2018 Fall/Winter Trade Catalog

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UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA PRESS NEW BOOKS FALL/WINTER 2018


University of Oklahoma Press to be distributed through Longleaf Services, Inc. Beginning October 1, 2018, Longleaf Services, Inc. will act as the agent and vendor of record for the purposes of billing, shipping, returns processing, credit and collections, and other services related to the fulfillment of orders from the University of Oklahoma Press and the publishers whose books we distribute. The University of Oklahoma Press will continue to accept and ship orders from its Norman facility until September 30, 2018.

For additional information regarding this transition, see page 44.

Congratulations to our Recent Award Winners

H RAY & PAT BROWNE AWARD FOR

H SPUR AWARD BEST WESTERN BIOGRAPHY

H WESTERN HERITAGE AWARD

H AL LOWMAN MEMORIAL PRIZE

BEST REFERENCE/PRIMARY SOURCE

H SPUR AWARD BEST WESTERN

NONFICTION CATEGORY

FOR BEST BOOK ON TEXAS COUNTY

WORK IN POPULAR CULTURE

NONFICTION BOOK

National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum

AND LOCAL HISTORY FOR 2018

AND AMERICAN CULTURE

Western Writers of America

Texas State Historical Association LAKOTA PERFORMERS IN EUROPE

The Popular Culture Association FRANK LITTLE AND THE IWW

Their Culture and the Artifacts They Left Behind

DUKES OF DUVAL COUNTY

TALKING MACHINE WEST

The Blood That Stained an American Family

By Steve Friesen with Francois Chladiuk

The Parr Family and Texas Politics

A History and Catalogue of Tin Pan Alley’s

By Jane L. Botkin

$39.95 CLOTH

By Anthony R. Carrozza

Western Recordings, 1902–1918

$34.95 CLOTH

978-0-8061-5696-5

$32.95 CLOTH

By Michael A. Amundson

978-0-8061-5500-5

978-0-8061-5771-9

$34.95 CLOTH 978-0-8061-5604-0

Front cover photograph by Harvey Payne


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1889 The Boomer Movement, the Land Run, and Early Oklahoma City By Michael J. Hightower After immigrants flooded into central Oklahoma during the land rush of 1889 and the future capital of Oklahoma City sprang up “within a fortnight,” the city’s residents adopted the slogan “born grown” to describe their new home. But the territory’s creation was never so simple or straightforward. The real story, steeped in the politics of the Gilded Age, unfolds in 1889, Michael J. Hightower’s revealing look at a moment in history that, in all its turmoil and complexity, transcends the myth. Hightower frames his story within the larger history of Old Oklahoma, beginning in Indian Territory, where displaced tribes and freedmen, wealthy cattlemen, and prospective homesteaders became embroiled in disputes over public land and federal government policies. Against this fraught background, 1889 travels back and forth between Washington, D.C., and the Oklahoma frontier to describe the politics of settlement, public land use, and the first stirrings of urban development. Drawing on eyewitness accounts, Hightower captures the drama of the Boomer incursions and the Run of ’89, as well as the nascent urbanization of the townsite that would become Oklahoma City. All of these events played out in a political vacuum until Congress officially created Oklahoma Territory in the Organic Act of May 1890. The story of central Oklahoma is profoundly American, showing the region to have been a crucible for melding competing national interests and visions of the future. Boomers, businessmen, cattlemen, soldiers, politicians, pundits, and African and Native Americans squared off—sometimes peacefully, often not—in disagreements over public lands that would resonate in western history long after 1889. Michael J. Hightower is an independent historian and biographer. He is author of six books, including the two-volume Banking in Oklahoma, and served as historian for the 89er Trail in downtown Oklahoma City. 1889 was subsidized by the 89er Trail Fund at the Oklahoma City Community Foundation, a project of Charles E. Wiggin.

SEPTEMBER $24.95 PAPER 978-0-8061-6070-2 344 PAGES, 6 × 9 32 B&W ILLUS., 1 MAP U.S. HISTORY/AMERICAN INDIAN

Of Related Interest

TWENTIETH-CENTURY OKLAHOMA Reflections on the Forty-Sixth State By Richard Lowitt $24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4910-3 FORT WORTH Outpost, Cowtown, Boomtown By Harold Rich $29.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4492-4 MAIN STREET OKLAHOMA Stories of Twentieth-Century America Edited by Linda W. Reese and Patricia Loughlin $24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4401-6

HIGHTOWER 1889

The dramatic story of early central Oklahoma’s origins


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NEW BOOKS FALL/WINTER 2018

McCUNE, MILLER LOVE CAN BE

Acclaimed wordsmiths celebrate their love of animals in poetry and prose

Love Can Be A Literary Collection About Our Animals Edited by Louisa McCune and Teresa Miller “Love can be, and sure enough is, moving in all things, in all places, in all forms of life at the same snap of your finger.”—Woody Guthrie Oklahoma native Woody Guthrie said it first and best. This new anthology of poems and prose, Love Can Be: A Literary Collection About Our Animals, is proof of what love can be, as thirty acclaimed authors join together to champion life in all its forms. This is their gift to the world, not just the artistry of their words, but their vision of an extended community that includes cats, birds, frogs, butterflies, bears, dogs, raccoons, horses—a full-out menagerie of being that enriches us all. OCTOBER $19.95 PAPERBACK 978-0-9996993-0-0 240 PAGES, 5.5 × 8.5 48 COLOR AND B&W ILLUS. LITERATURE/ANIMALS

Of Related Interest

ANIMAL STORIES A Lifetime Collection By Max Evans Illustrated by Keith Walters $19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4366-8 AS FAR AS THE EYE COULD REACH Accounts of Animals along the Santa Fe Trail, 1821–1880 By Phyllis S. Morgan $19.95 Hardcover 978-0-8061-4854-0

This broad-hearted vision comes with responsibility, and that responsibility speaks to the mission of the Kirkpatrick Foundation, publisher of the book. The Kirkpatrick Foundation will donate all net proceeds of sales of this volume to animal charities in Oklahoma as well as honoraria donated to the contributors’ selected animal charities. Authors featured in the collection are Julia Alvarez, Blake Bailey, Rick Bass, P. C. Cast, Wayne Coyne, Kim Doner, Delia Ephron, Reyna Grande, Joy Harjo, Amy Hempel, Juan Felipe Herrera, S. E. Hinton, Brandon Hobson, Dean Koontz, Ursula K. Le Guin, Jill McCorkle, Teresa Miller, N. Scott Momaday, Joyce Carol Oates, Susan Orlean, Ron Padgett, Elise Paschen, Diane Rehm, Jewell Parker Rhodes, Wade Rouse, Alexander McCall Smith, Lalita Tademy, Clifton Taulbert, Michael Wallis, and Mary Logan Wolf. Special contributions include: ■■

“THE CAT,” ONE OF THE FINAL ORIGINAL POEMS

■■

BY THE LEGENDARY URSULA K. LE GUIN. ■■

RESILIENCE BY PEABODY AWARD– WINNING JOURNALIST DIANE REHM.

A MEMORIAL TRIBUTE TO SUDAN, THE LAST MALE WHITE RHINO, BY FORMER U.S.

AN ESSAY ON LOVE, GRIEF, AND

■■

A CLASSIC, “JUBILATE,” BY JOYCE CAROL OATES.

POET LAUREATE JUAN FELIPE HERRERA. ■■

AN ESSAY BY NOTED NOVELIST ALEXANDER MCCALL SMITH, WHO CELEBRATES THE

DISTRIBUTED FOR THE KIRKPATRICK FOUNDATION

WHIMSICAL LINK BETWEEN BABOONS AND OPERA.

Louisa McCune is Executive Director of the Kirkpatrick Foundation and Editor in Chief of ArtDesk magazine. Teresa Miller is an author and Director Emerita of the Center for Poets and Writers at Oklahoma State University.


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Visions of the Tallgrass Prairie Photographs by Harvey Payne Essays by James P. Ronda Foreword by Geoffrey Standing Bear In centuries long past, a vast swath of grassland swept down the center of North America, from Canada’s Prairie Provinces to central Texas. This once-plentiful prairie has now all but disappeared. Humans have grazed, mowed, and plowed the plains, dammed the rivers, and imposed their will on the land and its creatures. Fortunately, some remnants have survived, including the Joseph H. Williams Tallgrass Prairie Preserve in northeastern Oklahoma. In this visually stunning volume, wildlife photographer Harvey Payne and historian James P. Ronda offer an intimate look at and into one of America’s Last Great Places. Spanning nearly 40,000 acres in Oklahoma’s Osage County, the Preserve is a living witness to a world that once existed. But the Osage prairie is not a museum or theme park—and it is not frozen in time. Under the stewardship of The Nature Conservancy, which has overseen its restoration, the Preserve lives on as a fully functioning ecosystem. And for twenty-five years, Payne and Ronda have explored these lands, together and in solitude. Rendered here in brilliant color and paired with Ronda’s informative yet deeply personal commentary, Payne’s photographs open our eyes to the ever-changing world of the Tallgrass Preserve. In chapters focused on grass, sky, birds, bison, and fire, Ronda and Payne reveal that the “Big Empty” is, in fact, teeming with life.

VOLUME 33 IN THE CHARLES M. RUSSELL CENTER SERIES ON ART AND PHOTOGRAPHY OF THE AMERICAN WEST

SEPTEMBER $34.95 CLOTH 978-0-8061-6028-3 180 PAGES, 8 × 10.875 117 COLOR PHOTOS, 1 MAP PHOTOGRAPHY/OUTDOORS AND NATURE

Of Related Interest

Through interwoven images and words, Visions of the Tallgrass shows that our nation’s grasslands are sacred ground, a priceless piece of our American past—and future. Harvey Payne is a renowned nature photographer whose work has been published in numerous newspapers, magazines, books, and calendars. An Osage County rancher, land manager, lawyer, and judge, he played a pivotal role in the Preserve’s creation in 1990, served as its Director until 2008, and now is its Community Relations Coordinator. James P. Ronda is retired as Professor at the University of Tulsa, where he held the H. G. Barnard Chair of Western American History. He is the author of eleven books, including Lewis and Clark among the Indians. Geoffrey M. Standing Bear is Chief of the Osage Nation.

VISIONS OF THE BIG SKY Painting and Photographing the Northern Rocky Mountain West By Dan Flores $45.00 Cloth 978-0-8061-3897-8 WINTER’S HAWK Red-tails on the Southern Plains By James W. Lish $24.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4835-9 WYOMING GRASSLANDS Photographs by Michael P. Berman and William S. Sutton By Frank H. Goodyear Jr. and Charles R. Preston $39.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4853-3

RONDA, PAYNE VISIONS OF THE TALLGRASS

A journey into America’s grasslands, rendered through pictures and words


ANAYA CHUPACABRA MEETS BILLY THE KID

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A novel that blends science fiction, folklore, and fantasy, by the renowned author of Bless Me, Ultima

ChupaCabra Meets Billy the Kid By Rudolfo Anaya After years of working with at-risk youth, Chicana social worker Rosa Medina leaves Los Angeles’s gang-ridden barrios and street violence to settle in the New Mexican village of Puerto de Luna. Her goal: to write a novel about Bilito—Billy the Kid. It all sounds straightforward enough, but things get more complicated— and a lot more exciting—when Rosa is transported back in time to 1879, where she participates in the infamous Lincoln County War, riding alongside Bilito. How Rosa achieves this fantastical feat of time travel, and what she discovers about herself, Bilito, and her Nuevomexicano heritage, unfolds through the course of this novel by master storyteller Rudolfo Anaya.

VOLUME 21 IN THE CHICANA AND CHICANO VISIONS OF THE AMÉRICAS SERIES

AUGUST $24.95 CLOTH 978-0-8061-6072-6 184 PAGES, 6 × 9 FICTION

Of Related Interest

THE SORROWS OF YOUNG ALFONSO By Rudolfo Anaya $24.95 Cloth 978-0-8061-5226-4 THE OLD MAN’S LOVE STORY By Rudolfo Anaya $16.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4648-5 RANDY LOPEZ GOES HOME A Novel By Rudolfo Anaya $14.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4457-3

As she travels in time, Rosa passes into an alternative reality inhabited by extraordinary creatures, including shapeshifters, extraterrestrials, Bigfoot, and ChupaCabra. Readers familiar with Anaya’s previous ChupaCabra mysteries will remember the heroine’s earlier dealings with the elusive monster, a frightening creature of Hispanic folklore. But new dangers are also lurking for Rosa in the land of her ancestors, as a secret group of scientists known as C-Force threatens to clone ChupaCabra to create an army that will rule the world. As she encounters the Nuevomexicana women whose families suffered during the conflict, Rosa finds new reasons to fear the ChupaCabra—and to fight against the forces that threaten to shake Lincoln County to its core. With her laptop computer in her saddlebag, Rosa rides into the Lincoln County War and accompanies Bilito on his last ride. By the end, her very soul is transformed, as she realizes that the same evil forces that propelled the violence along the Pecos River are much more resilient than she had hoped. In the finest tradition of magical realism and historical fiction, Anaya invites us to consider the ways that the supernatural reveals the realities of the past—and of our own times. Rudolfo Anaya is Professor Emeritus of English at the University of New Mexico and the award-winning author of numerous books including the classic Bless Me, Ultima; Poems from the Río Grande; and The Sorrows of Young Alfonso. Awards and honors conferred on him for his work include the National Humanities Medal, the National Medal of Arts, and the Robert Kirsch Award for lifetime achievement, a Los Angeles Times Book Prize.


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The Chisholm Trail Joseph McCoy’s Great Gamble By James E. Sherow Foreword by James P. Ronda One hundred fifty years ago the McCoy brothers of Springfield, Illinois, bet their fortunes on Abilene, Kansas, then just a slapdash way station. Instead of an endless horizon of prairie grasses, they saw a bustling outlet for hundreds of thousands of Texas Longhorns coming up the Chisholm Trail—and the youngest brother, Joseph, saw how a middleman could become wealthy in the process. This is the story of how that gamble paid off, transforming the cattle trade and, with it, the American landscape and diet. The Chisholm Trail follows McCoy’s vision and the effects of the Chisholm Trail from post–Civil War Texas and Kansas to the multimillion-dollar beef industry that remade the Great Plains, the American diet, and the national and international beef trade. At every step, both nature and humanity put roadblocks in McCoy’s way. Texas cattle fever had dampened the appetite for longhorns, while prairie fires, thunderstorms, blizzards, droughts, and floods roiled the land. Unscrupulous railroad managers, stiff competition from other brokers, Indians who resented the usurping of their grasslands, and farmers who preferred growing wheat to raising cattle all threatened to impede the McCoys’ vision for the trail. As author James E. Sherow shows, by confronting these obstacles, McCoy put his own stamp upon the land, and on eating habits as far away as New York City and London. Joseph McCoy’s enterprise forged links between cattlemen, entrepreneurs, and restaurateurs; between ecology, disease, and technology; and between local, national, and international markets. Tracing these connections, The Chisholm Trail shows in vivid terms how a gamble made in the face of uncontrollable environmental factors indelibly changed the environment, reshaped the Kansas prairie into the nation’s stockyard, and transformed Plains Indian hunting grounds into the hub of a domestic farm culture. James E. Sherow is Professor of History at Kansas State University, Manhattan, and the author of numerous books and articles, including The Grasslands of the United States: An Environmental History and his award-winning Railroad Empire across the Heartland: Rephotographing Alexander Gardner’s Westward Journey. James P. Ronda is retired as H. G. Barnard Professor of Western American History at the University of Tulsa and coauthor of The West the Railroads Made.

VOLUME 3 IN THE PUBLIC LANDS HISTORY SERIES

SEPTEMBER $29.95 CLOTH 978-0-8061-6053-5 368 PAGES, 6.125 × 9.25 43 B&W ILLUS., 3 MAPS, 8 CHARTS, 5 TABLES U.S. HISTORY/ENVIRONMENT

Of Related Interest

LOST TRAILS OF THE CIMARRON By Harry E. Chrisman $24.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3017-0 THE CHISHOLM TRAIL By Wayne Gard $24.95 Paper 978-0-8061-1536-8 A TEXAS COWBOY’S JOURNAL Up the Trail to Kansas in 1868 By Jack Bailey $16.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4647-8

SHEROW THE CHISHOLM TRAIL

An environmental history of the Texas cattle trade


FLITNER MY RANCH, TOO

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NEW BOOKS FALL/WINTER 2018

Recollections on a lifetime of Wyoming ranching

My Ranch, Too A Wyoming Memoir By Mary Budd Flitner Foreword by Teresa Jordan For many outsiders, the word “ranching” conjures romantic images of riding on horseback through rolling grasslands while living and working against a backdrop of breathtaking mountain vistas. In this absorbing memoir of life in the Wyoming high country, Mary Budd Flitner offers a more authentic glimpse into the daily realities of ranch life—and what it takes to survive in the ranching world.

AUGUST $24.95 CLOTH 978-0-8061-6058-0 232 PAGES, 5.5 × 8.5 23 B&W ILLUS., 2 MAPS MEMOIR/U.S. HISTORY

Of Related Interest

BONE DEEP IN LANDSCAPE Writing, Reading, and Place By Mary Clearman Blew $9.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3270-9 WYOMING RANGE WAR The Infamous Invasion of Johnson County By John W. Davis $19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4261-6 BOUND LIKE GRASS A Memoir from the Western High Plains By Ruth McLaughlin $24.95 Cloth 978-0-8061-4137-4 $16.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4326-2

Some of Flitner’s recollections are humorous and lighthearted. Others take a darker turn. A modern-day rancher with decades of experience, Mary has dealt with the hardships and challenges that come with this way of life. She’s survived harsh conditions like the “winter of 50 below” and economic downturns that threatened her family’s livelihood. She’s also wrestled with her role as a woman in a profession that doesn’t always treat her as equal. But for all its challenges, Flitner has also savored ranching’s joys, including the ties that bind multiple generations of families to the land. My Ranch, Too begins with the story of her great-grandfather, Daniel Budd, who in 1878 drove a herd of cattle into Wyoming Territory and settled his family in an area where conditions seemed favorable. Four generations later, Mary grew up on this same portion of land, learning how to ride horseback and take care of livestock. When she married Stan, she simply moved from one ranch to another, joining the Flitner family’s Diamond Tail Ranch in Wyoming’s Big Horn Basin. The Diamond Tail is not Mary’s alone to run, as she is quick to acknowledge. Everybody pitches in, even the smallest of children. But when Mary takes the responsibility of gathering a herd of cattle or makes solo rounds at the crack of dawn to check on the livestock, we have no doubt that this is indeed her ranch, too. Mary Budd Flitner has been a prominent rancher in Wyoming for more than fifty years. She is the author of articles in High Country News as well as various Wyoming and Montana newspapers. Teresa Jordan is an artist and author of several books, including the memoir Riding the White Horse Home and Cowgirls: Women of the American West.


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Valley of the Guns The Pleasant Valley War and the Trauma of Violence By Eduardo Obregón Pagán In the late 1880s, Pleasant Valley, Arizona, descended into a nightmare of violence, murder, and mayhem. By the time the Pleasant Valley War was over, eighteen men were dead, four were wounded, and one was missing, never to be found. Valley of the Guns explores the reasons for the violence that engulfed the settlement, turning neighbors, families, and friends against one another. While popular historians and novelists have long been captivated by the story, the Pleasant Valley War has more recently attracted the attention of scholars interested in examining the underlying causes of western violence. In this book, author Eduardo Obregón Pagán explores how geography and demographics aligned to create an unstable settlement subject to the constant threat of Apache raids. The fear of surprise attack by day and the theft of livestock by night prompted settlers to shape their lives around the expectation of sudden violence. As the forces of progress strained natural resources, conflict grew between local ranchers and cowboys hired by ranching corporations. Mixed-race property owners found themselves fighting white cowboys to keep their land. In addition, territorial law enforcement officers were outsiders to the community and approached every suspect fully armed and ready to shoot. The combination of unrelenting danger, its accompanying stress, and an abundance of firearms proved deadly. Drawing from history, geography, cultural studies, and trauma studies, Pagán uses the story of Pleasant Valley to demonstrate a new way of looking at the settlement of the West. Writing in a vivid narrative style and employing rigorous scholarship, he creatively explores the role of trauma in shaping the lives and decisions of the settlers in Pleasant Valley and offers new insight into the difficulties of survival in an isolated frontier community. Eduardo Obregón Pagán is the Bob Stump Endowed Professor of History at Arizona State University, Tempe, and author of Murder at the Sleepy Lagoon: Zoot Suits, Race, and Riot in Wartime L.A. He has published in such journals as Pacific Historical Review and Journal of Social Science History.

OCTOBER $29.95 CLOTH 978-0-8061-6154-9 304 PAGES, 6 × 9 10 B&W ILLUS., 3 MAPS, 2 TABLES, 2 CHARTS U.S. HISTORY

Of Related Interest

BLOOD OF THE PROPHETS Brigham Young and the Massacre at Mountain Meadows By Will Bagley $26.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3639-4 WHEN LAW WAS IN THE HOLSTER The Frontier Life of Bob Paul By John Boessenecker $29.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4285-2 WYOMING RANGE WAR The Infamous Invasion of Johnson County By John W. Davis $19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4261-6

PAGÁN VALLEY OF THE GUNS

Offers new insight into the difficulties of survival in an isolated frontier community


CONLEY, CONLEY PLASTIC INDIAN

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NEW BOOKS FALL/WINTER 2018

A posthumous collection of stories and speeches by the celebrated Cherokee author

Plastic Indian A Collection of Stories and Other Writings By Robert J. Conley Edited by Evelyn L. Conley Foreword by Geary Hobson “So what does it mean to be a Cherokee?” asks Cherokee author Robert J. Conley at the start of this delightful collection of his writings. Throughout his prolific career, Conley used his art to explore Cherokee identity and experience. With his passing in 2014, Native American literature—and American literature in general—lost a major voice. Fortunately, this posthumous publication, edited by the author’s wife, Evelyn L. Conley, offers readers the opportunity to appreciate anew the blend of humor, candor, and creativity that makes his work so exceptional.

VOLUME 71 IN THE AMERICAN INDIAN LITERATURE AND CRITICAL STUDIES SERIES

AUGUST $19.95 PAPER 978-0-8061-6151-8 174 PAGES, 5.5 × 8.5 1 B&W ILLUS. FICTION/AMERICAN INDIAN

Of Related Interest

CHEROKEE THOUGHTS Honest and Uncensored By Robert J. Conley $19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3943-2 SCALPING COLUMBUS AND OTHER DAMN INDIAN STORIES Truths, Half-Truths, and Outright Lies By Adam Fortunate Eagle $19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4428-3 THE PEOPLE WHO STAYED Southeastern Indian Writing after Removal Edited by Geary Hobson, Janet McAdams and Kathryn Walkiewicz $24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4136-7

Best known as a novelist, especially for his beloved Real People series, Conley was also a masterful writer of short stories, essays, plays, and speeches. The breadth of his talents is on full display in this wide-ranging collection, which begins with his very last public address, delivered in North Carolina in 2013. Following that speech, the reader is treated to what may be Conley’s most famous short story, “Plastic Indian,” the hilarious tale of three Cherokee youths who try to take down a giant plastic Indian located along Highway 51 between Tahlequah and Tulsa. Like many of Conley’s works, “Plastic Indian” is set in contemporary times, but as we discover through the stories that follow, the author drew inspiration from traditional Cherokee folktales and oral storytelling. His delight in the spoken word is evident in the single play featured in this volume, based on the writings of ethnographer James Mooney and originally performed for radio. Conley is also celebrated for his accurate depictions of the Old West (it is no accident that he was the first American Indian president of the distinguished Western Writers of America association), so the collection would not be complete without two of his cowboy stories, namely “The Execution” and “Nate’s Revenge.” The volume concludes with four of the author’s speeches. Laced with the author’s typical dry humor, these personal testimonies serve as a moving coda to the author’s extensive and illustrious career. Robert J. Conley (1940–2014) is the author of the Real People series, The Witch of Goingsnake and Other Stories, Mountain Windsong, and Wil Usdi. Geary Hobson is coeditor of The People Who Stayed: Southeastern Indian Writing after Removal.


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NEW IN PAPERBACK

Crossing Vines A Novel By Rigoberto González In the grim reality of Southern California’s grape fields, even the sun is a dark spot. For the migrant grape pickers in Crossing Vines, Rigoberto González’s novel that spans a single workday, the sun is a constant, malevolent force. The characters endure back-breaking, monotonous work as they succumb to the whims of their corrupt bosses. Each minute the sun rises higher in the sky is an eternity. The textures, smells, sights, and emotions of their daily existences engulf the lives of the Mexican laborers. Scarce drinking water, sweltering heat, splintered fingers, contempt for the job, and violence toward one another compose their unflinchingly dark world. In González’s brutally honest story, the characters are compelled forward mercilessly by the rising crisis that envelops their interconnected stories. This uncompromisingly thought-provoking tale gives names and faces to the anonymous agricultural laborers, whose lives are like the tangled vines of the fruits of their labor.

VOLUME 2 IN THE CHICANA AND CHICANO VISIONS OF THE AMÉRICAS SERIES

Not since Tómas Rivera’s . . . And the Earth Did Not Devour Him has a novel converged on the lives of migrant workers so profoundly. Like Rivera, González employs nostalgia for Mexican tradition as he looks at the family feuds, economic injustices, and racism prevalent in the migrant worker experience.

NOVEMBER $24.95 CLOTH 978-0-8061-3528-1 $19.95 PAPER 978-0-8061-6176-1 224 PAGES, 5.5 × 8.5 FICTION

Rigoberto González is the author of So Often the Pitcher Goes to Water until It Breaks, a selection of the National Poetry Series, and Soledad Sigh-Sighs, a book for children. The recipient of a Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship and of writing residencies in Spain, Brazil, and Costa Rica, he currently lives in New York City.

Of Related Interest

MEN WITHOUT BLISS By Rigoberto González $24.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-3945-6 CONFESSIONS OF A BERLITZ-TAPE CHICANA By Demetria Martínez $19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3722-3 THE MAN WHO COULD FLY AND OTHER STORIES By Rudolfo Anaya $14.95 Cloth 978-0-8061-3738-4

GONZÁLEZ CROSSING VINES

Intertwines the sixties and nineties to explore farm workers’ lives and their experience with la huelga


IMPERT PAINTERS OF THE NORTHWEST

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NEW BOOKS FALL/WINTER 2018

A foundational history of early twentiethcentury painting in the Pacific Northwest

Painters of the Northwest Impressionism to Modernism, 1900–1930 By John Impert

VOLUME 32 IN THE CHARLES M. RUSSELL CENTER SERIES ON ART AND PHOTOGRAPHY OF THE AMERICAN WEST

AUGUST $45.00s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6034-4 220 PAGES, 10.75 × 8.5 53 COLOR ILLUS. ART

Of Related Interest

A STRANGE MIXTURE The Art and Politics of Painting Pueblo Indians By Sascha T. Scott $45.00s Cloth 978-0-8061-4484-9 A PLACE OF REFUGE Maynard Dixon’s Arizona By Thomas Brent Smith $49.95s Cloth 978-0-911611-36-6 RAY STANFORD STRONG, WEST COAST LANDSCAPE ARTIST By Mark Humpal $45.00s Cloth 978-0-8061-5770-2

From its sweeping coastlines to its soaring inland mountains, verdant valleys, and volcanoes standing in splendid isolation, the Pacific Northwest has long inspired artists to capture the unique spirit of its varied landscape. Yet the early years of twentieth-century Pacific Northwest painting remain shrouded in mystery. In this groundbreaking work, John Impert introduces readers to the rich and varied array of artists and works of art that defined the region’s artistic transition from a naturebound impressionism to the arrival of modernism. Focusing on nine artists—Paul Morgan Gustin, C. C. McKim, Clyde Keller, J. Edgar Forkner, Clara Jane Stephens, Dorothy Dolph Jensen, Eustace Paul Ziegler, Mark Tobey, and C. S. Price—art historian John Impert organizes his work around the landscapes, people, and city scenes they painted. He identifies the influence of impressionism, in particular the singular way in which each artist’s biography, style, and iconography contribute to a distinctive Northwestern sensibility. Painters of the Northwest shows us for the first time how a spectacular natural environment, one that conformed aesthetically to nineteenth-century ideals of romanticism and transcendental reverence, combined with an emphasis on subject over style to create a body of work far more concerned with the natural environment than with the socioeconomic issues that occupied city-bound artists of the day. Establishing a chronology, history, and art historical canon for this little-studied place and time, this book is a long overdue foundational history of early twentiethcentury painting in the Pacific Northwest. John Impert is retired as an international lawyer and holds a PhD in Art History from the University of Washington, Seattle. His articles have been published in Muséologies, International Lawyer, and International Quarterly.


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Centering Modernism J. Jay McVicker and Postwar American Art By Louise Siddons During the twentieth century, artists across the United States participated in the modernist movement. But as American modernism evolved during the 1950s and 1960s, the art world likewise changed, narrowing its vision toward large coastal cities such as New York and Los Angeles. As these cities increasingly claimed the avant-garde for themselves, artists from the “flyover” states all but disappeared from the canon of experimental artists. Among these forgotten figures is Oklahoma modernist J. Jay McVicker (1911–2004). In Centering Modernism, Louise Siddons fills a curious gap in the history of American art by exploring—and indeed salvaging—McVicker’s career and contributions to international modernism. A painter, printmaker, and sculptor, McVicker served as chair of the Department of Art at Oklahoma State University. As his career progressed, he experimented with different styles and expanded his professional network, exhibiting his work in major national and international galleries and museums. Marshaling evidence from primary sources—including newly discovered archival sources and interviews with the artist’s friends, family, and colleagues—Siddons traces McVicker’s development from his early regionalist roots through biomorphic abstraction, hard-edge geometric abstraction, and finally to a style that reflects the shifting boundaries of postmodernism. Despite his achievements, McVicker—along with other midwestern artists— dropped out of view during the postwar period due to what Siddons terms the coastalization of American art, as critics, artists, and curators from the East and West Coasts formed an elite and tightly knit group that garnered exclusive institutional access and support. According to Siddons, the bias against artists outside of that circle continues to this day, even among revisionist scholars. Featuring nearly one hundred full-color reproductions of McVicker’s works, Centering Modernism showcases the extraordinary range of his artistry. As the first comprehensive survey of McVicker’s career and oeuvre, this volume is also the story of American modernism in all its diversity. Louise Siddons is Associate Professor of Art History at Oklahoma State University in Stillwater. Her numerous articles have been published in journals such as Frontiers: A Journal of Women’s Studies, Panorama, Great Plains Quarterly, and British Art Journal among others.

VOLUME 31 IN THE CHARLES M. RUSSELL CENTER SERIES ON ART AND PHOTOGRAPHY OF THE AMERICAN WEST

AUGUST $45.00s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6033-7 328 PAGES, 8.5 × 11 10 B&W AND 96 COLOR ILLUS. ART

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MODERN SPIRIT The Art of George Morrison By W. Jackson Rushing III and Kristin Makholm $39.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4392-7 $29.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4393-4 MACROCOSM/MICROCOSM Abstract Expressionism in the American Southwest By Mark Andrew White $15.95s Paper 978-0-9851609-7-5 SENTIMENTAL JOURNEY The Art of Alfred Jacob Miller By Lisa Strong $45.00s Cloth 978-0-88360-105-1

SIDDONS CENTERING MODERNISM

Recovers the career and artistry of a mid-twentieth-century modernist


SCOTT ART OF THE WEST

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NEW BOOKS FALL/WINTER 2018

Showcases a dynamic permanent collection at the Autry Museum of the American West

Art of the West Selected Works from the Autry Museum Edited by Amy Scott Foreword by Stephen Aron Afterword by Brian W. Dippie Since its founding in 1988, the Autry Museum of the American West has expanded its vision and its collections in profound ways. From its original focus on the history, art, and popular culture inspired by the West and its attendant myths, the museum— located in the heart of Los Angeles—has evolved to embrace a more inclusive, complex, and contemporary approach to the American West. Featuring more than 150 color images, this volume highlights the museum’s Art of the West exhibit. AUGUST $49.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6031-3 $34.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-6032-0 168 PAGES, 9 × 12 156 COLOR AND 18 B&W ILLUS. ART

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THE JAMES T. BIALAC NATIVE AMERICAN ART COLLECTION Selected Works By Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art $49.95 Cloth 978-0-8061-4299-9 $29.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4304-0 THE EUGENE B. ADKINS COLLECTION Selected Works Contributions by Jane Ford Aebersold, Christina E Burke, James Peck, B. Byron Price, W. Jackson Rushing III, Mary Jo Watson, and Mark Andrew White $60.00 Cloth 978-0-8061-4100-8 $29.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4101-5 THE FRED JONES JR. MUSEUM OF ART AT THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA Selected Works By Rima Canaan and Eric McCauley Lee $39.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3680-6

Alongside these celebrated works of art, Art of the West showcases essays by prominent scholars and art historians who address various topics, ranging from motorcycles to beadwork and photography. Essays devoted to women’s art, Native American art, and Chicano photography are important correctives to more traditional and linear models of western art history, with its emphasis on rugged masculinity, Anglo-American pioneers, and the myth of an “untamed” frontier. As Autry Museum curator Amy Scott explains in her introduction, there is not one West; instead, many Wests, comprising diverse collections of places and peoples, form a “complex tapestry of ethnic mixing and geopolitical spaces, diaspora, immigration, industry, infrastructure, tourism, and environmental degradation.” By addressing such provocative themes, Art of the West challenges us to look beyond surface appearances, superficial caricatures, and cultural assumptions. The American West emerges as a dynamic place in which memory informs, but does not determine, the present. Amy Scott is Chief Curator and Marilyn B. and Calvin B. Gross Curator of Visual Arts at the Autry Museum of the American West in Los Angeles, California. Stephen Aron is Professor and Robert N. Burr Department Chair of History at the University of California, Los Angeles, and chair of the Institute for the Study of the American West at the Autry Museum of the American West. Brian W. Dippie is retired as Professor of History at the University of Victoria, British Columbia.


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TROCCOLI CHARLES M. RUSSELL

Illuminates a less familiar aspect of Russell¹s art and his depiction of western women

Charles M. Russell The Women in His Life and Art Edited by Joan Carpenter Troccoli Introduction by Brian W. Dippie Contributions by Emily Crawford Wilson, Jennifer Bottomly-O’looney, and Thomas A. Petrie Charles M. Russell has long been recognized for his action-packed paintings, drawings, and sculpture of cowboys, fur trappers, Native American buffalo hunters and warriors, and other heroes of the Old West. Russell’s best-known works capture the excitement and deadly risk of men battling nature and one another in a majestic landscape of mountains and plains. Less well known are Russell’s hundreds of depictions of western women. As renowned author and art historian Ginger K. Renner observed thirty-five years ago, no other artist of the West devoted more of his time and talent to the portrayal of women. But few have followed Renner’s lead—until now. Lavishly illustrated with full-color illustrations, Charles M. Russell: The Women in His Life and Art presents groundbreaking essays essential to understanding the role of western women in Russell’s art. This volume is both a tribute to the women who nurtured Russell’s artistic development and a landmark in the study of the role of women in a genre all too often identified almost exclusively with a masculine world. The catalogue essays examine the exhibition’s theme from four unique perspectives. Joan Carpenter Troccoli provides an overview of the works in the exhibition and the social, cultural, and personal values that influenced them. Emily Crawford Wilson explores Russell’s interest in the feminine ideal, tying it to wider artistic trends of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Jennifer Bottomly-O’looney describes Russell’s friendship with Ben and Lela Roberts, who introduced the artist to Nancy Cooper, the woman who would become his wife and indispensable business partner. Thomas A. Petrie employs extended excerpts from Nancy’s unpublished biographical memoir to illuminate the Russells’ marriage, a relationship sustained by affection and mutual respect, as well as shrewd creative and marketing decisions. Joan Carpenter Troccoli is Founding Director of the Petrie Institute of Western American Art, Denver Art Museum. Brian W. Dippie is Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Victoria, British Columbia. Emily Crawford Wilson is Curator of the C. M. Russell Museum. Jennifer Bottomly-O’looney is Senior Curator at the Montana Historical Society Museum. Thomas A. Petrie is Board Chair of the C. M. Russell Museum.

DISTRIBUTED FOR THE CHARLES M. RUSSELL MUSEUM

JULY $39.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6179-2 192 PAGES, 9 × 10 99 COLOR AND 13 B&W ILLUS. BIOGRAPHY/ART

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CHARLES M. RUSSELL A Catalogue Raisonné Edited by B. Byron Price $125.00s Cloth 978-0-8061-3836-7 CHARLES M. RUSSELL Photographing the Legend By Larry Len Peterson $350.00n Leather 978-0-8061-4485-6 $60.00 Cloth 978-0-8061-4473-3 THE MASTERWORKS OF CHARLES M. RUSSELL A Retrospective of Paintings and Sculpture Edited by Joan Carpenter Troccoli $39.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4097-1


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RIVAS PÉREZ CIRCULACIÓN

Readings in Latin American Studies

Circulación Movement of Ideas, Art, and People in Spanish America Edited by Jorge Rivas Pérez In this beautifully illustrated volume, an international group of scholars present recent research on the movement of goods, art, and artists—and the circulation of ideas and ideologies—that shaped culture in Spanish America from the beginning of the sixteenth century to the first half of the nineteenth century. Their essays, now revised and expanded, were originally presented in 2016 at the annual symposium of the Frederick and Jan Mayer Center for Pre-Columbian and Spanish Colonial Art at the Denver Art Museum, organized by Jorge Rivas Pérez.

DISTRIBUTED FOR THE DENVER ART MUSEUM

SEPTEMBER $29.95s PAPER 978-0-914738-56-5 216 PAGES, 8.5 × 11 111 COLOR AND 34 B&W ILLUS. ART/LATIN AMERICA

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COMPANION TO GLITTERATI Portraits and Jewelry from Colonial Latin America at the Denver Art Museum By Donna Pierce and Julie Wilson Frick $14.95s Paper 978-0-914738-75-6 FESTIVALS AND DAILY LIFE IN THE ARTS OF COLONIAL LATIN AMERICA, 1492–1850 Papers from the 2012 Mayer Center Symposium at the Denver Art Museum Edited by Donna Pierce $34.95s Paper 978-0-914738-98-5 NEW ENGLAND/NEW SPAIN Portraiture in the Colonial Americas, 1492–1850 Edited by Donna Pierce $34.95s Paper 978-0-914738-50-3

Mónica Domínguez Torres (University of Delaware) opens the volume by examining the early modern pearl industry and trade in post-conquest Spanish America, and the history of the short-lived town of Nueva Cádiz de Cubagua, off the coast of Venezuela. Gustavo Curiel (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México) discusses issues of reception, adoption, and transformation of European print sources in the local production of furniture in the village of San Ildefonso Villa Alta in Oaxaca, Mexico. Esteban García Brosseau (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México) explores cultural and artistic exchanges between South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Spanish America. Constanza Toquica (Museo Colonial, Bogotá) comments on the roles of specific images and iconographies, and their contribution to the construction of the colonial order in the viceroyalty of New Granada. Rosario Inés Granados-Salinas (Blanton Museum of Art, Austin) explores the use of devotional images as rhetorical devices in Spanish colonial paintings. Rachael Zimmerman (University of Delaware) discusses the use of hammocks as an honorary mode of transportation in colonial Brazil. Idurre Alonso (Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles) discusses the never-realized city of Ville du Port de Napoleon (1807) in Hispaniola as a model where French and Spanish city planning models intersect. Natalia Majluf (Museo de Arte de Lima, Peru) focuses on the work of Peruvian portraitist of African descent José Gil de Castro (1785–c. 1841), a key figure in the rejuvenation of the arts during the years immediately following the independence of Peru. Jorge Rivas Pérez is the Frederick and Jan Mayer Curator of Spanish Colonial Art at the Denver Art Museum.


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Alfalfa Bill A Life in Politics By Robert L. Dorman In this masterful biography, Robert L. Dorman traces the career of William H. “Alfalfa Bill” Murray from his hardscrabble childhood in post–Civil War Texas to his remarkable ascendancy as a nationally known political figure in the midtwentieth century. The first comprehensive portrait of Murray to be published in fifty years, Alfalfa Bill is both the exploration of a larger-than-life personality and an illuminating account of the birth of political conservatism in Oklahoma. As Dorman reveals, no political label readily fit Murray. The core conservatism of his Texas years was caught up in the ferment of three major periods of American reform—the Populist uprising, the Progressive Era, and the New Deal. Over his long career, Murray strongly advocated for states’ rights, limited government, and strict constitutionalism, yet he was also a consistent foe of corporations and concentrated wealth. The society he sought was small-scale, decentralized, agrarian—and racially segregated. Although he claimed to represent high principles, Murray as a politician was an opportunist, loved a good fight, had a flair for the theatrical, and hungered for power. Dorman depicts Murray from his days as a political operative in the Chickasaw Nation to his leadership of the Oklahoma Constitutional Convention, and from the Speaker’s chair of the Oklahoma legislature to the halls of Congress. The book follows Murray’s quixotic attempt to found an agricultural colony in Bolivia, and chronicles his amazing Oklahoma comeback in the 1930 gubernatorial election. The final chapters detail Murray’s legendary term as state governor, his failed candidacy for president, and his emergence as a fierce critic of New Deal liberalism and racial desegregation. Unlike earlier biographies of Murray, Alfalfa Bill brings issues of race, class, and gender to the forefront, often in surprising ways. On the surface, the Murray saga was an American success story, yet his rise came at a price for Murray himself, his family, and the people of the state he helped to create. An indelible portrait emerges of an ambitious, domineering, relentless, and unapologetically racist figure whose tarnished legacy seems painfully relevant in America’s current political climate. Robert L. Dorman is Professor of Library Science at Oklahoma City University and the author of several books, including Revolt of the Provinces: The Regionalist Movement in America, 1920–1945.

OCTOBER $34.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6035-1 432 PAGES, 6.125 × 9.25 20 B&W ILLUS. BIOGRAPHY/U.S. HISTORY

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FORTY YEARS A LEGISLATOR By Elmer Thomas Edited by Richard Lowittt and Carolyn G. Hanneman $24.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-3809-1 OKLAHOMA TOUGH My Father, King of the Tulsa Bootleggers By Ron Padgett $19.95s Paper 978-0-8061-3732-2 ALTERNATIVE OKLAHOMA Contrarian Views of the Sooner State Edited by Davis D. Joyce $19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3819-0

DORMAN ALFALFA BILL

A vivid portrait of Oklahoma’s most famous and controversial politician


OGILVIE FOR THE BIRDS

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NEW BOOKS FALL/WINTER 2018

How a woman scientist succeeded in a field dominated by men

For the Birds American Ornithologist Margaret Morse Nice By Marilyn Bailey Ogilvie A first-rate ornithologist, Margaret Morse Nice (1883–1974) pioneered field studies on song sparrows and advocated for women’s active role in the sciences. Yet her nontraditional path toward scientific progress, as well as her gender, meant that she had to reach the highest pinnacles of achievement in order to gain prominence in her chosen field. Luckily for Nice, she was more than up to the challenge. In this engaging first book-length biography, Marilyn Bailey Ogilvie sheds light on Nice’s intellectual journey.

SEPTEMBER $39.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6069-6 312 PAGES, 6 × 9 17 B&W ILLUS. BIOGRAPHY

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GEORGE MIKSCH SUTTON Artist, Scientist, and Teacher By Jerome A. Jackson $29.95 Cloth 978-0-8061-3745-2 MONTANA’S PIONEER NATURALIST Morton J. Elrod By George M. Dennison $26.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-5436-7 OPEN RANGE The Life of Agnes Morley Cleaveland By Darlis A. Miller $24.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4117-6

The wife of an academic, Nice pursued her own scholarly interests through selfstudy and by cultivating and creating work partnerships with colleagues. Talented, ambitious, and creative, she did not define herself solely through her role as wife and mother, nor did her family responsibilities deter her from her professional achievements. From her undergraduate study at Mount Holyoke College to her fieldwork in Norman, Oklahoma, her coauthorship of Birds of Oklahoma and subsequent correspondence with George Sutton to her later years in Columbus, Ohio, Nice’s career grew in tandem with her personal life—and in some cases, because of it. Although bridled by social constraints, her work spoke for itself: she produced more than 244 papers, articles, and published letters; seven books and book-length monographs; and 3,000 reviews. This voluminous and field-defining output earned her the respect of some of the most important biological scientists of the day, among them Konrad Lorenz and Ernst Mayr, who declared that she had “almost singlehandedly” initiated “a new era in American ornithology.” For the Birds gives Nice her due recognition, lending compelling insight into her activism promoting conservation and preservation, her field methods, and the role of women in the history of science, particularly in ornithology. Nice’s life acts as a looking glass into the various challenges faced by fellow female pioneers, their resolve, and their contributions. Marilyn Bailey Ogilvie is Emeritus Curator of the History of Science Collections at the University of Oklahoma and the author of several books on women in science including Marie Curie: A Biography.


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Lone Star Mind Reimagining Texas History By Ty Cashion There is the story the Lone Star State likes to tell about itself—and then there is the reality, a Texas past that bears little resemblance to the manly Anglo myth of Texas exceptionalism that maintains a firm grip on the state’s historical imagination. Lone Star Mind takes aim at this traditional narrative, holding both academic and lay historians accountable for the ways in which they craft the state’s story. A clearsighted, far-reaching work of intellectual history, this book marshals a wide array of pertinent scholarship, analysis, and original ideas to point the way toward a new “usable past” that twenty-first-century Texans will find relevant. Ty Cashion fixes T. R. Fehrenbach’s Lone Star: A History of Texas and the Texans in his crosshairs in particular, laying bare the conceptual deficiencies of the romantic and mythic narrative the book has served to codify since its first publication in 1968. At the same time, Cashion explores the reasons why the collective efforts of universitytrained scholars have failed to diminish the appeal of the state’s iconic popular culture, despite the fuller and more accurate record these historians have produced. Framing the search for a collective Texan identity in the context of a post-Christian age and the end of Anglo-male hegemony, Lone Star Mind illuminates the many historiographical issues besetting the study of American history that will resonate with scholars in other fields as well. Cashion proposes that a cultural history approach focusing on the self-interests of all Texans is capable of telling a more complete story—a story that captures present-day realities. Ty Cashion is Professor of History at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas, and is a member of the Texas Institute of Letters. He lives in The Woodlands, Texas, and Montréal, Canada.

NOVEMBER $34.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6152-5 296 PAGES, 6 × 9 1 B&W ILLUS. AND 1 MAP U.S. HISTORY

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DISCOVERING TEXAS HISTORY Edited by Bruce A. Glasrud, Light Townsend Cummins, and Cary D. Wintz $24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4619-5 WEST TEXAS A History of the Giant Side of the State Edited by Paul H. Carlson and Bruce A. Glasrud $19.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4444-3 TEXAS A Historical Atlas By A. Ray Stephens $29.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4307-1

CASHION LONE STAR MIND

A pathbreaking, contemporary inquiry into Texas history


KISER COAST-TO-COAST EMPIRE

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NEW BOOKS FALL/WINTER 2018

A sweeping narrative history that alters our understanding of the nineteenth-century Southwest

Coast-to-Coast Empire Manifest Destiny and the New Mexico Borderlands By William S. Kiser Following Zebulon Pike’s expeditions in the early nineteenth century, U.S. expansionists focused their gaze on the Southwest. Explorers, traders, settlers, boundary adjudicators, and railway surveyors—along with U.S. cavalry and infantry—crossed into and through New Mexico, transforming it into a battleground for competing influences determined to control the region.

AUGUST $32.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6026-9 288 PAGES, 6 × 9 17 B&W ILLUS., 5 MAPS U.S. HISTORY

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AMERICAN CARNAGE Wounded Knee, 1890 By Jerome A. Greene $34.95 Cloth 978-0-8061-4448-1 FROM COCHISE TO GERONIMO The Chiricahua Apaches, 1874–1886 By Edwin R. Sweeney $24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4272-2 DRAGOONS IN APACHELAND Conquest and Resistance in Southern New Mexico, 1846–1861 By William S. Kiser $19.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4650-8

Previous histories have treated the Santa Fe trade, the American occupation under Colonel Stephen W. Kearny, the antebellum Indian Wars, debates over slavery, the Pacific Railway, and the Confederate invasion during the Civil War as separate events in New Mexico. In Coast-to-Coast Empire, William S. Kiser demonstrates instead that these developments were interconnected parts of a process by which the United States effected the political, economic, and ideological transformation of the region. New Mexico was an early proving ground for Manifest Destiny, the belief that U.S. possession of the entire North American continent was inevitable. Kiser shows that the federal government’s military commitment to the territory stemmed from its importance to U.S. expansion. Americans wanted California, but in order to retain possession of it and realize its full economic and geopolitical potential, they needed New Mexico as a connecting thoroughfare in their nation-building project. The use of armed force to realize this claim fundamentally altered New Mexico and the Southwest. Soldiers marched into the territory at the onset of the MexicanAmerican War and occupied it continuously through the 1890s, leaving an indelible imprint on the region’s social, cultural, political, judicial, and economic systems. By focusing on the activities of a standing army in a civilian setting, Kiser reshapes the history of the Southwest, underlining the role of the military not just in obtaining territory but in retaining it. William S. Kiser is Assistant Professor of History at Texas A&M University–San Antonio and the author of Turmoil on the Rio Grande: The Territorial History of the Mesilla Valley, 1846–1865; Dragoons in Apacheland: Conquest and Resistance in Southern New Mexico, 1846–1861; and Borderlands of Slavery: The Struggle over Captivity and Peonage in the American Southwest.


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Tombstone, Deadwood, and Dodge City Re-creating the Frontier West By Kevin Britz and Roger L. Nichols “Shootin’—Lynchin’—Hangin’,” announces the advertisement for Tombstone’s Helldorado Days festival. Dodge City’s Boot Hill Cemetery sports an “authentic hangman’s tree.” Not to be outdone, Deadwood’s Days of ’76 celebration promises “miners, cowboys, Indians, cavalry, bars, dance halls and gambling dens.” The Wild West may be long gone, but its legend lives on in Tombstone, Arizona; Deadwood, South Dakota; and Dodge City, Kansas. In Tombstone, Deadwood, and Dodge City, Kevin M. Britz and Roger L. Nichols conduct a tour of these iconic towns, revealing how over time they became repositories of western America’s defining myth. Beginning with the founding of the communities in the 1860s and 1870s, this book traces the circumstances, conversations, and clashes that shaped the settlements over the course of a century. Drawing extensively on literature, newspapers, magazines, municipal reports, political correspondence, and films and television, the authors show how Hollywood and popular novels, as well as major historical events such as the Great Depression and both world wars, shaped public memories of these three towns. Along the way, Britz and Nichols document the forces—from business interests to political struggles—that influenced dreams and decisions in Tombstone, Deadwood, and Dodge City. After the so-called rowdy times of the open frontier had passed, town promoters tried to sell these towns by remaking their reputations as peaceful, law-abiding communities. Hard times made boosters think again, however, and they turned back to their communities’ rowdy pasts to sell the towns as exemplars of the western frontier. An exploration of the changing times that led these towns to be marketed as reflections of the Old West, Tombstone, Deadwood, and Dodge City opens an illuminating new perspective on the crafting and marketing of America’s mythic self-image. Kevin M. Britz (1954–2011) received his Ph.D. in History from the University of Arizona under the direction of Roger L. Nichols. Roger L. Nichols is Professor Emeritus of History at the University of Arizona and author of numerous works on Native American history, including Warrior Nations: The United States and Indian Peoples.

AUGUST $32.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6029-0 280 PAGES, 6 × 9 25 B&W ILLUS., 1 MAP U.S. HISTORY

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ASSAULT ON THE DEADWOOD STAGE Road Agents and Shotgun Messengers By Robert K. DeArment $24.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4182-4 WILD BILL HICKOK, GUNFIGHTER An Account of Hickok’s Gunfights By Joseph G. Rosa $19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3535-9 DODGE CITY The Early Years, 1872–1886 By Wm. B. Shillingberg $49.95s Cloth 978-0-87062-378-3

BRITZ, NICHOLS TOMBSTONE, DEADWOOD, AND DODGE CITY

An illuminating new perspective on the crafting of Wild West legend


FOSTER STIGMA CITIES

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NEW BOOKS FALL/WINTER 2018

Investigates the effects of stigmatized identities on urban places

Stigma Cities The Reputation and History of Birmingham, San Francisco, and Las Vegas By Jonathan Foster Growing up in Birmingham, Alabama, a city that he loved, Jonathan Foster was forced to come to grips with its reputation for racial violence. In so doing, he began to question how other cities dealt with similar kinds of stigmas that resulted from behavior and events that fell outside accepted norms. He wanted to know how such stigmas changed over time and how they affected a city’s reputation and residents. Those questions led to this examination of the role of stigma and history in three very different cities: Birmingham, San Francisco, and Las Vegas.

SEPTEMBER $39.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6071-9 288 PAGES, 6 × 9 19 B&W ILLUS. U.S. HISTORY

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INVENTING LOS ALAMOS The Growth of an Atomic Community By Jon Hunner $19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3891-6 DISAPPEARING DESERT The Growth of Phoenix and the Culture of Sprawl By Janine Schipper $19.95 Cloth 978-0-8061-3955-5 OUR BETTER NATURE Environment and the Making of San Francisco By Philip J. Dreyfus $24.95 Cloth 978-0-8061-3958-6

In the era of civil rights, Birmingham became known as “Bombingham,” a place of constant reactionary and racist violence. Las Vegas emerged as the nation’s most recognizable Sin City, and San Francisco’s tolerance of homosexuality made it the perceived capital of Gay America. Stigma Cities shows how cultural and political trends influenced perceptions of disrepute in these cities, and how, in turn, their status as sites of vice and violence influenced development decisions, from Birmingham’s efforts to shed its reputation as racist, to San Francisco’s transformation of its stigma into a point of pride, to Las Vegas’s use of gambling to promote tourism and economic growth. The first work to investigate the important effects of stigmatized identities on urban places, Foster’s innovative study suggests that reputation, no less than physical and economic forces, explains how cities develop and why. An absorbing work of history and urban sociology, the book illuminates the significance of ideas in shaping metropolitan history. Jonathan Foster is Professor of History at Great Basin College in Elko, Nevada, and author of Lake Mead National Recreation Area: A History of America’s First National Playground.


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Wanderer on the American Frontier The Travels of John Maley, 1808–1813 Edited by F. Andrew Dowdy For nearly two hundred years, a fragment of the journal of John Maley, an obscure explorer on the American frontier, resided at Yale University and was treated with some skepticism by historians. It was only in 2012, when the first half of the manuscript turned up at a barn sale in Pennsylvania and was acquired by Southern Methodist University’s DeGolyer Library, that the full story of Maley’s travels could be pieced together. Wanderer on the American Frontier makes the complete journal available for the first time, allowing readers to follow a contemporary of Lewis and Clark on his journey through the Ohio, Mississippi, and Red River valleys, and to reassess the account’s authenticity. Between 1808 and 1813, Maley covered more than 16,000 miles through thirteen present-day states. Much of that travel took him beyond the fringes of civilization, and his journal offers some of the earliest descriptions of the Ozark Plateau, the Ouachita Mountains, and the upper reaches of the Red River. His account also provides a firsthand look at life on the frontier in the tumultuous years following the Louisiana Purchase. Editor F. Andrew Dowdy has carefully retraced Maley’s steps and, with extensive use of maps, has reconciled some of the journal’s more confusing passages to give readers clear modern-day reference points. Numerous annotations and appendices provide necessary historical context, from the link between Maley’s 1809 Indiana copper exploration and the Treaty of Fort Wayne, to the ways his 1811 foray into Spanish Texas presaged further filibusters there during the Mexican War for Independence. The fascinating tale of one of the wider-ranging explorers in American history, Wanderer on the American Frontier is an invaluable resource that provides a unique window on the West in the early nineteenth century. F. Andrew Dowdy is a retired geological engineer and U.S. Foreign Service officer. As an independent historian he researches North American colonial history, preColumbian cultures, and early mineral exploration.

OCTOBER $45.00s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6039-9 264 PAGES, 6 × 9 25 B&W ILLUS., 7 MAPS U.S. HISTORY/MEMOIR

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A TOUR ON THE PRAIRIES By Washington Irving $19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-1958-8 A WAY ACROSS THE MOUNTAIN Joseph Walker’s 1833 Trans-Sierran Passage and the Myth of Yosemite’s Discovery By Scott Stine $39.95s Cloth 978-0-87062-432-2 $29.95s Paper 978-0-8061-5754-2 A JOURNAL OF TRAVELS INTO THE ARKANSAS TERRITORY DURING THE YEAR 1819 By Thomas Nuttall $24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4277-7

MALEY, DOWDY WANDERER ON THE AMERICAN FRONTIER

An early explorer's recently discovered account of his journey in the American West


MCDERMOTT, PAUL, LOWRY ALL BECAUSE OF A MORMON COW

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Firsthand narratives of a seminal event in western American history

All Because of a Mormon Cow Historical Accounts of the Grattan Massacre, 1854–1855 Edited by John D. McDermott, R. Eli Paul, and Sandra J. Lowry On August 19, 1854, U.S. Army lieutenant John L. Grattan led a detachment of twenty-nine soldiers and one civilian interpreter to a large Lakota encampment near Fort Laramie to arrest an Indian man accused of killing a Mormon emigrant’s cow. The terrible series of events that followed, which became known as the Grattan Massacre, unleashed the opening volley in the First Sioux War—and marked the beginning of a generation of Indian warfare on the Great Plains. All Because of a Mormon Cow tells, for the first time, the full story of this seminal event in the history of the American West.

NOVEMBER $29.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6153-2 288 PAGES, 6 × 9 12 B&W ILLUS., 1 MAP U.S. HISTORY

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Where previous accounts of the Grattan Massacre have made do with limited primary sources, this volume includes eighty contemporary, annotated accounts of the fight and its aftermath, many newly discovered or recovered from obscurity. Recorded when the events were fresh in their narrators’ memories, these documents bring a sense of immediacy to a story more than a century and a half old. Alongside the voices heard here—of the Indian leaders Little Thunder and Big Partisan, of Mormons from passing emigrant trains, and of government officials charged with investigating the massacre, among many others—the editors include a substantial and thorough introduction that underscores the significance of the Grattan Massacre in all its depth and detail. All Because of a Mormon Cow offers a better understanding even as it evokes the drama of a highly controversial episode in the history of relations between Indians and non-Indians in the American West.

LAKOTA AND CHEYENNE Indian Views of the Great Sioux War, 1876–1877 By Jerome A. Greene $19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3245-7 FORT LARAMIE Military Bastion of the High Plains By Douglas C. McChristian $26.95s Paper 978-0-8061-5757-3 BLUE WATER CREEK AND THE FIRST SIOUX WAR, 1854–1856 By R. Eli Paul $19.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4275-3

John D. McDermott (1935–2016) was a historian and administrator with the National Park Service and the President’s Advisory Council on Historic Preservation. His numerous published books and articles on the American West include Red Cloud’s War: The Bozeman Trail, 1866–1868. R. Eli Paul is retired as Director of Missouri Valley Special Collections at the Kansas City Public Library. He is editor of Sign Talker: Hugh Lenox Scott Remembers Indian Country and author of Blue Water Creek and the First Sioux War, 1854–1856. Sandra J. Lowry (1943–2016) was a librarian for more than thirty years in the Research Library at the Fort Laramie National Historic Site.


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Color Coded Party Politics in the American West, 1950–2016 By Walter Nugent The now–staunchly red state of Texas was deep blue in 1950 and had virtually no functioning Republican Party. California, on the other hand, was reliably red. Today, both states have jumped to the opposite end of the political spectrum. Texas is one of the most conservative states, while California has become one of today’s most liberal bastions. These are the most dramatic cases, but notable shifts in voting patterns have occurred throughout the western states in recent decades—shifts so varied and complex that they have, until now, eluded the attention focused on the drastic examples of the South and Northeast. Bringing clarity to the remarkably mixed yet poorly understood map of America’s red, blue, and purple western half, Color Coded presents the first comprehensive history of political change and stability in the region between 1950 and 2016. The West, in Walter Nugent’s analysis, includes nineteen states: the thirteen that the U.S. Census Bureau calls the Western Region—roughly from the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific, as well as off-shore Alaska and Hawaii—plus the six Great Plains states from North Dakota south to Texas. Consulting official voting results of more than 5,300 state and national elections, as well as newspaper reports, oral histories, public documents, and other sources, Nugent reveals the ever-shifting patterns that have defined western politics in modern times. Geography, culture, history, political trajectories, and the charisma of key political actors have all played their part in these changes—and will, Nugent asserts, continue to do so for the foreseeable future. A powerful, exhaustively researched study of modern political organization, party development, and shifting voter blocs in the West, Color Coded deftly charts, as well, the profound red-blue tensions that have defined modern America. Returns for the 5,300-plus elections on which the book is based, covering the nineteen western states between 1950 and 2016, are compiled in the book’s appendix. Walter Nugent is Professor Emeritus of History at Notre Dame University and past president of the Western History Association. He has published two hundred articles and numerous books, including Habits of Empire: A History of American Expansion and Into the West: The Story of Its People.

OCTOBER $34.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6169-3 392 PAGES, 6 × 9 32 B&W ILLUS., 55 TABLES POLITICAL SCIENCE/U.S. HISTORY

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SHOOTING FROM THE LIP The Life of Senator Al Simpson By Donald Loren Hardy $19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4320-0 PARTY WARS Polarization and the Politics of National Policy Making By Barbara Sinclair $24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-3779-7 THE RISE AND FALL OF THE VOTING RIGHTS ACT By Charles S. Bullock III, Ronald Keith Gaddie, and Justin J. Wert $29.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-5200-4

NUGENT COLOR CODED

The first comprehensive history of political change and stability in the modern American West


MORMAN MANY NATIONS UNDER MANY GODS

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NEW BOOKS FALL/WINTER 2018

How Native nations preserve their sacred sites on federal public lands

Many Nations under Many Gods Public Land Management and American Indian Sacred Sites By Todd Allin Morman The lands the United States claims sovereignty over by right of the Doctrine of Discovery are home to more than five hundred Indian nations, each with its own distinct culture, religion, language, and history. Yet these Indians, and federal Indian law, rarely factor into the decisions of the country’s governing class—as recent battles over national monuments on tribal sites have made painfully clear. A muchneeded intervention, Many Nations under Many Gods brings to light the invisible histories of several Indian nations, as well as their struggles to protect the integrity of sacred and cultural sites located on federal public lands.

NOVEMBER $39.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6172-3 296 PAGES, 6 × 9 1 MAP LAW/AMERICAN INDIAN

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CLAIMING TRIBAL IDENTITY The Five Tribes and the Politics of Federal Acknowledgment By Mark Edwin Miller $29.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4378-1 UNEVEN GROUND American Indian Sovereignty and Federal Law By David E. Wilkins and K. Tsianina Lomawaima $29.95s Paper 978-0-8061-3395-9 PEYOTE VS. THE STATE Religious Freedom on Trial By Garrett Epps $19.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4026-1

Todd Allin Morman focuses on the history of Indian peoples engaging in consultation, a process mandated by the National Environmental Policy Act and the Indian Religious Freedom Act whenever a federal agency’s proposed action will affect land of significance to indigenous peoples. To understand this process and its various outcomes first requires familiarity with the history and culture that make these sites significant to particular Indian nations. Morman provides this necessary context for various and changing indigenous perspectives in the legal process. He also examines consultation itself in a series of case studies, including Hopi efforts to preserve the sacred San Francisco Peaks in the Coconino National Forest from further encroachment by a ski resort, the Wahoes’ effort near Lake Tahoe to protect Cave Rock from an influx of rock climbers, the Forest Service’s plan for the Blackfeet site Badger-Two Medicine, and religious freedom cases involving the Makahs, the Quechans, the Western Apaches, and the Standing Rock Sioux. These cases illuminate the strengths and dangers inherent in the consultation process. They also illustrate the need, for Natives and non-Natives alike, to learn the history of North America in order understand the value of protecting the many cultural and sacred sites of its many indigenous peoples. Many Nations under Many Gods reveals—and works to meet—the urgency of this undertaking. Todd Allin Morman is an attorney with Anishinabe Legal Services and holds both a Ph.D. from the University of Missouri and a J.D. from the University of Montana.


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Lest We Forget World War I and New Mexico By David Van Holtby More than 14,000 New Mexicans served in uniform during World War I, and thousands more contributed to the American home front. Yet today in New Mexico, as elsewhere, the Great War and the lives it affected are scarcely remembered. Lest We Forget confronts that amnesia. The first detailed study to describe New Mexico’s wartime mobilization, its soldiers’ combat experiences, and its veterans’ postwar lives, the book offers a poignant account of the profound changes these Americans underwent both during and after the war. By focusing on New Mexico, historian David V. Holtby underscores the challenges New Mexicans faced as they rallied support at home, served in Europe, and came home as veterans. Income disparity, gender divisions, political factionalism, and conflict between rural and urban lifeways all affected the war and its aftermath. Holtby shows how New Mexico responded to these problems even as it coped with federal action and inaction. In more than 1,500 eyewitness statements collected in Spanish and English not long after the war ended, New Mexicans described the murderous effects of shrapnel and gas warfare, the impact of the Spanish influenza, and the many other challenges they faced on the front as members of the American Expeditionary Forces. Lest We Forget recounts the background of these soldiers, but it also tells the oftenoverlooked story of what happened to New Mexico’s veterans after the war. Theirs is a story of resilience in the face of unfulfilled government promises, economic reversals, partisan politicizing of the state’s American Legion posts, and the challenges the newly created Veterans Bureau faced as it was overwhelmed by cases of shell shock (known today as PTSD). Although New Mexicans’ wartime efforts were in some ways unique, their story ultimately provides a revealing glimpse of the experiences of all Americans during World War I. A timely reminder of the courage and tragedy that accompany fullscale modern warfare, Lest We Forget reminds us of the enduring legacy of a vast international conflict that had keenly felt and long-lasting repercussions back home. David V. Holtby is the author of Forty-Seventh Star: New Mexico’s Struggle for Statehood and has served as Associate Director and Editor in Chief of University of New Mexico Press.

JULY $32.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6022-1 368 PAGES, 6 × 9 18 B&W ILLUS., 4 MAPS U.S. HISTORY

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SOMEWHERE OVER THERE The Letters, Diary, and Artwork of a World War I Corporal By Francis H. Webster $29.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-5172-4 NEW MEXICO A History By Joseph P. Sanchez, Robert L. Spude, and Arthur R. Gomez $19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4663-8 THE GREAT CALL-UP The Guard, the Border, and the Mexican Revolution By Charles H. Harris III and Louis R. Sadler $39.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4645-4 $26.95s Paper 978-0-8061-5592-0

HOLTBY LEST WE FORGET

A revealing account of New Mexicans’ experiences during and after the Great War


SANTIAGO A BAD PEACE AND A GOOD WAR

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Unearths a borderlands conflict during a time previously thought peaceful

A Bad Peace and a Good War Spain and the Mescalero Apache Uprising of 1795–1799 By Mark Santiago This book challenges long-accepted historical orthodoxy about relations between the Spanish and the Indians in the borderlands separating what are now Mexico and the United States. While most scholars describe the decades after 1790 as a period of relative peace between the occupying Spaniards and the Apaches, Mark Santiago sees in the Mescalero Apache attacks on the Spanish beginning in 1795 a sustained, widespread, and bloody conflict. He argues that Commandant General Pedro de Nava’s coordinated campaigns against the Mescaleros were the culmination of the Spanish military’s efforts to contain Apache aggression, constituting one of its largest and most sustained operations in northern New Spain. A Bad Peace and a Good War examines the antecedents, tactics, and consequences of the fighting. OCTOBER $32.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6155-6 248 PAGES, 6 × 9 10 B&W ILLUS., 2 MAPS AMERICAN INDIAN/MILITARY HISTORY

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DRAGOONS IN APACHELAND Conquest and Resistance in Southern New Mexico, 1846–1861 By William S. Kiser $19.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4650-8 THE JAR OF SEVERED HANDS Spanish Deportation of Apache Prisoners of War, 1770–1810 By Mark Santiago $29.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4177-0 FROM COCHISE TO GERONIMO The Chiricahua Apaches, 1874–1886 By Edwin R. Sweeney $24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4272-2

This conflict occurred immediately after the Spanish military had succeeded in making an uneasy peace with portions of all Apache groups. The Mescaleros were the first to break the peace, annihilating two Spanish patrols in August 1795. Galvanized by the loss, Commandant General Nava struggled to determine the extent to which Mescaleros residing in “peace establishments” outside Spanish settlements near El Paso, San Elizario, and Presidio del Norte were involved. Santiago looks at the impact of conflicting Spanish military strategies and increasing demands for fiscal efficiency as a result of Spain’s imperial entanglements. He examines Nava’s yearly invasions of Mescalero territory, his divide-and-rule policy using other Apaches to attack the Mescaleros, and his deportation of prisoners from the frontier, preventing the Mescaleros from redeeming their kin. Santiago concludes that the consequences of this war were overwhelmingly negative for Mescaleros and ambiguous for Spaniards. The war’s legacy of bitterness lasted far beyond the end of Spanish rule, and the continued independence of so many Mescaleros and other Apaches in their homeland proved the limits of Spanish military authority. In the words of Viceroy Bernardo de Gálvez, the Spaniards had technically won a “good war” against the Mescaleros and went on to manage a “bad peace.” Mark Santiago is the director of the New Mexico Farm and Ranch Heritage Museum in Las Cruces and the author of The Jar of Severed Hands: Spanish Deportations of Apache Prisoners of War, 1770–1810.


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White Hat The Military Career of Captain William Philo Clark By Mark J. Nelson Best known for his role in the arrest and killing of Crazy Horse and for the book he wrote, The Indian Sign Language, Captain William Philo Clark (1845–1884) was one of the Old Army’s renaissance men, by turns administrator, fighter, diplomat, explorer, and ethnologist. As such, Clark found himself at center stage during some of the most momentous events of the post–Civil War West: from Brigadier General George Crook’s infamous “Starvation March” to the Battle of Slim Buttes and the Dull Knife Fight, then to the attack against the Bannocks at Index Peak and Sitting Bull’s final fight against the U.S. Army. Captain Clark’s life story, here chronicled in full for the first time, is at once an introduction to a remarkable figure in the annals of nineteenth-century U.S. history, and a window on the exploits of the U.S. Army on the contested western frontier. White Hat follows Clark from his upbringing in New York State to his life as a West Point cadet, through his varied army posts on the northern plains, and finally to his stint in Lieutenant General Philip Sheridan’s headquarters first in Chicago and later in Washington, D.C. Along the way, Mark J. Nelson sets the record straight on Clark’s controversial relationship with Crazy Horse during the Lakota leader’s time at Camp Robinson, Nebraska. His book also draws a detailed picture of Clark’s service at Fort Keogh, Montana Territory, including what is arguably his greatest success—the securing of Northern Cheyenne leader Little Wolf’s peaceful surrender. In telling Clark’s story, White Hat illuminates the history of the nineteenth-century American military and the Great Plains, including the Grand Duke Alexis’s buffalo hunt, the Great Sioux War, and the careers of Crook and Sheridan. Clark’s early years in the army offer a rare look at the experiences of a staff officer stationed on the frontier and expands our view of the army, as well as the United States’ westward march. Mark J. Nelson has served on the staff of museums and historical sites across the American West, including Fort Bridger, the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument, and the Nebraska State Historical Society. He is author of With the Black Devils: A Soldier’s World War II Account with the First Special Service Force and the 82nd Airborne.

OCTOBER $29.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6122-8 280 PAGES, 6 × 9 12 B&W ILLUS., 1 MAP MILITARY HISTORY/U.S. HISTORY

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GREAT SIOUX WAR ORDERS OF BATTLE How the United States Army Waged War on the Northern Plains, 1876–1877 By Paul L. Hedren $19.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4322-4 TOM HORN IN LIFE AND LEGEND By Larry D. Ball $19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-5175-5 THE GRAY FOX George Crook and the Indian Wars By Paul Magid $29.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4706-2 $26.95s Paper 978-0-8061-6046-7

NELSON WHITE HAT

The life of an eyewitness to many of the latenineteenth-century West’s pivotal events


WADDELL IN THE YEAR OF THE TIGER

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NEW BOOKS FALL/WINTER 2018

A balanced interpretation of the French war for Indochina

In the Year of the Tiger The War for Cochinchina, 1945–1951 By William M. Waddell III In 1950, France experienced two parallel but different outcomes in its Indochina war. While the conflict in the north ended with a disastrous defeat for the French at Dien Bien Phu, in southern Vietnam, or Cochinchina, France emerged victorious in a series of violent but now largely forgotten actions. In the Year of the Tiger tells the story of this critical southern campaign, revealing in dramatic detail how the French war for Cochinchina set the stage for the American war in Vietnam.

VOLUME 62 IN THE CAMPAIGNS AND COMMANDERS SERIES

AUGUST $34.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6027-6 264 PAGES, 6 × 9 4 B&W ILLUS., 9 MAPS, 4 GRAPHS AND CHARTS, 2 TABLES MILITARY HISTORY/WORLD HISTORY

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In northern Vietnam, the French troops had focused on destroying Viet Minh main force units. A dearth of resources in the south dictated a different strategy. William M. Waddell III describes how, by avoiding costly attempts to defeat the Viet Minh in the traditional military sense, the southern French command was able to secure key economic and political strongholds. Consulting both French and Vietnamese sources, Waddell examines the principal commanders on both sides, their competing strategies, and the hard-fought military campaign that they waged for control of the south. The author’s deft analysis suggests that counter to widely accepted views, the Viet Minh were not invincible, and the outcome of the conflict in Indochina was not inevitable. A challenge to historical orthodoxy, In the Year of the Tiger presents a more balanced interpretation of the French war for Indochina. At the same time, the book alters and expands our understanding of the precedents and the dynamics of America’s Vietnam War. William M. Waddell III is a historian specializing in the French military and modern Europe. He earned his PhD at the Ohio State University.

THE LAST CAVALRYMAN The Life of General Lucian K. Truscott, Jr. By Harvey Ferguson $29.95 Cloth 978-0-8061-4664-5 CLIMAX AT GALLIPOLI The Failure of the August Offensive By Rhys Crawley $29.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4426-9 $24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-5206-6 INVASION OF LAOS, 1971 Lam Son 719 By Robert D. Sander $29.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4437-5 $19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4840-3


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The Rise and Fall of an Officer Corps The Republic of China Military, 1942–1955 By Eric Setzekorn The People’s Republic of China is the only large country in the world that does not have a “national” military; its military answers only to a political party, the Chinese Communist Party. For a brief period in the mid-twentieth century, China had the makings of a professional, apolitical military force. The Rise and Fall of an Officer Corps tells the story of that moment in the military history of modern China—how it came to be, why it ultimately failed, and what it meant for China at home and abroad. Between 1942 and 1955 a cadre of highly trained, nationalistic, and cosmopolitan Chinese officers created a professional, depoliticized military, a force that could effectively represent the aspirations of China as a world power. Drawing on multiple archival sources and Chinese military journals, author Eric Setzekorn charts the development of this new army as a critical cultural and political force with extensive connections to foreign powers. During this period, military officers were the primary actors in an intergovernmental partnership between the United States and the Republic of China. The partnership gave officers access to educational opportunities and technological transfers that were central to their professional ideals. Setzekorn’s account of the career of General Sun Li-jen, an American-educated Chinese army officer, illustrates the rise of a new sense of professionalism as well as its decline after 1953. Setzekorn then traces the failure of the army-building project to a renewed politicization of military forces, marked by a purge of key military leaders in 1955 by Chiang Kai-shek and his Koumintang (KMT) party. By focusing on this important chapter in Chinese military history, Setzekorn’s work also highlights broader patterns of military transformation during the pivotal period from World War II through the early Cold War. His work is critical to understanding the rise of China as a military and world power. Eric Setzekorn is a historian with the U.S. Army Center of Military History in Washington, D.C., and an adjunct professor in the Department of History at George Washington University. His articles have been published in Journal of Chinese Military History, Intelligence and National Security, and the Journal of American– East Asian Relations.

AUGUST $34.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6118-1 256 PAGES, 6 × 9 14 B&W ILLUS. MILITARY HISTORY/WORLD HISTORY

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A MILITARY HISTORY OF THE COLD WAR, 1944–1962 By Jonathan M. House $45.00s Cloth 978-0-8061-4262-3 INTO THE BREACH AT PUSAN The 1st Provisional Marine Brigade in the Korean War By Kenneth W. Estes $29.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4254-8 VICTORY AT PELELIU The 81st Infantry Division’s Pacific Campaign By Bobby C. Blair and John Peter DeCioccio $19.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4680-5

SETZEKORN THE RISE AND FALL OF AN OFFICER CORPS

Focuses on a pivotal chapter in Chinese military history


DAVIES SPYING FOR WELLINGTON

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NEW BOOKS FALL/WINTER 2018

The first full history of Wellington’s gathering and application of intelligence during the Peninsular War

Spying for Wellington British Military Intelligence in the Peninsular War By Huw J. Davies Intelligence is often the critical factor in a successful military campaign. This was certainly the case for Arthur Wellesley, the Duke of Wellington, in the Peninsular War. In this book, author Huw J. Davies offers the first full account of the scope, complexity, and importance of Wellington’s intelligence department, describing a highly organized, multifaceted series of networks of agents and spies throughout Spain and Portugal—an organization that is at once a microcosm of British intelligence at the time and a sophisticated forebear to intelligence developments in the twentieth century.

VOLUME 64 IN THE CAMPAIGNS AND COMMANDERS SERIES

NOVEMBER $39.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6173-0 336 PAGES, 6 × 9 13 B&W ILLUS., 5 MAPS, 2 TABLES MILITARY HISTORY/WORLD HISTORY

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ARCHITECTS OF EMPIRE The Duke of Wellington and His Brothers By John Severn $34.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-3810-7 ON WELLINGTON A Critique of Waterloo By Carl von Clausewitz $32.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4108-4 BLÜCHER Scourge of Napoleon By Michael V. Leggiere $29.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4409-2

Spying for Wellington shows us an organization that was, in effect, two parallel networks: one made up of Foreign Office agents “run” by British ambassadors in Spain and Portugal, the other comprising military spies controlled by Wellington himself. The network of agents supplied strategic intelligence, giving the British army advance warning of the arrival, destinations, and likely intentions of French reinforcements. The military network supplied operational intelligence, which confirmed the accuracy of the strategic intelligence and provided greater detail on the strengths, arms, and morale of the French forces. Davies reveals how, by integrating these two forms of intelligence, Wellington was able to develop an extremely accurate and reliable estimate of French movements and intentions not only in his own theater of operations but also in other theaters across the Iberian Peninsula. The reliability and accuracy of this intelligence, as Davies demonstrates, was central to Wellington’s decision-making and, ultimately, to his overall success against the French. Correcting past, incomplete accounts, this is the definitive book on Wellington’s use of intelligence. As such, it contributes to a clearer, more comprehensive understanding of Wellington at war and of his place in the history of British military intelligence. Huw J. Davies is a senior lecturer in Defence Studies at King’s College, London, and Deputy Dean of Academic Studies at the Joint Services Command and Staff College in Shrivenham. He is the author of Wellington’s Wars: The Making of a Military Genius.


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A British Profession of Arms The Politics of Command in the Late Victorian Army By Ian F. W. Beckett “You offer yourself to be slain,” General Sir John Hackett once observed, remarking on the military profession. “This is the essence of being a soldier.” For this reason as much as any other, the British army has invariably been seen as standing apart from other professions—and sometimes from society as a whole. A British Profession of Arms effectively counters this view. In this definitive study of the late Victorian army, distinguished scholar Ian F. W. Beckett finds that the British soldier, like any other professional, was motivated by considerations of material reward and career advancement. Within the context of debates about both the evolution of Victorian professions and the nature of military professionalism, Beckett considers the late Victorian officer corps as a case study for weighing distinctions between the British soldier and his civilian counterparts. Beckett examines the role of personality, politics, and patronage in the selection and promotion of officers. He looks, too, at the internal and external influences that extended from the press and public opinion to the rivalry of the so-called rings of adherents of major figures such as Garnet Wolseley and Frederick Roberts. In particular, he considers these processes at play in high command in the Second Afghan War (1878–81), the Anglo-Zulu War (1879), and the South African War (1899–1902). Based on more than thirty years of research into surviving official, semiofficial, and private correspondence, Beckett’s work offers an intimate and occasionally amusing picture of what might affect an officer’s career: wealth, wives, and family status; promotion boards and strategic preferences; performance in the field and diplomatic outcomes. It is a remarkable depiction of the British profession of arms, unparalleled in breadth, depth, and detail. Ian F. W. Beckett is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and retired as Professor of Military History at the University of Kent, Canterbury. He is author of A Guide to British Military History, the coauthor of The British Army and the First World War, and the editor of Citizen Soldiers and the British Empire, 1837–1902.

VOLUME 63 IN THE CAMPAIGNS AND COMMANDERS SERIES

OCTOBER $39.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6171-6 368 PAGES, 6 × 9 8 B&W ILLUS., 3 MAPS MILITARY HISTORY/WORLD HISTORY

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FROM BOER WAR TO WORLD WAR Tactical Reform of the British Army, 1902–1914 By Spencer Jones $34.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4289-0 $19.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4415-3 ALL FOR THE KING’S SHILLING The British Soldier under Wellington, 1808–1814 By Edward J. Coss $39.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4105-3 $24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-5177-9 VOLUNTEERS ON THE VELD Britain’s Citizen-Soldiers and the South African War, 1899–1902 By Stephen M. Miller $29.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-3864-0

BECKETT A BRITISH PROFESSION OF ARMS

The definitive study of the late Victorian army


TRUITT SUSTAINING THE DIVINE IN MEXICO TENOCHTITLAN

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NEW BOOKS FALL/WINTER 2018

An insightful look into Nahua life and religion in colonial Mexico City

Sustaining the Divine in Mexico Tenochtitlan Nahuas and Catholicism, 1523–1700 By Jonathan Truitt What happened to indigenous life after contact with the Spanish? In the complex interaction of cultures, how and to what degree did traditional ways persist? What role did religion play?

A COPUBLICATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA PRESS AND THE ACADEMY OF AMERICAN FRANCISCAN HISTORY

AUGUST $45.00s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6041-2 320 PAGES, 6 × 9 20 B&W ILLUS., 1 MAP LATIN AMERICA/RELIGION

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Sustaining the Divine in Mexico Tenochtitlan addresses these and other questions by focusing on Mexico City in the colonial era. Moving beyond the standard narrative of Spanish domination, author Jonathan Truitt uses Nahuatl- and Spanish-language sources, drawn from multiarchival and multinational research, to provide an innovative look at indigenous life on the southern half of the island capital of the Viceroyalty of New Spain. While Spanish authority was important, indeed central, it was far from omnipotent and depended each day on the assistance of the indigenous people. In many ways, Nahua life continued much as it had prior to Spanish contact. While certain elements of precontact life, such as public human sacrifice, were eliminated, others, such as traditional gender roles or belief in divinity, persisted. Before and after contact, religion was central to life on the island capital. Truitt uses Spanish and indigenous interactions with religion as a window on daily life in the city. As quickly becomes clear, Nahua men and women were active in most areas of city life. They took pride in their achievements, defended their religious buildings, fought against abuse, and ignored the idea that women should not be active members of the community. While change occurred during this era, it was controlled and directed as much, if not more, by the indigenous population as by the Spanish. Truitt’s innovative use of previously neglected Nahua and Spanish documents sheds new light on indigenous life in New Spain, making Sustaining the Divine in Mexico Tenochtitlan an important contribution to a deeper understanding of the era.

THE DIRECTORY FOR CONFESSORS, 1585 Implementing the Catholic Reformation in New Spain Translated and edited by Stafford Poole $65.00s Cloth 978-0-8061-5984-3 BONFIRES OF CULTURE Franciscans, Indigenous Leaders, and the Inquisition in Early Mexico, 1524–1540 By Patricia Lopes Don $34.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4049-0 $24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-6048-1 GÉNEROS DE GENTE IN EARLY COLONIAL MEXICO Defining Racial Difference By Robert C. Schwaller $34.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-5487-9

Jonathan Truitt is Associate Professor of Colonial Latin American History at Central Michigan University, Mount Pleasant, and coeditor of Native Wills from the Colonial Americas: Dead Giveaways in a New World.


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Made to Order Painted Ceramics of Ancient Teotihuacan By Cynthia Conides The ancient city of Teotihuacan, North America’s first metropolis, flourished for nearly eight centuries in central Mexico until its demise in 650 C.E. Known primarily for its massive architecture and monumental wall paintings, the city—and its dazzling artwork—inspired awe in its time, and continues to do so today. Made to Order, the first systematic study of more than 150 painted portable artworks produced in Teotihuacan, offers a unique, deeply informed perspective on the cultural practices and artistic techniques of the largest urban community in preHispanic Mesoamerica. The painted vessels Cynthia Conides considers—featured here in finely reproduced full-color photographs—constitute nearly the entire body of material now available for analysis. With attention to their origins and provenance, wherever possible, the author views these objects from a range of vantage points, using ceramic chronologies to measure the changing characteristics and cultural significance of pictorial paintings on portable media. Her approach—ranging from stylistic analysis and narrative theory to theoretical perspectives on artistic exchange among artisans living and working in a thriving urban setting—reveals the importance of such objects to a city where social status, and the acquisition and display of its symbols, were paramount. This perspective is in turn grounded in new interpretations of the religious, social, and ritual contexts in which the objects functioned. The most complete analysis of both ceramics from excavations at Teotihuacan and those held in museum collections worldwide, Made to Order will become a standard source for specialists and students of pre-Columbian visual culture and archaeology, and a vital resource for those interested in cross-cultural ceramic studies. Cynthia Conides, Associate Professor of History and Director of Museum Studies at SUNY Buffalo State, is an expert on pre-Columbian art and archaeology.

OCTOBER $55.00s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6057-3 256 PAGES, 8 × 10 166 COLOR AND B&W ILLUS., 1 MAP, 2 TABLES LATIN AMERICA/ART

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VISUAL CULTURE OF THE ANCIENT AMERICAS Contemporary Perspectives Edited by Andrew Finegold and Ellen Hoobler $39.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-5570-8 THE HUASTECA Culture, History, and Interregional Exchange Edited by Katherine A. Faust and Kim N. Richter $55.00s Cloth 978-0-8061-4704-8 TEOTIHUACAN An Experiment in Living By Esther Pasztory $49.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-2847-4

CONIDES MADE TO ORDER

A comprehensive examination of Teotihuacan’s portable paintings


WARD THE FORMATION OF LATIN AMERICAN NATIONS

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A fresh look at the origins of indigenous Latin American nations

The Formation of Latin American Nations From Late Antiquity to Early Modernity By Thomas Ward This pioneering work brings the pre-Columbian and colonial history of Latin America home: rather than starting out in Spain and following Columbus and the conquistadores as they “discover” New World peoples, The Formation of Latin American Nations begins with the Mesoamerican and South American nations as they were before the advent of European colonialism—and only then moves on to the sixteenth-century Spanish arrival and its impact.

OCTOBER $55.00s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6150-1 392 PAGES, 6 × 9 7 ILLUS., 8 MAPS LATIN AMERICA

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THE HUASTECA Culture, History, and Interregional Exchange Edited by Katherine A. Faust and Kim N. Richter $55.00s Cloth 978-0-8061-4704-8 INDIANS AND THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF COLONIAL CENTRAL AMERICA, 1670–1810 By Robert W. Patch $36.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4400-9 “STRANGE LANDS AND DIFFERENT PEOPLES” Spaniards and Indians in Colonial Guatemala By W. George Lovell and Christopher H. Lutz $34.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4390-3

To form a clearer picture of precolonial Latin America, Thomas Ward reads between the lines in the “Chronicles of the Indies,” filling in the blanks with information derived from archaeology, anthropology, genetics, and commonsense logic. Although he finds fascinating points of comparison among the K’iche’ Maya in Central America, the polities (señoríos) of Colombia, and the Chimú of the northern Peruvian coast, Ward focuses on two of the best-known peoples: the Nahua (Aztec) of Central Mexico and the Inka of the Andes. His study privileges indigenous-identified authors such as Diego Muñoz Camargo, Fernando de Alva Ixtlilxóchitl, Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, and Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala while it also consults Spanish chroniclers like Hernán Cortés, Bernal Diaz del Castillo, Pedro Cieza de León, and Bartolomé de las Casas. The nation-forming processes that Ward theorizes feature two forms of cultural appropriation: the horizontal, in which nations appropriate people and customs from adjacent cultures, and the vertical, in which nations dig into their own past to fortify their concept of exceptionality. In defining these processes, Ward eschews the most common measure, race, instead opting for the Nahua altepetl, the Inka panaka, and the K’iche’ amaq’. His work thus approaches the nation both as the indigenous people conceptualized it and with terminology that would have been familiar to them before and after contact with the Spanish. The result is a truly decolonial account of the formation and organization of Latin American nations, one that puts the indigenous perspective at its center. Thomas Ward is Professor of Spanish and Director of the Latin American and Latino Studies Program at Loyola University Maryland. He is the author, editor, or translator of numerous Spanish-language works on culture, colonialism, globalization, and the nation.


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Guardians of Idolatry Gods, Demons, and Priests in Hernando Ruiz de Alarcón’s Treatise on the Heathen Superstitions By Viviana Díaz Balsera In 1629, Catholic priest Hernando Ruiz de Alarcón produced the Treatise on the Heathen Superstitions that Today Live Among the Indians Native to This New Spain to aid the church in its abolishment of native Nahua religious practices. The bilingual Nahuatl-Spanish Treatise collected diverse incantations, or nahualtocaitl, used to conjure Mesoamerican deities for daily sustenance and medical activities. Today this work is recognized as one of the most significant firsthand records of indigenous religious practices in post-conquest Mexico. Yet, as Viviana Díaz Balsera argues in Guardians of Idolatry, the selection process for the incantations recorded in the Treatise reflects two sites of agency: Ruiz de Alarcón’s desire to present the most flagrant examples of Nahua “demonic” practices, and Nahua efforts to share benign nahualtocaitl in order to preserve their pre-conquest traditions while negotiating with colonial Christian hegemony. Guardians of Idolatry offers readers a rare, in-depth look at the nahualtocaitl and the native cosmogonies, beliefs, and medical practices they reveal. Through close reading of four incantations—for safe travel, maguey sap harvesting, bow-andarrow deer hunting, and divination through maize kernels—Díaz Balsera shows the nuances of a Nahua spiritual world populated by intelligent superhuman and nonhuman entities that directly responded to human appeals for intercession. She also addresses Jacinto de la Serna’s Manual for Ministers of These Indians (1656), an elaborate commentary on the Treatise. Guardians of Idolatry tells a compelling story of the robust presence of a unique form of Postclassic Mesoamerican ritual knowledge, fully operative one hundred years after the incursion of Christianity in south Central Mexico. Together, Ruiz de Alarcón’s Treatise and de la Serna’s Manual reveal the highly sophisticated language of the nahualtocaitl, and the disparate ways in which both colonizers and resilient indigenous agents contributed to the conservation of Mesoamerican epistemology. Viviana Díaz Balsera is Professor of Spanish at the University of Miami and the author of The Pyramid under the Cross: Franciscan Discourses of Evangelization and the Nahua Christian Subject in Sixteenth-Century Mexico.

NOVEMBER $45.00s CLOTH 978-0-8061-6040-5 224 PAGES, 6 × 9 4 B&W ILLUS. LATIN AMERICA/RELIGION

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TREATISE ON THE HEATHEN SUPERSTITIONS That Today Live Among the Indians Native to This New Spain, 1629 By Hernando Ruiz de Alarcón $39.95s Paper 978-0-8061-2031-7 AZTECS ON STAGE Religious Theater in Colonial Mexico Translated and edited by Louise M. Burkhart $24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4209-8 AZTEC THOUGHT AND CULTURE A Study of the Ancient Nahuatl Mind By Miguel León-Portilla $26.95 Paper 978-0-8061-2295-3

DÍAZ BALSERA GUARDIANS OF IDOLATRY

Offers insight into indigenous worldview in seventeenth-century colonial Mexico


PEEK HERODOTUS, HISTORIES, BOOK V

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NEW BOOKS FALL/WINTER 2018

A one-stop resource to a foundational text of the classical world

Herodotus, Histories, Book V Text, Commentary, and Vocabulary By Philip S. Peek History begins with Herodotus (485–425 b.c.e.). Born in Halikarnassos, a gateway between the Greek and Persian worlds, Herodotus in his Histories narrates the great historical struggle between the Persian Empire and the Greek-speaking citystates at the dawn of the classical era. Herodotus does not merely list events or tell tales; his history inquires into the causes of events and casts its net wide to include ethnography and legend as well as political and military history.

VOLUME 56 IN THE OKLAHOMA SERIES IN CLASSICAL CULTURE SERIES

OCTOBER $34.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-6103-7 280 PAGES, 6 × 9 1 MAP, 1 TABLE CLASSICAL STUDIES/GREEK

Of Related Interest

EURIPIDES’ ALCESTIS By Euripides $49.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-3458-1 $26.95s Paper 978-0-8061-3574-8 PLATO’S PHAEDRUS A Commentary for Greek Readers By Paul Ryan $19.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4259-3 THE ESSENTIALS OF GREEK GRAMMAR A Reference for Intermediate Readers of Attic Greek By Louise Pratt $24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4143-5

Book V of the Histories focuses on the Persians and their expansion into Thrakia and Makedonia, as well as their conflict with the Greeks of Ionia. Beginning in the timeless legends of prehistory, Herodotus discusses the customs of the Thrakians, offers insight into Sparta’s mindset, and narrates the struggle to restore democracy at Athens after the reign of the tyrant Peisistratos. The narrative of Book V sprawls over Asia, Africa, and Europe, naming more than 350 people and places. The reader will find in Herodotus a literate, keenly observant, wide-ranging guide to a time when Persia ruled 40 percent of the world’s population and was confronted by an uneasy and fragile alliance of Greek city-states. In his introduction to the text and commentary, Philip S. Peek outlines a process by which students of ancient Greek can develop translation and reading skills. For students’ convenience, Peek pairs the Greek text with the commentary and includes in the book’s appendices a case and function chart, an explanation of infinitives, a summary of the subjunctive and optative moods, a list of parsing terms, and a list of the five hundred most commonly occurring Greek words. A comprehensive glossary rounds out the volume. As further aids to students, running vocabulary for each text section and a generalized list of the principal parts of verbs can be downloaded from oupress.com. Philip S. Peek is Associate Professor of Classics at Bowling Green State University where he teaches Ancient Greek, Latin, and Classical Civilization.


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NEW IN PAPERBACK

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Eyewitness to the Fetterman Fight

Powder River Disastrous Opening of the Great Sioux War By Paul L. Hedren

Indian Views Edited by John H. Monnett Firsthand accounts from the infamous battle’s only survivors

John H. Monnett is Professor Emeritus of History at Metropolitan State University, Denver, and the author of several books, including Massacre at Cheyenne Hole: Lieutenant Austin Henely and the Sappa Creek Controversy and Tell Them We Are Going Home: The Odyssey of the Northern Cheyennes. AUGUST $29.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-5582-1 $21.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-6188-4 248 PAGES, 6 × 9 15 B&W ILLUS., 2 MAPS AMERICAN INDIAN/U.S. HISTORY

Historian Paul L. Hedren recounts the wintertime Big Horn Expedition and its great battle, along with stories of the Northern Cheyennes and their elusive leader Old Bear. Hedren tracks both sides of the conflict through a rich array of primary sources, including transcripts of Reynolds’s court-martial and Indian recollections. Forty photographs, many previously unpublished, and five new maps detail the action from start to ignominious conclusion. Hedren’s comprehensive account takes Powder River out of the shadows and reveals how much this critical battle tells us about the army’s policy and performance in the West, and about the debacle soon to follow at the Little Big Horn. Paul L. Hedren is a retired National Park Service superintendent residing in Omaha, Nebraska. He is the author of Fort Laramie and the Great Sioux War and Great Sioux War Orders of Battle: How the United States Army Waged War on the Northern Plains, 1876–1877. JULY $34.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-5383-4 $24.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-6189-1 472 PAGES, 6 × 9 40 B&W ILLUS., 5 MAPS U.S. HISTORY/MILITARY HISTORY

HEDREN POWDER RIVER

Traditional histories have laid the blame for Fetterman’s 1866 defeat on his incompetent leadership, implying the Indians succeeded because of Fetterman’s failings. But Monnett’s sources paint another picture. Narratives like Miniconjou Lakota warrior White Bull’s suggest Fetterman’s actions were not seen as rash or reprehensible until much later. His men did not flee the field in panic, but fought bravely to the end. The Indian warriors used their knowledge of the terrain to carefully plan and execute an ambush, ensuring them victory.

The Great Sioux War of 1876–77 began at daybreak on March 17, 1876, when Colonel Joseph J. Reynolds and six cavalry companies struck a village of Northern Cheyennes— Sioux allies—propelling the Northern Plains tribes into war. The ensuing last stand of the Sioux against Anglo-American settlement of their homeland spanned eighteen months, ranged across more than twenty battle and skirmish sites, and cost hundreds of lives on both sides and many millions of dollars. And it all began at Powder River.

MONNETT EYEWITNESS TO THE FETTERMAN FIGHT

The Fetterman Fight ranks among the most crushing defeats suffered by the U.S. Army in the nineteenth-century West. On December 21, 1866—during Red Cloud’s War (1866–1868)—a well-organized force of 1,500 to 2,000 Oglala Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, and Arapaho warriors annihilated a detachment of seventy-nine infantry and cavalry soldiers— among them Captain William Judd Fetterman—and two civilian contractors. With no survivors on the U.S. side, the only eyewitness accounts of the battle came from Lakota and Cheyenne participants. Here, award-winning historian John H. Monnett presents these Native views, drawn from previously published sources and newly discovered interviews with Oglala and Cheyenne warriors and leaders.

The battle that anticipated the catastrophe at the Little Big Horn


38

NEW BOOKS FALL/WINTER 2018

NEW IN PAPERBACK

NEW IN PAPERBACK

Orozco

Juan Bautista de Anza

When Law Was in the Holster

The Life and Death of a Mexican Revolutionary By Raymond Caballero

The King’s Governor in New Mexico By Carlos R. Herrera

The Frontier Life of Bob Paul By John Boessenecker

As governor of New Mexico from 1778 to 1788, Juan Bautista de Anza enacted changes that helped preserve it as a Spanish territory. Best known for his travels to California as a young man, Anza was more than an explorer. Devoted equally to the Spanish empire and the region he knew intimately, Governor Anza shaped the history of New Mexico.

Lawman Bob Paul (1830–1901) cast a long shadow in frontier California and Arizona Territory. Today he is remembered for his friendship with Wyatt Earp and involvement in the 1881 gunfight near the OK Corral.

JUAN BAUTISTA DE ANZA

WHEN LAW WAS IN THE HOLSTER

NEW IN PAPERBACK

On August 31, 1915, a Texas posse lynched five “horse thieves.” One of them, it turned out, was General Pascual Orozco Jr., military hero of the Mexican Revolution. Was he a desperado or a hero? Orozco’s death proved as controversial as his storied life, a career of mysterious contradictions.

OROZCO

Historian Raymond Caballero tells the full story of this revolutionary’s meteoric rise and ignominious descent, including the purposely obscured circumstances of his death at the hands of a lone, murderous lawman. From the circumstances of his ascent, to revelations about his treachery, to the true details of his death, Orozco at last emerges in all his complexity and significance. Raymond Caballero is an independent historian whose research has long focused on Mexico, especially the Mexican Revolution. NOVEMBER $34.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-5755-9 $24.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-6190-7 352 PAGES, 6 × 9 14 B&W ILLUS., 2 MAPS, 1 GRAPH BIOGRAPHY/MILITARY HISTORY

When raiding tribes threatened the colony, Anza rode into battle, killing the great Comanche war chief Cuerno Verde in 1779 and engineering a peace treaty in 1786. Charged with militarizing New Mexico, Anza curtailed the social, political, and economic power Franciscans had long enjoyed and increased Spain’s authority in the region. Carlos R. Herrera is Professor of History and Director of the Borderlands Institute at San Diego State University–Imperial Valley. NOVEMBER $29.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4644-7 $21.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-6191-4 320 PAGES, 6 × 9 10 B&W ILLUS., 2 MAPS BIOGRAPHY

Award-winning historian John Boessenecker begins with Paul’s boyhood adventures as a whaler in the South Pacific, then traces his journey to Gold Rush California where he was a lawman, Wells Fargo shotgun messenger, and detective. In the 1880s, Paul became sheriff of Pima County, Arizona, and a railroad detective. In 1890 President Harrison appointed him U.S. marshal of Arizona Territory. Bob Paul’s story illuminates frontier politics, Mexican-U.S. relations, vigilantism, and western justice. San Francisco attorney John Boessenecker is the author of Lawman: The Life and Times of Harry Morse, 1835–1912 and Bandido: The Life and Times of Tiburcio Vasquez. NOVEMBER $29.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4285-2 $24.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-6193-8 504 PAGES, 6 × 9 69 B&W ILLUS., 2 MAPS BIOGRAPHY/U.S. HISTORY


39

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NEW IN PAPERBACK

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Trills in the Bach Cello Suites

Standing in Their Own Light

The Second Pearl Harbor

A Handbook for Performers By Jerome Carrington Foreword by Lynn Harrell

African American Patriots in the American Revolution By Judith L. Van Buskirk

The West Loch Disaster, May 21, 1944 By Gene Eric Salecker

The Cello Suites of Johann Sebastian Bach contain some one hundred trills, many open to diverse execution and most sparking controversy among musicians. Accomplished cellist Jerome Carrington examines interpretations of the trills, comparing them with contemporary performance practice.

The Revolutionary War encompassed two struggles: one for freedom from British rule, and another for the liberty of thousands of African Americans who fought in the Continental Army. Because these veterans left few letters or diaries, their story is largely untold. This volume restores African American patriots to their rightful place in the historical struggle for independence and the end of racial oppression.

TRILLS IN THE BACH CELLO SUITES

NEW IN PAPERBACK

JULY $40.00s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4001-8 $29.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-6174-7 216 PAGES, 8.5 × 11 254 MUSICAL EXAMPLES MUSIC

Judith L. Van Buskirk is Professor of History at the State University of New York, Cortland, and the author of Generous Enemies: Patriots and Loyalists in Revolutionary New York. JULY $34.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-5635-4 $24.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-6187-7 312 PAGES, 6 × 9 13 B&W ILLUS., 1 TABLE U.S. HISTORY/MILITARY HISTORY VOLUME 59 IN THE CAMPAIGNS AND COMMANDERS SERIES

Military historian Gene Eric Salecker is the author of Disaster on the Mississippi: The Sultana Explosion, April 27, 1865 and Blossoming Silk against the Rising Sun: U.S. and Japanese Paratroopers in the Pacific in World War II. NOVEMBER $34.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4476-4 $21.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-6192-1 296 PAGES, 6 × 9 39 B&W ILLUS., 5 MAPS U.S. HISTORY

THE SECOND PEARL HARBOR

Jerome Carrington was principal cellist of three major American symphonies and served on the cello faculty in the Juilliard School. He now resides in upstate New York. Renowned cellist Lynn Harrell has performed as soloist with nearly every distinguished symphony orchestra worldwide. His discography includes the complete Bach Cello Suites.

Black veterans claimed an American identity after their sacrifices for American independence. And abolitionists adopted the rhetoric of revolution, personal autonomy, and freedom. Judith L. Van Buskirk retrieves black patriots’ experiences from obscurity, revealing their importance in the fight for equal rights.

To ensure the success of those still able to depart, the navy issued a censorship order, keeping the disaster secret for seventy years. This book re-creates the events leading to the explosion and the drama afterward, restoring a missing chapter to World War II history.

STANDING IN THEIR OWN LIGHT

Carrington annotates every trill in the Cello Suites, finding the most historically accurate execution and offering a method that includes analysis of harmonic structure. Bursting with new ideas for performers and music theorists, this handbook renews our appreciation for Bach’s genius.

In May 1944, the Fifth Fleet Amphibious Force was preparing to invade Saipan and put Japanese cities within range of B-29 bombers. The navy had assembled a fleet of landing ship tanks in the West Loch section of Pearl Harbor, but on May 21 an explosion spread fire and chaos through the ordnance-packed vessels. More than 500 personnel were killed or injured.


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RESERVATIONS, REMOVAL,

ARIZONA’S DEADLIEST

BORN TO SERVE

TRANSNATIONAL FRONTIERS

ALBERT BIERSTADT

AND REFORM

GUNFIGHT

A History of Texas

The American West in France

Witness to a Changing West

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Southern California, 1878–1903

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PIONEERS OF PROMOTION

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THROUGH OUR COUNTRY

Rustlers, Rangers, and Regulars on

The Struggle for South

How Press Agents for Buffalo

BUFFALO CULTURES

Lakota Voices of the Ghost Dance

the Lower Rio Grande, 1861–1877

Vietnam, 1968–1975

Bill, P. T. Barnum, and the

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FIVE YEARS IN AMERICA

Law, Virtue, and Violence in the

Historical Trauma in

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COLONIAL INTIMACIES

PRAIRIE POWER

FRUSTRATED AMBITION

PRESIDENTS WHO SHAPED

PATRIOT PRIESTS

Interethnic Kinship, Sexuality,

Student Activism,

General Vicente Lim and

THE AMERICAN WEST

French Catholic Clergy and

and Marriage in Southern

Counterculture, and Backlash

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By Glenda Riley and

National Identity in World War I

California, 1769–1885

in Oklahoma, 1962–1972

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THE DUKES OF DUVAL COUNTY

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Edward Schieffelin’s Own Story

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UTAH AND THE

EMORY UPTON

PAUL PLETKA

THE GREAT MEDICINE

LIVE FROM MEDICINE PARK

AMERICAN CIVIL WAR

Misunderstood Reformer

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44

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Photograph by Harvey Payne

Index A

G

P

Alfalfa Bill, Dorman, 15 All Because of a Mormon Cow, McDermott/Paul/Lowry, 22 Anaya, ChupaCabra Meets Billy the Kid, 4 Art of the West, Scott, 12

González, Crossing Vines, 9 Guardians of Idolatry, Díaz Balsera, 35

Pagán, Valley of the Guns, 7 Painters of the Northwest, Impert, 10 Peek, Herodotus, Histories, Book V, 36 Pérez, Circulación, 14 Plastic Indian, Conley, 8 Powder River, Hedren, 37

B Bad Peace and a Good War, A, Santiago, 26 Beckett, A British Profession of Arms, 31 Boessenecker, When Law Was in the Holster, 38 British Profession of Arms, A, Beckett, 31 Britz/Nichols, Tombstone, Deadwood, and Dodge City, 19

C Caballero, Orozco, 38 Carrington, Trills in the Bach Cello Suites, 39 Cashion, Lone Star Mind, 17 Centering Modernism, Siddons, 11 Charles M. Russell, Troccoli, 13 Chisholm Trail, The, Sherow, 5 ChupaCabra Meets Billy the Kid, Anaya, 4 Circulación, Pérez, 14 Coast-to-Coast Empire, Kiser, 18 Conides, Made to Order, 33 Conley, Plastic Indian, 8 Color Coded, Nugent, 23 Crossing Vines, González, 9

D Davies, Spying for Wellington, 30 Díaz Balsera, Guardian of Idolatry, 35 Dorman, Alfalfa Bill, 15

E 1889, Hightower, 1 Eyewitness to the Fetterman Fight, Monnett, 37

F Flitner, My Ranch, Too, 6 For the Birds, Ogilvie, 16 Formation of Latin American Nations, The, Ward, 34 Foster, Stigma Cities, 20

H Hedren, Powder River, 37 Herodotus, Histories, Book V, Peek, 36 Herrera, Juan Bautista de Anza, 38 Hightower, 1889, 1 Holtby, Lest We Forget, 25

I Impert, Painters of the Northwest, 10 In the Year of the Tiger, Waddell, 28

J Juan Bautista de Anza, Herrera, 38

K Kiser, Coast-to-Coast Empire, 18

L Lest We Forget, Holtby, 25 Lone Star Mind, Cashion, 17 Love Can Be, McCune/Miller, 2

M Made to Order, Conides, 33 Maley, Wanderer on the American Frontier, 21 Many Nations under Many Gods, Morman, 24 McCune/Miller, Love Can Be, 2 McDermott/Paul/Lowry, All Because of a Mormon Cow, 22 Monnett, Eyewitness to the Fetterman Fight, 37 Morman, Many Nations under Many Gods, 24 My Ranch, Too, Flitner, 6

N Nelson, White Hat, 27 Nugent, Color Coded, 23

O Ogilvie, For the Birds, 16 Orozco, Caballero, 38

R Rise and Fall of an Officer Corps, The, Setzekorn, 29 Ronda/Payne, Visions of the Tallgrass, 3

S Salecker, The Second Pearl Harbor, 39 Santiago, A Bad Peace and a Good War, 26 Scott, Art of the West, 12 Second Pearl Harbor, The, Salecker, 39 Setzekorn, The Rise and Fall of an Officer Corps, 29 Sherow, The Chisholm Trail, 5 Siddons, Centering Modernism, 11 Spying for Wellington, Davies, 30 Standing in Their Own Light, Van Buskirk, 39 Stigma Cities, Foster, 20 Sustaining the Divine in Mexico Tenochtitlan, Truitt, 32

T Tombstone, Deadwood, and Dodge City, Britz/Nichols, 19 Trills in the Bach Cello Suites, Carrington, 39 Troccoli, Charles M. Russell, 13 Truitt, Sustaining the Divine in Mexico Tenochtitlan, 32

V Valley of the Guns, Pagán, 7 Van Buskirk, Standing in Their Own Light, 39 Visions of the Tallgrass, Ronda/Payne, 3

W Waddell, In the Year of the Tiger, 28 Wanderer on the American Frontier, Maley, 21 Ward, The Formation of Latin American Nations, 34 When Law Was in the Holster, Boessenecker, 38 White Hat, Nelson, 27


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