Showing 1,021-1,040 of 2,899 items.
The Journey of a Tzotzil-Maya Woman of Chiapas, Mexico
Pass Well over the Earth
University of Texas Press
Enhancing our understanding of the struggle for indigenous rights in Chiapas, this testimonial presents a unique account of that struggle by a woman who has been active at the grassroots level for three decades.
The American University of Beirut
Arab Nationalism and Liberal Education
University of Texas Press
This history of the American University of Beirut presents a rich 150-year process of conflict, cooperation, and growth that has balanced the goals of American liberal education with the quest for Arab national identity and empowerment.
The Albatross and the Fish
Linked Lives in the Open Seas
University of Texas Press
Sounding an alarm over the potential extinction of many albatross species, this book encourages individuals, environmental groups, fishery oversight bodies, and governments to create sustainable management practices for whole ocean ecosystems.
Missing Mila, Finding Family
An International Adoption in the Shadow of the Salvadoran Civil War
University of Texas Press
While adding an engrossing new chapter to the story of the Salvadoran civil war and its long aftermath, Missing Mila, Finding Family deepens our understanding of the issues involved in international adoptions and the desire of birth families to find their disappeared sons and daughters.
Kitchenspace
Women, Fiestas, and Everyday Life in Central Mexico
By Maria Elisa Christie; Introduction by Mary Weismantel
University of Texas Press
A pioneering ethnography of a crucial, yet often undervalued, site of family and community building—the kitchen.
Horror after 9/11
World of Fear, Cinema of Terror
Edited by Aviva Briefel and Sam J. Miller
University of Texas Press
The first major exploration of the horror film genre through the lens of 9/11 and the subsequent transformation of American and global society.
Anthropology, Economics, and Choice
University of Texas Press
This book presents the first extended critique of rational choice theory from an anthropological perspective.
West of 98
Living and Writing the New American West
Edited by Lynn Stegner and Russell Rowland
University of Texas Press
The first collection of its kind in scope and ambition, this volume brings together the most prominent western writers of the current generation to create new visions of the American West—“the West that is still becoming.”
The Trials of Eroy Brown
The Murder Case That Shook the Texas Prison System
University of Texas Press
The shocking story of the black inmate who was acquitted after killing two high-ranking prison guards in a case that publicized the horrors of Texas’s “plantation-style” prison system.
Texas State Cemetery
University of Texas Press
Illustrated with superb images by renowned Texas photographer Laurence Parent, this history of the Texas State Cemetery tells the story of Texas through the lives of notable Texans, from Stephen F. Austin to Barbara Jordan, who are buried in this hallowed ground.
Tell Me the Story of How I Conquered You
Elsewheres and Ethnosuicide in the Colonial Mesoamerican World
By José Rabasa
University of Texas Press
This pathfinding book presents a new understanding of the pictorial vocabulary presented in Codex Telleriano-Remensis, which reveals a native painter’s perspective on the tandem of ethnosuicide and ethnogenesis, and the topology of conquest.
Super Black
American Pop Culture and Black Superheroes
By Adilifu Nama
University of Texas Press
An exploration of black superheroes as a fascinating racial phenomenon and a powerful source of racial meaning, narrative, and imagination in American society.
My Stone of Hope
From Haitian Slave Child to Abolitionist
By Jean-Robert Cadet and Jim Luken
University of Texas Press
From the author of Restavec: From Haitian Slave Child to Middle-Class American, which has sold more than 25,000 copies, comes a searing memoir that puts a human face on the issue of child slavery and sounds a call to end it through advocacy and education.
Greenback Planet
How the Dollar Conquered the World and Threatened Civilization as We Know It
By H. W. Brands
University of Texas Press
With fascinating stories of money men, from Alexander Hamilton to Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke, and deft explanations of the ins and outs of monetary policy, Greenback Planet clarifies why the dollar rules the world—and why that should frighten us all.
Gael Stack
University of Texas Press
Lavishly illustrated with color plates, Gael Stack is the first retrospective monograph on the art of one of America’s most accomplished contemporary painters, whose work charts the uncertain territories of memory.
From Uncertain to Blue
By Keith Carter; Introduction by Horton Foote
University of Texas Press
This superb re-envisioning of Keith Carter’s highly acclaimed first book presents classic images of small-town life in a completely redesigned volume that also offers insight into Carter’s creative process through a new essay, contact sheets, and an amplified travel journal.
Border Junkies
Addiction and Survival on the Streets of Juárez and El Paso
By Scott Comar; Introduction by Howard Campbell
University of Texas Press
From the sweaty summer days of a junky’s nightmare to the bittersweet success of true surrender and emergence into a new way of life, Border Junkies paints a searing, first-hand portrait of addiction, poverty, and recovery on the U.S.-Mexico border.
Zaprudered
The Kennedy Assassination Film in Visual Culture
University of Texas Press
This fascinating account examines how Abraham Zapruder’s accidental footage of the Kennedy assassination has been transformed from documentary evidence to an aesthetic and cultural lodestone.
Portuguese
A Reference Manual
University of Texas Press
A boon for students and instructors of the language, culture, and literature of the Portuguese-speaking world, this language resource manual delves beyond the realm of traditional language textbooks.
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