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Böcker utgivna av University of Iowa Press

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  • - Walt Whitman's Civil War Writings
    av Walt Whitman
    540,-

    The first book to offer a comprehensive selection of Walt Whitman's Civil War poetry and prose with a full commentary on each work. Ed Folsom and Christopher Merrill carry on a dialogue with Whitman (and with each other) as they invite readers to trace how Whitman's writing about the Civil War develops, shifts, and manifests itself.

  • - The Story of Our Most Vital Resource and How We Can Save It
    av Kathleen Woida
    406,-

    Sometimes called 'black gold', Iowa's deep, rich soils are a treasure that formed over thousands of years under the very best of the world's grasslands. In language that is scientifically sound but accessible to the layperson, Kathleen Woida explains how soils formed and have changed over centuries and millennia in the land between two rivers.

  •  
    1 256,-

    William Gibson is frequently described as one of the most influential writers of the past few decades, yet his body of work has only been studied partially and without full recognition of its implications for literature and culture beyond science fiction. It is high time for a book that explores the wide-ranging impact of Gibson's fiction.

  • - Party Prophecy in the Antebellum Editions of Leaves of Grass
    av David Grant
    1 256,-

    Walt Whitman wrote three distinct editions of Leaves of Grass before the Civil War. During those years he was passionately committed to anti-slavery, and fully attuned to the kind of rhetoric coming out of the new Republican party. This study explores how the prophecies of the pre-war Leaves of Grass relate to the prophecy of this new party.

  • - A Place-Based Approach to American Literature
    av Lowell Wyse
    1 256,-

    Explores modern and contemporary American prose literature through the lens of place, showing how authors like William Least Heat-Moon, Willa Cather, Richard Wright, and Leslie Marmon Silko represent and reimagine real places in the world and the human-environment relationships therein.

  • - Paths to Sustainable Iowa
    av Charles Connerly
    270,-

    Argues that Iowa must reckon with its past and the fact that its farm economy continues to pollute waterways, while remaining utterly unprepared for climate change. Iowa must recognize ways in which it can bolster its residents' standard of living and move away from its demographic tradition of whiteness.

  • av Eileen O'Leary
    300,-

    How does one live a good life? If you're Pat Graves, you change your name to Cecile Collette, move to Cleveland, and join three churches and the Rotary Club. For Cecile, it may be possible to make Michigan and everything else she touches beautiful, but she'll come to grief when she tries to redesign another human being.

  • - Stage Roles of Anglo-American Girls in the Nineteenth Century
    av Marlis Schweitzer
    1 256,-

    Traces the theatrical repertoire of a small group of white Anglo-American actresses as they reshaped the meanings of girlhood in Britain, North America, and the British West Indies during the first half of the nineteenth century.

  • av Vanessa Roveto
    346,-

    "To survive romantic love, the woman served the other woman desert dirt with shells as the truck stop receded into the distance" - so observes the mordantly detached voice of a women, an extravagantly pained, self-and-other-lacerating imaginative journey dedicated 'to relationship'.

  • av Joseph G. Peterson
    270,-

    Romulus was the founder of Rome; and those tossed outside the city-gate are not Romulus's children but the cast-offs living in hovels, the Rumphulus. However, this isn't ancient Rome, but rather the nature preserve of a contemporary American suburb.

  • - A Collection of Voices
    av Rukmini Pande
    1 106,-

    Gathers together seemingly contradictory narratives that intersect at the (in)visibility of race/ism in fandom and fan studies. This collection engages the problem by undertaking the different tactics of decolonization - diversifying methodologies, destabilizing canons of 'must-read' scholarship, and decentering white fans.

  • - A Memoir of Cuban American Terrorism in the United States
    av Magda Montiel Davis
    316,-

    What does it mean to be instantly transformed into the most hated person in your community? After meeting Fidel Castro in 1994, Magda Montiel Davis soon found out. Kissing Fidel shares the sometimes dismal, sometimes comical realities of an ordinary citizen being thrown into a world of death threats, mob attacks, and terrorism.

  • - How Fans Defined a Subculture
    av Judith May Fathallah
    480,-

    A popular music phenomenon in the early 2000s, emo is short for 'emotional hardcore', and refers to both a music genre and a youth scene notable for its androgynous style. Judith May Fathallah pushes beyond the stereotypes and social stigma to explore how online fandom has shaped the definition of emo.

  • - Sex, Poetry, and Politics
    av Betsy Erkkila
    740,-

    Brings together a rich collection of Betsy Erkkila's phenomenally influential essays that have been published over the years, along with two powerful new essays. Erkkila offers a moving account of the inseparable mix of the spiritual-sexual-political in Whitman and the absolute centrality of male-male connection to his work and thinking.

  • av Jennifer Burek Pierce
    690,-

    In the twenty-first century, reading and watching videos are related activities that allow people to engage with authors and other readers. Incorporating thousands of testimonials about what they read and why, Jennifer Burek Pierce explores the changing nature of reading in the digital age.

  • av Oni Buchanan
    346,-

    As time beings, what we have is the time being, the present moment, however compromised, however shattered. Buchanan's characteristic combination of wry humour, nerve, empathy, wisdom, and outrage exposes the laughably absurd and the evisceratingly tragic all at once.

  • - Field Notes from an Iowa Conservation Officer
    av Erika Billerbeck
    330,-

    Using an introspective personal voice, this narrative nonfiction work weaves stories of Iowa's natural history with a cast of unforgettable characters. Wildland Sentinel touches on what it means to be a woman working in the male-dominated field of conservation law enforcement.

  • av Sari Rosenblatt
    300,-

    In Sari Rosenblatt's collection, by turns tender and hilarious, we see fathers who are bullies and nervous watchdogs, haunted by their own pasts and fear of the future they may never see. Rosenblatt's comic sensibility, so present in these stories, entertains and consoles, while seeming to say to her readers: you might as well laugh.

  • - How and Why Fans Love the Man in Black
    av Michael Hinds
    440,-

    Examines digital and real-world fan communities and the individuals who comprise them, profiling their relationships to Cash and each other. Studying Johnny Cash's international fans and their love for the man reveals new insights about music, fandom, and the United States.

  •  
    480,-

    Presents the 104 color photographs - selected from more than 2,000 photographs taken over a twelve-day trip - in sequential order to show, in photographer Barry Phipps words, "what does and does not change as one travels through shifting cultural and geographic regions."

  • - A Biographical Chronicle of His Life, Drawn from Recollections, Interviews, and Memoirs by Family, Friends, and Associates
     
    1 136,-

    Based on Jeanne Reesman's nearly thirty-five years of archival research, this book offers surprising perspectives on Jack London's many sides by family, friends, fellow struggling young writers, business associates, high school and college classmates, interviewers, editors, coauthors, visitors to his Sonoma Valley Beauty Ranch, and more.

  • - Affect and History in Postwar Experimental Poetry
    av Benjamin Lee
    1 196,-

    Experimental poetry responded to historical change in the decades after World War II, with an attitude of such casual and reckless originality that its insights have often been overlooked. However, as Benjamin Lee argues, to ignore them is to overlook a rich resource for our own complicated transition into the twenty-first century.

  • - A Memoir of Sex, Love, Abuse, and Scandal in the Catholic Seminary
    av Tom Rastrelli
    336,-

    Tom Rastrelli is a survivor of clergy-perpetrated sexual abuse who then became a priest in the early days of the Catholic Church's ongoing scandals. This bok divulges the inner workings of the seminary, providing an unapologetic look into the psychosexual and spiritual dynamics of celibacy and lays bare system that perpetuates abuse and cover-up.

  • av William Fargason
    330,-

    In his debut collection, William Fargason inspects the pain of memory alongside the pain of the physical body. Fargason takes language to its limits to demonstrate how grief is given a voice. His speaker confronts illness, grapples with grief, and heals after loss in its most crushing forms.

  • av Jennifer Habel
    330,-

    Offers a perceptive, tenacious investigation of gender, authority, and art. Jennifer Habel draws a contrast between the archetype of the lone male genius and the circumscribed, relational lives of women.

  • - Photographing Life in One Meter
    av Chris Helzer
    620,-

    Illustrates the beauty and diversity of prairie through an impressive series of photographs, all taken within the same square meter of prairie. During a year-long project, Chris Helzer photographed 113 plant and animal species within a tiny plot, and captured numerous other images that document the splendor of diverse grasslands.

  • - A Leap into the Wood Duck's World
    av Greg Hoch
    540,-

    Shows how almost anyone can get involved in conservation and do something for wildlife beyond giving money to conservation organisations. In this fascinating and practical read, Greg Hoch blends historical literature with modern science, and shows how our views of conservation have changed over the last century.

  • - The Turn to Documents in Contemporary North American Poetry
    av Michael Leong
    1 000,-

    Why have so many contemporary poets turned to source material, from newspapers to governmental records, as inspiration for their poetry? How can citational poems offer a means of social engagement? Michael Leong reveals that much of the power of contemporary poetry rests in its potential to select, adapt and extend public documentation.

  • - How Two Midwestern Women Used Art to Negotiate Migration and Dispossession
    av Elizabeth Sutton
    740,-

    Tracing the parallel lives of two women artists, Angel De Cora and Karen Thronson, at the turn of the twentieth century, art historian Elizabeth Sutton reveals how their stories intersected and diverged in the American Midwest.

  • - A Memoir of Abuse
    av Dominic Bucca
    316,-

    At the most prestigious preparatory schools in the United States, the children of educators are referred to as "faculty brats". Dominic Bucca's art teacher mother married his music teacher stepfather twice, and the young boy wondered if the union might be twice as strong. Instead, he quickly discovered that the marriage was twice as flawed.

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