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The UniversiTy of Wisconsin Press

Spring 2013
ContentS
New Books and CDs 131
Terrace Books 5, 78
Midwest Regional Titles 1, 35, 13,
2325, 30
Book Awards 32
Journals 3335
Recent Backlist 3639
Ordering Information 40
Author / Title Indexes Inside back cover
SubjeCt Guide
American Studies 13, 10, 1213, 18,
2225, 27
Anthropology 1920
Art & Architecture 2324, 29
Asian Studies 1011
Biography & Memoir 3, 67, 9, 30
Classics 2829
Cultural Studies 7, 18, 22, 24, 27
Drama 28
European Studies 7, 19, 21
Education 10, 13, 17
Environment 45
Ethnic Studies 2, 6, 2425
Fiction 8
Folklore 18
Gay & Lesbian Interest 69
History 13, 7, 1013, 19, 2124, 29
Humor 18
Journalism 1
Language & Linguistics 25
Latin American Studies 6, 20
Law 2
Literature & Criticism 2628
Media Studies 18, 22
Museum Studies 2324
Music 31
Philosophy 30
Poetry 1416
Politics 12, 1013
Religion 12, 30
Russian, Slavic, & Balkan Studies 21,
2627
Sports & Recreation 5
Travel 4, 7, 19
Urban Studies 13, 23
Wisconsin & Midwest 1, 35, 13,
2325, 30
Womens Studies 3, 19
Writing Guides 17
On the cover: Students protest against Dow Chemi-
cal on UW-Madison campus in Fall 1967. The Capital
Times Archives. See page 13, Cold War University.
AnnounCinG tHRee neW booK SeRieS
The Harvey Goldberg Series for Understanding and Teaching
History, edited by John Day Tully, Matthew Masur, and Brad Austin, aims
to provide accessible and innovative resources for teaching challenging
historical topics commonly covered in courses at universities, two-year
colleges, and secondary schools. Each volume will include refections on
the topic, essays on methods and sources, and guides to understanding
and teaching specifc content. See the frst book in the series on page 10,
Understanding and Teaching the Vietnam War, edited by the series edi-
tors. (Next in the series is Understanding and Teaching American Slavery,
to be edited by Cynthia Lynn Lyerly and Bethany Jay.)
Folklore Studies in a Multicultural World publishes frst books by
emerging scholars in folklore studies. The series emphasizes the interdis-
ciplinary and international nature of current folklore scholarship. Funded
by a generous launch grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation,
the series is a collaborative venture of the University of Illinois Press, the
University Press of Mississippi, and the University of Wisconsin Press, in
conjunction with the American Folklore Society. See the frst book from
UWP in the series on page 18, The Last Laugh: Folk Humor, Celebrity Cul-
ture, and Mass-Mediated Disasters in the Digital Age by Trevor J. Blank.
Languages and Folklore of the Upper Midwest, edited by Joseph
Salmons and James P. Leary, publishes new scholarly books, new editions
of signifcant older works, and documentary multimedia that focus on the
lives, languages, and cultural traditions/folklore of the Upper Midwests
diverse peoples, both historical and contemporary. The editors welcome
manuscripts by scholars from various disciplines with innovative perspec-
tives and topics, as well as a wide range of theoretical and methodologi-
cal approaches. The series is published in collaboration with the Center
for the Study of Upper Midwest Cultures at the University of Wiscon-
sinMadison. See the frst book in the series on page 25, Wisconsin Talk:
Linguistic Diversity in the Badger State, edited by Thomas Purnell, Eric
Raimy, and Joseph Salmons.
WelCominG neW jouRnAl And booK SeRieS editoRS
Christyann Darwent of the University of California, Davis is the new
editor of the journal Arctic Anthropology, taking the reins from outgoing
editor Susan Kaplan of Bowdoin College.
Laura McClure of the University of WisconsinMadison and Mark
Stansbury-ODonnell of the University of Saint Thomas have joined
Patricia A. Rosenmeyer as series editors of Wisconsin Studies in Classics,
replacing outgoing editor William Aylward.
Sandra Black of the University of Texas at Austin has been named editor
of The Journal of Human Resources. The departing editor is William N. Evans
of the University of Notre Dame.
James Sweet and Neil Kodesh have joined Thomas Spear and Michael
Schatzberg, all of the University of WisconsinMadison, as series editors
of Africa and the Diaspora: History, Politics, Culture, replacing outgoing
editor David Henige.
UWPRESS.WI SC. EDU 1
U. S. Hi Story / poli ti cS / labor / JoUrnali Sm / wi SconSi n
More than They Bargained For
Scott Walker, Unions, and the Fight
for Wisconsin
Jason Stein and Patrick Marley
For better and worse, divided Wisconsin has been
at the forefront of American politics recently, and to
understand what happened and why, Jason Stein and
Patrick Marleys deeply reported and illuminating book
is an invaluable resource. David Maraniss, Madison native
and author of Barack Obama: The Story
When Wisconsin became the frst state in the nation in 1959
to let public employees bargain with their employers, the leg-
islation catalyzed changes to labor laws across the country.
In March 2011, when newly elected governor Scott Walker
repealed most of that labor law and subsequent onesand then became the frst
governor in the nation to survive a recall election ffeen months laterit sent a
diferent message. Both times, Wisconsin took the lead, frst empowering public
unions and then weakening them. Tis book recounts the battle between the
Republican governor and the unions.
Te struggle drew the attention of the country and the notice of the world,
launching Walker as a national star for the Republican Party and simultaneously
energizing and damaging the American labor movement. Madison was the site of
one unprecedented spectacle afer another: 1:00 a.m. parliamentary maneuvers,
a camel slipping on icy Madison streets as union frefghters rushed to assist,
massive nonviolent street protests, and a weeks-long occupation that blocked the
marble halls of the Capitol and made its rotunda ring.
Jason Stein and Patrick Marley, award-winning journalists for the Milwau-
kee Journal Sentinel, covered the fght frsthand. Tey center their account on
the frantic eforts of state ofcials meeting openly and in the Capitols elegant
backrooms as protesters demonstrated outside. Conducting new in-depth inter-
views with elected ofcials, labor leaders, police ofcers, protestors, and other
key fgures, and drawing on new documents and their own years of experience
as statehouse reporters, Stein and Marley have written a gripping account of
the wildest sixteen months in Wisconsin politics since the era of Joe McCarthy.
Tey ofer new insights on the origins of Walkers wide-ranging budget-repair
bill, which included the provision to end public-sector collective bargaining; the
Senate Democrats decision to leave the state to try to block the bill; Democrats
talks with both union leaders and Republicans while in Illinois; and the reasons
why compromise has become, as one Republican dissenter put it, a dirty word
in politics today.
Jason Stein and Patrick Marley both cover the Capitol for Wisconsins largest
newspaper, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Stein previously covered politics and
business for the Wisconsin State Journal and has received national recognition for
his reporting. He is a past president of the Wisconsin Capitol Correspondents
Association. Marley previously covered local government for the Kenosha News.
His work has been recognized by the Wisconsin Freedom of Information Coun-
cil and the Wisconsin Newspaper Association.
paperback original
March lc: 2012040563 HD
332 pp. 6 x 9 12 b/w illUS.
e-book $16.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29383-3

paper $26.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29384-0
A timely report on one of the most
tumultuous periods in Wisconsins
history. Stein and Marley cover the
substance of the story without bias
and include details not previously
known to the public. Joe Heim,
political analyst, Wisconsin Public
Radio
An important work that ofers
behind-the-scenes details on the
institutional players most involved
in the events leading up to and
following Governor Scott Walkers
introduction of his explosive col-
lective bargaining bill. It will be of
great interest to those who have fol-
lowed the drama closely as well as
to lay readers. Judith Davidof, news
editor, Isthmus
2 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Unsafe for Democracy: World War I and
the U.S. Justice Departments Covert
Campaign to Suppress Dissent
William H. Tomas Jr.
An invaluable contribution to our under-
standing of the history of the FBI and of
the pernicious legacy of national security
policy on the right to dissent.
Athan Teoharis, author of Te FBI and
American Democracy
pUbliSHeD november 2008
lc: 2008011973 D 272 pp. 6 9
13 b/w illUS.
e-book $22.95 iSbn 978-0-299-22893-4

clotH $34.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-22890-3
Studies in American Tought
and Culture
U. S. Hi Story / law / etHni c StUDi eS / terrori Sm
Worse than the Devil
Anarchists, Clarence Darrow, and Justice
in a Time of Terror
Dean A. Strang
A probing, sensitive account. Dean A. Strang, himself a skillful defense
attorney, has exposed American racism at its worst, and perversion and
corruption of the legal system at its best. Stanley Kutler, author of Wars
of Watergate
In 1917 a bomb exploded in a Milwaukee police station, killing nine ofcers and
a civilian. Tose responsible never were apprehended, but police, press, and pub-
lic all assumed that the perpetrators were Italian. Days later, eleven alleged Italian
anarchists went to trial on unrelated charges involving a fracas that had occurred
two months before. Against the backdrop of World War I, and amidst a prevail-
ing hatred and fear of radical immigrants, the Italians had an unfair trial. Te
specter of the larger, uncharged crime of the bombing haunted the proceedings
and assured convictions of all eleven. Although Clarence Darrow led an appeal
that gained freedom for most of the convicted, the celebrated lawyers methods
themselves were deeply suspect. Te entire case lef a dark, if hidden, stain on
American justice.
Largely overlooked for almost a century, the compelling story of this case
emerges vividly in this meticulously researched book by Dean A. Strang. In its
focus on a moment when patriotism, nativism, and terror swept the nation, the
themes in Worse than the Devil still resonate as the United States continues to
struggle with administering criminal justice to newcomers and outsiders.
Dean A. Strangs fascinating book excavates a conspiracy trial in Milwaukee
back in 1917 that sheds crucial insights into the failings of our legal system and
the hazards of succumbing to mass hysteria against immigrants and alleged ter-
rorists. Te book provides urgent lessons for us all.Matthew Rothschild, editor
of Te Progressive
Dean A. Strang is a criminal defense lawyer in Madison, Wisconsin, and an
adjunct professor at the law schools of the University of Wisconsin and Mar-
quette University. For more than ffeen years he lived on the Milwaukee block
that was the scene of the September 1917 riot.
paperback original
March lc: 2012032689 Hv
280 pp. 6 x 9
20 b/w pHotoS, 1 map
e-book $19.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29393-2

paper $26.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29394-9
In engaging prose and with a
terrifc eye for detail, Dean A.
Strang gives us the full story of a
fascinatingand almost forgot-
tenmoment of confict from
Milwaukees past. His book explores
debates over civil liberties and ter-
rorism, immigration and radicalism
as they were lived and fought over
a century ago. Beverly Gage, author
of The Day Wall Street Exploded
UWPRESS.WI SC. EDU 3
aUtobi ograpHy / afri can ameri can i ntereSt / U. S. Hi Story
Sister
An African American Life in Search of Justice
Sylvia Bell White and Jody LePage
A fascinating biography, adding important insight into the African Ameri-
can experience in Wisconsin as well as the broader histories of migration,
race, and employment in the twentieth-century United States.
William P. Jones, author of The Tribe of Black Ulysses: African American Lumber
Workers in the Jim Crow South
Raised with twelve brothers in a part of the segregated South that provided no
school for African American children through the 1940s, Sylvia Bell White went
North as a teenager, dreaming of a nursing career and a freedom defned in part
by wartime rhetoric about American ideals. In Milwaukee she and her broth-
ers persevered through racial rebufs and discrimination to fnd work. Barred
by both her gender and color from employment in the citys factories, Sylvia
scrubbed foors, worked as a nurses aide, and took adult education courses.
When a Milwaukee police ofcer killed her younger brother Daniel Bell in
1958, the Bell family suspected a racial murder but could do nothing to prove
ituntil twenty years later, when one of the two ofcers involved in the incident
unexpectedly came forward. Daniels siblings fled a civil rights lawsuit against
the city and ultimately won that four-year legal battle. Sylvia was the driving
force behind their quest for justice.
Telling her whole life story in these pages, Sylvia emerges as a buoyant spirit,
a sparkling narrator, and, above all, a powerful witness to racial injustice. Jody
LePages chapter introductions frame the narrative in a historical span that
reaches from Sylvias own enslaved grandparents to the nations frst African
American president. Giving depth to that wide sweep, this oral history brings us
into the presence of an extraordinary individual. Rarely does such a voice receive
a hearing.
Sylvia Bell White was born in Milwaukee in 1930 and raised in Louisiana.
She migrated to Milwaukee at seventeen and now lives near Milwaukee.
Jody LePage has a PhD in history from the University of WisconsinMadison
and lives in Madison.
april lc: 2012032691 f
272 pp. 6 x 9 18 b/w illUS.
e-book $19.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29433-5

clotH $27.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29434-2
Wisconsin Studies in Autobiography
William L. Andrews, Series Editor
A vivid and moving story, Sylvia
Bell Whites life tracks the roots and
routes of many working-class black
people of her generation. But she
also shows her vibrant individuality,
her refusal to be the typical or the
representative woman, her deter-
mination to be herself. William L.
Andrews, series editor and coeditor
of The Norton Anthology of African
American Literature
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
For Labor, Race, and Liberty: George
Edwin Taylor, His Historic Run for the
White House, and the Making of
Independent Black Politics
Bruce L. Mouser
Rich in detail, this compelling story sheds
light on black labor struggles in the Upper
Midwest and brings to life an American civil
rights hero and pioneer of independent black
politics.Omar H. Ali, author of In the Bal-
ance of Power: Independent Black Politics and
Tird Party Movements in the United States
pUbliSHeD JanUary 2011
lc: 2010011577 e 278 pp. 6 9
13 b/w illUS.
e-book $19.95 iSbn 978-0-299-24913-7

paper $24.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-24914-4
4 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
natUre / travel / wi SconSi n
Travel Wild Wisconsin
A Seasonal Guide to Wildlife Encounters in Natural Places
Candice Gaukel Andrews
What a great idea: a year-long scavenger hunt through the seasons in
search of Wisconsins most interesting creatures! Along the way to fnding
whooping cranes and lake sturgeon and elk, Candice Andrews leads us to
the states other hidden treasurespocket prairies and spawning streams
and woodland dunes. So grab your compass and binocularsand this
book! John Hildebrand, author of A Northern Front: New & Collected Essays
Have you ever heard a wolf howl in Wisconsins Northwoods, watched thou-
sands of ancient sturgeon roil the waters of one of the largest inland lakes in the
United States, or tagged a monarch butterfy before it begins one of the worlds
great migrations to its winter habitat in Mexico? Travel Wild Wisconsin is your
seasonal guide to genuine wildlife encounters with an amazing array of birds,
mammals, fsh, and insects in Wisconsins most beautiful natural settings: state
wildlife areas, rivers, lakes, fowages, and preserves as well as national wildlife
refuges and forests.
Wisconsin native Candice Gaukel Andrews shares natural history and lore,
accounts of her own experiences with Wisconsin wildlife, and insights from
biologists, environmental educators, and citizen scientists, so that you can seek
a wildlife encounter of your own.
So come spy on the spring courtship dance of the greater prairie chicken,
search for elusive and elegant white-tailed deer in summer, touch a tiny saw-whet
owl on one special day in autumn, and thrill to the sound of thousands of tundra
swans as they migrate through the Mississippi Flyway just before the frst snow
falls. Make this the year you Travel Wild Wisconsin.
Candice Gaukel Andrews is the author of
Great Wisconsin Winter Weekends, Te
Minnesota Almanac, Beyond the Trees: Stories of
Wisconsin Forests, and An Adventurous Nature:
Tales from Natural Habitat Adventures. A
resident of south-central Wisconsin, she is a
columnist for several international environ-
mental organizations and nature-travel and
eco-tour providers.
PaPerback Original
May lc: 2012035300 Ql
232 PP. 6 x 9 42 b/w PhOtOs, 7 maPs
e-bOOk $16.95 isbn 978-0-299-29163-1

PaPer $24.95 t isbn 978-0-299-29164-8
Visit www.candiceandrews.com
A particularly fne resource for Wis-
consin vacationers and those who
prefer to pursue entertaining learn-
ing experiences (instead of fudge
and waterslides). Sara Rath, author
of The Waters of Star Lake
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Door County Outdoors: A Guide to the
Best Hiking, Biking, Paddling, Beaches,
and Natural Places
Magill Weber
Suggests all sorts of new natural treasures
to explore.Lynne Diebel, coauthor of
Green Travel Guides
pUbliSHeD october 2011
lc: 2011016373 gv 314 pp. 5 8
125 mapS
e-book $16.95 iSbn 978-0-299-28553-1

paper $24.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-28554-8
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fi SHi ng / SportS & recreati on
Troutsmith
An Anglers Tales and Travels
Kevin Searock
Kevin Searock transports readers to the waterside as he explores the time-
less relationship between the outdoors and the sport of fshing.
Whether standing in a quiet Wisconsin creek, by a high-country lake in Wyo-
ming, or on the grassy margins of Englands hallowed chalkstreams, Kevin
Searock believes anglers are driven by a vision: Tere are things on this good
Earth that only the angler sees, and one of them is the breathless beauty of a
trout emerging from a river. Here, in this evocative collection of fshing essays,
he takes readers under the surface of this ancient sport, casting a spell of water-
magic. Although trout are central to many of the stories, bluegills, bass, and other
warm-water fsh also grace these pages.
Telling stories in thoughtful prose, Searock writes about fy-tying, collecting
fshing literature, journaling, and traveling in a way that makes Troutsmith a rich
and varied meditation on fshing and the outdoors.
We all, if we are lucky, fnd ways of loving the world. Fishing is how Kevin
Searock loves the world. Tese essays, like all good love stories, are windows into
a strange and obsessive heart. Searocks fshing illuminates our land and waters
and the nature and mystery of how we love.David Allan Cates, author of
Freeman Walker
Kevin Searock is an avid fsherman, photogra-
pher, and outdoors writer whose articles have
appeared in Grays Sporting Journal, Midwest
Fly Fishing, Wisconsin Outdoor Journal, and
Wisconsin Trails. He lives in Baraboo, Wiscon-
sin, and teaches advanced placement biology
and chemistry at Portage High School.

april lc: 2012032686 SH
184 pp. 5 x 7
e-book $16.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29373-4

clotH $24.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29370-3
a trade imprint of the University
of wisconsin press
Most fsher folks read fshing books
at times that they cannot fsh. In
Troutsmith, Kevin Searock takes
us fshing, writing about great
adventures with fsh, water, plants,
geology, travel, and companions.
We imagine being there with him: I
could do that; I have been there; Im
going to go there frst chance I get!
Jerry Davis, Wisconsin Outdoor News
pUbliSHeD november 2012
lc: 2012012024 pS 170 pp. 5 8
e-book $14.95 iSbn 978-0-299-28913-3

clotH $19.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-28910-2
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Sunlit Rifes and Shadowed Runs:
Stories of Fly Fishing in America
Kent Cowgill
Tese stories are sometimes quiet, some-
times raucous, and sometimes quirky, but
they all look at fshing and fshermen with
the kind of sidelong glance you might not
expect.John Gierach, editor at large of
Fly Rod & Reel Magazine
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6 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
april lc: 2012032924 pS
64 pp. 5 x 8
e-book $12.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29253-9

clotH $19.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29250-8
Living Out: Gay and
Lesbian Autobiographies
David Bergman, Joan Larkin, and
Raphael Kadushin, Series Editors
A haunting book, whose many
senses linger long after reading it.
Mary Cappello, author of Awkward:
A Detour
memoi r / gay & leSbi an i ntereSt / lati no i ntereSt
Autobiography of My Hungers
Rigoberto Gonzlez
An unforgettable portrait of the artist as a young immigrant gay poet.
These brief, passionate chapters are flled with rare courage, raw honesty,
and the uncommon beauty of a life spent yearning for consolation and
hope. Absolutely arresting. Dinty W. Moore, author of Between Panic & Desire
Rigoberto Gonzlez, author of the critically acclaimed memoir Butterfy Boy:
Memories of a Chicano Mariposa, takes a second piercing look at his past through
a startling new lens: hunger.
Te need for sustenance originating in childhood poverty, the adolescent emo-
tional need for solace and comfort, the adult desire for a larger world, another
lover, a diferent bodyall are explored by Gonzlez in a series of heartbreaking
and poetic vignettes.
Each vignette is a defning moment of self-awareness, every moment an
important step in a lifelong journey toward clarity, knowledge, and the nourish-
ment that comes in various formseven the smallest biggest joys help piece
together a complex portrait of a gay man of color who at last defnes himself by
what he learns, not by what he yearns for.
Rigoberto Gonzlez is the author of thirteen
books of poetry and prose and the editor of
Camino del Sol: Fifeen Years of Latina and Latino
Writing. His memoir Butterfy Boy: Memories of a
Chicano Mariposa won the American Book Award,
and he has received fellowships from the Guggen-
heim Foundation and the National Endowment
for the Arts. He is a contributing editor for Poets
& Writers Magazine, serves on the executive board
of directors of the National Book Critics Circle, and is an associate professor of
English at Rutgers-Newark, the State University of New Jersey.
American Book Award winner
pUbliSHeD September 2006
lc: 2006006990 pS 224 pp. 6 9
e-book $14.95 iSbn 978-0-299-21903-1

paper $19.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-21904-8
Writing in Latinidad: Autobiographical
Voices of U.S. Latinos/as
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Butterfy Boy: Memories of
a Chicano Mariposa
Rigoberto Gonzlez
In the tradition of Richard Rodriguez, this
stirring memoir of a frst-generation Mexi-
can Americans coming-of-age and coming
out is wrenching, angry, passionate, ironic,
and always eloquent about conficts of fam-
ily, class and sexuality. . . . An unforgettable
story of leaving home today.Hazel Roch-
man, Booklist
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june lc: 2012040153 pr
184 pp. 5 x 7
e-book $16.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29243-0

clotH $26.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29240-9
a trade imprint of the University
of wisconsin press
Wisconsin edition for sale only in the
U. S. anD DepenDencieS, canaDa, anD
tHe pHilippineS. prior eDition: Ditto
preSS, Uk, 2011, clotH iSbn 0-956-79523-4
Visit WWW.duncanfalloWell.com
Winner of the 2012 PEN / Ackerley
Prize for Memoir
Polished jewels of consciousness,
presented with this authors trade-
mark mixture of profundity, wit and
joyful naughtiness. They drink the
elixir of loss, though with an eye
fxed on the horizon. Christopher
Silvester, Daily Express
memoi r / bi ograpHy / travel / gay & leSbi an i ntereSt
How to Disappear
A Memoir for Misfits
Duncan Fallowell
A strange and wonderful book. Fallowell is a marvelous raconteur
who seems incapable of writing a dull sentence. James Magruder, author
of Sugarless
Duncan Fallowell sets out to odd corners of the world in pursuit of some extraor-
dinary and improbable characters who were in most cases momentarily famous
or infamousand then simply disappeared. Te frst to disappear is the author
himselfto a ghostly hotel on a Mediterranean island. His subjects, though unmet
or hardly met, live for the reader with remarkable vividness, such as the Ger-
man artist who bought a large island in the Hebrides and vanished immediately
aferward to the astonishment of its inhabitants. Fallowell tracks down the recluse
who inspired Evelyn Waughs creation Sebastian Flyte, the legendary love object of
Waughs novel Brideshead Revisited, who wants both to forget the past and to cling
to it. He even pursues the ultimate disappearancethe death of Princess Diana
and the miasma of shock, wonder, and grief that followed, writing Mystifcation is
absolutely essential to our feeling of being alive.
A highly original exploration of exposure, withdrawal, escape, and failing to
belong, How to Disappear winds through the eerie abyss that can open up between
someoneor somethingbeing both real and phantom.
Duncan Fallowell writes novels, history, autobiography, travel, libretti, lyrics,
and journalism. Most recently, he is author of the novel A History Of Facelifing
and the travel book Going As Far As I Can. His essays, interviews, and reviews
have appeared in a broad range of magazines and journals, including Vanity Fair,
Playboy, Te Paris Review, Esquire, Harpers, GQ, Te Times, Te Guardian, and
Prospect. He is based in London.
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Honorable Bandit: A Walk across Corsica
Brian Bouldrey
Tis deeply felt, humorous and wisdom-
flled book takes us on a gay mans journey
hiking across Corsica but, even more,
takes the reader on a charged journey
like something out of Dante, at timesthat
explores nuanced corners of life, loss and
love in our queer lives: our most intimate
infernos, purgatories and paradises.
Tim Miller, Windy City Times
pUbliSHeD october 2007
lc: 2007011728 Dc 256 pp. 6 9
5 DrawingS
e-book $9.99 iSbn 978-0-299-22323-6

clotH $26.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-22320-5
8 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Te End of Being Known: A Memoir
Michael Klein
Te pieces are densely written examina-
tions of emotions and sexual verities that
ofen blur the lines between friend and
lover, and between love, lust, yearning,
and kindness. Kleins thoughtful writing
refects ongoing ruminations, so thought-
provokingly personal yet universal that
readers may pause occasionally to really
absorb them.Whitney Scott, Booklist
fi cti on / gay & leSbi an i ntereSt
The Beauty of Men Never Dies
An Autobiographical Novel
David Leddick
We dont have many voices with 70-plus years of experience to tell us
what life and romance is like for a gay man at that age, but David Led-
dick has always defed expectationsnever retiring, always reinventing
himself. We are richer for having his voice to tell us what he sees from the
vantageadvantage, actuallyof his vibrant age, tall, proud, and ever
wondering. Tom Bianchi, author of Men Ive Loved
Buoyant and entertaining, this melding of memoir and fction recounts with
humor and candid observation a gay mans romances in his seventies, ofering
insight into the joys (and a few of the sorrows) of loving, living, and aging with
grace, style, and a fearless sense of fun.
Bouncing between Montevideo, New York, and Paris, the narrator reveals his
adventurous life, his many lovers, his varied careers from dance to advertising,
and the upbeat outlook that sustains him as he pursues the elusive Fenil, a hand-
some Uruguayan policeman.
David Leddicks short sketches, interspersed with memories, attitudes, and
opinions drawn from the past, combine in a vivid tale of a life lived with panache
at an age when most people think the adventure has already ended.
David Leddick is a writer, playwright, actor, and contributor to the Hufngton
Post. His previous careers have included service in the U.S. Navy, dancing with
the Metropolitan Opera in New York, and working as creative director with the
advertising clients Revlon and LOreal in New York and Paris. He began his writ-
ing career at the age of sixty-fve, and he is the author of twenty-three books,
including the novels My Worst Date and Te Sex Squad, as well as many photog-
raphy books about the male nude.
june lc: 2012043338 pS
136 pp. 5 x 8

e-book $16.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29273-7
clotH $24.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29270-6
a trade imprint of the University
of wisconsin press
I loved reading these bracing
pages, delighted by Leddicks frank
insights and exhilarated by his
humor. Will Fellows, author of Gay
Bar: The Fabulous True Story of a Dar-
ing Woman and Her Boys in the 1950s
pUbliSHeD october 2009
lc: 2003005650 HQ 152 pp. 5 8
e-book $12.95 iSbn 978-0-299-18873-3

paper $16.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-18874-0
Living Out: Gay and Lesbian
Autobiographies
D
a
v
i
d

V
a
n
c
e
UWPRESS.WI SC. EDU 9
paperback original
May lc: 2012037076 pS
192 pp. 5 x 8 24 b/w pHotoS
e-book $19.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29423-6

paper $24.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29424-3
A frank and insightful collection
of later journals from a brilliant
gay writer and Lost Generation
survivor. Full of literary and sexual
anecdotes, wise ruminations on the
writers craft, and poignant refec-
tions on growing older as a writer
and a lover of men, A Heaven of
Words shows Wescotts Haymead-
ows home to be a microcosmic, liter-
ary Downton Abbey. Kevin Bentley,
author of Wild Animals I Have Known:
Polk Street Diaries and After
Di ari eS & JoUrnalS / gay & leSbi an i ntereSt
A Heaven of Words
Last Journals, 19561984
Glenway Wescott
edited and with an introduction by Jerry rosco
When a writer like Wescott is famous in youth, it is the later years that are
often more fascinating. Jonathan Gathorne-Hardy, author of Sex the Measure of
All Things: A Life of Alfred C. Kinsey
Charm, wit, compassion, wisdom, literature, nature, sex, humor, politics, sor-
row, love: these themes fll the late journal pages of enigmatic American writer
Glenway Wescott. From humble beginnings on a poor Wisconsin farm, Wescott
went on to study at the University of Chicago, narrowly survive the Spanish fu
pandemic, and eventually emerge as an infuential poet and novelist. A major
fgure in the American literary expatriate community in Paris during the 1920s
and a prominent American novelist in the years leading up to World War II, he
spent a decade living abroad before relocating permanently to New York and
New Jersey with his partner, Museum of Modern Art publications director and
curator Monroe Wheeler.
Together they mixed with such intellectual and creative greats as Jean Cocteau,
Colette, George Platt Lynes, Paul Cadmus, Somerset Maugham, Christopher
Isherwood, Marianne Moore, W. H. Auden, Truman Capote, Joseph Campbell,
and scores of other luminaries. During the second half of his life, Wescott wrote
nonfction essays and worked for the Academy Institute of Arts and Letters, all
the while keeping journals in which he recorded the experiences that fostered
his love of life, literature, the arts, and humanity. A Heaven of Words looks back
on Wescotts entire fascinating life and reveals the riveting narrative of his last
decades.
Glenway Wescott (19011987) began his writing career as a poet but is best
known for his short stories and novels, notably Te Grandmothers (1927), Te
Pilgrim Hawk: A Love Story (1940), and Apartment in Athens (1945). Jerry Rosco
is author of Glenway Wescott Personally: A Biography, also published by the Uni-
versity of Wisconsin Press, and coeditor of Continual Lessons: Te Journals
of Glenway Wescott, 19371955. He lives in New York City.
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Glenway Wescott Personally:
A Biography
Jerry Rosco
More than a biography of an unjustly
ignored American writer, Roscos work
portrays a fascinating panorama of the
evolution of Americas gay artistic commu-
nity.Library Journal
pUbliSHeD marcH 2002
lc: 2001005410 pS 328 pp. 6 9
28 b/w pHotoS
e-book $9.99 iSbn 978-0-299-17733-1

paper $19.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-17734-8
pUbliSHeD october 2009
lc: 2003005650 HQ 152 pp. 5 8
e-book $12.95 iSbn 978-0-299-18873-3

paper $16.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-18874-0
Living Out: Gay and Lesbian
Autobiographies
10 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
ameri can StUDi eS / aSi an StUDi eS / Hi Story / eDUcati on / vi etnam war
Understanding and Teaching the Vietnam War
Edited by John Day Tully, Matthew Masur, and Brad Austin
This collection makes good on what it sets out to do: help high school and
college teachers think about understanding and teaching the Vietnam War
in new and innovative ways. There is a clear need for this kind of hands-on
volume. Mark Philip Bradley, author of Vietnam at War
Just as the Vietnam War presented the United States with a series of challenges,
it presents a unique challenge to teachers at all levels. Te war had a deep and
lasting impact on American culture, politics, and foreign policy. Still fraught with
controversy, this crucial chapter of the American experience is as rich in teachable
moments as it is riddled with potential pitfallsespecially for students a genera-
tion or more removed from the events themselves.
Addressing this challenge, Understanding and Teaching the Vietnam War ofers
a wealth of resources for teachers at the secondary and university levels. An
introductory section features essays by eminent Vietnam War scholars George
Herring and Marilyn Young, who refect on teaching developments since their
frst pioneering classes on the Vietnam War in the early 1970s. A methods section
includes essays that address specifc methods and materials and discuss the use of
music and flm, the White House tapes, oral histories, the Internet, and other mul-
timedia to infuse fresh and innovative dimensions to teaching the war. A topical
section ofers essays that highlight creative and efective ways to teach important
topics, drawing on recently available primary sources and exploring the wars
most critical aspectsthe Cold War, decolonization, Vietnamese perspectives, the
French in Vietnam, the role of the Hmong, and the Tet Ofensive. Every essay in
the volume ofers classroom-tested pedagogical strategies and detailed practical
advice.
Taken as a whole, Understanding and Teaching the Vietnam War will help teach-
ers at all levels navigate through cultural touchstones, myths, political debates,
and the myriad trouble spots enmeshed within the national memory of one of the
most signifcant moments in American history.
An excellent one-stop shop for nonspecialists who regularly fnd themselves
teaching about the Vietnam War.David Herzberg, State University of New York
at Bufalo
John Day Tully is an associate professor of history at Central Connecticut State
University and was the founding director of the Harvey Goldberg Program for
Excellence in Teaching at the Ohio State University. Matthew Masur is an associ-
ate professor of history at Saint Anselm College, where he is codirector of the
Father Peter Guerin Center for Teaching Excellence. He is a member of the Teach-
ing Committee of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations and
writes on American-Vietnamese relations. Brad Austin is a professor of history
at Salem State University. He has served as chair of the American Historical Asso-
ciations Teaching Prize Committee and has worked with hundreds of secondary
teachers as the academic coordinator of many Teaching American History grants.
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
With Honor: Melvin Laird in
War, Peace, and Politics
Dale Van Atta
pUbliSHeD april 2008
lc: 2007040159 e 664 pp. 6 9
40 b/w illUS.
e-book $12.95 iSbn 978-0-299-22683-1

clotH $35.00 t iSbn 978-0-299-22680-0
paperback original
august lc: 2012040084 DS
264 pp. 6 x 9 22 b/w illUS.
e-book $19.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29413-7

paper $29.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-29414-4
i ntroDUci ng a new Seri eS
Te Harvey Goldberg Series for
Understanding and Teaching History
John Day Tully, Matthew Masur,
and Brad Austin, Series Editors
10 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spring 2013
UWPRESS.WI SC. EDU 11
Hi Story / poli ti cS / vi etnam war

Voices from the Plain of Jars
Life under an Air War
SECoND EDiTioN
Edited by Fred Branfman with essays
and drawings by Laotian villagers
foreword by alfred w. mccoy

A classic. . . . No American should be able to read
[this book] without weeping at his countrys arro-
gance. Anthony Lewis, New York Times

During the Vietnam War the United States government waged a massive, secret
air war in neighboring Laos. Two million tons of bombs were dropped on one
million people. Fred Branfman, an educational advisor living in Laos at the time,
interviewed over 1,000 Laotian survivors. Shocked by what he heard and saw,
he urged them to record their experiences in essays, poems, and pictures. Voices
from the Plain of Jars was the result of that efort.
When frst published in 1972, this book was instrumental in exposing the
bombing. In this expanded edition Branfman follows the story forward in time,
describing the hardships that Laotians faced afer the war when they returned to
fnd their farm felds littered with cluster munitionsexplosives that continue to
maim and kill today.
In this small, shattering book we hearas we are so rarely able to do
the voices of Asian peasants describing what we can barely begin to
imagine.Gloria Emerson, New York Review of Books

Today, the signifcance of this books message has, if anything,
increased. As Fred Branfman predicted with uncommon prescience,
the massive U.S. bombing of Laos during the Vietnam War marked the
advent of a new kind of warfareautomated, aerial, and secretthat
is just now emerging as the dominant means of projecting U.S. power
worldwide.Alfred W. McCoy, author of Torture and Impunity: Te
U.S. Doctrine of Coercive Interrogation

Fred Branfman is a writer and activist on issues of peace and climate
change who lives in Santa Barbara, California, and in Budapest.
May lc: 2012032677 DS
176 pp. 5 x 8 34 b/w illUS.
e-book $15.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29223-2

paper $19.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-29224-9
Prior edition: harPer & roW usa, 1972,
paper iSbn 0-060-90300-7
New Perspectives in Southeast
Asian Studies
Alfred W. McCoy, R. Anderson
Sutton, Tongchai Winichakul, and
Kenneth M. George, Series Editors

Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Vit Nam: Borderless Histories
Edited by Nhung Tuyet Tran
and Anthony Reid
Shows that crossing both physical and
ideological borders is necessary to get at
the truth of this fascinating country. . . .
Highly recommended.Choice
pUbliSHeD november 2006
lc: 2005032883 DS
400 pp. 6 9 5 b/w pHotoS,
10 b/w illUS., 2 mapS, 7 tableS
e-book $16.95 iSbn 978-0-299-21773-0

paper $26.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-21774-7
New Perspectives in Southeast
Asian Studies
Fred Branfman among ancient stone jars on the Plain of
Jars, Laos.
12 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
U. S. Hi Story / reli gi on / poli ti cS
American Evangelicals and the 1960s
Edited by Axel R. Schfer
A rich and provocative reinterpretation of American evangelicalism in the
decades after World War II. These essays upset conventional wisdom about
the ways that American evangelicals responded to the American civil rights
movement, the sexual revolution, the Vietnam War, and the Great Society.
John G. Turner, author of Bill Bright and Campus Crusade for Christ
In the late 1970s, the New Christian Right emerged as a formidable political
force, boldly announcing itself as a unifed movement representing the views of
a moral majority. But that movement did not spring fully formed from its pre-
decessors. American Evangelicals and the 1960s refutes the thesis that evangelical
politics were a purely infammatory backlash against the cultural and political
upheaval of the decade.
Bringing together fresh research and innovative interpretations, this book
demonstrates that evangelicals actually participated in broader American devel-
opments during the long 1960s, that the evangelical constituency was more
diverse than ofen noted, and that the notion of right-wing evangelical politics
as a backlash was a later creation serving the interests of both Republican-
conservative alliances and their critics. Evangelicalisms involvement with
rather than its reaction againstthe main social movements, public policy initia-
tives, and cultural transformations of the 1960s proved signifcant in its 1970s
political ascendance. Twelve essays that range thematically from the oil industry
to prison ministry and from American counterculture to the Second Vatican
Council depict modern evangelicalism both as a religious movement with its
own internal dynamics and as one fully integrated into general American history.
Axel R. Schfer is director of the David
Bruce Centre for American Studies at Keele
University in the United Kingdom. He is
author of Countercultural Conservatives:
American Evangelicalism from the Postwar
Revival to the New Christian Right and of
Piety and Public Funding: Evangelicals and
the State in Modern America.
paperback original
july lc: 2012037153 br
280 pp. 6 x 9 6 b/w illUS.
e-book $24.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29363-5

paper $29.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-29364-2
Studies in American Tought
and Culture
Paul S. Boyer, Series Editor
A particularly efective efort to
enlighten the general public, prob-
lematize stereotypes, and deepen
understanding. It makes a substan-
tial contribution to both religious
and sociopolitical history. Mark
Noll, coeditor of Religion and Ameri-
can Politics
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Countercultural Conservatives: American
Evangelicalism from the Postwar Revival
to the New Christian Right
Axel R. Schfer
Schfer traces the evolution of a difuse
and pluralistic evangelical movement into
the conservative political force of the New
Christian Right, from the early 1940s to the
late 1990s.
pUbliSHeD December 2011
lc: 2011012634 br 264 pp. 6 9
20 b/w illUS.
e-book $24.95 iSbn 978-0-299-28523-4

paper $29.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-28524-1
Studies in American Tought
and Culture
UWPRESS.WI SC. EDU 13
U. S. Hi Story / poli ti cS / eDUcati on / wi SconSi n
Cold War University
Madison and the New Left in the Sixties
Matthew Levin
At last, a study that puts the saga of the 1960s New Left at the University
of WisconsinMadison campus into proper context! Matthew Levin has
done a marvelous job, and this book deserves the widest attention both
from scholars and from veterans of the experience. Paul Buhle, editor of
History and the New Left: Madison, Wisconsin, 19501970
As the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union escalated in the
1950s and 1960s, the federal government directed billions of dollars to Ameri-
can universities to promote higher enrollments, studies of foreign languages and
cultures, and, especially, scientifc research. In Cold War University, Matthew
Levin traces the paradox that developed: higher education became increasingly
enmeshed in the Cold War struggle even as university campuses became centers
of opposition to Cold War policies. Te partnerships between the federal govern-
ment and major research universities sparked a campus backlash that provided
the foundation, Levin argues, for much of the student dissent that followed. At
the University of Wisconsin in Madison, one of the hubs of student political
activism in the 1950s and 1960s, the protests reached their fashpoint with the
1967 demonstrations against campus recruiters from Dow Chemical, the manu-
facturers of napalm.
Levin documents the development of student political organizations in Madi-
son in the 1950s and the emergence of a mass movement in the decade that
followed, adding texture to the history of national youth protests of the time.
He shows how the University of Wisconsin tolerated political dissent even at
the height of McCarthyism, an era named for Wisconsins own virulently anti-
Communist senator, and charts the emergence of an intellectual community of
students and professors that encouraged new directions in radical politics. Some
of the events in Madisonespecially the 1966 draf protests, the 1967 sit-in
against Dow Chemical, and the 1970 Sterling Hall bombinghave become part
of the fabric of Te Sixties, touchstones in an era that continues to resonate in
contemporary culture and politics.
Matthew Levin teaches high school social studies in McFarland, Wisconsin. He
received his PhD in history from the University of WisconsinMadison.
paperback original
May lc: 2012035302 f
248 pp. 6 x 9 24 b/w pHotoS
e-book $19.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29283-6

paper $26.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29284-3
Studies in American Tought
and Culture
Paul S. Boyer, Series Editor
A compelling portrait of how Madi-
son, Wisconsin, became an enduring
hotbed for creative political activ-
ism. By capturing the complexity of
a campus that combines intellectual
elitism with populist commitments
and progressive inspirations with
conservative Midwestern inhibi-
tions, Levin shows how motivated
students remain connected to a
long history that transfers ideas and
practices across generations. Jeremi
Suri, author of Libertys Surest Guard-
ian: American Nation-Building from the
Founders to Obama
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Te University and the People: Envisioning
American Higher Education in an Era of
Populist Protest
Scott M. Gelber
Tis well-written, well-organized, and well-
argued book ofers the frst complete analysis
of Populist infuence on public higher educa-
tion in the United States in the late nine-
teenth century.Adam R. Nelson, author of
Education and Democracy
pUbliSHeD September 2011
lc: 2011011569 lb 266 pp. 6 9
7 b/w illUS.
e-book $19.95 iSbn 978-0-299-28463-3

paper $29.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-28464-0
Studies in American Tought
and Culture
14 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
poetry
About Crows
Craig Blais
Winner of the 2013 Felix Pollak Prize in Poetry, selected by Terrance Hayes
An unsentimental and at times disquieting frst collection, the poems of About
Crows excavate self, family, race, location, sex, art, and religion to uncover the
artifacts of a succession of traumas that the speaker does not always experience
frsthand but carries with him to refashion into some new importance. Tis is a
book of half-states, broken afliations, and dislocation.
Te speaker leads the reader through the fragments of a fooded town that
grows increasingly elusive the more one looks for it; through a succession of
Seoul love motels that further displace the outsider to unclaimed margins
transformed into sites of creative invention; through galleries of artwork, where
movement, color, and image are renewed through ekphrasis; and through the
world of the metatextual long poem Te Cult Poem, where good and bad moral
binaries tangle into a rats nest of our best and worst spiritual ambitions.
Te poems and sequences of About Crows are marked by their artistic balance
of the sublime and the profane, of polyphony, syntactical complexity, clashing
images, cagey humor, and unsettling sincerity, all trying desperately to connect.
. . . When i tell her ive started to write a book about crows,
she says shes not certain if there ever was a bar across the street from her
nursery school or whether watermelons were sold from a truck there
for only a dollar. Though shes been questioned countless times, shes still
unsure what happened before her mouth learned to stop screaming and worked
only to lick condensation from the brick walls of a padlocked root cellar.
excerpt from About Crows
Te Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System. All rights reserved.
Craig Blais is a tremendous talent. About Crows is a tremendous debut.
Terrance Hayes, Felix Pollak Prize judge and National Book Award winner
Craig Blais was born and raised in Springfeld, Massachusetts. His poems have
appeared in such literary journals as Bellingham Review, Best New Poets, Haydens
Ferry Review, Te Pinch, Sentence, and Spoon River Poetry Review. He lives in Tal-
lahassee, Florida.
paperback original
March lc: 2012032680 pS
72 pp. 7 x 9
e-book $12.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29193-8

paper $16.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29194-5
Te Felix Pollak Prize in Poetry
Ronald Wallace, Series Editor
Visit WWW.craigblais.com
These haunting, elegant poems
are painted with smoke and the
colors of the evening sky, and I feel
as though Im peering into rather
than merely reading them. Each
promises that something is about to
happen; the tension they create is
irresistible, and as I turn the pages,
I fnd myself drumming my fngers
in anticipation and thinking, More,
pleasemore. David Kirby
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Voodoo Inverso
Mark Wagenaar
Tere is an ardent music behind Mark
Wagenaars poetry, which feels like the
music not just of his writing, but in an
unusual way, of his heard thought.
Jean Valentine, judge
Winner of the 2012 Felix Pollak Prize
in Poetry, selected by Jean Valentine
pUbliSHeD marcH 2012
lc: 2011041956 pS 118 pp. 6 9
e-book $9.99 iSbn 978-0-299-28813-6

paper $16.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-28814-3
UWPRESS.WI SC. EDU 15
poetry
Centaur
Greg Wrenn
Winner of the 2013 Brittingham Prize in Poetry, selected by Terrance Hayes
Greg Wrenns debut collection opens with a long poem in which a man undergoes
surgery to become a centaur. Other poems speak in voices as varied as those of
Robert Mapplethorpe, Hercules, and a Wise Man at the birth of Jesus. Centaur
skitters along the blurred lines between compulsivity and following ones heart,
stasis and self-realization, human and animal. Here, sufering and transcendence
are restlessly conjoined.
Centaur testifes to the grave fact that humans can harm each other until they
want to trade in their bodies: I want to feel alive, says the man seeking to become
a centaur as the book begins. Tis is a masterful poetic debut marked by lyric bril-
liance and difcult, yet gleaming, wisdom.Katie Ford, author of Colosseum
Te terrifc, turbulent poems in Greg Wrenns Centaur seem as much etched as
writtenacid-exact, black promises on white possibilities, lines and space cross-
hatched with thrilling precision. Tese poems will startle you at frst, and then
haunt you long afer.J. D. McClatchy, editor of Te Yale Review and author
of Hazmat
Tese powerful poems mark the aliveness, sufering, and sensuality of the body.
Tey map out erotic adventures and the loneliness of human need. Tey fout dan-
ger with superb lyric craf. But they dont stop there. Each poem ofers a paradigm
of yearning held together by a rare excellence of language and music. Tis is a
marvelous debut collection.Eavan Boland, author of A Journey with Two Maps
Greg Wrenn, a native of northeast Florida, is
a former Wallace Stegner Fellow and a recipi-
ent of the Lyric Poetry Award from the Poetry
Society of America. His work has appeared
in New England Review, Te American Poetry
Review, Te Yale Review, and elsewhere. He is
a Jones Lecturer at Stanford University.
paperback original
March lc: 2012032696 pS
80 pp. 6 x 9
e-book $12.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29443-4

paper $16.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29444-1
Te Brittingham Prize in Poetry
Ronald Wallace, Series Editor
Visit WWW.gregWrenn.com
The magic here, like the best magic,
transforms with each encounter.
Fluid, tempered, atmospheric: Cen-
taur is a beautiful, encompassing
debut. Terrance Hayes, Brittingham
Prize judge and National Book Award
winner
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Darkroom
Jazzy Danziger
Jazzy Danziger is the girl next door of
American letters, giving voice to the ordi-
nary with an astonishing grace, language
at once elegant and ferce, def and daz-
zling. . . . Darkroom is a luminous, stun-
ning debut.Alice Anderson, author of
Human Nature
Winner of the 2012 Brittingham Prize
in Poetry, selected by Jean Valentine
pUbliSHeD marcH 2012
lc: 2011041963 64 pp. 6 9
e-book $9.99 iSbn 978-0-299-28683-5

paper $16.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-28684-2
Pak Han
16 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
poetry
The Declarable Future
Jennifer Boyden
Winner of the 2013 Four Lakes Poetry Prize
I cant remember a recent book so inhabited by a spirit of unease about where we
fnd ourselves now. Always in search of the voices, Jennifer Boyden writes, and
I can feel her probing for a way to give shape, less to a catalog of our social and
spiritual predicaments than the mood of our times.Bob Hicok, author of Te
Legend of Light
Te poems in this book inhabit a world uneasily familiar and promising, but from
the distance of a few possibilities into the future. In this collection of sharp, hallu-
cinatory, and ofen darkly humorous poems, a lost man wanders among the towns
of people who cant remember what they named the children, how to fnd each
others porches, or whether their buildings are still intact. Tats why they need the
person with the loupe. Among the poems where doorknobs emit the daily news,
stone angels fall from the sky, and the foating worlds harvest is whatever swims
too close, the person with the loupe steadfastly verifes only what can be mea-
sured, while the lost man is witness to the unquantifable and the limitless. And
throughout, precise and observant language leads us expertly into the gorgeous,
precarious wilderness of Te Declarable Future.
From the crystal doorknob transmitters that open Te Declarable Future to the
last will of the lost man that closes it, I was utterly captivated by the power of
Jennifer Boydens parallel worlda timely, disquieting parable for the broken one
in which we live. Her lost man, like Z. Herberts Mr. Cogito, becomes an alter ego
who inhabits and interprets our current predicament. Her colloquial language is
lucid, metaphorically inventive, constantly surprisinga rare blend of the piquant
and the quietly tragic.Eleanor Wilner, Warren Wilson College
Jennifer Boydens frst book, Te Mouths of Grazing
Tings, won the Brittingham Prize in Poetry in 2010.
Her work has appeared in Folio, Orion, Gettysburg
Review, and Te Beloit Poetry Journal, among others. She
is a recipient of a PEN Northwest Wilderness Writing
Residency and lives on the Oregon coast, where she is a
freelance editor and startup director of a writing and
arts residency dedicated to cross-genre collaborations.
paperback original
March lc: 2012032681 pS
72 pp. 6 x 9
e-book $12.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29213-3

paper $16.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29214-0
Four Lakes Poetry Series
Ronald Wallace, Series Editor
Visit WWW. jenniferboyden.com
Here recent scientifc break-
throughs collide with intimate
family life, ethereality with the quo-
tidian, and, when we least expect
it, the theoretical plane drops of
suddenly into the abyss of the too,
too real. In these poems of pith
and sizzle, Love [is] fnding feas in
the fur of our sisters. Sisters, you
may believe it. Nance Van Winckel,
author of No Starling
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Te Mouths of Grazing Tings
Jennifer Boyden
In a clear, muscular language loaded with
precise revealing metaphor, Jennifer Boyden
delivers a world. Tese are poems of a mature
poet deeply engaged with her environment,
demonstrating again and again the power of
language to surprise and delight in moments
of true insight.Sam Hamill
Winner of the 2010 Brittingham Prize
in Poetry, selected by Robert Pinsky
pUbliSHeD marcH 2010
lc: 2009039720 pS 118 pp. 6 9
e-book $9.99 iSbn 978-0-299-23513-0

paper $14.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-23514-7
UWPRESS.WI SC. EDU 17
wri ti ng gUi DeS
Find Your Story, Write Your Memoir
Lynn C. Miller and Lisa Lenard-Cook
A remarkably compact, efcient, complete, and helpful guide to writing
memoirs. I plan to use it in my own teaching. Rachel Hadas, author of Strange
Relation: A Memoir of Marriage, Dementia, and Poetry
Every person has a story to tell, but few beginners know how to uncover their
storys narrative potential. And despite a growing interest among students and cre-
ative writers, few guides to the genre of memoirs and creative nonfction highlight
compelling storytelling strategies. Addressing this gap, authors Lynn C. Miller
and Lisa Lenard-Cook provide a compact, accessible guide to memoir writing that
shows how an aspiring memoir writer can use storytelling tools and tactics bor-
rowed from fction to weave personal experiences into the shape of a story.
Find Your Story, Write Your Memoir ofers an overview of the building blocks
of memoir writing. Individual chapters focus on key issues and challenges, such
as the balance between the remembering narrator and the experiencing narra-
tor, the capacity to honor the subjective voice, the occasion of telling (why does
this narrator tell this story now?), creating an organically functional structure for
a particular story, and taking the next steps with a written memoir. Drawing on
their combined years of experience teaching memoir writing, authoring works of
fction and nonfction, and working in autobiographical performance, Miller and
Lenard-Cook provide a practical guide whose core philosophy is motivated by a
key word: story.
Lynn C. Miller is the author of the
novels Death of a Department Chair
and Te Fools Journey and coeditor of
Voices Made Flesh: Performing Womens
Autobiography. A playwright and solo
performer, she is former professor of
theater and dance as well as womens
and gender studies at the University of
Texas at Austin. Lisa Lenard-Cook is the PEN-shortlisted author of Dissonance,
Coyote Morning, and Te Mind of Your Story. She is a faculty member at the Santa
Barbara Writers Conference and at the Narrative Arts Center in Santa Fe, New
Mexico. Together, they cofounded ABQ Writers Co-op, a creative community for
Southwest writers.
paperback original
March lc: 2012032685 ct
128 pp. 6 x 9
e-book $12.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29313-0

paper $18.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29314-7
Find Your Story, Write Your Memoir
is original, taking its standpoint on
memoir writing from the craft of fc-
tion, and integrating research about
memory, narrative theory, and
concepts important to performance
studies. Craig Gingrich-Philbrook,
author of Loss: Stories about the End
of Things
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Building Fiction: How to Develop Plot
and Structure
Jesse Lee Kercheval
If you are writing fction or teaching
students to write fction, this book is the
best guide you can have.Kelly Cherry,
author of My Life and Dr. Joyce Brothers: A
Novel in Stories
pUbliSHeD marcH 2003
lc: 2003040187 pn 208 pp. 6 9

paper $17.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-18724-8
18 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
cUltUral StUDi eS / folklore / HUmor / meDi a StUDi eS
The Last Laugh
Folk Humor, Celebrity Culture, and Mass-Mediated
Disasters in the Digital Age
trevor J. blank
Q: Whats the diference between Michael Jackson and Farrah Fawcett?
A: About three hours.
Widely publicized in mass media worldwide, high-profle tragedies and celeb-
rity scandalsthe untimely deaths of Michael Jackson and Princess Diana, the
embarrassing afairs of Tiger Woods and President Clinton, the 9/11 attacks or
the Challenger space shuttle explosionofen provoke nervous laughter and
black humor. If in the past this snarky folklore may have been shared among
friends and uttered behind closed doors, today the Internets ubiquity and instant
interactivity propels such humor across a much more extensive and digitally
mediated discursive space. New media not only let more people in on the joke,
but they have also become the go-to formats for engaging in symbolic interac-
tion, especially in times of anxiety or emotional suppression, by providing users
an expansive forum for humorous, combative, or intellectual communication,
including jokes that cross the line of propriety and good taste.
Moving through engaging case studies of Internet-derived humor about
momentous disasters in recent American popular culture and history, Te Last
Laugh chronicles how and why new media have become a predominant means
of vernacular expression. Trevor J. Blank argues that computer-mediated com-
munication has helped to compensate for users sense of physical detachment in
the real world, while generating newly meaningful and dynamic opportunities
for the creation and dissemination of folklore. Drawing together recent develop-
ments in new media studies with the analytical tools of folklore studies, he makes
a strong case for the signifcance to contemporary folklore of technologically
driven trends in folk and mass culture.
Trevor J. Blank is visiting assistant professor in
the Department of English and Communica-
tion at SUNY Potsdam. He is editor of the
e-journal New Directions in Folklore and of the
books Folklore and the Internet: Vernacular
Expression in a Digital World and Folk Culture in
the Digital Age: Te Emergent Dynamics of
Human Interaction.
paperback original
june lc: 2012032669 gr
176 pp. 6 x 9 12 b/w illUS.
e-book $19.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29203-4

paper $24.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-29204-1
i ntroDUci ng a new Seri eS
Folklore StudieS
in a Multicultural
World
The Last Laugh is required reading
for anyone interested in the many
roles digital media now play in our
everyday lives. Robert Glenn How-
ard, author of Digital Jesus: The Mak-
ing of a New Christian Fundamentalist
Community on the Internet
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Lowering the Bar: Lawyer Jokes
and Legal Culture
Marc Galanter
Hilarious and philosophical at the same
time, a nify probe of the genre, regularly
guilty of wise humor.Carlin Romano,
Philadelphia Inquirer
pUbliSHeD october 2006
lc: 2005005443 k 448 pp. 7 10
57 b/w illUS.
e-book $16.95 iSbn 978-0-299-21353-4

paper $26.95 t iSbn: 978-0-299-21354-1
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UWPRESS.WI SC. EDU 19
travel / antHropology/ ScanDi navi an StUDi eS / women S StUDi eS
With the Lapps in the High Mountains
A Woman among the Sami, 19071908
Emilie Demant Hatt
edited and translated by barbara Sjoholm
foreword by Hugh beach
A classic travel account, vividly depicting Sami life in Lapland in the early
twentieth century.
With the Lapps in the High Mountains is an entrancing true account, a classic of
travel literature, and a work that deserves wider recognition as an early contri-
bution to ethnographic writing. Published in 1913 and available here in its frst
English translation, it is the narrative of Emilie Demant Hatts nine-month stay
in the tent of a Sami family in northern Sweden in 19078 and her participation
in a dramatic reindeer migration over snow-packed mountains to Norway with
another Sami community in 1908. A single woman in her thirties, Demant Hatt
immersed herself in the Sami language and culture. She writes vividly of daily
life, womens work, childrens play, and the care of reindeer herds in Lapland a
century ago.
While still an art student in Copenhagen in 1904, Demant Hatt had taken a
vacation trip to northern Sweden, where she chanced to meet Sami wolf hunter
Johan Turi. His dream of writing a book about his people sparked her interest in
the culture, and she began to study the Sami language at the University of Copen-
hagen. Tough not formally trained as an ethnographer, she had an eye for detail.
Te journals, photographs, sketches, and paintings she made during her travels
with the Sami enriched her eventual book, and in With the Lapps in the High
Mountains she memorably portrays people, dogs, reindeer, and the beauty of the
landscape above the Arctic Circle. Tis English-language edition also includes
photographs by Demant Hatt, an introduction by translator Barbara Sjoholm,
and a foreword by Hugh Beach, author of A Year in Lapland: Guest of the Rein-
deer Herders.
Emilie Demant Hatt (18731958) became a prominent artist in Denmark.
She helped Johan Turi write and publish his book, An Account of the Sami,
which appeared in 1910 in an innovative bilingual Sami/Danish edition.
Barbara Sjoholm is an award-winning novelist, frequent translator of Danish
and Norwegian fction and nonfction, and cofounder of the small literary pub-
lisher Seal Press. Her work also appears under the name Barbara Wilson.
She lives in Port Townsend, Washington.
paperback original
May lc: 2012032682 Dl
192 pp. 6 x 9 15 b/w pHotoS, 3 mapS
e-book $19.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29233-1

paper $26.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29234-8
Prior edition: danish language, a. b.
norDiSka bokHanDlen Denmark, 1913,
clotH
A treasure trove of ethnographic
and historical information for
scholars of Sami and other pastoral-
ists, especially those interested in
gender dynamics, domestic life, and
social relations. Sjoholms introduc-
tion provides helpful biographical
and historical information about
the author, Emilie Demant Hatt, and
the Sami, while Demant Hatts eth-
nography is vivid and informative.
Dorothy L. Hodgson, former
president of the Association for
Feminist Anthropology
Ne w i n pape r bac k
Under a Lucky Star
Roy Chapman Andrews
Andrews pioneering explorations in Mon-
golia greatly advanced science and archae-
ology; his life and adventures there, which
Indiana Jones would envy, make this a wel-
come reissue of a thrilling read.
ForeWord Reviews
firSt paperback eDition
marcH lc: 2008928321 280 pp. 6 x 8

paper $20.00 t iSbn 978-0-9835174-3-6
Distributed for borderland books
20 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
lati n ameri can StUDi eS / antHropology / i mmi grati on StUDi eS
Goodbye, Brazil
migrs from the Land of Soccer and Samba
Maxine L. Margolis
Articulate and thorough in considering the reasons so many Brazilians
have left their country, the diverse challenges and obstacles that diferent
kinds of Brazilians face when they move abroad, and the cultural and social
adaptations that occur as they seek a better life in their host countries or
return to Brazil. James N. Green, author of We Cannot Remain Silent: Opposition
to the Brazilian Military Dictatorship in the United States
Brazil, a country that has always received immigrants, only rarely saw its own
citizens move abroad. Beginning in the late 1980s, however, thousands of Brazil-
ians lef for the United States, Japan, Portugal, Italy, and other nations, propelled
by a series of intense economic crises. By 2009 an estimated three million Brazil-
ians were living abroadabout 40 percent of them in the United States.
Goodbye, Brazil is the frst book to provide a global perspective on Brazil-
ian emigration. Drawing and synthesizing data from a host of sociological and
anthropological studies, preeminent Brazilian immigration scholar Maxine L.
Margolis surveys and analyzes this greatly expanded Brazilian diaspora, asking
who these immigrants are, why they lef home, how they traveled abroad, how
the Brazilian government responded to their exodus, and how their host coun-
tries received them. Margolis shows how Brazilian immigrants, largely from the
middle rungs of Brazilian society, have negotiated their ethnic identity outside
Brazil. She argues that Brazilian society outside Brazil is characterized by the
absence of well-developed, community-based institutionswith the exception
of thriving, largely evangelical Brazilian churches.
Margolis looks to the future as well, asking what prospects at home and
abroad await the new generation, children of Brazilian immigrants with little
or no familiarity with their parents country of origin. Do Brazilian immigrants
develop such deep roots in their host societies that they hesitate to return home
despite Brazils recent economic boomor have they become true transnationals,
traveling between Brazil and their adopted lands but feeling not quite at home in
either one?
Maxine L. Margolis is professor emerita of
anthropology at the University of Florida and
adjunct senior research scholar at the
Institute for Latin American Studies at
Columbia University. She is the author of
Little Brazil: An Ethnography of Brazilian
Immigrants in New York City, True to Her
Nature: Changing Advice to American Women,
and An Invisible Minority: Brazilians in New
York City. She is a fellow of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences.
paperback original
May lc: 2012032684 f
272 pp. 6 x 9 7 tableS
e-book $24.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29303-1

paper $29.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-29304-8
A signifcant, unique contribution
to our understanding of recent and
contemporary transnational migra-
tion, diasporas, and the mechanics
of globalization. Conrad Kottak,
author of Assault on Paradise: The
Globalization of a Little Community
in Brazil
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Almost Home: A Brazilian
Americans Refections on Faith,
Culture, and Immigration
H. B. Cavalcanti
pUbliSHeD febrUary 2013
lc: 2012009960 e 214 pp. 6 9
3 b/w pHotoS, 1 map
e-book $21.95 iSbn 978-0-299-28893-8

paper $29.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-28894-5
20 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spring 2013
UWPRESS.WI SC. EDU 21
Hi Story / worlD war i i / central & eaStern eUrope
Scattered
The Forced Relocation of Polands Ukrainians
after World War ii
Diana Howansky Reilly
Reillys engaging book, a valuable historical source, is a homage to the
Lemkos, whose world has disappeared forever. Piotr J. Wrbel, Konstanty
Reynert Chair of Polish History, University of Toronto
Following World War II, the communist government of Poland forcibly relo-
cated the countrys Ukrainian minority by means of a Soviet-Polish population
exchange and then a secretly planned action code-named Operation Vistula. In
Scattered, Diana Howansky Reilly recounts these events through the experiences
of three siblings caught up in the confict, during a turbulent period when com-
pulsory resettlement was a common political tactic used against national minori-
ties to create homogenous states.
Born in the Lemko region of southeastern Poland, Petro, Melania, and Hania
Pyrtej survived World War II only to be separated by political decisions over
which they had no control. Petro relocated with his wife to Soviet Ukraine during
the population exchange of 194446, while his sisters Melania and Hania were
resettled to western Poland through Operation Vistula in 1947. As the Ukrainian
Insurgent Army fought resettlement, the Polish government meanwhile impris-
oned suspected sympathizers within the Jaworzno concentration camp. Melania,
Reillys maternal grandmother, eventually found her way to the United States
during Polands period of liberalization in the 1960s.
Drawing on oral interviews and archival research, Reilly tells a fascinating,
true story that provides a bottom-up perspective
and illustrates the impact of extraordinary historical
events on the lives of ordinary people. Tracing the
story to the present, she describes survivors eforts
to receive compensation for the destruction of their
homes and communities.
Diana Howansky Reilly has masters degrees from
Johns Hopkins University, in international afairs,
and from the Columbia University Graduate School
of Journalism. She lives in Connecticut.
May lc: 2012037002 Dk
144 pp. 5 x 8 37 b/w illUS.,
5 mapS
e-book $17.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29343-7

clotH $24.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29340-6
A very readable book, dealing with
complex and controversial issues
of World War II and the early Cold
War in a balanced and enlightened
manner. Reilly shows how such
events as the Nazi and Communist
occupations, the Holocaust, ethnic
cleansing, and forced deportations
afected and continue to afect the
lives of the people in the region.
Serhii Plokhii, Mykhailo Hrushevsky
Professor of Ukrainian History, Harvard
University
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Poles, Jews, and the Politics of Nationality:
Te Bund and the Polish Socialist Party in
Late Czarist Russia, 18921914
Joshua D. Zimmerman
Well written and exhaustively
researched.Jack L. Jacobs, John Jay
College
pUbliSHeD JanUary 2004
lc: 2003008903 Dk 378 pp. 6 9
35 b/w pHotoS anD grapHS
e-book $16.95 iSbn 978-0-299-19463-5

paper $29.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-19464-2
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22 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
pri nt cUltUre / Hi Story / ameri can StUDi eS
Libraries and the Reading Public
in Twentieth-Century America
Edited by Christine Pawley and Louise S. Robbins
The focus on libraries not as cold, impersonal institutions engaged in
promulgating top-down policies but rather as spaces populated by people
with diverse backgrounds, needs, and values is what makes this volume
valuable. Joan Shelley Rubin, University of Rochester
For well over one hundred years, libraries open to the public have played a cru-
cial part in fostering in Americans the skills and habits of reading and writing,
by routinely providing access to standard forms of print: informational genres
such as newspapers, pamphlets, textbooks, and other reference books, and liter-
ary genres including poetry, plays, and novels. Public libraries continue to have
an extraordinary impact; in the early twenty-frst century, the American Library
Association reports that there are more public library branches than McDonalds
restaurants in the United States. Much has been written about libraries from pro-
fessional and managerial points of view, but less so from the perspectives of those
most intimately involvedpatrons and librarians.
Drawing on circulation records, patron reviews, and other archived materials,
Libraries and the Reading Public in Twentieth-Century America underscores the
evolving roles that libraries have played in the lives of American readers. Each
essay in this collection examines a historical circumstance related to reading in
libraries. Te essays are organized in sections on methods of researching the his-
tory of reading in libraries; immigrants and localities; censorship issues; and the
role of libraries in providing access to alternative, nonmainstream publications.
Te volume shows public libraries as living spaces where individuals and groups
with diverse backgrounds, needs, and desires encountered and used a great vari-
ety of texts, images, and other media throughout the twentieth century.
Christine Pawley and Louise S. Robbins have
both served as professor and director of the School
of Library and Information Studies at the Univer-
sity of WisconsinMadison. Pawleys publications
include Reading Places: Literacy, Democracy, and
the Public Library in Cold War America. Robbins is
author of Te Dismissal of Miss Ruth Brown: Civil
Rights, Censorship, and the American Library.
paperback original
july lc: 2012040073 Z
256 pp. 6 x 9 9 b/w pHotoS
e-book $34.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29323-9

paper $39.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-29324-6
Print Culture History
in Modern America
James P. Danky, Christine Pawley,
and Adam R. Nelson, Series Editors
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Education and the Culture of Print
in Modern America
Edited by Adam R. Nelson
and John L. Rudolph
Te essays demonstrate the richness and
diversity of evidence available for the study
of modern print culture in the United
States.Tomas Edward Augst, coeditor
of Libraries as Agencies of Culture
pUbliSHeD JUne 2010
lc: 2009040638 p 234 pp. 6 9
7 b/w illUS., 1 map
e-book $16.95 iSbn 978-0-299-23613-7

paper $29.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-23614-4
Print Culture History
in Modern America
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UWPRESS.WI SC. EDU 23
art Hi Story / ameri can StUDi eS / mUSeUm StUDi eS / wi SconSi n

Laytons Legacy
An Historic American Art Collection, 18882013
John C. Eastberg and Eric Vogel
forewords by Dianne macleod and giles waterfeld

Before Carnegie, Frick, Whitney, and Guggenheim, there was
Frederick Layton. This is the story of how he created a new art
museum experience in America.

Frederick Layton (18271919) was among the very frst art collectors in
America to fund a purpose-built civic art gallery for the publics use and
enjoyment. Second only to the 1874 Corcoran Gallery of Art in Wash-
ington, D.C., the 1888 Layton Art Gallery in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, pre-
sented a new model for the single-patron art museum in America, one
signifcantly diferent from the established museums of Boston and New
York. Frederick Layton and his British architect George Audsley devel-
oped a new vision for a more intimate art museum experience. Tey drew upon
their knowledge of English precedents to create a refned, single-story, top-lit,
urban gallery that would infuence the development of the American art museum
well into the twentieth century.
Laytons Legacy draws on a recently discovered archive of Layton family papers,
travel journals, and vintage photographs and on fve years of extensive archival
research in the United States and Great Britain. John C. Eastberg traces the trajec-
tory of the collections development from its English origins through its grand
European acquisitions, Gilded Age art auctions in New York, Progressive-era
renovations, postwar deaccessions, and demolition of the original gallery, all lead-
ing to a new era of curatorial innovation and major American art acquisitions at
the end of the twentieth century. Eric Vogel looks more closely at the architectural
history of the original Layton Art Gallery and its infuence on the continuing lin-
eage of the single-patron art museum.
Laytons Legacy also includes the frst fully illustrated documentation of the
entire 125-year history of the Layton Art Collection. It includes object entries
from more than twenty scholars of American and European painting, furniture,
and decorative art and features the works of artists Eastman Johnson, Winslow
Homer, Frederick Church, Tomas Cole, Bastien Lepage, William Bourguereau,
James Tissot, Frederic Leighton, and Alma Tadema, among many others. Eminent
scholars of nineteenth-century art, Dianne Macleod and Giles Waterfeld, contrib-
ute forewords.

John C. Eastberg, a historian of the art and architecture of the American Gilded
Age, is senior historian at the Captain Frederick Pabst Mansion in Milwaukee,
Wisconsin. His books include Captain Frederick Pabst Mansion: An Illustrated His-
tory and A Revolutionary in Milwaukee: George Mann Niedecken and His Milwau-
kee Clients. Eric Vogel, an architect, designer, and architectural historian, is chair
of the 3D Design Department at the Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design.

May
440 pp. 10 x 12
400 color anD b/w illUS.

clotH $75.00 t iSbn 978-0-982-38101-8
Distributed for the layton art collection, inc.

this book is the comPanion to an
exHibit, april 6September 2, 2013,
at tHe milwaUkee art mUSeUm,
celebrating tHe 125tH anniverSary
of tHe layton art collection.

The Layton Art Gallery and its
founder Frederick Layton provide
the missing link between the
design and collecting policies of
the early British art gallery and the
nineteenth-century single-patron
art museum in America.
Giles Waterfeld, Courtauld institute
of Art
24 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
Hi Story / mUSeUm StUDi eS / ameri can StUDi eS / arcHi tectUre / wi SconSi n
Creating Old World Wisconsin
The Struggle to Build an outdoor History Museum
of Ethnic Architecture
John D. Krugler
In this gracefully written and insightful book, John D. Krugler pulls back the
curtain to reveal the history behind one of the nations great outdoor muse-
ums. Creating Old World Wisconsin will enlighten and entertain museum visi-
tors and will be essential reading for public history professionals.
Michael E. Stevens, Wisconsin Historical Society
With its charming heirloom gardens, historic livestock breeds, and faithfully re-
created farmsteads and villages that span nearly 600 acres, Old World Wisconsin
is the largest outdoor museum of rural life in the United States. But this seemingly
time-frozen landscape of rustic outbuildings and rolling wooded hills did not
efortlessly spring into existence, as John D. Krugler shows in Creating Old World
Wisconsin.
As dozens of historic buildings were transported in the 1970s from various
locations throughout the state to the Kettle Moraine State Forest, researchers,
curators, and volunteers launched a massive preservation initiative to salvage
fast-disappearing immigrant and migrant architecture. Tey created a backdrop
against which twenty-frst-century interpreters demonstrate nineteenth- and
early twentieth-century agricultural techniques and artisanal crafsmanship. Te
site, created and maintained by the Wisconsin Historical Society, ofers visitors
a unique opportunity to learn about the states rich and ethnically diverse past
through depictions of the everyday lives of its Norwegian, Danish, Finnish,
German, Polish, African American, and Yankee inhabitants.
Creating Old World Wisconsin chronicles the fascinating and complex origins
of this outdoor museum, highlighting the struggles that faced its creators as they
worked to achieve their vision. Even as Milwaukee architect and preservationist
Richard W. E. Perrin, the Societys staf, and enthusiastic volunteers opened the
museum in time for the national bicentennial in 1976, the site was plagued by
limited funds, bureaucratic tangles, and problems associated with gaining public
support. By documenting the engaging story of the challenges, roadblocks, false
starts, and achievements of the sites founders, Krugler brings to life the history
of the dedicated corps who collected and preserved Wisconsins diverse social
history and heritage.
John D. Krugler is professor of early American history and public history at
Marquette University. He is the author of English and Catholic: Te Lords Balti-
more in the Seventeenth Century. He lives in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin.
paperback original
june lc: 2012035301 f
224 pp. 6 x 9 36 b/w pHotoS
e-book $17.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29263-8

paper $24.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29264-5
Wisconsin Land and Life
Arnold Alanen, Series Editor
A meticulously researched account
of the development of a premier
historical attraction of signifcance
not only to Wisconsin but to the
entire nation. Krugler takes the
reader from what was once just
a vision to preserve vestiges of
our states unique architectural
legacy, through many perplexing
challenges that complicated the
museums construction, to what
has become one of Americas larg-
est and fnest outdoor museums
of rural American life. William H.
Tishler, author of Door Countys Emer-
ald Treasure: A History of Peninsula
State Park
pUbliSHeD aUgUSt 2006
304 pp. 6 9 250 b/w pHotoS

paper $17.95 S iSbn 978-0-9664180-0-2
Distributed for fine arts conservation Services
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Museums, Zoos and Botanical
Gardens of Wisconsin: A Comprehensive
Guidebook to Cultural, Artistic, Historic
and Natural History Collections in the
Badger State
Anton Rajer
Foreword by Senator Russ Feingold
UWPRESS.WI SC. EDU 25
paperback original
august lc: 2012037480 pe
152 pp. 6 x 9 46 b/w illUS.
e-book $16.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29333-8

paper $24.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-29334-5
i ntroDUci ng a new Seri eS
Languages and Folklore of
the Upper Midwest
Joseph Salmons and James P. Leary,
Series Editors
An outstanding book that will set
the standards for books of its kind.
At once accessibleindeed, enjoy-
ableand both original and fully
informed. Michael Adams, editor of
American Speech
langUage & li ngUi Sti cS / etHni c StUDi eS / wi SconSi n
Wisconsin Talk
Linguistic Diversity in the Badger State
Edited by Thomas Purnell, Eric Raimy, and Joseph Salmons
Yah, its true! Wisconsin is one of the most linguistically interesting
places in North America.
Wisconsin is one of the most linguistically rich places in North America. It
has the greatest diversity of American Indian languages east of the Mississippi,
including Ojibwe and Menominee from the Algonquian language family,
Ho-Chunk from the Siouan family, and Oneida from the Iroquoian family.
French place names dot the states map. German, Norwegian, and Polishthe
languages of immigrants in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuriesare still
spoken by tens of thousands of people, and the infux of new immigrants speaking
Spanish, Hmong, and Somali continues to enrich the states cultural landscape.
Tese languages and others (Walloon, Cornish, Finnish, Czech, and more) have
shaped the kinds of English spoken around the state. Within Wisconsins borders
are found three diferent major dialects of American English, and despite the
infuences of mass media and popular culture, they are not mergingthey are
dramatically diverging.
An engaging survey for both general readers and language scholars, Wisconsin
Talk brings together perspectives from linguistics, history, cultural studies, and
geography to illuminate why language matters in our everyday lives. Te authors
highlight such topics as:
words distinctive to the state
how recent and earlier immigrants have negotiated cultural and linguistic
challenges
the diversity of bilingual speakers that enriches our communities
how maps can convey the stories of language
the relation of Wisconsins Indian languages to language loss worldwide.
Thomas Purnell is associate professor of English at the University of Wisconsin
Madison, and his research examines the interface between phonetics and phonol-
ogy with a focus on regional pronunciation. Eric Raimy is associate professor of
English language and linguistics at the University of WisconsinMadison and is
coeditor of Contemporary Views on Architecture and Representations in Phonology
and Handbook of the Syllable. Joseph Salmons is the Lester W. J. Smoky Seifert
Professor of Germanic Linguistics at the University of WisconsinMadison. He is
author of A History of German: What the Past Reveals about Todays Language and
executive editor of Diachronica: International Journal for Historical Linguistics.
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Wisconsin Folklore
Edited by James P. Leary
A readable, diverse, informative, and well-
chosen anthology of essays on Wisconsin
folklore. . . . Leary is a gifed writer with
interesting anecdotes, as well as thorough
knowledge of American folklore scholar-
ship.Jan Harold Brunvand, author of
American Folklore
pUbliSHeD JanUary 1999
lc: 98-16371 gr 560 pp. 6 9 121 b/w illUS.
e-book $16.95 iSbn 978-0-299-16033-3

paper $27.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-16034-0
26 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
li teratUre & cri ti ci Sm / rUSSi an StUDi eS / Slavi c StUDi eS
Challenging the Bard
Dostoevsky and Pushkin, a Study of Literary Relationship
Gary Rosenshield
A work of impressive quality that shows in detail how broad a shadow
Russias supreme poet cast on those coming after. David M. Bethea,
series editor
When geniuses meet, something extraordinary happens, like lightning pro-
duced from colliding clouds, observed Russian poet Alexander Blok. Tere is
perhaps no literary collision more fascinating and deserving of study than the
relationship between Alexander Pushkin (17991837), Russias greatest poet, and
Fyodor Dostoevsky (182181), its greatest prose writer. In the twentieth century,
Pushkin, Russias Shakespeare, became enormously infuential, his literary
successors universally acknowledging and venerating his achievements. In the
nineteenth century, however, it was Dostoevsky more than any other Russian
writer who wrestled with Pushkins legacy as cultural icon and writer. Tough
he idolized Pushkin in his later years, the younger Dostoevsky exhibited a much
more contentious relationship with his eminent precursor.
In Challenging the Bard, Gary Rosenshield engages with the critical histories
of these two literary titans, illuminating how Dostoevsky reacted to, challenged,
adapted, and ultimately transformed the work of his predecessor Pushkin. Focus-
ing primarily on Dostoevskys works through 1866including Poor Folk, Te
Double, Mr. Prokharchin, Te Gambler, and Crime and PunishmentRosenshield
observes that the younger writers way to literary greatness was not around Push-
kin, but through him. By examining each literary fgure in terms of the other,
Rosenshield demonstrates how Dostoevsky both deviates from and honors the
work of Pushkin. At its core, Challenging the Bard ofers a unique perspective on
the poetry of the master, Pushkin, the prose of his successor, Dostoevsky, and the
nature of literary infuence.
Gary Rosenshield, professor emeritus of Slavic languages and literature at the
University of WisconsinMadison, is the author of many books, including Push-
kin and the Genres of Madness and Western Law, Russian Justice, both published
by the University of Wisconsin Press.
paperback original
july lc: 2012032688 pg
256 pp. 6 x 9
e-book $24.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29353-6

paper $34.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-29354-3
Publications of the Wisconsin Center
for Pushkin Studies
David M. Bethea and Alexander
Dolinin, Series Editors
Interesting, efective, and thought
provoking thanks to Rosenshields
acute analysis and originality.
Sarah J. Young, author of Dostoevskys
The Idiot and the Ethical Foundations
of Narrative: Reading, Narrating,
Scripting
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Pushkin and the Genres of Madness:
Te Masterpieces of 1833
Gary Rosenshield
Rosenshields book is a gold mine of
information not only on Pushkin but on
many of his predecessors, contemporaries,
and critics as well.Victor Terras, author
of A History of Russian Literature
pUbliSHeD December 2003
lc: 2003005698 pg 272 pp. 6 9

paper $29.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-18204-5
Publications of the Wisconsin Center
for Pushkin Studies
UWPRESS.WI SC. EDU 27
paperback original
june lc: 2012032683 pS
136 pp. 6 x 9 6 b/w illUS.
e-book $17.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29293-5

paper $24.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-29294-2
An important and fascinating piece
of work with a contribution to make
in several felds, including Russian
and American literary and cultural
history, the history of the book,
translation, and European cosmo-
politanism. Sarah Meer, author of
Uncle Tom Mania
rUSSi an StUDi eS / ameri can StUDi eS / cUltUral StUDi eS / li teratUre & cri ti ci Sm
True Songs of Freedom
Uncle Toms Cabin in Russian Culture and Society
John MacKay
There is no work of scholarship that so thoroughly and confdently mea-
sures Mrs. Stowes footprint on Russian political and intellectual life.
Dale Peterson, author of Up from Bondage: The Literatures of Russian and African
American Soul
Harriet Beecher Stowes 1852 antislavery novel Uncle Toms Cabin was the nine-
teenth centurys best-selling novel worldwide; only the Bible outsold it. It was
known not only as a book but through stage productions, flms, music, and com-
mercial advertising as well. But how was Stowes novelone of the watershed
works of world literatureactually received outside of the American context?
True Songs of Freedom explores one vital sphere of Stowes infuence: Russia and
the Soviet Union, from the 1850s to the present day. Due to Russias own tradition
of rural slavery, the vexed entwining of authoritarianism and political radicalism
throughout its history, and (especially afer 1945) its prominence as the super-
power rival of the United States, Russia developed a special relationship to Stowes
novel during this period of rapid societal change. Uncle Toms Cabin prompted
widespread refections on the relationship of Russian serfdom to American slav-
ery, on the issue of race in the United States and at home, on the kinds of writing
appropriate for children and peasants learning to read, on the political function
of writing, and on the values of Russian educated elites who promoted, discussed,
and fought over the book for more than a century. By the time of the Soviet
Unions collapse in 1991, Stowes novel was probably better known by Russians
than by readers in any other country.
John MacKay examines many translations and rewritings of Stowes novel; plays,
illustrations, and flms based upon it; and a wide range of reactions to it by fgures
famous (Leo Tolstoy, Ivan Turgenev, Marina Tsvetaeva) and unknown. In track-
ing the reception of Uncle Toms Cabin across 150 years, he engages with debates
over serf emancipation and peasant education, early Soviet eforts to adapt Stowes
deeply religious work of protest to an atheistic revolutionary value system, the
novels exploitation during the years of Stalinist despotism, Cold War anti-
Americanism and antiracism, and the postsocialist consumerist ethos.
John MacKay is professor of Slavic and East European languages and literatures
and flm studies and chair of the flm studies program at Yale University. He is
author of Inscription and Modernity: From Wordsworth to Mandelstam and editor
and translator of Four Russian Serf Narratives.
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Four Russian Serf Narratives
Translated, edited, and with an introduction
by John MacKay
Te narratives are fascinating in their own
right; the addition of the wide-ranging intro-
duction and thorough historical notes make
Four Russian Serf Narratives an important
volume for anyone interested in the study of
unfree labor.Anne Hruska, Slavic and East
European Journal
pUbliSHeD november 2009
lc: 2009008140 Ht 256 pp. 6 9
11 b/w illUS., 1 map
e-book $14.95 iSbn 978-0-299-23373-0

paper $26.95 t iSbn 978-0-299-23374-7
Wisconsin Studies in Autobiography
28 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
claSSi cS / li teratUre & cri ti ci Sm / Drama
Aeschyluss Suppliant Women
The Tragedy of immigration
Geofrey W. Bakewell
Politics, sex, and refugees in the ancient world.
Tis book ofers a provocative interpretation of a relatively neglected tragedy,
Aeschyluss Suppliant Women. Although the plays subject is a venerable myth, it
frames the fight of the daughters of Danaus from Egypt to Greece in starkly con-
temporary terms, emphasizing the encounter between newcomers and natives.
Some scholars read Suppliant Women as modeling successful social integration,
but Geofrey W. Bakewell argues that the play demonstrates, above all, the dif-
fculties and dangers noncitizens brought to the polis.
Bakewells approach is rigorously historical, situating Suppliant Women in the
context of the unprecedented immigration that Athens experienced in the sixth
and ffh centuries BCE. Te fow of foreigners to Attika increased under the
Pisistratids but became a food following liberation, Cleisthenes, and the Persian
Wars. As Athenians of the classical era became increasingly aware of their own
collective identity, they sought to defne themselves and exclude others. Tey
created a formal legal status to designate the free noncitizens living among them,
calling them metics and calling their status metoikia. When Aeschylus dramatized
the mythical fight of the Danaids from Egypt in his play Suppliant Women, he
did so in light of his own time and place. Troughout the play, directly and indi-
rectly, he casts the newcomers as metics and their stay in Greece as metoikia.
Bakewell maps the manifold anxieties that metics created in classical Ath-
ens, showing that although citizens benefted from the many immigrants in
their midst, they also feared the efects of immigration in political, sexual, and
economic realms. Bakewell fnds metoikia was a deeply fawed solution to the
problem of large-scale immigration. Aeschyluss Argives accepted the Danaids as
metics only under duress and as a temporary response to a crisis. Like the histori-
cal Athenians, they opted for metoikia because they lacked better alternatives.
Geofrey W. Bakewell is professor of Greek and Roman studies and director
of the Search for Values in Light of Western History and Religion Program at
Rhodes College in Memphis, Tennessee.
Photo: theatrical masks created by set and costume designer Thanos Vovolis.
paperback original
august lc: 2012032674 pa
176 pp. 6 x 9
e-book $24.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29173-0

paper $29.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-29174-7
Wisconsin Studies in Classics
William Aylward and
Patricia A. Rosenmeyer,
General Editors
Besides being one of our old-
est plays, Suppliant Women is the
frst depiction, in any genre, of
what happens when women fee-
ing sexual violence in their home
monarchy seek asylum in a nearby
democracy. With his sensitivity to
both philological and theatrical
issues, his lovely clear style and
sober, erudite judgment, Bakewell
is an ideal guide through this
uncannily resonant tragedy of
immigration. Jennifer Wise, Univer-
sity of Victoria
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Antigone
Sophocles
A verse translation by David Mulroy,
with introduction and notes
Tis version is far superior to any transla-
tion of Antigone known to me. For the
modern reader, Antigone is now a rich
and rewarding play in English.Robert J.
Rabel, author of Plot and Point of View in
the Iliad
pUbliSHeD JanUary 2013
lc: 2012015581 pa 104 pp. 5 8
e-book $7.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29083-2

paper $9.95 S iSbn 978-0-299-29084-9
Wisconsin Studies in Classics
UWPRESS.WI SC. EDU 29
claSSi cS / art Hi Story / arcHaeology / art
Couched in Death
Klinai and identity in Anatolia and Beyond
Elizabeth P. Baughan
A tour de force of meticulous research, broad reach, and thoughtful inter-
pretation. Couched in Death will remain the defnitive publication of klinai
and kline tombs for decades to come. Elspeth R.M. Dusinberre, author
of Aspects of Empire in Achaemenid Sardis
In Couched in Death, Elizabeth P. Baughan ofers the frst comprehensive look
at the earliest funeral couches in the ancient Mediterranean world. Tese sixth-
and ffh-century BCE klinai from Asia Minor were inspired by specialty luxury
furnishings developed in Archaic Greece for reclining at elite symposia. It was
in Anatolia, howeverin the dynastic cultures of Lydia and Phrygia and their
neighborsthat klinai frst gained prominence not as banquet furniture but as
burial receptacles. For tombs, wooden couches were replaced by more perma-
nent media cut from bedrock, carved from marble or limestone, or even cast
in bronze. Te rich archaeological fndings of funerary klinai throughout Asia
Minor raise intriguing questions about the social and symbolic meanings of this
burial furniture. Why did Anatolian elites want to bury their dead on replicas of
Greek furniture? Do the klinai found in Anatolian tombs represent Persian infu-
ence afer the conquest of Anatolia, as previous scholarship has suggested?
Bringing a diverse body of understudied and unpublished material together
for the frst time, Baughan investigates the origins and cultural signifcance of
kline-burial and charts the stylistic development and distribution of funerary kli-
nai throughout Anatolia. She contends that funeral couch burials and banqueter
representations in funerary art helped construct hybridized Anatolian-Persian
identities in Achaemenid Anatolia, and she reassesses the origins of the cus-
tom of the reclining banquet itself, a defning feature of ancient Mediterranean
civilizations. Baughan explores the relationships of Anatolian funeral couches
with similar traditions in Etruria and Macedonia as well as their aferlife in the
modern era, and her study also includes a comprehensive survey of evidence for
ancient klinai in general, based on analysis of more than three hundred klinai
representations on Greek vases as well as archaeological and textual sources.
Elizabeth P. Baughan is assistant professor of classics and archaeology at the
University of Richmond. Since 2009 she has served as feld supervisor for the
Hacmusalar Hyk excavations in southwestern Turkey.
august lc: 2012040082 gt
576 pp. 8 x 10 162 b/w illUS.,
12 color illUS., 4 mapS, 2 tableS
e-book $29.95 iSbn 978-0-299-29183-9

clotH $65.00 S iSbn 978-0-299-29180-8
Wisconsin Studies in Classics
William Aylward and
Patricia A. Rosenmeyer,
General Editors
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Hellenistic Architectural Sculpture:
Figural Motifs in Western Anatolia
and the Aegean
Pamela A. Webb
Webbs grasp of the scholarship and cov-
erage of the monuments seem all but total,
and her careful and judicious critiques of
previous opinion are most valuable.
Andrew F. Stewart, University of Cali-
fornia, Berkeley
pUbliSHeD october 1996
lc: 95-25221 na 224 pp. 8 11
81 b/w pHotoS, 55 illUS.

clotH $60.00 S iSbn 978-0-299-14980-2
Wisconsin Studies in Classics
30 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
Di ari eS & JoUrnalS / Spi ri tUali ty
Ox Herding in Wisconsin
Richard Quinney
A guide to mindful living, inspired by the Buddhist parable of ox herding
Tis is a daybook inspired by the parable of ox herding, the search for ones true
self. For a long time, writers, artists, and students of Buddhism have found spiri-
tual guidance in the herding of the ox. Tis metaphorical ox herding is a guide
for a year of living and observing, arriving at awareness and understanding.
In Ox Herding in Wisconsin, Richard Quinney writes meditatively about his
experiences of everyday life. In the course of the seasons of a year, he carefully
notes the daily news, seasonal changes in nature, family history, personal health
and aging, poetry and music, and spiritual development. Te observations and
writings of classical and contemporary writers enrich the book, ofering insights
and epiphanies for the Wisconsin ox herder. Illustrated with images both found
and newly created, Ox Herding in Wisconsin provides sustenance for the contem-
plative journey close to home.
i know the writing that is good and severe discipline. Many times writing has
been for me about the only discipline i had or needed, and it was good. in
the telling of the storyin the writingi have been able to consider care-
fully what i am experiencing in my life. Writing is a way to understand the
experience, to learn from it, and a way to go on.
excerpt from Ox Herding in Wisconsin
Richard Quinney is the author of several books that combine autobiographical
writing and photography, including Journey to a Far Place, For the Time Being,
Borderland, Where Yet the Sweet Birds Sing, A Lifetime Burning, and A Farm in
Wisconsin. His retrospective book of photographs, Tings Once Seen, received
the August Derleth Award from the Council of Wisconsin Writers. He lives in
Madison, Wisconsin.
paperback original
february
192 pp. 5 x 8 12 b/w illUS.

paper $20.00 t iSbn 978-0-9835174-2-9
Distributed for borderland books
pUbliSHeD September 2008
lc: 2005904608 pS 188 pp. 5 7
12 b/w pHotoS

clotH $24.00 t iSbn 978-0-9768781-0-0
Distributed for borderland books
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
Where Yet the Sweet Birds Sing
Richard Quinney
Quinney continues his search for mean-
ing in an ordinary life, which he chroni-
cled in Once Again the Wonder . . . but here
his meditations are given urgency by the
serious progression of his chronic lym-
phocytic leukemia. Realizing that life is
more precious than we can ever imagine,
he writes a moving journal of his odyssey
through an uncertain year.
Publishers Weekly
UWPRESS.WI SC. EDU 31
february
5 x 4

mUSic cD $15.00 t
iSbn 978-1-931569-23-1
Distributed for the University of
wisconsinmadison School of music
Proceeds from sales of this cd
will Help fUnD ScHolarSHipS in tHe
ScHool of mUSic at tHe UniverSity of
wiSconSinmaDiSon.
mUSi c
Rooster of Gold
Les Thimmig, winds and reeds;
Matan Rubinstein, piano
Tis is a live concert recording of original compositions by Les Tim-
mig and jazz standards by Charlie Parker, Cole Porter, Vernon Duke,
Hoagy Carmichael, and others. Timmig performs on saxophone,
fute, and clarinet; Matan Rubinstein joins in on piano.
Les Thimmig is leader of the ensemble Les Timmig 7 as well as a
member of the Adam Unsworth Ensemble and the Latino ensemble
Madisalsa. His compositions are recorded on numerous prominent
labels, and he has appeared as soloist with ensembles and orchestras throughout
the world. He teaches composition, woodwind performance,
and jazz studies at the University of WisconsinMadison School of Music.
Matan Rubinstein is a composer, pianist, and electronic musician as well as the
founder and leader of the jazz trio Sada Trio and the musical performance group
Modular Music Ensemble. He is professor of music at Marlboro College.
Trac k s
1. If I Love Again, Ben oakland
2. Charlies Wig, Charlie Parker
3. Whisper Not, Benny Golson
4. Minority, Gigi Gryce
5. Freddie Froo, Pepper Adams
6. Radiance, Les Thimmig
7. In the Still of the Night, Cole Porter
Les Timmig Solo: Compositions
and Improvisations
Les Timmig, winds and reeds
A live performance recording of
original works and improvisations
for unaccompanied woodwinds.
Recorded live in Mills Hall at the
University of WisconsinMadison.
pUbliSHeD September 2009
5 x 4

mUSic cD $15.00 t
iSbn 978-1-931569-19-4
Distributed for the Uw School of music
8. Autumn in New York, Vernon Duke
9. Children of the Night, Wayne Shorter
10. Lazybones, Hoagy Carmichael
11. Rooster of Gold, Les Thimmig
12. Dr. Jackle, Jackie McLean
13. Repeat, Denny Zeitlin
All the Marbles: Te Jazz
Compositions of Les Timmig
Les Timmig, sax and fute
Jazz compositions from the 1970s
to 2009 by composer and futist Les
Timmig, featuring University of
Wisconsin alumni in the rhythm
section.
pUbliSHeD September 2009
5 x 4

mUSic cD $15.00 t
iSbn 978-1-931569-20-0
Distributed for the Uw School of music
Of re l at e d i nt e re s t
32 THE UNI VERSI T Y OF WI SCONSI N PRESS Spri ng 2013
Back to the Land: The Enduring Dream
of Self-Sufciency in Modern America
Dona Brown
h Best Books for General Audiences,
selected by the American Association
of School Librarians
Tough as Nails: The Life and Films
of Richard Brooks
Douglass K. Daniel
h Best Books for General Audiences,
selected by the American Association
of School Librarians
h Outstanding Book, selected by the
Public Library Reviewers
Murder in Lascaux
Betsy Draine and Michael Hinden
h Best Books for General Audiences,
selected by the American Association
of School Librarians
h Best Books for General Audiences,
selected by the Public Library Reviewers
Glenn Ford: A Life
Peter Ford
h Best Books for General Audiences,
selected by the American Association
of School Librarians
h Best Books for General Audiences,
selected by the Public Library Reviewers
Lorine Niedecker: A Poets Life
Margot Peters
h Special Interest Book, selected by
the American Association of School
Librarians
For Labor, Race, and Liberty: George
Edwin Taylor, His Historic Run for
the White House, and the Making of
Independent Black Politics
Bruce L. Mouser
h Honorable Mention, Benjamin F.
Shambough Award, the State Historical
Society of Iowa
Celluloid Activist: The Life and Times
of Vito Russo
Michael Schiavi
h Special Interest Book, selected by
the American Association of School
Librarians
h Best Books for General Audiences,
selected by the Public Library Reviewers
h Finalist, Gay Memoir/Biography, Lambda
Literary Awards
Ambientes: New Queer Latino Writing
Lzaro Lima and Felice Picano
h Special Interest Book, selected by
the American Association of School
Librarians
h Special Interest Book, selected by
the Public Library Reviewers
Remaking Rwanda: State Building and
Human Rights after Mass Violence
Edited by Scott Straus and Lars Waldorf
h Special Interest Book, selected by
the American Association of School
Librarians
h Special Interest Book, selected by the
Public Library Reviewers
Recent book awaRds and honoRs
Frank Lloyd Wrights Taliesin: Illustrated
by Vintage Postcards
Randolph C. Henning
h Best Books for General Audiences,
selected by the American Association
of School Librarians
h Best Books for General Audiences,
selected by the Public Library Reviewers
A Muslim American Slave: The Life of
Omar Ibn Said
Omar Ibn Said; translated from the
Arabic, edited, and with an introduction
by Ala Alryyes
h Best Books for General Audiences,
selected by the American Association
of School Librarians
The Origins of Israel, 18821948:
A Documentary History
Edited by Eran Kaplan and
Derek. J Penslar
h Special Interest Book, selected by
the Public Library Reviewers
h Best Books for General Audiences,
selected by the American Association
of School Librarians
Remembrance of Things I Forgot: A Novel
Bob Smith
h Winner, Barbara Gittings Literature
Award/Stonewall Book Awards,
American Library Association
h Best Books for General Audiences,
selected by the American Association
of School Librarians
h Best Books for General Audiences,
selected by the Public Library Reviewers
UWPRESS.WI SC. EDU 33
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Landscape Journal Design, Planning, and Management of the Land
edited by lance m. neckar and David g. pitt, University of minnesota
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the mission of landscape architecture is supported by research and theory in many felds.
Landscape Journal ofers in-depth exploration of ideas and challenges that are central to contem-
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editorial columns, creative work, and reviews of books, conferences, technology, and exhibitions.
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The Scholarship of Transdisciplinary Action Research: Toward a New Paradigm for the Planning and
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Land Economics is dedicated to the study of land use, natural resources, public utilities, housing,
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Native Plants Journal
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landscaping, highway corridors, and related uses. the second issue of each year includes the native
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the U.S. and canada. Native Plants Journal began in January 2000 as a cooperative efort of the USDa
forest Service and the University of idaho, with assistance from the USDa agricultural research
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abstracts, biological & agricultural index plus, biocontrol news and information, c a b abstracts,
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Monatshefte
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moNatShefte loyally and productively advanced German StudieS in america for nearly 100 yearS, and i do not know of anybody in our
field, Student or teacher, who could do without moNatShefte. peter demetz, paSt preSIdeNt of mla
founded in 1899, Monatshefte is the oldest continuing journal of german studies in the U.S. it ofers
scholarly articles about the language and literature of german-speaking countries and cultural
matters that have literary or linguistic signifcance. issues contain extensive book reviews of current
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university german Department personnel from across the U.S. and canada, as well as special surveys
and articles dealing with professional concerns.
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SubStance
publishing editors: Sydney lvy, Uc Santa barbara, and michel peirssens, Universit de montral
editors: David f. bell, Duke University; paul Harris, loyola marymount University;
ric mchoulan, Universit de montral
one of the moSt influential journalS of theory and criticiSm in the united StateS. le moNde

a bold venture, hiGh and SeriouS in quality. hiGhly recommended for all academic librarieS o fferinG work in lanGuaGe and literature.
equally recommended to individualS intereSted in a contemporary and hiGhly SophiSticated approach to the Study of literature.
lIbrary jourNal
SubStance has a long-standing reputation for publishing innovative work on literature and culture.
while its main focus is french literature and continental theory, the journal is known for its openness
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Luso-Brazilian Review publishes interdisciplinary scholarship on portuguese, brazilian, and luso-
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the social sciences. published bi-annually, each issue of the LBR includes articles and book reviews,
which may be written in either english or portuguese.
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ReCapricorning the Atlantic, vol. 45:1
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Contemporary Literature
editor for poetry: timothy yu, University of wisconsinmadison; editor for american fiction:
thomas Schaub, University of wisconsinmadison; editor for british and anglophone fiction:
John marx, University of california, Davis
Contemporary Literature publishes scholarly essays on contemporary writing in english, interviews with
established and emerging authors, and reviews of recent critical books in the feld. CL welcomes articles on
multiple genres, including poetry, the novel, drama, creative nonfction, new media and digital literature, and
graphic narrative. CL published the frst articles on thomas pynchon and Susan Howe and the frst inter-
views with margaret Drabble and Don Delillo; it helped to introduce kazuo ishiguro, eavan boland, and J.m.
coetzee to american readers. as a forum for discussing issues animating the range of contemporary literary
studies, Contemporary Literature features the full diversity of critical practices. the editors seek articles that
frame their analysis of texts within larger literary historical, theoretical, or cultural debates.
Special Issues
Immigrant Fictions: Contemporary Literature in an Age of Globalization, vol. 47:4
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Language & Literature Journals
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The Postcolonial State in Africa:
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Mau Maus Children: The Making
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David p. Sandgren
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politics, culture
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Joy ladin
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Midnight Catch: A Novel
norman gilliland
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kent cowgill
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The Long Lite and Swift Death of
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albert kaganovitch
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Against the Tide: Immigrants, Day
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Sandra lazo de la vega
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Negotiating Empire: The Cultural
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Solsiree del moral
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How Difcult It Is to Be God: Shining
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critical Human rights
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wisconsin Studies in classics
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Whos Yer Daddy: Gay Writers
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Last Seen
Jacqueline Jones lamon
felix pollak prize in poetry
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A Diary of Pique 19831984 / Ein
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anna kuxhausen
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laura J. olson and Svetlana adonyeva
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Hooligans in Khrushchevs Russia:
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brian lapierre
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When Pigs Could Fly and Bears Could
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miriam neirick
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Letters Home to Sarah: The Civil War
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mariette nowak
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SpRinG 2013
title index
About Crows, Blais 14
Aeschyluss Suppliant Women,
Bakewell 28
American Evangelicals and the 1960s,
Schfer 12
Autobiography of My Hungers,
Gonzlez 6
The Beauty of Men Never Dies,
Leddick 8
Centaur, Wrenn 15
Challenging the Bard, Rosenshield 26
Cold War University, Levin 13
Couched in Death, Baughan 29
Creating Old World Wisconsin,
Krugler 24
The Declarable Future, Boyden 16
Find Your Story, Write Your Memoir,
Miller 17
Goodbye, Brazil, Margolis 20
A Heaven of Words, Wescott 9
How to Disappear, Fallowell 7
The Last Laugh, Blank 18
Laytons Legacy, Eastberg 23
Libraries and the Reading Public in
Twentieth-Century America,
Pawley 22
More than They Bargained For,
Stein 1
Ox Herding in Wisconsin, Quinney 30
Rooster of Gold, Thimmig 31
Scattered, Reilly 21
Sister, White 3
Travel Wild Wisconsin, Andrews 4
Troutsmith, Searock 5
True Songs of Freedom, MacKay 27
Under a Lucky Star, Andrews 19
Understanding and Teaching the
Vietnam War, Tully 10
Voices from the Plain of Jars,
Branfman 11
Wisconsin Talk, Purnell 25
With the Lapps in the High Mountains,
Demant Hatt 19
Worse than the Devil, Strang 2
AutHoR index
Andrews, Travel Wild Wisconsin 4
Andrews, Under a Lucky Star 19
Austin, see Tully
Bakewell, Aeschyluss Suppliant
Women 28
Baughan, Couched in Death 29
Blais, About Crows 14
Blank, The Last Laugh 18
Boyden, The Declarable Future 16
Branfman, Voices from the Plain of
Jars 11
Demant Hatt, With the Lapps in the
High Mountains 19
Eastberg, Laytons Legacy 23
Fallowell, How to Disappear 7
Gonzlez, Autobiography of My
Hungers 6
Krugler, Creating Old World
Wisconsin 24
Leddick, The Beauty of Men Never
Dies 8
Lenard-Cook, see Miller
LePage, see White
Levin, Cold War University 13
MacKay, True Songs of Freedom 27
Margolis, Goodbye, Brazil 20
Marley, see Stein
Masur, see Tully
Miller, Find Your Story, Write Your
Memoir 17
Pawley, Libraries and the Reading Pub-
lic in Twentieth-Century America 22
Purnell, Wisconsin Talk 25
Quinney, Ox Herding in Wisconsin 30
Raimy, see Purnell
Reilly, Scattered 21
Robbins, see Pawley
Rosco, see Wescott
Rosenshield, Challenging the Bard 26
Rubinstein, see Thimmig
Salmons, see Purnell
Schfer, American Evangelicals and the
1960s 12
Searock, Troutsmith 5
Sjoholm, see Demant Hatt
Stein, More than They Bargained For 1
Strang, Worse than the Devil 2
Thimmig, Rooster of Gold 31
Tully, Understanding and Teaching the
Vietnam War 10
Vogel, see Eastberg
Wescott, A Heaven of Words 9
White, Sister 3
Wrenn, Centaur 15
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