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Maria Diedrich has written 5 work(s)
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Product Description: In this nuanced, sympathetic interpretation of two extraordinary lives, Maria Diedrich acquaints us with an important and little-known relationship. Ottilie Assing, an intrepid German journalist, met and interviewed Frederick Douglass in 1856, and it was an encounter that transformed the lives of both...read more (view table of contents, read Amazon.com's description)
Hardcover:
9780809016136 | Hill & Wang Pub, June 1, 1999, cover price $35.00 | About this edition: Chronicles the relationship between the German journalist and the American abolitionist
Paperback:
9780809066865 | Hill & Wang Pub, September 1, 2000, cover price $31.00 | About this edition: In this nuanced, sympathetic interpretation of two extraordinary lives, Maria Diedrich acquaints us with an important and little-known relationship.
(view table of contents)
Paperback:
9783825833282 | Lit Verlag, December 1, 1999, cover price $62.95
(view table of contents)
Hardcover:
9780195126402 | Oxford Univ Pr on Demand, October 21, 1999, cover price $160.00
Paperback:
9780195126419 | Oxford Univ Pr on Demand, August 19, 1999, cover price $56.00
Hardcover:
9780674076174 | Harvard Univ Pr, December 1, 1994, cover price $42.00
Product Description: In the 1930s and 1940s American women, like women elsewhere in the Western world, experienced three very different and contradictory historical phases: women in the nation's workforce, denounced as parasites in the face of mass unemployment during the Depression, were courted to replace men in the US economy during the Second World War only to be dismissed to return to their "natural realm", the home, as the GIs came back from the front...read more
Hardcover:
9780854966486 | Berg Pub Ltd, December 1, 1990, cover price $19.50 | About this edition: In the 1930s and 1940s American women, like women elsewhere in the Western world, experienced three very different and contradictory historical phases: women in the nation's workforce, denounced as parasites in the face of mass unemployment during the Depression, were courted to replace men in the US economy during the Second World War only to be dismissed to return to their "natural realm", the home, as the GIs came back from the front.
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