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Author: rkcunningham

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Posts by rkcunningham

“Et tu, Skippy? Et tu?”

Posted on March 15, 2016 (March 11, 2016) by rkcunningham
in food

National Peanut Day is upon us. Come back to the dawn of industrialization, when a legume once considered worthy only for drunks and slaves began a journey into the everyday […]

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Tagged Andrew F. Smith, food studies, peanuts

Judging by the Cover

Posted on March 14, 2016 (March 14, 2016) by rkcunningham
in art, publishing

The University of Illinois Press recently had the honor of hosting the 2015 AAUP Book, Jacket, & Journal Show, the traveling exhibition of the  37 books and 40 jackets and covers that […]

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Tagged AAUP, AAUP Book, book covers, Jacket and Journal Show, Publishing

Meet the UI Press: Das Gravy Boot

Posted on March 11, 2016 (March 11, 2016) by rkcunningham
in food, publishing

The latest in our series of posts on how university presses and other small publishing concerns can enjoy greater financial security by creating new revenue streams. The introductory post is here. A second post […]

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Tagged food, fundraising, gravy, recipes

Throwbacklist Thursday: Furry’s People

Posted on March 10, 2016 (March 10, 2016) by rkcunningham
in African American Studies, music, photography

“Virtuosity in playing blues licks is like virtuosity in celebrating the Mass, it is empty, it means nothing. Skill—competence—is a necessity, but a true blues player’s virtue lies in his […]

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Tagged Bessie Smith, blues, Furry Lewis, Music in American Life, Throwbackist Thursday

Great Recession, Great Depression

Posted on March 8, 2016 (March 8, 2016) by rkcunningham
in american history, women's history

From “Women’s Work and Economic Crisis Revisited: Comparing the Great Recession and the Great Depression,” a new essay in Ruth Milkman’s 2016 collection On Gender, Labor, and Inequality. Overall, the […]

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Tagged and Inequality, feminism, International Women's Day, Labor, On Gender, Ruth Milkman, women's studies

Champagne Casanova

Posted on March 7, 2016 (March 3, 2016) by rkcunningham
in biography, literary studies, sexuality studies

Available just in time to erase all the romantic mistakes you’ve made since Valentine’s Day, Casanova the Irresistible offers a tour of its subject’s 3,700-page memoir by French reconteur/gadfly/writer/critic Philippe Sollers. […]

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Tagged Casanova, memoir, Philippe Sollers, tawdry, Valentine's Day

Bubbly with Success

Posted on March 4, 2016 (February 29, 2016) by rkcunningham
in film

Pixar is on a winning streak, to say the least. Its animated films not only rack up large box office, they hit the cultural zeitgeist gong in a way that […]

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Tagged animation, Contemporary Film Directors Series, film, Inside Out, John Lasseter, Richard Neupert

Throwbacklist Thursday: Life Is Old There

Posted on March 3, 2016 (March 2, 2016) by rkcunningham
in american history, Appalachian studies, music, radical studies

Appalachia is one of those words that encompasses a universe and leaves each of us to form our own ideas of what it means. For me, to use one example, […]

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Tagged Appalachian history, Aunt Molly Jackson, Don West, Edith Maxwell, The Stoneans

Serve It Up with Oscar!

Posted on March 1, 2016 (February 29, 2016) by rkcunningham
in film

Sunday night, Mexican filmmaker and auteur Alejandro González Iñárritu took home the Academy Award for Best Director, for his film The Revenant. The Revenant first went into production in 2001. Like many films, […]

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Tagged Academy Awards, Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, Contemporary Film Directors Series, film, The Revenant

Throwbacklist Thursday

Posted on February 25, 2016 (February 25, 2016) by rkcunningham
in black studies, dance, film, music

From Beyoncé to Shonda Rhimes to Laverne Cox, African American women have a higher profile up and down our pop culture than at any time in the past. Of course, […]

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Tagged African American Women, art, dance, film, music, Throwbackist Thursday

Reno’s little helper

Posted on February 23, 2016 (February 23, 2016) by rkcunningham
in sports history

As winter turns up its final furies on the Northern Hemisphere, those snowbirds in stirrups depart for Florida and Arizona, there to prepare body and soul for the baseball season […]

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Tagged baseball, drugs, Nathan Michael Corzine, sport history, Team Chemistry

Burn days at Prairie Crossing

Posted on February 22, 2016 (February 15, 2016) by rkcunningham
in Illinois / regional

Our new release Prairie Crossing looks at a suburban Chicago housing development founded as an experiment to use access to nature as a means to challenge America’s failed culture of suburban sprawl. […]

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Tagged environment, Illinois, John Scott Watson, Prairie Crossing, urban planning
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