For the younger scholar interested in the West, Professor Wilkinson\u27s book offers a bibliographic shortcut with a carefully selected and balanced listing of nearly 500 essential entries. The author skillfully weaves annotation of some works into a smoothly flowing text; other items are simply listed in concluding paragraphs. The book\u27s distinctive organization selectively highlights certain characteristics of the West. The initial chapter reviews the attempts to define the West geographically. The next chapter, Events, discusses works dealing with Western history, but focuses on key or illustrative conflicts and turning points. Chapter 3 addresses Peoples, which may be influential individuals, subcultures, occupations, or institu...
Review of: "Critical Regionalism: Connecting Politics and Culture in the American Landscape," by Dou...
Review of: "Critical Regionalism: Connecting Politics and Culture in the American Landscape," by Dou...
This is a little book about a big subject, wrote Gerald Nash in his introduction to The American We...
For the younger scholar interested in the West, Professor Wilkinson\u27s book offers a bibliographic...
For the younger scholar interested in the West, Professor Wilkinson\u27s book offers a bibliographic...
For the younger scholar interested in the West, Professor Wilkinson\u27s book offers a bibliographic...
Legal scholar Charles Wilkinson reads and recommends books as if the Video Age were not upon us and ...
Legal scholar Charles Wilkinson reads and recommends books as if the Video Age were not upon us and ...
Anyone interested in any place west of the Mississippi will find some part of Many Wests valuable. E...
Anyone interested in any place west of the Mississippi will find some part of Many Wests valuable. E...
Review of: Many Wests: Place, Culture, and Regional Identity. Wrobel, David M. and Steiner, Michael ...
Review of: Many Wests: Place, Culture, and Regional Identity. Wrobel, David M. and Steiner, Michael ...
This thorough study of the American West takes as a given the region\u27s contested and continuously...
Review of: "An American Colony: Regionalism and the Roots of Midwestern Culture," by Edward Watt
What do Dallas, Los Angeles, Omaha, and Seattle have in common? All are situated outside the New Wes...
Review of: "Critical Regionalism: Connecting Politics and Culture in the American Landscape," by Dou...
Review of: "Critical Regionalism: Connecting Politics and Culture in the American Landscape," by Dou...
This is a little book about a big subject, wrote Gerald Nash in his introduction to The American We...
For the younger scholar interested in the West, Professor Wilkinson\u27s book offers a bibliographic...
For the younger scholar interested in the West, Professor Wilkinson\u27s book offers a bibliographic...
For the younger scholar interested in the West, Professor Wilkinson\u27s book offers a bibliographic...
Legal scholar Charles Wilkinson reads and recommends books as if the Video Age were not upon us and ...
Legal scholar Charles Wilkinson reads and recommends books as if the Video Age were not upon us and ...
Anyone interested in any place west of the Mississippi will find some part of Many Wests valuable. E...
Anyone interested in any place west of the Mississippi will find some part of Many Wests valuable. E...
Review of: Many Wests: Place, Culture, and Regional Identity. Wrobel, David M. and Steiner, Michael ...
Review of: Many Wests: Place, Culture, and Regional Identity. Wrobel, David M. and Steiner, Michael ...
This thorough study of the American West takes as a given the region\u27s contested and continuously...
Review of: "An American Colony: Regionalism and the Roots of Midwestern Culture," by Edward Watt
What do Dallas, Los Angeles, Omaha, and Seattle have in common? All are situated outside the New Wes...
Review of: "Critical Regionalism: Connecting Politics and Culture in the American Landscape," by Dou...
Review of: "Critical Regionalism: Connecting Politics and Culture in the American Landscape," by Dou...
This is a little book about a big subject, wrote Gerald Nash in his introduction to The American We...