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  • - Selected Writings of Ding Ling
    av Ding Ling
    397

  • av Elizabeth V. Spelman
    367

  • av Catherine Keller
    407

  • av Pamela C. Berger
    351

  • - Performing between Cultures
    av Alina Troyano
    347

    Alina Troyano's one-woman shows, plays, and essays have astonished audiences and readers with their creativity, humor, and crackling political energy. I, Carmelita Tropicana offers the first comprehensive collection of her work, from "Memorias de la Revolución" (with Uzi Parnes) to "Your Kunst is Your Waffen" (with Ela Troyano).

  • av Cynthia Eller
    421

  • av Carol S. Robb
    307

  • av Ellen Zetzel Lambert
    321

  • av Kurt Brown
    297

  • av Scott Russell Sanders
    331

    This award-winning collection moves from the dark and technically astonishing title essayon growing up within the confines of a huge Army arsenal in Ohioto reflections on mountain hikes, limestone quarries, and fathers teaching their sons.

  • - Scenes from the Journey Home
    av Scott Russell Sanders
    331

  • - Teachers and Practitioners on How Yoga Enriches, Surprises, and Heals Us: Personal Stories
    av Valerie Jeremijenko
    327

    How We Live Our Yoga collects fourteen frank, moving, and thoughtful personal essays by passionate yoga practitioners on why they began to practice, what it has brought to their lives, how their relationship to yoga changes and evolves, and more. Judith Lasater looks at the unexpected relationship between yoga and parenting. Award-winning poet Stanley Plumly ponders the connection between his Quaker upbringing, his writing, and his yoga practice. The well-known Sanskritist Vyaas Houston tells the story of his first guru and their difficult relationship. And philosopher and conceptual artist Adrian Piper comes out as a yogic celibate.

  • av Scott Russell Sanders
    331

  • av Louise Desalvo
    281

  • av Dewitt Henry
    387

    A landmark collection of original essays that fills the void of writing by men about their daughters. Contributors include Phillip Lopate, Rick Bass, Gerald Early, Gary Soto, Scott Sanders, Nicholas Delbanco, and Alan Cheuse.

  • av Christian McEwen
    457

  • av Amy Bloom
    321

    This book is for the once, never, and much married. For believers and skeptics, love's fools and love's thieves. It is for people with long memories and long histories and for people who reinvent themselves in every new town, new decade, new relationship. This book is for everyone whose heart lies where it should, where it shouldn't, and, in the end, where it must. -Amy Bloom, from the ForewordIn these intensely personal essays, contemporary writers probe their experiences in and thoughts about one of our most enduring social and cultural institutions. Husbands and wives celebrate marriages that work, mourn those that don't, and write frankly about adultery. Includes essays by Mark Doty, Gerald Early, Barbara Ehrenreich, Cynthia Heimel, Vivian Gornick, Phillip Lopate, Nancy Mairs, and David Mamet.

  • av Kurt Brown
    307

  • av Barry Sanders
    481

  • av Nancy Mairs
    321

  • - The Parting of the Way
    av Holmes H. Welch
    337

  • av Vasisi Klyuchevsky
    421

  • av Matthew Restall
    391

  • av Richard Hofstadter
    457

    Social Darwinism in American Thought portrays the overall influence of Darwin on American social theory and the notable battle waged among thinkers over the implications of evolutionary theory for social thought and political action. Theorists such as Herbert Spencer and William Graham Sumner adopted the idea of the struggle for existence as justification for the evils as well as the benefits of laissez-faire modern industrial society. Others such as William James and John Dewey argued that human planning was needed to direct social development and improve upon the natural order. Hofstadter's classic study of the ramifications of Darwinism is a major analysis of the social philosophies that animated intellectual movements of the Gilded Age and the Progressive Era.

  • av D. Michael Shafer
    391

  • av Marilynn S. Johnson
    457

  • av Stephen Kendrick
    467

    In 1847, a five-year-old African American girl named Sarah Roberts was forced to walk past five white schools to attend the poor and densely crowded all-black Abiel Smith School on Boston's Beacon Hill. Incensed that his daughter had been turned away at each white school, her father, Benjamin, sued the city of Boston on her behalf. The historic case that followed set the stage for over a century of struggle, culminating in 1954 with the unanimous decision in Brown v. Board of Education.

  • av Vijay Prashad
    391

  • av Pat Willard
    367

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