These books can be accessed by using a browse title search in the catalog (exclude the subtitle). Should you have any trouble accessing any of these titles, please feel free to contact us at library@myunion.edu
History
- Before Auschwitz: Irene Nemirovsky and the cultural landscape of inter-war France
- Benjamin Franklin and the American revolution
- Common law in colonial America, volume 1: The Chesapeake and New England, 1607-1660
- Description of New Netherland
- Education of blacks in the south, 1860-1935
- Freedom's journey: African-American voices of the Civil War
- Lakota ghost dance of 1890
- Learning native wisdom: what traditional cultures teach us about subsistence, sustainability, and spirituality
- Living the revolution: Italian women's resistance and radicalism in New York City, 1880-1945
- Mr. Jefferson's lost cause: land, farmers, slavery, and the Louisiana Purchase
- Mrs. Dred Scott: a life on slavery's frontier
- Self-taught: African American education in slavery and freedom
- Song for the horse nation: horses in Native American culture
- Specter of Salem: remembering the witch trials in nineteenth century America
- Stormy weather: middle class African American marriages between the two world wars
- To make our world anew, volume II: a history of African Americans since 1880
- What should we do with the Negro? Lincoln, white racism, and Civil War America
- Whites of their eyes: the Tea Party's revolution and the battle over American history
- Blackwell companion to the study of religion
- Expose of polygamy: a lady’s life among the Mormons
- God and race in American politics: a short history
- Introducing philosophy of religion
- Is the good book good enough? Evangelical perspectives on public policy
- Israel in Egypt: the evidence for the authenticity of the Exodus tradition
- Learning native wisdom: what traditional cultures teach us about subsistence, sustainability, and spirituality
- Of god and gods: Egypt, Israel, and the rise of monotheism
- Religion: the basics (2nd edition)
No comments:
Post a Comment