Book Description
This legendary masterpiece--the most successful of Robbins's many books--tells a story of money and power, sex and death, and is available once again in an exciting new package. Reissue.
Author : Harold Robbins
Publisher : Macmillan
Page : 686 pages
File Size : 23,59 MB
Release : 2007-05
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 0765351463
This legendary masterpiece--the most successful of Robbins's many books--tells a story of money and power, sex and death, and is available once again in an exciting new package. Reissue.
Author : Ben Parnell
Publisher :
Page : 232 pages
File Size : 12,68 MB
Release : 1987
Category : History
ISBN :
Author : Jennifer L. Fluri
Publisher : University of Georgia Press
Page : 188 pages
File Size : 49,66 MB
Release : 2017-01-15
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0820350338
The 2001 invasion of Afghanistan by United States and coalition forces was followed by a flood of aid and development dollars and “experts” representing well over two thousand organizations—each with separate policy initiatives, geopolitical agendas, and socioeconomic interests. This book examines the everyday actions of people associated with this international effort, with a special emphasis on small players: individuals and groups who charted alternative paths outside the existing networks of aid and development. This focus highlights the complexities, complications, and contradictions at the intersection of the everyday and the geopolitical, showing how dominant geopolitical narratives influence daily life in places like Afghanistan—and what happens when the goals of aid workersor the needs of aid recipients do not fit the narrative. Specifically, this book examines the use of gender, “need,” and grief as drivers for both common and exceptional responses to geopolitical interventions.Throughout this work, Jennifer L. Fluri and Rachel Lehr describe intimate encounters at a microscale to complicate and dispute the ways in which Afghans and their country have been imagined, described, fetishized, politicized, vilified, and rescued. The authors identify the ways in which Afghan men and women have been narrowly categorized as perpetrators and victims, respectively. They discuss several projects to show how gender and grief became forms of currency that were exchanged for different social, economic, and political opportunities. Such entanglements suggest the power and influence of the United States while illustrating the ways in which individuals and groups have attempted to chart alternative avenues of interaction, intervention, and interpretation.
Author : Opie Read
Publisher :
Page : 314 pages
File Size : 47,86 MB
Release : 1899
Category : Fiction
ISBN :
Author : Horton Foote
Publisher : Dramatists Play Service Inc
Page : 44 pages
File Size : 10,5 MB
Release : 2002
Category : Drama
ISBN : 9780822218432
THE STORY: In funny, moving, engaging monologues, three sisters spin the tale of their family and an era. Their father, the eponymous carpetbagger, was a former Union soldier who used his post as county treasurer and tax collector to amass a Texas
Author : William Charles Harris
Publisher :
Page : 796 pages
File Size : 24,67 MB
Release : 1979
Category : Mississippi
ISBN :
Author : Grace Robbins
Publisher : Burres Books
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 24,45 MB
Release : 2013
Category : Authors' spouses
ISBN : 9780988284821
The 60s and '70s were decades like no others--radical, experimental, libertine. Globetrotting Grace Robbins chronicles the rollicking good times with the jetting set from megamansions in Beverly Hills to yachts on the French Riviera--and the secrets they kept.
Author : Otto H. Olsen
Publisher : JHU Press
Page : 447 pages
File Size : 12,99 MB
Release : 2019-12-01
Category : History
ISBN : 1421430959
Originally published in 1965. The Supreme Court's momentous school desegregation decision of 1954 was a postmortem victory for Albion Tourgée. Just fifty-eight years earlier this once-famous carpetbagger's attack on segregation was crushed in the case of Plessy v. Ferguson. His legal defeat in 1896 typified his frustrated but prophetic career. Tourgée was an idealistic Union veteran who ventured south in 1865. As an advocate of civil rights, political equality, free schools, and penal reform, he was elected to North Carolina's Constitutional Convention of 1868. Olsen records both the fierce struggles and the impressive accomplishments that filled Tourgée's fourteen years in the South. With the collapse of the Southern experiment, Tourgée was inspired to turn to fiction to express his convictions. A Fool's Errand by One of the Fools and Bricks without Straw were classics of their day, providing absorbing accounts and defenses of radical Reconstruction. In 1879 Tourgée went north, where he renewed and extended his crusade for Negro equality by writing, lecturing, and lobbying. For many years he was the most militant and persistent advocate of racial equality in the nation. He was also a vigorous critic of the industrial age, demanding the utilization of federal power in behalf of equality, democracy, and economic justice.
Author : Henry Tazewell Thompson
Publisher :
Page : 212 pages
File Size : 44,65 MB
Release : 1926
Category : Reconstruction
ISBN :
Author : James Michael Martinez
Publisher : Rowman & Littlefield
Page : 292 pages
File Size : 24,3 MB
Release : 2007
Category : History
ISBN : 9780742550780
In some places during Reconstruction, the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) was a social fraternity whose members enjoyed sophomoric high jinks and homemade liquor. In other areas, the KKK was a paramilitary group intent on keeping former slaves away from white women and Republicans away from ballot boxes. South Carolina saw the worst Klan violence and, in 1871, President Grant sent federal troops under the command of Major Lewis Merrill to restore law and order. Merrill did not eradicate the Klan, but he arguably did more than any other person or entity to expose the identity of the Invisible Empire as a group of hooded, brutish, homegrown terrorists. In compiling evidence to prosecute the leading Klansmen and restoring at least a semblance of order to South Carolina, Merrill and his men demonstrated that the portrayal of the KKK as a chivalric organization was at best a myth and at worst a lie. Book jacket.