Eli and Edye Broad Professor of Humanities and Social Sciences
Professor of History and Literature
WARREN C. BROWN
Associate Professor of History
JED Z. BUCHWALD
Doris and Henry Dreyfuss Professor of History
Histories of the Electron: The Birth of Microphysics This book, co-edited by Professor of History Jed Z. Buchwald, is both a biography of the electron and a history of the microphysical world that it opened up.
Isaac Newton's Natural Philosophy This volume, co-edited by Professor of History Jed Z. Buchwald, singles out two strands in recent Newton studies: the intellectual background to Isaac Newton's scientific thought and both specific and general aspects of his technical science.
FIONA COWIE
Associate Professor of Philosophy
MORDECHAI FEINGOLD
Professor of History
* The Newtonian Moment: Isaac Newton and the Making of Modern Culture
A companion volume to Professor Feingold's acclaimed exhibition "The Newtonian Moment," presented this year first in New York and now at the Huntington Library in San Marino, Calif., this splendidly illustrated book offers an introduction to Newton's life and his rise to scientific greatness.
KEVIN M. GILMARTIN
Professor of English
CHRISTOPHER HITCHCOCK
Professor of Philosophy
PHILIP T. HOFFMAN
Richard and Barbara Rosenberg Professor of History and Social Science
CATHERINE JURCA
Associate Professor of English
DIANA KORMOS-BUCHWALD
Professor of History
J. MORGAN KOUSSER
Professor of History and Social Science
JENIJOY LABELLE
Professor of English, Emeritus
GEORGE W. PIGMAN III
Professor of English
STEVEN R. QUARTZ
Associate Professor of Philosophy
ROBERT A. ROSENSTONE
Professor of History
History on Film/Film on History To deal with film is to deal with a historical game pretty much outside the control of historians. This book provides a broad historical and theoretical overview to the rapidly growing field of history and film. It introduces the varieties, types, and traditions of historical films made in Hollywood, Europe, and the rest of the world and the various and changing ways historians and other public critics (reviewers, teachers, politicians, historical actors) have greeted, evaluated, and debated the way particular historical events and history in have been presented on the screen.
Rosenstone argues that historical films utilize specific codes of conventions, visual, aural and dramatic, to engage us with and alter and complexify our view of the past. This allows film to create a sort of new history, one that we must approach with new conceptual tools if we are to evaluate its contribution to our understanding of the past.
CINDY WEINSTEIN
Professor of English
The Cambridge Companion to Harriet Beecher Stowe This collection of specially commissioned essays edited by Associate Professor of Literature Cindy Weinstein provides new perspectives on the frequently read classic Uncle Tom's Cabin, as well as on topics of perennial interest, such as Stowe's representation of race, her attitude to reform, and her relationship to the American novel.
The Literature of Labor and the Labors of Literature: Allegory in Nineteenth-Century American Fiction Associate Professor of Literature Cindy Weinstein's The Literature of Labor and the Labors of Literature juxtaposes representations of labor in fictional texts and non-fictional texts in order to trace the intersections between aesthetic and economic discourse in nineteenth-century America.
JAMES F. WOODWARD
J.O. and Juliette Koepfli Professor of the Humanities