Research Publications

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Terry Castle (2008-2009)

Former fellow Terry Castle releases The Professor, a new book of autobiographical essays.

Find Terry Castle's book on Amazon.com.

Theodore Andersson

Robert E. Bjork (General Editor)

The Oxford Dictionary of the Middle Ages Oxford University Press, USA, 2010

The Oxford Dictionary of the Middle Ages is a major new reference resource for all key aspects of European history, society, religion, and culture from circa 500 CE to circa 1500 CE. Over 800 scholars, guided by a five-member international advisory board and an international editorial board of twenty-six, have written the over 5,000 entries that make up this extraordinary four-volume set. These entries have been lavishly supplemented by more than 500 illustrations and 40 maps.

John Bender

Michael Marrinan

The Culture of Diagram Stanford University Press, 2010

The Culture of Diagram is about visual thinking. Exploring a terrain where words meet pictures and formulas meet figures, the book foregrounds diagrams as tools for blurring those boundaries to focus on the production of knowledge as process. It outlines a history of convergence among diverse streams of data in real-time: from eighteenth-century print media and the diagrammatic procedures in the pages of Diderot's Encyclopedia to the paintings of Jacques-Louis David and mathematical devices that reveal the unseen worlds of quantum physics.

Gregson Davis

A Companion to Horace (Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World) Wiley-Blackwell, 2010

A Companion to Horace features a collection of commissioned interpretive essays by leading scholars in the field of Latin literature covering the entire generic range of works produced by Horace.

Tim Dean

Unlimited Intimacy: Reflections on the Subculture of Barebacking University Of Chicago Press, 2009

Barebacking—when gay men deliberately abandon condoms and embrace unprotected sex—has incited a great deal of shock, outrage, anger, and even disgust, but very little contemplation. Purposely flying in the face of decades of safe-sex campaigning and HIV/AIDS awareness initiatives, barebacking is unquestionably radical behavior, behavior that most people would rather condemn than understand. Thus the time is ripe for Unlimited Intimacy, Tim Dean’s riveting investigation into barebacking and the distinctive subculture that has grown around it.

Johanna Drucker

SpecLab: Digital Aesthetics and Projects in Speculative Computing University Of Chicago Press, 2009

Nearly a decade ago, Johanna Drucker cofounded the University of Virginia’s SpecLab, a digital humanities laboratory dedicated to risky projects with serious aims. In SpecLab she explores the implications of these radical efforts to use critical practices and aesthetic principles against the authority of technology based on analytic models of knowledge. Illuminating the kind of future such experiments could enable, SpecLab functions as more than a set of case studies at the intersection of computers and humanistic inquiry.

Stephane Dudoignon

Intellectuals in the Modern Islamic World: Transmission, transformation, communication Routledge, 2009

Incorporating a rich series of case-studies covering a range of geographical areas, this collection of essays examines the history of modern intellectuals in the Islamic world throughout the twentieth century. While each chapter presents a separate regional case, with an historically and geographically different background, the volume discloses commonalities, similarities and intellectual echoes through its comparative approach.

Dan Edelstein

The Terror of Natural Right: Republicanism, the Cult of Nature, and the French Revolution University Of Chicago Press, 2009

In The Terror of Natural Right, Dan Edelstein argues that the revolutionaries used the natural right concept of the “enemy of the human race”—an individual who has transgressed the laws of nature and must be executed without judicial formalities—to authorize three-quarters of the deaths during the Terror. But the significance of the natural right did not end with its legal application.

Reviews

Richard Eldridge

The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Literature Oxford University Press, USA, 2009

The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Literature contains 23 newly commissioned essays by major philosophers and literary scholars that investigate literature as a form of attention to human life. Various forms of attention are considered under the headings of Genres (from Ancient Epic to the Novel and Contemporary Experimental Writing), Periods (from Realism and Romanticism to Postcolonialism), Devices and Powers (Imagination, Plot, Character, Style, and Emotion), and Contexts and Uses (in relation to inquiry, morality, and politics).

Jean-Michel Frodon

Cinema & the Shoah: An Art Confronts the Tragedy of the Twentieth Century State University of New York Press, 2010
Examines the variety of cinematic responses to the Holocaust as well as the Shoah's impact on cinematic expression itself.

Diego Gambetta

Codes of the Underworld: How Criminals Communicate Princeton University Press, 2009

Diego Gambetta shows that as villains balance the lure of criminal reward against the fear of dire punishment, they are inspired to unexpected feats of subtlety and ingenuity in communication.

Geballe Library
Geballe Library

Geballe Library, named after Humanities Center donors Theodore and Frances Geballe, contains publications written by current and former fellows of the Center. It also offers fellows a quiet spot for conversation or for reading periodicals and newspapers.

Celebration of books
Celebration of Books

Each year the Humanities Center throws a celebration in honor of works written, edited, and performed by humanities faculty members at Stanford and published during the previous calendar year.

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Books by Current Fellows
Books by Current Fellows
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