Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

100 Speeches That Changed the World [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 224 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 239x194x23 mm, kaal: 913 g, 200 COLOR PHOTOGRAPHS
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Mar-2021
  • Kirjastus: Rizzoli International Publications
  • ISBN-10: 0789339978
  • ISBN-13: 9780789339973
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 224 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 239x194x23 mm, kaal: 913 g, 200 COLOR PHOTOGRAPHS
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Mar-2021
  • Kirjastus: Rizzoli International Publications
  • ISBN-10: 0789339978
  • ISBN-13: 9780789339973
Teised raamatud teemal:
The history of the world as witnessed through the most inspiring, rousing, and memorable speeches ever given.

Throughout history, passionate orators have rallied nations, challenged accepted beliefs, and changed the course of history. Colin Salter has identified one-hundred of history's most inspirational, momentous, and thought-provoking speeches from ancient Rome and Athens to the 21st century and puts them into context, telling the stories behind the words that made history.
A celebration of the power of spoken rhetoric at its finest, this book profiles the words of the world's greatest public speakers. The speeches covered span the spectrum from stirring calls to arms to impassioned pleas for peace, along with speeches that marked major historical events such as the abolition of slavery, women achieving the right to vote, and the expansion of civil rights. Each speech features a concise introduction along with detailed analysis accompanied by key illustrations and photographs.
Highlighted speeches include: Elizabeth I's speech in preparation of the Spanish Armada (1588), Sojourner Truth's "Ain't I a Woman" (1851), Lincoln's Gettysburg Address (1863), Franklin D. Roosevelt, "Only thing we have to fear is fear itself" (1933), Winston Churchill, "Blood, Sweat and Tears" (1940), Martin Luther King, "I Have a Dream" (1963), Harvey Milk's "Hope Speech" (1978), Margaret Thatcher's "The Lady's not for Turning" (1980), Nelson Mandela on his release from prison (1990), among many more.
Introduction 10(4)
C. 399 BC: "I know that I know nothing"
14(2)
Socrates
C. 326 BC: Speech by the Hydaspes River
16(2)
Alexander The Great
63 BC "O temporal O mores!"
18(2)
Cicero
C. 31 AD: Sermon on the Mount
20(2)
Jesus Christ
1305: "I have slain the English"
22(2)
William Wallace
1588: "1 have the heart and stomach of a king"
24(2)
Elizabeth I.
1649: Execution speech
26(2)
Charles I.
1775: "Give me liberty, or give me death!"
28(2)
Patrick Henry
1789: Abolition of slavery speech
30(2)
William Wilberforce
1794: Justification for the "reign of terror"
32(2)
Maximilien Robespierre
1796: Farewell Address
34(2)
George Washington
1829: Speech to Congress on "Indian removal"
36(2)
Andrew Jackson
1851: "Ain't 1 a woman?"
38(2)
Sojourner Truth
1852: "What to the slave is the 4 of July?"
40(2)
Frederick Douglass
1860: Oxford evolution debate
42(2)
Thomas Henry Huxley
1861: Cornerstone speech, justifying the confederacy
44(2)
Alexander Stephens
1863: The Gettysburg Address
46(2)
Abraham Lincoln
1865: Second Inaugural Address
48(2)
Abraham Lincoln
1877: Surrender speech
50(2)
Chief Joseph
1895: "The love that dare not speak its name"
52(2)
Oscar Wilde
1901: Votes for Women
54(2)
Mark Twain
1913: "Freedom or Death" speech
56(2)
Emmeline Pankhurst
1915: "Ireland unfree shall never be at peace"
58(2)
Patrick Pearse
1917: "Power to the Soviets" speech
60(2)
Vladimir Lenin
1918: Fourteen Points
62(2)
Woodrow Wilson
1931: "My Spiritual Message"
64(2)
Mahatma Gandhi
1933: First speech as chancellor of Germany
66(2)
Adolf Hitler
1933: "The only thing we have to fear is fear itself"
68(2)
Franklin D. Roosevelt
1936: Abdication speech
70(2)
Edward VIII
1938: "Peace for our time"
72(2)
Neville Chamberlain
1939: "The luckiest man on the face of this earth"
74(2)
Lou Gehrig
1939: Obersalzberg speech
76(2)
Adolf Hitler
1939: Declaration of war against Germany
78(2)
George VI
1939: Urging the US to stay neutral in WWII
80(2)
Charles Lindbergh
1940: "Blood, toil, tears and sweat"
82(2)
Winston Churchill
1940: "We shall fight on the beaches"
84(2)
Winston Churchill
1940: "This was their finest hour"
86(2)
Winston Churchill
1940: Appeal of June 18
88(2)
General de Gaulle
1941: Radio speech on Nazi invasion
90(2)
Vyacheslav Molotov
1941: "A date which will live in infamy"
92(2)
Franklin D. Roosevelt
1944: Announcing the Allies had landed in France
94(2)
Dwight D. Eisenhower
1946: Denouncing divine status
96(2)
Emperor Hirohito
1946: "An iron curtain has descended"
98(2)
Winston Churchill
1946: Nuremberg Trial Testimony
100(2)
Albert Speer
1947: "Tryst with Destiny"
102(2)
Jawaharlal Nehru
1948: Israeli Declaration of Independence
104(2)
David Ben-Gurion
1948: Speech on the founding of the NHS
106(2)
Aneurin Bevan
1949: "The Chinese people have stood up!"
108(2)
Chairman Mao Zedong
1951: Speech to the descamisados
110(2)
Eva Peron
1953: Coronation speech
112(2)
Queen Elizabeth II
1954: Racial segregation US schools mling
114(2)
Earl Warren
1956: "Cult of the individual"
116(2)
Nikita Khruschev
1960: "The wind of change is blowing through this continent"
118(2)
Harold Macmillan
1960: "Home from the Army" press conference
120(2)
Elvis Presley
1960: United Nations' speech
122(2)
Fidel Castro
1960: Lady Chatterley's Lover Obscenity Trial
124(2)
Mervyn Griffith-Jones
1961: Inaugural Address
126(2)
John E. Kennedy
1962: "We choose to go to the moon"
128(2)
John F. Kennedy
1963: "Ich bin ein Berliner"
130(2)
John F. Kennedy
1963: "I have a dream"
132(2)
Martin Luther King Jr.
1963: The White Heat of Technology
134(2)
Harold Wilson
1964: "I am the greatest!"
136(2)
Muhammad Ali
1964: "The Ballot or the Bullet"
138(2)
Malcolm X.
1964: "An ideal for which I am prepared to die"
140(2)
Nelson Mandela
1966: "We're more popular than Jesus" apology
142(2)
John Lennon
1967: "Turn on, tune in, drop out"
144(2)
Timothy Leary
1967: Loving vs. Virginia
146(2)
Earl Warren
1967: Denouncing the Vietnam War
148(2)
Eugene McCarthy
1968: "I've been to the mounlaintop"
150(2)
Martin Luther King Jr.
1968: Rivers of Blood
152(2)
Enoch Powell
1969: "One giant leap lor mankind"
154(2)
Neil Armstrong
1969: "This is America and they are going to have their festival"
156(2)
Max B. Yasgur
1970: Strike for Equality
158(2)
Betty Friedan
1971: Vietnam Veterans Against the War
160(2)
John Kerry
1973: Rue VS. Wade
162(2)
Harry Blackmun
1974: Announcement of Resignation
164(2)
Richard Nixon
1978: "You have to give people hope"
166(2)
Harvey Milk
1980: "The lady's not for turning"
168(2)
Margaret Thatcher
1987: "Tear down this wall!"
170(2)
Ronald Reagan
1990: "We have waited too long for our freedom"
172(2)
Nelson Mandela
1991: Farewell Address
174(2)
Mikhail S. Gorbachev
1993: "On the Pulse of Morning"
176(2)
MayaAngelou
1997: "A very Chinese city with British characteristics"
178(2)
Chris Patten
1997: "The most hunted person of the modern age"
180(2)
Earl Spencer
1998: "I have sinned"
182(2)
Bill Clinton
1998: Address to Irish Parliament
184(2)
Tony Blair
2001: Address to the Nation
186(2)
George W. Bush
2004: Address to the United States
188(2)
Osama bin Laden
2004: Keynote Address at the Democratic-National Convention
190(2)
Barack Obama
2007: "Today Apple is going to reinvent the phone"
192(2)
Steve Jobs
2007: Commencement Address at Harvard
194(2)
Bill Gates
2008: "Yes, We Can!"
196(2)
Barack Obama
2013: "The right of education for every child"
198(2)
MalalaYousafzai
2016: Stanford Rape Trial statement to court
200(2)
"Emily Doe"
2016: Exploring the impact of Artificial Intelligence
202(2)
Stephen Hawking
2017: "I am a nasty woman"
204(2)
Ashley Judd
2017: Commencement Address at Harvard
206(2)
Mark Zuckerberg
2017: Senate Testimony
208(2)
James Comey
2017: Becoming a Multiplanet Species
210(2)
Elon Musk
2018: "Their time is up"
212
Oprah Winfrey
Colin Salter is the co-author of Everything You Need to Know About Everything You Need to Know About Inventions. He is a history and science writer with a fascination for how things work, and how they used to work. He has written about everything, including the private lives of marine gastropods. His contributions to Chambers' Biographical Dictionary include the entries for 500 living scientists.