Columbia University Press imprint: 2220 books

Who Ate Up All the Shinga?

An Autobiographical Novel

by Wan-suh Park
Language: English
Release Date: July 15, 2009

Park Wan-suh is a best-selling and award-winning writer whose work has been widely translated and published throughout the world. Who Ate Up All the Shinga? is an extraordinary account of her experiences growing up during the Japanese occupation of Korea and the Korean War, a time of great oppression,...
by T'aejun Yi
Language: English
Release Date: April 24, 2018

Yi T’aejun was one of twentieth-century Korea’s true masters of the short story—and a man who in 1946 stunned his contemporaries by moving to the Soviet-occupied northern zone of his country. In South Korea, where he is known today as “one who went north,” Yi’s work was banned until 1988....

Electric Sounds

Technological Change and the Rise of Corporate Mass Media

by Steve Wurtzler, , Ph.D.
Language: English
Release Date: January 30, 2007

Electric Sounds brings to vivid life an era when innovations in the production, recording, and transmission of sound revolutionized a number of different media, especially the radio, the phonograph, and the cinema. The 1920s and 1930s marked some of the most important developments in the history...

Down the Up Staircase

Three Generations of a Harlem Family

by Syma Solovitch, Bruce Haynes
Language: English
Release Date: April 11, 2017

Down the Up Staircase tells the story of one Harlem family across three generations, connecting its journey to the historical and social forces that transformed Harlem over the past century. Bruce D. Haynes and Syma Solovitch capture the tides of change that pushed blacks forward through the twentieth...

The Undiscovered Country

Poetry in the Age of Tin

by William Logan
Language: English
Release Date: December 22, 2008

William Logan has been called both the "preeminent poet-critic of his generation" and the "most hated man in American poetry." For more than a quarter century, in the keen-witted and bare-knuckled reviews that have graced the New York Times Book Review, the Times Literary Supplement...
by Heather Houser
Language: English
Release Date: June 3, 2014

The 1970s brought a new understanding of the biological and intellectual impact of environmental crises on human beings. As efforts to prevent ecological and bodily injury aligned, a new literature of sickness emerged. "Ecosickness fiction" imaginatively rethinks the link between these forms...

Sprezzatura

Concealing the Effort of Art from Aristotle to Duchamp

by Paolo D'Angelo
Language: English
Release Date: March 6, 2018

The essence of art is to conceal art. A dancer or musician does not only need to perform with ability. There should also be a lack of visible effort that gives an impression of naturalness. To disguise technique and feign ease is to heighten beauty. To express this notion, Italian has a word with...
by Sofia Khvoshchinskaya
Language: English
Release Date: August 15, 2017

An unsung gem of nineteenth-century Russian literature, City Folk and Country Folk is a seemingly gentle yet devastating satire of Russia's aristocratic and pseudo-intellectual elites in the 1860s. Translated into English for the first time, the novel weaves an engaging tale of manipulation, infatuation,...
by Qian Sima
Language: English
Release Date: February 10, 2011

This volume of the history of the Han dynasty consists of chapters dealing principally with the reign of Emperor Wu, one of the most energetic and strong-willed of China’s Rulers. Here the historian is chronicling events he has witnessed and writing of the men he personally knows or has known. In...
by Zhuangzi
Language: English
Release Date: April 16, 2003

Only by inhabiting Dao (the Way of Nature) and dwelling in its unity can humankind achieve true happiness and freedom, in both life and death. This is Daoist philosophy's central tenet, espoused by the person—or group of people—known as Zhuangzi (369?–286? BCE) in a text by the same name. To...
by Hans-Georg Moeller
Language: English
Release Date: May 2, 2006

For centuries, the ancient Chinese philosophical text the Daodejing (Tao Te Ching) has fascinated and frustrated its readers. While it offers a wealth of rich philosophical insights concerning the cultivation of one's body and attaining one's proper place within nature and the cosmos, its teachings...
by
Language: English
Release Date: December 10, 2010

Burton Watson and Haruo Shirane, renowned translators and scholars, introduce English-speaking readers to the vivid tradition of early and medieval Japanese anecdotal (setsuwa) literature. These orally narrated and written tales drew on both local folk tradition and continental sources. Taken from...
by An Li, King of Huainan
Language: English
Release Date: March 20, 2012

Compiled in the second century B.C.E, the Huainanzi clarifies a crucial period in the development of Chinese conceptions of the cosmos, human nature, and the social order. Outlining "all that a modern monarch needs to know," the text emphasizes rigorous self-cultivation and mental discipline,...

Genuine Pretending

On the Philosophy of the Zhuangzi

by Hans-Georg Moeller, Paul J. D'Ambrosio
Language: English
Release Date: October 17, 2017

Genuine Pretending is an innovative and comprehensive new reading of the Zhuangzi that highlights the critical and therapeutic functions of satire and humor. Hans-Georg Moeller and Paul J. D’Ambrosio show how this Daoist classic, contrary to contemporary philosophical readings, distances itself...
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