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Books published by University of Wisconsin Press

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  • - Readings from the Popular Press
    by Timothy E Scheurer
    £16.49 - 21.49

    Beginning with the emergence of commercial American music in the nineteenth century, Volume 1 includes essays on the major performers, composers, media, and movements that shaped our musical culture before rock and roll.

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    £23.49

    Challenges the often-romanticised view of the prostitute as an urbane and liberated courtesan by examining the social and economic realities of the sex industry in Greco-Roman culture. Departing from the conventional focus on elite society, these essays consider the Greek prostitute as displaced foreigner, slave, and member of an urban underclass.

  • - American Jewish Writing Since the 1980s
    by Janet Handler Burstein
    £40.99

    Argues that American Jewish writers since the 1980s have created a significant literature by wrestling with the troubled legacy of trauma, loss, and exile. Their ranks in this book include Cynthia Ozick, Todd Gitlin, Art Spiegelman, Pearl Abraham, Aryeh Lev Stollman, Jonathan Rosen, and Gerda Lerner.

  • - Reinventing Race in Bush Kaliai Cargo Cults
    by Andrew Lattas
    £22.49

    This volume offers information on how, for 50 years, the bush Kaliai in Melanesia have worked the deserted cargo left by US Marines during World War II into their indigenous culture. The author seeks to show how cargo cults in general bring together past, present and future.

  • - A Social History of the Spanish Civil War
    by Michael Seidman
    £26.99

    Rather than examining the major leaders or well-established political groups during the Spanish Civil War, Michael Seidman focuses instead on the personal and individual experiences of the common men and women who were actors in a struggle that defined a generation and helped to shape our world.

  • - The Oral History of a Nicaraguan Family
    by Dianne Walta Hart
    £20.49

    History of a Nicaraguan family based on conversations with its members over a four-year period. The author traces their story from the years of repression and guerilla activity under Somoza, through to an era of personal and political revolution in the 1970s and 1980s.

  • - A Casebook
     
    £18.49

    This volume gives accounts of the vampire and how its tradition developed in different cultures. The text examines the nature of the vampire from its birth in graveyard lore to the modern-day psychiatric patient with a penchant for drinking blood.

  • - Norway's Romantic Musician and Cosmopolitan Patriot
    by Einar Haugen
    £20.49

    A biography of Ole Bull - composer, virtuoso violinist, child prodigy, friend of Schumann and Liszt and tireless promotor of Norwegian art and culture. It provides a comprehensive listing of his works, analyses of his compositions and their influences, and reviews of his performances.

  • - Inside the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
    by Thierry Cruvellier
    £22.49

    A first hand account of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, created in 1994 by the United Nations Security Council to seek accountability for some of the worst atrocities since World War II. Drawing on interviews with these protagonists and hi

  • - Panathenaia and Parthenon
     
    £22.49

    The foremost religious festival of ancient Athens was the Panathenaia. This work addresses the problems of its interpretation, discussing the seasonal controversy over the Parthenon frieze. The festival is also compared with others held throughout the ancient Greek world.

  • - The Chapters from the North American Review
    by Mark Twain
    £17.49

    Mark Twain's ""Own Autobiography"" stands as the last of Twain's great yarns. This book covers a wealth of critical work done on Twain since 1990. It also includes a discussion of literary domesticity, locating the autobiography within the history of Twain's literary work and within Twain's own understanding and experience of domestic concerns.

  • - Ethnography and History Among an Andean People
    by Thomas A. Abercrombie
    £26.99

    This work examines the relationship between European and indigenous Andean ways of understanding the past. Following field work in Bolivia, the author argues that complex Andean rituals have hybridized European and indigenous traditions and are evidence of a keen social memory in the community.

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    £26.99

    Taking into account recent historic changes, this second edition updates the essays on the Supreme Court, same-sex marriage, the Right, and trans history. Authors of several other essays have taken the opportunity to add new material and references where warranted.

  • - The Life and Films of John Sturges
    by Glenn Lovell
    £23.49

    A biography of John Sturges. It examines his childhood in California during the Great Depression; his apprenticeship in the editing department of RKO Pictures, where he worked on such films as ""Gunga Din""; his service in the Army Air Corps in WWII; and his emergence as one of the first independent producer-directors in Hollywood.

  • - A Trilogy of Life in the Lodz Ghetto
    by Chava Rosenfarb
    £19.49

    Follows the tragic fate of the inhabitants of the ghetto. This book draws on the author's own history to create characters who struggle daily to retain a sense of humanity and dignity despite the physical and psychological effects of ghetto life.

  • - Ethnography of Urban Street Criminals
    by Mark S. Fleisher
    £18.49

    This ethnographic study of contemporary urban criminals examines issues such as the human dimensions of criminal lives, the family conditions that cause children to become deviant, and the role of jails and prisons in deterrence and rehabilitation. It also proposes anti-crime policy initiatives.

  • by Lawrence A. Frost
    £22.49

    Presents interesting and unusual George Armstrong Custer legends, which include the alleged fathering of Monahseetah's Indian son; the Annie Jones story buried in the National Archives; Custer's capture of Lee's supply trains at Appomattox Court House that caused Lee to surrender - and much more.

  • by Schofield
    £16.49

    The essays collected here explore the power and sensuality that food engenders within literature. The book permits the reader to sample food as a rhetorical structure, one that allows the individual writers to articulate the abstract concepts in a medium that is readily understandable. "

  • - Four Plays About Mass Murder in Rwanda, Bosnia, Cambodia, and Armenia
     
    £26.99

    Brings together four plays that explore the face of modern genocide. These scripts deal with the destruction of four targeted populations: Armenians in Lorne Shirinian's ""Exile in the Cradle"", Cambodians in Catherine Filloux's ""Silence of God"", Bosnian Muslims in Kitty Felde's ""A Patch of Earth"", and Rwandan Tutsis in Erik Ehn's ""Maria Kizito"".

  • - A Chapter-by-chapter Genetic Guide
     
    £34.99

    Explores the genesis of James Joyce's ""Finnegans Wake"". This book offers an archival survey of the manuscripts, and an introduction to genetic criticism.

  • - Model for Sherlock Holmes
    by Ely M. Liebow
    £23.49

    A distinguished physician and professor of medicine at Edinburgh University, and a forensic expert for the British Crown, Joseph Bell was well known for his powers of observation and deduction. This biography of Bell is intended for those interested in Victorian medicine, in the history of detective fiction, and in Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson.

  • by Leverance
    £23.49

    This profile of the man and the writer is an introduction to the personality behind "The Chapman Report" and "The Fan Club." Through correspondence, diaries, manuscript annotations, interviews and other private sources, the profile reveals the man who began as a sports stringer for a Wisconsin newspaper and is now one of the world's most popular novelists.

  • - An Historical Overview
    by Stanley G. Payne
    £19.49

  • - From Halle to Jerusalem
    by Emil L. Fackenheim
    £36.99

    Emil Fackenheim's life work was to call upon the world at large to confront the Holocaust as an unprecedented assault on the Jewish people, Judaism, and all humanity. Here, he looks back on his life, at the profound and painful circumstances that shaped him as a philosopher and a committed Jewish thinker.

  • - Social Change in National Policy Domains
    by Edward O. Laumann
    £26.99

    The Federal Government in the United States is a government "of the people, by the people, and for the people." Presidents are elected by popular vote in the nation (filtered through the electoral college), Senators are elected by popular vote in their states, and Representatives are elected by popular vote in their Congressional districts. Cabinet members and agency heads are appointed by the elected president, as are members of the Supreme Court.But this says nothing about politics. Professor Lauman and Knoke have asked, in this book, how policies were made, in the period 1977-1980, in the areas of energy and health. The question is a very different one from the question of how the positions of president and Congress are filled.

  • - Memoirs of a Gay Jew in Nazi Berlin
    by Gad Beck
    £17.49

    That Gad Beck, a gay Jew in the Berlin of Nazi Germany, lived through the Holocaust at all is amazing. His determination to keep loving, living and believing in every human possibility - even in the face of the unthinkably monstrous - makes this quite a different story of the Holocaust.

  • - Borderless Histories
    by George Dutton, Phan Huy Le, Insun Yu, et al.
    £23.49

    Moving beyond past histories of Viet Nam that have focused on nationalist struggle, this volume brings together work by scholars who are re-examining centuries of Vietnamese history. This book explores topics such as the extraordinary diversity between north and south, lowland and highland, and Viet and minority.

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