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<title>University of Nebraska Press -- Sample Books and Chapters</title>
<copyright>Copyright (c) 2013 University of Nebraska - Lincoln All rights reserved.</copyright>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples</link>
<description>Recent documents in University of Nebraska Press -- Sample Books and Chapters</description>
<language>en-us</language>
<lastBuildDate>Sun, 14 Apr 2013 01:34:51 PDT</lastBuildDate>
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<title>Becoming Melungeon</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/186</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 12 Apr 2013 12:26:43 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>Appalachian legend describes a mysterious, multiethnic population of exotic, dark-skinned rogues called Melungeons who rejected the outside world and lived in the remote, rugged mountains in the farthest corner of northeast Tennessee. The allegedly unknown origins of these Melungeons are part of what drove this legend and generated myriad exotic origin theories. Though nobody self-identified as Melungeon before the 1960s, by the 1990s “Melungeonness” had become a full-fledged cultural phenomenon, resulting in a zealous online community and annual meetings where self-identified Melungeons gathered to discuss shared genealogy and history. Although today Melungeons are commonly identified as the descendants of underclass whites, freed African Americans, and Native Americans, this ethnic identity is still largely a social construction based on local tradition, myth, and media.</p>
<p>In <em>Becoming Melungeon</em>, Melissa Schrift examines the ways in which the Melungeon ethnic identity has been socially constructed over time by various regional and national media, plays, and other forms of popular culture. Schrift explores how the social construction of this legend evolved into a fervent movement of a self-identified ethnicity in the 1990s. This illuminating and insightful work examines these shifting social constructions of race, ethnicity, and identity both in the local context of the Melungeons and more broadly in an attempt to understand the formation of ethnic groups and identity in the modern world.</p>

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<author>Melissa Schrift</author>


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<title>In the Shadows of a Fallen Wall</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/185</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 12 Apr 2013 12:12:27 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>Growing up, what Sanford Tweedie knew about East Germany was basically . . . nothing. West Germans were our friends; East Germans, the enemy. In 2000, somewhat better informed, Tweedie took advantage of a Fulbright Scholarship to move his family to the eastern German town of Erfurt for the academic year. Far from home and the familiar, with temporary status and a tenuous grasp of the language, he and his wife were curious to see how they would function shorn of all the rules that governed their daily lives—housing, food acquisition, transportation, and even basic communication. As soon as their taxi delivered them to their grim tan and concrete Soviet-vintage apartment building, they knew their education had begun.</p>
<p>Learning about life in the former East Germany, amid the feverish embrace of Western culture and the tenacious legacy of a totalitarian past, Tweedie comes to understand the deeper cultural assumptions through which Americans view the larger world. Part travelogue, part history, part cultural critique, all thoroughly engrossing, the story of his yearlong experience is one of dislocation and accommodation, making a German town his own and now ours</p>

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<author>Sanford Tweedie</author>


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<title>The Blind Man and the Loon</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/184</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 12 Apr 2013 12:04:11 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>The story of the Blind Man and the Loon is a living Native folktale about a blind man who is betrayed by his mother or wife but whose vision is magically restored by a kind loon. Variations of this tale are told by Native storytellers all across Alaska, arctic Canada, Greenland, the Northwest Coast, and even into the Great Basin and the Great Plains. As the story has traveled through cultures and ecosystems over many centuries, individual storytellers have added cultural and local ecological details to the tale, creating countless variations.</p>
<p>In <em>The Blind Man and the Loon: The Story of a Tale</em>, folklorist Craig Mishler goes back to 1827, tracing the story’s emergence across Greenland and North America in manuscripts, books, and in the visual arts and other media such as film, music, and dance theater. Examining and comparing the story’s variants and permutations across cultures in detail, Mishler brings the individual storyteller into his analysis of how the tale changed over time, considering how storytellers and the oral tradition function within various societies. Two maps unequivocally demonstrate the routes the story has traveled. The result is a masterful compilation and analysis of Native oral traditions that sheds light on how folktales spread and are adapted by widely diverse cultures.</p>

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<author>Craig Mishler</author>


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<title>The Song of the Lark</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/183</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 12 Apr 2013 11:54:18 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>Willa Cather’s third novel, <em>The Song of the Lark</em>, depicts the growth of an artist, singer Thea Kronborg, a character inspired by the Swedish-born immigrant and renowned Wagnerian soprano Olive Fremstad. Thea’s early life, however, has much in common with Cather’s own.</p>
<p>Set from 1885 to 1909, the novel traces Thea’s long journey from her fictional hometown of Moonstone, Colorado, to her source of inspiration in the Southwest, and to New York and the Metropolitan Opera House. As she makes her way in the world from an unlikely background, Thea distills all her experiences and relationships into the power and passion of her singing, despite the cost. <em>The Song of the Lark</em> presents Cather’s vision of a true artist.</p>

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<author>Willa Cather</author>


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<title>The X-15 Rocket Plane</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/182</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 12 Apr 2013 11:46:34 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>With the Soviet Union’s launch of the first Sputnik satellite in 1957, the Cold War soared to new heights as Americans feared losing the race into space. <em>The X-15 Rocket Plane</em> tells the enthralling yet little-known story of the hypersonic X-15, the winged rocket ship that met this challenge and opened the way into human-controlled spaceflight.</p>
<p>Drawing on interviews with those who were there, Michelle Evans captures the drama and excitement of, yes, rocket science: how to handle the heat generated at speeds up to Mach 7, how to make a rocket propulsion system that could throttle, and how to safely reenter the atmosphere from space and make a precision landing.</p>
<p>This book puts a human face on the feats of science and engineering that went into the X-15 program, many of them critical to the development of the Space Shuttle. And, finally, it introduces us to the largely unsung pilots of the X-15. By the time of the <em>Apollo 11</em> moon landing, thirty-one American astronauts had flown into space—eight of them astronaut-pilots of the X-15. <em>The X-15 Rocket Plane</em> restores these pioneers, and the others who made it happen, to their rightful place in the history of spaceflight.</p>

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<author>Michelle Evans</author>


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<title>Baseball&apos;s New Frontier</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/181</link>
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<pubDate>Thu, 11 Apr 2013 14:47:54 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>When Major League Baseball first expanded in 1961 with the addition of the Los Angeles Angels and the Washington Senators, it started a trend that saw the number of franchises almost double, from sixteen to thirty, while baseball attendance grew by 44 percent. The story behind this staggering growth, told for the first time in <em>Baseball’s New Frontier</em>, is full of twists and unexpected turns, intrigue, and, in some instances, treachery. From the desertion of New York by the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Giants to the ever-present threat of antitrust legislation, from the backroom deals and the political posturing to the impact of the upstart Continental League, the book takes readers behind the scenes and into baseball’s decision-making process.</p>
<p>Fran Zimniuch gives a lively team-by-team chronicle of how the franchises were awarded, how existing teams protected their players, and what the new teams’ winning (or losing) strategies were. With its account of great players, notable characters, and the changing fortunes of teams over the years, the book supplies a vital chapter in the history of Major League Baseball.</p>

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<author>Fran Zimniuch</author>


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<title>The Kingdom of Golf in America</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/180</link>
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<pubDate>Thu, 11 Apr 2013 11:05:56 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>For golf’s true enthusiasts, the game is far more—and far more complex—than a simple hobby, commodity, or slice of the sports industry. It is a physical and mental place to be, a community. It has a history, a hierarchy, laws, a language, and a literature. And in Richard J. Moss, it has a chronicler.</p>
<p>From its beginnings in the northeastern United States in the 1880s, golf has seen its popularity, and its fortunes, wax and wane, affected by politics and economics, reflecting tensions between aristocratic and democratic impulses.<em>The Kingdom of Golf in America</em> traces these ups and downs, ins and outs, in the growth of golf as a community. Moss describes the development of the private club and public course and the impact of wealth and the consumer culture on those who play golf and those who watch. He shows that factors like race, gender, technology, suburbanization, and the transformation of the South that shaped the nation also shaped golf. The result is a unique, and uniquely entertaining, work of cultural history that shows us golf as a community whose story resonates far beyond the confines of the course.</p>

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<author>Richard J. Moss</author>


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<title>Stories and Minds</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/179</link>
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<pubDate>Thu, 11 Apr 2013 11:04:25 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>How do narratives draw on our memory capacity? How is our attention guided when we are reading a literary narrative? What kind of empathy is triggered by intercultural novels? A cast of international scholars explores these and other questions from an interdisciplinary perspective in <em>Stories and Minds</em>, a collection of essays that discusses cutting-edge research in the field of cognitive narrative studies. Recent findings in the philosophy of mind and cognitive psychology, among other disciplines, are integrated in fresh theoretical perspectives and illustrated with accompanying analyses of literary fiction.</p>
<p>Pursuing such topics as narrative gaps, mental simulation in reading, theory of mind, and folk psychology, these essays address fundamental questions about the role of cognitive processes in literary narratives and in narrative comprehension. <em>Stories and Minds</em> reveals the rich possibilities for research along the nexus of narrative and mind.</p>

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<author>Lars Bernaerts et al.</author>


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<title>Call for Change</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/178</link>
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<pubDate>Thu, 11 Apr 2013 09:50:05 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>For too many years, the academic discipline of history has ignored American Indians or lacked the kind of open-minded thinking necessary to truly understand them. Most historians remain oriented toward the American experience at the expense of the Native experience. As a result, both the status and the quality of Native American history have suffered and remain marginalized within the discipline. In this impassioned work, noted historian Donald L. Fixico challenges academic historians—and everyone else—to change this way of thinking. Fixico argues that the current discipline and practice of American Indian history are insensitive to and inconsistent with Native people’s traditions, understandings, and ways of thinking about their own history. In <em>Call for Change</em>, Fixico suggests how the discipline of history can improve by reconsidering its approach to Native peoples.</p>
<p>He offers the “Medicine Way” as a paradigm to see both history and the current world through a Native lens. This new approach paves the way for historians to better understand Native peoples and their communities through the eyes and experiences of Indians, thus reflecting an insightful indigenous historical ethos and reality.</p>

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<author>Donald L. Fixico</author>


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<title>Philadelphia&apos;s Top Fifty Baseball Players</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/177</link>
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<pubDate>Thu, 11 Apr 2013 07:43:44 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p><em>Philadelphia’s Top Fifty Baseball Players</em> takes a look at the greatest players in Philadelphia baseball history from the earliest days in 1830 through the Negro Leagues and into the modern era. Their ranks include batting champions, home run kings, Most Valuable Players, Cy Young Award winners, and Hall of Famers—from Ed Delahanty, Jimmie Foxx, Lefty Grove, Roy Campanella, Mike Schmidt, and Ryan Howard to Negro League stars Judy Johnson and Biz Mackey and other Philadelphia standouts such as Richie Ashburn, Dick Allen, Chuck Klein, Eddie Collins, and Reggie Jackson. For each player the book highlights memorable incidents and accomplishments and, above all, his place in Philadelphia’s rich baseball tradition.</p>

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<author>Rich Westcott</author>


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<title>Death Zones and Darling Spies</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/176</link>
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<pubDate>Thu, 11 Apr 2013 07:36:59 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>In 1961, equipped with a master’s degree from famed Columbia Journalism School and letters of introduction to Associated Press bureau chiefs in Asia, twenty-six-year-old Beverly Deepe set off on a trip around the world. Allotting just two weeks to South Vietnam, she was still there seven years later, having then earned the distinction of being the longest-serving American correspondent covering the Vietnam War and garnering a Pulitzer Prize nomination.</p>
<p>In <em>Death Zones and Darling Spies</em>, Beverly Deepe Keever describes what it was like for a farm girl from Nebraska to find herself halfway around the world, trying to make sense of one of the nation’s bloodiest and bitterest wars. She arrived in Saigon as Vietnam’s war entered a new phase and American helicopter units and provincial advisers were unpacking. She tells of traveling from her Saigon apartment to jungles where Wild West–styled forts first dotted Vietnam’s borders and where, seven years later, they fell like dominoes from communist-led attacks. In 1965 she braved elephant grass with American combat units armed with unparalleled technology to observe their valor—and their inability to distinguish friendly farmers from hide-and-seek guerrillas.</p>
<p>Keever’s trove of tissue-thin memos to editors, along with published and unpublished dispatches for New York and London media, provide the reader with you-are-there descriptions of Buddhist demonstrations and turning-point coups as well as phony ones. Two Vietnamese interpreters, self-described as “darling spies,” helped her decode Vietnam’s shadow world and subterranean war. These memoirs, at once personal and panoramic, chronicle the horrors of war and a rise and decline of American power and prestige.</p>

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<author>Beverly Deepe Keever</author>


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<title>From Homeland to New Land</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/175</link>
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<pubDate>Thu, 11 Apr 2013 07:27:17 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>This history of the Mahicans begins with the appearance of Europeans on the Hudson River in 1609 and ends with the removal of these Native people to Wisconsin in the 1830s. Marshaling the methods of history, ethnology, and archaeology, William A. Starna describes as comprehensively as the sources allow the Mahicans while in their Hudson and Housatonic Valley homeland; after their consolidation at the praying town of Stockbridge, Massachusetts; and following their move to Oneida country in central New York at the end of the Revolution and their migration west.</p>
<p>The emphasis throughout this book is on describing and placing into historical context Mahican relations with surrounding Native groups: the Munsees of the lower Hudson, eastern Iroquoians, and the St. Lawrence and New England Algonquians. Starna also examines the Mahicans’ interactions with Dutch, English, and French interlopers. The first and most transformative of these encounters was with the Dutch and the trade in furs, which ushered in culture change and the loss of Mahican lands. The Dutch presence, along with the new economy, worked to unsettle political alliances in the region that, while leading to new alignments, often engendered rivalries and war. The result is an outstanding examination of the historical record that will become the definitive work on the Mahican people from the colonial period to the Removal Era.</p>

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<author>William A. A. Starna</author>


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<title>Proof of Guilt</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/174</link>
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<pubDate>Thu, 11 Apr 2013 06:29:00 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>Barbara Graham might have been a diabolical dame in a hard-boiled detective story—beautiful, sexy, and deadly. Charged alongside two male friends in the murder of an elderly widow during a botched robbery attempt, “Bloody Babs” became the third woman executed in California—after a 1953 trial that played out before standing-room-only crowds captured the imaginations of journalists, filmmakers, and death penalty opponents. Why, Kathleen A. Cairns asks, of all the capital cases in the twentieth century, did Graham’s have such political resonance and staying power?</p>
<p>Leaving aside the question of guilt or innocence—debated to this day—Cairns examines how Graham’s case became a touchstone in the ongoing debate over capital punishment. While prosecutors positioned the accused woman as a femme fatale, the media came to offer a counternarrative for Graham’s life highlighting her abusive and lonely beginnings. Cairns shows how Graham’s case became crucial to the abolitionists of the time, who used instances of questionable guilt to raise awareness of the arbitrary and capricious nature of death penalty prosecutions. Critical in keeping capital punishment in the forefront of public consciousness until abolitionists homed in on a winning strategy, Graham's case illustrates the power of individual stories to shape wider perceptions and ultimately public policies.</p>

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<author>Kathleen A. Cairns</author>


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<title>Mr. Wrigley&apos;s Ball Club</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/173</link>
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<pubDate>Wed, 10 Apr 2013 09:38:16 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>Chicago in the Roaring Twenties was a city of immigrants, mobsters, and flappers with one shared passion: the Chicago Cubs. It all began with the decision of the chewing-gum tycoon William Wrigley to build the world’s greatest ball club in the nation’s Second City. In this Jazz Age center, the maverick Wrigley exploited the revolutionary technology of broadcasting and attracted eager throngs of women to his renovated ballpark.</p>
<p><em>Mr. Wrigley’s Ball Club</em> transports us to this heady era of baseball history and introduces the team at its crazy heart—an amalgam of rakes, pranksters, schemers, and choirboys who take center stage in memorable successes and disasters. Readers take front-row seats to meet one Hall of Famer after another—Grover Cleveland Alexander, Rogers Hornsby, Joe McCarthy, Lewis “Hack” Wilson,  Gabby Hartnett. The cast of characters also includes their colorful if less-sung teammates and the Cubs’ nemesis, Babe Ruth, who terminates the ambitions of Mr. Wrigley’s ball club with one emphatic swing.</p>

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<author>Roberts Ehrgott</author>


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<title>American Jews and America&apos;s Game</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/172</link>
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<pubDate>Wed, 10 Apr 2013 09:27:09 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>Most fans don’t know how far the Jewish presence in baseball extends beyond a few famous players such as Greenberg, Rosen, Koufax, Holtzman, Green, Ausmus, Youkilis, Braun, and Kinsler. In fact, that presence extends to the baseball commissioner Bud Selig, labor leaders Marvin Miller and Don Fehr, owners Jerry Reinsdorf and Stuart Sternberg, officials Theo Epstein and Mark Shapiro, sportswriters Murray Chass, Ross Newhan, Ira Berkow, and Roger Kahn, and even famous Jewish baseball fans like Alan Dershowitz and Barney Frank.</p>
<p>The life stories of these and many others, on and off the field, have been compiled from nearly fifty in-depth interviews and arranged by decade in this edifying and entertaining work of oral and cultural history. In <em>American Jews and America’s Game</em> each person talks about growing up Jewish and dealing with Jewish identity, assimilation, intermarriage, future viability, religious observance, anti-Semitism, and Israel. Each tells about being in the midst of the colorful pantheon of players who, over the past seventy-five years or more, have made baseball what it is. Their stories tell, as no previous book has, the history of the larger-than-life role of Jews in America’s pastime.</p>

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<author>Larry Ruttman</author>


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<title>From Society Page to Front Page</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/171</link>
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<pubDate>Wed, 10 Apr 2013 09:20:06 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>Eileen M. Wirth never set out to be a groundbreaker for women in journalism, but if she wanted to report on social issues instead of society news, she had no alternative. Her years as one of the first women reporters at the <em>Omaha World-Herald</em>, covering gender barriers even as she broke a few herself, give Wirth an especially apt perspective on the women profiled in this book: those Nebraskans who, over a hundred years, challenged traditional feminine roles in journalism and subtly but surely changed the world.</p>
<p>The book features remarkable women journalists who worked in every venue, from rural weeklies to TV. They fought for the vote, better working conditions for immigrants, and food safety at the turn of the century. They covered wars from the Russian Revolution to Vietnam. They were White House reporters and minority journalists who crusaded for civil rights. Though Willa Cather may be the only household name among them, all are memorable, their stories affording a firsthand look into the history of journalism and social change.</p>

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<author>Eileen M. Wirth</author>


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<title>Reading for Liberalism</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/170</link>
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<pubDate>Wed, 10 Apr 2013 09:11:39 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>Founded in 1868, the <em>Overland Monthly</em> was a San Francisco–based literary magazine whose mix of humor, pathos, and romantic nostalgia for a lost frontier was an immediate sensation on the East Coast. Due in part to a regional desire to attract settlers and financial investment, the essays and short fiction published in the <em>Overland Monthly</em> often portrayed the American West as a civilized evolution of, and not a savage regression from, eastern bourgeois modernity and democracy.</p>
<p>Stories about the American West have for centuries been integral to the way we imagine freedom, the individual, and the possibility for alternate political realities. <em>Reading for Liberalism</em> examines the shifting literary and narrative construction of liberal selfhood in California in the late nineteenth century through case studies of a number of western American writers who wrote for the<em>Overland Monthly</em>, including Noah Brooks, Ina Coolbrith, Bret Harte, Jack London, John Muir, and Frank Norris, among others. <em>Reading for Liberalism</em>argues that Harte, the magazine’s founding editor, and the other members of the<em>Overland</em> group critiqued and reimagined the often invisible fabric of American freedom. <em>Reading for Liberalism</em> uncovers and examines in the text of the<em>Overland Monthly</em> the relationship between wilderness, literature, race, and the production of individual freedom in late nineteenth-century California.</p>

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<author>Stephen J. Mexal</author>


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<title>Yellowstone, Land of Wonders</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/169</link>
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<pubDate>Wed, 10 Apr 2013 08:39:27 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>In the summer of 1883 Belgian travel writer Jules Leclercq spent ten days on horseback in Yellowstone, the world’s first national park, exploring myriad natural wonders: astonishing geysers, majestic waterfalls, the vast lake, and the breathtaking canyon. He also recorded the considerable human activity, including the rampant vandalism. Leclercq’s account of his travels is itself a small marvel blending natural history, firsthand impressions, scientific lore, and anecdote. Along with his observations on the park’s long-rumored fountains of boiling water and mountains of glass, Leclercq describes camping near geysers, washing clothes in a bubbling hot spring, and meeting such diverse characters as local guides and tourists from the United States and Europe. Notables including former president Ulysses S. Grant and then-president Chester A. Arthur were also in the park that summer to inaugurate the newly completed leg of the Northern Pacific Railroad.</p>
<p>A sensation in Europe, the book was never published in English. This deft translation at long last makes available to English-speaking readers a masterpiece of western American travel writing that is a fascinating historical document in its own right.</p>

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<author>Jules Leclercq</author>


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<title>Cultural Negotiations</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/168</link>
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<pubDate>Wed, 10 Apr 2013 08:11:39 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>This meticulously researched reference work documents the role of women who contributed to the development of Americanist archaeology from 1865 to 1940. Between the Civil War and World War II, many women went into anthropology and archaeology, fields that, at the beginning of this period, welcomed and made room for amateurs of both genders. But over time, the increasingly professional structure of these fields diminished or even obscured the contributions of women due to their lack of access to prestigious academic employment and publishing opportunities. As a result, a woman archaeologist during this period often published her research under her husband’s name or as a junior author with her husband.</p>
<p>In <em>Cultural Negotiations</em> archaeologist David L. Browman has scoured the archaeological literature and archival records of several institutions to bring the stories of more than two hundred women in Americanist archaeology to light through detailed biographies that discuss their contributions and publications. This work highlights how the social and cultural construction of archaeology as a field marginalized women and will serve as an invaluable reference to those researchers who continue to uncover the history of women in the sciences.</p>

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<author>David L. Browman</author>


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