Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

3/19/2013

From Slavery to Freedom: A History of African Americans Review

From Slavery to Freedom: A History of African Americans
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Dr. Franklin is one of the greatest historians this country has ever produced. He holds degrees from Fisk and Harvard (two post graduate degrees from Cambridge). He has more honorary degrees than Carter has little pills (or I guess now, peanuts). This work, now in its eighth printing, is perhaps the greatest single reference work exploring the African American experience and the contributions of this race to American history, and has been so since the first edition was printed in 1947.
He starts by revealing more knowledge that most people ever fathomed about the African experience in the pre-slavery centuries, with the greatness that was the African continent in Ghana, Songhay and the rest of Africa. The exploration of the "peculiar institution" of slavery, reconstruction and the post Civil War hope is complete and brilliantly done. The chapters on the Harlem Renaissance and the first half of the twentieth century alone is worth the price of the book.
Extraordinarily well researched. It is scholarly but never dry. It is objective, but never loses the passion for the subject. A must for any complete understanding of our history.

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This work charts the journey of African Americans from their origins in the civilizations of Africa, through slavery in the Western Hemisphere, to their struggle for freedom in the West Indies, Latin America and the United States. Topics covered include the dilemma of reconciliation between theory and practice in matters of race; popular culture in the period between World War I and World War II; and the 1992 election, including discussion of the largest African-American voter turnout in history, largest number of African Americans elected to congress, and the most African Americans ever appointed to cabinet positions.

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3/08/2013

The Equation That Couldn't Be Solved: How Mathematical Genius Discovered the Language of Symmetry Review

The Equation That Couldn't Be Solved: How Mathematical Genius Discovered the Language of Symmetry
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Mario Livio's title suggests an exploration of unsolvable equations, in particular the drama enshrouding the mathematical conundrum of solving general, fifth degree polynomial equations, known as quintics. His subtitle, "How Mathematical Genius Discovered the Language of Symmetry," indicates that his work will also explore the role of symmetry in ultimately resolving the question of whether such polynomials could be solved by a formulas using nothing more than addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and nth roots. These two subjects portend an interesting discussion on the solvability of equations and the peculiar mathematical race in Renaissance Europe to "discover" the magical formulas for solving cubics and quartics.
One could reasonably expect that the groundbreaking work of Tartaglia, Cardano. Ferraro, Galois, Abel, Kronecker, Hermite, and Klein would be encompassed in this survey, and indeed they are. However, purchasers of this book are given no indication that they will spend well over half their reading time on rehashes of Abel's tragic life story and the mythology of Evariste Galois's foolish death, Emmy Noether's challenges as a woman mathematician in Germany, a history of group theory, Einstein's theory of relativity, the place of string theory in modern cosmology, the survival benefits of symmetry in evolution, Daniel Gorenstein's 30-year proof that "every finite simple group is either a member of one of the eighteen families or is one of the twenty-six sporadic groups," a trite and unnecessary diversion on human creativity, and finally, an even more outlandish (and utterly inconclusive) "comparison" of Galois's brain with that of Albert Einstein. The persevering reader can only conclude that anything and everything that remotely touches upon the quintic and Galois's work was given a chapter of its own, a mathematical version of "everything but the kitchen sink." The end result is an unfortunate mishmash, a sort of treetop skimming of modern mathematics, post-Newtonian physics, and cognitive theory.
Sadly, Mr. Livio misses a number of opportunities to enlighten his readers on the theory of polynomials, the nature of their roots, and the curious symmetries one encounters. For example, he makes no effort to discuss the nature of polynomial roots beyond a short Appendix, and he passes on the chance to detail the marvelous symmetry of imaginary roots in equations such as x^6 = 1. While he outlines the general thrust of Galois's approach to the unsolvability of quintics, Livio also mentions that Hermite found a method to solve the general quintic using elliptic functions, but we are not told how such a solution is discovered. What about sixth degree polynomials and beyond? Mr. Livio doesn't tell us - he's too busy worrying over the fairness of the first draft lottery in 1970. There is also the small matter of the author's style of explication. At times, such as his introduction to symmetry, he writes for a general, non-mathematical audience. Later, he tosses out references to elliptic functions without explanation and culminates his group theory discussion with sentences like, "We can use the family tree of these subgroups to create a sequence of composition factors (order of the parent group divided by that of the maximal normal subgroup)."
What THE EQUATION THAT COULDN'T BE SOLVED really needed was a good editor to bring these widespread ramblings into focus. A bit of truth in advertising might have been appropriate as well, but a book entitled "The Role of Group Theory in Modern Mathematics and Science" (primarily what this book is about, along with the author's peculiar obsession with Evariste Galois's death by duel) wouldn't tap well into the market developed by Keith Devlin, John Allen Paulos, Ian Stewart, Eli Maor, Simon Singh, and other popularizers of mathematics for mass market audiences. In the end, this book falls short of its companions for its sheer lack of focus and somewhat misleading cover presentation. At times, the book is interesting; at others, regrettably, it's simply too much of a superficial slog through too many loosely connected disciplines.

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2/15/2013

The Tenth Parallel: Dispatches from the Fault Line Between Christianity and Islam Review

The Tenth Parallel: Dispatches from the Fault Line Between Christianity and Islam
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Eliza Griswold demonstrates an unparalleled expertise in issues of religion and politics. This book is a must for anyone who wants to go beyond the dominant rhetoric of religious extremism to understand the intricate political issues at stake in the local conflicts of the regions she examines. Griswold shows the personal human costs of regional power structures.

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2/13/2013

Selected Poems of Langston Hughes Review

Selected Poems of Langston Hughes
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I had read several Hughes poems before buying this book, but I will admit that I had no grasp on the extent of his talent. These vivid poems were chosen by Hughes personally before his death in 1967.
They do so well to paint a picture of the time he lived -- of the blues, of love, of passion, of choices. He writes about faith and protest in a way that will move you.
I have read all of the poems exactly as they are placed in the book several times. I think I keep going back to them because this is poetry free of pretense -- it is grounded in reality and in sorrow.
Independent of age, of your ethnicity, and of your literary grasp, you will enjoy these poems. Simple and superb -- read them out loud.

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With the publication of his first book of poems, The Weary Blues, in 1926, Langston Hughes electrified readers and launched a renaissance in black writing in America. The poems Hughes wrote celebrated the experience of invisible men and women: of slaves who "rushed the boots of Washington"; of musicians on Lenox Avenue; of the poor and the lovesick; of losers in "the raffle of night." They conveyed that experience in a voice that blended the spoken with the sung, that turned poetic lines into the phrases of jazz and blues, and that ripped through the curtain separating high from popular culture. They spanned the range from the lyric to the polemic, ringing out "wonder and pain and terror-- and the marrow of the bone of life."The poems in this collection were chosen by Hughes himself shortly before his death in 1967 and represent work from his entire career, including "The Negro Speaks of Rivers," "The Weary Blues," "Still Here," "Song for a Dark Girl," "Montage of a Dream Deferred," and "Refugee in America." It gives us a poet of extraordinary range, directness, and stylistic virtuosity.

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2/09/2013

The Deadly Deception: Freemasonry Exposed by One of Its Top Leaders Review

The Deadly Deception: Freemasonry Exposed by One of Its Top Leaders
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The old saying, "An imbecile child with one good eye is a better authority for the existence of color than a roomful of blind PhDs," holds true here. Outside of this book, I know nothing of Shaw or his reliability, but his story is not only credible, but poignant - and corroborated by other former Freemasons who got out AND are still alive (not all are). The authors detail how this organization is not at all Christian, though it wears the guise of morality and does some good for society. Instead it is predominantly clandestine and defiles the conscience when confronting the law and Christ's commands and standards. "Taking an oath to assassinate any fellow-freemason who tries to leave that organization" is by no stretch kind, loving, compassionate, or even the fruit of a rational mind. Being coerced to take such an oath is not only demonic, but outright defiant of Christ's command. Another excellent source is Oberlin College president Charles Finney's book noted at this review's close. His objective expose includes an excerpt from a letter by George Washington, disavowing any supposed (although Freemason-asserted!) adult relationship with that lodge. So, regarding Truth, "seek and you shall find" may involve an extended search, but the end reward is worth it.The Character, Claims and Practical Workings of Freemasonry

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The 33rd Degree initiation ceremony revealed for the first time in history. Now we can visit behind the locked door into this deadly deception which is victimizing multitudes of sincere men. Co-author, Jim Shaw, opens the doors for the reader.

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2/06/2013

Fireforce: One Man's War in the Rhodesian Light Infantry Review

Fireforce: One Man's War in the Rhodesian Light Infantry
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This is a great book, written by a guy who has more combat jumps than ANYONE in the US or UK military (well, that's unsubstanitated...but I'm pretty sure.) The book's about a conscript who signs on to become a regular in the Rhodesian Security Forces, Rhodesian Light Infantry. These guys jumped in combat several times a week. The American Paratroopers who had the most jumps in WW2 had maybe 5 combat jumps. The author had close to 40. I cannot say enought good things about this book. It's well written and easy to read. Very informative and full of good information. I'm reading these books to get insight on how to win against guerillas. The Rhodesians won militarily, but lost due to politics. It's the typical story of how the military does the right thing, fights well and wins, but is held back by gutless politicians. OK enough rant from me. The book is good. Lots of action, lots of detail. I'm not a professional reviewer (as if you couldn't tell), but this book was great! One of those that I didn't want to be over! The only better book I've read on the Rhodesian Bush War is At The Going Down Of The Sun, by Charlie Warren, another trooper that served with the author in the same unit. Both books are good and highly reccomended.

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Fireforce is the compelling, brutal but true account of Chris Cocks' service in 3 Commando, The Rhodesian Light Infantry, during Zimbabwe s bitter civil war of the '70s a war that came to be known almost innocuously as 'the bush war'. 'Fireforce', a tactic of total airborne envelopment, was developed and perfected by the RLI, together with the Selous Scouts and the Rhodesian Air Force. Fireforce became the principal strike weapon of the beleaguered Rhodesian forces in their struggle against the overwhelming tide of the Communist-trained and -equipped ZANLA and ZIPRA guerrillas.The combat strain on a fighting soldier was almost unbelievable, for the Rhodesians, who were always desperately short of ground troops, were sometimes obliged to parachute the same men into action into as many as three enemy contacts a day. While estimates of enemy casualties vary, there seems little doubt that the RLI accounted for at least 12,000 ZANLA and ZIPRA guerrillas - but not without cost. Fireforce is not for the squeamish. Although it has been written with unforgettable pathos and humor, it tells of face-to-face combat in the bush and death at point-blank range. It is a book which does nothing to glorify or glamorize war, for as Chris Cocks found at such a young age, war is merely a catalogue of suffering, destruction and death.Fireforce has been described by critics as being to the Rhodesian War what All Quiet On The Western Front was to World War I and Dispatches was to Vietnam. Read it ... it will an experience you never forget.

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1/20/2013

Swaziland: A Southbound Pocket Guide (Southbound Pocket Guides) (Southbound Travel Guides) Review

Swaziland: A Southbound Pocket Guide (Southbound Pocket Guides) (Southbound Travel Guides)
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First, I must comment on the lack of travel guides for the country of Swaziland. Most books simply lump the country into a few pages and stick it into a South Africa travel guide, so the fact Fleminger took the time to write a book (with 256 pages!) on the traveling in the country must be applauded. Without question it is the most up to date and comprehensive resource out there.
In terms of content, this book was not what I expected, but ended up being exactly what I needed. Fleminger dedicates 100 pages (almost 40% of the book) to the history of the country. And not just recent history. His history starts with the earliest nomads and then really picks up in the 1800's. If you want to know all about the tribal struggles and colonialistic influences that shaped the modern country, then you will not be disappointed. If you are only interested in what to do and where to stay, then you may want to skip the first half of the book. (Again, I really appreciated this background since my wife and I are planning a move to the country, but I realize many readers may not be interested in this).
Fleminger focuses most of his time on the Hhohho and Manzini districts of the country, which makes sense because according to most visitors, these are the most popular areas. He also goes out of the way to give contact information for locations in and around Swaziland.
Overall a very helpful book. As most people will learn, the best approach to visiting Africa is to have a general idea of what you would like to do and then plan on deviating from that. Fleminger's book will certainly be useful in helping you do that.

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The kingdom of Swaziland is a friendly, compact and enchanting country to visit. Its landscapes range from dramatic mountain peaks to deep river valleys, from lush rolling hills to evocative bushveld plains. Add to this a thriving cultural heartbeat, a traditional monarchy going back hundreds of years and a proud national identity, and you have a really special vacation destination.Swaziland also boasts some top-notch adventure activities, such as river-rafting, quad-biking, mountain-biking, hiking, big game-viewing and horse-riding trails. There are plenty of accommodation options, ranging from 5-star international hotels to quaint B&Bs, to backpackers, to homestays in traditional beehive huts. And there is a wide choice of places to eat, handmade crafts to buy and things to do.This book is one of the first travel guides entirely devoted to the kingdom of Swaziland. It includes a compelling account of the country's fascinating history and cultural heritage. There are full listings of accommodation, eating and activity options. Suggested travel itineraries are included to help you make the most of your time in the Kingdom. Whatever your interests, whatever the season, Swaziland is a delight, just waiting to be explored.

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1/15/2013

Clausen's Commentaries on Morals and Dogma Review

Clausen's Commentaries on Morals and Dogma
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This book provides a brief overview of the teachings of each of the Scottish Rite degrees. I found it very interesting and provides added value to my Masonic library.

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11/25/2012

Rome 360 (360 Degrees) Review

Rome 360 (360 Degrees)
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the most beautiful and extraordinary book i've ever seen - an absolutely perfect gift for anyone who's ever been, wants to go, or plans to go to rome

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One of the most colorful cities in the world, Rome is exquisite material for photographs; its bustling streets and magnificent antiquities present spectacular panoramas. Attilio Boccazzi-Varotto has used a rotating camera to produce the unique large-format and multiple-page images--fifty-eight in all--that set this book and the previous volumes in theseries, New York 360 and Venice 360, apart from other volumes of photographs.In gorgeous detail, Rome 360 records the ruins, churches, palazzos, aerial cityscapes, and fountains of this awesome city. Through Boccazzi-Varotto's evocative images, we can reconstruct and marvel at the city's magisterial past: The Colosseum's might is undiminished by its crumbling walls; the Appian Way still stretches, unmarred by the centuries, into the horizon; the Spanish Steps possess the same inspirational power they did in more recent times, when Keats wrote there. The magic of these pictures is fully realized by their incredible presentation. The Trevi Fountain panorama covers six stunning pages, measuring a full six and a half feet; the heart of ancient Rome--Piazza Venezia, the Altar of theFatherland, the Ara Caeli, the Capitol, and the Teatrum Marcelli--is pictured across a four-page spread; and Piazza San Pietro is displayed, over four pages, during a Papal benediction. Journey through Rome while turning these pages: see the Pantheon, the Tiber Bridge, St. Peter's Basilica, Constantine's Arch, the Capitol, Trajan's Market, and more. Explanatory captions in the back of the book identify the landmarks pictured and provide an artistic and historical context. Rome 360 is a glorious window on this city's incomparable mystery.58 full-color photographs, including pull-out panoramas of Rome's greatest landmarks

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11/23/2012

Dispossession by Degrees: Indian Land and Identity in Natick, Massachusetts, 1650-1790 Review

Dispossession by Degrees: Indian Land and Identity in Natick, Massachusetts, 1650-1790
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Dispossession By Degrees: Indian Land And Identity In Natick, Massachusetts 1650-1790 by Jean M. O'Brien (Associate Professor of History, University of Minnesota) is a close and scholarly study of how Native American peoples from different tribal backgrounds came together for the purpose of working collaboratively to cope the cultural impact of European invaders, and to form a life for themselves even as English settlers extended their range of influence during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Dispelling the myth that Native Americans simply disappeared from the land, Dispossession By Degrees presents a carefully researched focus upon the Natick tribe and settlement that sought to coexist with an unending influx of settlers. An invaluable, informative, insightful contribution, Dispossession By Degrees is an original and very highly recommended addition to Native American Studies reading lists and American History reference collections.

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Despite popular belief, Native peoples did not simply disappear from colonial New England as the English extended their domination in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Rather, the Native peoples in such places as Natick, Massachusetts, creatively resisted colonialism, defended their lands, and rebuilt kin networks and community through the strategic use of English cultural practices and institutions. So why did New England settlers believe that the Native peoples had vanished? In this thoroughly researched and astutely argued study, historian Jean M. O'Brien reveals that, in the late eighteenth century, the Natick tribe experienced a process of "dispossession by degrees," which rendered them invisible within the larger context of the colonial social order, thus enabling the construction of the myth of Indian extinction.

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11/11/2012

Degrees of Freedom: Louisiana and Cuba after Slavery Review

Degrees of Freedom: Louisiana and Cuba after Slavery
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First, disclosure of potential conflict of interest. The author and I are both faculty at the University of Michigan, though not in the same department. This is a very good comparative study of the aftermath of emancipation in Louisiana and Cuba. In Louisiana, emancipation was followed by the burst of African-American political participation during the Reconstruction period, then the gradual extinction of African-American civil rights that was the imposition of Jim Crow. In Cuba, on the other hand, emancipation was bound up with the cause of Cuban independence and the attainment of nationhood was accompanied by considerable political participation on the part of Afro-Cubans, and this became an enduring feature of Cuban life.
In important respects, Louisiana and Cuba had important common features. Both were slaveholding societies with sugar plantation economies. Antebellum Louisiana, particularly the sugar producing parishes (counties) that are the focus of Scott's narrative, was a highly stratified 'slave' society with relatively small numbers of white owners lording over a large group of slave workers. Free blacks, and whites engaged in plantation labor were relatively sparse. The most important free black community in Louisiana was the urbanized and creolized community of New Orleans. Pre-independence Cuba, in contrast, was more diverse in some respects. There were substantial numbers of free Afro-Cubans, many whites who performed plantation labor, and other forms of ethnic diversity such as significant numbers of Chinese indentured laborers. Emancipation in Louisiana resulted from the Northern triumph in the Civil War (to which large numbers of southern black soldiers and sailors made crucial contributions) and the post-war maintenance of African-American civil rights depended on the sympathy of Northern politicians. The intensification of Northern racism and the desire to placate Southern whites led to the imposition of the Jim Crow system. In Cuba, the long struggle for independence was a multiracial, multiethnic phenomenon in which Afro-Cubans occupied prominent leadership roles. The nature of the Cuban society and the struggle for independence made imposing a Jim Crow like system difficult in Cuba. This was despite the American occupation of Cuba as the American overlords would clearly have preferred a system more like that of the American South.
Well written and documented, this book features a number of interesting aspects beyond the main analysis. The narrative about Louisiana is a very good case study of the imposition of Jim Crow. None of this will be novel to knowledgeable readers but this is one of the best 'bottom up' descriptions of this tragic process I've read. Scott provides some interesting discussion of the roles of New Orleans Creole leadership and their pan-Caribbean perspective. All the discussion of Cuba will be new to most American readers and is very interesting While the topic of this book appears relatively narrow, it is generally illuminating.

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11/05/2012

Magnum Degrees Review

Magnum Degrees
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This collection of Magnum photographs is amazing. The pictures are broken into differnet thematic or geographic categories--war, environment, famine, etc. While there is very little text and almost no captions at all, the pictures are enough to speak to the subject. It contains both recent photographs and old ones, becoming something like an encyclopediea of photography.
It is a beautiful edition, worth having and will make an excellent, classy present not only for a photography enthusiast, but for everybody.

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11/03/2012

Brother of the Third Degree Review

Brother of the Third Degree
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To read this book is similar to undergoing an initiation experience oneself. The book is very well-written, and it is hard to lay it down before reading it all the way through. Personally this book has had a profound influence on my life; I can only recommend it to the highest degree. If you are ready to get a push forward on the initiatory path, this book can do it for you!

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Set in the near future (early twentieth century), this 1894 occult novel is a tale of eternal love, albeit chaste. The protagonist, Alphonso Colono, a Mexican, is born into a family with connected with the Illuminati, here called the 'White Brotherhood.' He moves to Paris and is initiated into the occult group, where he meets the woman who is to become his soulmate: Iole. They meet St. Germain and other adepts, help a modern Napoleon unite Europe, and eventually pass beyond the mortal realm.This novel may not have had the impact of Zanoni, which it bears superficial resemblances to. It does show that the modern complex of beliefs about the Illuminati was complete in all of its aspects in the last decade of the 19th century. The wandering eternal masters, the use of occult power to leverage political change, and the strange powers of the adepts, are present and accounted for. These concepts would later become dogma for groups such as the "I AM" Activity and its modern successors.Garver's vision of a united Europe at peace in the 20th century, (after a period of war) was a good prediction, even if the mechanism he proposes is a bit absurd. The narrative itself is still a good read, despite the overblown period prose. This long-forgotten predecessor to the Da Vinci Code moves along nicely and has memorable characters. Not many 19th century occult fictions are half as readable.

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