Many Wests :Place, Culture and Regional Identity
Many Wests :Place, Culture and Regional Identity
paperback
Published:
30 October, 1997
Description
More Details
| Type | Book |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 9780700608621 |
| ISBN10 | 0700608621 |
| Number Of Pages | 320 |
| Item Weight | 636 g |
| Product Dimensions | 153 x 232 x 28 mm |
| Publisher / Reseller | University Press of Kansas |
| Format | paperback |
| Edition | illustrated Edition |
Media Reviews
Although there are no easy answers to questions about the roles of frontiers and regions in the American West, this book will be a source of stimulation in future debates about the elusive mindsets of westerners. --Southwestern Historical Quarterly
A lively and provocative series of discussions about the diverse pieces of the region that make up the larger whole. --Pacific Northwest Quarterly
Taken as a whole, the volume accomplishes the editors' purpose: to present the possibility of many Wests. The essays themselves--and the comprehensive bibliographies accompanying them--attest to the complex vitality of the Wests' various histories, geographies, and cultures. --Great Plains Quarterly
While never getting bogged down in tired debates over the West as region or frontier, this worth collection quietly opens new ways to see the West as both--or better, a region of regions with emergent frontiers. --Western Historical Quarterly
For those who seek a broader understanding of the complex social structure of what can no longer be seriously described as the West, Many Wests is an up-to-date and highly accessible starting point. --Annals of Wyoming
Breaks new ground in the study of the American West. A must book for all students of western history and culture. --Richard W. Etulain, author of Reimagining the Modern American West
The toughest job in western studies today is deciding just what the West is and how its maddeningly diverse parts stand alone yet fit together. In this fine book David Wrobel, Michael Steiner, and a baker's dozen of other writers have raised the vital questions and have helped us toward elusive answers. --Elliott West, author of The Way to the West
Besides cutting-edge scholarship, this book offers a multidimensional view of the West and regionalism. From the mountains to the Plains, men to women, one racial-ethnic group or social class to another, its interdisciplinary experts report, speculate, and suggest what it has meant to be western not only to the peoples who live in the West but to the nation as a whole. --Glenda Riley, author of The Female Frontier
Highly stimulating, wide-ranging, and well written. To understand America one must understand the West (in its many forms), and this book helps greatly. --Walter Nugent, author of Crossings: The Great Transatlantic Migrations