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  • av Brenda Shelton
    350,-

    By focusing not on women's history but on the history of men's attitudes toward their female companions, The Subordinated Sex reveals, more than any other single work, the conditions that sparked the feminist movement and the reasons it must inspire a change in the lives of men as well as women.

  • av Gary E. Moulton
    510,-

    Examines the life of the man who led the Cherokee people during the most trying and tragic period of their long history. John Ross was the principal Cherokee negotiator with the encroaching whites during the Georgia gold rush, guided the tribe through the Civil War, and struggled to preserve unity among his people during their removal westward.

  • - The Letters of a St. Simons Island Plantation Mistress, 1817-1859
    av Anna Matilda Page King
    920,-

    As the wife of a frequently absent slaveholder and public figure, Anna Matilda Page King (1798-1859) was the de facto head of their Sea Island plantation. This volume collects more than 150 of her letters to her husband, children, parents and others, reflecting her everyday life.

  • av Chet A. Bowers
    510,-

    This work explains how technological and progressive programmes of educational reform operate on deep cultural assumptions that came out of the Enlightenment and led to the Industrial Revolution.

  • av Christopher Camuto
    390,-

    The story of a year of fly fishing in backcountry mountain streams in the Blue Ridge, from Pennsylvania to Georgia. Christopher Camuto's love of trout fishing is wedded to a keen awareness of both history and nature.

  • av C. Peter Ripley
    530,-

    A sympathetic, street-level pilgrimage through a revolutionary society in transition, recounting the author's six trips to Cuba between 1991 and 1999, and his attachment to the country. This paperback edition is updated with an epilogue that details Ripley's seventh trip to Cuba in July 2000.

  • av J. Kerry Grant
    510,-

    This companion takes the reader through Thomas Pynchon's novel ""V."" chapter by chapter, breaking through its daunting surface by summarizing events and clarifying Pynchon's many allusions. It draws extensively from existing critical work on ""V."" to suggest the range of interpretations.

  • av Carl Dennis
    420,-

    An exploration of poetry, proposing that poems are acts of persuasion and that the strength of a poem's speaker is the key to engaging the reader. A variety of poetic examples are discussed, and the author calls on such masters of the craft as Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson.

  • av Charles Colcock Jones
    376,-

    A reprinted edition of Charles Colcock Jones Jr's 1888 publication of folk narratives from the Gullah-speaking people of the South Atlantic coast. The stories describe the adventures and mishaps of such characters as ""Buh Rabbit"", ""Buh Ban-Yad Rooster"" and other animals.

  • - Augusta, Georgia, 1860-1890
    av LeeAnn Whites
    530,-

    Argues that gender concepts and constructions deeply influenced the beliefs underpinning both the Confederacy and its vestiges to which white southerners clung for decades after its defeat. The book focuses on the effects of the conflict on the South's gender hierarchy.

  • - The Bioregional Vision
    av Kirkpatrick Sale
    450,-

    An introduction to the concept of bioregionalism, an alternative way of organizing society to create small-scale, ecologically sound, individually responsive communities with renewable economies and cultures. Emphasized throughout are communal ownership of and responsibility for land.

  • av Gregory C. McIntosh
    756,-

    This detailed study of the 1513 Piri Reis world map offers commentary and explication of a major milestone in cartography. It aims to disprove dubious conclusions drawn and clarify longstanding mysteries in order to open up new ways of looking at the history of exploration.

  • av Sidney Lanier
    450,-

    A collection of poems by the renowned southern poet Sidney Lanier. This anthology reveals Lanier's interest in the welfare and preservation of nature and society and his opposition to southern industrialization.

  • - Colonel Robert Gould Shaw and the 54th Massachusetts Infantry
    av Russell Duncan
    390,-

    This biography of Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, the white commander of the 54th Massachusetts Infantry of African American soldiers, presents a portrait of the son of a wealthy Boston abolitionist who never fully reconciled his racial prejudices yet went on to head the North's first black regiment.

  • av Ellen Bryant Voigt
    406,-

    The nine essays in this volume examine the art of lyric poetry in all aspects of its design and structure. Through the readings of a variety of artists, including her contemporaries, the author celebrates the structure and elasticity of lyric poems.

  • - America in Vietnam, January 25, 1963-February 15, 1964
    av Francis X. Winters
    510,-

    In November 1963, the US government engineered the overthrow of the South Vietnamese leader Ngo Dinh Diem, resulting in the escalation of the Vietnam War. This study asks why President Kennedy decided to depose his ally, despite warnings from his cabinet that such a coup would cause chaos.

  • - Stories by C.M.Mayo
    av C. M. Mayo
    350,-

    This is a collection of stories where characters ricochet around the globe in search of diversion, money, enlightenment, and escape. The characters envision the solutions to their lives in a world where nothing is stable, nothing can be nailed down, and all face the same pitiless sky.

  • - Hammett, Cain and Chandler
    av William Marling
    520,-

    In this text, William Marling reads classic hard-boiled fiction and film in the contexts of narrative theories and American social and cultural history. His theories for the origins of the dark narratives that emerged during the period leads to a critique of Jazz-Age and Depression-Era culture.

  • - A Poor White Life of the Old South
    av Edward Isham
    466,-

    In 1859, the Georgian Edward Isham, convicted in North Carolina of murdering a Piedmont farmer, dictated his life to his defence-attorney. This autobiography provides a perspective on the poor whites, and is accompanied by a selection of essays, which examine the meaning of the document.

  •  
    610,-

    Documenting slavery and its development in North America, this work provides excerpts from personal accounts, songs, legal documents, diaries, letters, and other written sources. It portrays the day-to-day connections between, and among, slaves and their owners across two centuries.

  • - A Philosophical Exploration in Journal Form
    av Henry Bugbee
    470,-

    This text blends East and West, nature and culture, the personal and the universal.

  •  
    390,-

    As the anthropological study of sex becomes more focused within the discipline, this volume offers a cross-section of current research that examines the biological and cultural interface of sexuality.

  • av Roy Wilder
    446,-

    This text explains the American South's linguistic heritage with 3000 humorous specimens of the region's speech.

  • - Poems of the Natural World
     
    376,-

    In various forms of verse, these 83 poems, most of them first published in ""Wilderness"" magazine, cover a diversity of creatures, weathers and landscapes from all regions of America. They decry ecological injuries, celebrate nature's beauties and point to its many mysteries.

  • av Susan Fenimore Cooper
    510,-

    The daughter of the novelist James Fenimore Cooper uses narratives and descriptions of her walks and excursions in this piece of American nature writing, to reveal her ideal society as a rural one, carefully poised between the receding wilderness and looming industrialization.

  • - Mexican American Folk Healing
    av Flagstaff, Robert T. Trotter, Department Of Anthropology, m.fl.
    490,-

    The practice of ""curanderismo"" or Mexican-American folk medicine is deeply rooted, both historically and culturally, in Mexican healing techniques. This book describes the practice from an insider's point of view, based on the authors' 3-year apprenticeships with ""curanderos"" or healers.

  • av Julia Peterkin
    406,-

    Julia Peterkin pioneered in demonstrating the literary potential for serious depictions of the African-American experience. In her novels and stories, she taps the richness of rural southern black culture and oral traditions to capture conflicting realities and reveal grace and courage.

  • av Louisa May Alcott
    556,-

    From the age of eleven, to the month of her death at age 55, Louisa May Alcott kept copious journals. Although never intended for publication, they provide insights into her life and reading habits, and the free-spiritedness with which she imbued her fictional alter ego, Jo March.

  • av Bernard Cooper
    416,-

    Writing on subjects ranging from his family to the origin of the barbershop, Cooper digs into the surface of the Southern California landscape observing the collision of the American dream with the realities of everyday life, in an attempt to make sense of contemporary America.

  • - Jefferson Davis and the Final Days of the Confederacy
    av Michael B. Ballard
    380,-

    This is a narrative account of the fall of the Confederacy told from the perspective of Jefferson Davis, his offical entourage, and his family as they tried to hold the government together while staying one step ahead of their Union Army pursuers.

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