An interdisciplinary study discussing the impact of the national crisis in Mandatory Palestine on relations between Jewish and Arab workers and their respective labor movements.
Pirates captivate the Western cultural imagination at the beginning of the 21st century. Queer Buccaneers addresses this phenomenon through an analysis of the Disney film series Pirates of the Caribbean.
The essays in this volume tackle the construction and significance of race and ethnicity as boundary-making processes among diverse immigrant populations in the United States. Race and ethnicity can both unite and divide.
... construction and significance of race and ethnicity as boundary-making processes among diverse immigrant populations in ... boundaries that often set a particular immigrant group off from mainstream society. Some African and Caribbean ...
The contributors to this volume offer a variety of perspectives on this richly complicated process.
In Signals and Boundaries, John Holland argues that understanding the origin of the intricate signal/border hierarchies of these systems is the key to answering such questions.
S. Duncan (eds.) WritingWorlds: Discourse, Text, and Metaphor in the Representation of Landscape (London and New York: Routledge 1992), pp.192–230. 337. M. Lewis and K.Wigen,The Myth of Continents: A Critique of Metageography (Berkeley: ...
Tucson: University of Arizona Press. Elson, Mark D. 1986. Archaeological Investigations at the Tanque Verde Wash Site, a Middle Rincon Settlement in the Eastern Tucson Basin. Anthropological Papers 7. Tucson, AZ: Institute for American ...
This collection of essays features a significant selection of the specialized fields of knowledge that have shaped classical South Asian intellectual history, and the aim of this volume is to offer a stimulating anthology of papers on the ...
Thoroughly revised on the basis of the Chinese edition and rigorously reviewed, this book inspects the general feature and structure of phase diagrams, and reveals that there exist actually two categories of boundaries.
In his new book, Thomas Gieryn argues that a better explanation for the cultural authority of science lies downstream, when scientific claims leave laboratories and enter courtrooms, boardrooms, and living rooms.