Macat Library imprint: 216 books

by Joshua Specht, Etienne Stockland
Language: English
Release Date: July 5, 2017

One criticism of history is that historians all too often study it in isolation, failing to take advantage of models and evidence from scholars in other disciplines. This is not a charge that can be laid at the door of Alfred Crosby. His book The Columbian Exchange not only incorporates the results...

Collapse

How Societies Choose to Fail or Survive

by Rodolfo Maggio
Language: English
Release Date: July 5, 2017

American scholar Jared Diamond deploys his powers of interpretation to great effect in Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed, which seeks to understand the meaning behind the available evidence describing societies that have survived and those that have withered and died. Why, for...
by Liam Haydon
Language: English
Release Date: May 11, 2018

What is a self? Greenblatt argues that the 16th century saw the awakening of modern self-consciousness, the ability to fashion an identity out of the culture and politics of one’s society. In a series of brilliant readings, Greenblatt shows how identity is constructed in the work of Shakespeare,...

Liquidated

An Ethnography of Wall Street

by Rodolfo Maggio
Language: English
Release Date: July 5, 2017

Liquidated is a work of anthropology that treats an unusual, despised subculture – that of the Wall Street banker – much as anthropologists have traditionally treated remote ‘savage’ tribes. But using the techniques of ethnography, including interviews, analysis of daily lives, and fieldwork...

Aggression

A Social Learning Analysis

by Jacqueline Allan
Language: English
Release Date: July 5, 2017

Albert Bandura is the most cited living psychologist, and is regularly named as one of the most influential figures ever to have worked in his field. Much of his reputation stems from the theories and experiments described in his 1973 study Aggression: A Social Learning Analysis – a book that is...
by Asiste Celkyte
Language: English
Release Date: July 12, 2017

Aristotle’s Metaphysics is a collection of essays on a wide range of topics, almost certainly never put together by Aristotle himself. This helps to explain why the material covers such a very wide range of material, from meaning to mathematics, from logical sequences to religion. It includes very...
by Tim Smith-Laing
Language: English
Release Date: May 11, 2018

Michel Foucault’s 1969 essay “What is an Author?” sidesteps the stormy arguments surrounding “intentional fallacy” and the “death of the author,” offering an entirely different way of looking at texts. Foucault points out that all texts are written but not all are discussed as having...
by Mark Scarlata
Language: English
Release Date: July 5, 2017

C.S. Lewis’s Mere Christianity is a perfect example of one of the most effective aspects of critical thinking skills: the use of reasoning to build a strong, logical argument. ¶Lewis originally wrote the book as a series of radio talks given from 1942-1944, at the height of World War II. The talks...
by Giovanni Gellera
Language: English
Release Date: July 5, 2017

Aristotle, a student of Plato, wrote Nicomachean Ethics in 350 BCE, in a time of extraordinary intellectual development. Over two millennia later, his thorough exploration of virtue, reason, and the ultimate human good still forms the basis of the values at the heart of Western civilization. According...

The New Jim Crow

Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness

by Ryan Moore
Language: English
Release Date: July 5, 2017

Michelle Alexander’s The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness is an unflinching dissection of the racial biases built into the American prison system. Named after the laws that enforced racial segregation in the southern United States until the mid-1960s, The New Jim Crow...
by Jonathan D. Teubner
Language: English
Release Date: May 11, 2018

The City of God against the Pagans is a central text in the Western intellectual tradition. Made up of twenty-two lengthy books, Augustine wrote his masterpiece over a thirteen-year period during which the Western Roman Empire began to unravel. The first ten books are a critique of pagan religion...

Seyla Benhabib's The Rights of Others

Aliens, Residents, and Citizens

by Burcu Ozcelik
Language: English
Release Date: May 14, 2018

In The Rights of Others, Benhabib argues that the transnational movement of people across the globe has brought to the fore fundamental dilemmas facing liberal democracies: tension between a state’s commitment to universal human rights, and to its sovereign self-determination and its claims to regulate...
by Damien Peters
Language: English
Release Date: July 5, 2017

Perhaps no work of history written in the 20th century has done more to undermine an existing consensus and cause its readers to re-evaluate their own preconceptions than has Jonathan Riley-Smith's revisionist account of the motives of the first crusaders. Riley-Smith's thesis – based on...

The True Believer

Thoughts on the Nature of Mass Movements

by Jonah S. Rubin
Language: English
Release Date: July 5, 2017

Eric Hoffer’s The True Believer: Thoughts on the Nature of Mass Movements is one of the most widely read works of social psychology written in the 20th-century. It exemplifies the powers of creative thinking and critical analysis at their best, providing an insight into two crucial elements of critical...
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