The University of Utah Press Spring/Summer 2012
“Significant . . . both as a religious study and
Contents New Books
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New in Paper
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Distributed Clients
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Essential Backlist
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a historical study. It is much more accessible than most other books on this topic.” —Tom Grayson Colonnese, University of Washington
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“Immeasurably valuable. Its narrative text is anecdotal in style and presentation, it puts you within the locale or setting very directly, and the sounds, sights, conversation, and activi-
On the Cover: Herbie, a 25-year-old chimp who resides at Chimps Inc. in Bend, Oregon, is featured in an essay in Primate People (p. 3). Photo © Jill Rosell. Learn more about Chimps Inc. at www.chimps-inc.org.
ties are experienced intimately. I feel and sense Lakota people and others have been waiting for ages for this book. I personally have. With his talent and indigenous sense of scholarship, Albert has composed a book that will go a long way to setting the record straight on indigenous knowledge as a whole.”
Our Mission The University of Utah Press is an agency of The University of Utah. In accordance with the mission of the University, the Press publishes and disseminates scholarly books in selected fields and other printed and recorded materials of significance to Utah, the region, the country, and the world. The University of Utah Press is a member of the Association of American University Presses.
www.UofUpress.com
—Simon J. Ortiz, Arizona State University
Life’s Journey—Zuya Oral Teachings from Rosebud
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A fascinating look at Lakota lifeways and history through the voices of medicine men and White Hat’s personal stories
Albert White Hat Sr. Compiled and edited by John Cunningham
White Hat also shares stories from his own experience. Using anecdotes he shows not only how the Lakota lifestyle has been altered but also how Lakota words have begun to take on new meanings that lack their original connotations and generate a different picture of Lakota philosophy. Language, interwoven with history, tells the people where they came from and who they are. By gathering the traditions and ceremonies in a single volume, with the history of how they evolved, he has secured the meaning of these practices for future generations. Filled with warmth and humor, Life’s Journey—Zuya is an enjoyable and enlightening read.
Born and raised on the Rosebud Sioux Reservation in South Dakota, Albert White Hat Sr. has lived there his entire life, teaching in the Lakota Studies Department at Sinte Gleska University for more than 25 years. As the grandson of Chief Hollow Horn Bear and member of the Aske Gluwipi Tiospaye, he continues to promote education and awareness for his people in the 21st century while maintaining a traditional way of life. Life’s Journey— Zuya is his second book, following Reading and Writing the Lakota Language (The University of Utah Press, 1999). John Cunningham lives in Boulder, Colorado, with his wife, Cindy, and his daughter, Catherine. He is an avid hiker and is happiest outdoors.
American Indian March 2012 224 pp., 7 x 8 1/2 21 color illus., 4 b/w illus., 1 map 978-1-60781-177-0, Cloth $49.95 978-1-60781-184-8, Paper $24.95
NEW BOOKS AMERICAN INDIAN
“Our people are very lucky to be here,” says Albert White Hat Sr. He has lived through a time when Indians were sent to boarding schools and were not permitted to practice their own rituals. Although the Lakota people can practice their beliefs openly once again, things have changed and old ways have been forgotten. As a teacher at Sinte Gleska University in South Dakota, White Hat seeks to preserve the link the Lakota people have with their past. In Life’s Journey—Zuya, White Hat has collected and translated the stories of medicine men, retaining the simplicity of their language so as not to interpret their words through a Western lens. This is Zuya, oral history that is lived and handed down over the generations.
The University of Utah Press Spring/Summer 2012
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“Among my worst fears is that I’ll wake up NEW BOOKS AMERICAN INDIAN
one day and wonder where all the animals have gone. Even if we do make immediate changes, numerous animals will perish. But that’s where persistence and hard work come in. . . . Right now each of us can start making more humane and ethical choices in our daily lives—in the food we eat, the clothes we wear, the products we buy, and the cars we drive, to offer just a few examples. It doesn’t take a great deal of effort to make a positive difference.” —from the foreword by Marc Bekoff
A young Barbary macaque photographed on the Rock of Gibraltar. © Keri Cairns.
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Primate People
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This thought-provoking collection sheds light on the plight of our nonhuman primate cousins— and what we can do to help
Saving Nonhuman Primates through Education, Advocacy, and Sanctuary Edited by Lisa Kemmerer Foreword by Marc Bekoff
The first section of Primate People introduces forces that threaten nonhuman primates, such as the entertainment and “pet” industries, the bushmeat trade, habitat destruction, and logging. The second section exposes the exploitation of primates in research facilities, including the painful memories of an undercover agent, and suggests models of more enlightened scientific methods. The final section tells the stories of those who lobby for change, educate communities, and tenderly care for our displaced cousins in sanctuaries. Sometimes shocking and disturbing, sometimes poignant and encouraging, Primate People always draws the reader into the lives of nonhuman primates. Activists around the world reveal the antics and pleasures of monkeys, the tendencies and idiosyncrasies of chimpanzees, and the sufferings and fears of macaques. Charming, difficult, sensitive—these testimonies demonstrate that nonhuman primates and human beings are, indeed, closely related. Woven into the anthology’s lucid narratives are the stories of how we harm and create the conditions that endanger primates, and what we can and must do to prevent their ongoing suffering and fast-approaching extinction.
“A significant contribution to the field of critical animal studies . . . but also to environmental ethics, law, biology, cognitive ethology, philosophy, and the social sciences. A useful and moving book.” —Carol Gigliotti, editor of Leonardo's Choice: Genetic Technologies and Animals
Lisa Kemmerer is an associate professor of philosophy and religions at Montana State University, Billings. She has published numerous scholarly articles and has authored or edited several books, including Animals and World Religions and Sister Species: Women, Animals, and Social Justice. She is a philosopher-activist determined to work against oppression, whether on behalf of nonhuman animals, the environment, or disempowered human beings.
Animal Rights/Ethics April 2012 224 pp., 6 x 9 3 charts 978-1-60781-178-7, Cloth $49.95
NEW BOOKS ANIMAL RIGHTS/ETHICS
In the last 30 years the bushmeat trade has led to the slaughter of nearly 90 percent of West Africa’s bonobos, perhaps our closest relatives, and has recently driven Miss Waldron’s red colobus monkey to extinction. Earth was once rich with primates, but every species—except one—is now extinct or endangered because of one primate—Homo sapiens. How have our economic and cultural practices pushed our cousins toward destruction? Would we care more about their fate if we knew something of their individual lives and sufferings? Would we help them if we understood how our choices threaten their existence? This anthology helps to answer these questions.
NEW BOOKS ANIMAL RIGHTS/ETHICS
The University of Utah Press Spring/Summer 2012
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Chase Peterson with University of Utah students on campus about 1984.
“When I first met Chase Peterson as a Harvard freshman— along with our joint friend and brother David Evans— something deeply touched me. It was not only his sincere smile and open embrace but also a sense that here was a kind and courageous man comfortable in his own skin, secure in who he was yet eager to encounter new persons, new experiences, and new challenges. . . . He was from Utah but in New England, a Mormon in old Harvard, and a medical doctor in the deanship of admissions. Little did I know that his journey would enhance and enrich my own—owing to his critical allegiance to his family, his faith, his friends, and to his citizenship of country and world. His prophetic witness at Harvard in the turbulent ‘60s and ‘70s, his promotion of black priesthood in the Mormon church, his support of antiapartheid protests in the ‘80s, and his steadfast defense of academic freedom in the Cold Fusion controversy in the early ‘90s all express his quiet and humble effort to be true to himself—a self grounded in, but not limited by, a rich Mormon tradition.” —from the foreword by Cornel West
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The Guardian Poplar
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This memoir by a Utah-born, Harvard-educated man offers life stories that focus on family, faith, career, and conviction
A Memoir of Deep Roots, Journey, and Rediscovery Chase Nebeker Peterson Foreword by Cornel West
The Guardian Poplar tells of a man who grew up in small-town Utah and carried his pioneer and Mormon heritage to a New England prep school and later to Harvard. He then returned to Utah as a doctor, but unexpectedly found himself back at Harvard as its dean of admissions, handling issues such as the Vietnam War and racial and gender reform. The book explains how Peterson’s home state recruited him back to become an administrator at the University of Utah and how he would eventually become the university president, taking on new issues and challenges. Peterson recounts these years by drawing on anecdotes that recall the people he served and the moments that brought his life meaning. This autobiography is a compelling account of how Peterson has managed to balance family and career, handle the tensions that have arisen between his faith and his scientific training, and remain solid in the face of his newest challenge—cancer. The book’s engaging prose and honest reflections are sure to intrigue and inspire readers who know the man well, as well as those readers who simply want to know a man who can be described as dedicated, faithful, hardworking, and hopeful about the future.
“Here is the odyssey of Chase Peterson, a man of remarkable gifts. His charming stories of the privileged places his talents have taken him reveal a man of unusual candor and humility. As he tells us, wherever he went as student, physician, college administrator, or teacher, he never left home.” —Richard Lyman Bushman, Gouverneur Morris Professor of History Emeritus, Columbia University
After graduating from Harvard Medical School, Chase Nebeker Peterson began a career practicing medicine, but his path took him into university administration and led to his position as president of The University of Utah from 1983 to 1991.
Memoir/Autobiography April 2012 328 pp., 6 x 9 19 illus. 978-1-60781-182-4, Cloth $39.95
NEW BOOKS MEMOIR/AUTOBIOGRAPHY
When Barney Clark received the Jarvik-7 artificial heart in 1983 and Cold Fusion came under fire in 1989, Chase Peterson, as the University of Utah president, was inevitably pulled into these campus events. While these episodes may be the best known in Peterson’s professional history, they are certainly not the only stories that make his autobiography worth reading.
Flaming Gorge Dam.
The University of Utah Press Spring/Summer 2012
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“My very first real river trip was on the Green below Flaming Gorge Dam about 1975 . . . . We nervously blew up the boat, put our gear and food in big plastic garbage bags, put them in the bottom of the boat, and pushed off. . . . We paddled through a whole series of little rapids, which to our inexperienced eyes were raging cataracts, and camped overnight at Little Hole, in those days rarely visited. At the end of it, we had asked our friend Mike to pick us up
NEW BOOKS MEMOIR/AUTOBIOGRAPHY
in ‘Browns Park.’ None of us had ever been there and we didn’t know it was an all-but-uninhabited, 40-mile long valley traversed by only a single dirt road. But somehow, after ducking under the Taylor Flats Bridge and walking along the road we found one another. That first overnight trip had been cold and scary and quick; and from that day to this I have never stopped thinking about the Green River.” —from the introduction USGS party camped at Scott Bottom, 1922.
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Takes the reader on a journey back in time to explore the Green River as it once was
Lost Canyons of the Green River The Story before Flaming Gorge Dam Roy Webb
A historian and a lifetime lover of rivers, Webb has spent decades exploring the region, digging into archives, and running the length of the Green River. The book chronicles the history that is most closely linked to the river and its bottomlands, sharing the stories of those who traveled the Green through Flaming Gorge and the other canyons now flooded by the reservoir, as well as those who lived, trapped, farmed, or ranched along its banks. In depicting the river of the past, Webb considers his book “a guidebook for a river you can no longer run.”
“Roy Webb is one of the premier river historians in the American West. Because the history of the Green River under Flaming Gorge reservoir is the most neglected part of the system, this book is a much-needed addition to the river system’s story. Webb’s easy-to-read writing style will engage both the scholar and the general reader.” —James Aton, author of John Wesley Powell: His Life and Legacy (The University of Utah Press, 2010.)
Roy Webb is the multimedia archivist for Special Collections at the J. Willard Marriott Library at The University of Utah. He has been running rivers since 1976 and has written scores of publications on river history, including If We Had a Boat: Green River Explorers, Adventurers, and Runners (The University of Utah Press, 1997)
Western History/Outdoors April 2012 176 pp., 8 ½ x 10 87 illlus., 6 maps 978-1-60781-179-4, Paper $21.95
NEW BOOKS WESTERN HISTORY/OUTDOORS
After more than 50 years of plans to dam the Green River, it finally happened in 1963 as part of the Colorado River Storage Project. Today many people enjoy boating and fishing on the resultant Flaming Gorge Reservoir, but few know about what lies under the water. Compared to Glen Canyon, Flaming Gorge has received little attention. In Lost Canyons of the Green River, Roy Webb takes the reader back in time to discover what lay along this section of the Green River before the Flaming Gorge Dam was built, and provides a historical account of this section of the Colorado River system.
The University of Utah Press Spring/Summer 2012
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A strong collection of essays about mass murder and humanitarian intervention that is sure to incite discussion
Essays on Genocide and Humanitarian Intervention
NEW BOOKS POLITICAL SCIENCE
Guenter Lewy
The essays in this book, written over a span of some twenty years but updated for this publication, discuss episodes of mass murder that are often considered instances of genocide: the large-scale killing of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey during World War I, the near-extinction of North America’s Indian population, the vicious persecution of the “Roma” or Gypsies under the Nazi regime. But in line with Article II of the Genocide Convention of 1948, Lewy stresses the crucial importance of looking closely at the intent of the perpetrators. In contrast to the Holocaust, the killers in the atrocities mentioned above did not seek to destroy an entire people, and so, these three large-scale killings do not deserve the label of genocide. Lewy argues that affirming the distinctiveness of the Holocaust does not deny, downgrade, or trivialize the suffering of other people. The crimes against the Ottoman Armenians, the American Indians, and the Gypsies—even if they did not reach the threshold of genocide—involved horrendous suffering and a massive loss of life. The genocides of Cambodia and Rwanda that took place in the second half of the twentieth century remind us that man’s inhumanity to man can take many forms and is not the special prerogative of any particular group. The last essay of the collection deals with the complications of humanitarian intervention to prevent genocide. As the recent support of the Libyan rebels by NATO demonstrates, the issues raised here remain topical and controversial.
Guenter Lewy is Professor Emeritus of Political Science at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. His books include The Catholic Church and Nazi Germany; The Nazi Persecution of the Gypsies; and The Armenian Massacres in Ottoman Turkey: A Disputed Genocide (The University of Utah Press, 2005).
“Lewy’s research is impeccable. I don’t know of any book in the field that covers the same ground as Lewy’s. The essays are thoughtful, judicious, well-crafted, and focus on issues that are very important and interesting.” —Abraham Ascher, Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Graduate Center, CUNY
Political Science January 2012 208 pp., 6 x 9 978-1-60781-168-8, Paper $25.00s
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A multifaceted approach to understanding the origins of the Tewa Pueblo people of New Mexico
Winner of the Don D. and Catherine S. Fowler Prize
Winds from the North Tewa Origins and Historical Anthropology Scott G. Ortman
Integrating data and methods from human biology, linguistics, archaeology, and cultural anthropology, Ortman shows that a striking social transformation took place as Mesa Verde people moved to the Rio Grande, such that the resulting ancestral Tewa culture was a unique hybrid of ideas and practices from various sources. While addressing several long-standing questions in American archaeology, Winds from the North also serves as a methodological guidebook, including new approaches to integrating archaeology and language based on cognitive science research. As such, it will be of interest to researchers throughout the social and human sciences.
Scott G. Ortman is an Omidyar Fellow at the Santa Fe Institute and the Lightfoot Fellow at the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center. His dissertation, which served as the basis for this book, won the Society for American Archaeology Dissertation Award in 2011.
“A very significant contribution. It will prove to be a landmark study since it shows new ways forward to the many archaeologists all over the world who are grappling with the sort of long-standing problem, concerned with questions of migration and ethnic identity, that Ortman addresses. It combines theoretical sophistication, solid methodology, and a detailed knowledge of a range of different types of evidence.” —Stephen Shennan, Director, UCL Institute of Archaeology
Anthropology/Archaeology January 2012 488 pp., 7 x 10 51 illus., 25 maps, 54 tables 978-1-60781-172-5, Cloth $70.00s
NEW BOOKS ANTHROPOLOGY/ARCHAEOLOGY
The “abandonment” of Mesa Verde and the formation of the Rio Grande Pueblos represent two classic events in North American prehistory. Yet, despite a century of research, no consensus has been reached on precisely how, or even if, these two events were related. In this landmark study, Scott Ortman proposes a novel and compelling solution to this problem through an investigation of the genetic, linguistic, and cultural heritage of the Tewa Pueblo people of New Mexico.
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A new and broader approach to understanding power and identity in the Mesoamerican archaeological record
Power and Identity in Archaeological Theory and Practice Case Studies from Ancient Mesoamerica
NEW BOOKS MESOAMERICA/ARCHAEOLOGY
Edited by Eleanor Harrison-Buck
The contributions to this volume represent a diverse array of Mesoamerican archaeological studies that are all theoretically rooted to larger, global debates concerning issues of power and identity—two logically paired concepts. While social identity has been the focus of more critical analysis in recent years, the concept of power has received far less attention. Most studies focus on large-scale, institutional forms of power and the ruling body. Here, the focus is on relations of power, addressing broader segments of society outside the dominant group, that often are ignored in traditional reconstructions of past societies. Harrison-Buck has compiled works that address a common criticism of social theory in the field of anthropological archaeology— the lack of strong case studies and corroborating facts supporting the abstract and often complex social theoretical concepts presented by scholars. Each contributor offers innovative method and theory and provides alternative and varied approaches to understanding power and identity in the archaeological record. They draw from a wide range of related disciplines and theoretical frameworks, including feminism, queer theory, cognitive studies, and postcolonial theory. The provocative case studies and exciting theoretical applications presented here will stimulate lively debate among scholars working both in and outside of Mesoamerica.
Eleanor Harrison-Buck is an assistant professor of archaeology at the University of New Hampshire.
“Makes an effective contribution to theory and practice in Mesoamerican studies. By coupling the study of power and identity, Harrison-Buck opens up a new avenue for research on power, an age-old question in archaeology.” —Cynthia Robin, Northwestern University
Mesoamerica/Archaeology March 2012 192 pp., 7 x 10 36 illus., 15 maps, 7 tables 978-1-60781-174-9, Paper $35.00s
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People of the Water
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A noteworthy ethnographic study based on years of immersion among the Andean Chipayans
Change and Continuity among the Uru-Chipayans of Bolivia Joseph W. Bastien
Chipayans have a resilient and innovative culture, maintaining dress, language, hairstyle, rituals, and behavior while also re- creating their culture from a dialectic between themselves and the world around them. Bastien provides the reader with a series of experienced observations and intimate details of a group of people who strive to maintain their ancient traditions while adapting to modern society. This ethnographic study offers insightful, surprising, and thoughtful conclusions applicable to interpreting the world around us.
Joseph W. Bastien is a Distinguished Scholar Professor of Sociology and Anthropology at the University of Texas, Arlington. He has lived and worked among the Bolivian peoples of the Andes since the 1960s and is author of several ethnographic publications, including Mountain of the Condor: Metaphor and Ritual in an Andean Ayllu.
“Bastien’s scholarship is meticulous and sound. It should appeal to a broad general audience due to a growing interest in indigenous cultures as well as Bastien’s engaging writing style and the way in which he involves the reader in the complexities of anthropological field work.” —Douglas Sharon, director (ret.) of the P.A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley
Anthropology/Ethnography July 2012 320 pp., 7 x 10 118 illus., 10 maps, 14 tables 978-1-60781-148-0, Cloth $40.00s
NEW BOOKS ANTHROPOLOGY/ETHNOGRAPHY
People of the Water is an ethnographic analysis of the cultural practices of the Uru-Chipayans—how they have maintained their culture and how they have changed. The Chipayans are an Andean people whose culture predates the time of the Incas (c. AD 1400), but they were almost wiped out by 1940, when only around 400 remained. Yet their population has quadrupled in the last 60 years. Joseph Bastien has spent decades living with and studying the Chipayans, and here for the first time he discusses the dynamics between traditional, social, and religious practices and the impending forces of modernity upon them. With the support of more than 100 illustrations he documents how, in spite of challenges, the Chipayans maintain ecological sustainability through an ecosystem approach that is holistic and symbolically embedded in rituals and customs.
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Case studies that act as a guidebook to archeologists on the uses of least cost analysis using GIS methodologies
Least Cost Analysis of Social Landscapes Archaeological Case Studies
NEW BOOKS ARCHAEOLOGY/ANTHROPOLOGY
Edited by Devin A. White and Sarah L. Surface-Evans
A growing number of archaeologists are applying Geographic Information Science (GIS) technologies to their research problems and questions. Advances in GIS and its use across disciplines allows for collaboration and enables archaeologists to ask ever more sophisticated questions and develop increasingly elaborate models on numerous aspects of past human behavior. Least cost analysis (LCA) is one such avenue of inquiry. While least cost studies are not new to the social sciences in general, LCA is relatively new to archaeology; until now, there has been no systematic exploration of its use within the field.
“Very significant. Scholarly contributions like this book will move archaeology rapidly into a new paradigm, beyond processualism and post-processualism, and into an identity of its own.”
This edited volume presents a series of case studies illustrating the intersection of archaeology and LCA modeling at the practical, methodological, and theoretical levels. Designed to be a guidebook for archaeologists interested in using LCA in their own research, it presents a wide cross-section of practical examples for both novices and experts. The contributors to the volume showcase the richness and diversity of LCA’s application to archaeological questions, demonstrate that even simple applications can be used to explore sophisticated research questions, and highlight the challenges that come with injecting geospatial technologies into the archaeological research process.
Archaeology/Anthropology January 2012 280 pp., 7 x 10 14 color illus., 18 b/w illus., 46 maps, 31 tables 978-1-60781-171-8, Cloth $55.00s
Devin A. White received his PhD in anthropology from the University of Colorado, Boulder. He works at Integrity Applications Incorporated and is also a research associate at Crow Canyon Archaeological Center. Sarah L. Surface-Evans received her PhD from Michigan State University and is a postdoctoral fellow in archaeology at Central Michigan University.
—Douglas C. Comer, author of Ritual Ground: Bent’s Old Fort, World Formation, and the Annexation of the Southwest
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Meetings at the Margins
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Explores interactions and their consequences among different societies at the margins of the Great Basin in the prehistoric Intermountain West
Prehistoric Cultural Interactions in the Intermountain West Edited by David Rhode
Meetings at the Margins focuses on the ways in which different societies in the Intermountain West profoundly influenced each other’s histories throughout the more than fourteen millennia of prehistoric occupation. Historically, inhabitants of this region frequently interacted with more than forty different groups— neighbors who spoke some two dozen different languages and maintained diverse economies. The contributors to this volume demonstrate that in the prehistoric Intermountain West, as elsewhere throughout the world, intergroup interactions were pivotal for the dynamic processes of cultural cohesion, differentiation, and change, and they affirm the value of a long-term, large-scale view of prehistory.
David Rhode is a research professor with the Desert Research Institute in Reno, Nevada, where he works as an archaeologist and Quaternary paleoecologist. Rhode is the author of Native Plants of Southern Nevada: An Ethnobotany (2002) and co-editor (with David Madsen) of Across the West: Human Population Movement and the Expansion of the Numa (1994), both published by The University of Utah Press.
“The idea for and concept behind the volume is innovative and timely.” —Steven Simms, author of Traces of Fremont: Society and Rock Art in Ancient Utah (The University of Utah Press, 2010)
Anthropology/Archaeology February 2012 304 pp., 7 x 10 41 illus., 35 maps, 24 tables 978-1-60781-173-2, Cloth $60.00s
NEW BOOKS ARCHAEOLOGY/ANTHROPOLOGY
Environmental conditions clearly influenced the cultural development of societies in the Intermountain West, but how did interactions with neighbors living along the region’s borders affect a society’s growth and advancement, its cultural integrity, and its long-term survival? Relationships among different societies are, of course, crucial to the spread of information, innovation, and belief systems; to the maintenance of exchange and mating networks; and to the forging of ethnic identity. In these ways and others, intergroup relationships can be as strong a force in shaping a society’s identity and future as are local social and economic dynamics.
The University of Utah Press Spring/Summer 2012
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Copublished with the Wallace Stegner Center for Land, Resources and the Environment and The J. Willard Marriott Library Special Collections Department 2011 Wallace Stegner Lecture
NEW BOOKS NATURE/ENVIRONMENT
Little Fish in a Pork Barrel
2010 Wallace Stegner Symposium Closing Keynote Lecture
Dance, Don’t Drive
The Classic American Story of the Endangered Snail Darter and the Tennessee Valley Authority’s Final Dam
Resilient Thinking for Turbulent Times
Zygmunt J. B. Plater
Warnings regarding our unsustainable lifestyles have
The “snail darter story” has become an iconic episode in
mention of the topic. Chip Ward aims to change that.
modern American history—a classic case regularly voted
Seeking to convey the importance of living sustainably, he
one of the top three Supreme Court environmental deci-
reframes the discourse to point out the consequences we
sions but also enjoying dubious public notoriety as the “Most
face and the choices we make. Ward says we must recognize
Extreme Environmental Case Ever.” Behind the fish marched
that we are bounded by the limits of a finite natural realm,
a bedraggled coalition: farmers whose land was being con-
that “after years of driving economies, we must learn to dance
demned for resale to private developers, Cherokee Indians,
with ecosystems.” The dancing lessons he offers are eloquent,
fishermen, local conservationists, and Zygmunt Plater and his
original, and compelling. Urging us to build resilient com-
students. They carried the campaign through federal agen-
munities, he concludes: “When we practice that awkward
cies, a succession of skeptical courtrooms, two White House
dance of mutuality that is the very signature of a democratic
administrations, repeated struggles with lobbyists in House
culture—the dance where we share, learn, listen, reconcile,
and Senate battles, and frustrations with the vagaries of the
invite, reciprocate, step towards one another and embrace—
national press.
we may be received with rough hands and a tenuous grasp.
Chip Ward become so commonplace that eyes glaze over at the mere
But if we have the courage to engage honestly and if we take Zygmunt Plater delivered this lecture in March 2011 at the 16th
our dancing lessons to heart, we may become not only resil-
annual symposium sponsored by the Wallace Stegner Center
ient but grateful, humble, and reverent.”
for Land, Resources and the Environment at the S. J. Quinney College of Law, The University of Utah. Zygmunt J. B. Plater is a professor of law at Boston College Law School, teaching and researching in the areas of environmental, property, land use, and administrative agency law. Over the past 30 years he has been involved with a number of issues of environmental protection and land-use regulation.
Nature/Environment March 2012 28 pp., 5 ½ x 8 ½ 978-1-60781-190-9, Paper $4.95
Chip Ward is a plitical activist, writer, and former library administrator. He cofounded Families Against Incinerator Risk, HEAL Utah, and other grassroots groups to raise awareness about the links between environmental quality and public health. He is the author of two books and numerous essays.
Nature/Environment March 2012 24 pp., 5 ½ x 8 ½ 978-1-60781-191-6, Paper $4.95
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$10,000 Book Publication Prize Presented by the University of Utah Press
2010 Lecture
Ownership, Property, and Sustainability Joseph Sax 5 ½ x 8 ½, 20 pp. 978-1-60781-139-8 Paper $4.95 2009 Lecture
The Fourth West Charles Wilkinson 5 ½ x 8 ½, 20 pp. 978-1-60781-025-4 Paper $4.95
The Twilight of Self-Reliance Frontier Values and Contemporary America Wallace Stegner 5 ½ x 8 ½, 32 pp. 978-0-87480-952-7 Paper $4.95
Annual deadline is December 31, with the winning submission being announced in June of the following year. Complete submission guidelines can be found at www.UofUpress.com
2011 & 2012 Stegner Prize Judges:
Peter J. Blodgett, H. Russell Smith Foundation Curator of Western American History, Huntington Library Robert B. Keiter, Wallace Stegner Professor of Law and Director, Wallace Stegner Center for Land, Resources and the Environment, The University of Utah George A. Miles, Curator of Western Americana, Beinecke Library, Yale University
Previous Winners:
2010 Winner: The Bitterroot and Mr. Brandborg: Clearcutting and the Struggle for Sustainable Forestry in the Northern Rockies by Frederick H. Swanson (see p. 26) 2010 Runner-up: Forced to Abandon Our Fields: The 1914 Clay Southworth Gila River Pima Interviews by David H. DeJong (see p. 22)
NEW BOOKS NATURE/ENVIRONMENT
Previous Wallace Stegner Lectures
The Wallace Stegner Prize will be awarded to the best monograph submitted to the Press in the subject areas of environmental or American western history. To compete for this award, manuscripts must emphasize research in primary and secondary sources and quality writing in the tradition of Wallace Stegner. The winning manuscript will demonstrate a commitment to scholarly narrative history that also appeals to more general readers. These criteria reflect the legacy of Wallace Stegner as a student of the American West, as a spokesman for the environment, and as a teacher of creative writing. The winner of the Wallace Stegner Prize will receive a $10,000 award and a publication contract with The University of Utah Press.
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The Wallace Stegner Prize in Environmental or American Western History
16 The University of Utah Press Spring/Summer 2012
A reflection upon scholarly and scientific learning related to human values
The Tanner Lectures on Human Values Volume 31
NEW BOOKS PHILOSOPHY
Edited by Mark Matheson
The Tanner Lectures on Human Values, founded July 1, 1978, at Clare Hall, Cambridge University, was established by the American scholar, industrialist, and philanthropist Obert Clark Tanner. Lectureships are awarded to outstanding scholars or leaders in broadly defined fields of human values and transcend ethnic, national, religious, or ideological distinctions. Volume 31 features lectures given during the academic year 2010–2011 at Yale University, The University of Utah, The University of Michigan, Stanford University, Princeton University, and Harvard University. Contributors: Rebecca Goldstein, “The Ancient Quarrel: Philosophy and Literature” Rebecca Goldstein is a research associate in the Department of Psychology, Harvard University, and an award-winning novelist.
Professor, Arthur F. Bentley Professor of Political Science, and senior research director of the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis, Indiana University, Bloomington.
Spike Lee, “America Through My Lens: The Evolving Nature of Race and Class in the Films of Spike Lee” Spike Lee, a writer-director, actor, producer, author, and educator who has revolutionized the role of black talent in cinema, is widely regarded as today’s premiere AfricanAmerican filmmaker.
Robert Putnam, “American Grace: Religious Americans Are Nicer and Happier. Why?” and “American Grace: Americans Are Religiously Devout and Religiously Divided, yet Religiously Tolerant. Why?” Robert Putnam is Malkin Professor of Public Policy at Harvard University and has written more than a dozen books.
Susan Neiman, “Victims and Heroes” Susan Neiman is the director of the Einstein Forum, an international interdisciplinary think tank in Berlin, and is the author of three books. Elinor Ostrom, “Frameworks” and “Analyzing 100-Year-Old Irrigation Puzzles” Elinor Ostrom is Distinguished
James Scott, “The Late Neolithic Multispecies Resettlement Camp” and “The Long Golden Age of Barbarians, a.k.a. Non-State Peoples” James Scott is the Sterling professor of Political Science and professor of Anthropology and director of the Agrarian Studies Program at Yale University.
Martin Seligman, “Flourish: Positive Psychology and Positive Interventions” Martin Seligman is Zellerbach Family Professor of Psychology at the University of Pennsylvania and director of the Positive Psychology Center. He is the author of twentyone books and more than 250 articles. Susan Smith, “Moral Maze: Dealings in Debt” and “Ethical Investment?: Attending to Assets” Susan Smith, Mistress of Girton College, Cambridge, researches the interdisciplinary world of housing studies. She has published more than 100 scholarly articles. Philosophy June 2012 264 pp., 6 x 9 34 illus. 978-1-60781-186-2, Cloth $35.00s
17 Orders: 800-621-2736 www.uofupress.com
France Davis
Reconstructing Ancient Maya Diet
An American Story Told
Edited by Christine D. White
Rev. France A. Davis and Nayra Atiya
The collapse of classic Maya civilization at the end of the eighth century AD is still an enigma, but the reason behind it
is oral history, ethnography, and memoir delivered with the
is likely more than a clash of warring city-states. New research
strong voice of a preacher. It recounts the life of France Davis,
indicates that ecological degradation and nutritional defi-
the dynamic pastor of the Calvary Baptist Church in Salt Lake
ciency may be as important to our understanding of Maya
City. Imbued with the rich details of family life in a rural com-
cultural processes as deciphering the rise and fall of kings.
munity, as well as a system of values at a time of transition in American history, it is a story of courage and vision, of coming of age in the segregated South, and of enduring with honor and living at the forefront of major issues. These gathered strands of a life lived with conviction and grace will appeal to a broad spectrum of readers from the curious to those seeking inspiration.
“Davis provides, without a doubt, significant information and details about who he is, not merely as a public figure but, perhaps more important, as a private man who is pastor, teacher, son, husband, father, and grandfather.” —Utah Historical Quarterly
“His comments are so invigorating, I felt the urge to shout ‘Amen.’” —Deseret Morning News France A. Davis is pastor of the Calvary Baptist Church in Salt Lake City.
Reconstructing Ancient Maya Diet integrates data from bonechemistry research, paleopathology, paleobotany, zooarchaeology, and ethnobotany to show what the ancient Maya actually ate at various periods (as opposed to archaeological suppositions) and how diet affected the quality of their lives. Maya subsistence has been probed intensively for the last decade, but this is the first volume to unite work across the spectrum of Maya bioarchaeology.
“An exemplar of multidisciplinary research. . . . This volume shows how much can be gleaned through a holistic approach to dietary reconstruction.” —International Journal of Osteoarchaeology.
“White argues that this volume is a starting point for additional investigations on food behavior and food as a metaphor for culture. It is, indeed, an impressive beginning.” —Journal of Anthropological Research
Nayra Atiya was born in Egypt, raised in the United States,
Christine D. White is professor of anthropology at the
and now lives in Salt Lake City. She is an oral historian, writer,
University of Western Ontario.
and translator. This is her sixth book.
Autobiography/Memoir February 2012 288 pp., 6 x 9 75 photos, 2 line drawings 978-1-60781-183-1, Paper $19.95
Mesoamerica/Anthropology February 2012 288 pp., 7 x 10 29 Figures, 37 Tables, 1 map 978-1-60781-180-0, Paper $35.00s
New in Paperback
Recorded and skillfully written by Nayra Atiya, France Davis
“A great scholarly enterprise.”—New Mexico Historical Review
7 7 7 “Highly recommended for all academic and large public libraries.”—Choice
7 7 7 “Bringing the knowledge of modern scholarship to bear on their materials, the translators have been able to illuminate many obscurities in the text. The complete series of volumes is a landmark of scholarly achievement.”—The New Mexican
7 7 7 “This publication of Sahagún makes available to scholars and their students alike the original Nahuatl text for comparison with the more easily accessible Spanish text, which is in many places merely an abridgment or précis of the original. A whole series of native sources for the study of Mexican preconquest history is now at hand for a field of historical study formerly restricted to a small number of investigators. A whole chapter of the cultural history of early Colonial Mexico is unfolding before us. [The Codex is] an impressive monument to Spanish humanism in the sixteenth-century New World.”—The Hispanic American Historical Review
7 7 7 “Sahagún emerges as the indisputable founder of ethnographic science. The accomplishments of the joint translators, Dibble and Anderson, will surely rank among the greatest achievements of American ethnohistorical scholarship.”—Natural History
19
The Florentine Codex A General History of the Things of New Spain Bernardino de Sahagún Translated from the Nahuatl with notes by Arthur J. O. Anderson and Charles E. Dibble Two of the world’s leading scholars of the Aztec language and culture have translated Sahagún’s monumental and encyclopedic study of native life in Mexico at the time of the Spanish Conquest. This immense undertaking is the first complete translation into any language of Sahagún’s Nahuatl text, and represents one of the most distinguished contributions in the fields of anthropology, ethnography, and linguistics.
The Florentine Codex is divided by subject area into twelve books and includes over 2,000 illustrations drawn by Nahua artists in the sixteenth century. Arthur J. O. Anderson (1907–1996) was an anthropologist specializing in Aztec culture and language. He received his MA from Claremont College and his PhD in anthropology from the University of Southern California. He was a curator of history and director of publications at the Museum of New Mexico in Santa Fe and taught at a number of institutions, including San Diego State University, from which he retired. Charles E. Dibble (1909–2002) was an anthropologist, linguist, and scholar specializing in Mesoamerican cultures. He received his master and doctorate degrees from the Universidad Nacional Autónomo de México and taught at The University of Utah from 1939–1978, where he became a Distinguished Professor of Anthropology. For their work on The Florentine Codex, Dibble and Anderson received the Mexican Order of the Aztec Eagle, the highest honor of the Mexican government; from the King of Spain they received the Order of Isabella the Catholic (Orden de Isabel la Católica) and the title of Commander (Comendador).
Book 1: The Gods 978-1-60781-157-2, 89 pp., Paper $30.00 Book 2: The Ceremonies 978-1-60781-158-9, 256 pp., Paper $45.00 978-0-87480-194-1, 256 pp., Cloth $54.50s Book 3: The Origin of the Gods 978-1-60781-159-6, 76 pp., Paper $30.00 978-0-87480-002-9, 76 pp., Cloth $44.50s Books 4 and 5: The Soothsayers, the Omens 978-1-60781-160-2, 210 pp., Paper $45.00 978-0-87480-003-6, 210 pp., Cloth $54.50s Book 6: Rhetoric and Moral Philosophy 978-1-60781-161-9, 260 pp., Paper $45.00 978-0-87480-010-4, 260 pp., Cloth $54.50s Book 7: The Sun, the Moon and Stars, and the Binding of the Years 978-1-60781-162-6, 90 pp., Paper $30.00 978-0-87480-004-3, 90 pp., Cloth $35.00s Book 8: Kings and Lords 978-1-60781-163-3, 98 pp., Paper $30.00 978-0-87480-005-0, 98 pp., Cloth $44.50s Book 9: The Merchants 978-1-60781-164-0, 108 pp., Paper $35.00 978-0-87480-006-7, 108 pp., Cloth $49.50s Book 10: The People 978-1-60781-165-7, 212 pp., Paper $40.00 978-0-87480-007-4, 212 pp., Cloth $44.50s Book 11: Earthly Things 978-1-60781-166-4, 314 pp., Paper $60.00 Book 12: The Conquest of Mexico 978-1-60781-167-1, 142 pp., Paper $40.00 978-0-87480-096-8, 142 pp., Cloth $49.50s Complete 12-volume set 978-1-60781-192-3, Paper $450.00 All volumes are 8 ½ x 11
New in Paperback
Written between 1540 and 1585, The Florentine Codex (so named because the manuscript has been part of the Laurentian Library’s collections since at least 1791) is the most authoritative statement we have of the Aztecs’ lifeways and traditions—a rich and intimate yet panoramic view of a doomed people.
Introductory Volume: Introductions, Sahagún’s Prologues and Interpolations, General Bibliography, General Indices 978-1-60781-156-5, 160 pp., Paper $35.00 978-0-87480-165-1, 160 pp., Cloth $54.50s
Orders: 800-621-2736 www.uofupress.com
The University of Utah Press is pleased to announce the release of The Florentine Codex in paperback, with color illustrations.
The University of Utah Press Spring/Summer 2012
20 BYU Museum of Peoples and Cultures
AT REST IN ZION The Archaeology of Salt Lake City’s First Pioneer Cemetery
Shane A. Baker Occasional Paper No. 14 Museum of Peoples and Cultures • Brigham Young University
At Rest in Zion
Shifting Sands
Occasional Paper 14
Occasional Paper 13
Shane A. Baker 978-0-9753945-5-7 Paper $25.00s
Richard K Talbot and Lane D. Richens 978-0-87480-981-7 Paper $45.00s
Wetland Adaptations in the Great Basin
New Dimensions in Rock Art Studies
Occasional Paper 1
Ray Matheny 978-0-9753945-0-2 Paper $30.00
Edited by Joel C. Janetski and David B. Madsen 978-0-87480-495-9 Paper $20.00s
BYU Museum of Peoples and Cultures
Occasional Paper 9
Archaeology of Clear Creek Canyon Popular Series 1 Joel C. Janetski 978-0-9753945-7-1 Paper $10.00
Canyonlands Natural History Association
S E ec o
Distributed Clients
x p n an d d E ed d it io n
Touching the Past Popular Series 5 Edited by Glenna NielsenGrimm and Paul Stavast 978-0-615-26595-7 Paper $25.00
Mesoamerican Influences in the Southwest Popular Series 4 Edited by Glenna NielsenGrimm 978-0-87480-970-1 Paper $12.00
Relics Revisited
Cinema Southwest
Popular Series 3
An Illustrated Guide to the Movies and their Locations 2nd Edition
Marti L. Allen 978-0-87480-733-2 Paper $45.00
John A. Murray 978-0-937407-18-9 Paper $22.95
Where God Put the West Movie Making in the Desert Bette L. Stanton 978-0-93740-708-0 Paper $17.99
Canyonlands Natural History Association
Last of the Robbers Roost Outlaws Moab’s Bill Tibbetts Tom McCourt 978-0-937407-15-8 Paper $14.99
Moab Classic Hikes 40 Hikes in the Moab Area Damian Fagan 978-0-937407-10-3 Paper $13.99
Grand Views of Canyon Country
The Towers of Hovenweep
A Driving Guide
Ian Thompson 978-0-937407-06-6 Paper $7.99
David B. Williams 978-0-937407-00-4 Paper $9.95
Sacred Images A Vision of Native American Rock Art Leslie Kelen and David Sucec 978-0-93740-713-4 Paper $19.95
21
Grand Canyon Serenade 50 minutes 978-1-60781-132-9 DVD $19.95
Green River
Glen Canyon
Battalion
Brigham Young
Divided Waters 60 minutes 978-1-60781-015-5 DVD $19.95
A Dam, Water, and the West 60 minutes 978-0-87480-985-5 DVD $19.95
120 minutes 978-0-87480-973-2 DVD $19.95
150 minutes 978-1-60781-135-0 DVD $19.95
KUED
90 minutes 978-0-87480-988-6 DVD $19.95
Western Epics
We Shall Remain
Splendid Heritage
Utah Ghost Rails
A Native History of America and Utah 150 minutes 978-0-87480-982-4 5-disc DVD set $29.95
Perspectives on American Indian Arts
Stephen L. Carr and Robert W. Edwards 978-0-914740-34-6 Paper $19.95
John and Marva Warnock 978-0-87480-960-2 Paper $49.95
The Historical Guide to Utah Ghost Towns Stephen L. Carr 978-0-914740-30-8 Paper $24.95
Western Epics
Lost Treasures on the Old Spanish Trail George A. Thompson 978-0-914740-31-5 Paper $15.95
Salt Desert Trails Charles Kelly 978-0-914740-37-7 Paper $13.95
Among the Mormons
Papa Married a Mormon
William Mulder and Russell Mortensen 978-0-914740-36-0 Paper $15.95
John D. Fitzgerald 978-0-914740-38-4 Paper $12.95
The Giant Joshua Maurine Whipple 978-0-914740-17-9 Cloth $17.95
Distributed Clients
The Frontier Photographers
John & Marva Warnock
Orders: 800-621-2736 www.uofupress.com
KUED
Essential Backlist
The University of Utah Press Spring/Summer 2012
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Troubled Trails The Meeker Affair and the Expulsion of Utes from Colorado Robert Silbernagel Foreword by Floyd A. O’Neil 978-1-60781-129-9 Paper $24.95
As If the Land Owned Us An Ethnohistory of the White Mesa Utes Robert S. McPherson 978-1-60781-145-9 Paper $29.95
Tony Hillerman’s Navajoland
Sherman Alexie
Hideouts, Haunts, and Havens in the Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee Mysteries Expanded Third Edition
Loop Hikes in Utah’s Escalante Steve Allen 978-0-87480-545-1 $21.95
Compiled by Sven Liljeblad, Catherine S. Fowler, and Glenda Powell 978-1-60781-030-8 Cloth $100.00s
Forced to Abandon Our Fields The 1914 Clay Southworth Gila River Pima Interviews David H. DeJong 978-1-60781-095-7 Paper $34.95
Navajo and Photography
Utah’s Black Hawk War
Edited by Jeff Berglund and Jan Roush 978-1-60781-008-7 Paper $24.95
A Critical History of the Repre sentation of an American People
John Alton Peterson 978-0-87480-508-6 Paper $19.95
River Runners’ Guide to Utah and Adjacent Areas
Hiking the Wasatch
A Collection of Critical Essays
Laurance D. Linford 978-1-60781-137-4 Paper $21.95
Canyoneering 3
Northern Paiute–Bannock Dictionary
Revised Edition Gary C. Nichols 978-0-87480-725-7 Paper $19.95
James C. Faris 978-0-87480-761-5 Paper $24.95
John Veranth 978-0-87480-628-1 Paper $16.95
A Guide to Plants of Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks Ray S. Vizgirdas 978-0-87480-875-9 Paper $29.95
Two Toms Lessons from a Shoshone Doctor Thomas H. Johnson and Helen S. Johnson 978-1-60781-090-2 Paper $15.95
Mountain Spirit The Sheep Eater Indians of Yellowstone Lawrence L. Loendorf and Nancy Medaris Stone 978-0-87480-868-1 Cloth $50.00s 978-0-87480-867-4 Paper $19.95
Utah’s Low Points A Guide to the Lowest Points in Utah’s Twenty-nine Counties Fred J. Nash 978-0-87480-932-9 Paper $22.95
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Its Ecological and Evolutionary Story
Evidence and Environmental Effects
Gwendolyn L. Waring 978-1-60781-028-5 Paper $29.95
Edited by Frederic H. Wagner 978-0-87480-906-0 Paper $29.95
Studying Technological Change
Simulating Change
Wildbranch
Home Waters
The Way Home
An Anthology of Nature, Envi ronmental, and Place-based Writing
A Year of Recompenses on the Provo River
Essays on the Outside West
Edited by Florence Caplow and Susan A. Cohen 978-1-60781-124-4 Paper $17.95
Archaeology Into the Twentyfirst Century
The Archaeology of Meaningful Places
Michael Brian Schiffer 978-1-60781-136-7 Paper $45.00s
Edited by Andre Costopoulos and Mark W. Lake 978-1-60781-036-0 Paper $25.00s
Edited by Brenda J. Bowser and María Nieves Zedeño 978-0-87480-882-7 Paper $35.00s
Burned Palaces and Elite Residences of Aguateca
Elite Craft Producers, Artists, and Warriors of Aguateca
The Postclassic Mesoamerican World
A Behavioral Approach
Excavations and Ceramics Takeshi Inomata and Daniela Triadan 978-1-60781-001-8 Cloth $60.00s
Lithic Analysis Kazuo Aoyama 978-0-87480-959-6 Cloth $60.00s
Edited by Michael E. Smith and Frances F. Berdan 978-1-60781-024-7 Paper $35.00s
George B. Handley 978-1-60781-023-0 Paper $24.95
Ancient Complexities New Perspectives in Precolumbian North America
James McVey 978-1-60781-033-9 Paper $19.95
Archeological Observations North of the Rio Colorado
Edited by Susan M. Alt 978-1-60781-026-1 Cloth $60.00s
Neil M. Judd Foreword by Richard Talbot 978-1-60781-022-3 Paper $19.95s
House of Mourning
Man Corn
A Biocultural History of the Mountain Meadows Massacre Shannon A. Novak 978-1-60781-169-5 Paper $14.95
Cannibalism and Violence in the Prehistoric American Southwest Christy G. Turner II and Jacqueline A. Turner 978-0-87480-968-8 Paper $45.00
Essential Backlist
Climate Warming in Western North America
Orders: 800-621-2736 www.uofupress.com
A Natural History of the Inter mountain West
The University of Utah Press Spring/Summer 2012
24
Perspectives on Prehistoric Trade and Exchange in California and the Great Basin
The Memoirs of Archaeologist W. Raymond Wood
Foragers and Farmers of the Northern Kayenta Region
W. Raymond Wood 978-1-60781-130-5 Cloth $49.95s
Excavations along the Navajo Mountain Road
The Glen Canyon Country
A Laboratory for Anthropology
Modern Oceans, Ancient Sites
A Personal Memoir
Science and Romanticism in the American Southwest, 1846–1930
Archaeology and Marine Conservation on San Miguel Island, California
Don D. Fowler Foreword by Brian Fagan 978-1-60781-035-3 Paper $34.95
Todd J. Braje 978-0-87480-984-8 Cloth $50.00s
Symbiotic Antagonisms
The Turk in America
Competing Nationalisms in Turkey Edited by Ayşe Kadıoğlu and E. Fuat Keyman 978-1-60781-031-5 $40.00s
Edited by Richard E. Hughes 978-1-60781-152-7 Cloth $50.00s
Essential Backlist
A White-Bearded Plainsman
Don D. Fowler Foreword by W. L. “Bud” Rusho 978-1-60781-127-5 Cloth $75.00s 978-1-60781-134-3 Paper $39.95
Phil R. Geib 978-1-60781-003-2 Cloth $70.00s
Where the Earth and Sky Are Sewn Together
Traces of Fremont
Sobaipuri-O’odham Contexts of Contact and Colonialism
Text by Steven R. Simms Photographs by François Gohier 978-1-60781-011-7 Paper $24.95
Deni J. Seymour 978-1-60781-067-4 Cloth $60.00s
Island of Fogs Archaeological and Ethnohis torical Investigations of Isla Cedros, Baja California
Society and Rock Art in Ancient Utah
Kinship, Language, and Prehistory Per Hage and the Renaissance in Kinship Studies
Matthew R. Des Lauriers 978-1-60781-007-0 Cloth $60.00s
Edited by Doug Jones and Bojka Milicic 978-1-60781-005-6 Cloth $70.00s
Turkish Foreign Policy, 1919–2006
A Religion, Not a State
The Search for God’s Law
The Creation of an Enduring Prejudice
Facts and Analyses with Documents
Ali cAbd al-Raziq’s Islamic Justi fication of Political Secularism
Justin A. McCarthy 978-1-60781-013-1 Paper $39.95s
Edited by Baskın Oran Translated by Mustafa Akşin 978-0-87480-904-6 Cloth $100.00s
Souad T. Ali 978-0-87480-951-0 Paper $25.00
Islamic Jurisprudence in the Writings of Sayf al-Dīn alĀmidī, Revised Edition Bernard G. Weiss 978-0-87480-938-1 Cloth $75.00s
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Volume One, The Gift of Persian Culture: Its Continuity and Influence in History Edited by Peter J. Chelkowski 978-1-60781-037-7 Cloth $35.00s
Raymond Kuehne 978-1-60781-149-7 Paper $26.95
American Missionaries and the Middle East
Lola Atiya Edited by Nayra Atiya 978-1-60781-012-4 Cloth $39.95s
Edited by Mehmet Ali Doğan and Heather J. Sharkey 978-1-60781-038-4 Paper $50.00s
Meir Hatina 978-1-60781-032-2 Paper $25.00s
Edited by M. Hakan Yavuz with Peter Sluglett 978-1-60781-150-3 Paper $40.00s
Mormons as Citizens of a Communist State
To the Peripheries of Mormondom
Early Mormon Missionary Activities in Japan, 1901–1924
Juanita Brooks
Reid L. Neilson 978-0-87480-989-3 Paper $29.95
Levi S. Peterson 978-1-60781-151-0 Paper $24.95
On the Mormon Frontier
Joseph Bates Noble
The Diary of Hosea Stout, 1844–1889
Polygamy and the Temple Lot Case
David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism
Edited by Juanita Brooks 978-0-87480-945-9 Paper $39.95
David L. Clark 978-0-87480-937-4 Cloth $24.95
A Documentary History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints in East Germany, 1945–1990 Raymond Kuehne 978-0-87480-993-0 Paper $39.95
Amasa Mason Lyman, Mormon Apostle and Apostate
Revisiting Thomas F. O’Dea’s The Mormons
A Study in Dedication
Edited by Cardell K. Jacobson, John P. Hoffmann, and Tim B. Heaton 978-0-87480-920-6 Cloth $34.95
Edward Leo Lyman 978-0-87480-940-4 Cloth $39.95
Contemporary Perspectives
Foundational Encounters
The Apostolic Around-theWorld Journey of David O. McKay, 1920–1921 Hugh J. Cannon Edited by Reid L. Neilson 978-1-60781-010-0 Cloth $29.95
An Egyptian Perspective
War & Diplomacy The Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878 and the Treaty of Berlin
The Life Story of a Courageous Historian of the Mountain Meadows Massacre
Gregory A. Prince and Wm. Robert Wright 978-0-87480-822-3 Cloth $29.95
Essential Backlist
Henry Burkhardt and LDS Realpolitik in Communist East Germany
ʿUlamaʾ, Politics, and the Public Sphere
An Index to the History of the Patriarchs of the Coptic Church
Orders: 800-621-2736 www.uofupress.com
Reza Ali Khazeni Memorial Lectures in Iranian Studies
The University of Utah Press Spring/Summer 2012
26
The Bitterroot and Mr. Brandborg Clearcutting and the Struggle for Sustainable Forestry in the Northern Rockies Frederick H. Swanson 978-1-60781-101-5 Cloth $39.95
Glory Hunter A Biography of Patrick Edward Connor Brigham D. Madsen 978-1-60781-154-1 Paper $21.95
Camp Floyd and the Mormons The Utah War Donald R. Moorman with Gene A. Sessions 978-0-87480-845-2 Paper $22.95
Geological Evolution of the Colorado Plateau of Eastern Utah and Western Colorado Robert Fillmore 978-1-60781-004-9 Paper $29.95
The Geology of the Parks, Monuments, and Wildlands of Southern Utah Robert Fillmore 978-0-87480-652-6 Paper $21.95
Essential Backlist
Copublished with the Utah State Historical Society
Cleaving an Unknown World The Powell Expeditions and the Scientific Exploration of the Colorado Plateau Edited by Don D. Fowler Foreword by Roy Webb 978-1-60781-146-6 Paper $24.95
John Muir To Yosemite and Beyond Edited by Robert Engberg and Donald Wesling 978-0-87480-580-2 Paper $14.95
The Exploration of the Colorado River in 1869 and 1871–1872 Edited by William Culp Darrah, Ralph V. Chamberlin, and Charles Kelly 978-0-87480-963-3 Paper 19.95
The DomínguezEscalante Journal Their Expedition through Colorado, Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico in 1776 Edited by Ted J. Warner Translated by Fray Angelico Chavez 978-0-87480-448-5 Paper $14.95
The Exploration of the Colorado River and the High Plateaus of Utah by the Second Powell Expedition of 1871–1872 Edited by Herbert E. Gregory, William Culp Darrah, and Charles Kelly 978-0-87480-964-0 Paper $24.95
Opening Zion A Scrapbook of the National Park’s First Official Tourists John Clark and Melissa Clark 978-1-60781-006-3 Paper $19.95
Diary of Almon Harris Thompson
John Wesley Powell
Explorations of the Colorado River of the West and Its Tributaries, 1871–1875
His Life and Legacy
Edited by Herbert E. Gregory 978-0-87480-962-6 Paper $14.95
James M. Aton 978-0-87480-992-3 Paper $9.95
Lost in the Yellowstone
On the Way to Somewhere Else
Truman Everts’s “Thirty-seven Days of Peril”
European Sojourners in the Mormon West, 1834–1930
Edited by Lee H. Whittlesey 978-0-87480-481-2 Paper $14.95
Edited by Michael W. Homer 978-0-87480-994-7 Paper $24.95
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History Beneath Lake Powell Revised Edition C. Gregory Crampton Foreword by Edward Abbey 978-0-87480-946-6 Paper $29.95
The University of Utah’s A. Ray Olpin Era, 1946–1964 Anne Palmer Peterson Foreword by David P. Gardner 978-0-87480-969-5 Cloth $19.95
Dave Rust A Life in the Canyons Frederick H. Swanson 978-0-87480-915-2 Cloth $19.95 978-0-87480-944-2 Paper $19.95
Edited by Jennifer L. Robinson and W. David Patton 978-0-87480-958-9 Paper $29.95
Black Pioneers Images of the Black Experience on the North American Frontier Second Edition John W. Ravage Foreword by Quintard Taylor 978-0-87480-941-1 Paper $22.95
A Homeland in the West
Back to the Soil
Utah Jews Remember
The Jewish Farmers of Clarion, Utah, and Their World
Eileen Hallet Stone 978-0-87480-702-8 Cloth $19.95
Robert Alan Goldberg 978-1-60781-155-8 Paper $19.95
The White Indian Boy and its sequel The Return of the White Indian
Shakespeare in Performance
Wallace Stegner’s Salt Lake City
When the White House Calls
Robert C. Steensma 978-0-87480-898-8 Cloth $29.95
From Immigrant Entrepreneur to U.S. Ambassador John Price 978-1-60781-143-5 Cloth $30.00
Elijah Nicholas Wilson and Charles A. Wilson 978-0-87480-834-6 Paper $19.95
The Lady in the Ore Bucket
A Hole in the Ground with a Liar at the Top
Blueprints
Charlotte’s Rose
Bringing Poetry into Communities
Fraud and Deceit in the Golden Age of American Mining
Edited by Katharine Coles 978-1-60781-147-3 Paper $8.95 A copublication with the Poetry Foundation
A. E. Cannon 978-1-60781-141-1 Paper $9.95
A History of Settlement and Industry in the Tri-Canyon Area of the Wasatch Mountains Charles L. Keller 978-1-60781-021-6 Paper $29.95
Dan Plazak 978-1-60781-020-9 Paper $24.95
Inside the Creative Process Michael Flachmann 978-1-60781-128-2 Paper $29.95
Essential Backlist
Years of Promise
The Rise of the West in Presidential Elections
Orders: 800-621-2736 www.uofupress.com
Ghosts of Glen Canyon
Index
The University of Utah Press Fall/Winter 2011
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Ali, A Religion, Not a State 24 Allen, Canyoneering 3 22 Allen, Relics Revisited 20 Alt, Ancient Complexities 23 Amasa Mason Lyman, Mormon Apostle and Apostate 25 Among the Mormons 21 Ancient Complexities 23 Aoyama, Elite Craft Producers, Artists, and Warriors at Aguateca 23 Archaeology of Clear Creek Canyon 20 Archaeology of Meaningful Places, The 23 Archeological Observations North of the Rio Grande 23 As If the Land Owned Us 22 At Rest in Zion 20 Atiya, An Index to the History of the Patriarchs of the Coptic Church 25 Aton, John Wesley Powell 26 Back to the Soil 27 Baker, At Rest in Zion 20 Bastien, People of the Water 11 Battalion (DVD) 21 Berglund/Roush, Sherman Alexie 22 Bitterroot and Mr. Brandborg, The 26 Black Pioneers 27 Blueprints 27 Bowser/Zedeño, The Archaeology of Meaningful Places 23 Braje, Modern Oceans, Ancient Sites 24 Brigham Young (DVD) 21 Brooks, On the Mormon Frontier 25 Burned Palaces and Elite Residences of Aguateca 23 Camp Floyd and the Mormons 26 Cannon, Charlotte’s Rose 27 Cannon/Neilson, To the Peripheries of Mormondom 25 Canyoneering 3 22 Caplow/Cohen, Wildbranch 23 Carr/Edwards, Utah Ghost Rails 21 Carr, The Historical Guide to Utah Ghost Towns 21 Charlotte’s Rose 27 Chelkowski, Reza Ali Khazeni Memorial Lectures in Iranian Studies, Vol. One 25 Cinema Southwest 20 Clark/Clark, Opening Zion 26 Clark, Joseph Bates Noble 25 Cleaving An Unknown World 26 Climate Warming in Western North America 23 Coles, Blueprints 27 Costopoulos/Lake, Simulating Change 23 Crampton, Ghosts of Glen Canyon 27 Dance, Don’t Drive 14 Darrah/Chamberlain/Kelly, The Exploration of the Colorado River in 1869 and 1871–1872 26 Dave Rust 27 David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism 25 Davis/Atiya, France Davis 17 DeJong, Forced to Abandon Our Fields 22 Des Lauriers, Island of Fogs 24 Diary of Almon Harris Thompson 26 Domínguez-Escalante Journal, The 26 Early Mormon Missionary Activity in Japan 25 Elite Craft Producers, Artists, and Warriors at Aguateca 23 Engberg/Wesling, John Muir 26 Essays on Genocide and Humanitarian Intervention 8 Exploration of the Colorado River and the High Plateaus of Utah by the Second Powell Expedition, The 26 Exploration of the Colorado River in 1869 and 1871–1872, The 26 Fagan, Moab Classic Hikes 20 Faris, Navajo and Photography 22 Fillmore, Geological Evolution of the Colorado Plateau 26 Fillmore, The Geology of the Parks, Monuments, and Wildlands of Southern Utah 26 Fitzgerald, Papa Married a Mormon 21 Flachmann, Shakespeare in Performance 27
Florentine Codex, The 18–19 Foragers and Farmers of the Northern Kayenta Region 24 Forced to Abandon Our Fields 22 Fourth West, The 15 Fowler, D., A Laboratory for Anthropology 24 —, Cleaving An Unknown World 26 —, The Glen Canyon Country 24 France Davis 17 Frontier Photographers (DVD) 21 Geib, Foragers and Farmers of the Northern Kayenta Region 24 Geological Evolution of the Colorado Plateau 26 Geology of the Parks, Monuments, and Wildlands of Southern Utah, The 26 Ghosts of Glen Canyon 27 Giant Joshua, The 21 Glen Canyon (DVD) 21 Glen Canyon Country, The 24 Glory Hunter 26 Goldberg, Back to the Soil 27 Grand Canyon Serenade (DVD) 21 Grand Views of Canyon Country 20 Green River (DVD) 21 Gregory/Darrah/Kelly, The Exploration of the Colorado River and the High Plateaus of Utah by the Second Powell Expedition 26 Gregory, Diary of Almon Harris Thompson 26 Guardian Poplar, The 4–5 Guide to Plants of Yellowstone and Grand Tetons National Parks, A 22 Handley, Home Waters 23 Harrison-Buck, Power and Identity in Archaeological Theory and Practice 10 Hatina, ʿUlamaʾ, Politics, and the Public Sphere 25 Henry Burkhardt and LDS Realpolitik in Communist East Germany 25 Hiking the Wasatch 22 Historical Guide to Utah Ghost Towns, The 21 Hole in the Ground with a Liar at the Top, A 27 Home Waters 23 Homeland in the West, A 27 Homer, On the Way to Somewhere Else 26 House of Mourning 23 Hughes, Perspectives on Prehistoric Trade and Exchange in California and the Great Basin 24 Index to the History of the Patriarchs of the Coptic Church, An 25 Inomata/Triadan, Burned Palaces and Elite Residences of Aguateca 23 Island of Fogs 24 Jacobson/Hoffman/Heaton, Revisiting Thomas O’Dea’s The Mormons 25 Janetski/Madsen, Wetland Adaptations in the Great Basin 20 Janetski, Archaeology of Clear Creek Canyon 20 John Muir 26 John Wesley Powell 26 Johnson/Johnson, Two Toms 22 Jones/Milicic, Kinship, Language, and Prehistory 24 Joseph Bates Noble 25 Juanita Brooks 25 Judd, Archeological Observations North of the Rio Grande 23 Kadıoğlu/Keyman, Symbiotic Antagonisms 24 Kelen/Sucec, Sacred Images 20 Keller, The Lady in the Ore Bucket 27 Kelly, Salt Desert Trails 21 Kemmerer, Primate People 2–3 Kinship, Language, and Prehistory 24 Kuehne, Henry Burkhardt and LDS Realpolitik in Communist East Germany 25 Kuehne, Mormons as Citizens of a Communist State 25 Laboratory for Anthropology, A 24 Lady in the Ore Bucket, The 27 Last of the Robbers Roost Outlaws 20 Least Cost Analysis of Social Landscapes 12
Lewy, Essays on Genocide and Humanitarian Intervention 8 Life’s Journey—Zuya 1 Liljeblad/Fowler, C./Powell, Northern Paiute–Bannock Dictionary 22 Linford, Tony Hillerman’s Navajoland 22 Little Fish in a Pork Barrel 14 Loendorf/Stone, Mountain Spirit 22 Lost Canyons of the Green River, The 6–7 Lost in the Yellowstone 26 Lost Treasures on the Old Spanish Trail 21 Lyman, Amasa Mason Lyman 25 Madsen, Glory Hunter 26 Man Corn 23 Matheny, New Dimensions in Rock Art Studies 20 Matheson, Tanner Lectures, Vol. 31 16 McCarthy, The Turk in America 24 McPherson, As If the Land Owned Us 22 McVey, The Way Home 23 Meetings at the Margins 13 Mesoamerican Influences in the Southwest 20 Moab Classic Hikes 20 Modern Oceans, Ancient Sites 24 Moorman, Camp Floyd and the Mormons 26 Mormons as Citizens of a Communist State 25 Mountain Spirit 22 Mulder/Mortensen, Among the Mormons 21 Murray, Cinema Southwest 20 Nash, Utah’s Low Points 22 Natural History of the Intermountain West, A 23 Navajo and Photography 22 Neilson, Early Mormon Missionary Activity in Japan 25 New Dimensions in Rock Art Studies 20 Nichols, River Runners’ Guide to Utah and Adjacent Areas 22 Nielsen-Grimm/Stavast, Touching the Past 20 Nielsen-Grimm, Mesoamerican Influences in the Southwest 20 Northern Paiute–Bannock Dictionary 22 Novak, House of Mourning 23 On the Mormon Frontier 25 On the Way to Somewhere Else 26 Opening Zion 26 Oran, Turkish Foreign Policy 1919– 2006 24 Ortman, Winds from the North 9 Ownership, Property, and Sustainability 15 Papa Married a Mormon 21 People of the Water 11 Perspectives on Prehistoric Trade and Exchange in California and the Great Basin 24 Peterson, A., Years of Promise 27 Peterson, C., The Guardian Poplar 4–5 Peterson, J., Utah’s Black Hawk War 22 Peterson, L., Juanita Brooks 25 Plater, Little Fish in a Pork Barrel 14 Plazak, A Hole in the Ground with a Liar at the Top 27 Postclassic Mesoamerican World, The 23 Power and Identity in Archaeological Theory and Practice 10 Price, When the White House Calls 27 Primate People 2–3 Prince/Wright, David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism 25 Ravage, Black Pioneers 27 Reconstructing Ancient Maya Diet 17 Relics Revisited 20 Religion, Not a State, A 24 Revisiting Thomas O’Dea’s The Mormons 25 Reza Ali Khazeni Memorial Lectures in Iranian Studies, Vol. One 25 Rhode, Meetings at the Margins 13 Rise of the West in Presidential Elections, The 27 River Runners’ Guide to Utah and Adjacent Areas 22 Robinson/Patton, The Rise of the West in Presidential Elections 27 Sacred Images 20
Sahagún/Anderson/Dibble, The Florentine Codex 18–19 Salt Desert Trails 21 Sax, Ownership, Property, and Sustainability 15 Schiffer, Studying Technological Change 23 Search for God’s Law, The 24 Seymour, Where Earth and Sky Are Sewn Together 24 Shakespeare in Performance 27 Sherman Alexie 22 Shifting Sands 20 Silbernagel, Troubled Trails 22 Simms and Gohier, Traces of Fremont 24 Simulating Change 23 Smith/Berdan, The Postclassic Mesoamerican World 23 Splendid Heritage 21 Stanton, Where God Put the West 20 Steensma, Wallace Stegner’s Salt Lake City 27 Stegner, The Twilight of Self-Reliance 15 Stone, A Homeland in the West 27 Studying Technological Change 23 Swanson, Dave Rust 27 Swanson, The Bitterroot and Mr. Brandborg 26 Symbiotic Antagonisms 24 Talbot/Richens, Shifting Sands 20 Tanner Lectures, Vol. 31 16 Thompson, Lost Treasures on the Old Spanish Trail 21 To the Peripheries of Mormondom 25 Tom McCourt, Last of the Robbers Roost Outlaws 20 Tony Hillerman’s Navajoland 22 Touching the Past 20 Traces of Fremont 24 Troubled Trails 22 Turk in America, The 24 Turkish Foreign Policy 1919–2006 24 Turner/Turner, Man Corn 23 Twilight of Self-Reliance, The 15 Two Toms 22 ʿUlamaʾ, Politics, and the Public Sphere 25 Utah Ghost Rails 21 Utah’s Black Hawk War 22 Utah’s Low Points 22 Veranth, Hiking the Wasatch 22 Vizgirdas, A Guide to Plants of Yellowstone and Grand Tetons National Parks 22 Wagner, Climate Warming in Western North America 23 Wallace Stegner’s Salt Lake City 27 War and Diplomacy 25 Ward, Dance, Don’t Drive 14 Waring, A Natural History of the Intermountain West 23 Warner, The Domínguez-Escalante Journal 26 Warnock, Splendid Heritage 21 Way Home, The 23 We Shall Remain (DVD) 21 Webb, The Lost Canyons of the Green River 6–7 Weiss, The Search for God’s Law 24 Wetland Adaptations in the Great Basin 20 When the White House Calls 27 Where Earth and Sky Are Sewn Together 24 Where God Put the West 20 Whipple, The Giant Joshua 21 White/Surface-Evans, Least Cost Analysis of Social Landscapes 12 White Hat, Life’s Journey 1 White Indian Boy and its sequel The Return of the White Indian Boy 27 White-bearded Plainsman, A 24 White, Reconstructing Ancient Maya Diet 17 Whittlesey, Lost in the Yellowstone 26 Wildbranch 23 Wilkinson, The Fourth West 15 Williams, Grand Views of Canyon Country 20 Wilson/Wilson, White Indian Boy and its sequel The Return of the White Indian Boy 27 Wood, A White-bearded Plainsman 24 Yavuz/Sluglett, War and Diplomacy 25 Years of Promise 27
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