August 28th, 2011

$29.95
ISBN-13: 9780691151236
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Princeton University Press, 8/2011

Pragmatism and its consequences are central issues in American politics today, yet scholars rarely examine in detail the relationship between pragmatism and politics. In "The Priority of Democracy," Jack Knight and James Johnson systematically explore the subject and make a strong case for adopting a pragmatist approach to democratic politics--and for giving priority to democracy in the process of selecting and reforming political institutions.

What is the primary value of democracy? When should we make decisions democratically and when should we rely on markets? And when should we accept the decisions of unelected officials, such as judges or bureaucrats? Knight and Johnson explore how a commitment to pragmatism should affect our answers to such important questions. They conclude that democracy is a good way of determining how these kinds of decisions should be made--even if what the democratic process determines is that not all decisions should be made democratically. So, for example, the democratically elected U.S. Congress may legitimately remove monetary policy from democratic decision-making by putting it under the control of the Federal Reserve.

Knight and Johnson argue that pragmatism offers an original and compelling justification of democracy in terms of the unique contributions democratic institutions can make to processes of institutional choice. This focus highlights the important role that democracy plays, not in achieving consensus or commonality, but rather in addressing conflicts. Indeed, Knight and Johnson suggest that democratic politics is perhaps best seen less as a way of reaching consensus or agreement than as a way of structuring the terms of persistent disagreement.


$19.95
ISBN-13: 9780674049277
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Published: Harvard University Press, 9/2011

How can an academic who does not believe evil spirits cause illness harbor the hope that her cancer may be cured by a healer who enters a trance to battle her demons? Whose actions are more (or less) honorable: those of a prostitute who sells her daughter’s virginity to a rich man, or those of a professor who sanctions her daughter’s hook-ups with casual acquaintances? As they immerse themselves in foreign cultures and navigate the relationships that take shape, the authors of these essays, most of them trained anthropologists, find that accepting cultural difference is one thing, experiencing it is quite another. In tales that entertain as much as they illuminate, these writers show how the moral and intellectual challenges of living cross-culturally revealed to them the limits of their perception and understanding.

Their insights were gained only after discomforts resulting mainly from the authors’ own blunders in the field. From Brazil to Botswana, Egypt to Indonesia, Mongolia to Pakistan, mistakes were made. Offering a gift to a Navajo man at the beginning of an interview, rather than the end, caused one author to lose his entire research project. In Côte d’Ivoire, a Western family was targeted by the village madman, leading the parents to fear for the safety of their child even as they suspected that their very presence had triggered his madness. At a time when misunderstanding of cultural difference is an undeniable source of conflict, we need stories like these more than ever before.


$16.00
ISBN-13: 9780385531184
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Published: Spiegel & Grau, 8/2011

#1 INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER

TRANSLATED INTO 23 LANGUAGES, WITH MORE THAN ONE MILLION COPIES SOLD
 
What is truth? What is love? Does life have meaning? Bestselling author Richard David Precht, “the Mick Jagger of the nonfiction book” (Tagesanzeiger Zürich), has traveled the globe searching for answers—and his odyssey has become one of the most talked-about books around the world. Combining classic philosophy and cutting-edge neuroscience, Precht guides readers through the thickest jungles of academic discourse with the greatest of ease, taking on subjects as challenging and divisive as abortion, cloning, the eating of animals, euthanasia, the ethics of reproductive science, and the very future of humanity.

Who knows? By the end of this wildly entertaining journey, you just might be able to answer, Who Am I?


$21.00
ISBN-13: 9781906497873
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Seagull Books, 5/2011
To grow up is to grow old. With time, great love can turn into indifference. And even the most earnest revolution can imperceptibly become its own system of privilege and corruption - just as global warming has slowly modified the climate by degrees. These are examples of the kind of quiet, unseen changes that Francois Jullien examines in "The Silent Transformations", in which he compares Western and Eastern - specifically Chinese - ways of thinking about time and processes of change. Jullien argues that our failure to notice the effects of cumulative changes over time is due to Western thought's foundations in classical Greek philosophies of being, which encourage thinking in terms of determined forms and neglect the indeterminable nature of the transition taking place. In contrast, Chinese thought, having a greater sense of the fluidity of life, provides a more flexible way of understanding everyday transformations and offers insightful perspectives from which to consider our relation to history and nature. In particular, a Chinese approach, argues Jullien, allows us to discover that there may be occasions when it is more efficacious to yield to situations than to confront them head-on. In "The Silent Transformations", Jullien resituates Western philosophy by examining it in the light of traditions of thought that have developed from fundamentally different concepts and contexts. Jullien here opens a space for a new way of thinking, and this refreshing book will stimulate the interest of scholars in both Western and Eastern philosophy.

$16.00
ISBN-13: 9780262516471
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Published: Bradford Book, 8/2011
While philosophers of mind have been arguing over the status of mentalrepresentations in cognitive science, cognitive scientists have been quietly engagedin studying perception, action, and cognition without explaining them in terms ofmental representation. In this book, Anthony Chemero describes thisnonrepresentational approach (which he terms radical embodied cognitive science), puts it in historical and conceptual context, and applies it to traditional problemsin the philosophy of mind. Radical embodied cognitive science is a direct descendantof the American naturalist psychology of William James and John Dewey, and followsthem in viewing perception and cognition to be understandable only in terms ofaction in the environment. Chemero argues that cognition should be described interms of agent-environment dynamics rather than in terms of computation andrepresentation. After outlining this orientation to cognition, Chemero proposes amethodology: dynamical systems theory, which would explain things dynamically andwithout reference to representation. He also advances a background theory: Gibsonianecological psychology, "shored up" and clarified. Chemero then looks atsome traditional philosophical problems (reductionism, epistemological skepticism, metaphysical realism, consciousness) through the lens of radical embodied cognitivescience and concludes that the comparative ease with which it resolves theseproblems, combined with its empirical promise, makes this approach to cognitivescience a rewarding one. "Jerry Fodor is my favorite philosopher," Chemerowrites in his preface, adding, "I think that Jerry Fodor is wrong about nearlyeverything." With this book, Chemero explains nonrepresentational, dynamical, ecological cognitive science as clearly and as rigorously as Jerry Fodor explainedcomputational cognitive science in his classic work The Language ofThought.

$20.00
ISBN-13: 9780300177527
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Published: Yale University Press, 9/2011
Debates about academic freedom have become increasingly fierce and frequent. Legislative efforts to regulate American professors proliferate across the nation. Although most American scholars desire to protect academic freedom, they have only a vague and uncertain apprehension of its basic principles and structure. This book offers a concise explanation of the history and meaning of American academic freedom and it attempts to intervene into contemporary debates by clarifying the fundamental functions and purposes of academic freedom in America. Matthew Finkin and Robert Post trace how the American conception of academic freedom was first systematically articulated in 1915 by the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) and how this conception was in subsequent years elaborated and applied by a Committee of the AAUP. The authors discuss the four primary dimensions of academic freedom: research and publication, teaching, intramural speech, and extramural speech. They carefully distinguish academic freedom from the kind of individual free speech right that is created by the First Amendment. The authors strongly argue that academic freedom protects the capacity of a faculty to pursue the scholar's profession according to the standards of that profession.

$39.95
ISBN-13: 9780674055445
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Published: Belknap Press, 9/2011

Perhaps no one in the twentieth century had a greater long-term impact on world history than Deng Xiaoping. And no scholar of contemporary East Asian history and culture is better qualified than Ezra Vogel to disentangle the many contradictions embodied in the life and legacy of China's boldest strategist.

Once described by Mao Zedong as a "needle inside a ball of cotton," Deng was the pragmatic yet disciplined driving force behind China's radical transformation in the late twentieth century. He confronted the damage wrought by the Cultural Revolution, dissolved Mao's cult of personality, and loosened the economic and social policies that had stunted China's growth. Obsessed with modernization and technology, Deng opened trade relations with the West, which lifted hundreds of millions of his countrymen out of poverty. Yet at the same time he answered to his authoritarian roots, most notably when he ordered the crackdown in June 1989 at Tiananmen Square.

Deng's youthful commitment to the Communist Party was cemented in Paris in the early 1920s, among a group of Chinese student-workers that also included Zhou Enlai. Deng returned home in 1927 to join the Chinese Revolution on the ground floor. In the fifty years of his tumultuous rise to power, he endured accusations, purges, and even exile before becoming China's preeminent leader from 1978 to 1989 and again in 1992. When he reached the top, Deng saw an opportunity to creatively destroy much of the economic system he had helped build for five decades as a loyal follower of Mao--and he did not hesitate.


$21.00
ISBN-13: 9781906497903
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Published: Seagull Books, 3/2011

On June 20, 2009, during demonstrations to protest the contested and controversial Iranian presidential election, a young girl named Neda Agha-Soltan was shot to death in the streets of Tehran. Within hours, the video footage of her death, captured on a roving camera-phone, had circled the globe. It was also the moment of choice for Arash Hejazi—a writer who had originally trained as a doctor—who tried and failed to save Neda’s life. Within days Hejazi left Iran to tell the world the story the government was denying: Neda had died at the hands of the pro-government militia.  The Gaze of the Gazelle is Hejazi’s personal story of how that tragedy came to be and how it will change the course of politics in Iran for a new generation.

 
In a tale that mingles politics and the personal, mythology and history, Hejazi tries to answer the question: How did it come to this? His quest for an answer leads him through the story of the decades long aftermath of the Iranian Revolution, when Ayatollah Khomeini was brought back from exile to drive the Shah from his throne and set up the Islamic Republic of Iran.

 

 

Against the background of Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Iran and the prolonged war that followed, Hejazi skillfully interweaves his own story and those of his family and friends with the machinations of the mullahs and politicians who seek to control Iranian lives. This timely, moving, and eloquent book describes the determination of a new generation to recover hope in the name of Neda, who gave her life in pursuit of a freer and better world.


$16.00
ISBN-13: 9780300150377
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Published: Yale University Press, 9/2011

In this surprising and highly unconventional work, Harvard law professor Mark Tushnet poses a seemingly simple question that yields a thoroughly unexpected answer. The Constitution matters, he argues, not because it structures our government but because it structures our politics. He maintains that politicians and political parties—not Supreme Court decisions—are the true engines of constitutional change in our system. This message will empower all citizens who use direct political action to define and protect our rights and liberties as Americans.

Unlike legal scholars who consider the Constitution only as a blueprint for American democracy, Tushnet focuses on the ways it serves as a framework for political debate. Each branch of government draws substantive inspiration and procedural structure from the Constitution but can effect change only when there is the political will to carry it out. Tushnet’s political understanding of the Constitution therefore does not demand that citizens pore over the specifics of each Supreme Court decision in order to improve our nation. Instead, by providing key facts about Congress, the president, and the nature of the current constitutional regime, his book reveals not only why the Constitution matters to each of us but also, and perhaps more important, how it matters.


$20.00
ISBN-13: 9780262516488
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Published: MIT Press (MA), 8/2011
Historians of mathematics have devoted considerable attention to IsaacNewton's work on algebra, series, fluxions, quadratures, and geometry. In IsaacNewton on Mathematical Certainty and Method, Niccol? Guicciardini examines acritical aspect of Newton's work that has not been tightly connected to Newton'sactual practice: his philosophy of mathematics. Newton aimed to inject certaintyinto natural philosophy by deploying mathematical reasoning (titling his main workThe Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy most probably to highlight a starkcontrast to Descartes's Principles of Philosophy). To that end he paid concertedattention to method, particularly in relation to the issue of certainty, participating in contemporary debates on the subject and elaborating his ownanswers. Guicciardini shows how Newton carefully positioned himself against twogiants in the "common" and "new" analysis, Descartes andLeibniz. Although his work was in many ways disconnected from the traditions ofGreek geometry, Newton portrayed himself as antiquity's legitimate heir, therebydistancing himself from the moderns. Guicciardini reconstructs Newton's own methodby extracting it from his concrete practice and not solely by examining his broaderstatements about such matters. He examines the full range of Newton's works, fromhis early treatises on series and fluxions to the late writings, which were producedin direct opposition to Leibniz. The complex interactions between Newton'sunderstanding of method and his mathematical work then reveal themselves throughGuicciardini's careful analysis of selected examples. Isaac Newton on MathematicalCertainty and Method uncovers what mathematics was for Newton, and what being amathematician meant to him.

$27.95
ISBN-13: 9780674048553
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Published: Belknap Press, 9/2011

Standing on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on August 28, 1963, a century after the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation, Martin Luther King, Jr., declared, “One hundred years later, the Negro still is not free.” He delivered this speech just three years after the Virginia Civil War Commission published a guide proclaiming that “the Centennial is no time for finding fault or placing blame or fighting the issues all over again.”

David Blight takes his readers back to the centennial celebration to determine how Americans then made sense of the suffering, loss, and liberation that had wracked the United States a century earlier. Amid cold war politics and civil rights protest, four of America’s most incisive writers explored the gulf between remembrance and reality. Robert Penn Warren, the southern-reared poet-novelist who recanted his support of segregation; Bruce Catton, the journalist and U.S. Navy officer who became a popular Civil War historian; Edmund Wilson, the century’s preeminent literary critic; and James Baldwin, the searing African-American essayist and activist—each exposed America’s triumphalist memory of the war. And each, in his own way, demanded a reckoning with the tragic consequences it spawned.

Blight illuminates not only mid-twentieth-century America’s sense of itself but also the dynamic, ever-changing nature of Civil War memory. On the eve of the 150th anniversary of the war, we have an invaluable perspective on how this conflict continues to shape the country’s political debates, national identity, and sense of purpose.


$13.99
ISBN-13: 9780061875687
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Published: HarperOne, 9/2011

Every Sunday, the Lord’s Prayer echoes in churches around the world.

It is an indisputable principle of Christian faith. It is the way Jesus taught his followers to pray and distills the most essential beliefs required of every one of the world’s 2.5 billion Christians. In The Greatest Prayer, our foremost Jesus scholar explores this foundational prayer line by line for the richest and fullest understanding of a prayer every Christian knows by heart.

An expert on the historical Jesus, Crossan provides just the right amount of history, scholarship, and detail for us to rediscover why this seemingly simple prayer sparked a revolution. Addressing issues of God’s will for us and our response, our responsibilities to one another and to the earth, the theology of our daily bread, the moral responsibilities that come with money, our nation-states, and God’s kingdom, Crossan reveals the enduring meaning and universal significance of the only prayer Jesus ever taught.


$16.99
ISBN-13: 9780062067630
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Published: Ecco, 8/2011

Inmore than forty essays and articles that range from Paris to Ceylon, Thailand to Kenya, and, of course, Morocco, the great twen-tieth-century American writer encapsulates his long and full life, and sheds light on his brilliant fiction. Whether he’s recalling the cold-water artists’ flats of Paris’s Left Bank or the sun-worshipping eccentrics of Tangier, Paul Bowles imbues every piece with a deep intelligence and the acute perspective of his rich experience of the world. Woven throughout are photographs from the renowned author’s private archive, which place him, his wife, the writer Jane Bowles, and their many friends and compatriots in the landscapes his essays bring so vividly to life.

With an introduction by Paul Theroux and a chronology by Daniel Halpern


$19.00
ISBN-13: 9780262516518
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Published: MIT Press (MA), 8/2011
A video game is half-real: we play by real rules while imagining afictional world. We win or lose the game in the real world, but we slay a dragon(for example) only in the world of the game. In this thought-provoking study, JesperJuul examines the constantly evolving tension between rules and fiction in videogames. Discussing games from Pong to The Legend of Zelda, from chess to Grand TheftAuto, he shows how video games are both a departure from and a development oftraditional non-electronic games. The book combines perspectives from such fields asliterary and film theory, computer science, psychology, economic game theory, andgame studies, to outline a theory of what video games are, how they work with theplayer, how they have developed historically, and why they are fun to play.Locatingvideo games in a history of games that goes back to Ancient Egypt, Juul argues thatthere is a basic affinity between games and computers. Just as the printing pressand the cinema have promoted and enabled new kinds of storytelling, computers workas enablers of games, letting us play old games in new ways and allowing for newkinds of games that would not have been possible before computers. Juul presents aclassic game model, which describes the traditional construction of games and pointsto possible future developments. He examines how rules provide challenges, learning, and enjoyment for players, and how a game cues the player into imagining itsfictional world. Juul's lively style and eclectic deployment of sources will makeHalf-Real of interest to media, literature, and game scholars as well as to gameprofessionals and gamers.

$20.00
ISBN-13: 9780262516600
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: MIT Press (MA), 8/2011

Recent years have seen a series of intense, increasingly acrimoniousdebates over the status and legitimacy of the natural sciences. These "sciencewars" take place in the public arena--with current battles over evolution andglobal warming--and in academia, where assumptions about scientific objectivity havebeen called into question. Given these hostilities, what makes a scientific claimmerit our consideration? In Cogent Science in Context, William Rehg examines whatmakes scientific arguments cogent--that is, strong and convincing--and how we shouldassess that cogency. Drawing on the tools of argumentation theory, Rehg proposes amultidimensional, context-sensitive framework both for understanding the cogency ofscientific arguments and for conducting cooperative interdisciplinary assessments ofthe cogency of actual scientific arguments. Rehg closely examines J?rgen Habermas'sargumentation theory and its implications for understanding cogency, applying it toa case from high-energy physics. A series of problems, however, beset Habermas'sapproach. In response, Rehg outlines his own "critical contextualist"approach, which uses argumentation-theory categories in a new and morecontext-sensitive way inspired by ethnography of science.


$19.00
ISBN-13: 9780262516631
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Published: MIT Press (MA), 8/2011
In Without Criteria, Steven Shaviro proposes and explores a philosophicalfantasy: imagine a world in which Alfred North Whitehead takes the place of MartinHeidegger. What if Whitehead, instead of Heidegger, had set the agenda forpostmodern thought? Heidegger asks, "Why is there something, rather thannothing?" Whitehead asks, "How is it that there is always somethingnew?" In a world where everything from popular music to DNA is being sampledand recombined, argues Shaviro, Whitehead's question is the truly urgent one.Without Criteria is Shaviro's experiment in rethinking postmodern theory, especiallythe theory of aesthetics, from a point of view that hearkens back to Whiteheadrather than Heidegger. Shaviro does this largely by reading Whitehead in conjunctionwith Gilles Deleuze, finding important resonances and affinities between them, suggesting both a Deleuzian reading of Whitehead and a Whiteheadian reading ofDeleuze. In working through the ideas of Whitehead and Deleuze, Shaviro also appealsto Kant, arguing that certain aspects of Kant's thought pave the way for thephilosophical "constructivism" embraced by both Whitehead and Deleuze.Kant, Whitehead, and Deleuze are not commonly grouped together, but thejuxtaposition of them in Without Criteria helps to shed light on a variety of issuesthat are of concern to contemporary art and media practices (especially developmentsin digital film and video), and to controversies in cultural theory (includingquestions about commodity fetishism and about immanence and transcendence).Moreover, in his rereading of Whitehead (and in deliberate contrast to the"ethical turn" in much recent theoretical discourse), Shaviro opens thepossibility of a critical aesthetics of contemporary culture.

$27.95
ISBN-13: 9780307266286
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Knopf, 8/2011

A panoramic yet intimate history of the American left—of the reformers, radicals, and idealists who have fought for a more just and humane society, from the abolitionists to Michael Moore and Noam Chomsky—that gives us a revelatory new way of looking at two centuries of American politics and culture.

Michael Kazin—one of the most respected historians of the American left working today—takes us from abolitionism and early feminism to the labor struggles of the industrial age, through the emergence of anarchists, socialists, and communists, right up to the New Left in the 1960s and ’70s. While the history of the left is a long story of idealism and determination, it has also been, in the traditional view, a story of movements that failed to gain support from mainstream America. In American Dreamers, Kazin tells a new history: one in which many of these movements, although they did not fully succeed on their own terms, nonetheless made lasting contributions to American society that led to equal opportunity for women, racial minorities, and homosexuals; the celebration of sexual pleasure; multiculturalism in the media and the schools; and the popularity of books and films with altruistic and antiauthoritarian messages.

Deeply informed, at once judicious and impassioned, and superbly written, American Dreamers is an essential book for our times and for anyone seeking to understand our political history and the people who made it.


$22.00
ISBN-13: 9780307700001
Availability: Not Currently In Stock at Our Stores
Published: Knopf, 8/2011

Julie Otsuka’s long awaited follow-up to When the Emperor Was Divine (“To watch Emperor catching on with teachers and students in vast numbers is to grasp what must have happened at the outset for novels like Lord of the Flies and To Kill a Mockingbird” —The New York Times) is a tour de force of economy and precision, a novel that tells the story of a group of young women brought over from Japan to San Francisco as ‘picture brides’ nearly a century ago.

In eight incantatory sections, The Buddha in the Attic traces their extraordinary lives, from their arduous journey by boat, where they exchange photographs of their husbands, imagining uncertain futures in an unknown land; to their arrival in San Francisco and their tremulous first nights as new wives; to their backbreaking work picking fruit in the fields and scrubbing the floors of white women; to their struggles to master a new language and a new culture; to their experiences in childbirth, and then as mothers, raising children who will ultimately reject their heritage and their history; to the deracinating arrival of war.

In language that has the force and the fury of poetry, Julie Otsuka has written a singularly spellbinding novel about the American dream.


$25.00
ISBN-13: 9780816676132
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Published: Univ Of Minnesota Press, 7/2011

Today’s American cities and suburbs are the sites of “thick injustice”—unjust power relations that are deeply and densely concentrated as well as opaque and seemingly intractable. Thick injustice is hard to see, to assign responsibility for, and to change.

Identifying these often invisible and intransigent problems, this volume addresses foundational questions about what justice requires in the contemporary metropolis. Essays focus on inequality within and among cities and suburbs; articulate principles for planning, redevelopment, and urban political leadership; and analyze the connection between metropolitan justice and institutional design. In a world that is progressively more urbanized, and yet no clearer on issues of fairness and equality, this book points the way to a metropolis in which social justice figures prominently in any definition of success.

Contributors: Susan S. Fainstein, Harvard U; Richard Thompson Ford, Stanford U; Gerald Frug, Harvard U; Loren King, Wilfrid Laurier U; Margaret Kohn, U of Toronto; Stephen Macedo, Princeton U; Douglas W. Rae, Yale U; Clarence N. Stone, George Washington U; Margaret Weir, U of California, Berkeley; Thad Williamson, U of Richmond.


$19.00
ISBN-13: 9780857420039
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Seagull Books, 5/2011

These essays by Petra Christine Hardt, head of the rights department at esteemed German publisher Suhrkamp Verlag, offer unique and informed insight into day-to-day practices in the rights and permissions departments of publishing houses. Hardt also addresses key underlying and practical issues, such as the protection of intellectual property, the length of copyright, contract duration, and the appropriate royalty rates for authors.

 

Rights is an essential plea for contractual values that foster a long-term relationship between an author and his or her publisher. Hardt is focused on balancing the needs of the author with the economic fundamentals of the publishing industry. Her essays include discourses on acquiring, securing, and distributing the rights to a work, the challenges posed by literary agencies, and the growing significance of the Internet as a global marketplace for copyrighted works. Critical examination of these issues is accompanied by realistic proposals for their solution, making this book the perfect reference not only for publishers but also for editors and authors.


$30.00
ISBN-13: 9780262015899
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: MIT Press (MA), 8/2011
Today on almost every desk in every office sits a computer. Eighty yearsago, desktops were equipped with a nonelectronic data processing machine: a cardfile. In Paper Machines, Markus Krajewski traces the evolution of thisproto-computer of rearrangeable parts (file cards) that became ubiquitous in officesbetween the world wars. The story begins with Konrad Gessner, a sixteenth-centurySwiss polymath who described a new method of processing data: to cut up a sheet ofhandwritten notes into slips of paper, with one fact or topic per slip, and arrangeas desired. In the late eighteenth century, the card catalog became the librarian'sanswer to the threat of information overload. Then, at the turn of the twentiethcentury, business adopted the technology of the card catalog as a bookkeeping tool.Krajewski explores this conceptual development and casts the card file as a"universal paper machine" that accomplishes the basic operations ofTuring's universal discrete machine: storing, processing, and transferring data. Intelling his story, Krajewski takes the reader on a number of illuminating detours, telling us, for example, that the card catalog and the numbered street addressemerged at the same time in the same city (Vienna), and that Harvard University'shome-grown cataloging system grew out of a librarian's laziness; and that MelvilDewey (originator of the Dewey Decimal System) helped bring about the technologytransfer of card files to business.

Modernism (Hardcover)

$40.00
ISBN-13: 9780300111736
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Yale University Press, 6/2011

In this wide-ranging and original account of Modernism, Michael Levenson draws on more than twenty years of research and a career-long fascination with the movement, its participants, and the period during which it thrived. Seeking a more subtle understanding of the relations between the period's texts and contexts, he provides not only an excellent survey but also a significant reassessment of Modernism itself.

Spanning many decades, illuminating individual achievements and locating them within the intersecting histories of experiment (Symbolism to Surrealism, Naturalism to Expressionism, Futurism to Dadaism), the book places the transformations of culture alongside the agitations of modernity (war, revolution, feminism, psychoanalysis). In this perspective, Modernism must be understood more broadly than simply in terms of its provocative works, experimental forms, and singular careers. Rather, as Levenson demonstrates, Modernism should be viewed as the emergence of an adversary culture of the New that depended on audiences as well as artists, enemies as well as supporters.


$35.00
ISBN-13: 9781400061259
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Random House, 8/2011

From a master chronicler of Spanish history comes a magnificent work about the pivotal years from 1522 to 1566, when Spain was the greatest European power. Hugh Thomas has written a rich and riveting narrative of exploration, progress, and plunder. At its center is the unforgettable ruler who fought the French and expanded the Spanish empire, and the bold conquistadors who were his agents. Thomas brings to life King Charles V—first as a gangly and easygoing youth, then as a liberal statesman who exceeded all his predecessors in his ambitions for conquest (while making sure to maintain the humanity of his new subjects in the Americas), and finally as a besieged Catholic leader obsessed with Protestant heresy and interested only in profiting from those he presided over.

The Golden Empire also presents the legendary men whom King Charles V sent on perilous and unprecedented expeditions: Hernán Cortés, who ruled the “New Spain” of Mexico as an absolute monarch—and whose rebuilding of its capital, Tenochtitlan, was Spain’s greatest achievement in the sixteenth century; Francisco Pizarro, who set out with fewer than two hundred men for Peru, infamously executed the last independent Inca ruler, Atahualpa, and was finally murdered amid intrigue; and Hernando de Soto, whose glittering journey to settle land between Rio de la Palmas in Mexico and the southernmost keys of Florida ended in disappointment and death. Hugh Thomas reveals as never before their torturous journeys through jungles, their brutal sea voyages amid appalling storms and pirate attacks, and how a cash-hungry Charles backed them with loans—and bribes—obtained from his German banking friends.

A sweeping, compulsively readable saga of kings and conquests, armies and armadas, dominance and power, The Golden Empire is a crowning achievement of the Spanish world’s foremost historian.


Come, Thief: Poems (Hardcover)

$25.00
ISBN-13: 9780307595423
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Knopf, 8/2011

A revelatory, indispensable collection of poems from Jane Hirshfield that centers on beauty, time, and the full embrace of an existence that time cannot help but steal from our arms.

Hirshfield is unsurpassed in her ability to sink into a moment’s essence and exchange something of herself with its finite music—and then, in seemingly simple, inevitable words, to deliver that exchange to us in poems that vibrate with form and expression perfectly united. Hirshfield’s poems of discovery, acknowledgment of the difficult, and praise turn always toward deepening comprehension. Here we encounter the stealth of feeling’s arrival (“as some strings, untouched, / sound when a near one is speaking. / So it was when love slipped inside us”), an anatomy of solitude (“wrong solitude vinegars the soul, / right solitude oils it”), a reflection on perishability and the sweetness its acceptance invites into our midst (“How suddenly then / the strange happiness took me, / like a man with strong hands and strong mouth”), and a muscular, unblindfolded awareness of our shared political and planetary fate.

To read these startlingly true poems is to find our own feelings eloquently ensnared. Whether delving into intimately familiar moments or bringing forward some experience until now outside words, Hirshfield finds for each face of our lives its metamorphosing portrait, its particular, memorable, singing and singular name.

Love in August

White moths
against the screen
in August darkness.

Some clamor
in envy.

Some spread large
as two hands
of a thief

who wants to put
back in your cupboard
the long-taken silver.


$27.95
ISBN-13: 9780307595904
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Knopf, 8/2011
“Every reader knows of writers who are like secrets one wants to keep, and whose books one wants to tell the world about. Millhauser is mine.”
—David Rollow, Boston Sunday Globe

From the Pulitzer Prize–winning author: the essential stories across three decades that showcase his indomitable imagination.
Steven Millhauser’s fiction has consistently, and to dazzling effect, dissolved the boundaries between reality and fantasy, waking life and dreams, the past and the future, darkness and light, love and lust. The stories gathered here unfurl in settings as disparate as nineteenth-century Vienna, a contemporary Connecticut town, the corridors of a monstrous museum, and Thomas Edison’s laboratory, and they are inhabited by a wide-ranging cast of characters, including a knife thrower and teenage boys, ghosts and a cartoon cat and mouse. But all of the stories are united in their unfailing power to surprise and enchant. From the earliest to the stunning, previously unpublished novella-length title story—in which a man who is dead, but not quite gone, reaches out to two lonely women—Millhauser in this magnificent collection carves out ever more deeply his wondrous place in the American literary canon.

$29.99
ISBN-13: 9781401230975
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Vertigo, 8/2011

In the latest deluxe FABLES hardcover, Little Red Riding Hood makes a dramatic reappearance, only to clash with Bigby Wolf.

Bill Willingham’s runaway hit series FABLES with this latest volume collecting the series in hardcover for the first time.

When Little Red Riding Hood suddenly walks through the gate between this world and the lost Fable Homelands, she’s welcomed as a miraculous survivor by nearly everyone – everyone except her old nemesis, Bigby Wolf, who smells espionage and subversion – not survival. But will he be able to prove his case before disaster strikes? And how will it all affect Prince Charming’s upstart campaign to become the new mayor of Fabletown?


Luminarium (Hardcover)

$25.00
ISBN-13: 9781569479759
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Soho Press, 8/2011

Fred Brounian and his twin brother, George, were once co-CEOs of a burgeoning New York City software company devoted to the creation of utopian virtual worlds. Now, in the summer of 2006, as two wars rage and the fifth anniversary of 9/11 approaches, George has fallen into a coma, control of the company has been wrenched away by a military contracting conglomerate, and Fred has moved back in with his parents. Broke and alone, he’s led by an attractive woman, Mira, into a neurological study promising to give him "peak" experiences and a newfound spiritual outlook on life. As the study progresses, lines between the subject and the experimenter blur, and reality becomes increasingly porous. Meanwhile, Fred finds himself caught up in what seems at first a cruel prank: a series of bizarre emails and texts that purport to be from his comatose brother.

Moving between the research hospitals of Manhattan, the streets of a meticulously planned Florida city, the neighborhoods of Brooklyn and the uncanny, immersive worlds of urban disaster simulation;  threading through military listserv geek-speak, Hindu cosmology, the maxims of outmoded self-help books and the latest neuroscientific breakthroughs, Luminarium is a brilliant examination of the way we live now, a novel that’s as much about the role technology and spirituality play in shaping our reality as it is about the undying bond between brothers, and the redemptive possibilities of love.

"Luminarium is dizzyingly smart and provocative, exploring as it does the state of the present, of technology, of what is real and what is ephemeral. But the thing that separates Luminarium from other books that discuss avatars, virtual reality and the like is that Alex Shakar is committed throughout with trying, relentlessly, to flat-out explain the meaning of life. This book is funny, and soulful, and very sad, but so intellectually invigorating that you'll want to read it twice." — Dave Eggers

"This fascinating, hilarious novel, though set in the past, is the story of the future: technology has outlapped us, reality is blinking on and off like a bad wireless connection,  the ones we love are nearby in one sense, but far away in another. Yet at the book’s galloping heart, it’s the story of what one man is willing to go through to find—in our crowded, second-rate space—something like faith. This novel is sharp, original, and full of energy—obviously the work of a brilliant mind.” — Deb Olin Unferth, author of Revolution: The Year I Fell in Love and Went to Join the War


$15.99
ISBN-13: 9780062037282
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: HarperOne, 8/2011

A Modern Manual for Sharing a Relevant, Vibrant, Enduring Faith

In the face of mounting obstacles, parents and educators find themselves increasingly challenged by the task of leading people toward lives of faith. Now Thomas Groome, a world-renowned authority on religious education, has created a contemporary, holistic approach to teaching Christian beliefs and values that offers real, effective solutions for today’s parents and teachers. His guide to religious education—which aims to “bring life to Faith and Faith to life”—is a hopeful road map for reenergizing the faith community and family from the bottom up.


$27.50
ISBN-13: 9780226326788
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: University Of Chicago Press, 8/2011
The rise of right-wing broadcasting during the Cold War has been mostly forgotten today. But in the 1950s and ’60s you could turn on your radio any time of the day and listen to diatribes against communism, civil rights, the United Nations, fluoridation, federal income tax, Social Security, or JFK, as well as hosannas praising Barry Goldwater and Jesus Christ. Half a century before the rise of Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck, these broadcasters bucked the FCC’s public interest mandate and created an alternate universe of right-wing political coverage, anticommunist sermons, and pro-business bluster.   A lively look back at this formative era, What’s Fair on the Air? charts the rise and fall of four of the most prominent right-wing broadcasters: H. L. Hunt, Dan Smoot, Carl McIntire, and Billy James Hargis. By the 1970s, all four had been hamstrung by the Internal Revenue Service, the FCC’s Fairness Doctrine, and the rise of a more effective conservative movement. But before losing their battle for the airwaves, Heather Hendershot reveals, they purveyed ideological notions that would eventually triumph, creating a potent brew of religion, politics, and dedication to free-market economics that paved the way for the rise of Ronald Reagan, the Moral Majority, Fox News, and the Tea Party.

$20.00
ISBN-13: 9780262516532
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: MIT Press (MA), 8/2011
In Critique and Disclosure, Nikolas Kompridis argues provocatively for aricher and more time-responsive critical theory. He calls for a shift in thenormative and critical emphasis of critical theory from the narrow concern withrules and procedures of J?rgen Habermas's model to a change-enabling disclosure ofpossibility and the enlargement of meaning. Kompridis contrasts two visions ofcritical theory's role and purpose in the world: one that restricts itself to thenormative clarification of the procedures by which moral and political questionsshould be settled and an alternative rendering that conceives of itself as apossibility-disclosing practice. At the center of this resituation of criticaltheory is a normatively reformulated interpretation of Martin Heidegger's idea of"disclosure" or "world disclosure." In this regard Kompridis reconnects criticaltheory to its normative and conceptual sources in the German philosophical traditionand sets it within a romantic tradition of philosophical critique.Drawing not onlyon his sustained critical engagement with the thought of Habermas and Heidegger butalso on the work of other philosophers including Wittgenstein, Cavell, Gadamer, andBenjamin, Kompridis argues that critical theory must, in light of modernity'stime-consciousness, understand itself as fully situated in its time--in anever-shifting and open-ended horizon of possibilities, to which it must respond bydisclosing alternative ways of thinking and acting. His innovative and originalargument will serve to move the debate over the future of critical studiesforward--beyond simple antinomies to a consideration of, as he puts it, "whatcritical theory should be if it is to have a future worthy of its past."

$30.00
ISBN-13: 9780262516556
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: MIT Press (MA), 8/2011
"Mathematics can be as effortless as humming a tune, if you know thetune," writes Gareth Loy. In Musimathics, Loy teaches us the tune, providing afriendly and spirited tour of the mathematics of music--a commonsense, self-contained introduction for the nonspecialist reader. It is designed formusicians who find their art increasingly mediated by technology, and for anyone whois interested in the intersection of art and science.In this volume, Loy presentsthe materials of music (notes, intervals, and scales); the physical properties ofmusic (frequency, amplitude, duration, and timbre); the perception of music andsound (how we hear); and music composition. Musimathics is carefully structured sothat new topics depend strictly on topics already presented, carrying the readerprogressively from basic subjects to more advanced ones. Cross-references point torelated topics and an extensive glossary defines commonly used terms. The bookexplains the mathematics and physics of music for the reader whose mathematics maynot have gone beyond the early undergraduate level. Calling himself "a composerseduced into mathematics," Loy provides answers to foundational questions about themathematics of music accessibly yet rigorously. The topics are all subjects thatcontemporary composers, musicians, and musical engineers have found to be important.The examples given are all practical problems in music and audio. The level ofscholarship and the pedagogical approach also make Musimathics ideal for classroomuse. Additional material can be found at a companion web site.

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