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Bøker utgitt av University of Toronto Press

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  • av Jacqueline Kennelly
    354,-

  • av Johanna Schuster-Craig
    427

  • av Anne M. Phelan
    826,-

  • av Treena Orchard
    280

    Jane Goodall meets Carrie Bradshaw in Sticky, Sexy, Sad - an insightful, empowering memoir by an anthropologist who lays her own life bare as she explores the cultural matrix of digital courtship.

  • av Albert Koehl
    280

    Highlighting an important yet often ignored part of Toronto's transportation story, Wheeling through Toronto chronicles the history of the bicycle and reveals a way forward for a world in climate crisis.

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    378,-

    Using seventeen cases where researchers applied behavioral interventions in the field, this book identifies not only what works but also what does not work (and why).

  • av Alessandra Montalbano
    403 - 826,-

  •  
    741,-

    Foregrounding transnational movements in and around Soviet culture, Red Migrations rethinks the field of migration studies in socialist Eastern Europe.

  •  
    354,-

    This book brings together leading experts to shine a light on a serious problem confronting Canada's democracy: gender-based violence in politics.

  •  
    741,-

    This book brings together leading experts to shine a light on a serious problem confronting Canada's democracy: gender-based violence in politics.

  • av Michael Burger
    512 - 524,-

  • av Laurie Ellinghausen
    669,-

    Ships of State analyses representations of seaborne labour across popular literary genres during the early years of British Empire.

  •  
    512,-

    This book examines how COVID-19 resulted in traumatic changes in society around the world before the arrival of vaccines, specifically during the 2020 year

  • av David Divita
    328 - 901

  • av Katharine Zywert
    512 - 1 136,-

  • av Vanessa Fernandez
    705,-

    Defining and Defying Borders describes how journals, magazines, and newspapers chart the complex postcolonial relationship between Spain and Latin America during the modernist era.

  • av Nili Kaplan-Myrth
    343

    Bringing together physicians, health care workers, and community advocates from across the country, Breaking Canadians shares firsthand stories about the personal, professional, and political impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

  • av Ilan Stavans
    693,-

    This collection presents a series of autobiographical meditations by Ilan Stavans on how language defines every aspect of our life.

  • av Robin M Bower
    669,-

    In the Doorway of All Worlds revisits the hagiographical poetry of Gonzalo de Berceo in the context of the emergent vernacular culture of thirteenth-century Iberia.

  • av S.L. Seethaler
    387 - 741,-

  • av Hilaire Kallendorf
    983

    Perilous Passions explores the ethical implications of emotion in Spanish Golden Age theatre.

  • av M. Ann Hall
    403 - 989,-

  •  
    427

    This multifaceted and comprehensive book examines the brutal twentieth-century tragedies that took place at Babyn Yar, a ravine on the outskirts of Kyiv in modern-day Ukraine.

  • av Heather Jeronimo
    705,-

    Drawing on examples from literature and film, Performing Parenthood explores the multiplicity within non-normative familial constructions in Spain.

  • av Charis Enns
    342

    Settler Ecologies reveals how settler colonialism impacts and endures through ecological relations.

  • av Michael Jabara Carley
    983

    Drawing on extensive archival research, Stalin's Failed Alliance presents an inside look at Soviet foreign policy making.

  • - Maternalism, Eugenics, and Professional Identity
    av Melissa Kravetz
    460 - 894,-

    Examining how German women physicians gained a foothold in the medical profession during the Weimar and Nazi periods, Women Doctors in Weimar and Nazi Germany reveals the continuity in rhetoric, strategy, and tactics of female doctors who worked under both regimes. Melissa Kravetz explains how and why women occupied particular fields within the medical profession, how they presented themselves in their professional writing, and how they reconciled their medical perspectives with their views of the Weimar and later the Nazi state.Focusing primarily on those women who were members of the Bund Deutscher rztinnen (League of German Female Physicians or BD), this study shows that female physicians used maternalist and, to a lesser extent, eugenic arguments to make a case for their presence in particular medical spaces. They emphasized gender difference to claim that they were better suited than male practitioners to care for women and children in a range of new medical spaces. During the Weimar Republic, they laid claim to marriage counselling centres, school health reform, and the movements against alcoholism, venereal disease, and prostitution. In the Nazi period, they emphasized their importance to the Bund Deutscher Mdels (League of German Girls), the Reichsmtterdienst (Reich Mothers' Service), and breast milk collection efforts. Women doctors also tried to instil middle-class values into their working-class patients while fashioning themselves as advocates for lower-class women.

  • av Dimitry Anastakis
    378 - 814,-

  • av Geoffrey W Clark
    460

    The Appeal of Insurance explores how insurance has grown in concert with a clientele largely of its own making. Drawing on the fields of history, sociology, criminology and economics, these essays illuminate the dialectical relationship between the expansion of business and the public demand for economic and social security.

  • av Rory Finnin
    416 - 715,-

    In the spring of 1944, Stalin deported the Crimean Tatars, a small Sunni Muslim nation, from their ancestral homeland on the Black Sea peninsula. The gravity of this event, which ultimately claimed the lives of tens of thousands of victims, was shrouded in secrecy after the Second World War. What broke the silence in Soviet Russia, Soviet Ukraine, and the Republic of Turkey were works of literature. These texts of poetry and prose - some passed hand-to-hand underground, others published to controversy - shocked the conscience of readers and sought to move them to action.Blood of Others presents these works as vivid evidence of literature's power to lift our moral horizons. In bringing these remarkable texts to light and contextualizing them among Russian, Turkish, and Ukrainian representations of Crimea from 1783, Rory Finnin provides an innovative cultural history of the Black Sea region. He reveals how a "e;poetics of solidarity"e; promoted empathy and support for an oppressed people through complex provocations of guilt rather than shame.Forging new roads between Slavic studies and Middle Eastern studies, Blood of Others is a compelling and timely exploration of the ideas and identities coursing between Russia, Turkey, and Ukraine - three countries determining the fate of a volatile and geopolitically pivotal part of our world.

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