The Politics of Hysteria

The Politics of Hysteria

Author: Edmund O. Stillman

Publisher: New York : Harper & Row [c1964]

Published: 1964

Total Pages: 296

ISBN-13:

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Philosophical analysis of world politics.


The "new Woman" Revised

The

Author: Ellen Wiley Todd

Publisher: Univ of California Press

Published: 1993-01-01

Total Pages: 464

ISBN-13: 9780520074712

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In the years between the world wars, Manhattan's Fourteenth Street-Union Square district became a center for commercial, cultural, and political activities, and hence a sensitive barometer of the dramatic social changes of the period. It was here that four urban realist painters--Kenneth Hayes Miller, Reginald Marsh, Raphael Soyer, and Isabel Bishop--placed their images of modern "new women." Bargain stores, cheap movie theaters, pinball arcades, and radical political organizations were the backdrop for the women shoppers, office and store workers, and consumers of mass culture portrayed by these artists. Ellen Wiley Todd deftly interprets the painters' complex images as they were refracted through the gender ideology of the period. This is a work of skillful interdisciplinary scholarship, combining recent insights from feminist art history, gender studies, and social and cultural theory. Drawing on a range of visual and verbal representations as well as biographical and critical texts, Todd balances the historical context surrounding the painters with nuanced analyses of how each artist's image of womanhood contributed to the continual redefining of the "new woman's" relationships to men, family, work, feminism, and sexuality.


Campus Design

Campus Design

Author: Richard P. Dober

Publisher:

Published: 1992

Total Pages: 314

ISBN-13:

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Utilizing case studies which cover all types of universities and institutions of higher learning throughout the world, this planning and design study illustrates how to create a university setting which is functional, attractive and accessible


The Struggles of John Brown Russwurm

The Struggles of John Brown Russwurm

Author: Winston James

Publisher: NYU Press

Published: 2010-08-30

Total Pages: 320

ISBN-13: 0814742904

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John Brown Russwurm (1799-1851) was an educator, abolitionist, editor, government official, emigrationist and colonizationist in the Pan-African movement. His life was one of "firsts" : first African American graduate of Maine's Bowdoin College; co-founder of Freedom's Journal, America's first newspaper to be owned, operated, and edited by African Americans; and, following his emigration to Africa, first black governor of the Maryland section of Liberia. Despite his accomplishments, Russwurm struggled internally with the perennial Pan-Africanist dilemma of whether to go to Africa or stay and fight in the United States, and his ordeal was the first of its kind to be experienced and resolved before the public eye.