11.07.2015 Views

Spring/Summer 2007 - University of Toronto Press Publishing

Spring/Summer 2007 - University of Toronto Press Publishing

Spring/Summer 2007 - University of Toronto Press Publishing

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

<strong>2007</strong>U N I V E R S I T Y O F T O R O N T O P R E S SSPRINGSUMMERINCLUDING THE BRITISH LIBRARY


SPRING<strong>2007</strong>SUMMERU N I V E R S I T Y O F T O R O N T O P R E S S1 GENERAL INTEREST10 NEW IN PAPERBACK15 POLITICS AND POLICY21 EDUCATION22 CULTURAL STUDIES23 ITALIAN STUDIES26 LANGUAGE27 BOOK HISTORY28 LITERARY STUDIES35 MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE STUDIES40 M.A.R.T.41 HISTORY45 PHILOSOPHY48 LAW50 CRIMINOLOGY AND POLICING51 SOCIOLOGY53 HEALTH CARE53 GEOLOGY54 THE BRITISH LIBRARY56 REFERENCE59 L.E.M.E.60 RECENT BACKLIST64 SELECTED BACKLIST68 JOURNALS70 INDEX72 ORDER FORMCover and catalogue design by John BeadleCover image: “Show Me the Way.” Courtesy Jerrold Litwinenko, http://photosapience.com.


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S TThe Chequered PastSports Car Racing and Rallying in Canada, 1951–1991David A. ChartersIn the forty year period between 1951 and 1991,Canadian sports car competition underwent a massivechange, transforming itself from an amateurrecreational pastime to a commercialized pr<strong>of</strong>essionand from an individual sport to a spectacle for massconsumption. The Chequered Past is the story <strong>of</strong> thestruggle over power and purpose within Canadianauto sport that led to this transformation.The first comprehensive history <strong>of</strong> sports car racingand rallying in Canada, The Chequered Past traces theefforts <strong>of</strong> the national governing body – the CanadianAuto Sport Clubs (CASC) – to bring Canadian sportscar competition up to a ‘world class’ level, and to managethe consequences <strong>of</strong> those efforts in the secondhalf <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century. David Charters tracesthe social origins <strong>of</strong> the sport in post-war Canadaand the major trends that shaped it thereafter: pr<strong>of</strong>essionalism,technological change, rising costs, and theinfluence <strong>of</strong> commercial sponsors. Charters arguesthat while early enthusiasts set the sport on a coursetoward pr<strong>of</strong>essionalism that would eventually produceworld class Canadian events and racers, that coursewould also ultimately change the purpose <strong>of</strong> the sport:from personal recreation to mass entertainment. Astechnological innovations drove up the costs <strong>of</strong> competingat the top ranks, racers were forced to rely onsponsors, who commercialized and ultimately gainedcontrol <strong>of</strong> the sport. The end result, Charters argues,was the marginalization <strong>of</strong> the amateur competitorand <strong>of</strong> the CASC itself.Based on extensive research into the CASC’srecords and dozens <strong>of</strong> interviews with former competitorsand <strong>of</strong>ficials, The Chequered Past opens awindow into the rich but virtually unknown history<strong>of</strong> auto sport in Canada, and claims for it a place inCanadian sports history.David A. Charters is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> New Brunswick andan amateur sports car racer.‘The Chequered Past deserves a victory flag! Auto sportin Canada has a fascinating past but has hitherto receivedlittle attention from sports historians. David Charters’well-written book represents an important new foray intothe development <strong>of</strong> Canadian cultural and social life andtreats readers to a number <strong>of</strong> milestones including thesuccesses <strong>of</strong> Canadian drivers on the international stage,from Gilles Villeneuve to the contemporary generation <strong>of</strong>Paul Tracy, Jacques Villeneuve, Patrick Carpentier, andAlex Tagliani.’Colin Howell, Department <strong>of</strong> History, Saint Mary’s<strong>University</strong>CANADIAN HISTORY / SPORTSApprox. 400 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2007</strong>16 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9093-1 / 978-08020-9093-5£48.00 $75.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9394-9 / 978-08020-9394-9£22.50 $35.00 CThe ‘father’ <strong>of</strong> formula car racing in Canada: Peter Broeker inhis Stebro Formula Junior at Watkins Glen. Photo courtesy <strong>of</strong>David A. Charters.1


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S TThe Sleep <strong>of</strong> Othersand the Transformations <strong>of</strong> Sleep ResearchKenton KrokerWe tend to think <strong>of</strong> sleep as a private concern, anight-time retreat from the physical world intothe realm <strong>of</strong> the subconscious. Yet sleep also has apublic side; it has been the focal point <strong>of</strong> religiousritual, philosophic speculation, political debate,psychological research, and more recently, neuroscientificinvestigation and medical practice.In this first ever history <strong>of</strong> sleep research, KentonKroker draws on a wide range <strong>of</strong> material to presentthe story <strong>of</strong> how an investigative field – at onetime dominated by the study <strong>of</strong> dreams – slowlymorphed into a laboratory-based discipline. Theresult <strong>of</strong> this transformation, Kroker argues, haschanged the very meaning <strong>of</strong> sleep from its earlierconception to an issue for public health and biomedicalintervention.Examining a vast historical period <strong>of</strong> 2500 years,Kroker separates the problems associated with thehistory <strong>of</strong> dreaming from those associated withsleep itself and charts sleep-related diseases such asnarcolepsy, insomnia, and sleep apnea. He describesthe discovery <strong>of</strong> rapid eye movement – REM– during the 1950s, and shows how this discoveryinitiated the creation <strong>of</strong> ‘dream laboratories’ thatlater emerged as centres for sleep research duringthe 1960s and 1970s. Kroker’s work is unique insubject and scope and will be enjoyed by anybodywho’s ever lost a night’s sleep.Kenton Kroker is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theScience and Technology Studies Program at York<strong>University</strong>.‘In The Sleep <strong>of</strong> Others, the history <strong>of</strong> scientific investigationsinto sleep and sleep-related problems unfolds as a richand complex territory. Incorporating a vast amount <strong>of</strong> material,in terms <strong>of</strong> periods covered as well as in the numbers <strong>of</strong>evaluated printed and archival sources, Kenton Kroker <strong>of</strong>fersa fascinating account <strong>of</strong> research into sleep.’Cornelius Borck, Department <strong>of</strong> Social Studies <strong>of</strong>Medicine, Canada Research Chair in Philosophy andLanguage <strong>of</strong> Medicine, McGill <strong>University</strong>HISTORY OF MEDICINEApprox. 496 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>30 halftones; 15 figuresCloth ISBN 0-8020-3769-0 / 978-08020-3769-5£29.95 $49.95 EPhoto courtesy <strong>of</strong> Kenton Kroker2


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S TThe Health Impact <strong>of</strong> Smoking and Obesityand What to Do About ItHans Krueger, Dan Williams, Barbara Kaminsky, and David McLeanHans Krueger is the president <strong>of</strong> H. Krueger &Associates Inc., a health care consulting companyin Vancouver.Dan Williams is head <strong>of</strong> research and writing for H.Krueger & Associates Inc.Barbara Kaminsky is an adjunct pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Medicine at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>British Columbia and CEO <strong>of</strong> the Canadian CancerSociety, British Columbia and Yukon Division.David McLean is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Medicine at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British Columbia andhead <strong>of</strong> cancer prevention at the British ColumbiaCancer Agency.Despite significant progress through public healthand other policy efforts, smoking continues to bea serious health threat throughout the world. Inaddition, a large proportion <strong>of</strong> chronic diseasesresults from sedentary lifestyles, poor diet, and obesity.The Health Impact <strong>of</strong> Smoking and Obesity andWhat to Do About It synthesizes a remarkably largevolume <strong>of</strong> up-to-date data on the effectiveness andcost-effectiveness <strong>of</strong> both population and personalinterventions suitable for developed nations seekingto address the risk factors <strong>of</strong> smoking and obesity.A large proportion <strong>of</strong> chronic disease is preventable.The Health Impact <strong>of</strong> Smoking and Obesity andWhat to Do About It provides practical advice forthose seeking to improve the health <strong>of</strong> their populationsand <strong>of</strong>fers resources for health care planners,decision-makers, and frontline providers inunderstanding the various approaches to measuringdisease burden and setting health care targets – thefirst step to a healthier world.Of related interest:Baby Boomer Health DynamicsHow Are We Aging?Andrew V. Wister0-8020-8635-7 / 978-08020-8635-8£20.00 / $30.95 / 2005HEALTH CARE / SOCIOLOGYApprox. 352 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2007</strong>14 figures; 37 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-9200-4 / 978-08020-9200-7£42.00 $65.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9441-4 / 978-08020-9441-4£19.95 $29.95 CPhoto courtesy <strong>of</strong> Digital Vision3


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S TFilm HistoriesAn Introduction and ReaderEdited by Paul Grainge, Mark Jancovitch, andSharon MontiethArranged chronologically, Film Histories is a wideranginganthology that covers the history <strong>of</strong> filmfrom 1885 to the present. Each chapter contains anintroduction by the editors on key developmentswithin the respective period, followed by a classicpiece <strong>of</strong> historical research about that period. Variousapproaches to film history are taken by the authors<strong>of</strong> the articles, exposing readers to different forms <strong>of</strong>historical research. Topics include: the history <strong>of</strong> audiences,exhibition, marketing, censorship, aesthetic history,political history, and historical reception studies.Film Histories concentrates on the so-calledhistorical turn in film studies, demonstrating thatfilm history is about more than simply key films,directors, and movements. Also included is a prefaceexplaining the structure and organization <strong>of</strong>the book. The contents are divided into sectionson American and non-American research, thusdesigned to reach a wide student audience at theundergraduate level. Chapter introductions providean overview <strong>of</strong> international developments in film.Paul Grainge is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School<strong>of</strong> American and Canadian Studies at the <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> Nottingham.Mark Jancovich is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School <strong>of</strong> Film andTelevision Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> East Anglia.Sharon Montieth is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School <strong>of</strong>American and Canadian Studies at the <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> Nottingham.FILM STUDIESApprox. 590 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9355-8 / 978-08020-9355-4$85.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9508-9 / 978-08020-9508-4$39.95 CLiterary Celebrity inCanadaLorraine YorkIn recent years, Canadian authors have enjoyed tremendousinternational success, from writing novels thatbecome Oscar-nominated films to achieving covetedsuccess as selections for the Oprah Winfrey bookclub.Literary Celebrity in Canada is the first extended study<strong>of</strong> the dynamics <strong>of</strong> celebrity in the field <strong>of</strong> Canadianliterature. Using as examples three contemporary literarycelebrities – Margaret Atwood, Michael Ondaatje,and Carol Shields – and four earlier popular writers– E. Pauline Johnson, Stephen Leacock, Mazo de laRoche and L. M. Montgomery – York demonstratesthat fame is performed in different keys by particularstar authors and those performances can be contradictoryand complex. York casts doubt on the notion <strong>of</strong>a specifically Canadian response to fame. Dependingon the public interpretation <strong>of</strong> a particular writer’slife and work, different tensions arise in negotiatingliterary celebrity. Privacy versus publicity; swift successversus laborious apprenticeship; national versus internationalassociation, or ownership <strong>of</strong> the celebrity: nosingle version <strong>of</strong> celebrity applies to all.Citizenship, however, is a remarkably consistentsite <strong>of</strong> tension for stars, literary or otherwise. Like citizenship,celebrity marks an uneasy space wherein thesingle, special individual and the group demographicboth meet and separate. Literary Celebrity in Canadais an innovative attempt to understand the psychology<strong>of</strong> literary stardom and will influence future researchon contemporary literature and popular culture.Lorraine York is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>English and Cultural Studies at McMaster <strong>University</strong>.LITERARY STUDIES / CULTURAL STUDIESApprox. 192 pp / 5½ x 8½ / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9282-9 / 978-08020-9282-3£22.50 $35.00 ENORTH AMERICAN RIGHTS ONLY. CO-PUBLISHED WITH UNIVERSITY OFEDINBURGH PRESS4


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S THistory <strong>of</strong> the Book in CanadaVolume Three: 1918–1980Edited by Carole Gerson and Jacques MichonThe History <strong>of</strong> the Book in Canada is one <strong>of</strong> thiscountry’s great scholarly achievements, with threevolumes spanning topics from Aboriginal communicationsystems established prior to European contactto the arrival <strong>of</strong> multinational publishing companies.Each volume observes developments in the realms<strong>of</strong> writing, publishing, dissemination, and reading,illustrating the process <strong>of</strong> a fledgling nation cominginto its own. The third and final volume sees bookhistory and print culture through to 1980 as it wasinflected by major changes in the twentieth century,including the country’s growing demographic complexityand the rise <strong>of</strong> multiculturalism.Crucial to creating a sense <strong>of</strong> identity duringthis period was the Royal Commission on NationalDevelopment in the Arts, Letters and Sciences, whosereport <strong>of</strong> 1951 led to the establishment <strong>of</strong> influentialcultural institutions such as the Canada Councilfor the Arts and the National Library <strong>of</strong> Canada.Other key developments included the initiation andgrowth <strong>of</strong> library systems, the expansion <strong>of</strong> film,radio, and television, the burgeoning <strong>of</strong> children’sliterature, enhanced opportunities for writers, theQuiet Revolution in Quebec, and the rise <strong>of</strong> Canadianstudies and Canadian literature as respected fields forteaching and research. In English Canada, mainstreambook publishing flourished during the 1920s, sufferedseverely during the Depression, went through aperiod <strong>of</strong> renewal and advance after the Second WorldWar, but became imperilled by the 1970s. Small literarypresses and allophone publishers, in turn, grewincreasingly significant from the 1960s, a decade inwhich Quebec’s new cultural policies began to fosterongoing support for francophone book culture.In addition to following the sweeping stories <strong>of</strong>Canada’s recent book history, this third volume paysdue attention to multifarious developments in printculture, including book prizes, sports writing, pulpmagazines, the alternative press, Coles Notes, theinternational success <strong>of</strong> Harlequin, and the unprecedentedinfluence <strong>of</strong> Les Insolences du Frère Untel, thefamous cry for education reform in 1960s Quebec.Volume Three <strong>of</strong> the History <strong>of</strong> the Book in Canadamarks the successful completion <strong>of</strong> an extraordinaryproject that documents the country’s achievementsfor generations <strong>of</strong> scholars and readers to come.Carole Gerson is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>English at Simon Fraser <strong>University</strong>.Jacques Michon is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Départementdes lettres et communications and a CanadaResearch Chair in Book and <strong>Publishing</strong> History atl’Université de Sherbrooke.History <strong>of</strong> the Book in CanadaThree Volume SetAll three volumes in a handsome slip case.0-8020-9342-6 / 978-08020-9342-4£130.00 / $200.00Les <strong>Press</strong>es de l’Université de Montréal is publishingFrench-language editions <strong>of</strong> each volume asHistoire du livre et de l’imprimé au Canada.Cet ouvrage est également disponible en languefrançaise aux <strong>Press</strong>es de l’Université de Montréal.ISBN: 2-7606-1998-2 / 978-2-7606-1998-2BOOK HISTORYApprox. 696 pp / 6¾ x 9¾ / January <strong>2007</strong>56 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-9047-8 / 978-08020-9047-8£55.00 $85.00 E5


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S TThe West beyond the WestA History <strong>of</strong> British Columbia, Third EditionJean BarmanBritish Columbia is regularly described in superlativesboth positive and negative – most spectacular scenery,strangest politics, greatest environmental sensitivity,richest Aboriginal cultures, most aggressive resourceexploitation, closest ties to Asia. Jean Barman’s TheWest beyond the West presents the history <strong>of</strong> BC in allits diversity and apparent contradictions. Barman’scritically acclaimed work is the premiere BC historybook, with a narrative beginning at the point <strong>of</strong>contact between Native peoples and Europeans andcontinuing into the twenty-first century.Barman tells British Columbia’s story by focusingnot only on the history made by leaders in governmentbut also on the roles <strong>of</strong> women, immigrants,and Aboriginal peoples. She incorporates new understandingsand expands discussions <strong>of</strong> importanttopics such as the province’s relationship to Canadaas a nation, the two world wars, the perspectives <strong>of</strong>non-mainstream British Columbians, and recreationand sports including Olympic participation.First published in 1991 and revised in 1996, thisthird edition <strong>of</strong> The West beyond the West has beensupplemented by maps, statistical tables incorporatingthe 2001 census, two large sections portrayingBritish Columbia’s history in images, and newmaterial bringing the book up-to-date. Barman’sdeft scholarship is readily apparent and the bookdemands to be on the shelf <strong>of</strong> anyone with an interestin British Columbian and Canadian history.Jean Barman is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in the Department<strong>of</strong> Educational Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> BritishColumbia.CANADIAN HISTORYApprox. 480 pp / 6½ x 9½ / April <strong>2007</strong>48 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-9309-4 / 978-08020-9309-7£48.00 $75.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9495-3 / 978-08020-9495-7£25.00 $39.95 C<strong>Toronto</strong> SprawlsA HistoryLawrence SolomonUNIVERSITY OF TORONTO CENTRE FOR PUBLIC MANAGEMENTMONOGRAPH SERIESWith a landmass spanning approximately 7000square kilometres and a population <strong>of</strong> roughlyfive million, the Greater <strong>Toronto</strong> Area is Canada’slargest metropolitan centre. How did a small nineteenth-centurycolonial capital become this sprawlingurban giant, and how did government policiesshape the contours <strong>of</strong> its landscape?In <strong>Toronto</strong> Sprawls, Lawrence Solomon examinesthe great migration from farm to the city that occurredin the last half <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth century. During thisperiod, a disproportionate number <strong>of</strong> single womencame to <strong>Toronto</strong>, while at the same time, immigrationfrom abroad was swelling the city’s urban boundaries.Labour unions were also increasingly successful inrecruiting urban workers in these years. Governmentsresponded to these perceived threats with a series <strong>of</strong>policies designed to foster order. To promote singlefamily dwellings conducive to the traditional family,buildings in high-density areas were razed and apartmentbuildings banned. To discourage returning FirstWorld War veterans from settling in cities, the government<strong>of</strong>fered grants to spur rural settlement. Thesepolicies and others dispersed the city’s population andpromoted sprawl.An illuminating read, <strong>Toronto</strong> Sprawls makes aconvincing case that urban sprawl in <strong>Toronto</strong> wasnot caused by market forces, but rather policiesand programs designed to disperse <strong>Toronto</strong>’s urbanpopulation.Lawrence Solomon is an urban affairs columnistwith the National Post, a past member <strong>of</strong> the City<strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> Planning Board, and the editor andpublisher <strong>of</strong> The Next City magazine.CANADIAN HISTORY / URBAN STUDIESApprox. 128 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-7727-8619 4 / 978-07727-8619-7£28.00 $45.00 EPaper ISBN 0-7727-8618-6 / 978-07727-8618-0£13.00 $19.95 C6


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S TBoris Yeltsin and Russia’s Democratic TransformationHerbert J. EllisonBoris Yeltsin is one <strong>of</strong> modern history’s mostdynamic and underappreciated figures. In thisvivid, analytical work, Herbert J. Ellison establishesYeltsin as the principal leader and defender <strong>of</strong>Russia’s democratic revolution and the embodiment<strong>of</strong> Russia’s fragile new liberties, including the evolvingrespect for the rule <strong>of</strong> law and private property,as well as core freedoms <strong>of</strong> speech, religion, press,and political association.In 1987, President Mikhail Gorbachev expelledBoris Yeltsin from his team <strong>of</strong> reform politicians.Yeltsin rebounded from this potentially devastatingsetback to become the leader <strong>of</strong> the Russiandemocratic movement and to create a new <strong>of</strong>fice<strong>of</strong> Russian president, to which he was elected. Healso designed a democratic constitution for theSoviet Union that precipitated a coup attempt bytraditionalist communist leaders, grantedindependence to the nations <strong>of</strong>the Soviet Union,and replacedCommunist Party rule withdemocracy and thes o c i a l i s teconomy with a mar-ket economy.In a short period,Yeltsin succeededin becoming thefirst popularlyelected leader in a thousandyears <strong>of</strong> Russianhistory. Heblocked violentattempts atcounter-revolutionand overcamepowerful resis-tance tohis reform program.Ellison, who hasdevoted his career toobserving and recordingRussian and Sovietpolitical life, asserts thatYeltsin’s achievements rankamong the most extraordinaryfeats <strong>of</strong> political leadership in thetwentieth century. This groundbreaking book willbe essential to all scholars <strong>of</strong> Russia and modernEuropean politics.Herbert J. Ellison is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History and the InternationalStudies Program at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Washington.‘Ellison’s account is, in effect, a defense <strong>of</strong> Boris Yeltsin’splace in Russian history. In this, his book differs from manytreatments <strong>of</strong> the period that concentrate on shortcomings inYeltsin’s administration to the exclusion, or near exclusion, <strong>of</strong>his achievements. While a great deal has been written aboutthis period, Ellison has no rival when it comes to a presentationthat is both comprehensive and concise.’Jack Matlock, Jr., former U.S. Ambassador to the SovietUnionOf related interest:Shocking Mother RussiaDemocratization, Social Rights, and PensionReform in Russia, 1990–2001Andrea Chandler0-8020-8930-5 / 978-8020-8930-4£40.00 / $60.00 / 2004BIOGRAPHY / POLITICS /EUROPEAN HISTORYApprox. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / Available20 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9304-3 /978-08020-9304-2$35.00CANADIAN RIGHTS ONLY.CO-PUBLISHED WITHTHE UNIVERSITY OFWASHINGTON PRESS.Photo © Peter Turnley/Corbis7


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S TExalted SubjectsStudies in the Making <strong>of</strong> Race and Nation in CanadaSunera ThobaniQuestions <strong>of</strong> national identity, indigenous rights, citizenshipand migration have acquired unprecedentedrelevance in the current age <strong>of</strong> globalization. InExalted Subjects, controversial feminist scholar SuneraThobani examines the complexities <strong>of</strong> these questionsin a Canadian context. Drawing on the theoreticaltraditions <strong>of</strong> political economy and cultural studies,Thobani examines how the national subject has beenconceptualized in Canada at particular historical junctures,and how state policies and popular practiceshave exalted certain subjects over others.Foregrounding the concept <strong>of</strong> ‘race’ as a criticalrelation <strong>of</strong> power, Thobani looks at how processes <strong>of</strong>racialization contribute to sustaining and replenishingthe politics <strong>of</strong> nation formation and nationalsubjectivity. She challenges the popular notion thatthe significance <strong>of</strong> racialized practices in Canadahas declined in the post-Second World War period,and traces key continuities and discontinuities inthese practices from Confederation into the present.Finally, Thobani develops the concept <strong>of</strong> ‘exaltation’to examine how the state seeks to ‘fix’ and ‘stabilize’its subjects in relation to the nation’s ‘others.’An absorbing study, Exalted Subjects makes acontribution to the transformation <strong>of</strong> the racializedand gendered underpinnings <strong>of</strong> both nation andsubject-formation.Sunera Thobani is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor at theCentre for Research in Women’s Studies and GenderRelations at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British Columbiaand the former president <strong>of</strong> the National ActionCommittee on the Status <strong>of</strong> Women.SOCIOLOGY / RACE STUDIESApprox. 384 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9227-6 / 978-08020-9227-4£48.00 $75.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9454-6 / 978-08020-9454-4£22.50 $35.00 COf related interest:Dark Threats and White KnightsThe Somalia Affair, Peacekeeping, and the NewImperialismSherene H. Razack0-8020-8663-2 / 978-08020-8663-1£15.00 / $24.95 / 2004The House <strong>of</strong> DifferenceCultural Politics and National Identity in CanadaEva Mackey0-8020-8481-8 / 978-08020-8418-1£14.00 / $25.95 / 2002Image credit: Despair and Determination II, by Arax Nazari9


N E W I N PA P E R B A C KMarginal ManThe Dark Vision <strong>of</strong> Harold InnisAlexander John WatsonWith Marginal Man, Alexander John Watsonprovides the first in-depth intellectual biography<strong>of</strong> Harold Adams Innis (1894–1952), the greatCanadian economic historian and communicationsvisionary. Melding biography and analysis, heexplores in detail the links between key events inInnis’s life and scholarly influences, and the intellectualsyntheses that Innis produced.Watson illustrates and reconciles Innis’s movementfrom rural Ontario to the centre <strong>of</strong> Canadianand international scholarship, followed by hisrelegation to the margin by scholars who did notunderstand his political project and the essentialconsistency <strong>of</strong> his scholarship and vision.Based on exhaustive research includinginterviews and reviews <strong>of</strong> archivalsources, the book is a product <strong>of</strong> amethodology that reflects that <strong>of</strong> Innishimself, emphasizing oral tradition and‘dirt’ research.Innis’s thought is remarkablyrelevant to today’s world, andMarginal Man discusses his foresightwith regards to technologicalchanges – such as thearrival <strong>of</strong> the Internet – aswell as historical changesincluding the end <strong>of</strong> theCold War and the beginnings<strong>of</strong> today’s unipolarworld order. Thisbook is an extraordinarywork <strong>of</strong> scholarship inits own right, as well asan essential companion tothe thought and work <strong>of</strong> one<strong>of</strong> Canada’s most importantpublic intellectuals.Alexander John Watson is the president and C.E.O.<strong>of</strong> CARE Canada.‘Watson’s biography delivers the gift <strong>of</strong> a thinker about thehuman condition who was also an authentic Canadianprophet. This is surely one <strong>of</strong> the most important books <strong>of</strong>the year.’Roy MacSkimming, Globe and Mail‘A brilliant biography <strong>of</strong> Innis.’Mel Watkins, Canadian DimensionOf related interest:The Fur Trade in CanadaAn Introduction to CanadianEconomic HistoryHarold A. Innis0-8020-8196-7 / 978-08020-8196-4£16.00 / $27.95 / 1999The Bias <strong>of</strong> CommunicationHarold A. Innis0-8020-6839-1 /978-08020-6839-2£13.95 / $25.95 / 1991BIOGRAPHY / HISTORY /COMMUNICATIONS544 pp / 6 x 9 /February <strong>2007</strong>24 halftonesPaper ISBN 0-8020-9478-3 /978-08020-9478-0£22.50 $35.00 COriginally published in cloth:January 2006Harold Innis during the First World War(<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> Archives)10


N E W I N PA P E R B A C KHarvey CushingA Life in SurgeryMichael Bliss‘Your friend, Harvey Cushing, has opened thebook <strong>of</strong> surgery in a new place,’ William Oslertold a mutual acquaintance in early 1901. Indeed,in the early years <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century, Cushingalmost single-handedly created brain surgery as aspecialty. He worked at Johns Hopkins <strong>University</strong>,Harvard <strong>University</strong>, and Yale <strong>University</strong> and his riseto become the world’s most prominent surgeon – aswell as a Pulitzer Prize winner for biography – wasan epic <strong>of</strong> the American dream.Never before has such a detailed and compellinglyreadable account <strong>of</strong> a surgeon’s life been written. MichaelBliss vividly recounts Cushing’s boyhood,his growing interest in surgery, and subsequently,neurosurgery, his travels and attentiveness toEuropean surgical models, the influence <strong>of</strong> Oslerand William Stewart Halsted, and his extraordinaryself-confidence in the operating room.Interweaving Cushing’s personal story withgraphic accounts <strong>of</strong> his technical prowess,Bliss skillfully charts not only the life <strong>of</strong> a man, butalso the birth and development <strong>of</strong> the esoteric andexotic fields <strong>of</strong> surgery and endocrinology (in whichCushing became a pioneer). Cushing was alsoan accomplished writer whose works include theinfluential The Pituitary Body and its Disorders aswell as a classic biography <strong>of</strong> his mentor and colleague,William Osler. Not surprisingly, Cushing was adriven, relentless, workaholic, and Bliss’s work laysplain the hurtful effect this had on his relationshipwith his wife and daughters, as well as some <strong>of</strong> hiscolleagues.A sequel <strong>of</strong> sorts to Bliss’s award-winning biography<strong>of</strong> Osler, and the completion <strong>of</strong> his project<strong>of</strong> describing the rise <strong>of</strong> North American medicineat the beginning <strong>of</strong> the modern age, HarveyCushing: A Life in Surgery breaks new ground inmedical biography. It will have a pr<strong>of</strong>ound and lastingimpact on the view <strong>of</strong> early-twentieth-centurymedicine and the lives <strong>of</strong> those who shaped it.Michael Bliss holds the rank <strong>of</strong> <strong>University</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essorin the Department <strong>of</strong> History and the History <strong>of</strong>Medicine Program at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.‘In the first three decades <strong>of</strong> the 1900s, Harvey Cushingwas a cosmic force in the special field <strong>of</strong> neurological surgeryand a commanding figure in American medicine. AuthorMichael Bliss gives us a brilliant and highly readable recreation<strong>of</strong> the life and work <strong>of</strong> Cushing.’William Feindel, Canadian Medical Association Journal‘Michael Bliss – the author <strong>of</strong> the recent magisterial biography<strong>of</strong> [William] Osler – has done it again … This excellentand well-written biography is truly a life and times <strong>of</strong>Cushing. Anyone with an interest in how medicine andsurgery developed in the first third <strong>of</strong> the 20 th Century willsurely enjoy it.’A. Mark Clarfield, M.D., New England Journal <strong>of</strong> Medicine‘Bliss has written a biography which is an exciting read evenif you are not familiar with “the trans-sphenoidal approach tothe pituitary.” Centering his book on the topic <strong>of</strong> brain surgeryand Cushing’s daring exploits in this region, Bliss takes you ona wonderful journey through the life <strong>of</strong> an astounding man.’Bert Keizer, The Threepenny ReviewAlso by Michael Bliss:William OslerA Life in Medicine0-8020-8541-5 / 978-08020-8541-2$32.95 / 1999Canadian Rights OnlyBIOGRAPHY / HISTORY OF MEDICINE604 pp / 6½ x 9¼ / January <strong>2007</strong>61 halftonesPaper ISBN 0-8020-9492-9 / 978-08020-9492-6$29.95Originally published in cloth: September 2005CANADIAN RIGHTS ONLY. ORIGINAL CLOTH CO-PUBLISHED WITHOXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS (NEW YORK).Dr. Harvey Cushing (1908) by Edmund C. Turbell (1862-1938).11


N E W I N PA P E R B A C KWhen Canadian Literature Moved to New YorkNick MountSTUDIES IN BOOK AND PRINT CULTURE. WINNER OF THE GABRIELLE ROY PRIZECanadian literature began not in the backwoods <strong>of</strong>Ontario or the salt flats <strong>of</strong> New Brunswick, but in thecafés, publishing <strong>of</strong>fices, and boarding houses <strong>of</strong> latenineteenth-century New York, where writing developedas a pr<strong>of</strong>ession and where the groundwork forthe Canadian canon was laid. So argues Nick Mountin When Canadian Literature Moved to New York.The last decades <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth century saw anextraordinary exodus from English Canada, drainingthe country <strong>of</strong> half its writers and all but a few <strong>of</strong> itsliterary celebrities. Motivated by powerful obstaclesto a domestic literature, most <strong>of</strong> these migrantslanded in New York – by the 1890s the centre <strong>of</strong> thecontinental literary market – and found for the firsttime a large, receptive audience and recognition fromnon-Canadian publishers and reviewers.Although the expatriates <strong>of</strong> the 1880s and 1890s– including Bliss Carman, Ernest Thompson Seton,and Palmer Cox – were recognized for their achievementsin Canada, the domestic literature they themselvesspurred into existence rekindled a nationalistimperative to distinguish Canadian writing from otherliteratures, especially American. Thought to lack the‘spirit <strong>of</strong> the soil,’ most <strong>of</strong> the work <strong>of</strong> these writerswas slowly eliminated from the emerging EnglishCanadian canon. When Canadian Literature Moved toNew York is the story <strong>of</strong> these expatriate writers: whothey were, why they left, what they achieved, and howthey changed Canadian literary history.Nick Mount is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.‘A highly readable history…the appeal <strong>of</strong> Mount’s narrativeis its examination <strong>of</strong> Canadian writers who have sincedropped out <strong>of</strong> literary history but who made a huge splashin the 1880s and 1890s.’Philip Marchand, <strong>Toronto</strong> Star‘The provocative title <strong>of</strong> Nick Mount’s book draws attentionto a historical phenomenon that students <strong>of</strong> early Canadianliterature have recognized but have failed to explore to anydepth: the fact that Canada and Canadians in the late nineteenthcentury wanted a distinctive Canadian literature butwere not prepared to pay for it. [Mount is] an ideal guide tothis little-known material.’W.J. Keith, Books in CanadaLITERARY STUDIES / CANADIAN HISTORY240 pp / 6 x 9 / Available8 halftonesPaper ISBN 0-8020-9485-6 / 978-08020-9485-8£15.00 $24.95 COriginally published in cloth: October 2005Photo: Spike Mafford/PhotoDisc12


N E W I N PA P E R B A C KSurvivor RhetoricNegotiations and Narrativity in Abused Women’sLanguageEdited by Christine Shearer-Cremean andCarol L. WinkelmannSurvivor Rhetoric is a collection <strong>of</strong> original essaysthat discuss the language <strong>of</strong> abused women andgirls. Written by feminist scholars from a variety <strong>of</strong>disciplines, including literary studies, psychology,law, and criminal justice, the essays examine narrativesfrom diverse sources, including Americanevangelicals, survivors <strong>of</strong> child sexual abuse, batteredwomen who have killed their abusive partners,and elite or highly educated women represented inthe mainstream media.The stories <strong>of</strong> abused women are drawn fromvarious records such as police reports, memoirs,and interviews in women’s shelters, and courttranscripts, and the methods and focus <strong>of</strong> theessays include rhetorical, thematic, ethnographic,and literary analysis. Survivor Rhetoric concludeswith a call for more holistic and local responses tothe problem <strong>of</strong> violence against women and girls– responses that are sensitive to language issues,informed by multiple perspectives, and respectful <strong>of</strong>cultural diversity and individual differences.Christine Shearer-Cremean is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essorin the Department <strong>of</strong> English at Black Hills State<strong>University</strong>.The Canadian Senate inBicameral PerspectiveDavid E. SmithThe Canadian Senate in Bicameral Perspective is thefirst scholarly study <strong>of</strong> the Senate in over a quartercentury and the first analysis <strong>of</strong> the upper houseas one chamber <strong>of</strong> a bicameral legislature. DavidE. Smith’s aim in this work is to demonstrate theinterrelationship <strong>of</strong> the two chambers and the constraintsthis relationship poses for Senate reform.He analyses past literature on the Senate and currentproposals for reform – such as a Triple-E Senate– and compares Canada’s upper chamber with those<strong>of</strong> Australia, the United States, Germany, and theUnited Kingdom, noting a revival <strong>of</strong> interest inCanada and abroad in upper chambers and bicameralism.Drawing on parliamentary debates and committeereports, as well as a range <strong>of</strong> broad secondarysources, The Canadian Senate in BicameralPerspective examine the Canadian Senate withinthe international context, shedding light on its roleas a political institution and arguing for a renewedinvestigation into its future.David E. Smith is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Political Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Saskatchewan.Carol L. Winkelmann is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at Xavier <strong>University</strong>.SOCIOLOGY / WOMEN'S STUDIES252 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2007</strong>Paper ISBN 0-8020-9491-0 / 978-08020-9491-9£18.00 $27.95 COriginally published in cloth: December 2004POLITICS280 pp / 6 x 9 / AvailablePaper ISBN 0-8020-9464-3 / 978-08020-9464-3£15.00 $24.95 COriginally published in cloth: August 200314


P O L I T I C S A N D P O L I C YThe People’s House <strong>of</strong> CommonsTheories <strong>of</strong> Democracy in ContentionDavid E. SmithCanada’s House <strong>of</strong> Commons is under attack,charged with being unresponsive to public opinion,its party leaders too much in control, andindividual MPs essentially impotent. It also facescompetitors: the courts in the era <strong>of</strong> the Charter,a bureaucracy with specialist knowledge, and newtelecommunications systems that are redefining thetransfer <strong>of</strong> information.Through an examination <strong>of</strong> academic, judicial,political, and legal commentary, The People’s House<strong>of</strong> Commons disentangles this conflation <strong>of</strong> criticism.Esteemed political scientist David E. Smithexamines the competing political models and inherenttensions affecting the public’s understanding <strong>of</strong>the House. Smith maintains that court decisions aretransforming politics from a system dominated byparties to one that promotes individual participation.He argues that reforms such as fixed electiondates or stronger parliamentary committees haveconstitutional significance since their implementationwould alter the practice <strong>of</strong> responsible government,which for more than a century has been aparty government.An essential work by one <strong>of</strong> Canada’s foremostminds in the field <strong>of</strong> political science, The People’sHouse <strong>of</strong> Commons explores the ramifications <strong>of</strong>the numerous changes being proposed to Canada’spolitical system, with particular reference to theireffect on the prerogative power, parliamentaryprivilege, party discipline, bicameralism, and therole <strong>of</strong> the opposition.David E. Smith is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Political Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Saskatchewan.Of related interest:Continuity and Change in Canadian PoliticsEssays in Honour <strong>of</strong> David E. SmithEdited by Hans J. Michelmann and Cristinede Clercy0-8020-9060-5 / 978-08020-9060-7£32.00 / $55.00 / 2006The Republican Option in Canada, Past andPresentDavid E. Smith0-8020-4469-7 / 978-08020-4469-3£37.50 / $50.00 / 1999Approx. 192 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9255-1 / 978-08020-9255-7£35.00 $55.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9465-1 / 978-08020-9465-0£15.00 $24.95 CThe 37th Parliament in SessionLibrary <strong>of</strong> Parliament – Roy Grogan15


P O L I T I C S A N D P O L I C YFederalism, Citizenship,and QuebecDebating MultinationalismAlain-G. Gagnon and Raffaele IacovinoCanadians <strong>of</strong>ten imagine their country as a multiculturaldemocracy, while a few go further to claimthat the country’s diversity can be characterized asmultinational in its social and institutional makeup.In Federalism, Citizenship, and Quebec, Alain-G. Gagnon and Raffaele Iacovino reveal how thisnotion has been falsely presented to the populace.Through comprehensive historical, contemporary,and critical accounts, they argue that the countryhas been the object <strong>of</strong> an aggressive nationalizingproject that contravenes the principles <strong>of</strong> a ‘multinationalfederation.’Including a detailed account <strong>of</strong> the main challengesassociated with Quebec’s place in the federation,Federalism, Citizenship, and Quebec standsapart from other English-language studies on multinationaldemocracy, citizenship, and federalism,and, most notably, multinational democracy inCanada. Gagnon and Iacovino ground their workin both history and theory, <strong>of</strong>fering a truly interdisciplinaryapproach that will appeal to scholars fromfields as diverse as Canadian and Quebec politics,comparative politics, and political and legal theory.Alain-G. Gagnon is the director <strong>of</strong> the Centre derecherche interdisciplinaire sur la diversité (CRIDAQ)and holds the Canada Research Chair in Quebec andCanadian Studies in the Department <strong>of</strong> PoliticalScience at l’Université du Québec à Montréal.Raffaele Iacovino is a PhD candidate in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Political Science at McGill <strong>University</strong>and a research associate in the Department <strong>of</strong> PoliticalScience at l’Université du Québec à Montréal.Political Leadership andRepresentation in CanadaEssays in Honour <strong>of</strong> John C. CourtneyEdited by Hans Michelmann, Donald C. Story, andJeffrey S. SteevesCommissioned to honour the distinguished career <strong>of</strong><strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Saskatchewan Pr<strong>of</strong>essor John Courtney,Political Leadership and Representation in Canadaaddresses a range <strong>of</strong> topics <strong>of</strong> central importance togovernment and politics in contemporary Canada.Beginning with an overview <strong>of</strong> Courtney’s contributionto the field <strong>of</strong> Canadian politics, editorsHans Michelmann, Donald C. Story, and JeffreyS. Steeves bring together an impressive list <strong>of</strong>scholars to discuss a variety <strong>of</strong> issues representingthe strengths <strong>of</strong> Courtney’s work. Topics exploredinclude: the transformation <strong>of</strong> Canadian parties,the impact <strong>of</strong> party leaders on the electoral fortunes<strong>of</strong> their parties, new avenues for public involvementin the policy-making process, Royal Commissions,opinion polls, access to information, the malaise<strong>of</strong> Canadian democracy, institutional reform, andindigenous nationalism.Timely and engaging, this impressive collectionhonours an important scholar and makes a valuablecontribution to the field.Hans Michelmann is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Political Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Saskatchewan.Donald C. Story is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Political Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Saskatchewan.Jeffrey S. Steeves is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Political Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Saskatchewan.Approx. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9216-0 / 978-08020-9216-8£40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9448-1 / 978-08020-9448-3£18.00 $27.95 CApprox. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2007</strong>16 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-9187-3 / 978-08020-9187-1£35.00 $55.00 E16


P O L I T I C S A N D P O L I C YLearning Civil SocietiesShifting Contexts for Democratic Planning andGovernanceEdited by Penny Gurstein and Leonora AngelesGREEN COLLEGE THEMATIC LECTURE SERIESAs public issues stretch out to affect an ever expandingpopulation, democratizing planning and governancebecomes increasingly important. How localizedcommunities embrace the progressive qualities<strong>of</strong> civil society is a critical topic in an era wherediverse and divergent forces <strong>of</strong>ten counteract civilsociety formation and community initiatives. Thiscollection explores the theoretical underpinnings <strong>of</strong>democratic planning and governance in relation tocivil society formation and social learning.The contributors to this volume use multiplelenses to uncover the challenges <strong>of</strong> democratizingplanning and governance, helping to create abetter understanding <strong>of</strong> how civil societies learnfrom their experiences, and how these lessonsmight be applied in other contexts. Learning CivilSocieties provides insights for developing a criticalmethodology for studying civil societies and theirformations and suggests that new organizationalmechanisms within and outside civil societies mustbe created if more democratic forms <strong>of</strong> planningand governance are to emerge, be revitalized, andbecome institutionalized in the coming decades.Penny Gurstein is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School <strong>of</strong>Community and Regional Planning and the Womenand Gender Studies Program at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>British Columbia.Leonora Angeles is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theSchool <strong>of</strong> Community and Regional Planning atthe <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British Columbia.HumanitéJohn Humphrey’s Alternative Account <strong>of</strong>Human RightsClinton Timothy CurleContemporary debates about the concept <strong>of</strong> humanrights are characterized, at their core, by difficultynegotiating the tension between the universal andthe particular. One <strong>of</strong> the central challenges <strong>of</strong> anincreasingly global society is to determine how wecan affirm universal human rights while respectingthe distinctive traditions <strong>of</strong> individual cultures.To address this challenge, Clinton Timothy Curleturns to John Humphrey, an <strong>of</strong>t-ignored Canadianwho is chiefly responsible for the United Nations’Declaration <strong>of</strong> Human Rights. Using Humphrey’sjournals as a starting point, Curle illustrates howHumphrey was pr<strong>of</strong>oundly influenced by the philosophy<strong>of</strong> Henry Bergson, and in fact regardedthe Declaration as a kind <strong>of</strong> legal transliteration<strong>of</strong> Bergson’s philosophy <strong>of</strong> the open society. Curlegoes on to provide a careful analysis <strong>of</strong> Bergson’sphilosophy, and to establish an affinity betweenHumphrey’s vision <strong>of</strong> the contemporary humanrights project and the Greek Patristic tradition.Curle concludes that the Universal Declaration<strong>of</strong> Human Rights, understood in a Bergsoniancontext, provides us with a way to affirm in themodern context that there is a ground to humanfellowship which is transcendent and which <strong>of</strong>fers abasis to establish a universal ethics without a radicalhomogenization <strong>of</strong> cultures.Clinton Timothy Curle is an independent scholar livingin Ottawa.Approx. 256 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9119-9 / 978-08020-9119-2£32.00 $50.00 EApprox. 224 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9261-6 / 978-08020-9261-8£32.00 $50.00 E17


P O L I T I C S A N D P O L I C YDigital State at the Leading EdgeSandford Borins, Kenneth Kernaghan, David Brown, Nick Bontis, Perri 6, and Fred ThompsonIPAC SERIES IN PUBLIC MANAGEMENT AND GOVERNANCEThe impact <strong>of</strong> information technology (IT) on governmentin the last five years has been pr<strong>of</strong>ound.Using the governments <strong>of</strong> Canada and Ontario(both recognized as international leaders in the use<strong>of</strong> IT) as case studies, Digital State at the LeadingEdge is the first attempt to take a comprehensiveview <strong>of</strong> the impact <strong>of</strong> IT upon the whole <strong>of</strong> government,including politics and campaigning, publicconsultation, service delivery, knowledge management,and procurement.Using the concepts <strong>of</strong> channel choice, procurementmarket analysis, organizational integration,and digital leadership, this study explores the interrelationshipsamong all these aspects <strong>of</strong> the application<strong>of</strong> IT to government and politics. The authorsseek to understand how IT is transforming governmentand what the nature <strong>of</strong> that transformation is.In the process, they <strong>of</strong>fer an explanation <strong>of</strong> Canada’srelative success, and conclude with practical adviceto politicians and public servants about how tomanage IT in government more effectively.Based on new and original research undertakenover the last five years, the findings <strong>of</strong> this intriguingstudy will be <strong>of</strong> interest to those studying orworking in the fields <strong>of</strong> public administration,political science, and information technology.Sandford Borins is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> Management at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> atScarborough.Kenneth Kernaghan is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> Political Science at Brock <strong>University</strong>.David Brown is a senior associate at the Public PolicyForum in Ottawa, and a doctoral candidate in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Political Science at Carleton <strong>University</strong>.Nick Bontis is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the DeGrooteSchool <strong>of</strong> Business at McMaster <strong>University</strong>.Perri 6 is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the College <strong>of</strong> Business,Law and Social Sciences at Nottingham Trent<strong>University</strong>.Fred Thompson is Grace & Elmer Goudy Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<strong>of</strong> Public Management and Policy in the AtkinsonGraduate School <strong>of</strong> Management at Willamette<strong>University</strong>.‘Digital State at the Leading Edge fills a serious gap in theliterature by <strong>of</strong>fering a comprehensive, comparative analysis<strong>of</strong> the evolution <strong>of</strong> e-governance in Canada. The reality andthe issues surrounding the evolution <strong>of</strong> the Digital State havelost the media’s interest and this book will regenerate the dialoguein classrooms, as well as in public and private sectors.’Cynthia Alexander, Department <strong>of</strong> Political Science,Acadia <strong>University</strong>Of related interest:Insurgency OnlineWeb Activism and Global ConflictMichael Y. Dartnell0-8020-8553-9 / 978-08020-8553-5£15.00 / $24.95 / 2006Approx. 416 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9118-0 / 978-08020-9118-5£48.00 $75.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9490-2 / 978-08020-9490-2£22.50 $35.00 C18


L I T E R A R Y S T U D I E SP O L I T I C S A N D P O L I C YPolicy Analysis in CanadaThe State <strong>of</strong> the ArtEdited by Laurent Dobuzinskis, Michael Howlett,and David LaycockIPAC SERIES IN PUBLIC MANAGEMENT AND GOVERNANCEThe growth <strong>of</strong> what some academics refer to as ‘thepolicy analysis movement’ represents an effort toreform certain aspects <strong>of</strong> government behaviour.The policy analysis movement is the result <strong>of</strong> effortsmade by actors inside and outside formal politicaldecision-making processes to improve policy outcomesby applying systematic evaluative rationalityto the development and implementation <strong>of</strong> policyoptions. This volume <strong>of</strong>fers a comprehensive overview<strong>of</strong> the many ways in which the policy analysismovement has been conducted, and to what effect,in Canadian governments and, for the first time, inbusiness associations, labour unions, universities,and other non-governmental organizations.Editors Laurent Dobuzinskis, Michael Howlett,and David Laycock have brought together a widerange <strong>of</strong> contributors to address the sociology <strong>of</strong>policy analysis, demonstrating how analysts workingin different organizations tend to have differentinterests and to utilize different techniques. Theycompare and analyze the significance <strong>of</strong> these differentstyles and approaches, and speculate abouttheir impact on the policy process.Laurent Dobuzinskis is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Political Science at Simon Fraser<strong>University</strong>.Michael Howlett is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Political Science at Simon Fraser <strong>University</strong>.David Laycock is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor and chair in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Political Science at Simon Fraser<strong>University</strong>.Strategic Science in thePublic InterestCanada’s Government Laboratories and Science-Based AgenciesG. Bruce Doern and Jeffrey S. KinderThe past twenty years have seen considerable shiftsand struggles in ‘government science’ – that is, in theway the state funds, supports, regulates, conducts anduses scientific and technological activity. Focusing onfederal labs and agencies, Strategic Science in thePublic Interest explores how these labs have beenlocated within, and <strong>of</strong>ten buried by, the larger commercially-focusedfederal innovation agenda.G. Bruce Doern and Jeffrey S. Kinder examinefour labs whose mandates deal with the Alberta oilsands, environmental technologies, wildlife research,and mining and metals, respectively. The authorsuse these cases to explain why a better middle-levelapproach to analysis is needed for strategic publicinterest-centred government science. They illustratethe importance <strong>of</strong> understanding the variety, as wellas the similarity, <strong>of</strong> federal science and technologylabs and agencies, and <strong>of</strong> instituting policies thatreflect this diversity. The growing importance <strong>of</strong>Related Science Activities (RSA) is also explored, aswell as the core trade-<strong>of</strong>fs between commercial andpublic goods science in their mandates and theirinternal capacities.G. Bruce Doern is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School<strong>of</strong> Public Policy and Administration at Carleton<strong>University</strong> and the Department <strong>of</strong> Politics at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Exeter.Jeffrey S. Kinder is a Ph.D. candidate in the School<strong>of</strong> Public Policy and Administration at Carleton<strong>University</strong>.Approx. 592 pp / 6 x 9 /June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8004-9 / 978-08020-8004-2£65.00 $100.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-3787-9 / 978-08020-3787-9£32.00 $50.00 CApprox. 224 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>58 halftones, 1 tableCloth ISBN 0-8020-8853-8 / 978-08020-8853-6£32.00 $50.00 E19


P O L I T I C S A N D P O L I C YGreener PasturesDecentralizing the Regulation <strong>of</strong> AgriculturalPollutionElizabeth BrubakerUNIVERSITY OF TORONTO CENTRE FOR PUBLIC MANAGEMENTMONOGRAPH SERIESAs farms increase in size and become increasinglyindustrialized, the problem <strong>of</strong> agricultural pollutionis gaining urgency across Canada. The response frommost environmentalists and provincial governmentsis to push for more centralized regulation. In GreenerPastures, Elizabeth Brubaker exposes the detrimentaleffects <strong>of</strong> such regulatory changes, which tend toexacerbate, rather than curb, pollution.For centuries, Brubaker explains, conflictsabout farming were resolved by the parties directlyinvolved, aided by common-law courts. The rule,‘use your own property so as not to harm another’s,’fairly and effectively resolved disputes betweenfarmers and their neighbours and curbed environmentaldamage. Beginning in the 1970s, however,concerns about restraints on agriculture’s growthprompted governments to replace the common lawwith more permissive provincial statutes.Greener Pastures chronicles the centralization <strong>of</strong>agricultural regulation and the resulting environmentalharm. Brubaker focuses, specifically, onthe right-to-farm laws (passed by every province inrecent decades) that have freed farmers from common-lawliability for the nuisances they create. Sheshows how these laws have made possible an unsustainableintensification <strong>of</strong> agriculture, and arguesfor a decentralized, rights-based decision-makingregime. This thoroughly researched and impressivelythought-out study challenges many commonassumptions about environmental regulation, andproposes fresh answers to grave environmental andpolitical questions.Elizabeth Brubaker is the executive director <strong>of</strong>Environment Probe.Fair Trade C<strong>of</strong>feeThe Prospects and Pitfalls <strong>of</strong> Market-Driven SocialJusticeGavin FridellSTUDIES IN COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY AND PUBLICPOLICYOver the past two decades, sales <strong>of</strong> fair trade c<strong>of</strong>feehave grown significantly and the fair trade networkhas emerged as an important international developmentproject. Activists and commentators havebeen quick to celebrate this sales growth, which hasallowed socially just trade, labour, and environmentalstandards to be extended to hundreds <strong>of</strong> thousands<strong>of</strong> small farmers and poor rural workers throughoutthe Global South. While recent assessments <strong>of</strong> thefair trade network have focused on its impact onlocal poverty alleviation, however, the broader political-economicand historically-rooted structures thatframe it have been left largely unexamined.Addressing this omission, Gavin Fridell arguesthat while local level analysis is important, examiningthe impacts <strong>of</strong> broader structures on fair tradec<strong>of</strong>fee networks, and vice versa, are <strong>of</strong> equal if notgreater significance in determining its long-termdevelopmental potential. Using fair trade groups inMexico and Canada as case studies, Fridell examinesfair trade c<strong>of</strong>fee at both the global and local level,assessing it as a development project and locating itwithin political and development theory. In addition,Fridell provides in-depth historical analysis <strong>of</strong>fair trade c<strong>of</strong>fee in the context <strong>of</strong> global trade, andcompares it to a variety <strong>of</strong> post-war developmentprojects within the c<strong>of</strong>fee industry.Timely, meticulously researched, and engaging,this study challenges many commonly heldassumptions about the long-term prospects andpitfalls <strong>of</strong> the fair trade network’s market-drivenstrategy in the era <strong>of</strong> globalization.Gavin Fridell is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Politics at Trent <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 152 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-7727-8621-6 / 978-07727-8621-0£28.00 $45.00 EPaper ISBN 0-7727-8620-8 / 978-07727-8620-3£13.00 $19.95 CApprox. 336 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2007</strong>15 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9238-1 / 978-08020-9238-0£32.00 $50.00 E20


E D U C AT I O NThe Holistic CurriculumSecond EditionJohn P. MillerHolistic education is concerned with connectionsin human experience – connections between mindand body, between linear thinking and intuitiveways <strong>of</strong> knowing, between academic disciplines,between individual and community, and betweenthe personal self and the transpersonal Self that allspiritual traditions believe exist beyond the ego.First published in 1988, The Holistic Curriculumexamines the philosophical, psychological, andsocial foundations <strong>of</strong> holistic education, provides anoutline <strong>of</strong> its history, and discusses practical applicationsfor this type <strong>of</strong> learning in the classroom.This revised and expanded second edition conciselydescribes how holistic thinking integratesspiritual and scientific perspectives, drawing onromantic, humanistic, and other radical alternativesto the atomistic worldview <strong>of</strong> the modernage. The role <strong>of</strong> the teacher, the issue <strong>of</strong> accountability,and strategies for implementing the HolisticCurriculum are also discussed.John P. Miller is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Centre for TeacherDevelopment at the Ontario Institute for Studies inEducation <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.The Theatre <strong>of</strong> UrbanYouth and Schooling in Dangerous TimesKathleen GallagherForeword by Michelle FineBecause <strong>of</strong> its powerful socializing effects, theschool has always been a site <strong>of</strong> cultural, political,and academic conflict. In an age where terms suchas ‘hard-to-teach,’ and ‘at-risk’ beset our pedagogicaldiscourses, where students have grown upin systems plagued by anti-immigrant, anti-welfare,‘zero-tolerance’ rhetoric, how we frame and understandthe dynamics <strong>of</strong> classrooms has serious ethicalimplications and powerful consequences.Using theatre and drama education as a specialwindow into school life in four urban secondaryschools in <strong>Toronto</strong> and New York City, The Theatre<strong>of</strong> Urban examines the ways in which these schoolsreflect the cultural and political shifts in big cityNorth American schooling policies, politics, andpractices <strong>of</strong> the early twenty-first century.Resisting facile comparisons <strong>of</strong> Canadian andAmerican schooling systems, Kathleen Gallagheropts instead for a rigorous analysis <strong>of</strong> the contextspecificfeatures, both the differences and similarities,between urban cultures and urban schools in thetwo countries. Gallagher re-examines familiar ‘urbanissues’ facing these schools, such as racism, classism,(hetero)sexism, and religious fundamentalism inlight <strong>of</strong> the theatre performances <strong>of</strong> diverse youngpeople and their reflections upon their own creativework together. The Theatre <strong>of</strong> Urban provides newinsights into the conflicts that <strong>of</strong>ten erupt in thesehighly charged school spaces.Kathleen Gallagher is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor andCanada Research Chair at the Ontario Institute forStudies in Education <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Approx. 208 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2007</strong>23 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9218-7 / 978-08020-9218-2£42.00 $65.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9449-X / 978-08020-9449-0£21.50 $32.95 CApprox. 192 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>13 photographsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9291-8 / 978-08020-9291-5£32.00 $50.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9483-X / 978-08020-9483-4£16.00 $24.95 C21


C U LT U R A L S T U D I E SDefamiliarizing theAboriginalCultural Practices and Decolonization in CanadaJulia V. EmberleyFrom the Canadian Indian Act to Freud’s Totemand Taboo to films such as Nanook <strong>of</strong> the North, allmanner <strong>of</strong> cultural artefacts were used to create adistinction between savagery and civilization. InDefamiliarizing the Aboriginal, Julia V. Emberleyexamines the historical production <strong>of</strong> aboriginalityin colonial cultural practices and its effects in shapingthe everyday lives <strong>of</strong> indigenous women, youth,and children.Adopting a materialist-semiotic approach,Emberley explores the ways in which representationaltechnologies – film, photography, andprint culture, including legal documents and literature– were crucial to British colonial practices.Many indigenous scholars, writers, and artists are,however, confounding these practices by deployingaboriginality as a complex and enabling sign<strong>of</strong> social, cultural, and political transformation.Emberley gives due attention to this importantwork, studying a wide range <strong>of</strong> topics, includingrace, place, and motherhood, primitivism and violence,and sexuality and global political kinships.Because <strong>of</strong> Emberley’s multidisciplinary approach,Defamiliarizing the Aboriginal will be <strong>of</strong> interest toscholars and students <strong>of</strong> cultural studies, indigenousstudies, women’s studies, postcolonial and colonialstudies, literature, and film.Julia V. Emberley is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> WesternOntario.Fluid Screens, ExpandedCinemaEdited by Janine Marchessault and Susan LordDIGITAL FUTURESAs a medium, film is constantly evolving bothin form and in content. Fluid Screens, ExpandedCinema considers the shift from traditional cinemato new frontiers <strong>of</strong> interactive, performative, andnetworked media.Using the theories <strong>of</strong> Marshall McLuhan andGilles Deleuze as a starting point, renowned scholarsfrom the fields <strong>of</strong> film theory, communicationstudies, cultural studies, and new media theoryexplore the ways in which digital technology istransforming contemporary visual culture. Theessays consider a series <strong>of</strong> questions: What constitutesthe ‘new’ in new media? How are digitalaesthetics different from film aesthetics? What newforms <strong>of</strong> spectatorship and storytelling, politicalcommunity, and commodity production are beingenabled through the digital media?Using Gene Youngblood’s 1970 book ExpandedCinema as an anchor, Fluid Screens, Expanded Cinemaunderstands the digital not simply as a technologicalform, but also as an experience <strong>of</strong> space and timethat is tied to capitalism. This important collectionis unique in framing a range <strong>of</strong> social justice issueswith aesthetic theories <strong>of</strong> new digital screen culturethat will appeal to scholars and multimedia artistsprepared to break new ground.Janine Marchessault is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor andCanada Research Chair in Art, Digital Media, andGlobalization in the Faculty <strong>of</strong> Fine Arts at York<strong>University</strong>.Susan Lord is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Film Studies at Queen’s <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>23 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9151-2 / 978-08020-9151-2£40.00 $60.00 EApprox. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>9 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-9297-7 / 978-08020-9297-7£24.95 $39.95 E22


I TA L I A N S T U D I E SSex, the Self, and the SacredWomen in the Cinema <strong>of</strong> Pier Paolo PasoliniColleen Ryan-ScheutzTORONTO ITALIAN STUDIESBorn in Bologna in 1922, filmmaker Pier PaoloPasolini was one <strong>of</strong> the most controversial Europeanintellectuals <strong>of</strong> his time. Pasolini believed the‘authentic’ Italy – with its many languages and subcultures,its ancient roots and idiosyncrasies – to bedisappearing before his eyes, and he used his filmsto denounce the social and ideological forces hefelt were responsible for this detrimental change.Rather than campaign with overtly political films,however, Pasolini vested ideological impetus in keyfilm characters, many <strong>of</strong> whom were women.Drawing upon Italy’s distinct socio-cultural historyas well as feminist and psychoanalytic approachesto film, Colleen Ryan-Scheutz explores the ways inwhich Pasolini’s representations <strong>of</strong> women revealhis concerns about purity in modern Italian society.Ryan-Scheutz demonstrates how Pasolini usedhis female figures onscreen to critique the rulingclass from a decisively different perspective andpropose a range <strong>of</strong> alternatives to the increasinglysterile and capitalistic world <strong>of</strong> Italyand the West. Providing a newcritical approach to Pasolinistudies, Sex, the Self, andthe Sacred bringspsychoanalyticand feminist theories to bear on the auteur’slifelong poetics and theoretical writings on cinema.Colleen Ryan-Scheutz is the director <strong>of</strong> the ItalianLanguage Program and an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Romance Languages and Literaturesat the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Notre Dame.Of related interest:Pier Paolo PasoliniContemporary PerspectivesEdited by Patrick Rumble and Bart Testa0-8020-7737-4 / 978-08020-7737-0£12.50 / $19.95 / 1994Approx. 336 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>10 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9285-3 / 978-08020-9285-4£40.00 $60.00 EMedea (Maria Callas) communicating withthe spiritual forces around her in Medea (1969)23


I TA L I A N S T U D I E SReading and Writing theMediterraneanEssays by Vincenzo ConsoloEdited by Norma Bouchard and Massimo LolliniTORONTO ITALIAN STUDIESVincenzo Consolo is counted by many criticsamong the most significant voices in contemporaryworld literature. This volume makes available forthe first time in English an edited and annotatedvolume <strong>of</strong> Consolo’s short stories, essays, and otherwritings pertaining to the diverse cultures and histories<strong>of</strong> Sicily and the Mediterranean basin.The Mediterranean region holds a particularfascination for Consolo, who seeks through hiswriting to recover the memory <strong>of</strong> a Sicilian andMediterranean history, which he feels is presentlybeing threatened by the forces <strong>of</strong> late-capitalistWestern culture. His writings about the region alsovoice a commitment to questions <strong>of</strong> ethics andhuman rights, which have been brought to the foreby recent tensions dividing this area and forcing amass exodus <strong>of</strong> its people. At a time when this part<strong>of</strong> the world is under threat from unbridled globalizationas well as dangerous forms <strong>of</strong> ethnic andreligious fundamentalism, Consolo’s words <strong>of</strong>fer aninsightful rethinking <strong>of</strong> regionalism within a globalhierarchy <strong>of</strong> values. They remind us <strong>of</strong> the necessity<strong>of</strong> moderation and contingency, and in so doing,attempt to recover a moral and ethical dimensionfor our collective life.Norma Bouchard is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Modern and Classical Languages at the <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> Connecticut.Massimo Lollini is Hatzantonis DistinguishedPr<strong>of</strong>essor in Italian in the Department <strong>of</strong> RomanceLanguages at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Oregon.Civilization andDemocracyThe Salvemini Anthology <strong>of</strong> Cattaneo’s WritingsEdited and introduced by Carlo G. Lacaita andFilippo SabettiTHE LORENZO DA PONTE ITALIAN LIBRARYNineteenth-century Italy is a vast, unexplored territoryin the history <strong>of</strong> modern political thought and liberaldemocratic theory. Apart from Mazzini, Pareto, andMosca, the authors <strong>of</strong> this period are little read, eventhough their central concerns – the riddle <strong>of</strong> humanliberation, progress, and liberty – are as importanttoday as ever. This volume presents a selection <strong>of</strong> thewritings <strong>of</strong> Carlo Cattaneo (1801–1869), one <strong>of</strong> theperiod’s most important thinkers, as selected by anequally important personage <strong>of</strong> a subsequent time, theanti-Fascist intellectual Gaetano Salvemini.Cattaneo had a pr<strong>of</strong>ound sense <strong>of</strong> the historicalcontingencies underlying the quest both to understandhuman affairs and to realize a self-governing society.Cattaneo’s ideas and framework <strong>of</strong> analysis were notshaped by a narrow intra-academic agenda but by thegreat social, economic, and political transformations<strong>of</strong> his time. The issues he addressed included problems<strong>of</strong> revolution, reform, and change in the passage tomodernity, which extended far beyond the confines <strong>of</strong>nineteenth-century Italy.The selection <strong>of</strong> original pieces presented in thistranslation is preceded by an introduction by theeditors, Carlo G. Lacaita and Filippo Sabetti, whichguides the reader through Cattaneo’s thinking andputs it in a comparative context.Carlo G. Lacaita is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Milan.Filippo Sabetti is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Political Science at McGill <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 352 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9210-1 / 978-08020-9210-6£42.00 $65.00 EApprox. 272 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9205-5 / 978-08020-9205-2£40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9445-7 / 978-08020-9445-2£18.00 $27.95 C24


I TA L I A N S T U D I E SCesare Pavese andAntonio ChiuminattoTheir CorrespondenceEdited by Mark PietralungaTORONTO ITALIAN STUDIESItalian poet, novelist, literary critic and translatorCesare Pavese (1908–1950) is generally recognizedas one <strong>of</strong> the most important writers <strong>of</strong>his period. Between the years 1929 and 1933,Pavese enjoyed a rich correspondence with hisItalian American friend, the musician and educatorAntonio Chiuminatto (1904–1973). The nature <strong>of</strong>this correspondence is primarily related to Pavese’sthirst to learn about American culture, its latestbooks, its most significant contemporary writers, aswell as its slang. This volume presents an annotatededition <strong>of</strong> Pavese and Chiuminatto’s complete epistolaryexchange.Mark Pietralunga’s brilliant introduction provideshistorical and cultural context for the lettersand traces Pavese’s early development as a leadingAmericanist and translator. The volume alsoincludes an appendix <strong>of</strong> Chiuminatto’s detailedannotations and thorough explanations <strong>of</strong> colloquialAmerican terms and slang, drawn fromthe works <strong>of</strong> Sinclair Lewis, Sherwood Anderson,and William Faulkner. A lively and illuminatingexchange, this collection ultimately corroboratescritical opinion that America was the ignitingspark <strong>of</strong> Pavese’s literary beginnings as a writer andtranslator.Mark Pietralunga is the Victor B. OelschlagerPr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Modern Languages in the Department<strong>of</strong> Modern Languages and Linguistics at FloridaState <strong>University</strong>.Dante’s Hermeneutics <strong>of</strong>SalvationPassages to Freedom in The Divine ComedyChristine O’Connell BaurTORONTO ITALIAN STUDIESWidely considered one <strong>of</strong> the greatest works producedin Europe during the Middle Ages, Dante’sLa Divina Commedia (The Divine Comedy) hasinfluenced countless generations <strong>of</strong> readers, yet surprisinglyfew books have attempted to explain thephilosophical relevance <strong>of</strong> this great epic. Dante’sHermeneutics <strong>of</strong> Salvation takes on this ambitiousproject.Turning to Heidegger to provide a theoreticalframework for her study, Christine O’ConnellBaur illustrates how Dante’s poem invites its readersto undertake their own existential-hermeneuticjourney to freedom. As the pilgrim progresses inhis journey, she argues, he moves beyond a merelyliteral, ‘infernal’ self-interpretation that is groundedon present attachments to things in the world. If wereaders accompany the pilgrim in this hermeneuticconversion, we will see that our own existentialcommitments can help disclose the meaning <strong>of</strong> ourworld and our own finite freedom.A work <strong>of</strong> considerable importance for bothteachers and students <strong>of</strong> Dante studies, Dante’sHermeneutics <strong>of</strong> Salvation will also prove useful toscholars working in medieval studies, philosophy,and literary theory.Christine O’Connell Baur holds a Ph.D. in philosophyfrom the Catholic <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> America andhas served as a lecturer at the Rome campus <strong>of</strong> theThomas More College <strong>of</strong> Liberal Arts, and as ateaching fellow at Fordham <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9294-2 / 978-08020-9294-6£40.00 $60.00 EApprox. 288 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9206-3 / 978-08020-9206-9£35.00 $55.00 E25


L A N G U A G EWilliams’ Hebrew SyntaxThird EditionRonald J. WilliamsRevised and expanded by John C. BeckmanDeveloped by Ronald J. Williams over fifteen years ina formal course on Hebrew syntax at the <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>, Williams’ Hebrew Syntax has since beenwidely used as an intermediate textbook in BiblicalHebrew. First published in 1967, with a second editionissued in 1976, this substantially revised andexpanded third edition is designed as an intermediatetextbook for students <strong>of</strong> Biblical Hebrew. The guideexplains the meanings <strong>of</strong> morphological categoriesand the way that words, phrases, and clauses relateto one another to create meaning.Expanded to meet the demands <strong>of</strong> contemporaryclassroom use, John C. Beckman’s third edition als<strong>of</strong>unctions as a grammatical reference, providingupdated analysis and thoroughly up-to-date crossreferencesto literature in the field. By providinginterlinear translations and final translations forexamples, this latest edition better enables studentswith modest vocabulary and knowledge <strong>of</strong> parsing tounderstand the examples and grammatical points.Ronald J. Williams (1917–1997) was a pr<strong>of</strong>essoremeritus in the Department <strong>of</strong> Near EasternStudies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.John C. Beckman is the Hebrew Language Programresearch and teaching assistant at Gordon-ConwellTheological Seminary.Features <strong>of</strong> Williams’ Hebrew Syntax, Third Edition:• Designed for students who have completed onlytwo semesters <strong>of</strong> previous instruction in basicHebrew• Provides the most thorough and up-to-datecross-references with other grammatical literaturein the field• Instruction can be covered completely in onesemester• Definitions have been expanded and examplesare explained as needed• Alternate terminology provided where relevant• Differences between grammatical categorieshave been added• Interlinear translations allow students withmodest Hebrew vocabulary and parsing experienceto understand examples• Twenty-page detailed outline included for easyreferenceApprox. 300 pp / 6 ¾ x 9 ¾ / June <strong>2007</strong>Paper ISBN 0-8020-9429-5 / 978-08020-9429-2£15.00 $24.95 C26


B O O K H I S T O R YThe Pr<strong>of</strong>essional LiteraryAgent in Britain,1880 –1920Mary Ann GilliesSTUDIES IN BOOK AND PRINT CULTUREBreaking new ground in the study <strong>of</strong> British literaryculture during an important transitional period,this new work by Mary Ann Gillies focuses on thepr<strong>of</strong>essional literary agent, whose emergence inBritain around 1880 coincided with, and accelerated,the transformation <strong>of</strong> both publishing andauthorship.Like other recent studies in book and printculture, The Pr<strong>of</strong>essional Literary Agent in Britainoperates from the central premise that the business<strong>of</strong> authorship is inextricably tied to the aesthetics<strong>of</strong> literary praxis. Rather than providing a broadoverview <strong>of</strong> the period, however, it focuses on aspecific figure, the literary agent. Gillies traces theinfluence <strong>of</strong> two prominent agents – A.P. Watt(generally acknowledged as the first pr<strong>of</strong>essionalliterary agent) and J.B. Pinker (the leading figurein the second wave <strong>of</strong> agenting) – focusing on theirrelationships with two key clients each. These casestudies not only provide insight into the businessdynamics operating in the literary world at thistime, but also illustrate the shifting definition <strong>of</strong>literature itself that characterized this period.Mary Ann Gillies is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at Simon Fraser <strong>University</strong>.Editing ModernityWomen and Little-Magazine Cultures in Canada,1916–1956Dean IrvineSTUDIES IN BOOK AND PRINT CULTUREThe period between 1916 and 1956 was a uniqueinterval in the history <strong>of</strong> Canadian publishing.This period not only witnessed the establishment<strong>of</strong> a significant number <strong>of</strong> non-commercial literary,arts, and cultural magazines, it also happened thatan unprecedented number <strong>of</strong> those involved in thecreation and subsequent editing <strong>of</strong> this new type<strong>of</strong> magazine – the little-magazine – were women.Based on extensive new archival and literary historicalresearch, Editing Modernity examines theseCanadian women writers and editors and their rolein the production and dissemination <strong>of</strong> modernistand leftist little magazines.At once a history <strong>of</strong> literary women and theemergent formations and conditions <strong>of</strong> culturalmodernity in Canada, Irvine’s study relates women’seditorial work and poetry to a series <strong>of</strong> crises andtransitions in modernist and leftist magazine communities,to the public hearings and publishedfindings <strong>of</strong> the Massey Commission <strong>of</strong> 1949–1951,and to the later development <strong>of</strong> feminist literarymagazines and editorial collectives during the1970s and 1980s. Writers and editors examined inthis study include Dorothy Livesay, Anne Marriott,Floris McLaren, P.K. Page, Miriam Waddington,Flora Macdonald Denison, Florence Custance,Catherine Harmon, Aileen Collins, and MargaretFairley.Dean Irvine is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at Dalhousie <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 304 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9147-4 / 978-08020-9147-5£42.00 $65.00 EApprox. 336 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9271-3 / 978-08020-9271-7£35.00 $55.00 E27


L I T E R A R Y S T U D I E SThe Twentieth-Century Humanist CriticsFrom Spitzer to FryeWilliam CalinThe Twentieth-Century Humanist Critics revisits thework and place <strong>of</strong> eight scholars roughly contemporarywith Anglo-American New Criticism: LeoSpitzer, Ernst Robert Curtius, Erich Auerbach, AlbertBéguin, Jean Rousset, C.S. Lewis, F.O. Matthiessen,and Northrop Frye. William Calin first considers theachievements <strong>of</strong> each critic, examining his methodologyand basic presuppositions as well as the critiquesmarshalled against him. Calin explores their relationto history, to canon-formation, and to our currenttheoretical debates. He then goes on to show how alleight form a current in the history <strong>of</strong> criticism relatedto both humanism and modernism.Underscoring the international, cosmopolitanaspects <strong>of</strong> literary scholarship in the twentieth century,The Twentieth-Century Humanist Critics bringstogether humanist critical traditions from Europe, theUnited Kingdom, and North America and reveals thesurprising extent to which, in various languages andacademic systems, critics were posing similar questionsand <strong>of</strong>fering a gamut <strong>of</strong> similar responses.‘The Twentieth-Century Humanist Critics is a very engagingwork, full <strong>of</strong> insights on critics that are due for a re-reading.Eminently readable, William Calin’s book is timely andoriginal in its treatment <strong>of</strong> the relationship between humanismand contemporary literary studies.’Francesco G. Loriggio, College <strong>of</strong> Humanities, Carleton<strong>University</strong>Also by William Calin:Minority Literatures and ModernismScots, Breton, and Occitan, 1920–19900-8020-8365-X / 978-08020-8365-4£20.00 / $32.95 / 2001The French Tradition and the Literature <strong>of</strong>Medieval England0-8020-7202-X / 978-08020-7202-3£19.50 / $33.95 / 1994William Calin is a graduate research pr<strong>of</strong>essor inthe Department <strong>of</strong> Romance Languages at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Florida.Approx. 288 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9283-7 / 978-08020-9283-0£40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9475-9 / 978-08020-9475-9£18.00 $27.95 C28


L I T E R A R Y S T U D I E SAnatomy <strong>of</strong> CriticismFour EssaysNorthrop FryeEdited by Robert D. DenhamCOLLECTED WORKS OF NORTHROP FRYE, VOLUME 22This volume, the twenty-second in the acclaimedCollected Works <strong>of</strong> Northrop Frye series, presentsFrye’s most influential work, Anatomy <strong>of</strong> Criticism(1957). In four stylish and sweeping essays, Fryeattempts to formulate an overall view <strong>of</strong> the scope,principles, and techniques <strong>of</strong> literary criticism andthe conventions <strong>of</strong> literature – its modes, symbols,archetypes, and genres. He makes the case for criticismas a legitimate and structured science, a sciencethat he would go on to wield with great influenceover the course <strong>of</strong> his distinguished career.Robert D. Denham’s introduction to this editionexamines the book’s genesis, its initial reception, andits relation to Frye’s other works, particularly FearfulSymmetry (Volume 14 in the series). He highlightsthe diagrammatic way <strong>of</strong> thinking that characterizesFrye’s brand <strong>of</strong> structuralism and explores themeaning <strong>of</strong> the word ‘anatomy.’ Denham also providescontext for the work, considering the criticaltradition out <strong>of</strong> which it emerged, as well as howit relates to some <strong>of</strong> the movements that appearedafter the waning <strong>of</strong> structuralism. A key volumein the Collected Works series, this annotated andexpertly introduced edition <strong>of</strong> Anatomy <strong>of</strong> Criticismwill be sure to satisfy Frye’s many admirers.Robert D. Denham is the John P. Fishwick Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<strong>of</strong> English Emeritus at Roanoke College.Northrop Frye and thePhenomenology <strong>of</strong> MythGlen Robert GillFRYE STUDIESIn Northrop Frye and the Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Myth,Glen Robert Gill compares Frye’s theories aboutmyth to those <strong>of</strong> three other major twentieth-centurymythologists: C.G. Jung, Joseph Campbell,and Mircea Eliade. Gill explores the theories <strong>of</strong>these respective thinkers as they relate to Frye’s discussions<strong>of</strong> the phenomenological nature <strong>of</strong> myth,as well as its religious, literary, and psychologicalsignificance.Gill substantiates Frye’s work as both moreradical and more tenable than that <strong>of</strong> his three contemporaries.Eliade’s writings are shown to have ametaphysical basis that abrogates an understanding<strong>of</strong> myth as truly phenomenological, while Jung’stheory <strong>of</strong> the collective unconscious emerges as similarlyproblematic. Likewise, Gill argues, Campbell’swork, while incorporating some phenomenologicalprogressions, settles on a questionable metaphysicalfoundation. Gill shows how, in contrast to theseother mythologists, Frye’s theory <strong>of</strong> myth – firstarticulated in Fearful Symmetry (1947) and culminatingin Words with Power (1990) – is genuinelyphenomenological.With excursions into fields such as literarytheory, depth psychology, theology, and anthropology,Northrop Frye and the Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Mythis essential to the understanding <strong>of</strong> Frye’s importantmythological work.Glen Robert Gill is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at Troy <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 672 pp / 6 1 /8 x 9 ¼ / February <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9272-1 / 978-08020-9272-4£65.00 $100.00 EApprox. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9116-4 / 978-08020-9116-1£32.00 $50.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9404-X / 978-08020-9404-9£15.00 $24.95 C29


L I T E R A R Y S T U D I E SBefore the CountryNative Renaissance, Canadian MythologyStephanie McKenzieImagining Joyce andDerridaBetween Finnegans Wake and GlasPeter MahonIn the late 1960s and early 1970s, Canada witnessedan explosion in the production <strong>of</strong> literaryworks by Aboriginal writers, a development thatsome critics have called the Native Renaissance. InBefore the Country, Stephanie McKenzie exploresthe extent to which this growing body <strong>of</strong> literatureinfluenced non-Native Canadian writers andhas been fundamental in shaping our search for anational mythology.In the context <strong>of</strong> Northrop Frye’s theories <strong>of</strong>myth, and in light <strong>of</strong> the attempts <strong>of</strong> social criticsand early anthologists to define Canada andCanadian literature, McKenzie discusses the waysin which our decidedly fractured sense <strong>of</strong> literarynationalism has set indigenous culture apart fromthe mainstream. She examines anew the aesthetics<strong>of</strong> Native Literature and, in a style that is creativeas much as it is scholarly, McKenzie incorporatesthe principles <strong>of</strong> storytelling into the unfolding <strong>of</strong>her argument. This strategy not only enlivens hernarrative, but also underscores the need for newtheoretical strategies in the criticism <strong>of</strong> Aboriginalliteratures. Before the Country invites us to engage inone such endeavour.Stephanie McKenzie is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor inthe Department <strong>of</strong> English at Northern Michigan<strong>University</strong>.How is meaning in one text shaped by another?Does intertextuality consist <strong>of</strong> more than simplereferences by one text to another? In ImaginingJoyce and Derrida, Peter Mahon explores thesequestions through a comparative study <strong>of</strong> JamesJoyce’s Finnegans Wake and the deconstructive texts<strong>of</strong> Jacques Derrida, with a particular emphasis onGlas.Mahon’s reading <strong>of</strong> these works insists on thinkingthrough Derrida’s ‘Hegelian’ manner <strong>of</strong> understandingJoyce. Using key texts <strong>of</strong> Vico, Kant, andHeidegger, Mahon develops a theoretical frameworkthat allows him to theorize and re-conceptualizethe intertextuality between Joyce and Derridain terms <strong>of</strong> the imagination. In order to test theflexibility <strong>of</strong> this imaginative framework, Mahonapplies it to a sustained comparison <strong>of</strong> FinnegansWake and Derrida’s under-appreciated masterwork,Glas. In so doing, Mahon reconfigures and expandsthe intertextual terrain between Joyce and Derridabeyond a simple catalogue <strong>of</strong> those instances whereDerrida cites Joyce. Engaging and innovative, thiserudite study makes an important contribution toliterary critical theory.Peter Mahon teaches in the Department <strong>of</strong> Englishat the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British Columbia.Approx. 224 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9208-X / 978-08020-9208-3£35.00 $55.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9446-5 / 978-08020-9446-9£18.00 $27.95 CApprox. 384 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2007</strong>2 IllustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9249-7 / 978-08020-9249-6£42.00 $65.00 E30


L I T E R A R Y S T U D I E SWriting on the ImageReading William MorrisEdited by David LathamMoral TasteAesthetics, Subjectivity, and Social Power in theNineteenth-Century NovelMarjorie GarsonWilliam Morris was a Victorian master <strong>of</strong> all trades,standing at the forefront <strong>of</strong> five historic movementsin western culture. As the author <strong>of</strong> The Defence <strong>of</strong>Guenevere in 1858, he wrote the first book <strong>of</strong> Pre-Raphaelite poetry. Co-founder <strong>of</strong> Morris & Co. in1861, he was the leader <strong>of</strong> the Arts and Crafts movement,designing textiles, wallpapers, and stainedglass. Editor <strong>of</strong> The Commonweal for the SocialistLeague in the 1880s and lecturing at political rallies,he was the leader <strong>of</strong> the socialist movementfor revolution in Britain. Founder <strong>of</strong> the Kelmscott<strong>Press</strong> in 1891, he was the leader <strong>of</strong> the private-pressmovement, with his Kelmscott Chaucer among themost beautiful books ever printed. The innovativeauthor <strong>of</strong> eight prose romances in the 1890s,he was the leading force in shifting the genre <strong>of</strong>fiction from the novel to the romance, the primaryinfluence on C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien.Writing on the Image is a collection <strong>of</strong> essaysthat showcases the varied canon <strong>of</strong> Morris. Theessays demonstrate how the most revolutionary artist,writer, and socialist <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth centurynow stands at the centre <strong>of</strong> interdisciplinary studiesin the twenty-first century, challenging academicsand artisans alike to pursue an ideal community <strong>of</strong>scholarship, craftsmanship, and subversive statesmanship.One <strong>of</strong> the particular concerns <strong>of</strong> the Victorianswas the notion <strong>of</strong> ‘taste’ and the idea that good tastein any field – clothing, décor, landscape, music,art, even food – meant good taste in all, and thattastefulness was a reliable sign <strong>of</strong> moral sensitivity,indeed <strong>of</strong> national, even racial, quality. Moral Tasteis a study <strong>of</strong> the ideological work done by the equation<strong>of</strong> good taste and moral refinement in a selection<strong>of</strong> nineteenth-century writings.Drawing on the theories <strong>of</strong> Pierre Bourdieu,Marjorie Garson discusses a number <strong>of</strong> Victoriantexts that treat aesthetic refinement as an essentialmark <strong>of</strong> proper middle-class subjectivity. She situateseach text in its historical moment and considersit in the light <strong>of</strong> contemporary anxieties, providinginsights into why certain ways <strong>of</strong> representing andendorsing tastefulness remained serviceable formany decades. In addition, this study demonstrateshow the discourse <strong>of</strong> taste engenders a wider discourseabout middle-class subjectivity and entitlement,national character, and racial identity in theperiod.Marjorie Garson is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emerita in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><strong>Toronto</strong>.David Latham is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>English at York <strong>University</strong> and the editor <strong>of</strong> TheJournal <strong>of</strong> Pre-Raphaelite Studies.Approx. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>16 PhotosCloth ISBN 0-8020-9247-0 / 978-08020-9247-2£32.00 $50.00 EApprox. 544 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9138-5 / 978-08020-9138-3£48.00 $75.00 E31


L I T E R A R Y S T U D I E SCervantes’ Epic NovelEmpire, Religion, and the Dream Life <strong>of</strong> Heroes inPersilesMichael Armstrong-RocheUNIVERSITY OF TORONTO ROMANCE SERIESMiguel de Cervantes conceived his final work, TheLabours <strong>of</strong> Persiles and Sigismunda: A Northern Story(1617), as a great prose epic that would accomplishfor its age what Homer and Virgil had done fortheirs. And yet, by the eighteenth century DonQuixote had eclipsed Persiles in the favour <strong>of</strong> readersand writers alike and the later novel is now virtuallyforgotten except by specialists.This study sets out to help restore Persiles topride <strong>of</strong> place within Cervantes’ corpus by readingit as the author’s summa, as a boldly new kind <strong>of</strong>prose epic that casts an original light on the majorpolitical, religious, social, and literary debates <strong>of</strong>its era. At the same time it seeks to illuminate howsuch a l<strong>of</strong>ty and solemn ambition could coexistwith Cervantes evident urge to delight. Groundedin the novel’s multiple contexts – literature, historyand politics, philosophy and theology – and in closereading <strong>of</strong> the text, Michael Armstrong-Roche aimsto reshape our understanding <strong>of</strong> Persiles within thehistory <strong>of</strong> prose fiction and to take part in the ongoingconversation about the relationship betweenliterary and non-literary cultural forms. Ultimatelyhe reveals how Cervantes recast the prose epic,expanding it in new directions to accommodate thegreat epic themes – politics, love, and religion – tothe most urgent concerns <strong>of</strong> his day.Michael Armstrong-Roche is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essorin the Department <strong>of</strong> Romance Languages andLiteratures at Wesleyan <strong>University</strong>.Conscience on StageThe Comedia as Casuistry in Early Modern SpainHilaire KallendorfUNIVERSITY OF TORONTO ROMANCE SERIESIt is no accident that some variation <strong>of</strong> the question‘What should I do?’ appears in over three-quarters<strong>of</strong> the comedic plays <strong>of</strong> the Spanish Golden Age.Casuistical dialogue was a concern, even an obsession,<strong>of</strong> Spanish playwrights during the seventeenthcentury, many <strong>of</strong> whom were educated by Jesuitcasuists. Conscience on Stage is a study <strong>of</strong> casuistryor case morality as the foundation for a poetics <strong>of</strong>seventeenth-century Spanish comedias.Hilaire Kallendorf examines the Jesuit upbringingand casuistical education <strong>of</strong> major playwrights<strong>of</strong> the Spanish Golden Age, many <strong>of</strong> whom werealso priests, and introduces the vocabulary <strong>of</strong> casuistry,as expressed in both confessors’ manuals and instage plays. Engaging issues <strong>of</strong> class, gender, and ageto explore scenes <strong>of</strong> advice-giving and receiving, shedemonstrates how the culture-specific construct <strong>of</strong>‘conscience’ in early modern Spain can be recoveredby means <strong>of</strong> a Foucauldian genealogy, which enliststhe skills <strong>of</strong> philology at the service <strong>of</strong> a larger vision<strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong> ideas. This study outlines andreiterates the relationship <strong>of</strong> theatre to casuistry, theJesuit contributions to Spanish literary theory andpractice, and the importance <strong>of</strong> casuistry for thestudy <strong>of</strong> early modern subjectivity.Hilaire Kallendorf is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Hispanic Studies at Texas A&M<strong>University</strong>.Approx. 384 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9085-0 / 978-08020-9085-0£45.00 $70.00 EApprox. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9229-2 / 978-08020-9229-8£42.00 $65.00 E32


L I T E R A R Y S T U D I E SEmbodying PessoaCorporeality, Gender, SexualityEdited by Anna Klobucka and Mark SabineUNIVERSITY OF TORONTO ROMANCE SERIESThe multifaceted and labyrinthine oeuvre <strong>of</strong> thePortuguese poet Fernando Pessoa (1888–1935) isdistinguished by having been published under morethan seventy different names. These were not merepseudonyms, but what Pessoa termed ‘heteronyms,’fully realized identities possessed not only <strong>of</strong> wildlydivergent writing styles and opinions, but also <strong>of</strong>detailed biographies. In many cases, their independentexistences extended to their publication <strong>of</strong> lettersand critical readings <strong>of</strong> each other’s works (andthose <strong>of</strong> Pessoa ‘himself’).Long acclaimed in continental Europe and LatinAmerica as a towering presence in literary modernism,Pessoa has more recently begun to receive theattention <strong>of</strong> an English-speaking public. EmbodyingPessoa responds to this new growth <strong>of</strong> interest. Thecollection’s twelve essays, preceded by a generalintroduction and grouped into four thematic sections,apply a range <strong>of</strong> current interpretative modelsboth to the more familiar canon <strong>of</strong> Pessoa’s output,and to less familiar texts – in many cases onlyrecently published. As a whole, this work divergesfrom traditional Pessoa criticism by testifying to theimportance <strong>of</strong> corporeal physicality in his heteronymousexperiment and to the prominence <strong>of</strong> representations<strong>of</strong> (gendered) sexuality in his work.Anna Klobucka is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor and chair inthe Department <strong>of</strong> Portuguese at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Massachusetts, Dartmouth.The Writing in the StarsA Jungian Reading <strong>of</strong> the Poetry <strong>of</strong> Octavio PazRodney WilliamsonUNIVERSITY OF TORONTO ROMANCE SERIESBorn in Mexico City in 1914, writer, poet, anddiplomat Octavio Paz won the Nobel Prize forLiterature in 1990, eight years before his death.TheWriting in the Stars explores Paz’s life and ideas byestablishing a dialogue between the structure andrecurring images <strong>of</strong> his major poems and the ideas<strong>of</strong> Carl Jung.Although other literary critics have pointed toJungian concepts in Paz, a comprehensive studyon the subject has yet to be undertaken. RodneyWilliamson takes up this challenge, adopting aJungian perspective to explore successive phases <strong>of</strong>Paz’s poetry. Williamson illustrates how archetypalimages infuse Paz’s early poetry and his surrealistperiod and shows how the circular structure <strong>of</strong> Paz’slonger poems, such as ‘Piedra de sol’ and ‘Blanco,’are based on the Eastern sacred circle or mandala, amajor archetype <strong>of</strong> psychic wholeness in Jung. Heargues that a grasp <strong>of</strong> the psychological importance<strong>of</strong> Jung’s archetypes is essential to understandingthe various syntheses <strong>of</strong> creative truth and existencesought by Paz at different defining moments <strong>of</strong> hiscareer as a poet. The Writing in the Stars will provefascinating to anyone interested in Latin-Americanliterature, Jungian psychology, or critical theory.Rodney Williamson is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> Modern Languages at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa.Mark Sabine is Lecturer in Lusophone Studies atthe <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Nottingham.Approx. 336 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9198-9 / 978-08020-9198-7£42.00 $65.00 EApprox. 176 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9084-2 / 978-08020-9084-3£32.00 $50.00 E33


L I T E R A R Y S T U D I E STelling AnxietyAnxious Narration in the Work <strong>of</strong> Marguerite Duras,Annie Ernaux, Nathalie Sarraute, and Anne HébertJennifer WillgingUNIVERSITY OF TORONTO ROMANCE SERIESFrom two world wars to rapid industrializationand population shifts, events <strong>of</strong> the twentiethcentury have engendered cultural anxieties to anextent hitherto unseen, particularly in Europe. InTelling Anxiety, Jennifer Willging examines manifestations<strong>of</strong> such anxiety in the selected narratives<strong>of</strong> four women writing in French – MargueriteDuras, Nathalie Sarraute, Annie Ernaux, and AnneHébert. Willging demonstrates that the anxietiesinherent in these women’s works (whether attributedto characters, narrators, or implied authors)are multiple in nature and relate to a general post-Second World War scepticism about the power<strong>of</strong> language to express non-linguistic phenomena,such as the destruction and loss <strong>of</strong> life that a largeportion <strong>of</strong> Europe endured during that period.Willging maintains that, while these women writersare pr<strong>of</strong>oundly wary <strong>of</strong> language and its artificiality,they eschew the radical linguistic scepticism <strong>of</strong>many post-war male writers and theorists. Rather,Willging argues, the anxieties that these four writersexpress stem less from a loss <strong>of</strong> faith in language’sreferential function than from a culturally ingraineddoubt about their own ability, as women, to makelanguage reflect certain realities. Ultimately, TellingAnxiety reveals the crippling obstacles <strong>of</strong> literaryagency for women in the twentieth century fromthe perspective <strong>of</strong> those who fully understood theawesome responsibility <strong>of</strong> their work.Jennifer Willging is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> French and Italian at Ohio State<strong>University</strong>.Approx. 304 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9276-4 / 978-08020-9276-2£40.00 $60.00 ERECENT TITLES IN UNIVERSITYOF TORONTO ROMANCE SERIESTransnational CervantesWilliam Childers0-8020-9045-1 / 978-08020-9045-4£40.00 / $60.00 / 2006The Triumphant Juan RanaA Gay Actor <strong>of</strong> the Spanish Golden AgePeter E. Thompson0-8020-8969-0 / 978-08020-8969-4£28.00 / $45.00 / 2006Narrative InterludesMusical Tableaux in Eighteenth-CenturyFrench TextsTili Boon Cuillé0-8020-3842-5 / 978-08020-3842-5£48.00 / $75.00 / 2006The Material, the Real, and theFractured SelfSubjectivity and Representation fromRimbaud to RédaSusan Harrow0-8020-8722-1 / 978-08020-8722-5£35.00 / $55.00 / 2004The Growth <strong>of</strong> A la recherche du temps perduA Chronological Examination <strong>of</strong> Proust’sManuscripts from 1909 to 1914Anthony R. Pugh0-8020-8818-X / 978-08020-8818-5(2 Volumes)£96.00 / $150.00 / 2004Notes from ExileEmile ZolaTranslated and Edited by Dorothy Speirs andYannick Portebois0-8020-3747-X / 978-08020-3747-3£20.00 / $27.95 / 200334


M E D I E VA L A N D R E N A I S S A N C E S T U D I E SManuscripts from the Anglo-Saxon AgeMichelle P. BrownThe Anglo-Saxons first appeared on the historicalscene as Germanic pagan pirates and mercenaries,moving into the declining Roman Empire inthe 5 th Century AD and forging a series <strong>of</strong> kingdomswhich became ‘England’. By the time <strong>of</strong> theNorman Conquest in 1066, Anglo-Saxon Englandwas one <strong>of</strong> the most sophisticated states in themedieval West, renowned for its ecclesiastical andcultural achievements.The written word was <strong>of</strong> tremendous importancein this transformation. Within a century<strong>of</strong> the introduction <strong>of</strong> Christianityand literacy, the book hadbecome a central element <strong>of</strong>Anglo-Saxon society, and arich vehicle for cultural andartistic expression.This new book providesan authoritativeintroduction to the art<strong>of</strong> book production inthe Anglo-Saxon periodand an historical overview<strong>of</strong> the period by means<strong>of</strong> its book culture, andillustrates in colour over140 examples <strong>of</strong> the finestAnglo-Saxon books inThe British Libraryand other majorcollections.Michelle P. Brown is a manuscripts specialist andoutreach <strong>of</strong>ficer at The British Library, and a freelanceauthor.Also by Michelle P. Brown:The Lindisfarne GospelsSociety, Spirituality, and the Scribe0-8020-8597-0 /978-08020-8597-9$45.00 / 2003Approx. 176 pp / 7 ½ x 9 ½ /April <strong>2007</strong>140 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9096-6 / 978-08020-9096-6£32.00 $50.00 ENORTH AND SOUTH AMERICANRIGHTS ONLY. CO-PUBLISHEDWITH THE BRITISH LIBRARYDetail from The Vespasian Psalter, f.30v35


M E D I E VA L A N D R E N A I S S A N C E S T U D I E SCheshire(including Chester)Edited by Elizabeth Baldwin, Lawrence M. Clopper,and David MillsRECORDS OF EARLY ENGLISH DRAMAThe Records <strong>of</strong> Early English Drama (REED) seriesaims to establish the context for the great drama<strong>of</strong> Britain’s past by examining material related todrama, secular music, and other communal entertainmentand ceremony from the Middle Ages untilthe mid-seventeenth century.This latest volume in the series is a collection <strong>of</strong>documentary evidence for dramatic performance,minstrelsy, and civic ceremony in Cheshire to1642. Editors Elizabeth Baldwin and David Millshave provided introductions detailing the historicalbackground and significance <strong>of</strong> the documentspresented, as well as a full apparatus <strong>of</strong> documentdescriptions, explanatory and textual notes andglossaries.Cheshire completes the series <strong>of</strong> REED volumeson the West <strong>of</strong> England, and incorporates an updatedversion <strong>of</strong> the early Chester volume, as well asproviding extensive new material on the county <strong>of</strong>Cheshire as a whole, making it an essential additionto this much-admired series.Elizabeth Baldwin is a visiting lecturer in the Department<strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Cape Town.Lawrence M. Clopper is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at Indiana <strong>University</strong>.David Mills is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in the School <strong>of</strong>English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Liverpool.‘Bring furth the pagants’Essays in Early English Drama presented toAlexandra F. JohnstonEdited by David N. Klausner and Karen Sawyer MarsalekSTUDIES IN EARLY ENGLISH DRAMAWritten to honour the distinguished work andcareer <strong>of</strong> Alexandra F. Johnston, ‘Bring furth thepagants’ brings together original essays in earlyEnglish drama by colleagues and students <strong>of</strong> thefounder and director <strong>of</strong> the Records <strong>of</strong> EarlyEnglish Drama series.Editors David N. Klausner and Karen SawyerMarsalek have grouped the contributions into threeprimary areas <strong>of</strong> Johnston’s research: the study <strong>of</strong>documentary records in relation to drama, includingnew research on the York documents; the interpretation<strong>of</strong> early English drama, focusing both onthe biblical plays and also on the moral interludes,including a broad survey <strong>of</strong> the role <strong>of</strong> the Expositorfigure in English and French plays; and the drama<strong>of</strong> the later sixteenth and seventeenth centuries(Marlowe and Shakespeare) from the standpoint <strong>of</strong>its medieval background.Diverse, thought-provoking, and original, thiscollection acts as an important complement to theREED volumes and provides a fitting tribute to thescholar it honours.David N. Klausner is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> English and the Centre for Medieval Studies atthe <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Karen Sawyer Marsalek is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor inthe Department <strong>of</strong> English at St Olaf College.Two Volumes / Approx. 1504 pp / 6 ¾ x 9 ¾ / May <strong>2007</strong>5 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9326-4 / 978-08020-9326-4$400.00 EApprox. 335 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2007</strong>3 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9107-5 / 978-08020-9107-9£32.00 $50.00 EWORLD RIGHTS LESS UK AND EUROPE. CO-PUBLISHED WITH THE BRITISH LIBRARY.36


M E D I E VA L A N D R E N A I S S A N C E S T U D I E SSanctity in the NorthSaints, Lives, and Cults in Medieval ScandinaviaEdited by Thomas DuBoisTORONTO OLD NORSE AND ICELANDIC STUDIESWith original translations <strong>of</strong> primary texts andarticles by leading researchers in the field, Sanctityin the North provides an introduction to the literaryproduction associated with the cult <strong>of</strong> the saints inmedieval Scandinavia.For more than five hundred years, Nordic clericsand laity venerated a host <strong>of</strong> saintsthrough liturgical celebrations, writtenmanuscripts, visual arts, and oraltradition. The textual evidence <strong>of</strong> thiswidespread and important aspect <strong>of</strong>medieval spirituality abounds. Writtenbiographies (vitae), compendia <strong>of</strong> witnessedmiracles, mass propers, homilies,sagas and chronicles, dramatic scripts,hymns, and ballads are found in theregion’s surviving medieval manuscriptsand early published books.Sanctity in the North featuresEnglish translations <strong>of</strong> these texts fromLatin or vernacular Nordic languages,in many cases for the first time. Theaccompanying essays concerningthe texts, saints, cults, and history<strong>of</strong> the period complement thetranslations and reflect contributors’own disciplinary groundings,in folklore, philology, medieval,and religious studies.Thomas DuBois is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor inthe Department <strong>of</strong> ScandinavianStudies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Wisconsin-Madison.Contributors:Margaret CormackThomas A. DuBoisNiels IngwersenMarianne KalinkeJohn LindowScott MellorTracey SandsMaria-Claudia TomanyKirsten WolfAlso from the <strong>Toronto</strong> Old Norse-Icelandic Series:Anglo-Saxon England in IcelandicMedieval TextsMagnús Fjalldal0-8020-3837-9 / 978-08020-3837-1£40.00 / $65.00 / 2005Einarr Skúlason’s GeisliA Critical EditionEdited by Martin Chase0-8020-3822-0 / 978-08020-3822-7£20.00 / $29.95 / 2005Approx. 400 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>7 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9130-X /978-08020-9130-7£48.00 $75.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9410-4 /978-08020-9410-0£22.50 $35.00 CWooden statue <strong>of</strong> Madonna and Child, fourteenth-century.Skrida closter. Icelandic National Archives.37


M E D I E VA L A N D R E N A I S S A N C E S T U D I E SParaphrase on the Gospel <strong>of</strong>MatthewContributing Editor: Robert D. SiderTranslated and annotated by Dean SimpsonCOLLECTED WORKS OF ERASMUS, VOLUME 45Erasmus yearned to make the Bible an effective instrument<strong>of</strong> reform in society, church, and everyday life.To this end, he composed the Paraphrases, in whichthe words <strong>of</strong> Holy Scripture provide the core <strong>of</strong> a textvastly expanded to embrace the reforming ‘philosophy<strong>of</strong> Christ.’ Matthew was Erasmus’s first paraphrasedGospel and was thus the great theologian’s first opportunityto set out a full portrait <strong>of</strong> the life <strong>of</strong> Jesus.In this Paraphrase, the wonderful complexity <strong>of</strong>Jesus’s life finds coherence in the conception <strong>of</strong> Himas a teacher. The Jesus <strong>of</strong> this Paraphrase understandspedagogy: He adapts His teaching to the developingabilities <strong>of</strong> His pupils, quizzes them, and gentlyrebukes them. His actions as well as His words haveone primary objective: to teach the disciples.As a Preface to the Paraphrase, Erasmus wrotea ‘Letter to the Pious Reader,’ which became one<strong>of</strong> his most provocative and important essays. Likethe more published Paraclesis, this ‘Letter’ vigorouslyadvocates the translation <strong>of</strong> Scripture into thevernacular languages, and proposes a ‘confirmation’ceremony to encourage young people to assumeresponsibility for the vows taken for them at baptismby their sponsors.This volume illuminates the early thinking <strong>of</strong>Erasmus and is a welcome addition to the CollectedWorks series.Sounding ObjectsMusical Instruments, Poetry, and Art in RenaissanceFranceCarla ZecherOften abstracted by the aesthetic implications <strong>of</strong>music itself, musical instruments can be seen asphysical signifiers apart from the music that theyproduce. In Sounding Objects, Carla Zecher studiesthe representation <strong>of</strong> musical instruments inFrench Renaissance poetry and art, arguing thatthe efficacy <strong>of</strong> these material objects as literary andpictorial images was derived from their physicalcharacteristics and acoustic properties, as well asfrom their aesthetic product.Sounding Objects is concerned with ways inwhich musical culture provided poets with a rich,nuanced vocabulary for reflecting on their own artand its roles in courtly life, the civic arena, and salonsociety. Poets not only depicted the world <strong>of</strong> musicalpractice but also appropriated it, using musicalinstruments figuratively to establish their literaryidentities. Drawing on music treatises and archivalsources as well as poems, paintings, and engravings,this unique study aims to enrich our understanding<strong>of</strong> the interplay <strong>of</strong> poetry, music, and art in thisperiod, and highlights the importance <strong>of</strong> musicalmateriality to Renaissance culture.Carla Zecher is the director <strong>of</strong> the Center forRenaissance Studies at the Newberry Library inChicago.Dean Simpson is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> Classical Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Richmond.Robert D. Sider is the Charles A. Dana Pr<strong>of</strong>essorEmeritus <strong>of</strong> Classical Languages at DickinsonCollege and an adjunct pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Saskatchewan.Approx. 408 pp / 6 ¾ x 9 ¾ / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9299-3 / 978-08020-9299-1£65.00 $100.00 EApprox. 255 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2007</strong>50 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9014-1 / 978-08020-9014-0£40.00 $60.00 E38


M E D I E VA L A N D R E N A I S S A N C E S T U D I E SThree Treatises from Bec on theNature <strong>of</strong> Monastic LifeEdited with introduction and notes by Giles ConstableTranslated by Bernard S. SmithMEDIEVAL ACADEMY BOOKSThe abbey <strong>of</strong> Bec was founded in the eleventhcentury and was one <strong>of</strong> the best known and mostinfluential monasteries in Normandy. Celebratedfor its high standard <strong>of</strong> religious life and its intellectualactivity, Bec also had an exceptional degree<strong>of</strong> institutional independence.The three treatises collected and translated inthis volume – Tractatus de pr<strong>of</strong>essionibus monachorum(‘The Pr<strong>of</strong>ession <strong>of</strong> Monks’), De pr<strong>of</strong>essionibusabbatum (‘The Pr<strong>of</strong>ession <strong>of</strong> Abbots’), and Delibertate Beccensis monasterii (‘On the Liberty <strong>of</strong> theMonastery <strong>of</strong> Bec’) – are a striking statement <strong>of</strong> theposition <strong>of</strong> Bec in relation to episcopal and ducal(later royal) authorities. Little is known about theanonymous author <strong>of</strong> these works except that hewas a twelfth-century monk with an attachmentto Augustine and Gregory the Great and had considerableknowledge <strong>of</strong> canon law. His purpose inwriting these treatises was to assert and justify theprivileges <strong>of</strong> Bec at a time when many bishops werereacting against monastic freedom, especially withregard to pr<strong>of</strong>ession.This volume is an important contribution tounderstanding not only monasticism in Normandy,but also the conflict between church and state inthe eleventh and twelfth centuries.Giles Constable is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus withthe Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton<strong>University</strong>.Byzantine Hermeneutics andPedagogy in the Russian NorthMonks and Masters at the Kirillo-BelozerskiiMonastery, 1397–1501Robert RomanchukThe Kirillov Monastery at White Lake in the farnorth <strong>of</strong> the Muscovite state was home to the greatestlibrary, and perhaps the only secondary school,in all <strong>of</strong> medieval Russia. This volume reconstructsthe educational activities <strong>of</strong> the spiritual fathers andheret<strong>of</strong>ore unknown teachers <strong>of</strong> that monastery.Based on extensive archival research, publishedrecords, and scholarship from a range <strong>of</strong> fields,Robert Romanchuk demonstrates how differenthabits <strong>of</strong> reading and interpretation at the monasteryanswered to different social priorities. Heargues that ‘spiritual’ and ‘worldly’ studies werebound to the monastery’s two main forms <strong>of</strong> socialorganization, semi-hermitic and communal. Further,Romanchuk contextualizes such innovative phenomenaas the editing work <strong>of</strong> the monk Efrosin and themonastery’s strikingly sophisticated library catalogueagainst the development <strong>of</strong> learning at Kirillov itselfover the fifteenth century, moving the discussion <strong>of</strong>medieval Russian book culture in a new direction.The first micro-historical ‘ethnology <strong>of</strong> reading’in the Early Slavic field, Byzantine Hermeneutics andPedagogy in the Russian North will prove fascinatingto western medievalists, Byzantinists, Slavists, andbook historians.Robert Romanchuk is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Modern Languages and Lingusticsat Florida State <strong>University</strong>.Bernard S. Smith is a former pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History at Swarthmore College.Approx. 208 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9260-8 / 978-08020-9260-1£32.00 $50.00 EApprox. 368 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9063-X / 978-08020-9063-8£55.00 $85.00 E39


M E D I E VA L A C A D E M Y R E P R I N T S F O R T E A C H I N G1 The Carolingian EmpireHeinrich FichtenauTranslated by Peter MunzPaper 0-8020-6367-5 $15.95 C2 The Story <strong>of</strong> TroilusEdited by R.K. GordonPaper 0-8020-6368-3 $17.95 C3 A Guide to Chaucer’s PronunciationHelge KökeritzPaper 0-8020-6370-5 $7.95 C4 Constantine and the Conversion <strong>of</strong>EuropeA.H.M. JonesPaper 0-8020-6369-1 $14.95 C5 The English Church in theFourteenth CenturyW.A. PantinPaper 0-8020-6411-6 $11.95 C7 Political Thought in Medieval TimesJohn B. MorrallPaper 0-8020-6413-2 $14.95 C8 Mission to AsiaEdited by Christopher DawsonPaper 0-8020-6436-1 $15.95 CNorth American rights only.9 Confessio AmantisJohn Gower, edited by Russell A. PeckPaper 0-8020-6438-8 $19.95 C10 Ancient Writing and its InfluenceB.L. UllmanWith an introduction by Julian BrownPaper 0-8020-6435-3 $15.95 C11 The Long-Haired Kings and OtherStories in Frankish HistoryJ.M. Wallace-HadrillPaper 0-8020-6500-7 $16.95 C13 William MarshallKnight-Errant, Baron, and Regent <strong>of</strong>EnglandSidney PainterPaper 0-8020-6498-1 $17.95 C14 A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary4th edition, J.R. Clark HallSupplement by Herbert D. MerrittPaper 0-8020-6548-1 $22.95 C15 Self and Society in Medieval FranceThe Memoirs <strong>of</strong> Abbot Guibert <strong>of</strong>NogentEdited and with an introduction byJohn F. BentonPaper 0-8020-6550-3 $15.95 C16 The Art <strong>of</strong> the Byzantine Empire312–1453Sources and DocumentsEdited by Cyril MangoPaper 0-8020-6627-5 $17.95 C17 Early Medieval Art 300–1150Sources and DocumentsEdited by Caecilia Davis-WeyerPaper 0-8020-6628-3 $16.95 C18 ByzantiumThe Imperial Centuries AD 610–1071Romilly JenkinsPaper 0-8020-6667-4 $24.95 C19 The Discovery <strong>of</strong> the Individual1050–1200Colin MorrisPaper 0-8020-6665-8 $13.95 C20 Gothic Art 1140–c1450Sources and DocumentsTeresa G. FrischPaper 0-8020-6679-8 $13.95 C21 The Crisis <strong>of</strong> Church and State1050–1300Brian TierneyPaper 0-8020-6701-8 $14.95 C22 Change in Medieval SocietyEurope North <strong>of</strong> the Alps 1050–1500Sylvia ThruppPaper 0-8020-6699-2 $14.95 C23 The Medieval ExperienceFrancis OakleyPaper 0-8020-6707-7 $15.95 C24 Allegories <strong>of</strong> the Virtues and Vices inMedieval ArtAdolf KatzenellenbogenPaper 0-8020-6706-9 $12.95 C25 Modern Perspectives in Western ArtHistoryAn Anthology <strong>of</strong> 20th-CenturyWritings on the Visual ArtsEdited by W. Eugene KleinbauerPaper 0-8020-6708-5 $30.50 C26 Renaissance and Renewal in theTwelfth CenturyEdited by Robert L. Benson andGiles ConstablePaper 0-8020-6850-2 $37.95 C27 Church, State, and Christian Societyat the Time <strong>of</strong> the Investiture ContestGerd TellenbachTranslated by R.E BennettPaper 0-8020-6857-X $16.95 C28 The Medieval BookBarbara A. ShailorCloth 0-8020-5910-4 $68.00 EPaper 0-8020-6853-7 $29.95 C29 Early MedievalStyle and CivilizationGeorge HendersonPaper 0-8020-6984-3 $23.95 C30 The Origins <strong>of</strong> European DissentR.I. MoorePaper 0-8020-7566-5 $19.95 C32 FablesMarie de FranceEdited and translated by Harriet SpiegelPaper 0-8020-7636-X $21.95 C33 The Birth <strong>of</strong> Popular HeresyR.I. MoorePaper 0-8020-7659-9 $16.95 C34 FeudalismF.L. Gansh<strong>of</strong>Translated by Philip GriersonPaper 0-8020-7158-9 $14.95 C35 Arthurian ChroniclesWace and LayamonTranslated by Eugene MasonPaper 0-8020-7176-7 $17.95 C37 Nature, Man, and Society in theTwelfth CenturyM.-D. ChenuPaper 0-8020-7175-9 $17.95 C38 Selections from English WycliffiteWritingsEdited by Anne HudsonPaper 0-8020-8045-6 $17.95 C39 The Life <strong>of</strong> Christina <strong>of</strong> MarkyateA Twelfth-Century RecluseEdited by C.H. TalbotPaper 0-8020-8202-5 $15.95 CNorth American rights only40 Medieval FamiliesPerspectives on Marriage, Household,and ChildrenEdited by Carol NeelCloth 0-8020-3606-6 $78.00 EPaper 0-8020-8458-3 $30.50 C41 A Concise Dictionary <strong>of</strong> Old IcelandicGeir T. ZoëgaCloth 0-8020-8705-1 $95.00 EPaper 0-8020-8659-4 $29.95 C42 Old Norse-Icelandic LiteratureA Critical GuideEdited by Carol J. Clover and JohnLindowPaper 0-8020-3823-9 $35.00 C40


H I S T O R YAngus L. MacdonaldA Provincial LiberalT. Stephen HendersonPerhaps one <strong>of</strong> the most influential Canadianpremiers <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century and one <strong>of</strong>the leading political intellectuals <strong>of</strong> his generation,Angus L. Macdonald dominated politics inNova Scotia for more than twenty years, servingas premier from 1933 to 1940 and again from1945 until his death in 1954. One rival referredto him as “the pope” out <strong>of</strong> respect for hispolitical infallibility. From 1940 to 1945Macdonald guided Canada’s war effort atsea as Minister <strong>of</strong> National Defence forNaval Services; under his watch, the RoyalCanadian Navy expanded faster than anyother navy in the world.This new work by T. StephenHenderson is the first academicbiography <strong>of</strong> Macdonald,whose life provides a frameworkfor the study <strong>of</strong>Canada’s pre- and postwartransformation, and a rareopportunity to comparethe political history <strong>of</strong> thetwo periods. Generally,Macdonald’s politicalthinking reflecteda progressive, interwarliberalism that foundits clearest expression inthe 1940 Rowell-Siroisreport on federal-provincialrelations. The reportproposed a redistribution<strong>of</strong> responsibilitiesand resources that wouldallow poorer provincesgreater autonomy andreduce overlapping jurisdictionsin the federal system.Ottawa abandoned Rowell-Sirois in the postwarperiod, and Macdonald fell out <strong>of</strong> step with thenational Liberal party that he had once seemeddestined to lead. Within Nova Scotia, however,his ardent defence <strong>of</strong> provincial powers and hiscommitment to building a moderninfrastructure enabled him to winelection after election and transformthe face and identity <strong>of</strong> hisprovince.T. Stephen Henderson is an assistantpr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong> Historyand Classics at Acadia <strong>University</strong>.Of related interest:The Supreme Court <strong>of</strong> NovaScotia, 1754–2004From Imperial Bastion toProvincial OracleEdited by Philip Girard, JimPhillips, and Barry Cahill0-8020-8021-9 /978-08020-8021-9£48.00 / $75.00 / 2004Approx. 368 pp / 6 x 9 /February <strong>2007</strong>16 photographsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9231-4 /978-08020-9231-1£48.00 $75.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9459-7 /978-08020-9459-9£22.50 $35.00 CAngus Macdonald in his Clanranald kiltCourtesy St. Francis Xavier Archives41


H I S T O R YAgents <strong>of</strong> EmpireBritish Female Migration to Canada and Australia,1860s–1930Lisa ChiltonSTUDIES IN GENDER AND HISTORYThe period between the 1860s and the 1920s sawa wave <strong>of</strong> female migration from Britain to Canadaand Australia, much <strong>of</strong> which was managed bywomen. In Agents <strong>of</strong> Empire, Lisa Chilton exploresthe work <strong>of</strong> the women who promoted, managed,and ultimately transformed single British women’sexperiences <strong>of</strong> migration.Chilton examines the origins <strong>of</strong> women-runfemale emigration societies through various aspects<strong>of</strong> their work and the responses they received fromemigrants and settled colonists. Working in the face<strong>of</strong> apathy in the community, resistance by other(usually male) managers <strong>of</strong> imperial migration, andagency exerted by the women they sought to manage,the emigrators endeavoured to maintain controlover the field until government agencies took itover in the aftermath <strong>of</strong> the First World War.Agents <strong>of</strong> Empire highlights the aims and methodsbehind the emigrators’ work, as well as theimplications and ramifications <strong>of</strong> their long-termengagement with this imperialistic feminizing project.Chilton provides tremendous insight into thestruggle for control <strong>of</strong> female migration and femalemigrants, aiding greatly in the study <strong>of</strong> gender,migration, and empire.Lisa Chilton is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> PrinceEdward Island.Pick One Intelligent GirlEmployability, Domesticity and the Gendering <strong>of</strong>Canada’s Welfare State, 1939–1947Jennifer A. StephenSTUDIES IN GENDER AND HISTORYDuring the tumultuous formative years <strong>of</strong> theCanadian welfare state, many women rose throughthe ranks <strong>of</strong> the federal civil service to oversee themassive recruitment <strong>of</strong> Canadian women to aid inthe Second World War. Ironically, it became thetask <strong>of</strong> these same female mandarins to encouragewomen to return to the household once thewar was over. Pick One Intelligent Girl reveals theelaborate psychological, economic, and managerialtechniques that were used to both recruit and trainwomen for wartime military and civilian jobs, andthen to achieve precisely the opposite effect – thatis, to move women out <strong>of</strong> the labour force altogether– at war’s end.Negotiating the fluid boundaries <strong>of</strong> state, community,industry, and household, and drawing ona wide range <strong>of</strong> primary sources, Jennifer Stephenillustrates how women’s relationships to home,work, and nation were pr<strong>of</strong>oundly altered duringthis period. She demonstrates how federal <strong>of</strong>ficialsenlisted the help <strong>of</strong> a new generation <strong>of</strong> ‘experts’to entrench a two-tiered training and employmentsystem that would become an enduring feature <strong>of</strong>the Canadian state.This engaging study not only intervenes indebates about the gendered origins <strong>of</strong> Canada’swelfare state, it also makes an important contributionto Canadian social history, labour and genderstudies, sociology, and political science.Jennifer A. Stephen is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History at York <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 272 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>8 photographsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9274-8 / 978-08020-9274-8£40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9474-0 / 978-08020-9474-2£18.00 $27.95 CApprox. 336 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9146-6 / 978-08020-9146-8£48.00 $75.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9421-X / 978-08020-9421-6£20.00 $29.95 C42


G E N E R A L I HN ITS ET RO ERS YTCraft CapitalismCraftsworkers and Early Industrialization in Hamilton,OntarioRobert B. Krist<strong>of</strong>fersonCANADIAN SOCIAL HISTORY SERIESMany studies have concluded that the effects <strong>of</strong>early industrialization on traditional craftsworkerswere largely negative. Robert B. Krist<strong>of</strong>ferson demonstrates,however, that in at least one area this wasnot the case. Craft Capitalism focuses on Hamilton,Ontario, demonstrating how the preservation <strong>of</strong>traditional work arrangements, craft mobility networks,and other aspects <strong>of</strong> craft culture ensuredthat craftsworkers in that city enjoyed an essentiallypositive introduction to industrial capitalism.Krist<strong>of</strong>ferson argues that as former craftsworkersthemselves, the majority <strong>of</strong> the city’s industrialproprietors helped younger craftsworkers achieveindependence. Conflict rooted in capitalist classexperience, while present, was not yet dominant.Furthermore, he argues, while craftsworkers’ experience<strong>of</strong> the change was more informed by theresidual cultures <strong>of</strong> craft than by the emergent logic<strong>of</strong> capitalism, craft culture in Hamilton was not retrogressive.Rather, this situation served as a center<strong>of</strong> social creation in ways that built on the positiveaspects <strong>of</strong> both systems.Based on extensive archival research, this controversialand engaging study makes an importantcontribution to the study <strong>of</strong> industrialization andclass formation in Canada.Robert B. Krist<strong>of</strong>ferson is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong>Contemporary Studies and History at WilfridLaurier <strong>University</strong>, Brantford.(Re)Visualizing NationalHistoryMuseums and National Identities in Europe in theNew MillenniumRobin OstowGERMAN AND EUROPEAN STUDIESThe role <strong>of</strong> the museum is a contentious one. Thelast fifteen years have seen scholars point to ways inwhich states use museums as sites to showcase lootedtreasure, to document their geographic expansion,to present the state as the guardian <strong>of</strong> the nationaltreasure, and to educate citizens and subjects. Thisperiod has also seen a great deal <strong>of</strong> attention paidto the reshaping <strong>of</strong> national histories and valuesin the wake <strong>of</strong> the collapse <strong>of</strong> the Communistbloc and the emergence <strong>of</strong> the European Union.(Re)Visualizing National History brings these twostreams <strong>of</strong> scholarship together, treating the wave<strong>of</strong> monument and museum building in Europe aspart <strong>of</strong> an attempt to forge consensus in politicallyunified, but deeply divided nations.The essays in this collection explore the ways inwhich museums exhibit new national values, and,equally important, how the realization <strong>of</strong> these newmuseums (and new exhibits in older museums)reflects the search for a new consensus among differentgenerational groups in Europe and in NorthAmerica. The approach <strong>of</strong> the volume is deliberatelyinterdisciplinary. The contributors come from avariety <strong>of</strong> countries in Europe and North America,speaking from the perspectives <strong>of</strong> cultural studies,history, art history, anthropology, and sociology, aswell as museum studies.Robin Ostow is a resident fellow at the Centre forEuropean, Russian and Eurasian Studies at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Approx. 288 pp / 5 ½ x 8 ½ / June <strong>2007</strong>27 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9127-X / 978-08020-9127-7£40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9408-2 / 978-08020-9408-7£20.00 $29.95 CApprox. 256 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>30 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9221-7 / 978-08020-9221-2£35.00 $55.00 E43


H I S T O R YMonarchisms in the Age<strong>of</strong> EnlightenmentLiberty, Patriotism, and the Common GoodEdited by Hans Blom, John Christian Laursen, andLuisa SimonuttiUCLA CLARK MEMORIAL LIBRARY SERIESIn recent decades, historians <strong>of</strong> early-modernEuropean political thought have tended to neglectthe concept <strong>of</strong> monarchy and monarchism, focusinginstead on the development <strong>of</strong> republicanismduring this period. Monarchisms in the Age <strong>of</strong>Enlightenment aims to correct this imbalance byillustrating that many thinkers <strong>of</strong> the seventeenthand eighteenth centuries, in fact, saw monarchy as asolution to the instability, chaos, and even violence<strong>of</strong> experiments with republican government.Editors Hans Blom, John Christian Laursen, andLuisa Simonutti have brought together outstandingscholars in the field to correct many <strong>of</strong> the misleadingstereotypes about monarchy, and to explore thevariety and dynamism <strong>of</strong> this form <strong>of</strong> governmentin early-modern Europe. Contributors explore fourmajor themes: monarchisms in the political thought<strong>of</strong> Spinoza, Bayle, Fénelon, Hume, and Montesquieu;enlightened Christian and millenarian monarchisms;defending and resisting absolute monarchy; and,finally, reflections on the British monarchy.Fascinating and timely, Monarchisms in the Age <strong>of</strong>Enlightenment will be <strong>of</strong> interest to historians, politicaltheorists, political philosophers, and political scientists.Hans Blom is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Social Science at Erasmus <strong>University</strong>.John Christian Laursen is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Political Science at the <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> California, Riverside.Luisa Simonutti is a research associate at the Istituto perla Storia del Pensiero Filos<strong>of</strong>ico e Scientifico Moderno– CNR, and an adjunct pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> Philosophy at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ferrara.Momigliano andAntiquarianismFoundations <strong>of</strong> the Modern Cultural SciencesEdited by Peter N. MillerUCLA CLARK MEMORIAL LIBRARY SERIESOne <strong>of</strong> the greatest historians <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century,Arnaldo Momigliano (1908–1987) is knownfor his path-breaking studies <strong>of</strong> ancient Greek andRoman history. The encyclopedic knowledge <strong>of</strong>the ancient world that Momigliano brought to hiswork, however, enabled him to make connectionsbetween ancient history and the subsequent study<strong>of</strong> that history. His sweeping vision stretched fromantiquity to the present day.In Momigliano and Antiquarianism, Peter N.Miller brings together an international and interdisciplinarygroup <strong>of</strong> scholars to provide the firstserious study <strong>of</strong> Momigliano’s history <strong>of</strong> historicalscholarship. At its core, this collection is devotedto one <strong>of</strong> Momigliano’s most celebrated subjectsthe history <strong>of</strong> antiquarianism, and one <strong>of</strong> his mostaudacious claims, that the decay <strong>of</strong> early modernantiquarianism actually gave birth to the moderncultural sciences – history, sociology, anthropology,art history, archaeology, and history <strong>of</strong> religion.Filling a gap in the scholarship, this erudite collectionwill prove fascinating to teachers and students<strong>of</strong> classics, history, and the human sciences.Peter N. Miller is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor at the Bard GraduateCenter for Studies in the Decorative Arts, Design,and Culture.Approx. 304 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2007</strong>1 photographCloth ISBN 0-8020-9177-6 / 978-08020-9177-2£40.00 $60.00 EApprox. 416 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2007</strong>10 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9207-1 / 978-08020-9207-6£48.00 $75.00 E44


G E N E RPA HL I LI NO TS EO RPE HS YTKant and the Scandal <strong>of</strong>PhilosophyThe Kantian Critique <strong>of</strong> Cartesian ScepticismLuigi CarantiTORONTO STUDIES IN PHILOSOPHYKant considered it to be scandalous that philosophystill had not found a rational pro<strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong> the existence<strong>of</strong> the external world during his time. Arguably,the scandal continues today because scepticismremains a widely debated and extremely divisiveissue among contemporary thinkers. Althoughscholars have devoted considerable attention toKant’s arguments against Cartesian scepticism, theliterature still presents gaps and inaccuracies thatobscure a full understanding <strong>of</strong> this issue and itssignificance for contemporary philosophy. In Kantand the Scandal <strong>of</strong> Philosophy, Luigi Caranti correctsthis omission, providing a thorough historicalanalysis <strong>of</strong> Kant’s anti-sceptical arguments fromthe pre-critical period up to the ‘Reflexionen zumIdealismus’ (1788–93).Caranti demonstrates how reconstructing Kant’scritique <strong>of</strong> scepticism is crucial for understandingthe origin <strong>of</strong> his philosophy and for avoiding seriousmistakes that still serve as obstacles to the properunderstanding <strong>of</strong> the Critique <strong>of</strong> Pure Reason. Inparticular, Caranti shows how the sceptical challengeleads Kant to the critical stage <strong>of</strong> his thought.Moreover, this study responds to recent criticism <strong>of</strong>transcendental idealism, showing how it can serveas the main premise <strong>of</strong> a powerful anti-scepticalargument whose main structure is suggested byKant in the 1781 Fourth Paralogism. Erudite andengaging, Kant and the Scandal <strong>of</strong> Philosophy fills animportant void in the literature and breathes newlife into this field <strong>of</strong> inquiry.Luigi Caranti is a Marie Curie Fellow at Philipps-Universität and a research associate at Libera UniversitàInternazionale degli Studi Sociali Guido Carli.CybersemioticsWhy Information Is Not EnoughSøren BrierTORONTO STUDIES IN SEMIOTICS AND COMMUNICATIONA growing field <strong>of</strong> inquiry, biosemiotics is a theory<strong>of</strong> cognition and communication that unites theliving and the cultural world. What is missing fromthis theory, however, is the unification <strong>of</strong> the informationand computational realms <strong>of</strong> the non-livingnatural and technical world. Cybersemiotics providessuch a framework.By integrating cybernetic information theoryinto the unique semiotic framework <strong>of</strong> C. S. Peirce,Søren Brier attempts to find a unified conceptualframe work encompassing the complex area <strong>of</strong>information, cognition, and communication science.The integration is performed through NiklasLuhmann’s autopoietic systems theory <strong>of</strong> socialcommunication. The link between cybernetics andsemiotics is further an ethological and evolutionarytheory <strong>of</strong> embodiment combined with Lak<strong>of</strong>f andJohnson’s ‘philosophy in the flesh.’ This demandsthe development <strong>of</strong> a transdisciplinary philosophy<strong>of</strong> knowledge: as common sense as well as it is culturedin the humanities and the sciences. Such anepistemological and ontological frame work is alsodeveloped in the book.Cybersemiotics not only builds a bridge betweenscience and culture, but it also provides at frameworkencompassing them both. The Cyber-semioticframework <strong>of</strong>fers a platform for a new level <strong>of</strong>global dialogue between knowledge systems includinga view <strong>of</strong> science that does not compete withreligion but <strong>of</strong>fers the possibility for mutual andfruitful exchange.Søren Brier is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the PhilosophyUnit <strong>of</strong> the Department for Management, Politics,and Philosophy at the Copenhagen Business School.Approx. 228 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9132-6 / 978-08020-9132-1£40.00 $60.00 EApprox. 544 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>39 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9220-9 / 978-08020-9220-5£55.00 $85.00 E45


P H I L O S O P H YAppropriating theLonergan IdeaFrederick E. CroweEdited by Michael VertinLONERGAN STUDIESFirst published in 1989, Appropriating the LonerganIdea is an exploration and expansion <strong>of</strong> BernardLonergan’s distinctive achievements as a theologianand philosopher by the world’s foremost expert onhis writings, Frederick E. Crowe.Comprised <strong>of</strong> twenty-two essays, this volume isdivided into two distinct parts. The nine essays thatconstitute the first part <strong>of</strong> the book are concernedwith Crowe’s investigation <strong>of</strong> the meaning andhistory <strong>of</strong> Lonergan’s own writings. The remainingthirteen papers concern Crowe’s expansion <strong>of</strong>Lonerganian claims by inventively developing andapplying them in his own scholarly endeavours. Awide variety <strong>of</strong> topics is explored in this collection,from Lonergan’s early academic career and the evolution<strong>of</strong> his notion <strong>of</strong> God, to the dynamic <strong>of</strong> ecclesiallearning, and the missions <strong>of</strong> the Trinity. Called byone critic “a splendid monument to its author’s wisdom,humanity, scholarship and good sense,” thisclassic work provides sharp insights into the work <strong>of</strong>a pr<strong>of</strong>ound philosopher and theologian.Frederick E. Crowe is Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Emeritus in Theologyand co-founder <strong>of</strong> the Lonergan Research Institute<strong>of</strong> Regis College at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Michael Vertin is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Philosophy at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.The Importance <strong>of</strong> InsightEssays in Honour <strong>of</strong> Michael VertinEdited by John J. Liptay and David S. LiptayLONERGAN STUDIESWritten in honour <strong>of</strong> Michael Vertin, the distinguishedphilosopher and Lonergan scholar at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>, The Importance <strong>of</strong> Insightbrings together a number <strong>of</strong> thoughtful essays byleading Lonergan scholars. These essays investigatethe importance <strong>of</strong> Lonergan’s articulation <strong>of</strong>insight, and how it can be applied within the fields<strong>of</strong> cognitional theory, theology, ethics, and politics.The contributors address several issues emergingfrom the post-Enlightenment crisis <strong>of</strong> meaningand value, as well as more specific contemporaryconcerns, such as the nature <strong>of</strong> Christian revelation,the articulation <strong>of</strong> Church doctrine, and the ethicaltraining health care pr<strong>of</strong>essionals should receive.By indicating what there is to be gained byunderstanding and applying insight in a number<strong>of</strong> different contexts, this collection highlights therelevance <strong>of</strong> Lonergan’s thought in the contemporaryintellectual and cultural milieu, and, at thesame time, makes a significant contribution to thedevelopment <strong>of</strong> Lonergan’s thought itself. In thisway, The Importance <strong>of</strong> Insight <strong>of</strong>fers a window intocutting-edge Lonergan scholarship and some <strong>of</strong> itscentral concerns and preoccupations.John J. Liptay is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in thePhilosophy Program at St. Thomas More College,<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Saskatchewan.David S. Liptay is a PhD candidate in ReligiousStudies at Syracuse <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 410 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8938-0 / 978-08020-8938-0£48.00 $75.00 EApprox. 256 pp / 6 1 /8 x 9 ¼ / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9217-9 / 978-08020-9217-5£42.00 $65.00 E46


G E N E RPA HL I LI NO TS EO RPE HS YTEthics and the NewGeneticsAn Integrated ApproachEdited by H. Daniel MonsourLONERGAN STUDIESEveryday, new advances are being made in thescience <strong>of</strong> human genetics. Accompanying progressin this area, however, are new ethical dilemmas.At a think tank sponsored by the CanadianCatholic Bioethics Institute, an interdisciplinarygroup <strong>of</strong> ethicists, geneticists, physicians, lawyers,and theologians gathered in an attempt to applysome features <strong>of</strong> Bernard Lonergan’s notion <strong>of</strong> functionalspecialization to ethical debates surroundinggenetics.Editor H. Daniel Monsour has brought togethera series <strong>of</strong> articles presented at this think tank. Thearticles accomplish two tasks: first, they exploresome <strong>of</strong> the advances in human genetic that continueto prompt ethical debate and outline the differentstances on those issues; second, they examinethose stances in the context <strong>of</strong> Roman Catholicmoral and religious thought. Timely, innovative,and wide-ranging, this collection will be <strong>of</strong> interestto bioethicists and philosophers, as well as religiousand Lonerganian scholars.H. Daniel Monsour is a research assistant with theLonergan Research Institute <strong>of</strong> Regis College at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Approx. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9273-X / 978-08020-9273-1£28.00 $45.00 ERECENT TITLES IN THELONERGAN STUDIES SERIESLonergan’s QuestA Study <strong>of</strong> Desire in the Authoring <strong>of</strong> InsightWilliam A. Mathews0-8020-3875-1 / 978-08020-3875-3£60.00 / $100.00 / 2006What is Systematic Theology?Robert M. Doran0-8020-9041-9 / 978-08020-9041-6£35.00 / $55.00 / 2005Philosophical EncountersLonergan and the Analytic TraditionJoseph Fitzpatrick0-8020-4884-6 / 978-08020-4884-4£20.00 / $29.95 / 2005Eye <strong>of</strong> the HeartKnowing the Human Good in theEuthanasia DebateWilliam F. Sullivan0-8020-3923-5 / 978-08020-3923-1£60.00 / $85.00 / 2005Developing the Lonergan LegacyHistorical, Theoretical, and ExistentialThemesFrederick E. CroweEdited by Michael Vertin0-8020-8938-0 / 978-08020-8938-0£45.00 / $75.00 / 2004Hermeneutics and MethodA Study <strong>of</strong> the ‘Universal Viewpoint’ inBernard LonerganIvo Coelho0-8020-4840-4 / 978-08020-4840-0£40.00 / $68.00 / 200147


L AWLaw and MoralityReadings in Legal Philosophy, Third EditionEdited by David Dyzenhaus, Sophia ReibetanzMoreau, and Arthur RipsteinTORONTO STUDIES IN PHILOSOPHYSince the publication <strong>of</strong> the first edition in 1996 andthe second in 2001, Law and Morality has filled a longstandingneed for a contemporary Canadian textbookin the philosophy <strong>of</strong> law. Now in its third edition,this essential volume has been significantly revised andupdated and includes new chapters on equality,judicial review, and terrorism and the rule <strong>of</strong> law.The collection begins with general questions aboutmorality and law, canvassing the traditional literatureon legal positivism and contemporary debates about theconnection between law and morality. Essays explorethe tensions between law as a protector <strong>of</strong> individual libertyand as a tool <strong>of</strong> democratic self-rule and introducedebates about adjudication and the contribution <strong>of</strong>feminist approaches to philosophy <strong>of</strong> law. New materialon the Chinese Canadian head tax case is also included.The second part <strong>of</strong> Law and Morality deals with philosophicalquestions as they apply to contemporary issues.Excerpts from judicial decisions are used throughoutin order to make concrete the theoretical issues, as areessays by lawyers that provide theoretically informedlegal analyses <strong>of</strong> the issues.It is a valuable text in both departments <strong>of</strong> philosophyand faculties <strong>of</strong> law and this third, muchexpandededition brings the debates fully up todate, filling gaps in the first and second editions,and adding to the array <strong>of</strong> contemporary issues.David Dyzenhaus is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Faculty <strong>of</strong>Law and the Department <strong>of</strong> Philosophy at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Sophia Reibetanz Moreau is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essorin the Faculty <strong>of</strong> Law and the Department <strong>of</strong>Philosophy at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Arthur Ripstein is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Faculty <strong>of</strong>Law and the Department <strong>of</strong> Philosophy at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.The Aesthetics <strong>of</strong>International LawEd MorganInternational law is a fundamentally modern phenomenon.Tracing its roots to the skeletal nineteenthcenturypronouncements <strong>of</strong> the ‘law <strong>of</strong> nations,’ thediscipline took shape in the elaborate treaty structures<strong>of</strong> the post-First World War era and in theinstitutions and tribunals <strong>of</strong> the post-Second WorldWar period. International law as scholars know andstudy it today is a product <strong>of</strong> modernism.In The Aesthetics <strong>of</strong> International Law, Ed Morganengages in a literary parsing <strong>of</strong> international legaltexts. In order to demonstrate how modernistaesthetics are imbued in these types <strong>of</strong> legal narratives,Morgan makes a direct comparison betweeninternational legal documents and modern (as wellas some immediately pre- and post-modern) literarytexts. He demonstrates how the same intellectualcurrents that flow through the works <strong>of</strong> authorsranging from Edgar Allen Poe to James Joyce toVladimir Nabokov, are also present in legal doctrinesranging from the law <strong>of</strong> war to internationalcommercial disputes to human rights.By providing a comparative, interdisciplinaryaccount <strong>of</strong> the modern phenomenon, this workseeks to highlight the ways in which judges, lawyers,and state representatives artfully exploit the narratives<strong>of</strong> international law. It demonstrates that justas modernist literature developed complex narrativetechniques as a way <strong>of</strong> dealing with the humancondition, modern international law has developedparallel argumentative techniques as a way <strong>of</strong> dealingwith international political conditions.Ed Morgan is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Faculty<strong>of</strong> Law at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Approx. 1072 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2007</strong>Paper ISBN 0-8020-9489-9 / 978-08020-9489-6£35.00 $55.00 CApprox. 272 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9251-9 / 978-08020-9251-9£35.00 $55.00 E48


G E N E R A L I N T E RL EAWS TThe Empirical Gap inJurisprudenceA Comprehensive Study <strong>of</strong> the Supreme Court <strong>of</strong>CanadaDaved MuttartIn jurisprudential writing, single decisions are <strong>of</strong>tenheld up as representative without any evidence tosupport their representative claims. In order toaddress this problem, Daved Muttart has made a systematicstudy encompassing every judgment <strong>of</strong> theSupreme Court <strong>of</strong> Canada between 1950 and 2003.Examining almost 5000 cases, Muttart analysesthese Supreme Court decisions employing severalimportant criteria including whether the decisionsoverruled prior precedent, the extent to which theywere decided on fact, law, or policy, and the legaland extra-legal modes <strong>of</strong> reasoning utilized by theCourt. Muttart uses the results <strong>of</strong> this systematicexamination to test the validity <strong>of</strong> extant jurisprudentialtheories. Ultimately, he concludes that theCourt’s method <strong>of</strong> operation is evolving as it movesinto a new century. While the court’s reasoning isbecoming less foundational, it remains a predominantlylegal, as opposed to political, institution.Filling an important niche in the study <strong>of</strong>jurisprudence, The Empirical Gap in Jurisprudencedemonstrates that systematic studies based on largesamples <strong>of</strong> cases will yield many insights that wereobfuscated by prior efforts that relied on small andself-selected samples.Daved Muttart obtained his Ph.D. and conductedpost-doctoral studies at Osgoode Hall Law School,York <strong>University</strong>.Inside and OutsideCanadian AdministrativeLawEssays in Honour <strong>of</strong> David MullanEdited by Grant Huscr<strong>of</strong>t and Michael TaggartThe rise to prominence <strong>of</strong> administrative law in thesecond half <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century is <strong>of</strong>ten remarkedupon as the greatest legal development <strong>of</strong> the period.In this process there has been considerable borrowing<strong>of</strong> ideas and learning from experiences elsewhere inthe common law world. This volume brings togetheradministrative law scholars and judges from aroundthe globe to address important issues in the field andto honour the career <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> the leading administrativelawyers in the Anglo-Commonwealth world,Pr<strong>of</strong>essor David Mullan.Editors Grant Huscr<strong>of</strong>t and Michael Taggart haveidentified the broad themes in Mullan’s work – proceduralfairness; scope <strong>of</strong> review and deference; theinterrelationship <strong>of</strong> administrative law and humanrights; the legitimacy <strong>of</strong> state regulation and tribunaladjudication; common law comparativism – andinvited contributions on those themes from leadingscholars in Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia,South Africa, and the United States. A fitting tributeto a great scholar, Inside and Outside CanadianAdministrative Law will prove fascinating to students,teachers, and practitioners <strong>of</strong> administrativelaw as well as policy makers and political scientists.Grant Huscr<strong>of</strong>t is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Faculty <strong>of</strong> Lawat the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Western Ontario.Michael Taggart is the Alexander Turner Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<strong>of</strong> Law at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Auckland.Approx. 256 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2007</strong>45 figuresCloth ISBN 0-8020-9159-8 / 978-08020-9159-8£42.00 $65.00 E508 pp / 6 x 9 / AvailableCloth ISBN 0-8020-9245-4 / 978-08020-9245-8£42.00 $65.00 E49


C R I M I N O L O G Y A N D P O L I C I N GRefocusing CrimePreventionCollective Action and the Quest for CommunityStephen SchneiderDespite widespread concern over crime, publicparticipation in local crime prevention programsis generally low and limited to a small, homogeneousgroup <strong>of</strong> middle-class home-owing residents.Conspicuously absent from these programs are thevery people who are the most vulnerable to crime:the poor, immigrants, and visible minorities.Refocusing Crime Prevention explores the capacity<strong>of</strong> disadvantaged neighbourhoods to organizearound local crime and disorder problems. Obstaclesto the mobilization <strong>of</strong> communities around crimeare strongly related to demographic and sociopsychologicalcharacteristics <strong>of</strong> residents, includinglow socioeconomic status and a lack <strong>of</strong> local socialintegration. Other obstacles stem from weaknessesin program implementation, such as inappropriateor ineffectual community outreach and communications,a lack <strong>of</strong> resources, and leadership voids. Many<strong>of</strong> these afore-mentioned barriers flow from broaderstructural factors, including politico-economic forcesthat spatially concentrate poverty, crime, and apathy;a culture <strong>of</strong> pervasive individualism, and a relianceon the welfare state for local problem solving.Using thorough ethnographic research, StephenSchneider identifies, comprehensively details, andcritically examines the many factors that obstructpublic participation in community crime preventionprograms, while formulating strategies andtheories that attempt to empower disadvantagedand marginalized communities. Refocusing CrimePrevention will aid immensely in the struggle forcrime reduction and safer neighbourhoods.Stephen Schneider is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Sociology and Criminology at SaintMary’s <strong>University</strong>.Police and GovernmentRelationsWho’s Calling the Shots?Edited by Margaret Beare and Tonita MurrayQuestions <strong>of</strong> police governance, accountability andindependence have been subjected to thoroughresearch before. That the issue still draws criticalattention more than twenty years after the McDonaldCommission <strong>of</strong> Inquiry into Certain Activities <strong>of</strong> theRoyal Canadian Mounted Police suggests that understandingand a resolution to the issue still eludes us.Despite the modifications to police practice that theCharter <strong>of</strong> Rights and Freedoms has brought, thereis still concern over the degree <strong>of</strong> independence thepolice exercise, and debate over where the line betweenlegitimate government direction <strong>of</strong> the police and illegitimatepolitical interference should be drawn.Police and Government Relations explores the question<strong>of</strong> police governance and independence from anumber <strong>of</strong> different points <strong>of</strong> view. Editors MargaretE. Beare and Tonita Murray <strong>of</strong>fer multi-disciplinary,comparative, and case-study methodologies writtenby scholars from law, political science, and criminologyto illustrate the diversity <strong>of</strong> opinion that exists onthe topic and to explore how the operating tensionbetween police independence and democratic governanceand accountability has played out. This bookserves as an academic and intellectual contribution toan important matter <strong>of</strong> public policy.Margaret E. Beare is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Sociology and the Osgoode HallLaw School at York <strong>University</strong>.Tonita Murray is a consultant and gender advisor tothe Afghan Ministry <strong>of</strong> Interior Affairs and formerdirector <strong>of</strong> the Canadian Police College.Approx. 368 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3550-7 / 978-08020-3550-9£48.00 $75.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8420-6 / 978-08020-8420-0£22.50 $35.00 CApprox. 464 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9152-0 / 978-08020-9152-9£48.00 $75.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9423-6 / 978-08020-9423-0£22.50 $35.00 C50


S O C I O L O G YMax Weber’s ‘Objectivity’ ReconsideredEdited by Laurence H. McFallsGERMAN AND EUROPEAN STUDIESThe German sociologist Max Weber (1864–1920)is without question one <strong>of</strong> the founders <strong>of</strong> modernsocial science. In his methodological writings,notably his essay “The ‘Objectivity’ <strong>of</strong> Knowledgein Science and Policy” (1904), Weber sought reflexivelyto establish a trans-culturally valid basis for thehistorical and cultural sciences. Over the past century,however, his work has given rise to divergentinterpretations and practical applications withindifferent disciplinary and cultural contexts.In Max Weber’s ‘Objectivity’ Reconsidered, LaurenceH. McFalls and a distinguished group <strong>of</strong> contributorsexplore the fragmented reception <strong>of</strong> Weber’swork and the legacies <strong>of</strong> his methodological writingsfor contemporary social science, <strong>of</strong>fering theirappraisals <strong>of</strong> Weber’s successes and failures in layingthe groundwork for an ‘objective’ social science.They develop a ‘Weberian’ theory <strong>of</strong> his receptionand evaluate the possibility <strong>of</strong> an ‘objectively’ validWeberian social science today.This essential volume not only contributes to theresurgence <strong>of</strong> interest in Weber’s oeuvre but goesbeyond the exegetic and polemical debates <strong>of</strong> the burgeoning‘Weberological’ literature in <strong>of</strong>fering a coherenttheoretical explanation for the proliferation <strong>of</strong> interpretationsthat Weber’s writings continue to elicit.ContributorsJames BoonPeter BreinerMario BungeCatherine Colliot-ThélèneJohn DrysdaleRobert FishmanJack GoodyJohn GunnellStephen HansonJeffrey KopsteinLaurence H. McFallsRoberto MottaAnthony OberschallGuy RocherAugustin SimardBarbara ThériaultNaoshi YamawakiOf related interest:In the Grip <strong>of</strong> FreedomLaw and Modernity in Max WeberCary Boucock0-8020-8342-0 / 978-08020-8342-5£16.00 / $27.95 / 2000Laurence H. McFalls is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> Political Science at l’Université de Montréal.Approx. 432 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9224-1 / 978-08020-9224-3£48.00 $75.00 E51


S O C I O L O G YRestructuring FamilyPoliciesConvergences and DivergencesMaureen BakerRecent years have seen significant changes in thesocial policies <strong>of</strong> many liberal welfare-states; this isespecially true <strong>of</strong> social programs for families withchildren. Increasingly, governments are making familypolicy trade-<strong>of</strong>fs, reducing support for some familiesbut improving it for others. Restructuring FamilyPolicies examines the political, demographic, andsocio-economic factors influencing the restructuring<strong>of</strong> family-related programs in OECD countries.Adopting a feminist political economy approach,Maureen Baker shows that while some governmentsencourage their citizens to see children as‘future resources,’ and promote strong supportfor reproductive health programs, child welfareservices, women’s refuges, subsidized childcare,and pay equity, others make these claims whilesimultaneously reducing family incomes throughthe deregulation <strong>of</strong> labour markets and restrictionson income support. Ultimately, Baker demonstratesthat nation states with the best outcomesfor families <strong>of</strong>fer a variety <strong>of</strong> social supports, whichare increasingly important as global markets reduceeconomic security for some families while improvingthe financial situation <strong>of</strong> others.Drawing from nation-based research, crossnationalstudies, and international data bases,Restructuring Family Policies successfully integratesmainstream academic debates about restructuringwelfare states with feminist research findings andcurrent policy concerns.Reading and WritingDisability DifferentlyThe Textured Life <strong>of</strong> EmbodimentTanya TitchkoskyMixing rigorous social theory with concrete analysis,Reading and Writing Disability Differentlyunpacks the marginality <strong>of</strong> disabled people byaddressing how the meaning <strong>of</strong> our bodily existenceis configured in everyday literate society.Tanya Titchkosky begins by illustrating hownews media and policy texts reveal dominantWestern ways <strong>of</strong> constituting the meaning <strong>of</strong> people,and the meaning <strong>of</strong> problems, as they relate toour understandings <strong>of</strong> the embodied self. Her goalis to configure disability as something more than aproblem, and beyond simply a positive or a negative,and to treat texts on disability as potential sitesto examine neo-liberal culture. Titchkosky holdsthat through an exploration <strong>of</strong> the potential behindlimited representations <strong>of</strong> disability, we can relateto disability as a meaningful form <strong>of</strong> resistance tothe restricted normative order <strong>of</strong> contemporaryembodiment.Incorporating a textual analysis <strong>of</strong> ordinarydepictions <strong>of</strong> disability, this innovative study promisesto represent embodied differences in new waysand alter our imaginative relations to the politics<strong>of</strong> the body.Tanya Titchkosky is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Sociology and Equity Studies at theOntario Institute for Studies in Education <strong>of</strong> the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Maureen Baker is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Sociology at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Auckland.308 pp / 6 x 9 / AvailableCloth ISBN 0-8020-8783-3 / 978-08020-8783-6£42.00 $65.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8571-7 / 978-08020-8571-9£20.00 $29.95 CApprox. 192 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9236-5 / 978-08020-9236-6£35.00 $55.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9506-2 / 978-08020-9506-0£15.00 $24.95 C52


H E A LT H C A R E / G E O L O G YWomen’s Health inCanadaCritical Perspectives on Theory and PolicyEdited by Marina Morrow, Olena Hankivisky, andColleen VarcoeIn recent years, healthcare pr<strong>of</strong>essionals have recognizedthe distinctly different healthcare needs andconcerns <strong>of</strong> men and women. In Canada, however,there has been little available in the way <strong>of</strong> a generaltext on women’s health. This volume works towardfilling that gap.To lay out the methodological and theoreticalfoundations for their study, editors Olena Hankivisky,Marina Morrow, and Colleen Varcoe bring togetheran interdisciplinary group <strong>of</strong> scholars and practitionerswho draw on the rich history <strong>of</strong> the Canadianwomen’s health movement, providing analysis <strong>of</strong>that history and <strong>of</strong> the emergent theory, policy, andpractice. Aimed at undergraduate and graduate studentsas well as practitioners, the collection adoptsan intersectional approach, looking closely at socialfactors such as gender, race, ethnicity, class, sexuality,and gender identity, and analysing how they relateboth to each other and to women’s health.Providing a much needed resource for teachers,students, and practitioners <strong>of</strong> women’s healthin Canada, this comprehensive volume makes animportant contribution to the literature.Marina Morrow is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theFaculty <strong>of</strong> Health Sciences and co-director <strong>of</strong> theInstitute for Critical Studies in Gender and Healthat Simon Fraser <strong>University</strong>.Olena Hankivisky is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Political Science and co-director<strong>of</strong> the Institute for Critical Studies in Gender andHealth at Simon Fraser <strong>University</strong>.Colleen Varcoe is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School<strong>of</strong> Nursing at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British Columbia.An Atlas <strong>of</strong> the Geologyand Mineral Deposits <strong>of</strong>UkraineEdited by Leonid Galets’kyiTranslated by Walter PerederySeventy-six full-colour maps with text presentthe geological characteristics <strong>of</strong> Ukraine in thistranslation <strong>of</strong> an atlas first prepared by scholarsat the Ukrainian Academy <strong>of</strong> Sciences’ Institue <strong>of</strong>Geology in 2001. Widely acclaimed in its country<strong>of</strong> origin, An Atlas <strong>of</strong> the Geology and MineralDeposits <strong>of</strong> Ukraine includes up-to-date geologicalconcepts, as well as ecological, historical, and prehistoricitems <strong>of</strong> interest.The seventy-six maps are grouped into sevencategories: general data, geophysical, structural,geological ‘slice,’ lithological, ecological, hydrological,and mineralogical. Ukraine has for some timebeen known as a country rich in mineral resources;as a result, maps depicting its vast mineral depositsas well as its oil, gas, and coal deposits are <strong>of</strong> particularinterest to foreign readers.Leonid Galets’kyi is a department head in theInstitute <strong>of</strong> Geology <strong>of</strong> the Ukrainian Academy <strong>of</strong>Sciences.Walter Peredery is a geologist who has workedacross Canada and internationally.Approx. 432 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>5 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-3939-1 / 978-08020-3939-2£55.00 $85.00 EApprox. 176 pp / 16 ¼ x 11 ½ / April <strong>2007</strong>76 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-8989-5 / 978-08020-8989-2£65.00 $100.00 E53


T H E B R I T I S H L I B R A R YLondonA Life in MapsPeter WhitfieldLondon: A Life in Maps <strong>of</strong>fers amagnificent panorama <strong>of</strong> London’shistory by focusing on its maps. TheGreat Fire; the opening <strong>of</strong> the RoyalParks; the building <strong>of</strong> the docks; therailway age – all these events andmany more are evident in thesehistoric maps from the mid-sixteenthcentury to the present day.Peter Whitfield is the author <strong>of</strong>several bestselling books on maphistory including Cities <strong>of</strong> theWorld: A History in Maps (BritishLibrary, 2005).Approx. 192 pp / February <strong>2007</strong>Approx. 200 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-4918-9 /978-07123-4918-5$50.00 EMedieval Dress andFashionMargaret ScottMedieval Dress and Fashion is thefirst book to deliberately focuson dress as it is depicted in theilluminated manuscript, and todiscuss the advantages and disadvantages<strong>of</strong> illuminations assource material, as well as indicatinghow dress would have beenunderstood by the manuscripts’original owners.Margaret Scott was Head <strong>of</strong>the History <strong>of</strong> Dress Section atthe Courtauld Institute <strong>of</strong> Art,London <strong>University</strong>.208 pp / April <strong>2007</strong>140 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-0675-7 /978-07123-0675-1$60.00 EThe Romantics andthe British LandscapeStephen HebronFocusing on the work <strong>of</strong> fourRomantic poets, Wordsworth,Coleridge, Keats, and Clare, TheRomantics and the British Landscapereveals how their appreciation <strong>of</strong>the natural world was highly subjective,changing according to thewriter’s state <strong>of</strong> mind. This book alsocontains stunning contemporaryillustrations, portraits, originalmanuscripts and watercolours byBritish artists <strong>of</strong> the days such asTurner and Cotman.Stephen Hebron works at TheWordsworth Trust in Cumbria,England.180 pp / Februray <strong>2007</strong>43 colour & 40 b/w illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-0676-5 / 978-07123-0676-8$50.00 EThe World <strong>of</strong> theLuttrell PsalterMichelle P. BrownIn The World <strong>of</strong> the Luttrell Psalter,Michelle Brown sets the psalterfirmly within its medieval context,tracing its history, inspirationand creation, and highlighting itsartistic models. Exploring patronage,purpose and audience, sheunravels the likely point andmeaning <strong>of</strong> the manuscript’suniquely fanciful imagery, dramaand humour.Michelle P. Brown is a renownedmanuscripts specialist. Recently,she has published The LindisfarneGospels: Society, Spirituality andthe Scribe (British Library, 2003).96 ppPaper ISBN 0-7123-4959-6 /978-07123-4959 -8$19.95 C54Mary Queen <strong>of</strong> ScotsAn Illustrated LifeSusan DoranUnlike other biographies on thesubject, Mary Queen <strong>of</strong> Scots isillustrated with many <strong>of</strong> the documentsupon which our knowledgeis based, as well as pictures <strong>of</strong> theleading characters in the story.Contemporary records are eithertranscribed or fully explainedwith extended captions.Susan Doran teaches Early ModernHistory at Christ Church, Oxford.192 pp / Februrary <strong>2007</strong>40 colour & 40 b/w illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-4916-2 /978-07123-4916-1$40.00 EDISTRIBUTION RIGHTS FOR CANADA ONLY. OTHER RIGHTS HELD BY THE BRITISH LIBRARYTradition andInnovation in LaterMedieval EnglishManuscriptsKathleen L. ScottThis ground-breaking study, by aleading historian <strong>of</strong> English art <strong>of</strong>the 15th century, <strong>of</strong>fers an originalinvestigation <strong>of</strong> motives for includingpictures in manuscripts, <strong>of</strong> therole <strong>of</strong> the author in illustration,and <strong>of</strong> the traditional and innovativenature <strong>of</strong> visual representationin medieval manuscripts.Kathleen L. Scott is general editor<strong>of</strong> Index <strong>of</strong> Images in EnglishManuscripts from the time <strong>of</strong>Chaucer to Henry VIII.Approx. 208 pp / April <strong>2007</strong>50 colour & 60 b/w illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-4936-7 / 978-07123-4936-9$90.00 E


T H E B R I T I S H L I B R A R YElizabeth I and theCulture <strong>of</strong> WritingEdited by Peter Beal and GraceIopolloThe distinguished contributors tothis volume believe that it is timeto pursue aspects <strong>of</strong> the culture <strong>of</strong>writing which formed so essentiala part <strong>of</strong> the life and reign <strong>of</strong>Elizabeth I. The essays shed lighton the roles she played in thisculture – as sovereign and ultimatearbiter, spectator and protagonist,friend and confidante, creator andrecipient, muse and literary icon.Contributors: H.R. Woodhuysen,Katherine Duncan-Jones, GraceIoppolo, Blair Worden, GabrielHenton, Joshua Eckhardt, JaneLawson, Peter Beal, Steven W. MayApprox. 240 pp / 9 x 6 ¼ / February <strong>2007</strong>40 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-0678-1 /978-07123-0678-2$90.00 ELiterary Cultures andthe Material BookThe British Library Studies in theHistory <strong>of</strong> the BookEdited by Simon Eliot, AndrewNash, and Ian WillisonThe wide range covered by thethirty contributors to this book isevidence <strong>of</strong> growing internationalinterest in book history. Thecontributors focus on the vitalrelationship between the materialbook itself (including the way inwhich it is created and sold) andthe study <strong>of</strong> literary cultures.Approx. 448 pp / March <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-7123-0684-6 / 978-07123-0684-3$90.00 ERussian Magic in theBritish Library: Books,Manuscripts, Scholarsand TravellersPanizzi Lectures 2005W.F. RyanThe work <strong>of</strong> W.R.S. Ralston,a Keeper <strong>of</strong> the British MuseumLibrary in the mid-19th centuryand authority on Russian magicand folklore is discussed in thislatest addition to the Panizzi Lectureswhich also looks at travel literatureand memoirs and examines both themerits and the problems <strong>of</strong> using thiskind <strong>of</strong> material as a historical sourcefor the study <strong>of</strong> popular belief.Approx. 96 pp / February <strong>2007</strong>Paper ISBN 0-7123-4983-9 /978-07123-4983-3$32.00 CVol. 12 ScottishLibrariesCorpus <strong>of</strong> British Medieval LibrariesEdited by J. Higgitt, with an introductoryessay by J. DurkanThe medieval institutions broughttogether here range from abbeys,priories and cathedral churchesto the universities <strong>of</strong> Aberdeen,Glasgow and St. Andrews. Alsoexamined are lists <strong>of</strong> books formerlyowned by Mary Queen <strong>of</strong> Scotsthat provide evidence <strong>of</strong> impressivecollections in Latin, Greek, French,Italian, and English. This is a work<strong>of</strong> the first importance for thehistory <strong>of</strong> the book in Scotland.Approx. 496 pp / April <strong>2007</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-7123-4979-0 /978-07123-4979-6$170.00 EVol. 13 New Textsand Discoveries inEarly Modern EnglishManuscriptsEnglish Manuscript StudiesEdited by Peter BealThis volume explores newlydiscovered manuscripts, or newaspects <strong>of</strong> known manuscripts.The manuscripts examined includecommonplace books, sermons,unpublished poems and a play.The thirteen articles throw newlight on notable texts and openup fresh research on aspects <strong>of</strong>authorship, scribal transmission,and compilation.Approx. 272 pp / April <strong>2007</strong>43 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-4977-4 /978-07123-4977-2$90.00 EDISTRIBUTION RIGHTS FOR CANADA ONLY. OTHER RIGHTS HELD BY THE BRITISH LIBRARY55


R E F E R E N C ECanadian Who’s Who <strong>2007</strong>Volume XLIIEdited by Elizabeth LumleyNow in its ninety-seventh year <strong>of</strong> publication, thisstandard Canadian reference source contains themost comprehensive and authoritative biographicalinformation on notable living Canadians. Thoselisted are carefully selected because <strong>of</strong> the positionsthey hold in Canadian society, or because <strong>of</strong> thecontribution they have made to life in Canada.The volume is updated annually to ensureaccuracy, and 600 new entries are added each yearto keep current with developing trends and issuesin Canadian society. Included are outstandingCanadians from all walks <strong>of</strong> life: politics, media,academia, business, sports, and the arts, from everyarea <strong>of</strong> human activity.Each entry details birth date and place, education,family, career history, memberships, creativeworks, honours and awards, and full addresses.Indispensable to researchers, students, media, business,government, and schools, Canadian Who’s Whois an invaluable source <strong>of</strong> general knowledge.‘The [Canadian] Who’s Who list <strong>of</strong> outstanding individualswill surely inspire…I know this research tool is regularlyconsulted, everywhere, by those who make it a pr<strong>of</strong>ession tobring the past to our…collective memory, as well as by thosewho, on the spur <strong>of</strong> the moment, may suddenly need informationbefore meeting someone, before introducing them,before referring someone to a research committee, beforewriting an article, etc… Canadian Who’s Who…has, fora long time, described the spirit <strong>of</strong> Canadians.’Roch Carrier, former National LibrarianCanadian Who’s Who <strong>2007</strong> on CD-ROMThe complete text <strong>of</strong> Canadian Who’s Who is alsoavailable on CD-ROM, in a comprehensively indexedand fully searchable format. Search ‘astronaut’ or‘entrepreneur <strong>of</strong> the year,’ ‘aboriginal achievementaward’ and ‘Order <strong>of</strong> Canada’ and discover a wealth<strong>of</strong> information. Fast, easy, and more accessible thanever, the Canadian Who’s Who on CD-ROM is anessential addition to your electronic library.Please see our website:www.utpress.utoronto.ca/cwwCD-ROM requirements:WINDOWS:95/98/2000/NT/XP386/25Mhz4mb RAM(8mb recommended)MAC:Mac OS 7, 8, and 94mb RAM(8mb recommended)BOOKApprox. 1460 pp / 8 ½ x 11 / May <strong>2007</strong>Cloth 0-8020-4061-6 / 978-0-8020-4061-9(ISSN 0068-9963)£127.00 $205.00 NETCD-ROMISBN 0-8020-4063-2 / 978-0-8020-4063-3(ISSN 1481-4269)£140.00 $250.00 NETBOOK AND CD-ROMISBN 0-8020-4062-4 / 978-0-8020-4062-6£200.00 $325.00 NETNETWORK LICENCESISBN 0-8020-4064-0 / 978-0-8020-4064-0For pricing information, please contact CEDROM-SNi(416) 260-2369info.canada@cedrom-sni.com8% PST applicable to Ontario residents on all formats56


R E F E R E N C EOntario Legal Directory <strong>2007</strong>Published annually since 1925Edited by Lynn N. BrowneAccuracy and completeness <strong>of</strong> detail have characterisedthe Ontario Legal Directory since 1925,when the first annual edition <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Toronto</strong> LegalDirectory was published.With over 30,000 listings <strong>of</strong> lawyers, law firms,federal and provincial courts, and government<strong>of</strong>fices, each complete with names, addresses, telephoneand fax numbers, e-mail and web addresses,the Ontario Legal Directory places all the informationyou need right at your fingertips. The BluePages put government and courts information rightup front, organized in easy-to-find categories withthumb-tab indexing.Book Subscription RatesQTY 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year1-5 copies 55.00 99.00 133.006-99 copies 51.00 92.00 123.00100+ copies 47.00 85.00 110.00Ontario Legal Directory <strong>2007</strong> on CD-ROMThe CD-ROM version incorporates all the features <strong>of</strong>the book and includes, as well, an easy-to-use interfacefor quick access to listings.• Cut and paste names and addresses directly intoother documents• Access services to the legal pr<strong>of</strong>ession• Bookmark frequently called numbers for quickreference• Annotate listings and create custom clipping files• Export data to standard word-processingformats or print information directlyCD-ROM requirements:WINDOWS:95/98/2000/NT/XP386/25Mhz – 4mb RAM (8mb recommended)MAC:Mac OS 7, 8, and 94mb RAM (8mb recommended)To order the book, contact:Journals Division, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong>Tel: (416) 667-7810Fax: (416) 667-7881journals@utpress.utoronto.caTo order the CD-ROM or network version,please contact:CEDROM-SNi120 Eglinton Ave. East, Suite 1000<strong>Toronto</strong>, Ontario M4P 1E2Tel: 416-260-2369Fax: 416-260-1559info.canada@cedrom-sni.comBOOKApprox. 1220 pp / 6 3 /5 x 9 3 /5 / February <strong>2007</strong>Paper ISBN 0-8020-4068-8 / 978-08020-4068-8(ISSN 1438-2615) $53.00 NETCD-ROMISBN 0-8020-4069-1 / 978-08020-4069-5(ISSN 1481-4064) $155.00 NETNETWORK LICENCESISBN 0-8020-4070-5 / 978-08020-4070-1Start as low as $195.00 for 1 to 3 users8% PST applicable to Ontario residents on all formats.57


R E F E R E N C ECanadian InsuranceClaims Directory <strong>2007</strong>75th Annual EditionEdited by Gwen PeroniThis directory is published yearly to facilitate theforwarding <strong>of</strong> insurance claims throughout Canadaand the United States. Its subscribers are adjusters,firms specializing in counsel to the insuranceindustry, insurance companies, and industrial andgovernment <strong>of</strong>fices.Listed are a total <strong>of</strong> 1600 independent adjusting<strong>of</strong>fices, which <strong>of</strong>fer dependable service to claims forwarders,as well as some 100 insurance counsel, whoare experienced in insurance defence litigation.The arrangement <strong>of</strong> listings is national, geographical,and alphabetical: adjusters and counselare listed by city, within province or state, andcountry. The editorial section includes a list <strong>of</strong>provincial associations <strong>of</strong> Insurance Adjusters, theFire Underwriters Investigation Bureau <strong>of</strong> Canada,Provincial Superintendents <strong>of</strong> Insurance, the FireMarshals <strong>of</strong> Canada, and a comprehensive listing <strong>of</strong>Canadian insurance companies.The listings are interspersed with informativeadvertisements from all fields <strong>of</strong> the insurance industry.Included as well are indexes to adjusters, insurancecounsel, insurance-related industries, and advertisers.Approx. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2007</strong>Paper ISBN 0-8020-4065-9 / 978-0-8020-4065-7(ISSN 0318-0352) $45.00 NET8% PST applicable to Ontario residents on above58


L E X I C O N S O F E A R LY GM EON DE ER RA N L IE NT GE RL EI S HTLexicons <strong>of</strong> Early Modern English (LEME) givesscholars unprecedented access to early books andmanuscripts that document the English languagefrom the beginning <strong>of</strong> printing in England to1702. With over 150 monolingual, bilingual, andpolyglot dictionaries and glossaries (in which eithersource or target language is English), as well as linguistictreatises, and encyclopedic or topical workLEME provide exciting opportunities for researchfor historians <strong>of</strong> the English language. A half-millionword-entries devised by contemporary speakers<strong>of</strong> early modern English describe the meaning <strong>of</strong>words, and their equivalents in languages such asFrench, Italian, Spanish, Latin, Greek, Hebrew,and other tongues encountered then in Europe,America, and Asia. LEME <strong>of</strong>fers:• searchable word-entries (simple, wildcard,Boolean, and proximity)• browsable page-by-page transcriptions <strong>of</strong> the lexicons,indexed by date, author, title and subject• a selection-list <strong>of</strong> editorially-lemmatized headwords• lists <strong>of</strong> headwords unique to each lexical text inthe database• bibliographies <strong>of</strong> over 800 primary lexical texts,and secondary historical and critical literature, withbiographical information on lexicographers• introduction, help, and information on editorialproceduresEditorIan LancashireProgrammerMarc PlamondonWeb Development<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> LibrarySUBSCRIPTION PRICES1 year 2 years 3 years1,000 2,000 3,000 Institutions (FTE> 10,000)750 1,000 1,500 Institutions (FTE< 10,000)75 100 150 IndividualTo subscribe to LEME contact:Journals Division, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong>Tel: (416) 667-7810 / (800) 565-9523Fax: (416) 667-7881 / (800) 221-9985journals@utpress.utoronto.caLEME gratefully acknowledges the generousresearch support <strong>of</strong> the Social Sciences andHumanities Research Council <strong>of</strong> Canada, theCanada Foundation for Innovation (CFI), and theText Analysis Portal for Research (TAPoR), directedby Ge<strong>of</strong>frey Rockwell at McMaster <strong>University</strong>.59


R E C E N T B A C K L I S TAboriginal Health in CanadaHistorical, Cultural,and EpidemiologicalPerspectives. SecondEditionJames B. Waldram, D. AnnHerring, T. Kue Young978-08020-8579-5 /£20.00 / $29.95 / 2006Adages IV iii 1 to V ii 51Edited by John N. Grant,Translated and Annotatedby John N. Grant and BettyI. Knott978-08020-8832-1 /£95.00 / $150.00 / 2006Athens and JerusalemGeorge Grant’s Theology,Philosophy, and PoliticsEdited by Ian Angus, RonDart, and Randy Peg Peters978-08020-9176-5 /£48.00 / $75.00 / 2006Beyond the Family RomanceThe Legend <strong>of</strong> PascoliMaria Truglio978-08020-9191-8 /£28.00 / $45.00 / 2006Bodies <strong>of</strong> TomorrowTechnology, Subjectivity,Science FictionSherryl Vint978-08020-9052-2 /£32.00 / $50.00 / 2006‘Call Me Hank’A Stó:lõ Man’s Reflectionson Logging, Living, andGrowing OldHank Pennier. Edited byKeith Thor Carlson andKristina Fagan978-08020-426-1 /£15.00 / $24.95 / 2006Canada’s Prime MinistersMacdonald to Trudeau– Portraits from theDictionary <strong>of</strong> CanadianBiographyEdited by Ramsay Cookand Réal Bélanger978-08020-9174-1 /£22.50 / $35.00 / <strong>2007</strong>Canadian Annual Review <strong>of</strong>Politics and Public Affairs2001Edited by David Muttimer978-08020-9235-9/£65.00 / $100.00 / 2006CaughtMontreal’s Modern Girlsand the Law, 1869-1945Tamara Myers978-08020-9450-6 /£22.50 / $35.00 / 2006Cinderella ArmyThe Canadians inNorthwest EuropeTerry Copp978-08020-3925-5 /£28.00 / $45.00 / 2006City StagesTheatre and Urban Spacein a Global CityMichael McKinnie978-08020-9121-5 /£28.00 / $45.00 / 2006The Court <strong>of</strong> Queen’s BenchManitoba, 1870-1950A Biographical HistoryDale Brawn978-08020-9225-0 /£42.00 / $65.00 / 2006Culinary LandmarksA Bibliography <strong>of</strong>Canadian Cookbooks,1825-1949Elizabeth Driver978-08020-4790-8 /£112.00 / $175.00 / <strong>2007</strong>Curriculum as CulturalPracticePostcolonial ImaginationsEdited by Yatta Kanu978-08020-9078-2 /£42.00 / $65.00 / 2006Dilemmas <strong>of</strong> SolidarityRethinking Distributionin the CanadianFederationEdited by Sujit Choudhry,Jean-François Gaudreault-Desbiens, and Lorne Sossin978-08020-9407-0 /£14.00 / $24.95 / 2006Do Men Mother?Fathering, Care, andDomestic ResponsibilityAndrea Doucet978-08020-8546-7 /£21.00 / $32.00 / 2006Doing Medicine TogetherGermany and RussianBetween the WarsEdited by Susan GrossSoloman978-08020-9171-0 /£42.00 / $65.00 / 2006Doing Time on the OutsideDeconstructing theBenevolent CommunityMaDonna R. Maidment978-08020-9389-9 /£15.00 / $24.95 / 200660


R E C E N T B A C K L I S TThe Educated Imaginationand Other Writings inCritical Theory 1933-1963Northrop Frye. Edited byGermaine Warkentin978-08020-9209-0 /£80.00 / $125.00 / 2006The Filled PenSelected Non-Fiction <strong>of</strong>P.K. PageP.K. Page. Edited by ZailigPollock978-08020-9399-8 /£14.00 / $21.95 / 2006Gangster PriestThe Italian AmericanCinema <strong>of</strong> MartinScorseseRobert Casillo978-08020-9403-2 /£21.95 / $39.95 / 2006Gender, the State, andSocial ReproductionHousehold Insecurity inNeo-Liberal TimesKate Bezanson978-08020-9065-2 /£35.00 / $55.00 / 2006The German RightPolitical Limits <strong>of</strong>the AuthoritarianImagination, 1860-1920James Retallack978-08020-9419-3 /£19.95 / $35.00 / 2006Gramsci’s Politics <strong>of</strong>LanguageEngaging the BakhtinCircle and the FrankfurtSchoolPeter Ives978-08020-9444-5 /£18.00 / $27.95 / 2006The Great CodeThe Bible and LiteratureNorthrop Frye. Edited byAlvin A. Lee978-08020-9120-8 /£65.00 / $100.00 / 2006A History <strong>of</strong> Canadian LegalThoughtCollected EssaysR.C.B. Risk. Edited andIntroduced by G. BlaineBaker and Jim Phillips978-08020-9424-7 /£42.00 / $65.00 / 2006Hopkin’s Poetics <strong>of</strong> Speechand SoundSprung Rhythm,Lettering, InscapeJames I. Wimsatt978-08020-915403 /£28.00 / $45.00 / 2006Household CountsCanadian Households andFamilies in 1901Edited by Eric W. Sagerand Peter Baskerville978-08020-3802-9 /£22.50 / $35.00 / <strong>2007</strong>Hunting the 1918 FluOne Scientist’s Search fora Killer VirusKirsty E. Duncan978-08020-9456-8 /£11.95 / $19.95 / 2006The Illusive Trade-<strong>of</strong>fIntellectual PropertyRights, InnovationSystems, and Egypt’sPharmaceutical IndustryBasma Abdelgafar978-08020-9180-2 /£32.00 / $50.00 / 2006The Illustrated Old EnglishHexateuch, Cotton Ms.Claudius B. ivThe Frontier <strong>of</strong> Seeingand Reading in Anglo-Saxon EnglandBenjamin C. Withers978-08020-9104-8 /$85.00 / <strong>2007</strong>World rights less U.K. andEuropeImagining LondonPostcolonial Fictionand the TransnationalMetropolisJohn Clement Ball978-08020-9455-1 /£14.95 / $27.95 / 2006International Law andIndigenous KnowledgeIntellectual Property,Plant Biodiversity, andTraditional MedicineChidi Oguamanam978-08020-3902-6 /£42.00 / $65.00 / 2006An Irish Working ClassExplorations in PoliticalEconomy and Hegemony,1800-1950Marilyn Silverman978-08020-9451-3 /£19.95 / $35.00 / 2006Italian Cultural LineagesJonathan White978-08020-9458-2 /£22.50 / $35.00 / <strong>2007</strong>The Jesuits Series Part Five(P-Z)Edited by Peter M. Dalyand G. Richard Dimler978-08020-9264-9 /£87.00 / $150.00 / 200661


R E C E N T B A C K L I S TLetters from HeavenPopular Religion in Russiaand the UkraineEdited by John-Paul Himkaand Andriy Zayarnyuk978-08020-9148-2 /£40.00 / $60.00 / 2006Loving in VersePoetic Influence as EroticStephen Guy-Bray978-08020-9203-8 /£28.00 / $45.00 / 2006Madness and the Mad inRussian CultureEdited by AngelaBrintlinger and IlyaVinitsky978-08020-9140-6 /£45.00 / $70.00 / <strong>2007</strong>Magistrates, Police, andPeopleEveryday Criminal Justicein Quebec and LowerCanada, 1764-1837Donald Fyson978-08020-9223-6 /£42.00 / $65.00 / 2006Making the Voyageur WorldTravelers and Traders inthe North American FurTradeCarolyn Podruchny978-08020-9428-5 /$29.95 / 2006Canadian rights onlyModern Art and the Idea <strong>of</strong>the MediterraneanEdited by Vojtìch Jirat-Wasiutyñski978-08020-9170-3 /£55.00 / $85.00 / <strong>2007</strong>Money Laundering inCanadaChasing Dirty andDangerous DollarsMargaret E. Beare andStephen Schneider978-08020-9417-9 /£20.00 / $32.95 / <strong>2007</strong>Mortuary Landscape <strong>of</strong>North AfricaEdited by David L. Stoneand Lea M. Stirling978-08020-9083-6 /£48.00 / $75.00 / 2006Narrating Social OrderAgoraphobia and thePolitics <strong>of</strong> ClassificationShelley Z. Reuter978-08020-9088-1 /£28.00 / $45.00 / 2006Negotiating TransculturalLivesBelongings and SocialCapital among Youth inComparative PerspectiveEdited by Dirk Hoerder,Yvonne Hébert, and IrinaSchmitt978-08020-9463-6 /£18.00 / $27.95 / 2006North American rights onlyNorthrop Frye’s Notebookson Renaissance LiteratureEdited by Michael Dolzani978-08020-9179-6 /£65.00 / $100.00 / 2006The Novel as InvestigationLeonardo de Sciascia,Dacia Maraini, andAntonio TabucchiJo-Ann Cannon978-08020-9114-7 /£32.00 / $50.00 / 2006Old Books and NewHistoriesAn Orientation to Studiesin Book and Print CultureLeslie Howsam978-08020-9438-4 /£9.95 / $16.95 / 2006Philosophy at the Edge <strong>of</strong>ChaosGilles Deleuze and thePhilosophy <strong>of</strong> DifferenceJeffrey A. Bell978-08020-9409-4 /£21.50 / $32.95 / 2006Racial Pr<strong>of</strong>iling in CanadaChallenging the Myth <strong>of</strong>‘a Few Bad Apples’Carol Tator and FrancisHenry978-08020-8666-2 /£22.50 / $35.00 / 2006Real WordsLanguage and System inHegelJeffrey Reid978-08020-9172-7 /£25.00 / $40.00 / <strong>2007</strong>Recognizing Aboriginal TitleThe Mabo Case andIndigenous Resistanceto English-SettlerColonialismPeter H. Russell978-08020-9443-8 /£22.50 / $35.00 / 2006REED in ReviewEssays in Celebration <strong>of</strong>the First Twenty-Five YearsEdited by Audrey Douglasand Sally-Beth MacLean978-08020-3827-2 /£45.00 / $70.00 / 200662


R E C E N T B A C K L I S TRural Protest on PrinceEdward IslandFrom BritishColonization to theEscheat MovementRusty Bittermann978-08020-7229-0 /£20.00 / $29.95 / 2006Rural Women’s Leadershipin Atlantic CanadaFirst-Hand Perspectiveson Local Public Life andParticipation in ElectoralPoliticsLouise Carbert978-08020-9125-3 /£28.00 / $45.00 / 2006Schooling and Differencein AfricaDemocratic Challenges ina Contemporary ContextGeorge J. Sefa Dei, AlirezaAsgharzadeh, SharonEblaghie Bahador, RiyadAhmed Shahjahan978-08020-4894-3 /£25.00 / $39.95 / 2006Screening Gender, FramingGenreCanadian Literature intoFilmPeter Dickinson978-08020-4475-4 /£28.00 / $45.00 / 2006Sexual Hierarchies, PublicStatusMen, Sodomy, and Societyin Spain’s Golden AgeCristian Berco978-08020-9139-0 /£32.00 / $55.00 / 2006Teaching AdolescentsEducational Psychologyas a Science <strong>of</strong> SignsHoward A. Smith978-08020-9099-7 /£40.00 / $60.00 / 2006Theatre <strong>of</strong> EstrangementTheory, Practice,IdeologySilvija Jestrovic978-08020-9068-3 /£35.00 / $55.00 / 2006Theorizing HistoricalConsciousnessEdited by Peter Seixas978-08020-9457-5 /£18.00 / $27.50 / 2006Through Lover’s LaneL.M. Montgomery’sPhotography and VisualImaginationElizabeth Rollins Epperley978-08020-9460-5 /£20.00 / $29.95 / <strong>2007</strong>To the PastHistory Education,Public Memory, andCitizenship in CanadaEdited by Ruth Sandwell978-08020-3814-2 /£14.00 / $21.95 / 2006The Triune GodSystematicsBernard Lonergan.Edited by Robert Doranand Daniel Monsour.Translated by Michael G.Shields978-08020-9433-9 /£25.00 / $39.95 / 2006Unpopular CultureTransforming theEuropean Comic Book inthe 1990sBart Beaty978-08020-9412-4 /£20.00 / $29.95 / 2006Virginity RevisitedConfigurations <strong>of</strong> theUnpossessed BodyEdited by BonnieMacLachlan and JudithFletcher978-08020-9013-3 /£35.00 / $55.00 / 2006World’s Fairs Italian-StyleThe Great Expositionsin Turin and theirNarratives, 1860-1915Cristina Della Coletta978-08020-9115-4 /£45.00 / $70.00 / 2006Writing to DelightItalian Short Stories byNineteenth-CenturyWomen WritersEdited by Antonia Arslanand Gabriella Romani978-08020-3810-4 /£20.00 / $29.95 / 2006Written in the FleshA History <strong>of</strong> DesireEdward Shorter978-08020-9452-0 /£12.95 / $24.95 / 200663


S E L E C T E D B A C K L I S TAboriginal People and theColonizers <strong>of</strong> Western Canadato 1900Sarah Carter0-8020-7995-4 / £33.00 / $48.00/ 1999Access to Care, Access toJusticeThe Legal Debate Over PrivateHealth Insurance in CanadaEdited by Colleen M. Flood, KentRoach, and Lorne Sossin0-8020-9420-1 / £22.50 / $37.95/ 2005Adages III iv 1 to IV ii 100Desiderius Erasmus. Edited byJohn N. Grant. Translated andannotated by Denis L. Drysdall0-8020-3643-0 / £80.00 /$125.00 / 2005Against the DraftEssays on ConscientiousObjection from the RadicalReformation to the Second WorldWarPeter Brock0-8020-9073-7 / £50.00 / $80.00/ 2006Analytical Political PhilosophyFrom Discourse, EdificationDavid Braybrooke0-8020-3867-0 / £42.00 / $65.00/ 2006Appointing Judges in an Age<strong>of</strong> Judicial PowerCritical Perspectives from aroundthe WorldEdited by Kate Malleson and PeterRussell0-8020-9381-7 / £22.50 / $45.00/ 2006The Art <strong>of</strong> Nation-BuildingPageantry and Spectacle atQuebec’s TercentenaryH.V. Nelles0-8020-8431-1 / £16.00 / $35.00/ 2000The Artist as MonsterThe Cinema <strong>of</strong> DavidCronenbergWilliam Beard0-8020-3807-7 / £22.50 / $35.00/ 2006Beasley’s Guide to LibraryResearchDavid Beasley0-8020-8328-5 / £8.00 / $13.95/ 2000Being Alive Well’Health and the Politics <strong>of</strong> CreeWell-BeingNaomi Adelson0-8020-8326-9 / £12.00 / $23.95/ 2000Between Caring & CountingTeachers Take on EducationReformLindsay Kerr0-8020-9123-7 / £25.00 / $40.00/ 2006BienfaitThe Saskatchewan Miners’Struggle <strong>of</strong> ’31Stephen Lyon Endicott0-8020-8452-4 / £14.00 / $25.95/ 2002Blood, Sweat, and CheersSport and the Making <strong>of</strong> ModernCanadaColin Howell0-8020-8248-3 / £10.00 / $17.95/ 2001Bora LaskinBringing Law to LifePhilip Girard0-8020-9044-3 / £35.00 / $55.00/ 2005Born at the Right TimeA History <strong>of</strong> the Baby BoomGenerationDoug Owram0-8020-8086-3 / £15.00 / $24.95/ 1986Breaking the BargainPublic Servants, Ministers, andParliamentDonald J. Savoie0-8020-8591-1 / £18.00 / $32.95/ 2003The British Library Guide toManuscript IlluminationHistory and TechniquesChristopher de Hamel0-8020-8173-8 / $20.95 / 2001North and South American rightsonlyBrothers and Sisters in IndiaA Study <strong>of</strong> Urban Adult SiblingsG.N. Ramu0-8020-9077-X / £40.00 / $60.00/ 2006Canada’s Changing FamiliesImplications for Individuals andSocietyEdited by Kevin McQuillan andZenaida R. Ravanera0-8020-8640-3 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2006Canada’s Governors General,1847–1878Biography and ConstitutionalEvolutionBarbara J. Messamore0-8020-9385-X / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2006Canadian Annual Review<strong>of</strong> Politics and Public Affairs1999Edited by David Mutimer0-8020-3901-4 / £65.00 /$100.00 / 2005Canadian Annual Review<strong>of</strong> Politics and Public Affairs2000Edited by David Mutimer0-8020-9089-3 / £63.00 / $98.00/ 2006Changing Politics <strong>of</strong> CanadianSocial PolicyJames J. Rice and Michael J. Prince0-8020-8074-X / £15.00 / $26.95/ 2000The Canadian PrairiesA HistoryGerald Friesen0-8020-6648-8 / £11.00 / $32.95/ 1987Char Davies’ ImmersiveVirtual Art and the Essence <strong>of</strong>SpatialityLaurie McRobert0-8020-9094-X / £32.00 / $50.00/ 2006Chasing RealityStrife over RealismMario Bunge0-8020-9075-3 / £48.00 / $75.00/ 2006Chaucer’s Queer PoeticsRereading the Dream TrioSusan Schiban<strong>of</strong>f0-8020-9035-4 / £48.00 / $75.00/ 2006Common and ContestedGroundA Human and EnvironmentalHistory <strong>of</strong> the NorthwesternPlainsTheodore Binnema0-8020-8694-2 / $24.95 / 2004Canadian rights onlyConcise Historical Atlas <strong>of</strong>CanadaEdited by William G. Dean,Conrad Heidenreich, ThomasMcIlwraith, and John Warkentin0-8020-4203-1 / £60.00 / $90.00/ 1998Constitutional OdysseyCan Canadians Become aSovereign People?Third EditionPeter H. Russell0-8020-3777-1 / £18.00 / $27.95/ 2004Continuity and Change inCanadian PoliticsEssays in Honour <strong>of</strong> David E. SmithEdited by Hans J. Michelmann andCristine de Clercy0-8020-9060-5 / £32.00 / $55.00/ 2006Controlling ReadersGuillaume de Machaut and HisLate Medieval AudienceDeborah McGrady0-8020-9020-6 / £48.00 / $75.00/ 2006Controversies with Edward LeeDesiderius Erasmus. Edited by JaneE. Phillips. Translated by ErikaRummel. Annotated by IstvánBejczy, Erika Rummel, and JaneE. Phillips0-8020-3836-0 / £96.00 /$150.00 / 2005The Convergence <strong>of</strong>CivilizationsConstructing a MediterraneanRegionEdited by Emanuel Adler, BeverlyCrawford, Federica Bicchi, andRafaella A. Del Sarto0-8020-3804-2 / £22.50 / $35.00/ 2006A Critical and Cultural TheoryReaderSecond EditionEdited by Anthony Easthope andKate McGowan0-8020-3800-X / $32.95 / 2004North American rights onlyCulture <strong>of</strong> EcologyReconciling Economics andEnvironmentRobert E. Babe0-8020-3595-7 / £42.00 / $65.00/ 2006Deleuze and SpaceEdited by Ian Buchanan and GreggLambert0-8020-9390-6 / $29.95 / 2005North American rights onlyDesiring WomenThe Partnership <strong>of</strong> Virginia Woolfand Vita Sackville-WestKaryn Z. Sproles0-8020-9402-3 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 200664


S E L E C T E D B A C K L I S TDiaspora in the CountrysideTwo Mennonite Communitiesand Mid-Twentieth CenturyRural DisjunctureRoyden Loewen0-8020-9418-X / £20.00 / $32.95/ 2006World rights less U.S.Dictionary <strong>of</strong> CanadianBiography / Dictionnairebiographique du CanadaVolume XV, 1921–1930Edited by Ramsay Cook and RéalBélanger0-8020-9087-7 / £80.00 /$125.00 / 2005Dictionary <strong>of</strong> NewfoundlandEnglishSecond Edition with SupplementEdited by G.M. Story, W.J. Kirwin,and J.D.A. Widdowson0-8020-6819-7 / £24.00 / $42.50/ 1998Difficult JusticeCommentaries on Levinas andPoliticsEdited by Asher Horowitz and GadHorowitz0-8020-8009-X / £40.00 / $60.00/ 2006Discounted LabourWomen Workers in Canada,1870–1939Ruth A. Frager and Carmela K.Patrias0-8020-7818-4 / £9.25 / $19.95/ 2005Disraeli’s DiscipleThe Scandalous Life <strong>of</strong> GeorgeSmytheMary S. Millar0-8020-9092-3 / £48.00 / $75.00/ 2006Dream No Little DreamsA Biography <strong>of</strong> the DouglasGovernment <strong>of</strong> Saskatchewan,1944-1961A.W. Johnson0-8020-8633-0 / £20.00 / $35.00/ 2004The Emotions <strong>of</strong> the AncientGreeksStudies in Aristotle and ClassicalLiteratureDavid Konstan0-8020-9103-2 / £55.00 / $85.00/ 2006The Empire <strong>of</strong> MindDigital Piracy and the Anti-Capitalist MovementMichael Strangelove0-8020-3818-2 / £21.50 / $33.95/ 2005Encyclopedic Dictionary<strong>of</strong> Semiotics, Media, andCommunicationEdited by Marcel Danesi0-8020-8329-3 / £12.00 / $25.95/ 2000Engaged PhilosophyEssays in Honour <strong>of</strong> DavidBraybrookeEdited by Susan Sherwin and PeterSchotch0-8020-3890-5 / £42.00 / $65.00/ 2006The Enlightenment CyborgA History <strong>of</strong> Communicationsand Control in the HumanMachine, 1660–1830Allison Muri0-8020-8850-3 / £40.00 / $60.00/ 2006Essays in the History <strong>of</strong>Canadian LawTwo Islands, Newfoundland andPrince Edward IslandEdited by Christopher English0-8020-9043-5 / £42.00 / $65.00/ 2005Ethical Issues in Community-Based Research with Childrenand YouthEdited by Bonnie Leadbeater,Elizabeth Banister, Cecilia Benoit,Mikael Jansson, Anne Marshall,and Ted Riecken0-8020-4882-X / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2006Federal-Provincial DiplomacyThe Making <strong>of</strong> Recent Policy inCanadaRichard Simeon0-8020-9411-2 / £20.00 / $32.95/ 2006Female Enterprise in the NewEconomyKaren D. Hughes0-8020-8672-1 / £15.00 / $29.95/ 2005Fields <strong>of</strong> FireThe Canadians in NormandyTerry Copp0-8020-3780-1 / £20.00 / $30.95/ 2003Flora <strong>of</strong> AlbertaRevised EditionE.H. Moss. Revised by John G. Packer0-8020-2508-0 / £42.00 / $73.00/ 1983Friends, Citizens, StrangersEssays on Where We BelongRichard Vernon0-8020-9079-6 / £42.00 / $65.00/ 2005The Gender <strong>of</strong> BreadwinnersWomen, Men and Change in TwoIndustrial Towns, 1880–1950Joy Parr0-8020-6760-3 / £13.95 / $27.50/ 1998Getting it WrongHow Canadians Forgot Their Pastand Imperilled ConfederationPaul Romney0-8020-8105-3 / £15.00 / $25.95/ 1999Grettir’s SagaTranslated by Denton Fox andHermann Palsso0-8020-6165-6 / £6.95 / $19.95/ 2001Grieving Mental IllnessA Guide for Patients and TheirCaregivers, Revised EditionVirginia Lafond0-8020-8532-6 / £10.00 / $18.95/ 2002Health Systems in TransitionCanadaGregory P. Marchildon0-8020-9400-7 / $25.00 / 2006North American rights onlyHidden in Plain SightContributions <strong>of</strong> AboriginalPeoples to Canadian Identity andCulture, Volume OneEdited by David R. Newhouse,Cora J. Voyageur, and Daniel J.K.Beavon0-8020-8581-4 / £22.50 / $35.00/ 2005History <strong>of</strong> MedicineA Scandalously ShortIntroductionJacalyn Duffin0-8020-7912-1 / $28.95 / 1999World rights less U.K. andEuropeHorses in SocietyA Story <strong>of</strong> Animal Breeding andMarketing Culture, 1800–1920Margaret E. Derry0-8020-9112-1 / £40.00 / $60.00/ 2006The House <strong>of</strong> DifferenceCultural Politics and NationalIdentity in CanadaEva Mackey0-8020-8481-8 / £14.00 / $25.95/ 2002Household PoliticsMontreal Families and PostwarReconstructionMagda Fahrni0-8020-4888-9 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2005In the AgoraThe Public Face <strong>of</strong> CanadianPhilosophyEdited by Andrew D. Irvine andJohn S. Russell0-8020-3817-4 / £20.00 / $32.95/ 2006In the Days <strong>of</strong> OurGrandmothersA Reader in Aboriginal Women’sHistory in CanadaEdited by Mary-Ellen Kelm andLorna Townsend0-8020-7960-1 / £22.50 / $35.00/ 2006Industrial SunsetThe Making <strong>of</strong> North America’sRust Belt, 1969-1984Steven High0-8020-8528-8 / £18.00 / $30.95/ 2003Inside the MosaicEdited by Eric Fong0-8020-8834-1 / £35.00 / $55.00/ 2006Integrative AntiracismSouth Asians in CanadianAcademeEdith Samuel0-8020-3782-8 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2005Introduction to Psychologyand LawCanadian PerspectivesEdited by Regina A. Schuller andJames R.P. Ogl<strong>of</strong>f0-8020-4275-9 / £30.00 / $55.00/ 2001The Jesuits, IICultures, Sciences, and the Arts,1540–1773Edited by John W. O’Malley, S.J.,Gauvin Alexander Bailey, Steven J.Harris, and T. Frank Kennedy, S.J.0-8020-3861-1 / £55.00 / $85.00/ 200565


S E L E C T E D B A C K L I S TJust MedicareWhat’s In, What’s Out, How WeDecideEdited by Colleen Flood0-8020-8002-2 / £42.00 /$65.00 / 2006Land Use Planning Made EasySecond EditionHok-Lin Leung0-8020-8552-0 / £20.00 / $32.95/ 2003Latin Learning and English LoreStudies in Anglo-Saxon Literaturefor Michael LapidgeEdited by Katherine O’BrienO’Keeffe and Andy Orchard0-8020-8919-4 / £96.00 /$150.00 / 2005Law and Ethics in BiomedicalResearchRegulation, Conflict <strong>of</strong> Interest,and LiabilityEdited by Trudo Lemmens andDuff R. Waring0-8020-8643-8 / £22.50 / $35.00/ 2006Lords <strong>of</strong> the RinksThe Emergence <strong>of</strong> the NationalHockey League, 1875–1936John Chi-Kit Wong0-8020-8520-2 / £18.00 / $32.95/ 2005The Making <strong>of</strong> the MosaicA History <strong>of</strong> CanadianImmigration PolicyNinette Kelley and MichaelTrebilcock0-8020-8146-0 / £20.00 / $32.95/ 1999Making Sense <strong>of</strong> AdultLearningSecond EditionDorothy MacKeracher0-8020-3778-X / £21.50 / $34.95/ 2004Managing to NurseInside Canada’s Health CareReformJanet M. Rankin and Marie L.Campbell0-8020-3791-7 / £16.00 / $27.95/ 2006Manuscript Diversity, Meaning,and Variance in Juan Manuel’sEl Conde LucanorLaurence de Looze0-8020-9057-5 / £48.00 / $75.00/ 2006Medici WomenPortraits <strong>of</strong> Power, Love, andBetrayal in the Court <strong>of</strong> DukeCosimo IGabrielle Langdon0-8020-3825-5 / £55.00 / $85.00/ 2006Method in TheologySecond EditionBernard Lonergan0-8020-6809-X / £13.50 / $26.95/ 1990Milton and the Climates <strong>of</strong>ReadingEssays by Balachandra RajanEdited by Elizabeth Sauer0-8020-9105-9 / £28.00 / $45.00/ 2006Mothers <strong>of</strong> the NationWomen, Families, andNationalism in Twentieth-Century EuropePatrizia Albanese0-8020-9015-X / £35.00 / $55.00/ 2006NarratologyIntroduction to the Theory <strong>of</strong>Narrative, Second EditionMieke Bal0-8020-7806-0 / £13.00 / $23.95/ 1997A Nation <strong>of</strong> ImmigrantsReadings in Canadian History,1840s–1960sEdited by Franca Iacovetta withPaula Draper and Robert Ventresca0-8020-7482-0 / £15.00 / $28.95/ 1998The Neo-Primitivist TurnCritical Reflections on Alterity,Culture, and ModernityVictor Li0-8020-9111-3 / £32.00 / $50.00/ 2006Not This TimeCanadians, Public Policy, and theMarijuana Question, 1961–1975Marcel Martel0-8020-9379-5 / £18.00 / $27.95/ 2006On the Edge <strong>of</strong> EmpireGender, Race, and the Making <strong>of</strong>British Columbia, 1849–1871Adele Perry0-8020-8336-6 / £16.00 / $28.95/ 2001The Order <strong>of</strong> CanadaIts Origins, History, andDevelopmentChristopher McCreery0-8020-3940-5 / £40.00 / $70.00/ 2005The Other QuebecMicrohistorical Essays onNineteenth-Century Religionand SocietyJ.I. Little0-8020-9397-3 / £20.00 / $35.00/ 2006Partisanship, Globalization,and Canadian Labour MarketPolicyFour Provinces in ComparativePerspectiveRodney Haddow and Tho masKlassen0-8020-9090-7 / £42.00 / $65.00/ 2006Patrons <strong>of</strong> EnlightenmentEdward G. Andrew0-8020-9064-8 / £35.00 / $55.00/ 2006The People <strong>of</strong> New FranceAllan Greer0-8020-7816-8 / £10.00 / $15.95/ 1997Performance Degree ZeroRoland Barthes and TheatreTimothy Scheie0-8020-9387-6 / £18.00 / $27.95/ 2006Pink BloodHomophobic Violence in CanadaDouglas Victor Jan<strong>of</strong>f0-8020-8570-9 / £21.50 / $33.95/ 2005The Politics <strong>of</strong> CANDU ExportsDuane Bratt0-8020-9091-5 / £40.00 / $60.00/ 2006The Primacy <strong>of</strong> SemiosisAn Ontology <strong>of</strong> RelationsPaul Bains0-8020-9003-6 / £32.00 / $50.00/ 2006Print Culture and theBlackwood TraditionEdited by David Finkelstein0-8020-8711-6 / £42.00 / $65.00/ 2006The Promise <strong>of</strong> SchoolingEducation in Canada, 1800–1914Paul Axelrod0-8020-7815-X / £8.50 / $15.95/ 1997The Quest for EpicFrom Ariosto to TassoSergio Zatti. Edited by DennisLooney0-8020-9373-6 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2006Quest for Self-KnowledgeAn Essay in Lonergan’sPhilosophyJoseph Flanagan0-8020-7851-6 / £18.00 / $27.95/ 1997Quixotic FrescoesCervantes and Italian RenaissanceArtFrederick A. de Armas0-8020-9074-5 / £50.00 / $80.00/ 2006The RebelsA Brotherhood <strong>of</strong> Outlaw BikersDaniel R. Wolf0-8020-7363-8 / £13.00 / $24.95/ 1991Recovering CanadaThe Resurgence <strong>of</strong> IndigenousLawJohn Borrows0-8020-8501-6 / £20.00 / $32.95/ 2002Red Riding Hood and the Wolfin BedModernism’s Fairy TalesAnn Martin0-8020-9086-9 / £32.00 / $50.00/ 2006The Renaissance in HistoricalThoughtWallace K. Ferguson0-8020-9415-5 / £18.00 / $27.50/ 2006Responding to Youth Crime inCanadaAnthony Doob and Carla Cesaroni0-8020-8624-1 / £20.00 / $30.95/ 2004Riding to the RescueThe Transformation <strong>of</strong> the RCMPin Alberta and Saskatchewan,1914–1939Steve Hewitt0-8020-4895-1 / £15.00 / $24.95/ 2006Ritual, Routine, and RegimeRepetition in Early ModernBritish and European CulturesEdited by Lorna Clymer0-8020-9030-3 / £40.00 / $60.00/ 200666


S E L E C T E D B A C K L I S TRockboundFrank Parker Day0-8020-6723-9 / £14.00 / $22.95/ 1973The Roles <strong>of</strong> Public OpinionResearch in CanadianGovernmentChristopher Page0-8020-9377-9 / £18.00 / $27.95/ 2006Rules, Rules, Rules, RulesMulti-Level RegulatoryGovernanceEdited by G. Bruce Doern andRobert Johnson0-8020-3858-1 / £40.00 / $60.00/ 2006Searching for JusticeAn AutobiographyFred Kaufman0-8020-9051-6 / £42.00 / $65.00/ 2005The Secular Scripture andOther Writings on CriticalTheory, 1976–1991Northrop Frye. Edited by JosephAdamson and Jean Wilson0-8020-3945-6 / £65.00 /$100.00 / 2006Shakespeare in the Worlds <strong>of</strong>Communism and SocialismEdited by Irena R. Makaryk andJoseph G. Price0-8020-9058-3 / £55.00 / $85.00/ 2006The Shape <strong>of</strong> the City<strong>Toronto</strong> Struggles with ModernPlanningJohn Sewell0-8020-7409-X / £13.00 / $20.95/ 1993Skyscrapers Hide the HeavensA History <strong>of</strong> Indian-WhiteRelations in Canada, ThirdEditionJ.R. Miller0-8020-8153-3 / £18.00 / $35.95/ 2000Staying Human DuringResidency TrainingThird EditionAllan D. Peterkin0-8020-8615-2 / £11.75 / $21.95/ 2004Studies in HellenisticArchitectureFrederick E. Winter0-8020-3914-6 / £96.00 /$150.00 / 2005Teaching with the Records <strong>of</strong>Early English DramaEdited by Elza C. Tiner0-8020-9082-6 / £48.00 / $75.00/ 2006The Thesis and the BookA Guide for First-Time AcademicAuthors, Second EditionEdited by Eleanor Harman, IanMontagnes, Siobhan McMenemy,and Chris Bucci0-8020-8588-1 / £11.00 / $17.95/ 2003This Is Not a Peace PipeTowards a Critical IndigenousPhilosophyDale Turner0-8020-3792-5 / £15.00 / $26.95/ 2006Thomas Hardy ReappraisedEssays in Honour <strong>of</strong> MichaelMillgateEdited by Keith Wilson0-8020-3955-3 / £40.00 / $60.00/ 2006A Tournament <strong>of</strong> MisfitsTall Tales and ShortAldo Palazzeschi. Translated byNicolas J. Perella0-8020-4889-7 / £18.00 / $27.95/ 2005Transnational CervantesWilliam Childers0-8020-9045-1 / £40.00 / $60.00/ 2006The Triumphant Juan RanaA Gay Actor <strong>of</strong> the SpanishGolden AgePeter E. Thompson0-8020-8969-0 / £28.00 / $45.00/ 2006Unsettling PartitionLiterature, Gender, MemoryJill Didur0-8020-7997-0 / £32.00 / $50.00/ 2006Utopian PedagogyRadical Experiments AgainstNeoliberal GlobalizationEdited by Mark Coté, Richard J.F.Day, and Greig de Peuter0-8020-8675-6 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2006A Vision <strong>of</strong> the OrientTexts, Intertexts, and Contexts <strong>of</strong>Madame ButterflyEdited by Jonathan Wisenthal,Sherrill Grace, Melinda Boyd,Brian McIlroy, and Vera Micznik0-8020-8801-5 / £32.00 / $50.00/ 2006Visiting GrandchildrenEconomic Development in theMaritimesDonald J. Savoie0-8020-9382-5 / £22.50 / $35.00/ 2006Vite italianeDodici conversazioni con italianiUgo Skubikowski0-8020-4887-0 / £18.00 / $29.95/ 2005For more information on these and other <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong> titles, please visit our website atwww.utppublishing.comThe Voyages <strong>of</strong> JacquesCartierEdited by Ramsay Cook0-8020-6000-5 / £11.50 / $24.95/ 1993WalesEdited by David N. Klausner0-8020-9072-9 / $250.00 / 2005World rights less UK and EuropeWeapons <strong>of</strong> Mass PersuasionMarketing the War Against IraqPaul Rutherford0-8020-8651-9 / £13.00 / $19.95/ 2004What is Systematic Theology?Robert M. Doran0-8020-9041-9 / £35.00 / $55.00/ 2005Wheat and WomanGeorgina Binnie-Clark0-8020-3813-1 / £18.00 / $27.95/ 2006White CivilityThe Literary Project <strong>of</strong> EnglishCanadaDaniel Coleman0-8020-3707-0 / £35.00 / $55.00/ 2006‘Will the Circle be Unbroken?’Aboriginal Communities,Restorative Justice, and theChallenges <strong>of</strong> Conflict andChangeJane Dickson-Gilmore and CarolLa Prairie0-8020-8674-8 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2005The Workers’ FestivalA History <strong>of</strong> Labour Day inCanadaCraig Heron and Steve Penfold0-8020-4886-2 / £25.00 / $39.95/ 2005Working on ScreenRepresentations <strong>of</strong> the WorkingClass in Canadian CinemaEdited by Malek Khouri andDarrell Varga0-8020-9388-4 / £22.50 / $35.00/ 2006The World in VenicePrint, the City, and Early ModernIdentityBronwen Wilson0-8020-8725-6 / £48.00 / $75.00/ 2005Writing the Roaming SubjectThe Biotext in CanadianLiteratureJoanne Saul0-8020-9012-5 / £25.00 / $45.00/ 200667


J O U R N A L SGenocide Studies andPreventionGenocide Studies and Prevention is an international,interdisciplinary journal dedicated to understandingthe phenomenon <strong>of</strong> genocide, researchingit, and sharing the findings as widely as possibleso as to produce constructive results. Our aim isto produce a high-quality peer-reviewed journalthat addresses cutting-edge issues in the field <strong>of</strong>genocide studies and related areas such as preventivediplomacy, conflict management, intervention,sanctions, and post-genocidal issues.Genocide Studies and Prevention provides a muchneededforum for discussion, as it fosters awareness<strong>of</strong> the atrocities linked to genocide while promotingthe necessity <strong>of</strong> prevention. This peer-reviewedjournal publishes articles on the latest developmentsin policy, research and theory from variousdisciplines including history, political science,sociology, psychology, international law, criminaljustice and religion.Canadian HistoricalReviewThe Canadian Historical Review <strong>of</strong>fers an analysis<strong>of</strong> the ideas, people, and events that have moldedCanadian society and institutions into their presentstate. Canada’s past is examined from a vastand multicultural perspective to provide a thoroughassessment <strong>of</strong> all influences. The CanadianHistorical Review <strong>of</strong>fers an analysis <strong>of</strong> the ideas,people, and events that have molded Canadiansociety and institutions into their present state.Victorian PeriodicalsReview0riginating in the 1960s as a response to the narrowrange <strong>of</strong> index and information on Victorianperiodicals, the Victorian Periodicals Review hasdeveloped a large and far-reaching audience. VPRis the only journal that deals exclusively with BritishVictorian periodicals. It is, therefore, on the cuttingedge <strong>of</strong> research in that field.VPR is a quarterly journal featuring articles onthe editorial and publishing history <strong>of</strong> Victorianperiodicals, with a historical, critical, or bibliographicalemphasis on the importance <strong>of</strong> periodicalsfor an understanding <strong>of</strong> the history and culture<strong>of</strong> Victorian Britain, Ireland, and the Empire. Italso publishes book reviews on subjects pertainingto the interests <strong>of</strong> its readers and a biannualbibliography <strong>of</strong> articles dealing with periodicalsin the period 1800–1914, culled from nearly 200periodicals and reference works.Canadian Theatre ReviewCanadian Theatre Review is the major magazine <strong>of</strong>record for Canadian theatre. It is committed to excellencein the critical analysis and innovative coverage<strong>of</strong> current developments in Canadian theatre, toadvocating new issues and artists, and to publishingat least one significant new playscript per issue.The editorial board is committed to CTR’spractice <strong>of</strong> theme issues that present multi-facetedand in-depth examinations <strong>of</strong> the emerging issues<strong>of</strong> the day and to expanding the practice <strong>of</strong> criticismin Canadian theatre and to the development<strong>of</strong> new voices.68


J O U R N A L SContact <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong> Journalsfor the following titles:Bookbird: A Journal <strong>of</strong> InternationalChildren’s LiteratureCanadian Historical ReviewCanadian Journal on AgingCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> Criminology andCriminal JusticeCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> Information and LibraryScienceCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> Law and SocietyCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> LinguisticsCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> MathematicsCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> Science, Mathematics andTechnology EducationCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> SociologyCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> Women and the LawCanadian Mathematical BulletinCanadian Modern Language ReviewCanadian Public PolicyCanadian Review <strong>of</strong> American StudiesCanadian Theatre ReviewCartographicaDiaspora: A Journal <strong>of</strong> Transnational StudiesEighteenth Century FictionGenocide Studies and PreventionHistoire Sociale / Social HistoryInfor: Information Systems and OperationalResearchJournal <strong>of</strong> Canadian StudiesJournal <strong>of</strong> Scholarly <strong>Publishing</strong>Journal <strong>of</strong> Veterinary Medical EducationLexicons <strong>of</strong> Early Modern English (LEME)Literary Review <strong>of</strong> CanadaModern DramaSeminar: A Journal <strong>of</strong> Germanic StudiesSimile: Studies in Media & Information LiteracyEducationThe Tocqueville ReviewUltimate Reality and Meaning<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> Law Journal<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> QuarterlyVictorian Periodicals ReviewYearbook <strong>of</strong> Comparative and General Literature<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong> Journals5201 Dufferin Street, North York ON M3H 5T8Tel: 416-667-7810 / Fax: 416-667-7881Toll-free fax in North America: 1-800-221-9985E-mail: journals@utpress.utoronto.caVisit www.utpjournals.com to access more than5000 articles and book reviews taken from currentand previously published journals.69


I N D E XAThe Aesthetics <strong>of</strong>International Law 48Agents <strong>of</strong> Empire .......42An Atlas <strong>of</strong> the Geologyand Mineral Deposits<strong>of</strong> Ukraine ...........53Anatomy <strong>of</strong> Criticism 29Angeles, Leonora .....17Angus L. Macdonald .41Appropriating theLonergan Idea ......46Armstrong-Roche,Michael ...............32BBadia, Janet .............13Baker, Maureen .......52Baldwin, Elizabeth ..36Baur, ChristineO’Connell ...........25Barman, Jean .............6Beal, Peter ...............55Beare, Margaret .......50Before the Country ....30Bliss, Michael ..........11Blom, Hans .............44Bontis, Nick ............18Borins, Sandford .....18Boris Yeltsin andRussia’s DemocraticTransformation ......7Bouchard, Norma ...24Brier, Søren .............45‘Bring furth thepagants’ ................36The British LibraryStudies in the History<strong>of</strong> the Book ...........55Brown, David ..........18Brown, Michelle P......................35, 54Browne, Lynn N .....57Brubaker, Elizabeth .20Byzantine Hermeneuticsand Pedagogy in theRussian North ......39CCalin, William ........28Canadian InsuranceClaims Directory<strong>2007</strong> ...................58The Canadian Senate inBicameralPerspective ............14Canadian Who’s Who<strong>2007</strong> ...................56Caranti, Luigi ..........45Cervantes’ EpicNovel ...................32Cesare Pavese andAntonioChiuminatto ........25Charters, David A .....1Chequered Past ...........1Cheshire ...................36Chilton, Lisa ...........42Civilization andDemocracy ...........24Clopper, Lawrence ...36Conscience on Stage ..32Constable, Giles ......39Corpus <strong>of</strong> MedievalBritish Libraries ...55Craft Capitalism .......43Crowe, Frederick E ..46Curle, ClintonTimothy ..............17Cybersemiotics ..........45DDante’s Hermeneutics <strong>of</strong>Salvation .............25Defamiliarizing theAboriginal ............22Denham, Robert D. 29Digital State at theLeading Edge .......18Dobuzinskis,Laurent ...............19Doern, G. Bruce ......19Doran, Susan ...........54DuBois, Thomas .....37Dyzenhaus, David ...48EEditing Modernity ....27Eliot, Simon ............55Elizabeth I and theCulture <strong>of</strong> Writing 55Ellison, Herbert J ......7Emberley, Julia V .....22Embodying Pessoa .....33The Empirical Gap inJurisprudence .......49English ManuscriptStudies .................55Ethics and the NewGenetics ...............47Exalted Subjects ..........9The Extended Mind ....8FFair Trade C<strong>of</strong>fee ......20Federalism, Citizenship,and Quebec ..........16Film Histories .............4Fluid Screens, ExpandedCinema ...............22Fridell, Gavin ..........20Frye, Northrop ........29GGagnon, Alain-G ....16Galets’kyi, Leonid ...53Gallagher, Kathleen .21Garson, Marjorie .....31Gerson, Carole ..........5Gill, Glen Robert ....29Gillies, Mary Ann ....27Grainge, Paul ............4Greener Pastures .......20Gurstein, Penny ......17HThe Half-Lives <strong>of</strong> PatLowther ...............13Hankivisky, Olena ...53Harvey Cushing ........11The Health Impact<strong>of</strong> Smoking andObesity ..................3Hebron, Stephen .....54Henderson, T.Stephen ...............41Higgitt, J .................55History <strong>of</strong> the Book inCanada .................5The HolisticCurriculum ..........21Howlett, Michael ....19Humanité ................17Huscr<strong>of</strong>t, Grant .......49IIacovino, Raffaele ....16Imagining Joyce ........30The Importance <strong>of</strong>Insight .................46Inside and OutsideCanadian AdministrativeLaw ....................... 49Iopollo, Grace .........55Irvine, Dean ............27JJancovitch, Mark .......4KKallendorf, Hilaire ..32Kaminsky, Barbara ....3Kant and the Scandal <strong>of</strong>Philosophy ............45Kernaghan, Kenneth 18Kinder, Jeffrey S ......19Klausner, David N ..36Klobucka, Anna ......33Krist<strong>of</strong>ferson,Robert B .............43Kroker, Kenton .........2Krueger, Hans ...........3LLacaita, Carlo G ......24Latham, David ........31Laursen, JohnChristian .............44Law and Morality ....48Laycock, David .......1970


I N D E XLeadership,Representation, andElection ...............16Learning CivilSocieties ...............17Lexicons <strong>of</strong> Early ModernEnglish ................59Liptay, David S ........46Liptay, John J ..........46Literary Celebrity inCanada .................4Logan, Robert K .......8Lollini, Massimo .....24London ....................54Lord, Susan .............22Lumley, Elizabeth ....56MMahon, Peter ..........30Manuscripts fromthe Anglo-SaxonAge ......................35Marchessault, Janine 22Marginal Man .........10Mary Queen <strong>of</strong> Scots .54Marsalek, KarenSawyer ................36Max Weber’s ‘Objectivity’Reconsidered .........51McFalls, Laurence ...51McKenzie, Stephanie 30McLean, David .........3Medieval Dress andFashion ................54Michelmann, Hans .16Michon, Jacques ........5Miller, John P ..........21Miller, Peter N ........44Mills, David ............36Momigliano andAntiquarianism ....44Monarchisms in the Age<strong>of</strong> Enlightenment ..44Monsour, H.Daniel .................47Montieth, Sharon ......4Moral Taste ..............31Moreau, SophiaReibetanz ............48Morgan, Ed .............48Morrow, Marina ......53Mount, Nick ...........12Murray, Tonita ........50Muttart, Daved .......49NNash, Andrew .........55Northrop Frye and thePhenomenology <strong>of</strong>Myth ...................29OOntario Legal Directory<strong>2007</strong> ...................57Ostow, Robin ..........43PPanizzi Lectures .......55Paraphrase on the Gospel<strong>of</strong> Matthew ..........38The People’s House <strong>of</strong>Commons ............15Peredery, Walter ......53Peroni, Gwen ..........58Perri 6 .....................18Phegley, Jennifer ......13Pick One IntelligentGirl .....................42Pietralunga, Mark ....25Police and GovernmentRelations ..............50Policy Analysis inCanada ...............19The Pr<strong>of</strong>essional LiteraryAgent in Britain,1880 – 1920 .......27RReading and WritingDisabilityDifferently ...........52Reading and Writing theMediterranean .....24Reading Women ........13Refocusing CrimePrevention ...........50Restructuring FamilyPolicies .................52(Re)Visualizing NationalHistory ................43Ripstein, Arthur ......48Romanchuk, Robert 39The Romantics and theBritish Landscape 54Ryan, W. F ..............55Ryan-Scheutz,Colleen ...............23SSabetti, Filippo ........24Sabine, Mark ...........33Sanctity in the North 37Schneider, Stephen ..50Scott, Kathleen L ....54Scott, Margaret .......54Sex, the Self, and theSacred ..................23Shearer-Cremean,Christine .............14Sider, Robert ...........38Simonutti, Luisa ......44The Sleep <strong>of</strong> Others .....2Smith, David E .14, 15Solomon, Lawrence ...6Sounding Objects ......38Steeves, Jeffrey S ......16Stephen, Jennifer .....42Story, Donald C ......16Strategic Science in thePublic Interest ......19Survivor Rhetoric ......14TTaggart, Michael .....49Telling Anxiety .........34The Theatre <strong>of</strong> Urban 21Thobani, Sunera ........9Thompson, Fred .....18Three Treatise fromBec on the Nature <strong>of</strong>Monastic Life .......39Titchkosky, Tanya ...52<strong>Toronto</strong> Sprawls ..........6Tradition andInnovation in LaterMedieval EnglishManuscripts .........54The Twentieth-CenturyHumanist Critics ..28UUnexpected Affinities ..8VVarcoe, Colleen .......53Vertin, Michael .......46WWatson, AlexanderJohn ....................10The West beyondthe West .................6When CanadianLiterature Moved toNew York .............12Whitfield, Peter .......54Wiesenthal, Christine 13Willging, Jennifer ....34Williams, Dan ...........3Williams’ HebrewSyntax .................26Williams, Ronald J ..26Williamson, Rodney 33Willison, Ian ...........55Winkelmann,Carol L ...............14Women’s Health inCanada ...............53The World <strong>of</strong> the LuttrellPsalter .................54Writing on the Image 31The Writing onthe Stars ...............33YYork, Lorraine ...........4ZZecher, Carla ...........38Zhang Longxi ............871


O R D E R F O R MHOW TO ORDERIndividuals:Booksellers:Order direct from<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong>Order Department. If youare billing an order, pleaseinclude your UTP accountnumber.Institutions:Order through yourwholesaler or direct from<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong>Order Department.Institutional purchaseorders accepted.To order by phone:(800) 565-9523(Canada and US)(416) 667-7791INDIVIDUALS’ ORDER FORMName ___________________________________________________________________________Institution _________________________________________________________________________Address ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________Phone ___________________________________________________________________________PAYMENTName ___________________________________________________________________________❑Enclosed is my cheque/money order, payable to <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong> forpayable to <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong> for$ __________________❑ Please charge my: ❑ Visa ❑ MasterCard ❑ American ExpressCard # ________________________________________________________ Expiry __________Signature (required)________________________________________________________________PLEASE QUOTE MARKETING CODE 1021QTY AUTHOR / TITLE ISBN PRICE SUBTOTALor fax this order form to:(800) 221-9985(Canada and US)(416) 667-7832or contact us by E-mail at:utpbooks@utpress.utoronto.caMail this form to:<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong>Order Department5201 Dufferin StreetNorth York ONM3H 5T8SUBTOTAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ __________________Outside Canada all prices are in US Dollars.SHIPPING CHARGES:Canada & US: $6.00 for the first book, $2.00 for each additional book . . $ __________________Overseas: $12.00 US for the first book, $3.00 US for each additional book $ __________________Canadian orders should add 6% GST for total books and shipping . . . . $ __________________NY State orders should add 8% state sales tax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ __________________TOTAL AMOUNT OF THIS ORDER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ __________________Note: Books not yet published will be shipped when stock arrives.All prices are subject to change without notice.72


ORDERS AND CUSTOMER SERVICEHEAD OFFICE:UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS10 St. Mary Street, Suite 700<strong>Toronto</strong> ON M4Y 2W8Tel: (416) 978-2239*Fax: (416) 978-4738www.utppublishing.comDouglas HildebrandSales and Marketing ManagerTel: *251Suzanne RancourtRights ManagerTel: *239SEND ORDERS TO:CANADA & USCustomer Order Department<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong>5201 Dufferin StreetNorth York ON M3H 5T8Tel: (416) 667-7791Fax: (416) 667-7832Tel: 1 (800) 565-9523Fax: 1 (800) 221-9985(Toll Free in Canada & U.S.)Email:utpbooks@utpress.utoronto.caU.S. Orders can be sent to:<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong>2250 Military RoadTonawanda NY 14150Tel: (716) 693-2768Fax: (716) 692-7479UK & CONTINENTAL EUROPEc/o NBN InternationalPlymbridge HouseEstover Road, PlymouthPL6 7PYUnited KingdomTel: (0) 1752 202301Fax: (0)1752 202333Email:orders@nbninternational.comAUSTRALIA & N.Z.(NON-EXCLUSIVE)Inbooks - a Division <strong>of</strong>James Bennett Pty Ltd.3 Narabong WayBelrose NSW 2085Tel: +61(2) 9986-7037Fax: +61(2) 9986-7090Email:marketing@inbooks.com.auREPRESENTATIVES:CANADA, AUSTRALIA, & N.Z.<strong>University</strong> <strong>Press</strong> GroupDavid Stimpson<strong>Toronto</strong> ONTel: (416) 484-8296Fax: (416) 484-0602Laurel OakesWiarton ONTel: (519) 534-0381Fax: (519) 534-5719CANADA & USCOLLEGE REPRESENTATIVESavant BooksPenelope GrowsEtobicoke ONTel: (416) 231-6119Fax: (416) 231-5114UNITED KINGDOMYale <strong>University</strong> <strong>Press</strong>47 Bedford SquareLondon WC13 3DPU.K.Tel: 020-7079-4900Fax: 020-7079-4901DISCOUNT CODES:T = trade titleC = collegeE = educational titleCENTRAL & SOUTH AMERICA,AND THE CARIBBEANEthan AtkinCranbury International LLC7 Clarendon Ave. Suite 2Montpelier VT 05602Tel: (802) 223-6565Fax: (802) 223-6824USAIA, IL, IN, KS, KY, MI, MN, MO,ND, NE, OH, SD, WITrim Associates2643 N. Burling StreetChicago IL 60614Tel/Fax: (773) 871-1249AL, FL, GA, MS, NC, SC, TN, VARoger Sauls, Book Traveler1289 Fordham Blvd.Box 193Chapel Hill NC 27514Tel: (919) 490-5656Fax: (919) 490-0927Email: rsauls@webtv.netCT, DC, DE, MA, MD, ME, NH, NJ,NY, PA, RI, VTBen Schrager735 Pelham Parkway N.Bronx NY 10467Tel/Fax: (718) 654-1968CO, NM, UT, WYHenry HubertP. O. Box 1347Arvada, CO 80001Tel/Fax: (303) 422-8640AK, AR, AZ, CA, HI, ID, LA, MT,NV, OK, OR, TX, WACollins/Terry Associates19216 S.E. 46th Pl.Issaquah WA 98027Tel: (425) 747-3411Fax: (425) 747-0366CHINA, HONG KONG, & TAIWANCassidy and Associates Inc.288 Cliffside DriveTorrington CT 06790Tel: (860) 482-3030Fax: (860) 482-7588EUROPEWolfgang WingerterWeinbergsweg 4D-10119 Berlin, GermanyTel: +49 30 4435 6174Fax: +49 30 4737 4241Email: wolfgangwingerter@alice-dsl.deSOUTH ASIASegment Book Distributors22, Prakash Deep,DMA RoadDarayaganj, New Delhi-110002 INDIATel: 91-11-644-3013,6287737Fax: 01-11-647-0472Email: segment@de12.vsnl.net.inwww.segmentbooks.comJAPANUnited Publishers Service1-32-5 Higashi-shinagawaShinagawa-kuTokyo 140-0002, JapanTel: 81-3-5479-7251Fax: 81-3-5479-7307MALAYSIA & SINGAPOREJustin KokUBS Library Services Pte LtdBlk 1008 Toa PayohNorth#05-14/16 Toa PayohIndustrial EstateSingapore 318996Tel: (65) 353 6682Fax: (65) 353 6683Email:enquiries@ubspress.comwww.library2000.com.sgALL PRICES IN THIS CATALOGUE ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. OUTSIDE CANADA ALL PRICES ARE IN US DOLLARS. PRINTED IN CANADA BY THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS.


UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS10 St Mary Street, Suite 700<strong>Toronto</strong> Ontario Canada M4Y 2W8www.utppublishing.comCatalogue Designed and Printed by <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong>

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!