Showing 1,371-1,380 of 2,666 items.

Pizza City

The Ultimate Guide to New York's Favorite Food

Rutgers University Press, Rivergate Books

Journalist Peter Genovese surveys the food, the business, and the culture of New York City’s pizza scene by visiting 250 pizzerias in all five boroughs. He provides borough-by-borough reviews, from “slice shops” with scant atmosphere to gourmet pizzerias, including shops that use organic ingredients and experiment with a variety of crusts and toppings. Hundreds of current and never-before-seen archival photos complement this funny and fascinating book.

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Zapotecs on the Move

Cultural, Social, and Political Processes in Transnational Perspective

Rutgers University Press

Through interviews with three generations of Yalálag Zapotecs (“Yalaltecos”) in Los Angeles and Yalálag, Oaxaca, Adriana Cruz-Manjarrez examines the impact of international migration on this community, tracing five decades of migration to Los Angeles to delineate migration patterns, community formation in Los Angeles, and the emergence of transnational identities of the first and second generations of Yalálag Zapotecs in the U.S.

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Framing Fat

Competing Constructions in Contemporary Culture

Rutgers University Press

Framing Fat examines competing messages about body fat by considering the vantage point of cultural actors representing the fashion-beauty complex, public health, the food industry, and the fat acceptance movement. In doing so, it provides a more comprehensive view of the obesity epidemic and shows how strong cultural debates play a powerful role in shaping individual behavior.

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Falling Back

Incarceration and Transitions to Adulthood among Urban Youth

Rutgers University Press

Falling Back documents the transition to adulthood for young inner-city men of color who have, by the age of eighteen, already been imprisoned. It is based on over three years of ethnographic research with black and Latino males on the cusp of adulthood and incarcerated at a rural reform school. The book portrays the complexities of human decision-making as these men strove to “fall back,” or avoid reoffending and become productive adults.

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The Circassian Genocide

Rutgers University Press

This book chronicles the history of the war between Russia and Circassia, describes in detail the final genocidal campaign, and follows the Circassians in diaspora through five generations as they struggle to survive and return home. It updates the story to the present day as the Circassian community works to gain international recognition of the genocide as the region prepares for the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, the site of the Russians’ final victory over the Circassians.

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In the Godfather Garden

The Long Life and Times of Richie "the Boot" Boiardo

Rutgers University Press

In the Godfather Garden is the true story of the life of Richie “the Boot” Boiardo, one of the most powerful and feared men in the New Jersey underworld and the gangster who inspired the creation of HBO’s The Sopranos. Richard Linnet provides an inside look this once-powerful Mafia crew led by the Boot, based on recollections of a grandson of the Boot himself and complemented by never-before-published family photos.

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Hormones, Heredity, and Race

Spectacular Failure in Interwar Vienna

Rutgers University Press

In the early twentieth century, arguments between “nature” and “nurture” pitted a rigid genetic determinism against the idea that genes were flexible and open to environmental change. This book tells the story of three Viennese biologists who sought to show how the environment could shape heredity through the impact of hormones and explores the dynamic of failure in science through both scientific and social lenses.

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The Eyes Have It

Cinema and the Reality Effect

Rutgers University Press

The Eyes Have It explores those rarified screen moments when viewers are confronted by sights that seem at once impossible and present, artificial and stimulating, illusory and definitive. Murray Pomerance takes readers on an illuminating filmic journey through a vast array of cinematic moments, technical methods, and laborious collaborations from the 1930s to the 2000s to show how the viewer’s experience of “reality” is put in context and willfully engaged.

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You're the First One I've Told

The Faces of HIV in the Deep South

Rutgers University Press

This extensively revised second edition presents twenty-five different case studies and incorporates research from the authors’ recent quantitative study, “Coping with HIV/AIDS in the Southeast” (CHASE). CHASE includes 611 HIV-positive patients from eight clinics in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, and Louisiana. This is the first cohesive compilation of up-to-date evidence on the unique and difficult aspects of those living with HIV in the Deep South.

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College Women In The Nuclear Age

Cultural Literacy and Female Identity, 1940-1960

Rutgers University Press

In the popular imagination, American women during the time between the end of World War II and the 1960s—the era of the so-called “feminine mystique”—were ultraconservative and passive. College Women in the Nuclear Age takes a fresh look at these women, showing them actively searching for their place in the world while engaging with the larger intellectual and political movements of the times.  Drawing from the letters and diaries of young women in the Cold War era, Babette Faehmel seeks to restore their unique voices and to chronicle their collective ambitions.

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