Marknadens största urval
Snabb leverans

Böcker utgivna av University of Texas Press

Filter
Filter
Sortera efterSortera Populära
  • av Ann Pollard Rowe
    555,-

    A detailed study of the hand weaving and dyeing techniques of the indigenous Andean peoples of Ecuador.

  • av Patsy Cravens
    415,-

    This oral and pictorial history chronicles the lives and separate worlds of black and white communities in Jim Crow era Colorado County, TX. First settled by Stephen F. Austin's colonists in the early nineteenth century, Colorado County has deep roots in Texas history. Mainly rural and agrarian until late in the twentieth century, it was a cotton-growing region whose population was evenly divided between blacks and whites. These life-long neighbors led separate and unequal lives, memories of which still linger today. To preserve those memories, Patsy Cravens began interviewing and photographing the older residents of Colorado County in the 1980s. In this book, Cravens presents photographs and recollections of the last generation, black and white, who grew up in the era of Jim Crow segregation. And they have engrossing stories to tell. They recall grinding poverty and rollicking fun in the Great Depression, losing crops and livestock to floods, working for the WPA, romances gone wrong and love gone right, dirty dancing, church and faith, sharecropping, quilting, raising children, racism and bigotry, and even the horrific lynching of two African American teenagers in 1935. These stories reveal an amazing resiliency and generosity of spirit, despite the hardships that have filled most of their lives. They also capture a now lost rural way of life that was once common across the South.

  • av J. Frank Dobie
    185

    Cow People records the fading memories of a bygone Texas, the reminiscences of the cow people themselves.

  • - Conversations with a Texas Football Legend
    av Darrell Royal
    265,-

    UT's most beloved coach tells his life story in his own words--includes 55 photos, many never before published.

  • - Media, Memory, and Hurricane Katrina
    av Bernie Cook
    335,99

    With innovative visual analysis of TV news coverage, documentaries such as Trouble the Water and When the Levees Broke, and the HBO series Treme, this book investigates how media representations both shaped and contested collective memories of Katrina.

  • av Joe Ely
    249

    Acclaimed singer-songwriter and Flatlanders band member Joe Ely creates an authentic picture in verse and drawings of a musician's life on the road.

  • av Austin Film Festival
    249

    Renowned, award-winning screenwriters, including John Lee Hancock, Peter Hedges, Lawrence Kasdan, Whit Stillman, Robin Swicord, and Randall Wallace, discuss their craft from concept to completion in these lively conversations transcribed from the acclaime

  • - The Politics of Women's Rights in Morocco
    av Katja Zvan Elliott
    459

    This ethnographic study breaks the silence on women's rights and contemporary development in Morocco, where legal and educational advances are actually leaving some women behind, especially educated, single women.

  • - The New Essay of Spanish America, 1960-1985
    av Martin S. Stabb
    249

    How political, social, and aesthetic changes made their way into the essayistic writings of twenty-six Spanish American intellectuals.

  • av David M. Pritchard
    275,-

    Settling a debate that has been ongoing since classical times, this book calculates the real costs of religion, politics, and war to demonstrate what the Athenian citizenry valued most highly.

  • - A Memoir with Recipes
    av Ellen Sweets
    185

    In this delicious memoir, Molly Ivins's longtime friend and fellow cook Ellen Sweets offers an intimate, fascinating portrait of the private Molly behind the "professional Texan" through stories of the fabulous meals she prepared for friends and family, along with thirty-five recipes

  • - Classicism and Dissonance on the Plaza de Armas of Havana, 1754-1828
    av Paul Niell
    389

    This pathfinding interpretation of Havana's foundational site brings the first extensive and direct application of contemporary heritage studies to the analysis of colonial Latin American visual culture.

  • - Performance Art and Politics on the U.S. Frontera since 1984
    av Ila Nicole Sheren
    275,-

    In a first-of-its-kind exploration, Ila Sheren examines the contradictory effects of globalization on the U.S.-Mexico border, as witnessed and processed by contemporary artists.

  • - The Journey of Cabeza de Vaca across North America
    av Alex D. Krieger
    359

    In this book, Alex D. Krieger correlates the accounts in two primary sources with his own extensive knowledge of the geography, archaeology, and anthropology of southern Texas and northern Mexico to plot out stage by stage the most probable route of the 2

  • - Arab Nationalism and Liberal Education
    av Betty S. Anderson
    315,-

    This history of the American University of Beirut presents a rich 150-year process of conflict, cooperation, and growth that has balanced the goals of American liberal education with the quest for Arab national identity and empowerment

  • - Mexican Segregation in a South Texas Town
    av Jennifer R. Najera
    275,-

  • - Observations on a Patch of Land
    av John Graves
    295

    Now back in print-the second volume in the acclaimed Brazos Trilogy by John Graves, who is widely acknowledged as Texas's most beloved writer.

  • - The Texas State Police, 1870-1873
    av Barry A. Crouch
    475

    Drawing on a wealth of previously unused primary sources, this book offers the first full-scale assessment of the much-reviled Texas State Police and its role in maintaining law and order in Reconstruction Texas.

  • - Texas Women
    av editors of Texas Monthly
    239,-

    From the pages of Texas Monthly, a collection of articles by notable writers that celebrate the diversity and strength of Texas women.

  • - Sijilmasa and Its Saharan Destiny
    av Ronald A. Messier
    335

    Drawing on archaeological discoveries and historical accounts, this book tells the lively story of Morocco's legendary golden city and its pivotal role in medieval transcontinental trade, the spread of Islam, and the rise of several ruling dynasties.

  • av Judith E. Smith
    299,-

    This biography of the singer, actor, and fearless anti-racism activist is "e;so engaging that readers will crave a sequel"e; (Kirkus Reviews).A son of poor Jamaican immigrants who grew up in Depression-era Harlem, Harry Belafonte became the first black performer to gain artistic control over the representation of African Americans in commercial television and film. Forging connections with an astonishing array of consequential players on the American scene in the decades following World War II-from Paul Robeson to Ed Sullivan, John Kennedy to Stokely Carmichael-Belafonte established his place in American culture as a hugely popular singer, matinee idol, internationalist, and champion of civil rights, black pride, and black power.In Becoming Belafonte, Judith E. Smith presents the first full-length interpretive study of this multitalented artist. She sets Belafonte's compelling story within a history of American race relations, black theater and film history, McCarthy-era hysteria, and the challenges of introducing multifaceted black culture in a moment of expanding media possibilities and constrained political expression. Smith traces Belafonte's roots in the radical politics of the 1940s, his careful negotiation of the complex challenges of the Cold War 1950s, and his full flowering as a civil rights advocate and internationally acclaimed performer in the 1960s. In Smith's account, Belafonte emerges as a relentless activist, a questing intellectual, and a tireless organizer-and a performer who never shied away from the dangerous crossroads where art and politics meet.

  • - The Story of a Texas Panhandle Ranch
    av Dulcie Sullivan
    329

    This book is the story of W. M. D. Lee and Lucien B. Scott's LS Ranch, from the tempestuous years of the open range to the era of "bob wire."

  • - Sex and Religion on Screen
    av Daniel S. Cutrara
    445

    With close readings of films such as The Last Temptation of Christ, Crimes and Misdemeanors, and Closed Doors, this book investigates cinematic representations of transgressive sexuality within Christianity, Judaism, and Islam to argue that religious beli

  • av Lee Eldridge Huddleston
    275,-

    An examination of early European theories about the origin of American indigenous peoples.The American Indian-origin, culture, and language-engaged the best minds of Europe from 1492 to 1729. Were the Indians the result of a co-creation? Were they descended from the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel? Could they have emigrated from Carthage, Phoenicia, or Troy? All these and many other theories were proposed.How could scholars account for the multiplicity of languages among the Indians, the differences in levels of culture? And how did the Indian arrive in America-by using as a bridge a now-lost continent or, as was later suggested by some persons in the light of an expanding knowledge of geography, by using the Bering Strait as a migratory route?Most of the theories regarding the American Indian were first advanced in the sixteenth century. The two most influential men in an early-developing controversy over Indian origins were Joseph de Acosta and Gregorio Garcia. Approaching the subject with restraint and with a critical eye, Acosta, in 1590, suggested that the presence of diverse animals in America indicated a land connection with the Old World. On the other hand, Garcia accepted several theories as equally possible and presented each in the strongest possible light in his Origen de los indios of 1607.In this distinctive book Lee E. Huddleston looks carefully into those theories and proposals. From many research sources he weaves an historical account that engages the reader from the very first.

  • - Chronicles of Texas during the 80s and 90s
    av Gary Cartwright
    409

    This book collects seventeen of Cartwright's best Texas Monthly articles from the 1980s and 1990s, along with a new essay, "My Most Unforgettable Year," about the lasting legacy of the Kennedy assassination.

  • - Power and Identity on the Maya Periphery
    av Rosemary A. Joyce
    329

    The author combines archaeological data gleaned from site research in 1980-1983 with anthropological theory about the evolution of social power to reconstruct something of the culture and lifeways of the prehispanic inhabitants of Cerro Palenque.

  • - An Autobiography
    av Jose Clemente Orozco
    249

    The autobiography of one of Mexico's greatest artists.

  • - History and Aesthetics
    av Cynthia Tompkins
    335

    Applies Deleuzian theories of cinema in a comparative approach to examine multiple genres and works from the most important national cinematic traditions

  • - Sexuality, Gender, and the European Art Cinema
    av Daniel Humphrey
    292

    Foregrounding a fundamental aspect of the Swedish auteur's work that has been routinely ignored, as well as the vibrant connection between postwar American queer culture and European art cinema, this book offers a pioneering reading of Bergman's films as

  • - The Works of Ezequiel Martinez Estrada
    av Peter G. Earle
    399

    This book traces the development of the response to the human dilemma in the works of the Argentine writer Ezequiel Martinez Estrada,

Gör som tusentals andra bokälskare

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