front cover of Restless Nation
Restless Nation
Starting Over in America
James M. Jasper
University of Chicago Press, 2000
In Restless Nation, James M. Jasper isolates a narrative that lies very close to the core of the American character. From colonial times to the present day, Americans have always had a deep-rooted belief in the "fresh start"—a belief that still has Americans moving from place to place faster than the citizens of any other nation.
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front cover of Starting Over
Starting Over
Feminism and the Politics of Cultural Critique
Judith Newton
University of Michigan Press, 1994
For more than a decade Judith Newton has been at the forefront of defining and promoting materialist feminist criticism. Starting Over brings together a selection of her essays that chart the establishment of feminist literary criticism in the academy and its relation to other forms of cultural criticism, including Marxist, post-Marxist, new historicist, and cultural materialist approaches, as well as cultural studies.
The essays in Starting Over have functioned as exemplars of interdisciplinary thinking, mapping out the ways in which reading strategies and the constructions of history, culture, identity, change, and agency in various materialist theories overlap, and the ways in which feminist-materialist work both draws upon, revises, and complicates the vision of nonfeminist materialist critiques. They are shaped by an awareness that public knowledge is always informed by the so-called private realm of familial and sexual relations and that cultural criticism must bring together investigations of daily behaviors, economic and social relations, and the dynamics of race, class, gender, and sexual struggle.
Starting Over is a brilliant synthesis of literature, history, anthropology, the many influential trends in contemporary theory, and the politics of feminism.
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front cover of Starting Over with John and Yoko
Starting Over with John and Yoko
The Photographs
Roger Farrington
Rutgers University Press, 2026

Starting Over with John Lennon & Yoko Ono: The History of a Photograph and a Day traces the dramatic story of John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s triumphant return to the recording studio after a self-imposed five-year absence. For photographer Roger Farrington, the opportunity to get “the shot” was the assignment of a lifetime. 

On August 7, 1980, the Boston photographer met the famous couple at the Dakota and documented their fateful trip to Manhattan’s Hit Factory, where Lennon and Ono recorded their Grammy-winning LP Double Fantasy. For Farrington, the whirlwind opportunity would be life-changing in more ways than one. Farrington’s photography would land him in a high-profile dispute with notorious publicist Charles J. Cohen. Things would become even more harrowing with Lennon’s assassination only a few months later, an event that would plunge the world into mourning.

Working with renowned Beatles scholar Kenneth Womack, Farrington captures the amazing story of working with John and Yoko on that fateful day.

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