U N I V E R S I T Y P R E S S vanderbilt
New for Spring & Summer 2012
Anthropology 4, 8, 10
Archaeology 11
Biography 5
Caregiving 2
Cultural Studies 5
Education 10
Ethnology 8, 10
Gender Studies 3, 4, 10
Global Health 8
Hispanic Studies 11
History 5, 6, 7
Human Rights 1
Human Services 2
International Development 10
International Relations 6, 7
Journalism 5
Latin American Studies 4, 6, 9, 10, 11, 12
Literature 3, 6, 9, 10
Media Studies 3
Mental Health 1
Popular Culture 9, 12
Political Science 6, 7
Race Relations 6
Religion 2, 7
Reproductive Health 8
Sexuality 2, 4
Sociology 3
Transatlantic Studies 9, 11
Transnational Migration 4
Women’s Studies 5
NewTitleSubjectIndex
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Look inside the book
cover illustration:From Anonymous in Their Own Names (see page 5).
Jane Grant Photographs, PH 141, Special Collections and University Archives, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon 97403-1299.
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A Muslim psychiatrist and a Jewish journalist join together to tell a story of genocide and healing
Wounded I Am More AwakeFinding Meaning after Terrorj u l i a l i e b l i c h a n d e s a d b o š k a i lo
oundedIAmMoreAwake follows the story of Esad Boškailo, a doctor who survives six concentration camps in Bosnia and emerges with powerful new lessons for healing in an age of genocide.
This gripping account raises ques-tions for healers, survivors, and readers striving to understand the reality of war and the aftermath of terror. Is it possible to find meaning after enduring crimes against humanity? Can people heal after trauma?
Human rights journalist Julia Lieblich takes the reader through Boškailo’s early years under Tito to the wars when friends
turned on friends. She documents his harrowing experiences in the camps, where the men he once joined for coffee murder his best friend from childhood.
But the story does not end there. Boškailo moves to the United States and decides to become a psychiatrist so he can guide survivors through the long-term process of restoring hope. Today, inspired by the late psychiatrist and Holocaust survivor Viktor Frankl, Boškailo uses his own experience to help patients mourn their losses and find meaning in the aftermath of terror.
h u m a n r i g h t s / m e n ta l h e a lt h
julia lieblich is an award-winning human rights journalist whose work has appeared in the New York Times Magazine, the Washington Post, Time, Life, and Ms. A former religion writer for the Chicago Tribune and the Associated Press, she is an assistant professor of journalism at Loyola University Chicago.
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“I have just turned the last page. I feel drained, enraged, despairing for humanity—but also enriched, confirmed, and, in a way, elated. This unlikely couple, a journalist who wrote the story and a psychiatrist who lived the story, have accomplished something that is remarkable and necessary. They relived and recorded one man’s survival of genocide in a narrative that conveys such well-chosen detail that you smell the stench and sweat of bodies in a concentration camp, but you have just enough air to breathe and distance to carry you through the darkness.
“We must acknowledge the extremes of human evil, and face the history of collective atrocity. We must understand the impact of cruelty and loss on those who escape and endure. And the only way to learn the hardest lessons of inhumanity is for the tale to be told so well that we permit ourselves to take it in, to appreciate the dignity of those who have been deliberately debased, but who act in small, decent ways. They share bread. They restrain anger that could damage a fellow prisoner. They testify and risk the reprisal of others and, even worse, the reprisal of unforgiving memory. This is my world, the world of those who witness trauma and terror and loss. These are my people, the victims who prevail, the therapists who listen, the journalists who witness, perceive, and relate.
“Read this book. It will take you where you would rather not go, but you will be better for going there.”
—Frank Ochberg, MD, founder of the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma
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esad boškailo is a Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Arizona College of Medicine-Phoenix and Associate Director of Psychiatric Residency Training at the Maricopa Integrated Health System. Trained in family medicine in Bosnia, he works with survivors of trauma from domestic abuse to war.
April 2012
192 pages, 5.5 x 8.5 inches
index
cloth $39.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1825-5
paper $19.95t ISBN 978-0-8265-1826-2
ebook $18.99 ISBN 978-0-8265-1827-9
How a two-year recovery community for women with histories of abuse, addiction, and involvement in street-based sex work can empower and heal
A PlAce About Mercy
Magdalene House
Sarah VanHooser Suiter
omencometoMagdaleneHouse inNashvillewhentheyarereadyto leavethestreets.Theylivetogether—unsupervisedandfreeofcharge—fortwoyears.Duringthattime,thewomenaregiventime,space,andtheresourcestheyneedtohealfromwhathaveoftenbeenlifelongexperienceswithsuffering.(Ofthetwenty-twowomennowinresidence,80percenthaveadiagnosedmentalillnessotherthanaddiction,40percentarereceiv-ingtreatmentforhepatitisC,andone-thirdareHIVpositive.)
However,thestoryoftheMagdalenecommunityisnotaboutthesestatistics,butaboutthestoriesthewomentell.Theysaytheythriveinthecommunitybecauseitisaplacewheretheyarefreetobethem-selves,safetogiveandreceivelove,and
Magdalene HouseA Place about Mercys a r a h va n h o o s e r s u i t e r
freetospeaktheirtruth—eventocomplainsometimesabouthowtheirstorytellingisexploited“forthegoodofthecommunity.” Magdalene Houseisaparticipant-observationaccountofthehistoryofthisremarkablecommunityfoundedin1997,itsstructure,itsThistleFarmsbeautyproductsoperation,andReverendBeccaStevens’scommunalandspiritualvision.Thebookisfinallyaboutwhatitmeanstowalkthepathofhealingwithagroupofunlikelywomenasguide.
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“Sarah Suiter’s book documents a healing community that creates a home for women who have used drugs and sold sex and are desperate for a safe place, helping hands, and loving hearts to help them change their lives. The ingredients for the development and evaluation of similar effective communities for women are well and passionately described in the book. Hopefully they will be heeded.” —Jean J. Schensul, Senior Scientist and Founding Director,Institute for Community Research, Hartford, and author, withMargaret LeCompte, of The Ethnographer’s Toolkit
� Va n d e r b i lt U n i V e r s i t y P r e s s • New for Spring & Summer 2012
c a r e g i v i n g / h u m a n s e r v i c e s / s e x ua l i t y / r e l i g i o n
sarah vanhooser suiter became lead Program evaluator at Centerstone research institute in nashville after completing a postdoctoral fellowship in religion, spirituality, and Health at duke University Medical Center.
Magdalene House was the subject of a multiple-part documentary
on National Public Radio.
May 2012
200 pages, 6 x 9 inches
references, index
cloth $45.00s ISBN 978-0-8265-1837-8
paper $22.50s ISBN 978-0-8265-1838-5
ebook $21.99 ISBN 978-0-8265-1839-2
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tiegLarssonwasanunabashedfeminist inhispersonalandprofessionallifeand inthefictionalworldhecreated,butThe Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, The Girl Who Played with Fire,andThe Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nestarefullofgraphicdepictionsofviolenceagainstwomen,includingstalking,sexualharassment,childabuse,rape,incest,serialmurder,sexualslavery,andsextrafficking,commit-tedbyvileindividualmenandbycorrupt,
Feminist takes on depictions of violence against women and changing gender roles in Stieg Larsson’s thrillers
Men Who Hate Women and Women Who Kick Their AssesStieg Larsson’s Millennium Trilogy in Feminist PerspectiveE D I T E D B Y D O N N A K I N G A N D C A R R I E L E E S M I T H
secretiveinstitutions.Howdoreadersandmoviegoersreacttothesedepictions,andwhatdotheymakeofthewomenwhofightback,thecomplexmasculinitiesinthetrilogy,andtheambiguousgenderoftheelusiveLisbethSalander?
Theselivelyandaccessibleessaysexpandtheconversationintheblogosphereaboutthenovelsandfilmsbyconnectingthecon-troversiesaboutgenderrolestosocialtrendsintherealworld.
Donna King is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of North Carolina Wilmington.
Carrie Lee Smith is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Millersville University of Pennsylvania.
G E N D E R S T U D I E S / M E D I A S T U D I E S / S O C I O LO G Y / L I T E R AT U R E
S
contents
IntroductionDonna King and Carrie Lee Smith
Misogyny and MayhemAlways Ambivalent: Why Media Is Never Just EntertainmentAbby Ferber
Kick-Ass Feminism: Violence, Resistance, and Feminist Avengers in Larsson’s TrilogyKris DeWelde
Lisbeth Salander as the “Final Girl” in the Swedish “Girl Who” FilmsKaren Ritzenhoff
Accounts of Violence against Women: The Potential of Realistic FictionRoberta Villalón
State Complicity in Men’s Violence against WomenPatricia Yancey Martin
Gender and Power in the New Millennium The Gender Ambiguity of Lisbeth Salander: Third-Wave Feminist Hero? Judith Lorber
Third-Wave Rebels in a Second-Wave World: Polyamory, Gender, and PowerMimi Schippers
Men Who Love Women: Pro-feminist Masculinities in the Millennium TrilogyMichael Kimmel
Tiny, Tattooed, and Tough as Nails: Representations of Lisbeth Salander’s BodyCatherine (Kay) G. Valentine
Hacker Republic: Cyberspace and the Feminist Appropriation of TechnologySophie Statzel Bjork-James
Is This What Equality Looks Like? Working Women in theMillennium TrilogyDiane Levy
Swedish PerspectivesCorporations, the Welfare State, and Covert Misogyny in The Girl with the Dragon TattooAnna Westerståhl Stenport and Cecilia Ovesdotter Alm
Lisbeth Salander and Her Swedish Crime Fiction “Sisters”: Stieg Larsson’s Hero in a Genre ContextKerstin Bergman
Is Mikael Blomkvist the Man of the Millennium?Sara Kärrholm
Readers’ ResponsesAn Open Letter to the Next Stieg LarssonLeeAnn Kriegh
Pippi and Lisbeth: Fictional Heroes across GenerationsMeika Loe
Feminist Bloggers Kick Larsson’s Ass: Reading Resistance OnlineJessie Daniels
Feminist Avenger or Male Fantasy? Reading the Reception of the Millennium TrilogyCaryn Murphy
July 2012
192 pages, 6 x 9 inches
references, index
cloth $44.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1849-1
paper $24.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1850-7
ebook $23.99 ISBN 978-0-8265-1851-4
Life histories of women negotiating their identities between two worlds
igrantsexworkersarecommonly castasvictims,movedbydesperation tofleepovertyandhopelessnessintheirhomecountry.TheBrazilianeroticdancersSuzanaMaiapresentsinTransna-tional Desires,however,arewomenfromtheBrazilianmiddleclass—someofthemwell-educatedprofessionals—whomigratedtotheUnitedStatesnotjusttobetterthemselveseconomicallybutalsotorealizetheirpersonaldreams.
Theirmotivationtomigrateandtoworkaseroticdancerscanalsobeunder-stoodinthecontextofarepresentationalsystem,inauguratedincolonialtimes,thatemphasizestheexoticismofBrazilianwomen—theirbodies,theirskintone,their
Transnational DesiresBrazilian Erotic Dancers in New YorkS u z a n a M a i a
sexuality.ThesestereotypesarethepropsthatBrazilianwomenusetoconstructtheirperformancesinManhattanandQueensgentlemen’sbarsandthelanguagethroughwhichtheynegotiatetheirrelationshipstosocietyatlarge.
Transnational DesiresfocusesonthelivesofnineBraziliandancerswithwhomtheauthor,herselfamiddle-classBrazilian,developedcloserelationshipsovertheyears.Maiaexaminestheirsocialrelationsbothinthebarsceneandwithfamily,friends,andloversoutside.Sheshowsthatforthesewomeneroticdancingispartofalifetrajec-torythatinvolvesnegotiatingtheirsocialpositionandlifeprospectsinafundamen-tallytransnationalsocialuniverse.
� Va n d e r b i lt U n i V e r s i t y P r e s s • New for Spring & Summer 2012
t r a n s n at i o n a l m i g r at i o n / g e n d e r a n d s e x ua l i t y / a n t h r o p o lo g y / l at i n a m e r i c a n s t u d i e s
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“An exceptional study based on long-term field research of the highest quality, Transnational Desires is especially effective in situating the exotic (erotic dancing) within the mundane (the daily lives of the women who are its focus). Maia manages to contextualize the lives of her informants in their more complex existence not just as workers at the bars, but as people struggling to construct meaningful lives, building projects for the present and the future, trying to find happiness in often difficult circumstances. Her description of their emotional relationships, their struggles and searches, should make this an instant classic.” —Richard G. Parker, author of Bodies, Pleasures, and Passions: Sexual Culture in Contemporary Brazil
“This study of middle-class Brazilian women, their border-crossing migratory experiences as colored by their experiences of class, sexuality, gender, race/ethnicity, and nationality in New York City and Brazil, and their work choices (erotic dancing is better than domestic work) is absolutely fascinating. It is also a ‘good read,’ full of unexpected twists, sensitive interpretation, rich ethnography, and insightful socioeconomic contextualization.” —Nicole Constable, Professor of Anthropology, University of Pittsburgh
Suzana Maia is Professor of anthropology at the Universidade Federal do recôncavo da bahia (UFrb), brazil. she received her Phd from the City University of new york Graduate Center.
May 2012
256 pages, 6 x 9 inches
references, index
cloth $59.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1822-4
paper $24.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1823-1
ebook $23.99 ISBN 978-0-8265-1824-8
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nonymous in Their Own Names recountsthelivesofthreewomen who,whileworkingastheirhusbands’uncreditedprofessionalpartners,hadaprofoundandenduringimpactonthemediainthefirsthalfofthetwentiethcentury.Withherhusband,EdwardL.Bernays,DorisE.Fleischmanhelpedfoundandformthefieldofpublicrela-tions.RuthHalehelpedherhusband,HeywoodBroun,becomeoneofthemostpopularandinfluentialnewspapercolumnistsofthe1920sand1930s.In1925JaneGrantandherhusband,HaroldRoss,startedtheNew Yorkermagazine.
Yetthesewomen’sachievementshavebeeninvisibletocountlessauthorswhohavewrittenabouttheirhusbands.Thisinvisibilityisespeciallyironicgiventhatallthreewerefeministswhokepttheirbirthnameswhentheymarriedasasignoftheirequalitywiththeirhusbands,thenbattledthegovernmentandsocietalnormstoretaintheirnames.HaleandGrantsobelievedinthiscausethatin1921
A collective biography of three New York City women who pushed boundaries, changed media, and advanced the cause of equality
s u s an h e n ry
Doris E. Fleischman,
Ruth Hale, and Jane Grant
anonymou sin Their Own Names
Anonymous in Their Own NamesDoris E. Fleischman, Ruth Hale, and Jane Grants u s a n h e n r y
b i o g r a p h y / h i s to r y / j o u r n a l i s m / w o m e n ’ s s t u d i e s / c u lt u r a l s t u d i e s
susan henry is Professor Emeritus of Journalism at California State University, Northridge, and a former editor of Journalism History.
theyfoundedtheLucyStoneLeaguetohelpotherwomenkeeptheirnames,andGrantandFleischmanrevivedtheleaguein1950.ThiswasthesameyearGrantandhersecondhusband,WilliamHarris,foundedWhiteFlowerFarm,pioneeringatthattimeandtodayoneofthecountry’smostcelebratedcommercialnurseries.
Despitestrikinglydifferentpersonalities,thethreewomenwerefriendsandlivedinoverlapping,immenselystimulatingNewYorkCitycircles.SusanHenryexplorestheirpivotalrolesintheirhusbands’extraordinarysuccessandmuchmore,includingtheirproblematicmarriagesandtheirstrategiesforovercomingbarriersthatthwartedmanyoftheircontemporaries.
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July 2012
304 pages, 7 x 10 inches
29 b&w photos, notes, bibliography, index
cloth $35.00s ISBN 978-0-8265-1846-0
ebook $34.99 ISBN 978-0-8265-1848-4
May 2012
280 pages, 6 x 9 inches
bibliography, index
cloth $69.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1804-0
paper $34.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1805-7
ebook $33.99 ISBN 978-0-8265-1806-4
Deborah Cohn The LaTin
american LiTerary
BoomanD U. S.
naTionaLiSmDUrinG The
coLD WarCOEN LIT BOOM COMP 5.indd 1 10/15/11 8:33:54 AM
Philip E. Muehlenbeck, Professorial Lecturer in History at George Washington University, is the author of Betting on the Africans: John F. Kennedy’s Courting of African Nationalist Leaders.
How the dissemination of Latin American literature in the U.S. was “caught between the desire to support the literary revolution of the Boom writers and the fear of revolutionary politics.” *
The Latin American Literary Boom and U.S. Nationalism during the Cold WarD E B O R A H C O H N
Deborah Cohn, Associate Professor of Spanish and American Studies at Indiana University Bloomington, is the author of History and Memory in the Two Souths: Recent Southern and Spanish American Fiction (Vanderbilt University Press).
*“A splendid, engagingly written work, based on a wealth of hitherto unexplored archival material. It offers a fascinating account of how the publication and dissemination of Latin American literature in the U.S. were enmeshed in the contradictions of Cold War culture: caught between the desire to support the literary revolution of the Boom writers and the fear of revolutionary politics. Essential reading for all scholars of the Americas.” —John King, University of Warwick
“Deborah Cohn’s lucid, meticulous study is a model of historical inquiry and critical acumen. Unprecedented and groundbreaking, in a field still muddled by academics who have not moved beyond political agendas and the careless shortcuts of historical amnesia, is Cohn’s fair-minded retrospection of what was clearly a fiercely paradoxical era of intense cultural productivity and conflict under the deforming shadow of the Cold War.” —Suzanne Jill Levine, author of The Subversive Scribe: Translating Latin American Fiction
� VA n d e r B I Lt U n I V e r S I t y P r e S S • New for Spring & Summer 2012
L AT I N A M E R I C A N S T U D I E S / L I T E R AT U R E / U. S . H I S TO R Y
uringthe1960sand1970s,whenwriterssuchas JulioCortázar,CarlosFuentes,GabrielGarcía Márquez,andMarioVargasLlosaenteredtheinternationalliterarymainstream,ColdWarculturalpoliticsplayedanactiveroleindisseminatingtheirworkintheUnitedStates.DeborahCohndocumentshowU.S.universities,bookandjournalpublishers,philanthropicorganizations,culturalcenters,andau-thorscoordinatedtheireffortstobringLatinAmeri-canliteraturetoaU.S.readingpublicduringthisperiod,wheninterestintheregionwasheightenedbytheCubanRevolution.Shealsotracestheconnec-tionsbetweentheendeavorsofprivateorganizationsandofficialforeignpolicygoals.
ThehighlevelofinterestinLatinAmericaparadoxicallyledtheU.S.governmenttorestricttheseauthors’physicalpresenceintheUnitedStatesthroughtheMcCarran-WalterAct’simmigrationblacklist,evenasculturalorganizationscultivatedtheexchangeofideaswithwritersandsoughttomarkettranslationsoftheirworkfortheU.S.market.
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The racial front in the global Cold War
H I S TO R Y / p O L I T I C A L S C I E N C E / R A C E
R E L AT I O N S / I N T E R N AT I O N A L R E L AT I O N S
Race, Ethnicity, andthe Cold WarA Global PerspectiveE D i t E D B y P H i l i P E . M u E H l E N B E C k
whiteAmericanwomanisrapedbya blackPanamanianlaborerin1946in thePanamaCanalZone,andtheafter-mathaffectslaborrelationsintheWesternhemisphereforthenexttwodecades.AndnumerousnationsusetheAfricancontinenttoexercisetheircolonialmuscleandpostwarpower,onlytoencounterthefinancialandmilitaryburdensthatwillexhaustandalienatetheirowncitizenryhalfaworldaway.AsRace, Ethnicity, and the Cold War reveals,duringthisdangerouseratherewerenolongerany“isolatedincidents.”Likethebutterflyflappingitswingsandchangingtheweatherontheothersideoftheglobe,aninstanceofracialorethnichostilityhadrippleeffectsacrossaColdWarworldofbrinksmanshipbetweenbitternationalrivalsandideologicalopponents.
A
“Race, Ethnicity, and the Cold War makes it clear that race, and even racism, was not something uniquely afflicting the United States, and that it can be studied in many other societies, and that it had an impact on the foreign policies of these countries.” —Thomas Alan Schwartz, author of Lyndon Johnson and Europe
“By uncovering the transnational history of linkages between race, ethnicity, and global conflict, this volume makes clear that the challenge of grappling with, in Obama’s words, our
‘teeming, colliding, irksome diversity,’ marked not just the United States, but many parts of the world. Perhaps recognizing the global nature of this challenge can serve as one step toward confronting the many boundaries that continue to divide human beings from each other and from our shared history.” —Nico Slate, Carnegie Mellon University, from the introduction
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E d i t E d b y
Philip E. Muehlenbeck
A G l o b A l P e r s P e c t i v e
E d i t E d b y
Philip E. Muehlenbeck
A G l o b A l P e r s P e c t i v e
r e l i g i o n / h i s t o r y / i n t e r n at i o n a l r e l at i o n s / p o l i t i c a l s c i e n c e
contents
Introduction Nico Slate
Token Diplomacy: The United States, Race, and the Cold War Michael L. Krenn
A Wind of Change? White Redoubt and the Postcolonial Moment, 1960–1963 Ryan Irwin
Race, Labor, and Security in the Panama Canal Zone: The 1946 Greaves Rape Case, Local 713, and the Isthmian Cold War Crackdown Michael Donoghue
Race, Identity, and Diplomacy in the Papua Decolonization Struggle, 1949–1962David Webster
For a Better Guinea! Winning Hearts and Minds in Portuguese Guinea Luís Nuno Rodrigues
Testing the Limits of Soviet Internationalism: African Students in the Soviet UnionMaxim Matusevich
Crimes against Humanity in the Congo: Nazi Legacies and the German Cold War in AfricaKatrina Hagen
Race and the Cuban Revolution: The Impact of Cuba’s Intervention in Angola Henley Adams
Ethnic Nationalism in the Cold War Context: The Cyprus Issue in the Greek and Greek American Public Debate, 1954–1989Zinovia Lialiouti and Philip Muehlenbeck
“God Bless Reagan” and “God Help Canada”: The Polish Canadian Action Group and Solidarność in Toronto Eric L. Payseur
Ethnic Nationalism and the Collapse of Soviet Communism Mark R. Beissinger
“Religion and the Cold War is a crucial reminder that religion shaped the international context of the Cold War for both the United States and the Soviet Union in the decades following World War II. A much-needed collection of essays, this volume demonstrates that nations who resisted the two superpowers often did so through religious organizations and religious visions of their own national communities.” —David Zietsma, Redeemer University College
“This is an ambitious and stimulating volume that reflects two of the most important trends in the recent study of the Cold War: the role of religion in its development, and its global nature. Bible-bearing balloons launched into the German wind, the surprising relationship between the Soviet state and its four Central Asian muftiates, tensions between South Vietnam’s Catholic leadership and the majority Buddhist opposition—these episodes, and many more, add an exciting and essential new dimension to the history of this vital era.” —Andrew J. Rotter, Colgate University, author of Hiroshima: The World’s Bomb
The influence of faith in the conflicts that defined the Cold War
Religion and the Cold WarA Global Perspectivee d i t e d b y p h i l i p e . m u e h l e n b e c k
helinesofarmedconflict,andthecatastrophicperils theyportended,wereshapedwithshockingclarityin theimmediateaftermathofWorldWarII.LessclearistherolereligiousideologyplayedintheconflictsthatdefinedtheColdWarera.Alltoooften,beliefsheldsacredbysomebecametoolstomotivateactionorcreatefriction.InReligion and the Cold War,PhilipMuehlenbeckassem-blesaninternationalteamofspecialiststoexplorehowreligioninformedtheideologicalandmilitaryclashesacrosstheglobeinthesecondhalfofthetwentiethcentury.
StudentsandscholarswillfindinthisvolumealevelofcomprehensivenessrarelyachievedinColdWarstudies.Eachchapterrevealsthatthepowerandinfluenceofideasarejustasimportantasmilitarymightinthestrugglesbe-tweensuperpowers—andthatfewideas,thenasnow,carryasmuchforceasreligiousideology.AsMuehlenbeckandhiscontributorsdemonstrate,noareaoftheworld,andnoreli-gioustenet,wassafefromthemanipulationsofapowerfulsetofplayersfocusedsolelyontheirownsphereofinfluence.
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contents
Introduction Andrew Preston
An Early Attempt to Rip the Iron Curtain: The Pomak Question, 1945–1947Argyris Mamarelis
The Western Allies, German Churches, and the Emerging Cold War in Germany, 1948–1952 JonDavid K. Wyneken
From Sermon to Strategy: Religious Influence on the Formation and Implementation of US Foreign Policy in the Early Cold War Jonathan Herzog
Hewlett Johnson: Britain’s “Red Dean” and the Cold War David Ayers
Rising to the Occasion: The Role of American Missionaries and Korean Pastors in Resisting Communism throughout the Korean WarKai Yin Allison Haga
The “Campaign of Truth” Program: U.S. Propaganda in Iraq during the Early 1950s Ahmed Khalid Al-Rawi
Religion and Cold War Politics in Ethiopia Wudu Tafete Kassu
Soviet Policies toward Islam: Domestic and International ConsiderationsEren Murat Tasar
Bosnian Muslims during the Cold War: Identity between Domestic and Foreign Policies Aydın Babuna
Religion, Power, and Legitimacy in Ngo Dinh Diem’s Republic of VietnamJessica Chapman
Brazil: Nation and Church during the Cold War Iain S. Maclean
“I Will Be Devoted to Service with My Body and Soul”: Institutionalized Atheism of the Security Service Officers in Communist Poland, 1944–1989Leszek Murat
Political Islam, Jamaat-e-Islami, and Pakistan’s Role in the Afghan-Soviet War, 1979–1988 Zahid Shahab Ahmed
philip e. muehlenbeck, Professorial Lecturer in History at George Washington University, is the author of Betting on the Africans: John F. Kennedy’s Courting of African Nationalist Leaders.
July 2012
344 pages, 7 x 10 inches
2 tables, bibliographies, notes, index
cloth $69.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1843-9
paper $27.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1844-6
ebook $26.99 ISBN 978-0-8265-1845-3
July 2012
288 pages, 7 x 10 inches
bibliographies, notes, index
cloth $69.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1852-1
paper $27.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1853-8
ebook $26.99 ISBN 978-0-8265-1854-5
� Va n d e r b i lt U n i V e r s i t y P r e s s • New for Spring & Summer 2012
g lo b a l h e a lt h / r e p r o d u c t i v e h e a lt h / a n t h r o p o lo g y / e t h n o g r a p h y
Edited by Lauren Fordyce and Amínata Maraesa
Risk, Reproduction, and Narratives
of Experience
sCaroleBrownerexplainsinher foreword:“Thesechapterscompellingly revealthatalthoughweanthropolo-giststendtospeakofbiomedicineinhegemonicterms,infactitspenetrationisquitevariableandoftenambivalentlymet....Risk, Reproduction, and Narratives of Experienceshedsnewlightonatroublingcoreaspectofmedicalizationprocesses,whichsimultaneouslyrenderpregnant
Risk, Reproduction, and Narratives of Experiencee d i t e d b y L au r e n F o r d yc e a n d a m í n ata m a r a e s a
F o r e w o r d b y c a r o L e b r o w n e r
a F t e r w o r d b y r ay n a r a p p
womenmoredocilesubjectsevenastheyareimpelledtoactivelyengagewithbio-medicalizedprenatalcareregimes....Wealsoseethataconsummatemeansbywhichstatesseektoconsolidatepowerinthereproductiverealmisthroughexpan-sionofthebiomedicalconceptofrisk.Thiscriticalobservationemergesrepeatedlyinthiscollection.”
Vivid ethnographies of reproductive risk and responsibility that speak to the conflicts between pregnant women and mothers and state-sanctioned biomedicine
A
Lauren Fordyce is a Visiting assistant Professor in the department of sociology and anthropology at bucknell University.
amínata maraesa is a lecturer in the department of anthropology at Hunter College of the City University of new york and the department of latin american and Puerto rican studies at lehman College of the City University of new york.
contents
Introduction: The Development of Discourses Surrounding Reproductive Risks Lauren Fordyce and Amínata Maraesa
Complications in Measuring and Defining RiskConceiving Risk in K’iche’ Maya ReproductionMatthew R. Dudgeon
Failing to See the Danger: Conceptions of Pregnancy and Care Practices among Mexican Immigrant Women in New York CityAlyshia Gálvez
The Vital Conjuncture of Methamphetamine-Involved Pregnancy: Objective Risks and Subjective RealitiesAlison B. Hamilton
Biopolitical Narratives of Risk and ResponsibilityBirth and Blame: Guatemalan Midwives and Reproductive RiskSheila Cosminsky
“They Don’t Know Anything”: How Medical Authority Constructs Perceptions of Reproductive Risk among Low-Income Mothers in MexicoVania Smith-Oka
Local Contours of Reproductive Risk and Responsibility in Rural OaxacaRebecca Howes-Mischel
New Countryside, New Family: The Discourses of Reproductive Risk in Postsocialist Rural ChinaQingyan Ma
Struggles over the Embodiment of Reproductive RiskNegotiating Risk and the Politics of Responsibility: Mothers and Young Child Health among Datoga Pastoralists in Northern TanzaniaAlyson G. Young
Shifting Maternal Responsibilities and the Trajectory of Blame in Northern GhanaAaron R. Denham
Imaging Maternal Responsibility: Prenatal Diagnosis and Ultrasound among Haitians in South FloridaLauren Fordyce
A Competition over Reproductive Authority: Prenatal Risk Assessment in Southern BelizeAmínata Maraesa
April 2012
256 pages, 7 x 10 inches
references, index
cloth $69.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1819-4
paper $29.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1820-0
ebook $28.99 ISBN 978-0-8265-1821-7
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JUNGLE FEVERExploring Madness and Medicine
in Twentieth-Century Tropical Narratives
CHARLOTTE ROGERS
The horror, deep in the mythical jungle
Jungle FeverExploring Madness and Medicine in Twentieth-Century Tropical Narrativesc h a r lo t t e r o g e r s
hesinister“jungle”—thatill-defined andamorphousplacewherecivilization hasnofootholdandsurvivalisalwaysindoubt—istheterrifyingsettingforcountlessworksoftheimagination.FilmslikeApocalypse Now,televisionshowslikeLost,andofcoursestorieslikeHeart of Darknessallpursuetheessentialquestionofwhytheunknownworldterrifiesadven-turerandspectatoralike.InJungle Fever,CharlotteRogersgoesdeepintofivebooksthatfirstdefinedthejungleasaviolentandmaddeningplace.Thereaderfindsurbanexplorersventuringintothewilderness,encounteringandlivingamongthe“native”inhabitants,andeventuallylosingtheirminds.
ThecanonicalworksofauthorssuchasJosephConrad,AndréMalraux,JoséEustasioRivera,andotherspresentjunglesandwildernessesasfundamentallycor-ruptinganddangerous.Rogersexploreshowthemethodstheseauthorsusetocom-municatethephysicalandpsychological
maladiesthatafflicttheircharactersevolvedsymbioticallywithmodernmedicine.WhilethewildernesschallengesConrad’sandMal-raux’sEuropeantravelerstoquestiontheircivilityandmentalstability,LatinAmericanauthorssuchasAlejoCarpentierdeftlyturnpseudoscientifictheoriesintotheirgreatestasset,astheircharacterstransformmadnessintoanessentialcreativespark.
Ultimately,Jungle Feversuggeststhatthegreatesthorrorofthejungleistheunknownregionsofthecharacter’sownmind.
l at i n a m e r i c a n l i t e r at u r e / co m pa r at i v e l i t e r at u r e / t r a n s at l a n t i c s t u d i e s / p o p u l a r c u lt u r e
charlotte rogers is Assistant Professor of Latin American Culture at George Mason University.
T
“Jungle Fever takes us on a fascinating excursion into the colonial and postcolonial tropics where we find Conrad and Malraux in the company of Alejo Carpentier, Mario Vargas Llosa, Jorge Luis Borges, and Wilson Harris —with many surprises lurking along the way.” —Vera Kutzinski, author of Against the American Grain
“Jungle Fever isolates, in the novelistic subgenre of the jungle book, a deep strand involving disease, which is at the source of its creative impulse, and where these adventure novels carry out a compelling critique of modern imperialism. Cutting across the English, Latin American, and French traditions this book is a model of the comparative approach.” —Roberto González Echevarría, Sterling Professor of Hispanic and Comparative Literature, Yale University, andauthor of Myth and Archive
Phot
o by R
ichar
d Ser
ton
June 2012
248 pages, 7 x 10 inches
notes, bibliography, index
cloth $55.00s ISBN 978-0-8265-1831-6
ebook $54.99 ISBN 978-0-8265-1833-0
10 Va n d e r b i lt U n i V e r s i t y P r e s s • New for Spring & Summer 2012
A fresh conception of women’s empowerment through education as a process of recognition, capacity development, and action in a community setting
Opening Minds, Improving LivesEducation and Women’s Empowerment in Hondurase r i n m u r p h y - g r a h a m
erin murphy-graham is assistant adjunct Professor of education at the University of California, berkeley. she was formerly assistant Professor of international education at new york University.
e d u c at i o n / g e n d e r s t u d i e s / l at i n a m e r i c a n s t u d i e s / a n t h r o p o lo g y / e t h n o g r a p h y / i n t e r n at i o n a l d e v e lo p m e n t
“Based on her years of intensive interviews, Murphy-Graham teaches us that the right kind of education promotes much more than economic opportunities. We learn about the remarkable ways that women changed: recognizing their own human worth, developing public voices, creating their own businesses, pursuing higher education, and negotiating more egalitarian marriages. This book should be read by everyone interested in the transformational power of education and in gender equality, and by all who seek hope for a better world.” —Francine Deutsch, Mt. Holyoke College
“A major contribution in helping us turn discussion of empowerment and education away from jargon and cynicism, enhancing our concern with women’s struggles for recognition, capabilities, and wider social change.” —Elaine Unterhalter, University of London
“Erin Murphy-Graham shows how the complex process of empowerment unfolds, and answers the question of how it can take place within an educational program that also prepares students for traditional educational assessments. A valuable contribution to understanding gendered processes of empowerment at school and home.” —Karen Monkman, DePaul University
uanitawasseventeenyearsoldandpreg- nantwithherfirstchildwhenshebegan anactivitythatwould“open”hermind.LivinginaremoteGarifunavillageinHon-duras,Juanitahaddroppedoutofschoolafterthesixthgrade.In1996,anewedu-cationalprogram,Sistema de Aprendizaje Tutorial(TutorialLearningSystemorSAT),wasstartedinhercommunity.Thepro-gramhelpedherseetheworlddifferentlyandopenasmallbusiness.
Empoweringwomenthrougheducationhasbecomeatoppriorityofinternationaldevelopmentefforts.ErinMurphy-Grahamdrawsonmorethanadecadeofqualitative
J researchtoexaminetheexperiencesofJuan-itaandeighteenotherwomenwhopartici-patedintheSATprogram.Theirnarrativessuggestthesimpleyetsubtlewayseducationcansparktheempowermentprocess,aswellastheroleofmenandboysinpromotinggenderequality.
Drawingonin-depthinterviewsandclassroomobservationinHondurasandUganda,Murphy-Grahamshowsthepoten-tialoftheSATprogramtoempowerwomenthroughexpandedaccessandimprovedqualityofsecondaryeducationinLatinAmericaandAfrica.Anappendixprovidessamplesoftheclassroomlessons.
May 2012
240 pages, 6 x 9 inches
9 b&w photos, appendix, references, index
cloth $59.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1828-6
paper $29.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1829-3
ebook $28.99 ISBN 978-0-8265-1830-9
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Ceramic analysis supports the internal warfare hypothesis for the Classic Maya collapse
heClassicMayacollapsehasengenderedagreatdealofdebateoverthelastdecades.Thiscollapsewasahighlyvariablephenomenonthatdidnot
affectthewholeMayazone,sothespecificeventsandprocessestakingplaceindifferentregionsaf-fectedbythis“transition”needfurtherexploration.ThisvolumeexaminestheeconomicparametersofthecollapseinthePetexbatunregionfromtheeighththroughtheeleventhcenturiesA.D.throughthelensofceramicmanufacture,production,consumption,andexchange.Itexploresthiscriticaltimeperiodthroughceramicanalysis,includingtype:varietyclassification,standardizationstudies,andchemicalprovenanceresearch.
TheseceramicdataarethenusedtoreevaluatedifferentmodelsexplainingtheClassicMayacol-lapse—theforeigninvasiontheory,thecommercial-izationhypothesis,andtheinternalwarfaremodel.Theauthorsconcludethattheinternalwarfaremodelhasthemostsupport.
Ceramics, Production, and Exchange in the Petexbatun RegionThe Economic Parameters of the Classic Maya Collapsea n t o n i a e . f o i a s a n d r o n a l d l . b i s h o p
antonia e. foias is Professor of Anthropology at Williams College.
ronald l. bishop is Curator for Mexican and Central American Archaeology at the Smithsonian Institution.
ThispaniC issUes series
nicholas spadaccini,editor-in-Chief
hispaniC issUes onlinehispanicissues.umn.edu/
online_main.html
a r c h a e o lo g y / l at i n a m e r i c a n s t u d i e s
#7 in the Vanderbilt institUte
of MesoaMeriCan arChaeology series
edited by arthur a. demarest
July 2012
640 pages, 7 x 10 inches
76 tables, 159 figures, 58 color plates, references
cloth $125.00s ISBN 978-0-8265-1840-8
Available Now
344 pages, 6 x 9 inches
references, index
hardcover $79.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1834-7
paper $34.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1835-4
ebook $33.99 ISBN 978-0-8265-1836-1
Poetic making from Cervantes and Góngora to Descartes and Locke
Poiesis and Modernity in the Old and New Worldse d i t e d b y a n t h o n y j . C a s C a r d i a n d l e a h M i d d l e b r o o k
hisbroad-rangingexplorationargues thattherewasaspecialpreoccupation withthenatureandlimitsofpoetryinearlymodernSpainandEurope,aswellasespeciallyvigorouspoeticactivityinthisperiod.ContrarytowhatonemightreadinHegel,the“prosification”oftheworldhasremainedanunfinishedaffair.
T
anthony j. Cascardi is Ancker Professor of Comparative Literature, Rhetoric, and Spanish at the University of California, Berkeley, and Dean of Arts and Humanities. He is the author of Ideologies of History in the Spanish Golden Age, The Subject of Modernity, and Consequences of Enlightenment.
leah Middlebrook is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature and Romance Languages at the University of Oregon. She is the author of Imperial Lyric: New Poetry and New Subjects in Early Modern Spain.
Edited by Anthony J. Cascardi and Leah Middlebrook
Poiesis and Modernity in the Old and New Worlds
contents
IntroductionAnthony J. Cascardi and Leah Middlebrook
Poiesis on the Threshold of ModernityPoiesis and Modernity at the Turn of the Spanish Sixteenth Century: Luís Alfonso de Carvallo and the Cisne de Apolo (1602) Leah Middlebrook
“Orphic Fictions”: Poesía and Poiesis in CervantesAnthony J. Cascardi
Spiders and Flies: Imagining “The World” in Early Modern European Natural Philosophy Christopher Braider
Encyclopedism, Poiesis, and ModernityMarina S. Brownlee
From the Bibliotheca to the Garden and theGraveyard: Origins of the Poiesis of the Fantastic in Late Sixteenth-Century Miscellanea David R. Castillo
Case Studies: Poesía and PoiesisWriting Religion: Sacromonte and the Literary Conventions of Orthodoxy Seth Kimmel
Scrutinizing Early Modern Warfare in Latin Hexameters: The Austrias Carmen of Joannes Latinus (Juan Latino)Elizabeth R. Wright
Ribera’s Sagradas poesías as Poiesis of Modernity in Colonial Potosí Leonardo García-Pabón
English and European Contexts“A Super-Political Concernment”: Evolution and Revolution of Inward Light from Juan de Valdés to John Locke Julian Jiménez Heffernan
Failed New World Epics in Baroque Italy Nathalie Hester
How to Reconquer Poiesis? Florian’s Gonzalve de Cordoue, ou Grenade reconquise (1791)Fabienne Moore
The Opacity of Language and the Transparency of Being: On Góngora’s Poetics William Egginton
Sense and Equivalence in Góngora and the Spanish Mystics: A Credit Crisis Julio Baena
AfterwordBradley J. Nelson
h i s pa n i c s t u d i e s / e u r o p e a n l i t e r at u r e / t r a n s at l a n t i c s t u d i e s
12 Va n d e r b i lt U n i V e r s i t y P r e s s • New for Spring & Summer 2012
heproductofauniquecollaborationbetweenaliterarycritic (vanDelden)andapoliticalscientist(Grenier),thisbooklooks attherelationshipbetweenliteratureandpoliticsinLatinAmerica,aregionwherethesetwodomainsexistincloserproximitythanperhapsanywhereelseintheWesternworld.Theapparentlyseamlessblendingofliteratureandpoliticsisreflectedintheexplicitlypoliticalcontentofmuchofthecontinent’swriting,aswellasinthehighlyvisiblepoliticalrolesplayedbymanyLatinAmericanintellectuals.
r e c e n t b a c k l i s t
Cultures of theErotic in Spain,
1898–1939
Maite Zubiaurre
Gunshots at the FiestaLiterature and Politics in Latin AmericaM a a r t e n va n D e l D e n a n D Y v o n G r e n i e r
So Far AwayA Daughter’s Memoir of Life, Loss, and Lovec h r i s t i n e w. h a r t M a n n
Excellence for AllHow a New Breed of Reformers Is Transforming America’s Public Schoolsj a c k s c h n e i D e r
Fuel Cycle to NowhereU.S. Law and Policy on Nuclear Waster i c h a r D B u r l e s o ns t e wa r t a n D j a n e B lo o M s t e wa r t
(2011) 224 pages
cloth $49.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1795-1
paper $21.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1796-8
ebook $20.99 ISBN 978-0-8265-1797-5
(2011) 208 pages
cloth $39.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1810-1
paper $24.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1811-8
ebook $23.99 ISBN 978-0-8265-1812-5
(2011) 446 pages
cloth $65.00s ISBN 978-0-8265-1774-6
ebook $64.99 ISBN 978-0-8265-1776-0
Cultures of the Erotic in Spain, 1898-1939M a i t e Z u B i au r r e
New Pub Date: January 2012
408 pages, 350 color and b&w illustrations
cloth $95.00s ISBN 978-0-8265-1696-1
Re-announcing
Now in paperback!
l at i n a m e r i c a n s t u d i e s / p o p u l a r c u lt u r e
“There is no question in my mind that this book makes a gigantic contribution to our understanding of the power of the pen in political life.” —Michael Keren, University of Calgary, author of Political Literature in the Twentieth Century
January 2012 (Cloth 2009)
312 pages, 7 x 10 inches
bibliography, index
cloth $65.00s ISBN 978-0-8265-1633-6
paper $27.95s ISBN 978-0-8265-1634-3
T
“Spirited and unsparing, Gunshots at the Fiesta takes dead aim at the politicization of Latin American literary studies. Offering a sharp critique of this trend, the authors point the way toward a more nuanced view of the complicated —sometimes conflicted—relation between the aesthetic and the political.” —Gustavo Pérez Firmat, Columbia University
Maarten van Delden is Professor and Chair of spanish and Portuguese at UCla and author of Carlos Fuentes, Mexico, and Modernity (Vanderbilt University Press, 1998).
Yvon Grenier is a Professor in the department of Political science at st. Francis Xavier University; author of Guerre et pouvoir au Salvador (1994), The Emergence of Insurgency in El Salvador (1999), and Art and Politics: Octavio Paz and the Pursuit of Freedom (2001; Spanish trans. 2004); and editor of Octavio Paz, Sueño en libertad, escritos politicos (2001).
Co m m u n i t y o r g a n i z i n g / P o l i t i C a l S C i e n C e / S o C i a l m o v e m e n t S
� Va n d e r b i lt U n i V e r s i t y P r e s s • New for Spring and Summer 2010
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A PlAce About Mercy
Magdalene House
Sarah VanHooser Suiter
s u s an h e n ry
Doris E. Fleischman,
Ruth Hale, and Jane Grant
anonymou sin Their Own Names
Deborah Cohn The LaTin
american LiTerary
BoomanD U. S.
naTionaLiSmDUrinG The
coLD WarE d i t E d b y
Philip E. Muehlenbeck
A G l o b A l P e r s P e c t i v e
JUNGLE FEVERExploring Madness and Medicine
in Twentieth-Century Tropical Narratives
CHARLOTTE ROGERS
Edited by Anthony J. Cascardi and Leah Middlebrook
Poiesis and Modernity in the Old and New Worlds
E d i t E d b y
Philip E. Muehlenbeck
A G l o b A l P e r s P e c t i v e
Edited by Lauren Fordyce and Amínata Maraesa
Risk, Reproduction, and Narratives
of Experience
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