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Bøger om South Atlantic States

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  • af Thomas Walker Bullitt
    193,95 - 338,95 kr.

  • af Florence Ala Bros and Curtis
    153,95 - 313,95 kr.

  • af Maude Vest Cn Clark & James H. B. Cn Miller
    468,95 - 533,95 kr.

  • af Barnett A. Elzas
    273,95 - 378,95 kr.

  • af Charles Tenney Jackson
    288,95 - 398,95 kr.

  • af Margaret Beaufort Ca Amelia Halsted
    243,95 - 363,95 kr.

  • af Frederick A. Porcher
    193,95 - 338,95 kr.

  • af Ella Molloy Langford
    218,95 - 353,95 kr.

  • af John C. McEldowney
    218,95 - 348,95 kr.

  • af Clarence B. Moore
    243,95 - 363,95 kr.

  • af J. B. B. Alexander
    308,95 - 413,95 kr.

  • af T[homas] M[itchell] [Fro Shackleford
    178,95 - 323,95 kr.

  • af W. W. Scott & Everett Waddey Co
    258,95 - 363,95 kr.

  • af Thomas Frederick Davis & H and W B Drew Company
    218,95 - 353,95 kr.

  • af Victoria Virginia Hunter Clayton
    218,95 - 353,95 kr.

  • af David E. Stafford
    398,95 kr.

    A Handful of Corn traces the lineage of the true Baptist Church from Christ to the Missionary Baptist Churches of Middle Tennessee. David E. Stafford, a Missionary Baptist minister and educator, skillfully leads the reader through a voyage from the time of Christ to the frontier settlements of Middle Tennessee and the South. The great persecutions of the true believers of Christ by the Catholic Church is detailed in reader friendly descriptions, and the passage of time through the Donatist, Paulicians, Novatians, Bogomils, Anabaptist, English Baptists, Welsh Baptists, and the early Baptists in America is carefully and skillfully surveyed with historical accuracy and approachability. The doctrines, customs, and identifiers of the early church are examined and used as supports to trace the lineage of Baptist Churches throughout history. The history of the development of the Baptists in the South is traced from John Clarke through Shubal Stearns and the spread of the Church into Middle Tennessee. The great divisions of the Baptists are explored and expounded. The Primitive Baptist movement, the Restoration Movement, and the development of the Southern Baptist Convention are illustrated, and their effects on the true Church are brought to light. This beneficial work concludes with a brief, but adequate, guide to Baptist practice and order.

  • af Julia Sattler
    449,95 - 1.187,95 kr.

    This interdisciplinary investigation argues that since the 1990s, discourses about mixed-race heritage in the United States have taken the shape of a veritable literary genre, here termed ';memoir of the search.' The study uses four different texts to explore this non-fictional genre, including Edward Balls Slaves in the Family and Shirlee Taylor Haizlips The Sweeter the Juice. All feature a protagonist using methods from archival investigation to DNA-testing to explore an intergenerational family secret; photographs and family trees; and the trip to the American South, which is identified as the site of the secret's origin and of the family's past. As a genre, these texts negotiate the memory of slavery and segregation in the present.In taking up central narratives of Americanness, such as the American Dream and the Immigrant story, as well as discourses generating the American family, the texts help inscribe themselves and the mixed-race heritage they address into the American mainstream. In its outlook, this book highlights the importance of the memoirs' negotiations of the past when finding ways to remember after the last witnesses have passed away. and contributes to the discussion over political justice and reparations for slavery.

  • af Shirletta Kinchen
    388,95 kr.

    During the civil rights era, Memphis gained a reputation for having one of the South's strongest NAACP branches. But that organization, led by the city's black elite, was hardly the only driving force in the local struggle against racial injustice. In the late sixties, Black Power proponents advocating economic, political, and cultural self-determination effectively mobilized Memphis's African American youth, using an array of moderate and radical approaches to protest and change conditions on their campuses and in the community. While Black Power activism on the coasts and in the Midwest has attracted considerable scholarly attention, much less has been written about the movement's impact outside these hotbeds. In Black Power in the Bluff City, Shirletta J. Kinchen helps redress that imbalance by examining how young Memphis activists, like Coby Smith and Charles Cabbage, dissatisfied by the pace of progress in a city emerging from the Jim Crow era, embraced Black Power ideology to confront such challenges as gross disparities in housing, education, and employment as well as police brutality and harassment. Two closely related Black Power organizations, the Black Organizing Project and the Invaders, became central to the local black youth movement in the late 1960s. Kinchen traces these groups' participation in the 1968 sanitation workers' strike--including the controversy over whether their activities precipitated events that culminated in Martin Luther King's assassination--and their subsequent involvement in War on Poverty programs. The book also shows how Black Power ideology drove activism at the historically black LeMoyne-Owen College, scene of a 1968 administration-building takeover, and at the predominately white Memphis State University, where African American students transformed the campus by creating parallel institutions that helped strengthen black student camaraderie and consciousness in the face of marginalization. Drawing on interviews with activists, FBI files, newspaper accounts from the period, and many other sources, the author persuasively shows not only how an emerging generation helped define the black freedom struggle in Memphis but also how they applied the tenets of Black Power to shape the broader community. Shirletta J. Kinchen is an assistant professor in the Pan-African Studies Department at the University of Louisville.

  • af Melody Marion
    453,95 kr.

    "Melody Marion and Amanda Ford trace the formation of this Jefferson City, Tennessee, institution from its founding as Mossy Creek Missionary Baptist Seminary in 1850 to the one-hundred-and-twenty acre university campus that is Carson-Newman today. Along the way, Marion and Ford discuss the school's Baptist foundations, its coeducational merger in the late nineteenth century, a string of presidents both exceptional and misguided, and its expansion from college to university in the twenty-first century"--

  • af George C Browder
    458,95 kr.

    "Germantown during the Civil War Era recounts the rise and fall of a nineteenth-century Tennessee town, a community that was not a typical antebellum town in the cotton belt. It's a case study in how social, economic, and political changes affected them, Black and White. Before the Civil War, Germantown had become a thriving cultural, commercial, and political center. Its elite and middle-class White families had full access to the cultural and social life of Memphis, as well as local private academies and collegiate institutions that hosted enriching events. Its appealing inns, taverns, and mineral springs allowed for festive social mixing of all classes. As an emerging industrial and commercial center of a rich cotton-growing district in the 1850s, Germantown's decline after the war would have been unimaginable before the war. Thus, this monograph paints a picture of a vibrant community whose brilliancy was extinguished and almost entirely forgotten. Yet, Germantown's economic and political decline, caused by a number of factors, is not the most interesting part of its story. Meticulously documented and richly illustrated with maps and data, this book reveals the impacts of surviving a theater of guerrilla war, of emancipation, of social and political Reconstruction, and a disastrous Yellow Fever epidemic on all of Germantown's people-psychologically, socially, and culturally. The damage struck far deeper than economic destruction and loss of life. A peaceful and harmonious society crumbled. Germantown during the Civil War Era is sure to be of interest not just to Shelby County residents, or students of the Civil War, but also to anyone interested in the racial and social history of the Volunteer state"--

  • af Dennis Todd
    768,95 kr.

    "William Byrd II was a prominent eighteenth-century Virginian who at the time of his death owned over 180,000 acres of land and employed laborers and enslaved Africans. This book examines a neglected stage in the formation of slavery in Virginia by analyzing the practices and beliefs of one of the more prominent slave owners of the period. Byrd was perhaps the early colonial definition of a patriarch, and author Dennis Todd here grounds the concept of patriarchalism in a series of concrete practices and expectations. Doing so, Todd argues that patriarchal principles, which are often assumed to have justified slavery and to have offered a template for slave management, in fact did neither"--

  • af Maury Nicely
    698,95 kr.

    "John T. Wilder was an entrepreneur, Civil War general, and business leader who would become influential in the development of post-Civil War Chattanooga. A northern transplant who made his early fortune in the iron industry, Wilder would gain notoriety in the Western Theater through his victories at the battles of Chattanooga, Chickamauga, and throughout the Tullahoma and Atlanta Campaigns while leading the famous "Lightning Brigade." After the Civil War, he relocated to Chattanooga and began the Roane Iron Company and fostered southern ironworks throughout the southeast. He was elected mayor of Chattanooga but would fail to be elected to Congress as its representative. Finally, he was instrumental in the establishment of national military parks in Chattanooga and Chickamauga. Nicely's biography captures the life of a man important to the overall development of Chattanooga and East Tennessee and argues that Wilder was influential in bringing both northern and immigrant populations to the area"--

  • af Teri A. McMurtry-Chubb
    439,95 - 1.065,95 kr.

    Race Unequals: Overseer Contracts, White Masculinities, and the Formation of Managerial Identity in the Plantation Economy is a re-imagining of the plantation not as Black and White, but in shades of White male identity. Through an examination of employment contracts between plantation owners and their overseers, and the web of public and private law that surrounded them, this book challenges notions of a monolithic White male identity in the antebellum South. It considers how race provided White men access to the land and enslaved labor that were foundational to the plantation economy, but how the wealthiest of those men used contracts, public law, and plantation management schemes to limit the access points by which overseers, the first managerial class in the United States, could achieve upward mobility as both White people and as men. In navigating the legal and social parameters of their employment contracts, overseers negotiated a white masculinity that formed their managerial identity. This managerial identity carried the imprint of white supremacy necessary to preserve inequities on the plantation, and perhaps in our modern workplaces as well.

  • af Jim Fraiser
    258,95 kr.

    "Pat Browne Jr. was a star athlete at Jesuit High School and Tulane University in New Orleans who became an attorney. An All-American golfer, he was blinded in a car accident. He would go on to win twenty-three blind pro golf tournaments. Arnold Palmer nominated him for the World Golf Hall of Fame. This is his story"--

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