Geneive Abdo on Ingrid Mattson
Honoring Ingrid Mattson.
Honoring Ingrid Mattson.
A lesson for Yom Kippur from The Tree of Souls.
A poem is excerpted from the book Jews in America by Hasia R. Diner. It recounts the tale of Hank Greenberg, a baseball legend, who put his religion before baseball when he went to synagogue instead of playing the Yankees in 1934.
An excerpt from Philip Jenkins new book, The New Faces of Christianity.
OUP author Nicole Rafter weighs in on The Inside Man and heist films in general.
A profile of Gwendolyn Brooks.
Ramadan begins tomorrow and will last for a month. For an explanation of the holiday we turn to John Esposito’s What Everyone Needs to Know About Islam.
A celebration of Rosh Hashana.
In this article from Black Women in America, Second Edition, Jacquelyn Y. McLendon profiles the new generation of fiction writers.
OUP wishes Upton Sinclair a happy birhtday.
OUP talks with author Geneive Abdo about her new book Mecca and Mainstreet.
It’s Friday so we thought we would lighten things up and give our loyal readers something fun to kick-off the weekend with (not that our other posts aren’t fun!). So today Oxford University Press challenges you to be slothful, to lean back, sink into your couch and to remain there for 48-hours.
Chris Lowney reports on his travels.
There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.
Cereal commercials, nutritionists, and your mother all agree—breakfast is the most important meal of the day. That’s why Congress has declared September to be "All American Breakfast Month!" That begs the question: what is the all-American breakfast, anyway? The answer to that question has changed over the years. A cowboy in the 1880s may have […]
The prevailing wisdom of most African Americanists, is that due to the distinctive history and acculturation of Africans in the British colonies in North America, African-American literature is most meaningfully assessed in the context of multiple geographical, oral, and literary heritages.