Please find our faculty publications in reverse chronological order below.
Books
The Political Power of Visual Art Liberty, Solidarity, and Rights
Daniel Herwitz
Visual art has a ubiquitous political cast today. But which politics? Daniel Herwitz seeks clarity on the various things meant by politics, and how we can evaluate their presumptions or aspirations in contemporary art.
Drawing on the work of William Kentridge, drenched in violence, race, and power, and the artworld immolations of Banksy, Herwitz's examples range from the NEA 4 and the question of offense-as-dissent, to the community driven work of George Gittoes, the identity politics of contemporary American art and (for contrast with the power of visual media) literature written...
Capture: American Pursuits and the Making of a New Animal Condition
Antoine Traisnel
Reading canonical works of the nineteenth century through the modern transformation of human-animal relations
From Audubon’s still-life watercolors to Muybridge’s trip-wire locomotion studies, from Melville’s epic chases to Poe’s detective hunts, the nineteenth century witnessed a surge of artistic, literary, and scientific treatments that sought to “capture” the truth of animals at the historical moment when animals were receding from everyday view. In Capture, Antoine Traisnel reveals how the drive to contain and record disappearing animals was a central feature and organizing pursuit...
See MoreCity of Champions: A History of Triumph and Defeat in Detroit
Silke-Maria Weineck and Stefan Szymanski
The changing fortunes of Detroit, told through the lens of the city’s major sporting events, by the bestselling author of Soccernomics, and a prizewinning cultural critic.
From Ty Cobb and Hank Greenberg to the Bad Boys, from Joe Louis and Gordie Howe to the Malice at the Palace, City of Champions explores the history of Detroit through the stories of its most gifted athletes and most celebrated teams, linking iconic events in the history of Motown sports to the city’s shifting fortunes.
In an era when many teams have left rustbelt cities to relocate elsewhere, Detroit has held...
See MoreAbsinthe: World Literature in Translation: Volume 26: Vibrate! Resounding the Frequencies of Africana in Translation
Frieda Ekotto, Imani Cooper, and Xiaoxi Zhang
Absinthe 26: VIBRATE! contemplates the implications of Africa and its diasporas in translation, moving through various temporalities and mediums and languages, including Lugosa, Kamba, English, French, Swahili, Arabic, Adinkra Symbols, visual codes, and digital languages.
Publisher: Michigan Publishing Services
Year of publication: 2020
Life in Citations: Biblical Narratives and Contemporary Hebrew Culture (Routledge Studies in Comparative Literature)
Ruth Tsoffar
In her latest book, Life in Citiations: Biblical Narratives and Contemporary Hebrew Culture, Ruth Tsoffar studies several key biblical narratives that figure prominently in Israeli culture. Life in Citations provides a close reading of these narratives, along with works by contemporary Hebrew Israeli artists that respond to them. Together they read as a modern commentary on life with text, or even life under the rule of its verses, to answer questions like How can we explain the fascination and intense identification of Israelis with the Bible? What does...
See MoreEva Palmer Sikelianos: A Life in Ruins
Artemis Leontis
The first biography of a visionary twentieth-century American performer who devoted her life to the revival of ancient Greek culture
This is the first biography to tell the fascinating story of Eva Palmer Sikelianos (1874-1952), an American actor, director, composer, and weaver best known for reviving the Delphic Festivals. Yet, as Artemis Leontis reveals, Palmer's most spectacular performance was her daily revival of ancient Greek life. For almost half a century, dressed in handmade Greek tunics and sandals, she sought to make modern life freer and more beautiful through a creative ...
See MoreDon't Whisper Too Much and Portrait of a Young Artiste from Bona Mbella
Frieda Ekotto translated by Corine Tachtiris
Don’t Whisper Too Much was the first work of fiction by an African writer to present love stories between African women in a positive light. Bona Mbella is the second. In presenting the emotional and romantic lives of gay, African women, Ekotto comments upon larger issues that affect these women, including Africa as a post-colonial space, the circulation of knowledge, and the question of who writes history. In recounting the beauty and complexity of relationships between women who love women, Ekotto inscribes these stories within African history, both past, and present. Don’t Whisper Too Much...
See MoreIt's Football, Not Soccer (and Vice Versa): On the History, Emotion, and Ideology Behind One of the Internet's Most Ferocious Debates
Silke-Maria Weineck and Stefan Szymanski
Every four years, when the World Cup rolls around, the internet yells at the US that "it's football, not soccer." This short and light-hearted book lays out the contours of the debate, delves into the history of the word “football” and the emergence of the word “soccer,” explores some 20th-century data on the distribution of the two words and the surprisingly recent origin of the great schism, tells you about all the words the world actually uses to describe the game, gives you a glimpse of the convoluted fate of the word soccer in Australia, and tries to make sense of it all. Stefan...
See MoreSheppard Lee, écrit par lui-même
Robert Montgomery Bird, translated by Antoine Traisnel
Qui n'a jamais rêvé d'être quelqu'un d'autre ? D'échanger sa place avec un autre ? Debut du XIXe siècle, Philadelphie : un jeune américain, Sheppard Lee, se découvre capable de migrer de corps en corps : il sera un riche, un pauvre, un fou, un esclave. et ses multiples réincarnations vont peu à peu dessiner le portrait de la société américaine, une société folle et cruelle.
Aesthetics, Arts, and Politics in a Global World
Daniel Herwitz
A different set of purposes define culture today than those that preoccupied the world in the immediate decades of decolonization. Focusing on art and music in diverse parts of the world, Daniel Herwitz explores a world that has largely shifted from the earlier days of nationalism, decolonization and cultural exclusion, to one of global markets and networks.
Using examples from India and Mexico to South Africa, Australia and China, Herwitz argues that the cultural politics and art being produced in these places are now post- postcolonial. Where the postcolonial downplayed formerly...
See MoreIn the Skin of a Beast: SOVEREIGNTY AND ANIMALITY IN MEDIEVAL FRANCE
Peggy McCracken
In medieval literature, when humans and animals meet—whether as friends or foes—issues of mastery and submission are often at stake. In the Skin of a Beast shows how the concept of sovereignty comes to the fore in such narratives, reflecting larger concerns about relations of authority and dominion at play in both human-animal and human-human interactions.
Peggy McCracken discusses a range of literary texts and images from medieval France, including romances in which animal skins appear in symbolic displays of power, fictional explorations of the wolf’s desire for human domestication...
See MoreLadies' Greek: Victorian Translations of Tragedy
Yopie Prins
In Ladies' Greek, Yopie Prins illuminates a culture of female classical literacy that emerged in the second half of the nineteenth century, during the formation of women's colleges on both sides of the Atlantic. Why did Victorian women of letters desire to learn ancient Greek, a "dead" language written in a strange alphabet and no longer spoken? In the words of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, they wrote "some Greek upon the margin—lady's Greek, without the accents." Yet in the margins of classical scholarship, they discovered other ways of knowing, and not knowing, Greek. Mediating...
See MoreOur Ancient Wars: Rethinking War through the Classics
Victor Caston and Silke-Maria Weineck, editors
Many famous texts from classical antiquity—by historians like Thucydides, tragedians like Sophocles and Euripides, the comic poet Aristophanes, the philosopher Plato, and, above all, Homer—present powerful and profound accounts of wartime experience, both on and off the battlefield. These texts also provide useful ways of thinking about the complexities and consequences of wars throughout history, and the concept of war broadly construed, providing vital new perspectives on conflict in our own era.
Our Ancient Wars features essays by top scholars from across academic disciplines—classicists...
See MoreDonner le change: L'impensé animal
Thangam Ravindranathan, Antoine Traisnel
Avant de passer dans le langage courant, « donner le change » désignait la ruse par laquelle un cerf traqué, brouillant la voie, en faisait courir un autre à sa place. Le temps d’une indistinction des corps, la proie se donnait en autre et par là s’échappait. Et si ce vertige au moment de la saisie, ce drame hallucinatoire de la scène de chasse animait encore secrètement nos textes ? À la pensée de Derrida viennent répondre ici Poe, Melville, Flaubert, Michaux, Cendrars et les archives de la vénerie. Aujourd’hui que « donner le change » n’est plus que métaphore, retrouver son sens oublié c’est...
See MoreLost in the Shadow of the Word: Space, Time, and Freedom in Interwar Eastern Europe
Benjamin Paloff
2018 AATSEEL Prize for Best Book in Literary Scholarship
Scholars of modernism have long addressed how literature, painting, and music reflected the radical reconceptualization of space and time in the early twentieth century—a veritable revolution in both physics and philosophy that has been characterized as precipitating an “epistemic trauma” around the world. In this wide-ranging study, Benjamin Paloff contends that writers in Central and Eastern Europe felt this impact quite distinctly from their counterparts in Western Europe. For the latter, the destabilization of traditional notions...
See MoreRethinking African Cultural Production
Kenneth W. Harrow and Frieda Ekotto (editors)
Frieda Ekotto, Kenneth W. Harrow, and an international group of scholars set forth new understandings of the conditions of contemporary African cultural production in this forward-looking volume. Arguing that it is impossible to understand African cultural productions without knowledge of the structures of production, distribution, and reception that surround them, the essays grapple with the shifting notion of what “African” means when many African authors and filmmakers no longer live or work in Africa. While the arts continue to flourish in Africa, addressing questions about marginalization...
See MoreAnd His Orchestra
Benjamin Paloff
In his second collection, Benjamin Paloff examines how we relate to others by relating to ourselves, and vice-versa—how the speech that runs through our heads as we run errands, wash the dishes, or brush our teeth is always and inescapably in conversation with those to whom we owe an unpayable debt. In poems that orchestrate imaginal dialogues with absent friends, And His Orchestra traces the inner experience of attachment, intimacy, and separation.
Publication Information:
Publisher: Carnegie Mellon
Year of Publication: 2015
Location: Pittsburgh, PA
See MoreThe Game for Real
Richard Weiner, Benjamin Paloff
The book opens with The Game of Quartering, where an unnamed hero discovers his double. Surely, he reasons, if he has a double, then his double must also have a double too, and so on . . . What follows is a grotesquely hilarious, snowballing spree through Paris, where real-life landmarks disintegrate into theaters, puppet shows, and, ultimately, a funeral.
Following this, The Game for the Honor of Payback neatly inverts things: instead of a branching, expanding adventure, a man known as “Shame” embarks on a quest that collapses inward. Slapped by someone he despises, he launches a doomed...
See MoreHawthorne: Blasted allegories
Antoine Traisnel
In Hawthorne: Blasted Allegories, Traisnel asks why Hawthorne risked literary marginalization to embrace allegory at a time when a prevalent romantic dogma had declared this rhetorical mode obsolete, even unliterary. To borrow from Deleuze, allegory is not a “failed symbol” but a specific “power of figuration” that both conjures and contests the one-to-one correspondence between sign and signified that the detractors of allegory have condemned. Applying the fourfold structure of medieval allegoresis to Hawthorne’s four major works, Blasted Allegories attempts to reanimate the dormant critical...
See MoreThe Tragedy of Fatherhood: King Laius and the Politics of Paternity in the West
Silke-Maria Weineck
Winner of the 2014 Aldo and Jeanne Scaglione Prize for Comparative Literary Studies, awarded by the Modern Language Association.
Theories of power have always been intertwined with theories of fatherhood: paternity is the oldest and most persistent metaphor of benign, legitimate rule. The paternal trope gains its strength from its integration of law, body, and affect—in the affirmative model of fatherhood, the biological father, the legal father, and the father who protects and nurtures his children are one and the same, and in a complex system of mutual interdependence, the father...
See MoreThe Lyric Theory Reader: A Critical Anthology
Yopie Prins
The Lyric Theory Reader collects major essays on the modern idea of lyric, made available here for the first time in one place. Representing a wide range of perspectives in Anglo-American literary criticism from the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, the collection as a whole documents the diversity and energy of ongoing critical conversations about lyric poetry. Virginia Jackson and Yopie Prins frame these conversations with a general introduction, bibliographies for further reading, and introductions to each of the anthology’s ten sections: genre theory, historical models of lyric, New ...
See MoreIn Search of the Christian Buddha: How an Asian Sage Became a Medieval Saint
Donald S. Lopez Jr., Peggy McCracken
The fascinating account of how the story of the Buddha was transformed into the legend of a Christian saint. The tale of St. Josaphat, a prince who gave up his wealth and kingdom to follow Jesus, was widely told and read in the Middle Ages, translated into a dozen languages, and even cited by Shakespeare in The Merchant of Venice. Only in the nineteenth century did scholars note the parallels between the lives of Buddha and Josaphat. In Search of the Christian Buddha traces the Buddha’s story from India to Persia to Jerusalem and then throughout Europe, as it was rewritten by Muslim, Jewish,...
See MoreBarlaam and Josaphat: A Christian Tale of the Buddha
Gui de Cambrai, Peggy McCracken (Translator), Donald S. Lopez Jr. (Introduction)
When his astrologers foretell that his son Josaphat will convert to Christianity, the pagan King Avenir confines him to a palace, allowing him to know only the pleasures of the world, and to see no illness, death, or poverty. Despite the king's precautions, the hermit Barlaam comes to Josaphat and begins to teach the prince Christian beliefs through parables. Josaphat converts to Christianity, angering his father, who tries to win his son back to his religion before he, too, converts. After his father's death, Josaphat renounces the world and lives as a hermit in the wilderness with his teacher...
See MoreThe Sacrificed Body: Balkan Community Building and the Fear of Freedom
Tatjana Aleksic
Tatjana Aleksic examines the widespread use of the sacrificial metaphor in cultural texts and its importance to sustaining communal ideologies in the Balkan region. Aleksic further relates the theme to the sanctioning of ethnic cleansing, rape, and murder in the name of homogeneity and collective identity. She employs cultural theory, sociological analysis, and human rights studies to expose a historical narrative that is predominant regionally, if not globally.
Publication Information:
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
Year of Publication: 2013
... See MoreHeritage, Culture, and Politics in the Postcolony
Daniel Herwitz
The act of remaking one's history into a heritage, a conscientiously crafted narrative placed over the past, is a thriving industry in almost every postcolonial culture. This is surprising, given the tainted role of heritage in so much of colonialism's history. Yet the postcolonial state, like its European predecessor of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, deploys heritage institutions and instruments, museums, courts of law, and universities to empower itself with unity, longevity, exaltation of value, origin, and destiny.
Bringing the eye of a philosopher, the pen of an essayist...
See MoreComparative Early Modernities
David Porter
Recent historical scholarship has shown the way towards a geographically capacious conception of the early modern world. Featuring essays by nine leading scholars of early modern Asia and Europe, Comparative Early Modernities casts aside the legacies of European exceptionalism to reveal the interconnected multiplicity of the early modern world and of the variety of unexpected pathways linking these histories to the evolving modernities of the 21st century. In their fresh and provocative examinations of topics in literature, philosophy, art history, and political economy, the authors transform...
See MoreRace and Sex across the French Atlantic: The Color of Black in Literary, Philosophical and Theater Discourse
Frieda Ekotto
Jean Genet's masterpiece Les Nègres was first published in 1958, in the midst of the Algerian war, and first performed at the Théâtre de Lutèce in Paris in October 1959. Yet even though the play is more than 50 years old, it remains a fundamental contribution to critical race theory, as Genet unequivocally posits that no matter what a black person does or doesn't do, simply to be black in our times is itself a tragedy.
Placing Genet in the context of Negritude movement, Race and Sex across the French Atlantic equally reveals and examines blackness within the African-American dialogue...
The Chinese Taste in Eighteenth-Century England
David Porter
Eighteenth-century consumers in Britain, living in an increasingly globalized world, were infatuated with exotic Chinese and Chinese-styled goods, art and decorative objects. However, they were also often troubled by the alien aesthetic sensibility these goods embodied. This ambivalence figures centrally in the period's experience of China and of contact with foreign countries and cultures more generally. David Porter analyzes the processes by which Chinese aesthetic ideas were assimilated within English culture. Through case studies of individual figures, including William Hogarth and Horace Walpole... See MoreThe Stains of Culture: An Ethno Reading of Karaite Jewish Women
Ruth Tsoffar
A minority within Judaism, the Karaites are known as a ‘reading community’—one that looks to the Bible as the authority in all areas of life, including intimate relations and hygiene. Here Ruth Tsoffar considers how Egyptian Kariates of the San Francisco Bay Area define themselves, within both California culture and Judaism, in terms of the Bible and its bearing on their bodies. Women’s perspectives play a large role in this ethnography; it is their bodies that are especially regulated by rules of cleanliness and purity to the point where their biological cycles—menstruation, procreation, childbirth...
See MoreChuchote Pas Trop
Frieda Ekotto
"Les jeunes filles de Fulani sont enfermées ainsi, parfois pendant des années, dans l'obscurité, jusqu'à leur mariage imposé." A travers des portraits de femmes aux destins rebelles, de conflits de cultures, Frieda Ekotto bouscule les préjugés pour nous proposer une autre vision des rapports humains. Riche de son écriture composite, éclaté, ce récit échappe ainsi aux formes traditionnelles de la narration.
Publication Information:
Publisher: Editions L'Harmattan
Year of Publication: 2005
Location: Paris, France
Ideographia: The Chinese Cipher in Early Modern Europe
David Porter
From the first successful Jesuit mission in 1583 until the disastrous failure of the British trade embassy in 1816, China’s cultural practices transfixed the attention of Western philosophers, theologians, architects, artists, entrepreneurs, and social critics. The direct influences on European culture were many and profound, ranging from Chinese teahouses in European palace gardens to adaptations of Chinese plays for the popular stage, from calls for the restructuring of the civil service on the model of Chinese meritocracy to the espousal of Confucian precepts in the moral education of children...
See MoreThe Abyss Above: Philosophy and Poetic Madness in Plato, Holderlin, and Nietzsche
Silke-Maria Weineck
In The Abyss Above, Silke-Maria Weineck offers the first sustained discussion of the relationship between poetic madness and philosophy. Focusing on the mad poet as a key figure in what Plato called "the ancient quarrel between philosophy and poetry, " Weineck explores key texts from antiquity to modernity in order to understand why we have come to associate art with irrationality. She shows that the philosophy of madness concedes to the mad a privilege that continues to haunt the Western dream of reason, and that the theory of creative madness always strains the discourse on authenticity...
See MoreVictorian Sappho
Yopie Prins
What is Sappho, except a name? Although the Greek archaic lyrics attributed to Sappho of Lesbos survive only in fragments, she has been invoked for many centuries as the original woman poet, singing at the origins of a Western lyric tradition. Victorian Sappho traces the emergence of this idealized feminine figure through reconstructions of the Sapphic fragments in late nineteenth-century England. Yopie Prins argues that the Victorian period is a critical turning point in the history of Sappho's reception; what we now call "Sappho" is in many ways an artifact of Victorian poetics. ...
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