Showing 1-40 of 25,191 items.
Higher Education amid the COVID-19 Pandemic
Supporting Teaching and Learning through Turbulent Times
Edited by Jessica Ostrow Michel
Rutgers University Press
Higher Education amid the COVID-19 Pandemic documents first-hand experiences from faculty and students in order to help navigate the path to supporting teaching and learning in the wake of the pandemic, and beyond. With essays from a diverse range of experts, this volume will serve as a comprehensive guide to many affected higher education communities.
Waiwai
Water and the Future of Hawai‘i
Edited by Kamanamaikalani Beamer
University of Hawaii Press
The Beef Taboo in China
Agriculture, Ethics, Sacrifice
By Vincent Goossaert; Translated by Barbara R. Ambros
University of Hawaii Press
No Man Is An Island
Community and Commemoration on Norway's Utøya
By Jørgen Watne Frydnes; Translated by Wendy H. Gabrielsen
University of Massachusetts Press
Formulating a Minimalist Morality for a New Planetary Order
Alternative Cultural Perspectives
University of Hawaii Press
Fenua and Fare, Marae and Mana
The Archaeology of Ancient Tahiti and the Society Islands
University of Hawaii Press
I Am My Own Path
Selected Writings of Julia de Burgos
Edited by Vanessa Pérez-Rosario
University of Texas Press
Beyond Bananas and Condoms
The LGBTQIA+ Inclusive Sex Education You Never Got at School
By Dee Whitnell
Jessica Kingsley Publishers
A shame-free, illustrated sex-ed guide for adults and young adults, that embraces queer, gender diverse and neurodiverse experiencesy, written by a qualified RSHE educator.
Original Copy
Ekphrasis, Gender, and the National Imagination in Nineteenth Century American Literature
University of Massachusetts Press
Undoing Modernity
Linguistics, Higher Education, and Indigeneity in Yucatan
University of Texas Press
An ethnography of the decolonization of Maya-ness.
Memorializing Violence
Transnational Feminist Reflections
By Alison Crosby and Heather Evans
Rutgers University Press
This volume brings together feminist reflections on the transnational lives of memorializations to colonial, imperial, militarized, and state violence. It asks what’s at stake in memorializing amidst and against ongoing harm and injustice produced by white supremacist global capitalist empire.
Memorializing Violence
Transnational Feminist Reflections
By Alison Crosby and Heather Evans
Rutgers University Press
This volume brings together feminist reflections on the transnational lives of memorializations to colonial, imperial, militarized, and state violence. It asks what’s at stake in memorializing amidst and against ongoing harm and injustice produced by white supremacist global capitalist empire.
Medbh McGuckian
Bucknell University Press
Medbh McGuckian offers an original and wide-ranging analysis of one of the most daring and important poetic voices in contemporary Ireland. It considers the entire corpus of McGuckian’s published work, investigating previously neglected themes, in particular the exploration of creativity and performativity, while also emphasizing the thematic unity of individual volumes in the light of the poet’s constant change and development.
Labs of Our Own
Feminist Tinkerings with Science
Rutgers University Press
Labs of Our Own demonstrates the perils and possibilities that emerge from experiments in democratizing science. The book ultimately intervenes in stale debates for and against science by arguing against uncritical excitement for democratic science and instead for critical science literacy and feminist tinkering as third ways forward.
Dancing for Their Lives
The Pursuit of Meaningful Aging in Urban China
Rutgers University Press
Theatre History Studies 2024, Vol 43
Edited by Jocelyn L. Buckner; Introduction by Jocelyn L. Buckner
University of Alabama Press
The Banks We Deserve
Reclaiming Community Banking for a Just Economy
Island Press
The number of community banks in the US has been steadily declining for decades, giving way to big banks that have little connection to the communities they claim to serve. In The Banks We Deserve, journalist Oscar Perry Abello argues that community banking has a crucial role to play in addressing urgent social challenges, from creating a more racially just economy to preparing for a changing climate.
Abello tells the stories of new community banks — like Adelphi Bank, the first new Black bank in 20 years; or Walden Mutual Bank, the first mutual bank chartered specifically to finance a more sustainable food system. He hopes these stories inspire others to take some of these same daunting-but-not-impossible steps.
For a community or industry that is being ignored by big banks, the idea of starting up a new bank or credit union rarely figures as an option. In The Banks We Deserve, Abello shows advocates, organizers, and innovators that it can be done, that it is being done, and describes a path to support more community banks and credit unions.
Abello tells the stories of new community banks — like Adelphi Bank, the first new Black bank in 20 years; or Walden Mutual Bank, the first mutual bank chartered specifically to finance a more sustainable food system. He hopes these stories inspire others to take some of these same daunting-but-not-impossible steps.
For a community or industry that is being ignored by big banks, the idea of starting up a new bank or credit union rarely figures as an option. In The Banks We Deserve, Abello shows advocates, organizers, and innovators that it can be done, that it is being done, and describes a path to support more community banks and credit unions.
Branching Out
The Public History of Trees
By Leah S Glaser and Philip Levy
University of Massachusetts Press
No Island Is an Island
Perspectives on Immigration to Japan
Edited by Michael Strausz
University of Hawaii Press
Literature for Little Bodhisattvas
Making Buddhist Families in Modern Taiwan
By Natasha Heller; Series edited by Mark Michael Rowe
University of Hawaii Press
Capturing COVID
Media and the Pandemic in the Digital Era
University of Massachusetts Press
Radical Advocate
Ida B. Wells and the Road to Race and Gender Justice
University of Alabama Press
Urban Bikeway Design Guide, Third Edition
By National Association of City Transportation Officials
Island Press
“The guide will serve as an essential blueprint for safe, active, multi-modal streets.”
—Gabe Klein, former Chicago Transportation Commissioner
The completely revised and updated third edition of the NACTO Urban Bikeway Design Guide sets a new standard for street design in North America. Developed for cities, by cities, the new guide is more than a permission slip for better street design—it's a prescription for safe, connected, equitable bike networks. It captures lessons learned and emerging practices to set a new bar for the design of city streets. Every transportation professional, from design to maintenance and from field staff to executives, needs a copy for their daily work.
—Gabe Klein, former Chicago Transportation Commissioner
The completely revised and updated third edition of the NACTO Urban Bikeway Design Guide sets a new standard for street design in North America. Developed for cities, by cities, the new guide is more than a permission slip for better street design—it's a prescription for safe, connected, equitable bike networks. It captures lessons learned and emerging practices to set a new bar for the design of city streets. Every transportation professional, from design to maintenance and from field staff to executives, needs a copy for their daily work.
The Dressing Room
Backstage Lives and American Film
Rutgers University Press
A recurrent and popular setting in American cinema, the dressing room has captured the imagination of audiences for over a century. In the only book-length study of the space, Desirée J. Garcia explores how dressing rooms are dynamic realms in which a diverse cast of performers are made and exposed.
Supervillains
The Significance of Evil in Superhero Comics
Rutgers University Press
This book provides a savvy investigation of the supervillains that appear in superhero comics. Exploring villainous archetypes and Otherness in relation to the notion of evil, the book investigates how supervillains uphold and solidify but also trouble hegemonic ideals expressed by the heroism of superheroes.
Strength Through Diversity
Harlem Prep and the Rise of Multiculturalism
Rutgers University Press
In Strength Through Diversity, Barry M. Goldenberg traces the inspiring, uncharted history of Harlem Prep, a unique multicultural institution that became an educational phenomenon in the iconic Black neighborhood of Harlem and nationwide. From 1967 to 1974, Harlem Prep sent to college many hundreds of students who had previously been labeled as “dropouts,” demonstrating how a multicultural educational program centered on diversity can provide a blueprint for schools today.
Rewriting Television
Rutgers University Press
Rewriting Television suggests that it is time for a radical overhaul of television studies. It offers a new model for doing television (or film, or media) studies through the synthesis of production studies, screenwriting studies and “writing otherwise”. With a focus on form, story and voice, this book is an opportunity to imagine our work, and the work of others, differently.
Raritan on War
An Anthology
Edited by T.J. Jackson Lears and Karen Parker Lears
Rutgers University Press
On War gathers together some of the finest writing on that troubling subject published in Raritan between 2003 and 2022. The editors, Jackson Lears and Karen Parker Lears, have selected work that typifies Raritan’s wide-ranging sensibility--focusing on a topic that is aesthetically rich, intellectually challenging, and morally disturbing. It is also all too timely.
Public Catastrophes, Private Losses
Rutgers University Press
This collection of feminist essays examines how public catastrophes imprint themselves on private lives, how individuals narrate, process, and grapple with legacies of loss, and how, though a combination of attention and neglect, governments and nonprofits frequently exacerbate preexisting vulnerabilities.
Public Catastrophes, Private Losses
Rutgers University Press
This collection of feminist essays examines how public catastrophes imprint themselves on private lives, how individuals narrate, process, and grapple with legacies of loss, and how, though a combination of attention and neglect, governments and nonprofits frequently exacerbate preexisting vulnerabilities.
Moving Blackness
Black Circulation, Racism, and Relations of Homespace
Rutgers University Press
Moving Blackness explores the centrality of circulation within the framework of western modernity and the racially structured regulations of mobility. Storytelling emerges as the primary mode through which blackness is conveyed: it serves as a means of circulating the lived experiences of being Black while also functioning as acts of resistance and solidarity performed by blackened individuals who were (once) colonized and enslaved.
John Banville
By Neil Murphy
Bucknell University Press
John Banville offers a close analysis of most of Banville’s major novels, his Quirke crime novels, and his dramatic adaptations of Heinrich von Kleist’s plays. It asserts that Banville’s fiction can be viewed both as an extended interrogation of the meaning and status of art, and that it is itself representative of the type of art admired in the pages of the novels.
Icons Axed, Freedoms Lost
Russian Desecularization and a Ukrainian Alternative
Rutgers University Press
In the years between the Soviet collapse and the Russo-Ukrainian war, Russia went from persecuting believers to jailing irreligionists, while Ukraine solidified religious pluralism and tolerance. The book richly documents and explains the development of this contrast while offering an original theoretical and methodological perspective on desecularization (the resurgence of religion’s societal role).
Black Sporting Resistance
Diaspora, Transnationalism, and Internationalism
By Joseph N. Cooper; Foreword by Gerald Horne
Rutgers University Press
In this text, the Black Sporting Resistance Framework (BSRF) is introduced to examine how resistance actions in and through sport have contributed to the advancement of local and global racial justice efforts. Key concepts such as African (Black) diaspora, transnationalism, internationalism, sporting resistance typology, and sport activism typology are presented.
Ben Hecht's Theatre of Jewish Protest
Rutgers University Press
A critical and historical study of Ben Hecht’s forgotten controversial plays championing Jewish causes during the World War II era. Includes the full texts of four works - We Will Never Die (1943), A Jewish Fairy Tale (1944), A Flag is Born (1946), and The Terrorist (1947) - which are republished here for the first time along with production details and full performance histories.
Ancient Indigenous Cuisines
Archaeological Explorations of the Midcontinent
University of Alabama Press
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