Pulitzer Prize winner Sheri Fink
Posted in Guest Authors, Lowell Humanities Series
Tagged ethics, natural disaster, New Orleans, nonfiction, Pulitzer Prize winner
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Book review by Stephen Pope
Boston College Theologian Stephen Pope has written a review of Evolution, Games, and God: The Principle of Cooperation, edited by Martin A. Nowak and Sarah Coakley, for Commonweal magazine. In his review, Pope writes “Coakley and Nowak’s book provides an excellent resource for anyone who wants to learn about current thinking at the nexus of evolutionary theory, ethics, and theology…This is one of the best books on this topic in the past decade.” Pope is the author of Human Evolution and Christian Ethics (Cambridge University Press).
Women of Will
J. Donald Monan, S.J., Professor in Theatre Arts Tina Packer, a renowned expert on Shakespeare, is the author of the forthcoming book, Women of Will (Knopf Doubleday, 2015) — the product of her lifelong exploration of Shakespeare’s famed yet misunderstood heroines. It is based on her five-part performance piece of the same name, which won critical acclaim in its off-Broadway run. Packer is an actor, writer, teacher and the founding artistic director of Shakespeare & Company in Lenox, one of the largest and most critically acclaimed Shakespeare Festivals in North America. From January 21 to 25 at Robsham Theater, Packer will direct “Honor, Shame, and Violence: A Shakespeare Anthology Project,” a compilation of war scenes from some of Shakespeare’s most beloved and lesser-known works. Her previous books are Power Plays: Shakespeare’s Lessons in Leadership & Management, co-written with John Whitney, and the award-winning children’s book, Tales from Shakespeare.
Childhood in Irish society
A new volume co-edited by Boston College English Associate Professor James M. Smith and Maria Luddy of the University of Warwick offers significant scholarly contributions to the fields of Irish studies and childhood studies. Reflecting the interests of historians, literary critics, and the discipline of social work, the essays in Children, Childhood and Irish Society: 1500 to the Present (Four Courts Press, Dublin, 2014) examine how attitudes to children have changed in Ireland over the past half millennium. Smith is the author of Ireland’s Magdalen Laundries and the Nation’s Architecture of Containment.
Posted in Boston College Authors
Tagged children, English Department, Ireland, Irish Studies
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Filming the End of the Holocaust
In his new book, Filming the End of the Holocaust: Allied Documentaries, Nuremberg and the Liberation of the Concentration Camps (Bloomsbury, 2014), Professor of Fine Arts John Michalczyk tells the story of how the US Government commissioned filmmakers to document the horrors of the concentration camps during the April-May 1945 liberation and the impact those films had the Nuremberg Trials. The evidence of the Nazis’ genocidal actions amassed in the films helped to indict Nazi officials. A noted documentary filmmaker, Michalczyk provides a thorough analysis of the footage in these films– some of them made by Hollywood luminaries such as John Ford and Billy Wilder–and their historical significance. Michalczyk used research carried out at the Museum of Jewish Heritage, the US National Archives and the film collection at the National Center for Jewish Film at Brandeis University to produce a book that explores the rationale for filming the atrocities and their use in the subsequent trials of Nazi officials in greater detail than anything previously published. BC Jesuit priest Raymond Helmick, SJ offers the book’s foreword.
Posted in Boston College Authors
Tagged film, Fine Arts Department, Holocaust, law, war, World War II
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Book award for Derber
Capitalism: Should You Buy It? (Paradigm Publishers, 2014) co-written by Boston College Professor of Sociology Charles Derber and Yale Magrass (University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth) has been selected as an Outstanding Academic Title for 2014 by the editors of Choice magazine, an academic library review magazine that is considered the premier guideline for library acquisitions. The prestigious list, which reflects the best in scholarly titles reviewed by Choice, is announced every year in the magazine’s January issue. The list of Outstanding Academic Titles is selective: it contains only about ten percent of the some 7,000 works reviewed in Choice each year. Capitalism was recognized in the Economics category. Derber and Magrass’ book casts a critical eye towards capitalism and questions whether it can provide a society that promotes the well-being, indeed the survival, of humanity. Derber is the author of some 20 books, including Greed to Green, Corporation Nation, Morality Wars, People Before Profit, and many more.
Posted in Awards/Honors, Boston College Authors
Tagged America, economy, Sociology Dept
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Gasson Chair Frank Brennan, S.J.
Frank Brennan, S.J., who holds an appointment at Boston College Law School as the Gasson Chair, has written a review of Austen Ivereigh’s biography The Great Reformer: Francis and the Making of a Radical Pope for the Australian Broadcasting Co.’s “Religion and Ethics.” An expert in human rights law, Fr. Brennan is the author/co-author of several books, including The Wik Debate, One Land One Nation, Sharing the Country , Land Rights Queensland Style, Too Much Order With Too Little Law, Legislating Liberty and Tampering with Asylum. He is a professor of law at Australian Catholic University and an adjunct professor at the Australian National University’s College of Law and National Centre for Indigenous Studies. He was appointed an Officer of the Order of Australia for services to Aboriginal Australians, particularly as an advocate in the areas of law, social justice and reconciliation.
Posted in Boston College Authors
Tagged Australia, Gasson Chair, Jesuit author, Law School, Pope Francis
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A look at trade
Boston College Professor of Political Science David Deese is the editor of Handbook of the International Political Economy of Trade, which brings together leading researchers and writers from different countries to highlight the most important and promising research and policy questions regarding international trade from the past decade. The book looks at the topic from the disciplines of political science, political economy, law and economics. Deese talked about the book in this BC Libraries video.
Posted in Boston College Authors
Tagged BC Libraries, business, Political Science department, politics
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