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  • - Stories by Catherine Brady
    av Catherine Brady
    475,-

    Eleven stories set in San Francisco chronicle the lives of characters who avoid middle class lifestyles while clinging to their idealism about love and life.

  • - Tales of Contemporary Somnambulism
    av Peter LaSalle
    475,-

    To be untethered in the waking world, to have the feeling that perhaps we are sleepwalking-that's what life can be like for the people in these eleven stories by Peter LaSalle, known to readers of leading literary magazines for his luminous prose style and narrative daring.

  • - Their Lives and Times, Volume 3
     
    565,-

    Covering an era from the early twentieth century to the present, this volume features twenty-seven South Carolina women of varied backgrounds whose stories reflect the ever-widening array of activities and occupations in which women were engaged in a transformative era that included depression, world wars, and dramatic changes in the role of women.

  • - Their Lives and Times, Volume 3
     
    1 279,-

    Covering an era from the early twentieth century to the present, this volume features twenty-seven South Carolina women of varied backgrounds whose stories reflect the ever-widening array of activities and occupations in which women were engaged in a transformative era that included depression, world wars, and dramatic changes in the role of women.

  • - Labor, Landscape, and the Struggle over Industrial Farming in Bracero-Era California
    av Don Mitchell
    1 415,-

    Argues that by delineating the need for cheap, flexible farm labour as a problem and solving it via the importation of relatively disempowered migrant workers, an alliance of growers and government actors committed the United States to an agricultural system that is, in important respects, still in existence.

  • - A Family Exposure
    av Jill Christman
    475,-

    This is Jill Christman's account of her first 30 years. Her story runs the gamut of dramatic life events, including childhood sexual abuse, accidental death and psychological trauma, but her memoir is more than a litany of horrors: it is an open-eyed, wide-hearted look at a life worth surviving.

  • - The Failure of Agricultural Reform
    av William M. Mathew
    555,-

    In 1818, Edmund Ruffin, then a young Virginia planter, began conducting chemical and rotational experiments on his Coggin's Point plantation on the James River. Tracing Ruffin's passionate advocacy of both agricultural reform and slavery, William M. Mathew pinpoints in this book many of the contradictions that underlay the economic and social structures of the antebellum South.

  • - The Private Diary of Edmund Ruffin, 1843
    av Edmund Ruffin
    585,-

    The centerpiece of this generously annotated book is the diary kept by the celebrated agricultural reformer Edmund Ruffin during the eight months in 1843 when, at the request of Governor James Henry Hammond, he conducted an economic survey of South Carolina, traveling to every corner of the state to examine the different farming methods in use and the resources available for their improvement.

  • - Economy, Society, and Patterns of Political Thought in the Hispanic Caribbean, 1840-1878
    av Luis Martinez-Fernandez
    529 - 1 619,-

  • - Essays on the Poetry of Anthony Hecht
     
    505,-

    One of the most influential modern poets, Anthony Hecht (1923-2004) was awarded virtually every major American prize for poetry. Written mostly by other poets, in styles ranging from the informal to the scholarly, these essays explore Hecht's image and poetic devices, his debts to other poets, and his place in the study of modern poetry.

  • av Sydney Lea
    379,-

    In Sydney Lea's poems, purest joy and woe flash amid the mundane, and beauty knows the full range of nature - from the plumed tension of a newborn child twisting away from the ready breast to bright birds lying dead on the winter lawn.

  • - A Profile
    av Alan Watson
    445

    Alan Watson argues that a close examination of the Gospels in their historic and religious context reveals St. Mark's text as the most plausible account of how Jesus saw himself and how he was perceived by his contemporaries. In the gospel of Mark, Watson says that we see a Jesus who was basically apolitical, hostile to dogma, and deliberately incomprehensible to his followers and enemies.

  • - The First Christian Martyr
    av Alan Watson
    445

    Studies the first Christian martyr, who was stoned to death by a mob outside of Jerusalem around AD36 during his trial by the supreme rabbinic court for blasphemy against the Jewish faith. Alan Watson focuses on Stephen's enthralling defense speech, as found solely in the Acts of Apostles, which is both the pivotal and, until now, least understood part of the fatal proceedings.

  • av Alan Watson
    439,-

    Measures the success of Jesus's ministry by explaining his attitude toward, and knowledge of, certain laws and legal customs. Alan Watson argues that Jesus engendered harsh responses from his fellow Jews by his apparently contemptuous or insensitive behaviour that stemmed from a lack of knowledge or concern about legal and rabbinic strictures.

  • av Alan Watson
    505,-

    Argues that by virtue of Jesus's conviction and crucifixion at the hands of the Romans he failed to fulfil the prophecy of his messiahship in the manner he had intended. Jesus's destiny, as he saw it, was to be condemned by the Jewish authorities to death by stoning. This is just one of the provoking insights in Alan Watson's fresh interpretation of the arrest, trial, and conviction of Jesus.

  • - The Pharisaic Tradition in John
    av Alan Watson
    439,-

    In Jesus and the Jews, Alan Watson reveals and substantiates a central yet previously unrecognized source for the composition of the Gospel of John. Strikingly antithetical to John's basic message, this source originated from an anti-Christian tradition promulgated by the Pharisees, the powerful and dogmatic teachers of Jewish law. The aims of this Pharisaic tradition, argues Watson, included discrediting Jesus as the Messiah, minimizing his historical importance, and justifying the Jewish authorities' role in his death. Jesus and the Jews joins three other works by Watson--The Trial of Jesus, Jesus and the Law, and Jesus: A Profile--to examine the early dynamism of western religion through refocused attention on biblical texts and other historical sources.

  • - A Case Study in Conflict of Laws
    av Alan Watson
    439,-

    Examines the decisions of Supreme Court justice and Harvard law professor Joseph Story (1779-1845). Demonstrating the odd twists and turns that legal development sometimes takes, the book is also a fascinating case study that reveals much about the relationship of law to society.

  • - Five American Poets
    av Peter Stitt
    549,-

    In this book, Peter Stitt presents interviews with five American poets--Richard Wilbur, William Stafford, Louis Simpson, James Wright, and Robert Penn Warren--and critical essays on their works, uniting the objectivity and insight of the critic with the words and vision of the artist.

  • - Evangelicalism in Mississippi, 1773-1876
    av Randy J. Sparks
    515

    On Jordan's Stormy Banks is a social history of southern evangelicalism from the late eighteenth century to the end of Reconstruction. By focusing on the three largest evangelical denominations in a single state - Baptist, Methodist, and Presbyterian - Randy J. Sparks charts the rise of evangelicals on the southern frontier and their remarkable increase in numbers, wealth, and influence throughout the remainder of the period. Beginning as a rebellious movement of the plain folk, evangelicals set themselves up to challenge the social hierarchy and even welcomed slaves into their congregations on terms approaching equality. Although evangelicals had largely abandoned formal opposition to slavery by the time the movement reached Mississippi, their relationship to the institution was complex and conflicted. Sparks demonstrates that the typical evangelical church was biracial and that the African-American influence in ritual and practice left an indelible imprint on southern religion. The egalitarian nature of these early churches created unique opportunities for women and blacks, and Sparks pays close attention to the important role of the female majority of church members. Similarly, evangelical practice and rhetoric was consciously democratic, linking the movement with republican virtue. By the 1830s, the evangelicals in Mississippi had so prospered that their churches grew from sects to major denominations. This shift to the establishment divided the traditionalists from the modernists within each denomination. As the evangelicals began to have a marked influence on southern society, they sought to perfect rather than abolish slavery, and egalitarian biracialism gave way to separateworship services, a practice that fueled the development of independent African-American churches following the Civil War. The orderly society that evangelicals labored to create - one organized around the patriarchal household - unraveled at the end of the Civil War, says Sparks. For whites, evangelicalism became entwined with the Religion of the Lost Cause; for African Americans, the Confederate defeat came as an answered prayer as they began to carve out an autonomous religious life for themselves that would prove to be the bedrock of the African-American community. This separation of Mississippi's major denominations along racial lines dramatically marked the end of the evangelical movement's first century.

  • av Thomas J. Roberts
    549,-

    With wit and insight, Thomas J. Roberts reassesses popular writing forms, such as westerns, romances, and fantasies, that are often denigrated and explores the motives and experiences of readers of these genres. Drawing widely from literary criticism, the sociology and psychology of literature, and popular culture, this is an incisive examination of our discretionary reading tastes.

  • - A Biography of Steadman Vincent Sanford
    av Charles Stephen Gurr
    549,-

    Vincent Sanford was a distinguished educator instrumental in shaping higher education in Georgia and in the South during the first half of the twentieth century. Charles Stephen Gurr draws the portrait of a man for whom the ties of family, friendship, and community were immensely important and whose personal and professional legacy lives on in the lives he influenced and the institutions he led.

  • - Stories from the Civil War's Ragged Edges
     
    555,-

    Each contributor uses a seemingly unusual story, incident, or phenomenon to cast new light on the nature of the war itself. Collectively the essays remind us that war is always about damage, even at its most heroic and even when certain people and things deserve to be damaged. Here, in short, is war.

  • - The Reconfigured Text in Twentieth-Century Writing
    av David Cowart
    505,-

    Increasingly, literary texts have attached themselves to their sources in seemingly parasitic--but, more accurately, symbiotic--dependence. It is this kind of mutuality that Cowart examines in his wide-ranging and richly provocative study.

  • - Pagan Rome
    av Alan Watson
    439,-

    Analyzes the interaction of law and religion in ancient Rome, offering a new perspective on the nature and development of Roman law in the early republic and empire before Christianity was recognized and encouraged by Constantine.

  • av Alan Watson
    439

    In this book, Alan Watson argues that the slave laws of North and South America-the written codes defining the relationship of masters to slaves-reflect not so much the culture and society of the various colonies but the legal traditions of England, Europe, and ancient Rome.

  • - At the Edges
    av Alan Watson
    439,-

    By examining law's influence from Homeric Greece to present-day Armenia, this text concludes that ancient law is both relevant and important for the understanding of history, theology, sociology and literature.

  • av Mary Titus
    549,-

    Shows how Katherine Anne Porter explored her own ambivalence about gender and creativity, for she experienced firsthand a remarkable range of ideas concerning female sexuality. This is an important study of the tensions and ambivalence inscribed in Porter's fiction, as well as the vocational anxiety and gender performance of her actual life.

  • - Envisioning America Through Europe
    av J. D. Stahl
    505,-

    Stahl looks at various Twain works with European settings and traces the manner in which he redefined European notions of class into American concepts of gender, identity, and society.

  • - The Civil War Correspondence of Edgeworth and Sallie Bird
     
    555,-

    Centered around a small plantation in the heart of middle Georgia's nineteenth-century cotton culture, The Granite Farm Letters send forth from the Civil War years not simply a record of clashing armies at the front or of the fraying fabric of life at home but also the correspondence of a close-knit family

  • - Political Revolution in a Georgia County
    av John Rozier
    505,-

    John McCown was a black civil rights worker who achieved great political power and whose career, and life, ended in a swirl of controversy. Black Boss details the rise and fall of McCown and the continuing effects of his abuse of power on the people of Hancock County. It is a story that Rozier says shows ""the good and evil that dwell in us all.

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