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June 1, 2017 (June 1, 2017)

How we book expo at Book Expo

publishing

Today marks the open of Book Expo, also known as @BookExpoAmerica, the trade show at the center of the publishing world. Every year, industry types congregate in a selected city to […]

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May 31, 2017 (May 23, 2017)

Ask the Bolshevik

publishing radical studies

Meet the UI Press is a recurring feature that delves into issues affecting academic publishing, writing, education, and related topics. Today, industry advice columnist The Bolshevik answers your questions. Dear Bolshevik, The […]

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May 26, 2017 (May 2, 2017)

Volvariella bombycina, a silky-haired and stately mushroom

Illinois / regional natural history photography

Volvariella bombycina (Schaeffer) Singer [The cap is] oval at first, becoming bell-shaped to broadly complex or nearly flat; whitish or tinged yellowing to brownish in age; the margin not lined; […]

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May 24, 2017

Q & A with “Local Vino” Author James R. Pennell

author commentary authors food Illinois / regional interviews wine

James R. Pennell is a professor of sociology at the University of Indianapolis. He is also a lifelong musician and singer-songwriter who regularly performs in Central Indiana. He recently answered some questions […]

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May 24, 2017 (May 23, 2017)

Backlist Bop: Soviet conspiracy unveiled!

american history biography radical studies

Comrades, The Press has asked me, The Bolshevik, to pause from my advice column to fill in with the popular Backlist Bop feature. And good timing it is, for today […]

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May 19, 2017 (May 2, 2017)

Climbing Twin Peaks, plus David Lynch cooks quinoa

film

An excerpt from Justin Nieland‘s once-again-timely book David Lynch. Laura Palmer—passive, suffering, already victimized—is one kind of a melodramatic myth, and Twin Peaks, both the series and the fictional town, is Lynch’s […]

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May 17, 2017 (May 16, 2017)

Backlist Bop: An earthmoving industry

american history Illinois / regional

Born in Vermont, made in America, John Deere helped humans move enough earth to impress even Ruaumoko, the Maori god of earthquakes. Deere’s death on May 17, 1886 marked the […]

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May 16, 2017 (May 15, 2017)

Harry Edwards on fighting for black athletes and coaches, whether they like it or not

African American Studies Olympic history politics sports history

An excerpt from the new introduction to The Revolt of the Black Athlete: 50th Anniversary Edition, by Harry Edwards. I believe that over the last fifty years, the facts, the relationships, […]

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May 15, 2017 (May 11, 2017)

200 Years of Illinois: Cal Coolidge, controversy, and Cairo

american history Illinois / regional music

The 1927 Mississippi River flood disaster had a far-reaching social impact, inspired timeless music, influenced policy that includes what happened during Hurricane Katrina, and received its due in at least one […]

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May 12, 2017 (May 11, 2017)

Hirum Cronk Remembered

american history biography

He fought for his country at a time when Native Americans still played a major role in New York’s military conflicts. He died when film could be taken of his funeral. On […]

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May 11, 2017 (May 10, 2017)

Backlist Bop: John Lennon knows politics ain’t easy

american history music politics radical studies

As the tumultuous late Sixties and early Seventies retreat into history, the zeitgeist is steadily sanding the many rough edges off John Lennon in order to enjoy his music without […]

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May 9, 2017 (May 3, 2017)

The origins of the Beckman Institute

architecture Illinois / regional

An excerpt from An Illini Place: Building the University of Illinois Campus, by Lex Tate and John Franch The gift (and match) to establish the interdisciplinary Beckman Institute for Advanced […]

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