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James GilbertRezensionen

Autor von The Great Planes

29+ Werke 440 Mitglieder 6 Rezensionen

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Saint-Exupery, Rickenbacker, Richthofen, Fokker & DeHavilland, Harald Penrose and Bert Stiles, Charles Lindbergh, Ernest Gann, Richard Bach, Scott Crossfield, and Michael Collins, neville Shute, Francis Chichester, W.H. Auden
 
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MasseyLibrary | Feb 13, 2024 |
In "The Flier's World," James Gilbert shares his vast knowledge and experience with aircrafts and flying. Topics include aviation history, theory of flight, weather, navigation, and instruments, aerobatics, travel, racing, military airmen, home-built airplanes, and multiengine planes. Heavily illustrated with colorful photographs, some of which were taken by Gilbert himself.
 
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MasseyLibrary | Feb 5, 2024 |
480 Mediterranean Diet Air Fryer Cookbook: Healthy Affordable Tasty Air Fried Recipes for Your Successful Mediterranean Diet, Save Cooking Time and Eat Less Oil, Everyone Should Try These Recipes by James Gilbert
This book starts out with table of contents were recipes are broken up into meals and food categories.
Introduction has a lot to it, about your new air fryer and what it will do for you.
History of the Mediterranean meals and the changes your body will experience if you use foods in this book.
Each recipe starts with a title, cook time, servings.
List of ingredients is included and you should be able to substitute for your healthier dietary needs: low far, low sugar, low sodium and fresh vs. canned items.
Directions are given and there are NO pictures.
Some nutritional information per serving includes calories, total fat - NOT broken up into good or bad, carbs and protein.
Recipes do NOT always start at the top of a new page.
There are some great recipes using cranberries that I want to try.
Conversion tables are listed at the end. Guide to common air fryer cooking times.
 
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jbarr5 | Sep 18, 2020 |
pilot's choice of the most significant, and best-flying aircraft in the history of aviation. air-to-air color photography by the author: Wright, Bleriot, Fokker, Sopwith, SPAD, Jenny, Ryan, Vega, Ford Tri-Motor, Moth, Waco, Jungmeister, Cub, DC-3, Beech Staggerwing, Me-109, Spitfire, Mustang, B-17 Flying Fortress, Grumman, Yak, Zlin, Frati, F-86, Lear, and 707.
 
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MasseyLibrary | Apr 12, 2018 |
Peter J. Kuznick and James Gilbert, “U.S. Culture and the Cold War,” in Rethinking Cold War Culture, ed. Peter J. Kuznick and James Gilbert (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2001), 1-13.
Kuznick and Gilbert write, “Broadly speaking there is very little fundamentally new about American culture in the Cold War era. Most of the characteristics by which we define it are the results of long-term social trends and political habits of mind, revived and refurbished from the past” (pg. 2). Despite this, Kuznick and Gilbert identify four elements unique to this era that transformed American politics and culture: “threat of nuclear annihilation, replacement of direct military confrontation with surrogate and covert warfare, opposition to an enemy officially espousing socialism and supporting Third World revolution, and the rise of the military-industrial complex” (pg. 2). Discussing issues of gender, Kuznick and Gilbert write, “The history of sexuality in postwar America is thus the story of increasing liberalization, first within and then outside of marriage” (pg. 5). They conclude, “Despite the weight of advice, opinion, and propaganda, women continued (after a short recess immediately after 1945) to enter the work force in larger and larger numbers. Women’s changing socioeconomic position burst into public view in the early 1960s when feminists denounced the suburban housewife lifestyle that kept women dependent, undereducated, underemployed, and largely underfulfilled” (pg. 9).

William M. Tuttle, Jr., “America’s Children in an Era of War, Hot and Cold: The Holocaust, the Bomb, and Child Rearing in the 1940s,” in Rethinking Cold War Culture, ed. Peter J. Kuznick and James Gilbert (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2001), 14-34.
Tuttle links children’s understanding of the Cold War to earlier patterns during World War II. He writes of previous historians’ work, “Too often historians have overlooked the continuities that distinguished the decade of the 1940s, at least in children’s lives. Between 1941 and 1945 the specter of death and destruction haunted millions of American girls and boys, and the way in which the war ended only exacerbated children’s fears and insured that the specter would persist into peacetime” (pg. 14). He grounds himself in this historiography, though, writing, “We have learned a great deal about the culture of the atomic age from historians, particularly Paul Boyer, Spencer R. Weart, Allan M. Winkler, and Margot A. Henriksen” (pg. 21). Tuttle discusses continuities in the forms of children’s’ media, writing, “Another point of continuity in the 1940s was children’s popular culture, including radio, comic books, and particularly the movies, which changed little after the war” (pg. 17). Even these media were gendered, however. Tuttle writes, “Without regard to gender, film images of war filled the minds of American children in the 1940s. Yet the messages in these movies, as well as those conveyed in the radio shows, comic books, and war games, were gender-specific; the men fought the war, the women waited” (pg. 20).

Joanne Meyerowitz, “Sex, Gender, and the Cold War Language of Reform,” in Rethinking Cold War Culture, ed. Peter J. Kuznick and James Gilbert (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2001), 106-123.
Discussing the historiography of gender and the Cold War, Meyerowitz writes, “I do not attempt to sever the historiography links between Cold War policy and domestic ideology; rather, I hope to complicate and multiply them. While in many cases Cold War thought did indeed reinforce traditional gender roles and the heterosexual marital norm, in other notable cases it also seemed to subvert them” (pg. 106-107). Reformers worked new opportunities for women into Cold War rhetoric. Meyerowitz writes, “In the 1950s, both the Commission on the Education of Women, sponsored by the American Council on Education, and the National Manpower Council, funded by the Ford Foundation, promoted education and employment for women by using Cold War arguments about the nation’s security needs” (pg. 112). Gay and lesbian Americans also tied their identities to a democratic ideal in the ideological battle against communism. According to Meyerowitz, “In this line of argument, the rights of homosexuals belonged within the broader battle for the kinds of individual rights allegedly protected in America and denied under communism” (pg. 114).

Jane Sherron De Hart, “Containment at Home: Gender, Sexuality, and National Identity in Cold War America,” in Rethinking Cold War Culture, ed. Peter J. Kuznick and James Gilbert (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2001), 124-155.
De Hart works to complicate Elaine Tyler May’s work. She writes, “May’s use of containment as a metaphor for Cold War gender and sexual politics is not without problems, for reasons we will explore. Yet the repression that she identified was real and has been underscored by scholarship on the gay and lesbian experience during the long fifties” (pg. 125). To this end, “the binary opposites of containment and liberation, even if used sequentially, seem much too simple to capture the complex realities of gender and sexuality over nearly half a century” (pg. 127). She points out that May’s study primarily focuses on middle class white women and modern studies extend analysis to include the working class, blacks, and Hispanics (pg. 130). According to De Hart, those who challenged the norm used maternalist language as to do otherwise would invite criticism from those who equated dissent with communism (pg. 132). Despite this, Hart writes, “Some of these modern practitioners of maternalism were prepared to admit privately that motherhood and family were not the only basis for their political involvement: egalitarian considerations also played a part” (pg. 132). Describing the pushback against activists, De Hart writes, “The framework of significance structuring social conservatives’ beliefs reveal that for many opposing feminism – of which the [equal rights] amendment was a symbol – certitude about the role of sex in shaping personal identity, private obligation, family life, and social responsibility was essentially a religion conviction…Gender, in other words, was sacred” (pg. 138).
 
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DarthDeverell | Apr 2, 2017 |
An unexpectedly witty look at 75 years of Really Bad Ideas from the world of aviation: bombers to big to get off the ground, rocket planes that exploded on landing, planes for amateur pilots that even the pros could barely control, and so on. Gilbert's recountings of aerial catastrophe and near-catastrophe are extremely funny, but the mood is never just point-and-laugh . . . you could actually learn something in between fits of laughter.

About 1/3 of the aircraft in this book overlap with those covered by Bill Yenne in his large-format book of the same name. Aviation buffs with a perverse sense of humor will enjoy both.
 
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ABVR | Dec 8, 2005 |
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