Professional Documents
Culture Documents
fall 2016
A WRESTLING LIFE
THE INSPIRING STORIES OF DAN GABLE
i David N. Wetzel j
THE VA
V NISHING MESSIAH
THE LIFE & RESU R RECTIONS
OF FR ANCIS SCHL ATTER
THE
PENELOPE
PROJECT
THE
PENELOPE
PROJECT
An Arts-Based Odyssey
to Change Elder Care
An Arts-Based Odyssey
to Change Elder Care
edited by
anne basting, maureen towey,
and ellie rose
edited by
anne basting, maureen towey,
and ellie rose
In a modern world of
political correctness and
glad handing, the art of the
fight is highly undervalued.
Allow Dan to show you another
way. tim ferriss, The 4-Hour Body
dan
gable
with scott schulte
SEE YOU IN
THE STREETS
Art, Action, and
Remembering the
Triangle Shirtwaist
Factory Fire
ruth sergel
contents
index by subject
uiowapress.org
Midwest 14, 16
Nature 6, 14
Performing Arts 21
Poetry 810
Publishing 2
Theatre 21
Travel 1
True Crime 3
Urban Planning 17
Womens Studies 3
AN D THE
M ON KEY
LEARNED
NOTHING
tom l
utz
tom lutZ Is on a mission to visit every country on earth. And the To read And the Monkey Learned Nothing
Monkey Learned Nothing contains reports from fifty of them, most is to experience the thrill of visiting new
describing personal encounters in rarely visited spots, anecdotes places coupled with the pleasure of perfrom way off the beaten path. Traveling without an itinerary and sonal and cultural reflection. The sensitivwithout a goal, Lutz explores the Iranian love of poetry, the occupy- ity and moral intelligence that Tom Lutz
ing Chinese army in Tibet, the amputee beggars in Cambodia, the brings to his writing allows us to discover
hill tribes on Vietnams Chinese border, the sociopathic monkeys the unity to be found in our wondrously
of Bali, the dangerous fishermen and conmen of southern India, diverse world.Laila Lalami, author,
the salt flats of Uyumi in Peru, and floating hotels in French Guiana, The Moors Account, finalist, Pulitzer Prize
introduces you to an Uzbeki prodigy in the market of Samarkand, for fiction
an Azeri rental car clerk in Baku, guestworkers in Dubai, a military contractor in Jordan, cucuruchos in Guatemala, a Pentecostal Slip in between the cracks of the world,
preacher in rural El Salvador, a playboy in Nicaragua, employment wiggle through borderlands of language,
agents in Singapore specializing in Tamil workers, prostitutes symbols, and undetermined and frazzled
in Colombia and the Dominican Republic, international bank- cultural archipelagos, surf on the knifeers in Belarus, a teacher in Havana, border guards in Botswana, sharp fractures of peoples hopes, starvatango dancers in Argentina, a cook in Suriname, a juvenile thief tions, desperations, wisdom, luxuries,
in Uruguay, voters in Guyana, doctors in Tanzania and Lesotho, and desires and you will be ambling with
scary poker players in Moscow, reed dancers in Swaziland, young Lutz. I am astounded at Toms ethnocamel herders in Tunisia, Romanian missionaries in Macedonia, graphic fragments, his deep knowledge
and musical groups in Mozambique. With an eye out for both the of the regions and peoples, his relentless
sublime and the ridiculous, Lutz falls, regularly, into the instant openness and outer-inner descriptions,
the ways in which he finds meaning in
intimacy of the road with random strangers.
Tom Lutz is the founder and editor in chief of the Los Angeles Review
of Books. He is the author of Doing Nothing: A History of Loafers,
Loungers, Slackers, and Bums, Cosmopolitan Vistas: American Regionalism and Literary Value,Crying: The Natural andCulturalHistory of Tears,
and American Nervousness, 1903: An Anecdotal History. He teaches at
the University of California, Riverside, and lives in Los Angeles,
California.
october
travel
uiowapress.org
Anton Maltsev
october
books / publishing
2
diane simmons
by Diane Simmons
the
Courtship
o f eva eld rid ge
II, prosperous married life was a triumph. The unwed were objects
of pity, scorn, even suspicion. And so in the 1950s, Eva Eldridge, no
longer so young and marginally employed, was the perfect target
for handsome Vick, who promised everything: storybook romance, Diane Simmons has brilliantly used a colmarital respectability, and the lively social life she loved. When he lection of never-before-seen World War II
disappeared not long after their honeymoon, she was devastated. letters to tell a story that has all the twists
Eva hadnt always been so vulnerable. Growing up pretty and of a true crime novel. At its heart, this is a
popular in rural Oregon, she expected to marry young and live a poignant, extraordinary tale of a woman
life much like that of her parents, farming and rearing children. who married a man with a secret and a
But then the United States threw its weight into World War II and troubling past.Andrew Carroll, editor,
as men headed to battle, the government started recruiting women War Letters: Extraordinary Correspondence from
to work in their places. Eva, like many other young women, found American Wars, a New York Times bestseller
that life in the city with plenty of money, personal freedom, and
lots of soldiers and sailors eager to pay court was more exhilarating
than life down on the farm. After the war, she was ambivalent about
getting married and settling downat least until Vick arrived.
Refusing to believe her brand-new husband had abandoned
her, Eva set about tracking down a man who, she now believed,
was more damaged by wartime trauma than she had known. But
instead of a wounded hero, she found a long string of women much
like herselfhard-working, intelligent women who had loved and
married Vick and now had no idea whereor even whohe was.
Drawing on a trove of some eight hundred letters and papers,
Diane Simmons tells the story of Evas poignant struggle to get her
dream husband back, as well as the stories of the women who had
stood at the altar with Vick before and after her. Evas remarkable
life illuminates womens struggle for happiness at a time when
marriageand the perfect husbandmeant everything.
n
Diane Simmons has published two novels, Let the Bastards Freeze
in the Dark and Dreams Like Thunder, which won the Oregon Book
Award. Her short story collection Little America won the Ohio State
University Prize for Short Fiction. She lives in the New York City
area and is a professor of English at Borough of Manhattan Community CollegeCity University of New York.
august
uiowapress.org
November Storm
by Robert Oldshue
2016 Iowa short fIctIon award
october
fiction
4
OF T H IS
NEW WORL D
october
fiction
uiowapress.org
november
uiowapress.org
bodys
by Vanessa Roveto
bodys
november
66 pages . 6 x 8 inches
$19.95 paper original, 978-1-60938-455-5
$19.95 e-book, 978-1-60938-456-2
poetry
8
The Abandonment
Sarah v. SchWeig
november
86 pages . 6 x 8 inches
$19.95 paper original, 978-1-60938-457-9
$19.95 e-book, 978-1-60938-458-6
poetry
uiowapress.org
Song of Myself
With a Complete Commentary
by Walt Whitman
introduction and commentary by Ed Folsom
and Christopher Merrill
The Iowa Whitman Series
Ed Folsom, series editor
This is a nearly perfect introduction to Song of Myself, with a great
Whitman scholar and a terrific poet who love this breathtaking,
funny, heartbreaking visionary poem at the center of American literature, talking to each other and to you as they read it. There couldnt
be a better guide except perhaps Whitman himself.Robert Hass,
author, Time and Materials, Poems 19972005, National Book Award
winner
In this book, Ed Folsom and Christopher Merrill are the first to
undertake an attentive and detailed reading of every section of
Walt Whitmans Song of Myself. Their readings offer a gift of wit,
wisdom, and delight that will shape conversations about Whitmans
democratic epic for years to come.Betsy Erkkil, Northwestern
University
An enlivening experiment in contrapuntal criticism. Folsom and Merrilldistinguished critic and poeteach provide
section by section commentary on Song of
Myself. Bold in form, rich in insight, this
is the rare book that will be equally prized
by novices and experts. Few books have
brought me such pleasure.Kenneth M.
Price, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
This book offers the most comprehensive and detailed reading to date of Song of Myself. One of the most distinguished critics
in Whitman studies, Ed Folsom, and one of the nations most
prominent writers and literary figures, Christopher Merrill, carry This book offers the fresh and illuminaton a dialog with Whitman, and with each other, section by section, ing interpretations of a critic and a poet,
as they invite readers to enter into the conversation about how the two longtime readers of Whitmans
poem develops, moves, improvises, and surprises. Instead of pick- poetry deeply engaged in respinning all
ing and choosing particular passages to support a reading of the fifty-two sections ofSong of Myself from
poem, Folsom and Merrill take Whitman at his word and interact their unique and equally perceptive
with every atom of his work. The book presents Whitmans final angles of vision. Highly recommended
version of the poem, arranged in fifty-two sections; each section is for use at both the undergraduate and
followed by Folsoms detailed critical examination of the passage, graduate levels.Jerome Loving, auand then Merrill offers a poets perspective, suggesting broader thor, Walt Whitman: The Song of Himself
contexts for thinking about both the passage in question and the
entire poem.
When most critics write about literary
Ed Folsom, the Roy J. Carver professor of English at the University
of Iowa, is the editor of the Walt Whitman Quarterly Review, codirector of the online Whitman Archive, and editor of the Whitman
Series at the University of Iowa Press. He lives in Iowa City, Iowa.
Christopher Merrill has published numerous collections of poetry,
edited volumes, books of translations, and nonfiction, including
Only the Nails Remain: Scenes from the Balkan Wars, Things of the Hidden
God: Journey to the Holy Mountain, and The Tree of the Doves: Ceremony,
Expedition, War. He is the director of the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa. He lives in Iowa City, Iowa.
october
texts, they focus on their favorite passages and ignore others that happen to
not fit their agenda. Folsom and Merrill
do something far different by entering
into a dialog with Whitmans Song of
Myself, taking on the text of Whitmans
longest and most influential poem in its
entirety. Their alternation of lyrical and
critical voices makes for an entirely new
and exhilarating reading experience that
will open many new doors to Whitmans
greatest work for readers around the
world.Walter Grnzweig, author,
Constructing the German Walt Whitman
Invisible Hawkeyes
African Americans at the University of Iowa
during the Long Civil Rights Era
november
uiowapress.org 11
second edition
september
iowa / architecture
uiowapress.org 13
january
nature / midwest
Largemouth bass
Rosyface shiner
Black crappie
The Sacred Cause of Union highlights Iowans important role in reuniting the nation when the battle over
slavery tore it asunder. In this first-ever survey of the
states Civil War history, Thomas Baker interweaves
economics, politics, army recruitment, battlefield
Battle of Shiloh by Thure de Thulstrup; restoration Adam Cuerden
performance, and government administration. Scattered across more than a dozen states and territories, Iowas fighting men marched long distances and won battles against larger The authordoes a particularly good job
rebel armies despite having little food or shelter and sometimes of illustrating connections between the
poor equipment. On their own initiative, the states women ven- battlefield and home front and between
tured south to the battlefields to tend to the sick and injured, and events in the three main theaters of
farm families produced mountains of food to feed hungry federal the war. He also excels in situating
armies. In the absence of a coordinated military supply system, Iowas wartime role firmly in the context
womens volunteer organizations were instrumental in delivering of its position as a new midwestern
food, clothing, medicines, and other supplies to those who needed state.Robert Cook, author,Troubled
them. All of these efforts contributed mightily to the Union victory Commemoration: The American Civil War
and catapulted Iowa into the top circle of most influential states Centennial, 19611965
in the nation.
To shed light on how individual Iowans experienced the war, The Sacred Cause of Union is a long overdue
the book profiles six state residents. Three were well-known. An- detailed examination of the motivations
nie Wittenmyer, a divorced woman with roots in Virginia, led the and experiences of Iowans in civil life and
states efforts to ship clothing and food to the soldiers. Alexander military service during the Civil War era. It
Clark, a Muscatine businessman and the son of former slaves, is a valuable contribution to understandeloquently championed the rights of African Americans. Cyrus ing how these people shaped the state for
Carpenter, a Pennsylvania-born land surveyor anxious to make generations.Leo Landis, State Curator,
his fortune, served in the army and then headed the states Radical State Historical Museum of Iowa
Republican faction after the war, ultimately being elected governor.
Three never became famous. Ben Stevens, a young, unemployed carpenter, fought in an Iowa regiment at Shiloh, and then
transferred to a Louisiana African American regiment so that he
could lead the former slaves into battle. Farm boy Abner Dunham
defended the Sunken Road at the Battle of Shiloh, before spending seven grim months in Confederate prison camps. The young
Charles Musser faced pressure from his neighbors to enlist and
from his parents to remain at home to work on the farm. Soon
after he signed on to serve the Union, he discovered that his older
brother had joined the Confederate Army. Through the letters and
lives of these six Iowans, Thomas Baker shows how the Civil War
transformed the state at the same time that Iowans transformed
the nation.
Thomas R. Baker is the associate dean of students at the University
of Iowa. A judicial administrator since 1988, he specializes in civil
rights investigations. He lives in Muscatine with his partner, Neva
Rettig Baker.
november
uiowapress.org 15
PFI and its members are an inspiration! They remind us all that family, community, and stewardship are at the heart of farming. Their
stories are a call to action to everyone who belongs to the land:
start the conversation about your farms legacy today. The future of
rural communities and regional food systems may depend on it.
Jim Habana Hafner, executive director, Land for Good
september
agriculture / midwest
Cities of Farmers
Urban Agricultural Practices and Processes
www.community-food.org
Full-scale food production in cities: is it an impossibility? Or I do not think we will be able to survive in
is it a panacea for all that ails urban communities? Today, its a real- the future without a dramatic change in
ity, but many people still dont know how much of an impact this the way we produce food. There are going
emerging food system is having on cities and their residents. This to be 3.1 billion new people on Earth in
book showcases the work of the farmers, activists, urban planners, the next forty years, and we cannot even
and city officials in the United States and Canada who are advanc- feed our population with good food now.
ing food production. They have realized that, when its done right, The only way that we are going to be able
farming in cities can enhance the local ecology, foster cohesive to survive is to grow food closer to where
communities, and improve the quality of life for urban residents. people liveinside cities where there is a
Implementing urban agriculture often requires change in the lot of vacant land.From the foreword
physical, political, and social-organizational landscape. Beginning by Will Allen, founder and CEO, Growing
with a look at how and why city people grew their own food in the Power, Inc.
early twentieth century, the contributors to Cities of Farmers examine
the role of local and regional regulations and politics, especially This is a rare find! An academic book
the creation of food policy councils, in making cities into fertile that is highly readable, relevant, well
ground for farming. The authors describe how food is produced researched, and, as the topic requires,
and distributed in cities via institutions as diverse as commercial down to earth. Especially helpful to city
farms, community gardens, farmers markets, and regional food planners, health promoters, community
hubs. Growing food in vacant lots and on rooftops affects labor, leaders, and all who love what a garden
capital investment, and human capital formation, and as a result does for a day outdoors, a yard or parurban agriculture intersects with land values and efforts to build kette, a great meal, and quality time with
affordable housing. It also can contribute to cultural renewal and others.Wayne Roberts, author, The No
Nonsense Guide to World Food and Food for
improved health.
This book enables readers to understand and contribute to their City Building
local food system, whether they are raising vegetables in a community garden, setting up a farmers market, or formulating regulations for farming and composting within city limits.
Julie C. Dawson is an assistant professor in the department of horticulture at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the state extension specialist for urban and regional food systems. She focuses
on diversified vegetable production for local markets in and around
cities. More information on her program is at dawson.horticulture.
wisc.edu. She lives in Madison, Wisconsin. Alfonso Morales is a
professor in the departments of urban and regional planning and
civil society and community studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The founder of the Foodglossary website, he also
cofounded and currently cohosts openair.org, a website on street
vendors and public markets.He lives in Madison, Wisconsin.
november
uiowapress.org 17
You can tell a true war story if you just keep on telling it, Tim
OBrien writes in The Things They Carried. Widely regarded as the
most important novelist to come out of the American war in Viet The quality of John Youngs scholarship is
Nam, OBrien has kept on telling true war stories not only in nar- uniformly high. This book does fully what
ratives that cycle through multiple fictional and nonfictional ver- a new book is supposed to do: supply
sions of the wars defining experiences, but also by rewriting those original knowledge. It is well-grounded
stories again and again. Key moments of revision extend from early in current theories of textual criticism,
drafts, to the initial appearance of selected chapters in magazines, and in practice the textual analysis, freacross typescripts and page proofs for first editions, and through quently involving major revisions in wellcontinuing post-publication variants in reprints.
known and much written about titles, is
How to Revise a True War Story is the first book-length study of meticulous.Philip D. Beidler, author,
OBriens archival papers at the University of Texass Harry Ran- Late Thoughts on an Old War: The Legacy
som Center. Drawing on extensive study of drafts and other pre- of Vietnam
publication materials, as well as the multiple published versions
of OBriens works, John K. Young tells the untold stories behind
the production of such key texts as Going After Cacciato, The Things
They Carried, and In the Lake of the Woods. By reading not just the texts
that have been published, but also the versions they could have
been, Young demonstrates the important choices OBrien and his
editors have made about how to represent the traumas of the war
in Viet Nam. The result is a series of texts that refuse to settle into
a finished or stable form, just as the stories they present insist on
being told and retold in new and changing ways. In their lack of
textual stability, these variants across different versions enact for
OBriens readers the kinds of narrative volatility that is key to the
American literature emerging from the war in Viet Nam. Perhaps in
this case, you can tell a true war story if you just keep on revising it.
John K. Young is a professor of English at Marshall University.
He is the author of Black Writers, White Publishers: Marketplace Politics in Twentieth-Century African American Literature and, with George
Hutchinson, the coeditor of Publishing Blackness: Textual Constructions
of Race since 1850. He lives with his family in Lexington, Kentucky.
january
literary criticism
Larry D. Moore
CONTRIBUTORS:
Seth Abramson, Greg Barnhisel, Eric Bennett, Matthew Blackwell,
Kelly Budruweit, Mike Chasar, Simon During, Donal Harris,
Michael Hill, Benjamin Kirbach, Sean McCann, Mark McGurl,
Marija Rieff, Juliana Spahr, Stephen Voyce, Stephanie Young
january
literary criticism
uiowapress.org 19
Noelle Baker has performed an invaluable service of original scholarship in this marvelous assembly of writings about Elizabeth Cady
Stanton by her contemporaries. Bakers work allows us both to illuminate Stantons contributions and at the same time to chart the
changing reception she received throughout the half-century of her
career.Ellen Carol DuBois, UCLA
Library of Congress
Among nineteenth-century womens rights reformers, A valuable new teaching and research tool,
Elizabeth Cady Stanton (18151902) stands out for the maternal Noelle Bakers Stanton in Her Own Time also
and secular advocacy that shaped her activism and public recep- provides a moving and nuanced portrait
tion. A wife and mother of seven, she was also a prolific writer, of an extraordinary American whose trials
transatlantic womens rights leader, popular lecturer, congres- and triumphs resound through the centusional candidate, canny historian, and freethought champion. Her ries to inspire and motivate us today.
lifelong interest in womens sexual and reproductive rights and late Megan Marshall, Pulitzer Prizewinning
efforts to reform institutional religion are as relevant to our time author, Margaret Fuller: A New American Life
as they were to her own.
Stantons professional life lasted a half-century, ranging from
antebellum womens rights organization and oratory, to a post
Civil War career as a lyceum lecturer, to a late-century role as an
incisive religious and cultural critic. Acutely aware of the medical,
religious, legal, and educational barriers to womens independence, she advocated for married womens right to vote, obtain a
divorce, gain custody of their children, and own property. As she
grew more radical over the years, she also demanded judicial reform, the separation of church and state, free love, progressive coeducational opportunities, and womens right to limit their fertility.
In this richly contextualized collection of primary sources,
Noelle A. Baker brings together accounts of Stantons life and
ideas from both well-known and recently recovered figures. From
the teacher chiding an assertive young woman to erstwhile allies
worrying about her growing radicalism, their voices paint a vivid
portrait of a woman of vaunting ambition, powerhouse intellect,
and her share of human failings.
An independent scholar living in Denver, Colorado, Noelle A. Baker
is the coeditor of The Almanacks of Mary Moody Emerson: A Scholarly
Digital Edition.
november
december
uiowapress.org 21
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uiowapress.org 23
Index by Author
Baker, Noelle A. 20
Baker, Thomas R. 15
Dawson, Julie C. 17
Folsom, Ed 10
Glass, Loren 19
Hill, Lena M. 11
Hill, Michael D. 11
Hyde, Allegra M. 5
Laquintano, Timothy 2
Lehnertz, Rodney P. 1213
Lewis, Megan 21
Lutz, Tom 1
Merrill, Christopher 10
Morales, Alfonso 17
Mller, Mark 67
Oldshue, Robert 4
Opheim, Teresa 16
Roveto, Vanessa 8
Schweig, Sarah V. 9
Scott, John Beldon 1213
Simmons, Diane 3
VanDeWalle, Terry 14
Whitman, Walt 10
Young, John K. 18
Index by Title
After the Program Era 19
And the Monkey Learned Nothing 1
bodys 8
Cities of Farmers 17
The Courtship of Eva Eldridge 3
Fish In Your Pocket 14
The Future of Family Farms 16
How to Revise a True War Story 18
Invisible Hawkeyes 11
Mass Authorship and the Rise of Self-Publishing 2
ORDER FORM
Name __________________________
November Storm 4
Of This New World 5
Performing Whitely in the Postcolony 21
The Sacred Cause of Union 15
Song of Myself 10
Stanton in Her Own Time 20
Take Nothing with You 9
The University of Iowa Guide to Campus Architecture,
Second Edition 1213
The Wild Midwest 67
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