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  • av Eugenie Brinkema
    377

    What is the relationship between a cinematic grid of color and that most visceral of negative affects, disgust? How might anxiety be a matter of an interrupted horizontal line, or grief a figure of blazing light? This title deals with these questions.

  • - American Films and Mexican Film Culture before the Golden Age
    av Laura Isabel Serna
    527

    In the 1920s, as American films came to dominate the country's cinemas, many of Mexico's cultural and political elites feared that this "Yanqui Invasion" would turn Mexico into a cultural vassal of the United States. In this book, the author contends that Hollywood films were not simply tools of cultural imperialism.

  • - Configuring Difference in the Colonial New Kingdom of Granada
    av Joanne Rappaport
    697

    Looking at what it meant to be mestizo (of mixed parentage) in early colonial Spanish America, Joanne Rappaport finds fluid identification processes rooted in an epistemology entirely distinct from modern racial discourses.

  • - A Biography and Documentary History
    av Gaston Espinosa
    697

    In 1906, William J Seymour (1870-1922) preached Pentecostal revival at the Azusa Street mission in Los Angeles. This book provides an insight into the life and ministry of Seymour, the Azusa Street revival, and Seymour's influence on global Pentecostal origins.

  • - Transformistas, Beauty Queens, and the Performance of Femininity in Venezuela
    av Marcia Ochoa
    621

    Considers how femininities are produced, performed, and consumed in the mass-media spectacles of international beauty pageants, on the runways of the Miss Venezuela contest, on the well-traveled Caracas avenue where transgender women project themselves into the urban imaginary, and on the bodies of transformistas and beauty pageant contestants.

  • - Religion, Decolonization, and Bolivia's Indigenous Intellectuals
    av Waskar Ari Chachaki
    621

    Focuses on the lives of four indigenous activist-intellectuals in Bolivia, key leaders in the Alcaldes Mayores Particulares (AMP), a movement established to claim rights for indigenous education and reclaim indigenous lands from hacienda owners.

  • - Tissue Donors and Research Subjects in the Global Bioeconomy
    av Melinda Cooper & Catherine Waldby
    427

    Forms of embodied labor, such as surrogacy and participation in clinical trials, are central to biomedical innovation, but they are rarely considered as labor. This book examines the rapidly expanding transnational labor markets surrounding assisted reproduction and experimental drug trials.

  • - Reading Race, Reading Pornography
    av Jennifer C Nash
    317 - 1 391

    Rewrites black feminism's theory of representation. This title offers an analysis and that moves beyond black feminism's preoccupation with injury and recovery to consider how racial fictions can create a space of agency and even pleasure for black female subjects.

  • - Anthropology for a Society without a Story Line
    av Nestor Garcia Canclini
    367

    Art is expanding into urban development and the design and tourism industries. Art practices based on objects are displaced by practices based on contexts. Aesthetic distinctions dissolve as artworks are inserted into the media, urban spaces, digital networks, and social forums. This book deals with this topic.

  • - Tragedy, Time, Memory, Justice
    av David Scott
    361

    Omens of Adversity is a profound critique of postcolonial temporality. David Scott argues that the palpable sense of the present as time stalled, without hope for emancipatory futures, has had far-reaching effects on how we think about justice and the nature of political action.

  • - Cultural Dimensions of Ecotourism
    av Robert Fletcher
    621

    An anthropologist and former rafting guide considers why ecotourists-almost all of whom are white, upper-middle-class Westerners-choose to engage in physically and emotionally strenuous activities such as mountain climbing and white-water rafting.

  • - Forests and Ecological Conflict in Chile's Frontier Territory
    av Thomas Miller Klubock
    337,99

    Offers a pioneering social and environmental history of southern Chile, exploring the origins of forestry "miracle" in Chile. This book narrates the century-long struggles among peasants, indigenous communities, large landowners, and the state over access to forest commons in the frontier territory.

  • - The Archives of Dictatorship in Guatemala
    av Kirsten Weld
    541

    In 2005, human rights investigators stumbled on the archives of Guatemala's National Police. In Paper Cadavers, Kirsten Weld tells the story of the astonishing discovery and rescue of 75 million pages of evidence of state-sponsored crimes, and analyzes the repercussions for both the people and the state of Guatemala.

  • - Civic Agency and Public Humanities
    av Doris Sommer
    497 - 1 651

    The Work of Art in the World offers a celebration of socially engaged art that develops momentum and meaning as it circulates through society and an impassioned call for citizens to collaborate in the co-creation of a more just and more beautiful world.

  • - CGI and Contemporary Cinema
    av Kristen Whissel
    361

    examines contemporary films, including Avatar, The Matrix, and The Lord of the Rings movies, revealing the films astonishing computer-generated visual effects as central to their narratives.

  • - The Story of My Life
    av Myriam Jimeno
    571

    The Colombian activist Juan Gregorio Palechor (1923-1992) dedicated his life to championing indigenous rights in Cauca, a department in the southwest of Colombia, where he helped found the Regional Indigenous Council of Cauca. This book traces his political awakening, his experiences in national politics, and the disillusionment that resulted.

  • - Death and Life for Inuit and Innu
    av Gerald M. Sider
    621

    Seeking to understand these transformations in the capacities of Native communities to resist cultural, economic, and political domination, this book offers an ethnographic analysis of aboriginal Canadians' changing experiences of historical violence.

  • av Nestor Garcia Canclini
    321

    A leading figure in cultural studies worldwide, Nestor Garcia Canclini is a Latin American thinker who has consistently sought to understand the impact of globalization. In this book, newly available in English, he considers how globalization is imagined by artists, academics, migrants, and entrepreneurs, all of whom traverse boundaries and engage in multicultural interactions.

  • - Rock 'n' Roll, the Labor Question, and the Musicians' Union, 1942-1968
    av Michael James Roberts
    511

    Explaining the bias of union members - most of whom were classical or jazz music performers - against rock music and musicians, this book addresses issues of race and class; questions of what qualified someone as a "skilled" or professional musician.

  • - The Surprise of Otherness
    av Barbara Johnson
    431

    Offers a historical guide through the metamorphoses and tumultuous debates that have defined literary study in recent decades, as viewed by one of critical theory's most astute thinkers.

  • av Gisele Sapiro
    717

    Offers an account of French writers and literary institutions from the beginning of the German Occupation through France's passage of amnesty laws in the early 1950s. To understand how the Occupation affected French literary production as a whole, this book uses Pierre Bourdieu's notion of the "literary field."

  • - An Environmental and Technological History of Agrarian Reform in Mexico
    av Mikael D. Wolfe
    621

    Mikael D. Wolfe transforms our understanding of the Mexican revolution and agrarian reform through an environmental and technological history of water management in the emblematic Laguna region, showing how the contested modernization of the region's irrigation network unintentionally contaminated the water supply, deepened social inequality, and undermined reform efforts.

  • - Decolonizing Speculation in Financial Times
    av Aimee Bahng
    571

    Aimee Bahng traces the cultural production of futurity by juxtaposing the practices of speculative finance against those of speculative fiction, showing how speculative novels, films, and narratives create alternative futures that envision the potential for new political economies, social structures, and subjectivities that exceed the framework of capitalism.

  • - Freedom, Modernity, and the Logic of Black Music's African Origins
    av David F. Garcia
    337,99

    David F. Garcia examines the work of a wide range of musicians, dancers, academics, and activists between the 1930s and the 1950s to show how their belief in black music's African roots would provide the means to debunk racist ideologies, aid decolonization of Africa, and ease racial violence.

  • - Manila, Development, and Transnational Connectivity
    av Eric J. Pido
    571

    Eric J. Pido examines the complicated relationship between the Philippine economy, Manila's urban development, and Filipino migrants visiting or returning to their homeland, showing migration to be a multidirectional, layered, and continuous process with varied and often fraught outcomes.

  • - The Humanitarian Impulse in Documentary
    av Pooja Rangan
    331 - 1 157

    Pooja Rangan interrogates participatory documentary's humanitarian ethos of "giving a voice to the voiceless" in documentaries featuring marginalized subjects, showing how it reinforces the films' subjects as the "other" and reproduces definitions of the human that exclude non-normative modes of thinking, being, and doing.

  • - Genomics, Multiculturalism, and Race in Latin America
    av Peter Wade
    621

    Peter Wade draws on a multidisciplinary research study in Mexico, Brazil, and Colombia, arguing that genomics produces biologized versions of racialized difference within the nation and the region and that a comparative approach nuances the simple idea that highly racialized societies give rise to highly racialized genomics.

  • - Human-Security States, Sexuality Politics, and the End of Neoliberalism
    av Paul Amar
    324,99

    Based on in-depth ethnographic research in Cairo and Rio de Janeiro, Paul Amar describes new forms of governance emerging in the Global South, partly in opposition to neoliberalism.

  • - Popular Music and the Politics of Work
    av Matt Stahl
    621

    Asserts that the labor issues in the music industry can stimulate insights about the political-economic and imaginative challenges currently facing working people of all kinds

  • - An African Oncology Ward in an Emerging Cancer Epidemic
    av Julie Livingston
    317

    Focused on Botswana's only dedicated oncology ward, Improvising Medicine renders the experiences of patients, their relatives, and clinical staff during a cancer epidemic.

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