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1

Mies van der Rohe: Crown Hall : Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, the Department of Architecture. Basel: Birkhäuser, 2001.

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2

Walton, Jo. Half a crown. New York: Tor, 2008.

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3

Johnston, Alexander Keith. The half-crown atlas of British history. Edinburgh: W. & A.K. Johnston, 1986.

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4

Proceedings ICOMOS Thailand International Conference 2008 "Conservation and Management of Sacred Places" (2008 Bangkok, Thailand). Kānʻanurak læ kānčhatkān pūchanīyasathān =: Proceedings ICOMOS Thailand International Conference 2008 "Conservation and Management of Sacred Places" and ICOMOS Thailand Annual meeting at Wang Ladawan Conference Hall, the Crown Property Bureau, Phitsanulok Road, Bangkok. Krung Thēp: ʻIkhōmōt Thai, 2011.

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5

Union of crowns: The forging of Europe's most independent state. Glasgow: Neil Wilson, 2003.

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6

McLaughlin, Judith. Nothing over half a crown: A personal history of the founder of the G.J. Coles stores. Victoria: Loch Haven Books, 1991.

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7

Mies van der Rohe, Ludwig, 1886-1969, ed. Looking for Mies. Barcelona: ACTAR, 2000.

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8

Mies van der Rohe: Lake Shore Drive apartments : high-rise building = wohnhochnaus. Basel: Birkhäuser, 1999.

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9

Blaser, Werner. Mies van der Rohe: The art of structure. New York: Whitney Library of Design, 1994.

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10

Mies van der Rohe, Ludwig, 1886-1969., ed. Mies van der Rohe: The art of structure = : die Kunst der Struktur. Basel: Birkhäuser, 1993.

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11

Mies van der Rohe: Farnsworth House : weekend house = Wochenendhaus. Basel: Birkhäuser-Publishers for Architecture, 1999.

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12

Mies van der Rohe: Less is more. Zürich: Waser, 1986.

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13

Mies van der Rohe. 6th ed. Basel: Birkhauser Verlag, 1997.

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14

Moore, Stuart A. A history of the foreshore and the law relating thereto: With a hitherto unpublished treatise by Lord Hale, Lord Hale's "De jure maris," and Hall's essay on the rights of the Crown in the sea-shore. 3rd ed. Holmes Beach, Fla: Wm. W. Gaunt & Sons, 1993.

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15

Crown Hall Dean's Dialogues 2012-2017. Actar, 2017.

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16

Erdrich, Louise, and Michael Dorris. The Crown of Columbus (G.K. Hall Large Print Book Series). G K Hall & Co, 1992.

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17

Erdrich, Louise, and Michael Dorris. The Crown of Columbus (G K Hall Large Print Book Series). G. K. Hall & Company, 1992.

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18

Schulze, Franz. The Mies Van Der Rohe Archive: Robert F. Carr Memorial Chapel of Saint Savior, S. R. Crown Hall, & Other Buildings & Projects (Ga). Routledge, 1993.

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19

Walton, Jo. HALF A CROWN. Tor Trade, 2013.

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20

Walton, Jo. Half a crown. Charnwood, 2015.

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21

Half A Crown (Small Change). Corsair, 2001.

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22

Crowe, Thomas Rain. Live at Lipinsky Hall: Thomas Rain Crowe & the Boatrockers. New Native Pr, 2005.

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23

Shadle, Douglas W. Antonín Dvořák's New World Symphony. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190645625.001.0001.

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Antonín Dvořák’s New World Symphony exposed the deep wounds of American racism at the dawn of the Jim Crow era while serving as a flashpoint in broader debates about the national ideals of freedom and equality. Following several strands of musical thought during the second half of the nineteenth century, this richly textured account of the symphony’s 1893 premiere shows that even the classical concert hall could not remain insulated from the country’s fraught racial politics. The New World Symphony continued to wield extraordinary influence over American classical music culture for decades after its premiere as it became one of the most beloved pieces in the standard orchestral repertoire.
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24

Williams, Frederick. Seven Half Crowns: The Memories of an Evacuee. AuthorHouse, 2007.

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25

Garside, Peter, and Karen O’Brien, eds. Note on British Currency before Decimalization. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198749394.003.0002.

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BEFORE the introduction of decimal currency into the United Kingdom in 1971, the pound sterling was divided into twenty shillings, with twelve pence (pennies) to the shilling. The lowest value coin was the farthing (a quarter of a penny). The crown was five shillings—hence the popular 2s 6d coin known as the half-crown—while the guinea, much used in commercial transactions, was twenty-one shillings. In the present book we use the conventional abbreviations ‘s’ for shillings and ‘d’ for pence, and prices are given as follows: £13s 6d (one pound three shillings and sixpence, often abbreviated to one pound three and six)....
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26

Baym, Nancy K. Playing to the Crowd. NYU Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479896165.001.0001.

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In Playing to the Crowd, Nancy K. Baym examines the shift toward more personal connections with audiences, offering an entirely new approach to media cultures and industries as she does. The book argues that workers in many fields are under increased pressure get online and connect with others to further their careers, a trend that musicians have long led. Using a dialectical framework, the book draws on in depth-interviews with a range of professional musicians and other qualitative methods to show how the rise of digital communication platforms transformed artist-fan relationships into something that can feel personal. Part I explores music as a means of communication and as a commodity, drawing out the tension between its social and commercial values. Part II looks at audiences, showing how they developed fandoms in the 20th century, how those fandoms came online, and the tension between participation and control musicians experience when they encounter online audiences. Part III looks at relationships, examining how, in contrast to the concert hall environment in which musicians and audiences may one have met, social media create a new potential and pressure for everyday, intimate relating and how musicians manage the tensions between closeness and distance this creates. Ultimately, the book argues that the relational labor musicians do is a significant mode of work, one which requires resources, skills, and strategies we must all understand.
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27

Little, Crawford, and Martin Kielty. Union of Crowns: The Forging of Europe's Most Independent State /. Neil Wilson Publishing, 2005.

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28

Miller, James. Lucy's Half Crown: How She Earned It, and How She Spent It and Other Stories. HardPress, 2020.

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29

Archer, Richard. Riding the Rails with Jim Crow. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190676643.003.0007.

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New England railroads, segregated transportation, and the origins of the term Jim Crow appeared in the 1830s. The equal rights movement in New England shifted toward direct action in the 1840s. Constituting only a small portion of the overall population, activists could not overturn segregation and racism by themselves. They believed—they almost had to—that most New Englanders were decent people who, when aware of injustice, would want it eliminated. Others might need economic or political persuasion. To counter the discrimination African Americans turned to direct action—sit-ins, boycotts, petition drives, political manoeuvring, and they were successful. One of the first targets was discrimination on public conveyances. The first half of the 1840s were the first years of substantial progress, including the end of segregation on public transportation.
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30

Half a flight: (Nuruddin's memoirs of his master, crown prince Dara Shukoh, son of emperor Shah Jahan). Jaipur: Literary Circle, 2016.

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31

Daza, Ricardo, and A. Tetas. Looking for Mies. Birkhauser, 2000.

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32

Smuts, Malcolm. James I and the Consolidation of British Monarchy? Edited by Malcolm Smuts. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199660841.013.5.

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This chapter surveys the efforts of James I and his government to consolidate royal authority both within the three kingdoms of England, Scotland and Ireland and in matters involving relationships between them. It looks specifically at James’s views on hereditary monarchy, and his handling of the nobilities of his kingdoms, as well as the roles played by ethnic diversity, differing attitudes toward law and custom in the three kingdoms. It also discusses the growing authority of royal magistrates and officers in the localities and at how the concept of service to both Crown and community shaped participation in public life. James was not always effective in maintaining communication with groups within his kingdoms dissatisfied with key elements of royal policy, such as Irish Catholics and Scottish Presbyterians. His governance also suffered from mounting financial problems. Nevertheless he was largely successful in establishing a secure and stable polity during the first half of his reign.
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33

Blaser, Werner. Mies van der Rohe (Studio Paperback). Patmos Verlag GmbH & Co KG, 1991.

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34

Press, Princeton Architectural, and Werner Blaser. Mies van der Rohe: Art of Structure. Birkhauser, 1999.

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35

Bartels, Larry M., Joshua D. Clinton, and John G. Geer. Representation. Edited by Richard Valelly, Suzanne Mettler, and Robert Lieberman. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199697915.013.16.

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We examine the history of political representation in the United States using a multi-stage statistical analysis of the changing relationship between roll call votes in the US House of Representatives and the preferences of citizens (as measured by presidential votes). We show that members of Congress have become considerably more responsive to constituents’ preferences over the past 40 years, reversing a half-century drought in responsiveness stemming from the South’s one-party Jim Crow era. However, the House as a whole has become less representative, veering too far left when Democrats are in the majority and too far right when Republicans are.
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36

Moore, Stuart A. A History Of The Foreshore And The Law Relating Thereto: With A Hitherto Unpublished Treatise By Lord Hale, Lord Hale's "de Jure Maris", And Hall's Essay On The Rights Of The Crown In The Seashore. 3rd ed. Lawbook Exchange Ltd, 2006.

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37

Scovell, Adam. Folk Horror. Liverpool University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781911325239.001.0001.

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Interest in the ancient, the occult, and the “wyrd” is on the rise. The furrows of Robin Hardy (The Wicker Man), Piers Haggard (Blood on Satan's Claw), and Michael Reeves (Witchfinder General) have arisen again, most notably in the films of Ben Wheatley (Kill List), as has The Spirit of Dark of Lonely Water, Juganets, cursed Saxon crowns, spaceships hidden under ancient barrows, owls and flowers, time-warping stone circles, wicker men, the goat of Mendes, and malicious stone tapes. This book charts the summoning of these esoteric arts within the latter half of the twentieth century and beyond, using theories of psychogeography, hauntology, and topography to delve into the genre's output in film, television, and multimedia as its “sacred demon of ungovernableness” rises yet again in the twenty-first century.
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38

Nelson, William E. E Pluribus Unum. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190880804.001.0001.

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This book examines the role of the common law in the life and politics of Great Britain’s North American colonies from the founding of Virginia in 1607 to the outbreak of the American Revolution in 1775–76. The main theme of the book is that when the different colonies were initially founded, they followed very different law—typically not the common law of England. But over the course of the seventeenth century and first half of the eighteenth century, the colonies all received the common law, with the result that by the 1750s the common law constituted the foundation of every colony’s law and every colony’s political system. Some of the colonies adopted the common law because of pressure from the Crown to do so, but others turned to the common law because of socioeconomic pressures on the ground. During the more than century-long process of reception, the common law gradually changed, and thus, what was on the ground in 1776 was not identical to the common law of England. Rather, it was a body of rules that would constitute a foundation for an Americanized version of the common law.
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39

Down, Reg. The Tales of Tiptoes Lightly: The Bee Who Lost His Buzz, Pumpkin Crow, Lucy Goose and the Half-Egg. Trafford Publishing, 2006.

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40

Moore, Stuart A., and Lord Hale. A History of the Foreshore and the Law Relating Thereto: With a Hitherto Unpublished Treatise by Lord Hale, Lord Hales' "De Jure Maris," and Hall's Es. Gaunt Inc., 1993.

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41

McRae, Elizabeth Gillespie. Mothers of Massive Resistance. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190271718.001.0001.

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Examining racial segregation from 1920s to the 1970s, this book argues that white segregationist women constituted the grassroots workforce for racial segregation. For decades, they censored textbooks, campaigned against the United Nations, denied marriage certificates, celebrated school choice, and lobbied elected officials. They trained generations, built national networks, collapsed their duties as white mothers with those of citizenship, and experimented with a color-blind political discourse. Their work beyond legislative halls empowered the Jim Crow order with a flexibility and a kind of staying power. With white women at the center of the story, massive resistance and the rise of postwar conservatism rises out of white women’s grassroots work in homes, schools, political parties, and culture. Their efforts began before World War II and the Brown Decision and persisted past the removal of “white only” signs in 1964 and through the anti-busing protests. White women’s segregationist politics involved foreign affairs, economic policy, family values, strict constitutionalism, states’ rights, and white supremacy. It stretched across the nation and overlapped with and helped shape the rise of the New Right. In the end, this history compels us to confront the reign of racial segregation as a national story. It asks us to reconsider who sustained the Jim Crow order, who bears responsibility for the persistence of the nation’s inequities, and what it will take to make good on the nation’s promise of equality.
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42

Schultz, Jaime, and Shelley Lucas. Girls’ Six-Player Basketball. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037610.003.0006.

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This chapter focuses on a defunct version of high school girls' basketball known as “six-on-six” and how it expressed community identity in Iowa. Throughout the twentieth century, more than a million Iowa high school girls played the half-court, two-dribble version of basketball known as “six-on-six.” Originally conceived to accommodate girls and women's perceived physical limitations, six-on-six basketball often lent itself to fast-paced, high-scoring, crowd-rallying competitions. This chapter first provides a historical background on six-player basketball in Iowa before discussing how girls' six-on-six basketball has been relegated to the past, yet lives on in many places and memories, thanks in part to new technologies and understandings of community. It argues that the history of Iowa's six-player basketball is alive and thriving in alternative forms, citing the emergence of new, transitory communities to sustain its remembrance. The chapter considers two sites: a 2003 reunion game that gathered former players and supporters, and a Facebook page which fosters a virtual kinship of more than 7,000 members.
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43

McSheffrey, Shannon. Seeking Sanctuary. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198798149.001.0001.

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Seeking Sanctuary explores a curious aspect of premodern English law: the right of felons to shelter in a church or ecclesiastical precinct, remaining safe from arrest and trial in the king’s courts. This is the first book in more than a century to examine sanctuary in England in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Looking anew at this subject challenges the prevailing assumptions in the scholarship that this ‘medieval’ practice had become outmoded and little used by the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Although for decades after 1400 sanctuary-seeking was indeed fairly rare, the evidence in the legal records shows the numbers of felons seeking refuge in churches began to climb again in the late fifteenth century and reached its peak in the period between 1525 and 1535. Sanctuary was not so much a medieval dinosaur accidentally surviving into the early modern era, as it was an organism that had continued to evolve and adapt to new environments and indeed flourished in its adapted state. Sanctuary suited the early Tudor regime: it intersected with rapidly developing ideas about jurisdiction and provided a means of mitigating the harsh capital penalties of the English law of felony that was useful not only to felons but also to the crown and the political elite. Sanctuary’s resurgence after 1480 means we need to rethink how sanctuary worked, and to reconsider more broadly the intersections of culture, law, politics, and religion in the century and a half between 1400 and 1550.
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44

Kotin, Joshua. Utopias of One. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691196541.001.0001.

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This book is a new account of utopian writing. It examines how eight writers—Henry David Thoreau, W. E. B. Du Bois, Osip and Nadezhda Mandel'shtam, Anna Akhmatova, Wallace Stevens, Ezra Pound, and J. H. Prynne—construct utopias of one within and against modernity's two large-scale attempts to harmonize individual and collective interests: liberalism and communism. The book begins in the United States between the buildup to the Civil War and the end of Jim Crow; continues in the Soviet Union between Stalinism and the late Soviet period; and concludes in England and the United States between World War I and the end of the Cold War. In this way it captures how writers from disparate geopolitical contexts resist state and normative power to construct perfect worlds—for themselves alone. The book contributes to debates about literature and politics, presenting innovative arguments about aesthetic difficulty, personal autonomy, and complicity and dissent. It models a new approach to transnational and comparative scholarship, combining original research in English and Russian to illuminate more than a century and a half of literary and political history.
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45

Watson, Jay. William Faulkner and the Faces of Modernity. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198849742.001.0001.

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William Faulkner has enjoyed a secure reputation as American modernism’s foremost fiction writer, and as a landmark figure in international literary modernism, for well over half a century. Less secure, however, has been any scholarly consensus about what those modernist credentials actually entail. Over recent decades, there have been lively debates in modernist studies over the who, what, where, when, and how of the surprisingly elusive phenomena of modernism and modernity. It is the aim of this book to broaden and deepen an understanding of Faulkner’s oeuvre by following some of the guiding questions and insights of new modernism studies scholarship into understudied aspects of Faulkner’s literary modernism and his cultural modernity. William Faulkner and the Faces of Modernity explores Faulkner’s rural Mississippians as modernizing subjects in their own right rather than mere objects of modernization; traces the new speed gradients, media formations, and intensifications of sensory and affective experience that the twentieth century brought to the cities and countryside of the US South; maps the fault lines in whiteness as a racial modernity under construction and contestation during the Jim Crow period; resituates Faulkner’s fictional Yoknapatawpha County within the transnational countermodernities of the black Atlantic; and follows the author’s imaginative engagement with modern biopolitics through his late work A Fable, a novel Faulkner hoped to make his “magnum o.” By returning to the utterly uncontroversial fact of Faulkner’s modernism with a critical sensibility sharpened by new modernism studies, William Faulkner and the Faces of Modernity aims to spark further reappraisal of a distinguished and quite dazzling body of fiction. Perhaps even make it new.
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