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  • - Ancient Partners in a Post-Imperial World
    by John W. Garver
    £23.99

    Iran's nuclear aspirations dominate its relations with the US and Europe. China is Iran's strongest allies on the Security Council, and also its likely supplier of technology and assistance, built on economic and military relations. This book talks about the relationship between the People's Republic of China and the Islamic Republic of Iran.

  • - Politics and Society under Milosevic and After
     
    £23.99

    During thirteen years in power, Slobodan Milosvevic and his cohorts plunged Yugoslavia into wars of ethnic cleansing, leading to the murder of thousands of civilians. This collection of essays examines the Milosevic era, power struggles, the legacy of Serbia's recent wars, Serbia's Roma, and other topics.

  • - Traditions of Plant Use and Cultivation on the Northwest Coast of North America
     
    £23.99

    Tells the story of traditional Northwest Coast cultivation practices, and of how they came to be overlooked by Europeans. This book discusses plant management methods found from the Oregon coast to Southeast Alaska. It looks at tobacco gardens among the Haida and Tlingit, managed camas plots among the Coast Salish of Puget Sound, and more.

  • - Overcoming Secondary Disabilities
     
    £17.99

    Describes how to help people with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome. This book describes the solutions to this problem of a birth defect that targets the brain and has lifelong consequences. It acknowledges the multifaceted needs of people with FAS/FAE across the lifespan. It is useful for parents and the professionals working with people with FAS/FAE.

  • - Data and Methods for the Study of Eggs, Embryos, and Larvae
    by Megumi F. Strathmann
    £47.49

  • by Robert A. Kann & Zdenek David
    £78.49

    The Peoples of the Eastern Habsburg Lands, 1526-1918

  • - Turkish Architectural Culture in the Early Republic
    by Sibel Bozdogan
    £23.99

    A cultural history of modern Turkish architecture and its connections to European modernism.

  • - Tlingit Life Stories
    by Nora Marks Dauenhauer
    £29.49

    This book is an introduction to Tlingit social and political history. Each biography is compelling in its own merit, but when all are taken together, the collection shows patterns of interaction among people and communities of today, and across the generations. By combining historical documents and photographs with accounts gathered from living memory, the book also enables the present, living generations to interact with their past.The book features biographies and life histories of more than 50 men and women, most born between 1880 and 1910, including a special section on the founders of the Alaska Native Brotherhood. Additional lives are described tangentially.Each biography or life history follows a standard format that includes vital statistics, genealogical information, names in Tlingit and English, and major achievements. But each is also unique. Like the lives they describe, all vary in length, detail, and style, depending on authorship and available human and archival resources. To the fullest extent possible oral and written material from the subjects and their families has been incorporated. Some is more anecdotal, some historical. The appendixes include previously unpublished historical documents and Tlingit texts with facing translations.The lives in this volume show how individual people both shaped and were shaped by their time and place in history.

  • - America's Children Abandoned in Vietnam
    by Robert S. McKelvey
    £23.99

    This text is a collection of oral histories of Vietnamese Amerasians. Abandoned during the war by their American fathers, discriminated against by the victorious Communists, and ignored for many years by the American government, they endured life in impoverished Vietnam.

  • by John K. Nelson
    £78.49

    What we today call Shinto has been at the heart of Japanese culture for almost as long as there has been political entity distinguishing itself as Japan. A Year in the Life of a Shinto Shrine describes the ritual cycle at Suwa Shrine, Nagasaki's major Shinto shrine. Conversations with priests, other shrine personnel, and people attending shrine functions supplement John K. Nelson's observations of over fifty shrine rituals and festivals. He elicits their views on the meaning and personal relevance of the religious events and the place of Shinto and Suwa Shrine in Japanese society, culture, and politics. Nelson focuses on the very human side of an ancient institution and provides a detailed look at beliefs and practices that, although grounded in natural cycles, are nonetheless meaningful in late-twentieth-century Japanese society.

  • - The Final Report
    by John M. Maki
    £78.49

    Japan's Commission on the Constitution: The Final Report

  • - An Anthology of Art and Literature by Southeast Asian Women in the Diaspora
     
    £27.49

    Juxtaposing short stories, poetry, painting, and photographs, Troubling Borders showcases the creative work of women of Vietnamese, Cambodian, Lao, Thai, and Filipino ancestry. This thematically arranged collection interrupts borders of categorization and gender, in what preface author Shirley Geok-Lin Lim describes as a ¿leap over the barbed fences that have kept these women apart in these, our United States of America.¿The sixty-two contributors have been shaped by colonization, wars, globalization, and militarization. For some of these women on the margins of the margin, crafting and showing their work is a bold act in itself. Their provocative and accessible creations tell unique stories, provide sharp contrasts to familiar stereotypes¿Southeast Asian women as exotic sex symbols, dragon ladies, prostitutes, or ¿bar girls¿¿and serve as entry points for broader discussions about questions of history, memory, and identity.

  • - Gold Mining and Subsistence in the Choco, Colombia
    by Daniel Tubb
    £78.49

  • - Climate Change, Adaptive Restoration, and the Columbia River Basin
    by Shana Lee Hirsch
    £78.49

  • - Billy Gohl, Labor, and Brutal Times in the Pacific Northwest
    by Aaron Goings
    £22.49

    In the early twentieth century so many dead bodies surfaced in the rivers around Aberdeen, Washington, that they were nicknamed the ¿floater fleet.¿ When Billy Gohl (1873¿1927), a powerful union official, was arrested for murder, local newspapers were quick to suggest that he was responsible for many of those deaths, perhaps even dozens¿thus launching the legend of the Ghoul of Grays Harbor.More than a true-crime tale, The Port of Missing Men sheds light on the lives of workers who died tragically, illuminating the dehumanizing treatment of sailors and lumber workers and the heated clashes between pro- and anti-union forces. Goings investigates the creation of the myth, exploring how so many people were willing to believe such extraordinary stories about Gohl. He shares the story of a charismatic labor leader¿the one man who could shut down the highly profitable Grays Harbor lumber trade¿and provides an equally intriguing analysis of the human costs of the Pacific Northwest¿s early extraction economy.

  • - The Crusader, the Skeptic, and the Rise of Modern Seismology
    by Susan Hough
    £25.99

    In the first half of the twentieth century, when seismology was still in in its infancy, renowned geologist Bailey Willis faced off with fellow high-profile scientist Robert T. Hill in a debate with life-or-death consequences for the millions of people migrating west. Their conflict centered on a consequential question: Is southern California earthquake country?These entwined biographies of Hill and Willis offer a lively, accessible account of the ways that politics and financial interests influenced the development of earthquake science. During this period of debate, severe quakes in Santa Barbara (1925) and Long Beach (1933) caused scores of deaths and a significant amount of damage, offering turning points for scientific knowledge and mainstreaming the idea of earthquake safety.The Great Quake Debate sheds light on enduring questions surrounding the environmental hazards of our dynamic planet. What challenges face scientists bearing bad news in the public arena? How do we balance risk and the need to sustain communities and cities? And how well has California come to grips with its many faults?

  • - This Storied Land
    by William G. Robbins
    £17.99 - 78.49

  • - Toward a Labor Aristocracy
    by Hyung-A Kim
    £23.99 - 78.49

  • - Textile Artistry and Commerce in the Late Qing
    by Rachel Silberstein
    £54.49

    Clothing and accessories from nineteenth-century China reveal much about women¿s participation in the commercialization of textile handicrafts and the flourishing of urban popular culture. Focusing on women¿s work and fashion, A Fashionable Century presents an array of visually compelling clothing and accessories neglected by traditional histories of Chinese dress, examining these products¿ potential to illuminate issues of gender and identity.In the late Qing, the expansion of production systems and market economies transformed the Chinese fashion system, widening access to fashionable techniques, materials, and imagery. Challenging the conventional production model, in which women embroidered items at home, Silberstein sets fashion within a process of commercialization that created networks of urban guilds, commercial workshops, and subcontracted female workers. These networks gave rise to new trends influenced by performance and prints, and they offered women opportunities to participate in fashion and contribute to local economies and cultures.Rachel Silberstein draws on vernacular and commercial sources, rather than on the official and imperial texts prevalent in Chinese dress history, to demonstrate that in these fascinating objects¿regulated by market desires, rather than imperial edict¿fashion formed at the intersection of commerce and culture.A Fashionable Century is the winner of the Costume Society of America's Millia Davenport Publication Award and was long-listed for the Textile Society of America's R. L. Shep Award. The judges described the book as "an extraordinary achievement in scholarship working with source materials that are little-known outside of China and not otherwise available in English."

  • - Print Media and Legal Knowledge in Qing China
    by Ting Zhang
    £23.99 - 78.49

  • - A Cultural Landmark in the Song Dynasty
    by Xiaolin Duan
    £23.99 - 81.49

  • - Islamic Law and State Governance in Contemporary India
    by Jeffrey A. Redding
    £78.49

  • - Drawing Democratic Dreams in Republican China
    by Louise Edwards
    £78.49

  • - Women at Work in Colonial Bengal
    by Pika Ghosh
    £54.49

    In Bengal, mothers swaddle their infants and cover their beds in colorful textiles that are passed down through generations. They create these kantha from layers of soft, recycled fabric strengthened with running stitches and use them as shawls, covers, and seating mats.Making Kantha, Making Home explores the social worlds shaped by the Bengali kantha that survive from the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In the first study of colonial-period women¿s embroidery that situates these objects historically and socially, Pika Ghosh brings technique and aesthetic choices into discussion with iconography and regional culture.Ghosh uses ethnographic and archival research, inscriptions, and images to locate embroiderers¿ work within domestic networks and to show how imagery from poetry, drama, prints, and watercolors expresses kantha artists¿ visual literacy. Affinities with older textile practices include the region¿s lucrative maritime trade in embroideries with Europe, Africa, and China. This appraisal of individual objects alongside the people and stories behind the objects¿ creation elevates kantha beyond consideration as mere handcraft to recognition as art.

  • - Native American Stories from Puget Sound
     
    £78.49

  • - The Ecological Recovery of Mount St. Helens
    by Eric Wagner
    £22.49

    A CHOICE OUTSTANDING ACADEMIC TITLEOn May 18, 1980, people all over the world watched with awe and horror as Mount St. Helens erupted. Fifty-seven people were killed and hundreds of square miles of what had been lush forests and wild rivers were to all appearances destroyed.Ecologists thought they would have to wait years, or even decades, for life to return to the mountain, but when forest scientist Jerry Franklin helicoptered into the blast area a couple of weeks after the eruption, he found small plants bursting through the ash and animals skittering over the ground. Stunned, he realized he and his colleagues had been thinking of the volcano in completely the wrong way. Rather than being a dead zone, the mountain was very much alive.Mount St. Helens has been surprising ecologists ever since, and in After the Blast Eric Wagner takes readers on a fascinating journey through the blast area and beyond. From fireweed to elk, the plants and animals Franklin saw would not just change how ecologists approached the eruption and its landscape, but also prompt them to think in new ways about how life responds in the face of seemingly total devastation.

  • - Jarai and Other Lives in the Cambodian Highlands
    by Jonathan Padwe
    £78.49

  • - Architecture and Empire in the Early Ming
    by Aurelia Campbell
    £54.49

    One of the most famous rulers in Chinese history, the Yongle emperor (r. 1402¿24) gained renown for constructing Beijing¿s magnificent Forbidden City, directing ambitious naval expeditions, and creating the world¿s largest encyclopedia. What the Emperor Built is the first book-length study devoted to the architectural projects of a single Chinese emperor.Focusing on the imperial palaces in Beijing, a Daoist architectural complex on Mount Wudang, and a Buddhist temple on the Sino-Tibetan frontier, Aurelia Campbell demonstrates how the siting, design, and use of Yongle¿s palaces and temples helped cement his authority and legitimize his usurpation of power. Campbell offers insight into Yongle¿s sense of empire¿from the far-flung locations in which he built, to the distant regions from which he extracted construction materials, and to the use of tens of thousands of craftsmen and other laborers. Through his constructions, Yongle connected himself to the divine, interacted with his subjects, and extended imperial influence across space and time.Spanning issues of architectural design and construction technologies, this deft analysis reveals remarkable advancements in timber-frame construction and implements an art-historical approach to examine patronage, audience, and reception, situating the buildings within their larger historical and religious contexts.

  • - An American Colony
    by Stephen W. Haycox
    £23.99 - 78.49

    Alaska has not evolved in a vacuum. It has been part of larger stories: the movement of Native peoples and their contact and accommodation to Western culture, the spread of European political economy to the New World, and the expansion of American capitalism and culture.Alaska, an American Colony focuses on Russian America and American Alaska, bringing the story of Alaska up to the present and exploring the continuing impact of Alaska Native claims settlements, the trans-Alaska pipeline, and the Alaska Lands Act. In contrast to the stereotype of Alaska as a place where rugged individualists triumph over the harsh environment, distinguished historian Stephen Haycox offers a less romantic, more complex history that emphasizes the broader national and international contexts of Alaskas past and the similarities between Alaska and the American West. Covering cultural, political, economic, and environmental history, the book also includes an overview of the regions geography and the anthropology of Alaskas Native peoples.Throughout Alaska, an American Colony, Haycox stresses the continuing involvement of Alaska Natives in the states economic, political, and social life and development. He also explores the power of myth in historical representations of Alaska and the controlling influence of national perceptions of the region.

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