Postcards from Exeter

Postcards from Exeter
Author: Carol Walker Aten
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Total Pages: 150
Release: 2003
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780738534817

In 1904, Frank W. Swallow left behind his short-lived car dealership and began a successful cottage industry, printing his own hand-colored postcards. He was "the First to Introduce the Souvenir Post Card to One-Half of New England," according to the imprint of his trademark swallow. Many of Swallow's photographs are contained within this book, which tells a special history of Exeter, New Hampshire, between 1900 and 1940-a time when the horse and carriage era shifted to the automobile, hemlines rose a few inches, and electricity came to town. Learn about a mysteriously lost statue, hidden waterways, great buildings that burned, forgotten parades, and the famous "Swallow Girls." Most images, never before seen, are from the Exeter Historical Society's collection, and proceeds from the sales of this publication support the society in honor of its seventy-fifth anniversary.

Exeter: The Postcard Collection

Exeter: The Postcard Collection
Author: Alan Spree
Publisher: Amberley Publishing Limited
Total Pages: 183
Release: 2024-08-15
Genre: Photography
ISBN: 1398118389

Explore a fascinating portrait of Exeter presented through a remarkable collection of historical postcards.

Postcards from Vermont

Postcards from Vermont
Author: Allen Freeman Davis
Publisher: UPNE
Total Pages: 350
Release: 2002
Genre: Antiques & Collectibles
ISBN: 9781584651581

A vivid picture of four decades of social and cultural history in the Green Mountain State.

The Post

The Post
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 604
Release: 1925
Genre: Postal service
ISBN:

Growing Up Near Lake Wobegon

Growing Up Near Lake Wobegon
Author: Wendell Duffield
Publisher: iUniverse
Total Pages: 93
Release: 2005-07-01
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 0595365388

On the universal quest for personal independence and for fulfillment of growing-up dreams, a small-town Minnesota boy turns to raising runt piglets as a way to earn spending money of his own. But a series of mysterious and unexpected postcards from a prep school called Phillips Exeter Academy has begun to arrive, flooding his plans with uncertainty and confusing his inexperienced parents as to what is best for their son. "Growing Up Near Lake Wobegon: From Piglets To Prep School" describes the unanticipated and fundamentally unwanted struggle that this young boy faces as the postcards, eventually inviting him to attend the school on scholarship, continue to interrupt a comfortably familiar existence in his home town.a life of growing up in a virtual clone of Garrison Keillor's Lake Wobegon of Prairie Home Companion. Though satisfied at home, an inner voice seduces him to abandon his youthful dreams and join the cadre of elite preppies in New England. Overnight, names of his schoolmates change from Gary Gardner and Duane Labs to David Rockefeller and Peter Benchley. The social, economic, and academic shocks of such change are immediate and stunning.yet manageable. This entertainingly illustrated book is a poignant and humorous memoir that will resonate with anyone who remembers his or her growing-up years. Share the fun, sadness, discoveries, disappointments, and pranks of a young hayseed kid uprooted from bucolic rural life and transplanted into the rocky New England garden of stuffy and highly competitive preppies. You'll be challenged to read the book without alternately laughing and crying as memories of your own early years are rekindled!

Exeter Postcards

Exeter Postcards
Author: John Folkes
Publisher: Images of England
Total Pages: 128
Release: 2005-03
Genre:
ISBN: 9780752434742

This is an exploration of Exeter and Exonians, in the first six decades of the twentieth century, seen through over 200 archive postcards. Subjects examined include events such as the arrival of the first aeroplanes ever seen by Exonians and the crises of accidents, fires, floods and war. Exeter Postcards provides a visual history of the city.

Postcards from the Trenches

Postcards from the Trenches
Author: Irene Guenther
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 248
Release: 2018-11-01
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1350015776

German art student Otto Schubert was 22 years old when he was drafted into the Great War. As the conflict unfolded, he painted a series of postcards that he sent to his sweetheart, Irma. During the battles of Ypres and Verdun, Schubert filled dozens of military-issued 4” x 6” cards with vivid images depicting the daily realities and tragedies of war. Beautifully illustrated with full-color reproductions of his exquisite postcards, as well as his wartime sketches, woodcuts, and two lithograph portfolios, Postcards from the Trenches is Schubert's war diary, love journal, and life story. His powerful artworks illuminate and document in a visual language the truths of war. Postcards from the Trenches offers the first full account of Otto Schubert, soldier-artist of the Great War, rising art star in the 1920s, prolific graphic artist and book illustrator, one of the “degenerate” artists defamed by the Nazis, and a man shattered by the Second World War and the Cold War. Created in the midst of enormous devastation, Schubert's haunting visual missives are as powerful and relevant today as they were a century ago. His postcards are both a young man's token of love and longing and a soldier's testimony of the Great War.

Letters, Postcards, Email

Letters, Postcards, Email
Author: Esther Milne
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 558
Release: 2012-02-27
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 1135177465

In this original study, Milne moves between close readings of letters, postcards and emails, and investigations of the material, technological infrastructures of these forms, to answer the question: How does presence function as an aesthetic and rhetorical strategy within networked communication practices? As her work reveals, the relation between old and new communication systems is more complex than allowed in much contemporary media theory. Although the correspondents of letters, postcards and emails are not, usually, present to one another as they write and read their exchanges, this does not necessarily inhibit affective communication. Indeed, this study demonstrates how physical absence may, in some instances, provide correspondents with intense intimacy and a spiritual, almost telepathic, sense of the other’s presence. While corresponding by letter, postcard or email, readers construe an imaginary, incorporeal body for their correspondents that, in turn, reworks their interlocutor’s self-presentation. In this regard the fantasy of presence reveals a key paradox of cultural communication, namely that material signifiers can be used to produce the experience of incorporeal presence.