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Böcker utgivna av University of Missouri Press

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  • - The History of Homer G. Phillips Hospital
    av Candace O'Connor
    781

    Draws on contemporary newspaper articles, institutional records, and her own oral history project to tell the first full history of the Homer G. Phillips Hospital - as well as brings new facts and insights into the life and mysterious murder (still an unsolved case) of the hospital's namesake, a pioneering Black attorney and civil rights activist.

  • av Bryan M. Jack
    461

    In the aftermath of the Civil War, thousands of former slaves made their way from the South to the Kansas plains. Called ""Exodusters,"" they were searching for their own promised land. This work tells the story of the American exodus as it played out in St Louis, a key stop in the journey west.

  • - Perspectives on the African American Militia and Volunteers, 1865-1917
     
    497

    Offers insights into the varied experiences of black militia units in the post-Civil War period. The book includes eleven articles that focus either on 'Black Participation in the Militia' or 'Black Volunteer Units in the War with Spain'. The articles provide an overview of the history of early black citizen-soldiers.

  • - Forty Years of Friendship, Letters, 1921-1960
     
    497

    The correspondence of these two prominent women reveals their concerns with love, career, and marriage. Their letters tell the story of the first generation of women to come of age during the twentieth century, as they tried to cope with problems that still face women today.

  • - American Children and World War II
    av Lisa L. Ossian
    387

    The struggles endured by American civilians during the Second World War are well documented, but accounts of the war years have mostly deliberated on the grown-ups' sacrifices. In The Forgotten Generation, Lisa Ossian explores the war's full implications for the lives of children.

  • - A History, 1920-1960
    av Will Mari
    467 - 691

    The story of the American newsroom is that of modern American journalism. In this holistic history, Will Mari tells that story from the 1920s through the 1960s, a time of great change and controversy in the field, one in which journalism was produced in "news factories" by news workers with dozens of different roles, and not just once a day, but hourly, using the latest technology and setting the stage for the emergence later in the century of the information economy. During this time, the newsroom was more than a physical place--it symbolically represented all that was good and bad in journalism, from the shift from blue- to white-collar work to the flexing of journalism's power as a watchdog on government and an advocate for social reform. Told from an empathetic, omnivorous, ground-up point of view, The American Newsroom: A History, 1920-1960 uses memoirs, trade journals, textbooks, and archival material to show how the newsroom expanded our ideas of what journalism could and should be.

  • - St. Louis in the Life and Work of Tennessee Williams
    av Henry I. Schvey
    497 - 627

    Unlike the prevailing scholarly narrative that suggests that Tennessee Williams discovered himself artistically and sexually in the deep South and New Orleans, Blue Song reveals that Williams remained emotionally tethered to St. Louis for a host of reasons for the rest of his life.

  • - The Missouri Crisis at 200, Volume I, Western Slavery, National Impasse
     
    717

    Many of the original essays in this volume began as papers presented at an international conference on Constitutional Democracy. Contributors reassess and add to historians' understanding of the full scope of the causes and consequences of what came to be known as the Missouri Crisis, on a regional and national basis.

  • - Law and the Limits of Loyalty
    av Rawn James
    491

    Perhaps the most overlooked aspect of Harry S. Truman's presidency is his judicial legacy, with biographies neglecting to consider the influence he had on the Supreme Court. Yet, as Rawn James lays, as president, Harry Truman molded the high court into a judicial body that appeared to actively support his administration's political agenda.

  • - Congress Debates the Missouri Crisis, 1819-1821
     
    757

    The issue of what would come to be known as the Missouri Crisis tested the still young American republic and, some four decades later, would all but rend it asunder. This collection of essays engages the intersections of history and constitutional law, and is certain to find eager readers among historians, legal scholars, and political scientists.

  • - Immigrant Identities in Early Twentieth-Century St. Louis
    av Benjamin Moore
    761

    The scraps of a young migrant's schoolwork provided Benjamin Moore with the starting point for this study of migration, memory, and identity. Centering on the compelling story of its eponymous subject, this book examines the governmental and institutional forces that affected the lives of migrants in South St. Louis in the early twentieth century.

  • - Or, the Price Paid for Challenging a Company Town
    av Gregg Andrews
    497

    Tells the extraordinary tale of two sisters, Mary Alice Heinbach and Euphemia B. Koller, and their seventeen-year property dispute against America's leading cement corporation - the Atlas Portland Cement Company.

  • - The Public Life of a Post-Civil War Black Leader
    av Gary R. Kremer
    451

    Tells the story of James Milton Turner, Missouri's most prominent nineteenth-century African American political figure. A self-taught lawyer, Turner earned a statewide reputation and wielded power far out of proportion to Missouri's relatively small black population.

  • - An Intellectual History
    av Carli N. Conklin
    407

    Considers happiness across a variety of intellectual traditions, and focuses on its usage in two key legal texts of the Founding Era: Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England and the Declaration. In so doing, Carli Conklin makes several contributions to the fields of early American intellectual and legal history.

  •  
    397

    Recovers journalistic work by an American icon for whom scholarly recognition is long overdue. Amy Mattson Lauters introduces readers to Rose Wilder Lane's life through examples of her journalism and argues that her work and career help establish her not only as an author and political rhetorician but also as a literary journalist.

  • - The 7th Armored Division in the Battle of the Bulge
    av Gregory Fontenot
    507

    Closes a gap in the record of the Battle of the Bulge by recounting the exploits of the 7th Armored Division in a way that no other study has. This narrative centres on the 7th Armored Division for the entire length of the campaign, in so doing reconsidering the story of the whole battle through the lens of a single division.

  • - Visions of Transcendence in Modernist Literature
    av Glenn Hughes
    757

    Examines the ways in which six literary modernists - Emily Dickinson, Marcel Proust, T.S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, Samuel Beckett, and Bob Dylan - have explored the human relationship to a transcendent mystery of meaning.

  • - The Search for Ultimacy from Ancient Societies to Postmodernity
    av Glenn Hughes
    481

    This text is an analysis of what philosopher Eric Voegelin described as ""the decisive problem of philosophy"": the dilemma of the discovery of transcendent meaning and the impact of this discovery on human self-understanding.

  • - The Community Relations Service and Civil Rights
    av Grande Lum & Bertram Levine
    917

    In this second, expanded edition of Resolving Racial Conflict, Grande Lum continues Bertram Levine's excellent scholarship, adding what has transpired over the last twenty-five years for the Community Relations Service (CRS) of the US Department of Justice.

  • - Perfecting the Art of Illusion
    av John D. Fair
    1 217

    Tells the story of how film-makers use and manipulate the appearance and performances of muscular men and women to enhance the appeal of their productions. The authors show how this practice evolved from the art of photography through magic lantern and stage shows into the motion picture industry.

  • - Essays on MAD Magazine's Humor and Legacy
     
    981

    Mad magazine stands near the heart of post-WWII American humour, but at the periphery in scholarly recognition from American cultural historians, including humour specialists. This book fills that gap, with perceptive, informed, engaging, but also funny essays by a variety of scholars.

  • - American Master of Watercolor and Printmaking
    av Henry Adams
    1 137

    Adolf Dehn belongs to a group of distinguished midcentury American artists who were eclipsed by Abstract Expressionism and the following movements in American art. In this wide-ranging biography, Henry Adams explores how a once central figure can come to be forgotten.

  • - A Memoir
    av Nancy McCabe
    491

    In the age of #MeToo and a radical re-envisioning of cultural attitudes, Nancy McCabe sets out to re-examine and gain new understanding of her ill-advised marriage through the lens of multiple metaphors, images, and forms.

  • - Discovery in a New Land
    av William Least Heat-Moon
    581

    As word of the discovery of gold in northern California spreads, an English physician, Nathaniel Trennant, accepts an offer to serve as doctor on a ship carrying immigrants to America. Alongside some two hundred emigres from northern Europe is a contingent of wealthy British people who call themselves not immigrants, but colonists.

  • av J. Furman Daniel
    377 - 611

  • - Civil War Commemoration in Missouri
    av Amy Laurel Fluker
    677

    Offers a history of Civil War commemoration in Missouri, shifting focus away from the guerrilla war and devoting equal attention to Union, African American, and Confederate commemoration. In doing so, Amy Fluker provides the most complete look yet at the construction of Civil War memory in Missouri.

  • - Problems and Prospects
     
    867

    Written by expert scientists, this collection of essays addresses the relationships between human population growth, the need to increase food supplies to feed the world population, and the chances for avoiding the extinction of a major proportion of the world's plant and animal species that collectively makes our survival on earth possible.

  • - Critical Essays in the Personal Voice
     
    491

    The previously unpublished essays collected here are by literary scholars who have dedicated their lives to reading and studying nineteenth-century British fiction and the Victorian world. Each writes about a novel that has acquired personal relevance to them.

  • - The U.S. Army's Role in Creating the Forever Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
    av Pat Proctor
    757

    In this blunt critique of the leadership of the US Army, Colonel Pat Proctor contends that after the fall of the Soviet Union, the US Army refused to reshape itself in response to the new strategic reality, a decision that saw it struggle through low-intensity conflicts in the 1980s and '90s, and leaving it unprepared for Afghanistan and Iraq.

  • - An American Soldier's Story
    av Lloyd M. Wells
    547

    Based on his war journal, letters and personal records, this account of the 1943-1945 campaign in Italy is an account of Lloyd Wells's personal war.

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