Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker utgitt av University of Texas Press

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  • - The Algarve
    av Dan Stanislawski
    398,-

    The geography and culture of an isolated province of Portugal as it first felt the impact of industrialization.

  • - Call Him Ishmael
    av Paul Christensen
    389,-

    Charles Olson was an important force behind the raucous, explicit, jaunty style of much of twentieth-century poetry in America; this study makes a major contribution to our understanding of his life and work.

  • - Affines, Ancestors, and Aristocrats
    av Mary W. Helms
    266,-

    A broadly cross-cultural study of aristocracy in chiefly societies.

  • - Contexts and Dispositions
    av Eric Gary Anderson
    344,-

    This groundbreaking book explores the Southwest as both a real and a culturally constructed site of migration and encounter, in which the very identities of "alien" and "native" shift with each act of travel.

  • - A Postprocessual Prehistory of Central Andean Social Organization
    av William H. Isbell
    370,-

    A boldly revisionist view of the organization of the ayllu, ancient Andean kinship groups.

  • - Remembering the Dust Bowl Refugee Camps
    av Sanora Babb
    318,-

    A vivid, firsthand account of the migrations, immigrant camps, and labor organizing of displaced Midwestern farmers during the Dust Bowl of the 1930s, illustrated with striking photographs.

  • av Francois Burgat
    214,-

    A provocative rethinking of the war on terror that exposes the dangers of Western blindness to colonial Middle Eastern history and breaks the deadlock of geopolitics and religious identity.

  • - Books 11-14.34 (480-401 BCE)
    av Siculus Diodorus
    269,-

    By one of the foremost historians and translators in the field of Classics, Peter Green-an authoritative, modern translation of a long-neglected historian whose work covers the most vital century in ancient Greek history.

  • av J. Frank Dobie
    194,-

    A collection of folklore about rattlesnakes.

  • av Emma Perez
    326,-

    In this literary novel set in nineteenth-century Texas, a Tejana lesbian cowgirl embarks on an adventure after the fall of the Alamo.Micaela Campos witnesses the violence against Mexicans, African Americans, and indigenous peoples after the infamous battles of the Alamo and of San Jacinto, both in 1836. Resisting an easy opposition between good versus evil and brown versus white characters, the novel also features Micaela's Mexican-Anglo cousin who assists and hinders her progress. Micaela's travels give us a new portrayal of the American West, populated by people of mixed races who are vexed by the collision of cultures and politics. Ultimately, Micaela's journey and her romance with a Black/American Indian woman teach her that there are no easy solutions to the injustices that birthed the Texas Republic...This novel is an intervention in queer history and fiction with its love story between two women of color in mid-nineteenth-century Texas. Perez also shows how a colonial past still haunts our nation's imagination. The battles of the Alamo and San Jacinto offered freedom and liberty to Texans, but what is often erased from the story is that common people who were Mexican, Indian, and Black did not necessarily benefit from the influx of so many Anglo immigrants to Texas. The social themes and identity issues that Perez explorespolitical climate, debates over immigration, and historical revision of the American Westare current today.';Perez's sparse, clean writing style is a blend of Cormac McCarthy, Carson McCullers, and Annie Proulx. This makes for a quick and engrossing reading experience as the narrative has a fluid quality about it.' Alicia Gaspar de Alba, professor and chair of Chicana and Chicano Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, and author of Sor Juana's Second Dream';Riveting... Emma Perez captures well the violence and the chaos of the southwest borderlands during the time of territorial and international disputes in the 1800s.... Perez vividly depicts the conflicts between nations with the authority of a historian and with language belonging to a poet. A fine, fine read.' Helena Maria Viramontes, author of Their Dogs Came with Them';Perez's new novel... Powerfully presents a revenge tale from an unusual point of view, that of a displaced Chicana in 1836 Texas.... The writing is sharp and clever. The dialogue is realistic.' Lambda Literary, Lambda Award Finalist';Filled with lush beauty, harshness, and horrifying brutality, this is one of those books in which you just KNOW what's going to happen at the endbut you're wrong.' The Gay & Lesbian Review

  • - Economic Change in Texas, 1875-1901
    av John Stricklin Spratt
    484,-

    An economic history of Texas in the late nineteenth century.

  • - Finding Order amid Chaos
    av John Fleming
    344,-

    John Fleming offers the first book-length assessment of Tom Stoppard's work in nearly a decade.

  • - Daytime Television in the 1950s
    av Marsha F. Cassidy
    292,-

    Viewing popular women's daytime TV programs of the 1950s from a feminist perspective.

  • av Virginia H. Taylor
    457,-

    The history of a land company, its railroad parent, and its role in the development of Northwest Texas.

  • av Andy Adams
    344,-

    A sparkling collection of tales told around Western campfires.

  • - Text and Transformations
     
    266,-

    This volume brings together thirteen essays by noted scholars from the first symposium ever devoted exclusively to the Lancelot-Grail Cycle.

  • - Its History, Structure, and Survival
    av John Baugh
    214,-

    The history, linguistic structure, and survival within white society of black street speech, based on a long-term study of adult speakers.

  • - Art and Cinema in the Age of Photography
     
    370,-

    In this volume, experts in film studies and art history take up the debate, begun by philosopher Walter Benjamin, about the power and scope of the image in a secular age.

  •  
    614,-

    This anthology is an attempt to look at the current situation of children in the Middle East by presenting materials by both Middle Eastern and Western scholars.

  • av R. John Rath
    540,-

    An evaluation of the revolution from the point of view of the political ideologies of 1848.

  • av Jack Couffer
    311,-

    ';Inside information on a wondrously droll, highly classified yarn from WWII... A well-told, stranger-than-fiction tale that could make a terrific movie.' Kirkus Reviews The plan: attach small incendiary bombs to millions of bats and release them over Japan's major cities. As the bats went to roost, a million fires would flare up in remote crannies of the wood and paper buildings common throughout Japan. When their cities were reduced to ashes, the Japanese would surely capitulate... Told here by the youngest member of the team, this is the story of the bat bomb project, or Project X-Ray, as it was officially known. In scenes worthy of a Capra or Hawks comedy, Jack Couffer recounts the unorthodox experiments carried out in the secrecy of Bandera, Texas, Carlsbad, New Mexico, and El Centro, California, in 1942-1943 by ';Doc' Adams' private army. This oddball cast of characters included an eccentric inventor, a distinguished Harvard scientist, a biologist with a chip on his shoulder, a movie star, a Texas guano collector, a crusty Marine Corps colonel, a Maine lobster fisherman, an ex-mobster, and a tiger. The bat bomb researchers risked life and limb to explore uncharted bat caves and ';recruit' thousands of bats to serve their country, certain that they could end the war with Japan. And they might havein their first airborne test, the bat bombers burned an entire brand-new military airfield to the ground. For everyone who relishes true tales of action and adventure, Bat Bomb is a must-read. Bat enthusiasts will also discover the beginnings of the scientific study of bats.

  • av Jorge Luis Borges
    240,-

  • - A History of Private Law and Institutions in Spanish America
    av M. C. Mirow
    484,-

    This book offers the first comprehensive introduction in either English or Spanish to private law in Spanish Latin America from the colonial period to the present.

  • - Narrative, Gender, and the Intimacies of Power in the Andes
    av Krista E. Van Vleet
    305,-

    A unique analysis of the stories, conversations, gossip, public speeches, and other narratives that shape community and identity among peasant women of the Bolivian highlands.

  • - A Biography of Edith Wharton
    av Shari Benstock
    750,-

    A biography of the noted author, tracing her evolution from shy debutante to the social chronicler of her age.

  • av Charles William Ramsdell
    344,-

    An examination of events that still impact upon Texas and the South.

  • av Llerena Friend
    410,-

    A biography of Sam Houston that examines seriously his role as an American statesman.

  • - Bodies and Desire in the Postindustrial Age
    av Claudia Springer
    214,-

    How futuristic techno-erotic imagery in popular culture actually encode current debates concerning gender roles and sexuality.

  • - Marriage in Sophoclean Tragedy
    av Kirk Ormand
    266,-

    Insights into how Athenians thought about the institution of marriage, gleaned from the plays of Sophocles.

  •  
    457,-

    An examination of the economic policies and their outcomes in several Latin American states.

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