The definitive book on what POTUS 45 calls "The Southern Border" and that we call home, mi tierra, mi alma, la frontera REFRAMING THE LATINO IMMIGRATION DEBATE by Alvaro Huerta, featuring the amazing photography of Antonio Turok #antonioturok— San Diego State University Press (@SDSUPress) February 13, 2019
direct link: https://t.co/7hZwTt0Mgy pic.twitter.com/AYskVYHRAQ
Wednesday, February 13, 2019
The Definitive Guide to the "Southern Border" -- REFRAMING THE LATINO IMMIGRATION DEBATE by Alvaro Huerta and featuring the photography of Antonio Turok
Wednesday, February 06, 2019
Images of Revolution: Art Embraces Death, Destruction, and Humanity in Post-WWI Germany

What better time to dive into the psycho-social dilemma of an era of art that embodies the tragic longing for justice and revolution than now? In Ida Katherine Rigby's War-Revolution-Weimer: German Expressionist Prints, Drawings, Posters and Periodicals from The Robert Gore Rifkind Foundation, the author and former San Diego State University professor of Art History outlines one of the art world's most important and influential movements--not only in the sense of aesthetic style, but also (and more importantly) in the sense of a political uprising in the aftermath of the most globally devastating war in the history of mankind.
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| Kaethe Kollwitz, Die Freiwilligen (The Volunteers), 1922/1923 |
The selected works within War-Revolution-Weimer, generously provided by the Robert Gore Rifkind Foundation based in Los Angeles, California, were created by German Expressionist artists, both well-known and obscure, between 1918 and 1925. Through a variety of printmaking techniques including woodcut, drypoint, lithography, etching, aquatint and even illustrations in crayon, these artists utilized a combination of aesthetic appeal and mass production to engage their audience into a sociopolitical dialog revolving around the fallout from WWI. As an idealistic language of revolution began to take shape following what German Expressionists viewed as the absurdity of war (i.e. death, killing and political injustice), art became a tool to express, simultaneously, one's emotive/physical reaction to war as well as ideas of political revolution.
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| Franz Maria Jansen, in Der Anbruch, 1922 |
Along with over one hundred image panels, Ida Katherine Rigby curates an equally vivid written historical context to the German Expressionist movement:
“These new radicals were convinced that their powerful reactions to the compelling times and their radical political sentiments could only be conveyed in an intensely emotionalized, revolutionary idiom, and they readily marshaled the prewar generation’s avant-garde, abstract style to serve a new, more political content. Theirs was often less Expressionism than that of their mentors; instead they merged Dadaist, Futurist and Expressionist elements into an explosive unity.”
The works compiled in War-Revolution-Weimer, indeed, embody political and social sentiments that are not entirely unlike our contemporary experience. Thus, immersing oneself into the world of German Expressionist art as presented in this book is guaranteed to shed new light on shared human experiences, both new and old.
Wednesday, December 05, 2018
Back in Print! A Classic Memoir from the Annals of 20th Century American History: Soldier to Ambassador: From the D-Day Normandy Landing to the Persian Gulf War by Charles W. Hostler--SDSU Press
Like some fusion of James Bond and The Man from U.N.C.L.E., this fascinating memoir, Soldier to Ambassador: From the D-Day Normandy Landing to the Persian Gulf War, marks key, life-shaping moments from Charles W. Hostler's amazing odyssey--a remarkable man who began his life as a newsboy during the Great Depression, who developed himself whilst a soldier in the U.S. military, working his way up still further as an agent in the OSS and, finally, as the U.S. Ambassador to Bahrain.
Hostler describes his 20 year residence in the Middle East, as well as his extensive world travels and dedicated public services.
Click on the book cover image to order now.
Hostler describes his 20 year residence in the Middle East, as well as his extensive world travels and dedicated public services.
Click on the book cover image to order now.
Sunday, October 21, 2018
Not To Be A Total Dick Higgins… But You Should Probably Read More Dick Higgins
Siglio Press has released a wonderful paperback entitled Intermedia, Fluxus and the Something Else Press: Selected Writings by Dick Higgins. We were fortunate enough to receive a copy and it’s killer. This is a must have for all those privy to the radically far-sweeping yet methodically concentrated writings generated in and around the Fluxus movement of the middle part of the 20th century.
Intermedia Chart by Dick Higgins
To recap: Fluxus is what happens if you do your best to put a softly dotted conceptual line around everything happening throughout aural and performative art in the 20th century — and if you happen to consider painting a performance — and if art might also be an arbitrary gathering of painters intending to paint for an hour and then, afterwards, burn everything thus produced in a brazier… Okay, honestly, defining Fluxus is a bit more than we’re going to do in a single blog post.
Oh, and don’t forget Something Else Press, the brainchild of Dick Higgins. Being a forerunner in the many-hyphenated identity, Higgins, the composer, poet, printmaker, artist, and a co-founder of Fluxus, managed to publish a fascinating assemblage of theoretical, historical, philosophical and plain artful texts by authors like Gertrude Stein and William Brisbane Dick and Ray Johnson. These publications, along with a plethora of detailed photographs, are featured in the aforementioned Siglio Press title. Of note: Intermedia, Fluxus and the Something Else Press also includes a quirky list of not-quite-actualized projects. We found one incredibly poignant, the collected writings of Erik Satie, fecund mind of the Surrealist and Dadaist movements, as well as ever-so-hip-even-in-2018 minimalist composer.
Speaking of avant-garde composers who also write, we should humbly mention that SDSU Press released a collection of essays by Dick Higgins. We would encourage any John Cage fans to grab a copy of Modernism Since Postmodernism: Essays on Intermedia by Dick Higgins if only for Higgins’ brilliant contemplation on the work of this minimalist composer and tenacious art theorist. If you ever find yourself having one of those irksome days, the kind where you question: is there something inescapably wrong about being a westerner? … then fear not. John Cage investigated such quandaries by creating music seeking to negate the implied “creator” that is omnipresent in all Western fabrications, be they theoretical, practical, conceptual, or actual… Spoiler alert: Cage achieved this by employing chance and probability in his compositions. But this phenomenon might go unperceived if not for the cogent work of the scholar Dick Higgins. Wait, it would seem that Higgins could add one more hyphenated word to his list of identities… so it goes. Here. Some Erik Satie. For while we're all feeling so wonderfully un-accomplished...
Wednesday, October 10, 2018
Gabriel Trujillo Muñoz's "Permanent Work: Poems 1981-1992"
I was particularly drawn to the poem “Turbulence” (Muñoz, 28). The vivid imagery feels almost jarring, reminding me somewhat of airplane turbulence, especially starting at the quote “vital signs/Dissolve into the mud”. I could almost hear the squelch of the mud described in the aforementioned quote. The collection consists of almost all poems in verse, excluding about six or so poems written in prose, demonstrating Muñoz’s range in writing skills. The back-cover of the collection states he was a “key player in the Baja California’s literary Renaissance of the 1980s”, creating context for me as I had never heard of Muñoz’s work before reading this collection. The diverse spread of poetry provides a portfolio to those who have no or little experience with this poet’s works.
Saturday, October 06, 2018
How queer? We’re the exclusive English publisher of the work of transgressive Brazilian poet Glauco Mattoso | Perversions on Parade: Brazilian Literature of Transgression and Postmodern Anti-Aesthetics in Glauco Mattoso by Steven F. Butterman
Not to massage our own feet, per se, but we’re wondering why more of you theory heads haven’t been reading Perversions on Parade: Brazilian Literature of Transgression and Postmodern Anti-Aesthetics in Glauco Mattoso.
Excuse our Portuguese, and pardon the long title, but there’s a lot packed in these critical 266 pages. Without giving away any spoilers, there’s insight provided by Georges Bataille, a fertile wizard of gory-erotic poetic imagery, into the nature of pseudonyms. For one, Glauco Mattoso is a semantic stage-name of sorts—in Portuguese, it becomes a punk rock play on words roughly translating into “one who has glaucoma.”
But the punk rock nature of Mattoso’s work goes further, actually toeing the fetishistic fixations of Quentin Tarantino: namely upon feet. But, we’re not here to be basic, to shock you into reading a book about weirdos who are turned on by toes (shrimping is a term that we highly encourage you “NOT TO GOOGLE”). No, in this serious academic text, Judith Butler shares insight into the pleasure which is derived from the troubling nature of the categorization of the binary gender performative. Mattoso, according to Perversions on Parade, manages to fetishize feet so much that he negates the categorization itself and invokes a genderless subject who is overtaken by the excessive joy of the conceived/perceived “foot.” All in a day’s worship,— sorry, a day’s work.
But don’t let us tease you any further. Pick up a copy of Steven F. Butterman's Perversions on Parade here. It turns us on. Really. And it solves one more predicament. Mattoso remains quite obscure to the English-speaking world. In fact, for those of us who don’t know Portuguese, there’s not much to read about the man, and not much of his work available. For those of us restricted to simple Google searches, few solid English translations of his poems exist. So: if you or anyone you know translates Portuguese and enjoys LGBTQ theory, poetics, performative, etc., get at us. ASAP!
Excuse our Portuguese, and pardon the long title, but there’s a lot packed in these critical 266 pages. Without giving away any spoilers, there’s insight provided by Georges Bataille, a fertile wizard of gory-erotic poetic imagery, into the nature of pseudonyms. For one, Glauco Mattoso is a semantic stage-name of sorts—in Portuguese, it becomes a punk rock play on words roughly translating into “one who has glaucoma.”
Perversions on Parade: Brazilian Literature of Transgression and Postmodern Anti-Aesthetics in Glauco Mattoso by Steven F. Butterman (Author), Rebecca Saraceno (Illustrator)
But the punk rock nature of Mattoso’s work goes further, actually toeing the fetishistic fixations of Quentin Tarantino: namely upon feet. But, we’re not here to be basic, to shock you into reading a book about weirdos who are turned on by toes (shrimping is a term that we highly encourage you “NOT TO GOOGLE”). No, in this serious academic text, Judith Butler shares insight into the pleasure which is derived from the troubling nature of the categorization of the binary gender performative. Mattoso, according to Perversions on Parade, manages to fetishize feet so much that he negates the categorization itself and invokes a genderless subject who is overtaken by the excessive joy of the conceived/perceived “foot.” All in a day’s worship,— sorry, a day’s work.
But don’t let us tease you any further. Pick up a copy of Steven F. Butterman's Perversions on Parade here. It turns us on. Really. And it solves one more predicament. Mattoso remains quite obscure to the English-speaking world. In fact, for those of us who don’t know Portuguese, there’s not much to read about the man, and not much of his work available. For those of us restricted to simple Google searches, few solid English translations of his poems exist. So: if you or anyone you know translates Portuguese and enjoys LGBTQ theory, poetics, performative, etc., get at us. ASAP!
Pictured: Glauco Mattoso
Friday, September 28, 2018
Have We Told You Lately, We Love Semiotics? SDSU Press's POETICS AND VISUALITY: A TRAJECTORY OF CONTEMPORARY BRAZILIAN POETRY
Yes, we’re kind of theory heads here at the SDSU Press — which means we think about how unstable the term semiotics itself is! Why does a sign mean what we think it does? And how could anyone think that a sign really means one thing? Seriously, though, for anyone’s been courted in this lifetime, is it not so trite to wonder after receiving something—a text, a note, a message, a smile—to wonder: Okay, so-and-so just conveyed “this,” but does “this” mean that they “like” me? And, if yes, then what should I do to convey “exactly” what I want them to understand, i.e. a yes or no or maybe or … ???
“Koito” (coitus) — Villari Herrmann — 1971
But we digress… Of course, love is more than mere semiotic matter… And, yes, Semiotics proves an ever-contentious field of thought. But on a more pragmatic note, have you thought about reading one of our contributions to this destabilizing theoretical field? In 1994, we published POETICS AND VISUALITY: a trajectory of contemporary Brazilian poetry by Philadelpho Menezes. While it’s no spring chicken, it is a phenomenal cognitive gateway drug to hyper-specific moments of poetic metamorphoses that occurred in Brazil through the 1960s and ‘70s. The book is worth the read if only to experience one of many contexts for examination of the quixotic and visual poetry of artists like Décio Pignatari and Pedro Xisto and Villari Herrmann, to name a few…
“terra” — Décio Pignatari — 1957
Take note, radical theory heads. In a historical sense, Brazil figured violently into the burgeoning globalized economy. While Menezes’ text remains acutely clinical, tending to gloss over the gory details and analyze the pure “poetics,” it’s worth mentioning: these relatively obscure artworks came into being in light of intense political discord. In 1968, Brazilian political leaders were outright imprisoned, tortured and even killed; the nation was violently seized by dictatorship; “Ferreira Gullar, a Concretist turned Neo-Concretist who then broke with the avant-garde camp to write agitprop poetry,” was exiled along with fellow artists who were revered by the Brazilian people! If you’re curious, LA REVIEW OF BOOKS wrote a fantastic piece about Brazil’s tumultuous history here.
“beba coca cola” — Décio Pignatari — 1956
With Menezes’ tragic death in 2000, the world was deprived of further semiotic investigations. But, fortunately, we were able to press his impressively erudite text, originally written in Portuguese, and translated by SDSU’s very own Harry Polkinhorn. A challenging read, a rewarding read. So enjoy, good readers! Hopefully, as much as we enjoyed bringing it to fruition.
“Epithalâmio III” (“Epithalamium III”) — Pedro Xisto — 1966
Saturday, August 11, 2018
A Dick Higgins classic from SDSU Press: MODERNISM SINCE POSTMODERNISM ...
Modernism Since Postmodernism: Essays on Intermedia by Dick Higgins
ISBN 1-879691-43-4 (1997/2014) paper, 252 pp. US $22.95
Modernism Since Postmodernism: Essays on Intermedia completed Dick Higgins' critical trilogy that began with A Dialectic of Centuries: Notes Towards a Theory of the New Arts and continued with his Horizons: The Poetics and Theory of Intermedia. A fluxperson, artist, poet, composer, and scholar of intermedia, Higgins also authored Pattern Poetry: Guide to an Unknown Literature, among numerous other works. He died in October of 1998.
Dick Higgins, from the Foreword to Modernism Since Postmodernism:
"Of course kitsch can be fun. Already 125 years ago, Rimbaud recognized this when, in the second section of A Season in Hell, he speaks of liking dumb paintings, door panels, stage sets, backdrops for acrobats, street signs, old-time literature and such-like. Who doesn't?... 'Kitschspeak' is the term I use...for the fashionable kitsch language about the arts, sometimes delightful for a while, as with
Derrida, for instance, but ultimately locked so closely into fashion and the world of second-rate, derivative art that it is all but impossible to use with major work and thus destined to pass into academia or oblivion once its novelty has passed... There are, of course, many schools of postmodernism--and they are just that, schools--but for a preliminary discussion there is no need to identify all of them. [One sort is] pop-academic, in which the professors cite each other to build up a lattice of assumptions into a polemic that may or may not have any correspondence with the realities of the arts that lie outside what is known in their trade as 'the discussion.' The academic trades are known collectively among participants in such discussions as 'the profession,' much as prostitutes refer to 'the life.'"
Sunday, July 15, 2018
The Definitive Critical Work Focused on John Steinbeck as a Native Californian! HOMER FROM SALINAS from SDSU Press
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Saturday, July 14, 2018
San Diego State University Press Was Ahead of the Curve When it Comes to Gender Studies and LBGTQ Cultural Studies Volumes!
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CRITICAL THEORY | CULTURAL STUDIES | QUEER THEORY | LATIN AMERICAN LITERATURE | Perversions on Parade: Brazilian Literature of Transgression and Postmodern Anti-Aesthetics in Glauco Mattoso by Steven Butterman | SDSU PRESS | 2005 | trade paperback | List Price: $25
Tuesday, June 26, 2018
Sunday, May 20, 2018
Tuesday, February 06, 2018
Tuesday, January 30, 2018
The Flesh and Blood Aesthetics of Alejandro Morales: Disease, Sex, and Figuration by Marc García-Martínez: An Exploration, Analysis, and Worthy Critical Read
Dr. Marc García-Martínez provides readers and in-depth analyses
of Alejandro Morales’ works. The outset of this text details the Morales’ descriptions
of the sometimes beautiful, horrific or sublime nature of the body. García-Martínez
examines Morales’ modes of poetic construction elucidates the inherent
connections between the body, the soul, and societal borders that Morales’
works illustrate. García-Martínez
reveals the subtext and scaffolding that García-Martínez utilized to layer
explorations of ethnic symbologies, motifs, and religions; “disease, disorders,
and decadence…technology and science, urban ecology, cultural ruin vs.
renaissance, mythology, futuristic conceptualizations, (post)colonialism and
self-determined consciousness” - Francisco A. Lomelí, Prof of Spanish & Portuguese
and Chicana/o Studies, UCSB, editor of Aztlán: Essays on the Chicano Homeland
(with Rudolfo A. Anaya).
Frederick Luis Aldama, author
of The Routledge Concise History of Latino/a Literature and Arts &
Humanities Distinguished Professor at Ohio State University, reviewed the text
as "Leaving in the dust all those highfalutin' literary theories of
yesteryear,” describing “Marc García-Martínez [as digging his] heels in deep to
dig out a radically new aesthetic paradigm.”
García-Martínez has unraveled
the folds of meaning contained within each piece featured by Morales, and in
doing so has unveiled the deep, rich multiplicities of self, imagination and
histories within Chicano bodies. García-Martínez delves into Morales’ methodologies
of making his reader disquieted in their reflection of omnipresent abject –
putting on display the ties between the decaying body, the earth, and violence
among men.
The
Flesh-And-Blood Aesthetics of Alejandro Morales is a must
read for any scholar, educator or writer that wishes to view Morales’ work
through the credible and holistic lens of a Chicano author. García-Martínez clearly recognizes his platform and has manifested
a text that not only transgresses the layers and borders of Morales’ poetics,
but also transcends the White-American gaze that often infects and alters the
Latinx voice.
To purchase García-Martínez's text, click here: http://amzn.to/2DYkC82
Monday, January 01, 2018
New Groundbreaking Book on the Border, Mexico, and the United States by Steven Bender, Law Professor, Seattle University
More info and snap up a copy on sale here!
About the Author: Dr. Steven W. Bender:
Steven Bender is a national academic leader on immigration law and policy, as well as an expert in real estate law. Among his honors, the Minority Groups Section of the Association of American Law Schools presented him with the C. Clyde Ferguson, Jr., Award, a prestigious national award recognizing scholarly reputation, mentoring of junior faculty, and teaching excellence. Born to a Mexican American mother in East Los Angeles, his culture and upbringing in a Mexican American household informs his writing and passion for legal reform. An avid reader as a youth, he read over 400 adult-level bestsellers and classics each year from 7th grade through high school. An equally avid fan of popular culture, and a critic of its shortcomings, Bender infuses his writings with a connection to pop culture, while trying to instill timeless values of respect and human dignity for all people.
About the Author: Dr. Steven W. Bender:Steven Bender is a national academic leader on immigration law and policy, as well as an expert in real estate law. Among his honors, the Minority Groups Section of the Association of American Law Schools presented him with the C. Clyde Ferguson, Jr., Award, a prestigious national award recognizing scholarly reputation, mentoring of junior faculty, and teaching excellence. Born to a Mexican American mother in East Los Angeles, his culture and upbringing in a Mexican American household informs his writing and passion for legal reform. An avid reader as a youth, he read over 400 adult-level bestsellers and classics each year from 7th grade through high school. An equally avid fan of popular culture, and a critic of its shortcomings, Bender infuses his writings with a connection to pop culture, while trying to instill timeless values of respect and human dignity for all people.
A post shared by SDSU Press (@sdsupress) on
New from SDSU Press! A pathbreaking book by Professor Steven W. Bender: https://t.co/VLNXjvTDQR pic.twitter.com/eKzv671Gz4— SDSU Press (@SDSUPress) August 25, 2017
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