Results 31 to 40 of 49 | « previous | next »
- Great American outpost : dreamers, mavericks, and the making of an oil frontier / by Rao, Maya,1984-author.(CARDINAL)679022;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 315-324).I should be dead -- The water depot -- Before the eyes of Roosevelt -- The wild bison -- Williston Brewing Company -- Great American scam -- Street lights -- South of Sasketchewan -- Edge of the world -- The sheer emptiness of it -- Nobody lives here -- The fattest chicken in the barn -- Empire of junk -- The North Dakota way -- Capitalism is legal -- A great steaming pile of money -- Ballad of La Bruta -- The dinner party -- Peyton Place on the plains -- Fifteen Enrons -- Going to war -- The derrick goes sideways -- Oil to $1 beer -- Nat Geo's in town -- Fracking hell -- A convicted ponzi schemer walks into a bar -- The dangers at 20 feet -- Pipelining blues -- You chose oil over us -- Exodus -- Bile of the subterranean -- Frigid despair -- This is your treasure."In 2012, a recovering addict named Don arrived in North Dakota with no money, no connections, and no job. Like many others, Don had heard that the Bakken Shale was being fracked, and within just twelve days, he'd landed a salary of over $100,000 hauling sand. North Dakota was experiencing a resurgence of population and wealth comparable to only one event in American history: the California Gold Rush. Through stories of men like Don--as well as down-on-their-luck businessmen, Ponzi-schemers, prostitutes, and reality-television hosts--Great American Outpost recounts the dramatic boom and bust of the largest oil rush in US history. As a writer for the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, Maya Rao spent more time in the Bakkens than any other reporter. By day, she worked at the local truck stop, hauled supplies, and explored frack sites with hard-worn truck drivers. By night, she dined with the Dakota elite: deceitful bankers, ex-strippers, drug lords, and a whole cast of characters hoping to get rich quick. Rao discovered that where there is oil, crime, greed, and sensationalism follow. The result is a fascinating microcosm of the United States in the twenty-first century that reads like a frontier novel of the Wild West"--
- Subjects: Petroleum industry and trade; Petroleum industry and trade; Oil shale reserves;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- The murders that made us : how vigilantes, hoodlums, mob bosses, serial killers, and cult leaders built the San Francisco Bay Area / by Calhoun, Bob,author.(CARDINAL)424255;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 315-321).My mother the murder suspect -- Vigilance! -- The fourth estate -- Gangs of the Barbary Coast -- Official misconduct -- Popular attractions -- The state-sanctioned lynch mob -- Chicago to the bay -- No parts lying together in one place -- Urban renewal -- When the garden flowers, baby, are dead -- Zodiac adjacent -- The murder capital of the world -- Death to the fascist insect that preys upon the life of the people -- Killing Gerald Ford -- Rainbows and leather -- The Golden Dragon massacre -- The last victims of Jonestown -- The white working class -- The face of the girl in room 24 -- The hucksters -- The outside lands -- The night stalker is born -- The scene -- Upward mobility -- Two-fisted liberal -- The technological divide -- A real fixer-upper -- The last days of Tom Guido."The 170-year history of the San Francisco Bay Area told through its crimes and how they intertwine with the city's art, music, and politics In The Murders That Made Us, the story of the San Francisco Bay Area unfolds through its most violent and depraved acts. From the city's earliest days, where vigilantes hung perps from buildings and newspaper publishers shot it out on Market Street, to the kidnapping of Patty Hearst and the Zodiac Killer, crime has made the people of San Francisco who they are. Murder and mayhem are intertwined with the city's art, music, and politics. The Great 1906 Earthquake that burned down the old Barbary Coast shook a city that was already teetering on the brink of a massive prostitution scandal. The Summer of Love ended with a pair of ghastly acid dealer slayings that made the Haight too violent for even Charles Manson. The '70s ground to a halt with San Francisco pastor Jim Jones forcing his followers to drink cyanide-laced punch in Guyana, and the assassination of gay icon Harvey Milk. With each tale of true crime, The Murders That Made Us will take you from the violence that began in the original Gold Rush into the brutal displacement of today's techie ruination."--
- Subjects: True crime stories.; Case studies.; Murder; Murder; Murder;
- Available copies: 3 / Total copies: 3
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- An indefinite sentence : a personal history of outlawed love and sex / by Dube, Siddharth,1961-author.(CARDINAL)811031;
"From his time as a child in 1960s India, Siddharth Dube knew that he was different. Reckoning with his femininity and sexuality--and his intellect--would send him on a lifelong journey of discovery: from Harvard classrooms to unsafe cruising sites; from ivory-tower think-tanks to shantytowns; from halls of power at the UN and the World Bank to jail cells where sexual outcasts were brutalized. Coming of age in the earliest days of AIDS, Dube was at the front lines when that disease made rights for gay men and for sex workers a matter of basic survival, pushing to decriminalize same-sex relations and sex work in India, both similarly outlawed dating back to British colonial rule. (His efforts would contribute to the repeal of Section 377 in 2018.) He became a trenchant critic of the United States' imposition of its cruel anti-prostitution policies on developing countries--an effort legitimized by leading American feminists and would-be do-gooders--warning that this was a twenty-first-century replay of the moralistic Victorian-era campaigns that had spawned endless persecution of countless women, men, and trans individuals the world over. Profound, ferocious, and luminously written, [this book] is both a personal and political journey, weaving Dube's own quest for love and self-respect with unforgettable portrayals of the struggles of some of the world's most oppressed people, those reviled and cast out for their sexuality. Informed by a lifetime of scholarship and introspection, it is essential reading on the global debates over sexuality, gender expression, and securing human rights and social justice in a world distorted by inequality and right-wing ascendancy."--Dust jacket.
- Subjects: Autobiographies.; Dube, Siddharth, 1961-; Gay people; Gay rights; Prostitutes; Prostitutes; AIDS (Disease); Homosexuals.; Gay rights.;
- Available copies: 3 / Total copies: 3
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- Bury me standing : the Gypsies and their journey / by Fonseca, Isabel.(CARDINAL)224099;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 307-315) and index.Out of the mouth of Papusza, a cautionary tale -- Dukas of Albania -- Kinostudio -- Everybody sees only his own dish -- Women's work -- Learning to speak -- Into town -- Zoo -- Mbrostar -- Hindupen -- Antoinette, Emilia, and Elena -- Least obedient people in the world -- Emilian of Bolintin deal -- Social problem -- Slavery -- No place to go -- Other side -- Zigeuner chips -- Devouring -- Temptation to exist.After the revolutions of 1989, the author lived and traveled with the Gypsies of Bulgaria, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, the former Yugoslavia, Romainia, and Albania -- listening to their stories and recording their attempts to become something more than despised outsiders. In this book, alongside unforgettable portraits of individuals -- the poet, the politician, the child prostitute- - are vivid insights into the wit, language, wisdom, and taboos of the Roma. The author also traces their long-ago exodus out of India and their history of relentless persecution: enslaved by the princes of medieval Romania; massacred by the Nazis in what the Roma call "the Devouring"; forcibly assimilated by the communist regime; and, most recently, evicted from their settlements by nationalistic mobs in the new "democracies" of the East, and under violent attack in the Western countries to which many have fled.
- Subjects: Romanies;
- Available copies: 5 / Total copies: 5
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- Women of the Mountain South : identity, work, and activism / by Rice, Connie Park,editor.(CARDINAL)667151; Tedesco, Marie,editor.(CARDINAL)338716;
Includes bibliographical references and index.A tapestry of voices: women's history in the Mountain South / Connie Park Rice -- Women in Cherokee society: status, race, and power from the colonial period to removal / Marie Tedesco -- Mothers' Day v. Mother's Day: the Jarvis women and the meaning of motherhood / Katharine Lane Antolini -- Female stereotypes and the creation of Appalachia, 1870 to 1940 / Deborah L. Blackwell -- Women on a mission: Southern Appalachia's "Benevolent Workers" on film / John C. Inscoe -- Embodying Appalachia: progress, pride, and beauty pageantry, 1930s to the present / Karen W. Tice -- Documents. Moravian Lebenslauf (Memoir or life's journey) -- Petition for divorce -- Women of the mountains / Rev. Edgar Tufts -- Rebel in the Mosque : going where I know I belong / Asra Q. Nomani -- An undocumented Mexican mother of a high school dropout in East Tennessee / Maria Alejandra Lopez -- Challenging the myth of separate spheres: women's work in the antebellum Mountain South / Wilma A. Dunaway -- Cyprians and courtesans, murder and mayhem: prostitution in Wheeling during the Civil War / Barbara J. Howe -- Professionalizing "Mountain Work" in Appalachia: women in the Conference of Southern Mountain Workers / Penny Messinger -- "Two fer' the Money?": African American women in the Appalachian coalfields / Carletta A. Bush -- Flopping tin and punching metal: a survey of women steelworkers in West Virginia, 1890-1970 / Louis C. Martin -- Documents. The indenture of Mary Hollens -- The testimony of Mrs. Maggie Waters -- A working woman speaks -- The Pikeville Methodist Hospital strike -- Poetry from the Coal Mining Women's Support Team News -- In the footsteps of Mother Jones, mothers of the miners: Florence Reece, Molly Jackson, and Sarah Ogan Gunning / H. Adam Ackley -- "She Now Cries Out": Linda Neville and the limitations of venereal disease control policies in Kentucky / Evelyn Ashley Sorrell -- Garrison, Drewry, Meadows, and Bateman: race, class, and activism in the mountain state / Lois Lucas -- Ethel New v. Atlantic Greyhound: fighting for social justice in Appalachia / Jan Voogd -- "Remembering the Past, Working for the Future": West Virginia women fight for environmental heritage and economic justice in the age of mountaintop removal coal mining / Joyce M. Barry -- Documents. The petition of Margaret Lee -- The fight for suffrage -- Abortion in the mountain South -- Helen Louise Gibson Compton: founder and proprietor of The Shamrock / Carol Burch-Brown -- At the intersection of cancer survivorship, gender, family, and place in Southern Central Appalachia: a case study / Kelly A. Dorgan, Kathryn L. Duvall, and Sadie P. Hutson -- Epilogue: reflections on the concept of place in the study of women in the Mountain South / a roundtable discussion with the authors.
- Subjects: Women; Women; Women.; Womyn.;
- Available copies: 3 / Total copies: 3
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- New objectivity : modern German art in the Weimar Republic, 1919-1933 / by Los Angeles County Museum of Art,publisher,organizer,host institution.(CARDINAL)137901; Bader, Graham,contributor.(CARDINAL)209594; Bahlmann, Nana,contributor.(CARDINAL)873113; Barron, Stephanie,1950-editor,contributor.(CARDINAL)154278; Bergman, Lauren,contributor.(CARDINAL)873475; Eckmann, Sabine(Sabine M.),editor,contributor.(CARDINAL)324826; Fabricius, Daniela,contributor.(CARDINAL)873173; Fuhrmeister, Christian,1963-contributor.(CARDINAL)213342; Holz, Keith,contributor.(CARDINAL)875109; Huyssen, Andreas,contributor.(CARDINAL)175145; Luke, Megan R.,1977-contributor.(CARDINAL)277085; Makela, Maria Martha,contributor.(CARDINAL)200494; Peters, Olaf,contributor.(CARDINAL)873013; Roth, Lynette,contributor.(CARDINAL)873346; Stetler, Pepper,contributor.(CARDINAL)873597; Van Dyke, James A.,contributor.(CARDINAL)875116; Witkovsky, Matthew S.,1967-contributor.(CARDINAL)282984; Fondazione Musei civici di Venezia,publisher.(CARDINAL)336733;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 342-346) and index.This beautifully illustrated book brings together a dazzling variety of works and provides fresh insight into artistic expressions of life in the Weimar Republic. Between the end of World War I and the Nazi rise to power, Germany's Weimar Republic (1919-1933) was a thriving laboratory of art and culture. As the country experienced unprecedented and often tumultuous social, economic, and political upheaval, many artists rejected Expressionism in favor of a new realism to capture this emerging society. Dubbed Neue Sachlichkeit--New Objectivity--its adherents turned a cold eye on the new Germany: its desperate prostitutes and crippled war veterans, its alienated urban landscapes, its decadent underworld where anything was available for a price. Showcasing 150 works by more than 50 artists, this book reflects the full diversity and strategies of New Objectivity. Organized around five thematic sections, it mixes photography, works on paper, and painting to bring them into a visual dialogue. Artists such as Otto Dix, George Grosz, and Max Beckmann are included alongside Christian Schad, Alexander Kanoldt, Georg Schrimpf, August Sander, Lotte Jacobi, and Aenne Biermann. Also included are essays that examine the politics of New Objectivity and its legacy; its relation to international art movements of the time; the context of gender roles and sexuality; and the influence of new technology and consumer goods.
- Subjects: Exhibition catalogs.; Art, German; Art, Modern; Neue Sachlichkeit (Art);
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- Bollywood nights / by Dé, Shobha,1948-;
Bollywood is no place for a vulnerable, small-town girl like Aasha Rani. But that doesn't stop her mother from pushing her into a world of exploitation and bedroom casting calls. Aasha has no choice but to thrive-despite the vicious circles of starlets, pimps, and celebrities who want to see her meet her end. But the day she meets Bollywood's leading man, everything she's worked so hard for is jeopardized. Because she may be falling for Akshay Arora-and there's no room for love in a business where it's the stranger under your sheets holding the key to your success. With her innocence stolen and nowhere else to turn, Aasha knows her downfall could come as quickly as her rise to fame. And letting herself love might just be the most fatal career move of her life...
- Subjects: Romance fiction.; Fiction.; Indian Americans; Street life.; Pimps; Prostitutes; Escort services; Sex; Motion picture actors and actresses; Motion picture industry; Motion picture actors and actresses; Motion picture industry; East Indians.; East Indians; East Indians; East Indian Americans; East Indian American women; East Indian Americans; Interpersonal relations; Asian Americans; Asian American authors.; Escort services.;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- Sorolla : Spanish master of light / by Finaldi, Gabriele,author.(CARDINAL)226803; Schofield, Linda,editor.(CARDINAL)785453; Sorolla, Joaquín,1863-1923.Works.Selections.(CARDINAL)789950; Barón, Javier,author.(CARDINAL)291282; Gerard Powell, Véronique,author.(CARDINAL)265634; Tostmann, Oliver,author.(CARDINAL)785452; Riopelle, Christopher,author.(CARDINAL)266460; Pons-Sorolla, Blanca,contributor.(CARDINAL)266571; National Gallery (Great Britain),issuing body,publisher,organizer,host institution.(CARDINAL)153835; National Gallery of Ireland,organizer,host institution.(CARDINAL)127251; Museo Sorolla,organizer.(CARDINAL)168939; Yale University Press,distributor.(CARDINAL)332061;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 252-253) and index."Joaquin Sorolla y Bastida (1863-1923) was the leading Spanish painter of his day, world-famous when Picasso was still struggling to establish a name. This sumptuously illustrated book traces Sorolla's career at home and abroad, focusing on more than 60 canvases. These include portraits, landscapes, the bathers and seascapes for which he is most famous, and genre scenes of Spanish life. His monumental early works established the artist's reputation as an unflinching social realist. Sending pictures strategically to major exhibitions across Europe, Sorolla depicted peasants, fishermen, and sail-makers eking out meager existences; young women forced into prostitution; and naked, disabled orphans. Rarely had Impressionist technique been turned to such provocative ends. As Sorolla found a wealthy clientèle toward the turn of the century, his focus turned to sun-drenched scenes of leisure and elegant sociability: beautiful women stroll in fashionable resorts and children gambol on the seashore. Here, leading scholars offer a contemporary assessment of his career and explore Sorolla's relations with the most famous bravura painters of the day, including John Singer Sargent and the Swedish artist Anders Zorn. An illustrated chronology by Blanca Pons Sorolla, the artist's great-granddaughter, provides additional information."--Publisher's description
- Subjects: Exhibition catalogs.; Art.; Sorolla, Joaquín, 1863-1923; Sorolla, Joaquín, 1863-1923; Sorolla, Joaquín, 1863-1923; Light in art; Impressionism (Art); Impressionism (Art); Figurative painting, Spanish; Figurative painting, Spanish; Portrait painting, Spanish; Portrait painting, Spanish; Male artists; Male artists;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- Women in classical antiquity : from birth to death / by McClure, Laura,1959-author.(CARDINAL)854100; Wiley-Blackwell (Firm),publisher.(CARDINAL)854099;
Includes bibliographical references and index.List of figures -- List of charts -- List of boxes -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- Timeline of the Classical world -- Maps -- Introduction -- 1 Approaches to women and gender in Classical antiquity -- 1.1 Ancient Greek and Roman sources --1.2 Gender in context: social identity in the Ancient world -- 1.3 Critical approaches -- 1.4 Structuralism -- 1.5 Psychoanalytic criticism -- 1.6 Feminist criticism -- 1.7 Cultural criticism -- 1.8 Conclusion -- Questions for review -- References -- Further reading -- Greece -- 2 Introduction to ancient Greece -- 2.1 Greece in the Bronze Age: Minoan and Mycenaean civilizations -- 2.2 Iron Age -- 2.3 The rise of the pois in the Archaic Period -- 2.4 Athens and the Classical Period -- 2.5 Conclusion -- Questions for review -- Reference -- Further reading -- 3 The Greek family and household -- 3.1 Oikos: family and household -- 3.2 Greek domestic space -- 3.3 Textile production: women's work -- 3.4 Growing up female in the Greek family -- 3.5 The ritual activities of girls -- 3.6 The family in ancient Sparta -- 3.7 Conclusion -- Questions for review -- Reference -- Further reading -- 4 Female adolescence in Greece -- 4.1 Medical views of female adolescence -- 4.2 Aidos: protecting purity -- 4.3 Nausicaa: a teenage girl in a heroic world -- 4.4 Choruses of young girls -- 4.5 Brides of death -- 4.6 The Greek wedding -- 4.7 Conclusion -- Questions for review -- Further reading -- 5 Greek marriage and motherhood -- 5.1 Pandora: the ambiguity of wives -- 5.2 Aphrodite: the power of female sexuality -- 5.3 Virtuous wives: Penelope and Alcestis -- 5.4 How to train a wife -- 5. The legal status of Athenian women -- 5.6 Pregnancy and childbirth -- 5.7 Mothers and children -- 5.8 Conclusion -- Questions for review -- Further reading -- 6 Adultery and prostitution in Greece -- 6.1 Eros unbound -- 6.2 Helen: archetype of adultery -- 6.3 Adultery and Athenian law -- 6.4 Desperate housewives -- 6.5 Courtesans and prostitutes -- 6.6 Conclusion -- Questions for review -- Further reading -- 7 Women, religion, and authority in Greece -- 7.1 Older women -- 7.2 Women as ritual agents -- 7.3 Priestesses -- 7.4 Women-only religious festivals -- 7.5 Women and funerary ritual -- Conclusion -- Questions for review -- Further reading -- Interlude: women in the Hellenistic world -- 8 Women in the Hellenistic world -- 8.1 The rise of Macedon and Alexander the Great -- 8.2 Olympias: mother of Alexander -- 8.3 The spread of Hellenism -- 8.4 Women and Hellenistic literature -- 8.5 Aphrodite and the female nude -- 8.6 Traces of women in Hellenistic Egypt -- 8.7 Ptolemaic queens: Arsinoe II -- 8.8 Ptolemaic queens: Berenice II -- 8.9 Conclusion -- Questions for review -- Reference -- Further reading -- Rome -- 9 An introduction to ancient Rome -- 9.1 Roman foundation myth -- 9.2 The early republic -- 9.3 Expansion of Roman rule -- 9.4 Roman spectacles -- 9.5 The collapse of the republic -- 9.6 Julius Caesar -- 9.7 The transition to empire -- 9.8 Augustus and imperial Rome -- 9.9 Conclusion -- Questions for review -- Further reading -- 10 The Roman family and household -- 10.1 Familia and domus -- 10.2 The family of Augustus -- 10.3 Roman domestic space -- 10.4 Lanificium: women's work -- 10.5 Growing up female in the Roman family -- 10.6 Girls and Roman religion -- 10.7 Educating girls -- 10.8 Conclusion -- Questions for review -- Reference -- Further reading -- 11 Female adolescence in Rome -- 11.1 Pudicitia: protecting purity -- 11.2 Medical views of female adolescence -- 11.3 Age at first marriage -- 11.4 Adolescent girls in Roman religion -- 11.5 Virgo docta -- 11.6 The Roman wedding -- 11.7 Conclusion -- Questions for review -- Further reading -- 12 Roman marriage and motherhood -- 12.1 Marriage and property -- 12.2 Divorce, Roman style -- 12.3 Cultus: the art of self-fashioning -- 12.4 Managing the household -- 12.5 Roman views of contraception and abortion -- 12.6 Childbirth and nursing -- 12.7 Mothers and children -- 12.8 Conclusion -- Questions for review -- Further reading -- 13 Adultery and female prostitution in Rome -- 12.1 Clodia Metelli: a woman of pleasure -- 12.2 Women in Latin love elegy -- 12.3 The Augustan law against adultery -- 12.4 Concubines -- 12.5 Female prostitution -- 12.6 Conclusion -- Questions for review -- Further reading -- 14 Women and public life in Rome -- 14.1 Benefactors and businesswomen -- 14.2 Female political protests -- 14.3 Women and Roman religion -- 14.4 Priestess -- 14.5 Matronal cults -- 14.6 Women and foreign cults -- 14.7 Conclusion -- Questions for review -- Further reading. -- Glossary -- Index.Focuses on the important objects, events and concepts that combine to form a clear understanding of ancient Greek and Roman women and gender. Drawing on the most recent findings and research on the topic, the book offers an overview of the historical events, values, and institutions that are critical for appreciating and comparing the life situations of women across both cultures. The author examines the life cycle of women in ancient Greek and Rome beginning with how young females acquired the gendered characteristics necessary for adulthood. The text explores female adolescence, including concerns about virginity, medical views of the female body, religious roles, and education. Views of marriage, motherhood, sexual activity, adultery, and prostitution are also examined. In addition, the author explores how women exercised authority and the possibilities for their civic engagement.
- Subjects: Women; Women; Women.; Womyn.;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- Becoming Elizabeth Arden : the woman behind the global beauty empire / by Cordery, Stacy A.,author.(CARDINAL)460453;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 401-479) and index.Beginnings -- The beauty culturalist -- Changing the face of America -- Building a national beauty brand -- The new woman and the Arden look -- An empire of health -- The beauty of friendship -- Fashioning the American woman -- Exercising modern perfection -- Inventing color harmony -- More beginnings, and endings -- Maine chances -- Business savvy during hard times -- Marketing value -- New directions -- War begins in Europe -- Beauty and morale -- "For beauty on duty" -- The end of World War II -- The horsewoman -- "Meauty is power" -- Maine chance Phoenix -- Maine chance mania -- Rounding out the Fifties -- The not-yet-swinging Sixties.Elizabeth Arden was a household name on six continents and a millionaire several times over before her death in 1966. Arden counted British royalty and social elites from the overlapping worlds of New York, Hollywood, London, and Paris among her clients. She revolutionized skin care and cosmetics, making it acceptable for all women to embrace glamour and wear makeup-not just actresses and prostitutes. She created a successful international business empire before women gained the vote and at a time when virtually no woman owned or ran a national company. She developed the first luxury spa and insisted on a holistic understanding of health and beauty. Unconventional and driven, Arden fervently believed that every woman could be beautiful. Acclaimed biographer Stacy Cordery does full justice to one of America's greatest entrepreneurs. Canadian-born Florence Nightingale Graham turned herself into Elizabeth Arden, using her uncanny sense of the possible to take full advantage of everything New York City offered, building her company and becoming one with her brand. In an astounding rags-to-riches tale, Elizabeth Arden came to personify sophistication and refinement. Her hard work and innovation made makeup, fitness, and style not only acceptable but de rigueur. Arden prospered throughout the Depression, reimagined women's needs during two World Wars, and by pioneering new approaches to marketing and advertising, ushered beauty into the modern era. Cordery delivers a compelling picture of a modern CEO whose career provides a model for aspiring businesses to this day.--
- Subjects: Biographies.; Arden, Elizabeth, 1878-1966.; Businesswomen; Cosmetics industry;
- Available copies: 10 / Total copies: 11
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Results 31 to 40 of 49 | « previous | next »