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Böcker utgivna av University of California Press

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  • - How Searching for Fulfillment at Work Fosters Inequality
    av Erin Cech
    345 - 1 079

  • - Taking Collective Action to Protect California
    av Adina Merenlender
    265,-

    "The climate leaders profiled in this book are inspirational. Their stories reflect the diversity of California's people and landscapes and show the power of collective action to create change. They also reveal our profound connection with nature and one another and illuminate the power of nature-based solutions to address the climate crisis. Most importantly, this wonderful book reminds us of what we are capable of as individuals to improve the future of our planet and people."--Wade Crowfoot, California Secretary for Natural Resources "Climate Stewardship minces no words in describing the hazards that California is already experiencing from climate change. Through many examples, this hopeful and inspiring book shows the power of collective action to combat climate extremes and create resilient communities and ecosystems."--Claire Kremen, 2020 Laureate of the Volvo Environment Prize

  • - The Great War's End, Ottoman Longevity, and Incidental Nations
    av Hasan Kayali
    349 - 1 079

  • - The Social Construction of Emotion in India
     
    1 389

    Naked holy men denying sexuality and feeling; elderly people basking in the warmth and security provided by devoted and attentive family members; fastidious priests concerned solely with rules of purity and the minutiae of ritual practice; puritanical moralists concealing women and sexuality behind purdah's veils--these are familiar Western stereotypes of India. The essays in Divine Passions, however, paint other, more colorful and emotionally alive pictures of India: ecstatic religious devotees rolling in temple dust; gray-haired elders worrying about neglect and mistreatment by family members; priests pursuing a lusty, carefree ideal of the good life; and jokers reviling one another with bawdy, sexual insults at marriages. Drawing on rich ethnographic data from emotion-charged scenarios, these essays question Western academic theories of emotion, particularly those that reduce emotions to physiological sensations or to an individual's private feelings. Presenting an alternative view of emotions as culturally constructed and morally evaluative concepts grounded in the bodily self, the contributors to Divine Passions help dispel some of the West's persistent misconceptions of Indian emotional experience. Moreover, the edition as a whole argues for a new and different understanding of India based on field research and an understanding of the devotional (bhakti) tradition. This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1990.

  • - A Cultural History Reader, 1450-1700
     
    469

    "This brilliantly curated collection of translated sources will open up new and unexpected perspectives on the complexity and richness of Ottoman cultural life for students and teachers alike."--Joshua M. White, Associate Professor of History, University of Virginia

  • - Philanthropy and the Making of Christian Society in Early Byzantium
    av Daniel Caner
    425

    "This book is a game-changer and will set the direction of everything that will come thereafter--and all the while it reads like a novel. I could not put it down!"--Susanna Elm, Sidney H. Ehrman Professor of History and Classics, Department of History, University of California, Berkeley "The result of decades of meticulous research across a vast array of sources, including archaeology, The Rich and the Pure offers new and nuanced perspectives on Christian attitudes toward wealth--its possession, and its circulation--against the very concrete background of the societal developments in the Eastern Mediterranean from the fourth to the seventh century."--Claudia Rapp, University of Vienna and Austrian Academy of Sciences "For now, and for any foreseeable time to come, this will be 'the' book on the roots of Christian wealth and charity. I expect it will be hailed as an instant classic."--Hal Drake, University of California, Santa Barbara

  • - A Cultural History Reader, 1450-1700
     
    1 715

  • - A Complete Guide to Making Your Business Thrive
    av Suzy Bills
    298 - 1 079

  • - Control and Resistance in an American Bank
    av Vicki Smith
    475 - 1 389

  • - Worlds in Collision
     
    635

    "This exhibition was organized to help celebrate the sesquicentennial of the San Francisco Art Institute (SFAI)"--Acknowledgements.

  • - Palestinian Reciprocity and Remittances in the Digital Age
    av Nadya Hajj
    419

    "According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, more than 1 percent of the world's people have been forced to flee from their homes. In this remarkable book, Nadya Hajj deploys her considerable theoretical and empirical gifts to explore how refugees maintain identity and community in the face of obstacles that most of us would find insurmountable. This book is essential reading for anyone interested in understanding--and ameliorating--a refugee experience that is becoming distressingly common around the world."--Tarek Masoud, coauthor of The Arab Spring: Pathways of Repression and Reform "With nuance, sensitivity, and fascinating connections across diverse social settings, Hajj offers an insightful blueprint for how transnational networks can motivate reciprocity to solve communal problems. Deeply moving stories and voices bring to life the adaptive resilience of Palestinian refugees and inspire us to recognize our power to be reciprocal activists, too."--Wendy Pearlman, author of We Crossed a Bridge and It Trembled: Voices from Syria and Violence, Nonviolence, and the Palestinian National Movement "Palestinian refugee communities have suffered the ravages of war, occupation, forced displacement, dispersion, and marginalization. This book offers keen and original insight into how they have used digital means to sustain family and community ties, facilitate the transfer of economic remittances, and maintain social interaction and reciprocity across the diaspora."--Rex J. Brynen, Department of Political Science, McGill University "In a field as substantive as Middle East studies, it is not easy to make a contribution that promises to stand out. This is such a book. Through her stunning ethnographic and survey research, Hajj has opened a window into a world seldom seen, providing enormous insights into the way Palestinian refugees in Lebanon and the diaspora--through their use of digital technology--not only resist the destruction of their community but have found new ways of rebuilding it, ensuring its cohesion and resilience, and, in the process, opening their community to new ideas and forms of organization. Although these changes are not without costs--real and potential--they challenge us to think differently about Palestinian refugees and their unimagined (or reimagined) futures. This book not only meets that challenge but exceeds it."--Sara Roy, Harvard University "Nadya Hajj's analysis of the materiality of refugee suffering is heartbreaking; and yet, Networked Refugees strikes a profoundly hopeful message."--The Critical Refugee Studies Collective "Beautifully written, and offers an analysis that is at once intellectually novel and deeply compassionate."--Ora Szekely, Associate Professor of Political Science at Clark University

  • - Art, Land, and the Politics of Environment
     
    849

    "A timely and indispensable collection of thoughtful essays exploring contemporary issues of the arid lands of the American West that should be required reading for any serious desert scholar."--Kim Stringfellow, Project Director, The Mojave Project "This fascinating volume reveals the strange history of the meanings of the desert in the American imagination, closely examining art, architecture, film, and literature. It offers a multifaceted guide to the desert's special role as a surface for the play of modern fantasies and fears."--Joshua Shannon, Professor of Contemporary Art History and Theory, University of Maryland "The breadth of this volume's subjects and voices is impressive. From essays on Will Wilson's meditative photographs about environmental despoliation to declassified films of nuclear tests, passive solar heating systems, and a modernist glass home built around a massive rock, the volume challenges the pernicious myth of the unpopulated desert while also showing how that myth continues to feed cultural production and shape governmental policy."--James Glisson, Curator of Contemporary Art, Santa Barbara Museum of Art

  • - How to Understand the Limits of Presidential Power
    av Dan A. Farber
    325

    "This is a wonderfully readable and insightful book on a topic of enormous importance: the constitutional parameters of presidential power in the United States. Dan Farber expertly guides readers through multiple aspects of the topic, including constitutional text, methods of constitutional interpretation, and the roles played by law, politics, and history. "--Heidi Kitrosser, University of Minnesota Law School "Farber, one of our nation's preeminent constitutional scholars, offers a brilliant analysis of the constitutional limits and historical abuses of presidential power--an issue that has tested our democracy from the founding through the Trump era. Addressing such critical issues as foreign affairs, domestic policy, individual rights, and separation of powers, this is an essential work for anyone who wants to understand the central challenges to our democracy past, present, and future."--Geoffrey R. Stone, University of Chicago Law School "This book is a master class on the law and politics of presidential powers. Drawing from founding debates, modern political practice, and Supreme Court case law, Farber brings clarity to the boundaries of executive authority. Another home run for Farber."--Richard Albert, the University of Texas at Austin "Addressing our national turmoil over the nature, powers, and legitimacy of the presidency, here is an accessible, brilliant, balanced book anyone interested in these questions should want to read."--Peter L. Strauss, Columbia Law School "Refreshingly open-minded and comprehensive. Farber writes beautifully and clearly, and he meticulously presents both sides of every issue. I disagree with much of what Farber concludes, but this is a scholarly and timely book!"--Steven Gow Calabresi, Northwestern Pritzker School of Law "Is the President too powerful, or not powerful enough? Dan Farber's smart, engaging book weaves together law, politics, history, and common sense to give readers, whatever their background, a new way to think about this critical question--one that doesn't depend on whether we happen to approve of the incumbent."--David A. Strauss, University of Chicago Law School

  • - A History of America through Forced Removal
    av Ethan Blue
    435

    "Exciting and original, this book is a significant contribution at the forefront of US history and immigration history. It examines the displacement and erasure of people of color in the nation-building project of white Americans beyond the colonial period. Using never-before-seen immigration officials' communications and correspondence, the memoirs of a physician hired on the deportation trains, employee records, train itineraries, and passenger lists, this book even opens up the experience of deportees as well as those of the middle managers and agents who made the state real."--Torrie Hester, author of Deportation: The Origins of U.S. Policy "This sprawling, beautifully written, and copiously researched book illuminates the experience of deportation across space and time. Organized into two cross-continental train journeys, Blue's account synthesizes world histories of revolution and economic exigency with the evolution of the deportation process. Important scholarship and great reading!"--Rachel Ida Buff, author of Immigration and the Political Economy of Home "This book describes one of the first--but little known--steps taken by the federal government to systematize the deportation of immigrants who violated the rules governing their lives and work in the United States. This first step illustrates how and on what grounds the criminalization and incarceration of immigrants began. I know of no other competing works. This is, I believe, the first study of deportation trains, and it's very important and original as such."--Donna Gabaccia, coauthor of Gender and International Migration: From the Slavery Era to the Global Age "The Deportation Express is one of the best books on the history of migration I have ever read. It is fascinating, powerful, important, and highly original. Examining more than the history of deportation, Ethan Blue uses the device of the deportation train's stops on its circular route around the United States to get at the history of race, state formation, immigration, citizenship, and sexuality in the Progressive Era."--Cindy Hahamovitch, author of No Man's Land: Jamaican Guestworkers in America and the Global History of Deportable Labor "A harrowing chronicle of the rise of the US deportation machine fired by Pullman car prison trains and telegraph wires that braided the continent, revealing the intimate distress of migrants from across the globe who sought to remain but instead were rounded up and expelled." -- Nayan Shah, author of Refusal to Eat, Stranger Intimacy, and Contagious Divides "This evocative story of deportation trains and some of the nearly one million people forced to board them in the early twentieth century provides a detailed account of the importance of the railroad for the emergence of the United States as a key player in the global capitalist economy. The insights gleaned from these analyses will be useful to all students and scholars of racial capitalism, settler colonialism, and global migration." -- Tanya Golash-Boza, author of Deported: Immigrant Policing, Disposable Labor, and Global Capitalism "Ethan Blue reveals how deportation infrastructures, especially the train, enabled the conjoined growth and consolidation of the deportation state and carceral state, knitting together different scales of government and connecting vast spatial expanses. As it follows the tendrils of movement and social control, The Deportation Express brings forward the histories of the state and corporate agents who made deportations possible and the immigrants ensnared in the trains' cages and deemed undesirable for their race, political beliefs, poverty, neurodiversity, disability, and more. A stirring achievement that should be required reading." --A. Naomi Paik, author of Bans, Walls, Raids, Sanctuary and Rightlessness

  • - Scenes from the Delhi Metro and the Social Life of Infrastructure
    av Rashmi Sadana
    349 - 1 079

  • - The Artisanal Ethos, Ordinary Virtues, and Everyday Life in the Age of Limits
    av John Lie
    419 - 809

  • - Suicide, Social Connection, and the Search for Relational Meaning in Contemporary Japan
    av Chikako Ozawa-de Silva
    419 - 1 079

  • - Writings on the Disaster in Paris, France
    av Khalil Habrih & Prof. Robert R. Desjarlais
    445 - 1 079

  • - Ushuaia and the History of Landscape and Punishment in Argentina
    av Ryan C. Edwards
    419 - 1 079

  • - Community, Property, and Revolution in Modern Bolivia
    av Sarah T. Hines
    355 - 1 079

  • - Inhabiting Kampala's Infrastructures of Disposability
    av Jacob Doherty
    349 - 1 079

  • - The Geography of Mass Imprisonment
    av Jessica T. Simes
    349 - 1 079

  • - Race, Science, and Pregnancy Trials in the Postgenomic Era
    av Natali Valdez
    409 - 1 079

  • - Armando Bo and Isabel Sarli's Sexploits
    av Victoria Ruetalo
    419 - 1 079

  • - How Digital Life Is Changing Evangelical Culture
    av Corrina Laughlin
    349 - 1 079

  • - Class and Mothering in a Flooded Community
    av Rachel Kimbro
    355 - 1 079

  • - How Women Navigate Domestic Violence and Its Aftermath
    av Paige Sweet
    349 - 1 389

  • - Four Decades of California Environmental Justice Activism
    av Tracy Enfield Perkins
    349 - 1 079

  • - Sterilization and Confinement in California, 1900-1950s
    av Natalie Lira
    355 - 1 079

  • - Disability and Life-Making during Medical Incarceration
    av Adria L. Imada
    349 - 1 079

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