63
63
Mar 14, 2020
03/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 63
favorite 0
quote 0
and welcome to the yale bookstore. we are very pleased to have with us this evening doctor jennifer hirsch who is a professor of socio- medical science at columbia university who will be reading from and discussing her new book, sexual citizens, landmarks. >> you start to feel distressed by what i'm sharing obviously it's fine to get up and take a break. the national sexual assault hotline is 18656 hope. it's 180-0656 hope. austin was a sweet student, the story of boston's hot summer night had sex with his girlfriend is the sexy story in the book. that's not the story i'm going to tell, sorry. but he was a good guy, he was the kind had developed a series of nicknames for the kind of orgasms his girlfriend had. he was committed to making sure that sex is something that felt good for her, too. but austin also sexually assaulted someone. he told us a story about a night freshman year he was in a room with his roommates girlfriends roommate. a roommate and his girlfriend, two people get shoveled into the same bedroom toget
and welcome to the yale bookstore. we are very pleased to have with us this evening doctor jennifer hirsch who is a professor of socio- medical science at columbia university who will be reading from and discussing her new book, sexual citizens, landmarks. >> you start to feel distressed by what i'm sharing obviously it's fine to get up and take a break. the national sexual assault hotline is 18656 hope. it's 180-0656 hope. austin was a sweet student, the story of boston's hot summer...
58
58
Oct 23, 2017
10/17
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 58
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> welcome to the yale bookstore. tonight one of our ongoing author event series and in conjunction with the law library we are pleased to have with us oona hathaway and scott shapiro, the authors of "the internationalists." a look at provocative history of the main who fought to outlaw war and how an often overlooked treaty signed in 1928 was among the most transformative events in modern history. oona hathaway is a professor of international law and counselor to the dean at the jail law school. she is professor of international law in area studies at the yale university mcmillan center. in 2014-15 she took leave to serve as special counsel to the general counsel for national security law at the u.s. department of defense where she was awarded the office of the secretary of defense award for excellence. professor halfwit earned his ba at harvard in 1994 and her j. d. at yale law school. she served as a law clerk for justice sandra day o'connor and for d.c. circuit judge patricia law. she has published more than 25 la
. >> welcome to the yale bookstore. tonight one of our ongoing author event series and in conjunction with the law library we are pleased to have with us oona hathaway and scott shapiro, the authors of "the internationalists." a look at provocative history of the main who fought to outlaw war and how an often overlooked treaty signed in 1928 was among the most transformative events in modern history. oona hathaway is a professor of international law and counselor to the dean at...
38
38
Jan 19, 2020
01/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 38
favorite 0
quote 0
harry cohen from bookstore, yale bookstore. thanks for coming out tonight. [applause] >> booktv continues now on c-span2, television for serious readers. >> been a remarkable year for books that have been tackling the uses and especially abuses of this country's criminal justice system. we in politics & prose have been honored to host authors and poets behind many of them from martha, to reginald betts. the first event we hosted this year at this location at the wharf was for alexandria, investigation of the misdemeanor system. punishment without crime. this is
harry cohen from bookstore, yale bookstore. thanks for coming out tonight. [applause] >> booktv continues now on c-span2, television for serious readers. >> been a remarkable year for books that have been tackling the uses and especially abuses of this country's criminal justice system. we in politics & prose have been honored to host authors and poets behind many of them from martha, to reginald betts. the first event we hosted this year at this location at the wharf was for...
31
31
Jan 19, 2020
01/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 0
harry cohen from bookstore, yale bookstore. thanks for coming out tonight. [applause] >> booktv continues now on c-span2, television for serious readers. >> been a remarkable year for books that have been tackling the uses and especially abuses of this country's criminal justice system. we in politics & prose have been honored to host authors and poets behind many of them from martha, to reginald betts. the first event we hosted this year at this location at the wharf was for alexandria, investigation of the misdemeanor system. punishment without crime. this is pleasure we're closing this events's season at wharf, look the way the legal world unfairly treats country's disenfranchised he targets his own profession at public defender. the book titled, usual cruelty. comes from alec karakatanis, an organization designed to advocate for racial justice and bring systemic civil rights cases on behalf of impoverished people. especially known for combating unconstitutionality of money bail. karakatanis was named 2016 trial lawyer of the year by public justice. was a
harry cohen from bookstore, yale bookstore. thanks for coming out tonight. [applause] >> booktv continues now on c-span2, television for serious readers. >> been a remarkable year for books that have been tackling the uses and especially abuses of this country's criminal justice system. we in politics & prose have been honored to host authors and poets behind many of them from martha, to reginald betts. the first event we hosted this year at this location at the wharf was for...
80
80
Mar 5, 2018
03/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 80
favorite 0
quote 0
my first book was for yale university on dean acheson on the bookstore until a really nice home party for me in the new york penthouse. again condemn my first book and lo and behold with walter cronkite in line. a guy watched in ohio has come into my book signing and i can't deny them so they came up and when he got up to me, that was a wonderful time we had sailing together. i was david's son. you're always put in that position to correct them a little. >> i was onstage recently with a very prominent person interviewing them and they kept asking me, as you wrote about graham, your hamilton's point. [laughter] i like my rock music. >> how many of you have had somebody that airport and commenced or some other person. i used to be somebody who nobody pays attention to. i got such great treatment. nobody really cared when the show went off the air. >> baker ran for attorney general of texas in 1978. the only time he was on a battle and lost. he ran out to the ranch that friday to his wounds. filling up his truck with gas at all by walks up to them and says that anybody ever tell you you
my first book was for yale university on dean acheson on the bookstore until a really nice home party for me in the new york penthouse. again condemn my first book and lo and behold with walter cronkite in line. a guy watched in ohio has come into my book signing and i can't deny them so they came up and when he got up to me, that was a wonderful time we had sailing together. i was david's son. you're always put in that position to correct them a little. >> i was onstage recently with a...
66
66
Apr 13, 2017
04/17
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 66
favorite 0
quote 0
in 1957 the obscenity, the arrest of the manager of city lights bookstore for selling obscene poems. and ginsberg yale a huge influence on me in college. the same thing. lenny bruce. he is the person who transforms the medium of comedy, stand-up comedy from merely gags to very satiric but meaningful style of analysis of such a problem. lenny bruce is the one who made comedy politically and socially relevant. lenny bruce was an equal opportunity offender. and the first thinker really who had enormous impact on the in adolescence was oscar wilde. by chance in a secondhand bookstore in syracuse upstate new york, i stumbled on a copy of a book, it was a british book for the epigrams of oscar wilde. ashley is still available from the dover additions that are presumably that no one in the us would recognize the word epigrams peers another cloth he rigid humor of oscar wilde. but it is all of his or many of his wonderful one-liners from his plays, his writings and dinnertable conversation in london. organized by topic. some nature, manage women etc. his scathing uncompromising quality of his thinking was a h
in 1957 the obscenity, the arrest of the manager of city lights bookstore for selling obscene poems. and ginsberg yale a huge influence on me in college. the same thing. lenny bruce. he is the person who transforms the medium of comedy, stand-up comedy from merely gags to very satiric but meaningful style of analysis of such a problem. lenny bruce is the one who made comedy politically and socially relevant. lenny bruce was an equal opportunity offender. and the first thinker really who had...
56
56
Feb 3, 2018
02/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 56
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> i'm not lying my first book was through yale university of press on dean acheson and someone i knew owned a bookstorethey threw a nice party for me in their new york penthouse. i was a young kid in my first book sitting at the desk of my signing pen on dean acheson and lo and behold in a tuxedo was walter cronkite in line. i thought wow the guy watched in ohio is coming to my book signing on dean acheson. i kept an eye on him and i was talking to other people. when he got up to me he said that was a wonderful time we had sailing together. [laughter] he thought i was david's son. you are in that position to say well you know. i corrected him and i watched them slink out. >> a whole category on this i was on stage with a varied prominent person interviewing him and he kept asking me, as you wrote about your hamilton point. you think i am -- how did you handle that? >> something like this happens. how many of you have had someone walk up to an airport and they are convinced you are some other person? i used to be someone -- phil donahue. i got such great treatment. the show went off the air but i got go
. >> i'm not lying my first book was through yale university of press on dean acheson and someone i knew owned a bookstorethey threw a nice party for me in their new york penthouse. i was a young kid in my first book sitting at the desk of my signing pen on dean acheson and lo and behold in a tuxedo was walter cronkite in line. i thought wow the guy watched in ohio is coming to my book signing on dean acheson. i kept an eye on him and i was talking to other people. when he got up to me he...
96
96
Nov 17, 2018
11/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 96
favorite 0
quote 0
bookstore. and i'm pleased to introduce william nelson cromwell at yale university. talked for over 30 years and served as a law clerk for thurgood marshall, received eight honorary degrees delivering the web du bois lecture. he is an author of 15 books of nonfiction and fiction which includes violence abuse, confirmation mess, new england and emperor of ocean park. and the bestseller list. he is here to present his new book invisible, the forgotten story of the black woman lawyer who took down america's most powerful mobster. it is brimming with intellect and grit and new york times best-selling author walter isaacson, praises it as a riveting and moving story with enormous residence. and we are pleased to have his other with us tonight. please join me in welcoming stephen carter. >> thank you for that reduction and thanks for coming out. last time i was supposed to be here there was an illness in the family, couldn't make it in the bookstore said we will reschedule and 3 years later, it is a pleasure, you know me much better for my fiction. this is a book that had
bookstore. and i'm pleased to introduce william nelson cromwell at yale university. talked for over 30 years and served as a law clerk for thurgood marshall, received eight honorary degrees delivering the web du bois lecture. he is an author of 15 books of nonfiction and fiction which includes violence abuse, confirmation mess, new england and emperor of ocean park. and the bestseller list. he is here to present his new book invisible, the forgotten story of the black woman lawyer who took down...
36
36
May 28, 2020
05/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 36
favorite 0
quote 0
bookstore. >>> welcome to this virtual event about how the south won the civil war i am a professor of history and studies that yale university and this afternoon i have the pleasure of being in conversation
bookstore. >>> welcome to this virtual event about how the south won the civil war i am a professor of history and studies that yale university and this afternoon i have the pleasure of being in conversation
97
97
Jan 22, 2019
01/19
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 97
favorite 0
quote 0
bookstore. thank you. a quick reminder turn off your cell phones before the talk i pleased to introduce tonight speaker professor of law at yale university where he has taught for over 30 years serving as a law clerk for thurgood marshall, eight honorary degrees and delivered w e-b to boys lecture at harvard. the author of 15 books of nonfiction which include the confirmation and the emperor of ocean park spending 11 weeks on "the new york times" bestseller list. tonight he is here to present his new book invisible the forgotten story of the black woman lawyer who took down the most powerful mobster remarking it is brimming with intellect and grit and "new york times" best-selling author walter isaacson praises it as a moving story with enormous residence for our own time. we are so pleased to have the author here with us tonight please join me to welcome stephen carter. [applause] . >> thank you for that kind introduction. also the harvard bookstore for inviting me. the last time i was supposed to be here i canceled because there was an illness in the family and i could not make it. they said don't worry we will reschedule. n
bookstore. thank you. a quick reminder turn off your cell phones before the talk i pleased to introduce tonight speaker professor of law at yale university where he has taught for over 30 years serving as a law clerk for thurgood marshall, eight honorary degrees and delivered w e-b to boys lecture at harvard. the author of 15 books of nonfiction which include the confirmation and the emperor of ocean park spending 11 weeks on "the new york times" bestseller list. tonight he is here to...
55
55
Nov 5, 2018
11/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 55
favorite 0
quote 0
bookstore think you and now please silence your cell phones. and i'm pleased to introduce tonight speaker professor of law at yale university where he has taught for over 30 years serving as a law clerk for justice marshall has eight honorary degrees the author of 15 books of nonfiction and fiction and a novel that was 11 weeks on "the new york times" bestseller list. today he is here to present his new book invisible of a black woman lawyer and with intellect and grit and "the new york times" best-selling author is a riveting story one with enormous residence we are so pleased to have the author here with us tonight so please join me to welcome stephen carter. [applause] . >> thank you for that kind introduction. and also to the harvard bookstore inviting me back the last time i was supposed to be here i canceled at the last minute with my family and they said don't worry we will reschedule and now three years later i am here. [laughter] it is a pleasure maybe you know, me better for my fiction but this was a book rolling around in my head for a long time. so in a sense talking backward. so with that historical moment that gave rise to it so
bookstore think you and now please silence your cell phones. and i'm pleased to introduce tonight speaker professor of law at yale university where he has taught for over 30 years serving as a law clerk for justice marshall has eight honorary degrees the author of 15 books of nonfiction and fiction and a novel that was 11 weeks on "the new york times" bestseller list. today he is here to present his new book invisible of a black woman lawyer and with intellect and grit and "the...
54
54
Oct 30, 2016
10/16
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 54
favorite 0
quote 0
in dreaming in french, yale university professor examines the influence they had on women's rights. another pic from iowa city's prairie life bookstores consumed in which political theorists argues that capitalism has gone awry and in overproducing global economy. military historian max hasting provides a history of world war i in catastrophe 1914. in spies and commissars, they profile some of the major players in the early days of the russian revolution. former british ambassador recalls the soviet war enough afghanistan. some of the staff picks from. life bookstore in i was city iowa. many of these authors have
in dreaming in french, yale university professor examines the influence they had on women's rights. another pic from iowa city's prairie life bookstores consumed in which political theorists argues that capitalism has gone awry and in overproducing global economy. military historian max hasting provides a history of world war i in catastrophe 1914. in spies and commissars, they profile some of the major players in the early days of the russian revolution. former british ambassador recalls the...
176
176
Oct 30, 2016
10/16
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 176
favorite 0
quote 0
in dreaming in french, yale university professor examines the influence they had on women's rights. another pic from iowa city's prairie life bookstore is consumed in which political theorists argues that capitalism has gone awry and in overproducing global economy. military historian max hasting provides a history of world war i in catastrophe 1914. in spies and commissars, they profile some of the major players in the early days of the russian revolution. former british ambassador recalls the soviet war enough afghanistan. some of the staff picks from. life bookstore in i was city iowa. many of these authors have appeared on book tv. you can watch them on our website, booktv.org. >> good evening. welcome to the richard nixon presidential library. just a few announcements before we introduce our special guest. please join us for the reopening of the new nixon library on october 15 and 16th. it will be spectacular. the exhibits will be a must see. they tell president nixon story in a new and exciting way. it will be an unforgiving experience for all visitors. please check that out. now to our distinguished speaker , president richard
in dreaming in french, yale university professor examines the influence they had on women's rights. another pic from iowa city's prairie life bookstore is consumed in which political theorists argues that capitalism has gone awry and in overproducing global economy. military historian max hasting provides a history of world war i in catastrophe 1914. in spies and commissars, they profile some of the major players in the early days of the russian revolution. former british ambassador recalls the...
42
42
Feb 18, 2018
02/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 42
favorite 0
quote 0
yale law school professor examines how parties impact our political system in political tribes. look for these titles in bookstores this weekend watch for many of the authors in the near future on booktv on c-span2. >> bernie and his supporters, i wanted them to be a part of what was going to happen. hillary won the primary fair and square. she had 4 million more votes than bernie, did not set the primary in florida or alabama or louisiana. she had more pledged delegates and unpledged delegates. tim kane called for the elimination of unpledged delegates. we need to have this conversation if not now, when. what forms would you like to see at the dnc? the unity commission will pick on a lot of electoral firms, pledged versus unpledged delegates, looking at the window, what states in new hampshire, once upon a time they hit here because it is earlier. i am the same donna. internally party is doing a great job reforming the party, we had so many great victories across the country. let's be honest. paula jean was absolutely right. i love you, florida. i love your elect oral votes but no reason why from florida all the
yale law school professor examines how parties impact our political system in political tribes. look for these titles in bookstores this weekend watch for many of the authors in the near future on booktv on c-span2. >> bernie and his supporters, i wanted them to be a part of what was going to happen. hillary won the primary fair and square. she had 4 million more votes than bernie, did not set the primary in florida or alabama or louisiana. she had more pledged delegates and unpledged...
40
40
Jul 25, 2016
07/16
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 40
favorite 0
quote 0
yale university. please welcome walter shapiro. [applause]. >> while. first first of all, i really want to thank politics and prose which is one of the world's great bookstores. i love independent bookstores. independent bookstores. i particularly love that politics imposes driving. now looking around i don't how many many of you are old enough to remember, the old, old 1950s tv tv show, this is your life. clapmac, will that is a little bit how i feel looking around the room is seen so many old friends. so let me start off by, this book really starts with my father. my father died in 2004 and he and he was a connecticut city planner. a mild-mannered city planner. in suburban connecticut who went to the zoning board meetings in the evening. were talking about a racy upbringing i had. but my father kept talking about his uncle, his uncle freeman. my grandmother's older brother and he kept saying he was a really big and vaudeville, he knew people like sophie tucker, he married a showgirl and ultimately he cheated hitler on a nickel deal. wait a second. we are in a suburban connecticut living room, this makes no sense. it was like my father taking me my father t
yale university. please welcome walter shapiro. [applause]. >> while. first first of all, i really want to thank politics and prose which is one of the world's great bookstores. i love independent bookstores. independent bookstores. i particularly love that politics imposes driving. now looking around i don't how many many of you are old enough to remember, the old, old 1950s tv tv show, this is your life. clapmac, will that is a little bit how i feel looking around the room is seen so...
83
83
Feb 19, 2018
02/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 83
favorite 0
quote 0
yale law school professor examines how parties impact our political system in political tribes. >> look for these titles in bookstores this coming week and watch for many of the authors in the near future on booktv on c-span2. >> i want bernie and his supporters, because i wanted them to be a part of what was going to happen. hillary won the primaries there and square. she had 4 million more votes than bernie. she gha did not set the primaryd in florida or alabama my beloved louisiana. she also had more pledged delegates and more unpledged delegates. i don't know if you read that tim kaine call for the elimination of unpledgeds. delegates. we need to have these debates within the party. we need to have this conversation. if not now, when? what are someav of the specific reforms you like to see at the dnc? >> they unity commission is going to pick on a lot of those so-called electoral confirms, that plagues versus unpledged delegates. they are also going to take a look at the window, what states go before i was in new hampshire. once upon a time oc people in florida, we penalize you for going early. >> 2008. >> i just
yale law school professor examines how parties impact our political system in political tribes. >> look for these titles in bookstores this coming week and watch for many of the authors in the near future on booktv on c-span2. >> i want bernie and his supporters, because i wanted them to be a part of what was going to happen. hillary won the primaries there and square. she had 4 million more votes than bernie. she gha did not set the primaryd in florida or alabama my beloved...
57
57
Jun 19, 2022
06/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 57
favorite 0
quote 0
it was no use trying to rush this when yale university pressed rightly wanted to get copies of this at the front of of you know, barnes and noble bookstores and that was impossible so we held on and that gave me the chance to go back to the manuscript and go through its sentence by sentence and try to trim it down. it's a very large narrative in any case and to try to get official sufficient and wonderful number of statistical. tables and data and the maps by mapmaker down in maryland mr. wilson all put into this complicated book. i was trying to do if you like. what historians might call a broad delian approach to the naval history of the second world war brodell and his magnificent books on the mediterranean in the age of philip ii said there was an underlying or basic level of causation geography the climate and everything else. there was a middle level of technical technical and technological trading change which affected things. and there's a top level the history of events lee strava anymore, which was that of you know battle of lepanto or the spanish armada. could you try and do broad dell in the mid 20th century? i was going to ha
it was no use trying to rush this when yale university pressed rightly wanted to get copies of this at the front of of you know, barnes and noble bookstores and that was impossible so we held on and that gave me the chance to go back to the manuscript and go through its sentence by sentence and try to trim it down. it's a very large narrative in any case and to try to get official sufficient and wonderful number of statistical. tables and data and the maps by mapmaker down in maryland mr....
386
386
Dec 5, 2011
12/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 386
favorite 0
quote 0
guest: yeah, it started when i was traveling to massachusetts, and i stopped by a use bookstore, and i came across the yale class of 194250 year reunion book, and a lot of members of the class of 1942 wrote stories of what they had done since they graduated 50 years before. some were fascinating as people went through amazing things they did. a couple were boring. a guy, you know, took a guy at a law firm, stayed at that law firm his whole life and said it's boring, but too late to change it now. i became fascinated with the people looking back, so i wrote a column about the book and asked my readers saying if you're over 70 send me grades about how good or bad you did and what can we learn? we got several thousands essays, some were a page or 25 page, and they make for addictive reading. if you go to my blog on the new york times, there's a number of them online so you can read them yourselves. they were addicting. there's one up there on the web page by a guy named neil who, you know, he just gave himself an f saying i didn't lead the life i should have, and i know how to do it now, but i wish i had know
guest: yeah, it started when i was traveling to massachusetts, and i stopped by a use bookstore, and i came across the yale class of 194250 year reunion book, and a lot of members of the class of 1942 wrote stories of what they had done since they graduated 50 years before. some were fascinating as people went through amazing things they did. a couple were boring. a guy, you know, took a guy at a law firm, stayed at that law firm his whole life and said it's boring, but too late to change it...
17
17
Feb 21, 2023
02/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 17
favorite 0
quote 0
bookstore, is one for all by lily lane. it's a white novel about a character with pots who and it's written by a fencer who fence with yale who has pots. my last shout out be for a nonfiction recommendation which alice wang's year of the tiger, which came out this september it's a memoir by alice wong, who edited the disability visibility. she's a very dear friend and her words really matter. and i think it's a book that everybody should read. okay, awesome. and what are you reading right now, if i may ask? i am currently reading babble by r.f. crank. yeah, how are you liking that? i love it, but i went to oxford for a book, so very academic. yeah, great. well, i think we have some time for a question. the audience, we do have a microphone for folks, since this is being recorded. so who has a question for for elsa, uh, about. yeah. so the book's about for a little bit now and i'm curious if there are any reactions to it that surprised you or any that, you know, you were more excited by. i had someone walk up to me in a bar about six months ago, sobbing and hugging my book like a teddy bear. and she said that it was like someb
bookstore, is one for all by lily lane. it's a white novel about a character with pots who and it's written by a fencer who fence with yale who has pots. my last shout out be for a nonfiction recommendation which alice wang's year of the tiger, which came out this september it's a memoir by alice wong, who edited the disability visibility. she's a very dear friend and her words really matter. and i think it's a book that everybody should read. okay, awesome. and what are you reading right now,...
405
405
Dec 4, 2011
12/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 405
favorite 0
quote 0
traveling to massachusetts on my way to new hampshire for a thing, and i stopped by a used bookstore, and i came across the yaleclass of '42 50-year, um, reunion book. and so a lot of members of the class of 1942 yale had written 50 stories of what they'd done since they graduated 50 years before. and some of the stories were fascinating as people would go through amazing things they'd done. a couple were boring. a guy, you know, took a job with a law firm or something, stayed at that law firm his whole life and said, you know, this is kind of boring, but it's too late to change it now. so i became fascinated with these people looking back. so i wrote a column, and i asked my readers. i said, if you're over 70, send me something appraising your own life, send me some grades, what can we learn? and we got several thousand essays were sent in. some of them were a page, some of them were 25 pages, and they make for addictive reading. i've put a number of them online so you can read them directly yourselves. so reading them was addictive. some people, i have one up there on my web page now by a guy named neil who,
traveling to massachusetts on my way to new hampshire for a thing, and i stopped by a used bookstore, and i came across the yaleclass of '42 50-year, um, reunion book. and so a lot of members of the class of 1942 yale had written 50 stories of what they'd done since they graduated 50 years before. and some of the stories were fascinating as people would go through amazing things they'd done. a couple were boring. a guy, you know, took a job with a law firm or something, stayed at that law firm...
86
86
May 2, 2018
05/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 86
favorite 0
quote 0
bookstore at all the staff thank you very much for coming. we are very excited to have amy with us thisnk evening. walt professor at yale who's written and spoken extensively on matters of culture and identity. her new book political tribe addresses the theme that has become topical these days but has little interest in compromising or even try to get along. one of the founding notions was a democratic system in which the differences of race, ethnicity, religion and so on would be taken up in a shared identity but these days messages that appealed toh the shared values seen repeatedly trumped by messages intended to exploit narrow group identity. she argues those in the international affairs and our domestic dealings, americans have fallen prey to tribalism as we've often been blind to it and we have a debilitating tendency to revert to its. a number of positive reviews, one of the "washington post" insightful, disquieting, hopeful because they are trying to break out of their political tribes. whether the amount of a definite seismic trend is debatable, but at least they are encouraging and psychological research shows
bookstore at all the staff thank you very much for coming. we are very excited to have amy with us thisnk evening. walt professor at yale who's written and spoken extensively on matters of culture and identity. her new book political tribe addresses the theme that has become topical these days but has little interest in compromising or even try to get along. one of the founding notions was a democratic system in which the differences of race, ethnicity, religion and so on would be taken up in a...
71
71
Feb 17, 2018
02/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
yale law school professor examines how parties impact our political system in political tribes. look for these titles in bookstores this weekend watch for many of the authors in the near future on booktv on c-span2. >> bernie and his supporters, i wanted them to be a part of what was going to happen. hillary won the primary fair and square. she had 4 million more votes than bernie, did not set the primary in florida or alabama or louisiana. she had more pledged delegates and unpledged delegates. tim kane called for the elimination of unpledged delegates. we need to have this conversation if not now, when. what forms would you like to see at the dnc? the unity commission will pick on a lot of electoral firms, pledged versus unpledged delegates, looking at the window, what states in new hampshire, once upon a time they hit here because it is earlier. i am the same donna. internally party is doing a great job reforming the party, we had so many great victories across the country. let's be honest. paula jean was absolutely right. i love you, florida. i love your elect oral votes but no reason why from florida all the
yale law school professor examines how parties impact our political system in political tribes. look for these titles in bookstores this weekend watch for many of the authors in the near future on booktv on c-span2. >> bernie and his supporters, i wanted them to be a part of what was going to happen. hillary won the primary fair and square. she had 4 million more votes than bernie, did not set the primary in florida or alabama or louisiana. she had more pledged delegates and unpledged...
191
191
Aug 15, 2009
08/09
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 191
favorite 0
quote 0
bookstore in waco texas. >> to see more reading lists and ruben information visit our web site at booktv.org. bookexpo america and new york city, 20 or nine at yale university press with the director of yale university press. mr. donotich what is coming out this fall? >> and number of great books starting with the making of americans by e.d. hirsch who wrote a best-selling book called cultural literacy and he cares very much about what role education has and actually defining what it is to be american, and this book is sort of fighting a capstone of his career which has included many best sellers and decades of activism and education to talk about the centrality of information and knowledge and what it means to have a shared corpus of knowledge and how important it is to the national identity and how it is being threatened by the way education seems to be splintered across the country so it is a book that has a lot of argument and efficacy and ways to look forward to what the new administration can do about education. >> the other but you have brad shaw elephants on the edge, what relevance teach about humanity. >> yeah, this is a marvelous book.
bookstore in waco texas. >> to see more reading lists and ruben information visit our web site at booktv.org. bookexpo america and new york city, 20 or nine at yale university press with the director of yale university press. mr. donotich what is coming out this fall? >> and number of great books starting with the making of americans by e.d. hirsch who wrote a best-selling book called cultural literacy and he cares very much about what role education has and actually defining what...
64
64
Oct 13, 2018
10/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
on monday we will be at the harvard bookstore in cambridge massachusetts to hear who the yale law professorer recalled the life of his grandmother eunice hunt and carter. and the barriers she broke down as a black female lawyer in the 1930s and 40s. on tuesday at the free library philadelphia, pollutes or plies demo prize winner historian joseph ellis examines the political thinking of four founding fathers and how it relates to our current social and political issues. then on wednesday in new york city ben mcintyre reports on a high ranking kgb spy who worked for british intelligence at the height of the cold war. and on thursday we will be at politics and prose bookstore in washington dc to hear nathaniel philbrick provide a history of the revolutionary wars battle of the chesapeake. that's a look at some of what booktv will be covering this week.many of these events are open to the public. look for them to air in the near future on booktv on c-span2. >> good afternoon folks, thanks for coming. governor thompson will be here momentarily. if you can believe it this isn't the first time i'v
on monday we will be at the harvard bookstore in cambridge massachusetts to hear who the yale law professorer recalled the life of his grandmother eunice hunt and carter. and the barriers she broke down as a black female lawyer in the 1930s and 40s. on tuesday at the free library philadelphia, pollutes or plies demo prize winner historian joseph ellis examines the political thinking of four founding fathers and how it relates to our current social and political issues. then on wednesday in new...
89
89
Dec 31, 2018
12/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 89
favorite 0
quote 0
bookstore. so thank you. finally, a quick reminder to silence your cell phones for the talk. now, i'm very pleased to introduce two nights speaker, stephen carter, the professor of law at yale university where he has taught for over 30 years. he served as a law clerk for justice thurgood marshall. received eight honorary degrees and recently delivered the debbie-- he has books that are fiction and nonfiction. -- the emperor of ocean pike one that was on the new york times bestseller list. tonight he is here to present his new book, "invisible". the forgotten story of the black woman lawyer who took down america's most powerful mobster. and it is your market is brimming with intellect and quit. and new york times best-selling author, walter isaacson praises it as a riveting and moving story. one with enormous revenues for our own time. we are so pleased to have this author here with us tonight. please join me in welcoming, stephen carter. [applause] >> well, thank you for the kind introduction and thank you all for coming out. i think -- i think the harvard bookstore for having. i had to cancel last time and they said don't where we will reschedule. now three years later we are here! h
bookstore. so thank you. finally, a quick reminder to silence your cell phones for the talk. now, i'm very pleased to introduce two nights speaker, stephen carter, the professor of law at yale university where he has taught for over 30 years. he served as a law clerk for justice thurgood marshall. received eight honorary degrees and recently delivered the debbie-- he has books that are fiction and nonfiction. -- the emperor of ocean pike one that was on the new york times bestseller list....
48
48
Apr 8, 2018
04/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 48
favorite 0
quote 0
bookstore, and all of the staff here, welcome. thank you very much for coming. we are very excited to have amy chua with us this morning. she's a law professor at yale written and spoken extensively on matters of culture and identity. her new book, political tribes addresses a theme that has become especially topical these days. with many the splintering of america into groups of one sort or another. but seemed to have little interest in uniting or compromising more even trying to get along. one of the founding notions of america of course, was as a democratic system. in which differences of race, ethnicity, religion and so on would be taken up in a shared identity. these days messages that appeal to shared values seem repeatedly trumped by messages intended to exploit narrow group identities. amy argues that in international affairs and domestic dealings, americans have fallen prey to tribalism. abroad we have all too often been blind to it. and at home, we have a debilitating tendency to revert to it. among a number of positive reviews of amy's book, one of the "washington post" quoted quote - compact and insightful, yet ultimately hopeful. hopefu
bookstore, and all of the staff here, welcome. thank you very much for coming. we are very excited to have amy chua with us this morning. she's a law professor at yale written and spoken extensively on matters of culture and identity. her new book, political tribes addresses a theme that has become especially topical these days. with many the splintering of america into groups of one sort or another. but seemed to have little interest in uniting or compromising more even trying to get along....
86
86
Dec 15, 2018
12/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 86
favorite 0
quote 0
bookstore. thank you. finally, a quick reminder to silence your cell phones for the talk. now i'm very pleased to introduce tonight's speaker stephen oh carter william nelson carver professor of law at yaleuniversity where he taught for over 30 years. he served as a law click for justice marshall and received eight honorary degrees and recently delivered the w eb the boys lectures at harvard. he is the author of 15 books of nonfiction and fiction. which include the violence of peace, the confirmation mass, new england weight and the emperor of ocean park. a novel that spent 11 weeks on the new york times bestseller list. tonight he is here to present his new book "invisibles" the forgotten story of the black woman lawyer who took down america's most powerful mobster. it is brimming with intellect and grits. and new york times best-selling author walter isaac says raises it as a riveting and moving story, one with enormous revenues for our own times. we are so pleased to have its author here with us tonight please join me in welcoming stephen carter. [applause] >> thank you for that kind introduction and thank you all for coming out and i want to thank the harvard bookstore for inviting y
bookstore. thank you. finally, a quick reminder to silence your cell phones for the talk. now i'm very pleased to introduce tonight's speaker stephen oh carter william nelson carver professor of law at yaleuniversity where he taught for over 30 years. he served as a law click for justice marshall and received eight honorary degrees and recently delivered the w eb the boys lectures at harvard. he is the author of 15 books of nonfiction and fiction. which include the violence of peace, the...
0
0.0
Mar 10, 2025
03/25
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
bookstore. i'm so excited to welcome you to our event tonight with judy ginsburg presenting her new book, last seen the enduring search by formerly enslaved people to find lost family in conversation yale stern how tonight's event will conclude with some time your questions after which we'll have a book signing at this table to ask a question just raise your hand during the q&a portion and, our speakers will call on you and if you haven't, you can find a copy of last seen the registers in the next room. as always, thank for buying books from harvard bookstore. your purchases, support events like this and help to ensure the future of our local independent bookstore. and a quick reminder and you for sanitizing your cell phones for the duration of tonight's event. now i'm pleased to introduce tonight speakers judith giesberg, the robert and birmingham chair and humanities and is professor of history at of university. she is the author of civil war sisterhood the united states sanitary commission and the civil war. soldiers pornography in the making of modern morality. ginsburg directs a digital project lasting finding family after slavery that is collecting, digitizing and transcribing in
bookstore. i'm so excited to welcome you to our event tonight with judy ginsburg presenting her new book, last seen the enduring search by formerly enslaved people to find lost family in conversation yale stern how tonight's event will conclude with some time your questions after which we'll have a book signing at this table to ask a question just raise your hand during the q&a portion and, our speakers will call on you and if you haven't, you can find a copy of last seen the registers in...
58
58
Jun 11, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 58
favorite 0
quote 0
yale, my family as well. but thank you so much for this. reading. the second nominated work in poetry is, the co-owner of diesel, a bookstore in los angeles and san diego he judge for the l.a. times book prize in poetry this year and has lent his expertise and passion for poetry as a judge for the aba indies choice book award, the national book award and other prizes. welcome john evans reading. if you see something, say something. from james cagney's martian the saint of loneliness. published by nomad express. james cagney's second book of poems. martian the scene of loneliness for the articulate, contemporary urban life. a place of striking beauty, erotic desire, and layered historical and structural musical, all stunningly visual with giddy leaps of imagination. he brings all his poetic skills to skewer hypocrisies, cruelties and violences in scathing poems which seek relief a less isolated humanity with love, honesty, and a piercing intimacy intimacy. if you see something, say something. i pick up my mail down the street from an ice raid, him boning myself for the title. proof of ownership, a passport license. the sky began hailing handcuffs and zi
yale, my family as well. but thank you so much for this. reading. the second nominated work in poetry is, the co-owner of diesel, a bookstore in los angeles and san diego he judge for the l.a. times book prize in poetry this year and has lent his expertise and passion for poetry as a judge for the aba indies choice book award, the national book award and other prizes. welcome john evans reading. if you see something, say something. from james cagney's martian the saint of loneliness. published...
66
66
Jul 12, 2020
07/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 66
favorite 0
quote 0
bookstores? >> sure. every now and then somebody will ask for a copy i don't think there's any book you cannot find. >>cspan: where will your papers be kept? >> yale>cspan: you have reconciled with yale after all these years? >> you don't have to reconcile. there is a repository. yale is terrific about it. you don't have to take an oath of allegiance to yale. >>cspan: which library? >> university library. >>cspan: long island. >>caller: mr. buckley. my feelings on the relationship with stall and is not exactly correct. prior to world war ii was the fascist government of mussolini and after the war there certainly was an attempt to reconcile the stall and and roosevelt in fact there is a saying it will not be capitalism and fascism that capitalism and socialism. the original agreement to build the german economy up to build those reparations they did most of the fighting and dying. and the united states and the conservative dixiecrat's voted against the agreement and therefore isolating with this insane cold war lasting 45 years and we are responsible for that in that direction. >> are we responsible for the stall and hitler packed? >> in a way we
bookstores? >> sure. every now and then somebody will ask for a copy i don't think there's any book you cannot find. >>cspan: where will your papers be kept? >> yale>cspan: you have reconciled with yale after all these years? >> you don't have to reconcile. there is a repository. yale is terrific about it. you don't have to take an oath of allegiance to yale. >>cspan: which library? >> university library. >>cspan: long island. >>caller: mr....
127
127
Apr 19, 2012
04/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 127
favorite 0
quote 0
communities to monitor daily life in bookstores, cafes, nightclubs and even infiltrated muslim student organizations in colleges and universities such as columbia and yale university. when we tolerate this type of racial profiling and the guise of promoting national security, we jeopardy guise national security and compromise the basic set forth in our constitution. policing base on stereotypes remains an entrenched practice in routine law enforcement across the country. the tragic story of ray von martin garnered national attention and raised questions about the role of race in the criminal justice system. while we don't yet know how this heartbreaking story will end, we do know that stereotypes played a role in this tragedy and yet they have no place in law enforcement. racial profiling undermines the trust and mutual respect between police and the communities they are there to protect, which is critical to keeping communities safe. additionally, profiling deepens racial in america and conveys the suggestion that some americans do not dee serve equal protection under the law. racial profiling is exploding. state intrusion to federal immigration author
communities to monitor daily life in bookstores, cafes, nightclubs and even infiltrated muslim student organizations in colleges and universities such as columbia and yale university. when we tolerate this type of racial profiling and the guise of promoting national security, we jeopardy guise national security and compromise the basic set forth in our constitution. policing base on stereotypes remains an entrenched practice in routine law enforcement across the country. the tragic story of ray...
406
406
Sep 3, 2020
09/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 406
favorite 0
quote 0
bookstore's? >> guest: oh sure. i have a lovely ingenious -- and i don't think there's any book you can't find. >> host: where the william f. but we paper's? >> guest: at yalest: sue have reconciled with yale after all these years? >> guest: you don't have to reconcile with the republic. gail was terrific about it. you don't have to have an allegiance to yell to have them handle your papers. >> host: long island for bill buckley. >> caller: my feelings on a relationship with stalin and your disk should have stalin is not exactly correct. prior to -- it was the capitalists that brought in the fascist government of mussolini and overthrew this country using -- [inaudible] and after the war there simply was an attempt to reconcile with roosevelt and stalin on socialism and the fact there was a thought that it is not going to be capitalism and fascism but capitalism and socialism and the original agreement was to -- germany under the ford palace in build the german economy up and pay the russians for war reparations because they did most of the dying in most of the fighting. they lost 300,000 it was the united states that the conservatives and the dixiecrat wen
bookstore's? >> guest: oh sure. i have a lovely ingenious -- and i don't think there's any book you can't find. >> host: where the william f. but we paper's? >> guest: at yalest: sue have reconciled with yale after all these years? >> guest: you don't have to reconcile with the republic. gail was terrific about it. you don't have to have an allegiance to yell to have them handle your papers. >> host: long island for bill buckley. >> caller: my feelings on a...
22
22
Oct 23, 2017
10/17
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 22
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> welcome to the yale bookstore. tonight one of our ongoing author event series and i
. >> welcome to the yale bookstore. tonight one of our ongoing author event series and i
21
21
Apr 16, 2017
04/17
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
also that evening we'll be at busboys and poets bookstore in the nation's capital to cover a talk by yale law school professor james foreman. he'll be discussing his book "locking up our own: crime and punishment in black america." wednesday we head the new york where journalists amie parnes and jonathan allen will talking about hillary clinton's 2016 -- will talk about hillary clinton's 2016 campaignful we'll also be in dallas where tony smith will discuss his book, "why wilson matters." thursday we're in durham, north carolina, for a talk by benjamin waterhouse, history professor at the university of north carolina. his book, "the land of enterprise," charts the development of business in america. we'll also be at the smithsonian 's museum of natural history in washington, d.c. with a report on the impact that humans are having on our planet. and on saturday and sunday, we'll be live from the los angeles times festival of books. featured authors include annie jacobson, hugh hewitt, adam hochschild and lisa lucas. that's a look at some of the events booktv will be covering this week. man
also that evening we'll be at busboys and poets bookstore in the nation's capital to cover a talk by yale law school professor james foreman. he'll be discussing his book "locking up our own: crime and punishment in black america." wednesday we head the new york where journalists amie parnes and jonathan allen will talking about hillary clinton's 2016 -- will talk about hillary clinton's 2016 campaignful we'll also be in dallas where tony smith will discuss his book, "why wilson...
52
52
Sep 3, 2020
09/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 52
favorite 0
quote 0
yale in 1951. the next book you will find in the bookstores is this one on the chair, william f buckley junior let us talk of many things in collective speeches. last question, anything you want to accomplish for the rest of your life you haven't done so far that is on the tip of your tongue? >> guest: now. c-span: we wish everybody a happy day. >> that is concluding another look at our archives with william have close -- william f buckley's close to 40 appearances available to watch online. go to our website booktv.org and type in names of the search box. >> we are featuring booktv programs is a preview of what is available every weekend on c-span2. beginning at 8 eastern booktv features several programs on books written by first ladies. and enjoy booktv on c-span2. booktv on c-span2 this labor day weekend. watch top nonfiction books and authors. on "in depth," a 2-hour conversation with father and faith and freedom coalition founder ralph read. 9:00 pm eastern on afterwords breitbart new senior editor at large on his book read november and his thoughts on
yale in 1951. the next book you will find in the bookstores is this one on the chair, william f buckley junior let us talk of many things in collective speeches. last question, anything you want to accomplish for the rest of your life you haven't done so far that is on the tip of your tongue? >> guest: now. c-span: we wish everybody a happy day. >> that is concluding another look at our archives with william have close -- william f buckley's close to 40 appearances available to...