Trees, Truffles, and Beasts
How Forests Function
Theorizing Scriptures
New Critical Orientations to a Cultural Phenomenon
'Un-American' Hollywood
Politics and Film in the Blacklist Era
Original essays scrutinize the work of individual practitioners, such as Robert Rossen, Joseph Losey, Jules Dassin, and Edward Dmytryk, and examine key films, including The Robe, Christ in Concrete, The House I Live In, The Lawless, The Naked City, The Prowler, Body and Soul, and FTA.
Conversion of a Continent
Contemporary Religious Change in Latin America
The Practice of U.S. Women's History
Narratives, Intersections, and Dialogues
In this collection of seventeen original essays on women’s lives from the colonial period to the present, contributors take the competing forces of race, gender, class, sexuality, religion, and region into account. Among many other examples, they examine how conceptions of gender shaped government officials’ attitudes towards East Asian immigrants; how race and gender inequality pervaded the welfare state; and how color and class shaped Mexican American women’s mobilization for civil and labor rights.
Rutgers Football
A Gridiron Tradition in Scarlet
You Shall Tell Your Children
Holocaust Memory in American Passover Ritual
Utopia, New Jersey
Travels in the Nearest Eden
Hindu Primary Sources
A Sectarian Reader
Notorious New Jersey
100 True Tales of Murders and Mobsters, Scandals and Scoundrels
Genetic Witness
Science, Law, and Controversy in the Making of DNA Profiling
Yet, this promise took ten turbulent years to be fulfilled. In Genetic Witness, Jay D. Aronson uncovers the dramatic early history of DNA profiling that has been obscured by the technique’s recent success.
Tuberculosis and the Politics of Exclusion
A History of Public Health and Migration to Los Angeles
Abel’s revealing account provides a critical lens through which to view both the contemporary debate about immigration and the U.S. response to the emergent global tuberculosis epidemic.
Hemispheric American Studies
The Many Colors of Hinduism
A Thematic-Historical Introduction
The Many Colors of Hinduism is the first introductory text to provide a balanced view of this rich religious tradition, acknowledging the full range of its many competing and even contradictory aspects. Utilizing a thematic-historical approach, Carl Olson draws on a wide array of textual evidence, the fieldwork of anthropologists in close contact with insiders, and voices of thinkers ranging from Indologist Alf Hiltebeitel to Cambridge scholar Julius Lipner. The result is a narrative approach that offers a view of Hinduism that emulates the storytelling nature of the religion itself.