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Your summer reading list: An Introduction to Cybernetics. W. Ross Ashby - 1963.
#vintage illustration#vintage books#books#reading lists#book covers#paperbacks#vintage paperbacks#books and reading#summer reading#nonfiction#non fiction#science#science books#the sciences#cybernetics#robotics#automation#tech#technology#artificial intelligence#ai
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what i read in 2024: best of, part two
(previous editions) bold = favourite
class, race, gender, & sexuality
the crash of the hammer (usa)
my own personal hell: thoughts on hazbin hotel
the devil went down to georgia (usa)
'we spoke english to set ourselves apart': how i rediscovered my mother tongue (nigeria)
the shapes of silence
laws once prevented aubrey lynch from entering kalgoorlie's town centre. he believes truth-telling is the way forward (australia)
politics & current affairs
the road to 1948 (palestine, interactive)
'for me, there was no other choiceâ: inside the global illegal organ trade
the cement company that paid millions to isis: was lafarge complicit in crimes against humanity? (france)
how 3m executives convinced a scientist the forever chemicals she found in human blood were safe
'machines set loose to slaughter': the dangerous rise of military ai
other
'look, they're getting skin!': are we right to strive to save the worldâs tiniest babies?
spreadsheet superstars (interactive)
the great abandonment: what happens to the natural world when people disappear? (bulgaria)
my family and other nazis
inside snapchat's teen opoid crisis
#studyblr#studyspo#academia#productivity#bookblr#university#reading list#reading lists#essays#myresources
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The Chicago Sun-Times may or may not have published a reading list of AI slop, fake books and all.
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Reading List for the Student and Youth Anti-Vietnam War Movement
Personal Statements by Draft Resisters and their Families
Muhammad Ali's speech
"I Picked Prison Over Fighting in Vietnam"
"We Won't Go: Personal Accounts of War Objectors"
"Resister: A Story of Protest and Prison during the Vietnam War" (free sample of full-length book)
"Suppose They Gave a War and Nobody Came"
Prosecution of War Resisters
"Draft Card Burning"
"Constitutional Law - Free Speech - Draft Card Burning - U.S. v. Miller"
Civil Rights Speeches
"On Black People and War" by Malcolm X
The Liberation of Our People: Transcript of a Speech Delivered by Angela Y. Davis
"An Open Letter to My Sister, Angela Davis" by James Baldwin
"Beyond Vietnam" by Martin Luther King Jr.
People that got on a boat and delivered medical aid to Vietnam
"An American Boat Sailed to Vietnam During the War. Then It Disappeared"
Homosexuality Draft Exemptions
"Coming Out Against the Vietnam War"
"Psychiatry and Homosexuality Draft Exemptions during the Vietnam War"
Primary Documents Critical of the Youth Movement
"Nuremberg and Vietnam"
"What's Bugging the Students?"
"On Civil Disobedience" (not the essay by Thoreau)
"The American Peace Movement and the National Security State, 1941-1971"
"Vietniks" (see also: David Miller's letter to the editor)
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I can't believe i'm saying this, but modern DC does have one small leg up over Marvel: they have imprints for all the different age groups. DC has a middle grade imprint, which significantly helped me make my reading list. Because all I want out of modern comics are the silly ones. The middle grade stuff. The stuff that doesn't take itself too seriously. Because if you're not going to have the fantastic prose of the 60s, 70s and 80s, then you don't deserve serious storylines. Serious stories deserve to feel serious. They deserve to feel like novels.
But humour? Humour can be light and short on words. So humour is the only genre that works in the modern format. So I need directions to Marvel's humour stuff. I can't look up an imprint, so i'm turning the question over to everyone on here. What marvel stuff from at least 2010 onwards (maybe the 2000s and 90s too) is fun and silly enough to meet my classifications? I'm talking stuff like Tiny Titans, all the Batman tv show tie-in comics, the DC Zoom imprint stuff, etc. What is there in that ballpark at Marvel?
#marvel#marvel comics#comic books#comic recommendations#not often do i say dc does something better#but this is an exception#comic recommendation#modern comics#2010s comics#2020s comics#2000s comics#marvel universe#humour comics#middle grade#dc zoom#dc#dc comics#tiny titans#dc comic books#dc universe#dcu#comic book#comic#reading comics#reading lists#reading order
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Concept idea: Philosophical Academia


Characteristics:
⢠an inclination towards the thinking process and towards exercising criticial thinking;
⢠a passion for the study of classical and contemporary philosophical works and their interpretation through critical analysis;
⢠an inclination to debate any subject, questioning the rationality of the act of doing and thinking;
⢠the permanent possession of a dose of skepticism and mistrust until the fact is demonstrated;
⢠the urge of doing a profound analysis step by step, starting from the hypothesis to the conclusion;
⢠the fascination for knowledge, but especially for the process of obtaining knowledge through thinking and reason.


Primary works and authors:
⢠"Dialogues" by Plato
⢠"Metaphysics" by Aristotle
⢠"Meditations" by Marcus Aurelius
⢠"Discourse on the Method" by RenÊ Descartes
⢠"Critique of Pure Reason" by Immanuel Kant
⢠"The Phenomenology of the Spirit" by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
⢠"Thus Spoke Zarathustra" by Friedrich Nietzsche
⢠"The World as Will and Representation" by Arthur Schopenhauer
⢠"Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus" by Ludwig Wittgenstein


Movies:
⢠"The Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" by Michel Gondry
⢠"Persona" and "The Seventh Seal" by Ingmar Bergman
⢠All Movies made by Andrei Tarkovsky
⢠"The French Dispatch" by Wes Anderson
⢠"Memento" and "Inception " by Christopher Nolan
⢠"2001: A Space Odyssey" by Stanley Kubrick
⢠"The Tree of Life" by Terrence Malick
⢠"Blade Runner" by Ridley Scott


Series:
⢠"Neon Evangelion Genesis"
⢠"Black Mirror"
⢠"The Good Place"
⢠"Severence"
⢠"Alice in Borderland"
⢠"The Sandman"


Clothing and outfits:
⢠combinations of black, grey or beige with neutral colors;
⢠straight line uni pants and jackets;
⢠white or neutral color shirts with stiff collars or black turtlenecks;
⢠plaid or knitted vests;
⢠leather shoes in black or neutral colors.
⢠ties, bows, watches with leather and silver bands, pocket watches, glasses, hats, overcoats, canes, leather gloves.
#dark academia#light academia#chaotic academia#classic academia#darkest academia#art academia#romantic academia#philosophy#philosophers#books#movies#tv series#aesthetic#dark acadamia aesthetic#academia#academia aesthetic#academics#concept#philosophical#philosophical academia#philosophy aesthetic#aestethic#ideas#outfits#reading lists#dark academia aesthetic
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Hi, love your blog, no pressure do you have any sex sociology etc related books or movies you recommended? Sorry if silly question!
not a silly question at all!! i love to read about this stuff & am always happy to talk about it :) i am however not very experienced with film so other than Bound being on my to-watch list since forever i donât have any recommendations in that area
all of these recs are definitely at different points along a spectrum of how much i ascribe to or agree with; i avoid language of âsafe, sane, & consensual,â for example, because i disagree with the requirement for safety and the positioning of sanity as synonymous with not doing harm. a lot of kink writing falls into the habit of trying to justify itself to normative society through language of health, which i find both useless & offensive lol. as far as content notes itâs also worth mentioning that many if not all of these works discuss stigma & trauma, including hate crimes, rape, and incest.
i have a prior list on my disability blog with recs about sex & disability, i highly recommend checking out my favorites from there! Emma Sheppardâs work in particular was life-changing for me. many of these were accumulated through her sources as well as from @gatheringbones âs excerpts
in no particular order:
sociology
Playing on the Edge: Sadomasochism, Risk, and Intimacy by Staci Newmahr
Safe, Sane and Consensual: Contemporary Perspectives on Sadomasochism, edited Darren Langdridge & Meg Barker
Sex and Disability, edited Robert McRuer & Anna Mollow
The Sexual Politics of Disability: Untold Desires by Tom Shakespeare, Kath Gillespie-Sells, & Dominic Davies
Unbreaking Our Hearts: Cultures of Un/Desirability and the Transformative Potential of Queercrip Porn by Loree Erickson (dissertation)
Dungeon Intimacies: The Poetics of Transsexual Sadomasochism by Susan Stryker (article)
Public Sex: The Culture of Radical Sex by Pat (now Patrick) Califia
Leatherfolk: Radical Sex, People, Politics, and Practice, edited Mark Thompson
The Feminist Porn Book: The Politics of Producing Pleasure, edited Tristan Taormino, Celine ParreĂąas Shimizu, Constance Penley, and Mireille Miller-Young
Tomorrow Sex Will Be Good Again: Women and Desire in the Age of Consent by Katherine Angel
practicality
The New Topping Book by Dossie Easton & Janet W. Hardy
The New Bottoming Book by Dossie Easton & Janet W. Hardy
The Lesbian S/M Safety Manual, edited Pat (now Patrick) Califia
Fucking Trans Women by Mira Bellwether (zine)
sex writing
S/HE by Minnie Bruce Pratt
Skin by Dorothy Allison
Lover by Bertha Harris
Trans/Love: Radical Sex, Love, and Relationships Beyond the Gender Binary, edited Morty Diamond
Wild Side Sex: The Book of Kink by Midori
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how long is your ao3 mark for later list?
I just opened mine out of curiosity and ended up just staring blankly because it's so much more than I expected. So, here it goes.
Honestly, genuinely wanna see what the results are. If there's an option that I've missed, please let me know in the tags or in the comments! <3
#ao3#ao3 mark for later#mark for later#fanfiction#fanfiction readers of tumblr#ao3 fanfiction#fandom#fic readers#fanfic#reading lists
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Your summer reading list: Hillbilly Women. Kathy Kahn - 1974.
#vintage illustration#vintage books#books#reading lists#book covers#paperbacks#vintage paperbacks#books and reading#summer reading#nonfiction#non fiction#hillbillies#hillbilly#hillbilly women#appalachians#appalachia#hillbilly girls#country girls#rural america#americana#west virginia#the holler#holler girls#women
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what i read in 2024: best of, part three
(previous editions) bold = favourite
class, race, gender, & sexuality
everyone knew about the a-team
post-377a, discrimination is still in our blood donations (singapore)
predator or prey
40 acres and a lie (usa)
"girl" trends and the repackaging of womanhood
a killer among them (canada)
politics & current affairs
in ruinsâ: archaeological warfare in the west bank
haiti and the failed promise of u.s. aid
the insulin empire
refugee chronicles: the long and lonely road from sudan to france
'korea is hiding our past': the adoptees searching for their families â and the truth
other
pain and suffering
the expanding table: honoring palestinian culinary tradition in arkansas
remembered coast (singapore)
the last children of down syndrome
my mother, the gambler
the nazi of oak park (usa)
return to kĂĹĂĄĂĄhĂĂ
letter from berlin: piecing together the secrets of the stasi
#studyblr#studyspo#university#productivity#academia#reading list#reading lists#bookblr#literature#myresources#sorry this is so late
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June 20, 2025
Today, weâre thinking about book tour best practices, iconic author pseudonyms, lesbian lit, and more!
On Lit Hub dot com:
Kamila Shamsie gives a close and highly critical reading of English PENâs charter. | Lit Hub Politics
âRemember to rest.â In which Maris Kreizman attempts to heed her own advice about publishing a book and going on a book tour. | Lit Hub Advice
Kirsty McHugh and Ian Scott explore how Charles Dickens, George Eliot, and more chose their pen names. | Lit Hub Biography
Catherine Laceyâs TBR includes books by Jen Calleja, Tezer ĂzlĂź, and Georgi Gospodinov! | Lit Hub Criticism
âWhile reading Next to Heaven, I sometimes thought I could feel individual cells in my body trying to die.â 5 book reviews you need to read this week. | Book Marks
Siouxzi Connor recommends Sapphic books that explore hydrofeminism by Dylin Hardcastle, Julia Armfield, Sophie Mackintosh, and more. | Lit Hub Reading Lists
How Edna Lewis became a queer icon of Southern cooking. | Lit Hub Food
Radha Vatsal remembers the literary legacy of her great-great grandfather, Nandshankar Mehta, and traces the forgotten history of South Asian cosmopolitanism. | Lit Hub History
Catherine Laceyâs The MĂśbius Book, Michelle Hunevenâs Bug Hollow, and Jan Gradvallâs The Story of ABBA all feature among the best reviewed books of the week. | Book Marks
Jane Smiley and Susan Swan discuss the importance of women who take up space: âBeing unusually tall makes you feel set apart because mostly everybody else sees someone with the same weight, height and coloring every day.â | Lit Hub In Conversation
 âUpstairs, I paused at my bedroom door, hearing Rickâs delicate, papery snore, and walked down the hall, pushing open the door to Alexâs room.â Read from Jayson Greeneâs new novel, UnWorld. | Lit Hub Fiction
From around the internet:
âFew have cared so deeply for the poor or taken the quest to both know and live out truth more seriously.â Ben Woollard on Tolstoyâs Christian anarchism. | JSTOR Daily
âIf we value the medicine the land offers us so generously, we must become medicine for the land.â Robin Wall Kimmerer explores the precious forest pharmacy of the Adirondacks. | Orion
âBrianâs genius was bound up in his fixation on these paradoxes: the absence that haunts every presence; the love thatâs most vital just before it drains away; pain and beauty too enmeshed to be pulled apart.â Charlotte Shane on Ben Greenmanâs I Am Brian Wilson and the late musicianâs legacy. | n+1
Sophie Gonick considers the construction of migrant spaces in New York. | Public Books
âItalian rhythm is obviously different from that of English, but it has a pronounced physiognomy: this aspect allowed the translator to hear it naturally and render it instinctively into its linguistic twin.â On poetry in translation between English and Italian. | Asymptote
Authors are taking to TikTok to prove they arenât using generative AI. | Wired
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#lit hub daily#lit hub#literary hub#lit news#book news#publishing news#Kamila Shamsie#writing advice#charles dickens#george eliot#catherine lacey#book reviews#reading lists#lesbian literature#sapphic literature#julia armfield#edna lewis#cooking#southern cooking#Nandshankar Mehta#south asian literature#taking up space#novel excerpt#leo tolstoy#christian anarchism#adirondacks#brian wilson#i am brian wilson#new york#jackson heights
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Who is...Sam Guthrie | Cannonball? - A Reading Guide
Sam Guthrie is an X-Men and Avengers affiliated mutant from Marvel Comics. Sam is the oldest of the nine Guthrie children and is the definition of parentification having dropped out of high school to work in the coal mines that killed his father (in either a mine accident or through black lung depending on your preferred retcon). Sam's powers would manifest during a mining accident and allowed him to blast through the rock to safety. Sam would then join the team he's most associated with, the New Mutants. Sam's story is one of overcoming adversities, determination, and of healing. Some of Sam's earlier stories show him being groomed by Lila Cheney and the adults in charge of his safety enabling her.
Sam is also excellent Appalachian representation and is one of the first Appalachian main characters to not be ashamed of being Appalachian while simultaneously not being based on hillbilly humor.
You'll find a reading list under the cut! The list will need to be posted in multiple parts due to length, subsequent parts will be added as reblogs.
Part 1 below!
Introduction and New Mutants Era
Sam's first team immediately after introduction was the original New Mutants (1983). Throughout this period Sam develops the close bonds he's known for, particularly with teammates Roberto Da Costa (Sunspot), Dani Moonstar (Mirage), and Rahne Sinclair (Wolfsbane). New Mutants was written by Chris Claremont and while wonderful, drops the ball in many places, one of which being the way that Sam's dialect is written and the sort of general understanding of Appalachia, as well as a refusal to acknowledge that Sam's relationship with Lila Cheney was based upon grooming. The issue that introduces Lila to Sam's story will have a red asterisk and a trigger warning next to it.
Marvel Graphic Novel (1981) #4 New Mutants (1983) #1-12 Marvel Team-Up (1972) # Annual 6 New Mutants (1983) #13-21 Rom (1982) #Annual 3 New Mutants (1983) # Annual 1 * (TW: Grooming) New Mutants (1983) #23-25 Marvel Team-Up (1972) #149 New Mutants (1983) #29 (Lila is in this issue) New Mutants (1983) #30-34 New Mutants Special Edition (1985) #1 Uncanny X-Men (1981) #201 (definitely not a necessary issue, but it's one that highlights that Sam IS smart, he's just really bad at technology) New Mutants (1983) #37 Firestar (1986) #2 New Mutants (1983) #38-40, 42-44, Annual 2, 45-51, Annual 3, 52 Fallen Angels (1987) #1 (this issue is a good look into Sam and Berto's relationship) New Mutants (1983) #53-66 Spellbound (1988) #4 (Lila's in this issue and you can see the way she almost treats Sam like an accessory) New Mutants (1983) #Annual 4A-B, 67-76, Annual 5A, 77-92, Annual 6A Wolverine: Rahne of Terra (not incredibly Sam focused and it's a bit..different, but what there is of Sam I like) New Mutants (1983) #93-100, Annual 7A
X-Force, X-Men, and X-Force Again
After the end of New Mutants, under the direction of Cable, Sam helped found the team, X-Force, and would be appointed Cable's second-in-command. While in New Mutants we got to see a Sam Guthrie who was coming into his powers, X-Force really gives us a glimpse of a Sam Guthrie who is starting to really apply those powers and who is starting to highlight why the character has come to be known as a powerhouse. During this period we see Sam go from a member of X-Force, to becoming a fully fledged X-Men, and then see him re-join X-Force until the team is disbanded. The change from X-Force to X-Men to X-Force are not represented in different sections as there is still overlap in Sam's character interactions and throughout his period on the X-Men, his former X-Force affiliation is an important factor that helps inform his choices and his outlook on situations, although I have tried to signify the changes with breaks in the text block.
New Warriors (1990) # Annual 1A Uncanny X-Men (1981) #Annual 15A X-Factor (1986) #Annual 6A X-Force (1991) #1-3 Spider-Man (1990) #16 X-Force (1991) #4-5 X-Factor (1986) #77 X-Force (1991) #Annual 1C, 6-15 X-Cutioner's Song Event (this links you to a reading list I made for the event) X-Men (1991) #17 New Warriors (1990) #31 X-Force (1991) #19-26, Annual 2, 27-29, 32-33 New Warriors (1990) #46 X-Force (1991) #34-37 Cable (1993) #15 X-Factor (1986) #106 X-Force (1991) #38 Excalibur (1988) #82 X-Force (1991) #39-45 Uncanny X-Men (1981) #323-325 Wolverine (1988) #93
Uncanny X-Men '95 (1995) #1 X-Men: Clan Destine (1996) #1 Wolverine (1998) #96 X-Force (1991) #48 X-Force and Cable '95 (1995) #1 X-Men vs. The Brood (1996) #1-2 X-Force (1991) #51 X-Men (1991) #48 Wolverine (1988) #99-100 Uncanny X-Men (1981) #332 Wolverine (1988) #101 Uncanny X-Men (1981) #334 X-Men (1991) #54 Onslaught: X-Men (1996) #1 Uncanny X-Men (1981) #335 Cable (1993) #36 Beast (1997) #1-3 X-Men (1991) #59 Uncanny X-Men (1981) #340 X-Men (1991) #60 Wolverine (1988) #111 Uncanny X-Men (1981) #341-342, Annual '97 The Incredible Hulk (1962) #455 X-Men (1991) #62-66 Wolverine (1988) #115-118 Uncanny X-Men (1981) #350 X-Men (1991) #70 New Mutants: Truth or Death (1997) #1-3 X-Men (1991) #71-72, 75-76 Uncanny X-Men (1981) #355 Alpha Flight (1997) #9 X-Men (1991) #77-78 Uncanny X-Men/Fantastic Four Annual '98 (1998) #1 X-Men (1991) #79
X-Force (1991) #83-84 X-Force/Champions Annual '98 (1998) #1 X-Force (1991) #85-93 Uncanny X-Men (1981) #375 (Sam's only in the beginning of this one) X-Force (1991) # Annual '99, 94-98 Cable (1993) #73-75 X-Force (1991) #99-117
Part 2 to follow soon as I've hit the link limit!
#Sam Guthrie#cannonball#new mutants#x-force#x force#xmen comics#reading guide#reading lists#comic reading list#comic reading guide
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Here's the Batfamily section of my DC reading list. I'm combining it with the list for the Superman and Batman team up books (like World's Finest, Brave and The Bold, or DC Comics Presents).
Batman:
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 1 (Detective Comics #36, 38-55, Batman #1-7, New York World's Fair Comics #2, World's Best Comics #1 and World's Finest Comics #2-3)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 2 (Detective Comics #58-74, Batman #8-15 and World's Finest Comics #4-9)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 3 (Detective Comics #75-91, Batman #16-25 and World's Finest Comics #10-14)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 4 (Detective Comics #92-112, Batman #26-35 and World's Finest Comics #15-22)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 5 (Detective Comics #113-132, Batman #36-45 and World's Finest Comics #23-32)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 6 (Detective Comics #133-153, Batman #46-55 and World's Finest Comics #33-42)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 7 (Detective Comics #154-173, Batman #56-66 and World's Finest Comics #43-53)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 8 (Detective Comics #174-191, Batman #67-75 and World's Finest Comics #54-62)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 9 (Detective Comics #192-210, Batman #76-85 and World's Finest Comics #63-70)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 10 (Detective Comics #211-232 and Batman #86-100)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 11 (Detective Comics #233-257 and Batman #101-116)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 12 (Detective Comics #258-281 and Batman #117-132)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 13 (Detective Comics #282-303 and Batman #133-148)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 14 (Detective Comics #304-326 and Batman #149-163)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 15 (Detective Comics #327-347 and Batman #164-178)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 16 (Detective Comics #348-371 and Batman #179-198)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 17 (Detective Comics #372-391 and Batman #199-216)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 18 (Detective Comics #396, #399-400, #402, #404, #407-408 and Batman #219-220, #222-223, #226, #229 and #231)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 19 (Detective Comics #415-418, #424-425, #428-429, #432, #434-435 and Batman #232, #234-235, #239, #241 and #247)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 20 (Detective Comics #442, #444-448, #452-454 and Batman #251-260, #262-263 and #266-268)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 21 (Detective Comics #460-476, Batman #272-277, #279-288 and #291-297, DC Special #28 and DC Special Series #1)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 22 (Detective Comics #477-479, #483-484, #486, Batman #301-319 and Batman Family #17 and #20)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 23 (Detective Comics #488, #491-505, Batman #321-324, #326-329, #336-337 and DC Special Series #21)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 24 (Detective Comics #506-526 and Batman #341-359)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 25 (Detective Comics #527-547, Batman #360-381 and Batman Special #1)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Vol. 26 (Detective Comics #548-567, Batman #382-400 and Batman annual #10)
Robin:
DC Deluxe Collections: Robin Vol. 1 (Star Spangled Comics #65-85)
DC Deluxe Collections: Robin Vol. 2 (Star Spangled Comics #86-105)
DC Deluxe Collections: Robin Vol. 3 (Star Spangled Comics #106-130)
DC Deluxe Collections: Robin Vol. 4 (Detective Comics #390-391, #400-403, Batman #192, #202, #227, #229, #230-231, #234-236, #239-242, World's Finest Comics #200 and Justice League of America #91-92)
DC Deluxe Collections: Robin Vol. 5 (Batman #244-245, #248-250, #252, 254 and Detective Comics #445, #447, #450-451)
DC Deluxe Collections: Robin Vol. 6 (Batman Family #1, #3-9, #11-20, Detective Comics #481-493, Batman #333, #337-339 and DC Comics Presents #31 and #58)
Batgirl:
DC Deluxe Collections: Batgirl Vol. 1 (Detective Comics #359, #363, #369, #371, #384-385, #388-389, 392-393, #396-397, #400-401, #404-424, Batman #197, Justice League of America #60, Superman #268, #279 and Superman Family #171)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batgirl Vol. 2 (Batman Family #1, #3-7, #9-20 and DC Comics Presents #19)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batgirl Vol. 3 (Detective Comics #481-499, #501-502 and #508-510)
The Joker:
DC Deluxe Collections: The Joker Vol. 1 (Batman #251 and The Joker #1-10) â
Catwoman:
DC Deluxe Collections: Catwoman Vol. 1 (Batman #345-346, #348-349, #350-351 and Detective Comics #520)
Two-Face:
DC Deluxe Collections: Two-Face Vol. 1 (Batman #81, #234, #258, Detective Comics #66, #68, #80 and DC Super-Stars #14) â
The Riddler:
DC Deluxe Collections: The Riddler Vol. 1 (Batman #171, #179, #263, #279 and Detective Comics #140, #142, #362, #364 and #377) â
Man-Bat and Jason Bard:
DC Deluxe Collections: Man-Bat and Jason Bard Vol. 1 (Man-Bat stories from Detective Comics #400, #402, #407, #416, #429, Batman #254 and Jason Bard stories from Detective Comics #425, #427, #429, #431, #433 and #435) â
DC Deluxe Collections: Man-Bat and Jason Bard Vol. 2 (Detective Comics #458-459, #481, #485, #492, Batman Family #11-20 and Man-Bat #1-2)
Batman Family:
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Family Vol. 1 (Untold Legends of the Batman #1-3, Bruce Wayne stories from Batman #304 and Detective Comics #483, Bat-Mite stories from Detective Comics #482 and The Brave and The Bold #200, Alfred stories from Detective Comics #486, #489, Commissioner Gordon story from Detective Comics #489 and Commissioner Gordon and Alfred story from Batman Family #11)
Superman & Batman:
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman & Batman: World's Finest Vol. 1 (Superman #76 and World's Finest Comics #71-94)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman & Batman: World's Finest Vol. 2 (World's Finest Comics #95-116)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman and Batman: World's Finest Vol. 3 (World's Finest Comics #117-131)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman and Batman: World's Finest Vol. 4 (World's Finest Comics #132-141)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman and Batman: World's Finest Vol. 5 (World's Finest Comics #142-153)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman and Batman: World's Finest Vol. 6 (World's Finest Comics #154-164)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman and Batman: World's Finest Vol. 7 (World's Finest Comics #165-177)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman and Batman: World's Finest Vol. 8 (World's Finest Comics #178-197)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman and Batman: World's Finest Vol. 9 (World's Finest Comics #217-220, #223, #225-227, #232 and #234)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman and Batman: World's Finest Vol. 10 (World's Finest Comics #235-237, #239-240 and #243-249)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman and Batman: World's Finest Vol. 11 (World's Finest Comics #250-260)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman and Batman: World's Finest Vol. 12 (World's Finest Comics #261-262 and #264-270)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman and Batman: World's Finest Vol. 13 (World's Finest Comics #271-276 and #278-281)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman and Batman: World's Finest Vol. 14 (World's Finest Comics #282-291)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman and Batman: World's Finest Vol. 15 (World's Finest Comics #292-293 and #296-302)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman and Batman: World's Finest Vol. 16 (World's Finest Comics #303-313)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman and Batman: World's Finest Vol. 17 (World's Finest Comics #314-323)
DC Team-Ups:
DC Deluxe Collections: DC Team-Ups Vol. 1 (The Brave and The Bold #50-51, #53, #55-56, #61-63, #65-66 and #72-73)
Super-Sons:
DC Deluxe Collections: Super-Sons Vol. 1 (World's Finest Comics #154, #157, #215-216, #221-222, #224, #228, #230-231, #233, #238 and #242)
Batman Team-Ups:
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Team-Ups Vol. 1 (The Brave and The Bold #59, #64, #67-71, #74-76) â
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Team-Ups Vol. 2 (The Brave and The Bold #77-86)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Team-Ups Vol. 3 (The Brave and The Bold #87-96)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Team-Ups Vol. 4 (The Brave and The Bold #97-106)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Team-Ups Vol. 5 (The Brave and The Bold #107-116)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Team-Ups Vol. 6 (The Brave and The Bold #117-126)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Team-Ups Vol. 7 (The Brave and The Bold #127-136 and DC Special Series #8)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Team-Ups Vol. 8 (The Brave and The Bold #137-145 and Batman Family #20)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Team-Ups Vol. 9 (The Brave and The Bold #146-155)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Team-Ups Vol. 10 (The Brave and The Bold #156-165)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Team-Ups Vol. 11 (The Brave and The Bold #166-175)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Team-Ups Vol. 12 (The Brave and The Bold #176-185)
DC Deluxe Collections: Batman Team-Ups Vol. 13 (The Brave and The Bold #186-192 and #194-200)
Superman Team-Ups:
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman Team-Ups Vol. 1 (World's Finest Comics #198-214)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman Team-Ups Vol. 2 (DC Comics Presents #1-9 and All-New Collectors Edition #58)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman Team-Ups Vol. 3 (DC Comics Presents #10-19)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman Team-Ups Vol. 4 (DC Comics Presents #20-30)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman Team-Ups Vol. 5 (DC Comics Presents #31-40)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman Team-Ups Vol. 6 (DC Comics Presents #41-49 and annual #1)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman Team-Ups Vol. 7 (DC Comics Presents #50-59) â
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman Team-Ups Vol. 8 (DC Comics Presents #60-68 and annual #2)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman Team-Ups Vol. 9 (DC Comics Presents #69-76 and annual #3)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman Team-Ups Vol. 10 (DC Comics Presents #77-84 and annual #4)
DC Deluxe Collections: Superman Team-Ups Vol. 11 (DC Comics Presents #89-97)
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"Those who do not learn history are doomed to repeat it," and those who don't question history's methods, standards, and values are doomed to never learn it. Here are five free historiography essays.
Venus in Two Acts: A scholar of African American history grapples with the problem of writing about a slave when "no one recorded the things she said, or observed that she refused to say anything at all".
Introduction to Agnotology: A historian and philosopher who has spent his life fighting corporate disinformation campaigns writes âabout the conscious, unconscious, and structural production of ignoranceâ.
Introduction to Landmark Thucydides: A contemporary historian evaluates the research methods, and reliability, of a âhistorianâ born around 460 BC. The full introduction is available in the Amazon preview.
Can the Mosquito Speak?: What happens when history focuses on nonhuman forces? How have animals shaped human society?
The Idea of Provincializing Europe: A postcolonial historian confronts his own intellectual âinheritanceâ of Enlightenment thought: the methods and standards of the colonizers.
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