The European American Experience
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Author | : Karen Sirvaitis |
Publisher | : Twenty-First Century Books |
Total Pages | : 84 |
Release | : 2010-08-01 |
Genre | : Juvenile Nonfiction |
ISBN | : 0761363599 |
Supplemented with quotes and engaging articles from USA TODAY, the Nation’s No. 1 Newspaper, The European American Experience shines a spotlight on European Americans and their many exciting contributions to American society. From architects and athletes to singers and chefs, European Americans enrich American life. In Giants in the Earth, Norwegian American Ole Rolvaag wrote about the struggles of nineteenth-century European Americans. In The Russian Debutante’s Handbook, Gary Shteyngart highlights the lives of modern immigrants to the United States. Actress Nia Vardalos wrote and starred in the Oscar-nominated film My Big Fat Greek Wedding. Legendary singer Frank Sinatra, the son of Italian immigrants, won ten Grammy Awards, posted thirty-one gold records, and also starred in movies. Known as the Croatian Sensation, Toni Kukoc helped the Chicago Bulls win three NBA championships in the 1990s. Polish American Tara Lipinski is a gold-medal-winning figure skater. Austrian-born celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck is famous for his restaurants, cookbooks, and line of prepared foods. Read this informative title to learn more about how European Americans contribute to the United States’ cultural mosaic, enriching our nation with a wide range of traditions, customs, and life experiences.
Author | : John Lewis Gaddis |
Publisher | : Harvard University Press |
Total Pages | : 164 |
Release | : 2005-10-31 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 9780674018365 |
In this provocative book, a distinguished Cold War historian argues that September 11, 2001, was not the first time a surprise attack shattered American assumptions about national security and reshaped American grand strategy.
Author | : Jay Wertz |
Publisher | : Andre Deutsch Limited |
Total Pages | : 64 |
Release | : 2008 |
Genre | : Indians of North America |
ISBN | : 9780233002149 |
Without a doubt, there is one event in the history of Native Americans that overshadows all others in its impact on their culture - the discovery of the Western Hemisphere by European explorers. This catastrophic event is at the centre of The Native American Experience, which, having given an overview of Aboriginal concepts and history, traces the tumultuous relationship between Native Americans and Western settlers. The book takes a vital view on the relationship between Native Americans and their cultural roots in the modern world, tracing their history into the contemporary era with the support of facsimile documents from key US archives, which bring their story to life.
Author | : Paul A Argenti |
Publisher | : SAGE Publications |
Total Pages | : 385 |
Release | : 2015-07-01 |
Genre | : Business & Economics |
ISBN | : 1483383113 |
"This is the cutting-edge textbook on a managerial approach to corporate responsibility. Students and executives will benefit a great deal by studying the cases and best practices that are here. It’s a terrific book." —Ed Freeman, Elis and Signe Olsson Professor of Business Administration, Darden School of Business, University of Virginia Corporate Responsibility offers a concise and comprehensive introduction to the functional area of corporate responsibility. Readers will learn how corporate responsibility is good for business and how leaders balance their organization’s needs with responsibilities to key constituencies in society. Author Paul A. Argenti engages students with new and compelling cases by focusing on the social, reputational, or environmental consequences of corporate activities. Students will learn how to make difficult choices, promote responsible behavior within their organizations, and understand the role personal values play in developing effective leadership skills.
Author | : Henry Bamford Parkes |
Publisher | : New York, A. A. Knopf |
Total Pages | : 378 |
Release | : 1947 |
Genre | : United States |
ISBN | : |
Interpretation of the history and civilization of the American people.
Author | : Jay P. Dolan |
Publisher | : Image |
Total Pages | : 503 |
Release | : 2011-09-07 |
Genre | : Religion |
ISBN | : 0307553892 |
Catholicism has had a profound and lasting influence on the shape, the meaning, and the course of American history. Now, in the first book to reflect the new communal and social awakening which emerged from Vatican Council II, here is a vibrant and compelling history of the American Catholic experience—one that will surely become the standard volume for this decade, and decades to come. Spanning nearly five hundred years, the narrative eloquently describes the Catholic experience from the arrival of Columbus and the other European explorers to the present day. It sheds fascinating new light on the work of the first vanguard of missionaries, and on the religious struggles and tensions of the early settlers. We watch Catholicism as it spread across the New World, and see how it transformed—and was transformed by—the land and its people. We follow the evolution of the urban ethnic communities and learn about the vital contributions of the immigrant church to Catholicism. And finally, we share in the controversy of the modern church and the extraordinary changes in the Catholic consciousness as it comes to grips with such contemporary social and theological issues as war and peace and the arms race, materialism, birth control and abortion, social justice, civil rights, religious freedom, the ordination of women, and married clergy. The American Catholic Experience is not just the history of an institution, but a chronicle of the dreams and aspirations, the crises and faith, of a thriving, ever-evolving religious community. It provides a penetrating and deeply thoughtful look at an experience as diverse, as exciting, and as powerful as America itself.
Author | : Cornelia Navari |
Publisher | : Springer |
Total Pages | : 182 |
Release | : 2017-11-24 |
Genre | : Political Science |
ISBN | : 3319674986 |
This edited volume covers the development of the thought of the political realist Hans J. Morgenthau from the time of his arrival in America from Nazi-dominated Europe through to his emphatic denunciation of American policy in the Vietnam War. Critical to the development of thinking about American foreign policy in the post-war period, he laid out the idea of a national interest defined in terms of power, the precarious uncertainty of the international balance of power, the weakness of international morality, the decentralized character of international law, the deceptiveness of ideologies, and the requirements of a peace-preserving diplomacy. This volume is required reading for students of American foreign policy, and for anyone who wishes to understand the single most important source of the ideas underpinning American foreign policy since the end of the Second World War.
Author | : G.M. Ames |
Publisher | : Springer Science & Business Media |
Total Pages | : 491 |
Release | : 2013-11-11 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 1489905308 |
This volume is an important contribution to our understanding of culture and alcohol in the United States. Its appearance is also a milestone in the history of alcohol studies in American anthropology. Over the last six years, the volume's editors, initially along with Miriam Rodin, have served as the coorganizers of the Alcohol and Drug Study Group of the American Anthropological Association (AAA). In this capacity, they have organized sessions at the AAA and other meetings, greatly strengthened the research network with a regular and informative newsletter, and painstakingly promoted the publication of anthropological work on al cohol and drugs. Appearing just as the responsibility for the Study Group is passed on to others, this book is a fitting emblem of the care and energy with which its editors have built an institutional nexus for alcohol and drug anthropology in North America. The contents of this volume offer a uniquely wide sampling of the diversity of cultural patterns that make up the American experience with alcohol. The collective portrait the editors have assembled extends in several dimensions: through time and history, across such social differ entiations as gender, age-grade, and social class, and through such major social institutions as the church and the family. Clearly the dominant dimension of variation in the material that follows, however, is ethnicity. The book offers us a sampler of unprecedented richness of the different experiences with alcohol of American ethnoreligious groups.
Author | : Aurelian Cr_iu_u |
Publisher | : Penn State Press |
Total Pages | : 298 |
Release | : 2009 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0271033908 |
"A collection of essays that discuss representative eighteenth- and nineteenth-century French and English views of American democracy and society, and offer a critical assessment of various narrative constructions of American life, society, and culture"--Provided by publisher.
Author | : Kristine Kim |
Publisher | : Heyday Books |
Total Pages | : 162 |
Release | : 2000 |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : |
It is a long way from the town of Wakayama in central Japan to West 146th Street in New York City s Harlem, but painter Henry Sugimoto traversed this wide divide in more than just the physical sense. He began life as the grandson of a displaced samurai and died in 1990 an American painter. From his early years in California, Paris, and Mexico to the transformative impact of the World War II incarceration of Japanese Americans, Sugimoto's art became a vivid expression of the American immigrant experience.Henry Sugimoto is the first-ever survey of this relatively unknown but remarkable artist. From the early work influenced by the European impressionists and post-impressionists to the later work that extensively documents and interprets the experiences of Japanese Americans behind barbed wire, this is a stunning body of work. Henry Sugimoto accompanies a major exhibition of his work at the Japanese American National Museum in Spring 2001.