In poems selected from his long career, Daniels focuses on Detroit and other Rust Belt cities, where issues of class and race and justice play out in the streets and kitchens and backyards and garages of the Americans trying to live and make a living there.
Recounts in detail the rise and fall of Burkina Faso's revolutionary government, demonstrating how it embodied the critical transition period in modern African history between the era of decolonization and the dawning of neoliberal capitalism.
Many a Hand: Michigan and the Civil War brings together familiar and little-known stories about Michiganians who—in facing the nation’s most challenging ordeal—combined courage, doggedness, and ideals to produce an enduring legacy both at home and on the battlefield.
Michigan’s CON-CON 11 highlights the contributions of the eleven female delegates to the 1961–1962 Michigan Constitutional Convention. As the first female delegates to a state of Michigan constitutional convention, these pioneers demonstrated that women were more than capable of helping to revise Michigan’s highest law.
Modernity in Motion is a groundbreaking exploration of Anishinaabe writer Gerald Vizenor’s richly layered body of work spanning fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. It is essential reading for scholars of Indigenous studies and comparative literature.