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Rockwell portrayed Americans in their daily, mundane activities. He believed that there is beauty in the ordinary. He depicted for example, a couple obtaining a marriage license, a family going and returning from a vacation, and a barbershop quartet.
Rockwell's illustrations did intersect with the world of politics. Because the Saturday Evening Post had a large circulation, he was able to influence public opinion. He designed several covers during World War II, including Rosie the Riveter and the Four Freedoms, to honor the contributions of civilians and to remind Americans of the reason for the war.
Rockwell did not shy from controversy. As America became engulfed in the Civil Rights Movement, Rockwell depicted the ongoing legacy of racial tension. His most famous illustration in the area of civil rights is The Problem We All Live With, which depicts the traumatic effects of desegregation on whites and blacks.
In summary, Norman Rockwell must be include as a figure in American art. Although his works were harshly criticized by those in the art world, they were admired by the general public. Today, scholars have begun to acknowledge Rockwell as being an important artist.
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It includes excellent advice for all computer personnel, especially for technical and science writers, hyptertext fiction writers for multimedia and entertainment technology industries, and both the creative side of the computer industry as well as the logistics part. Great book for finding your career according to your needs and how to match your preferences to the special requirements of the up-to-date aspects of the entire computer and entertainment technology and Internet industries.
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The novel is written in first person, and is one of the best diary novels I've seen in my 36 years of teaching university level comparative literature.
The story is one of a Jewish anthropologist/archaeologist female from Bensonhurst in Brooklyn, near Coney Island, searching for marriage into a family where there is no domestic violence, only to find that once she marries this Saudi Arabian/Bedouin Arab Sheik, that he and his world does not treat her as one of the family, as she is an outsider, a Polish Jew living in a world of Saudi Arabians trying to pass, to disguise herself as an Arab "housewife" in an Arab environment.
Then the protagonist is back in Brooklyn or at the West Coast, living life as an Arab woman, only to find out that as the years pass, she is still regarding as "a Jewess" and an outsider.
In her second marriage to a German-American, whose husband has German-oriented southern, American-born parents, his family also is reared to the world of White Protestantism, and has southern White feelings towards her Jewish ancestry in the 1950s sense of the word.
She is swept away into trying to find out her own identity, housebound by agoraphobia for many decades, and expressing inner reflections of what life was in her youth as an archaeologist/anthropologist traveling around the world compared to her middle-age with an abusive second husband, recalling the marriage to the Sheik, and the kidnapping of her children for twenty-plus years in the Middle East, who return grown, and express their fear of her Jewishness, even though she is a secular person in a world of many ethnicities, eagerly searching for her own ancestry which she searches for in ancient ruins only to find she is not what she thought she was, but is she?
A wonderful book for deep reflection, reads as a diary novel written in exquisite language and easy to understand. One of the best novels I've read on searching for ethnic identity and interfaith/international marriage and motherhood. This book should be a best-seller and a great women's movie. This is one of the author's 22+ popular novels, one of the best, and a mainstream women's work of fiction that reads vibrantly and brilliantly.
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Should there be a class about history for 14-year old boys and 15-year old sisters, Marót, the 13-year-old boy in the latest adventure book, The Year My Whole Country Turned Jewish (now available through 1stBooks Library) would certainly outdo and outwit the legendary Harry Potter.
Marót, the wonder boy and his sister Chichek have traveled as far away as Medieval times through World War II and back to the present religious conflicts in the Middle East. Author, Anne Hart painstakingly recreates these memorable historical events and offers loads of adventures, excitement and surprises in her most recent book, The Year My Whole Country Turned Jewish: A Time Travel Adventure in Medieval Khazaria with the Steppe Kids.
It takes place between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea in medieval times when migrations were the day and the first crusade had only been in the planning stage. Hart is an award-winning novelist, textbook author, and playwright of a large musical and artistic family from the Greek Islands; she has written over 55 books and dozens of articles, plays and course books. In The Year My Whole Country Turned Jewish, she presents what seems to be an impossible task, bringing together century-old tales, multicultural stories and awe-inspiring historical accounts of Jewish origin.
Hart's spectacular journey begins during the 9th and 10th century at the renowned Medieval Khazaria, the only Jewish state that exists outside Israel. Here, she blends actual accounts of the Jewish struggle against Russian pagan empire and the Vikings with a gripping family saga. The story is told from the perspective of an insightful young Marót who rescued his family from tyranny.
Their journey from Khazaria overflows with memories of the Byzantine Empire and Constantinople which all played significant roles in the history of Judaism. Harts version of the book for young readers, The Day My Whole Country Turned Jewish also is published with illustrations, stories, and poems on the same theme.
Also see Hart's multicultural female sleuth books, her Armenian detective character (female) Tweechig Haroutunian, her Eygptian/Greek Mizrahi character, in A Private Eye Called Mama Africa... She writes several novels a year as she has done since 1963. This is a spectacular book in the style of Harry Potter with a multicultural nuance. Great book for young teen readers. I also enjoyed Anne Hart's DNA Detectives Series, and her novel, The Courage to be Jewish and the Wife of an Arab Sheik as well as a version and poem of Marot's story in The Day My Whole Country Turned Jewish, which is a poem, a story, and illustrations from Marot's diary. The Year book focuses on Chichek's diary story of time travel. A wonderful read for young teens with the whole family.
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The resources are current and terrific, and the cost of operating these online homebased businesses are perfect for anyone who wants to work part time or full time at any age on any budget. It's full of practical applications of creative ideas and business strategies and resources. I highly recommend this and all other books by popular-selling author, Anne Hart.
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