CYBEREDITIONS publishes quality non-fiction books as ebooks online or as print-on-demand paperbacks available through bookshops or online suppliers, including Barnes&Noble and Amazon. As an independent publisher, we specialise in academic works or new editions of out-of-print works updated with new introductions, supplementary chapters and revised bibliographies. We welcome submissions by authors (more information on that here).
Our book list covers a broad range of disciplines, including literary criticism, social anthropology and biographical analysis, but always provides quality, thought-provoking material.
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What connects stuttering, fatherhood, filicide and homoerotic desire?
Melville's Gay Father and the Knot of Filicidal Desire: On Men and Their Demons is a broad-ranging literary study starting with Herman Melville's Billy Budd, wherein lecturer Myron C. Tuman teases out the bonds between a series of fathers and their mostly inarticulate sons. From Joseph Conrad to Vladimir Nabokov, from Giambattista Vico to Sigmund Freud, Tuman canvasses the knotted tales of innocent children in the hands of a filicidal protector.
What do Star Wars and Lord of the Rings tell us of our mythic past and our attitude to modern technology?
John David Ebert's Celluloid Heroes and Mechanical Dragons, a wide-ranging study of films produced since the late 1960s which consciously embody mythic themes and address the problem of man's relation to modern technology. Ebert gives detailed analyses of seven kinds of cinematic responses to this problem, exhibited in films such as 2001: A Space Odyssey, Videodrome, The Lord of the Rings, Solaris, Alien, Star Wars, and A.I. In addition he offers a highly original and thought-provoking account of the way such visionary films serve not only to highlight man’s predicament vis-à-vis modern technology, but also to “miniaturize” ancient cosmologies as a way of preserving the past in the form of modern folklore.
Which came first: color prejudice or black slavery?
Peter Frost’s Fair Women, Dark Men, is a provocative study of the phenomenon that anthropologist Pierre L. van den Berghe has called the Snow White Syndrome: the cultural preference in virtually all human societies for fair complexions, especially in women. This apparently existed long before black slavery, European colonialism, and what we now call “color prejudice”. Of special interest is the question of how this earlier sensibility to skin color relates to the later development of prejudice against dark skin.
As Peter Frost puts it, “Which came first, color prejudice or black slavery? Was it slavery that eventually created negative feelings toward dark skin? Or was it the other way around? Perhaps these feelings already existed when black slavery first arose, eventually making it more and more inhuman.” In Fair Women, Dark Men, Dr Frost exposes and explores historical, biological, cultural and psychological facts which might help to answer this question.
Visionary films and mythic themes
In 2004:
In 2003:
The full list of CYBEREDITIONS titles now available can be seen here.
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Frederick Crews
University of California
Berkeley
Daniel C. Dennett
Tufts University
Denis Dutton
University of Canterbury
William C. Dowling
Rutgers University
Owen Gingerich
Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics
Anthony Grafton
Princeton University
Robert E. Hall
Stanford University
Kathleen M. Higgins
University of Texas
Douglas Hofstadter
Indiana University
John Hollander
Yale University
Richard A. Lanham
UCLA
Elizabeth Loftus
University of California
Irvine
David F Marks
City University, London
Martha C. Nussbaum
University of Chicago
Marjorie Perloff
Stanford University
Steven Pinker
MIT
Mark Turner
Case Western Reserve University
Michael Wood
Princeton University
Executive Director
Peter Hyde
Editorial Director
Vicki Hyde
Technical Director
Nigel Presland