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  • - Two Journeys into the West
    av Daryl Farmer
    271 - 391

    Charts a moving landscape of people and places over the past twenty years

  • - The Commemoration and Representation of the Nineteenth-Century Mexican Pronunciamiento
     
    481

    The third in a series of books examining the pronunciamiento, this collection addresses the complicated legacy of pronunciamientos and their place in Mexican political culture. The essays explore the sacralization and legitimization of these revolts and of their leaders in the nation's history and consider why these celebrations proved ultimately ineffective.

  • av Randolph Feezell
    337

    Draws from current sports issues, popular literature, and contemporary sports figures to shed light on the attraction and value of sports and examine the accompanying ethical issues

  • - The Rocket Pioneers
    av Chris Gainor
    287

    Although the dream of flying is as old as the human imagination, the notion of rocketing into space may have originated with Chinese gunpowder experiments during the Middle Ages. Rockets as both weapons and entertainment are examined in this engaging history of how human beings acquired the ability to catapult themselves into space.

  • - The Political Project of Psychoanalysis
    av Todd McGowan
    481

    Although there have been many attempts to apply the ideas of psychoanalysis to political thought, this book is the first to identify the political project inherent in the fundamental tenets of psychoanalysis. And this political project, Todd McGowan contends, provides an avenue for emancipatory politics after the failure of Marxism in the twentieth century.

  •  
    537

    Examines the theories of race that informed the legal, political, and social policies aimed against ethnic minorities in Nazi-dominated Europe. The essays explicate how racial science, preexisting racist sentiments, and pseudoscientific theories of race that were preeminent in interwar Europe ultimately facilitated Nazi racial designs for a ""New Europe"".

  • - An Alphabetical Odyssey of Mayhem and Misbehavior
    av Brandon R. Schrand
    187

    Doing things by the book"" acquires a whole new meaning in Brandon R. Schrand's memoir of coming of age in spite of himself. The ""works cited"" are those books that serve as Schrand's signposts as he goes from life as a hormone-crazed, heavy-metal wannabe in the remotest parts of working-class Idaho to a reasonable facsimile of manhood.

  • av Barrie Jean Borich
    277

    Cartography of high literary order, plotting routes, real and imagined, and putting an alternate landscape on the map

  • - Remapping the Americas and the Pacific
     
    481

    Through a comparative framework, this volume weaves together narratives of US and Spanish empire, globalization, resistance, and identity, as well as social, labor, and political movements. Contributors examine multiethnic celebrities and key figures, migratory paths, cultural productions, and social and political formations among these three groups.

  • av John M. Oskison
    791

    John Milton Oskison, born in the Indian Territory to a Cherokee mother and an immigrant English father, and was brought up engaging in his Cherokee heritage. Oskison left Indian Territory to attend college and went on to have a long career in New York City journalism. This is the first comprehensive collection of Oskison's writings.

  • - The Dirty Secrets of Clean Energy and the Future of Environmentalism
    av Ozzie Zehner
    411

    We don't have an energy crisis. We have a consumption crisis.

  • - A Tale of the Pioneers Twenty Years Later
    av O. E. Rolvaag
    291

    A sequel to "Giants in the Earth", this work tells the tale of Norwegian settlers in the Dakotas. Beret and their children, Syvert Tonseten and Kjersti, and Sorine struggle to adapt, and to become Americans. This is a novel of youth and youth's self-discovery. It is a story of Beret's pain and dismay at the Americanization of her children.

  • av Richard Wagner
    391

    Includes works such as "The Art-Work of the Future", "Autobiographical Sketch," "Art and Climate"; "Wieland the Smith"; "Art and Revolution", and "A Communication to My Friends".

  • - The Pelbar Cycle, Book Three
    av Paul O. Williams
    201

    Several years in the future, the conservative borders of Pelbar society continue to crumble as the people conduct trade, form friendships, and intermarry with members of the tribes that have settled around the citadel of Northwall. This book is the third volume in the "Pelbar Cycle", a series of 7 postapocalyptic novels about the people of Pelbar.

  • - Willa Cather and Modern Cultures
    av Cather Studies
    441

    Divided into two sections, the essays in Cather Studies, Volume 9 examine Willa Cather as an author with an innovative receptivity to modern cultures and a powerful affinity with the visual and musical arts. The essays are unified by an understanding of Cather as a writer of transition whose fiction meditates on the cultural movement from Victorianism into the twentieth century.

  • - The Army Career of Frederick William Benteen, 1834-1898
    av Charles K. Mills
    311

    Frederick William Benteen (1834-98) was a military officer during the Civil War and the Black Hills War against the Lakotas and the Northern Cheyennes. In Harvest of Barren Regrets, Charles K. Mills explores Benteen's complex personality and life as a career army man during one of the most violent and compelling periods in US military history.

  • av James Crews
    201

    For any of us, what stays? For the arsonist's wife who has not yet left? The devout saint trudging another mile in his nail-shoes? The lost couple in their dying moments in a Nebraska blizzard? With an unflinching eye, James Crews gives us the forbidden love, forbidden unions, and secret lives that, whatever the loss, the attrition, the cost, we must acknowledge, must hold, must keep.

  • - A Memoir
    av Mary Clearman Blew
    261 - 337

    Mary Clearman Blew's education began at home, on a remote cattle ranch in Montana. She graduated to a one-room rural school, then escaped, via scholarship, to the University of Montana, where, still in her teens, she met and married her first husband. This Is Not the Ivy League is her account of what it was to be that girl, and then that woman.

  • - Violence, Military Encounters, and Colonialism
     
    481

    Violence was prominent in France's conquest of a colonial empire, and the use of force was integral to its control and regulation of colonial territories. What, if anything, made such violence distinctly colonial? And how did its practitioners justify or explain it? These are issues at the heart of The French Colonial Mind.

  • - Mental Maps of Empire and Colonial Encounters
     
    481

    Considers French colonial experiences in Africa and Southeast Asia and identifies the processes that made Frenchmen and women into ardent imperialists

  • av Blake M. Hausman
    421

    A surrealistic revisiting of the Cherokee Removal, Riding the Trail of Tears takes us to north Georgia in the near future, into a virtual-reality tourist compound where customers ride the Trail of Tears, and into the world of Tallulah Wilson, a Cherokee woman who works there.

  • - Settler Colonialism, Maternalism, and the Removal of Indigenous Children in the American West and Australia, 1880-1940
    av Margaret D. Jacobs
    441

    In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, American Indians in the United States and Aboriginal people in Australia suffered a common experience at the hands of state authorities: the removal of their children to institutions in the name of assimilation. White Mother to a Dark Race examines the key roles white women played in these removal policies.

  • - A History of the North American West, 1800-1860
    av Anne F. Hyde
    671

    To most people living in the West, the Louisiana Purchase made little difference: the United States was just another imperial overlord to be assessed and manipulated. However, this was not, as Empires, Nations, and Families makes clear, virgin wilderness discovered by virtuous Anglo entrepreneurs. Rather, the United States was a newcomer in a place already complicated by vying empires.

  • av Anna Berge
    977

    West Greenlandic Eskimo, a part of the Eskimo-Aleut language family spoken all across the Arctic, is primarily found among the Native peoples of central west Greenland. In this highly nuanced study of West Greenlandic, linguist Anna Berge examines how the speaker's role affects syntactic structures within discourse. Also included are transcripts of conversations with fluent Native speakers.

  • - The Path to Private Spaceflight
    av Emeline Paat-Dahlstrom & Chris Dubbs
    311 - 501

    Nearly forty years passed between the Apollo moon landings, the grandest accomplishment of a government-run space programme, and the Ansari X PRIZE-winning flights of SpaceShipOne, the greatest achievement of a private space programme. As we hover on the threshold of commercial spaceflight, authors Chris Dubbs and Emeline Paat-Dahlstrom look back at how we got to this point.

  • - Representations of Consciousness in Narrative Discourse in English
     
    391

    In this interdisciplinary and groundbreaking collection of essays, distinguished scholars examine trends in the representation of consciousness in English-language narrative discourse from 700 to the present. Tracing commonalities and differences in the portrayal of fictional minds, The Emergence of Mind will have a lasting impact on literary studies, narratology, and other fields.

  • - Selected Sources on the Destruction of the Jews of Germany and Austria, Poland, and the Soviet Union (Eighth Edition)
     
    481

    Presents 213 documents on the theory, planning, and execution of, and reaction and resistance to, the Nazi plan to exterminate European Jews, from the 1920s through the closing days of World War II, and focuses on the experience of eastern Europe.

  • - The Life of Olive Oatman
    av Margot Mifflin
    250 - 451

    In 1851 Olive Oatman was a thirteen-year old pioneer traveling west toward Zion, with her Mormon family. Within a decade, she was a white Indian with a chin tattoo, caught between cultures. The Blue Tattoo tells the harrowing story of this forgotten heroine of frontier America.

  • - A Salish Story about the Value of Reciprocity
    av Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes
    301

    We were wealthy from the water"", Mitch Smallsalmon says, and like all the tribal elders, he speaks to our understanding of the natural world and the consequences of change. In this book the wisdom of the elders is passed on to the young as the story of the Jocko River, the home of the bull trout, unfolds for a group of schoolchildren on a field trip.

  • - Discovering Bhutan on the Toughest Trek in the World
    av Kevin Grange
    261

    In a remote kingdom hidden in the Himalayas, there is a trail said to be the toughest trek in the world - twenty-four days, 216 miles, eleven mountain passes, and enough ghost stories to scare an exorcist. In 2007 Kevin Grange decided to acquaint himself with the country of Bhutan by taking on this infamous trail. Beneath Blossom Rain is Grange's account of his journey.

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