Books by "Michael Philip West"

9 books found

American Radio in China

American Radio in China

by Michael A. Krysko

2011 · Springer

Interwar era efforts to expand US radio into China floundered in the face of flawed US policies and approaches. Situated at the intersection of media studies, technology studies, and US foreign relations, this study frames the ill-fated radio initiatives as symptomatic of an increasingly troubled US-East Asian relationship before the Pacific War.

A Hidden Phase of American History

A Hidden Phase of American History

by Michael Joseph O'Brien

1919

Black Yanks in the Pacific

Black Yanks in the Pacific

by Michael Cullen Green

2010 · Cornell University Press

Cover -- BLACK YANKS IN THE PACIFIC -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Everyday Racial Politics in a Military Empire -- Chapter 1: Reconversion Blues and the Appeal of (Re)Enlistment -- Chapter 2: The American Dream in a Prostrate Japan -- Chapter 3: The Public Politics of Intimate Affairs -- Chapter 4: A Brown Baby Crisis -- Chapter 5: The Race of Combat in Korea -- Epilogue: Military Desegregation in a Militarized World -- Notes -- Selected Bibliography -- Index.

Surrealism in Britain

Surrealism in Britain

by Michael Remy

2019 · Routledge

This book was originally published in 1999, and is the first comprehensive study of the British surrealist movement and its achievements. Lavishly illustrated, the book provides a year-by-year narrative of the development of surrealism among artists, writers, critics and theorists in Britain. Surrealism was imported into Britain from France by pioneering little magazines. The 1936 International Surrealist Exhibition in London, put together by Herbert Read and Roland Penrose, marked the first attempt to introduce the concept to a wider public. Relations with the Soviet Union, the Spanish Civil War and World War Two fractured the nascent movement as writers and artists worked out their individual responses and struggled to earn a living in wartime. The book follows the story right through to the present day. Michael Remy draws on 20 years of studying British surrealism to provide this authoritative and biographically rich account, a major contribution to the understanding of the achievements of the artists and writers involved and their allegiance to this key twentieth-century movement.

Education and Psychology

Education and Psychology

by Michael Philip West

1914

Education

Education

by Michael Philip West

1917

Making World English

Making World English

by Michael G. Malouf

2022 · Bloomsbury Publishing

Uncovering the role of literature, late imperialism, and the rise of new models of internationalism as integral to the invention of Global English, this book focuses on three key figures from the “Vocabulary Control Movement” - C.K. Ogden, Harold Palmer, and Michael West - who competed for market share for their respective language teaching systems - Basic English, the Palmer Method, and the New Method - through battles over word lists and teaching methods in the 1920s and 30s. Drawing on archives from the Carnegie Corporation and considering language teaching in eight global sites, this book analyzes how a series of conferences in New York and London resolved their conflicts and produced a consolidated, international standard form of English. As a postcolonial approach to the development of the field of English Language Teaching, it reveals how these language debates were proxy battles over an idealized global subject: an urban, secular, consumer moving seamlessly between the tribal and global, speaking both mother tongues and an international lingua franca, Global English. Featuring analysis of the primary texts of each of the three key figures in this book as well as close readings of their readers, which featured adaptations of well-known literary texts from writers like Poe, Dickens, Wordsworth, Milton and Wells, it recovers a neglected history of English as it was redefined as an international language through anti-colonial resistance in the peripheries and transatlantic power struggles in the metropole during the interwar period.

Learning to Read a Foreign Language

Learning to Read a Foreign Language

by Michael Philip West

1926

Arc of Empire

Arc of Empire

by Michael H. Hunt, Steven I. Levine

2012 · Univ of North Carolina Press

Argues that America's wars in The Philippines, Japan, Korea and Vietnam were actually all part of a sustained U.S. bid for dominance in Asia.