The Low End of Higher Things

The Low End of Higher Things
Author: David Clewell
Publisher: Univ of Wisconsin Press
Total Pages: 132
Release: 2003
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9780299185749

Comic books, beatnik kitsch, and all that jazz.

Show and Tell

Show and Tell
Author: Jim Daniels
Publisher: Univ of Wisconsin Press
Total Pages: 212
Release: 2003-04-22
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9780299185848

Show and Tell is a varied, complex collection of poems, serious and wise, wry and often profound. Jim Daniels' work has become both more experimentally dramatic and more poetically sure of itself.

Late Psalm

Late Psalm
Author: Betsy Sholl
Publisher: University of Wisconsin Pres
Total Pages: 113
Release: 2004-05-25
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 0299198936

Late Psalm takes themes from those ancient songs of joy and grief and transposes them into the language of contemporary life.

Hot Popsicles

Hot Popsicles
Author: Charles Harper Webb
Publisher: Univ of Wisconsin Press
Total Pages: 84
Release: 2005
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9780299209940

This engaging illustrated history, full of photographs, maps, and bird s-eye views, captures Madison s early history from its first days as a city to the Great Depression. Biographical vignettes tell the stories of early movers and shakers in the city. The volume includes many archival images of Madison that have never been published or have not been seen since for a century or more."

Reactor

Reactor
Author: Judith Vollmer
Publisher: Univ of Wisconsin Press
Total Pages: 94
Release: 2004
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9780299199449

Reactor gives voice to beloved and ruined American landscapes through extended meditations of an urban mystical wanderer.

Taken Somehow By Surprise

Taken Somehow By Surprise
Author: David Clewell
Publisher: Univ of Wisconsin Press
Total Pages: 145
Release: 2011-03-10
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 0299251136

David Clewell’s spirited poems cut through the noise we too often accommodate in our daily lives. Breath by surprising breath, this poet takes us into chambers of the heart that have never been mapped quite this way before. By turns raucous and strangely soothing, narrative and lyrical, Clewell traffics in unlikely and compelling details of our mostly discernible world: a school custodian’s role in the burgeoning Space Race, the vastness of abandoned missile silos, the first lawn flamingos, and the living fossil still using a typewriter.

Seriously Funny

Seriously Funny
Author: Barbara Hamby
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 446
Release: 2010
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 0820330876

Can serious poetry be funny? Chaucer and Shakespeare would say yes, and so do the authors of these 187 poems that address timeless concerns but that also include comic elements. Beginning with the Beats and the New York School and continuing with both marquee-name poets and newcomers, Seriously Funny ranges from poems that are capsized by their own tomfoolery to those that glow with quiet wit to ones in which a laugh erupts in the midst of terrible darkness. Most of the selections were made in the editors' battered compact car, otherwise known as the Seriously Funny Mobile Unit. During the two years in which Barbara Hamby and David Kirby made their choices, they'd set out with a couple of boxes of books in the back seat, and whoever wasn't driving read to the other. When they found that a poem made both of them think but laugh as well, they earmarked it. Readers will find a true generosity in these poems, an eagerness to share ideas and emotions and also to entertain. The singer Ali Farka Tour said that honey is never good when it's only in one mouth, and the editors of Seriously Funny hope its readers find much to share with others.

The Sum of Small Things

The Sum of Small Things
Author: Elizabeth Currid-Halkett
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 267
Release: 2017-05-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1400884691

How the leisure class has been replaced by a new elite, and how their consumer habits affect us all In today’s world, the leisure class has been replaced by a new elite. Highly educated and defined by cultural capital rather than income bracket, these individuals earnestly buy organic, carry NPR tote bags, and breast-feed their babies. They care about discreet, inconspicuous consumption—like eating free-range chicken and heirloom tomatoes, wearing organic cotton shirts and TOMS shoes, and listening to the Serial podcast. They use their purchasing power to hire nannies and housekeepers, to cultivate their children’s growth, and to practice yoga and Pilates. In The Sum of Small Things, Elizabeth Currid-Halkett dubs this segment of society “the aspirational class” and discusses how, through deft decisions about education, health, parenting, and retirement, the aspirational class reproduces wealth and upward mobility, deepening the ever-wider class divide. Exploring the rise of the aspirational class, Currid-Halkett considers how much has changed since the 1899 publication of Thorstein Veblen’s Theory of the Leisure Class. In that inflammatory classic, which coined the phrase “conspicuous consumption,” Veblen described upper-class frivolities: men who used walking sticks for show, and women who bought silver flatware despite the effectiveness of cheaper aluminum utensils. Now, Currid-Halkett argues, the power of material goods as symbols of social position has diminished due to their accessibility. As a result, the aspirational class has altered its consumer habits away from overt materialism to more subtle expenditures that reveal status and knowledge. And these transformations influence how we all make choices. With a rich narrative and extensive interviews and research, The Sum of Small Things illustrates how cultural capital leads to lifestyle shifts and what this forecasts, not just for the aspirational class but for everyone.