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Your search for "Urban Rivers %3A Re-making Rivers%2C Cities and Space in Europe and North America" returned 620 results

Instill and Inspire

Instill and Inspire

The John and Vivian Hewitt Collection of African-American Art

The John and Vivian Hewitt Collection of African-American Art represents works that celebrate the expression and passion of twenty artists, including Romare Bearden, Margaret Burroughs, Jonathan Green, Jacob Lawrence, Elizabeth Catlett, Ann Tanksley, and Henry Ossawa Tanner. This book contains all fifty-eight works from the collection, exquisitely reproduced in full color. Grace C. Stanislaus provides a text on the significance of the collection that is supplemented by interviews with Vivian Hewitt, David Taylor of the Gantt Center, art collectors Harmon and Harriett Kelley, and Nancy Washington.

The Correspondence of John Tyndall, Volume 1

The Correspondence of John Tyndall, Volume 1

The Correspondence, May 1840–August 1843

The 230 letters in this inaugural volume of The Correspondence of John Tyndall chart Tyndall’s emergence into early adulthood, spanning from his arrival in Youghal in May 1840 as a civil assistant with just a year’s experience working on the Irish Ordnance Survey to his pseudonymous authorship of an open letter to the prime minister, Robert Peel, protesting the pay and conditions on the English Survey in August 1843.

Permeable Border

Permeable Border

The Great Lakes Basin As Transnational Region 1650-1990

This text examines the history of the Great Lakes Basin in relation to its importance as a place of social, economic, and political interaction between the United States and Canada.

Winner of the 2006 Albert B. Corey Prize from the American Historical Association.

Available in Canada through University of Calgary Press

Breaking The Backcountry

Breaking The Backcountry

Seven Years War In Virginia And Pennsylvania 1754-1765

An exciting history of the Seven Years’ War (i.e., The French and Indian War) from the perspective of the region in which it began and most affected the early U.S.: the backcountry communities of Virginia and Pennsylvania.

Sin Puertas Visibles

Sin Puertas Visibles

An Anthology Of Contemporary Poetry By Mexican Women
Edited By Jen Hofer

A fully bilingual anthology featuring the work of eleven women poets not yet fully established—by choice or because of youth—within Mexican literary hierarchies.

Awarded the 2004 Eugene M. Kayden National Translation Award from the University of Colorado, Boulder.

Process Philosophy

Process Philosophy

A Survey of Basic Issues

Process philosophy views temporality, activity, and change as the cardinal factors in our understanding of the real, and emphasizes process over product. In this work Nicholas Rescher provides an accessible survey of the basic issues and controversies surrounding this philosophical approach.

The Andrew Carnegie Reader

The Andrew Carnegie Reader

The first anthology to bring together a representative selection of Carnegie’s writings which show him as a shrewd businessman, celebrated philanthropist, champion of democracy, and eternal optimist. Carnegie’s first letter to the editor at the age of seventeen was the beginning of a lifelong attempt to satisfy an insatiable journalistic desire. Always voluble and candid, Carnegie was as active with his pen as with his tongue.

Although most of the selections were penned for an audience now long gone, today’s reader will be intrigued by the pertinence and timelessness of Carnegie’s hopes for world peace, his views on labor, and his concern for better race relations in America.

Hemispheric Blackness and the Exigencies of Accountability

Hemispheric Blackness and the Exigencies of Accountability

Critically Assesses How Black Collectives across the Hemisphere Evoke Their Rights

A New No-Man’s-Land

A New No-Man’s-Land

Writing and Art at Guantánamo, Cuba

Reveals a New Story of Unexpected Sympathies, Solidarities, and Care in the Guantánamo Borderlands

The Book in Movement

The Book in Movement

Autonomous Politics and the Lettered City Underground

An Ethnography of the Underground Print Book in Latin America

Reforming Women

Reforming Women

The Rhetorical Tactics of the American Female Moral Reform Society, 1834-1854

An Examination of the American Female Reform Society’s Periodical That Delineates Rhetorical Tactics of the 19th Century Women’s Reform Movement.

The Contracted World

The Contracted World

New & More Selected Poems

Passionate and compassionate, these poems are both deeply imagined and accessible to the general reader, focusing on personal and political life in American society.

Democracy Against Parties

Democracy Against Parties

The Divergent Fates of Latin America’s New Left Contenders

An Investigation into What Makes New Political Parties Succeed—Or Fail

Vernacular Latin Americanisms

Vernacular Latin Americanisms

War, the Market, and the Making of a Discipline

The emergence of Latin Americanism as a field of critical debate and inquiry.

Bound Lives

Bound Lives

Africans, Indians, and the Making of Race in Colonial Peru

Bound Lives chronicles the lived experience of race relations in northern coastal Peru during the colonial era. Rachel Sarah O’Toole examines how Andeans and Africans negotiated and employed casta, and in doing so, constructed these racial categories. This study highlights the tenuous interactions of colonial authorities, indigenous communities, and enslaved populations and shows how the interplay between colonial law and daily practice shaped the nature of colonialism and slavery.

Winner of the 2013 Perœ Flora Tristan Prize from the Peru Section of theLatin American Studies Association

Your search for "Urban Rivers %3A Re-making Rivers%2C Cities and Space in Europe and North America" returned 620 results