Showing 841-880 of 1,443 items.

Damned Notions of Liberty

Slavery, Culture, and Power in Colonial Mexico, 1640-1769

University of New Mexico Press

This study explores the lived experience of slavery from the perspective of slaves themselves to reveal how the enslaved may have conceptualized and contested their subordinated social positions in New Spain's middle colonial period (roughly 1630-1760s).

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Funerals, Festivals, and Cultural Politics in Porfirian Mexico

University of New Mexico Press

While most historians have argued that Díaz's reign owed its longevity to extralegal activities and personal appeals to loyalty, this study examines Díaz's successful manipulation of cults of the dead, hero cults, and national memory to shape the perception of his leadership.

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Giveaways

An ABC Book of Loanwords from the Americas

University of New Mexico Press

Linda Boyden shares an alphabet list of indigenous loanwords from North, South, and Central America that have found their way into common usage either nationally or regionally.

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Blood Desert

Witnesses, 1820-1880

University of New Mexico Press

In narrative poems that take us back to New Mexico during the nineteenth century, Renny Golden resurrects the spirits of native people and of those who came West.

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Beyond Wari Walls

Regional Perspectives on Middle Horizon Peru

Edited by Justin Jennings
University of New Mexico Press

Wari culture and its influence in Andean prehistory is investigated here from a variety of geographic locales.

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Nicaragua Before Now

Factory Work, Farming, and Fishing in a Low-wage Global Economy

University of New Mexico Press

Farrell weaves together interviews, photographs, and her own observations to illustrate the relationship between Nicaraguan laborers, international politics, and global markets.

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Tamarind Touchstones

Fabulous at Fifty: Creating Excellence in Fine Art Lithography

Edited by Marjorie Devon
University of New Mexico Press

Showcasing the broad aesthetic capabilities of lithography, Tamarind Touchstones demonstrates the diversity of the artists who have embraced lithography and their increased facility and comfort with the medium.

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The Risen Horse

University of New Mexico Press

This story of the tribulations of early reservation life that led to the modern-day triumphs of the Mescalero people also offers a rare glimpse at the strengths of education at Carlisle, largely remembered for its flaws.

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Golden States of Grace

Prayers of the Disinherited

By (photographer) Rick Nahmias; Foreword by Jack Miles
University of New Mexico Press

Taking California as a window into the diversity of religion in America, Golden States of Grace documents marginalized communities at prayer in their own faith traditions.

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What Are Global Warming and Climate Change?

Answers for Young Readers

University of New Mexico Press

Using a question-and-answer format supplemented by hands-on activities, this book fosters an understanding of the complex processes at work in global warming and climate change.

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Raptors of New Mexico

University of New Mexico Press

This beautifully illustrated study is the first book to focus on the birds of prey of New Mexico.

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Powering the Future

New Energy Technologies

University of New Mexico Press

This lively introduction to alternative energy sources highlights the science that will play a vital role in our lives today and in the future.

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Old Yellowstone Days

University of New Mexico Press

This new edition of the first book to collect accounts of early visits to Yellowstone includes a new Foreword by park historian Lee H. Whittlesey.

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Notes from a Miner's Canary

Essays on the State of Native America

University of New Mexico Press

A leading scholar takes on a variety of contemporary issues as they relate to Native Americans.

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Los Alamos

The Ranch School Years, 1917-1943

University of New Mexico Press

Wirth and Aldrich examine the Los Alamos Ranch School, an elite prep school for boys, ages twelve to eighteen. In existence between the two World Wars, the school's curriculum combined a robust outdoor life with a rigorous academic program mirroring the Progressive Era's quest for perfection.

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Invitation to an Execution

A History of the Death Penalty in the United States

University of New Mexico Press

These original essays examine the complex history of the death penalty, focusing on specific geographic areas to illuminate the circumstances of law and politics.

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Allies at Odds

The Andean Church and its Indigenous Agents, 1583-1671

University of New Mexico Press

Explores the vital, often conflictive role indigenous agents played in the creation of Andean Christian society.

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Where a Hundred Soldiers Were Killed

The Struggle for the Powder River Country in 1866 and the Making of the Fetterman Myth

University of New Mexico Press

Monnett takes a closer look at the struggle between the mining interests of the United States and the Lakota and Cheyenne nations in 1866 that climaxed with the Fetterman Massacre.

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The War for Mexico's West

Indians and Spaniards in New Galicia, 1524-1550

University of New Mexico Press

Altman has undertaken the challenging task of examining the Spaniards' attempt to conquer and settle the western region of Mexico (New Galicia).

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Land, Wind, and Hard Words

A Story of Navajo Activism

University of New Mexico Press

Because of his friendship with the Jacksons, Sherry was on the scene during the aftermath of the mysterious death of Leroy Jackson in 1993. His vivid account of the resulting journalistic feeding frenzy and heightened conflict on the reservation adds an unusual dimension to this intimate and unpretentious story.

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How Cities Won the West

Four Centuries of Urban Change in Western North America

University of New Mexico Press

The author traces the evolution of early frontier towns at the beginning of Western expansion to the thriving urban centers they have become today.

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Hard Grass

Life on the Crazy Woman Bison Ranch

University of New Mexico Press

These colorful tales highlight the complex relationships that comprise life in the rural West today.

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Come with Me to Babylon

University of New Mexico Press

The saga of an early twentieth-century Russian Jewish family and how they learn to find hope amidst many disappointments in America.

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Bolitas de Oro

Poems from My Marble-playing Days

University of New Mexico Press

These vivid memories of the poet's life in rural New Mexico in the 50s were written first in Spanish then translated to English.

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Wolves at Our Door

University of New Mexico Press

A close-knit group of Anglo and Hispanic families struggle to keep their southern Arizona ranches alive amidst the dual threats of drug lords and smugglers.

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Schools of Their Own

The Education of Hispanos in New Mexico, 1850-1940

University of New Mexico Press

Demonstrates how educational inequality persisted in a democracy and how Hispanos tried to secure more and better schools in New Mexico prior to 1940.

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Educational Reform in New Mexico

Tireman, San José, and Nambé

University of New Mexico Press

In the 1930s Loyd Tireman organized two experiments in cross-cultural education in New Mexico. These experiments were remarkably successful and anticipated contemporary trends, yet they remained unacknowledged and, until now, unstudied. Bachelor makes Tireman's insights available to modern teachers.

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Singing to the Plants

A Guide to Mestizo Shamanism in the Upper Amazon

University of New Mexico Press

This accessible study of ayahuasca shamanism introduces its ritual practices including healers' spiritual relationships with the native plants used in its ceremonies.

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Crash of TWA Flight 260

University of New Mexico Press

Williams documents the tragic crash of TWA Flight 260 in the Sandia Mountains in 1955 and the fifty years that he has spent unraveling the mysteries of the crash, many still unresolved today.

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Mexican Community Health and the Politics of Health Reform

University of New Mexico Press

This very human study of emerging medical services in Morelos, Mexico, illustrates the variety of grassroot solutions to health care delivery in response to rising costs and restrictions on access.

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This High, Wild Country

A Celebration of Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park

By Paul Schullery; Illustrated by Marsha Karle
University of New Mexico Press

A colorful gift of words and art from two of the West's most knowledgeable and talented naturalists.

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The Very Nature of God

Baroque Catholicism and Religious Reform in Bourbon Mexico City

University of New Mexico Press

Using wills and other testaments of faith, Larkin examines the complex efforts by secular and religious authorities to reform religious practice during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.

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The Rounders

University of New Mexico Press

This is the 50th anniversary edition of the western that made Max Evans famous.

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For Every Indio Who Falls

A History of Maya Activism in Guatemala, 1960-1990

University of New Mexico Press

By following indigenous organizing experiences at multiple levels--local, regional, national, and international--this book explores how some Mayas became involved in political activism and opposition to a repressive state.

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Gentlemen Preferred Dry Flies

The Dry Fly and the Nymph, Evolution and Conflict

University of New Mexico Press

Through stories of numerous historical characters Black details the long debate among fly-fishing devotees on the relative merits of dry or wet flies.

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Dreaming the Biosphere

The Theater of All Possibilities

University of New Mexico Press

Reider tells the tangled tale of the creation, and eventual disintegration, of the experimental eco-utopia known as Biosphere 2.

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Mother Jones

Raising Cain and Consciousness

University of New Mexico Press

The details of the life and work of Mary Harris "Mother" Jones are skillfully told here for those who have not heard her story and those who know it well.

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Dance of the Eggshells

Baile de Los Cascarones

By Carla Aragón; Illustrated by Kathy Dee Saville; Translated by Socorro Aragon
University of New Mexico Press

A little girl and her brother are introduced to the Baile de los Cascarones in this charming bilingual story of family and cultural tradition.

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Manhattan Project to the Santa Fe Institute

The Memoirs of George A. Cowan

University of New Mexico Press

Cowan relates the details of his unique scientific career.

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Picturing an Exhibition

The Family of Man and 1950s America

University of New Mexico Press

Examines a major photography exhibit and its connections with the politics and culture of the 1950s, and how the U.S.I.A. used it to project a view of American culture abroad.

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