New books, articles, and TV series with an SA国际传媒 connection
Shrill, Lindy West 鈥04鈥檚 2016 memoir about finding her voice as a budding Millennial writer鈥攆eminist and body positive鈥攊s the basis of a six-episode series for Hulu. The show, which was renewed for a second season, focuses on Annie Easton (Aidy鈥圔ryant, above), who is dealing with an unreliable boyfriend, ailing parents, and a tyrannical editor. West told NPR鈥檚 Ari Shapiro that she enjoyed making a fictionalized version of her life: 鈥淵ou can work out all your grudges and your resentments against everyone you鈥檝e ever met, except with this plausible deniability because it鈥檚 fictional.鈥
Sola: One Woman鈥檚 Journey Alone Across South America, by Amy Field 鈥96 (WanderWomyn Publishing). A coming-of-age memoir about the 2陆 years Field spent traveling alone in her mid-20s, Sola chronicles a young woman鈥檚 plunge from her pleasant narrow life into a rich foreign continent brimming with Panpipe-playing Zen masters, nighttime motorboat rides through the jungle, hikes to Inca ruins and Patagonian glaciers, witches, mummies, goddesses, Brazilian bikinis, and an accidental climb up a snow-covered volcano. At the center of it all is a slightly unstable surf guru who bends her mind with tidbits of wisdom and prompts the question: Can you ever go home again? Field weaves tales of the quirky, the insane, and the absurd during her journey through South America鈥攖he foundation for which began with the Richter Fellowship which she was awarded as a junior at SA国际传媒. She lives on the central coast of California, where she funds her continuing travels by working as a nuclear mechanic, teaching scuba diving, and farming organic produce on her ranch.
Fiddled Out of Reason: Addison and the Rise of Hymnic Verse 1687-1712, by John William Knapp 鈥96 (Lehigh UP/Rowman & Littlefield). Examining a range of poems spanning the career of Joseph Addison, who is most well known as the co-creator of the early periodical, The Spectator, Knapp positions Addison as a key player in early 18th-century literary (rather than liturgical) hym颅nography, a kind of writing that only continued to blossom throughout the next century. Knapp was an English and comparative literary studies major and acknowledges his indebtedness to teachers and friends at SA国际传媒, including English Professor Dan Fineman and 鈥渙ur inimitable former Special Collections librarian, Mike Sutherland.鈥 Knapp is visiting scholar in English at the University of New Mexico and instructor of English and humanities at Albuquerque Academy.
Unknowing Fanaticism: Reformation Literatures of Self-Annihilation, by Ross Lerner (Fordham University Press). From the European Reformation to today, the term fanatic has never been a stable one. Then and now it has been reductively defined to justify state violence and to delegitimize alternative sources of authority. Unknowing Fanaticism rejects the simplified binary of fanatical religion and rational politics, turning to Renaissance literature to demonstrate that fanaticism was integral to how both modern politics and poetics developed, from the German Peasants鈥 Revolt to the English Civil War. Lerner鈥檚 book traces two entangled approaches to fanaticism in this long Reformation moment: the targeting of it as an extreme political threat and the engagement with it as a deep epistemological and poetic problem. Lerner is assistant professor of English at SA国际传媒.
Reading Genesis & Modern Science: A Study Guide, by Franklin P. De Haan and David O. De Haan (Credo House Publishers). What evidence do scientists have that the Earth is 4.5 billion years old, and that the Universe is 14 billion years old? Does the Bible really suggest that everything began only 6,000 years ago? How does one take both scientific evidence and the Bible seriously? Frank De Haan, a physical chemist, and son David, an environmental chemist, walk readers through geologic, chemical, and astronomical evidence of the Earth鈥檚 ancient past and its projected future, and how these topics intersect with Christian beliefs. Frank De Haan is Carl F. Braun Professor of Chemistry Emeritus at Occidental. David De Haan is professor of chemistry and biochemistry at the University of San Diego.
Briefly noted: Jacob Mackey, assistant professor of comparative studies in literature and culture, has published 鈥淒evelopmental Psychologies in the Roman World: Change and Continuity,鈥 in History of Psychology, the journal of the American Psychological Association. Using findings from modern developmental psychology to revisit the ancient texts, Mackey argues that the Romans were keenly perceptive of children鈥檚 psychological abilities and cognitive maturation.
John McCormack, associate professor of biology, has written 鈥淰intage Birds: Modern Science,鈥 inBirder鈥檚 Guide to Listing &鈥圱axonomy, published by the American Birding Association. His article explains how the bird specimens in Occidental鈥檚 Moore Laboratory of Zoology are helping to answer pressing environmental questions involving habitat alteration and climate change.
Erica Preston-Roedder, Mellon postdoctoral fellow in philosophy, has co-authored 鈥淯nderstanding the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative: A Multi-Disciplinary Analysis鈥 in the International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics. The article traces how medical practices of 鈥渜uality improvement,鈥 which appear to have little to do with breastfeeding, may have shaped the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative.