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  • Save 16%
    - Passenger Steamboats of the Mississippi River System since the Advent of Photography in Mid-Continent America
    by Frederick Way Jr.
    £29.49

    The first Mississippi steamboat was a packet, the New Orleans, a sidewheeler built at Pittsburgh in 1811, designed for the New Orleans-Natchez trade. This book includes a majority of combination passenger and freight steamers, and includes in a sense all types of passenger carriers propelled by steam that plied the waters of Mississippi System.

  • - Analysis, Intervention, and Prevention
    by Sean Byrne & Jessica Senehi
    £36.49

    In a world desperate to comprehend and address what appears to be an ever-enlarging explosion of violence, this book provides important insights into crucial contemporary issues, with violence providing the lens. Violence: Analysis, Intervention, and Prevention provides a multidisciplinary approachto the analysis and resolution of violent conflicts. In particular, the book discusses ecologies of violence, and micro-macro linkages at the local, national, and international levels as well as intervention and prevention processes critical to constructive conflict transformation.The causes of violence are complex and demand a deep multidimensional analysis if we are to fully understand its driving forces. Yet in the aftermath of such destruction there is hope in the resiliency, knowledge, and creativity of communities, organizations, leaders, and international agencies to transform the conditions that lead to such violence.

  • - British and American Women and the Theater, 1660-1820
    by Mary Anne Schofield
    £44.99

    "I here and there o'heard a Coxcomb cry, Ah, rot-'tis a Woman's Comedy."Thus Aphra Behn ushers in a new era for women in the British Theatre (Sir Patient Fancy, 1678). In the hundred years that were to follow-and exactly those years that Curtain Calls examines-women truly took the theater world by storm.For

  • - The Musical Work, The Picture, The Architectural Work, The Film
    by Roman Ingarden
    £61.49

    In these studies Roman Ingarden investigates the nature and mode of being of four kinds of art works: the musical work, the picture, the architectural work, and the film. He establishes that the work of art is a purely intentional object but considers also its connections to the real world.

  • Save 14%
    - Fun, Leisure, and Expressive Culture on the Continent
     
    £24.99

    Africa Every Day is a multidisciplinary and accessible counterpoint to the prevailing emphasis on war, poverty, corruption, and other challenges on the continent. Essays address creative and dynamic elements of daily life without romanticizing them, showing that African leisure and popular culture are the product of dynamism and adaptation.

  • Save 13%
    - Fun, Leisure, and Expressive Culture on the Continent
     
    £63.49

    Africa Every Day is a multidisciplinary and accessible counterpoint to the prevailing emphasis on war, poverty, corruption, and other challenges on the continent. Essays address creative and dynamic elements of daily life without romanticizing them, showing that African leisure and popular culture are the product of dynamism and adaptation.

  • Save 13%
    by Saulius Geniusas
    £70.99

    The Phenomenology of Pain is the first book-length investigation of its topic to appear in English. Groundbreaking, systematic, and illuminating, it opens a dialogue between phenomenology and the sciences to argue that science alone cannot clarify the nature of pain experience without incorporating a phenomenological approach.

  • Save 13%
    - Decadent Moderns
     
    £59.99

    As "Michael Field," Katharine Bradley and Edith Cooper conversed with fin-de-siecle aesthetic movements and twentieth-century modernism, articulated ideas associated with the New Woman, and expressed queer desire. Essays address Michael Field's engagements with a range of cultural touchstones, highlighting their work's radicalism and relevance.

  • Save 14%
    - Sleeping Sickness in Eastern Africa, 1890-1920
    by Mari K. Webel
    £24.99 - 59.99

    Situating sleeping sickness control within African intellectual worlds and political dynamics, Webel prioritizes local histories to understand the successes and failures of a widely used colonial public health intervention-the sleeping sickness camp-in dialogue with African strategies to mitigate illness and death in the past.

  • Save 13%
    - Decolonization, Development, and the Making of Kenya, 1945-1980
    by Kara Moskowitz
    £59.99

    In focusing on rural Kenyans as they actively sought access to aid, Moskowitz offers new insights into the texture of political life in the decolonizing and early postcolonial world. Her account complicates our understanding of Kenyan experiences of independence, and the meaning and form of development.

  • Save 16%
    - Photography and Visibility in African History
     
    £26.99

    Ambivalent makes photography an engaging and important subject of historical investigation. Contributors bring photography into conversation with orality, travel writing, ritual, psychoanalysis, and politics, with new approaches to questions of race, time, and postcolonial and decolonial histories.

  • Save 13%
    - Gendered Power and Social Change in the Biafran Atlantic Age
    by Ndubueze L. Mbah
    £59.99

    Atlanticization-or interaction between regional processes and Atlantic forces such as the slave trade and Christianization-from 1750 to 1920 transformed gender into a primary mode of social differentiation in the Bight of Biafra. Mbah examines this process to fill a major gap in our understanding of gender's role in precolonial Africa.

  • Save 16%
    - A Global History of the Coffee Leaf Rust
    by Stuart McCook
    £26.99

    Coffee Is Not Forever assesses the global spread of a dire existential threat-coffee rust-to a crop consumers take for granted. In departing from commodity histories' usual emphasis on the social and economic, and instead putting ecology at the forefront, Stuart McCook offers the first truly global environmental history of coffee.

  • - A Memoir of Race, Love, and Legacy
    by Julia McKenzie Munemo
    £22.49

    Decades after Julia McKenzie Munemo's father died, she learned that he wrote interracial pornography. She hid the stack of his old paperbacks from her Zimbabwean husband, their mixed-race children, and herself before realizing her obligation to understand her racial legacy.

  • Save 15%
    - Race Science and the Making of Polishness on the Fringes of the German Empire, 1840-1920
    by Lenny A. Urena Valerio
    £25.49

    Urena Valerio illuminates nested imperial and colonial relations using sources ranging from medical texts and state documents to travel literature and fiction. She analyzes scientific and medical debates to connect medicine, migration, and colonialism, providing an invigorating model for the analysis of Polish history from a global perspective.

  • - A Nationalist and Pan-Africanist Revolutionary
    by Peter Karibe Mendy
    £13.99

    Amilcar Cabral's charismatic and visionary leadership, his pan-Africanist solidarity and internationalist commitment to "every just cause in the world," remain relevant to contemporary struggles for emancipation and self-determination. This concise biography is an ideal introduction to his life and legacy.

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