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PUBLICATIONS
Inside
Illinois
Vol.
22, No. 6, Sept. 19, 2002

book
corner
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"Computing
in the Social Sciences and Humanities,"
edited
by Orville Vernon Burton
(UI Press, 2002)
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How social scientists, humanists
can better use computers
The editor of a new
book about computing thinks of his publication as a bridge for colleagues
who are wary of the far side of technology.
Orville Vernon Burton, a UI professor of history and sociology, hopes
that "Computing in the Social Sciences and Humanities" (University
of Illinois Press) will help those who are still uncomfortable with
digital media understand where they are in terms of computer know-how
and show them where they might be. He concedes that while the larger
computing world has been galloping at a furious pace of change, humanists
and social scientists are creeping along in their "technological
adoption and adaptation."
In the book, Burton and 10 other computer-savvy scholars attempt not
only to demystify the ongoing computing revolution, but also to raise
consciousness about some of the larger challenges of the revolution,
for example, intellectual property protection and sexism on the Internet.
Accompanying the book is a CD-ROM, "Wayfarer: Charting Advances
in Social Science and Humanities Computing," an interactive overview
of the state of computing in the humanities and social sciences. Capable
of being updated through the World Wide Web,
it has been called a "seminar on a disk."
Link to the publisher:
<www.press.uillinois.edu>
Full release from the UI
News Bureau.
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"The
Wound and the Dream,"
edited
byCary Nelson
(UI Press, 2002)
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Anthology focuses on American poetry
about the Spanish Civil War
Why have so many
American writers remained obsessed with a war that ended 60 years ago?
And why does their story suddenly seem so relevant today? A new anthology
gathers this history together and provides the answers.
So says Cary Nelson, the editor of "The Wound and the Dream: Sixty
Years of American Poems about the Spanish Civil War" (University
of Illinois Press). Nelson is Jubilee Professor of Liberal Arts and
Sciences and a professor of English at the UI. During the past 15 years,
he has led a one-man crusade to bring out the literature, including
letters, posters and photography, of the war, which drew some 3,000
Americans and 40,000 others to Spain.
Nelson argues that although Americans are "fabled as isolationists,"
their poetry of the Spanish Civil War "shows a 60-year concern
with world history. Many of our well-known poets not only wrote about
the Spanish Civil War, but a number of them returned to the topic again
and again."
The anthology, which includes a long introduction, a glossary and a
biographical section, allows one to see how 56 poets were "both
inspired and haunted by this first antifascist cause of the 1930s,"
Nelson said.
Link to the publisher:
<www.press.uillinois.edu>
Full
release from the UI News Bureau.
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