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Books on Politics |
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By: Catherine Radziwill (1858-1941) | |
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By: Charles E. Morris | |
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By: Charles Kingsley (1819-1875) | |
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By: Charles Kingston O'Mahony (1884-) | |
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By: Charles Seymour (1885-1963) | |
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By: Chester Alan Arthur (1830-1886) | |
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By: Christopher Evans (1847-1917) | |
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By: Clarence Darrow (1857-1938) | |
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By: Clinton W. (Clinton Wallace) Gilbert (1871-1933) | |
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By: Coalition for Networked Information | |
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By: D. D. (Daniel Desmond) Sheehan (1873-1948) | |
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By: Dan Smoot (1913-2003) | |
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By: Daniel Defoe (1661?-1731) | |
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By: David Dudley Field (1805-1894) | |
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By: David Hunter Miller (1875-1961) | |
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By: De Alva Stanwood Alexander (1845-1925) | |
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By: Doane Robinson (1856-1946) | |
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By: Donald Mackenzie Wallace (1841-1919) | |
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By: Doris Stevens (1892-1963) | |
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![]() A first-hand account of the 1913-1919 campaign of American suffragists, detailing their treatment at the hands of the courts, and the true conditions of their incarceration. |
By: Dwight D. (Dwight David) Eisenhower (1890-1969) | |
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By: Earl Barnes (1861-1935) | |
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By: Edmund Burke (1729-1797) | |
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By: Edward Francis Adams (1839-) | |
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By: Edward M. House (1858-1938) | |
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![]() Philip Dru: Administrator: a Story of Tomorrow, 1920-1935 is a futuristic political novel published anonymously in 1912 by Edward Mandell House, an American diplomat, politician and presidential foreign policy advisor. His book's hero leads the democratic western U.S. in a civil war against the plutocratic East, and becomes the dictator of America. Dru as dictator imposes a series of reforms that resemble the Bull Moose platform of 1912 and then vanishes. |
By: Edward Potts Cheyney (1861-1947) | |
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By: Elbert Hubbard | |
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![]() LITTLE JOURNEYS TO THE HOMES OF AMERICAN STATESMENBy ELBERT HUBBARDBERT HUBBARD A little more patience, a little more charity for all, a little more devotion, a little more love; with less bowing down to the past, and a silent ignoring of pretended authority; a brave looking forward to the future with more faith in our fellows, and the race will be ripe for a great burst of light and life. --Elbert Hubbard It was not built with the idea of ever becoming a place in history: simply a boys' cabin in the woods... |
By: Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902) | |
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![]() Elizabeth Cady Stanton was one of the premier movers in the original women’s rights movement, along with Susan B. Anthony, her best friend for over 50 years. While Elizabeth initially stayed home with her husband and many babies and wrote the speeches, Susan went on the road to bring the message of the women’s rights movement to an often hostile public. When black men were given the vote in 1870, Susan and Elizabeth led the women’s rights establishment of the time to withhold support for a bill that would extend to black men the rights still denied for women of all colors... | |
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By: Elizabeth Garver Jordan (1867-1947) | |
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By: Émile Faguet (1847-1916) | |
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By: Emma Goldman (1869-1940) | |
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![]() Chicago, May 4, 1886. In the Haymarket region of the city, a peaceful Labor Day demonstration suddenly turns into a riot. The police intervene to maintain peace, but they soon use violence to quell the mob and a bomb is thrown, resulting in death and injuries to scores of people. In the widely publicized trial that followed, eight anarchists were condemned to death or life imprisonment, convicted of conspiracy, though none of them had actually thrown the bomb. A young Russian immigrant, Emma Goldman, had arrived just the previous year in the United States... |
By: Emma Guy Cromwell (1865-1952) | |
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By: Enrico Ferri (1859-1929) | |
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By: Eugene V. Debs (1855-1926) | |
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![]() "While there is a lower class I am in it; While there is a criminal class I am of it; While there is a soul in prison I am not free." ( Eugene V. Debs) This collection of essays charts the thought and character of Eugene V. Debs. Debs was an influential early American labor leader, a founding member of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), and a Presidential candidate for the Socialist Party of America. In these essays, Debs employs his characteristically fiery rhetoric in a spirited defense of worker's rights, organized labor, women's suffrage, class solidarity, and the principles of economic socialism. |
By: F. J. C. (Fossey John Cobb) Hearnshaw (1869-1946) | |
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By: Fabian Franklin | |
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![]() In What Prohibition Has Done to America, Fabian Franklin presents a concise but forceful argument against the Eighteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Beginning in 1920, this Amendment prohibited the sale and manufacture of alcoholic beverages in the United States, until it was repealed in 1933. Franklin contends that the Amendment “is not only a crime against the Constitution of the United States, and not only a crime against the whole spirit of our Federal system, but a crime against the first principles of rational government... |
By: Founding Fathers of the United States | |
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![]() The Declaration of Independence was signed on July 4, 1776. It announced that the thirteen American colonies, who were at war with Great Britain in the American Revolutionary War, no longer considered themselves part of the British Empire. They now called themselves a new nation, The United States of America. This famous document went on to become a well-known keystone of the human rights movement. However, the newly formed state had no real identity or philosophy and were merely a loose collection of states that had freed themselves from colonial rule... | |
![]() Declaration of Independence is the document in which the Thirteen Colonies declared themselves independent of the Kingdom of Great Britain and explained their justifications for doing so. It was ratified by the Continental Congress on July 4, 1776. |
By: Frances Burney (1752-1840) | |
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![]() This is the fourth and final novel by Fanny Burney, the author of Evelina, Cecilia, and Camilla. "Who is "Miss Ellis?" Why did she board a ship from France to England at the beginning of the French revolution? Anyway, the loss of her purse made this strange "wanderer" dependent upon the charity of some good people and, of course, bad ones. But she always comforts herself by reminding herself that it's better than "what might have been..." This is not only a mystery, not at all. It's also a romance which reminds readers of novels by Jane Austen... |
By: Francis Bacon (1561-1626) | |
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![]() In 1623, Francis Bacon expressed his aspirations and ideas in New Atlantis. Released in 1627, this was his creation of an ideal land where people were kind, knowledgeable, and civic-minded. Part of this new land was his perfect college, a vision for our modern research universities. Islands he had visited may have served as models for his ideas. |
By: François Hotman (1524-1590) | |
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By: Frank B. Lord | |
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By: Frank Norris (1870-1902) | |
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![]() Frank Norris based his 1901 novel The Octopus (A Story of California) on the Mussel Slough Tragedy of 1880, a bloody conflict between ranchers and agents of the Southern Pacific Railroad. The central issue was over the ownership of the ranches, which the farmers had leased from the railroad nearly ten years earlier with intentions of eventually purchasing the land. Although originally priced at $2.50 to $5 per acre, the railroad eventually opened the land for sale at prices adjusted for land improvements; the railroad’s attempts to take possession of the land led the ranchers to defend themselves as depicted in the book. |
By: Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945) | |
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By: Franklin Hichborn (1869?-1964) | |
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By: Franklin Knight Lane (1864-1921) | |
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By: Franklin Pierce (1804-1869) | |
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By: Frederic Austin Ogg (1878-1951) | |
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By: Frédéric Bastiat (1801-1850) | |
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![]() "The law perverted! The law—and, in its wake, all the collective forces of the nation. The law, I say, not only diverted from its proper direction, but made to pursue one entirely contrary! The law becomes the tool of every kind of avarice, instead of being its check! The law guilty of that very inequity which it was its mission to punish! Truly, this is a serious fact, if it exists, and one to which I feel bound to call the attention of my fellow-citizens." —Frédéric Bastiat |
By: Frederick Jackson Turner (1861-1932) | |
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By: Friedrich Engels (1820-1895) | |
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![]() This is Engels' first book (since considered a classic account of England's working class in the industrial age), which argues that workers paid a heavy price for the industrial revolution that swept the country. Engels wrote the piece while staying in Manchester from 1842 to 1844, based on th bohis observations and several contemporary reports conducted over the period. |
By: Friedrich Schiller | |
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![]() The History of the Thirty Years War is a five volume work, which followed his very successful History of the Revolt of the Netherlands. Written for a wider audience than Revolt, it is a vivid history, colored by Schiller’s own interest in the question of human freedom and his rationalist optimism. Volume 1 covers the background of the war, through the Battle of Prague in late 1620. (Introduction by Alan Winterrowd) |