Wesleyan University Press

Since its inception in 1957, Wesleyan University Press has published more than 250 titles within its internationally renowned poetry series, collecting four Pulitzer prizes, a Bollingen, and two National Book Awards in that one series alone. Wesleyan University Press also aspire to maintain and develop their rigorous and multifaceted publishing program that serves the academic and intellectual life of the University; an editorial program that focuses on the publication of poetry, music, dance, science fiction, film-TV, and Connecticut history and culture.

Because When God Is Too Busy Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 112
ISBN: 9780819577351
Pub Date: 07 Apr 2017
Illustrations: 31 illus.
Description:
Gina Athena Ulysse’s Because When God Is Too Busy: Haïti, me, & THE WORLD is a lyrically vivid meditative journey that is unapologetic in its determination to name, embrace and reclaim a revolutionary Blackness that has been historically stigmatized and denied. Crafting experiments with “ethnographic collectibles” of word, performative sounds, and imagery to blur genres and the lines between the geopolitical and the personal, this collection is a testament to postcolonial inheritances. Ulysse’s work remixes samples from a range of references as it beckons readers to bear witness to a coming of age as she shifts between time and place and plays with languages to stretch the margins of aesthetics in the academic.
Theorizing Sound Writing Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
ISBN: 9780819576651
Pub Date: 04 Apr 2017
Series: Music/Culture
Illustrations: 23 illus.
Description:
The study of listening—aurality—and its relation to writing is the subject of this eclectic edited volume. Theorizing Sound Writing explores the relationship between sound, theory, language, and inscription. This volume contains an impressive lineup of scholars from anthropology, ethnomusicology, musicology, performance, and sound studies.
Magic City Nights Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 376
ISBN: 9780819576989
Pub Date: 04 Apr 2017
Series: Music/Interview
Description:
This exploration of rock ’n’ roll music and culture in Birmingham, Alabama, is based on the oral histories of musicians, their fans and professionals in the popular music industry. Collected over a twenty-year period, their stories describe the coming of rock ’n’ roll in the 1950s, the rise of the garage bands in the 1960s, of southern rock in the 1970s, and of alternative music in the 1980s and 1990s. Told in the words of the musicians themselves, Magic City Nights provides an insider’s view of the dramatic changes in the business and status of popular music from the era of the vacuum tube to twenty-first-century digital technology.
Planetary Noise Cover Planetary Noise Cover
Format: 
Pages: 208
ISBN: 9780819576941
Pub Date: 07 Mar 2017
Pages: 208
ISBN: 9780819576958
Pub Date: 07 Mar 2017
Description:
Planetary Noise: Selected Poetry of Erín Moure gathers four decades of poetry from a celebrated Canadian poet and translator who has persistently reconfigured the linguistic and material relations of English. Moure’s poems and networked sequences are hybrid and often polylingual; they work with contradiction, paradox, and verbal detritus— linguistic hics and blips often too quickly dismissed as noise—to create new conditions for thought and pleasure. From postdramatic theatre to queer and feminist theory, from the politics of citizenship and genocide to the minutiae of digital poetics, from the clamor of love to the shadows of grief and memory, Moure has joyously toppled hierarchies of meaning and parasited dominant discourses to create poetry that crosses borders, embracing hope, not war.
Science Fiction and the Mass Cultural Genre System Cover Science Fiction and the Mass Cultural Genre System Cover
Format: 
Pages: 224
ISBN: 9780819577153
Pub Date: 07 Mar 2017
Illustrations: 2 illus.
Pages: 224
ISBN: 9780819577160
Pub Date: 07 Mar 2017
Illustrations: 2 illus.
Description:
In Science Fiction and the Mass Cultural Genre System, John Rieder asks literary scholars to consider what shape literary history takes when based on a historical, rather than formalist, genre theory. Rieder starts from the premise that science fiction and the other genres usually associated with so-called genre fiction comprise a system of genres entirely distinct from the pre-existing classical and academic genre system that includes the epic, tragedy, comedy, satire, romance, the lyric, and so on. He proposes that the field of literary production and the project of literary studies cannot be adequately conceptualized without taking into account the tensions between these two genre systems that arise from their different modes of production, distribution, and reception.
The Mountains in Art History Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 152
ISBN: 9780819577290
Pub Date: 07 Mar 2017
Illustrations: 7 illus.
Description:
The Mountains in Art History is the first English-language work to focus on the mountains as subject matter and source of aesthetic and spiritual inspiration for painters. This collection of original essays is written entirely by Wesleyan University students of art history. The essays examine how artistic representation of mountains has varied through the lens of specific depictions in English and American literature, and consider how images of mountains functioned in conjunction with religion, the sublime, and Romanticism.
Trophic Cascade Cover Trophic Cascade Cover
Format: 
Pages: 92
ISBN: 9780819577191
Pub Date: 07 Mar 2017
Pages: 92
ISBN: 9780819578563
Pub Date: 13 Nov 2018
Description:
In this fourth book in a series of award-winning survival narratives, Dungy writes positioned at a fulcrum, bringing a new life into the world even as her elders are passing on. In a time of massive environmental degradation, violence and abuse of power, a world in which we all must survive, these poems resonate within and beyond the scope of the human realms, delicately balancing between conflicting loci of attention. Dwelling between vibrancy and its opposite, Dungy writes in a single poem about a mother, a daughter, Smokin’ Joe Frazier, brittle stars, giant boulders, and a dead blue whale.
BAX 2016 Cover BAX 2016 Cover
Format: 
Pages: 264
ISBN: 9780819576736
Pub Date: 17 Feb 2017
Series: Best American Experimental Writing
Pages: 264
ISBN: 9780819576743
Pub Date: 17 Feb 2017
Series: Best American Experimental Writing
Description:
BAX 2016: Best American Experimental Writing is the third volume of this annual literary anthology compiling the best experimental writing in poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction. This year’s volume, guest-edited by Charles Bernstein and Tracie Morris, features seventy-five works by some of the most exciting American poets and writers today, including established authors—like Sina Queyras, Tan Lin, Christian Bök, Myung Mi Kim, Juliana Spahr, Samuel R. Delany, and even Barack Obama—as well as emerging voices.
Entanglements Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 52
ISBN: 9780819577399
Pub Date: 14 Feb 2017
Description:
Entanglements is the product of a years-long interest in science, particularly physics by Pulitzer Prize winning poet, Rae Armantrout. The collection includes poems from her previous books, as well as four new poems. Armantrout delved into books intended to make science accessible for the average person, as well as engaged in conversations with physicists.
Celestial Empire Cover Celestial Empire Cover
Format: 
Pages: 240
ISBN: 9780819576675
Pub Date: 07 Feb 2017
Series: Early Classics of Science Fiction
Illustrations: 8 illus.
Pages: 240
ISBN: 9780819576682
Pub Date: 07 Feb 2017
Series: Early Classics of Science Fiction
Illustrations: 8 illus.
Description:
Challenging assumptions about science fiction’s Western origins, Nathaniel Isaacson traces the development of the genre in China, from the late Qing Dynasty through the New Culture Movement. Through careful examination of a wide range of visual and print media—including historical accounts of the institutionalization of science, pictorial representations of technological innovations, and a number of novels and short stories—Isaacson makes a case for understanding Chinese science fiction as a product of colonial modernity. By situating the genre’s emergence in the transnational traffic of ideas and material culture engendered by the presence of colonial powers in China’s economic and political centers, Celestial Empires explores the relationship between science fiction and Orientalist discourse.
In Search of Silence Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 720
ISBN: 9780819570895
Pub Date: 07 Feb 2017
Series: The Journals of Samuel R. Delany
Illustrations: 25 illus.
Description:
For fifty years Samuel Delany has cultivated a special relationship with language in works of fiction, criticism, and memoir that have garnered critical praise and legions of fans. The present volume – the first in a series – reveals a new dimension of his genius. In Search of Silence presents over a decade’s worth of Delany’s private journals, commencing in 1957 when he was still a student at the Bronx High School of Science, and ending in 1969 when he was living in San Francisco and on the verge of reconceiving the novel that would become Dhalgren.
In the Language of My Captor Cover In the Language of My Captor Cover
Format: 
Pages: 108
ISBN: 9780819577115
Pub Date: 07 Feb 2017
Pages: 108
ISBN: 9780819577122
Pub Date: 07 Mar 2019
Description:
Acclaimed poet Shane McCrae’s latest collection is a book about freedom told through stories of captivity. Historical persona poems and a prose memoir at the center of the book address the illusory freedom of both black and white Americans. In the book’s three sequences, McCrae explores the role mass entertainment plays in oppression, he confronts the myth that freedom can be based upon the power to dominate others, and, in poems about the mixed-race child adopted by Jefferson Davis in the last year of the Civil War, he interrogates the infrequently examined connections between racism and love.
Escape Velocity Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 288
ISBN: 9780819576590
Pub Date: 03 Jan 2017
Series: Wesleyan Film
Illustrations: 25 illus.
Description:
Today, movie theaters are packed with audiences of all ages marveling to exciting science fiction blockbusters, many of which are also critically acclaimed. However, when the science fiction film genre first emerged in the 1950s, it was represented largely by exploitation horror films—lurid, culturally disreputable, and appealing to a niche audience of children and sci-fi buffs. How did the genre evolve from B-movie to blockbuster?
The Traprock Landscapes of New England Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 208
ISBN: 9780819576828
Pub Date: 03 Jan 2017
Series: The Driftless Connecticut Series & Garnet Books
Illustrations: 190 colour photos, 4 figs.
Description:
Stunning photography and fact-filled text reveal new perspectives on southern New England's most unique natural region. A picturesque journey through the traprock highlands from New Haven, Connecticut to Amherst, Massachusetts, this book captures the majesty of wild windswept cliffs, panoramic summit vistas, and intimate details of the natural world through the eyes of an artist and the mind of a scientist. By tracing the influence of natural history on cultural development in the Connecticut Valley, the authors present a compelling argument that the rocky highlands are landscapes of national significance, where the particular combination of geology, geography, water resources, climate, and human settlement fostered vital developments in Early American science, education, agriculture, manufacturing, technology, and the creative arts.
The Connecticut Prison Association and the Search for Reformatory Justice Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 526
ISBN: 9780819576767
Pub Date: 02 Jan 2017
Series: The Driftless Connecticut Series & Garnet Books
Illustrations: 22 illus.
Description:
The Connecticut Prison Association and the Search for Reformatory Justice looks at the role the Connecticut Prison Association played in the formation of the state’s criminal justice system. Now organized under the name Community Partners in Action (CPA), the Connecticut Prison Association was formed to ameliorate the conditions of criminal defendants and people in prison, improve the discipline and administration of local jails and state prisons, and furnish assistance and encouragement to people returning to their communities after incarceration. The organization took a leading role in prison reform in the state and was instrumental in a number of criminal justice innovations.
The Work-Shy Cover The Work-Shy Cover
Format: 
Pages: 160
ISBN: 9780819576781
Pub Date: 27 Dec 2016
Illustrations: 13 illus.
Pages: 160
ISBN: 9780819578617
Pub Date: 02 Oct 2018
Series: Wesleyan Poetry Series
Illustrations: 18 figures
Description:
The Work-Shy documents a secret network of overlooked communities that work in ways that defy work as we know it. Its poetic assemblages offer direct testimony from the first youth prison in California (the Whittier State School) and from asylums for the chronically insane (preserved in the Prinzhorn Collection in Germany and the Creedmoor Psychiatric Center in New York City). Activating what poet Susan Howe calls “the telepathy of the archive,” these poems occupy identities rooted in the demimonde and in places of confinement; they build portraits of individuals at once denied work and subjected to its punishing routine.