Books


  • Books: 2013

    2013 titles from our college community.


  • UT Faculty Chronicle Texas Cultural History

    Texas Bookshelf is a 16-book series that will be published by University of Texas Press chronicling the state’s rich culture and history. The five-year project is set to launch in 2017 and will cover a diverse range of topics—from the Tejano experience to Texas food culture to performing arts. This is the first project undertaken…


  • A Stack of Books

    Recently the dean’s office asked liberal arts faculty to provide copies of the books they had authored over the years for a collection to be exhibited in  the Gebauer Building. To comply with this request I began making a stack on my office desk. My stack grew to 13 books, including two I had edited…


  • ‘Gingrich Senators’ Behind Washington’s Legislative Gridlock, Research Shows

    A University of Texas at Austin government professor argues in his new book that rising polarization in the U.S. Senate has been caused almost entirely by a particular breed of Republican lawmakers known as the “Gingrich senators.” In his new book “The Gingrich Senators: The Roots of Partisan Warfare in Congress,” Sean Theriault, associate professor…


  • Virtual Gallery Reconstructs Art Exhibit Attended by Novelist Jane Austen

    The Department of English at The University of Texas at Austin has launched an online reconstruction of a famous art exhibit visited by novelist Jane Austen on May 24, 1813 – exactly 200 years ago to the day. In a letter to her sister, Austen joked that she would be searching for a portrait of…


  • Books: Spring 2013

    “The Cult of Pythagoras: Math and Myths”  University of Pittsburgh Press, Oct. 2012 By Alberto A. Martínez, associate professor, Department of History “Encountering America: Humanistic Psychology, Sixties Culture, and the Shaping of the Modern Self” Harper Perennial, Dec. 2012 By Jessica Grogan, English MA ’02, American Studies Ph.D. ’08 “Lady Bird Johnson: An Oral History”…


  • Long Live the Jane Austen Frenzy!

    As “Pride and Prejudice,” first published in 1813, celebrates its 200th anniversary, Jane Austen is repackaged to appeal to a new generation of readers On the highbrow end, organizations and libraries around the world are busy hosting academic conferences and readings to celebrate the bicentenary. On the pop culture side, Hollywood is about to release…


  • Life Lessons from the Great Books

    Students explore themes that have shaped modern civilization For any of life’s challenges, there is a Great Book to offer valuable insight. From Homer’s “Odyssey” to Shakespeare’s “Hamlet” to George Orwell’s “Animal Farm,” the world’s greatest tomes have touched on themes that are as relevant today as when they were written. Tracing the ideas, stories…


  • American Studies Alumnus Captures Ann Richards’ Spirit in New Biography

    When Ann Richards delivered the keynote address of the 1988 Democratic National Convention she instantly became a media celebrity and triggered a rivalry that would alter the course of American history. In “Let the People In: The Life and Times of Ann Richards,” author Jan Reid, a writer-at-large for Texas Monthly magazine, draws on his long friendship…


  • Books: Fall 2012

    Fall 2012 titles from our college community.


  • History Alumnus Awarded Pulitzer Prize

    In Brief: History When graduate students in the History Department met with John Lewis Gaddis on March 6, they thought they were going to participate in a discussion with an eminent Cold War historian. They did not realize they were meeting with a soon-to-be Pulitzer Prize-winner. Gaddis, the Robert A. Lovett Professor of Military and…


  • Books: Winter, Spring and Summer 2012

    Winter, Spring and Summer 2012 titles from our college community.


  • The Gospels in Rewrite

    University of Texas at Austin Classics and Religious Studies Professor L. Michael White is equally at home reading ancient texts as he is directing the archaeological dig of the oldest known Jewish synagogue in Europe and teaching large undergraduate classes and graduate seminars. He brings teaching and research together in writing journal articles and books.…


  • America’s Church

    Religious studies scholar offers uniquely broad perspective on Catholic presence in nation’s capital In 1913, Bishop Thomas J. Shahan received the pope’s blessing to pursue his vision for a church in Washington, D.C. — a national shrine that would honor the Virgin Mary, serve as a destination for pilgrims and stake a Catholic claim in…


  • Separating Fact From Fiction

    Legend has it Benjamin Franklin ventured out on a stormy day to fly a kite with a lightning rod and a key dangling on the end of the string. When the lightning struck the kite, the powerful bolt charged the metal key. Franklin then touched the key and got zapped, thus proving the electrical nature…


  • Books: Spring 2011

    Spring 2011 titles from our college community.


  • Book News: Fall 2010

    Pioneering With A Pen For creating the most vivid and vital portrayal of the American experience in microcosm, Creative Writing graduate Nora Boxer has won the $50,000 Keene Prize for Literature. Her story “It’s the song of the nomads, baby; or Pioneer,” was selected from 61 submissions in drama, poetry and fiction. Laconic in style,…


  • Books: Fall 2009

    Fall 2009 titles from our college community.