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<strong>penn</strong> <strong>state</strong> <strong>university</strong> <strong>press</strong>Spring and Summer 2008


(Im)permanenceCultures in/out of TimeEdited by Judith Schachter and Stephen Brockmann(Im)permanence: Culturesin/out of Time explores theinterplay between permanenceand impermanencein cultural and artisticpractices in the West andelsewhere.This volume engendersquestions of the transitionfrom traditionaland contemporary takeson permanence in art,the preservation of ephemeral artwork, permanence andimpermanence as understood in the Western, East Asian,and American Indian cultures, and art forms and permanence.This volume addresses particularly crucial artists,including Robert Smithson and Andy Goldsworthy, as wellas a wide variety of historical epochs and cultures, fromthe destroyed Buddhas at Bamiyan through attempts atpreservation and commemoration in the wake of historicalcatastrophes like 9/11 and the genocide in Cambodia to thecurrent trend toward globalization in contemporary art.Contributors include Bill Anthes, Jenny Blain, Lowry Burgess,Erica DiBenedetto, Erika Doss, Libby Karlinger Escobedo,Margaret Headstrom, Tienfong Ho, Xiaofei Kang, Pip Laurenson,Margaret Lindauer, Daniel Listoe, Clark Lunberry,Howard S. Melzer, Lenore Metrick, Mary O’Neill, Anna Perricci,Jan Schall, Franco Sciannameo, Terry Smith, Donald S.Sutton, Andrew Todd, Alexander Vari, and Robert J. Wallis.Judith Schachter is Professor of Anthropology, Historyand Art at Carnegie Mellon <strong>University</strong> and Director of theCenter for the Arts in Society. Her publications includeRuth Benedict (1983), Kinship with Strangers (1994), A TownWithout Steel: Envisioning Homestead, with C. Brodsky(1998), and A Sealed and Secret Kinship (2000).Stephen Brockmann is Professor of German at CarnegieMellon <strong>University</strong>. He is the author of Nuremberg: The ImaginaryCapital (2006), German Literary Culture at the Zero Hour(2004), and Literature and German Reunification (1999).Cult of the WillNervousness and the Forging of a Modern Self inGermany, 1890–1914Michael CowanCult of the Will is the firstcomprehensive studyof modernity’s preoccupationwith willpower.From Nietzsche’s “will topower” to the fantasy ofa “triumph of the will” underNazism, the will—itspathologies and potentialcures—was a topic of urgentdebates in Europeanmodernity.In this study, MichaelCowan examines theemergence of “will therapy” and its impact on arts andculture in Germany after 1900. The book’s five chapterslead readers through cross sections of modern Germancultural history, including not only literature and aestheticsbut also self-help medicine, economics, body culture,and pedagogy. Modernity’s fixation on willpower helpedprepare the way for fascism, but this trajectory is notCowan’s main concern. His focus falls rather on morewidespread “technologies of the self” and their role in theeffort to re-imagine agency for a modern subject caught upin increasingly complex systemic networks.Michael Cowan is Assistant Professor of German Studiesat McGill <strong>University</strong>. With Kai Marcel Sicks, he is co-editorof Leibhaftige Moderne: Körper in Kunst und Massenmedien1918–1933 (2005).320 pages | 40 illustrations | 6 x 9 | Juneisbn 978-0-271-03206-1 | cloth: $65.00sArt History/Literature/PhilosophyAlso of InterestMuseums of the Mind: GermanModernity and the Dynamics ofCollectingPeter M. McIsaacisbn 978-0-271-02991-7 | cloth: $60.00s284 pages | 6 color/106 b&w illustrations | 7.5 x 10 | Augustisbn 978-0-9797664-0-4 | cloth: $60.00sDistributed for the Center for the Arts in Society,Carnegie Mellon <strong>University</strong>Art History/Museum Studies/Anthropology | <strong>penn</strong> <strong>state</strong> <strong>university</strong> <strong>press</strong>


Hold That PoseVisual Culture in the Late Nineteenth-CenturySpanish PeriodicalLou Charnon-Deutsch“Charnon-Deutsch offers previously unpublishedmaterial, inspiring analysis of culturallycomplex images and texts, and an innovativemethodology for producing historicallyrich interpretations of visual culture.”—Jordana Mendelson, New York <strong>University</strong>Hold That Pose explores the role of visual images in Spain’stransition to a fully modern illustrated <strong>press</strong> by the firstdecade of the twentieth century. It examines both theideological impact and the technological transformationof image production in Spanish magazines during theRestoration. In the brief period of forty years, 1870 to 1910,technological and manufacturing advances revolutionizedSpain’s illustrated <strong>press</strong> and consequently Europeanizedthe tastes and the expectations of its elite urban readership.By 1900, once subscription prices fell and magazines beganto apply modern photojournalistic techniques, the middleclasses became inured to illustrated magazines. Advancementsin photomechanical reproduction allowed periodicalsto focus more extensively on the vicissitudes and pleasuresof everyday life in urban Spain along with world events inincreasingly remote locales. Hold That Pose explores thisperiod of transition through an analysis of the images thatspoke for and to the burgeoning numbers of subscriberswho purchased the most popular weeklies of the period.Lou Charnon-Deutsch is Professor of Hispanic Languagesat the <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong> of New York, Stony Brook. Her previousbooks include three published by Penn <strong>State</strong> <strong>Press</strong>:Narratives of Desire: Nineteenth-Century Spanish Fiction byWomen (1994), Fictions of the Feminine in the Nineteenth-Century Spanish <strong>Press</strong> (1999), and The Spanish Gypsy (2004).208 pages | 89 duotones | 8 x 9.5 | Mayisbn 978-0-271-03203-0 | flexi: $50.00sArt History/LiteratureAlso of InterestThe Spanish Gypsy:The History of a European ObsessionLou Charnon-Deutschisbn 978-0-271-02359-5 | cloth: $42.95sDocumenting Spain: Artists, Exhibition Culture,and the Modern Nation, 1929–1939Jordana Mendelsonisbn 978-0-271-02474-5 | flexi: $55.00sRefiguring Modernism Serieswww.psu<strong>press</strong>.org |


The Passion StoryFrom Visual Representation to Social DramaEdited by Marcia Kupfer“Marcia Kupfer has assembledan im<strong>press</strong>ive groupof world-class scholars,writing across the spectrumof media, periods,and methodologies. Thisvery readable collection ofessays offers a rich investigationof a perpetuallytimely topic. The essays onfilm, in particular, breaknew ground.”—Peter Decherney,<strong>University</strong> of <strong>Pennsylvania</strong>No story is more central to Western culture than thecrucifixion of Jesus Christ in the New Testament, and nonebetter demonstrates the power of representation in shapingreligious faith and practice. The incidence of Passionimagery in diverse media is fundamental to the historiesof Christian piety, church politics, and art in European andAmerican societies. At the same time, the visualizationand reenactment of Christ’s suffering has for centuriesbeen the principal engine generating popular perceptionsof Jews and Judaism. The provocative essays collectedhere, written by eminent scholars with an eye toward thenonspecialist reader, broadly survey the depiction anddramatization of the Passion and consider the significanceof this representational focus for both Christians and Jews.This anthology provides a unique, multifaceted overviewof a subject of enduring importance in today’s religiouslypluralistic societies.Contributors include Robin Blaetz, Stephen Campbell, JodyEnders, Christopher Fuller, James Marrow, Walter Melion,David Morgan, David Nirenberg, Adele Reinhartz, MiriRubin, Lisa Saltzman, and Marc Saperstein.Marcia Kupfer is an independent scholar. She is the authorof The Art of Healing: Painting for the Sick and the Sinner ina Medieval Town (Penn <strong>State</strong>, 2003) and Romanesque WallPainting in Central France: The Politics of Narrative (1993).The Commonwealth of NatureArt and Poetic Community in the Age of DanteC. Jean CampbellThis book explores therole of Tuscan visualculture in the poeticconstruction of a commonwealth.For Campbell,“commonwealth” shouldbe viewed not only in thecontext of abstract politicaltheory, but also as aliving reality, dependentupon the very processesof art making. The Commonwealth of Nature focuses onfour exceptional works: Brunetto Latini’s didactic poem,the Tesoretto; a unique illustrated manuscript of the same;and Simone Martini’s Maestà and Ambrogio Lorenzetti’sAllegory of Good and Bad Government, both painted for thePalazzo Pubblico in Siena. Campbell asserts that politicalinterpretations of the art of the Tuscan communes ignorewhat Brunetto understood as a vital difference between theinstitutions of civic government and the reality of a commonwealththat was properly conveyed by poetry. Guidingus from the miniature to the monumental, from theprivate to the public, Campbell presents the inextricablelinks among poetry, art, and commonwealth. Beginningwith the trope of secrecy in the Tesoretto and the poeticinterpretation of friendship in the illustrated manuscript,she then moves on to Martini’s and Lorenzetti’s paintings,arguing that they are not solely political but fully chargedwith the poetic as well. Concluding with a discussion of theAllegory of Good and Bad Government, Campbell interpretsthe painting as a medium through which the peaceful commonwealthmight be reinvented as a vital experience.C. Jean Campbell is Associate Professor of Art History atEmory <strong>University</strong>. She is the author of The Game of Courtingand the Art of the Commune of San Gimignano, 1290–1320 (1997).192 pages | 18 color/36 b&w illustrations | 9.25 x 10 | Juneisbn 978-0-271-03261-0 | cloth: $65.00sArt History272 pages | 16 color/70 b&w illustrations | 7 x 10 | Julyisbn 978-0-271-03307-5 | cloth: $90.00sArt History/Literature/Religion | <strong>penn</strong> <strong>state</strong> <strong>university</strong> <strong>press</strong>


The Usurer’s HeartGiotto, Enrico Scrovegni, and the Arena Chapelin PaduaAnne Derbes and Mark SandonaAt the turn of the fourteenth century, Enrico Scrovegniconstructed the most opulent palace that the city of Paduahad seen, and he engaged the great Florentine painter,Giotto, to decorate the walls of his private chapel (1303–5).In that same decade, Dante consigned Enrico’s father, anotorious usurer, to the seventh circle of hell. The frescoesrank with Dante’s Divine Comedy as some of the greatmonuments of late medieval Italian culture, and yet muchabout the fresco program is incompletely understood.“A significant contribution to one of the mostfamous monuments in the history of art.”Also of InterestPainting in the Age of Giotto:A Historical Re-evaluationHayden B. J. Maginnisisbn 978-0-271-02091-4 | paper: $38.00s—Erik Thunø,Rutgers <strong>University</strong>Most traditional studies of the Arena Chapel have examinedthe frescoes as individual compositions, almost as ifthey were panels detached from an altarpiece and hungon a museum wall for the viewing pleasure of the connoisseur,but largely divorced from their original context. AnneDerbes and Mark Sandona, in contrast, consider each imageas part of an intricate network of visual and theologicalassociations comparable to that of Dante’s poem. Theauthors show how this remarkable ensemble of paintingsoffers complex meanings, meanings shaped by severalinterested parties—patron, confessor, and painter.The Usurer’s Heart pieces together new historical evidenceon the chapel’s origins and describes the fresco programas, in part, an attempt to ameliorate the Scrovegni family’sreputation. It interprets the chapel’s fresco program andthe chapel’s place in the heart of an ambitious and guiltriddenmoneylender.Anne Derbes is Professor of Art and Co-Director of Honorsat Hood College. Her previous books are Picturing the Passionin Late Medieval Italy: Narrative Painting, FranciscanIdeology, and the Levant (1996) and, with Mark Sandona, TheCambridge Companion to Giotto (2003).Mark Sandona is Professor of English and Chair of the Departmentof English at Hood College. He is co-editor, withAnne Derbes, of The Cambridge Companion to Giotto (2003).312 pages | 40 color/144 b&w illustrations/2 maps | 9 x 11 | Augustisbn 978-0-271-03256-6 | cloth: $75.00sArt History1-800-326-9180 |


New in PaperbackBernini’s BiographiesCritical EssaysEdited by Maarten Delbeke, Evonne Levy, andSteven F. Ostrow“Although there is morebiographical writing onthe incomparable GianLorenzo Bernini than onany other early modernartist, including Michelangelo,the investigationof these writings remainssurprisingly incomplete.This fascinating andhighly original book istherefore a welcome additionto the literature, forit both consolidates ourpresent understanding of these biographies, which can betraced to Bernini himself, and raises important questionsabout these writings for future consideration. Bernini’sBiographies will therefore be of great interest to scholars ofart history, literature, and the social history of art alike.”—Paul Barolsky, <strong>University</strong> of VirginiaContributors are Eraldo Bellini, Heiko Damm, John D.Lyons, Sarah McPhee, Tomaso Montanari, Rudolf Preimesberger,Robert Williams, and the editors.Maarten Delbeke is Assistant Professor of ArchitecturalHistory and Theory at the universities of Ghent and Leiden.Evonne Levy is Associate Professor of the History of Art atthe <strong>University</strong> of Toronto.Steven F. Ostrow is Professor and Chair of Art History atthe <strong>University</strong> of Minnesota.440 pages | 40 illustrations | 6 x 9 | available nowisbn 978-0-271-02902-3 | paper: $35.00sArt HistoryAlso of InterestThe Life of BerniniFilippo BaldinucciTranslated by Catherine EnggassEdited by Maarten Delbeke, Steven F. Ostrow,and Evonne LevyDosso DossiPaintings of Myth, Magic, and the AntiqueGiancarlo Fiorenza“Giancarlo Fiorenza hasprovided an indispensablecontribution to thestudy of Italian Renaissanceculture. . . . Thereis, in fact, no comparableaccount of Ferrarese courtculture in the sixteenthcentury.”—Stephen Campbell,Johns Hopkins <strong>University</strong>In Dosso Dossi: Paintingsof Myth, Magic, and the Antique, Giancarlo Fiorenza drawson a wealth of rarely studied primary source material topresent the work of the Ferrarese court artist Dosso Dossiin a new light. The artist, who worked mainly for Duke AlfonsoI d’Este of Ferrara, is celebrated for his mythologicalpaintings that spoke to the courtly imagination. Fiorenzafocuses on Dosso’s highly allusive and eloquent portrayal ofancient and vernacular subjects found in such well-knownworks as Jupiter Painting Butterflies, Myth of Pan, Enchantress,and his frescoes of Aesop’s fables. Dosso’s art challengesconventional iconographic analysis, and Fiorenzaconsiders how the poetics governing his imagery recastsliterary sources, including Ludovico Ariosto’s OrlandoFurioso, by magnifying their most pictorial components.Perhaps more compellingly than any of his contemporaries,Dosso’s paintings transformed courtly ideals and princelyidentity into a new sensual spirit.Giancarlo Fiorenza is Pierre Daura Curator of EuropeanArt at the Georgia Museum of Art. His articles have beenincluded in such publications as Art Bulletin, RenaissanceQuarterly, I Tatti Studies, and Modern Language Notes.256 pages | 34 color/60 b&w illustrations | 8 x 10 | Julyisbn 978-0-271-03204-7 | cloth: $70.00sArt Historyisbn 978-0-271-73076-9 | paper: $20.00s | <strong>penn</strong> <strong>state</strong> <strong>university</strong> <strong>press</strong>


Producing Knowledge, ProtectingForestsRural Encounters with Gender, Ecotourism, andInternational Aid in the Dominican RepublicLight Carruyo“This rich portrayal of apeasant community inthe Dominican Republicactively engaging thechanging global economyis a highly readable textthat contributes significantlyto multiple sociologysubfields, includingdevelopment, gender, andcultural studies.”—Ginetta E. B. Candelario,Smith CollegeDevelopment studies hasnot yet found a vocabulary to connect large structural processesto the ways in which people live, love, and labor. Butwomen’s and men’s daily practices and the meaning they giveto those practices show the ways in which they are not simplyvictims of development, but also active participants, creating,challenging, and negotiating the capitalist world-system onthe ground. This book contributes toward building such avocabulary through a study of “local knowledge” that exposesthe relationship between culture and political economy.Many studies of the “local” treat it as a way of authorizingdevelopment projects or policies, dismiss it as colonizedknowledge, or else romanticize it as “traditional” knowledgein contrast with the elite scientific knowledgeprovided by experts from the developed nations. Theseapproaches perpetuate modernist dualisms, which Carruyowishes to “unsettle” by interpreting local knowledgeinstead as a dynamic process, configured and reconfiguredat the intersections of structural forces and lived practices.Her ethnographic case study of the Dominican rural communityof La Ciénaga de Manabao, which forms the coreof this book, provides a unique site enabling her to explorehow competing interests in agricultural production, tourism,and conservation both shape and collide with localpractices and knowledge.Light Carruyo is Assistant Professor of Sociology andLatin American and Latino Studies at Vassar College.New in PaperbackAmerican GuestworkersJamaicans and Mexicans in the U.S. Labor MarketDavid Griffith“Unlike the pundits whodebate immigrationpolicy within the contextof border security or labormarkets, David Griffithfocuses on the historyand evolution of the H-2program, examining theefficacy of actual guestworkerpolicies and theireffects on migrant workers.The value of AmericanGuestworkers lies in theauthor’s argument thatlocal history can influence global processes. Throughoutthe book, Griffith proves his point by moving effortlesslybetween analysis of the local and national issues related tothe H-2 program.” —Elzbieta M. Gozdziak,Georgetown <strong>University</strong>The H-2 program, originally based in Florida, is the longestrunning labor-importation program in the country. Overthe course of a quarter-century of research, Griffith studiedrural labor processes and their national and internationaleffects. In this book, he examines the socioeconomiceffects of the H-2 program on both the areas where thelaborers work and the areas they are from, and, taking auniquely humanitarian stance, he considers the effects ofthe program on the laborers themselves.David Griffith is Professor of Anthropology at East Carolina<strong>University</strong>.256 pages | 4 maps | 6 x 9 | available nowisbn 978-0-271-03188-0 | paper: $30.00sRural Studies SeriesRural SociologyAlso of InterestAmerica’s New Working Class:Race, Gender, and Ethnicity in aBiopolitical AgeKathleen R. Arnoldisbn 978-0-271-03276-4 | cloth: $45.00s144 pages | 16 illustrations | 6 x 9 | Aprilisbn 978-0-271-03325-9 | cloth: $45.00sSociology10 | <strong>penn</strong> <strong>state</strong> <strong>university</strong> <strong>press</strong>


The Fight Over FoodProducers, Consumers, and Activists Challenge theGlobal Food SystemEdited by Wynne Wright and Gerad Middendorf“One problem with the food system is thatprice is the bottom line rather than havingthe bottom line be land stewardship, anappreciation for the environmental andsocial value of small-scale family farms, or fororganically grown produce.”—Interview with farmer in Skagit County, WashingtonAlso of IntererstTogether at the Table: Sustainabilityand Sustenance in the AmericanAgrifood SystemPatricia Allenisbn 978-0-271-02977-1 | paper: $27.00sRural Studies SeriesFor much of the later twentieth century, food has beenabundant and convenient for most residents of advancedindustrial societies. The luxury of taking the safety and dependabilityof food for granted pushed it to the back burnerin the consciousness of many. Increasingly, however, thisonce taken-for-granted food system is coming under questionon issues such as the humane treatment of animals,genetically engineered foods, and social and environmentaljustice. Many consumers are no longer content with buyinginto the mainstream, commodity-driven food market onwhich they once depended. Resistance has emerged indiverse forms, from protests at the opening of McDonald’srestaurants worldwide to ever-greater interest in alternatives,such as CSAs (community-supported agriculture), fairtrade, and organic foods. The food system is increasinglybecoming an arena of struggle that reflects larger changesin societal values and norms, as expectations are movingbeyond the desire for affordable, convenient foods to a needfor healthy and environmentally sound alternatives. In thisbook, leading scholars and scholar-activists provide casestudies that illuminate the complexities and contradictionsthat surround the emergence of a “new day” in agriculture.The essays found in The Fight Over Food analyze and evaluateboth the theoretical and historical contexts of theagrifood system and the ways in which trends of individualaction and collective activity have led to an “accumulationof resistance” that greatly affects the mainstream market offood production. The overarching theme that integrates thecase studies is the idea of human agency and the ways inwhich people purposely and creatively generate new formsof action or resistance to facilitate social changes withinthe structure of predominant cultural norms. Togetherthese studies examine whether these combined effortswill have the strength to create significant and enduringtransformations in the food system.Wynne Wright is Assistant Professor of Community, Food,and Agriculture at Michigan <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong>.Gerad Middendorf is Associate Professor of Sociology atKansas <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong>.312 pages | 3 illustrations/1 map | 6 x 9 | Januaryisbn 978-0-271-03274-0 | cloth: $65.00sisbn 978-0-271-03275-7 | paper: $28.50sRural Studies SeriesRural Sociology1-800-326-9180 | 11


New in PaperbackActivist FaithGrassroots Women in Democratic Brazil and ChileCarol Ann Drogus and Hannah Stewart-Gambino“An extensive and powerfulliterature on religion, society,and politics in LatinAmerica in recent yearshas begun with the assumptionthat most of themovements that surgedin the struggle againstmilitary rule are dead,that most of the activistsare scattered and burnedout, and that the promiseof civil society as a sourceof new values and a newkind of citizenship and political life was illusory. Manyhave assumed that the religiously inspired activism of thatperiod left little lasting impact, but hardly anyone has actuallylooked at the activists themselves to see what remains,how they cope in a different, more open environment, andhow they see and act on the present and future.“Activist Faith addresses these issues with a wealth ofempirical detail from two key cases and with a richlyinterdisciplinary argument that draws on theorizing aboutsocial movements. The authors strive to understand whatsustains activism and movements in radically different circumstancesfrom those in which they arose. Their analysisis enriched by systematic attention to the impact of genderand gender-related issues on activism and movements. Inthe process, they shed much needed light on the fate of theactivists and social movements that rose to prominencethroughout Latin America during the 1980s.“This beautifully written book is a major achievement thatgives us analytical tools for studying how movementsand activists survive in the doldrums and when a cycle ofprotest peaks and societies move on.”—Daniel H. Levine, <strong>University</strong> of MichiganCarol Ann Drogus is Professor of Government at HamiltonCollege.Hannah Stewart-Gambino is Professor of Political Scienceand Director of Global Citizenship at Lehigh <strong>University</strong>.224 pages | 6 x 9 | available nowisbn 978-0-271-02550-6 | paper: $27.00sPolitical Science/Latin American StudiesLand, Protest, and PoliticsThe Landless Movement and the Struggle for AgrarianReform in BrazilGabriel Ondetti“Gabriel Ondetti haswritten an importantbook. For those interestedin Brazil’s landlessmovement, this new andpersuasive explanation ofthe rise of the movementcombines a focus on thepolitical opportunitystructure with subjectiveand cultural factors leftout of much mainstreamanalysis. For those wantingto learn about Brazil´sagrarian reform, Ondetti provides evidence that the reformwas a significant political achievement. His argumentabout how the landless movement avoided the Olsoniancollective action problem will interest anyone curious aboutsocial science. Ondetti’s book combines, in a rare fashion,in-depth research at the grassroots level, a rigorous theoreticalargument, substantial use of macro-level data, anda comparative Latin American focus. It is the best work onthis topic currently available.”—Anthony Pereira,School of Development Studies,<strong>University</strong> of East AngliaBrazil is a country of extreme inequalities, one of the mostimportant of which is the acute concentration of ruralland ownership. In recent decades, however, poor landlessworkers have mounted a major challenge to this <strong>state</strong> ofaffairs. A broad grassroots social movement led by theMovement of Landless Workers (MST) has mobilized hundredsof thousands of families to <strong>press</strong>ure authorities forland reform through mass protest. This book explores theevolution of the landless movement from its birth duringthe twilight years of Brazil’s military dictatorship throughthe first government of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. It usesthis case to test a number of major theoretical perspectiveson social movements and engages in a critical dialoguewith both contemporary political opportunity theory andMancur Olson’s classic economic theory of collective action.Gabriel Ondetti is Assistant Professor of Political Scienceat Missouri <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong>.264 pages | 1 map | 6 x 9 | Julyisbn 978-0-271-03353-2 | cloth: $60.00sPolitical Science/Latin American Studies12 | <strong>penn</strong> <strong>state</strong> <strong>university</strong> <strong>press</strong>


Copper Workers, International Business,and Domestic Politics in Cold War ChileAngela Vergara“A solidly researched andwell-written history ofthe least known of Chile’slarge copper mines. . . . Amajor original contributionto our understandingof Cold War Chile thatdemonstrates the centralityof copper miners, theirunions, and leaders toChile’s social, economic,and political history.”—Peter Winn,Tufts <strong>University</strong>This book tells the story of the labor movement in Chilethrough the experiences of workers in copper mines ownedby Anaconda, a major multinational corporation. Based onarchival sources, newspapers, and oral histories, it recountstheir economic, political, and social struggles over the fortyfive-yearperiod when the Cold War dominated politics.The labor movement, the author argues, was a progressiveforce instrumental in the introduction of national reformsand the radicalization of politics. In Chile its role is criticalto understanding the expansion of the welfare <strong>state</strong> in the1950s, the introduction of social reforms in the 1960s, andthe Chilean road to socialism in the early 1970s. The bookreveals the historical origin of the implementation of neoliberalpolicies, the erosion of labor rights, and the emergenceof the so-called Chilean economic model championedby the “Chicago boys.” Many of the changes undertaken inthe 1970s and 1980s, the book shows, had their impetus inthe crisis of the import-substitution effort of the late 1950s.Angela Vergara is Assistant Professor of History at California<strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong>, Los Angeles.208 pages | 6 illustrations/2 maps | 6 x 9 | Julyisbn 978-0-271-03334-1 | cloth: $60.00sHistory/Latin American StudiesThe Conquest on TrialCarvajal’s Complaint of the Indians in the Court of DeathCarlos A. JáureguiMichael de Carvajal’sfascinating and unusualplay—published by LuisHurtado de Toledo in1557—is a rare sixteenthcenturytheatrical pieceabout the conquest ofthe New World. It isarguably a long-ignoredbut fundamental sourcefor the study of LatinAmerican cultural history.A theatrical version of theSpanish Conquest clearlyinfluenced by Bartoloméde Las Casas, the play centers on a group of Americannatives filing a complaint against the Spanish conquistadors—beforea tribunal presided over by Death. They denouncethe horrors and crimes committed against them bythe conquistadors and colonizers in their idolatrous greedfor gold. The play constitutes an allegorical summary ofthe debates of the day about the emergence of the SpanishEmpire, the justification of conquest, the right to wage waragainst the Indians, the evangelization of the natives, thediscrimination against the newly converted peoples of theNew World, the exploitation of Indian labor, the extent ofthe emperor’s sovereignty, and the right to resist tyranny.The translation by Carlos Jáuregui and Mark Smith-Sotois the first English edition of this important work. It ispresented in an annotated, bilingual edition, with a criticalintroduction that discusses the origins and ideologicalsignificance of the play.Carlos A. Jáuregui is Associate Professor of Latin AmericanLiterature and Anthropology at Vanderbilt <strong>University</strong>.104 pages | 8 illustrations | 5.5 x 8.5 | Augustisbn 978-0-271-02513-1 | paper: $22.00sLatin American Originals #3History/Latin American Studieswww.psu<strong>press</strong>.org | 13


Illusion of ConsentEngaging with Carole PatemanEdited by Daniel I. O’Neill, Mary Lyndon Shanley,and Iris Marion Young“An im<strong>press</strong>ive collectionof essays from many ofthe leading social andpolitical theorists writingtoday. The essays developimportant new argumentsand compose a fittingtribute to Carole Pateman,whose work has had sucha major impact, and whooffers here a fine Afterword.”—Virginia Held,Graduate School, City<strong>University</strong> of New YorkFor nearly four decades, the writings of Carole Patemanhave been regarded as major contributions to debateswithin political philosophy and feminist theory. Bycritiquing conventional notions of consent at the heart ofmuch modern political thought—hence the title for thisvolume—Pateman has been a central voice in discussionsof such important topics as political participation anddemocracy, contract theory and sexual equality, liberalismand the problem of political obligation, and most recentlysocial citizenship, welfare, and basic income. These essays,all prepared especially for this volume, deal with issues thathave been central to Pateman’s work. The authors criticallyengage with her work while making their own originalcontributions and advancing ongoing debates.Daniel I. O’Neill is Assistant Professor of Political Scienceat the <strong>University</strong> of Florida and the author of The Burke-Wollstonecraft Debate: Savagery, Civilization, and Democracy(Penn <strong>State</strong>, 2007).Mary Lyndon Shanley is Professor of Political Science atVassar College and co-editor (with Carole Pateman) of FeministInterpretations and Political Theory (Penn <strong>State</strong>, 1991)and (with Uma Narayan) Reconstructing Political Theory(Penn <strong>State</strong>, 1997).Iris Marion Young was, until her untimely death in 2006,Professor of Political Science at the <strong>University</strong> of Chicago.232 pages | 6 x 9 | Juneisbn 978-0-271-03351-8 | cloth: $55.00sPolitical Science/PhilosophyDemocratic ProfessionalismCitizen Participation and the Reconstruction ofProfessional Ethics, Identity, and PracticeAlbert W. Dzur“Albert Dzur has writtenan important defenseof professionalism andits crucial relationshipto democracy. This is anespecially well-timed book,seeing as professionalcredibility has sunk to newlows in our contemporarypolitical culture and hasbeen under attack fromboth the left and right.”—Kevin Mattson,Ohio <strong>University</strong>Bringing expert knowledge to bear in an open and deliberativeway to help solve <strong>press</strong>ing social problems is amajor concern today, when technocratic and bureaucraticdecision making often occurs with little or no input fromthe general public. Albert Dzur proposes an approach hecalls “democratic professionalism” to build bridges betweenspecialists in domains like law, medicine, and journalismand the lay public in such a way as to enable and enhancebroader public engagement with and deliberation aboutmajor social issues.Sparking a critical and constructive dialogue amongsocial theories of the professions, professional ethics, andpolitical theories of deliberative democracy, Dzur revealsinterests, motivations, strengths, and vulnerabilities inconventional professional roles that provide guideposts forthis new approach. He then applies it in examining threepractical arenas in which experiments in collaboration andpower-sharing between professionals and citizens havebeen undertaken: public journalism, restorative justice,and the bioethics movement. Finally, he draws lessonsfrom these cases to refine this innovative theory and identifythe kinds of challenges practitioners face in being bothdemocratic and professional.Albert W. Dzur is Associate Professor of Political Scienceat Bowling Green <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong>, where he is also a SeniorResearch Fellow at the Social Philosophy and Policy Center.296 pages | 6 x 9 | Aprilisbn 978-0-271-03332-7 | cloth: $55.00sPolitical Science/Philosophy14 | <strong>penn</strong> <strong>state</strong> <strong>university</strong> <strong>press</strong>


The Problems and Promise ofCommercial SocietyAdam Smith’s Response to RousseauDennis C. Rasmussen“We have hitherto lacked asystematic and sophisticatedbook-lengthanalysis of the relationbetween Smith andRousseau. . . . DennisRasmussen’s beautifullywritten book willbe important reading foranyone concerned withthese two figures, andmore broadly the Enlightenmentand its critics.”—Charles Griswold,Boston <strong>University</strong>Adam Smith is popularly regarded as the ideologicalforefather of laissez-faire capitalism, while Rousseau isseen as the passionate advocate of the life of virtue in smallharmonious communities and as a sharp critic of the illsof commercial society. But in fact, Smith had many of thesame worries about commercial society that Rousseau didand was strongly influenced by his critique.In this first book-length comparative study of these leadingeighteenth-century thinkers, Dennis Rasmussen highlightsSmith’s sympathy with Rousseau’s concerns and thenanalyzes in depth the ways in which Smith crafted his argumentsto defend commercial society against these charges.These arguments, Rasmussen emphasizes, were pragmaticin nature, not ideological: it was Smith’s view that, allthings considered, commercial society offered more benefitsthan the alternatives.Just because of this pragmatic orientation, Smith’s approachcan be useful to us in assessing the pros and cons ofcommercial society today and thus contributes to a debatethat is too much dominated by both dogmatic critics anddoctrinaire champions of our modern commercial society.Dennis C. Rasmussen is Assistant Professor of PoliticalScience at the <strong>University</strong> of Houston.Eros in Plato, Rousseau, and NietzscheThe Politics of InfinityLaurence D. Cooper“This is an excellentbook—clear, lively, andinteresting from beginningto end—and quiteoriginal in what it so persuasivelyshows: the deepagreement in these threephilosophers’ understandingof the human soul.”—Leon H. Craig,<strong>University</strong> of AlbertaHuman beings are restlesssouls, ever driven by aninsistent inner force notonly to have more but to be more—to be infinitely more.Various philosophers have emphasized this type of ceaselessstriving in their accounts of humanity, as in Spinoza’snotion of conatus and Hobbes’s identification of “a perpetualand restless desire of power after power.” In this newbook, Laurence Cooper focuses his attention on three giantsof the philosophic tradition for whom this inner forcewas a major preoccupation and something separate fromand greater than the desire for self-preservation.Cooper’s overarching purpose is to illuminate the natureof this source of existential longing and discontent and itsimplications for political life. He concentrates especially onwhat these thinkers share in their understanding of thispsychic power and how they view it ambivalently as theroot not only of ambition, vigorous virtue, patriotism, andphilosophy, but also of tyranny, imperialism, and varietiesof fanaticism. But he is not neglectful of the differencesamong their interpretations of the phenomenon, either,and especially highlights these in the concluding chapter.Laurence D. Cooper is Associate Professor of PoliticalScience at Carleton College. He is the author of Rousseau,Nature, and the Problem of the Good Life (Penn <strong>State</strong>, 1999).376 pages | 6 x 9 | Januaryisbn 978-0-271-03330-3 | cloth: $55.00sPolitical Science/Philosophy192 pages | 6 x 9 | Juneisbn 978-0-271-03348-8 | cloth: $45.00sPolitical Science/Philosophy16 | <strong>penn</strong> <strong>state</strong> <strong>university</strong> <strong>press</strong>


PLUSCON | Variosub / Heavycon HC-PConector de Montaje rápido RJ 45PLUSCONInsertar cablesCortar cablesCerrar conectorMarco Jack Tapa Plug RJ45 CableVariosub (Conectividad Ethernet)Código Referencia Interfaces de Conexión1689844 VS-08-A-RJ45/MOD-1-R-IP67 Marco de montaje empotrado con tuerca, color gris RAL 70421658053 VS-08-A-RJ45/MOD-1-R-IP67-BK Marco de montaje empotrado con tuerca, color negro RAL 90051652606 VS-08-SD-F Tapa protectora plana color gris para cubrir el conector Jacken el marco empotrado.1658066 VS-08-SD-F Tapa protectora plana color negro para cubrir el conectorJack en el marco empotrado.1689064 VS-08-BU-RJ45/BU Conector Jack RJ 45 de paso al exterior hembra-hembra Cat 5e1653155 VS-08-BU-RJ45-6-MOD/BU Conector Jack RJ 45 de paso al exterior hembra-hembra Cat 61656990 VS-08-RJ45-5-Q/IP67 Conector Plug RJ45 de montaje rápido (No requiere pinzas), Cat 5e.Con carcasa IP 67 color gris, hace juego con marco empotrado y Jack1658493 VS-08-RJ45-5-Q/IP67-BK Conector Plug RJ45 de montaje rápido (No requiere pinzas), Cat 5e.Con carcasa IP 67 color negro. Hace juego con marco empotrado y Jack1656725 VS-08-RJ45-5-Q/IP20 Conector Plug RJ45 de montaje rápido (No requiere pinzas), Cat 5e.Con carcasa IP 20 color gris.1658008 VS-08-RJ45-5-Q/IP20 BK Conector Plug RJ45 de montaje rápido (No requiere pinzas), Cat 5e.Con carcasa IP 20 color negro.1652729 VS-08-ST-H21-RJ45 Conector Plug RJ45 Cat6. Se necesitan pizas para engastar1653265 VS-CT-RJ45-H Pinzas para engastar conector RJ45, VS-08-ST-H..1658862 VS-CAT5-F-4x2x26 AWG/100 Cable Ethernet S/UTP Cat 5e, 4 pares cal. 26 AWG. C/malla, Bobina de 100m.1658888 VS-CAT6-4x2x23 AWG/1/100 Cable Ethernet S/UTP Cat 6, 4 pares cal. 23 AWG. C/malla, Bobina de 100m.Heavycon HC-P (Puertos de Programación)Programación desde el exterior del gabineteGrado de protección IP65 Montaje empotrado en gabinetes, Puertos Ethernet e interfacesseriales y tomacorrientes a 120 VAC.Código Referencia Interfaces de Conexión5600573 HC-P: RJ45 CAT5 120VAC 1 Ethernet RJ 45 Cat 5, 1 Tomacorriente: 120 VAC, 3A5604805 HC-P: DB9 (F/M) RJ45 (F/F) 120VAC 1 DB 9 Hembra-macho, 1 RJ 45, 1 tomacorriente: 120 VAC 3A5603036 HC-P: DB9 (F/TB) 120VAC 3A 1 DB 9 Hembra-bornes, 1 tomacorriente: 120 VAC 3A5603891 HC-P: 2 x DB9 (F/F) 120VAC 2 DB 9 Hembra-Hembra, 1 tomacorriente; 120VAC 3A16 PHOENIX CONTACT


Debating God’s EconomySocial Justice in America on the Eve of Vatican IICraig PrentissWhat does God sayabout the “correct” socialteaching of the CatholicChurch? Pre–Vatican IICatholics, from archbishopsand theologians toCatholic union workersand laborers on U.S. farms,argued repeatedly aboutthis in the late nineteenthand early twentiethcenturies. Debating God’sEconomy is a history ofAmerican Catholic economicdebates taking place during the generation precedingVatican II. At that time, all of society was rife withsociopolitical debates over the relative merits and dangersof Marxism, capitalism, and socialism; labor unions, classconsciousness, and economic power were the watchwordsof the day. This was a time of immense social change,and especially in the light of the monumental social andeconomic upheavals in Russia and Europe in the earlytwentieth century, Catholics found themselves taking sides.Catholic subcultures across America sought to legitimize—or, in theological parlance, “sanctify”—diverse economicsystems that were, at times, mutually exclusive. While untilnow the faithful—both scholars and nonscholars—havetypically spoken of “The Catholic Social Tradition” as ifit were a linear and monolithic prescription for curingsocial ills, Prentiss maintains that the tradition is betterunderstood as a debate grounded in a common mythologythat provides Catholics with a distinctive vocabulary andtouchstone of authority.Craig Prentiss is Associate Professor of Theology andReligious Studies at Rockhurst <strong>University</strong> in Kansas City,Missouri, and editor of Religion and the Creation of Race andEthnicity: An Introduction (2003).232 pages | 6 x 9 | Juneisbn 978-0-271-03341-9 | cloth: $55.00sReligion/HistoryNew in PaperbackFrom the Salon to the SchoolroomEducating Bourgeois Girls in Nineteenth-CenturyFranceRebecca RogersWinner, 2007 Book Prize,the British History ofEducation Society“Rogers fills an importantgap in French women’shistory between OldRegime salons and theestablishment of universalpublic education for bothgirls and boys under theThird Republic.” —D. A. Harvey, Choice“In this lively piece ofwriting, one appreciates the interplay between generaltheoretical considerations and archival investigation.Rebecca Rogers excels in describing how the structure ofschools and their network relates to the formation of socialand individual identities.” —Alain Corbin,<strong>University</strong> of Paris, Panthéon SorbonneHow a nation educates its children tells us much aboutthe values of its people. From the Salon to the Schoolroomexamines the emerging secondary school system for girls innineteenth-century France and uncovers how that systemcontributed to the fashioning of the French bourgeoiswoman.Rebecca Rogers explores the variety of schools—religiousand lay—that existed for girls and paints portraits of thewomen who ran them and the girls who attended them.Drawing upon a wide array of public and private sources—school programs, prescriptive literature, inspection reports,diaries, and letters—she reveals the complexity of thefemale educational experience as the schoolroom graduallyreplaced the salon as the site of French women’s specialsource of influence.Rebecca Rogers is Maître de Conférences in history atthe Université Marc Bloch, Strasbourg. Her first book, LesDemoiselles de la Légion d’Honneur: Les Maisons d’éducationde la Legion d’honneur au dix-neuvième siècle, was publishedin France in 1992.352 pages | 4 illustrations/3 maps | 6.125 x 9.25 | available nowisbn 978-0-271-02491-2 | paper: $25.00sHistory1-800-326-9180 | 19


Philosophy, Black Film, Film NoirDan Florythe larger crimes of White America itself.”“The darkness of film noirwas always meant to illuminateas well as reflectthe shadows of the meanstreets of Gangland USA.Now, in this fascinatingsynthesis of philosophy,film studies, and criticalrace theory, Dan Floryreveals to us the significanceof the deeper blacknessof African-Americannoir—a light ‘doubly’black aimed at exposing—Charles W. Mills,Northwestern <strong>University</strong>,and author of The Racial ContractIn the past two decades, African American filmmakerslike Spike Lee have made significant contributions tothe dialogue about race in the United <strong>State</strong>s by adaptingtechniques from classic film noir to black American cinema.This book is the first to examine these artistic innovationsin detail from a philosophical perspective informed by bothcognitive film theory and critical race theory.Dan Flory explores the techniques and themes that areused in black film noir to orchestrate the audience’semotions of sympathy and empathy felt toward morallycomplex characters whom people might not typicallyfind appealing in real life, such as thugs, drug dealers, ormurderers. Using an approach that combines the cognitiveinsights of theorists like David Bordwell, Noël Carroll, andMurray Smith with the reflective Wittgensteinian methodsfor considering film employed by Stanley Cavell, StephenMulhall, and William Rothman, Flory shows how thesefilms scrutinize the <strong>state</strong> of race in America, induce theirviewers to do so as well, and illuminate the ways in whichcategories of race have defined and continue to direct muchof our vision of the moral self and what counts as appropriatemoral sensibility.Dan Flory is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Montana<strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong>.408 pages | 35 illustrations | 6 x 9 | Juneisbn 978-0-271-03344-0 | cloth: $65.00sPhilosophy and Rhetoric in DialogueRedrawing Their Intellectual LandscapeEdited by Gerard A. HauserPhilosophy and Rhetoric,one of Penn <strong>State</strong> <strong>Press</strong>’slongest-running journals,was conceived at a timeof immense philosophicalupheaval: rhetoric as afield of study—first dismissedby Descartes—wasbeing reexamined afterdecades of neglect. Now,nearly forty years later,Philosophy and Rhetoriccontinues to hold pride ofplace in this reinvigorateddiscipline. The brainchild of Penn <strong>State</strong> professors CarrollArnold and Henry Johnstone, Philosophy and Rhetoricboasts work from dozens of international luminariesfrom a broad spectrum of specializations. To commemoratethe fortieth year of publication, current series editorGerard Hauser assembled a volume of the journal’s mostnoteworthy articles, beginning with Henry Johnstone’sgem of an essay underscoring the essential relationshipbetween the art of rhetoric and philosophy. Donald Vereneelaborates that initial thesis and suggests that rhetoric andphilosophy are not distinct entities in conversation, butinstead that rhetoric provides a forum in which philosophycan exist. Jean Goodwin looks at the theory in terms of ateacher/student relationship, and Barbara Biesecker looksat how governments in the war on terror employ rhetoricto manipulate the social consciousness. A concludingarticle by Carroll Arnold casts rhetoric as a dramatic deviceessential to establishing personal sovereignty. During itsforty years, Hauser writes, the journal “radically altered therelationship between philosophy and rhetoric from irreconcilableantagonists to interlocutors in a shared inquiry intothe constitutive powers of discourse.” This series of essaysbrilliantly traces the arc of that accomplishment.Gerard A. Hauser is Professor of Communications at the<strong>University</strong> of Colorado at Boulder.188 pages | 6 x 9 | Februaryisbn 978-0-271-02768-5 | paper: $25.00sPhilosophyPhilosophy/Film Studies20 | <strong>penn</strong> <strong>state</strong> <strong>university</strong> <strong>press</strong>


An Entrenched LegacyHow the New Deal Constitutional RevolutionContinues to Shape the Role of the Supreme CourtPatrick M. GarryAn Entrenched Legacy takes a fresh look at the role of theSupreme Court in our modern constitutional system. Althoughcriticisms of judicial power today often attribute itsrise to the activism of justices seeking to advance particularpolitical ideologies, Patrick Garry argues instead that theSupreme Court’s power has grown mainly because of certainconstitutional decisions during the New Deal era that initiallyseemed to portend a lessening of the Court’s power.“This is a clear and well-informed additionto the line of strong critiques of the modernpractice of judicial review.”—Robert F. Nagel,Ira C. Rothgerber Jr. Professor of Constitutional Law,<strong>University</strong> of ColoradoWhen the Court retreated from enforcing separation ofpowers and federalism as the twin structural protectionsfor individual liberty in the face of FDR’s New Deal agenda,it was inevitably drawn into an alternative approach, substantivedue process, as a means for protecting individualrights. This has led to many controversial judicial rulings,particularly regarding the recognition and enforcement ofprivacy rights. It has also led to the mistaken belief thatthe judiciary serves as the only protection of liberty andthat an inherent conflict exists between individual libertyand majoritarian rule. Moreover, because the Court has assumedsole responsibility for preserving liberty, the wholearea of individual rights has become highly centralized. AsGarry argues, individual rights have been placed exclusivelyunder judicial jurisdiction not because of anything theConstitution commands, but because of the constitutionalcompromise of the New Deal.During the Rehnquist era, the Court tried to reinvigoratethe constitutional doctrine of federalism by strengtheningcertain powers of the <strong>state</strong>s. But, according to Garry, thiseffort only went halfway toward a true revival of federalism,since the Court continued to rely on judicially enforcedindividual rights for the protection of liberty. A morecomprehensive reform would require a return to the earlierreliance on both federalism and separation of powers asstructural devices for protecting liberty. Such reform, asGarry notes, would also help revitalize the role of legislaturesin our democratic system.Patrick M. Garry is Associate Professor of Law at the <strong>University</strong>of South Dakota.200 pages | 5.5 x 8.5 | Januaryisbn 978-0-271-03280-1 | cloth: $35.00sLaw/Historywww.psu<strong>press</strong>.org | 21


The Culture and Commerce of the EarlyAmerican NovelReading the Atlantic World-SystemStephen ShapiroTaking his cue fromPhiladelphia-born novelistCharles Brockden Brown’sAnnals of Europe andAmerica, which contendsthat America is shapedmost noticeably by theinternational strugglebetween Great Britainand France for control ofthe world trade market,Stephen Shapiro chartsthe advent, decline, andreinvigoration of the earlyAmerican novel. That the American novel “sprang so unexpectedlyinto published existence during the 1790s” may bea symptom of the beginning of the end of Franco-Britishsupremacy and a reflection of the power of a middle classriding the crest of a new world economic system.Shapiro’s world-systems approach is a relatively new methodologyfor literary studies, but it brings two particularly usefulfeatures to the table. First, it refines the conceptual frameworksfor analyzing cultural and social history, such as therise in sentimentalism, in relation to a long-wave economichistory of global commerce; second, it fosters a new modelfor a comparative American Studies across time. Rather thanrelying on contiguous time, a world-systems approach mightcompare the cultural production of one region to another atthe same location within the recurring cycle in an economicreconfiguration. Shapiro offers a new way of thinking aboutthe causes for the emergence of the American novel that suggestsa fresh way of rethinking the overall paradigms shapingAmerican Studies.Stephen Shapiro is Associate Professor of English andComparative Literary Studies at the <strong>University</strong> of Warwick.368 pages | 6 x 9 | Aprilisbn 978-0-271-03290-0 | cloth: $55.00sLiteratureImmigrant and EntrepreneurThe Atlantic World of Caspar Wistar, 1650–1750Rosalind Beiler“This book has been muchanticipated by scholarsfamiliar with the author’swork and this field. Itwill be the prime exhibitfor the growing communityof Atlantic historians,teaching early Americanor Atlantic history, whoare anxious to broaden thecontext of colonial Americabeyond the British andAfrican connections.”—Ian Steele,<strong>University</strong> of Western OntarioImmigrant and Entrepreneur examines the life of Germanimmigrant and successful businessman CasparWistar. Wistar arrived in Philadelphia in 1717 with nearlyno money; at the time of his death in 1750, his wealthoutstripped that of the contemporary elite more thanthreefold. Through this in-depth look at an immigrant’spath to achieving the American Dream, Beiler reevaluatesthe modern understanding of the entrepreneurial ideal andthe immigrant experience in the colonial era.The book follows Wistar’s life from his family’s Germaninfluences to the reasons behind his desire to emigrate andthe networks he used to establish himself as a wealthy entrepreneuronce he reached his adopted home. Beiler drawsfrom Wistar’s compelling story to examine the greaterprocesses at work in the Atlantic world of the eighteenthcentury. Wistar’s success exemplifies how European influence,acculturation patterns, and an innovative cultivationof networks helped immigrants broaden colonial Americaninfluence in the Atlantic world.Rosalind Beiler is Associate Professor of History at the<strong>University</strong> of Central Florida.208 pages | 14 illustrations/8 maps | 6 x 9 | Augustisbn 978-0-271-03372-3 | cloth: $55.00sMax Kade German-American Research Institute SeriesHistory22 | <strong>penn</strong> <strong>state</strong> <strong>university</strong> <strong>press</strong>


Ethnographies and ExchangesNative Americans, Moravians, and Catholics in EarlyNorth AmericaEdited by A. G. RoeberAlso of InterestThe Moravian Mission Diaries ofDavid Zeisberger: 1772–1781Edited by Hermann Wellenreutherand Carola Wesselisbn 978-0-271-02522-3 | cloth: $65.00sMax Kade German-AmericanResearch Institute SeriesEarly Europeans settling in America would never have survivedwithout the help of Native American groups. Thoughhistories of early America acknowledge this today, thathas not always been the case, and even today much workneeds to be done to appreciate more fully the nature of theinteractions between the settlers and the “First Peoples”and to hear the im<strong>press</strong>ions of, and exchanges between,these two groups. We also have much to learn about NativeAmericans as people—their cultures, their languages,their views of the world, and their religious beliefs—andabout their im<strong>press</strong>ions of the early settlers. One avenueto recovering the history of these relations examines earlyrecords that sought to understand the First Peoples scientifically.Missionaries were among those who chronicled theexchange between early settlers and Native Americans. Thediaries, letters, and journals of these early ethnographersare among the most valuable resources for recovering thelanguages, religions, cultures, and political makeup of theFirst Peoples. This volume explores the interactions of twoseventeenth- and eighteenth-century European settlementpeoples with Native Americans: German-speaking MoravianProtestants, and French-speaking Roman Catholics. Itis among these two European groups that we have some ofthe richest records of the exchange between early settlersand Native Americans.Editor A. G. Roeber introduces the volume, whosechapters—by an international cast of contributors—aregrouped in three parts: Texts and Interpretive Perspectives,Missions and Exchanges, and Indigenous Perspectives.A. G. Roeber is Professor of Early Modern History and ReligiousStudies and Co-Director of the Max Kade German-American Research Institute at Penn <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong>. Heis the author of Palatines, Liberty, and Property: GermanLutherans and Colonial British North America (1993), whichwas co-winner of the American Historical Association’s1993 John H. Dunning Prize.216 pages | 6 x 9 | Juneisbn 978-0-271-03346-4 | cloth: $45.00sMax Kade German-American Research Institute SeriesHistory/Religion1-800-326-9180 | 23


Architecture and Artifacts of the<strong>Pennsylvania</strong> GermansConstructing Identity in Early AmericaCynthia G. FalkHow did a mid-eighteenth-century group, the so-called<strong>Pennsylvania</strong> Germans, build their cultural identity in theface of ethnic stereotyping, nostalgic ideals, and the viewsimposed by outside contemporaries? Numerous forces createa group’s identity, including the views of outsiders, insiders,and the shaping <strong>press</strong>ure of religious beliefs, but tobetter understand the process, we must look to clues frommaterial culture. Then we will move toward understandingwhat influenced <strong>Pennsylvania</strong> German communities and<strong>Pennsylvania</strong> Germans as they constructed identities forthemselves.Also of InterestHorse-and-Buggy Mennonites:Hoofbeats of Humility in aPostmodern WorldDonald B. Kraybill and James P. Hurdisbn 978-0-271-02866-8 | paper: $19.95t<strong>Pennsylvania</strong> German Historyand Culture SeriesCynthia Falk explores the relationship between ethnicityand the buildings, personal belongings, and other culturalartifacts of early <strong>Pennsylvania</strong> German immigrants anddescendants. Such “material culture” has been the basisof stereotyping <strong>Pennsylvania</strong> Germans almost sincetheir arrival. Falk warns us against the typical scholarlyoveremphasis on <strong>Pennsylvania</strong> Germans’ assimilationto an English way of life. Rather, she demonstrates thatmore than anything, socioeconomic status and religiousaffiliation influenced the character of the material cultureof <strong>Pennsylvania</strong> Germans. Her work also shows how early<strong>Pennsylvania</strong> Germans defined their own identities.Cynthia G. Falk is Assistant Professor of Material Cultureat Cooperstown Graduate Program of SUNY Oneonta.256 pages | 102 illustrations/1 map | 8.5 x 9 | Julyisbn 978-0-271-03338-9 | cloth: $45.00s<strong>Pennsylvania</strong> German History and Culture SeriesAlso of InterestPowwowing Among the<strong>Pennsylvania</strong> Dutch: A TraditionalMedical Practice in the ModernWorldDavid W. KriebelArchitecture/History/Regionalisbn 978-0-271-03213-9 | cloth: $30.00s<strong>Pennsylvania</strong> German Historyand Culture Series24 | <strong>penn</strong> <strong>state</strong> <strong>university</strong> <strong>press</strong>


History of the Great Flood in Johnstown,Pa., May 31, 1889, by Which over TenThousand Lives Were LostJ. S. Ogilvie260 pages | 27 illustrations | 5.5 x 8.5 | 1889isbn 978-0-271-02494-3 | paper: $24.95sThe Johnstown FloodA Thriving City of 30,000 Inhabitants and ManyGreat Industrial Establishments Nearly Wiped fromEarth: Many Thousands Drowned or Burned to Death:Property Worth Many Millions of Dollars Destroyed:An Avalanche of Water Sweeps Down the ConemaughValley: General Hastings in Command in JohnstownHerman Dieck224 pages | 17 illustrations | 5.5 x 8.5 | 1889isbn 978-0-271-02497-4 | paper: $24.95sThe Johnstown Horror!!!Or, Valley of Death Being a Complete and ThrillingAccount of the Awful Floods and Their Appalling RuinJames Herbert WalkerPenn <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong> <strong>Press</strong> is pleased tointroduce Metalmark Books, a joint imprintof the <strong>Press</strong> and the <strong>University</strong> Librariesat Penn <strong>State</strong>. Books published under thisimprint are selected from the collectionsof the <strong>University</strong> Libraries. They maybe viewed online or ordered as paperbacks.Initially, books published under theMetalmark imprint will be chosen from theLibraries’ extensive <strong>Pennsylvania</strong> holdings.Over time, the scope will broaden to includeother significant out-of-print titles.444 pages | 54 illustrations | 5.5 x 8.5 | 1889isbn 978-0-271-02480-6 | paper: $29.95sThe Long Lost FriendA Collection of Mysterious and Invaluable Arts andRemedies, for Man as Well as Animals: Of Their Virtueand Efficacy in Healing Diseases, etc., the Greater Partof Which Was Never Published Until They Appeared inPrint for the First Time in the U.S. in the Year 1820Johann Georg Hohman80 pages | 6.69 x 9.61 | 1856isbn 978-0-271-02501-8 | paper: $13.95smetalmark bookswww.psu<strong>press</strong>.org | 25


Sentenced to ScienceOne Black Man’s Story ofImprisonment in AmericaAllen M. Hornblum232 pages | 16 illus. | 6 x 9 | 2007978-0-271-03336-5 | cloth: $24.95tMedical Ethics/Black StudiesMexican MessiahAndrés Manuel López ObradorGeorge W. Grayson360 pages | 1 map | 6 x 9 | 2007978-0-271-03262-7 | cloth: $35.00tBiography/Political ScienceHomeland MythologyBiblical Narratives in AmericanCultureChristopher Collins264 pages | 6 x 9 | 20072 illustrations978-0-271-02993-1 | cloth: $29.95tRhetoric/ReligionFrom Pablo to OsamaTrafficking and TerroristNetworks, GovernmentBureaucracies, andCompetitive AdaptationMichael Kenney312 pages | 6 x 9 | 2006978-0-271-02931-3 | cloth: $45.00sPolitical Science/SociologyCongress and the ClassroomFrom the Cold War to “No ChildLeft Behind”Lee W. Anderson208 pages | 6 x 9 | 2007978-0-271-03223-8 | cloth: $29.95tPolitical Science/EducationMemoirs of NikitaKhrushchevVolume 3: <strong>State</strong>sman,1953–1964Edited by Sergei Khrushchev1176 pages | 6.125 x 9.25 | 200740 illustrations978-0-271-02935-1 | cloth: $65.00tCo-published with The Thomas J.Watson Jr. Institute of InternationalStudies, Brown <strong>University</strong>History/Biography26 | <strong>penn</strong> <strong>state</strong> <strong>university</strong> <strong>press</strong>


The Art and Science ofWilliam BartramJudith Magee276 pages | 9 x 12 | 2007110 color illustrations978-0-271-02914-6 | cloth: $45.00tCo-published with the NaturalHistory Museum, LondonArt History/ScienceConfessions of a SpoilsportMy Life and Hard TimesFighting Sports Corruption atan Old Eastern <strong>University</strong>William C. Dowling216 pages | 10 illus. | 6 x 9 | 2007978-0-271-03293-1 | cloth: $23.95tSports/Higher EducationThe Wingless CrowCharles Fergus168 pages | 5.75 x 9.25 | 2007978-0-271-03303-7 | paper: $17.95tA Keystone Book Regional/NatureThe Perfect SeasonHow Penn <strong>State</strong> Came to Stopa Hurricane and Win a NationalFootball ChampionshipM. G. Missanelli232 pages | 28 illus. | 7 x 10 | 2007978-0-271-03282-5 | cloth: $24.95tA Keystone Book Sports/RegionalField Guide to WildMushrooms of <strong>Pennsylvania</strong>and the Mid-AtlanticBill Russell248 pages | 4.5 x 9 | 2006101 color/4 b&w illustrations/1 map978-0-271-02891-0 | paper: $19.95tA Keystone Book Regional/NatureThis Is Penn <strong>State</strong>An Insider’s Guide to the<strong>University</strong> Park CampusPenn <strong>State</strong> <strong>Press</strong>160 pages | 7.5 x 9 | 200550 color/65 b&w illustrations/4 maps978-0-271-02720-3 | paper: $19.95tA Keystone Book Regionalselected backlist1-800-326-9180 | 27


Joseph Priestley and EnglishUnitarianism in AmericaJ. D. Bowers296 pages | 4 illus. | 6.125 x 9.25 | 2007978-0-271-02951-1 | cloth: $50.00sHistory/ReligionThe Engineering ProjectIts Nature, Ethics, and PromiseGene Moriarty280 pages | 6 x 9 | 2007978-0-271-03254-2 | cloth: $55.00sPhilosophy of TechnologyPowwowing Among the<strong>Pennsylvania</strong> DutchA Traditional Medical Practicein the Modern WorldDavid W. Kriebel232 pages | 6 x 9 | 20077 illustrations978-0-271-03213-9 | cloth: $30.00s<strong>Pennsylvania</strong> German History andCulture SeriesAmerica’s New WorkingClassRace, Gender, and Ethnicity in aBiopolitical AgeKathleen R. Arnold240 pages | 6 x 9 | 2007978-0-271-03276-4 | cloth: $45.00sPhilosophy/Political ScienceHistory/ReligionSouls for SaleTwo German RedemptionersCome to Revolutionary AmericaEdited by Susan E. Klepp, FarleyGrubb, and Anne Pfaelzer de Ortiz288 pages | 6.125 x 9.25 | 20065 illustrations/1 map978-0-271-02881-1 | cloth: $75.00s978-0-271-02882-8 | paper: $25.00sMax Kade German-AmericanResearch Institute SeriesSex, Culture, and JusticeThe Limits of ChoiceClare Chambers304 pages | 6 x 9 | 2007978-0-271-03301-3 | cloth: $55.00sPhilosophy/Women’s Studies28 | <strong>penn</strong> <strong>state</strong> <strong>university</strong> <strong>press</strong>


The Arts of SpainIberia and Latin America,1450–1700Marjorie Trusted256 pages | 11.3 x 9.72 | 2007167 color/20 b&w illustrations978-0-271-03337-2 | paper: $47.50sCo-published with the Victoria andAlbert MuseumAvailable in the U.S. and CanadaFixed EcstasyJoan Miró in the 1920sCharles Palermo304 pages | 9 x 9.5 | 200732 color/26 b&w illustrations978-0-271-02972-6 | flexi: $50.00sRefiguring Modernism SeriesArt HistoryArt HistoryLooking Close and Seeing FarSamuel Seymour, TitianRamsay Peale, and the Art ofthe Long Expedition, 1818–1823Kenneth Haltman280 pages | 7 x 10 | 200724 color/96 b&w illustrations978-0-271-02982-5 | cloth: $60.00sArt HistoryThe Coral MindAdrian Stokes’s Engagementwith Art History, Criticism,Architecture, andPsychoanalysisEdited by Stephen Bann240 pages | 9.5 x 10 | 20079 color/21 b&w illustrations978-0-271-02970-2 | flexi: $40.00sRefiguring Modernism SeriesArt HistoryThe Art of MedievalUrbanismParthenay in RomanesqueAquitaineRobert A. Maxwell400 pages | 9.5 x 10 | 200740 color/245 b&w illustrations978-0-271-02956-6 | cloth: $90.00sArt History/ArchitectureThe Substance and theShadowMarius RouxEdited by Paul Smith264 pages | 4 illus. | 5.75 x 9.5 | 2007978-0-271-03205-4 | flexi: $35.00sRefiguring Modernism SeriesArt Historyselected backlistwww.psu<strong>press</strong>.org | 29


Book HistoryEzra Greenspan and Jonathan Rose, editorsAnnual Issn 1098-7371[Vol. 10 Isbn: 978-0-271-02766-1]Book History is devoted to every aspect ofthe history of the book, broadly defined asthe history of the creation, dissemination,and reception of script and print.Information about joining The Society forthe History of Authorship, Reading andPublishing (SHARP) can be seen atwww.sharpweb.org.Chaucer ReviewA Journal of Medieval Studies and LiteraryCriticismSusanna Fein and David Raybin, editorsQuarterly Issn 0009-2002Founded in 1966, The Chaucer Review is thejournal of Chaucerian research. The ChaucerReview publishes studies of language, sources,social and political contexts, aesthetics,and associated meanings of Chaucer’s poetry,as well as articles on medieval literature,philosophy, theology, and mythographyrelevant to study of the poet and his contemporaries,predecessors, and audiences.Comparative Literature StudiesThomas Beebee, editorQuarterly Issn 0010-4132Comparative Literature Studies publishescomparative articles in literature and culture,critical theory, and cultural and literaryrelations within and beyond the Westerntradition. More information is available atwww.cl-studies.org.The Good SocietyA pegs JournalStephen L. Elkin, editorBiannual Issn 3325-5990PEGS is a nonpartisan, ideologically diverse,nonprofit organization whose goal is topromote serious and sustained inquiry intoinnovative institutional designs for a goodsociety. More information is available atwww.bsos.umd.edu/pegs.JGEThe Journal of General EducationClaire Major, editorQuarterly Issn 0021-3667For faculty, administrators, and policmakers,JGE is the professional forum for discussingissues in general education today. JGEaddresses the general education concernsof community colleges, four-year colleges,universities, and <strong>state</strong> systems.Information about joining the Associationfor General and Liberal Studies (AGLS) can beseen at www.bsu.edu/agls.Journal of Nietzsche StudiesChrista Davis Acampora, editorSemiannual Issn 0968-8005The Journal of Nietzsche Studies is publishedsemiannually and contains essays, articles,notices, and reports pertaining to thelife, thought, and writings of FriedrichNietzsche.Information about joining the FriedrichNietzsche Society of Great Britain can beobtained on the Web at www.fns.org.uk.Journal of Policy HistoryDonald T. Critchlow, editorQuarterly Issn 0898-0306The Journal of Policy History provides aninterdisciplinary forum for scholars concernedwith the application of historicalperspectives to public policy studies.Journal of Speculative PhilosophyVincent M. Colapietro and John J. Stuhr,editorsQuarterly Issn 0891-625xThe Journal of Speculative Philosophy publishessystematic and interpretive essays aboutbasic philosophical questions. Scholarsexamine the constructive interactionbetween Continental and American philosophyas well as novel developments in theideas and theories of past philosophers thathave relevance for contemporary thinkers.JSP is published in affiliation with theSociety for the Advancement of AmericanPhilosophy (SAAP). To join SAAP visitwww.american-philosophy.org.<strong>Pennsylvania</strong> HistoryA Journal of Mid-Atlantic StudiesPaul Douglas Newman, editorQuarterly Issn 0031-4528<strong>Pennsylvania</strong> History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies is the official journal ofthe <strong>Pennsylvania</strong> Historical Association.Through publication of this quarterly journal,the Association brings its members thebest of current scholarship in the history of<strong>Pennsylvania</strong> and the Mid-Atlantic region.Information about joining the Associationcan be obtained at www.pa-history.org.Philosophy and RhetoricGerard Hauser, editorQuarterly Issn 0031-8213For forty years, Philosophy and Rhetoric haspublished some of the most influentialarticles on relations between philosophyand rhetoric.ShawThe Annual of Bernard Shaw StudiesMaryAnn K. Crawford and Michel Pharand,general editorsAnnual Issn 0741-5842[Vol. 27 Isbn: 978-0-271-02767-8]Shaw publishes general articles on Shaw andhis milieu, reviews, notes, and the authoritativeContinuing Checklist of Shaviana, thebibliography of Shaw studies. Every otherissue is devoted to a special theme.Information about joining the InternationalShaw Society (ISS) can be seen atwww.shawsociety.org or by contactingR. F. Dietrich at dietrich@cas.usf.edu.Visit the Penn <strong>State</strong> <strong>Press</strong> Web site atwww.psu<strong>press</strong>.org for editorial and advertisinginformation. Click on “order” to seeprices and a sample issue.To order, contact:Journals DepartmentThe Johns Hopkins <strong>University</strong> <strong>Press</strong>P.O. Box 19966Baltimore, MD 21218Tel: 410-516-6987Fax: 410-516-6968E-mail: jrnlcirc@<strong>press</strong>.jhu.eduPlease visit the JHU Web site atwww.<strong>press</strong>.jhu.edu/journals for prices,including those for single-title electronicorders.Penn <strong>State</strong> <strong>Press</strong> participates in Project MUSE.journals30 | <strong>penn</strong> <strong>state</strong> <strong>university</strong> <strong>press</strong>


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Activist Faith . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12American Guestworkers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10Architecture and Artifacts of the <strong>Pennsylvania</strong> Germans. . . . . . 24Beiler, Rosalind . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22Bernini’s Biographies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8The Book of Peace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9Brockmann, Stephen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Campbell, C. Jean . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6Carruyo, Light . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10Cavazzini, Patrizia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4Cézanne’s Bathers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3Charnon-Deutsch, Lou . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5Christine de Pizan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9Combs, Dick . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17The Commonwealth of Nature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6The Conquest on Trial. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13Cooper, Laurence D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16Copper Workers, Union Struggles, and Domestic Politicsin Cold War Chile. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13Counterfeit Amateurs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1Cowan, Michael . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Cult of the Will . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2The Culture and Commerce of the Early American Novel . . . . . . . 22Debating God’s Economy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19Delbeke, Maarten . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8Democratic Professionalism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14Derbes, Anne . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7Dieck, Herman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25Dosso Dossi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8Drogus, Carol Ann . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12D’Souza, Aruna . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3Dzur, Albert W. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14Emison, Patricia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4An Entrenched Legacy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21Eros in Plato, Rousseau, and Nietzsche . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16Ethnographies and Exchanges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23Falk, Cynthia G. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24The Fight Over Food . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11Fiorenza, Giancarlo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8Flory, Dan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20From the Salon to the Schoolroom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19Garry, Patrick M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21Graubart, Jonathan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18Green, Karen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9Griffith, David . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10Hauser, Gerard A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20History of the Great Flood in Johnstown, Pa., May 31, 1889,by Which over Ten Thousand Lives Were Lost . . . . . . . . . . 25Hohman, Johann Georg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25Hold That Pose . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5Illusion of Consent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14Immigrant and Entrepreneur . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22(Im)permanence. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Inside the Soviet Alternate Universe. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17Jáuregui, Carlos . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13The Johnstown Flood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25The Johnstown Horror!!! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25Kupfer, Marcia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6Land, Protest, and Politics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12Legalizing Transnational Activism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18Levy, Evonne . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8The Long Lost Friend . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25Lyne, Mona M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18Markovits, Elizabeth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15Mews, Constant J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9Middendorf, Gerad . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11Mueller, Joan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9Ogilvie, J. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25O’Neill, Daniel I. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14Ondetti, Gabriel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12Ostrow, Steven F. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8Painting as Business in Early Seventeenth-Century Rome . . . . . . 4The Passion Story . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6Philosophy, Black Film, Film Noir . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20Philosophy and Rhetoric in Dialogue. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20Pinder, Janice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9The Politics of Sincerity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15Prentiss, Craig . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19The Privilege of Poverty. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9The Problems and Promise of Commercial Society . . . . . . . . . . 16Producing Knowledge, Protecting Forests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10Rasmussen, Dennis C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16Roeber, A. G. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23Rogers, Rebecca . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19Sack, Allen L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Sandona, Mark . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7Schachter, Judith . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Shanley, Mary Lyndon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14The Shaping of Art History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4Shapiro, Stephen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22Silence and Democracy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15Stewart-Gambino, Hannah . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12The Usurer’s Heart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7Vergara, Angela . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13The Voter’s Dilemma . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18Walker, James Herbert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25Wright, Wynne . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11Young, Iris Marion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14Zumbrunnen, John G. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15indexwww.psu<strong>press</strong>.org | 33


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