George M. Woodwell
MIT Press
In a succinct book whose tone is at once meditative and determined, the founder of Woods Hole Research Center considers “life on the skin of the Earth” in the Anthropocene, and the prospect that we will yet turn away from our environmental “moment of inattention”. Drawing in Darwin and Lincoln, DDT and Haiti, Rachel Carson and Kazakhstan, Fukushima and dairy farms near his own New England hayfield, Woodwell asks bluntly how the corporate world “managed to be taken seriously in its argument before government and the public that it had the right to poison the world”. His closing words – “Sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas” – are ones to google, for those with small Latin, and reflect on, for us all.
Jennifer Ann Drobac
University of Chicago Press
Drawing on US case law both recent and historic, a legal scholar considers “the very common problem of the sexual harassment and exploitation of maturing teenagers by adults”: ostensibly “consenting” young people who “navigate the world without sufficient protection” through minefields of manipulation and coercion. The accounts outlined here – young people groomed, disbelieved and blamed – are as painfully familiar as today’s news headlines. Drobac’s conclusion is plain: “As a few adults initiate, perpetuate, and fail to cure the sexual abuse of teenagers, all adults must accept that, currently, only adults have the power to change laws and create rights.”
Rashida K. Braggs
University of California Press
Jazz is both black and white, both American and global, argues Africana studies scholar Braggs. In a fine, detailed study, she writes with verve and joy – as well as the requisite theoretical engagement and nods to the literature – about Sidney Bechet, journalist and vocalist Inez Cavanaugh (“her voice haunted me”), drummer Kenny Clarke, and the “rage-filled blues” of black writer James Baldwin and white French blues artist Boris Vian, in a time and place where black American musicians were admired and exoticised even as colonial conflicts escalated.
Paul Warren
Cambridge University Press
Aaargh, those young people with their appalling speech patterns – or, to put it as a linguist author must, “the use of rising intonation in contexts where questions would not usually be expected”. Warren unpicks the spread and variants of talking? like this? unnecessarily?, from Australia, New Zealand and California to Bristol, Northern Ireland and francophone Canada via The Office’s David Brent, silly girls and Monica Lewinsky, and puce-faced newspaper columnists. Will uptalk endure? A study of a mid-thirties cohort found it “remains relatively fixed into adulthood”, but Warren cheerily adds that “more evidence is needed before we can be confident that uptalk is here to stay”.
Tabish Khair
Oxford University Press
The Holocaust. Sinhalese-Tamil conflict. Murderous skinheads. Shia-Sunni bloodshed. Ethnic cleansing in the Balkans. The Ut?ya massacre. Anti-Muslim propaganda in Switzerland. Will preaching love, respect and multiculturalism sort it all out? In this eloquent, often searchingly personal study, Khair, an Indian-born, Denmark-based novelist and academic, considers “new” and “old” xenophobia, via Giddens, Dawkins, Marx, Count Dracula and UFOs, and argues that hatred of the other “is essentially the index of an ongoing power struggle, enabled by the nature of capital, which is why its subjects change, but xenophobia, like the proverbial river, ‘seems to go on forever’”. Highly timely and highly commended.