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Books > History > American history > General
An illuminating historical biography for students and scholars
alike, this book gives readers insight into the life and times of
Booker T. Washington. Booker T. Washington was an integral figure
in mid-19th to early-20th century America who successfully
transitioned from a life in slavery and poverty to a position among
the Black elite. This book highlights Washington's often overlooked
contributions to the African and African American experience,
particularly his support of higher education for Black students
through fundraising for Fisk and Howard universities, where he
served as a trustee. A vocal advocate of vocational and liberal
arts alike, Washington eventually founded his own school, the
Tuskegee Institute, with a well-rounded curriculum to expand
opportunities and encourage free thinking for Black students. While
Washington was sometimes viewed as a "great accommodator" by his
critics for working alongside wealthy, white elites, he quietly
advocated for Black teachers and students as well as for
desegregation. This book will offer readers a clearly written,
fully realized overview of Booker T. Washington and his legacy.
Presents a renewed profile of Booker T. Washington as a man who did
all that he could to improve the lives of African Americans through
self-determination and institution building Includes 15 images of
Washington and his contemporaries to provide visual support for the
text Includes 23 sidebars with interesting facts to enhance the
main text Includes 8 primary source documents to bring Washington's
words to life for readers
The untold story of the first-generation Jewish American toymakers who
literally manufactured “the century of the child.”
In 1902, Morris and Rose Michtom invented the Teddy Bear―bound by
clothing scraps, stuffed with sawdust, and given button eyes with a
sad, longing expression―in the back room of their Brooklyn candy store.
Together they launched the Ideal Toy Corporation, joining a set of
other poor, first-generation Jewish toymakers: the Hassenfeld brothers
of Hasbro, Ruth Moskowicz and Elliot Handler of Mattel, and Joshua
Lionel Cowan of Lionel Trains.
From Barbie and G.I. Joe to Popeye, Superman, and Mr. Potato Head,
Playmakers reveals how the toy industry created the idealized American
childhood: an enchanted world, full of wild creatures and eternal
struggles between good and evil, with endless realms of fantasy and
beauty. For much of the twentieth century, every part of the American
toy business was largely Jewish―the company founders, executives, and
designers, as well as the factory workers, wholesale distributors,
retail outlets, and armies of salesmen. A descendant of the founders of
the Ideal Toy Corporation, Michael Kimmel shows how these poor, often
Yiddish-speaking, tenement-dwelling children of immigrants invented a
world they never experienced for themselves. Along with the toys and
Jewish toymakers that climbed the ladder of success, Kimmel also
portrays the rise of an entire culture focused on children, led by
Jewish comic book creators, children’s authors, parenting experts, and
child psychologists.
The first full-scale toy history of the United States, Kimmel’s story
conjures the colorful, imaginative, restless spirits who followed the
promise of the American Dream―and describes the ways in which the world
they came from molded their beloved creations. Playmakers shows that
the overlapping experiences of being a Jew, an immigrant, and a child
in twentieth-century America―an outsider looking in, a person desperate
to be accepted―created childhood as we know it today.
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