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.

Here Be Dragons

Format: Paperback
Pages: 296
ISBN: 9780819573230
Pub Date: 19 Feb 2013
Illustrations: 3 maps, 8 tables
Description:
Fantasy worlds are never mere backdrops. They are an integral part of the work, and refuse to remain separate from other elements. These worlds combine landscape with narrative logic by incorporating alternative rules about cause and effect or physical transformation.

Collected Poems

Collected Poems Cover
Format: 
Pages: 596
ISBN: 9780819573414
Pub Date: 23 Jan 2013
Illustrations: 6 illus.
Pages: 596
ISBN: 9780819568618
Pub Date: 01 Jun 2007
Description:
Like an underground river, the astonishing poems of Joseph Ceravolo have nurtured American poetry for fifty years, a presence deeply felt but largely invisible. Collected Poems offers the first full portrait of Ceravolo's aesthetic trajectory, bringing to light the highly original voice that was operating at an increasing remove from the currents of the time. From a poetics associated with Frank O'Hara and John Ashbery to an ever more contemplative, deeply visionary poetics similar in sensibility to Zen and Dante, William Blake and St.

We Modern People

Format: Paperback
Pages: 230
ISBN: 9780819573346
Pub Date: 03 Jan 2013
Illustrations: 8 illus.
Description:
Science fiction emerged in Russia considerably earlier than its English version and instantly became the hallmark of Russian modernity. We Modern People investigates why science fiction appeared here, on the margins of Europe, before the genre had even been named, and what it meant for people who lived under conditions that Leon Trotsky famously described as "combined and uneven development." Russian science fiction was embraced not only in literary circles and popular culture, but also by scientists, engineers, philosophers, and political visionaries.
On Being Ill Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 160
ISBN: 9781930464131
Pub Date: 06 Dec 2012
Description:
This new publication of On Being Ill with Notes from Sick Rooms presents Virginia Woolf and her mother Julia Stephen in textual conversation for the first time in literary history. In the poignant and humorous essay On Being Ill, Virginia Woolf observes that though illness is a part of every human being’s experience, it is not celebrated as a subject of great literature in the way that love and war are embraced by writers and readers. We must, Woolf says, invent a new language to describe pain.

Yip Harburg

Format: Hardback
Pages: 332
ISBN: 9780819571281
Pub Date: 03 Dec 2012
Illustrations: 16 illus.
Description:
Known as "Broadway's social conscience," E. Y. Harburg (1896-1981) wrote the lyrics to the standards, "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?

Ella Grasso

Format: Hardback
Pages: 256
ISBN: 9780819573438
Pub Date: 06 Nov 2012
Illustrations: 20 illus.
Description:
When Ella Tambussi Grasso ran for governor of Connecticut in 1974, she had not lost an election since she was first voted into the state's General Assembly in 1952. The people of Connecticut chose her as the nation's first woman to be elected governor in her own right-the capstone of a long and successful career dedicated to public service, effective government, and the democratic process. During her tenure as governor, Grasso's leadership was tested in the face of fiscal problems, state layoffs, and budget shortfalls.

Music, Politics, and Violence

Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
ISBN: 9780819573384
Pub Date: 30 Oct 2012
Illustrations: 7 illus.
Description:
Music and violence have been linked since antiquity in ritual, myth, and art. Considered together they raise fundamental questions about creativity, discourse, and music's role in society. The essays in this collection investigate a wealth of issues surrounding music and violence-issues that cross political boundaries, time periods, and media-and provide cross-cultural case studies of musical practices ranging from large-scale events to regionally specific histories.

Musicking Bodies

Musicking Bodies

Format: 
Pages: 296
ISBN: 9780819573254
Pub Date: 29 Oct 2012
Illustrations: 57 illus., 1 table
Pages: 296
ISBN: 9780819573261
Pub Date: 29 Oct 2012
Illustrations: 57 illus., 1 table
Description:
Indian vocalists trace intricate shapes with their hands while improvising melody. Although every vocalist has an idiosyncratic gestural style, students inherit ways of shaping melodic space from their teachers, and the motion of the hand and voice are always intimately connected. Though observers of Indian classical music have long commented on these gestures, Musicking Bodies is the first extended study of what singers actually do with their hands and voices.

How To Do Things with Dance

Format: Paperback
Pages: 348
ISBN: 9780819568984
Pub Date: 10 Sep 2012
Illustrations: 38 illus.
Description:
In postwar America, any assertion of difference from the mainstream anticommunist culture carried professional and personal risks. For this reason, modern dance artists left much of what they thought unsaid. Instead they expressed themselves in movement.

Garnet Poems

Format: Hardback
Pages: 296
ISBN: 9780819573094
Pub Date: 06 Sep 2012
Description:
Connecticut may be a small state, but it is large indeed in its contribution to the nation's literature. Garnet Poems features forty-two poets whose work has a strong connection to Connecticut. The first major anthology of Connecticut poetry to appear since the mid-nineteenth century, it includes the work of such notable poets as Wallace Stevens, Lydia Sigourney, Mark Van Doren, Richard Wilbur, Susan Howe, and Elizabeth Alexander.

Money Shot

Format: Paperback
Pages: 92
ISBN: 9780819573148
Pub Date: 16 Jul 2012
Description:
The poems in Money Shot are forensic. Just as the money shot in porn is proof of the male orgasm, these poems explore questions of revelation and concealment. What is seen, what is hidden, and how do we know?
Starboard Wine Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 288
ISBN: 9780819568847
Pub Date: 11 Jul 2012
Description:
In Starboard Wine, Samuel R. Delany explores the implications of his now-famous assertion that science fiction is not about the future. Rather, it uses the future as a means of talking about the present and its potentiality.
The Time Ship Cover The Time Ship Cover
Format: 
Pages: 240
ISBN: 9780819572387
Pub Date: 05 Jul 2012
Illustrations: 52 illus.
Pages: 240
ISBN: 9780819572936
Pub Date: 02 Jul 2012
Illustrations: 52 illus.
Description:
H. G. Wells wasn't the only nineteenth-century writer to dream of a time machine.
Sunken Garden Poetry Cover Sunken Garden Poetry Cover
Format: 
Pages: 296
ISBN: 9780819572905
Pub Date: 04 Jun 2012
Illustrations: 6 illus.
Pages: 296
ISBN: 9780819572912
Pub Date: 04 Jun 2012
Illustrations: 6 illus.
Description:
Since 1992, the Sunken Garden Poetry Festival has welcomed nationally acclaimed poets to the picturesque landscape of Hill-Stead Museum, a National Historic Landmark in Farmington, Connecticut. Reflecting the festival that has attracted thousands to this rolling country estate, the poems in this collection have been selected with a broad audience in mind. In the spirit of the festival's mission to nurture the art of poetry, the anthology features young and emerging poets alongside established poets, including Lucille Clifton, Billy Collins, Carolyn Forche, Yusef Komunyakaa, Maxine Kumin, James Merrill, Marilyn Nelson, Grace Paley, and Richard Wilbur.
Hidden in Plain Sight Cover Hidden in Plain Sight Cover
Format: 
Pages: 264
ISBN: 9780819572813
Pub Date: 01 Jun 2012
Illustrations: 21 illus., 1 map
Pages: 264
ISBN: 9780819574664
Pub Date: 31 Jul 2014
Illustrations: 21 illus., 1 map
Description:
In the course of the mundane routines of life, we encounter a variety of landscapes and objects, either ignoring them or looking without interest at what appears to be just a tree, stone, anonymous building, or dirt road. But the "deep traveler," according to Hartford Courant essayist David K. Leff, doesn't make this mistake.
Always in Trouble Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 304
ISBN: 9780819571595
Pub Date: 01 May 2012
Illustrations: 42 illus.
Description:
In 1964, Bernard Stollman launched the independent record label ESP-Disk' in New York City to document the free jazz movement there. A bare-bones enterprise, ESP was in the right place at the right time, producing albums by artists like Albert Ayler, Pharoah Sanders, and Sun Ra, as well as folk-rock bands like the Fugs and Pearls Before Swine. But the label quickly ran into difficulties and, due to the politically subversive nature of some productions and sloppy business practices, it folded in 1974.