Pennsylvania Books
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Ethnology of the Yuchi Indians (Anthropological publications of the University Museum - University of Pennsylvania)
Published in Unknown Binding by Humanities Press (1979)
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Average review score: 

Speck documented numerous facets of Yuchi culture
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-17
Review Date: 2004-07-17
The Yuchis, a Native American people originating in the southeastern United States, were forcibly relocated to the Indian Territory (along with their neighboring Native American tribes) in the 1830s. More than seventy years later, much of their traditional way of life still survived into the early 1900s and was observed and recorded by anthropologist Frank G. Speck (1881-1950) during the years 1904 to 1908. Speck documented numerous facets of Yuchi culture, including language, subsistence practices, decorative arts, domestic architecture, clothing, religious beliefs and rituals, healing practices, mythology, music, social and political organizations, warfare, games, and life transition rituals and customs from birth to burial. Ethnology Of The Yuchi Indians remains as a seminal introduction to the history and the culture of this Native American peoples and is a welcome and renewed addition to the library of Native American Studies.

Etruscan Myth, Sacred History, And Legend
Published in Hardcover by University of Pennsylvania Museum Publication (2006-12-30)
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Etruscan Myth, Sacred History, and Legend
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-13
Review Date: 2007-06-13
This is a truly excellent study of Etruscan religion. I have read several other books on the subject and have always been rather disappointed by them. This is the first one which adopts a sensible methodology for recovering what we can and cannot surmise about Etruscan mythology given the preservation of art and the paucity of texts. I read each page with great interest and came out feeling that I had actually learned something about the subject, whereas previous books had seemed to get lost in a maze of Greek sources, and missed or even avoided material which seemed to contradict these Greek sources. This author, on the other hand, is interested precisely in what is different from the Greek versions of the iconography, and is able to deduce many salient features of Etruscan religion in doing so. I highly recommend this book to anyone who wishes to gain a deeper knowledge of Etruscan culture.

Eve of Destruction: The Coming Age of Preventive War
Published in Hardcover by University of Pennsylvania Press (2008-01-23)
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Average review score: 

A better understanding of this strange tactic.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-06
Review Date: 2008-05-06
Preventative warfare- attacking someone because a nation believes they are about to commit an act of war. "Eve of Destruction: The Coming Age of Preventative War" looks at that concept and asks why is an act of war preventive to an act of war? A scholarly look at the United States in particular growing practice of acting on preventative measures and the ethics of such an act and how they break the world code that has maintained overall general peace in the world. A shocking and controversial look at United States Foreign policy, "Eve of Destruction: The Coming Age of Preventative War" is highly recommended for community library military and social issues collections and for anyone who wants a better understanding of this strange tactic.

The Evergreen Farm: Essays and Tales of Rural Western Pennsylvania
Published in Paperback by Laurel Valley Graphics (2003-12-01)
List price: $10.00
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Collectible price: $20.00
Average review score: 

.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-17
Review Date: 2006-08-17
I love this book about a one room school house and the woods and streams in PA I was there and I like to relive those wonderful days before TV.
Evolution and the Founders of Pragmatism
Published in Paperback by University of Pennsylvania Press (1972-12)
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Average review score: 

A Vitally Important Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-08
Review Date: 2006-08-08
This is simply one of the most significant books published in the field of intellectual history since the end of World War II. First published in 1949 by Harvard, Wiener focuses upon the members of the so-called "Metaphysical Club" that convened in Cambridge MA during (roughly) 1871-75 and again from 1876 until 1879. The group was particularly interested in asssessing the impact of evolution on scientific and social thinking, including law. The primary members discussed are Charles Sanders Peirce, Chauncey Wright, William James, John Fiske (the Harvard historian), Nicholas St. John Green (lawyer and legal author), and Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. What a group of fascinating characters? The primary philosophical approach their discussions centered upon was what we now refer to as pragmatism--some say America's only original contribution to philosophy. An approach to social and scientific issues developed that was highly empirical, pluralistic, dismissive of moralist absolutes (more for some members than others), secular, democratic, and which reached out to embrace and study fields such as the new social sciences, particularly comparative anthropology (the work of Tylor in particular). This was especially a time of intellectual ferment, as reflected in the work of Maine, Buckle, Comte, Darwin and others. At around 300 pages, and so skillfully written that the reader hates to reach the end, this book serves as an invaluable introduction to this formative era of American intellectual development. I found that the Harper Torchbook edition in paper stood up very well to the passage of time and was a most attractive way to enjoy Wiener's insights.
The Evolution of the Southern Backcountry: A Case Study of Lunenburg County, Virginia, 1746-1832
Published in Hardcover by University of Pennsylvania Press (1985-01)
List price: $33.95
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Average review score: 

Book arrived promptly, in good shipment shape.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-30
Review Date: 2008-05-30
This book is a helpful treatment of economic conditions in Southside colonial Virginia and the early Republic. Historians of this era could benefit from genealogical studies, which often contain a wealth of detail about specific families. Likewise, genealogies ought to pay more attention to local histories such as this, which provide a valuable context, the better to understand ancestral circumstances. (This is a gap I have attempted to fill in my own Family histories. See on Amazon, ALL OF THE ABOVE I and ALL OF THE ABOVE II.) The rough-and-ready colonial environment, which entailed the creation of utterly new social elements in America - the enslavement of Africans by Protestants, for example - is an endlessly intereating and an important subject, for some. ALL OF THE ABOVE I,ALL OF THE ABOVE II

Exclusion and Hierarchy: Orthodoxy, Nonobservance, and the Emergence of Modern Jewish Identity (Jewish Culture and Contexts)
Published in Hardcover by University of Pennsylvania Press (2005-05-12)
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Superb analysis of managing rifts in Jewish community
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-29
Review Date: 2005-08-29
Jewish unity faces constant challenges, most recently in the anguished debate over Israel's withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, which was split largely across religious lines. Dr. Ferziger performs an important service in this book by tracing the roots of conflict between observant and non-observant Jews in 18th- and 19th-Century Europe and focusing on how communities managed to work together. From Budapest to Berlin, Ferziger describes the pain and puzzlement of Orthodox Jews as they watched family and friends violate the Sabbath and flout other halakhic observances while seeking to connect with the outside world. Although the notions of hierarchy that evolved may seem patronizing, they served as important tools for those among the Orthodox who sought to create a big tent that would not exclude their wayward brethren. Ferziger writes with sensitivity and style, offering a superb analysis of how Jews worked hard to bridge significant rifts and find common ground.
Experiment Perilous
Published in Paperback by Univ of Pennsylvania Pr (1974-08)
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Average review score: 

Language and Society
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-01
Review Date: 2008-09-01
This is a very important study relating language and social context, a classic model of research in Sociolinguistics field. Very, very good.

Exposes And Excess: Muckraking in America 1900-2000 (Personal Takes)
Published in Paperback by University of Pennsylvania Press (2005-05-30)
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Average review score: 

Best tell all book of the year
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-18
Review Date: 2004-06-18
Nashville City Paper BookClub Column - May 27, 2004
Local author and Vanderbilt professor Cecelia Tichi has written the juicy tell-all Exposes and Excess (Penn). Tichi dishes the dirt on those who made it big and rich during the Gilded Age.
Saralee Terry Woods is President of BookMan/BookWoman Books in Nashville, and Larry D. Woods is an attorney.

The Face of Decline: The Pennsylvania Anthracite Region in the Twentieth Century
Published in Paperback by Cornell University Press (2005-11-17)
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Average review score: 

A Top Notch Book About Decline
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-18
Review Date: 2008-04-18
This book is a well-researched and very gripping analysis of the history of the decline of Pennsylvania's anthracite industry. This tells of the events creating this industrial giant. It then details the circumstances that destroyed this once financial dynasty.
Pennsylvania was once a leading input towards our nation's economic strength. It's approximately 500 square miles of anthracite coal, which is 95% of the world's known supply, accounted for 16% of American's energy needs during the industrial era of the 1890s. The demands for increased energy during the 1910s due to World War I kept demand for Pennsylvania anthracite thriving. Yet, after the war, people turned to lower cost alternatives, such as oil and gas. Anthracite over time has found it increasingly difficult to compete. In 1917, Pennsylvania saw 100 million tons of anthracite was extracted by 181,000 miners. In 2000, less than 1,000 miners produced 4 million tons.
With the decline of industry came the decline of coal communities. This is a region that has gone from almost 1.2 residents in the 1930s to 836,000 today. This is more stunning compared to the population boom throughout most of the rest of the country. As the authors note, these towns have more than the typical share of abandoned commercial sites, elderly, and people requiring public assistance as the only available income option.
As the Depression of the 1930s forced many mine investors to close their companies, unemployed miners still wanted jobs to feed themselves and their families. They created "bootleg" companies and continued mining, up to 5 million tons in 1939, without authority of the owners. This led to a period of literal mine wars, where armed labor protectors would do battle with armed mine police. Governor Gifford Pinchot responded by declining to send in state police officers as mine owners requested.
World War II produced increased energy demands, and many mines officially reopened. Unfortunately, many mine owners, many absentee investors and many often operating in partnership with union officials, liquidated and diversified mine assets in ways that was profitable during wartime, yet financially crashed upon peacetime. Several public redevelopment projects attempted to stem the economic collapse of this region, yet the projects were haphazard with no overall plan. They may have helped stem some losses, yet they failed to resolve the larger challenges as the area was thrown into a downwards cycle, according to the authors.
The Pennsylvania state legislature played interesting roles in this history. A key issue has always been the transportation of all this coal. At first, it was legislated that coal and rail interests be kept separate, and that no transporting company could own a mine. Railroad companies hired lobbyists who, in 1860, persuaded the legislature to end this ban. What resulted was investors, in particular J.P. Morgan, owning both rail companies and coal mines. Coal mines not owned by rail companies discovered that no rail company would ship their coal, or would do so at exorbitant rates, and they were driven out of business and absorbed by the rail and coal conglomerates.
Anthracite coal mining was not an easy occupation. Nor was it safe, as over 10,000 workers are known to have perished in these mines. In 1869, the legislature and Governor enacted the first notable mine ventilation laws, yet only for mines in Schuylkill County. When 108 perished from lack of oxygen in a mine the following year in another county, the law was extended for the entire region. In addition, the law required two means of egress and provided for five qualified inspectors.
The authors point out that stronger safety procedures and laws requiring them were known. England had stricter mine safety rules. Pennsylvania lawmakers lagged behind the British in their abilities to enact these tougher requirements. This demonstrated the political strength of the mine owners and their ability to influence elected officials.
Pennsylvania law in fact allowed private Coal and Iron Police who in actually were a militia that kept mine employees mostly controlled. An early attempt of a mine strike by the Workingman's Benevolent Association (WBA) led to a failed strike that lasted six months and can concluded with wage reductions and the demine of the WBA. Over time, disgruntled mine employees likely killed some mine foremen and superintendents and burned and bombed company offices. Pinkerton investigators claimed members of the Molly Maguires were behind the disturbances. In 1877, ten were convinced and executed for these crimes over evidence that, to today, is debated as to whether those blamed, perhaps due to their political activism and perhaps over discrimination over their Irish ethnicity, were in fact innocent.
A strong union created with greater employee approval, the United Mineworkers, emerged in the 1890s. Crashes between union members on one side and Coal and Iron Police and local Sheriffs and their deputies on the other side, at one point led to 19 deaths and 73 arrests. The clash resulted in increased union membership and made the union even stronger.
In 1900, about 100,000 coal miners went on strike led by such organizers as "Mother' Jones. U.S. Senator Mark Hanna (R-Pa.), fretted that this continuing shutdown of coal supply could endanger the administration of President McKinley during a reelection year, tried to get union President John Mitchell to travel to meet J.P. Morgan. Mitchell declined. Union members were offered 10% pay increases and on October 29, union members accepted. For many years, October 29 was celebrated throughout Pennsylvania as Mitchell Day.
In 1905, the Pennsylvania legislature prohibited children age 13 or younger from working in mines. Even this law provided a loophole where all it took was a parent swearing to the age of a child. Thus, many underage children continued mine work.
The legislature and Governor approved the state's workers' compensation law in 1915. The legislature again found a loophole for mine workers, as the law did not cover black lung disease. Many injured mine workers relied upon help from friends and ethnic benefit societies.
Subsequent mine strikes became a national controversy. Sen. William Borah (R-Idaho) began an effort to nationalize coal mines. Governor Pinchot helped the sides reach an agreement. The authors believe Pinchot hoped this would gain him much national prominence, yet the accord led to higher coal prices, disgruntled consumers, and diminished Pinchot's public favorableness. Pinchot later attempted to get the legislature to restrain rising coal prices, yet coal lobbyists saw to it that the proposal never was reported from committee.
This is a very useful history of Pennsylvania anthracite coal mining. The authors have captured this period and how it affected the people living and working there. This book would interest people interested in coal mining, Pennsylvania history, and the sociology of coal mining areas.
Pennsylvania was once a leading input towards our nation's economic strength. It's approximately 500 square miles of anthracite coal, which is 95% of the world's known supply, accounted for 16% of American's energy needs during the industrial era of the 1890s. The demands for increased energy during the 1910s due to World War I kept demand for Pennsylvania anthracite thriving. Yet, after the war, people turned to lower cost alternatives, such as oil and gas. Anthracite over time has found it increasingly difficult to compete. In 1917, Pennsylvania saw 100 million tons of anthracite was extracted by 181,000 miners. In 2000, less than 1,000 miners produced 4 million tons.
With the decline of industry came the decline of coal communities. This is a region that has gone from almost 1.2 residents in the 1930s to 836,000 today. This is more stunning compared to the population boom throughout most of the rest of the country. As the authors note, these towns have more than the typical share of abandoned commercial sites, elderly, and people requiring public assistance as the only available income option.
As the Depression of the 1930s forced many mine investors to close their companies, unemployed miners still wanted jobs to feed themselves and their families. They created "bootleg" companies and continued mining, up to 5 million tons in 1939, without authority of the owners. This led to a period of literal mine wars, where armed labor protectors would do battle with armed mine police. Governor Gifford Pinchot responded by declining to send in state police officers as mine owners requested.
World War II produced increased energy demands, and many mines officially reopened. Unfortunately, many mine owners, many absentee investors and many often operating in partnership with union officials, liquidated and diversified mine assets in ways that was profitable during wartime, yet financially crashed upon peacetime. Several public redevelopment projects attempted to stem the economic collapse of this region, yet the projects were haphazard with no overall plan. They may have helped stem some losses, yet they failed to resolve the larger challenges as the area was thrown into a downwards cycle, according to the authors.
The Pennsylvania state legislature played interesting roles in this history. A key issue has always been the transportation of all this coal. At first, it was legislated that coal and rail interests be kept separate, and that no transporting company could own a mine. Railroad companies hired lobbyists who, in 1860, persuaded the legislature to end this ban. What resulted was investors, in particular J.P. Morgan, owning both rail companies and coal mines. Coal mines not owned by rail companies discovered that no rail company would ship their coal, or would do so at exorbitant rates, and they were driven out of business and absorbed by the rail and coal conglomerates.
Anthracite coal mining was not an easy occupation. Nor was it safe, as over 10,000 workers are known to have perished in these mines. In 1869, the legislature and Governor enacted the first notable mine ventilation laws, yet only for mines in Schuylkill County. When 108 perished from lack of oxygen in a mine the following year in another county, the law was extended for the entire region. In addition, the law required two means of egress and provided for five qualified inspectors.
The authors point out that stronger safety procedures and laws requiring them were known. England had stricter mine safety rules. Pennsylvania lawmakers lagged behind the British in their abilities to enact these tougher requirements. This demonstrated the political strength of the mine owners and their ability to influence elected officials.
Pennsylvania law in fact allowed private Coal and Iron Police who in actually were a militia that kept mine employees mostly controlled. An early attempt of a mine strike by the Workingman's Benevolent Association (WBA) led to a failed strike that lasted six months and can concluded with wage reductions and the demine of the WBA. Over time, disgruntled mine employees likely killed some mine foremen and superintendents and burned and bombed company offices. Pinkerton investigators claimed members of the Molly Maguires were behind the disturbances. In 1877, ten were convinced and executed for these crimes over evidence that, to today, is debated as to whether those blamed, perhaps due to their political activism and perhaps over discrimination over their Irish ethnicity, were in fact innocent.
A strong union created with greater employee approval, the United Mineworkers, emerged in the 1890s. Crashes between union members on one side and Coal and Iron Police and local Sheriffs and their deputies on the other side, at one point led to 19 deaths and 73 arrests. The clash resulted in increased union membership and made the union even stronger.
In 1900, about 100,000 coal miners went on strike led by such organizers as "Mother' Jones. U.S. Senator Mark Hanna (R-Pa.), fretted that this continuing shutdown of coal supply could endanger the administration of President McKinley during a reelection year, tried to get union President John Mitchell to travel to meet J.P. Morgan. Mitchell declined. Union members were offered 10% pay increases and on October 29, union members accepted. For many years, October 29 was celebrated throughout Pennsylvania as Mitchell Day.
In 1905, the Pennsylvania legislature prohibited children age 13 or younger from working in mines. Even this law provided a loophole where all it took was a parent swearing to the age of a child. Thus, many underage children continued mine work.
The legislature and Governor approved the state's workers' compensation law in 1915. The legislature again found a loophole for mine workers, as the law did not cover black lung disease. Many injured mine workers relied upon help from friends and ethnic benefit societies.
Subsequent mine strikes became a national controversy. Sen. William Borah (R-Idaho) began an effort to nationalize coal mines. Governor Pinchot helped the sides reach an agreement. The authors believe Pinchot hoped this would gain him much national prominence, yet the accord led to higher coal prices, disgruntled consumers, and diminished Pinchot's public favorableness. Pinchot later attempted to get the legislature to restrain rising coal prices, yet coal lobbyists saw to it that the proposal never was reported from committee.
This is a very useful history of Pennsylvania anthracite coal mining. The authors have captured this period and how it affected the people living and working there. This book would interest people interested in coal mining, Pennsylvania history, and the sociology of coal mining areas.
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