28
OHIO UNIVERSITY PRESS & SWALLOW PRESS SPRING & SUMMER 2012

OHIO · 2018. 3. 30. · by gene logsdon august_____ 216 pages 5 1/ 2 x 8 1/ 2 hc $29.95t illus. 978-0-8214-1998-4 e-book_____ 978-0-8214 - 4409-2 Fresh from receiving a doctorate

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    1

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • OHIO University Press

    & swa llow Press

    sPring & sUmmer 2012

  • Member of the Association of American University Presses

    Who We Are

    ohio University Press was incorporated in 1947 and formally organized in 1964 by President John C. Baker. as the largest university press in ohio, we are dedicated to publishing quality scholarship, books of regional interest and value, and trade titles with wide appeal. the press attracts the work of scholars of national reputation and benefits from partnerships with institutions throughout ohio and the world.

    along with its swallow Press imprint, ohio University Press publishes more than forty books a year and maintains over one thousand titles in print, a growing number of which are also available as electronic editions. each book carries with it the banner of ohio University, reaffirming the university’s commitment to the fruits of research and creative endeavor.

    Cover painting by Lesley Charnock, Montebello Design Centre, Cape Town.

    spring • summer • 2012

    neW Books

    Fiction ................................... 1

    modern african writing .... 2–3

    memoir .................................. 4

    Civil war ................................ 5

    nonfiction .............................. 6

    environmental activism .......... 7

    Poetry .................................... 8

    theater .................................. 9

    african literature ........... 10–11

    new african Histories ......12–13

    environmental History .......... 14

    Polish-american History ....... 15

    victorian studies ............ 16 –17

    law and society ............. 18–19

    Continental Philosophy ........ 20

    recent ...................21–22

    orderingsales information ................ 23

    sales representatives .......... 24

    index ............................ 25

    “Ministers of Fire is a

    beautifully written, restrained,

    and passionate work by a writer

    who knows the ins and outs and

    intrigues of the new world order

    all too well. His prose is alive with

    insight, his characters are both

    recognizable from the news and

    internally realized. His novel has

    psychological depth, action,

    and suspense. it’s a fine work

    and its author is a writer

    of great promise.”

    —robert stone, author of Dog Soldiers and Damascus Gate

    Of related interest________________________

    We Are All

    Zimbabweans Now

    by James Kilgore

  • subject area • subject area • subject area

    o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 1

    subject area • subject area • subject area

    o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 1

    MaY___________________344 pages 5 1/8 x 8

    hc $26.95t978-0-8040-1140-2

    e-book 978-0-8040-4048-8___________________

    Ministers of Fire opens in Kabul, Afghanistan, in 1979, where, the au-thor writes, “the world we know was born.” CIA station chief Lucius Burling, an idealistic but flawed product of his nation’s intelligence estab-lishment, barely survives the assassination of the American ambassador. Burling’s reaction to the murder, and his desire to understand its larger meaning, propel him on a journey of intrigue and betrayal that will shake his faith in himself and in his country.

    Fast forward to Shanghai in the spring of 2002: his marriage and career blown off course, Burling lives quietly as the American consul, but the at-tacks of September 11 threaten to bring his misadventures in Afghanistan back to the surface. A Chinese dissident physicist may be planning to sell his country’s nuclear secrets, and Burling recognizes the fingerprints of a covert operation, one without the obvious sanction of the Agency.

    The dissident Yong’s escape route winds through an underground rail-road of unauthorized churches and activists’ homes, drawing the violent attention of General Zu Dongren of the Chinese internal security service and his devoted lieutenant Li Xin. Drawn inexorably into their path, Burl-ing must face both the ghosts of the past and a present world of global trafficking, fragile alliances, and the human need for connection above all.

    Reminiscent of the best work of Graham Greene and John le Carré, Min-isters of Fire extends the spy thriller into new historical, political, and emotional territory.

    Mark Harril Saunders was born and raised in the Washington, D.C., area and holds degrees from the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Virginia, where he was a Henry Hoyns Fellow. He has traveled extensively in Europe, the Middle East, the former Soviet Union, and China. His writing has appeared in the VQR, Boston Review, and the Virginian-Pilot, and in 2001 he was awarded the Andrew S. Lytle Prize for fiction from Sewanee Review. He lives in Charlottesville, Virginia, with his wife and three children.

    ministers of FireA Novel

    Mark Harril Saunders

    spy thriller •fictiOn

    Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofofofofofofofofofofofofofofofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofofofofofofofofofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofofofofofofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters Ministers ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofMinisters ofMinisters Ministers Ministers ofMinisters ofofofofofoffirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefire

    offire

    ofofoffire

    offire

    offire

    ofofoffire

    offirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefire

    offire

    ofofoffire

    offire

    offire

    ofofoffire

    offirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefire

    offire

    ofofoffire

    offire

    offire

    ofofoffire

    ofoffire

    ofofoffire

    offire

    offire

    ofofoffire

    ofoffire

    ofofoffire

    offire

    offire

    ofofoffire

    offirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefire

    offire

    ofofoffire

    offire

    offire

    ofofoffire

    offirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefirefire

    Mark HarrilSaunderS

    a novel

    “Beautifully written . . . Saunders’ novel has psychological depth, action, and suspense.”

    —Robert Stone

    Photo: Richard Trenner

    “Ministers of Fire belongs on the bookshelf with John

    le Carre and eric ambler. . . .

    i enjoyed it enormously.”

    —John Casey, national Book award-winning author of Spartina and Compass Rose

    a swallOw press bOOk

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Ministers+Of+Fire

  • 2 | o h i o s w a l l o w . c o m

    ModeRn AfRicAn WRiTing SeRieS

    “niq mhlongo is one of the

    most high-spirited and irreverent

    new voices of south africa’s

    postapartheid literary scene.”

    —rachel Donadio, New York Times

    Of related interest_____________________After Tears by niq mhlongo

    Dog Eat Dog is a remarkable record of being young in a nation under-going tremendous turmoil, and provides a glimpse into South Africa’s pivotal kwaito (South African hip-hop) generation and life in Soweto. Set in 1994, just as South Africa is making its postapartheid transition, Dog Eat Dog captures the hopes—and crushing disappointments—that characterize such moments in a nation’s history.

    Raucous and darkly humorous, Dog Eat Dog is narrated by Dinga-manzi Makhedama Njomane, a college student in South Africa who spends his days partying, skipping class, and picking up girls. But Dingz, as he is known to his friends, is living in charged times, and his discouraging college life plays out against the backdrop of South Africa’s first democratic elections, the spread of AIDS, and financial difficulties that threaten to force him out of school.

    “a very significant contribution, not just to south

    african literature but world literature in general.”

    —Eclectica Magazine

    “Full of interesting perceptions and vivid

    descriptions, and well-drawn and

    believable characters.”

    —New Times (rwanda)

    niq Mhlongo was born in 1973 in Soweto. After Tears, his second novel, also in the Modern African Writing series, was published by Ohio University Press in 2011. Mhlongo lives in Soweto, South Africa.

    Dog eat DogA Novel

    niq Mhlongo

    african literature • fictiOn

    DogEat Dogn

    iq

    Mhl

    ongo

    A Novel

    julY_____________________224 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2

    pb $18.95t978-0-8214 -1994-6e-book 978-0-8214 - 4413-9_____________________

    world rights except south africa

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Dog+Eat+Dog

  • o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 3

    ModeRn AfRicAn WRiTing

    SeRieS

    “Powerful . . . the author’s raw voice, unflinching eye for detail, facility for creating a complex narrative, and affection for her characters make this a must read.”

    —Publishers Weekly, starred review

    februarY___________________272 pages 6 1/8 x 9 1/4

    pb $18.95t978-0-8214 -1992-2___________________

    On Black Sisters Street tells the haunting story of four very different women who have left their African homeland for the riches of Europe—and who are thrown together by bad luck and big dreams into a sisterhood that will change their lives. Each night, Sisi, Ama, Efe, and Joyce stand in the windows of Antwerp’s red-light district, promising to make men’s desires come true—if only for half an hour. They offer their bodies to strangers but their hearts to no one, each focused on earning enough to get herself free, to send money home, or to save up for her own future. Drawn together by Sisi’s murder, the women must choose between their secrets and their safety.

    This first paperback edition of On Black Sisters Street celebrates the U.S. publication debut of Chika Unigwe, a brilliant new writer and a standout voice among contemporary African authors.

    “Boiling with a sly, generous humor . . . On Black Sisters Street marks the arrival of a latter-day thackeray, an afro-Belgian writer who probes with

    passion, grace and comic verve the underbelly of

    our globalized new world economy.”—New York Times Book Review

    chika Unigwe was born in Nigeria and now lives in Belgium with her husband and four children. She was a 2008 UNESCO-Aschberg fellow and a 2009 Rockefeller Foundation fellow. She holds a PhD from the University of Leiden. She is the recipi-ent of several awards for her writing, including first prize in the 2003 BBC Short Story Competition. In 2004 she was shortlisted for the Caine Prize for African Writing. Her first novel, De Feniks, was published in Dutch in 2005.

    on Black sisters streetA Novel

    chika Unigwe

    african literature • fictiOn

    On Black Sisters Street

    A NOVEL

    ch

    ikA

    Uni

    gwe

    Of related interest_____________________Welcome to Our Hillbrow

    by Phaswane mpe

    Photo: Rocio forero

    world rights except BritishCommonwealth including Canada,

    ireland and south africa

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/On+Black+Sisters+Street

  • 4 | o h i o s w a l l o w . c o m

    MeMOir • farMing

    “It is because of this universality, this undercurrent which is the

    daily life of thirty million Ameri-cans, that I offer here [my]

    journal, in the hope that it brings to those who have not known

    the soil some measure of insight into its problems, and perhaps

    a deeper sympathy for its victories and its defeats.”

    Of related interest_______________________The Last of the Husbandmen:

    A Novel of Farming Lifeby gene logsdon

    august___________________216 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2

    hc $29.95t illus.978-0-8214 -1998-4e-book 978-0-8214 - 4409-2___________________

    Fresh from receiving a doctorate from Cornell University, but unable to find work, Charles Wiltse returned to his family’s 600-acre farm in southern Ohio. There, the Wiltses scratched out a living selling eggs, wood, corn, and other farm goods at prices that were barely enough to keep the farm intact.

    In wry and often affecting prose, Charles Wiltse recorded a year in the life of this quintessentially American place during the Great De-pression. He describes the family’s daily routine, occasional light mo-ments, and their ongoing frustrations, small and large —from a neigh-bor’s hog that continually broke into the cornfields to the ongoing struggle with their finances. Despite repeated requests, the family could not secure loans from local banks to help them through the hard economic times, and Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal had little to offer small farmers. Wiltse spoke the bitter truth when he told his diary, “We are not a lucky family.” In this he represented millions of others caught in the maw of a national disaster.

    The diary is introduced and edited by Michael J. Birkner, Wiltse’s former student and colleague at the Papers of Daniel Webster Project at Dartmouth College, and coeditor, with Wiltse, of the final volume of Webster’s correspondence.

    charles M. Wiltse was a professor of history at Dartmouth College and an editor of the sixteen-volume Papers of Daniel Webster. He was also the author or editor of many other books, including a three-volume collection of the papers of John C. Calhoun and The Jeffersonian Tradition in American Democracy.

    Michael J. Birkner is a professor of history and Benjamin Franklin Professor of Liberal Arts at Gettysburg College, where he has taught since 1989. He is the author or editor of twelve books, including the forthcoming James Buchanan and the Coming of the Civil War.

    Prosperity Far DistantThe Journal of an American Farmer, 1933–1934

    charles M. Wiltse

    Edited by Michael J. Birkner; with a foreword by Gene Logsdon

    ProsPerity Far Distant

    The Journal of an American Farmer, 1933-1934

    C h a r l e s m . W i l t s e

    Edited by Michael J. BirknerWith a forEWord By GEnE LoGsdon

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Prosperity+Far+Distant

  • o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 5

    civil war • histOrY

    “They had beaten Lee at Gettysburg, but it was now apparent he had not been beaten badly enough, because he sat on the opposite bank of the river as defiantly as ever.”

    Of related interest___________________________________

    Do They Miss Me at Home? The Civil War Letters of William McKnight, Seventh Ohio Volunteer Cavalry edited by Donald C. maness and H. Jason Combs

    june___________________512 pages 7 x 10

    pb $34.95t illus.978-0-8040-1139-6

    e-book 978-0-8040-4047-1 ___________________

    Told in unflinching detail, this is the story of the Twenty-Ninth Ohio Volunteer Infantry, also known as the Giddings Regiment or the Abolition Regiment, after its founder, radical abolitionist Con-gressman J. R. Giddings. The men who enlisted in the Twenty-Ninth OVI were, according to its lore, handpicked to ensure each was as pure in his antislavery beliefs as its founder. Whether these sol-diers would fight harder than other soldiers, and whether the people of their hometowns would remain devoted to the ideals of the regiment, were questions that could only be tested by the experiment of war.

    The Untried Life is the story of these men from their very first regi-mental formation in a county fairground to the devastation of Gettys-burg and the march to Atlanta and back again, enduring disease and Confederate prisons. It brings to vivid life the comradeship and loneli-ness that pervaded their days on the march. Dozens of unforgettable characters emerge, animated by their own letters and diaries: Corporal Nathan Parmenter, whose modest upbringing belies the eloquence of his writings; Colonel Lewis Buckley, one of the Twenty-Ninth’s most charismatic officers; and Chaplain Lyman Ames, whose care of the sick and wounded challenged his spiritual beliefs.

    The Untried Life shows how the common soldier lived —his enter-tainments, methods of cooking, medical treatment, and struggle to maintain family connections —and separates the facts from the mythol-ogy created in the decades after the war.

    James T. fritsch has been a teacher, carpenter, horse trainer, small- town newspaper reporter, actor, pilot, and professional investigator. This book is the culmination of fifteen years of research into the life and times of the Twenty-Ninth Ohio Volunteer Infantry. Fritsch lives in Scotts - dale, Arizona.

    the Untried lifeThe Story of the Twenty-Ninth Ohio Volunteer Infantry in the Civil War

    James T. fritsch

    a swallOw press bOOk

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/The+Untried+Life

  • 6 | o h i o s w a l l o w . c o m

    slaverY • cOlOnial studies •africa

    In Chocolate Islands: Cocoa, Slavery, and Colonial Africa, Catherine Higgs traces the early-twentieth-century journey of the Englishman Joseph Burtt to the Portuguese colony of São Tomé and Príncipe—the chocolate islands—through Angola and Mozambique, and finally to British Southern Africa. Burtt had been hired by the chocolate firm Cadbury Brothers Limited to determine if the cocoa it was buying from the islands had been harvested by slave laborers forcibly recruited from Angola, an allegation that became one of the grand scandals of the early colonial era. Burtt spent six months on São Tomé and Príncipe and a year in Angola. His five-month march across Angola in 1906 took him from innocence and credulity to outrage and activism and ultimately helped change labor recruiting practices in colonial Africa.

    This beautifully written and engaging travel narrative draws on collections in Portugal, the United Kingdom, and Africa to explore British and Portuguese attitudes toward work, slavery, race, and imperialism. In a story still familiar a century after Burtt’s sojourn, Chocolate Islands reveals the idealism, naivety, and racism that shaped attitudes toward Africa, even among those who sought to improve the conditions of its workers.

    catherine Higgs is an associate professor of history at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. She is the author of The Ghost of Equality: The Public Lives of D.D.T. Jabavu of South Africa, 1885–1959, and coeditor of Stepping Forward: Black Women in Africa and the Americas, both published by Ohio University Press.

    Chocolate islandsCocoa, Slavery, and Colonial Africa

    catherine Higgs

    “Catherine Higgs writes about the chocolate islands with clarity

    and conviction, commanding the evidence while presenting an argu-

    ment about the ‘dignity of labor’ with an elegance of style. in terms

    of presentation, research and struc-ture, the book is a tour de force.”

    —David Birmingham, author of Portugal and Africa and Trade and

    Empire in the Atlantic, 1400 to 1600

    Of related interest_______________________Chocolate on Trial:

    Slavery, Politics, and the Ethics of Business

    by lowell J. satre

    MaY___________________236 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2

    hc $26.95t illus.978-0-8214-2006-5e-book 978-0-8214 - 4422-1___________________

    Catherine Higgs

    Chocolate Islands Cocoa, Slavery, and Colonial Africa

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Chocolate+Islands

  • o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 7

    “what a magnificent book! the author skillfully weaves theoretical discussions into a fast-paced narrative. Standing Our Ground is well written, well researched, and on solid theoretical ground. the book offers a unique lens: coal is a highly masculinized world, and Barry opens up a view of women’s roles and activism inside this world, which is often closed to outsiders.”

    —Joni seager, author of Gender, Poverty, and the Environment

    august___________________208 pages 6 x 9

    hc $34.95t illus.978-0-8214-1997-7

    e-book 978-0-8214-4410-8___________________

    cOnservatiOn • activisM •appalachian studies •

    wOMen’s studies

    Standing Our Ground: Women, Environmental Justice, and the Fight to End Mountaintop Removal examines women’s efforts to end mountaintop removal coal mining in West Virginia. Mountaintop removal coal mining, which involves demolishing the tops of hills and mountains to provide access to coal seams, is one of the most significant environmental threats in Appalachia, where it is most commonly practiced.

    The Appalachian women featured in Barry’s book have firsthand experience with the negative impacts of Big Coal in West Virginia. Through their work in organizations such as the Coal River Mountain Watch and the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, they fight to save their mountain communities by promoting the development of alternative energy resources. Barry’s engaging and original work reveals how women’s tireless organizing efforts have made mountaintop removal a global political and environmental issue and laid the groundwork for a robust environmental justice movement in central Appalachia.

    Joyce M. Barry is a visiting assistant professor of women’s studies at Hamilton College. Her work has received support from the National Endow-ment for the Humanities and has appeared in such national publications as Women’s Studies Quarterly, Environmental Justice, Environmental Ethics, and the National Women’s Studies Associa-tion Journal. Barry grew up in West Virginia’s southern coalfields, and now resides in Clinton, New York.

    standing our groundWomen, Environmental Justice, and the Fight to End Mountaintop Removal

    Joyce M. Barry

    SeRieS in RAce,eTHniciTy, And gendeR

    in APPAlAcHiA

    Joyce M. barry

    StandingStandingStandingStandingStandingStandingStandingStandingStandingOur GrOur GrOur GrOur GrOur GrOur GrStandingStandingStandingOur GrStandingStandingStandingOur GrStandingStandingStandingOur GrStandingStandingStandingOOOOOOStandingStandingStandingOStandingStandingStandingOStandingStandingStandingOStandingStandingStandingundundundundundundStandingStandingStandingundStandingStandingStandingundStandingStandingStandingundStandingStandingStandingWomen, environmental Justice, and the Fight to end mountaintop removal

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Standing+Our+Ground

  • 8 | o h i o s w a l l o w . c o m

    previous winner of thehollis summers

    poetry prize_______________________Cracks in the Invisible: Poems

    by stephen Kampa

    april___________________72 pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2

    pb $16.95t978-0-8214 -1989-2e-book 978-0-8214 - 4408-5___________________

    pOetrY

    WinneR of THeHolliS SUMMeRSPoeTRy PRize

    Gravel and Hawk dwells on the physical and cultural landscapes of the Texarkana border region, an area of stark natural beauty and even starker manifestations of its human habitation: oil derricks and pump jacks, logging trucks, chicken houses, come-to-Jesus billboards, and greasy catfish joints, a patchwork of dying farm towns and ragtag municipalities laced together by county roads, state highways, and that treacherous, rust-hued slurry known as the Red River.

    Gravel and Hawk charts the emotional landscape of a single extended family, its history of loss and gain, and, especially, its encounters with violent death. It is an eminently readable collection, rooted in a distinctly American place and united by a poetic voice that is honest, sophisticated, and persuasive.

    “Gravel and Hawk is an elegiac book —explicitly so in the poems honoring relatives and friends

    who have died, and implicitly so in many other

    poems that recreate the daily textures of a farm-

    centered life. as a whole this book delivers a rich

    sense of a past deeply examined.”

    —mark Halliday, judge

    nick norwood is the author of the poetry collections The Soft Blare and A Palace for the Heart and the fine press book Wrestle, which he produced in collaboration with the artist and master printer Erika Adams. His poems have appeared widely in such journals as Western Humanities Review, Southwest Review, Paris Review, Wallace Stevens Journal, and others.

    gravel and HawkPoems

    nick norwood

    gravel and hawk

    poems

    Nick N

    orwood

    W i n n e r o f t h e h o l l i s s u m m e r s P o e t r y P r i z e

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Gravel+And+Hawk

  • o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 9

    african aMerican literature • theater • anthOlOgY

    “a plot twist of his own

    that darkens even twain’s

    dark humor.”

    —Bruce weber, New York Times, on Pudd’nhead Wilson

    nOw in paperback___________________________In His Own Voice: The Dramatic and Other Uncollected Works of Paul Laurence Dunbar edited by Herbert woodward martin and ronald Primeau

    august___________________348 pages 6 x 9

    pb $28.95t illus.978-0-8214-2005-8

    e-book 978-0-8214 - 4421-4 ___________________

    This collection of five award-winning plays by Charles Smith includes Jelly Belly, Free Man of Color, Pudd’nhead Wilson, Knock Me a Kiss,and The Gospel According to James. Powerful, provocative, and entertaining, these plays have been produced by professional theater companies across the country and abroad. Four of the plays are based on historical people and events from W.E.B. Du Bois and Countee Cullen to the Harlem Renaissance.

    Accurate in the way they capture the political and cultural milieu of their historical settings, and courageous in the way they grapple with difficult questions such as race, education, religion, and social class, these plays jump off the page just as powerfully as they come to life on stage. This first-ever collection from one of the nation’s leading African American playwrights is a journey down the complex road of race and history.

    “in one blistering scene after another—with

    dialogue that is alternately highly poetic,

    down-and-dirty, eerily disturbing and fiercely

    authoritarian—smith exposes the lies and the

    blazing truths that animate his characters.”

    —Hedy weiss, Chicago Sun-Times, on Knock Me a Kiss

    charles Smith is an award-winning playwright and member of the Playwrights Ensemble of the Tony Award–winning Victory Gardens Theater in Chicago. He is also Distinguished Professor of Theatre at Ohio University, where he heads the Professional Playwriting Program. His plays explore contemporary issues of race, identity, and politics in America.

    the gospel according to James and other Playscharles Smith

    The Gospel According to

    James and Other Plays

    charles smith

    Photo: Bob Winters

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/The+Gospel+According+To+James+And+Other+Plays

  • 10 | o h i o s w a l l o w . c o m

    literarY criticisM • african literature

    “Dance of Life offers a wealth of criti-cal insights into mda’s novels in chap-ters that are compellingly argued, very

    perceptive in their readings of individual works, utterly persuasive in the overall argument that is developed, and pre-

    sented in a lively style that makes for a very satisfying reading experience.

    . . . the book may serve both as a work for the literary specialist and as an

    introduction to mda for the newcomer. it will make an important and necessary

    contribution to mda studies.”

    —Johan U. Jacobs, coeditor with David Bell of Ways of Writing:

    Critical Essays on Zakes Mda

    april___________________224 pages 6 x 9

    pb $34.95s illus.978-0-8214 -1993-9e-book 978-0-8214 - 4414-6___________________

    In recent years, the work of Zakes Mda—novelist, painter, composer, theater director and filmmaker—has attracted worldwide critical attention. Gail Fincham’s book examines the five novels Mda has written since South Africa’s transition to democracy: Ways of Dying (1995), The Heart of Redness (2000), The Madonna of Excelsior (2002), The Whale Caller (2005), and Cion (2007). Dance of Life explores how refigured identity is rooted in Mda’s strongly painterly imagination that creates changed spaces in memory and culture.

    Through a combination of magic realism, African orature, and intertextuality with the Western canon, Mda rejects dualistic thinking of the past and the present, the human and the nonhuman, the living and the dead, the rural and the urban. He imbues his fictional characters with the power to orchestrate a reconfigured subjectivity that is simultaneously political, social, and aesthetic.

    gail fincham is an associate professor in the Department of English Language and Literature at the University of Cape Town.

    Dance of lifeThe Novels of Zakes Mda in Post-apartheid South Africa

    gail fincham

    rights: all americas and Pacific rim

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Dance+Of+Life

  • o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 11

    literarY criticisM • african literature

    “a well-researched and

    beautifully written textual

    study . . . authoritative and

    carefully argued.”

    —stephanie newell

    Of related interest_________________________

    Africa Writes Back: The African Writers Series & the Launch of African Literatureby James Currey

    june___________________264 pages 6 x 9

    pb $34.95s illus.978-0-8214 -1995-3

    e-book 978-0-8214 - 4412-2___________________

    Metaphor and the Slave Trade provides compelling evidence of the hidden but unmistakable traces of the transatlantic slave trade that persist in West African discourse. Through an examination of metaphors that describe the trauma, loss, and suffering associated with the commerce in human lives, this book shows how the horrors of slavery are communicated from generation to generation.

    Laura T. Murphy’s insightful new readings of canonical West African fiction, autobiography, drama, and poetry explore the relationship between memory and metaphor and emphasize how repressed or otherwise marginalized memories can be transmitted through images, tropes, rumors, and fears. By analyzing the unique codes through which West Africans have represented the slave trade, this work foregrounds African literary contributions to Black Atlantic discourse and draws attention to the archive that metaphor unlocks for scholars of all disciplines and fields of study.

    “original and challenging . . . (murphy) argues that while it has been acknowledged that the oral tradition registers the traumatic effect of the slave trade, scholars have been slow to recognize its deep imprint on the collective imaginary and the way in which it has been reflected in the modern literature in english.”—F. abiola irele, author of The African Imagination: Literature in Africa and the Black Diaspora

    laura T. Murphy is an assistant professor of English at Loyola University in New Orleans. Her work has appeared in Research in African Literatures and in Studies in the Novel.

    metaphor and the slave trade in west african literature

    laura T. Murphy

    Metaphor

    slave tr

    ade

    in west a

    frican lit

    erature

    laura t. murphy

    andthe

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Metaphor+And+The+Slave+Trade+In+West+African+Literature

  • 12 | o h i o s w a l l o w . c o m

    huMan trafficking • law • african histOrY• anthrOpOlOgY

    Of related interest___________________________

    Domestic Violence and the Law in Colonial and

    Postcolonial Africa edited by emily s. Burrill,

    richard l. roberts, and elizabeth thornberry

    Child Slaves in the Modern World

    edited by gwyn Campbell, suzanne miers, and

    Joseph C. miller

    august___________________264 pages 6 x 9

    pb $32.95s978-0-8214-2002-7e-book 978-0-8214 - 4418-4___________________

    Women and children have been bartered, pawned, bought, and sold within and beyond Africa for longer than records have existed. This important collection examines the ways trafficking in women and children has changed from the aftermath of the “end of slavery” in Africa from the late nineteenth century to the present.

    The formal abolition of the slave trade and slavery did not end the demand for servile women and children. Contemporary forms of hu-man trafficking are deeply interwoven with their historical precursors and scholars and activists need to be informed about the long history of trafficking in order to better assess and confront its contemporary forms. This book brings together the perspectives of leading scholars, activists, and other experts, creating a conversation that is essential for understanding the complexity of human trafficking in Africa.

    Human trafficking is rapidly emerging as a core human rights issue for the twenty-first century. Trafficking in Slavery’s Wake is excellent reading for the researching, combating, and prosecuting of trafficking in women and children.

    Benjamin n. lawrance is the Barber B. Conable, Jr. Endowed Pro-fessor of International Studies at the Rochester Institute of Technol-ogy. He is the author of Local Foods Meet Global Foodways: Tasting History, Locality, Mobility, and ‘Nation’; Interpreters, Intermediaries and Clerks; and The Ewe of Togo and Benin.

    Richard l. Roberts is the Frances and Charles Field Professor of His-tory and the Director of the Center for African Studies at Stanford University. His most recent books include Domestic Violence and the Law in Colonial and Postcolonial Africa and Muslim Family Law in Sub-Saharan Africa: Colonial Legacies and Postcolonial Challenges.

    trafficking in slavery’s wake Law and the Experience of Women and Children in Africa

    edited by Benjamin n. lawrance and Richard l. RobertsWith an afterword by Kevin Bales and Jody Sarich

    neW AfRicAn HiSToRieSSeRieS

    n e w a f r i c a n h i s t o r i e s

    Edited by Benjamin N. Lawrance and Richard L. RobertsW i t h a n a f t e r W o r d b y K e v i n b a l e s a n d J o d y s a r i c h

    Trafficking in slavery’s wake

    Law and the Experience of Women and Children in Africa

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Trafficking+In+Slavery's+Wake

  • o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 13

    urban histOrY • pOstcOlOnial studies • race relatiOns

    Of related interest___________________________

    The Americans Are Coming! Dreams of African American Liberation in Segregationist South Africa by robert trent vinson

    Our New Husbands Are Here: Households, Gender, and Politics in a West African State from the Slave Trade to Colonial Ruleby emily lynn osborn

    june___________________264 pages 6 x 9

    pb $32.95s978-0-8214-2001-0

    e-book 978-0-8214 - 4417-7___________________

    Taifa is a story of African intellectual agency, but it is also an account of how nation and race emerged out of the legal, social, and economic histories in one major city, Dar es Salaam. Nation and race—both translatable as taifa in Swahili—were not simply universal ideas brought to Africa by European colonizers, as previous studies assume. They were instead categories crafted by local African thinkers to make sense of deep inequalities, particularly those between local Africans and Indian immigrants. Taifa shows how nation and race became the key political categories to guide colonial and postcolonial life in this African city.

    Using deeply researched archival and oral evidence, Taifa transforms our understanding of urban history and shows how concerns about access to credit and housing became intertwined with changing conceptions of nation and nationhood. Taifa gives equal attention to both Indians and Africans; in doing so, it demonstrates the significance of political and economic connections between coastal East Africa and India during the era of British colonialism, and illustrates how the project of racial nationalism largely severed these connections by the 1970s.

    “this is an important book. there’s nothing else that

    puts indians and africans in the same frame. Brennan

    is grounded in two separate sets of secondary litera-

    ture and that gives his work a breadth that is rare.”—luise white, author of The Comforts of Home: Prostitution in Colonial Nairobi

    James R. Brennan is an assistant professor in history at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana. He is the author of numerous book chapters and journal articles.

    taifaMaking Nation and Race in Urban Tanzania

    James R. Brennan

    neW AfRicAn HiSToRieS SeRieS

    n e w a f r i c a n h i s t o r i e s

    James R. Brennan

    TaifaMaking Nation and Race

    in Urban Tanzania

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Taifa

  • 14 | o h i o s w a l l o w . c o m

    envirOnMental histOrY • indigenOus studies • pOlitical ecOlOgY

    contributors

    David BernsteinDerick Fay

    andrew H. FisherKaren Flint

    David m. gordonPaul Kelton

    shepard Krech iiiJoshua reid

    Parker shiptonlance van sittert

    Jacob troppJames l. a. webb, Jr.

    marsha weisiger

    March___________________368 pages 6 x 9

    hc $59.95s illus.978-0-8214 -1996-0e-book 978-0-8214 - 4411-5___________________

    Indigenous knowledge has become a catchphrase in global strug-gles for environmental justice. Yet indigenous knowledges are often viewed, incorrectly, as pure and primordial cultural artifacts. This collection draws from African and North American cases to argue that the forms of knowledge identified as “indigenous” resulted from strategies to control environmental resources during and after colo-nial encounters.

    At times indigenous knowledges represented a “middle ground” of intellectual exchanges between colonizers and colonized; elsewhere, indigenous knowledges were defined through conflict and struggle. The authors demonstrate how people claimed that their hybrid forms of knowledge were communal, religious, and traditional, as opposed to individualist, secular, and scientific, which they associated with Eu-ropean colonialism.

    Indigenous Knowledge and the Environment offers comparative and transnational insights that disturb romantic views of unchanging in-digenous knowledges in harmony with the environment. The result is a book that informs and complicates how indigenous knowledges can and should relate to environmental policy-making.

    david M. gordon is an associate professor of history at Bowdoin College. He is author of Nachituti’s Gift: Economy, Society, and En-vironment in Central Africa and numerous articles on African social, cultural, and environmental history.

    Shepard Krech iii is a professor emeritus of anthropology at Brown University and a research associate in the Department of Anthropol-ogy, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution. A trustee of the National Humanities Center, he is the author or editor of many essays and books, including The Ecological Indian and The Encyclopedia of World Environmental History, edited with John McNeill and Carolyn Merchant.

    SeRieS in ecology And HiSToRy

    indigenous Knowledge and the environment in africa and north americaedited by david M. gordon and Shepard Krech iii

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Indigenous+Knowledge+And+The+Environment+In+Africa+And+North+America

  • pOlish histOrY • histOrY Of religiOn • pOlitical science

    Of related interest___________________________Rome’s Most Faithful Daughter: The Catholic Church and Independent Poland, 1914–1939by neal Pease

    julY___________________272 pages 6 x 9

    hc $44.95s illus.978-0-8214-2004 -1

    e-book 978-0-8214 - 4420-7___________________

    In this study of the relationship of nationalism, communism, authoritarianism, and religion in twentieth-century Poland, Mikołaj Kunicki shows how the country’s communist rulers tried to adapt communism to local traditions, particularly ethnocentric nationalism and Catholicism. Focusing on the political career of Bolesław Piasecki, a Polish nationalist politician who started his journey as a fascist before the war and ended it as a procommunist activist, Kunicki demonstrates that Polish Communists reinforced the ethnocentric self-definition of Polishness and—as Piasecki’s case proves—prolonged the existence of the nationalist Right.

    Between the Brown and the Red captures the multifaceted nature of church-state relations in Communist Poland, relations that oscillated between mutual confrontation, accommodation, and dialogue rather than stagnating in a state of constant struggle. Contrary to assumptions, under Communism the bond between religion and nation in Poland grew stronger. Between the Brown and the Red also introduces to the reader one of the most fascinating figures in the history of twentieth-century Poland and the Communist world.

    Mikołaj Stanisław Kunicki is an assistant professor of history at the University of Notre Dame.

    Between the Brown and the redNationalism, Catholicism, and Communism in Twentieth-Century Poland

    Mikołaj Stanisław Kunicki

    PoliSH And PoliSH-AMeRicAn STUdieS

    SeRieS

    o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 15

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Between+The+Brown+And+The+Red

  • 16 | o h i o s w a l l o w . c o m

    victOrian studies • histOrY Of philanthrOpY • literarY criticisM

    “Charity and Condescension gives literary critics that which

    we always hope for in a new book: an entirely new

    way of seeing texts that we all know and teach.”

    —suzanne Daly, University of massachusetts amherst

    Of related interest___________________________

    Come Buy, Come Buy:Shopping and the

    Culture of Consumption in Victorian

    Women’s Writingby Krista lysack

    april___________________232 pages 6 x 9

    hc $49.95s illus.978-0-8214 -1991-5e-book 978-0-8214 - 4407-8___________________

    Charity and CondescensionVictorian Literature and the Dilemmas of Philanthropy

    daniel Siegel

    Charity and Condescension explores how condescension, a traditional English virtue, went sour in the nineteenth century, and considers the ways in which the failure of condescension influenced Victorian efforts to reform philanthropy and to construct new narrative models of social conciliation. In the literary work of authors like Dickens, Eliot, and Tennyson, and in the writing of reformers like Octavia Hill and Samuel Barnett, condescension—once a sign of the power and value of charity—became an emblem of charity’s limitations.

    Charity and Condescension argues that, despite its reputation for idealistic self-assurance, Victorian charity frequently doubted its own operations and was driven by creative self-critique. Through sophisticated and original close readings of important Victorian texts, Siegel shows how these important ideas developed even as England struggled to deal with its growing underclass and an expanding notion of the state’s responsibility to its poor.

    daniel Siegel is an associate professor of English at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. He is the author of several articles about Victorian literature and culture.

    Charity

    Condescension

    &

    Victorian Literature and the Dilemmas of Philanthropy

    Da n i e L s i e g e L

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Charity+&+Condescension

  • o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 17

    If nineteenth-century Britain witnessed the rise of medical professionalism, it also witnessed rampant quackery. It is tempting to categorize historical practices as either orthodox or quack, but what did these terms really signify in medical and public circles at the time? How did they develop and evolve? What do they tell us about actual medical practices?

    Doctoring the Novel explores the ways in which language constructs and stabilizes these slippery terms by examining medical quackery and orthodoxy in books such as Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Charles Dickens’s Bleak House and Little Dorrit, Charlotte Brontë’s Villette, Wilkie Collins’s Armadale, and Arthur Conan Doyle’s Stark Munro Letters. Contextualized in both medical and popular publishing, literary analysis reveals that even supposedly medico-scientific concepts such as orthodoxy and quackery evolve not in elite laboratories and bourgeois medical societies but in the rough-and-tumble of the public sphere, a view that acknowledges the considerable, and often underrated, influence of language on medical practices.

    Trained in Victorian studies and pharmacy, Sylvia A. Pamboukian is an associate professor in the department of English at Robert Morris University. She has published on topics as diverse as Victorian x-rays, Rudyard Kipling’s supernatural stories, and taboo in the Harry Potter series.

    “this very perceptive and

    imaginative study makes

    a significant contribution

    to victorian studies.”

    —matthew ramsey, vanderbilt University

    Of related interest_______________________________A Necessary Luxury:Tea in Victorian Englandby Julie e. Fromer

    March___________________224 pages 6 x 9

    hc $49.95s978-0-8214 -1990-8

    e-book 978-0-8214 - 4406-1___________________

    victOrian literature • histOrY Of Medicine

    Doctoring the novel Medicine and Quackery from Shelley to Doyle

    Sylvia A. Pamboukian

    DoctoringtheNovel

    Medicine and Quackery from Shelley to Doyle

    S y l v i a a . P a M b o u k i a n

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Doctoring+The+Novel

  • 18 | o h i o s w a l l o w . c o m

    Of related interest____________________________________

    American Pogrom: The East St. Louis Race Riot and Black Politicsby Charles l. lumpkins

    March____________________284 pages 6 x 9

    hc $49.95s illus.978-0-8214-2003-4e-book 978-0-8214 - 4419-1____________________

    SeRieS on lAW, SocieTy, And PoliTicS in THe MidWeST

    Historians have long argued that the Great War eradicated German culture from American soil. Degrees of Allegiance examines the experiences of German-Americans living in Missouri during the First World War, evaluating the personal relationships at the local level that shaped their lives and the way that they were affected by national war effort guidelines. Spared from widespread hate crimes, German-Americans in Missouri did not have the same bleak experiences as other German-Americans in the Midwest or across America. But they were still subject to regular charges of disloyalty, sometimes because of conflicts within the German-American community itself.

    Degrees of Allegiance updates traditional thinking about the German-American experience during the Great War, taking into account not just the war years but also the history of German settlement and the war’s impact on German-American culture.

    Petra deWitt teaches at Missouri University of Science and Technology, Rolla, Missouri. She is the author of a number of articles about the German-American community in Missouri.

    Degrees of allegianceHarassment and Loyalty in Missouri’s German-AmericanCommunity during World War I

    Petra deWitt

    gerMan-aMerican histOrY •u.s. histOrY

    18 | o h i o s w a l l o w . c o m

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Degrees+Of+Allegiance

  • subject area • subject area • subject area

    o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 19

    SeRieS on lAW, SocieTy, And PoliTicS

    in THe MidWeST

    Justice and Legal Change on the Shores of Lake Erie explores the many ways that the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio has affected the region, the nation, the development of American law, and American politics. The essays in this book, writ-ten by eminent law professors, historians, political scientists, and prac-ticing attorneys, illustrate the range of cases and issues that have come before the court. Since the court’s inception in 1855, judges have in-fluenced economic developments and social issues, beginning with the court’s most famous early case, involving the rescue of the fugitive slave John Price by residents of Northern Ohio. Chapters focusing on labor strikes, free speech, women’s rights, the environment, the death penalty, and immigration illustrate the impact this court and its judges have had in the development of society and the nation’s law. Some of the cases here deal with local issues with huge national implications —like political corruption, school desegregation, or pollution on the Cuyahoga River. But others are about major national issues that grew out of incidents, such as the prosecution of Eugene V. Debs for oppos-ing World War I, the litigation resulting from the Kent State shootings and opposition to the Vietnam War, and the immigration status of the alleged Nazi war criminal John Demyanjuk. This timely history confirms the significant role played by district courts in the history of the United States.

    Paul finkelman is President William McKinley Distinguished Profes-sor of Law and Public Policy and Senior Fellow in the Government Law Center at Albany Law School. He is the author or editor of many articles and books.

    Roberta Sue Alexander is Distinguished Service Professor of His-tory and Professor Emeritus at the University of Dayton. She is the author of North Carolina Faces the Freedmen: Race Relations during Presidential Reconstruction, 1865–67.

    Justice and legal Change on the shores of lake erie A History of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio

    edited by Paul finkelman and Roberta Sue Alexander

    Of related interest_______________________A Place of Recourse:A History of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, 1803–2003by roberta sue alexander

    julY___________________360 pages 6 x 9

    hc $49.95s illus.978-0-8214-2000-3

    e-book 978-0-8214 - 4416-0___________________

    contributors roberta sue alexander, martin H. Belsky, melvyn Dubofsky, Paul Finkelman, alison K. guernsey, thomas r. Hensley, Keith H. Hirokawa, nancy e. marion,Dan aaron Polster, renee C. redman,elizabeth reilly, richard B. saphire,tracy a. thomas, melvin i. Urofsky

    o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 19

    u. s. histOrY •law

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/Justice+And+Legal+Change+On+The+Shores+Of+Lake+Erie

  • 20 | o h i o s w a l l o w . c o m

    “Dillon was a force in Continental

    philosophy in the Us for more

    than four decades. . . . this

    volume will keep his voice and

    thought alive for years to come.”—galen Johnson, Professor of

    Philosophy, University of rhode island and general secretary, international

    merleau-Ponty Circle

    Of related interest___________________________The Memory of Place:

    A Phenomenology of the Uncannyby Dylan trigg

    March___________________264 pages 6 x 9

    hc $54.95s978-0-8214 -1999-1e-book 978-0-8214 - 4415-3___________________

    M. C. Dillon (1938–2005) was widely regarded as a world-leading Merleau-Ponty scholar. His book Merleau-Ponty’s Ontology (1988) is recognized as a classic text that revolutionized the philosophical conversation about the great French phenomenologist. Dillon followed that book with two others: Semiological Reductionism, a critique of early-1990s linguistic reductionism, and Beyond Romance, a richly developed theory of love. At the time of his death, Dillon had nearly completed two further books to which he was passionately committed. The first one offers a highly original interpretation of Nietzsche’s ontology of becoming. The second offers a detailed ethical theory based on Merleau-Ponty’s account of carnal intersubjectivity.

    The Ontology of Becoming and the Ethics of Particularity collects these two manuscripts written by a distinguished philosopher at the peak of his powers—manuscripts that, taken together, offer a distinctive and powerful view of human life and ethical relations.

    M. c. dillon (1938–2005) was Distinguished Teaching Professor of Philosophy at Binghamton University. He was the author of Merleau-Ponty’s Ontology, Semiological Reductionism: A Critique of the Deconstructionist Movement in Philosophy, and Beyond Romance. He served as the General Secretary of the International Merleau-Ponty Circle from 1985 to 2005.

    lawrence Hass is a professor of humanities at Austin College in Sherman, Texas, where he teaches philosophy and theater arts. He is the author of Merleau-Ponty’s Philosophy and Transformations: Creating Magic Out of Tricks. He is coeditor of Rereading Merleau-Ponty: Essays Across the Continental-Analytic Divide and From the 18th Century to the Present: Performance Magic on the Western Stage.

    SeRieS in conTinenTAl THoUgHT no. 43

    the ontology of Becoming and the ethics of ParticularityM. c. dillon

    Edited by Lawrence Hass

    cOntinental philOsOphY

    M.C. Dillonthe ontology ofBeCoMinganD the ethiCs ofPartiCularityEditEd by LawrEncE Hass

    sEriEs in continEntaL tHougHt

    DillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDillonDilloni l n

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/The+Ontology+Of+Becoming+And+The+Ethics+Of+Particularity

  • new in paperback

    THEPARADOX

    OFPROGRESS

    ECONOMIC CHANGE,INDIVIDUAL ENTERPRISE,AND POLITICAL CULTURE

    IN MICHIGAN, 1837–1878

    Martin J. Hershock

    The Civil War era proved to be a time of transformation for Michigan’sstate economy. Rapidly climbing prices, mechanization, and an incessant de-mand for agricultural products and livestock encouraged Michigan farmers toturn from traditional subsistence crops to commercial farming. The mining,manufacturing, and lumber industries boomed, and immigrants flooded intothe state. The harbinger and apotheosis of Michigan’s new market economywas, of course, the railroad, and its arrival in the backcountry brought the neweconomic order to the doorsteps of rural producers. Martin Hershock tracesthe ways in which all classes in the state of Michigan found themselves simul-taneously attracted to the enticements of the new world of the market and re-pulsed by its excess and instability. The Paradox of Progress is a fascinating studyof Michigan history and politics as well as an insightful analysis of the factorsunderlying the history of the GOP and its evolution from the party that sup-ported the antislavery movement, free soil, free labor, and Lincoln the Rail-Splitter into the party of Mark Hanna, J. P. Morgan, and William McKinley.

    Martin Hershock is assistant professor of history at the University ofMichigan– Dearborn and recipient of a Distinguished Teacher Award. He haspublished several articles on nineteenth-century Michigan political culture.

    Jacket art: “Au Sable and Northwestern Train,” E.C. Photograph Collection, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan

    Ohio University PressThe RidgesAthens, Ohio 45701ohioswallow.com

    TH

    E PA

    RA

    DO

    X

    OF P

    RO

    GR

    ESS

    Martin

    J.H

    ershock

    OHIO

    Winner of the 2004 Award of Merit from the Historical Society of Michigan

    “It can be compared to the best of the studies of state politics in this eradone in the last quarter century . . . [and] is certainly one of the mostimportant works written on nineteenth-century Michigan.”

    —Lawrence Frederick Kohl, author ofThe Politics of Individualism: Parties and the American Character in the Jacksonian Era

    American History

    hershockpbk 4/20/11 4:37 PM Page 1

    o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 21

    The collected novels of Paul laurence dunbaredited by Herbert woodward martin, ronald Primeau, and gene andrew Jarrett“this collection shows that [Dunbar] was on his way to becoming a great novelist when he died in 1906.”—Dayton Daily News

    978-0-8214-2007-2 paper $29.95 MAy

    The Paradox of ProgressEconomic Change, Individual Enterprise, and Political Culture in Michigan, 1837–1878martin J. Hershock“it can be compared to the best of the studies of state politics in this era done in the last quarter century . . . [and] is certainly one of the most important works written on nineteenth-century michigan.”—lawrence Frederick Kohl

    978-0-8214-1988-5 paper 28.95 APRil

    do They Miss Me at Home?the Civil war letters of william mcKnight, seventh ohio volunteer Cavalryedited by Donald C. maness and H. Jason Combs“a fascinating and intimate look at experiences of a typicalohio soldier. . . . (a)n insightful look into how one man balanced the competing desires for home and family with the overriding call of duty.” —Northwest Ohio History978-0-8214-2008-9 paper 26.95 JUnee-book 978-0-8214-4326-2 21.99

    The Midwestern native garden Native Alternatives to Nonnative Flowers and Plants, an Illustrated Guide

    Charlotte adelman and Bernard l. schwartz“what a great idea! . . . native plants will bring the birds, butterflies and other pollinators as only a balanced eco-system will do. Color and motion!” —Chicago Sun-Times

    978-0-8214-1937-3 paper 26.95 e-book 978-0-8214-4356-9 25.99

    recent release Great for Spring garden planning!

    http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/The+Midwestern+Native+Gardenhttp://www.ohioswallow.com/book/The+Collected+Novels+of+Paul+Laurence+Dunbarhttp://www.ohioswallow.com/book/The+Paradox+Of+Progress

  • irish People, irish linenKathleen wilson 978-0-8214-1971-7 hardcover 49.95

    The locavore’s KitchenA Cook’s Guide to Seasonal Eating and Preservingmarilou K. suszko978-0-8214-1938-0 paper 32.95e-book 978-0-8214-4355-2 25.99

    Barn Quilts and the American Quilt Trail Movementsuzi Parron with Donna sue groves978-0-8040-1138-9 paper 29.95e-book 978-0-8040-4049-5 23.99

    Asylum on the HillHistory of a Healing LandscapeKatherine Ziff978-0-8214-1973-1 hardcover 35.00e-book 978-0-8214-4426-9 27.99

    We Are All zimbabweans nowJames Kilgore978-0-8214-1985-4 paper 22.95e-book 978-0-8214-4395-8 17.99

    in the Shade of the Shady TreeStories of Wheatbelt AustraliaJohn Kinsella978-0-8040-1137-2 hardcover 24.95e-book 978-0-8040-4050-1 19.99

    Modernism and the Women’s Popular Romancemartin Hipsky978-0-8214-1970-0 hardcover 59.95e-book 978-0-8214-4377-4 47.99

    literary cincinnatiThe Missing ChapterDale Patrick Brown978-0-8214-1969-4 hardcover 24.95e-book 978-0-8214-4423-8 19.99

    recent releases

    22 | o h i o s w a l l o w . c o m

  • o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 23 o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 23

    sales infOrMatiOnthis catalog contains descriptions of books scheduled to be published between march 2012 and august 2012 and selected backlist titles. all prices and publication dates are subject to change without notice. Page counts of books not yet published reflect our best estimate at the time this catalog goes to press. For a complete catalog of publications currently in print, contact ohio University Press or go to: ohioswallow.com.

    Prices given are domestic list prices; book prices outside the U.s. may be higher.

    ohio University Press books (including books from swallow Press, the Cleveland museum of art, and ohio University research in inter-national studies) are warehoused, shipped, and billed from Chicago.

    the order address is:ohio University PressUC Distribution Center11030 s. langley ave.Chicago, il 60628

    telephone: 773-702-7000toll-free: 800-621-2736

    Fax orders: 773-702-7212toll-free: 800-621-8476

    credit and collections: 773-702-7094toll-free: 800-521-8412 Fax: 773-702-7201toll-free: 800-621-8471

    Returns:ohio University Press/returnsUC Distribution Center11030 south langley avenueChicago, il 60628

    returns are accepted between ninety days and one year from the date of invoice. Permission is not required, but invoice numbers must be provided. Credit will be issued for books in resaleable condition.

    Bookstoresthe ohio Univer sity Press retail discount schedule is: trade 1-2, 20%; 3-49, 40%; 50-99, 41%; 100-249, 43%; 250 or more, 46%; short discount books, 1-2, 20%; 3 or more, 40%. a “t” after the price indicates trade discount, an “s” indicates short discount. Quantities combine for best discount.

    to establish an account with the UC Distribution Center, call or write for an application. we honor stoP orders and blank check orders and will provide pro forma billing on request. Books are also available from wholesalers and distributors.

    libraries and institutions may order directly from the Press at the Chicago address or from a library wholesaler. we accept library purchase orders. you may establish a standing order for books in a series by calling the press: 740-593-1154. libraries may order certain titles in electronic formats through library wholesalers.

    individuals are encouraged to patronize local bookstores whenever possible. to order directly from ohio University Press, pre-pay in U.s. funds with a check or money order or use a masterCard, visa, american express, or Discover credit card. add $5 for shipping and handling for the first book and $1 for each additional book per order. (outside the U.s., add $9.50 per book, and $5.00 for each additional book). illinois residents add 9% state sales tax; Canadian residents add 5% gst.

    Make checks payable to: ohio University Press

    Mail your order to: Ohio University Press UC Distri bution Center 11030 s. langley ave. Chicago, il 60628

    For credit card orders, the order number is 800-621-2736. there is also an online order form at: www.ohioswallow.comQuestions? Call our order Department at 740-593-1154.

    examination copies for course adoption consideration are available for books priced under $35. Please prepay $5.00 (nonrefundable) to cover shipping and handling. (outside the U.s., add $9.50 per book, and $5.00 for each additional book). send your request on departmental letterhead to:

    Ohio University Press 19 Circle Drive, the ridges athens, oH 45701

    Fax: 740-593-4536 email: [email protected]

    give full credit card information, course title, level, anticipated enrollment, and when it would be offered.

    iSBn Prefixes978-0-8214- ohio University Press978-0-8040- swallow Press978-0-89680- ohio University research in international studies

    RigHTSworld rights unless otherwise indicated

    recent releases

    http://www.ohioswallow.commailto:[email protected]

  • 24 | o h i o s w a l l o w . c o m24 | o h i o s w a l l o w . c o m

    doMeSTicMetropolitan new york, Texas, oklahoma gary Hart

    413 s. Central ave. #a-135 glendale, Ca 91204 tel: 818-956-0527 Fax: 818-243-4676 [email protected]

    connecticut, delaware, eastern Pennsylvania, new Jersey, Maryland, Massachusetts, Maine, new Hampshire, Rhode island, Vermont, Washington, d.c. Blake Delodder 3401 Cheverly Cheverly, mD 20785 tel: 301-322-4509 Fax: 301-583-0376 [email protected]

    illinois, indiana, iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, nebraska, north dakota, ohio, South dakota, Wisconsin

    Bruce miller miller trade Book marketing, inc. 1426 w. Carmen avenue Chicago, il. 60640 tel.: 866-829-0824 Fax: 312-276-8109 Cell: 773.307.3446 [email protected]

    Western new york, Western Pennsylvania Bailey walsh sales representative University of Chicago Press 2306 west lawn avenue madison, wi 53711 608-218-1669 (office) 608-218-1670 (fax) 608-345-4306 (mobile) [email protected]

    Alabama, florida, georgia, Mississippi, north and South carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia The Morrison Sales Group Don morrison, Bill verner, Barbara arendall 294 Barons road Clemmons, nC 27012 tel.: 336-775-0226 Fax: 336-775-0239 [email protected]

    inTeRnATionAlUnited Kingdom, continental europe, Middle east, and Africa

    Eurospan Groupc/o Turpin DistributionPegasus Drivestratton Business ParkBiggleswade, Bedfordshire sg18 8tQ, UKtel: +44 (0) 1767 604972Fax: +44 (0) 1767 [email protected] University Press books are stocked in the United Kingdom. Please contact Eurospan for further information.

    eurospan University Press group3 Henrietta streetCovent garden, london wC2e 8lU, UKtel: +44 (0)20 7240 0856Fax: +44 (0)20 7379 0609

    Asia and the Pacific Region (including Australia andnew zealand)

    East-West Export Booksc/o The University of

    Hawaii Press royden muranaka

    2840 Kolowalu street Honolulu, Hi 96822

    tel.: 808-956-8830 Fax: [email protected]

    for sales information outside these areas:

    Ohio University Press Customer service 19 Circle Drive the ridges athens, oH 45701 tel.: 740-593-1154 or 740-593-1160 Fax: 740-593-4536

    sales representatives

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]

  • o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 25 o h i o u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s | 25

    adelman, Charlotte 21alexander, roberta sue 19Asylum on the Hill 22

    Barn Quilts and the American Quilt Trail Movement 22

    Barry, Joyce m. 7Between the Brown and the

    Red 15Birkner, michael J. 4Brennan, James r. 13Brown, Dale Patrick 22

    Charity and Condescension 16

    Chocolate Islands 6The Collected Novels of Paul Laurence Dunbar 21Combs, H. Jason 21

    Dance of Life 10Degrees of Allegiance 18Dewitt, Petra 18Dillon, m. C. 20Do They Miss Me at

    Home? 21Doctoring the Novel 17Dog Eat Dog 2

    Fincham, gail 10Finkelman, Paul 19Fritsch, James t. 5

    gordon, David m. 14The Gospel According to

    James and Other Plays 9Gravel and Hawk 8groves, Donna sue 22

    Hass, lawrence 20Hershock, martin J. 21Higgs, Catherine 6Hipsky, martin 22

    Indigenous Knowledge and the Environment in Africa and North America 14

    In the Shade of the Shady Tree 22

    Irish People, Irish Linen 22

    Jarrett, gene andrew 21Justice and Legal Change on

    the Shores of Lake Erie 19

    Kilgore, James 22Kinsella, John 22Krech iii, shepard 14Kunicki, mikołaj stanisław 15

    lawrance, Benjamin n. 12Literary Cincinnati 22The Locavore’s Kitchen 22

    maness, Donald C. 21martin, Herbert woodward 21Metaphor and the Slave

    Trade in West African Literature 11

    mhlongo, niq 2The Midwestern Native

    Garden 21Ministers of Fire 1Modernism and the Women’s

    Popular Romance in Britain, 1885–1925 22

    murphy, laura t. 11

    norwood, nick 8

    On Black Sisters Street 3The Ontology of Becoming

    and the Ethics of Particularity 20

    Pamboukian, sylvia a. 17The Paradox of Progress 21Parron, suzi 22Primeau, ronald 21Prosperity Far Distant 4

    roberts, richard l. 12

    saunders, mark Harril 1schwartz, Bernard l. 21siegel, Daniel 16smith, Charles 9Standing Our Ground 7suszko, marilou K. 22

    Taifa 13Trafficking in Slavery’s

    Wake 12

    The Untried Life 5Unigwe, Chika 3

    We Are All Zimbabweans Now 22

    wilson, Kathleen Curtis 22wiltse, Charles m. 4

    Ziff, Katherine 22

    index

  • non

    profi

    to

    rgan

    izat

    ion

    U.s

    . Pos

    tage

    PaiD

    ath

    ens,

    oH

    Perm

    it n

    o. 1

    00O

    HIO

    O

    HIO

    UN

    IVE

    RS

    ITY

    PR

    ES

    S &

    SW

    AL

    LO

    W B

    OO

    KS

    19 C

    ircle

    Driv

    e •

    The

    Ridg

    esa

    then

    s, o

    H 4

    5701

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofofofofofofofofofofofofofofofofofofofofofofofofofofofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    Minist

    ers

    ofMinist

    ers

    ofMinist