Product List
GET /services/catalog/products?format=api&page=70757
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In this comprehensive biography, Marlene Trestman reveals the forces that propelled and the obstacles that impeded Margolin's remarkable journey, illuminating the life of this trailblazing woman. <br>Raised in the Jewish Orphans' Home in New Orleans, Margolin received an extraordinary education at the Isidore Newman Manual Training School. Both institutions stressed that good citizenship, hard work, and respect for authority could help people achieve economic security and improve their social status. Adopting these values, Margolin used her intellect and ambition, along with her femininity and considerable southern charm, to win the respect of her classmates, colleagues, bosses, and judges -- almost all of whom were men. In her career she worked with some of the most brilliant legal professionals in America.<br>A graduate of Tulane and Yale Law Schools, Margolin launched her career in the early 1930s, when only 2 percent of America's attorneys were female, and far fewer were Jewish and from the South. According to Trestman, Margolin worked hard to be treated as \"one of the boys.\" For the sake of her career, she eschewed marriage -- but not romance -- and valued collegial relationships, never shying from a late-night brief-writing session or a poker game. <br>But her personal relationships never eclipsed her numerous professional accomplishments, among them defending the constitutionality of the New Deal's Tennessee Valley Authority, drafting rules establishing the American military tribunals for Nazi war crimes in Nuremberg, and, on behalf of the Labor Department, shepherding through the courts the child labor, minimum wage, and overtime protections of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938. A founding member of that National Organization for Women, Margolin culminated her government service as a champion of the Equal Pay Act, arguing and winning the first appeals. Margolin's passion for her work and focus on meticulous preparation resulted in an outstanding record in appellate advocacy, both in number of cases and rate of success. By prevailing in 21 of her 24 Supreme Court arguments Margolin shares the elite company of only a few dozen women and men who attained such high standing as Supreme Court advocates.</p>", "author": "Marlene Trestman", "slug": "fair-labor-lawyer-574635-9780807162095-marlene-trestman", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780807162095.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574635", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574635/fair-labor-lawyer-574635-9780807162095-marlene-trestman", "bisac_codes": [ "BIO007000", "LAW060000" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807162088", "EISBN13": "9780807162095", "EISBN10": "0807162094" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010018224682" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574634", "attributes": { "name": "Dear Almost", "subtitle": "A Poem", "description": "<p>Dear Almost is a book-length poem addressed to an unborn child lost in miscarriage. Beginning with the hope and promise of springtime, poet Matthew Thorburn traces the course of a year with sections set in each of the four seasons. Part book of days, part meditative prayer, part travelogue, the poem details a would-be fathers wanderings through the figurative landscapes of memory and imagination as well as the literal landscapes of the Bronx, Shanghai, suburban New Jersey, and the Japanese island of Miyajima.<br><br><br><br><br>\tAs the speaker navigates his days, he attempts to show his unborn daughter what life is like / here where you ought to be / with us, but arent. His experiences recall other deaths and uncover the different ways we remember and forget. Grief forces him to consider a question he never imagined asking: how do you mourn for someone you loved but never truly knew, never met or saw? In candid, meditative verse Dear Almost seeks to resolve this painful question, honoring the memory of a child who both was and wasnt there.</p>", "author": "Matthew Thorburn", "slug": "dear-almost-574634-9780807164327-matthew-thorburn", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780807164327.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574634", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574634/dear-almost-574634-9780807164327-matthew-thorburn", "bisac_codes": [ "POE000000" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807164310", "EISBN13": "9780807164327", "EISBN10": "0807164321" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010015071474" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574633", "attributes": { "name": "Marital Cruelty in Antebellum America", "subtitle": "", "description": "<p>In Marital Cruelty in Antebellum America, Robin C. Sager probes the struggles of aggrieved spouses shedding light on the nature of marriage and violence in the United States in the decades prior to the Civil War. Analyzing over 1,500 divorce records that reveal intimate details of marriages in conflict in Virginia, Texas, and Wisconsin from 1840--1860, Sager offers a rare glimpse into the private lives of ordinary Americans shaken by accusations of cruelty. <br>At a time when the standard for an ideal marriage held that both partners adequately perform their respective duties, hostility often arose from ongoing domestic struggles for power. Despite a rise in the then novel expectation of marriage as a companionate relationship, and even in the face of liberalized divorce grounds, marital conflicts often focused on violations of duty, not lack of love. Sager describes how, in this environment, cruelty was understood as a failure to fulfill expectations and as a weapon to brutally enforce more traditional interpretations of marital duty. <br>Sager's findings also challenge historical literature's assumptions about the regional influences on violence, showing that married southerners were no more or less violent than their midwestern counterparts. Her work reveals how definitions and perceptions of cruelty varied according to the gender of victim and perpetrator. Correcting historical mischaracterizations of women's violence as trivial, rare, or defensive, Sager finds antebellum wives both capable and willing to commit a wide variety of cruelties within their marriages. Her research provides details about the reality of nineteenth-century conjugal unions, including the deep unhappiness buried within them.</p>", "author": "Robin C. Sager", "slug": "marital-cruelty-in-antebellum-america-574633-9780807163115-robin-c-sager", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780807163115.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574633", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574633/marital-cruelty-in-antebellum-america-574633-9780807163115-robin-c-sager", "bisac_codes": [ "SOC032000", "HIS036000" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807163108", "EISBN13": "9780807163115", "EISBN10": "0807163112" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010018224042" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574632", "attributes": { "name": "St. Francisville", "subtitle": "Louisianas Historic River Bluff Country", "description": "<p>In the rolling hills of Louisiana's Felicianas, less than an hour north of Baton Rouge on the east bank of the Mississippi River, lies the historic community of St. Francisville. For generations, this picturesque town has inspired a variety of creative artists, from naturalist John James Audubon, whose experiences in the area helped make him the world's greatest bird artist, to acclaimed novelist Katherine Anne Porter, who wrote one of her best travelogues, \"Audubon's Happy Land,\" in 1939 after a visit to St. Francisville. Award-winning photographer Bevil Knapp embraces this lively tradition by lending her own perspective on a region Audubon once praised as an expression of \"the greatness of the Creator in all his unrivaled works.\"<br>Vividly evoking St. Francisville's fabled past as plantation country, Knapp offers stunning views of the stately historic homes that draw thousands of tourists annually -- including Oakley, Live Oak, Rosebank, Rosedown, and The Myrtles, among many others. But Knapp's images are more than mere architectural studies; they artfully invite the viewer to ponder who lived behind the windows of these historic homes -- and who might live there still. Knapp also captures the area's unmatched natural bounty, documenting the woods, waterways, and wildlife of a region that, in many ways, has remained unchanged for centuries. <br>In addition to honoring St. Francisville's strong links to the past, Knapp's photographs reveal the town's continuing vitality as a respite from urban life. St. Ferdinand Street, a vibrant collage of small-town southern life; Afton Villa Baptist Church, a thriving African American congregation founded in 1871; Tunica Hills, a popular hiking destination named for the Tunica Indians who lived in the area for centuries; the nearby Port Hudson Civil War battlefield, site of thrilling annual reenactments -- all reveal their singular charm through Knapp's knowing lens. In an introductory essay, acclaimed journalist and author Danny Heitman offers a poetic counterpoint to Knapp's imagery, reflecting on photographs that, for all their historical resonance, \"hum with the immediacy of news.\"<br>Ultimately, Knapp's images transcend time, illuminating a flourishing community of unrivaled natural and historical beauty. A cherished memento for locals and visitors alike, St. Francisville summons readers to discover the rich treasures of this wondrous region for themselves.</p>", "author": "Bevil Knapp, Danny Heitman", "slug": "st-francisville-574632-9780807137345", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780807137345.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574632", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574632/st-francisville-574632-9780807137345", "bisac_codes": [ "PHO000000", "TRV019000" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807147153", "EISBN13": "9780807137345", "EISBN10": "0807137340" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010023152840" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574631", "attributes": { "name": "The Door That Always Opens", "subtitle": "Poems", "description": "<p>Julie Funderburks debut poetry collection, The Door That Always Opens, braids together poems of sharp lyrical imagery and experimental narrative focused frequently on houses: houses under construction or demolition, inhabited, abandoned, and vandalized. Sparkling with details of landscapes and seascapes, her poems depict a state of isometric tension as people struggle to communicate and connect, pulled by feeling and pushed by logic, trapped between choices and mixed loyalties.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Despite what is unknown or misunderstood, however, the poems in The Door That Always Opens retain hope, as life persists in the beauty of the visible world.</p>", "author": "Julie Funderburk", "slug": "the-door-that-always-opens-574631-9780807163979-julie-funderburk", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780807163979.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574631", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574631/the-door-that-always-opens-574631-9780807163979-julie-funderburk", "bisac_codes": [ "POE000000" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807163962", "EISBN13": "9780807163979", "EISBN10": "080716397X" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010015074030" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574630", "attributes": { "name": "Newcomb College, 1886-2006", "subtitle": "Higher Education for Women in New Orleans", "description": "<p>In 1886, Josephine Louise Newcomb donated funds to Tulane University for the founding of the H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College. Her contribution created the nation's first degree-granting coordinate college for women. For more than a century, Newcomb College educated thousands of young women in the liberal arts and sciences, preparing them for positions in the civic and economic world of New Orleans and the South. <br>Newcomb College, 1886--2006 explores the rich history and tradition of the college through a diverse and multidisciplinary collection of essays. Early chapters focus on the life of Josephine Louise Newcomb and her desire to memorialize her daughter Sophie, as well as the development of student culture in the Progressive Era. Several essays explore the staples of a Newcomb education, from its acclaimed pottery and junior year abroad programs to lesser-known but trailblazing work in physical education and chemistry. Concluding biographical and autobiographical chapters recount the lives of distinguished alumnae and the personal memories of Newcomb's influence on New Orleans. The essays offer insight into the work of artists Caroline Wogan Durieux and Ida Kohlmeyer, education reformer Sarah Towles Reed, U.S. representative Lindy Boggs, and other Newcomb leaders in various fields. Throughout the book, contributors reflect on the curriculum, pedagogy, and alliances that created paths for students, not only for advanced studies, but also for their roles as friends, wives, mothers, reformers, and professionals. <br>Touching on three centuries, the book concludes in 2006 when Tulane University closed Newcomb College and Paul Tulane College, the arts and sciences college for men, and united the two as Newcomb-Tulane College. This absorbing collection offers both a scholarly history and an affectionate tribute to a Newcomb education.</p>", "author": "Susan Tucker, Beth Willinger", "slug": "newcomb-college-1886-2006-574630-9780807143377", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780807143377.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574630", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574630/newcomb-college-1886-2006-574630-9780807143377", "bisac_codes": [ "EDU000000", "SOC026000" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807143391", "EISBN13": "9780807143377", "EISBN10": "0807143375" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010018224774" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574629", "attributes": { "name": "The Fable of the Southern Writer", "subtitle": "", "description": "<p>\"With a breadth and depth unsurpassed by any other cultural historian of the South, Lewis Simpson examines the writing of southerners Thomas Jefferson, John Randolph, Mark Twain, Robert Penn Warren, Allen Tate, William Faulkner, Elizabeth Madox Roberts, Arthur Crew Inman, William Styron, and Walker Percy. Simpson offers challenging essays of easy erudition blessedly free of academic jargon.... [They] do not propose to support an overall thesis, but simply explore the southern writer's unique relationship with his or her region, bereft of myth and tradition, in the grasp of science and history.\" -- Library Journal</p>", "author": "Lewis P. Simpson", "slug": "the-fable-of-the-southern-writer-574629-9780807140628-lewis-p-simpson", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780807140628.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574629", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574629/the-fable-of-the-southern-writer-574629-9780807140628-lewis-p-simpson", "bisac_codes": [ "LIT004020" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807153512", "EISBN13": "9780807140628", "EISBN10": "0807140627" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010018222271" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574628", "attributes": { "name": "Death in a Promised Land", "subtitle": "The Tulsa Race Riot of 1921", "description": "<p>Widely believed to be the most extreme incident of white racial violence against African Americans in modern United States history, the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre resulted in the destruction of over one thousand black-owned businesses and homes as well as the murder of between fifty and three hundred black residents.<br><br>Exhaustively researched and critically acclaimed, Scott Ellsworths Death in a Promised Land is the definitive account of the Tulsa race riot and its aftermath, in which much of the history of the destruction and violence was covered up. It is the compelling story of racial ideologies, southwestern politics, and incendiary journalism, and of an embattled black communitys struggle to hold onto its land and freedom. More than just the chronicle of one of the nations most devastating racial pogroms, this critically acclaimed study of American race relations is, above all, a gripping story of terror and lawlessness, and of courage, heroism, and human perseverance.</p>", "author": "Scott Ellsworth, John Hope Franklin", "slug": "death-in-a-promised-land-574628-9780807151501-scott-ellsworth", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780807151501.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574628", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574628/death-in-a-promised-land-574628-9780807151501-scott-ellsworth", "bisac_codes": [ "HIS036120" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807108789", "EISBN13": "9780807151501", "EISBN10": "0807151505" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010018223795" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574627", "attributes": { "name": "Our Minds on Freedom", "subtitle": "Women and the Struggle for Black Equality in Louisiana, 19241967", "description": "<p>Literature on the civil rights movement has long highlighted the leadership of ministerial men and young black revolutionaries, such as Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., Stokely Carmichael, and Malcolm X. Recent studies have begun to explore female participation in the struggle for racial justice, but women continue to be relegated to the margins of civil rights history. In Our Minds on Freedom, Shannon Frystak explores the organizational and leadership roles female civil rights activists in Louisiana played from the 1920s to the 1960s. She highlights a diverse group of courageous women who fought alongside their brothers and fathers, uncles and cousins, to achieve a more racially just Louisiana.<br><br>From the Depression through World War II and the postwar years, Frystak shows, black women in Louisiana joined and led local unions and civil rights organizations, agitating for voting rights and equal treatment in the public arena, in employment, and in admission to the states institutions of higher learning. At the same time, black and white women began to find common ground in organizations such as the YWCA, the NAACP, and the National Urban League. Frystak explores how women of both races worked together to organize the 1953 Baton Rouge bus boycott, which served as inspiration for the more famous Montgomery bus boycott two years later; to alter the system of unequal education throughout the state; and to integrate New Orleans schools after the 1954 Brown decision.<br><br>In the early 1960s, a new generation of female activists joined their older counterparts to work with the NAACP, the Congress of Racial Equality, and a number of local grassroots civil rights organizations. Frystak vividly describes the very real dangers they faced canvassing for voter registration in Louisianas rural areas, teaching in Freedom Schools, and hosting out-of-town civil rights workers in their homes.<br><br>As Frystak shows, the civil rights movement allowed women to step out of their prescribed roles as wives, mothers, and daughters and become significant actors, indeed leaders, in a social-change structure largely dominated by men. Our Minds on Freedom is a welcome addition to the literature of the civil rights movement and will intrigue those interested in African American history, womens history, Louisiana, or the U.S. South.</p>", "author": "Shannon Frystak", "slug": "our-minds-on-freedom-574627-9780807136621-shannon-frystak", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780807136621.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574627", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574627/our-minds-on-freedom-574627-9780807136621-shannon-frystak", "bisac_codes": [ "HIS036000", "SOC032000" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807172360", "EISBN13": "9780807136621", "EISBN10": "080713662X" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010018221785" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574626", "attributes": { "name": "Its Ghostly Workshop", "subtitle": "Poems", "description": "<p>From the Mediterranean to the American West, the poems in Ron Smith's new collection move across time and place to find reliable truths through personal observation. Beyond his own experiences Smith draws from the lives of notable and diverse figures -- Edward Teller, Edgar Allan Poe, Mickey Mantle, Ezra Pound, Robert Penn Warren, Jesse Owens, Leni Riefenstahl, and many others. <br>Its Ghostly Workshop probes the fallibility of philosophy while strengthening the quest for certainty. Wondering and weighing, these are poems capable of conviction as well as doubt. Like the city of Rome, the subject at the book's center, Its Ghostly Workshop aims to rewire us, to \"virus\" us, to \"rush\" us \"with visionary blazes, cascades / of memory, incandescent logic.\"</p>", "author": "Ron Smith", "slug": "its-ghostly-workshop-574626-9780807150313-ron-smith", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780807150313.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574626", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574626/its-ghostly-workshop-574626-9780807150313-ron-smith", "bisac_codes": [ "POE000000" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807150306", "EISBN13": "9780807150313", "EISBN10": "0807150312" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010015060131" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574625", "attributes": { "name": "The Panic of 1857 and the Coming of the Civil War", "subtitle": "", "description": "<p>In the autumn of 1857, sustained runs on New York banks led to a panic atmosphere that affected the American economy for the next two years. In The Panic of 1857 and the Coming of the Civil War, James L. Huston presents an exhaustive analysis of the political, social and intellectual repercussions of the Panic and shows how it exacerbated the conflict between North and South.The panic of 1857 initiated a general inquiry between free traders and protectionists into the deficiencies of American economic practices. A key aspect of this debate was the ultimate fate of the American worker, an issue that was given added emphasis by a series of labor demonstrations and strikes. In an attempt to maintain the material welfare of laborers, northerners advocated a program of high tariffs, free western lands, and education. But these proposals elicited the opposition of southerners, who believed that such policies would not serve the needs of the slaves system. Indeed, many people of the period saw the struggle between North and South as an economic one whose outcome would determine whether laborers would be free and well paid or degraded and poor.Politically, the Panic of 1857 resurrected economic issues that had characterized the Whig-Democratic party system prior to the 1850s. Southerners, observing the collapse of northern banks, believed that they could continue to govern the nation by convincing northern propertied interests that sectionalism had to be ended in order to ensure the continued profitability of intersectional trade. In short, they hoped for a marriage between the Yankee capitalist and the southern plantation owner.However, in northen states, the Panic had made the Whig program of high tariffs, a national bank, and internal improvements popular with distressed members of the community. The country's old-line Whigs and nativists were particularly affected by the state of economic affairs. When Republicans moved to adopt a portion of the old Whig program, conservatives found the attraction irresistible. By maintaining their new coalition with conservatives and by exploiting the weaknesses of the Buchanan administration, the Republicans managed to capture the presidency in 1860.No other book examines in such detail the political ramifications of the Panic of 1857. By explaining how the economic depression influenced the course of sectional debate, Huston has made an important and much-needed contribution to Civil War historiography.</p>", "author": "James L. Huston", "slug": "the-panic-of-1857-and-the-coming-of-the-civil-war-574625-9780807153581-james-l-huston", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780807153581.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574625", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574625/the-panic-of-1857-and-the-coming-of-the-civil-war-574625-9780807153581-james-l-huston", "bisac_codes": [ "HIS036120" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807153598", "EISBN13": "9780807153581", "EISBN10": "0807153583" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010018222238" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574624", "attributes": { "name": "Desegregating Private Higher Education in the South", "subtitle": "Duke, Emory, Rice, Tulane, and Vanderbilt", "description": "<p>After World War II, elite private universities in the South faced growing calls for desegregation. Though, unlike their peer public institutions, no federal court ordered these schools to admit black students and no troops arrived to protect access to the schools, to suggest that desegregation at these universities took place voluntarily would be misleading In Desegregating Private Higher Education in the South,Melissa Kean explores how leaders at five of the region's most prestigious private universities -- Duke, Emory, Rice, Tulane, and Vanderbilt -- sought to strengthen their national position and reputation while simultaneously answering the increasing pressure to end segregation.<br>To join the upper echelon of U. S. universities, these schools required increased federal and northern philanthropic funding. Clearly, to receive this funding, schools had to eliminate segregation, and so a rift appeared within the leadership of the schools. University presidents generally favored making careful accommodations in their racial policies for the sake of academic improvement, but universities' boards of trustees -- the presidents' main opponents -- served as the final decision-makers on university policy. Board members--usually comprised of professional, white, male alumni--reacted strongly to threats against southern white authority and resisted determinedly any outside attempts to impose desegregation.<br>The grassroots civil rights movement created a national crisis of conscience that led many individuals and institutions vital to the universities' survival to insist on desegregation. The schools felt enormous pressure to end discrimination as northern foundations withheld funding, accrediting bodies and professional academic associations denied membership, divinity students and professors chose to study and teach elsewhere, and alumni withheld contributions. The Brown v. Board of Education decision in 1954 gave the desegregation debate a sense of urgency and also inflamed tensions -- which continued to mount into the early 1960s. These tensions and the boards' resistance to change created an atmosphere of crisis that badly eroded their cherished role as southern leaders. When faced with the choice between institutional viability and segregation, Kean explains, they gracelessly relented, refusing to the end to admit they had been pressured by outside forces.<br>Shedding new light on a rare, unexamined facet of the civil rights movement, Desegregating Private Higher Education in the South fills a gap in the history of the academy.</p>", "author": "Melissa Kean", "slug": "desegregating-private-higher-education-in-the-south-574624-9780807134627-melissa-kean", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780807134627.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574624", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574624/desegregating-private-higher-education-in-the-south-574624-9780807134627-melissa-kean", "bisac_codes": [ "HIS036120", "SOC031000" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807149119", "EISBN13": "9780807134627", "EISBN10": "0807134627" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010018225319" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574623", "attributes": { "name": "The Plague Files", "subtitle": "Crisis Management in Sixteenth-Century Seville", "description": "<p>In the first half of the 1580s, Seville, Spain, confronted a series of potentially devastating crises. In three years, the city faced a brush with deadly contagion, including the plague; the billeting of troops in preparation for Philip II's invasion of Portugal; crop failure and famine following drought and locust infestation; an aborted uprising of the Moriscos (Christian converts from Islam); bankruptcy of the municipal government; the threat of pollution and contaminated water; and the disruption of commerce with the Indies. While each of these problems would be formidable on its own, when taken together, the crises threatened Seville's social and economic order. In The Plague Files, Alexandra Parma Cook and Noble David Cook reconstruct daily life during this period in sixteenth-century Seville, exposing the difficult lives of ordinary men, women, and children and shedding light on the challenges municipal officials faced as they attempted to find solutions to the public health emergencies that threatened the city's residents. <br><br>Filling several gaps in the historiography of early modern Spain, this volume offers a history of not only Seville's city government but also the medical profession in Andalusia, from practitioner nurses and barber surgeons (who were often the first to encounter symptoms of plague) to well-trained university physicians. All levels of society enter the picturefrom slaves to the local aristocracy. Drawing on detailed records of city council deliberations, private and public correspondence, reports from physicians and apothecaries, and other primary sources, Cook and Cook recount Seville's story in the words of the people who lived itthe city's governor, the female innkeepers charged with reporting who recently died in their establishments, the physicians who describe the plague victims' symptoms. <br><br>As Cook and Cook's detailed history makes clear, in spite of numerous emergencies, Seville's bureaucracy functioned with relative normality, providing basic services necessary for the survival of its citizens. Their account of the travails of 1580s Seville provides an indispensable resource for those studying early modern Spain.</p>", "author": "Alexandra Parma Cook, Noble David Cook", "slug": "the-plague-files-574623-9780807134986-alexandra-parma-cook-noble-david-cook", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780807134986.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574623", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574623/the-plague-files-574623-9780807134986-alexandra-parma-cook-noble-david-cook", "bisac_codes": [ "HIS010020", "SOC026000" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807143605", "EISBN13": "9780807134986", "EISBN10": "0807134988" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010015235097" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574622", "attributes": { "name": "Disease, Resistance, and Lies", "subtitle": "The Demise of the Transatlantic Slave Trade to Brazil and Cuba", "description": "<p>In the early nineteenth century the major economic players of the Atlantic trade lanes -- the United States, Brazil, and Cuba -- witnessed explosive commercial growth. Commodities like cotton, coffee, and sugar contributed to the fantastic wealth of an elite few and the enslavement of many. As a result of an increased population and concurrent economic expansion, the United States widened its trade relationship with Cuba and Brazil, importing half of Brazil's coffee exports and 82 percent of Cuba's total exports by 1877. Disease, Resistance, and Lies examines the impact of these burgeoning markets on the Atlantic slave trade between these countries from 1808 -- when the U.S. government outlawed American involvement in the slave trade to Cuba and Brazil -- to 1867, when slave traffic to Cuba ceased.<br>In his comparative study, Dale Graden engages several important historiographic debates, including the extent to which U.S. merchants and capital facilitated the slave trade to Brazil and Cuba, the role of infectious disease in ending the trade to those countries, and the effect of slave revolts in helping to bring the transatlantic slave trade to an end.<br>Graden situates the transatlantic slave trade within the expanding and rapidly changing international economy of the first half of the nineteenth century, offering a fresh analysis of the \"Southern Triangle Trade\" that linked Cuba, Brazil, and Africa. Disease, Resistance, and Lies challenges more conservative interpretations of the waning decades of the transatlantic slave trade by arguing that the threats of infectious disease and slave resistance both influenced policymakers to suppress slave traffic to Brazil and Cuba and also made American merchants increasingly unwilling to risk their capital in the transport of slaves.</p>", "author": "Dale T. 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The poet encounters her own naive complicity in southern racism and challenges the narrative of her homeland, the \"Gone with the Wind\" mythology that still haunts the region.<br>Ultimately, Descent creates a fragile reconciliation between past and present, calling over and over again to celebrate being, as in the book's closing manifesto, \"Here. 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On a daily basis, news outlets, politicians, and the entertainment industry -- with motives both dubious and well-intentioned -- launch propagandistic appeals. <br>In Propaganda and American Democracy, eight writers explore various aspects of modern propaganda and its impact. Contributors include leading scholars in the field of propaganda studies: Anthony Pratkanis tackles the thorny issue of the inherent morality of propaganda; J. Michael Sproule explores the extent to which propaganda permeates the U.S. news media; and Randal Marlin charts the methods used to identify, research, and reform the use of propaganda in the public sphere. <br>Other chapters incorporate a strong historical component. Mordecai Lee deftly analyzes the role of wartime propaganda, while Dan Kuehl provides an astute commentary on former and current practices, and Garth S. Jowett investigates how Hollywood has been used as a vehicle for propaganda. In a more personal vein, Asra Q. Nomani recounts her journalistic role in the highly calculated and tragic example of the ultimate act of anti-American propaganda perpetrated by al-Qaeda and carried out against her former colleague, Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl.<br>Propaganda and American Democracy offers an in-depth examination and demonstration of the pervasiveness of propaganda, providing citizens with the knowledge needed to mediate its effect on their lives.Edited by Nancy Snow</p>", "author": "Nancy Snow", "slug": "propaganda-and-american-democracy-574620-9780807154151", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780807154151.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574620", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574620/propaganda-and-american-democracy-574620-9780807154151", "bisac_codes": [ "POL000000", "HIS036000" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807154175", "EISBN13": "9780807154151", "EISBN10": "0807154156" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010018224521" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574619", "attributes": { "name": "Blue Smoke", "subtitle": "The Recorded Journey of Big Bill Broonzy", "description": "<p>A contemporary of blues greats Blind Blake, Tampa Red, and Papa Charlie Jackson, Chicago blues artist William \"Big Bill\" Broonzy influenced an array of postwar musicians, including Muddy Waters, Memphis Slim, and J. B. Lenoir. In Blue Smoke, Roger House tells the extraordinary story of \"Big Bill,\" a working-class bluesman whose circumstances offer a window into the dramatic social transformations faced by African Americans during the first half of the twentieth century. <br>One in a family of twenty-one children and reared by sharecropper parents in Mississippi, Broonzy seemed destined to stay on the land. He moved to Arkansas to work as a sharecropper, preacher, and fiddle player, but the army drafted him during World War I. After his service abroad, Broonzy, like thousands of other black soldiers, returned to the racism and bleak economic prospects of the Jim Crow South and chose to move North to seek new opportunities. After learning to play the guitar, he performed at neighborhood parties in Chicago and in 1927 attracted the attention of Paramount Records, which released his first single, \"House Rent Stomp,\" backed by \"Big Bill's Blues.\" <br>Over the following decades, Broonzy toured the United States and Europe. He released dozens of records but was never quite successful enough to give up working as a manual laborer. Many of his songs reflect this experience as a blue-collar worker, articulating the struggles, determination, and optimism of the urban black working class. Before his death in 1958, Broonzy finally achieved crossover success as a key player in the folk revival movement led by Pete Seeger and Alan Lomax, and as a blues ambassador to British musicians such as Lonnie Donegan and Eric Clapton. <br>Weaving Broonzy's recordings, writings, and interviews into a compelling narrative of his life, Blue Smoke offers a comprehensive portrait of an artist recognized today as one of the most prolific and influential working-class blues musicians of the era.</p>", "author": "Roger House", "slug": "blue-smoke-574619-9780807138090-roger-house", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/cover_image/9780807138090.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574619", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574619/blue-smoke-574619-9780807138090-roger-house", "bisac_codes": [ "MUS025000" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807145999", "EISBN13": "9780807138090", "EISBN10": "0807138096" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010018224146" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574618", "attributes": { "name": "Hearing Sappho in New Orleans", "subtitle": "The Call of Poetry from Congo Square to the Ninth Ward", "description": "<p>While sifting through trash in her flooded New Orleans home, Ruth Salvaggio discovered an old volume of Sappho's poetry stained with muck and mold. In her efforts to restore the book, Salvaggio realized that the process reflected how Sappho's own words were unearthed from the refuse of the ancient world. Undertaking such a task in New Orleans, she sets out to recover the city's rich poetic heritage while searching through its flooded debris. <br>Hearing Sappho in New Orleans is at once a meditation on this poetic city, its many languages and cultures, and a history of its forgotten poetry. Using Sappho's fragments as a guide, Salvaggio roams the streets and neighborhoods of the city as she explores the migrations of lyric poetry from ancient Greece through the African slave trade to indigenous America and ultimately to New Orleans.<br>The book also directs us to the lyric call of poetry, the voice always in search of a listener. Writing in a post-Katrina landscape, Salvaggio recovers and ponders the social consequences of the \"long song\" -- lyric chants, especially the voices of women lost in time -- as it resonates from New Orleans's \"poetic sites\" like Congo Square, where Africans and Indians gathered in the early eighteenth century, to the modern-day Maple Leaf Bar, where poets still convene on Sunday afternoons. She recovers, for example, an all-but-forgotten young Creole woman named Lele and leads us all the way up to celebrated contemporary writers such as former Louisiana poet laureate Brenda Marie Osbey, Sybil Kein, Nicole Cooley, and Katherine Soniat.<br>Hearing Sappho in New Orleans is a reminder of poetry's ability to restore and secure fragile and fragmented connections in a vulnerable and imperiled world.</p>", "author": "Ruth Salvaggio", "slug": "hearing-sappho-in-new-orleans-574618-9780807144428-ruth-salvaggio", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780807144428.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574618", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574618/hearing-sappho-in-new-orleans-574618-9780807144428-ruth-salvaggio", "bisac_codes": [ "LIT000000", "SOC053000" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807144435", "EISBN13": "9780807144428", "EISBN10": "0807144428" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010018224051" } } } }, { "type": "Product", "id": "00010000574617", "attributes": { "name": "Thank God My Regiment an African One", "subtitle": "The Civil War Diary of Colonel Nathan W. Daniels", "description": "<p>\"Incredible!... Anyone interested in the hardship, frustration, and courage of soldiers at war will be enthralled by this book.\" -- James G. Hollandsworth, author of The Louisiana Native Guards<br>Until now, Union army colonel Nathan W. Daniels has been a forgotten man with a forgotten regiment. The white commanding officer of the 2nd Louisiana Native Guard Volunteers, a black regiment, he was removed with his men from mainland military activity and confined to obscure duty on Ship Island, ten miles off the coast of Mississippi. However, as Daniels' intriguing diary documents, despite an unrenowned existence that has earned them little attention from historians, the 2nd Native Guards represent a pioneering stage in the history of black troops at war.<br>The story of the Louisiana Native Guards is essentially the story of the first black commissioned officers in the Civil War. Ordered by General Benjamin F. Butler, the promotion of seventy-six educated, free blacks was an experimental step taken during the early days of black enlistment. However, within one year, nearly all the officers, including their white colonels, were forced out or had resigned in frustration.<br>Daniels lived the tale of these removals and confided his thoughts to his diary, a rare surviving narrative from someone of his rank and position. Woven through daily entries of routine life on the military post are his comments about his responsibilities and frustrations of being caught between the black and white military worlds of the day. He vividly recalls a fierce skirmish on the mainland at East Pascagoula, Mississippi, in which his black troops, having fought superbly, suffered most of their casualties from apparently intentional \"friendly\" fire from the Union gunboat Jackson, sent there to protect them.<br>In May, 1863, Daniels was arrested in New Orleans on seemingly trifling charges related to his duty on Ship Island. He continued his diary in the Federally occupied city, giving fascinating details of life there and chronicling his slow torture in the machinery of the military bureaucracy. He eventually separated from the army under circumstances that remain curious.<br>The diary also provides never-before-published pictures from wartime Ship Island, including photographs of members of Daniels' regiment, visiting ship captains, and Major Francis E. Dumas -- the highest-ranking black officer to see combat during the war. A superb resource in and of themselves, these photographs will fascinate Civil War enthusiasts.<br>The first published personal narrative by a regimental commander of free black troops, Thank God My Regiment an African One offers a unique glimpse into the daily lives of white leaders of the earliest black soldiers. It is a significant contribution to the ongoing documentation of the experience of black troops in the Civil War.</p>", "author": "Edwin C. Bearss, Clare P. 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This extreme measure reflects how pseudoscience justified widespread gender, race, and class discrimination in the Jim Crow South.<br><br>In Bad Girls at Samarcand Karin L. Zipf dissects a dark episode in North Carolina's eugenics campaign through a detailed study of the State Home and Industrial School in Eagle Springs, referred to as Samarcand Manor, and the school's infamous 1931 arson case. The people and events surrounding both the institution and the court case sparked a public debate about the expectations of white womanhood, the nature of contemporary science and medicine, and the role of the juvenile justice system that resonated throughout the succeeding decades.<br><br>Designed to reform and educate unwed poor white girls who were suspected of deviant behavior or victims of sexual abuse, Samarcand Manor allowed for strict disciplinary measures -- including corporal punishment -- in an attempt to instill Victorian ideals of female purity. The harsh treatment fostered a hostile environment and tensions boiled over when several girls set Samarcand on fire, destroying two residence halls. Zipf argues that the subsequent arson trial, which carried the possibility of the death penalty, represented an important turning point in the public characterizations of poor white women; aided by the lobbying efforts of eugenics advocates, the trial helped usher in dramatic policy changes, including the forced sterilization of female juvenile delinquents.<br><br>In addition to the interplay between gender ideals and the eugenics movement, Zipf also investigates the girls who were housed at Samarcand and those specifically charged in the 1931 trial. She explores their negotiation of Jazz Age stereotypes, their strategies of resistance, and their relationship with defense attorney Nell Battle Lewis during the trial. The resultant policy changes -- intelligence testing, sterilization, and parole -- are also explored, providing further insight into why these young women preferred prison to reformatories.<br><br>A fascinating story that grapples with gender bias, sexuality, science, and the justice system all within the context of the Great Depression--era South, Bad Girls at Samarcand makes a compelling contribution to multiple fields of study.</p>", "author": "Karin Lorene Zipf", "slug": "bad-girls-at-samarcand-574616-9780807162514-karin-lorene-zipf", "thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/9780807162514.png", "default_thumbnail_image": "//redshelf-images.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/thumbnail/default_book_thumbnail.jpg", "product_type": "book", "product_id": "574616", "product_url": "/app/ecom/book/574616/bad-girls-at-samarcand-574616-9780807162514-karin-lorene-zipf", "bisac_codes": [ "HIS036120", "SOC032000" ], "items_count": null, "identifiers": { "ISBN13": "9780807162491", "EISBN13": "9780807162514", "EISBN10": "0807162515" }, "drm": null, "cover_image": null, "default_cover_image": null, "book_type": null }, "relationships": { "lowest_offering": { "data": { "type": "offerings", "id": "00010018224119" } } } } ], "meta": { "pagination": { "page": 70757, "pages": 78408, "count": 1568151 } } }
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