Image descriptions

Image one: E-book titled Japanese Demon Lore: Oni from Ancient Times to the Present (2010) - synopsis: Oni, ubiquitous supernatural figures in Japanese literature, lore, art, and religion, usually appear as demons or ogres, and they appear frequently in various arts and media, from Noh theater and picture scrolls to modern fiction and political propaganda. They remain common figures in popular Japanese anime, manga, and film and are becoming embedded in American and international popular culture through such media. Noriko Reider’s book is the first in English devoted to oni as she fully examines their cultural history, multifaceted roles, and complex significance as “others” to the Japanese.

Image two: E-book titled The Monster in the Garden: The Grotesque and the Gigantic in Renaissance Landscape Design (2015) - synopsis: Monsters, grotesque creatures, and giants were frequently depicted in Italian Renaissance landscape design, yet they have rarely been studied. In The Monster in the Garden, Luke Morgan argues that the monster is a key figure in Renaissance culture that acts as a cipher for contemporary anxieties about normative social life and identity. Drawing on sixteenth-century medical, legal, and scientific texts, as well as recent scholarship on monstrosity, abnormality, and difference in early modern Europe, he develops a new conceptual model of Renaissance landscape design and argues that the presence of monsters was not incidental but an essential feature of the experience of gardens.