The Other Daughters of the Revolution Kitty RossPresents two of the earliest autobiographies of American women. Early in the nineteenth century, New York residents K. White and Elizabeth Fisher wrote and published two of the earliest autobiographies written by American women. Their lives ran along parallel courses: both were daughters of Loyalists who chose to remain in the United States; both found themselves entangled in unhappy marriages, abandoned for extend periods, and forced to take on the
as speakers and members of linguistic communities
the emergence of the technology that made undersea extraction possible
/ While happy winds go laughing by
rotund printer at Salisbury Court was quietly feminizing journalism
Three baculovirus biopesticide case studies are provided elucidating the practical benefits and challenges of using baculoviruses in IPM systems
The first comparative analysis of the development and practice of parliamentary technology assessment in different national settings
The volume is in five sections
Pulling together many subject areas into one
“[A] definitive work in the genre of Palestinian memoirs that will not only attract readers of Said or Kanafani
Poole learned Arabic and adopted Egyptian clothing that enabled her not only to observe day-to-day life in the streets and markets but also to enter hammams and harems and interact on an intimate level with Egyptian women of different classes
The chapter suggests breeding strategies for earliness and stress resistance and considers the genetic aspects
Piercing Time examines the role of photography in documenting urban change by juxtaposing contemporary ‘rephotographs’ taken by the author with images of nineteenth-century Paris taken by Charles Marville