Fay Bound-Alberti, The Face: A Cultural History – Allen Lane, February 2026

Fay Bound-Alberti, The Face: A Cultural History – Allen Lane, February 2026

What’s in a face?

The face is the only part of the body where all the senses come together and, over the course of human history, has come to represent who we are as individuals. We unlock our phones with facial recognition; we have our faces stamped in our passports; and although our faces may change over the course of our lives – whether through ageing, accident, illness or lifestyle – they remain a foundational marker of identity.

In The Face, cultural historian Fay Bound-Alberti explores the ways humans have interpreted faces and how they have shaped our ideas of morality, social hierarchy, psychology and so much more, revealing some of the biases that inform our everyday lives. She charts how new technologies and cultural innovations have transformed our conception of selfhood over time – from the growth of portraiture in the Renaissance and the mass production of mirrors and photography in the nineteenth century, to twenty-first century developments, such as digital avatars and face transplants.

Bringing together a wealth of fascinating research, interviews and illuminating personal narratives, Bound-Alberti probes beneath the surface to ask what our faces really say about us.

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Peter C. Grace, The Intelligence Intellectuals: Social Scientists and the Making of the CIA – Georgetown University Press, January 2026

Peter C. Grace, The Intelligence Intellectuals: Social Scientists and the Making of the CIA – Georgetown University Press, January 2026

The untold story of how America’s brightest academic minds revolutionized intelligence analysis at the CIA

In the early days of the Cold War, the United States faced a crisis in intelligence analysis. A series of intelligence failures in 1949 and 1950, including the failure to warn about the North Korean invasion of South Korea, made it clear that gut instinct and traditional practices were no longer sufficient for intelligence analysis in the nuclear age. The new director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Walter Bedell Smith, had a mandate to reform it.

Based on new archival research in declassified documents and the participants’ personal papers, The Intelligence Intellectuals reveals the neglected history of how America’s brightest academic minds were recruited by the CIA to revolutionize intelligence analysis during this critical period. Peter C. Grace describes how the scientifically sound analysis methods that they introduced significantly helped the United States gain an advantage in the Cold War, and these new analysts legitimized the role of the recently created CIA in the national security community. Grace demonstrates how these professors—such as William Langer from Harvard, Sherman Kent from Yale, and Max Millikan from MIT—developed systematic approaches to intelligence analysis that shaped the CIA’s methodology for decades to come.

Readers interested in the history of the Cold War and in intelligence, scholars of intelligence studies, Cold War historians, and intelligence practitioners seeking to understand their craft’s foundations will all value this insightful history about the place of social science in national security.

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Martin Heidegger, Being and Time: An Annotated Translation – trans. Cyril Welch, Yale University Press, February 2026 and New Books discussion

Martin Heidegger, Being and Time: An Annotated Translation – trans. Cyril Welch, Yale University Press, February 2026

New Books discussion with Stephen Dozeman – thanks to dmf for the link

A new, more accessible translation of one of the most important philosophical works of the twentieth century
 
Martin Heidegger’s seminal work Sein und Zeit (Being and Time) is an exploration of the founding conditions of our being in any world, and of the varying revelations that allow for radically different experiences of things. But the very originality of the work, and the relentless stream of neologisms that Heidegger used to express concepts for which philosophy had no vocabulary, make the book a daunting read. This translation by Cyril Welch, classroom tested for more than twenty years, is far more readable than previous versions. It includes explanatory footnotes, as well as a translator’s preface that sets out Heidegger’s overall purpose and strategy in this complex and essential work.

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Luisa T Schneider, Robbert Dillema, and Paola Rebughini eds. Agency Beyond Confinement Rethinking the Relationship Between Agency and Structure in the Contemporary World – Routledge, March 2026

Luisa T Schneider, Robbert Dillema, and Paola Rebughini eds. Agency Beyond Confinement Rethinking the Relationship Between Agency and Structure in the Contemporary World – Routledge, March 2026

What does it mean to be confined and what forms of life, resistance, and care emerge in response? Agency Beyond Confinement rethinks the social life of confinement by refusing binaries: structure vs. agency, reform vs. resistance, care vs. control.

Across prisons, homes, gardens, seas, and cities, this volume explores how material, affective, and institutional confinement is shaped and reshaped through recursive processes of structure and agency. It argues that confinement appears not as total enclosure, but as a genre of design, narration, abandonment, and control that is written, inhabited, and rewritten by those it seeks to contain.

Bringing together case studies from Europe, Latin America, and Africa, this volume features an interdisciplinary group of scholars who refuse academic silos. Across methods, themes, and theoretical lineages, they examine how confinement takes shape, how it can be re-theorized, and how it might be undone. As such this book is essential reading for scholars, students, and practitioners in anthropology, carceral studies, cultural studies, critical legal theory, and related fields seeking to understand—and unmake—the conditions of confinement today.

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Indo-European Thought research resources updated – Benveniste, Saussure, Dumézil

I’ve updated the list of English translations of Émile Benveniste’s work on this site to include a couple of articles.

I’ve not shared many research resources from my Indo-European thought project, but there is a list of Ferdinand de Saussure’s notes on German legends – and cross-references between the different editions of these manuscripts. If you’ve ever tried to find one of these texts, which are presented in some confusing and overlapping ways in different, often hard-to-find collections, I hope this concordance is useful.

There are a few other resources, including some textual comparison for texts by Georges Dumézil, and audio and video recordings of him, here.

Much more extensive research resources on Foucault are listed here – bibliographies, textual comparisons, audio and video links, etc. A few other things are listed here. Generally these are things I produced while researching something, and which I’ve shared in the hope someone else might find them useful. Corrections welcome, of course.

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Christopher Cusack, Bridget English and Matthew L. Reznicek eds. The Corpse in Modern Irish Literature – Liverpool University Press, February 2026

Christopher Cusack, Bridget English and Matthew L. Reznicek eds. The Corpse in Modern Irish Literature – Liverpool University Press, February 2026

From the bodies rotting by the wayside in Famine fiction, Synge’s sodden corpses and Joyce’s dead, to Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill’s talking corpses and the unburied and dissected remains of Celtic Tiger fiction, the figure of the corpse is ubiquitous in Irish writing. This collection examines the Irish corpse as a conceptually rich centrepoint with multiple differently signifying implications across this historical period as expressed in different social, political and creative contexts.

Taking Irish literature’s obsession with death as its starting point, The Corpse in Modern Irish Literature demonstrates the wide-ranging implications of this fixation, extending it through the contexts of the tragedies of the Irish past and the emergence of new identities in the wake of colonial modernity. In their range of authors and genres from the eighteenth to the twenty-first century, the chapters bring into focus patterns of change and continuity and extend current understanding of the Gothic mode, the national tale, the Irish modernist novel, Irish-language poetry, the elegiac mode, comic and tragic revivalist writings and the generic complexity of autofiction and contemporary fiction. In so doing, The Corpse in Modern Irish Literature makes a significant intervention in Irish studies, Gothic studies, death studies and medical and health humanities.

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Pierre-Olivier Dittmar, L’invention de l’animal: Essai d’anthropologie médiévale – Gallimard, March 2026

Pierre-Olivier Dittmar, L’invention de l’animal: Essai d’anthropologie médiévale – Gallimard, March 2026

Il n’y avait pas d’animal au Moyen Âge. Des cochons et des oiseaux, des bœufs et des belettes, des lapins et des ours, des loups et des abeilles, des licornes même, oui. Mais si les animaux étaient présents en nombre, partageaient leur territoire et bien d’autres relations avec les humains, l’animal en tant que catégorie, tel que nous le connaissons aujourd’hui, n’existait pas. Or l’invention de ce concept ne crée pas seulement une fracture entre les humains et le reste du monde ; elle produit aussi m1second partage, moins visible, plus intime, qui donne naissance à une « part animale » au sein de chaque individu.
L’objet de cet ouvrage est de témoigner d’un monde, d’une période, qui ignorait cette double coupure et l’a fait émerger. Au croisement de l’histoire religieuse et de l’histoire intellectuelle, de l’histoire de l’art ou de celle de l’alimentation, il met en lumière, notamment par les images, un mode particulier de rapport au vivant et un moment décisif de l’histoire des sociétés occidentales.

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Eray Çayli, Earthmoving: Extractivism, War, and Visuality in Northern Kurdistan – University of Texas Press, October 2025 and New Books discussion

Eray Çayli, Earthmoving: Extractivism, War, and Visuality in Northern Kurdistan – University of Texas Press, October 2025

New Books discussion with Ronay Bakan – thank to dmf for the link

Focuses on contemporary art and media to examine the role of visuals in environmental violence and war in Northern Kurdistan. 

Extractivism—exploiting the earth for resources—has long driven racial capitalism and colonialism. And yet, how does extractivism operate in a world where ecological and humanitarian sensibilities are unprecedentedly widespread? Eray Çaylı argues it does so by mobilizing these sensibilities in new ways. Extractivism is no longer only about moving the earth—displacing peoples, fossils, minerals, and waters—but also leaving those who witness this violent displacement sentimentally moved. 

Earthmoving conceptualizes this duality. Derived from Çaylı’s years-long work in Northern Kurdistan, home to the world’s largest stateless nation—rendered stateless by colonial policies since the nineteenth century—Earthmoving focuses on the 2010s, a decade that began with peace talks between Turkey and the Kurdish liberation movement but ended with war. The decade saw extractivism intensify in the region and images of its harm proliferate across art and media. Together with contemporary artists, Çaylı shows that images challenge extractivism both by making its harm visible and by fostering self-reflexive and reciprocal collaboration that breaks with its valuation of the colonized and the racialized only in quantifiable and marketable terms.

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Daniele Lorenzini ed. The Foucauldian Mind – Routledge, August 2026

Daniele Lorenzini ed. The Foucauldian Mind – Routledge, August 2026

This is a major, and very expensive, reference work. I say a bit about my chapter, on Foucault and structuralism, here. The Routledge website says July, but Daniele says the production schedule is being timed for the 100th anniversary of Foucault’s birth, 15 October.

[I’ve updated the description below to match the most recent version on the Routledge website.]

Michel Foucault is one of the most influential, and controversial, thinkers of the twentieth century. His work has had a transformative effect on the study of the humanities and social sciences. His engagement with topics such as truth, power and language continues to exert significant influence on a huge range of disciplines, from philosophy, sociology and anthropology to history, politics, law, literature, religion and many others. Yet, paradoxically, Foucault’s work is rarely discussed systematically within philosophy in the Anglophone world.

The Foucauldian Mind is an outstanding exploration and assessment of Foucault’s thought, demonstrating its coherence, insight and continuing relevance to current debates in a multiplicity of fields within philosophy, and beyond. Comprising over forty chapters authored by an international team of expert contributors, it addresses the following topics and more:

  • the formation of Foucault’s thought and his most important writings, from History of Madness and The Order of Things to Discipline and Punish, the History of Sexuality, and his later works on governmentality and the aesthetics of existence
  • Foucault’s theoretical and methodological engagements, including with phenomenology, existentialism, structuralism, Marxism, psychoanalysis, critical theory, pragmatism and feminism
  • Foucault’s contributions to ethics, political philosophy and law
  • Foucault’s often misunderstood engagements with science, race and gender
  • the legacy of Foucault’s thought, including for environmental studies, biopolitics, migration studies and philosophy of disability.

With its comprehensive analysis of Foucault’s work and its original discussion of both traditional and new topics, The Foucauldian Mind is a superb resource for anyone studying Foucault’s thought from a broadly philosophical standpoint.

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Antonio Melechi, The Unconscious: A Cultural History from Hippocrates to Philip K. Dick and Beyond – MIT Press, February 2026

Antonio Melechi, The Unconscious: A Cultural History from Hippocrates to Philip K. Dick and Beyond – MIT Press, February 2026

A highly original first anthology on the cultural history of the unconscious that is destined to become definitive.

“Know thyself”—the injunction that was once inscribed upon the Temple of Apollo—became a touchstone for classical and modern philosophers before being embraced as the endgame of psychoanalysis by Freud and his followers. The conceptual baggage that Freud took on his armchair journey into the unconscious mind is well known—and so, too, is the more recent science on implicit memory, blindsight and automatic processing—but the history of the unconscious beyond the consulting room and laboratory has largely been overlooked.

From ancient dream theory to hypnosis, somnambulism to psychedelic mind-expansion, The Unconsciousby Antonio Melechi traces the wider social and scientific history of the unconscious mind. It brings together a chorus of voices—including Friedrich Nietzsche, Henri Bergson, Mary Arnold-Forster, Swami Vivekananda, and Philip K. Dick, to name only some—to investigate the elusive psychology of memory and learning, instinct and imagination, creative breakthrough and mental breakdown.

Moving beyond the familiar psychoanalytic framework, the book draws on a rich seam of sources, including case studies, psychological experiments, pulp fiction, urban legend, and commercial hype. Approaching the unconscious as a product of both discovery and invention, the anthology underscores its importance as a perennial source of debate, a tantalizing mirror to our hidden selves, and a powerful master key that continues to influence contemporary thought.

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