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Books published by University of Pennsylvania Press

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  • Save 42%
    - The Limits of Privatization
    by Manfred Nowak
    £32.49

    Human Rights or Global Capitalism examines the application of neoliberal policies from a human rights perspective and asks whether states, by outsourcing to the private sector many services with a direct impact on human rights, abdicate their responsibilities to uphold human rights and violate international law.

  • Save 11%
    - The Politics of Politeness in Early America
    by Steven C. Bullock
    £38.99

    Tea Sets and Tyranny offers a political history of politeness in early America, from its origins in the late seventeenth century to its remaking in the age of the Revolution.

  • Save 13%
    - The New York Riots of 1964 and the War on Crime
    by Michael W. Flamm
    £23.49 - 75.99

    In Central Harlem, the symbolic and historic heart of black America, the violent unrest of July 1964 highlighted a new dynamic in the racial politics of the nation. The first "long, hot summer" of the Sixties had arrived.

  • Save 12%
     
    £49.49

    The American Revolution Reborn parts company with the American Revolution of our popular imagination and renders it as a time of intense ambiguity and frightening contingency. With an introduction by Spero and a conclusion by Zuckerman, this volume heralds a substantial and revelatory rebirth in the study of the American Revolution.

  • Save 12%
    - Disability Politics in World War II America
    by Audra Jennings
    £45.99

    Drawing from extensive archival research, Out of the Horrors of War demonstrates that disabled citizens in the World War II era organized a national movement for economic security and full citizenship, reshaping the U.S. welfare state and laying the foundation for the disability rights movement.

  • Save 11%
    - Making the Haitian Revolution in Early America
    by James Alexander Dun
    £38.99

    Dangerous Neighbors shows how the Haitian Revolution permeated early American print culture and had a profound impact on the young nation's domestic politics.

  • Save 13%
    - When Women Speak in Old French Literature
    by E. Jane Burns
    £19.99

    In Bodytalk, E. Jane Burns contends that female protagonists in medieval texts authored by men can be heard to talk back against the stereotyped and codified roles that their fictive anatomy is designed to convey.

  • - Part 1, Interpretive Studies; Part 2, Artifact Catalog
    by Ivor Noel Hume
    £78.99

    Martin's Hundred was a 20,000-acre tract of land in Tidewater Virginia, one of the most extensive English enterprises in the New World. Settled in 1618, all signs of its early occupation soon disappeared, leaving no trace above ground. More than three centuries later, archaeological explorations uncovered tantalizing evidence of the people who had lived, worked, and died there.

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