Publications
Given the mix of unencumbered time, academic
freedom, and interdisciplinary stimulation, it is not surprising that
many Fellows choose to spend their year writing major books.
Tyler Collection
Just how many books have been written at CASBS? There is no way to know
the precise answer to this question, but the Centers Tyler Collection
(named after the first Center director, Ralph Tyler) hints at the
impressive volume of resulting scholarship. Though all Fellows are
asked to donate copies of books written at the Center to the
collection, we know that some forget to do so. That makes the roughly
1,600 volumes in the collection a conservative estimate. On average,
some 25-30 books can be credited to each class over the 50 years the
Center has been in existence.
Seminal works
Among the titles in the Tyler Collection are many that are recognized
as classic works, books that have had a profound influence on academic
discourse and contemporary thought. These include:
Robert Axelrod, The Evolution of Cooperation
Bruno Bettelheim, A
Home for the Heart
Erik Erikson, Childhood and Society
John Hope Franklin, A Southern Odyssey
Victor Fuchs, Who
Shall Live?
Norman Naimark, Fires of Hatred
Deborah
Tannen, Gender and Conversational Interaction
W.V. Quine, Word
& Object
Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific
Revolutions
Lawrence Cremin, American Education
Robert
Dahl, Who Governs?
William Durham, Coevolution
Eugene Genovese, Roll, Jordan, Roll
E.D. Hirsch, Cultural
Literacy
Edward Said, Orientalism
Ed Tufte, The
Visual Display of Quantitative Information
Arthur Koestler; The
Ghost in the Machine
Karl Popper, The Logic of Scientific
Discovery
Robert Putnam, Making Democracy Work
John
Rawls, A Theory of Justice.