Kenneth Clark
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This book contains the transcriptions of televised interviews by Dr. Kenneth B. Clark, professor of psychology at City College, New York, with author James Baldwin, minister Malcolm X., and the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. These men were perceived by white Americans as leaders within the Negro community, and the conversations contained in this book are an introduction to the feelings of their Negro neighbors during a time of controversy and...
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A thoughtful guide to art appreciation by the Chairman of the Arts Council of Great Britain, who belleves that looking at pictures requress active participation, and in the early stages, a certain amount of discipline. He discusses his ways of looking at paintings by Titian, Velasquez, Van der Weyden, Delacroix, Raphael, Watteau. El Greco, vermeer, Constable, Goya, Scurat, Turner, Da Vinci, Courbet, Botticelli, and rembrandt. telling what elements...
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Kenneth Clark discusses thirteen important artists representing one of the greatest periods in the history of art -- the second half of the eighteenth century to the middle of the nineteenth century. During the second half of the eighteenth century, when the spirit of revolution was rising through Europe, a division appeared in all the arts, deeper and more radical than any that had preceded. Rivalry arose between to schools of painting, the Romantic...
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This book is a skilled indictment of the terrible failure of our affluent society, even in the 'liberal' North, to meet the racial problem it has created and now perpetuates -- a state of degradation and frustration for millions of its citizens. The immediate cause of the "pathology of the ghetto" is not, Clark argues, the fact of segregation. Rather it is the loss of status and self- respect, the frustration, the overwhelming sense of impotence and...
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Written in the lucid intervals between the bouts of dementia that haunted his final years, 'Praeterita' tells the story of John Ruskin's early life: the formation of his taste and intellect through education, travels in Europe, and encounters with great works of art and artists. In abandoning the traditional linear mode of autobiography, Ruskin opened up the form. He also provided a vivid, detailed portrait of pre-Victorian and Victorian England that...
15) Fads and fancies
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"Award-winning journalist Michele Weldon provides a potent antidote to the harried single mom stereotype in this beguiling memoir of raising three sons alone in the face of cancer, an ambitious career, and the shadow of her ex. Untethered from a seemingly idyllic life with a handsome but abusive attorney husband, Weldon relates the challenges and triumphs of the years that followed her divorce as she maneuvers through a complicated life of long daily...
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"Edie Kiglatuk's discovery along Alaska's Iditarod trail leads to a massive, far-reaching conspiracy M. J. McGrath's debut novel, White Heat, earned both fans and favorable comparisons to bestselling Scandinavian thrillers such as Smilla's Sense of Snow and the Kurt Wallander series. In The Boy in the Snow, half-Inuit Edie Kiglatuk finds herself in Alaska with Sergeant Derek Palliser, helping her ex-husband Sammy in his bid to win the famous Iditarod...