"The New Industrial State" is a book by economist John Kenneth Galbraith published in 1967. It introduces the concept of the "technostructure" and argues that in modern industrial societies, large corporations have significant power in shaping the economy. Galbraith suggests that traditional market forces do not have as much influence in these advanced economies.
It argued that few American industries fit the model of perfect competition. A+
The title comes last -- if you have finished the story or book totally, then you will know whether or not that title describes it well enough.
If this is about a book or story, then we NEED TO KNOW THE TITLE !
It is. It is repetadive and can be annoying to some people.
The title of Raul Hilberg's 1961 book 'The Destruction of European Jews' says it very well.
It can be anything you want it to be technically. I would include the title of the book in the title of the book. For example: The Glorious Cause By Jeff Shaara could be the title of a book report.
yes you need to again
Title as in the title of a book is title.
The thirteenth book of "Euclid's Elements" is called regular solids. In this final book, Euclid names and describes the properties of the five regular solids and ends it by proving no other regular solids exist.
The title of the book is "The Bibliophile's Dictionary"
A cool book title is "Catch 22."
A lot of things are a bad book title.