Grasso (University of New Mexico Press 368 pages $65). Writings on socially engaged artistic practices in the region during the political period known as the “Pink Tide” (1995-2010) includes previously untranslated materials.Įqual under the Sky: Georgia O’Keeffe and Twentieth-Century Feminism by Linda M. Kester (Duke University Press 438 pages $104.95 hardcover, $29.95 paperback). Matthew’s Parish, a cemetery in use from the early 18th century to the early 20th century.Ĭollective Situations: Readings in Contemporary Latin American Art, 1995-2010 edited by Bill Kelley Jr. Du Bois’s concept of “double consciousness” in a study of African funerary ways in evidence at the Northern Burial Ground of St. Honoring Ancestors in Sacred Space: The Archaeology of an Eighteenth-Century African-Bahamian Cemetery by Grace Turner (University Press of Florida 180 pages $74.95). Reportes on excavations at one of the largest late prehistoric Pueblo sites along the Rio Grande. Schleher (University of New Mexico Press 400 pages $95). The Archaeology and History of Pueblo San Marcos: Change and Stability edited by Ann F. Combines an intellectual biography of the British anthropologist and cyberneticist (1904-1980) with a discussion of a postmodern ecological consciousness as a legacy of the “Long Sixties.” Runaway: Gregory Bateson, the Double Bind, and the Rise of Ecological Consciousness by Anthony Chaney (University of North Carolina Press 304 pages $32.95). Discusses the Fair Trade movement as an object of both skepticism and interest for Nepali women working in organic tea production.
Discusses young Sambaru men from northern Kenya who travel to the country’s coastal resorts and and trade in eroticized images of the moran or warrior, forming sex-for-money relations with white female tourists examines attitudes toward their earnings in their home communities.Įveryday Sustainability: Gender Justice and Fair Trade Tea in Darjeeling by Debarati Sen (State University of New York Press 251 pages $85). Discusses the large community of Syrian Orthodox Christians in Sodertalje, a city on the outskirts of Stockholm describes how their approach to home, church, and other building has challenged the conventions of Swedish planning.Įthno-erotic Economies: Sexuality, Money, and Belonging in Kenya by George Paul Meiu (University of Chicago Press 304 pages $90 hardcover, $30 paperback). The Construction of Equality: Syriac Immigration and the Swedish City by Jennifer Mack (University of Minnesota Press 336 pages $120 hardcover, $30 paperback). Links food security and food sovereignty in a discussion of how demands for “ethnic vegetables” by Toronto’s South Asian, Chinese, and Afro-Caribbean communities strengthens integration and provides crossover benefits to other Canadians.
Filson and Bamidele Adekunle (Wilfrid Laurier University Press 200 pages US$34.99). Eat Local, Taste Global: How Ethnocultural Food Reaches Our Tables by Glen C.