Southern Illinois University Press Fall and Winter 2017
Table of Contents By Author
Ball, Backwards & Forwards: A Technical Manual for Reading Plays, 35th Anniversary Edition...................................6 Barnette, Adapturgy: The Dramaturg’s Art and Theatrical Adaptation...............................................................................11 Berry, Doing Time, Writing Lives: Refiguring Literacy and Higher Education in Prison....................................................9 Bessette, Retroactivism in the Lesbian Archives: Composing Pasts and Futures............................................................8 Booher/Jung, Feminist Rhetorical Science Studies: Human Bodies, Posthumanist Worlds.........................................8 Carwardine, Lincoln’s Sense of Humor.......................................................................................................................................2 Dubrow, Dots and Dashes...............................................................................................................................................................4 Elmore, Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address: Echoes of the Bible and Book of Common Prayer.........................................12 Fraker, Looking for Lincoln in Illinois: A Guide to Lincoln’s Eighth Judicial Circuit.............................................................3 Galvin, Egg Island Almanac.............................................................................................................................................................5 Gogan, Jean Baudrillard: The Rhetoric of Symbolic Exchange...............................................................................................9 Horrell, Southern Illinois Coal: A Portfolio.................................................................................................................................12 Jacobson, Walter’s Perspective: A Memoir of Fifty Years in Chicago TV News.............................................................12 Kells, Vicente Ximenes, LBJ’s Great Society, and Mexican American Civil Rights Rhetoric...........................................7 Mackowski/White, Turning Points of the American Civil War...............................................................................................1 Mason, Until Antietam: The Life and Letters of Major General Israel B. Richardson, U.S. Army.................................12 Mohlenbrock, Flowering Plants: Asteraceae, Part 3..............................................................................................................11 Montez, Memory, Transitional Justice, and Theatre in Postdictatorship Argentina.....................................................10 Noriega/Santana, Theatre and Cartographies of Power: Repositioning the Latina/o Americas ..............................10 Thompson, Emerson and the History of Rhetoric......................................................................................................................7
By Subject
Botany..............................................................11 Civil War.......................................................1, 12 Illinois.......................................................... 3, 12 Lincoln.................................................... 2, 3, 12 Literacy.............................................................. 9 Poetry............................................................ 4, 5 Rhetoric .....................................................7, 8, 9 Theater ..................................................6, 10, 11
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Cover image: publicity photo for Lola Arias’s Mi vida después (cropped). Photo by Lorena Fernández. Courtesy of Lola Arias.
Turning Points of the American Civil War
CIVIL WAR
Edited by Chris Mackowski and Kristopher D. White, with a foreword by Thomas A. Desjardin Investigating the course of the Civil War as a complex series of watershed moments
Although most Americans believe that
Chancellorsville, the issuance of the
turning point of the Civil War, the war
victory at Vicksburg, Grant’s decision to
the Battle of Gettysburg was the only actually turned repeatedly. Events unfolded in completely unexpected ways
and had unintended consequences. Turning Points of the American Civil
War examines key shifts and the context surrounding them, demonstrating
that the war was a continuum of watershed events.
The contributors show that many
Emancipation Proclamation, the Federal move on to Richmond rather than retreat
from the Wilderness, the naming of John
B. Hood as commander of the Army of Tennessee, and the 1864 presidential election. In their conclusion, editors
Mackowski and White suggest that the assassination of Abraham Lincoln might have been the war’s final turning point.
Presenting essays by public histo-
chains of events caused the course of
rians with experience at Civil War battle
at First Bull Run and Ball’s Bluff, the
fresh perspectives on political and mil-
the war to change: the Federal defeats wounding of Joseph Johnston at Seven
Pines and the Confederate victory at
sites, this provocative collection offers
itary events in the eastern and western theaters.
Chris Mackowski and Kristopher D. White Emerging Civil War.
December $24.50sp Paper 978-0-8093-3621-0 264 pages, 6 x 9, 31 illustrations Engaging the Civil War
“[This book has] a fresh and pointed perspective that will cause readers to rethink what too often they are mistakenly sure are the undeniable facts about the pendulum of war. Fascinating and must reading.” —John F. Marszalek, executive director of the Ulysses S. Grant Presidential Library
llas, Unionists, te Home Front
Southern Illinois University Press
Press
Campaign
Justin S. Solonick, PhD, is an adjunct instructor in the Department of History and Geography at Texas Christian University. His most recent publication, “Saving the Army of Tennessee: The Confederate Rear Guard at Ringgold Gap,” appeared in The Chattanooga Campaign, published by SIU Press in 2012. Amanda McCurry Photography, Fort Worth, Texas
the Civil War
ull narratives s the battle’s his contribuand dictated
SHILOH
S
Edited by Steven E. Woodworth
$24.95t Cloth 978-0-8093-2892-5 176 pages, 6 x 9, 3 illustrations Civil War Campaigns in the Heartland
at the Civil War Trust. He has cowritten several books with Chris Mackowski, including That Furious Struggle: Chancellorsville and the High Tide of the Confederacy, May 1–5, 1863.
ENGINEERING VICTORY
2/25/09 2:29:09 PM
Lincoln and the Civil War
Engineering O Victory: The Union Siege of Vicksburg n May 25, 1863, after driving the Confederate army into defensive lines surrounding Vicksburg, Mississippi, Union major general Ulysses S. Grant and his Army of the Tennessee laid siege to the fortress city. With no reinforcements and dwindling supplies, the Army of Vicksburg finally surrendered on July 4, yielding command of the Mississippi River to Union forces and effectively severing the Confederacy. In this illuminating volume, Justin S. Solonick offers the first detailed study of how Grant’s midwesterners serving in the Army of the Tennessee engineered the siege of Vicksburg, placing the event within the broader context of U.S. and European military history and nineteenth-century applied science in trench warfare and field fortifications. In doing so, he shatters the Lost Cause myth that Vicksburg’s Confederate garrison surrendered due to lack of provisions. Instead of being starved out, Solonick explains, the Confederates were dug out. After opening with a sophisticated examination of nineteenth-century military engineering and the history of siege craft, Solonick discusses the stages of the Vicksburg siege and the implements and tactics Grant’s soldiers used to achieve victory. As Solonick shows, though Grant lacked sufficient professional engineers to organize a traditional siege—an offensive tactic characterized by cutting the enemy’s communication lines and digging forward-moving approach trenches—the few engineers available, when possible, gave Union troops a crash course in military engineering. Ingenious midwestern soldiers, in turn, creatively applied engineering maxims to the situation at Vicksburg, demonstrating a remarkable ability to adapt in the face of
Michael Burlingame
Justin S. Solonick
The Union Siege of Vicksburg
Justin S. Solonick
Printed in the United States of America
Solonick jkt mech.indd 1
White, the chief historian of Emerging Civil War, is the education manager
Solonick
The Union Siege of Vicksburg
udents of the teresting and
The
The Shiloh Campaign
American History / Civil War ome one hundred thousand soldiers “By showing why Vicksburg fell did,battle Justin Solonick’s fought in thewhen Aprilit1862 of S. Shibook sheds new loh, lightand on nearly one oftwenty the most important campaigns of thousand men were the Civil War. Bykilled exploring how Grant’ s army achieveddied that success, or wounded; more Americans that Tennessee battlefield than it illuminates theonnature of Civil War armies andhad thedied society that raised them.” in all the nation’s previous wars combined. Steven E. Woodworth has brought togeth—Steven E. Woodworth, author of Nothing but Victory: er a group of superb historians to reassess The Army of the Tennessee, 1861–1865 this significant battle and provide in-depth analyses of key aspects of the campaign and “If Vicksburg wasitsthe front door to the Confederacy, it was engiaftermath. neering that provedThe to beeight the key to opening the door. Thus argues talented contributors dissect the campaign’s fundamental events, many Solonick, as he proceeds to methodically and convincingly make which have not received adequate atten- Army of his case. Lackingofprofessional engineers, U. S. Grant’s tionrelied beforeupon now. western John R. Lundberg examthe Tennessee often ingenuity for mining and ines the role of Albert Sidney Johnston, trenching. Their efforts, not fully appreciated by West Point thethe prized Confederate commander who orists even after recovered the war, won the day. Must reading not only for impressively after a less-thanwestern theater enthusiasts but also atforforts thoseHenry who wish stellar performance and to grasp how the war evolved.” Donelson only to die at Shiloh; Alexander Mendoza analyzes the crucial, and perhaps —Larry J. Daniel, author of Days of Glory: decisive, struggle to defend Union’s left;1861–1865 The Army of thethe Cumberland, Timothy B. Smith investigates the persistent legend that the Hornets’ Nest was the “Justin Solonick has produced an important and necessary study of spot of the hottest fighting at Shiloh; Stesiege operations at Vicksburg, setting the story within the context ven E. Woodworth follows Lew Wallace’s of European siegecontroversial craft and pointing the history march to tonew the directions battlefield in and of Civil War military This book is a breath of fresh air.” showsoperations. why Ulysses S. Grant never forgave —Earlhim; J. Hess, of Kennesaw Mountain: Garyauthor D. Joiner provides the deepest Sherman, analysis available of action UnionCampaign Johnston, andbythethe Atlanta gunboats; Grady McWhiney describes P. G. T. Beauregard’s decision to stop the first day’s attack and takes issue with his claim $37.50 USD 0-8093-3391-0 of victory; and Charles D. GrearISBN shows the ISBN 978-0-8093-3391-2 battle’s impact on Confederate soldiers, many of whom did not consider the battle a defeat for their side. In the final chapter, www. siupress . com Brooks D. Simpson analyzes how command relationships—specifically the interactions
ENGINEERING VICTORY
Prince of Dixie
The Shiloh Campaign
who concern loody Shiloh, r. It is not the many years to
Woodworth
tysburg Heroes
adversity. When instruction and oversight were not possible, the common soldiers improvised. Solonick concludes with a description of the surrender of Vicksburg, an analysis of the siege’s effect on the outcome of the Civil War, and a discussion of its significance in western military history. Solonick’s study of the Vicksburg siege focuses on how the American Civil War was a transitional one with its own distinct nature, not the last Napoleonic war or the herald of modern warfare. At Vicksburg, he reveals, a melding of traditional siege craft with the soldiers’ own inventiveness resulted in Union victory during the largest, most successful siege in American history. E. Woodworth Edited by Steven
Mackowski, a professor of journalism and mass communication at St. Bonaventure University, is the editor in chief of Emerging Civil War, editor of the Engaging the Civil War series, and historian-in-residence at Stevenson Ridge. He has written or cowritten more than a dozen books on the Civil War.
Read more about this new series on our website at www.siupress.com/engagingcw.
Also of Interest
heater’s most h and its key paigns in the tant contribuand South in
are co-founders of
$37.50sp Cloth 978-0-8093-3391-2 304 pages, 6 x 9, 37 illustrations
Southern Illinois University Press
1/13/15 10:03 AM
$19.95t Cloth 978-0-8093-3053-9 176 pages, 5 x 8
www.siupress.com
1
demonstrates that Lincoln’s funny stories
has become legendary. Lincoln’s Sense of
sonal advantage, though his reputation for
Humor registers the variety, complexity of
coln ran in telling jokes while the nation was engaged in a bloody struggle for existence.
Complete with amusing anecdotes,
this book shows how Lincoln’s uses of hu-
were the means of securing political or perunrestrained, uncontrollable humor gave welcome ammunition to his political foes. In fact, Lincoln’s jocularity elicited waves
of criticism during his presidency. He was dismissed as a “smutty joker,” a “first rate
second rate man,” and a “joke incarnated.” Since his death, Lincoln’s anecdotes
mor evolved as he matured and explores
and jokes have become detached from the
multiple sources: western tall tales, moral-
and cultural bite, losing much of the ironic
its versatility, range of expressions, and
ity stories, bawdy jokes, linguistic tricks, absurdities, political satire, and sharp wit.
While Lincoln excelled at self-mockery, nothing gave him greater pleasure than
satirical work lampooning hypocrisy and ethical double standards.
context that had given them their political and satiric meaning that he had intended.
With incisive analysis and laugh-inducing examples, Carwardine helps to recapture
a strong component of Lincoln’s character
and reanimates the good humor of our sixteenth president.
Richard Carwardine is a professor emeritus at Oxford University, where he served as Rhodes Professor of American History from 2002 to 2009 and as president of Corpus Christi College from 2010 to 2016. His analytical biography Lincoln won the Lincoln Prize in 2004.
November $24.95sp Cloth 978-0-8093-3614-2 168 pages, 5 x 8, 10 illustrations Concise Lincoln Library
See more books in the Concise Lincoln Library at www.conciselincolnlibrary.com. “Southern Illinois University Press’s Concise Lincoln Library is an excellent series of compact books. The premise of the series is to give readers the opportunity to quickly engage at a sophisticated level with selected Lincoln topics by noted Lincoln scholars. I own all volumes and haven’t been disappointed by a single one of them.” —Tom Peet, author of Reading Lincoln
Also of Interest
Marc Featherly, Illinois Wesleyan University
Abraham Lincoln and the Politics of Satire
painting by Eastman Johnson; Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division
Jacket design by Mary Rohrer Printed in the United States of America
$29.50sp Cloth 978-0-8093-3422-3 192 pages, 6 x 9, 41 illustrations
2
5/28/15 8:35 AM
with
Southern Illinois University Press
A llen c. guelzo, the author of Lincoln and Douglas: The Debates That Defined America, is Henry R. Luce Professor of the Civil War Era at Gettysburg College. He is a member of the National Council for the Humanities and a two-time winner of the Lincoln Prize, for Abraham Lincoln: Redeemer President and Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation: The End of Slavery in America.
LINCOLN ROBERT BRAY Printed in the United States of America
$29.95sp Cloth 978-0-8093-2995-3 272 pages, 6 ⅛ x 9 ¼
Southern Illinois University Press
Reading with Lincoln
A mericAn History / BiogrApHy hrough extensive reading and reflection, Abraham Lincoln fashioned a mind as powerfully intellectual and superlatively communicative thatLincoln of any scholars of “Allen C. Guelzo is one of theas finest other American leader. Reading our generation, andpolitical this book of essays reveals once again Lincoln uncoversofthe how of Lincoln’s awith unique combination impeccable scholarship with a inspiring rise to greatness by connecting wonderfully readable narrative style.” the content of his reading to the story of —Doris Kearns Goodwin, author of Team of his life. Rivals: The Political Genius Abraham Lincoln At the core of Lincoln’s success wasofhis self-education, centered on his love of and “Written in an easy, flowing style, Abraham appreciation for learning through books.Lincoln as aFrom Man of a valuable compendium of the ideas hisIdeas earlyis studies of grammar school driving some and of our most important handbooks children’s classics historical to his inquiries interest in Shakespeare’s Macbeth and thecollection is a into Lincoln’s life and times. This first-rate Bible during his WhitetoHouse years, what significant contribution the literature on Lincoln.” Lincoln read helped to define who he was of Lincoln and —Brian R. Dirck, author as a person and as a politician. This unique Davis: Imagining America, 1809–1865 study delves into the books, pamphlets, poetry, plays, and essays that influenced Lincoln’s thoughts and actions. soutHern illinois Exploring in great depthuniversity and detailpress university press drive those readings1915 that inspired the sixteenth mail code 6806 Linpresident, author Robert Bray follows carbondale, 62901teen coln’s progress closely, from the il young composing letterswww.siu.edu/~siupress for illiterate friends and neighbors to the politician who keenly emusd ployed what he read to $29.95 advance his agenda. Bray analyzes Lincoln’s radical period in isbn 0-8093-2861-5 New Salem, during which he came unisbn 978-0-8093-2861-1 der the influence of Anglo-American and French Enlightenment thinkers such as Thomas Paine, C. F. Volney, and Voltaire, and he investigates Lincoln’s appreciation of nineteenth-century lyric poetry, which he both read and wrote. Bray considers Cover illustration: Portrait of Abraham Lincoln, from Lincoln’s fascination science, mathlife, by W. B.with Travers, private collection. ematics, political economics, liberal social philosophy, and theology, and devotes special attention to Lincoln’s enjoyment of American humor. While striving to arrive at an understanding of the role each
T Robert Bray
Southern Illinois University Press
TODD NATHAN THOMPSON
Todd Nathan Thompson
Reading society, and democracy. Abraham Lincoln as a Man of Ideas is a broad and exciting survey of the ideas that made Lincoln great.
Bachrach
Robert Bray is the Colwell Professor of English at Illinois Wesleyan University. He is the author or editor of numerous articles and books, including Rediscoveries: Literature and Place in Illinois.
“Robert Bray has not only discovered every book and text and poem and braham Lincoln’s sense of humor proved treatise and humorous sketch and Shakespeare play that Lincoln read; he legendary during ownthe time and inside remains has also read them himself, and hehis takes reader those readings— and therefore inside Lincoln’sfacet mind.” a celebrated of his personality to this —William Lee Miller, author them, of President Lincoln: day. Indeed, his love of jokes—hearing The Duty of a Statesman telling them, drawing morals from them— prompted critics to dub Lincoln “the Na“Robert Bray’s approach to this important aspect of Lincoln’s developtionaland Joker.” The political cartoons and ment is both original provocative, for it aims at giving us not only the substance of Lincoln’s most consequential reading but the all-important print satires that mocked Lincoln often texture and flavor as well.”in precisely the same images and trafficked —Douglas L. Wilson, author of Lincoln’s Sword: terms Lincoln humorously used to characThe Presidency and the Power of Words terize himself. In this intriguing study, Todd Nathan Thompson considers the politically “Reading with Lincoln adds an important dimension to our understanding of our sixteenthproductive president’s relationship mind. It effectively delineates the rich resourcbetween Lincoln’s es of literature and his politicalofcareer. Bray’s use language of satire that and he thebrought satirictotreatments discussion of Lincoln’s reading in religion and science is especially cogent.” him in political cartoons, humor periodi—Fred Kaplan, author of Lincoln: The Biography of a Writer cals, joke books, and campaign literature. By fashioning a folksy, persona, “In this subtle, insightful study, Robert Brayfallible offers the first scholarly account of Lincoln’s reading. A professor of English, Braytohas Thompson shows, Lincoln was able usea keen literary sensibility and broad that enable him being to shedseverely bright light on the satire culture as a weapon without development of Lincoln’s taste and on the ways in which the books he read wounded by it. influenced his thinking and writing.” In his speeches, writings, andofpublic per-Lincoln: A Life —Michael Burlingame, author Abraham sona, Lincoln combined modesty and at“Bray expertly guides the readerin along what amounts to Lincoln’s inteltack, engaging strategic self-deprecation lectual pilgrimage through the works the many authors who influenced while denouncing hisof opponents, their polhim during hisicies, lifetime.” and their arguments, thus refiguring —Rodney O. Davis, coeditor of Herndon’s Informants: Letters, satiric discourse asand political discourse Interviews, Statements aboutand Abraham Lincoln vice versa. At the same time, he astutely deflected his opponents’ criticisms of him $29.95 USD southern illinois university press by embracing and sometimes preemptively ISBN 0-8093-2995-6 1915 university press drive initiating those criticisms. Thompson ISBN traces 978-0-8093-2995-3 mail code 6806 Lincoln’s comic sources and explains how, carbondale, il 62901 in reapplying others’ jokes and stories to powww.siupress.com litical circumstances, he transformed humor into satire. Time and time again, Thompson shows, Lincoln engaged inLog self-mockery, Jacket illustration: The Boyhood of Lincoln—An Evening in the Hut, chromolithograph of
BRAY
Abr aham Lincoln as a Man of Ideas
THE NATIONAL JOKER subject played in the development of this remarkable leader, Bray also examines the connections and intertextual relations between what Lincoln read and how he wrote and spoke. This comprehensive and unique book provides fresh insight into the self-made man from the wilderness of Illinois. Bray offers a new way to approach the mind of the political artist who used his natural talent, honed by years of rhetorical study and practice, to abolish slavery and end the Civil War.
The National Joker: Abraham A Lincoln and the Politics of Satire
Abraham Lincoln as a Man of Ideas
Guelzo
$29.50 usd 8093-3422-4 8093-3422-3
Richard Carwardine methodically
make storytelling, jokes, and laughter tools
of the office, and his natural sense of humor
Reading with Lincoln
r Abraham: End Slavery
Abraham Lincoln was the first president to
humor and pinpoints the political risks Lin-
Abraham Lincoln and the Politics of Satire
ed study of deprecating he National
Appreciating the serious nature of Lincoln’s humor
purpose, and ethical dimension of Lincoln’s
THE NATIONAL JOKER
ln’s Selected ical Edition
Richard Carwardine
Lincoln’s Sense of Humor
THOMPSON
shows that humor and Joker is an a’s greatest
Lincoln’s Sense of Humor
RI C HARD CARWARDI N E
Lincoln’s Sense of Humor
Lincoln and vil War Era
Carwardine
es what no ating study The author ly, that Lind rhetorical even more
LINCOLN
A
braham Lincoln was a skilled politician, an inspirational leader, and a man of humor and pathos. What many may not realize is how much he was also a man of ideas. Despite the most meager of formal educations, Lincoln’s tremendous intellectual curiosity drove him into the circle of Enlightenment philosophy and democratic political ideology. And from these, Lincoln developed a set of political convictions that guided him throughout his life and his presidency. Abraham Lincoln as a Man of Ideas, a compilation of ten essays from Lincoln scholar Allen C. Guelzo, uncovers the sources of Lincoln’s ideas and examines the beliefs that directed his career and brought an end to slavery and the Civil War. These essays reveal Lincoln to be a man of impressive intellectual probity and depth as well as a man of great contradictions. He was an apostle of freedom who did not believe in human free will; a champion of the Constitution who had to step outside of it in order to save it; a man of many acquaintances and admirers, but few friends; a man who opposed slavery but also opposed the abolition of it; a man of prudence who took more political risks than any other president. Guelzo explores the many influences on Lincoln’s thinking, especially the Founding Fathers and the great European champions of democracy. And he links the sixteenth president’s struggles with the issues of race, emancipation, religion, and civil liberties to the challenges these issues continue to offer to Americans today. Lincoln played many roles in his public life—lawyer, politician, president—but in each he was driven by a core of values, convictions, and beliefs about economics,
Allen C. Guelzo
Abraham Lincoln
as a Man of Ideas Allen C. Guelzo Foreword by Michael Lind
$22.50sp Paper 978-0-8093-3582-4 230 pages, 6 x 9, 1 illustration
www.siupress.com
Looking for Lincoln in Illinois
A Guide to Lincoln’s Eighth Judicial Circuit Guy C. Fraker
LOOKING FOR
LINCOLN
A guide to the roads Lincoln traveled and the sites he visited as an Illinois lawyer For twenty-three years Abraham Lincoln
friends, and associates who became part
cuit in east central Illinois, and his legal
to the presidency. Fraker guides travelers
practiced law on the Eighth Judicial Cir-
career is explored in Looking for Lincoln in Illinois: A Guide to Lincoln’s Eighth Judicial
Circuit, the first guidebook to the circuit.
Guy C. Fraker directs readers and travelers through the prairies to the towns in which Lincoln practiced law.
Twice a year, Lincoln’s work took him
through the circuit’s fourteen counties, a
down the long stretches of quiet country
roads that gave Lincoln time to read and think, shaping his views of democracy and governance, to the locations where Lincoln’s broad range of cases expanded his
sense of the economic and social forces changing America.
This book provides detailed directions,
five maps of the routes, and nearly one
a lawyer grew and east central Illinois
many formative events occurred and the
increased in population and influence, the circuit provided Lincoln with clients,
IN ILLINOIS
of the network that ultimately elevated him
ten- to twelve-week journey covering more
than four hundred miles. As his stature as
hundred images of the places where so
A GUIDE TO LINCOLN’S EIGHTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
people who had an effect on Lincoln.
Guy C. Fraker, a retired attorney from Bloomington, Illinois, is the author of Lin-
Guy C. Fraker
coln’s Ladder to the Presidency: the Eighth Judicial Circuit. His articles have been published in the Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association, Illinois Heritage, the Bloomington Pantagraph, and the Champaign News Gazette. He was a consultant for the WILL-TV documentary Lincoln, Prelude to the Presidency, and he cocurated Prologue to the Presidency: Abraham Lincoln on the Eighth Judicial Circuit, an exhibit on permanent display at the David Davis Mansion.
November $19.95t Paper 978-0-8093-3616-6 136 pages, 6 x 9, 97 illustrations Looking for Lincoln
“Some years ago, I joined Guy Fraker on a remarkable tour of Lincoln’s law practice on the Eighth Judicial Circuit—and now you can, too. A lawyer and Lincoln scholar, Fraker brings us up close and personal to Lincoln the lawyer and politician. In this marvelous guided journey, you will come to see how Lincoln’s law practice prepared him to be our Civil War president.” —Ronald C. White, author of A. Lincoln: A Biography and American Ulysses: A Life of Ulysses S. Grant
Also of Interest
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Andreasen cvr mech.indd 1
$34.95t Cloth 978-0-8093-3201-4 352 pages, 6 x 9, 34 illustrations
LINCOLN
Bryon C. Andreasen
ALTHOUGH
LINCOLN’S SPRINGFIELD
they dwelt in different political, social, and cultural arenas, Abraham Lincoln and the pioneer generation of Latter-day Saints shared the same nineteenthcentury world. Looking for Lincoln in Illinois: Lincoln and Mormon Country relates more than thirty fascinating and surprising stories that show how the lives of Lincoln and the Mormons intersected. This abundantly illustrated book expands on some of the storyboards found on the Looking for Lincoln Story Trail, from the Mormon capital of Nauvoo to the state capital of Springfield. Created by the Looking for Lincoln Heritage Coalition, this trail consists of wayside exhibits posted in sites of significance to Lincoln’s life and career across fifty-two communities in Illinois. The book’s maps, historic photos, and descriptions of battles, Mormon expeditions, and events connect the stories to their physical locations. Exploring the question of whether Lincoln and Mormon founder Joseph Smith ever met, the author reveals that they traveled the same routes and likely stayed at the same inns. The book also includes colorful and engaging looks at key figures such as Brigham Young, various Mormon apostles, and Mormon gunsmith Jonathan Browning. This engaging look at a long-past environment invites you to imagine social and cultural landscapes that have been lost in time. Bryon C. Andreasen, a historian at the LDS Church History Museum in Salt Lake City, is the author of Looking for Lincoln in Illinois: Lincoln’s Springfield. He was formerly the research historian at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum and helped create the Looking for Lincoln Heritage Coalition. He lives in Bountiful, Utah.
$19.95 USD ISBN 978-0-8093-3384-4 www. siupress . com
Bryon C. Andreasen 5/11/15 2:37 PM
$19.95t Paper 978-0-8093-3382-0 128 pages, 6 x 9, 164 illustrations Looking for Lincoln
Andreasen_MC_cvr_mech.indd 1
Southern Illinois University Press
Looking for Lincoln in Illinois: Lincoln and Mormon Country
LOOKING FOR
“Drawing on a lifetime of research, Andreasen describes the historical intersections between America’s most beloved president and its most controversial prophet. This volume contains vignettes of the people and places that shaped Lincoln’s life and influenced the development of Mormonism that are as carefully researched and nuanced as they are engaging and enlightening.” —Alex D. Smith, historian, Joseph Smith Papers
Printed in the United States of America
portrait of the sixteenth president depends on a full understanding of his experience on the circuit, and Lincoln’s Ladder to the Presidency provides that understanding, as well as a fresh perspective on the much-studied$19.95 USD figure, thus deepening our understandingISBN 0-8093-3382-1 of the roots of his political influence andISBN 978-0-8093-3382-0 acumen.
Foreword by
Michael Burlingame
IN ILLINOIS
Guy C. Fraker, with a foreword by Michael Burlingame
Guy C. Fraker Southern Illinois University Press
LINCOLN
Printed in the United States of America
llections, ampaign
The Eighth Judicial Circuit
LOOKING FOR
“Like an exceptionally talented photographer, Andreasen cuts through the mythology surrounding Lincoln and the Mormons to provide highly illuminating snapshots of the world they both inhabited.” —Lachlan Mackay, director of the Joseph Smith Historic Site, Nauvoo, Illinois
LINCOLN AND MORMON COUNTRY
detailed troduces nty years ve him a both conlocale on d politics
American History / Lincoln
LOOKING FOR LINCOLN IN ILLINOIS
iography
T
Looking for Lincoln in Illinois: Lincoln’s Springfield
Andreasen
g portrait nows the n eye for political
“This brief volume contains a wealth of information shedding a bright light on both ‘Lincoln’s Springfield’ and ‘Springfield’s Lincoln.’ It is his twenty-three-year especially helpfulhroughout for those wishing to know more about Lincoln sites legal above and beyond thecareer, home,Abraham tomb, lawLincoln office, spent and capitol.” nearly as much time on the road as Distinguished —Michael Burlingame, Chancellor Naomi B. Lynn for the Eighth Judicial Chairan inattorney Lincoln Studies, University of Illinois Springfield Circuit as he did in his hometown of Springfield, Illinois. Yet most historians gloss over fifty Abraham Lincoln stories—some familiar and beloved, some this time and instead have Lincoln emerge fresh and unexpected—Looking for Lincoln in Illinois: Lincoln’s Springfield is a fully formed as a skillful politician in 1858. Illinois, locations carefully researched, richly illustrated guide to the Springfield, innovative volume, Guyby C.the Fraker on the Looking In forthis Lincoln Story Trail. Created Looking for Lincoln Heriprovides the first-ever of Lincoln’s tage Coalition, this trail consists of morestudy than two hundred illustrated storyboards personallife home posted at sites ofprofessional significanceand to Lincoln’s andaway careerfrom across fifty-two commuand demonstrates the Eighth Junities in Illinois.home The storyboards connecthow Lincoln-related tales to the geographical locations where dicial they occurred, giving visitors,propelled and now Linreaders, a tour of the social Circuit and its people and cultural landscape nineteenth-century world while revealing the coln to of theLincoln’s presidency. very human LincolnEach known by friends andLincoln associates. spring and fall, traveled Engaging stories the book bring Lincoln’s Springfield to as in many as fourteen county seats in the to life: Lincoln created controversy withEighth his Temperance Address, which in heconsecdelivered in a church on Fourth Judicial Circuit to appear Street in February 1842. He unexpectedly married Mary Todd in her sister’s home on utive court sessions over a ten- to twelvethe edge of Springfield later that year. The Lincolns’ sons used to harness dogs and week period. Fraker describes the people cats to small wagons and drive them around the dirt streets of town. When Lincoln and counties that Lincoln encountered, visited his dentist, he applied his own chloroform, because the practice of anesthesia discusses key cases played Lincoln and was not yet common. He reportedly thehandled, ball game Fives in a downtown alley important friends henomination. made, during the weekintroduces he awaitedthe news of his presidential And heavyweight friends who eventually the team boxing champion John C. Heenan visitedformed the presidential candidate in October that executed Lincoln’s nomination 1860. Through texts, historic photographs and images, stratand maps, you are invited at cultural the Chicago Republican Convention to imagine socialegy and landscapes that have been lost in time. in 1860 and won him the presidential nomiBryon C. Andreasen is a historian at the LDS Church History Museum in Salt nation. Lake City, Utah. HeAs previously was a research historian at the Abraham Lincoln Fraker shows, the Eighth Judicial Presidential Library andprovided Museumthe andperfect the editor of the Circuit setting forJournal the of the Abraham Lincoln Association. He lives in Bountiful, Utah, near Salt Lake City. growth and ascension of Lincoln. A complete
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$19.95t Paper 978-0-8093-3384-4 136 pages, 6 x 9, 115 illustrations Looking for Lincoln
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3
POETRY
DOTS POEMS BY JEHANNE DUBROW
DASHES
&
August $15.95t Paper 978-0-8093-3609-8 88 pages, 6 x 9 Crab Orchard Series in Poetry
Dots & Dashes
Poems by Jehanne Dubrow
Exploring the lives and conflicts of military spouses Moving between the languages of love and
the poet considers how the act of writing
valuable testimony to the experiences
granted to military spouses, even in the
war, Jehanne Dubrow’s latest book offers of military wives. Frequently employing rhyme, meter, and traditional forms, these
poems examine what it means to be both
a military spouse and an academic, strad-
dling two communities that speak in very different and often conflicting terms.
As in the poet’s earlier collection,
allows her autonomy and agency rarely
twenty-first century. Dubrow catalogs the
domestic life of a military spouse, illustrating what it is like to live in a tightly constructed world of rules and regulations, cer-
emony and tradition, where “every sacrifice already / knows its place.”
Navigating the rough seas of marriage
Stateside, the poems in Dots & Dashes
alongside questions about how civilians
riences of women whose husbands are
municate with one another, Dubrow argues
are explicitly feminist, exploring the expe-
deployed. But, while Stateside looked to masculine stories of war, Dots & Dashes incorporates the views and voices of fe-
male poets who have written about combat. Looking to Sappho and Emily Dickinson,
and those in the military can learn to comfor compassion and empathy on both sides.
In this timely collection, Dubrow offers the
hope that if we can break apart our preconceptions and stereotypes, we can find what connects all of us.
Jehanne Dubrow is the author of five poetry collections: The Arranged Marriage,
Red Army Red, Stateside, From the Fever-World, and The Hardship Post. Her poems, creative nonfiction, and book reviews have appeared in the Southern Review, the New York Times Magazine, and the Hudson Review, among others. She has received a number of awards and fellowships, including the Alice Fay Di Castagnola Award and two fellowships from the Sewanee Writers’ Conference. She is an associate professor at the University of North Texas.
The Long Deployment
From the Pentagon
For weeks, I breathe his body in the sheet and pillow. I lift a blanket to my face. There’s bitter incense paired with something sweet, like sandalwood left sitting in the heat or cardamom rubbed on a piece of lace. For weeks, I breathe his body. In the sheet I smell anise, the musk that we secrete with longing, leather and moss. I find a trace of bitter incense paired with something sweet. Am I imagining the wet scent of peat and cedar, oud, impossible to erase? For weeks, I breathe his body in the sheet— crushed pepper—although perhaps discreet, difficult for someone else to place. There’s bitter incense paired with something sweet. With each deployment I become an aesthete of smoke and oak. Patchouli fills the space for weeks. I breathe his body in the sheet until he starts to fade, made incomplete, a bottle almost empty in its case. There’s bitter incense paired with something sweet. And then he’s gone. Not even the conceit of him remains, not the resinous base. For weeks, I breathed his body in the sheet. He was bitter incense paired with something sweet.
He brings me chocolate from the Pentagon, dark chocolates shaped like tanks and fighter jets, milk chocolate tomahawks, a bonbon like a kirsch grenade, mint chocolate bayonets. He brings me chocolate ships, a submarine descending in a chocolate sea, a drone unmanned and filled with hazelnut praline. He brings me cocoa powder, like chocolate blown to bits. Or chocolate squares of pepper heat. Or if perhaps we’ve fought, he brings a box of truffles home, missiles of semisweet dissolving on the tongue. He brings me Glocks and chocolate mines, a tiny transport plane, a bomb that looks delicious in its cellophane.
“Dubrow examines the difficulty of communication between man and woman, military and civilian, service member and academic. . . . The speakers of Dots & Dashes . . . are often full of longing, but are also weary, wary, more mature and empathetic from too many past deployments. . . . Dubrow [is] one of our greatest poets, and the brilliance of Dots & Dashes reads loud and clear.” —Siobhan Fallon, award-winning author of You Know When the Men Are Gone
4
Southern Illinois University Press
www.siupress.com
POETRY
Egg Island Almanac Poems by Brendan Galvin
Meditations on meaning and the natural world An endangered right whale attempting to
the smallest detail—bird-watching, rebuild-
foxgloves blooming in different places from
quail. Other poems recall the poet’s affec-
nurse her new calf in the December ocean, year to year, or the rescue of imperiled
Kemp’s ridley sea turtles—the bounty and
cruelty of nature infuses this latest collec-
tion of poems from Brendan Galvin, which takes as its maxim finding the extraordinary in the ordinary all around us.
The poems chronicle the waxing and
ing a woodpile, or the flight of bobwhite
tionate memories of his deceased wife and
the life they shared together, acknowledg-
question of where humans fit into this wild, ever-changing landscape.
In meditations that recall the poetry
dunes near a small seacoast town on the
increase readers’ appreciation for the nat-
chusetts. Galvin’s training as a naturalist and environmental writer is evident as his
practiced eye roves the waves, marshes, and forests, finding meaning and beauty in
B R EN DAN GALVI N
Always present beneath the surface is the
and prose of Mary Oliver or W. S. Merwin,
outermost reaches of Cape Cod, Massa-
P O EM S BY
ing grief without veering into the maudlin.
waning of the seasons from one winter to the next in the area around Egg Island, the
Eg g Island A lmanac
Galvin sets off on a vivid journey sure to
ural world. Perhaps his most compelling message is that readers need not jet off to Everest or Kilimanjaro to experience mystery and beauty on Earth—there’s wonder aplenty in our own backyards.
Brendan Galvin is the author of seventeen poetry collections, including Habi-
tat: New and Selected Poems, 1965–2005, a finalist for the National Book Award. His awards include a Guggenheim Fellowship, two NEA fellowships, the Iowa Poetry Prize, and the first O. B. Hardison, Jr., Poetry Prize from the Folger Shakespeare Library. He has been a Wyndham Robertson Visiting Writer in Residence at Hollins University, a Coal Royalty Distinguished Writer in Residence at the University of Alabama, Tusca loosa, and a Whichard Chairholder in the Humanities at East Carolina University.
A Taut String Across the Path
August $15.95t Paper 978-0-8093-3607-4 80 pages, 6 x 9 Crab Orchard Series in Poetry
An Egg Island Equinox
between the marsh grass and the dunes, so I pulled it, though naturally even out here you tend to wonder about explosions these days. Out on the marsh as I tugged a black-and-white skull and crossbones stood up—a kite with red and black streamers. It climbed a little into the air so I saw I could fly it if I got it high enough to catch the breeze. And higher. I had to get it right this time. Running across Ferry Street sixty-five years ago my first kite tore open like tissue before I even got it to the gate of Glendale Park.
There is no radical shift of light or redwings calling areas of marsh their territories yet, nor plovers probing for copepods. Only a yellow front-end loader laying out a new berm on the beach, from tubes too heavy to be called hoses, its audience one man and his protesting dog. No frosted wedding cake on tour, no Cap’n Beauregard hailing us from the Texas deck, no Texas deck, just an unshaven crew launching zodiacs from the county dredge, its twin stacks staining itself and the air with smoke, as battered an emblem of hope as any other. So spring comes to Egg Island, squealing and unwilling. Sulfur and diesel, flywheel, gear and grind until one morning the equinox dawns and silences the whole shebang.
“Brendan Galvin is one of our best poets of place, perhaps the best. Egg Island Almanac takes us again to . . . the woods and marshes at the outer reaches of Cape Cod, and in line after line he renders the physical world of changing seasons with a fine eye.” —Peter Makuck, author of Long Lens: New and Selected Poems, Pulitzer Prize nominee
This is the way things will go for you, a thought told me then, but here at the other end of my string, the dog dancing around for me to explain myself, barking for me to tell him what it was, the skull and crossbones dancing up there too—if this is to be my banner, so be it.
Southern Illinois University Press
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5
THEATER
Backwards & Forwards
A Technical Manual for Reading Plays 35th Anniversary Edition
David Ball, with forewords by Michael Langham and Joseph Haj
The best-selling script analysis book for thirty-five years Considered an essential text since its
what the playwright considers a play’s
guide for students and practitioners of
interpretation based on the foundation of
publication thirty-five years ago, this both theater and literature complements, rather than contradicts or repeats, tra-
most important elements, thus permitting the play rather than its details.
Using Shakespeare’s Hamlet as il-
ditional methods of literary analysis of
lustration, Ball assures a familiar base
Ball developed his method during his
as well as exemplifying the kinds of mis-
scripts.
work as literary director at the Guthrie
Theater, building his guide on the crafts
playwrights of every period and style use to make their plays stageworthy. The
text is full of tools for students and prac-
titioners to use as they investigate plot, character, theme, exposition, imagery, conflict, theatricality, and the other crucial parts of the superstructure of a play.
Also included are guides for discovering
for clarifying script-reading techniques interpretation readers can fall prey to
by ignoring the craft of the playwright. Of immense utility to those who want to
put plays on the stage (actors, directors, designers, production specialists) Backwards and Forwards is also a fine playwriting manual because the structures it describes are the primary tools of the playwright.
David Ball was one of the nation’s first theater literary directors when he served
under Michael Langham at Minneapolis’s Guthrie Theater. He later taught acting, directing, and script analysis at Lawrence, Carnegie Mellon, and Duke Universities. He was artistic director of Pittsburgh’s renowned Metro Theater and the literary director of the Pittsburgh Public Theater. David Ball’s plays and adaptations have been frequently staged at professional repertory theaters throughout the United States and in Europe, including most recently his landmark adaptations of Moliere’s Tartuffe, The Miser, and The Imaginary Invalid. His former theater and film students hold Oscars, Obies, Tonys, and Emmys, and his own work has been supported by the Ford, McKnight, and Shubert Foundations, and the National Endowment for the Arts.
Available $20.00s Paper 978-0-8093-1110-1 104 pages, 5 ½ x 8 ½
PRAISE FOR BACKWARDS & FORWARDS “Our editor says he learned more about dramatic structure in the few hours he spent with this ninety-six-page book than he has in his twenty years of theater experience.”
“David Ball’s Backwards and Forwards is the standard for anyone trying to understand the nature of dramatic action. No book has more succinctly and pragmatically described how plays actually work than this one.”
—Stage Directions “David Ball’s Backwards and Forwards is without a doubt the most practical, useful, and inspiring book I’ve used in my graduate playwriting classes. . . . It’s the bible for all theatre practitioners.”
—Michael M. Chemers, author of Ghost Light: An Introductory Handbook for Dramaturgy “Backwards and Forwards is succinct, clear, and incisive. As long as stories are valued, this book will stay young. I just keep going back to it. Students love it. And so do their teachers.”
—Stephen DiMenna, faculty at New York University “For decades, David Ball’s Backwards and Forwards has been my secret weapon for every class that I have taught in theatre arts.”
—David Feldshuh, Cornell University “This book is invaluable for teaching writers how to read a play and hence how to craft their own. . . . It is a classic in theatre pedagogy. I can’t teach without it.” —Darrah Cloud, Goddard College
—Theresa Larkin, California State University, Los Angeles
6
Southern Illinois University Press
www.siupress.com
RHETORIC
Vicente Ximenes, LBJ’s Great Society, and Mexican American Civil Rights Rhetoric
Michelle Hall Kells, with a foreword by Juan C. Guerra The rhetorical history of a pivotal activist
Beginning as a grassroots organizer in the
speeches and writings. In Vicente Ximenes,
of the movement for Mexican American civil
Civil Rights Rhetoric, Michelle Hall Kells elu-
1950s, Vicente Ximenes was at the forefront
rights through three presidential administrations, joining Lyndon B. Johnson’s Great
Society and later emerging as one of the highest-ranking appointees in Johnson’s administration. One of the most influential
government representatives of Mexican
American issues in recent history, Ximenes succeeded largely because he could adapt
his rhetoric for different audiences in his
LBJ’s Great Society, and Mexican American
cidates Ximenes’s achievements through a
rhetorical history of his career as an activist. Kells shows us a remarkable man who dedicated the majority of his life to public service,
using rhetoric to mobilize activists for change
at the grassroots level as well as at the highest levels of government to secure civil rights
advances for his fellow Mexican Americans.
Michelle Hall Kells is an associate professor of rhetoric and writing at the University of New Mexico. She is the author of Hector P. Garcia: Everyday Rhetoric and Mexican American Civil Rights and first editor of Latino/a Discourses: On Language, Identity, and Literacy Education and Attending to the Margins: Writing, Researching, and Teaching on the Front Lines. Her articles focusing on civil rights rhetoric, community literacy, and ethnolinguistic diversity have appeared in many edited collections and journals.
January $40.00s Paper 978-0-8093-3639-5 352 pages, 6 x 9, 21 illustrations
Emerson and the History of Rhetoric Roger Thompson
The first book-length examination of Emerson’s contributions to rhetorical theory Much has been written about Ralph Waldo
Drawing on Emerson’s manuscript
Emerson’s fundamental contributions to
notes, journal entries, and some of his rarely
ist, philosopher, lecturer, and poet. However,
more famous works, the author demonstrates
American literature and culture as an essaydespite wide agreement among literary and rhetorical scholars on the need for further
study of Emerson as a rhetorical theorist, not much has been published on the subject. Emerson and the History of Rhetoric fills this gap
in our knowledge, reenvisioning Emerson’s work through his significant engagement with
rhetorical theory throughout his career and
discussed essays and lectures as well as his
not only Emerson’s relevance to rhetorical history but also rhetorical history’s relevance to Emerson and nineteenth-century Ameri-
can literature and culture. This book bridges
the divide between literary and rhetorical studies, expanding our understanding of
this iconic nineteenth-century man of letters.
providing a more profound understanding of Emerson’s influence on American ideology.
Roger Thompson is an associate professor and the graduate coordinator of the
Program in Writing and Rhetoric at Stony Brook University. He is the coeditor of four books, including The Rhetoric of St. Augustine of Hippo: “De Doctrina Christiana” and the Search for a Distinctly Christian Rhetoric. His articles and book chapters on rhetoric and Emerson have been published in a number of journals and books. He is a member of the Ralph Waldo Emerson Society advisory board.
Southern Illinois University Press
www.siupress.com
November $35.00s Paper 978-0-8093-3612-8 176 pages, 6 x 9
7
RHETORIC
Feminist Rhetorical Science Studies Human Bodies, Posthumanist Worlds
Edited by Amanda K. Booher and Julie Jung The essays in Feminist Rhetorical Science
How can feminist rhetoricians of science en-
ence studies to dismiss rhetoric as having
the posthuman? Some contributors respond
Studies disrupt tendencies in feminist sciconcern only for language; they counter
posthumanist theories that ignore human
materialities and asymmetries of power as co-constituted with and through distinctions
such as gender, sex, race, and ability; they
model methodologies for doing feminist research in the rhetoric of science; and collectively they build innovative interdisciplinary
bridges across the related but divergent fields of feminism, posthumanism, new materialism, and the rhetoric of science.
Each essay addresses the question,
gage responsibly with emerging theories of
with case studies in medical practice (fetal ultrasound; patient noncompliance), medical science (the neuroscience of sex differ-
ences), and health policy (drug trials of the FDA); others respond with a critical review
of object-oriented ontology and a framework for researching women technical writers in
the workplace. The editors argue that a key contribution of feminist posthumanist rheto-
ric is that it rethinks the agency of people,
things, and practices in ways that can bring about more ethical human relations.
Amanda K. Booher is an assistant professor of English at the University of Akron. She has published essays in Intercom, Present Tense, Disability Studies Quarterly, and the International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics.
Julie Jung
is a professor of English at Illinois State University. Her book Revisionary Rhetoric, Feminist Pedagogy, and Multigenre Texts won the 2005 W. Ross Winterowd Award for most outstanding book on composition theory.
January $45.00s Paper 978-0-8093-3633-3 272 pages, 6 x 9, 2 illustrations Studies in Rhetorics and Feminisms
Retroactivism in the Lesbian Archives Composing Pasts and Futures Jean Bessette
Retroactivism, archives, and the shaping of lesbian identity Grassroots historiography has been essen-
have revised and replaced dominant ac-
the twentieth century. Retroactivism in the
reveals inventive rhetorical strategies lever-
tial in shaping American sexual identities in
Lesbian Archives examines how lesbian collectives have employed “retroactivist� rheto-
rics to propel change in present identification and politics. By appropriating and composing versions of the past, these collectives question, challenge, deconstruct, and reinvent
historical discourse itself to negotiate and contest lesbian identity.
Jean Bessette considers a diverse ar-
ray of primary sources, including grassroots newsletters, place-based archives, experi-
mental documentary films, and digital video collections, to investigate how retroactivists
counts of lesbian deviance. Her analysis
aged by these rhetors to belie the alienating, dispersing effects of discourses that painted
women with same-sex desire as diseased and criminal. Focusing on the Daughters of Bilitis, the Lesbian Herstory Archives, and
the June L. Mazer Archives, and historiographic filmmakers such as Barbara Ham-
mer and Cheryl Dunye, Bessette argues that these retroactivists composed versions of a
queer past that challenged then-present oppressions, joined together provisional communities, and disrupted static definitions and associations of lesbian identity.
Jean Bessette is an assistant professor at the University of Vermont whose essays have been published in Rhetoric Review, College Composition and Communication, Computers and Composition, and Rhetoric Society Quarterly.
8
Southern Illinois University Press
www.siupress.com
December $40.00s Paper 978-0-8093-3623-4 192 pages, 6 x 9, 10 illustrations Studies in Rhetorics and Feminisms
Jean Baudrillard
RHETORIC
Gogan
The Rhetoric of Symbolic Exchange Brian Gogan
The first book-length treatment of Jean Baudrillard as a rhetorical theorist
Jean Baudrillard
Jean Baudrillard, a French social theorist and
more comprehensive approach presents
has been studied as a sociologist, philoso-
a whole.
critic often associated with postmodernism, pher, cultural theorist, political commenta-
Jean Baudrillard: The Rhetoric of Sym-
Jean Baudrillard
tor, and photographer. In Jean Baudrillard:
bolic Exchange makes the French theorist’s
Gogan establishes him as a rhetorician,
relates them to the work of important phi-
The Rhetoric of Symbolic Exchange, Brian
The Rhetoric of Symbolic Exchange
fresh perspectives on Baudrillard’s work as
demonstrating how the histories, traditions, and practices of rhetoric prove central to his
use of language. In addition to Baudrillard’s standard works, Gogan examines many of the scholar’s lesser-known writings that have
never been analyzed by rhetoricians, and this
complex concepts understandable and losophers and intellectuals, including Plato, Aristotle, Ferdinand de Saussure, Hannah
Arendt, and Kenneth Burke, providing a thorough and accessible introduction to Baudrillard’s ideas.
Brian Gogan is an associate professor of rhetoric and writing studies in the depart-
Brian Gogan
ment of English at Western Michigan University. His articles have appeared in College Composition and Communication, Rhetoric Review, and the International Journal of Baudrillard Studies.
October $35.00s Paper 978-0-8093-3625-8 256 pages, 6 x 9 Rhetoric in the Modern Era
LITERACY
Doing Time, Writing Lives
Refiguring Literacy and Higher Education in Prison Patrick W. Berry
Analyzing college writing in U.S. prisons Doing Time, Writing Lives offers a much-
education will help them.
writing in U.S. prisons, a racialized space
with the author’s own personal experiences
lion people—remains nearly invisible to the
ing Lives chronicles how incarcerated stu-
needed analysis of the teaching of college
that—despite housing more than 2.2 milgeneral public. Through the examination of a college-in-prison program that promotes the belief that higher education in prison can reduce recidivism and improve life prospects
for the incarcerated and their families, author
Patrick W. Berry exposes not only incarcerated students’ hopes and dreams for their
futures but also their anxieties about whether
Combining case studies and interviews
teaching writing in prison, Doing Time, Writdents attempt to write themselves back into
a society that has erased their lived histories. It challenges polarizing rhetoric often used to describe what literacy can and cannot deliver, suggesting more nuanced and ethical
ways of understanding literacy and possibility in an age of mass incarceration.
Patrick W. Berry is a coauthor of Transnational Literate Lives in Digital Times, which
received the 2013 CCCC Research Impact Award and the Advancement of Knowledge Award, and a coauthor of a collaborative webtext published in Kairos that received the Computers and Composition Michelle Kendrick Outstanding Digital Production/Scholarship Award. He is a cochair of the CCCC special interest group Teaching in Prison: Pedagogy, Research, and Literacies and, since 2014, has led CCCC workshops related to prison research and teaching.
Southern Illinois University Press
DOING TIME, WRITING LIVES Refiguring Literacy and Higher Education in Prison Patrick W. Berry
www.siupress.com
January $40.00s Paper 978-0-8093-3637-1 160 pages, 6 x 9, 2 illustrations
9
THEATER
Theatre and Cartographies of Power Repositioning the Latina/o Americas
Edited by Jimmy A. Noriega and Analola Santana From the colonial period to independence
and into the twenty-first century, Latin American culture has been mapped as a sub-
histories have been constructed in the Americas.
Contributors—scholars and artists from
ordinate “other” to Europe and the United
throughout the Americas, including well-
dynamics, theatre scholars and artists have
ers—imagine how to reposition the Latina/o
States. In reaction to these shifting power continuously rewritten and remapped Latina/o American cultural histories. Theatre
and Cartographies of Power reconsiders
geographical space and power and the ways in which theatrical and performance
known playwrights, directors, and performAmericas in ways that offer agency to its
multiple peoples, cultures, and histories. In addition, they explore the ways artists
can create new maps and methods for their creative visions.
Jimmy A. Noriega, an assistant professor of theatre at the College of Wooster, is the recipient of the 2013 Elliott Hayes Award for Outstanding Achievement in Dramaturgy from LMDA and the 2015 Collaborative Research Award from ASTR. He has published essays in Review: The Journal of Dramaturgy, Theatre Topics, Latin American Theatre Review, and Lateral. Analola Santana, an assistant professor at Dartmouth College, works as a profes-
sional dramaturg and is a company member of Mexico’s famed Teatro de Ciertos Habitantes. She has published in several journals, including Gestos, Latin American Theatre Review, Letras Femeninas, Paso de gato, Hispanic Issues, Chasquí, Theatre Topics, and Cuadernos de Literatura.
February $60.00s Paper 978-0-8093-3631-9 320 pages, 6 x 9, 15 illustrations Theater in the Americas
MEMORY,
Memory, Transitional Justice, and Theatre in Postdictatorship Argentina
TRANSITIONAL
Noe Montez
The impact of theatre on collective memory and politics In Memory, Transitional Justice, and The-
trials, amnesties and pardons, and memorial
Montez considers how theatre, as a site of
in the last decade of the twentieth century
atre in Postdictatorship Argentina, Noe
activism, can produce memory narratives
events and spaces—that have taken place
and the first two decades of the twenty-first
JUSTICE, AND
THEATRE
regime’s human rights violations. Drawing
American theatre history and performance
in Postdictatorship Argentina
justice strategies, memory studies, and
postdictatorship Argentina, analyzing plays
NOE MONTEZ
that change the public’s reception to gov-
ernmental policies that address a previous on contemporary research in transitional theatre history, Montez examines the Argentine theatre’s responses to the numerous
changes in the country’s transitional justice
policies—truth and reconciliation hearings,
century.
This book fills an important gap in Latin
studies, exploring theatrical engagement in
by artists who have not yet been addressed
in English-language articles and books, and
exploring the practicalities of staging performances in Latin America.
Noe Montez is an associate professor and the director of graduate studies in drama
and dance at Tufts University. His essays have been published in Theatre Topics, Latin American Theatre Review, Texas Theatre Journal, New England Theatre Journal, the Journal of Religion and Theatre, Theatre History Studies, American Theatre, and the edited collection Public Theatres and Theatre Publics.
10
Southern Illinois University Press
www.siupress.com
November $50.00s Paper 978-0-8093-3629-6 264 pages, 6 x 9, 13 illustrations Theater in the Americas
THEATER
Adapturgy
The Dramaturg’s Art and Theatrical Adaptation
ADAPTURGY
Jane Barnette
The pivotal role of the dramaturg in adaptation
THE DRAMATURG’S ART AND THEATRICAL ADAPTATION JANE BARNETTE
Jane Barnette has put together an essential
case study—for analyzing theatrical adap-
seeking to understand and participate in the
the dramaturg: dramaturgy for the adapted
guide for theatre scholars and practitioners process of adaptation for the stage. Employing the term “adapturgy”—her neologism for
the art of adaptation dramaturgy—Barnette redefines the dramaturg’s role and refutes
the view that adapted works are somehow less creative than “original” plays..
The dual nature of dramaturgy and
adaptation as both process and product is
tations. Part 3 offers concrete strategies for script, the production dramaturgy of stage adaptations, and the role of the dramaturg in the postmortem for a production. Rounding out the book are two appendixes containing
interviews with adapters and theatre makers and representative program notes from different play adaptations.
Plays adapted from literature and other
reflected in the book’s organization. Part 1
media represent a rapidly growing segment
dramaturgy advances our understanding of
Art and Theatrical Adaptation offers both
explores the ways that linking adaptation to
both practices. Part 2 demonstrates three different methods—each grounded in a detailed
in the theatre. Adapturgy: The Dramaturg’s practical and theoretical tools for understanding and creating these new works.
Jane Barnette is an assistant professor and the director of graduate studies in the theatre department at the University of Kansas. She has published essays in the Journal of Adaptation in Film and Performance and Text and Performance Quarterly and in the edited collection The Routledge Companion to Dramaturgy.
November $40.00s Paper 978-0-8093-3627-2 256 pages, 6 x 9, 10 illustrations Theater in the Americas
BOTANY
Flowering Plants
The Illustrated Flora of Illinois
Asteraceae, Part 3
Flowering Plants
Robert H. Mohlenbrock
Asteraceae, Part 3 Robert H. Mohlenbrock
Third and final volume on the aster family of plants Flowering Plants: Asteraceae, Part 3, is the third and final volume in botanist Robert H.
Mohlenbrock’s comprehensive sequence of
applied to species and lesser taxa in Illinois are given under each species.
In addition, Mohlenbrock has identified
books on the aster family in Illinois. In this
the overall range for each species. Ranges
in 49 genera with 11 hybrids and 57 lesser
northeastern to the northwestern extrem-
volume, Mohlenbrock identifies 128 species
taxa. He provides an easy-to-use key to the genera and species and a complete description and nomenclatural and habitat notes for
are described more specifically, from the
ities, south to the southwestern limit, then eastward to the southeastern limit.
As important to amateurs as to profes-
each plant, including its uses, if applicable.
sional botanists and land planners, this last
of the species and includes common, locally
essential addition to the esteemed Illustrated
The book details the most important features used names. Synonyms that have been
volume of Mohlenbrock’s Asteraceae is an Flora of Illinois series.
Robert H. Mohlenbrock taught botany at Southern Illinois University Carbondale
for thirty-four years. Since his retirement, he has served as senior scientist for Biotic Consultants, teaching wetland identification classes around the country. Among his more than sixty books are Vascular Flora of Illinois and Field Guide to U.S. National Forests. September $30.00s Paper 978-0-8093-3605-0 200 pages, 6 x 9 The Illustrated Flora of Illinois
Southern Illinois University Press
www.siupress.com
11
“A. E. Elmore demonstrates Lincoln’s skill as a wordsmith and shows in intricate and persuasive detail how his language in the Gettysburg Address closely reflected both the King James Bible and the Book of Common Prayer. Lincoln borrowed from these texts, refracted the words through his own experience and sense of rhythm, and produced the most elegant public address in American history. Elmore’s book should be essential reading for anyone interested in the language, ideas, and impact of Lincoln’s statement.” —John B. Boles, author of The South through Time: a History of an American Region
Echoes of the Bible and Book of Common Prayer “This book offers an extraordinarily thorough examination of the words, concepts, and literary associations of Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. Its arguments about the connections of this famous speech to the King James Bible are convincing; its examination of connections to Shakespeare, the Book of Common Prayer, and landmark statements of American political history are provocative in the best way.” —Mark A. Noll, author of The Civil War as a Theological Crisis
A. E. Elmore
“Just when it seemed that everything that could be said about the Gettysburg Address had been said, A. E. Elmore has provided a new way to think about the speech and the man who made it. The result is a fascinating study of the mind of Abraham Lincoln.” —Michael S. Green, author of Freedom, Union, and Power: Lincoln and His Party in the Civil War
LINCOLN’S GETTYSBURG ADDRESS: Echoes of the BIBLE and Book of COMMON PRAYER
While it has long been determined that Abraham Lincoln’s writings southern illinois university press 1915 university press drive mail code 6806 carbondale, il 62901 www.siupress.com
$32.95 usd isbn 0-8093-2951-4 isbn 978-0-8093-2951-9
were influenced by the King James
F
LINCOLN’S GETTYSBURG ADDRESS
our score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battlefield of that war. We have come to dedicate
Echoes of the
BIBLE and Book of COMMON PRAYER
has shown the precise ways in
which the specific language of that
W
Until Antietam
The Life and Letters of Major General Israel B. Richardson, U.S. Army
hile it has long been determined that Abraham Lincoln’s writings were influenced by the King James Bible, until now no full-length study has shown the precise ways in which the Gettysburg Address uses its specific language. Refuting the view that the address was crafted with traditional classical references, this revealing investigation provides a new way to think about the speech and the man who wrote it. A. E. Elmore offers chapterand-verse evidence from the Bible, as well as specific examples from the Episcopal Book of Common Prayer, to illustrate how Lincoln borrowed from these sources to imbue his speech with meanings that would resonate with his listeners. He cites every significant word and phrase—conceived, brought forth, struggled, remaining, consecrate, dedicate, hallow, devotion, new birth, to name a few—borrowed by Lincoln from these two religious texts for use in his dedication of the Gettysburg National Cemetery. Elmore demonstrates how Lincoln transformed the lovely old language of the Bible and the Book of Common Prayer into something as close to perfection as any public speech has ever achieved. He further reveals how Lincoln used and transformed the language of his political enemies to promote his antislavery agenda and to advance the gospel of equality, borrowingf or example his controversial “proposition that all men are created equal” in nearly equal parts from John C. Calhoun and the Declaration of Independence. Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address focuses on a number of overlooked themes and ideas, such as the importance of literary allusion and the general public’s knowledge of the Bible in the age of Lincoln. It provides fresh answers to old questions and poses new ones. No one who reads this highly engaging study will ever think about Lincoln or the Gettysburg Address in the same way again.
Jack C. Mason
While researching this book, Jack
C. Mason found more than one hundred unpublished and unknown
letters from Union general Israel B.
Richardson to his family, written from his time as a West Point cadet
Bible, until now no full-length study
Southern Illinois University Press
ication of 19, 1863.
Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address
Elmore
ens State has conncluding on: Form Tradition,
NEW IN PAPER
until the day before his fatal wounding at the Battle of Antietam. Using
A. E. Elmore
these primary sources and exten-
book was used in the Gettysburg
November $22.50sp Paper 978-0-8093-3560-2 280 pages, 6 ⅛ x 9 ¼
Address. This revealing investigation provides a new way to think
about the speech and the man
sive research in secondary materials, Mason has written the first-ever biography of Israel B. Richardson.
Available $22.50sp Paper 978-0-8093-3611-1 258 pages, 6 ⅛ x 9 ¼, 27 illustrations
who wrote it.
A former trial lawyer and professor of law and literature, A. E. Elmore (1938–2016) contributed essays to a number of books, including American Fiction: Form and Function and The Vanderbilt Tradition, among others. “[This book] proves to be quite revelatory. . . . Elmore digs deep into the religious context of the time and fleshes out more completely here than other writers Lincoln’s wealth of understanding of the Bible.”
Jack C. Mason is retired both as a Department of the Army civilian and as a colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve. He is a member of the U.S. Army Officer Candidate School Hall of Fame. “Mason has done a valuable service in bringing Richardson’s fascinating story to life.” —The Civil War Times
—Register of the Kentucky Historical Society
Southern Illinois Coal
The coal mining photographs of C.
twenty-year period from 1966 to 1986, are extraordinary examples
June $24.95t Paper 978-0-8093-3599-2 130 pages, 8 ¾ x 8 ½, 79 illustrations Shawnee Books
of documentary photography—so
Printed in the United States of America
stark and striking that captions often seem superfluous. Horrell’s
processing, cleaning, and transpor-
photographs capture the varied
tation; as well as the daily, behind-
phenomena of twentieth-century
the-scenes operations that keep
coal mining technology; the related
mines and miners working.
activities of mining, including coal’s C. William Horrell (1918–1989) was instrumental in establishing the Department of Cinema and Photography. During Horrell’s lifetime, his photographs appeared in many major metropolitan newspapers and a variety of popular and specialty magazines, including Life. “In cool documentary style, Horrell’s photos detail the miners, the methods, and the artifacts of Illinois coal.” —St. Louis Post-Dispatch
12
A Memoir of Fifty Years in Chicago TV News
“In this lively romp through Chicago politics and the world of broadcast news, Jacobson provides key insights into the workings of the city and the high-stakes world of broadcast reporting. Told in the same lively, conversational, and forthright tone he has used to report and comment on the news over several decades, Jacobson’s memoir makes for great reading for anyone interested in the news business or seeking more insight into how Chicago works.” —Jacqueline Taylor, dean of the College of Communications, DePaul University, and author of Waiting for the Call
Walter Jacobson Foreword by Bill Kurtis
“Walter Jacobson is as much a Chicago landmark as Wrigley Field (where he stole other teams’ signals as a Cubs bat boy) or City Hall (where he tormented two mayors named Daley and all those in between). Walter’s Perspective takes us inside the newsrooms, pressrooms, and courtrooms that shaped his legendary career and defined Chicago broadcast journalism for a generation. Though he defies every conventional notion of a TV anchorman, he’s still one of the very best in town.” —Robert Feder, media critic, Time Out Chicago
A Memoir of Fifty Years in Chicago TV News
Celebrated anchor, investigative reporter, and political commentator, Walter Jacobson has won more than forty Emmys for his reporting and commentaries on three different television stations, CBS-WBBM, NBC-WMAQ, and Fox-WFLD—more than have been won by all the anchors in the history of Chicago combined.
“It’s Walter’s story of a remarkable chapter in the history of local television news, a memoir of a remarkable Chicago journalist who’s been a thorn in the sides of mayors Daley and Washington, Byrne and Emanuel, and of the managers of his newsrooms. He punctures arrogance, spies on abuses of power, and is a prickly inquisitor of Louis Farrakhan and Muhammad Ali; Hillary Clinton, Bill O’Reilly, and Barack Obama; Luciano Pavarotti, Liv Ulmann, and Boy George.”
WALTER’S PERSPECTIVE
interactions with Chicago mayors Richard J. and Richard M. Daley, Jane Byrne, Harold Washington, and Rahm Emanuel; recounts his coverage of such fascinating news stories as the violent 1968 Democratic National Convention and the execution of convicted mass murderer John Wayne Gacy; and recalls his reporting on and interviews with Louis Farrakhan, governors George Ryan and Rod Blagojevich, and Barack Obama. Jacobson’s story concludes with him back on the air after a brief retirement, paired once again with his former coanchor Bill Kurtis. More than a memoir, Walter’s Perspective is the extraordinary journey of one reporter whose distinctive career followed the rise and fall of local television news. Jacobson gives us a glimpse into the man who became one of Chicago’s most renowned television figures, and once again gives us his perspective, this time on the news industry itself.
C. William Horrell. Edited with an Introduction by Herbert K. Russell. Foreword by Jeffrey L. Horrell
southern Illinois Coal Belt over a
jacobson
From the Foreword by Bill Kurtis:
A Portfolio
William Horrell, taken across the
Walter’s Perspective
This book provides a unique glimpse into the rough-and“Jacobson, a legend in Chicago journalism, reveals the origin of his rivalry with columnist Mike Royko, takes readers inside local TV newsrooms, and describes how bad news decisions get made and mistakes haunt journalists forever. He trains his plain-speaking, “in-your-face” style, honed over decades of writing Perspectives, on himself and his industry. Reading his memoir, you can almost see him bobbing and weaving at his desk, taking aim this time not only at corrupt politicians but also at the corruption that has undermined the quality of television news.” —Phil Kadner, columnist for the SouthtownStar
tumble Chicago news business as
WALTER’S PERSPECTIVE
A Memoir of Fifty Years in Chicago TV News Foreword by Bill Kurtis
seen through the eyes of one of its Southern Illinois University Press www.siupress.com
$24.95 usd isbn 0-8093-3112-8 isbn 978-0-8093-3112-3
legendary players. While it is ultimately Jacobson’s story, a memoir Jacket illustration: Walter Jacobson. Maria Ponce Photography
Southern Illinois University Press
of a long and distinguished (and
sometimes highly controversial) career, it is also an insider’s account of the inner workings of Chi-
October $19.95t Paper 978-0-8093-3618-0 216 pages, 6 x 9, 28 illustrations
cago television news, including the
the media’s power and its failures,
ratings games, the process of de-
and the meddling by corporate and
fining news and choosing stories,
network executives.
Celebrated anchor, investigative reporter, and political commentator, Walter Jacobson has won more than forty Emmys for his reporting and commentaries—more than have been won by all other anchors in the history of Chicago combined. “Readers will love the sweep of this memoir, one written with a winning voice and perspective.” —Chicago Tribune
Southern Illinois University Press
www.siupress.com
Walter Jac
commuter sub Chicago Cubs coming a repor Walter’s Perspe in Chicago TV as a fifteen-yea first news job News columnis vision news at reporting on t forty years as o and powerful commentators career makes h along the front of dramatic c volume is ulti distinguished reporting life, of the inner w news, includin of defining new dia’s power and by corporate a As a report tentious and c on a number o victed of libelin Williamson, re federal court ju Yet it was this the top of the n inside informa and politics, an local television to visit Comm ing writing st periences and
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Lincoln’s Sense of Humor
ADAPTURGY
THE DRAMATURG’S ART AND THEATRICAL ADAPTATION JANE BARNETTE
RI C HARD CARWARD I N E
Lincoln’s Sense of Humor
Eg g Island A lmanac P O EM S BY
B R EN DAN GALVI N