_JKT_13179 1189 eup f | w 2017 scholarly 37 - - Grounded in archival research, German Pietism research, in archival Grounded the one of by work A learned, insightful is Associate Dean of Faculty and Dean of Faculty is Associate Jonathan Strom History Church of Professor and Affairs Academic Emory University at Candler School of Theology, in Europe and Community and the author of Pietism . and North 1650–1850 America, German Pietism and the and German Pietism Problem Conversion of Jonathan Strom his conver described Francke Hermann August that includedgripping terms in Pietism sion to to falling weeping, spiritual struggle, intense in which his moment his knees, and a decisive “over he was and doubt suddenly disappeared His account of joy.” whelmed as with a stream his- in the conversion Pietist exemplify came to and religious Pietism imagination around torical interpretation new Jonathan Strom’s awakening. of Francke’s nature the paradigmatic challenges varied, the more uncover to and seeks narrative - that con character and problematic complex, in the Pietists posed for experiences version centuries. and eighteenth seventeenth that the way traces of Conversion and the Problem and were developed of conversion accounts examines Strom among Pietists. disseminated of the pious stories to relationship members’ - narra of conversion the growth the “last hours,” controversies periodicals, popular Pietist in tives the model of conversion, the Busskampf over if and the popular, movement, revival Dargun - narra conversion of execution gruesome, genre and of sources wide variety a Interrogating tives. define used to in the language nuance examining explains Strom history, throughout conversion and why received were these experiences how - con to relationship had an uneasy Pietists many them. of narrating and the practice versions this volume of Pietism, leading scholars world’s and the conversion light on Pietist sheds new and modern evangelical of piety development experience. of religious narratives

- - -

AND THE JONATHAN STROM JONATHAN PROBLEM OF PROBLEM CONVERSION GERMAN PIETISM 978-0-271-07934-9 | cloth: $89.95/£63.95/€86.95 sh appeal to scholars in the field, graduate stu History/Religion nuance in understanding the nature of tives that has previously not been achieved. tion to thePietismof field studies, and will Pietist, Moravian, and Anabaptist Studies Series dents, and upper undergraduates.” level isbn Pietist narra and conversion conversion Modern Europe 240 pages | 1 b&w illustration | 6 × 9 | December German Pietism: Protestant Renewal at the Dawn of Dawn at the Renewal Protestant German Pietism: This book offers asophisticated contribu “Strom’s argument“Strom’s of provides a level An Introduction to to , author of An Introduction —Douglas Shantz

Horse-and-Buggy Mennonites: Hoofbeats Mennonites: Horse-and-Buggy , it will appeal especially to sociologists, it will appeal especially to EMU 978-0-271-07913-4 | cloth: $40.00/£28.95/€38.95 sh The founding of Eastern Mennonite School, Mennonite Eastern of founding The of the history well-told comprehensive, This is Distinguished College is Distinguished College Donald B. Kraybill and founding College at Elizabethtown Professor in Anabaptist and Books Center of Young editor books, Studies. He is the author of several Pietist including , also published World in a Postmodern of Humility Press. University State Penn by 384 pages | 50 b&w illustrations | 7 × 10 | September isbn and historians of Anabaptist and Pietist studies of Anabaptist and Pietist and historians and higher education. Education/Religion later Eastern Mennonite University, in 1917 came in 1917 University, Mennonite Eastern later and sci- time when industrialization at a pivotal around world changing the were entific discovery the increasing and community, the Mennonite tempting education offered of secular availability Mennonite the deeply religious to alternatives Mennonites the Eastern response, In of life. way “uphold the prin- a school that would founded youth where and simplicity,” ciples of plainness skills that would learn the Bible and develop could In the and further the church. advance help to the university’s century, half of the twentieth latter with individual Mennonite in pace evolved identity tides and of churning moral in the face identity defines its and it now technology, accelerating and peacebuilding, of service, in terms mission community. Mennonite Eastern distinctly nontraditional a leading scholar of Anabaptist and by University the school has medi- how studies reveals Pietist consistently while remaining modernity ated affiliated anyone for A must-have Mennonite. with In this unique educational history, Donald B. Donald history, unique educational In this transformation the socio-cultural traces Kraybill fledg- a from University Mennonite of Eastern rural, white, by founded school ling separatist a world-engaged into Germanic Mennonites traditions, faith many by populated institution and nationalities. cultures, - - eastern eastern mennonite university donald b. kraybill b. donald class of 1970 class A Century of A Century Countercultural Education

tution’s. Donaldtution’s. Kraybill offers insight rable march across time, this contains one presented challenges, new and the answers institutional histories, with their inexo language that sings.” leaders found unlike were any other insti elements conflict of rarely found in higher education. Each era the of school’s history of Goshen College; and president professor without without jargon, blindness, love and Donald B. Kraybill Eastern Mennonite University EMU A Century of Countercultural Education Countercultural of Century A

“This bookpulsates with life.Unlike most , former , former Showalter Hershey —Shirley

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS PRESS UNIVERSITY STATE PENN psupress.org 36 f | w 2017 scholarly 39

sublime

GEORGE SAND romantic

s ’ Kathryn M. Grossman hugo in Les Misérables Transcendence Figuring 978-0-271-07937-0 978-0-271-07936-3 978-0-271-07875-5 978-0-271-07914-1 Translated with an introduction by Translated Gretchen van Slyke La Petite Fadette La Petite Literature Literature/Religion paper: $19.95/£14.95/€19.95paper: sh isbn isbn paper: $39.95/£28.95/€38.95 sh $39.95/£28.95/€38.95 paper: isbn isbn cloth: $79.95/£56.95/€77.95 sh cloth: $79.95/£56.95/€77.95 sh 120 pages| 6 × 9 | November 376 pages | 5.5 × 8.5 | August -

will be read by generations to come. to generations by will be read Fadette Petite La Often regarded as a simple country tale, Sand’s novel is is novel tale, Sand’s country as a simple Often regarded An invaluable contribution to French literary studies and literary French to contribution An invaluable layered with meaning, including subtle nods to the burgeoning the burgeoning including subtle nods to with meaning, layered is Professor of French at Pennsylvania State at Pennsylvania of French is Professor Kathryn M. Grossman - Her introduc life. to story of the original brings the complexity - a closely con to correspond and structures motifs novel’s the how is a beloved 1848 novel about identical twin brothers and Fadette, Fadette, and brothers about identical twin novel 1848 is a beloved status and her lowly despite the girl by he is captivated is a witch, the mysterious waif with whom they both fall in love. The brothers, brothers, The in love. fall both with whom they waif the mysterious tion explores the autobiographical and political dimensions of the and political dimensions of the the autobiographical tion explores that the poetry published during his exile under the Second Empire. Empire. under the Second the poetry published during his exile . Kathryn M. Grossman, . Kathryn M. Grossman, Misérables study of Les book-length the first La Petite Fadette Fadette Petite peasant, La of a Berrichon in the unique voice rated When family. farm a highly respected belong to Landry and Sylvinet, France. This thoughtful critical translation by Gretchen van Slyke Slyke van Gretchen by critical translation thoughtful This France. rustic charm and archaic the preserves and her translation novel, nineteenth-century literature studies, this new edition ensures edition ensures studies, this new literature nineteenth-century nected set of ethical, spiritual, political, and aesthetic concerns. nected Drawing on Paul Ricoeur’s theory of metaphor and on Thomas theory of metaphor and on Thomas Ricoeur’s on Paul Drawing is Misérables” in “Les Transcendence Figuring published in 1994, First University. Hugo’s Romantic Sublime Romantic Hugo’s (1804–1876), born Armandine Aurore Lucille Dupin, was born Armandine Aurore (1804–1876), Sand George of Vermont. at University of French is Professor Slyke van Gretchen Kathryn M. Grossman one of the most celebrated female writers of the nineteenth century. of the nineteenth writers female one of the most celebrated as the expectations of the village, resulting in a tale of love, courage, courage, in a tale of love, resulting of the village, as the expectations and prejudice. superstition out over winning strategy and clever young Landry meets Fadette, whose very name suggests that she name suggests whose very Landry meets Fadette, young with the twins defies the patriarchal norms of French society as well as society French norms of defies the patriarchal with the twins flavor of Sand’s language. of Sand’s flavor — and to de Paris and including Notre-Dame to earlier novels—up with an authoritative command of Hugo’s work and Hugo criti- and Hugo work of Hugo’s command with an authoritative disreputable family. Sylvinet soon follows suit. Fadette’s relationship relationship suit. Fadette’s soon follows Sylvinet family. disreputable desire for political and sexual equality in nineteenth-century in nineteenth-century equality political and sexual for desire cism, situates the novelist’s masterpiece in relation both to his both to in relation masterpiece the novelist’s cism, situates Les Misérables Les in Transcendence Figuring La Petite Fadette LaPetite Set in the French countryside of George Sand’s childhood and nar childhood Sand’s of George countryside Set in the French

Weiskel’s analysis of the romantic sublime, Grossman illustrates illustrates sublime, Grossman of the romantic analysis Weiskel’s George Sand George Translated with an introduction by Gretchen van Slyke van an Gretchen introduction with by Translated

offers scholars scholars offers the World Translating 978-0-271-07910-3 | cloth: $89.95/£63.95/€86.95 sh German literary history has tended to employ employ to has tended history German literary - trans of literary exploration elegant A fresh, , Birgit Tautz offers a offers Tautz , Birgit World the Translating Max Kade Research Institute Series: Germans Beyond Europe Literature is Professor of German at Bowdoin of German at Bowdoin is Professor Birgit Tautz and Seeing She is the author of Reading College. China From in the Enlightenment: Ethnic Differences . Africa to 272 pages | 6 × 9 | December isbn of comparative literature, German studies, literature, of comparative of story new an exciting history and literary - its rela and German culture eighteenth-century global networks. expanding tionship to In in the history German literary of narrative new centuries. and early nineteenth eighteenth late dominant modes of thought Departing from - and national imag of literary nexus the regarding through this intersection examines ination, she networks global emerging Germany’s the lens of different very in two rendered were they and how and Weimar. German cities: Hamburg the that emphasizes framework a conceptual the experiences yet citizenry; nation or idealized cities German in eighteenth-century of readers - of their local environ within the context existed and writers occurred life ments, in which daily and Goethe worked. Schiller, such as Lessing, in the late city a flourishing literary Hamburg, relegated eventually was century, eighteenth while of German historiography, the margins to ­ with an insular world then a small town Weimar, not only for mythologized become would view, in national but its centrality history its literary the histories interrogating By German culture. with these cities, Tautz associated of and texts born of are and genres styles literary how shows with the than national, interaction local, rather intersect texts of how examination Her world. - shape and trans they how reveals and interact are they landscape as the urban cultural form the world. throughout move and translated shifts, and global cultural lation, discursive changes,

-

BIRGIT TAUTZ BIRGIT -

WORLD THE TRANSLATING TOWARD A NEW HISTORY OF A NEWTOWARD HISTORY OF GERMAN LITERATURE AROUND 1800

opens up fascinating up opens the possibili World she providesshe an original and nuanced not onlynot in theof German field literature. ties for rethinking eighteenth-century perspective on emerging globalnetworks powerful book that makes an important in late Enlightenment Europe. Translating lectuals mediated through translated texts, contribution to eighteenth-century studies, European culture.” European Literature Around 1800Literature Birgit Tautz Using theUsing idea a network of urban of intel Against Imperialism Against

Toward a New History a New German of Toward Translating the World Translating “Birgit has written Tautz a convincing and Herder: Aesthetics Aesthetics , author of Herder: K. Noyes —John

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS PRESS UNIVERSITY STATE PENN psupress.org 38 f | w 2017 scholarly 41

M. M. Elizabeth Weiser

978-0-271-07903-5 Building Civic Identity in National Spaces in Identity Building Civic Museum Rhetoric Museum Rhetoric/Museum Studies Rhetoric/Museum RSA Series Transdisciplinary in Rhetoric isbn cloth: $69.95/£49.95/€67.95 sh 6 × 9 | November 232 pages | 19 b&w illustrations - - -

Deeply researched and artfully argued, Museum Rhetoric and artfully argued, Deeply researched Based on fieldwork conducted in over sixty museums in sixty over in conducted Based on fieldwork a wide array material of and a multidimensional set of and elegantly presented analysis identity of made by work and through museums in placing their orchestrated and authorized rhetoric in dialogue with experiences visit by ses the of identity museums. of work investigates She than any previous scholar in the search for unifying analy productive dilemmas that museums are sites for negotiat ing. The result The ing. innovative, yet is a complex, clear-cut and beyond rhetorical explorations of museums as “memory sites,” of museums as “memory sites,” explorations rhetorical beyond ing citizens.” ing is Professor of English at The Ohio State The of English at is Professor Weiser M. Elizabeth to create museum spaces, and how museums operate as sites operate museums and how spaces, museum create to the straddle intentionally they how shows this original volume the European National Museums Project National Museums the European in which individuals can both tions within the public sphere volume uses the lens of rhetoric This tification with one another. in establishing play these societal repositories the role explore to civic with that of the broader sense of identity their own unite twenty-two countries across six continents, Museum Rhetoric six continents, across countries twenty-two provides insight into rhetorical theories of the public impact of rhetorical insight into provides University. She has published three other books, most recently, most recently, other books, three She has published University. In today’s diverse societies, museums are the primary institu- the societies, museums are diverse In today’s Building Civic Identity Spaces National in Building Civic scholars of museum studies and public history. scholars society and how the latter changes in response. Elizabeth Weiser Weiser Elizabeth in response. changes the latter and how society and Janet Zepernick. and future. and altering cultural heritage and national identity. heritage cultural and altering explores what compels communities, organizations, and nations and organizations, communities, what compels explores Moving persuasion. and rhetorical of both civic engagement engage critical thought and celebrate community, narrating iden- narrating community, critical thought and celebrate engage to visitors persuade exhibits museum heritage how explores divides between style and content, intellect and affect, unity and unity affect, and intellect and content, style divides between to of the past matters their portrayal why and therefore diversity, civic life—and particularly studies of nationalism—in the present particularly the present studies of nationalism—in civic life—and of inquiry for avenues and opens and aesthetic heritage cultural Museum Rhetoric M. Elizabeth Weiser

, coedited with Ann George with Ann George , coedited the Wars between and Rhetoric Women “Weiser crosses“Weiser national more and disciplinary borders , Linnaeus University, former coordinator of coordinator former , Linnaeus University, —Peter Aronsson

978-0-271-07909-7 978-0-271-07908-0 Rhetoric/Communication Studies Rhetoric/Communication RSA Series Transdisciplinary in Rhetoric paper: $32.95/£23.95/€31.95 sh paper: isbn isbn cloth: $89.95/£63.95/€86.95 sh 6 × 9 | October 240 pages | 5 b&w illustrations -

A unique, illuminating exploration of the contested the contested of A unique, illuminating exploration Boyle, Casey are the contributors the editors, In addition to Rather than simply mapping posthumanist rhetorics onto posthumanist rhetorics Rather than simply mapping

is Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and of Rhetoric Professor Sharp-Hoskins is Assistant Kellie is Associate Professor of English at Saint Louis of English at Saint Louis Professor is Associate Nathaniel A. Rivers how Burke’s writing on the human mind and technology, from his from writing on the human mind and technology, Burke’s how knowledge making. knowledge the contributors pay close attention to the fluidity, concerns, andconcerns, the fluidity, to close attention pay the contributors the multiplicity of ideas found both in his work and in the idea in his work both of ideas found the multiplicity tunities for invention, revision, and, importantly, transdisciplinary transdisciplinary importantly, and, revision, invention, tunities for Nevada, Reno. Nevada, - trans this inherently bodies and language, between relationship B. Katz, Julie Jung, Nathan Gale, Steven Kristie Fleckenstein, focuses on focuses Posthuman + The Burke Kenneth scholarship, Burke’s framework of boundaries and futures, the contributors show that show the contributors and futures, of boundaries framework Thinking with Bruno Latour in Rhetoric with Bruno Latour of Thinking and coeditor University grapples with these ostensibly contradictory concepts as oppor concepts contradictory with these ostensibly grapples is Assistant Professor of English at the University of of English at the University Professor is Assistant Mays Chris studying the humanist theories of Burke in this way creates a creates in this way theories of Burke studying the humanist look at essays The of interconnections. satisfyingly chaotic web Edited by Chris Mays, Nathaniel A. Chris by Edited Rivers, anthropology, posthumanism seeks to leave the human behind. leave to seeks posthumanism anthropology, . Burke of Kenneth Reviews earliest works to his very latest revisions, interrelates with current with current interrelates revisions, latest his very to earliest works and posthumanism. Burke, of rhetoric, of posthumanism. Taking varied approaches organized within a organized approaches varied of posthumanism. Taking disciplinary book will propel important future inquiry by scholars scholars inquiry by important future disciplinary book will propel concepts such as new materiality and coevolution. Throughout, Throughout, and coevolution. materiality such as new concepts and subjectivity. symbolism, in language, inherent contradictions and Sharp-Hoskins Kellie Kenneth Burke +The Posthuman Burke Kenneth Steven LeMieux, Jodie Nicotra, Jeff Pruchnic, Timothy Richardson, Richardson, Timothy Pruchnic, Jeff Jodie Nicotra, LeMieux, Steven Literature as Equipment for Living: The Literary Literary Living: The for as Equipment and Literature and Composition

Writing Program Administrator at New Mexico State University. State Mexico at New Administrator Program Writing While rhetoric as a discipline is firmly planted in humanism and in humanism planted as a discipline is firmly While rhetoric Thomas Rickert, and Robert Wess. and Robert Rickert, Thomas This highly original examination of Kenneth Burke’s thought Burke’s of Kenneth highly original examination This

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS PRESS UNIVERSITY STATE PENN psupress.org 40 f | w 2017 scholarly 43

978-0-271-07905-9 978-0-271-07906-6 Rhetoric/Communications Studies Rhetoric/Communications Rhetoric and Democratic Democratic and Rhetoric Deliberation Series paper: $32.95/£23.95/€31.95 sh paper: isbn isbn cloth: $99.95/£70.95/€96.95cloth: sh 344 pages 9 | November | 6 × 3 b&w illustrations -

Speech and debate education leads students to better under better leads students to education Speech and debate and reflections, case studies, theoretical historical Combining this volume to the contributors the editors, In addition to kind collection of the best ideas for reinventing and revitalizing the and revitalizing reinventing of the best ideas for kind collection is a Ph.D. candidate in Communication Arts in Communication candidate Bergmaier is a Ph.D. Michael J. include Jenn Anderson, Michael D. Bartanen, Ann Crigler, Sara A. Sara Bartanen, Ann Crigler, Michael D. include Jenn Anderson, ingly diverse and global society. Highlighting the need for more more the need for Highlighting and global society. ingly diverse the classroom. problems, solve to collaboratively together work them to teaches Rhetoric at Penn State University and Visiting Professor and Chair of and Chair Professor and Visiting University State at Penn Rhetoric reports on programs that utilize rhetorical pedagogies to educate to pedagogies rhetorical that utilize on programs reports Tim Laskai, Lorand A. Kuehl, Rebecca Huang, Una Kimokeo-Goes, III, Jamie Paul E. Mabrey Louden, D. S. Littlefield, Allan Robert Lewis, Melissa Watt, Stone Minhee Son, Sarah C. Rowland, Robert Ray, political debates, this volume makes the case for a renewed a renewed the case for makes this volume political debates, as civic education. mission Speech and Debate as Civic Education is a first-of-its- Education as Civic Speech and Debate citizenship, for In an era increasingly marked by polarized and unproductive and unproductive polarized by marked increasingly In an era stand their First Amendment rights and the power of speaking. It Amendment rights and the power stand their First their historical and reinventing recovering by speech and debate Mehltretter Drury, David A. Frank, G. Thomas Goodnight, Ronald Goodnight, Ronald G. Thomas A. Frank, David Drury, Mehltretter G. Angela Catherine H. Palczewski, R. Mitchell, Gordon McKown, Zarefsky. and David Carly S. Woods, Weeks, David Wade, Maxcy Edited by J. Michael by Hogan,Edited Jessica Michael J. A. Kurr, Johnson and Jeremy D. Bergmaier, Foreword by David Zarefsky and Sciences with a Minor in Social Thought at Penn State University. State at Penn with a Minor in Social Thought and Sciences and it encourages critical thinking, reasoned and fact-based and fact-based critical thinking, reasoned and it encourages - in our increas viewpoints differing for and respect argumentation, offer new ideas for reinvigorating curricular and co-curricular curricular and reinvigorating for ideas new offer emphasis on teaching speech and debate, both in and outside of and debate, speech emphasis on teaching the deliberation, and skills of democratic emphasis on the ethics civic mission of speech and debate for a new generation of students. generation a new for of speech and debate civic mission contributors to this volume—leading scholars, teachers, and teachers, scholars, this volume—leading to contributors the country— around programs in speech and debate coaches Speech and Debate as Civic Education Civic as Speech Debate and Communications Studies at Davison College. Studies at Davison Communications University. State at Penn Sciences University. State at Penn Sciences

Walter Greene, Taylor W. Hahn, Darrin Hicks, Edward A. Hinck, Jin Edward Hicks, Hahn, Darrin W. Taylor Greene, Walter is the Edwin Erle Sparks Professor Emeritus of Professor Erle Sparks is the Edwin Michael Hogan J. is a Ph.D. candidate in Communication Arts and in Communication candidate is a Ph.D. A. Kurr Jessica Arts and in Communication candidate Johnson is a Ph.D. D. Jeremy

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978-1-945169-11-3 | paper: $23.95/£16.95/€23.95 sh paper: | 978-1-945169-11-3

Political Science/Biography & Memoir together a remarkable book about an insight into was.” he who incredible public figure work benwhose Distributed by PSU Press for Pennsylvania Cable Network chronicled the triumphs and failures of efited Pennsylvaniansefited more than anyone other than Ben Franklin. Kansas From to Philadelphia and governor of Pennsylvania Philadelphia and governor isbn Philadelphia to Washington, DC, PCN 384 pages | 5.5 × 8.5 | May

Arlen Specter in that a way gives the reader “Pennsylvania Cable Network has put former mayor of mayor G. Rendell, former —Edward

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS PRESS UNIVERSITY STATE PENN psupress.org 42 f | w 2017 scholarly 45 - Though the 1521 defeat of the Mexica of of the Mexica the 1521 defeat Though on Spanish multiple perspectives Providing teenth century. teenth of the Aztec signaled the downfall Tenochtitlan Mexico outside of central areas large empire, control. outside the Spaniards’ still remained of present-day such as the Maya groups Home to peoples and the diverse and Guatemala Yucatan strongly were these regions Mexico, of western the establishment of Spanish rule. Ida to resilient of a English translations the first Altman provides - the perspec reflect that directly set of accounts include peoples. These these indigenous of tives campaign during the of Mendoza’s a chronicle leader rebel the exiled from a letter War, Mixton or on by written and an account Tenamaztle, community of the indigenous behalf of the rulers by supplemented are narratives The of Xalisco. that shed light Spanish sources from translations and conflict. interaction on indigenous-Spanish insights into provide these sources Together the efforts of struggles and illuminate indigenous conquerors. their would-be met by resistance and Mexico modern-day conquer campaigns to that to equal weight voices giving indigenous essential this book is an of the conquistadores, of the Spanish narratives standard to counterpoint students It will be especially useful to conquest. history. of Latin American colonial and scholars at the of History Ida Altman is Professor book is The Her most recent of Florida. University in New Indians and Spaniards West: Mexico’s for War . Galacia, 1524–1550 ContestingConquest IndigenousPerspectives Spanish onthe 1524–1545 Galicia, Nueva of Occupation Ida Altman an important set presents Conquest Contesting - that docu Spanish accounts and of indigenous over control to establish efforts ment Spain’s half of the six during the first Mexico western

Ida Altman Ida , eminent historian historian eminent , latin american originals american latin Contesting Conquest Contesting Indigenous Perspectives on the Spanish Occupation of Nueva Occupation on Spanish the Galicia, 1524-1545 Perspectives Indigenous 978-0-271-07856-4 | paper: $24.95/£17.95/€24.95 sh $24.95/£17.95/€24.95 paper: | 978-0-271-07856-4 Contesting Conquest Contesting how hard nativehow to defend people worked History/Latin American Studies their they always at how were sovereignty, teaching tool. diminishing Without the trauma conquest, of the documents show Latin American Originals Series American Originals Latin least partly the agents their of own destiny.” isbn Ida Altman has brought us an invaluable Mexico 128 pages | 5 b&w illustrations/4 maps | 5.5 × 8.5 | October Choices: An Indian Woman in the Conquest of in the Conquest An Indian Woman Choices: “In Malintzin’s , author of Malintzin’s —Camilla Townsend - distributing doctrine, devo evangélicos Based on a decade of ethnographic fieldwork fieldwork ethnographic Based on a decade of look at Pentecostalism, An eye-opening is Associate Professor of Professor Martijn is Associate Oosterbaan University. at Utrecht Anthropology Cultural in Rio de Janeiro and drawing from religious stud- religious from and drawing in Rio de Janeiro theory, and media of religion, ies, anthropology that the Pentecostal the Spirit argues Transmitting its ability to is due directly growth movement’s politics, entertainment, and religion. connect to and secular media—music religious Examining — political ads and telenovelas and magazines, Pentecostal how Martijn shows Oosterbaan - and recatego appropriate progressively leaders the religion’s to according forms cultural rize of the interrelationship His analysis cosmologies. among of nonreligious and interpretation reception tees’ by others of the self and perceptions messaging, as and the slums of urban Brazil dwellers, favela remarkable Pentecostalism’s reveals an entity with the media influences engage to capacity vulnerable in economically that shape daily life urban areas. - in the turbulent fave and culture media, society, on both light this book sheds new las of Brazil, in Latin America and of religion role the evolving ideas and practices of religious the proliferation in the postmodern world. Transmitting the Spirit Transmitting Media, Conversion, Religious and Urban Brazil Violence in Oosterbaan Martijn rapidly is one of the most Pentecostalism world. in the forms religious-cultural expanding suc- is often to attributed Its rise in popularity in cosmologies native incorporating cessfully probes volume This frameworks. religious new this phenom- to explanations complex more for one of the most once of Brazil, enon in the favelas world. Catholic nations in the -

Religious Conversion, Media, and Urban Violence in Brazil Media, Religious Conversion, Transmitting the SpiritTransmitting also depicts how Transmitting the Spirit Transmitting 978-0-271-07843-4 | cloth: $84.95/£60.95/€81.95 sh Martijn Oosterbaan

favelas that are the moder underside Rio’s of an otherworldly pentecostal piety traverses unveiled in this excellent book.” nity. but alsobut this how shows premodern faith pentecostal hemisphere is resounded and enables survival amid the violence the of currents the of present late modern age. ethnography of BrazilianPentecostalism Spiritual in power the South American isbn with and against the sonic and electronic Music and Worship in Global Pentecostal- Music and Worship 256 pages | 9 b&w illustrations/1 map | 6 × 9 | August Anthropology/Latin American Studies/Religion Charismatic Christianity Charismatic

“Martijn Oosterbaan only not provides an The Spirit of Praise: Spirit of Praise: of The coeditor Yong, —Amos

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$39.95/£28.95/€38.95 is Professor of Art History at at Art History of Professor is Jack Levine, George Segal, Audrey Flack, Larry Rivers, Larry Rivers, Flack, Audrey Segal, George Levine, Jack artists central been considered long have and R. B. Kitaj art: American Levine twentieth-century of canon in the conscience, social of and prints paintings biting his for the contemplating figures plaster quiet his for Segal her feminist for Flack modern life, of vicissitudes pop outrageous his for Rivers canvases, photorealist to commitment his for and Kitaj art statements, that is all, at known if known, less Much figuration. biblical to attention their devoted artists five all times at heritage Jewish a shared of in part because imagery, tied. inexorably were they which to Jewish study, case an extensive as artist each Taking America in Twentieth-Century the Bible and Artists Jewish their of and a host artists these how uncovers in innovative Bible the adopted contemporaries demonstrates, Baskind Samantha Indeed, as ways. American Jewish present, the to past the linking by in extraordinary narrative biblical the customized artists and genocide as such modern issues address to ways and assimilation inequality, gender Holocaust, the and establishment and the experience, immigrant the other many among Israel, of State modern the of fate pertinent concerns. Baskind Samantha University. State Cleveland Also of Interest Jewish Artists and the Twentieth-Century in Bible America BaskindSamantha ISBN 978-0-271-05983-9 cloth:

America Samantha Baskind Samantha Image, Action, and Idea in and Idea in Image, Action, Twentieth-Century ewish Artists and the Bible in and the Bible in Artists ewish J Departing from the traditional interpretation interpretation the traditional Departing from to challenge written A compellingly is Professor of Fine Arts at Saint of Fine is Professor Ben Schachter Fiber Tzit: He is the author of Tzit College. Vincent . Identity Art and Jewish Contemporary Jewish art is a growing field artis a growing Jewish Contemporary creative as new well as traditional that includes - exclu criticism of it is almost yet practices, Commandment’s on the Second reliant sively that this Arguing images. of graven prohibition thought and of Jewish the corpus disregards Ben and interpretation, of criticism a century approach a new instead advocates Schachter on action and process. focused Image, Action, Commandment, of the Second Art addresses Jewish and Idea in Contemporary art, art, performance conceptual abstraction, on imagery that do not rely and other styles art Jewish examines Schachter meaning. for of melachot—work-like the concept through by the medieval activities” as defined “creative the philosopher Maimonides. Showing Jewish art and melachot in the active between similarity artists such Jewish of contemporary processes Rand, Archie Allen Wexler, as Ruth Weisberg, relationship the and Nechama Golan, he explores these artists’ methods and Judaism’s between procedure. to demanding attention traditionalism, a well-argued Art makes Jewish Contemporary and interpretation, artisticcase for production, of in the dual foundation criticism that revels Judaism and art history. Jewish Artists and the Bible in Twentieth-Century p e ns n t a t e p r e s s

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9 The Pennsylvania State University Press University State The Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Park, University www.psupress.org “A fascinating and beautifully written examination of the role of of role the of examination written and beautifully fascinating “A America.” art in twentieth-century biblical Shteyngart —Gary , America in Twentieth-Century the Bible and Artists “In Jewish well-known five of careers the reimages Baskind Samantha little- mostly on their a focus training by artists modern American narrative biblical of adaptation occasional, than more but known, a Articulating Testament–based. and New Old both and imagery, not and sculptors painters between connection Jewish profound rubric, Baskind other any under in tandem considered necessarily purposeful the by underscored paradoxes connective delineates career in the (midrash) interpretation biblical of adaptation the that studies, case five in these She argues, each. of trajectory re-presentation enabled society secular America’s of freedom different provided in turn, these, and that archetypes ancient of Baskind’s modernity.’ ‘navigating for cues important equally but interpretation a wider to avenues a number of opens new book gender, on ethnicity, debates in ongoing art’s role visual of Art today. relevant increasingly and multiculturalism—topics in interested and anyone scholars, studies Judaic historians, a twentieth- through experience Jewish American the investigating it.” reading from profit will lens century University Reserve Western Case G. Landau, —Ellen a modern shape could Bible the that idea the age, “In our secular artist, seems and American mind a modern Jewish artist, never how shows Baskind Samantha new book, in her brilliant Yet odd. also but (Tanach) Bible a Jewish only necessarily Bible—not the American in Jewish Puritans—echoes the of Bible American the Larry Flack, Audrey Segal, George Levine, Jack at art. Looking and a sophisticated provides Baskind and R. B. Kitaj, Rivers, and flourishes survives imagery religious how of reading critical world.” in our secular University Emory Gilman, L. —Sander

978-0-271-07912-7 | paper: $34.95/£24.95/€33.95 sh and Jewish aniconism.” the theology of convergence and aesthetic antidote A welcome theory. to the preoc porary Jewish art practice and criticism at Dimyonot: Jews and the Cultural Imagination Series cupation with the SecondCommandment isbn Ben Schachter Destination Culture: Tourism, Museums, and Tourism, of Destination Culture: Heritage Contemporary Jewish Art Jewish Contemporary Image, Action, and Idea in Idea and Image, Action, 136 pages | 24 color/1 b&w illustrations | 6 × 8 | December Art History/Religion “A highly original“A exploration contem of , author —Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett

978-0-271-07769-7 | cloth: $94.95/£67.95/€91.95 sh An engaging multidisciplinary study of An engaging Applying anthropological models borrowed models borrowed Applying anthropological , Catherine Walworth explores explores Walworth , Catherine Salvage Soviet Refiguring Modernism SeriesRefiguring how artists on the margins of the Constructivist artistsConstructivist of the on the margins how ture tell a broader story of the unique political and story a broader tell ture discussions art-historical of existing the border ums and imagined a new world, knitting knitting world, a new ums and imagined art, and imperial castoffs, avant-garde together “engineer” typologies—the that his mythmaker such as Nadezhda of figures the relationships - fashion, and architec film, porcelain, propaganda movement of the 1920s rejected “elitist” medi- “elitist” of the 1920s rejected movement a wide range who deployed margins movement’s Constructivists Esfir Shub with and Lamanova of a fragments Reappropriated production.” former enemy era provided a wide range of play a wide range provided era enemy former from Claude Lévi-Strauss, Walworth shows shows Walworth Lévi-Strauss, Claude from Union’s early years, this volume highlights a this volume early years, Union’s group of artists who hover like free radicals at radicals free like of artists who hover group In isbn Silver to Steel: The The Steel: to Museum of Art of Silver and co-author is Curator at the Columbia at the Columbia is Curator Catherine Walworth such as Aleksei Gan, Varvara Stepanova, and Stepanova, Gan, Varvara such as Aleksei and possibility for these artists, for and the resulting and possibility and “bricoleur”—illustrate, respectively, the respectively, and “bricoleur”—illustrate, the chaotic and and other such artists reflected economic pressures felt by their makers. by felt pressures economic during the Soviet objects and their makers of and deepens our knowledge of Constructivism everyday life. everyday explores tactics. Walworth make-do of clever of the decade from zeitgeist often contradictory canonical Constructivists and artists on thecanonical Constructivists Soviet art culture. and material Soviet . Muller-Munk Modern Designs of Peter 248 pages | 34 color/66 b&w illus. | 9 × 9.5 | September Art History Art

1918 to 1929, and redefined the concept of “mass concept the 1929, and redefined to 1918 Aleksandr Rodchenko. Together, the work of these the work Together, Rodchenko. Aleksandr

- Imperial Debris, Revolutionary Reuse, and Russian Constructivism Russian and Reuse, Revolutionary Debris, Imperial Catherine Walworth Catherine

avant-garde, offeringavant-garde, us a truly synthetic assessment.” interdisciplinary and nothings’ the of Constructivists empha by sizing their reliance on the of ‘salvage’ throwaway objects,throwaway obsolescence, built-in brings to bear an alternative and refreshing light upon the later phase the of Russian chance, and art trouvé. In this she way and Russian Constructivism and Russian Imperial Debris, Revolutionary Reuse, Soviet Salvage Catherine Walworth Avant-Garde: Theory and Criticism, 1902–1934 and Criticism, Theory Avant-Garde:

“Catherine describes Walworth the ‘sweet Russian Art, author of Russian of the E. Bowlt —John

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS PRESS UNIVERSITY STATE PENN psupress.org 46 f | w 2017 scholarly 49 Focusing on the work of artists who came on the work Focusing the contributors the editors, In addition to is Associate Professor of Art Professor is Associate James Romaine in Greenwood, at Lander University History and co-founder He is president South Carolina. in of Christianity of Scholars of the Association book is Art as of Art.the History His most recent Spiritual Perception. in Professor is Assistant Phoebe Wolfskill American and the Department of African Studies at Indiana University, Diaspora African and Jr. Motley Bloomington, and author of Archibald . Reinvention Racial Many of the most celebrated African American African most celebrated of the Many manifest that visually works created artists have this component themes, yet and motifs Christian American art is often of African of the history This identity. racial to attention by subsumed of African history new a vivid constructs volume Christian biblical and exploring American art by of such noted in the work subjects and themes Lewis, Edmonia Bearden, artists as Romare and James Tanner, Henry O. Motley, Archibald VanDerZee. and the Civil War the Civil between maturity to - engag how show the contributors Rights Era, express to served themes has ing with religious and socio-economic political, of racial, an array a artists. American Providing African for concerns and choices of aesthetic techniques close analysis it as a but does not assume race that considers instead works measure they factor, predominant - icono their formal, with methods that emphasize thematic participation and in the history graphic, this and the visual arts. In doing so, of Christianity a single claim on black lay to refuses collection its explores or art, but rather culture, religiosity, of African the complexity and celebrates diversity American visual expression. Jacqueline Caro, Buick, Julie Levin Pai Kirsten are K. Hamlin, Amy Goeser, Caroline Francis, M. Edward Powell, J. Richard N. Pinder, Kymberly James Smalls, Carla Kristin Schwain, Puchner, Yau. and Elaine Y. Williams,

-

Wolfskill E b and PhoE and E omain s R Christ and Christianity in E Jam d by E Beholding Edit 978-0-271-07774-1 | cloth: $79.95/£56.95/77.95 sh Art American African Sensational Religion: of Sensational Religion: , editor M. Promey Sally key to the book’s substance. This superb relations with politics, socioeconomic real bookshelf.” practice in the context their of inextricable ities, and identity of the work formation is explicating Christian belief and religious energizes significant conversations about isbn work belongswork on every Americanist’s Edited by Jamesby Romaine andEdited Phoebe Wolfskill Beholding and Christ Christianities, and their relations. complex Christianity in African 204 pages | 33 color/22 b&w illustrations8 × 10 | | September Art History/Religion Sensory Cultures in Material Practice in Material Sensory Cultures American ArtAmerican The authors’ The demonstrated commitment to African American arts, African American American African arts, American African “Thisvolume expands long-needed and —

- (1933), and (1933), Boys Scottsboro 978-0-271-07773-4 | cloth: $69.95/£49.95/€67.95sh Wang presents comparative studies of comparative presents Wang - of pre Based on a decade-long excavation , ShiPu Wang ana- Wang , ShiPu Moderns Other American The is Associate Professor and founding and founding Professor is Associate Wang ShiPu (GASP) of the Global Arts Studies Program faculty He is the Merced. of California, at the University Modern and An American Obata: of Chiura editor Art and The American? the author of Becoming . Kuniyoshi Crisis of Yasuo Identity 196 pages | 39 color/36 b&w illustrations | 8 × 10 | October isbn This publication has been made possible through support from the Foundation Terra for American Art International Publication Program of the College Art Association. History Art ity artists: it reconceives American modernism American artists:ity it reconceives in the role illuminating these artists’by active and cosmopolitan shaping of a multicultural of their deliberate analysis nuanced This culture. of with the ideological complexities engagement our vision to a new contributes American identity in mod- identity of non-European understanding ernism and American art. lyzes the works of four early twentieth-century early twentieth-century of four the works lyzes - the con with American artists who engaged Eitarō Matsura, Frank of “Americanness”: cept In so Noda, and Miki Hayakawa. Hideo Ishigaki, - artists’ con of minority notions doing, he recasts culture. modernism and American tributions to feature that works artists’ these four figurative and other Americans, Americans, African Native Matsura and ethnic minorities, including racial The 1912), at Studio (ca. Pose and Susan Timento (1932), Bonus March than creating 1926). Rather (ca. of a Negro Portrait Matsura, “Asian aesthetics,” art that reflected “imag- deployed Noda, and Hayakawa Ishigaki, the Other” as their means ery of the Other by and contesting understanding, of exploring, notions of and contested of diaspora conditions of anti- be American in an age what it meant to sentiment and legislation. immigrant United in the collections viously unexamined Moderns American Other and Japan, The States minor of “forgotten” a rediscovery than is more In - ShiPu Wang Matsura, Ishigaki, Noda, Hayakawa Noda, Ishigaki, Matsura, The OtherAmerican Moderns is THE OTHER AMERICAN MODERNS THE OTHER

ambivalent relationships cross-racial of affinity, diasporic conditions,and national a refreshingly nuanced, well-written, and scholarship on ‘historically overlooked to the art history American of modern promises to spark future research and minority artists’ in America.” identity, into collaborative, the complex, and often much needed, account the of important ism, challenging and that how why history contributions Asian of American artists cultural and sociopolitical scope. Delving wonderfully illustrated that one study, was originally written and broadening its Matsura, Noda, Ishigaki, Hayakawa ShiPu Wang 20th–21st Centuries

The Other Moderns American “ShiPu provides an and exemplary, Wang American Art—Erika Doss, author of American of the

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS PRESS UNIVERSITY STATE PENN psupress.org 48 f | w 2017 scholarly 51 - - In illustrating commonalities in the design, commonalities In illustrating look at the effects composed A thoughtfully the contributors the editor, In addition to teenth and seventeenth centuries profoundly profoundly centuries and seventeenth teenth of Gardens society. and Islamic European affected - consid Empires and the Islamic Europe Renaissance and landscapes of gardens and place the role ers sharing of the information context in the broader and Islamic among Europeans place that took and India. Persia, in Turkey, empires of gar perceptions and people’s development, this volume in both regions, dens and nature - in the revolu importantsubstantiates parallels architecture in landscape tionary advancements contributors The during the era. place that took as as well of gardeners the exchange how explain influenced techniques and irrigation horticultural examine cultures; in the two design traditions and urban landscape shifts in garden concurrent public more toward design, such as the move the mutually influential and explore functionality; on and culture of politics, economics, effects shed they In doing so, space. outdoor composed and politics of cultures light on the complexity during the Renaissance. design on garden exchange of cross-cultural this history, time in world during a pivotal in areas new book points to thought-provoking and confluences, inquiry about the influences, and Islamic European between connections traditions. garden Henderson, Paula include Cristina Castel-Branco, Christopher Ebba Koch, Simone M. Kaiser, Ruggles, Jill Fairchild D. Paya, Laurent Pastore, Tchikine. and Anatole Sinclair, Professor, Mohammad Gharipour is Associate and Planning, at Morgan School of Architecture Editor and Founding and Director University State . Journal of Islamic Architecture of the International most recently He has published eight other books, of the Middle East. Urban Landscapes Contemporary The cross-cultural exchange of ideas that of ideas exchange cross-cultural The the six during Mediterranean in the flourished

- Mohammad Gharipour Mohammad Edited by

978-0-271-07779-6 $94.95/£67.95/€91.95 cloth: | sh GARDENS OF RENAISSANCE RENAISSANCE OF GARDENS ISLAMIC EMPIRESTHE AND EUROPE Confluences and Encounters , co-editor of Mughal , co-editor Jr. L. Wescoat James and histories longer-term European of gar garden research into dialogue with larger gardens, critiquing those geographic of gardenof and landscape history with new connections between European and Islamic constructs while exploring them in rich dens, addressing a major need in the field detail. brings It innovative lines Islamic of isbn Encounters and Confluences Encounters Edited by Mohammadby Edited Gharipour Prospects findings and interpretations.” Europe and the Islamic Islamic the and Europe Empires Gardens of Renaissance 272 pages | 37 color/85 b&w illustrations | 9 × 10 | December Art History/Architecture Art Gardens: Sources, Places, Representations, and Representations, Places, Sources, Gardens: “Thisvolume offers afine of array historical —

978-0-271-07836-6 | cloth: $89.95/£63.95/€86.95 sh The Centennial’s fine arts display, which fine arts display, Centennial’s The and written, thoughtfully Deeply researched,

is Andrew W. Mellon Curator Mellon Curator W. is Andrew Kimberly A. Orcutt Museum, and the of American Art, Brooklyn - exhi the prizewinning to and contributor co-editor at 100: Modernism Armory Show bition catalog The . and Revolution 264 pages b&w | 43 color/41 illustrations | 9 × 10 | December isbn Studies /Museum History Art included both a government-sanctioned included both a government-sanctioned con- and significant works selection of American spurred other countries, sixteen tributions from in the American art world. a transformation published criti- records, official from Drawing Kimberly poems, and satire, cism, guidebooks, study of the in-depth a nuanced, provides Orcutt of the circumstances She considers exhibition. the ideological positions expressed their creation, of installation, and the responses their through public. From and the general critics, collectors, - cosmo a postwar nationalism to antebellum took politanism in which artists and collectors the how reveals Orcutt stage, the international art criticism the fine arts,gave democratized fair and led art muse- and authority, reach newfound the country. across proliferate ums to and black- full-color eighty a mix of over featuring and insightful this thorough illustrations, and-white in American those interested book will appeal to fairs and world’s the art world, history, and culture in Philadelphia and beyond. and exhibitions A milestone in American cultural history, the history, cultural in American A milestone was in Philadelphia Exhibition Centennial 1876 attended, heavily shared, most broadly one of the public experiences documented and thoroughly illu- and Posterity Power century. of the nineteenth in the celebration the art featured how minates the over debates national and reflected informed in the world. and its role identity country’s

American Art at Philadelphia’s 1876 Centennial Exhibition | | Exhibition Centennial 1876 Philadelphia’s at Art American

Kimberly Orcutt Kimberly &

POWER POSTERITY

for our thinking about the fair.” also offermethodological new a approach an illuminating picture the of event history of Philadelphia’s 1876 Centennialhistory 1876 Philadelphia’s of understudied primary sources, presents she museum studies perspective, this book will complicated cultural politics undergirding Exhibition and its ‘Centennial moment.’ while offering an in-depth analysisof the Kimberly Orcutt Making use a treasure of of trove Rome Power and Posterity and Power Centennial Exhibition Sculptors: American Artists in Nineteenth-Century Artists American in Nineteenth-Century Sculptors: American Art at Philadelphia’s 1876American Art at Philadelphia’s American art the at time. Informed a by

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978-0-271-07857-1 | cloth: $99.95/£70.95/€96.95 sh Rather than assume that visitors agreed agreed visitors that Rather than assume on the research archival Based on extensive , Eugenia Afinoguénova takes an takes Afinoguénova , Eugenia Prado The is Professor of Spanish and is Professor Afinoguénova Eugenia She is University. at Marquette Spanish Culture Tourism and Different: Spain is (Still) of the co-editor El and the author of in Spanish Identity Discourse a frente españolas Artes superviviente: y letras idiota 1969–1990. la “muerte del hombre,” 304 pages | 50 b&w illustrations/6 maps | 7 × 10 | December isbn Studies/History History/Architecture/Museum Art In art most iconic Spain’s look at unconventional of as a space on the Prado museum. Focusing highlights both Afinoguénova urban leisure, relation of the museum’s history the political liberal and the the church, the monarchy, to of as an extension as its role as well nation state, Promenade. the Prado social center, Madrid’s the museum, this volume interpret to about how as a debate of the Prado the history approaches - those cross Just like and leisure. about culture a firm trace who did not always ing its threshold, see or do inside the could what they line between the del Prado, on the Paseo museum and outside participants- politi in this debate—journalists, art critics—considered cians, museum directors, discussion as part of a broader museum-going rights, the rise and voting citizenship concerning capital, and themodern of the status to Madrid of and the country. the town between gap growing as the as well and policies displays museum’s Prado The and city-dwellers, attitudes of visitors - political and pro many the museum’s unfolds its complicated and examines roles pagandistic between the tension as a monument to history Art schol- and historians leisure. and culture of museum studies and visual and leisure ars study of the foundational find this will culture invaluable. Prado - -

EUGENIA AFINOGUÉNOVA

ThePrado SPANISH CULTURE CULTURE SPANISH AND LEISURE, 1819-1939 hood and the public. Her deep mining the of archival sources and creative integration of relationship between the Museo and the by allby a great love who museum.” ment aboutment the liminal and shifting position museum and leisure studies should be read of theof Spanish museum in relation to nation Eugenia Afinoguénova España: American Views of Art and Life in Spain, of Art and Life Views España: American Paseo del Prado to make a compelling argu Spanish Culture andSpanish Leisure, Culture 1819-1939 1860–1914 The Prado “Eugenia Afinoguénovaplays on complexthe Vistas de —M. Elizabeth Boone, author of Vistas -

Coupling digital acoustic models and video digital acoustic Coupling and beautifully deeply researched, Immersive, is Professor of Art History is Professor Pentcheva V. Bissera and the author of Icons University at Stanford and Mother of God in Byzantium The and Power: Ritual, and the Senses Space, Sensual Icon: The State Penn , both published by in Byzantium Press. University Experiencing the resonant acoustics of the church church of the acoustics resonant the Experiencing participants the Byzantine allowed Sophia of Hagia Spirit of be filled with the to rituals in its liturgical earth. on This his image become to God, and even rites these sung how examines analysis vibrant to space architectural church’s with the combined wor of place Hagia Sophia a performative make ship representative of Byzantine religious culture in culture religious of Byzantine ship representative all its sensory richness. and texts of liturgical with a close examination applies Pentcheva Bissera melodic structures, and philosophical, archeoacoustical, art-historical, insight provide to methodologies anthropological and location liturgy ways the complementary into in Byzantium. worshippers animate to worked of the form on the architectural Rather than focus or of its construction, building, the technology Pentcheva the political ideology of its decoration, of Hagia Sophia the performativity into delves by of sound” created the “icons how and explains reverberation and architectural the sung liturgy mystical that led to experience an aural formed to opening access worshippers, for transcendence choirs. sound of the angelic the imagined celestial of Hagia Sophia sheds exploration this illustrated, - and reli iconicity, space, light on sacred new of art and Scholars in Byzantium. gious devotion studies, music and religious history, architectural period will especially and the medieval acoustics, work. field-advancing Pentcheva’s appreciate

- Bissera V. Pentcheva Bissera V.

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Sound, Space, and Spirit in Byzantium in Byzantium Spirit and Space, Sound, SOPHIA

fragrance, and light movement, between a rich and dynamic exchange sound, air, of andheaven earth to create an all-envelop kinetic, interpretative model that will acoustic science to sixth-century poetry, the in ways which the sixth-century church sacred space.” sacred transform our understanding of Byzantine Byzantine of understanding our transform ing spiritual experience for the worshipper. of Hagiaof Sophia engaged all the senses in isbn Bissera V. Pentcheva Bissera V. Pentcheva establishesPentcheva multisensory, a fluid, Hagia Sophia Sound, Space, and Byzantium in Spirit Marc’Antonio Barbaro and Venetian Architecture, Architecture, and Venetian Barbaro Marc’Antonio 288 pages | 50 color/42 b&w illustrations | 7 × 10 | October Using sourcesUsing ranging from modern Art History/Architecture Art 1550-1600

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, Henry James’s iconic novels reflect iconic, Henry novels significancethe James’s 978-0-271-07833-5 | paper: $19.95/£14.95/€19.95 tr 978-0-271-07852-6 | cloth: $40.00/£28.95/€38.95 tr 978-0-271-07699-7 | paper: $19.95/£14.95/€19.95 tr seldom studied institution—the American high school. to be known both locally and nationally. has it Finally, Penn State Series in the History of the Book been told.” been isbn isbn in Pittsburgh novelist and critic joins art Colm historian Tóibín Marc to vital scenes in the galleries crowded The of Wings of the 240 pages | 42 b&w illustrations/4 maps | 5.5 × 8.5 | 2017 isbn isbn Co-published with The Morgan Library & Museum of theof visual culture his of society. In this edifying volume, ery the of arts—and friendships with artists—were to Simpson and Declan Kiely the of Morgan Library & Henry Painting James andAmerican A Keystone Book® Keystone A From theFrom eponymous young sculptor in Roderick Hudson 192 pages | 70 color illustrations | 8 × 10 | 2017 Museum essential to reveal how the language and imag writing.James’s Colm Tóibín, Marc Simpson, and Tóibín, DeclanColm Kiely Dove forever changeforever understanding your national of grief and and our collective memories of 9/11. Thompson’s book willand Thompson’s ourcollective memories 9/11. of the memorials erect we our to dead.” honor its effect on the families, communitythe of Shanksville, isbn isbn A Social History Pittsburgh’s of First Public High School 200 pages | 26 b&w illustrations/3 maps | 5.5 × 8.5 | 2017 Jake Oresick Jake From Memory Memorial to From The Schenley Experiment The Schenley And what a remarkable high school! Schenley’s story needs A Keystone Book® Keystone A Shanksville, America, and Flight 93 Burial J. William Thompson William J. Through theModern Funeral Industry ofWay Natural to a “This is trulymemorable a book about an important but

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Dangerous Emotions, and Trust Dangerous 978-0-271-07101-5 978-0-9885170-6-6 keen intelligence. Warner reveals reveals Warner intelligence. keen long for to his readers both inspires her own experience and insights. Her experience her own Rousseau and the Problem of of Problem the and Rousseau Relations Human Rousseau’s understanding of human understanding Rousseau’s paper: $39.95/£28.95/€38.95 sh $39.95/£28.95/€38.95 paper: paper: $84.95/£60.95/€81.95 sh isbn isbn isbn isbn Violence and author of Violence University, the tragic impossibility of ever truly of ever impossibility the tragic thought is unlimitedly ambitious andthought is unlimitedly of institutions—and the construction 522 pages | 91 color illustrations | 6 × 9 | 2013 Problem of Human Relations he has of Human Relations Problem 272 pages 6 × 9 | 2016 | retical appetite, Cara Judea Alhadeff Cara appetite, retical them with contesting thinkers, rary than the subject of rights or rather and the and in Rousseau relationships, vulnerable. It issues in making vulner It issues vulnerable. with admirable clarity how Rousseau Rousseau how clarity with admirable - in harmonious relation wholeness Ob-scene Splendor, ships with others but also intimates but also ships with others satisfying such longings.” scholars to have carefully analyzed analyzed carefully have to scholars Cara Judea AlhadeffCara and democracy.” ability central—rather than individual central—rather ability enterprise, or collective autonomy exposes her thought to the most to her thought exposes on justice perspective opens a new done so with great sensitivity and sensitivity done so with great - contempo radical difficult and most Viscous Expectations Viscous Justice, The Vulnerability, John M. Warner John —Alphonso Lingis, Pennsylvania State Lingis, Pennsylvania —Alphonso —Joseph Reisert, Colby College Colby Reisert, —Joseph “John Warner is among the few is among the few Warner “John “With enormous energy and theo- and energy enormous “With

ADRIANNA M. PALIYENKO

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AMpiot ile Coquet-Mokoko ile

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2333-3073 | E-ISSN 1878-5301 | E-ISSN Biannual Biannual house for the growing critical the growing house for Bustan long-form review essays that review that review essays review long-form for Middle East and African Studies Middle East and African for is a journal dedicated to review. review. to is a journal dedicated Published by the Moshe Dayan Center Center the Moshe Dayan by Published ISSN ISSN Eyal Zisser, editors the works and influence of Cormac of and influence the works Bustan: The Middle East Book Review Book Review Middle East The Bustan: typically includes at least three includes at least three typically Bustan Uzi Rabi, Itamar Rabinovich, and peer-reviewed journal focusing on journal focusing peer-reviewed It is the primary clearing­ McCarthy. new literature. new StaceyPeebles, editor at Tel Aviv University, each issue of each issue University, Aviv at Tel conversation about McCarthy’s work. about McCarthy’s conversation The Cormac McCarthy Journal Cormac The The Middle East Book Review The Cormac McCarthy Journal is a McCarthy Cormac The 2333-3154 1528-4212

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Journal of Asia-Pacific Pop Culture Culture Pop Journal of Asia-Pacific 1524-8429 | E-ISSN Biannual between literary study and other literary between is a peer-reviewed journal with an is a peer-reviewed to and is devoted focus international Interdisciplinary Literary Pacific and Oceania regions. and Oceania Pacific ISSN ISSN 2380-7679 | E-ISSN Kenneth Womack, editor Womack, Kenneth Quarterly the study of popular culture and the the study of popular culture to explore the interconnections the interconnections explore to Studies seeks Studies seeks Literary Interdisciplinary methods of critique. Culture disciplines, ideologies, and cultural disciplines, ideologies, and cultural context of the everyday in the Asia- of the everyday context and Paul Mountfort, editors Journal of Asia-Pacific of Journal Pop A Journal of Criticism and Theory Adam Geczy, Vicki Karaminas, The The

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Journal of Africana Religions pub- Religions Journal of Africana 2473-8433 | E-ISSN 2165-5405 | E-ISSN Biannual heritage of Africa. heritage lishes critical scholarship on Africana on Africana lishes critical scholarship influenced by the diverse cultural cultural by the diverse influenced Essays on Contemporary Drama ISSN ISSN Edward E. Curtis IV and to publishing peer-reviewed essays, essays, publishing peer-reviewed to tions of African and African Diasporic and African tions of African reviews, interviews, and discussions interviews, reviews, - tradi including the religious religions, traditions as religious peoples as well Sylvester A. Johnson, editors Annual of the work of Harold Pinter and other Pinter of Harold of the work contemporary dramatists and their dramatists contemporary art forms. various to contributions The Harold Pinter Review Journal of Africana Religions Africana of Journal Ann C. Hall, editor The Harold Pinter Review is dedicated Review Pinter Harold The The The

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International Journal of Persian Journal of Persian International 1089-0017 | E-ISSN Literature ing dialectical articles on the pressing ing dialectical articles on the pressing International Journal of Persian of Journal International ISSN 2376-5739 | E-ISSN Homa Katouzian, editor Katouzian, Homa ISSN the broader geographical areas. geographical the broader Literature Literature political, social, religious, and legal and legal political, social, religious, poetry, classical Persian philology, philology, Persian classical poetry, and of Iran and the literature prose, with a novel focus on Persian poetics, on Persian focus with a novel Annual society. Triannual questions facing twenty-first-century twenty-first-century questions facing The Good Society Good The A Journal of Civic Studies Alireza Korangy, editor in chief The Good Society publishes outstand- Society Good The The The Trygve Throntveit, editor - 2330-3980 2372-191x -indexed scholarly MLA-indexed is a peer-reviewed scholarly is a peer-reviewed

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Journal of Medieval Religious Religious Journal of Medieval 1947-6566 | E-ISSN 0968-8005 | E-ISSN Biannual focus include the relationship of medi- include the relationship focus ISSN ISSN reports pertaining to the life, thought, pertaining the life, reports to Sherri Olson, editors Olson, Sherri Cultures Cultures Cultures sents essays, articles, and notices, sents essays, Triannual Christine Cooper-Rompato F. and and writings of Friedrich Nietzsche. and writings of Friedrich essays on mystical and devotional texts, and devotional on mystical essays of the especially but not exclusively of Other areas Middle Ages. Western outside Europe. cultures religious eval The Journal of Nietzsche Studies of Journal The Journal of Medieval Religious Religious Medieval of Journal Jessica Berry, editor ­ Studies pre Journal of Nietzsche The The The -

2161-6310 2334-1785

Journal of Moravian History is a History Journal of Moravian 1933-6632 | E-ISSN 2334-1777 | E-ISSN Biannual Biannual ISSN ISSN Emily Filler, editors Paul M. Peucker, editor the history of the Unitas Fratrum. the history those interested in understanding, in understanding, those interested ethics. Jewish and normative tive peer-reviewed English-language jour English-language peer-reviewed nal that publishes scholarly articles and reviews publications in all areas of publications in all areas and reviews a site for the exchange of ideas among the exchange for a site descrip- articulating, and promoting outstanding scholarship in Jewish in Jewish outstanding scholarship as It serves conceived. ethics, broadly The Journal of Jewish Ethics Jewish of Journal The Journal of Moravian History Jonathan K. Crane and The Journal of Jewish Ethics publishes of Jewish Journal The The The -

2152-9272

2158-3897 Journal of Modern Periodical Studies Journal of Modern Periodical is dedi- Policy Journal of Information 1947-6574 | E-ISSN Biannual journal devoted to the academic study to journal devoted is a peer-reviewed scholarly online is a peer-reviewed in an electronic, online format. in an electronic, international in scope and publishes in scope international E-ISSN E-ISSN ISSN Patrick Collier and Barbara Green, Richard Amit Schejter, Taylor, Open Access Open Studies world. ature reviews, and invited commentary and invited reviews, ature articles, comments, book reviews, liter articles, book reviews, comments, addresses contemporary challenges contemporary addresses poli- the to researchers and connects of “little magazines” published from published from of “little magazines” and Krishna Jayakar, editors Jayakar, Krishna and cated to timely policy research that timely policy research to cated It is multidisciplinary and cymakers. editors 1880 to 1950 in the English-speaking 1950 1880 to Journal of Modern Periodical Modern Periodical of Journal Journal of Information Policy Information of Journal The The The The

1527-2060 2169-7132

Journal of General Education Education Journal of General Journal of Ayn Rand Studies is a Rand Journal of Ayn 0021-3667 | E-ISSN 1526-1018 | E-ISSN

Biannual fessional concentrations to provide an provide to concentrations fessional ideas. is devoted to the ideas and ideals to is devoted Humanities and Sciences and Humanities ISSN ISSN Quarterly through a respectful exchange of exchange a respectful through nonpartisan journal devoted to the to nonpartisan journal devoted - disciplinary and pro beyond reaches Stephen Cox, Robert L. Campbell, understanding of curriculum that understanding educational commons. undergraduate study of Ayn Rand and her times study of Ayn Christopher P. Long, editor Long, P. Christopher Chris Matthew Sciabarra, Matthew Chris and aims to foster scholarly dialogue scholarly foster and aims to of scholarship, which enlighten an which enlighten of scholarship, and Roderick Long, T. editors The Journal of Ayn Rand Studies Journal of General Education General of Journal A Curricular Commons of the The The The

2166-3556 2475-0913

Journal of Eastern Mediterranean Mediterranean Journal of Eastern 2166-3548 | E-ISSN 2475-0905 | E-ISSN Biannual | Open Access both prehistoric and historic periods. and historic both prehistoric by examining the interplay between between the interplay examining by History Eastern Mediterranean, encompassing Mediterranean, Eastern Mediterranean ArchaeologyMediterranean ISSN ISSN Kristina Poznan, editor Quarterly - politics, eco the disciplines of history, takes a transatlantic focus focus a transatlantic takes History and Heritage Studies Heritage and nomics, law, and cultural studies. and cultural nomics, law, Sandra A. Scham, editors various scholarly conversions across across scholarly conversions various social, and applied archaeologies of the social, and applied archaeologies devoted to traditional, anthropological, anthropological, traditional, to devoted Journal of Eastern of Journal Journal Austrian-American of Archaeology and Heritage Studies is and Heritage Archaeology Austria and America and connects and America and connects Austria Ann E. Killebrew and The The ournal of Austrian-American Journal of Austrian-American The - 2375-0464 2160-6757

publishes scholarly work on the publishes scholarly work 2375-0456 | E-ISSN 2160-6765 | E-ISSN

Biannual Biannual has grown substantially. The Journal The substantially. has grown the findings between the gap bridge Perspectives - and emerg mission to in relation in higher education ing directions Institutional Effectiveness ISSN ISSN the challenges confronted by policy by confronted the challenges makers. reported in academic journals and reported Meredith Fletcher, managing editor managing Fletcher, Meredith well as more broadly focused scholar focused broadly more as well ship on institutional effectiveness ship on institutional effectiveness Craig Pepin and Raymond Shaw, assessment. assessment of student learning as of student learning assessment Work on the economics of developing of developing on the economics Work countries and related policy questions policy and related countries coeditors of Development Perspectives aims to Perspectives of Development The Journal of Assessment and and Assessment of Journal The JAIE Journal of Development Development of Journal Johannes W. Fedderke, editor Fedderke, W. Johannes

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2326-067x 2161-2188 is an interdisciplinary is an interdisciplinary

2161-2196 | E-ISSN 0078-7469 | E-ISSN Biannual Biannual the Preternatural the Preternature Pacific Coast Philology Coast Pacific journal of the Pacific Ancient and Ancient and journal of the Pacific as available are Back issues folklore. forum for the study of the preter for forum Kindle editions. Language Association. The journal journal The Association. Language Debbie Felton, editor ISSN ISSN Roswitha Burwick and editors Sperber, Richard Preternature Preternature is the official is the official Coast Philology Pacific natural as seen in magics, witchcraft, as seen in magics, witchcraft, natural and demonology, monstrophy, Modern Language Association, a a Association, Modern Language of the Modern branch regional and on the classical publishes essays and literatures, modern languages, Critical and Historical Studies on spiritualism, occultism, prophecy, prophecy, spiritualism, occultism, cultures. 1527-2079 2161-4741

0031-8213 | E-ISSN 1074-164x | E-ISSN Biannual beyond the region’s geographical geographical the region’s beyond boundaries. Philosophy and Rhetoric and Philosophy Philosophy Philosophy years, than forty more For Mediterranean Studies Mediterranean ISSN ISSN Quarterly the most influential articles on rela- the most influential articles on and rhetoric. philosophy tions between tional forum devoted to the ideas to devoted tional forum Susan O. Shapiro, editor - Studies is an interna Mediterranean Gerard Hauser, editor Hauser, Gerard and ideals of western Mediterranean Mediterranean and ideals of western ent and the influence of these ideas ent and the influence - the pres to antiquity from cultures and Rhetoric has published some ofand Rhetoric 2153-2109 1756-2597

1553-0981 | E-ISSN 0031-4528 | E-ISSN Pennsylvania History journal of the Pennsylvania Historical journal of the Pennsylvania ISSN ISSN Linda Ries, editor Quarterly Pennsylvania History: A Journal of A Journal History: Pennsylvania related to Mark Twain and those who Twain Mark to related approaches. pedagogical new Mid-Atlantic Studies is the official Mid-Atlantic Annual surrounded him and serves as an him and serves surrounded Chad Rohman, editor arship in the history of Pennsylvania of Pennsylvania in the history arship region. and the mid-Atlantic outlet for new scholarship as well as as well scholarship new outlet for The Mark Twain Annual Twain Mark The A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies Association and offers premier schol- premier and offers Association offers essays essays Annual offers Twain Mark The

2473-036X 2475-1989

Journal of the Pennsylvania Journal of the Pennsylvania 2473-0343 | E-ISSN 1044-6753 | E-ISSN Biannual Biannual Libraries library history as its own field of as its own history library with their relationships libraries’ Bernadette A. Lear, editors Eric C. Novotny and ISSN ISSN tive cross-disciplinary research on research cross-disciplinary tive papers, research notes, commentary, commentary, notes, research papers, neering, and social sciences. unique environments. Culture, History, and Society positions and Society History, Culture, - innova while promoting scholarship, Carl R. Pratt, editor articles in the natural, physical, engi- physical, articles in the natural, editorials, viewpoints, and review and review viewpoints, editorials, Libraries: Libraries: history, library to devoted Journal of the Pennsylvania Pennsylvania the of Journal Academy of Science publishes original of Science Academy The only journal in the United States only journal in the United The The The - 2374-670x 1527-9383

Journal of Speculative Philosophy Philosophy Journal of Speculative 0891-625x | E-ISSN 2332-0346 | E-ISSN Biannual ing from a variety of disciplines and of a variety ing from Korean-language teaching and learn- teaching Korean-language Korean. ISSN ISSN Hae-Young Kim, editor Kim, Hae-Young Quarterly - perspec theoretical/methodological It is the official journal of the tives. tive essays about basic philosophical essays tive professional best practices related to related best practices professional - and interpre publishes systematic - contempo for relevant philosophers thinkers. rary Continental and American philosophy, and American philosophy, Continental vides a platform for scholarship and scholarship for vides a platform as well as ideas and theories of past as well constructive interaction between between interaction constructive questions. Scholars examine the examine questions. Scholars The Korean Language in in Language Korean The Journal of Speculative Philosophy Speculative of Journal America American Association of Teachers of of Teachers American Association John J. Stuhr, editor The Korean Language in America pro in America Language Korean The The The 1943-1538 2471-4461

2377-8784 | E-ISSN 2472-4513 | E-ISSN Journal of Posthuman Studies is a Journal of Posthuman

Biannual Biannual histories, practices, and discourses and discourses practices, histories, journal developed to analyze what analyze to journal developed fully peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary fully peer-reviewed, it is to be human in an age of rapid of rapid be human in an age it is to Philosophy, Technology, Media Technology, Philosophy, ISSN ISSN Dale T. IrvinDale T. and Rafael Reyes III, Hughes, and Sangkyu Shin, editors Shin, Sangkyu and Hughes, that encompasses analysis of the analysis that encompasses technological, scientific, cultural, and scientific, cultural, technological, Stefan Lorenz Sorgner, James James Sorgner, Lorenz Stefan Christianity social evolution. of Christianity as it is found on six as it is found of Christianity World Christianity is a field of study Christianity World continents. editors The Journal of World World of Journal The Journal of Posthuman Studies Posthuman of Journal The

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1935-0244 2157-328x is the official journal of

, Review Williams Carlos William Supply Chain Council. APICS Supply Chain 0041-1612 | E-ISSN 0196-6286 | E-ISSN Biannual his contemporaries to the artistic, to his contemporaries founded in 1975, showcases scholarly showcases in 1975, founded ISSN ISSN Quarterly the publication of articles that present the publication of articles that present tation field. TJ the the relationship of Williams and of Williams the relationship Ian Copestake, editor Copestake, Ian new knowledge relating to all sectors sectors all to relating knowledge new philosophical, social, and political of his day. movements Mary Holcomb and Mary Holcomb work of William Carlos Williams Carlos Williams of William work William Carlos Williams Review and his literary milieu, including and his literary of the supply chain/logistics/transpor essays on any aspect of the life and life aspect of the on any essays Transportation Journal Transportation Yoshinori Suzuki, editors Yoshinori is devoted to Journal is devoted Transportation The The

2377-9578 2291-1731

2291-1723 | E-ISSN Biannual Biannual lishes peer-reviewed articles that lishes peer-reviewed intersections of identities, power, and of identities, power, intersections Revival, their historical and theological their historical Revival, ISSN ISSN E-ISSN | 1052-5017 Hammond, editors Hammond, Ellen Gruber Garvey, editors the eighteenth-century Evangelical Evangelical the eighteenth-century Scholarship and Pedagogy and Scholarship reviewed interdisciplinary forum for for forum interdisciplinary reviewed exploring scholarship pedagogical raries (proponents or opponents) in or opponents) (proponents raries Wesley and Methodist Studies Scholarship and Pedagogy is a peer- and Pedagogy Scholarship social justice. - their contempo Wesley, and Charles in the their successors antecedents, today. traditions and Evangelical examine the life and work of John and work the life examine Wesleyan and the tradition, Wesleyan William Gibson and Geordan Geordan and Gibson William Wesley and Methodist Studies pub- and Methodist Wesley Transformations The Journal of Inclusive Jacqueline Ellis and Ellis Jacqueline Transformations: The Journal of Inclusive Journal of Inclusive The Transformations: - 2374-6629 2154-9648

0039-4238 | E-ISSN 1045-991x | E-ISSN intentional communities. intentional Utopian Studies ISSN ISSN Nicole Pohl, editor Pohl, Nicole Quarterly Style publication of the Society for Utopian for publication of the Society - uto utopianism, utopias, to related and theory, utopian pian literature, philosophy of language, rhetoric, nar rhetoric, of language, philosophy studies as it and composition rative, of literature the teaching to relates may draw from such fields as literary such fields as literary from draw may Studies that presents scholarly Studies that presents is a peer-reviewed Studies is a peer-reviewed Utopian addresses questions of style, questions of style, addresses Style stylistics, and poetics. Contributions Contributions and poetics. stylistics, Triannual articles on a wide range of subjects articles on a wide range and the humanities. criticism, critical theory, linguistics, criticism, critical theory, John V. Knapp,John V. editor - 1948-5077 2161-6302 encourages scholars scholars encourages

0038-1861 | E-ISSN 0271-9274 | E-ISSN Biannual best and most rigorous deliverances deliverances best and most rigorous Literature ing the place, representation, and representation, ing the place, ISSN ISSN Eric Bain-Selbo, Jane Fife, and Benjamin Schreier, editor Benjamin Schreier, Quarterly to challenge the fragmentation of the fragmentation challenge to toward the sterner discipline of a sterner the toward Studies in AmericanStudies in Jewish Soundings modern intellectual life and to turn the and to life modern intellectual Soundings is Literature Jewish Studies in American of the several academic disciplines of the several dedicated to publishing work analyz publishing work to dedicated common good in human affairs. good common in and Jewishness of Jews circulation An Interdisciplinary Journal Interdisciplinary An American literatures. Anthony Harkins, editors Harkins, Anthony 2333-9934 1529-1480

publishes general articles on publishes general 0095-280x | E-ISSN 0741-5842 | E-ISSN Biannual Biannual is devoted to a special theme. to is devoted ISSN ISSN Studies in American Humor SHAW Studies practitioners, and media across the and media across practitioners, journal values The past and present. - and interdisciplin transnational new phy of Shaw studies. Every other issue studies. Every of Shaw phy Shaw and his milieu, reviews, notes, and his milieu, reviews, Shaw - the bibliogra of Shaviana, Checklist wide spectrum of American humor, wide spectrum of American humor, Studies in American Humor publishesStudies in American SHAW SHAW scholarship. Christopher Wixson, editor Wixson, Christopher articles on topics, themes, practices, articles themes, practices, on topics, as traditional as well ary approaches and the authoritative Continuing Continuing and the authoritative critical and historical humanitiescritical and historical The Journal of Bernard Shaw Shaw Bernard of Journal The Judith Yaross Lee, editor Judith Yaross 2155-7888 1754-6087 seeks to promote dialogue promote to seeks

is an authorized is an authorized Review Steinbeck 2168-0604 | E-ISSN 1546-007x | E-ISSN

Biannual history. Reception including reader-response criticism including reader-response ISSN ISSN Barbara A. Heavilin, editor that broadens the scope of Steinbeck the scope that broadens Reception Reception Steinbeck Review Steinbeck publication on the life and works of and works publication on the life Annual and established scholars, and serves and serves and established scholars, teachers Steinbeck for as a resource at all levels. and discussion among scholars among scholars and discussion and study, reception and pedagogy, - and practi in theoretical engaged criticism, promotes the work of new of new the work criticism, promotes cal analyses in several related fields, related in several cal analyses editors Texts, Readers, Audiences, History American novelist John Steinbeck American novelist Amy L. Blair and James L. Machor, The The

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