>>City Politics
http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=A1187AF47316B6C0966496205B9722A7
https://archive.org/details/shadowofpantherh00pear
>Pearson (Pacific News Service) offers a history of the Black Panthers and an account of the rise and fall of Huey Newton. He traces the development of the civil rights movement from the formation of the Brotherhood of Sleeping-Car Porters in the 1920s through the leadership of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X, and demonstrates how Newton's personal conflicts mirrored those of the Black Panther Party.
>Modernizing a Slave Economy The Economic Vision of the Confederate Nation By John Majewski
http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=799807FC0F0F148AE733AD16002C68CA
https://www.amazon.co.uk/CALL-ME-PHAEDRA-Movement-Stender-ebook/dp/B07D4C1WCF/
>Who was Fay Abrahams Stender? A giant among Movement lawyers from the McCarthy Era to the 1970s intent on forcing society to change. Friends could easily picture her as the heroine of a grand opera. A child prodigy, she abandoned the concert piano to become a zealous advocate for society's most scorned and vilified criminal defendants: from the Rosenberg espionage case during the Cold War to militant black clients, Black Panther Party leader Huey Newton and revolutionary prisoner George Jackson, to prisoners in the "Dachau" of maximum security. Stender achieved amazing legal successes in criminal defense and prison reform before she ultimately refocused with similar zeal on feminist and lesbian rights.
>In May 1979, an ex-felon invaded her home and shot her execution-style after forcing her to write a note saying she betrayed George Jackson. She barely survived. Wheelchair bound and under 24-hour police protection, she then became the star witness in her assailant's prosecution. Awaiting trial in a secret hideaway in San Francisco, Fay told the few friends she let visit her there to "call me Phaedra," a tragic heroine from Greek mythology. Shortly after the trial, like Phaedra, she committed suicide.
>Set against a backdrop of sit-ins, protest marches, riots, police brutality, assassinations, death penalty trials and bitter splits among Leftists, this book makes for a compelling biography. Yet it delivers on a broader goal as well - an overview of the turbulent era in which Fay Stender operated under the watchful eye of the FBI and state officials. We not only relive Stender's story, but that of a small cadre of committed Bay Area activists who played remarkable roles during the McCarthy Era, Civil Rights Movement (including Mississippi Freedom Summer), the Free Speech Movement, Vietnam War protests, and the rise of Black Power.
>Besides revolutionaries Huey Newton and George Jackson, Fay's life intertwined with: Jessica Mitford (who dubbed Fay her "frenemy'), Bob Treuhaft, Charles Garry, Bob Richter, Stanley Moore, Tom Hayden, Jane Fonda, Stokely Carmichael, Cesar Chavez, Mario Savio, George Crockett, Joan Baez, Willie Brown, Ron Dellums, Jerry Rubin, Max Scherr, Jean Genet, Elsa Knight Thompson, Kay Boyle, Bobby Seale, David Hilliard, Angela Davis, Eldridge and Kathleen Cleaver, and Mike Tigar, among others.
>By the fall of 1970, Stender had gained international press coverage as the most sought-after Movement lawyer in America. She had just achieved spectacular successes against all odds for two black revolutionary clients. The book also describes Stender's ultimate failure to surmount class and racial differences to make her clients' cause her own and how, as in a Greek tragedy, hubris led to her downfall. Fay's tragic end served as a sobering lesson to her Movement friends of the personal risks many of them had run. For many, her death symbolized the end of an era.
>Beginning with Heidegger
http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=2D41F6BAE7608C8CD36601E15AF72DC3
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Left-Behind-Rosedale-Relations-Institutions-ebook-dp-B079TQ3N32/dp/B079TQ3N32/
>Left Behind in Rosedale is a stunning analysis of community and neighborhood decline. Through creative application of ethnographic analysis, participant observation, and in-depth interviews, Scott Cummings' unique book breathes human life into one of the most serious problems facing the nation's cities: the ghettoization of urban neighborhoods. Transcending demographic and statistical analysis, he vividly and passionately tells the story of ghettoization by explaining what happens to people's lives during the process of racial transition and change. Cummings takes the reader on a distressing historical journey, detailing the progressive decline of one community's culture. Along the way, he explains and explores the futile attempts of its white elderly residents to maintain their traditional way of life. He then moves to an examination of the black youth who victimize the elderly and explains the family and gang context of their actions. Moving full circle some fifteen years later, after the collapse of Rosedale is nearly complete, Cummings documents the similar plight facing the black elderly and details the grinding poverty that has enveloped the entire community. He concludes by evaluating the community's effort to revitalize itself and explains why these efforts failed. Cummings uses the case of Rosedale as a window to explore and critically evaluate the evolution of American urban policy over the past forty years. He concludes that many of our efforts to solve urban problems have actually made them worse. This book should be read by liberals and conservatives alike, neighborhood and community activists, politicians and reformers, urban planners of American cities, and citizens who want to know why government efforts to revitalize urban neighborhoods have accomplished so little.
>Why Borders Matter: Why Humanity Must Relearn the Art of Drawing Boundaries
http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=98F78700022FFA310C86932A67A5AF9C
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Genes-Polymorphisms-Making-Societies-Perspective-ebook/dp/B099ZTQ2NQ/
>Our genes determine to a large extent who we are and why we are different from others. In this book, Hippokratis Kiaris explores how various genetic polymorphisms in different ethnic populations may affect the development of distinct cultures and eventually historical decisions. It should be read by anybody interested in history, anthropology, behavior, psychology or genetics. The reader will find clues linking together these scientific disciplines and how such genetically determined behavioral traits may play an undervalued, as yet, role in shaping historical outcomes.
>The book initially describes some basic concepts on genetics and proceeds with an outline of human evolution, the journey of early humans Out-of-Africa, and the colonization of Earth by different human populations that eventually resulted in the development of different cultures. Then, by focusing on the two major prototype cultural lines, the Eastern and the Western, the author discusses differences in the corresponding civilizations in view of specific genetic polymorphisms that affect behavior and differ in frequencies between people of Asian and European origin. Finally, in view of the contemporary increasing tendency for cultural globalization, the book attempts to predict future trends on cultures and behavioral patterns. In this revised and extended second edition new data are included and new chapters, focusing on how sets of genes, as opposed to individual ones, coexist in different populations and may potentially impact cultural divergence throughout history.
>Augusto Del Noces “The Crisis of Modernity”
http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=29961763AB8B9D3993B078E822B9CE96
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Farmers-Hunter-gatherers-Dark-Emu-Debate-ebook/dp/B097Q9NPG2
>An authoritative study of pre-colonial Australia that dismantles and reframes popular narratives of First Nations land management and food production.
>Australians’ understanding of Aboriginal society prior to the British invasion from 1788 has been transformed since the publication of Bruce Pascoe’s Dark Emu in 2014. It argued that classical Aboriginal society was more sophisticated than Australians had been led to believe because it resembled more closely the farming communities of Europe.
>In Farmers or Hunter-gatherers? Peter Sutton and Keryn Walshe ask why Australians have been so receptive to the notion that farming represents an advance from hunting and gathering. Drawing on the knowledge of Aboriginal elders, previously not included within this discussion, and decades of anthropological scholarship, Sutton and Walshe provide extensive evidence to support their argument that classical Aboriginal society was a hunter-gatherer society and as sophisticated as the traditional European farming methods.
>Farmers or Hunter-gatherers? asks Australians to develop a deeper understanding and appreciation of Aboriginal society and culture.
>The Forgotten Slave Trade: The White European Slaves of Islam
http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=278F78347F5B799636E3F41C222BD597
https://archive.org/details/andrewdurnfordbl00whit
>Andrew Durnford (born 1800, New Orleans; died 1859, St. Rosalie PlanÂtation), Free Man of Color, was born of an English father and a free woman of color. The Louisiana Purchase made him a citizen of the United States. Thomas Durnford, his father, and John McDonogh, a prosperous merchant of New Orleans and Baltimore, were friends and business associates. On Thomas's death Andrew continued the friendship and association (McDonogh was the godfather of Andrew's first son, Thomas McDonogh Durnford). Draw-Ing on McDonogh for credit, Durnford purchased land south of New Orleans In Plaquemines Parish and, with a small cadre of slaves, established a sugar plantation. David O. Whitten's biography of Durnford draws on extenÂsive primary materials, including letÂters between the principals, that bespeak not only an active corresponÂdence but two extraordinary careers.Reinforced with newspaper acÂcounts and court records, the Durnford-McDonogh letters offer an intimate view into the life and work of an antebellum planter and depict the social intercourse of a black man in a society built on black slavery. Facile in English and French, Durnford read widely and commented in letters on works of the day. He journeyed to distant Pennsylvania and Virginia in 1835 to procure slaves and then reÂturn with them to his Louisiana planÂtation. Letters between Durnford and McDonogh during the lengthy trip proÂvide a unique travelogue - a black man, in the company of his black bondsmen, traversing the heart of slave country.Had Durnford done no more than build a sugar plantation out of the wilderness with black slave labor, his accounts would be valuable, but he also practiced medicine, recounting his experiences in a journal and in letters to McDonogh. The Durnford volume ofÂfers singular accounts of American life and labor in the first half of the nineÂteenth century. Had he been white, the narrative would be of inestimable value, but because Durnford was black, free, and a medical practitioner, his life stands as a rare example of a man and a culture adjusting to pecuÂliar social orders.Noted historian John Hope Franklin sums up this contribution to African American studies: "David Whitten has performed an important service in bringing the life of Andrew Durnford to the attention of students of the antebellum South, of the plantation economy, and of race relations - He has placed us all in his debt and he has set an example for others to folÂlow."
>The Waning of Humaneness
Link without password protection: http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=0E197507F7A7E2A8D7BC40327F90976A
>"Borderline, Narcissistic, and Schizoid Adaptations: The Pursuit of Love, Admiration, and Safety" by Elinor Greenberg.
http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=C2D61866C618206489A7D0270F1C33B6
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Witches-Feminism-Fall-Edward-Dutton-ebook/dp/B09CMWTMFR/
>The archetype of the "witch" is burnt deep into the European psyche, recurring again and again in folklore and fairytales. But is she merely the stuff of fantasy? Roald Dahl warned that witches don't always don black hats and ride on broom sticks. They "dress in ordinary clothes, and look very much like ordinary women. . . . That is why they are so hard to catch."
>In Witches, Feminism and the Fall of the West, Edward Dutton examines the history of witches and witch-hunting in light of evolutionary psychology. Throughout the centuries, witches were ostracized across Europe and often condemned and executed for sorcery and harming children. They generally adhered to a type: witches were low-status, anti-social, and childless, and their very presence was viewed as poisonous to the community. Dutton demonstrates that witches did, in their way, represent a maladaptive mentality and behavior, which undermined Europe's patriarchal system. When times got tough-that is, when Europe got poorer or colder-the witches were persecuted with a vengeance.
>Today, the evolutionary situation has been turned on its head. The intense selection pressures of the past have been overcome by the Industrial Revolution and its technological marvels. Modern witches survive and thrive in the postmodern West, still possessed by the motivations and dispositions of their sisters of yore. "Sorcery" (nihilism and self-hatred) is no longer taboo but has become a high-status ideology. Roald Dahl was all-too correct. Witches do exist, and they mean to do us harm.
>Meyer, Hubert. The 12th SS: The History of the Hitler Youth Panzer Division. Vol. 2. Stackpole Books, 2004.
http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=381A6B0F26165E20EC6ACC51F6BEC538
>Meyer, Kurt. Grenadiers: The Story of Waffen SS General Kurt" Panzer" Meyer. Stackpole Books, 2005.
http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=5D578BAAE0B1B05C627C6C0AB90F1953
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Empire-Eternal-Imperialism-Sinclair-Jenkins-ebook/dp/B0948GJGTL
>The men who founded these great civilizations are long gone, but their blood still lives within us. We are called to conquer. Our age, like every other age, is a war of all against all for the domination of space.”
>Throughout the 19th and through the early 20th centuries, the European Great Powers established direct control over the majority of the planet, and suzerainty over the rest. Despite the crumbling of those empires under the hammer blows of two world wars and the machinations of the United States and the Soviet Union, the feats by which they were established and the titanic efforts of the brave few that fought to preserve them still reverberate in history. Brave warriors conquered foreign lands, planted their flags, and tried to grow new cultures that mirrored their own.
>Sinclair Jenkins – writer, thinker, and dissident – lays out a resolute defense of, and advocacy for, that force of will which made the age of European Imperialism possible. From the conquering of the American West, to the bloody Rif War, to the heroic defenses of Katanga and Rhodesia, Empire Eternal: In Defense of Imperialism is a tour de force of the various chapters of European Imperialism.
>It is said that men did not love Rome because it is great – Rome was great because men loved her. These pages make it clear that likewise the European empires were not great because of some kind of overwhelming material superiority, but because of the eternal flame that pushed men to sacrifice for them – a flame that can never be extinguished.
>books by Alain de Benoist
https://b-ok.global/book/2385212/c3d6ed
>Beyond Human Rights
https://b-ok.global/book/5008833/a089b6
>Runes and the Origins of Writing
https://b-ok.global/book/2717259/2e1539
>The Problem of Democracy
https://b-ok.global/book/2042430/d03ba6
>Manifesto for a European Renaissance
https://b-ok.global/book/5008881/5740ff
>View from the Right, Volume I: Heritage and Foundations
https://b-ok.global/book/5238903/91e0b5
>View from the Right, Volume II: Systems and Debates
https://b-ok.global/book/5238921/49d2fe
>View from the Right, Volume III: Controversies and Viewpoints
https://b-ok.global/book/5567376/bba6c0
>The Indo-Europeans: In Search of the Homeland
https://b-ok.global/book/5567404/151d05
>On the Brink of the Abyss: The Imminent Bankruptcy of the Financial System
https://b-ok.global/book/5819361/d78bc8
>Carl Schmitt Today: Terrorism, 'Just' War, and the State of Emergency
https://archive.org/details/southduringrecon00coul
>The South During Reconstruction, 1865-1877
https://archive.org/details/civilwarreadjust0000coul
>The Civil War and Readjustment in Kentucky
https://archive.org/details/georgiashorthist0000coul
>Georgia: A Short History
https://archive.org/details/collegelifeinold0000coul_b4n5
>College Life in the Old South
https://archive.org/details/danielleeagricul0000coul
>Daniel Lee, Agriculturist: His Life North and South
https://archive.org/details/lostgeneration0000unse
>Lost Generation: The Life and Death of James Barrow, C.S.A.