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  • av Nancy (William H. Chafe Distinguished Professor of History and Public Policy MacLean
    255,-

    Behind the Mask of Chivalry exposes the inner workings of the Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s and explains how it was able to attract millions of American men. Drawing on an unusual and rich cache of internal Klan records to anchor her observations, Nancy MacLean combines a fine-grained portrait of a local Klan world with an analysis of the movement's ideas and politics nationwide. The result is a new, multi-dimensional understanding of the social conditions, cultural currents, and ordinary men that built this archetypal American reactionary movement. Examining the developments of the times from the perspective of white men who liked to portray themselves as victims, the study provides new insight into a critical era of American history and into an enduring refrain in conservative thought. In this anniversary edition, MacLean reflects on the resurgence of right-wing populism, white power activism, and political violence in our own time.

  • av Peter (former editor of The Times [of London] and of The Times Literary Supplement Stothard
    289,-

  • av Loewy Shacham
    1 019,-

    Examining the interplay of religion, history, and literature through a case study of King Krsnadevaraya's celebrated Telugu poem ¿muktam¿lyada, Ilanit Loewy Shacham showcases the groundbreaking worldview that this often-overlooked poem embodies. Krsnadevaraya (r.1509-1529) ruled over the Vijayanagara Empire during its heyday, and his monumental poem situates all power and authority not in the imperial center, but in the villages and temples at the empire's outskirts; not in the royal court, but in a religious community - a worldview radically different from how literary and political histories portray the king and his empire.

  • av Richard (Senior Fellow Youngs
    349 - 1 095,-

  • av Robert L. Klitzman
    495,-

    Psychiatrist and bioethicist Robert Klitzman here explores the need for spiritual guidance among patients and their families who are experiencing illness. They often struggle to make sense of their situation, and as they confront their mortality they will try to seek hope, purpose, and larger connections beyond the world of medicine. While physicians are frequently uncomfortable with these issues, often under sung hospital chaplains can and do fill this void. Klitzman uses interviews with patients, families, and chaplains to bring their stories to life; and more broadly he explores the ways in which hospitals and the health care system might address this neglect of a vital human need in times of crisis.

  • av Jurgen (Professor Jaspers
    1 315,-

  • av Suzanne (Assistant Professor Lye
    1 019,-

    Life / Afterlife traces the development, evolution, and uses of underworld scenes in ancient Greek literature and society. Underworld scenes are a unique form of embedded storytelling, appearing across time and genres. These scenes employ a special register of language that acts as a narrative space outside of chronological time and everyday reality. Suzanne Lye shows how writers such as Homer, Hesiod, Aristophanes, Plato, and Lucian, among others, used afterlife depictions as commentaries to communicate a call to action for their audiences in response to cultural, religious, and political changes to their worlds.

  •  
    1 125,-

    Adults 65 and older are the fastest growing segment of the population worldwide, which means there will be more people living with mild cognitive impairment and dementia. Written at a resident level, the Primer on Dementia provides early career professionals with the information necessary to care for the often complex clinical presentations of people with age-associated neurocognitive disorders. This book is organized into three sections: (1) core concepts, (2) dementia syndromes, and (3) disease management.

  • av Nicholas O. (Kirkland & Ellis Professor of Law Stephanopoulos
    509,-

    This book provides a new theoretical perspective to election law showing how alignment theory would operate in practice, in both litigation and legislation.

  • av Mark A. (Founding Chief Emeritus Goldstein M.D.
    825,-

    How Technology, the COVID-19 Pandemic, and Current Events Profoundly Affect Adolescents examines contemporary issues and events and their impact on the biological, psychological, and social domains in adolescents. The book contains 18 chapters including sleep, obesity, depression, suicidality, racism, LGBTQ, poverty, and war. With over 750 references cited, the work reviews the complexity of current adolescent problems and how they interrelate with one another.

  • av Geoffrey (Distinguished Professor of Music History and Humanities Block
    279 - 1 109,-

  • av Ross (Milton R. Konvitz Professor of Judeo-Islamic Studies & Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellow Brann
    135,-

    Moses Maimonides, a scientist, physician, philosopher, rabbinic scholar, and communal leader, was perhaps the most important Jewish figure of the pre-modern age. In this accessible introduction, Ross Brann presents a holistic picture of this towering figure, the author of The Guide for the Perplexed, the Commentary on the Mishnah, and the seminal Mishneh Torah (Code of Jewish Law), in which he reorganized and systematized all of rabbinic law in its entirety. Key to engaging Maimonides on his own terms is understanding that he applied a rationalist's regimen characteristic of his scientific research and practice of medicine to all his life's work: he observed and studied a problem, diagnosed it, and then prescribed a remedy for it whether the concern was physical, metaphysical, spiritual, intellectual, or social in nature.

  • av Ange (Professor Mlinko
    449,-

  • av K. Sara (Professor of Classics Myers
    1 019,-

  • av Jerome (Senior analyst on Jihad and Modern Conflict Drevon
    385 - 1 095,-

  • av Diarmuid (Professor of Philosophy Costello
    1 439,-

    Aesthetics after Modernism defends the ongoing relevance of aesthetics to art after modernism. Diarmuid Costello traces the art world's rejection of aesthetics to Clement Greenberg's success in co-opting the discourse of aesthetics, notably Kant's aesthetics, to underwrite a formalist theory of aesthetic value. This has led to Kant's aesthetics being tarred with the brush of Greenbergian formalism; it has also encouraged subsequent critics and theorists to miss the resources in Kant's aesthetics for capturing our cognitive relation to precisely the kinds of art that interest them.

  • av Alexander W. ( Sawatsky
    935,-

  • av William (Field Archaeologist Lewis
    1 315,-

    Division of Empire follows the lives of Constantine the Great's three sons--Constantine II, Constantius II, and Constans--beginning with the death of their father in 337 AD and tracing how they first shared the empire as a triarchy, until Constantine II was killed by Constans in the civil war of 340, and then Constans was murdered by a usurper in 350. William Lewis uses their story as a case study for how division works, as a process rather than a singular event.

  •  
    1 125,-

    Bringing together siloed areas to offer a comprehensive summary of decades of research, Pain, the Opioid Epidemic, and Depression is a comprehensive evaluation of the evidence for bi-directional and mutually reinforcing effects of pain, prescription opioid use, and mental illness, with a focus on depression.

  • av Anthony F. (Adjunct Professor of Vocal Pedagogy Jahn
    309 - 1 109,-

  • av Tahir Rahman
    545,-

    Extreme Overvalued Beliefs makes a profound argument that most violent targeted attacks are incorrectly classified as motivated by delusions or obsessions. Drawing on exceptionally clear and vivid details of crimes such as the JFK assassination and the January 6th US Capitol attack, the monograph illuminates three easily understood cognitive drivers of targeted attacks, arguing that we must embrace these in order to thwart future incendiary acts.

  • av Jared E. (Professor of Preaching Alcantara
    449,-

    The Rev. Dr. Joseph H. Jackson remains one of the most important but least known figures of twentieth-century African American Christian history. In this book, Jared E. Alcántara sets out a definitive academic biography of this complex figure.

  •  
    1 015,-

    This book is the first to fully describe critical time intervention (CTI), a time-limited, evidence-based model of care that provides direct emotional and practical assistance and strengthens individuals' ties to their community and support systems during critical periods of transition in their lives. The model is widely applied in the US and elsewhere by case managers, social workers, and others seeking to help vulnerable people--including those who are homeless, those with severe mental illness, and others--re-establish themselves in the community with access to needed supports.

  •  
    509,-

    This book offers an inclusive lens through which to study the music and dance of South Asia, its diasporas, and the people who produce and use these cultural expressions. Each chapter's central argument ties into a participatory exercise that provides active ways to understand and engage with cultural meaning.

  • av R. Isabela (Editor and Project Manager Morales
    349 - 455,-

  • av Moen ( Lars J.K.
    1 015,-

  • av Richard (Nicholas Dopuch Professor of Accounting Frankel
    1 015,-

    The Economics of Accounting explores how accounting plays a vital role in driving business efficiency and creating value. The book reveals the economic significance of accounting outputs, particularly earnings, in optimizing firm performance. It showcases how accounting information enhances decision-making within organizations, reduces information gaps in financial markets, and facilitates price discovery. The book highlights that, contrary to common misconceptions, accounting not only maximizes shareholder value but also promotes stakeholder protection, leading to increased value creation.

  • av Jason S. (Assistant Professor Spicer
    1 019,-

  • av John L. Esposito
    579,-

    Islamophobia has been on the rise since September 11, as seen in countless cases of discrimination, racism, hate speeches, physical attacks, and anti-Muslim campaigns. The 2006 Danish cartoon crisis and the controversy surrounding Pope Benedict XVI's Regensburg speech have underscored the urgency of such issues as image-making, multiculturalism, freedom of expression, respect for religious symbols, and interfaith relations. The 1997 Runnymede Report defines Islamophobia as "dread, hatred, and hostility towards Islam and Muslims perpetuated by a series of closed views that imply and attribute negative and derogatory stereotypes and beliefs to Muslims." Violating the basic principles of human rights civil liberties, and religious freedom, Islamophobic acts take many different forms. In some cases, mosques, Islamic centers, and Muslim properties are attacked and desecrated. In the workplace, schools, and housing, it takes the form of suspicion, staring, hazing, mockery, rejection, stigmatizing and outright discrimination. In public places, it occurs as indirect discrimination, hate speech, and denial of access to goods and services. This collection of essays takes a multidisciplinary approach to Islamophobia, bringing together the expertise and experience of Muslim, American, and European scholars. Analysis is combined with policy recommendations. Contributors discuss and evaluate good practices already in place and offer new methods for dealing with discrimination, hatred, and racism.

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