91B0FBB4-04A9-D5D7-16F0F3976AA697ED
9D9EFF11-C715-B4AD-C419B3380BA70DA7
  • Dean of the Faculty Joseph Urgo is the co-editor of a new book on William Faulkner, Faulkner and Material Culture published by University Press of Mississippi. It is co-edited with Ann J. Abadie, associate director of Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi. Faulkner and Material Culture is a collection of essays originally presented at the annual Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha conference in July, 2004, in Mississippi.

  • The second Faulkner book co-edited by Dean of the Faculty Joseph Urgo is Faulkner's Inheritance, co-edited with Ann J. Abadie, associate director of Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi, (University Press of Mississippi). The book is a collection of essays originally presented at the annual Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha conference in 2005 in Mississippi.

  • This book is an examination of a religion in flux — one that speaks to the growing popularity of evangelicalism in America and to the broader pathways of religious change.

  • Margaret Thickstun, the Elizabeth J. McCormack Professor of English Literature, has published a book, Milton's Paradise Lost: Moral Education (Palgrave Macmillan, April 17, 2007). According to the publisher, this book "reads Milton's Paradise Lost as a poem that seeks to educate its readers by narrating the education of its main characters. Many of Milton's characters enter the action in late adolescence, newly independent and eager to test themselves, to discover who they are and their place in the world. The poem charts their progress into moral adulthood."

  • Professor of Sociology Dennis Gilbert is the author of a new book, Mexico's Middle Class in the Neoliberal Era (The University of Arizona Press, March, 2007). Gilbert who joined the Hamilton faculty in 1976, earned a Ph.D. in sociology from Cornell University. His primary research interests are Latin American and American class system. He is also the author of Sandinistas: the Party and the Revolution (1988) and The American Class Structure in an Age of Growing Inequality (2003).

  • Associate Professor of English Naomi Guttman has published a book of poetry, Wet Apples, White Blood (McGill-Queen's University Press).

  • The Amity Art Foundation of Connecticut has published a book about Professor of Art Bruce Muirhead's etchings. The book, "Robert Bruce Muirhead, Prints, 1969-2006, A Catalogue Raisonne," contains 130 illustrations of his etchings, most done while teaching at Kirkland and Hamilton. It also includes an interview with Muirhead by his colleague, Professor Bill Salzillo; an essay by his artist son and Hamilton alumnus Jake Muirhead '86; and an introduction by John Stewart, the director and founder of the Amity Art Foundation. Stewart is a 1964 Hamilton graduate. The Amity Art Foundation is an organization for the purpose of supporting the art of printmaking and its teaching.

  • Associate Professor of Philosophy A. Todd Franklin is co-editor, with Jacqueline Scott (Loyola University of Chicago) of Critical Affinities: Nietzsche and African American Thought, published by State University of New York Press, which explores convergences between the ideas of Friedrich Nietzsche and African American thought. Franklin also cotnributed an essay to the book, titled "Kindred Spirits: Nietzsche and Locke as progenitors of Axiological Liberation."

  • From silent films to television programs, Hollywood has employed actors of various ethnicities to represent "Oriental"characters, from Caucasian stars like Loretta Young made up in yellow-face to Korean American pioneer Philip Ahn, whose more than 200 screen performances included roles as sadistic Japanese military officers in World War II movies and a wronged Chinese merchant in the TV show Bonanza.

  • What exactly is a green city? What does it mean to say that San Francisco is greener than Houston, or that Vancouver is a green city while Beijing is not? When does urban growth lower environmental quality, and when does it produce environmental gains? These questions drive Matthew Kahn's exploration of the relationship between urban growth and sustainable development.

    Topic

Help us provide an accessible education, offer innovative resources and programs, and foster intellectual exploration.

Site Search