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The American Historical Review. 118 (5): 1563–1564. ISSN 0002-8762. JSTOR 23784675. McCrossen, Alexis Macon (2014). "Review of Free Time: The Forgotten American Dream". The Journal of American History. 100 (4): 1176–1177. ISSN 0021-8723. JSTOR 44307866. Ramey, Valerie A. (2013). "Review of Free Time: The Forgotten American Dream".
The American Book Review was founded in 1977 by Ronald Sukenick. [6] According to the novelist Raymond Federman, in his series reading with American Book Review in 2007, Sukenick founded the American Book Review because The New York Times had stopped reviewing books by "that group labeled experimental writers", and Sukenick wanted to start a "journal where we can review books that everyone is ...
The population of free black men and free black women rose from less than 1% in 1780 to more than 10% in 1810, when 7.2% of Virginia's population was free black people, and 75% of Delaware's black population was free. [18] Concerning the sexual hypocrisy related to whites and their sexual abuse of enslaved women, the diarist Mary Boykin Chesnut ...
The book review publishes each week the widely cited and influential New York Times Best Seller list, which is created by the editors of the Times "News Surveys" department. [7] In 2021, on the 125th anniversary of the Book Review, Parul Sehgal a staff critic and former editor at the Book Review, wrote a review of the NYTBR titled "Reviewing ...
In America is a 1999 novel by Susan Sontag. It won the U.S. National Book Award for Fiction . [ 1 ] It is based on the true story of Polish actress Helena Modjeska (called Maryna Zalewska in the book), her arrival in California in 1876, and her ascendancy to American stardom.
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While the precise abortion rate was not known, James Mohr's 1978 book Abortion in America documented multiple recorded estimates by 19th-century physicians, [38] which suggested that between around 15% and 35% of all pregnancies ended in abortion during that period. [60] This era also saw a marked shift in the people who were obtaining abortions.
Policing the Womb: Invisible Women and the Criminalization of Motherhood is a nonfiction book by American scholar and law professor Michele Goodwin.The book details the criminalization of reproduction in United States and argues for choice movements to expand to a reproductive justice framework.