Rising Wind


Book Description

African Americans have a long history of active involvement and interest in international affairs, but their efforts have been largely ignored by scholars of American foreign policy. Gayle Plummer brings a new perspective to the study of twentieth-century American history with her analysis of black Americans' engagement with international issues, from the Italian invasion of Ethiopia in 1935 through the wave of African independence movements of the early 1960s. Plummer first examines how collective definitions of ethnic identity, race, and racism have influenced African American views on foreign affairs. She then probes specific developments in the international arena that galvanized the black community, including the rise of fascism, World War II, the emergence of human rights as a factor in international law, the Cold War, and the American civil rights movement, which had important foreign policy implications. However, she demonstrates that not all African Americans held the same views on particular issues and that a variety of considerations helped shape foreign affairs agendas within the black community just as in American society at large.




The Rising of the Wind


Book Description

When the fishermen's boat is wrecked during a storm, Arion and Avion try to save them.




Let the Wind Rise


Book Description

The breathtaking action and romance build to a climax in this thrilling conclusion to the Sky Fall trilogy from the New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author of the Keeper of the Lost Cities series. Vane Weston is ready for battle. Against Raiden’s army. Against the slowly corrupting Gale Force. Even against his own peaceful nature as a Westerly. He’ll do whatever it takes, including storming Raiden’s icy fortress with the three people he trusts the least. Anything to bring Audra home safely. But Audra won’t wait for someone to rescue her. She has Gus—the guardian she was captured with. And she has a strange “guide” left behind by the one prisoner who managed to escape Raiden. The wind is also rising to her side, rallying against their common enemy. When the forces align, Audra makes her play—but Raiden is ready. Freedom has never held such an impossible price, and both groups know the sacrifices will be great. But Vane and Audra started this fight together. They’ll end it the same way.




Rising Wind


Book Description

THE DATE IS DECEMBER 7TH. AND INFAMY LIVES. . .AGAIN. On a remote Pacific Island, millions of pounds of lethal chemical agents are being stockpiled by the United States--enough toxic material to annihilate one quarter of the Earths population. In a swift and daring early morning surprise attack, a band of Japanese terrorist led by a fanatical right-wing nationalist has seized the weakly defended island. More than a thousand Americans--including a U.S. senator--have been made prisoners. A madman with dreams of empire suddenly commands the most terrifying weapon the worlds has ever known. The gravest crisis since the end of the second World War has set rival economic superpowers on a lethal collision course--unless two men, Lt. John Moody of the U.S. Navy SEALs and modern-day Samurai Shintaro Nakajima of the elite, top-secret Japanese Counter Force, join together on an extraordinary mission to save a hostage planet form the terrible vengeance of the . . . RISING WIND




Ride the Rising Wind


Book Description

A black horse name Zazy, $100, three maps, a camera, camping fear, a rifle and her Mum's sandwiches, Barbara Kingscote rode away from Mascouche, Quebec, bound for British Columbia. For sixteen months Barbara and her horse relied on the kindness of strangers, her courage and sense of humour. Ride the rising wing is her journey into the heart of Canada.




Rising Wind


Book Description

When terrorists occupy a Pacific Rim chemical plant, taking 1,000 Americans hostage, Washington dispatches the Navy's Seals to free them. The author is a former Seal.




A Rising Wind


Book Description

During World War II, Walter White visited the European, North African and Pacific theaters of war, sending back to the New York Post and other periodicals accounts of what he saw. These included accounts of the experiences of black servicemen on American military bases. Historically significant, these accounts give the reader a window into the mood and culture of the era as well as the struggle for equality during a time when African-Americans risked everything for a country that, at best, was in conflict with race relations.




Old-Time Country Wisdom & Lore


Book Description

A collection of old-fashioned country wisdom on all kinds of topics describes how to make and cook things, read the weather, and dowse; and provides lore on animals and plants.




At the Dawn of History


Book Description

Nearly 50 students, colleagues, and friends of Nicholas Postgate join in tribute to an Assyriologist and Archaeologist who has had a profound influence on both disciplines. His work and scholarship are strongly felt in Iraq, where he was the Director of the British School of Archaeology, in the United Kingdom, where he is Emeritus Professor of Assyriology in the University of Cambridge, and in the subject internationally. He has fostered close collaboration with colleagues in Turkey and Iraq, where he has been involved in archaeological investigation, always seeking to meld the study of texts with that of material remains. The essays embrace the full range of Postgate’s interests, including government and administration, art history, population studies, the economy, religion and divination, foodstuffs, ceramics, and Akkadian and Sumerian language—in a word, all of ancient Mesopotamian civilisation.




The Problem of the Future World


Book Description

The Problem of the Future World is a compelling reassessment of the later writings of the iconic African American activist and intellectual W. E. B. Du Bois. As Eric Porter points out, despite the outpouring of scholarship devoted to Du Bois, the broad range of writing he produced during the 1940s and early 1950s has not been thoroughly examined in its historical context, nor has sufficient attention been paid to the theoretical interventions he made during those years. Porter locates Du Bois’s later work in relation to what he calls “the first postracial moment.” He suggests that Du Bois’s midcentury writings are so distinctive and so relevant for contemporary scholarship because they were attuned to the shape-shifting character of modern racism, and in particular to the ways that discredited racial taxonomies remained embedded and in force in existing political-economic arrangements at both the local and global levels. Porter moves the conversation about Du Bois and race forward by building on existing work about the theorist, systematically examining his later writings, and looking at them from new perspectives, partly by drawing on recent scholarship on race, neoliberalism, and empire. The Problem of the Future World shows how Du Bois’s later writings help to address race and racism as protean, global phenomena in the present.