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Fall/Winter 2005 - University of Toronto Press Publishing

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g e n e r a l i n t e r e s tWar XHuman Extensions in BattlespaceTim BlackmoreDigital FuturesAre we afraid <strong>of</strong> war? Has the advancement <strong>of</strong> militarytechnology created a mindset <strong>of</strong> invincibilityon the battlefield? In War X, Tim Blackmore arguesthat the technology <strong>of</strong> warfare has essentially erasedthe human body from battlespace. The result is aphysical and psychological distance betweenhumanity and bloodshed. As the machinery <strong>of</strong> wardevelops, and as advances are made in the biologicalsciences, war becomes increasingly palatable –attractive, even – resulting in a sanitized murderculture in which war is anticipated and viewed withlittle anxiety.Blackmore makes connections between humanbeings in battle and the very different world <strong>of</strong>weapons manufacturers, finding between the two aromance <strong>of</strong> war technology. Using science fictionliterature and film, personal war narratives, biographies,and military imagery, he explores the humanbody in war and the ways in which soldiers imaginethemselves superhuman – posthuman – protectedby the armour <strong>of</strong> muscles and steel, tanks and helicopters,robotics and remote control.War X is an explosive introduction to the discussion<strong>of</strong> modern warfare and a timely consideration<strong>of</strong> industrial warfare. It is also a deliberationon the startling world <strong>of</strong> new weapon development,and the indescribable future <strong>of</strong> war that beckons.Tim Blackmore is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theFaculty <strong>of</strong> Information and Media Studies at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Western Ontario.Military Studies / Cultural StudiesApprox. 280 pp / 5 1 /2 x 8 1 /2 / October <strong>2005</strong>21 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-8791-4 £20.00 $29.95 T‘Tim Blackmore’s War X is a groundbreaking, mind-alteringbook: an exposé <strong>of</strong> runaway government and corporate militarism,and the dehumanising effect <strong>of</strong> military technology.With stunning clarity, energy, intelligence, technological mastery,human understanding, and expositional elegance, whatBlackmore describes is not the future; it is the present – andthe vision is both hypnotic and chilling. War X should berequired reading for every citizen whose country participatesin the global culture <strong>of</strong> militarism and twenty-first-centuryweapons development. I just can’t say how much my own eyeswere opened and my own mind was blown by this book.’Philip D. Beidler, Department <strong>of</strong> English, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>AlabamaOf related interest:The Science <strong>of</strong> WarCanadian Scientists and Allied Military TechnologyDuring the Second World WarDonald H. Avery0-8020-5996-1 / £25.00 / $43.00 / 1998Image © <strong>2005</strong> Alliant Technosystems, Inc.2


g e n e r a l i n t e r e s tHarvey CushingA Life in SurgeryMichael Bliss“Your friend, Harvey Cushing, has opened thebook <strong>of</strong> surgery in a new place,” William Osler tolda mutual acquaintance in early 1901. Indeed, in theearly years <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century, Cushing(1869–1939) almost single-handedly created brainsurgery as a specialty. Working at Johns Hopkins<strong>University</strong>, Harvard <strong>University</strong>, and Yale <strong>University</strong>,his rise to become the world’s most prominent surgeon– as well as a Pulitzer Prize winner for biography– was an epic <strong>of</strong> the American Dream. MichaelBliss, one <strong>of</strong> North America’s pre-eminent pr<strong>of</strong>essionalhistorians and the leading voice in the field<strong>of</strong> medical history, has taken up the challenge <strong>of</strong>documenting this brilliant and complex man in anew biography, Harvey Cushing: A Life in Surgery.Never before has such a detailed and compellinglyreadable account <strong>of</strong> a surgeon’s life been written.Bliss vividly recounts Cushing’s boyhood, hisgrowing interest in surgery and, subsequently, neurosurgery,his travels and attentiveness toEuropean surgical models, the influence <strong>of</strong> Oslerand William Stewart Halsted, and his extraordinaryself-confidence in the operating room.Interweaving Cushing’s personal story withgraphic accounts <strong>of</strong> his technical prowess, Bliss skilfullycharts not only the life <strong>of</strong> a man, but also thebirth and rise <strong>of</strong> the most esoteric and exotic fields <strong>of</strong>surgery and endocrinology (in which Cushingbecame a pioneer). Cushing was also known as anaccomplished writer who wrote the influential ThePituary Body and its Disorders as well as a classic biography<strong>of</strong> his mentor and colleague, William Osler.Not surprisingly, Cushing was a driven, relentless,workaholic, and Bliss’ work lays plain the hurtfuleffect this had on his relationship with his wife anddaughters, as well as some <strong>of</strong> his colleagues.A sequel <strong>of</strong> sorts to Bliss’ award-winning biography<strong>of</strong> Osler, and the completion <strong>of</strong> his project <strong>of</strong>describing the rise <strong>of</strong> North American medicine atthe beginning <strong>of</strong> the modern age, Harvey Cushing:A Life in Surgery breaks new ground in medicalbiography. It will have a pr<strong>of</strong>ound and lastingimpact <strong>of</strong> the view <strong>of</strong> early-twentieth-century medicineand the lives <strong>of</strong> those who shaped it.Michael Bliss holds the rank <strong>of</strong> <strong>University</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essorin the Department <strong>of</strong> History and the History <strong>of</strong>Medicine Program at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Also by Michael Bliss:William OslerA Life in Medicine0-8020-8541-5 / $32.95 / 1999Canadian Rights OnlyBiography / History <strong>of</strong> MedicineApprox. 540 pp / 6 1 /2 x 9 1 /4 / September <strong>2005</strong>37 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-8950-X $50.00 TCanadian Rights oNly. Co-PubliSHed with Oxford uNiversity PreSS (New York).Dr. Harvey Cushing (1908) by Edmund C. Turbell (1862–1938).3


g e n e r a l i n t e r e s tInsurgency OnlineWeb Activism and Global ConflictMichael Y. DartnellMarginal ManThe Dark Vision <strong>of</strong> Harold InnisAlexander John WatsonDigital FuturesIn Insurgency Online, Michael Dartnell focuses on anew form <strong>of</strong> conflict made possible by global communications.The Internet, Dartnell argues, iseffecting extensive change to the way politics arecarried out, by inserting a range <strong>of</strong> non-state actorsonto the global political stage. He demonstratesthat Web activism raises issues about the organization<strong>of</strong> societies and the distribution <strong>of</strong> power andcontends that the development <strong>of</strong> online activismhas far-reaching social and political implications,with parallels to the influence <strong>of</strong> the invention <strong>of</strong>the printing press, the telegraph, and the radio.Dartnell concentrates on Web activists who usethe Internet as a media tool, distinguishing this usefrom information terrorism, which threatens orharasses through ‘hacking’ or electronic sabotage.Using the examples <strong>of</strong> the Revolutionary Association<strong>of</strong> the Women <strong>of</strong> Afghanistan (RAWA), whichopposed the Taliban, the Peruvian MovimentoRevolucionario Tupac Amaru (MRTA) and its campaignagainst the Fujimori government, and theIrish Republican Socialist Movement (IRSM),Dartnell evaluates the political implications andgeneral character <strong>of</strong> Web activism among non-stateactors. Insurgency Online shows that online activismis a ripe, new territory for non-governmental actorsto raise awareness and develop support around theworld.Michael Y. Dartnell is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History and Politics at the <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> New Brunswick, Saint John.Communications / ActivismWith Marginal Man, Alexander John Watson providesthe first in-depth intellectual biography <strong>of</strong>Harold Adams Innis (1894–1952), the greatCanadian economic historian and communicationsvisionary. Melding biography and analysis, Watsonpresents, in unprecedented detail, the links betweenkey events in Innis’ life and scholarly influences,and the intellectual syntheses that Innis produced.Watson illustrates and reconciles Innis’ movementfrom rural Ontario to the centre <strong>of</strong> Canadianand international scholarship, followed by his relegationto the margin by scholars who did notunderstand his political project and the essentialconsistency <strong>of</strong> his scholarship and vision. Based onexhaustive research including interviews and reviews<strong>of</strong> archival sources, the book’s methodology reflectsthat <strong>of</strong> Innis himself, emphasizing oral traditionand ‘dirt’ research.Innis’ thought is remarkably relevant to today’sworld, and Marginal Man discusses his foresightwith regards to technological changes – such as thearrival <strong>of</strong> the Internet – as well as historical changesincluding the end <strong>of</strong> the Cold War and thebeginnings <strong>of</strong> today’s unipolar world order. Thisbook is an extraordinary work <strong>of</strong> scholarship in itsown right, as well as an essential companion to thethought and work <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> Canada’s most importantpublic intellectuals.Alexander John Watson is the president and C.E.O.<strong>of</strong> CARE Canada.History / Biography / CommunicationsApprox. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8747-7 £42.00 $65.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8553-9 £15.00 $24.95 TApprox. 480 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>24 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3916-2 £42.00 $65.00 E4


g e n e r a l i n t e r e s tThe Workers’ FestivalA History <strong>of</strong> Labour Day in CanadaCraig Heron and Steve PenfoldFor most Canadians today, Labour Day is the lastgasp <strong>of</strong> summer fun: the final long weekend beforereturning to the everyday routine <strong>of</strong> work or school.But over its century-long history, there was muchmore to the September holiday than just having aday <strong>of</strong>f.In The Workers’ Festival, Craig Heron and StevePenfold examine the complicated history <strong>of</strong> LabourDay from its origins as a spectacle <strong>of</strong> skilled workersin the 1880s through to its declaration as a nationalstatutory holiday in 1894 and finally to its reinventionthroughout the twentieth century. Theholiday’s inventors hoped to blend labour solidarity,community celebration, and increased leisure timeby organizing parades, picnics, speeches, and otherforms <strong>of</strong> respectable leisure. As the holiday evolved,so too did the rituals, with trade unionists embracingnew forms <strong>of</strong> parading, negotiating, and bargaining,and other social groups re-shaping it andmaking it their own. Heron and Penfold also examinehow Labour Day’s monopoly as the workers’holiday has been challenged since its founding byalternative festivals such as May Day andInternational Women’s Day.The Workers’ Festival ranges widely into many keythemes <strong>of</strong> labour history – union politics and rivalries,radical movements, religion (Catholic and Protestant),race and gender, and consumerism/leisure – as well ascultural history – public celebration/urban procession,urban space and communication, and popularculture. From St. John’s to Victoria, the authors followthe century-long development <strong>of</strong> the holiday inall its varied forms.Craig Heron is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>History at York <strong>University</strong>.Steve Penfold is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.‘Carefully documented and analytically nuanced, TheWorkers’ Festival is an ambitious, original, and highly sophisticatedstudy in the history <strong>of</strong> public culture that addresses theevolution <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> the more historically complicated holidayson the Canadian calendar. Craig Heron and Steve Penfoldsucceed in providing a thoughtful and illuminating portrait<strong>of</strong> the changing place <strong>of</strong> labour in Canadian society.’David Frank, Department <strong>of</strong> History, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> NewBrunswickAlso by Craig Heron (editor):The Workers’ Revolt in Canada, 1917–19250-8020-8082-0 / £14.00 / $27.95 / 1998History / Labour studiesApprox. 340 pp / 7 1 /4 x 8 3 /4 / September <strong>2005</strong>250 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3847-6 £50.00 $80.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-4886-2 £25.00 $39.95 TIllustration from The Evening News (<strong>Toronto</strong>), 31 August 1901.Courtesy <strong>Toronto</strong> Public Library Special Collections.5


g e n e r a l i n t e r e s tHistory <strong>of</strong> the Book in CanadaVolume Two: 1840–1918Edited by Yvan Lamonde, Patricia Lockhart Fleming, and Fiona A. BlackVast in its scope and depth <strong>of</strong> scholarship, this secondvolume <strong>of</strong> the History <strong>of</strong> the Book in Canadaextends the landmark research on Canadian bookand print culture from 1840 to the end <strong>of</strong> the FirstWorld War. During this time, the lives <strong>of</strong> Canadianswere shaped by technological innovation, politicalchange, and settlement <strong>of</strong> the West by immigrantsfrom Europe and migrants from eastern and centralCanada and the United States. The development <strong>of</strong>steam power, telegraphy, photography, electricity,and the railroads transformed the book trades.Whether it was an urban daily, a small-townweekly, a newspaper published in one <strong>of</strong> a dozenlanguages, or a magazine, the periodical pressreached readers across the country. The period alsosaw Canadian authors such as L.M. Montgomerywrite bestsellers that are still popular today, andmarked the introduction <strong>of</strong> new voices into print,including those <strong>of</strong> Black communities, Native peoples,and the Métis led by Louis Riel.Traditional genres <strong>of</strong> print – government publications,religious books, almanacs, and schoolbooks– were joined in the mid to late nineteenthcentury by new forms, such as department storecatalogues. Advances in Canada’s postal service carriedprint to a wider audience. Unchallenged byother media until the 1890s, print retained a centralrole in Canadian society into the new century andremained a key source <strong>of</strong> information and propagandaduring the war years.This second <strong>of</strong> three volumes in the History <strong>of</strong>the Book in Canada demonstrates the same researchand editorial standards established with VolumeOne by book history specialists from across thenation. The fascinating story <strong>of</strong> print in the lives <strong>of</strong>Canadians continues in this significant contributionto Canada’s cultural heritage.Yvan Lamonde is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>French Language and Literature at McGill <strong>University</strong>.Patricia Lockhart Fleming is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theFaculty <strong>of</strong> Information Studies and the CollaborativeProgram in Book History and Print Culture at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Fiona A. Black is the director <strong>of</strong> the School <strong>of</strong> Libraryand Information Studies at Dalhousie <strong>University</strong>.Les <strong>Press</strong>es de l’Université de Montréal is simultaneouslypublishing French-language editions <strong>of</strong>each volume as Histoire du livre et de l’imprimé auCanada.Cet ouvrage est également disponible en languefrançaise aux <strong>Press</strong>es de l’Université de Montréal.ISBN: 2-7606-1973-7Also available:History <strong>of</strong> the Book in CanadaVolume One: Beginnings to 1840Edited by Patricia Lockhart Fleming, GillesGallichan, and Yvan Lamonde0-8020-8943-7 / £48.00 / $75.00 / 2004Praise for Volume One‘This is a reference book that every library and anyoneinterested in Canadian history will want to have.’Pat Donnelly, Montreal GazetteBook historyApprox. 670 pp / 6 3 /4 x 9 3 /4 / September <strong>2005</strong>75 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-8012-X £48.00 $75.00 E6


g e n e r a l i n t e r e s tWhen Canadian Literature Moved to New YorkNick MountStudies in Book and Print CultureCanadian literature was born in New York City. Itbegan not in the backwoods <strong>of</strong> Ontario or the saltflats <strong>of</strong> New Brunswick, but in the cafés, publishing<strong>of</strong>fices, and boarding houses <strong>of</strong> late nineteenthcenturyNew York, where writing developed as apr<strong>of</strong>ession and where the groundwork for theCanadian canon was laid. So argues Nick Mount inWhen Canadian Literature Moved to New York.The last decades <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth century sawan extraordinary exodus from English Canada,draining the country <strong>of</strong> half its writers and all but afew <strong>of</strong> its contemporary and future literary celebrities.Motivated by powerful obstacles to a domesticliterature, most <strong>of</strong> these migrants landed in NewYork – by the 1890s the centre <strong>of</strong> the continentalliterary market – and found for the first time alarge, receptive literary market and recognitionfrom non-Canadian publishers and reviewers.While the expatriates <strong>of</strong> the 1880s and 1890s –including Bliss Carman, Ernest Thompson Seton, andPalmer Cox – were recognized for their achievementsin Canada, the domestic literature they themselvesspurred into existence rekindled a nationalist imperativeto distinguish Canadian writing from other literatures,especially American, and this slowly eliminatedmost <strong>of</strong> their work from the emerging EnglishCanadian canon. When Canadian Literature Moved toNew York is the story <strong>of</strong> these expatriate writers: whothey were, why they left, what they achieved, and howthey changed Canadian literary history.Nick Mount is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.literature / historyApprox. 210 pp / 6 x 9 / August <strong>2005</strong>8 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3828-X £28.00 $45.00 T‘Engaging, illuminating, and enlivened by wit, WhenCanadian Literature Moved to New York makes a strongcase for the need to take proper account <strong>of</strong> Canada’s “expatriateliterary communities” in Canadian literary studies. NickMount has skilfully shaped a wealth <strong>of</strong> original research intoa compelling and highly readable narrative that makes avery significant contribution to the history and sociology <strong>of</strong>Canadian literature.’D.M.R. Bentley, Department <strong>of</strong> English, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Western OntarioPhotograph courtesy Spike Mafford / PhotoDisc.7


g e n e r a l i n t e r e s tPerilous RealmsCeltic and Norse in Tolkien’s Middle-earthMarjorie BurnsRenowned Tolkien scholar Marjorie Burns also investigatesthe ways Tolkien reconciled other oppositions,including paganism and Christianity, good and evil,home and wayside, war and peace, embellishmentand simplicity, hierarchy and the common man.Even those who do not know Beowulf, theArthurian tales, or northern European mythologycome away from The Lord <strong>of</strong> the Rings with a feelingfor Britain’s historical and literary past. Those whorecognize the sources behind Tolkien – and the skillwith which he combines these sources – gain farmore. Perilous Realms gives this advantage to allreaders and provides new discoveries, includingmaterial from obscure, little-known Celtic texts anda likely new source for the name ‘hobbit.’ It is trulyessential reading for Tolkien fans.Marjorie Burns is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>English at Portland State <strong>University</strong>.J.R.R. Tolkien (1892–1973) is increasingly recognizedas the most influential writer <strong>of</strong> the twentiethcentury. Sales <strong>of</strong> his books remain exceptionallyhigh, and Middle-earth fan clubs flourish aroundthe world. The film versions made <strong>of</strong> The Lord <strong>of</strong>the Rings, released between 2001 and 2003, haveonly added to his popularity.Throughout his life, Tolkien was acutely aware<strong>of</strong> the power <strong>of</strong> myth in shaping society; so much so,that one <strong>of</strong> his earliest ambitions as a writer was tocreate a mythology for England. The Middle-earth <strong>of</strong>The Lord <strong>of</strong> the Rings and The Hobbit was to serve asa stand-in for Britain and northwestern Europe and isstrongly based on a variety <strong>of</strong> influential literaturesand beliefs, particularly the Celtic and Norse. PerilousRealms is the first book to focus consistently on theways in which Tolkien balances these two ancientcultures and unites them in a single literature.‘Perilous Realms is a pleasure to read. Marjorie Burnswrites in a style that is literate and graceful, avoiding the stiffand stuffy prose <strong>of</strong> much <strong>of</strong> today’s critical prose. With thisvaluable piece <strong>of</strong> work, Burns displays a thorough knowledge<strong>of</strong> both Norse and Celtic literature <strong>of</strong> the medieval period,and by focusing on the hitherto-undervalued Celtic aspect <strong>of</strong>Tolkien’s fiction, fills a gap in the spectrum <strong>of</strong> Tolkien scholarship.’Verlyn Flieger, Department <strong>of</strong> English, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Marylandliterature / fantasyApprox. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / July <strong>2005</strong>1 figureCloth ISBN 0-8020-3871-9 £35.00 $55.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-3806-9 £18.00 $27.95 CThe Anger <strong>of</strong> the Mountain. Copyright: Ted Nasmith andHarperCollins Publishers. Used by permission.8


g e n e r a l i n t e r e s tLords <strong>of</strong> the RinksThe Emergence <strong>of</strong> the National Hockey League, 1875–1936John Chi-Kit WongNo sport is as important to Canadians as hockey.Though there may be a great many things thatdivide the country, the love <strong>of</strong> hockey is perhaps itssingle greatest unifier. Before the latest labour unrestin the National Hockey League (NHL) however, itwas easy to forget that hockey is also a multi-milliondollar business run, not by the athletes or coaches,but by corporate boards and businessmen. Lords <strong>of</strong>the Rinks documents the early years <strong>of</strong> hockey’s pr<strong>of</strong>essionalizationand commercialization and theemergence <strong>of</strong> a fledgling NHL, from 1875 to 1936.As the popularity <strong>of</strong> hockey grew in Canada inthe late nineteenth century, so too did its commercialaspects, and players, club directors, rink owners,fans, and media had developed deep emotional,economic, and ideological interests in the sport.Disagreement came in the ways and means <strong>of</strong> howorganized hockey, especially at the elite level, shouldbe managed. Hence, some coordination, by way <strong>of</strong>governing bodies, was required to maintain a semblance<strong>of</strong> order. These early administrative bodiestried to maintain a structure that would help tocoordinate the various interests, set up standards <strong>of</strong>behaviour, and impose mechanisms to detect andpunish violators <strong>of</strong> governance. In 1917, the NHLheld its first games and by 1936 had become thedominant governing body in pr<strong>of</strong>essional hockey.Having performed extensive research in theNHL archives – including league meeting minutes,letters, memos, telegrams, as well as gate receiptreports – John Chi-Kit Wong traces the commercialroots <strong>of</strong> hockey and argues that, in its organizedform, the sport was rarely if ever without somecommercial aspects despite labels such as amateurand pr<strong>of</strong>essional. Lords <strong>of</strong> the Rinks is the only trulycomprehensive and scholarly history <strong>of</strong> the leagueand the business <strong>of</strong> hockey.John Chi-Kit Wong is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theSport Management Program at Washington State<strong>University</strong>.‘Clearly written and impressively researched, Lords <strong>of</strong> theRinks adds significantly to our knowledge <strong>of</strong> the early history<strong>of</strong> pro hockey and the National Hockey League. This is one <strong>of</strong>the most important books in Canadian sports history.’Morris Mott, Department <strong>of</strong> History, Brandon <strong>University</strong>Of related interest:Blood, Sweat, and CheersSport and the Making <strong>of</strong> Modern CanadaColin D. Howell0-8020-8248-3 / £10.00 / $17.95 / 2001sports / history / businessApprox. 330 pp / 6 x 9 / August <strong>2005</strong>25 photographsCloth ISBN 0-8020-3725-9 £40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8520-2 £18.00 $27.50 TNewspaper photograph <strong>of</strong> a hockey game, likely between theNew York Americans and the Detroit Red Wings, circa 1933–1935. Courtesy Hockey Hall <strong>of</strong> Fame Archives.9


g e n e r a l i n t e r e s tThe Order <strong>of</strong> CanadaIts Origins, History, and DevelopmentsChristopher McCreeryIn 1966, a project to create a national honour forCanadians was begun. The first recipients <strong>of</strong> theOrder <strong>of</strong> Canada were announced a year later, andin the nearly forty years since, the Order hasbecome a symbol familiar to, and respected by,people from across the country.The spirit that motivates theOrder <strong>of</strong> Canada – celebration,inclusion, and democracy –was born <strong>of</strong> the memories <strong>of</strong>Canada’s earlier experiencewith honours. From initialdistrust and misunderstandingto the awakening <strong>of</strong> anational identity, the development<strong>of</strong> the Order reflectsthe relationship Canadianshave with their country, theirgovernment, their culture, andtheir heroes. The Order itself is aproduct <strong>of</strong> national identity, politics, andhistory, reflected by the significance <strong>of</strong> its recipients’accomplishments. Indeed, the Order’s historyis as fascinating as the more than 4000 Canadianswho have received it.This first book-length history <strong>of</strong> the Order <strong>of</strong>Canada – and first major work on Canadian honours– by Christopher McCreery is a celebration<strong>of</strong> the Order and a close examination <strong>of</strong> its uniquedesign and various early incarnations. McCreeryprovides both a history <strong>of</strong> the Order’s beginningsand a more general overview <strong>of</strong> trends in Canadianhonours. Extensively illustrated with never-beforepublishedphotographs, The Order <strong>of</strong> Canada: ItsOrigins, History, and Developments pays tribute tothe individuals who felt the need for a system<strong>of</strong> recognition for Canadians.Christopher McCreery has servedas an advisor to the Canadianand British governments onhonours policy.‘This is easily the most comprehensivework that has been done on theOrder, describing it as it does, incareful detail, both the institutionitself, its significance, and the history<strong>of</strong> its conception and evolution.Christopher McCreery castslight on the values embodied in Canada’snational persona, and how they have come tobe expressed in its honours system.’Olive Dickason, C.M., Department <strong>of</strong> History,<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa, and School <strong>of</strong> Native Studies,<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> AlbertahistoryApprox. 350 pp / 7 x 10 / August <strong>2005</strong>61 colour and black-and-white photographsCloth ISBN 0-8020-3940-5 £40.00 $60.00 EInsignia <strong>of</strong> the Order <strong>of</strong> Canada, 1967–1972. (NationalArchives <strong>of</strong> Canada, C002107534).10


g e n e r a l i n t e r e s tBora LaskinBringing Law to LifePhilip GirardOsgoode Society for Canadian Legal HistorySearching for JusticeAn AutobiographyFred KaufmanOsgoode Society for Canadian Legal HistoryIn any account <strong>of</strong> twentieth-century Canadian law,Bora Laskin (1912–1984) looms large. Born innorthern Ontario to Russian-Jewish immigrantparents, Laskin became a prominent human rightsactivist, university pr<strong>of</strong>essor, and labour arbitratorbefore embarking on his ‘accidental career’ as ajudge on the Ontario Court <strong>of</strong> Appeal (1965) andlater Chief Justice <strong>of</strong> Canada (1973–1984).Throughout his pr<strong>of</strong>essional career, he used the lawto make Canada a better place for workers, racialand ethnic minorities, and the disadvantaged. As ajudge, he sought to make the judiciary moreresponsive to modern Canadian expectations <strong>of</strong>justice and fundamental rights.In this rich biography, Philip Girard chroniclesthe life <strong>of</strong> a man who, at all points <strong>of</strong> his life, was afighter for a better Canada: he fought antisemitism,corporate capital, omnipotent university boards,the Law Society <strong>of</strong> Upper Canada, and his ownjudicial colleagues in an effort to modernize institutionsand re-shape Canadian law. Girard exploits awealth <strong>of</strong> previously untapped archival sources toprovide, in vivid detail, a critical assessment <strong>of</strong> arestless man on an important mission.Philip Girard is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Law, Department <strong>of</strong> History, and Canadian StudiesProgramme at Dalhousie <strong>University</strong>.biography / law / historyApprox. 600 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>32 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-9044-3 £35.00 $55.00 EThe Honourable Fred Kaufman has been a distinguishedfigure in Canadian law for a half century.Born into a middle-class Jewish family in mid-1920s Vienna, Kaufman escaped to England on theeve <strong>of</strong> the Second World War. In 1940, he wasinterned as an ‘enemy alien’ and sent to Canada.Released in 1942, Kaufman stayed in Canadawhere he went on to university and law school inMontreal.Kaufman was called to the Bar <strong>of</strong> Quebec in1955 and practiced criminal law for eighteen years,taking part in many <strong>of</strong> the famous cases <strong>of</strong> thatperiod. In 1960, he secured the release <strong>of</strong> a youngPierre Elliott Trudeau from prison, and in 1973,Trudeau returned the favour by personally informingKaufman <strong>of</strong> his appointment to the QuebecCourt <strong>of</strong> Appeal, where he served for eighteenyears, including one as Acting Chief Justice <strong>of</strong>Quebec. Since his retirement in 1991, Kaufman hasled numerous commissions and inquiries, mostnotably the investigation into the wrongful conviction<strong>of</strong> Guy Paul Morin and the two-year reassessment<strong>of</strong> the Steven Truscott case.Searching for Justice is Kaufman’s remarkablestory in his own words. It is the tale <strong>of</strong> adversityovercome in a crucial period <strong>of</strong> Canadian legal history.Fred Kaufman is a former justice <strong>of</strong> the QuebecCourt <strong>of</strong> Appeal.biography / law / historyApprox. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>24 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-9051-6 £42.00 $65.00 E11


g e n e r a l i n t e r e s tGeorge IIIThe British Library Historic LivesChristopher WrightThe British LibraryThe Duke <strong>of</strong> WellingtonThe British Library Historic LivesMatthew ShawThe British LibraryKing George III, who reigned in Britain from 1760to 1820, is perhaps best remembered today forbeing the monarch who lost the American Coloniesand for his own uncertain sanity. Attacked by hispolitical opponents as a ‘tyrant,’ opposition politiciansat the time and Whig historians subsequentlyportrayed him as seeking to undermine the Britishconstitution by enlarging the power <strong>of</strong> the Crown.Over the last decades, however, historians havelooked again at his life and reign. What hasemerged is an altogether more sympathetic portrait.George III was far from being the intellectualmediocrity <strong>of</strong> legend. He was interested in, and anactive supporter <strong>of</strong>, the latest advances in science. Avoracious buyer <strong>of</strong> books, his collection was in duecourse to double the size <strong>of</strong> the national library. Hisdeath produced a national outpouring <strong>of</strong> grief thathas rarely been equalled until modern times. Thisstudy seeks the truth about this most controversial<strong>of</strong> rulers, while giving an account <strong>of</strong> the King’s personaland political life and seeking to place it in itssocial, constitutional, and international context.Christopher Wright is the head <strong>of</strong> the Department<strong>of</strong> Manuscripts at the British Library.biographyPraised by Queen Victoria as the ‘greatest man thiscountry has ever produced,’ the Duke <strong>of</strong> Wellingtonpossessed an unmatched career in Britain as a soldier,politician, and statesman. A frail child, overshadowedby his siblings, he became a man <strong>of</strong> exacting preparation,determination, and tactical brilliance who pavedthe way for the creation <strong>of</strong> the British Empire.The Duke <strong>of</strong> Wellington founded his career onthree great military triumphs; he helped to extendBritish rule in India, defeated the French in Portugaland Spain, and ended Napoleon’s ambitions at Waterloo.He twice served as Prime Minister and acted as Britishenvoy and confidante to royalty during a crucial period<strong>of</strong> British history. Despite his authoritarian Toryinstincts, he recognised the need for limited reform athome, and ushered in the repeal <strong>of</strong> the Test andCorporation Acts and the Catholic Emancipation bill,thereby transforming the British political landscape.Lavishly illustrated throughout by uniqueitems from the British Library’s unparalleled collections,this engaging biography <strong>of</strong> Britain’s greatestgeneral charts the life <strong>of</strong> a man whose reputation asthe alo<strong>of</strong> ‘Iron Duke’ masked strong passions and akeen awareness <strong>of</strong> his public persona.Matthew Shaw is the curator <strong>of</strong> United StatesCollections at the British Library and former curator<strong>of</strong> eighteenth- and nineteenth-century manuscripts.biography144 pp / 6 x 8 1 /2 / July <strong>2005</strong>50 colour and black-and-white illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-4893-X $26.00 TDistribution Rights for North and South America Only. Other RightsHeld by the British Library.144 pp / 6 x 8 1 /2 / July <strong>2005</strong>50 colour and black-and-white illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-4891-3 $26.00 TDistribution Rights for North and South America Only. Other RightsHeld by the British Library.12


g e n e r a l i n t e r e s tThe Autobiography <strong>of</strong> a FishermanFrank Parker DayBack in PrintWith the recent selection <strong>of</strong> Frank Parker Day’s1928 novel Rockbound as CBC’s <strong>2005</strong> “CanadaReads” winner, interest in the life and work <strong>of</strong> Dayhas never been greater. In 1927, Day wrote his autobiographicalreflections on fishing, family, and,more broadly, humanity’s place in the natural world.The Autobiography <strong>of</strong> a Fisherman is a wonderfulrecollection <strong>of</strong> one man’s life, with characters strugglingin a depressed economy, contending with thesocial pressures <strong>of</strong> local village life, and respondingin one way or the other to the pull <strong>of</strong> the big city.Day details his early introduction to fishing,which becomes a life-long passion, at once a ‘gentleart’ and a ‘disease’. Studying at Oxford <strong>University</strong> ona Rhodes Scholarship (‘it was easier to get one inthose days’), his fervour for fishing is shared bymany, but while at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Berlin studyingBeowulf, he laments that he ‘did no trout fishing.’Eventually, Day returns to Canada and is hiredas an English pr<strong>of</strong>essor at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> NewBrunswick, knowing it to be ‘the centre <strong>of</strong> a wellwatereddistrict.’ The reader sees him through hisfinal episode <strong>of</strong> fishing with his father before hisfather dies, as well as the First World War, duringwhich time he ‘never wet a line’, and beyond, as hemarries, builds a family, and continues to fish. Day’sreflections suggest the restorative powers <strong>of</strong> theenvironment and should appeal to even those readerswho have never thought to sit quietly by the side<strong>of</strong> a stream, line in hand, waiting.Also by Frank Parker Day:Rockbound0-8020-6723-9 / £14.00 / $21.95 / 1928Biography / Literature202 pp / 5 1 /4 x 8 / AvailablePaper ISBN 0-8020-9393-0 £14.00 $21.95 TPortrait <strong>of</strong> Frank Parker Day, c.1935. Painted by Mabel KillamDay. Courtesy Yarmouth County Museum, Yarmouth, NovaScotia.13


g e n e r a l i n t e r e s tThe Diary <strong>of</strong> Abraham UlrikabText and ContextEdited and translated by Hartmut Lutz and Greifswald studentsPreface by Alootook Ipellie<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa <strong>Press</strong>In 1880, eight Inuit men, women, and children fromLabrador were hired to be exhibited in EuropeanZoos as part <strong>of</strong> so-called Völkerschauen (peoples’exhibitions). Within five months <strong>of</strong> their arrival, theyhad all died <strong>of</strong> smallpox. One <strong>of</strong> the group, AbrahamUlrikab, a baptized member <strong>of</strong> the Moravian Missionat Hebron, Labrador, kept a short diary <strong>of</strong> his experiences,which was sent back to Hebron after his death.His original in Inuktitut is lost, but a handwrittenMoravian translation into German survived. Thismoving document <strong>of</strong> culture shock, isolation, homesicknessand institutional racism has now been translatedinto English by Hartmut Lutz and his studentsat the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Greifswald in Germany, and is atthe heart <strong>of</strong> this volume.Abraham’s diary is complemented by historicalnewspaper articles reporting on the exhibitions, acontemporary ethnographic description by a Germanphysician, Abraham’s letters to his Moravian brethrenin Hebron (as well as their replies), contemporaryillustrations, and photographs by Hans-LudwigBlolm. A preface by Inuit artist and author AlootookIpellie and an introduction by Lutz comment on andcomplement the textual documents, which present asad and important story <strong>of</strong> early IndigenousCanadian-European relations.Hartmut Lutz is the chair <strong>of</strong> the Department <strong>of</strong> Englishand American Studies at Universität Greifswald.Alootook Ipellie is a writer, graphic artist, cartoonist,photographer, and translator living in Ottawa.History / native studiesApprox. 120 pp / 8 x 8 / August <strong>2005</strong>16 pages <strong>of</strong> photographsPaper ISBN 0-7766-0602-6 £20.00 $30.00 COf related interest:Franz Boas with the Inuit <strong>of</strong> Baffin Island,1883–1884Journals and LettersTranslated by William BarrEdited with an introduction by Ludger Muller-Wille0-8020-4150-7 / £32.00 / $53.00 / 1998Illustration by Alootook Ipellie.14


n e w i n pa p e r b a c kThe Artist as MonsterThe Cinema <strong>of</strong> David CronenbergWilliam BeardINCLUDES TWO NEW CHAPTERSDavid Cronenberg is one <strong>of</strong> the most fascinatingfilmmakers in the world today. His provocativework has stimulated debate and received major retrospectivesin museums, galleries, and cinemathequesaround the globe. William Beard’s The Artist asMonster was the first book-length scholarly work inEnglish on Cronenberg’s films, analyzing all <strong>of</strong> hisfeatures from Stereo (1969) to Crash (1996). In thispaperback edition, Beard includes new chapters oneXistenZ (1999) and Spider (2002).Through close readings and visual analyses,Beard argues that the structure <strong>of</strong> Cronenberg’s cinemais based on a dichotomy between, on the onehand, order, reason, repression, and control, and onthe other, liberation, sexuality, d i s e a s e ,and the disintegration <strong>of</strong> selfand <strong>of</strong> the boundaries thatdefine society. The instigating figurein the films is a scientist characterwho, as Cronenbergevolves as a filmmaker, graduallymetamorphoses into an artist,with the ground <strong>of</strong> liberation andcatastrophe shifting from experimentalsubject to the self.Bringing a wealth <strong>of</strong> analyticalobservation and insight to Cronenberg’s films,Beard’s sweeping, comprehensive work has establishedthe benchmark for the study <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong>Canada’s best-known filmmakers.William Beard is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Film and MediaStudies Program at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Alberta.film studies‘The Artist as Monster <strong>of</strong>fers the most thorough and balancedaccount <strong>of</strong> David Cronenberg ever published … Eminentlyreadable and intellectually (as well as emotionally) engaging.’Monique Tsch<strong>of</strong>en, Canadian Literature‘Essential reading for any fan <strong>of</strong> the filmmaker.’Matthew Hays, Mirror‘Beard’s interpretation <strong>of</strong> Cronenberg’s cinema is original andunique … A fascinating and rigorous critical examination.’Thomas Caldwell, Screening the Past‘A painstaking and meticulous analysis <strong>of</strong> the films.’Marc Horton, Edmonton Journal‘Timely and insightful … Highlyrecommended to anyone interested inthe compelling and disturbing work <strong>of</strong>the éminence grise <strong>of</strong> contemporaryEnglish-Canadian art-cinema.’Scott McKenzie, British Journal <strong>of</strong>Canadian StudiesOf related interest:One Hundred Years <strong>of</strong> Canadian CinemaGeorge Melynk0-8020-8444-3 / £22.50 / $35.00 / 2004Dante, Cinema, and TelevisionEdited by Amilcare A. Iannucci0-8020-8827-9 / £18.00 / $27.95 / 2004Approx. 550 pp / 6 x 9 / September <strong>2005</strong>Paper ISBN 0-8020-3807-7 £22.50 $35.00 COriginally published in cloth: September 2001The Clark Nova Typewriter, c. 1990 (from Naked Lunch).Collection <strong>of</strong> Chris Wales Inc., San Rafael. Photograph by BenBlackwell.15


n e w i n pa p e r b a c kNegotiating CitizenshipMigrant Women in Canada and the Global SystemCivic CapitalismThe State <strong>of</strong> ChildhoodDaiva K. Stasiulis and Abigail B. BakanJohn O’NeillWhile the designated rights <strong>of</strong> capital to travel freelyacross borders have increased under neo-liberal globalization,the citizenship rights <strong>of</strong> many people,particularly the most vulnerable, have tended todecline. Using Canada as an example <strong>of</strong> a majorrecipient state <strong>of</strong> international migrants, NegotiatingCitizenship considers how migrant women workersfrom two settings in the global South – the WestIndies and the Philippines – have attempted to negotiatecitizenship across the global citizenship divide.Daiva K. Stasiulis and Abigail B. Bakan challengetraditional liberal and post-national theories <strong>of</strong>citizenship with a number <strong>of</strong> approaches: historicaldocumentary analyses, investigation <strong>of</strong> the politicaleconomy <strong>of</strong> the sending states, interviews withmigrant live-in caregivers and nurses, legal analyses<strong>of</strong> domestic worker case law, and analysis <strong>of</strong> socialmovement politics. Negotiating Citizenship demonstratesthat the transnational character <strong>of</strong> migrants’lives – their migration and labour strategies, familyhouseholds, and political practices – <strong>of</strong>fer importantchallenges to inequitable and exclusionary aspects <strong>of</strong>contemporary nation-state citizenship.Daiva K. Stasiulis is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> Sociology and Anthropology at Carleton<strong>University</strong>.Abigail B. Bakan is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> Political Studies and the Department <strong>of</strong> Women’sStudies at Queen’s <strong>University</strong>.immigration / sociologyCivic Capitalism <strong>of</strong>fers a reappraisal <strong>of</strong> the moralpractices that are basic to the civic institutions <strong>of</strong>childhood, citizenship, and social justice. JohnO’Neill expands the economist’s concept <strong>of</strong> humancapital to include health, education, and othersocial transfers that enrich civic capital, and therebyunderwrite childhood, family, and community life.This concept <strong>of</strong> human capital is shown to be at thepolitical core <strong>of</strong> capitalist societies in North Americaand Europe whose welfare regimes are continuouslycontested yet are intrinsic to ideals <strong>of</strong> citizenshipand social justice.O’Neill identifies the state <strong>of</strong> childhood as thesite where notions <strong>of</strong> civic well-being are tested. Heexamines the current surrender to global capitalismand market elites and challenges the reader to refocusattention on the needs <strong>of</strong> children and the poor,arguing that elite ideologies <strong>of</strong> anti-governance andanti-taxation ignore the needs <strong>of</strong> society’s most vulnerable,and that inequality, ignorance, and sicknessare the real impediments to economic growth anddemocracy. Drawing upon the classical tradition <strong>of</strong>critical political economy and social policy inGalbraith, Rawls, and Tawney, among others, CivicCapitalism provides a guide to civic childhood andthe wealth <strong>of</strong> nations.John O’Neill is a distinguished research pr<strong>of</strong>essoremeritus in the Department <strong>of</strong> Sociology at York<strong>University</strong>.sociologyApprox. 240 pp / 5 1 /2 x 8 1 /2 / November <strong>2005</strong>Paper ISBN 0-8020-7915-6 £13.00 $19.95 COriginally published in cloth by Palgrave: December 2003144 pp / 5 1 /2 x 8 1 /2 / September <strong>2005</strong>Paper ISBN 0-8020-9392-2 £14.00 $21.95 COriginally published in cloth: June 200416


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 dThe Books <strong>of</strong> King HenryVIII and his WivesJames P. CarleyKing Henry VIII was one <strong>of</strong> the most intelligentand widely read monarchs <strong>of</strong> the renaissance, andwas deeply involved in theological debate andmonastic history, especially when moving to thebreak with Rome. At the same time, he was aHumanist scholar ahead <strong>of</strong> his time in all the liberalarts. Equally, most <strong>of</strong> his wives were also avidreaders and collectors. This important bookdescribes Henry’s books and their significance. TheIllumination from Books<strong>of</strong> HoursJanet BackhouseBooks <strong>of</strong> Hours survive in their thousands in libraries,museums, and private collections across thewestern world, reflecting both the personal pietyand the fashionable taste <strong>of</strong> the later Middle Agesand the Renaissance in Europe. This extensivelyillustrated book acts as an introduction to some <strong>of</strong>the most beautiful and historically interestingmanuscripts in the collections <strong>of</strong> the British Library.It <strong>of</strong>fers an unparalleled opportunity to see a wideA New Index <strong>of</strong> MiddleEnglish VerseJulia B<strong>of</strong>fey and A.S.G. EdwardsThe Index <strong>of</strong> Middle English Verse was originallypublished in 1943 in a limited edition. Althoughit has remained a standard research tool, the passage<strong>of</strong> time has rendered much <strong>of</strong> its contentobsolete. It is now replaced by this New Index,<strong>of</strong>fering a first-line listing <strong>of</strong> all surviving verserecorded between c.1150 and 1500, together withfull bibliographical information for every witnessand details <strong>of</strong> modern editions. In addition, itincorporates a complete index <strong>of</strong> manuscripts andextensive illustrations allow an examination <strong>of</strong> thebinding and content <strong>of</strong> the collection, and providesome examples <strong>of</strong> marginalia in Henry’s own hand.James P. Carley is a distinguished research pr<strong>of</strong>essorin the Department <strong>of</strong> English at York <strong>University</strong>.160 pp / 6 1 /2 x 9 1 /2 / Available145 colour and black-and-white illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-4791-7 $39.95 Erange <strong>of</strong> examples from these precious manuscripts,many <strong>of</strong> which have never been reproduced before.Janet Backhouse was an internationally respectedmanuscript expert and former Curator <strong>of</strong>Illuminated Manuscripts at the British Library.160 pp / 6 x 7 1 /2 / Available140 colour illustrationsPaper ISBN 0-7123-4849-2 $19.95 Ta comprehensive subject index. The book will bean essential reference work for any future researchin this field.Julia B<strong>of</strong>fey is a reader in the School <strong>of</strong> English andDrama at Queen Mary, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> London.A.S.G. Edwards is pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Victoria.Approx. 360 pp / 9 x 11 / July <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-7123-4831-X $150.00 EDistribution Rights for North and South America Only. Other Rights Held by the British Library.17


h i s t o r yDictionary <strong>of</strong> Canadian Biography /Dictionnaire biographique du CanadaVolume XV, 1921–1930Ramsay Cook (General Editor) and Réal Bélanger (Directeur général adjoint)This new volume <strong>of</strong> the Dictionary <strong>of</strong> CanadianBiography / Dictionnaire biographique du Canada(DCB / DBC) presents well-written, carefully documented,and meticulously edited biographies <strong>of</strong>Canadians from all walks <strong>of</strong> life. Its literary andscholarly standards make it, like its predecessors, thedefinitive biographical reference for its period <strong>of</strong> history.The 619 biographies by 446 authors present apanoramic view <strong>of</strong> the origins <strong>of</strong> modern Canada, itspolitical landscapes, economic changes, educationalinstitutions, cultural developments, and athleticachievements. The volume’s coverage is inclusive,ranging from murderers to artists, from businessmagnates to religious leaders, from Canada’s FirstPeoples to new immigrants. There are labour leaders,farmers, feminists, and naturalists, as well as prominentleaders in all aspects <strong>of</strong> Canadian life.The dominant theme <strong>of</strong> this volume is the emergence<strong>of</strong> a country engrossed by material gains andaware <strong>of</strong> broadening horizons. Sir Clifford Sifton,federal minister <strong>of</strong> the interior, Sir Lomer Gouin,premier <strong>of</strong> Quebec, and Sir Robert Bond, premier <strong>of</strong>Newfoundland, symbolize this age <strong>of</strong> development.The lives <strong>of</strong> Sir Adam Beck, father <strong>of</strong> Ontario Hydro,Gordon Morton McGregor, founder <strong>of</strong> the FordMotor Company <strong>of</strong> Canada, and Alexander GrahamBell, inventor <strong>of</strong> the telephone, illustrate how newtechnologies harnessed natural energy sources andcreated new ways to communicate. Such innovationsdrove the transformation <strong>of</strong> Canada in the early years<strong>of</strong> the twentieth century.An expanding nation required thousands <strong>of</strong>new people to answer the demands <strong>of</strong> the agriculturalenterprises in the west, the manufacturingindustries <strong>of</strong> central Canada, and the fishing andlumbering businesses <strong>of</strong> British Columbia and theAtlantic region. Many newcomers were drawn fromeastern Europe and Asia as well as the British Islesand western Europe, traditionally the homelands <strong>of</strong>new Canadians. The Doukhobor leader PeterVasil’evich Verigin, the housemaid AngelinaNapolitano, the Chinese teacher and merchant YipSang, and the Orthodox clergyman Nestor Dmytriwall took their places in the increasingly complexethnic mosaic.Social and economic changes inspired demandsfor other types <strong>of</strong> change. The movement <strong>of</strong> womeninto the pr<strong>of</strong>essions is exemplified by the life <strong>of</strong> ClaraBrett Martin, the first woman called to the bar inCanada. Jeanne Lajoie, an embattled Franco-Ontarian teacher, joins writers Sara JeannetteDuncan, Félicité Angers (known as Laure Conan),Joséphine Marchand (Dandurand), and MarjorieLowry Christie Pickthall in the cast <strong>of</strong> womenprominent in this volume. Among those representingarts and sports are the painter James WilsonMorrice and the brilliant goalkeeper Georges Vézina.Without question, Volume XV <strong>of</strong> the DCB/DBC will take its place as one <strong>of</strong> the finest to appearin this distinguished ongoing series <strong>of</strong> Canadianlives.Ramsay Cook is a former pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History at York <strong>University</strong>.Réal Bélanger is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>History at Université Laval.Praise for previous volumes‘No serious student <strong>of</strong> Canada’s past can function withoutaccess to this thorough, balanced and reliable source.’Roger Hall, Globe and Mail‘The range and richness <strong>of</strong> DCB biographies is a wonder andan experience.’Peter B. Waite, Canadian Historical ReviewApprox. 1200 pp / 7 x 10 1 /4 / September <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9087-7 £80.00 $125.00 E18


h i s t o r yAuto PactCreating a Borderless North American Auto Industry,1960–1971Dimitry AnastakisThe 1965 Canada-United States Automotive Tradeagreement fundamentally reshaped relationsbetween the automotive business and the state inboth countries and represented a significant steptoward the creation <strong>of</strong> an integrated NorthAmerican economy. Breaking from previous conceptions<strong>of</strong> the agreement as solely a product <strong>of</strong>intergovernmental negotiation, Dimitry Anastakis’Auto Pact argues that the ‘big three’ auto companiesplayed a pivotal role – and benefited immensely –in the creation and implementation <strong>of</strong> this newautomotive regime. With the border effectivelyerased by the agreement, the pact transformed thesegiant enterprises into truly global corporations.Drawing from newly released archival sources,Anastakis demonstrates that, for Canada’s automotivepolicy makers, continentalism was a form<strong>of</strong> economic nationalism. Although the deal representedthe end <strong>of</strong> any notion <strong>of</strong> an indigenousCanadian automotive industry, significant economicgains were achieved for Canadians underthe agreement. Anastakis provides a fresh andalternative view <strong>of</strong> the auto pact that places itfirmly within contemporary debates about thenature <strong>of</strong> free trade as well as North American –and, indeed, global – integration. Far from beinga mere artefact <strong>of</strong> history, the deal was a forebearerto what is now known as ‘globalization.’Dimitry Anastakis is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History at Trent <strong>University</strong>.‘There is no book that even approaches what DimitryAnastakis has written. Auto Pact is the only detailed,archival-based study <strong>of</strong> the deal. The scholarship is soundand the research is very impressive. It is well written andaddresses a critical Canadian industry.’Maureen Appel Molot, Norman Paterson School <strong>of</strong>International Affairs, Carleton <strong>University</strong>Of related interest:Industrial SunsetThe Making <strong>of</strong> North America’s Rust Belt, 1969–1984Steven High0-8020-8528-8 / £18.00 / $30.95 / 2003Negotiating NAFTAExplaining the Outcome in Cultures, Textiles,Autos, and PharmaceuticalsMaryse Robert0-8020-8170-3 / £16.00 / $27.95 / 2000Approx. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / September <strong>2005</strong>16 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3903-0 £35.00 $55.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-3821-2 £20.00 $29.95 CFord Assembly Plant, Windsor, Ontario, c. 1949.20


h i s t o r yDancing around theElephantCreating a Prosperous Canada in an Era <strong>of</strong> AmericanDominance, 1957–1973Bruce MuirheadDiscounted LabourWomen Workers in Canada, 1870–1939Ruth A. Frager and Carmela K. PatriasThemes in Canadian HistoryA generation <strong>of</strong> Canadian historians has viewed themid-twentieth century as an era when Canada gaveground to the United States in most areas <strong>of</strong> foreigntrade policy. In Dancing around the Elephant, BruceMuirhead elegantly and cogently disputes this view.Drawing on extensive archival research,Muirhead notes a number <strong>of</strong> cases where Canadianpolicy makers actually got the better <strong>of</strong> theirAmerican counterparts, such as the Auto Pact, andexamines contextual reasons for the pessimisticview <strong>of</strong> Canada’s trade position and hostile scepticism<strong>of</strong> American dominance: the rise <strong>of</strong> Canadiannationalism, the growth <strong>of</strong> anti-Americanism(based largely on the American role in Vietnam),and the election <strong>of</strong> Pierre Elliot Trudeau as primeminister in 1968. Muirhead also dispels the myththat the poor relationship between Prime MinisterJohn Diefenbaker and President John F. Kennedyserved to wreak havoc on Canadian-American relations,clearly demonstrating its lack <strong>of</strong> effect ontrade patterns.While not disregarding a number <strong>of</strong> trade failures– particularly with the United Kingdom andEurope – Dancing around the Elephant refutes theposition <strong>of</strong> those who question Canada’s economicindependence in the mid-century and will provetremendously controversial with economic historiansand those who study Canadian nationalism.Bruce Muirhead is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>History at Lakehead <strong>University</strong>.The years between 1870 and 1939 were a crucialperiod in the growth <strong>of</strong> industrial capitalism inCanada, as well as a time when many women joinedthe paid workforce. Yet despite the increase inemployment, women faced a difficult struggle ingaining fair remuneration for their work and ingaining access to better jobs. Discounted Labouranalyses the historical roots <strong>of</strong> women’s persistentinequality in the paid labour force. Ruth A. Fragerand Carmela K. Patrias analyse how and whywomen became confined to low-wage jobs, whytheir work was deemed less valuable than men’swork, why many women lacked training, job experience,and union membership, and under whatcircumstances women resisted their subordination.Distinctive earning discrepancies and employmentpatterns have always characterized women’splace in the workforce whether they have been inlow-status, unskilled jobs, or in higher positions.For this reason, Frager and Patrias focus not only onwomen wage-earners but on women as salariedworkers as well. They also analyze the divisionsamong women, examining how class and ethnic orracial differences have intersected with those <strong>of</strong>gender. Discounted Labour is an essential new workfor anyone interested in the historical struggle forgender equality in Canada.Ruth A. Frager is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History at McMaster <strong>University</strong>.Carmela K. Patrias is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History at Brock <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 360 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9016-8 £42.00 $65.00 EApprox. 160 pp / 5 1 /2 x 8 1 /2 / November <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-0828-3 £28.00 $45.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-7818-4 £9.25 $13.95 C21


h i s t o r yJailed for PossessionIllegal Drug Use, Regulation, and Power inCanada, 1920–1961Catherine CarstairsStudies in Gender and HistoryAs rates <strong>of</strong> illegal drug use increase, the debates overdrug policy heat up. While some believe penaltiesshould be harsher, others advocate completedecriminalisation. Certainly, debate over the ‘waron drugs’ is not new. In the early 1920s, as the drivefor Chinese Exclusion gathered steam, Canadiansblamed the Chinese for the growing use <strong>of</strong> opiumand other drugs, and parliamentarians passedextremely harsh drug laws to counter this use. Theselaws remained in place until the 1960s.In Jailed for Possession, Catherine Carstairsexamines the impact <strong>of</strong> these drug laws on users’health, work lives, and relationships. In the middle<strong>of</strong> the century, drug users regularly went to jail forup to two years for possession <strong>of</strong> even the smallestamount <strong>of</strong> opium, morphine, heroin, or cocaine,<strong>of</strong>ten spending more time incarcerated than on thestreet. As enforcement increased and drugs becameharder to obtain, drug use became an increasinglycentral preoccupation, making it almost impossiblefor users to hold down steady jobs, support families,or maintain solid relationships.Jailed for Possession is the first social history <strong>of</strong>drug use in Canada and provides a careful examination<strong>of</strong> drug users and their regulators includingdoctors, social workers, and police <strong>of</strong>ficers.Catherine Carstairs is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Guelph.Household PoliticsMontreal Families and Postwar ReconstructionMagda FahrniStudies in Gender and HistoryThe reconstruction <strong>of</strong> Canadian society in the wake<strong>of</strong> the Second World War had an enormous impacton all aspects <strong>of</strong> public and private life. For familiesin Montreal, reconstruction plans included a stablehome life hinged on social and economic security,female suffrage, welfare-state measures, and a reasonablecost <strong>of</strong> living. In Household Politics, MagdaFahrni examines postwar reconstruction from avariety <strong>of</strong> angles in order to fully convey its significancein the 1940s as differences <strong>of</strong> class, gender,language, religion, and region naturally produceddiffering perspectives.Reconstruction was not simply a matter <strong>of</strong><strong>of</strong>ficial policy. Although the government set many<strong>of</strong> the parameters for public debate, federal projectsdid not inspire a postwar consensus, and familiesalternatively embraced, negotiated, or opposed governmentplans. Through in-depth research from awide variety <strong>of</strong> sources, Fahrni brings together familyhistory, social history, and political history tolook at a wide variety <strong>of</strong> Montreal families –French-speaking and English-speaking; Catholic,Protestant, and Jewish – making Household Politicsa particularly unique and erudite study.Magda Fahrni is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History at l’Université du Québec àMontréal.Approx. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>5 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-9029-X £35.00 $55.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9372-8 £15.00 $24.95 CApprox. 350 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>12 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3849-2 £40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-4888-9 £20.00 $29.95 C22


h i s t o r yNation and HistoryPolish Historians from the Enlightenment to theSecond World WarEdited by Peter Brock, John Stanley,and Piotr J. WróbelHistorical IdentitiesThe Pr<strong>of</strong>essoriate in CanadaEdited by Paul Stortz and E. Lisa PanayotidisThe important scholarly achievements <strong>of</strong> Polishhistorians remain largely unknown outside Poland.In Nation and History, editors Peter Brock, JohnStanley, and Piotr J. Wróbel have brought togethertwenty-four essays on Polish historians from theEnlightenment to the Second World War, an era <strong>of</strong>unparalleled changes in every aspect <strong>of</strong> Polish life.From the late eighteenth century until 1918,the Polish state was partitioned between its threeneighbours: Russia, Prussia (Germany), and Austria.Polish historiography throughout this period tendedto focus on the reasons behind the old Polish state’sdecline and fall. This shaped Polish historians’ vision<strong>of</strong> their country’s past and created the burden <strong>of</strong> notonly having to discuss the state, but the issue <strong>of</strong>‘nation’ – its essence, its shape, and its failure.The contributors to this volume – from Polandand abroad – closely examine the role played byhistorians in both the documenting and shaping <strong>of</strong>Poland’s history. While featuring different approaches,Nation and History serves as the most comprehensivework on Polish historiography written inEnglish.Peter Brock is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in the Department<strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.John Stanley is an independent scholar and a seniorpolicy advisor for the Management Board Secretariat<strong>of</strong> the Government <strong>of</strong> Ontario.Piotr J. Wróbel is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> History and the Konstanty ReynertChair <strong>of</strong> Polish History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.As the intellectual engines <strong>of</strong> the university, pr<strong>of</strong>essorshold considerable authority and play an importantrole in society. By nature <strong>of</strong> their occupation,they are the agents <strong>of</strong> intellectual culture in Canada.Historical Identities is a new collection <strong>of</strong> essaysexamining the history <strong>of</strong> the pr<strong>of</strong>essoriate inCanada. Framing the volume with the question,‘What was it like to be a pr<strong>of</strong>essor?’ editors PaulStortz and E. Lisa Panayotidis, along with anesteemed group <strong>of</strong> Canadian historians, strive touncover and analyze variables and contexts – suchas background, education, economics, politics, gender,and ethnicity – in the lives <strong>of</strong> academicsthroughout Canada’s history. The contributors takean in-depth approach to topics such as academicfreedom, pr<strong>of</strong>essors and the state, faculty development,discipline construction and academic cultures,religion, biography, gender and faculty wives,images <strong>of</strong> pr<strong>of</strong>essors, and background and childhoodexperiences.Including the best and most recent criticalresearch in the field <strong>of</strong> the social history <strong>of</strong> highereducation and pr<strong>of</strong>essors, Historical Identities examinesfundamental and challenging topics, issues,and arguments on the role and nature <strong>of</strong> intellectualismin Canada.Paul Stortz is an instructor in the Faculty <strong>of</strong>Communication and Culture at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Calgary.E. Lisa Panayotidis is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theFaculty <strong>of</strong> Education at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Calgary.Approx. 420 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>10 mapsCloth ISBN 0-8020-9036-2 £48.00 $75.00 EApprox. 450 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>9 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-9000-1 £42.00 $65.00 E23


e d u c at i o ne d u c at i o nE-CritDigital Media, Critical Theory, and the HumanitiesMarcel O’GormanIn E-Crit, Marcel O’Gorman takes an ambitious andprovocative look at how university scholarship, pedagogy,and curricula might be transformed to suit adigital culture. Arguing that universities were foundedon the logic <strong>of</strong> print culture, O’Gorman sets outto reinvent the academic apparatus, constructing ahybrid methodology that draws on avant-garde art,deconstructive theory, cognitive science, andthe work <strong>of</strong> painter and poet William Blake.O’Gorman explores the ways inwhich digital media might help torestore the critical, intellectual purpose<strong>of</strong> higher education, whichhas been repressed by the technocraticstructures that dominate the modernuniversity. He argues that the revolutionary,socio-critical impetus that spurred deconstructivetheory and transformed the humanitieswas lost in the initial attempts to digitize the literarycanon and demonstrate the convergence <strong>of</strong>critical theory and hypertext. Humanities disciplines,he argues, must reposition themselvesthrough the invention <strong>of</strong> humanities-based interdisciplinaryprograms capable <strong>of</strong> adapting to thepost-print vicissitudes <strong>of</strong> a digital culture. E-Crit isthus essential reading for anyone concerned withthe practice – and future – <strong>of</strong> the humanities inhigher education.Marcel O’Gorman is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English and the director <strong>of</strong> theElectronic Critique Program at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Detroit Mercy.Learning to PractisePr<strong>of</strong>essional Education in Historical andContemporary PerspectiveEdited by Ruby Heap, Wyn Millar, and Elizabeth Smyth<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa <strong>Press</strong>How does one become a pr<strong>of</strong>essional? Learning toPractise is an interdisciplinary collection that <strong>of</strong>fersnew insights into that fundamental question.Employing a wide variety <strong>of</strong> approaches and methodologies,the original and thematically linked essaysdiscuss such problematic issues as the most appropriatesite for pr<strong>of</strong>essional education, the proper focusand content <strong>of</strong> the initial and on-going preparation<strong>of</strong> pr<strong>of</strong>essionals, and the nature<strong>of</strong> both continuity and change inpr<strong>of</strong>essional education. In the process,they raise challenging questions aboutthe development <strong>of</strong> pr<strong>of</strong>essional educationin Canada and elsewhere from theearly nineteenth century to the presentday, in fields as diverse as thehealth sciences, law, engineering,social work, theology, and universityteaching.An essential resource for those studying thepr<strong>of</strong>essions, Learning to Practise will appeal to practitioners,pr<strong>of</strong>essional associations, administrators,and faculty in pr<strong>of</strong>essional schools, and to all thoseinterested in the past, present, and future state <strong>of</strong>the pr<strong>of</strong>essions.Ruby Heap is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa.Wyn Millar is an independent scholar living inLondon, Ontario.Elizabeth Smyth is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Curriculum Teaching and Learningat the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education <strong>of</strong>the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Approx. 200 pp / 6 3 /4 x 9 3 /4 / December <strong>2005</strong>30 halftones; 2 figuresCloth ISBN 0-8020-9037-0 £32.00 $50.00 EApprox. 220 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>Paper ISBN 0-7766-0605-0 £22.50 $35.00 C24


e d u c at i o nTaking Public Universities SeriouslyEdited by Frank Iacobucci and Carolyn TuohyIn 2004, the Government <strong>of</strong> Ontario announced acomprehensive review <strong>of</strong> the design and funding <strong>of</strong> theprovince’s post-secondary education system, chaired byformer premier Bob Rae. The issues and opportunitiesconfronting Ontario’s and Canada’s research universitiesare by no means unique. Many industrializedcountries have been forced over the last several years torespond to challenges in higher education.In anticipation <strong>of</strong> the Rae review, the <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> convened a conference in December <strong>of</strong>2004 to focus on the evolving role <strong>of</strong> the publicuniversity in industrialized democracies, and theimplications <strong>of</strong> this role for creating optimal governmentpolicy. The conference involved leadingpolicy makers, university administrators, and scholarsfrom Canada and abroad. Taking PublicUniversities Seriously includes all the papers given atthis conference, and is enhanced by a comprehensiveintroduction by two <strong>of</strong> Canada’s most prominentuniversity administrators, Frank Iacobucci andCarolyn Tuohy.Topics discussed include the rationale for fundingpublic universities, the role <strong>of</strong> the public university,the increased competition between higher educationand other government priorities, the properrole <strong>of</strong> tuition in the funding <strong>of</strong> higher education,and the models for student assistance if tuition feesincrease. Anyone concerned with the future <strong>of</strong> publicuniversities will find this book essential readingand a touchstone for future discussions.The Honourable Frank Iacobucci is InterimPresident <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> and a formerSupreme Court <strong>of</strong> Canada justice.Carolyn Tuohy is Vice-President, Government andInstitutional Relations, <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.ContributorsBenjamin Alarie • Nicholas Barr • BahramBekhradnia • Michelle Broderick • David M.Cameron • H. Lorne Carmichael • Judith Chadwick• John R.G. Challis • Ronald J. Daniels • PeterDawkins • David Duff • David Dyzenhaus • RossFinnie • Jane Gaskell • Meric S. Gertler • AndrewGreen • Martin Hayden • Ruth Hayhoe • EdwardIacobucci • Glen A. Jones • Daniel W. Lang •Donald N. Langenberg • James Milway • V. LynnMeek • Stephen Parker • W. Craig Riddell • ArthurRipstein • Steven J. Rosenstone • José Sigouin •Andrew A. Sorensen • Lorne Sossin • Janice GrossStein • Arthur Sweetman • Michael J. Trebilcock •Tara Vinodrai • Melissa S. Williams • Ross Williams• David A. Wolfe • Qiang ZhaOf related interest:Educational Outcomes for the CanadianWorkplaceNew Frameworks for Policy and ResearchEdited by Jane Gaskell and Kjell Rubenson0-8020-8845-7 / £32.00 / $50.00 / 2004Mergers in Higher EducationLessons from Theory and ExperienceJulia Eastman and Daniel Lang0-8020-3525-6 / £55.00 / $78.00 / 2001633 pp / 6 x 9 / AvailablePaper ISBN 0-8020-9376-0 £35.00 $55.00 C25


n at i v e s t u d i e s‘Pictures Bring Us Messages’ /Sinaakssiiksi aohtsimaahpihkookiyaawaPhotographs and Histories from the Kainai NationAlison K. Brown and Laura Peers, with members <strong>of</strong> the Kainai NationIn 1925, Beatrice Blackwood <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Oxford’s Pitt Rivers Museum took thirty-three photographs<strong>of</strong> Kainai people on the Blood IndianReserve in Alberta as part <strong>of</strong> an anthropologicalproject. In 2001, staff from the museum took copies<strong>of</strong> these photographs back to the Kainai andworked with community members to try to gain abetter understanding <strong>of</strong> Kainai perspectives on theimages. ‘Pictures Bring Us Messages’ is about thatprocess, about why museum pr<strong>of</strong>essionals andarchivists must work with such communities, andabout some <strong>of</strong> the considerations that need to beaddressed when doing so.Exploring the meanings that historic photographshave for source communities, Alison K.Brown, Laura Peers, and members <strong>of</strong> the KainaiNation develop and demonstrate culturally appropriateways <strong>of</strong> researching, curating, archiving,accessing, and otherwise using museum and archivalcollections. They describe the process <strong>of</strong> relationshipbuilding that has been crucial to theresearch and the current and future benefits <strong>of</strong> thisnew relationship. While based in Canada, thedynamics <strong>of</strong> the ‘Pictures Bring Us Messages’ projectis relevant to indigenous peoples and heritage institutionsaround the world.Alison K. Brown is the research manager for humanhistory at Glasgow Museums.Laura Peers is a lecturer and curator with the PittRivers Museum and the School <strong>of</strong> Anthropology atthe <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Oxford.Approx. 420 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2005</strong>45 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-9006-0 £48.00 $75.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-4891-9 £20.00 $29.95 C‘“Pictures Bring Us Messages” marks a serious advance inresearch. There are regrettably far too few such collaborativeprojects, although the need has been identified for manyyears. This book is unique, innovative, and valuable, withscholarship <strong>of</strong> the highest standard. It establishes that it ispossible to bridge a divide – perceived and sustained bymuseums, archives, historians, and others – if Indigenousethics and protocols, and the needs <strong>of</strong> the source community,are respected.’Sarah Carter, Department <strong>of</strong> History, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Calgary‘This book is a major contribution to research into museum/archives collections and how the people who work at theseinstitutions can reach out to and work productively and collaborativelywith Aboriginal peoples. The photos – the focus<strong>of</strong> the book – are excellent, and the text is carefully written,thoughtful, and analytical.’Patricia McCormack, School <strong>of</strong> Native Studies, <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> AlbertaAatsp’to’aawa / Head Chief Shot on Both Sides. Photograph byBeatrice Blackwood. (Pitt Rivers Museum, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Oxford,PRM. BB.A3.52.)26


n at i v e s t u d i e sApostle to the InuitThe Journals and Ethnographic Notes <strong>of</strong>Edmund James Peck – The Baffin Years, 1894–1905Edited by Frédéric Laugrand, Jarich Oosten,and François TrudelApostle to the Inuit presents the journals and ethnographicalnotes <strong>of</strong> Reverend Edmund James Peck,an Anglican missionary who opened the first missionamong the Inuit <strong>of</strong> Baffin Island in 1894 andbecame known to the Inuit as ‘Uqammaq,’ the onewho talks well. His colleagues knew him as ‘Apostleamong the Eskimo.’Peck’s diaries <strong>of</strong> the period focus on his missionarywork and the adoption <strong>of</strong> Christianity by theInuit. He conducted extensive research on Inuit oraltraditions and this book presents several detailedverbatim accounts <strong>of</strong> shamanic traditions and practises.Apostle to the Inuit demonstrates how a Christianmissionary who was bitterly opposed to shamanism,became a devoted researcher <strong>of</strong> this complex tradition.Editors Frédéric Laugrand, Jarich Oosten, andFrançois Trudel highlight the relationships betweenEuropeans and Inuit and present a selection <strong>of</strong> fascinatingdrawings made by the Inuit. The book <strong>of</strong>fersimportant new data on the history <strong>of</strong> the missionsamong the Inuit as well as on the history <strong>of</strong> Inuitreligion and the anthropological study <strong>of</strong> Inuit oraltraditions.Frédéric Laugrand is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Anthropology at Université Laval.Cultures and EcologiesA Native Fishing Conflict on the Saugeen-BrucePeninsulaEdwin C. KoenigIn 1993, an Ontario Court decision recognizedNative rights to harvest fish in the waters aroundthe Saugeen-Bruce Peninsula, sparking sometimesviolent confrontation between Native and non-Native fishers about how these rights would betranslated into equitable resource access for all.In Cultures and Ecologies, Edwin C. Koenigapplies ethnohistorical and ethnographic approachesto the conflict, exploring both historical andrecent fisheries activity in the region. In an effort toclarify particularly contentious issues, he providesinsights into how the conflict was entangled withcultural perspectives on the definition <strong>of</strong> ‘conservation’and how each side had various interpretations<strong>of</strong> the conservation mandate.Based on substantial ethnographic fieldworkand featuring rich interviews with First Nationsmembers, Cultures and Ecologies links perspectiveson fishing conflict issues to local community revitalizationefforts, where there is also a strong interestin articulating traditions and traditional knowledge.It encourages an open dialogue on this andother aboriginal resource conflicts.Edwin C. Koenig is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Anthropology at St. Thomas<strong>University</strong>.Jarich Oosten is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Cultural Anthropology and Development Sociologyat Universiteit Leiden.François Trudel is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Anthropology at Université Laval.Approx. 420 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>30 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-9042-7 £48.00 $75.00 EApprox. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>3 mapsCloth ISBN 0-8020-8847-3 £32.00 $50.00 E27


n at i v e s t u d i e s‘Hang Onto These Words’Johnny David’s Delgamuukw Land Claims EvidenceEdited by Antonia MillsIn 1985 and 1986, ninety-year-old Witsuwit’enChief, Maxlaxlex – or Johnny David as he is betterknown – was the first Witsuwit’en to giveCommission Evidence in the Delgamuukw landclaims case in which the Witsuwit’en and Gitxsan<strong>of</strong> Northern British Columbia were battling for titleto their traditional territories.‘Hang Onto These Words’ presents the actualtranscripts <strong>of</strong> the questions and answers betweenlawyers working on both sides and this knowledgeableand outspoken Native elder who spoke in hisown language and whose words were then translatedby an interpreter into English. The evidence wasgiven in a makeshift courtroom set up in David’sown home. Anthropologist Antonia Mills was presentduring these proceedings, and in this book, sheintroduces and contextualizes the evidence withinthe Delgamuukw case.In his testimony, David provides a rich description<strong>of</strong> the Witsuwit’en way <strong>of</strong> life as well as theinjustices suffered at the hands <strong>of</strong> Indian agents andsettlers. He ends his testimony saying, “If you hangon to these words, everything will be all right.” Thechallenge <strong>of</strong> hearing his voice, and using it to negotiatethe meaning and substance <strong>of</strong> Aboriginalrights remains unresolved and resonant.Antonia Mills is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the FirstNations Studies Program at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Northern British Columbia.Maps <strong>of</strong> ExperienceThe Anchoring <strong>of</strong> Land to Story in SecwepemcDiscourseAndie Diane PalmerAnthropological HorizonsIn many North American indigenous cultures, historyand stories are passed down, not by the writtenword, but by oral tradition. In Maps <strong>of</strong> Experience,Andie Diane Palmer draws on stories recorded duringtravels through Secwepemc – or Shuswap –hunting and gathering territory with members <strong>of</strong>the Alkali Lake Reserve in Interior British Columbia.Palmer examines how the various kinds <strong>of</strong> talkallow knowledge to be carried forward, reconstituted,reflected upon, enriched, and ultimatelyrelocated by and for new interlocutors in new experiencesand places.Maps <strong>of</strong> Experience demonstrates how theSecwepemc engagement in the traditional practices<strong>of</strong> hunting and gathering create shared lived experiencesbetween individuals, while recreating a knownsocial context in which existing knowledge <strong>of</strong> theland may be effectively shared and acted upon.When the narratives <strong>of</strong> fellow travellers are pooledthrough discursive exchange, they serve as what canbe considered a ‘map <strong>of</strong> experience,’ providing thebasis <strong>of</strong> shared understanding and social relationshipto territory. Palmer’s analysis <strong>of</strong> ways <strong>of</strong> listeningand conveying information within the AlkaliLake community brings new insights into indigenouslanguage and culture, as well as to the study <strong>of</strong>oral history, ethnohistory, experimental ethnography,and discourse analysis.Andie Diane Palmer is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Anthropology at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Alberta.Approx. 400 pp / 6 x 9 / September <strong>2005</strong>10 halftones, 3 mapsCloth ISBN 0-8020-3746-1 £42.00 $65.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8534-2 £21.50 $32.95 CApprox. 260 pp / 6 x 9 / September <strong>2005</strong>18 halftones, 1 line art, 7 mapsCloth ISBN 0-8020-3559-0 £32.00 $50.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8435-4 £15.00 $24.95 C28


i ta l i a n s t u d i e sMigration ItalyThe Art <strong>of</strong> Talking Back in a Destination CultureGraziella Parati<strong>Toronto</strong> Italian StudiesIn terms <strong>of</strong> migration, Italy is <strong>of</strong>ten thought <strong>of</strong> as asource country – a place from which people camerather than one to which people go. However, in thepast few decades, Italy has indeed become a destinationfor many people from poor or war-torn countriesseeking a better life in a stable environment. GraziellaParati’s Migration Italy examines immigration to Italyin the past twenty years, and explores the processes <strong>of</strong>cultural hybridization that have occurred.Working from a cultural studies viewpoint,Parati constructs a theoretical framework for discussingItaly as a country <strong>of</strong> immigration. She givesspecial attention to immigrant literature, positingthat it functions as an act <strong>of</strong> resistance, a means totalk back to the laws that regulate the lives <strong>of</strong>migrants. Parati also examines Italian cinema, demonstratinghow native and non-native filmmakersalike create parallels between old and new migrations,complicating the definitions <strong>of</strong> sameness anddifference.These definitions and the complexities inherentin the different cultural, legal, and political positions<strong>of</strong> Italy’s people are at the heart <strong>of</strong> Migration Italy, aunique work <strong>of</strong> immense importance for understandingsociety in both modern-day Italy and,indeed, the entire European continent.Graziella Parati is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>French and Italian, the Comparative LiteratureProgram, and the Women’s and Gender StudiesProgram at Dartmouth College.‘Migration Italy is a ground-breaking work that surveys,documents, and theorizes the literary and cinematic production<strong>of</strong> migrants writing and working in Italy. GraziellaParati’s knowledge <strong>of</strong> this production is encyclopedic, and hercommand <strong>of</strong> the Italian debates about immigration is capillaryin its precision and finely documented.’Barbara Spackman, Department <strong>of</strong> Italian Studies andDepartment <strong>of</strong> Comparative Literature, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>California, Berkeley‘In Migration Italy, Graziella Parati manages the difficulttask <strong>of</strong> unifying film, literature, law, and autobiographyrelative to migrants in Italy. In so doing, she makes a verysignificant contribution to the field <strong>of</strong> Italian studies andimmigration studies. In fact, the book’s originality in thisnascent field <strong>of</strong> scholarship is its greatest strength.’H. Marie Orton, Division <strong>of</strong> Language and Literature,Truman State <strong>University</strong>Of related interest:Broken Time, Fragmented SpaceA Cultural Map for Postwar ItalyAnna Maria Torriglia0-8020-3604-X / £28.00 / $53.00 / 2002Eh, Paesan!Being Italian in <strong>Toronto</strong>Nicholas DeMaria Harney0-8020-8099-5 / £12.50 / $19.95 / 1998Approx. 260 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3924-3 £35.00 $55.00 E29


c u lt u r a l s t u d i e sThe Moral Economy<strong>of</strong> CitiesShaping Good CitizensEvelyn S. RuppertImages at WarIllustrated Periodicals and Constructed NationsMichèle MartinCultural SpacesWhat makes a good city? This question has longpreoccupied groups interested and involved in themaking and remaking <strong>of</strong> city spaces. In The MoralEconomy <strong>of</strong> Cities, Evelyn S. Ruppert contends thatthe vision <strong>of</strong> the ‘good city’ embraced by pr<strong>of</strong>essionalsin the business <strong>of</strong> city building recognizesthe interests <strong>of</strong> a dominant public, namely middleclass consumers, <strong>of</strong>fice workers, tourists, and families.This vision stigmatizes certain members <strong>of</strong> thepublic like street youth, panhandlers, discount- andlow-income shoppers; and the language used toextol the virtues <strong>of</strong> the good city inherently moralizessocial conduct in the city.Using the mid-1990s redevelopment <strong>of</strong> theYonge-Dundas intersection in downtown <strong>Toronto</strong>as a case study, Ruppert examines the language <strong>of</strong>planners, urban designers, architects, and marketinganalysts to reveal the extent to which moralizationlegitimizes these pr<strong>of</strong>essions in the public eye andbuttresses the very projects they produce. Ruppert’sconclusion that economic practices are not freefrom moral investment encourages the considerabletask <strong>of</strong> re-examining the implications <strong>of</strong> city planningand development worldwide. The MoralEconomy <strong>of</strong> Cities is mandatory reading for urbanstudies scholars and practitioners, and their critics.Evelyn S. Ruppert is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Sociology at Trent <strong>University</strong>.Using the press coverage <strong>of</strong> the Franco-Prussian waras a starting point, Michèle Martin’s Images at Warexamines nineteenth-century illustrated periodicalspublished in France, Germany, England, andCanada (with references also to Italy and the UnitedStates), and argues that periodicals during this periodworked to reinforce particular national identities.Images in periodicals played an essential role inhow the concept <strong>of</strong> nationalism was expressed andreproduced, usually by pitting cultures and countriesagainst one another. These illustrated periodicalshelped to shape nations where nations had notpreviously existed – such as with Germany, Italy,and Canada, which were only just coming intotheir own as states. In war, Martin observes, thesedocuments also represented a non-verbal method <strong>of</strong>communicating emotionally trying, politically challenging,and <strong>of</strong>tentimes contradictory informationto the public, literate and non-literate alike.The history <strong>of</strong> nineteenth-century illustratedpapers underscores their legitimacy as a form <strong>of</strong>journalism. They were more than a commodityproduced for pr<strong>of</strong>it; they <strong>of</strong>fered serious reflectionand commentary on the times designed by editorsto have specific effects on the readers. Images at Waris a much-needed study <strong>of</strong> this early news mediumand its part in the construction <strong>of</strong> nationalism inthe midst <strong>of</strong> war.Michèle Martin is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School <strong>of</strong>Journalism and Communication at Carleton<strong>University</strong>.Approx. 400 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>17 halftones; 1 figure; 8 tables; 2 mapsCloth ISBN 0-8020-3886-7 £42.00 $65.00 EApprox. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>30 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3757-7 £28.00 $45.00 E30


gle int e r a rl y i nS t ue rd ei es s tAfter Green GablesL.M. Montgomery’s Letters to Ephraim Weber, 1916–1941Edited by Hildi Froese Tiessen and Paul Gerard TiessenEphraim Weber (1870–1956) was a struggling youngwriter when he began corresponding with L.M.Montgomery (1874–1942) in 1902, six years beforeshe published her first novel. Weber’s initial letter wasthat <strong>of</strong> an admirer. Montgomery responded warmly,and the two quickly began a correspondence thatbecame an intellectual mainstay for both <strong>of</strong> them overthe following forty years. After Green Gables is a fascinatingcollection <strong>of</strong> letters sent by Montgomery toWeber between 1916 and 1941. This was the period<strong>of</strong> Montgomery’s greatest literary success, but privatelyshe was deeply troubled by her unhappy marriage.The letters, revealing an intense social and intellectualdynamic between Montgomery andWeber, cover, among other subjects, their strong differences<strong>of</strong> opinion on matters such as pacifism andwar and their joint rejection <strong>of</strong> the effects <strong>of</strong> literarymodernism. Drawing on Weber’s voluminous correspondencewith other Canadian figures – particularlyjournalist Wilfred Eggleston – editors Hildi FroeseTiessen and Paul Gerard Tiessen skilfully illuminateWeber’s interaction with Montgomery, especially inmatters concerning literature and culture, religionand politics, and education and entertainment. Theeditors provide various readings <strong>of</strong> Weber, based onhis aspirations as a writer, his active participation inthe Canadian culture <strong>of</strong> his day (including his friendshipswith hometown schoolmate William LyonMackenzie King and community leader LeslieStaebler), and his heritage as a Mennonite.After Green Gables brings to life a distinctlyCanadian literary and intellectual association <strong>of</strong> writers.Montgomery’s letters to a man committed to writingand to the cultural development <strong>of</strong> Canada revealher intellectual preoccupations and her personal hardships.This is an essential text for Montgomery fansand scholars as well as readers with an interest in thedevelopment <strong>of</strong> Canada’s literary culture.Hildi Froese Tiessen is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English and the Institute <strong>of</strong> Peaceand Conflict Studies at Conrad Grebel <strong>University</strong>College, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Waterloo.Paul Gerard Tiessen is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> English and Film Studies at Wilfrid Laurier<strong>University</strong>.‘After Green Gables is an outstanding contribution to thefield <strong>of</strong> Montgomery studies. Hildi Froese Tiessen and PaulGerard Tiessen have undertaken the painstaking task <strong>of</strong> deciphering,transcribing, and annotating L.M. Montgomery’sletters to Ephraim Weber, which shed light onto an intriguingrange <strong>of</strong> topics <strong>of</strong> interest to both. This book is exciting,timely, and important.’Irene Gammel, Department <strong>of</strong> English, Ryerson<strong>University</strong>Of related interest:In TranslationThe Gabrielle Roy–Joyce MarshallCorrespondenceEdited by Jane Everett0-8020-3908-1 / £32.00 / $50.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Marian EngelLife in LettersEdited by Christl Verduyn and Kathleen Garay0-8020-3687-2 / £25.00 / $40.00 / 2004Approx. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>4 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3607-4 £45.00 $70.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-8459-1 £22.50 $34.95 C31


l i t e r a r y s t u d i e sPolyglot JoyceFictions <strong>of</strong> TranslationPatrick O’NeillFitting SentencesIdentity in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century PrisonNarrativesJason HaslamJames Joyce’s writings have been translated hundreds<strong>of</strong> times into dozens <strong>of</strong> different languages.Given the multitude <strong>of</strong> interpretive possibilitieswithin these translations, Patrick O’Neill arguesthat the entire corpus <strong>of</strong> translations <strong>of</strong> Joyce’s work– indeed, <strong>of</strong> any author’s – can be regarded as asingle and coherent object <strong>of</strong> study. Polyglot Joycedemonstrates that all the translations <strong>of</strong> a work,both in a given language and in all languages, canbe considered and approached as a single polyglotmacrotext.To respond to, and usefully deconstruct, amacrotext <strong>of</strong> this kind requires what O’Neill calls a‘transtextual reading,’ a reading across the originalliterary text and as many as possible <strong>of</strong> its translations.Such a comparative reading explores textsthat are at once different and the same, and thussimultaneously involves both intertextual and intratextualconcerns. While such a model applies inprinciple to the work <strong>of</strong> any author, Joyce’s workfrom Dubliners to Finnegans Wake provides a particularlyappropriate and challenging set <strong>of</strong> texts fordiscussion. Polyglot Joyce illustrates how a translationextends rather than distorts its original, openingmany possibilities not only into the work <strong>of</strong>Joyce, but into the work <strong>of</strong> any author whose workhas been translated.Patrick O’Neill is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>German Language and Literature at Queen’s<strong>University</strong>.Fitting Sentences is an analysis <strong>of</strong> writings by prisonersfrom the nineteenth and twentieth centuries inNorth America, South Africa, and Europe. JasonHaslam examines the ways in which these writersreconfigure subjectivity and its relationship withsocial power structures, especially the prison itself,while also detailing the relationship between prisonand slave narratives. Specifically, Haslam reads textsby Henry David Thoreau, Harriet Jacobs, OscarWilde, Martin Luther King, Jr., Constance Lytton,and Breyten Breytenbach to find the commonalitiesand divergences in their stories.While the relationship between prison andsubjectivity has been mapped by Michel Foucaultand defined as ‘a strategic distribution <strong>of</strong> elements’that act ‘to exercise a power <strong>of</strong> normalization,’Haslam demonstrates some <strong>of</strong> the complex connectionsand dissonances between these elements andthe resistances to them. Each work was writteneither while its author was imprisoned (or enslaved)or shortly after his or her release, and each showshow carceral practices can be used to attack a variety<strong>of</strong> identifications, be they sexual, racial, economic,or any <strong>of</strong> a variety <strong>of</strong> social categories. Byanalysing the works <strong>of</strong> specific prison writers butnot being limited to a single locale or narrow timespan, Fitting Sentences <strong>of</strong>fers a significant historicaland global overview <strong>of</strong> a unique genre in literature.Jason Haslam is a postdoctoral fellow in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> NotreDame.Approx. 340 pp / 6 x 9 / August <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3897-2 £35.00 $55.00 EApprox. 270 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3833-6 £40.00 $60.00 E32


gle int e r a rl y i nS t ue rd ei es s tHarold Pinter and theTwilight <strong>of</strong> ModernismVarun BegleyThe Frankfurt School’s discourse on modernismhas seldom been linked to contemporary drama,though the questions <strong>of</strong> aesthetics and politicsexplored by T.W. Adorno and others seem especiallygermane to the plays <strong>of</strong> Harold Pinter, whichspan high and low cultural forms and move freelyfrom hermetic modernism to political engagement.Examining plays from 1958 to 1996, Varun Begley’sHarold Pinter and the Twilight <strong>of</strong> Modernism arguesthat Pinter’s work simultaneously embodies themodernist principle <strong>of</strong> negation and the more fluidaesthetics <strong>of</strong> the postmodern.Pinter is arguably one <strong>of</strong> the most popular andperplexing <strong>of</strong> modern dramatists writing in English.His plays prefigured, then chronicled, the crumblingdivide between modernism and its historical‘others’: popular entertainment, politically committedart, and technological mass culture. Begleysheds new light on Pinter’s work by applying themethods and problems <strong>of</strong> cultural studies discourse.Viewing his plays as a series <strong>of</strong> responses to fundamentalaesthetic and political questions withinmodernism, Begley argues that, collectively, theynarrate a prehistory <strong>of</strong> the postmodern.The George BernardShaw PapersBritish Libraray Catalogue <strong>of</strong> Additions to theManuscript SeriesEdited by Ann SummersThe British LibraryThis important new catalogue contains descriptionsand detailed indexing <strong>of</strong> the correspondence andpapers <strong>of</strong> George Bernard Shaw and his wifeCharlotte, acquired by the British Library in thecourse <strong>of</strong> seven decades. The volume is made up <strong>of</strong>two principal series <strong>of</strong> letters, one bequeathed byShaw himself, and the other purchased from hisresiduary legatees. These are supplemented byrelated items also held by the British Library’sDepartment <strong>of</strong> Manuscripts, including Shaw lettersfound amongst the personal papers <strong>of</strong> his variouscorrespondents, documents relating to publication,translation and performance <strong>of</strong> his works from thearchive <strong>of</strong> the Society <strong>of</strong> Authors, scripts <strong>of</strong> theplays submitted for licensing to the LordChamberlain and thirty-seven volumes <strong>of</strong> correspondenceand papers <strong>of</strong> Charlotte Shaw. A list <strong>of</strong>the British Library’s collection <strong>of</strong> books owned byShaw, many <strong>of</strong> them privately printed, forms anappendix to the catalogue.Ann Summers was a former Curator <strong>of</strong> Manuscriptsat the British Library and is currently a curator atthe Women’s Library in London.Varun Begley is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at the College <strong>of</strong> Williamand Mary.Approx. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3887-5 £35.00 $55.00 EApprox. 300 pages / 6 1 /4 x 9 1 /4 / August <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-7123-4887-5 $100.00 EDistribution Rights for North and South America Only. Other RightsHeld by the British Library.33


l i t e r a r y S t u d i e sThe Secular Scripture andOther Writings on CriticalTheory, 1976–1991Edited by Joseph Adamson and Jean WilsonCollected Works <strong>of</strong> Northrop Frye, Volume 18Northrop Frye’s The Secular Scripture was first publishedin 1976 and was soon recognized as one <strong>of</strong>his most influential works, reflecting an extensivedevelopment <strong>of</strong> Frye’s thoughts about romance as aliterary form. This new edition in the CollectedWorks <strong>of</strong> Northrop Frye series brings The SecularScripture together with thirty shorter pieces pertainingto literary theory and criticism from the lastfifteen years <strong>of</strong> Frye’s life.Frye’s study illuminates the enduring attractionand deep human significance <strong>of</strong> the romance genre inall its forms. He provides a unique perspective onpopular fiction and culture and shows how romanceforms have, by their very structural and conventionalfeatures, an ability to address both specific social concernsand deep and fundamental human concernsthat span time and place. In distinguishing popularfrom elite culture, Frye insists that they are both ultimatelytwo aspects <strong>of</strong> the same “human compulsionto create in the face <strong>of</strong> chaos.” The additional latewritings reflect Frye’s sense at the time that he wasworking “toward some kind <strong>of</strong> final statement,”which eventually saw the light <strong>of</strong> day, only monthsbefore his death, as Words with Power (1990).Joseph Adamson is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> English and the Comparative Literature Programat McMaster <strong>University</strong>.Jean Wilson is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Modern Languages and Linguisticsand the Comparative Literature Program atMcMaster <strong>University</strong>.Sanity, Madness,TransformationThe Psyche in RomanticismRoss WoodmanEdited and with an introduction by Joel FaflakIn Sanity, Madness, Transformation, Ross Woodman<strong>of</strong>fers an extended reflection on the relationshipbetween sanity and madness in Romantic literature.Woodman is one <strong>of</strong> the field’s most distinguishedauthorities on psychoanalysis and romanticism.Engaging with the works <strong>of</strong> Northrop Frye, JacquesDerrida, Sigmund Freud, and Carl Jung, he arguesthat madness is essential to the writings <strong>of</strong> WilliamBlake, William Wordsworth, and Percy Shelley, andthat it has been likewise fundamental to the emergence<strong>of</strong> the modern subject in psychoanalysis andliterary theory. For Frye, madness threatens humanism,whereas for Derrida its relationship is morecomplex, and more productive. Both approachesare informed by Freudian and Jungian responses tothe psyche, which, in turn, are drawn from an earlierRomantic ambivalence about madness.This work, which began as a collection <strong>of</strong>Woodman’s essays assembled by colleague Joel Faflak,quickly evolved into a new book <strong>of</strong> original compositionsthat approach Romanticism from a uniqueanalytic perspective by returning madness to itsproper place in the creative psyche. Sanity, Madness,Transformation is a provocative hybrid <strong>of</strong> theory, literarycriticism, and autobiography and is yet anotherdecisive step in a distinguished academic career.Ross Woodman is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> WesternOntario.Joel Faflak is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Western Ontario.Approx. 620 pp / 6 1 /8 x 9 1 /4 / November <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3945-6 £65.00 $100.00 EApprox. 270 pp / 6 x 9 / September <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3841-7 £40.00 $60.00 E34


gle int e r a rl y i nS t ue rd ei es s tNarrative InterludesMusical Tableaux in Eighteenth-Century French TextsTili Boon Cuillé<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> Romance SeriesCulture and Authority inthe BaroqueEdited by Massimo Ciavolella and Patrick ColemanUCLA Clark Memorial Library SeriesFrench authors in the eighteenth century traditionallyused music to enhance literary love scenes.Jean-Jacques Rousseau considerably expanded contemporarynotions <strong>of</strong> music’s expressive power, yetdistinguished between the capacity <strong>of</strong> differentnations and sexes to wield it. Rousseau’s controversialstatements led his readers to interrogate therelationship between music, meaning, and morality.They depicted their resistance to his claims in musicaltableaux, or musical performances staged for abeholder inscribed within the text. Tili BoonCuillé’s Narrative Interludes chronicles the emergence<strong>of</strong> the musical tableau in French literature.Spanning the latter half <strong>of</strong> the eighteenth century,Cuillé brings the cultural discourse on musicand musicians to bear on the works <strong>of</strong> Diderot,Cazotte, Beaumarchais, Charrière, Cottin,Krüdener, and Staël. She turns attention from therepresentation <strong>of</strong> music to its moral repercussions,from aesthetic innovation to social resistance, andfrom national to gender politics. Juxtaposing preeminentand popular writers, Cuillé reads their fictionalworks in light <strong>of</strong> their treatises on art andsociety, exploring the significance <strong>of</strong> musical tableauxthat have previously fallen outside the scope<strong>of</strong> literary analysis but that revolutionized the formand function <strong>of</strong> music in the text.Tili Boon Cuillé is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Romance Languages and Literaturesat Washington <strong>University</strong> in St. Louis.The cultural forms <strong>of</strong>ten referred to as ‘baroque’ arethe most spectacular expressions <strong>of</strong> early modernEurope’s effort to mediate between knowledge andpower at a time when political authority was beingcentralized, the authority <strong>of</strong> religion underminedby the division <strong>of</strong> Christianity, and science andpoetry were seen increasingly as rival forms <strong>of</strong> intellectualauthority. Culture and Authority in theBaroque explores the baroque across a wide range <strong>of</strong>disciplines, from poetics to politics, to the rituals <strong>of</strong>musical, dramatic, and religious performance.The essays in this collection span what hasbeen called the ‘baroque crescent’ stretching fromSpain through Italy to Russia, but they also bringShakespeare and English cosmological poetry intoproductive dialogue with continental Europe in thereinterpretation <strong>of</strong> baroque world-views. The editors,Massimo Ciavolella and Patrick Coleman,along with a group <strong>of</strong> eminent scholars from acrossthe disciplinary and geographic spectrum, investigatebaroque modes <strong>of</strong> persuasion with carefulattention to the complexity <strong>of</strong> particular culturalphenomena and their political and aesthetic implications.This collection redefines the way thebaroque will be understood.Massimo Ciavolella is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in, and chair <strong>of</strong>,the Department <strong>of</strong> Italian at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>California, Los Angeles.Patrick Coleman is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>French and Francophone Studies at the <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> California, Los Angeles.Approx. 320 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>8 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3842-5 £48.00 $75.00 EApprox. 260 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>1 figureCloth ISBN 0-8020-3838-7 £42.00 $65.00 E35


o o k h i s t o r y<strong>Toronto</strong> EditsEdited by Gillian FenwickConference on Editorial ProblemsAndrés González deBarcia and the Creation<strong>of</strong> the Colonial SpanishAmerican LibraryJonathan E. CarlyonStudies in Book and Print Culture<strong>Toronto</strong> can be seen as the seat <strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong> the finesteditorial scholarship in the world. The city’s editorialscholars and, indeed, those from across Canada,are recognised not only locally and nationally, butalso internationally, and are engaged with textsoriginating both inside and outside Canada. <strong>Toronto</strong>Edits is a celebration <strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong> the city’s best editorialprojects, past, present, and future.With papers by Michael Millgate, RandyMcLeod, Alexandra Johnston, James Carley, G.E.Bentley, and Francess Halpenny, this collection,edited by Gillian Fenwick, demonstrates the enormouschallenges <strong>of</strong> editing in modern times.Although what editors do now is fundamentally thesame as it was half a century ago, accessible internationaltravel and electronic resources have greatlyinfluenced the handling and preparation <strong>of</strong> texts,even if computers <strong>of</strong>ten introduce their own set <strong>of</strong>editorial problems.While the contributors and their subjects areby no means confined to <strong>Toronto</strong>, the city providesa focus, a home, and a stimulus for their work.They describe research far beyond the city, but the<strong>of</strong>ten unstated, underlying fact is that the editingand the preparation <strong>of</strong> the work for publication hastaken place in <strong>Toronto</strong>, where a tradition <strong>of</strong> editinghas been nurtured.Gillian Fenwick is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>English and a fellow <strong>of</strong> Trinity College at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.One <strong>of</strong> early Enlightenment Spain’s most importantscholars, Andrés González de Barcia (1673–1743)produced more than two dozen critical editions <strong>of</strong>some <strong>of</strong> Spain’s most significant works on the NewWorld, many <strong>of</strong> which were already rare when hepublished them. In this highly original new book,Jonathan E. Carlyon traces González de Barcia’swork as editor, bibliographer, and author, focusingon his program <strong>of</strong> scholarly republication thatresulted in the creation <strong>of</strong> the first comprehensivecolonial Spanish American library.González de Barcia established his collection toprovide the historiography <strong>of</strong> the period with anorder and clarity. He sought to underline what heconsidered to be the truth regarding colonial Spainby supplying his editions with marginal notes,prefatory writings, and scholarly indices. In sodoing, he prepared the foundation for the modernstudy <strong>of</strong> colonial Spanish American letters.Andrés González de Barcia and the Creation <strong>of</strong>the Colonial Spanish American Library is an investigationinto González de Barcia and his editorialagenda. It is essential to understanding the natureand importance <strong>of</strong> this great scholar and his contributionto the development <strong>of</strong> Spanish historiography,bibliography, and book history.Jonathan E. Carlyon is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Foreign Languages and Literaturesat Colorado State <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 200 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2005</strong>59 illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-8020-8928-1 £32.00 $50.00 EApprox. 260 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>7 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3845-X £42.00 $65.00 E36


o o k h i s t o r yThe Rothschilds and theirCollections <strong>of</strong> IlluminatedManuscriptsChristopher de HamelThe British LibraryScribes and Transmissionin English Manuscripts1400–1700Edited by Peter Beal and A.S.G. EdwardsThe British LibraryEnglish Manuscript Studies 1100 – 1700, Volume 12The family art collections <strong>of</strong> the Rothschilds werelegendary for their extravagance and refinement.This is the first history <strong>of</strong> the Rothschilds as bibliophilesand especially as collectors <strong>of</strong> medieval illuminatedmanuscripts. It follows the extraordinary andsometimes mysterious collections <strong>of</strong> Barons Adolphede Rothschild (1823–1900) <strong>of</strong> Naples, Ferdinand(1839–1898) <strong>of</strong> Vienna and Waddesdon, Edmond(1845–1934) <strong>of</strong> Paris, and others, following the restlessmovement <strong>of</strong> these supremely important works<strong>of</strong> art across the private libraries <strong>of</strong> Europe.In 1940, the Rothschilds’ collections in Pariswere looted by the Nazis, and the tale pursues thefate <strong>of</strong> the stolen manuscripts, some <strong>of</strong> them stillmissing. Almost no Rothschilds manuscript everincludes a bookplate or ownership mark. Theinquiry traces literally hundreds <strong>of</strong> illuminatedmanuscripts, including some <strong>of</strong> the world’s mostfamous books, made for the Duc de Berry, Catherine<strong>of</strong> Cleves, Isabella the Catholic, and many others,and finds them to have one thing in common: theywere all, at one time, Rothschilds possessions.Christopher de Hamel is the Gaylord DonnelleyLibrarian at Corpus Christi College, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Cambridge.“English Manuscript Studies” is a periodical thatreflects the growth <strong>of</strong> scholarly interest in manuscriptsources for literature and intellectual history frommedieval to early modern times. Encompassing thestudy <strong>of</strong> manuscripts produced in the British Islesbetween the conquest and the end <strong>of</strong> the seventeenthcentury, it provides a forum for the interdisciplinaryinvestigation <strong>of</strong> both medieval and Renaissancemanuscripts and aims to stimulate awareness <strong>of</strong> thepossibilities <strong>of</strong> manuscript study in general.This latest volume <strong>of</strong> English ManuscriptStudies 1100–1700 is concerned with the crucialrole <strong>of</strong> the scribe in the transmission <strong>of</strong> literary andother texts. It includes papers on English and Latinhumanist works <strong>of</strong> the fifteenth century, on Scottishliterary collections <strong>of</strong> the medieval and Renaissanceperiods, as well as papers on Surrey, Donne,Marvell, Hobbes, and Francis Beaumont.Peter Beal is the director <strong>of</strong> the Department <strong>of</strong>Printed Books and Manuscripts at Sotheby’s <strong>of</strong>London.A.S.G. Edwards is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Victoria.112 pp / 6 1 /2 x 9 1 /2 / August <strong>2005</strong>58 colour illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-4897-2 $40.00 EDistribution Rights for North and South America Only. Other RightsHeld by the British Library.272 pp / 6 1 /4 x 9 1 /4 / August <strong>2005</strong>30 black and white illustrationsCloth ISBN 0-7123-4894-8 $90.00 EDistribution Rights for North and South America Only. Other RightsHeld by the British Library.37


m e d i e va l a n d r e n n a i s a n c e s t u d i e sThe Correspondence <strong>of</strong> Wolfgang CapitoVolume 1: 1507–1523Edited and translated by Erika RummelWith the assistance <strong>of</strong> Milton KooistraWolfgang Capito (1478–1541) was one <strong>of</strong> the mostimportant figures <strong>of</strong> the Reformation, a leadingchurchman who turned from Catholic to Protestant.A pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> theology and advisor to theArchbishop <strong>of</strong> Mainz, he moved to Strasbourg andworked for two decades toward the reformation <strong>of</strong>the city, which became, after Wittenberg, themost active centre <strong>of</strong> the Reformationmovement.This volume – the first <strong>of</strong>three – is a fully annotated translation<strong>of</strong> Capito’s existing correspondence,covering theyears 1507–1523. The lettersreveal his dialogue withleading humanists andreformers, such as Erasmusand Luther (with whomCapito had a contentiousrelationship), and reflect thecultural and political milieu<strong>of</strong> the time. They also <strong>of</strong>fersignificant insights into theprogress <strong>of</strong> the Reformation.Erika Rummel’s head- and footnotesprovide historical context byidentifying classical and biblical quotationsas well as persons and places.The volume will aid historians <strong>of</strong> theReformation by elucidating as yet imperfectlyunderstood aspects <strong>of</strong> Capito’s thought, such as hisefforts to promote concord between the reformers,his stand in the Eucharistic controversy, the natureand limitations <strong>of</strong> his tolerance toward Anabaptists,and his views on the relationship between secularand church governments.Erika Rummel is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emerita in the Department<strong>of</strong> History at Wilfrid Laurier <strong>University</strong> and anadjunct pr<strong>of</strong>essor at Emmanuel College, <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Milton Kooistra is a Ph.D. candidate in the Centre forMedieval Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.‘Much <strong>of</strong> the literature on the Reformation has aquality <strong>of</strong> inevitability about it, giving theimpression that the Reformation was preordainedto succeed. The letters <strong>of</strong> WolfgangCapito instead reveal the intense innerconflict <strong>of</strong> an important Reformationleader and the anxiety he felt inaccepting the new beliefs. Capito wasless self-conscious than many <strong>of</strong> hispeers: he was not looking over hisshoulder creating an image for posterity;he struggled over his religiousbeliefs. His was no sudden conversion,and he was far from at peacewith himself. This excellent volumemakes an important contribution toReformation studies and to the broaderfield <strong>of</strong> intellectual history.’Miriam Usher Chrisman,Department <strong>of</strong> History, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>MassachusettsAlso by Erika Rummel:The Case against Johann ReuchlinReligious and Social Controversy in Sixteenth-Century Germany0-8020-8484-2 / £14.00 / $25.95 / 2002Approx. 240 pp / 6 3 /4 x 9 3 /4 / November <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9017-6 £60.00 $95.00 EWolfgang Faber Capito. Engraving by Peter Aubry, c. 1660,after an original now lost. Cabinet des Estamps, Musées de laville, Strasbourg.38


M e d i e va l a n d R e n ag ies ns ea rn ac l e i nS t ue rd ei es s tWalesEdited by David N. KlausnerRecords <strong>of</strong> Early English DramaMarian Devotion inThirteenth-Century FrenchLyricDaniel E. O’SullivanThe Records <strong>of</strong> Early English Drama (REED) seriesaims to establish the context for the great drama <strong>of</strong>Britain’s past by examining material related todrama, secular music, and other communal entertainmentand ceremony from the Middle Ages untilthe mid-seventeenth century.This latest volume in the series is a collection<strong>of</strong> documentary evidence for dramatic performance,minstrelsy, and civic ceremony in thePrincipality <strong>of</strong> Wales from the mid-fifth century to1660. Editor David N. Klausner has included documentsrelevant to the explicitly Welsh mode <strong>of</strong>bardic performance as well as evidence <strong>of</strong> the bardicpr<strong>of</strong>ession’s efforts to regulate itself with a gradingsystem and standards for education and training.Municipal records show payments to civic musiciansand other performers, and records <strong>of</strong> thecourts in particular – Star Chamber, Great Sessions,and Quarter Sessions – clarify the existence <strong>of</strong> localdrama on both a pr<strong>of</strong>essional and non-pr<strong>of</strong>essionalbasis, in both Welsh and English, from at least thebeginning <strong>of</strong> the sixteenth century.This volume is a superb addition to the alreadymuch-admired REED series and will be <strong>of</strong> greatbenefit to anyone interested in Renaissance theatreor Welsh history and culture.David N. Klausner is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> English and the Centre for Medieval Studies atthe <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Texts centred on the mother <strong>of</strong> Jesus abound inreligious traditions the world over, but thirteenthcenturyOld French lyric stands apart, both because<strong>of</strong> the enormous size <strong>of</strong> the Marian cult in thirteenth-centuryFrance and the lack <strong>of</strong> critical attentionthe genre has garnered from scholars.As hybrid texts, Old French Marian songscombine motifs from several genres and registers toarticulate a devotional message. In this comprehensiveand illuminating study, Daniel E. O’Sullivanexamines the movement between secular and religioustraditions in medieval culture that OldFrench religious song embodies. He demonstratesthat Marian lyric was far more than a simple, mindlessimitation <strong>of</strong> secular love song. On the contrary,Marian lyric participated in a dynamic interplaywith the secular tradition that different composersshaped and reshaped in light <strong>of</strong> particular doctrinaland aesthetic concerns. It is a corpus that revealsitself to be far more malleable and supple than pastreaders have admitted.With an extensive index <strong>of</strong> musical and textualeditions <strong>of</strong> dozens <strong>of</strong> songs, Marian Devotion inThirteenth-Century French Lyric brings a heret<strong>of</strong>oreneglected genre to light.Daniel E. O’Sullivan is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Modern Languages at the <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> Mississippi.Approx. 750 pp / 6 3 /4 x 9 3 /4 / October <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9072-9 $250.00 EWorld Rights leSS uk and Europe. Co-publiSHed with the BritiSH Library.Approx. 270 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>3 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3885-9 £40.00 $60.00 E39


m e d i e va l a n d r e n n a i s a n c e s t u d i e sPlaying the HeroReading the Táin Bó CuailngeAnn DooleyEarly English MetreThomas A. Bredeh<strong>of</strong>t<strong>Toronto</strong> Old English SeriesIn Playing the Hero, Ann Dooley examines the survivingmanuscript versions <strong>of</strong> the greatest <strong>of</strong> theearly Irish sagas, the Táin Bó Cuailnge (Cattle-Raid<strong>of</strong> Cooley), and creates a picture <strong>of</strong> the culturalconditions and literary mind-sets under whichmedieval scribes recreated the text. Dooley arguesthat the scribes’ work is both a transmission and atranslation, and that their own changing historicalcircumstances within the space <strong>of</strong> one hundredyears, from the beginning to the end <strong>of</strong> the twelfthcentury, determines the specifics <strong>of</strong> their literarycreativity.Playing the Hero is a unique example <strong>of</strong> morecontemporary literary methodologies – post-structuralist,feminist, historicist and beyond – being usedto illuminate the Irish saga world. Dooley providesa commentary for the saga, helping to re-animate itsliterary sophistication. Her work is an interrogation<strong>of</strong> both the Irish epic hero – a reading <strong>of</strong> the malethrough the medium <strong>of</strong> feminine discourse – andthe process whereby violence as normalized in thesaga genre can be recovered as problematic and troubling.Dooley’s work is groundbreaking and willprovoke a wide response in Medieval Irish studies.Ann Dooley is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Centrefor Medieval Studies and the director <strong>of</strong> theProgram for Celtic Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><strong>Toronto</strong>.Thomas A. Bredeh<strong>of</strong>t’s Early English Metre is a reassessment<strong>of</strong> the metrical rules for English poetryfrom Beowulf to Layamon. Bredeh<strong>of</strong>t <strong>of</strong>fers a newaccount <strong>of</strong> many <strong>of</strong> the most puzzling features <strong>of</strong>Old English poetry – anacrusis, alliteration patterns,rhyme, and hypermetric verses – and further<strong>of</strong>fers a clear account <strong>of</strong> late Old English verse as itdescended from the classical verse as observed inBeowulf. He makes the surprising and controversialdiscovery that Ælfric’s alliterative works are formallyindistinguishable from late verse.Discussing the early Middle English verseforms<strong>of</strong> Layamon’s Brut, Bredeh<strong>of</strong>t not only demonstratesthat they can be understood as developingfrom late Old English, but that Layamon seems tohave known, and quoted from, the poems <strong>of</strong> theAnglo-Saxon Chronicle. Early English Metre presentsa new perspective on early English verse and a newperspective on much <strong>of</strong> early English literary history.It is an essential addition to the literature onOld and Middle English and will be widely discussedamongst scholars in the field.Thomas A. Bredeh<strong>of</strong>t is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Northern Colorado.Approx. 250 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3832-8 £48.00 $75.00 EApprox. 220 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3831-X £42.00 $65.00 E40


M e d i e va l a n d R e n ag ies ns ea rn ac l e i nS t ue rd ei es s tLatin Learning and English LoreStudies in Anglo-Saxon Literature for Michael LapidgeEdited by Katherine O’Brien O’Keeffe and Andy Orchard<strong>Toronto</strong> Old English SeriesThroughout the Anglo-Saxon period, Latin andOld English were, to large extent, alternative literarylanguages. Latin Learning and English Lore is acollection <strong>of</strong> essays examining the complex coexistence<strong>of</strong> the two languages within the literary,historical, and cultural milieu <strong>of</strong> Anglo-SaxonEngland.More than forty <strong>of</strong> the leading Anglo-Saxonscholars in the world today have contributed tothis two-volume survey <strong>of</strong> the whole range <strong>of</strong>Anglo-Saxon Literature in honour <strong>of</strong> MichaelLapidge, one <strong>of</strong> the most productive, influential,and important figures <strong>of</strong> Anglo-Saxon studies inrecent years. The contributors include a wide range<strong>of</strong> the Lapidge’s former colleagues, students, andcollaborators.The essays in Latin Learning and English Lorecover material from the beginning <strong>of</strong> the Anglo-Saxon literary record in the late seventh century tothe immediately post-Conquest period <strong>of</strong> thetwelfth century. The volumes together provide aninvaluable survey <strong>of</strong> the rich literature, history, andculture <strong>of</strong> the period as well as a selection <strong>of</strong>groundbreaking studies that <strong>of</strong>fer a number <strong>of</strong>exciting possibilities for future research.Katherine O’Brien O’Keeffe is the Notre DamePr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> English at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> NotreDame.Andy Orchard is the director <strong>of</strong> the Centre forMedieval Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Two volumes / Approx. 800 pp / 6 x 9 / August <strong>2005</strong>10 figuresCloth ISBN 0-8020-8919-4 £96.00 $150.00 EVolume One ContributorsGeorge H. Brown • David Dumville • Michael Fox• Roberta Frank • R.D. Fulk • Mary Garrison •Helmut Gneuss • Malcolm Godden • MechthildGretsch • Michael Herren • Nicholas Howe •Christopher A. Jones • Simon Keynes • LeslieLockett • Andy Orchard • Paul Remley • RichardSharpe • Tom Shippey • Patrick Sims-Williams •Michael <strong>Winter</strong>bottom • Neil WrightVolume Two ContributorsPeter Baker • Martha Bayless • Robert E. Bjork •Mary Clayton • Thomas N. Hall • Joyce Hill •Peter Jackson • Patrizia Lendinara • Roy MichaelLiuzza • Rosalind Love • Richard Marsden • BruceMitchell • Katherine O’Brien O’Keeffe • OliverPadel • Fred C. Robinson • Katharine Scarfe-Beckett • D.G. Scragg • Jane Stevenson • Paul E.Szarmach • Charles D. WrightOf related interest:IntersticesStudies in Middle English and Anglo-Latin Textsin Honour <strong>of</strong> A.G. RiggEdited by Richard Firth Green and Linne R. Mooney0-8020-8743-4 / £32.00 / $53.00 / 2004Unlocking the WordhordAnglo-Saxon Studies in Memory <strong>of</strong> Edward B.Irving, Jr.Edited by Mark C. Amodio and Katherine O’BrienO’Keeffe0-8020-4822-6 / £48.00 / $78.00 / 200341


m e d i e va l a n d r e n n a i s a n c e s t u d i e sEinarr Skúlason’s GeisliA Critical EditionEdited by Martin Chase<strong>Toronto</strong> Old Norse and Icelandic SeriesGeisli is the earliest Nordic Christian drápa (longstanzaic poem) known to exist. Written by EinarrSkúlason, the twelfth century’s premier Icelandicpoet, Geisli marked a stylistic shift in Old Norsepoetry brought about by Christianity and Europeanlearning. Einarr Skúlason was a priest as well as askald, and his writing demonstrates that he was asfamiliar with the traditions <strong>of</strong> Latin liturgy andhagiography as with the conventions <strong>of</strong> skaldicpoetry.Geisli is a very important source for the modernscholar studying Old Norse hagiography andthe history <strong>of</strong> Christianity in Iceland and Norway.This new critical edition features a version in normalizedorthography, as well as a versionin prose word order, a translation intoEnglish, a complete glossary, an introductionthat situates the poem in itscontext, and substantial explanatorynotes. Editor Martin Chase uses thefamous Flateyjarbók manuscript as a basetext, but takes into account all knownmanuscripts <strong>of</strong> the poem. Long neededby scholars, this new edition will beextremely valuable to anyone with aninterest in Old Norse as well as medievalistsin other disciplines.Martin Chase is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> English and the Centerfor Medieval Studies at Fordham<strong>University</strong>.<strong>Toronto</strong> Old Norse-Icelandic SeriesA new series from <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong>General Editor: Andy Orchard, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>This series aims to promote and encourage thepublication <strong>of</strong> important monographs, collections<strong>of</strong> essays, translations, and other ancillaryworks to serve a range <strong>of</strong> scholars, students, andgeneral readers in the field <strong>of</strong> Old Norse-Icelandic studies.‘This critical edition <strong>of</strong> Einarr Skúlason’s Geisli is a finepiece <strong>of</strong> scholarship. Martin Chase is breaking much newground here and makes a considerable contribution tothe field. A sophisticated and beautifully writtenwork and a pleasure to read.’Kirsten Wolf, Department <strong>of</strong> ScandinavianStudies, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Wisconsin – Madison‘Martin Chase’s presentation <strong>of</strong> Geisli is concise,methodical, and very readable. EinarrSkúlason was an excellent poet and wonderfullyfluent stylist and Geisli is among the fewexamples <strong>of</strong> skaldic poetry to survive complete.With scholarship on medieval religiousand mystical texts flourishing as it is, this muchneedednew edition is timely as never before.’Russell Poole, Department <strong>of</strong> English, <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> Western OntarioApprox. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3826-3 £40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-3822-0 £20.00 $29.95 C42


M e d i e va l a n d R e n ag ies ns ea rn ac l e i nS t ue rd ei es s tAnglo-Saxon England inIcelandic Medieval TextsMagnús Fjalldal<strong>Toronto</strong> Old Norse and Icelandic SeriesMedieval Icelandic authors wrote a great deal on thesubject <strong>of</strong> England and the English. This new workby Magnús Fjalldal is the first to provide an overview<strong>of</strong> what Icelandic medieval texts have to sayabout Anglo-Saxon England in respect to its language,culture, history, and geography.Some <strong>of</strong> the texts Fjalldal examines includefamily sagas, the shorter pættir, the histories <strong>of</strong>Norwegian and Danish kings, and the Icelandiclives <strong>of</strong> Anglo-Saxon saints. Fjalldal finds that inresponse to a hostile Norwegian court and kings,Icelandic authors – from the early thirteenth centuryonwards (although they were rather poorlyinformed about England before 1066) – created alargely imaginary country where friendly, generous,although rather ineffective kings living under constantthreat welcomed the assistance <strong>of</strong> saga heroesto solve their problems.The England <strong>of</strong> Icelandic medieval texts ismore <strong>of</strong> a stage than a country, and chiefly functionsto provide saga heroes with fame abroad.Since many <strong>of</strong> these texts are rarely examined outside<strong>of</strong> Iceland or in the English language, Fjalldal’sbook is important for scholars <strong>of</strong> both medievalNorse culture and Anglo-Saxon England.Magnús Fjalldal is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>English at Háskóli Íslands (<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Iceland).Old Norse-IcelandicLiteratureA Critical GuideEdited by Carol J. Clover and John LindowMedieval Academy Reprints for Teaching 42In the past few decades, interest in the rich andvaried literature <strong>of</strong> early Scandinavia has prompteda great deal <strong>of</strong> interest in its background: its origins,social and historical context, and relationship toother medieval literatures. Until the 1980s, however,there was a distinct lack <strong>of</strong> scholarship in thearea, so in 1985, Carol J. Clover and John Lindowbrought together some <strong>of</strong> the most ambitious anddistinguished Old Norse scholars to contributeessays for a collection that would finally fill the void<strong>of</strong> a comprehensive guide to the field.The contributors summarize and comment onscholarly work in the major branches <strong>of</strong> the field:eddic and skaldic poetry, family and kings’ sagas,courtly writing, and mythology. Taken together,their judicious and well-written essays, each with afull bibliography, make up this vital survey <strong>of</strong> OldNorse literature in English – a basic reference workthat has stimulated much research and helped toopen up the field to a wider academic readership.This volume has become an essential text forinstructors, and twenty years later, is being republishedas part <strong>of</strong> the Medieval Academy Reprints forTeaching (MART) series with a new preface thatdiscusses more recent contributions to the field.Carol J. Clover is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Scandinavian and the Department <strong>of</strong> Rhetoric atthe <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> California, Berkeley.John Lindow is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Scandinavian and the Folklore Program at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> California, Berkeley.Approx. 200 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3837-9 £40.00 $60.00 EApprox. 390 pp / 6 x 9 / July <strong>2005</strong>Paper ISBN 0-8020-3823-9 £22.50 $35.00 C43


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 g1 The Carolingian EmpireHeinrich FichtenauTranslated by Peter MunzPaper 0-8020-6367-5 $15.95 C2 The Story <strong>of</strong> TroilusEdited by R.K. GordonPaper 0-8020-6368-3 $17.95 C3 A Guide to Chaucer’s PronunciationHelge KökeritzPaper 0-8020-6370-5 $7.95 C4 Constantine and the Conversion <strong>of</strong>EuropeA.H.M. JonesPaper 0-8020-6369-1 $14.95 C5 The English Church in theFourteenth CenturyW.A. PantinPaper 0-8020-6411-6 $11.95 C7 Political Thought in Medieval TimesJohn B. MorrallPaper 0-8020-6413-2 $14.95 C8 Mission to AsiaEdited by Christopher DawsonPaper 0-8020-6436-1 $15.95 CNorth American rights only.9 Confessio AmantisJohn Gower, edited by Russell A. PeckPaper 0-8020-6438-8 $19.95 C10 Ancient Writing and its InfluenceB.L. UllmanWith an introduction by Julian BrownPaper 0-8020-6435-3 $15.95 C11The Long-Haired Kings and OtherStories in Frankish HistoryJ.M. Wallace-HadrillPaper 0-8020-6500-7 $16.95 C13 William MarshallKnight-Errant, Baron, and Regent <strong>of</strong>EnglandSidney PainterPaper 0-8020-6498-1 $17.95 C14 A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary4th edition, J.R. Clark HallSupplement by Herbert D. MerrittPaper 0-8020-6548-1 $22.95 C15 Self and Society in Medieval FranceThe Memoirs <strong>of</strong> Abbot Guibert <strong>of</strong>NogentEdited and with an introduction byJohn F. BentonPaper 0-8020-6550-3 $15.95 C16 The Art <strong>of</strong> the Byzantine Empire312–1453Sources and DocumentsEdited by Cyril MangoPaper 0-8020-6627-5 $17.95 C17 Early Medieval Art 300–1150Sources and DocumentsEdited by Caecilia Davis-WeyerPaper 0-8020-6628-3 $16.95 C18 ByzantiumThe Imperial Centuries AD 610–1071Romilly JenkinsPaper 0-8020-6667-4 $24.95 C19 The Discovery <strong>of</strong> the Individual1050–1200Colin MorrisPaper 0-8020-6665-8 $13.95 C20 Gothic Art 1140–c1450Sources and DocumentsTeresa G. FrischPaper 0-8020-6679-8 $13.95 C21 The Crisis <strong>of</strong> Church and State1050–1300Brian TierneyPaper 0-8020-6701-8 $14.95 C22 Change in Medieval SocietyEurope North <strong>of</strong> the Alps 1050–1500Sylvia ThruppPaper 0-8020-6699-2 $14.95 C23 The Medieval ExperienceFrancis OakleyPaper 0-8020-6707-7 $15.95 C24 Allegories <strong>of</strong> the Virtues and Vices inMedieval ArtAdolf KatzenellenbogenPaper 0-8020-6706-9 $12.95 C25 Modern Perspectives in Western ArtHistoryAn Anthology <strong>of</strong> 20th-CenturyWritings on the Visual ArtsEdited by W. Eugene KleinbauerPaper 0-8020-6708-5 $30.50 C26 Renaissance and Renewal in theTwelfth CenturyEdited by Robert L. Benson andGiles ConstablePaper 0-8020-6850-2 $37.95 C27 Church, State, and Christian Societyat the Time <strong>of</strong> the Investiture ContestGerd TellenbachTranslated by R.E BennettPaper 0-8020-6857-X $16.95 C28 The Medieval BookBarbara A. ShailorCloth 0-8020-5910-4 $68.00 EPaper 0-8020-6853-7 $29.95 C29 Early MedievalStyle and CivilizationGeorge HendersonPaper 0-8020-6984-3 $23.95 C30 The Origins <strong>of</strong> European DissentR.I. MoorePaper 0-8020-7566-5 $19.95 C31 The Deeds <strong>of</strong> Frederick BarbarossaOtto, Bishop <strong>of</strong> FreisingTranslated and annotated with anIntroduction by Charles ChristopherMierowPaper 0-8020-7574-6 $17.95 C32 FablesMarie de FranceEdited and translated by Harriet SpiegelPaper 0-8020-7636-X $19.95 C33 The Birth <strong>of</strong> Popular HeresyR.I. MoorePaper 0-8020-7659-9 $16.95 C34 FeudalismF.L. Gansh<strong>of</strong>Translated by Philip GriersonPaper 0-8020-7158-9 $14.95 C35 Arthurian ChroniclesWace and LayamonTranslated by Eugene MasonPaper 0-8020-7176-7 $17.95 C37 Nature, Man, and Society in theTwelfth CenturyM.-D. ChenuPaper 0-8020-7175-9 $17.95 C38 Selections from English WycliffiteWritingsEdited by Anne HudsonPaper 0-8020-8045-6 $17.95 C39 The Life <strong>of</strong> Christina <strong>of</strong> MarkyateA Twelfth-Century RecluseEdited by C.H. TalbotPaper 0-8020-8202-5 $15.95 CNorth American rights only40 Medieval FamiliesPerspectives on Marriage, Household,and ChildrenEdited by Carol NeelCloth 0-8020-3606-6 $78.00 EPaper 0-8020-8458-3 $30.50 C41 A Concise Dictionary <strong>of</strong> Old IcelandicGeir T. ZoëgaCloth 0-8020-8705-1 $95.00 EPaper 0-8020-8659-4 $29.95 C44


P h i l o s o p h y / gP eo nl ie tri ca al l i nT th er oe rs ytThe Kantian ImperativeHumiliation, Common Sense, PoliticsPaul SauretteImmanuel Kant’s moral philosophy is almost universallyunderstood as the attempt to analyse anddefend a morality based on individual autonomy. InThe Kantian Imperative, Paul Saurette challengesthis interpretation by arguing that Kant’s ‘imperative’is actually based on a problematic appeal to‘common sense’ and that it is premised on, andseeks to further cultivate and intensify, the feeling<strong>of</strong> humiliation in every moral subject.Discerning the influence <strong>of</strong> this model on awide variety <strong>of</strong> historical and contemporary politicalthought and philosophy and critical <strong>of</strong> itsimplications, Saurette explores its impact on thework <strong>of</strong> two seminal and contemporary thinkers inparticular: Charles Taylor and Jürgen Habermas.Saurette also shows that an analysis <strong>of</strong> the Kantianimperative allows a better understanding <strong>of</strong> currentpolitical problems such as the U.S. torture scandalat Abu Ghraib in Iraq and broader post-9/11 U.S.foreign policy. The Kantian Imperative thus demonstratesthat philosophy and political theory areas relevant to contemporary events as at any othertime in history.Paul Saurette is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School<strong>of</strong> Political Studies at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa.Approx. 310 pp / 6 x 9 / August <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3882-4 £48.00 $75.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-4880-3 £22.50 $35.00 C‘With this fresh and provocative new work, Paul Saurettepresents a minority view <strong>of</strong> Kant that has few antecedents.His re-reading <strong>of</strong> Kant’s moral philosophy as a species <strong>of</strong>ethical cultivation – deeply indebted to an ascetics <strong>of</strong> humiliation– is innovative, challenging, and very well executed.This is a major contribution to research.’Ian Hunter, Centre for the History <strong>of</strong> EuropeanDiscourses, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Queensland‘The Kantian Imperative is a first-rate book: thoughtful,distinctive, provocative, engaging, eye-opening, even disturbing.It is one <strong>of</strong> those rare books where a reader can say, Iwish I’d written it. With great insight and an elegant prosestyle, Paul Saurette has unearthed problematic dimensions <strong>of</strong>Kant’s thought that demand serious attention.’Steven Johnston, Department <strong>of</strong> Government andInternational Affairs, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> South FloridaOf related interest:Kant’s IntuitionismA Commentary on the Transcendental AestheticLorne Falkenstein0-8020-3774-7 / £25.00 / $39.95 / 199545


p h i l o s o p h y / p o l i t i c a l t h e o r yBernard Bosanquet andthe Legacy <strong>of</strong> BritishIdealismEdited by William Sweet<strong>Toronto</strong> Studies in PhilosophyBernard Bosanquet (1848–1923) was one <strong>of</strong> theleading figures <strong>of</strong> the idealist movement in the latenineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and in hisobituary in the London Times, was described ashaving been ‘the central figure <strong>of</strong> British philosophyfor an entire generation.’Bosanquet’s views fell out <strong>of</strong> favour in thedecades after his death, but recently there has beena lively renewal <strong>of</strong> interest in European and BritishIdealism, the Idealist approach being recognized asproviding valuable insights for contemporarydebates in political philosophy, ethics, aesthetics,epistemology, and logic. Idealism also serves as abridge between the dominant philosophical traditions<strong>of</strong> twentieth century Anglo-American andcontinental thought, and, indeed, Bosanquet wasamong the first British philosophers to address thework <strong>of</strong> Benedetto Croce, Giovanni Gentile, andEdmund Husserl and to introduce these thinkers toan English-language audience.In Bernard Bosanquet and the Legacy <strong>of</strong> BritishIdealism, William Sweet and other leading scholarsexamine Bosanquet’s contribution to some <strong>of</strong> philosophy’scentral questions. They provide a solidintroduction to British Idealism and the idealistmovement as a whole, and bring the scholarship onBosanquet fully up-to-date.William Sweet is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Philosophy and the director <strong>of</strong> the Centre forPhilosophy, Theology, and Cultural Traditions atSt. Francis Xavier <strong>University</strong>.Boyle on AtheismTranscribed and edited by J.J. MacIntosh<strong>Toronto</strong> Studies in PhilosophyOpposition to atheism flourished in the seventeenthcentury, and famed scientist-philosopherRobert Boyle (1627–91) was so opposed to it thathe had planned throughout his life to publish awork on his various objections, a project that nevercame to fruition. Despite this, a great deal <strong>of</strong> histhought on atheism still exists within the manuscriptshe left behind after his death.With Boyle on Atheism, J.J. MacIntosh hasculled the Boyle manuscripts held at the RoyalSociety Library in London and transcribed the portionsthat relate to atheism, arranging them in theorder Boyle appears to have intended (as outlined inone <strong>of</strong> the pieces). The volume contains Boyle’sviews on the causes (and remedies) <strong>of</strong> atheism, thenature <strong>of</strong> God, various possible arguments forGod’s existence, the excellency <strong>of</strong> Christianity, andthe character <strong>of</strong> atheists and the deficiencies to befound in their arguments.To round out the volume, MacIntosh hasadded a short biography <strong>of</strong> Boyle, a general introductionto the text, introductions to the varioussections, and explanatory footnotes. Boyle onAtheism provides, for the first time, and at length,publication <strong>of</strong> the material that Boyle himselfthought worth marshalling on a subject <strong>of</strong> greatpersonal importance.J.J. MacIntosh is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Philosophy at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Calgary.Approx. 190 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-8981-X £32.00 $50.00 EApprox. 550 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9018-4 £60.00 $95.00 E46


P h i l o s o p h y / gP eo nl iet ri ca al l i nT th ero ers ytLonergan’s QuestA Study <strong>of</strong> Desire in the Authoring <strong>of</strong> InsightWilliam A. MathewsLonergan StudiesPhilosophical EncountersLonergan and the Analytic TraditionJoseph FitzpatrickLonergan StudiesInsight is widely regarded as Bernard Lonergan’smasterwork. Worked out over a period <strong>of</strong> twentyeightyears, its aim was to present a theory <strong>of</strong>human knowing that underpinned the wide range<strong>of</strong> disciplines it addressed and their distinctiveinsights. In Lonergan’s Quest, William A. Mathewsdetails the genesis, researching, composition, andquestion structure <strong>of</strong> Insight.The path to Insight began for Lonergan in the1920s with his studies in philosophy at HeythropCollege. Questioning many <strong>of</strong> the accepted truths<strong>of</strong> those studies, Lonergan’s interests moved to economicswhile teaching in Depression-era Montreal,and later to theology and the philosophy <strong>of</strong> historywhile studying in Rome. The writing <strong>of</strong> Insightbegan in earnest in 1949 and soon evolved intoLonergan’s masterpiece, encompassing his manydivergent, but philosophically coherent, streams <strong>of</strong>thought.An intellectual biography, Lonergan’s Questlocates Insight centrally within the broader philosophicaltradition, presenting a new solution to theproblem <strong>of</strong> the mind-world relation as posed byImmanuel Kant, as well as addressing the nature <strong>of</strong>consciousness. The book demonstrates that thedesire <strong>of</strong> the human mind is also a narrative in timethrough which the intellectual identity <strong>of</strong> theauthor is forged and their relation with the textestablished.William A. Mathews is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor withthe Centre for Philosophy at the Milltown Institute<strong>of</strong> Theology and Philosophy.The philosophic thought <strong>of</strong> Bernard Lonergan<strong>of</strong>ten ran contrary to that <strong>of</strong> his contemporaries inthe dominant analytical school. In PhilosophicalEncounters, Joseph Fitzpatrick delves behind theconcepts and terms both Lonergan and the analyticalschool employed and shared in order to map outclearly where they agreed and where they differed,and indicates where fruitful possibilities exist fordialogue.Fitzpatrick’s approach is unique as he sets updirect confrontations – or encounters – betweenrepresentative authors from the analytical traditionand topics or themes from Lonergan’s extensivephilosophical corpus. The result is a spirited battle<strong>of</strong> ideas. There is also a surprising level <strong>of</strong> agreement,as with, for example, Lonergan and LudwigWittgenstein, where both depart from the philosophicalpathway marked out by Descartes.Philosophical Encounters defends Lonerganfrom the kind <strong>of</strong> attacks typically made against hisposition and conveys something <strong>of</strong> the deep influenceson Lonergan’s mind that help to account forits distinctiveness. Including a very helpful glossary<strong>of</strong> key terms, this book will be useful not only tothose wishing to familiarize themselves withLonergan’s thought but also those wishing todevelop an acquaintance with some <strong>of</strong> the leadinglights <strong>of</strong> the analytical tradition, includingWittgenstein and Bertrand Russell.Joseph Fitzpatrick is an independent education consultantand school inspector living in WestYorkshire, England.Approx. 620 pp / 6 1 /8 x 9 1 /4 / November <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3875-1 £60.00 $95.00 EApprox. 250 pp / 6 1 /8 x 9 1 /4 / August <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3844-1 £42.00 $65.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-4884-6 £20.00 $29.95 C47


p h i l o s o p h y / p o l i t i c a l t h e o r yMistakes <strong>of</strong> ReasonEssays in Honour <strong>of</strong> John WoodsEdited by Kent A. Peacock and Andrew D. IrvinePersonal Liberty andPublic GoodThe Introduction <strong>of</strong> John Stuart Mill to Japan and ChinaDouglas HowlandOver a distinguished academic career, the Canadianphilosopher and scholar John Woods has written ona rich variety <strong>of</strong> topics central to contemporaryphilosophy. These include the history and philosophy<strong>of</strong> logic, deviant logics, inductive and abductivereasoning, informal reasoning, fallacy theory, thelogic <strong>of</strong> fiction, epistemology, and abortion andeuthanasia. Not only has Woods’ work been significantin itself, it has also stimulated others workingin these fields.Mistakes <strong>of</strong> Reason is a tribute to Woods andcontains twenty-six new essays by leading Canadianand international philosophers. The essays areaccompanied by commentaries by Woods himself,creating a unique dialogue between Woods and hiscolleagues. Editors Kent A. Peacock and Andrew D.Irvine have grouped the works under the themes <strong>of</strong>Reality, Knowledge, Logic and Language,Reasoning, and Values. The essays evaluate Woods’work and celebrate the generous contribution thathe has made to Canada’s intellectual developmentover the past forty years.Kent A. Peacock is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Philosophy at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Lethbridge.Andrew D. Irvine is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> Philosophy at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British Columbia.Blame for the putative failure <strong>of</strong> liberalism in latenineteenth-centuryJapan and China has <strong>of</strong>ten beenplaced on an insufficient grasp <strong>of</strong> modernity amongEast Asian leaders or on their cultural commitmentsto traditional values. In Personal Liberty andPublic Good, Douglas Howland refutes this view,turning to the central text <strong>of</strong> liberalism in that era:John Stuart Mill’s On Liberty.Howland <strong>of</strong>fers absorbing analyses <strong>of</strong> thetranslations <strong>of</strong> the book into Japanese and Chinese,which at times reveal astonishing emendations. Aswith their political leaders, Mill’s Japanese andChinese translators feared individual liberty couldundermine the public good and standards for publicbehaviour, and so introduced their own moralvalues – Christianity and Confucianism, respectively– into On Liberty, filtering its original meaning.Howland mirrors this mistrust <strong>of</strong> individualliberty in Asia with critiques <strong>of</strong> the work inEngland, which itself had trouble adopting liberalism.Personal Liberty and Public Good is a compellingaddition to the corpus <strong>of</strong> writing on the work<strong>of</strong> John Stuart Mill. It will be <strong>of</strong> great interest tohistorians <strong>of</strong> political thought, liberalism, andtranslation, as well as scholars <strong>of</strong> East Asian studies.Douglas Howland is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<strong>of</strong> History at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Wisconsin –Milwaukee.Approx. 400 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>1 halftoneCloth ISBN 0-8020-3866-2 £55.00 $85.00 EApprox. 200 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9005-2 £32.00 $50.00 E48


P h i l o s o p h y / gP eo nl ie tri ca al l i nT th er oe rs ytCollected Works <strong>of</strong> George GrantVolume 3 (1960–1969)Edited by Arthur Davis and Henry RoperGeorge Grant (1918–1988) has been calledCanada’s greatest political philosopher. During hislifetime, he encouraged Canadians to think moredeeply about matters <strong>of</strong> social justice and individualresponsibility, writing on subjects as diverse aswar, technology, abortion, and Canadian politics.His work continues to this day to stimulate, challenge,and inspire.Grant’s legacy includes sixbooks, more than two hundredarticles, as well as broadcast transcripts,correspondence, andunpublished material. In this, thethird volume <strong>of</strong> the CollectedWorks <strong>of</strong> George Grant, editorsArthur Davis and Henry Roperhave gathered together Grant’swork from the 1960s, when hewas a pr<strong>of</strong>essor at Hamilton,Ontario’s McMaster <strong>University</strong>.This is the era when Grant producedhis best-known worksincluding Lament for a Nation(1965) and Technology and Empire(1969), both <strong>of</strong> which are included in this volume.The 1960s also allowed Grant to comment onsome <strong>of</strong> the massive cultural shifts that were takingplace at the time and on major events like thewar in Vietnam.As with the previous volumes in the CollectedWorks, the text is fully annotated and includes anintroduction to the period it covers. The series asa whole strives to make evident the pattern <strong>of</strong>Grant’s thought, but also invites a reconsideration<strong>of</strong> the nature and significance <strong>of</strong> his work. Hiscollected writings are a valuable contribution toCanadian political thought and intellectual history.Arthur Davis is an associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor with theSchool <strong>of</strong> Social Sciences, Atkinson Faculty <strong>of</strong>Liberal and Pr<strong>of</strong>essional Studies, York <strong>University</strong>.Henry Roper is a retired pr<strong>of</strong>essor and former director<strong>of</strong> the King’s Foundation Year Programme at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> King’s College.‘This book is a remarkable compilation<strong>of</strong> the thoughts <strong>of</strong> Canada’s best thinker,George Grant. Through his interviews,correspondence and lecture transcripts,one gains a greater insight into how hismind could roam over a complex range<strong>of</strong> thoughts, yet tie them to ordinaryexperience in a way that escapes mostscholars.’Leah Bradshaw, Department <strong>of</strong>Political Science, Brock <strong>University</strong>Also available:Collected Works <strong>of</strong>George GrantVolume 2 (1951–1959)Edited by Arthur Davis0-8020-0763-5 / £80.00 / $128.00 / 2003Collected Works <strong>of</strong> George GrantVolume 1 (1933–1950)Edited by Arthur Davis and Peter C. Emberley0-8020-0762-7 / £48.00 / $83.00 / 2000Approx. 770 pp / 6 1 /8 x 9 1 /4 / October <strong>2005</strong>1 halftoneCloth ISBN 0-8020-3904-9 £80.00 $125.00 EGeorge Grant in 1960. Photograph by Tom Boschler.49


P o l i t i c s & P o l i c yGlobalization UnpluggedSovereignty and the Canadian State in the Twenty-First CenturyPeter UrmetzerStudies in Comparative Political eConomy and Public PolicyThe debate over economic globalization has reacheda fever pitch in the past decade and a half withWestern governments and multinational corporationstrumpeting its virtues and a multitude <strong>of</strong>activists and developing-world citizens vociferouslydenouncing it. Both sides would agree that globalizationis a recent development that is changing theway people and nations do business, but inGlobalization Unplugged, Peter Urmetzer questionswhether national economies are losing their sovereigntyand whether the topic <strong>of</strong> globalization meritsas much discussion as it receives.Urmetzer’s focus is specifically on Canada andhe demonstrates that current levels <strong>of</strong> trade are notunprecedented and, further, that as the economybecomes more service oriented, it will also becomeless trade dependent. He points out that only arelatively small percentage <strong>of</strong> Canada’s wealth isowned by foreign investors and likewise, only asmall portion <strong>of</strong> the country’s wealth is locatedoutside <strong>of</strong> its borders.Disputing claims that the nation-state is weakeningor disappearing altogether, Urmetzer showshow the welfare-state side <strong>of</strong> government spending– conveniently ignored in the anti-globalizationliterature yet arguably the most significant developmentin the political economy <strong>of</strong> the nation-state inthe twentieth century – remains remarkable stable.Written with precision and skill, GlobalizationUnplugged will spark controversy on both sides <strong>of</strong>the globalization debate and help deflate the rhetoric<strong>of</strong> both advocates and detractors.Peter Urmetzer is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Sociology at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>British Columbia, Okanagan.Approx. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / July <strong>2005</strong>31 figuresCloth ISBN 0-8020-3855-7 £40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-3799-2 £20.00 $29.95 CPhotograph <strong>of</strong> trucks courtesy PhotoDisc. Photograph <strong>of</strong>syringe (backscreen) courtesy Corbis.50


gP oe nl i et ir ca s l & i nPt oe rl ei cs y tNew InstitutionalismTheory and AnalysisEdited by André LecoursStudies in Comparative Political eConomy and Public PolicyNew Institutionalism is currently one <strong>of</strong> the mostprominent approaches in political science. In thisinnovative collection, top scholars in the field <strong>of</strong>fersubstantial theoretical and analytical contributionsto new institutionalist scholarship, engaging indebates about structure and agency, state-societyrelations, institutional creation and change, preferenceformation, and the complicated web <strong>of</strong> relationshipsbetween institutions, culture, ideas, identity,rationality, and interests.From an analytical point <strong>of</strong> view, the contributorsexamine how the state and political institutionsshape a variety <strong>of</strong> political phenomena and outcomes,namely, nationalism, democratic transition,party aggregation, policy networks, war and peace,international recognition, sovereignty, and selectedpublic policies. They <strong>of</strong>fer thorough theoreticalreflections on the relationship between institutionsand society as well as on the role <strong>of</strong> institutions inpolitical analysis.Featuring discussions <strong>of</strong> comparative politics,public policy, and international relations, as well asthe institutionalist traditions <strong>of</strong> English and FrenchCanadian political science, this collection from editorAndré Lecours is a comprehensive examination<strong>of</strong> the subject, making it a crucial addition to anypolitical scientist’s library.André Lecours is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Political Science at Concordia<strong>University</strong>.Recent titles in the Studies inComparative Political Economyand Public Policy seriesMoney in Their Own NameThe Feminist Voice in Poverty Debate inCanada, 1970–1995Wendy McKeen0-8020-8544-X / £15.00 / $27.95 / 2004Gendered StatesWomen, Unemployment Insurance, and thePolitical Economy <strong>of</strong> the Welfare State inCanada, 1945–1997Ann Porter0-8020-8408-7 / £18.00 / $30.95 / 2003Educational Regimes and Anglo-AmericanDemocracyRonald Manzer0-8020-8780-9 / £48.00 / $78.00 / 2003The Economic Implications <strong>of</strong> SocialCohesionEdited by Lars Osberg0-8020-3736-4 / £42.00 / $68.00 / 2003Contingent Work, Disrupted LivesLabour and Community in the New RuralEconomyAnthony Winson and Belinda Leach0-8020-8426-5 / £14.00 / $27.95 / 2002Knowledge and Economic ConductThe Social Foundations <strong>of</strong> the ModernEconomyNico Stehr0-8020-7886-9 / £18.00 / $30.50 / 2002Approx. 380 pp / 6 x 9 / July <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3900-6 £42.00 $65.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-4881-1 £20.00 $29.95 CSee the full list and shop atwww.utppublishing.com51


P o l i t i c s & P o l i c yComplex SovereigntyReconstituting Political Authority in theTwenty-First CenturyEdited by Edgar Grande and Louis W. PaulyThe way humanity governs itself is today changingvery rapidly. Pr<strong>of</strong>ound transformations in structures<strong>of</strong> political authority are underway in Europe,North America, and beyond. Nation-states remaincentral, but they cannot address the most pressingproblems facing their own citizens without movingaway from traditional understandings <strong>of</strong> sovereigntyitself. Complex Sovereignty contends that just sucha movement is underway.Editors Edgar Grande and Louis W. Pauly andthe contributors to this volume elucidate the meaning<strong>of</strong> ‘complex sovereignty’ through a set <strong>of</strong> conceptualand empirical studies including governancein the European Union and North America, theemergence <strong>of</strong> private-public partnerships, the adaptation<strong>of</strong> established international organizations,and the search for innovative mechanisms to managerisk. They reveal a fascinating and vitally importantstruggle to give coherence to a complicatedgoverning system <strong>of</strong> multiple and overlapping hierarchies.This is an original, collaborative studycrossing the disciplines <strong>of</strong> political science, internationalrelations, sociology, and political economy.Edgar Grande holds the Chair in Political Sciencein the Geschwister-Scholl Institute at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Munich).Louis W. Pauly is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor and Canada ResearchChair in the Department <strong>of</strong> Political Science anddirector <strong>of</strong> the Centre for International Studies atthe <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Public Science, PrivateInterestsCulture and Commerce in Canada’s Networks <strong>of</strong>Centres <strong>of</strong> ExcellenceJanet Atkinson-GrosjeanThe Networks <strong>of</strong> Centres <strong>of</strong> Excellence (NCE)program is Canada’s flagship research funding initiativeand a policy innovation that has been emulatedby a number <strong>of</strong> other countries. The NCEprogram is historically significant in the politicaleconomy <strong>of</strong> Canadian research: established in 1988by the Mulroney government, it was the first programto attach expectations <strong>of</strong> industry partnershipsand commercial exploitation to funding foracademic research. The program rests on dual goals<strong>of</strong> research excellence and commercial relevanceand promotes a national research capacity that‘floats across’ existing academic institutions andprovincial jurisdictions.Janet Atkinson-Grosjean’s Public Science,Private Interests is the first book-length study <strong>of</strong>NCEs, and <strong>of</strong>fers an assessment <strong>of</strong> the long-termimpact <strong>of</strong> the blurring between public institutionsand private enterprise. Atkinson-Grosjean revealsnot only the cultural and commercial shifts soughtby policymakers, but also unintended consequencessuch as regional clustering, élitism and exclusion,problems with social and fiscal accountability, tensionswith host institutions, and goal displacementbetween science and commerce. This is a work <strong>of</strong>great importance to Canadian policy studies andparticularly to science and medical research policy.Janet Atkinson-Grosjean is a research associate withthe Centre for Policy Research on Science andTechnology at Simon Fraser <strong>University</strong> and the W.Maurice Young Centre for Applied Ethics at the<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> British Columbia.Approx. 340 pp / 6 x 9 / September <strong>2005</strong>2 figures; 8 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3881-6 £40.00 $60.00 EApprox. 240 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>17 figuresCloth ISBN 0-8020-8005-7 £32.00 $50.00 E52


S o c i o l o ggy e/ n eS ro ac l i ai nl tWe ro ers ktEmpowering ChildrenChildren’s Rights Education as a Pathway to CitizenshipR. Brian Howe and Katherine CovellApproved by the General Assembly <strong>of</strong> the UnitedNations in 1989, the United Nations Convention onthe Rights <strong>of</strong> the Child affirms that children in allcountries have fundamental rights, including rightsto education. To date, 192 states are signatories to orhave in some form ratified the accord. Children arestill imperilled in many countries, however, and are<strong>of</strong>ten not made aware <strong>of</strong> their guaranteed rights.In Empowering Children, R. Brian Howe andKatherine Covell assert that educating childrenabout their basic rights is a necessary means not only<strong>of</strong> fulfilling a country’s legal obligations, but also <strong>of</strong>advancing education about democratic principlesand the practice <strong>of</strong> citizenship. The authors contendthat children’s rights education empowers childrenas persons and as rights-respecting citizens in democraticsocieties. Such education has a ‘contagioneffect’ that brings about a general social knowledgeon human rights and social responsibility.Although there remain obstacles to the implementation<strong>of</strong> children’s rights in many countries,Howe and Covell argue that reforming schools andenhancing teacher education are absolutely essentialto the creation <strong>of</strong> a new culture <strong>of</strong> respect towardchildren as citizens. Their thorough and passionatework marks a significant advance in the field.R. Brian Howe is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Political Science and co-director <strong>of</strong> the Children’sRights Centre at the <strong>University</strong> College <strong>of</strong> CapeBreton.Katherine Covell is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Psychology and co-director <strong>of</strong> the Children’s RightsCentre at the <strong>University</strong> College <strong>of</strong> Cape Breton.Approx. 260 pp / 6 x 9 / July <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-3857-3 £28.00 $45.00 E‘With Empowering Children, R. Brian Howe andKatherine Covell have provided a valuable contribution toan emerging field. They make a powerful and persuasive casethat provokes and evokes a response. The most striking feature<strong>of</strong> the book is its encyclopedic character: it demonstratesan authoritative grasp <strong>of</strong> a wide range <strong>of</strong> issues. Particularlyimportant is the capacity <strong>of</strong> the authors to draw on scholarshipand research from around the world – not just NorthAmerica and Europe, but also Asia, Africa, South America,and Australia.’Andrew Hughes, Faculty <strong>of</strong> Education, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>New Brunswick‘Empowering Children makes a passionate and well-presentedcase for children’s rights education. It is very wellwritten and argued, and engages nicely with the relevantliterature (both historical and current), making insightfulconnections between children’s rights education theory,research, and practice. R. Brian Howe and KatherineCovell’s work represents a major advance in the field.’Daniel Schugurensky, Ontario Institute for Studies inEducation, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>Illustration courtesy Don Bishop / PhotoDisc.53


S o c i o l o g y / S o c i a l W o r kPartnerships for PreventionThe Story <strong>of</strong> the Highfield Community EnrichmentProjectGe<strong>of</strong>frey Nelson, S. Mark Pancer, Karen Hayward,and Ray DeV. PetersThe Highfield Community Enrichment Project isone <strong>of</strong> eight demonstration sites for the ‘BetterBeginnings, Better Futures’ initiative, a comprehensive,community-driven program dedicated to theprevention <strong>of</strong> children’s mental health problems inOntario and the promotion <strong>of</strong> child, family, andcommunity wellness. Drawing from this multimethod,longitudinal research project, authorsGe<strong>of</strong>frey Nelson, S. Mark Pancer, Karen Hayward,and Ray DeV. Peters have written Partnerships forPrevention, providing insights and lessons on howprevention programs can be planned, implemented,and managed in a low-income, multicultural contextwith a high degree <strong>of</strong> community involvement.The authors demonstrate not just that the programworks, but how it works, and in so doingmake a contribution to theory, research, and practicein primary prevention and mental health promotionfor children. Partnerships for Preventionprovides a great deal <strong>of</strong> knowledge that will be <strong>of</strong>interest and use to policy-makers, program planners,practitioners, and community residents, whowish to create prevention programs.Ge<strong>of</strong>frey Nelson is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Psychology at Wilfrid Laurier <strong>University</strong>.S. Mark Pancer is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department <strong>of</strong>Psychology at Wilfrid Laurier <strong>University</strong>.Karen Hayward is an independent social researchconsultant living in <strong>Toronto</strong>.Ray DeV. Peters is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Psychology at Queen’s <strong>University</strong>.Towards Positive Systems <strong>of</strong>Child and Family WelfareInternational Comparisons <strong>of</strong> Child Protection, FamilyService, and Community Caring SystemsEdited by Nancy Freymond and Gary CameronThe need for services that respond to the ‘maltreatment’<strong>of</strong> children and to the struggles <strong>of</strong> families isat the core <strong>of</strong> social service systems in all developednations. While these child and family welfare systemsconfront similar problems and incorporatecommon elements, there are substantial differencesin philosophy, organization, and operation acrossinternational settings and models.In this new collection <strong>of</strong> essays, NancyFreymond and Gary Cameron have brought togethersome <strong>of</strong> the finest international minds to providean original and integrated discussion <strong>of</strong> child protection,family service, and community caringmodels <strong>of</strong> child and family welfare. The volume notonly examines child protection and family serviceapproaches within Western nations – includingCanada, the United States, England, theNetherlands, France, and Sweden – it is also thefirst comparative study to give equal attention toAboriginal community caring models in Canadaand New Zealand.The comparisons made by the essays in thisvolume allow for a consideration <strong>of</strong> constructiveand feasible innovations in child and family welfareand contribute to an enriched debate around eachsystem. This book will be <strong>of</strong> great benefit to thefield for many years to come.Nancy Freymond is a Ph.D. candidate in theFaculty <strong>of</strong> Social Work at Wilfrid Laurier <strong>University</strong>.Gary Cameron is the Lyle S. Hallman Chair inChild and Family Welfare in the Faculty <strong>of</strong> SocialWork at Wilfrid Laurier <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 290 pp / 6 x 9 / September <strong>2005</strong>6 charts; 37 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-8019-7 £42.00 $65.00 EApprox. 340 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>2 halftones; 13 figures; 10 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-9028-1 £48.00 $75.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9371-X £22.50 $35.00 C54


S o c i o l o ggy e/ n eS ro ac l i ai nl tWe ro ers ktLooking After ChildrenPractitioners’ GuideEdited by Raymond Lemay and Hayat Ghazal<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa <strong>Press</strong>Looking After Children (LAC) is an approach toassessing the development <strong>of</strong> children being caredfor by child welfare agencies and enhancing theirprogress towards important developmental goals.The initiative allows child welfare staff and fosterparents to put the concept <strong>of</strong> good parenting intopractical application. First developed in Britain in1987, the method has been adapted and usedincreasingly in Canada, and especially in Ontario.The Ontario Looking After Children (OnLAC)Council has been instrumental in seeing throughthis implementation across Ontario’s Children’s AidSocieties.This book provides an inclusive guide for practitionerson how to use the LAC approach in theirwork and describes its main clinical tool, theAssessment and Action Record (AAR), an in-depthassessment interview that leads to a comprehensivecare plan. Written by two long-time LAC practitioners,Raymond Lemay and Hayat Ghazal, the guidedemonstrates LAC’s benefits and goals, and is anessential manual for everyone in the field <strong>of</strong> ChildWelfare.Raymond Lemay is the executive director <strong>of</strong> thePrescott-Russell (Ontario) Services to Children andAdults (PRSCA) and a member <strong>of</strong> the OntarioLooking After Children Council.Hayat Ghazal is the Ontario Looking AfterChildren project coordinator at the Centre forResearch on Community Services, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong>Ottawa.Promoting Resilience inChild WelfareEdited by Robert J. Flynn, Peter Dudding, andJames Barber<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ottawa <strong>Press</strong>Since the beginnings <strong>of</strong> its development in Britainin 1987, the Looking After Children (LAC) initiativehas had a pr<strong>of</strong>ound influence in Canada – as well asin Australia and across Europe – in sharpening thedevelopmental focus and improving the quality <strong>of</strong>services for children and adolescents who, because<strong>of</strong> abuse, neglect, extreme poverty, or other circumstances,live in out-<strong>of</strong>-home care. With its emphasison high expectations, positive substitute parenting,and good short-term and long-term outcomes, LAChas been an important vehicle for promoting resilience(i.e., positive outcomes in spite <strong>of</strong> seriousthreats to development) in child welfare, one thatwill remain a beneficial influence in Canada andinternationally for many years to come.Promoting Resilience in Child Welfare presentsreviews <strong>of</strong> research, new empirical findings, anduseful practice and policy suggestions derived fromthe perspectives <strong>of</strong> LAC and resilience theory by anarray <strong>of</strong> international voices. Practitioners, out-<strong>of</strong>homecare providers, youths in care, in-servicetrainers, students, researchers, and policy makers inCanada and across the world will find much in thisbook that speaks to more effective ways <strong>of</strong> improvingthe lives <strong>of</strong> young people being looked after inout-<strong>of</strong>-home care.Robert J. Flynn is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School <strong>of</strong>Psychology and co-director <strong>of</strong> the Centre forResearch on Community Services at the <strong>University</strong><strong>of</strong> Ottawa.Peter Dudding is the executive director <strong>of</strong> the ChildWelfare League <strong>of</strong> Canada.James Barber is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in, and dean <strong>of</strong>, theFaculty <strong>of</strong> Social Work at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Approx. 160 pp / 8 1 /2 x 11 / December <strong>2005</strong>45 tables and figuresPaper ISBN 0-7766-3552-2 £25.00 $40.00 CApprox. 370 pp / 6 x 9 / September <strong>2005</strong>Paper ISBN 0-7766-3553-0 £25.00 $40.00 C55


S o c i o l o g y / S o c i a l W o r kTending the Gardens <strong>of</strong> CitizenshipChild Saving in <strong>Toronto</strong>, 1880s–1920sXiaobei ChenAt the threshold <strong>of</strong> the ‘social’ era (1880s–1920s) inCanada, the idea <strong>of</strong> ‘child saving’ emerged withinthe framework <strong>of</strong> building national citizenship,aimed at ensuring that children – the ‘future citizens’– would grow up to be useful, self-controlled,Christian adults. Child saving work connected theconduct <strong>of</strong> individuals with issues <strong>of</strong> societal importanceand attempted to install a desirable mode <strong>of</strong>power in child rearing and child saving that can bestbe described as ‘the gardening governmentality.’Tending the Gardens <strong>of</strong> Citizenship takes aFoucauldian approach to child saving work duringthe beginning <strong>of</strong> the social era in <strong>Toronto</strong> and demonstratesthe difference between the positions <strong>of</strong>children in citizenship politics at that time andtoday. Xiaobei Chen breaks new ground with hercritical observation <strong>of</strong> current canonical ideas andpractices centred around ‘keeping kids safe.’ Shedemonstrates that the protection <strong>of</strong> children fromparental abuse and neglect is best understood as aninterest that has undergone radical historical transformations,depending on the political and socialprojects <strong>of</strong> the day. This book marks a seriousadvancement in the study <strong>of</strong> Canadian social history,critical analysis <strong>of</strong> child welfare, and governmentalitystudies in social work.Xiaobei Chen is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School<strong>of</strong> Social Work at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Victoria.Approx. 220 pp / 6 x 9 / July <strong>2005</strong>13 halftonesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3913-8 £32.00 $50.00 E‘Tending the Gardens <strong>of</strong> Citizenship clearly advances thenarrative <strong>of</strong> child welfare in Canada. A distinctive contributionit makes is the rigorous intellectual approach to thetechnologies <strong>of</strong> social welfare, and Chen’s analysis <strong>of</strong> theinterplay between technique, power, metaphor, and prescriptivepractice is brilliant.’Ken M<strong>of</strong>fatt, School <strong>of</strong> Social Work, Ryerson <strong>University</strong>‘Tending the Gardens <strong>of</strong> Citizenship <strong>of</strong>fers a great deal tothe reader. It is accessibly written, rich in historical documentarydetail, and enlightening in its use <strong>of</strong> deconstructivetechniques. The issues Chen addresses from a comparativehistorical perspective are critical to debate today on childwelfare in many countries. This is a major contribution to thefield.’Peter Leonard, School <strong>of</strong> Social Work, McGill <strong>University</strong>John Joseph Kelso Fonds, scrapbook, n.d., National Archives <strong>of</strong>Canada, MC-30-C97, Vol. 12.56


S o c i o l o ggy e/ n eS ro ac l i ai nl tWe ro ers ktHome EconomicsNationalism and the Making <strong>of</strong> ‘Migrant Workers’ inCanadaNandita SharmaDiaspora, Memory, andIdentityA Search for HomeEdited by Vijay AgnewA massive shift has taken place in Canadian immigrationpolicy since the 1970s: the majority <strong>of</strong>migrants no longer enter as permanent residents butas temporary migrant workers. In Home Economics,Nandita Sharma shows how Canadian policies oncitizenship and immigration contribute to theentrenchment <strong>of</strong> a system <strong>of</strong> apartheid where thosecategorized as ‘migrant workers’ live, work, pay taxesand sometimes die in Canada but are subordinatedto a legal regime that renders them as perennialoutsiders to nationalized Canadian society.In calling for a ‘no borders’ policy in Canada,Sharma argues that it is the acceptance <strong>of</strong> nationalistformulations <strong>of</strong> ‘home’ informed by racializedand gendered relations that contribute to the neoliberalrestructuring <strong>of</strong> the labour market in Canada.She exposes the ideological character <strong>of</strong> Canadianborder control policies which, rather than preventingpeople from getting in, actually work to restricttheir rights once within Canada. Home Economics isan urgent and much-needed reminder that intoday’s world <strong>of</strong> growing displacement and unprecedentedlevels <strong>of</strong> international migration, societymust pay careful attention to how nationalist ideologiesconstruct ‘homelands’ that essentially leavethe vast majority <strong>of</strong> the world’s migrant peopleshomeless.Nandita Sharma is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theSchool <strong>of</strong> Social Sciences at Atkinson College, York<strong>University</strong>.Memories establish a connection between a collectiveand individual past, between origins, heritage,and history. Those who have left their places <strong>of</strong>birth to make homes elsewhere are familiar with thequestion, “Where do you come from?” and respondin innumerable well-rehearsed ways. Diasporas constructracialized, sexualized, gendered, and oppositionalsubjectivities and shape the cosmopolitanintellectual commitment <strong>of</strong> scholars. The diasporicindividual <strong>of</strong>ten has a double consciousness, aprivileged knowledge and perspective that is consonantwith postmodernity and globalization.The essays in this volume reflect on the movements<strong>of</strong> people and cultures in the present day,when physical, social, and mental borders andboundaries are being challenged and sometimessuccessfully dismantled. The contributors – from avariety <strong>of</strong> disciplinary perspectives – discuss thediasporic experiences <strong>of</strong> ethnic and racial groupsliving in Canada from their perspective, includingthe experiences <strong>of</strong> South Asians, Iranians, WestIndians, Chinese, and Eritreans. Diaspora, Memory,and Identity is an exciting and innovative collection<strong>of</strong> essays that examines the nuanced development <strong>of</strong>theories <strong>of</strong> Diaspora, subjectivity, double-consciousness,gender and class experiences, and thenature <strong>of</strong> home.Vijay Agnew is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School forWomen’s Studies and the Division <strong>of</strong> Social Scienceand director <strong>of</strong> the Centre for Feminist Research atYork <strong>University</strong>.Approx. 220 pp / 6 x 9 / December <strong>2005</strong>1 figure; 9 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3840-9 £32.00 $55.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-4883-8 £18.00 $27.50 CApprox. 260 pp / 6 x 9 / October <strong>2005</strong>Cloth ISBN 0-8020-9033-8 £40.00 $60.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-9374-4 £18.00 $27.95 C57


S o c i o l o g y / S o c i a l W o r kThe New Politics <strong>of</strong>Surveillance and VisibilityEdited by Kevin D. Haggerty and Richard V. EricsonGreen College Thematic Lecture SeriesSince the terrorist attacks <strong>of</strong> September 2001, surveillancehas been put forward as the essential toolfor the ‘war on terror,’ with new technologies andpolicies <strong>of</strong>fering police and military operativesenhanced opportunities for monitoring suspectpopulations. The last few years have also seen thepublic’s consumer tastes become increasingly codified,with ‘data mines’ <strong>of</strong> demographic informationsuch as postal codes and purchasing records.Additionally, surveillance has become a form <strong>of</strong>entertainment, with ‘reality’ shows becoming thedominant genre on network and cable television.In The New Politics <strong>of</strong> Surveillance and Visibility,editors Kevin D. Haggerty and Richard V. Ericsonbring together leading experts to analyse how societyis organized through surveillance systems, technologies,and practices. They demonstrate how thenew political uses <strong>of</strong> surveillance make visible thatwhich was previously unknown, blur the boundariesbetween public and private, rewrite the norms <strong>of</strong>privacy, create new forms <strong>of</strong> inclusion and exclusion,and alter processes <strong>of</strong> democratic accountability.This collection challenges conventional wisdomand advances new theoretical approaches through aseries <strong>of</strong> studies <strong>of</strong> surveillance in policing, themilitary, commercial enterprises, mass media, andhealth sciences.Contacts, Opportunities,and Criminal EnterpriseCarlo MorselliSuccess in criminal enterprise largely depends onhow <strong>of</strong>fenders go about committing their crimes.An <strong>of</strong>fender’s search for increasing financial returnsand decreasing costs is mediated by the structure <strong>of</strong>his pool <strong>of</strong> useful and trustworthy contacts. InContacts, Opportunities, and Criminal Enterprise,Carlo Morselli examines how business-orientedcriminals who have personal networks designed topromote high numbers <strong>of</strong> diverse contacts achieveand maintain competitive advantages in their earningactivities and overall criminal careers.Based on two case studies <strong>of</strong> criminal careers ininternational cannabis smuggling and Cosa Nostaracketeering, the book proposes a social networkframework to study the underlying social relationshipsinfluencing achievement in crime. Morsellifurther utilizes this relational approach to illustratehow survival and long-term endurance in criminalenterprise is achieved, and how criminals’ networks<strong>of</strong> contacts and opportunities can insulate themfrom potentially career-damaging forces – lawenforcement, fellow criminals, etc. Contacts,Opportunities, and Criminal Enterprise is a muchneededassessment <strong>of</strong> criminal activity.Carlo Morselli is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the School <strong>of</strong>Criminology at l’Université de Montréal.Kevin D. Haggerty is an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in theDepartment <strong>of</strong> Sociology and director <strong>of</strong> theCriminology Program at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Alberta.Richard V. Ericson is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor with the Centre <strong>of</strong>Criminology at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong>.Approx. 400 pp / 6 x 9 / November <strong>2005</strong>3 figures; 1 tableCloth ISBN 0-8020-3829-8 £42.00 $65.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-4878-1 £20.00 $29.95 CApprox. 210 pp / 6 x 9 / September <strong>2005</strong>13 figures; 14 tablesCloth ISBN 0-8020-3879-4 £32.00 $50.00 EPaper ISBN 0-8020-3811-5 £15.00 $24.95 C58


e f e r e n c eCanadian Who’s Who <strong>2005</strong>Volume XLEdited by Elizabeth LumleyNow in its ninety-fifth year <strong>of</strong> publication, this standardCanadian reference source contains the mostcomprehensive and authoritative biographical informationon notable living Canadians. Those listedare carefully selected because <strong>of</strong> the positions theyhold in Canadian society, or because <strong>of</strong> the contributionthey have made to life in Canada.The volume is updated annually to ensureaccuracy, and 600 new entries are added each yearto keep current with developing trends and issues inCanadian society. Included are outstandingCanadians from all walks <strong>of</strong> life: politics, media,academia, business, sports, and the arts, from everyarea <strong>of</strong> human activity.Each entry details birth date and place, education,family, career history, memberships, creativeworks, honours and awards, and full addresses.Indispensable to researchers, students, media, business,government, and schools, Canadian Who’s Whois an invaluable source <strong>of</strong> general knowledge.‘The [Canadian] Who’s Who list <strong>of</strong> outstanding individualswill surely inspire…I know this research tool is regularlyconsulted, everywhere, by those who make it a pr<strong>of</strong>ession tobring the past to our…collective memory, as well as by thosewho, on the spur <strong>of</strong> the moment, may suddenly need informationbefore meeting someone, before introducing them,before referring someone to a research committee, before writingan article, etc… Canadian Who’s Who…has, for a longtime, described the spirit <strong>of</strong> Canadians.’Roch Carrier, former National LibrarianCanadian Who’s Who <strong>2005</strong> on CD-ROMThe complete text <strong>of</strong> Canadian Who’s Who is alsoavailable on CD-ROM, in a comprehensively indexedand fully searchable format. Search ‘astronaut’ or‘entrepreneur <strong>of</strong> the year,’ ‘aboriginal achievementaward’ and ‘Order <strong>of</strong> Canada’ and discover a wealth<strong>of</strong> information. Fast, easy, and more accessible thanever, the Canadian Who’s Who on CD-ROM is anessential addition to your electronic library.Please see our website: www.utpress.utoronto.ca/cwwCD-ROM requirements:WINDOWS:95/98/2000/NT/XP386/25Mhz4mb RAM(8mb recommended)MAC:Mac OS 7, 8, and 94mb RAM(8mb recommended)8% PST applicable to Ontario residents on all formatsBook1451 pp / 8 1 /2 x 11 / AvailableCloth ISBN 0-8020-8907-0 (ISSN 0068-9963)£125.00 $195.00 NETCD-ROMISBN 0-8020-8909-7 (ISSN 1481-4269)£140.00 $250.00 NETBook and CD-ROMISBN 0-8020-8908-9£200.00 $325.00 NETNetwork LicencesISBN 0-8020-8910-0To order, please contact CEDROM-SNi(416) 260-2369info.canada@cedrom-sni.com59


e f e r e n c eOntario Legal Directory <strong>2005</strong>Published annually since 1925Edited by Lynn BurdonAccuracy and completeness <strong>of</strong> detail have characterisedthe Ontario Legal Directory since 1925, whenthe first annual edition <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Toronto</strong> Legal Directorywas published.With over 30,000 listings <strong>of</strong> lawyers, law firms,federal and provincial courts, and government<strong>of</strong>fices, each complete with names, addresses, telephoneand fax numbers, e-mail and web addresses,the Ontario Legal Directory places all the informationyou need right at your fingertips. The BluePages put government and courts information rightup front, organized in easy-to-find categories withthumb-tab indexing.Book Subscription RatesQTY 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year1-5 copies 53.00 95.00 128.006-99 copies 49.00 88.00 118.00100+ copies 45.00 81.00 108.00Ontario Legal Directory <strong>2005</strong> on CD-ROMThe CD-ROM version incorporates all the features <strong>of</strong>the book and includes, as well, an easy-to-use interfacefor quick access to listings.• Cut and paste names and addresses directly intoother documents• Access services to the legal pr<strong>of</strong>ession• Bookmark frequently called numbers for quickreference• Annotate listings and create custom clipping files• Export data to standard word-processing formatsor print information directlyCD-ROM requirements:WINDOWS:95/98/2000/NT/XP386/25Mhz – 4mb RAM (8mb recommended)MAC:Mac OS 7, 8, and 94mb RAM (8mb recommended)To order the book, contact:Journals Division, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong>Tel: (416) 667-7810Fax: (416) 667-7881journals@utpress.utoronto.caTo order the CD-ROM or network version,please contact:CEDROM-SNi120 Eglinton Ave. East, Suite 1000<strong>Toronto</strong>, Ontario M4P 1E2Tel: 416-260-2369Fax: 416-260-1559info.canada@cedrom-sni.com8% PST applicable to Ontario residents on all formats.Book1192 pp / 6 3 /5 x 9 3 /5 / AvailablePaper ISBN 0-8020-8911-9 (ISSN 1438-2615) $53.00 NETCD-ROMISBN 0-8020-8912-7 (ISSN 1481-4064) $155.00 NETnetwork LicencesISBN 0-8020-8913-5Start as low as $195.00 for 1 to 3 users60


e f e r e n c eCanadian InsuranceClaims Directory <strong>2005</strong>73rd Annual EditionEdited by Gwen PeroniCanadian Books in Print<strong>2005</strong>Edited by Marian ButlerThis directory is published yearly to facilitate theforwarding <strong>of</strong> insurance claims throughout Canadaand the United States. Its subscribers are adjusters,firms specializing in counsel to the insurance industry,insurance companies, and industrial and government<strong>of</strong>fices.Listed are a total <strong>of</strong> 1600 independent adjusting<strong>of</strong>fices, which <strong>of</strong>fer dependable service to claimsforwarders, as well as some 100 insurance counsel,who are experienced in insurance defence litigation.The arrangement <strong>of</strong> listings is national, geographical,and alphabetical: adjusters and counselare listed by city, within province or state, andcountry. The editorial section includes a list <strong>of</strong> provincialassociations <strong>of</strong> Insurance Adjusters, the FireUnderwriters Investigation Bureau <strong>of</strong> Canada,Provincial Superintendents <strong>of</strong> Insurance, the FireMarshals <strong>of</strong> Canada, and a comprehensive listing <strong>of</strong>Canadian insurance companies.The listings are interspersed with informativeadvertisements from all fields <strong>of</strong> the insurance industry.Included as well are indexes to adjusters, insurancecounsel, insurance-related industries, and advertisers.CBIP is the complete reference and buying guide toEnglish-language Canadian books currently inprint; consequently, the Author and Title Index,Subject Index, and micr<strong>of</strong>iche editions are indispensableto the book pr<strong>of</strong>ession. With submissionsfrom both small and large publishers, CBIP providesaccess to titles not listed anywhere else.Containing nearly 52,000 titles, <strong>of</strong> which morethan 4500 have a 2004 imprint, the Author andTitle Index is extensively cross-referenced. TheSubject Index lists the titles under 800 differentsubject categories. Both books <strong>of</strong>fer the most completedirectory <strong>of</strong> Canadian publishers available,listing the names and ISBN prefixes, as well as thestreet, e-mail, and web addresses <strong>of</strong> nearly 5000houses. The quarterly micr<strong>of</strong>iche service providesupdated information in April, July, and October.CBIP is constantly referred to by order librarians,booksellers, researchers, and all those involvedin book acquisition. In addition, CBIP is an invaluablerecord <strong>of</strong> the vast wealth <strong>of</strong> publishing andwriting activity in the scientific, literary, academic,and arts communities across Canada.Approx. 300 pp / 6 x 9 / July <strong>2005</strong>Paper ISBN 0-8020-8914-3 $45.00 NET8% PST applicable to Ontario residents on aboveAuthor and Title Index1604 pp / 8 x 10 3 /4 / AvailableCloth 0-8020-8903-8 (ISSN 0068-8398)£125.00 $195.00 NETSubject Index942 pp / 8 x 10 3 /4 / AvailableCloth 0-8020-8904-6 (ISSN 0315-1999)£110.00 $175.00 NETQuarterly Service(Author and Title Index plus Quarterly Micr<strong>of</strong>iche)Cloth – Available; Micr<strong>of</strong>iche – April, July, and October <strong>2005</strong>ISBN 0-8020-8906-2 $245.00 NET61


U T P r e c e n t b a c k l i s tAdages III iv 1 to IV ii 100Desiderius Erasmus.Edited by John N. Grant.Translated and annotatedby Denis L. Drysdall0-8020-3643-0 / £80.00 /$150.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Aretino’s DialoguesPietro Aretino. Translatedby Raymond Rosenthal0-8020-4890-0 / £20.00 /$29.95 / <strong>2005</strong>As for Sinclair RossDavid Stouck0-8020-4388-7 / £28.00 /$45.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Aspiring to the LandscapeOn Painting and theSubject <strong>of</strong> NaturePetra Halkes0-8020-3894-8 / £32.00 /$50.00 / <strong>2005</strong>An Audience <strong>of</strong> OneDorothy Osborne’s Lettersto Sir William Temple,1652–1654Carrie Hintz0-8020-8833-3 / £32.95 /$50.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Baby Boomer HealthDynamicsHow Are We Aging?Andrew V. Wister0-8020-8635-7 / £20.00 /$29.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Bernard Shaw and NancyAstorEdited by J.P. Wearing0-8020-3752-6 / £32.00 /$60.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Calling Power to AccountLaw, Reparations, and theChinese Canadian HeadTaxEdited by DavidDyzenhaus and MayoMoran0-8020-3808-5 / £27.00 /$42.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Canada and the First WorldWarEssays in Honour <strong>of</strong>Robert Craig BrownEdited by DavidMacKenzie0-8020-8445-1 / £20.00 /$35.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Canadian Annual Review <strong>of</strong>Politics and Public Affairs1999Edited by David Mutimer0-8020-3901-4 / £65.00 /$100.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Captivating SubjectsWriting Confinement,Citizenship, andNationhood in theNineteenth CenturyEdited by Jason Haslamand Julia M. Wright0-8020-8968-2 / £32.00 /$50.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Collective Action andRadicalism in BrazilWomen, Urban Housing,and Rural MovementsMichel Duquette, MaurilioGaldino, Charmain Levy,Bérengère Marques-Pereira,and Florence Raes0-8020-3907-3 / £32.00 /$50.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Contemporary AntisemitismCanada and the WorldEdited by Derek J. Penslar,Michael R. Marrus, andJanet Gross Stein0-8020-3931-6 / £28.00 /$45.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Continentalizing CanadaThe Politics and Legacy <strong>of</strong>the MacdonaldCommissionGregory J. Inwood0-8020-8729-9 / £48.00 /$75.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Controversies with AlbertoPioDesiderius Erasmus.Edited and annotated byNelson H. Minnich andDaniel Sheerin. Translatedby Daniel Sheerin.Introduction by Nelson H.Minnich0-8020-4397-6 / £110.00/ $175.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Controversies with EdwardLeeDesiderius Erasmus.Edited by Jane E. Phillips.Translated by ErikaRummel. Annotated byIstván Bejczy, ErikaRummel, and Jane E.Phillips0-8020-3836-0 / £96.00 /$150.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Corresponding InfluenceSelected Letters <strong>of</strong> EmilyCarr and Ira DilworthEdited by Linda Morra0-8020-3877-8 / £40.00 /$60.00 / <strong>2005</strong>62


u t p r e c e n t b a c k l i s tCreating Knowledge,Strengthening NationsThe Changing Role <strong>of</strong>Higher EducationEdited by Glen A. Jones,Patricia L. McCarney, andMichael L. Skolnik0-8020-3856-5 / £35.00 /$55.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Cross Culture and FaithThe Life and Work <strong>of</strong>James Mellon MenziesLinfu Dong0-8020-3869-7 / £42.00 /$65.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Denaturalizing EcologicalPoliticsAlienation from Naturefrom Rousseau to theFrankfurt School andBeyondAndrew Biro0-8020-3794-1 / £15.00 /$24.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Downtown CanadaWriting Canadian CitiesEdited by Justin D.Edwards and DouglasIvison0-8020-8668-3 / £20.00 /$29.95 / <strong>2005</strong>The Empire <strong>of</strong> MindDigital Piracy and theAnti-Capitalist MovementMichael Strangelove0-8020-3818-2 / £21.50 /$32.95 / <strong>2005</strong>English Biography in theSeventeenth CenturyA Critical SurveyAllan Pritchard0-8020-3889-1 / £40.00 /$60.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Executive Styles in CanadaCabinet Structures andLeadership Practices inCanadian GovernementEdited by Luc Bernier,Keith Brownsey, andMichael Howlett0-8020-3785-2 / £20.00 /$29.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Eye <strong>of</strong> the HeartKnowing the HumanGood in the EuthanasiaDebateWilliam F. Sullivan0-8020-3923-5 / £60.00 /$85.00 / <strong>2005</strong>The <strong>Fall</strong> <strong>of</strong> an IconPsychoanalysis andAcademic PsychiatryJoel Paris0-8020-3772-0 / £18.00 /$27.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Five-Part InventionA History <strong>of</strong> LiteraryHistory in CanadaE.D. Blodgett0-8020-3815-8 / £18.00 /$27.95 / <strong>2005</strong>GaliciaA Multicultured LandEdited by ChristopherHann and Paul RobertMagocsi0-8020-3781-X / £20.00/ $29.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Global Heath GovernanceInternational Law andPublic Health in aDivided WorldObiji<strong>of</strong>or Aginam0-8020-8000-6 / £40.00 /$60.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Gospels and GritWork and Labour inCarlyle, Conrad, andOrwellRob Breton0-8020-3888-3 / £35.00 /$55.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Governing EducationBenjamin Levin0-8020-8622-5 / £18.00 /$24.95 / <strong>2005</strong>The Half-Lives <strong>of</strong> PatLowtherChristine Wiesenthal0-8020-3635-X / £42.00/ $65.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Hidden in Plain SightContributions <strong>of</strong>Aboriginal Peoples toCanadian Identity andCulture, Volume OneEdited by David R.Newhouse, Cora J.Voyageur, and Dan Beavon0-8020-8581-4 / £22.50 /$35.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Holiness and Masculinity inMedieval EuropeEdited by Patricia Cullumand Katherine J. Lewis0-8020-4892-7 / $27.50 /<strong>2005</strong>North American RightsOnlyImproved EarthPrairie Space as ModernArtefact, 1869–1944Rod Bantjes0-8020-8782-5 / £25.00 /$45.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Impulse ArchaeologyEdited by Eldon Garnet0-8020-8787-6 / £28.00 /$45.00 / <strong>2005</strong>63


U T P r e c e n t b a c k l i s tItalian Futurist PoetryEdited and translated byWillard Bohn0-8020-3783-6 / £20.00/ $29.95 / <strong>2005</strong>An Italian RenaissanceSextetSix Tales in HistoricalContextLauro Martines.Translated by MurthaBaca0-8020-8650-0 / £15.00/ $24.95 / 2004Jazz Age CatholicismMystic Modernism inPostwar Paris, 1919–1933Stephen Schloesser0-8020-8718-3 / £55.00/ $85.00 / <strong>2005</strong>The Jesuits, IICultures, Sciences, andthe Arts, 1540–1773Edited by John W.O’Malley, S.J., GauvinAlexander Bailey, Steven J.Harris, and T. FrankKennedy, S.J.0-8020-3861-1 / £55.00/ $85.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Lovers and LiversDisease Concepts inHistoryJacalyn Duffin0-8020-3805-0 / £20.00/ $29.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Living in the Labyrinth <strong>of</strong>TechnologyWillem H. Vanderburg0-8020-4879-X / £22.50/ $35.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Minerva’s AviaryPhilosophy at <strong>Toronto</strong>,1843–2003John G. Slater0-8020-3870-0 / £48.00/ $75.00 / <strong>2005</strong>NAFTA Tax Law and PolicyResolving the Clashbetween Economic andSovereignty InterestsArthur J. Cockfield0-8020-3581-7 / £42.00/ $65.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Narrative SettlementsGeographies <strong>of</strong> Women’sFiction between the WarsJennifer Poulos Nesbitt0-8020-8986-0 / £28.00/ $45.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Northrop Frye on Miltonand BlakeEdited by AngelaEsterhammer0-8020-3919-7 / £55.00/ $85.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Northrop Frye’s Writingson the Eighteenth andNineteenth CenturiesEdited by Imre Salusinszky0-8020-3824-7 / £55.00/ $85.00 / <strong>2005</strong>‘Paper-contestations’ andTextual Communities inEngland, 1640–1675Elizabeth Sauer0-8020-3884-0 / £28.00/ $45.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Pension PowerUnions, Pension Funds,and Social Investment inCanadaIsla Carmichael0-8020-3647-3 / £32.00/ $50.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Pink BloodHomophobic Violence inCanadaDouglas Victor Jan<strong>of</strong>f0-8020-8570-9 / £21.50/ $32.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Plato’s SunAn Introduction toPhilosophyAndrew Lawless0-8020-3809-3 / £20.00/ $29.95 / <strong>2005</strong>The Pr<strong>of</strong>essionalization <strong>of</strong>History in English CanadaDonald Wright0-8020-3928-6 / £28.00/ $45.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Reading WomenLiterary Figures andCultural Icons from theVictorian Age to thePresentEdited by Janet Badia andJennifer Phegley0-8020-8928-3 / £40.00/ $60.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Recognizing Aboriginal TitleThe Mabo Case andIndigenous Resistance toEnglish-SettlerColonialismPeter H. Russell0-8020-3863-8 / £42.00/ $65.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Re-imagining Policing inCanadaEdited by Dennis Cooley0-8020-8503-2 / £20.00/ $35.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Ritual and the RoodLiturgical Images and theOld English Poems <strong>of</strong> theDream <strong>of</strong> the RoodTraditionÉamonn Ó Carragáin0-8020-9008-7 / $80.00/ <strong>2005</strong>North and SouthAmerican Rights Only64


U T P r e c e n t b a c k l i s tSaints in MedievalManuscriptsGreg Buzwell0-8020-3795-X / $19.95/ <strong>2005</strong>North and SouthAmerican Rights OnlyA Science on the ScalesThe Rise <strong>of</strong> CanadianAtlantic Fisheries Biology,1898–1939Jennifer M. Hubbard0-8020-8859-7 / £35.00 /$55.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Semiotics UnboundedInterpretive Routesthrough the OpenNetwork <strong>of</strong> SignsSusan Petrilli and AugustoPonzio0-8020-8765-5 / £48.00 /$75.00 / <strong>2005</strong>A Smile in His Mind’s EyeA Study <strong>of</strong> the EarlyWorks <strong>of</strong> LawrenceDurrellRay Morrison0-8020-8939-9 / £50.00 /$80.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Sociology and Mass CultureDurkheim, Mills, andBaudrillardPatricia Cormack0-8020-8686-1 / £15.00 /$24.95 / 2004Sociology and the SacredAn Introduction to PhilipRieff’s Theory <strong>of</strong> CultureAntonius A.W. Zondervan0-8020-8018-9 / £32.00 /$50.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Sojourning SistersThe Lives and Letters <strong>of</strong>Jessie and AnnieMcQueenJean Barman0-8020-4877-3 / £18.00 /$27.95 / 2004Studies in HellenisticArchitectureFrederick E. <strong>Winter</strong>0-8020-3914-6 / £96.00 /$150.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Sustainability and the CivilCommonsRural Communities in theAge <strong>of</strong> GlobalizationJennifer Sumner0-8020-7999-7 / £28.00 /$45.00 / <strong>2005</strong>A Tragedy RevealedThe Story <strong>of</strong> Italians fromIstria, Dalmatia, andVenezia Giulia, 1943–1956Arrigo Petacco. Translatedby Konrad Eisenbichler0-8020-3921-9 / £28.00 /$45.00 / <strong>2005</strong>The Trinity ApocalypseEdited by DavidMcKitterick0-8020-4893-5 / $39.95 /<strong>2005</strong>North and SouthAmerican Rights OnlyThe Ugly WomanTransgressive AestheticModels in Italian Poetryfrom the Middle Ages tothe BaroquePatrizia Bettella0-8020-3926-X / £40.00/ $60.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Unmaking Imperial RussiaMykhailo Hrushevsky andthe Writing <strong>of</strong> UkrainianHistorySerhii Plokhy0-8020-3937-5 / £60.00 /$95.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Verbal EncountersAnglo-Saxon and OldNorse Studies for RobertaFrankEdited by Antonina Harbusand Russell Poole0-8020-8011-1 / £48.00 /$75.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Viola Florence Barnes,1885–1979A Historian’s BiographyJohn G. Reid0-8020-8017-0 / £28.00 /$45.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Visual HabitsNuns, Feminism, andAmerican Postwar PopularCultureRebecca Sullivan0-8020-3776-3 / £20.00 /$29.95 / <strong>2005</strong>‘Will the Circle beUnbroken?’Aboriginal Communities,Restorative Justice, andthe Challenges <strong>of</strong> Conflictand ChangeJane Dickson-Gilmore andCarol La Prairie0-8020-8674-8 / £20.00 /$29.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Women’s Writing in EnglishEarly Modern EnglandPatricia Demers0-8020-8664-0 / £21.50 /$32.95 / <strong>2005</strong>Youth and Identity Politicsin South Africa, 1990–1994Sibusisiwe NombusoDlamini0-8020-3911-1 / £32.00 /$55.00 / <strong>2005</strong>65


U T P s e l e c t e d B a c k l i s tAboriginal Health in CanadaHistorical, Cultural, andEpidemiological PerspectivesJames B. Waldram, D. AnnHerring, T. Kue Young0-8020-6887-1 / £14.00 / $23.95/ 1995Aggressive in PursuitThe Life <strong>of</strong> Justice Emmett HallFrederick Vaughan0-8020-3957-X / £32.00 /$50.00 / 2004AnthropologyA Student’s Guide to Theory andMethodStanley R. Barrett0-8020-7833-8 / £13.95 / $22.95/ 1996Athena SingsWagner and the GreeksM. Owen Lee0-8020-8580-6 / £8.50 / $14.95/ 2003Babel and the Ivory TowerThe Scholar in the Age <strong>of</strong> ScienceW. David Shaw0-8020-7998-9 / £40.00 / $60.00/ 2004Beasley’s Guide to LibraryResearchDavid Beasley0-8020-8328-5 / £8.00 / $13.95/ 2001‘Being Alive Well’Health and the Politics <strong>of</strong> CreeWell-BeingNaomi Adelson0-8020-8326-9 / £12.00 / $23.95/ 2001Beyond SpectacleEliza Haywood’s FemaleSpectatorsJuliette Merritt0-8020-3540-X / £28.00 /$45.00 / 2004The Bias <strong>of</strong> CommunicationRevised EditionHarold A. Innis0-8020-6839-1 / £13.95 / $24.95/ 1951Biblical and Classical MythsThe Mythological Framework <strong>of</strong>Western CultureNorthrop Frye and Jay Macpherson0-8020-8695-0 / £22.50 / $35.00/ 2004Borderland ReligionThe Emergence <strong>of</strong> an English-Canadian Identity, 1792–1852J.I. Little0-8020-8671-3 / £20.00 / $32.95/ 2004Born at the Right TimeA History <strong>of</strong> the Baby BoomGenerationDoug Owram0-8020-8086-3 / £15.00 / $24.95/ 1986Breaking the BargainPublic Servants, Ministers, andParliamentDonald J. Savoie0-8020-8591-1 / £18.00 / $32.95/ 2003Canada 1900–1945Robert Bothwell, Ian Drummond,and John English0-8020-6801-4 / £12.50 / $27.95/ 1987Canada’s ArmyWaging War and Keeping thePeaceJ.L. Granatstein0-8020-8696-9 / £20.00 / $29.95/ 2002Canadian Annual Review <strong>of</strong>Politics and Public Affairs1998Edited by David Mutimer0-8020-8926-7 / £60.00 / $95.00/ 2004Canadian Energy Policy andthe Struggle for SustainableDevelopmentEdited by G. Bruce Doern0-8020-8561-X / £20.00 /$29.95 / 2004Canadian Missionaries,Indigenous PeoplesRepresenting Religion at Homeand AbroadEdited by Alvyn Austin and JamieS. Scott0-8020-3784-4 / £20.00 / $29.95/ <strong>2005</strong>The Canadian PrairiesA HistoryGerald Friesen0-8020-6648-8 / £11.00 / $32.95/ 1987Cape BretonianaAn Annotated BibliographyCompiled by Brian DouglasTennyson0-8020-8712-4 / £48.00 /$110.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Capitalizing on CultureCritical Theory for CulturalStudiesShane Gunster0-8020-3693-7 / £32.00 / $50.00/ 2004Changing Politics <strong>of</strong> CanadianSocial PolicyJames J. Rice and Michael J. Prince0-8020-8074-X / £15.00 /$26.95 / 2000Chronic Pain, Loss, andSufferingA Clinical PerspectiveRanjan Roy0-8020-3597-3 / £32.00 / $60.00/ 2004Cinema and SemioticPeirce and Film Aesthetics,Narration, and RepresentationJohannes Ehrat0-8020-3912-X / £60.00 /$95.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Citizens and NationAn Essay on History,Communication, and CanadaGerald Friesen0-8020-8283-1 / £17.00 / $25.95/ 2000Clio in the ClinicHistory in Medical PracticeEdited by Jacalyn Duffin0-8020-3798-4 / $35.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Canadian Rights OnlyColonial JusticeJustice, Morality, and Crime inthe Niagara District, 1791–1849David Murray0-8020-8688-8 / £18.00 / $27.95/ 2002Common and Contested GroundA Human and EnvironmentalHistory <strong>of</strong> the NorthwesternPlainsTheodore Binnema0-8020-8694-2 / $24.95 / 2004Canadian Rights OnlyThe Confederation Group <strong>of</strong>Canadian Poets, 1880–1897D.M.R. Bentley0-8020-8739-6 / £32.00 / $65.00/ 2004Consensual FictionsWomen, Liberalism, and theEnglish NovelWendy S. Jones0-8020-8717-5 / £35.00 / $55.00/ <strong>2005</strong>Constitutional OdysseyCan Canadians Become aSovereign People?Third EditionPeter H. Russell0-8020-3777-1 / £18.00 / $27.95/ 2004Corpus Librorum EmblematumThe Jesuit Series, Part Four (L-P)Edited by Peter M. Daly and G.Richard Dimler0-8020-3853-0 / £87.00 /$135.00 / <strong>2005</strong>Creeping ConformityHow Canada Became Suburban,1900–1960Richard Harris0-8020-8428-1 / £11.25 / $19.95/ 2004A Critical and Cultural TheoryReaderSecond EditionEdited by Anthony Easthope andKate McGowan0-8020-3800-X / $29.95 / 2004North American Rights OnlyThe Cultural Politics <strong>of</strong> MarketsEconomic Liberalization andSocial Change in NepalKatharine Neilson Rankin0-8020-8698-5 / $24.95 / 2004North American Rights OnlyThe Culture <strong>of</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>ession inLate Renaissance ItalyGeorge W. McClure0-8020-8970-4 / £42.00 / $65.00/ 2004Dark Threats and White KnightsThe Somalia Affair, Peacekeeping,and the New ImperialismSherene H. Razack0-8020-8663-2 / £15.00 / $24.95/ 2004Deflating InformationFrom Science Studies toDocumentationBernd Frohmann0-8020-8839-2 / £40.00 / $65.00/ 2004Design with TypeCarl Dair0-8020-6519-8 / £12.50 / $23.95/ 1967Developing the LonerganLegacyHistorical, Theoretical, andExistential ThemesFrederick E. Crowe. Edited byMichael Vertin0-8020-8938-0 / £45.00 / $75.00/ 200466


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j o u r n a l sModern DramaModern Drama is the primary quarterly journal t<strong>of</strong>ocus exclusively on world drama from 1850 to thepresent. It is designed to be the primary vehicle <strong>of</strong>communication for pr<strong>of</strong>essionals whose main interestlies in this lively area <strong>of</strong> study. Modern Dramapublishes refereed original articles analyzing textsand contexts, as well as book reviews and specialissues featuring outstanding research on a singletopic <strong>of</strong> wide interest. Published quarterly<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> LawJournal<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> Law Journal is the oldest universitylaw journal in Canada. It continues to representthe broad and visionary approach to legalscholarship which was initially announced byW.P.M. Kennedy, the first editor <strong>of</strong> the Journal,when he ventured the hope that its publicationwould foster a knowledge <strong>of</strong> comparative laws “notmerely as substantive or adjectival systems, but asexpressions <strong>of</strong> organized human life, <strong>of</strong> orderedprogress, and <strong>of</strong> social justice.” The journal publishesthe work <strong>of</strong> the most internationally wellknownscholars, not only in the law, but also in thebroad range <strong>of</strong> disciplines relating to the law, suchas economics, political science, philosophy, sociology,and history. Published quarterlyCanadian Journal onAging/La Revue canadiennedu vieillissementCanadian Journal on Aging/La Revue canadienne duvieillissement is a refereed, quarterly publication <strong>of</strong>the Canadian Association on Gerontology. It publishesarticles on aging from the point <strong>of</strong> view <strong>of</strong>health sciences, social sciences, psychology, socialpolicy, practice, educational gerontology, and biology.CJA aims to disseminate research-based knowledgeon the full range <strong>of</strong> issues to do with aging,providing information <strong>of</strong> interest to researchers,practitioners, and policy makers. Published quarterlyCartographicaCartographica, the international journal for geographicinformation and geovisualization deliversin-depth research and writings covering a widerange <strong>of</strong> cartographic studies including the production,design, use, and cognitive understanding <strong>of</strong>maps, the history <strong>of</strong> maps, and geographic informationsystems. Cartographica attracts submissionsfrom scholars around the world, bringing a variety<strong>of</strong> views and opinions to the attention <strong>of</strong> those inthe field. This resource is indispensable for allinvolved with the creation, use, and interpretation<strong>of</strong> maps. Published quarterly72


j o u r n a l sContact <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong> Journalsfor the following titles:Bookbird: A Journal <strong>of</strong> InternationalChildren’s LiteratureCanadian Historical ReviewCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> Criminology andCriminal JusticeCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> Information and LibraryScienceCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> Law and SocietyCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> LinguisticsCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> MathematicsCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> Science, Mathematicsand Technology EducationCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> SociologyCanadian Journal <strong>of</strong> Women and the LawCanadian Journal on AgingCanadian Mathematical BulletinCanadian Modern Language ReviewCanadian Public PolicyCanadian Review <strong>of</strong> American StudiesCanadian Theatre ReviewCartographicaDiaspora: A Journal <strong>of</strong> Transnational StudiesEighteenth Century FictionFrancophone d’AmériqueHistoire Sociale / Social HistoryInfor: Information Systems and Operational ResearchJournal <strong>of</strong> Canadian StudiesJournal <strong>of</strong> Scholarly <strong>Publishing</strong>Journal <strong>of</strong> Veterinary Medical EducationLiterary Review <strong>of</strong> CanadaModern DramaSeminar: A Journal <strong>of</strong> Germanic StudiesSimile: Studies in Media & Information LiteracyEducationThe Tocqueville ReviewUltimate Reality and Meaning<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> Law Journal<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> QuarterlyVictorian Periodicals Review<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong> Journals5201 Dufferin Street, North York ON M3H 5T8Tel: 416-667-7810 / Fax: 416-667-7881Toll-free fax in North America: 1-800-221-9985E-mail: journals@utpress.utoronto.caVisit www.utpjournals.com to access more than5000 articles and book reviews taken from currentand previously published journals.73


i n d e xAAdamson, Joseph...... 34After Green Gables..... 31Agnew, Vijay............. 57Anastakis, Dimitry.... 20Andrés González deBarcia and theCreation <strong>of</strong> theColonial SpanishAmerican Library.. 36Anglo-Saxon England inIcelandic MedievalTexts...................... 43Apostle to the Inuit..... 27Artist as Monster, The.15Atkinson-Grosjean,Janet..................... 52Auto Pact................... 20Autobiography <strong>of</strong> aFisherman, The..... 13BBackhouse, Janet....... 17Bakan, Abigail B....... 16Barber, James............ 55Beal, Peter................. 37Beard, William.......... 15Begley, Varun............ 33Bélanger, Réal........... 18Bernard Bosanquet andthe Legacy <strong>of</strong> BritishIdealism................ 46Black, Fiona A............ 6Blackmore, Tim.......... 2Bliss, Michael.............. 3B<strong>of</strong>fey, Julia.............. 17Books <strong>of</strong> King HenryVIII and his Wives.17Bora Laskin............... 11Boyle on Atheism........ 46Bredeh<strong>of</strong>t, Thomas A..40Brock, Peter.............. 23Brown, Alison K....... 26Burdon, Lynn........... 60Burns, Marjorie.......... 8Butler, Marian.......... 61CCameron, Gary......... 54Canadian Books in Print<strong>2005</strong>..................... 61Canadian InsuranceClaims Directory<strong>2005</strong>..................... 61Canadian Who’s Who<strong>2005</strong>..................... 59Carley, James P.......... 17Carlyon, Jonathan E..36Carstairs, Catherine.. 22Chase, Martin........... 42Chen, Xiaobei........... 56Ciavolella, Massimo.. 35Civic Capitalism........ 16Clover, Carol J.......... 43Coleman, Patrick...... 35Collected Works <strong>of</strong>George Grant......... 49Complex Sovereignty... 52Contacts, Opportunities,and CriminalEnterprise.............. 58Cook, Ramsay.......... 18Correspondence <strong>of</strong>Wolfgang Capito,The....................... 38Covell, Katherine...... 53Cuillé, Tili Boon....... 35Culture and Authority inthe Baroque........... 35Cultures and Ecologies.27DDancing around theElephant................ 21Dartnell, Michael Y..... 4Davis, Arthur............ 49Day, Frank Parker..... 13de Hamel,Christopher.......... 37Diary <strong>of</strong> AbrahamUlrikab, The......... 14Diaspora, Memory, andIdentity................. 57Dictionary <strong>of</strong> BasilianBiography.............. 19Dictionary <strong>of</strong> CanadianBiography.............. 18Discounted Labour..... 21Dooley, Ann............. 40Dudding, Peter......... 55Duke <strong>of</strong> Wellington,The....................... 12EEarly English Metre.... 40E-Crit....................... 25Edwards, A.S.G.. 17, 37Einarr Skúlason’sGeisli.................... 42EmpoweringChildren................ 53English, Christopher.19Ericson, Richard V.... 58Essays in the History <strong>of</strong>Canadian Law...... 19FFaflak, Joel................ 34Fahrni, Magda.......... 22Fenwick, Gillian....... 36Fitting Sentences........ 32Fitzpatrick, Joseph.... 47Fjalldal, Magnús....... 43Fleming, PatriciaLockhart................. 6Flynn, Robert J......... 55Frager, Ruth A.......... 21Freymond, Nancy..... 54GGeorge III.................. 12George Bernard ShawPapers, The............ 33Ghazal, Hayat........... 55Girard, Philip........... 11Globalization Unplugged.50Grande, Edgar.......... 52HHaggerty, Kevin D.... 58‘Hang Onto These Words’.28Harold Pinter and theTwilight <strong>of</strong>Modernism............ 33Harvey Cushing........... 3Haslam, Jason........... 32Hayward, Karen........ 54Heap, Ruby.............. 25Heron, Craig.............. 5Historical Identities.... 23History <strong>of</strong> the Book inCanada................... 6Home Economics........ 57Household Politics...... 22Howe, R. Brian......... 53Howland, Douglas.... 48IIacobucci, Frank....... 24Illumination from Books<strong>of</strong> Hours................ 17Images at War............ 30Insurgency Online........ 4Ipellie, Alootook....... 14Irvine, Andrew D..... 48JJailed for Possession..... 22KKantian Imperative,The....................... 45Kaufman, Fred.......... 1174


i n d e xKlausner, David N.... 39Koenig, Edwin C...... 27Kooistra, Milton....... 38LLamonde, Yvan........... 6Latin Learning andEnglish Lore.......... 41Laugrande, Frédéric.. 27Learning to Practise.... 25Lecours, André......... 51Lemay, Raymond...... 55Lindow, John............ 43Lonergan’s Quest........ 47Looking AfterChildren................ 55Lords <strong>of</strong> the Rinks........ 9Lumley, Elizabeth..... 59Lutz, Hartmut.......... 14MMacIntosh, J.J.......... 46Maps <strong>of</strong> Experience.... 28Marginal Man............. 4Marian Devotion inThirteenth-CenturyFrench Lyric.......... 39Martin, Michèle........ 30Mathews, William A..47McCreery,Christopher.......... 10Migration Italy.......... 29Millar, Wyn.............. 25Mills, Antonia........... 28Mistakes <strong>of</strong> Reason..... 48Moral Economy <strong>of</strong> Cities,The....................... 30Morselli, Carlo.......... 58Mount, Nick............... 7Muirhead, Bruce....... 21NNarrative Interludes... 35Nation and History.... 23NegotiatingCitizenship............ 16Nelson, Ge<strong>of</strong>frey....... 54New Index <strong>of</strong> MiddleEnglish Verse, A..... 17New Institutionalism.. 51New Politics <strong>of</strong>Surveillance andVisibility, The........ 58OO’Brien O’Keeffe,Katherine.............. 41O’Gorman, Marcel... 25Old Norse-IcelandicLiterature.............. 43O’Neill, John............ 16O’Neill, Patrick......... 32Ontario Legal Directory<strong>2005</strong>..................... 60Oosten, Jarich........... 27Orchard, Andy.......... 41Order <strong>of</strong> Canada, The.10O’Sullivan, Daniel E..39PPalmer, Andie Diane.28Panayotidis, E. Lisa... 23Pancer, S. Mark........ 54Parati, Graziella......... 29Partnerships forPrevention............. 54Patrias, Carmela K.... 21Pauly, Louis W.......... 52Peacock, Kent A........ 48Peers, Laura.............. 26Penfold, Steve............. 5Perilous Realms............ 8Peroni, Gwen............ 61Personal Liberty andPublic Good.......... 48Peters, Ray DeV........ 54PhilosophicalEncounters............. 47‘Pictures Bring UsMessages’................ 26Platt, P. Wallace........ 19Playing the Hero........ 40Polyglot Joyce.............. 32Promoting Resilience inChild Welfare........ 55Public Science, PrivateInterests................. 52RRoper, Henry............ 49Rothschilds and theirCollections <strong>of</strong>IlluminatedManuscripts, The... 37Rummel, Erika......... 38Ruppert, Evelyn S..... 30SSanity, Madness,Transformation...... 34Saurette, Paul............ 45Scribes and Transmissionin EnglishManuscripts........... 37Searching for Justice... 11Secular Scripture andOther Writings onCritical Theory,The....................... 34Sharma, Nandita....... 57Shaw, Matthew......... 12Shorter, Edward.......... 1Smyth, Elizabeth....... 25Stanley, John............. 23Stasiulis, Daiva K...... 16Stortz, Paul............... 23Summers, Ann.......... 33Sweet, William.......... 46TTaking PublicUniversitiesSeriously................ 24Tending the Gardens <strong>of</strong>Citizenship............ 56Tiessen, Hildi Froese. 31Tiessen, Paul Gerard.. 31<strong>Toronto</strong> Edits............. 36Towards Positive Systems<strong>of</strong> Child and FamilyWelfare.................. 54Trudel, François........ 27Tuohy, Carolyn......... 24UUrmetzer, Peter......... 50WWales......................... 39War X......................... 2Watson, AlexanderJohn....................... 4When CanadianLiterature Moved toNew York................ 7Wilson, Jean............. 34Wong, John Chi-Kit... 9Woodman, Ross........ 34Workers’ Festival, The... 5Wright, Christopher. 12Written in the Flesh..... 1Wróbel, Piotr J......... 2375


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In February, Frank Parker Day’s littleknownnovel Rockbound – originallypublished in 1928 and reissued byutP in 1973 – was chosen as theCBC’s <strong>2005</strong> “Canada Reads” winningselection. Our thanks to DonnaMorrissey and the CBC for bringingthis forgotten classic back to the fore.RockboundFrank Parker DayWith an afterword by Gwendolyn DaviesPaper ISBN 0-8020-6723-9£14.00 $21.95<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong>10 St Mary Street, Suite 700<strong>Toronto</strong> Ontario Canada M4Y 2W8www.utppublishing.comCatalogue Designed and Printed by <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> <strong>Press</strong>

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