This week in North Philly Notes, we announce our forthcoming Fall 2022 titles.
Are All Politics Nationalized?: Evidence from the 2020 Campaigns in Pennsylvania, Edited by Stephen K. Medvic, Matthew M. Schousen, and Berwood A. Yost
Do local concerns still play a significant role in campaigns up and down the ballot?
Beauty and Brutality: Manila and Its Global Discontents, Edited by Martin F. Manalansan IV, Robert Diaz, and Roland B. Tolentino
Diverse perspectives on Manila that suggest the city’s exhilarating sights and sounds broaden how Philippine histories are defined and understood
BLAM! Black Lives Always Mattered!: Hidden African American Philadelphia of the Twentieth Century, by the Charles L. Blockson Afro-American Collection
The historic accomplishments of 14 notable Black Philadelphians from the twentieth-century—in graphic novel form
Blue-State Republican: How Larry Hogan Won Where Republicans Lose and Lessons for a Future GOP, by Mileah K. Kromer
What the story of Maryland’s two-term Republican governor can teach us about winning elections
Bringing the Civic Back In: Zane L. Miller and American Urban History, Edited by Larry Bennett, John D. Fairfield, and Patricia Mooney-Melvin
A critical appraisal of the career of Zane L. Miller, one of the founders of the new urban history
Cultures Colliding: American Missionaries, Chinese Resistance, and the Rise of Modern Institutions in China, John R. Haddad
Why American missionaries started building schools, colleges, medical schools, hospitals, and YMCA chapters in China before 1900
Divide & Conquer: Race, Gangs, Identity, and Conflict, by Robert D. Weide
Argues that contemporary identity politics divides gang members and their communities across racial lines
Engaging Place, Engaging Practices: Urban History and Campus-Community Partnerships, Edited by Robin F. Bachin and Amy L. Howard
How public history can be a catalyst for stronger relationships between universities and their communities
An Epidemic among My People: Religion, Politics, and COVID-19 in the United States, Edited by Paul A. Djupe and Amanda Friesen
Did religion make the pandemic worse or help keep it contained?
Gendered Places: The Landscape of Local Gender Norms across the United States, by William J. Scarborough
Reveals how distinct cultural environments shape the patterns of gender inequality
A Good Place to Do Business: The Politics of Downtown Renewal since 1945, by Roger Biles and Mark H. Rose
How six industrial cities in the American Rust Belt reacted to deindustrialization in the years after World War II
Justice Outsourced: The Therapeutic Jurisprudence Implications of Judicial Decision-Making by Nonjudicial Officers, Edited by Michael L. Perlin and Kelly Frailing
Examines the hidden use of nonjudicial officers in the criminal justice system
Memory Passages: Holocaust Memorials in the United States and Germany, by Natasha Goldman
Now in Paperback—Considers Holocaust memorials in the United States and Germany, postwar to the present
The Mouse Who Played Football, Written by Brian Westbrook Sr. and Lesley Van Arsdall; Illustrated by Mr. Tom
Who would ever think that a mouse could play football?
Never Ask “Why”: Football Players’ Fight for Freedom in the NFL, By Ed Garvey; Edited by Chuck Cascio
An inside look at the struggles Ed Garvey faced in bringing true professionalism to football players
The Real Philadelphia Book 2nd Edition, by Jazz Bridge
An anthology of compositions by popular Philadelphia jazz and blues artists accessible for every musician
Reforming Philadelphia, 1682–2022, by Richardson Dilworth
A short but comprehensive political history of the city, from its founding in 1682 to the present day
Refugee Lifeworlds: The Afterlife of the Cold War in Cambodia, by Y-Dang Troeung
Explores key works that have emerged out of the Cambodian refugee archive
A Refugee’s American Dream: From the Killing Fields of Cambodia to the U.S. Secret Service, by Leth Oun with Joe Samuel Starnes
The remarkable story of Leth Oun, from overcoming tragedy and forced labor in Cambodia to realizing dreams he never could have imagined in America
Richard III’s Bodies from Medieval England to Modernity: Shakespeare and Disability History, by Jeffrey R. Wilson
How is Richard III always both so historical and so current?
The Rise and Fall of America’s Concentration Camp Law: Civil Liberties Debates from the Internment to McCarthyism and the Radical 1960s, by Masumi Izumi
Now in Paperback—Dissecting the complex relationship among race, national security, and civil liberties in “the age of American concentration camps”
The Spires Still Point to Heaven: Cincinnati’s Religious Landscape, 1788–1873, by Matthew Smith
How nineteenth-century Cincinnati tested the boundaries of nativism, toleration, and freedom
Teaching Fear: How We Learn to Fear Crime and Why It Matters, Nicole E. Rader
How rules about safety and the fear of crime are learned and crystalized into crime myths— especially for women
Toward a Framework for Vietnamese American Studies: History, Community, and Memory, Edited by Linda Ho Peché, Alex-Thai Dinh Vo, and Tuong Vu
A multi-disciplinary examination of Vietnamese American history and experience
Understanding Crime and Place: A Methods Handbook, Edited by Elizabeth R. Groff and Cory P. Haberman
A hands-on introduction to the fundamental techniques and methods used for understanding geography of crime
Filed under: african american studies, american studies, Anthropology, art, asian american studies, Asian Studies, civil rights, cultural studies, Disability Studies, drama, economics/business, Education, environment, ethics, gender studies, health, History, immigration, Jewish, Labor Studies, law & criminology, literature, Mass Media and Communications, Music, Philadelphia, philosophy, political science, race and ethnicity, racism, Religion, sexuality, sociology, sports, transnational politics, Urban Studies, women's studies | Tagged: Fall 2022 Catalog, Temple University Press |
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