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Artigos de revistas sobre o assunto "Harrison Street (New York, N.Y.)"

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Nocera, Amato. "“More than Equivalent to a Year of College”: Hubert Harrison and Informal Education in Harlem's New Negro Movement". Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education 122, n.º 3 (março de 2020): 1–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/016146812012200306.

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Background/Context Spurred on by the mass migration of African Americans from the South and blacks from the Caribbean, Harlem by the 1920s was defined by its association with New Negro culture and was widely known as the “mecca” of black life. The New Negro movement, as the period was called by contemporaries, has become a focus of scholars interested in black radical politics. Still, there has yet to be a focused study of the underlying educational experiences that helped create the New Negro movement and the mass political awakening that accompanied it. Focus of Study This paper takes as its focus Hubert Harrison, an Afro-Caribbean immigrant who arrived in New York City at the dawn of the New Negro movement and became a leading public intellectual and educator of the movement. In particular, it focuses on Harrison's participation and influence in several dimensions of the network of informal education that emerged as a part of Harlem life in the first part of the 20th century: street oratory, educational forums, and the black press. After a brief overview of Harrison and his political development, I examine each educational practice, discussing both Harrison's contribution and the wider culture of radical education he helped to create. I argue that at the foundation of the New Negro movement—and the burgeoning political consciousness among inhabitants of the uptown neighborhood in New York—was a system of education unlike anything that could be found inside a classroom. It was dynamic, democratic, and for many black residents moving into Harlem, inspirational. Research Design This paper uses archival materials from Hubert Harrison's papers at Columbia University. Those include newspaper clippings, diary entries, and pamphlets for talks and courses, among other material. It also draws upon newspapers and reports from the period as well as secondary literature on the topic. Conclusions/Recommendations While education scholars have often grappled with the limits of school as a mechanism for changing society, the history of Harrison and informal education in Harlem reveals the importance of political education outside the classroom in creating and sustaining social movements. For Harrison and the Harlemites of the 1920s, street oratory, educational forums, and a radical black press served as essential mechanisms for broadening what historian Robin D. G. Kelley has called the “black radical imagination.” Yet the educative experience of blacks arriving in Harlem is not so different from the experience of others who have participated in social movements in the 20th and 21st centuries. The challenge for scholars is not to identify and study political movements that can be linked to various forms of schooling, but to identify the educative dimensions of social uprising that take place beyond the walls of the classroom.
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Kurti, Marin, Yi He, Diana Silver, Margaret Giorgio, Klaus von Lampe, James Macinko, Hua Ye, Fidelis Tan e Victoria Mei. "Presence of Counterfeit Marlboro Gold Packs in Licensed Retail Stores in New York City: Evidence From Test Purchases". Nicotine & Tobacco Research 21, n.º 8 (26 de maio de 2018): 1131–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ntr/nty096.

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Abstract Background There are no independent studies measuring the availability of premium brand counterfeit cigarettes in New York City from licensed retailers. Methods We forensically analyzed the cigarette packaging of Marlboro Gold (n = 1021) purchased from licensed tobacco retailers in New York City, using ultraviolet irradiation and light microscopy to determine whether they were counterfeit. Results We find that while only 0.5% (n = 5) of our sample exhibits at least one characteristic synonymous with counterfeit packaging, none of our packs can be conclusively classified as counterfeit. Conclusions We do not find any counterfeit Marlboro Gold packs purchased at full price from licensed cigarette retailers throughout New York City. Future research using test purchases should include other venues (eg, street and online) and specifically ask for discounts to ascertain the overall presence of counterfeit cigarettes. Implications This is the first study to independently measure the availability of counterfeit cigarette packs purchased at full price from licensed retailers in New York City. We find that none of the Marlboro Gold packs purchased from licensed cigarette retailers are counterfeit.
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Hettinga, Kirstie, Alyssa Appelman, Christopher Otmar, Alesandria Posada e Anne Thompson. "Comparing and contrasting corrected errors at four newspapers". Newspaper Research Journal 39, n.º 2 (23 de maio de 2018): 155–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0739532918775685.

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A content analysis of corrections (N = 507) from four influential newspapers—the New York Times, the Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal and the Los Angeles Times—shows that they correct errors similar to each other in terms of location, type, impact and objectivity. Results are interpreted through democratic theory and are used to suggest ways for copy editors to most effectively proofread and fact-check.
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Lankenau, Stephen E., e Michael C. Clatts. "Ketamine Injection among High Risk Youth: Preliminary Findings from New York City". Journal of Drug Issues 32, n.º 3 (julho de 2002): 893–905. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002204260203200311.

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Ketamine, a synthetic drug commonly consumed by high risk youth, produces a range of experiences, including sedation, dissociation, and hallucinations. While ketamine is more typically sniffed, we describe a small sample of young ketamine injectors (n=25) in New York City and highlight risks associated with this emerging type of injection drug use. Our findings indicate that the injection practices, injection groups, and use norms surrounding ketamine often differ from other injection drug use: intramuscular injections were more common than intravenous injections; injection groups were often large; multiple injections within a single episode were common; bottles rather than cookers were shared; and the drug was often obtained for free. Our findings suggest that the drug injection practices exercised by ketamine injectors place them at risk for bloodborne pathogens, such as HIV, HBV, and HCV. We conclude that ketamine injectors represent an emerging, though often hidden, population of injection drug users, particularly among high risk, street-involved youth.
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Besteman, Nathan, e John Ferdinands. "Another Way to Divide a Line Segment into n Equal Parts". Mathematics Teacher 98, n.º 6 (fevereiro de 2005): 428–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.5951/mt.98.6.0428.

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In summer 1995, two high school students, David Goldenheim and Dan Litchfield, discovered a way to divide a line segment into any number of equal parts. Their method differed from the standard method of Euclid. Together with their teacher Charles Dietrich, they wrote an article on their method, which appeared in the January 1997 issue of the Mathematics Teacher (Litchfield, Goldenheim, and Dietrich 1997). The discovery received considerable publicity in the popular media and was written up in the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times. The authors gave talks at several professional conferences and were invited to meet the secretary of education.
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Curry, Laurel, Carol L. Schmitt, Amy Henes, Christina Ortega-Peluso e Haven Battles. "How Low-Income Smokers in New York Access Cheaper Cigarettes". American Journal of Health Promotion 33, n.º 4 (9 de outubro de 2018): 558–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0890117118805060.

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Purpose: To understand the tobacco acquisition practices of low-income smokers in New York State in light of high cigarette prices due to high cigarette taxes. Design: Eight focus groups with low-income smokers were conducted in spring 2015 and 2016 (n = 74). Setting: New York City (NYC) and Buffalo, New York. Participants: Low-income adults aged 18 to 65 who smoke cigarettes regularly. Method: Qualitative analysis of focus group transcripts that explored differences and similarities by region. We used the interview guide—which covered the process of acquiring cigarettes and the impact of cigarette prices—as a framework for analysis to generate themes and subthemes (deductive coding). We also generated themes and subthemes that emerged during focus group discussions (inductive coding). Results: Some smokers in Western New York have switched to untaxed cigarettes from Native American reservations, whereas low-income smokers in NYC described convenient sources of bootlegged cigarettes (packs or loosies) in their local neighborhood stores, through acquaintances, or on the street. Familiarity with the retailer was key to accessing bootlegged cigarettes from retailers. Conclusions: Smokers in this study could access cheaper cigarettes, which discouraged quit attempts and allowed them to continue smoking. The availability of lower priced cigarettes may attenuate public health efforts aimed at reducing smoking prevalence through price and tax increases.
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Lucan, Sean C., Andrew R. Maroko, Achint N. Patel, Ilirjan Gjonbalaj, Brian Elbel e Clyde B. Schechter. "Healthful and less-healthful foods and drinks from storefront and non-storefront businesses: implications for ‘food deserts’, ‘food swamps’ and food-source disparities". Public Health Nutrition 23, n.º 8 (30 de março de 2020): 1428–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1368980019004427.

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AbstractObjective:Conceptualisations of ‘food deserts’ (areas lacking healthful food/drink) and ‘food swamps’ (areas overwhelm by less-healthful fare) may be both inaccurate and incomplete. Our objective was to more accurately and completely characterise food/drink availability in urban areas.Design:Cross-sectional assessment of select healthful and less-healthful food/drink offerings from storefront businesses (stores, restaurants) and non-storefront businesses (street vendors).Setting:Two areas of New York City: the Bronx (higher-poverty, mostly minority) and the Upper East Side (UES; wealthier, predominantly white).Participants:All businesses on 63 street segments in the Bronx (n 662) and on 46 street segments in the UES (n 330).Results:Greater percentages of businesses offered any, any healthful, and only less-healthful food/drink in the Bronx (42·0 %, 37·5 %, 4·4 %, respectively) than in the UES (30 %, 27·9 %, 2·1 %, respectively). Differences were driven mostly by businesses (e.g. newsstands, gyms, laundromats) not primarily focused on selling food/drink – ‘other storefront businesses’ (OSBs). OSBs accounted for 36·0 % of all food/drink-offering businesses in the Bronx (more numerous than restaurants or so-called ‘food stores’) and 18·2 % in the UES (more numerous than ‘food stores’). Differences also related to street vendors in both the Bronx and the UES. If street vendors and OSBs were not captured, the missed percentages of street segments offering food/drink would be 14·5 % in the Bronx and 21·9 % in the UES.Conclusions:Of businesses offering food/drink in communities, OSBs and street vendors can represent substantial percentages. Focusing on only ‘food stores’ and restaurants may miss or mischaracterise ‘food deserts’, ‘food swamps’, and food/drink-source disparities between communities.
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Lucan, Sean C., Andrew R. Maroko, Courtney Abrams, Noemi Rodriguez, Achint N. Patel, Ilirjan Gjonbalaj, Clyde B. Schechter e Brian Elbel. "Government data v. ground observation for food-environment assessment: businesses missed and misreported by city and state inspection records". Public Health Nutrition 23, n.º 8 (4 de novembro de 2019): 1414–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1368980019002982.

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AbstractObjective:To assess the accuracy of government inspection records, relative to ground observation, for identifying businesses offering foods/drinks.Design:Agreement between city and state inspection records v. ground observations at two levels: businesses and street segments. Agreement could be ‘strict’ (by business name, e.g. ‘Rizzo’s’) or ‘lenient’ (by business type, e.g. ‘pizzeria’); using sensitivity and positive predictive value (PPV) for businesses and using sensitivity, PPV, specificity and negative predictive value (NPV) for street segments.Setting:The Bronx and the Upper East Side (UES), New York City, USA.Participants:All food/drink-offering businesses on sampled street segments (n 154 in the Bronx, n 51 in the UES).Results:By ‘strict’ criteria, sensitivity and PPV of government records for food/drink-offering businesses were 0·37 and 0·57 in the Bronx; 0·58 and 0·60 in the UES. ‘Lenient’ values were 0·40 and 0·62 in the Bronx; 0·60 and 0·62 in the UES. Sensitivity, PPV, specificity and NPV of government records for street segments having food/drink-offering businesses were 0·66, 0·73, 0·84 and 0·79 in the Bronx; 0·79, 0·92, 0·67, and 0·40 in the UES. In both areas, agreement varied by business category: restaurants; ‘food stores’; and government-recognized other storefront businesses (‘gov. OSB’, i.e. dollar stores, gas stations, pharmacies). Additional business categories – ‘other OSB’ (barbers, laundromats, newsstands, etc.) and street vendors – were absent from government records; together, they represented 28·4 % of all food/drink-offering businesses in the Bronx, 22·2 % in the UES (‘other OSB’ and street vendors were sources of both healthful and less-healthful foods/drinks in both areas).Conclusions:Government records frequently miss or misrepresent businesses offering foods/drinks, suggesting caveats for food-environment assessments using such records.
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Mailloux, Brian J., Clare McGillis, Terryanne Maenza-Gmelch, Patricia J. Culligan, Mike Z. He, Gabriella Kaspi, Madeline Miley et al. "Large-scale determinants of street tree growth rates across an urban environment". PLOS ONE 19, n.º 7 (11 de julho de 2024): e0304447. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0304447.

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Urban street trees offer cities critical environmental and social benefits. In New York City (NYC), a decadal census of every street tree is conducted to help understand and manage the urban forest. However, it has previously been impossible to analyze growth of an individual tree because of uncertainty in tree location. This study overcomes this limitation using a three-step alignment process for identifying individual trees with ZIP Codes, address, and species instead of map coordinates. We estimated individual growth rates for 126,362 street trees (59 species and 19% of 2015 trees) using the difference between diameter at breast height (DBH) from the 2005 and 2015 tree censuses. The tree identification method was verified by locating and measuring the DBH of select trees and measuring a set of trees annually for over 5 years. We examined determinants of tree growth rates and explored their spatial distribution. In our newly created NYC tree growth database, fourteen species have over 1000 unique trees. The three most abundant tree species vary in growth rates; London Planetree (n = 32,056, 0.163 in/yr) grew the slowest compared to Honeylocust (n = 15,967, 0.356 in/yr), and Callery Pear (n = 15,902, 0.334 in/yr). Overall, Silver Linden was the fastest growing species (n = 1,149, 0.510 in/yr). Ordinary least squares regression that incorporated biological factors including size and the local urban form indicated that species was the major factor controlling growth rates, and tree stewardship had only a small effect. Furthermore, tree measurements by volunteer community scientists were as accurate as those made by NYC staff. Examining city wide patterns of tree growth indicates that areas with a higher Social Vulnerability Index have higher than expected growth rates. Continued efforts in street tree planting should utilize known growth rates while incorporating community voices to better provide long-term ecosystem services across NYC.
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Rassekh, Christopher H. "Tumors of the upper jaw, Edited By Sir Donald F. N. Harrison And Valerie J. Lund, 351 pages, Churchill Livingstone, New York, 1993, $150.00". Laryngoscope 105, n.º 3 (março de 1995): 347. http://dx.doi.org/10.1288/00005537-199503000-00023.

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Livros sobre o assunto "Harrison Street (New York, N.Y.)"

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Danielle, Steel. Charles Street, n.° 44. Nueva York: Vintage Español, una división de Penguin Random House, LLC, 2015.

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author, Percival Marianne S., ed. 92 Harrison Street House, 92 Harrison Street, Staten Island: Built c. 1853-54; architect, not determined. New York]: Landmarks Preservation Commission, 2016.

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Levoy, Myron. Kelly 'n' me. New York, NY: HarperCollins Publishers, 1992.

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author, Postal Matthew A., ed. Springs Mills Building: 104 West 40th Street (aka 102-106 West 40th Street, 107-115 West 39th Street), Manhattan : built 1961-63, Harrison & Abramovitz, architects, Charles H. Abbe, chief designer. New York]: Landmarks Preservation Commission, 2010.

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Harrison & Abramowitz & Harris, ed. Time & Life Building, ground floor interior, consisting of the West 50th Street entrance and enclosed breezeway leading to the West 51st Street entrances, the lobby and elevator halls ... 1261-1277 Sixth Avenue (aka 101-133 West 50th Street and 100-130 West 51st Street), Manhattan: Built 1956-60 : Harrison & Abramowitz & Harris, architects : [report]. New York, N.Y.]: The Commission, 2002.

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New York (N.Y.). Landmarks Preservation Commission. Edward Ridley & Sons Department Store Buildings, 315-317 Grand Street (aka 66-68 Allen Street) and 319-321 Grand Street (aka 65 Orchard Street): Built 1886, Paul F. Schoen, architect; iron elements cast by Jackson Architectural Iron Company; Allen Street facade 1931-34; John N. Linn, architetct. New York]: Landmarks Preservation Commission, 2010.

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New York (N.Y.). Landmarks Preservation Commission. Socony-Mobil Building, 150 East 42nd Street, aka 130-170 East 42nd Street, 375-391 Lexington Avenue, 640-658 Third Avenue, 131-155 East 41st Street, Manhattan: Built 1954-1956 : Harrison & Abramowitz and John B. Peterkin, architects. New York, N.Y: Landmarks Preservation Commission, 2003.

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author, Postal Matthew A., ed. 140 Broadway, originally the Marine Midland Bank building (aka 71-89 Cedar Street, 54-74 Liberty Street, 27-39 Nassau Street), Manhattan: Built 1964-68 ; Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, architect Gordon Bunshaft, partner in charge of design; Roger N. Radford, lead designer. New York]: NYC Landmarks Preservation Commission, 2013.

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author, Klose Olivia, e Brazee Christopher D, eds. Edith Andrews Logan Residence, 17 West 56th Street, Manhattan: Built 1870 : John G. Prague, architect : altered 1903-04, Augustus N. Allen, architect. New York, N.Y.]: Landmarks Preservation Commission, 2009.

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Sotheby's (Firm). Fine books and manuscripts including duplicates from the economics collection of Prof. Dr. Arnold Heertje; property of Mrs. Philip D. Sang; property of Elsa Helena Arteta Millán de Borges; property of Miss Josephine de N. Henry; property from the estate of Giorgio Uzielli; property of the late Addison Allen; property from the estate of Charles Collingwood (C); property of a New York collector (NY); property of various owners: Auction Wednesday, September 24, 1986 ... Sotheby's ..., 1334 York Avenue (at 72nd Street), New York, NY 10021. New York: Sotheby's, 1986.

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Capítulos de livros sobre o assunto "Harrison Street (New York, N.Y.)"

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Ellenzweig, Allen. "Fifty Photographs and a Family Wedding at City Hall". In George Platt Lynes, 230–41. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190219666.003.0016.

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George’s 1934 show with Julien Levy presents famous faces, including André Gide, Gertrude Stein, Carl Van Vechten, and Lily Pons. Glenway contributes the exhibit’s poster essay. George photographs Balanchine’s ballet premier at Kirstein’s invitation, beginning twenty years as official photographer of successive Balanchine/Kirstein companies. Barbara Harrison visits New York. Fascism in Europe threatens future war. Printing HOP editions on the continent becomes costly. Barbara is integrated into Monie and George’s lively social life. On her meeting Lloyd Wescott, instant attraction encourages serious dating. She and Lloyd marry in April 1935. In summer, Monroe and George travel abroad on a German liner forbidding Jewish passengers. As a member of MOMA’s Library Committee, Monie curates a striking exhibition on contemporary bookbinding. Glenway struggles to regain career traction after long expatriation in France. The dynamic on East 89th Street leaves him odd man out. George consolidates his reputation in fashion and portraiture, while privately photographing unexhibitable male nudes.
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Crease, Stephanie Stein. "Ol’ Man Depression". In Rhythm Man, 91—C8P65. Oxford University PressNew York, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190055691.003.0009.

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Abstract In October 1929, the Wall Street stock market crash initiated widespread economic depression. The entertainment world in Harlem was not immediately impacted but would be in the early 1930s. Webb interacted with Baltimore musicians who came to New York: Blanche Calloway, who was a star singer in Chicago clubs, and her then-unknown younger brother Cab. In 1930, Cab’s breakthrough performance in New York led to fronting the Missourians; they appeared with Webb’s band at the Savoy and other places. In 1931, the Cotton Club’s gangster owners hired Cab Calloway and the Missourians to succeed Duke Ellington’s band. Chick Webb and His Orchestra were busy through most of 1931 after a few weeks at the Roseland Ballroom. Webb, Henderson, and other Harlem bandleaders traded musicians or raided each other’s bands. In one instance, dubbed “The Big Trade,” alto saxophonist Benny Carter and trombonist Jimmy Harrison were “traded” to Webb’s band from Henderson’s for alto saxophonist Russell Procope and trombonist Benny Morton. On March 31, 1931, Webb’s band recorded three tunes, arranged by Benny Carter for Vocalion, all of which got good reviews. In October 1931, Webb’s band and Blanche Calloway’s band went on tour with Bennie Moten’s band and two others for a five-band roving “Battle of Music.” Chick Webb and His Orchestra were now frequently covered by the Black press.
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Hudson, Berkley. "Catfish Alley Fire". In O. N. Pruitt's Possum Town, 109–25. University of North Carolina Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469662701.003.0012.

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From the late nineteenth through the mid-twentieth century, Catfish Alley was a strip of flourishing Black businesses, a product of racial segregation: restaurants, pool halls, the town’s first Black-run drugstore, barbershops, honky-tonks, a birthing center, and Black doctors’ offices. This was a small-town version of Black business districts elsewhere, whether Harlem in New York City or Sweet Auburn in Atlanta. On Catfish Alley, Blacks could go to a medical clinic and be treated without having to go into a separate-but-unequal entrance at the two white hospitals. In Pruitt’s photograph, you can see, under the Falstaff sign, the words “Colored Cafe.” The cafe sign testifies to the Jim Crow era. Many other racially segregated settings needed no signage. In places such as the F. W. Woolworth’s store on Market Street, Blacks and whites alike knew which separate doors to enter and exit. Catfish Alley’s name originated from people routinely selling catfish there—caught in creeks, rivers, and ponds nearby. The photograph of a fire depicts a tableau of street theater, such as that found in the aftermath of traffic accidents or tornadoes that Pruitt would photograph.
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Wiggers, Raymond. "The Loop". In Chicago in Stone and Clay, 118–39. Cornell University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501765063.003.0009.

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This chapter explores the history and architectural designs of buildings found in the Chicago Loop's Northwestern Quadrant. The Italianate-style Delaware Building stands as a noble survivor of a once much more extensive roster of Loop buildings constructed in the first few years after the Great Fire of 1871. The 1 N. LaSalle Street is another example of a building following the Grand Art Deco Formula. The chapter considers the architects at Clark Street Bridge Houses and 77 W. Wacker Drive. It also highlights the geologic features of the Hyatt Center, New York Life Building, First National Bank of Chicago and Inland Steel Building.
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Tichi, Cecelia. "Emerson, Darwin, and The Custom of The Country". In A Historical Guide to Edith Wharton, 89–114. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195135909.003.0004.

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Abstract Readers of Edith Wharton have for some years recognized her appreciation of—and affinity with—Darwin and Darwinism, which was a major part of her self-schooling in the sciences, especially between 1906 and 1908. Accordingly, in The Custom of the Country, Ralph Marvell’s analysis of social dislocation employs a Darwinian heuristic to present a precis of the plot dynamic. A son of Old New York and an important figure in the novel, Ralph declares traditional families like his own to be a species endangered by the late nineteenth-century nouveau riche “invading race,” by which Wharton means a line of descent, not a genetic category. As a young aspirant poet-critic, who is newly appreciative of his heritage, Ralph understands his family and their cohorts to be casualties of a recent historical-evolutionary rupture. The new modern, invasive “race” of plutocrats, with their headquarters on Wall Street and their domiciles on Fifth Avenue, are fast conquering an enervated Old New York comprised of the ladies and gentlemen of Washington Square. Ralph assesses the invaders’ “modern tendencies” as a deplorable “chaos of indiscriminate appetites” from the monetary to the gustatory, these over and against the moderate and temperate “coherent and respectable” ideals of his family’s waning Old New York (N, 669). More than social change or a reversible decline in mores and manners, this phenomenon is a Darwinian process of encroachment and extinction. As a record of the contest between base and higher morality, The Custom of the Country is arguably Wharton’s most thoroughgoing socially Darwinian narrative.
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Perreault, Gregory P., e Mildred F. Perreault. "eSports as a News Specialty Gold Rush". In Advances in E-Business Research, 303–20. IGI Global, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-7300-6.ch014.

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The news coverage of eSports presents an attractive avenue to a new audience for business, sports, and gaming journalists. The audience's interest is understandable given the financial vibrancy of the hobby. This chapter reflects an analysis of news articles (n=406) published in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Forbes, and Business Insider from January 2018 to December 2020. Researchers analyzed these articles for specific marketing and public relations messages and identified how various entertainment businesses were reflected in the news coverage of eSports. This chapter argues that eSports represents a topic typically covered through lifestyle journalism that has instead been dominated by traditional business reporting. Both gaming and sports are predominantly lifestyle specialties—hence, the dominant role of business journalism in reporting the specialty means that the emphasis on the niche has primarily been on awards and financing.
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Crosthwaite, Paul. "“Like a Flood or an Earthquake”". In Speculative Time, 106–48. Oxford University PressOxford, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198891796.003.0004.

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Abstract Chapter 3 examines works that emerge from the midst of the Great Crash of 1929. It begins by considering William Faulkner’s desire to connect his drafting of As I Lay Dying (1930) to the financial crisis with which it coincided, and how the novel’s portrayals of disastrously rising waters mirror descriptions of a deluged stock market. It next examines the crash’s most iconic depiction by a visual artist, James N. Rosenberg’s lithograph Dies Irae (Oct 29) (1929), and shows how—for Rosenberg—the work was both an immediate inscription of the “day of wrath” he had witnessed on Wall Street, and a harbinger of the still greater global catastrophes that the financial collapse portended. Turning to the hallucinatory depictions of a panic-stricken Wall Street in the Spanish poet Federico García Lorca’s Poet in New York (1940), the chapter indicates how a poetic persona that is at once eyewitness to the crash and prophesier of its devastating future repercussions casts the event in surrealist form. The following section considers press photographs of crowds massing on Wall Street: it offers an innovative analysis of “panic crowd” images, arguing not only that such images constitute a distinct (and previously untheorized) visual genre, but also that the panic crowd should itself be understood as shaped by the iterative and mimetic logic of genre. Finally, the chapter reflects on a very different set of images—by the photographer Margaret Bourke-White—which are simultaneously among the least dramatic and most evocative documents of the Great Crash.
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Milward, John. "Blowin’ in the Wind". In Americanaland, 54–72. University of Illinois Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043918.003.0005.

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This chapter assesses the emergence of Bob Dylan. Dylan was crazy about Elvis Presley and the other early rock ‘n’ rollers, especially Little Richard. When Dylan went to New York, his artistic growth was explosive. His girlfriend, Suze Rotolo, encouraged an interest in politics and social justice, which prompted him to write topical material. As a result, his second album, The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, on which he was pictured strolling on Jones Street with Rotolo, included such topical tunes as “A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall” (written during the Cuban Missile Crisis) and “Masters of War.” The collection also featured one of his sweetest ballads (“Girl from the North Country”) and a song that would become an anthem of social justice, “Blowin' in the Wind.” Ultimately, Dylan saw himself as a part of the folk tradition and was more confident writing lyrics than creating melodies.
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