This popular guide to both antique and modern dolls is produced each year to help keep collectors more informed of this ever-changing market. It contains over 6,000 doll descriptions, current values, histories, dates of manufacture, plus a wealth of facts to aid both beginning and advanced doll collectors. Full-color photos throughout.
Madame Alexander Dolls are still the most highly sought after Limited Edition dolls produced today. Their values are increasing yearly, making a new edition each year essential. This new edition is expanded to include every doll made by Alexander, and the prices have been revised to reflect today's market. Full-color photographs.
Describing more than 6,000 dolls with current values, histories, and dates of manufacture, and including a wealth of facts to aid both beginning and advanced collectors, this guide has sold over one million copies in previous editions. More than 500 full-color photos.
Each year, popular collectibles author Pat Smith completely updates the values in this popular guide and adds new, full-color photos to produce an entirely new look. The alphabetical listings contain nearly every Madame Alexander doll, including store specials and limited edition dolls, with sizes, dates, and current collector values for each doll.
This engaging, illustrated guide to the modernist movement in American literature provides a wealth of information on American modernism, the Lost Generation, modernism in the American novel, the Harlem Renaissance, modernism i.
The scope of affirmative obligation is a point of contention among liberals. Some see affirmative obligations required by social justice as incompatible with a strong commitment to individual freedom. The task before the moderate liberal is then to consider what a consistently liberal view of affirmative obligation would have to be in order to accommodate liberal commitments to freedom and justice and also account for long-standing institutions that are central to liberal democratic society. In this book, Patricia Smith argues that this can be achieved by reconstructing the liberal doctrine of positive and negative duty. She offers a careful consideration of these elements of liberal principles as they relate to affirmative obligation. Through an innovative analysis of the institutions of family and contract, Smith develops the idea of duties of membership as preferable to natural duties (to explain family obligation) and as needed to supplement contractual duties (to explain professional obligation). This idea is then applied to the problem of justifying political obligation. She argues that membership obligations, implied in cooperative endeavor, must supplement obligations of consent that are central to liberal theory. This is deftly illustrated through a state of nature theory that includes community membership, eliminating atomistic individualism while maintaining consonance with what Smith calls cooperative individualism. The resulting view of liberal individualism is consistent, complete, and capable of handling long-standing liberal institutions, while taking seriously the demands of affirmative obligations. Smiths clear articulation of a liberal view of affirmative obligation finds a middle ground on this polarized topic, with compelling and reasoned implications for liberal political philosophy. Her discussion will interest students and scholars of legal and political philosophy and political science.
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