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Yearning For the Land: A Search for the Importance
of Place
By John Warfield Simpson M.F. '86.
Pantheon Books, 2002.
281 pages. $24.
John Warfield Simpson is an explorer, although the unknown
he searches out is in our minds, below-the-surface thoughts,
in the bedrock of our being--the link between person and place.
What, he asks, is our connection to the land? And what have
we as urban Americans lost in the weakening of that connection,
in leaving the Old World for the New? In retracing the immigration
journey of the great conservationist John Muir, from his homeland
along the North Sea Coast in Scotland to the Wisconsin marshlands,
as well as his own, similar journey, Simpson reflects on the
meaning of place. |
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How to Avoid the Mommy Trap:
A Roadmap for Sharing
Parenting and Making It Work
By Julie Shields J.D. '90.
Capital Books, Inc. 2002.
288 pages.
$26.95.
Shields is a mother. But she is other things, too. She is an
attorney and she wrote this book, which means she's found a
way to balance her new life. After dozens of interviews with
marital counselors, childcare workers, negotiation experts,
employers, child-development experts, and lots of parents,
Shields discovered that the happiest families are the ones
who share parenting responsibilities. Though she acknowledges
that, like many new mothers, she initially took on more duties
than she ever expected, eventually she took a step back. Her
book, endorsed by Susan Estrich, acclaimed author of the Los
Angeles Times' bestseller Sex and Power, and former Congresswoman
Pat Schroeder, explains the process of negotiating, planning,
and creating the personalized work and parenting arrangements
that allow new mothers a life outside the world of "mommy." |
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Mavo: Japanese Artists and the Avant-Garde
By Gennifer S. Weisenfeld.
University of California Press,
2002.
368 pages. $55.
On August 28, 1923, forty angry Japanese artists stood outside
the Takenodai Exhibition Hall in Tokyo heaving rocks at the
glass building. Their unconventional works had been rejected
for the Nika Art Association's tenth annual exhibition. The
artists rejected the rejection. Mavo, as they called themselves,
sought to redefine Japanese art and, in so doing, waged war
on the state's traditional notions of what is normal and what
is perverse. They sought to reintegrate art into the everyday
experience, conveying, through allusions to mechanical environments
and abstract imagery, the feelings of crisis, peril, and uncertainty
that were beginning to characterize daily life. With acute
attention to historical conditions and to the political and
social norms of the day, Weisenfeld, a Duke professor of anthropology,
captures in sharp relief this iconoclastic fervor and its lasting
reverberations in Japanese art and society. |
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A Companion to the Works of Franz Kafka
Edited by James Rolleston.
Camden House, 2002.
347 pages. $75.
Franz Kafka was a deep thinker. And his stories can be hard
to make sense of. Things are implied, not told. There is much
imagery and little dialogue. There are layers of meaning. A
story may begin in the middle and end at the beginning--or
not all (Kafka never completed a novel). As one critic contends,
his protagonists have, in a sense, already died before the
story begins. These are the sorts of things that a literary
guide lets you in on; in A Companion to the Works of Franz
Kafka, Rolleston, Duke professor of German, and thirteen other
Kafka scholars, contribute their insights and arguments to
exploring who Kafka was, why he wrote, and what it meant. All
present a strong point of view while taking into account previous
Kafka research. |
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The Argentina Reader:History, Culture, Politics
Edited by Gabriela Nouzeilles and Graciela Montaldo.
Duke University
Press, 2002.
580 pages. $23.95, paper.
Now, as never before, this land of incongruent parts and contradictory
images-- incomplete, exceptional, and baffling--invites an
exploration of the history, culture, and political landscapes
that have forged one of the world's greatest enigmas. With
a collection of songs, articles, comic strips, essays, poems,
and short stories, The Argentina Reader--the latest in a series
published by Duke University Press, along with The Peru Reader,
The Brazil Reader, and The Mexico Reader--offers a compass
for navigating the complexities of the nation through the voices
of its own poets, writers, social figures, and political leaders.
Editor Nouzeilles is a Duke professor of Romance studies. |
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