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February 12, 2008

The Columbia Encyclopedia of Modern Drama Wins the PSP Award for Best Reference Work

On February 7th, the Professional and Scholarly Publishing Division of the Association of American Publishers named The Columbia Encyclopedia of Modern Drama, edited by Gabrielle H. Cody and Evert Sprinchorn, as Best of Reference for 2007 as part of the...

February 12, 2008

Black History Month II: Focus on Literature

In The Columbia Guide to Contemporary African American Literature, winner of the Before Columbus Foundations 2006 American Book Awards, Darryl Dickson-Carr has written a definitive guide to contemporary African American literature from Ishmael Reed and Toni Morrison to Colson Whitehead...

February 11, 2008

Reviews of Mountains Painted with Turmeric

Modern Nepali fiction might not have the same recognition as modern British fiction or modern Chinese fiction but that should not blind readers to the interesting, if hard to find, works from the country. The recent publication of the modern...

February 8, 2008

"I Miss the Old New York Sounds of My 50's Childhood"

This quote comes from a recent online chat Seth Lerer had on the Web site wordsmith.org to discuss his book Inventing English: A Portable History of the Language. Lerer explores a variety of questions related to the history and possible...

February 7, 2008

Edward Said: Literary and Music Critic

As a thinker and intellectual Edward Said defied easy categorization. He was a leading figure in the development of postcolonial criticism, a political activist, and a music critic for The Nation and other publications. In recent weeks, Columbia has published...

February 6, 2008

Books for the Candidates

With “Super Tuesday” settling the presidential field (sort of ), candidates can return to the issues. Over the next few weeks, we will offer some reading suggestions for Clinton, Obama, McCain, Huckabee, and others. The first on our list is...

February 5, 2008

Author Events for the Week of Feb 4

From Hollywood’s Censor to the philosophy of Thomas Hobbes to media depictions of women in the Iraq War, there are several opportunities to hear a Columbia University Press author. On Tuesday, February 5 at 6:00 pm, James Martel will discuss...

February 5, 2008

The Cinema of Todd Haynes

Brilliant and grounbreaking to some, inscrutable and frustrating to others, I’m Not There, Todd Haynes’s newest film a bio-pic of Bob Dylan has garnered its fair share of opinions—almost none ambivalent. Whatever your opinion of Haynes’s latest it is certainly...

February 4, 2008

Black History Month

February marks Black History Month and in honor of the wealth of scholarship that the Press has published on the subject, we will be featuring titles throughout the month that examine African American history and culture. The first book is...

February 1, 2008

Playing Politics with Terrorism

Have you ever wondered if politicians are being totally forthcoming about the threat of terrorism in your country? Have you ever wondered if they might be exaggerating for their own benefit? George Kassimeris did, and he’s put together an excellent...

January 31, 2008

Herve This Heads West

Considered by many to be the father of the molecular gastronomy movement, Hervé This has been changing the way the world approaches cooking; bringing a scientific sensibility to bear on the common problems all cooks face. His books Molecular Gastronomy...

January 30, 2008

Frontline Pakistan

An October headline in Newsweek magazine declared that the most dangerous nation in the world isn’t Iraq—it’s Pakistan. Earlier in October the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, the social unrest set off by the assassination, and the subsequent state of emergency...

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