Kent State University Swatch Guide Fashion Design Book

Conservation Concerns in Style Collections

and Margaret T. Ordoñez | Filed nether: Habiliment & Costume, Costume Society of America, Education, Fashion History, Forthcoming

Conservation Concerns in Fashion Collections cover. Kent State University Press

Continuous innovation and experimentation with the materials used in amalgam textiles, apparel, and accessories creates an ever-growing challenge for professional curators and collectors. Recognizing problematic fibers, dyes, finishes, and material and yarn constructions is crucial for maintaining objects' appearance, minimizing deterioration, and isolating those that are potentially harmful to other objects.



Red, White, and Blue on the Rail

Kimberly Chrisman-Campbell | Filed under: Clothing & Costume, Costume Social club of America, Political Science & Politics, Recent Releases

Chrisman-Campbell Cover

On February 29, 1968, the White Firm hosted its get-go—and only—fashion show. At the fourth dimension, the patriotic issue was lauded by the press, and many predicted it would get an almanac occasion, especially since manner had grown to become the fourth largest industry in the U.s.a., employing ane.4 million Americans, more than 80 percent of them women. Simply the social and political turmoil of that particular year—from the Vietnam State of war, the ceremonious rights motion, and the assassinations of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy—cast a shadow over the festivities.



Yours Affectionately, Osgood

Sarah Tracy Burrows and Ryan W. Keating | Filed under: American History, Ceremonious War Era, Forthcoming, Interpreting the Civil War: Texts and Contexts, U.S. History

Burrows Cover

More than 3 million men served in the American Ceremonious War. In Yours Affectionately, Osgood, editors Sarah Tracy Burrows and Ryan W. Keating accept assembled a collection of letters from one of those soldiers—Osgood Vose Tracy of the 122nd New York Infantry. Sarah Tracy Burrows, a descendant of Colonel Tracy, has compiled this expansive collection from her family's private papers. Paired with illuminating discussion and context from noted historian Ryan Due west. Keating, Tracy's letters abode follow his journey as a soldier and pw from his enlistment in September 1862 through the finish of the war in May 1865, equally Tracy then readjusted to civilian life.



How Blood Works

Ellene Glenn Moore | Filed under: Poetry, Recent Releases, Wick First Book

How Blood Works by Ellene Glenn Moore

In keeping with the central theme that the stories we tell ourselves—and, by extension, our understanding of who we are—are shaped by the spaces in which we tell them, the poems in How Blood Works vary drastically in course. From traditionally lineated lyrics to more architectural, segmented prose pieces, the poems themselves become a space for narratives of the self to play out.



The East River Ripper

George R. Dekle Sr. | Filed under: Contempo Releases, True Law-breaking, True Offense History

The East River Ripper by George R. Dekle Sr.

Shortly subsequently NYPD Primary of Detectives Thomas Byrnes publicly criticized the London police force for declining to capture Jack the Ripper, he received a letter purportedly from Jack himself saying New York was his next target. Not long after, Byrnes was confronted by his own Ripper-way murder example in the death of Carrie Brownish, a.one thousand.a. "One-time Shakespeare," a colorful character who worked equally a prostitute and had a penchant for quoting Shakespeare. People were worried that Jack might accept really come to America…



Queen of the Con

Thomas Crowl | Filed nether: Recent Releases, True Crime, Truthful Criminal offence History

Queen of the Con. Kent State University Press

Queen of the Con tells the true story of Cassie Chadwick, a successful swindler and "i of the top 10 imposters of all fourth dimension," according to Time magazine. Born Betsy Bigley in 1857 in Canada, she commencement operated as Madame Devere, a European clairvoyant, and in 1890 was arrested for defrauding a Toledo banking company of $xx,000. In the mid-1890s, while working as a madam in Cleveland, Cassie met and married a widowed physician with a coveted Euclid Avenue address.



Reading Hemingway's Winner Take Zippo

Mark Cirino and Susan Vandagriff | Filed under: Hemingway Studies, Literature & Literary Criticism, Reading Hemingway, Recent Releases

Reading Hemingway's Winner Take Nothing cover

Through line-by-line annotations and accompanying commentary, this book weaves together the biographical, historical, and cultural threads of one of Hemingway'southward more overlooked works, thus providing much needed guidance for Hemingway scholars and general readers alike.



Slavery

Aaron Astor and Thomas C. Buchanan | Filed under: Civil War Era, History, Interpreting American History, Recent Releases

Slavery: Interpreting American History. Kent State University Press

To fully sympathize the various ways in which slavery has been depicted and described is a difficult chore. Like whatsoever other important historical issue, this requires a thorough grasp of the underlying history, methodological developments over fourth dimension, and the contemporary politics and culture of historians' own times. And the example of slavery is further complicated, of form, by changes in the legal and political status of African Americans in the 20th and 21st centuries.



A Notable Bully

Robert E. Cray | Filed under: Civil State of war Era, Forthcoming, History, Interpreting the Civil State of war: Texts and Contexts, Understanding Civil War History

A Notable Bully/Cray. Kent State University Press

Largely forgotten past historians, Baton Wilson (1822–1874) was a behemothic in his fourth dimension, a man well known throughout New York Urban center, a man shaped past the city'south immigrant civilisation, its harsh voting practices, and its efforts to participate in the State of war for the Union. For decades, Wilson's name made headlines—for many dissimilar reasons—in the city'southward major newspapers.



No Place for Glory

Robert J. Wynstra | Filed under: Civil War Era, Civil State of war Soldiers and Strategies, Recent Releases, Agreement Civil War History

No Place for Glory/Wynstra. Kent State University Press

Over the years, many pinnacle historians have cited Major General Robert E. Rodes every bit the best division commander in Robert E. Lee's vaunted army. Despite those accolades, Rodes faltered desperately at Gettysburg, which stands as the only major blemish on his otherwise sterling tape.



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