Marknadens största urval
Snabb leverans

Böcker utgivna av Pennsylvania State University Press

Filter
Filter
Sortera efterSortera Populära
  • - Folk Lore and Legends Collected in Northern and Western Pennsylvania
    av Henry W. Shoemaker
    469

    Henry W Shoemaker authored hundreds of pamphlets and books on nature, history, and folklore. He was the publisher of several influential newspapers in Pennsylvania, including the "Altoona Tribune" and the "Reading Eagle". This title includes some of the early writings of folklorist Henry W Shoemaker.

  • - Legends and Traditions, Old and New, Gathered Among the Pennsylvania Mountains
    av Henry W. Shoemaker
    495

    Henry W Shoemaker authored hundreds of pamphlets and books on nature, history, and folklore. He was the publisher of several influential newspapers in Pennsylvania, including the "Altoona Tribune" and the "Reading Eagle". This title includes some of the early writings of folklorist Henry W Shoemaker.

  • - An Interpretive Anthology
    av David Brion Davis
    539,-

  • - Ideology, Spiritism, and Brazilian Culture
    av David J. Hess
    422

  • - A Perfectionist Basis for Non-perfectionist Politics
    av Douglas B. Rasmussen & Douglas J.Den Uyl
    489

  • - Polity, Society, Economy
     
    555

  • av Daniel R. Ahern
    489

  • - Anglo-American Social Christianity, 1880-1940
    av Paul T. Phillips
    555

  • - Milton's Political Imagery
    av Robert Thomas Fallon
    489

    In this book, Robert Fallon examines the influence of John Milton's political experience on his great poems, "Paradise Lost", "Paradise Regained" and "Samson Agonistes". It is a sequel to his previous book, "Milton in Government".

  • av J.Melvin Woody
    489

    This work explores the necessities of freedom, the set of conditions without which freedom would not exist. It surveys competing conceptions of freedom and traces debates about the nature and reality of freedom to confusions about knowledge, humanity and nature rooted in modern Western thought.

  • - August 4, 1789 and the French Revolution
    av Michael P. Fitzsimmons
    489

  • - The Public Theology of Jonathan Edwards
    av Gerald McDermott
    489

    Jonathan Edwards (1703-58) was arguably this country''s greatest theologian and its finest philosopher before the nineteenth century. His school if disciples (the "New Divinity") exerted enormous influence on the religious and political cultures of late colonial and early republican America. Hence any study of religion and politics in early America must take account of this theologian and his legacy.Yet historians still regard Edward''s social theory as either nonexistent or underdeveloped. Gerald McDermott demonstrates, to the contrary, that Edwards was very interested in the social and political affairs of his day, and commented upon them at length in his unpublished sermons and private notebooks. McDermott shows that Edwards thought deeply about New England''s status under God, America''s role in the millennium, the nature and usefulness of patriotism, the duties of a good magistrate, and what it means to be a good citizen. In fact, his sociopolitical theory was at least as fully developed as that of his better-known contemporaries and more progressive in its attitude toward citizens'' rights.Using unpublished manuscripts that have previously been largely ignored, McDermott also convincingly challenges generations of scholarly opinion about Edwards. The Edwards who emerges from this nook is both less provincial and more this-worldly than the persona he is commonly given.Gerald R. McDermott is Assistant Professor of Religion at Roanoke College.

  • - New Poetry and New Subjects in Early Modern Spain
    av Leah Middlebrook
    489 - 829

    Based on readings of representative poems by eight Peninsular writers, this book demonstrates that the lyric was a crucial site for the negotiation of masculine identity as Spain's noblemen were alternately cajoled and coerced into abandoning their identifications with images of the medieval hero and assuming instead the posture of subjects.

  • - Retaining Truth in a Pluralistic World
    av Wendy Farley
    525,-

  • - Relating to the Expedition Against Fort Duquesne in 1758
    av John Forbes
    319,-

    Presents the letters of the British General who led the campaign against Fort Duquesne, a pivotal episode in the French and Indian War.

  • - While Visiting Holland and Germany, in 1677
    av William Penn
    422

    Provides a firsthand account of William Penn's 1677 travels in Holland and Germany visiting Quaker congregations and preaching his message of religious toleration. This book helps understand Penn's early years, before he obtained the charter for Pennsylvania in 1681, as well as the reasons for later German-speaking migration to the New World.

  • - With Biographical Remarks
    av William Brotherhead
    469

    Presents information on the buying, selling, and publishing of books in Philadelphia. This book provides insight into the early antiquarian book trade in America.

  • - Law, Power, and Ideology
    av Scott Bowman
    555

    This work offers an explanation of the way corporate power has achieved its dominant position in contemporary American society. It does so through an examination of history, law, ideology and economics spanning two centuries. It shows that judge-made and statutory laws have had a strong influence.

  • - Ideology and Organization in Medieval Religious Communities
    av Lutz (University of Vermont) Kaelber
    555

    "Rather than write another of the countless studies in the Weberian tradition, Lutz Kaelber has attempted nothing less than to be Max Weber''s ghost writer and to produce one of the great studies he did not live to undertake-The Christianity of the Occident. The result is a fascinating and engrossing work that adds immensely to our understanding of both then and now." -Rodney Stark, University of WashingtonMax Weber argued that medieval religious movements were an important source for the distinctive rationality of Western civilization. He intended to study precisely this theme but died before he could do so. In Schools of Asceticism, Lutz Kaelber builds on Weber''s ideas by presenting a fresh historical and theoretical analysis of orthodox and heretical religious groups in the Middle Ages. He explores how doctrine and social organization shaped ascetic conduct in these groups from the twelfth century on. Kaelber first examines monastic and mendicant groups, correcting common misperceptions about the nature of their ascetic practices and their significance for the emergence of a Protestant work ethic. Then he turns to two of the largest and most widespread heretical groups in the Middle Ages, the Waldensians and the Cathars. For the most part, Waldensians and Cathars practiced a form of "other-worldly asceticism" resembling that of monks and nuns. For the Austrian Waldensians, however, Kaelber documents a type of "inner-worldly asceticism" that resembled what Weber described for early modern Protestant groups. Both types of asceticism originated in distinctive heretical establishments: Waldensian schools and Cathar "houses of heretics." As these establishments disappeared, the boundaries separating Waldensianism and Catharism from Catholicism collapsed. Kaelber is therefore able to link organizational aspects of heretical communities to the tenacity of heresy in the Middle Ages.Based on exhaustive research into both primary and secondary sources, Schools of Asceticism is a bold and original book that bridges the disciplines of comparative historical and theoretical sociology, medieval history, and religious studies.Lutz Kaelber is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Lyndon State College in Vermont.

  • - Religion and Reform in Depression Pittsburgh
    av Kenneth J. Heineman
    555

  • - The Idea of the Nation in Socialist and Anarchist Theory
    av Michael Forman
    422

    An explanation of the ideas of leading socialist and anarchist theorists about nationalism and the challenges it presented to the labour movement from the mid-19th to the mid-20th centuries.

  • - The Right Attacks the CIA
    av Anne Hessing Cahn
    422

    This text tells the story of a major episode of intelligence intervention in politics in the mid-1970s that led to the derailing of detente between the Soviet Union and the United States and to the resurgence of the Cold War in the following decade.

  • - Humanism, Rhetoric, and the Historical Imagination in the Early Chronicles of Spanish America
    av Sarah H. Beckjord
    619

    Explores the unacknowledged spirit of reflection, debate, and experimentation present in foundational Spanish American writing. In highlighting the parallels between sixteenth-century debates and post-structuralist approaches to the study of history, this book uncovers an important legacy of the Hispanic intellectual tradition.

  • - Belle Epoque Novels of Professional Development
    av Juliette M. Rogers
    489 - 619

    Seeks to understand early twentieth-century France by examining novels written about professional women, bourgeois and working-class heroines, and the particular dilemmas that they faced. This book can change the way we think about the Belle Epoque and the interwar period in French literary history.

  • - From Fiction to Reality in the Nineteenth-Century French Novel
    av Dorothy Kelly
    419 - 1 035

    Explores a scenario common to the works of four French novelists: Balzac, Flaubert, Zola, and Valle's. This book reviews some of the contributing trends that attracted one or more of the authors: mesmerism, dissection, transformism and evolution, understandings of human reproduction, spontaneous generation, puericulture, the experimental method.

  • - Mexico and the U.S. as Allies in World War II
    av Maria Emilia Paz
    555

    This investigation of US relations with Mexico during World War II, includes information on spies and internal bureaucratic struggles in both countries. Although the book focuses on the interactions of the two countries, it shows how Mexico evolved politically in crucial ways during this period.

  • - The Struggles of New Immigrants for Unionization, 1890s-1930s
    av Mildred Beik
    555

  • - The Back-to-the-land Movement and the Search for a Sustainable Future
    av Jeffrey Jacob
    605

    The new pioneers of this text are ordinary people who have tried to break away from mainstream consumer culture and return to small-town, rural America. The dilemmas, frustrations, adaptations, and triumphs of these neo-homesteaders offer insights to anyone thinking of a move "back to the land."

  • av Laurence D. Cooper
    429

    An interpretation of Rousseau's thought that focuses on his complex concept of nature as one major key to understanding his legacy to modern political philosophy. It examines his efforts to show why, despite a challenge from science, nature can remain a standard for human behaviour.

Gör som tusentals andra bokälskare

Prenumerera på vårt nyhetsbrev för att få fantastiska erbjudanden och inspiration för din nästa läsning.