The Revolution is for the Children

The Revolution is for the Children
Author: Anita Casavantes Bradford
Publisher: UNC Press Books
Total Pages: 279
Release: 2014
Genre: History
ISBN: 146961152X

Revolution Is for the Children: The Politics of Childhood in Havana and Miami, 1959-1962

Children of the Revolution

Children of the Revolution
Author: Peter Robinson
Publisher: McClelland & Stewart
Total Pages: 371
Release: 2013-09-03
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0771076312

By Canada's premier, bestselling crime fiction writer, the twenty-first book in the much-loved Inspector Banks series, now a television series on PBS, for readers of Ian Rankin and Michael Connelly. A disgraced college lecturer is found murdered with £5,000 in his pocket on a disused railway line near his home. Since being dismissed from his job for sexual misconduct four years previously, he has been living a poverty-stricken and hermit-like existence in this isolated spot. There are many suspects, mostly at the college where he used to teach, but Banks, much to the chagrin of Detective Chief Superintendent Gervaise, soon becomes fixated on Lady Veronica Chalmers, who appears to have links with the victim going back to the early '70s at the University of Essex, then a hotbed of political activism. When Banks suspects that Lady Chalmers is not telling him the whole truth and pushes his inquiries a bit too far, he is brought on the carpet and warned to lay off. He must continue to conduct his investigation surreptitiously, under the radar, with the help of new DC Geraldine Masterson, while DI Annie Cabbot and DS Winsome Jackman continue to rattle skeletons at Eastvale College. When the breakthroughs come, they are not the ones that Banks and his team expected, and everything turns in a different direction, and moves into higher gear.

The Revolution Wasn't Televised

The Revolution Wasn't Televised
Author: Lynn Spigel
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 368
Release: 2013-10-08
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 113520540X

Caricatures of sixties television--called a "vast wasteland" by the FCC president in the early sixties--continue to dominate our perceptions of the era and cloud popular understanding of the relationship between pop culture and larger social forces. Opposed to these conceptions, The Revolution Wasn't Televised explores the ways in which prime-time television was centrally involved in the social conflicts of the 1960s. It was then that television became a ubiquitous element in American homes. The contributors in this volume argue that due to TV's constant presence in everyday life, it became the object of intense debates over childraising, education, racism, gender, technology, politics, violence, and Vietnam. These essays explore the minutia of TV in relation to the macro-structure of sixties politics and society, attempting to understand the struggles that took place over representation the nation's most popular communications media during the 1960s.

The Industrial Revolution for Kids

The Industrial Revolution for Kids
Author: Cheryl Mullenbach
Publisher: Chicago Review Press
Total Pages: 146
Release: 2014-08-01
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 1613746903

The Industrial Revolution for Kids introduces young readers to the Industrial Revolution in a "revolutionary" way: through the usual people, places, and inventions of the time: the incredibly wealthy Rockefellers and Carnegies, dirty and dangerous factories, new forms of transportation and communication, but also through the eyes of everyday workers, kids, sports figures, and social activists whose names never appeared in history books. Readers learn about new machines that impacted American life—through the people who invented them and the people who built and operated them—and new forms of transportation that revolutionized society—through the people who designed them as well as the people who built and used them. Hannah Montague, who revolutionized the clothing industry with her highly popular detachable collars and cuffs, and Clementine Lamadrid, who either helped save starving New Yorkers or scammed the public into contributing to her One-Cent Coffee Stands, help tell the human stories of the Industrial Revolution. Twenty-one engaging and fun crosscurricular activities bring the times and technologies to life. Kids will make an assembly line sandwich, analyze the interchangeable parts of a common household fixture, weave a placemat, tell a story through photographs, and much more. Resources include books to read, places to visit, and websites to explore. Cheryl Mullenbach is a former history teacher, librarian, public television project manager, and K-12 social studies consultant. She is the author of Double Victory: How African American Women Broke Race and Gender Barriers to Help Win World War II and has contributed to An Encyclopedia of American Women at War. She lives in Panora, Iowa.

The Revolution Is Inevitable

The Revolution Is Inevitable
Author: Mohammed Hassan
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 105
Release: 2014-09-30
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 149694285X

Elders of the peasants vow to make the aristocracy pay for the painful trials they had caused them, as well as considering Huzmas recent misfortune of losing his mother and having their house burned down just because he fell in love with Mujni, who is a niece of the king, but this case will only be a spur to the almost-happening revolution. Elders choose Abakum for the specific task of beguiling their tribesman Kamza, who is one of the loyal soldiers who guards the Black Jail. Abakum finds out that Huzma is alive and works as a security guard in one of the restaurants located in a village close to the Black Jail. The revolution is inevitable, and the tyrant regime is ousted by a bloody battle that claims the lives of thousands. Thereafter, the controversial issue over administration begins, which causes people to flee and yearn for the former administration. Huzma gets shot after joining the drug-dealing trade, and Mujni gives birth to a baby boy named Muzzeer, who tells the story.

A Guide to the Revolution

A Guide to the Revolution
Author: Shirley Conley
Publisher: Archway Publishing
Total Pages: 108
Release: 2021-06-15
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1665706554

Everything the government does aims to help corporations—not the people. To drive that point home, the U.S. Supreme Court gave corporations the same status as human beings when it ruled they are “people” in the Citizens United decision. Shirley Conley takes corporations, politicians, and the voters who support them to task in this book that urges Americans to revolt against the status quo. In straightforward language, she makes the case that since corporations are people, they must start paying their fair share. The author also outlines how corporations contribute to a myriad of problems, such as: • pushing the government into wars to steal resources from other countries; • causing illnesses that threaten the solvency of Medicare and Medicaid; • destroying infrastructure with massive trucks that deliver products; • curbing competition by combining with other companies. Moreover, corporations want to keep a certain portion of the population uneducated and poor so that they will have someone to fight their wars, mow their lawns, and do other work that well-educated people will not do. Discover the problems we face and identify solutions to move forward as a nation with A Guide to the Revolution.

The Family Romance of the French Revolution

The Family Romance of the French Revolution
Author: Lynn Hunt
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 240
Release: 1992
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780520082700

This latest work from an author known for her contributions to the new cultural history is a daring multidisciplinary investigation of the imaginative foundations of modern politics. "Family romance" was coined by Freud to describe the fantasy of being freed from one's family and belonging to one of higher social standing. In Freud's view, the family romance was a way for individuals to fantasize about their place in the social order. Hunt uses the term more broadly, to describe the images of the familial order underlying revolutionary politics. She investigates the narratives of family relations that structured the collective political unconscious. Most Europeans in the eighteenth century thought of their rulers as fathers and of their nations as families writ large. The French Revolution violently disrupted that patriarchal model of authority and raised troubling questions about what was to replace it. The king and queen were executed after dramatic separate trials. Prosecutors in the trial of the queen accused her of exerting undue influence on the king and his ministers, engaging in sexual debauchery, and even committing incest with her eight-year-old son. Hunt focuses on the meaning of killing the king-father and the queen-mother and what these ritual sacrifices meant to the establishment of a new model of politics. In a wide-ranging account that uses novels, engravings, paintings, speeches, newspaper editorials, pornographic writing, and revolutionary legislation about the family, Hunt shows that politics were experienced through the grid of the family romance.