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Books > Humanities > History > History of specific subjects > Social & cultural history
In Contesting Commemoration: The 1876 Centennial, Independence Day,
and the Reconstruction-Era South, Jack Noe examines identity and
nationalism in the post-Civil War South through the lens of
commemorative activity, namely Independence Day celebrations and
the Centennial of 1876. Both events presented opportunities for
whites, Blacks, northerners, and southerners to reflect on their
identity as Americans. The often colorful and engaging discourse
surrounding these observances provides a fascinating portrait of
this fractured moment in the development of American nationalism.
Ben Viljoen (1868–1917) was ’n prominente jonger generaal in die
Anglo-Boereoorlog, maar ná die oorlog is hy nie opgeneem in die
nuwe politieke elite van die Afrikaners nie. Nadat hy die eed van
getrouheid op St. Helena onderteken het, het hy noot weer permanent
na Suid-Afrika teruggekeer nie.
Carel van der Merwe het besluit om Viljoen se spore te volg na
Brittanje, Nederland, Mexiko en Amerika en te gaan uitvind hoe dit
gebeur het dat dié Boereoorloggeneraal burgerskap van vier
verskillende lande gehad het, die ster was van ’n
Boereoorlogskouspel, aan ’n Mexikaanse revolusie deelgeneem het, as
vredeskommissaris tussen die Yaqui-Indiane opgetree het en voor sy
dood op die punt was om ’n film in Hollywood te vervaardig.
’n Prentjie van ’n komplekse persoonlikheid kom na vore wat
herinner aan ’n deel van die huidige generasie Afrikaners – minder
godvresend, gemaklik in verskillende kulture, en bereid om te
emigreer wanneer hulle dink dit tot hul voordeel is.
Barbara Hammer: Pushing Out of the Frame by Sarah Keller explores
the career of experimental filmmaker and visual artist Barbara
Hammer. Hammer first garnered attention in the early 1970s for a
series of films representing lesbian subjects and subjectivity.
Over the five decades that followed, she made almost a hundred
films and solidified her position as a pioneer of queer
experimental cinema and art. In the first chapter, Keller covers
Hammer's late 1960s-1970s work and explores the tensions between
the representation of women's bodies and contemporary feminist
theory. In the second chapter, Keller charts the filmmaker's
physical move from the Bay Area to New York City, resulting in
shifts in her artistic mode. The third chapter turns to Hammer's
primarily documentary work of the 1990s and how it engages with the
places she travels, the people she meets, and the histories she
explores. In the fourth chapter, Keller then considers Hammer's
legacy, both through the final films of her career-which combine
the methods and ideas of the earlier decades-and her efforts to
solidify and shape the ways in which the work would be remembered.
In the final chapter, excerpts from the author's interviews with
Hammer during the last three years of her life offer intimate
perspectives and reflections on her work from the filmmaker
herself. Hammer's full body of work as a case study allows readers
to see why a much broader notion of feminist production and
artistic process is necessary to understand art made by women in
the past half century. Hammer's work-classically queer and
politically feminist-presses at the edges of each of those notions,
pushing beyond the frames that would not contain her dynamic
artistic endeavors. Keller's survey of Hammer's work is a vital
text for students and scholars of film, queer studies, and art
history.
Through a series of original interviews, specially commissioned
photography and fascinating archive material, England Our England
tells the personal stories of the black and Asian pioneers who
crossed the waters to make Britain their home. Rich portraits and
moving personal accounts show how they dealt bravely with the shock
of rejection and cold weather, the difficulties of finding work and
making connections with the British, but also how their
achievements ultimately transcended both their own expectations and
those of the country in which they came to live, creating the
multicultural society that we know today and a rich legacy for
future generations. The book includes interviews with Russell
Henderson, co-founder of the Notting Hill Carnival, Yvonne
Bailey-Smith, mother of novelist Zadie Smith, playwright Mustapha
Matura, film director Horace Ove and Deloris Smith, mother of
singer Beverley Knight.
This is the first global history of dress regulation and its place
in broader debates around how human life and societies should be
visualised and materialised. Sumptuary laws were a tool on the part
of states to regulate not only manufacturing systems and moral
economies via the medium of expenditure and consumption of clothing
but also banquets, festivities and funerals. Leading scholars on
Asian, Latin American, Ottoman and European history shed new light
on how and why items of dress became key aspirational goods across
society, how they were lobbied for and marketed, and whether or not
sumptuary laws were implemented by cities, states and empires to
restrict or channel trade and consumption. Their findings reveal
the significance of sumptuary laws in medieval and early modern
societies as a site of contestation between individuals and states
and how dress as an expression of identity developed as a modern
'human right'.
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Southern California Blue Book of Money. Taxpayers Assessed on $5,000 and Upwards in Los Angeles, Pasadena, South Pasadena, Long Beach, Pomona, Monrovia, Arcadia, Santa Monica, Venice, Etc., Also San Diego
(Hardcover)
James Edward Condon
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R761
Discovery Miles 7 610
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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