Born in 1899, Alfred Hitchcock directed 57 films in a fifty year career that spanned the history of the moving image, from the silent era to stereo sound, black-and white to Technicolor, widescreen to television, and from Europe to Hollywood. His oeuvre has so comprehensively engaged the attentions of scholars of all critical persuasions that the study of his films is synonymous with the study of the art of cinema itself.
Alfred Hitchcock: Centenary Essays displays the range and breadth of Hitchcock scholarship and assesses the significance of his singular body of work. The book engages with Hitchcock's characteristic formal and aesthetic preoccupations, his relationship with modernism and politics and his engagement with romance and sexuality.
This volume of essays draws on the best of current Hitchcock criticism and opens up new directions for Hitchcock scholarship.
M*A*S*H: The Complete Seventh Season (Full Frame, Collector's Edition)
Korea, 1950. They were a MASH:(Mobile Army Surgical Hospital) unit stationed three miles from the front, positioned to provide quick care to the troops. Although it sometimes felt as if the incoming wounded would never stop, the docs and nurses of the 4077 were always ready with a steady hand, a smile and laugh - healing our soldiers in both body and soul and offering a touch of home, and often hilarity, in a foreign land. Contains television episodes from season 7. Episodes include: Disc 1: "Commander Pierce," "Peace On Us," "Lil," "Our Finest Hour, Part I" & "Our Finest Hour Part II" (Can be viewed as two separate episodes or one hour-long episode), "The Billfold Syndrome," "None Like It Hot," "They Call The Wind Korea" and "Major Ego" Disc 2: "Baby, It's Cold Outside," "Point Of View," "Dear Comrade," "Out Of Gas," "An Eye For A Tooth," "Dear Sis," "B.J.
M*A*S*H: The Complete Seventh Season (Full Frame, Collector's Edition)
Univision television network > M*A*S*H: The Complete Seventh Season (Full Frame, Collector's Edition)
Panasonic 2.4GHz 2-Handset Digital Phone w/Handset Speakerphone & Caller ID
Technical InformationPhone FeaturesDisplay & Graphics Display ScreenNetwork & Communication ConnectivityPhysical Characteristics Color | |
North Africans in Contemporary France: Becoming Visible
Derderian looks at the large North African population in France and their attempts for recognition in a country which has long denied its rich immigration past and present. He considers how the North African community has developed from the late 1970s to the mid-1990s, especially in their political and cultural initiatives. Derderian examines the radio station "Radio Beur" and the television show "La Famille Ramdam," as well as political initiatives and the role of ethnic minorities in defining prominent French sites of memory such as the working-class suburbs or banlieues and the Algerian War. Based largely on oral history, Derderian draws from a wealth of interviews with North African artists and creators as well as various French cultural actors.
North Africans in Contemporary France: Becoming Visible
Univision television network > North Africans in Contemporary France: Becoming Visible
North by Night: A Story of the Underground Railroad by Katherine Ayres, ISBN 044022747X
Lucy Spencer has been helping fugitive slaves flee to Canada since she was twelve years old. Her family's Ohio home is a station on the Underground Railroad, the secret network of people that helps runaways escape to freedom. Now that she's sixteen, Lucy is thirsty for adventure. When she is asked to stay with the widow Aurelia Mercer and help a family of runaway slaves hiding in the attic, she doesn't hesitate. From one of the fugitives who is pregnant, and from the surprisingly unconventional Miss Aurelia, Lucy learns much about growing up, loving, and standing on her own.
North by Night: A Story of the Underground Railroad by Katherine Ayres, ISBN 044022747X
Univision television network > North by Night: A Story of the Underground Railroad by Katherine Ayres, ISBN 044022747X
North Africans in Contemporary France: Becoming Visible
Derderian looks at the large North African population in France and their attempts for recognition in a country which has long denied its rich immigration past and present. He considers how the North African community has developed from the late 1970s to the mid-1990s, especially in their political and cultural initiatives. Derderian examines the radio station "Radio Beur" and the television show "La Famille Ramdam," as well as political initiatives and the role of ethnic minorities in defining prominent French sites of memory such as the working-class suburbs or banlieues and the Algerian War. Based largely on oral history, Derderian draws from a wealth of interviews with North African artists and creators as well as various French cultural actors.
North Africans in Contemporary France: Becoming Visible
Univision television network > North Africans in Contemporary France: Becoming Visible