Empire of Cotton

Empire of Cotton
  • Author : Sven Beckert
  • Publisher : Penguin UK
  • File Size : 45,5 Mb
  • Total Pages : 640
  • Relase : 2014-12-04
  • ISBN : 9780141979977
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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WINNER OF THE 2015 BANCROFT PRIZE WINNER OF THE 2015 PHILIP TAFT PRIZE FINALIST FOR THE 2015 PULITZER PRIZE FOR HISTORY SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2015 CUNDHILL PRIZE IN HISTORICAL LITERATURE Economist BOOKS OF THE YEAR 2015 'A masterpiece of the historian's craft' The Nation For about 900 years, from 1000 to 1900, cotton was the world's most important manufacturing industry. It remains a vast business - if all the cotton bales produced in 2013 had been stacked on top of each other they would have made a somewhat unstable tower 40,000 miles high. Sven Beckert's superb new book is a history of the overwhelming role played by cotton in dictating the shape of our world. It is both a gripping narrative and a brilliant case history of how the world works.

Empire of Cotton

Empire of Cotton
  • Author : Sven Beckert
  • Publisher : National Geographic Books
  • File Size : 45,8 Mb
  • Total Pages : 0
  • Relase : 2015-11-10
  • ISBN : 9780375713965
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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WINNER OF THE BANCROFT PRIZE • A Pulitzer Prize finalist that's as unsettling as it is enlightening: a book that brilliantly weaves together the story of cotton with how the present global world came to exist. “Masterly … An astonishing achievement.” —The New York Times The empire of cotton was, from the beginning, a fulcrum of constant global struggle between slaves and planters, merchants and statesmen, workers and factory owners. Sven Beckert makes clear how these forces ushered in the world of modern capitalism, including the vast wealth and disturbing inequalities that are with us today. In a remarkably brief period, European entrepreneurs and powerful politicians recast the world’s most significant manufacturing industry, combining imperial expansion and slave labor with new machines and wage workers to make and remake global capitalism.

Empire Cotton Growing Corporation

Empire Cotton Growing Corporation
  • Author : United States. Federal Trade Commission
  • Publisher : Unknown
  • File Size : 46,8 Mb
  • Total Pages : 44
  • Relase : 1925
  • ISBN : UCAL:B5004062
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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Cotton Literature

Cotton Literature
  • Author : Anonim
  • Publisher : Unknown
  • File Size : 48,6 Mb
  • Total Pages : 914
  • Relase : 1931
  • ISBN : CHI:102249986
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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Empire Cotton Growing Review

Empire Cotton Growing Review
  • Author : Anonim
  • Publisher : Unknown
  • File Size : 49,6 Mb
  • Total Pages : 808
  • Relase : 1957
  • ISBN : UCAL:B3873505
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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Where the Red-Winged Blackbirds Sing

Where the Red-Winged Blackbirds Sing
  • Author : Jennifer Bess
  • Publisher : University Press of Colorado
  • File Size : 53,5 Mb
  • Total Pages : 436
  • Relase : 2021-04-01
  • ISBN : 9781646421053
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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Where the Red-Winged Blackbirds Sing examines the ways in which the Akimel O’odham (“River People”) and their ancestors, the Huhugam, adapted to economic, political, and environmental constraints imposed by federal Indian policy, the Indian Bureau, and an encroaching settler population in Arizona’s Gila River Valley. Fundamental to O’odham resilience was their connection to their sense of peoplehood and their himdag (“lifeway”), which culminated in the restoration of their water rights and a revitalization of their Indigenous culture. Author Jennifer Bess examines the Akimel O’odham’s worldview, which links their origins with a responsibility to farm the Gila River Valley and to honor their history of adaptation and obligations as “world-builders”—co-creators of an evermore life-sustaining environment and participants in flexible networks of economic exchange. Bess considers this worldview in context of the Huhugam–Akimel O’odham agricultural economy over more than a thousand years. Drawing directly on Akimel O’odham traditional ecological knowledge, innovations, and interpretive strategies in archives and interviews, Bess shows how the Akimel O’odham engaged in agricultural economy for the sake of their lifeways, collective identity, enduring future, and actualization of the values modeled in their sacred stories. Where the Red-Winged Blackbirds Sing highlights the values of adaptation, innovation, and co-creation fundamental to Akimel O’odham lifeways and chronicles the contributions the Akimel O’odham have made to American history and to the history of agriculture. The book will be of interest to scholars of Indigenous, American Southwestern, and agricultural history.

Memorandum on Cotton Growing Within the Empire

Memorandum on Cotton Growing Within the Empire
  • Author : Empire Cotton Growing Corporation (Great Britain)
  • Publisher : Unknown
  • File Size : 50,8 Mb
  • Total Pages : 16
  • Relase : 1923*
  • ISBN : OCLC:71048041
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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The Rediscovery of America

The Rediscovery of America
  • Author : Ned Blackhawk
  • Publisher : Yale University Press
  • File Size : 53,5 Mb
  • Total Pages : 611
  • Relase : 2023-04-25
  • ISBN : 9780300271249
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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A sweeping and overdue retelling of U.S. history that recognizes that Native Americans are essential to understanding the evolution of modern America The most enduring feature of U.S. history is the presence of Native Americans, yet most histories focus on Europeans and their descendants. This long practice of ignoring Indigenous history is changing, however, with a new generation of scholars insists that any full American history address the struggle, survival, and resurgence of American Indian nations. Indigenous history is essential to understanding the evolution of modern America. Ned Blackhawk interweaves five centuries of Native and non‑Native histories, from Spanish colonial exploration to the rise of Native American self-determination in the late twentieth century. In this transformative synthesis he shows that • European colonization in the 1600s was never a predetermined success; • Native nations helped shape England’s crisis of empire; • the first shots of the American Revolution were prompted by Indian affairs in the interior; • California Indians targeted by federally funded militias were among the first casualties of the Civil War; • the Union victory forever recalibrated Native communities across the West; • twentieth-century reservation activists refashioned American law and policy. Blackhawk’s retelling of U.S. history acknowledges the enduring power, agency, and survival of Indigenous peoples, yielding a truer account of the United States and revealing anew the varied meanings of America.

A Dialectical Journey through Fashion and Philosophy

A Dialectical Journey through Fashion and Philosophy
  • Author : Eun Jung Kang
  • Publisher : Springer Nature
  • File Size : 44,7 Mb
  • Total Pages : 192
  • Relase : 2020-01-01
  • ISBN : 9789811508141
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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This book takes an in-depth look at the integration of fashion and philosophy. It challenges the deeply rooted prejudice or misconception that fashion is a field limited to body-oriented and appearance-related themes and practices. It also reveals that fashion is intermeshed with distinctively modern issues that belong to the realm of the mind as well as the body. In doing so, it refashions philosophy and philosophizes fashion, which ultimately amount to the same thing. The book argues that while the philosophization of fashion can give a clearer understanding of some esoteric areas of philosophy and fashion’s close connection to modern societies and politics, it also shows that philosophy can assist in redeeming fashion from the objective, bodily world, positioning it as an indispensable part of the humanities. This is because fashion manifests critical aspects of human culture in our time, and is an expression of the zeitgeist, which is interwoven with the unfolding of history. This book will be highly relevant to students and researchers in fashion studies who are looking for the theoretical underpinnings and insights for their own work. It will also be of keen interest to scholars in the field of philosophy who are seeking to apply philosophical concepts to both everyday life and our empirical world.

Red Round Globe Hot Burning

Red Round Globe Hot Burning
  • Author : Peter Linebaugh
  • Publisher : Univ of California Press
  • File Size : 47,7 Mb
  • Total Pages : 486
  • Relase : 2021-02-23
  • ISBN : 9780520383036
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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On February 21, 1803, Colonel Edward (Ned) Marcus Despard was publicly hanged and decapitated in London before a crowd of 20,000 for organizing a revolutionary conspiracy to overthrow King George III. His Black Caribbean wife, Catherine (Kate), helped to write his gallows speech in which he proclaimed that he was a friend to the poor and oppressed. He expressed trust that “the principles of freedom, of humanity, and of justice will triumph over falsehood, tyranny, and delusion.” And yet the world turned. From the connected events of the American, French, Haitian, and failed Irish Revolutions, to the Anthropocene’s birth amidst enclosures, war-making global capitalism, slave labor plantations, and factory machine production, Red Round Globe Hot Burning throws readers into the pivotal moment of the last two millennia. This monumental history, packed with a wealth of detail, presents a comprehensive chronicle of the resistance to the demise of communal regimes. Peter Linebaugh’s extraordinary narrative recovers the death-defying heroism of extended networks of underground resisters fighting against privatization of the commons accomplished by two new political entities, the U.S.A. and the U.K., that we now know would dispossess people around the world through today. Red Round Globe Hot Burning is the culmination of a lifetime of research—encapsulated through an epic tale of love.

Agrarian Crossings

Agrarian Crossings
  • Author : Tore C. Olsson
  • Publisher : Princeton University Press
  • File Size : 52,7 Mb
  • Total Pages : 296
  • Relase : 2020-11-03
  • ISBN : 9780691210452
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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In the 1930s and 1940s, rural reformers in the United States and Mexico waged unprecedented campaigns to remake their countrysides in the name of agrarian justice and agricultural productivity. Agrarian Crossings tells the story of how these campaigns were conducted in dialogue with one another as reformers in each nation came to exchange models, plans, and strategies with their equivalents across the border. Dismantling the artificial boundaries that can divide American and Latin American history, Tore Olsson shows how the agrarian histories of both regions share far more than we realize. He traces the connections between the US South and the plantation zones of Mexico, places that suffered parallel problems of environmental decline, rural poverty, and gross inequities in land tenure. Bringing this tumultuous era vividly to life, he describes how Roosevelt’s New Deal drew on Mexican revolutionary agrarianism to shape its program for the rural South. Olsson also looks at how the US South served as the domestic laboratory for the Rockefeller Foundation’s “green revolution” in Mexico—which would become the most important Third World development campaign of the twentieth century—and how the Mexican government attempted to replicate the hydraulic development of the Tennessee Valley Authority after World War II. Rather than a comparative history, Agrarian Crossings is an innovative history of comparisons and the ways they affected policy, moved people, and reshaped the landscape.

An Economic Survey of the Colonial Empire

An Economic Survey of the Colonial Empire
  • Author : Great Britain. Colonial Office
  • Publisher : Unknown
  • File Size : 40,7 Mb
  • Total Pages : 590
  • Relase : 1932
  • ISBN : MINN:319510022255195
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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South to Freedom

South to Freedom
  • Author : Alice L Baumgartner
  • Publisher : Hachette UK
  • File Size : 53,7 Mb
  • Total Pages : 362
  • Relase : 2020-11-10
  • ISBN : 9781541617773
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

South to Freedom Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

A brilliant and surprising account of the coming of the American Civil War, showing the crucial role of slaves who escaped to Mexico. The Underground Railroad to the North promised salvation to many American slaves before the Civil War. But thousands of people in the south-central United States escaped slavery not by heading north but by crossing the southern border into Mexico, where slavery was abolished in 1837. In South to Freedom, historianAlice L. Baumgartner tells the story of why Mexico abolished slavery and how its increasingly radical antislavery policies fueled the sectional crisis in the United States. Southerners hoped that annexing Texas and invading Mexico in the 1840s would stop runaways and secure slavery's future. Instead, the seizure of Alta California and Nuevo México upset the delicate political balance between free and slave states. This is a revelatory and essential new perspective on antebellum America and the causes of the Civil War.

"The Distress is Impossible to Convey"

  • Author : Ravi Ahuja,Marcel van der Linden,Anna Sailer
  • Publisher : Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
  • File Size : 40,6 Mb
  • Total Pages : 290
  • Relase : 2020-08-10
  • ISBN : 9783110682236
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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Asian industrial competition, from Japan, China but also India, attracted greater public attention in Europe during the inter-war period than ever before. Indian industrial employment became the subject not only of extensive official enquiries, intensified legislation, a growing number of academic studies and of more popular writings, but also of debates within and between European trade unions.

Slavery, Freedom and Conflict

Slavery, Freedom and Conflict
  • Author : Jane L. Bownas
  • Publisher : Liverpool University Press
  • File Size : 51,5 Mb
  • Total Pages : 220
  • Relase : 2020-03-11
  • ISBN : 9781802071658
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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A Story of Two Birminghams examines the roles played by two cities and the areas in which they are situated in the long history of people of African origin and their ancestors who were taken into slavery, experienced a phoney freedom and subsequently experienced racism, segregation and violence. From the eighteenth century the industrial city of Birmingham in England was involved in the manufacture of guns used in the African slave trade and then later, in the production and export of the steam engines used on the sugar plantations in the West Indies. In northern Alabama, on land where another industrial city of the same name would later develop, African slaves worked on cotton plantations owned by planters who would later make their fortunes by selling the mineral rich land. Abolitionists in Birmingham UK, and in the Southern States fought against much opposition to achieve freedom for the slaves. But this was often a phoney freedom: for example, under an apprenticeship system in Jamaica people endured conditions often worse than under slavery, and in Alabama they endured hard labour in the development of the new industrial city and under the Convict Lease system. Slavery, Freedom and Conflict follows the life path of descendants of slaves into the twentieth century, the difficulties experienced by West Indian immigrants in Birmingham UK, the segregation laws imposed in Birmingham, Alabama and the US Civil Rights movement which followed. Later in the century, riots occurring in Handsworth (Birmingham UK), the election of a far-right, racist politician in nearby Smethwick and the infamous speech of Enoch Powell indicated that, as in Birmingham, Alabama many black people were still suffering from the iniquities of the slave trade inflicted upon their ancestors more than two hundred years previously. This book is essential reading for all those with an interest in the history of slavery, and in the local history of the West Midlands of England and the Northern counties of Alabama.

Empire Cotton Growing Corporation

Empire Cotton Growing Corporation
  • Author : Empire Cotton Growing Corporation
  • Publisher : Unknown
  • File Size : 40,5 Mb
  • Total Pages : 16
  • Relase : 1961
  • ISBN : OCLC:30375645
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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Seeds of Empire

Seeds of Empire
  • Author : Andrew J. Torget
  • Publisher : UNC Press Books
  • File Size : 42,8 Mb
  • Total Pages : 368
  • Relase : 2015-08-06
  • ISBN : 9781469624259
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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By the late 1810s, a global revolution in cotton had remade the U.S.-Mexico border, bringing wealth and waves of Americans to the Gulf Coast while also devastating the lives and villages of Mexicans in Texas. In response, Mexico threw open its northern territories to American farmers in hopes that cotton could bring prosperity to the region. Thousands of Anglo-Americans poured into Texas, but their insistence that slavery accompany them sparked pitched battles across Mexico. An extraordinary alliance of Anglos and Mexicans in Texas came together to defend slavery against abolitionists in the Mexican government, beginning a series of fights that culminated in the Texas Revolution. In the aftermath, Anglo-Americans rebuilt the Texas borderlands into the most unlikely creation: the first fully committed slaveholders' republic in North America. Seeds of Empire tells the remarkable story of how the cotton revolution of the early nineteenth century transformed northeastern Mexico into the western edge of the United States, and how the rise and spectacular collapse of the Republic of Texas as a nation built on cotton and slavery proved to be a blueprint for the Confederacy of the 1860s.

Empire Cotton Growing Corporation

Empire Cotton Growing Corporation
  • Author : Empire Cotton Growing Corporation
  • Publisher : Unknown
  • File Size : 55,8 Mb
  • Total Pages : 11
  • Relase : 1922*
  • ISBN : OCLC:60601779
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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Democracy by Petition

Democracy by Petition
  • Author : Daniel Carpenter
  • Publisher : Harvard University Press
  • File Size : 55,6 Mb
  • Total Pages : 649
  • Relase : 2021-05-04
  • ISBN : 9780674247499
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

Democracy by Petition Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This pioneering work of political history recovers the central and largely forgotten role that petitioning played in the formative years of North American democracy. Known as the age of democracy, the nineteenth century witnessed the extension of the franchise and the rise of party politics. As Daniel Carpenter shows, however, democracy in America emerged not merely through elections and parties, but through the transformation of an ancient political tool: the petition. A statement of grievance accompanied by a list of signatures, the petition afforded women and men excluded from formal politics the chance to make their voices heard and to reshape the landscape of political possibility. Democracy by Petition traces the explosion and expansion of petitioning across the North American continent. Indigenous tribes in Canada, free Blacks from Boston to the British West Indies, Irish canal workers in Indiana, and Hispanic settlers in territorial New Mexico all used petitions to make claims on those in power. Petitions facilitated the extension of suffrage, the decline of feudal land tenure, and advances in liberty for women, African Americans, and Indigenous peoples. Even where petitioners failed in their immediate aims, their campaigns advanced democracy by setting agendas, recruiting people into political causes, and fostering aspirations of equality. Far more than periodic elections, petitions provided an everyday current of communication between officeholders and the people. The coming of democracy in America owes much to the unprecedented energy with which the petition was employed in the antebellum period. By uncovering this neglected yet vital strand of nineteenth-century life, Democracy by Petition will forever change how we understand our political history.

Technical Bulletin

Technical Bulletin
  • Author : Anonim
  • Publisher : Unknown
  • File Size : 45,8 Mb
  • Total Pages : 1332
  • Relase : 1937
  • ISBN : MINN:31951T00093156B
  • Rating : 4/5 (84 users)

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