Indiana Books
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Indiana Books sorted by
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Bartok for Piano: A Survey of His Solo Literature
Published in Paperback by Indiana University Press (2000-06)
List price: $15.95
New price: $13.50
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Average review score: 

Essential for Bartok Lovers
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-25
Review Date: 2001-03-25
Basic course in Finnish (Indiana University publications. Uralic and Altaic series)
Published in Unknown Binding by Indiana University (1967)
List price:
Average review score: 

Best for learning Finnish.
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-01
Review Date: 2000-08-01
This is listed as out of print, and perhaps it is, but I got it by mail from the publisher (Indiana University) and the tapes were available also by mail from the Indiana University Language and Computer Laboratories Audio Tape Library. It is by far the best learning tool for Finnish currently available. A good second is the book and recordings used by the Foreign Service Institute and available from the Department of Commerce through their NTIS series. Both courses use the same methodology (I own both), and they are effective and enjoyable to use.
Lehtinen provides conversations and ample exercises, all reproduced in the book and recorded on the cassettes, and it explains grammar and Finnish sound changes clearly. It explains important aspects of pronunciation that I have not found in any other Finnish textbook, such as the occurrence of the glottal stop, which is pronounced but never written. The Foreign Service Institute course does equally well but is oriented toward the needs of State Department personnel.
Other Finnish courses on the market are less than this (I own most of them too), and considering the complexity of Finnish they are just not up to the job.
Basic Questions of Philosophy (Studies in Continental Thought)
Published in Hardcover by Indiana University Press (2004-06-24)
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Great Introduction to Heidegger's Contributions to Philosophy
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-02
Review Date: 2006-11-02
Heidegger gave this lecture course in the Winter semester 1937-1938 while he was finishing his second masterpiece, Contributions to Philosophy. It elaborates many of the themes of that difficult work in a more lucid style. (Unfortunately not all of the themes of Contributions are elaborated here, e.g. "the last god" is noticeably absent.) Herrmann, the editor of the German edition of both volumes, recommends it as the best introduction to Contributions. However, even if one is not interested in that other work, this lecture course is an excellent (also clear, concise) example of the later Heidegger.
About the translation--although no translation is perfect and Heidegger's German presents many difficulties, the translators do an admirable job. One criticism however: they do not distinguish "Sein" from Heidegger's other spelling "Seyn" in their translation, choosing to translate both by the generic "Being." (Other translators will distinguish the two as Be-ing/Being or Beyng/Being.)
About the translation--although no translation is perfect and Heidegger's German presents many difficulties, the translators do an admirable job. One criticism however: they do not distinguish "Sein" from Heidegger's other spelling "Seyn" in their translation, choosing to translate both by the generic "Being." (Other translators will distinguish the two as Be-ing/Being or Beyng/Being.)

Basketball: King of Indiana
Published in Hardcover by AuthorHouse (2005-07-19)
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A journey from early Indiana childhood to Hoosier Hysteria!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-23
Review Date: 2006-06-23
In his first book, Gary Lee Smith writes a fascinating memoir of what it was like to grow up in a small Indiana town and be smitten by Hoosier basketball. His amazing memory and obviously well-reserached details of his time in Indiana reveal a nostalgic look back into what is now known as the Golden Era of Indiana basketball. He cleverly ties in the culture of the times and builds up to a vivid description of the then one-class high school basketball tournament. This book is a must read for anyone interested in what the culture was like in the 1950s, but also for those who would like to know how Hoosier Hysteria got its grip on the state. Dr. Norman Jones - author of Growing Up in Indiana: The Culture & Hoosier Hysteria Revisited

Bean Blossom: Its People and Its Music
Published in Paperback by Infinity Publishing (2006-05-12)
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Bean Blossom's Best Bluegrass Resource
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-26
Review Date: 2006-06-26
James R. Peva and his family have been a regular fixture at each and every June festival since the event's inception in the 1960's. The Peva family knew Bill Monroe, and many of the artists that performed at the park, personally.
Filled with excellent photographs and fascinating recollections related by the author, this is a valuable resource for fans of the music. Told in an accessible style that is conversational, this is a fun read. It felt much more like sharing a chat over the campfire with Col. Peva (while the bluegrass pickers played Mr. Monroe's music in the background!) than sitting at a history lecture, though the content was no less credible.
This book is a treasure!
Filled with excellent photographs and fascinating recollections related by the author, this is a valuable resource for fans of the music. Told in an accessible style that is conversational, this is a fun read. It felt much more like sharing a chat over the campfire with Col. Peva (while the bluegrass pickers played Mr. Monroe's music in the background!) than sitting at a history lecture, though the content was no less credible.
This book is a treasure!

Beauty Matters
Published in Paperback by Indiana University Press (2000-04)
List price: $19.95
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Collectible price: $135.00
Collectible price: $135.00
Average review score: 

Aesthetics for Every Reader
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-23
Review Date: 2005-03-23
This compilation of essays is accessible for the non-scholar and covers a wide range of topics related to beauty and aesthetics. It touches on both traditional aesthetics and more inclusive aesthetic systems, and the various authors draw on everything from biology to popular culture. The approaches encourage us to think about our visual environment and the arts in new ways and remind us of how important, in today's world, are a fluency with the languages of beauty and imagery.

Berber Culture On The World Stage: From Village To Video
Published in Paperback by Indiana University Press (2005-11)
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A weindow to the world of Berbers
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-03
Review Date: 2006-03-03
This book opens a wondow to the world of Berber culture. It is written with love and care about local people. Like those who this book is about are family members of the Author. And you know, what if family for North African - is may be most important in the life.

Best of the Best from Indiana: Selected Recipes from Indiana's Favorite Cookbooks (Best of the Best)
Published in Plastic Comb by Quail Ridge Press (1995-08)
List price: $16.95
New price: $8.69
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Average review score: 

MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-02
Review Date: 1999-02-02
I loved cooking all the food and the ones i could not cook i sat for hours and stared at the pictures wishing i could.m Very Good job.Know i havemto go and eat dinner and make one of the many recipes i love. To eat all day they are tasty and youm yum yum. Mushi Mushi Ano Nay
Between the Hammer and the Anvil? Chinese and Russian Policies in Outer Mongolia, 1911-1921
Published in Hardcover by Indiana University Research Institute for Inn (1980-12)
List price: $22.00
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Average review score: 

mongol
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-24
Review Date: 2000-10-24
Between the Hammer and the Anvil? Chinese and Russian Policies in Outer Mongolia, 1911-1921 by Thomas E.Ewing

Beyond Casablanca: M. A. Tazi and the Adventure of Moroccan Cinema
Published in Hardcover by Indiana University Press (2004-10)
List price: $65.00
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Average review score: 

Moroccan Film & Third World Challenges
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-08
Review Date: 2005-10-08
Few Americans have seen Muhammad Abderrahman Tazi's films and Kevin Dwyer is an anthropologist. But you needn't be a specialist to find this book fascinating. As Tazi's career is described, readers will also learn a great deal about film making, Morocco's colonial hangover, and the effects of globalization on Third World culture.
Dwyer is well qualified to write about Morocco and its arts. He has spent much of his professional life there and in other North African countries and is now Professor of Anthropology at the American University in Cairo. As demonstrated in this and previous books, he is also well qualified to conduct the interviews on which much of Beyond Casablanca is based. Thoughtful questions and comments put his subjects at ease. There is organization and direction, but we feel we are privy to the conversations of friends -- without the grinding of personal or academic axes.
Foreign film producers often take advantage of Morocco's exotic settings and lower production costs, and so Tazi has worked with Scorsese, Coppola, Huston and others. His credits include "The Last Temptation of Christ", "The Black Stallion Returns" and "The Man Who Would Be King". On the latter, a John Huston film, Tazi assisted with casting, recommended shooting locations and managed portions of the production effort. As he describes his early practical experience we begin to appreciate the logistics of creating a film. Whether in Morocco or Hollywood the basic requirements are the same. Casting, scene location, lighting, shooting sequences, props, continuity, sound mix, camera angles and perspective are some of the elements discussed here.
It's intriguing to hear a director talk about technique. Tazi tells us he tends to shoot from a distance rather than close in. He believes close-ups ruin "objectivity" and intrude on more appropriately private space. It's even more intriguing to learn that early in his career, lacking guide tracks and Steadicams, the director shot from the trunk of a moving car or from a wheelbarrow pushed by an assistant. I won't take the cameraman for granted the next time I watch Indiana Jones tearing away from a mortal threat.
Dwyer knows that the technical problems of a Third World film maker are a good stand-in for the more general challenges faced by ex-colonies. That wheelbarrow is a not so subtle reminder of what they face as they adjust to independence. Dwyer traces Tazi's evolution from wheelbarrow to digital editing, a difficult trip that remains incomplete. The parallel journey from colony to viable independent state is unimaginably more challenging and happy endings are far from given. Physical infrastructure, the economy, and governmental and educational systems must be rethought and made more effective. Pessimism and frustration have many thousands of Moroccans taking to small boats to cross the Mediterranean on dangerous voyages to Spain as illegal immigrants, a problem Tazi highlights in two of his more serious films.
The film maker's career also demonstrates that globalization can add to the woes of a country such as Morocco. It makes digital technology more readily available so it's easier and less expensive for Tazi to create the movie he wants, but at the same time he must now compete with U.S. media giants. Because of the limited number of screens in Morocco and the lack of foreign interest, Moroccan films invariably lose money. That means funding is scarce and only 10 or so films are made each year in spite of strong domestic interest. American films, profitable because of enormously wider distribution, fill much of the vacuum. Over 95% of the movies shown in Morocco are by foreign producers. Analogous problems plague many Third World industries. Proponents, including me, believe globalization will be for the best longer term, but there is increasing recognition that governments must intervene to temper market forces as long as there are huge imbalances in relative strength.
Fighting through the paucity of funding, weak technical support and strong foreign competition, Tazi has produced and directed five feature films. Beyond Casablanca describes the plot and circumstances of production of each in some detail. One of the clearest messages is that he makes movies that tell stories about, as he says, "... what haunts me". That's one of the reasons he is a frequent winner at various international festivals.
I think some American films are terrific and many more are entertaining, but few American directors make films because they have stories to tell about what haunts them. Even the most successful, and therefore independent, check marketing studies before they get very far into a new project. It's a business with big stakes. Film company managements have input and writers tend to come in teams designed to ensure something for everyone. M. A. Tazi on the other hand knows even his most popular films won't breakeven. He makes them because he has to. That's a pretty good definition of being an artist and Beyond Casablanca is well worth reading for its insight into an artist's mind and for the light it sheds on some of today's most difficult and controversial international social and economic issues.
Dwyer is well qualified to write about Morocco and its arts. He has spent much of his professional life there and in other North African countries and is now Professor of Anthropology at the American University in Cairo. As demonstrated in this and previous books, he is also well qualified to conduct the interviews on which much of Beyond Casablanca is based. Thoughtful questions and comments put his subjects at ease. There is organization and direction, but we feel we are privy to the conversations of friends -- without the grinding of personal or academic axes.
Foreign film producers often take advantage of Morocco's exotic settings and lower production costs, and so Tazi has worked with Scorsese, Coppola, Huston and others. His credits include "The Last Temptation of Christ", "The Black Stallion Returns" and "The Man Who Would Be King". On the latter, a John Huston film, Tazi assisted with casting, recommended shooting locations and managed portions of the production effort. As he describes his early practical experience we begin to appreciate the logistics of creating a film. Whether in Morocco or Hollywood the basic requirements are the same. Casting, scene location, lighting, shooting sequences, props, continuity, sound mix, camera angles and perspective are some of the elements discussed here.
It's intriguing to hear a director talk about technique. Tazi tells us he tends to shoot from a distance rather than close in. He believes close-ups ruin "objectivity" and intrude on more appropriately private space. It's even more intriguing to learn that early in his career, lacking guide tracks and Steadicams, the director shot from the trunk of a moving car or from a wheelbarrow pushed by an assistant. I won't take the cameraman for granted the next time I watch Indiana Jones tearing away from a mortal threat.
Dwyer knows that the technical problems of a Third World film maker are a good stand-in for the more general challenges faced by ex-colonies. That wheelbarrow is a not so subtle reminder of what they face as they adjust to independence. Dwyer traces Tazi's evolution from wheelbarrow to digital editing, a difficult trip that remains incomplete. The parallel journey from colony to viable independent state is unimaginably more challenging and happy endings are far from given. Physical infrastructure, the economy, and governmental and educational systems must be rethought and made more effective. Pessimism and frustration have many thousands of Moroccans taking to small boats to cross the Mediterranean on dangerous voyages to Spain as illegal immigrants, a problem Tazi highlights in two of his more serious films.
The film maker's career also demonstrates that globalization can add to the woes of a country such as Morocco. It makes digital technology more readily available so it's easier and less expensive for Tazi to create the movie he wants, but at the same time he must now compete with U.S. media giants. Because of the limited number of screens in Morocco and the lack of foreign interest, Moroccan films invariably lose money. That means funding is scarce and only 10 or so films are made each year in spite of strong domestic interest. American films, profitable because of enormously wider distribution, fill much of the vacuum. Over 95% of the movies shown in Morocco are by foreign producers. Analogous problems plague many Third World industries. Proponents, including me, believe globalization will be for the best longer term, but there is increasing recognition that governments must intervene to temper market forces as long as there are huge imbalances in relative strength.
Fighting through the paucity of funding, weak technical support and strong foreign competition, Tazi has produced and directed five feature films. Beyond Casablanca describes the plot and circumstances of production of each in some detail. One of the clearest messages is that he makes movies that tell stories about, as he says, "... what haunts me". That's one of the reasons he is a frequent winner at various international festivals.
I think some American films are terrific and many more are entertaining, but few American directors make films because they have stories to tell about what haunts them. Even the most successful, and therefore independent, check marketing studies before they get very far into a new project. It's a business with big stakes. Film company managements have input and writers tend to come in teams designed to ensure something for everyone. M. A. Tazi on the other hand knows even his most popular films won't breakeven. He makes them because he has to. That's a pretty good definition of being an artist and Beyond Casablanca is well worth reading for its insight into an artist's mind and for the light it sheds on some of today's most difficult and controversial international social and economic issues.
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The information provided by pianist David Yeomans is of very high quality, and I found his difficulty ratings, in particular, extremely accurate and helpful when selecting works for practice. This book is a must for anyone who loves to play Bartok's music, no matter what your level of playing ability.
Only the information on the recordings is out of date, but this is rendered moot by the fact that all of Bartok's solo piano works are available on CD in the excellent renditions by Gyorgy Sandor.