Marching to a Different Drummer: Unrecognized Heroes of American History

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Product Details
Price
$94.80
Publisher
Greenwood
Publish Date
Pages
368
Dimensions
6.4 X 9.56 X 1.11 inches | 1.52 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780313288029

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About the Author
ROBIN KADISON BERSON is Director of the Upper School Library of Riverdale Country School in New York City. A graduate of Bryn Mawr College, she was a Woodrow Wilson Fellow at New York University, where she received a Masters of Arts degree in history. She holds a Master of Science degree from Columbia University School of Library Service. She has taught secondary school history in a variety of settings, and spent seven years as Managing Editor of History of Education Quarterly.
Reviews
"You will probably recognize only a few of the 35 names whose biographical sketches appear in these pages, but that's the idea. Berson devotes this interesting volume to the achievements of persons she calls dedicated deviants. She includes contributors to such areas as infant care, racism and segregation, sweatshop labor, and freedom of conscience. It is wholesome for young people to learn that persons of both sexes, from groups often ignored when credit is given--persons nobody has heard of--have made important contributions. Highly Recommended."-The Book Report
"Berson has added breadth and depth to the underdeveloped corpus of biography on American reformers."-Wilson Library Bulletin
"Marching to a Different Drummer will be a valuable addition to academic, public, and high school libraries interested in building their resources on some of the unsung heroes of American history."-Booklist/Reference Books Bulletin
"This collection of brief studies of 35 individuals demonstrates how heroes and heroines come in many sizes--often unrecognized by themselves and by others--and should be remembered for their accomplishments. Berson gives brief but full studies of the individuals, of the social setting, and of the way these "dedicated deviants," as she calls them, marched to their own drum-beat through life."-IBJournal of Popular Culture
?Berson has added breadth and depth to the underdeveloped corpus of biography on American reformers.?-Wilson Library Bulletin
?Marching to a Different Drummer will be a valuable addition to academic, public, and high school libraries interested in building their resources on some of the unsung heroes of American history.?-Booklist/Reference Books Bulletin
?This collection of brief studies of 35 individuals demonstrates how heroes and heroines come in many sizes--often unrecognized by themselves and by others--and should be remembered for their accomplishments. Berson gives brief but full studies of the individuals, of the social setting, and of the way these "dedicated deviants," as she calls them, marched to their own drum-beat through life.?-IBJournal of Popular Culture
?You will probably recognize only a few of the 35 names whose biographical sketches appear in these pages, but that's the idea. Berson devotes this interesting volume to the achievements of persons she calls dedicated deviants. She includes contributors to such areas as infant care, racism and segregation, sweatshop labor, and freedom of conscience. It is wholesome for young people to learn that persons of both sexes, from groups often ignored when credit is given--persons nobody has heard of--have made important contributions. Highly Recommended.?-The Book Report
"Robin Berson has rounded up dozens of dissenters, mavericks, and reformers from mostly obscure sources to give us this immensely readable collection of profiles. Her book will help many to live better lives than they thought possible."-Milton Meltzer Award-winning author of over 70 books on social reform
"A bold and candid look at those who have dared break company with the conventional, the traditional, and stand for values and causes only later embraced by the rest of us, who have learned to be far more cautious, if not fearful--a book about heroism, really: its many aspects."-Robert Coles Harvard University