Marknadens största urval
Snabb leverans

Böcker utgivna av University Press of Mississippi

Filter
Filter
Sortera efterSortera Populära
  • - Black Masculinity and Women's Bodies
    av Ronda C. Henry Anthony
    635 - 1 945

    Using the slave narratives of Henry Bibb and Frederick Douglass, as well as the work of W.E.B. Du Bois, James Baldwin, Walter Mosley, and Barack Obama, Ronda C. Henry Anthony examines how women's bodies are used in African American literature to fund the production of black masculine ideality and power.

  • - Charles S. Johnson and the Struggle for Civil Rights
    av Richard Robbins
    445

    Presents the first full-length biography of Charles S. Johnson (1893-1956). Although he called himself a "sidelines activist", his advocacy for racial equality was never watered-down or half-hearted. His strategy was to work indirectly, sometimes behind the scenes, to influence public policy and to mobilize groups with special concerns, especially black sharecroppers.

  • - W. L. Clayton's Pen Pictures
    av W. L. Clayton
    579,-

    Olden times take on a nostalgic glow in these "pen pictures" of early days in Northeast Mississippi. The chivalry, the tall tales, the Indian lore, the social customs, and the local characters portrayed here provide intimate descriptions of how people lived in Lee and Itawamba counties during antebellum times and during Reconstruction.

  • - Jewett, Cather, Glasgow, Porter, Welty, and Naylor
    av Helen Fiddyment Levy
    599,-

  • - The Literary Career of John Edgar Wideman
    av James W. Coleman
    599,-

    Offers the first comprehensive study of John Edgar Wideman and his novels, and shows him to be a writer emerging as a major figure in black and American literature. It shows him too as a writer whose progress has been to move away from such modernist masters as Eliot, Faulkner, and Joyce into the rich world of black culture, while retaining modernist techniques.

  • - The House That Country Music Built
    av Nathan D. Gibson
    529 - 1 679,-

    This is the first book entirely dedicated to one of the most influential music labels of the twentieth century. Written with label president and cofounder Don Pierce (1915-2005), this book traces the label's origins in 1953 through the 1968 Starday-King merger. Interviews with artists and their families, employees, and Pierce contribute to the stories behind famous hit songs.

  • av Elizabeth Spencer
    459

    It is well known that New Orleans has its dark underside as well as its glowing visible delights. The journey that Julia Garrett, an intelligent, attractive, but psychically driven girl, makes through the city's hidden labyrinth shapes the movement of this riveting novel.

  • - Interviews
     
    1 359,-

    Four-time winner at the Cannes Film Festival, Canadian filmmaker Atom Egoyan began his career while still at the University of Toronto. The interviewscollected here reveal Egoyan's unique themes, and his individual, independent approach to filmmaking. He discusses his development as a director, his interest in opera and museum installations, and the expectations he has for his audience.

  • - Black Middle-Class Ideology and Culture, 1960-1990
    av Charles T. Banner-Haley
    415

    As a key force in the "Africanizing" of American culture, the black middle class has been both a shaper and a mirror during the past three decades. This study of that era shows that the fruits of integration have been at once sweet and bitter. This history of a pivotal group in American society will cause reflection, discussion, and debate.

  •  
    509

    As a cultural critic, biographer, essayist, and novelist, Albert Murray has had a wide-ranging and profound influence on American art in the decades since the Second World War. Yet this is the first book devoted to Murray himself. It brings together twenty interviews with Murray conducted over the last twenty-four years, concluding with a previously unpublished interview with the editor.

  • av Mattie Griffith
    599,-

    In the pages of this putative autobiography the author poses as a slave for the purpose of bringing attention to the injustice of slavery. The actual author Mattie Griffith, passing as a black, wanted her book to horrify and shame the nation. Pseudo-slave narratives like Griffith's appeared over the course of the abolitionist movement, and this is the only one now in print.

  • av David Frost
    599,-

  • - Smith, Glasgow, Welty, Hellman, Porter, and Hurston
    av Will Brantley
    599,-

    This study is an intertextual examination of selected self-writings by Lillian Smith, Ellen Glasgow, Eudora Welty, Lillian Hellman, Katherine Anne Porter, and Zora Neale Hurston. Here their memoirs are placed within a context of southern feminism and the more inclusive discourse of modern American liberalism.

  • av Leslie Caine Campbell
    445

  • - A Human Perspective
     
    599,-

  • av M. Heather Carver
    599,-

    Troubling Violence: A Performance Project follows the collaboration between performance studies professor M. Heather Carver and ethnographic folklorist Elaine J. Lawless. The book traces the creative development of a performance troupe in which women take the stage to narrate true, harrowing experiences of domestic violence and then invite audience members to discuss the tales. Similar to the performances, the book presents real-life narratives as a means of heightening social awareness and dialogue about intimate partner violence. "e;Troubling violence"e; refers not only to the cultures in our society that are "e;troubling,"e; but also to the authors' intent to "e;trouble"e; perceptions that enforce social, cultural, legal, and religious attitudes that perpetuate abuse against women. Performance, this book argues, enhances ethnographic research and writing by allowing ethnographers to approach both their field studies and their ethnographic writing as performance. The book also demonstrates how ethnography enhances the study of performance. The authors discuss the development of the Troubling Violence Performance Project in conjunction with their own "e;performances"e; within the academy.

  •  
    599,-

    Larry Brown is noted for his subjects - rural life, poverty, war, and the working class - and his spare, gritty style. Larry Brown and the Blue-Collar South considers the writer's full body of work, placing it in the contexts of southern literature, Mississippi writing, and literary work about the working class.

  • - Images of Black Men in Popular Culture
    av Linda G. Tucker
    599,-

    Examines popular culture's reliance on long-standing stereotypes of black men as animalistic, hypersexual, dangerous criminals, whose bodies, dress, actions, attitudes, and language both repel and attract white audiences.

  • - African-American Blues and Gospel Songs on JFK
    av Guido van Rijn
    599,-

  • - SDS and Why it Failed
    av David Barber
    565

    By the spring of 1969, Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) had reached its zenith as the largest, most radical movement of white youth in American history-a genuine New Left. Yet less than a year later, SDS splintered into warring factions and ceased to exist. A Hard Rain Fell: SDS and Why It Failed traces these activists in their relation to other movements.

  • - Victorian Era to Jazz Age
    av Jeffrey J. Noonan
    599,-

    Offers a history of the instrument from America's late Victorian period to the Jazz Age. The narrative traces America's BMG (banjo, mandolin, and guitar) community, a late nineteenth-century musical and commercial movement dedicated to introducing these instruments into America's elite musical establishments.

  • av Noel Polk
    465

    Collects Noel Polk's essays from the late-1970s to 2005. Featuring an introduction that places Faulkner and Welty at the centre of the South's literary heritage, the volume asks useful, probing questions about southern literature and provides insightful analysis.

  • - The Black Panther Party in Communities across America
     
    1 679,-

    Examines local Black Panther activities throughout the US. These essays shed new light on the Black Panther Party, re-evaluating its legacy in American cultural and political history. Just as important, this volume gives voice to those unsung Panthers whose valiant efforts have heretofore gone unnoticed, unheard, or ignored.

  • - Colonial and Postcolonial Folkloristics
    av Sadhana Naithani
    609 - 1 899

    Examines folklore collections compiled by British colonial administrators, military men, missionaries, and women in the British colonies of Africa, Asia, and Australia between 1860 and 1950. Naithani analyzes the role of folklore scholarship in the construction of colonial cultural politics as well as in the conception of international folklore studies.

Gör som tusentals andra bokälskare

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