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Detailed analysis of a Beethoven's String QuartetReview Date: 2007-05-31

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Case study of pre-Roe abortion policyReview Date: 2003-05-23
Because the first anti-abortion laws were passed prior to the development of antiseptic surgery/antibiotics, and had actually led to an increase in organized crime's involvement (eager to profit off of women's desperation) the statues could not accomplish any policy objective by the mid 20th century. Coincidentally, fetal life had never been among the concerns of the original legislators.
Doctors could attempt to treat illegal abortion complications, but paradoxically could not offer women services which would prevent the horrific medical crises to begin with.
Consequently, a patchwork of reform laws began developing under the recommendation of the American Law Institute, the Clergy Consultation Services, and fair minded legislators who were navigating realization the laws had to be reformed, with uncertainty of how far those reforms should go. Unlike the women's liberationists of the later 1960's who framed abortion as a woman's right and conversely positioned denial as a tool of women's subordination, the professionals involved in these cases also reasoned their control of the process would remove the social stigma then attached to abortion. If women could be screened prior to undergoing an abortion, only virtuous women would receive the procedure and society would be preserved.
However easy to disparage their intentions from the vantage point of a self-identified 'third wave' feminist who has never known a world without legalized abortion, I recognize their involvement in the policy process as a critical step in obtaining an eventual nationwide repeal ruling.
As the futility of conservative reform statues and widely varying laws became apparent, newly minted reproductive rights activists became less willing to accept anything less than a standardized national repeal.
With the Bush administration openly vowing to turn back the clock on women's rights (and the obvious willingness of some state legislatures in helping to achieve that goal) case studies such as these will prove to be an indispensable resource for scholars and activists alike. Understanding our past helps prevent future returns.

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Are You in the Dark?Review Date: 2008-03-11
Yes, there was a Norman Conquest of Sicily, and then of large chunks of the boot of Italy, and the Norman kingdom which resulted is well worth studying for its importance in the expansion of Europe. But this book plunges even farther back into the darkness, to examine the state of things in southern Italy before the Normans, in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries. The author writes: "In this early medieval period, southern Italy was in effect a giant laboratory, one in which polities were tested and where Byzantium, the Lombards, the Islamic world, and the Latin West constantly intersected." In other words, much of the interfacing of European, Byzantine, and Persian-Arab knowledge and technology that we Western European historians have studied so carefully in Renaissance Spain and northern Italy had already been previewed in southern Italy. Another quote from Dr. Kreutz: "...the lower half of the Italian peninsula...first became a separate and distinct geopolitical region in 774, with the Carolingian conquest of northern Italy. It is true that it was not politically unfified until the late eleventh century, under the Normans. From 774 on, however, southern Italy mostly pursued its own separate destiny, and indeed, as the Kingdom of Naples, it continued to do so until the unification of Italy in the nineteenth century."
This is not a book that makes concessions to a popular readership. It's all solid scholarship and stolid prose. Much of its drama focuses on the reliability of monastic sources. So, unless you're a Calabrian nationalist, why should you give a hoot? Because this fragmented and triangulated region was probably the most important gateway/marketplace through which Greeks, Muslims, and Latin-German Christians exchanged ideas! It was through this region, for instance, that Indian numerals using zero entered Europe. Most of the flow of knowledge was into Europe from Byzantium and North Africa, to the very great long-term detriment of the Islamic world. Frankly (and there's a pun), Europe was receptive while Islam was beginning its long exclusion of infidel science.
Benevento, the inland southern capital of Lombard Italy, is not much of a tourist destination these days, but it was a city of greater sophistication in the 9th C than anywhere north of Rome. Its liturgical music has been imaginatively reconstructed by Marcel Peres on his CD of Beneventan chant. Amalfi, the Lombard/Greek city state on the seacoast, is indeed a spectacular place to visit today, though most of its architecture dates from well after the Lomabards. There are good reasons to suppose that Amalfi was a hub of exchange of musical and poetic styles, north and south, long before the Spanish court of Alfonso el Sabio. Somehow, in southern Italy, the characteristic instruments of both Islamic and European music encountered each other and re-absorbed the dominant Hellenic instruments. The basic double reed of ancient Greece, for example, became the shenai of Arab/Persian music and the shawm>oboe of European. Translations of ancient Greek texts also flowed through pre-Norman and Norman Italy - translations from Greek to Arabic to Latin and also some from Latin to Arabic, though Arabs were almost never the translators.
Only readers with a general knowledge of Mediterranean history over the millennia will find this book intelligible. Still, if you are a person who reads history regularly for pleasure, you won't find many books with more new knowledge to impart.

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Behind the DisappearancesReview Date: 2005-04-20

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TOURING OLD PHILADELPHIA!Review Date: 2006-07-27
Huntington takes readers on a tour of colonial Philadelphia, stopping at many well known, and many unknown historical buildings and landmarks, including many of those frequented by Franklin himself. Along the way Huntington provides biographical information about Franklin in relation to these various stops. 2006 marks Franklin's 300th birthday and there is no better time to visit historical Philadelphia than during this year long celebration of one of America's greatest Founding Fathers. In all there are just over two dozen different places to visit in the guide and Huntington greatly assists readers by providing the address and phone number of each site, hours of operation, admission prices (if applicable), and finally, a walking map with each site numbered so you can plan your route when you visit.
Certainly many people know about Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell Center, both of which can be visited free of charge, but there are many other interesting, out-of-the-way sites that are not quite as well known but are equally tantalizing for history buffs. For instance this is Elfreth's Alley, which has the distinction of being the oldest, continually occupied residential street in America, with homes that date back to the 1720's. Two of these buildings served as the Elfreth's Alley museum with a modest admission price.
Near Elfreth's Alley is the Fireman's Hall Museum. The Museum recognizes Ben Franklin's contributions as the founder of the city's first fire company in 1736. Another marvelous site is Christ Church where he and his wife Deborah attended services on occasion. It was Franklin who helped organize the funding for the church's massive 200-foot tall steeple that has become one of the city's most visible landmarks.
The Franklins are buried in Christ Church Burial Grounds, which, oddly enough, are actually a few streets over from the church. A large slab covers Franklin's final resting place and it has become a tradition for visitors to toss pennies on the slab for good luck.
The thing that strikes me about all of the sites in Huntington's guide is the modest admission fees for visiting most of them. Many of these sites can be toured for free, while others are less than $20 for a family of four, making them not only historically enriching, but a heck of a bargain as well.
If you plan on visiting Philadelphia, do yourself a favor and pick up this book and have a great time walking around old Philadelphia.
Reviewed by Tim Janson

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The cultural and social life of the North and the SouthReview Date: 2001-10-15

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As much fun to browse through as it is to plan meals withReview Date: 2002-01-09
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One of the best for down-home cookingReview Date: 1999-12-09

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Attacks longstanding social problems head-on in search of solutionsReview Date: 2006-09-12


Beverly LewisReview Date: 2008-04-08
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