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Stoddard, Lothrop, 1883-1950 (Personal Name)

Preferred form: Stoddard, Lothrop, 1883-1950
Used for/see from:
  • Earlier heading: Stoddard, Theodore Lothrop, 1883-1950
  • Suddardo, Rōsuroppu, 1883-1950
  • ستودارد، لوثروب
  • Stoddard, T. Lothrop (Theodore Lothrop), 1883-1950

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His The French revolution in San Domingo ... 1914: t.p. (T. Lothrop Stoddard, A.M., Ph. D. (Harv.))

Kukyō ni tateru Amerika gaikō, 1934: t.p. (Rōsuroppu Suddardo [in katakana])

Stoddard, L. The rising tide of color against white world supremacy [surrogate], 1920: (Lothrop Stoddard, with an introduction by Madison Grant)

New Yorker, Aug. 26, 2019: page 38, in an article entitled, Old hatreds (The [Chicago] Forum [Council] got it right -- Stoddard was a "versatile popularizer." As Huxley was to Darwin, so Stoddard was to Madison Grant. In his first book, "The French Revolution in Santo Domingo" [1914], Stoddard discovered what would become his most successful writing strategies: scaring the reader with the spectre of race war, and scaring the Nordic reader with the prospect of losing a race war; In a 1929 debate with W.E.B. Du Bois addressing the topic, "Shall the Negro be encouraged to seek Cultural Equality," Stoddard was "laughed off the stage")

Wikipedia, 1 Sept. 2019 (Theodore Lothrop Stoddard; born June 29, 1883, Brookline, Mass., died May 1, 1950, Washington, D.C., aged 66; American white supremacist, historian, journalist, and political scientist. Stoddard wrote several books which advocated eugenics and scientific racism, the most famous of which was, The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy; member of the Ku Klux Klan) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lothrop_Stoddard

Re-forging America: the story of our nationhood 1927

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