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Archive of posts tagged Christina ramos

Hot Off The Press: March 2022

Posted by Phillip Loken on 9 March 2022, 9:05 am

We’re publishing some great books this month! Read below to learn more about these exceptional titles. Don’t forget to enter code 01DAH40 at checkout for some savings! You can save 40% on ALL UNC Press print books and if your order totals $75 or more, the shipping is FREE! CITIZENS AND RULERS OF THE WORLD:… Continue Reading Hot Off The Press: March 2022

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Filed under African American Studies, American Studies, Gender Studies, Health / Medicine, Latin American & Caribbean Studies, Law / Legal History, Music, Political Science, UNC Press News | Tagged Adam warren, african american studies, american, american studies, anne gray fischer, bedlam in the new world, Black men, Black women, boatema boateng, caribbean studies, cheryl hicks, Christina ramos, citizens and rulers of the world, dancehall, gender studies, health, hot off the press, indian, jamaican, jamaican popular music, Larisa Kingston mann, Latin American and Caribbean studies, latin american studies, law and legal history, march 2022, mashed mayar, medicine, Mexico City, music, Nathalie op de beeck, nineteenth century, police power, policing, Political History, Political Science, prohibition, reggae, rude citizenship, the streets belong to us, u.s. empire, United States

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Books published by the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture and the University of North Carolina Press: #OmohundroInstitute is the oldest organization in the U.S. exclusively dedicated to the advancement of study, research, and publications bearing on the history and culture of early America. Books published through UNC Press’s partnership with the OI, which dates back more than half a century, have won @pulitzerprizes, the National Book Award, several Bancroft Prizes, and the Francis Parkman Prize. Happy #PubDay to EATING WHILE BLACK 🎉 Check out our story to see some of the places this new book has been spotted 👀 in the wild! Repost 👇🏻 @porchlightbooks Looking for a great new read? Here are our recommendations from this week’s new releases! A very happy first day of class @uncchapelhill students and faculty! 🍽 TRY THESE SUMMER RECIPES 🍽 Advance copies are in of FROM HERE TO EQUALITY: Reparations for Black Americans in the Twenty-First Century—Second Edition by William A. Darity Jr. & A. Kirsten Mullen, which includes a new preface by the authors. Preorder it now➡️officially on sale 9/20/22 wherever books are sold. EATING WHILE BLACK: Food Shaming and Race in America, by @buildinghouses9 Psyche A. Williams-Forson, illuminates how anti-black racism  exists within the practice and culture of eating. Belated happy birthday to Juliana!🎂👇🏽Repost @mexirican517: Couldn’t have picked a better time to start reading the 10th book in my effort to read 49 books in my 49th year - ‘Space - Time Colonialism: Alaska’s Indigenous and Asian Entanglements’, by  Juliana Hu Pegues (UNC Press) - as it happens to be the author’s birthday! I’m blessed to call Juliana a dear friend of nearly 25 years, and she is one of the smartest & most politically grounded people I know, so I’m sure this book will teach me much, as I shift from one corner of American settler colonialism (Puerto Rico) to another (Alaska). Have you read this book?  Also, say hi to Cuca in the background.  #books #bookstagram #49books #49BooksInAYear #49BooksInMy49thYear  #Space-TimeColonialism #SpaceTimeColonialism #JulianaHuPegues #Alaska #Cuca #DogsAndBooks #BooksAndDogs 🚨 🏆 GIVEAWAY WINNERS 🏆 🚨 Happy Friday from Brooks Hall 😎(^here’s our sharp looking new sign!)
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