Wisconsin Books


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Wisconsin Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Wisconsin
Can you afford to work?: A handbook on Social Security benefits
Published in Unknown Binding by Council on Developmental Disabilities (1979)
Author: Bruce D Beck
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Average review score:

Trailblazer Info From An Expert
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-30
A timeless resource for all the ages. When one wants loads of correct and invaluable information go right to the source---Bruce D. Beck.
Not available in any store.

Wisconsin
Cannibal Fictions: American Explorations of Colonialism, Race, Gender And Sexuality
Published in Hardcover by University of Wisconsin Press (2006-06-30)
Author: Jeff Berglund
List price: $65.00

Average review score:

cannibals in fiction as figures of the other and images of the repressed
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-31
The assistant professor of English at Northern Arizona U. analyzes how there "emerged [in American society] a deeply ambivalent discourse, simultaneously estranging and familiarizing the barbaric cannibal." P. T. Barnum's exhibition of "Fiji Cannibals" in the 1870s was one of the first coherent, widespread examples of this ambivalence involving fear and fascination with the cannibal. In it, the "cannibals" were confined and thus tamed for the amusement of the public. Earlier instances of the U.S. European, white public's unsettled feelings about cannibals representing the foreign and wild are seen in works of Melville, Poe, and other pre-Civil War writers. With Edgar Rice Burroughs' turn-of-the-century book "Tarzan and the Apes," a white European male becomes a part of the cannibalistic world, and in some ways exceeds even the cannibals in their ferocity and freedom from the restraints of civilization. Generally overlooked aspects of the popular book and movie "Fried Green Tomatoes" uncover recent dispositions regarding cannibalism and the concept of the other and the repressed it stands for. By analysis of such texts, other media, and aspects of past and modern-day culture, Berglund sheds considerable light on the continual and changing play between the figure of the cannibal without and cannibalistic characteristics, urges, and designs within.

Wisconsin
Cardiac Cuisine: A Guide to Healthy Eating
Published in Spiral-bound by University of Wisconsin Press (1988-05-15)
Author: Gail Underbakke
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Not just for the heart attack prone
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-13
This is a great little book. It contains both narrative and recipes, based on the fundamentals of better nutrition. While it was written to help folks with heart disease and those trying to avoid it, it is also helpful to anyone looking to develop a more healthy diet. Some of my favorite recipes come from this book - you have got to try the sherbet pie! The other nice thing is this is spiral-bound, so it is easy to use in the kitchen.

Wisconsin
Career Moves: Olson, Creeley, Zukofsky, Berrigan, and the American Avant-Garde
Published in Hardcover by University of Wisconsin Press (2000-09-25)
Author: Libbie Rifkin
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Average review score:

Ego as Beak
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-07
Libbie Rifkin shines light on the work of four avant- garde poets who created a poetry culture where they could reign, preeminent. If ever there were a movement in art history that could only "be understood backwards, but must be lived forwards" (to paraphrase Kierkegaard,) it was the avant-garde. Now an American institution, avant-gardism can be more fully understood.

Focusing on four major literary figures of the 50's and 60's: Charles Olson, Robert Creeley, Louis Zukofsky, and Ted Berrigan, Career Moves guides us through to their eventual prominence. All four poets followed in the heat of the Beat poets, and capitalized on that movement, coming into their own with a fervor which could be described as the making of poetry in service to the self. The term `avant-garde' leads us to think of breaking old forms to create new, thus seeing its practitioners as revolutionaries and iconoclasts. A contrary point made by Rifkin is how imperialistic these avant-gardists were, and how they contrived to manipulate public taste by creating poetry which was doctrinaire. Ezra Pound, more than others, influenced these four, more even than W.C. Williams or Wallace Stevens. Pound's famous "ego as beak" (to "drive through the material") was the philosophy Olson and Creeley used to create an empire of solipsistic literature, in defiance of the Academy, at the same time courting the universities to promulgate and sustain their works. Their art was born and breasted of such contradictions.

Arrogance, yes. Self-styled critics and self appointed cultural anthropologists that they were, the facts remain: these are four of the most interesting writers in the history of American poetry. Charles Olson's projectivism, using breath to determine the line on the page, has changed the reading, writing and teaching of poetry forevermore. Creeley's magnificent epigrammatic poems established a new morality for word order. Zukofsky's life long poetic fugues are a testament to experimentation, and Berrigan's lust for recognition objectified the daily act (Frank O'Hara's legacy,) taking all to a new level of poetic exhibitionism. There is genius in each.

Libbie Rifkin gives us insight into the making of the new poetry. For example, she points to Berrigan's appropriation of other poets -- composition, tone, and language. She refers especially to his imitation of John Ashbery's poems. One has to believe Ashbery is a saint, completely without ego, for his acceptance of these practices. The book could have uncovered more here for our satisfaction and curiosity, but Rifkin doesn't go for pure literary gossip. The greater good Berrigan thought, was of course to pay tribute to the hero, Ashbery. The immediate effect, not lost on Berrigan, is that many of us don't have the means to credit the work properly and so, attribute to Berrigan work which wins the day. Much that followed this, however, is ground-breaking. The small literary magazines that ignored tables of content, authorship of poems etc. are pretty exciting in the creating of a new poetry ego within the pages. Poetic assemblage was born.

Throughout the book we are shown that nothing was written that wasn't consciously designed to construct a literary reputation. What is different? Looking at today's poets, most want recognition, few write for obscurity, and fame is certainly the goal. What distinguishes these four poets, then, according to Rifkin was the dogged authoritarianism in their roles as editors, in their writings and teachings - their "Homosocial " culture - and the incorporation of traditional works within the text.

The reader always wonders how far away any artist can go without turning back. Not far it seems. It is fascinating to see how heavily Shakespeare and European classical music figure in the work of our four. If anything, I would like to have seen how America's other avant-garde art forms (visual arts, music etc) factored into the manuscripts. We are content to imagine the broken line and off beat syntax as evidence However these were first the property of the modernists of the 50's. So what art forms of the time influenced them? We do not see this explicated in their texts.

Career Moves matters largely because the poets, Orson, Creeley, Zukofsky and Berrigan, matter to us. In my generation they are contemporaneous with the love of poetry itself. It's doubtful that many of us would have been drawn to the ongoing energy of poetry had it not been for these men and their bold innovations and powerful poetic disciplines.

Few scholars have concentrated before on how and when poetry was marketed. In today's presence of flamboyant PR and endless cultural commerce, we can now see how other "sociopoetic practices" figured. Public consumption is always an end in itself, a manufactured act, yet designers make taste and great poets do also. The study of their `career moves' interests us on all levels, mostly because suspicion of what goes into making people famous is finally satisfied by fact. It is impossible for me to forget that fame is an Italian word for hunger.

Libbie Rifkin's scholarly explorations and mastery of material combine with a language we had forgotten to expect from our critics, and a prose style we can be grateful for. This means that in the field of literary history Libbie Rifkin has authored a book for us to read and reread, not only in preparation for the classroom but for our own personal fulfillment and pleasure. Besides, who would not be attracted to a mythology of four men who have created a poetry society by their own imaginations of greatness. And who would not want to follow their every career move.

Grace Cavalieri is the author of several books of poetry, the latest Cuffed Frays (Argonne House Press.) Her most recent play "Pinecrest Rest Haven" premiered at NYC's Common Basis Theatre in NYC in 2001. She produces and hosts "The Poet and the Poem from the Library of Congress" broadcast via NPR satellite to public radio.

This article was originally written for THE MONTSERRAT REVIEW issue #6 Spring 2002 ....

Wisconsin
Caribbean Autobiography: Cultural Identity and Self-Representation (Wisconsin Studies in Autobiography)
Published in Hardcover by University of Wisconsin Press (2002-07-28)
Author: Sandra Pouchet Paquet
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Average review score:

Invaluable Study
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-19
Sandra Paquet offers a detailed an informative analysis of Caribbean literature. Her study explores a range of authors and texts, focusing on the difficulties of self-definition.

Wisconsin
Carrie and the Crazy Quilt
Published in Paperback by Midwest Traditions (1996-06-01)
Author: Nelda Johnson Liebig
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Great Historical Fiction
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-18
This story is a combination of many true events woven into a partially fictional story that happened during the Peshtigo fire. It is written for children, but as an adult, I found it fascinating. What a great way to get kids hooked on history!

Wisconsin
Censorship And Interpretation
Published in Paperback by University of Wisconsin Press (1991-04-15)
Author: Annabel M. Patterson
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Average review score:

The drive toward encryption.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-20
This is a critical treatment of the relationship between author and authority in the society of early modern England. Patterson explores the delicate balance between the state's need to control writers and their need to communicate with a contemporary audience on subjects that may not meet with state approval. Her thesis is that the need for indirection, encoding and encryption are fundamental to the literary impulse. A very fine book - essential reading to all students of literature.

Wisconsin
Central Sites, Peripheral Visions: Cultural and Institutional Crossings in the History of Anthropology
Published in Hardcover by University of Wisconsin Press (2006-10-04)
Author:
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A thoughtful, serious-minded scrutiny of specific aspects of the gradual evolution of a scientific discipline
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-05
Edited by Richard Handler (professor of anthropology, University of Virginia), Central Sites, Peripheral Visions: Cultural and Institutional Crossings in the History of Anthropology is volume eleven in the History of Anthropology series, and collects five in-depth, scholarly essays by learned authors under one cover. The topics discussed are "Ethnographic Publication and Emergent Nationalism in the Sixteenth Century", "Tracking, Offshore Incarceration, and Ethnology in the Back of Beyond", "Diffusion, Race, and the Culture Paradigm in the History of Anthropology", "The FBI and the History of Anthropology at Chicago and in Nigeria", and "Historical Particularism and Cultural Ecology in Court". Overall, Central Sites, Peripheral Visions traces how the science of anthropology has been affected, sometimes distorted, by forces both central and peripheral, from Cold War politics to jousting for status among academia. A thoughtful, serious-minded scrutiny of specific aspects of the gradual evolution of a scientific discipline, enthusiastically recommended along with the rest of the History of Anthropology series for college library reference shelves.

Wisconsin
The Chalk Ring
Published in Paperback by The Printing House (1998)
Author: Duane Wee Thorsen
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The Chalk Ring
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Review Date: 2008-01-07
A policeman is murdered. Behind a facade of law-abiding citizens is a terrible scandal and a group of people who rally around the prime suspect.
--- from book's back cover

Wisconsin
Chasing Montana: A Love Story
Published in Paperback by University of Wisconsin Press (2006-02-22)
Author: Lori Soderlind
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Average review score:

For the chasers among us
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-17
I couldn't put this book down. Anyone who has longed for an object of desire -- whether it's another person, a hand-carved guitar or a wilderness that is pure and uncomplicated -- will love this book. Soderlind manages to turn upside down all our preconceived notions about love, the wild west (there were bankers there?), the counterculture that has been asleep for the last 30 years and even the virtuous newsroom. Chasing Montana is funny (I never knew an elbow could wreak such panic) while looking deeply into our shared but excruciating aloneness. A great read.


Books-Under-Review-->Health-->Addictions-->Substance Abuse-->Centers and Counseling Services-->United States-->Wisconsin-->38
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