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Cultural Studies |
Author: Bennetta Jules-RosettePub Date: Cloth: ; Paper: 2000 learn more... |
Author: Carroll B. JohnsonPub Date: May 2000 In this first volume in the new HISPANISMS series, Johnson illuminates Cervantes Don Quixote on the side of materialism--in contrast to the highly idealistic perspective one usually takes of the knight-errant and his adventures. learn more... |
Author: Rosa A. EberlyPub Date: 2000 The condition of our public discussions about literary and cultural works has much to say about the condition of our democracy and the author argues for more public discourse--in classrooms, newspapers, magazines, etc. to reclaim a public voice on national artistic matters. learn more... |
Author: Ann LarabeePub Date: January 2000 learn more... |
Author: Paul MageePub Date: June 2000 Surrealistic in style and content, this intellectual tour guide into the nature of tourists and tourism is a theorists field trip, engaged in upside-down anthropology, ethnography, and culture studies to arrive out on the other side of emergent global culture and the nature of personhood. Quirky and difficult, but fun. learn more... |
Author: Ross MillerPub Date: 2000 Illuminates the birth of modernism in American and the development of a radically new architecture--tested in fire, the modern city emerged learn more... |
Author: Kimberly Rae ConnorPub Date: March 2000 Extends the tradition of the slave narrative to contemporary artists and demonstrates how they all work toward a liberation theology--even though it may not be traditionally Christian or sacred. learn more... |
Author: Orm ÖverlandPub Date: July 2000 The author sums it up best: What I call homemaking myths are stories told in immigrant/ethnic groups both to bolster members confidence in their identities as Americans and to prove to other Americans, in particular the traditionally dominant groups, that their particular group has a unique right to a home in the United States. learn more... |
Author: Victoria GetisPub Date: August 2000 The author traces the many failings of todays juvenile court system directly to the progressive reformers in Chicago who instituted the system in the belief that the state and science could fix the problems of troubled and youthful lawbreakers. learn more... |
Author: Deborah Anders SilvermanPub Date: June 2000 A rich and thorough investigation of the life and ways of American descendents of Polish immigrants--with photographs, firsthand observations, and interviews learn more... |
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