Publicado por Berkley Books, New York, 1959
Librería: WF Sandercombe, Burlington, ON, Canada
Original o primera edición
EUR 7,12
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoSoft cover. Condición: Very Good. Richard Powers; Ilustrador. First Paperback Printing. Berkley Book G249. Edge and corner wear with some creasing on the front cover and an uncreased spine; no interior markings. Cover art by Richard Powers. This anthology contains: Something from Above by Donald Wandrei; The Cure by Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore writing as Lewis Padgett; Spiro by Eric Frank Russell; Resurrection by A. E. van Vogt; Original Sin by S. Fowler Wright; Memorial by Theodore Sturgeon; The Thing on Outer Shoal by P. Schuyler Miller; The Devil of East Upton by Murray Leinster; Conquerors" Isle by Nelson Bond; and Symbiosis by Morray Leinster writing as Will F. Jenkins. Book.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por University of Virginia Press, 2011
ISBN 10: 0813931088 ISBN 13: 9780813931081
Librería: Sequitur Books, Boonsboro, MD, Estados Unidos de America
Miembro de asociación: IOBA
Ejemplar firmado
EUR 40,28
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: Like New. [Personal copy renowned historian, Philip D. Morgan, with his signature.] Hardcover and dust jacket. Good binding and cover. Light wear. Clean, unmarked pages. viii, 203 p., 22 cm. Morgan authored the essay, "Religious Diversity in Colonial Virginia: Red, Black, and White" featured in this volume. *Autographed by author.* "From Jamestown to Jefferson sheds new light on the contexts surrounding Thomas Jefferson's Statute for Religious Freedom--and on the emergence of the American understanding of religious freedom--by examining its deep roots in colonial Virginia's remarkable religious diversity. Challenging traditional assumptions about life in early Virginia, the essays in this volume show that the colony was more religious, more diverse, and more tolerant than commonly supposed. The presence of groups as disparate as Quakers, African and African American slaves, and Presbyterians, alongside the established Anglicans, generated a dynamic tension between religious diversity and attempts at hegemonic authority that was apparent from Virginia's earliest days." From the professional library of Dr. Philip D. Morgan, a professor of History at Johns Hopkins University. Morgan specializes in the African-American experience, the history of slavery, the early Caribbean, and the study of the early Atlantic world. Morgan is the author of more than 14 books on Colonial America and African American history. He has won both the Bancroft Prize and the Frederick Douglass Prize for his book Slave Counterpoint: Black Culture in the Eighteenth-Century Chesapeake and Lowcountry (1998). Signed.