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  • Monograph/Item  (10)
  • BSZ  (10)
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  • Monograph/Item  (10)
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Language
  • 1
    UID:
    (DE-627)1883780888
    Format: 1 online resource (275 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9780826506689
    Series Statement: Black Lives and Liberation Series
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
    Additional Edition: 9780826506658
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe 9780826506658
    Language: English
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  • 2
    UID:
    (DE-627)153930048X
    Format: 1 Blu-ray-Disc , farbig, PAL Regionalcode B , 12 cm
    Note: Bildformat: 1.85:1 in 16:9, DTS-HD 5.1Dolby Digital 5.1 , Extras: Blick hinter die Kulissen (ca. 7 Min.) ; Trailer "Molly Moon" in Deutsch und English (je ca. 2 Min.) , Spielfilm. Großbritannien. 2015 , Sprachfassungen: Deutsch, Englisch
    Language: English , German
    Keywords: Film ; Kinderfilm ; Blu-Ray-Disc
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  • 3
    UID:
    (DE-627)1540883973
    Format: 1 DVD-Video (circa 93 min) , farbig, PAL Regionalcode 2 , 12 cm
    Note: Breitbild: 1.85:1 in 16:9, Tonformat Dolby Digital 5.1, Dolby Digital 2.0 , Extras: Blick hinter die Kulissen (ca. 7 Min.) ; Trailer "Molly Moon" in Deutsch und English (je ca. 2 Min.) , Spielfilm. Großbritannien. 2015 , Sprachfassungen: Deutsch, Englisch
    Language: English , German
    Keywords: Film ; Kinderfilm ; DVD-Video
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  • 4
    UID:
    (DE-627)1798071797
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (360 p.) , 16 B/W illustrations
    ISBN: 9781474444156
    Content: Explores the changing roles of women to the Western and offers new approaches to what has been a male-centred genrePioneers new avenues for research on the Western and includes a bibliography of the extant criticism on women and Western to encourage further scholarshipCharts significant shifts in Hollywood’s transmission of American gender values and expectationsExamines the common Western tropes of women homesteaders, soiled doves, masculinised and erotically dangerous women and female characters bent on revengeTraditional and intertextual representations of women in the Western are consideredAs the Western matured, women’s roles became more complex and modern – transmitting a subtle cultural coding about the nature of westward expansionism, heroism, family life, manliness and American femininity. In Women in the Western, a range of international scholars explores the changing roles of women in the genre through case studies of classic films like Broken Arrow (1950) and The Searchers (1956), and contemporary films and TV series like Wind River (2017) and Justified (2010–15). Considering traditional and intertextual representations of women in the Western, the book charts the significant shifts in Hollywood’s transmission of gender values and expectations
    Note: Frontmatter , CONTENTS , FIGURES , ACKNOWLEDGMENTS , INTRODUCTION , PART ONE. ROLES ON THE RANGE , 1. SILENT BUT ROWDY: STUNTWOMEN OF THE EARLY FRONTIER , 2. SUFFERING HEROINES ON THE FRONTIER—MELODRAMA AND PATHOS, 1914–39 , 3. WHEN EAST GOES WEST: THE LOSS OF DRAMATIC AGENCY IN DEMILLE’S WESTERN WOMEN FROM THE 1910s TO THE 1930s , 4. THE VIRGINIAN AND THE ROSE: TWO KEY FEMALE ROLES IN WESTERN FILMS AND COMICS , 5. FREUD, “THE FAMILY ON THE LAND,” AND THE FEMININE TURN IN POST-WAR WESTERNS , 6. CLYTEMNESTRA AND ELECTRA UNDER WESTERN SKIES , 7. “NEVER SEEN A WOMAN WHO WAS MORE OF A MAN”: SALOON GIRLS, WOMEN HEROES, AND FEMALE MASCULINITY IN THE WESTERN , 8. GENDER POLITICS IN THE REVISIONIST WESTERN: INTERROGATING THE PERPETRATOR–VICTIM BINARY IN THE MISSING (HOWARD 2003) , PART TWO. WOMEN’S ISSUES IN POST-WAR, REVISIONIST, AND FEMINIST WESTERNS , 9. TRADING PLACES—TRADING RACES: THE CROSS-CULTURAL ASSIMILATION OF WOMEN IN THE SEARCHERS (1956) AND THE UNFORGIVEN (1960) , 10. WESTERN NOSTALGIA, REVISIONISM, AND NATIVE AMERICAN WOMEN IN WIND RIVER (2017) , 11. MOSTLY WHORES WITH A (VERY) FEW ANGELS: ASIAN WOMEN IN THE WESTERN , 12. “WE BEEN HAUNTED A LONG TIME”—RAPED WOMEN IN WESTERNS , 13. “MY BODY FOR A HAND OF POKER”: THE BELLE STARR STORY IN ITS CONTEXTS , 14. THE FEMALE AVENGER IN POST-9/11 WESTERNS , 15. YOU’VE GOT SOMETHING: FEMALE AGENCY IN JUSTIFIED , 16. EASTWARD THE WOMEN: REMAPPING WOMEN’S JOURNEYS IN TOMMY LEE JONES’S THE HOMESMAN (2014) , 17. WOMEN GOTTA GUN? ICONOGRAPHY AND FEMALE REPRESENTATION IN GODLESS , 18. WAGON MISTRESS , PART THREE. FILMOGRAPHY AND BIBLIOGRAPHIES , 19. WOMEN IN THE WESTERN FILMOGRAPHY AND BIBLIOGRAPHY , CONTRIBUTORS , INDEX , In English
    Language: English
    URL: Cover
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  • 5
    UID:
    (DE-627)1656163926
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (4 Seiten) , Illustrationen, Karten
    Series Statement: Fact sheets 2018-3033
    Note: Gesehen am 25.01.2020 , Volltext: PDF
    Language: English
    Keywords: Golf von Mexiko ; Texas ; Küstengebiet ; Schiefergas ; Rohstoffreserve ; Einführung ; Texas ; Golf von Mexiko ; Kreide ; Schieferöl ; Tonstein ; Erdgasgeologie ; Erdölgeologie ; Muttergestein ; Erdgaslagerstätte ; Erdöllagerstätte ; Vorkommen ; Einführung
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 6
    UID:
    (DE-627)183344907X
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (23 p)
    Series Statement: AEI-Brookings Joint Center Working Paper No. B00-01
    Content: As we understand it, the D.C. Circuit did not allow the EPA to consider the costs of complying with ozone and PM NAAQS. As we further understand it, this legal ruling can be overturned only by this Court. As economists, we believe that the D.C. Circuit's ruling not allowing the EPA to consider important information relating to the consequences of its regulatory actions is economically unsound. Without delving into the legal aspects of the case, we present below why we think the Court should allow the EPA to consider costs in setting standards. In particular, we believe that, as a general principle, regulators should be allowed to consider explicitly the full consequences of their regulatory decisions. These consequences include the regulation's benefits, costs, and any other relevant factors
    Note: Nach Informationen von SSRN wurde die ursprüngliche Fassung des Dokuments July 2000 erstellt
    Language: English
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  • 7
    UID:
    (DE-627)1747232033
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (300 p) , 9 color illustrations
    Edition: [Online-Ausgabe]
    ISBN: 9780824889159
    Series Statement: Biography Monographs
    Content: Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- Acknowledgments -- A Prayer, Lifting -- Kūʻokoʻa: Independence -- Introduction -- I. Overlapping Emergencies—(Over)Turnings -- Introduction -- Grounded -- Catastrophic Failure of the Planet -- This Is Just the Beginning: Climate Change, Positive Peace, and the “New Normal” -- The COVID-19 Crisis -- COVID-19, the Disease that Has Shined a Light on Health Equity -- Local Foods Through Crisis -- Reopening the Hawai‘i Tourism Economy in the Age of COVID-19 -- Of Pandemics and Financial Emergencies: Will We Restructure or Transform the University? -- Food Insecurity—An Institutional Response -- Inu i ka Wai ʻAwaʻawa: Drink of the Bitter Waters -- Political Engagement: A New Article of Lived Faith -- This Is Not a Drill: Notes on Surviving the End of the World, Again -- The Future Is Koa -- Waiʻaleʻale -- II. Resources and Values—Turning to Our Strengths -- Introduction -- We Da Waiwai -- Ahupuaʻa Values Sho -- An Aloha ʻĀina Economy—Give, Take, Regenerate -- Hawaiʻi and Tourism Reimagined -- Ka ʻĀina Moana -- From Wai to Waiwai -- Renewable Energy—Stop Burning Stuff -- E Pū Paʻakai Kākou -- The State of Our Starch -- Food of Our Future Grows from Seeds of Our Past -- Toward a Smaller, Smarter Correctional System for Hawaiʻi -- Labor and Social Justice against the Colonial University: A Union for Radical Solidarity -- The Sustaining Force of Sports -- The Value of Mele -- He Makeʻe ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi, He Makeʻe Lāhui: To Lose Our Language Is to Forget Who We Are -- Nuchi-gusui: Sustenance and Nourishment for Living -- III. Community Building—Turning Toward Each Other -- Introduction -- Kumpang Economy -- Hey! Let’s Get Organized, Hawaiʻi! -- Hoʻokuʻikahi Aloha Molokaʻi -- Lessons from Jojo: Organizing Side-by-Side with Power, Heart, and Grace -- Teachers, Public Education, and Civic Leadership -- Hawaiʻi Needs to Stand Governing on Its Head -- Civic Engagement—Picking a Fight -- Molokai ‘Āina Momona -- Home Is What We Make It -- Reconnecting Spiritual Roots in Our Faith Communities -- We Need to Talk: How a Con Con Can Secure Hawai‘i’s Post-COVID Future -- Hawaiʻi Breathes Multilingualism -- Activist Genealogy: Visions and Enactments of Solidarity Across Black and Kanaka Maoli Movements -- “If people aren’t locking rocks together, we ain’t got a story”: Pōhaku by Pōhaku, Connecting Stories of Community Building -- Wednesdays with Grandma -- We Are Art -- Lessons from Aloha ʻĀina Activism: Visioning and Planning for Our Islands and Communities in the Wake of COVID-19 -- IV. Emerging Futures—Turning Anew -- Introduction -- The Story and Sisterhood Behind the World’s First Feminist Economic Recovery Plan for COVID-19 -- Air Pollution and the Pandemic: How Will COVID-19 Shape Hawai‘i’s Response to Global Climate Change? -- Our City as Ahupuaʻa: For Justice-Advancing Futures -- ʻOhana Urbanism -- Prisons—Has COVID-19 Offered Hawaiʻi the Road to Redemption? -- Housing and Aloha ʻĀina: Beyond Building Our Way Out of the Crisis -- No Kākou Ke Kuleana: The Responsibility Belongs to Us -- Technology, Entrepreneurship, and Waiwai -- Ulu Kukui O Kaulike: Advancing Justice for Kānaka Maoli in One Generation Through Health Policy -- Shine Your Light Wherever You Go -- Puʻuhonua o Puʻuhuluhulu University: He Kīpuka Aloha ʻĀina no ka ʻImi Naʻauao -- Haumāna -- Ancient Is Modern—Transforming Public Education for Hawaiians -- Writing in the Path of Our Ancestors: Ke Ea Hawaiʻi Student Council -- The Next Aloha ʻĀina -- Hāmākua 2120: A Moʻolelo of Abundance from a Future -- Dear Reader: Making the Value of Hawaiʻi Together
    Content: “Hulihia” refers to massive upheavals that change the landscape, overturn the normal, reverse the flow, and sweep away the prevailing or assumed. We live in such days. Pandemics. Threats to ʻāina. Political dysfunction, cultural appropriation, and disrespect. But also powerful surges toward sustainability, autonomy, and sovereignty.The first two volumes of The Value of Hawaiʻi (Knowing the Past, Facing the Future and Ancestral Roots, Oceanic Visions) ignited public conversations, testimony, advocacy, and art for political and social change. These books argued for the value of connecting across our different expertise and experiences, to talk about who we are and where we are going.In a world in crisis, what does Hawaiʻi’s experience tell us about how to build a society that sees opportunities in the turning and changing times? As islanders, we continue to grapple with experiences of racism, colonialism, environmental damage, and the costs of modernization, and bring to this our own striking creativity and histories for how to live peacefully and productively together. Steered by the four scholars who edited the previous volumes, The Value of Hawaiʻi 3: Hulihia, the Turning offers multigenerational visions of a Hawaiʻi not defined by the United States. Community leaders, cultural practitioners, artists, educators, and activists share exciting paths forward for the future of Hawaiʻi, on topics such as education, tourism and other economies, elder care, agriculture and food, energy and urban development, the environment, sports, arts and culture, technology, and community life.These visions ask us to recognize what we truly value about our home, and offer a wealth of starting points for critical and productive conversations together in this time of profound and permanent change
    Note: Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web. , In English
    Language: English
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
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  • 8
    UID:
    (DE-627)1773365630
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (300 pages) , 9 color illustrations
    ISBN: 9780824889159 , 0824889150
    Series Statement: Biography Monographs
    Content: Frontmatter --CONTENTS --Acknowledgments --A Prayer, Lifting --Kūʻokoʻa: Independence --Introduction --I. Overlapping Emergencies--(Over)Turnings --Introduction --Grounded --Catastrophic Failure of the Planet --This Is Just the Beginning: Climate Change, Positive Peace, and the "New Normal" --The COVID-19 Crisis --COVID-19, the Disease that Has Shined a Light on Health Equity --Local Foods Through Crisis --Reopening the Hawai'i Tourism Economy in the Age of COVID-19 --Of Pandemics and Financial Emergencies: Will We Restructure or Transform the University? --Food Insecurity--An Institutional Response --Inu i ka Wai ʻAwaʻawa: Drink of the Bitter Waters --Political Engagement: A New Article of Lived Faith --This Is Not a Drill: Notes on Surviving the End of the World, Again --The Future Is Koa --Waiʻaleʻale --II. Resources and Values--Turning to Our Strengths --Introduction --We Da Waiwai --Ahupuaʻa Values Sho --An Aloha ʻĀina Economy--Give, Take, Regenerate --Hawaiʻi and Tourism Reimagined --Ka ʻĀina Moana --From Wai to Waiwai --Renewable Energy--Stop Burning Stuff --E Pū Paʻakai Kākou --The State of Our Starch --Food of Our Future Grows from Seeds of Our Past --Toward a Smaller, Smarter Correctional System for Hawaiʻi --Labor and Social Justice against the Colonial University: A Union for Radical Solidarity --The Sustaining Force of Sports --The Value of Mele --He Makeʻe ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi, He Makeʻe Lāhui: To Lose Our Language Is to Forget Who We Are --Nuchi-gusui: Sustenance and Nourishment for Living --III. Community Building--Turning Toward Each Other --Introduction --Kumpang Economy --Hey! Let's Get Organized, Hawaiʻi! --Hoʻokuʻikahi Aloha Molokaʻi --Lessons from Jojo: Organizing Side-by-Side with Power, Heart, and Grace --Teachers, Public Education, and Civic Leadership --Hawaiʻi Needs to Stand Governing on Its Head --Civic Engagement--Picking a Fight --Molokai 'Āina Momona --Home Is What We Make It --Reconnecting Spiritual Roots in Our Faith Communities --We Need to Talk: How a Con Con Can Secure Hawai'i's Post-COVID Future --Hawaiʻi Breathes Multilingualism --Activist Genealogy: Visions and Enactments of Solidarity Across Black and Kanaka Maoli Movements --"If people aren't locking rocks together, we ain't got a story": Pōhaku by Pōhaku, Connecting Stories of Community Building --Wednesdays with Grandma --We Are Art --Lessons from Aloha ʻĀina Activism: Visioning and Planning for Our Islands and Communities in the Wake of COVID-19 --IV. Emerging Futures--Turning Anew --Introduction --The Story and Sisterhood Behind the World's First Feminist Economic Recovery Plan for COVID-19 --Air Pollution and the Pandemic: How Will COVID-19 Shape Hawai'i's Response to Global Climate Change? --Our City as Ahupuaʻa: For Justice-Advancing Futures --ʻOhana Urbanism --Prisons--Has COVID-19 Offered Hawaiʻi the Road to Redemption? --Housing and Aloha ʻĀina: Beyond Building Our Way Out of the Crisis --No Kākou Ke Kuleana: The Responsibility Belongs to Us --Technology, Entrepreneurship, and Waiwai --Ulu Kukui O Kaulike: Advancing Justice for Kānaka Maoli in One Generation Through Health Policy --Shine Your Light Wherever You Go --Puʻuhonua o Puʻuhuluhulu University: He Kīpuka Aloha ʻĀina no ka ʻImi Naʻauao --Haumāna --Ancient Is Modern--Transforming Public Education for Hawaiians --Writing in the Path of Our Ancestors: Ke Ea Hawaiʻi Student Council --The Next Aloha ʻĀina --Hāmākua 2120: A Moʻolelo of Abundance from a Future --Dear Reader: Making the Value of Hawaiʻi Together
    Content: "Hulihia" refers to massive upheavals that change the landscape, overturn the normal, reverse the flow, and sweep away the prevailing or assumed. We live in such days. Pandemics. Threats to ʻāina. Political dysfunction, cultural appropriation, and disrespect. But also powerful surges toward sustainability, autonomy, and sovereignty. The first two volumes of The Value of Hawaiʻi (Knowing the Past, Facing the Future and Ancestral Roots, Oceanic Visions) ignited public conversations, testimony, advocacy, and art for political and social change. These books argued for the value of connecting across our different expertise and experiences, to talk about who we are and where we are going. In a world in crisis, what does Hawaiʻi's experience tell us about how to build a society that sees opportunities in the turning and changing times? As islanders, we continue to grapple with experiences of racism, colonialism, environmental damage, and the costs of modernization, and bring to this our own striking creativity and histories for how to live peacefully and productively together. Steered by the four scholars who edited the previous volumes, The Value of Hawaiʻi 3: Hulihia, the Turning offers multigenerational visions of a Hawaiʻi not defined by the United States. Community leaders, cultural practitioners, artists, educators, and activists share exciting paths forward for the future of Hawaiʻi, on topics such as education, tourism and other economies, elder care, agriculture and food, energy and urban development, the environment, sports, arts and culture, technology, and community life. These visions ask us to recognize what we truly value about our home, and offer a wealth of starting points for critical and productive conversations together in this time of profound and permanent change
    Note: In English
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Value of Hawaiʻi 3 Honolulu : University of Hawaii Press, [2021]
    Language: English
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  • 9
    UID:
    (DE-627)1805849557
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (300 pages) , 9 color illustrations
    ISBN: 9780824889166 , 0824889169
    Series Statement: Biography Monograph
    Content: Frontmatter --CONTENTS --Acknowledgments --A Prayer, Lifting --Kūʻokoʻa: Independence --Introduction --I. Overlapping Emergencies--(Over)Turnings --Introduction --Grounded --Catastrophic Failure of the Planet --This Is Just the Beginning: Climate Change, Positive Peace, and the "New Normal" --The COVID-19 Crisis --COVID-19, the Disease that Has Shined a Light on Health Equity --Local Foods Through Crisis --Reopening the Hawai'i Tourism Economy in the Age of COVID-19 --Of Pandemics and Financial Emergencies: Will We Restructure or Transform the University? --Food Insecurity--An Institutional Response --Inu i ka Wai ʻAwaʻawa: Drink of the Bitter Waters --Political Engagement: A New Article of Lived Faith --This Is Not a Drill: Notes on Surviving the End of the World, Again --The Future Is Koa --Waiʻaleʻale --II. Resources and Values--Turning to Our Strengths --Introduction --We Da Waiwai --Ahupuaʻa Values Sho --An Aloha ʻĀina Economy--Give, Take, Regenerate --Hawaiʻi and Tourism Reimagined --Ka ʻĀina Moana --From Wai to Waiwai --Renewable Energy--Stop Burning Stuff --E Pū Paʻakai Kākou --The State of Our Starch --Food of Our Future Grows from Seeds of Our Past --Toward a Smaller, Smarter Correctional System for Hawaiʻi --Labor and Social Justice against the Colonial University: A Union for Radical Solidarity --The Sustaining Force of Sports --The Value of Mele --He Makeʻe ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi, He Makeʻe Lāhui: To Lose Our Language Is to Forget Who We Are --Nuchi-gusui: Sustenance and Nourishment for Living --III. Community Building--Turning Toward Each Other --Introduction --Kumpang Economy --Hey! Let's Get Organized, Hawaiʻi! --Hoʻokuʻikahi Aloha Molokaʻi --Lessons from Jojo: Organizing Side-by-Side with Power, Heart, and Grace --Teachers, Public Education, and Civic Leadership --Hawaiʻi Needs to Stand Governing on Its Head --Civic Engagement--Picking a Fight --Molokai 'Āina Momona --Home Is What We Make It --Reconnecting Spiritual Roots in Our Faith Communities --We Need to Talk: How a Con Con Can Secure Hawai'i's Post-COVID Future --Hawaiʻi Breathes Multilingualism --Activist Genealogy: Visions and Enactments of Solidarity Across Black and Kanaka Maoli Movements --"If people aren't locking rocks together, we ain't got a story": Pōhaku by Pōhaku, Connecting Stories of Community Building --Wednesdays with Grandma --We Are Art --Lessons from Aloha ʻĀina Activism: Visioning and Planning for Our Islands and Communities in the Wake of COVID-19 --IV. Emerging Futures--Turning Anew --Introduction --The Story and Sisterhood Behind the World's First Feminist Economic Recovery Plan for COVID-19 --Air Pollution and the Pandemic: How Will COVID-19 Shape Hawai'i's Response to Global Climate Change? --Our City as Ahupuaʻa: For Justice-Advancing Futures --ʻOhana Urbanism --Prisons--Has COVID-19 Offered Hawaiʻi the Road to Redemption? --Housing and Aloha ʻĀina: Beyond Building Our Way Out of the Crisis --No Kākou Ke Kuleana: The Responsibility Belongs to Us --Technology, Entrepreneurship, and Waiwai --Ulu Kukui O Kaulike: Advancing Justice for Kānaka Maoli in One Generation Through Health Policy --Shine Your Light Wherever You Go --Puʻuhonua o Puʻuhuluhulu University: He Kīpuka Aloha ʻĀina no ka ʻImi Naʻauao --Haumāna --Ancient Is Modern--Transforming Public Education for Hawaiians --Writing in the Path of Our Ancestors: Ke Ea Hawaiʻi Student Council --The Next Aloha ʻĀina --Hāmākua 2120: A Moʻolelo of Abundance from a Future --Dear Reader: Making the Value of Hawaiʻi Together
    Content: "Hulihia" refers to massive upheavals that change the landscape, overturn the normal, reverse the flow, and sweep away the prevailing or assumed. We live in such days. Pandemics. Threats to ʻāina. Political dysfunction, cultural appropriation, and disrespect. But also powerful surges toward sustainability, autonomy, and sovereignty. The first two volumes of The Value of Hawaiʻi (Knowing the Past, Facing the Future and Ancestral Roots, Oceanic Visions) ignited public conversations, testimony, advocacy, and art for political and social change. These books argued for the value of connecting across our different expertise and experiences, to talk about who we are and where we are going. In a world in crisis, what does Hawaiʻi's experience tell us about how to build a society that sees opportunities in the turning and changing times? As islanders, we continue to grapple with experiences of racism, colonialism, environmental damage, and the costs of modernization, and bring to this our own striking creativity and histories for how to live peacefully and productively together. Steered by the four scholars who edited the previous volumes, The Value of Hawaiʻi 3: Hulihia, the Turning offers multigenerational visions of a Hawaiʻi not defined by the United States. Community leaders, cultural practitioners, artists, educators, and activists share exciting paths forward for the future of Hawaiʻi, on topics such as education, tourism and other economies, elder care, agriculture and food, energy and urban development, the environment, sports, arts and culture, technology, and community life. These visions ask us to recognize what we truly value about our home, and offer a wealth of starting points for critical and productive conversations together in this time of profound and permanent change
    Note: Includes bibliographical references , In English
    Additional Edition: 9780824889159
    Additional Edition: 0824889150
    Additional Edition: 9780824889067
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Value of Hawaiʻi 3 Honolulu : University of Hawaii Press, [2021]
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books
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  • 10
    UID:
    (DE-627)1761838679
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1128 p)
    Edition: [Online-Ausgabe]
    ISBN: 9780674054219
    Series Statement: Harvard University Press Reference Library
    Content: Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- INTRODUCTION -- A New Literary History of America -- 1507 The name "America" appears on a map -- 1521, August 13 Mexico in America -- 1536, July 24 Alvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca -- 1585 "Counterfeited according to the truth" -- 1607 Fear and love in the Virginia colony -- 1630 A city upon a hill -- 1643 A nearer neighbor to the Indians -- 1666, July 10 Anne Bradstreet -- 1670 The American jeremiad -- 1670 The stamp of God's image -- 1673 The Jesuit relations -- 1683 Francis Daniel Pastorius -- 1692 The Salem witchcraft trials -- 1693-1694, March 4 Edward Taylor -- 1700 Samuel Sewall, The Selling of Joseph -- 1722 Benjamin Franklin, The Silence Dogood Letters -- 1740 The Great Awakening -- Late 1740s; 1814, September 13-14 Two national anthems -- 1765, December 23 Michel-Guillaume Jean de Crèvecoeur -- 1773, September Phillis Wheatley -- 1776 The Declaration of Independence -- 1784, June Charles Willson Peale -- 1787 James Madison, Notes of the Debates in the Federal Convention -- 1787-1790 John Adams, Discourses on Davila -- 1791 Philip Freneau and The National Gazette -- 1796 Washington's farewell address -- 1798 Mary Rowlandson and the Alien and Sedition Acts -- 1798 American gothic -- 1801, March 4 Jefferson's first inaugural address -- 1804, January The matter of Haiti -- 1809 Cupola of the world -- 1819, February The Missouri crisis -- 1820, November 27 Landscape with birds -- 1821 Sequoyah, the Cherokee syllabary -- 1821, June 30 Junius Brutus Booth -- 1822 Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, the Ojibwe firefly, and Longfellow's Hiawatha -- 1825, November Thomas Cole and the Hudson River school -- 1826, July 4 Songs of the republic -- 1826 Cooper's Leatherstocking tales -- 1826; 1927 Transnational poetry -- 1827 Joseph Smith and the Book of Mormon -- 1828 David Walker, Appeal, in Four Articles -- 1830, May 21 Jump Jim Crow -- 1831, March 5 The Cherokee Nation decision -- 1832, July 10 President Jackson's bank veto -- 1835, January Democracy in America -- 1835 William Gilmore Simms, The Yemassee -- 1835 The Sacred Harp -- 1836, February 23-March 6 The Alamo and Texas border writing -- 1836, February 28 Richard Henry Dana, Jr. -- 1837, August 15 Ralph Waldo Emerson, "The American Scholar" -- 1838, July 15 "The Divinity School Address" -- 1838, September 3 The slave narrative -- 1841 "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" -- 1846, June James Russell Lowell's Biglow Papers -- 1846, late July Henry David Thoreau -- 1850 The Scarlet Letter -- 1850, July 19 Margaret Fuller and the Transcendentalist Movement -- 1850, August 5 Nathaniel Hawthorne and Herman Melville -- 1851 Moby-Dick -- 1851 Uncle Tom's Cabin -- 1852 Hawthorne's Blithedale Romance and utopian communities -- 1852, July 5 Frederick Douglass, "What to the slave is the Fourth of July?" -- 1854 Maria Cummins and sentimental fiction -- 1855 Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass -- 1858 The Lincoln-Douglas debates -- 1859 The science of the Indian -- 1861 Emily Dickinson -- 1862, December 13 The journeys of Little Women -- 1865, March 4 Lincoln's second inaugural address -- 1865 "Conditions of repose" -- 1869, March 4 Carl Schurz -- 1872, November 5 All men and women are created equal -- 1875 The Winchester Rifle -- 1876, January 6 Melville in the dark -- 1876, March 10 The art of telephony -- 1878 "How to Make Our Ideas Clear" -- 1879 John Muir and nature writing -- 1881, January 24 Henry James, Portrait of a Lady -- 1884 Mark Twain's hairball -- 1884, July The Linotype machine -- 1884, November The Southwest imagined -- 1885 The problem of error -- 1885, July Limits to violence -- 1885, October Writing New Orleans -- 1888 The introduction of motion pictures -- 1889, August 28 A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court -- 1893 Chief Simon Pokagon and Native American literature -- 1895 Ida B. Wells, A Red Record -- 1896 Paul Laurence Dunbar, Lyrics of Lowly Life -- 1896, September 6 Queen Lili'uokalani -- 1897, Memorial Day The Robert Gould Shaw and 54th Regiment Monument -- 1898, June 22 Literature and imperialism -- 1899; 1924 McTeague and Greed -- 1900 Henry Adams -- 1900 The Wizard of Oz -- 1900; 1905 Sister Carrie and The House of Mirth -- 1901 Charles W. Chesnutt, The Marrow of Tradition -- 1901; 1903 The problem of the color line -- 1903, May 5 "The real American has not yet arrived" -- 1903 The invention of the blues -- 1903 One sees what one sees -- 1904, August 30 Henry James in America -- 1905, October 15 Little Nemo in Slumberland -- 1906, April 9 The Azusa Street revival -- 1906, April 18, 5:14 a.m. The San Francisco Earthquake -- 1911 "Alexander's Ragtime Band" -- 1912, April 15 Lifeboats cut adrift -- 1912 The lure of impossible things -- 1912 Tarzan begins his reign -- 1913 A modernist moment -- 1915 D. W. Griffith, The Birth of a Nation -- 1915 Robert Frost -- 1917 The philosopher and the millionaire -- 1920, August 10 Mamie Smith's "Crazy Blues" -- 1921 Jean Toomer -- 1922 T. S. Eliot and D. H. Lawrence -- 1923, October Chaplinesque -- 1924 F. O. Matthiessen meets Russell Cheney -- 1924, May 26 The Johnson-Reed Act and ethnic literature -- 1925 The Great Gatsby -- 1925, June Sinclair Lewis -- 1925, July The Scopes trial -- 1925, August 16 Dorothy Parker -- 1926 Fire -- 1926 Hardboiled -- 1926 The Book-of-the-Month Club -- 1927 Carl Sandburg and The American Songbag -- 1927, May 16 "Free to develop their faculties" -- 1928, April 8, Easter Sunday Dilsey Gibson goes to church -- 1928, Summer John Dos Passos -- 1928, November 18 The mouse that whistled -- 1930 "You're swell!" -- 1930, March The Silent Enemy -- 1930, October Grant Wood's American Gothic -- 1931, March 19 Nevada legalizes gambling -- 1932 Edmund Wilson, The American Jitters -- 1932 Arthur Miller -- 1932, April or May The River Rouge plant and industrial beauty -- 1932, Christmas Ned Cobb -- 1933 Baby Face is censored -- 1933, March FDR's first Fireside Chat -- 1934, September Robert Penn Warren -- 1935 The Popular Front -- 1935 The skyscraper -- 1935, June 10 Alcoholics Anonymous -- 1935, October 10 Porgy and Bess -- 1936 Gone with the Wind and Absalom, Absalom -- 1936, July 5 Two days in Harlem -- 1936, November 23 Life begins -- 1938 Superman -- 1938, May Jelly Roll Morton speaks -- 1939 Billie Holiday, "Strange Fruit" -- 1939; 1981 Up from invisibility -- 1940 "No way like the American way" -- 1940-1944 Preston Sturges -- 1941 An insolent style -- 1941 Citizen Kane -- 1941 The word "multicultural" -- 1943 Hemingway's paradise, Hemingway's prose -- 1944 The second Bill of Rights -- 1945, February Bebop -- 1945, April 11 Thomas Pynchon and modern war -- 1945, August 6, 10:45 a.m. The atom bomb -- 1946, December 5 Integrating the military -- 1947, December 3 Tennessee Williams -- 1948 Norbert Wiener, Cybernetics -- 1948 Saul Bellow -- 1949-1950 "The Birth of the Cool" -- 1950, November 28 "Damned busy painting" -- 1951 A poet among painters -- 1951 The Catcher in the Rye -- 1951 James Jones, From Here to Eternity -- 1951 A soft voice -- 1952, April 12 Elia Kazan and the blacklist in Hollywood -- 1952, June 10 C. L. R. James -- 1953, January 1 The song in country music -- 1954 Wallace Stevens, Collected Poems -- 1955, August 11 "The self-respect of my people" -- 1955, September 21 A. J. Liebling and the Marciano- Moore fight -- 1955, October 7 A generation in miniature -- 1955, December Nabokov's Lolita -- 1956, April 16 "Roll Over Beethoven" -- 1957 Dr. Seuss -- 1959 "Nobody's perfect" -- 1960 Psycho -- 1960, January More than a game -- 1961, January 20 JFK's inaugural address and Catch-22 -- 1961, July 2 The author as advertisement -- 1962 Bob Dylan writes "Song to Woody" -- 1962 "White Elephant Art vs.
    Content: Termite Art" -- 1963, April "Letter from Birmingham Jail" -- 1964 Robert Lowell, "For the Union Dead" -- 1964, October 27 "The last stand on Earth" -- 1965, September 11 The Council on Interracial Books for Children -- 1965, October The Autobiography of Malcolm X -- 1968 Norman Mailer -- 1968, March The illusory babels of language -- 1968, August 28 The plight of conservative literature -- 1969 Elizabeth Bishop, Complete Poems -- 1969, January 11 The first Asian Americans -- 1969, November 12 The eye of Vietnam -- 1970 Maya Angelou, Toni Morrison, Alice Walker -- 1970; 1972 Linda Lovelace -- 1973 Loisaida literature -- 1973 Adrienne Rich, Diving into the Wreck -- 1975 Gayl Jones -- 1981, March 31 Toni Morrison -- 1982 Edmund White, A Boy's Own Story -- 1982 Wild Style -- 1982 Maya Lin's wall -- 1982, November 8 Harriet Wilson -- 1985, April 24 Henry Roth -- 1987 Maxine Hong Kingston, Tripmaster Monkey -- 1995 Philip Roth -- 2001 Twenty-first-century free verse -- 2003 Richard Powers, The Time of Our Singing -- 2005, August 29 Hurricane Katrina -- 2008, November 4 Barack Obama -- Contributors -- Index
    Content: America is a nation making itself up as it goes along-a story of discovery and invention unfolding in speeches and images, letters and poetry, unprecedented feats of scholarship and imagination. In these myriad, multiform, endlessly changing expressions of the American experience, the authors and editors of this volume find a new American history. In more than two hundred original essays, A New Literary History of America brings together the nation's many voices. From the first conception of a New World in the sixteenth century to the latest re-envisioning of that world in cartoons, television, science fiction, and hip hop, the book gives us a new, kaleidoscopic view of what "Made in America" means. Literature, music, film, art, history, science, philosophy, political rhetoric-cultural creations of every kind appear in relation to each other, and to the time and place that give them shape. The meeting of minds is extraordinary as T. J. Clark writes on Jackson Pollock, Paul Muldoon on Carl Sandburg, Camille Paglia on Tennessee Williams, Sarah Vowell on Grant Wood's American Gothic, Walter Mosley on hard-boiled detective fiction, Jonathan Lethem on Thomas Edison, Gerald Early on Tarzan, Bharati Mukherjee on The Scarlet Letter, Gish Jen on Catcher in the Rye, and Ishmael Reed on Huckleberry Finn. From Anne Bradstreet and John Winthrop to Philip Roth and Toni Morrison, from Alexander Graham Bell and Stephen Foster to Alcoholics Anonymous, Life, Chuck Berry, Alfred Hitchcock, and Ronald Reagan, this is America singing, celebrating itself, and becoming something altogether different, plural, singular, new. Please visit www.newliteraryhistory.com for more information
    Note: Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web. , In English
    Language: English
    URL: Cover
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