New Books Network

New Books
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Mar 29, 2026 • 36min

Sarah Berman, "Haggadah Shel Erev Rav: The Mixed Multitude Haggadah" (CCAR Press, 2026)

Sarah Berman, Director of Jewish Culture and Programming at Central Synagogue and editor of a new inclusive Haggadah. She discusses the book’s vivid Siona Benjamin artwork, four pathway reimaginings of Magid, additions like Miriam’s cup, and design choices that balance tradition with accessible, customizable ritual.
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Mar 29, 2026 • 1h 2min

Ainehi Edoro, "Forest Imaginaries: How African Novels Think" (Columbia UP, 2026)

Ainehi Edoro, Mellon-Morgridge assistant professor and founding editor of Brittle Paper, discusses how forests in African fiction act as living, agentive spaces. She explores forests as sites of worldbuilding, fragmentation as a creative strategy, and how forest-thinking rewrites literary history to imagine new political and ecological futures.
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Mar 29, 2026 • 36min

Michael Allan, "Cinema before the World: The Global Routes of the Lumière Brothers" (Fordham UP, 2026)

Michael Allan, Associate Professor of Comparative Literature and Cinema Studies, explores the Lumière Brothers’ 1896-97 voyages and Alexandre Promio’s films across North Africa and the Middle East. He traces how specific sites shape film techniques like framing and tracking shots. The conversation highlights archives, regional reception, language around cinema, and how early film complicates national film histories.
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Mar 29, 2026 • 21min

Christopher Wright Mitchell, "The Song of Songs - Concordia Commentary" (Concordia Publishing, 2001)

Christopher Wright Mitchell, an Old Testament scholar with a PhD in Hebrew and Semitic studies and editor for the Concordia Commentary series. He discusses the Song of Songs as Solomon’s lyrical masterpiece. Short takes cover why he studied it, his both-and interpretive approach seeing human and divine love, Solomon’s complex portrayal, and chapter 8’s theological significance.
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Mar 29, 2026 • 45min

Matthew Guariglia and Brian Hochman, "The Church Committee Report: Revelations from the Bombshell 1970s Investigation into the National Security State" (W. W. Norton & Co, 2026)

Brian Hochman, Georgetown professor of American Studies and editor of The Church Committee Report. Matthew Guariglia, historian and EFF policy analyst on surveillance and civil liberties. They discuss the Church Committee’s uncovering of CIA and FBI abuses, MKUltra and toxic experiments, NSA surveillance exposure, and the report’s lasting effects on oversight and reform.
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Mar 29, 2026 • 60min

Nick Juravich, "Para Power: How Paraprofessional Labor Changed Education" (U Illinois Press, 2024)

Nick Juravich, assistant professor of history and labor studies at UMass Boston, explores how paraprofessionals transformed U.S. schools. He traces their rise in the late 1960s, ties to Black and Latino community struggles, and roles in classrooms and unions. The conversation highlights origins, union choices, political coalition shifts, and connections to today’s education labor movements.
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Mar 29, 2026 • 39min

David Ost, "Red Pill Politics: Demystifying Today's Far Right" (New Press, 2026)

David Ost, political scientist and longtime scholar of Eastern European right-wing politics, outlines 'Red Pill Politics' as a way to understand today’s exclusionary populism. He contrasts classic fascism with contemporary electoral populism. He explains who these movements target, how economic appeals win support, and what strategies could blunt their rise.
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Mar 29, 2026 • 1h 32min

Emmanuel Ofuasia, "Ìwà: the Process-Relational Dimension to African Metaphysics" (Springer, 2024)

Emmanuel Ofuasia, Nigerian philosopher and scholar of African metaphysics and process thought. He traces links from Kemet to Yorùbá and develops a process-relational reading of African metaphysics. He discusses trivalent Izumezu logic, Iwa as both moral and ontological being, and implications for relational subjects, plant sentience, and decolonizing African intellectual history.
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Mar 28, 2026 • 29min

Mark Hlavacik, "Willing Warriors: A New History of the Education Culture Wars" (U Chicago Press, 2025)

Mark Hlavacik, assistant professor of communication and journalism at Texas A&M and author of Willing Warriors, traces how culture-war fights have reshaped US schooling since the 1970s. He walks through vivid controversies, from Lynn Cheney and national standards to debates over historical curricula. The conversation spotlights rhetoric, public spectacles, and when conflict helps or hinders education.
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Mar 28, 2026 • 1h

Zheng Liu, "Cultural Mavericks: The Business and Politics of Independent Bookselling in China" (Columbia UP, 2026)

Zheng Liu, cultural and economic sociologist and lecturer at the University of Bristol Business School, studied independent bookstores in China through over a decade of immersive research. She discusses how these stores define themselves, navigate publishing and stocking challenges, adopt “culturally adapted” business strategies, blend aesthetics and events, diversify revenue, and balance cultural mission with commercial pressures.

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