Minnesota Books
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Used price: $5.25
Collectible price: $20.00

Good plays!Review Date: 2000-10-17

Used price: $13.00

The captivating true story of a battle that would greatly alter the balance of power between unions and big businessReview Date: 2006-01-13
Used price: $598.78

The comprehensive guide to this groundbreaking seriesReview Date: 2002-04-20
"An American Family" was a surprise success when it was first broadcast in 1973: a 12-part series on PBS with very few voice-overs and what now seem like long shots of an affluent California family (two divorcing parents and five kids) doing things like playing guitar and discussing mundane topics and cleaning out their backyard pool (there were more engaging moments than that, but they were not the majority of shots).
What accounted for this series' success? How did it get made? How was it edited, and what was kept in and left out? Why is it still so compelling despite the passage of time and the declining attention spans of Americans in the past 30 years? Could it get made today?
This ultimate book about "An American Family" answers many of these questions and more: probing the origins of the series, and analyzing the final product and the widespread reaction to it in well-researched and precise detail.
The filmmakers were very lucky (in the sense of being able to create compelling TV) to have chanced upon the Loud family, in which the parents were about to get divorced and in which the eldest son Lance (who died in 2002, sadly) provided such a usable storyline (hanging out with Warhol's crowd in New York, etc). The book debunks the widely-held belief that Lance "came out" during the series. He never explicitly says he's gay on the show. However, of course he was, and it was much of America's first exposure to an openly gay man on TV, week after week.
If you've never seen this series but are still intrigued by it, also buy the book! Reading it will give you a great sense of the program, and will allow you to visualize it. (The still illustrations also help, as do accompanying material like press-release photos and ads from the time).
I only wish the series itself was for sale somewhere! Unfortunately, WNET in New York no longer seems to own the rights.

Used price: $28.59

BrilliantReview Date: 2008-10-08

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Collectible price: $23.01

bloody excellent book!Review Date: 2002-01-23
"American Studies" as described by Lipsitz here is basically CultStud informed by US cultural/social/political history and
literature. It is very engaging reading, especially the chapters
on the legacies of the 1930s, 1960s, and 1980s (and the ideological uses of a distorted IMAGE of the 1960s by Reagan/Thatcher Neoconservatives in the 1980s down to the present
day, which Lipsitz documents and condemns persuasively throughout
his book). The book explores the ongoing, changing myths/images that ask "what is/are" the thing(s) that make up this cultural entity we call the US of A. Lipsitz is a very entertaining, very
gifted writer, and as was the case with Michael Berube's work,
I literally could not put Lipsitz's book down! This book shows the enormous promise and power of American Studies (e.g. cultural studies) and gives a definitive example of "how it's done".
Loved it!

Used price: $15.00

Great Herp InfoReview Date: 2008-11-16

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new pathways in etymological studyReview Date: 2008-05-06
Liberman is a professor of Germanic philology at the U. of Minnesota and author of many books and articles on etymology and language. Most of the 55 words he has chosen for this first book of a planned series are simple words. Among these are bird, drab, ever, dwarf, gawk, key, lass, man, pimp, toad, and witch. Nearly every word is traced to a root word among the northern European family of languages, the basis for Anglo-Saxon and modern English. The word "jeep" is an obvious exception. A few of the words are controversial four-letter or gender terms.
While the author's "centrifugal principle" sets relevant limitations and preferences for deciding on the root of a particular word, the etymological practice demonstrated in his analysis of the more than 50 words is complex and depends on much scholarly knowledge. In these analyses, Liberman does not simply follow a line of apparent related words to a root word, as seen in most dictionaries, including even the esteemed multi-volume Oxford English Dictionary. For Liberman's search for the most probable root entails assessing other respected etymologists' research and conclusions, comparing similar words or possible cognates from several languages, and arguing for why the particular root identified is preferable. In other words, Liberman goes well beyond simply denoting a word root. He aims not only to clarify etymology where able, but to unearth its complexity where called for both to correct errors and assumptions regarding particular words and improve etymological methodology and research.
Word lovers will find the lengthy, involved articles on the number of particular familiar and few obscure words engaging. Most significantly for the field of etymology is his methodology; which is both rigorous and flexible in reaching probable attributions for word roots. With scientific method (as opposed to the frequent presumptions and conventions), literary (i. e., writing) and reasoning ability, and incomparable scholarship, Liberman charts new paths in the field of etymology.

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Great read!Review Date: 2008-02-11

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Great for the WHOLE family!!Review Date: 2005-07-19

Used price: $0.26

Very useful bookReview Date: 2007-03-11
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