University of Arizona Press listings include: Andrae M. Marak and Laura Tuennerman At the Border of Empires: The Tohono O'odham, Gender, and Assimilation, 1880-1934 (232 pp. for $55 cloth); Craig N. Cipolla, Becoming Brothertown: Native American Ethnogenesis and Endurance in the Modern World (240 pp. for $50 cloth); Foreword by Gregory Cajete; Edited by Lloyd L. Lee, Diné Perspectives: Revitalizing and Reclaiming Navajo Thought (240 pp. for $29.95, cloth); Stefanie Wickstrom; Philip D. Young, Mestizaje and Globalization : Transformations of Identity and Power (264 pp. for $55 cloth); Alice Beck Kehoe, A Passion for the True and Just: Felix and Lucy Kramer Cohen and the Indian New Deal (256 pp. for $55 cloth); C. Timothy McKeown, C. In the Smaller Scope of Conscience : The Struggle for National Repatriation Legislation, 1986–1990 (288 pp. for $26.95 paper); Dian Million, Therapeutic Nations: Healing in an Age of Indigenous Human Rights (240 pp. for $26.95); Natasha Lyons, Where the Wind Blows Us: Practicing Critical Community Archaeology in the Canadian North (256 pp. for $55 cloth); and Michelle M. Jacob, Yakama Rising: Indigenous Cultural Revitalization, Activism, and Healing (152 pp. for $24.95), all from the University of Arizona Press, 355 S. Euclid Ave., Suite 103, Tucson, AZ 85701, phone/fax (800) 426-3797, http://www.uapress.arizona.edu/.
Offerings from the University of Hawaii Press include: Reuven Amitai and Michel Biran, Nomads as Agents of Change: The Mongols and Their Eurasian Predecessors (317 pp. for $54 clot, also E-book); Philip Taylor, The Khmer Lands of Vietnam: Environment, Cosmology, and Sovereignty (350 pp. for $30 paper); Mark Poffenberger, ed., Cambodia's Contested Forest Domain (320 pp. for $49 paper); Malcolm Ebright,), All, plus $5 first item, $1 each additional, shipping, from University of Hawai’i Press, 1840 Kolawalu St., Honolulu, HI 96822 (808)956-8255, [email protected], http://www.uhpress.hawaii.edu. Seleyn Katene and Malcolm Mulholland, Future Challenges for Maori: He Korero Anamata (344 pp. for $32 paper), all, plus $5 first item, $1 each additional, from University of Hawai'i Press (800)847-7377, http://uhpress.wordpress.com.
Recent offerings from the University of New Mexico Press include: Thomas A. Britten, eds., The National Council on Indian Opportunity: Quiet Champion of Self-Determination (352 p[p. for $45 cloth); Malcolm Ebright, Advocates for the Oppressed: Hispanosm Indians, Genizaros, and their Land (440 pp. for $60 cloth); David E. Stuart, Anasazi America: Seventeen Centuries on the Road From Center Place (344 pp. for $27.95 paper); Rick Hendricks, and Richard Hughes, Four Square Leagues: Pueblo Indian Lands in New Mexico (496 pp. for $65 cloth); William M. Clements, Imagining Geronimo: An Apache Icon in Popular Culture (320 pp. for $24.95); Hal Langfur, eds., Native Brazil: Beyond the Convert and the Cannibal, 1500-1900 (304 pp. for $29.95); and David Leedom Shaul , A Prehistory of Western North America: The Impact of Uto-Aztecan Languages (432 pp. for $65 cloth), all plus $5 for the first item and $1 for each additional, shipping, from the University of New Mexico Press, MSC04 2820, 1 University of New Mexico, Albuquerque NM 87131-0001 (505)272-7777 or (800)249-7737, http://www.unmpress.com/.
University of Nebraska Press offerings include: Gregory D. Smithers and Brooke N. Newman, eds., Native Diasporas: Indigenous Identities and Settler Colonialism in the Americas (524 pp. for $45); B.C. Lindsay, Murder State: California's Native American Genocide, 1848-1873 (524 pp. for $45 paper), all, plus $5 for the first item, $1 for each additional, from University of Nebraska Press, 1111 Lincoln Mall, Lincoln, NE 68588 (800)755-1105, [email protected], www.nebraskapress.unl.edu.
Offerings from the University of Oklahoma Press include: Jerome A. Greene , (Foreword By: Thomas Powers , American Carnage: Wounded Knee, 1890 (648 pp. for $34.95 cloth); Gary Clayton Anderson , Ethnic Cleansing and the Indian: The Crime That Should Haunt America (472 pp. for $29.95); ed. , American Indians in U.S. History, Second Edition (216 pp. for $24.95); Roger L. Nichols An Osage Journey to Europe, 1827–1830: Three French Accounts (168 pp. for $29.95 cloth); George Harwood Phillips, Chiefs and Challengers: Indian Resistance and Cooperation in Southern California, 1769–1906 (384 pp. for $26.95 paper); Mark E. Miller (Foreword by: Chadwick Smith, Claiming Tribal Identity: The Five Tribes and the Politics of Federal Acknowledgment ((480 pp. for $29.95 paper); Edwin R. Sweeney, Cochise: Firsthand Accounts of the Chiricahua Apache Chief ((336 pp. for $49.95 cloth); Paul N. Beck , Columns of Vengeance: Soldiers, Sioux, and the Punitive Expeditions, 1863-1864 (320 pp. for $19.95 paper, also hardcover); James W. Parins, Literacy and Intellectual Life in the Cherokee Nation, 1820–1906 (296 pp. for $34.95 cloth); Jon S. Blackman, Oklahoma's Indian New Deal ((192 pp. for $24.95 paper); Joshua B. Nelson, Progressive Traditions: Identity in Cherokee Literature and Culture ((296 pp. for $34.95 cloth); C. Daniel Crews and Richard W. Starbuck, eds., Records of the Moravians Among the Cherokees: Volume Five: The Anna Rosina Years Part 3: Farewell to Sister Gambold, 1817–1821 (648 pp. for $60 cloth); Phillip Carroll Morgan, 19th Century Chickasaw Governors; Their Lives and Intellectual Legacy (200 pp. for $20 cloth); Virginia Cole Trenholm and Maurine Carley, The Sentinels of the Rockies (400 pp. for $19.95 paper); and Diana Meyers Bahr, The Students of Sherman Indian School: Education and Native Identity since 1892 (192 pp. for $190.95 paper), all, plus $5 for first item, $1.50 for each additional, shipping, from the University of Oklahoma Press, Attn: Order Department, 2800 Venture Drive, Norman, OK 73069-8218, www.oupress.com.
Books from University of Pennsylvania Press include: Marie Plane, Dreams and the Invisible World in Colonial New England: Indians, Colonists, and the Seventeenth Century (288 pp. $39 cloth or E-book); and Jean R. Soderlund, Lenape Country: Delaware Valley Society Before William Penn (272 pp. for $39.95 cloth or E-book), all plus $5 first item, $2 each additional, from University of Pennsylvania Press, www.pennpress.org.
Offerings from the University of Kansas Press include Daniel L. Cobb, Native Activism in Cold War America: The Struggle for Sovereignty (312 pp. for $19.95 paper, $34.95 cloth); Ralf A. Rossum, The Supreme Court and Tribal Gaming: California v. Cabazon Band of Mission Indians (216 pp. for $16.95 paper, $34.95 cloth); Carolyn N. Long, Religious Freedom and Indian Rights: The Case of Oregon v. Smith (264 pp. for $14.95 paper, $34 cloth); and Yasuhide Kawishima, Infighting King Philips War: The John Sassamon Murder Trial (192 pp. for $14.95 paper), all, plus $5 for first item, $1 for each additional, shipping, from: WWW.kansaspress.ku.edu.
SAR Press books encompass: Sherry L. Smith and Brian Frehner, Indians and Energy: Exploitation and Opportunity in the American Southwest (336 pp. for $34.95 paper); Circe Sturm, Becoming Indian: The Struggle Over Cherokee Identity in the Twenty-First Century (280 pp. for $27.95 paper); Nancy Marlo Mithio, "Our Indian Princess": Subverting the Stereotype (208 pp. for $29.95 paper); David Kamper, The Work of Sovereignty: Tribal Labor Relations and Self-Determination at the Navajo Nation (272 pp. for $34,95 paper); Waziyastawin and Michael Yellow Bird, For Indigenous Minds Only: A Decolonization Handbook (284 pp. for $24.95 paper); Benedict J. Colombi and James F. Brooks, Keystone Nations: Indigenous Peoples and Salmon Across the Pacific (336 pp. for $34.95 paper); Tressa Berman, No Deal! Indigenous Arts and the Politics of Possession (282 pp. for $34.95 paper); Rodney Harrison, Sarah Byrne and Anne Clarke, eds., Reassembling the Collection: Ethnographic Museums and Indigenous Agency (368 pp. for $34.95 paper); Lynn Stephen and Charles R. Hale, eds., Otros Saberes: Collaborative Research on Indigenous and Afro-Descendent Cultural Politics (262 pp. for $34.95 cloth); Charles R. Hale, Mas Que un Indio (More then an Indian): Racial Ambivalence and Neoliberal Multiculturism in Guatemala (304 pp. for $24.95); Emillo del Valle Escalante, Maya Nationalisms and Postcolonial Challenges in Guatemala: Colonality, Modernity and identity Politics (234 pp. for $34.95 paper); Maximilian Viatori, One State, Many Nations: Indigenous Rights Struggles in Ecuador (168 pp. for $29.95 paper); Nicole Fabricant and Bret Giustufson, Remapping Bolivia: Resources, Territory and Indigeneity in a Plurinational State (280 pp. for $34.95 paper); Robert Albro, Roosters at Midnight: Indigenous Signs and Stigma in Local Bolivian Politics (264 pp. for $34.95); and Kimberly Christen, Aboriginal Business: Alliances in a Remote Australian Town (334 pp. for $29.95 paper), all plus shipping from SAR Press, P.O. Box 2188, Santa Fe, NM 87504-7206 (888)390-6070, [email protected], www.sarpress.org.
Rick Wallace, Merging Fires: Grassroots Peacebuilding Between Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Peoples is 178 pp. for $22.95 from Fernwood Publishing: www.fernwoodpublishing.ca.
David P. Nachlor, Lawrence Felt and Andrea Procter, Settlement, Subsistence and Change Among the Labrador Inuit, is 295 pp. for $31.95 from University of Saskatchewan Press: http://ilmi.usask.ca/people/david-natcher/publications.php.
The June 2014 issue of The Social Science Journal, Vol. 51, No. 2, contains two articles concerning American Indians and politics: Thaddeus W. Conner, " Exploring Voting Behavior on American Indian Legislation in the United States Congress;" and Jeonnghun Min and Daniel Savage, " Why Do American Indians Vote Democratic?"