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  • - Freedom and Bondage Along the Ohio River
    av Matthew Salafia
    391

    By centering the practical and figurative significance of the Ohio River as a political border, a cultural boundary, and an artery of movement and economy that gave form to the region, Matthew Salafia sheds light on peculiarities of labor and economy along the Ohio River.

  • - Thangmi Identities Between Nepal and India
    av Sara Shneiderman
    391 - 951

    The first comprehensive ethnography of the Thangmi, a marginalized community who migrate between Himalayan border zones, Rituals of Ethnicity explores Thangmi cultural worlds and regional political histories to offer a new explanation for the persistence of enduring ethnic identities despite the realities of mobile, hybrid lives.

  • - Design, Profits, and Community
    av Peter Hendee Brown
    511

    Based on interviews in Portland, Chicago, Miami, and Minneapolis/Saint Paul, How Real Estate Developers Think depicts the entrepreneurial personality of the developer, explores the meaning of "good design," and examines the economic risks and rewards of development.

  • - Searching for Strangers in Colonial Boston
    av Sharon V. Salinger & Cornelia Hughes Dayton
    337

    Robert Love's Warnings follows the walks of one otherwise obscure townclerk, Robert Love, as he warned itinerants and sojourners to depart the town in fourteen days. Love's meticulous records reveal the complex legal, social, and political landscape of New England in the decade before the Revolution.

  • - The Black Freedom Struggle and the United Farm Workers
    av Lauren Araiza
    337

    Through the relationships between the African American civil rights groups of the 1960s and 1970s and the United Farm Workers, a primarily Mexican American union, To March for Others examines the complexities of forming coalitions across racial, socioeconomic, and geographic divides in pursuit of justice and equality.

  • - Syriac Christians and the Early Muslim World
    av Michael Philip Penn
    391 - 1 181

    The earliest and largest corpus of Christian writings on Islam was written in the Aramaic dialect of Syriac. Envisioning Islam shows how these previously neglected texts problematize modern perceptions of an exclusively hostile Christian reaction to Islam and revolutionize our understanding of the early Islamic world.

  • - Anthropology in Wartime
    av Ivana Macek
    377

    A richly detailed account of the lived experiences of ordinary people in this multicultural city between 1992 and 1996, during the war in the former Yugoslavia. Exploring how civilians coped with desperate circumstances, it argues that ethnonational divisions were the result rather than the cause of the war.

  • - Builders in Philadelphia, 1790-1850
    av Donna J. Rilling
    801

    How entrepreneurial housebuilders fueled a rapid economy. "A well-written and easily read business book with a historical perspective, quite fit for a general readership interested in the history of American enterprise."-APT Bulletin

  • - The Act as Idea
    av Berel Lang
    371

    Berel Lang's Genocide: The Act as Idea analyzes and defends the distinctiveness of the concept of genocide as a notable advance in the history of moral and political thinking and practice.

  • - The Politics of War in Early Pennsylvania
    av Patrick Spero
    391 - 557

    Synthesizing the tensions between high and low politics and eastern and western regions in Pennsylvania before the Revolution, Patrick Spero recasts the importance of frontiers, as eighteenth-century Pennsylvanians would have understood them, to the development of colonial America and the origins of American Independence.

  • - Soldiers' Writing in the Early Modern Hispanic World
    av Miguel Martinez
    847

    Front Lines documents the literary practices of imperial Spain's common soldiers. The epic poems, chronicles, ballads, and autobiographies that these soldiers wrote at the front provide a critical view from below on state violence and imperial expansion.

  • - Gender and National Expansion in Florida
    av Laurel Clark Shire
    681

    Among the many contentious frontier zones in nineteenth-century North America, Florida was an early and important borderland where the United States worked out how it would colonize new territories.

  • - Mechanism, Magic, Nature, and Art
    av E. R. Truitt
    337

    Medieval robots took such forms as talking statues, mechanical animals, or silent metal guardians; some served to entertain or instruct while others performed surveillance or discipline. Medieval Robots explores the forgotten history of real and imagined machines that captivated Europe from the ninth through the fourteenth centuries.

  • av Loa P. Traxler
    1 417

  • - The Limits of Privatization
    av Manfred Nowak
    841

    Human Rights or Global Capitalism examines the application of neoliberal policies from a human rights perspective and asks whether states, by outsourcing to the private sector many services with a direct impact on human rights, abdicate their responsibilities to uphold human rights and violate international law.

  • - America's Military Experience in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria
    av Brian Glyn Williams
    391 - 801

    Counter Jihad provides a sweeping account of America's military campaigns in the Islamic world and fills a gaping void in our understanding of the War on Terror.

  • - The Politics of Politeness in Early America
    av Steven C. Bullock
    641

    Tea Sets and Tyranny offers a political history of politeness in early America, from its origins in the late seventeenth century to its remaking in the age of the Revolution.

  • - The New York Riots of 1964 and the War on Crime
    av Michael W. Flamm
    391 - 1 237

    In Central Harlem, the symbolic and historic heart of black America, the violent unrest of July 1964 highlighted a new dynamic in the racial politics of the nation. The first "long, hot summer" of the Sixties had arrived.

  •  
    791

    The American Revolution Reborn parts company with the American Revolution of our popular imagination and renders it as a time of intense ambiguity and frightening contingency. With an introduction by Spero and a conclusion by Zuckerman, this volume heralds a substantial and revelatory rebirth in the study of the American Revolution.

  • - Disability Politics in World War II America
    av Audra Jennings
    801

    Drawing from extensive archival research, Out of the Horrors of War demonstrates that disabled citizens in the World War II era organized a national movement for economic security and full citizenship, reshaping the U.S. welfare state and laying the foundation for the disability rights movement.

  • - Making the Haitian Revolution in Early America
    av James Alexander Dun
    657

    Dangerous Neighbors shows how the Haitian Revolution permeated early American print culture and had a profound impact on the young nation's domestic politics.

  • - When Women Speak in Old French Literature
    av E. Jane Burns
    411

    In Bodytalk, E. Jane Burns contends that female protagonists in medieval texts authored by men can be heard to talk back against the stereotyped and codified roles that their fictive anatomy is designed to convey.

  • - Part 1, Interpretive Studies; Part 2, Artifact Catalog
    av Ivor Noel Hume
    1 237

    Martin's Hundred was a 20,000-acre tract of land in Tidewater Virginia, one of the most extensive English enterprises in the New World. Settled in 1618, all signs of its early occupation soon disappeared, leaving no trace above ground. More than three centuries later, archaeological explorations uncovered tantalizing evidence of the people who had lived, worked, and died there.

  • - Science, Commerce, and Politics in the Early Modern World
     
    421

    A wide-ranging collection of essays on plants as market forces.

  • - Kinesthetic and Visual Symbolism in a Philippine Community
    av Sally Ann Ness
    391

  • av Evan Haefeli
    391

    Evan Haefeli demonstrates how convoluted and uncertain were the beginnings of religious tolerance in America, by giving them an international context.

  • av Roland Burke
    391

    This book challenges traditional accounts of the Third World's contribution to international human rights. It demonstrates that diplomats from Third World countries helped both to radicalize the UN human rights agenda in the heyday of decolonization and to undermine that agenda by advancing cultural relativism as an excuse for abuses in the 1970s.

  • av John D. Dorst
    391

    In Looking West, John D. Dorst examines a largely neglected pattern of seeing that stands in contrast to the universally familiar iconography.

  • - Catastrophe and Colonial Settlement in Early America
    av Kathleen Donegan
    337

    Seasons of Misery offers a boldly original account of early English settlement in American by placing catastrophe and crisis at the center of the story. Donegan argues that the constant state of suffering and uncertainty decisively formed the colonial identity and produced the first distinctly colonial literature.

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