“Scholars who read a lot and care about good publishing soon learn to distinguish between those presses whose books they will only read when compelling reviews come out and those whose imprint itself signals the likelihood of interesting, valuable publications. Over the last decade, Penn State Press has put itself firmly in the second category. Any new book from the publisher of Miguel Centeno, John Markoff, Jan Kubik, Mark Lichbach, and other distinguished political analysts deserves a good look from scholars who savor quality.”
—Charles Tilly, Columbia University
Compared with political science, which neatly breaks down into four main subfields, sociology encompasses a plethora of subfields, ranging from economic sociology and medical sociology to sociology of the family and sociology of law. As a relatively small publishing house, the Press has largely staked a place in areas where sociology intersects with other fields on the Press’s list.
Until 1990 the Press issued sociology books in four main subfields.
Titles such as Richard Stivers’s A Hair of the Dog:
Irish Drinking and American Stereotype (1976) or Ken Levi’s
edited volume on the People’s Temple of Jim Jones, Violence
and Religious Commitment (1982), represented the subfield
of crime, law, and deviance. Harry Schwarzweller et al.’s
Mountain Families in Transition (1971) and Emilia Martinez-Brawley’s
edited volume Pioneer Efforts in Rural Social Welfare
(1980), among others, fitted into rural sociology. Peter Roche
de Coppens’s Ideal Man in Classical Sociology (1976)
and Rick Tilman’s C. Wright Mills (1984) reflected
the social theory subfield, and the sociology of religion was
represented by works such as The Ministry in Transition
(1972), by Yoshio Fukuyama, or Richard Bord and Joseph Faulkner’s
The Catholic Charismatics (1983).
As recent catalogues demonstrate, the Press has continued to
publish in all of these subfields. Examples include Cecilie Høigård
and Liv Finstad’s Backstreets:
Prostitution, Money, and Love (1992), Jeffrey Jacob’s
New Pioneers: The
Back-to-the-Land Movement and the Search for a Sustainable Future
(1997), John Rhoads’s Critical
Issues in Social Theory (1991), and Fenggang Yang’s
Chinese Christians
in America (1999). Of these four areas, rural sociology
has been developed most strongly, as the Press assumed responsibility
for publishing the Rural
Studies Series (sponsored by the Rural Sociology Society)
in 1996.
But in conjunction with broadening programs in history and political
science, the Press began publishing regularly in additional sociological
subfields, such as collective behavior and social movements; comparative
and historical sociology; economic sociology; labor and labor
movements; Marxist sociology; political sociology; race, gender,
and class; and sociology of culture. The extended list in sociology
is made manifest in titles ranging from Dag MacLeod’s Downsizing
the State: Privatization and the Limits of Neoliberal Reform in
Mexico (2004) to Nathan Newman’s Net
Loss: Internet Prophets, Private Profits, and the Costs to Community
(2002) and Anna Szemere’s Up
from the Underground: The Culture of Rock Music in Postsocialist
Hungary (2001).
The close relationships among Penn State Press’s history,
political science, and sociology lists are mirrored in the Press’s
publication of the Journal
of Policy History, which has representatives from all
three disciplines on its editorial advisory board, including Craig
Calhoun and Theda Skocpol. Some Press authors hold joint appointments,
as John Markoff does in History and Sociology at the University
of Pittsburgh. Occasionally the Press will publish a book jointly
written by people from two fields, such as Market
and Community: The Bases of Social Order, Revolution, and Relegitimation
(2000), penned by political scientist Mark Lichbach and sociologist
Adam Seligman. (In the book, the two authors enter into an engaging
dialogue about their competing research traditions.) A number
of such titles came to the Press as part of its co-publication
arrangement with Polity Press.
But the most successful monograph in sociology the Press has
ever published simply arrived “over the transom” from
F. James Davis, a colleague of Press author Richard Stivers, who
suggested that Davis submit his manuscript. A study of the “one-drop
rule” in the United States, with some comparisons to racial
orders elsewhere, Davis’s Who
Is Black? (1991) quickly established itself as a staple
of classroom reading. (To update the story with the trend toward
multiracialism, the Press issued a tenth anniversary edition in
2001.) The book has sold in excess of 20,000 copies and has gone
through multiple printings. Along the way, Davis became so widely
recognized as an authority on this subject that he even appeared
on the Oprah Winfrey Show to talk about it. One of the earliest
enthusiastic reviews of Davis’s book was written by G. Reginald
Daniel, whose own Race
and Multiraciality in Brazil and the United States was
published by the Press in mid-2006.
The title that received the most widespread attention in the
world outside academe was John Robinson and Geoffrey Godbey’s
Time for Life: The
Surprising Ways Americans Use Their Time (1997), which
became the subject of an Associated Press story, was excerpted
in Time magazine, and earned the authors appearances on ABC’s
Good Morning America and NBC’s The Today Show. The authors,
using their extensive survey data, countered Juliet Schor’s
argument in The Overworked American by showing that Americans
actually have more free time than they did twenty years earlier—but
feel more stressed nevertheless. A foreword to their book was
contributed by Harvard’s Robert Putnam, who was much influenced
by their findings and later relied on them heavily in his own
best-selling Bowling Alone.
The Press’s sociology program has developed a number of
series. In addition to Issues
in Policy History and the Rural
Studies Series, a third—Post-Communist
Cultural Studies—was launched in 1998. It will publish
its final title (the fourteenth) in late 2006. The series editor,
Tom Cushman, has now launched a new series with the Press, Essays
on Human Rights. This series issued its first title, Vulnerability
and Human Rights by Bryan Turner, in mid-2006.
“In sociology—a discipline that often seems to be searching for itself and finding that it is really an enormously diverse collection of subfields—Penn State Press has played a very important role by publishing uniformly high-quality books in a large number of these subfields. My own shelves include valuable books in the sociology of religion, political sociology and social movements, culture, and sociological theory. The lists on Latin America, historical sociology, and agrarian issues are especially strong. It is a great credit to the Press’s leadership to have been able to take risks at times and maintain such an excellent selection of titles.”
—Robert Wuthnow, Princeton University
Choice Outstanding Academic Books
Michael Mayerfeld Bell, Farming
for Us All: Practical Agriculture and the Cultivation of Sustainability
(2005)
David L. Brown and Louis Swanson, eds., Challenges
for Rural America in the Twenty-First Century (2004)
Nathan Newman, Net
Loss: Internet Prophets, Private Profits, and the Costs to Community
(2002)
José Itzigsohn, Developing
Poverty: The State, Labor Market Deregulation, and the Informal
Economy in Costa Rica and the Dominican Republic (2001)
Miguel Angel Centeno, Democracy
Within Reason: Technocratic Revolution in Mexico (1994)
Gilles Kepel, The
Revenge of God: The Resurgence of Islam, Christianity, and Judaism
in the Modern World (1994)
Christopher Pierson, Beyond
the Welfare State? The New Political Economy of Welfare
(1991)
Book Prizes
Miguel Angel Centeno, Blood
and Debt: War and the Nation-State in Latin America (Honorable
Mention, 2003 Mattei Dogan Award, Society for Comparative Research)
Michael Forman, Nationalism
and the International Labor Movement: The Idea of the Nation in
Socialist and Anarchist Theory (1999 Michael Harrington
Award, Caucus for a New Political Science)
Lutz Kaelber, Schools
of Asceticism: Ideology and Organization in Medieval Religious
Communities (1999 Book of the Year Award, Sociology of
Religion Section of the American Sociological Association)
Dubravka Ugrei, The
Culture of Lies: Antipolitical Essays, trans. Celia Hawkesworth
(1999 Heldt Prize, Association for Women in Slavic Studies)
Gerald W. Creed, Domesticating
Revolution: From Socialist Reform to Ambivalent Transition in
a Bulgarian Village (1998 Book Prize, Bulgarian Studies
Association)
John Markoff, The
Abolition of Feudalism: Peasants, Lords, and Legislators in the
French Revolution (1998 Distinguished Scholarly Publication
Award, American Sociological Association; 1997 Allan Sharlin Memorial
Award, Social Science History Association; 1996 David Pinkney
Prize, Society for French Historical Studies)
Jan Kubik, The Power
of Symbols Against the Symbols of Power: The Rise of Solidarity
and the Fall of State Socialism in Poland (1994 Biennial
Young Scholar Award, Polish Studies Association)
F. James Davis, Who
Is Black? One Nation’s Definition (1992 Outstanding
Book on the Subject of Human Rights, Gustavus Myers Center for
the Study of Human Rights in the United States)
Alex Callinicos, The
Revenge of History: Marxism and the East European Revolutions
(1992 Distinguished Scholarship Book Award, Marxist Sociology
Section of the American Sociological Association)
Ron Eyerman and Andrew Jamison, Social
Movements: A Cognitive Approach (Honorable Mention, 1991
European Amalfi Prize for Sociology and Social Sciences)
Best Sellers
F. James Davis, Who
Is Black? (1991; 10th anniv. ed. 2001): 23,000+
John P. Robinson and Geoffrey Godbey, Time
for Life (1997; 2nd ed. 1999): 6,500+
Gilles Kepel, The
Revenge of God (1994): 5,500+
Judy Wajcman, Feminism
Confronts Technology (1991): 5,500+
Martin Carnoy, Manuel Castells, Stephen S. Cohen, and Fernando
Henrique Cardoso, The
New Global Economy in the Information Age (1993): 5,000+
Sidney Kraus and Dennis Davis, The Effects of Mass Communication
on Political Behavior (1976): 5,000+
Judy Scales-Trent, Notes
of a White Black Woman (1995): 5,000+
Martha Crenshaw, ed., Terrorism
in Context (1995): 4,500+
James J. Shields Jr., ed., Japanese
Schooling (1993): 4,000+
Åke Daun, Swedish
Mentality (1995): 4,000+
Miguel Angel Centeno, Democracy
Within Reason (1994; 2nd ed. 1997): 4,000+
Christopher Pierson, Beyond
the Welfare State? (1991; 2nd ed. 1998): 3,000+
John Higham, ed., Civil
Rights and Social Wrongs (1999): 3,000+
Alex Callinicos, The
Revenge of History (1991): 2,500+
Bob Jessop, State
Theory (1991): 2,500+
David L. Brown and Louis Swanson, eds., Challenges
for Rural America in the Twenty-First Century (2004):
2,500+
Ron Eyerman and Andrew Jamison, Social
Movements (1991): 2,500+
Philip D. Oxhorn, Organizing
Civil Society (1995): 2,000+
“Penn State Press has developed a very impressive sociology
list and has been a leader in publishing books that have multidisciplinary
roots. It is especially strong at the intersection of sociology,
politics, and history. In my own subfield I find Penn State to
be a leader in the publication of books that show the constructed
and highly political nature of race and ethnicity. The seminal
Who Is Black?
by F. James Davis, published in 1991, compared the conceptions
of race in the U.S. with other countries, making clear the social
construction of race in our society. ...The Press’s strength
in the study of religion has also intersected with one of the
most important emerging fields in the study of immigration, and
Fenggang Yang’s Chinese
Christians in America is an early trailblazer in this
field, along with Kwon, Kim, and Warner’s Korean
Americans and Their Religions. Penn State Press publishes
high-quality books with broad appeal and deep scholarly roots.
Its list in sociology is innovative and stimulating.”
—Mary C. Waters, Harvard University