This collection investigates, through an autoethnographic lens, the roles and intersections of self, spirituality and academia.
Adams makes use of interviews, personal narratives, and autoethnography to analyze lived, relational experiences of sexuality, using the closet as metaphor.
Marshalling new scientific evidence on the musculoskeletal system, this book provides an accessible guide to training that balances athletic... Læs mere
This major work of historical ecology significantly advances the integration of research on natural and social systems, contributing important lessons for contemporary resource policy and management.
The second edition of this award-winning textbook on doing rock art research has additional material on mapping sites, ethnographic analogy, neuropsychological models, and Native American consultation.
A brief, useful guide to Glaserian grounded theory methods for the novice.
This volume addresses key questions regarding the extent of the Younger Dryas climate event at the end of the Pleistocene and how hunter-gatherer populations worldwide adapted behaviorally and technologically in the face of major climatic change.
A brief, accessible guide for students and novice researchers to the principles and practices of qualitative interviewing, both formal and unstructured.
In this engaging, thought-provoking book, Dwight Read explores the fundamental scientific debate about how culture and social organization separate humans from our primate cousins.
A primer on constructing an ethnographic study offered by one of the masters of the genre.
This provocative book confronts the fallacy of race and American Indian racialism, and challenges us to move American culture, policy, and scholarship beyond race.
This lively and provocative book refutes the claim that the “Hobbit” is a new species, and makes a forceful critique of the cultural and political pressures that lead to the wide acceptance of unsupported theories in science.