
Just in time for fall semester 2010!




Art as political protest? What a concept. Let’s fast-forward 70 years to “The Ghost of Tom Joad” resurrected by Rage Against The Machine. {a live video performance appears below}
Republican National Convention 2008: Artists Silenced by Police. The news media, however, failed to use the word “artist” to describe the enraged rioters prepared to rock the RNC. After police cut the electricity to prevent RATM from taking the stage, lead singer Zack de la Rocha proclaimed, “the reality is, we are just four musicians from Los Angeles who have used our voices, and our talent, and our musicianship, and our words to stand up against these unjust policies and why the f*** are these cops so afraid of us?!” What do you do when the cops cut your PA system? You sing a cappella, of course!
Although RATM represents an extreme example of subversive artistry, this street exhibition reflects the political system’s indifference to modern creators and their unwillingness to acknowledge to notable artistic figures. De la Rocha asks, “why are they afraid of us?” and rightly so. In Deverell’s panel discussion, he argues, “In the 1930s, as people were trying to figure it out and legislatively address economic strife through the New Deal, artists were often brought in as experts, documentary experts on what’s happening and part of the political debate” (39).

Akin to today’s economic struggles, legislators attempt to uncover the root of the country’s problems, but discount the ideas presented by mainstream musicians. Artists today are certainly not considered cultural, social and political “experts” of yesteryear. Here, the “ghost” of Tom Joad is less about the façade of the “promised land” (as presented in Bruce Springsteen’s original) and more about the ignorance of modern art in today’s political game.
As Deverell claims, art of today is not considered a part of the “political base” (40) because it truly does not matter to those in power. Is it the overwhelming amount of new artists? Has the political value of art diminished?
This is a work in progress to update those on happenings within the SDSUPress, the longest running press in CSU HISTORY. Questions? Comments? Can't get enough? Drop us a line at sdsupress@gmail.com
Part ONE: The Writer's Loft: Inside the Mind of the Author | Episode 7, Scholar Publishing from Tex[t] Mex on Vimeo.
Part TWO: The Writer's Loft: Inside the Mind of the Author | Episode 7, Scholar Publishing from Tex[t] Mex on Vimeo.
This is a work in progress to update those on happenings within the SDSUPress, the longest running press in CSU HISTORY. Questions? Comments? Can't get enough? Drop us a line at sdsupress@gmail.com


This is a work in progress to update those on happenings within the SDSUPress, the longest running press in CSU HISTORY. Questions? Comments? Can't get enough? Drop us a line at sdsupress@gmail.com
Hit the image to be instantly transported to our Amazon portal where you can order yourself a copy of Gerald Janecek's definitive study of Dada's cousin, "Zaum."
This is a work in progress to update those on happenings within the SDSUPress, the longest running press in CSU HISTORY. Questions? Comments? Can't get enough? Drop us a line at sdsupress@gmail.com

A Description of Distant Roads"Thanks to the erudition and detective work of Alan K. Brown and the high scholarly standards of SDSU Press, we no longer have to depend on a flawed version of this essential account of the founding of Spanish California. This is the definitive edition, in English AND Spanish.
David J. Weber, Dedman Professor of History, Southern Methodist University, and author of The Spanish Frontier in North America (1992) and many other books on the Spanish-Mexican borderlands.
"This work will be an integral part of any collection of basic California historical materials. Researchers in related fields such as anthropology, historical geography, and ethnobotany, along with history buffs and mission aficionados will seize upon it as a Îmust read itemâ and it becomes an instant Îmust possessâ title for any California library reference collection. Alan K. Brown deserves immense credit for his monumental research, editing, and analytical effort that produced this volume.
Harry W. Crosby, author of Antigua California, Mission Colony on the Peninsular Frontier, (1994).
"Alan K. Brown has provided historians, scholars, and researchers with a tremendous gift. His monumental and authoritative translation of Crespí's complete journals will quickly become an indispensable work for all who study the history of California. The introduction to Brown's work is, in and of itself, a masterful piece of research and writing. The extensive and thorough footnotes attest to Brown's careful attention to detail and desire to include the latest scholarship in his work. Brown's translations from the original Spanish texts are superbly done. They remain faithful to the Spanish but are "reader-friendly." Having the Spanish version of the original journals available in the text for comparison purposes greatly increases the value of Brown's contribution to researchers.
Rose Marie Beebe, President, California Mission Studies Association and Professor of Spanish, Santa Clara University
This is a work in progress to update those on happenings within the SDSUPress, the longest running press in CSU HISTORY. Questions? Comments? Can't get enough? Drop us a line at sdsupress@gmail.com
This is a work in progress to update those on happenings within the SDSUPress, the longest running press in CSU HISTORY. Questions? Comments? Can't get enough? Drop us a line at sdsupress@gmail.com
This is a work in progress to update those on happenings within the SDSUPress, the longest running press in CSU HISTORY. Questions? Comments? Can't get enough? Drop us a line at sdsupress@gmail.com