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TELL IT ALL, TELL IT EARLY, TELL IT YOURSELF
These days, every scandal is tried in the court of public opinion.
Political insider and legal crisis manager Lanny Davis has spent
years helping politicians, sports figures, business executives, and
corporations--including Bill Clinton, Martha Stewart, Washington
Redskins owner Dan Snyder, and Macy's, to name a few--through the
biggest reputation crises of our times. In this fascinating and
practical resource, Davis tells the real stories behind his famous
clients' very public scandals and how each case has aided him in
the creation of five invaluable rules that absolutely anyone can
use to protect himself.
Damaging falsehoods can go viral in an instant. The nation's
premier political spin doctor will teach you how to fight back.
More than the story of one man's case, this book tells the story of
entire generations of people marked as "mixed race" in America amid
slavery and its aftermath, and being officially denied their
multicultural identity and personal rights as a result. Contrary to
popular misconceptions, Plessy v. Ferguson was not a simple case of
black vs. white separation, but rather a challenging and complex
protest for U.S. law to fully accept mixed ancestry and
multiculturalism. This book focuses on the long struggle for
individual identity and multicultural recognition amid the
dehumanizing and depersonalizing forces of American Negro
slavery-and the Anglo-American white supremacy that drove it. The
book takes students and general readers through the extended
gestation period that gave birth to one of the most oft-mentioned
but widely misunderstood landmark law will cases in U.S. history.
It provides a chronology, brief biographies of key figures, primary
documents, an annotated bibliography, and an index all of which
provide easy reading and quick reference. Modern readers will find
the direct connections between Plessy's story and contemporary
racial currents in America intriguing.
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Steamfunk! (Hardcover)
Milton J. Davis, Balogun Ojetade; Illustrated by Marcellus Jackson
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R698
Discovery Miles 6 980
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The 1940s and 1950s were decades of far-reaching change and
mobilization in the United States. White culture strove to make
nonwhites invisible with segregation and discrimination as Southern
blacks continued the Great Migration north and the government
brought in Mexican labor via the Bracero Program to take up labor
slack while U.S. troops were overseas. The rise of the civil rights
movement and Brown v. Board of Education, which struck down
segregation in schools 1954, were some results. This volume is THE
content-rich source in a desirable decade-by-decade organization to
help students and general readers understand the crucial race
relations of the war years into the Cold War. Race Relations in the
United States, 1940-1960 provides comprehensive reference coverage
of the key events, influential voices, race relations by group,
legislation, media influences, cultural output, and theories of
inter-group interactions. The volume covers two decades with a
standard format coverage per decade, including Timeline, Overview,
Key Events, Voices of the Decade, Race Relations by Group, Law and
Government, Media and Mass Communications, Cultural Scene,
Influential Theories and Views of Race Relations, Resource Guide.
This format allows comparison of topics through the decades. The
bulk of the coverage is topical essays, written in a clear,
encyclopedic style. Historical photos, a selected bibliography, and
index complement the text.
This critical reevaluation of the causes of many of Beethoven's
illnesses offers detailed accounts of the treatments applied by his
physicians and a comprehensive rendering of the composer's final
illness, death, and burial. Separate chapters discuss the causes of
many of Beethoven's illnesses, his autopsy and the exhumations.
Following the rediscovery of the original Latin autopsy report in
1970, the author has discovered two faulty translations, which he
argues contributed to errors in earlier medical assumptions. New
evidence disputes earlier assertions that Beethoven's deafness
resulted from syphilis. This fascinating account of Beethoven's
ailments should appeal to Beethoven enthusiasts and to both the
medical and music communities.
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