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Dean of Faculty’s Report, October 2005 At
every monthly faculty meeting during the school year, the Dean of
Faculty presents brief overviews of recent publications and other
achievements by the Mount Holyoke faculty. Here are excerpts from the
October 2005 report of Donal O'Shea, Dean of Faculty
Books Grants and Awards
Books
Eva Paus, professor of economics and director of
the Center for Global Initiatives, has published a wonderful book with
Macmillan Palgrave entitled Foreign Investment, Development, and Globalization: Can Costa Rica Become Ireland?
Fascinating for me, at least, is the account of the interplay among
economic and governmental policies that have so transformed Ireland’s
economy and standard of living over the last two decades. The book
contains tons of interesting data as well as gentle definitions of
words that one hears a lot, but seldom sees defined (e.g.,
“development,” “foreign direct investment,” “value chain”). In
investigating the question asked by the title, the book takes a
comparative approach, stressing not only the results of different
strategies, but how the same strategy can play out differently as
global dynamics shift.
Assistant professor of religion Michael Penn’s book Kissing Christians: Ritual and Community in the Late Ancient Church has just appeared with the University of Pennsylvania Press and was already featured in the October 8 edition of the Boston Globe.
Michael recounts the phenomenon of kissing in the Church from the
second to fifth centuries (apparently there was lots!) and explores the
roots of kissing practices in Roman and Greek times. The book uses an
impressive range of inter- and cross-disciplinary techniques to explore
the ritual, community-binding, and cultural significance of the ritual
kiss and the cultural, social, and religious roles it played. The
chapter headings are great (some examples: “Kissing Basics,”
“Difference and Distinction: The Exclusive Kiss,” and, my favorite,
“Boundary Violations: Purity, Promiscuity, and Betrayal”).
The books of Constantine Pleshakov, visiting
assistant professor of Russian and Eurasian studies, keep getting
better. There was the Russian-language potboiler that included a
gruesome torture scene in Chicopee and language that surpassed the
limits of my battered Schoenhof’s samizdat Russian-English dictionary
of colloquialisms; a gripping account of the Romanovs; and an
enthralling, sardonic account of the Tsar’s first and last armada. Stalin’s Folly: The Tragic First Ten Days of WWII on
the Eastern Front appeared this summer and is the best yet. Read it and
weep. Compulsively quotable and full of short memorable sentences, the
book is a devastating portrayal of the Soviet response to the German
invasion of 1942. It tells the story of Stalin, the fear he inspired
among his own generals, and the staggering incompetence that he
elicited as a result. Underscoring the horror is the account of the
suffering visited on the Russian people.
Duke University Press has just published associate professor of English Michelle Stephens’s new book Black Empire: The Masculine Global Imaginary of Caribbean Intellectuals in the United States, 1914-1962.
It defies easy characterization and shows just how complicated and rich
the discipline of English has become. Ostensibly, Michelle studies the
writings of three Caribbean intellectuals, Marcus Garvey, Claude McKay,
and C. L. R. James, two from Jamaica and one from Trinidad. However,
the book is a sympathetic and critical portrayal of the construction of
black identity in an age of world war, of revolutionary
internationalism, and of mass black migration. It studies how the
discourses of the New Negro out of the Harlem Renaissance and the
inter-, intra-, and transnational sensibilities of Caribbean
intellectuals blended into an imagined transnational black empire. Her
canvas is enormous. She studies the authors and their public personae,
the interaction of the characters in their fiction, and how notions of
nation, identity, race, gender, and agency play out in relation to this
“black empire.” She draws on a huge range of scholarship and critical
techniques from gender studies, from American studies, and from
classical literary analysis. In studying race and empire, her book
resonates strikingly with current times: “Close to the turn of a new
millennium,” she writes, “what were once colonial ventures are now war
games where citizens and foreigners are held hostage by imperial
fictions. . . . What kind of space is Guantanamo Bay, Cuba?”
Read the latest by Donald Weber, Lucia, Ruth and Elizabeth MacGregor Professor of English and chair of English and cochair of American studies, Haunted in the New World: Jewish American Culture from Cahan to The Goldbergs,
from Indiana University Press, 2005. Part personal memoir, part account
of Jewish immigrant life, part account of the entertainment industry
from the viewpoint of the entertained, the book is at once a scholarly
analysis of low- and highbrow fiction, of film, of television, and of
stand-up comedy, and a highly sympathetic, highly critical, and highly
personal re-creation of the immigrant and new world experience captured
by those artifacts. It deals with memory, with nostalgia, with the
relation between creator/artist, his or her work, and the time and
place to which he or she belongs (or does not). It teaches us broadly
about identity by focusing on one small series of interlocking
identities: Jewish, American, New Yorker, Yiddish. It is beautifully,
almost lovingly, written. Open it anywhere. Each paragraph is a
miniature essay. Each sentence, it seems, stands alone and contains
several striking thoughts. Many are minor masterpieces. The book is a
tour de force.
Grants and Awards
Professor of English Corinne Demas’s book Saying Goodbye to Lulu received
the 2004 Henry Bergh Children’s Book Award of the American Society for
the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. The award is presented annually
to recognize books based on their exemplary handling of subject matter
pertaining to animals and the environment. The winning authors will be
honored at a ceremony at the American Library Association’s Annual
Conference in Chicago this June.
Karen Jacobus, coordinator of health education
services, will coordinate Mount Holyoke’s portion of the $399,521 grant
from the U.S. Department of Justice Program to Reduce Violent Crimes
against Women on Campus awarded to the University of Massachusetts and
four partners (Amherst, Hampshire, Mount Holyoke, and Smith Colleges).
Submitted by Don O’Shea October 12, 2005
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