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Democracy's prisoner : Eugene V. Debs, the great war, and the right to dissent
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ISBN: 0674037235 9780674037236 9780674027923 0674027922 Year: 2008 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press,

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In 1920, socialist leader Eugene V. Debs ran for president while serving a ten-year jail term for speaking against America's role in World War I. In this book, Freeberg shows that the campaign to send Debs from an Atlanta jailhouse to the White House was part of a wider national debate over the right to free speech in wartime. In this story of democracy on trial, Freeberg excavates an extraordinary episode in the history of one of America's most prized ideals.


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The Education of Laura Bridgman
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ISBN: 9780674037229 Year: 2009 Publisher: Cambridge, MA

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The Education of Laura Bridgman : First Deaf and Blind Person to Learn Language
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ISBN: 9780674037229 Year: 2009 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. Harvard University Press

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Democracy's Prisoner : Eugene V. Debs, the Great War, and the Right to Dissent
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ISBN: 9780674037236 9780674027923 Year: 2009 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. Harvard University Press

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The Age of Edison : Electric Light and the Invention of Modern America.
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ISBN: 1101605472 Year: 2013 Publisher: East Rutherford : Penguin Publishing Group,

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The education of Laura Bridgman : first deaf and blind person to learn language
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ISBN: 0674005899 0674010051 0674037227 Year: 2001 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press,

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In the mid-nineteenth century, Laura Bridgman, a young child from New Hampshire, became one of the most famous women in the world. Philosophers, theologians, and educators hailed her as a miracle, and a vast public followed the intimate details of her life with rapt attention. This girl, all but forgotten today, was the first deaf and blind person ever to learn language. Laura's dark and silent life was transformed when she became the star pupil of the educational crusader Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe. Against the backdrop of an antebellum Boston seething with debates about human nature, programs of moral and educational reform, and battles between conservative and liberal Christians, Freeberg tells this extraordinary tale of mentor and student, scientist and experiment. Under Howe's constant tutelage, Laura voraciously absorbed the world around her, learning to communicate through finger language, as well as to write with confidence. Her remarkable breakthroughs vindicated Howe's faith in the power of education to overcome the most terrible of disabilities. In Howe's hands, Laura's education became an experiment that he hoped would prove his own controversial ideas about the body, mind, and soul. Poignant and hopeful, The Education of Laura Bridgman is both a success story of how a sightless and soundless girl gained contact with an ever-widening world, and also a cautionary tale about the way moral crusades and scientific progress can compromise each other. Anticipating the life of Helen Keller a half-century later, Laura's is a pioneering story of the journey from isolation to accomplishment, as well as a window onto what it means to be human under the most trying conditions.

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