Image descriptions:
Image one - E-book titled Stranger in a Strange State: The Politics of Carpetbagging from Robert Kennedy to Scott Brown (2019) - synopsis: Candidates normally run for office in the places where they live. Occasionally, however, a politician will run as a carpetbagger—someone who moves to a new state for the express purpose of running, or who runs in one state after holding office in another. Stranger in a Strange State examines what makes some politicians take this drastic step and how that shapes their campaigns and chances for victory. Focusing on races for the US Senate from 1964 forward, Christopher J. Galdieri analyzes the campaigns of nine carpetbaggers, including nationally known figures such as Robert F. Kennedy and Hillary Rodham Clinton and less well-known candidates like Elizabeth Cheney and Scott Brown.
Image two - E-book titled Surveillance and Spies in the Civil War: Exposing Confederate Conspiracies in America's Heartland (2015) - synopsis: Surveillance and Spies in the Civil War represents path-breaking research on the rise of U.S. Army intelligence operations in the Midwest during the American Civil War and counters long-standing assumptions about Northern politics and society. Starting in 1862, army commanders took it upon themselves to initiate investigations of antiwar sentiment in several Southern states. By 1863, several of them had established intelligence operations staffed by hired civilian detectives and by soldiers detailed from their units to chase down deserters and draft dodgers, to maintain surveillance on suspected persons and groups, and to investigate organized resistance to the draft. By 1864, these spies had infiltrated secret organizations that, sometimes in collaboration with Confederate rebels, aimed to subvert the war effort.
Image three - E-book titled How Outer Space Made America: Geography, Organization, and the Cosmic Sublime (2014) - synopsis: Author Daniel Sage analyses how and why American space exploration reproduced and transformed American cultural and political imaginations by appealing to, and to an extent organizing, the transcendence of spatial and temporal frontiers. In so doing, he traces the development of a seductive, and powerful, yet complex and unstable American geographical imagination: the ‘transcendental state.’ While largely engaging with the historical development of space exploration, Sage shows how contemporary cultural and social, and indeed geographical, research themes (including national identity, critical geopolitics, gender, technocracy, trauma, and memory) can be informed by the study of space exploration.