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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 59: Pardis Dabashi on “My Uncle Napoleon” on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
Iraj Pezeshkzad’s My Uncle Napoleon is a slapstick and at times goofy love story, but it is also in the best tradition of sly anti-imperial satire. Scholar Pardis Dabashi came to it late, but she has all the convert’s zeal as she links it to a literary tradition that’s highly theoretical, but also delightfully far-flung.
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 58: Caleb Crain on Daisy Ashford’s “The Young Visiters” on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
John’s favorite avocation is editing a Public Books column called B-Side Books, where writers resurrect beloved but neglected books. Now comes a book that collects 40 of these columns (the Washington Post review was a big thumbs-up, and John talked about the B-side concept on Five Books). This week’s B-Sider is celebrated American novelist Caleb…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 57: Elizabeth Ferry on “The Diary of ‘Helena Morley'” on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
Elizabeth’s B-side was a paean to Elizabeth Bishop’s delightful translation of the Brazilian diary in which “Helena Morley” (a pseudonym for Alice Brant) looks back to her childhood in a dusty provincial mining town. In our RtB conversation, she explains that part of the joy in rediscovering the book came from feeling that she, like Bishop…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 56: Merve Emre on Natalia Ginzburg’s “The Dry Heart” on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
Like our podcast, B-Side Books focuses on those moments when books topple off their shelves, open up, and start bellowing at you. The one that buttonholed Merve Emre (Oxford literature professor and author most recently of The Personality Brokers) was a novella by the luminous midcentury Italian pessimist, Natalia Ginzburg. And if you think you…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 53: That Demonic Novelistic Impulse: Orhan Pamuk with Bruce Robbins on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
In Episode Two of Novel Dialogue, critic and scholar Bruce Robbins sits down with Nobel Laureate Orhan Pamuk. They have taught classes on the political novel together at Columbia for years, and it shows. They ask how the novel can ever escape its roots in middle-class sensibility and perspective: Joseph Conrad comes up, but so does modern…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 51: Thomas Piketti on Inequality and Ideology on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
Is Thomas Piketty the world’s most famous economic historian? A superstar enemy of plutocratic capitalism who wrote a pathbreaking bestseller, Capital in the 21st Century? Or simply a debonair and generous French intellectual happy to talk redistributive justice? Join John and Adaner Usmani (star of RTB’s episode 44: Racism as idea, Racism as…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 50: Greg Childs on Seditious Conspiracy; or, Why Words Matter on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
Continuing our conversation on the events at the Capitol and the end of the Trump era, John and Elizabeth spoke with Brandeis historian Greg Childs. He is an expert in Latin American political movements and public space; his Seditious Spaces: Race, Freedom, and the 1798 Conspiracy in Bahia, Brazil is forthcoming from Cambridge. His historical and…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 49: The Capitol Insurrection and Asymmetrical Policing: A Conversation with David Cunningham on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
We first heard from the sociologist of American racism David Cunningham in Episode 36 Policing and White Power. Less than a week after the horrors of January 6th, he came back for an extended conversation about “asymmetrical policing” of the political right and left-and of White and Black Americans. His very first book (There’s Something Happening…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 48: Transform, Not Transfer: Lisa Dillman on Translation on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
The eternal challenge (obsession) of translation: “how not to get lost in translation”.
However, the award-winning translator and literary scholar at Emory University Lisa Dillman suggests that we may be missing the truly challenging and exhilarating part of translation in this endless and “elitist” obsession.
In fact, not “losing” original me…[Read more] -
Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 47: Glimpsing COVID: Gael McGill on Data Visualization on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
What’s a picture worth? How about the picture that allows scientists to grasp what’s actually going on in a cell-or on the spiky outside of an invading virus? Gael McGill, Director of Molecular Visualization at the Center for Molecular and Cellular Dynamics at Harvard Medical School is founder and CEO of Digizyme and has spent his career exploring…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 46: Leah Price on Children’s Books: Turning Back the Clock on “Adulting” on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
What do children love most about books? Leaving their mark on inviting white spaces? Or that enchanting feeling when a book marks them as its own, taking them off to where the wild things are? To understand childhood reading past and present, Elizabeth and John talk with the illustrious and illuminating book historian Leah Price. They explore the…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 45: Laurence Ralph: Reckoning with Police Violence on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
In the third episode of our Global Policing series, Elizabeth and John speak with anthropologist Laurence Ralph about his 2020 book The Torture Letters: Reckoning with Police Violence. The book relates the decades-long history in which hundreds of people (mostly Black men) were tortured by the Chicago Police. Fascinatingly, it is framed as a…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 44: Racism as Idea, Racism as Power Relation: A Conversation with Adaner Usmani on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
Do we understand racism as the primary driving engine of American inequality? Or do we focus instead on the indirect ways that frequently hard-to-discern class inequality and inegalitarian power relations can produce racially differentiated outcomes? Adaner Usmani, Assistant Professor of Sociology and Social Studies at Harvard and on the editorial…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 43: Sanjay Krishnan on V. S. Naipaul: To make the Deformation the Formation on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
Sanjay Krishnan, Boston University English professor and Conrad scholar, has written a marvelous new book about that grumpiest of Nobel laureates, V. S Naipaul’s Journeys. Krishnan sees the “Contrarian and unsentimental” Trinidad-born but globe-trotting novelist and essayist as early and brilliant at noticing the unevenness with which the bless…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 42: Peter Brown on Wealth, Charity and Managerial Bishops in Early Christianity on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
Our Recall This Buck series began by speaking with Christine Desan of Harvard Law School about how key ideas-and the actual currency, physical coins and bills- underlying the modern monetary system get “invisibilized” with that system’s success, so that seeing money clearly is both harder and more vital. Today, illustrious Princeton historian…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 41: Lorraine Daston, Historian of Science on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
In this final episode of Books in Dark Times, John chews the bibliographic fat with Lorraine Daston of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin. Her list of publications outstrips our capacity to mention here; John particularly admires her analysis of “epistemic virtues” such as truth to nature and objectivity in her 2007…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 40: Hayal Akarsu on Turkish Community Policing on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
Today, Elizabeth and John discuss Turkish policing with Hayal Akarsu, Junior Research Fellow at the Crown Center for Middle East Studies at Brandeis. Hayal is an anthropologist specializing in police reforms in Turkey in the context of authoritarian governance. Our conversation focused on what police reforms succeed in doing, even if they do not…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 39: A Conversation with Carlo Rotella on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
Carlo Rotella of Boston College is author of six books, among them the amazing Good With Their Hands: Boxers, Bluesmen, and Other Characters from the Rust Belt (University of California Press, 2002) and most recently The World Is Always Coming to an End: Pulling Together and Apart in a Chicago Neighborhood (University of Chicago Press, 2019). What…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 38: Beth Blum on Self-Help from Carnegie to Today on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
Beth Blum, Assistant Professor of English at Harvard, is the author of The Self-Help Compulsion (Columbia University Press 2019). Learn how self-help went from its Victorian roots (worship greatness!) to the ingratiating unctuous style prescribed by the other-directed Dale Carnegie (everyone loves the sound of their own name) before arriving at…[Read more]
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Miranda Peery deposited Recall this Book 37: A Conversation with Elizabeth Bradfield on Humanities Commons 3 years, 7 months ago
Elizabeth Bradfied is editor of Broadsided Press, professor of creative writing at Brandeis, naturalist, photographer-and most of all an amazing poet (“Touchy” for example just appeared in The Atlantic). Her books include Interpretive Work, Approaching Ice, Once Removed, and Toward Antarctica. She lives on Cape Cod, travels north every summer to…[Read more]
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