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Rutgers also distributes books published by Bucknell University Press.
Nineteenth-Century Geographies
The Transformation of Space from the Victorian Age to the American Century
Gender in Latin America
A comprehensive state-of-the-art review of gender in one of the world's most diverse and dynamic regions. The authors draw on a wide range of sources, including their own field research, to explore changes and continuities in gender roles, relations and identities during the late twentieth century into the twenty-first. Debunking traditional universalizing stereotypes, diversity in gender is highlighted in relation to the cross-cutting influences of age, class, sexuality, ethnicity, rural-urban residence, and migrant status.
Crafting a Legacy
Contemporary American Crafts in the Philadelphia Museum of Art
From Stalin to Kim Il Sung
The Formation of North Korea, 1945-1960
Postnationalism Prefigured
Caribbean Borderlands
Selected Poems of Amy Lowell
New Jersey Anthology
Time Warps
Silent and Evasive Pasts in Indian Politics and Religion
Ashis Nandy, one of India’s foremost public intellectuals, contends in this book that India’s political and cultural élites have been trying to impose a secular ideology on their country. This ideology makes little sense to most Indians, who have their own religious and cultural lives, their own diverse pasts, and their own principles of tolerance and hospitality.
Religious extremists have exploited this tension by offering packaged forms of ancient faiths, with ready-made theories of violence and hatred. The resulting clash has fragmented Indians’ views of their precolonial past as well as their increasingly globalized present. In a country with deep roots in legendary pasts, some of these pasts have been made “silent” or “evasive” in the service of modern ideological agendas. They are no longer as easily drawn upon to oppose the forces of intolerance and hatred.
Most of the essays survey the ways in which India’s colonial secularism has produced some of the conditions for the current rise of Hindu nationalism. He shows how both religious nationalists and secular modernists have employed the colonial state’s ideology-producing power to blend the “religious” and “secular” domains. In the process, the indigenous traditions battling sectarianism and religious extremism have been marginalized. Nandy argues that it is possible to reclaim India’s rich, multicultural pasts and alternative forms of cosmopolitanism in order to rescue a truly multicultural present.
Frankenstein
Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature accompanies a traveling exhibit of the same name. This lavishly illustrated volume begins by highlighting Shelley's novel and the context in which she conceived it. It next focuses on the redefinition of the Frankenstein myth in popular culture. Here, the fate of the monster becomes a moral lesson illustrating the punishment for ambitious scientists who seek to usurp the place of God by creating life. The final section examines the continuing power of the Frankenstein story to articulate present-day concerns raised by new developments in biomedicine such as cloning and xenografting (the use of animal organs in human bodies), and the role scientists and citizens play in determining acceptable limits of scientific and medical advances.
Missions for Science
U.S. Technology and Medicine in America's African World
When I Look into the Mirror and See You
Women, Terror, and Resistance
A Guide to Bird Finding in New Jersey
Backroads, New Jersey
Driving at the Speed of Life
Shaded Lives
African American Women and Television
In Shaded Lives, Beretta Smith-Shomade sets out to dissect images of the African American woman in television from the 1980s. She calls their depiction "binaristic," or split. African American women, although an essential part of television programming today, are still presented as distorted and deviant. By closely examining the television texts of African-American women in comedy, music video, television news and talk shows (Oprah Winfrey is highlighted), Smith-Shomade shows how these voices are represented, what forces may be at work in influencing these images, and what alternate ways of viewing might be available.
Race in the College Classroom
Kaleidoscopic Ethnicity
International Migration and the Reconstruction of Community Identities in India
Digging New Jersey's Past
Historical Archaeology in the Garden State
Darwinian Politics
The Evolutionary Origin of Freedom
Born to Belonging
Writings on Spirit and Justice
Animation and America
Fantasies of Fetishism
From Decadence to the Post-Human
At the dawn of the new millennium, Western culture is marked by various fantasies that imagine our future selves and their forms of embodiment. These fantasies are part of a rapidly growing cultural discourse about the future of the human body; the ever more illusive boundary between the human, the animal, and the technological; and the cultural consequences of greater human-technological integration.
When Culture and Biology Collide
Why We are Stressed, Depressed, and Self-Obsessed
Military Power and Popular Protest
The U.S. Navy in Vieques, Puerto Rico
Webs of Reality
Social Perspectives on Science and Religion
Webs of Reality is a rare examination of the interrelationship between religion and science from a social science perspective, offering a broader view of the relationship, and posing practical questions regarding technology and ethics. Emphasizing how science and religion are practiced instead of highlighting the differences between them, the authors look for the subtle connections, tacit understandings, common history, symbols, and implicit myths that tie them together. How can the practice of science be understood from a religious point of view? What contributions can science make to religious understanding of the world? What contributions can the social sciences make to understanding both knowledge systems? Looking at religion and science as fields of inquiry and habits of mind, the authors discover not only similarities between them but also a wide number of ways in which they complement each other.
Girls Who Wore Black
Women Writing the Beat Generation
The Invention of Religion
Rethinking Belief in Politics and History
Biology at Work
Rethinking Sexual Equality
'Madame Butterfly' and 'A Japanese Nightingale'
Two Orientalist Texts
Sister Circle
Black Women and Work
The American Woman's Home
The American Womans Home, originally published in 1869, was one of the late nineteenth centurys most important handbooks of domestic advice. The result of a collaboration by two of the eras most important writers, this book represents their attempt to direct womens acquisition and use of a dizzying variety of new household consumer goods available in the postCivil War economic boom. It updates Catharine Beechers influential Treatise on Domestic Economy (1841) and incorporates domestic writings by Harriet Beecher Stowe first published in The Atlantic in the 1860s.