- Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded, Sick, and Shipwrecked Members of Armed Forces at Sea, Convention for the (1949)
Geneva Conventions: …in the Field, (2) the Convention for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded, Sick, and Shipwrecked Members of Armed Forces at Sea, (3) the Convention Relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War, and (4) the Convention Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War.
- Amelioration of the Wounded in Time of War, Convention for the (1864)
Geneva Conventions: …international negotiations that produced the Convention for the Amelioration of the Wounded in Time of War in 1864. This convention provided for (1) the immunity from capture and destruction of all establishments for the treatment of wounded and sick soldiers and their personnel, (2) the impartial reception and treatment of…
- Amelung glass
Amelung glass, American glass produced from 1784 to about 1795 by John Frederick Amelung, a native of Bremen in Germany. Financed by German and American promoters, Amelung founded the New Bremen Glassmanufactory near Frederick, Md., U.S., and attempted to establish a self-sufficient community,
- Amelung, John Frederick (American glassmaker)
Amelung glass: …1784 to about 1795 by John Frederick Amelung, a native of Bremen in Germany. Financed by German and American promoters, Amelung founded the New Bremen Glassmanufactory near Frederick, Md., U.S., and attempted to establish a self-sufficient community, importing glassworkers and other craftsmen from Germany. The enterprise was encouraged by such…
- amen (prayer)
amen, expression of agreement, confirmation, or desire used in worship by Jews, Christians, and Muslims. The basic meaning of the Semitic root from which it is derived is “firm,” “fixed,” or “sure,” and the related Hebrew verb also means “to be reliable” and “to be trusted.” The Greek Old Testament
- Amen (Dogon god)
Amma, the supreme creator god in the religion of the Dogon people of West Africa. The notion of a creator god named Amma or Amen is not unique to the Dogon but can also be found in the religious traditions of other West African and North African groups. It may be reflected in the name Amazigb,
- Amen (poetry by Amichai)
Yehuda Amichai: With Amen (1977) he garnered a wider audience through the translation of his poems into English by Ted Hughes. Influenced by modern American and English poets, including W.H. Auden, Amichai was noted for his lyrical use of everyday language and the simplicity of his work. The…
- Amen (Egyptian god)
Amon, Egyptian deity who was revered as king of the gods. Amon may have been originally one of the eight deities of the Hermopolite creation myth; his cult reached Thebes, where he became the patron of the pharaohs by the reign of Mentuhotep I (2008–1957 bce). At that date he was already identified
- Amen (album by Keita)
Salif Keita: …albums released in the 1990s, Amen (1991) was the most enthusiastically received. Keita returned to Bamako in 2001 and released Moffou to great acclaim the following year. For the album, Keita recorded with numerous guest artists representing a broad spectrum of African and non-African acoustic traditions.
- Amen. (film by Costa-Gavras [2002])
Costa-Gavras: Costa-Gavras cowrote and directed Amen. (2002), a war drama that centers on a German soldier who notifies leaders in the Roman Catholic Church about the killings inside Nazi concentration camps, and Le Couperet (2005; The Axe), about a frustrated unemployed man who decides to kill the other people competing…
- Amenábar, Alejandro (Chilean composer, director, writer, and producer)
Spain: Cinema: …ambitious ghost stories such as Alejandro Amenábar’s The Others (2001) emerged as a genre that easily found audiences outside the country. Amenábar’s The Sea Inside (2004) won the Academy Award for best foreign-language film.
- Amènagement, L’ (play by Louvet)
Jean Louvet: …dreams of a retired labourer; L’Amènagement (1979; “The Furnishings”), a critique of the petty bourgeoisie; and Le Coup de semonce (1995; figuratively, “The Shot Across the Bow” or “Warning Shot”), which dramatizes the 1945 Walloon Congress.
- amendment (constitutional law)
amendment, in government and law, an addition or alteration made to a constitution, statute, or legislative bill or resolution. Amendments can be made to existing constitutions and statutes and are also commonly made to bills in the course of their passage through a legislature. Since amendments to
- amendments to the U.S. Constitution, list of
The Constitution of the United States, which entered into force in 1789, is the oldest written national constitution in use. The framers of the U.S. Constitution included a provision whereby the document may be amended, generally (though not solely) by a two-thirds majority of each house of
- Amendola, Giovanni (Italian journalist and politician)
Giovanni Amendola was a journalist, politician, and, in the early 1920s, foremost opponent of the Italian Fascists. As a young journalist, Amendola expressed his philosophical and ideological views in articles appearing first in La Voce (“The Voice”) and then in the newspapers Resto di Carlino and
- Amenemhet I (king of Egypt)
Amenemhet I, was the king of ancient Egypt (reigned 1939–10 bce), founder of the 12th dynasty (1939–c. 1760 bce), who with a number of powerful nomarchs (provincial governors) consolidated Egyptian unity after the death of his predecessor, under whom he had served as vizier. Amenemhet, an
- Amenemhet II (king of Egypt)
Amenemhet II, was a king of ancient Egypt (reigned c. 1878–43 bce), grandson of Amenemhet I (founder of the 12th dynasty [c. 1939–c. 1760 bce]). He furthered Egypt’s trade relations and internal development. While he was coregent with his father, Sesostris I, Amenemhet led a gold-mining expedition
- Amenemhet III (king of Egypt)
Amenemhet III, was a king of ancient Egypt of the 12th dynasty, who brought Middle Kingdom Egypt to a peak of economic prosperity by completing a system to regulate the inflow of water into Lake Moeris, in the Al-Fayyūm depression southwest of Cairo. The resulting stabilization of the water level
- Amenemhet IV (king of Egypt)
ancient Egypt: The 12th dynasty (c. 1939–c. 1760 bce): …reigns of Amenemhet III and Amenemhet IV (c. 1772–64 bce) and of Sebeknefru (c. 1763–60 bce), the first certainly attested female monarch, were apparently peaceful, but the accession of a woman marked the end of the dynastic line.
- Amenemmes I (king of Egypt)
Amenemhet I, was the king of ancient Egypt (reigned 1939–10 bce), founder of the 12th dynasty (1939–c. 1760 bce), who with a number of powerful nomarchs (provincial governors) consolidated Egyptian unity after the death of his predecessor, under whom he had served as vizier. Amenemhet, an
- Amenemmes II (king of Egypt)
Amenemhet II, was a king of ancient Egypt (reigned c. 1878–43 bce), grandson of Amenemhet I (founder of the 12th dynasty [c. 1939–c. 1760 bce]). He furthered Egypt’s trade relations and internal development. While he was coregent with his father, Sesostris I, Amenemhet led a gold-mining expedition
- Amenemmes III (king of Egypt)
Amenemhet III, was a king of ancient Egypt of the 12th dynasty, who brought Middle Kingdom Egypt to a peak of economic prosperity by completing a system to regulate the inflow of water into Lake Moeris, in the Al-Fayyūm depression southwest of Cairo. The resulting stabilization of the water level
- Amenemope (Egyptian author)
Amenemope, ancient Egyptian author of The Instruction of Amenemope, probably composed during the late New Kingdom (1300–1075 bce). Amenemope’s text, similar in content to most of the instruction or wisdom literature written earlier, was a collection of maxims and admonitions setting forth practical
- Amenhotep (Egyptian high priest)
ancient Egypt: The 21st dynasty: 1051–06bce) and his eventual successor, Amenemope (ruled c.1002–c. 993 bce), were discovered at Tanis, but little is known of their reigns. This was a period when statuary was usurped and the material of earlier periods was reused. At Karnak, Pinudjem I, who decorated the facade of the Khons temple, usurped…
- Amenhotep I (king of Egypt)
Amenhotep I, was the king of ancient Egypt (reigned 1514–1494 bce), son of Ahmose I, the founder of the 18th dynasty (1539–1292 bce). He effectively extended Egypt’s boundaries in Nubia (modern Sudan). The biographies of two soldiers confirm Amenhotep’s wars in Nubia. As shown by a graffito from
- Amenhotep II (king of Egypt)
Amenhotep II, was the king of ancient Egypt (reigned c. 1425–00 bce), son of Thutmose III. Ruling at the height of Egypt’s imperial era, he strove to maintain his father’s conquests by physical and military skills. Amenhotep II’s upbringing was carefully guided by his warrior father, with great
- Amenhotep III (king of Egypt)
Amenhotep III, was the king of ancient Egypt (reigned c. 1390–53 bce) in a period of peaceful prosperity, who devoted himself to expanding diplomatic contacts and to extensive building in Egypt and Nubia. In the fifth year of his reign, Amenhotep conducted campaigns against a territory called
- Amenhotep IV (king of Egypt)
Akhenaten, was a king (c. 1353–36 bce) of ancient Egypt of the 18th dynasty, who established a new cult dedicated to the Aton, the sun’s disk (hence his assumed name, Akhenaten, meaning “beneficial to Aton”). Few scholars now agree with the contention that Amenhotep III associated his son Amenhotep
- Amenhotep, son of Hapu (Egyptian official)
Amenhotep, son of Hapu, was a high official of the reign of Amenhotep III of ancient Egypt (reigned 1390–53 bce), who was greatly honoured by the king within his lifetime and was deified more than 1,000 years later during the Ptolemaic era. Amenhotep rose through the ranks of government service,
- Amenophis I (king of Egypt)
Amenhotep I, was the king of ancient Egypt (reigned 1514–1494 bce), son of Ahmose I, the founder of the 18th dynasty (1539–1292 bce). He effectively extended Egypt’s boundaries in Nubia (modern Sudan). The biographies of two soldiers confirm Amenhotep’s wars in Nubia. As shown by a graffito from
- Amenophis II (king of Egypt)
Amenhotep II, was the king of ancient Egypt (reigned c. 1425–00 bce), son of Thutmose III. Ruling at the height of Egypt’s imperial era, he strove to maintain his father’s conquests by physical and military skills. Amenhotep II’s upbringing was carefully guided by his warrior father, with great
- Amenophis III (king of Egypt)
Amenhotep III, was the king of ancient Egypt (reigned c. 1390–53 bce) in a period of peaceful prosperity, who devoted himself to expanding diplomatic contacts and to extensive building in Egypt and Nubia. In the fifth year of his reign, Amenhotep conducted campaigns against a territory called
- Amenophis IV (king of Egypt)
Akhenaten, was a king (c. 1353–36 bce) of ancient Egypt of the 18th dynasty, who established a new cult dedicated to the Aton, the sun’s disk (hence his assumed name, Akhenaten, meaning “beneficial to Aton”). Few scholars now agree with the contention that Amenhotep III associated his son Amenhotep
- amenorrhea (physical disorder)
amenorrhea, failure to menstruate. Menstruation is the normal cyclic bleeding from the uterus in the female reproductive tract that occurs at approximately four-week intervals. Primary amenorrhea is the delay or failure to start menstruating upon reaching the age of 16, while secondary amenorrhea
- amenorrhoea (physical disorder)
amenorrhea, failure to menstruate. Menstruation is the normal cyclic bleeding from the uterus in the female reproductive tract that occurs at approximately four-week intervals. Primary amenorrhea is the delay or failure to start menstruating upon reaching the age of 16, while secondary amenorrhea
- Amenouzume (Japanese deity)
Amenouzume, in Japanese mythology, the celestial goddess who performed a spontaneous dance enticing the sun goddess Amaterasu out of the cave in which she had secluded herself and had thus deprived the world of light. Amenouzume decorated herself with club moss and leaves of the sakaki tree, lit
- Amenouzume No Mikoto (Japanese deity)
Amenouzume, in Japanese mythology, the celestial goddess who performed a spontaneous dance enticing the sun goddess Amaterasu out of the cave in which she had secluded herself and had thus deprived the world of light. Amenouzume decorated herself with club moss and leaves of the sakaki tree, lit
- amensalism (biology)
amensalism, association between organisms of two different species in which one is inhibited or destroyed and the other is unaffected. There are two basic modes: competition (q.v.), in which a larger or stronger organism excludes a smaller or weaker one from living space or deprives it of food, and
- ament (flower cluster)
catkin, elongated cluster of single-sex flowers bearing scaly bracts and usually lacking petals. Catkins may be erect or pendulous and are often somewhat inconspicuous. Many trees bear catkins, including willows, birches, and oaks. Wind carries pollen from male to female catkins or from male
- Ament, Jeff (American musician)
Pearl Jam: …20, 1966, Seattle, Washington), bassist Jeff Ament (b. March 10, 1963, Havre, Montana), lead guitarist Mike McCready (b. April 5, 1966, Pensacola, Florida), and drummer Dave Krusen (b. March 10, 1966, Tacoma, Washington). Later members have included Jack Irons (b. July 18, 1962, Los Angeles, California), Dave Abbruzzese (b. May…
- Amenta (Ceramese mythology)
dema deity: …myth, a dema man named Amenta found a coconut speared on a boar’s tusk and in a dream was instructed to plant it. In six days a palm had sprung from the nut and flowered. Amenta cut his finger, and his blood dripped on the blossom. Nine days later a…
- Amentaceae (plant family)
Fagales: …in an artificial group called Amentiferae. The chief features of the members of Amentiferae were staminate flowers, and frequently also pistillate flowers, in catkins, reduced or absent sepals and petals, and a general trend toward wind pollination (anemophily). Fagales is now placed in the Rosid I group among the core…
- Amentiferae (plant family)
Fagales: …in an artificial group called Amentiferae. The chief features of the members of Amentiferae were staminate flowers, and frequently also pistillate flowers, in catkins, reduced or absent sepals and petals, and a general trend toward wind pollination (anemophily). Fagales is now placed in the Rosid I group among the core…
- Amer (India)
Amer, former town, east-central Rajasthan state, northwestern India. Amer is now part of the Jaipur urban agglomeration. It is noted for its Amer (or Amber) Palace (also called Amer Fort), which is part of several other Rajput fortresses that collectively were designated a UNESCO World Heritage
- Amer (people)
Tigre: …Tigre is that of the Amer (Beni Amer), a branch of the historically important Beja peoples. These Muslims all recognize the religious supremacy of the Mirghanīyah family of eastern Sudan. Another group, the Bet-Asgade (Bet Asgede), converted from Ethiopic Christianity to Islam. The life of the nomadic herdsman, so characteristic…
- Amer Fort (fortress, Amer, India)
Amer: It is noted for its Amer (or Amber) Palace (also called Amer Fort), which is part of several other Rajput fortresses that collectively were designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2013.
- Amer Palace (fortress, Amer, India)
Amer: It is noted for its Amer (or Amber) Palace (also called Amer Fort), which is part of several other Rajput fortresses that collectively were designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2013.
- Amer, Ghada (Egyptian artist)
African art: African art in the 20th century and beyond: …Klee—and the striking installations of Ghada Amer of Egypt, which employ textile arts to comment on issues related to female sexuality, underscore the range and multinational focus of contemporary art production.
- Amerada Corporation (American company)
Amerada Hess Corporation, integrated American petroleum company involved in exploration and development of oil and natural-gas resources, and the transportation, production, marketing, and sale of petroleum products. Headquarters are in New York City. The company was incorporated in 1920 as Amerada
- Amerada Hess Corporation (American company)
Amerada Hess Corporation, integrated American petroleum company involved in exploration and development of oil and natural-gas resources, and the transportation, production, marketing, and sale of petroleum products. Headquarters are in New York City. The company was incorporated in 1920 as Amerada
- Amerada Petroleum Corporation (American company)
Amerada Hess Corporation, integrated American petroleum company involved in exploration and development of oil and natural-gas resources, and the transportation, production, marketing, and sale of petroleum products. Headquarters are in New York City. The company was incorporated in 1920 as Amerada
- Amerasia Basin (basin, Arctic Ocean)
Arctic Ocean: Origin: The origin of the Amerasia Basin is far less clear. Most researchers favour a hypothesis of opening by rotation of the Arctic-Alaska lithospheric plate away from the North American Plate during the Cretaceous Period (about 145 to 65 million years ago). Better understanding of the origin of the Arctic…
- amercement (English law)
amercement, in English law, an arbitrary financial penalty, formerly imposed on an offender by his peers or at the discretion of the court or the lord. Although the word has become practically synonymous with “fine,” there is a distinction in that fines are fixed by statute, whereas amercements are
- Ameretat (Zoroastrianism)
amesha spenta: Haurvatāt (Wholeness or Perfection) and Ameretāt (Immortality) are often mentioned together as sisters. They preside over water and plants and may come to the believer as a reward for participation in the natures of the other amesha spentas.
- America (continents)
Americas, the two continents, North and South America, of the Western Hemisphere. The climatic zones of the two continents are quite different. In North America, subarctic climate prevails in the north, gradually warming southward and finally becoming tropical near the southern isthmus. In South
- America (television series)
Alistair Cooke: …in his BBC-produced television series America (1972–73). In 13 installments, filmed on location throughout the United States, Cooke surveyed some 500 years of American history in an eclectic and personal but highly coherent narrative. Alistair Cooke’s America (1973), the book based on the award-winning program, was a best-seller in the…
- America (yacht)
America’s Cup: …cup was won by the America, a 100-foot (30-metre) schooner from New York City, and subsequently became known as the America’s Cup. The American winners of the cup donated it to the New York Yacht Club in 1857 for a perpetual international challenge competition. In 1987 the San Diego Yacht…
- América (work by Ixtolinque)
Latin American art: Neoclassicism: His works include América (1830), a Neoclassical marble allegorical female figure, which he rendered with the same plumed Tupinambá headdress mentioned earlier but with European rather than Indian features. (Ultimately, the academy he headed had to close for lack of financial support from the state, which was then…
- America
United States, country in North America, a federal republic of 50 states. Besides the 48 conterminous states that occupy the middle latitudes of the continent, the United States includes the state of Alaska, at the northwestern extreme of North America, and the island state of Hawaii, in the
- America (sculpture by Cattelan)
Maurizio Cattelan: America: Indeed, his America sculpture, a functioning solid-gold toilet, which was installed in a restroom at the Guggenheim from 2016 to 2017, drew long lines from good-humored visitors and caused a social media frenzy. The artwork, estimated to be worth more than $4 million, was later stolen from…
- America Again: Re-becoming the Greatness We Never Weren’t (work by Colbert)
Stephen Colbert: …children’s book, was for adults—and America Again: Re-becoming the Greatness We Never Weren’t.
- America and the World War (work by Roosevelt)
Preparedness Movement: …two books on the subject, America and the World War (1915) and Fear God and Take Your Own Part (1916), that helped popularize the Preparedness Movement.
- America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power, and the Neoconservative Legacy (work by Fukuyama)
Francis Fukuyama: In America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power, and the Neoconservative Legacy (2006), he criticized neoconservatives and Republican Pres. George W. Bush and his administration’s policies after the September 11 attacks. In the 2008 presidential election he supported the Democratic candidate—and eventual winner—Barack Obama.
- America First (policy)
MAGA movement: …can be reversed through “America first” policies that would provide a greater degree of economic protectionism, greatly reduce immigration, particularly from developing countries, and encourage or enforce what MAGA members consider to be traditional American values. Some MAGA-supported policies, such as Trump’s call in 2015 for a “total and…
- America First Committee (United States history)
America First Committee, influential political pressure group in the United States (1940–41) that opposed aid to the Allies in World War II because it feared direct American military involvement in the conflict. The committee claimed a membership of 800,000 and attracted such leaders as General
- América Móvil (Mexican company)
Telmex SA: …in Telmex was acquired by América Móvil—Latin America’s leading mobile-phone company—which had been spun off from Telmex in 2001, although Slim retained ownership of it.
- America NT & SA, Bank of
Bank of America NT & SA, subsidiary of BankAmerica Corporation
- America Online (American company)
AOL, one of the largest Internet-access subscription service companies in the United States, providing a range of Web services for users. AOL was one of the first companies to establish a strong sense of community among its users through buddy lists and instant messaging services, which transmit
- America Play, The (play by Parks)
American literature: The Off-Broadway ascendancy: …recognition with her surreal pageant The America Play (1993), an adaptation of The Scarlet Letter called In the Blood (1999), and Topdog/Underdog (2001), a partly symbolic tale of conflict between two brothers (named Lincoln and Booth) that reminded critics of Sam Shepard’s fratricidal True West. She later adapted George and…
- America the Beautiful (song by Bates)
America the Beautiful, patriotic American hymn, regarded as the United States’ unofficial national anthem and one of the country’s best-known songs. The song extols the grandeur of the American landscape as well as the nation’s ideals. The lyrics were written by American poet, author, and educator
- America We Deserve, The (work by Trump)
Donald Trump: Presidential election of 2016: …published a book that year, The America We Deserve, in which he set forth his socially liberal and economically conservative political views. Trump later rejoined the Republican Party, and he maintained a high public profile during the 2012 presidential election. He did not run for office at that time, but…
- America’s Army (electronic game)
America’s Army, army training simulator and electronic game used for army recruitment and training. It was created in 2002 by Lieut. Col. Casey Wardynski of the U.S. Army. The game is maintained and managed by the U.S. Army and received positive reviews for its realistic depiction of a soldier’s
- America’s Best Comics (American comic book imprint)
America’s Best Comics (ABC), American comic book imprint launched in 1999 by comic creator Alan Moore. An imprint of WildStorm, an independent publisher founded by artist Jim Lee, America’s Best Comics (ABC) was intended to provide Moore with a creative avenue that was separate from mainstream
- America’s Blue Yodeler (American singer)
Jimmie Rodgers was an American singer, songwriter, and guitarist, one of the principal figures in the emergence of the country and western style of popular music. Rodgers, whose mother died when he was a young boy, was the son of an itinerant railroad gang foreman, and his youth was spent in a
- America’s Coming of Age (work by Brooks)
Van Wyck Brooks: …in his first major work, America’s Coming-of-Age (1915), which made a strong impact with its thesis that the Puritan duality that separated spiritual and money matters had resulted in a corresponding split in contemporary American culture between “highbrow” and “lowbrow” publics, neither of which was helpful to the writer.
- America’s Cup (yacht race and trophy)
America’s Cup, one of the oldest and best-known trophies in international sailing yacht competition. It was first offered as the Hundred Guinea Cup on August 20, 1851, by the Royal Yacht Squadron of Great Britain for a race around the Isle of Wight. The cup was won by the America, a 100-foot
- America’s Economic Supremacy (work by Adams)
Brooks Adams: His America’s Economic Supremacy (1900) accurately foresaw that within 50 years there would be in the world only two powers, Russia and the United States, the latter possessing economic supremacy. In 1913 he published The Theory of Social Revolutions, a study of defects in the American…
- America’s Funniest Home Videos (American television program)
Television in the United States: Reality TV: ABC introduced America’s Funniest Home Videos (ABC, begun 1990), featuring tapes sent in by home viewers hoping to win prize money. When that show immediately reached the Nielsen top 10, it was followed by America’s Funniest People (ABC, 1990–94), a sort of updated version of Real People…
- America’s Funniest People (American television show)
Television in the United States: Reality TV: …10, it was followed by America’s Funniest People (ABC, 1990–94), a sort of updated version of Real People that mixed professional and amateur video productions.
- America’s Got Talent (American television show)
Tyra Banks: Television shows: …hosted the reality TV series America’s Got Talent. In 2020 she began hosting Dancing with the Stars.
- America’s Missing: Broadcast Emergency Response Alert (safety warning)
texting: …Missing: Broadcast Emergency Response (AMBER) Alert warnings of child abductions in the United States began to be sent by text to those who chose to receive them, and, as of 2018, 924 children had been recovered.
- America’s Most Wanted (American television program)
Television in the United States: Reality TV: America’s Most Wanted (Fox/Lifetime, 1988–2012) and Unsolved Mysteries (NBC/CBS, 1988–99; Lifetime, 2001–02) used actors to dramatize stories about crimes for which the suspects were still at large. Traditional journalists decried the use of these reenactments, but hundreds of criminals were apprehended as a result of…
- America’s National Game (book by Spalding)
baseball: Baseball and the arts: Spalding’s America’s National Game (1911), generally regarded as the first attempts at writing a standard history of baseball, cite “Casey at the Bat” as the best baseball poem ever written. Spalding goes so far as to proclaim that “Love has its sonnets galore; War its epics…
- America’s Next Top Model (television show)
Tyra Banks: Television shows: …host and executive producer of America’s Next Top Model, a weekly prime-time reality talent show that chronicled the search for a promising fashion model from a lineup of neophytes. It swiftly became one of the highest-rated shows in the history of the UPN (United Paramount Network). The show later aired…
- America, A Prophecy (work by Blake)
Urizen: …the so-called “Prophetic Books,” including America, a Prophecy (1793), The Book of Urizen (1794), and The Song of Los (1795), and then, more ambitiously, in the unfinished manuscript Vala, or The Four Zoas, written from approximately 1796 to 1807. In an engraving from Europe, a Prophecy (1794), Blake depicts Urizen…
- America, America (film by Kazan [1963])
Elia Kazan: Films, stage work, and writing of the 1960s and ’70s of Elia Kazan: America, America (1963) was an intensely personal project based on the experiences of Kazan’s immigrant uncle. A film of undeniable power, it earned Kazan his final Academy Award nomination for best director. Kazan followed it by directing Miller’s After the Fall (1964) on the stage…
- America, Bank of (American bank)
A.P. Giannini: …California-based Bank of Italy—later the Bank of America—which, by the 1930s, was the world’s largest commercial bank. He was a major pioneer of branch banking.
- America, Hospital Corporation of (American corporation)
Rick Scott: …1994 it merged with the Hospital Corporation of America (HCA) to form Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corporation, and Scott became the company’s chairman and chief executive officer. The company soon became the largest for-profit hospital chain in the United States. By 1997, however, Columbia/HCA had come under criminal investigation for alleged fraudulent…
- America, Their America (work by Clark)
John Pepper Clark: …foundation grant resulted in his America, Their America (1964), in which he attacks American middle-class values, from capitalism to Black American lifestyles. After a year’s research at Ibadan’s Institute of African Studies, he became a lecturer in English at the University of Lagos and coeditor of the literary journal Black…
- America, Volunteers of (American religious organization)
Volunteers of America, religious social-welfare organization in the United States that offers spiritual and material aid to those in need. It was founded in New York City in 1896 by Ballington and Maud Booth as a result of a schism in the Salvation Army and is organized along quasi-military lines.
- America: Farm to Table (cookbook by Batali)
Mario Batali: …My Home to Yours (2011), America: Farm to Table (2014; cowritten with Jim Webster), and Big American Cookbook: 250 Favorite Recipes from Across the USA (2016). He was also profiled in Bill Buford’s Heat (2006), which follows Buford as he tries his hand as an amateur chef in Babbo’s kitchen.
- Américains, Les (work by Frank)
United States: The visual arts and postmodernism: Frank’s book The Americans (l956), the record of a tour of the United States that combined the sense of accident of a family slide show with a sense of the ominous worthy of the Italian painter Giorgio de Chirico, was the masterpiece of this vision; and no…
- American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry (American organization)
American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry (AAAP), professional organization founded in 1985 that seeks to educate the public and influence public policy with regard to addictive illness while increasing the overall effectiveness of psychiatric care in the United States related to addictions.
- American Academy of Arts and Letters (honorary society)
Philip Pearlstein: …Pearlstein was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters and later served as its president (2003–06). His work was exhibited frequently in group and solo shows and was collected by such institutions as the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Art Institute of Chicago; and the Hammer…
- American Academy of Arts and Sciences (honorary society)
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, honorary society incorporated on May 4, 1780, in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., for the purpose of cultivating “every art and science.” Its membership—more than 4,500 fellows in the United States and about 600 foreign honorary fellows (all scholars and national
- American Academy of Pediatrics (American organization)
circumcision: …credence in 1971 when the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) found that there was “no absolute medical indication for routine circumcision.” In 2012, following an extensive review of scientific research, the AAP issued an updated policy statement, in which it concluded that circumcision does in fact offer certain health advantages…
- American Action Painters, The (essay by Rosenberg)
Harold Rosenberg: …published his influential essay “The American Action Painters” in Art News, a publication that would later become identified with both his views on art and his poetic literary style. In that essay he championed the idea of the artist’s canvas as “an arena in which to act,” strategically distancing…
- American Airlines (American company)
American Airlines, major American airline serving nearly 50 countries across the globe and a founding member of the oneworld global alliance. Its parent, or holding, company, AMR Corp. (created in 1982), also has holdings in food-catering services, hotels and inns, airport ground-transportation and
- American Airlines flight 191 (aviation disaster, Chicago, Illinois, United States [1979])
American Airlines flight 191, flight of a passenger airliner that crashed on May 25, 1979, near Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport. A total of 273 people died: all 258 passengers and 13 crew members on the aircraft, as well as two individuals at the site of the crash. That toll makes the crash
- American Airlines flight 587 (aviation disaster, New York, United States)
American Airlines flight 587, flight of an Airbus A300-605R passenger airliner that crashed in Belle Harbor, New York, U.S., on November 12, 2001. All 251 passengers and nine crew members on board died, as did five individuals on the ground. Most of the passengers on Flight 587 were flying to the