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  • - Prisoners of War and the Politics of Vengeance in the American Revolution
    av T. Cole Jones
    1 125

    Examining how America's founding generation grappled with the problems posed by prisoners of war, Captives of Liberty reveals a cycle of violence, retaliation, and revenge that spiraled out of control, transforming a struggle for colonial independence into a revolutionary war.

  • - Ethics, Politics, and Religion in Early French Farce
    av Noah D. Guynn
    845

    In Pure Filth, Noah D. Guynn argues that the superficial crudeness and predictability of late medieval French farce conceal finely drawn, and sometimes quite radical, perspectives on ethics, politics, and religion.

  • av Benjamin A. Saltzman
    399 - 1 055,-

  • - How Modern Racism Emerged from Medieval Race-Thinking
    av Cord J. Whitaker
    335 - 1 125

    In Black Metaphors, Cord J. Whitaker argues that rhetoric and theology establish blackness and whiteness as metaphors for sin and purity in medieval English and European writing. Whitaker shows how these metaphors came to guide the development of notions of race in the centuries that followed.

  • av Hannah Barker
    335,99 - 949

  • av Erik R. Seeman
    389 - 1 179

    In Speaking with the Dead in Early America, Erik Seeman undertakes a 300-year history of Protestant communication with the dead, from Elizabethan England to the mid-nineteenth-century United States. Through prodigious research and careful analysis, he boldly reinterprets Protestantism as a religion in which the dead played a central role.

  • - Printing Technology and the Rise of the French Language
    av Katie Chenoweth
    895

    In The Prosthetic Tongue, Katie Chenoweth explores the relationship between printing and vernacular language as it took shape in sixteenth-century France and charts the technological reinvention of French across a range of domains, from typography, orthography, and grammar to politics, pedagogy, and poetics.

  • - The Paper Trails of Richard Stonley
    av Jason Scott-Warren
    599,-

    Richard Stonley, the earliest known purchaser of Shakespeare's first publication, Venus and Adonis, has hitherto been the merest of footnotes in literary history. Through a combination of book history and biography, Shakespeare's First Reader tells a compelling story of how one early modern gentleman lived in and through his library.

  • - Exile Warriors in the Eastern Congo
    av Anna Hedlund
    895

    Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in a rebel camp located deep in the Congo forest, Anna Hedlund explores the micropolitics and practices of everyday life in a community of Hutu rebel fighters and their families and attempts to understand why they continue to fight in what appears to be an endless conflict.

  • - Constitutional Government, Democratic Legitimacy, and International Law
    av Jamie Mayerfeld
    389

    Jamie Mayerfeld defends international human rights law as an extension of domestic checks and balances and therefore necessary to constitutional government. The book combines theoretical reflections on democracy and constitutionalism with a case study of the contrasting human rights policies of Europe and the United States.

  • - Political Philosophy in "Frankenstein"
    av Eileen Hunt Botting
    335

    In Mary Shelley and the Rights of the Child, Eileen Hunt Botting contends that Frankenstein is a profound work of speculative fiction designed to engage a radical moral and political question: do children have rights?

  • - The Papacy, the Empire, and the Struggle for Sovereignty in the Thirteenth Century
    av Brett Edward Whalen
    1 075

    Covering decades that included the last major crusades, the birth of the Inquisition, and the unexpected invasion of the Mongols, The Two Powers shows how Popes Gregory and Innocent's battles with Emperor Frederick shaped the political circumstances of the thirteenth-century papacy and its role in the public life of medieval Christendom.

  • - Being American in an Age of Division
    av Samuel Goldman
    395,-

    To secure the general welfare in a new century, the future of American unity lies not in monolithic nationalism. Rather, Samuel Goldman suggests we move in the opposite direction: go small, embrace difference as the driving characteristic of American society, and support political projects grounded in local communities.

  • - Nudity and the American Cult of the Body
    av Sarah Schrank
    549,-

    Free and Natural is a cultural history of nudity offering an in-depth account of how the naked body came to be closely tied to modern ideas about nature and authenticity. Sarah Schrank explores how the "free and natural" lifestyle emerged from the history of the nudist movement, sexual and environmental politics, and consumer capitalism.

  • - Black Reconstruction and Its Legacies in Baltimore, 1865-1920
    av Dennis Patrick Halpin
    484

    Dennis Patrick Halpin argues that Baltimore is key to understanding the trajectory of civil rights in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. A Brotherhood of Liberty traces the civil rights victories scored by black Baltimoreans that inspired activists throughout the nation and subsequent generations.

  • - Free Trade in the Age of Revolution
    av Tyson Reeder
    615,-

    Smugglers, Pirates, and Patriots delineates the differences between the British and Portuguese empires as they struggled with revolutionary tumult, revealing how merchants, smugglers, rogue officials, slave traders, and pirates influenced contentious paths of independence in the United States and Brazil.

  • - Tales from an Aging Japan
    av Iza Kavedzija
    599,-

    Based on ethnographic fieldwork at two community centers in Osaka, Japan, Making Meaningful Lives provides an intimate anthropological account of the existential concerns of elderly Japanese women and men.

  • - Migrant Lives at Israel's Margins
    av Sarah S. Willen
    399 - 1 235

    Fighting for Dignity explores the impact of a mass deportation campaign on African and Asian migrant workers in Tel Aviv and their Israeli-born children. In this vivid ethnography, Sarah Willen shows how undocumented migrants struggle to craft meaningful, flourishing lives despite the exclusion and vulnerability they endure.

  • - Persona and Literary Culture in Elizabethan England
    av Samuel Fallon
    789

    In Paper Monsters, Samuel Fallon charts the striking rise in the 1590's of a new species of textual being: the serial, semifictional persona. He argues that their status as collective fictions, passed among writers, publishers, and readers, positioned personae as the animating figures of what we have come to call "print culture."

  • - Northeastern, 1996-2006
    av Richard M. Freeland
    865

    Richard M. Freeland reviews how Northeastern University in Boston, historically an access-oriented, private urban university serving commuter students from modest backgrounds and characterized by limited academic ambitions and local reach, transformed itself into a selective, national, and residential research university.

  •  
    895

    The essays in Digital Media and Democratic Futures provide deep insights into the complex and context-dependent relationship between media and democracy and show that there is no single outcome for democracy in the digital age, only possible futures.

  • av Chunmei Du
    845

    Gu Hongming's Eccentric Chinese Odyssey is the first comprehensive study in English of Gu Hongming, both the private individual and the public cultural figure. An "imitation Western man" who became "a Chinaman again," Hongming was a reactionary to his contemporaries and an Eastern prophet to foreign intellectuals after the carnage of WWI.

  • - Black Abolitionists and the Politics of Violence
    av Kellie Carter Jackson
    335 - 1 125

    In Force and Freedom, Kellie Carter Jackson provides the first historical analysis exclusively focused on the tactical use of violence among antebellum black activists. Through tactical violence, argues Carter Jackson, abolitionist leaders created the conditions that necessitated the Civil War.

  • av Eduardo Contreras
    319 - 599,-

  • - Philadelphia in the Age of Urban Consolidation
    av Andrew Heath
    619

    Andrew Heath shows how Philadelphians looked to consolidate their city across internal social and sectional divisions as the republic fell apart in the Civil War era. Rallying to the cry "In Union There Is Strength," their battles over what a modern metropolis ought to be reveals how a city of mobs became a city of neighborhoods.

  • - Algerian, French, and South African Ex-Combatants
    av Lætitia Bucaille
    1 235

    In its comparative analysis of postcolonial South Africa and Algeria and its examination of narratives of ex-combatants, Making Peace with Your Enemy demonstrates how former adversaries face a similar challenge: how to extricate oneself from colonial domination and the violence of war in order to build relationships based on trust.

  • - A Paradoxical Route to Economic Prosperity
    av Tobias ten Brink
    845

    In China's Capitalism, Tobias ten Brink reveals how combinations of three heterogeneous actors-party-state institutions, firms, and workers-led to China's distinctive form of capitalism. Presenting a historically nuanced portrait, the book is essential reading for anyone interested in China's socioeconomic order and its future development.

  • - Elijah Zvi Soloveitchik's Commentary to the Gospels
    av Elijah Zvi Soloveitchik
    1 129

    In The Bible, the Talmud, and the New Testament, Shaul Magid presents the first-ever English translation of Rabbi Elijah Zvi Soloveitchik's Qol Qore, a rabbinic commentary on the Gospels of Matthew and Mark.

  • - Knowledge and Taste in the Early Modern English Kitchen
    av Wendy Wall
    389

    Situated at the vital intersection of physiology, gastronomy, decorum, knowledge-production, and labor, recipes from the past allow us to understand the significant ways that kitchen work was an intellectual and creative enterprise.

  • - Business and Politics in Twentieth-Century America
     
    419

    Appealing to historians working in the fields of business history, political history, and the history of capitalism, Capital Gains highlights the causes, character, and consequences of business activism and underscores the centrality of business to any full understanding of the politics of the twentieth century-and today.

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