Book Description
Features 150 photographs, fully annotated catalog entries, and an interpretive essay on the Baruch family and their collection.
Author : McKissick Museum
Publisher : Univ of South Carolina Press
Page : 144 pages
File Size : 37,10 MB
Release : 1993
Category : Antiques & Collectibles
ISBN : 9780872499591
Features 150 photographs, fully annotated catalog entries, and an interpretive essay on the Baruch family and their collection.
Author : Kristin L. Spangenberg
Publisher :
Page : 180 pages
File Size : 30,66 MB
Release : 2008
Category : Art
ISBN :
Catalog of an exhibition at the Cincinnati Art Museum, Sept. 27, 2008-Jan. 4, 2009.
Author : Margaret L. Coit
Publisher : Beard Books
Page : 732 pages
File Size : 22,15 MB
Release : 2000
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 9781587980213
Author : Baruch A. Levine
Publisher : Eisenbrauns
Page : 712 pages
File Size : 41,32 MB
Release : 1999-01-01
Category : Religion
ISBN : 1575060302
A huge festschrift comprising 41 essays exploring mainly textual perspectives on Ancient Near Eastern and Jewish history and religious practice.
Author : Bridgett M. Davis
Publisher : Little, Brown
Page : 253 pages
File Size : 49,4 MB
Release : 2019-01-29
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 0316558710
As seen on the Today Show: This true story of an unforgettable mother, her devoted daughter, and their life in the Detroit numbers of the 1960s and 1970s highlights "the outstanding humanity of black America" (James McBride). In 1958, the very same year that an unknown songwriter named Berry Gordy borrowed $800 to found Motown Records, a pretty young mother from Nashville, Tennessee, borrowed $100 from her brother to run a numbers racket out of her home. That woman was Fannie Davis, Bridgett M. Davis's mother. Part bookie, part banker, mother, wife, and granddaughter of slaves, Fannie ran her numbers business for thirty-four years, doing what it took to survive in a legitimate business that just happened to be illegal. She created a loving, joyful home, sent her children to the best schools, bought them the best clothes, mothered them to the highest standard, and when the tragedy of urban life struck, soldiered on with her stated belief: "Dying is easy. Living takes guts." A daughter's moving homage to an extraordinary parent, The World According to Fannie Davis is also the suspenseful, unforgettable story about the lengths to which a mother will go to "make a way out of no way" and provide a prosperous life for her family -- and how those sacrifices resonate over time.
Author : J. Edward Taylor
Publisher : Univ of California Press
Page : 440 pages
File Size : 15,29 MB
Release : 2015-03-19
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN : 0520283171
Written to provide students with the critical tools used in today’s development economics research and practice, Essentials of Development Economics represents an alternative approach to traditional textbooks on the subject. Compact and less expensive than other textbooks for undergraduate development economics courses, Essentials of Development Economics offers a broad overview of key topics and methods in the field. Its fourteen easy-to-read chapters introduce cutting-edge research and present best practices and state-of-the-art methods. Each chapter concludes with an embedded QR code that connects readers to ancillary audiovisual materials and supplemental readings on a website curated by the authors. By mastering the material in this book, students will have the conceptual grounding needed to move on to higher-level development economics courses.
Author : Robert Henry Charles
Publisher :
Page : 162 pages
File Size : 11,62 MB
Release : 1918
Category : Apocryphal books (Old Testament)
ISBN :
Author : Baruch J. Schwartz
Publisher : A&C Black
Page : 129 pages
File Size : 38,12 MB
Release : 2008-06-01
Category : Religion
ISBN : 0567028321
This book is a collection of essays on purificaton and atonement in the Hebrew Bible that provides new insights into the discussion of these ideas by looking at the values of sociological and anthropological approaches to the topics. The collection also examines multivalence and polyvalence in ritual and asks to what extent it is possible to speak of the function or meaning of ritual, even within the highly systematic priestly texts.
Author : Geoffrey Hill
Publisher : Oxford University Press, USA
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 18,45 MB
Release : 2019
Category : POETRY
ISBN : 9780198829522
At his death in 2016, Geoffrey Hill left behind The Book of Baruch by the Gnostic Justin, his last work, a sequence of more than 270 poems, to be published posthumously as his final statement. Written in long lines of variable length, with much off-rhyme and internal rhyme, the verse-form of the book stands at the opposite end from the ones developed in the late Daybooks of Broken Hierarchies (2013), where he explored highly taut constructions such as Sapphic meter, figure-poems, fixed rhyming strophes, and others. The looser metrical plan of the new book admits an enormous range of tones of voices. Thematically, the work is a summa of a lifetime's meditation on the nature of poetry. A riot of similes about the poetic art makes a passionate claim for the enduring strangeness of poetry in the midst of its evident helplessness. The relation between art and spirituality is another connecting thread. In antiquity, Justin's gnostic Book of Baruch was identified as the 'worst of heresies, ' and the use of it in Hill's poem, as well as the references to alchemy, heterodox theological speculation, and the formal logics of mathematics, music, and philosophy are made coolly, as art and as emblems for our inadequate and perplexed grasp of time, fate, and eternity. A final set of themes is autobiographical, including Hill's childhood, the bombing of London, his late trip to Germany, his alarm and anger at Brexit, and his sense of decline and of death close at hand. It is a great work, and in Hill's oeuvre it is a uniquely welcoming work, open to all comers.
Author : Bernard Mannes Baruch
Publisher :
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 41,58 MB
Release : 1993
Category : Businessmen
ISBN : 9781568490953
Baruch: My Own Story is the memoirs of Bernard M. Baruch, a man whose life spanned the late nineteenth century and over half of the twentieth century. Given the time period, he is a man who has seen much having met seven presidents, witnessing two wars and working on Wall Street for a time. In these memoirs, Baruch has tried to set forth the philosophy through which he had sought to harmonize a readiness to risk something new with precautions against repeating the errors of the past.