Russia in the Twentieth Century
Title | Russia in the Twentieth Century PDF eBook |
Author | Bakhmeteff Archive of Russian and East European History and Culture |
Publisher | Macmillan Reference USA |
Pages | 216 |
Release | 1987 |
Genre | History |
ISBN |
The Columbia University Club
Title | The Columbia University Club PDF eBook |
Author | Columbia University Club |
Publisher | |
Pages | 86 |
Release | 1907 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Consists of, Incorporators, charter, constitution, house rules, officers and members of the Columbia University Club.
Liberty’s Chain
Title | Liberty’s Chain PDF eBook |
Author | David N. Gellman |
Publisher | Cornell University Press |
Pages | 542 |
Release | 2022-04-15 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1501715860 |
In Liberty's Chain, David N. Gellman shows how the Jay family, abolitionists and slaveholders alike, embodied the contradictions of the revolutionary age. The Jays of New York were a preeminent founding family. John Jay, diplomat, Supreme Court justice, and coauthor of the Federalist Papers, and his children and grandchildren helped chart the course of the Early American Republic. Liberty's Chain forges a new path for thinking about slavery and the nation's founding. John Jay served as the inaugural president of a pioneering antislavery society. His descendants, especially his son William Jay and his grandson John Jay II, embraced radical abolitionism in the nineteenth century, the cause most likely to rend the nation. The scorn of their elite peers—and racist mobs—did not deter their commitment to end southern slavery and to combat northern injustice. John Jay's personal dealings with African Americans ranged from callousness to caring. Across the generations, even as prominent Jays decried human servitude, enslaved people and formerly enslaved people served in Jay households. Abbe, Clarinda, Caesar Valentine, Zilpah Montgomery, and others lived difficult, often isolated, lives that tested their courage and the Jay family's principles. The personal and the political intersect in this saga, as Gellman charts American values transmitted and transformed from the colonial and revolutionary eras to the Civil War, Reconstruction, and beyond. The Jays, as well as those who served them, demonstrated the elusiveness and the vitality of liberty's legacy. This remarkable family story forces us to grapple with what we mean by patriotism, conservatism, and radicalism. Their story speaks directly to our own divided times.
Oral History Collections
Title | Oral History Collections PDF eBook |
Author | Alan M. Meckler |
Publisher | New York : Bowker |
Pages | 360 |
Release | 1975 |
Genre | History |
ISBN |
The Rare Book and Manuscript Library of Columbia University
Title | The Rare Book and Manuscript Library of Columbia University PDF eBook |
Author | Columbia University. Rare Book and Manuscript Library |
Publisher | New York : Columbia University Libraries |
Pages | 138 |
Release | 1985-01 |
Genre | Reference |
ISBN | 9780960786213 |
How I Became Hettie Jones
Title | How I Became Hettie Jones PDF eBook |
Author | Hettie Jones |
Publisher | Open Road + Grove/Atlantic |
Pages | 269 |
Release | 2007-12-01 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 0802196780 |
“A thoughtful, intimate memoir of life in the burgeoning movement of new jazz, poetry, and politics . . . in Lower Manhattan in the late 1950s and early 1960s” (Alix Kate Shulman, The Nation). Greenwich Village in the 1950s was a haven to which young poets, painters, and musicians flocked. Among them was Hettie Cohen, who’d been born into a middle-class Jewish family in Queens and who’d chosen to cross racial barriers to marry African American poet LeRoi Jones. This is her reminiscence of life in the awakening East Village in the era of the Beats, Black Power, and bohemia. “As the wife of controversial black playwright-poet LeRoi Jones (now Amiri Baraka), Hettie Cohen, a white Jew from Queens, NY, plunged into the Greenwich Village bohemia of jazz, poetry, leftish politics and underground publishing in the late 1950s. Their life together ended in 1965, partly, she implies, because of separatist pressures on blacks to end their interracial marriages. In this restrained autobiographical mix of introspection and gossip, the author writes of coping with racial prejudice and violence, raising two daughters, and of living in the shadow of her husband. When the couple divorced, she became a children’s book author and poet. The memoir is dotted with glimpses of Allen Ginsberg, Thelonious Monk, Jack Kerouac, Frank O’Hara, Billie Holiday, James Baldwin, Franz Kline, among others.” —Publishers Weekly
Break It Down
Title | Break It Down PDF eBook |
Author | Lydia Davis |
Publisher | Macmillan + ORM |
Pages | 197 |
Release | 2008-09-16 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 1429957980 |
The thirty-four stories in this seminal collection powerfully display what have become Lydia Davis's trademarks—dexterity, brevity, understatement, and surprise. Although the certainty of her prose suggests a world of almost clinical reason and clarity, her characters show us that life, thought, and language are full of disorder. Break It Down is Davis at her best. In the words of Jonathan Franzen, she is "a magician of self-consciousness."