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- Reminiscences of John Eiske.' by Samuel Swett Green
- Classification Along the Color Line: Excavating Racism in the Stacks
- Key Concepts in Communication and Cultural Studies, Second Edition
- John Fiske's Philosophy of Science
- Myths and Myth-Makers: Old Tales and Superstitions Interpreted
- The Erotics of Race Suicide: the Making of Whiteness and the Death Drive in the Progressive Era, 1880-1920
- 133748 Uncertain Lives.Pdf
- Black and White Sociology: Segregation of the Discipline
- An Introduction to Genre Theory
- Ethno-Nationalism, Christianity, and the Unite the Right Rally
- Memoirs of Jeremiah Curtin
- Catalogue of the University of Washington
- The Story of the Truth, the Way, the Life
- Abel, Darrel, 167; (A), "Significance of the Letter to the Abb6 Raynal in the Progress of Thomas Paine's Thought,"
- Race and Eaolution, 1859-1900
- Social Darwinism in Thomas Hardy's Jude the Obscure and Tess of the D'urbervilles
- Herbert Spencer, the Brooklyn Ethical Association, and the Integration of Moral Philosophy and Evolution in the Victorian Trans-Atlantic Community Christopher R
- Religion, White Supremacy, and the Politics of Darwinism in America
- Forthcoming in the Oxford Handbook of William James, Ed. Alexander Klein
- The Foundation of an Apparel Factory: Culture's Place Becomes a Practiced Space Kim T
- John Fiske Papers, 1865-1917
- John Fiske Papers: Finding Aid
- The Struggle to Define and Reinvent Whiteness: a Pedagogical Analysis. by Joe L
- The Influence of Darwin on Sociology
- An Introduction to Primate and Human Evolution</Article-Title>
- Race and Ethnicity
- A Guide to Early African Collections in the Smithsonian Institution
- Plato Meets Polygeny: Louis Agassiz's Defense of Southern Medicine And
- Myths and Myth-Makers Old Tales and Superstitions 1
- MARY BAKER EDDY MUSEUM and Historic Sites
- Gender, Race, and Media Representation
- Tim S. Reid for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History of Science
- The Mythology of Eugenics: Nature, War, and Politics in Early British Eugenic Thought
- Herbert Spencer and His American Audience