University Of Arizona Press imprint: 459 books

Talking Indian

Identity and Language Revitalization in the Chickasaw Renaissance

by Jenny L. Davis
Language: English
Release Date: April 17, 2018

In south-central Oklahoma and much of “Indian Country,” using an Indigenous language is colloquially referred to as “talking Indian.” Among older Chickasaw community members, the phrase is used more often than the name of the specific language, Chikashshanompa’ or Chickasaw. As author Jenny...

Outside Theater

Alliances That Shape Mexico

by Stuart A. Day
Language: English
Release Date: May 16, 2017

Taking a cue from influential French philosopher Jacques Rancière, who in The Emancipated Spectator rejects the idea of the passive, ignorant, duped spectators in need of instruction to become active, Stuart A. Day’s goal in Outside Theater is to highlight written words and performances that exemplify...

Capturing the Landscape of New Spain

Baltasar Obregón and the 1564 Ibarra Expedition

by Rebecca A. Carte
Language: English
Release Date: October 22, 2015

The son of an encomendero, Baltasar Obregón was twenty years old when he joined the 1564 expedition led by the first governor of Nueva Vizcaya, Francisco de Ibarra. The purpose of the expedition was to establish mining settlements in the borderlands of New Spain and to suppress indigenous rebellions...

Mexican Melodrama

Film and Nation from the Golden Age to the New Wave

by Elena Lahr-Vivaz
Language: English
Release Date: October 18, 2016

In Mexican Melodrama, Elena Lahr-Vivaz explores the compelling ways that new-wave Mexican directors use the tropes and themes of Golden Age films to denounce the excesses of a nation characterized as a fragmented and fictitious construct. Analyzing big hits and quiet successes of both Golden Age and...

A War that Can’t Be Won

Binational Perspectives on the War on Drugs

by
Language: English
Release Date: October 17, 2013

More than forty years have passed since President Richard Nixon described illegal drugs as “public enemy number one” and declared a “War on Drugs.” Recently the United Nations Global Commission on Drug Policy declared that “the global war on drugs has failed with devastating consequences...
by Emmy Pérez
Language: English
Release Date: October 4, 2016

Emmy Pérez’s poetry collection With the River on Our Face flows through the Southwest and the Texas borderlands to the river’s mouth in the Rio Grande Valley/El Valle. The poems celebrate the land, communities, and ecology of the borderlands through lyric and narrative utterances, auditory and...
by Jennifer Elise Foerster
Language: English
Release Date: February 20, 2018

In her dazzling new book, Jennifer Elise Foerster announces a frightening new truth: “the continent is dismantling.” Bright Raft in the Afterweather travels the spheres of the past, present, future, and eternal time, exploring the fault lines that signal the break of humanity’s consciousness...
by Jennifer Elise Foerster
Language: English
Release Date: March 21, 2013

In her first magical collection of poetry, Jennifer Elise Foerster weaves together a mythic and geographic exploration of a woman’s coming of age in a dislocated time. Leaving Tulsa, a book of road elegies and laments, travels from Oklahoma to the edges of the American continent through landscapes...
by Esther G. Belin
Language: English
Release Date: September 26, 2017

One of our generation’s most important literary voices, Esther G. Belin was raised in the Los Angeles area as part of the legacy following the federally run Indian relocation policy. Her parents completed the Special Navajo Five-Year Program that operated from 1946 to 1961 at Sherman Institute in...
by Julie Sophia Paegle
Language: English
Release Date: February 19, 2015

From the fall of Troy recorded at the beginning of Western poetry to the ongoing mass extinction of species, Twelve Clocks meditates on the temporality of loss across the many scales of our experience and knowledge. Framed by central images of beginnings and ends, this collection searches six cities...
by Karenne Wood
Language: English
Release Date: May 5, 2016

Evocative, haunting, and ultimately hopeful, Karenne Wood’s Weaving the Boundary explores personal and collective memories and contemporary American Indian realities through lenses of human loss, desire, violence, and love. This focused, accessible collection carries readers into a deep and...
by Juan Felipe Herrera
Language: English
Release Date: November 1, 2015

From one of the prominent Chicano poets writing today comes a collection of poems to take your breath away. With dazzling speed and energy, Juan Felipe Herrera sends readers rocketing through verbal space in a celebration of the rhythms and textures of words that will make you want to shout, dance,...
by Juan Felipe Herrera
Language: English
Release Date: November 1, 2015

First Place co-winner, Best Poetry, Latino Literary Hall of Fame A poetic collage of voices, genres, and time-spaces. A display of power over language and rhythm. A postmodern performance of naked figures hanging in the nebulae of a militarized universe. A new millennium cubist manifesto against...

Yakama Rising

Indigenous Cultural Revitalization, Activism, and Healing

by Michelle M. Jacob
Language: English
Release Date: September 26, 2013

The Yakama Nation of present-day Washington State has responded to more than a century of historical trauma with a resurgence of grassroots activism and cultural revitalization. This pathbreaking ethnography shifts the conversation from one of victimhood to one of ongoing resistance and resilience...
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