history

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history

Student movements of the 1960s

2012
This book opens with background information on student movements in the 1960s, presents the controversies surrounding student activism, and includes personal narratives from people who witnessed or participated in the activism regarding race, nuclear arms, the Vietnam War, and freedom of expression.

The red scare

2012
This book traces the history of the Red Scare, from 1917 when the Bolsheviks take power in Russia to the Army-McCarthy hearings in 1954.

The freedom rides

2012
This book traces the history of the Freedom Rides of 1961, offering a thorough look at the experiences of the 1960s that have shaped the black community and the American people as a whole.

The march from Selma to Montgomery

2011
This book discusses the 1965 March from Selma to Montgomery when 300 African Americans demanded that the government protect their voting rights which led to the August 6, 1965, Voting Rights Act.

Jim Crow laws

2012
A history of discriminatory segregation laws of the American South from the end of the Civil War to the passage of the 1965 Civil Rights Act.

Are traditional media dead?

can journalism survive in the digital world?
2012

500 cameras

170 years of photographic innovation
2011
A guide to the history and invention of the camera, with photos and information of five hundred cameras of all types, including dry plate, field, detective, twin-lens reflex, 35 mm, panoramic, stereo, toy, specialty cameras, and more.

Glass

a short history
2012
"Illustrated with 120 superb pieces, Glass: A Short History brings to life a centuries-old craft that has served many purposes, styles, and cultures. Until the first century BC, glass was made only in Western Asia, Egypt, and the Mediterranean regions; its manufacture then spread to China and other areas. The peoples of the Roman Empire included the most versatile glassmakers in the ancient world, leading to both widely available low-cost glassware and stunning luxury glass. During the Middle Ages, Islamic glassworkers decorated their fine cut glass with gilding and brilliant enamel. In the 15th century, the focus of luxury glassmaking shifted to Venice. Glassmaking in Europe was transformed again in the 17th century, when thick-walled objects with cut and engraved ornament were in great demand. By the nineteenth century, glassmaking was well established in America, where, as in Europe, industrial processes were developed to supply the rapidly expanding population with glassware for daily use. Within the past 50 years glass has gained acceptance as a medium for artistic expression, and the Studio Glass Movement, born in the United States, has inspired artists all over the world to explore its unique properties. Glass tells this sweeping story from ancient times to the present in an accessible text with gorgeous examples"--.

The story of English

how the English language conquered the world
2011
Traces the evolution of the English language, from the Angles and Saxons of the medieval era to the role of the Internet and the United States in its perseverance today.

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