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Literary, Cultural & Architectural Journals<br />

Cabinet 46:<br />

Punishment<br />

CAbIneT<br />

edited by sina najafi.<br />

From the rule of “an eye for an eye” in<br />

the Code of Hammurabi and the old<br />

testament to the rise of the reforming<br />

“penitentiary” in the nineteenth century,<br />

from Kant’s notion of the right of<br />

retaliation to historical-philosophical<br />

explorations by michel Foucault<br />

and John rawls, the question of<br />

punishment has long been central to<br />

religious, political and philosophical<br />

discourse. Cabinet issue 46, with a special<br />

section on punishment, features<br />

gregory Whitehead on the legacy of<br />

philip Zimbardo’s controversial “prison<br />

experiments” at Stanford University;<br />

Justin e.H. Smith on punishment and<br />

sacrifice; Johan Lindqvist on music<br />

and torture; and a multi-generational<br />

conversation about corporal punishment<br />

in the home. elsewhere in the<br />

issue: an interview with robert n.<br />

proctor on how diamonds were made<br />

into the most precious of gems;<br />

george prochnik on the history of<br />

tattoos; and marius Kwint on the<br />

Cornell Brain Club.<br />

978-1-932698-45-9<br />

pbk, 7.75 x 9.75 in. / 112 pgs / 70 color /<br />

30 b&w.<br />

U.S. $12.00 CDn $12.00<br />

august/Journals<br />

Also Available:<br />

Cabinet 45: Games<br />

9781932698442<br />

Pbk, u.s. $12.00 Cdn $12.00<br />

Cabinet<br />

Cabinet 47:<br />

Logistics<br />

CAbIneT<br />

edited by sina najafi.<br />

every time you put a letter in the mail,<br />

every time you stop at a traffic light, a<br />

complex—and usually invisible—network<br />

of logistics is at work. Cabinet<br />

issue 47, with a special section on Logistics,<br />

features James Whittington on<br />

the diaries of Dmitri pavlov, the Soviet<br />

official who determined who would eat<br />

and who would starve during the siege<br />

of Leningrad; Jacqueline Bochner on<br />

the harmonization of international<br />

postal systems; Daniella Stone on the<br />

logistics of the hospital kitchen; and a<br />

travelogue from the Cabinet “Hand-<br />

Delivered Issue road trip.” elsewhere<br />

in the issue: rasha Salti on intrigue<br />

and celebrity in the bar of Beirut’s<br />

phoenicia Hotel; Jeffrey Kastner on<br />

saintly “incorruptibles”; and Will Wiles<br />

on Bill phillips’ “monIaC,” a device<br />

that models the national economy<br />

using the flow of liquids.<br />

978-1-932698-46-6<br />

pbk, 7.75 x 9.75 in. / 112 pgs / 70 color /<br />

30 b&w.<br />

U.S. $12.00 CDn $12.00<br />

november/Journals<br />

Conjunctions: 59,<br />

Colloquy<br />

bArd CoLLeGe<br />

edited by bradford Morrow.<br />

Colloquy offers a major portfolio of<br />

never-before-published correspondence<br />

by William gaddis (1922–1998),<br />

a towering figure in twentieth-century<br />

literature and author of such novels as<br />

The Recognitions and JR. readers will<br />

encounter gaddis as a Harvard undergraduate<br />

making his first forays into<br />

fiction; struggling with his first book<br />

while scraping by in rented rooms in<br />

panama, Spain and paris; and grappling<br />

with his evolving status as an<br />

american writer and public figure. the<br />

selection includes his fan mail to other<br />

authors, passionate missives to his<br />

wives and lovers, tender and intimate<br />

notes to his children, frank and funny<br />

messages to friends such as David<br />

markson and Saul Steinberg, and revelatory<br />

exchanges with scholars of his<br />

work. this issue of Conjunctions also<br />

includes fiction, poetry and creative<br />

nonfiction from edie meidav, Cole<br />

Swensen, robert olen Butler, Samuel r.<br />

Delany, eliot Weinberger and others.<br />

978-0-941964-75-3<br />

pbk, 6 x 9 in. / 380 pgs.<br />

U.S. $15.00 CDn $15.00<br />

December/Journals<br />

Also Available:<br />

Conjunctions: 58 riveted<br />

9780941964746<br />

Pbk, u.s. $15.00 Cdn $15.00<br />

bard College<br />

Upon Paper No. 1:<br />

Los Angeles<br />

hATJe CAnTz<br />

published twice-yearly, and housed<br />

in a paper box, Upon Paper is a new<br />

large-format periodical offering a platform<br />

for works on paper and general<br />

cultural debate. each issue is devoted<br />

to a single theme; the theme for this<br />

inaugural issue is Los angeles. artists<br />

including robert mcnally and rinus<br />

van de velde have created exclusive<br />

artworks for the issue; collector and<br />

publisher, Christian Boros and Julia<br />

Zange enthuse about “real” bookmaking<br />

in the era of the ipad; Californian<br />

artist Doug aitken discusses his work;<br />

Beach Boys expert Jon Stebbins writes<br />

about the creation of perhaps the most<br />

long awaited album in the history of<br />

pop music, SMiLE; and we encounter<br />

the new, intelligent Hollywood in<br />

Sofia and roman Coppola’s “Directors’<br />

Bureau.”<br />

978-3-7757-3420-2<br />

pbk, 20 x 27 in. / 80 pgs / 143 color.<br />

U.S. $75.00 CDn $75.00<br />

august/art/Journals<br />

Upon Paper No. 2: Color<br />

978-3-7757-3421-9<br />

pbk, 20 x 27 in. / 80 pgs / 140 color.<br />

U.S. $75.00 CDn $75.00<br />

December/art/Journals<br />

DASH: The Eco-House<br />

nAI PubLIshers<br />

Text by Jacques vink, Piet vollaard, dirk van den<br />

heuvel, dick van Gameren.<br />

this issue of DASH examines the history and the future<br />

of the sustainable home, with particular attention<br />

to technical issues such as solar energy and ventilation<br />

and material-use concepts. essays and planning<br />

documentation provide a critical analysis of the current<br />

state of affairs as well as an exploration of possibilities<br />

for the future.<br />

978-90-5662-853-6<br />

pbk, 9 x 11 in. / 160 pgs / 125 color / 80 b&w.<br />

U.S. $45.00 CDn $45.00<br />

September/architecture & Urban Studies/Journals<br />

Open 23: Autonomy<br />

nAI PubLIshers<br />

edited by Jorinde seijdel, Liesbeth Melis, sven<br />

Lütticken.<br />

In a world that has become sharply polarized between<br />

political viewpoints, artists and other cultural creators<br />

have a choice between engaging with the political<br />

climate or remaining aloof. Issue 23 of Open investigates<br />

a third way, a form of autonomy incorporating<br />

the ideas of privacy, self-determination and independence<br />

in connection with social engagement.<br />

978-90-5662-858-1<br />

pbk, 6.75 x 9.5 in. / 176 pgs / 40 color / 40 b&w.<br />

U.S. $30.00 CDn $30.00<br />

September/architecture & Urban Studies/Journals<br />

Architecture in the<br />

Netherlands<br />

Yearbook 2011–12<br />

nAI PubLIshers<br />

edited by samir bantal, Jaap Jan berg, kees van der<br />

hoeven, Anne Luijten.<br />

For 25 years Architecture in the Netherlands has been<br />

an indispensable annual guide to the best in Dutch<br />

architecture. this anniversary issue reviews the 30<br />

most remarkable projects of 2011 and looks back at the<br />

past 25 years, highlighting milestone designs as well<br />

as the developments and trends that influenced them.<br />

978-90-5662-849-9<br />

pbk, 9.5 x 12.5 in. / 272 pgs / 400 color.<br />

U.S. $60.00 CDn $60.00<br />

august/architecture & Urban Studies<br />

OASE 87: Alan Colquhoun<br />

nAI PubLIshers<br />

oaSe 87 is dedicated to the thinking and career<br />

of renowned British architectural theorist alan<br />

Colquhoun (born 1921), author of such canonical<br />

books as The Oxford History of Modern Architecture.<br />

variously an architectural scholar, critic and<br />

practitioner, Colquhoun has always managed to<br />

link his practical experience with his constructive<br />

contributions to the discourse and the theorization<br />

of architecture.<br />

978-90-5662-855-0<br />

pbk, 6.75 x 9.5 in. / 128 pgs.<br />

U.S. $35.00 CDn $35.00<br />

September/architecture & Urban Studies/Journals<br />

JournALs & AnnuALs hIGhLIGhTs<br />

Candide No. 6: Journal for<br />

Architectural Knowledge<br />

hATJe CAnTz<br />

edited by Andres Lepik, susanne schindler, Axel<br />

sowa.<br />

published twice a year, Candide is dedicated to exploring<br />

the culture of knowledge specific to architecture.<br />

Like voltaire’s fictional character Candide, who<br />

traveled the eighteenth-century world on an eager if<br />

often thwarted search for knowledge, the journal’s<br />

editors have embarked on a twenty-first-century<br />

quest for architectural knowledge. How is architectural<br />

knowledge generated, collected, presented and<br />

passed on? Which forms of architectural knowledge<br />

can be observed? How can knowledge generated in<br />

reference to a specific task be applied to other contexts?<br />

Which techniques, tools, and methods are instrumental?<br />

to do justice to the many ways of<br />

approaching research, each edition of Candide is<br />

divided into five sections. “analysis” investigates<br />

building types, looking for the knowledge invested in<br />

them; “essay” offers space for a personal exploration<br />

of one of the grand themes of architecture; “project”<br />

serves as a forum for practicing architects and their<br />

works; “encounter” highlights famous or unjustly<br />

forgotten architects; and “Fiction” draws on<br />

architecture’s imaginative dimension, inviting more<br />

speculative writing.<br />

978-3-7757-3422-6<br />

Hbk, 6.75 x 9.5 in. / 144 pgs / illustrated throughout.<br />

U.S. $29.95 CDn $29.95<br />

December/architecture & Urban Studies/Journals<br />

144 artBooK | D.a.p. 1.800.338.2665 orders@dapinc.com artBooK.Com 145

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