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Rutgers also distributes books published by Bucknell University Press.
The Social Sciences Go to Washington
The Politics of Knowledge in the Postmodern Age
What happens when the allegedly value-free social sciences enter the national political arena? In The Social Sciences Go to Washington, scholars examine the effects of the massive influx of sociologists, demographers, economists, educators, and others to the federal advisory process in the postwar period. Essays look at how these social scientists sought to change existing policies in welfare, public health, urban policy, national defense, environmental policy, and science and technology policy, and the ways they tried to influence future policies.
Producing Dreams, Consuming Youth
Mexican Americans and Mass Media
Legitimating New Religions
James R. Lewis has written the first book to deal explicitly with the issue of how emerging religions legitimate themselves.
The Modern Woman Revisited
Paris Between the Wars
The contributions of female artists to the development of literary and artistic modernism in early twentieth century France remain poorly understood. It was during this period that a so-called “modern woman” began occupying urban spaces associated with the development of modern art and modernism’s struggles to define subjectivities and sexualities. Whereas most studies of modernism’s formal innovations and its encouragement of artistic autonomy neglect or omit necessary discussions of gender, race, class, and sexual orientation, the contributors of The Modern Woman Revisited inject these perspectives into the discussion.
Women, Gender and Fascism in Europe, 1919-45
What attracts women to far-right movements that appear to denigrate their rights? This question has vexed feminist scholars for decades and has led to many lively debates in the academy. In this context, during the 1980s, the study of women, gender, and fascism in twentieth-century Europe took off, pioneered by historians such as Claudia Koonz and Victoria de Grazia.
Rare and Commonplace Flowers
The Story of Elizabeth Bishop and Lota de Macedo Soares
Overcoming Hearing Aid Fears
The Road to Better Hearing
At Play in Belfast
Children's Folklore and Identities in Northern Ireland
The Holocaust
Theoretical Readings
Scrutinizing Feminist Epistemology
An Examination of Gender in Science
This volume presents the first systematic evaluation of a feminist epistemology of sciences’ power to transform both the practice of science and our society. Unlike existing critiques, this book questions the fundamental feminist suggestion that purging science of alleged male biases will advance the cause of both science and by extension, social justice.
In Sickness and in Play
Children Coping with Chronic Illness
Globalizing the Sacred
Religion Across the Americas
Acts of Possession
Collecting in America
We Are Not Babysitters
Family Childcare Providers Redefine Work and Care
Global Cities
Cinema, Architecture, and Urbanism in a Digital Age
The Reporter's Environmental Handbook
Third Edition
Public Places, Private Journeys
Ethnography, Entertainment, and the Tourist Gaze
Serving Our Country
Japanese American Women in the Military during World War II
Following the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor and America's declaration of war on Japan, the U.S. War Department allowed up to five hundred second-generation, or "Nisei," Japanese American women to enlist in the Women's Army Corps and, in smaller numbers, in the Army Medical Corps.
Through in-depth interviews with surviving Nisei women who served, Brenda L. Moore provides fascinating firsthand accounts of their experiences.
Paging New Jersey
A Literary Guide to the Garden State
The Selected Papers of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony
National Protection for National Citizens, 1873 to 1880
National Protection for National Citizens, 1873 to 1880 is the third of six planned volumes of TheSelected Papers of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. The entire collection documents the friendship and accomplishments of two of America's most important social and political reformers. Though neither Stanton nor Anthony lived to see passage of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920, each of them devoted fifty-five years to the cause of woman suffrage.
The third volume of the Selected Papers of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony opens while woman suffragists await the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in cases testing whether the Constitution recognized women as voters within the terms of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. At its close they are pursuing their own amendment to the Constitution and pressing the presidential candidates of 1880 to speak in its favor. Through their letters, speeches, articles, and diaries, the volume recounts the national careers of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony as popular lecturers, their work with members of Congress to expand women's rights, their protests during the Centennial Year of 1876, and the launch that same year of their campaign for a Sixteenth Amendment.