Marknadens största urval
Snabb leverans

Böcker utgivna av University of Georgia Press

Filter
Filter
Sortera efterSortera Populära
  • - The Courtship Correspondence of Nathaniel Dawson and Elodie Todd, Sister of Mary Todd Lincoln
     
    1 410,-

    These letters chronicle the wartime courtship of a Confederate soldier and the woman he loved - a sister-in-law of Abraham Lincoln. It is a relative rarity for the correspondence of both writers in Civil War letter collections to survive, as they have here. Rarer still is how frequently and faithfully the two wrote, given how little they truly knew each other at the start of their exchange.

  • - The Courtship Correspondence of Nathaniel Dawson and Elodie Todd, Sister of Mary Todd Lincoln
     
    510,-

    These letters chronicle the wartime courtship of a Confederate soldier and the woman he loved - a sister-in-law of Abraham Lincoln. It is a relative rarity for the correspondence of both writers in Civil War letter collections to survive, as they have here. Rarer still is how frequently and faithfully the two wrote, given how little they truly knew each other at the start of their exchange.

  • - Negotiating in the Shadow of the Intifadat
     
    540,-

  • av Alan Watson
    510,-

    Discusses about the values and approaches, explicit and implicit, of those who made the Roman law. This book presents the issues and problems that faced the Roman legal intelligentsia.

  • - The Narrative Art of Children's Picture Books
    av Perry Nodelman
    610 - 1 656,-

    This book examines the special qualities of picture books - books intended to educate or tell stories to young children. The author explores the ways in which the interplay of the verbal and visual aspects of picture books conveys narrative information.

  • - War, Development, and Youth in Africa
    av Marc Sommers
    1 416,-

    Invites policymakers, practitioners, academics, students, and others to think about three commanding contemporary issues - war, development, and youth - in new ways. The starting point is the following irony: while African youth are demographically dominant, many act as if they are members of an outcast minority.

  • - Poems
    av Diann Blakely
    320,-

    Originally published in 1992, this is Diann Blakely's first volume of poetry. With this collection, Blakely artfully mines the empathic centre of each poem, fearlessly crafting an achingly personal portrait of contemporary life and family that is both sweet and razor sharp.

  • - Free People of Color in Pre-Revolutionary Saint Domingue
    av Stewart R. King
    576 - 1 420,-

    By the late 1700s, half the free population of Saint Domingue was black and exercised a high degree of social, economic, and physical mobility. Covering the period 1776-1791, this study offers the most comprehensive portrait to date of Saint Domingue's free black elites on the eve of the colony's transformation into the republic of Haiti.

  • - The Inside Story of an American Oceanographic Expedition
    av Bill Belleville
    410,-

    Deep Cuba recounts Bill Belleville's month-long journey around the island in the company of American and Cuban marine biologists and a Discovery Channel film crew. From coral reefs to mangrove swamps to a submerged volcanic mountain, the voyagers encountered wild places unseen before by anyone from the United States, or even by many Cubans.

  • - The Story of Georgia's Governor's Mansion
    av Sandra D. Deal
    766,-

    Tells the story of the Georgia Governor's Mansion - what preceded it and how it came to be as well as the stories of the people who have lived and worked here since its opening in 1968. The authors worked closely with the former first families to capture behind-the-scenes anecdotes of what life was like in Georgia's most public house.

  • - Politics after Gravity's Rainbow
    av Sean Carswell
    416 - 1 036,-

    Occupy Pynchon examines power and resistance in the writer's post-Gravity's Rainbow novels. As Sean Carswell shows, Pynchon's representations of power after the neoliberal revolution of the 1980s shed the paranoia and meta-physical bent of his first three novels and are central to his vision of resisting global neoliberal capitalism.

  • - A History Preserved
    av Orville Vernon Burton & Wilbur Cross
    380,-

    Here is all of Penn Center's rich past and present, as told through the experiences of its longtime Gullah inhabitants and visitors to St. Helena Island. It is the inspiring story behind the first school for former slaves, from the Civil War through the civil rights movement, illustrated in forty-two captivating photographs.

  • - Making Political Space for Food Sovereignty
    av Amy Trauger
    516 - 1 276,-

    Trauger's work is the first of its kind to analytically and coherently link a dialogue on food sovereignty with case studies illustrating the spatial and territorial strate-gies by which the movement fosters its life in the margins of the corporate food regime.

  • - St. Louis Freedom Suits and the Legal Culture of Slavery in Antebellum America
    av Kelly Kennington
    956,-

    The Dred Scott suit for freedom, argues Kelly M. Kennington, was merely the most famous example of a phenomenon that was more widespread in antebellum American jurisprudence than is generally recognised. The author draws on the case files of more than three hundred enslaved individuals who, like Dred Scott and his family, sued for freedom in the local legal arena of St. Louis.

  •  
    750,-

    Addressing texts produced by writers who lived through the Civil War and wrote about it before the end of Reconstruction, this collection explores the literary cultures of that unsettled moment when memory of the war had yet to be overwritten by later impulses of reunion, reconciliation, or Lost Cause revisionism.

  • - Race, Nationhood, and Citizenship in Nineteenth-Century America
    av Rochelle Raineri Zuck
    430 - 786,-

  • - A Biography of Harry Crews
    av Ted Geltner
    516,-

    In 2010, Ted Geltner drove to Gainesville, Florida, to pay a visit to Harry Crews and ask the legendary author if he would be willing to be the subject of a literary biography. His health rapidly deteriorating, Crews told Geltner he was on board. ""Ask me anything you want, bud,"" Crews said. ""But you'd better do it quick." The result is Blood, Bone, and Marrow.

  • - The B-52's, R.E.M., and the Kids Who Rocked Athens, Georgia
    av Rodger Lyle Brown
    380,-

    Originally published in 1991, Rodger Lyle Brown's Party Out of Bounds is a cult classic that offers an insider's look at the underground rock music culture that sprang from a lazy Georgia college town. Brown uses half-remembered stories, local anecdotes, and legendary lore to chronicle the 1970s and 1980s and the spawning of Athens bands such as the B-52s, Pylon, and R.E.M.

  • - North Carolina's Civil War Refugee Crisis
    av David Silkenat
    546 - 806,-

    Examining refugees of Civil War-era North Carolina, Driven from Home reveals the complexity and diversity of the war's displaced populations and the inadequate responses of governmental and charitable organisations. For anyone seeking context to current refugee crises, Driven from Home has much to say.

  • - Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going?
    av Priscilla Long
    406,-

    The questions that drive Priscilla Long's Fire and Stone are the questions asked by the painter Paul Gauguin in the title of his 1897 painting: Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going? These questions look beyond every- day trivialities to ponder the essence of our origins.

  • - Trade, Conversion, and Indian Slavery in the Old Dominion, 1646-1722
    av Kristalyn Marie Shefveland
    516 - 956,-

    The 1646 Treaty of Peace with Necotowance in Virginia changed relationships between Native Americans and the English settlers of Virginia. This book traces English establishment of tributary status for its Native allies and the phrasing and concept of foreign Indians for non-allied Natives.

  • - Race, Freedom, and Extermination in America and the Atlantic World
    av Kay Wright Lewis
    1 060,-

    For African Americans, enslaved and free, the potential for one-sided violence was always present and deeply traumatic. This groundbreaking study reevaluates how extermination shaped black understanding of the Atlantic slave trade and the political, social, and economic worlds in which it thrived.

  • - Screenwriting for the Studios
    av Stefan Solomon
    880,-

    The scripts that Faulkner wrote for film and television constitute an extensive and, until now, thoroughly underexplored archival source. Stefan Solomon not only analyzes the majority of these scripts but compares them to the novels and short stories Faulkner was writing at the same time.

  • - Kinship in Early America
    av Natalie R. Inman
    446 - 880,-

    By following key families in Cherokee, Chickasaw, and Anglo-American societies from the Seven Years' War to 1845, this study illustrates how kinship networks - forged out of natal, marital, or fictive kinship relationships - enabled and directed the actions of their members as they decided the futures of their nations.

  • - Landscape Architect and Environmental Planner
     
    656,-

    "Library of American Landscape History, Amherst, Massachusetts."

  • - Transdisciplinary Explorations of a U.S. Region
     
    1 150,-

    Presents transdisciplinary conversations about southern studies scholarship. The fourteen original essays in Navigating Souths articulate questions about the significances of the South as a theoretical and literal "home" base for social science and humanities researchers. They also examine challenges faced by researchers who identify as southern studies scholars.

  • - The Slaying of Lemuel Penn by the Ku Klux Klan
    av Bill Shipp
    360,-

    First published in 1981, Murder at the Broad River Bridge recounts the stunning details of the murder of Lieutenant Colonel Lemuel Penn by the Ku Klux Klan on a back-country Georgia road in 1964. Bill Shipp gives us, with shattering power, the true story of how a good, innocent, "uninvolved" man was killed during the Civil Rights turbulence of the mid-1960s.

  • - Commerce and Conflict in Civil War Atlanta
    av Wendy Hamand Venet
    420,-

    In 1845 Atlanta was the last stop at the end of a railroad line, the home of just twelve families and three general stores. By the 1860s, it was a thriving Confederate city, second only to Richmond in importance. A Changing Wind is the first history to explore what it meant to live in Atlanta during its rapid growth, its devastation in the Civil War, and its rise as a "New South" city during Reconstruction.A Changing Wind brings to life the stories of Atlanta's diverse citizens. In a rich account of residents' changing loyalties to the Union and the Confederacy, the book highlights the unequal economic and social impacts of the war, General Sherman's siege, and the stunning rebirth of the city in postwar years. The final chapter focuses on Atlanta's collective memory of the Civil War, showing how racial divisions have led to differing views on the war's meaning and place in the city's history.

  • - Poems
    av Chelsea Dingman
    320,-

    Delves into the issues at the core of a resilient family: kinship, poverty, violence, death, abuse, and grief. The poems follow the speaker, as both mother and daughter, as she travels through harsh and beautiful landscapes in Canada, Sweden, and the United States.

Gör som tusentals andra bokälskare

Prenumerera på vårt nyhetsbrev för att få fantastiska erbjudanden och inspiration för din nästa läsning.