Anwar Al-Sadat: Transforming the Middle East
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Part of The World in A Life series, this brief, inexpensive text provides insight into the life of...
First Films of the Holocaust: Soviet Cinema and the Genocide of the Jews, 1938-46
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Most early Western perceptions of the Holocaust were based on newsreels filmed during the Allied...
Food Power: The Rise and Fall of the Postwar American Food System
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In Food Power, Bryan L. McDonald brings together the history of food, agriculture, and foreign...
Sing, Memory
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A Polish musician, a Jewish conductor, a secret choir, and the rescue of a trove of music from the...
I Escape: The Great War's Most Remarkable POW
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Of all the daring PoW escape stories that have come to light in the last 100 years and immortalized...
David McK (3425 KP) rated Batman: A Death In The Family in Books
Jan 28, 2019
I was just entering double digits, the Cold War was still in force, and DC decided to bump off Robin.
Of course, when I say 'Robin' I actually mean the second character (Jason Todd) to take that mantle (with the first being the more famous Dick Grayson, who has now become Nightwing), and when I say DC I actually mean the DC readers - in a (then) unprecedented move, DC had actually left it open to the readers to decide his fate, via a telephone poll.
It is, of course, Batman's nemesis Joker who is responsible for the killing, after he (yet again) breaks out of Arkham Asylum and heads to the middle East to sell a nuclear weapon that he just-so-happened to have lying around. Batman goes off in pursuit, with a sidelined-by-Batman (due to his erratic nature) Robin on the trail of his real parent; a trail that leads to the two of them meeting up (amazing coincidence, Batman!), Robin ignoring Batman's advice and proceeding to put himself in harms way.
Apparently there was also a media storm around this; around the fact that over the course - and due t 0the events of - this plot-line, that Batman was moving back to his nihilistic vigilante loner roots rather than the kid-friendly character he had become: he even goes so far, in this, to punch out at Superman! The horror!!
Karl Polanyi: A Life on the Left
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Karl Polanyi (1886-1964) was one of the twentieth century's most original interpreters of the market...
How Karl Marx Can Save American Capitalism
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When the Cold War ended, some people called it the "end of history." Capitalism and liberal...
Post-Wall German Cinema and National History: Utopianism and Dissent
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Since unification, a radical shift has taken place in Germans' view of their country's immediate...
A Prehistory of the Cloud
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We may imagine the digital cloud as placeless, mute, ethereal, and unmediated. Yet the reality of...