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  • - Volume 16
     
    653,-

    Research in Outdoor Education is a peer-reviewed, scholarly journal seeking to support and further outdoor education and its goals, including personal growth and moral development, team building and cooperation, outdoor knowledge and skill development, environmental awareness, education and enrichment, and research that directly supports...

  • - Volume 14
     
    653,-

    Research in Outdoor Education is a peer-reviewed, scholarly journal seeking to support and further outdoor education and its goals, including personal growth and moral development, team building and cooperation, outdoor knowledge and skill development, environmental awareness, education and enrichment, and research that directly supports...

  • - Power and Politics in East Asia
     
    1 439,-

    Strategic Adjustment and the Rise of China demonstrates how structural and domestic variables influence how East Asian states adjust their strategy in light of the rise of China, including how China manages its own emerging role as a regional great power.

  • - From Nabopolassar to Alexander the Great (626-331 BC)
    av Muhammad A. Dandamaev
    472,-

    Presents an analysis of the economics of slavery and a picture of Neo-Babylonian society as a whole.

  • - Family and Community in the Post-Emancipation Period
    av Christine D. Worobec
    237,-

  • - The American Revolution as Seen through the British Press
    av Troy Bickham
    475

    A study of the British perspective of the Revolutionary War. It offers a look at the British press as a whole - including analysis of London newspapers, provincial newspapers, and monthly magazines. It leads readers on an exploration into the varied national debates that raged throughout Britain during the American Revolution.

  • - The Documentary Moment in Early Soviet Culture
    av Elizabeth Astrid Papazian
    475

    Focusing on the years 1921-1934, this book explores the great upsurge in documentary methods and approaches in the arts and reveals how the documentary impulse influenced the development of Stalinist culture. It is suitable for readers of Russian history, cultural history, literature, and film studies.

  • av Robert Nemes
    520,-

    This book traces the complex process by which Budapest became a Hungarian city. Few cities grew as rapidly, and in none was nationalism woven so tightly into the urban fabric. Nemes views modern nationalism as expressed in daily events and maps its inroads into every corner of urban life.

  • - A Biography of Plowmakers John and Charles Deere
    av Neil Dahlstrom
    292,-

    Today, John Deere is remembered - some say mistakenly - as the investor of the steel plow. Who was this legendary man and how did he create the internationally renowned company that still bears his name?

  • - Language Culture and the Politics of Voice in Revolutionary Russia
    av Michael S. Gorham
    560

    This work explores how early Soviet language culture gave rise to unparalleled verbal creativity and utopian imagination, while sowing the seeds for perhaps the most notorious forms of Orwellian "newspeak" known to the modern era.

  • av Elise Kimerling Wirtschafter
    560

    How did educated 18th-century Russians view society? In this study, historian Elise Wirtschafter turns to literary plays to reconstruct the social thinking of the past and to discover how Russians of the Enlightenment understood themselves.

  • - Eighteenth-Century Rulers and Writers in Political Dialogue
    av Cynthia H. Whittaker
    600,-

    Russian monarchs have long been regarded as majestic and despotic, ruling mute and servile subjects in a vast empire isolated from the rest of Europe. Challenging this view, Whittaker uncovers a political dialogue about the nature and limitations of monarchy in 18th-century Russia.

  • - A History of the Chicago & North Western Railway System
    av H. Roger Grant
    687,-

    This comprehensive history of the Chicago and North Western Railway chronicles the developments of one of America's great railroads.

  • - Imperial Russia's "People of Various Ranks"
    av Elise Kimerling Wirtschafter
    545,-

  • - The "Changing Signposts" Movement among Russian Emigres in the Early 1920s
    av Hilde Hardeman
    498,-

  • - American Technology and the Small Arms Industry in Nineteenth-Century Russia
    av Joseph Bradley
    463,-

  • - A Social and Cultural Portrait of Two Generations, 1840-1905
    av Jo Ann Ruckman
    451

  • - Russia's Enlightened Bureaucrats, 1825-1861
    av W. Bruce Lincoln
    194

    The first decade of Alexander II's reign is known in Russian history as the Era of the Great Reforms, a time recognized as the major period of social, economic, and institutional transformation between the reign of Peter the Great and the Revolution of 1905. Coming directly after the notoriously repressive last decade of the Nicholas era, the appearance of such dramatic reform has led scholars to seek its causes in dramatic events. Surely some great, even cataclysmic, force must have driven Alexander II and his advisers to initiate what appears to be such an astonishing change in policy. In their search for the origins of these Great Reforms, historians generally have focused upon two phenomena. The first of these was Russia's defeat in the Crimean War by a relatively small, ineptly commanded Allied expeditionary force. The second was the serf revolts, which increased dramatically in the 1850s. From these events, most historians have concluded that the economic failings of serfdom, the problem of preserving domestic peace, and the need to restore Russia's tarnished military prestige were the major forces that convinced Alexander II's government to embark upon a new reformist path. As Lincoln's examination of the long-unstudied Russian archival evidence shows, there are good reasons to question whether such crises of policy and failings of Russia's servile economy impelled Alexander II and his advisers along a previously uncharted reformist path after the Crimean War. Further, in light of the Russian bureaucracy's slowness in drafting much less complex administrative reforms during the previous century, Lincoln argues that the Great Reform legislation simply was too complex and required too much sophisticated knowledge about the Empire's economic, administratvive, and judicial affairs to have been formulated in the brief half-decade after the war's end.

  • - Stories and Essays
    av Valentin Rasputin
    286,-

  • - The Association of Southern Coal and Steel Producers, 1874-1914
    av Susan McCaffray
    627,-

  • - Frederick II of Hohenstaufen, Francis of Assisi, and Journeys to Medieval Places
    av Richard Cassady
    394,-

  • - Religious Symbolism and the Royal Women of Muscovite Russia
    av Isolde Thyret
    560

    This study challenges traditional interpretations of the roles of royal women in a patriarchial society. Drawing upon sources in anthropology, sociology, art history and literature, the author demonstrates that the wives of the early tsars played complex roles in government.

  • - Volume 15
     
    820

    Research in Outdoor Education is a peer-reviewed, scholarly journal seeking to support and further outdoor education and its goals, including personal growth and moral development, team building and cooperation, outdoor knowledge and skill development, environmental awareness, education and enrichment, and research that directly supports...

  • - The History of the Russian-Soviet Soul
    av Svetlana Alexievich
    126

    "I love life in its living form, life that's found on the street, in human conversations, shouts, and moans." So begins this speech delivered in Russian at Cornell University by Svetlana Alexievich, winner of the 2015 Nobel Prize in Literature. In poetic language, Alexievich traces the origins of her deeply affecting blend of journalism, oral...

  • - Intellectual History for Complicated Times
     
    426

    Intellectual history has never been more relevant and more important to public life in the United States. In complicated and confounding times, people look for the principles that drive action and the foundations that support national ideals. American Labyrinth demonstrates the power of intellectual history to illuminate our public life and...

  • Spar 13%
    av William O. Walker
    565,-

    In 1941 the magazine publishing titan Henry R. Luce urged the nation's leaders to create an American Century. But in the post-World-War-II era proponents of the American Century faced a daunting task. Even so, Luce had articulated an animating idea that, as William O. Walker III skillfully shows in The Rise and Decline of the American Century...

  • - The Material Culture of Conflict and Displacement
     
    407,-

    Historians have become increasingly interested in material culture as both a category of analysis and as a teaching tool. And yet the profession tends to be suspicious of things; words are its stock-in-trade. What new insights can historians gain about the past by thinking about things? A central object (and consequence) of modern warfare is...

  • - October 1990
     
    427

  • - October 1976
     
    427

  • - April 1976
     
    427

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