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Bøker i Studies in American Popular History and Culture-serien

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  • - Cultural and Political Expressions of Africa
    av USA) Archer, Jermaine O. (SUNY & College at Old Westbury
    396 - 2 194,-

  • - Collectivist Impulses in Progressive-era Girl's Fiction, 1890-1940
    av Gwen Tarbox
    735,-

    First published in 2000. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

  • av Heather Addison
    859 - 2 147,-

    This study examines the relationship between cinema and physical culture, including activities such as dieting and muscle-building. Hollywood's long-standing prominence on the world stage makes it an ideal place to begin such an examination.

  • - The Literature, Art, Jazz, and Architecture of an Emerging Global Capital
    av Robert Bennett
    665 - 2 147,-

    Situating post-WWII New York literature within the material context of American urban history, this work analyses criticism of the spatial restructuring of post-WWII New York City.

  • - A Case Study from Massachusetts
    av USA) Ouellette & Susan (Saint Michael's College
    732 - 2 147,-

    Explores the development of a provincial textile industry in colonial America. This study examines the promotion of domestic textile manufacture from the level of the Massachusetts legislature down to the way in which individual communities organized individual productive efforts.

  • - Imagining Gender and Class in Nineteenth Century American Fiction
    av Amal Amireh
    2 147,-

    This book studies the representations of working-class women in canonical and popular American fiction between 1820 and 1870.

  • - Weapons in the War of Ideas
    av Patti Clayton Becker
    656 - 2 194,-

    This work examines how libraries could respond to their communities need through the use of numerous primary and secondary sources during World War II in America.

  • - Collectivist Impulses in Progressive-era Girl's Fiction, 1890-1940
    av Gwen Tarbox
    2 194,-

    This book examines the evolution of Progressive-era girls' peer groups, their representation in popular girls' fiction, and the influence of these upon young women's lives during the years leading up to the Second World War.

  • - Thomas Paine and the American Revolution
    av Vikki J. Vickers
    583 - 1 431,-

  • - Authority and Dissent in Puritan Massachusetts, 1630-1655
    av Timothy L. Wood
    764 - 2 194,-

    Reconciles two conflicting schools of thought within the historiography of American Puritanism. This book contends that under the threat of social and intellectual chaos on the frontiers of America, there emerged a core Puritan mission that was either embraced or spurned by New England's founders, but widely understood by all.

  • - Women's Bookstores in the United States
    av USA) Onosaka & Junko (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
    732 - 2 194,-

  • - Highbrow, Middlebrow, and LowBrow Novels of the 1950s
    av Ruth Pirsig Wood
    2 194,-

    Separating popular fiction into "lowbrow" and "middlebrow," Wood (U. of Wisconsin, River Falls) argues that lowbrow, like highbrow, evolves from folkloric tradition and contains messages about how to find a satisfying niche in the social order. Middlebrow, on the other hand, evolves from myth tradi

  • - African American Reform Rhetoric and the Rise of a Modern Nation State
    av Michael Stancliff
    770 - 2 194,-

    Examines Frances Ellen Watkins Harper's radically egalitarian practice through her involvement in the abolitionist movement, emancipation, Reconstruction, and into the Jim Crow era, placing her work firmly in black-nationalist lineages. This book contributes to the contemporary portrayal of Harper as a theorist of African-American feminism.

  • av USA) Alves & Jaime Osterman (Bard College
    748 - 2 194,-

    Seeking to understand how literary texts both shaped and reflected the century's debates over adolescent female education, this book examines fictional works and historical documents featuring descriptions of girls' formal educational experiences between the 1810s and the 1890s.

  • av USA) Jones & Megan Sanborn (Brigham Young University
    372 - 586,-

    In the late nineteenth century, melodramas were spectacular entertainment for Americans. They were also a key forum in which elements of American culture were represented, contested, and inverted. This book focuses on the construction of the Mormon villain as rapist, murderer, and Turk in anti-Mormon melodramas.

  • av USA) Stoneham & Michael (United States Military Academy
    299 - 618,-

    Focuses on how John Brown - radical abolitionist and freedom-fighter - inspired America's most significant intellects, such as Whittier, Whitman, Melville, Howells, Emerson and Thoreau, to take a public stand against the inertia of moral compromise and social degeneracy, bringing the nation to the brink of civil war.

  • av Zoe Desti-Demanti
    2 147,-

    Noting that the variation between the playwrights can be as great as between men and women, and acknowledging that her subjects are limited to a narrow class and race population, Detsi-Diamanti the cultural and historical specificity of women playwrights of the period and the interrelationship between their dramatic efforts and the formation of an American national and literary identity. Her major themes are metaphors of freedom, industrial capitalism, and gender perspective and ideology.

  • av USA) Hartmann, John Jay College of Criminal Justice & Jonathan (Jonathan Hartmann
    685 - 2 127,-

    The circulation and marketing of Edgar Allan Poe's prose are explored in this book through close readings of Poe's fictive, journalistic, and critical writings, and an examination of his involvement in the transatlantic literary marketplace and his development of a literary brand.

  • - Narratives of Southern Women Unionists
    av USA) Newton & Roxanne (Mitchell Community College
    732 - 2 385,-

    Examines women unionists' life histories through the lens of narrative analysis, interpreting their multiple perspectives as four coherent discourse communities: social activists, union feminists, women martyrs, and women whose identities are defined by their work in non-traditional fields.

  • - The Environmental and Political Effects of Large-Scale Water Systems
    av USA) Wehr & Kevin (California State University
    687 - 2 113,-

    This book inquires into the relations between society and its natural environment by examining the historical discourse around several cases of state building in the American West - the construction of three high dams from 1928 to 1963.

  • - The Role of Freedom Songs in the Civil Rights Movement
    av Kerran L. Sanger
    1 833,-

    An analysis of the freedom songs sung by Civil Rights activists and their rhetorical persuasion as part of an evolving African-American history. The songs are viewed as communication strategies that defined the activists' identities, the movement's goals, and a burgeoning world view. Sanger also de

  • av USA) Johnson & Sherita L. (University of Southern Mississippi
    732 - 2 194,-

    Focuses on the profound impact that racism had on the literary imagination of black Americans in the South. The author argues that it is impossible to consider what the 'South' and what 'southernness' mean without looking at how black women have contributed to and contested any unified definition of that region.

  • av Leslie H. Hossfeld
    656 - 1 994,-

    This work examines the counter-narratives of social actors that may be used as resources to promote and create social change, particularly racial change.

  • - How the Grey Nuns Changed the Social Welfare Paradigm of Lewiston, Maine
    av Susan P. Hudson
    372 - 618,-

    Recognizes the achievements by a nineteenth-century community of women religious, the Grey Nuns of Lewiston, Maine. This book tells how their hospital was significant in its time as the first hospital in that factory city; and is still significant if one desires a more accurate and inclusive history of women and healthcare in America.

  • - Becoming White, Becoming Other, Becoming American in the Late Progressive Era
    av Linda Joyce Brown
    732 - 2 194,-

    This work examines early twentieth-century literature about women immigrants to reveal the differing ways that American racial categories and identities were textually and socially constructed at the beginning of the twentieth century.

  • av USA) Strand & Amy Dunham (Aquinas College
    526 - 1 414,-

    Creating connections between language and literary studies and exploring the intersection of ideologies of language, gender, and nation, this book shows how American discussions of language in various forms have often disguised deeper social and political concerns about the voices of women, African Americans, and immigrants in national life.

  • av Zoe Desti-Demanti
    212,-

    First published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

  • - Audience, Patriarchy and Charles Brockden Brown's Editorship of the Monthly Magazine and American Review
    av USA) Slawinski & Scott (Western Michigan University
    764 - 2 194,-

  • - Images of American Revolutionary War Heroes, 1782-1832
    av Christopher Harris
    2 123,-

    This study surveys portraits of American Revolutionary heroes in books, magazines and school texts from 1782 to 1832. During this period of rapid change, historians and newspaper editors presented such tales in narrative and visual style, aiming to promote classical civic virtues.

  • - The Northeast Corner
    av David Smith
    751 - 2 147,-

    Drawing on primary documents such as farmer's diaries, small rural newspapers of the 19th century and the publications of state agricultural societies, this provocative study presents an overview into the driving forces of that shaped American history in the Northeast.

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