UNC Press Fall 2012 Catalog

Page 1

the university of north carolina press FALL | WINTER 2012-2013


In 1922, on the campus of the nation’s oldest state university, thirteen educators and civic leaders met to establish a publishing house. Their creation, the University of North Carolina Press, was the first university press in the South and one of the first in the nation. Today, the UNC Press imprint is recognized worldwide. This year, as we mark nine decades of publishing excellence, we celebrate our distinguished history while charting a dynamic future. Visit our website to learn about new books, sales, and ongoing celebrations. You can also learn more about the new ways we’re delivering our content, from Enduring Editions and DocSouth Books to enhanced e-books, E-Book Shorts, and Omnibus E-book Editions. Visit SouthernGateways.com and UNCPressCivilWar150.com, and keep up with our authors and the latest news at UNCPressBlog.com. For information on how you can be a part of this story—either through planned or outright gifts—please visit our website or contact our director of development, Joanna Ruth Marsland, at 919-962-0924 or Joanna_Ruth_Marsland@unc.edu.

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Civil War

Features

Subject Index African American Studies 2, 3, 5, 23, 25-27, 33, 36 American History 2-5, 13-22, 26-29, 31, 34-38 American Studies 12, 14-16, 23-25, 29, 34 Art & Architecture 17, 24, 30, 38 Biography 2, 3, 13, 18, 22, 27, 35 Civil War 1-3, 22, 36 Cookbooks 6-9, 37 Environmental Studies 11 Folklore 16 Gender Studies 12, 22, 34, 36

www.uncpress.unc.edu

Global Studies 38 Indigenous Studies 10, 30, 31, 33 Latin American & Caribbean Studies 20, 25, 30 Legal History 19, 27 Literary Studies 14, 22 Military History 1, 32 Photography 4, 11 Religious Studies 5, 28, 29 Science & Medicine 24, 26, 34 Southern Studies 2, 3, 24, 34, 35, 38

www.uncpressblog.com

E-Book Shorts and Omnibus Editions 39 DocSouth Books 40 Recent and Recommended 41 Award-Winning Books 42 UNC Press Journals 43 Sales Information 44 Author/Title Index 45

Cover photographs © Takao Bill Manbo From Colors of Confinement, see page 4

facebook.com/UNCPress

@uncpressblog


civil war | military history

War on the Waters The Union and Confederate Navies, 1861–1865

james m. mcpherson A sweeping history of the Civil War navies in action Although previously undervalued for their strategic impact because they represented only a small percentage of total forces, the Union and Confederate navies were crucial to the outcome of the Civil War. In War on the Waters, James M. McPherson has crafted an enlightening, at times harrowing, and ultimately thrilling account of the war’s naval campaigns and their military leaders. McPherson recounts how the Union navy’s blockade of the Confederate coast, leaky as a sieve in the war’s early months, became increasingly effective as it choked off vital imports and exports. Meanwhile, the Confederate navy, dwarfed by its giant adversary, demonstrated daring and military innovation. Commerce raiders sank Union ships and drove the American merchant marine from the high seas. Southern ironclads sent several Union warships to the bottom, naval mines sank many more, and the Confederates deployed the world’s first submarine to sink an enemy vessel. But in the end, it was the Union navy that won some of the war’s most important strategic victories—as an essential partner to the army on the ground at Fort Donelson, Vicksburg, Port Hudson, Mobile Bay, and Fort Fisher, and all by itself at Port Royal, Fort Henry, New Orleans, and Memphis. This elegantly written history by the preeminent historian of the Civil War is full of dramatic reversals of fortune, individual heroism, and executive determination. It promises to become a classic of Civil War literature.

james m. mcpherson taught U.S. history at Princeton University for forty-two years and is author of more than a dozen books on the era of the Civil War. His books have won a Pulitzer Prize and two Lincoln Prizes. Littlefield History of the Civil War Era

Publicity

• Advance Readers Copies available

• Possible first serial in Civil War Times, North & South or Blue & Gray • East coast author tour/events

• Major print reviews and features • Online publicity campaign

National Advertising

• New York Review of Books, New York Times Book Review, Civil War Times, North & South, Blue & Gray, America’s Civil War, Civil War History, and other Civil War publications

September 2012

978-0-8078-3588-3, $35.00t Cloth 978-0-8078-3732-0 $35.00 BOOK 978-0-8078-3815-0 $50.00s Large-Print Edition

Approx. 304 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 23 illus., 19 maps, notes, bibl., index

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Co-op Available

Wonderfully written and researched. . . . Balanced, objective, and highly readable.

From Frank Leslie’s Illustrated History of the Civil War

—Howard Jones, University of Alabama

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 1


american history | civil war | north carolina

Two Captains from Carolina Moses Grandy, John Newland Maffitt, and the Coming of the Civil War A Nonfiction Novel

bland simpson An epic tale of race and war on the waterways of North Carolina

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• New York Review of Books, Our State, Civil War Times, North & South, Blue & Gray, America’s Civil War, Civil War History, and other Civil War publications

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In Two Captains from Carolina, Bland Simpson twines together the lives of two accomplished nineteenth-century mariners from North Carolina—one African American, one Irish American. Though Moses Grandy (ca. 1791–ca. 1850) and John Newland Maffitt Jr. (1819–1886) never met, their stories bring to vivid life the saga of race and maritime culture in the antebellum and Civil War-era South. With his lyrical prose and inimitable voice, Bland Simpson offers readers a grand tale of the striving human spirit and the great divide that nearly sundered the nation. Grandy, born a slave, captained freightboats on the Dismal Swamp Canal and bought his freedom three times before he finally gained it. He became involved in Boston abolitionism and ultimately appeared before the General Anti-Slavery Convention in London in 1843. As a child, Maffitt was sent from his North Carolina home to a northern boarding school, and at thirteen he was appointed midshipman in the U.S. Navy, where he had a distinguished career. After North Carolina seceded from the Union, he enlisted in the Confederate navy and became a legendary blockade runner and raider. Both Grandy and Maffitt made names for themselves as they navigated very different routes through the turbulent waters of antebellum America.

bland simpson is Kenan Distinguished Professor of English and Creative Writing at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and longtime member of the Tony Award-winning Red Clay Ramblers. He is author of numerous books, including Into the Sound Country: A Carolinian’s Coastal Plain, Ghost Ship of Diamond Shoals: The Mystery of the Carroll A. Deering, and The Coasts of Carolina: Seaside to Sound Country.

September 2012

978-0-8078-3585-2, $28.00t Cloth 978-0-8078-3810-5, $28.00 BOOK

Simpson’s compelling portraits enrich our understanding of what life was like two centuries ago even as they address themes that are very much still with us today—race, poverty, hardship, and political and class conflict, to name a few.

Approx. 192 pp., 51⁄2 x 81⁄2, 26 illus., appends., bibl., index

—Jack Betts, retired associate editor of the Charlotte Observer

2 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu

also available

The Coasts of Carolina

Seaside to Sound Country Bland Simpson and Scott D. Taylor ISBN 978-0-8078-3439-8 $32.00t Cloth ISBN 978-0-8078-9946-5 $32.00 BOOK


biography | civil war | african american studies

The Fire of Freedom Abraham Galloway and the Slaves’ Civil War

david s. cecelski For the enslaved, it was always about freedom Abraham H. Galloway (1837–70) was a fiery young slave rebel, radical abolitionist, and Union spy who rose out of bondage to become one of the most significant and stirring black leaders in the South during the Civil War. Throughout his brief, mercurial life, Galloway fought against slavery and injustice. He risked his life behind enemy lines, recruited black soldiers for the North, and fought racism in the Union army’s ranks. He also stood at the forefront of an African American political movement that flourished in the Union-occupied parts of North Carolina, even leading a historic delegation of black southerners to the White House to meet with President Lincoln and to demand the full rights of citizenship. He later became one of the first black men elected to the North Carolina legislature. Long hidden from history, Galloway’s story reveals a war unfamiliar to most of us. As David Cecelski writes, “Galloway’s Civil War was a slave insurgency, a war of liberation that was the culmination of generations of perseverance and faith.” This riveting portrait illuminates Galloway’s life and deepens our insight into the Civil War and Reconstruction as experienced by African Americans in the South. Historian david s. cecelski is author, most recently, of The Waterman’s Song: Slavery and Freedom in Maritime North Carolina. He lives in Durham, N.C.

Marketing Campaign Publicity

• Advance Readers Copies available

• Possible first serial in North & South or America’s Civil War • Major print reviews and features

September 2012

• Author tour/events

978-0-8078-3566-1, $30.00t Cloth 978-0-8078-3812-9, $30.00 BOOK

• Online publicity campaign

Approx. 352 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 17 illus., 4 maps, notes, bibl., index

National Advertising

• New York Review of Books, New York Times Book Review, Civil War Times, North & South, Blue & Gray, America’s Civil War, Civil War History, and other Civil War publications

Co-op Available

also available

The Waterman’s Song

Slavery and Freedom in Maritime North Carolina David S. Cecelski ISBN 978-0-8078-4972-9 $27.95s Paper

An excellent work . . . by a top–flight historian. I am deeply impressed by the detective work that went into discovering Galloway’s story.

—Edward E. Baptist, Cornell University

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 3


american history | photography | documentary studies

Colors of Confinement Rare Kodachrome Photographs of Japanese American Incarceration in World War II

edited by eric l. muller With photographs by Bill Manbo

Never-before-seen color images of life at Heart Mountain Relocation Center

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• New York Review of Books, New York Times Book Review, Chronicle of Higher Education

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The color photographs of Bill Manbo are at once beautiful, poignant, and stinging with irony. . . . These are pictures of resilience and fortitude from a dark chapter of American history. —George Takei

In 1942, Bill Manbo and his family were forced from their Hollywood home into the Japanese American internment camp at Heart Mountain in Wyoming. While there, Manbo documented both the bleakness and beauty of his surroundings using Kodachrome film—a technology then just seven years old—to capture community celebrations and to record his family’s struggle to maintain a normal life under the harsh conditions of racial imprisonment. Colors of Confinement showcases sixty-five stunning images from this extremely rare collection of color photographs, presented along with three interpretive essays by leading scholars and a reflective, personal essay by a former Heart Mountain internee. The subjects of these haunting photos are the routine fare of an amateur photographer: parades, cultural events, people at play, Manbo’s son. But the images are set against the backdrop of the barbed-wire enclosure surrounding the Heart Mountain Relocation Center and the dramatic expanse of Wyoming sky and landscape. The accompanying essays illuminate these scenes as they trace a tumultuous history unfolding just beyond the camera’s lens, giving readers insight into Japanese American cultural life and the stark realities of life in the camps.

eric l. muller is Dan K. Moore Distinguished Professor in Jurisprudence and Ethics at the University of North Carolina School of Law and director of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s Center for Faculty Excellence. He is author of American Inquisition: The Hunt for Japanese American Disloyalty in World War II and Free to Die for Their Country: The Story of the Japanese American Draft Resisters in World War II. Documentary Arts and Culture Published in association with the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University

August 2012

978-0-8078-3573-9, $35.00t Cloth 978-0-8078-3758-0, $35.00 BOOK Approx. 144 pp., 10 x 9, 65 color and 6 b&w illus., notes, index

Photograph © 2012 Takao Bill Manbo

4 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu


religious studies | american history

The Color of Christ The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America

edward j. blum and paul harvey What happened when Jesus encountered America’s racial turmoil How is it that in America the image of Jesus Christ has been used both to justify the atrocities of white supremacy and to inspire the righteousness of civil rights crusades? In The Color of Christ, Edward J. Blum and Paul Harvey weave a tapestry of American dreams and visions—from witch hunts to web pages, Harlem to Hollywood, slave cabins to South Park, Mormon revelations to Indian reservations—to show how Americans remade the Son of God visually time and again into a sacred symbol of their greatest aspirations, deepest terrors, and mightiest strivings for racial power and justice. The Color of Christ uncovers how, in a country founded by Puritans who destroyed depictions of Jesus, Americans came to believe in the whiteness of Christ. Some envisioned a white Christ who would sanctify the exploitation of Native Americans and African Americans and bless imperial expansion. Many others gazed at a messiah, not necessarily white, who was willing and able to confront white supremacy. The color of Christ still symbolizes America’s most combustible divisions, revealing the power and malleability of race and religion from colonial times to the presidency of Barack Obama.

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edward j. blum is author of Reforging the White Republic: Race, Religion,

• Advance Readers Copies available

and American Nationalism and associate professor of history at San Diego State University. paul harvey is author of Freedom’s Coming: Religious Cultures and the Shaping of the South from the Civil War through the Civil Rights Era and professor of history at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs.

September 2012

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• Major print reviews and features • Local author events

• Online publicity campaign

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• New York Review of Books, Books and Culture, American Quarterly

978-0-8078-3572-2, $32.50t Cloth 978-0-8078-3737-5, $32.50 BOOK

Co-op Available

Approx. 336 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 19 illus., notes, index

Edward Blum and Paul Harvey’s masterful book is a breath of fresh air in our toxic religious culture of learned ignorance and unlearned bigotry.

—Cornel West

also available Freedom’s Coming

Religious Culture and the Shaping of the South from the Civil War through the Civil Rights Era Paul Harvey ISBN 978-0-8078-5814-1 $24.95s Paper

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 5


cookbook NEW edition

cookbook 20 TH anniversary edition

Jean Anderson’s Preserving Guide

Hoppin’ John’s Lowcountry Cooking

How to Pickle and Preserve, Can and Freeze, Dry and Store Vegetables and Fruits

Recipes and Ruminations from Charleston and the Carolina Coastal Plain

jean anderson

john martin taylor

With a New Preface by the Author

With a New Introduction by the Author An apples-to-zucchini guide to food preservation In this classic born of the back-to-the-land movement, Jean Anderson teaches how to enjoy the bounty of your garden, farmer’s markets, and roadside stands—all year round. You’ll learn which fruits and vegetables are best for canning, freezing, and pickling and, along the way, understand the importance of food safety. Best of all, you’ll find you’re having fun, saving money, and eating well. Jean Anderson’s Preserving Guide not only provides easy-to-follow directions for preserving whatever you grow but also dishes up more than 100 original recipes—for such tried-and-true classics as piccalilli and corn relish and more adventurous fare like caponata, frozen pasta sauce, and carrot marmalade. This step-by-step guidebook brings the expertise of a hands-on master to a whole new do-it-yourself generation of gardeners, cooks, and food lovers. “Ideal for beginners and experienced cooks alike. The former will appreciate her clear instructions and reassuring voice; the latter will love her surefire, sophisticated recipes.” —Andrea Weigl, food writer, Raleigh News and Observer The winner of six best-cookbook awards and a member of the James Beard Cookbook Hall of Fame, jean anderson is author of The American Century Cookbook: The Most Popular Recipes of the Twentieth Century, A Love Affair with Southern Cooking: Recipes and Recollections, and Falling Off the Bone.

August 2012

978-0-8078-3724-5, $24.00t Cloth 978-0-8078-3814-3, $24.00 BOOK

Approx. 240 pp., 61⁄8 x 87⁄8, 7 line drawings 6 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu

The book that launched the Lowcountry culinary revival At oyster roasts and fancy cotillions, in fish camps and cutting-edge restaurants, the people of South Carolina gather to enjoy one of America’s most distinctive cuisines—the delicious, inventive fare of the Lowcountry. In his classic Hoppin’ John’s Lowcountry Cooking, John Martin Taylor brings us 250 authentic and updated recipes for regional favorites, including shrimp and grits, she-crab soup, pickled watermelon rinds, and Frogmore stew. Taylor, who grew up casting shrimp nets in Lowcountry marshes, adds his personal experiences in bringing these dishes to the table and leads readers on a veritable treasure hunt throughout the region, giving us a delightful taste of an extraordinary way of life. “Splendid recipes that should be on a National Registry of Great American Food. It’s a stunner!” —New York Times “No man deserves more credit for Charleston’s culinary resurgence.” —Gourmet

john martin tay lor is owner of HoppinJohns.com and author of four cookbooks, including The Fearless Frying Cookbook.

August 2012

978-0-8078-3725-2, $25.00t Paper 978-0-8078-3757-3, $25.00 BOOK

Approx. 368 pp., 7 x 91⁄4, 1 map, bibl., index


cookbook

Fred Thompson’s Southern Sides 250 Dishes That Really Make the Plate

fred thompson Mouthwatering side dishes that are a joy to cook and eat Side dishes are the very heart and soul of southern cuisine. So proclaims Fred Thompson in this heartfelt love letter to the marvelous foods on the side of the plate. From traditional, like Pableaux’s Red Beans and Rice, to contemporary, like Scuppernong-Glazed Carrots, Thompson’s 250 recipes recommend the virtues of the utterly simple and the totally unexpected. Fred Thompson’s Southern Sides celebrates the sheer joy of cooking and eating these old and new classic dishes. Exploring the importance of side dishes in the cuisine of the American South, Thompson suggests that if you look closely enough, you can find a historical tale of family, culture, and ethnicity in one awesome recipe after another. Twelve richly illustrated chapters feature a full array of produce, grains and beans, fish and meats, and more. The recipes are enhanced by Thompson’s amusing observations, tales of southern living and eating, and straightforward cooking tips. Thompson also provides menus for special occasions throughout the year—for Thanksgiving, you may want to include Twice-Baked Sweet Potatoes with Sage, Sorghum, and Black Walnuts.

fred thompson is a food, wine, and travel writer and is publisher of

Edible Piedmont. He is author of ten cookbooks, including Barbecue Nation: 350 Hot-off-the-Grill, Tried-and-True Recipes from America’s Backyard and The Big Book of Fish and Shellfish: More than 250 Terrific Recipes. He is the Weekend Gourmet columnist for the Raleigh News and Observer.

Publicity

• Advance Readers Copies available • Major print reviews and features, including lifestyle magazines dedicated to food, travel, and southern living

• National radio and television coverage • Author appearances/events throughout the Southeast

September 2012

978-0-8078-3570-8, $35.00t Cloth 978-0-8078-3738-2, $35.00 BOOK

Marketing Campaign

• Online publicity campaign

Approx. 352 pp., 8 x 91⁄4, 43 color plates, 11 sidebars, appends., index

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• New York Review of Books, Gastronomica, Our State, Carolina Country, Carolina Heritage Guide, Southern Cultures

Co-op Available

A book for the ages. Thompson’s strong, knowledgeable voice is a reassuring companion in the kitchen. I am smitten with this book.

—Martha Foose, author of A Southerly Course: Recipes and Stories from Close to Home

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 7


cookbook

Buttermilk A Savor the South™ Cookbook

debbie moose Fantastic biscuits and pancakes—but why stop there? Most southern cooks will agree with Debbie Moose when she writes, “Like a full moon on a warm southern night, buttermilk makes something special happen.” Buttermilk explores the rich possibilities of this beloved ingredient and offers remarkably wide-ranging recipes for its use in cooking and baking—and drinking, including The Vanderbilt Fugitive, a buttermilk-based cocktail. Buttermilk includes fifty recipes—most of which are uniquely southern, with some decidedly cosmopolitan additions—from Fiery Fried Chicken to Lavender Ice Cream to Mango-Spice Lassi. For each recipe, Moose includes background information, snappy anecdotes, and preparation tips. Replete with helpful hints and advice for finding the best quality buttermilk available, this cookbook is indispensable for anyone who wants to learn more about this tangy cooking staple.

Smart, informative, and funny. . . . Full of old favorites as well as new and unusual choices, this little volume will be of much use to home cooks even as it documents our regional culture.

September 2012

978-0-8078-3578-4, $18.00t Cloth 978-0-8078-3748-1, $18.00 BOOK 96 pp., 51⁄2 x 81⁄2, index

Robert Vatz

debbie moose is an award-winning food writer and author of five cookbooks, including Deviled Eggs: 50 Recipes from Simple to Sassy and Potato Salad: 65 Recipes from Classic to Cool. She lives in Raleigh, N.C.

Debbie Moose

—Bill Smith, cookbook author and chef at Crook’s Corner, Chapel Hill

Announcing Our New Savor the South™ Cookbook Collection Each little cookbook in our Savor the South™ cookbook collection is a big celebration of a beloved food or tradition of the American South. From buttermilk to bourbon, pecans to peaches, bacon to catfish, one by one Savor the South™ cookbooks will stock a kitchen shelf with the flavors and culinary wisdom of this popular American regional cuisine. Written by well-known cooks and food lovers, the books brim with personality, the informative and often surprising culinary and natural history of southern foodways, and a treasure of some fifty recipes each—from delicious southern classics to sparkling international renditions that open up worlds of taste for cooks everywhere. You’ll want to collect them all. 8 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu


cookbook

Pecans A Savor the South™ Cookbook

kathleen purvis Recipes for the South’s favorite nut “Show me a recipe with pecans, and I have to try it.” Attributing her own love of this American nut to the state of her birth—Georgia is the nation’s leader in growing pecans—and to the happy fact that her mother “hardly made a cookie, candy, or pan of Sunday dressing without them,” Kathleen Purvis teaches readers how to find, store, cook, and completely enjoy this southern delicacy. Pecans includes fifty-two recipes, ranging from traditional to inventive, from uniquely southern to distinctly international, including Bourbon-Orange Pecans, Buttermilk-Pecan Chicken, Pecan Pralines, and Leche Quemada. In addition to the recipes, Purvis delights readers with the pecan’s culinary history and its intimate connections with southern culture and foodways. Headnotes for the recipes offer humorous personal stories as well as preparation tips such as how to choose accompanying cheeses. Wendy Yang/The Charlotte Observer

k athleen purvis is food editor of the Charlotte Observer and a member of the Southern Foodways Alliance, the Association of Food Journalists, and the James Beard Foundation.

September 2012

978-0-8078-3579-1, $18.00t Cloth 978-0-8078-3747-4, $18.00 BOOK

104 pp., 51⁄2 x 81⁄2, index

Kathleen Purvis

One of the foremost voices in southern food writing celebrates the South’s iconic nut—and does it proud.

—Damon Lee Fowler, author of Classical Southern Cooking and The Savannah Cookbook

Marketing Campaign for the Savor the South™ Cookbook Collection Publicity

• Advance Readers Copies available

• Major print reviews and features, including lifestyle magazines dedicated to food, travel, and southern living • National radio and television coverage

• Author appearances/events throughout the Southeast • Online publicity campaign

National Advertising

• New York Review of Books, Gastronomica, Our State, Carolina Country, Carolina Heritage Guide, Southern Cultures

Co-op Available

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 9


native american & indigenous studies

Cherokee Stories of the Turtle Island Liars’ Club christopher b. teuton

With Hastings Shade, Sammy Still, Sequoyah Guess, and Woody Hansen Illustrations by America Meredith

Cherokee storytelling, oral traditions, and teachings

• Online publicity campaign

Cherokee Stories of the Turtle Island Liars’ Club paints a vivid, fascinating portrait of a community deeply grounded in tradition and dynamically engaged in the present. A collection of interwoven stories, conversations, and teachings about Western Cherokee life, beliefs, and the art of storytelling, the book orchestrates a multilayered conversation between a group of honored Cherokee elders, storytellers, and knowledge-keepers based in Oklahoma and the communities their stories touch. Collaborating with Hastings Shade, Sammy Still, Sequoyah Guess, and Woody Hansen, Cherokee scholar Christopher B. Teuton has assembled the first collection of traditional and contemporary Western Cherokee stories published in over forty years. Not simply a compilation, Cherokee Stories of the Turtle Island Liars’ Club explores the art of Cherokee storytelling, or as it is known in the Cherokee language, gagoga (gah-goh-gá), literally translated as “he or she is lying.” The book reveals how the members of the Liars’ Club understand the power and purposes of oral traditional stories and how these stories articulate Cherokee tradition, or “teachings,” which the storytellers claim are fundamental to a construction of Cherokee selfhood and cultural belonging. Four of the stories are presented in both English and Cherokee.

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christopher b. teuton (Cherokee Nation) is associate professor of American

Marketing Campaign Publicity

• Advance Readers Copies available

• Major print reviews and features

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studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and author of Deep Waters: The Textual Continuum in American Indian Literature.

Co-op Available

October 2012

Shows beyond any doubt how rich, complex, and beautiful Cherokee oral and literary expressions continue to be in this chaotic world. It is easily one of the most important books on Cherokee worldview and tradition ever written.

978-0-8078-3584-5, $30.00t Cloth 978-0-8078-3749-8, $30.00 BOOK

Approx. 272 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 15 line drawings

—Daniel Heath Justice, University of British Columbia

10 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu

Illustration © 2012 America Meredith


environmental studies | photography

Longleaf, Far as the Eye Can See A New Vision of North America’s Richest Forest

bill finch, beth maynor young, rhett johnson, and john c. hall Foreword by E. O. Wilson

An intimate portrait of the tree that defines the South Longleaf forests once covered 92 million acres from Maryland to Florida to Texas. These grand old-growth pines were the “alpha tree” of the largest forest ecosystem in North America and have come to define the southern forest. But logging, suppression of fire, deliberate destruction by landowners, and a complex web of other factors reduced those forests so that longleaf is now found on only 3 million acres. Fortunately, the stately tree is enjoying a resurgence of interest, and longleaf forests are once again spreading across the South. Blending a compelling narrative by writers Bill Finch, Rhett Johnson, and John C. Hall with Beth Maynor Young’s breathtaking photography, Longleaf, Far as the Eye Can See invites readers to experience the astounding beauty and significance of the majestic longleaf ecosystem. The authors explore the interactions of longleaf with other species, the development of longleaf forests prior to human contact, and the influence of the tree on southern culture, as well as ongoing efforts to restore these forests. Part natural history, part conservation advocacy, and part cultural exploration, this book highlights the special nature of longleaf forests and proposes ways to conserve and expand them.

bill finch is senior fellow at the Ocean Foundation and executive director of the Mobile Botanical Gardens. beth maynor young is a conservation photographer. rhett johnson is cofounder and president of the Longleaf Alliance, Inc. john c. hall is curator of the Black Belt Museum at the University of West Alabama. Young and Hall are coauthors of Headwaters: A Journey on Alabama Rivers.

October 2012

978-0-8078-3575-3, $35.00t Cloth 978-0-8078-3809-9, $35.00 BOOK

Approx. 192 pp., 12 x 10, 160 color illus., 7 illus., 1 maps, index

Marketing Campaign Publicity

• Major print reviews and features • Online publicity campaign

• Author tour/events in southeast cities

National Advertising

• Our State, Carolina Country, Carolina Heritage Guide

Co-op Available

The longleaf pine, presiding over the biologically richest region of North America, is well served by this beautifully written book.

—E. O. Wilson, from the Foreword

Photograph © Forest History Society

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 11


american studies | gender studies

When We Were Free to Be Looking Back at a Children’s Classic and the Difference It Made

edited by lori rotskoff and laura l. lovett Prologue by Marlo Thomas

The struggle against stereotypes in children’s popular culture

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• Advance Readers Copies available

• Major print reviews and features • National television and radio coverage

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National Advertising • New York Review of Books, New York Times Book Review

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If you grew up in the era of mood rings and lava lamps, you probably remember Free to Be . . . You and Me—the groundbreaking children’s record, book, and television special that debuted in 1972. Conceived by actress and producer Marlo Thomas and promoted by Ms. magazine, it captured the spirit of the growing women’s movement and inspired girls and boys to challenge stereotypes, value cooperation, and respect diversity. In this lively collection marking the fortieth anniversary of Free to Be . . . You and Me, thirty-two contributors explore the creation and legacy of this popular children’s classic. When We Were Free to Be offers an unprecedented insiders’ view by the original creators, as well as accounts by activists and educators who changed the landscape of childhood in schools, homes, toy stores, and libraries nationwide. Essays document the rise of non-sexist children’s culture during the 1970s and address how Free to Be still speaks to families today. Contributors are Alan Alda, Laura Briggs, Karl Bryant, Becky Friedman, Nancy Gruver, Carol Hall, Carole Hart, Dorothy Pitman Hughes, Joe Kelly, Cheryl Kilodavis, Dionne Kirschner, Francine Klagsbrun, Stephen Lawrence, Laura L. Lovett, Courtney Martin, Karin A. Martin, Tayloe McDonald, Trey McIntyre, Peggy Orenstein, Leslie Paris, Miriam Peskowitz, Deesha Philyaw, Abigail Pogrebin, Letty Cottin Pogrebin, Robin Pogrebin, Patrice Quinn, Lori Rotskoff, Deborah Siegel, Jeremy Adam Smith, Barbara Sprung, Gloria Steinem, and Marlo Thomas.

lori rotskoff teaches at the Barnard Center for Research on Women and is

author of Love on the Rocks: Men, Women, and Alcohol in Post–World War II America.

laur a l. lovett is associate professor of history at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and author of Conceiving the Future: Pronatalism, Reproduction, and the Family in the United States, 1890–1938.

November 2012

978-0-8078-3723-8, $30.00t Cloth 978-0-8078-3755-9, $30.00 BOOK Approx. 368 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 20 illus., notes, bibl., index

12 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu

Personal collection of Marlo Thomas; used with permission


american history | biography

Thomas Nast The Father of Modern Political Cartoons

fiona deans halloran From Santa Claus to Tammany Hall Thomas Nast (1840-1902), the founding father of American political cartooning, is perhaps best known for his cartoons portraying political parties as the Democratic donkey and the Republican elephant. Nast’s legacy also includes a trove of other political cartoons, his successful attack on the machine politics of Tammany Hall in 1871, and his wildly popular illustrations of Santa Claus for Harper’s Weekly magazine. Throughout his career, his drawings provided a pointed critique that forced readers to confront the contradictions around them. In this thoroughgoing and lively biography, Fiona Deans Halloran focuses not only on Nast’s political cartoons for Harper’s but also on his place within the complexities of Gilded Age politics. She highlights the many contradictions in his own life: he was an immigrant who attacked immigrant communities, a supporter of civil rights who portrayed black men as foolish children in need of guidance, and an enemy of corruption and hypocrisy who idolized Ulysses S. Grant. He was a man with powerful friends, including Mark Twain, and powerful enemies, including William M. “Boss” Tweed. Halloran interprets Nast’s work, explores his motivations and ideals, and illuminates Nast’s lasting legacy on American political culture.

fiona deans hallor an teaches history at Rowland Hall-St. Mark’s School in

Salt Lake City, Utah.

January 2013

978-0-8078-3587-6, $35.00t Cloth 978-0-8078-3735-1, $35.00 BOOK

Approx. 352 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 65 illus., notes, bibl., index

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An excellent, lively, well-researched biography of an important and surprisingly little-discussed figure in American politics and art. It’s great fun to read.

—Alice Fahs, University of California, Irvine

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 13


literary studies | american studies

American Night The Literary Left in the Era of the Cold War

alan m. wald Left-wing writers in a time of crisis

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alan m. wald is H. Chandler Davis Collegiate Professor of English Literature and American Culture at the University of Michigan. The rest of his trilogy includes Exiles from a Future Time: The Forging of the Mid-Twentieth-Century Literary Left and Trinity of Passion: The Literary Left and the Antifascist Crusade.

October 2012

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The work of a scholar at the height of his powers. With intensive archival research, oral histories, and extensive reading in primary sources and theoretical approaches, Wald unveils the hidden history of Left culture in the United States. —Paula Rabinowitz, University of Minnesota

American Night, the final volume of an unprecedented trilogy, brings Alan Wald’s multigenerational history of Communist writers to a poignant climax. Using new research to explore the intimate lives of novelists, poets, and critics during the Cold War, Wald reveals a radical community longing for the rebirth of the social vision of the 1930s and struggling with a loss of moral certainty as the Communist worldview was being called into question. The resulting literature, Wald shows, is a haunting record of fracture and struggle linked by common structures of feeling, ones more suggestive of the “negative dialectics” of Theodor Adorno than the traditional social realism of the Left. Establishing new points of contact among Kenneth Fearing, Ann Petry, Alexander Saxton, Richard Wright, Jo Sinclair, Thomas McGrath, and Carlos Bulosan, Wald argues that these writers were in dialogue with psychoanalysis, existentialism, and postwar modernism, often generating moods of piercing emotional acuity and cosmic dissent. He also recounts the contributions of lesser known cultural workers, with a unique accent on gays and lesbians, secular Jews, and people of color. The vexing ambiguities of an era Wald labels “late antifascism” serve to frame an impressive collective biography.

Approx. 416 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4 , 36 illus.

complete the trilogy Trinity of Passion

The Literary Left and the Antifascist Crusade Alan M. Wald ISBN 978-0-8078-3075-8 $39.95s Cloth ISBN 978-0-8078-8236-8 $39.95 BOOK

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The Forging of the MidTwentieth-Century Literary Left Alan M. Wald ISBN 978-0-8078-2683-6 $75.00s Cloth ISBN 978-0-8078-5349-8 $29.95s Paper

14 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu


american studies

The Death and Life of Main Street Small Towns in American Memory, Space, and Community

miles orvell At the center of American values For more than a century, the term “Main Street” has conjured up nostalgic images of American small-town life. Representations exist all around us, from fiction and film to the architecture of shopping malls and Disneyland. All the while, the nation has become increasingly diverse, exposing tensions within this ideal. In The Death and Life of Main Street, Miles Orvell wrestles with the mythic allure of the small town in all its forms, illustrating how Americans continue to reinscribe these images on real places in order to forge consensus about inclusion and civic identity, especially in times of crisis. Orvell underscores the fact that Main Street was never what it seemed; it has always been much more complex than it appears, as he shows in his discussions of figures like Sinclair Lewis, Willa Cather, Frank Capra, Thornton Wilder, Margaret Bourke-White, and Walker Evans. He argues that translating the overly tidy cultural metaphor into real spaces—as has been done in recent decades, especially in the new urbanist planned communities of Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk and Andres Duany—actually diminishes the communitarian ideals at the center of this nostalgic construct. Orvell investigates the way these tensions play out in a variety of cultural realms and explores the rise of literary and artistic traditions that deliberately challenge the tropes and assumptions of small-town ideology and life.

miles orvell is professor of English and American studies at Temple University.

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He is author of several books, including American Photography and The Real Thing: Imitation and Authenticity in American Culture, 1880–1940.

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October 2012

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978-0-8078-3568-5, $39.95s Cloth 978-0-8078-3756-6, $39.95 BOOK

Approx. 288 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4 , 12 color and 90 b&w illus., notes, index

Bold and provocative. Orvell shows how Main Street as an ideology has been suffused with the values of consumerism, thus undercutting the personal bonds originally associated with the term. —Howard Gillette Jr., Rutgers University-Camden

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 15


folklore | material culture

The True Image Gravestone Art and the Culture of Scotch Irish Settlers in the Pennsylvania and Carolina Backcountry

daniel w. patterson Gravestones and Scotch Irish life in the American South A thousand unique gravestones cluster around old Presbyterian churches in the piedmont of the two Carolinas and in central Pennsylvania. Most are the vulnerable legacy of three generations of the Bigham family, Scotch Irish stonecutters whose workshop near Charlotte created the earliest surviving art of British settlers in the region. In The True Image, Daniel Patterson documents the craftsmanship of this group and the current appearance of the stones. In two hundred of his photographs, he records these stones for future generations and compares their iconography and inscriptions with those of other early monuments in the United States, Northern Ireland, and Scotland. Combining his reading of the stones with historical records, previous scholarship, and rich oral lore, Patterson throws new light on the complex culture and experience of the Scotch Irish in America. In so doing, he explores the bright and the dark sides of how they coped with challenges such as backwoods conditions, religious upheavals, war, political conflicts, slavery, and land speculation. He shows that headstones, resting quietly in old graveyards, reveal fresh insights into the character and history of an influential immigrant group.

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daniel w. patterson is Kenan Professor Emeritus of English and Folklore at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is author or editor of nine books, including The Shaker Spiritual, Sounds of the South, and A Tree Accurst: Bobby McMillon and Stories of Frankie Silver.

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October 2012

Describes with clarity a great tradition and sets it in historical context. Patterson has done a tremendous job in bringing this fascinating story and these important works of art to light.

978-0-8078-3567-8, $49.95s Cloth 978-0-8078-3753-5, $49.95 BOOK

Approx. 544 pp., 81⁄4 x 10, 234 illus., 2 maps, notes, bibl., index

—Henry Glassie, Indiana University

Photograph by the author

16 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu


early american history | art & architecture

The Chesapeake House Architectural Investigation by Colonial Williamsburg

edited by cary carson and carl r. lounsbury Bringing new life to historic architecture For more than thirty years, the architectural research department at Colonial Williamsburg has engaged in comprehensive study of early buildings, landscapes, and social history in the Chesapeake region. Its painstaking work has transformed our understanding of building practices in the colonial and early national periods and thereby greatly enriched the experience of visiting historic sites. In this beautifully illustrated volume, a team of historians, curators, and conservators draw on their far-reaching knowledge of historic structures in Virginia and Maryland to illuminate the formation, development, and spread of one of the hallmark building traditions in American architecture. The essays describe how building design, hardware, wall coverings, furniture, and even paint colors telegraphed social signals about the status of builders and owners and choreographed social interactions among everyone who lived or worked in gentry houses, modest farmsteads, and slave quarters. The analyses of materials, finishes, and carpentry work will fascinate old-house buffs, preservationists, and historians alike. The lavish color photography is a delight to behold, and the detailed catalogues of architectural elements provide a reliable guide to the form, style, and chronology of the region’s distinctive historic architecture.

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cary carson is retired vice president of the research division at Colonial Williamsburg. carl r. lounsbury is senior architectural historian at the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation and teaches history at the College of William and Mary.

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Published in association with The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation.

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January 2013

978-0-8078-3577-7, $60.00s Cloth 978-0-8078-3811-2, $60.00 BOOK

Approx. 544 pp., 9 x 12, 150 color and 200 b&w illus., notes, index

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A remarkable book. Cary Carson and his colleagues have transformed the way architectural history fieldwork is performed and in the process have also changed our understanding of the early architecture of the Chesapeake. —Carter L. Hudgins, Clemson University

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 17


early american history | biography

The Memoir of Lieutenant Dumont, 1715–1747 A Sojourner in the French Atlantic

edited by gordon m. sayre and carla zecher The singular life of a self-proclaimed “French Robinson Crusoe”

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In 1719, Jean-François-Benjamin Dumont de Montigny, son of a Paris lawyer, set sail for Louisiana with a commission as a lieutenant after a year in Quebec. During his peregrinations over the next eighteen years, Dumont came to challenge corrupt officials, found himself in jail, eked out a living as a colonial subsistence farmer, survived life-threatening storms and epidemics, encountered pirates, witnessed the 1719 battle for Pensacola, described the 1729 Natchez Uprising, and gave account of the 1739–1740 French expedition against the Chickasaw. Dumont’s adventures, as recorded in his 1747 memoir conserved at the Newberry Library, underscore the complexity of the expanding French Atlantic world, offering a singular perspective on early colonialism in Louisiana. His life story also provides detailed descriptions and illustrations of the peoples and environment of the lower Mississippi Valley. This English translation of the unabridged memoir features a new introduction, maps, and a biographical dictionary to enhance the text. Dumont emerges here as an important colonial voice and brings to vivid life the French Atlantic.

gordon m. sayre is professor of English and folklore at the University of Oregon and author of The Indian Chief as Tragic Hero: Native Resistance and the Literatures of America, from Moctezuma to Tecumseh. carla zecher is director of the Center for Renaissance Studies at the Newberry Library and author of Sounding Objects: Musical Instruments, Poetry, and Art in Renaissance France. Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Virginia

November 2012

978-0-8078-3722-1, $50.00s Cloth

Approx. 472 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 10 color and 24 b&w illus., 2 maps, 1 chart, appends., notes, index

Dodging death and success from La Rochelle to Biloxi and back, with some gardening in between, Dumont de Montigny survived to put quill to paper. His restless memoir, now briskly translated, offers a stereotype-shattering window onto eighteenth-century transatlantic life and writing.

—Catherine Desbarats, McGill University

18 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu


early american history | legal history

St. George Tucker’s Law Reports and Selected Papers, 1782-1825 edited by charles f. hobson A magisterial perspective on the development of the American court system Best known for his edition of Blackstone’s Commentaries, St. George Tucker (1752–1827), a lawyer and judge in the state and federal courts of Virginia, played a central role in the legal history of post-Revolutionary Virginia and of the new nation. This comprehensive three-volume edition of Tucker’s law reports and selected loose papers, edited by Charles F. Hobson, is an unsurpassed archive for studying the “republicanization” of the common law as it unfolded in the commonwealth of Virginia. In addition, Tucker’s papers provide an invaluable source for tracking Virginia’s efforts to establish a system of state superior courts operating alongside the older county court system dating from the colonial period. Tucker’s reports fill a documentary gap caused by the 1865 fire that destroyed Virginia’s higher court records. The editor’s general introduction supplies an informative overview of Tucker’s life and judicial career. Editorial aids and appendixes include a guide to Tucker’s abbreviations, a short-title bibliography, a glossary of selected legal terms, a biographical register of the Virginia bench and bar, and correspondence and documents relating to the rupture between Tucker and Spencer Roane.

charles f. hobson , editor of The Papers of John Marshall, is a

resident scholar at the William and Mary School of Law.

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Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Virginia

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January 2013

978-0-8078-3721-4, $250.00s Cloth Special Pre-Publication Offer: $250.00s

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until February 1, 2013; $300.00s thereafter Approx. 2128 pp. in 3 volumes, 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 25 illus., 1 map, 2 tables, appends., notes, index

St. George Tucker was a towering figure among lawyers and judges of the early republic. His papers offer a comprehensive picture of law in Virginia across forty years, from the technical minutiae of procedure to broader questions of inheritance, contract, debt, land title, crime, and more, including whether a person was slave or free. This superbly executed edition will be an essential resource for anyone interested in the development of American law in a crucial period of its history. —Bruce H. Mann, Harvard Law School

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 19


early american history | latin american & caribbean studies

early american history

new in paperback

new in paperback

In the Eye of All Trade

This Violent Empire

Bermuda, Bermudians, and the Maritime Atlantic World, 1680–1783

The Birth of an American National Identity

michael j. jarvis 2010 James A. Rawley Prize in Atlantic History, American Historical Association

The definitive history of maritime Bermuda In an exploration of the oceanic connections of the Atlantic world, Michael J. Jarvis recovers a mariner’s view of early America as seen through the eyes of Bermuda’s seafarers. This first social history of eighteenthcentury Bermuda takes readers aboard small Bermudian sloops and follows their transits in an expansive maritime sphere spanning Great Britain’s North American and Caribbean colonies. Jarvis shows that humble sailors and seafaring slaves operating small family-owned vessels were significant, but underappreciated, agents of Atlantic integration. The American Revolution shattered interregional links that Bermudians had helped to forge, however, and ultimately doomed the island’s maritime economy. “[An] impressive book. . . . Jarvis jumps from pawn to bishop among maritime historians.” —American Historical Review “Finely calibrated. . . . Should be required reading for Atlantic scholars.” —Journal of Interdisciplinary History

michael j. jarvis is associate professor of history at

the University of Rochester.

Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Virginia

June 2012

978-0-8078-7284-0, $35.00s Paper 978-0-8078-3321-6, $69.95s Cloth (2010) 978-0-8078-9588-7 $69.95 BOOK

704 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 36 illus., 21 maps, 11 tables, notes, index 20 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu

carroll smith-rosenberg 2011 Choice Outstanding Academic Title

America’s history of violence and racism This Violent Empire traces the origins of American violence, racism, and paranoia to the founding moments of the new nation and the initial instability of Americans’ national sense of self. Carroll SmithRosenberg explores the ways the founding generation, lacking a common history, governmental infrastructures, and shared culture, solidified their national sense of self by imagining a series of “Others” (African Americans, Native Americans, women, the propertyless) whose differences from European American male founders overshadowed the differences that divided those founders. These “Others,” dangerous and polluting, had to be excluded from the European American body politic. Feared, but also desired, they refused to be marginalized, incurring increasingly enraged enactments of their political and social exclusion that shaped our long history of racism, xenophobia, and sexism. “Provides important insights on the dark historical schism between the aspirations of the new republic and its racially violent reality.” —Journal of American History “Reminds us of what made cultural studies revolutionary.” —American Historical Review

carroll smith-rosenberg , Mary Frances Berry Collegiate Professor Emeritus, University of Michigan, is author of Disorderly Conduct: Visions of Gender in Victorian America, among other books. Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Virginia

August 2012

978-0-8078-7271-0, $27.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3296-7, $49.95s Cloth (2010) 978-0-8078-9591-7, $49.95 BOOK 512 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 22 illus., notes, index


early american history

new in paperback from unc press

A Reforming People Puritanism and the Transformation of Public Life in New England

david d. hall

With a New Foreword by the Author The dynamic reforms of the Puritans in America In this revelatory account of the people who founded the New England colonies, historian David D. Hall compares the reforms they enacted with those attempted in England during the period of the English Revolution. Bringing with them a deep fear of arbitrary, unlimited authority, these settlers based their churches on the participation of laypeople and insisted on “consent” as a premise of all civil governance. Puritans also transformed civil and criminal law and the workings of courts with the intention of establishing equity. In this political and social history of the five New England colonies, Hall provides a masterful re-evaluation of the earliest moments of New England’s history, revealing the colonists to be the most effective and daring reformers of their day.

david d. hall is Bartlett Research Professor of New England Church History at Harvard Divinity School. He is author or editor of numerous books on American religious and cultural history, including Worlds of Wonder, Days of Judgment.

August 2012

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978-0-8078-7311-3, $24.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3711-5, $24.95 BOOK

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Approx. 280 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, notes, index

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Reveals our original revolutionaries in search of equity, justice, and community. —Alan Taylor, author of The Civil War of 1812

A model of elegance and erudition. . . . A compelling story that has immense resonance for our understanding of the past—but also the present.

—Alexandra Walsham, author of Charitable Hatred: Tolerance and Intolerance in England, 1500-1700

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 21


civil war

american history | biography | gender studies

new in paperback

new in paperback

Fredericksburg! Fredericksburg!

Well-Read Lives

george c. rable

How Books Inspired a Generation of American Women

2003 Lincoln Prize, Lincoln and Soldiers Institute

2004 Distinguished Book Award in American History, Society for Military History

barbara sicherman

2002 Jefferson Davis Award, Museum of the Confederacy

In a compelling approach structured as theme and variations, Well-Read Lives offers insightful profiles of women born in America’s Gilded Age who lost— and found—themselves in books, and worked out a new life purpose around them, among them Jane Addams, Edith and Alice Hamilton, Rose Cohen, and Ida B. Wells. With Little Women’s Jo March often serving as a youthful model of independence, girls and young women created communities of learning, imagination, and emotional connection around literary activities in ways that helped them imagine, and later attain, public identities. Sicherman’s graceful study reveals the centrality of the era’s culture of reading and sheds new light on these women’s Progressive Era careers.

2002 Douglas Southall Freeman History Award, Military Order of the Stars and Bars Featured Alternate of the History Book Club

The battle and its place in Civil War history Fought on December 13, 1862, the battle of Fredericksburg ended in a stunning defeat for the Union. Confederate general Robert E. Lee suffered roughly 5,000 casualties but inflicted more than twice that many losses—nearly 13,000—on his opponent, General Ambrose Burnside. As news of the Union loss traveled north, it spread a wave of public despair that extended all the way to President Lincoln. In the beleaguered Confederacy, the southern victory bolstered flagging hopes, as Lee and his men began to take on an aura of invincibility. George Rable offers a gripping history of the Fredericksburg campaign and shows how the horrific carnage haunted military and civilian survivors on both sides. “The definitive history of the battle.” —Journal of American History “Captures the bravery, ineptitude, and heartache of soldiers and generals alike.” —Blue & Gray Magazine

george c. r able holds the Charles G. Summersell Chair in Southern History at the University of Alabama. He is author of God’s Almost Chosen Peoples: A Religious History of the American Civil War, among other books. Civil War America

August 2012

978-0-8078-7269-7, $28.00t Paper 978-0-8078-2673-7, $49.95t Cloth (2002) 978-0-8078-6793-8, $49.95 BOOK

688 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 25 illus., 8 maps, appends., notes, bibl., index 22 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu

Young women read their way into public lives

“An elegant historical survey . . . [arguing] that reading mattered crucially.” —American Historical Review “A rewarding look into the power of reading to transform lives.” —H-Net Reviews

barbar a sicherman is William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of American Institutions and Values Emerita at Trinity College. She is author of Alice Hamilton: A Life in Letters and The Quest for Mental Health in America, 1880–1917 and coeditor of Notable American Women: The Modern Period.

August 2012

978-0-8078-3909-6, $26.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3308-7, $37.50s Cloth (2010) 978-0-8078-9824-6, $37.50 BOOK 392 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 12 illus., notes, bibl., index


american studies | music | african american studies

The Strange Career of Porgy and Bess Race, Culture, and America’s Most Famous Opera

ellen noonan What an opera can tell us about a century of racial change Created by George Gershwin and DuBose Heyward and sung by generations of black performers, Porgy and Bess has been both embraced and reviled since its debut in 1935. In this comprehensive account, Ellen Noonan examines the opera’s long history of invention and reinvention as a barometer of twentieth-century American expectations about race, culture, and the struggle for equality. In its surprising endurance lies a myriad of local, national, and international stories. For black performers and commentators, Porgy and Bess was a nexus for debates about cultural representation and racial uplift. White producers, critics, and even audiences spun revealing racial narratives around the show, initially in an attempt to demonstrate its authenticity and later to keep it from becoming discredited or irrelevant. Expertly weaving together the wide-ranging debates over the original novel, Porgy, and its adaptations on stage and film with a history of its intimate ties to Charleston, The Strange Career of Porgy and Bess uncovers the complexities behind one of our nation’s most long-lived cultural touchstones.

ellen noonan is a historian, educator, and media producer at the American

Social History Project, the Graduate Center, City University of New York.

1

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448 pp., 6 ⁄8 x 9 ⁄4, 17 illus., notes, bibl., index 1

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December 2012

978-0-8078-3716-0, $39.95s Cloth 978-0-8078-3733-7, $39.95 BOOK

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In Noonan’s richly detailed book, Porgy and Bess becomes a prism refracting myriad triumphs and tragedies, collusions and fissures, in the American history of race, region, and culture. I was on the edge of my seat until the curtain call. —Karl Hagstrom Miller, University of Texas

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 23


The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture Charles Reagan Wilson, General Editor Sponsored by the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi

Volume 21: Art and Architecture edited by judith h. bonner and estill curtis pennington From the Potomac to the Gulf, artists were creating in the South even before it was recognized as a region. The South has contributed to America’s cultural heritage with works as diverse as Benjamin Henry Latrobe’s architectural plans for the nation’s Capitol, the wares of the Newcomb Pottery, and Richard Clague’s tonalist Louisiana bayou scenes. This comprehensive volume shows how, through the decades and centuries, the art of the South expanded from mimetic portraiture to sophisticated responses to national and international movements. The essays treat historic and current trends in the visual arts and architecture, major collections and institutions, and biographies of artists themselves. As leading experts on the region’s artists and their work, editors Judith H. Bonner and Estill Curtis Pennington frame the volume’s contributions with insightful overview essays on the visual arts and architecture in the American South.

judith h. bonner is senior curator of The Historic New

Orleans Collection and author of numerous scholarly articles and catalogs on southern art, including Newcomb Centennial 1886–1986: An Exhibition of Art by the Art Faculty. estill curtis pennington is an independent scholar and author of many books, including Lessons in Likeness: Portrait Painters in Kentucky and the Ohio River Valley, 1802–1920.

January 2013

978-0-8078-3717-7, $49.95s Cloth 978-0-8078-3718-4, $27.95t Paper 978-0-8078-6994-9, $49.95 BOOK

Approx. 592 pp., 6 ⁄8 x 91⁄4, 28 color and 32 b&w illus., 1

Volume 22: Science and Medicine edited by james g. thomas jr. and charles reagan wilson Science and medicine have been critical to southern history and the formation of southern culture. For three centuries, scientists in the South have documented the lush natural world around them and set a lasting tradition of inquiry. The medical history of the region, however, has at times been tragic. Disease, death, and generations of poor health have been the legacy of slavery, the plantation economy, rural life, and poorly planned cities. The essays in this volume explore this legacy as well as recent developments in technology, research, and medicine in the South. Subjects include natural history, slave health, medicine in the Civil War, public health, eugenics, HIV/AIDS, environmental health, and the rise of research institutions and hospitals, to name but a few. With 38 thematic essays, 44 topical entries, and a comprehensive overview essay, this volume offers an authoritative reference to science and medicine in the American South.

james g. thomas jr. is associate director for publications at the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi. He is also managing editor of The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture. charles reagan wilson is Kelly Gene Cook Sr. Chair in History and Professor of Southern Studies at the University of Mississippi. He is coeditor of the original Encyclopedia of Southern Culture.

November 2012

978-0-8078-3719-1, $49.95s Cloth 978-0-8078-3720-7, $24.95t Paper 978-0-8078-3743-6, $49.95 BOOK

Approx. 336 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 18 illus., 2 figs., 2 tables, bibl., index

bibl., index

For information on The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture series, please visit our website at www.uncpress.unc.edu. 24 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu


latin american & caribbean studies | cuban studies

latin american & caribbean studies | american studies

Visions of Power in Cuba

Radical Moves

Revolution, Redemption, and Resistance, 1959–1971

Caribbean Migrants and the Politics of Race in the Jazz Age

lillian guerra

lara putnam

Image, script, and spectacle in the Cuban Revolution

The African diaspora as political and cultural collective

In the tumultuous first decade of the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro and other leaders saturated the media with altruistic images of themselves in a campaign to win the hearts of Cuba’s six million citizens. In Visions of Power in Cuba, Lillian Guerra argues that these visual representations explained rapidly occurring events and encouraged radical change and mutual self-sacrifice. Mass rallies and labor mobilizations of unprecedented scale produced tangible evidence of what Fidel Castro called “unanimous support” for a revolution whose “moral power” defied U.S. control. Yet participation in state-orchestrated spectacles quickly became a requirement for political inclusion in a new Cuba that policed most forms of dissent. Devoted revolutionaries who resisted disastrous economic policies, exposed post-1959 racism, and challenged gender norms set by Cuba’s oneparty state increasingly found themselves marginalized, silenced, or jailed. Using previously unexplored sources, Guerra focuses on the lived experiences of citizens, including peasants, intellectuals, former prostitutes, black activists, and filmmakers, as they struggled to author their own scripts of revolution by resisting repression, defying state-imposed boundaries, and working for anti-imperial redemption in a truly free Cuba.

In the generations after emancipation, hundreds of thousands of African-descended workingclass men and women left their homes in the British Caribbean to seek opportunity abroad: in the goldfields of Venezuela and the canefields of Cuba, the canal construction in Panama, and the bustling city streets of Brooklyn. But in the 1920s and 1930s, racist nativism and a brutal cascade of antiblack immigration laws swept the hemisphere. Facing borders and barriers as never before, Afro-Caribbean migrants rethought allegiances of race, class, and empire. In Radical Moves, Lara Putnam takes readers from tin-roof tropical dancehalls to the elegant black-owned ballrooms of Jazz Age Harlem to trace the roots of the black internationalist and anticolonial movements that would remake the twentieth century. From Trinidad to 136th Street, these were years of great dreams and righteous demands. Praying or “jazzing,” writing letters to the editor or letters home, Caribbean men and women tried on new ideas about the collective. The popular culture of black internationalism they created—from Marcus Garvey’s UNIA to “regge” dances, Rastafarianism, and Joe Louis’s worldwide fandom—still echoes in the present.

lillian guerr a is associate professor of Cuban and Caribbean history at the University of Florida and author of The Myth of José Martí: Conflicting Nationalisms in Early Twentieth-Century Cuba and Popular Expression and National Identity in Puerto Rico. Envisioning Cuba

October 2012

978-0-8078-3563-0, $55.00s Cloth 978-0-8078-3736-8, $55.00 BOOK

lar a putnam is associate professor of history at the University of Pittsburgh and author of The Company They Kept: Migrants and the Politics of Gender in Caribbean Costa Rica, 1870-1960.

January 2013

978-0-8078-3582-1, $65.00x Cloth 978-0-8078-7285-7, $27.50s Paper 978-0-8078-3813-6, $65.00 BOOK

Approx. 288 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 11 illus., 3 maps, 1 table, notes, bibl., index

Approx. 512 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 30 illus., notes, bibl., index

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 25


american history | african american studies | health & medicine

Doctoring Freedom The Politics of African American Medical Care in Slavery and Emancipation

gretchen long Illness, health, and political power For enslaved and newly freed African Americans, attaining freedom and citizenship without health for themselves and their families would have been an empty victory. Even before emancipation, African Americans recognized that control of their bodies was a critical battleground in their struggle for autonomy, and they devised strategies to retain at least some of that control. In Doctoring Freedom, Gretchen Long tells the stories of African Americans who fought for access to both medical care and medical education, showing the important relationship between medical practice and political identity. Working closely with antebellum medical journals, planters’ diaries, agricultural publications, letters from wounded African American soldiers, WPA narratives, and military and Freedmen’s Bureau reports, Long traces African Americans’ political acts to secure medical care: their organizing mutual-aid societies, their petitions to the federal government, and, as a last resort, their founding of their own medical schools, hospitals, and professional organizations. She also illuminates work of the earliest generation of black physicians, whose adult lives spanned both slavery and freedom. For African Americans, Long argues, claiming rights as both patients and practitioners was a political and highly charged act in both slavery and emancipation.

gretchen long is associate professor of history at Williams College.

The John Hope Franklin Series in African American History and Culture

October 2012

978-0-8078-3583-8, $37.50s Cloth 978-0-8078-3739-9, $37.50 BOOK 256 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, notes, bibl., index

26 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu

american history | african american studies

The Making of Black Detroit in the Age of Henry Ford beth tompkins bates The political life of Ford’s black workers In the 1920s, Henry Ford hired thousands of African American men for his open-shop system of auto manufacturing. This move was a rejection of the notion that better jobs were for white men only. In The Making of Black Detroit in the Age of Henry Ford, Beth Tompkins Bates explains how black Detroiters, newly arrived from the South, seized the economic opportunities offered by Ford in the hope of gaining greater economic security. As these workers came to realize that Ford’s anti-union “American Plan” did not allow them full access to the American Dream, their loyalty eroded, and they sought empowerment by pursuing a broad activist agenda. This, in turn, led them to play a pivotal role in the United Auto Workers’ challenge to Ford’s interests. In order to fully understand this complex shift, Bates traces allegiances among Detroit’s African American community as reflected in its opposition to the Ku Klux Klan, challenges to unfair housing practices, and demands for increased and effective political participation. This groundbreaking history demonstrates how by World War II Henry Ford and his company had helped kindle the civil rights movement in Detroit without intending to do so.

beth tompkins bates is professor emerita at Wayne State University and author of Pullman Porters and the Rise of Protest Politics in Black America, 1925–1945.

September 2012

978-0-8078-3564-7, $45.00s Cloth 978-0-8078-3745-0, $45.00 BOOK

Approx. 352 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 20 illus., notes, bibl., index


american history | legal history

african american studies | biography

Families in Crisis in the Old South

new in paperback

David Ruggles A Radical Black Abolitionist and the Underground Railroad in New York City

Divorce, Slavery, and the Law

loren schweninger The first regionwide analysis of antebellum divorce In the antebellum South, divorce was an explosive issue. As one lawmaker put it, divorce was to be viewed as a form of “madness,” and as another asserted, divorce reduced communities to the “lowest ebb of degeneracy.” How was it that in this climate, the number of divorces rose steadily during the antebellum era? In Families in Crisis in the Old South, Loren Schweninger uses previously unexplored records to argue that the difficulties these divorcing families faced reveal much about the reality of life in a slave-holding society as well as the myriad difficulties confronted by white southern families who chose not to divorce. Basing his argument on almost 800 divorce cases from the southern United States, Schweninger explores the impact of divorce and separation on white families and on the enslaved and provides insights on issues including domestic violence, interracial adultery, alcoholism, insanity, and property relations. He examines how divorce and separation laws changed, how married women’s property rights expanded, how definitions of inhuman treatment of wives evolved, and how these divorces challenged conventional mores.

loren schweninger is Elizabeth Rosenthal Excellence Professor of History at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and is coauthor, with the late John Hope Franklin, of In Search of the Promised Land: A Slave Family in the Old South.

September 2012

978-0-8078-3569-2, $49.95s Cloth 978-0-8078-3750-4, $49.95 BOOK

Approx. 264 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 9 illus., 9 tables, appends., notes, bibl., index

graham russell gao hodges 2010 Hortense Simmons Prize for the Advancement of Knowledge, Underground Railroad Free Press

The first biography of a pioneering activist, mentor to Frederick Douglass and Sojourner Truth David Ruggles (1810–1849) was one of the most heroic figures of the early abolitionist movement in America—and he has been one of the most often overlooked. Graham Russell Gao Hodges provides the first biography of this African American activist, writer, publisher, and hydrotherapist who secured liberty for more than six hundred former bond people, the most famous of whom was Frederick Douglass. Hodges’s portrait of Ruggles establishes him as an essential link between disparate groups—male and female, black and white, clerical and secular, elite and rank-and-file—recasting the history of antebellum abolitionism as a more integrated and cohesive movement than is often portrayed. “Mention American abolitionists and David Ruggles rarely comes to mind. . . . Graham Russell Gao Hodges goes a long way toward rectifying that oversight.” —New York Times “A benchmark biography.” —Left History

gr aham russell gao hodges is George Dorland

Langdon Jr. Professor of History and Africana and Latin American Studies at Colgate University. He is author or editor of sixteen books, including Root and Branch: African Americans in New York and East Jersey, 1613-1863.

August 2012

978-0-8078-7264-2, $23.00t Paper 978-0-8078-3326-1, $32.00t Cloth (2010) 978-0-8078-9579-5, $32.00 BOOK 280 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 30 illus., notes, bibl., index

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 27


religious studies | american history

“A Peculiar People” Anti-Mormonism and the Making of Religion in Nineteenth-Century America

j. spencer fluhman Mormonism—just American enough Though the U.S. Constitution guarantees the free exercise of religion, it does not specify what counts as a religion. From its founding in the 1830s, Mormonism, a homegrown American faith, drew thousands of converts but far more critics. In “A Peculiar People,” J. Spencer Fluhman offers a comprehensive history of anti-Mormon thought and the associated passionate debates about religious authenticity in nineteenth-century America. He argues that understanding anti-Mormonism provides critical insight into the American psyche because Mormonism became a potent symbol around which ideas about religion and the state took shape. Fluhman documents how Mormonism was defamed, with attacks often aimed at polygamy, and shows how the new faith supplied a social enemy for a public agitated by the popular press and wracked with social and economic instability. Taking the story to the turn of the century, Fluhman demonstrates how Mormonism’s own transformations, the result of both choice and outside force, sapped the strength of the worst anti-Mormon vitriol, triggering the acceptance of Utah into the Union in 1896 and also paving the way for the dramatic, yet still grudging, acceptance of Mormonism as an American religion.

j. spencer fluhman is assistant professor of history at Brigham Young University.

September 2012

978-0-8078-3571-5, $34.95s Cloth 978-0-8078-3740-5, $34.95 BOOK

Approx. 256 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 12 illus., notes, bibl., index

28 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu

religious studies | american history

The Gospel of Freedom and Power Protestant Missionaries in American Culture after World War II

sarah e. ruble Protestantism and American global power In the decades after World War II, Protestant missionaries abroad were a topic of vigorous public debate. From religious periodicals and Sunday sermons to novels and anthropological monographs, public conversations about missionaries followed a powerful yet paradoxical line of reasoning, namely that people abroad needed greater autonomy from U.S. power and that Americans could best tell others how to use their freedom. In The Gospel of Freedom and Power, Sarah Ruble traces and analyzes these public discussions about what it meant for Americans abroad to be good world citizens, placing them firmly in the context of the United States’ postwar global dominance. Bringing together a wide range of sources, Ruble seeks to understand how discussions about a relatively small group of Americans working abroad became part of a much larger cultural conversation. She concludes that whether viewed as champions of nationalist revolutions or propagators of the gospel of capitalism, missionaries—along with their supporters, interpreters, and critics—ultimately both challenged and reinforced a rhetoric of exceptionalism that made Americans the judges of what was good for the rest of the world.

sar ah e. ruble is assistant professor of religion at Gustavus Adolphus College.

September 2012

978-0-8078-3581-4, $37.50s Cloth 978-0-8078-3742-9, $37.50 BOOK

Approx. 224 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, notes, bibl., index


american history | religious studies

american history | diplomatic history

Across God’s Frontiers

One World, Big Screen

Catholic Sisters in the American West, 1850–1920

Hollywood, the Allies, and World War II

anne m. butler

m. todd bennett How movies helped build Allied solidarity

Religious life and women’s power in the West Roman Catholic sisters first traveled to the American West as providers of social services, education, and medical assistance. In Across God’s Frontiers, Anne M. Butler traces the ways in which sisters challenged and reconfigured contemporary ideas about women, work, religion, and the West; moreover, she demonstrates how religious life became a vehicle for increasing women’s agency and power. Moving to the West introduced significant changes for these women, including public employment and thoroughly unconventional monastic lives. As nuns and sisters adjusted to new circumstances and immersed themselves in rugged environments, Butler argues, the West shaped them; and through their labors and charities, the sisters in turn shaped the West. These female religious pioneers built institutions, brokered relationships between Indigenous peoples and encroaching settlers, and undertook varied occupations, often without organized funding or direct support from the church hierarchy. A comprehensive history of Roman Catholic nuns and sisters in the American West, Across God’s Frontiers reveals Catholic sisters as dynamic and creative architects of civic and religious institutions in western communities.

anne m. butler is Trustee Professor Emerita at Utah

World War II coincided with cinema’s golden age. Movies now considered classics were created at a time when all sides in the war were coming to realize the great power of popular films to motivate the masses. Through multinational research, One World, Big Screen reveals how the Grand Alliance—Britain, China, the Soviet Union, and the United States—tapped Hollywood’s impressive power to shrink the distance and bridge the differences that separated them. The Allies, M. Todd Bennett shows, strategically manipulated cinema in an effort to promote the idea that the United Nations was a family of nations joined by blood and affection. Bennett revisits Casablanca, Mrs. Miniver, Flying Tigers, and other familiar movies that, he argues, helped win the war and the peace by improving Allied solidarity and transforming the American worldview. Closely analyzing film, diplomatic correspondence, propagandists’ logs, and movie studio records found in the United States, the United Kingdom, and the former Soviet Union, Bennett rethinks traditional scholarship on World War II diplomacy by examining the ways that Hollywood and the Allies worked together to prepare for and enact the war effort.

m. todd bennett is assistant professor of history at

State University and past editor of the Western Historical Quarterly.

East Carolina University.

September 2012

978-0-8078-3574-6, $39.95s Cloth 978-0-8078-3746-7, $39.95 BOOK

978-0-8078-3565-4, $45.00s Cloth 978-0-8078-3754-2, $45.00 BOOK

November 2012

Approx. 384 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 21 illus., notes, bibl., index

Approx. 416 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 25 illus., notes, bibl., index

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 29


native american & indigenous studies | latin american & caribbean studies

native american & indigenous studies

Mobilizing Bolivia’s Displaced

Decolonizing Museums

Indigenous Politics and the Struggle over Land

Representing Native America in National and Tribal Museums

nicole fabricant

amy lonetree

“Occupy, resist, produce!”

Envisioning new forms of Indigenous museum practice

The election of Evo Morales as Bolivia’s president in 2005 made him the first Indigenous head of state in the Americas, a watershed victory for social activists and Native peoples. El Movimiento Sin Tierra (MST), or the Landless Peasant Movement, played a significant role in bringing Morales to power. Following in the tradition of the well-known Brazilian Landless movement, Bolivia’s MST activists seized unproductive land and built farming collectives as a means of resistance to large-scale exportoriented agriculture. In Mobilizing Bolivia’s Displaced, Nicole Fabricant illustrates how landless peasants politicized indigeneity to shape grassroots land politics, reform the state, and secure human and cultural rights for Native peoples. Fabricant takes readers into the personal spaces of home and work, on long bus rides, and into meetings and newly built MST settlements to show how, in response to displacement, Indigenous identity is becoming ever more dynamic and adaptive. In addition to advancing this rich definition of indigeneity, she explores the ways in which Morales has found himself at odds with Indigenous activists and, in so doing, shows that Indigenous people have a far more complex relationship to Morales than is generally understood.

Museum exhibitions focusing on Native American history have long been curator controlled. However, a shift is occurring, giving Indigenous people a larger role in determining exhibition content. In Decolonizing Museums, Amy Lonetree examines the complexities of these new relationships with an eye toward exploring how museums can grapple with centuries of unresolved trauma as they tell the stories of Native peoples. She investigates how museums can honor an Indigenous worldview and way of knowing, challenge stereotypical representations, and speak the hard truths of colonization within exhibition spaces to address the persistent legacies of historical unresolved grief in Native communities. Lonetree focuses on the representation of Native Americans in exhibitions at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian, the Mille Lacs Indian Museum in Minnesota, and the Ziibiwing Center of Anishinabe Culture and Lifeways in Michigan. Drawing on her experiences as an Indigenous scholar and museum professional, Lonetree analyzes exhibition texts and images, records of exhibition development, and interviews with staff members. She addresses historical and contemporary museum practices and charts possible paths for the future curation and presentation of Native lifeways.

First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous Studies

am y lonetree (Ho-Chunk) is associate professor of American studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and co-editor, with Amanda J. Cobb, of The National Museum of the American Indian: Critical Conversations. She is co-author of People of the Big Voice: Photographs of Ho-Chunk Families, 1879–1942.

November 2012

First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous Studies

nicole fabricant is assistant professor of anthropology at Towson University.

978-0-8078-3713-9, $69.95x Cloth 978-0-8078-7249-9, $29.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3751-1, $69.95 BOOK

Approx. 288 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 10 illus., 3 maps, notes, bibl., index

November 2012

978-0-8078-3714-6, $65.00x Cloth 978-0-8078-3715-3, $24.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3752-8, $65.00 BOOK

Approx. 272 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 16 illus., notes, bibl., index 30 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu


native american & indigenous studies | anthropology

native american & indigenous studies | american history

Colonial Entanglement

Crooked Paths to Allotment

Constituting a Twenty-First-Century Osage Nation

The Fight over Federal Indian Policy after the Civil War

jean dennison

c. joseph genetin-pilawa

A nation in the midst of its own remaking

A counterhistory of Native American policy

From 2004 to 2006, the Osage Nation conducted a contentious governmental reform process in which sharply differing visions arose over the new government’s goals, the Nation’s own history, and what it means to be Osage. The primary debates were focused on biology, culture, natural resources, and sovereignty. Osage anthropologist Jean Dennison documents the reform process in order to reveal the lasting effects of colonialism and to illuminate the possibilities for Indigenous sovereignty. In doing so, she brings to light the many complexities of defining Indigenous citizenship and governance in the twenty-first century. By situating the 2004–6 Osage Nation reform process within its historical and current contexts, Dennison illustrates how the Osage have creatively responded to continuing assaults on their nationhood. A fascinating account of a nation in the midst of its own remaking, Colonial Entanglement presents a sharp analysis of how legacies of European invasion and settlement in North America continue to affect Indigenous people’s views of selfhood and nationhood.

Standard narratives of Native American history view the nineteenth century in terms of steadily declining Indigenous sovereignty, from removal of southeastern tribes to the 1887 General Allotment Act. In Crooked Paths to Allotment, C. Joseph Genetin-Pilawa complicates these narratives, focusing on political moments when viable alternatives to federal assimilation policies arose. In these moments, Native American reformers and their white allies challenged coercive practices and offered visions for policies that might have allowed Indigenous nations to adapt at their own pace and on their own terms. Examining the contests over Indian policy from Reconstruction through the Gilded Age, Genetin-Pilawa reveals the contingent state of American settler colonialism. Genetin-Pilawa focuses on reformers and activists, including Tonawanda Seneca Ely S. Parker and Council Fire editor Thomas A. Bland, whose contributions to Indian policy debates have heretofore been underappreciated. He reveals how these men and their allies opposed such policies as forced land allotment, the elimination of traditional cultural practices, mandatory boarding school education for Indian youth, and compulsory participation in the market economy. Although the mainstream supporters of assimilation successfully repressed these efforts, the ideas and policy frameworks they espoused established a tradition of dissent against disruptive colonial governance.

jean dennison (Osage) is assistant professor of anthropology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous Studies

October 2012

978-0-8078-3580-7, $65.00x Cloth 978-0-8078-7290-1, $24.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3744-3, $65.00 BOOK

Approx. 288 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 5 illus., appends., notes, bibl., index

c. joseph genetin-pilawa is assistant professor of

history at Illinois College.

First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous Studies

October 2012

978-0-8078-3576-0, $39.95s Cloth 978-0-8078-3741-2, $39.95 BOOK

Approx. 256 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 10 illus., notes, bibl., index

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 31


military history new in paperback

military history new in paperback

Not a Gentleman’s War

Until the Last Man Comes Home

An Inside View of Junior Officers in the Vietnam War

POWs, MIAs, and the Unending Vietnam War

ron milam

michael j. allen

On the ground with the platoon leaders

The repercussions of accounting for missing American soldiers

Not a Gentleman’s War is a gritty, against-the-grain defense of the often-maligned junior officer. Ron Milam, a combat veteran of the Vietnam War, demonstrates that, in contrast to popular perception, most of the lieutenants who served in combat served with great skill, dedication, and commitment to the men they led. Milam’s narrative provides a vivid, on-the-ground portrait of what a platoon leader faced: training his men, keeping racial tensions at bay, and preventing alcohol and drug abuse, all in a war without fronts. Despite these noncombat challenges, junior officers performed admirably, Milam argues, as documented both by field reports and by the evaluations of their superior officers. Based on meticulous and wide-ranging research, this book provides a much-needed serious treatment of these men—the only such study in print—shedding new light on the longest war in American history. “Contributes significantly to the historiography of the war.” —Journal of American History “A useful corrective . . . and a solid contribution of collective biography.” —Army History

ron milam is associate professor of military history at Texas Tech University. He served as an infantry advisor to Montagnard forces in the Vietnam War.

August 2012

978-0-8078-3712-2, $24.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3330-8, $37.50s Cloth (2009) 978-0-8078-9864-2, $37.50 BOOK 256 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, appends., notes, bibl., index

Fewer Americans were captured or declared missing during the Vietnam War than in any previous military conflict. Yet despite their small numbers, these men inspired an outpouring of concern that slowly eroded support for the war. Michael J. Allen analyzes the effects that activism by POW and MIA families had on U.S. politics before and after the war’s official end. He argues that POW/MIA activism prolonged hostilities between the United States and Vietnam even as the search for the missing became the basis for closer ties between the two countries in the 1990s. In addition, he argues, the POW/MIA families’ disdain for the antiwar left and contempt for federal authority fueled conservative ascendancy after 1968. Mixing political, cultural, and diplomatic history, Until the Last Man Comes Home presents the lasting impact of the Vietnam War in ways that are both familiar and surprising. “Fascinating.” —General (Ret.) Wesley K. Clark “The best book to date on the impact of the Vietnam War POW/MIA issue on American diplomacy, domestic politics, and national culture.” —Diplomatic History

michael j. allen is associate professor of history at Northwestern University.

August 2012

978-0-8078-7272-7, $27.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3261-5, $35.00s Cloth (2009) 978-0-8078-9531-3, $35.00 BOOK 448 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 28 illus., notes, bibl., index

32 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu


native american & indigenous studies | african american studies

native american & indigenous studies New in paperback

new in paperback

The House on Diamond Hill A Cherokee Plantation Story

tiya miles 2011 Erminie Wheeler-Voegelin Prize, American Society for Ethnohistory 2011 National Council on Public History Book Award

We Were All Like Migrant Workers Here Work, Community, and Memory on California’s Round Valley Reservation, 1850–1941

william j. bauer jr.

2011 Lilla M. Hawes Award, Georgia Historical Society

Myths and realities of Cherokee chief James Vann

Labor and survival among the Native people of northern California

At the turn of the nineteenth century, James Vann, a Cherokee chief and entrepreneur, established Diamond Hill, the most famous plantation in the southeastern Cherokee Nation. In this first full-length study to reconstruct the history of the plantation, Tiya Miles tells the story of Diamond Hill’s founding, its flourishing, its takeover by white land-lottery winners on the eve of the Cherokee Removal, its decay, and its renovation in the 1950s. In prose backed by extensive research, Miles skillfully illuminates gender, class, and cross-racial relationships on the southern frontier.

The federally recognized Round Valley Indian Tribes are a small, confederated people whose members today come from six Indigenous California tribes. In the 1850s and 1860s, people from these tribes were relocated to a reservation farm in northern Mendocino County. Fusing Native American history and labor history, Bauer chronicles the evolution of work, community, and tribal identity among the Round Valley Indians in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries that enabled their survival and resistance to assimilation.

“Meticulously researched and elegantly written.” —Public Historian

“Bauer’s study stands apart.” —American Historical Review

“A welcome addition to the histories of Native America, slavery, African America, gender, the early republic, and, perhaps most significantly, public history.” —American Historical Review

“A thought-provoking account of how the California Round Valley Indians responded to numerous changes that affected their environment and social organization.” —Oral History Review

tiya miles is the Elsa Barkley Brown Collegiate Professor of African American Women’s History and professor of history, American culture, Afroamerican and African studies, and Native American studies at the University of Michigan. She is author of Ties That Bind: The Story of an Afro-Cherokee Family in Slavery and Freedom and was selected as a 2011 MacArthur Foundation Fellow.

August 2012

978-0-8078-7267-3, $24.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3418-3, $35.00s Cloth (2010) 978-0-8078-6812-6, $35.00 BOOK

william j. bauer jr. (Wailacki and Concow) is an enrolled member of the Round Valley Indian Tribes. He is associate professor of history at University of Nevada-Las Vegas.

August 2012

978-0-8078-7273-4, $24.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3338-4, $55.00s Cloth (2009) 978-0-8078-9536-8, $55.00 BOOK

304 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 10 illus., 2 maps, notes, bibl., index

336 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 18 illus., 1 table, 4 maps, appends., notes, bibl., index

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 33


american studies new in paperback

american history | gender studies new in paperback

Empty Pleasures

Building a Housewife’s Paradise

The Story of Artificial Sweeteners from Saccharin to Splenda

Gender, Politics, and American Grocery Stores in the Twentieth Century

carolyn de la peña

tracey deutsch

2011 Association for the Study of Food and Society Book Award

2011 Association for the Study of Food and Society Book Award

2011 Choice Outstanding Academic Title

The invention, marketing, and consumption of America’s “sweet cheats” Sugar substitutes have been a part of American life since saccharin was introduced at the 1893 World’s Fair. In Empty Pleasures, the first history of artificial sweeteners in the United States, Carolyn de la Peña blends popular culture with business and women’s history, shedding light on the invention, production, marketing, regulation, and consumption of sugar substitutes such as saccharin, Sucaryl, NutraSweet, and Splenda. These companies have enjoyed enormous success by promising that Americans can “have their cake and eat it too,” but Empty Pleasures argues that these “sweet cheats” have fostered troubling and unsustainable eating habits and are ultimately too good to be true. “Fascinating.” —The New Yorker “Book Bench” blog “An enlightening examination of consumption and its consequences.” —PopMatters

carolyn de la peña is professor of American studies at

the University of California, Davis. She is author of The Body Electric: How Strange Machines Built the Modern American.

August 2012

978-0-8078-7274-1, $24.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3409-1, $35.00s Cloth (2010) 978-0-8078-7967-2, $35.00 BOOK 296 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 24 illus., notes, bibl., index

34 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu

Gender and economic politics shape the distribution of food Today we may take supermarkets for granted, but as Tracey Deutsch reveals, they transformed the ways that Americans feed themselves. From small neighborhood stores to huge corporate chains, she traces the complicated business of food selling and provisioning as it changed over time, closely examining the politics of grocery stores in the United States. She argues that the supermarket, that icon of postwar American consumerism, emerges not from shoppers’ straightforward demand for lower prices and convenience but in the complex politics of twentieth-century consumption. “Reveal[s] how the way we shop today is gendered, classed, and profoundly political.” —Radical History Review “Deutsch demonstrates the central role that gender played in the rise of supermarkets.” —Journal of American History

tr acey deutsch is associate professor of history at the University of Minnesota.

August 2012

978-0-8078-5976-6, $24.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3327-8, $37.50s Cloth (2010) 978-0-8078-9834-5, $37.50 BOOK

352 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 19 illus., 2 tables, notes, bibl., index


southern studies | biography

american history new in paperback

new in paperback

Intellectual Life and the American South, 1810–1860 An Abridged Edition of Conjectures of Order

For the People American Populist Movements from the Revolution to the 1850s

michael o’brien

ronald p. formisano

Placing the Old South in the history of Western thought

Bringing a foundational myth closer to reality

Foreword by Daniel Walker Howe

Michael O’Brien has masterfully abridged his award-winning two-volume intellectual history of the Old South, Conjectures of Order. Here, he depicts a culture that was simultaneously national, postcolonial, and imperial, influenced by European intellectual traditions, yet also deeply implicated in the making of the American mind. O’Brien succinctly and fluently surveys the lives and works of many significant Southern intellectuals, including John C. Calhoun, Louisa McCord, James Henley Thornwell, and George Fitzhugh. He offers a new understanding of the South by describing a place neither monolithic nor out of touch, but conflicted, mobile, and ambitious to integrate modern intellectual developments into its tense and idiosyncratic social experience. “[A] magisterial work of investigation and recovery.” —American Scholar “An astonishing book. . . . O’Brien addresses not only what rendered Southern thinking distinctive, but the entire tapestry of intellectual life as it was conducted in the Old South.” —Times Literary Supplement

michael o’brien is professor of American intellectual

history at the University of Cambridge and a fellow of the British Academy. He is author or editor of several books on Southern intellectual history and, most recently, of Mrs. Adams in Winter: A Journey in the Last Days of Napoleon.

August 2012

978-0-8078-7268-0, $29.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3400-8, $42.00s Cloth (2010) 978-0-8078-9564-1, $42.00 BOOK 400 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, notes, index

Alternate Selection of the History Book Club and the Military Book Club

Ronald P. Formisano offers a new interpretation of populist political movements from the Revolution to the eve of the Civil War and seeks to rescue them from the distortions of contemporary opponents as well as the misunderstandings of later historians. He traces movements —from the Anti-Federalists to the Know-Nothings—contextualizing them and demonstrating the progression of ideas and movements. Although American populist movements have typically been categorized as either progressive or reactionary, left-leaning or right-leaning, Formisano argues that most exhibit liberal and illiberal tendencies simultaneously. By considering them together, Formisano identifies commonalities that belie the pattern of historical polarization and bring populist movements from the margins to the core of American history. “Utterly compelling and convincing.” —Journal of Southern History “Wise, significant, and thought-provoking.” —American Studies

ronald p. formisano is William T. Bryan Chair of

American History at the University of Kentucky. He is author of four books, including Boston Against Busing: Race, Class, and Ethnicity in the 1960s and 1970s.

August 2012

978-0-8078-7262-8, $25.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3172-4, $42.00s Cloth (2008) 978-0-8078-8611-3, $42.00 BOOK 978-0-8078-8610-6, $42.00 Large-Print Edition 978-0-8078-8614-4, $42.00 Audio 328 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, notes, index

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 35


american history | african american studies new in paperback

civil war | gender studies new in paperback

An Example for All the Land

Army at Home

Emancipation and the Struggle over Equality in Washington, D.C.

Women and the Civil War on the Northern Home Front

kate masur

judith giesberg

Honorable Mention, 2011 Lincoln Prize, Lincoln and Soldiers Institute, Gettysburg College

Working-class women in wartime

Honorable Mention, 2011 Avery O. Craven Award, Organization of American Historians 2011 Choice Outstanding Academic Title

Rights and equality in the nation’s capital An Example for All the Land reveals Washington, D.C. as a laboratory for social policy in the era of emancipation and the Civil War. In this panoramic study, Kate Masur provides a nuanced account of African Americans’ grassroots activism, municipal politics, and the U.S. Congress. She tells the provocative story of how black men’s right to vote transformed local affairs, and how, in short order, city reformers made that right virtually meaningless. Bringing the question of equality to the forefront of Reconstruction scholarship, this widely praised study explores how concerns about public and private space, civilization, and dependency informed the period’s debate over rights and citizenship. “Original and widely ramifying.” —American Historical Review “Sets a new standard in Reconstruction historiography. . . . A stunning achievement.” —Journal of American History

k ate masur is associate professor of history and African American studies at Northwestern University.

August 2012

978-0-8078-7266-6, $25.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3414-5, $42.00s Cloth (2010) 978-0-8078-9932-8, $42.00 BOOK

376 pp., 6 ⁄8 x 9 ⁄4, 24 illus., 3 maps, notes, bibl., index 1

1

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Introducing readers to women whose Civil War experiences have long been ignored, Judith Giesberg examines the lives of working-class women in the North, where they managed farms that had been left without a male head of household, worked in munitions factories, made uniforms, and located and cared for injured or dead soldiers. As they became more confident in their new roles, these women became visible as political actors, writing letters, signing petitions, moving (or refusing to move) from their homes, and confronting civilian and military officials. Giesberg provides a dramatic reinterpretation of how America’s Civil War reshaped the lived experience of race and gender and brought swift and lasting changes to northern working-class family life. “Original, thought-provoking, and insightful.” —Civil War History “Offers a new perspective on women in the Civil War North.” —Civil War Book Review

judith giesberg is associate professor of history at Villanova University and author of Civil War Sisterhood: The United States Sanitary Commission and Women’s Politics in Transition. Civil War America

August 2012

978-0-8078-7263-5, $24.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3307-0, $37.50s Cloth (2009) 978-0-8078-9560-3, $37.50 BOOK 248 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 21 illus., notes, bibl., index


american history | diplomatic history

cookbook new in paperback

new in paperback

No Higher Law

Hearthside Cooking

American Foreign Policy and the Western Hemisphere since 1776

Early American Southern Cuisine Updated for Today’s Hearth and Cookstove

brian loveman

Second Edition

The longstanding U.S. effort to establish hegemony in the Americas and beyond

Foreword by Sandra Oliver

Dismantling the myths of United States isolationism and exceptionalism, No Higher Law is a sweeping history of American policy toward the Western Hemisphere and Latin America from independence to the present. From the nation’s earliest days, argues Brian Loveman, U.S. leaders treated Latin America as a crucible in which to test foreign policy and from which to expand American global influence. Loveman demonstrates how the main policies adopted for the Western Hemisphere were exported, with modifications, to other world regions as the United States pursued its self-defined global mission. This revisionist view considers the impact of slavery, racism, ethnic cleansing against Native Americans, debates on immigration, trade and tariffs, the historical growth of the military-industrial complex, and political corruption as critical dimensions of American politics and foreign policy.

“This provocative book . . . has the air of a lifetime achievement.” —Pacific Historical Review

brian loveman is professor emeritus of political science at San Diego State University and author or editor of more than twenty books on Latin American history and politics, inter-American relations, and U.S. foreign policy.

August 2012

1

For cooks hungry for a connection to culinary history, Hearthside Cooking is a treasure trove of early American delights. First published in 1986, it offers twenty-first-century cooks an enjoyable, informative resource for traditional cooking. It contains recipes for more than 250 historic dishes, including breads, soups, entrées, cakes, custards, sauces, and more. For each dish, Nancy Carter Crump provides the original recipe, followed by two sets of instructions—one for preparation over the open fire and a second making use of modern kitchen appliances. Crump also includes information about the men and women who wrote the original recipes, which she discovered by scouring old Virginia cookbooks, handwritten receipt books, and other primary sources in archival collections.

“Brush up on old-school cooking techniques and dive into comfort foods of the South.” —Hobby Farm Home Magazine

nancy carter crump is a culinary historian and founder of the Culinary Historians of Virginia.

August 2012

978-0-8078-5913-1, $22.00t Paper 978-0-8078-3246-2, $36.00t Cloth (2008) 978-0-8078-8954-1, $36.00 BOOK

552 pp., 6 ⁄8 x 9 ⁄4, 11 illus., 4 maps, 7 tables, appends., notes, bibl., index 1

More than 250 recipes for the open fire or the modern kitchen

“A delightful resource for historians and cooks alike.” —Patricia Brady, author of Nelly Custis Lewis’s Housekeeping Book

“Elegant and courageous.” —Latin American Review of Books

978-0-8078-7265-9, $29.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3371-1, $37.50s Cloth (2010) 978-0-8078-9598-6, $37.50 BOOK

nancy carter crump

352 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 55 illus., 250 recipes, notes, bibl., index

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 37


art history new in paperback

Cultural Contact and the Making of European Art since the Age of Exploration edited by mary d. sheriff The early globalization of artistic influence Art historians have long been accustomed to thinking about art in terms of national traditions. This volume suggests that organization based on national divisions often obscures the processes of cultural appropriation and global exchange that shaped the visual arts in Europe in fundamental ways. The essays analyze distinct zones of contact—between various European states, between Asia and Europe, or between Europe and so-called primitive cultures in Africa, the Americas, and the South Pacific—focusing mainly on painting, drawing, or the decorative arts. Each foregrounds the centrality of international borrowings and counters conceptions of European art as a “pure” tradition uninfluenced by the artistic forms of other cultures. The contributors are Claire Farago, Elisabeth A. Fraser, Julie Hochstrasser, Christopher Johns, Carol Mavor, Mary D. Sheriff, and Lyneise E. Williams. “[A] groundbreaking book.” —David O’Brien, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign “A masterfully conceived and organized collection.” —Melissa Hyde, University of Florida

mary d. sheriff is W. R. Kenan Jr. Distinguished Professor

of Art History at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is author of Moved by Love: Inspired Artists and Deviant Women in Eighteenth-Century France, among other books. Bettie Allison Rand Lectures in Art History

August 2012

978-0-8078-7270-3, $29.95s Paper 978-0-8078-3366-7, $35.00s Cloth (2010) 978-0-8078-9819-2, $35.00 BOOK

240 pp., 61⁄8 x 91⁄4, 12 color and 50 b&w illus., notes, bibl., index 38 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu

north carolina | global studies

A Way Forward Building a Globally Competitive South

edited by daniel p. gitterman and peter a. coclanis Published by the Global Research Institute, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Charting a different future for the region In the last half century, North Carolina and the South have experienced rapid economic growth. Much of the best analysis of this progress came from two North Carolinabased research organizations: the Southern Growth Policies Board and MDC (originally a project of the North Carolina Fund). Their 1986 reports are two of the best assessments of the achievements and limitations of the so-called Sunbelt boom. On November 17, 2011, the Global Research Institute at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the Institute for Emerging Issues at North Carolina State University co–hosted a public discussion to build on these classic reports and to offer fresh analyses of the current challenges facing the region. A Way Forward, which issued from this effort, features more than thirty original essays containing recommendations and strategies for building and sustaining a globally competitive South. “Of immense value to all of us who care about the region that our grandchildren are inheriting.” —William F. Winter, former governor of Mississippi

daniel p. gitterman is associate professor of public

policy and senior fellow at the Global Research Institute at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He has served as senior policy adviser to North Carolina governor Beverly Perdue and is author of Boosting Paychecks: The Politics of Supporting America’s Working Poor. peter a. coclanis is Albert R. Newsome Distinguished Professor of History and director of the Global Research Institute at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Now Available

978-0-8078-7335-9, $28.00s Paper 978-0-8078-7289-5, $15.00 BOOK 220 pp., 81⁄2 x 11


UNC Press Shorts excerpt compelling, shorter narratives from selected bestselling books published by the University of North Carolina Press and present them as engaging, quick reads. Published exclusively as e-books, these shorts introduce essential concepts, defining moments, and concise introductions to topics. They are intended to stir the imagination and encourage exploration of the original publications from which they are drawn. Priced from $2.99 and available instantly, these thought-provoking e-books are perfect starting places for further inquiry.

unc press shorts titles include: Michael B. Ballard on The Battle of Vicksburg Victoria E. Bynum on Rebels Against Confederate Mississippi Drew Gilpin Faust on Confederate Women and Yankee Men Robert K. Krick on The Mortal Wounding of Stonewall Jackson George C. Rable on The Battle of Fredericksburg Carol Reardon On Pickett’s Charge Johanna Schoen on Women and the Politics of Sterilization Available now for Kindle, Nook, and Sony eReader. For more information, visit www.uncpressebookshorts.com. Look for forthcoming UNC Press Shorts in American History, African-American history, religious studies, and more.

Omnibus E-Book Editions We are pleased to announce the first of our Omnibus E-Book Editions — The Harry Pfanz Gettysburg Trilogy, The Earl J. Hess Fortifications Trilogy, The Gary W. Gallagher Shenandoah Valley Campaigns, and Norton Hadler’s Healthcare Trilogy. Others are on their way. They bundle definitive, closely related volumes into one searchable, comprehensive volume. Look for more Omnibus E-Books to be published in the coming months. Available now for Kindle, Nook, and Sony eReader.

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 39


978-0-8078-6949-9, $25.00 Paper 978-0-8078-6950-5, $25.00 BOOK

Narrative of William W. Brown, an American Slave Written by Himself

william wells brown

978-0-8078-6959-8, $25.00 Paper 978-0-8078-6960-4, $25.00 BOOK

Narrative of the Life of Moses Grandy, Late a Slave in the United States of America moses grandy 978-0-8078-6951-2, $15.00 Paper 978-0-8078-6952-9, $15.00 BOOK

S

Slave Songs of the United States edited by william francis allen

OK

DOC

O

UNC Press and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Library are pleased to announce DocSouth Books. This project brings select titles from the library of Documenting the American South back into print and makes them available as e-books and print-on-demand TH B U publications. Please visit our website and click SO on DocSouth Books to learn more.

Behind the Scenes, or, Thirty Years a Slave, and Four Years in the White House elizabeth keckley 978-0-8078-6963-5, $25.00 Paper 978-0-8078-6964-2, $25.00 BOOK

Twelve Years a Slave Narrative of Solomon Northup, a Citizen of New-York, Kidnapped in Washington City in 1841, and Rescued in 1853

solomon northup

978-0-8078-6943-7, $30.00 Paper 978-0-8078-6944-4, $30.00 BOOK

A Narrative of the Adventures and Escape of Moses Roper, from American Slavery moses roper 978-0-8078-6965-9, $15.00 Paper 978-0-8078-6966-6, $15.00 BOOK

An Autobiography of the Reverend Josiah Henson

The Confessions of Nat Turner, the Leader of the Late Insurrection in Southampton, Virginia nat turner

978-0-8078-6961-1, $25.00 Paper 978-0-8078-6962-8, $25.00 BOOK

Walker’s Appeal, in Four Articles

Uncle Tom’s Story of His Life

josiah henson

The Experience of a Slave in South Carolina john andrew jackson 978-0-8078-6955-0 $15.00 Paper 978-0-8078-6956-7, $15.00 BOOK

The Experience of Rev. Thomas H. Jones, Who Was a Slave for Forty-Three Years

978-0-8078-6945-1, $15.00 Paper 978-0-8078-6946-8, $15.00 BOOK

Together with a Preamble, to the Coloured Citizens of the World, but in Particular, and Very Expressly, to Those of the United States of America

david walker

978-0-8078-6947-5, $15.00 Paper 978-0-8078-6948-2, $15.00 BOOK

Written by a Friend, as Related to Him by Brother Jones

American Slavery As It Is

978-0-8078-6953-6, $15.00 Paper 978-0-8078-6954-3, $15.00 BOOK

978-0-8078-6957-4, $40.00 Paper 978-0-8078-6958-1, $40.00 BOOK

thomas h. jones

40 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu

Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses

theodore dwight weld


recent and recommended

The New Southern Garden Cookbook

Enjoying the Best from Homegrown Gardens, Farmers’ Markets, Roadside Stands, and CSA Farm Boxes

sheri castle

ISBN 978-0-8078-3465-7, $35.00t Cloth ISBN 978-0-8078-7789-0, $35.00 BOOK

The New Southern-Latino Table Recipes That Bring Together the Bold and Beloved Flavors of Latin America and the American South

sandra a. gutierrez

ISBN 978-0-8078-3494-7, $30.00t Cloth ISBN 978-0-8078-6921-5, $30.00 BOOK

The Civil War in the West

Victory and Defeat from the Appalachians to the Mississippi

earl j. hess

Littlefield History of the Civil War Era

ISBN 978-0-8078-3542-5, $40.00t Cloth ISBN 978-0-8078-6984-0, $40.00 BOOK ISBN 978-0-8078-7231-4, $50.00s Large-Print

Dining with the Washingtons Historic Recipes, Entertaining, and Hospitality from Mount Vernon

edited by stephen a. mcleod Foreword by Walter Scheib

ISBN 978-0-8078-3526-5, $35.00t Cloth

Wildflowers and Plant Communities of the Southern Appalachian Mountains and Piedmont

A Naturalist’s Guide to the Carolinas, Virginia, Tennessee, and Georgia ISBN 978-0-8078-3440-4, $50.00s Cloth ISBN 978-0-8078-7172-0, $26.00t Paper ISBN 978-0-8078-7765-4, $50.00 BOOK

ISBN 978-0-8078-3514-2, $35.00t Cloth ISBN 978-0-8078-6939-0, $35.00 BOOK

Fishing North Carolina’s Outer Banks

The Armchair Birder Goes Coastal

The Complete Guide to Catching More Fish from Surf, Pier, Sound, and Ocean

stan ulanski

Backpacking North Carolina

James Madison

paul and angela knipple

joe miller

jeff broadwater

Foreword by John T. Edge

ISBN 978-0-8078-3517-3, $35.00t Cloth ISBN 978-0-8078-6996-3, $35.00 BOOK

ISBN 978-0-8078-3455-8, $45.00s Cloth ISBN 978-0-8078-7183-6, $20.00t Paper ISBN 978-0-8078-7794-4, $45.00 BOOK

james valentine

With text by Chris Bolgiano Foreword by William Meadows

ISBN 978-0-8078-7207-9, $20.00t Paper ISBN 978-0-8078-6926-0, $20.00 BOOK

The Definitive Guide to 43 Can’t-Miss Trips from Mountains to Sea

In Praise of Ancient Mountains, OldGrowth Forests, and Wilderness

timothy p. spira

The World in a Skillet A Food Lover’s Tour of the New American South

Southern Appalachian Celebration

A Son of Virginia and a Founder of the Nation ISBN 978-0-8078-3530-2, $30.00t Cloth ISBN 978-0-8078-6991-8, $30.00 BOOK

The Secret Lives of Birds of the Southeastern Shore

john yow

ISBN 978-0-8078-3561-6, $26.00t Cloth ISBN 978-0-8078-8260-3, $26.00 BOOK

Martha Jefferson Randolph, Daughter of Monticello Her Life and Times

cynthia a. kierner

ISBN 978-0-8078-3552-4, $35.00t Cloth ISBN 978-0-8078-8250-4, $35.00 BOOK

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press | 41


award-winning books

Lincoln’s Forgotten Ally

Judge Advocate General Joseph Holt of Kentucky

elizabeth d. leonard

2012 Gilder Lehrman Lincoln Prize, Gettysburg College and the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History

Living for the City

Migration, Education, and the Rise of the Black Panther Party in Oakland, California

donna murch

2011 Phillis Wheatley Book Prize, Northeast Black Studies Association

Forging Freedom

Black Women and the Pursuit of Liberty in Antebellum Charleston

amrita chakrabarti myers

2011 George C. Rogers Jr. Award, South Carolina Historical Society

The House on Diamond Hill

A Cherokee Plantation Story tiya miles, 2011 macarthur fellow 2011 National Council on Public History Book Award 2011 Lilla M. Hawes Award, Georgia Historical Society

Smeltertown

Making and Remembering a Southwest Border Community

monica perales

2011 Kenneth Jackson Award, Urban History Association

Schooling the Freed People

The Tejano Diaspora

ronald e. butchart

marc simon rodriguez

Teaching, Learning, and the Struggle for Black Freedom, 1861-1876

2011 Outstanding Book Award, History of Education Society

The Color of the Land

Mexican Americanism and Ethnic Politics in Texas and Wisconsin

2012 NACCS Tejas Nonfiction Book Award, National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies, Tejas Foco

Race, Nation, and the Politics of Landownership in Oklahoma, 1832-1929

The Deepest Wounds

2010 Theodore Saloutos Memorial Book Award, Agricultural History Society

thomas d. rogers

david a. chang

Living the Revolution

A Labor and Environmental History of Sugar in Northeast Brazil

2011 Warren Dean Memorial Prize, Conference on Latin American History

Italian Women’s Resistance and Radicalism in New York City, 1880-1945

Removable Type

2011 Helen and Howard R. Marraro Prize, Society for Italian Historical Studies and American Historical Association 2010 Theodore Saloutos Book Prize, Immigration and Ethnic History Society

2011 James Russell Lowell Prize, Modern Language Association

jennifer guglielmo

Forging Diaspora

Afro-Cubans and African Americans in a World of Empire and Jim Crow

Histories of the Book in Indian Country, 1663-1880

phillip h. round

Domingos Álvares, African Healing, and the Intellectual History of the Atlantic World james h. sweet

2011 James A. Rawley Prize in Atlantic History, American Historical Association

frank andre guridy

Motives of Honor, Pleasure, and Profit

Border War

lorena s. walsh

2011 Wesley-Logan Prize, American Historical Association Fighting over Slavery before the Civil War

Plantation Management in the Colonial Chesapeake, 1607-1763

2010 James A. Rawley Award, Southern Historical Association

2010 Frank L. and Harriet C. Owsley Award, Southern Historical Association Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, VA

Talk with You Like a Woman

Prospero’s America

cheryl d. hicks

walter woodward

stanley harrold

African American Women, Justice, and Reform in New York, 1890-1935

2011 Letitia Woods Brown Book Award, Association of Black Women Historians

John Winthrop, Jr., Alchemy, and the Creation of New England Culture, 1606-1676

2011 Homer D. Babbidge Jr. Award, Association for the Study of Connecticut History Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, VA

This is only a selection of our award-winning books. To see them all, visit our website. 42 | 1-800-848-6224 | www.uncpress.unc.edu


unc press journals U.S.A. Foreign

U.S.A. Foreign

Southern Cultures

Appalachian Heritage

Harry L. Watson and Jocelyn R. Neal, Editors Quarterly: Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter ISSN 1068-8218 (2012-Volume 18)

George Brosi, Editor Quarterly: Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall ISSN 0363-2318 (2012-Volume 40) $38.00 $70.00 $25.00 $57.00

er

issn 0038-366x i

astern divis he

Volume 52, Number 1

Spring 2012

Journal of the southeastern division, association of american geographers

4

ut o

19

editors: david m. cochran, Jr. & carl a. reese

$60.00 $92.00 $39.00 $71.00

Southeastern Geographer

Andy Reese and David Cochran, Editors Quarterly: Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter ISSN 0038-366X (2012-Volume 52) Institutions Individuals (SEDAAG membership dues)

$49.00 $81.00 $40.00

$72.00

s

The Southern Literary Journal

$61.00 $85.00 $39.00 $63.00

Jennifer G. Job, Managing Editor Quarterly: Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer ISSN 0018-1498 (2012/2013-Volume 96) $66.00 $98.00 $39.00 $71.00

The Journal of the Civil War Era William Blair, Editor Quarterly: Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter ISSN 2154-4727 (2012-Volume 2)

$60.00 $92.00 $40.00 $72.00

www.JournaloftheCivilWarEra.com Named one of the Best New Magazines of 2011 by Library Journal

am

$54.00

The High School Journal

Institutions Individuals

ion of

ographers

$46.00

Sandra Gustafson, Editor Triannually: Spring, Fall, Winter ISSN 0012-8163 (2012-Volume 47)

Institutions Individuals

c i at

Southeastern Geographer

Early American Literature

Institutions Individuals

so

ge

Zahi Zalloua, Editor Annually: May ISSN 0195-7678 (2012-Volume 36) Institutions and Individuals

as

n

io

n

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The Comparatist

Institutions Individuals

7

Institutions Individuals

Fred Hobson and Minrose Gwin, Editors Semiannually: Fall, Spring ISSN 0038-4291 (2012/2013-Volume 45) Institutions Individuals

$57.00 $73.00 $34.00 $50.00

Studies in Philology

Reid Barbour, Editor Quarterly: Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall ISSN 0039-3738 (2012-Volume 109) Institutions Individuals

$63.00 $95.00 $39.00 $71.00

journal orders

Orders for subscriptions may be placed directly with the Journals Department, the University of North Carolina Press, or through a subscription agency. All direct orders must be prepaid with a check drawn on a U.S. bank or an international money order payable to the appropriate journal(s). Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American Express orders are also accepted.

For additional information contact Suzi Waters at: Journals Department, University of North Carolina Press 116 S. Boundary St., Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514-3808 Telephone: 919-962-4201 Fax: 919-843-7595 or 1-800-205-5425 E-mail: uncpress_  journals@unc.edu

FALL/WINTER 2012-2013 | The University of North Carolina Press

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43


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Title and Author Index for Fall | Winter 2012-2013 29 32 14 6 36 26 33 29 5 24 34 29 8 17 3 10 17 31 5 4 31 37 38 27 34 15 30 31 34 26 34 36 20 30 27 11 3 28 35 35 7 22 31 36 38 28 25 21 13 37 19 27 6 33 35

Across God’s Frontiers Allen, Michael J. American Night Anderson, Jean Army at Home Bates, Beth Tompkins Bauer, William J. Bennett, M. Todd Blum, Edward J. and Paul Harvey Bonner, Judith H. and Estill Curtis Pennington Building a Housewife’s Paradise Butler, Anne M. Buttermilk Carson, Cary and Carl R. Lounsbury Cecelski, David S. Cherokee Stories of the Turtle Island Liars’ Club Chesapeake House, The Colonial Entanglement Color of Christ, The Colors of Confinement Crooked Paths to Allotment Crump, Nancy Carter Cultural Contact and the Making of European Art since the Age of Exploration David Ruggles de la Peña, Carolyn Death and Life of Main Street, The Decolonizing Museums Dennison, Jean Deutsch, Tracey Doctoring Freedom Empty Pleasures Example for All the Land, An Eye of All Trade, In the Fabricant, Nicole Families in Crisis in the Old South Finch, Bill, Beth Maynor Young, Rhett Johnson, and John C. Hall Fire of Freedom, The Fluhman, J. Spencer For the People Formisano, Ronald P. Fred Thompson’s Southern Sides Fredericksburg! Fredericksburg! Genetin-Pilawa, C. Joseph Giesberg, Judith Gitterman, Daniel P., and Peter A. Coclanis Gospel of Freedom and Power, The Guerra, Lillian Hall, David D. Halloran, Fiona Deans Hearthside Cooking Hobson, Charles F. Hodges, Graham Russell Gao Hoppin’ John’s Lowcountry Cooking House on Diamond Hill, The Intellectual Life and the American South, 1810-1860

Jarvis, Michael J. Jean Anderson’s Preserving Guide Lonetree, Amy Long, Gretchen Longleaf, Far as the Eye Can See Loveman, Brian Making of Black Detroit in the Age of Henry Ford, The Masur, Kate 36 1 McPherson, James M. 18 Memoir of Lieutenant Dumont, 1715–1747, The Milam, Ron 32 33 Miles, Tiya 30 Mobilizing Bolivia’s Displaced Moose, Debbie 8 4 Muller, Eric L. 24 New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture No Higher Law 37 23 Noonan, Ellen 32 Not a Gentleman’s War 35 O’Brien, Michael One World, Big Screen 29 15 Orvell, Miles 16 Patterson, Daniel W. 9 Pecans 28 “Peculiar People, A” Purvis, Kathleen 9 25 Putnam, Lara 22 Rable, George C. 25 Radical Moves 21 Reforming People, A 12 Rotskoff, Lori and Laura L. Lovett Ruble, Sarah E. 28 18 Sayre, Gordon M. and Carla Zecher Schweninger, Loren 27 38 Sheriff, Mary D. 22 Sicherman, Barbara 2 Simpson, Bland 20 Smith-Rosenberg, Carroll 19 St. George Tucker’s Law Reports and Selected Papers, 1782-1825 Strange Career of Porgy and Bess, The 23 Taylor, John Martin 6 10 Teuton, Christopher B. Thomas Jr., James G., and Charles 24 Reagan Wilson 13 Thomas Nast 7 Thompson, Fred 16 True Image, The 2 Two Captains from Carolina Until the Last Man Comes Home 32 Violent Empire, This 20 25 Visions of Power in Cuba 14 Wald, Alan M. 1 War on the Waters 38 Way Forward, A 33 We Were All Like Migrant Workers Here Well-Read Lives 22 12 When We Were Free to Be 20 6 30 26 11 37 26


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FALL | WINTER 2012-2013

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