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Hasil Pencarian

Ditemukan 5 dokumen yang sesuai dengan query
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Boller, Paul F.
Boston: Houghton Mifflin , 1988
973.8 BOL m
Buku Teks SO  Universitas Indonesia Library
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Fatovic, Clement, 1973-
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009
352.235 FAT o
Buku Teks  Universitas Indonesia Library
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Elly M. Susanto
"Tesis ini berjudul Peran Publik Dua Ibu Negara Amerika Serikat: Eleanor Roosevelt dan Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy. Tesis ini berisikan analisa peran publik kedua ibu Negara yang hidup pada zaman 1930-an dan 1960-an. Masalah ini menarik karena dari sekian Ibu Negara hanya beberapa orang saja yang mempunyai kegiatan di dunia publik.
Dalam pengkajian dan penelitian masalah tesis, penulis menggunakan sumber-sumber tertulis kepustakaan baik sumber primer maupun sekunder dari perpustakaan Program Kajian Wilayah Amerika dan USIS. Adapun metode yang digunakan dalam tesis ini metode kualitatif.
Hasil penelitian tesis membuktikan bahwa peraanan publik kedua Ibu Negara Eleanor Roosevelt dan Jacqueline B. Kennedy sangat menonjol disebabkan adanya Self-Esteem yang kuat yang mereka miliki dan kemampuan kedua Ibu Negara mengambil kesempatan yang ditawarkan oleh zamannya.

This thesis is on the public role of two First Ladies in America in the 1930s and 1960s. This topic is very interesting because from the many First Ladies in the History of the United States only a few are active in public life.
In achieving the objective of my research I have applied the qualitative method by way of library research: collecting data from both primary and secondary sources from the library of The American Studies program and USIS.
The outcome of my research proves that there is a strong Self-Esteem in both Eleanor Roosevelt and Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy that makes their role in public very outstanding. In addition, the opportunities at that time support them to develop their ability accordingly."
Depok: Program Pascasarjana Universitas Indonesia, 2001
T8988
UI - Tesis Membership  Universitas Indonesia Library
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Phillips, Christopher
"Most Americans believe that the Ohio River was a clearly defined and static demographic and political boundary between freedom and slavery, indeed between North and South, an extension of the Mason-Dixon Line and a border that produced the war. None of this is true, except perhaps the outcome of war. But the centrality of the Civil War and its outcome in the making of these tropes is undeniable. This interpretation leaves no room for the third of the nations major nineteenth-century regions: the West. Ironically, the wars central figure, Abraham Lincoln, was a lifelong resident of this regions middle border-the slave states of Kentucky and Missouri and of the free states of Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and Kansas-lying astride not one but two fault lines of that war, east and west and north and south. The Rivers Ran Backward contests the assumption that regional identities throughout these states were stable in the era of the civil war. Across the middle border, the war left an indelible imprint on the way in which residents thought of themselves and other Americans, proving as much a shaper as a product of regional identities. The book explains how the Civil War and its aftermath transformed a regional political culture into the cultural politics of region, creating perhaps the wars greatest irony: that the victorious North created a larger, more enduring South than the defeated Confederacy could accomplish for itself, and that former western neighbors created a border between them after the fact."
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016
e20470124
eBooks  Universitas Indonesia Library
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Moniz, Amanda B.
"From Empire to Humanity: The American Revolution and the Origins of Humanitarianism tells the story of a generation of American and British activists who transformed humanitarianism as they adjusted to being foreigners in the wake of the American Revolution. In the decades before the Revolution, Americans and Britons shared an imperial approach to charitable activity. Growing up in the increasingly integrated British Atlantic world, future activists from the British Isles, North America, and the Caribbean developed expansive outlooks and connections. For budding doctors, this was especially true. American independence put an end their common imperial humanitarianism but not their transatlantic ties, their far-reaching visions, or their belief that philanthropy was a tool of statecraft and reconciliation. In the postwar years, with doctor-activists at the forefront, they collaborated in medical philanthropy, antislavery, prison reform, poor relief, educational charities, and more. The nature of their cooperation, however, had changed. No longer members of the same polity, the erstwhile compatriots adopted a universal approach to their beneficence as they reimagined bonds with people who were now legal strangers. The basis of renewed cooperation, universal benevolence could also be a source of tension. With the new wars at the end of the century, activists optimistic cosmopolitanism waned while their practices endured."
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016
e20470583
eBooks  Universitas Indonesia Library