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A Computer Perspective is an illustrated essay on the origins and
first lines of development of the computer. The complex network of
creative forces and social pressures that have produced the
computer is personified here in the creators of instruments of
computation, and their machines or tables; the inventors of
mathematical or logical concepts and their applications; and the
fabricators of practical devices to serve the immediate needs of
government, commerce, engineering, and science. The book is based
on an exhibition conceived and assembled for International Business
Machines (IBM) Corporation. Like the exhibition, it is not a
history in the narrow sense of a chronology of concepts and
devices. Yet these pages actually display more true history (in
relation to the computer) than many more conventional presentations
of the development of science and technology.
In this pioneering, nonobjective study, a distinguished Black
sexologist tackles one of the most controversial aspects of
American race relations. The subject of Black sexuality has been
widely discussed in every possible popular format for the past four
hundred years, yet serious scholarship in the area is lacking.
While Black sexuality has been a pervasive force in American life,
it has been too sensitive a topic for Black or white authors to
write about in a serious, non-polemical format. Robert Staples
explores same-sex attitudes and behavior, interracial sexual
relations, rape, prostitution, pornography, and the stereotypes of
Black sexual superiority in this scholarly yet accessible
collection. Staples shows how vaunted and feared sexual differences
were the 'raison d'etre' of Southern school segregation, race-based
laws, white flight from the inner cities, the double sexual
standard, lynchings, and race riots. This groundbreaking study
concludes with a speculation on the future of Black sexuality in
the 21st century based on our knowledge of current demographic and
economic forces.
In this pioneering, nonobjective study, a distinguished Black
sexologist tackles one of the most controversial aspects of
American race relations. The subject of Black sexuality has been
widely discussed in every possible popular format for the past four
hundred years, yet serious scholarship in the area is lacking.
While Black sexuality has been a pervasive force in American life,
it has been too sensitive a topic for Black or white authors to
write about in a serious, non-polemical format. Robert Staples
explores same-sex attitudes and behavior, interracial sexual
relations, rape, prostitution, pornography, and the stereotypes of
Black sexual superiority in this scholarly yet accessible
collection. Staples shows how vaunted and feared sexual differences
were the 'raison d'etre' of Southern school segregation, race-based
laws, white flight from the inner cities, the double sexual
standard, lynchings, and race riots. This groundbreaking study
concludes with a speculation on the future of Black sexuality in
the 21st century based on our knowledge of current demographic and
economic forces.
A diverse collection of readings on trends and issues surrounding
the African American family. This book provides a combination of
empirical research and scholarly essays on such diverse issues in
the African American community as the Black male's role,
interracial relationships, poverty, AIDS, and the health status of
Black women.
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