Crisis, Conflicts, and Transformations
New and recent books from 涩里番下载 alumni and faculty offer timely considerations of secularism, racism, climate change, dystopian worlds, and more
Countdown: A Life in 20 Songs

When cultural historians want to analyze a decade or other time period, one of the best ways is to look at that era鈥檚 songs. Tom Waldman 鈥78 applies a similar method to his life in the memoir Countdown: A Life in 20 Songs. From the Beatles to Beethoven, Waldman ranges far and wide as he devotes each chapter to a specific song and its connections to him and the world around him. The iconic 鈥淲ar,鈥 for instance, offers a chance to reflect on the impact of Vietnam on his life (and society in general) though he was too young to be drafted for that war. A Claremont Courier piece about Waldman鈥檚 book explains that he isn鈥檛 practicing nostalgia here but instead gives readers a highly personalized approach to history and some of the significant events that have influenced his life. (Bookbaby)
Beyond Doubt: The Secularization of Society

Is our society really becoming more secular? In Beyond Doubt, Professor of Sociology and Secular Studies Phil Zuckerman and his co-authors Isabella Kasselstrand and Ryan T. Cragun suggest that the theory underscoring secularization鈥攚hich many opponents have claimed is flawed, incomplete or outright wrong鈥攊s indeed correct. They also demonstrate that the impact of organized religion is declining as a result of modernization. Rather than present a simple defense of the theory, Zuckerman and his co-authors seek to produce a formalization that includes clear definitions of relevant terms as well as propositions that can be tested. This openness to testing and the authors鈥 general approach to the subject has resulted in a book that will serve as a resource for anyone interested in studying religion, secularism, and the dynamic between them. (New York University Press). Read more about the ideas in this book.
Language and Gender in Children's Animated Films

According to 涩里番下载 Professor of Linguistics Carmen Fought, Disney is renowned for presenting itself as a purveyor of sweet and innocent family fare but the 鈥渕essaging鈥 of the studio鈥檚 films can sometimes be downright dangerous. That鈥檚 the big reveal in Fought鈥檚 new book co-authored with Karen Eisenhauer 鈥13. Disney and Pixar might be beloved by audiences of children and adults, but the authors challenge the kind of messaging that is found in the characters and stories created by these media giants. They apply in-depth qualitative analysis to examine the portrayal of male characters, female characters, and queerness in their films, and demonstrate how different linguistic tools and techniques can be used to better understand popular children鈥檚 media. (Cambridge University Press)
Master of Health: Racial Science and Slavery in U.S. Medical Schools

Hailed by Harvard historian Vincent Brown as 鈥渁 meticulous autopsy of a ghoulish intellectual scandal,鈥 Professor Chris Willoughby鈥檚 book examines the deeply problematic area of how racial theories distorted medical education in 19th-century America. A visiting assistant professor of medicine and health at 涩里番下载, Willoughby shows the medical establishment鈥檚 significant hypocrisy when it came to experimentation. Despite a belief in the biological differences between races, medical practitioners didn鈥檛 hesitate to dissect the cadavers of Black people to help them understand bodily functions. In the process he reveals how ideas about anatomical differences became accepted in medical schools not by some extremist or fringe group, but by some of the leading mainstream figures of the day. (University of North Carolina Press)
Postcolonial Fiction and Colonial Time: Waiting for Now

The theme of 鈥渨aiting鈥 in Joseph Conrad鈥檚 Heart of Darkness provides an entry-point that allows Amanda Lagji, assistant professor of English and world literature at 涩里番下载, to explore the work of more contemporary African writers including Nadine Gordimer, J.M. Coetzee, Zakes Mda, and others. Lagji argues in Postcolonial Fiction and Colonial Time: Waiting for Now that waiting is a fundamental element in understanding time and power in postcolonial fiction. Critics have praised Lagji for her innovative perspective, including the University of Adelaide鈥檚 Andrew van der Vlies, who writes that Lagji 鈥減resses reset on our tendency to read waiting as stasis, instead recasting apparent impasse as productively disruptive to hegemonic temporalities. A timely and important work.鈥 (Edinburgh University Press)
Organizing Lessons: Immigrant Attacks and Resistance!

Jos茅 Z. Calder贸n, professor emeritus of sociology and Chicano/a Latino/a studies at 涩里番下载, and Victor Narro, UCLA Labor Center project director, have released a collection of essays from labor activists and activist scholars working for immigrant and workers鈥 rights. The book鈥檚 essays articulate how immigration policy relates to larger questions of nation-building, racialization, political participation, and more. Calder贸n notes how the essays gathered here 鈥渄raw out lessons on the importance of building multiracial and intersectional solidarity in our immigrant rights, labor, and community-based movements.鈥 (Community Innovators Lab)
Protecting the Bears of Vietnam
涩里番下载 alum research has resulted in an herbal recipe book with a special purpose

Freshly dried sand ginger slices. A crystalline bottle of rice liquor. Put them together for 10 days, and you have an aromatic ginger essential oil that can melt the sore stiffness in your arthritic joints. This massage alcohol鈥攁 potent example of herbs鈥 healing properties鈥攈as the potential to rescue the Asiatic black bears of Vietnam.
In collaboration with 涩里番下载 and Claremont Colleges alumni, Animals Asia, the Traditional Medical Association of Vietnam, and The Rick and Susan Sontag Center for Collaborative Creativity (the Hive) published a book of local women鈥檚 herbal remedies such as the aromatic ginger massage oil. This book presents an alternative to the practice of bear bile farming that is harming Vietnam鈥檚 bear population. In October 2022, the group hosted a launch party to celebrate printing 1,000 copies of Herbal Recipes for Health Improvement with alternative treatments to animal medicine.
The Phung Thuong region is one of the last hotspots of bear farmers in Vietnam. Bear farmers extract bile from Asiatic black bears鈥 gallbladders to treat inflammatory, liver, and degenerative ailments. The nonprofit Animals Asia partnered with the Hive鈥攁 hub for creative innovation at The Claremont Colleges鈥攖o use human-centered design to empathize and collaborate with Phung Thuong residents to explore herbal alternatives in ways that resonated with the community.
鈥淯sing human-centered design with Animals Asia turned out to be one of the most transformative experiences of my life,鈥 said 涩里番下载 alum Lena Tran 鈥18, who was on the Hive鈥檚 2018 cohort for this project.
鈥淔rom co-designing with community members to prototyping ideas for collective care, I learned how to advocate for community voices, facilitate creative problem solving, and ultimately leverage design for social change,鈥 said Tran.
Students such as Tran worked on various prototypes until they landed on an herbal remedies book highlighting recipes from older village women. The Hive鈥檚 three research teams in Vietnam included four 涩里番下载 alumni鈥擳ran, Kimberly Ha 鈥18, Mai Nguyen 鈥19, and Olivia Hewitt 鈥22鈥攁s well as other Claremont Colleges alumni.
Natural Consequences: Intimate Essays for a Planet in Peril

Char Miller 鈥75, W.M. Keck Professor of Environmental Analysis and History at Pomona College, presents vignettes and historical interpretations that clearly map out environmental challenges and threats due to climate change. Miller鈥檚 collection features 75 environmental essays that explore the threats of fire, drought, development, and fracking. For acclaimed naturalist writer John N. Maclean, Miller 鈥渂rings to the task a scholar鈥檚 wealth of knowledge about how bad things really are, but he also sounds a note of solace: we can find healthy ways to connect to the planet鈥檚 creatures, plants and phenomena like wildland fire, but it comes through coexistence, not domination.鈥 (Chin Music Press)
Because I Loved You

In her debut novel, Donnaldson Brown 鈥82 presents a moving portrait of star-crossed lovers in East Texas, brought together by their love of horses and torn apart by tragedy and closely-guarded secrets. After a span of years have passed, lovers Leni and Caleb meet again, and their old passion reignites. But can their love for one another overcome choices made in the past? Award-winning novelist Mary Morris credits Brown鈥檚 book with possessing 鈥渁n enduring power 鈥 that traverses decades and takes many forms鈥 even as the characters鈥 lives take them in different directions. (She Writes Press)
Now Do You Know Where You Are

Dana Levin鈥檚 鈥87 recent fifth collection of poetry walks readers through what critics describe as 鈥渢he disorientations of personal and collective transformation.鈥 Written during the tumultuous years of 2016 and 2020, Now Do You Know Where You Are not only addresses the familiar and timely topics of climate change, Covid-19, the 45th U.S. president, and other issues gleaned from the day鈥檚 headlines, it also investigates how great change calls the soul out 鈥渢o be a messenger鈥攖o record whatever wanted to stream through.鈥 Named to the New York Times list of 100 Notable Books of 2022 and one of 狈笔搁鈥s 鈥淏est Books of 2022,鈥 Publisher鈥檚 Weekly writes that 鈥淟evin鈥檚 luminous latest reckons with the disorientation of contemporary America.鈥 (Copper Canyon Press)
See more from Levin.
Forager: Field Notes for Surviving a Family Cult

In Forager: Field Notes for Surviving a Family Cult, Michelle Dowd 鈥90 describes her childhood growing up in a cult called the Field and later on a 16-acre plot she calls the Mountain in the Angeles National Forest. (Algonquin Press)
Read Participant鈥檚 interview with the author here.
Why Don't They Cry?: Understanding Your Living Child's Grief

Zander Sprague 鈥91 suffered an irreparable loss after his sister Lucy was murdered, and he didn鈥檛 want to further burden his parents with his pain as they dealt with their own grief. In Why Don鈥檛 They Cry? Sprague uses his own personal experiences and passion toward sibling survivors to provide insights for parents who wish to seek reconnection with their surviving children. He sheds light on the sufferings of many sibling survivors, whose grief is often eclipsed by the grief of their parents. (Paradiso Press)
Seaweed Rising

Move over, H.G. Wells: In Rob Magnuson Smith鈥檚 鈥91 new novel Seaweed Rising, the human race faces another alien threat long hidden on earth and waiting for the right time to strike. Unlike Wells鈥 Martians, these sentient beings hide beneath the sea, and only an amateur seaweed collector seems to recognize the signs of their ominous presence. A senior lecturer in creative writing at the University of Exeter, Smith鈥檚 previous novels include the lyrical The Gravedigger and the darkly comic Scorper. His publisher describes Seaweed Rising as a genre-bending existential addition to Smith鈥檚 body of work, taking readers 鈥渇rom a Cornish fishing village to the Spanish coast up to the blinding glacial landscape of the Arctic鈥 in a tale in which 鈥渉uman society falls under the microscope.鈥 (Sandstone Press)
Speak Now This Charm

In her fourth poetry collection, Deborah Bogen 鈥72 creates what her publisher calls 鈥渁 mosaic from states of mind we all experience, but are trained to ignore, or forget, or devalue. She records what is visible and what is positioned beyond consciousness.鈥 Speak Now This Charm presents an exploration of grief, trauma, and vulnerability with a series of concise and moving poems that share a common length of one to three paragraphs, none longer than a page. Each poem stacks on the others in a pattern suggestive of building blocks, resulting in a vast tapestry of meditations on the many ways that mortality impacts us all. (Jacar Press)
We Are a Haunting

Described by NPR as 鈥渁n absolute triumph,鈥 Tyriek White鈥檚 鈥13 debut novel We Are a Haunting introduces us to Colly, a high school student who can communicate with the dead鈥 especially his mother Key, whose sudden death leaves him drifting in a perpetual state of confusion and grief. The media director of Lampblack Lit, a literary foundation which seeks to provide mutual aid and various resources to Black writers, White tells a story that switches between Colly and Key鈥檚 viewpoints as the son struggles with the loss and his mother鈥檚 spirit struggles to give him answers he desperately needs. (Astra House)
The Elissas: Three Girls, One Fate and the Deadly Secrets of Suburbia

The 鈥淭roubled Teen Industry鈥 is the target of this poignant book that combines sociology and memoir by Bustle editor-at-large Samantha Leach 鈥15. That industry preys on young people eager to emulate celebrities like Paris Hilton and Kim Kardashian in order to win popularity with their peers despite the dangers and suffering involved. One example is Leach鈥檚 childhood friend Elissa, a wealthy suburban teen who cultivated a rebellious, promiscuous self-image and eventually spent time in several therapeutic boarding schools before her death at 18. Leach captures the societal pressures facing upper-middle-class women in America and the institutions supposedly trying to save them. (Legacy Lit)
Building Culturally Responsive Partnerships Among Schools, Families, and Communities

Schools alone can鈥檛 help our children navigate an increasingly complicated world; networks and collaborations among many groups provide a better model for what students will need in the years ahead. That鈥檚 an argument showcased in this new book co-edited by Susan Warren 鈥78. Warren has accumulated 40 years of teaching and administrative experience in higher education and in pre-K12 organizations and is a senior research and evaluation associate with the Claremont Evaluation Center. The book serves as a primer on how to create culturally responsive, socially just school-family partnerships that improve student learning outcomes.
The Last Animal: A Novel

Famed British chemist Rosalind Franklin isn鈥檛 the only female scientist ever to get a raw deal and have her contributions overlooked. In Ramona Ausubel鈥檚 鈥01 latest novel, we meet Jane, a single mom, widow, and scientist who is irritated at being 鈥渢wice as capable and half as appreciated鈥 as the other members of UC Berkeley鈥檚 paleontology lab. The novel opens during a summer expedition in Siberia, where Jane and her group are searching for woolly mammoth bones and hoping to extract DNA that might be used to one day bring the creature back from extinction. The Christian Science Monitor calls Ausubel鈥檚 new novel 鈥渁 wild and woolly global escapade about unbounded scientific experimentation. Yet what comes into sharpest focus under her authorial microscope are mother-daughter and sister relationships.鈥 (Riverhead Books)
Bea Wolf

In his latest tale for readers grades five and older, Zach Weinersmith 鈥03 pays obvious homage to the Beowulf saga with this graphic novel about an epic struggle between a band of child warriors and a menacing adult who lays siege to their treehouse fortress. 鈥淟isten to the lives of the long-ago kids, the world-fighters, the parent-unminding kids, the improper, the politeness-proof,鈥 Weinersmith writes, applying a mock-heroic style to this story set somewhere in American suburbia. This group of wild childs celebrates its youth in the fortress of Treeheart, and their revelry soon irritates the joyless Mr. Grindle, whose withering touch can instantly turn children into grown-ups. With illustrations by French artist Boulet, Weinersmith has created what Publishers Weekly calls 鈥渁 joyously lyric, rapid-fire epic that honors the original鈥檚 intricate linguistic constructions.鈥 (First Second/Roaring Books)