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  • - Stories of Belfast and Beyond
    av Ruth C. Schwertfeger
    265,-

    With eccentric characters (including her father, ""The Wee Wild One"") and rich stories, Schwertfeger has painted a fresh picture of Northern Ireland as she lived it and as it remains today as a touchstone for all who have roots in this storied country.

  • - Essays on the Life and Work of Christopher Isherwood
    av Chris Freeman & James J. Berg
    299,-

    Best known for The Berlin Stories - the inspiration for the film Cabaret - Christopher Isherwood has always been considered both a literary and a gay pioneer. This collection contains 25 essays and interviews that offer a fresh, in-depth view of Isherwood and his legacy.

  • - The Holocaust and the Swiss Banks
    av Jane Schapiro
    329,-

  • - Conflicted Art of Cynthia Ozick
    av Victor Strandberg
    625,-

    This study of the author Cynthia Ozick, correlates her creative art and her intellectual development. It focuses on her struggle to maintain her Jewish religion and culture within a society saturated with Christian and secular values, and examines the effect of Western literary traditions on her.

  • av Brunilde Sismondo Ridgway
    329,-

    This text questions the Hellenistic dating of many famous monuements, based on careful examination of the evidence.

  • - Ethnographic Explorations Through Proverbial Wisdom and Theater in Shaba, Zaire
    av Johannes Fabian
    329,-

    An examination of traditional proverbs about power. The book presents rehearsal and performance versions of a play which emerged from the author's attempts to track down the meaning of a phrase - ""power is eaten whole"" - which he encountered when he was engaged in fieldwork in Shaha, Zaire.

  • av Judi Kesselman-Turkel
    149,-

    "Secrets to Writing Great Papers" illustrates how to work with ideas--develop them, hone them, and transform them into words. It provides techniques and exercises for brainstorming, choosing the right approach, working with an unknown or boring assigned topic, overcoming writer's block, and selecting the best point of view.

  • - The Angler's Guide
    av Steven Born
    329,-

    Drawing on years of conservation and angling experience, Steve Born and Jeff Mayers tell you about great fishing opportunities unique to Wisconsin-1,000 miles of spring creeks, the amazing nocturnal Hex hatch, and big salmonids in the Great Lakes tributaries. This new edition includes updates throughout, new photos, and a new chapter detailing improvements in fishing opportunities.

  • av Patricia Skalka
    249 - 355,-

    Six deaths mar the holiday mood as summer vacationers enjoy Wisconsin's beautiful Door County peninsula. Murders, or bizarre accidents? Newly hired park ranger Dave Cubiak, a former Chicago homicide detective, assumes the worst but refuses to get involved. Grief-stricken and guilt-ridden over the loss of his wife and daughter, he's had enough of death.

  • - A Nora Barnes and Toby Sandler Mystery
    av Betsy Draine & Michael Hinden
    265 - 355,-

    Angels, death, religion, and Russians along the Northern California coast challenge our smart and artful sleuthing couple in this captivating follow-up to Murder in Lascaux, the debut novel in the Nora Barnes and Toby Sandler mystery series.

  • - The Restless Journey and Tragic Sinking of a Tall Ship
    av Pamela Sisman Bitterman
    329,-

    The tall ship Sofia sank off New Zealand's North Island in February 1982, stranding its crew on disabled life rafts for five days. Just a few years earlier, Pamela Sisman Bitterman was a naïve swabbie looking for adventure, signing on with a sailing co-operative taking a sixty-year-old, three-masted gaff-topsail schooner around the globe. By the time Sofia went down, Bitterman had become an able seaman, immersing herself in this life of a tall ship sailor, world traveler, and survivor.

  • - American Historians and the Concept of US Imperialism
    av James G. Morgan
    449,-

  • - A Memoir
    av Jesse Lee Kercheval
    329,-

    Jesse Lee Kercheval opens her story in Cocoa, Florida, in 1966 as a precocious ten-year-old whose family-father, mother, two little girls-is trying to ride the Space Race's tide of optimism. But even as the rockets keep going up, the Kercheval family slowly spirals down.

  • - Culture, History, Context
     
    379,-

    Illuminates the significant role of Russian Orthodox thought in shaping the discourse of educated society during the imperial and early Soviet periods. Bringing together an array of scholars, this book demonstrates that Orthodox reflections on spiritual, philosophical, and aesthetic issues of the day informed much of Russia's intellectual and cultural climate.

  • - A History of Cooperative Conservation on the Leopold Memorial Reserve
    av Stephen A. Laubach
    275,-

    In 1935, in the midst of relentless drought, Aldo Leopold purchased an abandoned farm along the Wisconsin River near Baraboo, Wisconsin. An old chicken coop, later to become famous as the Leopold "Shack," was the property''s only intact structure. The Leopold family embraced this spent farm as a new kind of laboratory-a place to experiment on restoring health to an ailing piece of land. Here, Leopold found inspiration for writing A Sand County Almanac, his influential book of essays on conservation and ethics.Living a Land Ethic chronicles the formation of the 1,600-acre reserve surrounding the Shack. When the Leopold Memorial Reserve was founded in 1967, five neighboring families signed an innovative agreement to jointly care for their properties in ways that honored Aldo Leopold''s legacy. In the ensuing years, the Reserve''s Coleman and Leopold families formed the Sand County Foundation and the Aldo Leopold Foundation. These organizations have been the primary stewards of the Reserve, carrying on a tradition of ecological restoration and cooperative conservation. Author Stephen A. Laubach draws from the archives of both foundations, including articles of incorporation, correspondence, photos, managers'' notes, and interviews to share with readers the Reserve''s untold history and its important place in the American conservation movement.

  • - German Music and Philosophy
     
    515,-

    Traces the political, historical, and philosophical trajectories of a specifically German tradition in which thinkers take recourse to music, both as an aesthetic practice and as the object of their speculative work. This volume examines the texts of such influential writers and thinkers as Schelling, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, Bloch, and others.

  • - Holocaust History and Postwar Testimony
    av Christopher R. Browning
    259,-

    Addresses some of the most heated controversies surrounding the use of postwar testimony: Christopher Browning delineates the ways in which the critical use of problematic sources can provide telling evidence for writing Holocaust history.

  • av John Phillip Reid
    329,-

    This work addresses the central constitutional issues that divided the American colonists from their English legislators: the authority to tax, the authority to legislate, the security of rights, the nature of law, and the foundation of constitutional government in custom and contractarian theory.

  • av Benjamin E. Stevens
    449,-

    Both passionate and artful, learned and bawdy, Catullus is one of the best-known and critically significant poets from classical antiquity. An intriguing aspect of his poetry that has been neglected by scholars is his interest in silence, from the pauses that shape everyday conversation to linguistic taboos and cultural suppressions and the absolute silence of death. In Silence in Catullus, Benjamin Eldon Stevens offers fresh readings of this Roman poet's most important works, focusing on his purposeful evocations of silence. This deep and varied "poetics of silence" takes on many forms in Catullus's poetic corpus: underscoring the lyricism of his poetry; highlighting themes of desire, immortality-in-culture, and decay; accenting its structures and rhythms; and, Stevens suggests, even articulating underlying philosophies. Combining classical philological methods, contemporary approaches to silence in modern literature, and the most recent Catullan scholarship, this imaginative examination of Catullus offers a new interpretation of one of the ancient world's most influential and inimitable voices.

  • - A Memoir
    av George L. Mosse
    275,-

    Just two weeks before his death in January 1999, George L. Mosse, one of the great American historians, finished writing his memoir, a fascinating account of a remarkable life that spanned three continents and many of the major events of the twentieth century. Confronting History is guided in part by his belief that "what man is, only history tells” and, most of all, by the importance of finding one's self through the pursuit of truth and through an honest and unflinching analysis of one's place in the context of the times.

  • - Love and Politics in Progressive America
    av Bernard A. Weisberger
    339,-

  • - Gender, Nation, and Women's Activism in Postwar Bosnia-Herzegovina
    av Elissa Helms
    345,-

    The 1992-95 war in Bosnia-Herzegovina following the dissolution of socialist Yugoslavia became notorious for "ethnic cleansing" and mass rapes targeting the Bosniac (Bosnian Muslim) population. Postwar social and political processes have continued to be dominated by competing nationalisms representing Bosniacs, Serbs, and Croats, as well as those supporting a multiethnic Bosnian state, in which narratives of victimhood take center stage, often in gendered form. Elissa Helms shows that in the aftermath of the war, initiatives by and for Bosnian women perpetuated and complicated dominant images of women as victims and peacemakers in a conflict and political system led by men. In a sober corrective to such accounts, she offers a critical look at the politics of women's activism and gendered nationalism in a postwar and postsocialist society. Drawing on ethnographic research spanning fifteen years, Innocence and Victimhood demonstrates how women's activists and NGOs responded to, challenged, and often reinforced essentialist images in affirmative ways, utilizing the moral purity associated with the position of victimhood to bolster social claims, shape political visions, pursue foreign funding, and wage campaigns for postwar justice. Deeply sensitive to the suffering at the heart of Bosnian women's (and men's) wartime experiences, this book also reveals the limitations to strategies that emphasize innocence and victimhood.

  • av Rick Dodgson
    355,-

  • - A Tiny Colt's Fight for Life
    av Jeffrey L. Tucker
    259,-

    One bitterly cold winter afternoon, a nine-month-old colt-extremely weak, starving, left to die-was frozen to the rock-hard white landscape of a northern Wisconsin pasture. His whinny for help barely carried through thirty-mile-an-hour winds lashing snow and ice against his thin coat. But somewhere inside him a light refused to go out.

  • av Isidor Sadger
    275,-

    This eyewitness account by one of Sigmund Freud's earliest students has been rediscovered for twenty-first-century readers. Isidor Sadger's recollections provide a unique window into the early days of the psychoanalytic movement and also illuminate Freud's own struggles: his delight in wit, his attitudes toward Judaism, and his strong opinions concerning lay, non-medical psychoanalysts

  • av Pat Getz-Gentle
    449,-

    Personal Styles in Early Cycladic Sculpture represents the culmination of some thirty-five years of study. Pat Getz-Gentle offers here much new material and many fresh insights into a tradition, rooted in the Neolithic period, that spanned most of the third millennium B.C. She begins with a review of this tradition, placing particular emphasis on the stages leading to the reclining figure with folded arms that is the unique and quintessential icon of the early Bronze age culture at the center of the Aegean. She then focuses on the styles of fifteen carvers, several of whom are identified and discussed here for the first time. By introducing little-known pieces attributable to these sculptors, she illuminates various phases of their artistic development. With a strong aesthetic sense and a practiced approach grounded in keen observation, Getz-Gentle provides clear and detailed discussions illustrated by photos and drawings of 212 different works. Complementing her observations is a chapter by art historian Jack de Vries, who offers the first published summary of his study of Cycladic images and tests the validity of Getz-Gentle's view that, in designing their works, Cycladic sculptors took deliberate measures involving the use of proportional formulae.

  • - Constructing the Self Online
     
    449,-

  • - Contract Farming and Agrarian Transformation in Sub-Saharan Africa
     
    355,-

    This study examines agricultural restructuring and its effect upon various African societies. It documents how contract production links farmers, agribusiness and the state; and reveals that contract farming represents a distinctive form in which African growers join in national and world markets.

  • av James Steffen
    379,-

    "In the temple of cinema, there are images, light, and reality. Sergei Parajanov was the master of that temple."--Jean-Luc Godard

  • - The Crime Fiction of Arthur W. Upfield
    av Browne
    289,-

    In the world of crime fiction, Arthur W. Upfield stands among the giants. His detective-inspector Napoleon Bonaparte, is one of the most memorable of all crime fighters. Upfield was an independent, fiercely self-assertive ex-Britisher, who loved Australia, especially the Outback. In many ways Upfield became Outback Australia--the "Spirit of Australia."

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