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Lynne Ferguson
  • Language: en

Lynne Ferguson

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1988
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

The Christian's Disciplined Walk
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 110

The Christian's Disciplined Walk

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2007-02
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  • Publisher: Xulon Press

Ferguson offers fresh biblical insights and personal testimonies to illuminate the path to spiritual growth and development. He examines how prayer, fasting, study, submission, and meditation impact faith. (Practical Life)

Lyn Ferguson
  • Language: en

Lyn Ferguson

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2008
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

None

History of a Ferguson Family
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 276

History of a Ferguson Family

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1968
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Playing with Things
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 263

Playing with Things

More than a thousand years ago on the north coast of Peru, Indigenous Moche artists created a large and significant corpus of sexually explicit ceramic works of art. They depicted a diversity of sex organs and sex acts, and an array of solitary and interconnected human and nonhuman bodies. To the modern eye, these Moche “sex pots,” as Mary Weismantel calls them, are lively and provocative but also enigmatic creations whose import to their original owners seems impossible to grasp. In Playing with Things, Weismantel shows that there is much to be learned from these ancient artifacts, not merely as inert objects from a long-dead past but as vibrant Indigenous things, alive in their own hum...

Modernism's Magic Hat
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 337

Modernism's Magic Hat

Examines the role of architecture in the history of global development and decolonization.

Rethinking Zapotec Time
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 487

Rethinking Zapotec Time

In 1702, after the brutal suppression of a Zapotec revolt, the bishop of Oaxaca proclaimed an amnesty for idolatry in exchange for collective confessions. To evade conflict, Northern Zapotec communities denounced ritual specialists and surrendered sacred songs and 102 divinatory manuals, which preserve cosmological accounts, exchanges with divine beings, and protocols of pre-Columbian origin that strongly resemble sections of the Codex Borgia. These texts were sent to Spain as evidence of failed Dominican evangelization efforts, and there they remained, in oblivion, until the 1960s. In this book, David Tavárez dives deep into this formidable archive of ritual and divinatory manuals, the lar...

Black Country Music
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 241

Black Country Music

How Black musicians have changed the country music landscape and brought light to Black creativity and innovation.

The Entablo Manuscript
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 237

The Entablo Manuscript

A unique study of an Andean community’s water rituals and the extraordinary document describing how they should be performed In the dry season in the Andes, water from springs, lakes, reservoirs, and melting glaciers feeds irrigation canals that have sustained communities for thousands of years. Managing and maintaining these water infrastructures is essential, and in 1921, in the village of San Pedro de Casta, Peru, local authorities recorded their ritual canal-cleaning duties in a Spanish-language document called the Entablo. It is only the second book (along with the Huarochirí Manuscript) ever seen by scholars in which an Andean community explains its customs and ritual laws in its ow...

Violence in the Hill Country
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 289

Violence in the Hill Country

In the nineteenth century, Texas’s advancing western frontier was the site of one of America’s longest conflicts between white settlers and native peoples. The Texas Hill Country functioned as a kind of borderland within the larger borderland of Texas itself, a vast and fluid area where, during the Civil War, the slaveholding South and the nominally free-labor West collided. As in many borderlands, Nicholas Roland argues, the Hill Country was marked by violence, as one set of peoples, states, and systems eventually displaced others. In this painstakingly researched book, Roland analyzes patterns of violence in the Texas Hill Country to examine the cultural and political priorities of white settlers and their interaction with the century-defining process of national integration and state-building in the Civil War era. He traces the role of violence in the region from the eve of the Civil War, through secession and the Indian wars, and into Reconstruction. Revealing a bitter history of warfare, criminality, divided communities, political violence, vengeance killings, and economic struggle, Roland positions the Texas Hill Country as emblematic of the Southwest of its time.