In Socially Wired, Matthew W. Schelke uses the stories of patients with neurological illness to show how social and cultural environments transform the brain.
Hans-Georg Moeller argues that we can defuse our anxieties by recognizing that gender—like all identities—is social, not individual, and changes at different times and in different places.
This book provides a fresh perspective by demonstrating how the desire to increase trust in the news can be weaponized against journalists.
This book provides a fresh perspective by demonstrating how the desire to increase trust in the news can be weaponized against journalists.
This book is a comprehensive guide to sustainability metrics and management, introducing readers to key concepts and techniques.
Letting Grief Speak is a creative writing craft book on the art of telling our hardest stories.
Letting Grief Speak is a creative writing craft book on the art of telling our hardest stories.
Syaman Rapongan is a chronicler of his people, the Tao, an Indigenous community who live on Orchid Island near the island of Taiwan. In Eyes of the Sky, he invites readers to learn the ways of this oceanic world—and to learn to see their own worlds anew through a Tao lens.
Theodore Hughes crosses borders to demonstrate how stories of dying and death—what he calls the thanatographic imagination—in North Korea, the US, and South Korea energize ideas about history, the present, and the future.
This book presents Badiou’s seminar on Nietzsche’s late works, which for the first time addresses what would become one of his central concepts: anti-philosophy and its adversarial yet intimate relationship with philosophy.
Recipes for the Melting Pot tells the remarkable story of The Settlement Cook Book, demonstrating how it shaped Jewish American identity—and was in turn shaped by generations of Jewish women.
Antonio Negri offers a profound understanding of Baruch Spinoza (1632–1677) and his contemporary legacy, demonstrating the thinker’s ongoing relevance across politics and philosophy