
Each academic year, 91原创 faculty members publish books that advance scholarship and investigate questions of broad interest. New Reads offers a selection of some of their most recent work.
Deterritorializing/Reterritorializing: Critical Geography of Educational Reform
Edited by Nancy Ares, Eduard Buend铆a, and Robert Helfenbein
Sense Publishers, 2017
Focused on the changing landscape of educational reform and land-use policies, Ares, an associate professor of education at the Warner School of Education, and her coeditors reveal how social, political, and historical dimensions of social spaces鈥攅specially racial, ethnic, and other markers of difference鈥攕hape and are shaped by school reforms. The book, whose contributors are from a range of fields, situates itself in contemporary public education policies that are pushing responsibility for economic and social welfare, as well as education policy and practice, out of federal entities and into local ones.
Time: A Vocabulary of the Present
Edited by Joel Burges and Amy Elias
New York University Press, 2016
Burges, an assistant professor of English, and Elias present essays from an assortment of scholars in the new field of time studies. The volume focuses on the decades since World War II鈥攁 period 鈥渁nimated by certain kinds of time consciousness鈥濃攁nd considers time as history, as calculation, and as culture. Among the essayists included is Rachel Haidu, an associate professor of art and art history and director of the graduate program in visual and cultural studies.
Mothers, Comrades, and Outcasts in East German Women鈥檚 Film
By Jennifer Creech
Indiana University Press, 2016
Drawing together feminist film theory and cultural history, Creech, an associate professor of German, investigates 鈥渨omen鈥檚 films鈥 in the last two decades of the former East Germany to see how they functioned as an alternative public sphere and an expression of covert politics. The book is part of an emerging reconsideration of Eastern Bloc culture from a post-unification perspective. The politics of gender, Creech argues, 鈥渁re both at the center of the films鈥 social critique and their exclusion from contemporary research.鈥
Living Well Now and in the Future: Why Sustainability Matters
By Randall Curren and Ellen Metzger
MIT Press, 2017
Curren, a professor of philosophy and chair of the philosophy department, and Metzger, a geologist, formulate an ethics of sustainability with lessons for government, organizations, and individuals. They examine the nature and value of sustainability, proposing that sustainability can be understood as the art of living well together without diminishing the opportunity to live well in the future. The authors also catalog the problems and obstacles confronting sustainability and identify the kinds of efforts that can overcome them.
The Ethics of Theory: Philosophy, History, Literature
By Robert Doran
Bloomsbury, 2017
Doran, an associate professor of French and comparative literature, offers the first broad assessment of the ethical challenges posed by critical theory across the humanities and social sciences. Focusing on figures central to the history of critical theory鈥攊ncluding Claude L茅vi-Strauss, Michel Foucault, and Jacques Derrida鈥攈e expands the concept by including thinkers whose work is in some ways antagonistic to theory, such as Jean-Paul Sartre, Eric Auerbach, and Edward Said. Doran examines the apparent contradiction of how theory, once 鈥渄enounced as amoral, quietist, and nihilistic鈥ould also be the source of a 鈥榩olitical turn鈥 in the humanities and a wellspring for liberal activists.鈥
Institutions on the Edge: The Origins and Consequences of Inter-Branch Crises in Latin America
By Gretchen Helmke
Cambridge University Press, 2017
A professor and chair of political science, Helmke examines the institutional instability pervading contemporary Latin America. Contributing to this instability are inter-branch crises, 鈥渢he attempt by one branch of government to remove or otherwise take control over another branch.鈥 Drawing on an original dataset for 18 Latin American countries over the last three decades, she finds evidence that granting extensive constitutional powers to the president鈥攑articularly when the government is divided鈥攎akes all three branches of government more prone to instability.

