Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mary R. Habeck (born 1963) is an American scholar of international relations. She received her PhD from Yale University and is currently Associate Professor of Strategic Studies at the Johns Hopkins University .
As well as a Preface, an Introduction and an Index, the book consists of 12 chapters, or papers, as the authors call them in their introduction. [1] Chapters 1 (Vagueness in Logic), 8 (Logic in an Age of Science) and 9 (A Confused "Semiotic") were written by Bentley; Chapter 10 (Common Sense and Science) by Dewey, while the remainder were signed jointly.
For Lust of Knowing: The Orientalists and their Enemies, published in the United States under the title Dangerous Knowledge: Orientalism and Its Discontents, is a 2006 non-fiction book by British historian Robert Irwin.
Kelly Williams Brown (born August 6, 1984, in Covington, Louisiana) is a New York Times-bestselling [1] American writer and author. She is commonly credited with inventing the word " adulting ", [ 2 ] [ 3 ] which refers to the small actions that together comprise maturity.
Mary Matsuda Gruenewald (née Matsuda; January 23, 1925 – February 11, 2021) was an American writer. She is best known for her autobiographical novel Looking Like the Enemy: My Story of Imprisonment in Japanese American Internment Camps , which details her own experiences as a Japanese American in World War II internment camps .
Unconquerable Nation: Knowing Our Enemy, Strengthening Ourselves (ISBN 0-8330-3893-1) is a book written by Brian Michael Jenkins, one of the world's foremost authorities on terrorism. In it the author asserts that some of America 's recent approaches to counterterrorism have been counterproductive.
“First Views of the Enemy” is written from a third-person point-of-view with Annette as the focal character. Annette and her husband have bought a home in a semi-rural area. Both are just out of college, and the husband had thought it a more secure and healthy place to raise their six-year-old son, Timmy, than a city.
The Power of Sympathy: or, The Triumph of Nature (1789) is an 18th-century American sentimental novel written in epistolary form by William Hill Brown and is widely considered to be the first American novel. [1] The Power of Sympathy was Brown's first novel. The characters' struggles illustrate the dangers of seduction and the pitfalls of ...