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Böcker utgivna av University of Georgia Press

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  •  
    597

    24 conversations with Robert Penn Warren including a self-interview, television appearances and discussions with writers such as Flannery O'Connor, Ralph Ellison and William Styron. The conversations cover a wide range of subjects - history, politics, race, technological change and teaching.

  • av Jerry C. Beasley, O. M., Jr. Brack & m.fl.
    791 - 1 527

    First published in 1753, this experimental work explores the relations between history and fiction while introducing episodes of Gothic melodrama. Filled with satiric thrusts at the legal, medical, and military establishments of mid-eighteenth-century Europe, the novel reveals Smollett's capacities as a commentator on contemporary life.

  • - Survival Studies Among the Georgia Coastal Negroes
    av Georgia Writers' Project
    537

    Set against the background of the antebellum slave trade, Drums and Shadows traces the persistence of African heritage in the culture of blacks living on the Georgia coast in the 1930s. Members of the Georgia Writers' Project interviewed blacks about conjure--the curses and potions--and about dreams, spirits, and other apparitions.

  • - Monocotyledons
    av Jean W. Wooten & Robert K. Godfrey
    1 311

    Provides well-written, concise descriptions and keys for the identification of seven hundred species. The text for each species includes both a statement indicating the habitats in which the plant is usually found and information about its geographical distribution. Approximately four hundred drawings supplement the text.

  • - From Science to Synthesis
     
    531

    This international collection of 23 seminal readings both illustrate the range of philosophical apporaches available to ecologists and also provide a basis for understanding the thinking on which many contemporary environmental ideas are founded.

  • av Joshua K. Callaway
    447

    From the Kentucky Campaign to Tullahoma, Chickamauga to Missionary Ridge, junior officer Joshua K. Callaway took part in some of the most critical campaigns of the Civil War. His twice-weekly letters home, written between April 1862 and November 1863, chronicle his gradual change from an ardent Confederate to a weary veteran.

  • - A Novel
    av Chris Fuhrman & Fuhrman Christopher
    477

    Set in Savannah, Georgia, in the early 1970s, this is a novel of the anarchic joy of youth and encounters with the concerns of early adulthood. Francis Doyle, Tim Sullivan, and their three closest friends are altar boys at Blessed Heart Catholic Church and eighth-grade classmates at the parish school. They are also inveterate pranksters, artistic, and unimpressed by adult authority.

  • - On the Trail of Nancy Drew, Judy Bolton and Cherry Ames
    av Bobbie Ann Mason
    441

    The author of this text examines the girl detective in her various guises through a combination of childhood reminiscences and insights as a fiction writer and observer of American popular culture. She covers the Bobbsey Twins, Vicki Barr, Cherry Ames, Beverly Gray, Judy Bolton and Nancy Drew.

  • - The Escape of William and Ellen Craft from Slavery
    av William Craft & Ellen Craft
    371

    In 1848 William and Ellen Craft made one of the most daring escapes in the history of slavery. This edition of their story includes 11 annotated supplementary readings, drawn from contemporary sources, to help place the Crafts' story within the cultural currents of transatlantic abolitionism.

  • - Black Suffrage and Northern Republicans, 1860-1910
    av Xi Wang
    601

    A comprehensive analysis of both the forces and mechanisms that led to the implementation of black suffrage after the Civil War and the ultimate failure to maintain a stable northern constituency to support enforcement on a permanent basis.

  • - Race, Crime and Justice in the Nineteenth-Century South
     
    551

    Much of the current reassessment of race, culture, and criminal justice in the nineteenth-century South has been based on intensive community studies. Drawing on previously untapped sources, the nine original papers collected here represent some of the best new work on how racial justice can be shaped by the particulars of time and place.

  • av Anna Mae Duane
    497 - 867

    Nothing tugs on American heartstrings more than an image of a suffering child. Anna Mae Duane goes back to the nation's violent beginnings to examine how the ideal of childhood in early America was fundamental to forging concepts of ethnicity, race, and gender. Duane argues that children had long been used to symbolize subservience, but in the New World those old associations took on more meaning. Drawing on a wide range of early American writing, she explores how the figure of a suffering child accrued political weight as the work of infantilization connected the child to Native Americans, slaves, and women.In the making of the young nation, the figure of the child emerged as a vital conceptual tool for coming to terms with the effects of cultural and colonial violence, and with time childhood became freighted with associations of vulnerability, suffering, and victimhood. As Duane looks at how ideas about the child and childhood were manipulated by the colonizers and the colonized alike, she reveals a powerful line of colonizing logic in which dependence and vulnerability are assigned great emotional weight. When early Americans sought to make sense of intercultural contact-and the conflict that often resulted-they used the figure of the child to help displace their own fear of lost control and shifting power.

  • - American Abolitionists in Post-Emancipation Jamaica, 1834-1866
    av Gale L. Kenny
    477 - 881

    Examines the differing ideas of freedom held by white evangelical abolitionists and freed people in Jamaica, and explores the consequences of their encounter for both American and Jamaican history. The book makes creative use of available sources to unpack assumptions on both sides of this American-Jamaican interaction.

  • - A Life of Black Literary Activism
    av Keith Gilyard
    597 - 817

    In this first major biography of John Oliver Killens, Keith Gilyard examines the life and career of the man who was perhaps the premier African American writer-activist from the 1950s to the 1980s. Gilyard extends his focus to the broad boundaries of Killens's times and literary achievement-from the Old Left to the Black Arts Movement and beyond.

  • av Christopher Waldrep
    531 - 881

    In 1906 a white lawyer named Dabney Marshall argued a case before the Mississippi Supreme Court demanding the racial integration of juries. He carried out a plan devised by Mississippi's foremost black lawyer of the time: Willis Mollison. Against staggering odds, and with the help of a friendly newspaper editor, he won. How Marshall and his allies were able to force the court to overturn state law and precedent, if only for a brief period, at the behest of the U.S. Supreme Court is the subject of Jury Discrimination, a book that explores the impact of the Civil War and Reconstruction on America's civil rights history.Christopher Waldrep traces the origins of Americans' ideas about trial by jury and provides the first detailed analysis of jury discrimination. Southerners' determination to keep their juries entirely white played a crucial role in segregation, emboldening lynchers and vigilantes like the Ku Klux Klan. As the postbellum Congress articulated ideals of national citizenship in civil rights legislation, most importantly the Fourteenth Amendment, factions within the U.S. Supreme Court battled over how to read the amendment: expansively, protecting a variety of rights against a host of enemies, or narrowly, guarding only against rare violations by state governments. The latter view prevailed, entombing the amendment in a narrow interpretation that persists to this day.Although the high court clearly denounced the overt discrimination enacted by state legislatures, it set evidentiary rules that made discrimination by state officers and agents extremely difficult to prove. Had these rules been less onerous, Waldrep argues, countless black jurors could have been seated throughout the nation at precisely the moment when white legislators and jurists were making and enforcing segregation laws. Marshall and Mollison's success in breaking through Mississippi law to get blacks admitted to juries suggests that legal reasoning plausibly founded on constitutional principle, as articulated by the Supreme Court, could trump even the most stubbornly prejudiced public opinion.

  • - Reimagining the Dark Continent in American Culture, 1884-1936
    av Jeannette Eileen Jones
    551 - 867

    Traces the history of the idea of Africa with an eye to recovering the emergence of a belief in ""Brightest Africa"" - a tradition that runs through American cultural and intellectual history with equal force to its ""Dark Continent"" counterpart.

  • - Evangelical Women and Domestic Devotion in the Antebellum South
    av Scott Stephan
    567

    In the years leading up to the Civil War, southern evangelical denominations moved from the fringes to the mainstream of the American South. Scott Stephan argues that female Baptists, Methodists, and Presbyterians played a crucial role in this transformation.

  • - Free People of Color in Cuba and the Nineteenth-Century Atlantic World
    av Michele Reid-Vazquez
    477 - 1 177

    Reveals the untold story of the strategies of negotiation used by free blacks in the aftermath of the ""Year of the Lash"" - a wave of repression in Cuba that had great implications for the Atlantic World in the next two decades.

  • - Herbert Stoddard and the Rise of Ecological Land Management
    av Albert G. Way
    551 - 1 251

    The Red Hills region of south Georgia and north Florida contains one of the most biologically diverse ecosystems in North America--a valuable center for research into and understanding of wildlife biology, fire ecology, and the environmental appreciation of a region once dubbed simply the "pine barrens."

  • - A New Grassroots History, 1964-1980
    av Lisa Gayle Hazirjian
    1 281

    Examining the long War on Poverty from the 1960s onward, this book makes a controversial argument that Lyndon Johnson's programs were in many ways a success, reducing poverty rates and weaving a social safety net that has proven as enduring as programs that came out of the New Deal.

  • - Civil Rights and American Health Policy, 1935-1954
    av Karen Kruse Thomas
    557 - 1 267

  • - Revolution, Slavery and the American Renaissance
    av Larry J. Reynolds
    551 - 1 251

    Examines the struggles with the violence of slavery and revolution that engaged the imaginations of seven nineteenth-century American writers - Margaret Fuller, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Frederick Douglass, Henry David Thoreau, Louisa May Alcott, Nathaniel Hawthorne and Herman Melville.

  • av David Harvey
    447

    A text in urban geography that includes the essay 'The Right to the City'. It analyzes core issues in city planning and policy - employment and housing location, zoning, transport costs, concentrations of poverty - asking in each case about the relationship between social justice and space.

  • - The Forced Alliance
    av Michael L. Conniff
    551

    This work examines how relations between Panama and the United States have always pivoted on the issue of transportation across the country's narrow isthmus and delves into the future of those relations now that Panama controls the canal.

  • av David Cowart
    477 - 1 177

    Cowart argues that Pynchon has always understood the facticity of historical narrative and the historicity of storytelling--not to mention the relations of both story and history to myth. He offers a deft analysis of the problems of history as engaged by Pynchon and argues for the continuity of his historical vision.

  • av Tobias Smollett
    781 - 1 797

    This is the definitive scholarly edition of Smollett's first novel, widely regarded as a masterpiece and a chief rival to Henry Fielding's comic novel Tom Jones. Surging with verbal, sexual, and martial energy, The Adventures of Roderick Random opens a window on life, love, and war in the eighteenth century.

  • - Nine White Women in the Freedom Movement
    av et al, Joan C. Browning, Constance Curry, m.fl.
    521

    A collection of first-person accounts from nine white women who crossed the colour line in the days of segregation and joined the Southern Freedom Movement. It discusses what they saw, did, thought and felt in those uncertain days, and how their experiences shaped the rest of their lives.

  • - Games, Plays, Songs and Stories from the Afro-American Heritage
    av Bess Lomax Hawes
    447

    Growing up in the rural South, Bessie Jones sang her way through long hours of field work and child tending. These songs and games, recorded in Step It Down by folklorist Bess Lomax Hawes, capture the shape and colour of the crowded, impoverished, life-demanding, and life-loving days of the black family of sixty years ago.

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