111 research outputs found
A life in progress: motion and emotion in the autobiography of Robert M. La Follette
This article is a study of a La Follette’s Autobiography, the autobiography of the leading Wisconsin progressive Robert M. La Follette, which was published serially in 1911 and, in book form, in 1913. Rather than focusing, as have other historians, on which parts of La Follette’s account are accurate and can therefore be trusted, it explains instead why and how this major autobiography was conceived and written. The article shows that the autobiography was the product of a sustained, complex, and often fraught series of collaborations among La Follette’s family, friends, and political allies, and in the process illuminates the importance of affective ties as well as political ambition and commitment in bringing the project to fruition. In the world of progressive reform, it argues, personal and political experiences were inseparable
Theories of American Imperialism: A Critical Evaluation
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68828/2/10.1177_048661347400600303.pd
Wealth and power in America; an analysis of social class and income distribution.
"Notes": p. 143-162. Bibliography: p. 163-174.Mode of access: Internet
Les Universités et le Pentagone
Kolko Gabriel, Brunschwig Jeanne. Les Universités et le Pentagone. In: Raison présente, n°5, Novembre – Décembre – Janvier 1967. La science, valeur suprême de l'homme. pp. 134-137
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