|
Books > Humanities > History > World history > General
This book offers the first in-depth investigation into the
relationship between the National Birth Control Association, later
the Family Planning Association, and contraceptive science and
technology in the pre-Pill era. It explores the Association's role
in designing and supporting scientific research, employment of
scientists, engagement with manufacturers and pharmaceutical
companies, and use of its facilities, patients, staff, medical,
scientific, and political networks to standardise and guarantee
contraceptive technology it prescribed and produced. By taking a
micro-history approach to the archives of the Association, this
book highlights the importance of this organisation to the history
of science, technology, and medicine in twentieth-century Britain.
It examines the Association's participation within Western family
planning networks, working particularly closely with its American
counterparts to develop chemical and biological means of testing
contraception for efficacy, quality, and safety.
In the second volume of his landmark First World War trilogy, Professor
Nick Lloyd tells the story for the first time of what Winston Churchill
once called the 'unknown war': the vast conflict in Eastern Europe and
the Balkans that brought about the collapse of three empires.
Much has been written about the fighting in France and Belgium, yet the
Eastern Front was no less bloody. Between 1914 and 1917, huge numbers
of people - perhaps as many as 16 million soldiers and two million
civilians - were killed, wounded or maimed in enormous battles that
sometimes ranged across a front of 100 km in length. Through intimate
eyewitness reports, diary entries and memoirs - many of which have
never been translated into English before - Lloyd reconstructs the full
story of a war that began in the Balkans as a local struggle between
Austria-Hungary and Serbia, and which sucked in Russia, Germany and
Italy, right through to the final collapse of the Habsburg Empire in
1918.
The Eastern Front paints a vivid and authoritative picture of a
conflict that shook the world, and that remains central to
understanding the tragic, blood-soaked trajectory of the twentieth
century, and the current war in Ukraine.
 |
Wreckers
(Hardcover)
Simon Park
|
R665
R574
Discovery Miles 5 740
Save R91 (14%)
|
Ships in 5 - 10 working days
|
|
Wreckers sinks the old narratives of imperialism, revealing the violent, chaotic and improvised reality of empire-building from the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries. While figures such as Christopher Columbus, Vasco da Gama and Ferdinand Magellan are celebrated for their maritime achievements – reaching the Americas, India, and circumnavigating the globe – focusing solely on these voyages distorts our perspective on the past. Many explorers ended up as castaways, clinging to the splintered timbers of their wrecked ships, while those who survived often faced resistance and ridicule from indigenous communities across the globe. Drawing on maritime stories from various languages and continents – from Brazil and Southeast Africa to India and the Philippines – Wreckers shares dramatic tales of the sea and the events on land that followed. This offers an alternative timeline for the century after Columbus’ 1492 voyage and sheds light on the fractures and fault lines that accompanied the increasing geographical range of European ships. Simon Park argues that even when Europeans arrogantly claimed their own superiority, the truth was that they were often driven by a profound sense of greed and envy, and their actions included numerous mishaps. For example, in his hunt for gold, Martin Frobisher – who fancied himself England’s Columbus and Cortés combined – transported worthless rocks across the Atlantic by the tonne. In the search for spices, Captain and profiteer Manuel de Sousa de Sepúlveda’s ship was so overladen, it spewed its fragrant cargo when it crashed off the coast of South Africa. Moreover, in every place they went, Europeans depended on local know-how and goodwill – relying on indigenous knowledge of languages, geography, food and medicines. Wreckers reveals the precarious balance between imperious European powers, cunning locals who colluded to further their own agendas, and others who showed great tenacity in their resistance to European incursions. By focusing on stories of failure, defiance and comeuppance, Wreckers – a term Park uses to refer both to those who were wrecked and those involved in wrecking – offers a gripping and original account of a tumultuous period. It challenges the notion of unstoppable European dominance and enables a reimagining of history as a space of possibilities then, now and in the future.
|
|