Marknadens största urval
Snabb leverans

Böcker utgivna av University of Minnesota Press

Filter
Filter
Sortera efterSortera Populära
  • - Great Stories for Young Readers
     
    279,-

    A collection of short stories featuring the diverse people and places of Minnesota, set in time periods from Prohibition to the present day.

  • av Henri Lefebvre
    325 - 789,-

    "Originally published in French as La pensaee marxiste et la ville. Copyright 1972 by Casterman."

  • - Living Ethically in Compromised Times
    av Alexis Shotwell
    365 - 1 059,-

  • - Entanglements of War and Tourism
    av Debbie Lisle
    379 - 1 179,-

  • - An Organic Guide to Growing Vegetables, Berries, and Herbs in Cold Climates
    av John Whitman
    575,-

    All of John Whitman's gardening knowledge comes from hands-on experience acquired as a professional grower and an avid backyard vegetable gardener for more than fifty years. His book Starting from Scratch: A Guide to Indoor Gardening was a main selection of the Organic Gardening Book Club. He wrote the vegetable section of the Better Homes and Gardens New Garden Book and was the sole author of the Better Homes and Gardens New Houseplants Book. Whitman is the creator and coauthor of the other three volumes in the cold climate gardening series: Growing Perennials in Cold Climates, Growing Shrubs and Small Trees in Cold Climates, and Growing Roses in Cold Climates.

  • - Homeland Security in U.S. Public Schools
    av Nicole Nguyen
    339,-

    Welcome to Milton High School, where fear is a teacher s best tool and every student is a soldier in the war on terror. A struggling public school outside the nation s capital, Milton sat squarely at the center of two trends: growing fear of resurgent terrorism and mounting pressure to run schools as job training sites. In response, the school esta

  • - Toward Spatial Emancipation
    av Simon Springer
    339 - 1 059,-

    "The Anarchist Roots of Geography" sets the stage for a radical politics of possibility and freedom through a discussion of the insurrectionary geographies that suffuse our daily experiences. By embracing anarchist geographies as kaleidoscopic spatialities that allow for non-hierarchical connections between autonomous entities, Simon Springer confi

  • - The Rise of Detroit as America's Postindustrial Frontier
    av Rebecca J. Kinney
    355 - 979,-

  • - Educational Enclosures in Black Los Angeles
    av Damien M. Sojoyner
    339,-

  • - How Black Britain Performs Its Past
    av Steven Blevins
    379 - 1 179,-

    Outgrowth of the author's thesis (doctoral--University of California, Davis, 2008) under title: History unhoused.

  • - A Memoir
    av Zeke Caligiuri
    255,-

    This is the memoirof Zeke Caligiuri, who grew up in South Minneapolis in the 1990s when the citywas dubbed "Murderapolis." Currently in prison, Zeke's story is a clear-eyedaccount of how he got from there to here, how a boy who had every hope wentfrom dreaming of freedom to losing it, along with nearly everything andeveryone he loved.

  • - Infamous Letters from the Bastille Archives
    av Michel Foucault & Arlette Farge
    349 - 475,-

  • - Drone Warfare and Full Spectrum Dominance
    av Ian G. R. Shaw
    355,-

  • - Urban Revitalization versus the Working Poor in San Diego
    av David J. Karjanen
    355 - 1 099,-

    San Diego, California, is frequently viewed as a model for American urban revitalization. It looks like a success story: blight and poverty replaced by high rises and jobs. But David J. Karjanen shows that the much-touted job opportunities for poor people have been concentrated in low-paying service work as the cost of living in San Diego has soare

  • - Protecting Innocence in a Carceral State
    av Erica R. Meiners
    339,-

    Childhood has never been available to all. In her opening chapter of "For the Children?," Erica R. Meiners stakes the claim that childhood is a racial category often unavailable to communities of color. According to Meiners, this is glaringly evident in the U.S. criminal justice system, where the differentiation between child and adult often equate

  • - The Rise of Public Dining in Boston
    av Kelly Erby
    329 - 885,-

    Before the 1820s, the vast majority of Americans ate only at home. As the nation began to urbanize and industrialize, home and work became increasingly divided, resulting in new forms of commercial dining.In this fascinating book, Kelly Erby explores the evolution of such eating alternatives in Boston during the nineteenth century.

  • - Flying, Floating, and Hallucinating
    av Scott C. Richmond
    365 - 1 059,-

  • - Life after the Human Catastrophe
    av Rebekah Sheldon
    369,-

  • - Black Girls, White Girls, and Suburban Schooling
    av Signithia Fordham
    355,-

  • - Videogames and the Violence of Fiction
    av Timothy J. Welsh
    339 - 1 019,-

  • av Orikuchi Shinobu
    329,-

  • - A Natural History in North America
    av Mark Neuzil
    499,-

    Ancient records of canoes are found from the Pacific Northwest to the coast of Maine, in Minnesota and Mexico, in the Southeast and across the Caribbean. And if a native of those distant times might encounter a canoe of our day—whether birch bark or dugout or a modern marvel made of carbon fiber—its silhouette would be instantly recognizable. This is the story of that singular American artifact, so little changed over time: of canoes, old and new, the people who made them, and the labors and adventures they shared. With features of technology, industry, art, and survival, the canoe carries us deep into the natural and cultural history of North America.In the foreword by Pulitzer Prize–winner John McPhee, we dip into the experience of canoeing, from the thrilling challenges of childhood camp expeditions to the moving reflections of long-time paddlers. The pages that follow are filled with historical photographs and artwork, authors Neuzil and Sims describe the dugout and birch bark craft from their first known appearance through the exploration of Canada by fur traders, to the recreational movements that promoted all-wood and wood-and-canvas canoes. Modern materials such as aluminum, fiberglass, and plastic expanded participation and connected canoeists with emerging environmental movements. Finally, Canoes lets us hear the voices of past paddlers like Alexander Mackenzie, the first European to cross North America, using birch bark and dugout canoes a decade before Lewis and Clark went overland, Henry Thoreau, Eric Sevareid, Edwin Tappan Adney, and others. Their stories are a tribute to the First Peoples who, 500 or 1,000 or even 5,000 years ago, built a craft designed to such perfection that it has plied the waters fundamentally unchanged ever since.

  • - Sleep, Medicine, and Modern American Life
    av Matthew J. Wolf-Meyer
    279,-

  • - IBM and the Transformation of Corporate Design, 1945-1976
    av John Harwood
    379,-

  • - A Counting Book
    av Phyllis Root
    245,-

    Phyllis Root is the author of more than forty books, most of them picture books. She received a McKnight Fellowship for Lucia and the Light; Aunt Nancy and Old Man Trouble won a Minnesota Picture Book award; Big Momma Makes the World won a Boston Globe–Horn Book Award; and Plant a Pocket of Prairie (Minnesota, 2014) won a John Burroughs Riverby Award. She lives in Minneapolis. Beckie Prange is a biologist and printmaker who has illustrated two previous books, the Caldecott Honor winner Song of the Water Boatman and Ubiquitous: Celebrating Nature's Survivors. She lives in Ely, Minnesota. Betsy Bowen has written and illustrated many children’s books, including Antler, Bear, Canoe: A Northwoods Alphabet Year; Helen Hoover’s Great Wolf and the Good Woodsman (Minnesota, 2005); and Phyllis Root's Big Belching Bog (Minnesota, 2010) and Plant a Pocket of Prairie. She lives in Grand Marais, Minnesota.

  • av Brian McMahon
    469,-

Gör som tusentals andra bokälskare

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