Crossing Borders: Stories and Essays About Translation
edited by Lynne Sharon Schwartz ’59
In this compilation of stories and essays on translation, prominent writers and translators—Joyce Carol Oates, Lydia Davis, Primo Levi, and others—give voice to the ways literary translation can inform, distort, or enhance. For example, Oates’s “The Translator” tells of a traveler who falls for a woman he gets to know through a translator; and Levi’s essay, “On Translating and Being Translated,” addresses the difficult task translators have in preserving a work’s original meaning.
The Pilgrim Kings: A Story of the Magi
by Gemma Corradi Fiumara ’61
A training and supervising analyst with the Italian Psychoanalytic Society and a professor emerita of philosophy at Roma Tre University, Fiumara reimagines the story of the Magi—the three wise men who journeyed to visit the infant Jesus.
Ambivalent Embrace: Jewish Upward Mobility in Postwar America
by Rachel Kranson ’91
In an examination of Jewish life and identity in the United States after World War II, Kranson challenges the notion that most American Jews unquestionably celebrated the increase in their social status and the societal acceptance that came during the postwar economic boom.
History Comes Alive: Public History and Popular Culture in the 1970s
by M.J. Rymsza-Pawlowska ’02
While many Americans engaged with the nation’s past in new ways during the 1976 Bicentennial celebrations, Rymsza-Pawlowska shows such behaviors were symptomatic of a fundamental shift in Americans’ relationship to history during the 1960s and 1970s.
This Could Hurt
by Jillian Medoff ’85
A dissection of corporate culture, this novel about five human resources colleagues in a small company examines the subject of work, looking at the different ways each character balances ambition, hope, and fear.
Second Labor: Mothers Share Post-Birth Stories
edited by Chaya Valier
Leora Leeder ’91 contributes to this anthology of twenty-four stories from women who write about parenting newborns and coping after giving birth.
Understanding Your Child’s and Teen’s Behavior
by Angie Rumaldo ’01
A licensed clinical psychologist and advanced psychiatric practice nurse, Rumaldo offers guidelines to help correct common behavioral problems among kids and teens.
My Impossible Life
by Liza Cheuk May Chan ’76
This memoir of a Chinese woman born in Hong Kong during British colonial rule features her coming-of-age as a lesbian-feminist while attending Barnard in the 1970s.
We Who March: A Photo Book of the 2017 Women’s March
by Ellen Feldman ’69
Thirty photographers and twenty additional marchers contribute images and reflections from last January’s Women’s March.
DIY Rules for a WTF World: How to Speak Up, Get Creative, and Change the World
by Krista Suh ’09
From the cocreator of the Pussyhat Project comes a book of tools and tips to help everyone get creative and bold, use their intuition, and change the world.