Friday, October 11, 2024

Academic Reading Challenge Recommendations: A Book Written in the 1960s

A book written in the 1960s, for which I'm counting books published in the 1960s, is another really broad category. 

As always, I'll start with academic, or near-academic books

I'm always happy for an oportunity to recommend E.P. Thompson's Making of the English Working Class which was first published in 1963. 

A book that continues to influence the conversation on fascism is Hannah Arendt's Eichmann in Jerusalem which began in the New Yorker magazine in 1963. 

Some of Erving Goffman's most important works were published in the 1960s. 

Jane Jacobs' Death and Life of the Great American Cities came out in 1961

And, I've only just recommended it in the last post, but Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth was first published in 1961. 

The 60s was a time of landmark books that both influenced and were influenced by social movements. 

Alex Haley's as-told-to Autobiography of Malcolm X was published in 1965.

James Baldwin's The Fire Next Time was first published in 1963. 

Another landmark 1960s activist book is Rachel Carson's Silent Spring, first published in 1961. 

Richard Farina's Been Down So Long It Looks Like Up To Me , published in 1966, is a 60s classic and one of my favorite novels from my teen years, though I haven't read it in quite a while. 


This entry's official song is "Sympathy for the Devil," a 60s song inspired by Mikhail Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita which was actually written in Russian between 1928 and 1941, though the English translation could qualify as "written in the 60s." 



Science fiction also went through a radical transformation in the 1960s. The landmark collection Dangerous Visions (edited by Harlan Ellison) came out in 1967.  Several of Samuel R. Delany's more accessible books came out in the 1960s. Ursula LeGuin's The Left Hand of Darkness was first published in 1969.

There are many lists that you can peruse for important fiction and popular non-fiction of the 1960s. Lit Hub is always a great place to look. Here is their list of  The 10 Books that Defined the 1960s which is followed by a lengthy list of additional books published in that decade. 

Saturday, September 21, 2024

Academic Reading Challenge Recommendations: Book About Mental Health/Illness

When we chose the category book about mental health or illness, I don't think I really understood the potentially huge number of books that could count. This could include works of fiction, studies of individuals, academic books about mental health or illness from a variety of perspectives. 

In other words, this list should not be considered exhaustive in any way. Pretty much any honest or reflective book about human experience could be considered a book about mental health or mental illness, though some will be more explicit through framing the subject in those terms. The books listed are the ones that I first thought of, as well as books suggested by other challenge members. 

There are some obvious academic classics you could consider, 

Freud may get a bad rap as a sexist, and wrong about everything, but his writing is actuallyinteresting and mostly accessible. Reading anything's he's written can provide you with an understanding of the history of psychiatry. His influence on our culture, regardless of how much psychiatry and psychology have changed, remains massive.

Another couple of classic works of theory aim to topple the empire of Freud. These are Foucault's History of Sexuality part one, which takes on Freud's "repression hypothesis" and the entire method of psychoanalysis, as well as Madness and Civilization, which identifies this binary as central to modernity.  

Deleuze and Guattari's Anti-Oedipusis a major critique of the Freudian model of psychoanalysis that has also been influential in academia. 

Another classic recommendation from a member of the group is Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth or Black Skin, White Masks

And with that, I've revisited a chunk of my time in graduate school in the mid-1990s. 


(theme song for this entry "Where is My Mind?" by the Pixies) 


There are also a number of recent academic books that I haven't read, but which are among those "highly anticipated" or duly celebrated award-winners:  

Marr Jurelle Bruce, How to go Mad Without Losing Your Mind: Madness and Black Radical Creativity

Mab Segrest, Administrations of Lunacy: The Haunting of American Psychiatry at the Milledgeville Asylum

Regina Kunzel, In the Shadow of Diagnosis: Psychiatric Power and Queer Life

Also recent, Adam Shatz's The Rebel's Clinic: the Revolutionary Lives of Frantz Fanon is about Frantz Fanon's work and has been popular with members of the challenge. 

When I checked in with members of the challenge facebook group, I got a variety of recommendations for books, including 

Art therapist Sandra Magsamen and Ivy Ross's, Your Brain on Art: How Art Transforms Us.

Alicia Elliot's memoir, A Mind Spread Out on the Ground which connects mental health and illness to Mohawk experience and settler colonialism. 

Susan Kaysen's Girl, Interrupted, a literary memoir about the experience of being locked in a mental institution in the late 1960s. 

Alan Reeve's Notes from a Waiting Room, published in 1983, is a memoir chronicling the author's 17 years in the UK's Broadmoor mental institution, his eventual escape, and his engagement with radical politics. 

Other memoirs that readers in the challenge have read include comedian, Fern Brady's Strong Female Character and novelist, Viet Thanh Nguyen's A Man with Two Faces: A Memoir, A History, A Memorial. Both of these look fascinating to me. I really loved Nguyen's novel the Sympathizer, and had seen it was out, but didn't realize that the Man With Two Faces is a memoir. A couple of years ago, for a book club, I read Claire Vaye Watkins' I Love You, But I've Chosen Darkness which is about post-partum depression, among other things. I didn't love the book, but it did leave a lasting impression. 

Kaysen's book got higher marks than Sylvia Plath's classic novel, The Bell Jar which one of our challengers read, but left non-plussed. I remember being very moved by it as a teenager in the 1980s, but I haven't read it since then, and today if you bop around the web, you will see people assailing it for its casual racism. 



Wednesday, July 10, 2024

Final Extra Credit Categories in this year's reading challenge!


Hello there, reading friends

 I haven't posted here in a while because I've been trying to get some research done and have been having a pretty busy summer. I will get back to posting cateogry recommendations soon. However, the big news is that the challenge FB group has voted on the the 2 10th anniversary bonus extra-credit categories. These are

19: A book about class and
20. A book about natural disaster and/or natural disaster response. 
 

 The complete list is here: 


1. A book by a friend, colleague, former teacher or former student (10)
 2. a book by a Palestinian author (10)
3. A book by an author you've seen cited or heard about a lot but never read (10)
4. a book about housing, homelessness, and/or the use of urban space (20)
5. a book written in the 1960s (10)
6. A book that you've owned for a long time but have never read (10)
7. A book about a rural location or rural life in general (in any country) (20)
8. A book by a winner of the Nobel Prize for literature (10)
9. A book that won an academic prize (20)
10. A book about conspiracy theories or "conspiracism" (10)
11. A book about mental health/illness (20)
12. A book of fiction in which a non-human animal is a major character, or in which non-human animals feature significantly in the plot (10)
13. A book published before 1900 (10)
14. A book about a specific election or elections in general (10)
15. A book about a place you've visited for no longer than a month (20)
Extra Credit:
16. Extra-Credit: A book about the effect of a disease outbreak or epidemic on religion (20)
17. Extra Extra-Credit: A book by a recently-ish deceased author (10)
18. Super-Duper Extra Credit: A special issue of an academic journal (20)
10th anniversary bonus categories!
19. A book about class
20. A book about natural disaster and/or natural disaster response

Tuesday, May 21, 2024

Bout of Books 40 Wrap-Up

 I didn't read as much as I had hoped to during the bout of books week, considering that this time of year is generally a good one for me to be reading. I think the main problem was that I started with Isaac-Dovere's Battle for the Soul, which I made some headway in, though I'm beginning to find it to be a  a slog. 

However, I did finish Michael Gould Wartofksy's The Occupiers, which I was reading to prepare for my fall seminar, and found it quite a quick and informative study. I'm looking forward to teaching it. I also finished the audiobook of Ian Rankin's Strip Jack, which I had almost finished, but then forgot about for a while - not the best Rankin mystery. I also started reading John Scalzi's Starter Villain, which is quite entertaining. Not only is it nominated for the best novel Hugo (though I doubt I'll be voting for it), but the artist who did the cover, Tristan Ellwell is also nominated for best professional artist.

Thursday, May 16, 2024

Bout of Books 40 Update - Monday-Wednesday

 I read a little bit in the morning, but spent most of Monday at a work mini-conference and then had a post-work plan with a friend, so I didn't get much reading done on the first day of this readathon. 

On Tuesday, I read about 40 pages of Edward-Isaac Dovere's Battle for the Soul and 75 pages of Michael Gould-Wartofksy's The Occupiers, which is my 'read-for-work' book of the moment. This was my best day so far. 

On Wednesday, I had hopes to match Tuesday, but I was distracted and didn't read that much, though I did pick up three books at the public library (two holds that came in: Volker Ulrich,Germany 1923, Calla Henkel, Other People's Clothes and impulse shelf pick of John Safran, God'll Cut You Down) as well as several comics at the comics shop in the evening, including the first two issues of Matt Kindt's new series If You Find This I'm Already Dead which had been accumulating in the "large issues" box along with Jeff Lemire's new run of Swamp Thing

Today's music, in honor of reading about Occupy Wall Street is Lupe Fiasco's anthem, with video brought to you by "Shit Scott Walker is Doing to My State" (what that SSWIDTMS stamped on the video means).



I forgot to do the last couple of photo challenges, so I'll have to start doing those again. I guess I still have 4 potential good reading days before this week is over. Onward! 

Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Academic Reading Challenge Recommendation: Book About an Election or Elections in General

 I was kind of surprised that category 14, Book about an election or elections in general got chosen by the group since this kind of focus in politics can become tedious. However, it is an election year, and we're surrounded by election talk. It seems reasonable to read something about an election, including things that could help put current politics in context. 

This entry's theme song is Black Sheep's "The Choice is Yours" with the chorus that Billboard tells me sums up every election "you can get with this or you can get with that." 



The one that I've chosen to read myself, and which I'm currently about 1/4 of the way through is Edward-Isaac Dovere's book Battle for the Soul: Inside the Democrats' Campaigns to Defeat Trump. This is the sort of book that probably turns a lot of people off from reading books about elections. It's a very standard political journalist's take, not an academic analysis, and certainly not a book with a point of view from the left. However, if you want to read an account that includes a lot of detailed "political insider" stuff about the internal politics of various campaigns building up to 2020, this isn't a bad read. I don't agree with a lot of Dovere's judgments of particular policies or politicians, but it's useful to know what those judgments are as I believe they are shared by a lot of people with political power. This is very much an example of American political "common sense," which can make it unintentionally infuriating. Other books about the 2020 election that are worth reading include Mark Bowden and Matthew Teague's The Steal which describes Trump's efforts to undo the results. I read this back when it first came out, and it was very similar to what you might have learned if you watched the January 6th hearings. Another choice might be the Congress's January 6th Report - though consider which edition to get. I got the one with Ari Melber's introduction on the recommendation of my local bookseller. 

A search for books about the 2016 election led me immediately to the role of Russian propaganda in that election. Probably the most authoritative academic study of that attempt is political scientist, Kathleen Hall-Jamieson's book Cyberwar which came out in the fall of 2018. After finding that, I went searching for books about "election meddling" that would cover the US's interference in other countries' elections, and came across this 2021 study Meddling in the Ballot Box by International Relations professor, Dov Levin, which compares Russian and US electoral interference efforts from 1946 to 2000. Another interesting book that addresses recent elections outside the United States is Leslie C. Gates's Capitalist Outsiders about the influence of oil on the politics of Mexico and Venezuela. Another book that begins with a recent election in Latin America is Sebastian Edwards' The Chile Project which includes substantial discussion of the role of the US in undermining democracy in Chile, but also tells the story of the election of Gabriel Boric in 2021. Rather than being a story of the rise of neoliberalism, it's about neoliberalism's fall. Another book about elections and electoral activity outside the U.S., but involving U.S. influence is Amy Wilentz's  The Rainy Season: Haiti Then and Now which updates the author's classic account of the immediate aftermath of the fall of "Baby Doc" Duvalier in Haiti and goes into the 2000s. 

For books about the mixing of elections and criminal conspiracies, why not read about Richard Nixon's rise and fall in the U.S? There are many books to choose from. There's Hunter S. Thompson's Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail in '72 based on his reports for Rolling Stone. I read this book years ago in the summer between my senior year in high school and first year in college, and remember finding it both prescient and hilarious. Or, you could read the classic Joe McGinnis book, The Selling of the President 1968 which features Roger Ailes, who sadly continued to influence American politics for years to come. A relatively recent book on the 1968 election is Aram Goudsouzian's The Men and the Moment, which is also about Nixon's opponents. And of course, you could go for any book on Watergate. There are so many to choose from, starting with the original All the President's Men that made so many people want to be investigative reporters, to the more recent book by Garrett Graff, Watergate: A New History

 While electoral play-by-plays can be interesting, elections can also be sites of analysis to understand broader political context. One example of such a book is political scientist, Joe Lowndes' book From the New Deal to the New Right: Race and the Southern Origins of Modern Conservatism which builds from 1948's Dixiecrats to the George Wallace campaigns as a key to understanding the contemporary right.  Speaking of 1948, you could pick one of THREE recent books on Henry Wallace and the 1948 US presidential campaign. There's Ben Steil's The World That Wasn't, published this year, John Nichols' Fight for the Soul of the Democratic Party and Thomas Devine's Henry Wallace's 1948 Presidential Campaign and the Future of American Postwar Liberalism

  If you're more interested in the slightly more recent past, you might want to check out Robert Fleegler's Brutal Campaign about the Bush vs. Dukakis contest in 1988.  This was the same period when David Duke ran for the Louisiana state legislature, sparking an early anti-fascist campaign to stop him. Tyler Bridges' book The Rise and Fall of David Duke could be a great choice for this category. Or, if you're interested in a more academic account, you might take a look at the edited collection from U. of Vanderbilt Press, David Duke and the Politics of Race in the South

If you're interested in going even further back in US electoral history to get at the roots of this situation, a friend and mentor of mine recommends Morgan Kousser's The Shaping of Southern Politics, originally published in 1974 as "the best of the older histories" about the establishment of the Democratic Party's one-party white-supremacist rule of the US South in the late nineteenth century. 

If you want to read about elections in Europe, you could go with a real classic, Karl Marx's Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte which is about a coup, but also includes a lot of discussion of elections that preceded it. This is really an indispensible book for anyone interested in political analysis in my view.   Another book that concerns a set of specific elections that ends with the end of elections is Benjamin Carter Hett's book about the immediate rise of Hitler, The Death of Democracy which gets into the details of the German parliament during the Weimar period, and also was written in such a way as to highlight parallels with the Trump era. I am not sure how much this book on Silvio Berlusconi focuses on the ins and outs of specific elections, but it looks like it has at least some discussion of the media and "the democratic process" and might be worth a look. For another account of contemporary far-right authoritarianism, Paul Lendvai's book on Viktor Orban, Orban: Hungary's Strongman includes a significant amount of discussion of his path to electoral victory. 

Another book about the election of a major far-right leader outside the US, is the popular book on Modi's election in 2014 by journalist, Rajdeep Sardesai, 2014: The Election that Changed India. I haven't read this book, but the Goodreads reviews from BJP supporters are very negative, which suggests it's a critical analysis of Hindu nationalism. 

A friend who's participating in the reading challenge reminded me that there are also novels about elections. 

One of those is Edwin O'Connor's The Last Hurrah, a classic work about a mayoral race in Boston that was adapted into a movie starring Spencer Tracey. It's now out in a new edition from the University of Chicago Press.  

But if a mayoral race is too serious for you, you could try Tom Perotta's popular novel about a high school class-president race, Election, which was also adapted into a (very funny) movie. 

Philip Roth's The Plot Against America got a second lease on life because of Trump, and also a TV series adaptation. It's one of his better novels, in my view, though I found the ending a bit strange.






Sunday, May 12, 2024

Bout of Books 40 - Sign-Up Post

 

The May Bout of Books is the one that gives me the best chance to actually do some substantial reading. My grades are turned in, the big indie-rock festival I go to every spring is over. The only thing stopping me this week is one all-day mini-conference thing at work on Monday. After that, I should be unscheduled and ready to read. What is Bout of Books? According to the hosts,
The Bout of Books readathon is organized by Amanda Shofner and Kelly Rubidoux Apple. It’s a weeklong readathon that begins 12:01am Monday, May 13th and runs through Sunday, May 19th in YOUR time zone. Bout of Books is low-pressure. There are reading sprints, daily Discord questions, and exclusive Instagram challenges, but they’re all completely optional. For all Bout of Books 40 information and updates, be sure to visit the Bout of Books blog. - From the Bout of Books team
I noticed that they've moved the scheduled chats from the sewer that is Twitter/X to Discord which is nice, though I rarely remember to participate in the chats.

 I've been trying to figure out what I really want to focus on reading this month for my research. I've been working on two different books over the last few years, and summer is the only time I really have to do research. One of these books is about "geek culture" and political conflict in science-fiction and fantasy, which I've been calling "Geek Wars" as a working title. The other one is about anti-fascist politics in the U.S. But I have a couple of other pressing work-related things to do that involve reading. I'm teaching a brand new graduate course in the fall, and need to prepare for that. I've also got a book review to write this summer - and both the book review and the new graduate course are related to the project on anti-fascism. I always try to do at least some "non-work" reading as well, and those books continue to be tempting. 

So far, I'm thinking I'll continue reading Battle for the Soul: Inside the Democrats' Campaigns to Defeat Trump, which was my choice for the academic reading challenge category 14: "book about an election or elections in general." It's not the best book about an election, but it's a detailed account of the backroom politics of a lot of capmaigns and Democratic strategizing over the last 8 years or so, so is worth reading. 

 I'm also going to continue reading Michael A. Gould-Wartofsky's The Occupiers: the Making of the 99 Percent Movement, which I'll be teaching in that grad seminar in the fall. 

 If I have time, I'm going to go back to Jo Walton's Informal History of the Hugos, which has the benefit of being both fun and related to the "geek wars" project. A less fun book that I started reading for "Geek Wars" before I was forced to focus all my energy on teaching last spring is the Routledge Companion to Science Fiction by Mark Bould and Sherryl Vint (the edition I have doesn't include Adam Roberts).

 I have already given up on this week's book-club selection, 2312 which I'm having trouble getting into, and which is just too long to finish in a couple of days, even if I was really loving it. 

 I guess we'll see what happens. Hopefully I'll be able to settle down and focus on reading something, as I've been very distracted for the last week.

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Academic Reading Challenge Recommendations: Books by Recently-ish Deceased Authors (Extra-Credit Category)

I've been super busy with work this spring, so I haven't had an opportunity to post for a while, but I'm finally getting around to this one. I just finished reading my own choice for this category, which was Russel Banks' novel The Darling about a white woman from the Weather Underground who winds up in Liberia, married to a government minister, and then involved in the civil war between Charles Taylor, Prince Johnson and Samuel Doe. The reason for this category's entry into into the challenge was that one of my friends really wanted to read another book by Banks, and thus "rigged" the cateogory. Thankfully, others were interested in reading books by the recently departed.  This category may seem a little maudlin or macabre, but it's true that writers who we may not have paid attention to in life get more attention when they die because of the obituaries that come out. 

Sadly there are many eligible people for this category. Since this category is "recently-ish" I've decided that means within the last five years. I decided to only include authors whose work I've read myself and remember well enough to really talk about, though of course there have been some recent major literary deaths that I haven't included below. 

Since several of the authors I chose were fierce critics of the US government, but also knew, "it's not just American where shit's fucked up." today's musical accompaniment comes from the late Jaimie Branch, a fantastic jazz musician who died in 2022, playing "Prayer for AmeriKKKa pt 1 and 2" 



Here are my suggestions: 

1. Russell Banks Since I've already mentioned him, here's why you should read a book by him. Banks is a meticulous writer who creates wonderfully believable characters. For example, in the Darling, his point-of-view character is Hannah Musgrave, a white woman activist from the 60s, told in flashback from the early 1990s. It never felt "off" to me at all. He also takes on serious political issues without being didactic. I say he's meticulous because so many of his novels are also about distinct historical periods - such as his book Cloudsplitter, about John Brown, which is probably the best work of fiction about John Brown and abolition in general. 

2. Toni Morrison This is my second recommendation for her for one of the reading challenge categories. She counts for this category because she died in 2019, within the last five years. 

3.I've also previously recommended Mike Davis for this reading challenge. He was a prolific writer, and while my first recommendation was in the books about cities category, he also wrote books about other subjects that are very much worth reading, such as his classic book on the American working class, Prisoners of the American Dream

4. The great British novelist, A.S. Byatt  died last year. Her book Possession is one of my all-time favorite books. I re-read a few years ago for one of these reading challenges, and it was still just as fun as the first time. She's also the author of many other books that are probably also excellent. 

5. Another great British novelist, and the winner of two Booker prizes, Hilary Mantel, who suffered from illness for most of her life, died in 2022. As the linked obituary reads, she is most well-known for her amazing historical novels about Thomas Cromwell, starting with Wolf Hall. I also loved her novel Beyond Black sort of like magical realism in British suburbia.

6. If you're looking for an excellent academic book to read by a recently deceased scholar of American empire, Amy Kaplan would be a wonderful author to read at this particular moment because of the way she brought together literary and cultural criticism and analysis of US foreign policy. Her 2018 book Our American Israel, would be an especially good choice this year. 

7. Another great anti-imperialist writer was Sven Lindquist, who died in 2019. His short book Exterminate All the Brutes is one that most of my friends read when it first came out in translation. In it, he writes “We want genocide to have begun and ended with nazism....That is what is most comforting.” 

8. If you'd rather read something lighter, try something by Barbara Neely, the author of the wonderful mystery series featuring Blanche White. This article from Lit Hub's "Crime Reads" newsletter explains her activist history and influence on a younger generation of Black women mystery writers.  

9. If you want a mix of foreign policy commentary with genre fiction, you cannot do better than John Le Carre, who, like Neely, died in 2020. He certainly wrote plenty of books to choose from. 

10. The last author whose work I've read and who I highly recommend in this category is the most recently deceased, Maryse Conde who died just last month. Her book I, Tituba, Black Witch of Salem, is one that I taught when I was still teaching literature classes. You can read Lit Hub's profile of her at the link above.

11. Speaking of Lit Hub, I suggest reviewing their annual summaries of notable literary deaths I found out more about recently-deceased Syrian author, Khaled Khalifa by reviewing those lists this morning. 

Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Academic Reading Challenge Recommendations: Fiction about Non-Human Animals


 I've been too busy to do a recommendation post for a while, but here I am again wtih recommendations for category 12:  A book of fiction in which a non-human animal is a major character, or in which non-human animals feature significantly in the plot. 

At first I didn't think there would be that many books that would fit this category, but then I realized that there's so much to choose from in this category. There are many books written from an animal's point of view, books about alien animal species, books in which animals figure significantly without being central characters, and science-fiction books about "uplifted animals" who have been genetically modified to have human-like intelligence. 

I got some excellent suggestions for this category from members of the reading challenge Facebook group, as well as a new "bookish" social group that a friend of mine has created for his friends that like to read and talk about books without being members of a regular book club. It also just so happens that the science fiction book club that I'm in chose to read a book about uplifted animals for our March meeting, so I got some ideas from that list of options as well. 

This post's theme-song is Foals' "Providence" 

 



1. One of my favorite books,and one of the first to be recommended by a member of the challenge facebook group was the science-fiction book, Borne by Jeff VanderMeer. This book began a series and all of it includes significant animal characters, so any of them could count. VanderMeer's interest in animals and ecology would also make some of his other writings work for this challenge, including the excellent Southern Reach trilogy.  

2. Another alien-animal series begins with Nicky Drayden's book Escaping Exodus which includes an organic space-ship. It comes recommended by another challenge participant. The same member of the group also recommends The Last Animal, which she described as addressing a number of fascinating issues such as cloning, research ethics, grief, and sexism. 

3, Because I was reading their review of Borne, Publisher's Weekly's algorithm just suggested this forthcoming book by Julia Phillips, author of The Disappearing Earth. If you can wait until June to read this category, why not try out Bear, which sounds like it's influenced both by ecology and fairy tales. 

4. Also from the facebook group, comes a recommendation for Bernard Malamud's God's Grace which, like some of the others listed here is also a dystopian novel, and according to the challenge participant "gets weird." 

5. I thought of this entire category because I recently stumbled across the book Barn 8 by Deb Olin Unferth. It's not written from an animal point of view, at least as far as I know, but the whole thing is about a heist by two egg auditors to "steal a million chickens in the middle of the night." I bought it because the cover caught my eye and then the description made it sound like a lot of fun. 

6. There are many classics written from the point of view of animals, and any of them would be great for this category. Consider, for example Watership Down, Animal Farm, Call of the Wild and White Fang; Charlotte's Web, the Metamorphosis paired with lesser-works by Kafka, such as "Josephine the Mouse Singer." There are many children's books in this category, including the Black Stallion books, or, more recently, the huge "warrior cats" series. Just remember that challenge books should be about 200 pages long, so you might need to read a couple to fill the category. 

7. The most classic work in the "uplifted animal" sub-genre is Planet of the Apes, which began as a book in French in 1963. Other works to consider in this category, Adrian Tchaikovsky's Children of Time series, which features a terraformed planet populated by accidentally uplifted spiders and ants, Despite being pretty horrifying as a concept, this book, which I'm currently reading for the SF book club I mentioned, is really good. Some other good uplifted animal books you might consider are Clifford Simak's City, in which dogs narrate the end of human civilization,  Lawrence Schoen's Barsk; The Elephant's Graveyard, and Robert Repino's Mort(e): War With No Name, featuring a house-cat turned assassin.   

8. Many of the members of the bookish club recently read the short novel, Open Throat written from the point of view of a mountain lion in the Hollywood Hills, which is part of this year's Tournament of Books. They really, really liked it, finding the animal's point of view narrative very interestingly non-human.

9. I've already mentioned this book in my recommendations of Nobel Prize winners, but Olga Tokarczuk's Drive Your Plow over the Bones of the Dead is another great book in which animals feature significantly in the plot without being point-of-view characters. 

10. Sigrid Nunez's The Friend is another non-science fiction work in which an animal figures significantly in the plot. This book is as much about relationships among humans as it is about animals, but it explores the importance of animal companions to humans.

I think I'll stop there, but if you find something else that looks good, feel free to mention it in the comments. 

Sunday, February 11, 2024

Academic Reading Challenge Recommendations: Books About Conspiracy Theories or Conspiracism

 

Category ten this year is a “book about conspiracies or conspiracism.”  Because of the research I’ve been doing on opposition to the far-right, this is one category where I’ve read enough to make some general observations about the scholarship.  It’s also a category in which new books, and new editions of old books come out at a fast clip, so there’s just a ridiculous amount to choose from. As usual, I’m including a mix of journalistic and more academic works, though I’ve only included one novel.

My general observation about scholarship on conspiracy theory is that it’s closely tied to scholarship on populism, and thus tends to be divided in similar ways to that scholarship. The books that come to the quickest and easiest condemnations of conspiracy theory are by defenders of liberal democratic institutions who find both left and right populisms to be dangerous to liberal democracy. Richard Hofstadter’s Paranoid Style in American Politics, while written mostly in opposition to right-wing populism, also identifies left populism as paranoid, and is the foundational work for most liberal critics of conspiracy theory. Frederic Jameson’s description of conspiracy theory as a “poor person’s cognitive mapping” is a Marxist analysis similar to Ferdinand Kronawetter's description of anti-Semitism as the “socialism of fools" (this phrase is often attributed to August Bebel). Jameson rejects conspiracy theories while also advocating for left critique of liberal capitalism. Since the 1990s, academic analyses of conspiracy theories have largely aligned either with one of these two central arguments or have been written against them. Those scholars influenced by post-modern theory oppose Hofstadter thesis for its own defense of establishment common sense and Jameson’s for what they see as “dismissal” of popular anti-establishment ideas and over-zealous rationalism. I would call these recent critics of anti-conspiracy theory writers as more populist than leftist as they are defending conspiracy theorizing on the basis that it represents an “anti-establishment” position, while depicting even left critics of conspiracy theory as aligned with various “authorities.” They argue for the radical potential in conspiracy theory, sometimes by pointing out that “real conspiracies” do exist.

 My own view is that left scholars accommodate conspiracy theory and repudiate efforts to disprove or debunk them at our peril. Conspiracy theory may be understandably anti-establishment and even exhilarating, but that’s what makes it more dangerous than more traditional conservative politics. The problem is not that it is “pseudo-conservative,” to use Richard Hofstadter’s term, so much as it is “pseudo-left.”  The left populist academic effort to salvage conspiracy theory for as imanent radicalism fails to account for right-wing populism. I think this blindness to right-wing anti-establishment discourse is related to this group's general emphasis on opposing liberalism (and sometimes Marxism) as more hegemonic than they are. Their identification of liberal and left enemies as the most important ones means that they have a relatively simple understanding of right-wing politics. This also means that their analyses of fascism are similarly wrong-headed. 

The conceptual battle-lines in this case are not between liberalism and populism but between Marxism and populism. Populism is not “almost” Marxism or on the way there, but this idea causes some leftist writers on this issue to be overly charitable to conspiracy theorizing for its anti-liberalism. Rather than leading to more leftist positions eventually, conspiratorial understandings of power may be helpful in explaining why someone who once seemed to be on the left - say, Tom Watson in the 1890s - could become such a vicious right-wing demagogue such a short time later. The answer may be that the person did not “switch” from the left to the right at all, but was the same all along – a populist who aligned with the left on some issues, but with the right on many others. Their underlying analysis was never truly anti-capitalist in most cases, but against specific capitalists, or monopolies, or particular branches of capitalism. Close-reading of these popular "left" thinkers who later shifted right would likely real a consistency in their thinking over time. We don't always see it because many of us just “want to believe” that socialist analysis is more prevalent in popular culture than it is. But, like specific anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, conspiracy theories in general represent “the socialism of fools.”

 Conspiracy theories themselves will more often lead to right-wing xenophobia and anti-Semitism than to leftist analysis of power. Regardless of whether the theory is held on the right or the left, conspiracy theory always leads to an impoverished account of how power works, and thus leads to bad political strategies, if not outright right-wing xenophobia. My point here is not that there are no left populists or that left populists couldn’t change over time and develop better analysis, but that there’s no point in protecting that bad analysis, as if a left critique would somehow hurt the left, or align with power, or as if conspiracy theory were a kind of necessary step on the way to radicalization instead of a problem to be solved.

And with that, here are my recommendations for category 10:

 

1. Naomi Klein’s book Doppelganger was the blockbuster in this category for 2023. It’s the most personal of her books, beginning with her experiences of being confused with Naomi Wolff, the former feminist who became an anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist and now regularly appears on Steve Bannon’s show. This book will be especially interesting for anyone interested in public people (such as Klein’s former colleagues Matt Taibbi and Glenn Greenwald, who are never mentioned in this book) who have made what seem turns from left to right in recent years.  She draws on Quinn Slobodian’s work on what is called “diagonalism” in Germany to explain this phenomenon. Klein’s statement that conspiracy theorists “get the feelings right but he facts wrong,” is a pithy and helpful framing of what goes wrong with conspiracy theories.

2. A related book, which I haven’t read, but know a lot about because I listen to their podcast regularly is Derek Beres, Matthew Remski’s and Julian Walker’s Conspirituality: How New-Age Conspiracy Theories Became a Public Health Threat. The podcast and the book try to explain how health and wellness influencers became increasingly conspiratorial around the Covid-19 pandemic. This book will likely be the best one to read if you are interested in anti-vax politics or Yoga cults, or trying to figure out how legitimate critiques of “big pharma” can go awry.

3. One of the most frequently cited academics on the phenomenon of “conspiracism,” and included in the notes of many journalists’ accounts is Joseph Uscinski, who has written a number of books on conspiracy theories for a variety of audiences. The shortest and most accessible of these is probably Conspiracy Theories: A Primer. He’s also the editor of a very big (500+ pp) collection called Conspiracy Theories and the People Who Believe Them that provides a good survey of differing academic arguments about conspiracy theory, from the Hofstadter supporters to the populist critics of “conspiracy panic.” As with most anthologies, the quality of these pieces varies, but this is a decent book for getting a sense of how social scientists in general write about conspiracy theory and belief. Uscinski’s own most controversial claims are that conspiratorial thinking exists equally on the left and right, and that the amount of conspiracy theorizing hasn’t changed in the last few years. He bases these claims on polls that he’s conducted – so everything rests on whether his polls are reliable.

4. Katheryn Olmstead’s Real Enemies: Conspiracy Theories and American Democracy, World War I to 9/11 is another academic book that has become nearly canonical in scholarship on conspiracy theory. Her general argument is that conspiracy theories by lay-people are related to the existence of real conspiracies and deceptions by people in power, so much of her book cites both the conspiratorial language of the government itself and the existence of actual conspiracies that have justified people’s paranoia.  This book is limited by its focus on the United States and to my view, is overly populist in its approach. That said, it’s still very much worth reading. The book was originally published in 2009, but the new anniversary edition (2019) includes a chapter on the 2016 election, and I’d be curious to see whether Olmstead has become less sanguine about conspiratorial thinking in recent years.

This week's theme song is Rockwell's "Somebody's Watching Me" 



5. Political scientists Russell Muirhead and Nancy Rosenblum’s A Lot of People Are Saying: the New Conspiracism and the Assault on Democracy offers a counter-point to Uscinski’s argument that conspiracism exists equally on the left and right and makes the argument that conspiracy thinking is more common, and more dangerous than ever, on the far right. Although it is written by two political scientists, this is a short and punchy little book written for a popular audience. I haven’t read it, but it’s in my TBR pile right now.

5. Much denser is Thomas Milan Korda’s . Conspriacy of Conspiracies: How Delusions Have Overrun America. He also takes the position that conspiracy theories are more a characteristic of right-wing thought, adopting Richard Hofstadter’s concept of “pseudo-conservatism” in his introduction. Korda’s is the first major historical account of American conspiracy theories by an academic since Olmstead’s. He’s not a historian, but a political scientist, and I haven't read this, but he seems to fall on the more liberal, anti-populist side, winning praise from Michael Barkun.

6. While it’s not entirely about conspiracy theories, I’m including Peter Pomerantsev’s book Nothing is True and Everything is Possible on this list because of how well it explains the rise of popular conspiracism in Russia, given the prominence of Russian disinformation efforts internationally. This book is based on the author’s work at Russian television station in the 1990s and connects conspiracism and the Russian government’s use of media. Pomerantsev has also written a new book called This is Not Propaganda – you can hear him talk about it with Joey Ayoub on his podcast, The Fire These Times

7. If you want to understand both the origins of Alex Jones’s infamous theory that the Sandy Hook preschool shooting was a “false flag” and how that affected the families of children killed there, read Elizabeth Williamson’s Sandy Hook: An American Tragedy

9. Journalist Anna Merlan’s Republic of Lies: American Conspiracy Theorists and their Surprising Rise to Power is an informative, deftly written, and entertaining overview of recent conspiracy theories, beginning with 9/11 conspiracy theories and including discussions of Seth Rich theories, Pizzagate, Sandyhook, anti-vax theories, and UFOs.  Merlan also includes a chapter on “Russiagate.” The book came out in 2019, so it doesn’t include anything about covid-19 or the 2020 election, but it’s got a good general analysis of Trump’s uses of conspiracy theories and the broad appeal of conspiratorial thinking.

10. Mike Rothschild’s The Storm is Upon Us: How QAnon Became a Movement, a Cult, and Conspiracy Theory of Everything was the first of a handful of left reporters’ books on QAnon to come out. It’s a good guide to understanding the phenomenon and its basic history on the internet. Although Rothschild does seek to identify the main people driving the “Q” movement, he is also interested in the rank and file members and how they come to believe in these bizarre theories. He writes about people who “have fallen down the rabbit hole” with sympathy and gives advice to readers who are seeking to help relative and friends leave the “Q” cult.  He continues to be interested in conspiracism’s impact in society. His new book Jewish Space Lasers is about the Rothschild family and conspiracy theories about them. (As he says in his by-lines, he’s no relation).  

11. Kelly Weill’ s Off the Edge: Flat-Earthers, Conspiracy Culture and Why People Will Believe Anything is a journalists’ account of Flat-Earth conspiracy theories. This book is super interesting as an exploration of how conspiratorial thinking works, how communities are built around conspiracy beliefs, and how the internet works to spread even the most bizarre conspiracy theories. Weill also writes with practical goals, and includes a discussion of various debunking techniques and methods that every day people can use to combat conspiracism.

12. Graphic novel champion and comic writer and artist, Will Eisner’s last book was his comic history of the creation and circulation of the infamous forgery, the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. It’s called simply, The Plot It’s a really remarkable achievement in graphic story-telling and includes a comprehensive bibliography and notes, as well as introduction by Umberto Eco.

13. Of all the fictional accounts of conspiracy theories, I most recommend Umberto Eco’s Foucault's Pendulum. Eco has himself been interested in the problems of conspiracy theory and has written extensively about fascism in culture, particularly in response to the rise of the European New Right. I read this book over 30 years ago, in between my shifts as a linecook, but I remember it as being something between a wild romp and a philosophical exercise. 

Sunday, January 28, 2024

Academic Reading Challenge Recommendations: Books about housing, homelessness, and/or the use of urban space

 The reading challenge category 4 is "A book about housing, homelessness, and/or the use of urban space." When thinking of books for the challenge, I realized that the "use of urban space" really opens the category widely to almost any work in urban geography or urban studies more broadly, but I tried to keep these generally connected to issues of inequality in urban space. 

Here are my recommendations for books that could work in this category:

1. Mike Davis is one of the first authors I think of when I think of writing about cities. He was a rare scholar who produced a large number of books that were also really, really good. Many of these books are about cities - in particular, Los Angeles. I read his most famous book on LA, City of Quartz in my first year of grad school in the 1990s, and I still think of it as one of the best books on urban life in America. I have not read his Ecology of Fear, also about Los Angeles, though I could count it for the cateogry "book you've owned for a long time, but never read." Nor have I read his more recent Set the Night on Fire, co-written with Jon Weiner, and about Los Angeles in the 1960s, but that would also work in this category. 

2. Ruth Wilson Gilmore is co-founder of the abolitionist organization, Critical Resistance, and the author of Golden Gulag, a now classic work in the study of the political economy of prisons. Her newest book Abolition Geography, a collection of her essays written over the last 30 years would be an excellent choice for this category for anyone interested in the abolitionist activism, economics and geography of the carceral state. 

3. I live in Atlanta, so of course Dan Immergluck's Red Hot City about Atlanta's rapid gentrification and its broader impact on the city's people has been on my reading list since it first came out. Perhaps ironcially, I found a copy of it in a Little Free Library in my neighborhood. 

4. In 2019, LA Family Housing published an interesting reading list about homelessness that includes both fiction and non-fiction, classics and newer books. From that list, I've read Righteous Dopefiend, which is about a community of drug users living under a freeway overpass in San Francisco. It's an incredible work of ethnography and photography, though more about addiction and harm reduction than urban land use. 

5. A geographer friend of mine reminded me that science-fiction author and socialist, China Mieville has written many novels about very strange cities. Of these The City and the City is my favorite. In it, two cities share the same space, nearly cross-hatched and rubbing shoulders against eachother, but the residents are officially, legally, invisible to each other. He explains the ideas behind the book in this interview with Geoff Manaugh for Bldgblog: it started with the idea of different species living in the same space but experiencing it differently (humans and rats in London) or jurisdictional boundaries in urban spaces. It's all complicated sounding, but the metaphor works and the book is both entertaining and thought-provoking. 

6. Another book that would also work for the category "book written in the 1960s" (but remember only one category for book!) is Lewis Mumford's  The City in History, which comes highly recommended by my geographer friend. I recall reading pieces of this for my doctoral prelim exams, but also reading his much shorter Sticks and Stones - for the same seminar that introduced me to Mike Davis's work. Mumford's a really elegant writer and his work is a great introduction to thinking about architecture and urban space.

7. The title Homelessness is a Housing Problem by Gregg Colburn and Clayton Page Aldern sounds promising. This book is a quantitative explanation of something that seems fairly obvious - homelessness is higher when rental housing markets are tight, and this factor more than any other (poverty rate, drug addiction, etc) causes higher rates of homelessness in a given location. 

This entry's theme song is Living Colour "Open Letter (to a Landlord)" 



8. There are several interesting books in this list of past prize winners from the Urban Affairs Association. Go to the above link to check out Jessica Trounstine, Segregation by Design;  Lawrence J. Vale, Purging the Poorest; Japonica Brown-Saracino, A Neighborhood that Never Changes and Jennifer Clark Uneven Innovation

9. If you haven't read it, Jane Jacobs The Death and Life of Great American Cities is a classic work that continues to be an influence in urban planning

10. It's on every list, so why not this one too? The Pulitzer Prize winning Evicted by Matthew Desmond has been part of the conversation about homelessness in the US since it came out in 2016. I haven't read it, but many people really like it.

11. Another exploration of the anti-state-state is John Arena's Driven from New Orleans. I haven't read this one, but the description says it's about how non-profit organizations drive poor people out of the city and contribute to privatization. 

12. Kristian Karlo Saguin's book about Manila is the most recent winner of the American Association of Geographer's Meridian book prize. It's called Urban Ecologies on the Edge

13. Don Mitchell's book Mean Streets sounds really interesting. The linked review from the Urban Geography Journal summarizes the argument of the book it is not a failure of the system, but "the effective operation of capitalism that creates homelessness."

13. Several years ago I read journalist, Katherine Boo's Behind the Beautiful Forevers which is based on interviews with people living in a slum behind the Mumbai airport, not far from several luxury hotels. It's a devastating book about poverty amidst plenty and one of the most memorable indictments of neoliberalism that I've encountered. 

14. The novelist Aravind Adiga writes about similar themes in fiction. His novels White Tiger (his debut and a Booker Prize winner) and Last Man in Tower are both excellent portrayals of poverty, wealth and corruption in modern India. Last Man in Tower in particular is about housing and real-estate as you might guess from the title.  

15. Another excellent and devastating book is Ann Petry's The Street. I read this book one summer when I was a teenager and all I remember about it is that it I read it in a short period of time and that I became depressed as a consequence - but also loved the book. Might be time to revisit.

Sunday, January 21, 2024

Academic Reading Challenge Recommendations: Books by Palestinian Authors

 The challenge's category two: book by a Palestinian author was the number one category in this year's voting, which doesn't come as a surprise. The US is supporting Israel's terrible military assault on the Palestinian people, and in current US media coverage of that war, Palestinian voices have been few and far between. At the same time, universities and literary organizations have been more than usually brazen in their silencing of supporters of Palestinian rights since last fall. 

A number of organizations and bloggers more knowledgeable than I am have already published lists of things to read by Palestinians, including this recent one from Words Without Borders and this list of "40 Books to Understand Palestine" from Lithub, as well as this much shorter list from Five Books.

I finally decided I would go ahead and give my own recommendations, though I haven't read a lot of these. I figured that it would be worth doing since I'm including academic books as well as some older, but not 1960s classics that might get less publicity from most other book blogs. To find some of these I looked up the publications of Palestinian authors who signed a link denouncing Mahmoud Abbas for statements about the Holocaust in September of this year.  I also got a huge list of recommendations from one of the challenge's long-time participants in our Facebook group. If you join that group, you can see his list there.  

This week's musical theme song is the late Rim Banna's "A Time to Cry: A Lament Over Jerusalem" 


 




I'm going to start with Edward Said, just because he's the author in this category that I'm the most familiar with. I have been reading his work for years, and was lucky enough to see him speak in the 1990s when I was a graduate student. He was eloquent and inspiring, introducing ideas that may have been old for many, but were new and revelatory for me at the time. The most influential of his works in academia is Orientalism, originally published in 1978. On the more immediate situation in Palestine, I would recommend The Politics of Dispossesion, though all of his books are relevant and worth reading.  

A more recent academic book on the history of settler colonialism in Palestine is Sherene Seikaly's Men of Capital which is about Palestinian capitalists under the British mandate. Rashid Khalidi had this to say about it: "Men of Capital is a remarkable achievement. Sherene Seikaly introduces us to the class of Palestinian capitalists, a group too often overlooked in histories of Palestine and Israel, and brilliantly puts them into the context of their time, exploring their group consciousness, hopes, and aspirations. Examining their failures to break through the iron ceiling of Britain's colonial commitment to the Zionist project, Seikaly offers a powerful critique of the strait-jacket of settler colonialism."

Speaking of Rashid Khalidi, I see from the challenge spreadsheet that one of our members has already read his Hundred Years War on Palestine which is on the top of many reading lists for obvious reasons. it looks like a great comprehensive introduction to the history of settler colonialism in Palestine.

Another recent academic book by a Palestinian author is Ashjan Ajour's  Reclaiming Humanity in Palestinian Hunger Strikes. It won the Palestine Book Award in 2022 and has already been recommended by another challenge participant for this year.  Other winners of this prize would also make great choices. You can see a complete list of these book awards here

Published in 2015, so relatively recent by academic standards, Lila Abu-Lughod's Do Muslim Women Need Saving? while not specifically about Palestine, addresses a discourse that is used to justify colonialism in the Middle-East in general. Less recent, but more obviously about Israel and Palestine is her 2008 book, Nakba: Palestine, 1948, and the Claims of Memory Abu-Lughod is a highly-respected feminist anthropologist, and is also the author of the now-classic Writing Women's Worlds about Bedouin women.

Paying homage to Palestinian poet, Mahmoud Darwish's title, Palestine as Metaphor, is the highly-lauded 2016 essay collection Gaza as Metaphor edited by Helga Tawil-Souri and Dina Matar. Not all the authors in the collection are Palestinian, but editors Dina Matar and Tawil-Souri are, and many of the authors of individual essays are as well. Matar has also written a collection of the stories of everday people in Palestine under the title What it Means to be Palestinian

 If you're looking for a novel, Adania Shibli's Minor Detail would also be timely. Shibli was recently  disinvited from the Frankfurt Book fair, and the book fair canceled the celebration of the novel's winning of the 2023 LiBeraturpreis prize for an author from Africa, Asia, Latin America or the Arab world.  

Because I've met her and followed her work for a long time, I'm recommending Suheir Hammad's Born Palestinian, Born Black & the Gaza Suite. Hammad is a poet who was part of the spoken-word scene in the 1990s, and has also been a long-time activist in New York City. To hear and see Hammad read from her poems on Gaza, go to this video from the Palestinian Festival of Literature. 


Probably no list like this would be complete without Mahmood Darwish, a legendary and prolific poet. Here is the profile of him from Words Without Borders. I have not read his work, but if I were going to choose something at this moment, I think I would agree with Lit Hub's recommendation to read his book of interviews, Palestine as Metaphor. Or maybe I would read his collection In the Presence of Absence

Another major Palestinian writer whose works are considered classics is Ghassan Kanafani, whose work was popular in the 1960s. He was assassinated in Lebanon in 1972. His 1966 novella All That's Left to You is set in Gaza and just came out along with some of his stories in a new edition this fall. Some of Kanafani's writing would also work for the category "book written in the 1960s" if you are looking for a way to expand the number of Palestinian writers on your reading list for this year. 

Ghada Karmi was born in Jerusalem and was exiled with her family in 1948. She now lives in London, where she practiced as a doctor with a specialization in medical treatment of refugees. She has written a number of books, including two very well-received memoirs, Return and In Search of Fatima, as well as a 2007 book about the Israel-Palestine conflict entitled Married to Another Man which is based on what seems likely to be an apocryphal story of two rabbis who visited Palestine in the 1890s and remarked that the "bride is beautiful, but she is married to another man." Whether or not the title is based on a fable, Ilan Pappe, whose opinion I tend to trust, called this book a "must read."   

 For a new work of fiction originally written in English, Susan Muaddi Darraj's book Behind You Is the Sea looks interesting to me, though it seems to be more about Palestinian-Americans than about Palestine itself. It's been getting very positive reviews.

Another more recent book popular with literary bloggers and revieweres is Sharon and My Mother in Law: Ramallah Diaries by Suad Amiry. According to review it is about the absurdity of living under occupation, and is described as "hilarious." I thought that might be a good way for those feeling too much despair from the news reports of Israel's ongoing crimes against humanity.  





Friday, January 12, 2024

Academic Reading Challenge Recommendations: Book by a winner of a Nobel Prize for Literature

As before, I'm writing my recommendations in no particular order. Category Eight: book by a winner of a Nobel Prize for Literature is in some ways, quite easy. There's a list of all the prize winners - and it's a finite list of possibilities. On the other hand, there are so many great writers and books to choose from, that choosing just one book to read seems daunting, and reading the list of laureates is guaranteed to give you "FOMO" when you finally choose something. 

In honor of the prestige of the Nobel, this entry's theme song is "The Greatest" by Cat Power: 




Here are my top-ten, some are chosen because they're authors whose work I already know and love. Others I've chosen because I've never read them, but want to, and some, well, I chose because they have particular relevance for work I'm in the process of doing right now.

1. As suggested above, it's an easy choice to read a book by Toni Morrison, whose novel Beloved is, to my mind, the greatest American novel of the 20th century. If you've already read that one, she has many other books to choose from, several of which have been in the news lately because her work has been targeted by right-wingers.

2. Abdulrazak Gurnah is a writer I'm not at all familiar with, but the themes identified by the Nobel Committee seem appropriate for our current moment. Here's a review of his book Paradise which is set in colonial East Africa.

3. Jose Saramago is someone whose work I'm very interested in, have heard a lot about, but I've never had the pleasure of reading. Recently, another participant in the challenge recommended his novel Raised from the Ground as a great option for the "rural life" category, though remember if you read him for this category, that book won't also count for the "rural life" category. Only one category per book. 

4. Derek Walcott is a wonderful poet and has many collections of poems that you could choose from. He's also a playwright. Here's an example of his work that you can read on his page at the National Poetry Foundation website. 

5. I was shocked when Olga Tokarczuk won a Nobel, simply because she is so young. However, her book Drive Your Plow over the Bones of the Dead which I read for a book club, was one of the best novels I've read in the last ten years. 

6. Gabriel Garcia Marquez is an other easy, much beloved choice. If you haven't read One Hundred Years of Solitude it's simply a fantastic, unforgettable novel. The last time I read it was over 30 years ago  - maybe it's time to revisit.

7. Thomas Mann is a writer who I'm particularly interested in reading right now, but more because of his extra-literary activities. Despite being deeply resented by less famous and more radical members of the community, he was an important spokesman for the anti-Fascist German emigre community in the United States during WWII. 

8. Isaac Beshevis Singer is an old favorite of mine. I read several of his novels when I was in high school - I can't remember why. I'd go back and read The Family Moskat which I believe once started, but never finished. 

9. A less-well known literary anti-fascist (because he was trapped in Spain after Franco's victory and his works were banned there) is 1977 winner, Vincente Aleixandre.  I had never heard of him before perusing the Laureates list, but he looks very interesting.

10. Wow, this list has a lot of men on it. My tenth recommendation is for Annie Ernaux particularly in this moment, because of her outspoken feminism and support for Palestinian rights

Friday, January 5, 2024

Academic Reading Challenge Recommendations: Books about Rural Life

 This year I'm trying to write on this blog more frequently, both about books and music, and I also want to do more to publicize the academic reading challenge. If you're looking for ideas for things to read for the different categories, I'm going to post a set of recommendations for each one as regularly as I can. 

Since I am better read in some of these categories than others, I'm not going to go in numerical order by prompt. Today's prompt is category 7: A book about a rural location or rural life in general (in any country)

Since a lot of the books I found are about the integration of rural areas into broader global economic circuits instead of being seen as isolated and remote, I thought Lucinda Williams' classic "Car Wheels on a Gravel Road" would be a good into to this entry.  






For me the first thing that comes to mind when I think of academic books about rural life is Marxist literature on peasant societies, but of course, there are many others types of books one could read. Here are some interesting ones, both academic and not. Note: I have not read all of these!  

William Garriot, Policing Methamphetamine: Narcopolitics in Rural America,  I read this several years ago and wound up using a chapter of it in a class I teach on prisons that is organized around rural, urban and suburban settings. It's both academically rigorous and easy to read - a short ethnographic account of the impact of meth policing in Appalachia. 

Navied Mahdavian, This Country I haven't read this one, but someone in my social media networks is reading it, and it looks pretty cool. It's a graphic memoir about an Iranian-American cartoonist's move from San Francisco to rural Idaho with his wife, a documentary film-maker. The link goes to his website, where you can see samples of the artwork.

Ngugi wa Thiong'o's Petals of Blood is a classic novel set in a village in post-colonial Kenya. Originally published in 1977, it led to the author's imprisonment by the Kenyan government, and an international protest campaign on his behalf. 

E.P. Thompson, Whigs and Hunters: The Origin of the Black Act I read this book for the 2nd year of the reading challenge - though I don't now remember what category. I am a huge fan of E.P. Thompson, as most left historians are. This book is about rules of property and criminal law in 18th century England, and it's just an excellent book about class and criminal justice. 

Also about rural England, I have it on good authority that Vron Ware's Return of a Native is "fabulous" from cover-to-cover. Here's a cool video of her talking about it with another great scholar and writer. 



Another of my favorite historians, Robin D.G.Kelley's book, Hammer and Hoe,is not entirely about rural life, but is mostly so. It is a fantastic history of Alabama activists in the Communist Party during the Great Depression.This was and still is a hugely influential book in American left and labor history - and Kelley is another historian who's influenced by the work of E.P. Thompson. 

Speaking of  Thompson's Whigs and Hunters, I recently saw it cited in a book I read for the challenge last year -for the category "a book about the natural environment that draws on academic research." That book was Lyndsie Bourgon's Tree Thieves: Crime and Survival in North America's Woods. The rural life in this described is mostly in the Pacific Northwest, as her main subject is timber poaching around the Redwood National Forest. She also has a brief discussion of the impact of the timber industry and poaching practices in the Amazon.

In my search for books about Africa by African scholars, I came across Safari Nation: A Social History of the Kruger National Park by Jacob Dlamini, which looks really interesting. Dlamini is from South Africa and won the AHA's Martin Klein Prize for best book in African hisotry in 2021 as well as the University of Johannesburg Book prize for this book.  

If you're interested in African history, the Ohio University Press's "New African Histories Series" includes a number of fascinating titles.  Alice Wiemers' Village Work looks like it would be an interesting one for anyone interested in village life with an emphasis on the state.  There are another couple of books in that series that might be about rural life, though it's hard to tell from just the titles and brief synopses. Check out the series page. An older book by one of the series founders (but with a different press) is Jean Allman's I Will Not Eat a Stone: A Woman's History of Colonial Asante,

I found several other interesting sounding books by searching for prize-winners in rural sociology and anthropology, and doing some keyword searching for book reviews on JSTOR. 

Coffee and Community by Sarah Lyon won a prize from the Society for Economic Anthropology. It's an analysis of a Mayan farm cooperative in Guatemala as a case-study analysis of the fair trade movement as it is experienced by producers.  Kristen Phillips won the same prize for her study of Tanzanian subsistence farmers, An Ethnography of Hunger. Another prize-winner from this organization is Sarah Besky's The Darjeeling Distinction which is about fair-trade tea plantations in India.  (note - any of these three books could be read for the "book that won an academic prize" category if you're looking for something for that category, but then they can't count for the "book about rural life" category.)  Not a prize-winner in this category, but in a similar vein is Sarah Osterhoudt's Vanilla Landscapes which is an ethnography based on vanilla farming in Madagascar. Another book about rural economies is Kathleen Schwartzman's intriguingly titled The Chicken Trail which follows migrant workers across the Americas through the poultry industry.

For work on USian farmworkers of various types, a good friend suggested Frank Bardacke's Trampling out the Vintage as the best book on the United Farm Workers. Other recommendations from this friend on American rural labor include Jarod Roll's Spirit of Rebellion and H.L. Mitchell's classic, Roll the Union On about the Southern Tenant Farmers Union. Conversely, if you're looking for a book on rural conservatism, you might want to read Katherine J. Cramer's The Politics of Resentment: Rural Consciousness in Wisconsin and the Rise of Scott Walker. This book came out before Trump was elected and is among the most prescient of the books on "red state America" that have come out in recent years.