Spring/Summer 2010 - University of Toronto Press Publishing
Spring/Summer 2010 - University of Toronto Press Publishing
Spring/Summer 2010 - University of Toronto Press Publishing
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<strong>2010</strong><br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong>
U n i v e r s i t y o f T o r o n t o P r e s s<br />
SprinG <strong>Summer</strong><br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
General Interest 1<br />
New in Paperback 13<br />
Business 20<br />
Education 22<br />
Politics & Policy 23<br />
Philosophy 29<br />
Economics 32<br />
History 33<br />
Italian Studies 40<br />
Medieval & Renaissance Studies 46<br />
M.A.R.T. 53<br />
Literary Studies 54<br />
Cultural Studies 58<br />
Indigenous Studies 60<br />
Anthropology 63<br />
Psychology / Mental Health 64<br />
Sociology 65<br />
Reference 68<br />
L.E.M.E. 71<br />
Recent and Selected Backlist 72<br />
Index 82<br />
Order Form 84<br />
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UTP would also like to express gratitude to the Canada Council <strong>of</strong> the Arts for its support.<br />
Cover and catalogue design by John Beadle
General Interest<br />
Watching YouTube<br />
Extraordinary Videos by Ordinary People<br />
Michael Strangelove<br />
Digital Futures<br />
An anonymous musician plays Pachelbel’s Canon on<br />
the electric guitar in a clip that has been viewed over<br />
sixty million times. The Dramatic Gopher is viewed over<br />
sixteen million times, as is a severely inebriated David<br />
Hasselh<strong>of</strong>f attempting to eat a hamburger. Over 800<br />
variations, parodies, and parodies-<strong>of</strong>-parodies are uploaded<br />
<strong>of</strong> Beyoncé Knowles’ Single Ladies dance. Tay<br />
Zonday sings Chocolate Rain in a video viewed almost<br />
forty million times and scores himself a record deal.<br />
Obama Girl enters the political arena with contributions<br />
such as I Got a Crush on Obama and gets coverage on<br />
mainstream news networks.<br />
In Watching YouTube, Michael Strangelove provides<br />
a broad overview <strong>of</strong> the world <strong>of</strong> amateur online videos<br />
and the people who make them. Dr. Strangelove,<br />
the Governor General Literary Award-nominated author<br />
Wired Magazine called a ‘guru <strong>of</strong> Internet advertising,’<br />
describes how online digital video is both similar to and<br />
different from traditional home-movie-making and argues<br />
that we are moving into a post-television era characterized<br />
by mass participation.<br />
Strangelove draws from television, film, cultural, and<br />
media studies to help define an entirely new field <strong>of</strong> research.<br />
Online practices <strong>of</strong> representation, confessional<br />
video diaries, gendered uses <strong>of</strong> amateur video, and<br />
debates over elections, religion, and armed conflicts<br />
make up the bulk <strong>of</strong> this groundbreaking study, which<br />
is supplemented by an online blog at strangelove.com/<br />
blog. An innovative and timely study, Watching YouTube<br />
raises questions about the future <strong>of</strong> cultural memory,<br />
identity, politics, warfare, and family life when everyday<br />
representational practices are altered by four billion<br />
cameras in the hands <strong>of</strong> ordinary people.<br />
Michael Strangelove is an adjunct pr<strong>of</strong>essor in<br />
the Department <strong>of</strong> Communication at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Ottawa.<br />
Also by Michael Strangelove:<br />
the Empire <strong>of</strong> Mind<br />
Digital Piracy and the Anti-Capitalist Movement<br />
978-0-8020-3818-0<br />
£21.50 / $37.95 / 2005<br />
‘Watching YouTube is well written, carefully researched, and a<br />
pleasure to read. Michael Strangelove beautifully brings together<br />
contemporary research and a fast-growing body <strong>of</strong> video to<br />
draw coherence and clarity from a seemingly chaotic cultural<br />
space and practice.’<br />
Alexandra Juhasz, Department <strong>of</strong> Media Studies, Pitzer College<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
cultural stuDIes / COMMunICatIOns<br />
Approx. 272 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
10 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4145-7 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1067-5 £18.95 $29.95 T<br />
1
General Interest<br />
Multicultiphobia<br />
Phil Ryan<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Official multiculturalism, established as Canadian government<br />
policy in 1971, has drawn criticism from many<br />
scholars and journalists who view it as a potential threat<br />
to a strong, unified Canadian society. In this timely and<br />
original book, Phil Ryan examines the emergence and<br />
influence <strong>of</strong> these criticisms, which continue to provoke<br />
an anxiety he calls “multicultiphobia.” Although Ryan<br />
argues that multicultiphobic discourse is <strong>of</strong>ten marred<br />
by important errors <strong>of</strong> fact and interpretation, a systematic<br />
inspection <strong>of</strong> news coverage and parliamentary debates<br />
reveals the persistent influence <strong>of</strong> these critiques<br />
and their underlying concerns.<br />
Rather than simply dismissing multicultiphobia, Ryan<br />
acknowledges that critics <strong>of</strong> multiculturalism have identified<br />
issues about which Canadians need to talk. Does<br />
multiculturalism discourage adaptation and encourage<br />
‘cultural walls’ between Canadians Does it promote an<br />
‘anything goes’ relativism Finally, what do we – both<br />
as supporters and critics <strong>of</strong> multiculturalism – wish to<br />
make <strong>of</strong> Canada’s ethnic diversity Multicultiphobia<br />
perceptively tackles all <strong>of</strong> these questions by means <strong>of</strong> a<br />
sophisticated analysis that encourages a deeper understanding<br />
<strong>of</strong> the issues at the heart <strong>of</strong> multiculturalism.<br />
Phil Ryan is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School <strong>of</strong><br />
Public Policy and Administration at Carleton <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Of related interest:<br />
Exalted Subjects<br />
Studies in the Making <strong>of</strong> Race and Nation in Canada<br />
Sunera Thobani<br />
978-0-8020-9454-4<br />
£22.50 / $38.00 / 2007<br />
Race, Racialization, and Antiracism<br />
in Canada and Beyond<br />
Edited by Genevieve Fuji Johnson and Randy Enomoto<br />
978-0-8020-9504-6<br />
£22.50 / $38.00 / 2007<br />
‘Multicultiphobia is a nuanced critique from a very cultured author<br />
who quotes Habermas and Peanuts, Woody Allen, Dostoevsky,<br />
and Rousseau, an author who possesses a good understanding<br />
<strong>of</strong> … multiculturalism as well as a deep knowledge<br />
<strong>of</strong> national debates.’<br />
Danielle Juteau, Department <strong>of</strong> Sociology, Université de Montréal<br />
Multiculturalism and the History <strong>of</strong><br />
Canadian Diversity<br />
Richard J.F. Day<br />
978-0-8020-8075-2<br />
£12.00 / $24.95 / 2000<br />
politICal sCIence / cultural stuDIes / SOCIOLOGY<br />
Approx. 256 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4146-4 £35.00 $55.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1068-2 £15.00 $24.95 C<br />
2
General Interest<br />
Eating Chinese<br />
Culture on the Menu in Small Town<br />
Canada<br />
Lily Cho<br />
Cultural Spaces<br />
“Chicken fried rice, sweet and sour pork, and an order<br />
<strong>of</strong> onion rings, please.”<br />
Chinese restaurants in small town Canada are at once<br />
everywhere – you would be hard pressed to find a town<br />
without a Chinese restaurant – and yet they are conspicuously<br />
absent in critical discussions <strong>of</strong> Chinese diasporic<br />
culture or even in popular writing about Chinese<br />
food. In Eating Chinese, Lily Cho examines Chinese<br />
restaurants as spaces that define, for those both inside<br />
and outside the community, what it means to be Chinese<br />
and what it means to be Chinese-Canadian.<br />
Despite restrictions on immigration and explicitly<br />
racist legislation at national and provincial levels, Chinese<br />
immigrants have long dominated the restaurant<br />
industry in Canada. While isolated by racism, Chinese<br />
communities in Canada were still strongly connected<br />
to their non-Chinese neighbours through the food that<br />
they prepared and served. Cho looks at this surprisingly<br />
ubiquitous feature <strong>of</strong> small-town Canada through<br />
menus, literature, art, and music. An innovative approach<br />
to the study <strong>of</strong> diaspora, Eating Chinese brings<br />
to light the cultural spaces crafted by restaurateurs, diners,<br />
cooks, servers, and artists.<br />
Lily Cho is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Western Ontario.<br />
Of related interest:<br />
The Donut<br />
A Canadian History<br />
Steve Penfold<br />
978-0-8020-9545-9<br />
£15.00 / $24.95 / 2008<br />
Culinary Landmarks<br />
A Bibliography <strong>of</strong> Canadian Cookbooks, 1825–1949<br />
Edited by Elizabeth Driver<br />
978-0-8020-4790-8<br />
£112.00 / $185.00 / 2008<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
cultural stuDIes / culinary stuDIes / race stuDIes<br />
Approx. 224 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
20 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4105-1 £35.00 $55.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1040-8 £15.00 $24.95 C<br />
3
General Interest<br />
The Politics <strong>of</strong><br />
Command<br />
Lieutenant-General A.G.L. McNaughton<br />
and the Canadian Army, 1939 –1943<br />
John Nelson Rickard<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
In December 1943, Lieutenant-General A.G.L. Mc-<br />
Naughton resigned from command <strong>of</strong> the First Canadian<br />
Army amidst criticism <strong>of</strong> his poor generalship and <strong>of</strong><br />
his abrasive personality. Despite McNaughton’s importance<br />
to the Canadian Army during the first four years<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Second World War, little has been written about<br />
the man himself or the circumstances <strong>of</strong> his resignation.<br />
In The Politics <strong>of</strong> Command, the first full-length study<br />
<strong>of</strong> the subject since 1969, John Nelson Rickard analyse<br />
McNaughton’s performance during exercise SPARTAN<br />
in March 1943 and assesses his relationships with key<br />
figures such as Sir Alan F. Brooke, Bernard Paget, and<br />
Harry Crerar. This detailed re-examination <strong>of</strong> McNaughton’s<br />
command argues that the long-accepted reasons<br />
for his relief require extensive modification.<br />
Based on a wide range <strong>of</strong> sources, The Politics <strong>of</strong><br />
Command will redefine how military historians and all<br />
Canadians look not only at “Andy” McNaughton, but<br />
the Canadian Army as well.<br />
John Nelson Rickard is a Captain in the Canadian<br />
Army and has a PhD in military history from the <strong>University</strong><br />
<strong>of</strong> New Brunswick.<br />
‘John Nelson Rickard has written an impressive, nuanced work<br />
that aptly demonstrates the challenges facing Lieutenant-General<br />
A.G.L. McNaughton’s command and his creative responses to<br />
them. A classic example <strong>of</strong> the conflict between character and circumstance,<br />
The Politics <strong>of</strong> Command portrays McNaughton as a<br />
rational, well-informed decision maker constrained by events and<br />
personalities over which he has no control.’<br />
Terry Copp, Department <strong>of</strong> History, Wilfrid Laurier <strong>University</strong><br />
and author <strong>of</strong> Fields <strong>of</strong> Fire and Cinderella Army<br />
Of related interest:<br />
A Thoroughly Canadian General<br />
A Biography <strong>of</strong> General H.D.G. Crerar<br />
Paul Douglas Dickson<br />
978-0-8020-0802-2<br />
£35.00 / $59.00 / 2007<br />
Cinderella Army<br />
The Canadians in Northwest Europe, 1944–1945<br />
Terry Copp<br />
978-0-8020-9522-0<br />
£20.00 / $31.95 / 2006<br />
Fields <strong>of</strong> Fire<br />
The Canadians in Normandy<br />
Terry Copp<br />
978-0-8020-3780-0<br />
£20.00 / $35.95 / 2004<br />
military Studies / history / biography<br />
Approx. 416 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2010</strong><br />
12 photos; 7 maps; 18 tables<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4002-3 £30.00 $46.95 E<br />
4
General Interest<br />
Canada’s Navy<br />
The First Century, Second Edition<br />
Marc Milner<br />
From its eighteenth-century roots in exploration and<br />
trade, to the major conflicts <strong>of</strong> the First and Second<br />
World Wars, through to current roles in multinational<br />
operations with United Nations and NATO forces, Canada’s<br />
navy – now celebrating its one hundredth anniversary<br />
– has been an expression <strong>of</strong> Canadian nationhood<br />
and a catalyst in the complex process <strong>of</strong> national unity.<br />
In the second edition <strong>of</strong> Canada’s Navy, Marc Milner<br />
brings his classic work up to date and looks back at one<br />
hundred years <strong>of</strong> the Navy in Canada. With supplementary<br />
photos, updated sources, a new preface and epilogue,<br />
and an additional chapter on the Navy’s global reach from<br />
1991 to <strong>2010</strong>, this edition carries Canadian Naval history<br />
into the twenty-first century. Milner brings effortless prose<br />
and exacting attention to detail to his comprehensive and<br />
accessible examination <strong>of</strong> this fascinating Canadian organization.<br />
This much-needed update <strong>of</strong> Canada’s Navy<br />
will continue to provoke discussion about the past and<br />
future <strong>of</strong> the country’s naval forces and their evolving role<br />
in the interwoven issues <strong>of</strong> maritime politics and economics,<br />
defence and strategy, and national and foreign policy.<br />
Of related interest:<br />
The Science <strong>of</strong> Bombing<br />
Operational Research in RAF Bomber Command<br />
Randall T. Wakelam<br />
978-0-8020-9629-6<br />
£19.95 / $35.00 / 2009<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Marc Milner is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
History and director <strong>of</strong> the Gregg Centre for the Study<br />
<strong>of</strong> War and Society at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> New Brunswick.<br />
praise for the first edition:<br />
‘Milner’s book ... will serve for many as the navy’s “<strong>of</strong>ficial history.”’<br />
John D. Harbron, Globe and Mail<br />
‘A delightful tour de force.’<br />
Ron Lowman, <strong>Toronto</strong> Star<br />
Shoestring Soldiers<br />
The 1 st Canadian Division at War, 1914–1915<br />
Andrew Iarocci<br />
978-0-8020-9822-1<br />
£32.00 / $50.00 / 2008<br />
Canada’s Army<br />
Waging War and Keeping the Peace<br />
J.L. Granatstein<br />
978-0-8020-8696-9<br />
£20.00 / $34.95 / 2004<br />
military STUDIES / history<br />
Approx. 504 pp / / January <strong>2010</strong><br />
82 photos; 2 maps<br />
Paper ISBN 978-0-8020-9604-3 £22.50 $35.00 T<br />
5
General Interest<br />
Babies Without Borders<br />
Adoption and Migration across<br />
the Americas<br />
Karen Dubinsky<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
International adoptions are both high-pr<strong>of</strong>ile and controversial,<br />
with the celebrity adoptions and critically acclaimed<br />
movies such as Casa de los babys <strong>of</strong> recent years<br />
increasing media coverage and influencing public opinion.<br />
Neither celebrating nor condemning cross-cultural adoption,<br />
Karen Dubinsky considers the political symbolism<br />
<strong>of</strong> children in her examination <strong>of</strong> adoption and migration<br />
controversies in North America, Cuba, and Guatemala.<br />
Babies Without Borders tells the interrelated stories <strong>of</strong><br />
Cuban children caught in Operation Peter Pan, adopted<br />
Black and Native American children who became icons<br />
in the Sixties, and Guatemalan children whose ‘disappearance’<br />
today in transnational adoption networks<br />
echoes their fate during the country’s brutal civil war.<br />
Drawing from extensive research as well as from her critical<br />
observations as an adoptive parent, Karen Dubinsky<br />
aims to move adoption debates beyond the current dichotomy<br />
<strong>of</strong> ‘imperialist kidnap’ versus ‘humanitarian rescue.’<br />
Integrating the personal with the scholarly, Babies<br />
Without Borders exposes what happens when children<br />
bear the weight <strong>of</strong> adult political conflicts.<br />
Karen Dubinsky is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
Global Development Studies and the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
History at Queen’s <strong>University</strong>.<br />
‘Deeply researched, beautifully written, and brimming with insight,<br />
Babies Without Borders illustrates how pr<strong>of</strong>oundly narratives about<br />
rescuing and stealing children have distorted our understanding <strong>of</strong><br />
international adoption throughout its history … Dubinsky refreshingly<br />
shifts our attention from Asia to Latin America, insists on telling stories<br />
from both sides <strong>of</strong> the border, and <strong>of</strong>fers compelling evidence<br />
for the view that international power is inextricably linked to some <strong>of</strong><br />
the most intimate experiences <strong>of</strong> family life—including her own.’<br />
Of related interest:<br />
Giving Birth in Canada, 1900–1950<br />
Wendy Mitchinson<br />
978-0-8020-8471-2<br />
£20.00 / $38.95 / 2002<br />
Baby’s First Picture<br />
Ultrasound and the Politics <strong>of</strong> Fetal Subjects<br />
Lisa M. Mitchell<br />
978-0-8020-8349-4<br />
£15.00 / $31.95 / 2001<br />
Ellen Herman, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Oregon<br />
history / women’s studies / sociology<br />
Approx. 204 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1019-4 £15.00 $24.95 C<br />
Canada, Cuba, and UK/European rights only.<br />
Other rights held by New York <strong>University</strong> <strong>Press</strong>.<br />
6
General Interest<br />
Into the Past<br />
The Cinema <strong>of</strong> Guy Maddin<br />
William Beard<br />
Guy Maddin started making films in his back yard and<br />
on his kitchen table. Now his unique work, which relies<br />
heavily on such archaic means as black-and-white<br />
small-format cinematography and silent-film storytelling,<br />
premieres at major film festivals around the world<br />
and is avidly discussed in the critical press. Into the<br />
Past provides a complete and systematic critical commentary<br />
on each <strong>of</strong> Maddin’s feature films and shorts,<br />
from his 1986 debut film The Dead Father through to<br />
his highly successful 2008 full-length ‘docu-fantasia’<br />
My Winnipeg.<br />
William Beard’s extensive analysis <strong>of</strong> Maddin’s narrative<br />
and aesthetic strategies, themes, influences, and<br />
underlying issues also examines the origins and production<br />
history <strong>of</strong> each film. Each <strong>of</strong> Maddin’s projects<br />
and collaborations showcase his gradual evolution as<br />
a filmmaker and his singular development <strong>of</strong> narrative<br />
forms. Beard’s close readings <strong>of</strong> these films illuminate,<br />
among other things, the pr<strong>of</strong>ound ways in which Maddin’s<br />
art is founded in the past – both in the cultural past<br />
and in his personal memory.<br />
William Beard is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor and film studies program<br />
director in the Department <strong>of</strong> English and Film Studies<br />
at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Alberta.<br />
Also by William Beard:<br />
The Artist As Monster<br />
The Cinema <strong>of</strong> David Cronenberg<br />
978-0-8020-3807-4<br />
£22.50 / $40.00 / 2006<br />
Of related interest:<br />
Working on Screen<br />
Representations <strong>of</strong> the Working Class in Canadian<br />
Cinema<br />
Edited by Malek Khouri and Darrell Varga<br />
978-0-8020-9388-2<br />
£22.50 / $39.00 / 2006<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
The Girl From God’s Country<br />
Nell Shipman and the Silent Cinema<br />
Kay Armatage<br />
978-0-8020-8542-9<br />
£20.00 / $38.95 / 2003<br />
film studies / cultural studies<br />
Approx. 504 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
40 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4139-6 £55.00 $85.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1066-8 £23.00 $37.95 C<br />
7
General Interest<br />
Picturing Canada<br />
A History <strong>of</strong> Canadian Children’s<br />
Illustrated Books and <strong>Publishing</strong><br />
Gail Edwards and Judith Saltman<br />
studies in book and print culture<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
The study <strong>of</strong> children’s illustrated books is located within<br />
the broad histories <strong>of</strong> print culture, publishing, the book<br />
trade, and concepts <strong>of</strong> childhood. An interdisciplinary<br />
history, Picturing Canada provides a critical understanding<br />
<strong>of</strong> the changing geographical, historical, and<br />
cultural aspects <strong>of</strong> Canadian identity as seen through<br />
the lens <strong>of</strong> children’s publishing over two centuries.<br />
Gail Edwards and Judith Saltman illuminate the connection<br />
between children’s publishing and Canadian<br />
nationalism, analyse the gendered history <strong>of</strong> children’s<br />
librarianship, identify changes and continuities in narrative<br />
themes and artistic styles, and explore recent<br />
changes in the creation and consumption <strong>of</strong> children’s<br />
illustrated books. Over 130 interviews with Canadian<br />
authors, illustrators, editors, librarians, booksellers, critics,<br />
and other contributors to Canadian children’s book<br />
publishing, document the experiences <strong>of</strong> those who<br />
worked in the industry.<br />
An important and wholly original work, Picturing<br />
Canada is fundamental to our understanding <strong>of</strong> publishing<br />
history and the history <strong>of</strong> childhood itself in Canada.<br />
Gail Edwards is the chair <strong>of</strong> the Department <strong>of</strong> History<br />
at Douglas College.<br />
Judith Saltman is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />
School <strong>of</strong> Library, Archival and Information Studies and<br />
the chair <strong>of</strong> the Master <strong>of</strong> Arts in Children’s Literature<br />
Program at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British Columbia.<br />
Of related interest:<br />
History <strong>of</strong> the Book in Canada<br />
Volume Three: 1918–1980<br />
Edited by Carole Gershon and Jacques Michon<br />
978-0-8020-9047-8<br />
£55.00 / $90.00 / 2007<br />
History <strong>of</strong> the Book in Canada<br />
Volume Two: 1840–1918<br />
Edited by Yvan Lamonde, Patricia Lockhart Fleming,<br />
and Fiona A. Black<br />
978-0-8020-8012-7<br />
£48.00 / $94.00 / 2005<br />
History <strong>of</strong> the Book in Canada<br />
Volume One: Beginnings to 1840<br />
Edited by Patricia Lockhart Fleming, Gilles Gallichan,<br />
and Yvan Lamonde<br />
978-0-8020-8943-4<br />
£48.00 / $84.00 / 2004<br />
literary studies / book and print culture<br />
Approx. 384 pp / / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
40 halftones; 20 colour illustrations<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-3759-6 £60.00 $95.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-0-8020-8540-5 £25.00 $39.95 C<br />
8
General Interest<br />
Anne’s World<br />
A New Century <strong>of</strong> Anne <strong>of</strong> Green Gables<br />
Edited by Irene Gammel<br />
and Benjamin Lefebvre<br />
The recent 100 year anniversary <strong>of</strong> the first publication<br />
<strong>of</strong> L.M. Montgomery’s Anne <strong>of</strong> Green Gables has inspired<br />
renewed interest in one <strong>of</strong> Canada’s most beloved<br />
fictional icons. The international appeal <strong>of</strong> the redhaired<br />
orphan has not diminished over the past century,<br />
and the cultural meanings <strong>of</strong> her story continue to grow<br />
and change. The original essays in Anne’s World <strong>of</strong>fer<br />
fresh and timely approaches to issues <strong>of</strong> culture, identity,<br />
health, and globalization as they apply to Montgomery’s<br />
famous character and to today’s readers.<br />
In conversation with each other and with the work<br />
<strong>of</strong> previous experts, the contributors to Anne’s World<br />
discuss topics as diverse as Anne in fashion, the global<br />
industry surrounding Anne, how the novel can be used<br />
as a tool to counteract depression, and the possibility<br />
that Anne suffers from Fetal Alcohol Syndrome. Anne in<br />
translation and its adaptation for film and television are<br />
also considered. By establishing new ways to examine<br />
one <strong>of</strong> popular culture’s most beloved characters, the<br />
essays <strong>of</strong> Anne’s World demonstrate the timeless and<br />
ongoing appeal <strong>of</strong> L.M. Montgomery’s writing.<br />
Irene Gammel is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor and Canada Research<br />
Chair in Modern Literature and Culture in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> English at Ryerson <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Benjamin Lefebvre has held postdoctoral visiting fellowships<br />
at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Alberta, the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Worcester, and the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Prince Edward Island.<br />
Also edited by Irene Gammel:<br />
The Intimate Life <strong>of</strong> L.M. Montgomery<br />
978-0-8020-8676-1<br />
£18.00 / $35.95 / 2005<br />
Making Avonlea<br />
L.M. Montgomery and Popular Culture<br />
978-0-8020-8433-0<br />
£18.00 / $35.00 / 2002<br />
L.M. Montgomery and Canadian Culture<br />
(with Elizabeth Epperly)<br />
978-0-8020-4406-8<br />
£15.00 / $31.00 / 1999<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
literary studies / cultural studies<br />
Approx. 304 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
16 colour illustrations<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4202-7 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1106-1 £20.00 $29.95 T<br />
9
General Interest<br />
National Performance<br />
Representing Quebec from Expo 67<br />
to Céline Dion<br />
Erin Hurley<br />
Canadian Hockey<br />
Literature<br />
Jason Blake<br />
cultural spaces<br />
winner <strong>of</strong> the 2009 northeast modern language<br />
association book prize (for best unpublished<br />
manuscript)<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
In National Performance,<br />
Erin Hurley examines the<br />
complex relationship between<br />
performance and<br />
national identity. How do<br />
theatrical performances<br />
represent the nation in<br />
which they were created<br />
How is Quebecois<br />
performance used to define<br />
Quebec as a nation<br />
and to cultivate a sense<br />
<strong>of</strong> ‘Quebec-ness’ for audiences<br />
both within and outside the province In exploring<br />
Expo 67, the critical response to Michel Tremblay’s<br />
Les Belles Soeurs, Carbone 14’s image-theatre, Marco<br />
Micone’s writing practices, Céline Dion’s popular music,<br />
and feminist performance <strong>of</strong> the 1970s and 80s, Hurley<br />
reveals the ways in which certain performances come to<br />
be understood as ‘national’ while others are relegated<br />
to sub-national or outsider status. Each chapter focuses<br />
on a particular historical moment in Quebec’s modern<br />
history and a genre <strong>of</strong> performance emblematic <strong>of</strong> the<br />
moment, and uses these to elaborate the nature <strong>of</strong> the<br />
national performances.<br />
Winner <strong>of</strong> the Northeast Modern Language Association’s<br />
Book Prize (for best unpublished manuscript), National<br />
Performance is sophisticated yet accessible, seeking<br />
to enlarge the parameters <strong>of</strong> what counts as ‘Quebecois’<br />
performance, while providing a thorough introduction to<br />
changing discourses <strong>of</strong> nation-ness in Quebec.<br />
Hockey occupies a<br />
prominent place in the<br />
Canadian cultural lexicon,<br />
as evidenced by<br />
the wealth <strong>of</strong> hockeycentred<br />
stories and<br />
novels published within<br />
Canada. In this exciting<br />
new work, Jason Blake<br />
takes readers on a thematic<br />
journey through<br />
Canadian hockey literature,<br />
examining five<br />
common themes – nationhood, the hockey dream, violence,<br />
national identity, and family – as they appear in<br />
hockey fiction.<br />
Blake examines the work <strong>of</strong> such authors as Mordecai<br />
Richler, David Adams Richards, Paul Quarrington,<br />
and Richard B. Wright, arguing that a study <strong>of</strong> contemporary<br />
hockey fiction exposes a troubled relationship<br />
with the national sport. Rather than the storybook happy<br />
ending common in sports literature <strong>of</strong> previous generations,<br />
Blake finds that today’s fiction portrays hockey<br />
as an <strong>of</strong>ten-glorified sport that in fact leads to broken<br />
lives and ironic outlooks. The first book to focus exclusively<br />
on hockey in print, Canadian Hockey Literature is<br />
an accessible work that challenges popular perceptions<br />
<strong>of</strong> a much-beloved national pastime.<br />
Jason Blake is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong> English<br />
at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ljubljana.<br />
Erin Hurley is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> English at McGill <strong>University</strong><br />
cultural studies / drama<br />
literary studies / cultural studies<br />
Approx. 264 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
15 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4095-5 £28.00 $45.00 E<br />
Approx. 288 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9984-6 £40.00 $60.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-0-8020-9713-2 £18.00 $27.95 C<br />
10
General Interest<br />
David Adams Richards<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Miramichi<br />
Tony Tremblay<br />
Widely considered to be one <strong>of</strong> Canada’s most important<br />
authors, David Adams Richards has been honoured<br />
with a Giller Prize and two Governor General’s<br />
Literary Awards. Despite this, there has been a dearth<br />
<strong>of</strong> critical appraisal <strong>of</strong> his life and works. In David Adams<br />
Richards <strong>of</strong> the Miramichi, Tony Tremblay sheds light<br />
not only on Richards’ art and achievements, but also on<br />
Canadian literary criticism in general.<br />
Tremblay maps out the early influences on Richards’<br />
thinking and writing by drawing on interviews, archival<br />
records, and cultural studies <strong>of</strong> New Brunswick. He argues<br />
that the author is a more sophisticated craftsman<br />
than his critical reception has assumed and makes the<br />
case for a more nuanced analysis <strong>of</strong> his works. Equal<br />
parts literary biography, literary criticism, and cultural<br />
study <strong>of</strong> New Brunswick, David Adams Richards <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Miramichi provides a rare glimpse into the struggles and<br />
triumphs <strong>of</strong> a New Brunswick artist in a national and<br />
provincial milieu.<br />
Tony Tremblay is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor and Canada Research<br />
Chair in the Department <strong>of</strong> English at St. Thomas <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Of related interest:<br />
The Half-Lives <strong>of</strong> Pat Lowther<br />
Christine Wiesenthal<br />
978-0-8020-9480-3<br />
£22.50 / $40.00 / 2006<br />
As For Sinclair Ross<br />
David Stouck<br />
978-0-8020-4388-7<br />
£28.00 / $50.00 / 2005<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Ethel Wilson<br />
A Critical Biography<br />
David Stouck<br />
978-0-8020-8741-6<br />
£32.00 / $57.00 / 2003<br />
literary Studies / biography<br />
Approx. 384 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
10 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4162-4 £45.00 $70.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1077-4 £21.50 $32.95 C<br />
11
General Interest<br />
A History <strong>of</strong> Ukraine<br />
The Land and Its Peoples, Second Edition<br />
Paul Robert Magocsi<br />
Modernism in Kyiv<br />
Jubilant Experimentation<br />
Edited by Irena R. Makaryk<br />
and Virlana Tkacz<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
First published in 1996,<br />
A History <strong>of</strong> Ukraine<br />
quickly became the authoritative<br />
account <strong>of</strong><br />
the evolution <strong>of</strong> Europe’s<br />
second largest country.<br />
In this fully revised and<br />
expanded second edition,<br />
Paul Robert Magocsi<br />
examines recent<br />
developments in the<br />
country’s history and<br />
uses new scholarship in order to expand our conception<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Ukrainian historical narrative.<br />
New chapters deal with the Crimean Khanate in the<br />
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and new research<br />
on the pre-historic Trypillians, the Italians <strong>of</strong> the Crimea<br />
and the Black Death, the Karaites, Ottoman and Crimean<br />
slavery, Soviet-era ethnic cleansing, and the Orange<br />
Revolution is incorporated. Magocsi has also thoroughly<br />
updated the many maps that appear throughout.<br />
Maintaining his depiction <strong>of</strong> the multicultural reality<br />
<strong>of</strong> past and present Ukraine, Magocsi has added<br />
new information on Ukraine’s peoples and discusses<br />
Ukraine’s diasporas. Comprehensive, innovative, and<br />
geared towards teaching, the second edition <strong>of</strong> A History<br />
<strong>of</strong> Ukraine is ideal for both teachers and students.<br />
Paul Robert Magocsi holds the chair <strong>of</strong> Ukrainian<br />
Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />
The study <strong>of</strong> modernism<br />
has been largely focused<br />
on Western cultural centres<br />
such as Paris, Vienna,<br />
London, and New<br />
York. Extravagantly illustrated<br />
with over 300 photos<br />
and reproductions,<br />
Modernism in Kyiv demonstrates<br />
that the Ukrainian<br />
capital was a major<br />
centre <strong>of</strong> performing and<br />
visual arts as well as literary and cultural activity. While arguing<br />
that Kyiv’s modernist impulse is most prominently<br />
displayed in the experimental work <strong>of</strong> Les Kurbas, one<br />
<strong>of</strong> the masters <strong>of</strong> the early Soviet stage, the contributors<br />
also examine the history <strong>of</strong> the city and the artistic production<br />
<strong>of</strong> diverse groups including Ukrainians, Russians,<br />
Jews, and Poles.<br />
Until now a silent presence in Western accounts <strong>of</strong><br />
the cultural topography <strong>of</strong> modernism, multicultural Kyiv<br />
is here restored to its historical, intellectual, and artistic<br />
complexity. Excerpts taken from the works <strong>of</strong> artists,<br />
writers, and critics as well as the numerous illustrations<br />
help give life to the exciting creativity <strong>of</strong> this period. The<br />
first book-length examination <strong>of</strong> this subject, Modernism<br />
in Kyiv is a breakthrough accomplishment that will<br />
become a standard volume in the field.<br />
Irena r. Makaryk is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa.<br />
ukrainian studies / history<br />
Virlana Tkacz is the artistic director <strong>of</strong> the Yara Arts<br />
Group in New York.<br />
literary studies / ukrainian studies /<br />
cultural studies<br />
Approx. 896 pp / / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
71 text boxes; 46 maps; 23 tables<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4085-6 £78.00 $120.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1021-7 £32.95 $54.95 C<br />
Approx. 680 pp / / March <strong>2010</strong><br />
273 halftones; 21 colour illustrations<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4098-6 £57.95 $95.00 E<br />
12
new in paperbaCK<br />
Roman Dress and<br />
the Fabrics <strong>of</strong> Roman<br />
Culture<br />
Edited by Jonathan Edmondson<br />
and Alison Keith<br />
Phoenix Supplementary Volumes<br />
It was in ancient Rome that dress first acquired the symbolic<br />
elements and implications that, to a certain degree,<br />
persist to this day. An individual’s dress was a readily<br />
available source <strong>of</strong> reference and swiftly became an indicator<br />
<strong>of</strong> wealth or status – or lack there<strong>of</strong>. Roman Dress<br />
and the Fabrics <strong>of</strong> Roman Culture investigates the social<br />
symbolism and cultural poetics <strong>of</strong> dress in the ancient<br />
Roman world in the period from 200 bce–400 ce.<br />
Editors Jonathan Edmondson and Alison Keith and<br />
the contributors to this volume explore the diffusion <strong>of</strong><br />
Roman dress protocols in Rome and beyond by looking<br />
at Rome’s North African provinces in particular, a focus<br />
that previous studies have overlooked or dealt with only<br />
in passing. Another unique aspect <strong>of</strong> this collection is<br />
that it goes beyond the male elite to address a wider<br />
spectrum <strong>of</strong> Roman society. Chapters deal with such<br />
topics as masculine attire; strategies for self-expression<br />
available to Roman women within a dress code prescribed<br />
by a patriarchal culture; and the complex dynamics<br />
<strong>of</strong> dress in imperial Roman culture, both literary<br />
and artistic. This volume further investigates the literary,<br />
legal, and iconographic evidence to provide anthropologically<br />
informed readings <strong>of</strong> Roman clothing.<br />
This collection <strong>of</strong> original essays employs a range <strong>of</strong><br />
methodological approaches – historical, literary, philological,<br />
art historical, sociological, and anthropological –<br />
to <strong>of</strong>fer a thorough discussion <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> the most central<br />
issues in Roman culture.<br />
Jonathan Edmondson is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> History and the Programme in Classical Studies<br />
in the Division <strong>of</strong> Humanities at York <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Alison Keith is pr<strong>of</strong>essor and chair <strong>of</strong> the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Classics at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />
Contributors<br />
Keith Bradley<br />
Elaine Fantham<br />
T. Corey Brennan<br />
Michele George<br />
Michael Carter<br />
Alison Keith<br />
Michael Dewar<br />
Michael Koortbojian<br />
Fanny Dolansky<br />
Guy P.R. Métraux<br />
Jonathan Edmondson<br />
Kelly Olson<br />
Riemer Faber<br />
Leslie Shumka<br />
‘Those entering the field <strong>of</strong> Roman clothing studies will find this<br />
concise survey very useful … Illustrating the various threads <strong>of</strong><br />
current investigation into Roman clothing, these intriguing essays<br />
show that understanding the symbolism <strong>of</strong> Roman clothing<br />
is essential in recovering the Romans’ way <strong>of</strong> thinking about<br />
themselves and the “others” <strong>of</strong> their empire.’<br />
Judith Lynn Sebesta, Mouseion: Journal <strong>of</strong> the Classical<br />
Association <strong>of</strong> Canada<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
classics<br />
448 pp / 6 x 9 / Available<br />
56 halftones<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1079-8 £21.95 $35.00 C<br />
Originally published in cloth: May 2008<br />
13
new in paperbaCK<br />
Living with Strangers<br />
The Nineteenth-Century Sioux and the<br />
Canadian-American Borderlands<br />
David G. McCrady<br />
winner <strong>of</strong> the 2007 clio prize (prairies), given by<br />
the canadian historical association<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Now in paperback, Living with Strangers tells the story<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Sioux who moved into the Canadian-American<br />
borderlands in the later years <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth century.<br />
David G. McCrady’s award-winning study crosses<br />
national boundaries to examine how Native peoples in<br />
both countries reacted to the arrival <strong>of</strong> the Sioux. Using<br />
material from archives across North America, including<br />
Canadian and American government documents, Lakota<br />
winter counts, and oral histories, McCrady reveals<br />
that the nineteenth-century Sioux acted with spirited<br />
self-interest across the Canadian-American border.<br />
The Sioux’s shifting tactical use <strong>of</strong> the boundary<br />
helped them to create cross-border trading competitions,<br />
to open negotiations with both governments to<br />
determine which country would accord them better<br />
treatment, and to use the border as a shield in times <strong>of</strong><br />
war with the United States. Living with Strangers takes<br />
readers beyond the traditional dichotomy <strong>of</strong> the Canadian<br />
and the American West to reveal significant and<br />
previously unknown strands in Sioux history.<br />
David G. McCrady is an independent historian living<br />
in Winnipeg.<br />
‘This [book] will work well for courses on the Northern Plains,<br />
the North American West, and Native American/First Nations<br />
history. Especially useful for class settings will be the introductory<br />
and concluding chapters that spell out reasons to study<br />
comparative and transnational history … [Living with Strangers]<br />
presents a deep sense <strong>of</strong> place and adds significantly to historians’<br />
growing understanding <strong>of</strong> the borderlands <strong>of</strong> the American<br />
and Canadian Wests.’<br />
Sterling Evans, American Historical Review<br />
‘There is much to compliment in Living with Strangers. It shifts<br />
the historical border focus from Canada–United States national<br />
studies by uncovering northern Sioux border history and explaining<br />
tribal relationship with the international boundary.’<br />
Richmond L. Clow, Journal <strong>of</strong> American History<br />
history / indigenous studies<br />
200 pp / 6 x 9 / Available<br />
14 halftones; 2 maps<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0990-7 £14.00 $21.95 C<br />
Originally published in cloth by <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Nebraska <strong>Press</strong>:<br />
April 2006<br />
14
new in paperbaCK<br />
Encounters on the<br />
Passage<br />
Inuit Meet the Explorers<br />
Dorothy Harley Eber<br />
Inuit elders who grew up in camps on the shores <strong>of</strong><br />
Frobisher Bay can tell you what happened when Martin<br />
Frobisher arrived with his vessel in 1576: ‘He fired<br />
two warning shots into the air. So right away there were<br />
some grievances.’ Frobisher’s shots were the opening<br />
salvos in the search for the Northwest Passage, a<br />
search that lasted for more than four hundred years and<br />
riveted the Western world, particularly in the nineteenth<br />
and early twentieth century. In Encounters on the Passage,<br />
present day Inuit tell the stories that have been<br />
passed down from their ancestors <strong>of</strong> the first encounters<br />
with European explorers.<br />
In many <strong>of</strong> these stories the old cosmogony is still<br />
in place, with shamans playing starring roles opposite<br />
‘the strangers intruding on the Inuit lands.’ Dorothy<br />
Harley Eber presents the stories told to her about the<br />
expeditions <strong>of</strong> Sir Edward Parry, Sir John Ross, Sir John<br />
Franklin, and the Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen,<br />
and places them in historical context. In the case <strong>of</strong> the<br />
disasterous Franklin expedition, new information opens<br />
up another fascinating chapter on its tragic demise.<br />
Collected over twelve years on visits to communities<br />
in Nunavut, these remarkable stories <strong>of</strong> expeditionary<br />
forces and their dealings with Native peoples will<br />
be new and exciting reading for those interested in the<br />
search for the Northwest Passage, the Franklin tragedy,<br />
and traditions <strong>of</strong> oral history.<br />
‘Encounters on the Passage is alive with suggestions for the<br />
enthusiast still seeking Franklin’s grave or his lost record books<br />
or his sunken ships. But what stand[s] out is how the Inuit experienced<br />
those crazy incursions. Eber’s stories bring home the<br />
true weirdness <strong>of</strong> these aliens and their great vessels, suddenly<br />
planting themselves amidst the people … the richest material in<br />
this book … is not what it says about a few doomed intruders<br />
from the south, but the role it plays in storing and preserving<br />
Inuit storytelling.’<br />
Christopher Moore, The Beaver<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Dorothy Harley Eber is an author based in Montreal<br />
who has written numerous books about the Inuit.<br />
‘[Encounters on the Passage] is a very worthy contribution to<br />
the store <strong>of</strong> preserved Inuit oral traditions. It serves as a useful<br />
reference and introduction to the stories relating to explorers<br />
that are otherwise scattered throughout the literature on British<br />
Arctic Exploration, and sets them in clear context.’<br />
David C. Woodman, The Arctic Book Review<br />
history / indigenous studies<br />
196 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2010</strong><br />
27 images<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1103-0 £14.00 $21.95 C<br />
Originally published in cloth: December 2008<br />
15
new in paperbaCK<br />
Moral Taste<br />
Aesthetics, Subjectivity, and Social Power<br />
in the Nineteenth-Century Novel<br />
Marjorie Garson<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
One <strong>of</strong> the particular concerns <strong>of</strong> the Victorians was<br />
the notion <strong>of</strong> ‘taste’ and the idea that good taste in any<br />
field – clothing, décor, landscape, music, art, even food<br />
– meant good taste in all, and that tastefulness was a<br />
reliable sign <strong>of</strong> moral sensitivity, indeed <strong>of</strong> national, even<br />
racial, quality. Moral Taste is a study <strong>of</strong> the ideological<br />
work done by the equation <strong>of</strong> good taste and moral refinement<br />
in a selection <strong>of</strong> nineteenth-century writings.<br />
Drawing on the theories <strong>of</strong> Pierre Bourdieu, Marjorie<br />
Garson discusses a number <strong>of</strong> Victorian texts that treat<br />
aesthetic refinement as an essential mark <strong>of</strong> proper<br />
middle-class subjectivity. She situates each text in its<br />
historical moment and considers it in the light <strong>of</strong> contemporary<br />
anxieties, providing insights into why certain<br />
ways <strong>of</strong> representing and endorsing tastefulness remained<br />
serviceable for many decades. In addition, this<br />
study demonstrates how the discourse <strong>of</strong> taste engenders<br />
a wider discourse about middle-class subjectivity<br />
and entitlement, national character, and racial identity<br />
in the period.<br />
Marjorie Garson is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emerita in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />
‘Moral Taste is especially strong when addressing the nuances<br />
<strong>of</strong> gendered taste – and how notions <strong>of</strong> taste that seem to concretize<br />
gender distinctions can <strong>of</strong>ten complicate them … this<br />
superior study is essential reading for scholars investigating<br />
nineteenth-century aesthetics, material culture, spatial theory,<br />
or the codification <strong>of</strong> morality in literature.’<br />
Elizabeth Bridgham, Dickens Quarterly<br />
‘Easy classification would fail to do justice to the richness here<br />
on <strong>of</strong>fer. Garson has spent a lifetime in the company <strong>of</strong> her texts,<br />
and she speaks with a voice <strong>of</strong> intimate acquaintance and perfect<br />
authority … This book’s deeply satisfying readings will make it<br />
valuable to readers from undergraduates in their first exposure to<br />
texts to advanced scholars seeking new perspectives.’<br />
D.L. Patey, Choice<br />
literary studies<br />
496 pp / 6 x 9 / Available<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1081-1 £22.50 $35.00 C<br />
Originally published in cloth: March 2007<br />
16
new in paperbaCK<br />
The Tigress in the Snow<br />
Motherhood and Literature in Twentieth-<br />
Century Italy<br />
Laura Benedetti<br />
<strong>Toronto</strong> Italian Studies<br />
The Narrative Pulse <strong>of</strong><br />
Beowulf<br />
Arrivals and Departures<br />
John M. Hill<br />
winner <strong>of</strong> the 2008 ennio flaiano book prize<br />
<strong>Toronto</strong> Old English Studies<br />
The Tigress in the Snow<br />
explores how literature<br />
was influenced by and<br />
helped to shape notions<br />
<strong>of</strong> motherhood in twentieth-century<br />
Italy. From<br />
late-nineteenth-century<br />
religious iconography,<br />
to the Fascist regime’s<br />
campaign to boost<br />
Italy’s birthrate, to more<br />
recent feminist challenges<br />
to traditional gender<br />
roles, this study demonstrates that concepts <strong>of</strong> motherhood<br />
and the social status associated with mothers<br />
were subject to constant negotiation. Examining how<br />
this negotiation came to be represented in literature,<br />
Laura Benedetti looks at four generations <strong>of</strong> women<br />
writers, stressing their similarities and differences, as<br />
well as their complex interactions with their male counterparts<br />
and their reactions to changes in Italian society.<br />
Drawing on examples from a wide range <strong>of</strong> novels,<br />
plays, poems, and short stories as well as from critical and<br />
public debate, the book highlights literature’s role in the formation<br />
<strong>of</strong> cultural discourses up to the dawn <strong>of</strong> the twentyfirst<br />
century. An intriguing look at the changing nature <strong>of</strong><br />
the maternal role in a culture that has always put strong<br />
emphasis on the institution <strong>of</strong> motherhood, this volume<br />
goes further to show how literature investigates, shapes,<br />
and envisions social models for the present and future.<br />
Laura Benedetti is the Laura and Gaetano De Sole<br />
Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor in Contemporary Italian Culture at<br />
Georgetown <strong>University</strong>.<br />
One <strong>of</strong> the most consistent<br />
critiques levelled<br />
against Beowulf is that it<br />
lacks a steady narrative<br />
advance and that its numerous<br />
digressions tend<br />
to complicate if not halt<br />
the poem’s movement.<br />
As those passages <strong>of</strong>ten<br />
look backward or far<br />
ahead in narrative time,<br />
they seem to transform<br />
the poem into a meditative<br />
pastiche. The Narrative Pulse <strong>of</strong> Beowulf counters<br />
this assertion, examining Beowulf as a social drama<br />
with a strong, forward-moving narrative momentum.<br />
John M. Hill discerns a distinctive ‘narrative pulse’<br />
arising out <strong>of</strong> the poem’s many scenes <strong>of</strong> arrival and<br />
departure. He argues that such scenes, far from being<br />
fixed or ‘type’ scenes, are socially dramatic and act as a<br />
key to understanding the structural density <strong>of</strong> the poem.<br />
Bolstering his analysis with a strong understanding <strong>of</strong><br />
the epic, Hill looks at Beowulf in relation to other stories<br />
such as The Odyssey and The Iliad, epics that, though<br />
they may appear to have a certain narrative elasticity,<br />
use scenes <strong>of</strong> arrival and departure to create a cohesive<br />
social world in which stories unfold.<br />
As a new and comprehensive study <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> the<br />
most important Old English texts, The Narrative Pulse<br />
<strong>of</strong> Beowulf sheds new light on this famous poem and<br />
the epic tradition itself.<br />
John M. Hill is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the English Department<br />
at the U.S. Naval Academy.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
italian studies / literary studies<br />
medieval studies / literary studies<br />
176 pp / 6 x 9 / Available<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1086-6 £15.00 $24.95 C<br />
Originally published in cloth: December 2007<br />
136 pp / 6 x 9 / Available<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1087-3 £14.00 $21.95 C<br />
Originally published in cloth: February 2008<br />
17
new in paperbaCK<br />
Hooked<br />
Drug War Films in Britain, Canada,<br />
and the United States<br />
Susan C. Boyd<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Drug prohibition laws began to emerge in the United<br />
States, Canada, and Britain during the same era that<br />
saw the discovery <strong>of</strong> film. In Hooked, Susan C. Boyd<br />
explores over a century <strong>of</strong> American, British, and Canadian<br />
films containing fictional representations <strong>of</strong> drug<br />
use, the drug trade, and the war on drugs. She examines<br />
not only popular, mainstream films but also counterculture,<br />
alternative, and ‘stoner’ movies, including<br />
Harold and Kumar go to White Castle, and Trailer Park<br />
Boys: The Movie.<br />
On-screen depictions <strong>of</strong> drug use and trafficking are<br />
powerful indicators <strong>of</strong> evolving socio-cultural attitudes<br />
towards illegal drugs. Using films such as Broken Blossoms,<br />
The Trip, Superfly, Traffic, and Trainspotting,<br />
Boyd explores how illegal drugs are linked to discourses<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Other, nation building, and law and order. Her<br />
discussion takes into account issues <strong>of</strong> race, class, and<br />
gender, and includes an important analysis <strong>of</strong> representations<br />
<strong>of</strong> women. A fascinating and groundbreaking<br />
study, Hooked uncovers the links between cinema and<br />
the cultural production <strong>of</strong> myths and stereotypes related<br />
to illegal drugs.<br />
Also by Susan C. Boyd:<br />
Mothers and Illicit Drugs<br />
Transcending the Myths<br />
978-0-8020-8151-3<br />
£12.95 / $28.95 / 1999<br />
Susan C. Boyd is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in Studies in Policy and<br />
Practice at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Victoria.<br />
‘In Hooked, Susan Boyd provides a useful and substantive contribution<br />
both to the literature on drug representations and to a<br />
larger body <strong>of</strong> developing cultural, feminist and critical criminology<br />
… Boyd insists that the negative mythologies <strong>of</strong> drug<br />
use persist across the US, Britain, and Canada, with Hollywood<br />
productions the most deeply bound up with war-on-drugs/law<br />
and order drug war ideologies … Ultimately, Boyd makes a critical<br />
contribution that marks how positive and alternative images<br />
<strong>of</strong> drug use and altered states <strong>of</strong> consciousness are difficult<br />
to find.’<br />
Michelle Brown, Canadian Journal <strong>of</strong> Sociology<br />
film studies / criminology / sociology<br />
256 pp / 6 x 9 / Available<br />
9 tables<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1017-0 $27.95 C<br />
Originally published in cloth by Routledge: December 2007<br />
North American rights only.<br />
18
new in paperbaCK<br />
Thinking Historically<br />
Educating Students for the Twenty-First<br />
Century<br />
Stéphane Lévesque<br />
Exploring Student<br />
Response to<br />
Contemporary<br />
Picturebooks<br />
Sylvia Pantaleo<br />
Two simple but pr<strong>of</strong>ound<br />
questions have preoccupied<br />
scholars since<br />
the establishment <strong>of</strong><br />
history education over a<br />
century ago: what is historical<br />
thinking, and how<br />
do educators go about<br />
teaching it In Thinking<br />
Historically, Stéphane<br />
Lévesque examines<br />
these questions, focusing<br />
on what it means to<br />
think critically about the past. As students engage with<br />
a new century already characterized by global instability,<br />
uncertainty, and rivalry over claims about the past,<br />
present, and future, this study revisits enduring questions<br />
and aims to <strong>of</strong>fer new and relevant answers.<br />
Drawing on a rich collection <strong>of</strong> personal, national, and<br />
international studies in history education, Lévesque <strong>of</strong>fers<br />
a coherent and innovative way <strong>of</strong> looking at how historical<br />
expertise in the domain intersects with the pedagogy<br />
<strong>of</strong> history education. Thinking Historically provides<br />
all those working in the field <strong>of</strong> history education ways<br />
<strong>of</strong> rethinking their practice by presenting some <strong>of</strong> the<br />
benchmarks <strong>of</strong> what students ought to learn and do to<br />
become more critical historical actors and citizens.<br />
As questions regarding history education impinge<br />
upon educators with greater force than ever, this timely<br />
study explores different ways <strong>of</strong> approaching and engaging<br />
with the discipline in the twenty-first century.<br />
Multimodal mediums<br />
such as picturebooks<br />
have been a source <strong>of</strong><br />
continuing interest to<br />
educational scholars,<br />
yet research into the<br />
literary understanding<br />
<strong>of</strong> elementary school<br />
students has tended to<br />
focus primarily on written<br />
materials. Based on<br />
research with students<br />
in Grades 1 and 5, this<br />
study describes children’s interpretations <strong>of</strong> and responses<br />
to a variety <strong>of</strong> contemporary picturebooks,<br />
specifically those that employ ‘Radical Change’ characteristics<br />
and metafictive devices. In approaching<br />
picturebooks as literature, Sylvia Pantaleo explores the<br />
ways in which they express artistic codes and conventions,<br />
and develop critical thinking skills, visual literacy<br />
skills, and interpretative strategies.<br />
As well as analysing picturebooks and their place in the<br />
curriculum, Pantaleo discusses the broader implications<br />
<strong>of</strong> reading, viewing, and creating print and digital texts in<br />
schools. These activities, she argues, reflect the changing<br />
nature <strong>of</strong> communication and representation in the world<br />
<strong>of</strong> elementary school students. Extensively researched<br />
and engagingly written, Exploring Student Response to<br />
Contemporary Picturebooks introduces new dimensions<br />
to discussions <strong>of</strong> the social nature <strong>of</strong> intertextuality and the<br />
pedagogical value <strong>of</strong> literature in the classroom.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Stéphane Lévesque is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> History<br />
Education in the Faculty <strong>of</strong> Education at the <strong>University</strong><br />
<strong>of</strong> Ottawa.<br />
Sylvia Pantaleo is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Curriculum and Instruction at the <strong>University</strong><br />
<strong>of</strong> Victoria.<br />
education / history<br />
education<br />
240 pp / 6 x 9 / Available<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1099-6 £18.00 $27.95 C<br />
Originally published in cloth: March 2008<br />
264 pp / 6 x 9 / Available<br />
8 tables<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1095-8 £18.00 $27.95 C<br />
Originally published in cloth: September 2008<br />
19
usiness<br />
Creating Healthy<br />
Organizations<br />
How Vibrant Workplaces Inspire<br />
Employees to Achieve Sustainable<br />
Success<br />
Graham Lowe<br />
Rotman/UTP <strong>Publishing</strong><br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
The current global economic environment is defined<br />
by unprecedented uncertainty, a premium placed on<br />
knowledge, and the threat <strong>of</strong> future talent scarcity. Key<br />
to an organization’s success under these conditions is<br />
its ability to strengthen the links between people and<br />
performance. Creating Healthy Organizations provides<br />
executives, managers, human resource pr<strong>of</strong>essionals,<br />
and employees an action-oriented approach to forging<br />
these connections by creating and sustaining vibrant<br />
and productive workplaces.<br />
A healthy organization operates in ways that benefits<br />
all stakeholders, including employees, customers,<br />
shareholders, and communities. Using a wide range <strong>of</strong><br />
examples from a variety <strong>of</strong> industries in Canada and beyond,<br />
Graham Lowe integrates leading practices with<br />
research on workplace health and wellness, quality<br />
work environments, employee engagement, organizational<br />
performance, and corporate social responsibility<br />
to make a compelling business case for creating<br />
healthy, resilient, and sustainable organizations.<br />
Creating Healthy Organizations <strong>of</strong>fers readers,<br />
whether CEOs or front-line workers, an innovative<br />
framework and practical tools for planning, implementing,<br />
and measuring healthy change in their workplaces.<br />
Graham Lowe is a workplace consultant and pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
emeritus in the Department <strong>of</strong> Sociology at the <strong>University</strong><br />
<strong>of</strong> Alberta.<br />
Also from Rotman/UTP <strong>Publishing</strong>:<br />
Gravity Shift<br />
How Asia’s New Economic Powerhouses Will Shape the<br />
Twenty-First Century<br />
Wendy Dobson<br />
978-1-4426-4052-8<br />
£19.95 / $35.00 / 2009<br />
Relentless Change<br />
A Casebook for the Study <strong>of</strong> Canadian Business History<br />
Joe Martin<br />
978-0-8020-9559-6<br />
£25.00 / $39.95 / 2009<br />
business<br />
Approx. 256 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
13 figures; 14 tables<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9980-8 £22.50 $34.95 T<br />
20
usiness<br />
Transnational<br />
and Immigrant<br />
Entrepreneurship in a<br />
Globalized World<br />
Edited by Benson Honig, Israel Drori,<br />
and Barbara Carmichael<br />
Voices from the<br />
Voluntary Sector<br />
Perspectives on Leadership Challenges<br />
Edited by Frederick Bird<br />
and Frances Westley<br />
Rotman/UTP <strong>Publishing</strong><br />
Transnational entrepreneurs<br />
are individuals who<br />
migrate from one country<br />
to another, concurrently<br />
maintaining businessrelated<br />
linkages with their<br />
countries <strong>of</strong> origin and<br />
their adopted countries<br />
and communities. Once<br />
thought <strong>of</strong> as contributing<br />
primarily to ethnic<br />
enterprise and small<br />
business, they are recognized<br />
now as playing a leading role around the world in<br />
important start-ups and high technology ventures.<br />
Transnational and Immigrant Entrepreneurship in a<br />
Globalized World brings together leading international<br />
scholars from a cross-disciplinary basis to examine the<br />
economic, social, regulatory, technological, and theoretical<br />
issues related to the impact <strong>of</strong> transnational entrepreneurs<br />
on business and economic development.<br />
Benson Honig is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor and Teresa Cascioli Chair<br />
in Entrepreneurial Leadership in the DeGroote School <strong>of</strong><br />
Business at McMaster <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Israel Drori is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School <strong>of</strong> Business<br />
at the College <strong>of</strong> Management Academic Studies.<br />
Barbara Carmichael is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Geography and Environmental Studies and<br />
director <strong>of</strong> the NeXt Research Centre (Centre for the<br />
Study <strong>of</strong> Entrepreneurship and Nascent Technology) at<br />
Wilfrid Laurier <strong>University</strong>.<br />
The voluntary sector is<br />
made up primarily <strong>of</strong><br />
not-for-pr<strong>of</strong>it and nongovernmental<br />
organizations<br />
that engage with<br />
social issues. Voices<br />
from the Voluntary Sector<br />
contains reasoned<br />
reflections by practitioners<br />
on some <strong>of</strong> the significant<br />
challenges faced<br />
by today’s not-for-pr<strong>of</strong>it<br />
organizations in Canada.<br />
Broad in scope, these essays present a rich, multi-dimensional<br />
set <strong>of</strong> vignettes that as a whole express the<br />
vitality and humanity <strong>of</strong> the voluntary sector in Canada.<br />
The contributors discuss organizational and managerial<br />
challenges, social entrepreneurship, and how to<br />
foster effective global movements. The essays include<br />
a reflection on the ways that young people can find the<br />
courage to become leaders, an exploration <strong>of</strong> the absence<br />
<strong>of</strong> First Nations peoples within voluntary sector<br />
organizations, and a consideration <strong>of</strong> how parental incarceration<br />
affects the life prospects <strong>of</strong> children.<br />
Frederick Bird is a research pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Political Science at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Waterloo<br />
and a distinguished pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus at Concordia<br />
<strong>University</strong>.<br />
Frances Westley is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor and J.W. McConnell<br />
Chair in Social Innovation at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Waterloo.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
business<br />
business / political science<br />
Approx. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
6 figures; 10 tables<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4001-6 £32.00 $50.00 E<br />
Approx. 448 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
4 figures; 1 table; 4 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9101-7 £58.50 $90.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-0-8020-9661-6 £23.00 $37.95 C<br />
21
educatIOn<br />
A Quality <strong>of</strong> Life<br />
Approach to Career<br />
Development<br />
Schooling for Life<br />
Community Education and Social<br />
Enterprise<br />
Dale E. Shuttleworth<br />
Ge<strong>of</strong>frey S. Peruniak<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Career development<br />
– the processes that<br />
shape a person’s career<br />
over his or her life – is<br />
a relatively new field <strong>of</strong><br />
research in applied psychology.<br />
In A Quality <strong>of</strong><br />
Life Approach to Career<br />
Development, Ge<strong>of</strong>frey<br />
S. Peruniak draws from<br />
philosophy, sociology,<br />
literature, anthropology,<br />
psychology, political science,<br />
and economics to form a new, holistic approach<br />
to career development that extends beyond paid work<br />
to include all aspects <strong>of</strong> life. Emphasizing that a person<br />
is a whole entity rather than a role or category, Peruniak<br />
also explores nature and the place <strong>of</strong> community in relation<br />
to career development theories.<br />
A highly original text with broad theoretical appeal to<br />
several disciplines, A Quality <strong>of</strong> Life Approach to Career<br />
Development also includes exercises and case studies.<br />
Most importantly, this book provides a new approach<br />
that will complement more specialized methods and<br />
serve as a foundation for further study in the field.<br />
Ge<strong>of</strong>frey s. Peruniak is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Centre for<br />
Psychology at Athabasca <strong>University</strong> and coordinator <strong>of</strong><br />
the <strong>University</strong> Certificate in Career Development.<br />
During the first decade<br />
<strong>of</strong> the twenty-first century,<br />
schools and communities<br />
find themselves<br />
struggling with concerns<br />
<strong>of</strong> youth violence, child<br />
poverty, and race relations<br />
in an economy<br />
mired in recession. In<br />
Schooling for Life, esteemed<br />
community<br />
educator Dale E. Shuttleworth<br />
brings his rich<br />
experiences as a teacher, principal, school superintendant,<br />
policy writer, community development worker,<br />
social entrepreneur, and university course director to a<br />
discussion <strong>of</strong> public education and its role in the communities<br />
that it serves.<br />
In an historic overview <strong>of</strong> how and why public<br />
schooling has changed since 1965, Schooling for Life<br />
traces a series <strong>of</strong> demonstration projects which have<br />
influenced policy development and innovative practice<br />
in such fields as inner city education, multi-cultural and<br />
race relations, adult education, economic development,<br />
and skill training. This timely work represents a blueprint<br />
for community education and development as society<br />
faces the challenges <strong>of</strong> social, economic, and political<br />
renewal.<br />
Dale E. Shuttleworth is the executive director <strong>of</strong><br />
the Training Renewal Foundation.<br />
education / psychology / business<br />
education / political science<br />
Approx. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2010</strong><br />
7 figures; 1 table<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4136-5 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1064-4 £20.00 $29.95 C<br />
Approx. 336 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
4 figures<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9811-5 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
22
politICs & POlICY<br />
Perceptions <strong>of</strong> Cuba<br />
Canadian and American Policies in<br />
Comparative Perspective<br />
Lana Wylie<br />
In 1976, with the US trade embargo against Cuba underway,<br />
Canada’s Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau<br />
visited the island nation, befriended his counterpart,<br />
and exclaimed publicly “Long live Prime Minister Fidel<br />
Castro!” During the past half-century <strong>of</strong> communist rule<br />
in Cuba, Canada’s policy <strong>of</strong> engagement with the country<br />
has contrasted sharply with the United States’ policy<br />
<strong>of</strong> isolation. Based on a series <strong>of</strong> interviews conducted<br />
in Havana, Washington, and Ottawa, Perceptions <strong>of</strong><br />
Cuba moves beyond traditional economic and political<br />
analyses to show that national identities distinct to each<br />
country contributed to the formation <strong>of</strong> their dissimilar<br />
foreign policies.<br />
Lana Wylie argues that Canadians and Americans<br />
perceive Cuba through different lenses rooted in their<br />
respective identities: American exceptionalism made<br />
Cuba the polar opposite <strong>of</strong> the United States, while<br />
Canada’s self-image as a good international citizen and<br />
as ‘not American’ has allowed the country to engage<br />
with the Cuban government. By acknowledging that<br />
competing national identities, perceptions, and ideas<br />
play a major role in foreign policies, Perceptions <strong>of</strong> Cuba<br />
makes a significant contribution to our understanding <strong>of</strong><br />
international relations.<br />
Lana Wylie is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Political Science at McMaster <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Also by Lana Wylie:<br />
Our Place in the Sun<br />
Canada and Cuba in the Castro Era<br />
(edited with Robert Wright)<br />
978-0-8020-9666-1<br />
£20.00 / $29.95 / 2009<br />
Of related interest:<br />
An Independent Foreign Policy for<br />
Canada<br />
Challenges and Choices for the Future<br />
Edited by Brian Bow and Patrick Lennox<br />
978-0-8020-9634-0<br />
£15.00 / $24.95 / 2009<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Does North America Exist<br />
Governing the Continent after NAFTA and 9/11<br />
Stephen Clarkson<br />
978-0-8020-9653-1<br />
£20.00 / $29.95 / 2008<br />
politICal sCIence / internatIOnal relatIOns / history<br />
Approx. 176 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4061-0 £32.00 $55.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1007-1 £14.00 $22.95 C<br />
23
politICs & POlICY<br />
The Politics <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Charter<br />
The Illusive Promise <strong>of</strong> Constitutional<br />
Rights<br />
Andrew Petter<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Andrew Petter is a leading constitutional scholar who<br />
served from 1991 to 2001 as a British Columbia MLA<br />
and cabinet minister, including Attorney General. In The<br />
Politics <strong>of</strong> the Charter, Petter assembles a set <strong>of</strong> his<br />
original essays written over three decades to provide a<br />
coherent critique <strong>of</strong> the political nature, impact, and legitimacy<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Canadian Charter <strong>of</strong> Rights and Freedoms.<br />
Showing how Charter rights have been shaped by the<br />
institutional character <strong>of</strong> the courts and by the ideological<br />
demands <strong>of</strong> liberal legalism, the essays contend that the<br />
Charter has diverted progressive political energies and<br />
facilitated the rise <strong>of</strong> neo-conservatism in Canada.<br />
Drawing upon his constitutional expertise and political<br />
experience, Petter evaluates the Charter in practical,<br />
legal, and philosophical terms. These essays, along with<br />
a new introduction and conclusion, map out Petter’s political<br />
philosophy and review the entirety <strong>of</strong> the Charter<br />
record. The Politics <strong>of</strong> the Charter is vividly written, free<br />
<strong>of</strong> legal jargon, accessible to a broad readership, and will<br />
provoke renewed discussion about how best to achieve<br />
a more compassionate and egalitarian Canadian society.<br />
Andrew Petter is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Faculty <strong>of</strong> Law at<br />
the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Victoria.<br />
Of related interest:<br />
The CourTS, the CharTEr, and the Schools<br />
The Impact <strong>of</strong> the Charter <strong>of</strong> Rights and Freedoms<br />
on Educational Policy and Practice, 1982–1997<br />
Edited by Michael Manley-Casimir and<br />
Kristin Manley-Casimir<br />
978-0-8020-9440-7<br />
£20.00 / $35.00 / <strong>2010</strong><br />
‘In The Politics <strong>of</strong> the Charter, Andrew Petter’s well-argued and<br />
thought-provoking analysis <strong>of</strong> the changing role <strong>of</strong> Canada’s<br />
Charter <strong>of</strong> Rights and Freedoms in Canadian law forces readers<br />
to re-examine their assumptions about the benefits or shortcomings<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Charter. As a coherent body <strong>of</strong> work, the essays<br />
in this collection represent one <strong>of</strong> the most compelling and wellreasoned<br />
critiques <strong>of</strong> the Charter yet in print.’<br />
Janet Hiebert, Department <strong>of</strong> Political Science, Queen’s <strong>University</strong><br />
Constitutional Odyssey<br />
Can Canadians Become a Sovereign People<br />
Third Edition<br />
Peter H. Russell<br />
978-0-8020-3777-0<br />
£18.00 / $34.95 / 2004<br />
political science/ law<br />
Approx. 256 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9898-6 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-0-8020-9599-2 £20.00 $29.95 C<br />
24
politICs & POlICY<br />
Canadian Politics<br />
Fifth Edition<br />
Edited by James Bickerton<br />
and Alain-G. Gagnon<br />
Canada at the WTO<br />
Trade Litigation and the Future <strong>of</strong><br />
Public Policy<br />
Marc D. Froese<br />
utp higher education<br />
utp higher education<br />
The new fifth edition <strong>of</strong><br />
Canadian Politics continues<br />
the work <strong>of</strong> earlier<br />
editions in <strong>of</strong>fering a<br />
comprehensive introduction<br />
to Canadian government<br />
and politics by a<br />
widely recognized and<br />
highly respected group<br />
<strong>of</strong> political scientists writing<br />
about subjects on<br />
which they are acknowledged<br />
experts. For this<br />
edition, the editors have organized the book into four<br />
sections: Part I: Citizenship, Identities, and Values; Part<br />
ii: Institutions; Part iii: Democracy and Representation;<br />
and Part IV: Canada in the World. The fourth section develops<br />
a focus on the diverse and increasingly important<br />
influences <strong>of</strong> globalization on the Canadian polity, the environment,<br />
and the role <strong>of</strong> Canada in the world.<br />
Of the eighteen chapters, nine are completely new,<br />
and six new authors appear, including Martin Papillon<br />
on Aboriginal governments, Peter J. Stoett on Canadian<br />
international environmental policy, and Andrew F.<br />
Cooper on Afghanistan and Canadian foreign policy.<br />
The remaining chapters have been thoroughly revised<br />
and updated.<br />
Canada at the WTO<br />
provides readers with<br />
an accessible evaluation<br />
<strong>of</strong> the World Trade<br />
Organization’s influence<br />
on domestic Canadian<br />
policy. It <strong>of</strong>fers a foundational<br />
understanding <strong>of</strong><br />
the WTO, including the<br />
myths that surround it,<br />
and introduces readers<br />
to Canada’s objectives<br />
in being a part <strong>of</strong> the<br />
WTO’s dispute settlement process. It also examines the<br />
realities <strong>of</strong> these goals through five dispute settlement<br />
case studies: s<strong>of</strong>twood lumber, the Canadian Wheat<br />
Board, Bombardier Regional Jets, split-run magazines,<br />
and Canadian patents in relation to the production <strong>of</strong><br />
generic pharmaceuticals and intellectual property rights.<br />
The author takes a multidisciplinary approach, conveying<br />
the interrelationship between global politics,<br />
economics, and international law, and <strong>of</strong>fers a balanced<br />
analysis that is both critical and optimistic. What results<br />
is a clear picture <strong>of</strong> how resolutions made at the international<br />
level affect Canadian politics, industries, and<br />
employment, and conversely how international governance<br />
can be used to protect national policies.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
James Bickerton is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
Political Science at St. Francis Xavier <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Alain-G. Gagnon holds the Canada Research Chair<br />
in Québec and Canadian Studies at the Université du<br />
Québec à Montréal.<br />
political science<br />
Marc D. Froese is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> History and Political Science at Canadian<br />
<strong>University</strong> College.<br />
political science / international relations /<br />
policy studies<br />
416 pp / 6 x 9 / Available<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0121-5 £24.99 $48.95 X<br />
Approx. 175 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-0152-9 £39.00 $60.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0138-3 £15.99 $26.95 X<br />
25
politICs & POlICY<br />
Agricultural Policy,<br />
Agribusiness, and Rent-<br />
Seeking Behaviour<br />
Second Edition<br />
Andrew Schmitz, Charles B. Moss,<br />
Troy G. Schmitz, Hartley W. Furtan,<br />
and Helen C. Schmitz<br />
Current Affairs<br />
Perspectives on Electricity Policy<br />
for Ontario<br />
Edited by Doug Reeve, Donald N. Dewees,<br />
and Bryan W. Karney<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
The second edition<br />
<strong>of</strong> the groundbreaking<br />
Agricultural Policy,<br />
Agribusiness, and Rent-<br />
Seeking Behaviour expands<br />
upon its original<br />
analysis <strong>of</strong> the economic<br />
policies that affect agriculture<br />
and agribusiness.<br />
Widening their<br />
lens to include information<br />
on the European<br />
Union, the authors continue<br />
to emphasize the role <strong>of</strong> farmers and agribusiness<br />
in the formation <strong>of</strong> policy, exploring the issues from both<br />
economic and historical perspectives.<br />
Andrew Schmitz is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Food and<br />
Resource Economics Department at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Florida.<br />
Charles B. Moss is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Food and<br />
Resource Economics Department at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Florida.<br />
Troy G. Schmitz is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Morrison<br />
School <strong>of</strong> Management and Agribusiness at Arizona<br />
State <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Hartley W. Furtan is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
Agricultural Economics at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Saskatchewan.<br />
Helen C. Schmitz is an independent economics editor.<br />
Electricity in Ontario<br />
has historically been<br />
generated from hydroelectriciy,<br />
coal, and<br />
nuclear power. Amidst<br />
aging infrastructure and<br />
diminishing capacity<br />
combined with escalating<br />
demand, Ontario’s<br />
electricity policy must<br />
contend with growing<br />
concerns about air pollutants,<br />
global warming,<br />
and the environmental impacts <strong>of</strong> fossil fuel production.<br />
Current Affairs brings together the views <strong>of</strong> a number<br />
<strong>of</strong> international experts on electricity and environment<br />
along with commentators familiar with Ontario’s<br />
situation to begin a discussion <strong>of</strong> these issues. The<br />
contributors suggest that in Ontario, as in other jurisdictions,<br />
solid environmental policy must be married with<br />
thoughtful information programs and regulations to encourage<br />
the behavioural and institutional changes that<br />
will lead the region to a sustainable electricity future.<br />
Doug Reeve is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor and chair <strong>of</strong> the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry<br />
at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />
Donald N. Dewees is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
Economics at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong><br />
Bryan W. Karney is chair <strong>of</strong> the Division <strong>of</strong> Environmental<br />
Engineering and Energy System and a pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
in the Department <strong>of</strong> Civil Engineering at the <strong>University</strong><br />
<strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />
policy Studies / business / economics<br />
policy Studies / business<br />
Approx. 512 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
133 figures; 60 tables<br />
Paper ISBN 978-0-8020-9547-3 £48.00 $75.00 C<br />
Approx. 304 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2010</strong><br />
21 figures; 19 tables<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4019-1 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0994-5 £20.00 $29.95 C<br />
26
politICs & POlICY<br />
Local Government in<br />
a Global World<br />
Australia and Canada in Comparative<br />
Perspective<br />
Latin American Politics<br />
An Introduction<br />
David Close<br />
Edited by Emmanuel Brunet-Jailly<br />
and John F. Martin<br />
IPAC Series in PublIC Management and GOVernance<br />
utp hIGher educatIOn<br />
Local government plays a<br />
critical role in the lives <strong>of</strong><br />
all citizens, from remote<br />
towns to capital cities.<br />
As the political legitimacy<br />
and importance <strong>of</strong> municipalities<br />
grow, however,<br />
it becomes increasingly<br />
difficult to strike a balance<br />
between local and<br />
higher levels <strong>of</strong> government.<br />
The contributors<br />
to Local Government in a<br />
Global World provide insights into key themes impacting<br />
local governance in two federations with much in common<br />
historically, culturally, and politically: Australia and Canada.<br />
These essays examine changes in the Australian and<br />
Canadian systems through four thematic lenses: citizen<br />
participation in government systems, the restructuring<br />
and reform <strong>of</strong> local governments, the use <strong>of</strong> performance<br />
measures and management systems in the administration<br />
<strong>of</strong> local governments, and the relations <strong>of</strong> local governments<br />
within higher levels <strong>of</strong> governments. Unique in<br />
its thematic selection and in its compare-and-contrast<br />
structure, Local Government in a Global World provides<br />
a valuable reference for those seeking to understand how<br />
effective local government is structured and managed.<br />
Latin American Politics<br />
provides a solid base<br />
for understanding the<br />
current political scene<br />
in Latin America, as well<br />
as the region’s complex<br />
political history. Beginning<br />
with an overview <strong>of</strong><br />
Latin America’s historic<br />
power elite and traditional<br />
modes <strong>of</strong> governance,<br />
and moving into<br />
a discussion <strong>of</strong> political<br />
change, violence, and instability, the book also explains<br />
the basics <strong>of</strong> government institutions, democracy and<br />
democratization, political economy, and economic and<br />
foreign relations.<br />
Most introductions to Latin American politics include<br />
either a series <strong>of</strong> case studies or refer to one or two cases<br />
throughout to illustrate their points. Instead, this book<br />
<strong>of</strong>fers a thematic approach, highlighting eleven different<br />
topics in separate chapters. The result is a consistent<br />
narrative focused on providing the tools necessary for<br />
understanding the political systems <strong>of</strong> Latin American<br />
nations. This thematic approach also makes the book<br />
self-consciously comparative, allowing readers to become<br />
strong analysts <strong>of</strong> politics around the globe.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Emmanuel Brunet-Jailly is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
and co-director <strong>of</strong> the Local Government Institute at the<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Victoria.<br />
John F. Martin is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor and director <strong>of</strong> the Centre<br />
for Sustainable Regional Communities at LaTrobe<br />
<strong>University</strong>.<br />
David Close is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong> Political<br />
Science at Memorial <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Newfoundland.<br />
politICal sCIence / urban stuDIes<br />
POlitICal sCIence<br />
Approx. 256 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
3 figures; 6 tables<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9963-1 £32.00 $55.00 E<br />
Approx. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2010</strong><br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0137-6 £18.99 $36.95 X<br />
27
politICs & POlICY<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
European Foreign and<br />
Security Policy<br />
States, Power, Institutions, and<br />
American Hegemony<br />
Catherine Gegout<br />
European Union Studies<br />
The European Union’s<br />
(eu) Common Foreign<br />
and Security Policy<br />
(CFsp) stipulates that<br />
all member states must<br />
unanimously ratify policy<br />
proposals through<br />
their representatives on<br />
the eu Council. Intergovernmentalism,<br />
or the<br />
need for equal agreement<br />
from all member<br />
nations, is used by<br />
many political scientists and policy analysts to study<br />
how the eu achieves its CFsp. However, in European<br />
Foreign and Security Policy, Catherine Gegout modifies<br />
this theory, arguing instead for analyses based on<br />
what she terms ‘constrained intergovernmentalism.’<br />
Gegout’s theory <strong>of</strong> constrained intergovernmentalism<br />
allows for member states, in particular France,<br />
Germany, and the United Kingdom, to bargain with<br />
one another and to make rational decisions but also<br />
takes into account the constraints imposed by the<br />
United States, the European Commission, and the<br />
precedents set by past decisions. Three in-depth case<br />
studies <strong>of</strong> CFsp decision-making support her argument,<br />
as she examines the eu position on China’s human<br />
rights record, eu sanctions against Serbia, and<br />
eu relations with NATO.<br />
Catherine Gegout is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />
School <strong>of</strong> Politics and International Relations at the <strong>University</strong><br />
<strong>of</strong> Nottingham.<br />
UnIVersity OF tOronto <strong>Press</strong><br />
is pleased to announce a new series<br />
European Union<br />
Studies<br />
European Union Studies features the latest research<br />
on topics in European integration in the<br />
widest sense including Europe’s role as a regional<br />
and international actor. This interdisciplinary series<br />
publishes the research <strong>of</strong> Canadian and international<br />
scholars and aims at attracting scholars<br />
working in various disciplines such as economics,<br />
history, law, political sciences, and sociology.<br />
The series is made possible in part by a generous<br />
grant from the European Commission.<br />
The first series <strong>of</strong> its kind in Canada, and one<br />
<strong>of</strong> only a few in North America, European Union<br />
Studies is unique in looking at the EU “from the<br />
outside,” making sense <strong>of</strong> not only European integration,<br />
but the role <strong>of</strong> the European Union as<br />
an international actor.<br />
Upcoming titles in European Union Studies include<br />
a theoretical examination <strong>of</strong> the EU’s Common<br />
Foreign and Security Policy, a collection <strong>of</strong><br />
essays on European security since the fall <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Berlin Wall, and a look at the Canadian travels<br />
and experiences <strong>of</strong> Jean Monnet, chief architect<br />
<strong>of</strong> European Unity.<br />
General eDItors:<br />
Jeffrey KopSTEin<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Political Science<br />
Director, Centre for European, Russian, and<br />
Eurasian Studies<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong><br />
Amy vErdun<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Political Science<br />
Jean Monnet Chair in European Integration Studies<br />
Director, Jean Monnet Centre <strong>of</strong> Excellence<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Victoria<br />
political science / international relations<br />
Approx. 256 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
12 tables; 3 figures<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4094-8 £40.00 $60.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1034-7 £16.95 $27.95 C<br />
28
philosOPhy<br />
The Platonian Leviathan<br />
Leon Harold Craig<br />
In The Platonian Leviathan, Leon Harold Craig <strong>of</strong>fers a<br />
radical re-interpretation <strong>of</strong> Hobbes’s most famous and<br />
influential political treatise. Craig begins and concludes<br />
with substantial discussions <strong>of</strong> the Hobbesian features<br />
<strong>of</strong> Melville’s Moby-Dick, however, the major portion <strong>of</strong> his<br />
text consists <strong>of</strong> a two-part commentary on Leviathan.<br />
In ‘The Problematical Leviathan,’ Craig critically assesses<br />
the metaphysical and psychological principles<br />
on which Hobbes supposedly based his political prescription,<br />
and shows them to be untenable. Craig also<br />
argues that Hobbes himself clearly does not subscribe<br />
to these principles, but uses them merely as the means<br />
<strong>of</strong> assimilating his new science <strong>of</strong> politics to the new<br />
Baconian-Cartesian natural science his prescribed regime<br />
is designed to promote and exploit. In Part Two,<br />
‘The Platonic Leviathan,’ Craig delineates the underlying<br />
‘Platonism’ <strong>of</strong> Hobbes’ thinking, especially regarding<br />
justice and the relationship between philosophy and<br />
politics. Dividing the two parts is an essay on Conrad’s<br />
Heart <strong>of</strong> Darkness, illustrating the pr<strong>of</strong>ound difference<br />
between the two ‘States <strong>of</strong> Nature’ – pre-civil and postcivil<br />
– that Hobbes’s rhetoric conceals.<br />
This very different interpretation <strong>of</strong> Leviathan is sure<br />
to be controversial, but may nonetheless re-orient the<br />
future direction <strong>of</strong> scholarship regarding Hobbes’s political<br />
philosophy.<br />
Also by Leon Harold Craig:<br />
Of Philosophers and Kings<br />
Political Philosophy in Shakespeare’s Macbeth<br />
and King Lear<br />
978-0-8020-8605-1<br />
£20.00 / $38.95 / 2001<br />
The War Lover<br />
A Study <strong>of</strong> Plato’s Republic<br />
978-0-8020-7942-8<br />
£18.65 / $38.95 / 1994<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Leon Harold Craig is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Political Science at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Alberta.<br />
philosophy / political theory<br />
‘Written from a sense <strong>of</strong> urgency … The Platonian Leviathan is<br />
a tightly woven argument. Leon Harold Craig sets about his task<br />
with the joy <strong>of</strong> a scholar in command <strong>of</strong> his sources but with<br />
the motivation <strong>of</strong> a genuine (and so rare) philosopher … Craig’s<br />
book will change forever the way serious readers <strong>of</strong> Hobbes<br />
understand the master.’<br />
Barry Cooper, Department <strong>of</strong> Political Science, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Calgary<br />
Approx. 704 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4106-8 £55.00 $85.00 E<br />
29
philosOPhy<br />
Engaging Heidegger<br />
Richard Capobianco<br />
Foreword by William J. Richardson<br />
Lonergan and the Level<br />
<strong>of</strong> Our Time<br />
Frederick E. Crowe<br />
Edited by Michael Vertin<br />
New StuDIes in PhenOMenolOGY and HermeneutICs<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
One <strong>of</strong> the most important<br />
philosophers <strong>of</strong><br />
the twentieth century,<br />
Martin Heidegger was<br />
primarily concerned<br />
with the ‘question <strong>of</strong><br />
Being.’ However, recent<br />
scholarship has tended<br />
to marginalize the importance<br />
<strong>of</strong> the name<br />
<strong>of</strong> Being in his thought.<br />
Through a focused reading<br />
<strong>of</strong> Heidegger’s texts,<br />
and especially his late and <strong>of</strong>ten overlooked Four Seminars<br />
(1966-1973), Richard Capobianco counters this<br />
trend by redirecting attention to the centrality <strong>of</strong> the<br />
name <strong>of</strong> Being in Heidegger’s lifetime <strong>of</strong> thought.<br />
Capobianco gives special attention to Heidegger’s<br />
resonant terms Ereignis and Lichtung and reads them<br />
as saying and showing the very same fundamental phenomenon<br />
named ‘Being itself’. Written in a clear and approachable<br />
manner, the essays in Engaging Heidegger<br />
examine Heidegger’s thought in view <strong>of</strong> ancient Greek,<br />
medieval, and Eastern thinking, and they draw out the<br />
deeply humane character <strong>of</strong> his ‘meditative thinking.’<br />
Richard Capobianco is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor and chair in the<br />
Department <strong>of</strong> Philosophy at Stonehill College.<br />
This volume is the third<br />
and final collection <strong>of</strong><br />
articles by the noted Lonergan<br />
expert Frederick<br />
E. Crowe. Comprised<br />
<strong>of</strong> twenty-eight papers<br />
written between 1961<br />
and 2004, five <strong>of</strong> which<br />
have never before been<br />
published, Lonergan<br />
and the Level <strong>of</strong> Our<br />
Time is divided into two<br />
distinct sections.<br />
The first part focuses on Lonergan himself and on<br />
certain features <strong>of</strong> his writings by examining his use <strong>of</strong><br />
analogy, the complex relationship between ethics and<br />
public policy, and the limits <strong>of</strong> our understanding. In the<br />
remaining fifteen essays, Crowe extends and employs<br />
Lonergan’s philosophy, applying it to subjects such as<br />
the development <strong>of</strong> doctrine, the character <strong>of</strong> salvation,<br />
and the relationship <strong>of</strong> religious believing to critical<br />
thinking. Several papers are devoted expressly to<br />
rethinking our perspectives on the religious state <strong>of</strong> life,<br />
on moral judgments, and on life after death. The product<br />
<strong>of</strong> a lifetime <strong>of</strong> engagement with Bernard Lonergan’s<br />
thought, Lonergan and the Level <strong>of</strong> Our Time is a major<br />
contribution to our understanding <strong>of</strong> his philosophy.<br />
Frederick E. Crowe is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus at the<br />
<strong>Toronto</strong> School <strong>of</strong> Theology, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> and<br />
co-founder <strong>of</strong> the Lonergan Research Institute.<br />
Michael Vertin is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Philosophy at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />
philosOPhy<br />
philosOPhy / theolOGY<br />
Approx. 192 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4159-4 £35.00 $55.00 E<br />
Approx. 480 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4032-0 £55.00 $85.00 E<br />
30
philosOPhy<br />
Lonergan’s Early<br />
Economic Research<br />
Texts and Commentary<br />
Edited by Michael Shute<br />
Lonergan’s Discovery<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Science <strong>of</strong><br />
Economics<br />
Michael Shute<br />
Lonergan Studies<br />
Lonergan Studies<br />
Lonergan’s Early Economic<br />
Research delves<br />
into the origins <strong>of</strong> Bernard<br />
Lonergan’s economic<br />
theory through<br />
his own writing on the<br />
subject. Michael Shute<br />
provides transcriptions<br />
<strong>of</strong> many <strong>of</strong> Lonergan’s<br />
private files on economics<br />
for a deeper<br />
understanding <strong>of</strong> his<br />
groundbreaking macroeconomic<br />
theory. An introduction by the editor contextualizes<br />
the works, which also serve as archival materials<br />
relevant to the companion volume Lonergan’s<br />
Discovery <strong>of</strong> the Science <strong>of</strong> Economics.<br />
Organized around specific themes such as dialectic<br />
<strong>of</strong> history, methodology, economic history, and price<br />
equilibrium, the book makes available a substantial<br />
amount <strong>of</strong> previously unpublished texts. Materials include<br />
Lonergan’s earliest notes on economics prior to<br />
his move to Rome in 1933, the complete surviving portion<br />
<strong>of</strong> ‘An Essay in Fundamental Sociology,’ and notes<br />
on economists Heinrich Pesch and Lionel Robbins,<br />
among others. These early works show that Lonergan<br />
built his economic discoveries on the methodological<br />
developments that he founded in his writings on the<br />
philosophy <strong>of</strong> history.<br />
Michael Shute is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Religious Studies at Memorial <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Newfoundland.<br />
Bernard Lonergan’s<br />
economic writings span<br />
forty years and contain<br />
ideas that differ radically<br />
from those <strong>of</strong> his contemporaries.<br />
His theory<br />
<strong>of</strong> macroeconomic dynamics<br />
was developed<br />
through the 1930s and<br />
1940s, culminating in<br />
the composition <strong>of</strong> For<br />
a New Political Economy<br />
(1942) and An Essay in<br />
Circulation Analysis (1944).<br />
In Lonergan’s Discovery <strong>of</strong> the Science <strong>of</strong> Economics,<br />
Michael Shute uses archival material in order<br />
to examine the influence <strong>of</strong> Lonergan’s early work in<br />
methodology, social philosophy, and theology on the<br />
development <strong>of</strong> his economic theory. Shute traces the<br />
development <strong>of</strong> Lonergan’s economic ideas from the<br />
late 1920s to the publication <strong>of</strong> his significant economic<br />
works in the 1940s. Together with its companion volume,<br />
Lonergan’s Early Economic Research, this volume<br />
outlines the process behind one <strong>of</strong> the great intellectual<br />
discoveries <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century and uncovers Lonergan’s<br />
framework for a genuine science <strong>of</strong> economics.<br />
Michael Shute is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Religious Studies at Memorial <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Newfoundland.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
philosophy / economics<br />
philosophy / economics<br />
Approx. 224 pp / / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
7 figures<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9864-1 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
Approx. 320 pp / / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
9 figures<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4091-7 £48.00 $75.00 E<br />
31
eCOnOMICs<br />
Globalization and Its<br />
Tax Discontents<br />
Tax Policy and International Investments<br />
Edited by Arthur J. Cockfield<br />
Industrial Organization,<br />
Trade, and Social<br />
Interaction<br />
Essays in Honour <strong>of</strong> B. Curtis Eaton<br />
Edited by Gregory K. Dow,<br />
Andrew Eckert, and Douglas S. West<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Increasingly linked by<br />
regional and global ties,<br />
national economies depend<br />
more than ever<br />
on international investments<br />
and trade. Agreements<br />
such as NAFTA<br />
in North America and<br />
the regional integration<br />
<strong>of</strong> the European Union<br />
facilitate cross-border<br />
commerce. While trade<br />
has become international,<br />
however, taxation has remained national, preserving<br />
and strengthening one <strong>of</strong> the few remaining barriers to<br />
the flow <strong>of</strong> cross-national investments.<br />
In Globalization and Its Tax Discontents, some <strong>of</strong><br />
the world’s leading international tax scholars identify<br />
the ways that taxes can inhibit or promote international<br />
investments, and assess both government and private<br />
market responses to present challenges. Given the lack<br />
<strong>of</strong> meaningful government cooperation, the contributors<br />
integrate economic theory with elements <strong>of</strong> history,<br />
gender theory, and international relations to explore the<br />
potential development effective international tax rules<br />
and processes to tax international investments. Innovative,<br />
interdisciplinary, and comprehensive, Globalization<br />
and Its Tax Discontents sheds light on one <strong>of</strong> the last<br />
real policy battlegrounds <strong>of</strong> globalization.<br />
Arthur J. Cockfield is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />
Faculty <strong>of</strong> Law at Queen’s <strong>University</strong>.<br />
B. Curtis Eaton is one<br />
<strong>of</strong> Canada’s leading microeconomists.<br />
As an<br />
applied economic theorist,<br />
Eaton has contributed<br />
greatly to industrial<br />
organization literature<br />
and has also worked in<br />
labour economics, economic<br />
geography, and<br />
organizational theory.<br />
The essays in this volume,<br />
by former students<br />
and present and former colleagues, call attention to the<br />
path-breaking work <strong>of</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Eaton.<br />
The first two chapters provide a short overview <strong>of</strong> Eaton’s<br />
research contributions and argue that his work laid<br />
the foundation for important research programs across<br />
the country. The remaining chapters, including an unpublished<br />
paper by Eaton himself, consist <strong>of</strong> original work that<br />
can be divided into the three broad categories <strong>of</strong> industrial<br />
organization and spatial competition, trade and productivity,<br />
and social interaction. Not only a collection <strong>of</strong> laudatory<br />
essays, Industrial Organization, Trade, and Social Interaction<br />
presents cutting edge research by leading scholars.<br />
Gregory K. Dow is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
Economics at Simon Fraser <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Andrew Eckert is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Economics at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Alberta.<br />
Douglas S. West is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
Economics at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Alberta.<br />
economics / law<br />
economics<br />
Approx. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
4 figures; 4 tables<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9976-1 £35.00 $55.00 E<br />
Approx. 336 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
43 figures; 16 tables<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9702-6 £48.00 $75.00 E<br />
32
history<br />
Transforming Labour<br />
Women and Work in Postwar Canada<br />
Joan Sangster<br />
The increased participation <strong>of</strong> women in the labour<br />
force was one <strong>of</strong> the most significant changes to Canadian<br />
social life during the quarter century after the<br />
close <strong>of</strong> the Second World War. Transforming Labour<br />
<strong>of</strong>fers one <strong>of</strong> the first critical assessments <strong>of</strong> women’s<br />
paid labour in this era, a period when more and more<br />
women, particularly those with families, were going ‘out<br />
to work’.<br />
Using case studies from across Canada, Joan<br />
Sangster explores a range <strong>of</strong> themes, including women’s<br />
experiences within unions, Aboriginal women’s<br />
changing patterns <strong>of</strong> work, and the challenges faced<br />
by immigrant women. By charting women’s own efforts<br />
to ameliorate their work lives as well as factors that reshaped<br />
the labour force, Sangster challenges the commonplace<br />
perception <strong>of</strong> this era as one <strong>of</strong> conformity,<br />
domesticity for women, and feminist inactivity. Working<br />
women’s collective grievances fuelled their desire for<br />
change, culminating in challenges to the status quo in<br />
the 1960s, when they voiced their discontent, calling<br />
for a new world <strong>of</strong> work and better opportunities for<br />
themselves and their daughters.<br />
Also by Joan Sangster:<br />
Regulating Girls and Women<br />
Sexuality, Family, and the Law in Ontario, 1920–1960<br />
978-0-1954-1663-3<br />
£15.00 / $28.95 / 2001<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Joan Sangster is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Departments <strong>of</strong><br />
History and Women’s Studies at Trent <strong>University</strong>.<br />
‘This is a beautifully conceived and revealing book. Joan<br />
Sangster lucidly explores and explains an astonishing array <strong>of</strong><br />
complex material to reveal how women in the post war period<br />
became full-fledged members <strong>of</strong> the labor force. Transforming<br />
Labour <strong>of</strong>fers such a rich variety <strong>of</strong> anecdotal evidence that it<br />
will benefit students <strong>of</strong> women’s work from all over the world.’<br />
Alice Kessler-Harris, author <strong>of</strong> In Pursuit <strong>of</strong> Equity: Women,<br />
Men and the Quest for Economic Citizenship in Twentieth<br />
Century America<br />
history / labour studies / women’s studies<br />
Approx. 416 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
12 illustrations<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9711-8 £48.00 $75.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-0-8020-9652-4 £22.50 $35.00 C<br />
33
history<br />
History <strong>of</strong> Medicine<br />
A Scandalously Short Introduction,<br />
Second Edition<br />
Jacalyn Duffin<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Jacalyn Duffin’s History <strong>of</strong> Medicine has for ten years<br />
been one <strong>of</strong> the leading texts used to teach medical and<br />
nursing students the history <strong>of</strong> their pr<strong>of</strong>ession. It has<br />
also been widely used in history courses and by general<br />
readers. An accessible overview <strong>of</strong> medical history, this<br />
new edition is greatly expanded, including more information<br />
on medicine in the United States, Great Britain,<br />
and in other European countries. The book continues<br />
to be organized conceptually around the major fields<br />
<strong>of</strong> medical endeavor such as anatomy, pharmacology,<br />
obstetrics, and psychiatry and has grown to include a<br />
new chapter on public health.<br />
Years <strong>of</strong> pedagogic experience, medical developments,<br />
and reader feedback have led to new sections<br />
throughout the book on topics including bioethics, forensics,<br />
genetics, reproductive technology, clinical trials,<br />
and recent outbreaks <strong>of</strong> BSE, West Nile Virus, SARS,<br />
and anthrax. Up to date and filled with pithy examples<br />
and teaching tools such as a searchable online bibliography,<br />
History <strong>of</strong> Medicine continues to demonstrate<br />
the power <strong>of</strong> historical research to inform current health<br />
care practice and enhance cultural understanding.<br />
Jacalyn Duffin is the Hannah Chair <strong>of</strong> the History <strong>of</strong><br />
Medicine at Queen’s <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Also by Jacalyn Duffin:<br />
Lovers and Livers<br />
Disease Concepts in History<br />
978-0-8020-3805-0<br />
£20.00 / $32.95 / 2005<br />
Clio in the Clinic<br />
Doctors’ Stories <strong>of</strong> Using History in Medical Practice<br />
(edited)<br />
978-0-8020-3798-5<br />
$40.00 / 2005<br />
Canadian rights only.<br />
‘The first readers <strong>of</strong> this History <strong>of</strong> Medicine should be medical<br />
students. As the director <strong>of</strong> a history <strong>of</strong> medicine program<br />
I welcome this book, for at last I have a good text book to<br />
recommend … It should be bought by, or better still, presented<br />
to each Canadian medical student as a reward for acceptance<br />
into medical school.’<br />
Peter Warren, Canadian Medical Association Journal<br />
history / medicine<br />
Approx. 480 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
66 photos; 22 tables<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9825-2 $75.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-0-8020-9556-5 $35.00 C<br />
North American rights only. Other rights held by MacMillan/<br />
Palgrave.<br />
34
history<br />
Prescribed Norms<br />
Women and Health in Canada and the<br />
United States since 1800<br />
Cheryl Krasnick Warsh<br />
Remembrance <strong>of</strong><br />
Patients Past<br />
Patient Life at the <strong>Toronto</strong> Hospital for the<br />
Insane, 1870–1940<br />
Ge<strong>of</strong>frey Reaume<br />
utp higher education<br />
Canadian Social History Series<br />
back in print<br />
Clear and concise yet<br />
brimming with historical<br />
research, Prescribed<br />
Norms provides a multilayered<br />
history <strong>of</strong> women’s<br />
health in Canada<br />
and the United States.<br />
Using numerous examples,<br />
Warsh recounts<br />
a socio-medical history<br />
that insistently operates<br />
within the paradigm<br />
<strong>of</strong> “masculinity equals<br />
health.” Such a paradigm, she argues, limits and <strong>of</strong>ten<br />
discounts women’s individual knowledge <strong>of</strong> their bodies<br />
and promotes medical research based on current understandings<br />
<strong>of</strong> women’s health, even though this starting<br />
point may be misinformed. Sensitive to differences<br />
in class and culture, Warsh demonstrates how cultural<br />
rituals reveal varied understandings <strong>of</strong> processes like<br />
menstruation, menopause, and childbirth. She also discusses<br />
the growth <strong>of</strong> hospitals, the roles <strong>of</strong> midwives,<br />
and women as nurses and physicians.<br />
Challenging readers to rethink the norms <strong>of</strong> women’s<br />
health and treatment, Prescribed Norms concludes<br />
with a gesture to chaos theory as a way <strong>of</strong> critiquing<br />
and breaking out <strong>of</strong> prescribed physiological and social<br />
understandings <strong>of</strong> women’s health.<br />
Cheryl Krasnick Warsh is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> History at Vancouver Island <strong>University</strong>.<br />
In Remembrance <strong>of</strong><br />
Patients Past, historian<br />
Ge<strong>of</strong>frey Reaume<br />
remembers previously<br />
forgotten psychiatric<br />
patients by examining<br />
in rich detail their daily<br />
life at the <strong>Toronto</strong> Hospital<br />
for the Insane (now<br />
called the Centre for<br />
Addiction and Mental<br />
Health – CAMH) from<br />
1870-1940. Psychiatric<br />
patients endured abuse and could lead monotonous<br />
lives inside the asylum’s walls, yet these same women<br />
and men worked hard at unpaid institutional jobs for<br />
years and decades on end, created their own entertainment,<br />
and even in some cases made their own clothes,<br />
while forming meaningful relationships with other patients<br />
and some staff.<br />
Using first person accounts by and about patients<br />
– including letters written by inmates which were confiscated<br />
by hospital staff – Reaume weaves together a<br />
tapestry <strong>of</strong> stories about the daily lives <strong>of</strong> people confined<br />
behind brick walls that patients themselves built.<br />
Ge<strong>of</strong>frey Reaume is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />
Critical Disabilities Studies Graduate Program at York<br />
<strong>University</strong>.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
history / medicine / women’s studies<br />
history / mental health<br />
Approx. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-0359-2 £45.00 $70.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0061-4 £16.99 $34.95 X<br />
380 pp / / Available<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1075-0 £20.00 $29.95 c<br />
35
history<br />
The Power <strong>of</strong> Place,<br />
the Problem <strong>of</strong> Time<br />
Aboriginal Identity and Historical<br />
Consciousness in the Cauldron <strong>of</strong><br />
Colonialism<br />
Keith thor Carlson<br />
Behind the Scenes<br />
The Life and Work <strong>of</strong> William Clifford Clark<br />
Robert A. Wardhaugh<br />
IPAC Series in PublIC Management and GOVernance<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
The Indigenous communities<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Lower Fraser<br />
River, British Columbia<br />
(a group commonly<br />
called the Stó:lõ), have<br />
historical memories and<br />
senses <strong>of</strong> identity deriving<br />
from events, cultural<br />
practices, and kinship<br />
bonds that had been<br />
continuously adapting<br />
long before a non-Native<br />
visited the area directly.<br />
In The Power <strong>of</strong> Place, the Problem <strong>of</strong> Time, Keith Thor<br />
Carlson re-thinks the history <strong>of</strong> Native-newcomer relations<br />
from the unique perspective <strong>of</strong> a classically trained<br />
historian who has spent nearly two decades living,<br />
working, and talking with the Stó:lõ peoples.<br />
Stó:lõ actions and reactions during colonialism were<br />
rooted in their pre-colonial experiences and customs,<br />
which coloured their responses to events such as<br />
smallpox outbreaks or the gold rush. Pr<strong>of</strong>iling tensions<br />
<strong>of</strong> gender and class within the community, Carlson emphasizes<br />
the elasticity <strong>of</strong> collective identity. A rich and<br />
complex history, The Power <strong>of</strong> Place, the Problem <strong>of</strong><br />
Time looks to both the internal and the external factors<br />
which shaped a society during a time <strong>of</strong> great change<br />
and its implications extend far beyond the study region.<br />
Keith Thor Carlson is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />
Department <strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Saskatchewan.<br />
William Clifford Clark,<br />
federal deputy minister<br />
<strong>of</strong> finance from 1932 to<br />
1952, had a pr<strong>of</strong>ound<br />
impact on Canadian history.<br />
An important intellectual<br />
figure during the<br />
first half <strong>of</strong> the twentieth<br />
century, he was leader<br />
<strong>of</strong> ‘The Ottawa Men,’<br />
a group <strong>of</strong> federal civil<br />
servants who shaped<br />
a new liberal vision <strong>of</strong><br />
the nation. Robert A. Wardhaugh chronicles Clark’s<br />
contributions to Canada’s modern state in Behind the<br />
Scenes, which reconstructs the public life and ideas <strong>of</strong><br />
one <strong>of</strong> Canada’s most important bureaucrats.<br />
The Department <strong>of</strong> Finance sat at the centre <strong>of</strong><br />
critical federal decisions and debates. From this axis,<br />
Clark’s wide-ranging contributions to Canadian policy<br />
were nothing short <strong>of</strong> phenomenal: he was the driving<br />
force behind the creation <strong>of</strong> the Bank <strong>of</strong> Canada and he<br />
spearheaded national housing policy. Clarke also managed<br />
the economy during the Great Depression and<br />
during the Second World War and he was instrumental<br />
in forging Canada’s international economic role in the<br />
postwar era.<br />
Robert A. Wardhaugh is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in<br />
the Department <strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Western<br />
Ontario.<br />
history / inDIGenous stuDIes<br />
history / POlICY stuDIes / BIOGraphy<br />
Approx. 368 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
30 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9839-9 £48.00 $75.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-0-8020-9564-0 £21.50 $32.95 C<br />
Approx. 560 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
24 illustrations<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4126-6 £50.00 $80.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1052-1 £23.50 $37.95 C<br />
36
history<br />
A Country Nourished<br />
on Self-Doubt<br />
Documents in Post-Confederation<br />
Canadian History, Third Edition<br />
An Empire <strong>of</strong> Regions<br />
A Brief History <strong>of</strong> Colonial British America<br />
Eric Nellis<br />
Edited by Thomas Thorner<br />
with Thor Frohn-NielsEn<br />
utp higher education<br />
utp higher education<br />
A Country Nourished<br />
on Self-Doubt demonstrates<br />
how thoroughly<br />
engaging the raw materials<br />
<strong>of</strong> Canadian history<br />
truly are, and how they<br />
<strong>of</strong>fer rich and informative<br />
insights into the nation’s<br />
history. Providing coastto-coast<br />
representation<br />
and featuring a diverse<br />
range <strong>of</strong> social groups,<br />
the editors <strong>of</strong>fer a refreshing look at the major events in<br />
post-Confederation Canadian history. Throughout, they<br />
rely on a careful selection <strong>of</strong> personal, formal, and legal<br />
documents to tell the story, including testimonies from<br />
the trial <strong>of</strong> Louis Riel, newspaper articles on Canada’s<br />
role in World War I, debates on the internment <strong>of</strong> Japanese<br />
Canadians in World War II, personal manifestos on<br />
Quebec separatism, and <strong>of</strong>ficial reports on the residential<br />
school system in Canada.<br />
In this new edition, each document is introduced<br />
with biographical information about the creator. Four<br />
brand new chapters explore sexual advice in Victorian<br />
Canada, northern treaties, drugs in the 1920s, and<br />
youth in the 1960s. The final chapter on environmentalism<br />
has also been revised and updated.<br />
An Empire <strong>of</strong> Regions<br />
<strong>of</strong>fers a new perspective<br />
on the history <strong>of</strong> colonial<br />
British America. In clear<br />
and beautiful prose, Nellis<br />
moves from a general<br />
history <strong>of</strong> European exploration<br />
in America to a<br />
more focused narrative<br />
on the distinct identities<br />
<strong>of</strong> the thirteen British<br />
mainland colonies.<br />
By comparing the<br />
experiences <strong>of</strong> the colonies in America with related<br />
developments in Europe, Nellis demonstrates how the<br />
colonies grew to function as separate, self-governing<br />
entities associated with larger regional identities such as<br />
New England, the Chesapeake and Southern Colonies,<br />
and the Backcountry and Middle Colonies. Only when<br />
the British Empire shifted its policies after the Seven<br />
Years’ War did the colonies come together in a collective<br />
defence <strong>of</strong> their individual political and economic integrity,<br />
thus beginning a process <strong>of</strong> cultural, social, and<br />
jurisdictional integration among the colonies.<br />
Extensive maps illustrate colony boundaries, settlement<br />
growth, Native American populations, and the impact<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Proclamation Line.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Thomas Thorner is the chair <strong>of</strong> the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
History at Kwantlen Polytechnic <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Eric Nellis is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus at the<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British Columbia.<br />
Thor Frohn-NielsEn teaches in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
History at Kwantlen Polytechnic <strong>University</strong>.<br />
history<br />
history<br />
Approx. 600 pp / / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0019-5 £27.99 $49.95 X<br />
Approx. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-0139-0 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0104-6 £16.99 $32.95 X<br />
37
history<br />
Prejudice and Pride<br />
Canadian Intellectuals Confront the<br />
United States, 1891–1945<br />
Damien-Claude Bélanger<br />
Re-Imagining Ukrainian-<br />
Canadians<br />
History, Politics, and Identity<br />
Edited by Rhonda L. Hinther<br />
and Jim Mochoruk<br />
Canadian Social History Series<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
As a country with enormous economic, military, and<br />
cultural power, the United States can seem an overwhelming<br />
neighbour – one that demands consideration<br />
by politicians, thinkers, and cultural figures. Prejudice<br />
and Pride examines and compares how English and<br />
French Canadian intellectuals viewed American society<br />
from 1891 to 1945.<br />
Based on over 500 texts drawn largely from the era’s<br />
periodical literature, the study reveals that English and<br />
French Canadian intellectuals shared common preoccupations<br />
with the United States, though the English<br />
tended to emphasize political issues and the French<br />
cultural issues. Damien-Claude Bélanger’s in-depth<br />
analysis <strong>of</strong> anti-American sentiment during this era<br />
divides Canadian thinkers not by language lines but<br />
rather by their political stance as right-wing, left-wing,<br />
or centre. Significantly, the era’s discourse regarding<br />
American life and the Canadian-American relationship<br />
was less an expression <strong>of</strong> nationalism or a reaction to<br />
US policy than it was about the expression <strong>of</strong> wider attitudes<br />
concerning modernity.<br />
Damien-Claude Bélanger is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
in the Department <strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa.<br />
Ukrainian immigrants to Canada have <strong>of</strong>ten been portrayed<br />
in history as sturdy pioneer farmers cultivating the<br />
virgin land <strong>of</strong> the Canadian west. The essays in this collection<br />
challenge this stereotype by examining the varied<br />
experiences <strong>of</strong> Ukrainian-Canadians in their day-to-day<br />
roles as writers, intellectuals, national organizers, working-class<br />
wage earners, and inhabitants <strong>of</strong> cities and<br />
towns. Throughout, the contributors remain dedicated to<br />
promoting the study <strong>of</strong> ethnic, hyphenated histories as<br />
major currents in mainstream Canadian history.<br />
Topics explored include Ukrainian-Canadian radicalism,<br />
the consequences <strong>of</strong> the Cold War for Ukrainians<br />
both at home and abroad, the creation and maintenance<br />
<strong>of</strong> ethnic memories, and community discord embodied<br />
by pro-Nazis, Communists, and criminals. Re-<br />
Imagining Ukrainian-Canadians uses new sources and<br />
non-traditional methods <strong>of</strong> analysis to answer unstudied<br />
and <strong>of</strong>ten controversial questions within the field.<br />
Collectively, the essays challenge the older, essentialist<br />
definition <strong>of</strong> what it means to be Ukrainian-Canadian.<br />
Rhonda L. Hinther is the Western Canadian History<br />
curator at the Canadian Museum <strong>of</strong> Civilization, Ottawa.<br />
Jim Mochoruk is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> North Dakota.<br />
history<br />
history / ukrainian stuDIes / slaVIC stuDIes<br />
Approx. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4045-0 £35.00 $55.00 e<br />
Approx. 448 pp / / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4134-1 £50.00 $80.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1062-0 £22.50 $35.00 C<br />
38
history<br />
Face to the Village<br />
The Riazan Countryside under Soviet<br />
Rule, 1921–1930<br />
Tracy McDonald<br />
Braudel Revisited<br />
The Mediterranean World, 1600–1800<br />
Edited by Gabriel Piterberg,<br />
Te<strong>of</strong>ilo F. Ruiz, and Ge<strong>of</strong>frey Symcox<br />
UCLA Clark Memorial Library series<br />
In the summer <strong>of</strong> 1924,<br />
the Bolshevik Party<br />
called on scholars, the<br />
police, the courts, and<br />
state <strong>of</strong>ficials to turn<br />
their attention to the villages<br />
<strong>of</strong> Russia. The<br />
subsequent campaign<br />
to ‘face the countryside’<br />
generated a wealth <strong>of</strong><br />
intelligence that fed into<br />
the regime’s sense <strong>of</strong><br />
alarmed conviction that<br />
the countryside was a space outside Bolshevik control.<br />
Richly rooted in archival sources, including local and<br />
central-level secret police reports, detailed cases <strong>of</strong> the<br />
local and provincial courts, government records, and<br />
newspaper reports, Face to the Village is a nuanced<br />
study <strong>of</strong> the everyday workings <strong>of</strong> the Russian village in<br />
the 1920s. Local-level <strong>of</strong>ficials emerge in Tracy McDonald’s<br />
study as vital and pivotal historical actors, existing<br />
between the Party’s expectations and peasant interests.<br />
McDonald’s careful exposition <strong>of</strong> the relationships<br />
between the urban centre and the peasant countryside<br />
brings us closer to understanding the fateful decision to<br />
launch a frontal attack on the countryside in the fall <strong>of</strong><br />
1929 under the auspices <strong>of</strong> collectivization.<br />
Fernand Braudel (1912–<br />
1985), was a leading<br />
French historian and<br />
author <strong>of</strong>, among other<br />
books, the groundbreaking<br />
The Mediterranean<br />
and the Mediterranean<br />
World in the Age <strong>of</strong> Philip<br />
II (1949). One <strong>of</strong> the<br />
founders <strong>of</strong> the Annales<br />
School in France, Braudel<br />
insisted on treating<br />
the Mediterranean region<br />
as a whole, irrespective <strong>of</strong> religious and national<br />
divides. Braudel’s new historiography rejected political<br />
history as the dominant discipline and espoused a ‘total<br />
history’ or a ‘history from below’ that would tell the story<br />
<strong>of</strong> the vast majority <strong>of</strong> humanity hitherto excluded from<br />
the grand narrative.<br />
The contributors to Braudel Revisited assess the<br />
impact <strong>of</strong> Braudel’s work on today’s academic world,<br />
in light <strong>of</strong> subsequent methodological shifts. Engaging<br />
with Braudel’s texts as well as with his ideas, the essays<br />
in this volume speak to the enduring legacy <strong>of</strong> his work<br />
on the ongoing exploration <strong>of</strong> early modern history.<br />
Gabriel Piterberg is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> California, Los Angeles.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Tracy McDonald is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> History at McMaster <strong>University</strong>.<br />
history / russian studies / slavic studies<br />
Te<strong>of</strong>ilo F. Ruiz is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
History and the Department <strong>of</strong> Spanish and Portuguese<br />
at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> California, Los Angeles.<br />
Ge<strong>of</strong>frey Symcox is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> California, Los<br />
Angeles.<br />
history<br />
Approx. 440 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
16 halftones; 14 tables<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4082-5 £48.00 $75.00 E<br />
Approx. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
10 photos<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4133-4 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
39
italian stuDIes<br />
Armour and<br />
Masculinity in the Italian<br />
Renaissance<br />
Carolyn <strong>Spring</strong>er<br />
<strong>Toronto</strong> Italian Studies<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
During the Italian Wars <strong>of</strong> 1494 to 1559, with innovations<br />
in military technology and tactics, armour began to<br />
disappear from the battlefield. Yet as field armour was<br />
retired, parade and ceremonial armour grew increasingly<br />
flamboyant. Displaced from its utilitarian function <strong>of</strong><br />
defense but retained for symbolic uses, armour evolved<br />
in a new direction as a medium <strong>of</strong> artistic expression.<br />
Luxury armour became a chief accessory in the performance<br />
<strong>of</strong> elite male identity, coded with messages<br />
regarding the owner’s social status, genealogy, and political<br />
alliances. Carolyn <strong>Spring</strong>er decodes Renaissance<br />
armour as three-dimensional portraits through the case<br />
studies <strong>of</strong> three patrons <strong>of</strong> luxury armourers, Guidobaldo<br />
II della Rovere (1514–75), Charles V Habsburg<br />
(1500–58 and Holy Roman Emperor from 1519–56),<br />
and Cosimo I de’Medici (1519–74). A fascinating exposition<br />
<strong>of</strong> male self-representation, Armour and Masculinity<br />
in the Italian Renaissance explores the significance<br />
<strong>of</strong> armour in early modern Italy as both cultural artefact<br />
and symbolic form.<br />
Carolyn <strong>Spring</strong>er is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />
Department <strong>of</strong> French and Italian at Stanford <strong>University</strong>.<br />
‘Armour and Masculinity in the Italian Renaissance is a fascinating<br />
introduction to the cultural symbolism <strong>of</strong> armour and its physical,<br />
visual, and verbal interpretations during sixteenth-century Italy.<br />
Carolyn <strong>Spring</strong>er’s writing is clear, intelligent, and witty as she<br />
adroitly links her subject to recent discourses concerning power<br />
and gender as mediated through representations <strong>of</strong> the body.’<br />
Albert R. Ascoli, Gladys Arata Terrill Distinguished Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
<strong>of</strong> Italian Studies, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> California, Berkeley<br />
Of related interest:<br />
Sacred Violence<br />
The European Crusades to the Middle East, 1096–1396<br />
Jill N. Claster<br />
978-1-4426-0060-7<br />
£17.99 / $29.95 / 2009<br />
Lelia’s Kiss<br />
Imagining Gender, Sex, and Marriage in Italian<br />
Renaissance Comedy<br />
Laura Giannetti<br />
978-0-8020-9951-8<br />
£42.00 / $65.00 / 2009<br />
Medieval Warfare in Manuscripts<br />
Pamela Porter<br />
978-08020-8400-2<br />
$23.95 / 2000<br />
North and South American rights only<br />
italian studies / renaissance studies /<br />
military studies<br />
Approx. 272 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
38 photos<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4055-9 £35.00 $55.00 E<br />
40
italian stuDIes<br />
Beasts and Beauties<br />
Animals, Gender, and Domestication in<br />
the Italian Renaissance<br />
Juliana Schiesari<br />
‘My Muse Will Have a<br />
Story to Paint’<br />
Selected Prose <strong>of</strong> Ludovico Ariosto<br />
Translated with an Introduction by<br />
Dennis Looney<br />
<strong>Toronto</strong> Italian Studies<br />
The Lorenzo Da Ponte Italian Library<br />
The question <strong>of</strong> what it<br />
means to be human has<br />
preoccupied thinkers<br />
since antiquity. The classical<br />
humanism <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Italian Renaissance saw<br />
humanity as hierarchical,<br />
with elite European<br />
males at the apex while<br />
women, lower class or<br />
foreign men, and animals<br />
occupied varying<br />
lesser degrees <strong>of</strong> being.<br />
Using the theme <strong>of</strong> domestication to interrogate the intertwined<br />
notions <strong>of</strong> femininity, sexuality, and animality,<br />
Juliana Schiesari looks to early modern Italy to uncover<br />
the origins <strong>of</strong> the modern conception <strong>of</strong> the human.<br />
Beasts and Beauties examines the relationship between<br />
domesticity and power by focusing on the contemporaneous<br />
development <strong>of</strong> two phenomena – the<br />
invention <strong>of</strong> the ‘pet’ and the delineation <strong>of</strong> the home<br />
as a uniquely private enclosure, where the pater familias<br />
ruled over his own secluded world <strong>of</strong> domesticated<br />
wife, children, servants, and animals. Drawing upon canonical<br />
works and authors <strong>of</strong> the Italian Renaissance,<br />
Schiesari discusses how the figure <strong>of</strong> the animal resituates<br />
these works and provides a fresh perspective to<br />
how we as human beings perceive ourselves in relation<br />
to the world.<br />
Juliana Schiesari is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
Comparative Literature and the Department <strong>of</strong> French<br />
and Italian at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> California, Davis.<br />
Ludovico Ariosto, best<br />
known for his 1516 epic<br />
poem Orlando furioso,<br />
was one <strong>of</strong> the great<br />
writers <strong>of</strong> the Italian Renaissance.<br />
In this collection,<br />
Dennis Looney<br />
assembles a diverse<br />
compendium <strong>of</strong> Ariosto’s<br />
prose, including his<br />
214 Letters and a satirical<br />
piece, Herbal Doctor.<br />
Ariosto’s correspondence<br />
paints a detailed portrait <strong>of</strong> the world he lived and<br />
wrote in. While some letters illuminate his day-to-day<br />
life, including his work as a provincial commissioner for<br />
the ruling Este family <strong>of</strong> Ferrara, others shed light on the<br />
composition and production <strong>of</strong> his poems and plays,<br />
allowing a glimpse <strong>of</strong> the man in his creative workshop.<br />
Herbal Doctor, a parody <strong>of</strong> humanism in general and<br />
neoplatonic philosophy in particular, may mark a defense<br />
<strong>of</strong> Ariosto’s decision to turn away from the philological<br />
world <strong>of</strong> his contemporaries in order to pursue a<br />
different kind <strong>of</strong> learning.<br />
Looney’s elegant, careful translation provides us with<br />
the first extensive selection <strong>of</strong> Ariosto’s prose works in<br />
English, and enriches our understanding <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> Italy’s<br />
most important Renaissance writers.<br />
Dennis Looney is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> French and Italian at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Pittsburgh.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
italian studies / renaissance studies /<br />
animal studies<br />
italian studies / renaissance studies /<br />
literary studies<br />
Approx. 176 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2010</strong><br />
9 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9922-8 £28.00 $45.00 E<br />
Approx. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
2 photos; 1 map<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4087-0 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
41
italian stuDIes<br />
Tuscan Spaces<br />
Literary Constructions <strong>of</strong> Space<br />
Silvia Ross<br />
Pride in Modesty<br />
Modernist Architecture and the Vernacular<br />
Tradition in Italy<br />
Michelangelo Sabatino<br />
<strong>Toronto</strong> Italian Studies<br />
<strong>Toronto</strong> Italian Studies<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
An important locus for<br />
English-speaking writers,<br />
the region <strong>of</strong> Tuscany<br />
is also well represented<br />
in the Italian<br />
literary canon. In Tuscan<br />
Spaces, Silvia Ross focuses<br />
on constructions<br />
<strong>of</strong> Tuscany in twentiethcentury<br />
Italian literature<br />
and juxtaposes them<br />
with English prose works<br />
by such authors as E.M.<br />
Forster and Frances Mayes to expose the complexity <strong>of</strong><br />
literary representation centred on a single milieu.<br />
Ross uses the works <strong>of</strong> writers such as Federigo<br />
Tozzi, Aldo Palazzeschi, Vasco Pratolini, and Elena<br />
Gianini Belotti, to seek out alternative visions <strong>of</strong> Tuscan<br />
space and emphasizes that each author fashions the<br />
region in a manner which reflects their personal poetics,<br />
background, and experiences. Theories <strong>of</strong> cultural<br />
geography, space, travel, and narrative contribute to<br />
Ross’s consideration <strong>of</strong> the dualisms commonly employed<br />
in writings about Tuscany, such as country/city,<br />
nature/culture, female/male, and self/other, all <strong>of</strong> which<br />
are in turn affected by her interrogation <strong>of</strong> the local/foreign<br />
opposition that underlies the study as a whole.<br />
Silvia Ross is a senior lecturer in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
Italian at <strong>University</strong> College Cork.<br />
Following Italy’s unification<br />
in 1861, architects,<br />
artists, politicians, and<br />
literati engaged in volatile<br />
debates over the<br />
pursuit <strong>of</strong> national and<br />
regional identity. Growing<br />
industrialization and<br />
urbanization across the<br />
country contrasted with<br />
the rediscovery <strong>of</strong> traditionally<br />
built forms and<br />
objects created by the<br />
agrarian peasantry. Pride in Modesty argues that these<br />
ordinary, <strong>of</strong>ten anonymous, everyday things inspired<br />
and transformed Italian art and architecture from the<br />
1920s through the 1970s.<br />
Through in-depth examinations <strong>of</strong> texts, drawings,<br />
and buildings, Michelangelo Sabatino finds that the folk<br />
traditions <strong>of</strong> the pre-industrial countryside have provided<br />
formal, practical, and poetic inspiration directly<br />
affecting both design and construction practices over a<br />
period <strong>of</strong> sixty years and a number <strong>of</strong> different political<br />
regimes. This surprising continuity allows Sabatino to<br />
reject the division <strong>of</strong> Italian history into sharply delimited<br />
periods such as Fascist Interwar and Democratic<br />
Postwar and to instead emphasize the long, continuous<br />
process that transformed pastoral and urban ideals into<br />
a new, modernist Italy.<br />
Michelangelo Sabatino is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in<br />
the Gerald D. Hines College <strong>of</strong> Architecture at the <strong>University</strong><br />
<strong>of</strong> Houston.<br />
italian studies / literary studies<br />
italian studies / architecture<br />
Approx. 208 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
6 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-3998-0 £28.00 $45.00 E<br />
Approx. 336 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
95 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9705-7 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
42
italian stuDIes<br />
Roads and Ruins<br />
The Symbolic Landscape <strong>of</strong> Fascist Rome<br />
Paul Baxa<br />
War, Massacre, and<br />
Recovery in Central<br />
Italy, 1943–1948<br />
Victoria C. Belco<br />
<strong>Toronto</strong> Italian Studies<br />
<strong>Toronto</strong> Italian Studies<br />
In the 1930s, the Italian<br />
Fascist regime pr<strong>of</strong>oundly<br />
changed the<br />
landscape <strong>of</strong> Rome’s<br />
historic centre, demolishing<br />
buildings and<br />
displacing thousands <strong>of</strong><br />
Romans in order to display<br />
the ruins <strong>of</strong> the pre-<br />
Christian Roman Empire.<br />
This transformation<br />
is commonly interpreted<br />
as a failed attempt to<br />
harmonize urban planning with Fascism’s ideological<br />
exaltation <strong>of</strong> the Roman Empire.<br />
Roads and Ruins argues that the chaotic Fascist<br />
cityscape, filled with traffic and crumbling ruins, was in<br />
fact a reflection <strong>of</strong> the landscape <strong>of</strong> the First World War.<br />
In the radical interwar transformation <strong>of</strong> Roman space,<br />
Paul Baxa finds the embodiment <strong>of</strong> the Fascist exaltation<br />
<strong>of</strong> speed and destruction, with both roads and ruins<br />
defining the cultural impulses at the heart <strong>of</strong> the movement.<br />
Drawing on a wide variety <strong>of</strong> sources, including<br />
war diaries, memoirs, paintings, films, and government<br />
archives, Roads and Ruins is a richly textured study that<br />
<strong>of</strong>fers an original perspective on a well known story.<br />
Paul Baxa is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> History at Ave Maria <strong>University</strong>.<br />
The Second World<br />
War wreaked unprecedented<br />
devastation<br />
throughout Europe, necessitating<br />
monumental<br />
reconstruction efforts<br />
that burdened not only<br />
governments, but the<br />
lives <strong>of</strong> ordinary citizens.<br />
War, Massacre, and Recovery<br />
in Central Italy,<br />
1943–1948 examines<br />
this transitional period in<br />
the province <strong>of</strong> Arezzo by detailing the daily experiences<br />
<strong>of</strong> civilians through the traumas <strong>of</strong> war and the difficulties<br />
<strong>of</strong> recovery.<br />
Studying the aftermath <strong>of</strong> war in a new and insightful<br />
way, Victoria C. Belco shifts the perspective from the<br />
national to the local level. With this localized focus, she<br />
provides valuable insight into the ways in which civilians<br />
coped with an overwhelming range <strong>of</strong> problems<br />
– from adjusting to Allied occupation and widespread<br />
displacement to rampant unemployment and the restructuring<br />
<strong>of</strong> local administrations and institutions after<br />
fascism. Recreating the post-war atmosphere <strong>of</strong> disorder,<br />
need, and political upheaval, Belco shows how the<br />
competing community interests caused social fragmentations<br />
that impeded change, while the unity <strong>of</strong> a shared<br />
past prevented civil war.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Victoria C. Belco is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> History at Portland State <strong>University</strong>.<br />
italian studies / history / urban studies<br />
italian studies / history<br />
Approx. 256 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9995-2 £35.00 $55.00 E<br />
Approx. 592 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
20 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9314-1 £60.00 $95.00 E<br />
43
italian stuDIes<br />
Neoavanguardia<br />
Italian Experimental Literature and Arts in<br />
the 1960s<br />
Edited by Paolo Chirumbolo, Mario<br />
Moroni, and Luca Somigli<br />
The Revolt <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Scribe in Modern Italian<br />
Literature<br />
Thomas E. Peterson<br />
<strong>Toronto</strong> Italian Studies<br />
<strong>Toronto</strong> Italian Studies<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
The Italian neoavanguardia,<br />
a literary and artistic<br />
movement characterized<br />
by a strong push towards<br />
experimentation,<br />
playfulness, and new<br />
forms <strong>of</strong> language usage,<br />
was founded at the<br />
beginning <strong>of</strong> the 1960s<br />
by a group <strong>of</strong> poets, critics,<br />
artists, and composers.<br />
Although the neoavanguardia<br />
movement<br />
has been primarily defined and examined in a literary<br />
context, it is broadly discussed in this collection as also<br />
affecting other artistic forms such as the visual arts, music,<br />
and architecture.<br />
In examining this <strong>of</strong>ten controversial movement,<br />
Neoavanguardia’s contributors include topics such as<br />
critical-theoretical debates, the crisis <strong>of</strong> literature as<br />
defined within the movement, and issues <strong>of</strong> gender in<br />
1960s Italian art and literature. This important collection<br />
interrogates the arts as creative codes, their ability to<br />
question reality, and their capacity to survive.<br />
Paolo Chirumbolo is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />
Department <strong>of</strong> Foreign Languages and Literatures at<br />
Louisiana State <strong>University</strong>.<br />
The Revolt <strong>of</strong> the Scribe<br />
in Modern Italian Literature<br />
<strong>of</strong>fers a perceptive<br />
re-assessment <strong>of</strong> Italian<br />
literary culture, focusing<br />
on the nature <strong>of</strong><br />
modernity through the<br />
literature <strong>of</strong> those who<br />
revolt against established<br />
norms and expectations.<br />
By exploring<br />
selected works from authors<br />
such as Deledda,<br />
Foscolo, Ungaretti, Bertolucci, and Valeri, Thomas E.<br />
Peterson considers the categories <strong>of</strong> vatic poetry, the<br />
feminine voice, and the writings <strong>of</strong> those situated on<br />
Italy’s cultural periphery.<br />
As practitioners <strong>of</strong> literary Italian, Peterson argues<br />
that these authors are conscious <strong>of</strong> their role in preserving<br />
both language and tradition during a period <strong>of</strong> great<br />
upheaval and national transformation. At the same time,<br />
they use their writings to move towards change, combat<br />
alienation, and reconfigure the self in relation to the<br />
community. In treating the act <strong>of</strong> authorship in terms <strong>of</strong><br />
its cultural and didactic significance, Peterson successfully<br />
bridges the gap between traditional literary critical<br />
monographs and the trend toward cultural studies.<br />
Mario Moroni is a visiting assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />
Department <strong>of</strong> Modern Romance Languages and Literatures<br />
at SUNY Birmingham.<br />
Luca Somigli is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Italian Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />
Thomas E. Peterson is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Romance Languages at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Georgia.<br />
italian studies / literary studies<br />
italian studies / literary studies<br />
Approx. 336 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
7 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9998-3 £45.00 $70.00 E<br />
Approx. 384 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
2 illustrations<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4089-4 £48.00 $75.00 E<br />
44
italian stuDIes<br />
Marco Bellocchio<br />
The Cinematic I in the Political Sphere<br />
Clodagh J. Brook<br />
Building a Monument to<br />
Dante<br />
Boccaccio as Dantista<br />
Jason M. Houston<br />
<strong>Toronto</strong> Italian Studies<br />
<strong>Toronto</strong> Italian Studies<br />
Marco Bellocchio is one <strong>of</strong> Italy’s most important and<br />
prolific directors, with a career spanning five decades.<br />
In this book, Clodagh J. Brook explores the boundaries<br />
between the public and the private, the political and the<br />
personal, and the collective and the individual as they<br />
appear in Bellocchio’s films. Including work on psychoanalysis,<br />
politics, film production, autobiography, and<br />
the relationship between film tradition and contemporary<br />
culture, Marco Bellocchio touches on fundamental<br />
issues in film analysis.<br />
Brook’s study interrogates what it means to make<br />
personal or anti-institutional art in a medium dominated<br />
by a late-capitalist industrial model <strong>of</strong> production. Her<br />
readings <strong>of</strong> Bellocchio’s <strong>of</strong>ten enigmatic and perplexing<br />
work suggest new ways to answer questions about<br />
subjectivity, objectivity, and political commentary in<br />
modes <strong>of</strong> filmmaking. Relating the art <strong>of</strong> a private director<br />
to a public medium, Clodagh J. Brook’s work is an<br />
important contribution to our understanding <strong>of</strong> film.<br />
Clodagh J. Brook is a senior lecturer and head <strong>of</strong><br />
the Department <strong>of</strong> Italian Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Birmingham.<br />
The shadow <strong>of</strong> Dante<br />
Alighieri looms large in<br />
the works <strong>of</strong> Giovanni<br />
Boccaccio, and yet the<br />
full extent <strong>of</strong> Boccaccio’s<br />
relationship to Dante<br />
remains largely unexplored.<br />
Building a Monument<br />
to Dante employs<br />
literary analysis coupled<br />
with philological and historical<br />
evidence to argue<br />
that Boccaccio’s multifaceted<br />
work as Dante’s editor, biographer, apologist,<br />
and commentator created a literary figure that could<br />
support Boccaccio’s poetic and political ideologies.<br />
Jason M. Houston finds in Boccaccio’s biographical<br />
writings a strong condemnation <strong>of</strong> Florentine politics<br />
and a harsh critique <strong>of</strong> Petrarch’s political isolation, distinguishing<br />
Boccaccio’s political and intellectual positions<br />
from those <strong>of</strong> both Dante and Petrarch. Reading<br />
the Trattatello in Laude di Dante and other writings as<br />
works intended to promote Dante as a brilliant political<br />
exemplum to the city <strong>of</strong> Florence, Houston discovers<br />
the processes by which Boccaccio constructed an image<br />
<strong>of</strong> Dante that continues to influence the way that<br />
readers understand the poet’s life and works.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Jason M. Houston is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />
Department <strong>of</strong> Modern Languages at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Oklahoma.<br />
italian studies / film studies<br />
italian studies / medieval studies /<br />
literary studies<br />
Approx. 272 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9710-1 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-0-8020-9651-7 £19.95 $29.95 C<br />
Approx. 272 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
8 illustrations<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4051-1 £35.00 $55.00 E<br />
45
meDIeval & Renaissance stuDIes<br />
Erasmus and Voltaire<br />
Why They Still Matter<br />
Ricardo J. Quinones<br />
erasmus studies<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Despite comparisons between Erasmus and Voltaire<br />
having become common-place in the course <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth<br />
century, this is the first full study to bring them<br />
together in their careers, their works, and their historic<br />
afterlives. Each was a force for change in his time and<br />
thus ranks among the masters <strong>of</strong> modern liberalism. Beginning<br />
with the continuities between the Renaissance<br />
and the Enlightenment, award-winning scholar Ricardo<br />
J. Quinones joins Erasmus and Voltaire as voices <strong>of</strong><br />
moderation and reason that remain capable <strong>of</strong> addressing<br />
the philosophical crises <strong>of</strong> twentieth-century thought.<br />
A companion piece to Dualisms, Quinones’ 2007<br />
book, Erasmus and Voltaire differs in method: where<br />
its predecessor looked to inveterate, unyeilding differences,<br />
this new work looks to similarities. In delving<br />
beneath the obvious differences between these two intellectual<br />
giants, Quinones uncovers the great practical<br />
and spiritual vocations that unite them.<br />
Ricardo J. Quinones is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in the<br />
Department <strong>of</strong> English at Claremont McKenna College.<br />
Also by Ricardo Quinones:<br />
Dualisms<br />
The Agons <strong>of</strong> the Modern World<br />
978-0-8020-9763-7<br />
£42.00 / $69.00 / 2007<br />
‘In Erasmus and Voltaire, Ricardo J. Quinones’ erudition and<br />
soaring thought allow him to <strong>of</strong>fer original insights into the works<br />
<strong>of</strong> these two intellectual giants. By juxtaposing the lived experiences<br />
and writings <strong>of</strong> both Erasmus and Voltaire, this superb<br />
study makes one figure a foil for the other and gives depth and<br />
piquancy to what is an eloquent interpretation <strong>of</strong> their lives.’<br />
Erika Rummel, Department <strong>of</strong> History, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong><br />
‘Extremely worldly and sophisticated, Erasmus and Voltaire<br />
both engaged with the most important ideas <strong>of</strong> their times.<br />
Champions <strong>of</strong> civilization and tradition, they were revolutionary<br />
in some ways, but ready to hold the line in contradistinction to<br />
the more rebellious ideologues <strong>of</strong> their time. It is always a pleasure<br />
to read the work <strong>of</strong> Ricardo J. Quinones, and this fine study<br />
brings to light the parallel development <strong>of</strong> these two figures,<br />
with a clarity and appeal I have never before seen in writing on<br />
either Erasmus or Voltaire.’<br />
David M. Hertz, Department <strong>of</strong> Comparative Literature, Indiana<br />
<strong>University</strong><br />
renaissance studies / history / philosophy<br />
Approx. 240 pp / / March <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4054-2 £35.00 $55.00 E<br />
46
meDIeval & renaissance stuDIes<br />
The Correspondence <strong>of</strong><br />
Erasmus<br />
Letters 1802 to 1925<br />
March 1527–December 1527<br />
Expositions <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Psalms<br />
Edited by Dominic Baker-Smith<br />
Annotated by James K. Farge<br />
Translated by Charles Fantazzi<br />
Collected Works <strong>of</strong> Erasmus, Volume 13<br />
Collected Works <strong>of</strong> Erasmus, Volume 65<br />
The letters in this volume cover Erasmus’ correspondence<br />
from March to December 1527. These 129 letters<br />
centre primarily on Erasmus’ continuing struggle<br />
with his Catholic critics, especially those in Spain and<br />
France, and on Erasmus’ growing criticism <strong>of</strong> the Protestant<br />
reform movement.<br />
The letters show Erasmus’ attempts to justify his position<br />
and to win favour with rulers, other prestigious<br />
men, and powerful institutions, all influential in both<br />
secular and religious spheres. Although the Inquisition<br />
in Spain investigated his orthodoxy and did not<br />
bring charges against him, the Paris Faculty <strong>of</strong> Theology<br />
formally condemned 112 propositions drawn from<br />
Erasmus’ works in December 1527. The letters in this<br />
volume, written by and to Erasmus in this critical time,<br />
represent a unique view <strong>of</strong> a Europe torn by war and<br />
breaking apart into religious confessionalism and regionally<br />
organized churches.<br />
Throughout all this controversy, Erasmus repeatedly<br />
protested that the sole aim <strong>of</strong> his life’s work was<br />
to promote the study <strong>of</strong> humanities for the pr<strong>of</strong>it <strong>of</strong> both<br />
knowledge and religion.<br />
James K. Farge is a senior fellow and librarian at the<br />
Pontifical Institute <strong>of</strong> Medieval Studies, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />
Consisting <strong>of</strong> Erasmus’ commentary on psalms 38, 83,<br />
and 14, this is the third and final volume <strong>of</strong> the Expositions<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Psalms in the Collected Works <strong>of</strong> Erasmus.<br />
Dating from the last years <strong>of</strong> Erasmus’ life, they<br />
represent his mature thoughts on the great crisis facing<br />
western Christendom.<br />
During the early 1530s, Erasmus explored disputed<br />
issues in the Church and attempted to reconcile the<br />
warring parties <strong>of</strong> the Reformation. His characteristic<br />
emphasis on the inner experience <strong>of</strong> faith, rather than<br />
outer conformity to a doctrinal checklist, allowed him<br />
to be receptive to the insights <strong>of</strong> reform while refusing<br />
to compromise on the essentials <strong>of</strong> received tradition.<br />
By stressing the subjective experience at the heart<br />
<strong>of</strong> religious practice, he sought to reduce the tension<br />
<strong>of</strong> institutional conflict. The exposition <strong>of</strong> Psalm 38 is<br />
here translated into English for the first time, and that<br />
<strong>of</strong> Psalm 14 for the first time since 1537; together with<br />
Psalm 83, the three expositions in this collection <strong>of</strong>fer<br />
the student <strong>of</strong> Erasmus an important access to his<br />
legacy.<br />
Dominic Baker-Smith is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus <strong>of</strong> English<br />
Literature at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Amsterdam.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Charles Fantazzi is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Foreign Languages and Literatures at East Carolina<br />
<strong>University</strong> and a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Classics at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Windsor.<br />
renaissance studies / philosophy<br />
renaissance studies / philosophy<br />
Approx. 624 pp / / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
19 illustrations<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9059-1 £114.00 $175.00 E<br />
Approx. 352 pp / / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
3 illustrations<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9979-2 £72.00 $110.00 E<br />
47
meDIeval & Renaissance stuDIes<br />
Ovid in the Age <strong>of</strong><br />
Cervantes<br />
Edited by Frederick A. de Armas<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
The Roman poet Ovid, author <strong>of</strong> the famous Metamorphoses,<br />
is widely considered one <strong>of</strong> the canonical poets<br />
<strong>of</strong> Latin antiquity. Vastly popular in Europe during the<br />
Renaissance and Early Modern periods, Ovid’s writings<br />
influenced the literature, art, and culture in Spain’s<br />
Golden Age.<br />
The book begins with examinations <strong>of</strong> the translation<br />
and utilization <strong>of</strong> Ovid’s texts from the Middle Ages<br />
to the Age <strong>of</strong> Cervantes. The work includes a section<br />
devoted to the influence <strong>of</strong> Ovid on Cervantes, arguing<br />
that Don Quixote is a deeply Ovidian text, drawing<br />
upon many classical myths and themes. The contributors<br />
then turn to specific myths in Ovid as they were<br />
absorbed and transformed by different writers, including<br />
that <strong>of</strong> Echo and Narcissus in Garcilaso de la Vega<br />
and Hermaphroditus in Covarrubias and Moya. The final<br />
section <strong>of</strong> the book centers on questions <strong>of</strong> poetic fame<br />
and self-fashioning. Ovid in the Age <strong>of</strong> Cervantes is an<br />
important and comprehensive re-evaluation <strong>of</strong> Ovid’s<br />
impact on Renaissance and Early Modern Spain.<br />
Frederick A. de Armas is the Andrew W. Mellon<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor in Humanities and chair <strong>of</strong> the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
Romance Languages and Literatures at the <strong>University</strong><br />
<strong>of</strong> Chicago.<br />
Also by Frederick A. de Armas:<br />
Quixotic Frescoes<br />
Cervantes and Italian Renaissance Art<br />
978-1-4426-1031-6<br />
£21.95 / $35.00 / 2009<br />
European Literary Careers<br />
The Author from Antiquity to the Renaissance<br />
(edited with Patrick Cheney)<br />
978-0-8020-4779-3<br />
£28.00 / $76.00 / 2002<br />
Of related interest:<br />
Cervantes’ Epic Novel<br />
Empire, Religion, and the Dream Life <strong>of</strong> Heroes in<br />
Persiles<br />
Michael Armstrong-Roche<br />
978-0-8020-9085-0<br />
£45.00 / $70.00 / 2009<br />
renaissance studies / literary studies /<br />
spanish studies<br />
Approx. 320 pp / / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4117-4 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
48
meDIeval & renaissance stuDIes<br />
Subject Stages<br />
Marriage, Theatre, and the Law in<br />
Early Modern Spain<br />
María M. Carrión<br />
The Persistence <strong>of</strong><br />
Presence<br />
Emblem and Ritual in Baroque Spain<br />
Bradley J. Nelson<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> Romance Series<br />
In early modern Spain,<br />
the strict definition <strong>of</strong><br />
marriage as the union<br />
<strong>of</strong> a man and a woman<br />
<strong>of</strong> Catholic faith for the<br />
sole purpose <strong>of</strong> procreation<br />
became a key<br />
strategy in the production<br />
<strong>of</strong> Spain’s version<br />
<strong>of</strong> empire, the Universal<br />
Catholic Monarchy.<br />
María M. Carrión argues<br />
that popular Spanish<br />
theatre questioned this marital prescription by staging<br />
subjects that were strictly regulated or prohibited by the<br />
crown. Theatre audiences in Spain saw different representations<br />
<strong>of</strong> marriage: women arguing in court against<br />
marital violence, queens and noblewomen delaying or<br />
refusing imposed marriages, and queer subjects articulating<br />
radical critiques <strong>of</strong> sex and gender policing.<br />
Subject Stages argues that the discourses and<br />
practices <strong>of</strong> marital legislation, litigation, and theatrics<br />
informed each other during this period in ways that<br />
still have a critical bearing on contemporary events in<br />
Spain, such as the legalization <strong>of</strong> divorce in 1978 and <strong>of</strong><br />
same-sex marriage in 2005. Carrión’s comprehensive<br />
and clear analysis pulls back the facade <strong>of</strong> the ‘happily<br />
ever after’ marriage plot on stage to reveal the inner<br />
workings <strong>of</strong> the legal, economic, political, and social<br />
networks that mainstream theatre was able to critique.<br />
María M. Carrión is Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Spanish, Religion,<br />
and Women’s Studies at Emory <strong>University</strong>.<br />
The Persistence <strong>of</strong><br />
Presence analyzes the<br />
relationship between<br />
emblem books, containing<br />
combinations <strong>of</strong><br />
pictures and texts, and<br />
Spanish literature in the<br />
early modern period. As<br />
representations <strong>of</strong> ideas<br />
and ideals, emblems are<br />
allegories produced in<br />
a particular place and<br />
time, and their study can<br />
shed light on the central cultural and political activities<br />
<strong>of</strong> an era.<br />
Bradley J. Nelson argues that the emblem was a primary<br />
indicator <strong>of</strong> the social and political functions <strong>of</strong> diverse<br />
literary practices in early modern Spain, from theatre<br />
to epic prose. Furthermore, the disintegration <strong>of</strong> a<br />
unified medieval world view left many seeking the kinds<br />
<strong>of</strong> deep knowledge that could be accessed through<br />
symbolic pictures, increasing their cultural significance.<br />
In this detailed examination <strong>of</strong> emblem books, sacred<br />
and secular theatre, and Cervantes’ critique <strong>of</strong> baroque<br />
allegory in Los trabajos de Persiles y Sigismunda, Nelson<br />
connects the early history <strong>of</strong> emblematics with the<br />
drive towards cultural and political hegemony in Counter-Reformation<br />
Spain.<br />
Bradley J. Nelson is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor and<br />
chair in the Department <strong>of</strong> Classics, Modern Languages<br />
and Linguistics at Concordia <strong>University</strong>.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
renaissance studies / literary studies /<br />
spanish studies<br />
renaissance studies / literary studies /<br />
spanish studies<br />
Approx. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
9 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4108-2 £32.00 $50.00 E<br />
Approx. 272 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
16 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9977-8 £35.00 $55.00 E<br />
49
meDIeval & Renaissance stuDIes<br />
Fathers and Sons in<br />
Shakespeare<br />
The Debt Never Promised<br />
Against Reproduction<br />
Where Renaissance Texts Come From<br />
Stephen Guy-Bray<br />
Fred B. Tromly<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Some <strong>of</strong> Shakespeare’s<br />
most memorable male<br />
characters, such as<br />
Hamlet, Prince Hal, and<br />
Edgar, are defined by<br />
their relationships with<br />
their fathers. In Fathers<br />
and Sons in Shakespeare,<br />
Fred B. Tromly<br />
demonstrates that these<br />
relationships are far<br />
more complicated than<br />
most critics have assumed.<br />
While Shakespearean sons <strong>of</strong>ten act as their<br />
fathers’ steadfast defenders, they simultaneously resist<br />
paternal encroachment on their autonomy, tempering<br />
vigorous loyalty with subtle hostility.<br />
Tromly’s introductory chapters draw on both Freudian<br />
psychology and Elizabethan family history to frame<br />
the issue <strong>of</strong> filial ambivalence in Shakespeare. The following<br />
analytical chapters mine the father-son relationships<br />
in plays that span Shakespeare’s entire career. The<br />
conclusion explores Shakespeare’s relationship with his<br />
own father and its effect on his fictional depictions <strong>of</strong> life<br />
as a son. Through careful scrutiny <strong>of</strong> word and deed,<br />
the scholarship in Fathers and Sons in Shakespeare reveals<br />
the complex attitude Shakespeare’s sons harbour<br />
towards their fathers.<br />
The idea <strong>of</strong> the author<br />
as parent and the text<br />
as child is a pervasive<br />
metaphor throughout<br />
Renaissance poetry<br />
and drama. In Against<br />
Reproduction, Stephen<br />
Guy-Bray sets out to<br />
systematically interrogate<br />
this common trope,<br />
and to consider the limits<br />
<strong>of</strong> using heterosexual<br />
reproduction to think <strong>of</strong><br />
textual creation.<br />
Through an analysis <strong>of</strong> Renaissance texts by poets<br />
and playwrights including William Shakespeare, Christopher<br />
Marlowe, and John Milton, Guy-Bray argues that<br />
the reproductive metaphor was only one <strong>of</strong> the ways in<br />
which writers presented their own literary production.<br />
Their uses <strong>of</strong> sexual language reveal that these authors<br />
were surprisingly ambivalent about their own writing.<br />
Guy-Bray suggests that they <strong>of</strong>ten presented their work<br />
in such a way as to feminize themselves and to associate<br />
the writing process with shame and abjection.<br />
Offering fresh perspectives on well-known texts,<br />
Against Reproduction is an accessible and compelling<br />
book that will affect the study <strong>of</strong> both Renaissance literature<br />
and queer theory.<br />
Fred B. Tromly is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> English at Trent <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Stephen Guy-Bray is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British Columbia.<br />
renaissance studies / drama / literary studies<br />
renaissance studies / literary studies<br />
Approx. 400 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9961-7 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
Approx. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4060-3 £35.00 $55.00 E<br />
50
meDIeval & renaissance stuDIes<br />
On the Aesthetics <strong>of</strong><br />
Beowulf and Other Old<br />
English Poems<br />
Edited by John M. Hill<br />
Rethinking the School <strong>of</strong><br />
Chartres<br />
Edouard Jeauneau<br />
Translated by Claude Paul Desmarais<br />
<strong>Toronto</strong> Anglo-Saxon Series<br />
utp higher education<br />
Rethinking the Middle Ages<br />
What makes one Anglo-<br />
Saxon poem better than<br />
another Why does<br />
Beowulf still have the<br />
power to move us after<br />
so many centuries<br />
What might have been<br />
aesthetically pleasing to<br />
Old English readers and<br />
writers <strong>of</strong> poetry<br />
While there is an apparent<br />
consensus by<br />
scholars on a core <strong>of</strong><br />
poems considered to be exceptional literary achievements<br />
– Beowulf, Judith, the Vercelli book – there has<br />
been little systematic investigation <strong>of</strong> the basis for these<br />
appraisals. With new essays on rhetoric, wordplay, meter,<br />
structure, irony, form, psychology, ethos, and reader<br />
response, the contributors to this collection aim to find<br />
objective aesthetic qualities in Anglo-Saxon poetry.<br />
Posing questions <strong>of</strong> quality and beauty as discoverable<br />
in artefacts, On the Aesthetics <strong>of</strong> Beowulf and Other<br />
Old English Poems significantly advances our understanding<br />
not only <strong>of</strong> aesthetics and Old English poetry,<br />
but also <strong>of</strong> Old English attitudes towards literature as<br />
an art form.<br />
John M. Hill is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong> English<br />
at the U.S. Naval Academy.<br />
In this brief essay, esteemed<br />
medieval historian<br />
Edouard Jeauneau<br />
examines a much-debated<br />
question in medieval<br />
intellectual history:<br />
did the famous School<br />
<strong>of</strong> Chartres actually exist<br />
Gracefully acknowledging<br />
the suggestion<br />
by Sir Richard Southern<br />
in 1965 that the School was actually a myth, Jeauneau<br />
argues that the School did in fact exist but perhaps was<br />
not as important as previously thought.<br />
Jeauneau provides a fascinating portrait <strong>of</strong> the<br />
School <strong>of</strong> Chartres during its heyday in the first half <strong>of</strong><br />
the twelfth century, bringing to light the accomplishments<br />
<strong>of</strong> Fulbert <strong>of</strong> Chartres, Bernard <strong>of</strong> Chartres,<br />
Thierry <strong>of</strong> Chartres, Gilbert <strong>of</strong> Poitiers, and William <strong>of</strong><br />
Conches.<br />
Deftly translated by Claude Paul Desmarais, Rethinking<br />
the School <strong>of</strong> Chartres provides a narrative that is<br />
critical, passionate, and witty. Sixteen black-and-white<br />
images are included.<br />
Edouard Jeauneau is directeur de recherches honoraire<br />
at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique<br />
in Paris and a pr<strong>of</strong>essor at Pontifical Institute <strong>of</strong> Medieval<br />
Studies, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Claude Paul Desmarais is the Reichwald Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
in Germanic Studies in the Department <strong>of</strong> Critical Studies<br />
at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British Columbia, Okanagan.<br />
medieval studies / literary studies<br />
medieval studies / history<br />
Approx. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
7 figures; 5 tables<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9944-0 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
Approx. 125 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-0009-6 £32.00 $50.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0007-2 £15.99 $24.95 X<br />
51
meDIeval & Renaissance stuDIes<br />
The Viking Age<br />
A Reader<br />
Edited by Angus A. Somerville<br />
and R. Andrew McDonald<br />
Medieval Medicine<br />
A Reader<br />
Edited by Faith Wallis<br />
utp higher education<br />
ReaDIngs in MeDIeval CIVIlizatIOns and Cultures: XIV<br />
utp higher education<br />
ReaDIngs in MeDIeval CIVIlizatIOns and Cultures: XV<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Drawing on a wide range<br />
<strong>of</strong> original primary sources,<br />
and tracing the astonishing<br />
development<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Viking age from<br />
the first foreign raids to<br />
the rise and fall <strong>of</strong> Viking<br />
empires, this comprehensive<br />
reader is essential<br />
to an understanding<br />
<strong>of</strong> Viking history.<br />
The diversity <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Viking world is mirrored<br />
by the range and variety <strong>of</strong> the primary documents chosen<br />
for inclusion. Chroniclers record European horror in<br />
the face <strong>of</strong> the Viking onslaught. An Arab diplomat gives<br />
a gripping account <strong>of</strong> an encounter with Norsemen in<br />
Russia. Great warriors and kings <strong>of</strong> the period are heralded<br />
in Skaldic poetry. With unusual power, saga literature<br />
narrates the lives <strong>of</strong> Norse women and men at<br />
home and abroad.<br />
The reader includes new translations <strong>of</strong> all <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Norse material. Brief introductions contextualize the<br />
translations and all unfamiliar terms are explained in the<br />
body <strong>of</strong> the text, making this an extremely readable and<br />
user-friendly introduction to the Viking age.<br />
Medicine in the medieval<br />
world is <strong>of</strong>ten treated in a<br />
static manner as if a single<br />
picture <strong>of</strong> the body, a<br />
unitary understanding <strong>of</strong><br />
disease, and unvarying<br />
practices <strong>of</strong> healing held<br />
sway for a millennium.<br />
Medieval Medicine: A<br />
Reader challenges this<br />
view by documenting<br />
the change and complexity<br />
in medieval medical<br />
thinking and practice.<br />
Renowned scholar Faith Wallis has compiled more<br />
than 100 unique primary sources that demonstrate how<br />
medical knowledge and practice changed pr<strong>of</strong>oundly<br />
during the medieval period. She illustrates a constant<br />
process <strong>of</strong> engagement—rather than rivalry—between<br />
medical doctrines, and ideas on the one hand and healing<br />
practices (pr<strong>of</strong>essional, informal, secular, and religious)<br />
on the other. The collection contains both core<br />
texts, such as the 1348 report <strong>of</strong> the Paris Medical<br />
Faculty on the causes <strong>of</strong> the plague, as well as lesser<br />
known material. Ten illustrations, a glossary <strong>of</strong> medical<br />
terms, a bibliography, and an index are all included.<br />
Angus A. Somerville is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in<br />
the Department <strong>of</strong> English Language and Literature at<br />
Brock <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Faith Wallis is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> History and the Department <strong>of</strong> Social Studies <strong>of</strong><br />
Medicine at McGill <strong>University</strong>.<br />
R. Andrew McDonald is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in<br />
the Department <strong>of</strong> History and director <strong>of</strong> the Centre for<br />
Medieval and Renaissance Studies at Brock <strong>University</strong>.<br />
meDIeval stuDIes / history<br />
meDIeval stuDIes / history / meDICIne<br />
Approx. 450 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-0147-5 £52.00 $80.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0148-2 £18.99 $39.95 X<br />
Approx. 450 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
10 illustrations<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-0169-7 £55.00 $85.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0103-1 £18.99 $39.95 X<br />
52
meDIeval acadeMY reprints FOr teaching<br />
1 The Carolingian Empire<br />
Heinrich Fichtenau<br />
Translated by Peter Munz<br />
paper 978-0-8020-6367-0<br />
$19.95 C<br />
2 The Story <strong>of</strong> Troilus<br />
Edited by R.K. Gordon<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6368-7<br />
$21.95 C<br />
3 A Guide to Chaucer’s Pronunciation<br />
Helge Kökeritz<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6370-0<br />
$8.95 C<br />
4 Constantine and the Conversion <strong>of</strong><br />
Europe<br />
A.H.M. Jones<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6369-4<br />
$23.95 C<br />
8 Mission to Asia<br />
Edited by Christopher Dawson<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6436-3<br />
$23.95 C<br />
North American rights only.<br />
10 Ancient Writing and its Influence<br />
B.L. Ullman<br />
With an introduction by Julian Brown<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6435-6<br />
$19.95 C<br />
13 William Marshall<br />
Knight-Errant, Baron, and Regent <strong>of</strong><br />
England<br />
Sidney Painter<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6498-1<br />
$21.95 C<br />
14 A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary<br />
4th edition, J.R. Clark Hall<br />
Supplement by Herbert D. Merritt<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6548-3<br />
$28.95 C<br />
15 Self and Society in Medieval France<br />
The Memoirs <strong>of</strong> Abbot Guibert <strong>of</strong><br />
Nogent<br />
Edited and with an introduction by<br />
John F. Benton<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6550-6<br />
$20.95 C<br />
16 The Art <strong>of</strong> the Byzantine Empire<br />
312–1453<br />
Sources and Documents<br />
Edited by Cyril Mango<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6627-5<br />
$22.95 C<br />
17 Early Medieval Art 300–1150<br />
Sources and Documents<br />
Edited by Caecilia Davis-Weyer<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6628-2<br />
$20.95 C<br />
18 Byzantium<br />
The Imperial Centuries AD 610–1071<br />
Romilly Jenkins<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6667-1<br />
$28.95 C<br />
19 The Discovery <strong>of</strong> the Individual<br />
1050–1200<br />
Colin Morris<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6665-7<br />
$17.95 C<br />
20 Gothic Art 1140–c1450<br />
Sources and Documents<br />
Teresa G. Frisch<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6679-4<br />
$17.95 C<br />
21 The Crisis <strong>of</strong> Church and State<br />
1050–1300<br />
Brian Tierney<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6701-2<br />
$20.95 C<br />
22 Change in Medieval Society<br />
Europe North <strong>of</strong> the Alps 1050–1500<br />
Sylvia Thrupp<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6699-2<br />
$18.95 C<br />
23 The Medieval Experience<br />
Francis Oakley<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6707-4<br />
$20.95 C<br />
25 Modern Perspectives in Western<br />
Art History<br />
An Anthology <strong>of</strong> 20th-Century<br />
Writings on the Visual Arts<br />
Edited by W. Eugene Kleinbauer<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6708-1<br />
$35.00 C<br />
28 The Medieval Book<br />
Barbara A. Shailor<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-6853-8<br />
$35.95 C<br />
30 The Origins <strong>of</strong> European Dissent<br />
R.I. Moore<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-7566-6<br />
$24.95 C<br />
32 Fables<br />
Marie de France<br />
Edited and translated by Harriet Spiegel<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-7636-6<br />
$25.95 C<br />
33 The Birth <strong>of</strong> Popular Heresy<br />
R.I. Moore<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-7659-5<br />
$20.95 C<br />
34 Feudalism<br />
F.L. Gansh<strong>of</strong><br />
Translated by Philip Grierson<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-7158-3<br />
$18.95 C<br />
35 Arthurian Chronicles<br />
Wace and Layamon<br />
Translated by Eugene Mason<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-7176-7<br />
$21.95 C<br />
37 Nature, Man, and Society in the<br />
Twelfth Century<br />
M.-D. Chenu<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-7175-0<br />
$21.95 C<br />
38 Selections from English Wycliffite<br />
Writings<br />
Edited by Anne Hudson<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-8045-5<br />
$21.95 C<br />
40 Medieval Families<br />
Perspectives on Marriage,<br />
Household, and Children<br />
Edited by Carol Neel<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-8458-3<br />
$34.00 C<br />
41 A Concise Dictionary <strong>of</strong> Old Icelandic<br />
Geir T. Zoëga<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-8659-4<br />
$34.95 C<br />
42 Old Norse-Icelandic Literature<br />
A Critical Guide<br />
Edited by Carol J. Clover and John<br />
Lindow<br />
Paper 978-0-8020-3823-4<br />
$40.00 C<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
53
literary stuDIes<br />
Bluebeard Gothic<br />
Jane Eyre and Its Progeny<br />
Heta Pyrhönen<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
‘Bluebeard,’ the tale <strong>of</strong> a sadistic husband who murders<br />
his wives and locks away their bodies, has inspired<br />
hundreds <strong>of</strong> adaptations since it first appeared in 1697.<br />
In Bluebeard Gothic, Heta Pyrhönen argues that Charlotte<br />
Brontë’s 1847 classic Jane Eyre can be seen as<br />
one such adaptation, and that although critics have<br />
been slow to realize the connection, authors rewriting<br />
Brontë’s novel have either intuitively or intentionally<br />
seized on it.<br />
Pyrhönen begins by establishing that the story <strong>of</strong><br />
Jane Eyre is intermingled with the ‘Bluebeard’ tale, as<br />
young Jane moves between households, each dominated<br />
by its own Bluebeard figure. She then considers<br />
rewritings <strong>of</strong> Jane Eyre, such as Jean Rhys’ Wide Sargasso<br />
Sea (1966) and Diane Setterfield’s The Thirteenth<br />
Tale (2006), to examine how novelists have interpreted<br />
the status and meaning <strong>of</strong> ‘Bluebeard’ in Brontë’s novel.<br />
Using psychoanalysis as the primary model <strong>of</strong> textual<br />
analysis, Bluebeard Gothic focuses on the conjunction<br />
<strong>of</strong> religion, sacrifice, and scapegoating to provide<br />
an original interpretation <strong>of</strong> a canonical and frequentlystudied<br />
text.<br />
Heta Pyrhönen is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
Art Research and Comparative Literature at the <strong>University</strong><br />
<strong>of</strong> Helsinki.<br />
Also by Heta Pyrhönen:<br />
Mayhem and Murder<br />
Narrative and Moral Issues in the Detective Story<br />
978-0-8020-8267-1<br />
£12.95 / $31.95 / 1999<br />
Of related interest:<br />
Samuel Butler, Victorian Against<br />
the Grain<br />
A Critical Overview<br />
James G. Paradis<br />
978-0-8020-9745-3<br />
£45.00 / $75.00 / 2008<br />
Reading Women<br />
Literary Figures and Cultural Icons from the<br />
Victorian Age to the Present<br />
Edited by Janet Badia and Jennifer Phegley<br />
978-0-8020-9487-2<br />
£18.00 / $31.95 / 2006<br />
literary studies<br />
Approx. 304 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4124-2 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
54
literary stuDIes<br />
Architectural Identities<br />
Domesticity, Literature, and the Victorian<br />
Middle Classes<br />
Andrea Kaston Tange<br />
The Protestant Whore<br />
Courtesan Narrative and Religious<br />
Controversy in England, 1680–1750<br />
Alison Conway<br />
Architectural Identities<br />
links Victorian constructions<br />
<strong>of</strong> middle-class<br />
identity with domestic<br />
architecture. In close<br />
readings <strong>of</strong> a wide range<br />
<strong>of</strong> texts, including fiction,<br />
autobiography,<br />
housekeeping manuals,<br />
architectural guides and<br />
floor plans, Andrea Kaston<br />
Tange argues that<br />
the tensions at the root<br />
<strong>of</strong> middle-class self-definition were built into the very<br />
homes that people occupied.<br />
Individual chapters examine the essential identities<br />
associated with particular domestic spaces, such<br />
as the dining room and masculinity, the drawing room<br />
and femininity, and the nursery and childhood. Autobiographical<br />
materials by Frances Hodgson Burnett,<br />
Thomas and Jane Welsh Carlyle, Elizabeth Gaskell,<br />
and Linley and Marion Sambourne <strong>of</strong>fer useful counterpoints<br />
to the evidence assembled from fiction, demonstrating<br />
how and where members <strong>of</strong> the middle classes<br />
remodelled the boundaries <strong>of</strong> social categories to suit<br />
their particular needs. Including analyses <strong>of</strong> both canonical<br />
and lesser-known Victorian authors, Architectural<br />
Identities connects the physical construction <strong>of</strong> the<br />
home with the symbolic construction <strong>of</strong> middle-class<br />
identities.<br />
After the restoration <strong>of</strong><br />
the English monarchy in<br />
1660, Protestants worried<br />
that King Charles<br />
II might favour religious<br />
freedom for Roman<br />
Catholics, and many<br />
suspected that the king<br />
was unduly influenced<br />
by his Catholic mistresses.<br />
Nell Gwyn, actress<br />
and royal mistress,<br />
stood apart by virtue <strong>of</strong><br />
her Protestant loyalty. In 1681, Gwyn, her carriage surrounded<br />
by an angry anti-Catholic mob, famously declared<br />
‘I am the Protestant Whore.’ Her self-branding<br />
invites an investigation into the alignment between sex<br />
and politics during this period, and in this study, Alison<br />
Conway relates courtesan narrative to cultural and religious<br />
anxieties.<br />
In new readings <strong>of</strong> canonical works by Aphra Behn,<br />
Daniel Defoe, Henry Fielding, and Samuel Richardson,<br />
Conway argues that authors engaged the same questions<br />
about identity, nation, authority, literature, and<br />
politics as those pursued by Restoration polemicists.<br />
Her study reveals the recurring connection between<br />
sexual impropriety and religious heterodoxy in Restoration<br />
thought, and Nell Gwyn, writ large as the nation’s<br />
Protestant Whore, is shown to be a significant figure <strong>of</strong><br />
sexual, political, and religious controversy.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Andrea Kaston Tange is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in<br />
the Department <strong>of</strong> English Language and Literature at<br />
Eastern Michigan <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Alison Conway is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Western Ontario.<br />
literary studies<br />
literary studies<br />
Approx. 336 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
18 photos<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4113-6 £45.00 $70.00 E<br />
Approx. 304 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
8 illustrations<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4137-2 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
55
literary stuDIes<br />
Omissions Are Not<br />
Accidents<br />
Modern Apophaticism from Henry James<br />
to Jacques Derrida<br />
Oedipus Against Freud<br />
Myth and the End(s) <strong>of</strong> Humanism in<br />
Twentieth-Century British Literature<br />
Bradley W. Buchanan<br />
Christopher J. Knight<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Ludwig Wittgenstein<br />
wrote in a 1919 letter<br />
that his work ‘consists<br />
<strong>of</strong> two parts: the one<br />
presented here plus all<br />
that I have not written.<br />
And it is precisely this<br />
second part which is the<br />
important one.’ In Omissions<br />
Are Not Accidents,<br />
Christopher J. Knight<br />
analyzes the widespread<br />
apophaticism in texts<br />
from the late nineteenth to the late twentieth century.<br />
In theology, apophaticism refers to the idea that what<br />
we cannot say about God is more fundamental than<br />
what we can; in literature and other works <strong>of</strong> art, Knight<br />
argues, it functions as a way <strong>of</strong> continuing to speak and<br />
write even in the face <strong>of</strong> the unspeakable.<br />
Probing the works <strong>of</strong> authors and intellectuals from<br />
Henry James to Jacques Derrida, Knight suggests that<br />
we no longer trust ourselves to speak about experience’s<br />
most numinous aspect, and explores the consequences<br />
<strong>of</strong> the modern artist’s tendency to imagine<br />
his or her work as incomplete. Ambitious in the scope<br />
<strong>of</strong> its investigation, Omissions Are Not Accidents lends<br />
insight into an important modern phenomenon.<br />
Christopher J. Knight is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Montana.<br />
Sigmund Freud’s interpretation<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Oedipus<br />
myth – that subconsciously,<br />
every man<br />
wants to kill his father in<br />
order to obtain his mother’s<br />
undivided attention –<br />
is widely known. Arguing<br />
that the pervasiveness<br />
<strong>of</strong> Freud’s ideas has unduly<br />
influenced scholars<br />
studying the works <strong>of</strong><br />
Modernist writers, Bradley<br />
W. Buchanan re-examines the Oedipal narratives <strong>of</strong><br />
authors such as D.H. Lawrence, T.S. Eliot, W.B. Yeats,<br />
Virginia Woolf, and James Joyce in order to explore<br />
their conflicted attitudes towards the humanism that<br />
underpins Freud’s views.<br />
In the alternatives to the Freudian version <strong>of</strong> Oedipus<br />
<strong>of</strong>fered by twentieth-century authors, Buchanan<br />
finds a complex examination <strong>of</strong> the limits <strong>of</strong> human<br />
understanding. Following the analyses <strong>of</strong> philosophers<br />
such as G.W.F. Hegel and Frederick Nietzsche and anticipating<br />
critiques by writers such as Jacques Derrida<br />
and Gilles Deleuze, British Modernists saw Oedipus as<br />
representative <strong>of</strong> the embattled humanist project. Closing<br />
with the concept <strong>of</strong> posthumanism as explored by<br />
authors such as Zadie Smith, Oedipus Against Freud<br />
demonstrates the lasting significance <strong>of</strong> the Oedipus<br />
story.<br />
Bradley W. Buchanan is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in<br />
the Department <strong>of</strong> English at California State <strong>University</strong>,<br />
Sacramento.<br />
literary studies / religious studies<br />
literary studies<br />
Approx. 272 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4050-4 £35.00 $55.00 E<br />
Approx. 208 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4157-0 £28.00 $45.00 E<br />
56
literary stuDIes<br />
Enchanted Objects<br />
Visual Art in Contemporary Fiction<br />
Allan Hepburn<br />
Parallels, Interactions,<br />
and Illuminations<br />
Traversing Chinese and Western Theories<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Sign<br />
Ersu Ding<br />
toronto stuDIes in seMIOtICs and COMMunICatIOn<br />
Enchanted Objects investigates<br />
the relationship<br />
between visual<br />
art and contemporary<br />
fiction, addressing the<br />
problems that arise<br />
when paintings, deluxe<br />
books, porcelains, or<br />
statues are represented<br />
in contemporary novels.<br />
The distinction between<br />
objects and art objects<br />
depends on aesthetics.<br />
While some objects are authenticated through museum<br />
exhibits, others are hidden, broken, neglected, coveted,<br />
hoarded, or salvaged.<br />
Allan Hepburn asks four broad questions about aesthetics<br />
and value: What is a detail in visual art Is all<br />
art ornamental Does the value <strong>of</strong> an object increase<br />
because it is fragile What defines ugliness Contemporary<br />
novels, such as Tracy Chevalier’s Girl with a Pearl<br />
Earring, Barry Unsworth’s Stone Virgin, and Bruce Chatwin’s<br />
Utz <strong>of</strong>fer implicit answers to these questions while<br />
critiquing museums and the determination to invest<br />
objects with value through display. Addressing current<br />
debates in museum studies, cultural studies, art history,<br />
and literary criticism, Enchanted Objects develops an<br />
extensive theory <strong>of</strong> how contemporary literature engages<br />
with and relates to aesthetic objects.<br />
Allan Hepburn is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> English at McGill <strong>University</strong>.<br />
The first major work in<br />
Sino-Western comparative<br />
semiotics, Parallels,<br />
Interactions, and Illuminations<br />
is a trans-disciplinary<br />
and intercultural<br />
effort that makes intellectual<br />
connections not<br />
only across such diverse<br />
academic fields as epistemology,<br />
anthropology,<br />
linguistics, sociology, and<br />
cultural studies but also<br />
between Chinese and Western theories <strong>of</strong> the sign in the<br />
conviction that they can shed light on one another.<br />
In this groundbreaking work, Ersu Ding studies two<br />
traditions <strong>of</strong> semiotic realism, represented by Plato and<br />
Husserl in the West and by Mo Zi and Ouyang Jian in<br />
China. They share two fundamental assumptions with<br />
regard to meaning: that there exist ultimate qualities <strong>of</strong><br />
things and states <strong>of</strong> affairs in the extrasemiotic world<br />
and that the meanings <strong>of</strong> words or other types <strong>of</strong> sign<br />
are derivatives <strong>of</strong> these essentials. A pioneering work<br />
that remains extraordinarily accessible, Parallels, Interactions,<br />
and Illuminations explores a wide range <strong>of</strong> issues,<br />
including inter-subjective negotiation <strong>of</strong> meaning,<br />
the relationship between metaphor and culture, and the<br />
production and dissemination <strong>of</strong> myths.<br />
Ersu Ding is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong> English<br />
at Lingnan <strong>University</strong>.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
literary studies / art history<br />
literary studies / semiotics<br />
Approx. 288 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
18 illustrations<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4100-6 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
Approx. 216 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
53 figures; 2 tables<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4048-1 £28.00 $45.00 E<br />
57
cultural stuDIes<br />
Broadcasting Policy in<br />
Canada<br />
Robert Armstrong<br />
Becoming Biosubjects<br />
Bodies. Systems. Technologies.<br />
Neil Gerlach, Sheryl N. Hamilton,<br />
Rebecca Sullivan, and<br />
Priscilla L. Walton<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Where do Canadian content<br />
requirements come<br />
from What do international<br />
trade agreements<br />
mean for existing broadcasting<br />
policy and business<br />
practices How are<br />
new media changing the<br />
face <strong>of</strong> broadcasting in<br />
Canada Broadcasting<br />
Policy in Canada traces<br />
the development <strong>of</strong><br />
Canada’s broadcasting<br />
legislation and analyses the roles and responsibilities <strong>of</strong><br />
the key players in the broadcasting system, particularly<br />
those <strong>of</strong> the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications<br />
Commission (CRTC).<br />
Robert Armstrong expresses with remarkable clarity<br />
the complicated changes to issues such as Canadian<br />
content, media regulation, and tax measures to provide<br />
a comprehensive overview <strong>of</strong> policies that have created<br />
the Canadian broadcasting system as it exists today.<br />
He also discusses related issues such as new media<br />
and the Internet, copyright, social concerns, and cultural<br />
diversity in a global media environment. Broadcasting<br />
Policy in Canada will serve as a valuable resource for<br />
students, policymakers, and industry players <strong>of</strong> all kinds<br />
who are affected by the CRTC’s policies and decisions.<br />
Becoming Biosubjects examines<br />
the ways in which<br />
the Canadian government,<br />
media, courts, and everyday<br />
Canadians are making<br />
sense <strong>of</strong> the challenges<br />
being posed by biotechnologies.<br />
The authors argue<br />
that the human body<br />
is now being understood<br />
as something that is fluid<br />
and without fixed meaning.<br />
This shift has significant<br />
implications both for how we understand ourselves and<br />
how we see our relationships with other forms <strong>of</strong> life.<br />
Focusing on four major issues, the authors examine<br />
the ways in which genetic technologies are shaping criminal<br />
justice practices, how policies on reproductive technologies<br />
have shifted in response to biotechnologies, the<br />
debates surrounding the patenting <strong>of</strong> higher life forms,<br />
and the Canadian (and global) response to bioterrorism.<br />
Neil Gerlach is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Sociology and Anthropology at Carleton <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Sheryl N. Hamilton is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />
Department <strong>of</strong> Law and the School <strong>of</strong> Journalism and<br />
Communication at Carleton <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Robert Armstrong is president <strong>of</strong> Communications<br />
Médias inc. in Montreal and teaches part-time in the<br />
Department <strong>of</strong> Communication Studies at Concordia<br />
<strong>University</strong>.<br />
Rebecca Sullivan is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />
Faculty <strong>of</strong> Communication and Culture at the <strong>University</strong><br />
<strong>of</strong> Calgary.<br />
Priscilla L. Walton is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> English at Carleton <strong>University</strong>.<br />
cultural studies / communications<br />
cultural studies / law<br />
Approx. 224 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2010</strong><br />
10 tables; 30 charts<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4096-2 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1035-4 £18.00 $27.95 C<br />
Approx. 224 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9983-9 £35.00 $55.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-0-8020-9683-8 £15.00 $24.95 C<br />
58
cultural stuDIes<br />
Make the Night Hideous<br />
Four English-Canadian Charivaris,<br />
1881–1940<br />
Pauline Greenhill<br />
Memory and Migration<br />
Multidisciplinary Approaches to Memory<br />
Studies<br />
Edited by Julia Creet and<br />
Andreas Kitzmann<br />
Canadian Social History Series<br />
The charivari is a loud,<br />
late-night surprise housevisiting<br />
custom from<br />
members <strong>of</strong> a community,<br />
usually to a newlywed<br />
couple, accompanied<br />
by a quête (a request for<br />
a treat or money in exchange<br />
for the noisy performance)<br />
and/or pranks.<br />
Up to the first decades<br />
<strong>of</strong> the twentieth century,<br />
charivaris were for the<br />
most part enacted to express disapproval <strong>of</strong> the relationship<br />
that was their focus, such as those between individuals<br />
<strong>of</strong> different ages, races, or religions. While later charivaris<br />
maintained the same rituals, their meaning changed to<br />
a welcoming <strong>of</strong> the marriage.<br />
Make the Night Hideous explores this mysterious<br />
transformation using four detailed case studies from different<br />
time periods and locations across English Canada,<br />
as well as first-person accounts <strong>of</strong> more recent<br />
charivari participants. Pauline Greenhill’s unique and<br />
fascinating work explores the malleability <strong>of</strong> a tradition,<br />
its continuing value, and its contestation in a variety <strong>of</strong><br />
discourses.<br />
Pauline Greenhill is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Women’s and Gender Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Winnipeg.<br />
Memory plays an integral<br />
part in how individuals<br />
and societies<br />
construct their identity.<br />
While memory is usually<br />
considered in the<br />
context <strong>of</strong> a stable, unchanging<br />
environment,<br />
this collection <strong>of</strong> essays<br />
explores the effects <strong>of</strong><br />
immigration, forced expulsions,<br />
exile, banishment,<br />
and war on individual<br />
and collective memory. The ways in which<br />
memory affects cultural representation and historical<br />
understanding across generations is examined through<br />
case studies and theoretical approaches that underscore<br />
its mutability.<br />
Memory and Migration is a truly interdisciplinary<br />
book featuring the work <strong>of</strong> leading scholars from a<br />
variety <strong>of</strong> fields across the globe. The essays are collaborative,<br />
successfully responding to the central theme<br />
and expanding upon the findings <strong>of</strong> individual authors.<br />
A groundbreaking contribution to an emerging field <strong>of</strong><br />
study, Memory and Migration provides valuable insight<br />
into the connections between memory, place, and displacement.<br />
Julia Creet is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> English at York <strong>University</strong>.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Andreas Kitzmann is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />
Department <strong>of</strong> Humanities at York <strong>University</strong>.<br />
cultural studies / history<br />
cultural studies<br />
Approx. 272 pp / / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
17 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4077-1 £40.00 $60.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1015-6 £18.00 $27.95 C<br />
Approx. 344 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2010</strong><br />
10 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4129-7 £42.00 $65.00 E<br />
59
InDIGenous stuDIes<br />
Canada’s Indigenous<br />
Constitution<br />
John Borrows<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Canada’s Indigenous Constitution reflects on the nature<br />
and sources <strong>of</strong> law in Canada, beginning with the conviction<br />
that the Canadian legal system has helped to engender<br />
the high level <strong>of</strong> wealth and security enjoyed by people<br />
across the country. However, longstanding disputes<br />
about the origins, legitimacy, and applicability <strong>of</strong> certain<br />
aspects <strong>of</strong> the legal system have led John Borrows to<br />
argue that Canada’s constitution is incomplete without a<br />
broader acceptance <strong>of</strong> Indigenous legal traditions.<br />
With characteristic richness and eloquence, John<br />
Borrows explores legal traditions, the role <strong>of</strong> governments<br />
and courts, and the prospect <strong>of</strong> a multi-juridical<br />
legal culture, all with a view to understanding and improving<br />
legal processes in Canada. He discusses the place <strong>of</strong><br />
individuals, families, and communities in recovering and<br />
extending the role <strong>of</strong> Indigenous law within both Indigenous<br />
communities and Canadian society more broadly.<br />
This is a major work by one <strong>of</strong> Canada’s leading legal<br />
scholars, and an essential companion to Drawing Out<br />
Law: A Spirit’s Guide (see page 61).<br />
John Borrows is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor and Law Foundation<br />
Chair in Aboriginal Justice in the Faculty <strong>of</strong> Law at the<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Victoria and Robina Pr<strong>of</strong>essor in Law and<br />
Public Policy at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Minnesota Law School.<br />
‘Rich and comprehensive, Canada’s Indigenous Constitution<br />
challenges non-Aboriginal and Aboriginal Canadians alike to<br />
integrate the legal traditions and practices <strong>of</strong> Canada’s Indigenous<br />
peoples with the overall system <strong>of</strong> Canadian law. A lucid<br />
analysis <strong>of</strong> how Canadian and Indigenous laws relate to one<br />
another, John Borrows’ penetrating work is a tour de force.’<br />
Also by John Borrows:<br />
Recovering Canada<br />
The Resurgence <strong>of</strong> Indigenous Law<br />
978-0-8020-8501-6<br />
£20.00 / $37.95 / 2002<br />
Of related interest:<br />
This is not a Peace Pipe<br />
Towards a Critical Indigenous Philosophy<br />
Dale Turner<br />
978-0-8020-3792-3<br />
£15.00 / $29.95 / 2006<br />
Indigenous Difference and the<br />
Constitution <strong>of</strong> Canada<br />
Patrick Macklem<br />
978-0-8020-8049-3<br />
£18.00 / $36.95 / 2001<br />
Peter Russell, Department <strong>of</strong> Political Science, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
<strong>Toronto</strong><br />
indigenous studies / law / political science<br />
Approx. 416 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4103-7 £48.00 $75.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1038-5 £22.50 $35.00 C<br />
60
inDIGenous stuDIes<br />
Drawing Out Law<br />
A Spirit’s Guide<br />
John Borrows<br />
Alliances<br />
Re/Envisioning Indigenous-non-<br />
Indigenous Relationships<br />
Edited by Lynne Davis<br />
The Anishinabek Nation’s<br />
legal traditions are<br />
deeply embedded in<br />
many aspects <strong>of</strong> customary<br />
life. In Drawing<br />
Out Law, John Borrows<br />
(Kegedonce) skillfully juxtaposes<br />
Canadian legal<br />
policy and practice with<br />
the more broadly defined<br />
Anishinabek perception<br />
<strong>of</strong> law as it applies to<br />
community life, nature,<br />
and individuals.<br />
This innovative work combines fictional and nonfictional<br />
elements in a series <strong>of</strong> connected short stories<br />
that symbolize different ways <strong>of</strong> Anishinabek engagement<br />
with the world. Drawing on oral traditions, pictographic<br />
scrolls, dreams, common law case analysis,<br />
and philosophical reflection, Borrows’ narrative explores<br />
issues <strong>of</strong> pressing importance to the future <strong>of</strong><br />
indigenous law and <strong>of</strong>fers readers new ways to think<br />
about the direction <strong>of</strong> Canadian law.<br />
Shedding light on Canadian law and policy as they<br />
relate to Indigenous peoples, Drawing Out Law illustrates<br />
past and present moral agency <strong>of</strong> Indigenous<br />
peoples and their approaches to the law and calls for<br />
the renewal <strong>of</strong> ancient Ojibway teaching in contemporary<br />
circumstances.<br />
John Borrows is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor and Law Foundation<br />
Chair in Aboriginal Justice in the Faculty <strong>of</strong> Law at the<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Victoria and Robina Pr<strong>of</strong>essor in Law and<br />
Public Policy at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Minnesota Law School.<br />
When Indigenous and<br />
non-Indigenous activists<br />
work together, what are<br />
the ends that they seek,<br />
and how do they negotiate<br />
their relationships<br />
while pursuing social<br />
change Alliances brings<br />
together Indigenous and<br />
non-Indigenous leaders,<br />
activists, and scholars<br />
in order to examine their<br />
experiences <strong>of</strong> alliancebuilding<br />
for Indigenous rights and self-determination and<br />
for social and environmental justice.<br />
The contributors, both Indigenous and non-Indigenous,<br />
come from diverse backgrounds as community<br />
activists and academics. They write from the<br />
front lines <strong>of</strong> struggle, from spaces <strong>of</strong> reflection rooted<br />
in past experiences, and from scholarly perspectives<br />
that use emerging theories to understand contemporary<br />
instances <strong>of</strong> alliance. Some contributors reflect on<br />
methods <strong>of</strong> mental decolonization while others use Indigenous<br />
concepts <strong>of</strong> respectful relationships in order<br />
to analyze present-day interactions. Most importantly,<br />
Alliances delves into the complex political and personal<br />
relationships inherent in both Indigenous and non-Indigenous<br />
struggles for social justice to provide insights<br />
into the tensions and possibilities <strong>of</strong> Indigenous-non-<br />
Indigenous alliance and coalition-building in the early<br />
twenty-first century.<br />
Lynne Davis is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Indigenous Studies at Trent <strong>University</strong>.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
indigenous studies / law / political science<br />
indigenous studies / anthropology<br />
Approx. 272 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
16 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4068-9 £35.00 $55.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1009-5 £15.00 $24.95 C<br />
Approx. 400 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
8 photos; 2 figures<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4023-8 £50.00 $80.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0997-6 £22.50 $35.00 C<br />
61
InDIGenous stuDIes<br />
Blackfoot Grammar<br />
Second Edition<br />
Donald G. Frantz<br />
Ponteach, or the<br />
Savages <strong>of</strong> America<br />
A Tragedy<br />
Robert Rogers<br />
Edited by Tiffany Potter<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Thousands <strong>of</strong> people<br />
in Alberta and Montana<br />
speak Blackfoot, an Algonquian<br />
language. But<br />
the numbers are diminishing<br />
and the survival<br />
<strong>of</strong> Blackfoot is in some<br />
danger. To help preserve<br />
the language while it is<br />
still in daily use, Donald<br />
G. Frantz and Norma<br />
Jean Russell collaborated<br />
on the Blackfoot<br />
Dictionary, published in 1989 to widespread acclaim<br />
and later revised in 1995. Blackfoot Grammar, the companion<br />
volume to the dictionary, has now also been updated<br />
with this new edition.<br />
The changes made to each chapter reflect new approaches<br />
refined through years <strong>of</strong> teaching experience.<br />
New chapters on ‘Numbers and Enumeration’ and<br />
‘Translating from English to Blackfoot’ have been added,<br />
as well as new exercises and two new appendixes<br />
describing the phonetics <strong>of</strong> Blackfoot and the design <strong>of</strong><br />
the alphabet.<br />
This second edition <strong>of</strong> Blackfoot Grammar will be a<br />
welcome update not only for those who wish to learn<br />
the language, but for all those with an interest in Native<br />
Studies and North American linguistics.<br />
Donald G. Frantz is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Faculty <strong>of</strong> Arts<br />
and Science at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Lethbridge.<br />
Pontiac, or Ponteach,<br />
was a Native American<br />
leader who made war<br />
upon the British in what<br />
became known as Pontiac’s<br />
Rebellion (1763 to<br />
1766). One <strong>of</strong> the earliest<br />
accounts <strong>of</strong> Pontiac<br />
is a play, written in 1766<br />
by the famous frontier<br />
soldier Robert Rogers,<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Rangers. Ponteach,<br />
or the Savages <strong>of</strong><br />
America is one <strong>of</strong> the only early dramatic works composed<br />
by an author with personal knowledge <strong>of</strong> the Indigenous<br />
nations <strong>of</strong> North America. Important both as<br />
a literary work and as a historical document, Ponteach<br />
interrogates eighteenth-century Europe’s widespread<br />
ideological constructions <strong>of</strong> Indigenous peoples as either<br />
innocent and noble savages, or monstrous and<br />
violent Others.<br />
Presented for the first time in a fully annotated edition,<br />
Ponteach takes on questions <strong>of</strong> nationalism, religion,<br />
race, cultural identity, gender, and sexuality; the<br />
play <strong>of</strong>fers a unique perspective on the Rebellion and<br />
on the emergence <strong>of</strong> Canadian and American identities.<br />
Tiffany Potter’s edition is supplemented by an introduction<br />
that critically and contextually frames the play, as<br />
well as by important appendices, including Rogers’ ethnographic<br />
accounts <strong>of</strong> the Great Lakes nations.<br />
Tiffany Potter teaches in the Department <strong>of</strong> English<br />
at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British Columbia.<br />
indigenous studies / language<br />
indigenous studies / literary studies / drama<br />
Approx. 224 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4018-4 £45.00 $70.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-9987-8 £21.50 $32.95 C<br />
Approx. 224 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
4 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9895-5 £40.00 $60.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-0-8020-9597-8 £18.00 $27.95 C<br />
62
anthrOPOlOGY<br />
Maya or Mestizo<br />
Nationalism, Modernity, and its<br />
Discontents<br />
Ronald Loewe<br />
utp higher education<br />
Readings for a History<br />
<strong>of</strong> Anthropological<br />
Theory<br />
Third Edition<br />
Edited by Paul A. Erickson<br />
and Liam D. Murphy<br />
utp higher education<br />
This multifaceted and<br />
beautifully written ethnography<br />
<strong>of</strong> Maxcanu,<br />
a small Maya town in the<br />
Yucatan region <strong>of</strong> Mexico,<br />
<strong>of</strong>fers both an historical<br />
and a contemporary<br />
understanding <strong>of</strong> the<br />
way external pressures<br />
to modernize are <strong>of</strong>ten<br />
met with forms <strong>of</strong> resistance<br />
that are rooted in<br />
rituals and oral tradition.<br />
The Maya <strong>of</strong> the Yucatan have long been drawn into<br />
the Mexican state’s attempt to create modern Mexican<br />
citizens (mestizos). They have also been drawn into the<br />
North American and global economy through agriculture<br />
and, more recently, tourism and US-based evangelical<br />
organizations. Despite the many pressures to<br />
turn Maya into mestizos, the citizens <strong>of</strong> Maxcanu use<br />
subtle forms <strong>of</strong> resistance, including humour, satire,<br />
and language, to maintain aspects <strong>of</strong> their traditional<br />
identity. Maya or Mestizo skillfully weaves the history<br />
<strong>of</strong> Mexico into a compelling tale <strong>of</strong> a community caught<br />
between tradition and modernity.<br />
This comprehensive<br />
and extremely popular<br />
anthology presents<br />
readings that are critical<br />
to an understanding <strong>of</strong><br />
anthropological theory<br />
and the development <strong>of</strong><br />
anthropology as an academic<br />
discipline.<br />
Thematic coverage<br />
begins with nineteenthcentury<br />
foundations and forerunners, before moving on<br />
to the early- and mid-twentieth century when anthropology<br />
comes <strong>of</strong> age. The last section examines numerous<br />
late-twentieth-century and early-twenty-first-century<br />
developments in anthropological theory.<br />
The third edition has been completely revised and<br />
updated throughout. It <strong>of</strong>fers seven new readings, including<br />
works by Freud, de Saussure, Levi-Strauss,<br />
Sahlins, and Foucault, as well as three original new<br />
essays written by contemporary anthropologists on<br />
the topic <strong>of</strong> “Why Theory Matters.” The edition has<br />
also been organized to more closely complement the<br />
accompanying overview, A History <strong>of</strong> Anthropological<br />
Theory, third edition.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Ronald Loewe is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Anthropology at California State <strong>University</strong>,<br />
Long Beach.<br />
Paul A. Erickson is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
Anthropology at St. Mary’s <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Liam D. Murphy is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Anthropology at California State <strong>University</strong>,<br />
Sacramento.<br />
anthropology / indigenous studies<br />
anthropology<br />
Approx. 225 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-0141-3 £32.00 $50.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0142-0 £14.99 $28.95 X<br />
Approx. 625 pp / 7 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0069-0 £32.99 $64.95 X<br />
63
psYCholOGY / mental health<br />
Mental Disorder in<br />
Canada<br />
An Epidemiological Perspective<br />
Hearing (Our) Voices<br />
Participatory Research in Mental Health<br />
Barbara Schneider<br />
Edited by John Cairney<br />
and David L. Streiner<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Canada has long been<br />
recognized as a leader<br />
in the field <strong>of</strong> psychiatric<br />
epidemiology, the study<br />
<strong>of</strong> the factors affecting<br />
mental health in populations.<br />
However, there<br />
has never been a book<br />
dedicated to the study<br />
<strong>of</strong> mental disorder at a<br />
population level in Canada.<br />
This collection <strong>of</strong><br />
essays by leading scholars<br />
in the discipline uses data from the country’s first<br />
national survey <strong>of</strong> mental disorder, the Canadian Community<br />
Health Survey <strong>of</strong> 2005, to fill that gap.<br />
Mental Disorder in Canada explores the history <strong>of</strong><br />
psychiatric epidemiology, evaluates methodological issues,<br />
and analyzes the prevalence <strong>of</strong> several significant<br />
mental disorders in the population. The collection also<br />
includes essays on stigma, mental disorder and the<br />
criminal justice system, and mental health among women,<br />
children, workers, and other demographic groups.<br />
Mental Disorder in Canada is an important contribution<br />
to the dissemination and advancement <strong>of</strong> knowledge<br />
on psychiatric epidemiology.<br />
John Cairney is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Departments<br />
<strong>of</strong> Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences<br />
and Family Medicine at McMaster <strong>University</strong> and a senior<br />
research scientist at the Centre for Addiction and<br />
Mental Health.<br />
Hearing (Our) Voices<br />
describes two innovative<br />
participatory action<br />
research projects – one<br />
on communication with<br />
medical pr<strong>of</strong>essionals,<br />
the other on housing –<br />
carried out by a group <strong>of</strong><br />
people diagnosed with<br />
schizophrenia under the<br />
guidance <strong>of</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
Barbara Schneider. Participants<br />
designed the<br />
research, conducted interviews and focus groups, participated<br />
in data analysis, and disseminated research<br />
results through a number <strong>of</strong> innovative strategies including<br />
theatre performances, a documentary film, a<br />
graphic novel, and a travelling exhibit.<br />
Emerging from these projects is the central and significant<br />
finding that people diagnosed with schizophrenia<br />
are caught between their dependence on care and<br />
their longing for independent lives. The research presented<br />
in Hearing (Our) Voices points to a way to resolve<br />
this paradox and transform lives through the inclusion<br />
<strong>of</strong> people diagnosed with schizophrenia in research, in<br />
decision-making about their own treatment and housing,<br />
and in public discourse about schizophrenia.<br />
Barbara Schneider is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />
Communication Studies Program at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Calgary.<br />
David L. Streiner is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
Psychiatry at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />
psychology / mental health<br />
psychology / mental health<br />
Approx. 432 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
21 figures; 38 tables<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8020-9202-1 £50.00 $80.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-0-8020-9442-1 £23.00 $37.95 C<br />
Approx. 196 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
11 halftones<br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4071-9 £40.00 $60.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1010-1 £15.00 $24.95 C<br />
64
sOCIOlOGY<br />
By Himself<br />
The Older Man’s Experience <strong>of</strong><br />
Widowhood<br />
Deborah K. van den Hoonaard<br />
What happens when older men become widowers<br />
Popular books, movies, and television present widowers<br />
as lost and unable to cope or care for themselves.<br />
These stereotypes do not encapsulate the experiences<br />
<strong>of</strong> real widowers, how their daily lives change, and what<br />
being a widower means to individuals in both sociological<br />
and practical ways.<br />
By Himself is based on in-depth interviews with<br />
twenty-six widowers over the age <strong>of</strong> sixty living in the<br />
United States and Canada. Using these interviews,<br />
Deborah K. van den Hoonaard explores masculine<br />
identity and traces the stories that widowers tell about<br />
their wives’ illnesses and deaths. She also focuses on<br />
the widowers’ changed relationships with their children<br />
and friends, as well as with women, and details the<br />
men’s encounters with tasks such as housework and<br />
cooking. An eminently readable and accessible book,<br />
By Himself sheds new light on the social meaning <strong>of</strong><br />
being a widower.<br />
Deborah K. van den Hoonaard is Canada Research<br />
Chair in Qualitative Research and Analysis and a pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
in the Department <strong>of</strong> Gerontology at St. Thomas<br />
<strong>University</strong>.<br />
Of related interest:<br />
The Person in Dementia<br />
A Study <strong>of</strong> Nursing Home Care in the US<br />
Athena MacLean<br />
978-1-5511-1606-8<br />
£18.00 / $27.95 / 2006<br />
Baby Boomer Health Dynamics<br />
How Are We Aging<br />
Andrew V. Wister<br />
978-0-8020-8635-8<br />
£20.00 / $35.95 / 2005<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Aging and Demographic Change in<br />
Canadian Context<br />
Edited by David Cheal<br />
978-0-8020-8505-4<br />
£15.00 / $31.95 / 2003<br />
sociology<br />
Approx. 176 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4109-9 £25.00 $40.00 E<br />
65
sOCIOlOGY<br />
Beyond Expectation<br />
Lesbian/Bi/Queer Women and Assisted<br />
Conception<br />
Jacquelyne Luce<br />
Against the Grain<br />
Couples, Gender, and the Reframing <strong>of</strong><br />
Parenting<br />
Gillian Ranson<br />
utp higher education<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
An in-depth study <strong>of</strong><br />
lesbian, bi, and queer<br />
women’s experiences <strong>of</strong><br />
thinking about and trying<br />
to become a parent, Beyond<br />
Expectation draws<br />
on eighty-two narrative<br />
interviews conducted<br />
during the late 1990s in<br />
British Columbia. Jacquelyne<br />
Luce chronicles<br />
these women’s experiences,<br />
which took place<br />
from 1980 to 2000, during a period that saw significant<br />
changes to the governance <strong>of</strong> assisted reproduction<br />
and the status <strong>of</strong> lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender<br />
parents and same-sex partners.<br />
Beyond Expectation looks closely at the changing<br />
contexts in which women’s experiences occurred and<br />
draws attention to complex issues such as ‘contracting’<br />
relationships, mediating understandings <strong>of</strong> biology<br />
and genetics, and decision-making amidst various<br />
social, legal, and medical developments. Luce skillfully<br />
juxtaposes the stories <strong>of</strong> her interviewees with the wider<br />
public discourses about lesbian/bi/queer parenting and<br />
reproductive technology and highlights gaps in existing<br />
legislative reforms. Most importantly, Beyond Expectation<br />
foregrounds the lived experiences <strong>of</strong> lesbian, bi,<br />
and queer women as they negotiate kinship at the intersection<br />
<strong>of</strong> reproduction, technology, and politics.<br />
Based on interviews<br />
conducted with thirtytwo<br />
families living in<br />
cities across Canada,<br />
Against the Grain challenges<br />
dominant understandings<br />
<strong>of</strong> parenting<br />
by looking closely at the<br />
way couples who have<br />
opted for less traditional<br />
divisions <strong>of</strong> labour negotiate<br />
their parental and<br />
household responsibilities.<br />
Included are interviews with breadwinner mothers<br />
and caregiver fathers and with dual-earner couples,<br />
both heterosexual and same-sex, who struggle to<br />
share equally in the nurture and support <strong>of</strong> their families.<br />
Concise and highly accessible, it <strong>of</strong>fers a richly detailed<br />
sociological analysis <strong>of</strong> gender relations in families undergoing<br />
change.<br />
A central claim <strong>of</strong> the book is that, when both parents<br />
are equally involved in hands-on caregiving, they<br />
tend to become, over time, functionally interchangeable,<br />
leading away from conventional “mothering” and<br />
“fathering” and towards parenting. In exploring this dynamic,<br />
Against the Grain <strong>of</strong>fers an excellent opportunity<br />
to examine how social change happens at home.<br />
Gillian Ranson is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Sociology at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Calgary.<br />
Jacquelyne Luce is a research fellow at Zeppelin<br />
<strong>University</strong>.<br />
sociology / queer studies / women’s studies<br />
sociology<br />
Approx. 304 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4063-4 £40.00 $60.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1008-8 £18.00 $27.95 C<br />
Approx. 190 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-0357-8 £39.00 $60.00 E<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0358-5 £14.99 $28.95 X<br />
66
sOCIOlOGY<br />
Religion and Ethnicity<br />
in Canada<br />
Edited by Paul Bramadat<br />
and David Seljak<br />
A Good Book, In Theory<br />
Making Sense Through Inquiry,<br />
Second Edition<br />
Alan Sears and James Cairns<br />
utp higher education<br />
As the leading book in its<br />
field, Religion and Ethnicity<br />
in Canada has been<br />
embraced by scholars,<br />
teachers, students, and<br />
policy makers as a breakthrough<br />
study <strong>of</strong> Canadian<br />
religio-ethnic diversity<br />
and its impact on multiculturalism.<br />
A team <strong>of</strong> established<br />
scholars looks<br />
at the relationships between religious and ethnic identity in<br />
Canada’s six largest minority religious communities: Hindus,<br />
Buddhists, Sikhs, Jews, Muslims and practitioners <strong>of</strong><br />
Chinese religion. The chapters also highlight the ethnic diversity<br />
extant within these traditions in order to <strong>of</strong>fer a more<br />
nuanced appreciation <strong>of</strong> the variety <strong>of</strong> lived experiences <strong>of</strong><br />
members <strong>of</strong> these communities.<br />
Together, the contributors develop consistent<br />
themes throughout the volume, among them the<br />
changing nature <strong>of</strong> religious practice and ideas, current<br />
demographics, racism, and the role <strong>of</strong> women. Chapters<br />
related to the public policy issues <strong>of</strong> health care,<br />
education and multiculturalism show how new ethnic<br />
and religious diversity are challenging and changing Canadian<br />
institutions and society.<br />
A Good Book, In Theory<br />
invites readers to participate<br />
in actively inquiring<br />
about the world around<br />
them, showing how<br />
theoretical thinking and<br />
methodical research are<br />
useful in making sense<br />
<strong>of</strong> our surroundings. It<br />
is written deliberately to<br />
convey complex ideas<br />
in an accessible and engaging<br />
style and to encourage<br />
readers to embrace new ways to think about<br />
the world.<br />
The book begins by establishing theoretical thinking<br />
as an important feature <strong>of</strong> human activity. It then<br />
explores the differences between formal theorizing and<br />
everyday theorizing, using examples such as the politics<br />
<strong>of</strong> the classroom, what is “real” and what is “natural,”<br />
and the measurement <strong>of</strong> time. The new edition has<br />
been revised throughout, and includes a new chapter<br />
on the processes <strong>of</strong> inquiry and a new section on debate<br />
and deeply-held convictions. It continues to <strong>of</strong>fer a<br />
strong foundation in critical thinking that is rooted in the<br />
social sciences but relevant across all disciplines.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
Paul Bramadat is the director <strong>of</strong> the Centre for Studies<br />
in Religion and Society at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Victoria.<br />
Alan Sears is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong> Sociology<br />
at Ryerson <strong>University</strong>.<br />
David Seljak is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor at St. Jerome’s<br />
<strong>University</strong> and Chair <strong>of</strong> the Department <strong>of</strong> Religious<br />
Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Waterloo.<br />
James Cairns is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Sociology at Wilfrid Laurier <strong>University</strong>, Brantford.<br />
sociology / religious studies<br />
sociology<br />
264 pp / 7 x 9¼ / Available<br />
4 halftones<br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1018-7 £35.00 $54.95 C<br />
Originally published by Pearson Education Canada:<br />
September 2004<br />
Approx. 200 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2010</strong><br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-0156-7 £12.99 $24.95 X<br />
67
REFerenCE<br />
Canadian Who’s Who<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
Volume XLV<br />
Edited by Elizabeth Lumley<br />
100th Anniversary edition!<br />
UTP is proud to celebrate the hundredth anniversary<br />
<strong>of</strong> Canadian Who’s Who. To commemorate<br />
this important milestone, we’re going back<br />
in time with a special limited edition reprint <strong>of</strong><br />
the first 1910 edition. Order your copy with your<br />
<strong>2010</strong> edition for a glimpse into Canadian society<br />
<strong>of</strong> a century ago!<br />
Please see our website:<br />
www.utpress.utoronto.ca/cww<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Now in its hundredth year <strong>of</strong> publication, this standard<br />
Canadian reference source contains the most comprehensive<br />
and authoritative biographical information on<br />
notable living Canadians. Those listed are carefully selected<br />
because <strong>of</strong> the positions they hold in Canadian<br />
society, or because <strong>of</strong> the contribution they have made<br />
to life in Canada.<br />
The volume is updated annually to ensure accuracy,<br />
and 600 new entries are added each year to keep current<br />
with developing trends and issues in Canadian society.<br />
Included are outstanding Canadians from all walks<br />
<strong>of</strong> life: politics, media, academia, business, sports, and<br />
the arts, from every area <strong>of</strong> human activity.<br />
Each entry details birth date and place, education,<br />
family, career history, memberships, creative works,<br />
honours and awards, languages and full addresses. Indispensable<br />
to researchers, students, media, business,<br />
government, and schools, Canadian Who’s Who is an<br />
invaluable source <strong>of</strong> general knowledge.<br />
Canadian Who’s Who <strong>2010</strong> on CD-ROM<br />
The complete text <strong>of</strong> Canadian Who’s Who is also available<br />
on CD-ROM, in a comprehensively indexed and<br />
fully searchable format. Search ‘astronaut’ or ‘entrepreneur<br />
<strong>of</strong> the year,’ ‘aboriginal achievement award’ and<br />
‘Order <strong>of</strong> Canada’ and discover a wealth <strong>of</strong> information.<br />
Fast, easy, and more accessible than ever, the Canadian<br />
Who’s Who on CD-ROM is an essential addition to<br />
your electronic library.<br />
CD-ROM requirements:<br />
WINDOWS:<br />
95/98/2000/NT/XP<br />
386/25Mhz<br />
4mb RAM<br />
(8mb recommended)<br />
MAC:<br />
Mac OS 7, 8, and 9<br />
4mb RAM<br />
(8mb recommended)<br />
Book<br />
Approx. 1449 pp / / April <strong>2010</strong><br />
Cloth ISBN 978-1-4426-4155-6<br />
(ISBN 0068-9963)<br />
£140.00 $249.95 NET<br />
CD-ROM<br />
ISBN 978-1-4426-4171-6<br />
(ISSN 1481-4269)<br />
£169.00 $295.00 NET<br />
Book and CD-ROM<br />
ISBN 978-1-4426-4172-3<br />
£218.00 $369.95 NET<br />
Network Licences<br />
ISBN 978-1-4426-4173-0<br />
For pricing information, please contact CEDROM-SNi<br />
1-888-544-0339 ext. 3<br />
info.canada@cedrom-sni.com<br />
8% PST applicable to Ontario residents on all formats<br />
68
eference<br />
The Canadian<br />
Who’s Who 1910<br />
Canadian Insurance<br />
Claims Directory <strong>2010</strong><br />
78th Annual Edition<br />
Edited by Gwen Peroni<br />
1910 <strong>2010</strong><br />
The first edition <strong>of</strong> what would become a Canadian institution,<br />
The Canadian Who’s Who 1910 is an invaluable<br />
snapshot <strong>of</strong> Canadian society at the dawn <strong>of</strong> the<br />
twentieth century.<br />
The volume features well-known Canadians such as<br />
Arthur Cleave, Superintendent <strong>of</strong> the Royal Mint; Clement<br />
Dansereau, editor-in-chief <strong>of</strong> La <strong>Press</strong>e, Montreal;<br />
Earl Grey, Governor-General and Commander-in-Chief<br />
<strong>of</strong> Canada; The Most Reverend Louis Philippe Langevin,<br />
Archbishop <strong>of</strong> St. Boniface, Manitoba; Sir Wilfrid<br />
Laurier, Prime Minister <strong>of</strong> Canada; The Honourable Takashi<br />
Nakamura, Consul General for Japan; Mrs. Nellie<br />
McClung (who had not yet become part <strong>of</strong> the Famous<br />
Five); Robert Service, poet; and Charles Zavitz, Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
<strong>of</strong> Field Husbandry, Ontario Agricultural College,<br />
Guelph. Reproductions <strong>of</strong> the original advertisements<br />
illustrate the commercial and cultural context <strong>of</strong> the era.<br />
A document <strong>of</strong> its time, The Canadian Who’s Who 1910<br />
brings history alive through the individuals who lived it.<br />
This directory is published<br />
yearly to facilitate the forwarding<br />
<strong>of</strong> insurance claims<br />
throughout Canada and<br />
the United States. Its subscribers<br />
are adjusters, firms<br />
specializing in counsel to the<br />
insurance industry, insurance<br />
companies, and industrial and<br />
government <strong>of</strong>fices.<br />
Listed are a total <strong>of</strong> 700<br />
independent adjusting <strong>of</strong>fices, which <strong>of</strong>fer dependable<br />
service to claims forwarders, as well as some 40<br />
insurance counsel, who are experienced in insurance<br />
defence litigation.<br />
The arrangement <strong>of</strong> listings is national, geographical,<br />
and alphabetical: adjusters and counsel are listed by<br />
city, within province or state, and country. The editorial<br />
section includes a list <strong>of</strong> provincial associations <strong>of</strong><br />
Insurance Adjusters, the Fire Underwriters Investigation<br />
Bureau <strong>of</strong> Canada, Provincial Superintendents <strong>of</strong> Insurance,<br />
the Fire Marshals <strong>of</strong> Canada, and a comprehensive<br />
listing <strong>of</strong> Canadian insurance companies.<br />
The listings are interspersed with informative advertisements<br />
from all fields <strong>of</strong> the insurance industry. Included as<br />
well are indexes to adjusters, insurance counsel, insurance-related<br />
industries, and advertisers.<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
278 pp / / January <strong>2010</strong><br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1111-5 £13.00 $19.95 C<br />
Approx. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2010</strong><br />
Paper ISBN 978-1-4426-1088-0<br />
(ISSN 0318-0352) $50.00 NET<br />
8% PST applicable to Ontario residents on above<br />
69
REFerenCE<br />
Ontario Legal Directory<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
Published annually since 1925<br />
Edited by Lynn N. Browne<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
Accuracy and completeness <strong>of</strong> detail have characterised<br />
the Ontario Legal Directory since 1925, when the<br />
first annual edition <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Toronto</strong> Legal Directory was<br />
published.<br />
With over 30,000 listings <strong>of</strong> lawyers, law firms, federal<br />
and provincial courts, and government <strong>of</strong>fices,<br />
each complete with names, addresses, telephone and<br />
fax numbers, e-mail and web addresses, the Ontario<br />
Legal Directory places all the information you need right<br />
at your fingertips. The Blue Pages put government and<br />
courts information right up front, organized in easy-t<strong>of</strong>ind<br />
categories with thumb-tab indexing.<br />
Book Subscription Rates<br />
QTY 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year<br />
1-5 copies 60.00 110.00 150.00<br />
6-99 copies 55.00 100.00 135.00<br />
100+ copies 50.00 90.00 120.00<br />
Ontario Legal Directory <strong>2010</strong> on CD-ROM<br />
The CD-ROM version incorporates all the features <strong>of</strong> the<br />
book and includes, as well, an easy-to-use interface for<br />
quick access to listings.<br />
• Cut and paste names and addresses directly into<br />
other documents<br />
• Access services to the legal pr<strong>of</strong>ession<br />
• Bookmark frequently called numbers for quick<br />
reference<br />
• Annotate listings and create custom clipping files<br />
• Export data to standard word-processing<br />
formats or print information directly<br />
CD-ROM requirements:<br />
WINDOWS:<br />
95/98/2000/NT/XP<br />
386/25Mhz – 4mb RAM (8mb recommended)<br />
MAC:<br />
Mac OS 7, 8, and 9<br />
4mb RAM (8mb recommended)<br />
To order the book, contact:<br />
Journals Division, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong><br />
Tel: (416) 667-7810<br />
Fax: (416) 667-7881<br />
journals@utpress.utoronto.ca<br />
To order the CD-ROM or network version,<br />
please contact:<br />
CEDROM-SNi<br />
120 Eglinton Ave. East, Suite 1000<br />
<strong>Toronto</strong>, Ontario M4P 1E2<br />
Tel: (888) 544-0339 ext. 3<br />
Fax: (416) 260-1559<br />
info.canada@cedrom-sni.com<br />
Book<br />
Approx. 1225 pp / 6 3 /5 x 9 3 /5 / February <strong>2010</strong><br />
Paper 978-1-4426-1083-5<br />
(ISSN 1438-2615) $60.00 NET<br />
CD-ROM<br />
ISBN 978-1-4426-1084-2<br />
(ISSN 1481-4064) $169.37 NET<br />
network Licences<br />
ISBN 978-1-4426-1085-9<br />
Start as low as $213.09 for 1 to 3 users<br />
8% PST applicable to Ontario residents on all formats.<br />
70
lexICOns OF early MODern english<br />
Lexicons <strong>of</strong> Early Modern English (LEME) is a growing<br />
reference database that gives scholars unprecedented<br />
access to early books and manuscripts that document<br />
the English language from the beginning <strong>of</strong> printing in<br />
England to 1702. With over 150 monolingual, bilingual,<br />
and polyglot dictionaries and glossaries (in which either<br />
source or target language is English), as well as linguistic<br />
treatises, and encyclopedic or topical work LEME<br />
provides exciting research opportunities for historians<br />
<strong>of</strong> the English language. A half-million word-entries devised<br />
by contemporary speakers <strong>of</strong> early modern English<br />
describe the meaning <strong>of</strong> words, and their equivalents in<br />
languages such as French, Italian, Spanish, Latin, Greek,<br />
Hebrew, and other tongues encountered then in Europe,<br />
America, and Asia. LEME <strong>of</strong>fers:<br />
• searchable word-entries (simple, wildcard, Boolean,<br />
and proximity)<br />
• browsable page-by-page transcriptions <strong>of</strong> the lexicons,<br />
indexed by date, author, title and subject<br />
• a selection-list <strong>of</strong> editorially-lemmatized headwords<br />
• lists <strong>of</strong> headwords unique to each lexical text in the<br />
database<br />
• bibliographies <strong>of</strong> over 800 primary lexical texts,<br />
and secondary historical and critical literature, with<br />
biographical information on lexicographers<br />
• introduction, help, and information on editorial<br />
procedures<br />
LEME gratefully acknowledges the generous research<br />
support <strong>of</strong> the Social Sciences and Humanities Research<br />
Council <strong>of</strong> Canada, the Canada Foundation for<br />
Innovation (CFI), and the Text Analysis Portal for Research<br />
(TAPoR), directed by Ge<strong>of</strong>frey Rockwell at Mc-<br />
Master <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Editor<br />
Ian Lancashire<br />
Programmer<br />
Marc Plamondon<br />
Web Development<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> Library<br />
Subscription Prices<br />
1 year 2 years 3 years<br />
1,200 1,500 2,200 Institutions (FTE> 10,000)<br />
950 1,200 1,700 Institutions (FTE< 10,000)<br />
75 100 150 Individual<br />
To subscribe to Leme contact:<br />
Journals Division, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong><br />
Tel: (416) 667-7810 / (800) 565-9523<br />
Fax: (416) 667-7881 / (800) 221-9985<br />
journals@utpress.utoronto.ca<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
71
ecent and selected baCKlist<br />
anthropology<br />
book and print culture<br />
978-0-8020-9612-8<br />
$29.95 / £20.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9582-4<br />
$29.95 / £20.00<br />
2008<br />
978-1-4426-4042-9<br />
$45.00 / £28.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9617-3<br />
$35.00 / £22.50<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-1024-8<br />
$39.95 / £25.00<br />
2009<br />
book and print culture<br />
business<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
978-1-4426-4057-3<br />
$50.00<br />
2009<br />
North American rights only<br />
business<br />
978-0-8020-9991-4<br />
$34.95 / £21.50<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-0987-7<br />
$24.95 / £13.95<br />
2008<br />
978-1-4426-4052-8<br />
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classics<br />
978-0-8020-9940-2<br />
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criminology<br />
978-0-8020-9559-6<br />
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978-1-4426-0981-5<br />
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2009<br />
978-0-8020-9645-6<br />
$35.00 / £22.50<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-4059-7<br />
$55.00 / £35.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-3846-3<br />
$70.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
criminology<br />
cultural studies<br />
978-0-8020-9679-1<br />
$36.95 / £17.99<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-1048-4<br />
$16.95 / £10.95<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9606-7<br />
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2008<br />
978-0-8020-9498-8<br />
$32.95 / £20.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-1025-5<br />
$32.95 / £21.50<br />
2009<br />
72
ecent and selected baCKlist<br />
cultural studies<br />
978-0-8020-9505-3<br />
$27.95 / £18.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9586-2<br />
$27.95 / £18.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-6041-9<br />
$31.95 / £14.95<br />
1962<br />
978-1-4426-1043-9<br />
$29.95 / £19.95<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-1060-6<br />
$16.95 / £10.95<br />
2009<br />
cultural studies<br />
education<br />
978-0-8020-9631-9<br />
$27.95 / £16.95<br />
2009<br />
education<br />
978-1-4426-0124-6<br />
$19.95 / £9.99<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9893-1<br />
$50.00 / £32.00<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
health & medicine<br />
978-1-4426-1027-9<br />
$29.95 / £20.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-1026-2<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
978-0-8020-9915-0<br />
$50.00 / £32.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-3778-7<br />
$38.95 / £22.50<br />
2004<br />
978-0-8020-8579-5<br />
$35.95 / £20.50<br />
2006<br />
978-0-8020-9548-0<br />
$27.95 / £16.95<br />
2008<br />
978-0-8020-9627-2<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2008<br />
history<br />
978-1-4426-0982-2<br />
$26.95 / £17.00<br />
2008<br />
978-0-8020-9949-5<br />
$195.00 / £125.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9618-0<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-1003-3<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9646-3<br />
$29.95 / £20.00<br />
2009<br />
73
ecent and selected baCKlist<br />
history<br />
978-0-8020-9659-3<br />
$35.00 / £22.50<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9386-8<br />
$45.00 / £28.00<br />
2008<br />
978-1-4426-4070-2<br />
$55.00 / £35.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-4015-3<br />
$90.00 / £58.50<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9715-6<br />
$27.95 / £18.00<br />
2009<br />
history<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
978-0-8020-9532-9<br />
$29.95 / £20.00<br />
2009<br />
history<br />
978-0-8020-9515-2<br />
$35.00 / £22.50<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-0029-4<br />
$49.95 / £27.99<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9697-5<br />
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978-0-8020-9663-0<br />
$29.95<br />
2008<br />
North American rights only<br />
978-1-4426-4010-8<br />
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<strong>2010</strong><br />
978-0-8020-9609-8<br />
$27.95 / £20.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9619-7<br />
$29.95 / £20.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9809-2<br />
$75.00 / £48.00<br />
2009<br />
history<br />
978-0-8020-8247-3<br />
$29.95 / £20.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9675-3<br />
$29.95 / £14.99<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9284-7<br />
$29.95 / £16.95<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9685-2<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9826-9<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
74
ecent and selected baCKlist<br />
history<br />
978-1-4426-3996-6<br />
$80.00 / £50.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9657-9<br />
$35.00 / £22.50<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9669-2<br />
$29.95 / £20.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9629-6<br />
$35.00 / £19.95<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9822-1<br />
$50.00 / £32.00<br />
2008<br />
history<br />
978-0-8020-9960-0<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
history<br />
978-1-4426-4038-2<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-0991-4<br />
$59.95 / £37.95<br />
2009<br />
italian studies<br />
978-0-8020-9927-3<br />
$70.00 / £45.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9615-9<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
978-0-8020-9906-8<br />
$85.00 / £50.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-0984-6<br />
$26.95 / £17.00<br />
2008<br />
978-0-8020-9863-4<br />
$75.00 / £48.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9975-4<br />
$135.00 / £88.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9626-5<br />
$50.00 / £32.00<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
italian studies<br />
978-0-8020-9910-5<br />
$85.00 / £55.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9684-5<br />
$35.00 / £22.50<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9621-0<br />
$39.95 / £22.50<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9951-8<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-1042-2<br />
$27.95 / £17.95<br />
2009<br />
75
ecent and selected baCKlist<br />
italian studies<br />
law and society<br />
978-0-8020-9624-1<br />
$95.00 / £60.00<br />
2008<br />
978-0-8020-9723-1<br />
$37.95 / £23.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9704-0<br />
$75.00 / £48.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9440-7<br />
$35.00 / £22.50<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
978-0-8020-9846-7<br />
$55.00 / £35.00<br />
2009<br />
law and society<br />
literary studies<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
978-0-8020-9489-6<br />
$59.00 / £35.50<br />
2007<br />
literary studies<br />
978-0-8020-8961-8<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9085-0<br />
$70.00 / £45.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9625-8<br />
$95.00 / £60.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9921-1<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-1033-0<br />
$27.95 / £17.95<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9614-2<br />
$17.95 / £9.95<br />
2008<br />
978-0-8020-9935-8<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9926-6<br />
$45.00 / £27.95<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9957-0<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
literary studies<br />
978-1-4426-4005-4<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9964-8<br />
$65.00 / £40.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-4053-5<br />
$100.00 / £60.00<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
978-0-8020-9938-9<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9363-9<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
76
ecent and selected baCKlist<br />
literary studies<br />
978-0-8020-9195-6<br />
$70.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-1029-3<br />
$27.95 / £17.95<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-4034-4<br />
$60.00 / £40.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9897-9<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-3956-9<br />
$55.00 / £35.00<br />
2009<br />
literary studies<br />
978-0-8020-9919-8<br />
$60.00 / £40.00<br />
2009<br />
medieval and renaissance studies<br />
978-1-4426-4020-7<br />
$75.00 / £48.00<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
978-1-4426-1047-7<br />
$29.95 / £19.95<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9691-3<br />
$50.00 / £28.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9642-5<br />
$29.95 / £20.00<br />
2006<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
978-0-8020-9971-6<br />
$70.00 / £45.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9946-4<br />
$125.00 / £80.00<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
978-0-8020-9945-7<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-1030-9<br />
$39.95 / £24.95<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-3995-9<br />
$90.00 / £58.50<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
medieval and renaissance studies<br />
978-0-8020-9955-6<br />
$150.00 / £97.50<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
978-1-4426-1032-3<br />
$39.95 / £19.95<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9900-6<br />
$85.00 / £55.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9567-1<br />
$39.95 / £22.95<br />
2008<br />
978-0-8020-9952-5<br />
$55.00 / £35.00<br />
2009<br />
77
ecent and selected baCKlist<br />
medieval and renaissance studies<br />
978-0-8020-9813-9<br />
$135.00 / £85.00<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
978-1-4426-4000-9<br />
$425.00<br />
2009<br />
World rights less UK and Europe.<br />
978-0-8020-9832-0<br />
$70.00 / £45.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9869-6<br />
$85.00 / £55.00<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
978-0-8020-9296-0<br />
$175.00 / £120.00<br />
2009<br />
medieval and renaissance studies<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
978-0-8020-9924-2<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
medieval and renaissance studies<br />
978-0-8020-9158-1<br />
$75.00 / £48.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-1031-6<br />
$35.00 / £21.95<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9254-0<br />
$75.00 / £48.00<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
978-0-8020-9324-0<br />
$75.00 / £48.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-0060-7<br />
$29.95 / £17.99<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9352-3<br />
$75.00 / £48.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-44260-104-8<br />
$44.95 / £22.99<br />
2009<br />
978-1-44260-094-2<br />
$22.95 / £9.99<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9917-4<br />
$80.00 / £50.00<br />
2009<br />
med / ren studies<br />
philosophy<br />
978-1-4426-0126-0<br />
$42.95 / £18.99<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9930-3<br />
$215.00 / £140.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9892-4<br />
$45.00 / £28.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9988-4<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9881-8<br />
$35.00 / £22.50<br />
2008<br />
78
ecent and selected baCKlist<br />
philosophy<br />
978-0-8020-9620-3<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9838-2<br />
$45.00 / £28.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9594-7<br />
$70.00 / £45.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-4041-2<br />
$45.00 / £28.00<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
978-1-4426-1051-4<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
philosophy<br />
political science<br />
978-0-8020-9667-8<br />
$45.00 / £28.00<br />
2009<br />
political science<br />
978-0-8020-9375-2<br />
$29.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
North American & UK rights only<br />
978-0-8020-9630-2<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9985-3<br />
$115.00 / £75.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-0047-8<br />
$37.95 / £21.99<br />
2009<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
978-0-8020-9468-1<br />
$38.00 / £22.50<br />
2007<br />
978-0-8020-9672-2<br />
$29.95 / £16.99<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-0012-6<br />
$46.95 / £22.99<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9533-6<br />
$37.95 / £23.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9579-4<br />
$35.00 / £19.95<br />
2008<br />
political science<br />
978-0-8020-9653-1<br />
$29.95 / £20.00<br />
2008<br />
978-0-8020-9521-3<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9650-0<br />
$39.95 / £22.50<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-0092-8<br />
$39.95 / £19.99<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9305-9<br />
$75.00 / £48.00<br />
2009<br />
79
ecent and selected baCKlist<br />
political science<br />
978-0-8020-9891-7<br />
$39.95 / £25.00<br />
2008<br />
978-0-8020-9634-0<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2008<br />
978-0-8020-9674-6<br />
$37.95 / £18.99<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-0993-8<br />
$32.95 / £21.50<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9666-1<br />
$29.95 / £20.00<br />
2009<br />
political science<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
978-1-4426-1014-9<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
political science<br />
978-1-4426-4067-2<br />
$55.00 / £35.00<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
978-0-8020-9500-8<br />
$35.00 / £22.50<br />
2009<br />
religion<br />
978-0-8020-9265-6<br />
$65.00 / £42.00<br />
2009<br />
sociology<br />
978-0-8020-9689-0<br />
$70.00 / £45.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-4007-8<br />
$39.95 / £25.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9671-5<br />
$52.95 / £27.99<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9429-2<br />
$26.95 / £15.50<br />
2007<br />
978-0-8020-9405-6<br />
$29.95 / £20.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9499-5<br />
$29.95 / £20.00<br />
2009<br />
sociology<br />
978-0-8020-9593-0<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9962-4<br />
$55.00 / £35.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9681-4<br />
$39.95 / £17.99<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9688-3<br />
$50.00 / £32.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9682-1<br />
$34.95 / £17.99<br />
2009<br />
80
ecent and selected baCKlist<br />
sociology<br />
978-0-8020-9722-4<br />
$39.95 / £23.95<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9678-4<br />
$28.95 / £14.99<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9543-5<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-5511-1873-4<br />
$28.95 / £15.99<br />
2008<br />
978-1-4426-0050-8<br />
$32.95 / £16.99<br />
2009<br />
sociology<br />
978-1-4426-0055-3<br />
$37.95 / £17.99<br />
2009<br />
sociology<br />
978-0-8020-9557-2<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9648-7<br />
$35.00 / £22.50<br />
<strong>2010</strong><br />
978-0-8020-9560-2<br />
$29.95 / £20.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9551-0<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
978-0-8020-9605-0<br />
$35.00 / £22.50<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9677-7<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-1028-6<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9470-4<br />
$29.95 / £20.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9680-7<br />
$49.95 / £25.95<br />
2009<br />
sociology<br />
urban studies<br />
978-0-8020-9184-0<br />
$35.00 / £22.50<br />
2009<br />
978-1-4426-0992-1<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2008<br />
978-1-4426-0093-5<br />
$29.95 / £15.99<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9602-9<br />
$27.95 / £18.00<br />
2009<br />
978-0-8020-9587-9<br />
$24.95 / £15.00<br />
2009<br />
81
index<br />
www.utppuBLishing.COm<br />
A<br />
Against Reproduction 50<br />
Against the Grain 66<br />
Agricultural Policy, Agribusiness,<br />
and Rent-Seeking<br />
Behaviour 26<br />
Alliances 61<br />
Anne’s World 9<br />
Architectural Identities 55<br />
Ariosto, Ludovico 41<br />
Armour and Masculinity in the<br />
Italian Renaissance 40<br />
Armstrong, Robert 58<br />
B<br />
Babies Without Borders 6<br />
Baker-Smith, Dominic 47<br />
Baxa, Paul 43<br />
Beard, William 7<br />
Beasts and Beauties 41<br />
Becoming Biosubjects 58<br />
Behind the Scenes 36<br />
Bélanger Damien-Claude 38<br />
Belco, Victoria C 43<br />
Benedetti, Laura 17<br />
Beyond Expectation 66<br />
Bickerton, James 25<br />
Bird, Frederick 21<br />
Blackfoot Grammar 62<br />
Blake, Jason 10<br />
Bluebeard Gothic 54<br />
Borrows, John 60, 61<br />
Boyd, Susan C 18<br />
Bramadat, Paul 67<br />
Braudel Revisited 39<br />
Broadcasting Policy in Canada 58<br />
Brook, Clodagh J 45<br />
Browne, Lynn N 70<br />
Brunet-Jailly, Emmanuel 27<br />
Buchanan, Bradley W 56<br />
Building a Monument to Dante 45<br />
By Himself 65<br />
C<br />
Cairney, John 64<br />
Cairns, James 67<br />
Canada at the WTO 25<br />
Canada’s Indigenous<br />
Constitution 60<br />
Canada’s Navy 5<br />
Canadian Hockey Literature 10<br />
Canadian Insurance Claims<br />
Dictionary <strong>2010</strong> 69<br />
Canadian Politics 25<br />
The Canadian Who’s Who<br />
1910 69<br />
Canadian Who’s Who <strong>2010</strong> 68<br />
Capobianco, Richard 30<br />
Carlson, Keith Thor 36<br />
Carmichael, Barbara 21<br />
Carrión, María M 49<br />
Chirumbolo, Paolo 44<br />
Cho, Lily 3<br />
Close, David 27<br />
Cockfield, Arthur J 32<br />
Conway, Alison 55<br />
The Correspondence <strong>of</strong><br />
Erasmus 47<br />
A Country Nourished on Self-<br />
Doubt 37<br />
Craig, Leon Harold 29<br />
Creating Healthy Organizations 20<br />
Creet, Julia 59<br />
Crowe, Frederick E 30<br />
Current Affairs 26<br />
D<br />
David Adams Richards <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Miramichi 11<br />
Davis, Lynne 61<br />
de Armas, Frederick A 48<br />
Desmarais, Claude Paul 51<br />
Dewees, Donald N 26<br />
Ding, Ersu 57<br />
Dow, Gregory K 32<br />
Drawing Out Law 61<br />
Drori, Israel 21<br />
Dubinsky, Karen 6<br />
Duffin, Jacalyn 34<br />
E<br />
Eating Chinese 3<br />
Eber, Dorothy Harley 15<br />
Eckert, Andrew 32<br />
Edmondson, Jonathan 13<br />
Edwards, Gail 8<br />
An Empire <strong>of</strong> Regions 37<br />
Enchanted Objects 57<br />
Encounters on the Passage 15<br />
Engaging Heidegger 30<br />
Erasmus and Voltaire 46<br />
Erickson, Paul A 63<br />
Exploring Student Response to<br />
Contemporary Picturebooks 19<br />
Expositions <strong>of</strong> the Pslams 47<br />
European Foreign and Security<br />
Policy 28<br />
F<br />
Face to the Village 39<br />
Fantazzi, Charles 47<br />
Farge, James K 47<br />
Fathers and Sons in<br />
Shakespeare 50<br />
Frantz, Donald G 62<br />
Froese, Marc D 25<br />
Frohn-Nielson, Thor 37<br />
Furtan, Hartley W 26<br />
G<br />
Gagnon, Alain-G 25<br />
Gammel, Irene 9<br />
Garson, Marjorie 16<br />
Gegout, Catherine 28<br />
Gerlach, Neil 58<br />
Globalization and Its Tax<br />
Discontents 32<br />
A Good Book, in Theory 67<br />
Greenhill, Pauline 59<br />
Guy-Bray, Stephen 50<br />
H<br />
Hamilton, Sheryl N 58<br />
Hearing (Our) Voices 64<br />
Hepburn, Allan 57<br />
Hill, John M 17, 51<br />
Hinther, Rhonda L 38<br />
History <strong>of</strong> Medicine 34<br />
A History <strong>of</strong> Ukraine 12<br />
Honig, Benson 21<br />
Hooked 18<br />
Houston, Jason M 45<br />
Hurley, Erin 10<br />
I<br />
Industrial Organization, Trade,<br />
and Social Interaction 32<br />
Into the Past 7<br />
J<br />
Jeauneau, Edouard 51<br />
K<br />
Karney, Bryan W 26<br />
Keith, Alison 13<br />
Kitzmann, Andreas 59<br />
Knight, Christopher J 56<br />
L<br />
Latin American Politics 27<br />
Lefebvre, Benjamin 9<br />
Lévesque, Stéphane 19<br />
Lexicons <strong>of</strong> Early Modern<br />
English 70<br />
Loewe, Ronald 63<br />
Living with Strangers 14<br />
Local Government in Global<br />
World 27<br />
82
index<br />
Lonergan and the Level <strong>of</strong> Our<br />
Time 30<br />
Lonergan’s Discovery <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Science <strong>of</strong> Economics 31<br />
Lonergan’s Early Economic<br />
Research 31<br />
Looney, Dennis 41<br />
Lowe, Graham 20<br />
Luce, Jacquelyne 66<br />
Lumley, Elizabeth 68<br />
M<br />
Magocsi, Paul Robert 12<br />
Makaryk, Irena R 12<br />
Make the Night Hideous 59<br />
Marco Bellocchio 45<br />
Martin, John F 27<br />
Maya or Mestizo 63<br />
McCrady, David G 14<br />
McDonald, R. Andrew 51<br />
McDonald, Tracy 39<br />
Medieval Medicine 52<br />
Memory and Migration 59<br />
Mental Disorder in Canada 64<br />
Milner, Marc 5<br />
Mochoruk, Jim 38<br />
Modernism in Kyiv 12<br />
Moral Taste 16<br />
Moroni, Mario 44<br />
Moss, Charles B 26<br />
Multicultiphobia 2<br />
Murphy, Liam D 63<br />
‘My Muse Will Have a Story<br />
to Paint’ 41<br />
N<br />
The Narrative Pulse <strong>of</strong> Beowulf 17<br />
National Performance 10<br />
Nellis, Eric 37<br />
Nelson, Bradley J 49<br />
Neoavanguardia 44<br />
O<br />
Oedipus Against Freud 56<br />
Omissions Are Not Accidents 56<br />
Ontario Legal Directory <strong>2010</strong> 70<br />
On the Aesthetics <strong>of</strong> Beowulf and<br />
Other Old English Poems 51<br />
Ovid in the Age <strong>of</strong> Cervantes 48<br />
P<br />
Pantaleo, Sylvia 19<br />
Parallels, Interactions, and<br />
Illuminations 57<br />
Perceptions <strong>of</strong> Cuba 23<br />
Peroni, Gwen 69<br />
The Persistence <strong>of</strong> Presence 49<br />
Peruniak, Ge<strong>of</strong>frey S 22<br />
Peterson, Thomas E 44<br />
Petter, Andrew 24<br />
Picturing Canada 8<br />
Piterberg, Gabriel 39<br />
The Platonian Leviatihan 29<br />
The Politics <strong>of</strong> Command 4<br />
The Politics <strong>of</strong> the Charter 24<br />
Ponteach, or the Savages <strong>of</strong><br />
America 62<br />
Potter, Tiffany 62<br />
The Power <strong>of</strong> Place, the<br />
Problem <strong>of</strong> Time 36<br />
Prejudice and Pride 38<br />
Prescribed Norms 35<br />
Pride in Modesty 42<br />
The Protestant Whore 55<br />
Pyrhönen, Heta 54<br />
Q<br />
A Quality <strong>of</strong> Life Approach to<br />
Career Development 22<br />
Quinones, Ricardo J 46<br />
R<br />
Ranson, Gillian 66<br />
Readings for a History <strong>of</strong><br />
Anthropological Theory 63<br />
Reaume, Ge<strong>of</strong>frey 35<br />
Reeve, Doug 26<br />
Re-Imagining Ukrainian-<br />
Canadians 38<br />
Religion and Ethnicity in<br />
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Remembrance <strong>of</strong> Patients<br />
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Rethinking the School <strong>of</strong><br />
Chartres 51<br />
The Revolt <strong>of</strong> the Scribe in<br />
Modern Italian Literature 44<br />
Richardson, William J 30<br />
Rickard, John Nelson 4<br />
Roads and Ruins 43<br />
Rogers, Robert 62<br />
Roman Dress and the Fabrics<br />
<strong>of</strong> Roman Culture 13<br />
Ross, Silvia 42<br />
Ruiz, Te<strong>of</strong>ilo F 39<br />
Ryan, Phil 2<br />
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Schiesari, Juliana 41<br />
Schmitz, Andrew 26<br />
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Schooling for Life 22<br />
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Shute, Michael 31<br />
Shuttleworth, Dale E 22<br />
Somerville, Angus A 52<br />
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<strong>Spring</strong>er, Carolyn 40<br />
Strangelove, Michael 1<br />
Streiner, David L 64<br />
Subject Stages 49<br />
Sullivan, Rebecca 58<br />
Symcox, Ge<strong>of</strong>frey 39<br />
T<br />
Tange, Andrea Kaston 55<br />
Thinking Historically 19<br />
Thorner, Thomas 37<br />
The Tigress in the Snow 17<br />
Tkacz, Virlana 12<br />
Transforming Labour 33<br />
Transnational and Immigrant<br />
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Tremblay, Tony 11<br />
Tromly, Fred B 50<br />
Tuscan Spaces 42<br />
V<br />
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Vertin, Michael 30<br />
The Viking Age 52<br />
Voices from the Voluntary<br />
Sector 21<br />
W<br />
Wallis, Faith 52<br />
Walton, Priscilla L 58<br />
War, Massacre, and Recovery<br />
in Central Italy, 1943–1948 43<br />
Wardhaugh Robert A 36<br />
Warsh, Cheryl Krasnick 35<br />
Watching YouTube 1<br />
West, Douglas S 32<br />
Westley, Frances 21<br />
Wylie, Lana 23<br />
spring-summer <strong>2010</strong><br />
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ecent award winners<br />
978-0-8020-9835-1<br />
$70.00 / 2008<br />
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978-0-8020-9211-3<br />
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978-0-8020-4790-8<br />
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WINNER: 2009 Clio Prize, Atlantic Region<br />
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978-0-8020-9831-3<br />
$65.00 / 2008<br />
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