Thursday, March 8, 2012
Afterimage of Empire: Photography in Nineteenth-Century India by Zahid R. Chaudhary F'08 now available from the University of Minnesota Press.
Afterimage of Empire provides a philosophical and historical account of early photography in India that...

Afterimage of Empire: Photography in Nineteenth-Century India by Zahid R. Chaudhary F'08 now available from the University of Minnesota Press.

Afterimage of Empire provides a philosophical and historical account of early photography in India that focuses on how aesthetic experiments in colonial photography changed the nature of perception. Considering photographs from the Sepoy Revolt of 1857 along with landscape, portraiture, and famine photography, Zahid R. Chaudhary explores larger issues of truth, memory, and embodiment.

(Source: upress.umn.edu)

[L]iving and talking with migrant workers from a variety of socioeconomic and cultural backgrounds. I observed their daily lives, the challenges they were up against, and noted the dramatic disconnect between their lived experiences and the policies written about “trafficked persons.” ACLS Fellows Focus on Research: Pardis Mahdavi F'09 on Human Trafficking Reconsidered. http://www.acls.org/news/6-14-11/

(Source: acls.org)

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

ACLS Fellows in the News. Richard J. A. Talbert F'00 will deliver a public lecture tonight concerning Roman cartography and the Peutinger map, a significant document because it is the only known surviving map showing the “cursus publicus,” or Roman roads. The lecture is hosted by Texas Tech and the American Institute of Archaeologists.

(Source: lubbockonline.com)

The Global Right Wing and the Clash of World Politics by Clifford Bob F'07 now available from Cambridge University Press.
This book is an eye-opening account of transnational advocacy, not by environmental and rights groups, but by conservative...

The Global Right Wing and the Clash of World Politics by Clifford Bob F'07 now available from Cambridge University Press.

This book is an eye-opening account of transnational advocacy, not by environmental and rights groups, but by conservative activists. Mobilizing around diverse issues, these networks challenge progressive foes across borders and within institutions. In these globalized battles, opponents struggle as much to advance their own causes as to destroy their rivals. Deploying exclusionary strategies, negative tactics and dissuasive ideas, they aim both to make and unmake policy. In this work, Clifford Bob chronicles combat over homosexuality and gun control in the UN, the Americas, Europe and elsewhere. He investigates the ‘Baptist-burqa’ network of conservative believers attacking gay rights, and the global gun coalition blasting efforts to control firearms. Bob draws critical conclusions about norms, activists and institutions, and his broad findings extend beyond the culture wars. They will change how campaigners fight, scholars study policy wars, and all of us think about global politics.

(Source: cambridge.org)

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

ACLS Fellows in the News. Eric M. MacPhail F'96 speaks about his book The Sophistic Renaissance today at the University of Indiana, Bloomington. His presentation is hosted by the College Arts & Humanities Institute and the Renaissance Studies Program.

The Sophistic Renaissance traces the fragmentary fortune of the ancient Greek sophists in the European Renaissance. After examining the textual tradition of the sophists from antiquity to the Renaissance and documenting their notoriety in humanist commentaries, the study surveys a broad range of literary texts that share the sophistic impulse to revel in opposing arguments and to exploit the capacity of speech to neutralize itself and to undermine all dogmatic convictions. The two authors who emerge as the champions of this relativistic Renaissance are Desiderius Erasmus and Michel de Montaigne. Ultimately, The Sophistic Renaissance seeks to put Erasmus and Montaigne in dialogue both with each other and with some of the most challenging and provocative voices of the classical past. MacPhail will address the association of sophistic and atheism and the understanding of religion as an instrument of rule.

(Source: indiana.edu)

Monday, March 5, 2012
The word nature is the most complicated word in the English language. Jesse Oak Taylor F'11 on the challenges of communicating the urgency and complexity of ecological crisis to the public.

(Source: livablefutureblog.com)

Photographs make history. Rather than portholes on the past, photographs are artifacts in their own right that can be mined to enrich historical understanding. ACLS Fellows Focus on Research: Jasmine Alinder F'09, F'97 on Photography and the Japanese American Incarceration. http://www.acls.org/news/9-8-11/

(Source: acls.org)

Saturday, March 3, 2012
The Maryknoll Catholic Mission in Peru, 1943–1989: Transnational Faith and Transformation by Susan Fitzpatrick-Behrens F'08 now available from the University of Notre Dame Press.
Maryknoll Catholic missionaries from the United States settled in Peru...

The Maryknoll Catholic Mission in Peru, 1943–1989: Transnational Faith and Transformation by Susan Fitzpatrick-Behrens F'08 now available from the University of Notre Dame Press.

Maryknoll Catholic missionaries from the United States settled in Peru in 1943 believing they could save a “backward” Catholic Church from poverty, a scarcity of clergy, and the threat of communism. Instead, the missionaries found themselves transformed: within twenty-five years, they had become vocal critics of United States foreign policy and key supporters of liberation theology, the preferential option for the poor, and intercultural Catholicism.

In The Maryknoll Catholic Mission in Peru, 1943-1989, Susan Fitzpatrick-Behrens explains this transformation and Maryknoll’s influence in Peru and the United States by placing it in the context of a transnational encounter among Catholics with shared faith but distinct practices and beliefs. Peru received among the greatest number of foreign Catholic missionaries who settled in Latin America during the Cold War. It was at the heart of liberation theology and progressive Catholicism, the center of a radical reformist experiment initiated by a progressive military dictatorship, and the site of a devastating civil war promoted by the Maoist Shining Path. Maryknoll participated in all these developments, making Peru a perfect site for understanding Catholic missions, the role of religion in the modern world, and relations between Latin America and the United States.

(Source: undpress.nd.edu)

Friday, March 2, 2012
[The] study of stories and storytelling can get at the heart of questions concerning how people make sense of—and thereby put themselves in a position to engage with—the circumstances and forces that help shape the course of their lives. ACLS Fellows Focus on Research: David Herman F'08 on Narrative Worldmaking across Media and Disciplines. http://www.acls.org/news/5-24-11/

(Source: acls.org)

Thursday, March 1, 2012
Trans-Americanity: Subaltern Modernities, Global Coloniality, and the Cultures of Greater Mexico by José David Saldívar F'91, F'85 now available from Duke University Press.
A founder of U.S.-Mexico border studies, José David Saldívar is a leading...

Trans-Americanity: Subaltern Modernities, Global Coloniality, and the Cultures of Greater Mexico by José David Saldívar F'91, F'85 now available from Duke University Press.

A founder of U.S.-Mexico border studies, José David Saldívar is a leading figure in efforts to expand the scope of American studies. In Trans-Americanity, he advances that critical project by arguing for a transnational, antinational, and “outernational” paradigm for American studies. Saldívar urges Americanists to adopt a world-system scale of analysis. “Americanity as a Concept,” an essay by the Peruvian sociologist Aníbal Quijano and Immanuel Wallerstein, the architect of world-systems analysis, serves as a theoretical touchstone for Trans-Americanity. In conversation not only with Quijano and Wallerstein, but also with the theorists Gloria Anzaldúa, John Beverley, Ranajit Guha, Walter D. Mignolo, and Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Saldívar explores questions of the subaltern and the coloniality of power, emphasizing their location within postcolonial studies. Analyzing the work of José Martí, Sandra Cisneros, Toni Morrison, Arundhati Roy, and many other writers, he addresses concerns such as the “unspeakable” in subalternized African American, U.S. Latino and Latina, Cuban, and South Asian literature; the rhetorical form of postcolonial narratives; and constructions of subalternized identities. In Trans-Americanity, Saldívar demonstrates and makes the case for Americanist critique based on a globalized study of the Américas.

(Source: dukeupress.edu)

Wednesday, February 29, 2012
How special is human language? How did it evolve? How important is language to making us who we are? ACLS Fellows Focus on Research: Mitchell Green F'05, F'00 on the Origins of Meaning and Communication. http://www.acls.org/news/7-11-11/

(Source: acls.org)

Monday, February 27, 2012
[T]here is nothing unduly ‘utopian’ in the idea that fairness in the global economy can and should substantially guide public deliberation and choice about the kind of international world we should have and move towards. ACLS Fellows Focus on Research: Aaron James F’08 on Fairness in the Global Economy. http://www.acls.org/news/5-10-11/

(Source: acls.org)

Sunday, February 26, 2012

ACLS Fellows in the News. Michael F. Suarez F'03, an authority on the history of books, will discuss “Old Books, Digital Books and the Future of Libraries,” in the 2012 Peple Lecture Feb. 26, 2 p.m., at the University of Richmond. Suarez is university professor and director of the Rare Book School at the University of Virginia. He is author of “The Oxford Companion to the Book,” a million-word reference about the history of books and manuscripts since the invention of writing.

(Source: news.richmond.edu)

Saturday, February 25, 2012

ACLS Fellows in the News. Susan Bernofsky F'05 joins Goethe Insitut symposium on Robert Walser’s microscripts “We Don’t Need to See Anything Out of the Ordinary. We Already See So Much.” http://bit.ly/AuCXQr

(Source: goethe.de)

Friday, February 24, 2012
Lost in Transition: Ethnographies of Everyday Life after Communism by Kristen Ghodsee G'09, F'05 now available from Duke University Press.
Lost in Transition tells of ordinary lives upended by the collapse of communism. Through ethnographic essays...

Lost in Transition: Ethnographies of Everyday Life after Communism by Kristen Ghodsee G'09, F'05 now available from Duke University Press.

Lost in Transition tells of ordinary lives upended by the collapse of communism. Through ethnographic essays and short stories based on her experiences with Eastern Europe between 1989 and 2009, Kristen Ghodsee explains why it is that so many Eastern Europeans are nostalgic for the communist past. Ghodsee uses Bulgaria, the Eastern European nation where she has spent the most time, as a lens for exploring the broader transition from communism to democracy. She locates the growing nostalgia for the communist era in the disastrous, disorienting way that the transition was handled. The privatization process was contested and chaotic. A few well-connected foreigners and a new local class of oligarchs and criminals used the uncertainty of the transition process to take formerly state-owned assets for themselves. Ordinary people inevitably felt that they had been robbed. Many people lost their jobs just as the state social-support system disappeared. Lost in Transition portrays one of the most dramatic upheavals in modern history by describing the ways that it interrupted the rhythms of everyday lives, leaving confusion, frustration, and insecurity in its wake.

(Source: dukeupress.edu)