Books on the topic 'Industries (Home), Germany'

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1

Heimann, Holger, and Holger Heimann. Die beste Buchhandlung der Welt: Wo Schriftsteller ihre Bücher kaufen. Berlin: Berlin University Press, 2012.

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2

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Hōritsu : Chihō reikishū, BBD. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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3

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Sōki : Ippan ronbunshū, kōenshū, EAF. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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4

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Sōki : Hyakka jiten, EAE. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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5

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Gogaku : Tōyō shogo, DAG. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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6

Kaisha, Maruzen Kabushiki, ed. Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Denki : Jinmeiroku , Shokuinroku, ACF. Tōkyō: Maruzen kabushiki Kaisha, 1991.

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7

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Igaku : Kiso igaku, CBB. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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8

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Sōki : Kojin zenshū, EAH. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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9

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Keizai, sangyō : Sangyō, EDJ. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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10

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Seiji : Seiji, BAA. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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11

Kaisha, Maruzen Kabushiki, ed. Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Denki : Monshō, Kiishō, ACH. Tōkyō: Maruzen kabushiki Kaisha, 1991.

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12

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Tetsugaku : Ronrigaku, AAB. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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13

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Geijutsu, shogei : Biwa, shigin, kenbu, CEJ. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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14

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Igaku : Igaku, CBA. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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15

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Keizai, sangyō : Keizai, BDD. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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16

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Shūkyō : Jōdokyō, ABF : Jōdoshū, Shinshū, Jishū, Yūzū Nenbutsushū. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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17

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Hōritsu : Shōhō, Shōjihō, BBO. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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18

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Keizai, sangyō : Shōgyō, bōeki, kaikei, unʼyu, tsūshin, EDL. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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19

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Kyōiku : Gakusei, gakushūhō, BEK. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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20

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Bungaku : Zuihitsu, nikki, kikō, DBR. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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21

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Sōki : Toshokan, dokusho, EAA. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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22

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Kyōiku : Kyōiku shinri, jidō kenkyū, BEB. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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23

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Tetsugaku : Ekisen, sōhōrui, AAK. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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24

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Hōritsu : Shihō, Saiban, BBR. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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25

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Rekishi : Rekishi, ACA. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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26

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Ōbun tosho : Kyōiku, heiji, ECF. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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27

Kaisha, Maruzen Kabushiki, ed. Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Denki : Denki, ACE. Tōkyō: Maruzen kabushiki Kaisha, 1991.

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28

Kaisha, Maruzen Kabushiki, ed. Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Denki : Kōshitsu, Kazoku, ACJ. Tōkyō: Maruzen kabushiki Kaisha, 1991.

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29

Kaisha, Maruzen Kabushiki, ed. Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Denki : Kojin denki (Seiyōjin), ACM. Tōkyō: Maruzen kabushiki Kaisha, 1991.

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30

Schreiter, Katrin. Designing One Nation. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190877279.001.0001.

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The histories of East and West Germany traditionally emphasize the Cold War rivalries between the communist and capitalist nations. Yet, even as the countries diverged in their political directions, they had to create new ways of working together economically. This book examines the material culture of increasing economic contacts in divided Germany from the 1940s until the 1990s. Trade events, such as fairs and product shows, became one of the few venues for sustained links and knowledge between the two countries after the building of the Berlin Wall. The book uses industrial design, epitomized by the furniture industry, to show how a network of politicians, entrepreneurs, and cultural brokers attempted to nationally re-inscribe their production cultures, define a postwar German identity, and regain economic stability and political influence in postwar Europe. What started as a competition for ideological superiority between East and West Germany quickly turned into a shared, politically legitimizing quest for an untainted post-fascist modernity. This work follows products from the drawing board into the homes of ordinary Germans to offer insights into how converging visions of German industrial modernity created shared expectations about economic progress and living standards. The book reveals how intra-German and European trade policies drove the creation of products and generated a certain convergence of East and West German taste by the 1980s.
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31

Worrall, Richard. Hamburg 1940–45. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781472859310.

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The first book to cover the full history of the RAF's air war against Hamburg, one of the most important target cities in Germany. The city of Hamburg became synonymous with the destructive power of RAF Bomber Command when, during summer 1943, the city suffered horrific destruction in a series of four heavy firebombing attacks, Operation Gomorrah. However, few know how varied or long the Hamburg campaign was. In this book, RAF air power expert Dr Richard Worrall presents the complete history of the RAF’s air campaign against the city, a campaign that stretched well beyond the devastating fire raids of 1943. Dr Worrall explains how Germany’s second city was an industrial centre of immense proportions and proved a consistent target for Bomber Command throughout World War II. It was home to oil refineries, U-boat pens, and ship-building and submarine-building yards, all sustained by a large industrial workforce. Bomber Command evolved tactically and technically throughout the war, and the Luftwaffe’s defensive capabilities would do likewise in response. Drawing on a wide range of primary and secondary sources available on this topic, and packed with photos, artwork, maps and diagrams, this is an important new history of the air campaign against the industrial and naval heart of Nazi Germany.
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32

Baade, Jurgen, and Diethelm Hoffmann. The Klosterkirch Home (BauWerke). John Wiley & Sons Ltd (Import), 1994.

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33

The BMW Group Home Plant in Munich. Hirmer Publishers, 2016.

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34

Goldman, Wendy Z., and Donald Filtzer. Fortress Dark and Stern. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190618414.001.0001.

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The book tells the story, largely unknown to Western readers, of the Soviet home front during World War II. After Hitler’s invasion in 1941, German troops conquered the heartland of Soviet industry and agriculture and turned the occupied territories into mass killing fields. In one of the greatest wartime feats in history, Soviet workers rapidly evacuated factories, food, and people thousands of miles to the east and built a new industrial base beyond the reach of German bombers. As millions of refugees and evacuees streamed east, mass epidemics engulfed the country. Health officials battled to establish new public health regulations. The Soviet state reached the height of its power, imposing military discipline and mobilizing millions of people to work thousands of miles from home. The state assumed responsibility for feeding the nation through a strict ration system. Given terrible food shortages, many people, including workers, began to starve. This book examines the dark and painful war years from a new perspective, telling the stories of evacuees, refugees, teenaged and women workers, runaways from work, Gulag prisoners, and deportees. The narrative follows the Red Army as it retreated east and then battled back westward after Stalingrad, presenting “total war” behind the front lines in a chronicle of spirited defense efforts, draconian state directives, teeming black markets, and selfless heroism. Based on a vast trove of new archival materials, the book tells the story of suffering, sacrifice, and commitment that made the Allied victory possible.
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35

Ferreiro, Larrie D. Churchill's American Arsenal. Oxford University PressNew York, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197554012.001.0001.

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Abstract The weapons and inventions that helped the Allies to win World War Two had not even been imagined when the conflict began. This book tells the story of how a British and American scientific and technological partnership, one that started not long after Britain had lost its ally France and stood alone against Nazi Germany, developed these innovations on an industrial scale. It has often been argued that the atomic bomb ended the war, but radar won it. Development of both began in Britain and then was taken over by the United States, which had the industrial and engineering capacity, and also the advantage of not being part of the battlefront. The partnership between the two nations was responsible for a number of iconic “American” weapons and inventions: the P-51 Merlin Mustang fighter, the Liberty ship, the proximity fuze, the LST, the Sherman tank, and even penicillin originally stemmed from British experiments and designs, then were brought to life with American scientific and technological might. Relying on previously untold stories of those scientists, engineers, and workers, on both sides of the Atlantic, who made all this possible, this book expands the story of the British-American “special relationship” in World War Two. It shows how the alliance extended beyond the battlefront and onto the home front, and resulted in the innovations that ultimately decided the outcome of the most devasting conflict in human history.
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36

Kennedy, Thomas C. Quakers. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199683710.003.0004.

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Unitarianism and Presbyterian Dissent had a complex relationship in the nineteenth century. Neither English Unitarians nor their Presbyterian cousins grew much if at all in the nineteenth century, but elsewhere in the United Kingdom the picture was different. While Unitarians failed to prosper, Presbyterian Dissenting numbers held up in Wales and Ireland and increased in Scotland thanks to the Disruption of the Church of Scotland. Unitarians were never sure whether they would benefit from demarcating themselves from Presbyterians as a denomination. Though they formed the British and Foreign Unitarian Association, its critics preferred to style themselves ‘English Presbyterians’ and Presbyterian identities could be just as confused. In later nineteenth-century Scotland and Ireland, splinter Presbyterian churches eventually came together; in England, it took time before Presbyterians disentangled themselves from Scots to call themselves the Presbyterian Church of England. While Unitarians were tepid about foreign missions, preferring to seek allies in other confessions and religions rather than converts, Presbyterians eagerly spread their church structures in India and China and also felt called to convert Jews. Missions offered Presbyterian women a route to ministry which might otherwise have been denied them. Unitarians liked to think that what was distinctive in their theology was championship of a purified Bible, even though other Christians attacked them as a heterodox bunch of sceptics. Yet their openness to the German higher criticism of the New Testament caused them problems. Some Unitarians exposed to it, such as James Martineau, drifted into reverent scepticism about the historical Jesus, but they were checkmated by inveterate conservatives such as Robert Spears. Presbyterians saw their adherence to the Westminster Confession as a preservative against such disputes, yet the Confession was increasingly interpreted in ways that left latitude for higher criticism. Unitarians started the nineteenth century as radical subversives of a Trinitarian and Tory establishment and were also political leaders of Dissent. They forfeited that leadership over time, but also developed a sophisticated, interventionist attitude to the state, with leaders such as H.W. Crosskey and Joseph Chamberlain championing municipal socialism, while William Shaen and others were staunch defenders of women’s rights and advocates of female emancipation. Their covenanting roots meant that many Presbyterians were at best ‘quasi-Dissenters’, who were slower to embrace religious voluntaryism than many other evangelical Dissenters. Both Unitarians and Presbyterians anguished about how to reconcile industrial, urban capital with the gospel. Wealthy Unitarians from William Roscoe to Henry Tate invested heavily in art galleries and mechanics institutes for the people but were disappointed by the results. By the later nineteenth century they turned to more direct forms of social reform, such as domestic missions and temperance. Scottish Presbyterians also realized the importance of remoulding the urban fabric, with James Begg urging the need to tackle poor housing. Yet neither these initiatives nor the countervailing embrace of revivalism banished fears that Presbyterians were losing their grip on urban Britain. Only in Ireland, where Home Rule partially united the Protestant community in fears for its survival, did divisions of space and class seem a less pressing concern.
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37

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Jidō tosho : Shōsetsu, otogibanashi, honʼyaku dōwa, EBD. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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38

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Sōki : Zuihitsu, zassho, EAG. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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39

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Hōritsu : Zaiseihō, Kaikeihō, BBI. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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40

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Nihon bungaku, ECP. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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41

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Seiji : Chihō gikai, BAE. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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42

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Tōkei : Tōkei, BDQ. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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43

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Kyōiku : Kyōjuhō, kakka kyōiku, BEF. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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44

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Hōritsu : Kyōikuhō, BCA. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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45

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Shizen kagaku, sūgaku, hakubutsu, ECG. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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46

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Rekishi : Nihon shi, ACB. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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47

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Kōgaku : Kenchiku, Daiku, CDC. 1991.

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48

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Ōbun tosho : Shakai, keizai sangyō, tōkei, ECE. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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49

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Kyōiku : Kyōiku, BEA. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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50

Kokuritsu Kokkai Toshokan shozō Meijiki kankō tosho maikuro-ban shūsei: Shakai : Shakai, EDH. Tōkyō: Maruzen, 1991.

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