LIBROS DEL AUTOR: kerry segrave

47 resultados para LIBROS DEL AUTOR: kerry segrave

  • Tarring and Feathering in America
    Kerry Segrave
    Tarring and feathering as a punishment is present throughout American history, perhaps most notably as a form of political reprimand during the late eighteenth century. Its original use was as a non-lethal method of torture and humiliation, designed to publicly shame the targeted individual and drive them from the area. Following the Civil War, tarring and feathering became...
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    71,94 €

  • Masking America, 1918-1919
    Kerry Segrave
    This book recalls masking efforts in response to the Spanish flu epidemic. Masking the population as an ineffective response to disease by public health officials and political bureaucrats at various levels of jurisdiction reached its zenith in 2020. However, it began a century earlier during the Spanish flu epidemic of 1918-1919. In both cases, masking was not the first re...
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    109,95 €

  • Wall Street’s Financing of World War I; Liberty Loans and Financial Demonization.
    Kerry Segrave
    World War I was a gold mine for the capitalist class. The only problem was that they did not want to pay the entire war cost themselves. The banking plutocrats created the Liberty Loan programs to pass much of that cost along to the underclasses – five in total from 1917 to 1919. An intense campaign was put in motion to sell the bonds, perhaps the most significant public relati...
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    20,99 €

  • Dying for Chocolate
    Kerry Segrave
    On a summer day in 1898, a family in Dover, Delaware, shared a box of chocolates they received in the mail from an anonymous sender. Within days, two of the seven family members were dead; the other five became ill but recovered. The search for the perpetrator soon moved from Delaware to California, where a suspect was quickly identified: Cordelia Botkin, lover of the husban...
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    28,45 €

  • The National Security League, 1914-1922
    Kerry Segrave
    The early 20th century saw the founding of the National Security League, a nationalistic nonprofit organization committed to an expanded military, conscripted service and meritocracy. This book details its history, from its formation in December 1914 through 1922, at which point it was a spent force in decline. Founded by wealthy corporate lawyers based in New York City, it ...
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    79,27 €

  • Women and Bicycles in America, 1868-1900
    Kerry Segrave
     In the last third of the 1800s, America was struck by a bicycle craze. This trend massively impacted the lives of women, allowing them greater mobility and changing perceptions of women as weak or in need of chaperons. This book traces the history and development of the American bicycle, observing its critical role in the fight for gender equality. The bicycle radically cha...
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    79,27 €

  • The Electric Car in America, 1890-1922
    Kerry Segrave
    The electric vehicle seemed poised in 1900 to be a leader in automotive production. Clean, odorless, noiseless and mechanically simple, electrics rarely broke down and were easy to operate. An electric car could be started instantly from the driver’s seat; no other machine could claim that advantage. But then it all went wrong. As this history details, the hope and confide...
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    73,28 €

  • 'Masquerading in Male Attire'
    Kerry Segrave
    Historically, American women have dressed as men for a number of reasons: to enter the military, to travel freely, to commit a criminal act, to marry other women--most often however to secure employment. During the 1800s and early 1900s, most jobs were barred to women, and those that were available to both sexes paid women far less. This book profiles both women who passed...
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    72,00 €

  • The Women Who Got America Talking
    Kerry Segrave
    When the need for telephone operators arose in the 1870s, the assumption was that they should all be male. Wages for adult men were too high, so boys were hired. They proved quick to argue with the subscribers, so females replaced them. Women were calmer, had reassuring voices and rarely talked back. Within a few years, telephone operators were all female and would remain so...
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    42,81 €

  • Police Violence in America, 1869-1920
    Kerry Segrave
    Police violence is not a new phenomenon. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, police officers in America assaulted or killed many ordinary citizens, often during improper detainments or arrests where no threat existed or no crime had been committed. Based on hundreds of newspaper accounts from 1869 through 1920, this history provides a chronological listing of interact...
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    42,79 €

  • The Hatpin Menace
    Kerry Segrave
    Between 1887 and 1920, the humble hatpin went from an unremarkable item in every woman’s wardrobe, to a fashion necessity, to a dangerous weapon (it was said). Big hair and big hats of the era meant big hatpins, and their weaponized use sparked controversy. There were 'good' uses of hatpins, such as fending off an attacker in the street. There were also 'bad' uses, such as w...
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    50,28 €

  • Chewing Gum in America, 1850-1920
    Kerry Segrave
    Americans began chewing gum long before 1850, scraping resin from spruce trees, removing any bits of bark or insects and chewing the finished product. Commercially-made gum was of limited availability and came in three types--tree resin, pretroleum-based paraffin and chicle-based--the latter, a natural latex, ultimately eclipsing its rivals by 1920. Once considered a women-o...
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    57,46 €

  • Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance in America, 1862-1920
    Kerry Segrave
    Following the 2013 revelations of Edward Snowden, Americans have come to realize that many of us may be under surveillance at any time. It all started 150 years ago on the battlefields of the Civil War, where each side tapped the other’s telegraph lines. It continued in 1895, when the New York Police Department began to tap telephone lines. It was 20 years before it was publ...
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    42,85 €

  • Beware the Masher
    Kerry Segrave
    This book examines the history of sexual harassment in America’s public places, such as on the streets and on public transit vehicles, in the period 1880 to 1930. Such behavior was referred to then as mashing with the harasser most commonly being called a masher. It began around 1880 as a response to the women’s movement as females in America increased their efforts to gain ...
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    57,41 €

  • Policewomen
    Kerry Segrave
    Women in policing have seen three phases of acceptance. Beginning in about 1880, they were admitted as police matrons with extremely limited duties. Next they were accepted as policewomen around 1910-1916, when that title was officially bestowed on them. Finally came assignment of females as general duty officers in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Not coincidentally, an acti...
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    56,83 €

  • American Television Abroad
    Kerry Segrave
    Once the major Hollywood studios got over their loathing of television as an entertainment medium, they moved quickly to try to dominate both domestic and international programming. In the United States, the eight major studios controlled an overwhelming majority of all television programming by the early 1950s. Their efforts in foreign markets were not quite so successful, ...
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    57,01 €

  • Extras of Early Hollywood
    Kerry Segrave
    Pity the 'extras.' Mostly overlooked and forgotten. Especially those in the major Hollywood films 1913 to 1945--right through the dream factory’s golden era. The struggles of extras to unionize were followed by internal struggles as the extras fought for a voice within that union. There were just too few jobs for far too many extras, some of whom were lured to Hollywood by w...
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    57,58 €

  • Women Serial and Mass Murderers
    Kerry Segrave
    It is at 31.4 years of age that the average woman multiple murderer kills the first of her 17 victims, whom she usually knows or is related to. The preferred method is poison, usually arsenic. She is more likely to prey on the vulnerable--the very young or the very old--than is her male counterpart. Her killing spree lasts five years; when caught, she shows little remorse. ...
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    35,18 €

  • The Sexual Harassment of Women in the Workplace, 1600 to 1993
    Kerry Segrave
    While sexual harassment of women in the workplace has been discussed for decades it is still a pervasive problem. This book looks at the history of that harassment from the 1600s (!) to the early 1990s, from long forgotten domestic servants in England of the 1600s to abused Japanese textile workers of 1900, to Anita Hill in 1991 America. Coverage is worldwide with emphasis o...
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    57,24 €

  • Payola in the Music Industry
    Kerry Segrave
    Payola is as old as the music industry and continues today. Contrary to popular belief, the acceptance of payola is legal. (Only the nonreporting of it would be illegal.) The recipients of payola and the reasons behind it are discussed decade-by-decade. The early bribes to the minstrel groups and vaudeville players are traced, as are modern-day payments to disc jockeys and...
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    42,60 €

  • Parking Cars in America, 1910-1945
    Kerry Segrave
    With its decentralized urban areas, pollution, and mostly inadequate public transit systems, America pays a heavy price for its dependency on cars. This volume explores one of the more pressing aspects of the problem--storage--from 1910 to the end of World War II, contrasting the reality and perception of car parking as found in the pages of the popular newspapers and magazi...
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    42,95 €

  • Begging in America, 1850-1940
    Kerry Segrave
    The poverty that drives people to begging has been a pressing social issue in the United States since the beginning. This historical work explores begging and beggars in the period 1850 to 1940, with emphasis on how the police, the courts, the media and private charity organizations dealt with them. Efforts to suppress mendicancy are explored, including legislation, police c...
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    72,13 €

  • Vision Aids in America
    Kerry Segrave
    This text examines the eyewear industry in America from 1900 to 2008, a period which mirrors an increased demand for eyewear. Eyeglasses, sunglasses and contacts are discussed. Topics covered include the marketing and selling of eyewear with particular attention paid to advertising strategies and the internal structures of the industry and its regulations, which have sometim...
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    42,89 €

  • Lynchings of Women in the United States
    Kerry Segrave
    Between 1850 and 1950, at least 115 women were lynched by mobs in the United States. The majority of these women were black. This book examines the phenomenon of the lynching of women, a much more rare occurence than the lynching of men. Over the same hundred year period covered in this text, more than 1,000 white men were lynched, while thousands of black men were murdered ...
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    28,27 €

  • America Brushes Up
    Kerry Segrave
    This excursion into American cultural history looks at the toothpaste and toothbrush industries from 1900 to 2008. During these years, America moved from cleaning their teeth mostly with homemade powders to using an enormous array of brands, often applied with an electric toothbrush. From early 20th century products like Forhan’s (which 'cured' pyorrhea) to the whiteners of ...
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    42,81 €

  • Parricide in the United States, 1840-1899
    Kerry Segrave
    The case of Lizzy Borden stands out in the history of sensational criminal cases, but she was not the only person to be accused of killing her parents. Historically, about two percent of all murders are parricides. This book examines 103 selected cases of individuals charged with parricide--the murder of a father or mother--in the United States in the last half of the 19t...
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    28,41 €

  • Tipping
    Kerry Segrave
    Though the history of tipping can be traced to the Middle Ages, the practice did not become widespread until the late 19th century. Initially, Americans reviled the custom, branding it un-American and undemocratic. The opposition gradually faded and tipping became an American institution. From its beginnings in Europe to its development as a quintessentially American trait, ...
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    50,22 €

  • Movies at Home
    Kerry Segrave
    The relationship of Hollywood and television, initially turbulent, has ultimately been profitable from the first sally in what was expected to be a war of attrition, up through the soliciting of movies by major networks, independent stations, basic cable networks, premium cable channels, pay-per-view systems and even the corner video store. When their initial efforts to ac...
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    42,71 €

  • Film Actors Organize
    Kerry Segrave
    The transition from stage to screen was not only a shift in popular entertainment, but a challenge for those working in the industry as well. This book looks at all the attempts to organize film actors into a union, starting in 1912 when the Actors’ Equity Association seemed the best platform for such an effort, to the establishment of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) in 1933 a...
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    57,50 €

  • Baldness
    Kerry Segrave
    Each year, men spend an enormous amount of time and money searching for a cure to male pattern baldness. Numerous psychological assessments indicate that the reasons behind their futile efforts are sound: attitudes toward bald men are overwhelmingly negative. From the first torturous attempts at hair implants to the faddish, well-hyped drug treatments of today, the extreme...
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    42,88 €


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