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Books published by University of Georgia Press

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  • - Food Studies Methods from the American South
     
    £85.49

    Argues that the study of food does not simply help us understand more about what we eat and the foodways we embrace. The methods and strategies herein help scholars use food and foodways as lenses to examine human experience. The resulting conversations provoke a deeper understanding of our overlapping, historically situated, and evolving cultures and societies.

  • - Urban Politics and Grassroots Activists in Houston
    by Wesley G. Phelps
    £80.49

    Investigates the on-the-ground implementation of President Lyndon Johnson's War on Poverty during the 1960s and 1970s. Wesley G. Phelps argues that the fluid interaction between federal policies, urban politics, and grassroots activists created a significant site of conflict over the meaning of American democracy and the rights of citizenship that historians have largely overlooked.

  • - The Life of Henry Dumas
    by Jeffrey B. Leak
    £28.49

    The long-awaited biography of an unsung literary legend who informed the major 1960s cultural and political movements: Black Arts, Black Power, and Civil Rights. Leak offers a full examination of both Dumas's life and his creative development.

  • - Americans in Spanish West Florida, 1785-1810
    by Andrew McMichael
    £30.49

    Integrating social, cultural, economic, and political history, this is a study of the factors that grounded - or swayed - the loyalties of non-Spaniards living under Spanish rule on the southern frontier. In particular, Andrew McMichael looks at the colonial Spanish administration's attitude toward resident Americans.

  • - Local Conflicts, Indigenous Populations, and Natural Resources
    by Patricia I. Vasquez
    £85.49

    Vasquez writes that, while oil busts and civil wars are common, the tension over oil in the Amazon has played out differently, in a way inextricable from the region itself, and she argues that each case should be analyzed with attention to its specific sociopolitical and economic context.

  • - Interests, Conflicts, and Justice
    by Harald Muller
    £32.99 - 80.49

    Covering a range of issues related to dynamic norm change in the current major international arms control regimes related to nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons; small arms and light weapons; cluster munitions; and antipersonnel mines. Arms control policies of all of the key established and rising state actors are considered.

  • - Nonclosure in Novalis and Holderlin
    by Alice A. Kuzniar
    £33.49

  • by Luc Herman & Steven Weisenburger
    £33.49 - 85.49

    Broadly situates Pynchon's novel in ""long sixties"" history, revealing a fiction deeply of and about its time. Herman and Weisenburger put the novel's questions about freedom in context with sixties struggles against war, restricted speech rights, ethno-racial oppression, environmental degradation and social and psychological control.

  • - Irish, Africans, and the Construction of Difference
    by Jenny Shaw
    £80.49

    The everyday lives of Irish and Africans are obscured by sources constructed by elites. Through her research, Shaw overcomes the constraints such sources impose by pushing methodological boundaries to fill in the gaps, silences, and absences that dominate the historical record.

  • - Traditional Music and Song in North Georgia
    by Art Rosenbaum
    £27.99

    Sampling virtually all of the old-time styles within the musical traditions still extant in north Georgia, Folk Visions and Voices is a collection of eighty-two songs and instrumentals, enhanced by photographs, illustrations, biographical sketches of performers and examples of their narratives, sermons, tales and reminiscences.

  • - New and Collected Poems
    by Margaret Walker
    £24.49

    Addressing the literature and culture of black America, This Is My Century, a classic first published in 1989, marked a significant contribution to American Poetry, bringing together Walker's selection of one hundred of her own poems.

  • - Stories
    by Jacquelin Gorman
    £21.99

    Two hospital chaplains console the living during the moments when they look upon their beloved dead for one last time in a large urban hospital in Los Angeles. This moving and unsettling collection of stories shines a piercing light on the dark corners of our modern world, illuminating necessary truths that convey a clearer and, undoubtedly, greater vision of humanity.

  • - A Story of School Desegregation
    by Clara Silverstein
    £22.99

    This poignant account recalls firsthand the upheaval surrounding court-ordered busing in the early 1970s to achieve school integration. Sixth-grader Clara Silverstein tells her story, with questions about race and the use of schools to engineer social change.

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