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FACULTY PUBLICATIONS

Edward Brudney, assistant professor in the Department of History, and James S. Damico and Loren D. Lybarger, “Commemorative Literacies and Labors of Justice.” Routledge.

Mark A. Johnson, associate lecturer in the Department of History, “Rough Tactics: Black Performance in Political Spectacles, 1877-1932.” University Press of Mississippi.

Ahmet Kule, associate professor in the Department of Social, Cultural and Justice Studies, and Sanja Kutnjak Ivkovic, Jon Maskaly and Maria Maki Haberfeld, “Police Code of Silence in Times of Change.” Springer International.

Jessica McCarthy, associate lecturer in the Department of English, and Charles A. Johanningsmeier, editors, “Reimagining Realism: A New Anthology of Late Nineteenthand Early Twentieth-Century Short Fiction.” Ohio State University Press.

Marcia Noe, professor in the Department of English and director of the Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies program, “Three Midwestern Playwrights: How Floyd Dell, George Cram Cook, and Susan Glaspell Transformed published.

Andrew O’Brien, professor in the Department of Art, “Drift Alignment.” Skylark.

Irven M. Resnik, professor and Chair of Excellence in the Department of Philosophy and Religion, and Kenneth F. Kitchell, Jr., “Albertus Magnus and the World of Nature.” Reaktion Books.

Brian Ribeiro, UC Foundation and North Callahan Distinguished Professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religion, “Sextus, Montaigne, Hume: Pyrrhonizers.” Brill.

Annie Tracy Samuel, associate professor in the Department of History, “The Unfinished History of the Iran-Iraq War: Faith, Firepower, and Iran’s Revolutionary Guards.” Cambridge University Press.

Henry G. Spratt, Jr., professor in the Department of Biology, Geology, and Environmental Science, “Bioremediation— Cleaning Toxic Wastes with a Little Help From Nature.” Kendall Hunt.

Carl Springer, SunTrust Chair of Excellence in the Humanities in the Department of Modern and Classical Languages and Literatures, “Luther’s Rome, Rome’s Luther: How the City Shaped the Reformer.” Fortress Press.

Talia L. Welsh, UTAA Distinguished Service professor and UC Foundation professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religion, “Feminist Existentialism, Biopolitics, and Critical Phenomenology in a Time of Bad Health.” Routledge.

Talia L. Welsh, UTAA Distinguished Service professor and UC Foundation professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religion, and Susan Bredlau, editors, “Normality, Abnormality, and Pathology in MerleauPonty.” State University of New York Press.

Jonathan Yeager, Leroy A. Martin Distinguished Professor of Religious Studies in the Department of Philosophy and Religion, editor, “The Oxford Handbook of Early Evangelicalism.” Oxford University Press.