Writings of Daniel DeLeon

Writings of Daniel DeLeon
Author: Daniel De Leon
Publisher:
Total Pages: 228
Release: 2008
Genre: History
ISBN:

American socialist Daniel DeLeon was born in 1852 on the Caribbean island of Curacao. He joined the Socialist Labor Party in 1890 and soon became one of its leading figures. DeLeon was a fierce critic of the American trade union movement, dismissing its reformist goals. As a syndicalist and industrial unionist, he helped to form the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) in 1905.

Daniel De Leon

Daniel De Leon
Author: Stephen Coleman
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Total Pages: 208
Release: 1990
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780719021909

Woman Under Socialism

Woman Under Socialism
Author: August Bebel
Publisher: New York : New York Labor News Company
Total Pages: 414
Release: 1904
Genre: Socialism
ISBN:

Indivisible

Indivisible
Author: Daniel Aleman
Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Total Pages: 287
Release: 2021-05-04
Genre: Young Adult Fiction
ISBN: 0759554978

This timely, moving debut novel follows a teen's efforts to keep his family together as his parents face deportation. Mateo Garcia and his younger sister, Sophie, have been taught to fear one word for as long as they can remember: deportation. Over the past few years, however, the fear that their undocumented immigrant parents could be sent back to Mexico started to fade. Ma and Pa have been in the United States for so long, they have American-born children, and they're hard workers and good neighbors. When Mateo returns from school one day to find that his parents have been taken by ICE, he realizes that his family's worst nightmare has become a reality. With his parents' fate and his own future hanging in the balance, Mateo must figure out who he is and what he is capable of, even as he's forced to question what it means to be an American. Daniel Aleman's Indivisible is a remarkable story—both powerful in its explorations of immigration in America and deeply intimate in its portrait of a teen boy driven by his fierce, protective love for his parents and his sister.

Self-Exposure

Self-Exposure
Author: Charles L. Ponce de Leon
Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press
Total Pages: 347
Release: 2003-10-15
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 0807862215

Few features of contemporary American culture are as widely lamented as the public's obsession with celebrity--and the trivializing effect this obsession has on what appears as news. Nevertheless, America's "culture of celebrity" remains misunderstood, particularly when critics discuss its historical roots. In this pathbreaking book, Charles Ponce de Leon provides a new interpretation of the emergence of celebrity. Focusing on the development of human-interest journalism about prominent public figures, he illuminates the ways in which new forms of press coverage gradually undermined the belief that famous people were "great," instead encouraging the public to regard them as complex, interesting, even flawed individuals and offering readers seemingly intimate glimpses of the "real" selves that were presumed to lie behind the calculated, self-promotional fronts that celebrities displayed in public. But human-interest journalism about celebrities did more than simply offer celebrities a new means of gaining publicity or provide readers with the "inside dope," says Ponce de Leon. In chapters devoted to celebrities from the realms of business, politics, entertainment, and sports, he shows how authors of celebrity journalism used their writings to weigh in on subjects as wide-ranging as social class, race relations, gender roles, democracy, political reform, self-expression, material success, competition, and the work ethic, offering the public a new lens through which to view these issues.