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By largely focusing on daily life, the authors create a space in which to explore relations among people of varying ethnic, religious, regional, and national identities. They also engage with multiple disciplines: anthropology, history, visual studies, genocide studies, as well as transnational, memory, and gender studies.
Catalunya and the Basque Country are European stateless nations desiring liberation. This book gives response to the question: If people live well, why do they seek independence?
The volume compiles the proceedings of the conference on Basque improvisational verse signing, bertsolaritza, and its pedagogical organizations, bertso-schools.
Time Talk is a story of love and loss, of immigration and survival. It's a story of losing home and finding it.
This is a story about the experience of being the child of immigrants and learning to navigate and embrace different cultures and places.
A book about Nationalism in the Iberian Peninsula during the 20th century.
In the town of Urepel, Arizona, Xabier Etxea, a young Basque-American sheep rancher, and his wife grapple with the rituals, mores, and spirituality of their heritage and the realities of living in the new American West. Their tenuous balance of the past and the present is disrupted when Xabier's father is unexpectedly killed. In the wake of this tragedy, Xabier learns that not only is the family ranch in jeopardy of foreclosure but his father's death may not have been the accident it first appeared to be. Now, he must find a way to save his family's ranch while unraveling the mysteries leading to his father's death. Along the way, Xabier strives to adhere to his father's memory and words--the invitation to stay true to who he is without losing his arima (soul). In lyrical language that evokes the mythologies that have shaped the Etxeas's worldview, White Dove, Tell Me speaks to the divided self that seeks to honor the family's Basque heritage, while they strive for understanding in a new land.
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