Tag: French

Rififi French Film Guide


Free Download Alastair Phillips, "Rififi: French Film Guide"
English | 2009 | pages: 135 | ISBN: 1848850557 | PDF | 2,9 mb
Du rififi chez les hommes (1955), directed by the exiled American film director Jules Dassin, recounts the nail-biting tale of a Parisian gangster heist gone wrong. Famed for its extended dialogue free robbery sequence, it is both a classic French film noir and one of the greatest, most influential crime films. In this lively companion to the film, Alastair Phillips reveals Dassin’s role as a director of socially conscious Hollywood film noir and argues that his seminal contribution to the regeneration of the thriller in post war France therefore uniquely complicated relations between French genre cinema and American mass culture.

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French Socialists Before Marx Workers, Women and the Social Question in France, 1796-1852


Free Download Pamela M. Pilbeam, "French Socialists Before Marx: Workers, Women and the Social Question in France, 1796-1852"
English | 2000 | pages: 270 | ISBN: 190268317X, 0773521992, 0773521984 | PDF | 2,1 mb
French socialism traces its origins to the revolutionary communist Gracchus Babeuf (1760-1797) and for a time during the Second Republic socialists such as Louis Blanc, Etienne Canet, Victor Considérant, Jeanne Deroin, Pauline Roland, Blanqui, and Raspail occupied a prominent place in the attempt to create a reforming social democracy. For Karl Marx, and the dominant academic historians of twentieth-century France who took up his thesis, the early French socialists were worthy only of faint praise or scorn, yet the French parliamentary socialist groups that emerged in the 1880s can be understood only through reference to their predecessors. French Socialists before Marx identifies the major issues for French socialists between 1796 and the 1850s – revolution, religion, education, the status of women, association, and work. Pilbeam demonstrates that the socialists’ answer to emerging capitalist competition and social conflict was association, while conservatives, in contrast, defended a liberal economy and united to persecute, prosecute, and deport socialists. French Socialists before Marx fills a significant void in socialist studies, enhancing our understanding of nineteenth-century social thought and strategies. It will be invaluable reading for students of history, politics, gender, French, and European studies.

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A French Aristocrat in the American West The Shattered Dreams of De Lassus De Luzières


Free Download Marie-Sol de La Tour d’Auvergne, "A French Aristocrat in the American West: The Shattered Dreams of De Lassus De Luzières"
English | 2010 | pages: 258 | ISBN: 0826218962 | EPUB | 1,7 mb
In 1790, Pierre-Charles de Lassus de Luzières gathered his wife and children and fled Revolutionary France. His trek to America was prompted by his "purchase" of two thousand acres situated on the bank of the Ohio River from the Scioto Land Company-the institution that infamously swindled French buyers and sold them worthless titles to property. When de Luzières arrived and realized he had been defrauded, he chose, in a momentous decision, not to return home to France. Instead, he committed to a life in North America and began planning a move to the Mississippi River valley.

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The French and Indian War Deciding the Fate of North America [Audiobook]


Free Download The French and Indian War: Deciding the Fate of North America (Audiobook)
English | ASIN: B0CCFQWJYF | 2023 | 12 hours and 30 minutes | M4B@64 kbps | 362 MB
Author: Walter R. Borneman
Narrator: Jonathan Yen

In the summer of 1754, deep in the wilderness of western Pennsylvania, a very young George Washington suffered his first military defeat, and a centuries-old feud between Great Britain and France was rekindled. The war that followed would be fought across virgin territories, from Nova Scotia to the forks of the Ohio River, and it would ultimately decide the fate of the entire North American continent-not just for Great Britain and France but also for the Spanish and Native American populations. Noted historian Walter R. Borneman brings to life an epic struggle for a continent-what Samuel Eliot Morison called "truly the first world war"-and emphasizes how the seeds of discord sown in its aftermath would take root and blossom into the American Revolution.

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