university of illinois press history catalog 2012
DESCRIPTION
University of Illinois Press catalog of history books released in 2011-2012.TRANSCRIPT
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
U N I V E R S I T Y O F I L L I N O I S PR E S S
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U N I V E R S I T Y O F I L L I N O I S PR E S S
1 POLITICAL HISTORY
2 THE WAR OF 1812
3 CIVIL WAR
4 AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY/THE NEW BLACK STUDIES SERIES
7 SOUTHERN UNITED STATES
8 LABOR
8 THE WORKING CLASS IN AMERICAN HISTORY SERIES
10 WOMEN’S HISTORY
10 WOMEN IN AMERICAN HISTORY SERIES
11 MIGRATION/IMMIGRATION
12 CULTURAL HISTORY
14 THE HISTORY OF COMMUNICATION
15 JOURNALS
CONTENTS
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The Deepest SenseA Cultural History of Touch
CONSTANCE CLASSEN
Fleshes out our understanding of the past with explora-
tions of lived experiences of embodiment from the
middle ages to modernity. This intimate and sensuous
approach to history makes it possible to foreground the
tactile foundations of Western culture—the ways in
which feelings shaped society.
She delves into a range of vital issues, from the uses—
and prohibitions—of touch in social interaction to the
disciplining of the body by the modern state, from the
changing feel of the urban landscape to the technologi-
zation of touch in modernity.
296 pp. 6 x 9. 8 b & w photos. 2012.
*Cloth 978-0-252-03493-0. $80.00 $56.00
Paper 978-0-252-07859-0. $25.00 $17.50
Studies in Sensory History
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
POLITICAL HISTORY 1
*UNJACKETED
The Obama PhenomenonToward a Multiracial Democracy
EDITED BY CHARLES P. HENRY, ROBERT L. ALLEN,
AND ROBERT CHRISMAN
Beginning as a special issue of The Black Scholar, this
probing collection illustrates the impact of “the Obama
phenomenon” on the future of U.S. race relations.Contributors are Josephine A. V. Allen, Robert L. Allen, Herb
Boyd, Donald R. Deskins Jr., Cheryl I. Harris, Charles P. Henry,
Dwight N. Hopkins, John L. Jackson, Maulana Karenga,
Robin D. G. Kelley, Martin Kilson, Clarence Lusane, Julianne
Malveaux, Shaun Ossei-Owusu, Dianne M. Pinderhughes,
Sherman C. Puckett, Scharn Robinson, Ula Y. Taylor, Alice
Walker, Hanes Walton Jr., and Ronald Williams II.
344 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 2 charts, 7 tables. 2011.
*Cloth 978-0-252-03645-3. $75.00 $52.50
Paper 978-0-252-07822-4. $25.00 $17.50
Obama, Clinton, PalinMaking History in Election 2008
EDITED BY LIETTE GIDLOW
Contributors include Kathryn Kish Sklar on Clinton’s gen-
der masquerade; Tiffany Ruby Patterson on the politics of
black anger; Mitch Kachun on Michelle Obama and ste-
reotypes about black women’s bodies; Glenda E. Gilmore
on black women’s century of effort to expand political
opportunities for African Americans; Tera W. Hunter on
the lost legacy of Shirley Chisholm; Susan M. Hartmann
on why the U.S. has not yet followed western democracies
in electing a female head of state; Melanie Gustafson on
Palin and the political traditions of the American West;
Ronald Formisano on the populist resurgence in 2008;
Paula Baker on how digital technologies threaten the
secret ballot; Catherine E. Rymph on Palin’s distinctive
brand of political feminism; and Elisabeth I. Perry on the
new look of American leadership.
192 pp. 6 x 9. 3 tables. 2012.
*Cloth 978-0-252-03660-6. $65.00 $45.50
Paper 978-0-252-07830-9. $25.00 $17.50
AVAILABLE MARCH 2012
Making Sense of American LiberalismEDITED BY JONATHAN BELL AND TIMOTHY
STANLEY
Contributors Anthony J. Badger, Jonathan Bell, Lizabeth
Cohen, Susan Hartmann, Ella Howard, Bruce Miroff,
Nelson Lichtenstein, Doug Rossinow, Timothy Stanley,
and Timothy Thurber assess the problems liberals have
confronted in the twentieth century, and potential for
future liberal reform.
280 pp. 6 x 9. 2012. Cloth 978-0-252-03686-6. $55.00 $38.50
AVAILABLE JULY 2012
The Supreme Court and McCarthy-Era RepressionOne Hundred Decisions
ROBERT M. LICHTMAN
Veteran attorney Robert M. Lichtman delivers a history
of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decisions in “Communist”
cases during the McCarthy era. Stressing the Court’s
vulnerability to public criticism and attacks by elected
offi cials, these cases show the range and intrusiveness of
McCarthy-era repression.
320 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 21 b & w photos, 2 line drawings. 2012.
Cloth 978-0-252-03700-9. $60.00 $42.00
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
2 THE WAR OF 1812
The War of 1812A Forgotten Confl ict
DONALD R. HICKEY
Bicentennial Edition
This comprehensive and authoritative history of the
War of 1812, thoroughly revised for the 200th anniver-
sary of the historic confl ict, is a myth-shattering study
that will inform and entertain students, historians, and
general readers alike.
Praise for the fi rst edition:
“A well-researched and extensively documented
overview of the causes and consequences of the War of
1812. In a penetrating analysis of prewar society, the
author accumulates evidence suggesting that the war
was ultimately unnecessary and unpopular. . . . Highly
recommended as an inclusive political, military, and
social treatment of a customarily neglected war.”
—American Library Association Booklist
“Despite being forgotten and overlooked, the War of
1812 was a signifi cant milestone in the development
of the United States. [Hickey] was accurate when
he wrote, ‘Although looking to the past, the war was
fraught with consequences for the future, and for this
reason it is worth studying today.’ And there is no better
place to start than with The War of 1812.”—Civil War News
“The defi nitive study.”—Journal of American History
480 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 47 b & w photos, 5 maps, 2 charts. 2012.
Paper 978-0-252-07837-8. $24.95 $17.47
Winner of a Best Book Award from the American Military Institute (fi rst edition)
Illinois in the War of 1812GILLUM FERGUSON
“For more than a century, there has been no book-
length historical study of the War of 1812 in Illinois,
but Gillum Ferguson has labored mightily to remedy
that historiographical shortcoming. Massively
researched and well written, Illinois in the War of 1812 is a pioneering work that will undeniably appeal to
scholars, local historians, and interested readers.”
—Rodney O. Davis, coeditor of The Lincoln-Douglas Debates: The Lincoln Studies Center Edition
In this engrossing new history, published upon the
war’s bicentennial, Gillum Ferguson underlines the
crucial importance of the War of 1812 in the develop-
ment of Illinois as a state. The history of Illinois in the
War of 1812 has never before been told with so much
attention to the personalities who fought it, the events
that defi ned it, and its lasting consequences.
360 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 12 b & w photos. 2012.
Cloth 978-0-252-03674-3. $34.95 $24.47
To receive 30% discount use order form on last page, call 800-621-2736,
or visit www.press.uillinois.edu. Use code HIS12 when ordering.
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CIVIL WAR 3
*UNJACKETED
A Secret Society History of the Civil WarMARK A. LAUSE
Analyzes how the Old World’s traditions infl uenced
various underground groups and movements in
America, particularly George Lippard’s Brotherhood
of the Union, an attempt to replicate the political secret
societies that drove the European Revolutions of 1848.
“A fascinating and provocative study that illuminates
the history of the Civil War era by probing the relation-
ship between political secret societies and social radi-
calism in Europe and antebellum reform and sectional
crisis in the United States. This book will be a tremen-
dous resource of information for scholars, and it is one
of the most genuinely original works that I have ever
read.”—Robert E. May, author of Manifest Destiny’s Underworld: Filibustering in Antebellum America
248 pp. 6 x 9. 12 b & w photos. 2011.
Cloth 978-0-252-03655-2. $35.00 $24.50
AVAILABLE FALL 2012
Mary Lincoln’s Insanity CaseA Documentary History
JASON EMERSON
Drawing from never-before-published archival materi-
als, Jason Emerson sheds new light on Mary Lincoln’s
internment and two trials on charges of insanity. He
examines signifi cant documents, witness testimonies,
and presumptions of fact in this case that generated
national interest and vexing debate.
256 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 5 b & w photos. 2012.
Cloth 978-0-252-03707-8. $35.00 $24.50
NEW IN PAPERBACK
Lincoln’s Political GeneralsDAVID WORK
“Readers, especially those interested in the fascinating
relationship between war and politics in the Northern
war effort, will fi nd this book enjoyable and useful.”
—Journal of American History
“In this thoroughgoing study of sixteen ‘political
generals’ in the Union army, David Work demonstrates
convincingly that these generals’ efforts signifi cantly
aided the Union war effort in their capacity as admin-
istrators, political supporters, recruiters and organizers
of troops, and advocates of the Union cause among
key political and ethnic constituencies.”—James M.
McPherson, author of Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era, winner of the Pulitzer Prize
320 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 16 b & w photos. February 2012.
Paper 978-0-252-07861-3. $19.95 $13.97
Winner of the Hay-Nicolay Prize of the Abraham Lincoln Association and the Abraham Lincoln Institute
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
4 AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY | THE NEW BLACK STUDIES SERIES
AVAILABLE JUNE 2012
The Black Chicago RenaissanceEDITED BY DARLENE CLARK HINE AND JOHN
MCCLUSKEY JR.
“This landmark anthology, the fi rst to comprehensively
gather work on the Black Chicago Renaissance, ratifi es
that topic’s ascendant stature within recent African
American and American historical study. A tremen-
dous achievement for its editors and contributors, and
an indispensable scholarly resource for generations
to come.”—Adam Green, author of Selling the Race: Culture, Community, and Black Chicago, 1940–1955
Contributors are Hilary Mac Austin, David T. Bailey,
Murry N. DePillars, Samuel A. Floyd Jr., Erik S. Gellman,
Jeffrey Helgeson, Darlene Clark Hine, John McCluskey Jr.,
Christopher Robert Reed, Elizabeth Schlabach, and Clovis E.
Semmes.
272 pp. 8.5 x 11. 37 color photos, 5 b & w photos. 2012.
*Cloth 978-0-252-03702-3. $80.00 $56.00
Paper 978-0-252-07858-3. $27.95 $19.57
The New Black Studies Series
Examination CopiesFor information and downloadable order forms:
visit our web site •
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The Roots of Rough JusticeOrigins of American Lynching
MICHAEL J. PFEIFER
“Extends the historical treatment of lynching back in
time and ties the history of mob violence to the broad
currents of nineteenth-century American history. His
work will be foundational to all subsequent scholarship
on lynching, both before and after the Civil War.”
—W. Fitzhugh Brundage, author of Lynching in the New South: Georgia and Virginia, 1880–1930
160 pp. 6 x 9. 2 maps, 2 tables. 2011.
Cloth 978-0-252-03613-2. $40.00 $28.00
AVAILABLE MAY 2012
Sex, Sickness, and SlaveryDefi ning Illness in the Antebellum South
MARLI F. WEINER
With editorial assistance by Mazie Hough
This study of medical treatment in the antebellum
South argues that Southern physicians’ scientifi c train-
ing and practice uniquely entitled them to formulate
medical justifi cation for the imbalanced racial hierar-
chies of the period.
328 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 2012.
Cloth 978-0-252-03699-6. $60.00 $42.00
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
THE NEW BLACK STUDIES SERIES 5
*UNJACKETED
The Rise of Chicago’s Black Metropolis, 1920–1929CHRISTOPHER ROBERT REED
“An important contribution to the fi eld of African
American urban history and the history of black
Chicago in particular. Among other things, Christo-
pher Robert Reed persuasively cites the need for a
reappraisal of Cayton and Drake’s classic depiction
of Chicago’s ‘Black Metropolis’ by illuminating
the role of professionals and political and religious
organizations.”—Robert E. Weems Jr., author of Black Business in the Black Metropolis: The Chicago Metro-politan Assurance Company, 1925–1985
288 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 12 b & w photos, 1 map. 2011.
Cloth 978-0-252-03623-1. $55.00 $38.50
AVAILABLE APRIL 2012
Africans to Spanish AmericaExpanding the Diaspora
EDITED BY SHERWIN K. BRYANT, RACHEL
SARAH O’TOOLE, AND BEN VINSON III
“A pioneering effort to write the history of Africans in
colonial Spanish America using the African diaspora
paradigm. The authors fully demonstrate the consider-
able potential of this approach.”—Kris Lane, author
of The Colour of Paradise: The Emerald in the Age of Gunpowder Empires
Contributors are Joan Cameron Bristol, Nancy E. van Deusen,
Leo Garafalo, Herbert S. Klein, Charles Beatty Medina, Karen
Y. Morrison, Rachel Sarah O’Toole, Frank “Trey” Proctor, and
Michele B. Reid.
288 pp. 6 x 9. 1 line drawing, 2 maps, 5 tables. 2012.
Cloth 978-0-252-03663-7. $50.00 $35.00
AVAILABLE MAY 2012
Rebels and RunawaysSlave Resistance in Nineteenth-Century Florida
LARRY EUGENE RIVERS
“Most studies of antebellum slavery have either
ignored or forgotten the bold actions of hundreds of
enslaved Africans in Florida. Rivers’s poignant study
makes a strong case that this thrilling human drama—
played out over many generations—constitutes perhaps
the largest slave rebellion in American history. After
reading this splendid book, historians and others inter-
ested in America’s history will never look at slave re-
sistance in the same way again.”—James M. Denham,
author of A Rogue’s Paradise: Crime and Punishment in Antebellum Florida, 1821–1861
264 pp. 6 x 9. 32 b & w photos, 7 tables. 2012.
Cloth 978- 0-252-03691-0. $55.00 $38.50
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
6 AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY | THE NEW BLACK STUDIES SERIES
Eugene Kinckle JonesThe National Urban League and Black Social Work, 1910–1940
FELIX L. ARMFIELD
“This important book rescues Eugene Kinckle Jones from relative historical ob-
scurity and anchors his rightful place as a major black leader.”—Robert L. Harris
Jr., coeditor of The Columbia Guide to African American History Since 1939
136 pp. 6 x 9. 7 b & w photos, 1 map. 2012. Cloth 978-0-252-03658-3. $55.00 $38.50
Black Internationalist FeminismWomen Writers of the Black Left, 1945–1995
CHERYL HIGASHIDA
“An accomplished blend of radical social history and literary analysis, this book
promises to revolutionize the fi eld.”—Michelle Ann Stephens, author of Black Empire: The Masculine Global Imaginary of Caribbean Intellectuals in the United States, 1914–1962
264 pp. 6 x 9. 2011. Cloth 978-0-252-03650-7. $50.00 $35.00
AVAILABLE FALL 2012
Quaker BrotherhoodInterracial Activism and the American Friends Service Committee, 1917–1950
ALLAN W. AUSTIN
This volume examines the Quakers’ interracial activism through their American
Friends Service Committee, providing important insights into Quakers, white
antiracist activism, interracial coalition building, and evolving notions of race.
280 pp. 6 x 9. 2012. Cloth 978-0-252-03704-7. $55.00 $38.50
NEW IN PAPERBACK
African or American?Black Identity and Political Activism in New York City, 1784–1861
LESLIE M. ALEXANDER
“[Alexander’s] survey of black leadership is excellent, her sensitivity to local
black politics is admirable, and her tracing of the varied black investment in
emigrations is . . . correct and adds to our understanding of antebellum reform and
nationalism.”—American Historical Review
288 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 21 b & w photos. 2012. Paper 978-0-252-07853-8. $28.00
Awarded the Cheikh Anta Diop Award for Outstanding Scholarship in the fi eld of Africana Studies by the National Council for Black Studies (NCBS)
NIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRE
Daughter of the Empire StateThe Life of Judge Jane Bolin
JACQUELINE A. MCLEOD
“Jacqueline A. McLeod not only premieres the public life
of Jane Matilda Bolin but also bridges some of the gaps that
exist in studies of lawyers who are most likely to be male
and of female lawyers who are most likely to be white. This
is an engaging work that will be of interest to scholars of
women’s history and African American history.”
—Stephanie J. Shaw, author of What a Woman Ought to Be and to Do: Black Professional Women Workers During the Jim Crow Era
168 pp. 6 x 9. 4 b & w photos. 2011.
Cloth 978-0-252-03657-6. $30.00 $21.00
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
SOUTHERN UNITED STATES 7
*UNJACKETED
AVAILABLE MARCH 2012
Transforming PlacesLessons from Appalachia
EDITED BY STEPHEN L. FISHER AND BARBARA ELLEN SMITH
Illuminates widely relevant lessons about building coalitions and movements with suf-
fi cient strength to challenge corporate-driven globalization.
Contributors are Fran Ansley, Yaira Andrea Arias Soto, Dwight B. Billings, M. Kathryn Brown,
Jeannette Butterworth, Paul Castelloe, Aviva Chomsky, Dave Cooper, Walter Davis, Meredith Dean,
Elizabeth C. Fine, Jenrose Fitzgerald, Doug Gamble, Nina Gregg, Edna Gulley, Molly Hemstreet, Mary
Hufford, Ralph Hutchison, Donna Jones, Ann Kingsolver, Sue Ella Kobak, Jill Kriesky, Michael E.
Maloney, Lisa Markowitz, Linda McKinney, Ladelle McWhorter, Marta Maria Miranda, Chad Montrie,
Maureen Mullinax, Phillip J. Obermiller, Rebecca O’Doherty, Cassie Robinson Pfl eger, Randal Pfl eger,
Anita Puckett, Katie Richards-Schuster, June Rostan, Rees Shearer, Daniel Swan, Joe Szakos, Betsy
Taylor, Thomas E. Wagner, Craig White, and Ryan Wishart.
336 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 12 b & w photos. 2012. *Cloth 978-0-252-03666-8. $85.00 $59.50;
Paper 978-0-252-07838-5. $30.00 $21.00
AVAILABLE MARCH 2012
The Poco FieldAn American Story of Place
TALMAGE A. STANLEY
“Effectively argues that the natural, built, and social environments of a particular place
can produce a way of life that is an honest response to the demands, limits, and promises
of that place.”—Dwight B. Billings, coauthor of The Road to Poverty: The Making of Wealth and Hardship in Appalachia
264 pp. 6 x 9. 33 b & w photos, 1 map, 1 table. 2012. *Cloth 978-0-252-03667-5. $75.00 $52.50;
Paper 978-0-252-07839-2. $28.00 $19.60
Spirits of Just MenMountaineers, Liquor Bosses, and Lawmen in the Moonshine Capital of the World
CHARLES D. THOMPSON JR.
“A thought-provoking portrait of 1930s Appalachia.”—Library Journal
304 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 29 b & w photos, 1 map. 2011. * Cloth 978-0-252-03512-8. $75.00 $52.50;
Paper 978-0-252-07808-8. $23.95 $16.77
Combating Mountaintop RemovalNew Directions in the Fight against Big Coal
BRYAN T. MCNEIL
This close ethnographic study of community activist group Coal River Mountain Watch
investigates the local effects of globalization on ideas of identity, history, and landscape.
216 pp. 6 x 9. 3 b & w photos, 1 map, 2 charts, 2 tables. 2011. Cloth 978-0-252-03643-9. $45.00 $31.50
AVAILABLE MARCH 2012
Ghost of the OzarksMurder and Memory in the Upland South
BROOKS BLEVINS
Recounts the gripping events and media coverage surrounding
of the murder investigation of harmonica-playing drifter Connie
Franklin and the brutal rape of his teenaged fi ancée, and the sub-
sequent trial, where a man claiming to be the murder victim—the
“Ghost” of the Ozarks—appeared to testify.
“Does an outstanding job of retelling the ins and outs of this fan-
tastic and entertaining story—the sensationalism of the press, the
charges of rape, peonage, and privilege, the dramatic trial, and even
the reappearance of the murder victim.”—Michael Pierce, associate
editor, Arkansas Historical Quarterly
296 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 18 b & w photos, 1 line drawing, 5 maps. 2012.
Cloth 978-0-252-03695-8. $29.95 $20.97
*UNJACKETED
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
8 LABOR
We Are the UnionDemocratic Unionism and Dissent at Boeing
DANA L. CLOUD
Engages union reformers at Boeing in Wichita and Seattle to reveal how ordi-
nary workers attempted to take command of their futures by chipping away at
the cozy partnership between union leadership and corporate management.
“Dana L. Cloud raises vital, critical questions: Why have union reformers had
so little success in the last thirty-fi ve years? To what extent have their own
analyses, actions, and choices contributed to the shortfalls or outright failures of
their efforts? Given the deepening crisis of the U.S. labor movement, it is well
past time to ask these questions.”—Peter Rachleff, author of Hard Pressed in the Heartland: The Hormel Strike and the Future of the Labor Movement
256 pp. 6 x 9. 13 b & w photos. 2011. Cloth 978-0-252-03637-8. $55.00 $38.50
THE WORKING CLASS IN AMERICAN HISTORY SERIES
The Gospel of the Working ClassLabor’s Southern Prophets in New Deal America
ERIK S. GELLMAN AND JAROD ROLL
“This outstanding and impressively researched study reveals the tremendous
signifi cance of Claude Williams and Owen Whitfi eld, two major fi gures in the
efforts to organize southern black and white workers. Erik S. Gellman and Jarod
Roll also show the signifi cance of religion in southern working class history.
There have been other studies of various religious fi gures who worked for social
justice in the South during this era, but this is the fi nest one that I have read.”
—Nan Elizabeth Woodruff, author of American Congo: The African American Freedom Struggle in the Delta
248 pp. 6 x 9. 13 b & w photos, 1 map. 2011.
*Cloth 978-0-252-03630-9. $75.00 $52.50
Paper 978-0-252-07840-8. $30.00 $21.00
Gleanings of FreedomFree and Slave Labor along the Mason-Dixon Line, 1790–1860
MAX GRIVNO
Max Grivno closely examines a handful of counties in northern Maryland
and southern Pennsylvania to illustrate how these rural local communities
represented issues of national historical signifi cance, including the dynamic,
multifaceted relationship between slave and free labor, the lives of free black
and white farmhands, the domestic slave trade’s impact on the people of the Up-
per South, and the struggles of enslaved and free blacks to liberate themselves
and their families from bondage through immediate and delayed manumissions.
296 pp. 6 x 9. 2 b & w photos, 1 map, 4 charts, 4 tables. 2011.
Cloth 978-0-252-03652-1. $50.00 $35.00
Archie GreenThe Making of a Working-Class Hero
SEAN BURNS
Foreword by David Roediger. With a fi nal interview conducted by Nick Spitzer
“An intimate, fi rst-person account of Green’s life that illuminates
ideological and strategic links between expressive culture and
progressive action. Folklorists, labor historians, discographers,
and students and scholars of American culture will treasure this
book.”—Robert McCarl, editor of Latinos in Idaho: Celebrando Cultura
Capturing the many dimensions of Green’s remarkably infl uential
life and work, Sean Burns draws on extensive interviews with
Green and his many collaborators to examine the intersections
of radicalism, folklore, labor history, and worker culture with
Green’s work.
232 pp. 6 x 9. 16 b & w photos. 2011.
Paper 978-0-252-07828-6. $25.00 $17.50
Publication of this book was supported by a grant from the L. J. and Mary C. Skaggs Folklore Fund.
NIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRES
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
THE WORKING CLASS IN AMERICAN HISTORY SERIES 9
*UNJACKETED
Banded TogetherEconomic Democratization in the Brass Valley
JEREMY BRECHER
“Accessible, clear, and engaged, Banded Together will make an impressive
addition to the ways historians understand deindustrialization.”—Peter
Rachleff, author of Hard Pressed in the Heartland: The Hormel Strike and the Future of the Labor Movement
280 pp. 6 x 9. 2011. *Cloth 978-0-252-03612-5. $75.00 $52.50;
Paper 978-0-252-07806-4. $27.00 $18.90
AVAILABLE FEBRUARY 2012
Chicago in the Age of CapitalClass, Politics, and Democracy during the Civil War and Reconstruction
JOHN B. JENTZ AND RICHARD SCHNEIROV
This sweeping interpretive history boldly traces the dramatic capitalist transi-
tion in Chicago during a period that saw the rise of a permanent wage-worker
class and the formation of an industrial middle class.
320 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 5 maps, 10 charts, 5 tables. 2012.
Cloth 978-0-252-03683-5. $55.00 $38.50
AVAILABLE JULY 2012
The Haymarket ConspiracyTransatlantic Anarchist Networks
TIMOTHY MESSER-KRUSE
Challenges the dominant view of the Haymarket Bombing and Trial of 1886–87,
questioning whether there is reliable and convincing evidence that the bombing
was in fact the culmination of a coordinated plan of attack.
272 pp. 6 x 9. 2012. *Cloth 978-0-252-03705-4. $75.00 $52.50;
Paper 978-0-252-07860-6. $30.00 $21.00
Guest Workers and Resistance to U.S. Corporate DespotismIMMANUEL NESS
“The topics of guest worker programs, internal and international labor
migration, and worker organizing are fundamental to understanding today’s
economy and labor market. Immanuel Ness’s argument that business is
actively involved in creating the notion of labor shortages while pushing
programs to meet their interests is a crucial addition to the immigration policy
debate.”—Stephanie Luce, author of Fighting for a Living Wage
232 pp. 6 x 9. 1 chart, 6 tables. 2011. *Cloth 978-0-252-03627-9. $70.00 $49.00;
Paper 978-0-252-07817-0. $25.00 $17.50
AVAILABLE APRIL 2012
Child Care in Black and WhiteWorking Parents and the History of Orphanages
JESSIE B. RAMEY
“This book is an important contribution to the history of child welfare policy.
Jessie B. Ramey’s research illustrates the role racial segregation played in a
northern industrialized city in child welfare policies for dependent children
whose parents turned to orphanages for help.”—Kriste Lindenmeyer, author
of The Greatest Generation Grows Up: American Childhood in the 1930s
320 pp. 6 x 9. 22 b & w photos, 8 charts, 13 tables. 2012.
Cloth 978-0-252-03690-3. $55.00 $38.50
Winner of the Herbert G. Gutman Prize from the Labor and Working-Class History Association
The Labor Question in AmericaEconomic Democracy in the Gilded Age
ROSANNE CURRARINO
“This splendidly researched cultural and intellectual history . . . offers a
masterful explanation of the move from a producerist to a consumerist under-
standing of citizenship and labor.”—Lawrence M. Lipin, author of Workers and the Wild: Conservation, Consumerism, and Labor in Oregon, 1910–30
232 pp. 6 x 9. 2011. *Cloth 978-0-252-03570-8. $70.00 $49.00;
Paper 978-0-252-07786-9. $25.00 $17.50
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
10 WOMEN’S HISTORY
Defi ning DevianceSex, Science, and Delinquent Girls, 1890–1960
MICHAEL A. REMBIS
“An excellent history of the involuntary commitment of delinquent girls.
. . . Highly recommended.”—Choice
248 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 9 b & w photos. 2011.
Cloth 978-0-252-03606-4. $50.00 $35.00
WOMEN IN AMERICAN HISTORY SERIES
AVAILABLE APRIL 2012
Rape in ChicagoRace, Myth, and the Courts
DAWN RAE FLOOD
Assesses how individual men and women, particularly African Americans,
understood and challenged rape myths and claimed their right to be pro-
tected as American citizens—protected by the State against violence, and
protected from the State’s prejudicial investigations and interrogations.
272 pp. 6 x 9. 2 tables. 2012.
Cloth 978-0-252-03689-7. $55.00 $38.50
Demanding Child CareWomen’s Activism and the Politics of Welfare, 1940–1971
NATALIE M. FOUSEKIS
“Introduces readers to a remarkable cast of characters: ordinary women
who recognized that to support their families they needed the peace of
mind that quality child care could provide; visionary educators and teach-
ers who understood child care as part of public education, and not social
assistance; and male allies in the legislature and public service who were
instrumental in policymaking.”—Eileen Boris, coeditor of The Practice of U.S. Women’s History: Narratives, Dialogues, and Intersections
264 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 6 b & w photos. 2011.
Cloth 978-0-252-03625-5. $50.00 $35.00
AVAILABLE MAY 2012
Black Women and Politics in New York CityJULIE A. GALLAGHER
Traces the paths of black women activists from women’s clubs and civic
organizations to national politics—including appointments to presiden-
tial commissions, congressional offi ces, and even a presidential candida-
cy—while articulating the vision of politics the women developed and its
infl uence on the Democratic party and its policies.
276 pp. 6 x 9. 12 b & w photos, 1 map, 1 table. 2012.
Cloth 978-0-252-03696-5. $55.00 $38.50
Making Feminist PoliticsTransnational Alliances between Women and Labor
SUZANNE FRANZWAY AND MARY MARGARET FONOW
This timely and detailed examination of the intersections of feminism,
labor politics, and global studies reveals the ways in which women
across the world are transforming labor unions.
“Making Feminist Politics is empirically rich and analytically nu-
anced. I do not know of another book with this breadth of focus. Rang-
ing from the family to global governance and from internal politics in
an international union to coalition-building at the World Social Forum,
this is fascinating material.”—Catherine Eschle, coauthor of Making Feminist Sense of the Global Justice Movement
192 pp. 6 x 9. 1 table. 2011. *Cloth 978-0-252-03596-8. $70.00 $49.00;
Paper 978-0-252-07792-0. $25.00 $17.50
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
MIGRATION 11
*UNJACKETED
Pacifi c CitizensLarry and Guyo Tajiri and Japanese American Journalism in the World War II Era
EDITED, WITH AN INTRODUCTION AND NOTES, BY GREG ROBINSON
Foreword by Harry Honda
“Pacifi c Citizens is an extraordinary piece of historical scholarship. Robinson
. . . . analytically rigorous while at the same time writing in narrative prose
characterized by grace and accessibility.”—Arthur A. Hansen, coeditor of Re-fl ections on Shattered Windows: Promises and Prospects for Asian American Studies
344 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 7 b & w photos. 2012. Cloth 978-0-252-03672-9. $60.00 $42.00
The Asian American Experience
AVAILABLE IN PAPERBACK
The Scent of the GodsFIONA CHEONG
Edited by Leslie Bow
Tells the enchanting, haunting story of a young girl’s coming of age in
Singapore during the tumultuous years of its formation as a nation.
“Charged and poetic. . . . A story exquisitely poised between the specifi c and
the mythic, delicately narrated and profoundly resonant.”—Publishers Weekly
304 pp. 6 x 8.25. 1 map. 2011. Paper 978-0-252-07642-8. $22.00 $15.40
AVAILABLE JUNE 2012
Russia in MotionCultures of Human Mobility since 1850
EDITED BY JOHN RANDOLPH AND EUGENE M. AVRUTIN
“This well-crafted collection of essays brings together a comprehensive
selection of new research on mobility in Russia from the Tsarist Empire’s
westernmost provinces to the Far East. Of worldwide interest to scholars in
migration studies as well as East Europeanist studies.”—Dirk Hoerder, author
of Cultures in Contact: World Migrations in the Second Millennium
304 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 3 charts. 2012. Cloth 978-0-252-03703-0. $55.00 $38.50
Studies of World Migrations
NEW IN PAPERBACK
A New Language, A New WorldItalian Immigrants in the United States, 1890–1945
NANCY C. CARNEVALE
“Outstanding from start to fi nish. . . . The author displays exceptional range
and depth in exploring not only the interior world of Italian American life, but
also the intersections of this group’s story with that of other immigrant com-
munities and with society as a whole. . . . Highly recommended.”—Choice
264 pp. 6 x 9. 2012. Paper 978-0-252-07862-0. $25.00 $17.50
Winner of an American Book Award from The Before Columbus Foundation
Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Centennial Series
In Pursuit of GoldChinese American Miners and Merchants in the American West
SUE FAWN CHUNG
“[Sue Fawn Chung’s] focus is on three relatively isolated mining
towns in Nevada and Oregon, but her narrative sweep encompasses
the broader experiences of the Chinese diaspora. Acknowledging the
challenges of discrimination and hostility, Chung demonstrates a wide
range of contributions by Chinese Americans and identifi es areas of
positive interaction with the dominant Euro-American society.”
—James J. Rawls, coeditor of A Golden State: Mining and Economic Development in Gold Rush California
296 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 16 b & w photos, 4 maps, 4 tables. 2011.
Cloth 978-0-252-03628-6. $55.00 $38.50
*UNJACKETED
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
12 CULTURAL HISTORY
Before the CurseThe Chicago Cubs’ Glory Years, 1870–1945
EDITED BY RANDY ROBERTS AND CARSON CUNNINGHAM
“A substantial, in-depth collection that shows how the Cubs came to be, from the late
nineteenth century up to the mid-twentieth century, and how they set up the direction
of the franchise into the present day.”—George Castle, Chicago sportswriter and
author of Sweet Lou and the Cubs: A Year Inside the Dugout
296 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 18 b & w photos. 2012. Paper 978-0-252-07816-3. $21.95 $15.37
Locomotive to AeromotiveOctave Chanute and the Transportation Revolution
SIMINE SHORT
Foreword by Tom D. Crouch
“Exhaustively researched and persuasively argued, Short’s biography of Chanute
fi lls a long-lamented void in civil engineering and early fl ight historiography.”
—Library Journal
360 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 67 b & w photos, 5 maps, 2 tables. 2011.
Cloth 978-0-252-03631-6. $38.00 $26.60
NEW IN PAPERBACK
The 1933 Chicago World’s FairA Century of Progress
CHERYL R. GANZ
“With graceful prose and beautiful illustrations, Ganz demonstrates the fair’s
central themes of modernist architectural design, fi nancial economy, and material
progress.”—The Journal of American History
272 pp. 7 x 10. 42 color photos, 45 b & w photos. 2012. Paper 978-0-252-07852-1. $21.95 $15.37
Recipient of the Smithsonian Institution Secretary’s Research Prize
From the Jewish HeartlandTwo Centuries of Midwest Foodways
ELLEN F. STEINBERG AND JACK H. PROST
“After delighting in the myriad tastes and traditions of Midwestern Jewry summoned
up by this evocative book, readers will be much less likely refl exively to think New
York when they encounter the delights of the delicatessen or savor a traditional Sab-
bath or other Jewish holiday dinner.”—The Washington Times
224 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 10 b & w photos. 2011. Cloth 978-0-252-03620-0. $32.95 $23.07
Heartland Foodways
AVAILABLE FEBRUARY 2012
Squeeze This!A Cultural History of the Accordion in America
MARION JACOBSON
A history of the piano accordion as a uniquely American musical and cultural
phenomenon.
304 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 34 color photos, 34 black & white photos, 1 line drawing, 3 tables. 2012.
Cloth 978-0-252-03675-0. $29.95 $20.07
Publication of this book is supported by a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Folklore Studies in a Multicultural World
AVAILABLE MARCH 2012
A People’s History of Baseball MITCHELL NATHANSON
Probes the other side of baseball: episodes not involving equality, patrio-
tism, heroism, and virtuous capitalism, but power—how it is obtained, and
how it perpetuates itself. Exploring the founding of the National League,
Nathanson focuses on club ownership and status; the rise and public
rebuke of the Players Association; and baseball’s uneven racial integration.
272 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 2012. Cloth 978-0-252-03680-4. $29.95 $20.97
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
CULTURAL HISTORY 13
*UNJACKETED
Commemorating HellThe Public Memory of Mittelbau-Dora
GRETCHEN SCHAFFT AND GERHARD ZEIDLER
“Commemorating Hell is a fascinating and unique combination of social
history and cultural analysis that uses the social memory of Mittelbau-
Dora to analyze the personal and social processes of coming to grips with
horrifi c past acts.”—David Price, author of Anthropological Intelligence: The Deployment and Neglect of American Anthropology in the Second World War
216 pp. 6 x 9. 19 b & w photos. 2011. *Cloth 978-0-252-03593-7. $70.00 $49.00
Paper 978-0-252-07788-3. $25.00 $17.50
Histories of the PresentPeople and Power in Ecuador
NORMAN E. WHITTEN JR. AND DOROTHEA SCOTT WHITTEN
The wellspring of critical analysis in this book emerges from Ecuador’s major
Indigenous Uprising of 1990 and its ongoing aftermath in which indigenous and
Afro-Ecuadorian action transformed the nation-state and established new dimen-
sions of human relationships.
280 pp. 6 x 9. 4 color photos, 1 line drawing, 1 map, 2 charts. 2011.
*Cloth 978-0-252-03603-3. $80.00 $56.00; Paper 978-0-252-07797-5. $27.00 $18.90
NEW IN PAPERBACK
The American Discovery of EuropeJACK D. FORBES
“A fascinating book that makes an important . . . contribution to the subject of
pre-Columbian contacts between America and Europe. Highly recommended.”
—Choice
“Readers will fi nd much to ponder in this volume, and the extensive bibliography is a
valuable guide to further study.”—Journal of Interdisciplinary History
272 pp. 6 x 9. 10 b & w photos. 2011. Paper 978-0-252-07836-1. $28.00 $19.60
Howard PyleImagining an American School of Art
JILL P. MAY AND ROBERT E. MAY
“Meticulously researched and clearly written, this book gives us a well-rounded
understanding of Howard Pyle’s personality and character. Pyle was renowned in his
time and remains a signifi cant fi gure in the history of illustrational art and popular
literature.”—Charles Alexander, author of Here the Country Lies: Nationalism and Arts in Twentieth-Century America
288 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 8 color photos, 22 b & w photos. 2011.
Cloth 978-0-252-03626-2. $45.00 $31.50
AVAILABLE MARCH 2012
New German Dance StudiesEDITED BY SUSAN MANNING AND LUCIA RUPRECHT
Offers fresh histories and theoretical inquiries focusing on three major thematic
areas: Weimar culture and its afterlife, the German Democratic Republic, and recent
conceptual trends in theater dance.Contributors are Maaike Bleeker, Franz Anton Cramer, Kate Elswit, Susanne Franco, Susan
Funkenstein, Jens Richard Giersdorf, Yvonne Hardt, Sabine Huschka, Claudia Jeschke,
Marion Kant, Gabriele Klein, Karen Mozingo, Tresa Randall, Gerald Siegmund, and Christina
Thurner.
320 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 31 b & w photos. 2012.
*Cloth 978-0-252-03676-7. $80.00 $56.00; Paper 978-0-252-07843-9. $30.00 $21.00
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
14 THE HISTORY OF COMMUNICATION
AVAILABLE FEBRUARY 2012
Equal TimeTelevision and the Civil Rights Movement
ANIKO BODROGHKOZY
“A thoroughly researched analysis of the intersection between race, social change,
and network television in the 1960s. Bodroghkozy shows in vivid detail how televi-
sion served as a powerful tool of moral persuasion that played a key role in turning
the tide toward the passage of historic civil rights legislation.”—S. Craig Watkins,
author of The Young and the Digital: What the Migration to Social Network Sites, Games, and Anytime, Anywhere Media Means for Our Future
328 pp. 6.125 x 9.25. 38 b & w photos. 2012.
Cloth 978-0-252-03668-2. $50.00 $35.00
AVAILABLE MAY 2012
The Rise and Fall of Early American Magazine CultureJARED GARDNER
“An ambitious reimagining of magazine culture. . . . Under Gardner’s careful atten-
tion, however, the early national period emerges as a time of extraordinary periodi-
cal experimentation.”—Patricia Okker, author of Social Stories: The Magazine Novel in Nineteenth-Century America
240 pp. 6 x 9. 8 b & w photos. 2012. Cloth 978-0-252-03670-5. $50.00 $35.00
AVAILABLE APRIL 2012
Saving the WorldA Brief History of Communication for Development and Social Change
EMILE G. MCANANY
Summarizing the history of the fi eld of communication for development from
Truman’s Marshall Plan for the Third World to the United Nations’ Millennium
Development Goals, McAnany argues that the communication fi eld can renew its
role in development by recognizing large aid-giving institutions have a diffi cult
time promoting genuine transformation.
208 pp. 6 x 9. 2012. *Cloth 978-0-252-03677-4. $80.00 $56.00;
Paper 978-0-252-07844-6. $25.00 $17.50
Chronicling TraumaJournalists and Writers on Violence and Loss
DOUG UNDERWOOD
“Will inspire considerable thought about the history of journalism, the dynamic
between a society’s culture and its characteristic literature, and the impact of
trauma on a writer’s choice of literary subjects.”—Nancy L. Roberts, coauthor of
The Press and America: An Interpretive History of the Mass Media
256 pp. 6 x 9. 2 tables. 2011. Cloth 978-0-252-03640-8. $50.00 $35.00
Radio UtopiaPostwar Audio Documentary in the Public Interest
MATTHEW C. EHRLICH
“A vivid refl ection of the social and cultural climate of the post-World War II era,
Matthew C. Ehrlich’s engaging study shows readers what was occurring on the
national radio networks as the Cold War started and the impact that the war had on
broadcasting and those who worked in it.” —Patrick S. Washburn, author of The African American Newspaper: Voice of Freedom
240 pp. 6 x 9. 2011. Cloth 978-0-252-03611-8. $50.00 $35.00
On the Condition of AnonymityUnnamed Sources and the Battle for Journalism
MATT CARLSON
“Raises important issues related to sources and to the structural forces currently
challenging the meaning of journalism in today’s multimedia world.”—Library Journal
216 pp. 6 x 9. 2011. Cloth 978-0-252-03599-9. $45.00 $31.50
NIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PR
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
JOURNALS 15
Journal of American Ethnic HistoryThe offi cial journal of the Immigration & Ethnic History Society
EDITED BY JOHN J. BUKOWCZYK
Addresses various aspects of American immigration and ethnic history,
including background of emigration, ethnic and racial groups, Native
Americans, immigration policies, and the processes of acculturation. Each
issue contains articles, review essays and single book reviews.
Journal of the Illinois State Historical SocietyEDITED BY EILEEN M. MCMAHON
The Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, established in 1908, is
the scholarly publication of the Illinois State Historical Society, a statewide
non-profi t organization dedicated to preserving, promoting, and publish-
ing the latest research about the Prairie State. The peer-reviewed Journal
welcomes articles, essays, and documents about history, literature, art
technology, law, and other subjects related to Illinois and the Midwest.
History of the PresentA Journal of Critical History
JOAN W.SCOTT, ANDREW AISENBERG, BRIAN CONNOLLY, BEN
KAFKA, SYLVIA SCHAFER, & MRINALINI SINHA
A journal devoted to history as a critical endeavor. Its aim is twofold: to
create a space in which scholars can refl ect on the role history plays in
establishing categories of contemporary debate by making them appear
inevitable, natural or culturally necessary; and to publish work that calls
into question certainties about the relationship between past and present
that are taken for granted by the majority of practicing historians.
Journal of the Abraham Lincoln AssociationEDITED BY BRYON ANDREASEN
The offi cial journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association, devoted exclu-
sively to Lincoln scholarship. In addition to selected scholarly articles—
on Lincoln in the popular media, for example, or British reactions to the
War— the journal also features photographs and newly discovered Lincoln
letters and documents.
UNIVERSITY OF ILL INOIS PRESS • www.press.u i l l ino is .edu
1933 Chicago World’s Fair, The 12
African or American? 6Africans to Spanish America 5ALEXANDER 6American Discovery of Europe, The 13ANDREASEN, ed. 15Archie Green 8ARMFIELD 6AUSTIN 6
Banded Together 9Before the Curse 12BELL & Stanley, eds. 1Black Chicago Renaissance, The 4Black Internationalist Feminism 6Black Women and Politics in New York City 10BLEVINS 7BODROGHKOZY 14BRECHER 9BRYANT, O’Toole, and Vinson 5BUKOWCZYK, ed. 15BURNS 8
CARLSON 14CARNEVALE 11CHEONG, ed. Bow 11Chicago in the Age of Capital 9Child Care in Black and White 9Chronicling Trauma 14CHUNG 10CLASSEN Inside front coverCLOUD 8Combating Mountaintop Removal 7Commemorating Hell 13CURRARINO 9
Daughter of the Empire State 6Deepest Sense Inside front coverDefi ning Deviance 10Demanding Child Care 10
EHRLICH 14EMERSON 3Equal Time 14Eugene Kinckle Jones 6
FERGUSON 2FISHER & Smith, eds. 7FLOOD 10FORBES 13FOUSEKIS 10FRANZWAY & Fonow 10From the Jewish Heartland 12
GALLAGHER 10GANZ 12GARDNER 14GELLMAN & Roll 8Ghost of the Ozarks 7GIDLOW 1Gleanings of Freedom 8Gospel of the Working Class, The 8GRIVNO 8Guest Workers and Resistance to U.S. Corporate
Despotism 9
Haymarket Conspiracy, The 9HENRY, Allen & Chrisman, Eds. 1HICKEY 2HIGASHIDA 6HINE & McCluskey, Eds. 4Histories of the Present 13History of the Present 15Howard Pyle 13Illinois in the War of 1812 2In Pursuit of Gold 10
JACOBSEN 12JENTZ & Schneirov 9Journal of American Ethnic History 15Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association 15Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 15
Labor Question in America, The 9LAUSE 3LICHTMAN 1Lincoln’s Political Generals 3Locomotive to Aeromotive 12
Making Feminist Politics 10Making Sense of American Liberalism 1MANNING & Ruprecht, eds. 13Mary Lincoln’s Insanity Case 3MAY & May 13McANANY 14McLEOD 6MCMAHON, ed. 15McNEIL 7MESSER-KRUSE 9
NATHANSON 12NESS 9New German Dance Studies 13New Language, A New World, The 11
Obama Phenomenon, The 1Obama, Clinton, Palin 1On the Condition of Anonymity 14
Pacifi c Citizens 11People’s History of Baseball, A 12PFEIFER 4Poco Field, The 7Quaker Brotherhood 6
Radio Utopia 14RAMEY 9RANDOLPH & Avrutin, eds. 11Rape in Chicago 10Rebels and Runaways 5REED 5REMBIS 10Rise and Fall of Early American Magazine
Culture, The 14Rise of Chicago’s Black Metropolis,
1920-1929, The 5RIVERS 5ROBERTS & Cunningham, eds. 12ROBINSON 11Roots of Rough Justice, The 4Russia in Motion 11
Saving the World 14Scent of the Gods, The 11SCHAFFT & Zeidler 13SCOTT, Aisenberg, Connolly, Kafka, Schafer,
& Sinha, eds. 15Secret Society History of the Civil War, A 3Sex, Sickness, and Slavery 4SHORT 12Spirits of Just Men 7Squeeze This! 12STANLEY 7STEINBERG & Prost 12Supreme Court and McCarthy-Era Repression, The 1
THOMPSON 7Transforming Places 7
UNDERWOOD 14
War of 1812, The 2We Are the Union 8WEINER 4WHITTEN & Whitten 13WORK 3
16 INDEX
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