Freedom and Confinement is a powerful, book-length conversation between poets Elizabeth Gordon McKim and Etheridge Knight, recorded in 1990 as... Læs mere
The Language Movement in Bangladesh charts the Bangla Language Movement from a rhetorical perspective. The... Læs mere
Ana Forcinito explores how testimonial voices have played a pivotal role in the fight for justice, memory, and gender rights.
American Workman presents a comprehensive, novel reassessment of the life and work of one of America’s most influential self-taught artists, John Kane.
In her first collection in a decade, Beckian Fritz Goldberg returns with The Blue Eye of Earth, her tour de force of luminous, meditative poems that measure a secret distance between person and cosmos, memory and desire, beauty and grief.
Equal parts sad, sexy, and searching, Abider opens with the central lament/brag of its lover-speaker, that she can never truly leave anything—or anyone—behind.
Winner of the 2025 Donald Hall Prize for Poetryretrovirology oscillates between Queer childhood erasure and the AIDS epidemic, pulling from the ACT UP oral history project, informal interviews with survivors, and AIDS historians Sarah Schulman and David France.
In All Eyes on Space, Sam Dodd looks at television and sees architecture: a dynamic system of spatial design, environmental planning, and bodily control operating behind and beyond the small screen.
The novel emerged in lockstep with the nation-state, serving as the cultural counterpart to political form in the modern era.