Books by "John Chester Miller"

12 books found

The Allegheny River flows through the counties of Allegheny, Westmoreland, Armstrong, Clarion, Venango, Forest, and Warren.

Handbook of Indiana Geology

Handbook of Indiana Geology

by Indiana. Division of Geology, William Newton Logan, Edgar Roscoe Cumings, Clyde A. Malott, Stephen Sargent Visher, William Motier Tucker, John Robert Reeves

1922

Tuberculosis in Swine

Tuberculosis in Swine

by George Lewis McKay, Jay Brownlee Davidson, Louis Hermann Pammel, Melville LeRoy Bowman, Willard John Kennedy, William Henry Stevenson

1907

Colonial Families of Philadelphia

Colonial Families of Philadelphia

by John Woolf Jordan

1911

Wallace's American Trotting Register ...

Wallace's American Trotting Register ...

by John Hankins Wallace

1911

Tuberculosis in Swine

Tuberculosis in Swine

by Willard John Kennedy

1907

Encyclopaedia of Heraldry

Encyclopaedia of Heraldry

by John Burke, Bernard Burke

1851

Inside the Ark

Inside the Ark

by Yosef Kats, John Lehr

2012 · University of Regina Press

The world's longest-lasting and most successful communal society, the Hutterites have a model of governance that has served them well for almost five hundred years. In the past the colony was an "ark," isolated from both the secular world and the host society. But today colonies face new challenges because of globalization and digital technologies and are losing much of their ability to exclude these influences from their lives. Based on extensive fieldwork with the Schmiedeleut branch of the Hutterites, the book includes the Conference Letters and Regulations, published for the first time in English translation, that provide invaluable insights into strategies for managing change.

Identity and the Failure of America

Identity and the Failure of America

by John Michael

2008 · U of Minnesota Press

From Thomas Jefferson to John Rawls, justice has been at the center of America’s self-image and national creed. At the same time, for many of its peoples-from African slaves and European immigrants to women and the poor-the American experience has been defined by injustice: oppression, disenfranchisement, violence, and prejudice. In Identity and the Failure of America, John Michael explores the contradictions between a mythic national identity promising justice to all and the realities of a divided, hierarchical, and frequently iniquitous history and social order. Through a series of insightful readings, Michael analyzes such cultural moments as the epic dramatization of the tension between individual ambition and communal complicity in Moby-Dick, attempts to effect social change through sympathy in the novels of Lydia Marie Child and Harriet Beecher Stowe, Ralph Waldo Emerson’s antislavery activism and Frederick Douglass’s long fight for racial equity, and the divisive figures of John Brown and Nat Turner in American letters and memory. Focusing on exemplary instances when the nature of the United States as an essentially conflicted nation turned to force, Michael ultimately posits the development of a more cosmopolitan American identity, one that is more fully and justly imagined in response to the nation’s ethical failings at home and abroad. John Michael is professor of English and of visual and cultural studies at the University of Rochester. He is the author of Anxious Intellects: Academic Professionals, Public Intellectuals, and Enlightenment Values and Emerson and Skepticism: The Cipher of the World.