Archive for the 'Books To Add To Your Reading List' Category

Congratulations to Lawrence P. Jackson, whose book The Indignant Generation: A Narrative History of African American Writers and Critics, 1934-1960 has won the 2012 BCALA Literary Award in the Nonfiction Category. This award recognizes excellence in adult fiction and nonfiction by African American authors published in 2011. According to the BCALA press release:

“The Indignant Generation is a fascinating exploration of the development of African American literature after the Harlem Renaissance to the modern day Civil Rights Movement. Lawrence P. Jackson offers readers rare insights into the lives of key players who contributed to the breadth of writing that flourished between 1934 and 1960. From Zora Neale Hurston and Langston Hughes to James Baldwin and Lorraine Hansberry, Jackson highlights the unique challenges faced by the writers during the time of the Great Depression, Jim Crow, World War II and the Cold War. Dozens of illustrations and photographs enhance this stunning work that celebrates African American artistic and intellectual achievement in writing. Professor Jackson teaches English and African American Studies at Emory University.”

 

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“Kathleen Graber, assistant professor of English in the creative writing department at Virginia Commonwealth University, won the 2011 Literary Award for Poetry for The Eternal City. Graber’s book suggests the miraculous in ordinary human experience, exploring the interplay among the personal, historical, and philosophical.”

With an epigraph from Freud comparing the mind to a landscape in which all that ever was still persists, The Eternal City offers eloquent testimony to the struggle to make sense of the present through conversation with the past. Questioning what it means to possess and to be possessed by objects and technologies, Kathleen Graber’s collection brings together the elevated and the quotidian to make neighbors of Marcus Aurelius, Klaus Kinski, Walter Benjamin, and Johnny Depp. Like Aeneas, who escapes Troy carrying his father on his back, the speaker of these intellectually and emotionally ambitious poems juggles the weight of private and public history as she is transformed from settled resident to pilgrim.

Some of Graber’s wonderful poems can be found online. The New Yorker published The Magic Kingdom in 2008 and The Drunkenness of Noah in 2010.

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Congratulations to Margaret Cohen, whose book The Novel and the Sea has won the 2012 Barbara and George Perkins Prize from The International Society for the Study of Narrative. The prize is awarded to the book making the most significant contribution to the study of narrative in a given year.

“This book is bracing and exciting, an adventure in its own right. It skillfully makes its compelling case about the role played by maritime craft in the history of the adventure novel, and about the role played by adventure in the literary realm more generally. It will provoke thought, argument, and revision of some long-held truisms, especially about the importance of the novel of manners, and of psychological realism in prose forms of the modern West.”–John Plotz, Brandeis University

 

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Margot Canaday’s brilliant book The Straight State: Sexuality and Citizenship in Twentieth-Century America has won the 2012 Order of the Coif Biennial Book Award.

“The Order of the Coif is an honorary scholastic society the purpose of which is to encourage excellence in legal education by fostering a spirit of careful study, recognizing those who as law students attained a high grade of scholarship, and honoring those who as lawyers, judges and teachers attained high distinction for their scholarly or professional accomplishments.”

This is Margot Canaday’s SEVENTH award for The Straight State. Some of the other accolades include the 2011 John Boswell Prize, the 2010 Cromwell Book Prize, the Lora Romero First Book Publication Prize, the Gladys M. Kammerer Award, and the Lambda Literary Award for LGBT Studies.

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A whopping 27 PUP titles have been named CHOICE “Outstanding Academic Titles” 2011by CHOICE Magazine!

“This year’s Outstanding Academic Title list includes 629 books and electronic resources chosen by the Choice editorial staff from among the 7,263 titles reviewed by Choice during the past year. Of these, 600 are print products; the remaining 29 are electronic. These outstanding works have been selected for their excellence in scholarship and presentation, the significance of their contribution to the field, and their value as important–often the first–treatment of their subject.”

The complete list of PUP titles on the CHOICE list:

Auden, W. H. (Jacobs, ed.) THE AGE OF ANXIETY

Bálazs, Béla (Zipes, transl.) THE CLOAK OF DREAMS

Casson, Douglas, John LIBERATING JUDGMENT

Cole, Michael W. AMBITIOUS FORM

Dayan, Colin THE LAW IS A WHITE DOG

Fried, Michael THE MOMENT OF CARAVAGGIO

Galor, Oded UNIFIED GROWTH THEORY

Hagan, John WHO ARE THE CRIMINALS?

Heilman, Samuel C. THE REBBE
and Menachem M. Friedman

Humphrey, Nicholas SOUL DUST

Hyman, Louis DEBTOR NATION

Ikenberry, G. John LIBERAL LEVIATHAN

Jayawardhana, Ray STRANGE NEW WORLDS

Lepore, Jill THE WHITES OF THEIR EYES

Mattison, Chris FROGS AND TOADS OF THE WORLD

Paul, Gregory S. THE PRINCETON FIELD GUIDE TO DINOSAURS

Schmitz, Oswald J. RESOLVING ECOSYSTEM COMPLEXITY

Sejersted, Francis THE AGE OF SOCIAL DEMOCRACY
(Adams, ed., Daly, transl.)

Shapiro, Ian (et al.) THE REAL WORLD OF DEMOCRATIC THEORY

Thagard, Paul THE BRAIN AND THE MEANING OF LIFE

Trubowitz, Peter POLITICS AND STRATEGY

Tyler, Tom R. WHY PEOPLE COOPERATE

Vendler, Helen LAST LOOKS, LAST BOOKS

Wasley, Aidan THE AGE OF AUDEN

Weintraub, David A. HOW OLD IS THE UNIVERSE?

Wendel, W. Bradley LAWYERS AND FIDELITY TO LAW

Willmer, Pat POLLINATION AND FLORAL ECOLOGY

Special congratulations to Colin Dayan and Louis Hyman whose respective books The Law is a White Dog: How Legal Rituals Make and Unmake Persons and Debtor Nation: The History of America in Red Ink have been given the additional distinction of being in the “Top 25 Books For 2011.”

 

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Dec
22
2011

Let’s talk about wine

It’s always nice to know someone who knows something about wine. With the holidays just around the corner, we decided to tap our own James Simpson, author of the recently released Creating Wine: The Emergence of a World Industry 1840-1914, for his holiday wine memories, tips, and historical expertise. He’s exactly who you’d want to have handy when you’re puzzling over whether sherry goes with turkey, or how to avoid looking like a slouch if you happen to be raising your glass in Barcelona. Enjoy:

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Congratulations to Lawrence P. Jackson, whose book The Indignant Generation: A Narrative History of African American Writers and Critics, 1934–1960 is picking up accolades left and right. The book has won the 2011 William Sanders Scarborough Prize from the Modern Language Association, which recognizes “an outstanding scholarly study of black American literature or culture.”

“In this magisterial narrative history of African American literature running from the end of the Harlem Renaissance to the beginning of the civil rights period, Lawrence P. Jackson expands the archive for assessing African American writing during a period that has often been reduced to protest writing. Jackson places writers into fresh contexts of cohorts (critics and editors included) and threads a clear narrative line through three heady decades jam-packed with African American authors publishing in a variety of genres and venues. Jackson is excellent on the important influence of the Communist Party, on mid-twentieth-century black literary culture, and on issues of publishing and reception. Beautifully written and rich in historical detail, The Indignant Generation should quickly become a standard work in twentieth-century African American studies and United States publishing history.”

Jackson’s work is also a finalist for the 2011 Hurston/Wright Legacy Award for Nonfiction, from the Hurston/Wright Foundation.

“The Hurston/Wright Legacy Award™ is the first national award presented to published writers of African descent by the national community of Black writers. This award consists of prizes for the highest quality writing in the categories of Fiction, Nonfiction, Poetry.”

 

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Olivier Zunz, author of Philanthropy in America, will be speaking at Zócalo Public Square on January 17th at the Goethe-Institut of Los Angeles:

“Charity has been around for as long as humankind, but philanthropy as we know it is much younger. Launched by titans like Andrew Carnegie and enshrined in the U.S. tax code, philanthropy in America is big business—as well-funded, by some measurements, as the Pentagon. While non-political in principle, philanthropy strongly influences politics and public policy, and government views the nonprofit sector as both a partner and a competitor. But is the sway of philanthropy good for society? Or are charities just one more way for the contributors to achieve their agendas? University of Virginia historian Olivier Zunz, author of Philanthropy in America: A History, visits Zócalo to explore the origins of modern American philanthropy—and whether its power is a good thing.”

More information can be found at the Zócalo Public Square website, and feel free to RSVP to the Facebook event!

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Elizabeth Popp Berman, author of Creating the Market University: How Academic Science Became an Economic Engine, has won the 2011 President’s Book Award from the Social Science History Association. This award recognizes “an especially meritorious first work by a beginning scholar.”

Daniel Carpenter, who wrote Reputation and Power: Organizational Image and Pharmaceutical Regulation at the FDA, has won the SSHA’s 2011 Allan Sharlin Memorial Award for “an outstanding book in social science history published in the previous year.”

Congratulations to both authors on their fantastic achievements!

 

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Congratulations to Edwidge Danticat, author of Create Dangerously: The Immigrant Artist at Work, who has been honored with the 2011 Langston Hughes Medal from City College of New York. The award recognizes the body of Danticat’s work.

“The Langston Hughes Medal is awarded to highly distinguished writers from throughout the African American diaspora for their distinguished contributions to the arts and letters. Among past recipients of this award are James Baldwin, Gwendolyn Brooks, Toni Cade Bambara, Paule Marshall, Toni Morrison, Ralph W. Ellison, Alice Walker, Maya Angelou, August Wilson, Chinua Achebe, Derek Walcott, and Octavia Butler, to name a few.”

Here is a video of a Q&A with the author at the 2011 Langston Hughes Festival:

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Foreign Policy has just released a list of the “Top 100 Global Thinkers” for 2011, and four PUP authors have made the cut!

#25 Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, authors of This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly.

“They told us so. For years before the crash, economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff presciently sketched out just how bad the global credit crunch could become based on their groundbreaking study of eight centuries of financial crises — the work that culminated in the publication of their bestselling 2009 book, This Time Is Different. In their study, the two found that in all the crises, “excessive debt accumulation … often poses greater systemic risks than it seems during a boom.”

#43 Saskia Sassen, author of The Global City: New York, London, Tokyo.

“This year’s political upheavals have been as much about cities as countries. From Cairo’s Tahrir Square to London’s Tottenham, we’ve seen vivid illustrations of how urban spaces can shape social movements. Saskia Sassen, an academic guru who famously coined the term “global city,” has been very much part of the conversation, arguing that the same melting-pot factors that make cities drivers of capitalism can also make them highly unstable. “The poor in Britain, living next to enclaves of wealth and privilege, chose street riots to deliver their message,” she wrote.”

#44 David Scheffer, author of All the Missing Souls: A Personal History of the War Crimes Tribunals. Foreign Policy applauds Scheffer for demanding that war criminals be held accountable.

Congratulations to these four authors, alongside the other great thinkers and writers on this list!

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Dr. Leora Batnitzky, author of “How Judaism Became a Religion: An Introduction to Modern Jewish Thought” will be giving a lecture tomorrow night at Drexel University.

 

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