Virginia & the Capital Region

Virginia & the Capital Region
Author: Randall S. Peffer
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2000
Genre: Guidebook
ISBN: 9780864427694

Exploring more than just Washing-ton, D.C., this comprehensive new guide covers the entire region from historic Jamestown to the Shenandoah Valley. A special Civil War section delves into the history of the area.

Virginia and the Capital Region

Virginia and the Capital Region
Author: Henry Wiencek
Publisher: Stewart, Tabori, & Chang
Total Pages: 406
Release: 1989
Genre: Travel
ISBN: 9781556700583

Covers Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, D.C.

Washington and the Capital Region (Rough Guides Snapshot USA)

Washington and the Capital Region (Rough Guides Snapshot USA)
Author: Rough Guides
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 184
Release: 2017-05-01
Genre: Travel
ISBN: 0241313163

The Rough Guides Snapshot USA: Washington and the Capital Region is the ultimate travel guide to this dynamic part of the USA. It leads you through the region with reliable information and comprehensive coverage of all the sights and attractions, from DC's iconic Capitol Hill and International Spy Museum, to Charlottesville's architecture and the battlefields of Fredericksburg. Detailed maps and up-to-date listings pinpoint the best cafés, restaurants, hotels, entertainment, bars and nightlife, ensuring you make the most of your trip, whether passing through, staying for the weekend or longer. The Rough Guides Snapshot USA: Washington and the Capital Region covers Washington DC, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland and Delaware. Also included is the Basics section from the Rough Guide to The USA, with all the practical information you need for travelling in and around Washington and the Capital Region, including transportation, accommodation, food and drink, festivals, sports and other essentials. Also published as part of the Rough Guide to The USA. The Rough Guides Snapshot USA: Washington and the Capital Region is equivalent to 96 printed pages.

Capital and Convict

Capital and Convict
Author: Henry Kamerling
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2017-11-28
Genre: History
ISBN: 0813940567

Both in the popular imagination and in academic discourse, North and South are presented as fundamentally divergent penal systems in the aftermath of the Civil War, a difference mapped onto larger perceived cultural disparities between the two regions. The South’s post Civil War embrace of chain gangs and convict leasing occupies such a prominent position in the nation’s imagination that it has come to represent one of the region’s hallmark differences from the North. The regions are different, the argument goes, because they punish differently. Capital and Convict challenges this assumption by offering a comparative study of Illinois’s and South Carolina’s formal state penal systems in the fifty years after the Civil War. Henry Kamerling argues that although punishment was racially inflected both during Reconstruction and after, shared, nonracial factors defined both states' penal systems throughout this period. The similarities in the lived experiences of inmates in both states suggest that the popular focus on the racial characteristics of southern punishment has shielded us from an examination of important underlying factors that prove just as central—if not more so—in shaping the realities of crime and punishment throughout the United States.

Covert Capital

Covert Capital
Author: Andrew Friedman
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 428
Release: 2013-08-02
Genre: History
ISBN: 0520956680

The capital of the U.S. Empire after World War II was not a city. It was an American suburb. In this innovative and timely history, Andrew Friedman chronicles how the CIA and other national security institutions created a U.S. imperial home front in the suburbs of Northern Virginia. In this covert capital, the suburban landscape provided a cover for the workings of U.S. imperial power, which shaped domestic suburban life. The Pentagon and the CIA built two of the largest office buildings in the country there during and after the war that anchored a new imperial culture and social world. As the U.S. expanded its power abroad by developing roads, embassies, and villages, its subjects also arrived in the covert capital as real estate agents, homeowners, builders, and landscapers who constructed spaces and living monuments that both nurtured and critiqued postwar U.S. foreign policy. Tracing the relationships among American agents and the migrants from Vietnam, El Salvador, Iran, and elsewhere who settled in the southwestern suburbs of D.C., Friedman tells the story of a place that recasts ideas about U.S. immigration, citizenship, nationalism, global interconnection, and ethical responsibility from the post-WW2 period to the present. Opening a new window onto the intertwined history of the American suburbs and U.S. foreign policy, Covert Capital will also give readers a broad interdisciplinary and often surprising understanding of how U.S. domestic and global histories intersect in many contexts and at many scales. American Crossroads, 37