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  • - The First Matriarch of Genesis
    av Savina J. Teubal
    441

    Shows that the "Sarah tradition" represents a nonpatriarchal system struggling for survival in isolation, in the patriarchal environment of what was for Sarah a foreign society.

  • - Guide To Mining Camps Of Treasure State
    av Muriel Sibell Wolle
    371

    "In her pictures of mountain scenery and miners' cabins, deserted mills and smelters, empty boarding houses, once-lavish hotels, and forgotten stores and post offices, Muriel Sibell Wolle has preserved the authentic look of the Montana mining frontier in a poignant and effective record." Allan Radbourne - The English Westerners Tally Sheet

  • av Temple H. Cornelius
    267

    Golden Treasures of the San Juan contains fabulous stories of lost mines, bullion, and valuable prospects of one of the most beautiful mountain areas of the United States. Many of the stories are based on the personal adventures of author Cornelius.

  • - A Life of Manuel Antonio Chaves
    av Marc Simmons
    420,99

    Manuel Antonio Chaves' life (1818-1889) straddled three eras of New Mexican history. A Spanish frontiersman, his long career was interwoven with almost every major historical event which occurred during his adult life-the Texan-Santa Fe Expedition, the Mexican War, the Civil War, skirmishes with Utes, Navajos, and Apaches.

  • av Frank Waters
    407

  • - Story Of Stratton & Cripple Creek
    av Frank Waters
    497

  • - A Mining Saga
    av Frank Waters
    691

  • av Charles Champlin
    477

    Nearly 200 photos enhance Champlin's readable, fascinating survey of the movies from the Golden Age up through the year 1980. According to Champlin, movies are the art form of our time - perhaps even the art form of this century. With this revised and enlarged edition of his book, one of the most comprehensive and eloquent works on film is available once again.

  • - A Novel of Pueblo Indian Life
    av Frank Waters
    201

    The story of Martiniano, the man who killed the deer, is a timeless story of Pueblo Indian sin and redemption, and of the conflict between Indian and white laws; written with a poetically charged beauty of style, a purity of conception, and a thorough understanding of Indian values.

  • av Yvor Winters
    657

  • - And Mining Camps
    av Perry Eberhart
    387

    In undertaking the stud, I was amazed at the amount of legend and contradictory information Colorado history has collected in just one hundred years. Who was it that said: 'History is the perpetuation of saleable gossip'? This title presents the compilation of Colorado mining towns.

  • av Grace McClure
    267

    Ann and Josie Bassett were members of Butch Cassidy's inner circle, ranchers, and cattle rustlers. Based on interviews, written records, newspapers, and archives, The Bassett Women is an indelible portrait and one of the few credible accounts of early settlers on Colorado's western slope, one of the last strongholds of the Old West.

  • av Abu Talib Ahmad
    841

    At a watershed moment in the scholarly approach to the history of this important region, New Terrains in Southeast Asian History captures the richness and diversity of historical discourse among Southeast Asian scholars.

  • - Verse Cultures of the Long Nineteenth Century
     
    1 011

    The ten essays in Meter Matters showcase the range of metrical practice of poets from Wordsworth and Byron to Hopkins, Swinburne, and Tennyson; at the same time, the contributors bring into focus some of the metrical theorizing that shaped poetic thinking and responses to it throughout the nineteenth century.

  •  
    1 291

    Christianity and Public Culture in Africa takes readers beyond familiar images of religious politicians and populations steeped in spirituality.

  • - A Tale of Two Villages
    av Ann R. Tickamyer & Siti Kusujiarti
    367

    Women's status in rural Java can appear contradictory to those both inside and outside the culture. In some ways, women have high status and broad access to resources, but other situations suggest that Javanese women lack real power and autonomy.

  • - A Phenomenology of the Uncanny
    av Dylan Trigg
    391 - 897

    From the frozen landscapes of the Antarctic to the haunted houses of childhood, the memory of places we experience is fundamental to a sense of self. Drawing on influences as diverse as Merleau-Ponty, Freud, and J. G. Ballard, The Memory of Place charts the memorial landscape that is written into the body and its experience of the world.

  •  
    1 311

    This is the second of two volumes that examine the distinctive uses and experiences of children in slavery in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This collection of previously unpublished essays exposes the global victimization of child slaves from the period of abolition of legal slavery in the nineteenth century to the human rights era of the twentieth century.

  • - The Colonial Order and the Creation of Knowledge
     
    567

    Examines the multifaceted nature of the colonial science of demography in the last two centuries and focuses on three questions: How have historians, demographers, and other social scientists understood colonial populations? What were the demographic real

  • - A Critical Anthology
     
    931

    Explores the entire range of poems written in English on the subcontinent from their beginnings in 1780 to the watershed moment in 1913 when Rabindranath Tagore won the Nobel Prize in Literature. The historical scope of the anthology will enable teachers and students to understand what brought Kipling early fame and why at the same time Tagore's Gitanjali became a global phenomenon.

  • - Polish Migrants in Germany and the United States, 1870-1924
    av Brian McCook
    567 - 901

    A comparative study of Polish migrants in the Ruhr Valley and in northeastern Pennsylvania, The Borders of Integration questions assumptions about race and white immigrant assimilation a hundred years ago, highlighting how the Polish immigrant experience is relevant to present-day immigration debates.

  • av Frank Waters
    251

    One of Frank Waters's most popular novels, People of the Valley takes place high in the Sangre de Cristo mountains where an isolated Spanish-speaking people confront a threatening world of change.

  • - A Dutch Family in Japanese Java
    av Dieuwke Wendelaar Bonga
    337

    Eldest daughter of eight children, the author grew up in Surakarta, Java, in what is now Indonesia. In the months following the bombing of Pearl Harbor, however, Dutch nationals were rounded up by Japanese soldiers and put in internment camps.

  • - Sustainable Development by Mayan Farmers
    av Maria Elena Martinez-Torres
    407

    Despite deepening poverty and environmental degradation throughout rural Latin America, Mayan peasant farmers in Chiapas, Mexico, are finding environmental and economic success by growing organic coffee.

  • - Indonesian Poetry, 1966-1998
    av Harry Aveling
    407

    The period from 1966 to 1999 represents a distinct era in Indonesian history. Throughout the "New Order" regime of President Suharto, the policies of economic development and political stability were dominant. However, the public opinion of personal expression was consistently under suspicion, and indeed dissent was severely punished.

  • - English Literary Culture and the 1890s
     
    517

    Featuring innovative research by emergent and established scholars, The Fin-de-Siecle poem throws new light on the remarkable diversity of poetry produced at the close of the nineteenth century in England

  • - The Paramilitarization of Colombia
    av Jasmin Hristov
    497

    In Blood and Capital: The Paramilitarization of Colombia, Jasmin Hristov examines the complexities, dynamics, and contradictions of present-day armed conflict in Colombia.

  • - Stories of Cameroon
    av Makuchi
    271

    Women's writing in Cameroon has so far been dominated by Francophone writers. The short stories in this collection represent the yearnings and vision of an Anglophone woman, who writes both as a Cameroonian and as a woman whose life has been shaped by the minority status her people occupy within the nation-state.

  • av Herbert S. Bailey Jr.
    307

    Now back in print, this volume discusses with authority every aspect of the editorial and financial operations of the modern publishing house.

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