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In Toward an Anti-Capitalist Composition, James Rushing Daniel argues that capitalism is eminently responsible for the entangled catastrophes of the twenty-first century--precarity, economic and racial inequality, the decline of democratic culture, and climate change--and that it must accordingly become a central focus in the teaching of writing.
The Material Culture of Writing opens up avenues for understanding writing through scholarship in material culture studies.
A historical interrogation of the use of fear as a tool to vilify and persecute groups and individuals from a global perspective, offering an unflinching look at racism, fearful framing, oppression, and marginalization across human history.
Through creative combinations of ethnohistoric evidence, iconography, and contextual analysis of faunal remains, this work offers new insight into the mechanisms involved in food provisioning for complex societies.
Programmatic and Administrative Approaches for Multimodal Curricular Transformation.
How Mrs Maxwell Made Her Natural History Collection.
Author Polly McLean depicts the rise of the African American middle class through the story of Lucile Berkeley Buchanan Jones--CU's true first black graduate--and her family, from slavery in northern Virginia to middle-class life in the American West.
This volume offers an integrated and comparative approach to the Popol Vuh, analyzing its myths to elucidate the ancient Maya past while using multiple lines of evidence to shed light on the text.
A provocative theoretical synthesis by renowned folklorist and anthropologist Charles L. Briggs, Unlearning questions intellectual foundations and charts new paths forward. Briggs argues, through an expansive look back at his own influential works as well as critical readings of the field, that scholars can disrupt existing social and discourse theories across disciplines when they collaborate with theorists whose insights are not constrained by the bounds of scholarship.
Southeastern Mesoamerica highlights the diversity and dynamism of the Indigenous groups that inhabited and continue to inhabit the borders of Southeastern Mesoamerica, an area that includes parts of present-day Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador.
Relational Identities and Other-than-Human Agency in Archaeology explores the benefits and consequences of archaeological theorizing on the social agency of nonhumans.
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