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Mammon’s Music

Literature and Economics in the Age of Milton

Blair Hoxby

The commercial revolution of the seventeenth century deeply changed English culture. In this ambitious book, Blair Hoxby explores what that economic transformation meant to the century’s greatest poet, John Milton, and...

November 10, 2002, Cloth, $65.00

Visiones

Perspectivas literarias de la realidad social hispana

Carlos M. Coria-Sánchez and Germán Torres

Visiones is a unique anthology of Spanish literature that employs literary texts to explore social, political, and economic issues specific to Hispanic cultures. The book approaches literary texts—novels, short...

October 11, 2002, Paper, $40.00

Republic of Denial

Press, Politics, and Public Life

Michael Janeway

This thought-provoking book offers the most insightful critique of the relationship among the press, politics, and public life in decades. Disdain for politics today in the United States is almost universal. Condemnation of...

February 8, 2001, Paper, $24.00

What Are Journalists For?

Jay Rosen

American journalists in the 1990s confronted disturbing trends—an erosion of trust in the news media, weakening demand for serious news, flagging interest in politics and civic affairs, and a discouraging public climate...

February 8, 2001, Paper, $37.00

The Power of Feelings

Personal Meaning in Psychoanalysis, Gender, and Culture

Nancy J. Chodorow

In the middle of the twentieth century, leading cultural critics and visionaries—Erik Erikson, Lionel Trilling, Herbert Marcuse, and many others—turned to psychoanalysis as a measure of human personal and cultural fulfillment...

February 8, 2001, Paper, $33.00

Caught in the Web of Words

James Murray and the Oxford English Dictionary

K.M. Elisabeth Murray; With a preface by R.W. Burchfield

This unique and celebrated biography describes how a largely self-educated boy from a small village in Scotland entered the world of scholarship and became the first editor of the Oxford English Dictionary and a great...

February 8, 2001, Paper, $39.00

Bright Pages

Yale Writers, 1701-2001

Edited and with an introduction by J.D. McClatchy

College years—when ideas collide, literature intrigues and inspires, lasting passions are first fired—can stamp a young writer for life. This extraordinary book contains the work of dozens of writers whose experiences at Yale...

April 10, 2001, Paper, $52.00

Learning Policy

When State Education Reform Works

David K. Cohen and Heather C. Hill

Education reformers and policymakers argue that improved students’ learning requires stronger academic standards, stiffer state tests, and accountability for students’ scores. Yet these efforts seem not to be succeeding in...

November 10, 2001, Cloth, $65.00

Confessio Philosophi

Papers Concerning the Problem of Evil, 1671–1678

G. W. Leibniz; Translated and with an introduction by Robert C. Sleigh, Jr.; with contributions from Brandon Look and James Stam

This volume contains papers that represent Leibniz’s early thoughts on the problem of evil, centering on a dialogue, the Confessio philosophi, in which he formulates a general account of God’s relation to sin and evil that...

January 24, 2006, Cloth, $105.00

You Can't Steal a Gift

Dizzy, Clark, Milt, and Nat

Gene Lees; Foreword by Nat Hentoff

In this wise, stimulating, and deeply personal book, an eminent jazz chronicler writes of his encounters with four great black musicians: Dizzy Gillespie, Clark Terry, Milt Hinton, and Nat "King" Cole. Equal parts memoir...

October 11, 2001, Cloth, $65.00

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