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Spring/Summer 2005 - University of Toronto Press Publishing

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GENERAL INTERESTLovers and LiversDisease Concepts in HistoryJacalyn DuffinJOANNE GOODMAN LECTURE SERIESCan a disease be an idea? A theory? Does diseaseexist without a patient to suffer from it?In Lovers and Livers, Jacalyn Duffin provides alively overview <strong>of</strong> the ideas around disease. Sheintroduces philosophical theories <strong>of</strong> disease anddelves into the history <strong>of</strong> two distinct afflictions– one old, one new – which serve asexamples to show how applyingtheory can uncoversurprising aspects <strong>of</strong> themedical past and present.Written with humour and compassion,and using poignant examples fromDuffin’s own clinical experience,Lovers and Livers is based ona series <strong>of</strong> public lectures andinnovates by utilizing audience participationand a wide variety <strong>of</strong>sources including art, poetry, literature,medical journals, newspapers.Duffin’s first example <strong>of</strong> a diseaseconcept – the now possibly defunct disease<strong>of</strong> Lovesickness – had its origins inthe poetry <strong>of</strong> antiquity and itsdemise in twentieth-century scepticism,but Duffin argues that it maynot be as passé as is generally thought. The secondexample is the new disease Hepatitis C. Duffindemonstrates that it too stems from ancient traditionand that it has been shaped by discoveries invirology and recent tragedies in transfusion medicine,as well as by legislators, journalists, andpatients.In any given time and place, coherent concepts<strong>of</strong> disease emerge from combining social, cultural,legal, and scientific preoccupations with currentepistemological priorities about what constitutesclear thinking. Lovers and Livers will be <strong>of</strong> specialinterest to scholars <strong>of</strong> history, philosophy, and medicine,as well as many others.Jacalyn Duffin is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Faculty <strong>of</strong> HealthSciences, the Department <strong>of</strong> History, and theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Philosophy, and holds theHannah Chair in the History <strong>of</strong> Medicine, atQueen’s <strong>University</strong>.‘Lovers and Livers is animportant and well-written book on the waywe conceptualize, construct, and continuallychange our notions <strong>of</strong> disease. Jacalyn Duffinweaves an intriguing historical tale that combinesscholarship, originality <strong>of</strong> thought, andimportant ideas with a lively, bright, andwitty presentation.’Jock Murray, Medical HumanitiesProgram, Dalhousie <strong>University</strong>Of related interest:Hunting the 1918 FluOne Scientist’s Search for a Killer VirusKirsty E. Duncan0-8020-8748-5 / £22.50 / $38.00 / 2003HISTORY / HEALTH CAREApprox. 240 pp / 5 1 /2 x 8 1 /2 / May <strong>2005</strong>17 halftones; 6 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3868-9 £35.00 $55.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-3805-0 £20.00 $29.95 CThe Liver from Vasalius, Tabulae sex, 1538.2


GENERAL INTERESTContemporary AntisemitismCanada and the WorldEdited by Derek J. Penslar, Michael R. Marrus, andJanice Gross SteinAntisemitism is reappearing in disturbing new waysand in unexpected strength. This resurgence is <strong>of</strong>deep concern to politicians, practitioners <strong>of</strong> law,and the academic community. To address it, ascholarly conference was assembled at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> in 2003. ContemporaryAntisemitism is the result <strong>of</strong> that meeting.Editors Derek J. Penslar, Michael R. Marrus,and Janice Gross Stein, and the contributors to thisvolume address the following questions: is contemporaryantisemitism an eerie echo <strong>of</strong> the past, or isit driven by new combinations <strong>of</strong> political, economic,and religious forces? How powerful are theanti-Jewish trends that so many have detected? Andhow should liberal democratic societies respond tothis new threat against them? The essays map theterrain <strong>of</strong> antisemitic thought and practice, makeimportant distinctions between expressions <strong>of</strong> antisemitismacross time and space, and put variousstrategies <strong>of</strong> response into critical perspective.With its combination <strong>of</strong> voices from bothscholarship and leadership and its unique assessment<strong>of</strong> antisemitism in Canada and the struggleagainst it, Contemporary Antisemitism <strong>of</strong>fers newperspectives on one <strong>of</strong> the world’s most ancient anddiffuse hatreds.ContributorsTodd M. EndelmanThe Honourable R. Roy McMurtryThe Right Honourable Brian MulroneyDerek J. PenslarMark TesslerMorton WeinfeldSteven J. Zipperstein‘Clearly focused and exceptionally readable, ContemporaryAntisemitism is a model <strong>of</strong> scholarly intervention on anurgent public issue. The contributors are all recognizedauthorities in their fields. No one could address these subjectswithout referring to their work.’Louis Greenspan, Department <strong>of</strong> Religious Studies,McMaster <strong>University</strong>Derek J. Penslar is the Samuel Zacks Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong>Jewish History and the director <strong>of</strong> the JewishStudies Program at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Michael R. Marrus is the Chancellor Rose and RayWolfe Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Holocaust Studies at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Janice Gross Stein is the Belzberg Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong>Conflict Management and the director <strong>of</strong> theMunk Centre for International Studies at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.JEWISH STUDIESApprox. 130 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2005</strong>9 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3931-6 £28.00 $45.00 T3


GENERAL INTERESTCanada and the First World WarEssays in Honour <strong>of</strong> Robert Craig BrownEdited by David MacKenzieDavid MacKenzie is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History at Ryerson <strong>University</strong>.The First World War is <strong>of</strong>ten credited as being theevent that gave Canada its own identity, distinctfrom that <strong>of</strong> Britain, France, and the United States.Less <strong>of</strong>ten noted, however, is that it was also thecause <strong>of</strong> a great deal <strong>of</strong> friction within Canadian society.The fifteen essays contained in Canada and theFirst World War examine how Canadians experiencedthe war and how their experiences were shaped byregion, politics, gender, class, and nationalism.Editor David MacKenzie has brought togethersome <strong>of</strong> the leading voices in Canadian history to takein-depth looks at the tensions and fractures the warcaused and to address the way some attitudes and perceptionsabout the country were changed while othersremained the same. The essays vary in scope, but arestrongly unified so as to create a collection that treatsits subject in a complete and comprehensive manner.Canada and the First World War is a tribute toesteemed <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> historian RobertCraig Brown, one <strong>of</strong> Canada’s greatest authoritieson the war, and the authors include a cross-section<strong>of</strong> his friends, colleagues, contemporaries,and former students. Together, they provide a fittingtribute to a scholar who has contributedgreatly to Canadians’ understanding <strong>of</strong> their past.ContributorsDonald AveryRamsay CookTerry CoppAdam CrerarPatrice A. DutilJohn EnglishJ.L. GranatsteinPaul LittDavid MacKenzieMargaret MacMillanDouglas McCallaRod MillardDesmond MortonJoan SangsterJonathan F. VanceOf related interest:Our Glory and Our Grief<strong>Toronto</strong>nians and the Great WarIan Hugh Maclean Miller0-8020-3592-2 / £30.00 / $48.00 / 2002HISTORYApprox. 430 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2005</strong>30 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3573-6 £42.00 $65.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8445-1 £20.00 $29.95 CTip Top Lady for soldiers: Soldier with girl’s picture in hat, 1916.Courtesy City <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> Archives, Fonds 1244, Item 829.4


GENERAL INTERESTHidden in Plain SightContributions <strong>of</strong> Aboriginal Peoples to Canadian Identity and Culture, Volume 1Edited by David R. Newhouse, Cora J. Voyageur, and Daniel J.K. BeavonThe history <strong>of</strong> Aboriginal people in Canada taughtin schools and depicted in the media tends to focuson Aboriginal displacement from native lands andthe consequent social and cultural disruptions theyhave endured. Collectively, they are portrayed aspassive victims <strong>of</strong> European colonization and governmentpolicy, and, even when well intentioned,these depictions are demeaning and do little to trulyrepresent the role Aboriginal peoples have played inCanadian life. Hidden in Plain Sight adds anotherdimension to the story, showing the extraordinarycontributions Aboriginal peoples have made – andcontinue to make – to the Canadian experience.From treaties to contemporary arts and literatures,Aboriginal peoples have helped to defineCanada and have worked to secure a place <strong>of</strong> theirown making in Canadian culture. For this volume,editors David R. Newhouse, Cora J. Voyageur, andDaniel J.K. Beavon have brought together leadingscholars and other impassioned voices, and togetherthey give full treatment to the Aboriginal contributionto Canada’s intellectual, political, economic,social, historic, and cultural landscapes. Includedare pr<strong>of</strong>iles <strong>of</strong> several leading figures such as actorChief Dan George, artist Norval Morrisseau,author Tomson Highway, activist Anna Mae PictouAquash, and politician Phil Fontaine, among others.Canada simply would not be what it is todaywithout these contributions. The first <strong>of</strong> two volumes,Hidden in Plain Sight is key to understandingand appreciating Canadian society and will beessential reading for generations to come.David R. Newhouse is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Native Studies and the principal <strong>of</strong>Gzowski College at Trent <strong>University</strong>.Cora J. Voyageur is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Sociology at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Calgary.Daniel J.K. Beavon is the director <strong>of</strong> the StrategicResearch and Analysis Directorate <strong>of</strong> Indian andNorthern Affairs Canada.Of related interest:In the Words <strong>of</strong> EldersAboriginal Cultures in TransitionEdited by Peter Kulchyski, Don McCaskill, andDavid R. Newhouse0-8020-7953-9 / £20.00 / $32.95 / 1999NATIVE STUDIESApprox. 420 pp / 6 1 /2 x 9 1 /2 / June <strong>2005</strong>60 halftones; 9 colour illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-8800-7 £45.00 $70.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8581-4 £22.50 $35.00 CCultural Identity by Daphne Odjig.5


GENERAL INTERESTAs for Sinclair RossDavid StouckStouck’s biography draws on archival recordsand on insights gathered during an acquaintancelate in Ross’s life to illuminate this difficult author,describing in detail the struggles <strong>of</strong> a gifted artistliving in an inhospitable time and place. Stouckargues that when Ross was writing about prairiefarmers and small towns, he wanted his readers tosee the kind <strong>of</strong> society they were creating, to feeluncomfortable with religion as coercive rhetoric,prejudices based on race and ethnicity, and rigidnotions <strong>of</strong> gender. As for Sinclair Ross is the story <strong>of</strong>a remarkable writer whose works continue to challengeus and are rightly considered classics <strong>of</strong>Canadian literature.David Stouck is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>English at Simon Fraser <strong>University</strong>.Sinclair Ross (1908–1996), best known for hiscanonical novel As for Me and My House (1941),and for such familiar short stories as “The Lamp atNoon” and “The Painted Door,” is an elusive figurein Canadian literature. A master at portraying thehardships and harsh beauty <strong>of</strong> the Prairies duringthe Great Depression, Ross nevertheless receivedonly modest attention from the public during hislifetime. His reluctance to give readings or interviewsfurther contributed to this faint public perception<strong>of</strong> the man.In As for Sinclair Ross, David Stouck tells thestory <strong>of</strong> a lonely childhood in rural Saskatchewan,<strong>of</strong> a long and unrewarding career in a bank, and <strong>of</strong>many failed attempts to be published and to find anaudience. The book also tells the story <strong>of</strong> a manwho fell in love with both men and women andwho wrote from a position outside any single definition<strong>of</strong> gender and sexuality.‘As for Sinclair Ross is one <strong>of</strong> the most companionablebiographies I have ever read: a loving friend talks articulatelyand meaningfully about the long life <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong>Canada’s most important writers. The painstaking research,not just in archives, but most especially in interviews, is outstanding,but the strength <strong>of</strong> the book is in its warmth, itsattention to detail, and the ways Stouck reads the biographyinto the literature. This is a wonderful, must-have work.’Frances Kaye, Department <strong>of</strong> English, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Nebraska, LincolnAlso by David Stouck:Ethel WilsonA Critical Biography0-8020-8741-8 / £32.00 / $50.00 / 2003LITERARY STUDIESApprox. 350 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2005</strong>25 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-4388-7 £28.00 $45.00 ESinclair Ross, 1941. Courtesy Royal Bank Corporate Archives.6


GENERAL INTERESTThe Half-Lives <strong>of</strong>Pat LowtherChristine WiesenthalSince her untimely death in 1975, the life and work<strong>of</strong> the Vancouver poet Pat Lowther have <strong>of</strong>ten beenreferred to as ‘the Lowther legacy.’ In The Half-Lives<strong>of</strong> Pat Lowther, Christine Wiesenthal seeks to conveywhat that legacy actually entails.Combining biography with an analysis <strong>of</strong> literaryand cultural history, Wiesenthal examines thecritical legacy <strong>of</strong> a writer whose remarkable life andpoetry have remained overshadowed by her notoriousdeath. Working within a new form <strong>of</strong> biography,which employs multiple narrative arcs – or‘half-lives’ – that interpret Lowther’s life and poetrywithin and across several interpretive frameworks,Wiesenthal retraces the influences on the publicmemory <strong>of</strong> the poet. She charts Lowther’s complexcreative evolution: from her modest beginnings as ahigh-school drop-out and single mother to heremergence as one <strong>of</strong> the most distinctive poeticvoices <strong>of</strong> the 1970s.A wealth <strong>of</strong> previously uncollected andunpublished letters, notebook entries, court documents,interviews, and archival materials illuminatePat Lowther’s manifold achievements in herdomestic, political, and intellectual lives. The Half-Lives <strong>of</strong> Pat Lowther is the premier work on thisremarkable figure.Christine Wiesenthal is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Alberta.LITERARY STUDIESApprox. 530 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2005</strong>12 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3635-X £42.00 $65.00 EThe Lord ChamberlainRegrets…A History <strong>of</strong> British Theatre CensorshipDominic Shellard and Steve Nicholsonwith Miriam HandleyTHE BRITISH LIBRARYBetween 1824 and 1968, British theatre was controlledby censorship. Under the dictate <strong>of</strong> the LordChamberlain’s Office, all new plays were read forunfavourable or corrupting content with the intention<strong>of</strong> protecting the ‘vulnerable’ audiences <strong>of</strong> thetime. Such material was either instructed to be cutor the play to be banned. The effect that censorshipmay have had on the plays that came out <strong>of</strong> thisperiod, not to mention the ones that never even gotwritten, is crucial to our understanding <strong>of</strong> the historyand development <strong>of</strong> theatre in Britain.Revealed here for the first time are a selection <strong>of</strong>extensive extracts from key reports, correspondence,and memoranda about some <strong>of</strong> the most significantplays <strong>of</strong> the period. Many documents are reproducedin their entirety, allowing the reader direct access tooriginal, unpublished, and unedited archive material.The authors contextualize this material within thepolitical and moral issues <strong>of</strong> the time, and reveal thefascinating processes and debates that occurred inand around the Lord Chamberlain’s Office.Dominic Shellard is a lecturer in the Department <strong>of</strong>English Literature at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Sheffield.Steve Nicholson is a principal lecturer in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Drama at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Huddersfield.Miriam Handley is a lecturer in the Department <strong>of</strong>English Literature at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Sheffield.DRAMA / HISTORYApprox. 210 pp / 9 3 /4 x 10 3 /4 / April <strong>2005</strong>32 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-4865-4 $38.00 EDISTRIBUTION RIGHTS FOR NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA ONLY.OTHER RIGHTS HELD BY THE BRITISH LIBRARY7


GENERAL INTERESTSaints in Medieval ManuscriptsGreg BuzwellDevotion to the saints played a crucial role in thereligious life <strong>of</strong> the Middle Ages. Kings and queens,merchants and craftsmen, beggars and thieves – allwere alike in drawing inspiration, reassurance, andsolace from the lives <strong>of</strong> holy martyrs and pious confessors.Saints were much loved because they held aunique position in the hierarchy <strong>of</strong> Heaven; theyhad the power to intercede directly with God onbehalf <strong>of</strong> the living.Familiar though many saints may be, some elements<strong>of</strong> their history are not immediately obvious.How does one become a saint? Who were the firstsaints? Why was the devotion to saints so passionate?Why did certain individuals, pr<strong>of</strong>essions,towns, and countries adopt particular saints as theirpatrons? Why were a saint’s relics so important andwhy were pilgrimages to their shrines so important?In Saints in Medieval Manuscripts, GregBuzwell documents how saints were represented inthe manuscripts <strong>of</strong> the Middle Ages. He focuses onthose saints whose cults were based in the LatinWest, including the well known, like St Sebastianand St George, as well as many less familiar ones.The book is beautifully illustrated with examplestaken primarily from the British Library’s collection<strong>of</strong> medieval western manuscripts. Buzwell also discussesthe particular nature <strong>of</strong> these manuscriptsand their importance in medieval religious life.Greg Buzwell is the manuscripts loans curator in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Manuscripts at the British Library.MEDIEVAL STUDIES / RELIGIOUS STUDIES64 pp / 7 x 9 1 /2 / May <strong>2005</strong>50 colour illustrationsPaper ISBN 0-8020-3795-X $19.95 TNORTH AND SOUTH AMERICAN RIGHTS ONLY.CO-PUBLISHED WITH THE BRITISH LIBRARY.St. Catherine <strong>of</strong> Alexandria. The British Library, Add. MS54782, f.68v.10


GENERAL INTERESTImpulse ArchaeologyEdited by Eldon GarnetImpulse Archaeology honours this importantperiod in Canadian art and cultural history, recallingthe early influence <strong>of</strong> like-minded publicationsfrom New York and the import <strong>of</strong> French theoristsand European artists and writers into NorthAmerica. Impulse brought the world into Canadaand Canada to the world.Eldon Garnet is an international photographic artistand novelist based in <strong>Toronto</strong> and a pr<strong>of</strong>essor at theOntario College <strong>of</strong> Art and Design.Impulse was the premier Canadian art and culturemagazine <strong>of</strong> the 1970s and 1980s, a visual and conceptualcornerstone in magazine publishing. Duringits run, Impulse featured the writings and thought <strong>of</strong>some <strong>of</strong> the world’s most influential and provocativeminds, including Jean Baudrillard, William S.Burroughs, and Paul Virilio, and work by some <strong>of</strong>the world’s foremost artists, among them PattiSmith, Michael Snow, and Joel Peter Witkin. Themagazine was experimental, a work <strong>of</strong> art in itself.Eldon Garnet was the editor and publisher <strong>of</strong>Impulse from 1975 to 1990, when it ceased publication,and with Impulse Archaeology, he brings themagazine’s spirit back to life. The book is an eclecticcollection <strong>of</strong> original and groundbreaking interviews,articles, and artwork that ranges in scopefrom pieces on Punk rock to early discussions onpostmodernism, and that includes contributionsfrom artists, architects, writers, and philosophers.CULTURAL STUDIESApprox. 290 pp / 11 x 11 / June <strong>2005</strong>Illustrations throughoutCloth ISBN 0-8020-8787-6 £28.00 $45.00 EImpulse magazine cover, <strong>Summer</strong> 1985. Artwork by Carolyn White.11


GENERAL INTERESTLiving in the Labyrinth <strong>of</strong> TechnologyWillem H. VanderburgFrom the very beginnings <strong>of</strong> their existence, humanbeings have distinguished themselves from otheranimals by not taking immediate experience forgranted. Everything was symbolized according to itsmeaning and value: a fallen branch from a treebecame a lever; a tree trunk floating in the riverbecame a canoe. Homo logos created communitiesbased on cultures: humanity’s first megaproject.Further symbolization <strong>of</strong> the human communityand its relation to nature led to the possibility<strong>of</strong> creating societies and civilizations. Everythingchanged as these interposed themselves between thegroup and nature. Homo societas created ways <strong>of</strong> lifeable to give meaning, direction, and purpose tomany groups by means <strong>of</strong> very different cultures:humanity’s second megaproject.What Das Kapital did for the nineteenth centuryand La technique did for the twentieth, WillemH. Vanderburg’s Living in the Labyrinth <strong>of</strong>Technology seeks to create for the twenty-first century:an attempt at understanding the world in a mannernot shackled to overspecialized scientific knowingand technical doing. Western civilization maywell be creating humanity’s third megaproject, basednot on symbolization for making sense <strong>of</strong> and livingin the world, but on highly specialized desymbolizedknowing stripped <strong>of</strong> all peripheral understanding.Vanderburg focuses on two interdependentforces in his narrative, namely, people changingtechnology and technology changing people. Thelatter aspect, although rarely considered, turns outto be the more critical one for understanding thespectacular successes and failures <strong>of</strong> contemporaryways <strong>of</strong> life. As technology continues to change thesocial and physical world, the experiences <strong>of</strong> thisworld ‘grow’ people’s minds and society’s cultures,thereby re-creating human life in the image <strong>of</strong> technology.Living in the Labyrinth <strong>of</strong> Technology arguesthat the twenty-first century will be dominated bythis pattern unless society intervenes on human (asopposed to technical) terms.Willem H. Vanderburg is the director <strong>of</strong> the Centre forTechnology and Social Development and a pr<strong>of</strong>essorin the Department <strong>of</strong> Civil Engineering, the Institutefor Environmental Studies, and the Department <strong>of</strong>Sociology at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.‘Willem H. Vanderburg’s work is highly regarded by many,but Living in the Labyrinth <strong>of</strong> Technology is surely hismost important book. Vanderburg compellingly explainshow daily life in modern society has evolved to become routinelyblind to the forces <strong>of</strong> authoritarianism and conformity.We learn, painfully, not only how the everyday <strong>of</strong> modernlife fails to question the meaning or ethics <strong>of</strong> its constructedreality, but why. The book’s disturbing explanation cannotcomfort readers, but it does <strong>of</strong>fer the chance to reflect on ourcultural drift and, just possibly, to realize the need to resurrectnormative purposes for our being. A major work.’John Byrne, Center for Energy and EnvironmentalPolicy, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Delaware‘An important contribution to the ongoing debate aboutwhere current events are leading us, Living in the Labyrinth<strong>of</strong> Technology is dense with pr<strong>of</strong>ound, disturbing, and <strong>of</strong>tensurprising insights and connections. Vanderburg’s writing isexcellent – clear and refreshingly conversational – and heperforms an important role in pulling together Jacques Ellul’sideas about technology and technique and updating Ellul’sconclusions to the present at a time when the downside <strong>of</strong>technique seems to be accelerating.’Stuart Dreyfus, College <strong>of</strong> Engineering, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>California, BerkeleyAlso by Willem H. Vanderburg:The Labyrinth <strong>of</strong> TechnologyA Preventive Technology and Economic Strategyas a Way Out0-8020-8385-4 / £16.00 / $28.95 / 2000SOCIOLOGY / TECHNOLOGYApprox. 550 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-4432-8 £48.00 $75.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-4879-X £22.50 $35.00 C12


GENERAL INTERESTPlato’s SunAn Introduction to PhilosophyAndrew LawlessWriting an introductory text for philosophy is anexceedingly difficult task. The discipline has spent acentury or more in existential crisis with the attackon metaphysics dating back at least to Nietzscheand carried forward in different ways by Heidegger,Wittgenstein, and Derrida, to name a few. Thisconstant upheaval has precipitated a climate <strong>of</strong> selfdoubtthat goes to the core <strong>of</strong> philosophy, the resultbeing a strange discipline with many <strong>of</strong> its mostillustrious names proudly announcing its demise.In Plato’s Sun, Andrew Lawless takes on thechallenge <strong>of</strong> creating an introductory text for philosophy,arguing that such a work has to take intoaccount the strangeness <strong>of</strong> the field and divulge it,rather than suppress it beneath traditional certaintiesand authoritative pronouncements. Lawlesswrites within the shadow <strong>of</strong> post-modern antimetaphysicalscepticism, introducing some <strong>of</strong> theprincipal areas <strong>of</strong> philosophy: metaphysics, epistemology,logic, ethics, and language.Lawless’s concern is not to resolve the issues heraises so much as to set them out in a way that letsthe reader experience something <strong>of</strong> the philosopher’sstruggle. In so doing, Lawless holds fast tothe Socratic vision <strong>of</strong> philosophy as a process <strong>of</strong>inquiry that values questions above answers, pushingthe inquirer beyond his or her answers. Withnumerous pedagogical features including glossaries<strong>of</strong> names and key terms, suggested readings, andshort chapter summaries, Plato’s Sun will be anessential text to new students <strong>of</strong> philosophy and animportant aid in teaching the subject.Andrew Lawless is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Humanities at Vanier College.‘An excellent introduction to philosophy for anyone interestedin the area, be they students or not, Plato’s Sun is not just abook about philosophy, it is philosophy. Readers engage the textby doing philosophy, even if they aren’t aware they are. AndrewLawless’s comprehensive review <strong>of</strong> the Western philosophicaltradition, including the ideas <strong>of</strong> most major philosophers isenjoyable and easy to read. This is truly a first rate text.’Christopher D. Viger, Department <strong>of</strong> Philosophy,<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Western OntarioOf related interest:InroadsPaths in Ancient and Modern Western PhilosophyMurray Miles0-8020-8531-8 / £25.00 / $42.95 / 2003PHILOSOPHYApprox. 290 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3873-5 £40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-3809-3 £20.00 $29.95 CPhotograph courtesy photos.com.13


GENERAL INTERESTOn All FrontiersFour Centuries <strong>of</strong> Canadian NursingEdited by Christina Bates, Dianne Dodd, and Nicole RousseauUNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA PRESSNursing has a long and varied history in Canada.Since the founding <strong>of</strong> the first hospital by theAugustine nuns in 1637, nurses have contributedgreatly to Canadians’ quality <strong>of</strong> life.On All Frontiers is a much-needed comprehensivehistory <strong>of</strong> Canadian nursing. Editors ChristinaBates, Dianne Dodd, and Nicole Rousseau havebrought together a vast body <strong>of</strong> research into onevolume. Authored by leading experts, the chaptersand vignettes form an overview <strong>of</strong> our knowledge <strong>of</strong>Canadian nursing to date.From the midwives <strong>of</strong> early Canada to urbanpublic health nurses, and from remote outposts to thebattlefields <strong>of</strong> Europe, On All Frontiers documents thehardships, challenges, and achievements <strong>of</strong> Canadiannurses. Richly illustrated with archival photographs,it will prove essential to scholars <strong>of</strong> Canadianhealthcare and women’s studies – and <strong>of</strong> interest toanyone whose life has been touched by a nurse.Christina Bates is the curator for Ontario history atthe Canadian Museum <strong>of</strong> Civilization.Dianne Dodd is the coordinator <strong>of</strong> the Women’sHistory Initiative in the NationalHistoric Sites Directorate <strong>of</strong> ParksCanada.Nicole Rousseau is a retiredpr<strong>of</strong>essor from the Faculty<strong>of</strong> Nursing Sciences atUniversité Laval.ContributorsGeneviève AllardChristina BatesCecilia BenoitDena CarrollDianne DoddJayne ElliottBarbara KeddyLynn KirkwoodDiana MansellMarion McKayKathryn McPhersonPauline PaulSharon RichardsonNicole RousseauCynthia TomanBrigitte VioletteJudith YoungOf related interest:Bedside MattersThe Transformation <strong>of</strong> Canadian Nursing, 1900–1960Kathryn McPherson0-8020-8679-9 / £15.00 / $24.95 / 1996HISTORYApprox. 250 pp / 9 x 11 / April <strong>2005</strong>140 colour and black-and-whiteillustrationsPaper ISBN 0-7766-0591-7£32.00 $50.00 C14


NEW IN PAPERBACKSojourning SistersThe Lives and Letters <strong>of</strong> Jessie and Annie McQueenJean BarmanShortly after the completion <strong>of</strong> the transcontinentalrailroad in 1886, two young sisters from PictouCounty, Nova Scotia, took the train west to BritishColumbia. Jessie and Annie McQueen each intendedto teach there for three years and then returnhome. In fact they remained sojourners betweenBritish Columbia, Nova Scotia, and Ontario formuch <strong>of</strong> their lives.Drawing on family correspondence and supportedby extensive engagement with current scholarship,Jean Barman tells the sisters’ stories and, indoing so, <strong>of</strong>fers a new interpretation <strong>of</strong> early settlementacross Canada. Like many other women <strong>of</strong>these years, Jessie and Annie McQueen were affectedby daughterhood’s obligations and sisterhood’sbonds even as they became involved in their newcommunities. Barman takes seriously women assojourners and uses Jessie and Annie McQueen’sletters home to evoke the boundless energy andenthusiasm shown by the thousands <strong>of</strong> women whohelped to form Canada’s frontiers.Like other sojourners, the McQueen sisters didnot come to their new home empty-handed. Theybrought with them a distinctly Scottish Presbyterianway <strong>of</strong> life, consistent with ideas <strong>of</strong> the nation beingpromoted in the public realm by fellow NovaScotians such as George Monro Grant. Confident intheir assumptions, including the central role <strong>of</strong> religionin the formation <strong>of</strong> a grand national vision,women like these sisters were critical in unitingCanada from coast to coast. Broad in its criticalapproach and nuanced in its interpretations,Sojourning Sisters is a major contribution to the field<strong>of</strong> life writing and to the political, gender, and socialhistory <strong>of</strong> Canada.Jean Barman is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Educational Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> BritishColumbia.Winner <strong>of</strong> the Clio Award for the British Columbia Region,given by the Canadian Historical AssociationWinner <strong>of</strong> the Lieutenant Governor’s Medal, given by theBritish Columbia Historical Federation‘An important book that merits a wide audience …Sojourning Sisters is a magnificent piece <strong>of</strong> historical interpretationand storytelling. Barman has original insights intoBritish Columbia and the process <strong>of</strong> nation building, andshe skilfully translates the lives <strong>of</strong> Annie and Jessie McQueeninto stories <strong>of</strong> nation builders.’Suzanne Morton, BC Studies‘The narrative in Sojourning Sisters is carried by the extensiveand vibrant correspondence between the various familymembers … Thanks to Barman’s scholarship, and the wealth<strong>of</strong> primary sources on which she was able to draw, we cannow appreciate the role that two engaging individualsplayed in the shaping <strong>of</strong> a nation.’Charlotte Gray, Canadian Historical ReviewAlso by Jean Barman:Constance Lindsay SkinnerWriting on the Frontier0-8020-3678-3 / £32.00 / $53.00 / 2002The West Beyond the WestA History <strong>of</strong> British Columbia, Revised Edition0-8020-7185-6 / £16.00 / $32.95 / 1996HISTORY314 pp / 6 x 9 / Available15 halftones, 2 mapsPaper ISBN 0-8020-4877-3 £18.00 $27.95 COriginally Published in Cloth: March 200315


NEW IN PAPERBACKFive-Part InventionA History <strong>of</strong> Literary History in CanadaE.D. BlodgettSociology and Mass CultureDurkheim, Mills, and BaudrillardPatricia CormackThe literary history <strong>of</strong> a nation is one <strong>of</strong> the main cornerstones<strong>of</strong> its national identity. As a result <strong>of</strong>Canada’s diverse cultural history, however, its literaryhistory is varied and, as E.D. Blodgett contends inFive-Part Invention, is composed <strong>of</strong> five parts –English Canada, French Canada, First Nations communities,Inuit communities, and immigrant communities– that work to create the whole. Using thecritical writing on constructing nationhood, Blodgettsuggests that Canadian literary histories can be usedto address the problem <strong>of</strong> nation and to examine howthe various ‘national’ groups making up Canadadevelop unique narratives that demonstrate their differentresponses to the notion <strong>of</strong> nationhood andtheir sense <strong>of</strong> place within Canada’s borders.The first such history <strong>of</strong> its kind in Canada,Five-Part Invention <strong>of</strong>fers a means <strong>of</strong> reading ethnicdifference through cultural representations andaddresses the roots <strong>of</strong> Canada’s fragmented literaryhistory, speculating on the reasons why this traditioncontinues today. Original, intelligent, and provocative,the book brings an entirely new perspective tothe notion <strong>of</strong> literary history and will greatly influencethe study <strong>of</strong> Canadian literature in the future.E.D. Blodgett is a university pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus withthe Centre d’études canadiennes at the <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> Alberta.LITERARY STUDIES375 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2005</strong>Paper ISBN 0-8020-3815-8 £18.00 $27.95 COriginally Published in Cloth: March 2003In Sociology and Mass Culture, Patricia Cormackinvestigates the broad cultural significance and relevance<strong>of</strong> academic sociology by examining itsongoing relationship with modernity and mass culture.Recognizing sociology’s participation in culture,she bids us to see the discipline as informingethical, epistemological, and pedagogical questions.Through an examination <strong>of</strong> the writings <strong>of</strong>Emile Durkheim, C. Wright Mills, and JeanBaudrillard, Cormack illustrates how their formulations<strong>of</strong> sociology as a cultural practice are rooted inthe very mass culture that the discipline studies.Central to her argument is a discussion <strong>of</strong> conceptualand rhetorical devices – ‘totems’ and ‘tropes’ –within social theory. Based on her reading <strong>of</strong> thethree theorists, Cormack posits that the social is adiscursive artefact, becoming over time a ‘socialfact,’ explaining and sustaining ordinary life.Sociology and Mass Culture is a textually orientedethnography that presents a theoretical investigation<strong>of</strong> the relationship between sociology andculture. It will be <strong>of</strong> great interest to those workingin sociology as well as critical and cultural theory.Patricia Cormack is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Sociology and Anthropology at St.Francis Xavier <strong>University</strong>.SOCIOLOGY / CRITICAL THEORY144 pp / 6 x 9 / AvailablePaper ISBN 0-8020-8686-1 £15.00 $24.95 COriginally Published in Cloth: August 200216


BRITISH LIBRARY PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCEDA New Index <strong>of</strong>Middle English VerseJulia B<strong>of</strong>fey and A.S.G. EdwardsThe Index <strong>of</strong> Middle English Verse was originally publishedin 1943 in a limited edition. Although it hasremained a standard research tool, the passage <strong>of</strong>time has rendered much <strong>of</strong> its content obsolete. It isnow replaced by this New Index, <strong>of</strong>fering a first-linelisting <strong>of</strong> all surviving verse recorded between c.1150and 1500, together with full bibliographical informationfor every witness and details <strong>of</strong> modern editions.This includes much material not previouslyaccessible. In addition, it incorporates a completeindex <strong>of</strong> manuscripts and a comprehensive subjectindex. The book will be an essential reference workfor any future research in this field.Julia B<strong>of</strong>fey is a reader in the School <strong>of</strong> English andDrama at Queen Mary, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> London.A.S.G. Edwards is pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Victoria.Approx. 575 pp / 9 x 11 / January <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-7123-4831-X $150.00 ETreasures <strong>of</strong> theBritish LibraryNew EditionNicolas BarkerIllustrated throughout in colour, this revised edition <strong>of</strong>the indispensable guide to the great collections <strong>of</strong> TheBritish Library is the perfect introduction to some <strong>of</strong>the world’s most magnificent books and manuscripts,from The Lindisfarne Gospels to Shakespeare’s FirstFolio, The Diamond Sutra, and The Gutenberg Bible.Also to be found are the earliest versions <strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong> thebest-known works <strong>of</strong> English literature, includingBeowulf, Alice’s Adventures Underground, andFinnegan’s Wake. This handsome volume also coverssome <strong>of</strong> the other items to be found within the collections,including papyri, historical maps, prints, photographs,sound recordings, and printed books fromthe earliest to the most recently produced.Nicolas Barker was a deputy keeper at the BritishLibrary for twenty years and has been editor <strong>of</strong> TheBook Collector since 1965.Approx. 270 pp / 8 3 /4 x 11 1 /2 / January <strong>2005</strong>138 colour and 190 black-and-white illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-4844-1 $39.95 EThe Victorian ScientistThe Growth <strong>of</strong> a Pr<strong>of</strong>essionJack MeadowsAt the start <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth century, science was aminority cultural interest. By the end it had becomeone <strong>of</strong> the central components <strong>of</strong> contemporarythought. The growth <strong>of</strong> science as a pr<strong>of</strong>essionbegan taking shape in the Victorian period and wasdue to the influence <strong>of</strong> just a small group <strong>of</strong> men.Who these men were and how they created thefoundations <strong>of</strong> the modern scientific community isrevealed in The Victorian Scientist. Jack Meadowstracks the growth <strong>of</strong> laboratories and researchgroups, and the importance that new scientific societies,journals, and lectures played in makingVictorian science an essential stage in the evolution<strong>of</strong> scientific communication today.Jack Meadows is an emeritus pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Information Science atLoughborough <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 190 pp / 5 1 /2 x 8 1 /2 / January <strong>2005</strong>40 black-and-white illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-0894-6 $35.00 TDISTRIBUTION RIGHTS FOR NORTH AMERICA ONLY. OTHER RIGHTS HELD BY THE BRITISH LIBRARY.17


LITERARY STUDIESWomen’s Writing in EnglishEarly Modern EnglandPatricia DemersIn this introduction to the diversity and scope <strong>of</strong>the writing by women in England from the beginning<strong>of</strong> the sixteenth century to the restoration <strong>of</strong>the monarchy in 1660, Patricia Demers discussesthe creative realities <strong>of</strong> women writers’ accomplishmentsand the cultural conditions under which theywrote.There were deep suspicions and restrictionssurrounding the education <strong>of</strong> women during thisperiod, and thus the contributions <strong>of</strong> women toliterature, and to the print industry itself, arelargely unknown. This wide-ranging examination<strong>of</strong> the genres <strong>of</strong> early modern women’s writingembraces translation (from Latin, Greek, andFrench) in the fields <strong>of</strong> theological discourse,romance and classical tragedy, original meditationsand prayers, letters and diaries, poetry, closetdrama, advice manuals, and prophecies andpolemics. A close study <strong>of</strong> six major authors –Mary Sidney, Aemilia Lanyer, Elizabeth TanfieldCary, Lady Mary Wroth, Margaret Cavendish, andKatherine Philips – explores their work as poets,dramatists, and romantic fiction writers. Demersinvites readers to savour the subtlety and daringwith which these women authors made writing anexpressly social craft.Patricia Demers is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Alberta.Approx. 480 pp / 5 1 /2 x 8 1 /2 / April <strong>2005</strong>5 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-8710-8 £42.00 $65.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8664-0 £21.50 $32.95 C‘In this clearly written book, Patricia Demers provides aninformative analysis <strong>of</strong> how early modern women writerscontributed to the structure <strong>of</strong> the period’s world <strong>of</strong> thoughtand demonstrates a wide breadth <strong>of</strong> scholarship in the area.Demers writes with energy and vitality, and the large historicalrange she surveys provides coverage not always seen instudies <strong>of</strong> this kind. Students being introduced to the fieldwill find in this book a wealth <strong>of</strong> valuable information andclear, direct analysis while more experienced scholars willappreciate the opportunity <strong>of</strong> finding references to less familiarauthors and forms <strong>of</strong> writing.’Linda Vecchi, Department <strong>of</strong> English Language andLiterature, Memorial <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> NewfoundlandWomen’s Writing in EnglishSeries Editor: Gary Kelly, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> AlbertaUTP is pleased to announce that it hasacquired the Women’s Writing in Englishseries. The volumes in this new and excitingseries place women’s cultural work in social andhistorical contexts and are designed to open upthe writers and texts under consideration tostudents, teachers, and scholars in literary andcultural studies, education, social history, andwomen’s studies. They survey women’s writing<strong>of</strong> the time and place, <strong>of</strong>fering careful and freshreadings <strong>of</strong> ‘major’ and ‘minor’ authors andgenres. Through chronologies, bibliographies,and volume-specific websites, the series providessupporting materials for historical-criticalstudy <strong>of</strong> individual books and authors, as wellas historical movements.18


LITERARY STUDIESAn Audience <strong>of</strong> OneDorothy Osborne’s Letters to Sir William Temple,1652–1654Carrie HintzWhen first published in 1888, the letters <strong>of</strong>Dorothy Osborne to William Temple – writtenbetween 1652 and 1654 – created a kind <strong>of</strong> cultphenomenon in the Victorian period. Osborne andTemple, both in their early twenties, shared aromance that was opposed by their families, andOsborne herself was almost constantly under surveillance.Osborne’s letters provide a rare glimpseinto an early modern woman’s life at a pivotalpoint, as she tried to find a way to marry for love aswell as fulfil her obligations to her family.Combining historical and biographicalresearch with feminist theory, Carrie Hintz considersOsborne’s vision <strong>of</strong> letter writing, her literaryachievement, and her literary influences. Osbornehas long been overlooked as a writer, making acomprehensive and thorough analysis long overdue.While the nineteenth-century reception <strong>of</strong> the lettersis testament to the enduring public fascinationwith restrained love narratives, Osborne’s eloquentand outspoken articulation <strong>of</strong> her expectations anddesires also makes her letters compelling in our owntime.Carrie Hintz is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at Queen’s College, City<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> New YorkEnglish Biography in theSeventeenth CenturyA Critical SurveyAllan PritchardAlthough biography is one <strong>of</strong> today’s most flourishingliterary genres, its early history has attractedmuch less attention than that <strong>of</strong> other forms, aneglect that is especially apparent in the case <strong>of</strong> theformative period <strong>of</strong> English biography, the seventeenthcentury. This new work by Allan Pritchardfills the scholarly void by providing a wide-rangingand comprehensive survey <strong>of</strong> this period’s biographicalwritings.After charting the growth <strong>of</strong> seventeenth-centurybiographical writing, Pritchard explores theways in which traditional forms <strong>of</strong> religious biographyand lives <strong>of</strong> princes and other secular figureswere adapted to, and transformed by, the crises andrevolutions <strong>of</strong> the period. He then considers thedevelopment <strong>of</strong> less traditional biographical typesand analyses the emergence <strong>of</strong> a ‘new biography,’concerned essentially with individuality and withprivate as well as public life.Examining a rich range <strong>of</strong> texts, EnglishBiography in the Seventeenth Century is a survey <strong>of</strong> afield important for both literary and wider culturalreasons.Allan Pritchard is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><strong>Toronto</strong>.Approx. 280 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8833-3 £32.95 $50.00 EApprox. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3889-1 £40.00 $60.00 E19


LITERARY STUDIESGospels and GritWork and Labour in Carlyle, Conrad, and OrwellRob BretonA Smile in His Mind’s EyeA Study <strong>of</strong> the Early Works <strong>of</strong> Lawrence DurrellRay MorrisonWork has had a problematic history in Westernthought: disparaged as being contrary to contemplation,seen as a necessary burden, and investedwith moral or even sacred value. In the Victorianera, a romantic-utilitarian dichotomy developed,and ideas <strong>of</strong> work were more radically divided thanat any other time. On the one hand, the most popularmythologies propagated work as a value initself – the ‘Gospel <strong>of</strong> Work’ – defining and buildingcharacter and fostering well-being and a sense <strong>of</strong>fulfillment. On the other hand, with widespreadindustrialism, automation, and the division <strong>of</strong>labour, work was perceived as toil for extrinsic gain.Gospels and Grit examines the literary representations<strong>of</strong> work and labour in the Victorian works<strong>of</strong> Thomas Carlyle and the twentieth-century writings<strong>of</strong> Joseph Conrad and George Orwell, exploringhow the three systematically displaced the conflictbetween the Gospel <strong>of</strong> Work and a non-idealist,non-theoretical pragmatism. Rob Breton arguesthat these writers were unwilling or unable to providea resolution to the conflicting discourses andlocates fissures emerging out <strong>of</strong> the divisionbetween work and the economic. This is an importantand well-written study that provides a newdepth <strong>of</strong> insight into Victorian ideology and working-classculture.Rob Breton is an instructor in the Department <strong>of</strong>English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British Columbia.Lawrence Durrell (1912–1990), author <strong>of</strong> TheAlexandra Quartet, was a writer with a foot in twoworlds. His childhood in India and life in Franceand Greece provided him with an ability to absorbmany traditions, all <strong>of</strong> which are evident in hiswork. Pr<strong>of</strong>icient in several forms <strong>of</strong> the writtenword – novels, poetry, travel writing, essays, drama– Durrell’s best-known work fused Western notions<strong>of</strong> time and space with Eastern metaphysics.Very little has been written about Durrell’swork before the Second World War. With A Smilein His Mind’s Eye, Ray Morrison seeks to redressthis neglect. While French symbolism and the writings<strong>of</strong> Remy de Gourmont and ArthurSchopenhauer were important to the development<strong>of</strong> Durrell’s writing, it was his embrace <strong>of</strong> Taoismthat truly illustrated a shift from a Western, patriarchalconsciousness to that <strong>of</strong> an Eastern, femininecentredone and marked Durrell’s coming into hisown as a writer.In the years before Durrell’s death, Morrisonbecame a close acquaintance <strong>of</strong> the writer, giving ASmile in His Mind’s Eye a personal element unseenin most other scholarly analyses. The work is essentialto understanding one <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century’smost original and eclectic minds.Ray Morrison is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at Carleton <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 290 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3888-3 £35.00 $55.00 EApprox. 530 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8939-9 £50.00 $80.00 E20


LITERARY STUDIESNarrative SettlementsGeographies <strong>of</strong> British Women’s Fictionbetween the WarsJennifer Poulos NesbittCaptivating SubjectsWriting Confinement, Citizenship, and Nationhood inthe Nineteenth CenturyEdited by Jason Haslam and Julia M. WrightDuring the interwar period, shifting attitudestoward empire dovetailed with women’s achievement<strong>of</strong> citizenship, placing women at the centre <strong>of</strong>debates about what England would be. Respondingto these cultural conditions, women writers usednovels <strong>of</strong> place to analyse relationships amongspace, self, and nation in England, thereby establishingnew ways for the country to view itself.Jennifer Poulos Nesbitt’s Narrative Settlementsresituates British women’s writing between the warsin light <strong>of</strong> postcolonial theories <strong>of</strong> the novel andfeminist geography. Reading works by WinifredHoltby, Vita Sackville-West, Angela Thirkell, SylviaTownsend Warner, Rebecca West, and VirginiaWoolf, Nesbitt argues that renewed attention to settingprovides a methodological base for a morenuanced understanding <strong>of</strong> the aesthetic preoccupations<strong>of</strong> women writers between the wars. She providesnot only attentive readings <strong>of</strong> literature duringthis contentious time, but a convincing argumentfor looking beyond modernism to locate the significance<strong>of</strong> interwar literary production.Jennifer Poulos Nesbitt is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor inthe Department <strong>of</strong> English at Penn State York.Ever since Michel Foucault’s highly regarded work onprisons and confinement in the 1980s, critical examination<strong>of</strong> the forerunners to the prison – slavery, serfdom,and colonial confinements – has been rare.However, these institutions inform and participate inmany <strong>of</strong> the same ideologies that the prison enforces.Captivating Subjects is a collection <strong>of</strong> essays thatfills several crucial gaps in the critical analysis <strong>of</strong> therelations between Western state-sanctioned confinement,identity, nation, and literature. Editors JasonHaslam and Julia M. Wright have brought togetheran esteemed group <strong>of</strong> international scholars to explorenineteenth-century writings by prisoners, slaves, andother captives, tracing some <strong>of</strong> the continuitiesamong the varieties <strong>of</strong> captivity and their crucial relationshipto post-Enlightenment subjectivities.This volume is the first sustained examination<strong>of</strong> the ways in which the diverse kinds <strong>of</strong> confinementintersect with Western ideologies <strong>of</strong> subjectivity,investigating the modern nation-state’s relianceon captivity as a means <strong>of</strong> consolidating notions <strong>of</strong>individual and national sovereignty. It details thespecific historical and cultural practices <strong>of</strong> confinementand their relations to each other and to punishmentthrough a range <strong>of</strong> national contexts.Jason Haslam is a postdoctoral fellow in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> NotreDame.Julia M. Wright is a Canada Research Chair inEnglish and Cultural Studies with the Department<strong>of</strong> English and Film Studies at Wilfrid Laurier<strong>University</strong>.Approx. 190 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8986-0 £28.00 $45.00 EApprox. 290 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8968-2 £32.00 $50.00 E21


LITERARY STUDIESDowntown CanadaWriting Canadian CitiesEdited by Justin D. Edwards andDouglas IvisonThe vast majority <strong>of</strong> Canadians live in cities, yet forthe most part, discussions <strong>of</strong> Canadian literaturehave failed to engage actively with the country’surban experience. Canada’s prevalent myths continueto be about nordicity and the wilderness, and,stereotypically, its literature is <strong>of</strong>ten perceived asbeing about small towns, rural areas, and ‘roughingit in the bush.’Downtown Canada is a collection <strong>of</strong> essays thataddresses Canada as an urban place. The contributorsfocus their attention on the writing <strong>of</strong> Canada’scities – including Vancouver, <strong>Toronto</strong>, Ottawa,Montreal, and Halifax – and call attention to thecentrality <strong>of</strong> the city in Canadian literature. Theyexamine how characters are affected by the urbanexperience in works by a group <strong>of</strong> authors as diverseas the country itself: Hugh MacLennan, JovetteMarchessault, Michael Ondaatje, Austin Clarke,and Gerald Lynch, to name just a few. EditorsJustin D. Edwards and Douglas Ivison havebrought together an esteemed group <strong>of</strong> internationalCanadian literary scholars, and together theyhave created a book that is timely and unique, questioningconventional assumptions about Canadianliterature, and Canadian culture more generally.Justin D. Edwards is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at Københavns Universitet.Douglas Ivison is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at Lakehead <strong>University</strong>.The CanadianModernists MeetEdited by Dean IrvineUNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA PRESS – REAPPRAISALS:CANADIAN WRITERS SERIESThe Canadian Modernists Meet is a collection <strong>of</strong>new critical essays on major and rediscoveredCanadian writers <strong>of</strong> the early to mid-twentieth century.F.R. Scott’s well-known poem “The CanadianAuthors Meet” sets the theme for the volume: arevisiting <strong>of</strong> English Canada’s formative movementsin modernist poetry, fiction, and drama. As didScott’s poem, Dean Irvine’s collection raises questions– about modernism and antimodernism,nationalism and antinationalism, gender and class,originality and influence – that remain central tocontemporary research on early to mid-twentiethcenturyEnglish Canadian literature.The Canadian Modernists Meet is the first gathering<strong>of</strong> its kind: a meeting <strong>of</strong> literary critics, textualeditors, biographers, literary historians, and arthistorians whose collective research contributes tothe study <strong>of</strong> modernism in Canada. The collectionstages a major reassessment <strong>of</strong> the origins and development<strong>of</strong> modernist literature in Canada, its relationshipto international modernist literatures, itsregional variations, its gender and class inflections,and its connections to visual art, architecture, andradio. It presents a range <strong>of</strong> scholarly perspectives,drawing upon the multidisciplinarity that characterizesthe international field <strong>of</strong> modernist studies.Dean Irvine is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at Dalhousie <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 290 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8720-5 £40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8668-3 £20.00 $29.95 CApprox. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2005</strong>2 illustrationsPaper ISBN 0-7766-0599-2 £22.50 $35.00 C22


LITERARY STUDIESCorresponding InfluenceSelected Letters <strong>of</strong> Emily Carr and Ira DilworthEdited by Linda MorraBernard Shaw andNancy AstorEdited by J.P. WearingTHE SELECTED CORRESPONDENCE OF BERNARD SHAWEmily Carr (1871–1945) is an iconic figure inCanadian culture, known internationally for herpainting and her writing, which depicted the extraordinaryBritish Columbia mountain landscapealong with its indigenous inhabitants and their culturaliconography. Carr’s writing career came laterin her life, and as it developed, she met Ira Dilworth(1894–1962), the British Columbia RegionalDirector for CBC Radio who came to play a significantrole in her life. Corresponding Influence is acollection <strong>of</strong> selected correspondence the twoshared during the life <strong>of</strong> their friendship.Over the years, Dilworth acted variously asCarr’s editor, writing agent, sounding board, pr<strong>of</strong>essionaland personal advisor, and most importantly,close friend and confidante. The letters providea narrative for the latter part <strong>of</strong> Carr’s life andilluminate the impression Dilworth made on thedevelopment <strong>of</strong> her writing. In addition to a criticalintroduction and annotation throughout, editorLinda Morra has included an unpublished storyby Carr called “Small’s Gold.” CorrespondingInfluence will prove essential reading to anyonehoping to understand Emily Carr’s extraordinarylife and work.Linda Morra recently completed a SSHRC postdoctoralfellowship at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> BritishColumbia.George Bernard Shaw and Nancy Lady Astorenjoyed a close friendship for over twenty years,from the late 1920s until Shaw’s death in 1950.Although opposites in many matters – particularlypolitics – Shaw and Astor were irresistibly attractedto each other, both being unconventional firebrandswith ready wits. This collection <strong>of</strong> nearly250 letters between Shaw and Astor – as well asbetween Astor and Shaw’s wife, Charlotte, andShaw’s secretary, Blanche Patch – illustrates therewarding friendship the two shared and thenumerous issues they debated.Perhaps the most fascinating letters occur afterCharlotte’s death in 1943. Astor became concernedfor Shaw’s well-being, but his letters at this pointreveal his growing resentment with her suffocatingattentions. However, the friendship endured andthe correspondence continued.More than half <strong>of</strong> the letters in this volumehave never been published and many more appearin their entirety for the first time. Headnotes to theletters provide a contextual narrative and identifypolitical, historical, literary, and theatrical references,allusions, and other relevant information.This is a crucial edition in the highly praisedSelected Correspondence <strong>of</strong> Bernard Shaw series.J.P. Wearing is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Arizona.Approx. 350 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>10 colour and black-and-white imagesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3877-8 £40.00 $60.00 EApprox. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3752-6 £32.00 $50.00 E23


LITERARY STUDIESNorthrop Frye onMilton and BlakeEdited by Angela EsterhammerCOLLECTED WORKS OF NORTHROP FRYE, VOLUME 16The writings <strong>of</strong> John Milton and William Blakewere central to Northrop Frye’s concept <strong>of</strong> theimaginative structure <strong>of</strong> Western literature andthought. He considered them the two most importantpoet-prophets in the English tradition.This volume brings together all <strong>of</strong> Frye’s writingson Milton and Blake from 1947 to 1987 –published and unpublished essays, reviews, commentaries,and public lectures – with the exception<strong>of</strong> Fearful Symmetry (published as Volume 14 <strong>of</strong> theCollected Works <strong>of</strong> Northrop Frye). During thistime, Frye’s engagement with Milton moved outwardfrom the university into conferences, publications,and public lectures. His engagement withBlake, meanwhile, was a personal, intellectual, andspiritual quest, leading him to become the worldauthority on Blake in the mid-twentieth century.Angela Esterhammer, a student <strong>of</strong> Frye’s in the1980s, has provided annotation and an introductionthat demonstrates the poets’ importance forFrye’s literary and cultural criticism and provides atwenty-first-century perspective on the legacy <strong>of</strong> hiswork. This key volume <strong>of</strong> the Collected Works willbe important to scholars interested in Frye as well asthose <strong>of</strong> Milton and Blake.Angela Esterhammer is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English and the Program inComparative Literature at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Western Ontario.Northrop Frye’s Writingson the Eighteenth andNineteenth CenturiesEdited by Imre SalusinszkyCOLLECTED WORKS OF NORTHROP FRYE, VOLUME 17Highlighting aspects <strong>of</strong> his scholarship seldomgiven sufficient emphasis, this new volume <strong>of</strong> theCollected Works <strong>of</strong> Northrop Frye documentsFrye’s writings on the literature <strong>of</strong> the eighteenthand nineteenth centuries (apart from those onWilliam Blake, which are featured in Volumes 14and 16 <strong>of</strong> the Collected Works).The volume includes Frye’s seminal 1956 essay“Towards Defining an Age <strong>of</strong> Sensibility” and thehighly influential 1968 book A Study <strong>of</strong> EnglishRomanticism. With these pieces and the other publishedand unpublished works contained in the volume,Frye changed the way the transition from themajor Augustan figures to the Romantics wasviewed. These works are a central part <strong>of</strong> Frye’s longand radical rethinking <strong>of</strong> the relation <strong>of</strong> romanceand Romanticism and, through them, he emergesas a meticulous textual critic, teasing out the finebrushstroke effects in writers as varied as Boswelland Beddoes, Dickens and Dickinson.Imre Salusinszky’s introduction and annotationilluminates Frye’s writing and guides the readeralong the path <strong>of</strong> Frye’s five-decade development<strong>of</strong> thought on Romanticism. This volume is aninvaluable contribution to studies on Frye, as wellas to Romantic and Victorian literature.Imre Salusinszky is an editorial writer with thenational daily newspaper The Australian.Approx. 530 pp / 6 1 /8 x 9 1 /4 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3919-7 £55.00 $85.00 EApprox. 515 pp / 6 1 /8 x 9 1 /4 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3824-7 £55.00 $85.00 E24


CULTURAL STUDIESSemiotics UnboundedInterpretive Routes through the Open Network <strong>of</strong> SignsSusan Petrilli and Augusto PonzioTORONTO STUDIES IN SEMIOTICS AND COMMUNICATIONAspiring to the LandscapeOn Painting and the Subject <strong>of</strong> NaturePetra HalkesThe more human knowledge increases, the moresigns grow and, with this expansion, the more theboundaries <strong>of</strong> the science that studies signs alsogrows. In Semiotics Unbounded, Susan Petrilli andAugusto Ponzio explain the explosion <strong>of</strong> the signnetwork in the era <strong>of</strong> global communication anddiscuss the important theoretical responses <strong>of</strong>feredby semiotics. Providing a much-needed introductoryguide to the subject, Petrilli and Ponzio explorethe ever-growing frontiers <strong>of</strong> semiotics through thethought <strong>of</strong> prominent sign scholars such as CharlesPeirce, Victoria Welby, Mikhail Bakhtin, CharlesMorris, and Thomas Sebeok.In an era <strong>of</strong> global communication, a globalapproach is necessary, and what may seem to be thewhole is only a part – a view being at once globalizingand open. Each and every sign is never self-sufficientand closed but exists always in a relation <strong>of</strong> otherness.This is true <strong>of</strong> the signs forming animals and humanbeings, individuals and communities, and involves theimplication <strong>of</strong> all living beings in the life <strong>of</strong> all others.Semiotics Unbounded <strong>of</strong>fers a new and original survey<strong>of</strong> the science <strong>of</strong> signs, evaluating it in relation to theproblems <strong>of</strong> our time, not only <strong>of</strong> a scientific order,but also the problems concerning everyday social life.The idea <strong>of</strong> nature as a cultural construction hasbeen discussed extensively in postmodern theory.Less attention, however, has been paid to the underlyingmotivations shaping the ideologies <strong>of</strong> nature,in particular the desire to submit to some largerorder outside <strong>of</strong> oneself. Aspiring to the Landscapeexamines this persistent desire and how it is mademanifest in contemporary landscape art.Four installations <strong>of</strong> large-scale paintings byCanadian artists Eleanor Bond, Susan Feindel,Stephen Hutchings, and Wanda Koop are the focus<strong>of</strong> Petra Halkes’s study. The works vary widely instyle and iconography but are drawn together bythe way they invite a reflection on the troubled relationshipbetween culture and nature and our contradictoryand simultaneous longing to conquerand to succumb to nature.It is the tension between modern and postmoderninterpretations <strong>of</strong> the subject <strong>of</strong> nature thatmakes the theory and the artwork discussed inAspiring to the Landscape so important to contemporaryCanadian culture.Petra Halkes is an independent curator, painter, andart critic living in Ottawa.Susan Petrilli is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Linguistic Practices and TextAnalysis at l’Università degli Studi di Bari.Augusto Ponzio is the head <strong>of</strong> the Department <strong>of</strong>Linguistic Practices and Text Analysis at l’Universitàdegli Studi di Bari.Approx. 670 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2005</strong>1 figureCloth ISBN 0-8020-8765-5 £48.00 $75.00 EApprox. 270 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>52 colour and black-and-white imagesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3894-8 £32.00 $50.00 E25


BOOK HISTORYReading WomenLiterary Figures and Cultural Icons from the Victorian Age to the PresentEdited by Janet Badia and Jennifer PhegleySTUDIES IN BOOK AND PRINT CULTURELiterary and popular culture has <strong>of</strong>ten focused itsattention on women readers, particularly since earlyVictorian times. In Reading Women, an esteemedgroup <strong>of</strong> new and established scholars provide aclose study <strong>of</strong> the evolution <strong>of</strong> the woman reader byexamining a wide range <strong>of</strong> nineteenth- and twentieth-centurymedia, including Antebellum scientifictreatises, Victorian paintings, and OphrahWinfrey’s televised book club, as well as the writings<strong>of</strong> Charlotte Brontë, Harriet Beecher Stowe, andZora Neale Hurston.Attending especially to what, how, and whywomen read, Reading Women brings together a richarray <strong>of</strong> subjects that sheds light onthe defining role the womanreader has played in the formationnot only <strong>of</strong> literaryhistory, but <strong>of</strong> British andAmerican culture. The contributorsbreak new groundby focusing on the impactrepresentations <strong>of</strong> womenreaders have had onunderstandings <strong>of</strong> literacyand certain readingpractices, the development<strong>of</strong> books and print culture,and the categorization <strong>of</strong> texts intohigh and low cultural forms.Janet Badia is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at Marshall <strong>University</strong>.Jennifer Phegley is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Missouri – Kansas City.ContributorsSuzanne M. AshworthJanet BadiaMichele CrescenzoKate FlintRuth HobermanBarbara HochmanMary R. LambAntonia LosanoJennifer PhegleyElizabeth Fekete TrubeyTuire ValkeakariSarah A. WadsworthAlso from the Studies in Book andPrint Culture series:Approx. 340 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>16 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-8928-3 £40.00 $60.00 EThe Book UnboundEditing and Reading MedievalManuscripts and TextsEdited by Siân Echard andStephen Partridge0-8020-8756-6 / £32.00 /$50.00 / 2004Title page vignette from A Garland for Girls by Louisa May Alcott (1908).26


BOOK HISTORY‘Paper-contestations’ andTextual Communities inEngland, 1640–1675Elizabeth SauerSTUDIES IN BOOK AND PRINT CULTUREThe mass production and dissemination <strong>of</strong> printedmaterials were unparalleled in England during the1640s and 50s. While theatrical performance traditionallydefined literary culture, print steadilygained ground, becoming more prevalent andenabling the formation <strong>of</strong> various networks <strong>of</strong> writers,readers, and consumers <strong>of</strong> books.In conjunction with an evolving print culture,seventeenth-century England experienced a rise <strong>of</strong>political instability and religious dissent, the closing<strong>of</strong> the theatres, and the emergence <strong>of</strong> a middle class.Elizabeth Sauer examines how this played out in thenation’s book and print industry with an emphasison performative writings, their materiality, reception,and their extra-judicial function. ‘Paper-contestations’and Textual Communities in England challengestraditional readings <strong>of</strong> literary history, <strong>of</strong>fersnew insights into drama and its transgression <strong>of</strong>boundaries, and proposes a fresh approach to thepolitics <strong>of</strong> consensus and contestation that animatedseventeenth-century culture and that distinguishescurrent scholarly debates about this period.Elizabeth Sauer is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>English at Brock <strong>University</strong>.Prints for BooksIllustration in France, 1760–1800Antony GriffithsTHE BRITISH LIBRARY – PANIZZI LECTURES, VOLUME 19The second half <strong>of</strong> the eighteenth century in Francewas one <strong>of</strong> the great ages <strong>of</strong> book illustration, andsaw the meeting <strong>of</strong> top-quality engraving, fine printing,and high bibliophily. In this new book, AntonyGriffiths explores the interrelationship <strong>of</strong> these elements.The vogue began with a public demand thatnew poems, plays, and novels should be illustratedwith high-quality prints, and authors had torespond. The pr<strong>of</strong>its to be made tempted engravers,draughtsmen, and a new breed <strong>of</strong> art entrepreneurto undertake projects <strong>of</strong> their own. In the 1780s,fashion shifted to a passionate interest in book collectingand fine printing. Griffiths demonstrateshow the business responded to the new situation,and to the effects <strong>of</strong> the Revolution in the 1790s.Based on the Panizzi lectures given in theBritish Library in November 2003, the text hasbeen considerably augmented for publication.There are more than 200 footnotes and 90 illustrations,as well as an appendix giving the actual period<strong>of</strong> production <strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong> the most importantbooks <strong>of</strong> the period.Antony Griffiths is the keeper <strong>of</strong> the Department <strong>of</strong>Prints and Drawings at the British Museum.Approx. 255 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2005</strong>10 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3884-0 £28.00 $45.00 EApprox. 190 pp / 5 1 /2 x 8 1 /2 / March <strong>2005</strong>90 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-4874-3 $40.00 EDISTRIBUTION RIGHTS FOR NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA ONLY.OTHER RIGHTS HELD BY THE BRITISH LIBRARY.27


MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIESAdages III iv 1 to IV ii 100Edited by John N. Grant. Translated and annotatedby Denis L. DrysdallCOLLECTED WORKS OF ERASMUS, VOLUME 35This fifth <strong>of</strong> seven volumes on the Adages continuesfrom where the Collected Works <strong>of</strong> ErasmusVolume 34 left <strong>of</strong>f and includes 900 more adagesfrom III iv 1 to IV ii 100. The aim <strong>of</strong> the Adagesvolumes in the Collected Works is to provide a fullyannotated, accurate, and readable English version<strong>of</strong> the more than 4000 adages gathered and commentedon by Erasmus, sometimes in a few linesand sometimes in full-scale essays.Following in the tradition <strong>of</strong> meticulous scholarshipfor which the Collected Works <strong>of</strong> Erasmus iswidely known, the notes to this volume identify theclassical sources and illustrate how Erasmus’ readingand thinking developed over twenty-five years, aperiod spanned by eight revisions <strong>of</strong> the first edition<strong>of</strong> the work which appeared in 1508 and wonimmediate acclaim. Many <strong>of</strong> the proverbs cited byErasmus are still in use today.John N. Grant is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Classics at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Denis L. Drysdall is a research associate with theDepartment <strong>of</strong> European and Hispanic Studies atthe <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Waikato.Praise for the Collected Works <strong>of</strong> Erasmus series:‘The <strong>Toronto</strong> Erasmus project is a magnificent achievement,one <strong>of</strong> the scholarly triumphs <strong>of</strong> our time. The succession <strong>of</strong>fine volumes – both in quality <strong>of</strong> content and <strong>of</strong> design andproduction – since the edition began in 1974 has continuedto fulfil the original promise <strong>of</strong> the distinguished team <strong>of</strong> editorsand the equally distinguished advisory committee.’Lisa Jardin, Common Knowledge‘Academic publishing does not get any better than this:durably bound, expertly annotated, beautifully translatededitions <strong>of</strong> the works <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> the finest scholars in the illustrioushistory <strong>of</strong> the Christian Church.’Michael Bauman, Journal <strong>of</strong> the Evangelical TheologicalSociety‘The Collected Works <strong>of</strong> Erasmus project has long since establisheda new standard for scholarly translation series to emulate.Not only have the English versions represented Erasmus’writings in crisp and accessible language, but meticulouseditorial scholarship has placed the author’s thought andwork in their proper intellectual contexts.’Jerry H. Bentley, Renaissance Quarterly‘A marvellous work <strong>of</strong> organization, erudition, and presentation.The scholarship is perfect; the editorial apparatus economicalbut entirely sufficient; the translation easy, colloquial,fresh, like Erasmus’ own Latin. This is a splendidenterprise: I cannot commend it enough.’Hugh Trevor-Roper, Times Literary SupplementApprox. 470 pp / 6 3 /4 x 9 3 /4 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3643-0 £80.00 $125.00 EErasmus composing the Adages by Hans Holbein. 1515. CourtesyKupferstichkabinett Kunstmuseum, Basel.28


MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIESControversies withEdward LeeEdited by Jane E. Phillips. Translated by ErikaRummel. Annotated by István Bejczy, Erika Rummel,and Jane E. Phillips.COLLECTED WORKS OF ERASMUS, VOLUME 72In 1520, the reading public witnessed the eruption <strong>of</strong>a simmering conflict between Erasmus, the foremostadvocate <strong>of</strong> the new biblical humanism, and EdwardLee, a younger scholar at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Louvainand spokesman for the traditionalists in matters <strong>of</strong>biblical interpretation and church discipline. WhenErasmus (perhaps unconsciously) subsumed criticismsLee had sent to him <strong>of</strong> his 1516 Annotations onthe New Testament into the second edition (1519)without properly crediting their source, Lee resortedto publication <strong>of</strong> his collection <strong>of</strong> criticisms.Erasmus responded immediately with theApologia which is neither arrogant nor biting nor angrynor aggressive, and which responds to the two invectives<strong>of</strong> Edward Lee, describing his version <strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong>the dispute with Lee, and less than two months laterproduced Responses to Lee’s criticisms. This new volumein the Collected Works <strong>of</strong> Erasmus series containsthe first-ever English translations <strong>of</strong> the Apologyand the Responses. These two pieces display Erasmusthe humanist in the thick <strong>of</strong> academic turmoil,deploying all the rhetorical weapons at his command.The volume is an entertaining and informativelook into Erasmus as a scholar and as a man.Jane E. Phillips 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> Kentucky.Erika Rummel is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emerita in the Department<strong>of</strong> History at Wilfrid Laurier <strong>University</strong> and an adjunctpr<strong>of</strong>essor at Emmanuel College, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.István Bejczy is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> History at Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen.Controversies withAlberto PioEdited and annotated by Nelson H. Minnich andDaniel J. Sheerin. Translated by Daniel J. Sheerin.Introduction by Nelson H. MinnichCOLLECTED WORKS OF ERASMUS, VOLUME 84PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCEDThis new volume in the Collected Works <strong>of</strong>Erasmus series presents three <strong>of</strong> the great thinker’spolemic works against Alberto Pio, Prince <strong>of</strong> Carpi.A leading diplomat <strong>of</strong> the period, patron <strong>of</strong> artistsand humanists, and conservative Catholic, Pio continuallyangered Erasmus by criticizing him for hisdenunciations <strong>of</strong> church practices and <strong>of</strong>ficials, andby accusing him <strong>of</strong> supporting Luther and holdingdangerous opinions. The texts are lucid, passionate,and even vitriolic at times.The introduction by Nelson H. Minnich providesa biography <strong>of</strong> Pio, an overview <strong>of</strong> the controversyand related texts, and a bibliographical conspectus<strong>of</strong> source-texts. The translation is by DanielJ. Sheerin. The annotation by Minnich and Sheerinis wide-ranging and informative, answering questionsposed by the text and placing the reader firmlyin the sixteenth-century context <strong>of</strong> the dispute.This is the first English translation <strong>of</strong> the AlbertoPio controversies. In the Collected Works it followson Volumes 71–83, which contain Erasmus’ controversieswith other critics on theological, political,social, philological, and educational matters.Nelson H. Minnich is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> History at the Catholic <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> America.Daniel J. Sheerin is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Classics at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> NotreDame.Approx. 430 pp / 6 3 /4 x 9 3 /4 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3836-0 £96.00 $150.00 EApprox. 790 pp / 6 3 /4 x 9 3 /4 / March <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-4397-6 £110.00 $175.00 E29


MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIESThe Trinity ApocalypseEdited by David McKitterickBRITISH LIBRARY STUDIES IN MEDIEVAL CULTUREDavid McKitterick is the librarian <strong>of</strong> Trinity College,<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Cambridge.Also from the British Library Studies in MedievalCulture series:Art, Identity, and Devotion in Fourteenth-Century EnglandThree Women Patrons and their Books <strong>of</strong> HoursKathryn A. Smith0-8020-8691-8 / $29.95 / 2004North and South American rights onlyThe Trinity Apocalypse has long been considered thefinest manuscript <strong>of</strong> its kind. Containing the text <strong>of</strong>the Book <strong>of</strong> Revelation, accompanied by a commentaryand a remarkable series <strong>of</strong> illustrations thatdepict the dream <strong>of</strong> John in vivid detail, it was writtenand illustrated in England in the mid-thirteenthcentury (with a text in French), and stands at theheight <strong>of</strong> artistic achievement. Amidst the figures inthe dream, there are people and animals familiar incontemporary life, depicted with a colour and vitalitywhose appeal speaks over the centuries.The essays in this collection concern the creation<strong>of</strong> The Trinity Apocalypse and its subsequenthistory, including the circumstances surrounding itscoming to its current home at Trinity College,Cambridge, in the seventeenth century. The contributorsexamine the extraordinarily close relationshipbetween text and image in the Book <strong>of</strong>Revelation and how these images were interpretedin The Trinity Apocalypse. The first close examination<strong>of</strong> this extraodinary work, David McKitterick’svolume is accompanied by a CD containing theentire text, with an English translation.The Making <strong>of</strong> Medieval ForgeriesFalse Documents in Fifteenth-Century EnglandAlfred Hiatt0-8020-8951-8 / $63.00 / 2004North and South American rights onlyApprox. 280 pp /6 3 /4 x 9 3 /4 / April <strong>2005</strong>16 colour illustrations; 133 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-9009-5 $85.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-4893-5 $39.95 TNORTH AND SOUTH AMERICAN RIGHTS ONLY.CO-PUBLISHED WITH THE BRITISH LIBRARY.The dragon delegates power to the seven-headed beast who risesfrom the sea and the two are worshipped by the people. Thebeast slays the saints. The Trinity Apocalypse, Trinity College,Cambridge MS R.16.2, f.14v.30


MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIESRitual and the RoodLiturgical Images and the Old English Poems <strong>of</strong> theDream <strong>of</strong> the Rood TraditionÉamonn Ó CarragáinBRITISH LIBRARY STUDIES IN MEDIEVAL CULTURERitual and the Rood is a study <strong>of</strong> four <strong>of</strong> the mostimportant surviving artifacts from Anglo-SaxonEngland: the elaborate eighth-century stone crossstill standing at Ruthwell in Dumfriesshire,Scotland; the related cross-shaft at Bewcastle; themajestic and hypnotizing Dream <strong>of</strong> the Rood, a poemsurviving in a late tenth-century manuscript now inVercelli, North Italy; and the early eleventh-centurymetal reliquary cross now preserved in the Cathedral<strong>of</strong> Saints Michael and Gudule in Brussels, Belgium.In bringing together these scattered witnessesto the sustained brilliance <strong>of</strong> Anglo-Saxon artisticachievement across several centuries, Éamonn ÓCarragáin has produced a study <strong>of</strong> great significanceto Anglo-Saxon history. He grounds his work inliturgical practices and demonstrates that even inthe far North <strong>of</strong> (then) Anglo-Saxon England, peoplewere deeply influenced by the latest developmentsin liturgy taking place in Rome.Ritual and the Rood is an important contributionto medieval studies and will prove valuable to a widerange <strong>of</strong> readers, as well as being <strong>of</strong> particular relevanceto those interested in cultural contacts betweenGermanic and Latin traditions, between England andthe Continent, and in the subtle relations that Anglo-Saxon designers established between word and image.Holiness and Masculinityin Medieval EuropeEdited by Patricia Cullum andKatherine J. LewisStudies <strong>of</strong> gender in medieval culture have tendedto focus on femininity, however the study <strong>of</strong>medieval masculinities has developed greatly overthe last few years. Holiness and Masculinity inMedieval Europe is the first volume to concentrateon this specific aspect <strong>of</strong> medieval gender studies,and looks at the ways in which varieties <strong>of</strong> medievalmasculinity intersected with concepts <strong>of</strong> holiness.Patricia Cullum and Katherine J. Lewis havecollected an exceptional group <strong>of</strong> essays that explorediffering notions <strong>of</strong> medieval holiness, understoodvariously as religious, saintly, sacred, pure, morallyperfect, and consider topics such as significance <strong>of</strong>the tonsure, sanctity and martyrdom, eunuchsaints, and the writings <strong>of</strong> Henry Suso. Holiness andMasculinity in Medieval Europe deals with a widevariety <strong>of</strong> texts and historical contexts, fromByzantium to Anglo-Saxon and late-medievalEngland.Patricia Cullum is a principal lecturer in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Huddersfield.Katherine J. Lewis is a lecturer in the Department <strong>of</strong>History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Huddersfield.Éamonn Ó Carragáin is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at <strong>University</strong> College Cork.Approx. 320 pp / 6 3 /4 x 9 3 /4 / June <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9008-7 $80.00 ENORTH AND SOUTH AMERICAN RIGHTS ONLY.CO-PUBLISHED WITH THE BRITISH LIBRARY.Approx. 240pp / 5 1 /2 x 8 1 /2 / March <strong>2005</strong>Paper ISBN 0-8020-4892-7 $27.50 CNORTH AMERICAN RIGHTS ONLY.CO-PUBLISHED WITH UNIVERSITY OF WALES PRESS.31


MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIESVerbal EncountersAnglo-Saxon and Old Norse Studies for Roberta FrankEdited by Antonina Harbus and Russell PooleDue to conquests and colonialism through the centuries,it is not unusual for languages and culturesto be influenced by other foreign languages andcultures. The modern English language, for example,owes many <strong>of</strong> its words to Old Norse andLatin, debts dating from contacts made during theMiddle Ages. Verbal Encounters is a collection <strong>of</strong>papers on the cultural and linguistic exchange inOld Norse, Old English, and medieval Latin literature,written in honour <strong>of</strong> Roberta Frank, former<strong>University</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Medieval Studies at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.The essays feature new scholarship in the field,on topics such as the integral position <strong>of</strong> Anglo-Latin within Anglo-Saxon culture and literature,constructions <strong>of</strong> femininestrength and effectiveness inAnglo-Saxon literature, therise <strong>of</strong> Latin-based learningin twelfth-century Iceland,medieval Icelandic religiouspoetry, and the conversionto Christianity inmedieval Scandinavia.The essays in VerbalEncounters are not merely a fitting tributeto Roberta Frank, but also strongcontributions to current scholarshipon medieval literature and culture.ContributorsDon ChapmanMartin ChaseRobert DiNapoliOren FalkDorothy HainesAntonina HarbusPauline HeadChristopher A. JonesSoon-Ai LowBernadine McCreeshHaruko MommaKarin OlsenRussell PooleCarin Ruff‘A high standard <strong>of</strong> scholarly excellenceis maintained throughoutin this impressive and beautifullyedited collection <strong>of</strong> essays.It is an entirely fitting tributeto the work <strong>of</strong> Roberta Frank.’Thomas N. Hall,Department <strong>of</strong> English,<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Illinois atChicagoAntonina Harbus is a lecturer in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at Macquarie<strong>University</strong>.Russell Poole is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Western Ontario.Approx. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8011-1 £42.00 $65.00 E32


MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIESJohn Stow (1525–1605)and the Making <strong>of</strong> theEnglish PastEdited by Ian Gadd and Alexandra GillespieTHE BRITISH LIBRARYThe scholar and antiquarian John Stow(1525–1605) is a figure <strong>of</strong> crucial importance toour understanding <strong>of</strong> medieval and early modernEnglish history, literature, and culture. His Survey<strong>of</strong> London, a rich account <strong>of</strong> metropolitan topographyand tradition, is still an invaluable resource forscholars <strong>of</strong> the early modern city, and his Chronicles<strong>of</strong> English history paved the way for the famous historicalprojects <strong>of</strong> Raphael Holinshed and WilliamCamden, and shaped the historical consciousness <strong>of</strong>early modern dramatists and poets such asShakespeare and Samuel Daniel. We also owe some<strong>of</strong> the most important copies <strong>of</strong> major medievaltexts to Stow’s endeavours as an obsessive ‘serchar <strong>of</strong>antiquities’ <strong>of</strong> ‘divinite ... and poetry.’This volume brings together wide-ranging andexciting new essays on Stow. Its contributors considerthe feuds and friendships at the heart <strong>of</strong> the Tudorhistoriographical project, the construction <strong>of</strong> a politicaland religious culture, and a topographical history,for Elizabethan London, the early modern invention<strong>of</strong> the medieval past, and the manuscript andprinted books written and collected by this industriousand important ‘maker’ <strong>of</strong> English history.Ian Gadd is a lecturer in the School <strong>of</strong> English andCreative Studies at Bath Spa <strong>University</strong> College.Alexandra Gillespie is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>at Mississauga.The Life <strong>of</strong> St Edmund,King and Martyr(facsimile)Introduction by A.S.G. EdwardsTHE BRITISH LIBRARYOn Christmas Eve 1433, the young King Henry VIarrived at the abbey at Bury St Edmunds, one <strong>of</strong> thelargest religious foundations in fifteenth-centuryEngland. He remained there until Easter and at theend <strong>of</strong> his stay was admitted to the abbey’s confraternity.To cement the abbey’s relationship with the king,abbot William Curteys conceived the idea <strong>of</strong> commemoratingHenry’s visit with a ‘life’ <strong>of</strong> the Anglo-Saxon king, St Edmund, the patron saint <strong>of</strong> the abbey.The man charged with the task <strong>of</strong> translatingthe ‘life’ <strong>of</strong> St Edmund was John Lydgate, a monkat the abbey and the pre-eminent poet <strong>of</strong> the fifteenthcentury. It is hard to overstate the importance<strong>of</strong> the resulting manuscript, both as a monumentto the development <strong>of</strong> the English language,and for its illustrations – 120 images, forming narrativesequences integrated to form a coherent visualparallel to the text and with a careful fidelity todetail. The completed manuscript that was presentedto the young king remained in his library untilafter his deposition, and although it left royal handsfor a time, it reappears in the inventories <strong>of</strong> thelibrary <strong>of</strong> Henry VIII. It was acquired by TheBritish Library in 1742.In both the number and quality <strong>of</strong> its illustrationsand in the degree <strong>of</strong> integration, The Life <strong>of</strong> StEdmund, King and Martyr is unsurpassed.A.S.G. Edwards is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Victoria.Approx. 190 pp / 6 3 /4 x 9 3 /4 / Available30 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-4864-6 $60.00 EDISTRIBUTION RIGHTS FOR NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA ONLY.OTHER RIGHTS HELD BY THE BRITISH LIBRARY.Approx. 265 pp / 6 1 /2 x 9 3 /4 / January <strong>2005</strong>120 colour illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-4871-9 $100.00 EDISTRIBUTION RIGHTS FOR NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA ONLY.OTHER RIGHTS HELD BY THE BRITISH LIBRARY.33


MEDIEVAL ACADEMY REPRINTS FOR TEACHING1 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 JulianBrownPaper 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 AD610–1071Romilly 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 Alps1050–1500Sylvia 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 Vicesin Medieval 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 C31 The Deeds <strong>of</strong> Frederick BarbarossaOtto, Bishop <strong>of</strong> FreisingTranslated and annotated with anIntroduction by Charles ChristopherMierowPaper 0-8020-7574-6 $17.95 C32 FablesMarie de FranceEdited and translated by Harriet SpiegelPaper 0-8020-7636-X $19.95 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 C34


ITALIAN STUDIESAn Italian Renaissance SextetSix Tales in Historical ContextLauro MartinesTranslations by Murtha BacaTHE LORENZO DA PONTE ITALIAN LIBRARYAn Italian Renaissance Sextet is a collection <strong>of</strong> sixtales <strong>of</strong>fering a unique view <strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong>Renaissance Italy, with fiction and fictional modesbecoming gateways to a real, historical world. Allwritten between 1400 and 1500 – among them arare gem by Lorenzo the Magnificent and a famousaccount featuring Filippo Brunelleschi – the storiesare presented here in lively translations.As engrossing, fresh, and high-spirited as thosein Boccaccio’s Decameron, the tales deal with marriage,deception, rural manners, gender relations,social ambitions, adultery, homosexuality, and thedemands <strong>of</strong> individual identity. Each is accompaniedby an essay, in which Lauro Martines situatesthe story in its temporal context, transforming itinto an outright historical document. The storiesand essays focus mainly on people from the ordinaryand middling ranks <strong>of</strong> society, as they go abouttheir ordinary lives, under the pressure <strong>of</strong> a highlypractical, conformist, pleasure-loving (but <strong>of</strong>tencruel) urban society. Revealing the concerns <strong>of</strong> asearching historical work with a combined anthropological,demographic, and cultural slant, AnItalian Renaissance Sextet shines a probing light onItalian Renaissance culture.… as the friar continued to beg the damsel to satisfy his love,and the young priest continued to refuse, the friar became allinflamed with desire. And unable to change his mind withprayers, gifts, and extravagant promises, he seized him andthrew him on the bed. Now the young priest, finding himselfon his back and thinking it was time to reveal his identity,suddenly changed his fake Florentine accent and spokein the accent <strong>of</strong> Arezzo, saying: “My dear sir, don’t overexertyourself, for I am more a man than you are.” Amazed andwanting an immediate explanation, the friar put out hishand and felt that the “young lady” was a very well-endowedyoung man. But seeing how handsome he was, feeling allaflame with desire, and determined to satisfy his unrulyappetite, he said: “Very well! I like you no less as a man thanas a woman.” Then the young priest, rather alarmed by this,quickly pushed his feet against the friar’s shameless breast,knocking him backward, and jumped <strong>of</strong>f the bed …From ‘Friar and Priest’Lauro Martines is an author and independent scholarwho has taught history in Los Angeles, London,and Paris.Murtha Baca is head <strong>of</strong> the Standards and VocabularyPrograms at the Getty Research Institute.278 pp / 6 x 9 / AvailableCloth ISBN 0-8020-8993-3 £32.00 $50.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8650-0 £15.00 $24.95 CApollo and Daphne by Antonio del Pollaivolo (1432–98). Oil onwood, 1470–80. Courtesy the National Gallery, London.35


ITALIAN STUDIESAretino’s DialoguesPietro AretinoTranslated by Raymond RosenthalWith a new introduction by Margaret RosenthalTHE LORENZO DA PONTE ITALIAN LIBRARYPietro Aretino (1492–1556) was one <strong>of</strong> the mostimportant figures in Italian Renaissance literature,and certainly the most controversial. Condemnedby some as a pornographer, his infamy was duelargely to his use <strong>of</strong> explicit sexuality and the vulgartongue <strong>of</strong> ordinary speech in much <strong>of</strong> his work.Dialogues centres around a conversationbetween two rather frank, experienced, and sharptonguedwomen on the topic <strong>of</strong> women’s occupations.We learn that at the time there were onlythree: wife, whore, or nun. Their discussion is a rollickingaccount <strong>of</strong> the advantages, perils, and pleasureseach pr<strong>of</strong>ession <strong>of</strong>fers.Not only was Dialogues the first erotic book inthe Christian world to be written in the commonvernacular, it was but one <strong>of</strong> the few to describe theobscenity <strong>of</strong> commercial love, and is thus a cornerstone<strong>of</strong> both Italian literature and Counter-Renaissance vigour. Raymond Rosenthal’s Englishtranslation first appeared in 1971, and this editioncontains his original preface as well as a new introductionby Margaret Rosethal. Also included, as apreface, is a review <strong>of</strong> the translation by AlbertoMoravia from the New York Times Book Review.The late Raymond Rosenthal (1915–1995) was aworld-renowned translator <strong>of</strong> Italian literature.Margaret Rosenthal is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> French and Italian at the <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> Southern California.The Ugly WomanTransgressive Aesthetic Models in Italian Poetryfrom the Middle Ages to the BaroquePatrizia BettellaTORONTO ITALIAN STUDIESThe ugly woman is a surprisingly common figure inItalian poetry, one that has been frequently appropriatedby male poetic imagination to depict moral,aesthetic, social, and racial boundaries. Mostly usedbetween the thirteenth and seventeenth centuries –from the invectives <strong>of</strong> Rustico Filippi, FrancoSacchetti, and Burchiello, to the paradoxical praises<strong>of</strong> Francesco Berni, Niccolò Campani and PietroAretino, and further to the conceited encomia <strong>of</strong>Giambattista Marino and Marinisti – the portrayal<strong>of</strong> female unattractiveness was, argues PatriziaBettella in The Ugly Woman, one way <strong>of</strong> figuringwoman as ‘other.’Bettella shows how medieval female uglinessincluded transgressive types ranging from the lustfulold hag, to the slanderer, the wild woman, theheretic/witch, and the prostitute, whereas EarlyModern unattractiveness targeted peasants, mountaindwellers, and black slaves: marginal womenwhose bodies and manners subvert aesthetic precepts<strong>of</strong> culturally normative beauty and propriety. Takinga philological and feminist approach, and drawingon the Bakhtinian concept <strong>of</strong> the grotesque body andon the poetics <strong>of</strong> transgression, The Ugly Woman is aunique look at the essential counterdiscourse <strong>of</strong> thecelebrated Italian poetic canon and a valuable contributionto the study women in literature.Patrizia Bettella is an instructor in the Department<strong>of</strong> Modern Languages and Cultural Studies at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Alberta.Approx. 420 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9004-4 £40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-4890-0 £20.00 $29.95 CApprox. 270 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3926-X £40.00 $60.00 E36


ITALIAN STUDIESItalian Futurist PoetryEdited and translated by Willard BohnTORONTO ITALIAN STUDIESFounded by F.T. Marinetti in 1909, Italian Futurismwas the first major avant-garde movement <strong>of</strong> thetwentieth century. It was also one <strong>of</strong> the longest lasting,having continued as long as Marinetti and hiscolleagues remained active – until 1944. Despite theprovocative manifestos and outrageous public performancesthat earned its members internationalfame, their remarkable poetic achievements havereceived little post-war scholarly attention. Thisanthology, by the widely recognized Italian Futuristscholar Willard Bohn, seeks to correct this oversight.It is commonly believed that Futurist poetryrarely strayed from three main subjects: modernmachinery, warfare, and the Fascist dream. Bohndemonstrates that, in reality, it was much morediverse. Although military, mechanical, and patrioticthemes occur in a number <strong>of</strong> poems, includingsome in this volume, the Futurist repertoire wasactually much larger. Ranging from Symbolist exercisesto radical experiments worthy <strong>of</strong> Dada orSurrealism, it was also surprisingly creative.Italian Futurist Poetry contains more than 100poems (both Italian and English versions) by sixtyonepoets from across Italy. Arranged in roughlychronological order, the anthology reflects numerousaesthetic, historical, and cultural developments.It is a major contribution to the understanding <strong>of</strong>modern Italian culture and, indeed, <strong>of</strong> twentiethcenturyavant-garde literature in general.Willard Bohn is a distinguished pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Foreign Languages at Illinois State<strong>University</strong>.A Tragedy RevealedThe Story <strong>of</strong> Italians from Istria, Dalmatia, andVenezia Giulia, 1943–1956Arrigo PetaccoTranslated by Konrad EisenbichlerTORONTO ITALIAN STUDIESAs the Second World War drew to a close, Europeanborders were being redrawn. The regions <strong>of</strong> Istria,Dalmatia, and Venezia Giulia, nominally Italian butat various times also belonging to Austria andGermany, fell under the rule <strong>of</strong> Yugoslavia and itsdictator Marshal Tito. The ensuing removal andgenocide <strong>of</strong> Italians from these regions had been littleexplored or even discussed until 1999, when theesteemed Italian journalist Arrigo Petacco wroteL’esodo: La tragedia negata degli italiani d’Istria,Dalmazia e Venezia Giulia. Now this story is availablein English as A Tragedy Revealed.Petacco explains the history <strong>of</strong> the regions andhow they were shifted between empires for centuries.The greater part <strong>of</strong> the story however detailsthe genocidal program <strong>of</strong> the Yugoslav Communistgovernment toward the native Italians in theregions. Based on previously unavailable archivaldocuments and oral accounts from people whowere there, Petacco reveals the events and exposesthe Italian government’s mishandling – and then<strong>of</strong>ficial silence on – the situation. This is a rivetingwork on a little-known, tragic event written by one<strong>of</strong> Italy’s most highly regarded journalists.Arrigo Petacco is a journalist, author, and historianliving in Liguria, Italy.Konrad Eisenbichler is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor at VictoriaCollege, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Approx. 270 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3948-0 £40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-3783-6 £20.00 $29.95 CApprox. 210 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2005</strong>1 mapCloth ISBN 0-8020-3921-9 £28.00 $45.00 T37


HISTORYUnmaking Imperial RussiaMykhailo Hrushevsky and the Writing <strong>of</strong>Ukrainian HistorySerhii PlokhyFrom the eighteenth century until its collapse in1917, Imperial Russia – as distinct from MuscoviteRussia before it and Soviet Russia after it – <strong>of</strong>ficiallyheld that the Russian nation consisted <strong>of</strong> threebranches: Great Russian, Little Russian(Ukrainian), and White Russian (Belarusian). Afterthe 1917 revolution, this view was discredited bymany leading scholars, politicians, and cultural figures,but none were more intimately involved in thedismantling <strong>of</strong> the old imperial identity and its historicalnarrative than the eminent Ukrainian historianMykhailo Hrushevsky (1866–1934).Hrushevsky took an active part in the work <strong>of</strong>Ukrainian scholarly, cultural, and political organizationsand became the first head <strong>of</strong> the independentUkrainian state in 1918. Serhii Plokhy’sUnmaking Imperial Russia examines Hrushevsky’sconstruction <strong>of</strong> a new historical paradigm thatbrought about the nationalization <strong>of</strong> the Ukrainianpast and established Ukrainian history as a separatefield <strong>of</strong> study. By showing how the ‘all-Russian’ historicalparadigm was challenged by the Ukrainiannational project, Plokhy provides the indispensablebackground for understanding the current state <strong>of</strong>relations between Ukraine and Russia.Serhii Plokhy is the associate director <strong>of</strong> the PeterJacyk Centre at the Canadian Institute <strong>of</strong> UkrainianStudies, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Alberta.‘In this fine piece <strong>of</strong> scholarship, Serhii Plokhy lucidly discussesthe ways in which Mykhailo Hrushevsky and other Ukrainianhistorians unmasked the imperial Russian historical narrativeand aided in the construction <strong>of</strong> a Ukrainian national history.With extraordinary erudition, Plokhy discusses the complexinteractions <strong>of</strong> Hrushevsky the historian, Hrushevsky the populist,and Hrushevsky the statist. Unmaking Imperial Russiais a great contribution to Ukrainian studies as well as thebroader field <strong>of</strong> Russian and Soviet studies.’Hiroaki Kuromiya, Department <strong>of</strong> History, Indiana<strong>University</strong>Of related interest:Stalin’s Empire <strong>of</strong> MemoryRussian-Ukrainian Relations in the SovietHistorical ImaginationSerhy Yekelchyk0-8020-8808-2 / £32.00 / $53.00 / 2004Approx. 700 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3937-5 £60.00 $95.00 ESt. Sophia Square in Kiev, 1910.38


HISTORYGaliciaA Multicultured LandEdited by Christopher Hann andPaul Robert MagocsiCross Culture and FaithThe Life and Work <strong>of</strong> James Mellon MenziesLinfu DongHabsburg Galicia was an area in central Europecovering territory presently occupied by Poland andUkraine that was distinctive for its multi-ethniccharacter. With the unravelling <strong>of</strong> the Austro-Hungarian Empire following the First World War, anew political map <strong>of</strong> Europe emerged, one based onthe principle <strong>of</strong> the nation-state. The very concept<strong>of</strong> the nation-state, however, was problematic inculturally pluralistic regions like Galicia.The essays in this volume examine Galiciabeyond the traditional paradigm <strong>of</strong> national history,in an effort to better understand the region as aplace where different ethnic communities – Poles,Ukrainians, Jews, Austro-Germans – lived in peacefulco-existence. As expansion <strong>of</strong> the EuropeanUnion proceeds, as migration becomes increasinglyprevalent, and as the very concept <strong>of</strong> the nationstateis called into question, a look back to see howcultural diversity was managed in a pre-nationalistage is <strong>of</strong> more than antiquarian interest. The contributorsto this multidisciplinary volume pursue awide range <strong>of</strong> approaches to shed fresh light on thisunique region.Christopher Hann is a director <strong>of</strong> the Max-Planck-Institut für Ethnologische Forschung inHalle/Saale, Germany.Paul Robert Magocsi is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History and the Department <strong>of</strong>Political Science and the chair <strong>of</strong> the UkrainianStudies Program at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.James Mellon Menzies (1885–1957) was aCanadian engineer, Presbyterian missionary, andarchaeologist active in China in the 1920s and1930s. In a tradition that saw archaeology as ameans <strong>of</strong> gathering artefacts for the collections <strong>of</strong>Western museums, Menzies believed in collectingfor the people <strong>of</strong> China. He also saw his archaeologicalwork as an extension <strong>of</strong> his missionary work,connecting, through his discoveries, the religiousbeliefs <strong>of</strong> ancient China to those <strong>of</strong> evangelicalChristianity.In Cross Culture and Faith, Linfu Dong shedsnew light on the modern encounter between Chinaand the West through Menzies’s life, work, andthought. He elucidates the difficult ‘negotiation’processes that Menzies endured on multiple levelsand with multiple forces, including Chinese nationalism,Western imperialism, the evangelicalMission, and his own personal interest in Chinesearchaeology within that world.Despite his belief in assuring Chinese artefactsremained in China, some <strong>of</strong> Menzies’s personal collectionwas donated to the Royal Ontario Museumin <strong>Toronto</strong> and to the Art Gallery <strong>of</strong> GreaterVictoria in British Columbia. This has assured hisplace in the cultural memory <strong>of</strong> both East and West– appropriate, since his life so <strong>of</strong>ten straddled thetwo worlds.Linfu Dong is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School <strong>of</strong>Management at Ocean <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> China,Qingdao.Approx. 260 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2005</strong>6 halftones; 1 mapCloth ISBN 0-8020-3943-X £32.00 $50.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-3781-X £20.00 $29.95 CApprox. 370 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>24 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3869-7 £42.00 $65.00 E39


HISTORYViola Florence Barnes,1885–1979A Historian’s BiographyJohn G. ReidThe Pr<strong>of</strong>essionalization <strong>of</strong>History in English CanadaDonald WrightSTUDIES IN GENDER AND HISTORYViola Florence Barnes was one <strong>of</strong> the most prominentwomen historians in the United States fromthe 1920s to the 1950s. Born in 1885, Barnes waseducated at Yale <strong>University</strong> and began teaching atMount Holyoke College in 1919. She was aninstrumental member <strong>of</strong> the ‘imperial school’ <strong>of</strong>historians, who interpreted North American colonialhistory within a British imperial framework.Specializing in New England and Canada’sMaritime provinces, her best-known book was TheDominion <strong>of</strong> New England, published in 1923.In this probing biography, John G. Reid examinesBarnes’s life as a female historian, providing arevealing glimpse into the gendered experience <strong>of</strong>pr<strong>of</strong>essional academia in that era. Reid also examinesthe imperial school, which, although rapidlylosing favour by the 1950s, had yielded results thatwere crucial to the study <strong>of</strong> North American colonialhistory.Viola Florence Barnes was cited as one <strong>of</strong> 100‘outstanding career women’ in the United States in1940. The later years <strong>of</strong> her life were marked by difficultyand disillusionment, as she tried in vain tohave her last book published. Yet, despite retiring in1952, Barnes remained an active scholar almost tothe time <strong>of</strong> her death in 1979. This exhaustive workis the first biography <strong>of</strong> Barnes – a major figure inthe study <strong>of</strong> North American history.John G. Reid is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>History at Saint Mary’s <strong>University</strong>.The study <strong>of</strong> history in Canada has a history <strong>of</strong> itsown, and its development as an academic disciplineis a multifaceted one. The Pr<strong>of</strong>essionalization <strong>of</strong>History in English Canada charts the transition <strong>of</strong>the study <strong>of</strong> history from a leisurely pastime to that<strong>of</strong> a full-blown academic career for universitytrainedscholars – from the mid-nineteenth to thelate twentieth century.Donald Wright argues that pr<strong>of</strong>essionalizationwas not, in fact, a benign process, nor was itinevitable. It was deliberate. Within two generations,historians saw the creation <strong>of</strong> a pr<strong>of</strong>essionalassociation – the Canadian Historical Association –and rise <strong>of</strong> an academic journal – the CanadianHistorical Review. Pr<strong>of</strong>essionalization was also gendered.In an effort to raise the status <strong>of</strong> the pr<strong>of</strong>essionand protect the academic labour market formen, male historians made a concerted effort toexclude women from the academy.History’s pr<strong>of</strong>essionalization is best understoodas a transition from one way <strong>of</strong> organizing intellectuallife to another. What came before pr<strong>of</strong>essionalizationwas not necessarily inferior, but rather, a differentperspective <strong>of</strong> history. As well, Wright arguesconvincingly that pr<strong>of</strong>essionalization inadvertentlyled to a popular inverse: the amateur historian,whose work is <strong>of</strong>ten more widely received andappreciated by the general public.Donald Wright is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History and the Centre forCanadian Studies at Brock <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2005</strong>33 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-8017-0 £28.00 $45.00 EApprox. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3928-6 £28.00 $45.00 E40


HISTORYBuilding New Bridges /Bâtir de nouveaux pontsSources, Methods, and Interdisciplinarity / Sources,méthodes et interdisciplinaritéEdited by Jeff Keshen, Sylvie Perrier, and Chad GaffieldA Science on the ScalesThe Rise <strong>of</strong> Canadian Atlantic Fisheries Biology,1898–1939Jennifer M. HubbardUNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA PRESSQuestions <strong>of</strong> methodology and the use <strong>of</strong> sourcesare fundamental to all academic disciplines. Inrecent years, this topic has become far more challengingas scholars are increasingly adopting aninterdisciplinary approach to achieve richer anddeeper analyses, particularly in the study <strong>of</strong> history.Building New Bridges / Bâtir de nouveaux ponts is acollection <strong>of</strong> scholarly papers that deals with thefirst principles <strong>of</strong> source identification and theireffective utilization.The contributors to the volume come from awide range <strong>of</strong> disciplines and represent both Frenchand English Canada. Together, they explore andencourage the interdisciplinarity trend – aroundwhich considerable academic trepidation remains –and seek to explain, for example, how historians andthose in English or Lettres françaises analyse texts.They utilize their respective research to elucidatemeans <strong>of</strong> effectively employing evidence and methodsto achieve richer, deeper, and more nuanced results.As a whole, the collection provides an excellentprimer for scholars <strong>of</strong> both history and methodology.Jeff Keshen is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa.Sylvie Perrier is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa.Chad Gaffield is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa.In A Science on the Scales, Jennifer M. Hubbard tellsthe story <strong>of</strong> how a new and emerging science –marine and fisheries biology – became an importantenterprise in Canada. She uses extensivearchival research – focussed on scientific correspondenceand internal reports – and follows the science’sdevelopment in Canada, as well asScandinavia, the United Kingdom, and the UnitedStates. In so doing, Hubbard describes the important,but fraught, relationship between the economicand social history <strong>of</strong> Atlantic Canada and itsrelations with the federal government, particularlyin the context <strong>of</strong> the generally low priority givenfisheries issues.Despite a variety <strong>of</strong> challenges, contributionsmade by the research organization that eventuallybecame the Fisheries Research Board <strong>of</strong> Canadaproved to be vital in the development <strong>of</strong> the science.Indeed, its flagship station, the AtlanticBiological Station in New Brunswick, became for atime one <strong>of</strong> the world’s leading centres for marinescience, its dynamic scientists and facilities providingthe impetus that helped Canadian fisheries biologyto achieve internationally recognized status. Anoriginal and timely work, A Science on the Scalesshines a light on a heret<strong>of</strong>ore-neglected aspect <strong>of</strong>Canada’s science history.Jennifer M. Hubbard is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History at Ryerson <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2005</strong>Paper ISBN 0-7766-0593-3 £22.50 $35.00 CApprox. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>15 halftones; 1 tableCloth ISBN 0-8020-8859-7 £35.00 $55.00 E41


CLASSICSStudies in Hellenistic ArchitectureFrederick E. WinterWith a chapter by Janos FedakPHOENIX SUPPLEMENTARY VOLUMESStudies in Hellenistic Architecture is a detailed analysis<strong>of</strong> the development <strong>of</strong> the major building-types<strong>of</strong> the Hellenistic age – the mid-fourth centuryB.C. to the time <strong>of</strong> the Roman conquest <strong>of</strong> theEastern Mediterranean. In this meticulous work,Frederick E. Winter reveals how the architects <strong>of</strong>the period went beyond anything achieved by theirClassical Greek predecessors, and how these impressiveskills prepared the way for many <strong>of</strong> Rome’s laterarchitectural achievements.Geographically, the monuments included inthis volume extend from Spain to Afghanistan andfrom Provence to North Africa. Winter discussesthe architectural achievements <strong>of</strong> the variousregional styles <strong>of</strong> the Eastern Mediterranean, andtakes a detailed look at Hellenistic developmentswest <strong>of</strong> the Adriatic.While the interrelationship <strong>of</strong> these regionaldevelopments is <strong>of</strong>ten unclear, especially in caseswhere there are no explicit criteria for dating,Winter makes excellent use <strong>of</strong> the advance in scholarshipover the past fifty to sixty years, <strong>of</strong>fering thefirst real attempt at a synthesis <strong>of</strong> this vast subject.Studies in Hellenistic Architecture is an invaluableresource, containing a wealth <strong>of</strong> illustrations <strong>of</strong> thevarious types <strong>of</strong> Hellenistic building and the mostcomprehensive scholarship to date on the topic.Frederick E. Winter is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Fine Art at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><strong>Toronto</strong>.Janos Fedak is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Fine Arts at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Prince Edward Island.‘Studies in Hellenistic Architecture demonstrates quiteadmirably the place <strong>of</strong> Hellenistic architecture within thedevelopment from Classical to Roman Imperial architecture.It is an impressive effort both in scope and learning, and asignificant contribution to a somewhat neglected field. Thisis a very ambitious undertaking – one that has been longneeded, especially in English – and with it Frederick E.Winter has reached a high standard. The book is well organized,covers a tremendous amount <strong>of</strong> material, is thorough,balanced, well written, and clear, and contains a wonderfulcollection <strong>of</strong> photos and plans.’Gerald P. Schaus, Department <strong>of</strong> Archaeology andClassical Studies, Wilfrid Laurier <strong>University</strong>Approx. 460 pp / 8 1 /4 x 10 3 /4 / April <strong>2005</strong>429 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3914-6 £96.00 $150.00 EKnidos, round temple restored in Doric order.42


PHILOSOPHYMinerva’s AviaryPhilosophy at <strong>Toronto</strong>, 1843–2003John G. SlaterPhilosophy has been taught at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><strong>Toronto</strong> and its predecessor King’s College since1843. While much has changed in that time, theuniversity’s Department <strong>of</strong> Philosophy remainsone <strong>of</strong> Canada’s preeminent institutions for philosophicalinstruction. In Minerva’s Aviary, John G.Slater documents the history <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>’s philosophydepartment from its founding to contemporarytimes.In the early years, the teaching <strong>of</strong> philosophy atthe university was an appendage to courses in religion.As time passed however, the discipline grewinto the independent, largely secular subject it istoday. The story <strong>of</strong> how this happened is told interms <strong>of</strong> the people who taught in the department.Slater also recounts the histories and sometimes difficultintegration <strong>of</strong> the philosophy departmentsthat came with the smaller institutions that federatedwith the university around the turn <strong>of</strong> the twentiethcentury: Victoria <strong>University</strong>, St. Michael’sCollege, and Trinity College.Comprehensive and lovingly written, Minerva’sAviary is the result <strong>of</strong> decades <strong>of</strong> research by one <strong>of</strong>the department’s most esteemed recent scholars.Slater’s intense investigations have uncovered a complexand evolving past that shatters some establishedmyths but also roughly mirrors what was happeningin universities throughout the English-speakingworld. It thus adds greatly to our understanding <strong>of</strong>the intellectual history <strong>of</strong> the last two centuries.John G. Slater is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Philosophy at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><strong>Toronto</strong>.Eye <strong>of</strong> the HeartKnowing the Human Good in the Euthanasia DebateWilliam F. SullivanLONERGAN STUDIESWhat is the role <strong>of</strong> feelings in the euthanasiadebate? This is the central question in William F.Sullivan’s unique philosophical and ethical exploration<strong>of</strong> the issue, Eye <strong>of</strong> the Heart. Employing theprinciples and techniques <strong>of</strong> the great Canadiantheologian and thinker Bernard Lonergan, Sullivan<strong>of</strong>fers a concrete examination <strong>of</strong> the role <strong>of</strong> feelingsin grasping moral values and the key role that feelingsplay in ethical decision-making. The heart hasits reasons, he argues convincingly, and it is a type<strong>of</strong> reason that bioethicists, philosophers, and legalscholars all need to know.Sullivan draws on his experiences as a practicingphysician to analyse the distinguishing elements<strong>of</strong> human knowing, illustrating them through commonexamples <strong>of</strong> decision-making in health care.He highlights the occurrence <strong>of</strong> various types <strong>of</strong>insight, particularly ‘deliberative insights’ that occurin the process <strong>of</strong> making value judgments. Thesedeliberative insights are affective, and throughthem, a person apprehends moral values.Eye <strong>of</strong> the Heart proposes that feelings are relevantto knowing moral values and orient us towardsmoral self-transcendence. The implications <strong>of</strong> thisstance in ethics are drawn out for the euthanasiadebate.William F. Sullivan, MD, is a general practitioner atSt. Michael’s Hospital in <strong>Toronto</strong>, the foundingdirector <strong>of</strong> the Canadian Catholic BioethicsInstitute, and an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Family and Community Medicineat the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>Approx. 550 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2005</strong>40 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3870-0 £48.00 $75.00 EApprox. 430 pp / 6 1 /8 x 9 1 /4 / February <strong>2005</strong>6 figures; 2 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3923-5 £60.00 $95.00 E43


POLITICAL SCIENCE / ECONOMICSContinentalizing CanadaThe Politics and Legacy <strong>of</strong> the Macdonald Royal CommissionGregory J. InwoodSTUDIES IN COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY AND PUBLIC POLICYFree trade has been a highly contentious issue sincethe Conservative government <strong>of</strong> Brian Mulroneynegotiated the first deal with the United States inthe 1980s. Tracing the roots <strong>of</strong> Canada’s contemporaryinvolvement in North American free tradeback to the Royal Commission on the EconomicUnion and Development Prospects for Canada in1985 – also known as the Macdonald Commission– Gregory J. Inwood <strong>of</strong>fers a critical examination <strong>of</strong>the commission and how its findings affectedCanada’s political and economic landscape, as wellas its present-day reverberations.Using original research – including contentanalysis, interviews, archival information, and surveys<strong>of</strong> relevant literature – Inwood argues that theMacdonald Commission created an atmosphereand political discourse that made the continentalization<strong>of</strong> Canada possible by way <strong>of</strong> free tradeagreements with the U.S. and Mexico. Throughthe use <strong>of</strong> a suspect research program, and withthe aid <strong>of</strong> a select oligarchy within theCommission and the government bureaucracy,opposition to continentalism from both themajority <strong>of</strong> the Canadian population and evenseveral commissioners was ignored. Accessible toreaders interested in Canadian politics, policy, oreconomy, Continentalizing Canada <strong>of</strong>fers a thoroughexamination into the MacdonaldCommission and the resulting discourse in theCanadian political economy.Gregory J. Inwood is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Politics and the School <strong>of</strong> PublicAdministration at Ryerson <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 480 pp / 6 x 9 / February <strong>2005</strong>13 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-8729-9 £48.00 $75.00 E44


POLITICAL SCIENCE / ECONOMICSNAFTA Tax Law and PolicyResolving the Clash between Economic andSovereignty InterestsArthur J. CockfieldUnder the North American Free Trade Agreement(NAFTA), Canada, the United States, and Mexicocontinue to maintain their own distinct tax regimes,jealously guarding their sovereign right to do so. Attimes, these different tax systems harm the economicwelfare <strong>of</strong> the trade bloc by imposing barriers to crossborderflows <strong>of</strong> capital. In NAFTA Tax Law andPolicy, Arthur J. Cockfield analyses these different taxsystems and proposes a number <strong>of</strong> recommendationsto reduce the harm caused by these barriers.Cockfield argues that it is unrealistic to expectthe NAFTA countries to negotiate comprehensivereform efforts such as full-fledged tax harmonization.Rather, a strategy <strong>of</strong> heightened multilateraltax coordination is the appropriate solution as itpermits the countries to maintain national tax differences,but strives to smooth over many <strong>of</strong> theproblems created by the interaction <strong>of</strong> the taxregimes. The NAFTA countries should promotebinding arbitration for transfer pricing disputes,multilateral tax treaty negotiations, the elimination<strong>of</strong> parent/subsidiary dividend withholding taxes,and enhanced administrative cooperation to reducetax compliance costs for multinational firms. Onlythen can NAFTA function in the way it wasdesigned to.Arthur J. Cockfield is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theFaculty <strong>of</strong> Law at Queen’s <strong>University</strong>.Executive Styles in CanadaCabinet Structures and Leadership Practices inCanadian GovernmentEdited by Luc Bernier, Keith Brownsey, andMichael HowlettIPAC SERIES IN PUBLIC MANAGEMENT AND GOVERNANCECanada’s political regime is centred on the existence<strong>of</strong> a federal system <strong>of</strong> government within the institutions<strong>of</strong> Westminster parliamentary democracy.This system places a great deal <strong>of</strong> political power inthe hands <strong>of</strong> cabinet ministers, and while cabinetsystems <strong>of</strong> government in Canada have evolved atdifferent speeds in different federal and provincialgovernments, they have, over the last two decades,increased centralization <strong>of</strong> administrative and legislativecontrol in ever fewer hands.This shift has been well demonstrated byscholars such as Donald J. Savoie regarding the federalsystem, but little examined in the context <strong>of</strong>provincial governance. Executive Styles in Canadaplaces equal emphasis on both levels, explaininghow and in what way cabinet systems have conformedto or diverged from this general pattern.This unique collection is the only systematic, crossprovincialstudy <strong>of</strong> its kind, and is certain to be <strong>of</strong>great benefit to anyone interested in the structure <strong>of</strong>government in Canada.Luc Bernier is the director <strong>of</strong> l’École nationale d’administrationpublique.Keith Brownsey is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Policy Studies at Mount Royal College.Michael Howlett is Burnaby Mountain pr<strong>of</strong>essor inthe Department <strong>of</strong> Political Science at Simon Fraser<strong>University</strong>.Approx. 315 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>3 figures; 11 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3581-7 £42.00 $65.00 EApprox. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2005</strong>8 figures; 1 tableCloth ISBN 0-8020-3952-9 £42.00 $65.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-3785-2 £20.00 $29.95 C45


POLITICAL SCIENCE / ECONOMICSGoverning EducationBenjamin LevinIPAC SERIES IN PUBLIC MANAGEMENT AND GOVERNANCEHigh levels <strong>of</strong> cynicism about politics, fuelled by alack <strong>of</strong> understanding <strong>of</strong> the real dynamics <strong>of</strong> policyand the political process, are dangerous todemocracy. So argues Benjamin Levin in GoverningEducation. With this book, Levin seeks to improvepublic understanding <strong>of</strong> the way governmentworks, especially with regard to education policy.Based on his experience as Manitoba’s deputyminister <strong>of</strong> education from 1999 to 2002, Levin<strong>of</strong>fers an insider’s account <strong>of</strong> the events and conditionsthat governed Manitoba’s educational policyas a way <strong>of</strong> illustrating the larger dynamics <strong>of</strong> thepolitical process. He demonstrates how the actions<strong>of</strong> governments are rooted in diverse politicaldemands, and looking at the current state <strong>of</strong> educationand education policy in Canada, comments onits strengths, weaknesses, and opportunities.Levin’s unique combination <strong>of</strong> informed analysiswith real stories <strong>of</strong> real events told by participantsprovides an incisive exploration <strong>of</strong> governmentin action. While based on events inManitoba, the same dynamics and conditions applyacross the country. This book will have strongappeal to people in education, political science, andpublic administration.Benjamin Levin is the deputy minister <strong>of</strong> educationfor the Government <strong>of</strong> Ontario.‘Governing Education is a unique and powerful book thatprovides an insider’s view <strong>of</strong> the workings <strong>of</strong> government.Benjamin Levin addresses virtually every major educationalpolicy issue that face governments and society, and each ispresented with insightful analysis, insider and personalobservation, and links to the bigger policy picture. A substantialcontribution to the field <strong>of</strong> public policy.’Michael Fullan, Ontario Institute for Studies inEducation, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>Of related interest:The Politics <strong>of</strong> Educational Reform in AlbertaAlison Taylor0-8020-8352-8 / £20.00 / $32.95 / 2001Approx. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2005</strong>5 figuresCloth ISBN 0-8020-8852-X £35.00 $55.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8622-5 £18.00 $27.95 CPhotograph courtesy Comstock.46


POLITICAL SCIENCE / ECONOMICSCreating Knowledge,Strengthening NationsThe Changing Role <strong>of</strong> Higher EducationEdited by Glen A. Jones, Patricia L. McCarney, andMichael L. SkolnikGlobalization’s effects on universities have been littleexamined. Creating Knowledge, StrengtheningNations seeks to improve understanding by deepeningthe analysis <strong>of</strong> how universities contribute toeconomic growth and entrepreneurialism as well asto strategic societal goals <strong>of</strong> equity and redistributivejustice. A diverse group <strong>of</strong> contributors describehow globalization exerts pressure to change the role<strong>of</strong> higher education in society and how universitiesare dealing with this.The essays pay particular attention to tensionsassociated with attempts to balance the economicwith the non-economic objectives <strong>of</strong> higher education,and between those who celebrate the ‘entrepreneurialuniversity’ versus those who lament thealignment between the university and the businesscommunity. Creating Knowledge, StrengtheningNations is a crucial addition to the debate on thefuture <strong>of</strong> higher education.Glen A. Jones is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Theory and Policy Studies in Education and anassociate dean at the Ontario Institute for Studies inEducation <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Patricia L. McCarney is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Political Science and the MunkCentre for International Studies and is AssociateVice President, International Research andDevelopment, at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Pension PowerUnions, Pension Funds, and Social Investment inCanadaIsla CarmichaelCanadian pension fund assets are second in sizeonly to the combined financial assets <strong>of</strong> the majorbanks and have become a critical source <strong>of</strong> capitalfor national and international markets. Given theirtax-exempt status, pension funds can provide thelong-term capital needed to build a new economybased on real productivity. The funds are controlledby an intricate web <strong>of</strong> financial and legal standardsbut, as deferred wages, are largely beyond the control<strong>of</strong> workers or their unions.In Pension Power, Isla Carmichael argues thatunions could – and should – have a new role to playin the economy by gaining control over their members’pension funds. She demonstrates how thefinancial industry’s access to the capital goes againstthe interests <strong>of</strong> working people, and she providesconvincing evidence that union management <strong>of</strong> pensionswould better protect benefits and <strong>of</strong>fer supportin building infrastructure in communities and protectingthe environment. This is a work <strong>of</strong> singularcommitment to a fundamental shift in the structure<strong>of</strong> managing one <strong>of</strong> Canada’s largest pools <strong>of</strong> capital.Isla Carmichael is a postdoctoral fellow with theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Adult Education and CounsellingPsychology at the Ontario Institute for Studies inEducation <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Michael L. Skolnik is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> Theory and Policy Studies in Education and theWilliam G. Davis Chair in Community CollegeLeadership at the Ontario Institute for Studies inEducation <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Approx. 290 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2005</strong>2 figures; 6 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3856-5 £35.00 $55.00 EApprox. 225 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>5 figures; 23 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3647-3 £32.00 $50.00 E47


POLITICAL SCIENCE / ECONOMICSThe New GlobalGovernanceA Baroque ApproachGilles PaquetUNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA PRESS – GOVERNANCE SERIESOver the last few decades, the Westphalian nationstatehas lost its hegemonic position in the system<strong>of</strong> geo-governance. A dispersive revolution has ledto the emergence <strong>of</strong> powerful new networked businessorganizations, new subsidiarity-focused governments,and increasingly virtual, elective, andmalleable communities. This in turn has led to thecrystallization <strong>of</strong> distributed governance regimes,based on a wider variety <strong>of</strong> more fluid and alwaysevolving groups <strong>of</strong> stakeholders.In The New Global Governance, Gilles Paquetdevelops a general conceptual framework to deal withthe new evolving reality <strong>of</strong> global governance. He usesthis framework to critically examine the evolving territorialgovernance (hemispheric governance, mesoinnovationsystems, smart city-regions) and tacklesthe more complex governance challenges raised bysustainability and common-property resources likeoceans. Paquet further explores the implications <strong>of</strong>this emerging baroque polycentric geo-governance onthe new forms <strong>of</strong> stewardship and its impact on citizenship,federalism, and other technologies <strong>of</strong> coordination,and reflects on the sort <strong>of</strong> subversive bricolagerequired if the missing mechanisms for effective coordinationare to be put in place.The New Global Governance will be <strong>of</strong> greatinterest to students and scholars interested in governance,organizational design, international affairs,and political studies.Gilles Paquet is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus and seniorresearch fellow in the School <strong>of</strong> Political Studies atthe <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa and the president <strong>of</strong> theRoyal Society <strong>of</strong> Canada.On Global GovernanceCritical Discourses and PracticesEdited by Claire Turenne Sjolander andJean-François ThibaultUNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA PRESS – GOVERNANCE SERIESThe concept <strong>of</strong> global governance has been muchdiscussed over the past decade, since the publicationin 1995 <strong>of</strong> the report <strong>of</strong> the Commission onGlobal Governance, Our Global Neighbourhood.This collection provides an assessment <strong>of</strong> globalgovernance as both discourse and practice, situatingnational and international attempts to respondto several challenges. These challenges include: the‘shrinking’ <strong>of</strong> the ‘global neighbourhood;’ the emergence<strong>of</strong> a global civil society; the rising interdependenceamong both state and non-state actors withininternational society; and the rise in the number andcomplexity <strong>of</strong> transnational issues in conjunctionwith the failure or inability <strong>of</strong> national governmentsto deal with them while providing common goodsand security guarantees for their citizens.Examining the idea <strong>of</strong> global governance froma number <strong>of</strong> different theoretical and empirical perspectives,the contributors to On Global Governanceraise the limits <strong>of</strong> the practices <strong>of</strong> global governanceas they have emerged over the past ten years. Thecollection provides readers with both case studiesand theoretical debates, thereby allowing a broaderunderstanding <strong>of</strong> global governance and a firmerposition from which to critique it.Claire Turenne Sjolander is the director and associatedean <strong>of</strong> the School <strong>of</strong> Political Studies at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa.Jean-François Thibault is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor inthe Department <strong>of</strong> Political Science at l’Universitéde Moncton.Approx. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2005</strong>Paper ISBN 0-7766-0594-1 £22.50 $35.00 CApprox. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2005</strong>Paper ISBN 0-7766-0595-X £22.50 $35.00 C48


POLITICAL SCIENCE / ECONOMICSAccounting for CultureThinking Through Cultural CitizenshipEdited by Caroline Andrew, Monica Gattinger,M. Sharon Jeannotte, and Will StrawUNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA PRESS – GOVERNANCE SERIESMany scholars, practitioners, and policy-makers in thecultural sector argue that Canadian cultural policy is ata crossroads: that the environment for cultural policymakinghas evolved substantially and that traditionalrationales for state intervention no longer apply.The concept <strong>of</strong> cultural citizenship is a relativenewcomer to the cultural policy landscape, and<strong>of</strong>fers a potentially compelling alternative rationalefor government intervention in the cultural sector.Likewise, the articulation and use <strong>of</strong> cultural indicatorsand <strong>of</strong> governance concepts are also newarrivals, emerging as potentially powerful tools forpolicy and program development.Accounting for Culture is a unique collection <strong>of</strong>essays from leading Canadian and internationalscholars that critically examines cultural citizenship,cultural indicators, and governance in the context<strong>of</strong> evolving cultural practices and cultural policymaking.It will be <strong>of</strong> strong interest to scholars <strong>of</strong>cultural policy, communications, cultural studies,and public administration alike.Caroline Andrew is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School <strong>of</strong>Political Studies and the dean <strong>of</strong> the Faculty <strong>of</strong>Social Sciences at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa.Monica Gattinger is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the PublicAdministration Program at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa.M. Sharon Jeannotte is manager <strong>of</strong> the InternationalComparative Socio-Cultural Research Unit in the StrategicResearch and Analysis Directorate <strong>of</strong> the Department<strong>of</strong> Canadian Heritage.Canadian Annual Review<strong>of</strong> Politics and PublicAffairs 1999Edited by David MutimerLong praised for its accuracy, readability, andinsight, the Canadian Annual Review <strong>of</strong> Politics andPublic Affairs <strong>of</strong>fers a synoptic appraisal <strong>of</strong> the year’sdevelopments in Canadian politics.Canada went to war in 1999, participating in atwo-month NATO-led air war against Yugoslaviaover its treatment <strong>of</strong> Kosovar Albanians. Attractingless public attention however was an importantturn in the country’s constitutional arrangements –the creation <strong>of</strong> Nunavut – producing a self-governingcapacity for the Inuit. The year 1999 also sawboth the federal and British Columbia governmentsapprove an historic agreement with the Nisga’aNation. Additionally, Jean Chrétien’s Liberal governmentpushed ahead with its plan to create a lawthat sets out the rules around any future referendumon Quebec’s sovereignty.The Canadian Annual Review is unique in itscollection and presentation <strong>of</strong> the year in politics.The combination <strong>of</strong> the calendar and the text <strong>of</strong>fersa superb, easy-access reference source for politicalevents, both federal and provincial.David Mutimer is an associate with the Centre forInternational and Security Studies and an associatepr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong> Political Science atYork <strong>University</strong>.Will Straw is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in and chair <strong>of</strong> theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Art History and CommunicationStudies at McGill <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2005</strong>Paper ISBN 0-7766-0596-8 £22.50 $35.00 CApprox. 320 pp / 6 1 /8 x 9 1 /4 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3901-4 £65.00 $100.00 E49


POLITICAL SCIENCE / ECONOMICSCollective Action andRadicalism in BrazilWomen, Urban Housing, and Rural MovementsMichel Duquette, Maurilio Galdino, Charmain Levy,Bérengère Marques-Pereira, and Florence RaesSTUDIES IN COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY AND PUBLIC POLICYIn the past decade, Brazil has undergone a longseries <strong>of</strong> political changes, culminating in the recentelection <strong>of</strong> President Lula da Silva and his Workers’Party. These changes have come about through anunprecedented landslide <strong>of</strong> social activism. Thisbook is an examination <strong>of</strong> three recent movementswithin Brazil’s civil society: the women’s movement,the urban housing movement, and the landless peasantmovement. All three are representative <strong>of</strong> a moregeneral trend toward public protest and collectivelyindicate a shift in the dynamics <strong>of</strong> group identity inBrazil. The authors propose that the practices <strong>of</strong>power in Brazil are influenced by the expressions <strong>of</strong>a civil society now reorganized into a social movementand mobilized within a ‘cycle <strong>of</strong> protest’ thathas attained the level <strong>of</strong> a political alternative.Michel Duquette is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Political Science at l’Université de Montréal.Maurilio Galdino is a training coordinator withEntraide Missionaire in Montreal.Charmain Levy is a programs <strong>of</strong>ficer with theCanadian Catholic Organization for Developmentand Peace.Bérengère Marques-Pereira is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor with theCentre for Political Sociology and the director <strong>of</strong>the Centre for Latin American Studies atl’Université Libre de Bruxelles.Florence Raes is a program <strong>of</strong>ficer for the UnitedNations Development Fund for Women (Brazilianand Southern Cone Section) in Brasilia, Brazil.Denaturalizing EcologicalPoliticsAlienation from Nature from Rousseau to theFrankfurt School and BeyondAndrew BiroThe possibility <strong>of</strong> bringing the insights <strong>of</strong> modernpolitical theory to bear on the problems <strong>of</strong> humanecology has long been plagued by disagreementsover the category <strong>of</strong> nature itself. But withDenaturalizing Ecological Politics, Andrew Biro hasfound a way <strong>of</strong> rescuing environmentalism from theideological trap <strong>of</strong> naturalism.Biro develops an environmental political theorythat takes seriously both the materiality <strong>of</strong> the ecologicalcrises generated by industrial and post-industrialsociety and the anti-foundationalist critiques <strong>of</strong>‘nature’ developed in postmodern social theory. Heargues that the theoretical basis for ecological politicscan be better advanced through the lens <strong>of</strong> alienationfrom nature, sidestepping some <strong>of</strong> the pitfalls <strong>of</strong>debates over conceptions <strong>of</strong> nature itself.Biro traces the development <strong>of</strong> the concept <strong>of</strong>alienation from nature through four modern politicalthinkers – Rousseau, Marx, Adorno, andMarcuse – each <strong>of</strong> whom are read as arguing thathuman beings are not biologically separate from therest <strong>of</strong> nature, but are nevertheless historically differentiatedfrom it through the self-conscious transformation<strong>of</strong> the natural environment. In so doing,Biro provides the starting point for a ‘denaturalized’rethinking <strong>of</strong> ecological politics.Andrew Biro is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor and CanadaResearch Chair in the Department <strong>of</strong> PoliticalScience at Acadia <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>3 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3907-3 £32.00 $50.00 EApprox. 270 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8022-7 £32.00 $50.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-3794-1 £15.00 $24.95 C50


SOCIOLOGY / ANTHROPOLOGYSociology and the SacredAn Introduction to Philip Rieff’s Theory <strong>of</strong> CultureAntonius A.W. ZondervanThe acclaimed American sociologist and culturalphilosopher Philip Rieff gained great academicprestige with his thesis on the emergence <strong>of</strong>‘Psychological Man’ in western culture and withhis classic book, Freud: The Mind <strong>of</strong> the Moralist,published in 1959. In this work and the later TheTriumph <strong>of</strong> the Therapeutic (1966) he not only<strong>of</strong>fered a highly original interpretation <strong>of</strong> the work<strong>of</strong> Sigmund Freud, but critically evaluated theenormous influence <strong>of</strong> psychotherapeutic thinkingon Western culture. However, Rieff’s later workon the theory <strong>of</strong> culture did not garner the sameattention, and his most recent writings havereceived very little critical engagement. InSociology and the Sacred, Antonius A.W.Zondervan sets out to remedy this neglect, arguingthat Rieff’s work is ripe for intellectual reconsideration.Zondervan begins by presenting an outline <strong>of</strong>Rieff’s entire body <strong>of</strong> work, focussing on his theory<strong>of</strong> culture, and explaining how the sacred is a keynotion, pivotal to the overall understanding <strong>of</strong>Rieff’s work. The author argues that the presentupsurge in religion, in many varieties throughoutthe world, cannot be explained by the classical secularization-thesis,making Rieff’s theory <strong>of</strong> sacredorder in culture an essential contribution to a newsocial theory <strong>of</strong> religion.Including material from personal interviewswith Rieff that enabled Zondervan to clarify importantaspects <strong>of</strong> his work, Sociology and the Sacred isan essential contribution to the understanding <strong>of</strong>contemporary culture’s maintenance <strong>of</strong> its ties toreligion.‘Sociology and the Sacred is groundbreaking work. There isa scarcity <strong>of</strong> secondary material on Philip Rieff, and he has,for a very long time, deserved a major study. AntoniusZondervan’s book is a thorough and well-informed expositionon Rieff’s work, and an excellent extrapolation <strong>of</strong> hisimplications for discussions about modernity.’Hamid Dabashi, Department <strong>of</strong> Middle East and AsianLanguages and Cultures, Columbia <strong>University</strong>‘This is a terrific book. Antonius Zondervan has done anexcellent job distilling Philip Rieff’s theoretical insights andpresenting them in a sophisticated, critical, and informativeway, drawing connections and bridges where necessary withother discourses. The use <strong>of</strong> language is lucid and elegant,and the information Zondervan has received directly fromRieff through interviews is fascinating.’Yiannis Gabriel, Tanaka Business School,Imperial CollegeApprox. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8018-9£32.00 $50.00 EAntonius A.W. Zondervan is a theologian and independentscholar living in Utrecht, The Netherlands.Philip Rieff, 1967. From the collections <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Pennsylvania Archives.51


SOCIOLOGY / ANTHROPOLOGYImproved EarthPrairie Space as Modern Artefact, 1869–1944Rod BantjesSustainability and theCivil CommonsRural Communities in the Age <strong>of</strong> GlobalizationJennifer SumnerImproved Earth is a history <strong>of</strong> the making <strong>of</strong>‘abstract spaces <strong>of</strong> modernity’ in the setting <strong>of</strong> theCanadian prairies, particularly rural Saskatchewan,from 1869 to 1944. Rod Bantjes demonstrates howthree interrelated projects – state formation, agrarianclass formation, and the transformation <strong>of</strong> theenvironment – were conceived in spatial terms andemployed competing visions <strong>of</strong> spatial possibility.Bantjes proposes that the prairies be thought <strong>of</strong>as a site <strong>of</strong> modernity, and makes a case for viewingprairie farmers as ‘modernists’ who not onlyembraced, but took an active role in the making <strong>of</strong>modernity. Indeed, many <strong>of</strong> the questions thatexcited the imaginations <strong>of</strong> prairie politicians andreformers are alive today: the ecological and socialvalue <strong>of</strong> ‘localization’ in agricultural production; thepotentials for ‘community’ maintained and linkedby transportation and communications technologies;and the possibilities <strong>of</strong> democratic decentralizationwithin large translocal networks.The first systematic treatment <strong>of</strong> the spatialdimensions <strong>of</strong> the colonization <strong>of</strong> the prairie west,Improved Earth is a unique and thorough study certainto provoke new debates about the way spaceand time are imagined.Rod Bantjes is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Sociology and Anthropology at St.Francis Xavier <strong>University</strong>.Often used but little understood, the word ‘sustainability’is potent in its ability to evoke a better worldbased on economic, social, and environmental justice.The concept <strong>of</strong> sustainability, however, hasbeen strikingly under-theorized. Sustainability andthe Civil Commons provides what has been lackingsince the publication <strong>of</strong> the Brundtland Report – afirm foundation and a clear vision <strong>of</strong> alternatives.Using rural communities as her referencepoint,Jennifer Sumner exposes the unsustainableimpacts <strong>of</strong> corporate globalization, and develops aframework to explain why current definitions <strong>of</strong>sustainability are pr<strong>of</strong>oundly inadequate. From thisfoundation, she allies sustainability with the concept<strong>of</strong> the civil commons – including universalhealthcare, environmental protocols, workplacesafety regulations, and public education – demonstratinghow globalizing the civil commons, notcorporate-sponsored trade treaties, opens the wayfor truly ‘sustainable globalization.’ Sustainabilityand the Civil Commons moves beyond rural rootsthrough Antonio Gramsci’s model <strong>of</strong> hegemony,Jürgen Habermas’s theory <strong>of</strong> communicativeaction, and John McMurtry’s life-value ethics tobuild a comprehensive understanding <strong>of</strong> sustainabilitythat combines global reach with local focus.It will be an invaluable resource for scholars andpractitioners interested in sustainability, globalization,community development, and rural studies.Jennifer Sumner is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theAdult Education and Community DevelopmentProgram at the Ontario Institute for Studies inEducation <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Approx. 280 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2005</strong>9 mapsCloth ISBN 0-8020-8782-5 £25.00 $40.00 EApprox. 180 pp / 6 x 9 / January <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-7999-7 £28.00 $45.00 E52


SOCIOLOGY / ANTHROPOLOGYYouth and Identity Politics inSouth Africa, 1990–94Sibusisiwe Nombuso DlaminiANTHROPOLOGICAL HORIZONSDocumenting youth participation in the SouthAfrican anti-apartheid struggle, Youth and IdentityPolitics in South Africa examines identity constructionand negotiation in the region <strong>of</strong>KwaZulu/Natal. Based on extensiveinterviews, Sibusisiwe NombusoDlamini presents life stories <strong>of</strong>survival and identity negotiationin a region and at a timewhere to be youthful and politicallyactive was to be associatedwith membership in NelsonMandela’s African NationalCongress – a potentially dangerousassociation.Zulus are far from beingan homogenous group. Dlamini examines thedynamics both <strong>of</strong> group identification – that <strong>of</strong>being a young Zulu – and <strong>of</strong> the differences, bothclass and regional. Further, she looks at the discourses<strong>of</strong> participation in the liberation struggle,and how these discourses intersect withKwaZulu/Natal identity and party politics. Youthand Identity Politics in South Africa shows how theyouth identify variously as fans <strong>of</strong> jazz or hip-hopwho espouse a non-racial national character, as athleteswho feel a strong connection to traditionalZulu patriarchy, or in many other social and politicalsubcultures. This is a rich and unprecedentedyouth-centred ethnography that paints a unique picture<strong>of</strong> the lives <strong>of</strong> South African youth.Sibusisiwe Nombuso Dlamini is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essorin the Faculty <strong>of</strong> Education at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Windsor.‘This is a highly readable book that makes a significant contributionto social anthropology. As an anthropologist, it wasstimulating for me to read an ethnography centred in SouthAfrica that was able to convey theseriousness <strong>of</strong> the political context,while at the same timebringing the human face <strong>of</strong> this tothe fore. Its ethnographic detailis perhaps one <strong>of</strong> its finest aspectsalong with Dlamini’s generousdescriptions <strong>of</strong> her role in thewider community. This is animportant work that elucidates arather muddy and neglected area<strong>of</strong> South African history thatcould have only been written bysomeone from the community.’Robin Oakley, Department <strong>of</strong>Sociology and Social Anthropology, Dalhousie <strong>University</strong>Of related interest:Ghosts and ShadowsConstruction <strong>of</strong> Identity and Community in anAfrican DiasporaAtsuko Matsuoka and John Sorenson0-8020-8331-5 / £14.00 / $25.95 / 2001Approx. 260 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2005</strong>3 figuresCloth ISBN 0-8020-3911-1 £35.00 $55.00 EYoung Zulu youth performing a dance at a traditional weddingceremony. Photograph courtesy the author.53


SOCIOLOGY / ANTHROPOLOGYPink BloodHomophobic Violence in CanadaDouglas Victor Jan<strong>of</strong>fRe-imagining Policing inCanadaEdited by Dennis CooleyDespite Canada’s reputation as a beacon for equalityin the international struggle for gay rights,homophobia and homophobic violence remainmajor problems in the country. Since 1990, hundreds<strong>of</strong> gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgenderedpeople have been assaulted or murdered in Canada,but so far there has been little mention <strong>of</strong> the phenomenonin Canadian criminology textbooks orother publications.Pink Blood is the first book to analyse homophobicviolence on a national scale. Douglas VictorJan<strong>of</strong>f uses social theory, legal analysis, descriptivecase studies, and interviews with victims, activists,and police <strong>of</strong>ficers from thirty cities to convey theshattering impact this violence has had on queerCanadians and on the communities they inhabit.Jan<strong>of</strong>f critically examines the concept <strong>of</strong> homophobia,the ‘homosexual panic defence,’ the ignoranceand brutality <strong>of</strong> some Canadian police <strong>of</strong>ficers, andhate crime legislation and policies that, despitegood intentions, are <strong>of</strong>ten powerless to counteractthis complex and troubling social problem.Drawing from a wide range <strong>of</strong> scholarship –law, criminology, sociology, psychology, philosophyand social work – Pink Blood is an important additionto the literature on queer life in Canada froma respected researcher and community activist.Douglas Victor Jan<strong>of</strong>f is a policy advisor for theGovernment <strong>of</strong> Canada.Policing in Canada is in the process <strong>of</strong> change: similarto other nations in the western world, many <strong>of</strong>the policing services that were provided by publicforces in the past are being gradually handed over toprivate security agencies.Complex networks <strong>of</strong> policing that reflect amix <strong>of</strong> public and private security providers areemerging, and this transformation has seriousimplications for how Canadians interact with oneanother. For instance, if residents <strong>of</strong> a gated communityor members <strong>of</strong> a downtown business associationpay for their own policing services rather thanrelying on the public police, whose law is beingenforced?With this collection, Dennis Cooley hasbrought together some <strong>of</strong> the top minds in criminologyand policing to examine the phenomenon<strong>of</strong> the changing nature <strong>of</strong> policing in Canada. Theessays describe the character and constitution <strong>of</strong>security in Canada and explore the implications <strong>of</strong>these changes in terms <strong>of</strong> larger questions aboutpower, social control, justice, and law. Wide-rangingand topical, Re-imagining Policing in Canadawill prove essential reading for policy-makers andscholars alike.Dennis Cooley is the deputy minister <strong>of</strong> justice forthe Government <strong>of</strong> Yukon.Approx. 290 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2005</strong>35 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-8781-7 £45.00 $70.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8570-9 £21.50 $32.95 CApprox. 330 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3681-3 £40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8503-2 £20.00 $29.95 C54


LAW & SOCIETY‘Will the Circle be Unbroken?’Aboriginal Communities, Restorative Justice, and the Challenges <strong>of</strong> Conflict and ChangeJane Dickson-Gilmore and Carol La PrairieEmbraced with zeal by a wide array <strong>of</strong> activists andpolicymakers, the restorative justice movement hasmade promises to reduce the disproportionate rates<strong>of</strong> Aboriginal involvement in crime and the criminaljustice system and to <strong>of</strong>fer a healingmodel suitable to Aboriginal communities.Such promises should bethe focus <strong>of</strong> considerable criticalanalysis and evaluation, yet thiskind <strong>of</strong> scrutiny has largely beenabsent. ‘Will the Circle beUnbroken?’ explores and confrontsthe potential and pitfalls <strong>of</strong> restorativejustice, <strong>of</strong>fering a much-neededcritical perspective.Drawing on their shared experiencesworking with Aboriginal communities,Jane Dickson-Gilmore and CarolLa Prairie examine the outcomes <strong>of</strong>restorative justice projects, paying specialattention to such prominent programs asconferencing, sentencing circles, and healing circles.They also look to Aboriginal justice reforms inother countries, comparing and contrastingCanadian reforms with the restorative efforts inNew Zealand, Australia, and the United States.‘Will the Circle be Unbroken?’ provides a comprehensiveoverview <strong>of</strong> the critical issues inAboriginal and restorative justice, placing these inthe context <strong>of</strong> community. It examines the essentialrole <strong>of</strong> community in furthering bothAboriginal and non-Aboriginal aspirations forrestorative justice.Jane Dickson-Gilmore is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor inthe Department <strong>of</strong> Law at Carleton <strong>University</strong>.Carol La Prairie is a consulting criminologist and aformer senior researcher with the Departments<strong>of</strong> the Solicitor General and Justice <strong>of</strong> theGovernment <strong>of</strong> Canada.Of related interest:‘In a field riddled with the rhetoric <strong>of</strong> do-goodersand moral entrepreneurs, Jane Dickson-Gilmore and Carol La Prairie have provided aserious advance in the research and some muchneededcritical perspective with ‘Will theCircle be Unbroken?’ It is a must for allwith a stake or an interest in Aboriginaland restorative justice.’Jean-Paul Brodeur, École de criminologie,Université de MontréalRecovering CanadaThe Resurgence <strong>of</strong> Indigenous LawJohn Borrows0-8020-8501-6 / £20.00 / $32.95 / 2002Indigenous Difference and the Constitution <strong>of</strong>CanadaPatrick Macklem0-8020-8049-9 / £18.00 / $30.95 / 2001Approx. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>3 figures; 4 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-8922-4 £40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8674-8 £20.00 $29.95 CShield with Feathers. Courtesy Getty Images.55


LAW & SOCIETYRecognizing Aboriginal TitleThe Mabo Case and Indigenous Resistance toEnglish-Settler ColonialsimPeter H. RussellA judicial revolution occurred in 1992 whenAustralia’s highest court discarded a doctrine thathad stood for two hundred years, that the countrywas a terra nullius – a land <strong>of</strong> no one – when thewhite man arrived. The proceedings were known asthe Mabo Case, named for Eddie Koiki Mabo, theTorres Strait Islander who fought the notion thatthe Australian Aboriginal people did not have a system<strong>of</strong> land ownership before European colonization.The case had international repercussions,especially on the four countries in which Englishsettlers are the dominant population: Australia,Canada, New Zealand, and the United States.In Recognizing Aboriginal Title, Peter H. Russell<strong>of</strong>fers a comprehensive study <strong>of</strong> the Mabo case, itsbackground, and its consequences, contextualizing itwithin the international struggle <strong>of</strong> Indigenous peoplesto overcome their colonized status. Russellweaves together a historical narrative <strong>of</strong> Mabo’s lifewith an account <strong>of</strong> the legal and ideological premises<strong>of</strong> European imperialism and their eventual challengeby the global forces <strong>of</strong> decolonization. He traces thedevelopment <strong>of</strong> Australian law and policy in relationto Aborigines, and provides a detailed examination <strong>of</strong>the decade <strong>of</strong> litigation that led to the Mabo case.Mabo died at the age <strong>of</strong> fifty-six just five monthsbefore the case was settled. Although he had beenexiled from his land over a dispute when he was ateenager, he was buried there as a hero. RecognizingAboriginal Title is a work <strong>of</strong> enormous importance bya legal and constitutional scholar <strong>of</strong> internationalrenown, written with a passion worthy <strong>of</strong> its subject– a man who fought hard for his people and won.Peter H. Russell is a university pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus inthe Department <strong>of</strong> Political Science at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.‘Everything about this powerful and magnificent book issound. It is a major contribution to world literature and, inAustralia, fills a niche now unoccupied. It will have enormousimpact and will rumble around for some time inscholarly and pr<strong>of</strong>essional circles.’Peter Jull, School <strong>of</strong> Political Science and InternationalAffairs, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Queensland‘Recognizing Aboriginal Title is an excellent book that willprove <strong>of</strong> interest and inspiration to indigenous scholars andscholars <strong>of</strong> indigeneity. Peter Russell demonstrates his usualsolid research, lucid writing, penetrating insights, and sensitivityto highly political issues. Riveting and brilliant.’Augie Fleras, Department <strong>of</strong> Sociology, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>WaterlooAlso by Peter H. Russell (Editor):The Future <strong>of</strong> Social DemocracyViews <strong>of</strong> Leaders from Around the World0-8020-8066-9 / £10.00 / $20.95 / 1999Approx. 450 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2005</strong>10 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3863-8 £42.00 $65.00 E56


LAW & SOCIETYCalling Power to AccountLaw, Reparations, and the Chinese Canadian Head TaxEdited by David Dyzenhaus and Mayo MoranGlobal Health GovernanceInternational Law and Public Health in a Divided WorldObiji<strong>of</strong>or AginamCourts today face a range <strong>of</strong> claims to redress historicinjustice, including injustice perpetrated by law. InCanada, descendants <strong>of</strong> Chinese immigrants recentlyclaimed the return <strong>of</strong> a head tax levied only onChinese immigrants. Calling Power to Account usesthe litigation around the Chinese Canadian Head TaxCase as a focal point for examining the historical,legal, and philosophical issues raised by such claims.By placing both the discriminatory law and thejudicial decisions in their historical context, some <strong>of</strong>the essays in this volume illuminate the larger patterns<strong>of</strong> discrimination and the sometimes surprisingcapacity <strong>of</strong> the courts <strong>of</strong> the day to respond toracism. A number <strong>of</strong> the contributors explore theimplications <strong>of</strong> reparations claims for relationsbetween the various branches <strong>of</strong> government whileothers examine the difficult questions such claimsraise in both legal and political theory by placing theclaims in a comparative or philosophical perspective.Calling Power to Account suggests that our legalsystems can hope to play a part in responding totheir own legacy <strong>of</strong> past injustice only when theyrecognize the full array <strong>of</strong> issues posed by the HeadTax Case.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>.Mayo Moran 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>.Globalization has immersed all <strong>of</strong> humanity in asingle germ pool. There are no health sanctuariesin a globalizing world. In Global HealthGovernance, Obiji<strong>of</strong>or Aginam explores the relevance<strong>of</strong> international law in contemporary publichealth diplomacy. He focuses on the concept <strong>of</strong>mutual vulnerability to explore the globalization <strong>of</strong>disease, in what is paradoxically a global village anda divided world.Drawing from a wide range <strong>of</strong> disciplines,Global Health Governance <strong>of</strong>fers a holistic approachto global health governance involving a multiplicity<strong>of</strong> actors: nation-states, international organizations,civil society organizations, and private actors.Aginam articulates modest proposals under therubric <strong>of</strong> communitarian globalism, a paradigm thatstrives to meet the ideals <strong>of</strong> ‘law <strong>of</strong> humanity.’ Theseproposals project a humane global health orderwhere all <strong>of</strong> humanity is inexorably tied into a globalcompact and where the health <strong>of</strong> one nation-staterises and falls with the health <strong>of</strong> others.International law – with its bold claims to universalprotection <strong>of</strong> human rights and human dignity– is an indispensable governance tool for thereconstruction <strong>of</strong> damaged public health trust inthe relations <strong>of</strong> nations and peoples.Obiji<strong>of</strong>or Aginam is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Law at Carleton <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 450 pp / 6 x 9 / April <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3872-7 £48.00 $75.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-3808-5 £27.00 $42.95 CApprox. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8000-6 £40.00 $60.00 E57


HEALTH CAREBaby BoomerHealth DynamicsHow Are We Aging?Andrew V. WisterAre the baby boomers in Canada more or lesshealthy than previous generations? What are theimplications <strong>of</strong> this for the national health care system?Baby Boomer Health Dynamics responds to thegrowing interest in the generation that makes upover one-third <strong>of</strong> the Canadian population – thelargest segment <strong>of</strong> society – with the leading edgereaching their sixty-fifth birthday in 2011 andeighty-five by 2031.Focusing on four health behaviours that havebeen proven to be major risk factors for disease:smoking, unhealthy exercise, obesity, and heavydrinking – Andrew V. Wister researches the longtermimplications <strong>of</strong> several key lifestyle-healthconundrums, most notably the paradoxical relationshipin the concurrent trends over the last twodecades <strong>of</strong> increased exercise levels and a significantrise in obesity. This invariably leads to questionsabout the eating habits <strong>of</strong> North Americans, and inparticular, the quantity and quality <strong>of</strong> fast-food andconvenience-food consumption. Recent public declarationsby a number <strong>of</strong> health organizations andinstitutes that we are experiencing an obesity crisis,and moreover, that obesity is the ‘new tobacco’makes Baby Boomer Health Dynamics both timelyand topical.Andrew V. Wister is the chair <strong>of</strong> the Department <strong>of</strong>Gerontology at Simon Fraser <strong>University</strong>.Acute Resuscitation andCrisis ManagementAcute Critical Events SimulationEdited by David T. NeilipovitzUNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA PRESSWhile the management <strong>of</strong> critically ill patients has traditionallybeen an undeveloped area <strong>of</strong> medicine,recent advances now allow patients to survive illnessesand disorders that were previously fatal.Unfortunately, the knowledge and techniques that arerequired to do this are not traditionally taught in medicalschool. Thus, medical errors are not uncommon.In 2001, physicians responsible for the care <strong>of</strong>the critically ill were introduced to a new program:the Acute Critical Events Simulation (ACES)Program, an intensive and highly interactive courseon the acute resuscitation <strong>of</strong> critically ill patientsand the management <strong>of</strong> crisis situations.This book is a compendium to the ACESProgram, containing its important background informationand reference material. With contributions byrecognized physicians from across Canada, it presentsthe specifics <strong>of</strong> acute resuscitation in the context <strong>of</strong>crisis resource management and teaches readers lifesaving resuscitation skills in a way that allows them touse their medical training more effectively.With increasing doctor shortages forcing morephysicians to manage acutely ill patients, this bookwill aid physicians looking for a simple yet usefultext to help them manage critically ill patients inconnection with the ACES Program.David T. Neilipovitz, MD, is a staff physician at theOttawa Hospital (Civic Campus) and an assistantpr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong> Anesthesiology atthe <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa.Approx. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2005</strong>65 figures; 57 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-8957-7 £42.00 $65.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8635-7 £20.00 $29.95 CApprox. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / June <strong>2005</strong>Line drawings throughoutPaper ISBN 0-7766-0597-6 £22.50 $35.00 C58


HEALTH CAREThe Fall <strong>of</strong> an IconPsychoanalysis and Academic PsychiatryJoel ParisOver the last few decades, academic psychiatryhas undergone a revolution. After theSecond World War, most departmentchairs were psychoanalysts whobelonged to separate institutes, notsubject to the checks and balances <strong>of</strong>academia, and who did not subscribeto the tenets <strong>of</strong> scientific medicine.The revolution against psychoanalyticdominance began when a group <strong>of</strong>psychiatrists developed an evidencebasedmodel that brought psychiatryback into the medical mainstream.In The Fall <strong>of</strong> an Icon, Joel Paris narrates thehistory <strong>of</strong> this transition, placing it in the context <strong>of</strong>current trends in science and medicine. He illustratesthe story using interviews with prominent academicpsychiatrists in Canada and the United States,and describes his own experiences as a psychiatrist:how he was caught up in the excitement <strong>of</strong> the psychoanalyticmodel, how he became disillusionedwith it, and how he came to a new and more scientificview <strong>of</strong> his discipline. This is an essential workfor understanding the recent history <strong>of</strong> psychiatry.Joel Paris is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Psychiatry at McGill <strong>University</strong>.‘The Fall <strong>of</strong> an Icon is an important addition to theworld literature on psychiatry and psychoanalysis.Joel Paris’s career has coincided with thedecline <strong>of</strong> psychoanalysis in academe, andhis heavily autobiographical style, alongwith his candour, self-disclosure, humour,and reflection, make this book very engaging.It is, among other things, a short history<strong>of</strong> twentieth-century psychiatry.’Of related interest:David Goldbloom, MD, Department<strong>of</strong> Psychiatry, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>,and Centre for Addiction and MentalHealthFrom Philosophy to PsychotherapyA Phenomenological Model for Psychology,Psychiatry, and PsychoanalysisEdwin L. Hersch0-8020-8734-5 / £42.00 / $68.00 / 2003Approx. 225 pp / 6 x 9 / March <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3933-2 £32.00 $50.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-3772-0 £18.00 $27.95 CIllustration courtesy IIT, Bombay.59


REFERENCECanadian Who’s Who <strong>2005</strong>Volume XLEdited by Elizabeth LumleyNow in its ninety-fifth year <strong>of</strong> publication, this standardCanadian reference source contains the mostcomprehensive and authoritative biographical informationon notable living Canadians. Those listedare carefully selected because <strong>of</strong> the positions theyhold in Canadian society, or because <strong>of</strong> the contributionthey 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 issues inCanadian 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>2005</strong> on CD-ROMThe complete text <strong>of</strong> Canadian Who’s Who is alsoavailable on CD-ROM, in a comprehensivelyindexed and fully searchable format. Search ‘astronaut’or ‘entrepreneur <strong>of</strong> the year,’ ‘aboriginal achievementaward’ and ‘Order <strong>of</strong> Canada’ and discover awealth <strong>of</strong> information. Fast, easy, and more accessiblethan ever, the Canadian Who’s Who on CD-ROM isan essential addition to your electronic library.Please see our website:www.utpress.utoronto.ca/cwwNetwork Licences0-8020-8910-0For pricing information, please contact CEDROM-SNi (416) 260-2369info.canada@cedrom-sni.comCD-ROM requirements:WINDOWS:95/98/2000/NT/XP386/25Mhz4mb RAM(8mb recommended)MAC:Mac OS 7, 8, and 94mb RAM(8mb recommended)8% PST applicable to Ontario residents on all formatsBOOKApprox. 1450 pp / 8 1 /2 x 11 / May <strong>2005</strong>Cloth 0-8020-8907-0(ISSN 0068-9963) UK £125.00$195.00 NETCD-ROMISBN 0-8020-8909-7(ISSN 1481-4269)UK £140.00$205.00 NETBOOK AND CD-ROMISBN 0-8020-8908-9UK £175.00 $285.00 NET60


REFERENCEOntario Legal Directory <strong>2005</strong>Published annually since 1925Edited by Lynn BurdonAccuracy 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 53.00 95.00 128.006-99 copies 49.00 88.00 118.00100+ copies 45.00 81.00 108.00Ontario Legal Directory 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-processing formatsor 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.com8% PST applicable to Ontario residents on all formats.BOOKApprox. 1325 pp / 6 3 /5 x 9 3 /5 / February <strong>2005</strong>Paper ISBN 0-8020-8911-9 (ISSN 1438-2615) $53.00 NETCD-ROMISBN 0-8020-8912-7 (ISSN 1481-4064) $155.00 NETNETWORK LICENCESISBN 0-8020-8913-5Start as low as $195.00 for 1 to 3 users61


REFERENCECanadian InsuranceClaims Directory <strong>2005</strong>73rd Annual EditionCanadian Books in Print<strong>2005</strong>Edited by Marian ButlerEdited 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 insurance industry,insurance companies, and industrial and government<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 claimsforwarders, as well as some 100 insurance counsel,who are 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.CBIP is the complete reference and buying guide toEnglish-language Canadian books currently inprint; consequently, the Author and Title Index,Subject Index, and micr<strong>of</strong>iche editions are indispensableto the book pr<strong>of</strong>ession. With submissionsfrom both small and large publishers, CBIP providesaccess to titles not listed anywhere else.Containing more than 52,000 titles, <strong>of</strong> whichmore than 3000 have a 2004 imprint, the Authorand Title Index is extensively cross-referenced. TheSubject Index lists the titles under 800 different subjectcategories. Both books <strong>of</strong>fer the most completedirectory <strong>of</strong> Canadian publishers available, listingthe names and ISBN prefixes, as well as the street,e-mail, and web addresses <strong>of</strong> more than 5000 houses.The quarterly micr<strong>of</strong>iche service provides updatedinformation in April, July, and October.CBIP is constantly referred to by order librarians,booksellers, researchers, and all those involvedin book acquisition. In addition, CBIP is an invaluablerecord <strong>of</strong> the vast wealth <strong>of</strong> publishing andwriting activity in the scientific, literary, academic,and arts communities across Canada.Approx. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / July <strong>2005</strong>Paper ISBN 0-8020-8914-3$45.00 NET8% PST applicable to Ontario residents on aboveAUTHOR AND TITLE INDEXApprox. 1600 pp / 8 x 10 3 /4 / February <strong>2005</strong>Cloth 0-8020-8903-8 (ISSN 0068-8398)UK £125.00 $195.00 NETSUBJECT INDEXApprox. 940 pp / 8 x 10 3 /4 / February <strong>2005</strong>Cloth 0-8020-8904-6 (ISSN 0315-1999)UK £110.00 $175.00 NETQUARTERLY SERVICE(Author and Title Index plus Quarterly Micr<strong>of</strong>iche)Cloth – Available Micr<strong>of</strong>iche – April, July, and October <strong>2005</strong>ISBN 0-8020-8906-2$245.00 NET62


CANADIAN MUSEUM OF NATURE/MUSÉE CANADIEN DE LA NATURERocky Mountain WildFlowersA.E. PorsildA popular, beautifullyillustrated guide to 430species <strong>of</strong> Rocky Mountainalpine and sub-alpineplants. Dagny Tande Lid’sbotanically accurate watercoloursand A.E. Porsild’sdetailed scientific descriptionsmake this book an indispensable tool for laymenand scientists alike.1979$11.95 PaperbackISBN 0-660-00073-3454 pages, 258 colour illustrationsHandbook <strong>of</strong> CanadianMammals, Volume I:Marsupials andInsectivoresC.G. van Zyll de JongDescriptions and illustrations<strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong> Canada’smost interesting mammalspecies, including 16 species<strong>of</strong> shrew, one species <strong>of</strong>opossum and six species <strong>of</strong>mole. With detailed black and white and colour illustrationsshowing the whole animal, the skull andother diagnostic characters.1983$19.95 PaperbackISBN 0-660-10328-1210 pages, 4 colour plates, 35 black and white illustrations, 23 mapsHandbook <strong>of</strong> CanadianMammals, Volume II: BatsC.G. van Zyll de JongA reference work for naturalists,students and pr<strong>of</strong>essionalbiologists, Batsdeals with the systematics,distribution and naturalhistory <strong>of</strong> Canada’s 20species <strong>of</strong> bats. Bats featuresdetailed color illustrationsby artist Paul Geraghty.1985$19.95 PaperbackISBN 0-660-10756-2212 pages, 4 colour plates, 51 black and white illustrations, 20 mapsThe Freshwater Molluscs <strong>of</strong> CanadaArthur H. ClarkeA complete field guide andlaboratory manual for shellcollectors, with descriptionsand lovely watercolourillustrations <strong>of</strong> every species<strong>of</strong> freshwater mollusc foundin Canada. Clarke’s identificationkeys and descriptionsare extremely useful identificationtools. Clarke also deals with mollusc ecologyand our relationship to molluscs.1981$25.00 HardcoverISBN 0-660-00022-9448 pages, 16 colour plates, 196 illustrationsThe Flora <strong>of</strong> Canada (Parts 1-4):Publications in Botany Volume 7H.G. Scoggan1978$131.00 Hardcover in 4 volume setISBN 0-660-00139-X1711 pagesnature.ca63


UTP RECENT BACKLISTAggressive in PursuitThe Life <strong>of</strong> JusticeEmmett HallFrederick Vaughan0-8020-3957-X / £32.00/ $50.00 / 2004Babel and the Ivory TowerThe Scholar in the Age <strong>of</strong>ScienceW. David Shaw0-8020-7998-9 / £40.00 /$60.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Biblical and Classical MythsThe MythologicalFramework <strong>of</strong> WesternCultureNorthrop Frye and JayMacpherson0-8020-8695-0 / £22.50 /$35.00 / 2004Borderland ReligionThe Emergence <strong>of</strong> anEnglish-CanadianIdentity, 1792–1852J.I. Little0-8020-8671-3 / £20.00 /$32.95 / 2004Canada’s ArmyWaging War and Keepingthe PeaceJ.L. Granatstein0-8020-8696-9 / £20.00 /$29.95 / 2004Canadian Annual Review <strong>of</strong>Politics and Public Affairs1998Edited by David Mutimer0-8020-8926-7 / £60.00 /$98.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Canadian Energy Policy andthe Struggle for SustainableDevelopmentEdited by G. Bruce Doern0-8020-8561-X / £20.00/ $29.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Canadian Missionaries,Indigenous PeoplesRepresenting Religion atHome and AbroadEdited by Alvyn Austinand Jamie S. Scott0-8020-3784-4 / £20.00 /$29.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Cape BretonianaAn AnnotatedBibliographyCompiled by BrianDouglas Tennyson0-8020-8712-4 / £48.00 /$75.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Chronic Pain, Loss, andSufferingA Clinical PerspectiveRanjan Roy0-8020-3597-3 / £32.00 /$60.00 / 2004Cinema and SemioticPeirce and FilmAesthetics, Narration, andRepresentationJohannes Ehrat0-8020-3912-X / £60.00/ $95.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Civic CapitalismThe State <strong>of</strong> ChildhoodJohn O’Neill0-8020-3915-4 / £25.00 /$40.00 / 2004Clio in the ClinicHistory in MedicalPracticeEdited by Jacalyn Duffin0-8020-3798-4 / $35.00 /<strong>2005</strong>Canadian Rights OnlyColonial JusticeJustice, Morality, andCrime in the NiagaraDistrict, 1791–1849David Murray0-8020-8688-8 / £18.00 /$27.95 / 2003Common and ContestedGroundA Human andEnvironmental History <strong>of</strong>the Northwestern PlainsTheodore Binnema0-8020-8694-2 / $24.95 /2004Canadian Rights OnlyConsensual FictionsWomen, Liberalism, andthe English NovelWendy S. Jones0-8020-8717-5 / £35.00 /$55.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Constitutional OdysseyCan Canadians Become aSovereign People?Third EditionPeter H. Russell0-8020-3777-1 / £18.00 /$27.95 / 2004Corpus LibrorumEmblematumThe Jesuit Series, PartFour (L-P)Edited by Peter M. Dalyand G. Richard Dimler0-8020-3853-0 / £87.00 /$138.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Creeping ConformityHow Canada BecameSuburban, 1900–1960Richard Harris0-8020-8428-1 / £11.25 /$19.95 / 2004A Critical and CulturalTheory ReaderSecond EditionEdited by AnthonyEasthope and KateMcGowan0-8020-3800-X / $29.95/ 2004North American RightsOnly64


UTP RECENT BACKLISTThe Cultural Politics <strong>of</strong>MarketsEconomic Liberalizationand Social Change inNepalKatharine Neilson Rankin0-8020-8698-5 / $24.95 /2004North American RightsOnlyDeflating InformationFrom Science Studies toDocumentationBernd Frohmann0-8020-8839-2 / £40.00 /$65.00 / 2004Developing the LonerganLegacyHistorical, Theoretical,and Existential ThemesFrederick E. Crowe. Editedby Michael Vertin0-8020-8938-0 / £45.00 /$75.00 / 2004Durable PeaceChallenges forPeacebuilding in AfricaEdited by Taisier M. Aliand Robert O. Matthews0-8020-8463-X / £18.00/ $29.95 / 2004Educational Outcomes forthe Canadian WorkplaceNew Frameworks forPolicy and ResearchEdited by Jane Gaskell andKjell Rubenson0-8020-8845-7 / £32.00 /$50.00 / 2004Enchanted GroundReimagining JohnDrydenEdited by Jayne Lewis andMaximillian E. Novak0-8020-8940-2 / £45.00 /$70.00 / 2004Ezra Pound andConfucianismRemaking Humanism inthe Face <strong>of</strong> ModernityFeng Lan0-8020-8941-0 / £40.00 /$60.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Families <strong>of</strong> the KingWriting Identity in theAnglo-Saxon ChronicleAlice Sheppard0-8020-8984-4 / £42.00 /$65.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Fearful SymmetryA Study <strong>of</strong> William BlakeNorthrop Frye. Edited byNicholas Halmi0-8020-8983-6 / £60.00 /$95.00 / 2004Fields <strong>of</strong> FireThe Canadians inNormandyTerry Copp0-8020-3780-1 / £20.00 /$29.95 / 2004Fighting Firewater FictionsMoving Beyond theDisease Model <strong>of</strong>Alcoholism in FirstNationsRichard W. Thatcher0-8020-8647-0 / £22.50 /$35.00 / 2004Flowers in MedievalManuscriptsCelia Fisher0-8020-3796-8 / $19.95 /2004North and SouthAmerican Rights OnlyThe Future <strong>of</strong> the PageEdited by Peter Stoicheffand Andrew Taylor0-8020-8584-9 / £20.00 /$29.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Gendered PastsHistorical Essays inFemininity andMasculinity in CanadaEdited by KathrynMcPherson, CeciliaMorgan, and Nancy M.Forestell0-8020-8690-X / £15.00/ $24.95 / 2003GlaucomaA Patient’s Guide to theDiseaseThird DiseaseGraham E. Trope0-8020-8623-3 / £6.99 /$10.95 / 2004The Hateful and theObsceneStudies in the Limits <strong>of</strong>Free ExpressionL.W. Sumner0-8020-8083-9 / £20.00 /$29.95 / 2004History <strong>of</strong> the Book inCanadaVolume One: Beginningsto 1840Edited by PatriciaLockhart Fleming, GillesGallichan, and YvanLamonde0-8020-8943-7 / £48.00 /$75.00 / 2004In TranslationThe Gabrielle Roy–JoyceMarshall CorrespondenceEdited by Jane Everett0-8020-3908-1 / £32.00 /$50.00 / <strong>2005</strong>The Intimate Life <strong>of</strong> L.M.MontgomeryEdited by Irene Gammel0-8020-8676-4 / £18.00 /$27.50 / <strong>2005</strong>65


UTP RECENT BACKLISTInventing Sam SlickA Biography <strong>of</strong> ThomasChandler HaliburtonRichard A. Davies0-8020-5001-8 / £40.00 /$60.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Jehovah’s Witnesses andthe Third ReichSectarian Politics underPersecutionM. James Penton0-8020-8678-0 / £22.50 /$35.00 / 2004Kant’s IntuitionismA Commentary on theTranscendental AestheticLorne Falkenstein0-8020-3774-7 / £25.00 /$39.95 / 2004The Labyrinth <strong>of</strong> DangerousHoursA Memoir <strong>of</strong> the SecondWorld WarLilka Trzcinska-Croydon0-8020-3958-8 / £25.00 /$40.00 / 2004Magic in MedievalManuscriptsSophie Page0-8020-3797-6 / $19.95 /2004North and SouthAmerican Rights OnlyMaking Sense <strong>of</strong> AdultLearningSecond EditionDorothy MacKeracher0-8020-3778-X / £21.50/ $32.95 / 2004The Material, the Real, andthe Fractured SelfSubjectivity andRepresentation fromRimbaud to RédaSusan Harrow0-8020-8722-1 / £35.00 /$55.00 / 2004Mothers <strong>of</strong> the MunicipalityWomen, Work, and SocialPolicy in Post-1945HalifaxEdited by Judith Fingardand Janet Guildford0-8020-8693-4 / £20.00 /$29.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Multiple Lenses, MultipleImagesPerspectives on the ChildAcross Time, Space, andDisciplinesEdited by Hillel Goelman,Sheila K. Marshall, andSally Ross0-8020-8931-3 / £32.00 /$50.00 / <strong>2005</strong>The Next World WarTribes, Cities, Nations,and Ecological DeclineRoy Woodbridge0-8020-8603-9 / £18.00 /$27.95 / 2004Northrop Frye’s Notebookson RomanceEdited by Michael Dolzani0-8020-3947-2 / £60.00 /$95.00 / <strong>2005</strong>On LocationCanada’s TelevisionIndustry in a GlobalMarketSerra Tinic0-8020-8548-2 / £15.00 /$24.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Parenting Assessments inChild Welfare CasesA Practical GuideTerry Pezzot-Pearce andJohn Pearce0-8020-8654-3 / £25.00 /$39.95 / 2004Paul VirilioTheorist for anAccelerated CultureSteve Redhead0-8020-8682-9 / $21.95 /2004North American RightsOnlyThe Politics <strong>of</strong> the Past inan Argentine Working-ClassNeighbourhoodLindsay DuBois0-8020-8844-9 / £40.00 /$60.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Practical JudgmentsEssays in Culture, Politics,and InterpretationMark Kingwell0-8020-3801-8 / £15.00 /$24.95 / 2004Printed VoicesThe Renaissance Culture<strong>of</strong> DialogueEdited by Dorothea Heitschand Jean-François Vallée0-8020-8706-X / £32.00/ $65.00 / 2004Rapt in PlaidCanadian Literature andScottish TraditionElizabeth Waterston0-8020-8685-3 / £15.00 /$24.95 / 2003Repression and ResistanceCanadian Human RightsActivists, 1930–1960Ross Lambertson0-8020-8921-6 / £42.00 /$65.00 / <strong>2005</strong>The Romance Epics <strong>of</strong>Boiardo, Ariosto, and TassoFrom Public Duty toPrivate PleasureJo Ann Cavallo0-8020-8915-1 / £42.00 /$70.00 / 200466


UTP RECENT BACKLISTRomances <strong>of</strong> the Archive inContemporary BritishFictionSuzanne Keen0-8020-8684-5 / £18.00/ $27.95 / 2003Romanticism and theMateriality <strong>of</strong> NatureOnno Oerlemans0-8020-8697-7 / £15.00/ $24.95 / 2004Royal SpectacleThe 1860 Visit <strong>of</strong> thePrince <strong>of</strong> Wales toCanada and the UnitedStatesIan Radforth0-8020-8665-9 / £18.00/ $27.95 / 2004Saints and the Audience inMiddle English BiblicalDramaChester N. Scoville0-8020-8944-5 / £32.00/ $50.00 / 2004Science in the Kitchen andthe Art <strong>of</strong> Eating WellPelegrino Artusi0-8020-8657-8 / £18.99/ $35.00 / 2003Shocking Mother RussiaDemocratization, SocialRights, and PensionReform in Russia,1990–2001Andrea Chandler0-8020-8930-5 / £40.00/ $60.00 / 2004Smoke and MirrorsGlobalized Terrorism andthe Illusion <strong>of</strong>Multilateral SecurityFrank P. Harvey0-8020-8948-8 / £25.00/ $40.00 / 2004Stateliest MeasuresTennyson and theLiterature <strong>of</strong> Greece andRomeA.A. Markley0-8020-8937-2 / £35.00/ $55.00 / 2004The Supreme Court <strong>of</strong> NovaScotia, 1754–2004From Imperial Bastion toPolitical OracleEdited by Philip Girard,Jim Phillips, and BarryCahill0-8020-8021-9 / £48.00/ $75.00 / 2004Survivor RhetoricNegotiations andNarrativity in AbusedWomen’s LanguageEdited by ChristineShearer-Cremean andCarol L. Winkelmann0-8020-8641-1 / £15.00/ $24.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Theorizing HistoricalConsciousnessEdited by Peter Seixas0-8020-8713-2 / £40.00/ $60.00 / 2004Tudor Historical ThoughtF.J. Levy0-8020-3775-5 / £18.00/ $27.50 / 2004The Unsung PsychoanalystThe Quiet Influence <strong>of</strong>Ruth EasserMary Kay O’Neil0-8020-8978-X / £28.00/ $45.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Using Knowledge andEvidence in Health CareMultidisciplinaryPerspectivesEdited by Louise Lemieux-Charles and FrançoisChampagne0-8020-8932-1 / £41.50/ $63.00 / 2004UtilitarianismRestorations; Repairs;RenovationsDavid Braybrooke0-8020-8732-9 / £35.00/ $55.00 / 2004Utopia, Carnival, andCommonwealth inRenaissance EnglandChristopher Kendrick0-8020-8936-4 / £55.00/ $85.00 / 2004The World in VenicePrint, the City, and EarlyModern IdentityBronwen Wilson0-8020-8725-6 / £48.00/ $75.00 / <strong>2005</strong>A World <strong>of</strong> RelationshipsItineraries, Dreams, andEvents in the AustralianWestern DesertSylvie Poirier0-8020-8414-1 / £20.00/ $29.95 / <strong>2005</strong>67


UTP CLASSIC BACKLISTAboriginal Health in CanadaHistorical, Cultural, andEpidemiological PerspectivesJames B. Waldram, D. AnnHerring, T. Kue Young0-8020-6887-1 / £14.00 / $23.95/ 1995Almost HomeReforming Home andCommunity Care in OntarioPatricia M. Baranek, Raisa B.Deber, and A. Paul Williams0-8020-8639-X / £20.00 /$29.95 / 2004AnthropologyA Student’s Guide to Theory andMethodStanley R. Barrett0-8020-7833-8 / £13.95 / $22.95/ 1996Apocalypse DelayedThe Story <strong>of</strong> Jehovah’s Witnesses,Revised EditionM. James Penton0-8020-7973-3 / £15.00 / $27.95/ 1997Aretino’s SatyrSexuality, Satire, and Self-Projection in Sixteenth CenturyLiterature and ArtRaymond B. Waddington0-8020-8814-7 / £40.00 / $63.00/ 2004Arresting ImagesCrime and Policing in Front <strong>of</strong>the Television CameraAaron Doyle0-8020-8504-0 / £15.00 / $27.95/ 2003Athena SingsWagner and the GreeksM. Owen Lee0-8020-8580-6 / £8.50 / $14.95/ 2003Bel CantoA History <strong>of</strong> Vocal PedagogyJames Stark0-8020-8614-4 / £25.00 / $43.00/ 1999Benjamin Disraeli LettersVolume 7: 1857–1859Edited by M.G. Wiebe, Mary S.Millar, Ann P. Robson, and EllenHawman0-8020-8728-0 / £96.00 /$190.00 / 2004Between Colliding WorldsThe Ambiguous Existence <strong>of</strong>Government Agencies forAboriginal and Women’s PolicyJonathan Malloy0-8020-3717-8 / £28.00 / $48.00/ 2003Between Renaissance andBaroqueThe First Jesuit Paintings inRome, 1564–1610Gauvin Alexander Bailey0-8020-3721-6 / £55.00 / $88.00/ 2003Beyond SpectacleEliza Haywood’s FemaleSpectatorsJuliette Merritt0-8020-3540-X / £28.00 /$45.00 / 2004The Bias <strong>of</strong> CommunicationRevised EditionHarold A. Innis0-8020-6839-1 / £13.95 / $24.95/ 1999BienfaitThe Saskatchewan Miners’Struggle <strong>of</strong> ‘31Stephen Lyon Endicott0-8020-8452-4 / £14.00 / $24.95/ 2002Blood, Sweat, and CheersSport and the Making <strong>of</strong> ModernCanadaColin Howell0-8020-8248-3 / £10.00 / $17.95/ 2001Bookrolls and Scribes inOxyrhynchusWilliam A. Johnson0-8020-3734-8 / £55.00 / $85.00/ 2004Born 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/ 2003Brian DicksonA Judge’s JourneyRobert J. Sharpe and Kent Roach0-8020-8952-6 / £32.00 / $58.00/ 2003The British Library Guide toManuscript IlluminationHistory and TechniquesChristopher de Hamel0-8020-8173-8 / $20.95 / 2001North and South AmericanRights OnlyBuller Men and Batty BwoysHidden Men in <strong>Toronto</strong> andHalifax Black CommunitiesWesley Crichlow0-8020-8942-9 / £28.00 / $53.00/ 2004CaddisfliesThe Underwater ArchitectsGlenn B. Wiggins0-8020-3714-3 / £80.00 /$128.00 / 2004Canada 1900–1945Robert Bothwell, Ian Drummond,and John English0-8020-6801-4 / £12.50 / $27.95/ 1987Canada Since 1945Revised EditionRobert Bothwell, Ian Drummond,and John English0-8020-6672-0 / £13.50 / $30.95/ 1989Canada’s Founding DebatesEdited by Janet Ajzenstat, PaulRomney, Ian Gentles, and WilliamD. Gairdner0-8020-8607-1 / £22.50 / $38.00/ 2003Canadian Annual Review <strong>of</strong>Politics and Public Affairs 1997Edited by David Mutimer0-8020-8803-1 / £60.00 / $98.00/ 2003The Canadian PrairiesA HistoryGerald Friesen0-8020-6648-8 / £11.00 / $32.95/ 1987The Canadian Senate inBicameral PerspectiveDavid E. Smith0-8020-8788-4 / £32.00 / $55.00/ 2003The CanadianizationMovementEmergence, Survival, and SuccessJeffrey Cormier0-8020-8815-5 / £42.00 / $65.00/ 2004Canadians at LastThe Integration <strong>of</strong>Newfoundland as a ProvinceRaymond B. Blake0-8020-6978-9 / £13.75 / $23.95/ 2004CannabisReport <strong>of</strong> the Senate SpecialCommittee on Illegal DrugsPreface by Senator Pierre ClaudeNolin0-8020-8630-6 / £15.00 / $27.95/ 2003Capitalizing on CultureCritical Theory for CulturalStudiesShane Gunster0-8020-3693-7 / £32.00 / $50.00/ 2004Caring for Gay and LesbianPeopleA Clinical GuideAllan D. Peterkin and CathyRisdon0-8020-8379-X / £25.00 /$40.00 / 2003The Cartulary <strong>of</strong> Montier-en-Der, 666–1129Edited by Constance BrittainBouchard0-8020-8807-4 / £48.00 / $78.00/ 2004CatullusEdited by D.F.S. Thomson0-8020-8592-X / £28.00 /$48.00 / 1997Changing Politics <strong>of</strong> CanadianSocial PolicyJames J. Rice and Michael J.Prince0-8020-8074-X / £15.00 /$26.95 / 2000Cold ComfortMothers, Pr<strong>of</strong>essionals, andAttention Deficit DisorderClaudia Malacrida0-8020-8558-X / £18.00 /$30.95 / 200368


UTP CLASSIC BACKLISTCome and I Will Sing YouA Newfoundland SongbookEdited by Genevieve Lehr0-8020-6586-4 / £15.00 / $27.95/ 2003Compassionate CanadiansCivic Leaders Discuss HumanRightsRhoda E. Howard-Hassmann0-8020-3664-3 / £35.00 / $58.00/ 2003Concise Historical Atlas <strong>of</strong>CanadaEdited by William G. Dean,Conrad Heidenreich, ThomasMcIlwraith, and John WarkentinCartographers: Ge<strong>of</strong>frey J.Matthews and Byron Mold<strong>of</strong>sky0-8020-4203-1 / £60.00 / $90.00/ 1998The Confederation Group <strong>of</strong>Canadian Poets, 1880–1897D.M.R. Bentley0-8020-8739-6 / £32.00 / $65.00/ 2004The ‘Conquest’ <strong>of</strong> Acadia, 1710Imperial, Colonial, andAboriginal Constructionsby John G. Reid, Maurice Basque,Elizabeth Mancke, Barry Moody,Ge<strong>of</strong>frey Plank, and WilliamWicken0-8020-8538-5 / £20.00 / $32.95/ 2004Contemporaries <strong>of</strong> ErasmusA Biographical Register <strong>of</strong> theRenaissance and ReformationEdited by Peter G. Bietenholz andThomas B. Deutscher0-8020-8577-6 / £60.00 /$100.00 / 2003The Conventional ManThe Diaries <strong>of</strong> Ontario ChiefJustice Robert A. Harrison,1856–1878Edited by Peter Oliver0-8020-8842-2 / £45.00 / $75.00/ 2003Correspondance généraled’HelvétiusVolume 5Edited by Peter Allan, AlanDainard, Marie-ThérèseInguenaud, Jean Orsoni, DavidSmith, and Jonas Steffen0-8020-8991-7 / £80.00 /$128.00 / <strong>2005</strong>World Rights Less U.K. andEuropeCounting for NothingWhat Men Value and WhatWomen are Worth, SecondEditionMarilyn Waring0-8020-8260-2 / $25.95 / 1999North American Rights OnlyThe Culture <strong>of</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>ession inLate Renaissance ItalyGeorge W. McClure0-8020-8970-4 / £42.00 / $65.00/ 2004Dante, Cinema, and TelevisionEdited by Amilcare A. Iannucci0-8020-8827-9 / £18.00 / $27.95/ 2004Dark Threats and White KnightsThe Somalia Affair, Peacekeeping,and the New ImperialismSherene H. Razack0-8020-8663-2 / £15.00 / $24.95/ 2004The Decameron First Day inPerspectiveEdited by Elissa B. Weaver0-8020-8589-X / £18.00 /$30.95 / 2004Democracy Off BalanceFreedom <strong>of</strong> Expression and HatePropaganda Law in CanadaStefan Braun0-8020-8636-5 / £22.50 / $35.00/ 2004Democracy, Power, andLegitimacyThe Critical Theory <strong>of</strong> JürgenHabermasOmid A. Payrow Shabani0-8020-8761-2 / £28.00 / $58.00/ 2003Design with TypeCarl Dair0-8020-6519-8 / £12.50 / $23.95/ 1967Dictionary <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/ 1998Downsizing in AcademicLibrariesThe Canadian ExperienceEthel Auster and Shauna Taylor0-8020-8975-5 / £28.00 / $50.00/ 2004Dream No Little DreamsA Biography <strong>of</strong> the DouglasGovernment <strong>of</strong> Saskatchewan,1944–1961A.W. Johnson0-8020-8633-0 / £20.00 / $35.00/ 2004Dying JusticeA Case for DecriminalizingEuthanasia and Assisted Suicidein CanadaJocelyn Downie0-8020-3760-7 / £32.00 / $50.00/ 2004Eco’s ChaosmosFrom the Middle Ages toPostmodernityCristina Farronato0-8020-8586-5 / £18.00 / $30.95/ 2003Editing Robert GrossetesteEdited by Evelyn A. Mackie andJoseph Goering0-8020-8841-4 / £25.00 / $42.95/ 2003Educational Regimes andAnglo-American DemocracyRonald Manzer0-8020-8780-9 / £48.00 / $78.00/ 2003Emergence and ConvergenceQualitative Novelty and theUnity <strong>of</strong> KnowledgeMario Bunge0-8020-8860-0 / £48.00 / $75.00/ 2003Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> ContemporaryLiterary TheoryApproaches, Scholars, TermsEdited by Irena R. Makaryk0-8020-6860-X / £26.00 /$42.95 / 1993Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> Literature inCanadaEdited by W.H. New0-8020-0761-9 / £50.00 / $75.00/ 2002Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> Rusyn Historyand CultureRevised and Expanded EditionEdited by Paul Robert Magocsiand Ivan Pop0-8020-3566-3 / £65.00 /$100.00 / 2004Encyclopedic Dictionary <strong>of</strong>Semiotics, Media, andCommunicationEdited by Marcel Danesi0-8020-8329-3 / £12.00 / $25.95/ 2000‘Enough to Keep Them Alive’Indian Welfare in Canada,1873–1965Hugh Shewell0-8020-8610-1 / £22.50 / $38.00/ 2004Establishing the Rules <strong>of</strong> the GameElection Laws in DemocraciesLouis Massicotte, André Blais, andAntoine Yoshinaka0-8020-8564-4 / £13.00 / $19.95/ 2004Exorcism and its TextsSubjectivity in Early ModernLiterature <strong>of</strong> England and SpainHillaire Kallendorf0-8020-8817-1 / £48.00 / $68.00/ 2003Exploring ManitoulinThird EditionShelley J. Pearen0-8020-8461-3 / £14.00 / $25.95/ 2001The False TraitorLouis Riel in Canadian CultureAlbert Braz0-8020-8314-5 / £15.00 / $27.95/ 2003FashionA Canadian PerspectiveEdited by Alexandra Palmer0-8020-8590-3 / £22.50 / $35.00/ 2004A Fatherly EyeIndian Agents, GovernmentPower, and Aboriginal Resistancein Ontario, 1918–1939Robin Jarvis Brownlie0-19-541784-4 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2003FearlessThe Complete Personal SafetyGuide for WomenPaul Henry Danylewich0-8020-8112-6 / £14.00 / $25.50/ 2001Figured WorldsOntological Obstacles inIntercultural RelationsEdited by John Clammer, SylviePoirier, and Eric Schwimmer0-8020-8749-3 / £40.00 / $60.00/ 200469


UTP CLASSIC BACKLISTThe Fiscal Sustainability <strong>of</strong>Health Care in CanadaThe Romanow Papers, Volume 1Edited by Gregory P. Marchildon,Tom McIntosh, and Pierre-GerlierForest0-8020-8617-9 / £18.00 / $30.95/ 2004The Force <strong>of</strong> CultureVincent Massey and CanadianSovereigntyKaren A. Finlay0-8020-3624-4 / £42.00 / $68.00/ 2004Forever YoungThe ‘Teen-Aging’ <strong>of</strong> ModernCultureMarcel Danesi0-8020-8620-9 / £14.00 / $24.95/ 2003Founding FathersThe Celebration <strong>of</strong> Champlainand Laval in the Streets <strong>of</strong>Quebec, 1878–1908Ronald Rudin0-8020-8479-6 / £15.00 / $30.95/ 2003From Fascism to DemocracyCulture and Politics in the ItalianElection <strong>of</strong> 1948Robert A. Ventresca0-8020-8768-X / £40.00 /$68.00 / 2004Frye and the WordReligious Contexts in theWritings <strong>of</strong> Northrop FryeEdited by Jeffery Donaldson andAlan Mendelson0-8020-8813-9 / £42.00 / $78.00/ 2004Gendered StatesWomen, UnemploymentInsurance, and the PoliticalEconomy <strong>of</strong> the Welfare State inCanada, 1945–1997Ann Porter0-8020-8408-7 / £18.00 / $30.95/ 2003The Genetic ImaginaryDNA in the Canadian CriminalJustice SystemNeil Gerlach0-8020-8572-5 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2004The Girl from God’s CountryNell Shipman and the SilentCinemaKay Armatage0-8020-8542-3 / £20.00 / $32.95/ 2003The Governance <strong>of</strong> HealthCare in CanadaThe Romanow Papers, Volume 3Edited by Tom McIntosh, Pierre-Gerlier Forest, and Gregory P.Marchildon0-8020-8619-5 / £18.00 / $30.95/ 2004Governing from the CentreThe Concentration <strong>of</strong> Power inCanadian PoliticsDonald J. Savoie0-8020-8252-1 / £18.95 / $32.95/ 1999Gramsci’s Politics <strong>of</strong> LanguageEngaging the Bakhtin Circle andthe Frankfurt SchoolPeter Ives0-8020-3756-9 / £32.00 / $53.00/ 2004‘A Great Effusion <strong>of</strong> Blood’?Interpreting Medieval ViolenceEdited by Mark D. Meyerson,Daniel Thiery, and Oren Falk0-8020-8774-4 / £40.00 / $65.00/ 2004Grettir’s SagaTranslated by Denton Fox andHermann Palsson0-8020-6165-6 / £6.95 / $19.95/ 2001The Growth <strong>of</strong> A la recherchedu temps perduA Chronological Examination <strong>of</strong>Proust’s Manuscripts from 1909to 1914Anthony R. Pugh0-8020-8818-X / £96.00 /$153.00 / 2004The Gutenberg GalaxyThe Making <strong>of</strong> Typographic ManMarshall McLuhan0-8020-6041-2 / £9.95 / $24.95/ 1962Health Care in Canada andthe Process <strong>of</strong> ChangeThe Romanow Papers, Volume 2Edited by Pierre-Gerlier Forest,Gregory P. Marchildon, and TomMcIntosh0-8020-8618-7 / £18.00 / $30.95/ 2004Hebrew SyntaxSecond EditionRonald J. Williams0-8020-2218-9 / £9.75 / $17.95/ 1992Heroines and HistoryRepresentations <strong>of</strong> Madeleine deVerchères and Laura SecordColin M. Coates and CeciliaMorgan0-8020-8330-7 / £18.00 / $30.95/ 2002The Historic ImaginaryPolitics <strong>of</strong> History in Fascist ItalyClaudio Fogu0-8020-8764-7 / £40.00 / $63.00/ 2003Historical Atlas <strong>of</strong> CentralEuropeRevised EditionPaul Robert Magocsi0-8020-8486-9 / $53.00 / 2002Canadian Rights OnlyHistory <strong>of</strong> MedicineA Scandalously ShortIntroductionJacalyn Duffin0-8020-7912-1 / $27.50 / 1999World Rights Less U.K. andEuropeThe House <strong>of</strong> DifferenceCultural Politics and NationalIdentity in CanadaEva Mackey0-8020-8481-8 / £14.00 / $25.95/ 2002How Theatre EducatesConvergences and Counterpointswith Artists, Scholars, andAdvocatesEdited by Kathleen Gallagher andDavid Booth0-8020-8556-3 / £18.00 / $29.95/ 2003Hrotsvit <strong>of</strong> GandersheimContexts, Affinities, andPerformancesEdited by Phyllis R. Brown, LindaA. McMillin, and Katharina M.Wilson0-8020-8962-3 / £40.00 / $60.00/ 2004Human Rights in anInformation AgeA Philosophical AnalysisGregory J. Walters0-8020-8550-4 / £16.00 / $28.95/ 2001‘I Have Been Waiting’Race and U.S. Higher EducationJennifer S. Simpson0-8020-8569-5 / £15.00 / $27.95/ 2003The Idea <strong>of</strong> a ColonyCross-culturalism in ModernPoetryEdward Marx0-8020-8799-X / £32.00 /$50.00 / 2004The Illuminated PageTen Centuries <strong>of</strong> ManuscriptPainting in The British LibraryJanet Backhouse0-8020-4346-1 / $42.95 / 1997North and South AmericanRights OnlyImagining LondonPostcolonial Fiction and theTransnational MetropolisJohn Clement Ball0-8020-4496-4 / £28.00 / $45.00/ 2004Industrial SunsetThe Making <strong>of</strong> North America’sRust Belt, 1969–1984Steven High0-8020-8528-8 / £18.00 / $30.95/ 2003Insurance as GovernanceRichard V. Ericson, Aaron Doyle,and Dean Barry0-8020-8574-1 / £22.50 / $38.00/ 2003IntersticesStudies in Middle English andAnglo-Latin Texts in Honour <strong>of</strong>A.G. RiggEdited by Richard Firth Green andLinne R. Mooney0-8020-8743-4 / £32.00 / $53.00/ 2004Introduction to Psychology andLawCanadian PerspectivesEdited by Regina A. Schuller andJames R.P. Ogl<strong>of</strong>f0-8020-4275-9 / £30.00 / $55.00/ 2001Irish TravellersRacism and the Politics <strong>of</strong>CultureJane Helleiner0-8020-8628-4 / £15.00 / $27.95/ 2000Israel, Diaspora, and theRoutes <strong>of</strong> National BelongingJasmin Habib0-8020-8510-5 / £18.00 / $27.50/ 200470


UTP CLASSIC BACKLISTItalian ModernismItalian Culture betweenDecadentism and Avant-GardeEdited by Luca Somigli and MarioMoroni0-8020-8602-0 / £25.00 / $39.95/ 2004Italo Calvino and the Compass<strong>of</strong> LiteratureEugenio Bolongaro0-8020-8763-9 / £32.00 / $53.00/ 2003Jacob Burckhart’s Social andPolitical ThoughtRichard Sigurdson0-8020-4780-7 / £32.00 / $55.00/ 2004Justin and Pompeius TrogusA Study <strong>of</strong> the Language <strong>of</strong>Justin’s Epitome <strong>of</strong> TrogusJ.C. Yardley0-8020-8766-3 / £42.00 / $98.00/ 2003Land Use Planning Made EasySecond EditionHok-Lin Leung0-8020-8552-0 / £20.00 / $32.95/ 2003The Law and Economics <strong>of</strong>Canadian Competition PolicyMichael J. Trebilcock, Ralph A.Winter, Paul Collins, and EdwardIacobucci0-8020-8612-8 / £55.00 / $88.00/ 2002Law and MoralityReadings in Legal Philosophy,Second EditionEdited by David Dyzenhaus andArthur Ripstein0-8020-8447-8 / £26.00 / $50.00/ 2001The LawmakersJudicial Power and the Shaping <strong>of</strong>Canadian FederalismJohn T. Saywell0-8020-8656-X / £20.00 /$32.95 / 2002Legitimizing the ArtistManifesto Writing and EuropeanModernism, 1885–1915Luca Somigli0-8020-3761-5 / £35.00 / $55.00/ 2003Liberals at the BorderWe Stand on Guard for Whom?Lloyd Axworthy0-8020-8593-8 / £8.00 / $12.95/ 2004The Lindisfarne GospelsMichelle Brown0-8020-8597-0 / $45.00 / 2003North and South AmericanRights OnlyLittere BaronumThe Earliest Cartulary <strong>of</strong> theCounts <strong>of</strong> ChampagneEdited by Theodore Evergates0-8020-8762-0 / £32.00 / $53.00/ 2003The Lonergan ReaderEdited by Mark D. Morelli andElzabeth A. Morelli0-8020-7648-3 / £26.00 / $42.95/ 1997Love, Hate, and Fear inCanada’s Cold WarEdited by Richard Cavell0-8020-8500-8 / £15.00 / $24.95/ 2004Marian EngelA Life in LettersEdited by Christl Verduyn andKathleen Garay0-8020-3687-2 / £25.00 / $40.00/ 2004Marriage <strong>of</strong> MindsIsabel and Oscar Skelton ReinventingCanadaTerry Crowley0-8020-7902-4 / £20.00 / $32.95/ 2003McLuhan in SpaceA Cultural GeographyRichard Cavell0-8020-8658-6 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2002Media Violence and its Effecton AggressionAssessing the Scientific EvidenceJonathan L. Freedman0-8020-8425-7 / £15.00 / $27.95/ 2002The Medieval GardenSylvia Landsberg0-8020-8660-8 / $24.95 / 2003North American Rights OnlyMedieval VirginitiesEdited by Anke Bernau, SarahSalih, and Ruth Evans0-8020-8637-3 / $24.95 / 2003North American Rights OnlyMethod in TheologySecond EditionBernard Lonergan0-8020-6809-X / £13.50 /$26.95 / 1990Mi’kmaq Treaties on TrialHistory, Land, and DonaldMarshall JuniorWilliam C. Wicken0-8020-7665-3 / £18.00 / $30.95/ 2002Modern DramaDefining the FieldEdited by Ric Knowles, JoanneTompkins, and W.B. Worthen0-8020-8621-7 / £18.00 / $30.95/ 2003Money in Their Own NameThe Feminist Voice in PovertyDebate in Canada, 1970–1995Wendy McKeen0-8020-8544-X / £15.00 /$27.95 / 2004The Monstrous Middle AgesEdited by Bettina Bildhauer anRobert Mills0-8020-8667-5 / $21.95 / 2004North American Rights OnlyMoral Objectives, Rules, andthe Forms <strong>of</strong> Social ChangeDavid Braybrooke0-8020-8031-6 / £14.00 / $24.95/ 1998The Music <strong>of</strong> Harry FreedmanGail Dixon0-8020-8964-X / £28.00 /$45.00 / 2004The Myth <strong>of</strong> Print CultureEssays on Evidence, Textuality,and the Bibliographical MethodJoseph A. Dane0-8020-8775-2 / £40.00 / $63.00/ 2003Narratives in the MakingTeaching and Learning atCorktown Community HighSchoolMary Beattie0-8020-8533-4 / £14.00 / $25.95/ 2003NarratologyIntroduction to the Theory <strong>of</strong>Narrative, Second EditionMieke Bal0-8020-7806-0 / £13.00 / $21.95/ 1997Natural Law ModernizedDavid Braybrooke0-8020-8644-6 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2001The New Avant-Garde in ItalyTheoretical Debate and PoeticPracticesJohn Picchione0-8020-8994-1 / £32.00 / $50.00/ 2004Niki GoldschmidtA Life in Canadian MusicGwenlyn Setterfield0-8020-4807-2 / £32.00 / $53.00/ 2003No TrespassingAuthorship, Intellectual PropertyRights, and the Boundaries <strong>of</strong>GlobalizationEva Hemmungs Wirtén0-8020-8608-X / £15.00 /$27.95 / 2004Northrop Frye’s Notebooksand Lectures on the Bible andOther Religious TextsEdited by Robert D. Denham0-8020-3766-6 / £80.00 /$125.00 / 2003Nurturing Hidden Resilience inTroubled YouthMichael Ungar0-8020-8565-2 / £20.00 / $32.95/ 2004Odysseys HomeMapping African-CanadianLiteratureGeorge Elliott Clarke0-8020-8191-6 / £22.50 / $38.95/ 2002Of Philosophers and KingsPolitical Philosophy in Shakespeare’sMacbeth and King LearLeon Harold Craig0-8020-8605-5 / £20.00 / $32.95/ 2001On the Edge <strong>of</strong> EmpireGender, Race, and the Making <strong>of</strong>British Columbia, 1849–1871Adele Perry0-8020-8336-6 / £16.00 / $27.95/ 2001One Hundred Years <strong>of</strong>Canadian CinemaGeorge Melnyk0-8020-8444-3 / £22.50 / $35.00/ 2004Origin Stories in PoliticalThoughtDiscourses on Gender, Power,and CitizenshipJoanne H. Wright0-8020-8812-0 / £32.00 / $50.00/ 200471


UTP CLASSIC BACKLISTThe Other FuturismFuturist Activity in Venice,Padua, and VeronaWillard Bohn0-8020-8816-3 / £32.00 / $50.00/ 2004Oxford (<strong>University</strong> and City)Edited by John Elliott, AlanNelson, Alexandra F. Johnston, andDiana Wyatt0-8020-3905-7 / $300.00 / 2004World Rights Less U.K. andEuropePast FuturesThe Impossible Necessity <strong>of</strong>HistoryGed Martin0-8020-8645-4 / £16.00 / $25.95/ 2004The Patriots and the PeopleThe Rebellion <strong>of</strong> 1837 in RuralLower CanadaAllan Greer0-8020-6930-4 / £12.50 / $22.50/ 1993The People <strong>of</strong> New FranceAllan Greer0-8020-7816-8 / £10.00 / $15.95/ 1997Philosophical and TheologicalPapers 1965–1980Bernard Lonergan. Edited byRobert C. Croken and Robert M.Doran0-8020-8638-1 / £20.00 / $32.95/ 2004Plateaus <strong>of</strong> FreedomNationality, Culture, and StateSecurity in Canada, 1940–1960Mark Kristmanson0-19-541803-4 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2003Pleyn DelitMedieval Cookery for ModernCooks, Second EditionConstance B. Hieatt, BrendaHosington, and Sharon Butler0-8020-7632-7 / £12.95 / $19.95/ 1996The Politics <strong>of</strong> PopulationState Formation, Statistics, andthe Census <strong>of</strong> Canada,1840–1875Bruce Curtis0-8020-8585-7 / £20.00 / $32.95/ 2001The Politics <strong>of</strong> PublicManagementThe HRDC Audit <strong>of</strong> Grants andContributionsDavid A. Good0-8020-8587-3 / £15.00 / $27.95/ 2003The Politics <strong>of</strong> the Visible inAsian North AmericanNarrativesEleanor Ty0-8020-8604-7 / £15.00 / $24.95/ 2004Power SwitchEnergy Regulatory Governance inthe Twenty-First CenturyG. Bruce Doern and MonicaGattinger0-8020-8536-9 / £15.00 / $24.95/ 2003Proust and EmotionThe Importance <strong>of</strong> Affect in A larecherche du temps perduInge Crosman Wimmers0-8020-8727-2 / £35.00 / $58.00/ 2003Questions <strong>of</strong> TraditionEdited by Mark Salber Phillipsand Gordon Schochet0-8020-8272-6 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2004Ragas <strong>of</strong> LongingThe Poetry <strong>of</strong> Michael OndaatjeSam Solecki0-8020-8543-1 / £14.00 / $24.95/ 2003The RebelsA Brotherhood <strong>of</strong> Outlaw BikersDaniel R. Wolf0-8020-7363-8 / £13.00 / $24.95/ 1991Reference Sources forCanadian Literary StudiesJoseph Jones0-8020-8740-X / £80.00 /$128.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Reflections on Native-Newcomer RelationsSelected EssaysJ.R. Miller0-8020-8669-1 / £18.00 / $27.95/ 2004The Reinvention <strong>of</strong> IgnazioSiloneElizabeth Leake0-8020-8767-1 / £32.00 / $53.00/ 2003Responding to Youth Crime inCanadaAnthony Doob and Carla Cesaroni0-8020-8624-1 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2004Revenge <strong>of</strong> the WindigoThe Construction <strong>of</strong> the Mindand Mental Health <strong>of</strong> NorthAmerican Aboriginal PeoplesJames B. Waldram0-8020-8600-4 / £15.00 / $32.95/ 2004A Rhetoric <strong>of</strong> the DecameronMarilyn Migiel0-8020-8594-6 / £15.00 / 24.95/ 2003Risk and MoralityEdited by Richard V. Ericson andAaron Doyle0-8020-8563-6 / £22.50 / $38.00/ 2003The Rites <strong>of</strong> MenManhood, Politics, and theCulture <strong>of</strong> SportVarda Burstyn0-8020-7725-0 / £14.95 / $30.50/ 1999The Rule <strong>of</strong> the AdmiralsLaw, Custom, and NavalGovernment in Newfoundland,1699–1832Jerry Bannister0-8020-8613-6 / £22.50 / $35.95/ 2003Rulers and RuledAn Introduction to ClassicalPolitical TheoryIrving M. Zeitlin0-8020-7877-X / £13.00 /$19.95 / 1996Russian Literature, 1995–2002On the Threshold <strong>of</strong> the NewMilleniumN.N. Shneidman0-8020-8670-5 / £18.00 / $27.95/ 2004Safe HavenThe Story <strong>of</strong> a Shelter forHomeless WomenRae Bridgman0-8020-8084-7 / £14.00 / $24.95/ 2003Scenography in CanadaSelected DesignersNatalie Rewa0-8020-8554-7 / £40.00 / $63.00/ 2004Science Research at theFederal Level in CanadaHistory, Research Activities, andPublicationsBrian Wilks0-8020-8811-2 / £70.00 /$113.00 / 2004Scribes and IlluminatorsChristopher de Hamel0-8020-7707-2 / $24.95 / 1992North American Rights OnlySearching ShakespeareStudies in Culture and AuthorityDerek Cohen0-8020-8778-7 / £32.00 / $53.00/ 2003Seeing Through the VeilOptical Theory and MedievalAllegorySuzanne Conklin Akbari0-8020-3605-8 / £42.00 / $65.00/ 2004Sex Crimes, Honour, and theLaw in Early Modern SpainVizcaya, 1528–1735Renato Barahona0-8020-3694-5 / £32.00 / $63.00/ 2003Sexuality and CitizenshipMetamorphosis in ElizabethanErotic VerseJim Ellis0-8020-8735-3 / £35.00 / $58.00/ 2003Shakespeare in theUndiscovered BournLes Kurbas, UkrainianModernism, and Early SovietCultural PoliticsIrena R. Makaryk0-8020-8849-X / £32.00 /$58.00 / 2004The Shape <strong>of</strong> the City<strong>Toronto</strong> Struggles with ModernPlanningJohn Sewell0-8020-7409-X / £13.00 /$20.95 / 1993The Shifting Foundations <strong>of</strong>Modern Nation StatesRealignments <strong>of</strong> BelongingEdited by Sima Godfrey and FrankUnger0-8020-8394-3 / £14.00 / $21.95/ 200472


UTP CLASSIC BACKLISTShingwauk’s VisionA History <strong>of</strong> Native ResidentialSchoolsJ.R. Miller0-8020-7858-3 / £20.00 / $32.95/ 1996Should We Worry AboutFamily Change?Jane Lewis0-8020-8746-9 / £25.00 / $43.00/ 2003The Sikh Diaspora inVancouverThree Generations AmidTradition, Modernity, andMulticulturalismKamala Elizabeth Nayar0-8020-8631-4 / £17.00 / $26.95/ 2004Sisters or Strangers?Immigrant, Ethnic, andRacialized Women in CanadianHistoryEdited by Marlene Epp, FrancaIacovetta, and Frances Swyripa0-8020-8609-8 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2004Skyscrapers Hide the HeavensA History <strong>of</strong> Indian-WhiteRelations in Canada, Third EditionJ.R. Miller0-8020-8153-3 / £18.00 / $34.95/ 2000The Small Details <strong>of</strong> LifeTwenty Diaries by Women inCanada, 1830–1996Edited by Kathryn Carter0-8020-8159-2 / £15.00 / $37.95/ 2002Spying 101The RCMP’s Secret Activities atCanadian Universities,1917–1997Steve Hewitt0-8020-4149-3 / £20.00 / $38.00/ 2002Staying Human DuringResidency TrainingThird EditionAllan D. Peterkin0-8020-8615-2 / £11.75 / $18.95/ 2004The Struggle for Canadian SportBruce Kidd0-8020-7664-5 / £14.00 / $23.95/ 1996Surgical LimitsThe Life <strong>of</strong> Gordon MurrayShelley McKellar0-8020-3739-9 / £28.00 / $48.00/ 2003TattooedThe Sociogenesis <strong>of</strong> a Body ArtMichael Atkinson0-8020-8568-7 / £18.00 / $29.95/ 2003These Strange CriminalsAn Anthology <strong>of</strong> Prison Memoirsby Conscientious Objectors fromthe Great War to the Cold WarEdited by Peter Brock0-8020-8661-6 / £28.00 / $45.00/ 2004The 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 / $16.95/ 2003<strong>Toronto</strong>, No Mean CityThird Edition with New EssaysEric Arthur. 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JOURNALSCanadian Historical ReviewThe Canadian Historical Review has provided generations<strong>of</strong> Canadians with an analysis <strong>of</strong> the ideas,people, and events that have molded Canadiansociety and institutions into their present state. For86 years, Canada’s past has been examined from avast and multicultural perspective to provide a thoroughassessment <strong>of</strong> all influences.As a source for penetrating, authoritative scholarship,giving the sort <strong>of</strong> in-depth background necessaryfor understanding the course <strong>of</strong> daily events – both forCanadians themselves and for those with an interestin the nation’s affairs – the CHR is without rival.The CHR also provides comprehensive reviews<strong>of</strong> books, websites, and video to interest all levels <strong>of</strong>Canadian historians. Each issue also provides anextensive bibliography <strong>of</strong> recently published historicalwritings in all areas <strong>of</strong> Canadian history.Published quarterlyCanadian Theatre ReviewThe Canadian Theatre Review is the major magazine<strong>of</strong> record for Canadian theatre. It interests awide spectrum <strong>of</strong> the theatre community in Canada– performers, directors, pr<strong>of</strong>essionals <strong>of</strong> all kindsinvolved in practice, academics, teachers, critics,and the theatre-going public. The magazine is committedto excellence in the critical analysis andinnovative coverage <strong>of</strong> current developments inCanadian theatre. It introduces new artists, publishingat least one significant new playscript ineach issue, and it provides a forum for the nationaldiscussion <strong>of</strong> new directions and new projects intheatre. Published quarterlyJournal <strong>of</strong> Scholarly<strong>Publishing</strong>Journal <strong>of</strong> Scholarly <strong>Publishing</strong> addresses the age-oldproblems in publishing as well as the new challengesresulting from changes in technology andfunding. Some articles suggest ways to get effectivelypublished in books and journals, while othersaddress such topics as editorial and publishing policy,computer applications, electronic publishing,effective marketing, and business management. Inserving the wide-ranging interests <strong>of</strong> the internationalacademic publishing community, Journal <strong>of</strong>Scholarly <strong>Publishing</strong> provides a balanced look at theissues and concerns – from solutions to the everydayproblems to commentary on the philosophicalquestions at large. Published quarterly<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>Quarterly<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> Quarterly publishes interdisciplinaryarticles and reviews <strong>of</strong> international reputein English and French. This interdisciplinaryapproach provides a depth and quality to the journalthat attracts both general readers and specialistsfrom across the humanities.The ‘Letters in Canada’ issue, published eachwinter, contains reviews <strong>of</strong> the previous year’s workin Canadian fiction, poetry, drama, translations,and works in the humanities. Many <strong>of</strong> the recentissues have included over 650 pages <strong>of</strong> the year’swork in creative writing and scholarship! Publishedquarterly76


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INDEXAAccounting forCulture..................49Acute Resuscitation andCrisis Management 58Adages III iv 1 to IV ii100.......................28Aginam, Obiji<strong>of</strong>or ....57Andrew, Caroline......49Aretino, Pietro ..........36Aretino’s Dialogues......36As for Sinclair Ross.......6Aspiring to theLandscape..............25Audience <strong>of</strong> One, An ..19BBaby Boomer HealthDynamics ..............58Baca, Murtha ............35Badia, Janet...............26Bailey, GauvinAlexander................9Bantjes, Rod .............52Barker, Nicolas..........17Barman, Jean ............15Bates, Christina.........14Beavon, Daniel J.K. ....5Bejczy, István ............29Bernard Shaw andNancy Astor...........23Bernier, Luc ..............45Bettella, Patrizia ........36Biro, Andrew ............50Blodgett, E.D............16B<strong>of</strong>fey, Julia...............17Bohn, Willard...........37Breton, Rob ..............20Brownsey, Keith ........45Building NewBridges.................41Burdon, Lynn ...........61Butler, Marian...........62Buzwell, Greg............10CCalling Power toAccount .................57Canada and the FirstWorld War...............4Canadian Annual Review<strong>of</strong> Politics and PublicAffairs 1999 ..........49Canadian Books inPrint <strong>2005</strong> ............62Canadian InsuranceClaims Directory<strong>2005</strong>.....................62Canadian ModernistsMeet, The..............22Canadian Who’s Who<strong>2005</strong>.....................60Captivating Subjects...21Carmichael, Isla ........47Cockfield, Arthur J. ..45Collective Actionand Radicalism inBrazil....................50ContemporaryAntisemitism............3ContinentalizingCanada .................44Controversies withAlberto Pio ............29Controversies withEdward Lee ...........29Cooley, Dennis .........54Cormack, Patricia .....16CorrespondingInfluence................23Creating Knowledge,StrengtheningNations .................47Cross Culture andFaith .....................39Cullum, Patricia........31DDemers, Patricia........18DenaturalizingEcological Politics...50Dickson-Gilmore,Jane ......................55Dlamini, SibusisiweNombuso..............53Dodd, Dianne...........14Dong, Linfu..............39Downtown Canada....22Drysdall, Denis L......28Duffin, Jacalyn............2Duquette, Michel......50Dyzenhaus, David.....57EEdwards, A.S.G. .17, 33Edwards, Justin D.....22Eisenbichler, Konrad.37Empire <strong>of</strong> Mind, The....1English Biography inthe SeventeenthCentury.................19Esterhammer, Angela 24Executive Styles inCanada .................45Eye <strong>of</strong> the Heart .........43FFall <strong>of</strong> an Icon, The....59Fedak, Janos..............42Five-Part Invention ....16GGadd, Ian..................33Gaffield, Chad ..........41Galdino, Maurilio.....50Galicia ......................39Gattinger, Monica.....49Gillespie, Alexandra ..33Global HealthGovernance............57Gospels and Grit ........20Governing Education..46Grant, John N. .........28Griffiths, Antony ......27HHalf-Lives <strong>of</strong> PatLowther, The ...........7Halkes, Petra.............25Handley, Miriam.........7Hann, Christopher....39Harbus, Antonina .....32Harris, Steven J...........9Haslam, Jason ...........21Hidden in Plain Sight ..5Hintz, Carrie.............19Holiness and Masculinityin Medieval Europe..31Howlett, Michael......45Hubbard, Jennifer M..41IImproved Earth..........52Impulse Archaeology ...11Inwood, Gregory J. ...44Irvine, Dean..............22Italian Futurist Poetry 37Italian RenaissanceSextet, An..............35Ivison, Douglas .........22JJan<strong>of</strong>f, Douglas Victor54Jazz Age Catholicism ....8Jeannotte, M. Sharon49Jesuits, II, The..............9John Stow (1525–1605)and the Making <strong>of</strong>the English Past......33Jones, Glen A............47KKennedy, T. Frank.......9Keshen, Jeff...............41LLa Prairie, Carol........5578


INDEXLawless, Andrew .......13Levin, Benjamin........46Levy, Charmain.........50Lewis, Katherine J.....31Life <strong>of</strong> St Edmund, Kingand Martyr, The ....33Living in the Labyrinth<strong>of</strong> Technology .........12Lord ChamberlainRegrets…, The .........7Lovers and Livers .........2Lumley, Elizabeth......60MMacKenzie, David ......4Magocsi, Paul Robert39Marques-Pereira,Bérengère..............50Marrus, Michael R......3Martines, Lauro ........35McCarney, Patricia L. .47McKitterick, David...30Meadows, Jack ..........17Minerva’s Aviary ........43Minnich, Nelson H. .29Moran, Mayo............57Morra, Linda ............23Morrison, Ray...........20Mutimer, David ........49NNAFTA Tax Law andPolicy ....................45Narrative Settlements..21Neilipovitz, David T..58Nesbitt, JenniferPoulos...................21New Global Governance,The .......................48New Index <strong>of</strong> MiddleEnglish Verse, A......17Newhouse, David R....5Nicholson, Steve .........7Northrop Frye on Miltonand Blake..............24Northrop Frye’s Writingson the Eighteenthand NineteenthCenturies...............24OÓ Carragáin, Éamonn.31O’Malley, John W. ......9On all Frontiers .........14On GlobalGovernance............48Ontario Legal Directory<strong>2005</strong>.....................61P‘Paper-contestations’ andTextual Communitiesin England ............27Paquet, Gilles............48Paris, Joel ..................59Pension Power ............47Penslar, Derek J...........3Peroni, Gwen............62Perrier, Sylvie ............41Petacco, Arrigo..........37Petrilli, Susan ............25Phegley, Jennifer .......26Phillips, Jane E..........29Pink Blood.................54Plato’s Sun .................13Plokhy, Serhii............38Ponzio, Augusto........25Poole, Russell ............32Prints for Books..........27Pritchard, Allan.........19Pr<strong>of</strong>essionalization <strong>of</strong>History in EnglishCanada, The .........40RRaes, Florence...........50Reading Women .........26Recognizing AboriginalTitle......................56Reid, John G.............40Re-imagining Policing inCanada .................54Ritual and the Rood ...31Rosenthal, Margaret..36Rosenthal, Raymond.36Rousseau, Nicole.......14Rummel, Erika..........29Russell, Peter H. .......56SSaints in MedievalManuscripts...........10Salusinszky, Imre.......24Sauer, Elizabeth.........27Schloesser, Stephen .....8Science on the Scales, A .41Semiotics Unbounded .25Sheerin, Daniel J.......29Shellard, Dominic.......7Skolnik, Michael L....47Slater, John G. ..........43Smile in His Mind’s Eye,A...........................20Sociology and MassCulture..................16Sociology and theSacred ...................51Sojourning Sisters .......15Stein, Janice Gross ......3Stouck, David .............6Strangelove, Michael ...1Straw, Will ................49Studies in HellenisticArchitecture ...........42Sullivan, Rebecca ........8Sullivan, William F....43Sumner, Jennifer .......52Sustainability and theCivil Commons......52TThibault,Jean-François ........48Tragedy Revealed, A....37Treasures <strong>of</strong> the BritishLibrary..................17Trinity Apocalypse,The .......................30Turenne Sjolander,Claire....................48UUgly Woman, The ......36Unmaking ImperialRussia....................38VVanderburg,Willem H. ............12Verbal Encounters.......32Victorian Scientist,The .......................17Viola Florence Barnes .40Visual Habits...............8Voyageur, Cora J.........5WWearing, J.P. .............23Wiesenthal, Christine .7‘Will the Circle beUnbroken?’ ............55Winter, Frederick E...42Wister, Andrew V......58Women’s Writing inEnglish ..................18Wright, Donald ........40Wright, Julia M.........21YYouth and IdentityPolitics in SouthAfrica....................53ZZondervan, AntoniusA.W. .....................5179


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