Product List
GET /services/catalog/products?format=api&page=72597
{ "links": { "first": "https://redshelf.com/services/catalog/products?format=api&page=1", "last": "https://redshelf.com/services/catalog/products?format=api&page=78373", "next": "https://redshelf.com/services/catalog/products?format=api&page=72598", "prev": "https://redshelf.com/services/catalog/products?format=api&page=72596" }, "data": [ { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383134", "attributes": { "name": "Tender Is the Night and F. Scott Fitzgerald's Sentimental Identities", "subtitle": "", "description": "In this fascinating study, Chris Messenger posits F. Scott Fitzgerald as a great master of sentiment in modern American fiction. Sentimental forms both attracted and repelled Fitzgerald while defining his deepest impulses as a prose writer. Messenger demonstrates that the sentimental identities, refractions, and influences Fitzgerald explores in Tender Is the Night define key components in his affective life, which evolved into a powerful aesthetic that informed his vocation as a modernist writer. In Tender Is the Night and F. Scott Fitzgeralds Sentimental Identities, Messenger traces the roots of Fitzgeralds writing career to the deaths of his two infant sisters a few months before his own birth. It was their loss, Fitzgerald wrote, that made him a writer. Messenger highlights how the loss of Fitzgeralds siblings powerfully molded his relation to maternal nurturing and sympathy in Tender Is the Night as well as how it shaped the homosocial intimations of its care-giving protagonist, psychiatrist Dick Diver. A concomitant grief and mourning was fueled by Fitzgeralds intimate and intense creative rivalry with his often-institutionalized wife, Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald. While sentiment is a discredited strain in high modernism, Fitzgerald nevertheless embraced it in Tender Is the Night to fashion this most poignant and beautiful successor to The Great Gatsby. Fitzgeralds aesthetic and emotional preoccupations came most vividly to life in this major novel. Messenger describes how Fitzgerald, creating his character Nicole Warren Diver as a victim of paternal incest, finally found the sentimental key to finishing his novel and uniting his vision of the two narratives of saving the two sisters and reimagining the agony of his wife and their marriage. Fitzgeralds productive quarrel with and through sentiment defines his career, and Messenger convincingly argues that Tender Is the Night should be placed alongside TheGreat Gatsby as a classic exemplar of the modern novel.", "author": "Christian K. Messenger", "slug": "tender-is-the-night-and-f-scott-fitzgeralds-sentimental-identities-383134-9780817387976-christian-k-messenger", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780817387976.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383134", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383134/tender-is-the-night-and-f-scott-fitzgeralds-sentimental-identities-383134-9780817387976-christian-k-messenger", "bisac_codes": [ "LIT000000", "813/.52" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817318536", "EISBN13": "9780817387976" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010769304" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383133", "attributes": { "name": "The Best Station of Them All", "subtitle": "The Savannah Squadron, 1861-1865", "description": "The Confederate Navys Savannah Squadron, its relationship with the people of Savannah, Georgia, and its role in the citys economy In this well-written and extensively researched narrative, Maurice Melton charts the history of the unit, the sailors (both white and black), the officers, their families, and their activities aboard ship and in port. The Savannah Squadron worked, patrolled, and fought in the rivers and sounds along the Georgia coast. Though they saw little activity at sea, the unit did engage in naval assault, boarding, capture, and ironclad combat. The sailors finished the war as an infantry unit in Robert E. Lees Army of Northern Virginia, fighting at Saylers Creek on the road to Appomattox. Melton concentrates on navy life and the squadrons place in wartime Savannah. The book reveals who the Confederate sailors were and what their material, social, and working lives were like. The Best Station of Them All is an essential piece of historical literature for anyone interested in the Civil War, its navies, or Savannah. ", "author": "Maurice Melton", "slug": "the-best-station-of-them-all-383133-9780817386108-maurice-melton", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780817386108.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383133", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383133/the-best-station-of-them-all-383133-9780817386108-maurice-melton", "bisac_codes": [ "HIS000000", "975.8/03" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817317638", "EISBN13": "9780817386108" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010771684" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383132", "attributes": { "name": "The Border Crossed Us", "subtitle": "Rhetorics of Borders, Citizenship, and Latina/o Identity", "description": "Explores efforts to restrict and expand notions of US citizenship as they relate specifically to the US-Mexico border and Latina/o identity. Borders and citizenship go hand in hand. Borders define a nation as a territorial entity and create the parameters for national belonging. But the relationship between borders and citizenship breeds perpetual anxiety over the purported sanctity of the border, the security of a nation, and the integrity of civic identity. In The Border Crossed Us, Josue David Cisneros addresses these themes as they relate to the US-Mexico border, arguing that issues ranging from the Mexican-American War of 18461848 to contemporary debates about Latina/o immigration and border security are negotiated rhetorically through public discourse. He explores these rhetorical battles through case studies of specific Latina/o struggles for civil rights and citizenship, including debates about Mexican American citizenship in the 1849 California Constitutional Convention, 1960s Chicana/o civil rights movements, and modern-day immigrant activism. Cisneros posits that bordersboth geographic and civichave crossed and recrossed Latina/o communities throughout history (the books title derives from the popular activist chant, We didnt cross the border; the border crossed us!) and that Latina/os in the United States have long contributed to, struggled with, and sought to cross or challenge the borders of belonging, including race, culture, language, and gender. The Border Crossed Us illuminates the enduring significance and evolution of US borders and citizenship, and provides programmatic and theoretical suggestions for the continued study of these critical issues.", "author": "Josue David Cisneros", "slug": "the-border-crossed-us-383132-9780817387235-josue-david-cisneros", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780817387235.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383132", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383132/the-border-crossed-us-383132-9780817387235-josue-david-cisneros", "bisac_codes": [ "SOC000000", "973/.046872" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817318123", "EISBN13": "9780817387235" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010771360" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383131", "attributes": { "name": "SunWatch", "subtitle": "Fort Ancient Development in the Mississippian World", "description": "Focuses on the development of village social structure within a broad geographic and temporal framework, recognizing border areas as particularly dynamic contexts of social change The last prehistoric cultures to inhabit the Middle Ohio Valley (ca. A.D. 10001650) are referred to as Fort Ancient societies, which exhibited a wide variety of Mississippian period characteristics. What is less well-known and little understood are the social processes by which Mississippian characteristics spread to Fort Ancient communities. Through a comprehensive study of SunWatch, one of the few thoroughly excavated Fort Ancient settlements, the author focuses on the development of village social structure within a broad geographic and temporal framework, recognizing border areas as particularly dynamic contexts of social change. As a fundamental study of social patterning of Fort Ancient villages, this work reveals the interrelationships of small social units in culture change and social structure development and provides a full reconsideration of the Mississippian dimensions of Fort Ancient societies and a model for future investigations of larger patterning in the lateprehistory of the region.", "author": "Robert A. Cook", "slug": "sunwatch-383131-9780817381776-robert-a-cook", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780817381776.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383131", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383131/sunwatch-383131-9780817381776-robert-a-cook", "bisac_codes": [ "SOC000000", "973.1/73" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817315900", "EISBN13": "9780817381776" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010772231" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383130", "attributes": { "name": "Tennesseans at War, 18121815", "subtitle": "Andrew Jackson, the Creek War, and the Battle of New Orleans", "description": "Tennesseans at War, 18121815 by Tom Kanon tells the often forgotten story of the central role citizens and soldiers from Tennessee played in the Creek War in Alabama and War of 1812. Although frequently discussed as separate military conflicts, the War of 1812 against Great Britain and the Creek War against Native Americans in the territory that would become Alabama were part of the same forceful projection of growing American power. Success in both wars won for America security against attack from abroad and vast tracks of new land in the Old Southwest. In Tennesseans at War, 18121815, Tom Kanon explains the role Tennesseans played in these changes and how they remade the south. Because it was a landlocked frontier state, Tennessees economy and security depended heavily upon the river systems that traversed the region; some, like the Tennessee River, flowed south out of the state and into Native American lands. Tennesseans of the period perceived that gaining mastery of these waterways formed an urgent part of their economic survival and stability. The culmination of fifteen years research, Kanons work draws on state archives, primary sources, and eyewitness accounts, bringing the information in these materials together for first time. Not only does he narrate the military campaigns at the heart of the young nations expansion, but he also deftly recalls the economic and social pressures and opportunities that encouraged large numbers of Tennesseans to leave home and fight. He expertly weaves these themes into a cohesive narrative that culminates in the vivid military victories of the War of 1812, the Creek War, and the legendary Battle of New Orleansthe victory that catapulted Tennessees citizen-soldier Andrew Jackson to the presidency. Expounding on the social roles and conditions of women, slaves, minorities, and Native Americans in Tennessee, Kanon also brings into focus the key idea of the home front in the minds of Tennesseans doing battle in Alabama and beyond. Kanon shows how the goal of creating, strengthening, and maintaining an ordered society permeated the choices and actions of the American elites on the frontiers of the young nation. Much more than a history of Tennesseans or the battles they fought in Alabama, Tennesseans at War, 18121815, is the gripping story of a pivotal turning point in the history of the young American republic.", "author": "Tom Kanon", "slug": "tennesseans-at-war-18121815-383130-9780817387525-tom-kanon", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780817387525.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383130", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383130/tennesseans-at-war-18121815-383130-9780817387525-tom-kanon", "bisac_codes": [ "HIS000000", "973.5/2" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817318291", "EISBN13": "9780817387525" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010769466" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383129", "attributes": { "name": "The Archaeology of Events", "subtitle": "Cultural Change and Continuity in the Pre-Columbian Southeast", "description": "The first work to apply an events-based approach to the analysis of pivotal developments in the pre-Columbian Southeast Across the social sciences, gradualist evolutionary models of historical dynamics are giving way to explanations focused on the punctuated and contingent events through which history is actually experienced. The Archaeology of Events is the first book-length work that systematically applies this new eventful approach to major developments in the pre-Columbian Southeast. Traditional accounts of pre-Columbian societies often portray them as cold and unchanging for centuries or millennia. Events-based analyses have opened up archaeological discourse to the more nuanced and flexible idea of context-specific, rapidly transpiring, and broadly consequential historical events as catalysts of cultural change. The Archaeology of Events, edited by Zackary I. Gilmore and Jason M. ODonoughue, considers a variety of perspectives on the nature and scale of events and their role in historical change. These perspectives are applied to a broad range of archeological contexts stretching across the Southeast and spanning more than 7,000 years of the regions pre-Columbian history. New data suggest that several of this regions most pivotal historical developments, such as the founding of Cahokia, the transformation of Moundville from urban center to vacated necropolis, and the construction of Poverty Points Mound A, were not protracted incremental processes, but rather watershed moments that significantly altered the long-term trajectories of indigenous Southeastern societies. In addition to exceptional occurrences that impacted entire communities or peoples, southeastern archaeologists are increasingly recognizing the historical importance of localized, everyday events, such as building a house, crafting a pot, or depositing shell. The essays collected by Gilmore and ODonoughue show that small-scale events can make significant contributions to the unfolding of broad, regional-scale historical processes and to the reproduction or transformation of social structures. The Archaeology of Events is the first volume to explore the archaeological record of events in the Southeastern United States, the methodologies that archaeologists bring to bear on this kind of research, and considerations of the event as an important theoretical concept. ", "author": "Zackary I. Gilmore, Jason M. O'Donoughue", "slug": "the-archaeology-of-events-383129-9780817387839", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780817387839.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383129", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383129/the-archaeology-of-events-383129-9780817387839", "bisac_codes": [ "SOC000000", "975.004/97" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817318505", "EISBN13": "9780817387839" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010770059" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383128", "attributes": { "name": "Tell the World You're a Wildflower", "subtitle": "Stories", "description": "Tell the World Youre a Wildflower is a collection of loosely interwoven stories in the voices of southern women and girls of different ages and backgrounds. Beginning with the youngest characters and ending with the oldest, the stories encompass plastic surgery and white supremacists, family secrets and family trees, the United Daughters of the Confederacy and a young writer who describes her work in progress as the bastard love-child of William Faulkner and Alice Walker. In Tell the World Youre a Wildflower, each character must decide what to tell, whether to tell it, and to whom to tell it. Each struggles with questions of identity and truth, trying to understand who she is and what holds true for her. Some tell their stories plainly, directly, others more obliquely, nesting one within another. Anchored in the tradition of southern storytelling, these women contend with loss, change, and growth while going to church, school, and prison, navigating love and sex, and worrying too much about what people might think. Yet these women generally refuse to behave, and they wander in and out of each others stories just like people do in small towns across the South. Small town lives are always interconnected: your third-grade teacher is your new neighbors aunt and the boy you dated your senior year falls from political grace after being caught in a hot tub with your second cousin. Though they may have had little say in where they were planted, Hornes protagonists nevertheless do their best to bloom. Rich, multifaceted, and unforgettable, Tell the World Youre a Wildflower is the work of a veteran explorer of the twentieth and twenty-first century South. Hornes quest to understand her culture through decades of reading and observing has now yielded these narratives that imaginatively and insightfully enter the hearts and minds of southern women.", "author": "Jennifer Horne", "slug": "tell-the-world-youre-a-wildflower-383128-9780817387778-jennifer-horne", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780817387778.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383128", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383128/tell-the-world-youre-a-wildflower-383128-9780817387778-jennifer-horne", "bisac_codes": [ "FIC000000", "813/.6" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817318451", "EISBN13": "9780817387778" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010026681141" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383127", "attributes": { "name": "Tenahaha and the Wari State", "subtitle": "A View of the Middle Horizon from the Cotahuasi Valley", "description": "The Middle Horizon period (A.D. 6001000) was a time of sweeping cultural change in the Andes. Archaeologists have long associated this period with the expansion of the Wari (Huari) and Tiwanaku (Tiahuanaco) states in the south-central Andes and the Pacific coasts of contemporary Peru and Chile. Tenahaha and the Wari State contains a series of essays that challenge current beliefs about the Wari state and suggest a reassessment of this pivotal era in Andean history. In this collection, a picture emerges of Wari power projected across the regions rugged and formidable topography less as a conquering empire than as a source of ideas, styles, and material culture voluntarily adopted by neighboring peoples. Much of the previous fieldwork on Wari history took place in the Wari heartland and in Wari strongholds, not areas where Wari power and influence were equivocal. In Tenahaha and the Wari State, editors Justin Jennings and Willy Yepez Alvarez set out to test whether current theories of the Wari state as a cohesive empire were accurate or simply reflective of the bias inherent in studying Wari culture in its most concentrated centers. The essays in this collection examine instead life in the Cotahuasi Valley, an area into which Wari influence expanded during the Middle Horizon period. Drawing on ten years of exhaustive field work both at the ceremonial site of Tenahaha and in the surrounding valley, Jennings and Yepez Alvarez posit that Cotahuasinos at Tenahaha had little contact with the Wari state. Their excavations and survey in the area tell the story of a region in flux rather than of a people conquered by Wari. In a time of uncertainty, they adopted Wari ideas and culture as ways to cope with change.", "author": "Willy Yépez Álvarez, Luz Antonio Vargas, Maria D. Velarde, Elina Alvarado Sánchez, Stefanie Bautista, Patricia Bedregal, Ingrid Berg, Camila Capriata Estrada, Isabel Collazos, Matthew J. Edwards, Alcides Gavilán Vargas, Oscar Huamán López, Corina M. Kellner, Justin Jennings, Martha Palma Malaga, Pablo Mendoza, Eduardo Montoya, Franco Mora, Amanda Mummert, Guadalupe Ochoa, Marco Ubillús, Irela Vallejo, Willy Yépez Álvarez, Justin Jennings", "slug": "tenahaha-and-the-wari-state-383127-9780817387815", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780817387815.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383127", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383127/tenahaha-and-the-wari-state-383127-9780817387815", "bisac_codes": [ "SOC000000", "985/.01" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817318499", "EISBN13": "9780817387815" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010801196" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383126", "attributes": { "name": "Suburban Dreams", "subtitle": "Imagining and Building the Good Life", "description": "2016 Choice Outstanding Academic Title and Jane Jacobs Urban Communication Book Award finalist Explores how the suburban imaginary, composed of the built environment and imaginative texts, functions as a resource for living out the good life Starting with the premise that suburban films, residential neighborhoods, chain restaurants, malls, and megachurches are compelling forms (topos) that shape and materialize the everyday lives of residents and visitors, Greg Dickinsons Suburban Dreams offers a rhetorically attuned critical analysis of contemporary American suburbs and the good life their residents pursue. Dickinsons analysis suggests that the good life is rooted in memory and locality, both of which are foundations for creating a sense of safety central to the success of suburbs. His argument is situated first in a discussion of the intersections among buildings, cities, and the good life and the challenges to these relationships wrought by the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The argument then turns to rich, fully-embodied analyses of suburban films and a series of archetypal suburban landscapes to explore how memory, locality, and safety interact in constructing the suburban imaginary. Moving from the pastoralism of residential neighborhoods and chain restaurants like Olive Garden and Macaroni Grill, through the megachurchs veneration of suburban malls to the mixed-use lifestyle centers nostalgic invocation of urban downtowns, Dickinson complicates traditional understandings of the ways suburbs situate residents and visitors in time and place. The analysis suggests that the suburban good life is devoted to family. Framed by the discourses of consumer culture, the suburbs often privilege walls and roots to an expansive vision of worldliness. At the same time, developments such as farmers markets suggest a continued striving by suburbanites to form relationships in a richer, more organic fashion. Dickinsons work eschews casually dismissive attitudes toward the suburbs and the pursuit of the good life. Rather, he succeeds in showing how by identifying the positive rhetorical resources the suburbs supply, it is in fact possible to engage with the suburbs intentionally, thoughtfully, and rigorously. Beyond an analysis of the suburban imaginary, Suburban Dreams demonstrates how a critical engagement with everyday places can enrich daily life. The book provides much of interest to students and scholars of rhetoric, communication studies, public memory, American studies, architecture, and urban planning.", "author": "Greg Dickinson", "slug": "suburban-dreams-383126-9780817388119-greg-dickinson", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780817388119.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383126", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383126/suburban-dreams-383126-9780817388119-greg-dickinson", "bisac_codes": [ "LAN000000", "307.74" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817318635", "EISBN13": "9780817388119" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010770367" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383125", "attributes": { "name": "Surveillance, Transparency, and Democracy", "subtitle": "Public Administration in the Information Age", "description": "Investigates public administrations increasing dependence on technology and how its pervasive use in complex and interrelated socioeconomic and political affairs has outstripped the ability of many public administrators and the public to grasp the consequences of their choices In this well-informed yet anxious age, public administrators have constructed vast cisterns that collect and interpret a meteoric shower of facts. Akhlaque Haque demonstrates that this pervasive use and increasing dependence on information technology (IT) enables sophisticated and well-intentioned public services that nevertheless risk deforming public policy decision-making and sees a contradiction inherent in a public that seeks services that require a level of data collection that in turn triggers fears of a tyrannical police state. The author posits that ITs potential as a tool for human development depends on how civil servants and citizens actively engage in identifying desired outcomes, map IT solutions to those outcomes, and routinize the applications of those solutions. This leads to his call for the development of entrepreneurs who generate innovative solutions to critical human needs and problems. In his powerful summary, he recaps possible answers to the question: What is the best way a public institution can apply technology to improving the human condition? Engrossing, challenging, and timely, Surveillance, Transparency, and Democracy is essential reading for both policy makers as well as the great majority of readers and citizens engaged in contemporary arguments about the role of government, public health and security, individual privacy, data collection, and surveillance. ", "author": "Akhlaque Haque", "slug": "surveillance-transparency-and-democracy-383125-9780817388768-akhlaque-haque", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780817388768.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383125", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383125/surveillance-transparency-and-democracy-383125-9780817388768-akhlaque-haque", "bisac_codes": [ "POL000000", "352.3/802854678" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817318772", "EISBN13": "9780817388768" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010771389" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383124", "attributes": { "name": "Stumbling Its Way through Mexico", "subtitle": "The Early Years of the Communist International", "description": "Stumbling Its Way through Mexico records the early attempts by the Moscow-based Communist International to organize and direct a revolutionary movement in Mexico. The period studied, from 1919 to 1929, was characterized at the beginning by a wave of revolutions in Europe that the Bolsheviks expected to grow into an international phenomenon. However, contrary to their expectations, the revolutionary tide ebbed, and the new age they had expected receded into an uncertain future. In response, Moscow sent agents and recruited local leaders worldwide to sustain and train local revolutionary movements and to foment what they saw as an inevitable seizure of power by Communist-led workers. Unlike the Soviet seizure of power in Russia, the Mexican Revolution of 19101920 had not changed the fundamental character of the nation-state. However, it did represent a sea change in the relationship between the state and society. When the Bolshevik Revolution broke out in Russia in 1917, Mexican workers already had generations of experience in the struggle against oppression, in forming class solidarity, in organizing strikes, and had tasted both success and failure. For decades in their workplaces, Mexicans had debated how to end the exploitation of labor and practice international solidarity. Mexico had an indigenous labor movement acting with some success to establish a place in a new Mexico. The agents that Moscow chose to lead the Communist movement in Mexico lacked an understanding of the local situation and presumed a lack of indigenous confidence and experience that doomed to failure their efforts to impose external control over the labor movement. Based on documents found principally in the Soviet archives recently opened to the public, Stumbling Its Way through Mexico is an invitation to rethink the history of Communism in Mexico and Latin America. Copublication with the Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropologia Social.", "author": "Daniela Spenser", "slug": "stumbling-its-way-through-mexico-383124-9780817385491-daniela-spenser", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780817385491.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383124", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383124/stumbling-its-way-through-mexico-383124-9780817385491-daniela-spenser", "bisac_codes": [ "HIS000000", "324.272/075" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817317362", "EISBN13": "9780817385491" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010770720" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383123", "attributes": { "name": "Storm of Words", "subtitle": "Science, Religion, and Evolution in the Civil War Era", "description": "A study of the ways that southern Presbyterians in the wake of the Civil War contended with a host of cultural and theological questions Southern Presbyterian theologians enjoyed a prominent position in antebellum southern culture. Respected for both their erudition and elite constituency, these theologians identified the southern society as representing a divine, Biblically ordained order. Beginning in the 1840s, however, this facile identification became more difficult to maintain, colliding first with antislavery polemics, then with Confederate defeat and reconstruction, and later with womens rights, philosophical empiricism, literary criticisms of the Bible, and that most salient symbol of modernity, natural science. As Monte Harrell Hampton shows in Storm of Words, modern science seemed most explicitly to express the rationalistic spirit of the age and threaten the Protestant conviction that science was the faithful handmaid of theology. Southern Presbyterians disposed of some of these threats with ease. Contemporary geology, however, posed thornier problems. Ambivalence over how to respond to geology led to the establishment in 1859 of the Perkins Professorship of Natural Science in Connexion with Revealed Religion at the seminary in Columbia, South Carolina. Installing scientist-theologian James Woodrow in this position, southern Presbyterians expected him to defend their positions. Within twenty-five years, however, their anointed expert held that evolution did not contradict scripture. Indeed, he declared that it was in fact Gods method of creating. The resulting debate was the first extended evolution controversy in American history. It drove a wedge between those tolerant of new exegetical and scientific developments and the majority who opposed such openness. Hampton argues that Woodrow believed he was shoring up the alliance between science and scripturethat a circumscribed form of evolution did no violence to scriptural infallibility. The traditionalists view, however, remained interwoven with their identity as defenders of the Lost Cause and guardians of southern culture. The ensuing debate triggered Woodrows dismissal. It also capped a modernity crisis experienced by an influential group of southern intellectuals who were grappling with the nature of knowledge, both scientific and religious, and its relationship to culturea culture attempting to define itself in the shadow of the Civil War and Reconstruction.", "author": "Monte Harrell Hampton", "slug": "storm-of-words-383123-9780817387624-monte-harrell-hampton", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780817387624.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383123", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383123/storm-of-words-383123-9780817387624-monte-harrell-hampton", "bisac_codes": [ "HIS000000", "285/.17509034" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817318314", "EISBN13": "9780817387624" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010800708" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383122", "attributes": { "name": "Southern Crucifix, Southern Cross", "subtitle": "Catholic-Protestant Relations in the Old South", "description": "Southern Crucifix, Southern Cross examines the complex and often overlooked relationships between Catholics and Protestants in the antebellum South. In sharp contrast to many long-standing presumptions about mistrust or animosity between these two groups, this study proposes that Catholic and Protestant interactions in the South were characterized more by cooperation than by conflict. Andrew H. M. Stern argues that Catholics worked to integrate themselves into southern society without compromising their religious beliefs and that many Protestants accepted and supported them. Catholic leaders demonstrated the compatibility of Catholicism with American ideals and institutions, and Protestants recognized Catholics as useful citizens, true Americans, and loyal southerners, in particular citing their support for slavery and their hatred of abolitionism. Mutual assistance between the two groups proved most clear in shared public spaces, with Catholics and Protestants participating in each others institutions and funding each others enterprises. Catholics and Protestants worshipped in each others churches, studied in each others schools, and recovered or died in each others hospitals. In many histories of southern religion, typically thought of as Protestant, Catholicism tends to be absent. Likewise, in studies of American Catholicism, Catholic relationships with Protestants, including southern Protestants, are rarely discussed. Southern Crucifix, Southern Cross is the first book to demonstrate in detail the ways in which many Protestants actively fostered the growth of American Catholicism. Stern complicates the dominant historical view of interreligious animosity and offers an unexpected model of religious pluralism that helped to shape southern culture as we know it today. ", "author": "Andrew Henry Stern", "slug": "southern-crucifix-southern-cross-383122-9780817386290-andrew-henry-stern", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780817386290.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383122", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383122/southern-crucifix-southern-cross-383122-9780817386290-andrew-henry-stern", "bisac_codes": [ "HIS000000", "277.5/08" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817317744", "EISBN13": "9780817386290" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010797320" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383121", "attributes": { "name": "Sounding Real", "subtitle": "Musicality and American Fiction at the Turn of the Twentieth Century", "description": "Examining American realist fiction as it was informed and shaped by the music of the period, Sounding Real sheds new light on the profound musical and cultural change at the turn of the twentieth century. Sounding Real by Cristina L. Ruotolo examines landmark changes in American musical standards and tastes in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries and the way they are reflected in American literature of the period. Whereas other interdisciplinary approaches to music and literature often focus on more recent popular music and black music that began with blues and jazz, Ruotolo addresses the literary response to the music that occurred in the decades before the Jazz Age. By bringing together canonical and lesser-known works by authors like Theodore Dreiser, Kate Chopin, Harold Fredric, James Weldon Johnson, Willa Cather, and Gertrude Atherton, Ruotolo argues that new, emerging musical forms were breaking free from nineteenth-century constraints, and that the elemental authenticity or real-ness that this new music articulated sparked both interest and anxiety in literature: What are the effects of an emancipated musicality on self and society? How can literature dramatize musical encounters between people otherwise segregated by class, race, ethnicity, or gender? By examining the influence of an increasingly aggressive and progressive musical marketplace on the realm of literature, Sounding Real depicts a dynamic dialogue between two art forms that itself leads to a broader discussion of how art speaks to society.", "author": "Cristina L. Ruotolo", "slug": "sounding-real-383121-9780817386764-cristina-l-ruotolo", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780817386764.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383121", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383121/sounding-real-383121-9780817386764-cristina-l-ruotolo", "bisac_codes": [ "LIT000000", "813/.5093578" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817317980", "EISBN13": "9780817386764" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010800030" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383120", "attributes": { "name": "Stepping Into Zion", "subtitle": "Hatzaad Harishon, Black Jews, and the Remaking of Jewish Identity", "description": "Considers the question Who is a Jew? a critical rhetorical issue with far-reaching consequences for Jews and non-Jews alike Hatzaad Harishon (\"The First Step\") was a New York-based, multiracial Jewish organization that worked to increase recognition and legitimacy for Black Jews in the sixties and seventies. In Stepping into Zion, Janice W. Fernheimer examines the history and archives of Hatzaad Harishon to illuminate the shifting definitions and borders of Jewish identity, which have critical relevance to Jews of all traditions as well as to non-Jews. Fernheimer focuses on a period when Jewish identity was in flux and deeply influenced by the Civil Rights and Black Power movements. In 1964, white and Black Jews formed Hatzaad Harishon to foster interaction and unity between Black and white Jewish communities. They raised the question of who or what constitutes Jewishness or Jewish identity, and in searching for an answer succeededboth historically and rhetoricallyin gaining increased recognition for Black Jews. Fernheimer traces how, despite deep disagreement over definitions, members of Hatzaad Harishon were able to create common ground in a process she terms \"interruptive invention\": an incremental model for rhetorical success that allows different groups to begin and continue important but difficult discussions when they share little common ground or make unequal claims to institutional and discursive power, or when the nature of common ground is precisely what is at stake. Consequently, they provide a practical way out of the seemingly incommensurable stalemate incompatible worldviews present. Through insightful interpretations of Hatzaad Harishon's archival materials, Fernheimer chronicles the group's successes and failures within the larger rhetorical history of conflicts that emerge when cultural identities shift or expand.", "author": "Janice W. Fernheimer", "slug": "stepping-into-zion-383120-9780817387471-janice-w-fernheimer", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780817387471.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383120", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383120/stepping-into-zion-383120-9780817387471-janice-w-fernheimer", "bisac_codes": [ "SOC000000", "305.800973" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817318246", "EISBN13": "9780817387471" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010772411" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383119", "attributes": { "name": "South by Southwest", "subtitle": "Katherine Anne Porter and the Burden of Texas History", "description": "An interdisciplinary study of Katherine Anne Porters troubled relationship to her Texas origins and southern roots, South by Southwest offers a fresh look at this ever-relevant author. Today, more than thirty years after her death, Katherine Anne Porter remains a fascinating figure. Critics and biographers have portrayed her as a strikingly glamorous woman whose photographs appeared in society magazines. They have emphasized, of course, her writing particularly the novel Ship of Fools, which was made into an award-winning film, and her collection Pale Horse, Pale Rider, which cemented her role as a significant and original literary modernist. They have highlighted her dramatic, sad, and fragmented personal life. Few, however, have addressed her uneasy relationship to her childhood in rural Texas. Janis P. Stout argues that throughout Porters life she remained preoccupied with the twin conundrums of how she felt about being a woman and how she felt about her Texas origins. Her construction of herself as a beautiful but unhappy southerner sprung from a plantation aristocracy of reduced fortunes meant she construed Texas as the Old South. The Texas Porter knew and re-created in her fiction had been settled by southerners like her grandparents, who brought slaves with them. As she wrote of this Texas, she also enhanced and mythologized it, exaggerating its beauty, fertility, and gracious ways as much as the disaffection that drove her to leave. Her feelings toward Texas ran to both extremes, and she was never able to reconcile them. Stout examines the author and her works within the historical and cultural context from which she emerged. In particular, Stout emphasizes four main themes in the history of Texas that she believes are of the greatest importance in understanding Porter: its geography and border location (expressed in Porters lifelong fascination with marginality, indeterminacy, and escape); its violence (the brutality of her first marriage as well as the lawlessness that pervaded her hometown); its racism (lynchings were prevalent throughout her upbringing); and its marginalization of women (Stout draws a connection between Porters references to the burning sun and oppressive heat of Texas and her life with her first husband).", "author": "Janis P. Stout", "slug": "south-by-southwest-383119-9780817386498-janis-p-stout", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780817386498.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383119", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383119/south-by-southwest-383119-9780817386498-janis-p-stout", "bisac_codes": [ "LIT000000", "813/.52" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817317829", "EISBN13": "9780817386498" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010770859" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383118", "attributes": { "name": "Stand Up for Alabama", "subtitle": "Governor George Wallace", "description": "Whereas other studies have focused on George Wallaces career as a national figure, Stand Up for Alabama provides a detailed, comprehensive, and analytical study of Wallaces political life that emphasizes his activities and their impact within the state of Alabama. Jeff Frederick answers two fundamental questions: What was George Wallaces impact on the state of Alabama? Why did Alabamians continue to embrace him over a twenty-five year period? Using a variety of sources to document the states performance in areas including mental health, education, conservation, prisons, and industrial development, Frederick answers question number one. He cites comparisons between Alabama and both peer states in the South and national averages. Wallaces policies improved the state, but only in relation to Alabamas past, not in relation to peer states in the region or national averages. As a result, energy was expended but little progress was made. To answer the second question, Frederick uses the words of Alabamians themselves through oral history, correspondence, letters to the editor, and other sources. Alabamians, white and eventually black, supported Wallace because race was but one of his appeals. Stand Up for Alabama shows that Wallace connected to Alabamians at a gut level, reminding them of their history and memory, championing their causes on the stump, and soothing their concerns about their place in the region and the nation. Jeff Frederick examines the development of policy during the Wallace administrations and documents relationships with his constituents in ways that go beyond racial politics. He also analyzes the connections between Wallaces career and Alabamians understanding of their history, sense of morality, and class system. Stand up for Alabama was the governors campaign slogan.", "author": "Jeffrey Frederick", "slug": "stand-up-for-alabama-383118-9780817380311-jeffrey-frederick", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780817380311.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383118", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383118/stand-up-for-alabama-383118-9780817380311-jeffrey-frederick", "bisac_codes": [ "HIS000000", "976.1/063092" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817315740", "EISBN13": "9780817380311" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010798622" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383117", "attributes": { "name": "Sold Down the River", "subtitle": "Slavery in the Lower Chattahoochee Valley of Alabama and Georgia", "description": "Examines a small part of slaverys North American domain, the lower Chattahoochee river Valley between Alabama and Georgia In the New World, the buying and selling of slaves and of the commodities that they produced generated immense wealth, which reshaped existing societies and helped build new ones. From small beginnings, slavery in North America expanded until it furnished the foundation for two extraordinarily rich and powerful slave societies, the United States of America and then the Confederate States of America. The expansion and concentration of slavery into what became the Confederacy in 1861 was arguably the most momentous development after nationhood itself in the early history of the American republic. This book examines a relatively small part of slaverys North American domain, the lower Chattahoochee river Valley between Alabama and Georgia. Although geographically at the heart of Dixie, the valley was among the youngest parts of the Old South; only thirty-seven years separate the founding of Columbus, Georgia, and the collapse of the Confederacy. In those years, the area was overrun by a slave society characterized by astonishing demographic, territorial, and economic expansion. Valley counties of Georgia and Alabama became places where everything had its price, and where property rights in enslaved persons formed the basis of economic activity. Sold Down the River examines a microcosm of slavery as it was experienced in an archetypical southern locale through its effect on individual people, as much as can be determined from primary sources. Published in cooperation with the Historic Chattahoochee Commission and the Troup County Historical Society. ", "author": "Anthony Gene Carey, Historic Chattahoochee Historic Chattahoochee Commission", "slug": "sold-down-the-river-383117-9780817385668-anthony-gene-carey", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780817385668.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383117", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383117/sold-down-the-river-383117-9780817385668-anthony-gene-carey", "bisac_codes": [ "HIS000000", "306.3/6209758" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817317416", "EISBN13": "9780817385668" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010017283011" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383116", "attributes": { "name": "Soapbox Rebellion", "subtitle": "The Hobo Orator Union and the Free Speech Fights of the Industrial Workers of the World, 1909-1916", "description": "Soapbox Rebellion, a new critical history of the free speech fights of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), illustrates how the lively and colorful soapbox culture of the Wobblies generated novel forms of class struggle. From 1909 to 1916, thousands of IWW members engaged in dozens of fights for freedom of speech throughout the American West. The volatile spread and circulation of hobo agitation during these fights amounted to nothing less than a soapbox rebellion in which public speech became the principal site of the struggle of the few to exploit the many. While the fights were not always successful, they did produce a novel form of fluid union organization that offers historians, labor activists, and social movement scholars a window into an alternative approach to what it means to belong to a union. Matthew May coins the phrase Hobo Orator Union to characterize these collectives. Soapbox Rebellion highlights the methodological obstacles to recovering a workers history of public address; closely analyzes the impact of hobo oratorical performances; and discusses the implications of the Wobblies free speech fights for understanding grassroots resistance and class struggle todayin an era of the decline of the institutional business union model and workplace contractualism. ", "author": "Matthew S. May", "slug": "soapbox-rebellion-383116-9780817386962-matthew-s-may", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780817386962.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383116", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383116/soapbox-rebellion-383116-9780817386962-matthew-s-may", "bisac_codes": [ "LAN000000", "331.88/60973" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817318062", "EISBN13": "9780817386962" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010772635" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000383115", "attributes": { "name": "Sinclair Lewis Remembered", "subtitle": "", "description": "Sinclair Lewis Remembered is a collection of reminiscences and memoirs by contemporaries, friends, and associates of Lewis that offers a revealing and intimate portrait of this complex and significant Nobel Prizewinning American writer. After a troubled career as a student at Yale, Sinclair Lewis turned to literature as his livelihood, publishing numerous works of popular fiction that went unnoticed by critics. With the 1920s, however, came Main Street, Lewiss first critical success, which was soon followed by Babbitt, Arrowsmith, Elmer Gantry, and Dodsworthfive of the most influential social novels in the history of American letters, all written within one decade. Nevertheless, Lewiss Nobel Prize for Literature in 1930 led to controversy. Writers such as Theodore Dreiser, William Faulkner, and Thomas Mann expressed their dissent with the decision. Unable to match his previous success, Lewis suffered from alcoholism, alienated colleagues, and embraced unpopular political positions. The nadir for Lewiss literary reputation was Mark Schorers 1961 biography, Sinclair Lewis: An American Life, which helped to legitimize the dismissal of Lewiss entire body of work. Recent scholarly research has seen a resurgence of interest in Lewis and his writings. The multiple and varied perspectives found in Sinclair Lewis Remembered, edited by Gary Scharnhorst and Matthew Hofer, illustrate uncompromised glimpses of a complicated writer who should not be forgotten. The more than 115 contributions to this volume include reminiscences by Upton Sinclair, Edna Ferber, Alfred Harcourt, Samuel Putnam, H. L. Mencken, John Hersey, Hallie Flanagan, and many others.", "author": "Gary Scharnhorst, Matthew Hofer, Gary Scharnhorst, Matthew Hofer", "slug": "sinclair-lewis-remembered-383115-9780817386276", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780817386276.jpg", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "383115", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/383115/sinclair-lewis-remembered-383115-9780817386276", "bisac_codes": [ "BIO000000", "813/.52" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780817317720", "EISBN13": "9780817386276" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010010800454" } } } } ], "meta": { "pagination": { "page": 72597, "pages": 78373, "count": 1567448 } } }
Response Info
Default: None