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As always, Mashburn goes out of his way to provide value. This book contains over 380 pages of information, thousands of black and white photographs, a wonderful index, and price guides. The guide includes information on the following topics: Artist Signed; Unsigned Artists; Advertising; Real Life; Real Photos; Sports; Entertainers; Topicals; Social History; and Lynchings.
All in all this book is a must-have for any serious postcard collector or dealer. It's full of useful information, and wonderful just to sit and look through at the many fabulous cards shown. Don't hesitate to buy this book!
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Their adventures (although obviously enhanced in grammar)and the history alone is enough. The power just leaps off the pages and you can feel the spirit. I actually had to lay the book down sometime because of the power of the written words that I was receiving into my spirit.
I read the book sometime ago.. and so moved that I'm reading it again!! and maybe even more times in the future. You should "Give" any special sisters you have in your life a copy It's definitely one of those books that you can read more than once and still find JOY!! I rate Higher 5 Stars PLUS PLUS PLUS!!
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On a linguistic persepctive, as this book suggests, AAVE should be considered a dialect of English for it is what linguists call "rule-governed". It means that Black English has a distinctive sets of grammar rules, structures, and sound patterns. It had been hypothesized that West African immigrants came into the country and worked as slaves. They might speak a pidgrin that over course of time developed and became a creole. This is known as the Creole Hypothesis. It explains the striking similarities shared between Plantation English (spoken by Southern Whites) and Black English.
Dillard's book, though published more than 20 years ago, still reflects the distinct linguistic characteristics of AAVE. The dialect distinguishes itself with forestressing syllable, regularization (i.e. using "I goes" rather than "I go"), syllable contaction (i.e. pronouncing "suppose" as /spoz/), perfective "done" form, invariant be form, and more.
AAVE therefore is just like any dialect we might hear people speak except it is often stigmatized; that is, in linguist's language, language is degraded and the speakers feel ashamed to speak the language. Dillard's book deals with grammatical and social aspects of the language. Highly recommended.
I decided to visit the Afro-American Studies dept. By then I was a grad student at Indiana University, and innocently enough, I thought that this was what a person in the academia did when they wanted to learn something -- they went to consult the experts... The experience was an overall disappointment. I spoke to several instructors, several students, left messages with the secretaries, but alas -- it was very difficult to get through to people: They were all very suspicious that someone would even think of studying Black English. Eventually I was able to learn a few things from peoples' comments:
- Currently, there is no such thing as a textbook for Black English in the same way that there are textbooks for Spanish or Russian. You will need to make due with books like Dillard's, and there aren't all that many of those either.
- Black English is more than just a vocabulary. A dictionary of "Jive" won't do. You need to pick up some grammar.
- There are many dialects of Black English, and Black English changed over time.
- No one I spoke to had ever heard of a university course in Black English.
- No one I spoke to knew of any book written entirely in Black English, though there are books (including novels) that have generous samples.
- I've found a reference to the New Testament in Black English (I'm NOT refering to the Clarence Jordan's Cotton Patch version of the New Testament), but no one seemed to know where to get a copy (if you do PLEASE let me know).
Eventually, though, a kind instructor pointed me to Zora Neale Hurston's books, for which I couldn't have been more grateful. So, if you're interested in Black English, get Dillard's book and go through it a few times, to appreciate the structure of the language. Then if you would like to see some very beautiful if somewhat out-of-date examples of Black English, pick up a copy of Their Eyes Were Watching God, and in addition to reading a beautiful novel you'll also get a beathtakingly beautiful sample of Black English. Enjoy!
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This work contains thousands of definitions, has been recently updated (7th edition) to encompass new and evolving areas of the law, and addresses more legal maxims than a college latin professor can shake a stick at. It is, therefore, simply the best.
I would like to briefly and concisely address come of the concerns of other reviewers. First, the color of the cover is completely irrelevant to the quality of the book. Get over it. If the problem is really that bad, buy a can of spray paint. Next, this monster doesn't go to class - it sits on your desk at home. If you need a pocket law dictionary for class (which you do), go buy one. Stop complaining because it won't fit into your Levis. Finally, if you don't think you need it, you need it more than you think. Every first year law student cracks this book early in the first semester. There isn't one law school professor in the country who doesn't own a copy. It's standard fare at all major law firms. So again, please tell me, why don't you need to purchase the most comprehensive, authoritative, and up-to-date legal dictionary in the world?
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This book, which was as much about the man as it was about the civil rights movement, was a quick read that I often wished would last a lot longer.
I really enjoyed both the front-line perspective on a movement I only read about in history books, and as a law student, the legal angle was also fascinating.
But the best part of the book concerns the continuing efforts of the black people in Selma to maintain the gains of the movement, especially against white establishment efforts to take away black votes by subterfuge. The trials and tribulations of Albert Turner, who recently died, are partiularly illuminating. Everyone who is interested in the continuing stuggle to keep the movement going should read this book.
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To the authors: well done thank you for looking into a subject that society choses to ignore.