oric

A rhetorics of the word [Electronic book] / George Pattison.

Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2020.




oric

Rethinking Sino-Japanese alienation : history problems and historical opportunities [Electronic book] / Barry Buzan and Evelyn Goh.

Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2020.




oric

Prehistoric Maritime Cultures and Seafaring in East Asia [Electronic book] / Chunming Wu, Barry Vladimir Rolett, editors.

Singapore : Springer, 2020.




oric

The periodic table. I, Historical development and essential features [Electronic book] / D. Michael P. Mingos, editor.

Cham : Springer, c2019.




oric

The OECD's historical rise in education [Electronic book] : the formation of a global governing complex / Christian Ydesen, editor.

Cham : Palgrave Macmillan, c2019.




oric

OECD'S HISTORICAL RISE IN EDUCATION [Electronic book] : the formation of a global governing.

[S.l.] : SPRINGER NATURE, 2020.




oric

Historical studies in computing, information, and society : insights from the Flatiron lectures [Electronic book] / William Aspray, editor.

Cham, Switzerland : Springer, [2019]




oric

Australian mothering : historical and sociological perspectives [Electronic book] / C. Pascoe Leahy, P. Bueskens, editors.

Cham : Palgrave Macmillan, [2019]




oric

Putting the “Fight” in the “Fighting 69th”: Louis Lang and the Historic Return of the 69th (Irish) Regiment

One of the highlights of our North Gallery in our 4th-floor Luce Center, which reopened last April, is the magnificent painting Return of the 69th (Irish) Regiment, N.Y.S.M. from the Seat of War, painted by Louis Lang (1812-1893) in 1862. The painting depicts the regiment marching off the ship and into the Battery in Lower Manhattan,...

The post Putting the “Fight” in the “Fighting 69th”: Louis Lang and the Historic Return of the 69th (Irish) Regiment appeared first on Behind The Scenes.




oric

Happy Birthday, New-York Historical Society!

This week, the New-York Historical Society turned 214! To celebrate our birthday we’re taking a look back on the construction of the New-York Historical Society’s permanent home at 170 Central Park West. Before settling along the park, New-York Historical lived at seven other locations around the city between 1804 and 1908. Here’s a retro map...

The post Happy Birthday, New-York Historical Society! appeared first on Behind The Scenes.




oric

The Bible, America’s First Book: ‘In God We Trust’ at New-York Historical

Most Christian and Jewish Americans, reading about Christ’s resurrection or the Jewish exodus from Egypt during the upcoming Easter and Passover holidays, will not consider the Bible to be an American book. And yet, the Bible was our first American book; its earliest printings, translations, and interpretations reflected the experiences of the first Europeans to...

The post The Bible, America’s First Book: ‘In God We Trust’ at New-York Historical appeared first on Behind The Scenes.




oric

Ethics in the gutter: empathy and historical fiction in comics / Kate Polak

Hayden Library - PN6710.P65 2017




oric

Fifty years in Western Canada: being the abridged memoirs of Rev. A.G. Morice by D.L.S

Toronto, Ryerson Press, 1930




oric

A prehistoric copper hook : a paper read before the Society / by Charles Napier Bell

Winnipeg : Dawson Richardson Publishing, 1927




oric

Plato on the rhetoric of philosophers and sophists [electronic resource] / Marina McCoy

Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2008




oric

Time-space compression [electronic resource] : historical geographies / Barney Warf

London ; New York : Routledge, 2008




oric

Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers: NEH Announces 2018 NDNP Awards and University of Alabama Joins the Program!

Earlier this month, the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) announced an additional $4.5 million in funding to institutions in 18 states to expand selection and digitization of U.S. historic newspapers for the National Digital Newspaper Program (NDNP), including first-time awardee University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa.  Seventeen other participating institutions - Alaska Division of Libraries, Archives, and Museums; University of California, Riverside; Colorado Historical Society; University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; State Historical Society of Iowa; Maine State Library; University of Maryland, College Park; Central Michigan University; Montana Historical Society; University of Nebraska-Lincoln; University of Nevada, Las Vegas; Rutgers University, New Brunswick (New Jersey); University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Ohio History Connection; South Dakota Department of Education; University of North Texas; and Washington State Library - received additional awards, each charged with selecting and digitizing approx. 100,000 newspaper pages from their state for contribution to the online newspaper collection "Chronicling America," hosted by the Library of Congress. Since 2005, cultural institutions in 46 states and Puerto Rico have contributed more than 13 million digitized American historical newspaper pages, published between 1789 and 1963 and in 14 different languages, to the collection. 

Jointly sponsored by the NEH and LC, NDNP is a long-term effort to provide access to an Internet-based, searchable database of U.S. newspapers with descriptive information and select digitization of historic pages. This rich digital resource will be developed and permanently maintained at the Library of Congress. The NEH grant program funds the contribution of content from, eventually, all U.S. states and territories.... Read more about it & follow us on Twitter @librarycongress #ChronAm!!

 

 




oric

Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers: 80 YEARS AGO: “Orson Welles – The All American Bogeyman,” Evening Star, Oct. 31, 1938

On October 30, 1938, the radio-listening public was brought to near-hysteria by the evening broadcast narrated by 23-year old Orson Welles of an adaption of the H.G. Wells classic ‘War of the Worlds.” According to newspapers around the country the next day, the dramatization “threw the public into an uproar when listeners believed flocks of nasty little men from Mars had smashed down into the State of New Jersey and were wiping out civilization…” Police stations and newspaper offices were inundated with calls from the public and telephone switchboards overloaded, while others evacuated their homes and apartment buildings, fearing the worst. Read more about it and the aftermath and follow us on Twitter @librarycongress #ChronAm!




oric

Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers: 100 YEARS AGO: "Menu and Recipes for Your 'Victory' Thanksgiving Dinner," The Evening World, Nov. 26, 1918

Just a few weeks after the the signing of the armistice with Germany on November 11, 1918, ending military action in World War One, Americans prepared to celebrate their traditional Thanksgiving with new appreciation for a "day of thankful prayer... and joyous feasting." Although still restricted by wartime rationing, the Evening World (New York, NY) asked chefs of major New York City hotels to contribute their best recipes to honor the Allied leaders responsible for victory and the war's end....Read more about it and try some Roast Turkey a la Pershing! For more Thanksgiving recipes see our recent Headlines and Heroes blog for "10 Thanksgiving Recipes You May Not Have Tried" and follow us on Twitter @librarycongress #ChronAm!

 




oric

Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers: Join the National Digital Newspaper Program in 2019! Applications due Jan. 15, 2019

from on Twitter: Be part of the National Digital Newspaper Program (NDNP), a partnership between National Endowment for the Humanities and the Library of Congress to create a digital resource of newspapers published between 1690 and 1963, from all the states and U.S. territories. Applications due Jan 15:




oric

Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers: 86 YEARS AGO: “Popular Popcorn,” The Midland Journal, February 17, 1933

In honor of National Popcorn Day on Jan. 19, here’s a quick rundown from 1933 of some fun ways to incorporate more grains into your diet! There’s of course the traditional style of popcorn for snacking, “popped while you wait, with a generous pour of melted butter and a big shake of salt” according to the Midland Journal (Rising Sun, MD). But why not enjoy some popcorn “merrily floating on the surface of creamy soups,” or combine popcorn, cheese, and mayonnaise for cheeseballs in a fruit salad! Read more about it, check out some recipes and follow us on Twitter @librarycongress #ChronAm!




oric

Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers: Celebrate International Women's Day With Us!

Celebrate International Women's Day today with us and explore how change-making women in American history appeared in the contemporary news using the Chronicling America historic newspaper collection. Our most recent post in Headlines and Heroes highlights fifteen amazing American women, including Clara Barton, Ida B. Wells, Marie Curie, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and, of course, investigative journalist Nellie Bly. Use the linked Recommended Topic guides to learn more about them and make your own discoveries. Read more about them and follow us on Twitter @librarycongress #ChronAm!




oric

Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers: Happy National Chocolate Chip Cookie Day! (May 15)

Happy National Chocolate Chip Cookie Day! Have you made America’s favorite cookie recently? How about trying out this 1940 recipe from the Roanoke Rapids Herald (Roanoke Rapids, NC)? Chop your own chocolate and read more about it! Follow us on Twitter @librarycongress #ChronAm!




oric

Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers: Celebrate 15 Million Pages with Us! Find Out More and Join our Twitter #ChronAmParty Today (May 21)!

Join us in celebrating a new milestone in Chronicling America – 15 million pages freely available to all! You can find out more on LC's Headlines and Heroes blog and join the #ChronAmParty on Twitter all day Tuesday, May 21 (today!). Follow the threads and find out about all the fun kinds of “15 Million” things we’ve discovered in Chronicling America – feel free to celebrate with us and tweet your own discoveries! Just add #ChronAmParty and #15MillionPages to your tweet to join the party!

We’ve also been working on new ways to explore and visualize what’s available in Chronicling America and have included a sneak peek in Headlines and Heroes and a more in-depth explanation of these tools in the Library’s The Signal digital libraries blog. Understand and interact with our newspapers in a different way using maps, time-based views, charts of language and ethnic press in American newspapers and more!

Read more about it and follow us all the time on Twitter @librarycongress #ChronAm!




oric

Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers: 75 Years Ago: “ALLIES SMASHING INLAND,” The Wilmington Morning Star, June 07, 1944

Across the world on June 7, 1944, newspapers rushed to press with the first word on the Western Allied invasion of the beaches of Normandy in France. For days before, front pages in the homefront news were filled with word of Allied battles on all fronts with hints of an imminent invasion of the French coast. Finally on June 7, news arrived… “ALLIES SMASHING INLAND” declared the Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, DE). Follow the headlines from issue to issue and read more about it! (And then follow us on Twitter @librarycongress #ChronAm!)




oric

Historical dictionary of the green movement / Miranda Schreurs, Elim Papadakis

Online Resource




oric

Inevitably toxic: historical perspectives on contamination, exposure and expertise / edited by Brinda Sarathy, Vivien Hamilton and Janet Farrell Brodie

Barker Library - TD179.I54 2018




oric

From hysteria to hormones: a rhetorical history / Amy Koerber

Hayden Library - RA564.85.K655 2018




oric

Authenticity guaranteed: masculinity and the rhetoric of anti-consumerism in American culture / Sally Robinson

Dewey Library - HC110.C6 R628 2018




oric

Expectations: theory and applications from historical perspectives / Arie Arnon, Warren Young, Karine van der Beek, editors

Online Resource




oric

A walk through combinatorics : an introduction to enumeration and graph theory / Miklós Bóna, University of Florida, USA

Bóna, Miklós




oric

Writing the Apocalypse: historical vision in contemporary U.S. and Latin American fiction / Lois Parkinson Zamora

Online Resource




oric

The structures of the film experience by Jean-Pierre Meunier: historical assessments and phenomenological expansions / edited by Julian Hanich and Daniel Fairfax ; translated by Daniel Fairfax

Online Resource




oric

Pop empires: transnational and diasporic flows of India and Korea / edited by S. Heijin Lee, Monika Mehta, and Robert Ji-Song Ku

Hayden Library - PN1993.5.I8 P655 2019




oric

Could you survive the Jurassic period? : an interactive prehistoric adventure / by Matt Doeden ; illustrated by Juan Calle

Doeden, Matt, author




oric

Could you survive the New Stone Age? : an interactive prehistoric adventure / by Thomas Kingsley Troupe ; illustrated by Juan Calle

Troupe, Thomas Kingsley, author




oric

Ricoeur and Castoriadis in discussion : on human creation, historical novelty, and the social imaginary / edited by Suzi Adams




oric

The transhistorical image : philosophizing art and its history / Paul Crowther

Crowther, Paul, author




oric

The prince of slavers: Humphry Morice and the transformation of Britain's transatlantic slave trade, 1698-1732 / Matthew David Mitchell

Online Resource




oric

Martha Lamb: New-York Historical Society Pioneer

From the title Scholars and Gentlemen, one of the essential histories written about the New-York Historical Society and that dates from the 1980s, one might get the wrong impression, that only men played a role in the life of the institution over the course of its 216 years. Yet many women have played significant roles...

The post Martha Lamb: New-York Historical Society Pioneer appeared first on New-York Historical Society.




oric

New Research Analyzes State-Level Impact of USDA Proposal to End SNAP Broad-Based Categorical Eligibility

This interactive data visualization uses SNAP quality control data from fiscal year 2016 and microsimulation modeling to provide detailed information on the demographic characteristics of those at risk of losing benefits.




oric

Historical atlas of South-East Asia / by Jan M. Pluvier

Pluvier, Jan M




oric

The habitats directive in its EU environmental law context : European nature's best hope? / edited by Charles-Hubert Born, An Cliquet, Hendrik Schoukens, Delphine Misonne, and Geert Van Hoorick




oric

Historic Farming

Historic farming retains a connection to field and yield that modern farming does not. Farmer Ed Shultz describes the animals and methods he uses at Great Hopes Plantation.




oric

Skill and Science in Historic Trades

Intelligence born of practice combines with the study of science to complete the historic tradesman’s store of knowledge. There was no better spokesman for the Historic Trades program than Director Jay Gaynor. Jay recently passed away and we miss him. This encore podcast is dedicated to him.




oric

Futuristic Lab Reveals Historic Secrets

Technologies that used to be beyond reach for museum professionals now can lend new insights into the hidden compositions of materials, metals, and paints. Conservator Kirsten Moffitt explains how a spike on a screen can spot a fake or reveal a discovery.




oric

Rhetorics, literacies, and narratives of sustainability [electronic resource] / edited by Peter N. Goggin




oric

Personal Finance Expert Suze Orman To Be Honored at the New-York Historical Society’s Annual Strawberry Festival

Date: 
4-11-2011

4-11-11

Personal Finance Expert Suze Orman To Be Honored at the New-York Historical Society’s Annual Strawberry Festival

New York, NY, April 7, 2011 – The New-York Historical Society will present Suze Orman with a distinguished service award on Thursday, April 14, as it holds its annual Strawberry Festival benefit luncheon. The event, celebrating women in philanthropy, will take place from noon to 2:00 p.m. at the Metropolitan Club, Fifth Avenue and 60th Street.




oric

A Transformed New-York Historical Society Reopens to the Public on November 11, 2011

Date: 
11-9-2011

11-09-11

A Transformed New-York Historical Society Reopens to the Public on November 11, 2011

Following a Three-Year Renovation, New York City’s First Museum Invites Visitors to Experience Its First Permanent Installations, a Brand-New Innovative History Museum for Children, Trailblazing Special Exhibitions, Premier Restaurant and More

Re-opening Celebrated With Free Admission for Children under 13, Veterans and Active Service Members During Opening Day and All Visitors After 6pm




oric

First-Hand Notes of the Constitutional Convention Acquired by the New-York Historical Society

Date: 
5-31-2011

5-31-11

The New-York Historical Society Acquires Rare First-Hand Notes of the Constitutional Convention

Documents in the Hand of Founding Father John Lansing, Jr. are Purchased for the Historical Society’s Library by Chairman Roger Hertog