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  • New Books Network

    Nicholas Freudenberg, "Fighting for New York: Activism for Health and Social Justice Since The 1960s" (Columbia UP, 2026)

    07/07/2026 | 56 mins.
    Today I'm speaking with Nicholas Freudenberg, Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Public Health at the CUNY School of Public Health. We are discussing his book, Fighting for New York: Activism for Health and Social Justice Since the 1960s (Columbia University Press, 2026). In March 2020, during one of the first major US outbreaks of Covid, New York became an epicenter of the spread. New York's connective tissue, like the walkable city streets, subways, and taxi cabs, became pathways of transmission. In places where ideas and cultures can spread, diseases can, too. As the hospitals began to fill, essential workers from doctors and nurses to ambulance drivers and social workers stepped up to help heal the city in a time of crisis. For a brief moment, health workers became highly visible in our public consciousness. For many, the pandemic came as a shock. It had been more than 100 years since the last pandemic of comparable magnitude hit the five boroughs. We soon discovered that there already existed a network of public health workers and activists waiting to spring into action to blunt the virus's spread. Many wished that this network had been more robust, better developed, and better funded. Fighting for New York looks at the long sweep of public health activism in New York City from the 1960s to now. Covid was not the first public health crisis the city faced, and it certainly won't be the last. Nicholas details various initiatives to mobilize support for public health projects in the city. How have activists identified problems in their communities? How have they gained institutional support in addressing these problems? And how do they discover and implement workable solutions to the identified problems? Though primarily a work of history, Fighting for New York also serves as a road map for public health workers and activists seeking to navigate contemporary issues.

    Caleb Zakarin is CEO and Publisher of the New Books Network.
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  • New Books Network

    Jay Szpilka, "BDSM Practices in Contemporary Poland: Barbed Wire Floggings, Rope Orgasms, and the Problem with Desire" (Palgrave Macmillan, 2025)

    07/07/2026 | 1h 8 mins.
    In BDSM Practices in Poland: Barbed Wire Floggings, Rope Orgasms, and the Problem with Desire
    (Palgrave Macmillan, 2025), cultural anthropologist and cultural
    studies scholar Jay Szpilka analyzes the way that BDSM is practiced in
    contemporary Poland. Based on extensive field research, she asks what
    social, cultural, and political conditions are necessary for BDSM to be possible to practice
    in the first place. Through a nuanced analysis of the way that
    practitioners navigate conflicting understandings and politics of kink,
    this book provides an alternative to Western-centric narratives of BDSM
    communities and challenges a number of long-standing notions about the
    status kink which circulate in sexuality and queer studies.

    Jay Szpilka is a visiting fellow at Edinburgh Napier University and
    an assistant professor at SWPS University in Poland. She is the author
    of BDSM Practices in Contemporary Poland, and her work has been published in the Feminist Review, TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly, Journal of Lesbian Studies, Teksty Drugie, and the Australian Feminist Studies.

    Atalia Israeli-Nevo is an anthropology PhD candidate at the University of Texas at Austin.
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  • New Books Network

    Aswin Punathambekar, Adrienne Shaw and Jonathan Gray eds., "Planet Digital: A Global Media Cultures Reader" (NYU Press, 2026)

    07/07/2026 | 1h 1 mins.
    In the three decades since the rise of the global internet,
    digitalization has transformed how media are made, circulated, and
    consumed, reshaping culture on a planetary scale. Yet the story of
    global media is not one of seamless connection or cultural
    homogenization. Planet Digital: A Global Media Cultures Reader (NYU Press, 2026) challenges
    the myth of a “global village,” revealing instead how regional
    histories, infrastructures, economies, and power relations shape the
    uneven terrains of our digital world.

    Edited by the series editors of Critical Cultural Communication,
    this field-defining anthology gathers leading scholars to examine the
    texts, genres, platforms, and industries that define today’s global
    entertainment landscape. From TikTok to Squid Game, K-Pop to Marvel, Bluey
    to Nollywood, each chapter offers a focused case study that illuminates
    how digital media both reflect and remake global cultural life.

    Spanning influencer culture, streaming platforms, esports, and beyond, Planet Digital
    shows how digital technologies and global media flows continually
    reshape one another, producing hybrid forms of creativity, circulation,
    and control. Together, these essays provide a vital framework for
    understanding how the world’s screens, sounds, and networks are
    rewriting the relationship between culture and power in the twenty-first
    century.
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  • New Books Network

    Daniel Rood, "In the Shadow of the Great House: A History of the Plantation in America" (Norton, 2026)

    07/07/2026 | 1h 21 mins.
    Dan Rood’s In the Shadow of the Great House (W.W.
    Norton & Co., 2026) is one of the first contemporary books to focus
    on the primary engine of slavery, race, and capitalism in this country:
    the plantation. The plantation was invented on the small Atlantic
    island of São Tomé in the 1500s, and the island also became the site,
    soon enough, of the first slave revolt. The brutal technology was then
    perfected in Barbados, where planters worked tens of thousands of
    African captives to their deaths in sugar factories. But it was in the
    United States, Rood shows, that the plantation found its most powerful
    manifestations. In Virginia, Carolina, and then the Deep South,
    successive plantation revolutions transformed slavery into a much more
    rigid and oppressive institution. Incomparably wealthy planters now
    insisted on a rightless, eternally available, “increasing” source of
    labor, and in the process reinvented human bondage and stamped it onto a
    single race. But the plantation did not die after the Civil War. It
    metastasized. From the advent of sharecropping in the late nineteenth
    century to the rise of cotton in mid-twentieth century California to
    today’s chicken processing plants, the plantation has cast a long shadow
    over American life. Rood further documents the “dark retreats” carved
    out of plantation life by the enslaved. It was the enslaved who offered
    the most clear-eyed understanding of what the plantation behemoths told
    us, and still tell us, about our country.
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  • New Books Network

    Gullah-Geechee Diasporas: Knowledge, Culture, and Black Lowcountry Legacies

    07/07/2026
    Gullah-Geechee Diasporas: Knowledge, Culture, and Black Lowcountry Legacies (University of South Carolina Press, 2026) counters romantic portrayals of Gullah-Geechee culture as a static, geographically isolated remnant of the past. Across eight interdisciplinary essays, the book’s contributors trace an arc, described in time and space, from pre-Middle Passage Africa through the Caribbean and coastal United States into the interior South and beyond. They consider how Gullah-Geechee cultural traditions are simultaneously rooted in the physical Lowcountry homeland and represent a dynamic cultural ethos that is not bounded by geography and has shaped Black life across North America and the Caribbean Basin. Together, these essays reveal the resilience and adaptability of people whose history defies myths of isolation and immobility. Gullah-Geechee Diasporas is a fresh framework for understanding African American cultural origins, migrations, and transformations.

    Dr. Muhammad Fraser-Rahim is associate professor of Intelligence and Security Studies at The Citadel. He is the author of America’s Other Muslims and Gullah Geechee Muslims in America. You can find him on Instagram and LinkedIn.Dr. Elizabeth J. West is professor of English and the John B. and Elena Diaz-Verson Amos Distinguished Chair in English Letters at Georgia State University. Her books include Finding Francis and African Spirituality in Black Women’s Fiction. She can be found online at Instagram and LinkedIn.

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