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We are Coast Salish - James M Hundley - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

The Political Economy of the Interior Gold Coast - Jarvis L. Hargrove - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

The Political Economy of the Interior Gold Coast - Jarvis L. Hargrove - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Black Rodeo in the Texas Gulf Coast Region - Demetrius W. Pearson - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Black Rodeo in the Texas Gulf Coast Region - Demetrius W. Pearson - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Kwame Nkrumah's Political Kingdom and Pan-Africanism Reinterpreted, 1909–1972 - Yvette M. Alex Assensoh - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Kwame Nkrumah's Political Kingdom and Pan-Africanism Reinterpreted, 1909–1972 - Yvette M. Alex Assensoh - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Island off the Coast of Asia - Clinton Fernandes - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Mississippi after Katrina - Jennifer Trivedi - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

The Communist Party on the American Waterfront - Vernon L. Pedersen - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Racing the Storm - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Leisure, Plantations, and the Making of a New South - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Leisure, Plantations, and the Making of a New South - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Negotiating Patriarchy and Gender in Africa - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Mennonite Disaster Service - Brenda Phillips - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Mennonite Disaster Service - Brenda Phillips - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

In the aftermath of a traumatic disaster, Mennonite Disaster Service arrives to help. Established in 1950, associated volunteers have gone into devastated communities to pick up debris, muck out homes, and launch rebuilding efforts. These volunteer efforts have succeeded in building more than homes, however. Called the “therapeutic community” by disaster researchers, acts of volunteerism can generate healing moments. Though most studies see such therapeutic effects happening right after disasters, this ethnographic study looks at long-term recovery assistance. Such extensive commitment results in beneficial consequences for survivors and their communities. For Mennonite Disaster Service volunteers, serving others reflects deeply upon their historic roots, cultural traditions, and theological belief system. In contrast to the corrosive blaming that erupted after hurricane Katrina, and feelings of neglect by those who experienced Rita and Ike, the arrival and long-term commitment of faith-based volunteers restored hope. This volume describes and explains how Mennonite Disaster Service organized efforts for the 2005 and 2008 Gulf Coast storms, following a well-established tradition of helping their neighbors. Based on deeply-ingrained religious beliefs, volunteers went to the coast for weeks, sometimes months, and often returned year after year. The quality of the construction work, coupled with the meaningful relationships they sought to build, generated trusting partnerships with communities struggling back from disaster. Based on five years of volunteer work by Mennonite Disaster Service, this volume demonstrates best practices for those who seek to do the same.

DKK 925.00
1

Mennonite Disaster Service - Brenda Phillips - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Mennonite Disaster Service - Brenda Phillips - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

In the aftermath of a traumatic disaster, Mennonite Disaster Service arrives to help. Established in 1950, associated volunteers have gone into devastated communities to pick up debris, muck out homes, and launch rebuilding efforts. These volunteer efforts have succeeded in building more than homes, however. Called the “therapeutic community” by disaster researchers, acts of volunteerism can generate healing moments. Though most studies see such therapeutic effects happening right after disasters, this ethnographic study looks at long-term recovery assistance. Such extensive commitment results in beneficial consequences for survivors and their communities. For Mennonite Disaster Service volunteers, serving others reflects deeply upon their historic roots, cultural traditions, and theological belief system. In contrast to the corrosive blaming that erupted after hurricane Katrina, and feelings of neglect by those who experienced Rita and Ike, the arrival and long-term commitment of faith-based volunteers restored hope. This volume describes and explains how Mennonite Disaster Service organized efforts for the 2005 and 2008 Gulf Coast storms, following a well-established tradition of helping their neighbors. Based on deeply-ingrained religious beliefs, volunteers went to the coast for weeks, sometimes months, and often returned year after year. The quality of the construction work, coupled with the meaningful relationships they sought to build, generated trusting partnerships with communities struggling back from disaster. Based on five years of volunteer work by Mennonite Disaster Service, this volume demonstrates best practices for those who seek to do the same.

DKK 450.00
1

The Challenge of Institutionalizing Civilian Control - Boubacar N'diaye - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Africa’s Joola Shipwreck - Karen Samantha Barton - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Ten Years after Katrina - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Ten Years after Katrina - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Hurricane Katrina blasted the Gulf Coast in 2005, leaving an unparalleled trail of physical destruction. In addition to that damage, the storm wrought massive psychological and cultural trauma on Gulf Coast residents and on America as a whole. Details of the devastation were quickly reported—and misreported—by media outlets, and a slew of articles and books followed, offering a spectrum of socio-political commentaries and analyses. But beyond the reportage and the commentary, a series of fictional and creative accounts of the Katrina-experience have emerged in various mediums: novels, plays, films, television shows, songs, graphic novels, collections of photographs, and works of creative non-fiction that blur the lines between reportage, memoir, and poetry. The creative outpouring brings to mind Salman Rushdie’s observation that, “Man is the storytelling animal, the only creature on earth that tells itself stories to understand what kind of creature it is.” This book accepts the urge behind Rushdie’s formula: humans tell stories in order to understand ourselves, our world, and our place in it. Indeed, the creative output on Katrina represents efforts to construct a cohesive narrative out of the wreckage of a cataclysmic event. However, this book goes further than merely cataloguing the ways that Katrina narratives support Rushdie’s rich claim. This collection represents a concentrated attempt to chart the effects of Katrina on our cultural identity; it seeks to not merely catalogue the trauma of the event but to explore the ways that such an event functions in and on the literature that represents it. The body of work that sprung out of Katrina offers a unique critical opportunity to better understand the genres that structure our stories and the ways stories reflect and produce culture and identity. These essays raise new questions about the representative genres themselves. The stories are efforts to represent and understand the human condition, but so are the organizing principles that communicate the stories. That is, Katrina-narratives present an opportunity to interrogate the ways that specific narrative structures inform our understanding and develop our cultural identity. This book offers a critical processing of the newly emerging and diverse canon of Katrina texts.

DKK 468.00
1

The First to Cry Down Injustice? - Ellen M. Eisenberg - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Work, Class, and Power in the Borderlands of the Early American Pacific - Evan Lampe - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

The First to Cry Down Injustice? - Ellen M. Eisenberg - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Earthly Engagements - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Earthly Engagements - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Earthly Engagements: Reading Sartre after the Holocene brings together scholars from the Sartre studies community to think through the planetary ecological crisis. Edited by Matthew C. Ally and Damon Boria, the collection explores ways in which Sartre’s existential thought can be read socio-ecologically, illuminating the tightly imbricated earthly and worldly crises of our post-Holocene epoch. Contributors variously discuss phenomenology, ethics, politics, ontology, and metaphysics. Earthly locations include the Icelandic coast, the Minnesota woods, the Indiana Dunes, the Chinese Great Plain, the Venetian Lagoon, and more; worldly situations include that of the artist, the activist, the consumer, the tourist, and more. Through their diversity of methods and substantive concerns, the chapters reveal a wealth of critical and heuristic resources within Sartre’s thought for thinking through and engaging the planetary ecological crisis and its direct ties to global social, economic, and political crises. In full recognition of Sartre’s personal distaste for agrarian settings and wilderness, and some ostensibly anti-environmental philosophical and literary moments, the contributors take the proper Sartrean line that how we view nature and our relationship to nature is neither closed nor predetermined. Like life itself, our worldly relationship to earthly nature is rooted in the sufficiency and open-endedness of freedom.

DKK 866.00
1

Linguistic and Genetic (mtDNA) Connections between Native Peoples of Alaska and California - Nancy J. Turner - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Linguistic and Genetic (mtDNA) Connections between Native Peoples of Alaska and California - Nancy J. Turner - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Linguistic and Genetic (mtDNA) Connections between Native Peoples of Alaska and California: Ancient Mariners of the Middle Holocene traces the linguistic and biological connections between contemporary Aleut people of southwest Alaska and historic Utian people of central California. During the Middle Holocene Period, Aleut and Utian languages diverged from their common parent language, Proto-Aleut-Utian (PAU), spoken by people who resided on or near Kodiak Island in coastal southwest Alaska. Around the time of divergence, Utians departed the PAU homeland, migrating by watercraft along the eastern Pacific coast to the San Francisco Bay Area. The affiliation between Aleut and Utian languages is strongly supported by comparative linguistics and by the genetic link (mtDNA) of groups speaking these languages. On their migration, Utians encountered coastal groups speaking languages different from their own. Through these prolonged and intimate interactions, words were borrowed from Utian into the languages of these native coastal communities. Other significant findings explored in this book are the lack of compelling evidence for the kinship of Eskimo and Aleut peoples, despite scholarship’s long-term acceptance of this proposal, and the discovery of language-structure features shared by Yeniseian and Na Dene, indicating an historical connection for these circumarctic languages.

DKK 788.00
1

Caribou and Conoco - Robert J. Mcmonagle - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk