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  • - Creating a Modern Regional Tradition
    af Chris Wilson
    548,95 kr.

  • - Essays on the Central Plains
    af Elliott West
    413,95 kr.

  • af Griffinpi
    408,95 kr.

  • - A Life and Times of the Last Gaucho Caudillos
    af John Charles Chasteen
    413,95 kr.

  • af Claire Farrer
    408,95 kr.

  • af L. Coulter
    363,95 kr.

    Ornamental tinwork folk art originated in the mid-1800s in Santa Fe, with a discarded sardine can. As more food products shipped in tin cans arrived over the Santa Fe Trail, more materials were available to the area's tinsmiths. Lane Coulter and Maurice Dixon Jr begin with a brief history of New Mexican tinwork and then describe the tools and techniques used and how to determine the period in which older pieces were made.

  • - Mission and Colony on the Peninsular Frontier, 1697-1768
    af Harry W. Crosby
    888,95 kr.

  • - Changing Landscapes of the American West
    af Donald Worster
    413,95 kr.

  • - Pueblo in the Sky
    af Ward Alan Minge
    313,95 kr.

    Chronicles the social, economic, and political history of the Acoma tribe. Drawing on tribal documents, Minge traces the evolution of the pueblo and explores the ongoing struggle of the Acomas to preserve their traditions. He pays particular attention to the problems that beset the nation during the twentieth century and demonstrates how they have persevered.

  • - A Rephotographic Survey of Lake Tahoe
    af Robert E. Blesse
    413,95 kr.

    Lake Tahoe is one of America's most pristine, beautiful alpine lakes. Nestled in the Sierra Nevada at 6,229 feet above sea level, Lake Tahoe has also become an important symbol for issues dealing with land and water use, resource management, urban growth, and, most important here, how we perceive the landscape. Starting with nineteenth-century photographs from a variety of national and local archives, the authors have provided more than one hundred comparative photographs representing a visual document of the evolving landscape within the Tahoe Basin. Lake Tahoe attracted tourists in droves in the late nineteenth century, but the logging industry wrought extensive damage to the land. Now, as second-growth forests are maturing, new problems challenge the Tahoe basin's identity. Well known for the clarity of its deep water, the lake is now threatened by urban sewage and motor boat traffic. The fish population has yet to return to its presettlement abundance. Ever-increasing building demands confront the fragile ecosystem. From the beginning of permanent settlements at Lake Tahoe, the basin was viewed as both a mining resource and a resort area, identities which have come to be contradictory. Stopping Time confronts issues that have come to the fore in the late twentieth century--how we use the land, how we perceive the landscape, and what our perceptions mean for the future. The notion of an "ideal landscape" is explored in Elizabeth Raymond's informative essay, and how that notion itself has evolved since the nineteenth century. This book is essential to anyone concerned with the visual record of the American continent and with how our attitudes and ideals interact with the ever-pressingneed to preserve our national resources like Lake Tahoe.

  • af Franc Johnson Newcomb
    208,95 kr.

    When Water Monster caused the Great Flood, the thirty-two clans of the First People left their pleasant lands and migrated to the present world through an enormous hollow reed. In this marvellous collection, Franc Newcomb recounts some of the many tales she heard during long winter evenings at Blue Mesa.

  • - Reality & Promise 1940-1990
    af Juan Gomez-Quianones
    413,95 kr.

    This political history of Mexican Americans analyses and interprets the last fifty years in the movimiento. Written by a leading Chicano historian who spent many years as an activist, this study evolved from Juan Gomez-Quinones's participation and reflection. Examined are the leaders and organisations that waged struggles for political rights as well as the evolution of their goals and strategies.

  • - New Woman, New Worlds
    af Lois Palken Rudnick
    263,95 kr.

    She was "the most peculiar common denominator that society, literature, art and radical revolutionaries ever found in New York and Europe." So claimed a Chicago newspaper reporter in the 1920s of Mabel Dodge Luhan. Lois Rudnick's biography examines all aspects of Mabel Dodge Luhan's real and imagined lives, drawing on fictional portraits, as well as on Mabel's own memoirs, letters, and fiction.

  • - Mexican Women, Unionization & the California Food Processing Industry 1930-1950
    af Vicki L. Ruiz
    348,95 kr.

    Women have been the mainstay of the gruelling, seasonal canning industry for over a century. This book is a collective biography. Thousands of Mexicana and Mexican American women working in canneries in southern California established effective, democratic trade union locals run by local members. The dramatic and turbulent history of their union is a major contribution to the new labour history.

  • - An Escape to Reality
    af Mabel Dodge Luhan
    298,95 kr.

    In 1917 Mabel Sterne, patron of the arts and spokeswoman for the New York avant-garde, came to the Southwest seeking a new life. This autobiographical account, long out-of-print, of her first few months in New Mexico is a remarkable description of an Easterner's journey to the American West. It is also a great story of personal and philosophical transformation. The geography of New Mexico and the culture of the Pueblo Indians opened a new world for Mabel. She settled in Taos immediately and lived there the rest of her life. Much of this book describes her growing fascination with Antonio Luhan of Taos Pueblo, whom she subsequently married. Her descriptions of the appeal of primitive New Mexico to a world-weary New Yorker are still fresh and moving. <p>I finished it in a state of amazed revelation . . . it is so beautifully compact and consistent. . . . It is going to help many another woman and man to 'take life with the talons' and carry it high.--Ansel Adams

  • af T. Williams
    243,95 kr.

    This unusual book is an introduction to Navajo culture by a storyteller. Steeped in the lore of the Navajo reservation, where she worked as a teacher, the author came to see Navajo legend and ritual as touchstones for evaluating her own experience. She presents them here as a means for all people to locate their own history, traditions, and sense of how to live well.

  • af Lydia Spencer Lane
    348,95 kr.

  • - Encounters with the American Desert
    af Patricia Nelson Limerick
    348,95 kr.

    Traces the development of American attitudes toward the desert using case studies from the writings of John C. Fre(c)mont, William Lewis Manly, Mark Twain, William Ellsworth Smythe, John Van Dyke, George Wharton James, Joseph Wood Krutch, and Edward Abbey.

  • - Essays on Regional Mexican History, 1876-1911
     
    413,95 kr.

  •  
    183,95 kr.

    A rich gathering of essays that evoke the unique and mysterious appeal that New Mexico has had for some of the twentieth century's best known writers. Included here are selections by Mary Austin, Oliver La Farge, Conrad Richter, D. H. Lawrence, C. G. Jung, Winfield Townley Scott, John DeWitt McKee, Ernie Pyle, Harvey Fergusson, and Lawrence Clark Powell.

  • af Myres
    263,95 kr.

    Professor Myres gives frontier women a voice they never had. She uses extensive source material by and about women--letters, journals, and reminiscences from over 400 collections--to study the impact of the frontier on women's lives and the role of women in the West. She offers a major reinterpretation of the experience of pioneer women, including that of Indian, Mexican, French, black, and Anglo-American women. The account recreates in detail the frontier experience of all these women, beginning with their physical and intellectual responses to the trek West, and concluding with their struggle for political suffrage and economic opportunity.Women moved from civilization to the frontier encumbered by more than baggage. They also had to overcome literary and social stereotypes. We learn their views on wilderness, Indians, race, and religion as well as how they reacted to the daily challenges of keeping house, raising a family, and gaining a measure of equality. "A strikingly original, highly readable, and informative history that will be used by scholars and lay readers alike."--Howard Lamar, from the Foreword

  • - Analyses of the Past
    af Linda Cordell
    423,95 kr.

  • af Sonnichsen
    263,95 kr.

    The history of the Tularosa Basin--which includes White Sands Missile Range--from pioneer days through the atomic age.

  • - A Hopi Indian Woman's Struggle to Live in Two Worlds
    af Vada F. Carlson
    348,95 kr.

  • - Jenny Vincent's Life in Folk Music and Activism
     
    208,95 kr.

    Born in Minnesota and raised in Chicago, Jenny Vincent was educated at a progressive private school and Vassar College. Introduced to international folk music at an early age, she remains a performer and champion of this ""music of the people.

  • - Picturing Change
    af E.Wright Ledbetter
    262,95 kr.

    Made from visits to Cuba over a four-year period (1997-2001), Ledbetter's photographs take us on a compelling journey within a culture pressured by numerous internal and external difficulties, where the resulting climate is saturated with the tension and uncertainty brought on by a political and economic future that continues to evolve with no clear direction.

  • - The Story of the Trinity Site Nuclear Explosion, July 16, 1945
    af Ferenc Morton Szasz
    233,95 kr.

    First published in 1984, this prize-winning history of the Manhattan Project is now available in paperback for the first time, fifty years after the explosion of the first atomic bomb.

  • af Kelly Donahue-Wallace
    483,95 kr.

    Surveys the art and architecture created in the Spanish Viceroyalties of New Spain, Peru, New Granada, and La Plata from the time of the conquest to the independence era. This book offers a chronological review of the major objects and monuments of the colonial era.

  • - How the Sun, Moon, and Stars Began
    af Emmett ""Shkeme"" Garcia
    208,95 kr.

    According to Santa Ana Pueblo legend, the animals' spirit Leader created the sun, moon, and stars by using woven yucca mats and hot coals. He selected certain animals to climb from their homes in the Third World up to the Fourth World. This work presents this Pueblo's story of the beginnings of the stars and constellations.

  • af E. B. Held
    208,95 kr.

    When thinking of New Mexico, few people think spy-vs.-spy intrigue, but in fact, to many international intelligence operatives, the state's name is synonymous with espionage. In this fascinating guide, former CIA agent E. B. Held uses declassified documents from both the CIA and KGB, as well as secondary sources, to trace some of the most notorious spying events in US history.