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Love’s Lobotomy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 107

Love’s Lobotomy

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2019-02-04
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  • Publisher: AuthorHouse

Have you ever heard of the comparison between insanity and love? They have very similar qualities at times. Swaizi Vaughan Ellis is a Texas born model and contemporary poet. She began writing songs at a very young age and as she began to understand herself more, within love and heartbreak, she evolved these journal entries into poems. “Love’s Lobotomy” is her debut as an author. Within this thought provoking collection of poems she expresses all the feelings she felt for men who she loved and experienced at one time or another. This book took Swaizi almost six years to complete. She reminisces her first love, describes polarizing infatuations, and also paints a vivid picture of her desperate need to fall out of love. Within her poems she often combines the senses and personifies the universe, this creates an unexpected image challenging average thought, for example giving color to emotions. Stylishly playing with the idea of being able to surgically rid herself of love this book can resonate with anyone who has experienced such a powerful sentiment.

Researching Craft Beer
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 268

Researching Craft Beer

Researching Craft Beer offers insights for aspiring and present owners of breweries, those looking to open a craft beer bar as well as other beer researchers. The volume offers a prescient assessment of historic, present, and likely future developments within the sector.

A Little Book about the Big Bang
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 241

A Little Book about the Big Bang

Tony Rothman offers a primer on the science of the big bang and the questions we still can’t answer about the origins of the universe. Enlisting thoughtful analogies and a step-by-step approach, Rothman guides readers through dark matter, dark energy, quantum gravity, and other topics at—and beyond—the cutting edge of cosmology.

Decadence and Catholicism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 426

Decadence and Catholicism

Romantic writers had found in Christianity a poetic cult of the imagination, an assertion of the spiritual quality of beauty in an age of vulgar materialism. The decadents, a diverse movement of writers, were the climax and exhaustion of this romantic tradition. In their art, they enacted the romance of faith as a protest against the dreariness of modern life. Ellis Hanson teases out two strands--eroticism and aestheticism--that rendered the decadent interest in Catholicism extraordinary. More than any other literary movement, the decadents explored the powerful historical relationship between homoeroticism and Roman Catholicism. Why, throughout history, have so many homosexuals been attract...

Bengali Harlem and the Lost Histories of South Asian America
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 317

Bengali Harlem and the Lost Histories of South Asian America

Winner of the Theodore Saloutos Memorial Book Award Winner of the Association for Asian American Studies Book Award for History A Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year A Saveur “Essential Food Books That Define New York City” Selection In the final years of the nineteenth century, small groups of Muslim peddlers arrived at Ellis Island every summer, bags heavy with embroidered silks from their home villages in Bengal. The American demand for “Oriental goods” took these migrants on a curious path, from New Jersey’s beach boardwalks into the heart of the segregated South. Two decades later, hundreds of Indian Muslim seamen began jumping ship in New York and Baltimore, escaping t...

The Essential Guide to Effect Sizes
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 193

The Essential Guide to Effect Sizes

A jargon-free introduction for students and researchers looking to interpret the practical significance of their results.

America Classifies the Immigrants
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 465

America Classifies the Immigrants

Joel Perlmann traces the history of U.S. classification of immigrants, from Ellis Island to the present day, showing how slippery and contested ideas about racial, national, and ethnic difference have been. His focus ranges from the 1897 List of Races and Peoples, through changes in the civil rights era, to proposals for reform of the 2020 Census.

The Hungry World
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 369

The Hungry World

Food was a critical front in the Cold War battle for Asia. “Where Communism goes, hunger follows” was the slogan of American nation builders who fanned out into the countryside to divert rivers, remodel villages, and introduce tractors, chemicals, and genes to multiply the crops consumed by millions. This “green revolution” has been credited with averting Malthusian famines, saving billions of lives, and jump-starting Asia’s economic revival. Bono and Bill Gates hail it as a model for revitalizing Africa’s economy. But this tale of science triumphant conceals a half century of political struggle from the Afghan highlands to the rice paddies of the Mekong Delta, a campaign to tran...

The Story of an African Famine
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 192

The Story of an African Famine

This account of the 1949 famine in colonial Malawi employs a wide variety of historical sources, ranging from Colonial Office documentation to the songs of women who lived through the tragedy. The analysis of the causes and development of the famine takes the reader through a detailed agricultural and social history of Southern Malwai in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, focusing in particular on the nature of social and economic stratification, changes in kinship systems and the position of women and placing all this within the wider context of the impact of colonial rule.

Roots Too
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 494

Roots Too

In the 1950s, America was seen as a vast melting pot in which white ethnic affiliations were on the wane and a common American identity was the norm. Yet by the 1970s, these white ethnics mobilized around a new version of the epic tale of plucky immigrants making their way in the New World through the sweat of their brow. Although this turn to ethnicity was for many an individual search for familial and psychological identity, Roots Too establishes a broader white social and political consensus arising in response to the political language of the Civil Rights and Black Power movements. In the wake of the Civil Rights movement, whites sought renewed status in the romance of Old World travails...