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Books > History
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Lost Gary, Indiana
(Paperback)
Jerry Davich; Foreword by Christopher Meyers
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Introduced in 1918 as an award for bravery in the field, the
Military Medal was almost immediately open to women. During its 80
year existence, the Military Medal was awarded to women on only 146
occasions, the vast majority during the First World War. This
volume provides the definitive roll of recipients together with
citations, many of which were not available at the time, plus
service and biographical detail. Over 80% of the entries are
accompanied by a photograph. The vast majority of the recipients
were British, but the medal was open to women of all nationalities
and the names of French and United States recipients are recorded
together with allied personnel from the Empire.
Pamela D. Winfield offers a fascinating juxtaposition and
comparison of the thoughts of two pre-modern Japanese Buddhist
masters on the role of imagery in the enlightenment experience.
Kukai (774-835) believed that real and imagined forms were
indispensable to his new esoteric Mikkyo method for ''becoming a
Buddha in this very body'' (sokushin jobutsu), yet he deconstructed
the significance of such imagery in his poetic and doctrinal works.
Conversely, Dogen (1200-1253) believed that ''just sitting'' in Zen
meditation without any visual props or mental elaborations could
lead one to realize that ''this very mind is Buddha'' (sokushin
zebutsu), but he too privileged select Zen icons as worthy of
veneration. In considering the nuanced views of Kukai and Dogen,
Icons and Iconoclasm in Japanese Buddhism updates previous
comparisons of their oeuvres and engages their texts and images
together for the first time in two decades. Winfield liberates them
from sectarian scholarship, which has long pigeon-holed them into
iconographic/ritual vs. philological/philosophical categories, and
restores the historical symbiosis between religious thought and
artistic expression that was lost in the nineteenth-century
disciplinary distinction between religious studies and art history.
Winfield breaks new methodological ground by proposing space and
time as organizing principles for analyzing both meditative
experience as well as visual/material culture and presents a wider
vision of how Japanese Buddhists themselves understood the role of
imagery before, during, and after awakening.
No detailed comparison of the city-state in medieval Europe has
been undertaken over the last century. Research has concentrated on
the role of city-states and their republican polities as harbingers
of the modern state, or else on their artistic and cultural
achievements, above all in Italy. Much less attention has been
devoted to the cities' territorial expansion: why, how, and with
what consequences cities in the urban belt, stretching from central
and northern Italy over the Alps to Switzerland, Germany, and the
low countries, succeeded (or failed) in constructing sovereign
polities, with or without dependent territories. Tom Scott goes
beyond the customary focus on the leading Italian city-states to
include, for the first time, detailed coverage of the Swiss
city-states and the imperial cities of Germany. He criticizes
current typologies of the city-state in Europe advanced by
political and social scientists to suggest that the city-state was
not a spent force in early modern Europe, but rather survived by
transformation and adaption. He puts forward instead a typology
which embraces both time and space by arguing for a regional
framework for analysis which does not treat city-states in
isolation but within a wider geopolitical setting.
Again and again people turn to music in order to assist them make
sense of traumatic life events. Music can help process emotions,
interpret memories, and create a sense of collective identity.
While the last decade has seen a surge in academic studies on
trauma and loss in both the humanities and social sciences, how
music engages suffering has not often been explored. Performing
Pain uncovers music's relationships to trauma and grief by focusing
upon the late 20th century in Eastern Europe. The 1970s and 1980s
witnessed a cultural preoccupation with the meanings of historical
suffering, particularly surrounding the Second World War and the
Stalinist era. Journalists, historians, writers, artists, and
filmmakers repeatedly negotiated themes related to pain and memory,
truth and history, morality and spirituality both during glasnost
and the years prior. In the copious amount of scholarship devoted
to cultural politics during this era, the activities of avant-garde
composers stands largely silent. Performing Pain considers how
works by Alfred Schnittke, Galina Ustvolskaya, Arvo Part, and
Henryk Gorecki musically address contemporary concerns regarding
history and suffering through composition, performance, and
reception. Drawing upon theories from psychology, sociology,
literary and cultural studies, this book offers a set of
hermeneutic essays that demonstrate the ways in which people employ
music in order to make sense of historical traumas and losses.
Seemingly postmodern compositional choices-such as quotation,
fragmentation, and stasis-provide musical analogies to
psychological and emotional responses to trauma and grief. The
physical realities of embodied performance focus attention on the
ethics of pain and representation while these works' inclusion as
film music interprets contemporary debates regarding memory and
trauma. Performing Pain promises to garner wide attention from
academic professionals in music studies as well as an
interdisciplinary audience interested in Eastern Europe and
aesthetic articulations of suffering.
This book traces the shift from medieval to modern institutions in
English agriculture. It explores their importance for productivity
growth, income distribution, and the contribution of agriculture to
British economic development. Robert C. Allen's pioneering study
shows that, contrary to the assumption of many historians,
small-scale farmers in the open-field system were responsible for a
considerable proportion of the productivity growth achieved between
the middle ages and the nineteenth century. The process of
enclosure and the replacement of these yeomen by large-scale tenant
farming relying on wage labour had relatively little impact on the
agricultural contribution to economic development during the
industrial revolution. Enclosures and large farms enriched
landowners without benefiting consumers, workers, or farmers.
Thoroughly grounded in the archival sources, and underpinned by
rigorous economic analysis, Enclosure and the Yeoman is a scholarly
and challenging reassessment of the history of English agriculture.
It will be indispensable reading for all historians concerned with
the making of modern Britain.
This book examines the refugee phenomenon, specifically refugees in
inter-war Europe, and international responses to that phenomenon.
In Part I, the causes and consequences of refugee movements
throughout this century are explored. In Part II, international
responses to European refugee movements from 1919 until 1939 are
presented and analysed. In Part III, the impact of international
efforts on government policy toward refugees is evaluated. The
major argument of this book is that international assistance
efforts of the inter-war era composed an international regime, and
this regime had - and continues to have - significant impact on
refugee policy.
This book examines the contribution that petitioning and litigation
made to the maintenance of the social order in Roman Egypt between
30 BC and AD 284. Through the analysis of the many hundreds of
documents surviving on papyrus, especially petitions, reports of
court proceedings, and letters, Kelly focuses on how the legal
system achieved its formal goals (that is, the resolution of
disputes through judgments), and discusses in detail the
contribution made by the litigation process to informal methods of
social control. With particular emphasis on the roles that this
process played in the transmission of political ideologies, such as
the maintenance of family solidarity and the fostering of 'private'
mechanisms of dispute resolution, the book argues that although the
legal system was less than successful when judged by its formal
aims, it did have a real social impact by indirectly contributing
to some of the informal mechanisms that ensured order in this
province of the Roman Empire. However, arguing that, on occasion,
one can also see petitioning and litigation being abused for the
pursuit of feud and vengeance, Kelly also recognizes that the
social impacts of petitioning and litigation were multifaceted, and
in some senses even contradictory.
This book provides a concise analysis of the making of Kurdistan,
its peoples, historical developments and cultural politics. Under
the Ottoman Empire Kurdistan was the name given to the autonomous
province in which the Kurdish princes ruled over a cosmopolitan
population. But re-mapping, wars and the growth of modern
nation-states have turned Kurdistan into an imagined homeland. The
Kurdish question is one that continually reappears on the
international stage because of the strategic location of Kurdistan.
In describing the ways in which Kurdistan and its history have been
represented and politicized, the author traces the vital role of
the nationalist States of Turkey, Iran and Iraq in the crafting of
political actors in the region.
This book: covers the essential content in the new specifications
in a rigorous and engaging way, using detailed narrative, sources,
timelines, key words, helpful activities and extension material
helps develop conceptual understanding of areas such as evidence,
interpretations, causation and change, through targeted activities
provides assessment support for A level with sample answers,
sources, practice questions and guidance to help you tackle the
new-style exam questions. It also comes with three years' access to
ActiveBook, an online, digital version of your textbook to help you
personalise your learning as you go through the course - perfect
for revision.
In 1589 the Privy Council encouraged the Archbishop of Canterbury
to take steps to control the theatres, which had offended authority
by putting on plays which addressed 'certen matters of Divinytie
and of State unfitt to be suffred'.
How had questions of divinity and state become entangled? The
Reformation had invested the English Crown with supremacy over the
Church, and religious belief had thus been transformed into a
political statement. In the plentiful chronicle literature of the
sixteenth-century, questions of monarchical legitimacy and
religious orthodoxy became intertwined as a consequence of that
demand for a usable national past created by the high political
developments of the 1530s.
Divinity and State explores the consequences of these events in the
English historiography and historical drama of the sixteenth
century. It is divided into four parts. In the first, the impact of
reformed religion on narratives of the national past is measured
and described. Part II examines how the entanglement of the
national past and reformed religion was reflected in historical
drama from Bale to the early years of James I, and focuses on two
paradigmatic characters: the sanctified monarch and the martyred
subject. Part III considers Shakespeare's history plays in the
light of the preceding discussion, and finds that Shakespeare's
career as a historical dramatist shows him eventually re-shaping
the history play with great audacity. Part IV corroborates this
reading of Shakespeare's later history plays by reference to the
dramatic ripostes they provoked.
"Waging a counterinsurgency war and justified by claims of 'an
agreement between Guatemala and God, ' Guatemala's Evangelical
Protestant military dictator General Rios Montt incited a Mayan
holocaust: over just 17 months, some 86,000 mostly Mayan civilians
were murdered. Virginia Garrard-Burnett dives into the horrifying,
bewildering murk of this episode, the Western hemisphere's worst
twentieth-century human rights atrocity. She has delivered the most
lucid historical account and analysis we yet possess of what
happened and how, of the cultural complexities, personalities, and
local and international politics that made this tragedy.
Garrard-Burnett asks the hard questions and never flinches from the
least comforting answers. Beautifully, movingly, and clearly
written and argued, this is a necessary and indispensable
book."
-- Francisco Goldman, author of The Art of Political Murder: Who
Killed the Bishop?
"Virginia Garrard-Burnett's Terror in the Land of the Holy Spirit
is impressively researched and argued, providing the first full
examination of the religious dimensions of la violencia - a period
of extreme political repression that overwhelmed Guatemala in the
1980s. Garrard-Burnett excavates the myriad ways Christian
evangelical imagery and ideals saturated political and ethical
discourse that scholars usually treat as secular. This book is one
of the finest contributions to our understanding of the violence of
the late Cold War period, not just in Guatemala but throughout
Latin America."
--Greg Grandin, Professor of History, New York University
Drawing on newly-available primary sources including guerrilla
documents, evangelical pamphlets, speech transcripts, and
declassified US government records, Virginia Garrard-Burnett
provides aa fine-grained picture of what happened during the rule
of Guatelaman president-by-coup Efrain Rios Montt. She suggests
that three decades of war engendered an ideology of violence that
cut not only vertically, but also horizontally, across class,
cultures, communities, religions, and even families. The book
examines the causality and effects of the ideology of violence, but
it also explores the long duree of Guatemalan history between 1954
and the late 1970s that made such an ideology possible. More
significantly, she contends that self-interest, willful ignorance,
and distraction permitted the human rights tragedies within
Guatemala to take place without challenge from the outside world."
This book examines the importance of the Glorious Revolution and
the passing of the Toleration Act to the development of religious
and intellectual freedom in England. Most historians have
considered these events to be of little significance in this
connection. From Persecution to Toleration focuses on the
importance of the Toleration Act for contemporaries, and also
explores its wider historical context and impact. Taking its point
of departure from the intolerance of the sixteenth century, the
book goes on to emphasize what is here seen to be the very
substantial contribution of the Toleration Act for the development
of religious freedom in England. It demonstrates that his freedom
was initially limited to Protestant Nonconformists, immigrant as
well as English, and that it quickly came in practice to include
Catholics, Jews, and anti-Trinitarians. Contributors: John Bossy,
Patrick Collinson, John Dunn, Graham Gibbs, Mark Goldie, Ole Peter
Grell, Robin Gwynn, Jonathan I. Israel, David S. Katz, Andrew
Pettegree, Richard H. Popkin, Hugh Trevor-Roper, Nicholas Tyacke,
and B. R. White.
Wars have played a fundamental part in modern German history.
Although infrequent, conflicts involving German states have usually
been extensive and often catastrophic, constituting turning-points
for Europe as a whole. Absolute War is the first in a series of
studies from Mark Hewitson that explore how such conflicts were
experienced by soldiers and civilians during wartime, and how they
were subsequently imagined and understood during peacetime, from
Clausewitz and Kleist to Junger and Adorno. Without such an
understanding, it is difficult to make sense of the dramatic shifts
characterising the politics of Germany and Europe over the past two
centuries. The studies argue that the ease - or reluctance - with
which Germans went to war, and the far-reaching consequences of
such wars on domestic politics, were related to soldiers' and
civilians' attitudes to violence and death, as well as to long-term
transformations in contemporaries' conceptualisation of conflict.
Absolute War reassesses the meaning of military conflict for the
millions of German subjects who were directly implicated in the
Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. Based on a re-reading of
contemporary diaries, letters, memoirs, official correspondence,
press reports, pamphlets, treatises, plays, and cartoons, this
volume refocuses attention on combat and conscription as the
central components of new forms of mass warfare. It concentrates,
in particular, on the impact of violence, killing, and death on
many soldiers' and some civilians' experiences and subsequent
memories of conflict. War has often been conceived of as 'an act of
violence pushed to its utmost bounds', as Clausewitz put it, but
the relationship between military conflicts and violent acts
remains a problematic one.
Explore the haunted history of Salem, Massachusetts.
This volume is the first of six that will present in their entirety
Frances Burney's journals and letters from 17 July 1786, when she
assumed the position of Keeper of the Robes to Queen Charlotte,
until 7 July 1791, when she resigned her position because of ill
health. Burney's later journals have been edited as The Journals
and Letters of Fanny Burney (Madame d'Arblay), 1791-1840 (12 vols.,
1972-84). Her earlier journals have been edited as The Early
Journals and Letters of Fanny Burney (4 vols. to date, 1988- ). The
Court Journals and Letters of Frances Burney continues the modern
editing of Burney's surviving journals and letters, from 1768 until
her death in 1840.
The only previous edition of the Court journals and letters is the
Diary and Letters of Madame d'Arblay, edited by Burney's niece
Charlotte Barrett and published by Henry Colburn in seven volumes,
1842-46. Barrett's edition, however, is heavily abridged. For the
Court years, it excludes about half of the extant material, which
will be printed in the present volumes for the first time. In
addition, Barrett made no attempt to recover the thousands of lines
obliterated by Burney in the Court journals and letters, and indeed
added many further deletions of her own. Barrett's edition was
subsequently revised by Austin Dobson in a six-volume edition,
1904-05, containing new annotations and illustrations, but no
alterations to the text.
The present edition includes every extant letter that Burney wrote
during her five years at Court, as well as all of her copious
journals. The elderly Madame d'Arblay attempted to edit her own
journals and letters, making numerous changes that would, she
believed, make them fitter for publication. This edition aims to
restore the manuscripts, as far as possible, to their original
state. It recovers the words, lines, and entire passages that
Madame d'Arblay strove to conceal and it contains a comprehensive
commentary on the text.
Discover a wide range of fascinating and bizarre tales from
Wilmington and the surrounding region of North Carolina.
The impact of the Great Depression on politics in the 1930s was
both transformative and shocking. The role of government in America
was forever transformed, and across Europe socialist, communist,
and fascist parties saw their support skyrocket. Most famously, the
National Socialists seized power in Germany in 1933, setting off a
chain of events that led to the greatest conflagration in world
history. The recent Great Recession has not been as severe as the
Great Recession, but it has been severe enough, producing a half
decade of negative and/or slow growth across the advanced
industrial world. Yet the response by voters has been
extraordinarily muted considering the circumstances. Why is this?
In Mass Politics in Tough Times, the eminent political scientists
Larry Bartels and Nancy Bermeo have gathered a group of leading
scholars to analyze the political responses to the Great Recession
in the US, Western Europe, and East-Central Europe. In contrast to
works that focus on policy responses to the Recession, they examine
how ordinary voters have responded. In almost every country, most
voters have not shifted their allegiance to either far left or far
right parties. Instead, they've continued to act as they have in
more normal times: vote based on their own personal circumstances
and punish the incumbents who were on watch when the bad turn
occurred regardless of whether they were center-left or
center-right. In some countries, electoral trends that existed
before the Recession have continued. The US, for instance, saw no
real increase in popular support for an expanded welfare state. In
fact, the anti-regulatory right, which gained strength before the
Recession occurred, experienced a series of victories in Wisconsin
after 2008. Interestingly, states that had strong welfare systems
have seen the least political realignment. As the contributors
show, ordinary voters tend to vote based on their own experiences,
and those in expansive welfare states have been buffered from the
harshest effects of the Recession. That said, states with weaker
welfare systems-e.g., Greece-have seen significant political
turmoil. Moreover, there have been a small number of cases of
popular radicalization, and the contributors have been able to
isolate the cause: when voters can establish a clear and direct
connection between the actions of political elites and economic
hardship, they will throw their support to protest parties on the
right and left. Ultimately, though, the picture is one of
relatively stoic acceptance of the downturn by the majority of
publics. Featuring an impressive range of cases, this will stand as
the most comprehensive scholarly account of the Great Recession's
impact on political behavior in advanced economies.
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