Presents a portrait gallery that shows New Mexico in details. This title talks about the pueblos, the Spanish missions, the dances, prayers and festivals, the painters and writers and potters of this land.
Includes retellings of six Tewa Indian legends and a brief biographical section about the author, who is a noted American Indian artist.
Traces the philosophic roots of European assumptions of racial, cultural, and intellectual superiority. This work discusses the inevitable result: the exclusion of all but a handful of non-Europeans from truly meaningful participation in our society.
Looking beneath the surface of tribal communication, this book focuses on the myriad forms of traditional expression that were the outward manifestation of a sophisticated ethical and spiritual ecology that existed for millennia before contact with European culture.
Robert Ewing's biography of Douglas Johnson describes the experiences and influences which shaped him as an artist and includes a selection of Johnson's writings on his own life and work.
Describes 336 environment-friendly, money-saving ways to re-use 70 types of common products - most of them not currently accepted for recycling. It also helps readers locate businesses and non-profit organisations that accept products not suited for average household re-use.
Includes the following stories: Dreams of Quivira ; The Hands of Che Guevara ; The Quick and the Dead ; Seeing the Elephant ; Apple Core, Baltimore ; The Good Cowboy ; The Long Night of Elfego Baca ; and Daddy's Smile .
An account of the author's experiences in corporate culture during the 1970s.
Set during the 1970s when corporate consolidation and competition began to change the way we did business, this book is both an indelible portrait of corporate culture gone haywire and the story of one man's rueful journey toward wisdom. It is suitable for veterans of big business and an informative tale for anyone embarking on a corporate career.