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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

Peach State

Peach State

Poems

Celebrating the Pleasure of International Food in Atlanta and the Asian American Experience in the South

The Bukharan Crisis

The Bukharan Crisis

A Connected History of 18th Century Central Asia
In the first half of the eighteenth century, Central Asia’s Bukharan Khanate descended into a crisis from which it would not recover. Bukharans suffered failed harvests and famine, a severe fiscal downturn, invasions from the north and the south, rebellion, and then revolution. To date, efforts to identify the ...
Exploring Apocalyptica

Exploring Apocalyptica

Coming to Terms with Environmental Alarmism
Edited By Frank Uekötter

Environmental alarmism has long been a political bellwether. Based on case studies from four continents and the North Atlantic, Exploring Apocalyptica argues for a reevaluation of familiar clichés. t shows that environmentalists were less apocalyptic than commonly thought, and other groups were far more enthusiastic.

The Ethics of Creativity

The Ethics of Creativity

Beauty, Morality, and Nature in a Processive Cosmos

Unsatisfied with current environmental philosophies, Brian G. Henning developed his own theory inspired by Alfred North Whitehead and several other classical American philosophers. In this work he discusses the theory’s most significant insight, “The Ethics of Creativity.”

Winner, John N. Findlay Book Prize from the Metaphysical Society of America

Voted one of the Top Ten Picks for university press books by Foreword Magazine in 2014.

Salt Pier

Salt Pier

Dore Kiesselbach’s poems reveal the particularity and/or strangeness of the commonplace—but many good poems do that. What strikes me about his, though, are the ways that visual imagery, diction, and cadence are modulated to fit his subjects. Thus in ‘Rake’ the inanimate object speaks (as in an Anglo-Saxon kenning) to describe the way it touches ‘death / that life may be revealed / in green stupidity . . . fluent / as underwater hair.’ In ‘Hickey,’ a diver swimming among stingrays asks, ‘How long does it take us / in water sunlight permeates / to forget needing ever to be told?’; the unusual diction suggests both the speaker’s suspension in water as well as his apprehension of joy. The reader may hear faint echoes of Hopkins or the early Dylan Thomas, but the language is Kiesselbach’s own.

The Chief

The Chief

The Chief is a one-man play that faithfully reenacts the larger-than-life persona of Pittsburgh icon Art Rooney, owner of one of the most successful football franchises of all time. Reproduced in print for the first time, it’s complemented by photographs of Rooney, his family, members of the Steelers, and scenes from the play.

The Plum Flower Dance

The Plum Flower Dance

Poems 1985 to 2005

Winner of the 2008 Paterson Award for Literary Excellence

The Plum Flower Dance includes new poems and poems from Weaver’s earlier works My Fathers Geography, and Timber and Prayer, among others.

Front-Page Pittsburgh

Front-Page Pittsburgh

Two Hundred Years Of The Post-Gazette

Clarke Thomas has compiled a two-hundred-year history of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, the first paper published west of the Alleghenies. From the Whiskey Rebellion to the present, the stories the paper covered reveal the history of Pittsburgh and the people who live there.

Practicing Writing

Practicing Writing

The Postwar Discourse of Freshman English

Thomas Masters examines a pivotal era—the years following arrival of former soldiers on college campuses thanks to the GI Bill—in the history of the most ubiquitous and most problematic course offered in America: freshman English.

To Hell With Paradise

To Hell With Paradise

A History Of The Jamaican Tourist Industry

“To Hell with Paradise” illustrates the problems of founding a tourist industry for a European or U.S. clientele in a society where the mass of the population is poor, black, and with a historical experience of slavery and colonialism. It combines political and cultural history to reveal how Jamaica transformed itself in the nineteenth century from a pestilence-ridden “white man’s graveyard” to a sun-drenched tourist paradise.

Buck Fever

Buck Fever

The Deer Hunting Tradition in Pennsylvania

Mike Sajna, outdoors columnist for Pittsburgh Magazine, explores the controversial subject of deer hunting. Taking the reader to a camp site in Warren County, he recounts the traditions, lore, and physical testing that make the hunting of white-tailed deer a unique experience.

Guide to the Mammals of Pennsylvania

Guide to the Mammals of Pennsylvania

An Indispensable Field Guide for Professional and Amateur Naturalists With a newly redesigned cover. This extensive, portable guidebook contains behavior and ecological characteristics, Pennsylvania and North American range maps, and photographs of the sixty-three different species of wild mammals that populate Pennsylvania’s hills and valleys.

Now You Know It All

Now You Know It All

Winner of the 2021 Drue Heinz Literature Prize

Absent Here

Absent Here

Poems

Winner of the 2023 Donald Hall Prize for Poetry

Distribution of Wealth and Income in the United States in 1798

Distribution of Wealth and Income in the United States in 1798

Based on census data, Soltow presents an exhautive survey of wealth distribution in the early United States, with a particular focus on the 1798 census for the First Direct Tax.

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