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Archival Film Curatorship: Early and Silent Cinema from Analog to Digital: Grazia Ingravalle - Amsterdam University Press on BibliOpen
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Archival Film Curatorship: Early and Silent Cinema from Analog to Digital
Archival Film Curatorship: Early and Silent Cinema from Analog to Digital

by Grazia Ingravalle

Amsterdam University Press, 2024

ISBNs

Cloth: 978-94-6372-567-5

eISBN: 978-90-485-5574-1 (PDF)

About the Book
Archival Film Curatorship is the first book-length study that investigates film archives at the intersection of institutional histories, early and silent film historiography, and archival curatorship. It examines three institutions at the forefront of experimentation with film exhibition and curatorship. The Eye Film Museum in Amsterdam, the George Eastman Museum in Rochester, NY, and the National Fairground and Circus Archive in Sheffield, UK serve as exemplary sites of historical mediation between early and silent cinema and the digital age. A range of elements, from preservation protocols to technologies of display and from museum architectures to curatorial discourses in blogs, catalogs, and interviews, shape what the author innovatively theorizes as the archive’s hermeneutic dispositif. Archival Film Curatorship offers film and preservation scholars a unique take on the shifting definitions, histories, and uses of the medium of film by those tasked with preserving and presenting it to new digital-age audiences.
About the Author
Grazia Ingravalle is Assistant Professor in Film at Queen Mary University of London. She has published extensively on film archives, early cinema, digitization, and decolonisation in edited collections and journals including The Moving Image, Screen, and the JCMS. Archival Film Curatorship is her first monograph.
Reviews
“Archival Film Curatorship offers a vital contribution to moving image archiving studies. Grounded in Gadamer’s philosophical hermeneutics and extensive, original archival research, the book simultaneously reminds us that silent films’ historicity are products of deep-rooted institutional traditions, while showing a way forward for film curation amidst the accelerating datafication of film heritage.”
-- Dr. Christian Olesen, Assistant Professor Digital Media & Cultural Heritage, University of Amsterdam

"Ingravalle brilliantly explores the histories of three key film archives as institutions established in the 20th century that have revised and transformed their missions in the digital era. Archival practices and archival theories are intertwined in this penetrating study of film and media histories and futures."
-- Catherine Russell, Distinguished Professor of Film Studies, Concordia University, Montreal
Tags
Framing Film, Silent Cinema, Analog, Media Studies, Film, Performing Arts, Social Science
Open Access Information

License: OA CC BY-NC-ND

Mormonism's Last Colonizer: The Life and Times of William H. Smart: William B. Smart - Utah State University Press on BibliOpen
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Mormonism's Last Colonizer: The Life and Times of William H. Smart
Mormonism's Last Colonizer: The Life and Times of William H. Smart

by William B. Smart

Utah State University Press, 2008

ISBNs

Cloth: 978-0-87421-722-3

eISBN: 978-0-87421-723-0

About the Book

Winner of the Evans Handcart Prize 2009
Winner of the Mormon History Assn Best Biography Award 2009

By the early twentieth century, the era of organized Mormon colonization of the West from a base in Salt Lake City was all but over. One significant region of Utah had not been colonized because it remained in Native American hands--the Uinta Basin, site of a reservation for the Northern Utes. When the federal government decided to open the reservation to white settlement, William H. Smart--a nineteenth-century Mormon traditionalist living in the twentieth century, a polygamist in an era when it was banned, a fervently moral stake president who as a youth had struggled mightily with his own sense of sinfulness, and an entrepreneurial businessman with theocratic, communal instincts--set out to ensure that the Uinta Basin also would be part of the Mormon kingdom.

Included with the biography is a searchable CD containing William H. Smart's extensive journals, a monumental personal record of Mormondom and its transitional period from nineteenth-century cultural isolation into twentieth-century national integration.

About the Author
William B. Smart, a descendant of William H. Smart, is the coeditor, with Donna T. Smart, of Over the Rim: The Parley P. Pratt Exploring Expedition to Southern Utah, 1849–1850 ; and, with Terry Tempest Williams, of New Genesis: A Mormon Reader on Land and Community.
Tags
Latter Day Saints, 1862-1937, Historical, Life, Biography, Biography & Autobiography, History
Open Access Information

Label: This book is freely available in digital formats through the Utah State University Library Digital Commons.

License: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

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Futures after Progress: Hope and Doubt in Late Industrial Baltimore: Chloe Ahmann - University of Chicago Press on BibliOpen
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Futures after Progress: Hope and Doubt in Late Industrial Baltimore
Futures after Progress: Hope and Doubt in Late Industrial Baltimore

by Chloe Ahmann

University of Chicago Press, 2024

ISBNs

Cloth: 978-0-226-83359-0

Paper: 978-0-226-83361-3

eISBN: 978-0-226-83360-6

About the Book
A powerful ethnographic study of South Baltimore, a place haunted by toxic pasts in its pursuit of better futures.

Factory fires, chemical explosions, and aerial pollutants have inexorably shaped South Baltimore into one of the most polluted places in the country. In Futures after Progress, anthropologist Chloe Ahmann explores the rise and fall of industrial lifeways on this edge of the city and the uncertainties that linger in their wake. Writing from the community of Curtis Bay, where two hundred years of technocratic hubris have carried lethal costs, Ahmann also follows local efforts to realize a good future after industry and the rifts competing visions opened between neighbors.
 
Examining tensions between White and Black residents, environmental activists and industrial enthusiasts, local elders and younger generations, Ahmann shows how this community has become a battleground for competing political futures whose stakes reverberate beyond its six square miles in a present after progress has lost steam. And yet—as one young resident explains—“that’s not how the story ends.” Rigorous and moving, Futures after Progress probes the deep roots of our ecological predicament, offering insight into what lies ahead for a country beset by dreams deferred and a planet on the precipice of change.
About the Author
Chloe Ahmann is assistant professor of anthropology at Cornell University. This is her first book.
Reviews
“I began this book as an anthropologist, but a few pages in, realized I was reading it as the little Black boy who acquired a chronic respiratory illness while growing up in Baltimore. I was playing football outside and suddenly couldn’t breathe. Then an ambulance came. Before long, inhalers, respirators, and ventilators were a feature of everyday life—both for me and my two brothers, who also suffered from asthma. I wish we had Ahmann’s book back then. Maybe, just maybe, we would’ve better understood the uncertainties of a childhood existence defined by hazy and noxious forces that threatened to debilitate and kill us. Written with empathy and backed by rigorous analysis, Futures after Progress is a revelation.”
— Laurence Ralph, author of Sito: An American Teenager and the City that Failed Him

“Ahmann folds time and space in this stunning ethnography to ask how a future tense forms after sacrifice, resilience, and progress are exhausted—a vital intervention into contemporary conditions.”
— Joseph Masco, University of Chicago

"Futures After Progress makes numerous contributions to the theory and method of the environmental humanities, which is especially prescient for researchers across the African continent and the global south. Ahmann offers not only signposts for the future of anthropology, but also for the ways in which we as researchers reckon with entangled lifeworlds through our field sites. Bringing this work into conversation with students across the world will no doubt forge methodological dexterity along with positional sensitivities which will charter new terrains, possibilities, and futures across the social sciences"
— Anthropology Southern Africa

"With this richly researched book, Ahmann gives us a powerful ethnography of the industrialized Curtis Bay neighborhood of Baltimore. . .. The pleasure of this ethnography is the delicacy of Ahmann's analysis of the extremely fragile formations of hope that make up our visions of the future and thus our political aspirations. In a time of great uncertainty, Futures After Progress reminds us of this necessary, but ephemeral, form of political labor."
— Anthropology and Humanism

"Compelling. . . Anchored by a decade of involvement with varied populations, sometimes in conflict, in an area of South Baltimore that has been dominated for centuries by damaging industrial and post-industrial projects, Ahmann. . . skillfully evokes problems and people, united and divided by profound meditations on time past and futures imagined."
— Choice

"Beautifully written and necessary . . . There is so much to admire about this book. . . I also forgot to add a note of criticism, seemingly mandatory in reviews such as this. OK, here’s one: Why do we have to wait so long for another book from Ahmann?"
— American Ethnologist

"Chloe Ahmann’s debut book, Futures After Progress, is a well-researched and a unique publication. . . . Apart from discussing at length the harmful effects of industrialization, borne unevenly by racialized groups and extending across generations, Ahmann has analyzed the diverse ways in which the deteriorating environment of South Baltimore has permeated all kinds of relationships, including chemical and ethical as well as structural and personal. Moreover, by examining the efforts by the local population to realize a secure and healthy future, she can demonstrate the diverse ways in which people in the US have politicized 'impure' environments."
— World History Encyclopedia

"One of the most formidable commentaries on the current political situation in the USA, and the Anthropocene at large."
— Ethnos

Tags
Air, Maryland, Pollution, Doubt, Environmental sociology, Environmental conditions, Environmental aspects, Industries, Environmental Conservation & Protection, African American & Black Studies, Cultural & Social, Nature, Social aspects, Cultural & Ethnic Studies, Anthropology, American, Social Science
Open Access Information

License: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

Process This: Undergraduate Writing in Composition Studies: Nancy Dejoy - Utah State University Press on BibliOpen
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Process This: Undergraduate Writing in Composition Studies
Process This: Undergraduate Writing in Composition Studies

by Nancy Dejoy

Utah State University Press, 2004

ISBNs

Paper: 978-0-87421-595-3

eISBN: 978-0-87421-503-8

About the Book

In Process This, Nancy DeJoy argues that even recent revisions to composition studies, cultural studies, service learning, and social process movements--continue to repress the subjects and methodologies that should be central, especially at the level of classroom practice. Designed to move student discourses beyond the classroom, these approaches nonetheless continue to position composition students (and teachers) as mere consumers of the discipline. This means that the subjects, methodologies, and theory/practice relationships that define the field are often absent in composition classrooms.

Arguing that the world inside and outside of the academy cannot be any different if the profession stays the same, DeJoy creates a pedagogy and a plan for faculty development that revisions the prewrite/write/rewrite triad to open spaces for participation and contribution to all members of first-year writing classrooms.

Tags
English language, Study and teaching, Writing, Rhetoric, Language Arts & Disciplines
Open Access Information

Label: This book is freely available in digital formats through the Utah State University Library Digital Commons.

License: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

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Reading in a Digital Age: David M. Durant - Against the Grain, LLC on BibliOpen
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Reading in a Digital Age
Reading in a Digital Age

by David M. Durant

Against the Grain, LLC, 2017

ISBNs

Paper: 978-1-941269-13-8

eISBN: 978-1-941269-30-5 (OA)

eISBN: 978-1-941269-17-6 (standard)

About the Book
Charleston Briefings: Trending Topics for Information Professionals is a thought-provoking series of brief books concerning innovation in the sphere of libraries, publishing, and technology in scholarly communication. The briefings, growing out of the vital conversations characteristic of the Charleston Conference and Against the Grain, will offer valuable insights into the trends shaping our professional lives and the institutions in which we work.
 
The Charleston Briefings are written by authorities who provide an effective, readable overview of their topics—not an academic monograph. The intended audience is busy nonspecialist readers who want to be informed concerning important issues in our industry in an accessible and timely manner.

​How is reading changing in the digital environment? How will it continue to change? Are we headed for an all- digital future? Or does print still have a place in the reading environment? Does format matter? What do readers tell us they want? This brief monograph offers librarians, publishers, vendors, and others an overview of these key issues as well as advice on how their institutions should approach the print versus digital controversy.
About the Author
David M. Durant is Associate Professor and Federal Documents and Social Sciences Librarian at J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina. He holds a master’s of science degree in library and information services from the School of Information, University of Michigan, and an MA in history from the University of California, Los Angeles. He has published articles in portalLibrary JournalThe Chronicle of Higher Education, and Against the Grain. He has written book reviews for Against the Grain and for Choice.
 
Tags
Computers, Library & Information Science, Technology & Engineering, Language Arts & Disciplines
International Organizations and Research Methods: An Introduction: Fanny Badache, Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens - University of Michigan Press on BibliOpen
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International Organizations and Research Methods: An Introduction
International Organizations and Research Methods: An Introduction

edited by Fanny Badache, Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens

University of Michigan Press, 2023

ISBNs

Cloth: 978-0-472-07622-2

Paper: 978-0-472-05622-4

eISBN: 978-0-472-90354-2 (OA)

About the Book

Scholars have studied international organizations (IOs) in many disciplines, thus generating important theoretical developments. Yet a proper assessment and a broad discussion of the methods used to research these organizations are lacking. Which methods are being used to study IOs and in what ways? Do we need a specific methodology applied to the case of IOs? What are the concrete methodological challenges when doing research on IOs? International Organizations and Research Methods: An Introduction compiles an inventory of the methods developed in the study of IOs under the five headings of Observing, Interviewing, Documenting, Measuring, and Combining. It does not reconcile diverging views on the purpose and meaning of IO scholarship, but creates a space for scholars and students embedded in different academic traditions to reflect on methodological choices and the way they impact knowledge production on IOs.

About the Author

Fanny Badache is a Post-Doctoral Researcher at the Geneva Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies.

Leah R. Kimber is a Post-Doctoral Fellow at Columbia University and Research Associate at the University of Geneva.

Lucile Maertens is Senior Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Lausanne.

Reviews

International Organizations and Research Methods fills a gaping hole in the IO literature and will be particularly valuable to graduate students and IO researchers with its diversity of methods and authors covering a range of UN specialized agencies and IOs in different issue areas and regions.  The book's introduction provides a very useful overview of what the book aims to do and not do and how the editors define methods as a reflexive part of the research process.  The innovative use of boxes is a great way to present specific tools and ‘tricks,’ including interviewing in a foreign language and analyzing tweets.”

— Margaret Karns, University of Massachusetts Boston

“This book is original and innovative, as it is the first companion to provide a broad and thoughtful inventory of research methods used in the social sciences and humanities to understand what international organizations are and what they do: so very helpful!”

— Bob Reinalda, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands

“This book is a terrific achievement. It not only provides the novice and the experienced researcher with a complete menu of methods to choose from when analyzing international organizations. The authors also take care to address cross-cutting questions of epistemology, positionality, and research ethics that we should all be aware of.” — Jens Steffek, Technische Universität Darmstadt

“Politicians, pundits, and the public undervalue international organizations. Too few scholars understand enough about the nuts-and-bolts to dispel this inaccurate image. Not the team assembled in these pages, however. They detail not only why institutions matter but how to analyze these essential actors in contemporary world politics.”— Thomas G. Weiss, The CUNY Graduate Center

"[The book] will be useful for students looking for an entry point into a fascinating social world; for researchers wanting to dabble in new methods; for lecturers integrating case-studies from international politics in their teaching; and for practitioners seeking to understand how research is conducted on their employer(s). Consequently, the book provides the first systematic survey of how scholars of international organizations think about their research subject, their own positionality, and their interactions with the institutions themselves." — International Affairs

Tags
Research Methods, International Organizations, Introduction, Study and teaching, Research, Reference, Political Science, Social Science
Open Access Information

License: CC BY-NC

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