University of Minnesota Books


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University of Minnesota Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

University of Minnesota
Revolution Televised: Prime Time and THe Struggle for Black Power
Published in Hardcover by University of Minnesota Press (2004-10)
Author: Christine Acham
List price: $57.00
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Average review score:

Cool Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-11
Props to the Author for Bringing to Light Black Images&the battle on Network tv then&Now. I Love Sanford&Son&to this day ain't nothing on touching it for my eye balls. I miss Tv challgeing people to think&reflect. Major Tv networks have not done right by Black People on the Tv Tube since back in the day.everything has Been recycled or watered down.glad this Book came out&put it there. RIP to Redd Foxx,Esther Rolle&Richard Pryor.

University of Minnesota
The River We Have Wrought: A History of the Upper Mississippi
Published in Hardcover by University of Minnesota Press (2003-03)
Author: John O. Anfinson
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A Splendid Juggernaut of a book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-05
For anyone living along the upper Mississippi river, especially in the Twin Cities, who has an interest in our river this book is a must read. John Anfinson comprehensively examines the history and development of the upper Mississippi river from several perspectives. The upper Mississippi's development and health are still unfolding, as Anfinson suggests, and he leaves us with the open-eneded question how economics, environment, recreation, and politics will shape policy regarding future development and sustainability. At times the book overly bombards the reader with very specific historical minutiae that become hard to remember as the book progresses. Despite the minutiae, though, the book is thoroughly researched and organized clearly. It's an overall great read.

University of Minnesota
Seductive Cinema: The Art of Silent Film
Published in Paperback by University of Minnesota Press (1999-03-01)
Author: James Card
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Worthy addition to any film lover's library!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-25
In "Seductive Cinema," the late author James Card provides an intriguing glimpse into the silent film era. Card, a film historian, professor, and preservationist, saw many of these films in his youth, and he dedicated his entire life to preserving silent films and introducing them to new generations. The book provides insight into the careers of several specific actors and directors. "Seductive Cinema" is not as much a history of silent films as it is a perspective. Card picks and chooses his subjects, and he doesn't refrain from disputing opinions that do not agree with his own experience and/or insights. The book begins slowly, but the pace rapidly increases. Several wonderful photographs accompany the text. For those already immersed in the fascinating world of silent film, this is a great companion book written by someone from the era who personally knew many of the subjects in his book. For others not as well versed in silent films, this book will hopefully instill a lasting desire to learn more, and seek out other books as well as the specific films Card discusses.

University of Minnesota
Senator Gerald P. Nye and American Foreign Relations
Published in Hardcover by University of Minnesota (1962)
Author: Wayne S. Cole
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Average review score:

Scholarly, well written and illuminating
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-03

This 1962 book from Wayne Cole on the life and times of Senator Gerald P Nye illustrates why Cole is the doyen of the history of the isolationist movement. Well written and copiously researched it has neither hagiography or hate for it's subject or his main protagonist, FDR.

Nye belonged to a group now almost forgotten. He was a western Progressive Republican from North Dakota. A newspaperman, "friend of the farmer" turned Senator who went on to head the Munitions Industry Investigation in the 1930s. Nye led the Neutrality Acts movement and was a major player in America First's opposition to FDR's "all aid short of war" policy before Pearl Harbor.

The "Progressive" Republicans of the west mainly represented agricultural districts. Rivals to the more conservative "Old Guard" within the GOP, they had no qualms about advocating public ownership at a state level and were, as often as not, to the left of many pro-New Deal Democrats. Most had better liberal and progressive credentials than FDR himself, and unlike most liberal New Dealers they stayed truer to the older WW1 era pacifist and anti-war ideals. This was especially true after "Dr New Deal" changed to "Dr Win the War", and partisan pressures made liberal Democrats generally pro-war. By default the Progressive Republicans became the congressional backbone of the "isolationist" movement.

But to understand the story we need to go back earlier in the early thirties. Nye was chairman of the Senate's munitions investigations which in a sense was the forerunner of modern concerns of what Ike christened "the military industrial complex". Nye's committee detailed not just war profiteering but the escalating political process that took America into the Great War. The lessons learned from the committee drove Nye's later political actions. The neglect of the Nye Committee's historical role by the modern antiwar movement is itself telling. If they made mistakes presumably study could prevent repetition. However I suspect the neglect really reflects ideological partisanship as modern liberals desire to enshrine the legacy of Wilson and FDR, in much the same way as today's "neocons" desire to invest Reagan in valhalla.

The Munitions investigators found (but didn't publish) FDR's son, Elliot Roosevelt, was involved in a plan with Germany's Fokker to sell military aircraft to Russia. They argued that if manpower is to be drafted, war profits should too. This they believed would deterr pro-war lobbying. But it was not just "the merchants of death" who were in the committee's cross hairs. They came to find J P Morgan and the great financiers as 'at least' as responsible for war as armament manufacturers. Maybe more so. Neutrality, they argued, required not just limits on munitions exports but controls over lending to belligerent states. Much of this was supported at the time by the anti-capitalist left, however it was their critique of government that made them different. During the course of their 5 report investigations Nye, to his surprise, came to the view that the War Dept and Navy Dept were 'every bit as bad' as the "munitions trust".

Nye became increasingly concerned about the Executive branch's power to start war. Nye, at least until WW2 began, was a staunch liberal. He opposed Franco and, unlike FDR, believed the Neutrality Acts embargoes did not prevent US munitions exports to the Loyalist government. For the most part Nye welcomed the New Deal, despite some reservations about aspects of the NRA. He uncovered evidence (apparently not seriously disputed today) that Wilson knew of the Entente allies' secret treaties (at least) as early as 1917. The harsh treaties were not the Paris Peace Conference surprise Wilson's defenders maintained. When Nye mentioned his findings, he was hit by a barrage of outraged defenders of the dead president's reputation, even though Nye never actually accused Wilson of lying. The experience probably coloured his later dealings with Roosevelt.

Nye was skeptical of both the President's role in war making and the Chief Executive's ability to prevent the drift to war once it's 'economic preconditions' were in place. He noted that the arms trade and loans to combatants before 1918 wove into a powerful pro-war coalition few politicians could resist. To counter this Nye believed tough mandatory legislative controls to enforce neutrality and to curb lending and arms exports were required. Hence the Neutrality Acts. FDR, who originally supported them, sought a watered down version. Nye was careful, at least up to the outbreak of actual war in Europe, to couch his arguments in terms of "backing up" the President with 'legislative help' to resist pro-war forces. He was careful to take Presidential claims of peaceful intent at face value, at least in public.

Still the western progressives most serious split from the New Deal coalition had nothing to do with foreign policy. It was the `court stacking' issue. Interestingly, for these agrarians, constitutionalism was more important, than support for the Supreme Court's road blocking. They supported FDR's liberal appointments to the bench and urged a Congressional route to unblock the legislation, including constitutional amendment if necessary. This was preferable than damaging the machinery of the constitution, and in their enlightened self interest too. Cole points out that agrarian interests had more sway via state governments and thus the senate than they did through Presidents. Presidential centralism weakened their constituency.

Cole thus integrates his political and biographic exposition with 'economic' analysis. Agricultural states had the least to gain from war expenditure. Indeed North Dakota was the state with the smallest slice of the Pentagon pie until the 1960s. Cole sees the western progressives as heirs of American agrarianism, a tradition that embraced both Jefferson and Bryan. Foreign policy isolationism was part and parcel of a wider domestic agrarian radicalism that located the source of farmers' woes in the East.

Cole speculatively develops this theme. He discusses how the growth of a great urban megapolis along the eastern seaboard, comprising over 17% of the US population, shifted the centre of political geography from isolation to intervention. Indeed to sharpen the focus, from about 1936 on FDR no longer needed the support of western progressives and his administration, and the Democratic Party itself, became more urban in orientation. This shift coincides with both the `second New Deal' and a turn to foreign intervention.

Cole further speculates that in the modern world a new North Atlantic urban - industrial bloc comprising the US North East and Western Europe exercises the same dominance over the world that the East held over America's west. In a sense, the agrarian radicals and neutralists of "the Third World", an emerging force in the early "pre-Sunbelt" 1960s when Cole wrote, had parallels in the agrarian radicals of the US.

Just as the Munitions Investigations led to the Neutrality Acts, the fight to maintain those acts was behind the America First Committee, an organization Nye spoke for but never joined. Nye believed FDR's "all aid short of war" policy would lead to war. And it did. Or so Nye quite logically believed. Indeed history might suggest that even the legislative shackles Nye sought to forge were too weak to constrain a concerted war drive. Like most isolationists, once war was actually declared they saw their political battle as lost, at least until military victory restored sanity. The isolationists were limited by wartime loyalty from responding forcefully to "the Brown Smear", attempts by administration partisans, to paint opponents as pro-fascist. Cole makes the telling observation that the smears really emerged in 1944, an election year.

Nye became increasingly conservative during the war and ultimately lost his seat. Although he held fast to the correctness of his prewar actions he never became prominent in the post-WW2 "Old Right" opposition to the new Cold War. By then he was more of an Eisenhower than a Taft Republican. Nye's older radicalism had mellowed, more due to domestic issues, as he came to see organized labor, previously an ally, as a threat to farmers. At the same time America's country and city were being saturated by the same media, the older particularism was in decline, along with rural votes. Still I suspect Cole would see echoes of Nye in the 2008 GOP primary campaign of country doctor Ron Paul.

Cole's able treatment illuminates a poorly understood period of 20th century history and relates it back to tendencies that emerged early in the American republic. The reader can easily relate it forward to contemporary developments on their own. Fully indexed with detailed and scholarly chapter notes, this remains a cleanly written book. I found it something of a "page turner" too. Highly recommended.

University of Minnesota
Senator Gerald P. Nye and American foreign relations
Published in Unknown Binding by University of Minnesota Press (1962)
Author: Wayne S Cole
List price:
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Average review score:

Well written, scholarly history
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-04
This 1962 book from Wayne Cole on the life and times of Senator Gerald P Nye illustrates why Cole is the doyen of the history of the isolationist movement. Well written and copiously researched it has neither hagiography or hate for it's subject or his main protagonist, FDR.

Nye belonged to a group now almost forgotten. He was a western Progressive Republican from North Dakota. A newspaperman, "friend of the farmer" turned Senator who went on to head the Munitions Industry Investigation in the 1930s. Nye led the Neutrality Acts movement and was a major player in America First's opposition to FDR's "all aid short of war" policy before Pearl Harbor.

The "Progressive" Republicans of the west mainly represented agricultural districts. Rivals to the more conservative "Old Guard" within the GOP, they had no qualms about advocating public ownership at a state level and were, as often as not, to the left of many pro-New Deal Democrats. Most had better liberal and progressive credentials than FDR himself, and unlike most liberal New Dealers they stayed truer to the older WW1 era pacifist and anti-war ideals. This was especially true after "Dr New Deal" changed to "Dr Win the War", and partisan pressures made liberal Democrats generally pro-war. By default the Progressive Republicans became the congressional backbone of the "isolationist" movement.

But to understand the story we need to go back earlier in the early thirties. Nye was chairman of the Senate's munitions investigations which in a sense was the forerunner of modern concerns of what Ike christened "the military industrial complex". Nye's committee detailed not just war profiteering but the escalating political process that took America into the Great War. The lessons learned from the committee drove Nye's later political actions. The neglect of the Nye Committee's historical role by the modern antiwar movement is itself telling. If they made mistakes presumably study could prevent repetition. However I suspect the neglect really reflects ideological partisanship as modern liberals desire to enshrine the legacy of Wilson and FDR, in much the same way as today's "neocons" desire to invest Reagan in valhalla.

The Munitions investigators found (but didn't publish) FDR's son, Elliot Roosevelt, was involved in a plan with Germany's Fokker to sell military aircraft to Russia. They argued that if manpower is to be drafted, war profits should too. This they believed would deterr pro-war lobbying. But it was not just "the merchants of death" who were in the committee's cross hairs. They came to find J P Morgan and the great financiers as 'at least' as responsible for war as armament manufacturers. Maybe more so. Neutrality, they argued, required not just limits on munitions exports but controls over lending to belligerent states. Much of this was supported at the time by the anti-capitalist left, however it was their critique of government that made them different. During the course of their 5 report investigations Nye, to his surprise, came to the view that the War Dept and Navy Dept were 'every bit as bad' as the "munitions trust".

Nye became increasingly concerned about the Executive branch's power to start war. Nye, at least until WW2 began, was a staunch liberal. He opposed Franco and, unlike FDR, believed the Neutrality Acts embargoes did not prevent US munitions exports to the Loyalist government. For the most part Nye welcomed the New Deal, despite some reservations about aspects of the NRA. He uncovered evidence (apparently not seriously disputed today) that Wilson knew of the Entente allies' secret treaties (at least) as early as 1917. The harsh treaties were not the Paris Peace Conference surprise Wilson's defenders maintained. When Nye mentioned his findings, he was hit by a barrage of outraged defenders of the dead president's reputation, even though Nye never actually accused Wilson of lying. The experience probably coloured his later dealings with Roosevelt.

Nye was skeptical of both the President's role in war making and the Chief Executive's ability to prevent the drift to war once it's 'economic preconditions' were in place. He noted that the arms trade and loans to combatants before 1918 wove into a powerful pro-war coalition few politicians could resist. To counter this Nye believed tough mandatory legislative controls to enforce neutrality and to curb lending and arms exports were required. Hence the Neutrality Acts. FDR, who originally supported them, sought a watered down version. Nye was careful, at least up to the outbreak of actual war in Europe, to couch his arguments in terms of "backing up" the President with 'legislative help' to resist pro-war forces. He was careful to take Presidential claims of peaceful intent at face value, at least in public.

Still the western progressives most serious split from the New Deal coalition had nothing to do with foreign policy. It was the `court stacking' issue. Interestingly, for these agrarians, constitutionalism was more important, than support for the Supreme Court's road blocking. They supported FDR's liberal appointments to the bench and urged a Congressional route to unblock the legislation, including constitutional amendment if necessary. This was preferable than damaging the machinery of the constitution, and in their enlightened self interest too. Cole points out that agrarian interests had more sway via state governments and thus the senate than they did through Presidents. Presidential centralism weakened their constituency.

Cole thus integrates his political and biographic exposition with 'economic' analysis. Agricultural states had the least to gain from war expenditure. Indeed North Dakota was the state with the smallest slice of the Pentagon pie until the 1960s. Cole sees the western progressives as heirs of American agrarianism, a tradition that embraced both Jefferson and Bryan. Foreign policy isolationism was part and parcel of a wider domestic agrarian radicalism that located the source of farmers' woes in the East.

Cole speculatively develops this theme. He discusses how the growth of a great urban megapolis along the eastern seaboard, comprising over 17% of the US population, shifted the centre of political geography from isolation to intervention. Indeed to sharpen the focus, from about 1936 on FDR no longer needed the support of western progressives and his administration, and the Democratic Party itself, became more urban in orientation. This shift coincides with both the `second New Deal' and a turn to foreign intervention.

Cole further speculates that in the modern world a new North Atlantic urban - industrial bloc comprising the US North East and Western Europe exercises the same dominance over the world that the East held over America's west. In a sense, the agrarian radicals and neutralists of "the Third World", an emerging force in the early "pre-Sunbelt" 1960s when Cole wrote, had parallels in the agrarian radicals of the US.

Just as the Munitions Investigations led to the Neutrality Acts, the fight to maintain those acts was behind the America First Committee, an organization Nye spoke for but never joined. Nye believed FDR's "all aid short of war" policy would lead to war. And it did. Or so Nye quite logically believed. Indeed history might suggest that even the legislative shackles Nye sought to forge were too weak to constrain a concerted war drive. Like most isolationists, once war was actually declared they saw their political battle as lost, at least until military victory restored sanity. The isolationists were limited by wartime loyalty from responding forcefully to "the Brown Smear", attempts by administration partisans, to paint opponents as pro-fascist. Cole makes the telling observation that the smears really emerged in 1944, an election year.

Nye became increasingly conservative during the war and ultimately lost his seat. Although he held fast to the correctness of his prewar actions he never became prominent in the post-WW2 "Old Right" opposition to the new Cold War. By then he was more of an Eisenhower than a Taft Republican. Nye's older radicalism had mellowed, more due to domestic issues, as he came to see organized labor, previously an ally, as a threat to farmers. At the same time America's country and city were being saturated by the same media, the older particularism was in decline, along with rural votes. Still I suspect Cole would see echoes of Nye in the 2008 GOP primary campaign of country doctor Ron Paul.

Cole's able treatment illuminates a poorly understood period of 20th century history and relates it back to tendencies that emerged early in the American republic. The reader can easily relate it forward to contemporary developments on their own. Fully indexed with detailed and scholarly chapter notes, this remains a cleanly written book. I found it something of a "page turner" too. Highly recommended.

University of Minnesota
Sensory Design
Published in Paperback by University of Minnesota Press (2004-03)
Authors: Joy Monice Malnar and Frank Vodvarka
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Average review score:

At Long Last
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-29
The opening salvo in what promises to be the new turf wars of design. Though limited to architecture and attendant arts, the battle royale will be enjoined in brand, package and product design -- commercial arts are now the true avant garde of design practice.

I found Chapter 11 ("Sensory Schematics") to be the most engaging and practical, and have been using my own variation of the authors' "sensory slider" for years.

My firm's invention of what we call NeuroDesignTM offers new and fruitful options for companies looking to capture, clarify and magnify the emotionally resonant components of their visual messaging.

It is heartening to see, finally, serious effort being put into this arena by architects.

University of Minnesota
The Sioux Uprising in Minnesota, 1862 : Jacob Nix's Eyewitness History (Max Kade German-American Center, Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis ... Heritage Society, Inc. (Series), V. 5.)
Published in Paperback by Max Kade German-American Center & Indiana Ger (1994-06)
Author: D. H. Tolzmann
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Average review score:

A good "first hand" account of a tragic war.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-04
This is a good reference book for anyone studying the Sioux Uprising (Dakota War) of 1862.

Mr Nix was one of the settlers from a small town in Minnesota called New Ulm. Mr. Nix and other New Ulmers succesfully defended their city against two separate Indian attacks during the height of this war (he was shot twice, but survived.)

The English portion of this book was translated from the original German document written in the late 1800's, so the verbage is a little dated. The author still had strong prejudices against the Native Americans when he wrote this testimonial, and frequently refers to them as "Red Devils" and "Red Scoundrels." This book is hardly objective.

This is a good glimpse at one man's viewpoint of the war, but should be examined as just that, one man's viewpoint.

University of Minnesota
The Superior North Shore
Published in Hardcover by University of Minnesota Press (1988-01)
Author: Thomas F. Waters
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Average review score:

A Fine Book on the Natural History of Superior
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-20
Of necessity, Tom Waters has had to tell the tale of Lake Superior as a whole to prepare for the main work of considering its wondrous north shore. Waters's direct, clear, and servicable writing is just about perfect for the job of covering both the natural and human history of the Lake and its diverse peoples. This, in my opinion, is the best book I've ever read about the Lake, and I've read a slew of them. I am one of the captains of a ferry boat that crosses the heart of the world's greatest lake every day during the summer, and, naturally, I've had many occasions to read about this wild inland sea. I learned a great deal in Waters's fine overview of the Lake and its past, especially about a topic I thought I would have little interest in -- the Lake Superior fishery, which crashed in the middle of last century. That Waters could make this subject (among the dozens of others he covers) entralling for a non-fisherman is a real testament to his skill as a writer. Tom is a fisheries specialist, so you'd think he's blow it when he came to his discipline, as often happens to writers of this sort, but the writing is at nearly perfect pitch throughout. Believe it or not for a book of natural history, I found Waters's book hard to put down, and not only because I'm a Lake Superior boy (having been working on the Greatest Lake since I was 15 years old). It's just flat-out well done, and the story has many an intersting twist and turn, from the slow pushing out of the Indians living around the Lake at the time of European settlement to the development of lumbering on the north shore. If you want to learn more about this incomparable international resource and its fascinating, if somewhat obscure, history, then start with this excellent book by Tom Waters. There are lovely pencil sketches by his wife in the book, too. And come visit us on Superior some day. It's just as spectacular as it was 100 years ago. (See my amazon site for information on what the rating stars mean for me and about lots of other books.)

University of Minnesota
Theory of the Avant-Garde (Theory & History of Literature)
Published in Paperback by University of Minnesota Press (1984-02)
Author: Peter Burger
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Average review score:

Modernism vs the Avant-Garde
Helpful Votes: 26 out of 28 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-09
This book argues a clear difference between two often confused terms: Modernism and the Avant-Garde. According to Peter Burger, Modernism dealt with formal evolution of style (in visual arts as well as in literature), while the Avant-Garde project involved radical change of the way of life. Consequently,the greatest Modernist movements of the 20th century, according to Burger, must be Cubism and Abstractionism, as they were mainly about visual distortion, and the relevant masters were Picasso and Kandinsky. On the other hand, the Avant-Garde produced its own most ambitious projects with the Russian Constructivism and Surrealism, and its geniuses must be Tatlin, Rodchenko, or Marcel Duchamp. All this is argued quite intellegently; the only reason for my 4 stars instead of 5 being that Burger brings on too much polemics with Marxist or semi-Marxist theorists (Lukacs, Adorno, etc.) and his own view is sometimes hard to disentangle from what he criticizes.

University of Minnesota
The Trickster of Liberty: Tribal Heirs to a Wild Baronage (Emergent Literatures)
Published in Paperback by University of Minnesota Press (1988-09)
Author: Gerald Robert Vizenor
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Average review score:

Very good, if unusual
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-18
This is a rather odd novel, broken down into a series of stories, vignettes and (mis)adventures involving various members of the Browne family, `mixedbloods' from an Indian reservation in northern Minnesota. As the title suggests, Vizenor is deeply interested in trickster themes, here borrowed from Native American and (to a lesser extent) Chinese oral traditions. Also, the concept of mixedbloods is the overriding leitmotiv of the entire book - often symobolized by mongrels. The style varies, and this is a very postmodern literary experience, but that shouldn't stop anyone from reading it. Generally this is a rewarding book: the narrative, if difficult to follow at times, is often humerous, yet behind this light-hearted veneer there is quite a bit of scathing commentary.


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