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Nietzsche

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Lorence, James J.:
author size: 16
USD
15.00
price size: 16
Rotes Antiquariat /ZVAB
dealer size: 16
ISBN10: 0826320279, ISBN13: 9780826320278, [publisher: Albuquerque., University of New Mexico Press] Softcover XV, 279 S. 8°, OKart. Good condition. 600 gr.
[Berlin, Germany] [Publication Year: 1999]
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Lorence, James J.:
USD
16.53
Rotes Antiquariat /AbebooksDE
ISBN10: 0826320279, ISBN13: 9780826320278, [publisher: Albuquerque., University of New Mexico Press] Softcover XV, 279 S. 8°, OKart. Good condition. 600 gr.
[Berlin, Germany] [Publication Year: 1999]
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Lorence James J.
USD
40.00
Dons Book Store /Biblio
Albuquerque, New Mexico: University of New Mexico Press, Date: 1999. First Edition Stated . Hard Back. Fine/No Dust Jacket. 6 1/4" X 9 1/2. 279 Pages Indexed and with high quality alkaline paper. This impassioned history tells a story of censorship and politics during the early Cold War. The author recounts the 1950 Empire Zinc Strike in Bayard, New Mexico, the making of the extraordinary motion picture Salt of the Earth by Local 890 of the International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers, and the film's suppression by Hollywood, federal and state governments, and organized labor. This disturbing episode reflects the intense fear that gripped America during the Cold War and reveals the unsavory side of the rapprochement between organized labor and big business in the 1950s. In the face of intense political opposition, blackballed union activists, blacklisted Hollywood artists and writers, and Local 890 united to write a script, raise money, hire actors and crews, and make and distribute the film. Rediscovered in the 1970s, Salt of the Earth is a revealing celluloid document of socially conscious unionism that sought to break down racial barriers, bridge class divisions, and emphasize the role of women. Lorence has interviewed participants in the strike and film such as Clinton Jencks and Paul Jarrico and has consulted private and public archives to reconstruct the story of this extraordinary documentary and the coordinated efforts to suppress it. 1999. Univ ...
Lorence, James J.
USD
40.00
Don's Book Store /Abebooks
ISBN10: 0826320279, ISBN13: 9780826320278, [publisher: University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, New Mexico] Hardcover First Edition 279 Pages Indexed and with high quality alkaline paper. This impassioned history tells a story of censorship and politics during the early Cold War. The author recounts the 1950 Empire Zinc Strike in Bayard, New Mexico, the making of the extraordinary motion picture Salt of the Earth by Local 890 of the International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers, and the film's suppression by Hollywood, federal and state governments, and organized labor. This disturbing episode reflects the intense fear that gripped America during the Cold War and reveals the unsavory side of the rapprochement between organized labor and big business in the 1950s. In the face of intense political opposition, blackballed union activists, blacklisted Hollywood artists and writers, and Local 890 united to write a script, raise money, hire actors and crews, and make and distribute the film. Rediscovered in the 1970s, Salt of the Earth is a revealing celluloid document of socially conscious unionism that sought to break down racial barriers, bridge class divisions, and emphasize the role of women. Lorence has interviewed participants in the strike and film such as Clinton Jencks and Paul Jarrico and has consulted private and public archives to reconstruct the story of this extraordinary documentary and the coordinated efforts to suppress it.
[Albuque ...
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