About Author: dbennie

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Wind Historian Says: Build New Wind Farms Farther From Neighbors

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Windfall: Wind Energy in America Today, by historian Robert Righter, was recently published by University of Oklahoma Press; it’s a follow-up to his 1996 book, a history of the industry through its first commercial boom. As a hearty advocate of wind energy and continued rapid growth of the industry, Righter may surprise some with his strong call for more sensitivity to quality of life concerns of rural residents. He spends chunks of three chapters addressing the increasing problems caused by wind farm noise in rural communities, chides developers for not building farther from unwilling neighbors, and says that new development should be focused on the remote high plains, rather than more densely populated rural landscapes in the upper midwest and northeast.

Righter seems to be especially sensitive to the fact that today’s turbines are huge mechanical intrusions on pastoral landscapes, a far cry from the windmills of earlier generations.  At the same time, he suggests that a look back at earlier technological innovations (including transmission lines, oil pump jacks, and agricultural watering systems) suggests that most of us tend to become accustomed to new intrusions after a while, noting that outside of wilderness areas, “it is difficult to view a landscape devoid of a human imprint.” He also acknowledges the fact that impacts on a few can’t always outweigh the benefits for the many in generating electricity without burning carbon or generating nuclear waste.

But unlike most wind boosters, he doesn’t content himself with these simple formulations.  He goes on to stress that even as recently as 2000, most experts felt that technical hurdles would keep turbines from getting much bigger than they were then (500 kW-1 MW).  The leaps that have taken place, with 3 MW and larger turbines in new wind farms, startle even him:  ”They do not impact a landscape as much as dominate it….Their size makes it practically impossible to suggest that wind turbines can blend technology with nature.”  He joins one of his fellow participants in a cross-disciplinary symposium on NIMBY issues, stressing:  ”Wind energy developers must realize the ‘important links among landscape, memory, and beauty in achieving a better quality of life.’  This concept is not always appreciated by wind developers, resulting in bitter feeling, often ultimately reaching the courts.”

Read the article at renewableenegyworld.com

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Book Review – Scenery, Curiosities, and Stupendous Rocks

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Review by By David Hendee, OMAHA WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER

An Arkansas farmer who went bust as a gold miner in California hit pay dirt as an artist in the high Plains of Nebraska.

But William Quesenbury’s big strike — sketching the North Platte River wilderness on his way down the Overland Trail to his home back east — remained hidden for nearly 150 years.

Quesenbury, a self-taught artist, couldn’t have imagined that his 1851 sketches of what is now western Nebraska and eastern Wyoming would survive, much less be rediscovered and published in a large-format book for the world to see, said David Royce Murphy of the Nebraska State Historical Society.

After a brief, failed fling as a gold miner, Quesenbury (pronounced Cush-en-berry) bounced from job to job in Arkansas and Texas — newspaperman, Confederate officer, politician, art teacher — and lived a life of desperation. He died in 1888 in Missouri.

“The fact that he would be known today for his Overland sketches would probably surprise him to no end,” Murphy said.

Quesenbury’s greatest work was his role as one of the first and most skilled sketch artists to depict Chimney Rock, Courthouse Rock and other iconic buttes, hills and plains of the Overland Trail, Murphy said.

The sketches have been owned by The World-Herald since 1994, shortly after they were rediscovered. They are on loan to the state historical society.

The Quesenbury story and his 71 pencil sketches are featured in “Scenery, Curiosities, and Stupendous Rocks,” published last month by the University of Oklahoma Press.

Read the entire review at omaha.com

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Book Review: Kit Carson, by David Remley

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Kit Carson: The Life of an American Border Man, by David Remley, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 2011, $24.95

“Ask people who Kit Carson was,” David Remley posits in the preface to this new biography. “Most suspect that he was not the great white hero of dime novels, but a real border man of some sort—a trapper, a guide, a hunter, a mountain man, a frontiersman. Some think that he was good and that he was larger than life, others that he was just a killer, even genocidal.” Dime novelists in the 19th century saddled Christopher Houston “Kit” Carson with the nicknames “Nestor of the Plains” and “Terror of the Plains,” among other hyperbolic handles. Modern-day revisionists have termed him “trigger happy” and a “natural born killer.” Remley has thoughtfully sifted through the existing scholarship on Carson to find neither myth nor monster but a man more nuanced than either extreme. “My hope,” says the author, “is to stimulate more careful and balanced thought, speech and writing about Kit.”

Born in Kentucky on Christmas Eve 1809 and raised in Missouri, Carson ran away from a saddlery apprenticeship at age 16 and never let the dust settle long on his feet after that. For the next four decades he roamed the United States from coast to coast as a fur trapper, guide, dispatch rider and Army scout. He was married twice to Indian women and, finally, to lifelong love Josefa Jaramillo, the daughter of a prominent Mexican family in Taos. Kit shared campfires with explorers Ewing Young and John Frémont, served in the Indian wars and Civil War under noted officers Stephen Kearny and Edward Canby and rubbed elbows, albeit anxiously, with presidents and statesmen. Such professional associations brought the plainspoken Carson uneasy fame.

Read the entire review at Historynet.com

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Bryn Mawr Classical Review…Eros at the Banquet

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Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2012.01.41
Louise H. Pratt, Eros at the Banquet: Reviewing Greek with Plato’s Symposium. Oklahoma Series in Classical Culture, 40.   Norman:  University of Oklahoma Press, 2011.  Pp. xxiii, 407.  ISBN 9780806141428.  $29.95 (pb).

Reviewed by Derek Smith Keyser, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (dereksh@email.unc.edu)

As one of the most well-known and beloved dialogues of Plato, the Symposium is an enticing selection for teachers of intermediate language courses. Unfortunately, it is generally not considered to be an ideal text for third- semester students: its length (roughly twice that of the Apology), its complexity in both language and thought, and its wealth of cultural details requiring explanation seem to make it more fitting for upper-level classes than for students first dipping their toes into the sea of Greek literature. There are several excellent commentaries on the dialogue, including the Bryn Mawr edition by Rose and the Cambridge edition by Dover,1 but these either refrain from commenting on the intellectual and cultural material within the dialogue (Bryn Mawr) or lack the meticulous grammatical and syntactical explanations that intermediate students often need (Cambridge). Louise Pratt’s Eros at the Banquet successfully addresses both these concerns in a lucidly written, thoroughly researched, and engaging edition of the dialogue. Teachers should be aware, however, that the first five readings of the book contain a moderately altered Greek text that has been simplified for intermediate readers; I discuss the nature of these alterations below.

Like other commentaries in the Oklahoma Series in Classical Culture, Pratt’s edition provides students and teachers with almost everything they will need to study the Symposium, including text, running commentary below each passage, and glossary in the back. The opening sections contain: an outline of the book’s format and helpful suggestions on using it in the classroom; a key for grammatical abbreviations found in the commentary; and a brief but detailed introduction divided into several topics relevant to the dialogue, including religion, history, sexuality, and literary themes. Students will appreciate the clear and succinct writing in these sections, and teachers will find many helpful references to primary and secondary sources at the end of each discussion. Pratt’s three-page bibliography is not meant to be exhaustive, but she consistently cites reliable sources that are appropriate for intermediate-level classes. For example, rather than overwhelm readers with a comprehensive list of scholarship on Diotima’s speech, Pratt directs them to the sound, though cautious, analysis found in Allen’s The Dialogues of Plato.2

Read the entire review

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Helen Hornbeck Tanner (1916-2011)

Helen Hornbeck Tanner, passed away on Saturday at the age of 94 in Beulah, Michigan. Helen was a distinguished scholar of American Indian history and literature, publishing books on the Caddo and the Ojibwa as well as on early eighteenth-century Spanish Florida.  Her crowning scholarly achievement in print Atlas of Great Lakes Indian History was the published by the University of Oklahoma Press.

Her commitment to the development of scholarship by American Indians is symbolized by the “Susan Kelly Power and Helen Hornbeck Tanner Fund“, co-named for her, which supports work at The Newberry Library by Ph.D. candidates and post-doctoral scholars of American Indian heritage.

Helen graduated with distinction from Swarthmore College in 1937 and went on to complete a Master’s degree at the University of Florida (1948) and a Ph.D. at the University of Michigan (1961).  She taught at Michigan for several years but she was always proudest of her academic affiliation with the Newberry Library.

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OU Press books receive awards!

INTERNATIONAL LATINO BOOK AWARD WINNER, May 2011

OU Press book wins 2011 International Latino Book Award, which recognizes worldwide achievements in Latino literature. Bandido: The Life and Time of Tiburcio Vasquez by John Boessenecker, was a winner in the Best Biography (English) category. Latino Literacy Now, the non-profit organization that gave out the award, has been dedicated to advancing the cause of reading and promoting literacy in the Latino community since 1997.

NATIVE AMERICAN AND INDIGENOUS STUDIES ASSOCIATION WINNERS, May 2011

Reasoning Together: The Native Critics Collective and Uneven Ground: American Indian Sovereignty and Federal Law by David E. Wilkins and K. Tsianina Lomawaima were voted among the top ten best books in Native American and Indigenous Studies of the first decade of the 21st Century.  The books were voted on by members of the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association, a professional organization dedicated to supporting scholars and others who work in the academic field of Native American and Indigenous studies.

TWO IPPY AWARD WINNERS, May 2011

Selected from thousands of entries, two OU Press books received IPPY Awards presented by Independent Publisher. Texas: A Historical Atlas by A. Ray Stephens won a Bronze award in the Reference category. Arena Legacy: The Heritage of American Rodeo by Richard D. Rattenbury won a Silver award in the Table Books category. The “IPPY” Awards, launched in 1996 as the first awards program open exclusively to independent publishers, are designed to bring increased recognition to the deserving but often unsung titles published by independent authors and publishers.

WESTERN WRITERS OF AMERICA SPUR AWARD FINALISTS, June 2011

Three OU Press books are finalists for the Spur Awards which are given annually for distinguished writing about the American West. Bandido: The Life and Time Of Tiburcio Vasquez, by John Boessenecker was a finalist in the Best Western Nonfiction Biography.  Beyond Bear’s Paw: The Nez Perce Indians in Canada, by Jerome A. Greene and So Rugged & Mountainous: Blazing the Trails to Oregon and California, 1812-1848 by Will Bagley are both finalists in the Best Western Nonfiction Historical category. The Spur Awards, given by the Western Writers of America, Inc. are among the oldest and most prestigious in American literature.

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Remembering Clara Luper, Oklahoma Civil Rights Leader and Educator

(AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki, File)

Merriam-Webster’s online dictionary provides a definition for the word “pioneer” that is: “soldier who builds things: a foot soldier whose duties include going ahead of the main company to construct things to pave the way for them.” It is no wonder then that Oklahoma civil rights activist Clara Luper is so frequently referred to as a “pioneer”. It fully encompasses who she was and what she did to change the face of race relations in the state of Oklahoma and beyond.

Luper, who died June 8 after a lengthy illness, was the Oklahoma civil rights activist who, in 1958, organized a lunch counter sit-in at Katz Drugstore in downtown Oklahoma City. Although police were called in and the media swarmed the store, Luper’s group of 13 demonstrators remained peaceful, and within mere days of the demonstration all 38 Katz locations in Oklahoma, Missouri, Kansas and Iowa were desegregated.

A deeply virtuous leader and born teacher, Luper insisted on non-violence and worked to instill these values in the members of Oklahoma City NAACP chapter of which she was the leader. Ultimately, her efforts in Oklahoma led to the desegregation of hundreds of businesses. In the 1960s Luper was active in the civil rights movement on a national level. She was a high school history teacher until her retirement in 1991.

As a publisher so deeply rooted in Oklahoma, OU Press expresses gratitude to Ms. Luper for her courageous and tireless efforts on behalf of all Oklahomans, and, ultimately, the United States of American as a whole.

The Katz Drugstore demonstration, and the events leading up to it, are described in an entry within the book, An Oklahoma I Had Never Seen Before: Alternative Views of Oklahoma History edited by Davis D. Joyce and published by OU Press. The book is a compilation of stories about Oklahoma’s history submitted by various authors. Originally published in hardcover in 1994, the book was reissued in paperback in 1998.

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Great Sioux War Orders of Battle Book Review

While reading Paul Hedren’s, “Great Sioux War Orders of Battle”, we have to ask why no one has produced such a reference before. We find bits and pieces of Mr. Hedren’s material in a small number of other works, but never have we seen this data comprised into one volume. Besides data, the author provides a reasonable and innovative analysis for why the frontier army was ably led and equipped to win the Sioux/Cheyenne War of 1876.

No matter one’s opinion on the subject of the U.S. Army during the Centennial Campaign, Mr. Hedren’s arguments are well made and supported from primary research. His check list of primary material includes but is not limited to 185 monthly Regimental Returns, official reports, and diaries. The war was made up of a complex maze of many columns of infantry and cavalry moving across a wide landscape over a period of almost two years. Making sense of it all is a huge challenge, but Mr. Hedren accomplishes it through a novel approach.

The book is divided into three parts. Part one “explores the doctrine, training, culture, and materiel” of the army that entered the campaign. Part two is exemplary in that the author has divided the entire campaign into 28 separate deployments starting with the relief of Fort Pease in February 1876, and ending with the establishment of Fort Custer in July 1877. Part three encompasses a well thought-out analysis for why a well trained army could lose on some of the campaigns’ battlefields. It also affirms why the war was not won because of luck; the army went into the field confident and rightfully so.

Read the entire review and the interview with the author.

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“A Letter to America” by David Boren now available on Kindle

Wise, timely, and constructive views from one of the leading public servants and educators of our time. This book should be read, re-read, and passed along to all who care about our country and its future.—David McCullough, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of John Adams

Here now is the letter to us all, the one we have been waiting for—and sorely need. It is a message of alarm but also of hope. Our problems as Americans are huge but most are of our own making and thus capable of our own fixing. I say, Amen, David Boren.—Jim Lehrer, Executive Editor, The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer

David Boren’s unique insights present us with a summons to action. Not all that he suggests will be palatable, but all should be debated. Above all, his letter calls us back from the precipice of narrow self-interest to the solid ground of the public good.—Ruth Simmons, President of Brown University

A powerful, compelling analysis of the major crises facing the United States today. Treating each crisis in a nonpartisan, compassionate way, and believing that ‘we Americans are natural problem solvers,’ Boren suggests excellent solutions for the well-being of our own and future generations of Americans.—Howard R. Lamar, former President of Yale University

David Boren defines our nation’s challenges with clarity, common sense, and courage. Americans concerned about the country their children and grandchildren will find Boren’s diagnosis and prescriptions refreshing, compelling—and inspiring.—Sam Nunn, U.S. Senator from Georgia, 1972–1997

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Thomas Krause receives Robert H. Ruby Editorial Fellowship

We congratulate Thomas Krause on receiving the Robert H. Ruby Editorial Fellowship at the University of Oklahoma Press. After earning a bachelor’s degree from the University of Wisconsin, Tom came to the University of Oklahoma last fall to earn an M.A. in Native American Studies. The Ruby Fellowship allows students to gain firsthand knowledge of and insight into publishing and acquisitions by assisting the OU Press Acquisitions Editor for American Indian studies. Fellowship students gain multifaceted experience by working directly with authors, honing their communication skills, and interacting with colleagues in the Press’s other departments. The fellowship is made possible through the generous support of Dr. Robert H. Ruby, an independent scholar who, with John A. Brown, is co-author of several successful and long-respected books published by the Press, including A Guide to the Indian Tribes of the Pacific Northwest, Third Edition (co-authored with Gary C. Collins).