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American,
European, & World History
New History Books
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Harvard U. Press, Fall 1999
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HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS CUSTOM CATALOG
SERVICE
Fall 1999 Books: HISTORY
_______________________________________________________________________
AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY
DANCING IN THE STREET
Motown and the Cultural Politics of
Detroit
SUZANNE E. SMITH
Detroit in the 1960s was a city with a pulse: people were
marching in step with Martin Luther King, Jr., dancing in the
street with Martha and the Vandellas, and facing off with city
police. Through it all, Motown provided the beat. This book tells
the story of Motown--as both musical style and entrepreneurial
phenomenon--and of its intrinsic relationship to the politics and
culture of Motor Town, USA.
As Suzanne Smith traces the evolution of Motown from a small
record company firmly rooted in Detroit's black community to an
international music industry giant, she gives us a clear look at
cultural politics at the grassroots level. Here we see Motown's
music not as the mere soundtrack for its historical moment but as
an active agent in the politics of the time. In this story,
Motown Records had a distinct role to play in the city's black
community as that community articulated and promoted its own
social, cultural, and political agendas. Smith shows how these
local agendas, which reflected the unique concerns of African
Americans living in the urban North, both responded to and
reconfigured the national civil rights campaign.
Against a background of events on the national scene--featuring
Martin Luther King, Jr., Langston Hughes, Nat King Cole, and
Malcolm X--Dancing in the Street presents a vivid picture
of the civil rights movement in Detroit, with Motown at its
heart. This is a lively and vital history. It's peopled with a
host of major and minor figures in black politics, culture, and
the arts, and full of the passions of a momentous era. It offers
a critical new perspective on the role of popular culture in the
process of political change.
6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 17 halftones, 1 line illustration 320
pages ISBN 0-674-00063-3
January 2000 $24.95 / £15.50 cloth
SOUL BY SOUL
Life Inside the Antebellum Slave
Market
WALTER JOHNSON
Awarded the Thomas J. Wilson Prize of Harvard University Press
Soul by Soul tells the story of slavery in antebellum
America by moving away from the cotton plantations and into the
slave market itself, the heart of the domestic slave trade.
Taking us inside the New Orleans slave market, the largest in the
nation, where 100,000 men, women, and children were packaged,
priced, and sold, Walter Johnson transforms the statistics of
this chilling trade into the human drama of traders, buyers, and
slaves, negotiating sales that would alter the life of each. What
emerges is not only the brutal economics of trading but the vast
and surprising interdependencies among the actors involved.
Using recently discovered court records, slaveholders' letters,
nineteenth-century narratives of former slaves, and the financial
documentation of the trade itself, Johnson reveals the tenuous
shifts of power that occurred in the market's slave coffles and
showrooms. Traders packaged their slaves by "feeding them
up," dressing them well, and oiling their bodies, but they
ultimately relied on the slaves to play their part as valuable
commodities. Slave buyers stripped the slaves and questioned
their pasts, seeking more honest answers than they could get from
the traders. In turn, these examinations provided information
that the slaves could utilize, sometimes even shaping a sale to
their own advantage.
Johnson depicts the subtle interrelation of capitalism,
paternalism, class consciousness, racism, and resistance in the
slave market, to help us understand the centrality of the
"peculiar institution" in the lives of slaves and
slaveholders alike. His pioneering history is in no small measure
the story of antebellum slavery.
6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 20 halftones 320 pages ISBN
0-674-82148-3
February 2000 $26.00 / £16.50 cloth
ABOLITIONISTS ABROAD
American Blacks and the Making of
Modern West Africa
LAMIN SANNEH
In 1792, nearly 1,200 freed American slaves crossed the Atlantic
and established themselves in Freetown, West Africa, a community
dedicated to anti-slavery and opposed to the African chieftain
hierarchy that was tied to slavery. Thus began an unprecedented
movement with critical long-term effects on the evolution of
social, religious, and political institutions in modern Africa.
Lamin Sanneh's engrossing book narrates the story of freed slaves
who led efforts to abolish the slave trade by attacking its base
operation: the capture and sale of people by African chiefs.
Sanneh's protagonists set out to establish in West Africa
colonies founded on equal rights and opportunity for personal
enterprise, communities that would be havens for ex-slaves and an
example to the rest of Africa. Among the most striking of these
leaders is the Nigerian Samuel Ajayi Crowther, a recaptured slave
who joined a colony in Sierra Leone and subsequently established
satellite communities in Nigeria. The ex-slave repatriates
brought with them an evangelical Christianity that encouraged
individual spirituality--a revolutionary vision in a land where
European missionaries had long assumed they could Christianize
the whole society by converting chiefs and rulers.
Tracking this potent African American anti-slavery and
democratizing movement through the nineteenth century, Lamin
Sanneh draws a clear picture of the religious grounding of its
conflict with the traditional chieftain authorities. His study
recounts a crucial development in the history of West Africa.
6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 7 line illustrations 352 pages ISBN
0-674-00060-9
February 2000 $29.95x / £18.50 cloth
AMERICAN HISTORY
SEX IN THE HEARTLAND
BETH BAILEY
Sex in the Heartland is the story of the sexual revolution
in a small university town in the quintessential heartland state
of Kansas. Bypassing the oft-told tales of radicals and
revolutionaries on either coast, Beth Bailey argues that the
revolution was forged in towns and cities alike, as
"ordinary" people struggled over the boundaries of
public and private sexual behavior in postwar America.
Bailey fundamentally challenges contemporary perceptions of the
revolution as simply a triumph of free love and gay lib. Rather,
she explores the long-term and mainstream changes in American
society, beginning in the economic and social dislocations of
World War II and the explosion of mass media and communication,
which aided and abetted the sexual upheaval of the 1960s.
Focusing on Lawrence, Kansas, we discover the intricacies and
depth of a transformation that was nurtured at the grass roots.
Americans used the concept of revolution to make sense of social
and sexual changes as they lived through them. Everything from
the birth control pill and counterculture to Civil Rights, was
conflated into "the revolution," an accessible but
deceptive simplification, too easy to both glorify and vilify.
Bailey untangles the radically different origins, intentions, and
outcomes of these events to help us understand their roles and
meanings for sex in contemporary America. She argues that the
sexual revolution challenged and partially overturned a system of
sexual controls based on oppression, inequality, and
exploitation, and created new models of sex and gender relations
that have shaped our society in powerful and positive ways.
6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 22 halftones 320 pages ISBN
0-674-80278-0
September 1999 $27.00 / £16.95 cloth
THE REAL AMERICAN DREAM
A Meditation on Hope
ANDREW DELBANCO
Since we discovered that, in Tocqueville's words, "the
incomplete joys of this world will never satisfy the heart,"
how have we Americans made do? In The Real American Dream
one of the nation's premier literary scholars searches out the
symbols and stories by which Americans have reached for something
beyond worldly desire. A spiritual history ranging from the first
English settlements to the present day, the book is also a
lively, deeply learned meditation on hope.
Andrew Delbanco tells of the stringent God of Protestant
Christianity, who exerted immense force over the language,
institutions, and customs of the culture for nearly 200 years. He
describes the falling away of this God and the rise of the idea
of a sacred nation-state. And, finally, he speaks of our own
moment, when symbols of nationalism are in decline, leaving us
with nothing to satisfy the longing for transcendence once
sustained by God and nation.
From the Christian story that expressed the earliest Puritan
yearnings to New Age spirituality, apocalyptic environmentalism,
and the multicultural search for ancestral roots that divert our
own, The Real American Dream evokes the tidal rhythm of
American history. It shows how Americans have organized their
days and ordered their lives--and ultimately created a
culture--to make sense of the pain, desire, pleasure, and fear
that are the stuff of human experience. In a time of cultural
crisis, when the old stories seem to be faltering, this book
offers a lesson in the painstaking remaking of the American
dream.
5 1/8 x 7 1/2 inches 160 pages ISBN 0-674-74925-1
September 1999 $19.95 / £12.50 cloth
JEFFERSON AND THE INDIANS
The Tragic Fate of the First
Americans
ANTHONY F. C. WALLACE
In Thomas Jefferson's time, white Americans were bedeviled by a
moral dilemma unyielding to reason and sentiment: what to do
about the presence of black slaves and free Indians. That
Jefferson himself was caught between his own soaring rhetoric and
private behavior toward blacks has long been known. But the
tortured duality of his attitude toward Indians is only now being
unearthed.
In this landmark history, Anthony Wallace takes us on a tour of
discovery to unexplored regions of Jefferson's mind. There, the
bookish Enlightenment scholar--collector of Indian vocabularies,
excavator of ancient burial mounds, chronicler of the eloquence
of America's native peoples, and mourner of their tragic
fate--sits uncomfortably close to Jefferson the imperialist and
architect of Indian removal. Impelled by the necessity of
expanding his agrarian republic, he became adept at putting a
philosophical gloss on his policy of encroachment, threats of
war, and forced land cessions--a policy that led, eventually, to
cultural genocide.
In this compelling narrative, we see how Jefferson's close
relationships with frontier fighters and Indian agents, land
speculators and intrepid explorers, European travelers,
missionary scholars, and the chiefs of many Indian nations all
complicated his views of the rights and claims of the first
Americans. Lavishly illustrated with scenes and portraits from
the period, Jefferson and the Indians adds a troubled
dimension to one of the most enigmatic figures of American
history, and to one of its most shameful legacies.
6 1/4 x 9 1/4 inches 60 halftones, 3 maps 416 pages ISBN
0-674-00066-8
October 1999 $29.95 / £18.50 cloth
THE GREAT ARIZONA ORPHAN ABDUCTION
LINDA GORDON
In 1904, New York nuns brought forty Irish orphans to a remote
Arizona mining camp, to be placed with Catholic families. The
Catholic families were Mexican, as was the majority of the
population. Soon the town's Anglos, furious at this
"interracial" transgression, formed a vigilante squad
that kidnapped the children and nearly lynched the nuns and the
local priest. The Catholic Church sued to get its wards back, but
all the courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, ruled in favor
of the vigilantes.
The Great Arizona Orphan Abduction tells this disturbing
and dramatic tale to illuminate the creation of racial boundaries
along the Mexican border. Clifton/Morenci, Arizona, was a
"wild West" boomtown, where the mines and smelters
pulled in thousands of Mexican immigrant workers. Racial walls
hardened as the mines became big business and whiteness became a
marker of superiority. These already volatile race and class
relations produced passions that erupted in the "orphan
incident." To the Anglos of Clifton/Morenci, placing a white
child with a Mexican family was tantamount to child abuse, and
they saw their kidnapping as a rescue.
Women initiated both sides of this confrontation. Mexican women
agreed to take in these orphans, both serving their church and
asserting a maternal prerogative; Anglo women believed they had
to "save" the orphans, and they organized a vigilante
squad to do it. In retelling this nearly forgotten piece of
American history, Linda Gordon brilliantly recreates and dissects
the tangled intersection of family and racial values, in a
gripping story that resonates with today's conflicts over the
"best interests of the child."
6 3/8 x 9 1/4 inches 35 halftones, 2 maps, 1 table 480
pages ISBN 0-674-36041-9
November 1999 $29.95 / £18.50 cloth
FINANCIAL MISSIONARIES TO THE
WORLD
The Politics and Culture of Dollar
Diplomacy, 1900-1930
EMILY S. ROSENBERG
Recently, a volatile global economy has challenged the United
States to rethink its financial policies toward economically
troubled countries. Emily Rosenberg suggests that perplexing
questions about how to standardize practices within the global
financial system, and thereby strengthen market economies in
unstable areas of the world, go back to the early decades of this
century. Then, dollar diplomacy--the practice of extending
private U.S. bank loans in exchange for financial supervision
over other nations--provided America's major approach to
stabilizing economies overseas and expanding its influence.
Policymakers, private bankers, and the members of the emerging
profession of international economic advising cooperated in
devising arrangements by which U.S. banks would extend foreign
loans on the condition that the countries hire U.S. experts to
revamp financial systems and exercise some supervision. Rosenberg
demonstrates that these arrangements were not simply technical
and shows how they became central to foreign policy debates
during the 1920s, when increasingly vocal critics at home and
abroad assailed dollar diplomacy as a new imperialism. She
explores how loan-for-supervision arrangements interrelated with
broad cultural notions of racial destiny, professional expertise,
and the virtues of manliness. An innovative, interdisciplinary
study, Financial Missionaries to the World illuminates the
dilemmas of public/private cooperation in foreign economic policy
and the incalculable consequences of exercising financial power
in the global marketplace.
November 1999 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 352 pages
ISBN 0-674-00059-5$45.00x / £27.95 cloth
MAKING CITIZEN-SOLDIERS
ROTC and the Ideology of American Military Service
MICHAEL S. NEIBERG
This book examines the Reserve Officers Training Corps program as
a distinctively American expression of the social, cultural, and
political meanings of military service. Since 1950, ROTC has
produced nearly two out of three American active duty officers,
yet there has been no comprehensive scholarly look at civilian
officer education programs in nearly forty years.
While most modern military systems educate and train junior
officers at insular academies like West Point, only the United
States has relied heavily on the active cooperation of its
civilian colleges. Michael Neiberg argues that the creation of
officer education programs on civilian campuses emanates from a
traditional American belief (which he traces to the colonial
period) in the active participation of civilians in military
affairs. Although this ideology changed shape through the
twentieth century, it never disappeared. During the Cold War
military buildup, ROTC came to fill two roles: it provided the
military with large numbers of well-educated officers, and it
provided the nation with a military comprised of
citizen-soldiers. Even during the Vietnam era, officers,
university administrators, and most students understood ROTC's
dual role. The Vietnam War thus led to reform, not abandonment,
of ROTC.
Mining diverse sources, including military and university
archives, Making Citizen-Soldiers provides an in-depth
look at an important, but often overlooked, connection between
the civilian and military spheres.
6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 288 pages ISBN 0-674-54312-2
February 2000 $39.95x / £24.95 cloth
ACHESON
The Secretary of State Who Created the American World
JAMES CHACE
A New York Times Book Review Notable Book
Acheson is the first comprehensive biography of the most
important and controversial secretary of state of the twentieth
century. More than any other of the renowned "Wise Men"
who shaped America's vision of the world in the aftermath of
World War II, Dean Acheson was the quintessential man of action,
the driving force behind the Truman Doctrine, the Marshall Plan,
and NATO. James Chace has given us an important and dramatic work
of history chronicling the momentous decisions, events, and
fascinating personalities of the most critical decades of the
American Century.
6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 33 halftones, 1 map, 528 pages ISBN
0-674-00081-1
October 19999 $17.95 / £10.95 paper
THE GOSPEL OF GERMS
Men, Women, and the Microbe in American Life
NANCY TOMES
AIDS. Ebola. "Killer microbes." All around us the
alarms are going off, warning of the danger of new, deadly
diseases. And yet, as Nancy Tomes reminds us in her absorbing
book, this is really nothing new. A remarkable work of medical
and cultural history, The Gospel of Germs takes us back to
the first great "germ panic" in American history, which
peaked in the early 1900s, to explore the origins of our modern
disease consciousness.
Little more than a hundred years ago, ordinary Americans had no
idea that many deadly ailments were the work of microorganisms,
let alone that their own behavior spread such diseases. The
Gospel of Germs shows how the revolutionary findings of late
nineteenth-century bacteriology made their way from the
laboratory to the lavatory and kitchen, with public health
reformers spreading the word and women taking up the battle on
the domestic front. Drawing on a wealth of advice books, patent
applications, advertisements, and oral histories, Tomes traces
the new awareness of the microbe as it radiated outward from
middle-class homes into the world of American business and
crossed the lines of class, gender, ethnicity, and race.
Just as we take some of the weapons in this germ war for
granted--fixtures as familiar as the white porcelain toilet, the
window screen, the refrigerator, and the vacuum cleaner--so we
rarely think of the drastic measures deployed against disease in
the dangerous old days before antibiotics. But, as Tomes notes,
many of the hygiene rules first popularized in those days remain
the foundation of infectious disease control today. Her work
offers a timely look into the history of our long-standing
obsession with germs, its impact on twentieth-century culture and
society, and its troubling new relevance to our own lives.
6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 18 halftones 384 pages ISBN
0-674-35708-6
September 1999 $16.95 / £10.50 paper
KIDNAPPED
Child Abduction in America
PAULA S. FASS
Few crimes capture our imagination as completely as child
kidnapping. Paula S. Fass explores how our awareness of violence
toward the young has evolved from a time when Americans were
shocked to discover that their children could be held for ransom,
until today, when sexual predators seem to threaten our children
at every turn. In a series of riveting narratives, Kidnapped
shows how child abduction reflects cultural issues--parenting and
the American family, the media and our fascination with
celebrity, gender and sexuality, mental health, and much more. By
tracing the most infamous kidnapping cases of the past 125 years,
Fass peers into the American mind, providing new insights into a
society that both values and exploits its youngest members.
6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 29 halftones, 2 line illustrations 352 pages
ISBN 0-674-00082-X
September 1999 $15.95 / £9.95 paper
KIDS' STUFF
Toys and the Changing World of American Childhood
GARY CROSS
To sort out who's who and what's what in the enchanting, vexing
world of Barbies® and Ninja Turtles®, Tinkertoys® and teddy
bears, is to begin to see what's become of childhood in America.
It is this changing world, and what it unveils about our values,
that Gary Cross explores in Kids' Stuff, a revealing look
into the meaning of American toys through this century.
Early in the 1900s toys reflected parents' ideas about children
and their futures. Erector sets introduced boys to a realm of
business and technology, while baby dolls anticipated motherhood
and building blocks honed the fine motor skills of the youngest
children. Kids' Stuff chronicles the transformation that
occurred as the interests and intentions of parents, children,
and the toy industry gradually diverged--starting in the 1930s
when toymakers, marketing playthings inspired by popular
favorites like Shirley Temple and Buck Rogers, began to appeal
directly to the young. TV advertising, blockbuster films like Star
Wars®, and Saturday morning cartoons exploited their
youthful audience in new and audacious ways. Meanwhile, powerful
social and economic forces were transforming the nature of play
in American society. Cross offers a richly textured account of a
culture in which erector sets and baby dolls are no longer alone
in preparing children for the future, and in which the toys that
now crowd the racks are as perplexing for parents as they are
beguiling for little boys and girls. Whether we want our children
to be high achievers in a competitive world or playful and free
from the worries of adult life, the toy store confronts us with
many choices.
What does the endless array of action figures and fashion dolls
mean? Are children--or parents--the dupes of the film,
television, and toy industries, with their latest fads and
fantasies? What does this say about our time, and what does it
bode for our future? Tapping a vein of rich cultural history, Kids'
Stuff exposes the serious business behind a century of
playthings.
6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 37 halftones 336 pages ISBN
0-674-50335-X
November 1999 $16.95x / £10.50 paper
WHITENESS OF A DIFFERENT COLOR
European Immigrants and the Alchemy of Race
MATTHEW FRYE JACOBSON
Winner of the 1999 John Hope Franklin Publication Prize of the
American Studies Association
Co-winner of the American Political Science Association's 1999
Ralph J. Bunche Award
1999 Best Book on the Social Construction of Race, Sponsored
by the American Political Science Association Section on Race,
Ethnicity and Politics
America's racial odyssey is the subject of this remarkable work
of historical imagination. Matthew Frye Jacobson argues that race
resides not in nature but in the contingencies of politics and
culture. In ever-changing racial categories we glimpse the
competing theories of history and collective destiny by which
power has been organized and contested in the United States.
Capturing the excitement of the new field of "whiteness
studies" and linking it to traditional historical inquiry,
Jacobson shows that in this nation of immigrants "race"
has been at the core of civic assimilation: ethnic minorities in
becoming American were reracialized to become Caucasian. He
provides a counterhistory of how nationality groups such as the
Irish or Greeks became Americans as racial groups like Celts or
Mediterraneans became Caucasian. Jacobson tracks race as a
conception and perception, emphasizing the importance of knowing
not only how we label one another but also how we see one
another, and how that racialized vision has largely been
transformed in this century. The stages of racial formation--race
as formed in conquest, enslavement, imperialism, segregation, and
labor migration--are all part of the complex, and now
counterintuitive, history of race. Whiteness of a Different
Color traces the fluidity of racial categories from an
immense body of research in literature, popular culture,
politics, society, ethnology, anthropology, cartoons, and legal
history, including sensational trials like the Leo Frank case and
the Draft Riots of 1863.
6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 14 halftones, 2 tables 368 pages ISBN
0-674-95191-3
September 1999 $16.95 / £10.50 paper
THE GOOD CITIZEN
A History of American Civic Life
MICHAEL SCHUDSON
In 1996, less than half of all eligible voters bothered to vote.
Fewer citizens each year follow government and public affairs
regularly. Is popular sovereignty a failure? Not necessarily,
argues Michael Schudson in this provocative history of
citizenship in America. Schudson sees American politics as
evolving from a "politics of assent" in colonial times
and the eighteenth century, in which voting generally reaffirmed
the social hierarchy of the community; to a "politics of
affiliation" in the nineteenth century, in which party
loyalty was paramount for the good citizen. Progressive reforms
around the turn of the century reduced the power of parties and
increased the role of education, making way for the
"informed citizen," which remains the ideal in American
civic life. Today a fourth model, "the rights-bearing
citizen," supplements the "informed citizen" model
and makes the courthouse as well as the voting booth a channel
for citizenship.
6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 400 pages ISBN 0-674-35640-3
September 1999 $17.95 / £10.95 paper
WHAT THE PEOPLE KNOW
Freedom and the Press
RICHARD REEVES
The power and status of the press in America reached new heights
after spectacular reporting triumphs in the segregated South, in
Vietnam, and in Washington during the Watergate years. Then new
technologies created instantaneous global reporting which left
the government unable to control the flow of information to the
nation. The press thus became a formidable rival in critical
struggles to control what the people know and when they know it.
But that was more power than the press could handle--and
journalism crashed toward new lows in public esteem and public
purpose.
The dazzling new technologies, profit-driven owners, and
celebrated editors, reporters, and broadcasters made it possible
to bypass older values and standards of journalism. Journalists
reveled in lusty pursuit after the power of politics, the profits
of entertainment and trespass into privacy. Richard Reeves was
there at the rise and at the fall, beginning as a small-town
editor, becoming the chief political correspondent of the New
York Times and then a best-selling author and award-winning
documentary filmmaker. He tells the story of a tribe that lost
its way. From the Pony Express to the Internet, he chronicles
what happened to the press as America accelerated into
uncertainty, arguing that to survive, the press must go back to
doing what it was hired to do long ago: stand as outsiders
watching government and politics on behalf of a free people busy
with their own affairs.
5 1/2 x 8 1/4 inches 159 pages ISBN 0-674-61623-5
October 1999 $12.95 / £7.95 paper
PROGRESSIVE INTELLECTUALS AND THE
DILEMMAS OF DEMOCRATIC COMMITMENT
LEON FINK
How to lead the people and be one of them? What's a democratic
intellectual to do? This longstanding dilemma for the progressive
intellectual, how to bridge the world of educated opinion and
that of the working masses, is the focus of Leon Fink's
penetrating book, the first social history of the progressive
thinker caught in the middle of American political culture.
In a series of vivid portraits, Fink investigates the means and
methods of intellectual activists in the first part of the
twentieth century--how they served, observed, and made their own
history. In the stories of, among others, John R. Commons,
Charles McCarthy, William English Walling, Anna Strunsky Walling,
A. Philip Randolph, W. Jett Lauck, and Wil Lou Gray, he creates a
panorama of reform of unusual power. Issues as broad as the cult
of leadership and as specific as the Wisconsin school of labor
history lead us into the heart of the dilemma of the progressive
intellectual in our age.
The problem, as Fink describes it, is twofold: Could people
prevail in a land of burgeoning capitalism and concentrated
power? And should the people prevail? This book shows us
Socialists and Progressives and, later, New Dealers grappling
with these questions as they tried to redress the new inequities
of their day--and as they confronted the immense frustrations of
moving the masses. Fink's graphic depiction of intellectuals'
labors in the face of capitalist democracy's challenges
dramatizes a time in our past--and at the same time speaks
eloquently to our own.
6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 14 halftones 384 pages ISBN
0-674-71390-7
November 1999 $19.95x / £12.50 paper
BITTER FRUIT
The Story of the American Coup in Guatemala
STEPHEN SCHLESINGER AND STEPHEN
KINZER
With New Essays by John H. Coatsworth, Richard A. Nuccio, and
Stephen Kinzer
Bitter Fruit recounts in telling detail the CIA operation
to overthrow the democratically elected government of Jacobo
Arbenz of Guatemala in 1954. The 1982 book has become a classic,
a textbook case study of Cold War meddling that succeeded only to
condemn Guatemala to decades of military dictatorship. The
authors make extensive use of U.S. government publications and
documents, as well as interviews with former CIA and other
officials. The Harvard edition includes a powerful new
introduction by historian John Coatsworth, Director of the David
Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies; an insightful
prologue by Richard Nuccio, former State Department official who
revealed recent evidence of CIA misconduct in Guatemala to
Congress; and a compelling afterword by coauthor Stephen Kinzer,
now Istanbul bureau chief for the New York Times,
summarizing developments that led from the 1954 coup to the peace
accords that ended Guatemala's civil strife forty years later.
6 x 9 inches 8 halftones 362 pages ISBN 0-674-07590-0
August 1999 $19.95x / £12.50 paper
RESTORING THE BALANCE
Women Physicians and the Profession of Medicine, 1850-1995
ELLEN S. MORE
From about 1850, American women physicians won gradual acceptance
from male colleagues and the general public, primarily as
caregivers to women and children. By 1920, they represented
approximately five percent of the profession. But within a
decade, their niche in American medicine--women's medical schools
and medical societies, dispensaries for women and children,
women's hospitals, and settlement house clinics--had declined.
The steady increase of women entering medical schools also
halted, a trend not reversed until the 1960s. Yet, as women's
traditional niche in the profession disappeared, a vanguard of
women doctors slowly opened new paths to professional advancement
and public health advocacy.
Drawing on rich archival sources and her own extensive interviews
with women physicians, Ellen More shows how the Victorian ideal
of balance influenced the practice of healing for women doctors
in America over the past 150 years. She argues that the history
of women practitioners throughout the twentieth century fulfills
the expectations constructed within the Victorian culture of
professionalism. Restoring the Balance demonstrates that
women doctors--collectively and individually--sought to balance
the distinctive interests and culture of women against the claims
of disinterestedness, scientific objectivity, and specialization
of modern medical professionalism. That goal, More writes,
reaffirmed by each generation, lies at the heart of her central
question: what does it mean to be a woman physician?
6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 6 halftones, 1 line illustration, 5
tables 320 pages ISBN 0-674-76661-X
February 2000 $49.95x / £30.95 cloth
ANCIENT HISTORY
LATE ANTIQUITY
A Guide to the Postclassical World
EDITED BY G. W. BOWERSOCK, PETER
BROWN, AND OLEG GRABAR
The first book of its kind, this richly informative and
comprehensive guide to the world of late antiquity offers the
latest scholarship to the researcher along with great reading
pleasure to the browser. In eleven comprehensive essays and in
over 500 encyclopedic entries, an international cast of experts
provides essential information and fresh perspectives on the
history and culture of an era marked by the rise of two world
religions, unprecedented political upheavals that remade the map
of the known world, and the creation of art of enduring glory.
By extending the commonly accepted chronological and territorial
boundaries of the period--to encompass Roman, Byzantine,
Sassanian, and early Islamic cultures, from the middle of the
third century to the end of the eighth--this guide makes new
connections and permits revealing comparisons. Consult the
article on "Angels" and discover their meaning in
Islamic as well as classical and Judeo-Christian traditions.
Refer to "Children," "Concubinage," and
"Divorce" for a fascinating interweaving of information
on the family. Read the essay on "Barbarians and
Ethnicity" and see how a topic as current as the
construction of identity played out in earlier times, from the
Greeks and Romans to the Turks, Huns, and Saxons. Turn to
"Empire Building" to learn how the empire of
Constantine was supported by architecture and ceremony.
Or follow your own path through the broad range of entries on
politics, manufacturing and commerce, the arts, philosophy,
religion, geography, ethnicity, and domestic life. Each entry
introduces readers to another facet of the postclassical world:
historic figures and places, institutions, burial customs, food,
money, public life, and amusements. A splendid selection of
illustrations enhances the portrait.
The intriguing era of late antiquity emerges completely and
clearly, viewed in a new light, in a guide that will be relished
by scholars and general readers alike.
8 x 10 1/4 inches 16 color illustrations, 63 halftones, 2
maps 832 pages ISBN 0-674-51173-5
November 1999 $49.95 / £29.95 cloth
ANCIENT GREEK LOVE MAGIC
CHRISTOPHER A. FARAONE
The ancient Greeks commonly resorted to magic spells to attract
and keep lovers--as numerous allusions in Greek literature and
recently discovered "voodoo dolls," magical papyri,
gemstones, and curse tablets attest. Surveying and analyzing
these various texts and artifacts, Christopher Faraone reveals
that gender is the crucial factor in understanding love spells.
There are, he argues, two distinct types of love magic: the
curselike charms used primarily by men to torture unwilling women
with fiery and maddening passion until they surrender sexually;
and the binding spells and debilitating potions generally used by
women to sedate angry or philandering husbands and make them more
affectionate.
Faraone's lucid analysis of these spells also yields a number of
insights about the construction of gender in antiquity, for
example, the "femininity" of socially inferior males
and the "maleness" of autonomous prostitutes. Most
significantly, his findings challenge the widespread modern view
that all Greek men considered women to be naturally lascivious.
Faraone reveals the existence of an alternate male understanding
of the female as "naturally" moderate and chaste, who
uses love magic to pacify and control the "naturally"
angry and passionate male. This fascinating study of magical
practices and their implications for perceptions of male and
female sexuality offers an unusual look at ancient Greek religion
and society.
6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 5 tables 224 pages ISBN 0-674-03320-5
October 1999 $35.00x / £21.95 cloth
MAGIC IN THE ANCIENT WORLD
FRITZ GRAF
Translated by Franklin Philip
Ancient Greeks and Romans often turned to magic to achieve
personal goals. Magical rites were seen as a route for direct
access to the gods, for material gains as well as spiritual
satisfaction. In this fascinating survey of magical beliefs and
practices from the sixth century B.C.E. through late antiquity,
Fritz Graf sheds new light on ancient religion.
Evidence of widespread belief in the efficacy of magic is
pervasive: the contemporaries of Plato and Aristotle placed
voodoo dolls on graves in order to harm business rivals or
attract lovers. The Twelve Tables of Roman Law forbids the
magical transference of crops from one field to another. Graves,
wells, and springs throughout the Mediterranean have yielded vast
numbers of Greek and Latin curse tablets. And ancient literature
abounds with scenes of magic, from necromancy to love spells.
Graf explores the important types of magic in Greco-Roman
antiquity, describing rites and explaining the theory behind
them. And he characterizes the ancient magician: his training and
initiation, social status, and presumed connections with the
divine world. With trenchant analysis of underlying conceptions
and vivid account of illustrative cases, Graf gives a full
picture of the practice of magic and its implications. He
concludes with an evaluation of the relation of magic to
religion. Magic in the Ancient World offers an unusual
look at ancient Greek and Roman thought and a new understanding
of popular recourse to the supernatural.
5 1/2 x 8 1/4 inches 319 pages ISBN 0-674-54151-0 ISBN
0-674-54153-7
October 1999 $16.95x / £10.50 paper
ATHENS FROM ALEXANDER TO ANTONY
CHRISTIAN HABICHT
Translated by Deborah Lucas Schneider
Winner of the 1997 Criticos Prize of the London Hellenic
Society
The conquests of Alexander the Great transformed the Greek world
into a complex of monarchies and vying powers, a vast sphere in
which the Greek city-states struggled to survive. This is the
compelling story of one city that despite long periods of
subjugation persisted as a vital social entity throughout the
Hellenistic age.
Christian Habicht narrates the history of Athens from its
subjugation by the Macedonians in 338 B.C. to the battle of
Actium in 31 B.C., when Octavian's defeat of Mark Antony paved
the way for Roman dominion over the Hellenistic world. For nearly
three centuries Athens strove unsuccessfully for sovereignty; its
foreign policies were shaped by the dictates first of the
Macedonian monarchy and later of the Roman republic. Yet the city
never relinquished control of internal affairs, and citizen
participation in its government remained strong. Habicht lucidly
chronicles the democracy's setbacks and recoveries over these
years as it formed and suffered the consequences of various
alliances. He sketches its continuing role as a leader in
intellectual life and the arts, as Menander and other Athenian
playwrights saw their work produced throughout the Greek world;
and the city's famous schools of philosophy, now including those
of Zeno and Epicurus, remained a stellar attraction for students
from around the Mediterranean. Habicht has long been in the
forefront of research on Hellenistic Athens; in this
authoritative yet eminently readable history he distills that
research for all readers interested in the ancient Mediterranean
world.
416 pages ISBN 0-674-05112-2 October 1999 $18.95x /
£11.95 paper
ASIAN HISTORY
A CONCISE HISTORY OF CHINA
J. A. G. ROBERTS
The centuries-long complexity of China's political experience,
the richness of its culture, and the drama of its economic
unfolding are the hallmarks of this short but sweeping history.
China's own history is entwined with its response to the West in
a rich tapestry depicting its peoples, rulers, and society. More
than a nuanced history of a vast continent, this study is
sensitive to the multifaceted and changing interpretations of
China that have been offered over the years.
In this overarching book, J. A. G. Roberts refers to recent
archeological finds--the caches of bronze vessels found at
Sanxingdui--and to new documentary reevaluations--the
reassessment of Manchu documentation. The first half of the book
provides an up-to-date interpretation of China's early and
imperial history, while the second half concentrates on the
modern period and provides an interpretive account of major
developments--the impact of Western imperialism, the rise of
Chinese Communism, and the record of the People's Republic of
China since 1949.
Concise and direct, this book is a compelling narrative and handy
companion for those interested in China.
December 1999
5 7/16 x 8 1/2 inches 10 maps 320 pages cloth ISBN 0-674-00074-9
$45.00
paperback: ISBN 0-674-00075-7 $16.95
IMPERIAL CHINA 900-1800
F. W. MOTE
This is a history of China for the 900-year time span of the late
imperial period. A senior scholar of this epoch, F. W. Mote
highlights the personal characteristics of the rulers and
dynasties and probes the cultural theme of Chinese adaptations to
recurrent alien rule. No other work provides a similar synthesis:
generational events, personalities, and the spirit of the age
combine to yield a comprehensive history of the civilization, not
isolated but shaped by its relation to outsiders.
This vast panorama of the civilization of the largest society in
human history reveals much about Chinese high and low culture,
and the influential role of Confucian philosophical and social
ideals. Throughout the Liao Empire, the world of the Song, the
Mongol rule, and the early Qing through the Kangxi and Qianlong
reigns, culture, ideas, and personalities are richly woven into
the fabric of the political order and institutions. This is a
monumental work that will stand among the classic accounts of the
nature and vibrancy of Chinese civilization before the modern
period.
February 2000 6 3/8 x 10 inches 5 halftones, 22 maps, 9
charts 1440 pages
ISBN 0-674-44515-5 $39.95 / £24.95 cloth
ONE QUARTER OF HUMANITY
Malthusian Mythology and Chinese Realities
JAMES Z. LEE AND WANG FENG
This book presents evidence about historical and contemporary
Chinese population behavior that overturns much of the received
wisdom about the differences between China and the West first
voiced by Malthus. Malthus described a China in which early and
universal marriage ensured high fertility and therefore high
mortality. He contrasted this with Western Europe, where marriage
occurred late and was far from universal, resulting in lower
fertility and higher demographic responsiveness to economic
circumstances. The result in China was thought to be mass misery
as part of the population teetered on the brink of a Malthusian
precipice, whereas in the West conditions were less severe.
In reality, James Lee and Wang Feng argue, there has been
effective regulation of population growth in China through a
variety of practices that depressed marital fertility to levels
far below European standards, and through the widespread
practices of infanticide and abortion. Moreover, in China,
population behavior has long been primarily a consequence of
collective intervention. This collective culture underlies four
distinctive features of the Chinese demographic pattern--high
rates of female infanticide, low rates of male marriage, low
rates of marital fertility, and high rates of adoption--that Lee
and Wang trace from 1700 to today. These and other distinctive
features of the Chinese demographic and social system, they
argue, led to a different demographic transition in China from
the one that took place in the West.
October 1999 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 29 line illustrations, 1 map,
16 tables 288 pages
ISBN 0-674-63908-1 $47.50x / £29.50 cloth
CULTURE AND THE STATE IN LATE CHOSON KOREA
EDITED BY JAHYUN KIM HABOUSH AND MARTINA DEUCHLER
Investigating the late sixteenth through
the nineteenth century, this work looks at the shifting
boundaries between the Choson state and the adherents of
Confucianism, Buddhism, Christianity, and popular religions.
Seeking to define the meaning and constitutive elements of the
hegemonic group and a particular marginalized community in this
Confucian state, the contributors argue that the power of each
group and the space it occupied were determined by a dynamic
interaction of ideology, governmental policies, and the group's
self-perceptions. Collectively, the volume counters the static
view of the Korean Confucian state, elucidates its relationship
to the wider Confucian community and religious groups, and
suggests new views of the complex way in which each negotiated
and adjusted its ideology and practices in response to the
state's activities.
October 1999 6 x 9 inches 3 tables 325 pages ISBN 0-674-17982-X
$40.00x / £24.95 cloth
COLONIAL MODERNITY IN KOREA
GI-WOOK SHIN AND MICHAEL ROBINSON, EDITORS
The twelve chapters in this volume seek to
overcome the nationalist paradigm of Japanese repression and
exploitation versus Korean resistance that has dominated the
study of Korea's colonial period (1910-1945) by adopting a more
inclusive, pluralistic approach that stresses the complex
relations among colonialism, modernity, and nationalism. By
addressing such diverse subjects as the colonial legal system,
radio, telecommunications, the rural economy, and
industrialization and the formation of industrial labor, one
group of essays analyzes how various aspects of modernity emerged
in the colonial context and how they were mobilized by the
Japanese for colonial domination, with often unexpected results.
A second group examines the development of various forms of
identity from nation to gender to class, particularly how aspects
of colonial modernity facilitated their formation through
negotiation, contestation, and redefinition.
Harvard East Asian Monographs, 184 Harvard Hallym Series on
Korean Studies
December 1999 6 x 9 inches 7 illustrations, 2 maps, 14 tables450
pages
ISBN 0-674-14255-1 $49.50x / £30.95 cloth
BRANCHES OF HEAVEN
A History of the Imperial Clan of Sung China
JOHN W. CHAFFEE
By the end of the Sung dynasty (960-1279),
known descendants of the three Chao brothers who had founded the
dynasty numbered over 20,000. Unlike the rulers of many other
Chinese dynasties, however, the Sung emperors were not plagued by
challenges to their rule from their relatives. Indeed, so
successful was Sung policy on the imperial clan that it would
serve as a model for the subsequent Ming and Ch'ing dynasties.
How the Sung created a social and political asset in the imperial
clan while neutralizing it as a potential threat is the story of
this book. In this, the first full-length study of the imperial
clan as an institution, John W. Chaffee analyzes its history, its
political role, and the lifestyle of its members, focussing on
their residence patterns, marriages, and occupations.
Harvard East Asian Monographs, 183
November 1999 6 x 9 inches 5 illustrations, 2 maps 350 pages
ISBN 0-674-08049-1 $45.00x / £27.95 cloth
NEPALESE SHAMAN ORAL TEXTS
GREGORY G. MASKARINEC
Nepalese Shaman Oral Texts is a
bilingual (Nepali and English) critical edition of three
complete, representative repertoires of shaman texts collected
over the past twenty years in Jajarkot District, Western Nepal.
Throughout that area, shamans continue to fulfill important
therapeutic roles, diagnosing problems, treating afflictions, and
restoring order and balance to the lives of their clients and
their communities. Each of these efforts incorporates extensive,
meticulously memorized oral texts, materials that not only
clarify symptoms and causes but also detail the proper ways to
conduct rituals. These texts preserve the knowledge necessary to
act as a shaman, and confirm a social world that demands
continuous intervention by shamans. This volume, the first of its
kind, includes both publicly chanted recitals and privately
whispered spells of the area's three leading shamans, annotated
with extensive notes. Containing over 250 texts, this work
endeavors to provide a comprehensive documentation of a
non-Western healing system through the material that sustains and
preserves that tradition, demonstrating that shaman texts remain
thoroughly meaningful.
Harvard Oriental Series, 55 7 1/4 x 10 1/4 inches 707 pages
ISBN 0-674-60795-3 $90.00x / £56.50 cloth
EUROPEAN HISTORY
THE STORY OF GREENWICH
CLIVE ASLET
To open this book is to enter a world of living history, of pomp
and pageantry, royal fiats and popular revolutions, naval
exploits and mercantile triumphs, and soaring scientific
achievements. This is the world of Greenwich, England, home of a
now mysterious temple in the days of the ancient Romans and of
the Millennium Dome in our own, biding its time on the Thames
and, flush with the line of longitude zero, keeping the time of
the world. Clive Aslet conducts us through the streets and byways
of this storied city, showing us scenes from its prodigious
history at every turn. His richly illustrated book is a journey
through time as it has been lived, and marked, in this city like
no other in the world.
Here Sir Walter Raleigh laid down his cloak for Elizabeth I. Here
Elizabeth signed the death warrant for Mary, Queen of Scots. A
place of royal haunts and regal courting, Greenwich was also the
site of Wat Tyler's revolt in the fourteenth century. Home to the
navy that supported the world's greatest maritime empire, the
city saw the funeral of England's most celebrated naval hero,
Admiral Horatio Nelson. Aslet revisits these events, immersing us
in courtly drama and popular ferment, cosmopolitan grandeur and
bustling commerce. He shows us the remarkable buildings that hold
so much of Greenwich's history, from the palaces embellished by
Henry VIII to the structures designed by England's renowned
architects--from Christopher Wren and Inigo Jones--to the
observatories that house the massive telescopes and nautical
clocks that have put Greenwich at the forefront of scientific
invention and discovery.
Whether recalling the literary marks that writers such as Marlowe
and Dickens have left on the city, or tracking London's first
railway into Greenwich, or recounting the tales of navigators and
statesmen, monarchs and common and uncommon folk, this book tells
the story of Greenwich for all time.
September 1999 7 1/16 x 9 1/2 inches 100 color
illustrations 60 halftones 288 pages
ISBN 0-674-00076-5 $35.00 cloth
THE SUN IN THE CHURCH
Cathedrals as Solar Observatories
J. L. HEILBRON
A New York Times Book Review Notable Book
of the Year, 1999
Between 1650 and 1750, four Catholic churches were the best solar
observatories in the world. Built to fix an unquestionable date
for Easter, they also housed instruments that threw light on the
disputed geometry of the solar system, and so, within sight of
the altar, subverted Church doctrine about the order of the
universe.
A tale of politically canny astronomers and cardinals with a
taste for mathematics, The Sun in the Church tells how
these observatories came to be, how they worked, and what they
accomplished. It describes Galileo's political overreaching, his
subsequent trial for heresy, and his slow and steady
rehabilitation in the eyes of the Catholic Church. And it offers
an enlightening perspective on astronomy, Church history, and
religious architecture, as well as an analysis of measurements
testing the limits of attainable accuracy, undertaken with
rudimentary means and extraordinary zeal. Above all, the book
illuminates the niches protected and financed by the Catholic
Church in which science and mathematics thrived.
Superbly written, The Sun in the Church provides a
magnificent corrective to long-standing oversimplified accounts
of the hostility between science and religion.
October 1999 6 3/4 x 9 3/4 inches 8 color illustrations, 42
halftones, 91 line illustrations, 15 tables 374 pages ISBN
0-674-85433-0 $35.00 / £21.95 cloth
THE ARCADES PROJECT
WALTER BENJAMIN
Translated by Howard Eiland and Kevin McLaughlin
"To great writers," Walter Benjamin once wrote,
"finished works weigh lighter than those fragments on which
they labor their entire lives." Conceived in Paris in 1927
and still in progress when Benjamin fled the Occupation in 1940, The
Arcades Project (in German, Das Passagen-Werk) is a
monumental ruin, meticulously constructed over the course of
thirteen years--"the theater," as Benjamin called it,
"of all my struggles and all my ideas."
Focusing on the arcades of nineteenth-century Paris-glass-roofed
rows of shops that were early centers of consumerism--Benjamin
presents a montage of quotations from, and reflections on,
hundreds of published sources, arranging them in thirty-six
categories with descriptive rubrics such as "Fashion,"
"Boredom," "Dream City,"
"Photography," "Catacombs,"
"Advertising," "Prostitution,"
"Baudelaire," and "Theory of Progress." His
central preoccupation is what he calls the commodification of
things--a process in which he locates the decisive shift to the
modern age.
The Arcades Project is Benjamin's effort to represent and
to critique the bourgeois experience of nineteenth-century
history, and, in so doing, to liberate the suppressed "true
history" that underlay the ideological mask. In the
bustling, cluttered arcades, street and interior merge and
historical time is broken up into kaleidoscopic distractions and
displays of ephemera. Here, at a distance from what is normally
meant by "progress," Benjamin finds the lost time(s)
embedded in the spaces of things.
November 1999 6 1/2 x 10 inches 46 halftones 960 pages
ISBN 0-674-04326-X $39.95 / £24.95 cloth
THE BLACK BOOK OF COMMUNISM
Crimes, Terror, Repression
STÉPHANE COURTOIS, NICOLAS WERTH,
JEAN-LOUIS PANNÉ, ANDRZEJ PACZKOWSKI, KAREL BARTOSEK, AND
JEAN-LOUIS MARGOLIN
Translated by Jonathan Murphy and Mark Kramer
Consulting Editor Mark Kramer
Foreword by Martin Malia
Already famous throughout Europe, this international bestseller
plumbs recently opened archives in the former Soviet bloc to
reveal the actual, practical accomplishments of Communism around
the world: terror, torture, famine, mass deportations, and
massacres. Astonishing in the sheer detail it amasses, the book
is the first comprehensive attempt to catalogue and analyze the
crimes of Communism over seventy years.
"Revolutions, like trees, must be judged by their
fruit," Ignazio Silone wrote, and this is the standard the
authors apply to the Communist experience--in the China of
"the Great Helmsman," Kim Il Sung's Korea, Vietnam
under "Uncle Ho" and Cuba under Castro, Ethiopia under
Mengistu, Angola under Neto, and Afghanistan under Najibullah.
The authors, all distinguished scholars based in Europe, document
Communist crimes against humanity, but also crimes against
national and universal culture, from Stalin's destruction of
hundreds of churches in Moscow to Ceausescu's leveling of the
historic heart of Bucharest to the widescale devastation visited
on Chinese culture by Mao's Red Guards.
As the death toll mounts--as many as 25 million in the former
Soviet Union, 65 million in China, 1.7 million in Cambodia, and
on and on--the authors systematically show how and why, wherever
the millenarian ideology of Communism was established, it quickly
led to crime, terror, and repression. An extraordinary
accounting, this book amply documents the unparalleled position
and significance of Communism in the hierarchy of violence that
is the history of the twentieth century.
October 1999 6 3/8 x 9 1/4 inches 78 halftones, 6 maps
1120 pages
ISBN 0-674-07608-7 $37.50 / £23.50 cloth
CARDANO'S COSMOS
The Worlds and Works of a Renaissance Astrologer
ANTHONY GRAFTON
Girolamo Cardano was an Italian doctor, natural philosopher, and
mathematician who became a best-selling author in Renaissance
Europe. He was also a leading astrologer of his day, whose
predictions won him access to some of the most powerful people in
sixteenth-century Europe. In Cardano's Cosmos, Anthony
Grafton invites readers to follow this astrologer's extraordinary
career and explore the art and discipline of astrology in the
hands of a brilliant practitioner.
Renaissance astrologers predicted everything from the course of
the future of humankind to the risks of a single investment, or
even the weather. They analyzed the bodies and characters of
countless clients, from rulers to criminals, and enjoyed
widespread respect and patronage. This book traces Cardano's
contentious career from his first astrological pamphlet through
his rise to high-level consulting and his remarkable
autobiographical works. Delving into astrological principles and
practices, Grafton shows how Cardano and his contemporaries
adapted the ancient art for publication and marketing in a new
era of print media and changing science. He maps the context of
market and human forces that shaped Cardano's practices--and the
maneuvering that kept him at the top of a world rife with
patronage, politics, and vengeful rivals.
January 2000 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 23 line illustrations
352 pages
ISBN 0-674-09555-3 $35.00x / £21.95 cloth
LINNAEUS
Nature and Nation
LISBET KOERNER
Drawing on letters, poems, notebooks, and secret diaries, Lisbet
Koerner tells the moving story of one of the most famous
naturalists who ever lived, the Swedish-born botanist and
systematizer, Carl Linnaeus. The first scholarly biography of
this great Enlightenment scientist in almost one hundred years, Linnaeus
also recounts for the first time Linnaeus' grand and bizarre
economic projects: to "teach" tea, saffron, and rice to
grow on the Arctic tundra and to domesticate buffaloes, guinea
pigs, and elks as Swedish farm animals.
Linnaeus hoped to reproduce the economy of empire and colony
within the borders of his family home by growing cash crops in
Northern Europe. Koerner shows us the often surprising ways he
embarked on this project. Her narrative goes against the grain of
Linnaean scholarship old and new by analyzing not how modern
Linnaeus was, but how he understood science in his time. At the
same time, his attempts to organize a state economy according to
principles of science prefigured an idea that has become one of
the defining features of modernity. Meticulously researched, and
based on archival data, Linnaeus will be of compelling
interest to historians of the Enlightenment, historians of
economics, and historians of science. But this engaging, often
funny, and sometimes tragic portrait of a great man will be
valued by general readers as well.
December 1999 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 4 halftones 320 pages
ISBN 0-674-09745-9 $39.95x / £24.95 cloth
SALVATION AT STAKE
Christian Martyrdom in Early Modern Europe
BRAD S. GREGORY
Winner of the Thomas J. Wilson Prize of Harvard University
Press
Thousands of men and women were executed for incompatible
religious views in sixteenth-century Europe. The meaning and
significance of those deaths are studied here comparatively for
the first time, providing a compelling argument for the
importance of martyrdom as both a window onto religious
sensibilities and a crucial component in the formation of
divergent Christian traditions and identities.
Gregory explores Protestant, Catholic, and Anabaptist martyrs in
a sustained fashion, addressing the similarities and differences
in their self-understanding. He traces the processes and impact
of their memorialization by co-believers, and he reconstructs the
arguments of the ecclesiastical and civil authorities responsible
for their deaths. In addition, he assesses the controversy over
the meaning of executions for competing views of Christian truth,
and the intractable dispute over the distinction between true and
false martyrs. He employs a wide range of sources, including
pamphlets, martyrologies, theological and devotional treatises,
sermons, songs, woodcuts and engravings, correspondence, and
legal records. Reconstructing religious motivation, conviction,
and behavior in early modern Europe, Gregory shows us the
shifting perspectives of authorities willing to kill, martyrs
willing to die, martyrologists eager to memorialize, and
controversialists keen to dispute.
December 1999 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 5 halftones, 30 line
illustrations 608 pages
ISBN 0-674-78551-7 $49.95x / £30.95 cloth
MIGRATION AND THE ORIGINS OF THE
ENGLISH ATLANTIC WORLD
ALISON GAMES
England's seventeenth-century colonial empire in North America
and the Caribbean was created by migration. The quickening pace
of this essential migration is captured in the London port
register of 1635, the largest extant port register for any single
year in the colonial period and unique in its record of migration
to America and to the European continent. Alison Games analyzes
the 7,500 people who traveled from London in that year,
recreating individual careers, exploring colonial societies at a
time of emerging viability, and delineating a world sustained and
defined by migration.
The colonial travelers were bound for the major regions of
English settlement--New England, the Chesapeake, the West Indies,
and Bermuda--and included ministers, governors, soldiers,
planters, merchants, and members of some major colonial
dynasties--Winthrops, Saltonstalls, and Eliots. Many of these
passengers were indentured servants. Games shows that however
much they tried, the travelers from London were unable to
recreate England in their overseas outposts. They dwelled in
chaotic, precarious, and hybrid societies where New World
exigencies overpowered the force of custom. Patterns of repeat
and return migration cemented these inchoate colonial outposts
into a larger Atlantic community. Together, the migrants' stories
offer a new social history of the seventeenth century. For the
origins and integration of the English Atlantic world, Games
illustrates the primary importance of the first half of the
seventeenth century.
October 1999 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 11 line illustrations, 39
tables 368 pages
ISBN 0-674-57381-1 $45.00x / £27.95 cloth
CARLO ROSSELLI
Socialist Heretic and Antifascist Exile
STANISLAO G. PUGLIESE
Carlo Rosselli (1899-1937) was one of the most charismatic and
influential of European antifascist intellectuals. Born into a
wealthy Jewish family, and abandoning a promising career as a
professor of political economics, he devoted his considerable
fortune and ultimately his life to the struggle against fascism.
In 1925, he was instrumental in establishing the first
underground antifascist newspaper. While imprisoned for his
subversive political activities, he wrote his magnum opus, Liberal
Socialism, arguing that socialism was the logical development
of the principle of liberty. After a daring escape, he made his
way to Paris and became the driving force behind a new political
movement, "Justice and Liberty." Rosselli was among the
first to arrive in Barcelona after the outbreak of the Spanish
Civil War, in which he commanded an armed column of volunteers in
defense of the Republic. When Italian fascists discovered
Rosselli's plot to assassinate Mussolini, they declared him the
regime's most dangerous enemy and had him murdered, along with
his brother, noted historian Nello Rosselli, on a country road in
Normandy.
In this work, the first biography of Rosselli in English,
Stanislao Pugliese skillfully interweaves the strands of heresy,
exile, and tragedy in Rosselli's life. The drama and drive of his
narrative enhance the scholarly contribution that this work makes
to modern Italian history and to the study of European
antifascism.
December 1999 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 14 halftones, 1 line
illustration 352 pages
ISBN 0-674-00053-6 $35.00x / £21.95 cloth
JUDGING THE FRENCH REFORMATION
Heresy Trials by Sixteenth-Century Parlements
WILLIAM MONTER
This original look at the French Reformation pits immovable
object--the French appellate courts or parlements--against
irresistible force--the most dynamic forms of the Protestant
Reformation. Without the slightest hesitation, the high courts of
Renaissance France opposed these religious innovators. By 1540,
the French monarchy had largely removed the prosecution of heresy
from ecclesiastical courts and handed it to the parlements.
Heresy trials and executions escalated dramatically. But within
twenty years, the irresistible force had overcome the immovable
object: the prosecution of Protestant heresy, by then unworkable,
was abandoned by French appellate courts.
Until now no one has investigated systematically the judicial
history of the French Reformation. William Monter has examined
the myriad encounters between Protestants and judges in French
parlements, extracting information from abundant but unindexed
registers of official criminal decisions both in Paris and in
provincial capitals, and identifying more than 425 prisoners
condemned to death for heresy by French courts between 1523 and
1560. He notes the ways in which Protestants resisted the French
judicial system even before the religious wars, and sets their
story within the context of heresy prosecutions elsewhere in
Reformation Europe, and within the long-term history of French
criminal justice.
September 1999 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 1 map, 6 tables 336
pages
ISBN 0-674-94847-5 $49.95x / £30.95 cloth
SPAIN AT THE CROSSROADS
Civil Society, Politics, and the Rule of Law
VÍCTOR PÉREZ-DÍAZ
This book explores the trials of Spanish democracy from the death
of Franco to the present. But the heart of the story is the
generation that came of age in the 1960s, assumed political
power, and formed the first Socialist government in 1982 with
Felipe González as Prime Minister, which was returned to power
in four consecutive elections. Starting in 1993, however, the
government came under siege. High officials were accused of
authorizing the assassination of as many as twenty-eight Basque
nationalists suspected of terrorism over the years, and of
covering up these crimes. This scandal, along with other
disclosures of corruption and serious law-breaking, shook the
country's confidence in its legal and political institutions and
in its ability to hold its leaders to the rule of law.
The author probes for the roots of these events in the character
of the generation that assumed power and in the immature nature
of the civil society it inherited. Facing unusually high
unemployment, internal economic and social pressures, the
stringent requirements for joining the European Union, and the
demands of Catalan and Basque nationalists, the government lost
its way and was eventually voted out of office.
Using Spain as the example, the book examines issues of
governance, social change, and internal nationalist movements as
they relate to the civil society and the wider polity everywhere.
September 1999 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 4 tables256 pages
ISBN 0-674-00052-8 $39.95x / £24.95 cloth
WOMEN AND FAITH
Catholic Religious Life in Italy from Late Antiquity to the
Present
EDITED BY LUCETTA SCARAFFIA AND
GABRIELLA ZARRI
Feminist thought has wrestled with the question of whether
religion has been principally responsible for the oppression of
women or instead has provided access to culture, public life,
and--sometimes--power. This study of Italian women and
Catholicism from the fourth through the twentieth century
reflects this conflict and the tension between the masculine
character of divinity in the Catholic Church and the potential
for equality in the gospels and early writings ("neither
male nor female, but one in Jesus").
The various chapters in this book consider the institutions
within which religious women lived, many of which they themselves
founded or reorganized. In addition to overviews of women and the
religious life throughout the periods under study, specific
chapters focus on mystical marriage, religious writings by women,
secular writings by nuns, women in sacred images, women in the
nineteenth-century Christian family, Marian pilgrimages, and
depictions of sisters and saints in film. The authors, leading
American, Italian, and French scholars, have drawn on rich
resources to provide a panorama of sixteen centuries of Italian
history, religious history, and women's history.
November 1999 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 60 halftones 496 pages
ISBN 0-674-95478-5 $59.95x / £37.50 cloth
GERMANS INTO NAZIS
PETER FRITZSCHE
Why did ordinary Germans vote for Hitler? In this dramatically
plotted book, organized around crucial turning points in 1914,
1918, and 1933, Peter Fritzsche explains why the Nazis were so
popular and what was behind the political choice made by the
German people.
Rejecting the view that Germans voted for the Nazis simply
because they hated the Jews, or had been humiliated in World War
I, or had been ruined by the Great Depression, Fritzsche makes
the controversial argument that Nazism was part of a larger
process of democratization and political invigoration that began
with the outbreak of World War I.
The twenty-year period beginning in 1914 was characterized by the
steady advance of a broad populist revolution that was animated
by war, drew strength from the Revolution of 1918, menaced the
Weimar Republic, and finally culminated in the rise of the Nazis.
Better than anyone else, the Nazis twisted together ideas from
the political Left and Right, crossing nationalism with social
reform, anti-Semitism with democracy, fear of the future with
hope for a new beginning. This radical rebelliousness destroyed
old authoritarian structures as much as it attacked liberal
principles.
The outcome of this dramatic social revolution was a surprisingly
popular regime that drew on public support to realize its
horrible racial goals. Within a generation, Germans had grown
increasingly self-reliant and sovereign, while intensely
nationalistic and chauvinistic. They had recast the nation, but
put it on the road to war and genocide.
October 1999 ISBN 0-674-35091-X 5 1/2 x 8 1/4 inches 5
halftones 288 pages
ISBN 0-674-35092-8 $14.95 (£9.50) paper
A HISTORY OF YOUNG PEOPLE IN THE
WEST
EDITED BY GIOVANNI LEVI AND
JEAN-CLAUDE SCHMITT
Volume I: Ancient and Medieval Rites of Passage
Translated by Camille Naish
Volume II: Stormy Evolution to Modern Times
Translated by Carol Volk
However swiftly it passes, youth is always with us, a perpetual
passing phase, an apprenticeship to the myriad ways of the world,
subject of panegyrics and diatribes, romances and cautionary
tales from antiquity to our day. This two-volume history is the
first to present a comprehensive account of what youth has been
in the West and what it has meant through the ages. Brought
together by Giovanni Levi and Jean-Claude Schmitt, a company of
gifted historians and social scientists traces the changing
character and status of young people from the gymnasia of ancient
Greece to the lycées of modern France, from the sweatshops of
the industrial revolution to the crucibles of Nazi youth.
Monumental in its scope, minute in its attention to detail, A
History of Young People takes us into the sensational rituals
surrounding youth in Roman antiquity (such as the Lupercalia,
with its nudity and whipping) and into the chivalric trials
awaiting the privileged young of the Middle Ages. Elisabeth
Crouzet-Pavan and Michel Pastoureau explore the elusive question
of what defines youth, a concept that over time has reached from
infancy to the age of forty. Elliott Horowitz and Renata Ago
consider the young in the context of the family--within the
different worlds of European Judaism and Catholicism through the
Renaissance. Sabina Loriga takes us through three centuries of
military experience to temper and complicate our assumptions
about the youthful face of war. Michelle Perrot focuses on
working-class youth, and Jean-Claude Caron on the young at
school. The obedient and the rebellious are here, the cherished
and the sacrificed, the children catapulted into adult
responsibility, the adults who have yet to forsake the
protections of childhood. What emerges in this history as never
before is a vast, richly textured picture of youth as a changing
constant of culture, society, economics, politics, and art, and
as a uniquely complex experience of acculturation in every life.
November 1999 6 3/8 x 9 1/4 inches
Volume 1 1 line illustration 464 pages ISBN 0-674-40407-6 $19.95x
/ £12.50 paper
Volume 2 448 pages ISBN 0-674-40408-4 $19.95x / £12.50 paper
STEALING THE STATE
Control and Collapse in Soviet Institutions
STEVEN L. SOLNICK
What led to the breakdown of the Soviet Union? Steven Solnick
argues, contrary to most current literature, that the Soviet
system did not fall victim to stalemate at the top or to a
revolution from below, but rather to opportunism from within. In
three case studies--on the Communist Youth League, the system of
job assignments for university graduates, and military
conscription--Solnick makes use of rich archival sources and
interviews to tell the story from a new perspective, and to
employ and test Western theories of the firm in the Soviet
environment. He finds that even before Gorbachev, mechanisms for
controlling bureaucrats in Soviet organizations were weak,
allowing these individuals great latitude in their actions. Once
reforms began, they translated this latitude into open
insubordination by seizing the very organizational assets they
were supposed to be managing. Thus, the Soviet system, Solnick
argues, suffered the organizational equivalent of a colossal bank
run. When the servants of the state stopped obeying orders from
above, the state's fate was sealed.
By incorporating economic theories of institutions into a
political theory of Soviet breakdown and collapse, Stealing
the State offers a powerful and dynamic account of the most
important international political event of the later twentieth
century.
October 1999 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 5 line illustrations, 21
tables 351 pages
ISBN 0-674-83681-2 $18.95x / £11.95 paper
THE POVEST' VREMENNYKH LET
An Interlinear Collation and Paradosis
EDITED AND COLLATED BY DONALD OSTROWSKI
with David Birnbaum and Horace G. Lunt
The Tale of Bygone Years (Povest'
vremennykh let) is the most important source for the history
of early Rus'. Full of stories of grand princes and saints,
monks, and knightly retinues, this chronicle compilation has been
the bedrock of modern interpretations of the history, ethos, and
religious traditions of Ukrainians, Russians, and Belarusians
alike. It also has been a source of controversy, with competing
redactions and interpretations of the Old East Slavic language in
which it was written. This massive undertaking provides scholars
and general readers with the first fully legible text that
includes all of the known redactions of the Povest'. The
text consists of an intercollation of the five oldest redactions,
three more modern redactions, three later interpolations, and
Ostrowski's own final interpretation. The intercollated texts are
nested line-by-line. This three-part set will be of fundamental
importance to Slavic philologists and historians of early Rus'.
February 1999 8 1/2 x 11 inches 1800 pages
ISBN 0-916458-91-1 $125.00x / £77.95 cloth
WAR AND SOCIETY IN THE ANCIENT AND MEDIEVAL WORLDS
Asia, the Mediterranean, Europe, and Mesoamerica
EDITED BY KURT A. RAAFLAUB AND NATHAN ROSENSTEIN
A unique, multi-authored social history of
war from the third millennium B.C.E. to the tenth century
C.E. in the Mediterranean, the Near East, and Europe
(Egypt, Achaemenid Persia, Greece, the Hellenistic World, the
Roman Republic and Empire, the Byzantine Empire, the early
Islamic World, and early Medieval Europe), with parallel studies
of Mesoamerica (the Maya and Aztecs) and East Asia (ancient
China, medieval Japan). The product of a colloquium at Harvard's
Center for Hellenic Studies, this volume offers a broadly based,
comparative examination of war and military organization in their
complex interactions with social, economic, and political
structures as well as cultural practices.
August 1999 5 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 1
illustration, 13 maps 544 pages
ISBN 0-674-94660-X
$50.00x / £31.50 cloth
JEWISH HISTORY
THE BIBLE AS IT WAS
JAMES L. KUGEL
This is a guide to the Hebrew Bible unlike any other.
Leading us chapter by chapter through its most important
stories--from the Creation and the Tree of Knowledge through the
Exodus from Egypt and the journey to the Promised Land--James
Kugel shows how a group of anonymous, ancient interpreters
radically transformed the Bible and made it into the book that
has come down to us today.
Was the snake in the Garden of Eden the devil, or the Garden
itself "paradise"? Did Abraham discover monotheism, and
was his son Isaac a willing martyr? Not until the ancient
interpreters set to work. Poring over every little detail in the
Bible's stories, prophecies, and laws, they let their own
theological and imaginative inclinations radically transform the
Bible's very nature. Their sometimes surprising interpretations
soon became the generally accepted meaning. These
interpretations, and not the mere words of the text, became
the Bible in the time of Jesus and Paul or the rabbis of the
Talmud.
Drawing on such sources as the Dead Sea Scrolls, ancient Jewish
apocrypha, Hellenistic writings, long-lost retellings of Bible
stories, and prayers and sermons of the early church and
synagogue, Kugel reconstructs the theory and methods of
interpretation at the time when the Bible was becoming the
bedrock of Judaism and Christianity. Here, for the first time, we
can witness all the major transformations of the text and
recreate the development of the Bible "As It Was" at
the start of the Common era--the Bible as we know it.
November 1999 6 1/2 x 10 inches 24 halftones 700 pages
ISBN 0-674-06941-2 $19.95 / £12.50 paper
LATIN AMERICAN HISTORY
BITTER FRUIT
The Story of the American Coup in Guatemala
STEPHEN SCHLESINGER AND STEPHEN
KINZER
With New Essays by John H. Coatsworth, Richard A. Nuccio, and
Stephen Kinzer
Bitter Fruit recounts in telling detail the CIA operation
to overthrow the democratically elected government of Jacobo
Arbenz of Guatemala in 1954. The 1982 book has become a classic,
a textbook case study of Cold War meddling that succeeded only to
condemn Guatemala to decades of military dictatorship. The
authors make extensive use of U.S. government publications and
documents, as well as interviews with former CIA and other
officials. The Harvard edition includes a powerful new
introduction by historian John Coatsworth, Director of the David
Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies; an insightful
prologue by Richard Nuccio, former State Department official who
revealed recent evidence of CIA misconduct in Guatemala to
Congress; and a compelling afterword by coauthor Stephen Kinzer,
now Istanbul bureau chief for the New York Times,
summarizing developments that led from the 1954 coup to the peace
accords that ended Guatemala's civil strife forty years later.
August 1999 6 x 9 inches 8 halftones 362 pages
ISBN 0-674-07590-0 $19.95x / £12.50 paper
THE UNITED STATES AND LATIN AMERICA
The New Agenda
EDITED BY VICTOR BULMER-THOMAS AND JAMES DUNKERLEY
The end of the Cold War removed hemispheric
security from the top of the agenda of U.S.-Latin American
relations. Democracy, trade and investment, drugs, and migration
rose in importance. Pressures to eliminate the anachronistic U.S.
embargo on Cuba increased. The new agenda also includes Latin
America's growing ties to the countries of the European Union and
other regions. This book contains fifteen essays by distinguished
U.S., Latin American, and European scholars on each of these
issues, framed by overviews of the changing historical context
from the nineteenth century to the end of the Cold War. Authors
include such notables as Harvard scholars John Coatsworth, Jorge
Domínguez, and Marcelo Suárez-Orozco; European academics such
as editors James Dunkerley and Victor Bulmer-Thomas; and Latin
American intellectuals such as Eduardo Gamarra and Rodolfo
Cerdas-Cruz.
August 1999 6 x 9 inches 54 tables 420 pages
cloth: ISBN 0-674-92595-5 $39.95x / £24.95
paperback: ISBN 0-674-92596-3 $24.95x / £15.50
MIDDLE EASTERN HISTORY
THE TRANSFORMATION OF PALESTINIAN
POLITICS
From Revolution to State-Building
BARRY RUBIN
This book is a comprehensive overview and analysis of the
Palestinians' travail as they move from revolutionary movement to
state. Barry Rubin outlines the difficulties in the transition
now under way arising from Palestinian history, society, and
diplomatic agreements. He writes about the search for a national
identity, the choice of an economic system, and the structure of
government.
Rubin finds the political system interestingly distinctive--it
appears to be a pluralist dictatorship. There are free elections,
multiple parties, and some latitude in civil liberties. Yet there
is a relatively unrestrained chief executive and arbitrariness in
applying the law because of restraints on freedom. The new ruling
elite is a complex mixture of veteran revolutionaries, heirs to
large and wealthy families, professional soldiers, technocrats,
and Islamic clerics.
Beyond explaining how the executive and legislative branches
work, Rubin factors in the role of public opinion in the peace
process, the place of nongovernmental institutions, opposition
movements, and the Palestinian Authority's foreign
relations--including Palestinian views and interactions with the
Arab world, Israel, and the United States.
This book is drawn from documents in Arabic, Hebrew, and English,
as well as interviews and direct observations. Rubin finds that,
overall, the positive aspects of the Palestinian Authority
outweigh the negative, and he foresees the establishment of a
Palestinian state. His charting of the triumphs and difficulties
of this state-in-the-making helps predict and explain future
dramatic developments in the Middle East.
October 1999 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 288 pages
ISBN 0-674-00071-4 $29.95 / £18.50 cloth
EMPIRES OF THE SAND
The Struggle for Mastery in the Middle East, 1789-1923
EFRAIM KARSH AND INARI KARSH
Empires of the Sand offers a bold and comprehensive
reinterpretation of the struggle for mastery in the Middle East
during the long nineteenth century (1789-1923). This book denies
primacy to Western imperialism in the restructuring of the region
and attributes equal responsibility to regional powers. Rejecting
the view of modern Middle Eastern history as an offshoot of
global power politics, the authors argue that the main impetus
for the developments of this momentous period came from the local
actors.
Ottoman and Western imperial powers alike are implicated in a
delicate balancing act of manipulation and intrigue in which they
sought to exploit regional and world affairs to their greatest
advantage. Backed by a wealth of archival sources, the authors
refute the standard belief that Europe was responsible for the
destruction of the Ottoman Empire and the region's political
unity. Instead, they show how the Hashemites played a decisive
role in shaping present Middle Eastern boundaries and in
hastening the collapse of Ottoman rule. Similarly, local states
and regimes had few qualms about seeking support and protection
from the "infidel" powers they had vilified whenever
their interests so required.
Karsh and Karsh see a pattern of pragmatic cooperation and
conflict between the Middle East and the West during the past two
centuries, rather than a "clash of civilizations." Such
a vision affords daringly new ways of viewing the Middle East's
past as well as its volatile present.
November 1999 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches 27 halftones, 6 maps
448 pages
ISBN 0-674-25152-0 $29.95 / £18.50 cloth
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