Историческая литература

Различные книги в жанре Историческая литература

The Ojibwa Dance Drum

Thomas Vennum Jr

Hiding in a lake under lily pads after fleeing U.S. soldiers, a Dakota woman was given a vision over the course of four days instructing her to build a large drum and teaching her the songs that would bring peace and end the killing of her people. From the Dakota, the &quot;big drum&quot; spread throughout the algonquian-speaking tribes to the Ojibwe, becoming the centerpiece of their religious ceremonies.<br /><br />This edition of The Ojibwa Dance Drum, originally created through the collaboration of Ojibwe drum maker and singer William Bineshi Baker Sr. and folklorist Thomas Vennum, has a new introduction by history professor Rick St. Germaine that discusses the research behind this book and updates readers on the recent history of the Ojibwe Drum Dance.

Toys of the 50s 60s and 70s

Kate Roberts

Toys from the 1950s, &#39;60s, and &#39;70s capture the joy of play and the pure fun of being a kid. But beneath those iconic names are rich veins of nostalgia, memory, and history. These toys&mdash;and the stories of the kids, parents, child-rearing experts, inventors, manufacturers, and advertisers they affected&mdash;reflect the dynamism of American life.<br /><br />Senior exhibit developer and best-selling author Kate Roberts, along with senior curator Adam Scher, spotlight forty-five memorable toys, placing them in historical context and examining their development and launch, their impact on kids and the larger community, and their reflection of the social and cultural shifts of each decade. The book, developed in conjunction with the national traveling exhibit of the same name, will include firsthand stories shared by adults who revered these toys as kids as well as research gleaned from primary sources and toy experts and collectors.

Hard Work and a Good Deal

Barbara W. Sommer

The Civilian Conservation Corps&mdash;born out of Franklin D. Roosevelt&#39;s New Deal at the height of the Great Depression&mdash;supplied jobs to more than 77,000 Minnesotans in need. Their work left a lasting legacy, visible today in Minnesota&#39;s thriving forests, state park amenities, and soil conservation practices.<br /><br />Hundreds of interviews complement oral historian Barbara Sommer&#39;s lively text with personal accounts that animate the history of the CCC in Minnesota as camps were created and projects tackled throughout the state. The &quot;boys&quot; look back – often fondly – at this program, which, for many, was their introduction to the workforce and to life away from home.<br /><br />Accolades for Hard Work and a Good Deal:<br /><br />?Winner of the 2009 Minnesota Book Award in the Minnesota Category<br /><br />?Winner of the 2009 Northeast Minnesota Book Award in the General Nonfiction Category<br /><br />?Winner of the 2009 Award of Merit from the American Association for State and Local History (AASLH)

Joined at the Hip

Jay Goetting

Jazz first floated into the Twin Cities on the Mississippi River excursion boats, which brought the likes of Jelly Roll Morton and Louis Armstrong to listeners on the levee—and it never left. When Paul Whiteman, Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald and other jazz greats toured the clubs and concert halls of the Cities, young musicians listened in the alleys outside clubs, bought records, and learned more of this exciting new music. The local scene began to nurture players like Lester Young and Oscar Pettiford, who went on to bigger things, as well as those who remained close to home to ply their craft, like Rook Ganz, Percy Hughes, Doc Evans, and Dave Karr.
Using an invaluable set of interviews taped with jazz personalities that were broadcast by Dave Sletten and Kent Hazen in the 1990s, author Jay Goetting recounts the lore and explores the social aspects of the story: racism, the gangster era, unionization and strip joints, and the ever-evolving music itself. Separate chapters feature clubs players, singers, big bands, broadcasters (including the amazing Leigh Kammen), and the young lions forming the jazz community of tomorrow.
This is the story behind the music, the rich chronicle of a vibrant jazz scene.

Making Marriage

Catherine J. Denial

The debate over the meaning of marriage in the United States and specifically in Minnesota is not a recent development. From 1820 to 1845, when the first significant numbers of Americans arrived in the region now called Minnesota, they carried the belief that good government and an orderly household went hand in hand. The territorial, state, and federal governments of the United States were built upon a particular vision of civic responsibility: that men, as heads of households, enter civic life on behalf of their dependents&mdash;wives, children, servants, and slaves. These dependents were deemed unfit to make personal decisions or to involve themselves in business and government&mdash;and they owed labor and obedience to their husbands, fathers, and masters.<br /><br />These ideas clashed forcibly with the conceptions of kinship and social order that existed among the Upper Midwest&#39;s long-established Dakota, Ojibwe, and mixed-heritage communities. In resisting the new gender and familial roles advocated by military personnel, Indian agents, and missionaries, the region&#39;s inhabitants frustrated American attempts to transform Indian country into a state. Indeed, many Americans were forced to compromise their own beliefs so that they could put down roots.<br /><br />Through the stories of married&mdash;and divorcing&mdash;men and women in the region, Catherine J. Denial traces the uneven fortunes of American expansion in the early nineteenth century and the nation-shaping power of marital acts.

Remembering The Good War

Thomas Saylor

World War II was the defining event for a generation of Americans. Remembering the Good War tells the stories of over one hundred Minnesotans&mdash;ordinary people who rose to duty at an extraordinary moment in our past. Here soldiers and sailors, housewives and farmers, &quot;Rosies&quot; and &quot;Joes&quot; tell what it was like to be swept up in history.<br /><br />Betty Wall Strofus of Faribault recalls how she discovered a love for flying and joined the Women&#39;s Air Force Service Pilots (WASP) program to serve stateside during the war. Lyle Pasket of St. Paul marvels that he was only seventeen when his cruiser, the USS Indianapolis, was torpedoed en route to the Philippines. After three days without food or drink in shark-infested waters, he was one of only 317 sailors rescued. Paratrooper Frank Soboleski of International Falls recounts how he depended on north woods hunting skills to keep himself alive during battle in the Netherlands. Schoolteacher Vivian Linn McMorrow remembers with quiet intensity the brief time she shared with her husband Ralph Gland, who was killed in France during the second year of their marriage.<br /><br />From the shock of the attack on Pearl Harbor to the excitement of recruits leaving the farm for the first time to the horrors of the battlefields of Europe, Africa, and the Pacific, Remembering the Good War pays homage to the generation of Minnesotans who were forever transformed by World War II. Their voices&mdash;honest, emotional, and resolute&mdash;remind us of a time of sacrifice and courage.

A People's History of the Hmong

Paul Hillmer

Over the centuries, the Hmong have called many places home, including China, Laos, Vietnam, Thailand, and most recently France, Australia, and the United States. Their new neighbors, though welcoming, may know little about how they have come to these places or their views on relationships, religion, or art. Now, in A People&#39;s History of the Hmong, representative voices offer their community&#39;s story, spanning four thousand years to the present day.<br /><br />&quot;This was the life of our Hmong people,&quot; remembers Pa Seng Thao, one of many who describe farming villages in the mountains of Laos. Others help us understand the Hmong experience during the Vietnam War, particularly when the U.S. military pulled out of Laos, abandoning thousands of Hmong allies. Readers learn firsthand of the hardships of refugee camps and the challenges of making a home in a foreign country, with a new language and customs. Drawing on more than two hundred interviews, historian Paul Hillmer assembles a compelling history in the words of the people who lived it.

Somalis in Minnesota

Ahmed I. Yusuf

The story of Somalis in Minnesota begins with three words: sahan, war, and martisoor. Driven from their homeland by civil war and famine, one group of Somali sahan, pioneers, discovered well-paying jobs in the city of Marshall, Minnesota. Soon the war, news, traveled that not only was employment available but the people in this northern state, so different in climate from their African homeland, were generous in martisoor, hospitality, just like the Somali people themselves.<br /><br />The diaspora began in 1992, and today more than fifty thousand Somalis live in Minnesota, the most of any state. Many have made their lives in small towns and rural areas, and many more have settled in Minneapolis, earning this city the nickname &quot;Little Somalia&quot; or &quot;Little Mogadishu.&quot; Amiable guide Ahmed Yusuf introduces readers to these varied communities, exploring economic and political life, religious and cultural practices, and successes in education and health care. he also tackles the controversial topics that command newspaper headlines: alleged links to terrorist organizations and the recruitment of young Somali men to fight in the civil war back home. This newest addition to the people of Minnesota series captures the story of the state&#39;s most recent immigrant group at a pivotal time in its history.

Shining Big Sea Water

Norman K. Risjord

In Shining Big Sea Water, historian Norman K. Risjord offers a grand tour of Lake Superior&#39;s remarkable history, taking readers through the centuries and into the lives of those who have traveled the lake and inhabited its shores.<br /><br />Through lively, informative chapters, Risjord begins with the lake&#39;s cataclysmic geological birth, then explores the lives of native peoples along the shore before European contact and during the fur trade, showing how Superior functioned as an unusual &quot;blue water highway&quot; for Indians, early explorers, industries, and settlers. He outlines the development of such cities as Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan; Ashland, Wisconsin; and Two Harbors, Minnesota, and tells the fascinating histories of life-saving lighthouses and famous shipwrecks. In the final chapter, Risjord looks to the future, offering a clear-eyed account of the environmental and economic challenges faced by America&#39;s largest freshwater lake.<br /><br />Interspersed throughout the book are handy tips for travelers, highlighting historically significant sites that illustrate key pieces of Lake Superior&#39;s natural and human history, including national lakeshores in the United States and provincial parks in Canada.

Creating Minnesota

Annette Atkins

Winner of a Spur Award, presented by the Western Writers of America (WWA), for the Best Western Nonfiction Historical Book.<br /><br />Renowned historian Annette Atkins presents a fresh understanding of how a complex and modern Minnesota came into being in Creating Minnesota. Each chapter of this innovative state history focuses on a telling detail, a revealing incident, or a meaningful issue that illuminates a larger event, social trends, or politics during a period in our past.<br /><br />A three-act play about Minnesota&#39;s statehood vividly depicts the competing interests of Natives, traders, and politicians who lived in the same territory but moved in different worlds. Oranges are the focal point of a chapter about railroads and transportation: how did a St. Paul family manage to celebrate their 1898 Christmas with fruit that grew no closer than 1,500 miles from their home? A photo essay brings to life three communities of the 1920s, seen through the lenses of local and itinerant photographers. The much-sought state fish helps to explain the new Minnesota, where pan-fried walleye and walleye quesadillas coexist on the same north woods menu.<br /><br />In Creating Minnesota, Atkins invites readers to experience the texture of people&#39;s lives through the decades, offering a fascinating and unparalleled approach to the history of our state.