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A New York Times bestseller, A Slave in the White House received
glowing reviewsthatpraised its narrative and original research. It
is the story of Paul Jennings, who was born into slavery on the
plantation of James and Dolley Madison in Virginia and moved with
the Madison household staff to the White House. Jennings was a
self-taught and self-made man who purchased his own freedom and
penned the first ever White House memoir. Nearly two centuries
later, Montpelier scholar Elizabeth Dowling Taylor uncovered the
memoir. In this amazing narrative she reconstructs his lifeand
hisunusual portraits of James and Dolley Madison andSenator Daniel
Websterin early nineteenth century Washington, as well as the 1812
assault on British troops and Jennings' heroic saving of George
Washington's portrait. Fascinating and original, this is an
important contribution to American history.
This collection of essays investigates signs of toleration,
recognition, respect and other positive forms of interaction
between and within religious groups of late antiquity. At the same
time, it acknowledges that examples of tolerance are significantly
fewer in ancient sources than examples of intolerance and are often
limited to insiders, while outsiders often met with contempt, or
even outright violence. The essays take both perspectives seriously
by analysing the complexity pertaining to these encounters.
Religious concerns, ethnicity, gender and other social factors
central to identity formation were often intertwined and they
yielded different ways of drawing the limits of tolerance and
intolerance. This book enhances our understanding of the formative
centuries of Jewish and Christian religious traditions. It also
brings the results of historical inquiry into dialogue with
present-day questions of religious tolerance. The book contains
contributions by Ismo Dunderberg, Carmen Palmer, Michael Labahn,
Nina Nikki, Anna-Liisa Rafael, Sami Yli-Karjanmaa, Galit
Hasan-Rokem & Israel Yuval, Paul Middleton, Outi Lehtipuu,
Elizabeth Dowling, and Amy-Jill Levine.
Why are rainfall, carcinogens, and primary care physicians
distributed unevenly over space? The fourth edition of the leading
text in the field has been updated and reorganized to cover the
latest developments in disease ecology and health promotion across
the globe. The book accessibly introduces the core questions and
perspectives of health and medical geography and presents
cutting-edge techniques of mapping and spatial analysis. It
explores the intersecting genetic, ecological, behavioral,
cultural, and socioeconomic processes that underlie patterns of
health and disease in particular places, including how new diseases
and epidemics emerge. Geographic dimensions of health care access
and service provision are addressed. More than 100 figures include
16 color plates; most are available as PowerPoint slides at the
companion website. New to This Edition: *Chapters on the political
ecology of health; emerging infectious diseases and landscape
genetics; food, diet, and nutrition; and urban health. *Coverage of
Middle East respiratory syndrome, Ebola, and Zika; impacts on
health of global climate change; contaminated water crises in
economically developed countries, including in Flint, Michigan;
China's rapid industrial growth; and other timely topics. *Updated
throughout with current data and concepts plus advances in GIS.
Pedagogical Features: *End-of-chapter review questions and
suggestions for further reading. *Section Introductions that
describe each chapter. *"Quick Reviews"--within-chapter recaps of
key concepts. *Bold-faced key terms and an end-of-book glossary.
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