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BOOKSHELF
Compiled by Jonathan Lemire '01, Timothy P. Cross, and Laura
Butchy
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Duel:
Alexander Hamilton, Aaron Burr and the Future of America by
Thomas Fleming. This latest take on the country's most celebrated
duel uses narrative to illuminate the rival egos and ambitions that
led the King's College dropout to take a fatal bullet in Weehawken,
N.J. (Basic Books, $30 cloth, $16.50 paper).
The
Health Marketplace: New York City, 1990-2010 by Eli Ginzberg
'31, Hepburn Professor Emeritus of Economics, Howard Berliner,
Panos Minogianis and Miriam Ostow. Using the Big Apple
as a microcosm, the director of Columbia's Eisenhower Center for
the Conservation of Human Resources and his colleagues delineate
changes in American health care delivery in the 1990s and offer
an expert assessment of what might happen in the next decade (Transaction
Publishers, $32.95).
Essays
in Idleness: The Tsurezureigusa of Kenko, translated and with
a new preface by Donald Keene'42, University Professor Emeritus.
These disarming discursions from a 14th-century Japanese priest
are suffused with a reverence for Buddhist traditions and an appreciation
of the pleasures of ordinary life (Columbia University Press, $17
paper).
A
Fragile Capital: Identity and the Early Years of Columbus, Ohio
by Charles C. Cole, Jr. '43. A longtime Cow Town resident
(and former provost and history professor at Lafayette College)
uses contemporary letters, diaries and newspapers to trace the first
40 years of Ohio's capital (Ohio State University Press, $45).
Snapshot
Poetics: A Photographic Memoir of the Beat Era by Allen Ginsberg
'48, edited by Michael Köhler. This collection of over
70 black-and-white photographs, taken by the Beat poet between 1953
and 1991, uses personal captions to bring figures of the Beat generation
- including Jack Kerouac '44, William Burroughs, and Ginsberg -
to life (Chronicle Books, $14.95 paper).
Aging
and Mental Health: Positive Psychosocial and Biomedical Approaches
by Robert Butler '49, Myrna Lewis and Trey
Sutherland. The fifth edition of this collection of medical
statistics and advice uses the latest demographic and epidemiological
data to create a portrait of older people in America today, their
mental health care needs, and responses to those needs (Allyn and
Bacon, $60).
Book
Business: Publishing Past, Present and Future by Jason Epstein
'49. Seven essays from the famed Random House editor - and founder
of The New York Review of Books - recount his exploits during
a half century as publisher, editor and author, and examine the
challenges facing modern publishing (W.W. Norton & Company, $21.95).
See related story.
The
Positive Psychology of Buddhism and Yoga: Paths to a Mature Happiness
by Marvin Levine '50. This introduction to Eastern views
of human nature emphasizes the compatibility of Eastern philosophies
with Western psychological viewpoints, and offers advice from both
East and West to manage anger and enhance the quality of life (Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates, $39.95 cloth, $17.95 paper).
The
Art of Political War and Other Radical Pursuits by David
Horowitz '59. This collection of essays - including the title
essay, which was endorsed by 35 state Republican chairman and sent
in 2000 by the House majority whip to every Republican congressional
officeholder - is offered as an "instructional guide"
for Republicans suffering from Democratic political imprecations
(Spence, $24.95).
What
Counts by Jay Liveson '59. This slender volume of verse
on medical themes includes poems with the intriguing names of "Between
Alexandria and the Second Cataract," "Before the Plaster
Sets," and "Conversation as my Tumor Advances;" by
a neurologist at Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center (Fithian Press,
$9.60 paper).
Napoleon
and his Collaborators: The Making of a Dictatorship by Isser
Woloch '59, Moore Collegiate Professor of History. The author
of the award-winning The New Regime shows how the general-turned-emperor
relied on a nascent government bureaucracy and adroit political
operatives who did not necessarily share his political outlook or
ambitions (W.W. Norton & Company, $29.95). For an excerpt, please
see Columbia Forum.
The
Thessalonians Debate: Methodological Discord or Methodological Synthesis?,
edited by Karl Donfried '60 and Johannes Beutler.
Top New Testament scholars introduce readers to the current exegetical
struggle over the purpose and intention of 1 Thessalonians, Paul's
first letter and the earliest extant Christian document (William
B. Eerdman's Publishing, $25 paper).
Classics
of Western Philosophy, fifth edition, edited by Steven M.
Cahn '63. The fifth edition of this introductory anthology adds
20th-century authors Bertrand Russell and Jean-Paul Sartre to canonical
philosophical figures from antiquity, the Middle Ages, Renaissance
and Enlightenment (Hackett Publishing, $47.95 cloth, $29.95 paper).
Random
Reminiscences of Sixty Years of Law Practice: The Memoir of Dean
Stockett Edmonds, edited by Charles Miller '63. This
account of one of New York's most prominent patent lawyers was written
in the "evocative style of yesteryear" and edited by a
current partner at the firm - Pennie and Edmonds LLP - that would
eventually take his name (Rutledge Books, $15.96).
Willa
Cather & Others by Jonathan Goldberg '64. An examination
of Cather's artistic principle of "a thing not named"
that illuminates how her fiction transcends the very categories
- class, gender, and sexuality - around which recent scholarship
on her work has focused; by the Sir William Osler Professor of English
at Johns Hopkins (Duke University Press, $18.95 paper).
Pensions,
Politics, and the Elderly: Historic Social Movements and Their Lessons
for Our Aging Society by Daniel J.B. Mitchell '64. A
study of pensionite movements in California from the 1920s to 1940s,
one of the first modern examples of political lobbying by senior
citizens, suggests that current efforts to "save" Social
Security and Medicare are actually planting the seeds of future
senior agitation (M.E. Sharpe, $64.95 cloth, $23.95 paper).
Millennial
Child: Transforming Education in the Twenty-First Century by
Euguene Schwartz '67. Arguing that "today's children
are an endangered species," the author attacks Sigmund Freud's
"tragic understanding of childhood" and argues that the
Waldorf schooling method may be the last, best hope for "childhood
to be regained" (Anthroposophic Press, $19.95 paper).
To
Fight and Learn: The Praxis and Promise of Literacy in Eritrea's
Independence War by Les Gottesman '68. The work of Eritrea's
fighter-teachers, who taught peasants to read and write in the midst
of a long war of independence, not only fostered social change but
also became the foundation of the country's education system today
(Red Sea Press, $21.95 paper).
American
Palestine: Melville, Twain, and the Holy Land Mania by Hilton
Obenzinger '69. Fascination with the Holy Land among evangelicals,
scholars, writers and artists helped shape notions of national identity
in 19th-century America, which many Americans viewed as the new
promised land (Princeton University Press, $55 cloth, $18.95 paper).
The
Official NBA Basketball Encyclopedia, third edition, edited
by Jan Hubbard. Columbia College Today editor Alex
Sachare '71 is among the contributors to the latest edition of this
most complete look at the NBA and its players (Doubleday, $50).
The
World of Caffeine: The Science and Culture of the World's Most Popular
Drug by Bennet Weinberg '71 and Bonnie Bealer.
Over 85 percent of Americans use significant amounts of caffeine
daily, and the natural and cultural history of the drug encompasses
all aspects of the human condition, including love, religion and
Starbucks' mini-bars (Routledge, $27.50).
Swift
as Nemesis: Modernity and Its Satirist by Frank Boyle '81.
This reinterpretation of the author of Gulliver's Travels utilizes
pre-modern notions of satire, examines Swift's perceptions of the
new science and draws out the cultural implications of his authorial
approach (Stanford University Press, $45).
Debt
Free by 30: Practical Advice for Young, Broke, & Upwardly Mobile
by Jason Anthony '94 GS and Karl Cluck '94. A
pocket-sized primer on paying off credit cards, keeping more of
what you earn and living debt-free forever (Plume, $12 paper).
The
Weaving of Mantra: Ku-kai and the Construction of Esoteric Buddhist
Discourse by Ryu-ichi Abé, Kao Professor of Japanese
Religion. This re-examination of Ku-kai (774-835), who is credited
with establishing tantric Buddhism and founding of the Shingon School
in ninth-century Japan, argues that the Buddhist priest's most lasting
contribution lie in his development of the ritual speech of the
mantra (Columbia University Press, $42 cloth, $19.50 paper).
Remaking
Women: Feminism and Modernity in the Middle East, edited by
Lila Abu-Lughod, Professor of Anthropology. In addition to
the editor, who just joined the faculty, Columbia contributors to
this collection of essays, which examines the "women question"
and notions of progress in the Middle East, include Afsaneh Najmabadi,
professor of women's studies at Barnard (Princeton University Press,
$65 cloth, $17.95 paper).
Louis
Le Vau: Mazarin's College, Colbert's Revenge by Hilary Ballon,
Professor of Art History and Archaeology. The first English-language
book on Louis XIV's celebrated architect, whose buildings shaped
the image of French court society, focuses on Cardinal Mazarin's
College, widely acknowledged as Le Vau's masterpiece, and the debate
over how it would affect Paris's "soul" (Princeton University
Press, $39.50).
My
Laocoön: Alternative Claims in the Interpretation of Artworks by
Richard Brilliant, Anna S. Garbedian Professor in the Humanities.
The noted art historian traces the theme, provenance and interpretation
of the Greco-Roman sculpture, now in the Vatican, and shows how
the masterpiece's reception has evolved (University of California
Press, $45).
Work
Without Wages: Russia's Nonpayment Crisis by Padma Desai,
Gladys and Ronald Harriman Professor of Comparative Economic Systems
and Todd Idson, Director of Undergraduate Studies, Department
of Economics. When Russia switched to a market economy in 1992,
the 70-year Soviet tradition of "wages without work" reversed
itself, and this book, using economic and policy analysis, determines
who exactly isn't getting paid (MIT Press, $29.95).
Black
Corona: Race and the Politics of Place in an Urban Community by
Steven Gregory, Associate Professor of Anthropology. Historical
and ethnographic research into the political culture of Corona,
an African-American neighborhood in Queens, challenges the view
that black urban communities are socially disorganized (Princeton
University Press, $37.50 cloth, $14.80 paper).
"A
Voyage on the North Sea": Art in the Age of the Post-Medium
Condition by Rosalind Krauss, Meyer Schapiro Professor
of Modern Art and Theory. The work of Belgian artist Marcel Broodthaers,
argues the author of The Picasso Papers, transcends traditional
definitions of modernist art, showing it to be a complex structure
that goes beyond the material properties of paint and canvas (Thames
& Hudson, $16.95 paper).
Shifting
the Color Line: Race and the American Welfare State by Robert
C. Lieberman, Assistant Professor of Political Science and Public
Affairs. Winner of Harvard University Press's Thomas J. Wilson Prize
and the Social Sciences History Association's President's Book Award,
this social policy study lays bare the historical and political
roots of enduring racial conflict in American welfare policy, beginning
with the New Deal (Harvard University Press, $46.95).
Opening
the Borders: Inclusivity in Early Modern Studies. Essays in Honor
of James V. Mirollo, edited by Peter C. Herman. The contributors
to this multidisciplinary collection honoring Columbia's Parr Professor
Emeritus include Marc Berley '85, assistant professor of English
at Barnard, Ernest B. Gilman '68, David Scott Kastan, professor
of English, and Edward W. Tayler, Lionel Trilling Professor in the
Humanities (University of Delaware Press, $52.50).
Pre-Columbian
Art by Esther Pasztory, Lisa and Bernard Selz Professor
in Pre-Columbian Art History and Archaeology. An illustrated guide
to the art and culture of Mesoamerica and the Andes, from the earliest
times to the destruction of the Aztec and Inca empires by Spanish
conquistadors (Cambridge University Press, $18.95 paper).
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