Sage House News: The Cornell University Press Blog

March 17, 2008

Recent Releases

Filed under: Recently Released — sagehouse @ 3:44 pm

Recent arrivals in our warehouse include:

The End of the West?: Crisis and Change in the Atlantic Order, edited by Jeffrey Anderson, G. John Ikenberry, and Thomas Risse

Humanitarianism in Question: Politics, Power, Ethics, edited by Michael Barnett and Thomas G. Weiss

Base Politics: Democratic Change and the U.S. Military Overseas by Alexander Cooley

Forgotten Firebrand: James Redpath and the Making of Nineteenth-Century America by John R. McKivigan

March 11, 2008

Laboratories of Faith in the Fortean Times

Filed under: Publicity Roundup — sagehouse @ 9:40 am

The April 2008 edition of the Fortean Times features a 9/10 review of John Warne Monroe’s Laboratories of Faith: Mesmerism, Spiritism, and Occultism in Modern France. An excerpt appears below:

“A mesmerizing overview of a foreign field. Monroe has immersed himself in the ferment of ideas going on in this period and analyzes what they meant to people then, however naïve they may now seem. He stresses just how widely read the publications of some of the figures that he discusses were, making them a crucial factor in any balanced assessment of French intellectual life.”—Tom Ruffles, Fortean Times, April 2008

March 7, 2008

Recent Releases

Filed under: Recently Released — sagehouse @ 3:37 pm

Recent arrivals in our warehouse include:

Cars for Comrades: The Life of the Soviet Automobile by Lewis H. Siegelbaum

The End of the West?: Crisis and Change in the Atlantic Order, edited by Jeffrey Anderson, G. John Ikenberry, and Thomas Risse

Privatizing China: Socialism from Afar, edited by Li Zhang and Aihwa Ong

Stephen W. Kress at Mann Library, Cornell University

Filed under: Publicity Roundup — sagehouse @ 11:50 am

Just received this announcement for an event featuring the author of The Audubon Society Guide to Attracting Birds: Creating Natural Habitats for Properties Large and Small:

Chats in the Stacks book talk at Mann Library

Stephen Kress
The Audubon Society Guide to Attracting Birds: Creating Natural Habitats for Properties Large and Small
March 12, 4:00 pm
Albert R. Mann Library
Room 160
Landscapes rich in native plants are not only beautiful, they also attract large numbers and many different kinds of birds. A book talk by Cornell Lab of Ornithology author Stephen Kress will provide tips on how to foster native plant communities that yield a variety of foods and shelter for birds across the seasons. Gardeners, land stewards and owners of properties large and small are invited to come learn more about creating thriving natural landscapes filled with color and bird song the whole year through. Refreshments and book signing to follow talk (books will be available for purchase from The Cornell Store).

Think you might have to miss this talk? No worries—just catch it via pod- or webcast at http://mannlib.cornell.edu/podcasts/ Expected availability: March 31.

Awaiting the Heavenly Country in Library Journal

Filed under: Cornell Press Books in the News, Publicity Roundup — sagehouse @ 11:47 am

Great Library Journal review (in the February 15, 2008 issue) of Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America’s Culture of Death by Mark S. Schantz:

“Schantz makes a compelling case that Americans’ experiences with, and ideas about, death before the Civil War made it possible for them to understand—and even celebrate—death caused by the war. By closely reading landscapes, images, and all manner of writings on the ‘culture of death,’ Schantz discovers that Northerners and Southerners alike came to believe that how one approached death and how a people honored the dead revealed, even decided, matters of faith, community, and national identity. Schantz is especially perceptive at describing mourning rituals, the literature on heaven as a place of family reunion with full bodily restoration, the rural cemetery movement, and the illustration of death in lithographs, photography, and painting. He finds a strong strain of Greek revival and ancient mythology in Americans’ representation of what death demanded of men and women. When read in tandem with Drew Gilpin Faust’s recent This Republic of Suffering, we learn that for 19th-century Americans the ‘unifying power of death’ defined how one must live, and when the war came, it also made it easier to kill and to die. A sobering assessment for anyone who imagines war as a purifying process.”

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