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Bøker i Borderlands and Transcultural Studies-serien

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  • - Sakha Language Discourses and Practices in the City
    av Jenanne Ferguson
    747,-

    What does it mean to speak Sakha in the city? Words like Birds, a linguistic ethnography of Sakha discourses and practices in urban Far Eastern Russia, examines the factors that have aided speakers in maintaining - and adapting - their minority language over the course of four hundred years of contact with Russian speakers and the federal power apparatus.

  • av Paul Barba
    440 - 886,-

  • av Paul Spickard, Ingrid Dineen-Wimberly & Lily Anne Y. Welty Tamai
    394,-

    Shape Shifters presents a wide-ranging array of essays that examine peoples of mixed racial identity across a broad swath of space and time to understand the fluid nature of racial identities.

  • av Susan Elizabeth Ramirez
    344 - 1 348,-

  • - The Politics of Paternity and Responsibility for the Amerasians of Vietnam
    av Sabrina Thomas
    821,-

    Scars of War examines how the exclusion of mixed-race persons and people of Asian descent in the United States shaped the efforts of policymakers to recognize the Amerasians of Vietnam as American children and initiate legislation that designated them unfit for American citizenship.

  • - Mapping, Indians, and the Construction of the Trans-Mississippi West
    av David Bernstein
    385 - 1 078,-

  • - Migration across the Borderlands after the American Civil War
    av Todd W. Wahlstrom
    314 - 591,-

    The Southern Exodus to Mexico is an examination of the post-Civil War migration of former southern slaveholders into Mexico.

  • - How Stolen People Changed the World
    av Catherine M. Cameron
    316 - 425,-

  • - Journeys across Terrains of Race and Identity
     
    910,-

    Presents essays that examine peoples of mixed racial identity. Moving beyond the static "either/or" categories of racial identification found within typical insular conversations about mixed-race peoples, Shape Shifters explores these mixed-race identities as fluid, ambiguous, contingent, multiple, and malleable.

  • av Ingrid Dineen-Wimberly
    699,-

    Examines generations of mixed-race African Americans after the Civil War and into the Progressive Era, skilfully tracking the rise of a leadership class in Black America made up largely of individuals who had complex racial ancestries, many of whom therefore enjoyed racial options to identity as either Black or White.

  • - Writing the New American Multiracialism
    av Molly Littlewood McKibbin
    709,-

    Offers a social and literary history of multiracialism in the twentieth-century US. Molly Littlewood McKibbin examines the African American and white racial binary in contemporary multiracial literature to reveal the tensions of multiracialism in American life through individual consciousness, social perceptions, societal expectations, and subjective struggles with multiracial identity.

  • - History, Conquest, and Memory in the Native Northeast
    av Chad L. Anderson
    747,-

    Chad L. Anderson offers a significant contribution to understanding colonialism, intercultural conflict, and intercultural interpretations of the Iroquoian landscape during the late seventeenth, eighteenth, and early nineteenth centuries in central and western New York, the traditional Haudenosaunee homeland.

  • - Mobility and the Making of the Eastern U.S.-Mexico Border
    av James David Nichols
    692,-

    Chronicles the formation of the US-Mexico border from the perspective of the ""mobile peoples"" who assisted in determining the international boundary from both sides in the mid-nineteenth century. In this historic and timely study, James David Nichols argues against the many top-down connotations that borders carry, noting that the state cannot entirely dominate the process of boundary marking.

  •  
    657,-

    Borderlands are complex spaces that can involve military, religious, economic, political, and cultural interactions - all of which may vary by region and over time. John W. I. Lee and Michael North bring together interdisciplinary scholars to analyse a wide range of border issues and to encourage a nuanced dialogue addressing the concepts and processes of borderlands.

  • - Race, Health, and Colonization in the Texas Borderlands
    av Mark Allan Goldberg
    657,-

    Presents a comprehensive analysis of race, health, and colonization in a specific cross-cultural contact zone in the Texas borderlands between 1780 and 1861. Throughout this eighty-year period, ordinary health concerns shaped cross-cultural interactions during Spanish, Mexican, and Anglo colonization.

  • - Interracial Sex and Marriage in the United States and Australia
    av Ann McGrath
    403 - 551,-

  • - Indigenous Identities and Settler Colonialism in the Americas
     
    465,-

    Explores how indigenous peoples forged a sense of identity and community amid the changes wrought by European colonialism in the Caribbean, the Pacific Islands, and the mainland Americas from the seventeenth through the twentieth century.

  • - Vincennes, Prophetstown, and the Invasion of the Miami Homeland
    av Patrick Bottiger
    512,-

  • - Remapping the Americas and the Pacific
     
    509,-

    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.

  • - Mixed Families in the Age of Extremes
     
    948,-

    Adrienne Edgar and Benjamin Frommer bring together an international and interdisciplinary team of scholars to analyze interethnic and interracial marriage in Eastern Europe, the former Soviet Union, and Central Asia.

  • - Communities of Violence in the Southwestern Borderlands, 1680-1880
    av Lance R. Blyth
    320 - 657,-

    Borderlands violence, so explosive in our time, has deep roots in history. Lance R. Blyth's study of Chiricahua Apaches and the presidio of Janos in the US-Mexican borderlands reveals how no single entity had a monopoly on coercion, and how violence became the primary means by which relations were established, maintained, or altered both within and between communities.

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