South Carolina Books


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South Carolina Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

South Carolina
Understanding Tennessee Williams (Understanding Contemporary American Literature)
Published in Hardcover by Univ of South Carolina Pr (1995-01)
Author: Alice Griffin
List price: $29.95
Used price: $100.00

Average review score:

Best insights into the plays of America's great playwright
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1995-10-26
A definitive interpretation of the major plays that covers the characters, structure, and language of the plays, this work is especially impressive for its insights into Williams' poetic language. It explains clearly the imagery of the language, its rhythms and diction, as well as the visual dramatic effects that made Williams an innovator in his day. If you like the plays, buy the book! You'll love it.

South Carolina
Understanding Ursula K Le Guin (Understanding Contemporary American Literature)
Published in Hardcover by Univ of South Carolina Pr (1990-05)
Author: Elizabeth Cummins
List price: $29.95
New price: $33.49
Used price: $2.92

Average review score:

I searched a long time before I found writing about Le Guin
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-22
This is a wonderful book to read if you enjoy Le Guin's fiction. It's useful to readers and academics alike because Cummins has split the book into four sections that study the settings for Le Guin's stories. There is a section for the Hainish Universe, another for her works set on the future-West Coast of America, one for the Earthsea books and so on and so forth.

Reading a book structured like this is a delight because Cummins has tied in themes and concerns of Le Guin's work with her fictional settings. It reads like a detailed and complex unofficial Ursula Le Guin handbook, with many references to the tao te ching and other philosophical pre-occupations, but is easy to read and simply ~*fascinating*~.

South Carolina
Understanding William H. Gass (Understanding Contemporary American Literature)
Published in Hardcover by University of South Carolina Press (2002-07)
Author: H. L. Hix
List price: $34.95
New price: $30.99
Used price: $27.00

Average review score:

A very thoughtful, informative, scholarly guide
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-08
Understanding William H. Gass by poet and author H. L. Hix is a very thoughtful, informative, scholarly guide to the novels, short stories, novellas, and essays of William H. Gass, an American writer and philosopher with a keen grasp of ethical dilemmas and the lasting effects of childhood "hurts." A scholarly and meticulous discourse on the work of a very intelligent and expressive author, Understanding William H. Gass is very highly recommended for academic Literary Criticism and Philosophy collections, as well as "must" reading for students of the life and work of William H. Gass.

South Carolina
A Union Officer in the Reconstruction
Published in Paperback by Louisiana State University Press (1997-04)
Author: John W. De Forest
List price: $17.95
New price: $7.25
Used price: $5.57

Average review score:

Great first-hand account of reconstruction
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-17
De Forest describes his experiences as a Freedmen's Bureau agent during Reconstruction in Greenville, SC. Not only is his story very engaging, but he provides a unique look into the turmoils of reconstruction, why it failed, and the real people that existed at the time. Although De Forest does regard the South as defeated and backwards, he maintains a fairly balanced outlook despite his status. De Forest is very good at describing the decay of the Old South and the birth of the modern southern US. Overall, an excellent work.

South Carolina
University of South Carolina 2007 (College Prowler)
Published in Paperback by College Prowler (2006-07-01)
Author: Jessica Foster
List price: $16.95
New price: $10.53
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Average review score:

Great addition to campus visit!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-27
This book was very helpful to read on the way to our campus visit. Though everything in this book cannot be taken as "everyone's opinion" it is great to have an inside view from various students on their thoughts. We did not see the girl/guy ranking as the book had noted... the students we saw on campus seemed like a great mix of beauty as well as ethnicity. However - we were able to have a lot of "inside knowledge" before even stepping foot on the campus - this enhanced the visit a lot. The information about Honors College also helped. This book is highly recommended if you are seriously considering this school. We LOVED University of South Carolina and is in the top tier of choices.

South Carolina
The Vanishing Coast
Published in Hardcover by John F Blair Pub (1992-06)
Author: Elizabeth Leland
List price: $21.95
New price: $17.50
Used price: $4.39

Average review score:

A wonderful Kuralt-style exploration of the Carolina Coast
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-13
This is fine book, written in beautiful, lucid prose, full of stunning B&W photographs. Featured are off-the-beaten-path places like the teeny-tiny post office in Salvo on the Outer Banks and the grave of the famous, eccentric Fort Fisher hermit who once mesmerized visitors to his home in a WW II bunker near Carolina beach. The author, a native of Charleston and a veteran columnist for the Charlotte Observer, has interviewed natives of the last unchanged and rapidly changing places along the Carolina coast. Most of the islands and coastal towns (from Hilton Head to small Outer Banks towns to Charleston) along the coasts of the Carolinas are represented.

The author interviewed and photographed: descendants of slaves who still make sweetgrass baskets in the old tradition; the last of the old-time clam rakers, crab pickers, and boat builders who discuss what new ways have done to their livelihoods, the "Live-Aboards", folks who left their nine-to-five lives to live on modest boats along the water's edge; the Menhaden Chanteymen,a group of singing black fisherman who were once an institution in the days "when boats were made of wood, and men of steel"; the "Hoi Toiders" of the Outer Banks who still speak with the same accent as their seventeenth century British ancestors.

A great browsing and coffee-table book, would make an excellent gift for anyone who has a home on the coast or wants to visit. For anyone who wants a glimpse of the way things were along the vanishing southern coast, or to see what remains with new eyes.

South Carolina
Venturers the Hampton Harrison and Earle Families of Virginia, South Carolina and Texas
Published in Hardcover by Southern Historical Pr (1981-06)
Author: Virginia G. Meynard
List price: $55.00

Average review score:

The most important genealogy and family history book of 1981
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-06
The Venturers is a family history of the highest caliber. It is a well researched and masterful blend of history, genealogy and drama covering 300 years of American history and the role of the Hampton family, beginning with William Hampton the immigrant who came to Virginia from England in 1620 and their allied Harrison and Earle Families. The author, Virginia G. Meynard is a seasoned journalist and experienced genealogist. Make no mistake in thinking this to be mostly narrative; it is a solidly and extensively researched genealogy for either the budding or professional genealogist.

South Carolina
Vernacular Voices (Studies in Rhetoric/Communication)
Published in Paperback by University of South Carolina Press (2008-05-30)
Author: Gerard A. Hauser
List price: $32.50
New price: $32.50
Used price: $31.14

Average review score:

Partisan, rhetorical politics, but still a 'common good.'
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-09
In Vernacular Voices: The Rhetoric of Publics and Public Spheres, Gerald Hauser hopes to rethink the discrepancy between what the political and media elite abstract as the "public sphere" and what ordinary people consider it to be. Hauser surveys political and rhetorical scholarship in an attempt to theorize a more rhetorical politics, rather than an idealistic one. By mapping the trajectory of the discourse around such cases as the Polish Solidarity movement, the Meese Commission on Pornography, and Jimmy Carter's framing of the Iranian Hostage Crisis, Hauser crafts a "vernacular rhetorical model" in which partisanship is assumed and embraced rather than bracketed out.

Hauser places Juergen Habermas as his theoretical foil. Habermas proposes a notion of the public sphere as an Enlightenment ideal: the public sphere is concerned with a common good which is outside of private and partisan interests and where irrationality and inequalities can be dismissed in order to act. Like most rhetorical scholars, Hauser, however, disagrees with Habermas' ideal public sphere. According to Hauser, Habermas' Enlightenment take on public deliberation conceals the marginalized and multiple publics, excludes the citizens with a stake in the political process, frustrates the democratic notion of open access, and defies any privileging of diversity. Hauser's "rhetorical model" of the public sphere is a discourse-based, reality-based, and diversified take that encourages shared judgments. He grounds his theory in actual political discourses which prove that interest, rather than disinterest, is crucial to a vital public sphere.

While I appreciate Hauser's privileging of rhetoric as the life-blood of politics and am thrilled to read his thorough defense of partisan rhetoric, I am uncomfortable with his notions of "common good." He seems to be as goaded by his ideal of the "common good" and "dialogue" as much as Habermas' is limited by his ideal speech situation. In a summary statement, Hauser describes the "vernacular rhetoric model" as "assum[ing] that publics emerge insofar as interested citizens, often out of concern for the common good, engage in dialogue on the issues that touch their lives" (189). Looking even at early issues in Campaign 2000, for instance, the "common good" itself was hotly debated and "dialogue" was not the method of deliberation. How can the "vernacular rhetorical model" account for the most fundamental disagreements in which most citizens are the most interested? Thus, I would prefer that Hauser took a more agonistic approach in this model rather than a deliberative, dialogic one.

South Carolina
Visiting Utopian Communities: A Guide to the Shakers, Moravians, and Others
Published in Paperback by University of South Carolina Press (1998-03-01)
Author: Gerald Lee Gutek
List price: $16.95
New price: $2.71
Used price: $2.95

Average review score:

A wonderful resource
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-01
This guidebook introduces the potential tourist to various utopian communities throughout the United States. Each community is given a chapter, which has an introduction that includes the community's general location, address, telephone number, hours when open, admission, restaurants, shops and facilities. (Everything a tourist could need!) Next follows an overview of the community, its history, and finally a written tour explaining what a visitor will see.

The communities included are: Ephrata Cloister (Ephrata, Pennsylvania), Old Salem (Winston-Salem, North Carolina), Mount Lebanon Shaker Village (New Lebanon, New York), Hancock Shaker Village (Pittsfield, Massachusetts), Canterbury Shaker Village (Canterbury, New Hampshire), The Shaker Museum (Poland Spring, Maine), Shaker Village of Pleasant Hill (Harrodsburg, Kentucky), Shakertown at South Union (South Union, Kentucky), Shaker Museum and Library (Old Chatham, New York), Old Economy Village (Ambridge, Pennsylvania), Zoar Village State Memorial (Zoar, Ohio), Historic New Harmony (New Harmony, Indiana), Oneida Community (Oneida, New York), Fruitlands (Harvard, Massachusetts), Historic Bethel German Colony (Aurora, Oregon), Bishop Hill (Bishop Hill, Illinois), Amana Colonies (Amana, Iowa), Historic Rugby (Rugby, Tennessee), and Koreshan State Historic Site (Estero, Florida).

This book is a wonderful resource! Not only does this book tell you how you can visit various historic utopian communities, but it also gives you the information you need to understand what the community was about. Complete with pictures, I highly recommend this book.

South Carolina
Visits to Bedlam: Madness and Literature in the Eighteenth Century
Published in Hardcover by University of South Carolina Press (1974)
Author: Max Byrd
List price:
Used price: $9.01

Average review score:

Additional Information
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-28
This is additional information taken from the 2nd printing of the book, 1975.

About the Author:
Max Byrd is an assistant professor in the Department of English aT Yale University, havnig received his Ph.D. from harvard in 1970. Awarded the Know Fellowship by Harvard and the Morse Fellowship by Yale, he ahs specialized in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century English and American literature. A version of the introduction to Visits to Bedlam won the Winthrop Sargeant Price at harvard in 1970.

Subject Terms: 1. English literature-18th century-History and criticism. 2. Mental illness in literature.

Contents:
Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
Chapter One / Reason in Madness
Chapter Two / Dunciad and Augustan Madness
Chapter Three / Swift
Chapter Four / Johnson
Chapter Five / Madness at Mid-Century: Melancholy and the Sublime
Chapter Six / Cowper and Blake
Notes
Index

Illustrations

Frontispiece. Sixteenth-century engraving by Matthaus Greuter of Doctor Wurmbrandt curing insanity

Plate 1. William Hogarth's Credulity, Superstition and Fanaticism: A Medley (1762)
Plate 2. William Hogarth's last engraving in the series Rakes' Progress (1735)
Plate 3. Richard Newton's A Visit to Bedlam (1794)
Plate 4. The Mad Artist in Chains, an eighteenth-century etching by an anonymous artist
Plate 5. Wash drawing by Thomas Rowlandson of a doctor and a lunatic
Plate 6. St. Luke's Hospital (1809), a colored aquatint and etching by Thomas Rowlandson and August Pugin
Plate 7. Madness, an eighteenth-century mezzotint by and anonymous artist
Plate 8. Crazey Kate (1815), a colored aquatint by G. M. Brighty after Geoge Shepheard

All illustrations are from the Fry Print Collection, Yale Medical Library

200 pages


Books-Under-Review-->Society-->Law-->Services-->Lawyers and Law Firms-->Property Law and Real Estate-->North America-->United States-->South Carolina-->82
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