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Böcker utgivna av University of Texas Press

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  • av Emilio Carballido
    399

    A collection of plays by one of the most innovative and accomplished of Mexico's playwrights and one of the outstanding creators in the new Latin American theater.

  • - Biotechnology, Agriculture, and the Struggle for Control
    av Gabriela Pechlaner
    349

    An eye-opening examination of four legal cases concerning genetically modified seeds in Saskatchewan and Mississippi, using the lens of political economy to make crucial connections between sociological repercussions and legal proceedings involving Monsan

  • - An Ethnographic Approach
    av Paolo Fortis
    293

    The first book to study woodcarving and its relation to shamanism among Kuna people from the San Blas Archipelago, providing a rich new lens for understanding the Kuna worldview.

  • - Race, Convergence, and the Hidden Histories of Song of the South
    av Jason Sperb
    322,99 - 609

  • - Male Desire in Hitchcock, De Palma, Scorsese, and Friedkin
    av David Greven
    335

    Examining the intertextual reverberations between canonical Hitchcock films and the New Hollywood of the 1970s, this revisionist reading challenges the received opinion of misogyny, racism, and homophobia presented in male desire featured in works by Hitc

  • - A Rockshelter in the Sierra Madre Oriental, Mexico
    av C. Roger Nance
    399

    This comprehensive site report, with detailed information on artifacts and stratigraphy, provides baseline archaeological data for one of the least understood regions of prehistoric North America, the state of Nuevo Leon in northern Mexico.

  • - Profiles, History, and Reminiscences of the University
     
    469

    An informal, highly readable history of the University of Texas at Austin told through the stories of some of its most colorful characters and era-defining events.

  • av Richard "Cactus" Pryor
    289

    This book gathers over forty of Texas humorist Cactus Pryor's favorite radio essays, translating "ear words into eye words," as he puts it.

  • - From Foraging to Farming
     
    509

    Leading U.S. and Mexican scholars investigate the groundbreaking transition from foraging to farming in the North American Southwest.

  • - Granado Cave
    av Donny L. Hamilton
    475

    This book provides detailed insights into the lifeways of the little-known prehistoric peoples who inhabited the Northeastern Trans-Pecos region.

  • - The Human Cost of Pesticides in Latin America
    av Douglas L. Murray
    249

    The author draws on ten years of field research to tell the stories of international development strategies, pesticide problems, and agrarian change in Latin America.

  • av William Andrew Fletcher
    249

    A line soldier's account of the Civil War without heroics.

  • - Foreign, Cult, Avant-Garde, and Beyond
    av David Andrews
    335

  • - Making and Exporting Arpilleras Under Pinochet
    av Jacqueline Adams
    349,-

  • - Recollections of a Latterday Cowboy
    av William Timmons
    299

    Recollections of eighteen years of range-riding in Texas and North Dakota.

  • - From Aztec Herbs to Betatrons
    av Gordon Schendel
    539

    The history of medicine and public health and welfare in Mexico through the mid-twentieth century.

  • - Social Change and Cultural Crisis
    av Ronald C. Newton
    399

    This study of the German community of early twentieth century Buenos Aires is a major contribution to the literature on Argentine history and on the New World immigrant experience.

  • - Elite Ambivalence and Public Demand
    av Peter McDonough
    329

    This book examines the attitudes toward population planning of Brazilian government officials and other elites-bishops, politicians, labor leaders, and business owners-in comparison with mass public opinion.

  • - A Panhandle Promotion, 1912-1956
    av B.R. Brunson
    399

    The history of the influential Texas Land and Development Company from its inception in 1912 to its final dissolution in January 1956.

  • - The Autobiography of Rufe LeFors
    av Rufe LeFors
    329

    LeFors's life story, set down near the end of his long and adventurous life, is the best sort of insider's history, the chronicle of a life lived fully amid the exciting events and rough landscape of the frontier's final years.

  • av Charles Greer
    249

    This work deals with the technological problems faced by the Chinese in taming the destructive river and also focuses on cultural attitudes that have governed the Chinese response to nature.

  • av Samuel Ramos
    399

    A twentieth-century Mexican philosopher considers the culture of his native land.

  • - Culture and Personality
    av R. Diaz-Guerrero
    329

    In his quest to understand and describe the behavior of the Mexican, the distinguished Mexican psychologist R. Diaz-Guerrero combines a strong theoretical interest in the relationship of culture to personality with a pragmatic concern for methodology.

  • - A Nation's Search for Identity
    av John S. Brushwood
    475

    A perceptive examination of the Mexican reality as revealed through the nation's novel.

  • - The Ecological Bases of Tradition in Highland Chiapas
    av George A. Collier
    295,-

    The first study of social processes in contemporary highland Maya communities to encompass a regional view of the highlands of Chiapas as a system.

  • - Their Psychological Dimensions, Correlates, and Antecedents
    av Janet T. Spence
    345

    The authors present research showing that masculinity and femininity do not relate negatively to each other, thus supporting a dualistic rather than a bipolar conception of these two psychological dimensions.

  • av Donald F. Schofield
    399

    Indian trader, rancher, harbor developer, oil impresario-these are the many worlds of one of the least chronicled but most fascinating characters of the American West. In the early, bustling years of the frontier, a brazen young man named William McDole Lee moved from Wisconsin to Kansas and then to Texas to forge a life for himself. Becoming a driving entrepreneurial force in Texas's development, Lee soon garnered the alliances and resources necessary to shape the financial destinies of disparate groups throughout the state. His story is expertly told in Donald F. Schofield's Indians, Cattle, Ships, and Oil. Beginning in 1869 as a trader to the southern Cheyenne and Arapaho tribes and fort provisioner to troops garrisoned at Camp Supply, Indian Territory, Lee gained a partner and amassed a fortune in short order from trading buffalo hides and robes. Vast herds of buffalo grazing on the southern plains were killed largely on his order. When buffalo were no longer a profitable commodity, Lee tackled his next challenge-the cattle trade. He began with herds branded LR that grazed on pastures near Fort Supply. Then came his LE herd in the Texas Panhandle. Another partnership, with noted cattle rancher Lucien Scott, resulted in the vast LS ranch, one of the most successful operations of its day. Lee even introduced a new breed of cattle, the Aberdeen-Angus, to the western range. But as his partnership faded, Lee moved on to his next undertaking-the development of Texas' first deep-water harbor. In 1888, Lee and other financiers put up one million dollars to finance a dream: opening international trade from the waters of the Gulf of Mexico to the mainland at the mouth of the Brazos River. Their Brazos River Channel and Dock Company was to construct, own, and operate a deep-water harbor at Velasco, with a railroad link to Houston. Though threats of financial disaster loomed large, the Velasco facility was to welcome, in its day, tugs, barges, and three-masted schooners and to provide impetus for Houston's boom. Yet with success, the mercurial Lee turned to yet another challenge-oil. Starting still another partnership, Lee committed himself to prospecting for oil on the West Columbia Ridge in Brazoria County. Lee and crew struck oil in 1907, developing one of the first producing wells of Brazoria County, but inadequate drilling equipment hampered further fruitful exploration. Lee moved his rigs to the famed Spindletop, where he perfected the technique of shallow drilling. Though spectacular success in the oil business eluded him, Lee's accomplishments set him squarely among the great entrepreneurs of the Texas oil industry. Lee's exploits led him to roles in some of the most dramatic moments in Texas and the West-Indian uprisings, buffalo hunts, political scandals, cowboy strikes and shoot-outs, railroad promotions, oil-well blow-outs and gushers. The people he encountered are the famous and infamous of western history: Cheyenne Chief Little Robe and the outlaw "e;Hurricane Bill"e; Martin; Indian Agent John D. Miles and Major General John Pope; outlaws Tom Harris and William Bonney, and Sheriff Pat Garrett. Altogether, Lee's biography vividly shows one man's manipulation of people and events during the settlement of the American frontier.

  • - A Study of Paradiso and Other Prose Works
    av Gustavo Pellon
    329

    This book, a much-needed critical study of Paradiso, Oppiano Licario, and Lezama's essays, is an exploration in reading, one that highlights and preserves the essential and persistent contradictions in Lezama's theory and practice of literature.

  • - Perlimplin, Yerma, Blood Wedding
    av Rupert C. Allen
    325,-

    An analysis of three of Lorca's plays, providing a new view of Lorca as a dramatist and presenting new material to students of symbology.

  • - A Novel: A Story of Indian Life and Priestly Oppression in Peru
    av Clorinda Matto de Turner
    329

    An English translation of the first major Spanish American novel to protest the plight of native peoples.

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