Showing 3,961-4,000 of 25,572 items.

Minding Bodies

How Physical Space, Sensation, and Movement Affect Learning

West Virginia University Press

What happens to teaching when you consider the whole body (and not just “brains on sticks”)?

More info

ePortfolios@edu

What We Know, What We Don’t Know, and Everything In-Between

The WAC Clearinghouse

This edited collection offers a comprehensive examination of best practices in creating, implementing, and assessing an ePortfolio program.

More info

Emergency Deep

Cold War Missions of a Submarine Commander

University of Alabama Press
More info

A Bloody and Barbarous God

The Metaphysics of Cormac McCarthy

University of New Mexico Press

A Bloody and Barbarous God investigates the relationship between gnosticism and the perennial philosophy and how these traditions have influenced the later novels of Cormac McCarthy, namely, Blood Meridian, All the Pretty Horses, The Crossing, Cities of the Plain, No Country for Old Men, and The Road.

More info

Zheng Chongbin

I Look for the Sky

By Abby Chen and Maya Kóvasakaya; Introduction by Jay Xu
Asian Art Museum
More info

The Last Layer of the Ocean

Kayaking through Love and Loss on Alaska's Wild Coast

Oregon State University Press

There are five layers of the ocean, though most of us will only ever see one. The deepest layer is the midnight zone, where the only light comes from bioluminescence, created by animals who live there. In order to see, these creatures must create their own light. They move like solitary suns, encased in their own bubbles of freezing water. This is the most remote, unexplored zone on the planet. Though hostile to humans, it’s a source of rapt fascination for Mary Emerick, who would go there in a heartbeat if she could.

The year Emerick turned 38, the suicide of a stranger compelled her to uproot her life and strike out for Alaska, taking a chance on love and home. She learned how to travel in a small yellow kayak along the rugged coast, contending with gales, high seas, and bears. She pondered the different meanings of home from the perspectives of people who were born along Alaska’s coast, the first peoples who had been there for generations, newcomers who chose this place for themselves, and the many who would eventually, inevitably leave. When she married a man from another island, convinced that love would stick, she soon learned that marriage is just as difficult to navigate as the ocean.

Divided into sections detailing the main kayaking strokes, with each stroke serving as metaphor for the lives we all pass through and the tools needed to stay afloat, this eloquent memoir speaks to the human need for connection—connection to place and to our fellow travelers casting their bubbles of light in the depths.

More info

Sailing to Freedom

Maritime Dimensions of the Underground Railroad

University of Massachusetts Press
More info

Patmos

University of Massachusetts Press
More info

Love Potion and Other Stories

Ateneo De Manila, Ateneo De Manila Univ Press
More info

Integrated Korean

Advanced 1, Second Edition

University of Hawaii Press
More info

Dekameron

Ateneo De Manila, Ateneo De Manila Univ Press
More info

Confucianism and Deweyan Pragmatism

Resources for a New Geopolitics of Interdependence

University of Hawaii Press
More info

Civil Society in West Maui

North Beach West Maui Benefit, North Beach West Maui Benefit Fund
More info

1819 & Before

Singapore's Pasts

Edited by Kwa Chong Guan
ISEAS - Yusof Ishak Institute
More info

Building Community Food Webs

Island Press

In Building Community Food Webs, Ken Meter shows how grassroots leaders across the U.S. are constructing civic networks to create healthier and more equitable food systems. Overturning extractive economic structures, these inspired food leaders are engaging low-income residents, farmers, and local organizations in their quest to build stronger communities. 

Network-building takes a variety of forms and arises out of multiple activities. Farmers and researchers may convene to improve farming practices collaboratively. Food banks engage their clients to challenge the root causes of poverty. Municipalities invest large sums to protect farmland from development.

Building Community Food Webs captures the essence of these efforts, and offers pragmatic insights for community food leaders anywhere.
 

More info

Oncology Massage

An Integrative Approach to Cancer Care

Jessica Kingsley Publishers, Handspring Publishing
More info

Hiding in Plain Sight

Black Women, the Law, and the Making of a White Argentine Republic

University of Alabama Press

Details how African-descended women’s societal, marital, and sexual decisions forever reshaped the racial makeup of Argentina

More info

Famine Foods

Plants We Eat to Survive

The University of Arizona Press

How people eat today is a record of food use through the ages, and Famine Foods offers the first ever overview of the use of alternative foods during food shortages. Paul E. Minnis explores the unusual plants that have helped humanity survive throughout history.

More info

Being a Ballerina

The Power and Perfection of a Dancing Life

University Press of Florida
More info

On the Run

Finding the Trail Home

Oregon State University Press

OCatherine Doucette is a backcountry skier, horseback rider, and mountaineer—roles that have resulted in adventures where she is often the only woman in a group of men. Starting from a young age, she pushed through the wilderness with her brothers, friends, and partners, gaining the skill and judgement to tackle progressively bigger goals until she became an accomplished outdoorswoman.

For over a decade, Doucette chased winter around the world to ski, from the White Mountains of her native New Hampshire to the slopes of Alaska, British Columbia, California, Argentina, Switzerland, and beyond. But she always kept one eye toward living a more settled life and putting her heart on the line if someone would just ask her to. Like other women who choose or yearn to be in the wilderness, she wrestled to reconcile her outdoor ambitions with society’s expectations of women.

The personal essays collected in On the Run touch on the author’s origins in New Hampshire while focusing on the lure of big mountains in the West. They celebrate the comfort, challenge, and community found in expanses of wilderness while confronting the limitations and sacrifices that come with a transient, outdoor lifestyle. In a voice both searching and deeply grounded, Doucette contends with avalanches and whitewater along with the less dramatic but equally important questions of belonging. Anyone who has searched to define home, who has been called by mountains, or by movement, will feel at home in these pages.

More info

Securitizing Youth

Young People’s Roles in the Global Peace and Security Agenda

Edited by Marisa O. Ensor
Rutgers University Press

Securitizing Youth offers new insights on young people’s engagement in a wide range of contexts related to the peace and security field. It examines the challenges and opportunities faced by young women and men in their efforts to build more peaceful, inclusive, and environmentally secure societies.

More info

Securitizing Youth

Young People's Roles in the Global Peace and Security Agenda

Edited by Marisa O. Ensor
Rutgers University Press

Securitizing Youth offers new insights on young people’s engagement in a wide range of contexts related to the peace and security field. It examines the challenges and opportunities faced by young women and men in their efforts to build more peaceful, inclusive, and environmentally secure societies.

More info

The Comics of R. Crumb

Underground in the Art Museum

Edited by Daniel Worden
University Press of Mississippi

A scholarly exploration of the iconic comics artist

More info

Rebirthing a Nation

White Women, Identity Politics, and the Internet

University Press of Mississippi

A timely exploration of the role white women play in supporting systems of racism

More info

Race in Young Adult Speculative Fiction

University Press of Mississippi

A wrestling with the faults and possibilities of the portrayals of race in this powerful genre

More info

Policing Intimacy

Law, Sexuality, and the Color Line in Twentieth-Century Hemispheric American Literature

University Press of Mississippi

A study of interracial intimacy, multiracial identities, and the intersectional, interconnected nature of social relations

More info

Lost in the Dark

A World History of Horror Film

University Press of Mississippi

A comprehensive and fun overview of moviegoers’ favorite genre

More info

Black to Nature

Pastoral Return and African American Culture

University Press of Mississippi

Close readings of Black women reclaiming space within the power of nature

More info

Women’s Ways of Making

Utah State University Press

Women’s Ways of Making draws attention to material practices—those that the hands perform—as three epistemologies—an episteme, a techne, and a phronesis—that together give pointed consideration to making as a rhetorical embodied endeavor.

More info

Touch is Really Strange

By Steve Haines; Illustrated by Sophie Standing
Jessica Kingsley Publishers

A science-based graphic medicine comic exploring touch as a fundamental human experience, and why it is essential for health

More info

Top To Bottom

A Memoir and Personal Guide Through Phalloplasty

Jessica Kingsley Publishers

A witty, practical and insightful memoir and guide to the emotional and physical journey of having phalloplasty.

More info

Queerly Autistic

The Ultimate Guide For LGBTQIA+ Teens On The Spectrum

Jessica Kingsley Publishers

An inspiring survival guide for autistic LGBTQIA+ teens, sharing experience and advice oncoming out, consent, staying safe in relationships, communicating with family members, finding a community and practicing self-care.

More info

Why Solange Matters

University of Texas Press

A Black feminist punk performer and important new voice recounts the dramatic story of an incandescent musician and artist whose unconventional journey to international success on her own terms was far more important than her family name.

More info

The Pinochet Generation

The Chilean Military in the Twentieth Century

By John R. Bawden; Introduction by John R. Bawden
University of Alabama Press

Weaves together the dramatic history of Chile’s complex and fraught relationship to its armed services by thorough analysis of the experiences of General Augusto Pinochet’s generation of soldiers and the beliefs and traditions that motivated their actions

More info

The Hatak Witches

The University of Arizona Press

A baffling museum murder that appears to be the work of twisted human killers results in an unexpected and violent confrontation with powerful shape-shifters for Choctaw detective Monique Blue Hawk. Blending tribal beliefs and myths into a modern context, The Hatak Witches continues the storyline of Choctaw cosmology and cultural survival that are prominent in Devon A. Mihesuah’s award-winning novel, The Roads of My Relations.

More info

The Diné Reader

An Anthology of Navajo Literature

The University of Arizona Press

The Diné Reader: An Anthology of Navajo Literature is a comprehensive collection of creative works by Diné poets and writers. This anthology is the first of its kind.

More info
Find what you’re looking for...
Stay Informed

Receive the latest UBC Press news, including events, catalogues, and announcements.


Read past newsletters

Publishers Represented
UBC Press is the Canadian agent for several international publishers. Visit our Publishers Represented page to learn more.