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Fall/Winter 2006 - University of Toronto Press Publishing

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U N I V E R S I T Y O F T O R O N T O P R E S S<br />

FALL WINTER<br />

<strong>2006</strong><br />

Including the British Library and <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa <strong>Press</strong>


U N I V E R S I T Y O F T O R O N T O P R E S S<br />

FALL WINTER<br />

<strong>2006</strong><br />

1 General Interest<br />

10 New in Paperback<br />

14 British Library - Previously Announced<br />

15 History<br />

22 Cultural Studies<br />

26 Italian Studies<br />

29 Book History<br />

32 Literary Studies<br />

35 Medieval & Renaissance Studies<br />

38 MART<br />

39 Classics<br />

40 Philosophy<br />

42 Politics and Policy<br />

45 Criminology & Law<br />

48 Sociology<br />

51 Health Care<br />

52 Education<br />

54 Reference<br />

57 Lexicons <strong>of</strong> Early Modern English<br />

58 UTP Recent Backlist<br />

62 UTP Selected Backlist<br />

66 British Library Selected Backlist<br />

67 <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa <strong>Press</strong> Selected Backlist<br />

68 Journals<br />

70 Index<br />

72 Order Form<br />

Cover and catalogue design by John Beadle. Cover photograph © Royalty-Free/Corbis


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S T<br />

Cinderella Army<br />

The Canadians in Northwest Europe, 1944–1945<br />

Terry Copp<br />

In his controversial and award-winning 2003 book<br />

Fields <strong>of</strong> Fire, Terry Copp <strong>of</strong>fered a stunning reversal<br />

<strong>of</strong> accepted military history, challenging the conventional<br />

view that the Canadian contribution to the<br />

Battle <strong>of</strong> Normandy was a failure. Cinderella Army<br />

continues the story <strong>of</strong> the operations carried out by<br />

the First Canadian Army in the last nine months<br />

<strong>of</strong> the war, and extends the argument developed in<br />

Fields <strong>of</strong> Fire that “the achievement <strong>of</strong> the Allied and<br />

especially the Canadian armies… has been greatly<br />

underrated while the effectiveness <strong>of</strong> the German<br />

army has been greatly exaggerated.” Copp supports<br />

this argument with research conducted on numerous<br />

trips to the battlefields <strong>of</strong> France, Belgium,<br />

Holland and Germany. His detailed knowledge <strong>of</strong><br />

the battlefield terrain, along with contemporary<br />

maps and air photos, allows Copp to explore the<br />

defensive positions that Canadian soldiers were<br />

required to overcome, and to illustrate how impressive<br />

their achievements truly were.<br />

Except for a brief period during the Rhineland<br />

battle, the First Canadian Army was the smallest to<br />

serve under Eisenhower’s command. The Canadian<br />

component <strong>of</strong> that Army never totalled more that<br />

185,000 <strong>of</strong> the four million Allied troops serving<br />

in Northwest Europe. It is, however, evident that<br />

the divisions <strong>of</strong> 2nd Canadian Corps played a role<br />

disproportionate to their numbers. Their contribution<br />

to operations designed to secure the Channel<br />

Ports and open the approaches to Antwerp together<br />

with the battles in the Rhineland place them among<br />

the most heavily committed and sorely tried divisions<br />

in the Allied armies. By the end <strong>of</strong> 1944 3rd<br />

Canadian Division had suffered the highest number<br />

<strong>of</strong> casualties in 21 Army Group with 2nd Canadian<br />

Division ranking a close second. Among armoured<br />

divisions, 4th Canadian was at the top <strong>of</strong> the list<br />

as was 2nd Canadian Armoured Brigade among<br />

the independent tank brigades. Overall Canadian<br />

casualties were twenty percent higher than in comparable<br />

British formations. This was a direct result<br />

<strong>of</strong> the much greater number <strong>of</strong> days that Canadian<br />

units were involved in close combat.<br />

As passionately written and compellingly argued<br />

as its precursor, Cinderella Army is both an important<br />

bookend to Copp’s earlier work, and stands on<br />

it’s own as a significant contribution to Canadian<br />

military history.<br />

Terry Copp is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus <strong>of</strong> in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> History at Wilfrid Laurier <strong>University</strong><br />

and director <strong>of</strong> the Laurier Centre for Military<br />

Strategic and Disarmament Studies.<br />

Of related interest:<br />

Fields <strong>of</strong> Fire<br />

The Canadians in Normandy<br />

Terry Copp<br />

0-8020-3780-1 / 978-0-8020-3780-0<br />

£20.00 / $30.95 / 2003<br />

Canada’s Army<br />

Waging War and Keeping the Peace<br />

J.L. Granatstein<br />

0-8020-8696-9 / 978-0-8020-8696-9<br />

£20.00 / $29.95 / 2002<br />

CANADIAN HISTORY / MILITARY STUDIES<br />

Approx. 392 pp / 6 x 9 / September <strong>2006</strong><br />

32 illustrations and 27 Maps<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3925-1 / 978-08020-3925-5<br />

£28.00 $45.00 T<br />

Donald L. Grant/Library and Archives Canada/PA 130039.<br />

1


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S T<br />

Gangster Priest<br />

The Italian American Cinema <strong>of</strong> Martin Scorsese<br />

Robert Casillo<br />

TORONTO ITALIAN STUDIES<br />

Widely acclaimed as America’s greatest living film<br />

director, Martin Scorsese is also, some argue, the<br />

pre-eminent Italian American artist. Although he<br />

has treated various subjects in over three decades,<br />

his most sustained filmmaking and the core <strong>of</strong><br />

his achievement consists <strong>of</strong> five films on Italian<br />

American subjects – Who’s That Knocking at My<br />

Door, Mean Streets, Raging Bull, GoodFellas, and<br />

Casino – as well as the documentary Italianamerican.<br />

In Gangster Priest Robert Casillo examines these films<br />

in the context <strong>of</strong> the society, religion, culture, and<br />

history <strong>of</strong> Southern Italy, from which the majority <strong>of</strong><br />

Italian Americans, including Scorsese, derive.<br />

Casillo argues that these films cannot be fully<br />

appreciated either thematically or formally without<br />

understanding the various facets <strong>of</strong> Italian<br />

American ethnicity, as well as the nature <strong>of</strong> Italian<br />

American cinema and the difficulties facing assimilating<br />

third-generation artists. Forming a unified<br />

whole, Scorsese’s Italian American films <strong>of</strong>fer what<br />

Casillo views as a prolonged meditation on the<br />

immigrant experience, the relationship between<br />

Italian America and Southern Italy, the conflicts<br />

between the ethnic generations, and the formation<br />

and development <strong>of</strong> Italian American ethnicity (and<br />

thus identity) on American soil through the generations.<br />

Raised as a Catholic and deeply imbued with<br />

Catholic values, Scorsese also deals with certain<br />

forms <strong>of</strong> Southern Italian vernacular religion, which<br />

have left their imprint not only on Scorsese himself<br />

but also on the spiritually tormented characters<br />

<strong>of</strong> his Italian American films. As Casillo shows,<br />

Scorsese interrogates the Southern Italian code <strong>of</strong><br />

masculine honour in his exploration <strong>of</strong> the Italian<br />

American underworld or Mafia, and through his<br />

implicitly Catholic optic, discloses its thoroughgoing<br />

and longstanding opposition to Christianity.<br />

Bringing a wealth <strong>of</strong> scholarship and insight into<br />

Scorsese’s work, Casillo’s study will captivate readers<br />

interested in the director’s magisterial artistry,<br />

the rich social history <strong>of</strong> Southern Italy, Italian<br />

American ethnicity, and the sociology and history<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Mafia in both Sicily and the United States.<br />

Robert Casillo is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Miami in Coral Gables.<br />

‘With Gangster Priest, Robert Casillo gives arguably the<br />

best reading <strong>of</strong> Martin Scorsese’s “Italian American” films<br />

I have come across to date. Casillo’s incredibly thorough<br />

presentation <strong>of</strong> the historical and social contexts surrounding<br />

the films and the filmmaker himself helps us to see the Italian<br />

American films <strong>of</strong> Martin Scorsese in new and exciting ways.<br />

No other scholar has even attempted such a work.’<br />

–Fred Gardaphe, Department <strong>of</strong> European Languages<br />

and Literature, Director <strong>of</strong> the American and Italian/<br />

American Studies Programs, Stony Brook <strong>University</strong><br />

Of related interest:<br />

Dante, Cinema, and Television<br />

Edited by Amilcare A. Iannucci<br />

0-8020-8827-9 / 978-0-8020-8827-7<br />

£18.00 / $27.95 / 2004<br />

Federico Fellini<br />

Contemporary Perspectives<br />

Edited by Frank Burke and Marguerite R. Waller<br />

0-8020-7647-5 / 978-0-8020-7647-2<br />

£18.00 / $27.95 / 2002<br />

FILM STUDIES / ITALIAN STUDIES<br />

Approx. 590 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9113-X / 978-08020-9113-0<br />

£55.00 $85.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9403-1 / 978-08020-9403-2<br />

£21.95 $39.95 T<br />

2


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S T<br />

Canada's Prime Ministers<br />

Macdonald to Trudeau<br />

Portraits from the Dictionary <strong>of</strong> Canadian Biography<br />

Edited by Robert L. Fraser, Ramsay Cook, and Réal Bélanger<br />

DICTIONARY OF CANADIAN BIOGRAPHY<br />

Prime ministers, the central figures in parliamentary<br />

government and the leaders <strong>of</strong> political parties,<br />

fill dominant roles in Canada’s political history.<br />

Their importance is recognized in the Dictionary<br />

<strong>of</strong> Canadian Biography/Dictionnaire biographique du<br />

Canada by the space devoted to them. Each political<br />

leader is presented by a notable Canadian scholar<br />

who, following the rigorous standards <strong>of</strong> research,<br />

writing, and critical judgement set by the DCB/DBC,<br />

has brought life and understanding to the careers <strong>of</strong><br />

the individuals who have served in Canada’s pre-eminent<br />

political <strong>of</strong>fice. Canada's Prime Ministers brings<br />

these well-written biographies together for the first<br />

time in order to provide readers with an opportunity<br />

to reflect on the striking variety <strong>of</strong> personalities who<br />

have succeeded in climbing the summit <strong>of</strong> Canada’s<br />

public life and the different challenges they faced in<br />

their determination to stay there.<br />

What insights into the workings <strong>of</strong> our public life<br />

do the biographies <strong>of</strong> these fifteen leaders provide Did<br />

these very different men have anything in common<br />

that determined their success The DCB/DBC biographies<br />

make it clear that although there is no standard<br />

mould that shapes Canadian prime ministers, prime<br />

ministerial success depends on both “character and<br />

circumstance.” The biographies suggest that one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

only commonalities between the prime ministers was<br />

an unstable mixture <strong>of</strong> personal ambition and a sense<br />

<strong>of</strong> obligation toward their country and their political<br />

party. Pragmatism in making policy and in devising<br />

strategies <strong>of</strong> survival, rather than principle or ideology,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten seems the guiding determinant in the success<br />

<strong>of</strong> Canada’s federal political leaders. For a Canadian<br />

prime minister there is usually no higher ground than<br />

the claim to be the defender <strong>of</strong> national unity against<br />

threats <strong>of</strong> disruption and disintegration.<br />

In addition to these themes, the DCB/DBC’s<br />

fifteen biographies <strong>of</strong> Canada’s prime ministers is<br />

also an important historical reference tool, providing<br />

details about personal lives, sketches <strong>of</strong> close associates,<br />

a narrative <strong>of</strong> major events, and an assessment<br />

<strong>of</strong> accomplishments and failures set against the<br />

backdrop <strong>of</strong> economic and demographic growth, the<br />

social crisis <strong>of</strong> depressions, and the impact <strong>of</strong> world<br />

events. Together, they recreate the political and social<br />

panorama stretching from the campaign for confederation<br />

in 1867 to the struggle to entrench the Charter<br />

<strong>of</strong> Rights and Freedoms in the new Constitution <strong>of</strong><br />

1982. Told through the lives <strong>of</strong> Canada’s leading politicians,<br />

this is a remarkable, engrossing, documented<br />

account <strong>of</strong> modern Canadian history.<br />

Ramsay Cook is General Editor, Dictionary <strong>of</strong> Canadian<br />

biography/Dictionnaire biographique du Canada and<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus <strong>of</strong> history, York <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Réal Bélanger is Directeur general adjoint,<br />

Dictionnaire biographique du Canada/Dictionary <strong>of</strong><br />

Canadian biography, and pr<strong>of</strong>esseur titulaire d’histoire,<br />

Université Laval.<br />

Robert L. Fraser is the executive <strong>of</strong>ficer <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Dictionary <strong>of</strong> Canadian Biography/Dictionnaire<br />

biographique du Canada<br />

Praise for the DCB/DBC volumes:<br />

‘No serious student <strong>of</strong> Canada’s past can function without<br />

access to this thorough, balanced and reliable source.’<br />

Roger Hall, Globe and Mail<br />

‘The range and richness <strong>of</strong> DCB biographies is a wonder and<br />

an experience.’<br />

Peter B. Waite, Canadian Historical Review<br />

CANADIAN HISTORY / BIOGRAPHY<br />

Approx. 384 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2006</strong><br />

15 illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9173-3 / 978-0-8020-9173-4<br />

£48.00 $75.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9174-1 / 978-0-8020-9174-1<br />

£22.50 $35.00 T<br />

Sir John A. Macdonald/Library and Archives Canada/PAC C5329.<br />

3


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S T<br />

Unpopular Culture<br />

Transforming the European Comic Book in the 1990s<br />

Bart Beaty<br />

STUDIES IN BOOK AND PRINT CULTURE<br />

Increasingly, comic book artists seek to render<br />

a traditionally degraded aspect <strong>of</strong> popular culture<br />

un-popular, transforming it through the adoption<br />

<strong>of</strong> values borrowed from the field <strong>of</strong> ‘high art.’ The<br />

first English-language book to explore these issues,<br />

Unpopular Culture represents a challenge to received<br />

histories <strong>of</strong> art and popular culture that downplay<br />

significant historical anomalies in favour <strong>of</strong> more conventional<br />

narratives. In tracing the efforts <strong>of</strong> a large<br />

number <strong>of</strong> artists to disrupt the hegemony <strong>of</strong> high<br />

culture, Bart Beaty raises important questions about<br />

cultural value and its place as an important structuring<br />

element in contemporary social processes.<br />

Bart Beaty is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Faculty<br />

<strong>of</strong> Communication and Culture at the <strong>University</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> Calgary.<br />

In the last fifteen years or so, a wide community<br />

<strong>of</strong> artists working in a variety <strong>of</strong> western European<br />

nations have overturned the dominant traditions <strong>of</strong><br />

comic book publishing as it has existed since the<br />

end <strong>of</strong> the Second World War. These artists reject<br />

both the traditional form and content <strong>of</strong> comic<br />

books (hardcover, full-colour ‘albums’ <strong>of</strong> humour<br />

or adventure stories, generally geared towards children),<br />

seeking instead to instil the medium with<br />

experimental and avant-garde tendencies commonly<br />

associated with the visual arts. Unpopular<br />

Culture addresses the transformation <strong>of</strong> the status<br />

<strong>of</strong> the comic book in Europe since 1990.<br />

‘Unpopular Culture not only makes a highly significant<br />

contribution to the field <strong>of</strong> comics scholarship, but also<br />

makes a major contribution to the field <strong>of</strong> cultural studies<br />

in general. The developments which it details and theorises<br />

represent the emergence <strong>of</strong> comics in Europe as an art form<br />

with an avant garde, experimental tendency. The scholarship<br />

is remarkable, and the book is groundbreaking.’<br />

–Ann Miller, School <strong>of</strong> Modern Languages, <strong>University</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> Leicester<br />

CULTURAL STUDIES / BOOK HISTORY<br />

Approx. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

30 black & white illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9133-4 / 978-08020-9133-8<br />

£42.00 $65.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9412-0 / 978-08020-9412-4<br />

£20.00 $29.95 C<br />

Photo © Ricci/Pierpoint/Amok, 1996.<br />

4


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S T<br />

Through Lover’s Lane<br />

L.M. Montgomery’s Photography and Visual Imagination<br />

Elizabeth Rollins Epperly<br />

for home and belonging. Epperly examines thirtyfive<br />

<strong>of</strong> Montgomery’s photographs, demonstrating<br />

how they figure in the novelist’s life and fiction.<br />

She argues that the shapes in Montgomery’s favourite<br />

place in nature – Lover’s Lane in Cavendish<br />

P.E.I. – organized Montgomery’s other photographs,<br />

underpinned her colourful descriptions, and grounded<br />

her aesthetics. Through Lover’s Lane suggests how<br />

an artist creates metaphors that resonate within a<br />

single work, echo across a lifetime <strong>of</strong> writing and<br />

photography, and inspire readers and viewers across<br />

cultures and time.<br />

Elizabeth Rollins Epperly is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Prince<br />

Edward Island and a founding chair <strong>of</strong> the L.M.<br />

Montgomery Institute.<br />

It might surprise some to know that internationally<br />

beloved Canadian writer L.M. Montgomery<br />

(1874–1942), author <strong>of</strong> the Anne <strong>of</strong> Green Gables<br />

series, among other novels, and hundreds <strong>of</strong><br />

short stories and poems, also fuelled a passion<br />

for photography. For forty years, Montgomery<br />

photographed her favourite places and people,<br />

using many <strong>of</strong> these photographs to illustrate the<br />

hand-written journals she left as a record <strong>of</strong> her<br />

life. Artistically inclined, and possessing a strong<br />

visual memory, Montgomery created scenes and<br />

settings in her fiction that are closely linked to the<br />

carefully composed shapes in her photographs.<br />

Elizabeth Rollins Epperly’s Through Lover’s Lane is<br />

the first book to examine Montgomery’s photography<br />

in any depth; it is also the first study to connect<br />

Montgomery’s photography with her fiction and<br />

other writing. Drawing on the work <strong>of</strong> Montgomery<br />

scholars, as well as theorists such as Susan Sontag,<br />

Gaston Bachelard, Roland Barthes, John Berger,<br />

and George Lak<strong>of</strong>f, Epperly connects Montgomery’s<br />

practice <strong>of</strong> photography with the writer’s metaphors<br />

Of related interest:<br />

After Green Gables<br />

L.M. Montgomery’s Letters to Ephraim Weber,<br />

1916–1941<br />

Edited by Hildi Froese Tiessen and Paul Gerard<br />

Tiessen<br />

0-8020-8459-1 / 978-0-8020-8459-0<br />

£22.50 / $34.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

The Intimate Life <strong>of</strong> L.M. Montgomery<br />

Edited by Irene Gammel<br />

0-8020-8676-4 / 978-0-8020-8676-1<br />

£20.00 / $29.95 / 2005<br />

LITERARY STUDIES<br />

Approx. 288 pp / 6 x 9 / January 2007<br />

35 halftones<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3878-6 / 978-08020-3878-4<br />

£42.00 $65.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9460-0 / 978-08020-9460-5<br />

£20.00 $29.95 C<br />

Photo: Archival & Special Collections, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Guelph Library<br />

5


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S T<br />

Hans Christian Andersen<br />

The Complete Stories<br />

THE BRITISH LIBRARY<br />

The stories <strong>of</strong> Hans Christian Andersen are known<br />

all over the world and he is one <strong>of</strong> the most translated<br />

authors <strong>of</strong> all time. Andersen’s fame rests<br />

on his fairy tales and stories, written between<br />

1835 and 1872, among the best known <strong>of</strong> which<br />

are ‘The Ugly Duckling,’ ‘The Little Mermaid,’<br />

‘The Princess and the Pea,’ ‘The Snow Queen,’<br />

‘The Nightingale,’ and ‘The Steadfast Tin Soldier.’<br />

With these fairy tales, inspired by the great tradition<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Arabian Nights and by the brothers<br />

Grimm, Andersen became known as the father <strong>of</strong><br />

the modern fairytale. Moreover, Andersen’s works<br />

were original. Only twelve <strong>of</strong> his 156 known fairy<br />

stories drew on folktales. This complete collection<br />

<strong>of</strong> Andersen’s stories is based on Jean Hersholt’s<br />

classic translation.<br />

Andersen’s stories have been widely illustrated<br />

by some <strong>of</strong> the best-known illustrators <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth<br />

and twentieth centuries, in particular those<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Edwardian period – the Golden Age <strong>of</strong> illustration<br />

– including W. Heath Robinson, Arthur<br />

Rackham, Mabel Lucie Atwell, Kay Nielsen and<br />

Edmund Dulac. Around ninety <strong>of</strong> the stories are<br />

illustrated with reproductions <strong>of</strong> original illustrations<br />

from classic Edwardian to contemporary<br />

illustrators. In addition, there are thirteen newly<br />

commissioned illustrations for some <strong>of</strong> Andersen’s<br />

less well-known stories.<br />

Advanced Praise:<br />

‘The British Library has published a stupendous book, just<br />

under 1,000 pages long, <strong>of</strong> the complete stories.’<br />

The Guardian<br />

LITERARY STUDIES<br />

980 pp / 7 ½ x 10 2 /3 / Available<br />

60 colour and 30 black and white illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-7123-0682-X / 978-07123-0682-9<br />

$49.95 E<br />

DISTRIBUTIONS RIGHTS FOR NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA ONLY.<br />

OTHER RIGHTS HELD BY THE BRITISH LIBRARY.<br />

6


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S T<br />

The Filled Pen<br />

Selected Non-Fiction <strong>of</strong> P.K. Page<br />

P.K. Page<br />

Edited by Zailig Pollock<br />

P.K. Page is best known as one <strong>of</strong> Canada’s finest<br />

poets, but over the course <strong>of</strong> her career she has<br />

also written a number <strong>of</strong> essays – meditations<br />

– on her life and work, on the nature <strong>of</strong> art and<br />

the imagination, and on Canadian works <strong>of</strong> literature,<br />

painting, and film that have had special<br />

significance for her. As lovers <strong>of</strong> her poetry would<br />

hope and expect, these essays are beautiful, intelligent,<br />

moving, and delightfully quirky. The<br />

Filled Pen brings together the most important<br />

<strong>of</strong> these essays, including two previously unpublished:<br />

“A Writer’s Life” and “Fairy Tales, Folk<br />

Tales: The Language <strong>of</strong> the Imagination.” Zailig<br />

Pollock, Page scholar and pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> English at<br />

Trent <strong>University</strong>, has edited and annotated this<br />

collection for admirers <strong>of</strong> Page’s work, general<br />

readers, and academics alike.<br />

The essays, which cover a period <strong>of</strong> approximately<br />

forty years, reflect Page’s enduring concerns as a<br />

verbal and visual artist with the power <strong>of</strong> art and the<br />

imagination to transcend the barriers that limit our<br />

perceptions <strong>of</strong> the world and our sympathies with<br />

our fellow human beings. Page is more interested<br />

in posing questions than imposing answers; and<br />

fascinated as she is by a wide range <strong>of</strong> ideas, from<br />

ancient mysticism to modern neurophysiology, it<br />

is images, endlessly evocative and suggestive, that<br />

matter to her most. Her comments on A.M. Klein<br />

from “A Sense <strong>of</strong> Angels,” one <strong>of</strong> the most moving<br />

and perceptive tributes by one poet to another,<br />

apply very much to the P.K. Page we see in The<br />

Filled Pen: “For all his interest in the immediate<br />

world … for all his acceptance <strong>of</strong> ideological and<br />

psychological theory, he seemed to reach beyond<br />

both to a larger reality.”<br />

P.K. Page is a writer and painter living in Victoria<br />

B.C.<br />

Of related interest:<br />

The Half-Lives <strong>of</strong> Pat Lowther<br />

Christine Wiesenthal<br />

0-8020-3635-X / 978-0-8020-3635-3<br />

£42.00 / $65.00 / 2005<br />

Corresponding Influence<br />

Selected Letters <strong>of</strong> Emily Carr and Ira Dilworth<br />

Edited by Linda Morra<br />

0-8020-3877-8 / 978-0-8020-3877-7<br />

£40.00 / $60.00 / 2005<br />

LITERARY STUDIES<br />

Approx. 144 pp / 5 ½ x 8 ½ / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9108-3 / 978-08020-9108-6<br />

£40.00 $60.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9399-X / 978-08020-9399-8<br />

£14.00 $21.95 T<br />

Photo Courtesy P.K. Page<br />

7


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S T<br />

In An Iron Glove<br />

An Autobiography<br />

Claire Martin<br />

Translated by Philip Stratford<br />

UNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA PRESS / HARVEST HOUSE IMPRINT<br />

Claire Martin’s autobiography Dans un gant de fer<br />

(English: In an Iron Glove) was first published in two<br />

volumes in 1965 and 1966. Already a prizewinning<br />

Quebec writer, the author generated a wave <strong>of</strong> controversy<br />

with this detailed account <strong>of</strong> youth subjected to<br />

cruelty and brutality in the early twentieth century.<br />

Her deeply moving portrayal drew<br />

acclaim from readers who saw aspects<br />

<strong>of</strong> their own childhood experience<br />

mirrored in its pages; it also<br />

evoked resistance from traditionalists<br />

unsettled by its<br />

exposé <strong>of</strong> family, church,<br />

and convent school<br />

some decades before<br />

the Quiet Revolution.<br />

Written with the passion<br />

<strong>of</strong> one who has<br />

known harsh injustices,<br />

this memoir<br />

nevertheless reflects<br />

the steady focus and<br />

narrative skill <strong>of</strong> an<br />

already seasoned writer.<br />

With a richly descriptive<br />

style and deft ironic touch,<br />

Claire Martin tells her own<br />

unforgettable story <strong>of</strong> a young<br />

person confronting and finally<br />

emerging from the oppressions <strong>of</strong><br />

unrestrained malign authority.<br />

Translated into English by Philip Stratford,<br />

In an Iron Glove was published by The Ryerson<br />

<strong>Press</strong> in 1968 and subsequently by Harvest House<br />

in 1975. This new edition retains the text <strong>of</strong><br />

Stratford’s translation and incorporates a new<br />

introduction and several explanatory notes<br />

by Patricia Smart.<br />

Philip Stratford was a literary<br />

critic and a winner <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Governor General’s Award<br />

for Translation.<br />

Patricia Smart is a distinguished<br />

research pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />

in the Department<br />

<strong>of</strong> French at Carleton<br />

<strong>University</strong>.<br />

BIOGRAPHY<br />

398 pp / 6 x 9 / Available<br />

Paper ISBN 0-7766-0612-3 /<br />

978-07766-0612-5<br />

£20.00 $29.95 C<br />

8


G E N E R A L I N T E R E S T<br />

‘Call Me Hank’<br />

A Stó:lõ Man’s Reflections on Logging, Living, and Growing Old<br />

Hank Pennier<br />

Edited by Keith Thor Carlson and Kristina Fagan<br />

‘My name is Henry George Pennier and if you<br />

want to be a friend <strong>of</strong> mine please you will call me<br />

Hank.’ So begins ‘Call Me Hank,’ the autobiography<br />

<strong>of</strong> Hank Pennier (1904–1991): logger, storyteller,<br />

and self-described ‘halfbreed.’ In this work, Pennier<br />

<strong>of</strong>fers thoughtful reflections on growing up as a nonstatus<br />

Aboriginal person on or near a Stó:lõ reserve,<br />

searching for work <strong>of</strong> all kinds during hard times as<br />

a young man, and working as a logger through the<br />

depression <strong>of</strong> the 1930s up to his retirement. Known<br />

only to a small local audience when it was first published<br />

in 1972, this expanded edition <strong>of</strong> Pennier’s<br />

autobiography provides poignant political commentary<br />

on issues <strong>of</strong> race, labour, and life through the<br />

eyes <strong>of</strong> a retired West Coast Native logger.<br />

‘Call Me Hank’ is an engaging and <strong>of</strong>ten humorous<br />

read that makes an important contribution<br />

to a host <strong>of</strong> contemporary discourses in Canada,<br />

including discussions about the nature and value<br />

<strong>of</strong> Aboriginal identity. To Hank’s original manuscript,<br />

Keith Carlson and Kristina Fagan have added<br />

a scholarly introduction situating Hank’s writing<br />

within historical, literary, and cultural contexts,<br />

exploring his ideas and writing style, and <strong>of</strong>fering<br />

further information about his life. A map <strong>of</strong> place<br />

names mentioned by Hank, a diagram <strong>of</strong> a steam<br />

logging operation, a glossary <strong>of</strong> logging terms, and<br />

sixteen photographs provide practical and historical<br />

complements to Pennier’s original lively personal<br />

narrative.<br />

Pennier’s book preceded the proliferation <strong>of</strong><br />

Aboriginal writing that began with the publication<br />

<strong>of</strong> Maria Campbell’s Halfbreed in 1973 and provides<br />

a markedly different view <strong>of</strong> Aboriginal life<br />

than other writings <strong>of</strong> the period. It also documents<br />

important aspects <strong>of</strong> Aboriginal participation in the<br />

wage labour economy that have been overlooked by<br />

historians, and <strong>of</strong>fers a unique reflection on masculinity,<br />

government policy, and industrialization.<br />

Keith Thor Carlson is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in<br />

the Department <strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Saskatchewan.<br />

Kristina Fagan is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Saskatchewan.<br />

BIOGRAPHY / NATIVE STUDIES<br />

Approx. 144 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2006</strong><br />

16 illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9161-X / 978-08020-9161-1<br />

£40.00 $60.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9426-0 / 978-08020-9426-1<br />

£15.00 $24.95 C<br />

Photo: Hank Pennier, PN 2003-39-7, Chilliwack Archives.<br />

9


N E W I N PA P E R B A C K<br />

Written in the Flesh<br />

A History <strong>of</strong> Desire<br />

Edward Shorter<br />

2005 FINALIST FOR THE GOVERNOR GENERAL’S LITERARY AWARD IN NON-FICTION<br />

Written in the Flesh is a history <strong>of</strong> sexual desire<br />

– a provocative chronicle <strong>of</strong> the changing nature <strong>of</strong><br />

what people yearn to do sexually.<br />

The desire for sexual pleasure and total body sex<br />

– that is, the expansion <strong>of</strong> sexuality from a limited<br />

focus on the face and genitals to include the entire<br />

body – is certainly not a new phenomenon: the<br />

ancient Greeks, Romans, and Chinese, among others,<br />

were quite familiar with an eroticism that went<br />

beyond the strictly heterosexual and procreational.<br />

In the long centuries <strong>of</strong> Christian Europe, when the<br />

miserable conditions <strong>of</strong> life and religious repression<br />

conspired to minimize the expression <strong>of</strong> sexual<br />

longing, desire was driven underground. Yet in the<br />

late nineteenth century, increasing privacy, prosperity,<br />

and good health again permitted the underlying<br />

biological urge for total body sex to express itself,<br />

and encouraged a shift <strong>of</strong> erotic pleasure toward<br />

new and unexplored body zones: the mouth,<br />

nipples, anus, and further.<br />

This new work by renowned medical historian<br />

Edward Shorter demonstrates that desire is hardwired<br />

into the brain, expressing itself in remarkably<br />

similar ways in men and women, adolescent and<br />

adult, and in gays, lesbians, and straights alike.<br />

Drawing from a wide array <strong>of</strong> sources, including<br />

memoirs, novels, collections <strong>of</strong> letters, diaries, and<br />

indeed a large pornographic corpus, Shorter explores<br />

the widening <strong>of</strong> Western society’s sexual repertoire.<br />

Written in the Flesh is a history <strong>of</strong> what people like<br />

to do in bed and how that has changed. The change<br />

is relentless: human sexuality continually seeks new<br />

means <strong>of</strong> liberation in its expression <strong>of</strong> pleasure.<br />

Edward Shorter holds the Jason A. Hannah Chair<br />

in the History <strong>of</strong> Medicine at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

Praise for the hard cover edition:<br />

‘It all seems daunting to make a case that we were less sexed<br />

in past centuries … But Shorter, through a comprehensive<br />

survey <strong>of</strong> Western literature, pornography, and personal diaries,<br />

combined with some poignant observations about the<br />

history <strong>of</strong> medicine and the body (one <strong>of</strong> the pr<strong>of</strong>essor’s other<br />

specialties), makes a compelling case.<br />

–Christine Sismondo, The <strong>Toronto</strong> Star<br />

‘Written in the Flesh <strong>of</strong>fers a fascinating and refreshing take<br />

on the evolution <strong>of</strong> our relationship with sex and desire. An<br />

excellent antidote to the rising panic about our increasingly<br />

sexualized culture. Turns out its not all MTV’s fault.’<br />

–Josey Vogels, sex columnist and author <strong>of</strong> Bedside<br />

Manners: Sex Etiquette Made Easy<br />

‘A good argument is one <strong>of</strong> the joys <strong>of</strong> life, especially if it<br />

includes wine or dessert. Edward Shorter is the sort <strong>of</strong> intelligent,<br />

entertaining writer with whom it is pleasure to argue.’<br />

–Wendy McElroy, The Globe and Mail<br />

‘Shorter examines documents throughout Western history,<br />

including the incredible diary <strong>of</strong> Englishwoman (and<br />

lesbian) Anne Lister, to show how desire is expressed and<br />

experienced as a physical function. Written in an accessible<br />

and engaging style, Written in the Flesh is a fascinating<br />

account <strong>of</strong> sexual desire.’<br />

- Malinda Lo, Curve Magazine<br />

SEXUALITY / HISTORY / CULTURAL STUDIES<br />

321 pp / 5 ½ x 8 ½ / September <strong>2006</strong><br />

24 halftones<br />

ISBN 0-8020-9452-X / 978-0-8020-9452-0<br />

£12.95 $24.95 T<br />

Originally published in cloth: August 2005<br />

10


N E W I N PA P E R B A C K<br />

Hunting the 1918 Flu<br />

One Scientist’s Search for a Killer Virus<br />

Kirsty E. Duncan<br />

In 1918 the Spanish flu epidemic swept the world<br />

and killed an estimated 20 to 40 million people in<br />

just one year, more than the number that died during<br />

the four years <strong>of</strong> the First World War. To this<br />

day medical science has been at a loss to explain the<br />

Spanish flu’s origin. Most virologists are convinced<br />

that sooner or later a similarly deadly flu virus will<br />

return with a vengeance; thus anything we can learn<br />

from the 1918 flu may save lives in a new epidemic.<br />

Responding to sustained interest in this medical<br />

mystery, Hunting the 1918 Flu presents a detailed<br />

account <strong>of</strong> Kirsty Duncan’s experiences as she<br />

organized an international, multi-discipline scientific<br />

expedition to exhume the bodies <strong>of</strong> a group <strong>of</strong><br />

Norwegian miners buried in Svalbard, all victims <strong>of</strong><br />

the flu virus. Duncan’s narrative describes a largescale<br />

medical project to uncover genetic material<br />

from the Spanish flu; it also reveals the turbulent<br />

politics <strong>of</strong> a group moving towards a goal where<br />

the egos were as strong as the stakes were high. The<br />

author, herself a medical geographer, is very frank<br />

about her bruising emotional, financial, and pr<strong>of</strong>essional<br />

experiences on the ‘dark side <strong>of</strong> science.’<br />

Duncan raises questions not only about public<br />

health, epidemiology, the ethics <strong>of</strong> science, and the<br />

rights <strong>of</strong> subjects, but also about the role <strong>of</strong> age,<br />

gender, and privilege in science.<br />

Kirsty E. Duncan is an adjunct pr<strong>of</strong>essor at the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> where she teaches medical<br />

geography.<br />

MEDICAL HISTORY<br />

Recognizing Aboriginal Title<br />

The Mabo Case and Indigenous Resistance to<br />

English-Settler Colonialism<br />

Peter H. Russell<br />

WINNER OF THE C. HERMAN PRITCHETT AWARD<br />

A judicial revolution occurred in 1992 when<br />

Australia’s highest court discarded a doctrine that<br />

had stood for two hundred years – that the country<br />

was a terra nullius (literally, a land <strong>of</strong> no one) when<br />

the white man arrived. The proceedings were known<br />

as the Mabo case, named for Eddie Koiki Mabo, the<br />

Torres Strait Islander who fought the notion that the<br />

Australian Aboriginal people did not have a system<br />

<strong>of</strong> land ownership before European colonization.<br />

The case had international repercussions, especially<br />

in the four countries in which English-speaking<br />

settlers formed the dominant population: Australia,<br />

Canada, New Zealand, and the United States.<br />

In Recognizing Aboriginal Title, Peter H. Russell<br />

<strong>of</strong>fers a comprehensive study <strong>of</strong> the Mabo case. Russell<br />

weaves together the story <strong>of</strong> Mabo’s life with an<br />

examination <strong>of</strong> the legal and ideological foundations<br />

<strong>of</strong> European imperialism and their eventual challenge<br />

by the global forces <strong>of</strong> decolonization. He traces the<br />

development <strong>of</strong> Australian law and policy in relation<br />

to Aborigines, and provides a detailed account <strong>of</strong> the<br />

decade <strong>of</strong> litigation that led to the Mabo case.<br />

Recognizing Aboriginal Title is a work <strong>of</strong> global<br />

importance by a legal and constitutional scholar <strong>of</strong><br />

international renown, written with a passion worthy<br />

<strong>of</strong> its subject – a man who fought hard for his<br />

people and won.<br />

Peter H. Russell is <strong>University</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Emeritus<br />

in the Department <strong>of</strong> Political Science at the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

LAW / NATIVE STUDIES<br />

320 pp / 6 x 9 / August <strong>2006</strong><br />

14 halftones, 5 figures, 1 map<br />

ISBN 0-8020-9456-2 / 978-0-8020-9456-8<br />

£11.95 $19.95 T<br />

Originally published in cloth: May 2003<br />

Approx. 450 pp / 6 x 9 / Available<br />

10 halftones<br />

ISBN 0-8020-9443-0 / 978-0-8020-9443-8<br />

£22.50 $35.00 C<br />

Originally published in cloth: July 2005<br />

WORLD RIGHTS OUTSIDE AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND.<br />

CO-PUBLISHED WITH UNIVERSITY OF NEW SOUTH WALES PRESS.<br />

11


N E W I N PA P E R B A C K<br />

Imagining London<br />

Postcolonial Fiction and the Transnational Metropolis<br />

John Clement Ball<br />

London was once the hub <strong>of</strong> an empire on which ‘the<br />

sun never set.’ After the Second World War, as Britain<br />

withdrew from most <strong>of</strong> its colonies, the city that once<br />

possessed the world began to contain a diasporic world<br />

that was increasingly taking possession <strong>of</strong> it. Drawing<br />

on postcolonial theories, as well as interdisciplinary<br />

perspectives from cultural geography, urban theory,<br />

history, and sociology, Imagining London examines<br />

representations <strong>of</strong> the English metropolis in Canadian,<br />

West Indian, Indian, and second-generation ‘black<br />

British’ novels written in the last half <strong>of</strong> the twentieth<br />

century. It analyses the diverse ways in which London<br />

is experienced and portrayed as a transnational space<br />

by Commonwealth expatriates and migrants.<br />

As the former ‘heart <strong>of</strong> empire’ and a contemporary<br />

‘world city,’ London metonymically represents<br />

the British Empire in two distinct ways. In the early<br />

years <strong>of</strong> decolonization, it was a primarily white<br />

city that symbolized imperial power and history.<br />

Over time, as migrants from former colonies have<br />

‘reinvaded the centre’ and changed its demographic<br />

and cultural constitution, it has come to represent<br />

empire as a global microcosm and pr<strong>of</strong>oundly<br />

relational locale. John Clement Ball examines the<br />

work <strong>of</strong> more than twenty writers, including established<br />

authors such as Robertson Davies, Mordecai<br />

Richler, Jean Rhys, Sam Selvon, V.S. Naipaul,<br />

Anita Desai, and Salman Rushdie, and newer voices<br />

such as Catherine Bush, David Dabydeen, Amitav<br />

Ghosh, Hanif Kureishi, and Zadie Smith.<br />

John Clement Ball is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> New<br />

Brunswick.<br />

LITERARY STUDIES / CULTURAL STUDIES<br />

265 pp / 6 x 9 / Available<br />

ISBN 0-8020-9455-4 / 978-0-8020-9455-1<br />

£14.95 $27.95 C<br />

Originally published in cloth: June 2004<br />

Gramsci’s Politics <strong>of</strong><br />

Language<br />

Engaging the Bakhtin Circle and the Frankfurt School<br />

Peter Ives<br />

CULTURAL SPACES. WINNER OF THE RAYMOND KLIBANSKY PRIZE<br />

Antonio Gramsci and his concept <strong>of</strong> hegemony<br />

have permeated social and political theory, cultural<br />

studies, education studies, literary criticism, international<br />

relations, and post-colonial theory. The<br />

centrality <strong>of</strong> language and linguistics to Gramsci’s<br />

thought, however, has been wholly neglected. In<br />

Gramsci’s Politics <strong>of</strong> Language, Peter Ives argues that<br />

a university education in linguistics and a preoccupation<br />

with Italian language politics were integral<br />

to the theorist’s thought. Ives explores how the<br />

combination <strong>of</strong> Marxism and linguistics produced<br />

a unique and intellectually powerful approach to<br />

social and political analysis.<br />

To explicate Gramsci’s writings on language,<br />

Ives compares them with other Marxist approaches<br />

to language, including those <strong>of</strong> the Bakhtin<br />

Circle, Walter Benjamin, and the Frankfurt<br />

School, including Jürgen Habermas. From these<br />

comparisons, Ives elucidates the implications <strong>of</strong><br />

Gramsci’s writings, which, he argues, retained the<br />

explanatory power <strong>of</strong> the semiotic and dialogic<br />

insights <strong>of</strong> Bakhtin and the critical perspective <strong>of</strong><br />

the Frankfurt School, while at the same time foreshadowing<br />

the key problems with both approaches<br />

that post-structuralist critiques would later reveal.<br />

Gramsci’s Politics <strong>of</strong> Language fills a crucial gap in<br />

scholarship, linking Gramsci’s writings to current<br />

debates in social theory and providing a<br />

framework for a thoroughly historical-materialist<br />

approach to language.<br />

Peter Ives is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />

<strong>of</strong> Politics at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Winnipeg.<br />

POLITICS / CULTURAL STUDIES<br />

288 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2006</strong><br />

ISBN 0-8020-9444-9 / 978-0-8020-9444-5<br />

£18.00 $27.95 C<br />

Originally published in cloth: May 2004<br />

12


N E W I N PA P E R B A C K<br />

Theorizing Historical<br />

Consciousness<br />

Edited by Peter Seixas<br />

Our understanding <strong>of</strong> the past, or ‘historical consciousness,’<br />

shapes our sense <strong>of</strong> the present and the<br />

future. But while both academic history and public<br />

history are thriving enterprises, there has been little<br />

investigation <strong>of</strong> how people make sense <strong>of</strong> the past, or<br />

how their understanding shapes their current identities<br />

and their sense <strong>of</strong> possibilities for the future.<br />

With Theorizing Historical Consciousness, Peter<br />

Seixas has brought together a group <strong>of</strong> international<br />

scholars to address issues related to collective memory<br />

and historical consciousness from the perspectives<br />

<strong>of</strong> a number <strong>of</strong> disciplines, including history, historiography,<br />

philosophy, psychology, and education.<br />

From a practical standpoint, historical consciousness<br />

has serious implications for international relations,<br />

reparations claims, fiscal initiatives, immigration,<br />

and indeed almost every contentious area <strong>of</strong> public<br />

policy, collective identity, and personal experience.<br />

Current policy debates are laced with mutually<br />

incompatible historical analogies, and identity politics<br />

generate conflicting historical accounts. Never<br />

has the idea <strong>of</strong> a straightforward ‘one history fits all’<br />

been less workable. The volume addresses this complexity<br />

through examination and comparison <strong>of</strong> various<br />

theoretical approaches to the study <strong>of</strong> historical<br />

consciousness, thus enabling us to chart the future<br />

study <strong>of</strong> how people understand the past.<br />

An Irish Working Class<br />

Explorations in Political Economy and Hegemony,<br />

1800–1950<br />

Marilyn Silverman<br />

ANTHROPOLOGICAL HORIZONS<br />

In An Irish Working Class, Marilyn Silverman<br />

explores the dynamics <strong>of</strong> capitalism, colonialism,<br />

and state formation through an examination <strong>of</strong> the<br />

political economy and culture <strong>of</strong> those who contributed<br />

their labour. Stemming from the author’s<br />

academic research on Ireland for over two decades,<br />

the book combines archival data, interviews, and<br />

participant observation to create a unique and<br />

intricate study <strong>of</strong> labourers’ lives in Thomastown,<br />

County Kilkenny, between 1800 and 1950. Political<br />

anthropology, Gramscian approaches to hegemony,<br />

and the work <strong>of</strong> social historians on class experience<br />

all inform Silverman’s perspective in this volume.<br />

Silverman explores the complex and changing<br />

consciousness, politics, and social relations<br />

<strong>of</strong> a cross-section <strong>of</strong> workers. These workers were<br />

employed in the mills, tanneries, artisanal shops,<br />

and retail outlets, and on the landed estates, farms,<br />

and public works projects which typified this highly<br />

differentiated locality. In constructing the social<br />

history <strong>of</strong> workers in a particular place over time,<br />

An Irish Working Class makes an important contribution<br />

to Irish Studies, European historical ethnography,<br />

and the anthropology <strong>of</strong> working-class life.<br />

Marilyn Silverman is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />

<strong>of</strong> Anthropology at York <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Peter Seixas is the director <strong>of</strong> the Centre for the<br />

Study <strong>of</strong> Historical Consciousness and a pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />

and Canada Research Chair in the Faculty <strong>of</strong><br />

Education at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British Columbia.<br />

HISTORY<br />

ANTHROPOLOGY<br />

240 pp / 6 x 9 / Available<br />

4 figures; 1 table<br />

ISBN 0-8020-9457-0 / 978-0-8020-9457-5<br />

£18.00 $27.50 C<br />

Originally published in cloth: October 2004<br />

560 pp / 6 x 9 / May <strong>2006</strong><br />

ISBN 0-8020-9451-1 / 978-0-8020-9451-3<br />

£19.95 $35.00 C<br />

Originally published in cloth: October 2001<br />

13


B R I T I S H L I B R A R Y – P R E V I O U S LY A N N O U N C E D<br />

The Hereford World Map<br />

Medieval World Maps and their Context<br />

Edited by P.D.A. Harvey<br />

The famous Hereford world map, the ‘Mappa<br />

Mundi’ dates from around 1300. More than just<br />

a map, it can be seen as an encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> distant<br />

lands, their peoples, myths, and natural history,<br />

all held together within a framework <strong>of</strong> Christian<br />

belief. It presents an illuminating view <strong>of</strong> the world<br />

as it appeared to a cultured and well-read person in<br />

thirteenth-century England.<br />

In this book, P.D.A. Harvey and 24 contributors<br />

give an authoritative interpretation <strong>of</strong> the map,<br />

Guide to Scripts Used in<br />

English Writings up to 1500<br />

Jane Roberts<br />

Despite a resurgence <strong>of</strong> interest in the history <strong>of</strong> the<br />

English language there is currently no book available<br />

to introduce readers to the scripts used in Old<br />

and Middle English writing. This book fills this<br />

void by using visual examples to show readers why<br />

Middle English is different from Old English and<br />

how scripts change across time.<br />

Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Jane Roberts uses the illustrations<br />

from important literary texts to demonstrate the<br />

chronological progression <strong>of</strong> writing. Each plate is<br />

The St. Albans Psalter<br />

A Book for Christina <strong>of</strong> Markyate<br />

Jane Geddes<br />

The St Albans Psalter is considered one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

great monuments <strong>of</strong> English Romanesque painting.<br />

The work, a sequence <strong>of</strong> forty full-page<br />

miniatures illustrating the Life <strong>of</strong> Christ, includes<br />

211 initials whose inventiveness and charm belie<br />

the complex theological and personal messages<br />

they convey. The Psalter has an added fascination<br />

because <strong>of</strong> its owner, the hermitess Christina <strong>of</strong><br />

Markyate, who provided the monk <strong>of</strong> St Albans<br />

based on a fresh examination <strong>of</strong> its surface, and<br />

reveal evidence <strong>of</strong> how it was made, what it depicts,<br />

and what sources the author used. Many detailed<br />

photographs, specially commissioned for the purpose,<br />

together with illustrations <strong>of</strong> other related<br />

medieval maps, accompany the text.<br />

P.D.A. Harvey is Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Emeritus <strong>of</strong> Medieval<br />

History at Durham <strong>University</strong>.<br />

392 pp / 7 x 9 ¾ / Available<br />

25 colour and 75 black and white illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-7123-4760-7 / 978-0-7123-4760-0<br />

$90.00 E<br />

reproduced in full size where possible and is accompanied<br />

by a full transcript, commentary and notes.<br />

Through constant referrals to the visual examples,<br />

this guide gradually introduces readers to the necessary<br />

vocabulary, making it a suitable book for both<br />

students and general readers alike.<br />

Jane Roberts is a recently retired pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> London.<br />

328 pp / 8 ¾ x 10 ¾ / Available<br />

12 colour and 70 black and white illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-7123-4884-0 / 978-0-7123-4884-3<br />

$80.00 E<br />

with feisty material from her life. In this study,<br />

Jane Geddes examines in depth every aspect <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Psalter. Through her close analysis <strong>of</strong> the work,<br />

Geddes provides a pr<strong>of</strong>ound insight into female<br />

literacy, Anglo-Norman relations, the organization<br />

<strong>of</strong> England’s premier scriptorium, monk–nun relations,<br />

and the emerging Anglo-Norman language.<br />

Jane Geddes teaches History <strong>of</strong> Art at Aberdeen<br />

<strong>University</strong>.<br />

136 pp / 8 ¼ x 11 / Available<br />

95 colour and 5 black and white illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-7123-0677-3 / 978-0-7123-0677-5 $40.00 E<br />

DISTRIBUTION RIGHTS FOR NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA ONLY. OTHER RIGHTS HELD BY THE BRITISH LIBRARY.<br />

14


H I S T O R Y<br />

The German Right, 1860–1920<br />

Political Limits <strong>of</strong> the Authoritarian Imagination<br />

James Retallack<br />

GERMAN AND EUROPEAN STIUDIES<br />

Before the rise <strong>of</strong> Hitler and the Nazis, Germany<br />

was undergoing convulsive socioeconomic and<br />

political change. With unification as a nation state<br />

under Bismarck in 1871, Germany experienced the<br />

advent <strong>of</strong> mass politics, based on the principle <strong>of</strong><br />

one man, one vote. The dynamic, diverse political<br />

culture that emerged challenged the adaptability<br />

<strong>of</strong> the ‘interlocking directorate <strong>of</strong> the Right.’ To<br />

serve as a bulwark <strong>of</strong> the authoritarian state, the<br />

Right needed to exploit traditional sources <strong>of</strong> power<br />

while mobilizing new political recruits, but until<br />

Emperor Wilhelm II’s abdication in 1918 these<br />

aims could not easily be reconciled.<br />

In The German Right, 1860-1920, James<br />

Retallack examines how the authoritarian imagination<br />

inspired the Right and how political pragmatism<br />

constrained it. He explores the Right’s<br />

regional and ideological diversity, and refuses to<br />

privilege the 1890s as the tipping point when the<br />

traditional politics <strong>of</strong> notables gave way to mass<br />

politics. Retallack also challenges the assumption<br />

that, if Imperial Germany was modern, it could<br />

not also have been authoritarian. Written with<br />

clear, persuasive prose, this wide-ranging analysis<br />

draws together threads <strong>of</strong> reasoning from German<br />

and Anglo-American scholars over the past 30<br />

years and points the way for future research into<br />

unexplored areas.<br />

James Retallack is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

Suits <strong>of</strong> Armour Standing (1866), by Adolph Menzel (1815-<br />

1905), gouache and pencil on light brown paper, 43.9 x 56.7<br />

cm. Image (Inv. 34.803) courtesy <strong>of</strong> the Albertina, Vienna.<br />

‘James Retallack again demonstrates that his is a powerful<br />

and persuasive voice in Modern German history. In The<br />

German Right, Retallack stakes out a revisionist argument<br />

for understanding the political continuities <strong>of</strong> the German<br />

past, and in the process breathes new life into a deflated<br />

debate about Germany’s “Sonderweg.” What emerges is a<br />

new interpretation <strong>of</strong> modern German history, focusing on<br />

a highly contextualized political history <strong>of</strong> the German right<br />

from the middle <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth century into the maelstrom<br />

<strong>of</strong> the twentieth.’<br />

–Helmut Walser Smith, Martha Rivers Ingram Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />

<strong>of</strong> History, Director, Robert Penn Warren Center for the<br />

Humanities, Vanderbilt <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Approx. 416 pp / 6 x 9 / September <strong>2006</strong><br />

22 halftones<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9145-8 / 978-0-8020-9145-1<br />

£48.00 $75.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9419-8 / 978-0-8020-9419-3<br />

£19.95 $35.00 C<br />

15


H I S T O R Y<br />

Caught<br />

Montreal’s Modern Girls and the Law, 1869-1945<br />

Tamara Myers<br />

STUDIES IN GENDER AND HISTORY<br />

From the late nineteenth century to the Second<br />

World War, a ‘young and modern’ girl problem<br />

emerged in Montreal in the context <strong>of</strong> social<br />

and cultural turmoil. In Caught, Tamara Myers<br />

explores how the foundation and implementation<br />

<strong>of</strong> Quebec’s juvenile justice system intersected with<br />

Montreal’s modern girl. Using case files from the<br />

juvenile court and institutional records, this study<br />

aims to uncover the cultural practices that transformed<br />

modern girls into female delinquents.<br />

From reform schools <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth century to<br />

the juvenile court era <strong>of</strong> the early twentieth, juvenile<br />

justice was a key disciplinary instrument used to<br />

maintain and uphold the subordination <strong>of</strong> adolescent<br />

girls. Caught exposes the attempts made by the<br />

juvenile justice system <strong>of</strong> the day to curb modern<br />

attitudes and behaviour; at the same time, it reveals<br />

the changing patterns <strong>of</strong> social and family interaction<br />

among adolescent girls. Myers also uncovers the<br />

evolving social construction <strong>of</strong> these young culprits<br />

– les jeunes filles modernes with their penchant for la<br />

vie legere – as generated by parents, church authorities,<br />

women’s groups, social workers, the media, and<br />

juvenile justice agents. She illuminates the rich texture<br />

<strong>of</strong> these girls’ public and private lives in the first<br />

half <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century, humanizing the stories<br />

<strong>of</strong> girls who were condemned for being too modern<br />

as they worked, played, and resisted the authority <strong>of</strong><br />

parents, community, and the law.<br />

Tamara Myers is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British<br />

Columbia.<br />

Rural Protest on<br />

Prince Edward Island<br />

From British Colonization to the Escheat Movement<br />

Rusty Bittermann<br />

Who has the more legitimate claim to land, settlers<br />

who occupy and improve it with their labour,<br />

or landlords who claim ownership on the basis <strong>of</strong><br />

imperial grants This question <strong>of</strong> property rights,<br />

and their construction, was at the heart <strong>of</strong> rural<br />

protest on Prince Edward Island for a century.<br />

In Rural Protest on Prince Edward Island Rusty<br />

Bittermann examines this conflict and the dynamic<br />

<strong>of</strong> rural protest on the Island from its establishment<br />

as a British colony in the 1760s to the early 1840s.<br />

The focus <strong>of</strong> Bittermann’s study is the remarkable<br />

mass movement known as the Escheat movement,<br />

which emerged in the 1830s in the context <strong>of</strong> growing<br />

popular challenges elsewhere in the Atlantic<br />

World. The Escheat movement aimed at resolving<br />

the land question in favour <strong>of</strong> tenants by having<br />

the state resume (escheat) the large grants <strong>of</strong> land<br />

that created landlordism on the Island. Although it<br />

ultimately gained control <strong>of</strong> the assembly in the late<br />

1830s, the Escheat movement did not produce the<br />

land policies that tenants and their allies advocated.<br />

The movement did, however, synthesize years <strong>of</strong><br />

rural protest and produce a persistent legacy <strong>of</strong><br />

language and ideas concerning land, justice, and<br />

the rights <strong>of</strong> small producers that helped to make<br />

landlordism on the Island unsustainable in the<br />

long term. Rural Protest on Prince Edward Island is<br />

a comprehensive and fascinating examination <strong>of</strong> an<br />

important, but <strong>of</strong>ten overlooked, period in the history<br />

<strong>of</strong> Canada’s smallest province.<br />

Rusty Bittermann is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> History at St. Thomas <strong>University</strong><br />

Approx. 400 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

12 illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9219-5 / 978-08020-9219-9<br />

£48.00 $75.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9450-3 / 978-08020-9450-6<br />

£22.50 $35.00 C<br />

Approx. 382 pp / 6 x 9 / August <strong>2006</strong><br />

1 figure, 7 maps<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-0439-3 / 978-0-8020-0439-0<br />

£42.00 $65.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-7229-1 / 978-0-8020-7229-0<br />

£20.00 $29.95 C<br />

16


H I S T O R Y<br />

To the Past<br />

History Education, Public Memory, and<br />

Citizenship in Canada<br />

Making the Voyageur World<br />

Travelers and Traders in the North American Fur Trade<br />

Carolyn Podruchny<br />

Edited by Ruth Sandwell<br />

Recent years have witnessed a breakdown in consensus<br />

about what history should be taught within<br />

Canadian schools; there is now a heightened awareness<br />

<strong>of</strong> the political nature <strong>of</strong> deciding whose history<br />

is, or should be, included in social studies and history<br />

classrooms. Meanwhile, as educators are debating<br />

what history should be taught, developments in<br />

educational and cognitive research are expanding<br />

our understanding <strong>of</strong> how best to teach it. To the<br />

Past explores some <strong>of</strong> the issues surrounding what<br />

history education is, and why we should care about<br />

it, in the twenty-first century in Canada.<br />

Originally broadcast in the fall <strong>of</strong> 2002 on the<br />

CBC Radio program Ideas, the lectures that comprise<br />

this volume not only address how history is<br />

taught in Canadian classrooms, but also explore the<br />

meaning and purposes <strong>of</strong> history more generally.<br />

Contributors show how Canadians are demonstrating<br />

a new interest in what scholars have termed<br />

‘historical consciousness’ or collective memory,<br />

through participation in a wide range <strong>of</strong> cultural<br />

activities, from visiting museums to watching the<br />

History Channel. Canadian adults and children<br />

alike seem to be seeking answers to questions <strong>of</strong><br />

identity, meaning, community and nation in their<br />

study <strong>of</strong> the past.<br />

Ruth Sandwell is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Theory and Policy Studies at the<br />

Ontario Institute for Studies in Education <strong>of</strong> the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

Voyageurs are highly visible today as colourful caricatures<br />

in popular culture and history. They adorn<br />

the labels <strong>of</strong> beer bottles, the sides <strong>of</strong> U-Haul vans,<br />

and web sites. <strong>Winter</strong> festivals in Minnesota and<br />

Manitoba commemorate their legend. By placing<br />

them squarely in the centre <strong>of</strong> fur trade and labour<br />

studies, Carolyn Podruchny’s Making the Voyageur<br />

World frees voyageurs from their mystique as picturesque<br />

historical cartoons through a detailed analysis<br />

<strong>of</strong> their unique occupational culture.<br />

Voyageur life was shaped by the men’s shared<br />

roots as canadiens and habitants, as well as their<br />

encounters with Aboriginal peoples, and the exigencies<br />

<strong>of</strong> their jobs – they traveled constantly<br />

through varied landscapes and social worlds.<br />

Voyageurs numerically dominated the Montreal fur<br />

trade, formed kin ties with Aboriginal women, and<br />

settled in the northwest to raise their families. By<br />

examining their lives in conjunction with the metaphor<br />

<strong>of</strong> the voyage, Podruchny reveals not only the<br />

everyday lives <strong>of</strong> her subjects – what they ate, their<br />

cosmology, rituals <strong>of</strong> celebration, their families,<br />

and above all, their work – but underscores their<br />

resonance in history as well as in the Métis communities<br />

they helped found.<br />

Carolyn Podruchny is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> History at York <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Approx. 120 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3891-3 / 978-0-8020-3891-3<br />

£32.00 $50.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-3814-X / 978-0-8020-3814-2<br />

£14.00 $21.95 C<br />

Approx. 347 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2006</strong><br />

3 maps, 7 tables<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9428-7 / 978-08020-9428-5<br />

$29.95 C<br />

CANADIAN RIGHTS ONLY. CO-PUBLISHED WITH UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS.<br />

17


H I S T O R Y<br />

A History <strong>of</strong> Canadian<br />

Legal Thought<br />

Collected Essays<br />

R.C.B. Risk<br />

Edited and introduced by G. Blaine Baker and<br />

Jim Phillips<br />

OSGOODE SOCIETY FOR CANADIAN LEGAL HISTORY<br />

This volume in the Osgoode Society’s distinguished<br />

series on the history <strong>of</strong> Canadian law is a collection<br />

<strong>of</strong> the principal essays <strong>of</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Emeritus R.C.B.<br />

Risk, one <strong>of</strong> the pioneers <strong>of</strong> Canadian legal history<br />

and for many years regarded as its foremost authority<br />

on the history <strong>of</strong> Canadian legal thought.<br />

Frank Scott, Bora Laskin, W.P.M. Kennedy,<br />

John Willis and Edward Blake are among the better<br />

known figures whose thinking and writing about<br />

law are featured in this collection. But this compilation<br />

<strong>of</strong> the most important essays by a pioneer in<br />

Canadian legal history brings to light many other<br />

lesser known figures as well, whose writings covered<br />

a wide range <strong>of</strong> topics, from estoppel to the<br />

British North America Act to the purpose <strong>of</strong> legal<br />

education. Written over more than two decades,<br />

and covering the immediate post-Confederation<br />

period to the 1960s, these essays reveal a distinctive<br />

Canadian tradition <strong>of</strong> thinking about the nature<br />

and functions <strong>of</strong> law, one which Risk clearly takes<br />

pride in and urges us to celebrate.<br />

R.C.B. Risk is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritas in the Faculty <strong>of</strong><br />

Law at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

G. Blaine Baker is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Faculty <strong>of</strong> Law<br />

at McGill <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Jim Phillips is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Faculty <strong>of</strong> Law<br />

and Department <strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

The Court <strong>of</strong> Queen’s Bench<br />

<strong>of</strong> Manitoba, 1870-1950<br />

A Biographical History<br />

Dale Brawn<br />

OSGOODE SOCIETY FOR CANADIAN LEGAL HISTORY<br />

This study <strong>of</strong> the Manitoba judiciary is not only<br />

the first biographical history to examine an entire<br />

provincial bench, it is also one <strong>of</strong> the first studies<br />

to <strong>of</strong>fer an internal view <strong>of</strong> the political nature <strong>of</strong><br />

the judicial appointment process. Dale Brawn has<br />

penned the biographies <strong>of</strong> the first thirty-three men<br />

appointed to Manitoba’s Court <strong>of</strong> Queen’s Bench.<br />

The relative youth <strong>of</strong> Manitoba as a province and<br />

the small size <strong>of</strong> its legal pr<strong>of</strong>ession makes possible<br />

an exceptionally detailed investigation <strong>of</strong> the background<br />

<strong>of</strong> those appointed to the province’s highest<br />

trial court.<br />

The biographical data that Brawn has collected<br />

for this book highlights the extent to which judicial<br />

candidates underwent a socialization process<br />

designed to produce a legal elite whose members<br />

shared remarkably similar views and ways <strong>of</strong><br />

thinking. In addition, these biographies suggest<br />

that until at least 1950, seats on provincial benches<br />

were rewards for political services rendered.<br />

Many lawyers became judges not because <strong>of</strong> their<br />

legal ability, but because they had made themselves<br />

known in the communities in which they<br />

practiced. This fascinating study <strong>of</strong>fers an intimate<br />

look at personalities ranging from prime ministers<br />

to members <strong>of</strong> the bench and both senior levels <strong>of</strong><br />

government.<br />

Dale Brawn is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Law and Justice at Laurentian<br />

<strong>University</strong>.<br />

Approx. 336 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2006</strong><br />

1 illustration<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9424-4 / 978-08020-9424-7<br />

£42.00 $65.00 E<br />

Approx. 432 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2006</strong><br />

33 illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9225-X / 978-0-8020-9225-0<br />

£42.00 $65.00 E<br />

18


L I T E R A R Y S T U D I E S<br />

H I S T O R Y<br />

Magistrates, Police,<br />

and People<br />

Everyday Criminal Justice in Quebec and<br />

Lower Canada, 1764-1837<br />

Donald Fyson<br />

OSGOODE SOCIETY FOR CANADIAN LEGAL HISTORY<br />

The role and function <strong>of</strong> criminal justice in a<br />

conquered colony is always problematic, and the<br />

case <strong>of</strong> Quebec is no exception. Many historians<br />

have suggested that, between the Conquest and<br />

the Rebellions (1760s–1830s), Quebec’s ‘Canadien’<br />

inhabitants both boycotted and were excluded from<br />

the British criminal justice system. Magistrates, Police,<br />

and People challenges this simplistic view <strong>of</strong> the relationship<br />

between criminal law and Quebec society,<br />

<strong>of</strong>fering instead a fresh view <strong>of</strong> a complex accord.<br />

Based on extensive research in judicial and <strong>of</strong>ficial<br />

sources, Donald Fyson <strong>of</strong>fers the first comprehensive<br />

study <strong>of</strong> the everyday workings <strong>of</strong> criminal<br />

justice in Quebec and Lower Canada. Focussing<br />

on the justices <strong>of</strong> the peace and their police, Fyson<br />

examines both the criminal justice system itself,<br />

and the system in operation as experienced by<br />

those who participated in it. Fyson contends that,<br />

although the system was fundamentally biased, its<br />

flexibility provided a source <strong>of</strong> power for ordinary<br />

citizens. At the same time, everyday criminal justice<br />

<strong>of</strong>fered the colonial state and colonial elites a<br />

powerful, though <strong>of</strong>ten faulty, means <strong>of</strong> imposing<br />

their will on Quebec society. This fascinating and<br />

controversial study will challenge many received<br />

historical interpretations, providing new insight<br />

into the criminal justice system <strong>of</strong> early Quebec.<br />

Donald Fyson is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> History at Université Laval.<br />

Approx. 464 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2006</strong><br />

41 figures, 20 tables<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9223-3 / 978-0-8020-9223-6<br />

£42.00 $65.00 E<br />

RECENT TITLES FROM THE<br />

OSGOODE SOCIETY FOR<br />

CANADIAN LEGAL HISTORY<br />

Bora Laskin<br />

Bringing Law to Life<br />

Philip Girard<br />

0-8020-9044-3 / 978-0-8020-9044-7<br />

£35.00 / $55.00 / 2005<br />

Searching for Justice<br />

An Autobiography<br />

Fred Kaufman<br />

0-8020-9051-6 / 978-0-8020-9051-5<br />

£42.00 / $65.00 / 2005<br />

Essays in the History <strong>of</strong> Canadian Law<br />

Volume IX: Two Islands, Newfoundland<br />

and Prince Edward Island<br />

Edited by Christopher English<br />

0-8020-9043-5 / 978-0-8020-9043-0<br />

£42.00 / $65.00 / 2005<br />

Aggressive in Pursuit<br />

The Life <strong>of</strong> Justice Emmett Hall<br />

Frederick Vaughan<br />

0-8020-3957-X / 978-0-8020-3957-6<br />

£32.00 / $50.00 / 2004<br />

The Supreme Court <strong>of</strong> Nova Scotia,<br />

1754-2004<br />

From Imperial Bastion to Provincial Oracle<br />

Edited by Philip Girard, Jim Phillips, and<br />

Barry Cahill<br />

0-8020-8021-9 / 978-0-8020-8021-9<br />

£48.00 / $75.00 / 2004<br />

Brian Dickson<br />

A Judge’s Journey<br />

Robert J. Sharpe and Kent Roach<br />

0-8020-8952-6 / 978-0-8020-8952-6<br />

£40.00 / $58.00 / 2003<br />

19


H I S T O R Y<br />

Household Counts<br />

Canadian Households and Families in 1901<br />

Edited by Eric W. Sager and Peter Baskerville<br />

The Canadian census taken in 1901 has surprising<br />

things to say about the family as a social grouping<br />

and cultural construct at the turn <strong>of</strong> the twentieth<br />

century. Although the nuclear-family household<br />

was the most frequent type <strong>of</strong> household, family<br />

was not a singular form or structure at all; rather, it<br />

was a fluid micro-social community through which<br />

people lived and moved. There was no one “traditional”<br />

family, but rather many types <strong>of</strong> families<br />

and households, each with its own history.<br />

In Household Counts, editors Eric W. Sager<br />

and Peter Baskerville bring together an impressive<br />

array <strong>of</strong> scholars including Bettina Bradbury,<br />

Teter Gossage, and Ken Sylvester, to explore the<br />

demographic context <strong>of</strong> families in Canada using<br />

the 1901 census. Split into five sections, the collection<br />

covers such topics as family demography,<br />

urban families, the young and old, family and social<br />

history, and smaller groups as well. The remarkable<br />

plasticity <strong>of</strong> family and household that Household<br />

Counts reveals is <strong>of</strong> critical importance to our<br />

understanding <strong>of</strong> nation-building in Canada. This<br />

collection not only makes an important contribution<br />

to family history, but also to the widening<br />

intellectual exploration <strong>of</strong> historical censuses.<br />

Eric W. Sager is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Victoria.<br />

Peter Baskerville is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Victoria.<br />

The English Factory in<br />

Siam 1612–1685<br />

Anthony Farrington and Dhiravat na Pombejra<br />

THE BRITISH LIBRARY<br />

Seventeenth-century Siam was a remarkably open<br />

society, where at the great port city <strong>of</strong> Ayutthaya<br />

the English found themselves interacting and competing<br />

not only with their hosts, but also with<br />

Persians, Indians, Chinese, Japanese, Indonesians,<br />

Portuguese, French and Dutch. The English Factory<br />

in Siam 1612–1685 contains more than 700 documents<br />

from the archives <strong>of</strong> the English East India<br />

Company, making it an important new source for<br />

the history <strong>of</strong> Southeast Asia.<br />

The surviving documents range from business<br />

correspondence, commodity accounts and ships’<br />

journals to more intimate letters home, bitter<br />

denunciations <strong>of</strong> rivals, and vicious pamphleteering.<br />

The cast <strong>of</strong> characters includes Siamese kings<br />

and high <strong>of</strong>ficials, East India Company servants,<br />

renegade Englishmen, and the amazing Constantine<br />

Phaulkon, a former Company employee <strong>of</strong> Greek<br />

origin who became a Siamese minister, invited a<br />

French army into Siam, and was executed in a palace<br />

coup in 1688. This two-volume text is sure to<br />

become an invaluable reference tool for historical<br />

research.<br />

Anthony Farrington was formerly head <strong>of</strong> the India<br />

Office Records at the British Library.<br />

Dhiravat na Pombejra <strong>of</strong> Chulalongkom <strong>University</strong>,<br />

Bangkok, is a specialist in the history <strong>of</strong> Thailand’s<br />

foreign relations.<br />

Approx. 272 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3860-3 / 978-0-8020-3860-9<br />

£42.00 $65.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-3802-6 / 978-0-8020-3802-9<br />

£22.50 $35.00 C<br />

1900 pp / 2 volumes / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-7123-4928-6 / 978-0-7123-4928-4<br />

$400.00 E<br />

DISTRIBUTION RIGHTS FOR NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA ONLY.<br />

OTHER RIGHTS HELD BY THE BRITISH LIBRARY.<br />

20


H I S T O R Y<br />

Letters from Heaven<br />

Popular Religion in Russia and Ukraine<br />

Edited by John-Paul Himka and Andriy Zayarnyuk<br />

Doing Medicine Together<br />

Germany and Russia Between the Wars<br />

Edited by Susan Gross Soloman<br />

GERMAN AND EUROPEAN STUDIES<br />

Letters from Heaven features an international group<br />

<strong>of</strong> scholars investigating the place and function <strong>of</strong><br />

‘popular’ religion in Eastern Slavic cultures. The<br />

contributors examine popular religious practices<br />

in Russia and Ukraine from the middle ages to the<br />

present, considering the cultural contexts <strong>of</strong> death<br />

rituals, miracles, sin and virtue, cults <strong>of</strong> the saints,<br />

and icons. The collection not only fills a void in<br />

religious scholarship, but also responds to current<br />

theoretical challenges.<br />

Reflecting critically on the heuristic value <strong>of</strong><br />

popular religion and on the concept <strong>of</strong> popular<br />

culture in general, Letters from Heaven is characterized<br />

by a shift <strong>of</strong> focus from churches, institutions,<br />

and theological discourse to the religious practices<br />

themselves and their interconnections with the culture,<br />

mentality, and social structures <strong>of</strong> the societies<br />

in question. An important contribution to the<br />

fields <strong>of</strong> religion and Eastern Slavic studies, this<br />

volume challenges readers to rethink old pieties and<br />

to reconsider the function <strong>of</strong> religion.<br />

John-Paul Himka is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

History and Classics at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Alberta.<br />

Andriy Zayarnyuk is Academic Director <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Institute for Urban History <strong>of</strong> East-Central Europe,<br />

Harald Binder's Foundation, Lviv.<br />

Of the many interwar connections between<br />

Germany and Russia, one <strong>of</strong> the most unusual<br />

– and least explored – is medicine and public<br />

health. Between 1922 and 1932, with high-level<br />

political support and government funding, Soviet<br />

and German physicians and public health specialists<br />

collaborated in joint research expeditions,<br />

published joint articles, launched a bi-lingual journal,<br />

and established joint research institutions.<br />

Surprisingly, students <strong>of</strong> Soviet-German relations<br />

have all but ignored this medical collaboration;<br />

while historians <strong>of</strong> science have treated it as political<br />

history, an exercise in cultural diplomacy designed<br />

to mitigate the impact <strong>of</strong> the post-war exclusion <strong>of</strong><br />

both nations from the international science.<br />

The contributors to this volume, who come from<br />

Germany, Russia, Britain, the United States and<br />

Canada, depart from the traditional approach to the<br />

subject. Drawing on previously inaccessible archival<br />

materials, the authors move beyond politics to<br />

examine the impact <strong>of</strong> this collaboration on scientific<br />

activity. Contributors analyze aspects <strong>of</strong> the German-<br />

Russian collaboration <strong>of</strong>ten overlooked by students <strong>of</strong><br />

cross-national science, including the choice <strong>of</strong> ‘friends’<br />

across borders, the activities <strong>of</strong> scientific entrepreneurs,<br />

the tensions between bi-lateral and international<br />

science, and the migration <strong>of</strong> scientists. Treating<br />

Soviet-German medical relations as an instance <strong>of</strong><br />

trans-national science lays bare its unique features.<br />

Ultimately, Doing Medicine Together raises new and<br />

important questions about the vaunted ‘special’ relation<br />

between Soviet Russia and Weimar Germany.<br />

Susan Gross Soloman is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />

<strong>of</strong> Political Science at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

Approx. 304 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

21 illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9148-2 / 978-0-8020-9148-2<br />

£40.00 $60.00 E<br />

Approx. 416 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

20 illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9171-7 / 978-0-8020-9171-0<br />

£42.00 $65.00 E<br />

21


C U LT U R A L S T U D I E S<br />

Screening Gender, Framing Genre<br />

Canadian Literature into Film<br />

Peter Dickinson<br />

Audiences <strong>of</strong>ten measure the success <strong>of</strong> film adaptations<br />

by how faithfully they adhere to their original<br />

source material. However, fidelity criticism tells<br />

only part <strong>of</strong> the story <strong>of</strong> adaptation. For example,<br />

the changes made to literary sources in the course<br />

<strong>of</strong> creating their film treatments are <strong>of</strong>ten fascinating<br />

in terms <strong>of</strong> what they reveal about the different<br />

processes <strong>of</strong> genre recognition and gender identification<br />

in both media, as well as the social, cultural,<br />

and historical contexts governing their production<br />

and reception.<br />

In Screening Gender, Framing<br />

Genre, Peter Dickinson<br />

examines the history and<br />

theory <strong>of</strong> films adapted<br />

from Canadian literature<br />

through the lens <strong>of</strong> gender studies.<br />

Unique in its discussion <strong>of</strong><br />

a range <strong>of</strong> different adaptations,<br />

including films based on novels,<br />

plays, poetry, and Native orature,<br />

this study <strong>of</strong>fers new and <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

provocative readings <strong>of</strong> works by<br />

such well-known Canadian authors<br />

as Margaret Atwood, Marie-Claire<br />

Blais, and Michael Ondaatje, and by<br />

such important Canadian filmmakers<br />

as Mireille Dansereau, Claude<br />

Jutra, Robert LePage, and Bruce<br />

McDonald. Drawing with equal<br />

facility from film and gender<br />

theory, and revealing a thorough<br />

knowledge <strong>of</strong> both literary and<br />

cinematic history, Dickinson has<br />

written a lively and engaging study that is sure to<br />

resonate with readers curious about the intersection<br />

<strong>of</strong> Canadian cultural production and broader issues<br />

<strong>of</strong> gender and national identity formation.<br />

Peter Dickinson is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

English at Simon Fraser <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Of related interest:<br />

One Hundred Years <strong>of</strong> Canadian Cinema<br />

George Melnyk<br />

0-8020-8444-3 /<br />

978-0-8020-8444-6<br />

£22.50 / $35.00 / 2004<br />

Masters <strong>of</strong> Two Arts<br />

Re-creation <strong>of</strong> European Literatures<br />

in Italian Cinema<br />

Carlo Testa<br />

0-8020-8475-3 /<br />

978-0-8020-8475-0<br />

£18.00 / $30.95 / 2002<br />

Approx. 304 pp / 6 ¾ x 9 ¾ / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

22 illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-4475-1<br />

978-0-8020-4475-4<br />

£28.00 $45.00 E<br />

Photo © Corbis<br />

22


C U LT U R A L S T U D I E S<br />

City Stages<br />

Theatre and Urban Space in a Global City<br />

Michael McKinnie<br />

Bodies <strong>of</strong> Tomorrow<br />

Technology, Subjectivity, Science Fiction<br />

Sherryl Vint<br />

CULTURAL SPACES<br />

In every major city, there exists a complex exchange<br />

between urban space and the institution <strong>of</strong> the<br />

theatre. City Stages is an interdisciplinary and materialist<br />

analysis <strong>of</strong> this relationship as it has existed<br />

in <strong>Toronto</strong> since 1967. Locating theatre companies<br />

– their sites and practices – in <strong>Toronto</strong>’s urban environment,<br />

Michael McKinnie focuses on the ways in<br />

which the theatre has adapted to changes in civic<br />

ideology, environment, and economy.<br />

Over the past four decades, theatre in <strong>Toronto</strong><br />

has been increasingly implicated in the civic selffashioning<br />

<strong>of</strong> the city and preoccupied with the consequences<br />

<strong>of</strong> the changing urban political economy.<br />

City Stages investigates a number <strong>of</strong> key questions<br />

that relate to this pattern. How has theatre been<br />

used to justify certain forms <strong>of</strong> urban development<br />

in <strong>Toronto</strong> How have local real estate markets<br />

influenced the ways in which theatre companies<br />

acquire and use performance space How does the<br />

analysis <strong>of</strong> theatre as an urban phenomenon complicate<br />

Canadian theatre historiography<br />

McKinnie uses the St. Lawrence Centre for the<br />

Arts and the <strong>Toronto</strong> Centre for the Performing Arts<br />

as case studies and considers theatrical companies<br />

such as Theatre Passe Muraille, <strong>Toronto</strong> Workshop<br />

Productions, Buddies in Bad Times, and Necessary<br />

Angel in his analysis. City Stages combines primary<br />

archival research with the scholarly literature emerging<br />

from both the humanities and social sciences.<br />

The result is a comprehensive and empirical examination<br />

<strong>of</strong> the relationship between the theatrical arts<br />

and the urban spaces that house them.<br />

Anxieties about embodiment and posthumanism<br />

have always found an outlet in the science fiction<br />

<strong>of</strong> the day. In Bodies <strong>of</strong> Tomorrow, Sherryl Vint<br />

argues for a new model <strong>of</strong> an ethical and embodied<br />

posthuman subject through close readings <strong>of</strong> the<br />

works <strong>of</strong> Gwyneth Jones, Octavia Butler, Iain M.<br />

Banks, William Gibson, and other science fiction<br />

authors. Vint’s discussion is firmly contextualized<br />

by discussions <strong>of</strong> contemporary technoscience, specifically<br />

genetics and information technology, and<br />

the implications <strong>of</strong> this technology for the way we<br />

consider human subjectivity.<br />

Engaging with theorists such as Michel Foucault,<br />

Judith Butler, Anne Balsamo, N. Katherine Hayles,<br />

and Douglas Kellner, Bodies <strong>of</strong> Tomorrow argues for<br />

the importance <strong>of</strong> challenging visions <strong>of</strong> humanity<br />

in the future that overlook our responsibility as<br />

embodied beings connected to a material world. If<br />

we are to understand the post-human subject, then<br />

we must acknowledge our embodied connection to<br />

the world around us and the value <strong>of</strong> our multiple<br />

subjective responses to it. Vint’s study thus encourages<br />

a move from the common liberal humanist<br />

approach to posthuman theory toward what she<br />

calls ‘embodied posthumanism.’ This timely work<br />

<strong>of</strong> science fiction criticism will prove fascinating<br />

to cultural theorists, philosophers, and literary<br />

scholars alike, as well as anyone concerned with the<br />

ethics <strong>of</strong> posthumanism.<br />

Sherryl Vint is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />

<strong>of</strong> English at St. Francis Xavier <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Michael McKinnie teaches in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

Drama and Theatre Arts at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Birmingham.<br />

Approx. 208 pp / 5 ½ x 8 ½ / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9121-0 / 978-0-8020-9121-5<br />

£28.00 $45.00 E<br />

Approx. 304 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9052-4 / 978-0-8020-9052-2<br />

£32.00 $50.00 E<br />

23


C U LT U R A L S T U D I E S<br />

Theatre <strong>of</strong> Estrangement<br />

Theory, Practice, Ideology<br />

Silvija Jestrovic<br />

GERMAN AND EUROPEAN STUDIES<br />

In a world flooded with information, images, and<br />

sounds – where the distinction between real and<br />

simulated becomes increasingly blurred – one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

most pressing concerns <strong>of</strong> the theatre is how to subvert<br />

the stock responses <strong>of</strong> an audience and make the<br />

well-known fresh and meaningful again. Situating<br />

the practice <strong>of</strong> theatrical estrangement firmly in its<br />

social and political contexts, Theatre <strong>of</strong> Estrangement<br />

looks at how this concern has manifested itself in<br />

Russian and German avant-garde theatre.<br />

Silvija Jestrovic traces the concept <strong>of</strong> estrangement<br />

from its early formulation in the Russian Formalist<br />

School <strong>of</strong> Literary Criticism embodied in the experiments<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Russian avant-garde, to its so-called<br />

apotheosis in the theory and practice <strong>of</strong> Bertolt<br />

Brecht. Drawing from a variety <strong>of</strong> sources – theatrical<br />

performances, dramatic works, visual art, film,<br />

political events, biographical data – she demonstrates<br />

that theatrical estrangement is not only an abstract<br />

theoretical postulate, but also a practical artistic<br />

strategy shaped by the cultural and historical climate.<br />

In the historical avant-garde, Jestrovic argues,<br />

estrangement became a way <strong>of</strong> thinking, a means <strong>of</strong><br />

comprehending the world, and even a lifestyle. Yet,<br />

devices <strong>of</strong> making the familiar strange are destined<br />

to erode in one historical and cultural context and<br />

become rediscovered in another to rejuvenate stale<br />

art forms and open the door to a fresh and more<br />

critical perception <strong>of</strong> reality. Theatre <strong>of</strong> Estrangement<br />

attempts to make that rediscovery.<br />

Silvija Jestrovic is a playwright and lecturer in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Theatre Studies at the <strong>University</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> Warwick.<br />

Madness and the Mad in<br />

Russian Culture<br />

Edited by Angela Brintlinger and Ilya Vinitsky<br />

The problem <strong>of</strong> madness has preoccupied Russian<br />

thinkers since the beginning <strong>of</strong> Russia’s troubled history<br />

and has been dealt with repeatedly in literature,<br />

art, film, and opera, as well as medical, political, and<br />

philosophical essays. Madness has been treated not<br />

only as a medical or psychological matter, but also<br />

as a metaphysical one, encompassing problems <strong>of</strong><br />

suffering, imagination, history, sex, social and world<br />

order, evil, retribution, death, and the afterlife.<br />

Madness and the Mad in Russian Culture represents<br />

a joint effort by American, British, and<br />

Russian scholars – historians, literary scholars,<br />

sociologists, cultural theorists, and philosophers<br />

– to understand the rich history <strong>of</strong> madness in the<br />

political, literary, and cultural spheres <strong>of</strong> Russia.<br />

Editors Angela Brintlinger and Ilya Vinitsky have<br />

brought together essays that cover over 250 years<br />

and address a wide variety <strong>of</strong> ideas related to madness<br />

– from the involvement <strong>of</strong> state and social<br />

structures in questions <strong>of</strong> mental health, to the<br />

attitudes <strong>of</strong> major Russian authors and cultural figures<br />

towards insanity and how those attitudes both<br />

shape and are shaped by the history, culture, and<br />

politics <strong>of</strong> Russia.<br />

Angela Brintlinger is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Slavic Languages and Literatures at<br />

Ohio State <strong>University</strong><br />

Ilya Vinitsky is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Slavic Languages and Literatures at<br />

the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Pennsylvania.<br />

Approx. 208 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9068-0 / 978-08020-9068-3<br />

£35.00 $55.00<br />

Approx. 304 pp / 6 x 9 / January 2007<br />

4 illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9140-7 / 978-08020-9140-6<br />

£45.00 $70.00<br />

24


C U LT U R A L S T U D I E S<br />

Modern Art and the Idea <strong>of</strong> the Mediterranean<br />

Edited by Vojtìch Jirat-Wasiutyñski<br />

The Mediterranean is an invented cultural space,<br />

on the frontier between North and South, West and<br />

East. Modern Art and the Idea <strong>of</strong> the Mediterranean<br />

examines the representation <strong>of</strong> this region in the<br />

visual arts since the late eighteenth century, placing<br />

the ‘idea <strong>of</strong> the Mediterranean’ – a cultural construct<br />

rather than a physical reality – at the centre <strong>of</strong><br />

our understanding <strong>of</strong> modern visual culture.<br />

This collection <strong>of</strong> essays features an international<br />

group <strong>of</strong> scholars who examine competing visions<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Mediterranean in terms <strong>of</strong> modernity and<br />

cultural identity, questioning and illuminating both<br />

European and non-European representations. An<br />

introductory essay frames the analysis in terms <strong>of</strong> a<br />

new spatial paradigm <strong>of</strong> the Mediterranean as a geographic,<br />

historical, and cultural region that emerged<br />

in the late eighteenth century, as France and Britain<br />

colonized the surrounding territories. Essays are<br />

grouped around three vital themes: visualization <strong>of</strong><br />

the space <strong>of</strong> the new Mediterranean; varied uses <strong>of</strong><br />

the classical paradigm; and issues <strong>of</strong> identity and<br />

resistance in an age <strong>of</strong> modernity and colonialism.<br />

Drawing on recent geographical, historical, cultural<br />

and anthropological studies, contributors address<br />

the visual representation <strong>of</strong> identity in both the<br />

European and the ‘Oriental,’ the colonial and postcolonial<br />

Mediterranean.<br />

Vojtìch Jirat-Wasiutyñski is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Art History at Queen’s <strong>University</strong>. Approx. 480 pp / 6 x 9 / January 2007<br />

140 illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9170-9 / 978-0-8020-9170-3<br />

£55.00 $85.00 E<br />

Femme Mauresque dansant au son de la Derbouda / early 20th<br />

century / postcard / collection <strong>of</strong> the author.<br />

25


I TA L I A N S T U D I E S<br />

Writing to Delight<br />

Italian Short Stories by Nineteenth-Century Women Writers<br />

Edited by Antonia Arslan and Gabriella Romani<br />

TORONTO ITALIAN STUDIES<br />

women became a visible and conspicuous social<br />

force as consumers <strong>of</strong> cultural goods, such as books<br />

and newspapers. Many <strong>of</strong> the writers included in<br />

this anthology – Matilde Serao, Marchesa Colombi,<br />

Neera, Contessa Lara – were not only very successful<br />

writers <strong>of</strong> fiction but also worked as journalists<br />

for some <strong>of</strong> the main national newspapers <strong>of</strong> the<br />

time. They were well acquainted with their readers’<br />

tastes and expectations and made such awareness<br />

an integral part <strong>of</strong> their creative process. Their<br />

fiction thus reflects the many topics and concerns<br />

that informed the social and cultural debates <strong>of</strong><br />

nineteenth-century Italy.<br />

Antonia Arslan has been a Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Modern and<br />

Contemporary Italian Literature at the <strong>University</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> Padova.<br />

The nineteenth century represents a crucial historical<br />

and cultural phase in the development <strong>of</strong><br />

modern Italy. Writing to Delight provides a selection<br />

<strong>of</strong> short stories written by some <strong>of</strong> the most accomplished<br />

and acclaimed female authors <strong>of</strong> nineteenthcentury<br />

Italy, made available to an English-speaking<br />

audience for the first time through this translation.<br />

The stories that make up this anthology are written<br />

in a realistic vein and describe the life and concerns<br />

<strong>of</strong> women at a time when Italy was going through<br />

major social and economic changes. Imbued with<br />

didactic aims, the authors <strong>of</strong> these stories strove to<br />

inspire and at the same time educate their public.<br />

In this regard, Writing to Delight also serves as an<br />

instrument for a critical investigation <strong>of</strong> both the<br />

cultural productions <strong>of</strong> nineteenth-century Italy<br />

and the process <strong>of</strong> formation <strong>of</strong> modern Italian<br />

identities. With the growth <strong>of</strong> the middle-classes<br />

and a more diffuse literacy among the population,<br />

Gabriella Romani is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Modern Languages at Seton Hall<br />

<strong>University</strong>.<br />

Of related interest:<br />

The Century <strong>of</strong> Women<br />

Representations <strong>of</strong> Women in Eighteenth-Century<br />

Italian Public Discourse<br />

Rebecca Messbarger<br />

0-8020-3652-X / 978-0-8020-3652-0<br />

£28.00 / $48.00 / 2002<br />

Approx. 224 pp / 6 x 9 / August <strong>2006</strong><br />

3 illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3874-3 / 978-0-8020-3874-6<br />

£48.00 $75.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-3810-7 / 978-0-8020-3810-4<br />

£20.00 $29.95 T<br />

Ettore Tito, Lettura con musica. Private Collection.<br />

26


I TA L I A N S T U D I E S<br />

Beyond the Family Romance<br />

The Legend <strong>of</strong> Pascoli<br />

Maria Truglio<br />

TORONTO ITALIAN STUDIES<br />

Giovanni Pascoli (1855–1912) is one <strong>of</strong> Italy’s most<br />

canonical and beloved poets. In Beyond the Family<br />

Romance, Maria Truglio <strong>of</strong>fers fresh insight into<br />

the uncanny qualities <strong>of</strong> Pascoli’s domestic verse.<br />

As suggested by the Freudian title, this study opens<br />

a dialogue between Pascoli’s literature and Freud’s<br />

theories, with a particular focus on each author’s<br />

interrogation <strong>of</strong> origins. Through close readings and<br />

historical contextualization, themes <strong>of</strong> regression,<br />

memory, and other manifestations <strong>of</strong> ‘origins’ are<br />

analyzed, moving Pascoli’s poetry beyond the biographical<br />

strictures that have hitherto confined it.<br />

Truglio’s post-structuralist readings question<br />

the dichotomy between ‘safety within the home’<br />

and the ‘threatening outside world,’ revealing the<br />

ambivalences with which images <strong>of</strong> the home are<br />

fraught in Pascoli’s poetry. In addition to the sustained<br />

comparison with Freud’s writing, Beyond the<br />

Family Romance explores parallels between Pascoli’s<br />

work and such writers as Tarchetti, Boito, Poe, and<br />

Invernizio. Rethinking the concept <strong>of</strong> the fanciullino<br />

(‘little child’), Truglio shows that Pascoli’s poetry<br />

enacts a symbiosis between the logic <strong>of</strong> the rational<br />

modern adult and the mythic vision <strong>of</strong> the child.<br />

Maria Truglio is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese at<br />

Pennsylvania State <strong>University</strong>.<br />

The Novel as Investigation<br />

Leonardo Sciascia, Dacia Maraini, and Antonio Tabucchi<br />

Jo-Ann Cannon<br />

TORONTO ITALIAN STUDIES<br />

Detective fiction is a universally popular genre; stories<br />

about the investigation <strong>of</strong> a crime by a detective<br />

are published all over the world and in hundreds<br />

<strong>of</strong> languages. Detective fiction provides more than<br />

entertainment, however; it <strong>of</strong>ten has a great deal<br />

to say about crime and punishment, justice and<br />

injustice, testimony and judgment. The Novel as<br />

Investigation examines a group <strong>of</strong> detective novels by<br />

three important Italian writers – Leonardo Sciascia,<br />

Dacia Maraini, and Antonio Tabucchi – whose conviction<br />

about the ethical responsibility <strong>of</strong> the writer<br />

manifests itself in their investigative fiction.<br />

Jo-Ann Cannon explores each writer’s denunciation<br />

<strong>of</strong> societal ills in two complementary texts.<br />

These investigative novels shed light on pressing<br />

social ills, which are not particular to Italian society<br />

<strong>of</strong> the late twentieth century but are universal in<br />

scope: Sciascia focuses on abuses <strong>of</strong> power and the<br />

death penalty, Maraini on violence against women,<br />

Tabucchi on torture and police brutality. In addition,<br />

each <strong>of</strong> these texts self-reflexively explore the<br />

role <strong>of</strong> writing in society. Sciascia, Maraini, and<br />

Tabucchi all use their fiction to defend the power <strong>of</strong><br />

the pen to address “il male del mondo.”<br />

The Novel as Investigation will be <strong>of</strong> interest to<br />

a broad audience <strong>of</strong> readers, including those interested<br />

in Italian and comparative literature, Italian<br />

social history, and cultural studies.<br />

Jo-Ann Cannon is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

Italian at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> California, Davis.<br />

Approx. 192 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9191-1 / 978-0-8020-9191-8<br />

£28.00 $45.00 E<br />

Approx. 144 pp / 6 x 9 / August <strong>2006</strong><br />

3 illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9114-8 / 978-08020-9114-7<br />

£32.00 $50.00 E<br />

27


I TA L I A N S T U D I E S<br />

Italian Cultural Lineages<br />

Jonathan White<br />

TORONTO ITALIAN STUDIES<br />

In Italian Cultural Lineages, Jonathan White seeks<br />

answers to the elusive questions: what is Italian<br />

culture and what is the Italian identity By tracing<br />

Italian life and art through several themes – viewing<br />

and spectatorship, fantasy, passion, justice, reputation,<br />

and lifestyles – White <strong>of</strong>fers new ways <strong>of</strong> perceiving<br />

an ancient cultural tradition in the twentyfirst<br />

century. In doing so, he challenges readers to<br />

discern rich poetic seams that bind together his<br />

varied subject matter.<br />

Italian Cultural Lineages is primarily concerned<br />

with factors that unify Italians, however geographically<br />

dispersed they may be. Drawing on extensive<br />

archival and historical research, White shows how<br />

<strong>of</strong>tentimes Italian cultural traditions that appear<br />

to be extinct are, in fact, enduring – pushed out<br />

<strong>of</strong> the mainstream or submerged at some given<br />

point in history, only to re-surface and take on new<br />

meanings at a later date. Other, more marginal currents<br />

might disrupt and fragment Italian identity,<br />

politically and socially. However, White proposes<br />

that the challenge to Italy in these new and difficult<br />

lessons in tolerance has the potential to produce<br />

a much stronger culture, primed to welcome the<br />

marginal into an expanded spirit <strong>of</strong> all that counts<br />

as Italian. Ideally suited to course use, and written<br />

with great lucidity, Italian Cultural Lineages will<br />

prove fascinating to students, academics, and general<br />

readers alike.<br />

Jonathan White is Reader in Literature at the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Essex.<br />

World’s Fairs Italian-Style<br />

The Great Expositions in Turin and their Narratives,<br />

1860–1915<br />

Cristina Della Coletta<br />

TORONTO ITALIAN STUDIES<br />

According to conventional wisdom, Italy was not<br />

an influential participant in the nationalistic and<br />

imperialistic discourses that world’s fairs produced<br />

in countries such as Great Britain, France, and<br />

the United States. In the late nineteenth and early<br />

twentieth centuries, however, Italy hosted numerous<br />

national and international exhibitions expounding<br />

notions <strong>of</strong> national identity, imperial expansion,<br />

technological progress, and capitalist growth.<br />

World’s Fairs Italian-Style explores world’s fairs in<br />

Italy at the turn <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century in comparison<br />

to their more famous counterparts in France, England,<br />

and the United States. Cristina Della Coletta demonstrates<br />

that, because <strong>of</strong> its social fragmentation and<br />

hybrid history, Italy was a site <strong>of</strong> both hegemony and<br />

subordination – an aspiring imperial power whose colonization<br />

started from within. She focuses on two bestselling<br />

authors, Emilio Salgari and Guido Gozzano,<br />

and illustrates how these authors interpreted their age’s<br />

‘exposition mentality.’ Salgari and Gozzano’s exposition<br />

narratives, Della Coletta argues, reveal Italy’s uncertainties<br />

about own sense <strong>of</strong> national identity, and its belated<br />

commitment to Western imperialism.<br />

Of interest to students and scholars <strong>of</strong> literature,<br />

cultural history, and Italian, World’s Fairs Italian-<br />

Style provides a fascinating glimpse into a hitherto<br />

unexplored area <strong>of</strong> study, and brings to light a cultural<br />

phenomenon that played a significant role in<br />

shaping Italy’s national identity.<br />

Cristina Della Coletta is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese at<br />

the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Virginia.<br />

Approx. 336pp / 6 x 9 / January 2007<br />

24 Photographs<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9230-6 / 978-0-8020-9230-4<br />

£48.00 $75.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9458-9 / 978-0-8020-9458-2<br />

£22.50 $35.00 C<br />

Approx. 400 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

20 illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9115-6 / 978-08020-9115-4<br />

£45.00 $70.00 E<br />

28


B O O K H I S T O R Y<br />

Culinary Landmarks<br />

A Bibliography <strong>of</strong> Canadian Cookbooks, 1825–1949<br />

Edited by Elizabeth Driver<br />

STUDIES IN BOOK AND PRINT CULTURE<br />

territory <strong>of</strong> publication, revealing cooking and<br />

dining customs in each part <strong>of</strong> the country over<br />

125 years. Full bibliographical descriptions <strong>of</strong><br />

first and subsequent editions are augmented by<br />

author biographies and corporate histories <strong>of</strong> the<br />

food producers and kitchen-equipment manufacturers,<br />

who <strong>of</strong>ten published the books. Driver’s<br />

excellent general introduction sets out the evolution<br />

<strong>of</strong> the cookbook genre in Canada, while<br />

brief introductions for each province identify<br />

regional differences in developments and trends.<br />

Four indexes and a ‘Chronology <strong>of</strong> Canadian<br />

Cookbook History’ provide other points <strong>of</strong> access<br />

to the wealth <strong>of</strong> material in this impressive reference<br />

book.<br />

Elizabeth Driver is an independent scholar living in<br />

<strong>Toronto</strong> and president <strong>of</strong> the Culinary Historians<br />

<strong>of</strong> Ontario.<br />

Culinary Landmarks is a definitive history and bibliography<br />

<strong>of</strong> Canadian cookbooks from the beginning,<br />

when La cuisinière bourgeoise was published in<br />

Quebec City in 1825, to the mid-twentieth century.<br />

Over the course <strong>of</strong> more than ten years Elizabeth<br />

Driver researched every cookbook published within<br />

the borders <strong>of</strong> present-day Canada, whether a locally<br />

authored text or a Canadian edition <strong>of</strong> a foreign<br />

work. Every type <strong>of</strong> recipe collection is included,<br />

from trade publishers’ bestsellers and advertising<br />

cookbooks, to home economics textbooks and<br />

fund-raisers from church women’s groups.<br />

The entries for over 2,200 individual titles<br />

are arranged chronologically by their province or<br />

Of related interest:<br />

Science in the Kitchen and the Art <strong>of</strong> Eating<br />

Well<br />

Pellegrino Artusi<br />

Translated by Murtha Baca and Stephen Sartarelli.<br />

0-8020-8657-8 / 978-0-8020-8657-0<br />

£18.99 / $40.00 / 2003<br />

Approx. 1008 pp / 8 ½ x 11 / January 2007<br />

18 colour and 31 black and white illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-4790-4 / 978-0-8020-4790-8<br />

£112.00 $175.00 E<br />

Front cover <strong>of</strong> Dainty and Delicious Dishes, <strong>Toronto</strong>: Cowan Co.<br />

Ltd, nd [1915] (0336.1).<br />

29


B O O K H I S T O R Y<br />

Old Books and<br />

New Histories<br />

An Orientation to Studies in Book and Print Culture<br />

Leslie Howsam<br />

STUDIES IN BOOK AND PRINT CULTURE<br />

Studies in the culture and history <strong>of</strong> the book are a<br />

burgeoning academic specialty. Intriguing, rigorous,<br />

and vital, they are nevertheless rooted within three<br />

major academic disciplines – history, literary studies,<br />

and bibliography – that focus respectively upon the<br />

book as a cultural transaction, a literary text, and a<br />

material artefact. Old Books and New Histories serves<br />

as a guide to this rich but sometimes confusing territory,<br />

explaining how different scholarly approaches<br />

to what may appear to be the same entity can lead to<br />

divergent questions and contradictory answers.<br />

Rather than introduce the events and turning<br />

points in the history <strong>of</strong> book culture, or debates<br />

among its theorists, Leslie Howsam uses an array <strong>of</strong><br />

books and articles to <strong>of</strong>fer an orientation to the field<br />

in terms <strong>of</strong> disciplinary boundaries and interdisciplinary<br />

tensions. Howsam’s analysis maps studies <strong>of</strong> book<br />

and print culture onto the disciplinary structure <strong>of</strong> the<br />

North American and European academic world.<br />

Old Books and New Histories is also an engaged<br />

statement <strong>of</strong> the historical perspective <strong>of</strong> the book.<br />

In the final analysis, the lesson <strong>of</strong> studies in book<br />

and print culture is that texts change, books are<br />

mutable, and readers ultimately make <strong>of</strong> books<br />

what they need.<br />

Leslie Howsam is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Windsor.<br />

The Illustrated Old English<br />

Hexateuch, Cotton Ms. Claudius B.iv<br />

The Frontier <strong>of</strong> Seeing and Reading in<br />

Anglo-Saxon England<br />

Benjamin C. Withers<br />

STUDIES IN BOOK AND PRINT CULTURE<br />

The Old English Hexateuch is a manuscript <strong>of</strong> the<br />

earliest vernacular translation <strong>of</strong> the Old Testament<br />

books <strong>of</strong> Genesis through Joshua. The texts belong,<br />

in part, to the Anglo-Saxon monk Aelfric (950–<br />

1010) and to several anonymous translators and<br />

at least one artist who compiled these translations<br />

and illustrated them with nearly four hundred narrative<br />

images, which are carefully integrated into<br />

the manuscript.<br />

The Hexateuch testifies to the creativity and<br />

innovation <strong>of</strong> Anglo-Saxon bookmakers and stands<br />

as an important, if little known, witness to the relationship<br />

between early book-making technology<br />

and the history <strong>of</strong> literacy. Benjamin C. Withers<br />

examines codicological features <strong>of</strong> the manuscript,<br />

focusing on the working processes <strong>of</strong> the artist and<br />

scribes and seeking to understand how they integrated<br />

newly translated text with newly developed<br />

imagery so deftly. Grounded in art history and<br />

literary theory, this work considers the narrative<br />

relationships created by the careful design and seeks<br />

to place the Hexateuch within the broader social<br />

and cultural development <strong>of</strong> vernacular literacy in<br />

the eleventh century.<br />

Benjamin C. Withers is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor and<br />

chair in the Department <strong>of</strong> Art at the <strong>University</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> Kentucky.<br />

Approx. 128 pp / 5 ½ x 8 ½ / September <strong>2006</strong><br />

4 figures<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9196-2 / 978-0-8020-9196-3<br />

£25.00 $40.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9438-4 / 978-0-8020-9438-4<br />

£9.95 $16.95 C<br />

Approx. 464 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

115 black and white illustrations, CD <strong>of</strong> digital reproductions<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9104-0 / 978-8020-9104-8<br />

$85.00 E<br />

WORLD RIGHTS EXCLUDING UK AND EUROPE<br />

CO-PUBLISHED WITH THE BRITISH LIBRARY.<br />

30


B O O K H I S T O R Y<br />

RECENT TITLES IN THE<br />

STUDIES IN BOOK AND PRINT<br />

CULTURE SERIES<br />

Fleet Street – Five Hundred Years<br />

<strong>of</strong> the <strong>Press</strong><br />

Dennis Griffiths<br />

THE BRITISH LIBRARY<br />

Andrés González de Barcia and the<br />

Creation <strong>of</strong> the Colonial Spanish<br />

American Library<br />

Jonathan E. Carlyon<br />

0-8020-3845-X / 978-0-8020-3845-6<br />

£42.00 / $55.00 / 2005<br />

When Canadian Literature Moved to<br />

New York<br />

Nick Mount<br />

0-8020-3828-X / 978-0-8020-3828-9<br />

£28.00 / $45.00 / 2005<br />

The Future <strong>of</strong> the Page<br />

Edited by Peter Stoicheff and Andrew Taylor<br />

0-8020-8584-9 / 978-0-8020-8584-9<br />

£20.00 / $29.95 / 2005<br />

‘Paper-contestations’ and Textual<br />

Communities in England, 1640-1675<br />

Elizabeth Sauer<br />

0-8020-3884-0 / 978-0-8020-3884-5<br />

£28.00 / $50.00 / 2005<br />

Reading Women<br />

Literary Figures and Cultural Icons from the<br />

Victorian Age to the Present<br />

Edited by Janet Badia and Jennifer Phegley<br />

0-8020-8928-3 / 978-0-8020-8928-1<br />

£40.00 / $60.00 / 2005<br />

The World in Venice<br />

Print, the City, and Early Modern Identity<br />

Bronwen Wilson<br />

0-8020-8725-6 / 978-0-8020-8725-6<br />

£45.00 / $70.00 / 2005<br />

This authoritative history <strong>of</strong> the press in London<br />

from its earliest days through to the re-launch <strong>of</strong><br />

The Guardian in 2005 tells a fascinating story. Although<br />

there were ‘newsbooks’ during the turbulent<br />

Civil War period, and rigorously state-controlled<br />

newspapers (such as the London Gazette) launched<br />

afterwards, the newspaper industry as we know it<br />

today really began to flourish in the 1690s, when<br />

it was released from censorship. New papers have<br />

been launched every year since then, yet only a<br />

few have adapted and survived. Those who have<br />

succeeded have learned to live by the words ‘Give<br />

the readers what they want’ – a mantra that Dennis<br />

Griffiths adopts in presenting this history. Expertly<br />

weaving together themes ranging from political<br />

opinion, technological advances, advertising campaigns,<br />

unions, and price wars, to the influence<br />

<strong>of</strong> editors, the power <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Press</strong> Barons, gossip<br />

columnists, and the invention <strong>of</strong> the crossword,<br />

Griffiths presents a fascinating glimpse into the history<br />

<strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> Britain’s most powerful and enduring<br />

industries.<br />

Dennis Griffiths was former production director <strong>of</strong><br />

Express Newspapers, editor <strong>of</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essional Printer,<br />

and is currently the lead curator <strong>of</strong> The Front Page<br />

exhibition at the British Library.<br />

448 pp / 6 2 /3 x 9 2 /3 / Available<br />

40 black and white illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-7123-0697-8 / 978-0-7123-0697-3<br />

$50.00 E<br />

DISTRIBUTIONS RIGHTS FOR NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA ONLY.<br />

OTHER RIGHTS HELD BY THE BRITISH LIBRARY.<br />

31


L I T E R A R Y S T U D I E S<br />

The Great Code<br />

The Bible and Literature<br />

Northrop Frye<br />

Edited by Alvin A. Lee<br />

COLLECTED WORKS OF NORTHROP FRYE, VOLUME 19<br />

Considered by many to be Northrop Frye’s magnum<br />

opus, The Great Code (1982) reflects a lifetime <strong>of</strong><br />

thinking about the patterns and meanings <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Bible. In this new edition <strong>of</strong> The Great Code, Alvin A.<br />

Lee presents a corrected and fully annotated version<br />

<strong>of</strong> Frye’s text, as well as a comprehensive introduction<br />

to help contextualize this important work and guide<br />

readers through its allusive passages. Lee’s introduction<br />

provides a synoptic account <strong>of</strong> the role <strong>of</strong> the Bible<br />

in Frye’s intellectual and spiritual odyssey, as well as<br />

a description <strong>of</strong> how The Great Code as a book came<br />

into existence, and an introductory critique <strong>of</strong> the<br />

shape and meaning <strong>of</strong> the book’s argument.<br />

The Great Code is culturally allusive to a high<br />

degree. It takes much <strong>of</strong> its inspiration from the<br />

Bible itself, including a pr<strong>of</strong>usion <strong>of</strong> biblical passages,<br />

but also from the author’s extensive reading<br />

<strong>of</strong> a host <strong>of</strong> other texts from ancient times until the<br />

late twentieth century. Lee’s extensive annotation<br />

illustrates, beyond question, that Frye’s knowledge<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Bible and how it has worked in Western<br />

culture was at once pr<strong>of</strong>ound and visionary. This<br />

new edition not only re-presents Frye’s text in a<br />

clear, correct, and fully annotated form, it goes a<br />

long way in helping us understand the widespread<br />

scholarly and popular reception that met this<br />

extraordinary and in some ways revolutionary book<br />

and how it can still be richly rewarding for readers.<br />

Alvin A. Lee is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in the Department<br />

<strong>of</strong> English at McMaster <strong>University</strong>, a research<br />

associate at Victoria College in the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Toronto</strong>, and general editor <strong>of</strong> the Collected Works<br />

<strong>of</strong> Northrop Frye.<br />

Northrop Frye’s Notebooks<br />

on Renaissance Literature<br />

Edited by Michael Dolzani<br />

COLLECTED WORKS OF NORTHROP FRYE, VOLUME 20<br />

Although Northrop Frye’s first book, Fearful<br />

Symmetry (1947), elevated the reputation <strong>of</strong> William<br />

Blake from the status <strong>of</strong> a minor eccentric to that<br />

<strong>of</strong> a major Romantic poet, Frye in fact saw Blake as<br />

a poet (and, consequently, himself as a critic) not<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Romantic period, but <strong>of</strong> the Renaissance.<br />

As such, Frye’s meditations on the Renaissance are<br />

particularly valuable. This volume collects six <strong>of</strong><br />

Frye’s notebooks and five sets <strong>of</strong> his typed notes on<br />

subjects related to Renaissance literature.<br />

Michael Dolzani divides these notes into three<br />

categories: those on Spenser and the epic tradition;<br />

those on Shakespearean drama and, more widely, the<br />

dramatic tradition from Old Comedy to the masque;<br />

and those on lyric poetry and non-fiction prose.<br />

The organization <strong>of</strong> this volume reflects ‘a comprehensive<br />

study <strong>of</strong> Renaissance Symbolism’ in three<br />

volumes, which Frye proposed to the Guggenheim<br />

Foundation in 1949. Frye received a Guggenheim<br />

fellowship, but never wrote the book; nevertheless,<br />

his application, part <strong>of</strong> which is also included here, is<br />

an important document. The Guggenheim application<br />

not only reveals the outlines <strong>of</strong> Frye’s thinking<br />

about literature, it also uncovers his plans for his<br />

future creative life during the crucial period between<br />

his completion <strong>of</strong> Fearful Symmetry and his absorption<br />

in the writing <strong>of</strong> Anatomy <strong>of</strong> Criticism.<br />

In addition to providing insight into Frye’s<br />

thinking process, the material collected into this<br />

key volume in the Collected Works is <strong>of</strong> particular<br />

importance because much <strong>of</strong> it has no direct counterpart<br />

in any <strong>of</strong> Frye’s other published works.<br />

Michael Dolzani is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

English at Baldwin Wallace College.<br />

Approx. 464 pp / 6 x 9 / July <strong>2006</strong><br />

1 illustration<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9120-2 / 978-08020-9120-8<br />

£65.00 $100.00 E<br />

Approx. 608 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9179-2 / 978-0-8020-9179-6<br />

£65.00 $100.00 E<br />

32


L I T E R A R Y S T U D I E S<br />

The Educated Imagination<br />

and Other Writings on<br />

Critical Theory 1933–1963<br />

Northrop Frye<br />

Edited by Germaine Warkentin<br />

COLLECTED WORKS OF NORTHROP FRYE, VOLUME 21<br />

In 1933, Northrop Frye was a recent university<br />

graduate, beginning to learn his craft as a literary<br />

essayist. By 1963, with the publication <strong>of</strong> The<br />

Educated Imagination, he had become an international<br />

academic celebrity. In the intervening three<br />

decades, Frye wrote widely and prodigiously, but<br />

it is in the papers and lectures collected in this<br />

installment <strong>of</strong> the Collected Works <strong>of</strong> Northrop<br />

Frye, that the genesis <strong>of</strong> a distinguished literary<br />

critic can be seen. Here is Frye tracing the first<br />

outlines <strong>of</strong> a literary cosmology that would culminate<br />

in The Anatomy <strong>of</strong> Criticism (1958) and<br />

shape The Great Code (1982) and Words with<br />

Power (1990).<br />

At the same time that Frye garnered such international<br />

acclaim, he was also a working university<br />

teacher, lecturing in the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>’s<br />

English Language and Literature program. In her<br />

lively introduction, Germaine Warkentin links<br />

Frye’s evolution as a critic with his love <strong>of</strong> music, his<br />

passionate concern for his students, and his growing<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essional ambition. The writings included<br />

in this volume show how Frye integrated ideas<br />

into the work that would consolidate the fame that<br />

Fearful Symmetry (1947) had first established.<br />

Germaine Warkentin is Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Emeritus <strong>of</strong><br />

English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

Approx. 768 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

6 photographs<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9209-8 / 978-0-8020-9209-0<br />

£80.00 $125.00 E<br />

RECENT TITLES IN THE<br />

COLLECTED WORKS OF<br />

NORTHROP FRYE<br />

The Secular Scripture and Other Writings<br />

on Critical Theory, 1976–1991<br />

Volume 18<br />

Edited by Joseph Adamson and Jean Wilson<br />

0-8020-3945-6 / 978-0-8020-3945-3<br />

£65.00 / $100.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Northrop Frye’s Writings on the<br />

Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries<br />

Volume 17<br />

Edited by Imre Salusinszky<br />

0-8020-3824-7 / 978-0-8020-3824-1<br />

£55.00 / $85.00 / 2005<br />

Northrop Frye on Milton and Blake<br />

Volume 16<br />

Edited by Angela Esterhammer<br />

0-8020-3919-7 / 978-0-8020-3919-4<br />

£55.00 / $85.00 / 2005<br />

Northrop Frye’s Notebooks on Romance<br />

Volume 15<br />

Edited by Michael Dolzani<br />

0-8020-3947-2 / 978-0-8020-3947-7<br />

£60.00 / $95.00 / 2004<br />

Fearful Symmetry<br />

A Study <strong>of</strong> William Blake<br />

Volume 14<br />

Edited by Nicholas Halmi<br />

0-8020-8983-6 / 978-0-8020-8983-0<br />

£60.00 / $95.00 / 2004<br />

33


L I T E R A R Y S T U D I E S<br />

Hopkins’s Poetics <strong>of</strong><br />

Speech Sound<br />

Sprung Rhythm, Lettering, Inscape<br />

Loving in Verse<br />

Poetic Influence as Erotic<br />

Stephen Guy-Bray<br />

James I. Wimsatt<br />

Although virtually unknown in his lifetime,<br />

Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844–1889) is counted<br />

today among the great nineteenth-century poets.<br />

His poetry was collected and published posthumously<br />

by his friend Robert Bridges in 1917,<br />

and subsequently Hopkins’s reputation flowered,<br />

though more as a modern writer than as Victorian,<br />

and very little as a poetic theorist. Yet the body <strong>of</strong><br />

Hopkins’s critical writing reveals sharp insight into<br />

the subject <strong>of</strong> poetics, and presents an innovative<br />

theory that locates primary poetic meaning in<br />

‘figures <strong>of</strong> speech sound.’<br />

These ‘figures <strong>of</strong> speech sound’ provide the<br />

focus for James I. Wimsatt’s erudite and original<br />

study. Drawing from Hopkins’s diaries, letters, student<br />

essays, and correspondence with poet-friends,<br />

Wimsatt illuminates Hopkins’s theory that the<br />

sound <strong>of</strong> poetic language carries an emotional, not<br />

merely logical and grammatical, meaning. Wimsatt<br />

concentrates his study on Hopkins’s writings<br />

about ‘sprung rhythm,’ ‘lettering,’ and ‘inscape,’<br />

– his coinages – and makes abundant reference to<br />

Hopkins’s verse, showing how it exemplifies his language<br />

theory. A well-researched and highly detailed<br />

book, Hopkins’s Poetics <strong>of</strong> Speech Sound asserts major<br />

significance for a relatively neglected aspect <strong>of</strong> this<br />

important poet’s writings.<br />

James I. Wimsatt is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Texas<br />

at Austin.<br />

The current critical tendency in the study <strong>of</strong><br />

Renaissance literature is to regard the relationship<br />

between a poet and his predecessor as either<br />

familial or antagonistic. Stephen Guy-Bray argues<br />

that neither <strong>of</strong> these models can be applied to all<br />

poetic relationships and that, in fact, the romantic<br />

and even sexual nature <strong>of</strong> some relationships must<br />

be considered.<br />

Loving in Verse examines how three poets present<br />

their relationship to their most important<br />

predecessors, beginning with Dante’s use <strong>of</strong> Virgil<br />

and Statius in the Divine Comedy, moving on to<br />

Spenser’s use <strong>of</strong> medieval English poets in the Faerie<br />

Queene, and finally addressing Hart Crane’s use <strong>of</strong><br />

Whitman in The Bridge. In each case, Guy-Bray<br />

shows how the younger poet presents himself and<br />

the older poet as part <strong>of</strong> a male couple. He goes<br />

on to demonstrate how male couples are, in fact,<br />

found throughout these poems, and while some<br />

are indeed familial or hostile, many are romantic<br />

or sexual. Using concepts from queer theory and<br />

close readings <strong>of</strong> images and allusions in these<br />

texts, Loving in Verse demonstrates the importance<br />

<strong>of</strong> homoeroticism to an examination <strong>of</strong> poetic<br />

influence. A discussion <strong>of</strong> the theories <strong>of</strong> poetic<br />

influence from four twentieth-century writers (T.S.<br />

Eliot, Harold Bloom, Roland Barthes, and Frank<br />

O’Hara) concludes Guy-Bray’s analysis.<br />

Stephen Guy-Bray is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British<br />

Columbia.<br />

Approx. 192 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9154-7 / 978-0-8020-9154-3<br />

£28.00 $45.00 E<br />

Approx. 184 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9203-9 / 978-0-8020-9203-8<br />

£28.00 $45.00 E<br />

34


M E D I E VA L & R E N A I S S A N C E S T U D I E S<br />

Sexual Hierarchies, Public Status<br />

Men, Sodomy, and Society in Spain’s Golden Age<br />

Cristian Berco<br />

Despite the increasing popularity <strong>of</strong> queer scholarship,<br />

no major work in English thus far has explored<br />

the evidence <strong>of</strong> male homosexual behaviour found<br />

in the inquisitorial court records <strong>of</strong> early modern<br />

Spain. This absence seems all the more<br />

glaring considering the wealth <strong>of</strong> available<br />

archival material. Sexual Hierarchies,<br />

Public Status aims to fill this gap by comprehensively<br />

examining the Aragonese<br />

Inquisition’s sodomy trials.<br />

Using court records, Cristian<br />

Berco provides an analysis <strong>of</strong> male<br />

sexuality and its connection to<br />

public social structures and<br />

processes. His study illustrates<br />

how male homosexual<br />

behaviour existed<br />

within a widespread gendered<br />

system that extolled the<br />

penetrative act as the masculine<br />

pursuit <strong>of</strong> an emasculated passive<br />

partner. This sexual hierarchy based on<br />

masculinity constantly intersected in a<br />

potentially subversive manner with notions<br />

<strong>of</strong> public hierarchy and posed a threat to local<br />

sexual economies. Yet, Berco demonstrates<br />

how the views <strong>of</strong> private denouncers and<br />

magistrates in the sodomy<br />

trials produced divergent<br />

sexual economies<br />

that rendered persecution<br />

unstable and diffuse.<br />

By focusing on how hierarchies were created<br />

both within sexual relationships and in the public<br />

eye, this investigation traces the significance <strong>of</strong><br />

homosexual desire in the context <strong>of</strong> daily social<br />

relations informed by status, ethnic, religious, and<br />

national differences.<br />

Cristian Berco is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> History at Bishop’s <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Of related interest:<br />

Holiness and Masculinity in<br />

Medieval Europe<br />

Edited by Patricia Cullum and<br />

Katherine J. Lewis<br />

0-8020-4892-7 / 978-0-8020-<br />

4892-9<br />

$27.50 / 2005<br />

North American Rights Only<br />

Sex Crimes, Honour, and the<br />

Law in Early Modern Spain<br />

Vizcaya, 1528-1735<br />

Renato Barahona<br />

0-8020-3694-5 / 978-0-8020-3694-0<br />

£32.00 / $63.00 / 2003<br />

Approx. 248 pp / 6 x 9 / January 2007<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9139-3 / 978-08020-9139-0<br />

£32.00 $55.00 E<br />

Court Costume <strong>of</strong> Spanish noblemen.<br />

Veccilio's Renaissance Costume Book, 247.<br />

35


M E D I E VA L & R E N A I S S A N C E S T U D I E S<br />

The Jesuit Series Part Five<br />

(P-Z)<br />

Edited by Peter M. Daly and G. Richard Dimler<br />

CORPUS LIBRORUM EMBLEMATUM (CLE) SERIES<br />

The Corpus Librorum Emblematum (CLE)<br />

series presents documentation relating to printed<br />

books belonging to the tradition <strong>of</strong> emblems and<br />

imprese.<br />

The individual catalogues provide comprehensive<br />

short-title information accompanied by facsimile<br />

reproductions <strong>of</strong> title pages, and, where possible,<br />

also a sample emblem. The volumes provide<br />

a representative selection <strong>of</strong> library locations and<br />

pressmarks. Fingerprints and facsimile title pages<br />

enhance the bibliographic description <strong>of</strong> the books<br />

so that the record provided by CLE contains sufficient<br />

information to identify the edition or issue<br />

<strong>of</strong> a given emblem book.<br />

The bibliography encompasses all extant books<br />

<strong>of</strong> emblems, works illustrated with emblems, and<br />

books dealing with the theory and practice <strong>of</strong><br />

emblematics written by members <strong>of</strong> the Society <strong>of</strong><br />

Jesus. Translations and adaptations <strong>of</strong> Jesuit works<br />

in all languages are also included.<br />

The complete Jesuit Series will comprise some<br />

1700 entries: about 500 first editions, and a further<br />

1200 subsequent editions, issues, and translations.<br />

Peter M. Daly is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in the Department<br />

<strong>of</strong> German Studies at McGill <strong>University</strong>.<br />

G. Richard Dimler, S.J. is a research pr<strong>of</strong>essor at<br />

Fordham <strong>University</strong>.<br />

REED in Review<br />

Essays in Celebration <strong>of</strong> the First Twenty-Five Years<br />

Edited by Audrey Douglas and Sally-Beth MacLean<br />

STUDIES IN EARLY ENGLISH DRAMA (SEED)<br />

In 2002, the Records <strong>of</strong> Early English Drama (REED)<br />

project marked its twenty-fifth anniversary with<br />

a special series <strong>of</strong> sessions at the International<br />

Medieval Congress at Leeds <strong>University</strong>. The REED<br />

sessions were designed to allow critical reflection<br />

on the past, present, and future <strong>of</strong> the project<br />

as it entered the twenty-first century. Thirteen<br />

essays amplifying the content <strong>of</strong> selected conference<br />

papers, and a fourteenth submitted at the editors’<br />

invitation, make up REED in Review.<br />

Contributors to the collection describe the<br />

conception and early years <strong>of</strong> REED, assess the<br />

project’s impact on recent and current scholarship,<br />

and anticipate or propose stimulating new<br />

directions for future research. Individual essays<br />

address a wide variety <strong>of</strong> subjects, from the impact<br />

<strong>of</strong> REED research on Shakespeare textual editing,<br />

Robin Hood, patronage, and Elizabethan theatre<br />

studies, to a thought provoking redefinition <strong>of</strong><br />

‘drama,’ details <strong>of</strong> recent ground-breaking research<br />

in Scottish records, and the broadening possibilities<br />

for editorial and research relationships with information<br />

technology. The editors’ introduction and a<br />

select bibliography, with commentary and a list <strong>of</strong><br />

REED-related publications by editors and scholars<br />

from a variety <strong>of</strong> disciplines, make up the remainder<br />

<strong>of</strong> this landmark volume.<br />

Audrey Douglas is the editor <strong>of</strong> Cumberland,<br />

Westmorland, and Salisbury dramatic records for<br />

the REED Series.<br />

Sally-Beth MacLean is Associate Director and Executive<br />

Editor <strong>of</strong> the Records <strong>of</strong> Early English Drama.<br />

Approx. 360 pp / 8 ½ x 11 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9264-0 / 978-0-8020-9264-9<br />

£87.00 $150.00 E<br />

Approx. 264 pp / 6 x 9 / September <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3827-1 / 978-08020-3827-2<br />

£45.00 $70.00 E<br />

36


M E D I E VA L & R E N A I S S A N C E S T U D I E S<br />

Adages IV iii 1 to V ii 51<br />

Edited by John N. Grant, Translated and Annotated by John N. Grant and Betty I. Knott<br />

COLLECTED WORKS OF ERASMUS, VOLUME 36<br />

This sixth <strong>of</strong> seven volumes devoted to the Adages<br />

in the Collected Works <strong>of</strong> Erasmus completes the<br />

translation and annotation <strong>of</strong> the more than 4000<br />

proverbs gathered and commented on by Erasmus<br />

in his Adagiorum Chiliades (Thousands <strong>of</strong> Adages,<br />

usually known more simply as the Adagia). This<br />

volume’s aim, like that <strong>of</strong> the others, is to provide<br />

a fully annotated, accurate, and readable English<br />

version <strong>of</strong> Erasmus’ commentaries on these Greek<br />

and Latin proverbs, and to show how Erasmus<br />

continued to expand this work, originally published<br />

in 1508, until his death in 1536. An indication <strong>of</strong><br />

Erasmus’ unflagging interest in classical proverbs is<br />

that almost 500 <strong>of</strong> the 951 adages translated in this<br />

volume did not make their first appearance until<br />

the edition <strong>of</strong> 1533.<br />

Following in the tradition <strong>of</strong> meticulous scholarship<br />

for which the Collected Works <strong>of</strong> Erasmus is<br />

widely known, the notes to this volume identify<br />

the classical sources and illustrate how the content<br />

<strong>of</strong> his commentaries on the adages <strong>of</strong>ten reflects<br />

Erasmus’ scholarly and editing interests in the classical<br />

authors at a particular time. The work was<br />

highly acclaimed and circulated widely in Erasmus’<br />

time, serving as a conduit for transmitting classical<br />

proverbs into the vernacular languages, in which<br />

many <strong>of</strong> the proverbs still survive to this day.<br />

John N. Grant is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in the Department<br />

<strong>of</strong> Classics at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

Betty I. Knott is a senior honorary research fellow in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Classics at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Glasgow.<br />

Praise for the Collected Works <strong>of</strong> Erasmus:<br />

The <strong>Toronto</strong> Erasmus project is a magnificent achievement,<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the scholarly triumphs <strong>of</strong> our time. The succession <strong>of</strong><br />

fine volumes – both in quality <strong>of</strong> content and <strong>of</strong> design and<br />

production – since the edition began in 1974 has continued<br />

to fulfil the original promise <strong>of</strong> the distinguished team <strong>of</strong> editors<br />

and the equally distinguished advisory committee.’<br />

-Lisa Jardin, Common Knowledge<br />

‘Academic publishing does not get any better than this:<br />

durably bound, expertly annotated, beautifully translated<br />

editions <strong>of</strong> the works <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> the finest scholars in the illustrious<br />

history <strong>of</strong> the Christian Church.’<br />

-Michael Bauman, Journal <strong>of</strong> the Evangelical Theological<br />

Society<br />

‘The Collected Works <strong>of</strong> Erasmus project has long since established<br />

a new standard for scholarly translation series to emulate.<br />

Not only have the English versions represented Erasmus’<br />

writings in crisp and accessible language, but meticulous<br />

editorial scholarship has placed the author’s thought and<br />

work in their proper intellectual contexts.’<br />

-Jerry H. Bentley, Renaissance Quarterly<br />

677 pp / 6 ¾ x 9 ¾ / Available<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8832-5 / 978-08020-8832-1<br />

£95.00 $150.00 E<br />

37


M E D I E VA L A C A D E M Y R E P R I N T S F O R T E A C H I N G<br />

1 The Carolingian Empire<br />

Heinrich Fichtenau<br />

Translated by Peter Munz<br />

Paper 0-8020-6367-5 $15.95 C<br />

2 The Story <strong>of</strong> Troilus<br />

Edited by R.K. Gordon<br />

Paper 0-8020-6368-3 $17.95 C<br />

3 A Guide to Chaucer’s Pronunciation<br />

Helge Kökeritz<br />

Paper 0-8020-6370-5 $7.95 C<br />

4 Constantine and the Conversion <strong>of</strong><br />

Europe<br />

A.H.M. Jones<br />

Paper 0-8020-6369-1 $14.95 C<br />

5 The English Church in the<br />

Fourteenth Century<br />

W.A. Pantin<br />

Paper 0-8020-6411-6 $11.95 C<br />

7 Political Thought in Medieval Times<br />

John B. Morrall<br />

Paper 0-8020-6413-2 $14.95 C<br />

8 Mission to Asia<br />

Edited by Christopher Dawson<br />

Paper 0-8020-6436-1 $16.95 C<br />

North American rights only.<br />

9 Confessio Amantis<br />

John Gower, edited by Russell A. Peck<br />

Paper 0-8020-6438-8 $19.95 C<br />

10 Ancient Writing and its Influence<br />

B.L. Ullman<br />

With an introduction by Julian Brown<br />

Paper 0-8020-6435-3 $15.95 C<br />

11 The Long-Haired Kings and Other<br />

Stories in Frankish History<br />

J.M. Wallace-Hadrill<br />

Paper 0-8020-6500-7 $16.95 C<br />

13 William Marshall<br />

Knight-Errant, Baron, and Regent <strong>of</strong><br />

England<br />

Sidney Painter<br />

Paper 0-8020-6498-1 $17.95 C<br />

14 A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary<br />

4th edition, J.R. Clark Hall<br />

Supplement by Herbert D. Merritt<br />

Paper 0-8020-6548-1 $22.95 C<br />

15 Self and Society in Medieval France<br />

The Memoirs <strong>of</strong> Abbot Guibert <strong>of</strong><br />

Nogent<br />

Edited and with an introduction by<br />

John F. Benton<br />

Paper 0-8020-6550-3 $15.95 C<br />

16 The Art <strong>of</strong> the Byzantine Empire<br />

312–1453<br />

Sources and Documents<br />

Edited by Cyril Mango<br />

Paper 0-8020-6627-5 $17.95 C<br />

17 Early Medieval Art 300–1150<br />

Sources and Documents<br />

Edited by Caecilia Davis-Weyer<br />

Paper 0-8020-6628-3 $16.95 C<br />

18 Byzantium<br />

The Imperial Centuries AD 610–<br />

1071<br />

Romilly Jenkins<br />

Paper 0-8020-6667-4 $24.95 C<br />

19 The Discovery <strong>of</strong> the Individual<br />

1050–1200<br />

Colin Morris<br />

Paper 0-8020-6665-8 $13.95 C<br />

20 Gothic Art 1140–c1450<br />

Sources and Documents<br />

Teresa G. Frisch<br />

Paper 0-8020-6679-8 $13.95 C<br />

21 The Crisis <strong>of</strong> Church and State<br />

1050–1300<br />

Brian Tierney<br />

Paper 0-8020-6701-8 $14.95 C<br />

22 Change in Medieval Society<br />

Europe North <strong>of</strong> the Alps 1050–1500<br />

Sylvia Thrupp<br />

Paper 0-8020-6699-2 $14.95 C<br />

23 The Medieval Experience<br />

Francis Oakley<br />

Paper 0-8020-6707-7 $15.95 C<br />

24 Allegories <strong>of</strong> the Virtues and Vices in<br />

Medieval Art<br />

Adolf Katzenellenbogen<br />

Paper 0-8020-6706-9 $12.95 C<br />

25 Modern Perspectives in Western Art<br />

History<br />

An Anthology <strong>of</strong> 20th-Century<br />

Writings on the Visual Arts<br />

Edited by W. Eugene Kleinbauer<br />

Paper 0-8020-6708-5 $30.50 C<br />

26 Renaissance and Renewal in the<br />

Twelfth Century<br />

Edited by Robert L. Benson and<br />

Giles Constable<br />

Paper 0-8020-6850-2 $37.95 C<br />

27 Church, State, and Christian Society<br />

at the Time <strong>of</strong> the Investiture Contest<br />

Gerd Tellenbach<br />

Translated by R.E Bennett<br />

Paper 0-8020-6857-X $16.95 C<br />

28 The Medieval Book<br />

Barbara A. Shailor<br />

Cloth 0-8020-5910-4 $68.00 E<br />

Paper 0-8020-6853-7 $29.95 C<br />

29 Early Medieval<br />

Style and Civilization<br />

George Henderson<br />

Paper 0-8020-6984-3 $23.95 C<br />

30 The Origins <strong>of</strong> European Dissent<br />

R.I. Moore<br />

Paper 0-8020-7566-5 $20.95 C<br />

32 Fables<br />

Marie de France<br />

Edited and translated by Harriet Spiegel<br />

Paper 0-8020-7636-X $21.95 C<br />

33 The Birth <strong>of</strong> Popular Heresy<br />

R.I. Moore<br />

Paper 0-8020-7659-9 $16.95 C<br />

34 Feudalism<br />

F.L. Gansh<strong>of</strong><br />

Translated by Philip Grierson<br />

Paper 0-8020-7158-9 $14.95 C<br />

35 Arthurian Chronicles<br />

Wace and Layamon<br />

Translated by Eugene Mason<br />

Paper 0-8020-7176-7 $17.95 C<br />

37 Nature, Man, and Society in the<br />

Twelfth Century<br />

M.-D. Chenu<br />

Paper 0-8020-7175-9 $17.95 C<br />

38 Selections from English Wycliffite<br />

Writings<br />

Edited by Anne Hudson<br />

Paper 0-8020-8045-6 $17.95 C<br />

39 The Life <strong>of</strong> Christina <strong>of</strong> Markyate<br />

A Twelfth-Century Recluse<br />

Edited by C.H. Talbot<br />

Paper 0-8020-8202-5 $16.95 C<br />

North American rights only<br />

40 Medieval Families<br />

Perspectives on Marriage, Household,<br />

and Children<br />

Edited by Carol Neel<br />

Cloth 0-8020-3606-6 $78.00 E<br />

Paper 0-8020-8458-3 $30.50 C<br />

41 A Concise Dictionary <strong>of</strong> Old Icelandic<br />

Geir T. Zoëga<br />

Cloth 0-8020-8705-1 $95.00 E<br />

Paper 0-8020-8659-4 $29.95 C<br />

42 Old Norse-Icelandic Literature<br />

A Critical Guide<br />

Edited by Carol J. Clover and John<br />

Lindow<br />

Paper 0-8020-3823-9 $35.00 C<br />

38


C L A S S I C S<br />

Virginity Revisited<br />

Configurations <strong>of</strong> the Unpossessed Body<br />

Edited by Bonnie MacLachlan and Judith Fletcher<br />

STUDIES IN GENDER, PHOENIX SUPPLEMENTARY VOLUMES<br />

From Classical Antiquity to the present, virginity<br />

has been closely allied with power: as someone who<br />

chooses a life <strong>of</strong> celibacy retains mastery over his<br />

or her body. Sexual potency withheld becomes an<br />

energy-reservoir that can ensure independence and<br />

enhance self-esteem, but it can also be harnessed by<br />

public institutions and redirected for the common<br />

good. This was the founding principle <strong>of</strong> the Vestal<br />

Virgins <strong>of</strong> Rome and later in the monastic orders<br />

<strong>of</strong> the middle ages. Mythical accounts <strong>of</strong> goddesses<br />

and heroines who possessed the ability to recover<br />

their virginity after sexual experience demonstrate a<br />

belief that virginity is paradoxically connected both<br />

with social autonomy and the ability to serve the<br />

human community.<br />

Virginity Revisited is a collection <strong>of</strong> essays that<br />

examines virginity not as a physical reality but as a<br />

cultural artefact. By situating the topic <strong>of</strong> virginity<br />

within a range <strong>of</strong> historical ‘moments’ and using a<br />

variety <strong>of</strong> methodologies, Virginity Revisited illuminates<br />

how chastity provided a certain agency,<br />

autonomy, and power to women. This is a study <strong>of</strong><br />

the positive and negative features <strong>of</strong> sexual renunciation,<br />

from ancient Greek divinities and mythical<br />

women, in Rome’s Vestal Virgins, in the Christian<br />

martyrs and Mariology in the Medieval and early<br />

Modern period, and in Grace Marks, the heroine<br />

<strong>of</strong> Margaret Atwood’s novel Alias Grace.<br />

Bonnie MacLachlan is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />

<strong>of</strong> Classics at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Western Ontario.<br />

Judith Fletcher is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Classics at Wilfrid Laurier <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Mortuary Landscapes <strong>of</strong><br />

North Africa<br />

Edited by David L. Stone and Lea M. Stirling<br />

PHOENIX SUPPLEMENTARY VOLUMES<br />

Cemetery and landscape studies have been hallmarks<br />

<strong>of</strong> North African archaeology for more than one<br />

hundred years. Mortuary Landscapes <strong>of</strong> North Africa<br />

is the first book to combine these two fields by considering<br />

North African cemeteries within the context<br />

<strong>of</strong> their wider landscapes. This unique perspective<br />

allows for new interpretations <strong>of</strong> notions <strong>of</strong> identity,<br />

community, imperial influence, and sacred space.<br />

Based on a wealth <strong>of</strong> material research from current<br />

fieldwork, this collection <strong>of</strong> essays investigates<br />

how North African funerary monuments acted as<br />

regional boundaries, markers <strong>of</strong> identity and status,<br />

and barometers <strong>of</strong> cultural change. The essays cover<br />

a broad range in terms <strong>of</strong> space and time – from<br />

southern Libya to eastern Algeria, and from the<br />

seventh century BCE to the seventh century CE. A<br />

comprehensive introduction explains the importance<br />

<strong>of</strong> the ‘landscape perspective’ that these studies bring<br />

to North African funerary monuments, while individual<br />

case-studies address such topics as the African<br />

way <strong>of</strong> death among the Garamantes, the ritual<br />

reasons for the location <strong>of</strong> certain Early Christian<br />

tombs, Punic burials, Roman cupula tombs, and the<br />

effects <strong>of</strong> rapid state formation and imperial incorporation<br />

on tomb builders. Unique in both scope<br />

and perspective, this volume will prove invaluable to<br />

a cross-section <strong>of</strong> archaeological scholars.<br />

David L. Stone is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Classics at Florida State <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Lea M. Stirling is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Classics at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Manitoba and holds a Canada Research Chair in<br />

Roman Archaeology.<br />

Approx. 220 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9013-3 / 978-0-8020-9013-3<br />

£35.00 $55.00 E<br />

Approx. 270 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2006</strong><br />

45 half tones<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9083-4 / 978-08020-9083-6<br />

£48.00 $75.00 E<br />

39


P H I L O S O P H Y<br />

Philosophy at the<br />

Edge <strong>of</strong> Chaos<br />

Gilles Deleuze and the Philosophy <strong>of</strong> Difference<br />

Jeffrey A. Bell<br />

TORONTO STUDIES IN PHILOSOPHY<br />

From the early 1960s until his death, French philosopher<br />

Gilles Deleuze (1925–1995) wrote many<br />

influential works on philosophy, literature, film,<br />

and fine art. One <strong>of</strong> Deleuze’s main philosophical<br />

projects was a systematic inversion <strong>of</strong> the traditional<br />

relationship between identity and difference. This<br />

Deleuzian philosophy <strong>of</strong> difference is the subject <strong>of</strong><br />

Jeffrey A. Bell’s Philosophy at the Edge <strong>of</strong> Chaos.<br />

Bell argues that Deleuze’s efforts to develop a<br />

philosophy <strong>of</strong> difference are best understood by<br />

exploring both Deleuze’s claim to be a Spinozist,<br />

and Nietzsche’s claim to have found in Spinoza an<br />

important precursor. Beginning with an analysis<br />

<strong>of</strong> these claims, Bell shows how Deleuze extends<br />

and transforms concepts at work in Spinoza and<br />

Nietzsche to produce a philosophy <strong>of</strong> difference<br />

that promotes and, in fact, exemplifies the notions<br />

<strong>of</strong> dynamic systems and complexity theory. With<br />

these concepts at work, Deleuze constructs a philosophical<br />

approach that avoids many <strong>of</strong> the difficulties<br />

that linger in other attempts to think about difference.<br />

Bell uses close readings <strong>of</strong> Plato, Aristotle,<br />

Spinoza, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Derrida, and<br />

Whitehead to illustrate how Deleuze’s philosophy<br />

is successful in this regard and to demonstrate the<br />

importance <strong>of</strong> the historical tradition for Deleuze.<br />

Far from being a philosopher who turns his back on<br />

what is taken to be a mistaken metaphysical tradition,<br />

Bell argues that Deleuze is best understood as<br />

a thinker who endeavored to continue the work <strong>of</strong><br />

traditional metaphysics and philosophy.<br />

Real Words<br />

Language and System in Hegel<br />

Jeffrey Reid<br />

TORONTO STUDIES IN PHILOSOPHY<br />

There exists a very particular grasp <strong>of</strong> the relation<br />

between language and objectivity in the work <strong>of</strong><br />

G.W.F. Hegel (1770–1831), one that rejects the<br />

idea <strong>of</strong> truth as the reflection between words and<br />

what they represent.<br />

Jeffrey Reid’s Real Words is an examination <strong>of</strong><br />

Hegel’s notion <strong>of</strong> scientific language (i.e. the language<br />

<strong>of</strong> his system) and its implications to a type<br />

<strong>of</strong> discourse that is itself true objectivity. Hegel sees<br />

scientific logos as real, actual, and true, where there<br />

is no distance between signifier and signified and<br />

where the word is the effective thing. The words <strong>of</strong><br />

Hegel’s system are meant to be objective: they ‘take<br />

place’ in the world; they are not the arbitrary constructions<br />

<strong>of</strong> the individual philosopher. This concept<br />

<strong>of</strong> language is only possible through the idea<br />

<strong>of</strong> content, and for a systematic philosopher such as<br />

Hegel, the objective truth <strong>of</strong> the whole depends on<br />

that <strong>of</strong> its contents.<br />

Real Words presents an original way <strong>of</strong> understanding<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the most important philosophers<br />

in the Western tradition.<br />

Jeffrey Reid is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />

<strong>of</strong> Philosophy at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa.<br />

Jeffrey A. Bell is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

Philosophy at Southeastern Louisiana <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Approx. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9128-8 / 978-08020-9128-8<br />

£42.00 $65.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9409-0 / 978-08020-9409-4<br />

£21.50 $32.95 C<br />

Approx. 180 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9172-5 / 978-0-8020-9172-7<br />

£25.00 $40.00 E<br />

40


P H I L O S O P H Y<br />

The Triune God<br />

Systematics<br />

Bernard Lonergan<br />

Edited by Robert Doran and Daniel Monsour<br />

Translated by Michael G. Shields<br />

COLLECTED WORKS OF BERNARD LONERGAN, VOLUME 12<br />

Buried for more than forty years in a Latin text<br />

written for seminarian students at the Gregorian<br />

<strong>University</strong> in Rome, Bernard Lonergan’s 1964 masterpiece<br />

<strong>of</strong> systematic-theological writing, De Deo<br />

trino: Pars systematica, is only now being published<br />

in an edition that includes the original Latin along<br />

with an exact and literal translation. De Deo trino,<br />

or The Triune God, is the third great installment<br />

on one particular strand in trinitarian theology,<br />

namely, the tradition that appeals to a psychological<br />

analogy for understanding trinitarian processions<br />

and relations.<br />

The analogy dates back to St Augustine but was<br />

significantly developed by St Thomas Aquinas.<br />

Lonergan advances it to a new level <strong>of</strong> sophistication<br />

by rooting it in his own highly nuanced cognitional<br />

theory and in his early position on decision<br />

and love. Suggestions for a further development<br />

<strong>of</strong> the analogy appear in Lonergan’s late work, but<br />

these cannot be understood and implemented without<br />

working through this volume. This is truly one<br />

<strong>of</strong> the great masterpieces in the history <strong>of</strong> systematic<br />

theology, perhaps even the greatest <strong>of</strong> all time.<br />

Robert Doran is the director <strong>of</strong> the Lonergan<br />

Research Institute and a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus at Regis<br />

College, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

Daniel Monsour is a researcher at the Lonergan<br />

Research Institute.<br />

Michael G. Shields is a member and librarian <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Lonergan Research Institute.<br />

Athens and Jerusalem<br />

George Grant’s Theology, Philosophy, and Politics<br />

Edited by Ian Angus, Ron Dart, and Randy Peg Peters<br />

George Grant (1918–1988) has been called Canada’s<br />

greatest political philosopher. To this day, his work<br />

continues to stimulate, challenge, and inspire<br />

Canadians to think more deeply about matters <strong>of</strong><br />

social justice and individual responsibility. One <strong>of</strong><br />

the primary reasons for Grant’s enduring significance<br />

is that his work connects practical and political<br />

issues to deeper questions about Western civilization,<br />

ontology, and religion. However, while there<br />

has been considerable discussion <strong>of</strong> Grant’s political<br />

theories, relatively little attention has been paid to<br />

their theological and philosophical underpinnings.<br />

In Athens and Jerusalem, Ian Angus, Ron Dart, and<br />

Randy Peg Peters gather together sixteen original essays<br />

to <strong>of</strong>fer an elaboration and critique <strong>of</strong> the theological<br />

and philosophical basis <strong>of</strong> Grant’s work. The collection,<br />

which includes previously unpublished notes from<br />

four <strong>of</strong> Grant’s lectures, considers familiar themes <strong>of</strong><br />

nationalism, Canada and the United States, modernity,<br />

technology and liberalism from a theological and<br />

philosophical perspective. Contributors demonstrate<br />

how Grant drew upon the biblical and Greek philosophical<br />

roots <strong>of</strong> Western civilization to diagnose its<br />

present condition, and to suggest alternative sources <strong>of</strong><br />

illumination. A fascinating read for anyone interested in<br />

Canadian politics, philosophy or theology, this original<br />

collection goes one step further in helping us understand<br />

what is lasting about Grant’s work.<br />

Ian Angus is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

Humanities at Simon Fraser <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Ronald Dart is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong> Political<br />

Science at the <strong>University</strong> College <strong>of</strong> the Fraser Valley.<br />

Randy Peg Peters is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />

<strong>of</strong> Philosophy at Trinity Western <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Approx. 880 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9168-7 / 978-08020-9168-0<br />

£60.00 $95.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9433-3 / 978-08020-9433-9<br />

£25.00 $39.95 C<br />

Approx. 384 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

2 colour illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9176-8 / 978-0-8020-9176-5<br />

£48.00 $75.00 E<br />

41


P O L I T I C S A N D P O L I C Y<br />

Dilemmas <strong>of</strong> Solidarity<br />

Rethinking Distribution in the Canadian Federation<br />

Edited by Sujit Choudhry, Jean-François Graudreault-Desbiens, and Lorne Sossin<br />

Since the rise <strong>of</strong> the Canadian welfare state in the<br />

aftermath <strong>of</strong> the Second World War, the politics <strong>of</strong><br />

social policy and fiscal federalism have been at the<br />

centre <strong>of</strong> federal-provincial relations. Recent events<br />

have given impetus for scholars to re-examine these<br />

issues. In 2002, the Quebec Commission on Fiscal<br />

Imbalance released its report, which introduced the<br />

term ‘vertical fiscal imbalance’ into the vocabulary<br />

<strong>of</strong> Canadian politics. Essentially, the commission<br />

determined that a disjunction between revenueraising<br />

capacity and expenditures involving different<br />

orders <strong>of</strong> government – vertical fiscal imbalance<br />

– was an urgent problem that must be addressed.<br />

Dilemmas <strong>of</strong> Solidarity is both a reflection on and<br />

response to that finding.<br />

Editors Sujit Choudhry, Jean-François<br />

Graudreault-Desbiens, and Lorne Sossin bring<br />

together an array <strong>of</strong> respected legal and political<br />

scholars to reflect on the Quebec Commission’s<br />

findings. The contributors to this volume illustrate<br />

how recent debates surrounding Canada’s<br />

equalization program suggest alternative ways<br />

to approach the issue. The goal <strong>of</strong> Dilemmas <strong>of</strong><br />

Solidarity is to stand back from the particulars<br />

<strong>of</strong> different policy debates, to enable scholars to<br />

reflect on basic questions regarding redistribution.<br />

This fascinating collection will undoubtedly<br />

inform a more nuanced and wide-ranging debate<br />

both among academics and policy practitioners<br />

than has occurred in this past.<br />

Sujit Choudhry is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Faculty <strong>of</strong> Law and the Department <strong>of</strong> Political<br />

Science at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

Jean-François Graudreault-Desbiens is an associate<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Faculty <strong>of</strong> Law at the <strong>University</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

Lorne Sossin is an associate dean and associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />

in the Faculty <strong>of</strong> Law and the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

Political Science at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

Contributors:<br />

Paul Boothe<br />

Sujit Choudhry<br />

David Duff<br />

Jean-François Gaudreault-DesBiens<br />

Andrée Lajoie<br />

Alain Noël<br />

Peter H. Russell<br />

Richard Simeon<br />

Lorne Sossin<br />

François Vaillancourt<br />

Daniel Weinstock<br />

Approx. 224 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9126-1 / 978-08020-9126-0<br />

£35.00 $55.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9407-4 / 978-08020-9407-0<br />

£14.00 $21.95 C<br />

42


P O LG I TE INC ES R A NL D I NPT OE RL EI CS YT<br />

Rural Women’s Leadership<br />

in Atlantic Canada<br />

First-hand Perspectives on Local Public Life and<br />

Participation in Electoral Politics<br />

Louise Carbert<br />

Most people are aware <strong>of</strong> the large and persistent<br />

gender imbalance in elected <strong>of</strong>fice at all levels <strong>of</strong><br />

government in Canada, but few appreciate the far<br />

greater imbalance that occurs outside <strong>of</strong> large cities.<br />

This deficit arises not from rural voter bias, but<br />

from low numbers <strong>of</strong> female candidates running<br />

for winnable seats. The question <strong>of</strong> why there are so<br />

few female candidates has been difficult to answer,<br />

largely because we know so little about the pool <strong>of</strong><br />

potential candidates.<br />

Rural Women’s Leadership in Atlantic Canada<br />

presents results from a regional field-based study,<br />

which confronted this challenge directly for the<br />

first time. Louise Carbert gathered together small<br />

groups <strong>of</strong> rural community leaders (126 women<br />

in all) throughout the four Atlantic provinces, and<br />

interviewed them about their experiences and perceptions<br />

<strong>of</strong> leadership, public life, and running for<br />

elected <strong>of</strong>fice. Their answers paint a vivid picture<br />

<strong>of</strong> politics in rural communities, illustrating how it<br />

intersects with family life, work, and the overall local<br />

economy. Through discussion <strong>of</strong> their own reasoned<br />

aversion to holding elected <strong>of</strong>fice, and <strong>of</strong> resistance<br />

encountered by those who have put their names<br />

forward, the interviewees shed much-needed light on<br />

the pervasive barriers to the election <strong>of</strong> women.<br />

Louise Carbert is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Political Science at Dalhousie<br />

<strong>University</strong>.<br />

E-Government in Canada<br />

Transformation for the Digital Age<br />

Jeffrey Roy<br />

UNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA PRESS<br />

The rapid expansion <strong>of</strong> the Internet has fueled the<br />

emergence <strong>of</strong> electronic government at all levels<br />

in Canada. E-government’s first decade featured<br />

online service underpinned by a technically secure<br />

infrastructure. This service-security nexus entails<br />

internal governance reforms aimed at realizing<br />

more customer-centric delivery via integration and<br />

coordination across departments and agencies. Yet,<br />

as online networking has become more pervasive<br />

and public demands for participation rise, pressures<br />

for greater openness and accountability intensify.<br />

The result is widening experimentation with online<br />

democracy. The e-government focus is thus shifting<br />

toward issues <strong>of</strong> transparency and trust – and<br />

new possibilities for re-conceptualizing how power<br />

is organized and deployed. In sum, the prospects<br />

for digital transformation involve the interplay <strong>of</strong><br />

these for dimensions: service, security, transparency,<br />

and trust.<br />

This book identifies the main drivers <strong>of</strong> e-government,<br />

assesses the responses <strong>of</strong> Canada’s public<br />

sector to date, and sketches out the major challenges<br />

and choices that lie ahead. The findings will be <strong>of</strong><br />

interest to those studying or working in the world<br />

<strong>of</strong> public sector management and e-governance.<br />

Jeffrey Roy is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School <strong>of</strong><br />

Management at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa.<br />

Approx. 176 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

17 halftones<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9125-3 / 978-0-8020-9125-3<br />

£28.00 $45.00 E<br />

398 pp / 6 x 9 / Available<br />

Paper ISBN 0-7766-0617-4 / 978-0-7766-0617-0<br />

£22.50 $35.00 C<br />

43


P O L I T I C S A N D P O L I C Y<br />

The Illusive Trade-<strong>of</strong>f<br />

Intellectual Property Rights, Innovation Systems, and<br />

Egypt’s Pharmaceutical Industry<br />

Basma Abdelgafar<br />

STUDIES IN COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY AND<br />

PUBLIC POLICY<br />

The Egyptian pharmaceutical industry serves as a<br />

case study for understanding the impact <strong>of</strong> the global<br />

intellectual property regime in this fascinating new<br />

addition to the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong> Studies<br />

in Comparative Political Economy and Public Policy<br />

series. The Illusive Trade-<strong>of</strong>f examines the Egyptian<br />

pharmaceutical industry within a broader context<br />

<strong>of</strong> intellectual property policy making and the<br />

multilateral agreement on Trade-Related Aspects <strong>of</strong><br />

Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs).<br />

Basma Abdelgafar <strong>of</strong>fers a fascinating discussion<br />

<strong>of</strong> Egypt’s role in the trade negotiations that led to<br />

the establishment <strong>of</strong> the World Trade Organization,<br />

and makes the case that predominant perspectives<br />

on intellectual property rights are based on the false<br />

assumption that the innovation process is discrete<br />

and segmented. Abdelgafar contends that, in fact,<br />

innovation relies upon diffusion, and that inappropriately<br />

strong property rights interfere with<br />

this process. She uses the case <strong>of</strong> Egypt’s pharmaceutical<br />

industry to argue that we must consider<br />

relevant aspects <strong>of</strong> individual countries’ systems<br />

<strong>of</strong> innovation as well as public health, if we are to<br />

adequately understand the implication <strong>of</strong> stronger<br />

patent protection for the pharmaceutical industries<br />

<strong>of</strong> developing nations. The Illusive Trade-<strong>of</strong>f is an<br />

original and important study crossing the disciplines<br />

<strong>of</strong> political science, law, public policy, and<br />

public health.<br />

Basma Abdelgafar is an independent scholar living<br />

in Ottawa. She holds research positions at Carleton<br />

<strong>University</strong> and with the Joint Centre for Bioethics<br />

at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

Canadian Annual Review<br />

<strong>of</strong> Politics and Public<br />

Affairs 2001<br />

Edited by David Mutimer<br />

Long praised for its accuracy, readability, and<br />

insight, the Canadian Annual Review <strong>of</strong> Politics and<br />

Public Affairs <strong>of</strong>fers a synoptic appraisal <strong>of</strong> the year’s<br />

developments in Canadian politics.<br />

Much <strong>of</strong> the world, and many in Canada, celebrated<br />

a new century and a new millennium at the<br />

beginning <strong>of</strong> 2000. It was the year 2001, however,<br />

that truly seemed to herald a new age. 2001 was<br />

an eventful year, perhaps more so than any since<br />

1989. With the events <strong>of</strong> September 11th, and in<br />

the months that followed, Canadian public life, as<br />

with the public life <strong>of</strong> so much <strong>of</strong> the world, was<br />

reconfigured. While more than half the year had<br />

passed, 2001 will continue to be defined by the<br />

attacks on the United States and by the responses<br />

that were taken by the United States and others,<br />

including Canada. Had the attacks <strong>of</strong> September<br />

not happened, 2001 might well have been remembered<br />

for the Summit <strong>of</strong> the Americas, bringing all<br />

but one <strong>of</strong> the heads <strong>of</strong> government in the Americas<br />

to Quebec City. The summit was held within an<br />

immense exclusion zone, and surrounded by protest<br />

– some violent.<br />

The Canadian Annual Review is unique in its<br />

collection and presentation <strong>of</strong> the year in politics.<br />

The combination <strong>of</strong> the calendar and the text <strong>of</strong>fers<br />

a superb, easy-access reference source for political<br />

events, both federal and provincial.<br />

David Mutimer is a principal research fellow in the<br />

Centre for International Cooperation and Security,<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Peace Studies, at the <strong>University</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> Bradford and an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Political Science at York <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Approx. 224 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9180-6 / 978-08020-9180-2<br />

£32.00 $50.00 E<br />

Approx. 304 pp / 6 x 9 / January 2007<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9235-7 / 978-0-8020-9235-9<br />

£65.00 $100.00 E<br />

44


C R IG ME I NEO RLA OL GI Y N T& E RL EAW<br />

S T<br />

Money Laundering in Canada<br />

Chasing Dirty and Dangerous Dollars<br />

Margaret E. Beare and Stephen Schneider<br />

Money laundering is the process <strong>of</strong> converting or<br />

transferring cash or other assets, generated from<br />

illegal activity, in order to conceal or disguise their<br />

origins. In recent years, the international community<br />

has decided that focusing on money laundering is an<br />

efficient strategy in policing organized crime and, now<br />

terrorism. To this end, countries are encouraged to<br />

harmonize their policies and legislation and, to some<br />

extent, their policing strategies. Before adopting these<br />

new strategies, however, it is important to understand<br />

the extent <strong>of</strong> money laundering in different jurisdictions,<br />

as well as the likelihood <strong>of</strong> success and the costs<br />

involved in these anti-laundering strategies.<br />

This new work by Margaret E. Beare and Stephen<br />

Schneider brings empirical evidence to the study<br />

<strong>of</strong> money laundering in Canada – a topic that has<br />

recently assumed an international pr<strong>of</strong>ile. They challenge<br />

the seemingly common sense notion, fueled by<br />

political posturing and policing rhetoric, that taking<br />

the pr<strong>of</strong>its away from criminals is a rational law<br />

enforcment strategy. Using data from police cases,<br />

the inner working <strong>of</strong> financial institutions, and the<br />

‘successful’ claims <strong>of</strong> privilege from our legal pr<strong>of</strong>ession,<br />

the final picture that the authors paint is <strong>of</strong> a<br />

good enforcement strategy run amuck amid conflicting<br />

interests and agendas, an overly ambitious set <strong>of</strong><br />

expectations, and an ambiguous body <strong>of</strong> evidence as<br />

to the strategy’s overall merits.<br />

Margaret E. Beare is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Sociology and Director <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Nathanson Centre for the Study <strong>of</strong> Organized<br />

Crime and Corruption at Osgoode Hall Law<br />

School, York <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Stephen Schneider is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Sociology and Criminology at Saint<br />

Mary’s <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Of related interest:<br />

Critical Reflections on Transnational Organized<br />

Crime, Money Laundering, and Corruption<br />

Edited by Margaret E. Beare<br />

0-8020-8190-8 / 978-0-8020-8190-2<br />

£22.50 / $34.95 / 2003<br />

Approx. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / January 2007<br />

19 illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9143-1 / 978-08020-9143-7<br />

£48.00 $75.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9417-1 / 978-08020-9417-9<br />

£20.00 $32.95 C<br />

Photo courtesy Jordan Anderson and Stephen Kotowych.<br />

45


C R I M I N O L O G Y & L AW<br />

Calling for Change<br />

Women, Law, and the Legal Pr<strong>of</strong>ession<br />

Edited by Elizabeth Sheehy and Sheila McIntyre<br />

UNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA PRESS<br />

Unique in both scope and perspective, Calling for<br />

Change investigates the status <strong>of</strong> women within<br />

the Canadian legal pr<strong>of</strong>ession ten years after the<br />

first national report on the subject was published<br />

by the Canadian Bar Association. Elizabeth Sheehy<br />

and Sheila McIntyre bring together essays that<br />

investigate a wide range <strong>of</strong> topics, from the status<br />

<strong>of</strong> women in law schools, the practising bar, and on<br />

the bench, to women’s grassroots engagement with<br />

law and with female lawyers from the ‘frontlines.’<br />

Contributors not only reflect critically on the gains,<br />

losses, and barriers to change <strong>of</strong> the past decade, but<br />

also provide blueprints for future political action.<br />

Academics, community activists, practitioners,<br />

law students, women litigants, as well as law society<br />

benchers and staff explore how egalitarian change is<br />

occurring and/or being impeded in their particular<br />

contexts. Each <strong>of</strong> these unique voices <strong>of</strong>fers lessons<br />

from their individual, collective and institutional<br />

efforts to confront and counter the inter-related<br />

forms <strong>of</strong> systemic inequality that compromise<br />

women’s access to education and employment<br />

equity within legal institutions and, ultimately, to<br />

equal justice in Canada.<br />

Elizabeth Sheehy is Shirley Greenberg Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong><br />

Women and the Legal Pr<strong>of</strong>ession at the <strong>University</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> Ottawa.<br />

Sheila McIntyre is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Faculty <strong>of</strong> Law<br />

and director <strong>of</strong> the Human Rights Research and<br />

Education Centre at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa.<br />

International Law and<br />

Indigenous Knowledge<br />

Intellectual Property, Plant Biodiversity, and<br />

Traditional Medicine<br />

Chidi Oguamanam<br />

In the past, efforts to reconcile the western concept<br />

<strong>of</strong> intellectual property with indigenous knowledge<br />

have not taken into account the schism between<br />

this knowledge and western scientific forms. As<br />

knowledge assumes increasing importance in the<br />

quest for self-determination, cultural survival, and<br />

economic empowerment, the gulf between indigenous<br />

and western scientific knowledge assumes a<br />

new meaning. In International Law and Indigenous<br />

Knowledge, Chidi Oguamanam argues that the<br />

crisis <strong>of</strong> legitimacy indigenous knowledge poses for<br />

the intellectual property system compels a re-thinking<br />

<strong>of</strong> the concept <strong>of</strong> intellectual property itself.<br />

Drawing on interdisciplinary research,<br />

International Law and Indigenous Knowledge takes<br />

as its framework the legal doctrinal methodology,<br />

focusing on international legal and policy developments<br />

regarding the protection <strong>of</strong> indigenous<br />

knowledge. Using traditional medicine and biodiversity<br />

to illustrate his thesis, Oguamanam argues<br />

that recent international legal and policy developments<br />

in the direction <strong>of</strong> a cross-cultural approach<br />

to intellectual property rights are desirable trends.<br />

Such developments come closer to addressing the<br />

rift between western and non-western knowledge<br />

systems as well as the crisis <strong>of</strong> legitimacy in the<br />

conventional intellectual property system.<br />

Chidi Oguamanam is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Dalhousie<br />

Law School, Dalhousie <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Approx. 337 pp / 6 x 9 / July <strong>2006</strong><br />

Paper ISBN 0-7766-0620-4 / 978-0-7766-0620-0<br />

£35.00 $55.00 E<br />

Approx. 416 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3902-2 / 978-0-8020-3902-6<br />

£42.00 $65.00 E<br />

46


C R I M I N O L O G Y & L AW<br />

Doing Time on the Outside<br />

Deconstructing the Benevolent Community<br />

MaDonna R. Maidment<br />

Criminalized women are the focus <strong>of</strong> great interest<br />

in contemporary sociological research all over the<br />

world, however much <strong>of</strong> the growing body <strong>of</strong> work<br />

in this area has focused on the prison. Considerably<br />

less attention has been paid to women serving their<br />

sentences in the community. Doing Time on the<br />

Outside fills a gap in the research by focusing on the<br />

experiences <strong>of</strong> women on conditional release, and<br />

attempting to understand how some criminalized<br />

women avoid going back into custody given the<br />

many challenges they face.<br />

Using data collected in a series <strong>of</strong> interviews,<br />

MaDonna R. Maidment identifies four major<br />

factors characterizing women’s attempts at re-integration.<br />

First, the fewer ‘layers <strong>of</strong> social control’ a<br />

woman lived under prior to her prison term, the<br />

greater her chances <strong>of</strong> staying out <strong>of</strong> prison. Those<br />

women accustomed to a lifetime <strong>of</strong> formal social<br />

controls are vulnerable and largely dependent on<br />

continued intervention.<br />

Second, women’s own accounts <strong>of</strong> their success<br />

do not coincide with <strong>of</strong>ficial definitions. For many<br />

women who have spent their lives being controlled<br />

by state agencies, managing a relatively short<br />

period <strong>of</strong> independence in the community marks<br />

a major milestone. Third, for those women who<br />

have managed to stay out <strong>of</strong> the criminal justice<br />

system, a majority remain tightly entangled in other<br />

state-sponsored control regimes, where patterns <strong>of</strong><br />

dependency, medicalization, and infantilization<br />

still persist in the treatment <strong>of</strong> women. Fourth and<br />

finally, familial and social support networks are<br />

paramount to women’s successful re-integration,<br />

far more so than pr<strong>of</strong>essional supports provided by<br />

state and community agencies.<br />

Maidment’s important findings have significant<br />

implications: they beg us to re-examine<br />

how our society processes criminalized women,<br />

and to call into question well-entrenched contemporary<br />

policies, which have failed to account<br />

for the economic, social, and cultural realities <strong>of</strong><br />

women’s lives.<br />

MaDonna R. Maidment is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in<br />

the Department <strong>of</strong> Sociology and Anthropology at<br />

the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Guelph.<br />

Approx. 192 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9080-X / 978-08020-9080-5<br />

£32.00 $50.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9389-2 / 978-08020-9389-9<br />

£15.00 $24.95 C<br />

Image Courtesy Toshihide Gotoh/GettyImages.<br />

47


GS OE NC IE OR LA OL GI NY<br />

T E R E S T<br />

Racial Pr<strong>of</strong>iling in Canada<br />

Challenging the Myth <strong>of</strong> a ‘Few Bad Apples’<br />

Carol Tator and Frances Henry<br />

In October 2002, the <strong>Toronto</strong> Star ran a series <strong>of</strong><br />

articles alleging that <strong>Toronto</strong> police target young<br />

black men when making traffic stops, causing a<br />

crisis in the community and amongst politicians,<br />

policing <strong>of</strong>ficials, and other public authorities.<br />

Despite thorough statistical evidence, the <strong>Toronto</strong><br />

Police Association sued the Star, claiming that no<br />

such evidence existed. That lawsuit was ultimately<br />

rejected and the issue <strong>of</strong> racial pr<strong>of</strong>iling – the policing<br />

technique <strong>of</strong> including race in the pr<strong>of</strong>ile <strong>of</strong> a<br />

person considered likely to commit a particular type<br />

<strong>of</strong> crime – was thrust into the national spotlight. In<br />

this volume Carol Tator and Frances Henry explore<br />

the meaning <strong>of</strong> racial pr<strong>of</strong>iling in Canada not only<br />

as it is practised by the police, but also as it is manifested<br />

in a broad range <strong>of</strong> societal institutions.<br />

Tator and Henry approach the crisis over racial<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>iling by examining the issue from two different<br />

perspectives. First, they examine the discourses <strong>of</strong><br />

policing <strong>of</strong>ficials, politicians, government bureaucrats,<br />

judges, media, and other public authorities<br />

to demonstrate how the White elite communicate<br />

and reproduce existing racialized ideologies and<br />

social relations <strong>of</strong> inequality through their everyday<br />

interactions.<br />

Second, the authors analyze the narratives <strong>of</strong> the<br />

victims <strong>of</strong> racial pr<strong>of</strong>iling. These stories ‘bear witness’<br />

to the lived experience <strong>of</strong> ethno-racial minorities.<br />

The sheer number <strong>of</strong> racial pr<strong>of</strong>iling incidents that<br />

Tator and Henry document stands as a testament to<br />

the systematic racism in Canadian law enforcement<br />

today. Each story, connected to hundreds <strong>of</strong> other<br />

similar stories, exposes a deep schism between the<br />

perceptions <strong>of</strong> police and other public authorities<br />

who deny the existence <strong>of</strong> racial pr<strong>of</strong>iling, and the<br />

lived experience <strong>of</strong> racialized minorities.<br />

Carol Tator is a course director in the Department<br />

<strong>of</strong> Anthropology at York <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Frances Henry is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emerita in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Anthropology at York <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Approx. 304 pp / 6 x 9 / July <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8714-0 / 978-0-8020-8714-0<br />

£48.00 $75.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-8666-7 / 978-0-8020-8666-2<br />

£22.50 $35.00 C<br />

Photo © Jim Rankin/<strong>Toronto</strong> Star.<br />

48


G E N E R AS OL CI NI OT EL RO EG SYT<br />

Narrating Social Order<br />

Agoraphobia and the Politics <strong>of</strong> Classification<br />

Shelley Z. Reuter<br />

Gender, the State, and<br />

Social Reproduction<br />

Household Insecurity in Neo-Liberal Times<br />

Kate Bezanson<br />

Agoraphobia, the fear <strong>of</strong> open spaces, has received<br />

minimal attention from sociologists. Yet implicit within<br />

psychiatric discussion <strong>of</strong> this disease is a normative<br />

account <strong>of</strong> society, social order, social ordering, and<br />

power relations, making agoraphobia an excellent candidate<br />

for sociological interpretation. Narrating Social<br />

Order provides the first critical sociological framework<br />

for understanding agoraphobia, as well as the issue <strong>of</strong><br />

psychiatric classification more generally.<br />

Shelley Z. Reuter explores three major themes in<br />

her analysis: agoraphobia in the context <strong>of</strong> gender,<br />

race, and class; the shift in recent decades from an<br />

emphasis on psychoanalytic explanations for mental<br />

diseases to an emphasis on strictly biogenic explanations;<br />

and, finally, embodiment as a process that occurs<br />

in and through disease categories. Reuter provides<br />

a close reading <strong>of</strong> reports <strong>of</strong> agoraphobia beginning<br />

with the first <strong>of</strong>ficial cases, along with the DSM and<br />

its precursors, illustrating how a “psychiatric narrative”<br />

is contained within this clinical discourse. She argues<br />

that, while the disease embodies very real physiological<br />

and emotional experiences <strong>of</strong> suffering, implicit in this<br />

fluid and shifting discourse are socio-cultural assumptions.<br />

These assumptions, and especially the question<br />

<strong>of</strong> what it means, both medically and culturally, to be<br />

‘normal’ and ‘pathological,’ demonstrate the overlap<br />

between the psychiatric narrative <strong>of</strong> agoraphobia<br />

and socio-cultural narratives <strong>of</strong> exclusion. Ultimately,<br />

Reuter seeks to confront the gap that exists between<br />

sociological and psychiatric conceptions <strong>of</strong> mental<br />

disease and to understand the relationship between<br />

biomedical and cultural knowledges.<br />

Shelley Z. Reuter is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Sociology and Anthropology at<br />

Concordia <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Policies implemented in the mid to late 1990s in<br />

Ontario by Mike Harris’s Conservative government<br />

have had undeniable repercussions for the population<br />

<strong>of</strong> that province. Kate Bezanson’s Gender, the<br />

State, and Social Reproduction is the first study<br />

to consider the implications <strong>of</strong> those policies for<br />

gender relations – that is, how women and men,<br />

families, and households coped with these changes,<br />

and how division <strong>of</strong> labour and standards <strong>of</strong> living<br />

were affected. Bezanson also considers implications<br />

<strong>of</strong> neo-liberalism more generally, for the lives <strong>of</strong><br />

people living under such regimes.<br />

Beginning with an outline <strong>of</strong> the restructuring<br />

experiment which took place under the Conservative<br />

government between 1995 and 2000, Bezanson<br />

shows how this process dramatically altered the scope<br />

<strong>of</strong> the welfare state, labour market protections and<br />

conditions, and the capacity for people to manage<br />

and plan their own lives. She combines this detailed<br />

investigation <strong>of</strong> the changes introduced by Harris<br />

with data collected in in-depth interviews <strong>of</strong> selected<br />

Ontario households, in order to examine how neoliberalism<br />

affects daily lives, particularly <strong>of</strong> low<br />

income people, and especially <strong>of</strong> women. Ultimately,<br />

Bezanson finds that the neo-liberal restructuring <strong>of</strong><br />

Ontario in the 1990s consolidated a gender regime<br />

that was highly unsustainable for poor households,<br />

many <strong>of</strong> which were lead by women. A controversial<br />

and illuminating study, Gender, the State, and Social<br />

Reproduction crosses the disciplines <strong>of</strong> politics, history,<br />

gender studies, and sociology.<br />

Kate Bezanson is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Sociology at Brock <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Approx. 176 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9088-5 / 978-08020-9088-1<br />

£28.00 $45.00 E<br />

Approx. 420 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2006</strong><br />

1 illustration<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9065-6 / 978-08020-9065-2<br />

£35.00 $55.00 E<br />

49


S O C I O L O G Y<br />

Do Men Mother<br />

Fatherhood, Care, and Domestic Responsibility<br />

Andrea Doucet<br />

More and more, fathers are deciding to stay at<br />

home and care for their children rather than<br />

work full-time outside <strong>of</strong> the home. More and<br />

more, Canadian families are lead by single fathers.<br />

Shining a spotlight on the lives <strong>of</strong> stay at home<br />

dads and single fathers, Do Men Mother provides<br />

groundbreaking evidence <strong>of</strong> dramatic changes in<br />

mothering and fathering in Canada.<br />

Using evidence gathered in a four-year in-depth<br />

qualitative study, including interviews with over<br />

100 fathers – from truck drivers to insurance salesmen,<br />

physicians to artists – Andrea Doucet illustrates<br />

how men are breaking the mold <strong>of</strong> traditional<br />

parenting models. Doucet’s research examines key<br />

questions such as: What leads fathers to trade earning<br />

for caring How do fathers navigate through the<br />

‘maternal worlds’ <strong>of</strong> mothers and infants Are men<br />

mothering or are they redefining fatherhood<br />

Do Men Mother illuminates fathers’ candid<br />

reflections on caring and the intricate social worlds<br />

that men and women inhabit as they ‘love and let<br />

go’ <strong>of</strong> their children. In asking and unravelling<br />

the question ‘do men mother,’ this study tells a<br />

compelling story about Canadian parents radically<br />

re-visioning child care and domestic responsibilities<br />

at the beginning <strong>of</strong> the twenty-first century.<br />

Andrea Doucet is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Sociology and Anthropology at<br />

Carleton <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Approx. 304 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8731-0 / 978-0-8020-8731-7<br />

£40.00 $60.00<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-8546-6 / 978-0-8020-8546-7<br />

£21.00 $32.00<br />

Of related interest:<br />

Deadbeat Dads<br />

Subjectivity and Social Construction<br />

Deena Mandell<br />

0-8020-8318-8 / 978-0-8020-8318-0<br />

£18.00 / $27.95 / 2002<br />

Photo: © <strong>2006</strong> Nancy Falcony.<br />

50


G E N E RH AE L A LT I NH T EC RAE RS ET<br />

Aboriginal Health in Canada<br />

Historical, Cultural, and Epidemiological Perspectives,<br />

Second Edition<br />

James B. Waldram, D. Ann Herring, T. Kue Young<br />

Numerous studies, inquires, and statistics accumulated<br />

over the years have demonstrated the poor<br />

health status <strong>of</strong> Aboriginal peoples relative to the<br />

Canadian population in general. While several<br />

books have addressed specific aspects <strong>of</strong> this issue,<br />

Aboriginal Health in Canada, originally published<br />

in 1995, set the standard for studies in Aboriginal<br />

health services. Now available in a fully up to date<br />

second edition, this book is unique in the comprehensive<br />

historical review, national scope, and combination<br />

<strong>of</strong> methodologies that it provides.<br />

Aboriginal Health in Canada is about the complex<br />

web <strong>of</strong> factors that contribute to health and disease<br />

patterns among the Aboriginal peoples <strong>of</strong> Canada. The<br />

authors explore the evidence for changes in patterns <strong>of</strong><br />

health and disease prior to and since European contact<br />

up to the present. They discuss medical systems<br />

and the place <strong>of</strong> medicine within various Aboriginal<br />

cultures and trace the relationship between politics<br />

and the organization <strong>of</strong> health services for Aboriginal<br />

people. They also examine popular explanations for<br />

Aboriginal health patterns today, and emphasize the<br />

need to understand both the historical-cultural context<br />

<strong>of</strong> health issues and the diversity <strong>of</strong> circumstances<br />

that give rise to variations in health problems and<br />

healing <strong>of</strong> Aboriginal peoples in Canada.<br />

James B. Waldram is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />

<strong>of</strong> Psychology at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Saskatchewan.<br />

D. Ann Herring is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

Anthropology at McMaster <strong>University</strong>.<br />

T. Kue Young is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

Public Health Sciences in Faculty <strong>of</strong> Medicine at<br />

the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

Testing Treatments<br />

Better Research for Better Healthcare<br />

Imogen Evans, Hazel Thornton, and Iain Chalmers<br />

THE BRITISH LIBRARY<br />

How do we know whether a particular drug, therapy<br />

or operation really works, and how well How reliable<br />

is the clinical evidence Such timely and pressing questions<br />

are raised and resolved in this probing inquiry into<br />

modern clinical research, with far-reaching implications<br />

for daily medical practice and patient care. What<br />

emerges from this study is the surprising truth that<br />

clinical research is neither as unbiased, nor as relevant<br />

as patients have every right to expect, but that everyone<br />

– patients, doctors and researchers – can do much to<br />

change current practice and achieve better healthcare.<br />

Aimed at both patients and pr<strong>of</strong>essionals, Testing<br />

Treatments builds a lively and thought-provoking argument<br />

for better, more reliable, more relevant research,<br />

with unbiased or ‘fair’ trials, and explains how patients<br />

can work with doctors to achieve this vital goal. Expertly<br />

and thoroughly researched, the fast-moving commentary<br />

explores a vast range <strong>of</strong> revealing case-studies,<br />

enlivened throughout by entertaining anecdotes and<br />

vivid eyewitness accounts drawn from the direct experience<br />

<strong>of</strong> patients, practitioners and researchers. Often<br />

startling, at times unsettling, but never pessimistic,<br />

Testing Treatments remains essentially pragmatic and<br />

constructive in tone, urging everyone to take an active<br />

part in changing conditions, and describing what practical<br />

steps doctors and patients can together take to<br />

improve current research and future treatment.<br />

Imogen Evans is a medical journalist who has practiced<br />

and lectured in medicine in Canada and the UK.<br />

Hazel Thornton is a writer and patient advocate.<br />

Iain Chalmers has practiced medicine in the UK<br />

and Palestine. Since 2002 he has coordinated the<br />

James Lind Initiative, promoting better controlled<br />

trials for better health care.<br />

Approx. 352 pp / 6 x 9 / August <strong>2006</strong><br />

15 illustrations<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8792-2 / 978-0-8020-8792-8<br />

£45.00 $70.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-8579-2 / 978-0-8020-8579-5<br />

£20.00 $29.95 C<br />

Approx. 224 pp / 6 x 9 / July <strong>2006</strong><br />

Paper ISBN 0-7123-4909-X / 978-0-7123-4909-3<br />

$19.95 C<br />

DISTRIBUTION RIGHTS FOR NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA ONLY.<br />

OTHER RIGHTS HELD BY THE BRITISH LIBRARY<br />

51


E D U C AT I O N<br />

Schooling and Difference<br />

in Africa<br />

Democratic Challenges in a Contemporary Context<br />

George J. Sefa Dei, Alireza Asgharzadeh, Sharon<br />

Eblaghie Bahador, Riyad Ahmed Shahjahan<br />

Since the 1950s when most African countries<br />

gained political independence, schooling has presented<br />

very difficult challenges. In the discussion<br />

<strong>of</strong> these challenges, however, the issue <strong>of</strong> diversity<br />

has received relatively little attention. Schooling and<br />

Difference in Africa aims to understand how differences<br />

such as ethnicity, class, gender, language,<br />

religion, and disability play out in African schools<br />

systems, and more specifically in Ghana.<br />

Together, the authors promote ‘educational inclusion’<br />

in the context <strong>of</strong> African schooling. The aspects<br />

<strong>of</strong> diversity explored in this study include: minority<br />

/ majority relations, race, ethnicity, gender, language,<br />

class, religion, and physical (dis)ability. The authors<br />

build their analyses <strong>of</strong> these issues around a series <strong>of</strong><br />

interviews, which project a perspective that policy<br />

makers and administrators rarely seek out. By studying<br />

the challenges <strong>of</strong> inclusive education in Ghana<br />

and, further, by making comparisons with the<br />

Canadian context, this volume seeks to shed light<br />

on the ongoing struggle for an empowering school<br />

system in Africa and elsewhere.<br />

George Sefa Dei is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor and Chair in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Sociology and Equity Studies at the<br />

Ontario Institute for Studies in Education <strong>of</strong> the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

Alireza Asgharzadeh is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Sociology at York <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Sharon Eblaghie is a PhD candidate in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Sociology and Equity Studies and<br />

Riyad Ahmed Shahjahan is a PhD candidate in the<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Theory and Policy Studies at the<br />

Ontario Institute for Studies in Education <strong>of</strong> the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.<br />

Curriculum as Cultural<br />

Practice<br />

Postcolonial Imaginations<br />

Edited by Yatta Kanu<br />

Initiatives that deconstruct and challenge the<br />

dominance <strong>of</strong> Western cultural knowledge in<br />

curriculum are gaining momentum, and though<br />

some <strong>of</strong> the most potent challenges come from<br />

the field <strong>of</strong> postcolonial theory, the implications<br />

<strong>of</strong> these challenges for theorizing curriculum have<br />

not been fully explored. Curriculum as Cultural<br />

Practice aims to revitalize current discourses <strong>of</strong><br />

curriculum research and reform from a postcolonial<br />

perspective.<br />

Yatta Kanu brings together an impressive list <strong>of</strong><br />

scholars to interrogate the dominance <strong>of</strong> Western<br />

European knowledge, cultural production, representation,<br />

and dissemination in education, and<br />

to promote critical, democratic, and ethical practices<br />

in curriculum design. Contributors examine<br />

current curriculum from a variety <strong>of</strong> different<br />

perspectives including subalternity, indigenous<br />

knowledges and spirituality, critical ontology,<br />

biolinguistic diversity, postnationalism, transnationalism,<br />

globalization, and the West African<br />

concept <strong>of</strong> Sank<strong>of</strong>a. Each <strong>of</strong> these unique perspectives<br />

frame the postcolonial condition and reflect<br />

changing educational relations, practices, and<br />

institutional arrangements.<br />

Yatta Kanu is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Faculty <strong>of</strong><br />

Education at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Manitoba.<br />

Approx. 336 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9019-2 / 978-0-8020-9019-5<br />

£55.00 $85.00 E<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-4894-3 / 978-0-8020-4894-3<br />

£25.00 $39.95 C<br />

Approx. 348 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2006</strong><br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9078-8 / 978-08020-9078-2<br />

£42.00 $65.00 E<br />

52


E D U C AT I O N<br />

Negotiating Transcultural Lives<br />

Belongings and Social Capital among Youth in<br />

Comparative Perspective<br />

Edited by Dirk Hoerder, Yvonne Hébert,<br />

and Irina Schmitt<br />

In simple terms, transculturation describes the<br />

phenomenon <strong>of</strong> merging and converging cultures.<br />

In societies <strong>of</strong> the early twenty-first century, transculturation<br />

is amplified by communication and<br />

transportation technology – global media conglomerates,<br />

the Internet, and air travel, are bringing cultures<br />

together at an accelerating pace. This reality<br />

is especially prevalent in the lives <strong>of</strong> young people,<br />

who negotiate their position with peers from other<br />

(ethno-) cultural and socioeconomic contexts on<br />

a daily basis, and engage with diversely gendered<br />

traditions and media-suggested roles.<br />

In Negotiating Transcultural Lives Dirk Hoeder,<br />

Yvonne Hébert, and Irina Schmitt bring together an<br />

international group <strong>of</strong> scholars to reflect on transculturation<br />

in the daily lives <strong>of</strong> youth. Contributors analyze<br />

the life practices and projects <strong>of</strong> children and young<br />

people in several societies with emphasis on Europe and<br />

Canada, adopting a comparative perspective that allows<br />

them to avoid mono-cultural assumptions. Together,<br />

these studies argue that in order to understand the<br />

issue <strong>of</strong> cultural belonging in young people today, it is<br />

necessary to read histories as many-cultured. Ultimately,<br />

the goal <strong>of</strong> the collection is to stimulate teachers, social<br />

workers, facilitators, journalists, and the media to<br />

understand and appreciate the many-cultural perspectives<br />

and contributions <strong>of</strong> contemporary youth.<br />

Dirk Hoerder is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

History at Bremen <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Yvonne Hébert is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Faculty <strong>of</strong><br />

Education at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Calgary.<br />

Irina Schmitt is a PhD candidate in History and Cultural<br />

Studies at Bremen <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Teaching Adolescents<br />

Educational Psychology as a Science <strong>of</strong> Signs<br />

Howard A. Smith<br />

TORONTO STUDIES IN SEMIOTICS AND COMMUNICATION<br />

Grounded in the semiotic thought <strong>of</strong> Charles<br />

Sanders Peirce, America’s greatest polymath,<br />

Howard A. Smith’s Teaching Adolescents addresses<br />

topics in educational psychology from a semiotic<br />

or sign-based perspective rather than a behavioural<br />

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Smith’s main argument is that teachers must rely<br />

on signs <strong>of</strong> all kinds to understand students and to<br />

survive as teachers. This book is unique in applying<br />

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Among the many concepts that Smith discusses<br />

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classroom management. Various signs <strong>of</strong> learning<br />

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derived from local culture that have an impact on<br />

the lives <strong>of</strong> students and teachers, such as adolescent<br />

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Smith discusses what teachers can do to ensure their<br />

physical and emotional health in the classroom.<br />

The theoretical continuity and practical application<br />

<strong>of</strong> semiotics makes Teaching Adolescents both<br />

an indispensable resource for students in pre-service<br />

teaching programs and teachers working with teens,<br />

and a fascinating and real world study for anyone<br />

interested in the science <strong>of</strong> signs.<br />

Howard A. Smith is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Faculty <strong>of</strong><br />

Education at Queen’s <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Approx. 259 pp / 6 ½ x 9 ½ / Available<br />

Paper ISBN 0-8020-9253-5 / 978-08020-9253-3<br />

£18.00 $27.95 C<br />

NORTH AMERICAN RIGHTS ONLY. CO-PUBLISHED WITH V & R UNIPRESS<br />

Approx. 400 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2006</strong><br />

10 photographs<br />

Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9099-0 / 978-0-8020-9099-7<br />

£40.00 $60.00 E<br />

53


R E F E R E N C E<br />

Canadian Who’s Who <strong>2006</strong><br />

Volume XLI<br />

Edited by Elizabeth Lumley<br />

Now in its ninety-sixth year <strong>of</strong> publication, this<br />

standard Canadian reference source contains the<br />

most comprehensive and authoritative biographical<br />

information on notable living Canadians. Those<br />

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they hold in Canadian society, or because <strong>of</strong> the<br />

contribution they have made to life in Canada.<br />

The volume is updated annually to ensure<br />

accuracy, and 600 new entries are added each year<br />

to keep current with developing trends and issues<br />

in Canadian society. Included are outstanding<br />

Canadians from all walks <strong>of</strong> life: politics, media,<br />

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writing an article, etc… Canadian Who’s Who…has, for<br />

a long time, described the spirit <strong>of</strong> Canadians.’<br />

Roch Carrier, former National Librarian<br />

Canadian Who’s Who <strong>2006</strong> on CD-ROM<br />

The complete text <strong>of</strong> Canadian Who’s Who is also<br />

available on CD-ROM, in a comprehensively indexed<br />

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54


R E F E R E N C E<br />

Ontario Legal Directory <strong>2006</strong><br />

Published annually since 1925<br />

Edited by Lynn Burdon<br />

Accuracy and completeness <strong>of</strong> detail have characterised<br />

the Ontario Legal Directory since 1925,<br />

when the first annual edition <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Toronto</strong> Legal<br />

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55


R E F E R E N C E<br />

Canadian Insurance<br />

Claims Directory <strong>2006</strong><br />

74th Annual Edition<br />

Edited by Gwen Peroni<br />

This directory is published yearly to facilitate the<br />

forwarding <strong>of</strong> insurance claims throughout Canada<br />

and the United States. Its subscribers are adjusters,<br />

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government <strong>of</strong>fices.<br />

Listed are a total <strong>of</strong> 1600 independent adjusting<br />

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The arrangement <strong>of</strong> listings is national, geographical,<br />

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Canadian insurance companies.<br />

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<strong>2006</strong><br />

Final Edition<br />

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CBIP is the complete reference and buying guide<br />

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56


L E X I C O N S O F E A R LY GM EON DE RE AR N L IE NT GE RL EI S HT<br />

Lexicons <strong>of</strong> Early Modern English (LEME) gives<br />

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<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> Library<br />

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journals@utpress.utoronto.ca<br />

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57


U T P R E C E N T B A C K L I S T<br />

Access to Care, Access to<br />

Justice<br />

The Legal Debate Over<br />

Private Health Insurance<br />

in Canada<br />

Edited by Colleen M.<br />

Flood, Kent Roach, and<br />

Lorne Sossin<br />

0-8020-9420-1 / £22.50 /<br />

$35.00 / 2005<br />

Against the Draft<br />

Essays on Conscientious<br />

Objection from the<br />

Radical Reformation to<br />

the Second World War<br />

Peter Brock<br />

0-8020-9073-7 / £50.00 /<br />

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Analytical Political<br />

Philosophy<br />

From Discourse,<br />

Edification<br />

David Braybrooke<br />

0-8020-3867-0 / £42.00 /<br />

$65.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Appointing Judges in an Age<br />

<strong>of</strong> Judicial Power<br />

Critical Perspectives from<br />

around the World<br />

Edited by Kate Malleson<br />

and Peter Russell<br />

0-8020-9381-7 / £22.50 /<br />

$45.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Between Caring & Counting<br />

Teachers Take on<br />

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Lindsay Kerr<br />

0-8020-9123-7 / £25.00 /<br />

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Brothers and Sisters in India<br />

A Study <strong>of</strong> Urban Adult<br />

Siblings<br />

G.N. Ramu<br />

0-8020-9077-X / £40.00<br />

/ $60.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Canada’s Changing Families<br />

Implications for<br />

Individuals and Society<br />

Edited by Kevin<br />

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Ravanera<br />

0-8020-8640-3 / £20.00 /<br />

$29.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Canada’s Governors<br />

General, 1847–1878<br />

Biography and<br />

Constitutional Evolution<br />

Barbara J. Messamore<br />

0-8020-9385-X / £20.00<br />

/ $29.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Canadian Annual Review <strong>of</strong><br />

Politics and Public Affairs<br />

2000<br />

Edited by David Mutimer<br />

0-8020-9089-3 / £63.00 /<br />

$98.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Char Davies’ Immersive<br />

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<strong>of</strong> Spatiality<br />

Laurie McRobert<br />

0-8020-9094-X / £32.00<br />

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Chasing Reality<br />

Strife over Realism<br />

Mario Bunge<br />

0-8020-9075-3 / £48.00 /<br />

$75.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Chaucer’s Queer Poetics<br />

Rereading the Dream Trio<br />

Susan Schiban<strong>of</strong>f<br />

0-8020-9035-4 / £48.00 /<br />

$75.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Continuity and Change in<br />

Canadian Politics<br />

Essays in Honour <strong>of</strong><br />

David E. Smith<br />

Edited by Hans J.<br />

Michelmann and Cristine<br />

de Clercy<br />

0-8020-9060-5 / £32.00 /<br />

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Controlling Readers<br />

Guillaume de Machaut<br />

and His Late Medieval<br />

Audience<br />

Deborah McGrady<br />

0-8020-9020-6 / £48.00 /<br />

$75.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

The Convergence <strong>of</strong><br />

Civilizations<br />

Constructing a<br />

Mediterranean Region<br />

Edited by Emanuel Adler,<br />

Beverly Crawford, Federica<br />

Bicchi, and Rafaella A. Del<br />

Sarto<br />

0-8020-3804-2 / £22.50 /<br />

$35.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Culture <strong>of</strong> Ecology<br />

Reconciling Economics<br />

and Environment<br />

Robert E. Babe<br />

0-8020-3595-7 / £42.00 /<br />

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Deleuze and Space<br />

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0-8020-9390-6 / $29.95<br />

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North American Rights<br />

Only<br />

Desiring Women<br />

The Partnership <strong>of</strong><br />

Virginia Woolf and Vita<br />

Sackville-West<br />

Karyn Z. Sproles<br />

0-8020-9402-3 / £20.00 /<br />

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Diaspora in the Countryside<br />

Two Mennonite<br />

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Twentieth Century Rural<br />

Disjuncture<br />

Royden Loewen<br />

0-8020-9418-X / £20.00<br />

/ $29.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

World Rights Less U.S.<br />

58


U T P R E C E N T B A C K L I S T<br />

Difficult Justice<br />

Commentaries on Levinas<br />

and Politics<br />

Edited by Asher Horowitz<br />

and Gad Horowitz<br />

0-8020-8009-X / £40.00<br />

/ $60.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Dis/membering the Family<br />

Marital Breakdown,<br />

Domestic Conflict,<br />

and Family Violence in<br />

Ontario, 1830-1920<br />

Annalee Lepp<br />

0-8020-8646-2 / £22.50 /<br />

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Disraeli’s Disciple<br />

The Scandalous Life <strong>of</strong><br />

George Smythe<br />

Mary S. Millar<br />

0-8020-9092-3 / £48.00 /<br />

$75.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

The Emotions <strong>of</strong> the Ancient<br />

Greeks<br />

Studies in Aristotle and<br />

Classical Literature<br />

David Konstan<br />

0-8020-9103-2 / £55.00 /<br />

$85.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Engaged Philosophy<br />

Essays in Honour <strong>of</strong><br />

David Braybrooke<br />

Edited by Susan Sherwin<br />

and Peter Schotch<br />

0-8020-3890-5 / £42.00 /<br />

$65.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

The Enlightenment Cyborg<br />

A History <strong>of</strong><br />

Communications and<br />

Control in the Human<br />

Machine, 1660–1830<br />

Allison Muri<br />

0-8020-8850-3 / £40.00 /<br />

$60.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Ethical Issues in Community-<br />

Based Research with<br />

Children and Youth<br />

Edited by Bonnie<br />

Leadbeater, Elizabeth<br />

Banister, Cecilia Benoit,<br />

Mikael Jansson, Anne<br />

Marshall, and Ted Riecken<br />

0-8020-4882-X / £20.00<br />

/ $29.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Federal-Provincial<br />

Diplomacy<br />

The Making <strong>of</strong> Recent<br />

Policy in Canada<br />

Richard Simeon<br />

0-8020-9411-2 / £20.00 /<br />

$29.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Female Enterprise in the<br />

New Economy<br />

Karen D. Hughes<br />

0-8020-8672-1 / £15.00 /<br />

$29.95 / 2005<br />

Friends, Citizens, Strangers<br />

Essays on Where We<br />

Belong<br />

Richard Vernon<br />

0-8020-9079-6 / £42.00 /<br />

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Health Systems in Transition<br />

Canada<br />

Gregory P. Marchildon<br />

0-8020-9400-7 / $25.00<br />

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North American Rights<br />

Only<br />

Horses in Society<br />

A Story <strong>of</strong> Animal<br />

Breeding and Marketing<br />

Culture, 1800–1920<br />

Margaret E. Derry<br />

0-8020-9112-1 / £40.00 /<br />

$60.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

In the Agora<br />

The Public Face <strong>of</strong><br />

Canadian Philosophy<br />

Edited by Andrew D.<br />

Irvine and John S. Russell<br />

0-8020-3817-4 / £20.00 /<br />

$29.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

In the Days <strong>of</strong> Our<br />

Grandmothers<br />

A Reader in Aboriginal<br />

Women’s History in<br />

Canada<br />

Edited by Mary-Ellen Kelm<br />

and Lorna Townsend<br />

0-8020-7960-1 / £22.50 /<br />

$35.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Inside the Mosaic<br />

Edited by Eric Fong<br />

0-8020-8834-1 / £35.00 /<br />

$55.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Integrative Antiracism<br />

South Asians in Canadian<br />

Academe<br />

Edith Samuel<br />

0-8020-3782-8 / £20.00 /<br />

$29.95 / 2005<br />

Just Medicare<br />

What’s In, What’s Out,<br />

How We Decide<br />

Edited by Colleen Flood<br />

0-8020-8002-2 / £42.00 /<br />

$ 65.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Law and Ethics in Biomedical<br />

Research<br />

Regulation, Conflict <strong>of</strong><br />

Interest, and Liability<br />

Edited by Trudo Lemmens<br />

and Duff R. Waring<br />

0-8020-8643-8 / £22.50 /<br />

$35.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Managing to Nurse<br />

Inside Canada’s Health<br />

Care Reform<br />

Janet M. Rankin and<br />

Marie L. Campbell<br />

0-8020-3791-7 / £16.00 /<br />

$25.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Manuscript Diversity,<br />

Meaning, and Variance in<br />

Juan Manuel’s El Conde<br />

Lucanor<br />

Laurence de Looze<br />

0-8020-9057-5 / £48.00 /<br />

$75.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

59


U T P R E C E N T B A C K L I S T<br />

Medici Women<br />

Portraits <strong>of</strong> Power, Love,<br />

and Betrayal in the Court<br />

<strong>of</strong> Duke Cosimo I<br />

Gabrielle Langdon<br />

0-8020-3825-5 / £55.00 /<br />

$85.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Milton and the Climates <strong>of</strong><br />

Reading<br />

Essays by Balachandra<br />

Rajan<br />

Edited by Elizabeth Sauer<br />

0-8020-9105-9 / £28.00 /<br />

$45.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Mothers <strong>of</strong> the Nation<br />

Women, Families, and<br />

Nationalism in Twentieth-<br />

Century Europe<br />

Patrizia Albanese<br />

0-8020-9015-X / £35.00<br />

/ $55.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

The Neo-Primitivist Turn<br />

Critical Reflections on<br />

Alterity, Culture, and<br />

Modernity<br />

Victor Li<br />

0-8020-9111-3 / £32.00 /<br />

$50.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Not This Time<br />

Canadians, Public Policy,<br />

and the Marijuana<br />

Question, 1961–1975<br />

Marcel Martel<br />

0-8020-9379-5 / £18.00 /<br />

$27.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

The Other Quebec<br />

Microhistorical Essays<br />

on Nineteenth-Century<br />

Religion and Society<br />

J.I. Little<br />

0-8020-9397-3 / £20.00 /<br />

$35.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Partisanship, Globalization,<br />

and Canadian Labour<br />

Market Policy<br />

Four Provinces in<br />

Comparative Perspective<br />

Rodney Haddow and<br />

Thomas Klassen<br />

0-8020-9090-7 / £42.00 /<br />

$65.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Patrons <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment<br />

Edward G. Andrew<br />

0-8020-9064-8 / £35.00 /<br />

$55.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Performance Degree Zero<br />

Roland Barthes and<br />

Theatre<br />

Timothy Scheie<br />

0-8020-9387-6 / £18.00 /<br />

$27.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

The Politics <strong>of</strong> CANDU<br />

Exports<br />

Duane Bratt<br />

0-8020-9091-5 / £40.00 /<br />

$60.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

The Primacy <strong>of</strong> Semiosis<br />

An Ontology <strong>of</strong> Relations<br />

Paul Bains<br />

0-8020-9003-6 / £32.00 /<br />

$50.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Print Culture and the<br />

Blackwood Tradition<br />

Edited by David<br />

Finkelstein<br />

0-8020-8711-6 / £42.00 /<br />

$65.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

The Quest for Epic<br />

From Ariosto to Tasso<br />

Sergio Zatti. Edited by<br />

Dennis Looney<br />

0-8020-9373-6 / £20.00 /<br />

$29.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Quixotic Frescoes<br />

Cervantes and Italian<br />

Renaissance Art<br />

Frederick A. de Armas<br />

0-8020-9074-5 / £50.00 /<br />

$80.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Red Riding Hood and the<br />

Wolf in Bed<br />

Modernism’s Fairy Tales<br />

Ann Martin<br />

0-8020-9086-9 / £32.00 /<br />

$50.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

The Renaissance in<br />

Historical Thought<br />

Wallace K. Ferguson<br />

0-8020-9415-5 / £18.00 /<br />

$27.50 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Riding to the Rescue<br />

The Transformation <strong>of</strong><br />

the RCMP in Alberta and<br />

Saskatchewan, 1914–1939<br />

Steve Hewitt<br />

0-8020-4895-1 / £15.00 /<br />

$24.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Ritual, Routine, and Regime<br />

Repetition in Early<br />

Modern British and<br />

European Cultures<br />

Edited by Lorna Clymer<br />

0-8020-9030-3 / £40.00 /<br />

$60.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

The Roles <strong>of</strong> Public Opinion<br />

Research in Canadian<br />

Government<br />

Christopher Page<br />

0-8020-9377-9 / £18.00 /<br />

$27.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Rules, Rules, Rules, Rules<br />

Multi-Level Regulatory<br />

Governance<br />

Edited by G. Bruce Doern<br />

and Robert Johnson<br />

0-8020-3858-1 / £40.00 /<br />

$60.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Shakespeare in the<br />

Worlds <strong>of</strong> Communism and<br />

Socialism<br />

Edited by Irena R.<br />

Makaryk and Joseph G.<br />

Price<br />

0-8020-9058-3 / £55.00 /<br />

$85.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

60


U T P R E C E N T B A C K L I S T<br />

Teaching with the Records<br />

<strong>of</strong> Early English Drama<br />

Edited by Elza C. Tiner<br />

0-8020-9082-6 / £48.00<br />

/ $75.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

This Is Not a Peace Pipe<br />

Towards a Critical<br />

Indigenous Philosophy<br />

Dale Turner<br />

0-8020-3792-5 / £15.00<br />

/ $24.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Thomas Hardy Reappraised<br />

Essays in Honour <strong>of</strong><br />

Michael Millgate<br />

Edited by Keith Wilson<br />

0-8020-3955-3 / £40.00<br />

/ $60.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

A Tournament <strong>of</strong> Misfits<br />

Tall Tales and Short<br />

Aldo Palazzeschi.<br />

Translated by Nicolas J.<br />

Perella<br />

0-8020-4889-7 / £18.00<br />

/ $27.95 / 2005<br />

Transnational Cervantes<br />

William Childers<br />

0-8020-9045-1 / £40.00<br />

/ $60.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

The Triumphant Juan Rana<br />

A Gay Actor <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Spanish Golden Age<br />

Peter E. Thompson<br />

0-8020-8969-0 / £28.00<br />

/ $45.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Unsettling Partition<br />

Literature, Gender,<br />

Memory<br />

Jill Didur<br />

0-8020-7997-0 / £32.00<br />

/ $50.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Utopian Pedagogy<br />

Radical Experiments<br />

Against Neoliberal<br />

Globalization<br />

Edited by Mark Coté,<br />

Richard J.F. Day, and<br />

Greig de Peuter<br />

0-8020-8675-6 / £20.00<br />

/ $29.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

A Vision <strong>of</strong> the Orient<br />

Texts, Intertexts, and<br />

Contexts <strong>of</strong> Madame<br />

Butterfly<br />

Edited by Jonathan<br />

Wisenthal, Sherrill Grace,<br />

Melinda Boyd, Brian<br />

McIlroy, and Vera Micznik<br />

0-8020-8801-5 / £32.00<br />

/ $50.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Visiting Grandchildren<br />

Economic Development<br />

in the Maritimes<br />

Donald J. Savoie<br />

0-8020-9382-5 / £22.50<br />

/ $35.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Vite italiane<br />

Dodici conversazioni con<br />

italiani<br />

Ugo Skubikowski<br />

0-8020-4887-0 / £18.00<br />

/ $29.95 / 2005<br />

What is Systematic<br />

Theology<br />

Robert M. Doran<br />

0-8020-9041-9 / £35.00<br />

/ $55.00 / 2005<br />

Wheat and Woman<br />

Georgina Binnie-Clark<br />

0-8020-3813-1 / £18.00<br />

/ $27.95 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

White Civility<br />

The Literary Project <strong>of</strong><br />

English Canada<br />

Daniel Coleman<br />

0-8020-3707-0 / £35.00<br />

/ $55.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Working on Screen<br />

Representations <strong>of</strong><br />

the Working Class in<br />

Canadian Cinema<br />

Edited by Malek Khouri<br />

and Darrell Varga<br />

0-8020-9388-4 / £22.50<br />

/ $35.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Writing the Roaming<br />

Subject<br />

The Biotext in Canadian<br />

Literature<br />

Joanne Saul<br />

0-8020-9012-5 / £25.00<br />

/ $40.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

61


U T P S E L E C T E D B A C K L I S T<br />

Aboriginal People and the<br />

Colonizers <strong>of</strong> Western Canada<br />

to 1900<br />

Sarah Carter<br />

0-8020-7995-4 / £8.50 / $16.95<br />

/ 1999<br />

After Green Gables<br />

L.M. Montgomery’s Letters to<br />

Ephraim Weber, 1916–1941<br />

Edited by Hildi Froese Tiessen and<br />

Paul Gerard Tiessen<br />

0-8020-8459-1 / £22.50 / $34.95<br />

/ <strong>2006</strong><br />

Andrés González de Barcia<br />

and the Creation <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Colonial Spanish American<br />

Library<br />

Jonathan E. Carlyon<br />

0-8020-3845-X / £42.00 /<br />

$55.00 / 2005<br />

Anglo-Saxon England in<br />

Icelandic Medieval Texts<br />

Magnús Fjalldal<br />

0-8020-3837-9 / £40.00 / $60.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Anthropology<br />

A Student’s Guide to Theory and<br />

Method<br />

Stanley R. Barrett<br />

0-8020-7833-8 / £13.95 / $22.95<br />

/ 1996<br />

Apostle to the Inuit<br />

The Journals and Ethnographic<br />

Notes <strong>of</strong> Edmund James Peck<br />

– The Baffin Years, 1894–1905<br />

Edited by Frédéric Laugrand,<br />

Jarich Oosten, and François Trudel<br />

0-8020-9042-7 / £48.00 / $75.00<br />

/ <strong>2006</strong><br />

The Artist as Monster<br />

The Cinema <strong>of</strong> David<br />

Cronenberg<br />

William Beard<br />

0-8020-3807-7 / £22.50 / $35.00<br />

/ <strong>2006</strong><br />

As for Sinclair Ross<br />

David Stouck<br />

0-8020-4388-7 / £28.00 / $45.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Auto Pact<br />

Creating a Borderless North<br />

American Auto Industry,<br />

1960–1971<br />

Dimitry Anastakis<br />

0-8020-3821-2 / £20.00 / $29.95<br />

/ 2005<br />

The Autobiography <strong>of</strong> a<br />

Fisherman<br />

Frank Parker Day<br />

0-8020-9393-0 / £14.00 / $21.95<br />

/ 2005<br />

Bedside Matters<br />

The Transformation <strong>of</strong> Canadian<br />

Nursing, 1900-1990<br />

Kathryn McPherson<br />

0-8020-8679-9 / £15.00 / $24.95<br />

/ 2003<br />

‘Being Alive Well’<br />

Health and the Politics <strong>of</strong> Cree<br />

Well-Being<br />

Naomi Adelson<br />

0-8020-8326-9 / £12.00 / $23.95<br />

/ 2000<br />

Bernard Bosanquet and the<br />

Legacy <strong>of</strong> British Idealism<br />

Edited by William Sweet<br />

0-8020-8981-X / £32.00 /<br />

$60.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

The Bias <strong>of</strong> Communication<br />

Revised Edition<br />

Harold A. Innis<br />

0-8020-6839-1 / £13.95 / $24.95<br />

/ 1951<br />

Biblical and Classical Myths<br />

The Mythological Framework <strong>of</strong><br />

Western Culture<br />

Northrop Frye and Jay Macpherson<br />

0-8020-8695-0 / £22.50 / $35.00<br />

/ 2004<br />

The Blackfoot Dictionary <strong>of</strong><br />

Stems, Roots, and Affixes<br />

Second Edition<br />

Donald G. Frantz and Norma<br />

Jean Russell<br />

0-8020-7136-8 / £17.00 / $35.00<br />

/ 1995<br />

Blood, Sweat, and Cheers<br />

Sport and the Making <strong>of</strong> Modern<br />

Canada<br />

Colin Howell<br />

0-8020-8248-3 / £10.00 / $17.95<br />

/ 2001<br />

Bora Laskin<br />

Bringing Law to Life<br />

Philip Girard<br />

0-8020-9044-3 / £35.00 / $55.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Born at the Right Time<br />

A History <strong>of</strong> the Baby Boom<br />

Generation<br />

Doug Owram<br />

0-8020-8086-3 / £15.00 / $24.95<br />

/ 1986<br />

Boyle on Atheism<br />

Transcribed and edited by J.J.<br />

MacIntosh<br />

0-8020-9018-4 / £60.00 / $95.00<br />

/ <strong>2006</strong><br />

Breaking the Bargain<br />

Public Servants, Ministers, and<br />

Parliament<br />

Donald J. Savoie<br />

0-8020-8591-1 / £18.00 / $32.95<br />

/ 2003<br />

The British Library Guide to<br />

Manuscript Illumination<br />

History and Techniques<br />

Christopher de Hamel<br />

0-8020-8173-8 / $20.95 / 2001<br />

North and South American<br />

Rights Only<br />

Canadian Annual Review<br />

<strong>of</strong> Politics and Public Affairs<br />

1999<br />

Edited by David Mutimer<br />

0-8020-3901-4 / £65.00 /<br />

$100.00 / 2005<br />

The Canadian Prairies<br />

A History<br />

Gerald Friesen<br />

0-8020-6648-8 / £11.00 / $32.95<br />

/ 1987<br />

Changing Politics <strong>of</strong> Canadian<br />

Social Policy<br />

James J. Rice and Michael J. Prince<br />

0-8020-8074-X / £15.00 /<br />

$26.95 / 2000<br />

Citizens and Nation<br />

An Essay on History,<br />

Communication, and Canada<br />

Gerald Friesen<br />

0-8020-8283-1 / £17.00 / $25.95<br />

/ 2000<br />

Civic Capitalism<br />

The State <strong>of</strong> Childhood<br />

John O’Neill<br />

0-8020-9392-2 / £14.00 / $21.95<br />

/ 2005<br />

Collected Works <strong>of</strong> George<br />

Grant<br />

Volume 3 (1960–1969)<br />

Edited by Arthur Davis and Henry<br />

Roper<br />

0-8020-3904-9 / £80.00 /<br />

$125.00 / 2005<br />

Complex Sovereignty<br />

Reconstituting Political Authority<br />

in the Twenty-First Century<br />

Edited by Edgar Grande and Louis<br />

W. Pauly<br />

0-8020-3881-6 / £40.00 / $60.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Constitutional Odyssey<br />

Can Canadians Become a<br />

Sovereign People<br />

Third Edition<br />

Peter H. Russell<br />

0-8020-3777-1 / £18.00 / $27.95<br />

/ 2004<br />

Contacts, Opportunities, and<br />

Criminal Enterprise<br />

Carlo Morselli<br />

0-8020-3811-5 / £15.00 / $24.95<br />

/ 2005<br />

Controversies with Edward Lee<br />

Desiderius Erasmus.<br />

Edited by Jane E. Phillips.<br />

Translated by Erika Rummel.<br />

Annotated by István Bejczy, Erika<br />

Rummel, and Jane E. Phillips<br />

0-8020-3836-0 / £96.00 /<br />

$150.00 / 2005<br />

The Correspondence <strong>of</strong><br />

Wolfgang Capito<br />

Volume 1: 1507–1523<br />

Edited by Erika Rummel<br />

0-8020-9017-6 / £60.00 / $95.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Creating Knowledge,<br />

Strengthening Nations<br />

The Changing Role <strong>of</strong> Higher<br />

Education<br />

Edited by Glen A. Jones, Patricia<br />

L. McCarney, and Michael L.<br />

Skolnik<br />

0-8020-3856-5 / £35.00 / $60.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

A Critical and Cultural Theory<br />

Reader<br />

Second Edition<br />

Edited by Anthony Easthope and<br />

Kate McGowan<br />

0-8020-3800-X / $29.95 / 2004<br />

North American Rights Only<br />

Culture and Authority in the<br />

Baroque<br />

Edited by Massimo Ciavolella and<br />

Patrick Coleman<br />

0-8020-3838-7 / £42.00 / $70.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Cultures and Ecologies<br />

A Native Fishing Conflict on the<br />

Saugeen-Bruce Peninsula<br />

Edwin C. Koenig<br />

0-8020-8847-3 / £32.00 / $50.00<br />

/ <strong>2006</strong><br />

Dancing Around the Elephant<br />

Creating a Prosperous Canada in<br />

an Era <strong>of</strong> American Dominance,<br />

1957–1973<br />

Bruce Muirhead<br />

0-8020-9016-8 / £42.00 / $65.00<br />

/ <strong>2006</strong><br />

Diaspora, Memory, and<br />

Identity<br />

A Search for Home<br />

Edited by Vijay Agnew<br />

0-8020-9374-4 / £18.00 / $29.95<br />

/ 2005<br />

62


U T P S E L E C T E D B A C K L I S T<br />

Dictionary <strong>of</strong> Basilian<br />

Biography<br />

Lives <strong>of</strong> Members <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Congregation <strong>of</strong> Priests <strong>of</strong> Saint<br />

Basil from Its Origins in 1822 to<br />

2002, Second Edition<br />

Edited by P. Wallace Platt<br />

0-8020-3949-9 / £80.00 /<br />

$125.00 / 2005<br />

Dictionary <strong>of</strong> Canadian<br />

Biography / Dictionnaire<br />

biographique du Canada<br />

Volume XV, 1921–1930<br />

Edited by Ramsay Cook and Réal<br />

Bélanger<br />

0-8020-9087-7 / £80.00 /<br />

$125.00 / 2005<br />

Dictionary <strong>of</strong> Newfoundland<br />

English<br />

Second Edition with Supplement<br />

Edited by G.M. Story, W.J. Kirwin,<br />

and J.D.A. Widdowson<br />

0-8020-6819-7 / £24.00 / $42.50<br />

/ 1998<br />

Discounted Labour<br />

Women Workers in Canada,<br />

1870–1939<br />

Ruth A. Frager and Carmela K.<br />

Patrias<br />

0-8020-7818-4 / £9.25 / $19.95<br />

/ 2005<br />

Early English Metre<br />

Thomas A. Bredeh<strong>of</strong>t<br />

0-8020-3831-X / £42.00 /<br />

$65.00 / 2005<br />

E-Crit<br />

Digital Media, Critical Theory,<br />

and the Humanities<br />

Marcel O’Gorman<br />

0-8020-9037-0 / £32.00 / $50.00<br />

/ <strong>2006</strong><br />

Einarr Skúlason’s Geisli<br />

A Critical Edition<br />

Edited by Martin Chase<br />

0-8020-3822-0 / £20.00 / $29.95<br />

/ 2005<br />

The Empire <strong>of</strong> Mind<br />

Digital Piracy and the Anti-<br />

Capitalist Movement<br />

Michael Strangelove<br />

0-8020-3818-2 / £21.50 / $32.95<br />

/ 2005<br />

Empowering Children<br />

Children’s Rights Education as a<br />

Pathway to Citizenship<br />

R. Brian Howe and Katherine<br />

Covell<br />

0-8020-3857-3 / £28.00 / $45.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Encyclopedic Dictionary<br />

<strong>of</strong> Semiotics, Media, and<br />

Communication<br />

Edited by Marcel Danesi<br />

0-8020-8329-3 / £12.00 / $25.95<br />

/ 2000<br />

Essays in the History <strong>of</strong><br />

Canadian Law<br />

Two Islands, Newfoundland and<br />

Prince Edward Island<br />

Edited by Christopher English<br />

0-8020-9043-5 / £42.00 / $70.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Fields <strong>of</strong> Fire<br />

The Canadians in Normandy<br />

Terry Copp<br />

0-8020-3780-1 / £20.00 / $30.95<br />

/ 2003<br />

Fitting Senteces<br />

Identity in Nineteenth- and<br />

Twentieth-Century Prison<br />

Narratives<br />

Jason Haslam<br />

0-8020-3833-6 / £40.00 / $60.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Globalization Unplugged<br />

Sovereignty and the Canadian<br />

State in the Twenty-First Century<br />

Peter Urmetzer<br />

0-8020-3799-2 / £20.00 / $26.95<br />

/ 2005<br />

Gospels and Grit<br />

Work and Labour in Carlyle,<br />

Conrad, and Orwell<br />

Rob Breton<br />

0-8020-3888-3 / £35.00 / $55.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Grieving Mental Illness<br />

A Guide for Patients and Their<br />

Caregivers, Second Edition<br />

Virginia Lafond<br />

0-8020-8532-6 / £10.00 / $18.95<br />

/ 2002<br />

The Gutenberg Galaxy<br />

The Making <strong>of</strong> Typographic Man<br />

Marshall McLuhan<br />

0-8020-6041-2 / £9.95 / $24.95<br />

/ 1962<br />

The Half-Lives <strong>of</strong> Pat Lowther<br />

Christine Wiesenthal<br />

0-8020-3635-X / £42.00 /<br />

$65.00 / 2005<br />

‘Hang Onto These Words’<br />

Johnny David’s Delgamuukw<br />

Evidence<br />

Edited by Antonia Mills<br />

0-8020-8534-2 / £21.50 / $45.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Harold Pinter and the Twilight<br />

<strong>of</strong> Modernism<br />

Varun Begley<br />

0-8020-3887-5 / £35.00 / $55.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Harvey Cushing<br />

A Life in Surgery<br />

Michael Bliss<br />

0-8020-8950-X / $50.00 / 2005<br />

Canadian Rights Only<br />

Hebrew Syntax<br />

Second Edition<br />

Ronald J. Williams<br />

0-8020-2218-9 / £9.75 / $17.95<br />

/ 1992<br />

Hidden in Plain Sight<br />

Contributions <strong>of</strong> Aboriginal<br />

Peoples to Canadian Identity and<br />

Culture, Volume One<br />

Edited by David R. Newhouse,<br />

Cora J. Voyageur, and Dan Beavon<br />

0-8020-8581-4 / £22.50 / $35.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Historical Identities<br />

The Pr<strong>of</strong>essoriate in Canada<br />

Edited by Paul Stortz and E. Lisa<br />

Panayotidis<br />

0-8020-9000-1 / £42.00 / $65.00<br />

/ <strong>2006</strong><br />

History <strong>of</strong> Medicine<br />

A Scandalously Short<br />

Introduction<br />

Jacalyn Duffin<br />

0-8020-7912-1 / $27.50 / 1999<br />

World Rights Less U.K. and<br />

Europe<br />

History <strong>of</strong> the Book in Canada<br />

Volume Two: 1840–1918<br />

Edited by Yvan Lamonde, Patricia<br />

Lockhart Fleming, and Fiona A.<br />

Black<br />

0-8020-8012-X / £55.00 /<br />

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0-8020-8481-8 / £14.00 / $25.95<br />

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0-8020-4888-9 / £20.00 / $29.95<br />

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0-8020-8787-6 / £28.00 / $45.00<br />

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In the Words <strong>of</strong> Elders<br />

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0-8020-4275-9 / £30.00 / $55.00<br />

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0-8020-9372-8 / £15.00 / $24.95<br />

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The Kantian Imperative<br />

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0-8020-4880-3 / £22.50 / $35.00<br />

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King Death<br />

The Black Death and its<br />

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0-8020-7900-8 / $19.95 / 1996<br />

North American Rights Only<br />

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63


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Latin Learning and English Lore<br />

Studies in Anglo-Saxon Literature<br />

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0-8020-8919-4 / £96.00 /<br />

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Arthur Ripstein<br />

0-8020-8447-8 / £26.00 / $50.00<br />

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Living in the Labyrinth <strong>of</strong><br />

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Willem H. Vanderburg<br />

0-8020-4879-X / £22.50 /<br />

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Lonergan’s Quest<br />

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0-8020-3875-1 / £60.00 /<br />

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Lords <strong>of</strong> the Rinks<br />

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The Making <strong>of</strong> High<br />

Performance Athletes<br />

Discipline, Diversity, and Ethics<br />

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0-8020-8201-7 / £9.75 / $18.95<br />

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The Dark Vision <strong>of</strong> Harold Innis<br />

Alexander John Watson<br />

0-8020-3916-2 / £42.00 / $65.00<br />

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Marian Devotion in Thirteenth-<br />

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Daniel E. O’Sullivan<br />

0-8020-3885-9 / £40.00 / $60.00<br />

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Media Violence and its Effect<br />

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0-8020-8425-7 / £15.00 / $28.95<br />

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Method in Theology<br />

Second Edition<br />

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0-8020-6809-X / £13.50 /<br />

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Migration Italy<br />

The Art <strong>of</strong> Talking Back in a<br />

Destination Culture<br />

Graziella Parati<br />

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Mistakes <strong>of</strong> Reason<br />

Essays in Honour <strong>of</strong> John Woods<br />

Edited by Kent A. Peacock and<br />

Andrew D. Irvine<br />

0-8020-3866-2 / £55.00 / $85.00<br />

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The Moral Economy <strong>of</strong> Cities<br />

Shaping Good Citizens<br />

Evelyn S. Ruppert<br />

0-8020-3886-7 / £42.00 / $65.00<br />

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Naming Canada<br />

Stories about Canadian Place<br />

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0-8020-8293-9 / £16.00 / $27.95<br />

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between the Wars<br />

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Introduction to the Theory <strong>of</strong><br />

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0-8020-7806-0 / £13.00 / $21.95<br />

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Nation and History<br />

Polish Historians from the<br />

Enlightenment to the Second<br />

World War<br />

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0-8020-9036-2 / £48.00 / $75.00<br />

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A Nation <strong>of</strong> Immigrants<br />

Readings in Canadian History,<br />

1840s–1960s<br />

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Paula Draper and Robert Ventresca<br />

0-8020-7482-0 / £15.00 / $28.95<br />

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Negotiating Citizenship<br />

Migrant Women in Canada and<br />

the Global System<br />

Daiva K. Stasiulis and Abigail<br />

B. Bakan<br />

0-8020-7915-6 / $27.50 / 2005<br />

North American Rights Only<br />

New Institutionalism<br />

Theory and Analysis<br />

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0-8020-4881-1 / £20.00 / $29.95<br />

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The New Politics <strong>of</strong><br />

Surveillance and Visibility<br />

Edited by Kevin D. Haggerty and<br />

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0-8020-4878-1 / £20.00 / $40.00<br />

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The Next World War<br />

Tribes, Cities, Nations, and<br />

Ecological Decline<br />

Roy Woodbridge<br />

0-8020-8603-9 / £18.00 / $28.95<br />

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On Location<br />

Canada’s Television Industry in a<br />

Global Market<br />

Serra Tinic<br />

0-8020-8548-2 / £15.00 / $24.95<br />

/ 2005<br />

On the Edge <strong>of</strong> Empire<br />

Gender, Race, and the Making <strong>of</strong><br />

British Columbia, 1849–1871<br />

Adele Perry<br />

0-8020-8336-6 / £16.00 / $27.95<br />

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One Hundred Years <strong>of</strong><br />

Canadian Cinema<br />

George Melnyk<br />

0-8020-8444-3 / £22.50 / $35.00<br />

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The Order <strong>of</strong> Canada<br />

Its Origins, History, and<br />

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Christopher McCreery<br />

0-8020-3940-5 / £40.00 / $65.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Partnerships for Prevention<br />

The Story <strong>of</strong> the Highfield<br />

Community Enrichment Project<br />

Ge<strong>of</strong>frey Nelson, S. Mark Pancer,<br />

Karen Hayward, and Ray DeV. Peters<br />

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The People <strong>of</strong> New France<br />

Allan Greer<br />

0-8020-7816-8 / £10.00 / $15.95<br />

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Perilous Realms<br />

Celtic and Norse in Tolkien’s<br />

Middle-earth<br />

Marjorie Burns<br />

0-8020-3806-9 / £18.00 / $27.95<br />

/ 2005<br />

Personal Liberty and Public<br />

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The Introduction <strong>of</strong> John Stuart<br />

Mill to Japan and China<br />

Douglas Howland<br />

0-8020-9005-2 / £32.00 / $55.00<br />

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Philosophical Encounters<br />

Lonergan and the Analytic<br />

Tradition<br />

Joseph Fitzpatrick<br />

0-8020-4884-6 / £20.00 / $29.95<br />

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‘Pictures Bring Us Messages’ /<br />

Sinaakssiiksi aohtsimaahpihkookiyaawa<br />

Photographs and Histories from<br />

the Kainai Nation<br />

Alison K. Brown and Laura Peers,<br />

with members <strong>of</strong> the Kainai Nation<br />

0-8020-4891-9 / £20.00 / $29.95<br />

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Pink Blood<br />

Homophobic Violence in Canada<br />

Douglas Victor Jan<strong>of</strong>f<br />

0-8020-8570-9 / £21.50 / $32.95<br />

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Plato’s Sun<br />

An Introduction to Philosophy<br />

Andrew Lawless<br />

0-8020-3809-3 / £20.00 / $29.95<br />

/ 2005<br />

Playing the Hero<br />

Reading the Irish Saga Táin Bó<br />

Cúailnge<br />

Ann Dooley<br />

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Pleyn Delit<br />

Medieval Cookery for Modern<br />

Cooks, Second Edition<br />

Constance B. Hieatt, Brenda<br />

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0-8020-7632-7 / £12.95 / $19.95<br />

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64


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Polyglot Joyce<br />

Fictions <strong>of</strong> Translation<br />

Patrick O’Neill<br />

0-8020-3897-2 / £35.00 / $55.00<br />

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The Promise <strong>of</strong> Schooling<br />

Education in Canada, 1800–1914<br />

Paul Axelrod<br />

0-8020-7815-X / £8.50 / $15.95<br />

/ 1997<br />

Public Science, Private Interests<br />

Culture and Commerce in<br />

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Excellence<br />

Janet Atkinson-Grosjean<br />

0-8020-8005-7 / £32.00 / $55.00<br />

/ <strong>2006</strong><br />

Reading Women<br />

Literary Figures and Cultural<br />

Icons from the Victorian Age to<br />

the Present<br />

Edited by Janet Badia and Jennifer<br />

Phegley<br />

0-8020-8928-3 / £40.00 / $60.00<br />

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The Rebels<br />

A Brotherhood <strong>of</strong> Outlaw Bikers<br />

Daniel R. Wolf<br />

0-8020-7363-8 / £13.00 / $24.95<br />

/ 1991<br />

Responding to Youth Crime in<br />

Canada<br />

Anthony Doob and Carla Cesaroni<br />

0-8020-8624-1 / £20.00 / $30.95<br />

/ 2004<br />

Rockbound<br />

Frank Parker Day<br />

0-8020-6723-9 / £14.00 / $21.95<br />

/ 1973<br />

Saints in Medieval Manuscripts<br />

Greg Buzwell<br />

0-8020-3795-X / $19.95 / 2005<br />

North and South American<br />

Rights Only<br />

Sanity, Madness,<br />

Transformation<br />

The Psyche in Romanticism<br />

Ross Woodman. Edited by Joel<br />

Faflak<br />

0-8020-3841-7 / £40.00 / $60.00<br />

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Science in the Kitchen and the<br />

Art <strong>of</strong> Eating Well<br />

Pelegrino Artusi<br />

0-8020-8657-8 / £18.99 / $40.00<br />

/ 2003<br />

Scribes and Illuminators<br />

Christopher de Hamel<br />

0-8020-7707-2 / $24.95 / 1992<br />

North and South American<br />

Rights Only<br />

Searching for Justice<br />

An Autobiography<br />

Fred Kaufman<br />

0-8020-9051-6 / £42.00 / $65.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

The Secular Scripture and<br />

Other Writings on Critical<br />

Theory, 1976–1991<br />

Northrop Frye. Edited by Joseph<br />

Adamson and Jean Wilson<br />

0-8020-3945-6 / £65.00 /<br />

$100.00 / <strong>2006</strong><br />

Skyscrapers Hide the Heavens<br />

A History <strong>of</strong> Indian-White<br />

Relations in Canada, Third<br />

Edition<br />

J.R. Miller<br />

0-8020-8153-3 / £18.00 / $34.95<br />

/ 2000<br />

The Society <strong>of</strong> Renaissance<br />

Florence<br />

A Documentary Study<br />

Gene A. Brucker<br />

0-8020-8079-0 / £13.00 / $21.95<br />

/ 1997<br />

Sociology and the Sacred<br />

An Introduction to Philip Rieff’s<br />

Theory <strong>of</strong> Culture<br />

Antonius A.W. Zondervan<br />

0-8020-8018-9 / £32.00 / $50.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Taking Public Universities<br />

Seriously<br />

Edited by Frank Iacobucci and<br />

Carolyn Tuohy<br />

0-8020-9376-0 / £35.00 / $55.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Tending the Gardens <strong>of</strong><br />

Citizenship<br />

Child Saving in <strong>Toronto</strong>,<br />

1880s–1920s<br />

Xiaobei Chen<br />

0-8020-3913-8 / £32.00 / $50.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

The Thesis and the Book<br />

A Guide for First-Time Academic<br />

Authors, Second Edition<br />

Edited by Eleanor Harman, Ian<br />

Montagnes, Siobhan McMenemy,<br />

and Chris Bucci<br />

0-8020-8588-1 / £11.00 / $16.95<br />

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<strong>Toronto</strong> Edits<br />

Edited by Gillian Fenwick<br />

0-8020-8929-1 / £32.00 / $50.00<br />

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Tournaments <strong>of</strong> Value<br />

Sociability and Hierarchy in a<br />

Yemeni Town<br />

Anne Meneley<br />

0-8020-7868-0 / £13.00 / $20.95<br />

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Towards Positive Systems <strong>of</strong><br />

Child and Family Welfare<br />

International Comparisons <strong>of</strong><br />

Child Protection, Family Service,<br />

and Community Caring Systems<br />

Edited by Nancy Freymond and<br />

Gary Cameron<br />

0-8020-9371-X / £22.50 /<br />

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A Tragedy Revealed<br />

The Story <strong>of</strong> Italians from Istria,<br />

Dalmatia, and Venezia Giulia,<br />

1943–1956<br />

Arrigo Petacco. Translated by<br />

Konrad Eisenbichler<br />

0-8020-3921-9 / £28.00 / $45.00<br />

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For more information on these and other <strong>University</strong><br />

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The Treatise <strong>of</strong> Lorenzo Valla<br />

on the Donation <strong>of</strong> Constantine<br />

Translated by Christopher B.<br />

Coleman<br />

0-8020-7734-X / £14.00 /<br />

$26.95 / 1993<br />

Ukraine<br />

A History, Third Edition<br />

Orest Subtelny<br />

0-8020-8390-0 / £28.00 / $50.00<br />

/ 2000<br />

Uncle Sam and Us<br />

Globalization,<br />

Neoconservativism, and the<br />

Canadian State<br />

Stephen Clarkson<br />

0-8020-8539-3 / £22.50 / $40.50<br />

/ 2002<br />

Visual Habits<br />

Nuns, Feminism, and American<br />

Postwar Popular Culture<br />

Rebecca Sullivan<br />

0-8020-3776-3 / £20.00 / $29.95<br />

/ 2005<br />

Wagner<br />

The Terrible Man and His<br />

Truthful Art<br />

M. Owen Lee<br />

0-8020-8291-2 / £7.50 / $14.95<br />

/ 1999<br />

Wales<br />

Edited by David N. Klausner<br />

0-8020-9072-9 / $250.00 / 2005<br />

World Rights Less U.K. and<br />

Europe<br />

War X<br />

Human Extensions in Battlespace<br />

Tim Blackmore<br />

0-8020-8791-4 / £20.00 / $29.95<br />

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Weapons <strong>of</strong> Mass Persuasion<br />

Marketing the War Against Iraq<br />

Paul Rutherford<br />

0-8020-8651-9 / £13.00 / $19.95<br />

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When Canadian Literature<br />

Moved to New York<br />

Nick Mount<br />

0-8020-3828-X / £28.00 /<br />

$45.00 / 2005<br />

Will the Circle be Unbroken<br />

Aboriginal Communities,<br />

Restorative Justice, and the<br />

Challenges <strong>of</strong> Conflict and<br />

Change<br />

Jane Dickson-Gilmore and Carol<br />

La Prairie<br />

0-8020-8674-8 / £20.00 / $29.95<br />

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The Workers’ Festival<br />

A History <strong>of</strong> Labour Day in<br />

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Craig Heron and Steve Penfold<br />

0-8020-4886-2 / £25.00 / $39.95<br />

/ 2005<br />

The World in Venice<br />

Print, the City, and Early<br />

Modern Identity<br />

Bronwen Wilson<br />

0-8020-8725-6 / £48.00 / $70.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

65


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The Books <strong>of</strong> King Henry<br />

VIII and his Wives<br />

James P. Carley<br />

0-7123-4791-7 / $39.95<br />

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A Catalogue <strong>of</strong> Russian<br />

Avant-Garde Books 1912–<br />

1934 and 1969–2003<br />

Second Edition<br />

Edited by Peter Hellyer<br />

0-7123-0899-7 / $50.00<br />

/ <strong>2006</strong><br />

Catalogue <strong>of</strong> Scandinavian<br />

Books in the British Library<br />

Printed Before 1801<br />

Three Volumes<br />

Peter Hogg<br />

0-7123-0898-9 / $595.00<br />

/ <strong>2006</strong><br />

Chinese Printmaking Today<br />

Woodblock Printing in<br />

China, 1980–2000<br />

Edited by Anne Farrer<br />

0-7123-4823-9 / $39.95<br />

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The Duke <strong>of</strong> Wellington<br />

Matthew Shaw<br />

0-7123-4891-3 / $26.00<br />

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George III<br />

Christopher Wright<br />

0-7123-4893-X / $26.00<br />

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The George Bernard Shaw<br />

Papers<br />

British Library Catalogue<br />

<strong>of</strong> Additions to the<br />

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0-8020-4887-5 / $100.00<br />

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Illumination from Books <strong>of</strong><br />

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Janet Backhouse<br />

0-7123-4849-2 / $19.95<br />

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The Image in Print<br />

Book Illustration in Late<br />

Medieval England and its<br />

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Martha W. Driver<br />

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John Evelyn and His Milieu<br />

Edited by Frances Harris<br />

and Michael Hunter<br />

0-7123-4817-4 / $70.00<br />

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John Stow (1525–1605)<br />

and the Making <strong>of</strong> the<br />

English Past<br />

Edited by Ian Gadd and<br />

Alexandra Gillespie<br />

0-7123-4864-6 / $60.00<br />

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The Life <strong>of</strong> King Edmund,<br />

King and Martyr<br />

(facsimile)<br />

Introduction by A.S.G.<br />

Edwards<br />

0-7123-4871-9 / $100.00<br />

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The Lord Chamberlain<br />

Regrets…<br />

A History <strong>of</strong> British<br />

Theatre Censorship<br />

Dominic Shellard and<br />

Steve Nicholson with<br />

Miriam Handley<br />

0-7123-4865-4 / $38.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

A New Index <strong>of</strong> Middle<br />

English Verse<br />

Julia B<strong>of</strong>fey and A.S. G.<br />

Edwards<br />

0-7123-4831-X / $150.00<br />

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The Polished Cornerstones<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Temple<br />

Queenly Libraries <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Enlightenment<br />

María Luisa López-<br />

Vidriero<br />

0-7123-4907-3 / $32.00<br />

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Prints for Books<br />

Illustration in France,<br />

1760–1800<br />

Antony Griffiths<br />

0-7123-4874-3 / $40.00<br />

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The Rothschilds and their<br />

Collections <strong>of</strong> Illuminated<br />

Manuscripts<br />

Christopher de Hamel<br />

0-7123-4897-2 / $40.00<br />

/ 2005<br />

Scribes and Transmission<br />

in English Manuscripts<br />

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I N D E X<br />

A<br />

Abdelgafar, Basma .... 44<br />

Aboriginal Health in<br />

Canada, 2nd Ed. .. 51<br />

Adages IV iii 1 to V<br />

ii 51 ..................... 37<br />

Angus, Ian ................ 41<br />

Arslan, Antonia ........ 26<br />

Asgharzadeh, Alireza . 52<br />

Athens and<br />

Jerusalem .............. 41<br />

B<br />

Bahador, Sharon<br />

Eblaghie ............... 52<br />

Baker, G. Blaine ....... 18<br />

Ball, John Clement ... 12<br />

Baskerville, Peter ...... 20<br />

Beare, Margaret E. .... 45<br />

Beaty, Bart .................. 4<br />

Bell, Jeffrey A. .......... 40<br />

Berco, Cristian ......... 35<br />

Beyond the Family<br />

Romance ............... 27<br />

Bezanson, Kate ......... 49<br />

Bittermann, Rusty .... 16<br />

Bodies <strong>of</strong> Tomorrow .... 23<br />

Brawn, Dale ............. 18<br />

Brintlinger, Angela ... 24<br />

Burdon, Lynn ........... 55<br />

Butler, Marian .......... 56<br />

C<br />

‘Call Me Hank’ ............ 9<br />

Calling for Change .... 46<br />

Canada’s Prime<br />

Ministers ................. 3<br />

Canadian Annual Review<br />

<strong>of</strong> Politics and Public<br />

Affairs 2001 ...........44<br />

Canadian Books in Print<br />

<strong>2006</strong> .................... 56<br />

Canadian Insurance<br />

Claims Directory<br />

<strong>2006</strong> .................... 56<br />

Canadian Who’s Who<br />

<strong>2006</strong> .................... 54<br />

Cannon, Jo-Ann ....... 27<br />

Carbert, Louise ........ 43<br />

Carlson, Keith Thor ... 9<br />

Casillo, Robert ........... 2<br />

Caught ...................... 16<br />

Chalmer, Iain ........... 51<br />

Choudhry, Sujit ........ 42<br />

Cinderella Army .......... 1<br />

City Stages ................. 23<br />

Cook, Ramsay ............ 3<br />

Copp, Terry ................ 1<br />

Court <strong>of</strong> Queen’s Bench<br />

<strong>of</strong> Manitoba, The .. 18<br />

Culinary Landmarks . 29<br />

Curriculum as Cultural<br />

Practice ................. 52<br />

D<br />

Daly, Peter M. .......... 36<br />

Dart, Ron ................. 41<br />

Dei, George J. Sefa ... 52<br />

Della Coletta,<br />

Cristina ................ 28<br />

Dickinson, Peter ....... 22<br />

Dilemmas <strong>of</strong><br />

Solidarity .............. 42<br />

Dimler, Richard ....... 36<br />

Do Men Mother ....... 50<br />

Doing Medicine<br />

Together ................ 21<br />

Doing Time on the<br />

Outside ................. 47<br />

Dolzani, Michael ...... 32<br />

Doran, Robert .......... 41<br />

Doucet, Andrea ........ 50<br />

Douglas, Audrey ....... 36<br />

Driver, Elizabeth ...... 29<br />

Duncan, Kirsty E. .... 11<br />

E<br />

E-Government in<br />

Canada ................ 43<br />

English Factory in Siam,<br />

The ...................... 20<br />

Epperly, Elizabeth<br />

Rollins ................... 5<br />

Erasmus ................... 37<br />

Evans, Imogen .......... 51<br />

F<br />

Fagan, Kristina ........... 9<br />

Farrington, Anthony 20<br />

Filled Pen, The ............ 7<br />

Fleet Street - Five<br />

Hundred Years <strong>of</strong> the<br />

<strong>Press</strong> ..................... 31<br />

Fletcher, Judith ......... 39<br />

Fraser, Robert ............. 3<br />

Fruglio, Maria .......... 27<br />

Frye, Northrop ........ 32,<br />

33<br />

Fyson, Donald .......... 19<br />

G<br />

Gangster Priest ............ 2<br />

Geddes, Jane ............ 14<br />

Gender, the State, and<br />

Social Reproduction ..49<br />

German Right, The .... 15<br />

Gramsci’s Politics <strong>of</strong><br />

Language .............. 12<br />

Grant, John N. ......... 37<br />

Graudreault-Desbiens,<br />

Jean-François ....... 42<br />

Great Code, The ........ 32<br />

Griffiths, Dennis ...... 31<br />

Guide to Scripts Used in<br />

English Writing ..... 14<br />

Guy-Bray, Stephen ... 34<br />

H<br />

Hans Christian<br />

Andersen, The<br />

Complete Stories ...... 6<br />

Harvey, P.D.A. 14<br />

Hébert, Yvonne ........ 53<br />

Henry, Frances ......... 48<br />

Hereford World Map,<br />

The ...................... 14<br />

Herring, Ann ............ 51<br />

Himka, John-Paul .... 21<br />

A History <strong>of</strong> Canadian<br />

Legal Thought ....... 18<br />

Hoerder, Dirk ........... 53<br />

Hopkins’s Poetics <strong>of</strong><br />

Speech Sound ........ 34<br />

Household Counts ...... 20<br />

Howsam, Leslie ........ 30<br />

Hunting the 1918<br />

Flu ....................... 11<br />

I<br />

Illusive Trade-<strong>of</strong>f, The 44<br />

Illustraed Old English<br />

Hexateuch, The ..... 30<br />

Imagining London ..... 12<br />

In An Iron Glove ......... 8<br />

International Law<br />

and Indigenous<br />

Knowledge ............ 46<br />

An Irish Working<br />

Class ..................... 13<br />

Italian Cultural<br />

Lineages ................ 28<br />

Ives, Peter ................. 12<br />

J<br />

Jestrovic, Silvija ........ 24<br />

Jesuit Series Part Five<br />

(P-Z), The ............ 36<br />

Jirat-Wasiutynñski,<br />

Vojtìch ................. 25<br />

70


I N D E X<br />

K<br />

Kanu, Yatta .............. 52<br />

Knott, Betty I. .......... 37<br />

L<br />

Lee, Alvin A. ............ 32<br />

Letters from Heaven ... 21<br />

Lexicons <strong>of</strong> Early Modern<br />

English ................. 57<br />

Lonergan, Bernard ... 41<br />

Loving in Verse .......... 34<br />

Lumley, Elizabeth ..... 54<br />

M<br />

MacLachlan, Bonnie 39<br />

MacLean, Sally-Beth 36<br />

Madness and the Mad in<br />

Russian Culture ..... 24<br />

Magistrates, Police, and<br />

People ................... 19<br />

Maidment,<br />

MaDonna ............ 47<br />

Making the Voyageur<br />

World ................... 17<br />

Martin, Claire ............ 8<br />

McIntyre, Sheila ....... 46<br />

McKinnie, Michael .. 23<br />

Modern Art and the<br />

Idea <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Mediterranean ...... 25<br />

Money Laundering in<br />

Canada ................ 45<br />

Monsour, Daniel ...... 41<br />

Mortuary Landscapes <strong>of</strong><br />

North Africa ......... 39<br />

Mutimer, David ....... 44<br />

Myers, Tamara .......... 16<br />

N<br />

Narrating Social Order .49<br />

Negotiating Transcultural<br />

Lives ..................... 53<br />

Northrop Frye’s Notebooks<br />

on Renaissance<br />

Literature ...............32<br />

Novel as Investigation,<br />

The ...................... 27<br />

O<br />

Oguamanam, Chidi . 46<br />

Old Books and New<br />

Histories ............... 30<br />

Ontario Legal Directory<br />

<strong>2006</strong> .................... 55<br />

P<br />

Page, P.K. ................... 7<br />

Peg Peters, Randy ..... 41<br />

Pennier, Hank ............ 9<br />

Peroni, Gwen ........... 56<br />

Phillips, Jim ............. 18<br />

Philosophy at the Edge <strong>of</strong><br />

Chaos ................... 40<br />

Podruchny, Carolyn ...17<br />

Pollock, Zailig ............ 7<br />

Pombejra,<br />

Dhiravat na .......... 20<br />

R<br />

Racial Pr<strong>of</strong>iling in<br />

Canada ................ 48<br />

Real Words ................ 40<br />

Recognizing Aboriginal<br />

Title ..................... 11<br />

REED in Review ....... 36<br />

Reid, Jeffrey .............. 40<br />

Retallack, James ........ 15<br />

Reuter, Shelley Z. ..... 49<br />

Risk, R.C.B. ............. 18<br />

Roberts, Jane ............ 14<br />

Romani, Gabriella .... 26<br />

Roy, Jeffrey ............... 43<br />

Rural Protest on Prince<br />

Edward Island ...... 16<br />

Rural Women’s<br />

Leadership in Atlantic<br />

Canada ................ 43<br />

Russell, Peter H. ....... 11<br />

S<br />

Sager, Eric W. ........... 20<br />

Sandwell, Ruth ......... 17<br />

Schmitt, Irina ........... 53<br />

Schneider, Stephen ... 45<br />

Schooling and Difference<br />

in Africa ............... 52<br />

Screening Gender,<br />

Framing Genre ...... 22<br />

Seixas, Peter .............. 13<br />

Sexual Hierarchies,<br />

Public Status ......... 35<br />

Shahjahan, Riyad<br />

Ahmed ................. 52<br />

Sheey, Elizabeth ........ 46<br />

Shields, Michael G. .. 41<br />

Shorter, Edward ....... 10<br />

Silverman, Marilyn ... 13<br />

Smith, Howard A. .... 53<br />

Soloman, Susan<br />

Gross ................... 21<br />

Sossin, Lorne ............ 42<br />

St. Albans Psalter,<br />

The ...................... 14<br />

Stirling, Lea M. ........ 39<br />

Stone, David L. ........ 39<br />

Stratford, Philip .......... 8<br />

T<br />

Tator, Carol .............. 48<br />

Teaching Adolescents .. 53<br />

Testing Treatments ..... 51<br />

The Educated<br />

Imagination & Other<br />

Writings ................ 33<br />

Theatre <strong>of</strong><br />

Estrangement ........ 24<br />

Theorizing Historical<br />

Consciousness ........ 13<br />

Thornton, Hazel ...... 51<br />

Through Lover’s Lane .. 5<br />

To the Past ................ 17<br />

Triune God, The ........ 41<br />

U<br />

Unpopular Culture ...... 4<br />

V<br />

Vinitsky, Ilya ............ 24<br />

Vint, Sherryl ............ 23<br />

Virginity Revisited ..... 39<br />

W<br />

Waldram, James B. ... 51<br />

Warkentin,<br />

Germaine ............. 33<br />

White, Jonathan ....... 28<br />

Wimsatt, James I. ..... 34<br />

Withers,<br />

Benjamin C. ........ 30<br />

World’s Fairs<br />

Italian-Style .......... 28<br />

Writing to Delight ..... 26<br />

Written in the Flesh ... 10<br />

Y<br />

Young, T. Kue .......... 51<br />

Z<br />

Zayarnyuk, Andriy ... 21<br />

71


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ALL PRICES IN THIS CATALOGUE ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. OUTSIDE CANADA ALL PRICES ARE IN US DOLLARS. PRINTED IN CANADA BY THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS.


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