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Making use of newly-researched archival materials, this collection of original essays on wartime and post-war US foreign policy re-evaluates well-known crises and documents many less familiar aspects of the nation's mid-twentieth century conflicts. Leading diplomatic historians address familiar subjects from new angles. They offer new evidence about the risks run and the costs incurred in the prosecution of the Cold War, from Korea to the Caribbean. And they provide an up-to-date accounting of mid-twentieth century American diplomacy's global purposes and consequences.
Making use of newly-researched archival material, this collection
of original essays on wartime and postwar US foreign policy
re-evaluates well-known crises and documents many less familiar
aspects of the nation's mid-twentieth century conflicts. Leading
diplomatic historians address familiar subjects from new angles.
They offer new evidence about the risks run and the costs incurred
in the prosecution of the Cold War, from Korea to the Caribbean.
And they provide up-to-date accounting of mid-twentieth century
American diplomacy's global purposes and consequences.
"The Ethics of Mourning" dramatically shifts the critical
discussion of the lyric elegy from psychological economy to ethical
responsibility. Beginning from a reevaluation of famously
inconsolable mourners such as Niobe and Hamlet, R. Clifton Spargo
discerns the tendency of all grief to depend at least temporarily
upon the refusal of consolation. By disrupting the traditional
social and psychological functions of grief, resistant mourners
transform mourning into a profoundly ethical act. Spargo finds such
examples of ethical mourning in opposition to socially acceptable
expressions of grief throughout the English and American elegiac
tradition. Drawing on the work of Paul Ricoeur, Bernard Williams,
and Emmanuel Levinas, his book explores the ethical dimensions of
anti-consolatory grief through astute readings of a wide range of
texts--including treatments of Hamlet, Milton, and Renaissance
elegists, extended readings of Dickinson, Shelley, and Hardy, and
final chapters on American Holocaust elegies by Sylvia Plath and
Randall Jarrell.
Spargo argues that, to the extent that elegies are melancholic,
to the extent that they resist the history of consolation and the
strategies of commemoration implicit in elegiac conventions, they
make an extraordinary ethical demand on us, asking that we remain
in relationship to the other, even past the point of all
usefulness. In the wake of the atrocities of the twentieth century,
particularly the Holocaust, Spargo finds the crisis in the project
of commemoration to be an event already inscribed with ethical
meaning. He argues for the particular capacity of literature to
undertake an imaginative risk on behalf of another that seems the
very ground of ethics itself.
Phillip McCoy aka Big Mac is the head of a Virginia Beach crime
family. He's married to his high school sweetheart Tootie. They
control all the drugs moving on the east coast of the country. Big
Mac has groomed his eldest son J-Mac to run the drugs and gambling
of the family business. His daughter Princess is in charge of the
family's prostitution business as well as a brilliant chemist. She
has developed a synthetic drug that will revolutionize the drug
world and make her family wealthier than they can ever imagine. The
youngest son Baby Mac is in charge of the family's legitimate
business. The McCoy family is the largest minority owner of hotels
throughout the country. Baby Mac is also being groomed for a career
in politics. His father has aspirations like the Kennedy family.
Big Mac had decided early that he would use hotels to get his
family out of the illegal business. The problem is when the family
tries to get out there are people like Miguel, their Columbian
supplier, who are not happy with the move and determined to stop
the family. He also has to deal with the crooked city councilman
Weber who opposes every move that the family makes in building new
hotels because he blames them for his son's death. The McCoys are
not your average crime family. They are the real McCoys.
This is the first urban novel of author Davian Clifton. It's titled
"A Long Road to Redemption." James "JR" Roberts is a successful
middle-aged African American male. JR utilized his athletic
abilities to obtain a college scholarship thus allowing him to get
out of the drug game that he and his brother controlled. JR had the
American dream of the good wife, three kids, house, business, and
plenty of money and respect in the community. After a business deal
goes bad, JR finds himself in jail and loses everything he had
worked so hard to obtain. His house. His money. His family. As well
as his reputation. This story details the trials JR experiences as
he works to regain all he has lost. There are people and
consequences from his old life who are determined not to make his
journey easy. He discovers that it is a long road to redemption. It
is an urban tale with a spiritual twist.
Small Business Management Research Reports.
After Representation? explores one of the major issues in Holocaust
studiesùthe intersection of memory and ethics in artistic
expression, particularly within literature.As experts in the study
of literature and culture, the scholars in this collection examine
the shifting cultural contexts for Holocaust representation and
reveal how writersùwhether they write as witnesses to the
Holocaust or at an imaginative distance from the Nazi
genocideùarticulate the shadowy borderline between fact and
fiction, between event and expression, and between the condition of
life endured in atrocity and the hope of a meaningful existence.
What imaginative literature brings to the study of the Holocaust is
an ability to test the limits of language and its conventions.
After Representation? moves beyond the suspicion of representation
and explores the changing meaning of the Holocaust for different
generations, audiences, and contexts.
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