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July 2021 320 pages • 6 x 9 Paper • $30.00S(£23.99) 9781479808687 Cloth • $89.00X(£74.00) 9781479808663

Religion

June 2021 288 pages • 6 x 9 10 black & white illustrations Cloth • $45.00S(£37.00) 9781479803545

Religion | History ONE FAITH NO LONGER

The Transformation of Christianity in Red and Blue America GEORGE YANCEY and ASHLEE QUOSIGK

Irreconcilable differences drive the division between progressive and conservative Christians—is there a divorce coming?

Much attention has been paid to political polarization in America, but far less to the growing schism between progressive and conservative Christians. In this groundbreaking new book, George Yancey and Ashlee Quosigk offer the provocative contention that progressive and conservative Christianities have diverged so much in their core values that they ought to be thought of as two separate religions. The authors draw on both quantitative data and interviews to uncover how progressive and conservative Christians determine with whom they align themselves religiously, and how they distinguish themselves from each other, finding that progressive and conservative Christians use entirely different factors in determining their social identity and moral values.

George Yancey is Professor of Sociology at Baylor University. Ashlee Quosigk is a Visiting Scholar in the Department of Religion at the University of Georgia.

OPEN HEARTS, CLOSED DOORS

Immigration Reform and the Waning of Mainline Protestantism NICHOLAS T. PRUITT

A history of mainline Protestant responses to immigrants and refugees during the twentieth century

Open Hearts, Closed Doors uncovers the largely overlooked role that liberal Protestants played in fostering cultural diversity in America and pushing for new immigration laws during the forty years following the passage of the restrictive Immigration Act of 1924. These efforts resulted in the complete reshaping of the US cultural and religious landscape. During this period, mainline Protestants contributed to the national debate over immigration policy and joined the charge for immigration reform, advocating for a more diverse pool of newcomers. They were successful in their efforts, and in 1965 the quota system based on race and national origin was abolished. But their activism had unintended consequences, because the liberal immigration policies they supported helped to end over three centuries of white Protestant dominance in American society.

Nicholas T. Pruitt is Assistant Professor of History at Eastern Nazarene College.

KABBALAH AND THE FOUNDING OF AMERICA

The Early Influence of Jewish Thought in the New World BRIAN OGREN

Explores the influence of Kabbalah in shaping America’s religious identity

This book traces the influence of Kabbalah on early Christian Americans. It offers a new picture of Jewish-Christian intellectual exchange in pre-Revolutionary America, and illuminates how Kabbalah helped to shape early American religious sensibilities. The volume demonstrates that key figures, including the well-known Puritan ministers Cotton Mather and Increase Mather and Yale University President Ezra Stiles, developed theological ideas that were deeply influenced by Kabbalah. Some of them set out to create a more universal Kabbalah, developing their ideas during a crucial time of national myth building, laying down precedents for developing notions of American exceptionalism. This book illustrates how, through fascinating and often surprising events, this unlikely inter-religious influence helped to shape the United States and American identity.

Brian Ogren is Anna Smith Fine Associate Professor of Judaic Studies at Rice University. July 2021 320 pages • 6 x 9 5 black & white illustrations Cloth • $39.00S(£32.00) 9781479807987

Jewish Studies

THE COURSE OF GOD’S PROVIDENCE

Religion, Health, and the Body in Early America PHILIPPA KOCH

Shows that a religious understanding of illness and health persisted well into post-Enlightenment early America

The COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated the power of narrative during times of sickness and disease. As Americans strive to find meaning amid upheaval and loss, some consider the nature of God’s will. Early American Protestants experienced similar struggles as they attempted to interpret the diseases of their time. In this groundbreaking work, Philippa Koch explores the doctrine of providence—a belief in a divine plan for the world—and its manifestations in eighteenth-century America, from its origins as a consoling response to sickness to how it informed the practices of Protestant activity in the Atlantic world. Drawing on pastoral manuals, manuscript memoirs, journals, and letters, as well as medical treatises, epidemic narratives, and midwifery manuals, Koch shows how Protestant teachings around providence shaped the lives of believers even as the Enlightenment seemed to portend a more secular approach to the world and the human body.

Philippa Koch is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at Missouri State University. April 2021 288 pages • 6 x 9 11 black & white illustrations Cloth • $39.00S(£32.00) 9781479806683 In North American Religions

Religion

April 2021 256 pages • 6 x 9 Paper • $30.00S(£23.99) 9781479806768 Cloth • $89.00X(£74.00) 9781479871032

Religion | Music

May 2021 288 pages • 6 x 9 8 black & white illustrations Paper • $30.00S(£23.99) 9781479803279 Cloth • $89.00X(£74.00) 9781479803262

Religion SOUNDTRACK TO A MOVEMENT

African American Islam, Jazz, and Black Internationalism RICHARD BRENT TURNER

Explores how jazz helped propel the rise of African American Islam during the era of global Black liberation

Soundtrack to a Movement examines the link between the revolutionary Black Islam of the post-WWII generation and jazz music. It argues that from the late 1940s and ’50s though the '70s, Islam rose in prominence among African Americans in part because of the embrace of the religion among jazz musicians. The book demonstrates that the values that Islam and jazz shared—Black affirmation, freedom, and self-determination—were key to the growth of African American Islamic communities, and that it was jazz musicians who led the way in shaping encounters with Islam as they developed a Black Atlantic “cool” that shaped both Black religion and jazz styles.

Richard Brent Turner is Professor in the Department of Religious Studies and the African American Studies Program at the University of Iowa.

BLACK FUNDAMENTALISTS

Conservative Christianity and Racial Identity in the Segregation Era DANIEL R. BARE

Uncovers the voices of Black Fundamentalists during the early part of the twentieth century

Black Fundamentalists challenges the idea that fundamentalism was an exclusively white phenomenon. The volume uncovers voices from the Black community that embraced the doctrinal tenets of the movement and, in many cases, explicitly self-identified as fundamentalists. Black fundamentalists aligned closely with their white counterparts on the theological particulars of “the fundamentals.” Yet they often applied their conservative theology in more progressive, racially contextualized ways. While white fundamentalists were focused on battling the teaching of evolution, Black fundamentalists were tying their conservative faith to advocacy for reforms in public education, voting rights, and the overturning of legal bans on intermarriage. Beyond the narrow confines of the fundamentalist movement, Daniel R. Bare shows how these historical dynamics illuminate larger themes, still applicable today, about how racial context influences religious expression.

Daniel R. Bare is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at Texas A&M University.

THE OTHER SIDE OF TERROR

Black Women and the Culture of US Empire ERICA R. EDWARDS

Reveals the troubling intimacy between Black women and the making of US global power

The year 1968 marked both the height of the worldwide Black liberation struggle and a turning point for the global reach of American power, which was built on the counterinsurgency honed on Black and other oppressed populations at home. The next five decades saw the consolidation of the culture of the American empire through what Erica R. Edwards calls the “imperial grammars of blackness.” This is a story of state power at its most devious and most absurd, and, at the same time, a literary history of Black feminist radicalism at its most trenchant. Edwards reveals how the long war on terror, beginning with the late—Cold War campaign against organizations like the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense and the Black Liberation Army, has relied on the labor and the fantasies of Black women to justify the imperial spread of capitalism. Black feminist writers not only understood that this would demand a shift in racial gendered power, but crafted ways of surviving it. The Other Side of Terror offers an interdisciplinary Black feminist analysis of militarism, security, policing, diversity, representation, intersectionality, and resistance, while discussing a wide array of literary and cultural texts, from the unpublished work of Black radical feminist June Jordan to the memoirs of Condoleezza Rice to the television series Scandal. With clear, moving prose, Edwards chronicles Black feminist organizing and writing on “the other side of terror”, which tracked changes in racial power, transformed African American literature and Black studies, and predicted the crises of our current era with unsettling accuracy.

Erica R. Edwards is Associate Professor of English and Presidential Term Chair in African American Literature at Rutgers University. She is author of Charisma and the Fictions of Black Leadership, which received the MLA's William Sanders Scarborough Prize, and co-editor of Keywords for African American Studies.

August 2021 424 pages • 6 x 9 14 black & white illustrations Paper • 9781479808434 • $30.00S(£23.99) Cloth • 9781479808427 • $89.00X(£74.00)

African American Studies | Women's Studies

June 2021 224 pages • 6 x 9 19 black & white illustrations Paper • $28.00S(£21.99) 9781479808298 Cloth • $89.00X(£74.00) 9781479808281 In Performance and American Cultures

Cultural Studies

June 2021 224 pages • 6 x 9 10 black & white illustrations Paper • $28.00S(£21.99) 9781479807017 Cloth • $89.00X(£74.00) 9781479806980 In Critical Cultural Communication

Latinx Studies | Media Studies THE QUEER NUYORICAN

Racialized Sexualities and Aesthetics in Loisaida KAREN JAIME

A queer genealogy of the famous performance space and the nuyorican aesthetic

One could easily overlook the Nuyorican Poets Cafe, a small, unassuming performance venue on New York City’s Lower East Side. Yet the space once hosted the likes of Victor Hernández Cruz, Allen Ginsberg, and Amiri Baraka and is widely credited as the homespace for the emergent nuyorican literary and aesthetic movement of the 1990s. The nuyorican aesthetic recognizes and includes queer poets and performers of color whose writing and performance build upon the politics inherent in the Cafe’s founding. In focusing on artists who began their careers as spoken word artists and slam poets at the Cafe, this book examines queer modes of circulation that are tethered to the increasing visibility, commodification, and normalization of spoken word, slam poetry, and hip-hop theater in the United States and abroad.

Karen Jaime is Assistant Professor of Performing and Media Arts and Latina/o Studies at Cornell University.

BORDER OPTICS

Cultures of Surveillance on the US-Mexico Frontier CAMILLA FOJAS

Examines how the US-Mexico border is seen through visual codes of surveillance

Border Optics considers the US-Mexico border as one of the most visualized and imagined spaces in the US. As a place of continual crisis, permanent visibility, and territorial defense, the border is rendered as a layered visual space of policing—one that is seen from watchtowers, camera-mounted vehicles, helicopters, surveillance balloons, radar systems, unmanned aerial vehicles, and live streaming websites. Camilla Fojas describes how the perception of the viewing public is controlled through a booming security-industrial complex made up of entertainment media, local and federal police, prisons and detention centers, the aerospace industry, and all manner of security technology industries. The first study to examine visual codes of surveillance within an analysis of the history and culture of the border region, Border Optics is an innovative and groundbreaking examination of security cultures, race, gender, and colonialism.

Camilla Fojas is Professor of Media Studies and American Studies at the University of Virginia.

PAIN GENERATION

Social Media, Feminist Activism, and the Neoliberal Selfie L. AYU SARASWATI

Explores the perils and promise of feminist social media activism

Social media has become the front-and-center arena for feminist activism. Responding to and enacting the political potential of pain inflicted in acts of sexual harassment, violence, and abuse, Asian American and Asian Canadian feminist icons such as rupi kaur, Margaret Cho, and Mia Matsumiya have turned to social media to share their stories with the world. But how does such activism reconcile with the platforms on which it is being cultivated, when its radical messaging is at total odds with the neoliberal logic governing social media? Pain Generation troubles this phenomenon by articulating a “neoliberal self(ie) gaze“ through which these feminist activistssee and storify the self on social media as “good” neoliberal subjects who are appealing, inspiring, and entertaining. This book offers a fresh perspective on feminist activism by demonstrating how problematic neoliberal logic governing digital spaces can be and how to best use them.

L. Ayu Saraswati is Associate Professor of Women’s Studies at the University of Hawai'i.

CREATOR CULTURE

An Introduction to Global Social Media Entertainment Edited by STUART CUNNINGHAM and DAVID CRAIG

Explores new perspectives on social media entertainment

There is a new class of cultural producers—YouTube vloggers, Twitch gameplayers, Instagram influencers, TikTokers, Chinese wanghong, and others—who are part of a rapidly emerging and highly disruptive industry of monetized “user-generated” content. As this new wave of native social media entrepreneurs emerge, so do new formations of culture and the ways they are studied. Creator Culture introduces readers to new paradigms of social media entertainment from critical perspectives, demonstrating both relations to and differentiations from the well-established media forms and institutions traditionally within the scope of media studies. This volume does not seek to impose a uniform perspective; rather, the goal is to stimulate in-depth, globally-focused engagement with this burgeoning industry and establish a dynamic research agenda for scholars, teachers, and students, as well as creators and professionals across the media, communication, creative, and social media industries.

Stuart Cunningham is Distinguished Professor of Media and Communication, Queensland University of Technology. David Craig is Clinical Associate Professor at USC Annenberg’s School for Communication and Journalism and a Fellow at the Peabody Media Center. May 2021 224 pages • 6 x 9 Paper • $28.00S(£21.99) 9781479808335 Cloth • $89.00X(£74.00) 9781479808342

Media Studies

June 2021 336 pages • 6 x 9 1 black & white illustration Paper • $35.00S(£27.99) 9781479817979 Cloth • $99.00X(£82.00) 9781479879304

Media Studies

KEYWORDS FOR COMICS STUDIES

Edited by RAMZI FAWAZ, SHELLEY STREEBY, and DEBORAH ELIZABETH WHALEY

Ramzi Fawaz is an Assistant Professor of English at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. He is the author of The New Mutants: Superheroes and the Radical Imagination of American Comics. Shelley Streeby is Professor in the Departments of Ethnic Studies and Literature at the University of California, San Diego, and author of Imagining the Future of Climate Change: World-Making through Science Fiction and Activism. Deborah Whaley is an artist, curator, writer, and Professor of American Studies and African American Studies at the University of Iowa. She is the author of two books and numerous articles, book chapters, and poetry. Her most recent book is Black Women in Sequence: Re-inking Comics, Graphic Novels, and Anime.

Introduces key terms, research traditions, debates, and histories, and offers a sense of the new frontiers emerging in the field of comic studies

Across more than fifty original essays, Keywords for Comics Studies provides a rich, interdisciplinary vocabulary for comics and sequential art. The essays also identify new avenues of research into one of the most popular and diverse visual media of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Keywords for Comics Studies presents an array of inventive analyses of terms central to the study of comics and sequential art that are traditionally siloed in distinct lexicons: these include creative and aesthetic terms like Ink, Creator, Border, and Panel; conceptual terms such as Trans*, Disability, Universe, and Fantasy; genre terms like Zine, Pornography, Superhero, and Manga; and canonical terms like X-Men, Archie, Watchmen, and Love and Rockets. This volume ties each specific comic studies keyword to the larger context of the term within the humanities. Essays demonstrate how scholars, cultural critics, and comics artists from a range of fields take up sequential art as both an object of analysis and a medium for developing new theories about embodiment, identity, literacy, audience reception, genre, cultural politics, and more. Keywords for Comics Studies revivifies the fantasy and magic of reading comics in its kaleidoscopic view of the field’s most compelling and imaginative ideas.

June 2021 288 pages • 8 x 8.5 5 black & white illustrations Paper • 9781479831968 • $28.00S(£21.99) Cloth • 9781479816682 • $89.00X(£74.00) In Keywords

Media Studies

DISLIKE-MINDED

Media, Audiences, and the Dynamics of Taste JONATHAN GRAY

Explains why audiences dislike certain media and what happens when they do

The study and discussion of media is replete with talk of fans, loves, stans, likes, and favorites, but what of dislikes, distastes, and alienation? Dislike-Minded draws from over two-hundred qualitative interviews to probe what the media’s failures, wounds, and sore spots tell us about media culture, taste, identity, representation, meaning, textuality, audiences, and citizenship. The book refuses the simplicity of Pierre Bourdieu’s famous dictum that dislike is (only) snobbery. Instead, Jonathan Gray pushes onward to uncover other explanations for what it ultimately means to dislike specific artifacts of television, film, and other media, and why this dislike matters. As we watch and listen through gritted teeth, Dislike-Minded listens to what is being said, and presents a bold case for a new line of audience research within communication, media, and cultural studies.

Jonathan Gray is Hamel Family Distinguished Chair in Communication Arts, Professor of Media and Cultural Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and author and editor of numerous books, including Show Sold Separately: Promos, Spoilers, and Other Media Paratexts, Fandom, Second Edition, Keywords for Media Studies, and Satire TV, as well as Television Studies (with Amanda D. Lotz), and A Companion to Media Authorship (with Derek Johnson).

June 2021 288 pages • 6 x 9 Paper • 9781479809981 • $29.00S(£22.99) Cloth • 9781479809264 • $89.00X(£74.00) In Critical Cultural Communication

Media Studies

A PHYSICIAN ON THE NILE A Description of Egypt and Journal of the Famine Years ʿABD AL-LAṬĪF AL-BAGHDĀDĪ Edited and translated by TIM MACKINTOSH-SMITH

ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baghdādī (557–629/1162–1231) was a Baghdad-born physician and scientist who wrote books on a wide range of topics, including medicine, philology, mathematics, and philosophy. Tim Mackintosh-Smith is a noted British travel author, best known for his trilogy on the renowned Moroccan world-traveler Ibn Battutah, which earned him a spot among Newsweek’s top twelve travel writers of the past hundred years. Since 1982, he has lived in Sanaa, Yemen. Flora, fauna, and famine in thirteenth-century Egypt A Physician on the Nile begins as a description of everyday life in Egypt at the turn of the seventh/thirteenth century, before becoming a harrowing account of famine and pestilence. Written by the polymath and physician ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baghdādī, and intended for the Abbasid caliph al-Nāṣir, the first part of the book offers detailed descriptions of Egypt’s geography, plants, animals, and local cuisine, including a recipe for a giant picnic pie made with three entire roast lambs and dozens of chickens. ʿAbd al-Laṭīf’s text is also a pioneering work of ancient Egyptology, with detailed observations of Pharaonic monuments, sculptures, and mummies. An early and ardent champion of archaeological conservation, ʿAbd al-Laṭīf condemns the vandalism wrought by tomb-robbers and notes with distaste that Egyptian grocers price their goods with labels written on recycled mummy-wrappings. The book’s second half relates his horrific eyewitness account of the great famine that afflicted Egypt in the years 597–598/1200–1202. ʿAbd al-Laṭīf was a keen observer of humanity, and he offers vivid first-hand depictions of starvation, cannibalism, and a society in moral free-fall. A Physician on the Nile contains great diversity in a small compass, distinguished by the acute, humane, and ever-curious mind of its author. It is rare to be able to hear the voice of such a man responding so directly to novelty, beauty, and tragedy. A bilingual Arabic-English edition.

April 2021 350 pages • 6 x 9 Cloth • 9781479806249 • $30.00S(£23.99)

Arabic Literature Library of Arabic Literature

THE BOOK OF TRAVELS Volume One & Volume Two ḤANNĀ DIYĀB Edited by JOHANNES STEPHAN Translated by ELIAS MUHANNA Foreword by YASMINE SEALE Afterword by PAULO LEMOS HORTA

The adventures of the man who created Aladdin The Book of Travels is Ḥannā Diyāb’s remarkable first-person account of his travels as a young man from his hometown of Aleppo to the court of Versailles and back again, which forever linked him to one of the most popular pieces of world literature, The Thousand and One Nights. Diyāb, a Maronite Christian, served as a guide and interpreter for the French naturalist and antiquarian Paul Lucas. Between 1706 and 1716, Diyāb and Lucas traveled through Syria, Cyprus, Egypt, Tripolitania, Tunis, Italy, and France. In Paris, Ḥannā Diyāb met Antoine Galland, who added to his wildly popular translation of The Thousand and One Nights several tales related by Diyāb, including “Aladdin” and “Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves.” When Lucas failed to make good on his promise of a position for Diyāb at Louis XIV’s Royal Library, Diyāb returned to Aleppo. In his old age, he wrote this engaging account of his youthful adventures, from capture by pirates in the Mediterranean to quack medicine and near-death experiences. Translated into English for the first time, The Book of Travels introduces readers to the young Syrian responsible for some of the most beloved stories from The Thousand and One Nights. A bilingual Arabic-English edition.

Ḥannā Diyāb (b. ca. 1687) was a Syrian traveler originally from Aleppo. He is best known for his contributions to Antoine Galland’s translation of The Thousand and One Nights. Johannes Stephan is a postdoctoral researcher in the ERC-funded project “Kalīla and Dimna –AnonymClassic” at the Freie Universität Berlin. Elias Muhanna is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at Brown University. Yasmine Seale translates from Arabic and French, and her essays on books and art have appeared in Harper’s, The Nation, TLS, and elsewhere. Paulo Lemos Horta is Associate Professor of Literature at NYU Abu Dhabi.

Volume One May 2021 300 pages • 6 x 9 Cloth • 9781479892303 • $30.00S(£23.99)

Volume Two May 2021 300 pages • 6 x 9 Cloth • 9781479806300 • $30.00S(£23.99)

Arabic Literature

Two-Volume Set May 2021 600 pages • 6 x 9 Cloth • 9781479810949 • $50.00S(£41.00)

Arabic Literature

THE PHILOSOPHER RESPONDS An Intellectual Correspondence from the Tenth Century ABŪ ḤAYYĀN AL-TAWḤĪDĪ and ABŪ ʿALĪ MISKAWAYH Translated by SOPHIA VASALOU and JAMES E. MONTGOMERY Foreword by JONATHAN RÉE

Abū Ḥayyān al-Tawḥīdī (d. 414/1023) was a prominent litterateur and philosopher in Baghdad. Abū ʿAlī Miskawayh (ca. 320/932-421/1030) was a philosopher and historian born in Rayy. Sophia Vasalou is Senior Lecturer and Birmingham Fellow in Philosophical Theology at the University of Birmingham. Her books include Moral Agents and their Deserts: The Character of Mu‘tazilite Ethics, Wonder: A Grammar, and Ibn Taymiyya’s Theological Ethics. James E. Montgomery, author of Al-Jāḥiẓ: In Praise of Books, is Sir Thomas Adams’s Professor of Arabic at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Trinity Hall. His latest publications are Loss Sings, a collaboration with the celebrated Scottish artist Alison Watt, and Dīwān ʿAntarah ibn Shaddād: A Literary-Historical Study. Jonathan Rée is a freelance philosopher and historian living in Oxford and London. His books include Proletarian Philosophers, Philosophical Tales, I See a Voice, Witcraft, and A Schoolmaster's War.

NEW IN PAPERBACK

March 2021 300 pages • 5.5 x 8.25 Paper • 9781479806355 • $15.00T(£11.99) Cloth • Volume 1 • 9781479871483 Cloth • Volume 2 • 9781479834600

Philosophy Library of Arabic Literature

Questions and answers from two great philosophers Why is laughter contagious? Why do mountains exist? Why do we long for the past, even if it is scarred by suffering? Spanning a vast array of subjects that range from the philosophical to the theological, from the philological to the scientific, The Philosopher Responds is the record of a set of questions put by the litterateur Abū Ḥayyān al-Tawḥīdī to the philosopher and historian Abū ʿAlī Miskawayh. Both figures were foremost contributors to the remarkable flowering of cultural and intellectual life that took place in the Islamic world during the reign of the Buyid dynasty in the fourth/ tenth century. The correspondence between al-Tawḥīdī and Miskawayh holds a mirror to many of the debates of the time and reflects the spirit of rationalistic inquiry that animated their era. It also provides insight into the intellectual outlooks of two thinkers who were divided as much by their distinctive temperaments as by the very different trajectories of their professional careers. Alternately whimsical and tragic, trivial and profound, al-Tawḥīdī’s questions provoke an interaction as interesting in its spiritedness as in its content. An English-only edition.

ROME IN EGYPT’S EASTERN DESERT Volume One & Volume Two HÉLÈNE CUVIGNY Edited by ROGER S. BAGNALL

A detailed archaeological study of life in Egypt’s Eastern desert during the Roman period by a leading scholar Rome in Egypt’s Eastern Desert is a two-volume set collecting Hélène Cuvigny’s most important articles on Egypt’s Eastern desert during the Roman period. The fort excavations that she has directed have uncovered a wealth of material, including tens of thousands of texts written on pottery fragments (ostraca). Some of these are administrative texts, but many more are correspondence, both official and private, written by and to the people (mostly but not all men) who lived and worked in these remote and harsh environments, supported by an elaborate network of defense, administration and supply that tied the entire region together. The contents of Rome in Egypt’s Eastern Desert have all been published earlier in peer-reviewed venues, but almost entirely in French. All of the contributions have been translated by the editor and brought up to date with respect to bibliography and in some cases significantly rewritten by the author, in order to take account of the enormous amount of new material discovered in the intervening time and subsequent publications. A full index makes this body of work far more accessible than it was before. This book brings together thirty years of detailed study of this material, bringing to life the geography, administration, military, quarry operations, life in the forts, and the religion and expressive language of the population who lived in them.

Hélène Cuvigny is Research Director at the CNRS (Centre national de la recherche scientifique) and a papyrologist specializing in the eastern Egyptian desert during the Roman period. Over more than thirty years, beginning with the excavations at the quarry site of Mons Claudianus, Hélène Cuvigny has played a central role in the exploration of Egypt’s Eastern Desert. Roger S. Bagnall is Leon Levy Director Emeritus and Emeritus Professor of Ancient History at the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World at New York University. He is author, co-author, and editor of many books including Egypt in Late Antiquity and Everyday Writing in the Graeco-Roman East.

Volume One March 2021 322 pages • 8.5 x 11 Cloth • 9781479810642 • $75.00X(£62.00)

Volume Two March 2021 313 pages • 8.5 x 11 Cloth • 9781479810697 • $75.00X(£62.00)

History | Archeology

Two-Volume Set March 2021 635 pages • 8.5 x 11 5 color maps • 2 black & white maps 1 color plan • 4 black & white plans 35 color illustrations 94 black & white illustrations 2 black & white architectural plans 1 color chart Cloth • 9781479810611 • $135.00X(£112.00)

History | Archeology

NEW IN PAPERBACK

May 2021 256 pages • 6 x 9 Paper • $14.95T(£11.99) 9781479811106 Cloth • 9781479837335

History | African American Studies

NEW IN PAPERBACK

May 2021 400 pages • 6 x 9 32 black & white illustrations Paper • $24.00S(£18.99) 9780814767283 Cloth • 9780814767276

Latinx Studies | History THE BATTLE OF NEGRO FORT

The Rise and Fall of a Fugitive Slave Community MATTHEW J. CLAVIN

The dramatic story of Andrew Jackson’s destruction of a free and independent community of fugitive slaves in Spanish Florida

In the aftermath of the War of 1812, Major General Andrew Jackson ordered a joint United States army-navy expedition into Spanish Florida to destroy a free and independent community of fugitive slaves. The result was the Battle of Negro Fort, a brutal conflict among hundreds of American troops, Indian warriors, and black rebels that culminated in the death or re-enslavement of nearly all of the fort’s inhabitants. By eliminating this refuge for fugitive slaves, the United States government closed an escape valve that African Americans had utilized for generations. At the same time, it intensified the subjugation of southern Native Americans, including the Creeks, Choctaws, and Seminoles.

Matthew J. Clavin is a Professor of History at the University of Houston.

SUGAR, CIGARS, AND REVOLUTION

The Making of Cuban New York LISANDRO PÉREZ

Winner, 2020 Herbert H. Lehman Prize for Distinguished Scholarship in New York history | Honorable Mention, 2019 CASA Literary Prize for Studies on Latinos in the United States, La Casa de las Américas

The dramatic story of the origins of the Cuban community in nineteenth-century New York

More than one hundred years before the Cuban Revolution sparked an exodus that created today’s prominent Cuban American presence, Cubans were settling in New York City in what became largest community of Latin Americans in the 19th-century Northeast. This book brings this community to life, tracing its formation and how it was shaped by both the sugar trade and the long struggle for independence from Spain. New York City’s refineries bought vast quantities of raw sugar from Cuba, creating an important center of commerce for Cuban émigrés as the island tumbled into the tumultuous decades that would close out the century and define Cuban nationhood and identity.

Lisandro Pérez is Professor of Latin American and Latina/o Studies at John Jay College of Criminal Justice.

EVALUATING POLICE USES OF FORCE

SETH W. STOUGHTON, JEFFREY J. NOBLE, and GEOFFREY P. ALPERT

Provides a critical understanding and evaluation of police tactics and the use of force

This book explores a critical but largely overlooked facet of the difficult and controversial issues of police violence and accountability: how does society evaluate use-of-force incidents? By leading readers through answers to this question from four different perspectives—constitutional law, state law, administrative regulation, and community expectations—and by providing critical information about police tactics and force options that are implicated within those frameworks, Evaluating Police Uses of Force helps situate readers within broader conversations about governmental accountability, the role that police play in modern society, and how officers should go about fulfilling their duties.

Seth W. Stoughton is Associate Professor at the University of South Carolina School of Law. Jeffrey J. Noble is a police consultant and author of Managing Accountability Systems for Police Conduct: Internal Affairs and External Oversight. Geoffrey P. Alpert is a Professor in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of South Carolina.

FIGHT THE POWER

African Americans and the Long History of Police Brutality in New York City CLARENCE TAYLOR

A story of resistance, power, and politics as revealed through New York City’s complex history of police brutality

Fight the Power examines the explosive history of police brutality in New York City and the Black community’s long struggle to resist it. Taylor brings this story to life by exploring the institutions and the people that waged campaigns to end the mistreatment of people of color at the hands of the police, including the Black church, the Black press, Black communists and civil rights activists. Ranging from the 1940s to the mayoralty of Bill de Blasio, Taylor traces the significant strides made in curbing police power in New York City, describing the grassroots street campaigns as well as the accomplishments achieved in the political arena and in the city’s courtrooms. Taylor challenges the belief that police reform is born out of improved relations between communities and the authorities arguing that the only real solution is radically reducing the police domination of New York’s black citizens.

NEW IN PAPERBACK WITH A NEW PREFACE

Februrary 2021 256 pages • 6 x 9 12 black & white illustrations Paper • $25.00S(£19.99) 9781479810161 Cloth • 9781479814657

Law | Criminology

NEW IN PAPERBACK

April 2021 256 pages • 6 x 9 Paper • $24.00S(£18.99) 9781479811083 Cloth • 9781479862450

History | Criminology

NEW IN PAPERBACK

September 2020 256 pages • 6 x 9 15 black & white illustrations Paper • $19.95A(£15.99) 9781479806751 Cloth • 9781479847624

History | Criminology

NEW IN PAPERBACK, NOW WITH A NEW PREFACE

April 2021 232 pages • 6 x 9 Paper • $19.00S(£14.99) 9781479808731 Cloth • 9781479857463

Politics PRESUMED CRIMINAL

Black Youth and the Justice System in Postwar New York CARL SUDDLER

A startling examination of the deliberate criminalization of Black youths from the 1930s to today

A stark disparity exists between Black and white youth experiences in the justice system today. Black youths are perceived to be older and less innocent than their white peers. When it comes to incarceration, race trumps class, and even as Black youths articulate their own experiences with carceral authorities, many Americans remain surprised by the inequalities they continue to endure. In this revealing book, Carl Suddler brings to light a much longer history of the policies and strategies that tethered the lives of Black youths to the justice system indefinitely.

Carl Suddler is Assistant Professor of History at Emory University.

BANNED

Immigration Enforcement in the Time of Trump SHOBA SIVAPRASAD WADHIA

Examines immigration enforcement and discretion during the first eighteen months of the Trump administration

Banned combines personal interviews, immigration law, policy analysis, and case studies to answer the following questions: (1) what does immigration enforcement and discretion look like in the time of Trump? (2) who is affected by changes to immigration enforcement and discretion?; (3) how have individuals and families affected by immigration enforcement under President Trump changed their own perceptions about the future?; and (4) how do those informed about immigration enforcement and discretion describe the current state of affairs and perceive the future? Shoba Sivaprasad Wadhia pairs the contents of these interviews with a robust analysis of immigration enforcement and discretion during the first eighteen months of the Trump administration and offers recommendations for moving forward.

Shoba Sivaprasad Wadhia is the Samuel Weiss Faculty Scholar and Founding Director of the Center for Immigrants’ Rights Clinic at Penn State Law in University Park, Pennsylvania, and author of Beyond Deportation.

REPRODUCING RACISM

How Everyday Choices Lock In White Advantage DARIA ROITHMAYR

Argues that racial inequality reproduces itself automatically over time because early unfair advantage for whites has paved the way for continuing advantage

This book is designed to change the way we think about racial inequality. Long after the passage of civil rights laws and now the inauguration of our first Black president, Blacks and Latinos possess barely a nickel of wealth for every dollar that whites have. Why have we made so little progress? Legal scholar Daria Roithmayr provocatively argues that racial inequality lives on because white advantage functions as a powerful self-reinforcing monopoly, reproducing itself automatically from generation to generation even in the absence of intentional discrimination. Drawing on work in antitrust law and a range of other disciplines, Roithmayr brilliantly compares the dynamics of white advantage to the unfair tactics of giants like AT&T and Microsoft. Roithmayr concludes that racial inequality might now be locked in place, unless policymakers immediately take drastic steps to dismantle this oppressive system.

Daria Roithmayr is the George T. and Harriet E. Pfleger Professor of Law at the University of Southern California Gould School of Law.

CONFORMITY

The Power of Social Influences CASS R. SUNSTEIN

Bestselling author Cass R. Sunstein reveals the appeal and the danger of conformity

We live in an era of tribalism, polarization, and intense social division—separating people along lines of religion, political conviction, race, ethnicity, and sometimes gender. How did this happen? In Conformity, Cass R. Sunstein argues that the key to making sense of living in this fractured world lies in understanding the idea of conformity—what it is and how it works—as well as the countervailing force of dissent. An understanding of conformity sheds new light on many issues confronting us today: the role of social media, the rise of fake news, the growth of authoritarianism, the success of Donald Trump, the functions of free speech, debates over immigration and the Supreme Court, and much more. Sunstein concludes that while much of the time it is in the individual’s interest to follow the crowd, it is in the social interest for individuals to say and do what they think is best. A well-functioning democracy depends on it.

NEW IN PAPERBACK, NOW WITH A NEW PREFACE

March 2021 256 pages • 6 x 9 Paper • $14.95A(£11.99) 9781479811090 Cloth • 9780814777121

Current Events

NEW IN PAPERBACK, NOW WITH A NEW FOREWORD

May 2021 176 pages • 5 x 8 Paper • $10.95T(£8.99) 9781479810178 Cloth • 9781479867837

Current Events

November 2000 256 pages • 6 x 9 Paper • $28.00S(£21.99) 9780814715376 Cloth • $89.00X(£74.00) 9780814715369 In Critical America

Environmental Science

September 1993 203 pages • 6 x9 15 black & white illustrations Paper • $24.00S(£18.99) 9780814730607

History FROM THE GROUND UP

Environmental Racism and the Rise of the Environmental Justice Movement LUKE W. COLE and SHEILA R. FOSTER

A critical look at the movement for environmental justice

From the Ground Up critically examines one of the fastest growing social movements in the United States—the movement for environmental justice. Tracing the movement's roots, Luke Cole and Sheila Foster combine long-time activism with powerful storytelling to provide gripping case studies of communities across the US—towns like Kettleman City, California; Chester, Pennsylvania; and Dilkon, Arizona—and their struggles against corporate polluters. The authors use social, economic and legal analysis to reveal the historical and contemporary causes for environmental racism. Environmental justice struggles, they demonstrate, transform individuals, communities, institutions and the nation as a whole.

Luke W. Cole was Director of the California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation's Center on Race, Poverty, and the Environment. Sheila R. Foster is Associate Professor at Rutgers University School of Law, Camden.

OCCULT ROOTS OF NAZISM

Secret Aryan Cults and Their Influence on Nazi Ideology NICHOLAS GOODRICK-CLARKE

Reveals how Nazism was influenced by powerful occult sects that thrived in Germany and Austria almost fifty years before Hitler’s rise to power

Over half a century after the defeat of the Third Reich, Nazism remains a subject of extensive historical inquiry and general interest, and, alarmingly, a source of inspiration for resurgent fascism around the world. This powerful and timely book traces the intellectual roots of Nazism back to a number of influential occult and millenarian sects in the Habsburg Empire during its waning years. These millenarian sects—principally the Ariosophists—espoused a mixture of popular nationalism, Aryan racism, and occultism to proclaim their advocacy of German world-rule. Over time their ideas and symbols, filtered through nationalist-racist groups associated with the nascent Nazi party, came to exert a strong influence on Himmler's SS. Beyond what the Times Literary Supplement calls “an intriguing study of apocalyptic fantasies,” this bizarre and fascinating story contains lessons we cannot afford to ignore.

Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke is the author of several books on ideology and the Western esoteric tradition, including Hitler’s Priestess and Black Sun.

FREEDOM’S PROPHET

Bishop Richard Allen, the AME Church, and the Black Founding Fathers RICHARD S. NEWMAN Gold Winner of the 2008 Foreword Magazine Book of the Year Award, Biography Category

Brings to life the inspiring story of one of America's Black Founding Fathers, featured in the forthcoming documentary The Black Church: This is Our Story, This is Our Song

Freedom's Prophet is a long-overdue biography of Richard Allen, founder of the first major African American church and the leading Black activist of the early American republic. A tireless minister, abolitionist, and reformer, Allen inaugurated some of the most important institutions in African American history and influenced nearly every Black leader of the 19th century, from Douglass to Du Bois. In this thoroughly engaging and beautifully written book, Newman describes Allen's continually evolving life and thought, setting both in the context of his times. This book reintroduces Allen to today's readers and restores him to his rightful place in our nation's history.

Richard S. Newman is Professor of History at Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, New York.

PRIVILEGE REVEALED

How Invisible Preference Undermines America STEPHANIE M. WILDMAN With contributions by MARGALYNNE ARMSTRONG, ADRIENNE D. DAVIS, and TRINA GRILLO

An in-depth examination of the different forms of privilege perpetuating inequality within American society

In this important volume, scholars positioned differently with respect to white privilege examine how privilege of all forms manifests itself and how we can, and must, be aware of invisible privilege in our daily lives. Individual chapters focus on language, the workplace, the implications of comparing racism and sexism, race-based housing privilege, the dream of diversity and the cycle of exclusion, the rule of law and invisible systems of privilege, and the power of law to transform society. Twenty-five years since its first publication, Privilege Revealed is more relevant than ever. With a new introduction bringing the volume up to date, this book offers readers important insight into the inequalities still pervading American society, and encourages us all to confront our own relationship to these often invisible privileges.

Stephanie M. Wildman is Professor Emerita at Santa Clara Law and a member of The Writers Grotto. October 2009 359 pages • 6 x 9 Paper • $28.00S(£21.99) 9780814758571 Cloth • $89.00X(£74.00) 9780814758267

History

WITH A NEW

PREFACE AND ESSAY

June 1996 252 pages • 6 x 9 Paper • $25.00S(£19.99) 9780814793039 Cloth • $89.00X(£74.00) 9780814792988 In Critical America

Current Events

DEAD EPIDEMIOLOGISTS

On the Origins of COVID-19 ROB WALLACE

Rob Wallace is an evolutionary epidemiologist with the Agroecology and Rural Economics Research Corps. He is author of Big Farms Make Big Flu and coauthor of Clear-Cutting Disease Control: Capital-Led Deforestation, Public Health Austerity, and Vector-Borne Infection. He has consulted with the Food and Agriculture Organization and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A history of COVID-19 and the sociopolitical conditions that led to the 2020 global pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic shocked the world. It shouldn’t have. Since this century’s turn, epidemiologists have warned of new infectious diseases. Indeed, H1N1, H7N9, SARS, MERS, Ebola Makona, Zika, and a variety of lesser viruses have emerged almost annually. But what of the epidemiologists themselves? Some bravely descended into the caves where bat species hosted coronaviruses, including the strains that evolved into COVID19. Yet, despite their own warnings, many of the researchers appear unable to understand the true nature of the disease—as if they are dead to what they’ve seen. Dead Epidemiologists is an eclectic collection of commentaries, articles, and interviews revealing the hidden-in-plain-sight truth behind the pandemic: Global capital drove the deforestation and development that exposed us to new pathogens. Rob Wallace and his colleagues—ecologists, geographers, activists, and, yes, epidemiologists—unpack the material and conceptual origins of COVID-19. From deepest Yunnan to the boardrooms of New York City, this book offers a compelling diagnosis of the roots of COVID-19, and a stark prognosis of what—without further intervention—may come.

October 2020 260 pages • 5.5 x 8.25 Paper • 9781583679029 • $17.00S Cloth • 9781583679036 • $89.00X

Current Events Monthly Review Press

“In his brilliance and in the extraordinary depth, range, and courage of his thinking, Rob Wallace is unique. Dead Epidemiologists makes sense of the COVID-19 pandemic like no other work I’ve encountered anywhere. This is radical thinking in the very best sense. Written in perfect, pissed-off, punk-rock eloquence and fury.” —Ben Ehrenreich, author of Desert Notebooks: A Road Map for the End of Time

SENSING INJUSTICE

A Lawyer's Life in the Battle for Change MICHAEL E. TIGAR

The remarkable life of a lawyer at the forefront of civil and human rights since the 1960s

By the time he was 26, Michael Tigar was a legend in legal circles well before he would take on some of the highest-profile cases of his generation. In his first US Supreme Court case—at the age of 28—Tigar won a unanimous victory that freed thousands of Vietnam War resisters from prison. Tigar also led the legal team that secured a judgment against the Pinochet regime for the 1976 murders of Pinochet opponent Orlando Letelier and his colleague Ronni Moffitt in a Washington, DC car bombing. He then worked with the lawyers who prosecuted Pinochet for torture and genocide. A relentless fighter of injustice—not only as a human rights lawyer, but also as a teacher, scholar, journalist, playwright, and comrade—Tigar has been counsel to Angela Davis, Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin (H. Rap Brown), the Chicago Eight, and leaders of the Black Panther Party, to name only a few. It is past time that Michael Tigar wrote his memoir. Sensing Injustice: A Lawyer's Life in the Battle for Change is a vibrant literary and legal feat. In it, Tigar weaves powerful legal analysis and wry observation through the story of his remarkable life. The result is a compelling narrative that blends law, history, and progressive politics. This is essential reading for lawyers, for law students, for anyone who aspires to bend the law toward change.

Michael E. Tigar has worked for over fifty years with movements for social change as a human rights lawyer, law professor, and writer. He has taught at law schools in the United States, France, South Africa, and Japan, and is Emeritus Professor at Duke Law School and American University Washington College of Law. He has authored or coauthored fourteen books, three plays, and scores of articles and essays. His book, Law and the Rise of Capitalism, first published by Monthly Review Press, has been translated into Spanish, Portuguese, Greek, Turkish, and Chinese.

Praise for Michael E. Tigar's Fighting Injustice “No one since Clarence Darrow has been in the middle of more of his generation's important legal battles than Mike Tigar. His memoir … is must reading for those who wonder if law can still be exciting, heroic and moral. Tigar proves it is, with wit, high style and great stories.” —John Keker, partner at Keker & Van Nest; formerly Irangate special prosecutor July 2021 512 pages • 6 x 9.25 Paper • 9781583679203 • $29.00S Cloth • 9781583679210 • $89.00X

Memoir | Law Monthly Review Press

Michael Heinrich taught economics for many years at the University of Applied Sciences in Berlin and was managing editor of PROKLA: Journal for Critical Social Science. He has written in depth on Marx’s critique of political economy in his book, The Science of Value. His An Introduction to the Three Volumes of Karl Marx’s Capital is probably the most popular introduction to Marx’s economic works in Germany.

HOW TO READ MARX'S CAPITAL

Commentary and Explanations on the Beginning Chapters MICHAEL HEINRICH Translated by ALEXANDER LOCASCIO

An accessible companion to Karl Marx's essential Capital

With the recent revival of Karl Marx's theory, a general interest in reading Capital has also increased. But Capital—Marx’s foundational nineteenth-century work on political economy—is by no means considered an easily understood text. Central concepts, such as abstract labor, the value-form, or the fetishism of commodities, can seem opaque to us as first-time readers, and the prospect of comprehending Marx’s thought can be truly daunting. Until, that is, we pick up Michael Heinrich’s How to Read Marx's Capital. Paragraph by paragraph, Heinrich provides extensive commentary and lucid explanations of questions and quandaries that arise when encountering Marx’s original text. Suddenly, such seemingly gnarly chapters as “The Labor Process and the Valorization Process” and “Money or the Circulation of Capital” become refreshingly clear, as Heinrich explains just what we need to keep in mind when reading such a complex text. Deploying multiple appendices referring to other pertinent writings by Marx, Heinrich reveals what is relevant about Capital, and why we need to engage with it today. How to Read Marx's Capital provides an illuminating and indispensable guide to sorting through cultural detritus of a world whose political and economic systems are simultaneously imploding and exploding.

August 2021 448 pages • 6 x 9.25 Paper • 9781583678947 • $28.00S Cloth • 9781583678954 • $89.00X

Politics | History Monthly Review Press

Praise for Michael Heinrich’s An Introduction to the Three Volumes of Karl Marx’s Capital “Whether one is a ‘traditional world view Marxist’ like myself, or a student who wants to understand this world we live in, or an activist who is committed to changing it, Michael Heinrich’s succinct, lucid, compelling summary of the three volumes of Marx’s Capital is a ‘must-read’ in our time of crisis.” —Paul LeBlanc, author of From Marx to Gramsci and Marx, Lenin and the Revolutionary Experience

RACISM AND THE CLASS STRUGGLE updated edition

The Meaning of Black Revolt in the United States JAMES BOGGS

An updated edition of James Boggs’s influential essays on revolution and Black Power

Having just written his groundbreaking book, The American Revolution, Detroit autoworker James Boggs sat down in the early 1960s to continue his study of revolution. Boggs looked at the Black Power uprisings then beginning in the United States within the global context of the overthrow of rightwing puppet regimes in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. In Racism and the Class Struggle, Boggs produced thirteen powerful and prescient chapters that wrestled with topics such as the specific character of American capitalism and its intricate relationship to American democracy, the historic mission of the Black revolution in the United States, and the need for the 1960s Black movement to develop theoretically and organizationally. Boggs also hailed the coming of what was at the time the new slogan of the "Black revolution" with a momentous essay called "Black Power: A Scientific Concept Whose Time Has Come." In other essays, he hammered at his theme of a "second civil war" and Black control of the cities. With conflicting US forces so sharply polarized, wrote Boggs, "No one can predict when or whether a revolution will succeed, but we do know that … there is no turning back until one or the other side is defeated." Today, amid the metastasizing manifestations of "white power," Racism and the Class Struggle is stunningly pertinent to people of all races who, in the struggle against Empire and white supremacy, will not turn back.

James Boggs (1919–1993) was an African American auto worker and radical activist raised in rural Alabama. His books include The American Revolution: Pages from a Negro Worker’s Notebook and Revolution and Evolution in the Twentieth Century (with Grace Lee Boggs), both published by Monthly Review Press.

“Heady, controversial writing–pungent polemical essays and speeches–which spells out forcefully his Marxist-Fanonist thesis that 'the issues of the black revolt are fundamentally rooted in the American system itself.” —Publishers Weekly May 2021 224 pages • 5.5 x 8.25 Paper • 9781583679128 • $19.00S Cloth • 9781583679135 • $89.00X

Economics | Race & Ethnicity Monthly Review Press

September 2020 162 pages • 5.5 x 8.5 Paper • $17.00S 9781583679067 Cloth • $89.00X 9781583679074

Politics Monthly Review Press

April 2021 160 pages • 5.5 x 8.25 Paper • $19.00S 9781583679081 Cloth • $89.00X 9781583679098

History | Politics Monthly Review Press WASHINGTON BULLETS

A History of the CIA, Coups, and Assassinations VIJAY PRASHAD

Essays on acts of US imperialism, from the 1953 Iran coup to the 2019 ouster of Evo Morales

While applauding itself as an oasis of democracy, the United States, in reality, is a superpower, intent on infiltrating foreign governments, obliterating entire cultures, and carrying out murderous military interventions in developing countries the world over. Washington Bullets is about the bullets sent by the architects of US imperialism—the nation’s political and economic elites—to crush revolutions, assassinate democratically elected leaders, and destroy hope. Focusing on the rising national liberation movements in the Third World after the Second World War and continuing up to the present, historian and journalist Vijay Prashad delivers a scathing indictment of US imperialism, from the 1953 CIA-sponsored coup in Iran, to the twenty-first-century ousters of Dilma Rousseff in Brazil and Evo Morales in Bolivia.

Vijay Prashad is the Executive Director of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research. He is the author or editor of several books and is Chief Editor at LeftWord Books.

DISSENTING POWs

From Vietnam’s Hoa Lo Prison to America Today TOM WILBER and JERRY LEMBCKE

A fresh look at the resistance of US troops to the American war in Vietnam

Even if you don't know much about the war in Vietnam, you've probably heard of "The Hanoi Hilton," or Hoa Lo Prison, where captured US soldiers were held. What they did there and whether they were treated well or badly by the Vietnamese became lasting controversies. Half a century after the fact, Dissenting POWs emerges to recover this history, and to discover what drove the factionalism in Hoa Lo. After the war, the hardcore hero-holdouts—like John McCain—moved on to careers in politics and business, while the dissidents faded from view as the antiwar movement, that might otherwise have championed them, disbanded. Today, Dissenting POWs is a necessary myth-buster, disabusing us of the revisionism that has replaced actual GI resistance with images of suffering POWs—ennobled victims that serve to suppress the fundamental questions of America’s drift to endless war.

Tom Wilber represents a US-based nongovernmental organization that works on humanitarian projects with Vietnamese organizations. Jerry Lembcke is an Associate Professor of Sociology, Emeritus, at Holy Cross College and Distinguished Lecturer for the Organization of American Historians.

CRISIS AND PREDATION

India, COVID-19, and Global Finance RESEARCH UNIT FOR POLITICAL ECONOMY

How India's COVID-19 lockdown is creating an unprecedented humanitarian disaster

With the advent of COVID-19, India’s rulers imposed the world’s most stringent lockdown on an already depressed economy, dealing a body blow to the majority of India’s billion-plus population. Yet the Indian government’s spending to cushion the lockdown’s economic impact ranked among the world’s lowest in GDP terms. This book shows how this tight-fistedness stems from the fact that global financial interests oppose any sizable expansion of public spending by India, and that Indian rulers readily adhere to their guidance. It reveals that global investors and a handful of top Indian corporate groups actually benefit from the resulting demand depression: armed with funds, they are picking up valuable assets at distress prices.

The Research Unit for Political Economy, based in Mumbai, India, publishes the journal Aspects of India's Economy and a range of research publications in English, Hindi, and other Indian languages.

November 2020 216 pages • 5.5 x 8.5 31 color figures Paper • $15.00S 9781583679241 Cloth • $89.00X 9781583679258

Current Events | Politics Monthly Review Press

EXTRAORDINARY THREAT

The U.S. Empire, the Media, and Twenty Years of Coup Attempts in Venezuela JUSTIN PODUR and JOE EMERSBERGER

The US foreign policy decisions behind six coup attempts against the Venezuelan government – and Venezuela's heightening precarity

In Extraordinary Threat, Joe Emersberger and Justin Podur tell the story of six coup attempts against Venezuela. This book deflates the myths propagated about the Venezuelan government’s purported lack of electoral legitimacy, scant human rights, and disastrous economic development record. Contrary to accounts lobbed by the corporate media, the real target of sustained US assault on Venezuela is not the country’s claimed authoritarianism or its supposed corruption. It is Chavismo, the prospect that twenty-first century socialism could be brought about through electoral and constitutional means.

Justin Podur is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change at York University. Joe Emersberger is an engineer, writer, and activist based in Canada. June 2021 248 pages • 5.5 x 8.25 22 black & white illustrations Paper • $25.00S 9781583679166 Cloth • $89.00X 9781583679173

History | Politics Monthly Review Press

IN THE STRUGGLE

Scholars and the Fight against Industrial Agribusiness in California DANIEL J. O'CONNELL and SCOTT J. PETERS

Daniel O’Connell is executive director of the Central Valley Partnership, a regional nonprofit organization and progressive network of labor unions, environmental organizations, and community groups spanning the San Joaquin Valley. Trained as a multidisciplinary ethnographer, he holds an MS in International Agricultural Development from University of California, Davis, and a PhD in Education from Cornell University. As a politically engaged scholar, his work is dedicated to achieving social, racial, environmental, and economic justice in California. Scott Peters is a professor in the Department of Global Development at Cornell University and a historian of American higher education’s public purposes and work. He has spent the past twenty years as a leader in the civic engagement movement in American higher education, most recently serving as faculty co-director of Imagining America: Artists and Scholars in Public Life (IA). He is the lead author of Democracy and Higher Education: Traditions and Stories of Civic Engagement.

July 2021 384 pages • 6 x 9 24 black and white illustrations Paper • 9781613321225 • $24.95S(£19.99) Cloth • 9781613321232 • $89.00X(£74.00)

Labor Studies New Village Press A call to action in an ongoing battle against industrial agriculture

From the early twentieth century and across generations to the present, In the Struggle brings together the stories of eight politically engaged scholars, documenting their opposition to industrial-scale agribusiness in California. As the narrative unfolds, their previously censored and suppressed research, together with personal accounts of intimidation and subterfuge, is introduced into the public arena for the first time. In the Struggle lays out historic, subterranean confrontations over water rights, labor organizing, and the corruption of democratic principles and public institutions. As California’s rural economy increasingly consolidates into the hands of land barons and corporations, the scholars’ work shifts from analyzing problems and formulating research methods to organizing resistance and building community power. Throughout their engagement, they face intense political blowback as powerful economic interests work to pollute and undermine scientific inquiry and the civic purposes of public universities. The findings and the pressure put upon the work of these scholars—Paul Taylor, Ernesto Galarza, and Isao Fujimoto among them—are a damning indictment of the greed and corruption that flourish under industrial-scale agriculture. After almost a century of empirical evidence and published research, a definitive finding becomes clear: land consolidation and economic monopoly are fundamentally detrimental to democracy and the well-being of rural societies.

JANE JACOBS'S FIRST CITY

Learning from Scranton, Pennsylvania GLENNA LANG

A thorough investigation of how Jane Jacobs’s ideas about the life and economy of great cities grew from her home city, Scranton

Jane Jacobs’s First City vividly reveals how this influential thinker and writer’s classic works germinated in the once vibrant, mid-size city of Scranton, Pennsylvania, where Jane spent her initial eighteen years. In the 1920s and 1930s, Scranton was a place of enormous di¬versity and opportunity. Small businesses of all kinds abounded and flourished, quality public education was supported by all, and even recent immi¬grants could save enough to buy a house. Opposing political parties joined forces to tackle problems, and citizens worked together for the public good. Through interviews with contemporary Scrantonians and research of historic newspapers, city directories, and vital records, author Glenna Lang has uncovered Scranton as young Jane experienced it and shows us the lasting impact of her growing up in this thriving and accessible environment. Readers can follow the development of Jane’s acute observational abilities from childhood through her passion in early adulthood to understand and write about what she saw. Reflecting Jane’s belief in trusting one’s own direct observation above all, this volume has been richly illustrated with historic and modern color images that help bring alive a past Scranton. The book demonstrates why, at the end of Jacobs’s life, her thoughts and conversations increasingly returned to Scranton and the potential for cohesion and inclusiveness in all cities.

Glenna Lang's previous work about Jane Jacobs—Genius of Common Sense: The Story of Jane Jacobs and “The Death and Life of Great American Cities”—was chosen as a 2009 Notable Book by both the New York Times and Smithsonian Magazine. Lang has illustrated four children’s books for David R. Godine and written and illustrated Looking Out for Sarah, about a day in the life of a seeing-eye dog, which won the American Library Association’s Schneider Family Award. Although she grew up mainly in New York City, she has lived for many years in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and teaches at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, now part of Tufts University.

“Reframes not only who Jacobs was, but also what Scranton was in the early 20th-century.” —Mark Hirsch, senior historian, Smithsonian Institution

May 2021 450 pages • 6 x 9 130 color illustrations Cloth • 9781613321393 • $39.95S(£33.00)

Biography | History New Village Press

Lyndon Penner grew up in Saskatchewan and comes from a long line of gardeners. He is a traveller, environmentalist, and lover of literature, and the author of several books, including Native Plants for the Short Season Yard.

“Lyndon’s delight at discovering plants he has long loved in their native habitats rings true.” —Sara Williams, author of Creating the Prairie Xeriscape

THE WAY OF THE GARDENER

Lost in the Weeds Along the Camino de Santiago LYNDON PENNER

Reverence takes on a new meaning in this original memoir of an avid gardener walking the Camino de Santiago

The Camino de Santiago has been a journey for pilgrims for more than 1,000 years, testing—to varying degrees—their spirit, faith, and physical endurance. Lyndon Penner’s attention lies elsewhere. A renowned gardener and lover of literature, he revels in the plants, trees, and flowers that tell the history of the people and ecology of northern Spain. Brimming with wry observations—of nature, himself, and other pilgrims on the road—The Way of the Gardener reveals the beauty and the darkness of the human condition while underscoring the deeply fascinating nature of nature itself. This textured work makes for perfect armchair—or garden—reading.

March 2021 224 pages • 4.25 x 7 17 black and white illustrations Paper • 9780889778061 • $21.95A Cloth • 9780889777835 • $89.00X

Travel | Biography - Adventurers and Explorers University of Regina Press

THE GIRL FROM DREAM CITY

A Literary Life LINDA LEITH

Vivid stories from a Canadian literary icon, who shares a life spread across continents and immersed in books

It’s the life that many young women dream of: education in some of Europe’s most beautiful cities before becoming a novelist, essayist, translator and literary curator. But the start of Linda Leith’s journey is anything but idyllic. The daughter of a glamorous mother and a charming left-wing doctor, she is never told of her father’s psychiatric breakdown or his subsequent shock therapy for what was then called manic depression. As this secret festers, Leith’s father uproots the family to various European cities as he reinvents himself as a corporate executive, eventually moving across the Atlantic to Montreal. It’s there, in her first year of university, that Leith is inspired by Madame de Staël: a writer and salonnière, banished from Paris by Napoleon himself. With none of Staël’s advantages—no wealth, no social status, no château on Lake Geneva—Leith can scarcely imagine a salon, but she is drawn to Paris, and dreams of becoming a writer. This dream fuels her education in London, her marriage and writing in Budapest, and—finally— her journey back to Montreal where she meets a community of writers and readers who she works with to transform the city’s literary scene. As Leith publishes, translates, and curates, she also comes to terms with her troubled father and the secrets of her childhood. A luscious read, this book will rivet readers of Jill Ker Conway’s The Road from Coorain and Tara Westover’s Educated, or anyone who has dreamed of building a cultural life.

Linda Leith attended schools in London, Basel, Belfast, Paris, and Montreal, graduating from the University of London, which granted her a PhD on the work of Samuel Beckett when she was twenty-four. A novelist, essayist, literary translator, and the founder of Blue Metropolis International Literary Festival and Linda Leith Publishing, she lives in Montreal.

April 2021 304 pages • 4.72 x 7.48 Paper • 9780889777859 • $18.95T In The Regina Collection

Memoir University of Regina Press

January 2021 320 pages • 4.72 x 7.48 Paper • $18.95T 9780889777965 In The Regina Collection

Memoir University of Regina Press

May 2021 162 pages • 5 x 8.5 Paper • $17.95T 9780889777002 Cloth • $89.00X 9780889778047 In Writers on Writing

Literature & Literary Studies University of Regina Press WHITE COAL CITY

A Memoir of Place and Family ROBERT BOSCHMAN

A moving, unflinching exploration of life in Prince Albert, SK, as told through one family’s multigenerational story

Robert Boschman grew up in the living quarters of the King Koin Launderette in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, sandwiched between a residential school and a jail built in the aftermath of the Riel Resistance of 1885. White Coal City is the story of this hard hockey-obsessed white-settler town on Treaty Six territory and Boschman’s troubled family who lived within it. Boschman describes the city of Prince Albert as a “circle of pain”—one felt by white settlers but more so for the generations of First Nations and Métis people in the city and surrounding lands who were forcibly removed, incarcerated, or abducted. White Coal City is a poetic, necessary exploration of the painful landscapes of colonial cities in Canada.

Robert Boschman specializes in ecocritical approaches to American literature, with emphasis on the seventeenth and twentieth centuries. His monograph, In the Way of Nature, was published by McFarland in 2009. He is also a past president of the Association for Literature, Environment, and Culture in Canada.

GATHER

Richard Van Camp on Storytelling RICHARD VAN CAMP

"Van Camp is… a brilliant weaver of tales."—Quill & Quire

Master storyteller and bestselling author Richard Van Camp on how to tell a good story

Gathering around a campfire, or the dinner table, we humans have always told stories. Through the stories we tell, we define our own identities and shape our understanding of the world. Master storyteller and bestselling author Richard Van Camp writes of the power of storytelling and its potential to transform both the speaker and the audience in Gather. Describing the elements required to make a story, he offers insights into how to read a room, how to capture the attention of listeners, how to create community through storytelling, and how to banish loneliness. A member of the Tlicho Dene First Nation, Van Camp includes stories from Elders whose wisdom influenced him.

Richard Van Camp is the author of over twenty books, including the Eisner-nominated graphic novel, A Blanket of Butterflies. His bestselling novel The Lesser Blessed has been made into a movie that has also received critical acclaim. He lives in Edmonton, Alberta.

RED OBSIDIAN

New and Selected Poems STEPHAN TORRE

A visceral new collection grappling with the strength and complexities of life in the northwest wild lands

Drawing from a life lived well, amidst hard work and time for reflection in the northwest wild lands of the Canadian and American Wests, Stephen Torre returns to the literary world with his usual descriptive and lyric intensity. Comprised of new and selected poems, Red Obsidian explores the necessary tensions that arise between genders and the pain and grief of environmental loss. Inspired and influenced by a diverse array of literary influences— Indigenous oral poets and English pastoral poets, T’ang Dynasty Chinese poets and Latin American poets, American Imagists and poets—Torre’s book is a poetic journal of a man passionately engaged at once with the marvel of wilderness and the rural labors of family homesteading, construction, and the logging of that wilderness.

Stephan Torre's diverse working life includes college teaching, counseling and family services, farming, logging, and construction. He lives in British Columbia.

RESISTANCE

Righteous Rage in the Age of #MeToo Edited by SUE GOYETTE

Writers across the globe speak out against sexual assault and abuse in this powerful new poetry anthology

These collected poems from writers across the globe declare one common theme: resistance. By exploring sexual assault and violence in their work, each writer resists the patriarchal systems of power that continue to support a misogynist justice system that supports abusers. In doing so, they reclaim their power and their voice. Created as a response to the Jian Ghomeshi case, writers including Joan Crate, Ashley-Elizabeth Best, and Beth Goobie are, as editor Sue Goyette explains, a “multitude, resisting.” The collection could not be more timely. The work adds a new layer to the ever-growing #MeToo movement. Resistance underscores the validity of all women’s experiences, and the importance of dignifying such experiences in voice, however that may sound. Because once survivors speak out and disrupt their pain, there is no telling what else they can do.

Sue Goyette is the award-winning author of six books of poems and a novel. Now Halifax’s eighth poet laureate, she lives in Halifax and teaches in the Creative Writing Program at Dalhousie University. March 2021 120 pages • 5.5 x 8.5 Paper • $16.95S 9780889777750 In Oskana Poetry & Poetics

Poetry University of Regina Press

May 2021 176 pages • 5.5 x 8.5 Paper • $21.95T 9780889778016

Poetry University of Regina Press

HOW I LOST MY MOTHER

A Story of Life, Care and Dying LESLIE SWARTZ

Leslie Swartz is a clinical psychologist and a distinguished professor of psychology at Stellenbosch University, South Africa best known for his work on disability studies, disability rights, and mental health issues. His memoir Able-Bodied: Scenes from a Curious Life, received critical acclaim.

A deeply felt account of the relationship between a mother and son, and an exploration of what care for the dying means in contemporary society

The book is emotionally complex—funny, sad and angry—but above all, heartfelt and honest. It speaks boldly of challenges faced by all of us, challenges which are often not spoken about and hidden, but which deserve urgent attention. This is first and foremost a work of the heart, a reflection on what relationships mean and should mean. There is much in the book about relationships of care and exploitation in southern Africa, and about white Jewish identity in an African context. But despite the specific and absorbing references to places and contexts, the book offers a broader, more universal view. All parents of adult children, and all adults who have parents alive, or have lost their parents, will find much in this book to make them laugh, cry, think and feel.

March 2021 252 pages • 6 x 9 Paper • 9781776146949 • $30.00S Cloth • 9781776146956 • $89.00S

Memoir | Psychology | Sociology Wits University Press

SURFACING

On Being Black and Feminist in South Africa Edited by DESIREE LEWIS and GABEBA BADEROON

The first collection of essays dedicated to contemporary Black South African feminist perspectives

What do African feminist traditions that exist outside the canon look and feel like? What complex cultural logics are at work outside the centres of power? How do spirituality and feminism influence each other? What are the histories and experiences of queer Africans? What imaginative forms can feminist activism take? Surfacing: On Being Black and Feminist in South Africa is the first collection of essays dedicated to contemporary Black South African feminist perspectives. Leading feminist theorist, Desiree Lewis, and poet and feminist scholar, Gabeba Baderoon, have curated contributions by some of the finest writers and thought leaders. Radical polemic sits side by side with personal essays, and critical theory coexists with rich and stirring life histories. By including writings by Patricia McFadden, Panashe Chigumadzi, Sisonke Msimang, Zukiswa Wanner, Yewande Omotoso, Zoë Wicomb and Pumla Dineo Gqola alongside emerging thinkers, activists and creative practitioners, the collection demonstrates a dazzling range of feminist voices. The writers in these pages use creative expression, photography and poetry in eclectic, interdisciplinary ways to unearth and interrogate representations of Blackness, sexuality, girlhood, history, divinity, and other themes. Surfacing is indispensable to anyone interested in feminism from Africa which, the contributors show, is in vivid and challenging conversations with the rest of the world.

Desiree Lewis is Professor in the Department of Women and Gender Studies at the University of the Western Cape. She is the author of Living on a Horizon: Bessie Head and the Politics of Imagining. Gabeba Baderoon is a literary scholar, poet and Associate Professor of Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies, and African Studies at Pennsylvania State University, where she also co-directs the African Feminist Initiative. She is the author of Regarding Muslims: from Slavery to Post-apartheid and four books of poetry, most recently The History of Intimacy.

April 2021 328 pages • 6.14 x 9.21 Paper • 9781776146093 • $35.00S Cloth • 9781776146130 • $89.00S

Current Events | Women's Studies | Sociology Wits University Press

UNCOUNTED

The Crisis of Voter Suppression in America GILDA R. DANIELS $30.00A • Cloth 9781479862351

STAY WOKE

A People's Guide to Making All Black Lives Matter TEHAMA LOPEZ BUNYASI and CANDIS WATTS SMITH $18.95T • Paper 9781479836482

ALGORITHMS OF OPPRESSION

How Search Engines Reinforce Racism SAFIYA UMOJA NOBLE $28.00S • Paper 9781479837243

JUST MEDICINE

A Cure for Racial Inequality in American Health Care DAYNA BOWEN MATTHEW $20.00S • Paper 9781479851621

Finalist, Creative Nonfiction IGNYTE Award, FIYACON for BIPOC+ in Speculative Fiction

THE DARK FANTASTIC

Race and the Imagination from Harry Potter to the Hunger Games EBONY ELIZABETH THOMAS $16.95A • Paper 9781479806072 2019 William J. Goode Book Award, Family Section of the American Sociological Association

WHITE KIDS

Growing Up with Privilege in a Racially Divided America MARGARET A. HAGERMAN $18.95T • Paper 9781479802456

Honorable Mention, 2020 Victor Turner Prize in Ethnographic Writing, Society for Humanistic Anthropology

REPRODUCTIVE INJUSTICE

Racism, Pregnancy, and Premature Birth DÁNA-AIN DAVIS $30.00S • Paper 9781479853571

HYPER EDUCATION

Why Good Schools, Good Grades, and Good Behavior Are Not Enough PAWAN DHINGRA $29.95T • Cloth 9781479831142

2020 Body and Embodiment Best Publication Award, American Sociological Association

FEARING THE BLACK BODY

The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia SABRINA STRINGS $28.00S • Paper 9781479886753

2020 Outstanding Book Award, given by the International Communication Association

SOCIAL MEDIA ENTERTAINMENT

The New Intersection of Hollywood and Silicon Valley STUART CUNNINGHAM and DAVID CRAIG $30.00S • Paper 9781479846894

2020 Outstanding Scholarly Contribution Award, Children and Youth Section of the American Sociological Association

KIDS AT WORK

Latinx Families Selling Food on the Streets of Los Angeles EMIR ESTRADA $28.00S • Paper 9781479873708

2020 ASCA Book Award, Amsterdam School of Cultural Analysis

WHEN ANIMALS SPEAK

Toward an Interspecies Democracy EVA MEIJER $35.00S • Paper 9781479863136 2020 American Book Award, Before Columbus Foundation

THE RACE CARD

From Gaming Technologies to Model Minorities TARA FICKLE $30.00S • Paper 9781479805952

2020 Latino Book Awards in the LGBTQ+ Themed Section

ARCHIVING AN EPIDEMIC

Art, AIDS, and the Queer Chicanx Avant-Garde ROBB HERNÁNDEZ $29.00S • Paper 9781479820832

2020 DLC Outstanding Contribution Award, American Society of Criminology

CRIMINAL TRAJECTORIES

A Developmental Perspective DAVID M. DAY and MARGIT WIESNER $40.00S • Paper 9781479864607

2020 Mary Kelley Book Prize, Society for Historians of the Early American Republic

IN PURSUIT OF KNOWLEDGE

Black Women and Educational Activism in Antebellum America KABRIA BAUMGARTNER $35.00S • Cloth 9781479823116

ACCESSIBLE AMERICA

A History of Disability and Design BESS WILLIAMSON $19.95A • Paper 9781479802494

KEYWORDS FOR DISABILITY STUDIES

Edited by RACHEL ADAMS, BENJAMIN REISS and DAVID SERLIN $28.00S • Paper 9781479839520

LITERARY BIOETHICS

Animality, Disability, and the Human MAREN TOVA LINETT $28.00S • Paper 9781479801251

A BODY, UNDONE

Living On After Great Pain CHRISTINA CROSBY $17.00S • Paper 9781479853168

RESTRICTED ACCESS

Media, Disability, and the Politics of Participation ELIZABETH ELLCESSOR $29.00S • Paper 9781479853434

CRIP TIMES

Disability, Globalization, and Resistance ROBERT MCRUER $30.00S • Paper 9781479874156

FANTASIES OF IDENTIFICATION

Disability, Gender, Race ELLEN SAMUELS $27.00S • Paper 9781479859498

SUCH A PRETTY GIRL

A Story of Struggle, Empowerment, and Disability Pride NADINA LASPINA $19.95S • Paper 9781613320990

New Village Press

THE TRANS GENERATION

How Trans Kids (and Their Parents) are Creating a Gender Revolution ANN TRAVERS $18.95A • Paper 9781479840410

A QUEER NEW YORK

Geographies of Lesbians, Dykes, and Queers JEN JACK GIESEKING $30.00S • Paper 9781479835737

QUEERING FAMILY TREES

Race, Reproductive Justice, and Lesbian Motherhood SANDRA PATTON-IMANI $30.00S • Paper 9781479814862

THE TRAGEDY OF HETEROSEXUALITY

JANE WARD $26.95T • Cloth 9781479851553

GROWING UP QUEER

Kids and the Remaking of LGBTQ Identity MARY ROBERTSON $26.00S • Paper 9781479876945

THE LIFE AND DEATH OF LATISHA KING

A Critical Phenomenology of Transphobia GAYLE SALAMON $24.00S • Paper 9781479892525

TRANS-AFFIRMATIVE PARENTING

Raising Kids Across the Gender Spectrum ELIZABETH RAHILLY $28.00S • Paper 9781479817153

BEYOND TRANS

Does Gender Matter? HEATH FOGG DAVIS $18.00A • Paper 9781479858088

GENDER VIOLENCE third edition

Interdisciplinary Perspectives Edited by LAURA L. O'TOOLE, JESSICA R. SCHIFFMAN, and ROSEMARY SULLIVAN $39.00S • Paper 9781479820801

TIMES SQUARE RED, TIMES SQUARE BLUE 20th anniversary edition

SAMUEL R. DELANY $25.00S • Paper 9781479827770

HOW TO PLAY VIDEO GAMES

Edited by MATTHEW THOMAS PAYNE and NINA B. HUNTEMANN $30.00S • Paper 9781479827985

FIGHT LIKE A GIRL second edition

How to Be a Fearless Feminist MEGAN SEELY $28.00S • Paper 9781479810109

2012 Best Book Award, Latino/a Sociology Section, American Sociological Association

PUNISHED

Policing the Lives of Black and Latino Boys VICTOR M. RIOS $26.00S • Paper 9780814776384

HOW TO WATCH TELEVISION second edition

Edited by ETHAN THOMPSON and JASON MITTELL

$30.00S • Paper 9781479898817

THE PRESIDENTS AND THE CONSTITUTION volume one

From the Founding Fathers to the Progressive Era Edited by KEN GORMLEY $22.00S • Paper 9781479802128

LOOKING TO REFRESH YOUR SYLLABUS? NYU Press is pleased to offer complimentary desk and exam copies to qualified educators. For more information or to request a copy, please visit: nyupress.org/resources/for-educators

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