1.

Record Nr.

UNICASURB0119367

Autore

Heidegger, Martin

Titolo

Kant e il problema della metafisica / Martin Heidegger ; introduzione di Valerio Verra

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Roma [etc.], : GLF editori Laterza, 2000

Titolo uniforme

Kant und das problem der Metaphysik

ISBN

8842034452

Edizione

[3. ed]

Descrizione fisica

XXII, 241 p. ; 21 cm

Collana

Biblioteca universale Laterza ; 285

Disciplina

110

Soggetti

Kant, Immanuel - Metafisica

Lingua di pubblicazione

Italiano

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Trad. di Maria Elena Reina, riveduta da Valerio Verra.



2.

Record Nr.

UNINA9911002591903321

Autore

Ray Angela G

Titolo

Free Black Charlestonians in Debate : The Complete Proceedings of the Clionian Debating Society, 1847-1858

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Columbia : , : University of South Carolina Press, , 2025

©2025

ISBN

1-64336-580-0

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (216 pages)

Classificazione

HIS056000LAN015000

Disciplina

808.5306/0757915

Soggetti

Debates and debating - South Carolina - Charleston - Societies, etc

Free African Americans - South Carolina - Charleston - Societies, etc

Debates and debating - South Carolina - Charleston - History - 19th century

Free African Americans - South Carolina - Charleston - Intellectual life - 19th century

HISTORY / African American & Black

LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Rhetoric

Records (Documents)

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Cover -- Free Black Charlestonians in Debate -- Title -- Copyright -- CONTENTS -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Performing Freedom on Slavery's Hearth -- Note on Transcription -- Proceedings of the Clionian Debating Society, November 5, 1847-January 14, 1858 -- 1847 -- 1848 -- 1849 -- 1850 -- 1851 -- 1852 -- 1853 -- 1854 -- 1855 -- 1856 -- 1857 -- 1858 -- Appendix A Members, Honorary Members, and Supporters -- Appendix B Debating Questions and Decisions -- Appendix C Orations -- Appendix D Publications Acquired for Society Library -- Further Reading -- Index.

Sommario/riassunto

"The comprehensive, never-before-published records of a debating society run by free Black men From 1847 until 1858, when "political disadvantages" prompted its dissolution, the Clionian Debating Society, a group of free Black men, met regularly in Charleston, South Carolina. Reconstruction-era leaders such as Henry Cardozo, who would serve in



the SC state legislature, and Simeon W. Beaird, who was elected to Georgia's state constitutional convention in 1867, were among its membership.Free Black Charlestonians in Debate brings together the Clionian Society's minutes in a comprehensive scholarly edition, reuniting the two original handwritten volumes that are now housed in the collections of the Charleston Library Society and Duke University. The annotated transcription is supported by an introduction, appendixes summarizing key features of the society's membership and operations, recommendations for further reading, and an index. Made easily accessible for the first time, these minutes represent an important piece of Black intellectual history that offers insight into the educational training of young men of the free Black community in antebellum Charleston, some of whom became religious and political leaders in the Reconstruction South"--

"The comprehensive, never-before-published records of a debating society run by free Black men. From 1847 until 1858, when "political disadvantages" prompted its dissolution, the Clionian Debating Society, a group of free Black men, met regularly in Charleston, South Carolina. Reconstruction-era leaders such as Henry Cardozo, who would serve in the SC state legislature, and Simeon W. Beaird, who was elected to Georgia's state constitutional convention in 1867, were among its membership. Free Black Charlestonians in Debate brings together the Clionian Society's minutes in a comprehensive scholarly edition, reuniting the two original handwritten volumes that are now housed in the collections of the Charleston Library Society and Duke University. The annotated transcription is supported by an introduction, appendixes summarizing key features of the society's membership and operations, recommendations for further reading, and an index. Made easily accessible for the first time, these minutes represent an important piece of Black intellectual history that offers insight into the educational training of young men of the free Black community in antebellum Charleston, some of whom became religious and political leaders in the Reconstruction South"--