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  • - Geopolitical Thought in Weimar Germany, 1918-33
    av The Kent State University Press
    521

    In this challenge to traditional historiography, the author argues that geopolitical ideas were most dynamic and significant in Germany during the democratic culture of the Weimar Republic. He asserts that rather than rising with the Nazis, geopolitics faded in importance when Hitler came to power.

  • av The Kent State University Press
    117

  • av The Kent State University Press
    117

    These quasi-autobiographical poems and prose poems range from topics such as clairvoyant grandmas, roosters of questionable pedigree, one-armed farmhands, and a girl obsessed with holding her breath.

  • - Woodrow Wilson, World War I, and America's Strategy for Peace and Security
    av The Kent State University Press
    571

    After World War II, Woodrow Wilson and his contemporaries engaged in a wide-ranging debate about the fundamental character of American national security in the modern world. This book examines that debate offering a detailed analysis of how US political leaders and opinion makers conceptualized and pursued national security from 1914 to 1920.

  • - The Disappearance of Beverly Potts
    av The Kent State University Press
    277

    Ten-year-old Beverly Potts was last seen at 9:00 P.M. the evening of August 24, 1951. James Jessen Badal reexamines the events leading up to Beverly Potts's disappearance and the subsequent police investigation and over-the-top, sensational publicity in the Cleveland press.

  • - War, the Military, and Autobiographical Writing
    av The Kent State University Press
    331 - 571

    Includes essays ranging from Xenophon's memoir of his two-year march with the mercenaries of the Persian Prince Cyrus, through Canadian accounts of the Boer War and American civilian women's narratives of confinement in WWII Japanese internment camps, to Vietnam veterans' online testimonials and post - Persian Gulf War memoirs.

  • av The Kent State University Press
    117

    "In 'Love Poem to the Phrase Let's Get Coffee,' Catherine Pierce writes 'I adore / your elegant manner, / one hand on the car door, / the other on the ass.' She writes with her own tricky elegance, one that acknowledges yet adores language's self-serving grace. Pierce deftly blends repetition with sophisti-cated syntax, and a sinister wit glows inside the emotional wisdom of her vision. Animals of Habit is an exhilarating book." - Andrew Hudgins; "If I didn't know the poet personally, I'd think the name Catherine Pierce was a pseudonym, for these poems are not merely edgy, they are razor-sharp - they disembowel. What an extraordinary command of structure, persona, and humor this poet has! In one fell swoop, she has reinvented the 'love' poem and eschewed both pretentiousness and the anti-intellectual by being always smart and entertaining." - Kathy Fagan"

  • av The Kent State University Press
    801

    When George W. Bush won the White House, he was the first encumbent Republican governor elected president since William McKinley in 1896. This work shows that William McKinley was the last of the Civil War veterans to reach the White House, and it covers his career history.

  • av The Kent State University Press
    787

    This volume documents Robert A. Taft's experiences through World War II and his early postwar years. After winning a tough reelection battle as Senator from Ohio in 1944, Taft moved steadily upward in the leadership ranks of his conservative party.

  • - Reverdy Cassius Ransom, 1861-1959
    av The Kent State University Press
    461

    Reverdy Cassius Ransom spent his life as a pastor, editor, politician, writer, civil rights leader, and bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. This work offers Ransom as a symbol of an era and a larger movement and recalls him to be a man of deep faith and conviction.

  • av The Kent State University Press
    191

    This collection of poetry takes the reader through a world that is at once beautiful and tragic, sacrosanct and profane. The poems are drawn ineluctably to the place where passion and intelligence collide - and often end with passion having fled and intelligence standing alone.

  • - An Ambassador's Story
    av The Kent State University Press
    381

    This text is the autobiography of John E. Doilbois, US Ambassador to Luxembourg from 1981. Doilbois was born in Luxembourg in 1918 and moved to the USA in 1931. Having graduated from Miami University, he served in American Military Intelligence where he interrogated Nazi war criminals.

  • - Alexander McKee and British-Indian Affairs Along the Ohio Country Frontier, 1754-1799
    av The Kent State University Press
    381

  • - Refiguring Historical Time
    av The Kent State University Press
    261

    What would the world be like is history had taken a different course? Science fiction literature has long contemplated this question, and this text analyzes alternate history science fiction through a variety of historical models. It raises questions of narrative, writers, temporality and time.

  • av The Kent State University Press
    191

    The title poem of this collection tells of the creation of barbecue, how slaves cooked their masters' scraps into a survival food that became a cuisine. Powerful and moving, these poems teach how the ""nasty leftovers"" in life can be transformed into music, scripture, celebration.

  • - An Autobiography
    av The Kent State University Press
    371

    In this lively memoir, William B. Saxbe narrates his life's journey from his youth in a small Ohio town to his military career during World War II and Korea and through his career as a public servant in Ohio, Washinton D.C. and overseas.

  • - Essays on Confederate and Union Leadership
    av The Kent State University Press
    467

    A collection of essays from Civil War historians on leadership during the three-day Battle of Gettysburg. Based on manuscript sources and consideration of existing literature, the contributors challenge prevailing interpretations of key officers' performances.

  • - Nelson A.Miles, 1839-1925
    av The Kent State University Press
    627

    In this reassessment of the career of Nelson A. Miles - which he began as a volunteer officer in the Civil War - the author suggests that comments made by his enemies influenced the way Miles's career has been viewed by historians and tries to readdress this.

  • av The Kent State University Press
    151

    This text reproduces Arnold's essay of 1886 on Grant, and Twain's rejoinder to the Army and Navy Club of Connecticut. Arnold's essay praised Grant, but to many Americans its tone seemed patronizing of their hero and country.

  • - Growing Up in Hitler's Germany
    av The Kent State University Press
    267

    Schumann's intention in writing this memoir is to show young Americans how easy it can be to control and manipulate a whole nation - especially its young people. He analyzes his life in Nazi Germany, explaining why he became a devoted Nazi believer and describing his post-1945 experiences.

  • - Tim Mack, the Pole Vault, and the Quest for Olympic Gold
    av The Kent State University Press
    357

    Reveals the subculture of pole vaulting - from Bob Richards, who won Olympic gold twice in pole vaulting; to Sergey Bubka, the controversial pole vaulter; to Don Bragg, a rowdy Tarzan-like character who swung on ropes in his backyard to build upper-body strength; to the duel between Mack and Toby Stevenson as they battled for gold in Athens.

  • - A History of the German Steel Helmet
    av The Kent State University Press
    277

    Perhaps the most easily recognizable military helmet of the 20th century is the German Stahlhelm. In this revised and expanded edition of the text, Floyd R. Tubbs and Robert W. Clawson identify and classify the Stahlhelm and relate its history, designs, features and uses.

  • - An American Envoy
    av The Kent State University Press
    317

    Peter S. Bridges's service as American Ambassador to Somalia capped his three decades as a career officer in the American Foregin Service. This text presents a frank description of his experiences in Somalia and elsewhere, offering pointed assessments of American foreign policy and policymakers.

  • - Alchemy and Integration
    av The Kent State University Press
    681

    For a decade of his early adulthood, Williams was a member of the Fellowship of the Rosy Cross. This work explores both the history behind the myths and metaphysics Williams was to make his own and the hermetic culture that influenced him. It examines its expressions in Williams' novels, poetry, and the development of his ideas.

  • av The Kent State University Press
    737

    This work charts the life of 19th-century journalist, diplomat, adventurer, and enthusiast John Louis O'Sullivan. It presents an in-depth examination of O'Sullivan's ideas as they were expressed in the ""Democratic Review"" and other newspapers and literary magazines that he edited.

  • - A Study of the World's First Serial Killer and a Literary Phenomenon
    av The Kent State University Press
    347

    Ripperology - an obsessive interest in studying the crimes of Jack the Ripper - is a subject of interest that has suffered from confusion, exaggeration, and hyperbole. This study presents a sequential history of literary investigations of Jack the Ripper's crimes, and aims to tell the story of the literary efforts directed at solving the mystery.

  • - Five Tank Lieutenants in the Persian Gulf War
    av The Kent State University Press
    331

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