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The University of Arizona Press is the premier publisher of academic, regional, and literary works in the state of Arizona. They disseminate ideas and knowledge of lasting value that enrich understanding, inspire curiosity, and enlighten readers. They advance the University of Arizona’s mission by connecting scholarship and creative expression to readers worldwide.

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Western Apache Language and Culture

Essays in Linguistic Anthropology

The University of Arizona Press
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Desert Landscaping

How to Start and Maintain a Healthy Landscape in the Southwest

The University of Arizona Press
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New Chicana/Chicano Writing, Volume 2

The University of Arizona Press
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Plaintext

Essays

The University of Arizona Press

Plaintext has won critical acclaim and a wide audience for author Nancy Mairs’s unapologetic views on agoraphobia, multiple sclerosis, and the challenges of being a woman in a patriarchal world. The provocative collection includes the widely anthologized essays “On Being a Cripple” and “On Not Liking Sex.”

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State and Reservation

New Perspectives on Federal Indian Policy

The University of Arizona Press
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The Hawk Is Hungry and Other Stories

The University of Arizona Press
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Kachina Dolls

The Art of Hopi Carvers

The University of Arizona Press
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Woven Stone

The University of Arizona Press
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The Hatchet's Blood

Separation, Power, and Gender in Ehing Social Life

The University of Arizona Press

Winner of the Royal Anthropological Institute’s Amaury Talbot Prize for African Anthropology, The Hatchet's Blood is the first ethnography of the Ehing, a farming people of southern Senegal. The ritual complexes of the Ehing embody an elaborate set of prohibitions on social behavior and prescribe the general rules of Ehing social organization. Power is distributed and maintained by the concept of Odieng (“hatchet”), which as a spirit acts upon human beings much as an ax does upon a tree, falling from above to punish its victims for transgression. Marc R. Schloss’s ethnography is a study of the meaning of Odieng’s power, explaining why its rules are so essential to the Ehing way of life.
 

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