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  • - Essays on Queer History, Politics, and Community Life
    av John D'Emilio
    355,-

    These timely essays reflect upon the social, cultural, and political changes in twenty-first century America brought about by LGBT activism.

  • - The Trans-Atlantic Experience of a Swedish Immigrant Settlement in the Upper Middle West, 1835-1915
    av Robert C. Ostergren
    339,-

    The book follows the people from the Swedish farming community of Rattvik to Isanti County, Minnesota and explores the link of people and places between Sweden and America.

  • av Kagel
    249

    Travel gets us from one place to another--often with wonderful attendant enjoyment-but exploration makes us understand our travel, the places we travel to--and ourselves. The essays in this collection constitute a major step toward this understanding. They open up new areas for concern and draw many valuable insights and conclusions.

  • av John G. Motoviloff
    329,-

    This teacher''s guide to the intermediate anthology and workbook suggests a variety of classroom communicative activities for both pairs and small groups.

  • - An Autobiography
    av Theodore Bikel
    345,-

  • - The United States, the Philippines, and the Rise of the Surveillance State
    av Alfred W. Mccoy
    519

    At the dawn of the 20th century, the US Army swiftly occupied Manila and then plunged into a decade-long pacification campaign with striking parallels to war in Iraq. This book shows how this imperial panopticon slowly crushed the Filipino revolutionary movement with a lethal mix of firepower, surveillance, and incriminating information.

  • - Universality and Its Discontents
     
    299,-

    By identifying and embracing the paradox that human rights are at once a transcendent value belonging to all and a reality forged by particular people rooted in specific places, The Human Rights Paradox advances a new way to understand the history, contemporary politics, advocacy, and future prospects of human rights.

  • - Pastor Pierre-Charles Toureille in Vichy France
    av Tela Zasloff
    339,-

    In telling Pierre-Charles Toureille's story, Tela Zasloff describes the wide-ranging network of Protestant pastors and lay people in southern French villages who participated in an aggressive rescue effort. She delves into their motivations, including their Huguenot heritage as members of a religious minority.

  • - Christian Nationalism and U.S. Expansion in the Spanish-American War
    av Matthew McCullough
    379,-

  • - Essays in Biological Anthropology
     
    329,-

    Explores issues relating to the history of physical or biological anthropology - the application of the concept of ""race"" to humankind, the comparison of animal minds to those of humans, the evolution of humans from primate forms, and the relationship between science and racial ideology.

  • - Reckoning with Dictatorship in Brazil
    av Rebecca J. Atencio
    339,-

    The first book to trace Brazil's reckoning with dictatorship through the collision of politics and cultural production.

  • - The Civil War Narrative of Loreta Janeta Velazquez, Cuban Woman and Confederate Soldier
     
    519

    A Cuban woman who moved to New Orleans in the 1850s, Velazquez fought in the Civil War as the cross-dressing Harry T. Buford. She organized an Arkansas regiment, participated in historic battles and romanced men and women, but the authenticity of her account has often been questioned.

  • av Mary Wigman
    379,-

    Documents the lives of two remarkable women artists who were at the center of 20th century dance modernism. Written between 1920 and 1971, Wigman's letters to Hanya Holm are a treasury of fascinating detail about artistry, friendships of women, and the stamina of two artists who refused to capitulate to personal, political, and cultural forces.

  • - An Off-Kilter Memoir
    av Floyd Skloot
    355,-

    One March morning, writer Floyd Skloot was inexplicably struck by an attack of unrelenting vertigo that ended 138 days later as suddenly as it had begun. With body and world askew, everything familiar had transformed. Nothing was ever still. Revertigo is Skloot's account of that unceasingly vertiginous period, told in an inspired and appropriately off-kilter form.

  • - Stories
    av Kelly Cherry
    355,-

  • - Silence, Memory, and the Photographic Record in Cambodia
    av Michelle Caswell
    505

    A series of photographic mug shots taken by the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia are agents in an ongoing drama of unimaginable human suffering.

  • - A Personal and Political Biography
    av Jesús Palacios & Stanley G. Payne
    395 - 569

    The first comprehensive scholarly biography of Franco in English, presenting an objective and deeply researched account of the Spanish dictator's personal, professional, and political life.

  • - Gender, Sexuality, and Political Agency in Irish National Discourse
    av Kathryn Conrad
    569,-

    An analysis of gender, sexuality, nationalism, the public and private spheres, and the relationship between these categories of analysis and action. Kathryn Conrad exposes the assumptions and effects of national discourses in Ireland and their reliance on a limited and limiting vision of the family: the heterosexual family cell.

  • av Hugo Wolf
    329,-

    This volume tells of a relationship between Hugo Wolf, one of the greatest masters of the German art song, and Melanie Kochert, the wife of a prominent Viennese jeweller with whom Wolf shared a lifelong emotional, spiritual, and artistic bond.

  • - Ethnic Politics in Brazil
    av Alcida Rita Ramos
    299 - 329,-

    Indigenous people comprise only 0.2 per cent of Brazil's population, yet occupy a prominent role in the nation's consciousness. In this text, Ramos explains this irony, exploring Indian and non-Indian attitudes about interethnic relations.

  • av Timothy J. White
    339,-

    Northern Ireland's peace process has been deemed largely successful. Yet remarkably little has been done to assess in a comprehensive fashion what can be learned from it. Lessons from the Northern Ireland Peace Process incorporates recent research that emphasises the need for civil society and a grassroots approach to peacebuilding while taking into account a variety of perspectives, including neoconservatism and revolutionary analysis.

  • av C.Barre Hellquist, Garrett E. Crow & Norman C. Fassett
    555,-

    A comprehensive manual and illustrated guide to native and naturalized vascular plants - ferns, conifers, and flowering plants - growing in aquatic and wetland habitats in northeastern North America. This work expands Norman Fassett's 1940 classic ""A Manual of Aquatic Plants"", yet retains the features that made Fassett's book so useful.

  • av Frederick Cooper (Professor of History USA)
    329,-

    Argues that confrontation with major paradigms of world history has marked African and Latin American history during the last quarter-century and that the process has dramatically restructured historical and theoretical understanding of peasantries, labour and the capitalist world system.

  • - The Eastern Question Reconsidered
     
    449,-

    During the nineteenth century European and Russian diplomats debated the "Eastern Question", or, "What should be done about the Ottoman Empire?" Russian-Ottoman Borderlands brings together an international group of scholars to show that the Eastern Question was not just one but many questions that varied tremendously from one historical actor and moment to the next.

  • av Michael Carroll
    355,-

  • - The Conditions of Writing and Reading in Early Modern England
    av Annabel Patterson
    329,-

    Explores the effects of censorship on writing and reading in early modern England, drawing analogies with France, to produce an original account of the relationship between art and politics, and of the interpretive and communicative systems we call ""culture"".

  • - Prostitutes in American Fiction, 1885-1917
    av Laura Hapke
    249 - 515,-

    One group of male authors created fiction about the prostitute. The author examines how they attempted to turn an outcast into a heroine in a literature otherwise known for its puritanical attitude toward fallen women. She re-evaluates Stephen Crane's ""Maggie: A Girl of the Streets"", and other works of fiction. She draws on many period sources.

  • - From the Balkans to the American Midwest
    av Richard March
    449,-

    The Tamburitza Tradition is a lively and well-illustrated comprehensive introduction to a Balkan folk music that now also thrives in communities throughout Europe, the Americas, and Australia. Tamburitza features acoustic stringed instruments, ranging in size from tamburas as small as a ukulele to ones as large as a bass viol. Folklorist Richard March documents the centuries-old origins and development of the tradition, including its intertwining with nationalist and ethnic symbolism. The music survived the complex politics of nineteenth-century Europe but remains a point of contention today. In Croatia, tamburitza is strongly associated with national identity and supported by an artistic and educational infrastructure. Serbia is proud of its outstanding performers and composers who have influenced tamburitza bands on four continents. In the United States, tamburitza was brought by Balkan immigrants in the nineteenth century and has become a flourishing American ethnic music with its own set of representational politics. Combining historical research with in-depth interviews and extensive participant-observer description, The Tamburitza Tradition reveals a dynamic and expressive music tradition on both sides of the Atlantic and beyond, illuminating the cultures and societies from which it has emerged.

  • - State-Sponsored Science and the Failure of the Enlightenment in Indonesia
    av Andrew Goss
    339,-

    Situated along the line that divides the rich ecologies of Asia and Australia, the Indonesian archipelago is a hotbed for scientific exploration. But why do the names of Indonesia's own scientists rarely appear in the annals of scientific history? Andrew Goss examines the professional lives of Indonesian naturalists and biologists, to show what happens to science when a powerful state becomes its greatest, and indeed only, patron.

  • av Douglas A. Martin
    259,-

    Follows a young man's quest for identity through love and desire. This book tells tales of the unexpected emotional encounters of a young-man-on-the-make, who always pushes toward a bigger shiver of passion and learns how to adapt his persona to suit his lovers' needs, embracing his experience and his self, by becoming the purest object of desire.

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