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Bøker utgitt av University of Georgia Press

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  • - The Life and Death of Viola Liuzzo
    av Mary Stanton
    466

    Viola Liuzza was the only white woman honoured at the Civil Rights Memorial in Montgomery, Alabama. This biography follows Liuzza through her childhood in the south, adult life in Michigan, to the 1965 voting rights march in Selma, Alabama, where she died in a Klan ambush.

  • av Leslie Hall
    466 - 766,-

    Through analysis of the history of the American revolution in Georgia, this study presents a thorough examination of how landownership issues complicated and challenged the loyalties of the colonists.

  • - On Chimpanzees and People
    av Jane Goodall & Dale Peterson
    451

    After introducing the reader to the animal that fashions and uses tools, exploits forest medicines and exhibits human-like emotions, this text presents a study of the threats to wild chimpanzees' habitats and the many abuses that chimps have endured and continue to face at the hands of humans.

  • av Charles W. Chesnutt
    451

    John Walden, a young black man, decides to pass for white in order to earn what he feels is his share of the American dream. Without sentimentality, this novel probes deeply into the white South's obsessions with race and privilege.

  • av Sue William Silverman
    387,-

    From age four to 18, Sue William Silverman was sexually abused by her father, a high-ranking government official. This is an often graphic memoir of those years which recounts how Silverman's mother ignored her distress, thus conspiring in an attempt to keep the situation unreported and undetected.

  • av Chretien de Troyes, Chretien de & Troyes
    466

    In the poem presented in this volume, the romance begins with the marriage of Cliges's parents and continues with the clandestine mutual love of their son and his uncle's bride, Fenice. Cliges and Fenice are finally united after executing a false-death plot aided by black-magic.

  • av Chretien de Troyes, Chretien de & Troyes
    466 - 1 332,-

    The text presents is a circa 1170 version of the Griselda legend which tells the story of the marriage of Erec, a courageous Welsh prince and knight of the Round Table, and Enide, an impoverished noblewoman. The translator's introduction includes discussion of the Arthurian legends in history.

  • - Three Stage Versions
    av Robert Penn Warren
    766,-

  • - To be Free, Black and Female in the Old South
     
    422,-

    This text aims to offer an insight into the lives of the Old South's free women of colour. The letters, from family members and friends, were written between 1844 and 1899 to Ann Battles Johnson, wife of Natchez businessman William T. Johnson, while her granddaughter, Catherine, wrote the diary.

  • - A Chronicle
    av Mark Steadman
    466

    Welcome to McAfee County, home to a large gathering of characters whose stories are as intertwined as kudzu. Moving in and out of each other's lives in profound, often shocking, ways, the men and women in these stories form a vibrant community.

  • av Julia Peterkin
    525,-

    Julia Peterkin pioneered in demonstrating the literary potential for serious depictions of the African-American experience. In her novels and stories, she taps the richness of rural southern black culture and oral traditions to capture conflicting realities and reveal grace and courage.

  • av Kenneth E. Morris
    495 - 1 449,-

    Aims to show readers that any conclusions about former American president Jimmy Carter's leadership and its adequacy to his challenges as president cannot ignore the moral quandary that vexed the American nation not only under Carter but ever since.

  • av Robert E. Burns
    437 - 1 332,-

    This is Burns' story of his escape from a Georgia chain gang in 1921, after being sentenced to six to ten years' hard labour for robbery. He lived as a free man for seven years before being recaptured and returned to the chain gang. Escaping again, he was a fugitive when his story was published.

  • av Donald Windham
    437,-

    The memoir of the youth of Donald Windham in Depression-era Atlanta. The recollections describe the pleasant memories of his childhood as well as the less happy ones, and recount Windham's increasing desire for a world beyond Atlanta.

  • - Slave Work and Family Life in Antebellum South Carolina
    av Larry E. Hudson
    451 - 766,-

    Looking closely at both the slaves' and masters' worlds in low, middle, and up-country South Carolina, this volume covers a wide range of economic and social topics related to the opportunities given to slaves to produce and trade their own food, once the master's assigned work was done.

  • - East Hampton Histories
    av T.H. Breen
    525,-

    Assessing the interplay between some of the East Hampton histories the author encountered, this work details the ""official"" stories of many generations, the myths and oral traditions, and the curious stories that Breen, as an outsider, discerned in the town's holdings of artifacts and documents.

  • - What We Were Reading in the '60s
    av Philip D. Beidler
    510 - 1 332,-

    More than 50 writers are profiled in this survey of the literature of the 1960s including Timothy Leary, Malcolm X, Helen Gurley Brown and Rachel Carson. The background of the youth movements are highlighted in the investigation in order to compare literacy in the USA in the 1990s.

  • - Stories by Cecil Dawkins
    av Cecil Dawkins
    437,-

    These seven stories, set in the rural South and West, delve beneath the surface of ordinary lives, revealing their foibles and idiosyncracies. For example, an old deaf woman is kidnapped by a stranger whom she takes to the devil, and a money-grubbing man meets a woman no less hard than himself.

  • av Hugh Kenner
    525,-

    In this work, Hugh Kenner applies his attention to the alchemy of speech turning into language, language becoming art, and art finally settling down as culture. A variety of literary topics are addressed in 43 lively and often humorous essays, from St Augustine, through Tom Wolfe, to Nabokov.

  •  
    422,-

    A collection of ten essays which details the variety of ways that anthropological approaches and perspectives can be of practical worth in the resolution of conflicts.

  • - Growth of a Planter
    av Mary R. Bullard
    525,-

    This text offers a glimpse into the life and times of a 19th-century planter on one of Georgia's Sea Islands. Born poor, Robert Stafford became the leading planter on his native Cumberland Island and specialised in the highly valued long staple variety of cotton.

  • - An Oral History of the City, 1914-1948
    av Clifford M. Kuhn, Harlon E. Joye & E. Bernard West
    525,-

    A history of Atlanta during and between the world wars. This volume draws on nearly 200 interviews with Atlanta residents who recall, in their own words, ""the way it was"" - from segregated streetcars to college fraternity parties, from moonshine peddling to visiting opera performances.

  • - Theory Meets Practice
     
    525,-

    These essays explore the relationship between environmental ethics and policy, both in theory and practice. The work focuses on approaches to change in ethical theory, the need to expand awareness of the most pressing practical problems and the need for non-traditional solutions.

  •  
    590,-

    This volume is a collection of essays, letters, diary entries and speeches. Including selections by African Americans, women and native Americans, the anthology aims to reflect the diversity of voices and experiences throughout the history of the state.

  •  
    554,-

    This anthology offers pieces which embody the characteristically exaggerated and highly imaginative frontier humour of the old Southwest in the period 1835 to 1861. Among the authors represented are Philip B. January, Matthew C. Field, John Gorman, and George Washington Harris.

  • - Eyewitness Accounts, 1528-1861
     
    525,-

    Spanning the period from the earliest European expeditions to the eve of the Civil War, this book assembles a collection of first hand perspectives on the forces and experiences that defined the American south. Subjects include slavery, hospitality, religion and culture.

  • - Creating Woman's Voice in Southern Story
    av Lucinda H. MacKethan
    422,-

    Drawing upon letters, autobiographies and novels, this book examines the strategies that various southern women writers in the USA have used to create their own ""voice"", their own unique expression of mind and selfhood. This book is written within a chronological framework.

  • av Numan V. Bartley
    510

    An account of the people and forces that shaped the development of Georgia and other regions of the South. Enlarged and updated, this edition places greater emphasis on how urbanization and industrialization contributed to the development of a more cosmopolitan political culture.

  • av Patrick Lawler
    363 - 957,-

    This is a poetry of excursions: into maps of lost territories, into the thoughts of a man with no legs, into the life of a town marked by disasters. Lawler moves into the slender lines of shattered glass, the spaces between lyric and narrative, between metamorphosis and mutation.

  • - An Anthology of Contemporary American Poetry
     
    525,-

    In this pathbreaking anthology, Marie Harris and Kathleen Aguero have brought together poems representing a diversity of American voices and identities--among them Native, Asian, and black Americans; Chicano and Puerto Rican writers; gay and lesbian poets; writers of working-class background; and poets writing from American prisons.

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