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Books published by University of Nebraska Press

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  • Save 13%
    - Toward a Media-Conscious Narratology
     
    £23.49

    Explores how media, old and new, give birth to various types of storyworlds and provide different ways of experiencing them, inviting readers to join an ongoing theoretical conversation focused on the question: how can narratology achieve media-consciousness?

  • Save 13%
    - Selected Tales, Essays, and Poems
    by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps
    £19.99

    The well-educated daughter of a minister, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (1844-1911) was introduced to writing at a young age, as both her mother and father were published writers. This book seeks to restore Phelps' reputation by bringing together a diverse collection from the entire body of her lifetime of work.

  • - An American's Thirty-Year Pursuit of the International Game
    by Michael J. Agovino
    £13.99

    Although soccer had long been the world's game when the author first encountered it in 1982, here it was just a poor cousin to American football, to be found on obscure UHF channels and in foreign magazines. Offering the perspective of fan, player, and journalist, this book chronicles his obsession with the sport and its phenomenal evolution.

  • Save 16%
    - Indigenous Identities and Settler Colonialism in the Americas
     
    £29.49

    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.

  • - The Memoir of Astronaut Donn Eisele
    by Donn Eisele
    £22.49

  • Save 10%
    - Vincennes, Prophetstown, and the Invasion of the Miami Homeland
    by Patrick Bottiger
    £35.99

  • Save 11%
    - The Years of Decolonization
    by Ruth Ginio
    £42.49

  • by Liz Stephens
    £12.99

    Liz Stephens has come from Los Angeles to Utah for graduate school, and her brief stint working on a Taco Bell commercial is not much in the way of preparation for taking on the real West. In The Days Are Gods Stephens chronicles a move that is far more than a shift in geographical coordinates.

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