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  •  
    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.

  • av W. E. B. Du Bois
    605

    The problem of "the color line", W.E.B. Du Bois's ever-present polemical theme, is at the core of this novel of sensual love, radical politics, and the quest for racial justice. Originally published in 1928, Dark Princess was one of two novels written by Du Bois. Toward the end of his life he ranked it as his favourite of all his works.

  • av Willie Morris
    475

    At the time of Marcus Dupree's birth, Willie Morris journeyed north in a circular transit peculiar to southern writers. His memoir of those years, North Toward Home, became a modern classic. In The Courting of Marcus Dupree he turned again home to Mississippi to write about the small town of Philadelphia and its favourite son, a black high-school quarterback.

  •  
    809,-

    Reevaluates Charles Chesnutt's deft manipulation of the "passing" theme to expand understanding of the author's fiction and nonfiction. Nine contributors apply a variety of theories to add richness to readings of Chesnutt's works. Together the essays provide convincing evidence that "passing" is an intricate, essential part of Chesnutt's writing, and that it appears in all the genres he wielded.

  • - Interviews
     
    1 739

  • - Soul of Brazilian Music
    av Eric A. Galm
    599 - 1 679,-

    The Brazilian berimbau, a musical bow, is most commonly associated with the energetic martial art/dance/game of capoeira. This study explores the berimbau's stature from the 1950s to the present in diverse musical genres including bossa nova, samba-reggae, MPB, electronic dance music, Brazilian art music, and more.

  • av Margo V. Perkins
    599,-

    Angela Davis, Assata Shakur (a.k.a. JoAnne Chesimard), and Elaine Brown are the only women activists of the Black Power movement who have published book-length autobiographies. In bearing witness to that era, these militant newsmakers wrote in part to educate and to mobilize their anticipated readers. In this way, Davis's Angela Davis: An Autobiography (1974), Shakur's Assata (1987), and Brown's A Taste of Power: A Black Woman's Story (1992) can all be read as extensions of the writers' political activism during the 1960s. Margo V. Perkins's critical analysis of their books is less a history of the movement (or of women's involvement in it) than an exploration of the politics of storytelling for activists who choose to write their lives. Perkins examines how activists use autobiography to connect their lives to those of other activists across historical periods, to emphasize the link between the personal and the political, and to construct an alternative history that challenges dominant or conventional ways of knowing. The histories constructed by these three women call attention to the experiences of women in revolutionary struggle, particularly to the ways their experiences have differed from men's. The women's stories are told from different perspectives and provide different insights into a movement that has been much studied from the masculine perspective. At times they fill in, complement, challenge, or converse with the stories told by their male counterparts, and in doing so, hint at how the present and future can be made less catastrophic because of women's involvement. The multiple complexities of the Black Power movement become evident in reading these women's narratives against each other as well as against the sometimes strikingly different accounts of their male counterparts. As Davis, Shakur, and Brown recount events in their lives, they dispute mainstream assumptions about race, class, and gender and reveal how the Black Power struggle profoundly shaped their respective identities.

  • - Interviews
    av Dan Fainaru
    419

    Deeply rooted in the soil and culture of his native Greece, in its history, and in its contemporary political upheavals, Theo Angelopoulos has chosen to make all his films, without exception, at home. This collection of interviews follows his career from his innovative debut in 1971 to his triumph at the Cannes Film Festival in 1998.

  • - Interviews
     
    419

    The interviews collected here range over the nearly three decades of Clint Eastwood's directorial career. Their emphasis is on practical filmmaking issues and on his philosophy of filmmaking. Nearly half are from British and European sources.

  • - His Final, Great Speech
    av Keith D. Miller
    599 - 1 679,-

    Even though King cited and explicated the Bible in hundreds of speeches and sermons, Martin Luther King's Biblical Epic is the first book to analyze his approach to the Bible and its importance to his rhetoric and persuasiveness. It argues that King challenged dominant Christian supersessionist conceptions of Judaism in favour of a Christianity that affirms Judaism as its wellspring.

  •  
    1 085

    This volume of folktales from the Far North of European Russia features seventeen works by five narrators of the Russian tale, all recorded in the twentieth century. The tales, distinguished by their extraordinary length and by the manner in which they were commonly told, appear to have flourished only in the twentieth century and only in Russian Karelia.

  •  
    599,-

    Photographs, lumber, airplanes, hand-hewn coffins - in every William Faulkner novel and short story worldly material abounds. The essays in Faulkner and Material Culture provide a fresh understanding of the things Faulkner brought from the world around him to the one he created.

  • - Rhetoric and Reinvention on the Gulf Coast
     
    519

    Essays in this volume examine the ways in which a wide variety of stakeholders - community activists, elected officials, artists, and policy administrators - describe, quantify, and understand the unique assets of the region. Contributors question the process of cultural planning by analysing the language employed in decision making.

  • - Interviews from the Southern Quarterly
     
    599,-

    A collection of 20 interviews with famous southern writers, this volume will mark the 50th anniversary of The Southern Quarterly, one of the oldest scholarly journals dedicated to southern studies. The figures interviewed range from Erskine Caldwell, Eudora Welty and Tennessee Williams, to a virtual Who's-Who of southern literature in the second half of the twentieth century.

  • - Interviews from the Southern Quarterly
     
    1 719,-

    A collection of 20 interviews with famous southern writers, this volume will mark the 50th anniversary of The Southern Quarterly, one of the oldest scholarly journals dedicated to southern studies. The figures interviewed range from Erskine Caldwell, Eudora Welty and Tennessee Williams, to a virtual Who's-Who of southern literature in the second half of the twentieth century.

  • av Rychetta Watkins
    599 - 1 679,-

    The "guerilla" figure - taking the form of the black-leather-clad revolutionary within the Black Panther Party - has become an iconic trope in American popular culture. In this title, Rychetta Watkins uses the guerilla figure as a point of departure and shows how the trope's rhetoric animates discourses of representation and identity in African American and Asian American literature and culture.

  • - Interviews
     
    1 739

    Hal Ashby (1929-1988) is considered to be the lost genius of the New Hollywood generation. While his name does not bear the familiarity of, say, Robert Altman or Martin Scorsese, his diverse films are among the best known and most beloved of the era. Hal Ashby: Interviews for the first time brings together the best interviews conducted over the course of Ashby's career.

  • - Interviews
     
    495

    Lars von Trier is the most intriguing film director to emerge in Denmark since the days of his great mentor in spirit Carl Theodor Dreyer. The conversations in this collection trace his development from image-obsessed formalist to control-shunning game master. Most of these interviews are translated into English for the first time.

  • - King of the Hollow
    av Ann R. Hammons
    439,-

  • - Gilroy, Garlic, and the Making of a Festive Foodscape
    av Pauline Adema
    549

    According to Pauline Adema, you smell Gilroy, California, before you see it. In Garlic Capital of the World, she examines the role of food and festivals in creating a place brand or marketable identity. The author scrutinizes how Gilroy successfully transformed a negative association with the pungent bulb into a highly successful tourism and marketing campaign.

  •  
    599,-

    Explores the role that war played in the life and work of a writer whose career seems forever poised against a backdrop of wars going on or recently ended or in the volatile years between. These essays give illumination to Faulkner's close analysis of war and its consequences as they appear in his work.

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