Emily Zola
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Maitland, Alan (editor) (Virginia Woolf; Emily Carr; Emile Zola; Janette Turner Hospital; Malcolm Lowry; Laurence Housman; Alphonse Daudet; Jane Urquhart; Oscar Wilde; Lesley Choyce; Ivan Turgenev; L. Rossiter; E. Annix Proulx; E. Pauline Johnson): FAVOURITE (Favorite) SEA STORIES FROM SEASIDE AL: The Waves; Three Villages; Coqueville on the Spree; Port After Port the Same Baggage; The Ocean Spray; The Feeding of the Emigrants; The Lighthouse of Les Sanguinaires; The Boat; The Fisherman and His Soul, Toronto Viking 1996
0670865389 Very Good Stephen Snider;
322 pp. Blue and cream coloured boards; lettered in cream on the spine; headband. Light wear on the corners of the dustjacket; price intact; no interior markings. Dj art by Stephen Snider. This anthology contains: The Waves (dawn) by Virginia Woolf; Three Villages by Emily Carr; Coqueville on the Spree by Emile Zola; Port After Port the Same Baggage by Janette Turner Hospital; The Ocean Spray by Malcolm Lowry; The Feeding of the Emigrants by Laurence Housman; The Waves (early morning) by Virginia Woolf; The Lighthouse of Les Sanguinaires by Alphonse Daudet; The Boat by Jane Urquhart; The Fisherman and His Soul by Oscar Wilde; Far Enough Island by Lesley Choyce; On the Sea by Ivan Turgenev; The Waves (early afternoon) by Virginia Woolf; Ebb Tide by E. Rossiter; Deadman by E. Annie Proulx; The Wreck by Guy de Maupassant; The Aran Islands: First Visit by J. M. Synge; The Deep Waters by E. Pauline Johnson; The Waves (dusk) by Virginia Woolf; The Little Mermaid by Hans Christian Andersen; The Bottle Imp by Robert Louis Stevenson; Soaked in Seaweed by Stephen Leacock; and Sleep by Emily Carr. First Edition Very Good Hard Cover 8vo
[SW: sea stories; seafaring nautical adventure; canadian author;]
Maitland, Alan (editor) (Virginia Woolf; Emily Carr; Emile Zola; Janette Turner Hospital; Malcolm Lowry; Laurence Housman; Alphonse Daudet; Jane Urquhart; Oscar Wilde; Lesley Choyce; Ivan Turgenev; L. Rossiter; E. Annix Proulx; E. Pauline Johnson): FAVOURITE (Favorite) SEA STORIES FROM SEASIDE AL: The Waves; Three Villages; Coqueville on the Spree; Port After Port the Same Baggage; The Ocean Spray; The Feeding of the Emigrants; The Lighthouse of Les Sanguinaires; The Boat; The Fisherman and His Soul, Toronto Viking - The Penguin Group 1996
0670865389 Very Good Stephen Snider;
322 pp. Blue and cream coloured boards; lettered in cream on the spine; headband. Light wear on the corners of the dustjacket; price intact; no interior markings. Dj art by Stephen Snider. This anthology contains: The Waves (dawn) by Virginia Woolf; Three Villages by Emily Carr; Coqueville on the Spree by Emile Zola; Port After Port the Same Baggage by Janette Turner Hospital; The Ocean Spray by Malcolm Lowry; The Feeding of the Emigrants by Laurence Housman; The Waves (early morning) by Virginia Woolf; The Lighthouse of Les Sanguinaires by Alphonse Daudet; The Boat by Jane Urquhart; The Fisherman and His Soul by Oscar Wilde; Far Enough Island by Lesley Choyce; On the Sea by Ivan Turgenev; The Waves (early afternoon) by Virginia Woolf; Ebb Tide by E. Rossiter; Deadman by E. Annie Proulx; The Wreck by Guy de Maupassant; The Aran Islands: First Visit by J. M. Synge; The Deep Waters by E. Pauline Johnson; The Waves (dusk) by Virginia Woolf; The Little Mermaid by Hans Christian Andersen; The Bottle Imp by Robert Louis Stevenson; Soaked in Seaweed by Stephen Leacock; and Sleep by Emily Carr. First Edition Very Good Hard Cover 8vo
[SW: sea stories; seafaring nautical adventure; canadian author;]
FERRIS, MARCIE COHEN & GREENBERG, MARK I. (EDITORS). Jewish Roots In Southern Soil: A New History. Brandeis University Press, Waltham: 2006. ISBN: 1584655895
352 pages. A lively look at southern Jewish history and culture. Jews have long been a presence in the American South, first arriving in the late seventeenth century as part of exploratory voyages from Europe to the New World. Two of the nation's earliest Jewish communities were founded in Savannah in 1733 and Charleston in 1749. By 1800, more Jews lived in Charleston than in New York City. Today, Jews comprise less than one half of one percent of the southern population but provide critical sustenance and support for their communities. Nonetheless, southern Jews have perplexed scholars. For more than a century, historians have wrestled with various questions. Why study southern Jewish history? What is the southern Jewish experience? Is southern Jewish culture distinctive from that of other regions of the country, and if so, why? Jewish Roots in Southern Soil: A New History addresses these questions through the voices of a new generation of scholars of the Jewish South. Each of this book's thirteen chapters reflects a response with particular attention paid to new studies on women and gender; black/Jewish relations and the role of race, politics, and economic life; popular and material culture; and the changes wrought by industrialization and urbanization in the twentieth century. Essays address historical issues from the colonial era to the present and in every region of the South. Topics include assimilation and American Jewish identity, southern Jewish women writers, the Jewish Confederacy, Jewish peddlers, southern Jewish racial identity, black/Jewish relations, demographic change, the rise of American Reform Judaism, and Jews in southern literature. The Table of Contents of this books is as follows: Foreword - Eli N. Evans Acknowledgments Introduction: Jewish Roots in Southern Soil - marcie cohen ferris & mark i. greenberg One Religion, Different Worlds: Sephardic and Ashkenazic Immigrants in Eighteenth-Century Savannah - Mark I. Greenberg American, Jewish, Southern, Mordecai: Constructing Identities to 1865 - Emily Bingham "The Pen Is Mightier than the Sword": Southern Jewish Women Writers, Antisemitism, and the Promotion of Domestic Judaism Jennifer A. Stollman Entering the Mainstream of Modern Jewish History: Peddlers and the American Jewish South - Hasia Diner Jewish Confederates - Robert N. Rosen "Now Is the Time to Show Your True Colors": Southern Jews, Whiteness, and the Rise of Jim Crow - eric l. goldstein The Ascendancy of Reform Judaism in the American South during the Nineteenth Century - Gary Phillip Zola A Tangled Web: Black-Jewish Relations in the Twentieth-Century South - Clive wWebb An "Intense Heritage": Southern Jewishness in Literature and Film - Eliza R. L. McGraw Dining in the Dixie Diaspora: A Meeting of Region and Religion - Marcie Cohen Ferris Jewish Antiques Roadshow: Religion and Domestic Culture in the American South - Dale Rosengarten The Fall and Rise of the Jewish South - Stuart Rockoff Jewish Fates, Altered States - Stephen J. Whitfield Selected Bibliography - Eric L. Goldstein and Marni Davis About the Contributors Index Marie Cohen Ferris is the Associate Director of the Carolina Center for Jewish Studies and Assistant Professor of American Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is author of Matzoh Ball Gumbo: Culinary Tales of the Jewish South (2005). Mark L. Greenberg is Director of the Florida Studies Center and Special Collections Department at the University of South Florida and has published widely on southern Jewry. He is the author of University of South Florida: The First Fifty Years (2006). Eli N. Evans was born and raised in Durham, North Carolina, and is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the Yale Law School. He is author of The Provincials: A Personal History of Jews in the South; Judah P Benjamin: The Jewish Confederate; and The Lonely Days Were Sundays: Reflections of a Jewish Southerner. He is president-emeritus of the Charles H. Revson Foundation and chairman of the advisory board of the Carolina Center for Jewish Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Softcover. Brand new book.
[SW: (Key Words: Southern Jewish History, American South, Savannah, Charleston, Jewish Confederacy, Jewish Peddlers, Jewish Identity, Black/Jewish relations, Demographic Change, Reform Judaism, Jews, Southern Literature. Eli N. Evans, Marcie Cohen Ferris, Mark L. Greenberg, Sephardic Immigrants, Ashkenazic Immigrants, Mark I. Greenberg, American Jews, Emily Bingham, Southern Jewish Women Writers, Antisemitism, Judaism, Jennifer A. Stollman, American Jewish History, Peddlers, Hasia Diner, Jewish Confederates, Robert N. Rosen, Southern Jews, Jim Crow, Eric L. Goldstein, Reform Judaism, Gary Phillip Zola, Black-Jewish Relations, Clive Webb, Eliza R. L. McGraw, Marcie Cohen Ferris, Dale Rosengarten, Stuart Rockoff, Stephen J. Whitfield, Marni Davis, Judaica).]
FERRIS, MARCIE COHEN & GREENBERG, MARK I. (EDITORS). Jewish Roots In Southern Soil: A New History. Brandeis University Press, Waltham: 2006. ISBN: 1584655887
352 pages. A lively look at southern Jewish history and culture. Jews have long been a presence in the American South, first arriving in the late seventeenth century as part of exploratory voyages from Europe to the New World. Two of the nation's earliest Jewish communities were founded in Savannah in 1733 and Charleston in 1749. By 1800, more Jews lived in Charleston than in New York City. Today, Jews comprise less than one half of one percent of the southern population but provide critical sustenance and support for their communities. Nonetheless, southern Jews have perplexed scholars. For more than a century, historians have wrestled with various questions. Why study southern Jewish history? What is the southern Jewish experience? Is southern Jewish culture distinctive from that of other regions of the country, and if so, why? Jewish Roots in Southern Soil: A New History addresses these questions through the voices of a new generation of scholars of the Jewish South. Each of this book's thirteen chapters reflects a response with particular attention paid to new studies on women and gender; black/Jewish relations and the role of race, politics, and economic life; popular and material culture; and the changes wrought by industrialization and urbanization in the twentieth century. Essays address historical issues from the colonial era to the present and in every region of the South. Topics include assimilation and American Jewish identity, southern Jewish women writers, the Jewish Confederacy, Jewish peddlers, southern Jewish racial identity, black/Jewish relations, demographic change, the rise of American Reform Judaism, and Jews in southern literature. The The Table of Contents of this books is as follows: Foreword - Eli N. Evans Acknowledgments Introduction: Jewish Roots in Southern Soil - marcie cohen ferris & mark i. greenberg One Religion, Different Worlds: Sephardic and Ashkenazic Immigrants in Eighteenth-Century Savannah - Mark I. Greenberg American, Jewish, Southern, Mordecai: Constructing Identities to 1865 - Emily Bingham "The Pen Is Mightier than the Sword": Southern Jewish Women Writers, Antisemitism, and the Promotion of Domestic Judaism Jennifer A. Stollman Entering the Mainstream of Modern Jewish History: Peddlers and the American Jewish South - Hasia Diner Jewish Confederates - Robert N. Rosen "Now Is the Time to Show Your True Colors": Southern Jews, Whiteness, and the Rise of Jim Crow - eric l. goldstein The Ascendancy of Reform Judaism in the American South during the Nineteenth Century - Gary Phillip Zola A Tangled Web: Black-Jewish Relations in the Twentieth-Century South - Clive wWebb An "Intense Heritage": Southern Jewishness in Literature and Film - Eliza R. L. McGraw Dining in the Dixie Diaspora: A Meeting of Region and Religion - Marcie Cohen Ferris Jewish Antiques Roadshow: Religion and Domestic Culture in the American South - Dale Rosengarten The Fall and Rise of the Jewish South - Stuart Rockoff Jewish Fates, Altered States - Stephen J. Whitfield Selected Bibliography - Eric L. Goldstein and Marni Davis About the Contributors Index Marie Cohen Ferris is the Associate Director of the Carolina Center for Jewish Studies and Assistant Professor of American Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is author of Matzoh Ball Gumbo: Culinary Tales of the Jewish South (2005). Mark L. Greenberg is Director of the Florida Studies Center and Special Collections Department at the University of South Florida and has published widely on southern Jewry. He is the author of University of South Florida: The First Fifty Years (2006). Eli N. Evans was born and raised in Durham, North Carolina, and is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the Yale Law School. He is author of The Provincials: A Personal History of Jews in the South; Judah P Benjamin: The Jewish Confederate; and The Lonely Days Were Sundays: Reflections of a Jewish Southerner. He is president-emeritus of the Charles H. Revson Foundation and chairman of the advisory board of the Carolina Center for Jewish Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Hardcover with dustjacket. Brand new book.
[SW: (Key Words: Southern Jewish History, American South, Savannah, Charleston, Jewish Confederacy, Jewish Peddlers, Jewish Identity, Black/Jewish relations, Demographic Change, Reform Judaism, Jews, Southern Literature. Eli N. Evans, Marcie Cohen Ferris, Mark L. Greenberg, Sephardic Immigrants, Ashkenazic Immigrants, Mark I. Greenberg, American Jews, Emily Bingham, Southern Jewish Women Writers, Antisemitism, Judaism, Jennifer A. Stollman, American Jewish History, Peddlers, Hasia Diner, Jewish Confederates, Robert N. Rosen, Southern Jews, Jim Crow, Eric L. Goldstein, Reform Judaism, Gary Phillip Zola, Black-Jewish Relations, Clive Webb, Eliza R. L. McGraw, Marcie Cohen Ferris, Dale Rosengarten, Stuart Rockoff, Stephen J. Whitfield, Marni Davis, Judaica).]




