In Search of the Visible Past

In Search of the Visible Past
Author: Barry Gough
Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press
Total Pages: 91
Release: 2010-10-30
Genre: History
ISBN: 1554586925

This book is a combination of five public lectures offered to the university and community during the academic year 1973–1974, given by the History Department of Wilfrid Laurier University. These were given by leading scholars in their individual fields and are published here. The essays are on such topics as family life in New France, the origins of British fiscal policy during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, images of the negro in Victorian popular culture, Joseph Chamberlain and the “New Imperialism” in West Africa’s Gold Coast, and the controversial prime minister of Canada, Mackenzia King. They are all important in their own sense as contributions to the historian’s ongoing search for the visible past.

The Visible Past

The Visible Past
Author: Michael Grant
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers
Total Pages: 308
Release: 1992
Genre: Classical antiquities
ISBN:

Demonstrates the vital role played by archaeology in understanding ancient Greeks and romans.

Becoming Visible

Becoming Visible
Author: Renate Bridenthal
Publisher: Cengage Learning
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1998
Genre: Europe
ISBN: 9780395796252

Thematic emphases in this text include the contacts between European women and those outside European frontiers, sexuality and its importance for the construction of gender over the centuries, and the role of women in the great events and movements in European history and the impact of such events on them.

Making the Invisible Visible

Making the Invisible Visible
Author: Leonie Sandercock
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 292
Release: 1998-02-08
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9780520207356

While the official history of planning as a defined profession celebrates the state and its traditions of city building and regional development, this collection of essays reveals a flip side. This scrutiny of the class, race, gender, ethnic, or other biased agendas previously hidden in planning histories points to the need for new planning paradigms for our multicultural cities of the future. Photos.

What Is Visible

What Is Visible
Author: Kimberly Elkins
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Total Pages: 316
Release: 2014-06-03
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1455528978

A vividly original literary novel based on the astounding true-life story of Laura Bridgman, the first deaf and blind person who learned language and blazed a trail for Helen Keller. At age two, Laura Bridgman lost four of her five senses to scarlet fever. At age seven, she was taken to Perkins Institute in Boston to determine if a child so terribly afflicted could be taught. At age twelve, Charles Dickens declared her his prime interest for visiting America. And by age twenty, she was considered the nineteenth century's second most famous woman, having mastered language and charmed the world with her brilliance. Not since The Diving Bell and the Butterfly has a book proven so profoundly moving in illuminating the challenges of living in a completely unique inner world. With Laura—by turns mischievous, temperamental, and witty—as the book's primary narrator, the fascinating kaleidoscope of characters includes the founder of Perkins Institute, Samuel Gridley Howe, with whom she was in love; his wife, the glamorous Julia Ward Howe, a renowned writer, abolitionist, and suffragist; Laura's beloved teacher, who married a missionary and died insane from syphilis; an Irish orphan with whom Laura had a tumultuous affair; Annie Sullivan; and even the young Helen Keller. Deeply enthralling and rich with lyricism, What is Visible chronicles the breathtaking experiment that Laura Bridgman embodied and its links to the great social, philosophical, theological, and educational changes rocking Victorian America. Given Laura's worldwide fame in the nineteenth century, it is astonishing that she has been virtually erased from history. What is Visible will set the record straight.

The Visible Man

The Visible Man
Author: Chuck Klosterman
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 260
Release: 2012-06-05
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 143918447X

Treating a delusional scientist who has been using cloaking technology from an aborted government project to render himself nearly invisible, Austin therapist Victoria Vick becomes obsessed with his accounts of spying on the private lives of others.

The Visible

The Visible
Author: Bruce Bond
Publisher: LSU Press
Total Pages: 76
Release: 2012-03-12
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 0807142697

In The Visible, we enter into a surreal landscape "where it is neither day nor night / but both at once," where light becomes an imaginative force that both illuminates and obscures. The illegible draws us closer to the page-the visible revealed, paradoxically, by what we cannot see. Though these formally restrained poems possess an abstract and introspective intensity, Bond grounds them in the everyday. Both vivid and speculative, the chiseled lyrics breathe. In "My Mother's Closet," the pages of medical books become holy and horrendous, "soiled at the corners, the mind's / terrific passages shocked with highlight, / glossed with scratches in a mother's hand."

That's Not in My American History Book

That's Not in My American History Book
Author: Thomas Ayres
Publisher: Taylor Trade Publications
Total Pages: 257
Release: 2004-04-27
Genre: United States
ISBN: 158979107X

This book tackles the messy details, reclaims disregarded heroes, and sets the record straight. It also explains why July 4th isn't really Independence Day.

Becoming Visible

Becoming Visible
Author: Molly McGarry
Publisher: Penguin Putnam
Total Pages: 312
Release: 1998
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

Based on the New York Public Library's groundbreaking 1994 exhibit of the same name, "Becoming Visible" represents the largest and most extensive display of gay and lesbian history ever mounted in a museum or gallery space. 350 photos, documents & artifacts, 80 in color.

The Invention of the Visible

The Invention of the Visible
Author: Patrick Vauday
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 145
Release: 2017-08-17
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 178660051X

We live in a mediatized society, a society one could call a society of images. Working at the intersection of aesthetics and politics, Patrick Vauday challenges the dominant assumptions of this society and its disposition towards images. This challenge does not advocate repudiating images altogether, but rather entreats us to see them in a different light. This new way of thinking of images affords a glimpse into what images do and produce, rather than viewing them as copies or mere representations. Images are dynamic agents that are active in our world rather than simply empty reflections of it. Rethinking the concept of the image in this fashion opens up new ways of interpreting and engaging with works of art. This reconsideration of the role of images in society is the starting point for a new politics that considers the multiple and complex efficacies by which images act, circulate and are created.