Results for 'Kendra S. Gilds'

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  1.  59
    What is it like to be a patient with apperceptive agnosia?Shaun P. Vecera & Kendra S. Gilds - 1997 - Consciousness and Cognition 6 (2-3):237-66.
    Neuropsychological deficits have been widely used to elucidate normal cognitive functioning. Can patients with such deficits also be used to understand conscious visual experience? In this paper, we ask what it would be like to be a patient with apperceptive agnosia . Philosophical analyses of such questions have suggested that subjectively experiencing what another person experiences would be impossible. Although such roadblocks into the conscious experience of others exist, the experimental study of both patients and neurologically normal subjects can be (...)
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  2.  22
    AIDS and Culture: The Case for an African Information Identity.Kendra S. Albright - 2007 - International Review of Information Ethics 7:1.
    The library and information profession in Africa is not well recognized. It does not carry an identifiable set of core activities that share a common understanding across societies in Africa. The number of libraries in Africa is limited for a variety of reasons including lack of resources, populations that are not based in print literacy, and having its roots in the British model of librarianship. HIV/AIDS continues to pose severe problems for Sub-Saharan Africa. Some countries in the region have successfully (...)
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  3.  52
    Creative cognition and systems biology on the edge of chaos.Robert M. Bilder & Kendra S. Knudsen - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5:112333.
  4.  25
    Farming God’s Way: agronomy and faith contested.Kendra Kooy & Harry Spaling - 2019 - Agriculture and Human Values 36 (3):411-426.
    Farming God’s Way (FGW) is a type of conservation agriculture (CA) that re-interprets the CA principles of no tillage, mulching and crop rotation using biblical metaphors such as God doesn’t plow, God’s blanket, and the Garden of Eden. Through faith-based networks, FGW has spread throughout Sub-Saharan Africa, and beyond, as a development intervention for improving food security, adapting to climate change, and restoring soil productivity for resource-poor farming households. This research identifies and compares the production, sustainability and faith claims of (...)
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  5.  26
    Corticostriatal Dysfunction in Huntington’s Disease: The Basics.Kendra D. Bunner & George V. Rebec - 2016 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 10.
  6.  20
    Discriminating among grounded theory approaches.Kendra L. Rieger - 2019 - Nursing Inquiry 26 (1):e12261.
    To rationalize the selection of a research methodology, one must understand its philosophical origins and unique characteristics. This process can be challenging in the landscape of evolving qualitative methodologies. Grounded theory is a research methodology with a distinct history that has resulted in numerous approaches. Although the approaches have key similarities, they also have differing philosophical assumptions that influence the ways in which their methods are understood and implemented. The purpose of this discussion paper is to compare and contrast three (...)
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  7.  12
    Erotic Utopia: The Decadent Imagination in Russia's Fin de Siecle.Kendra H. Millis - 2006 - Utopian Studies 17 (2):413-417.
  8.  33
    Values-based food procurement in hospitals: the role of health care group purchasing organizations.Kendra Klein - 2015 - Agriculture and Human Values 32 (4):635-648.
    In alignment with stated social, health, and environmental values, hundreds of hospitals in the United States are purchasing local, organic, and other alternative foods. Due to the logistical and economic constraints associated with feeding hundreds to thousands of people every day, new food procurement initiatives in hospitals grapple with integrating conventional supply chain norms of efficiency, standardization, and affordability while meeting the diverse values driving them such as mutual benefit between supply chain members, environmental stewardship, and social equity. This paper (...)
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  9.  14
    Malpractice & Negligence: Cal. Supreme Court Clarifies Negligence Provisions under State’s Elder Abuse Act.Kendra Carlson - 1999 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 27 (2):203-203.
    The Supreme Court of California held, in Delaney v. Baker, 82 Cal. Rptr. 2d 610, that the heightened remedies available under the Elder Abuse Act, Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 15657,15657.2, apply to health care providers who engage in reckless neglect of an elder adult. The court interpreted two sections of the Act: section 15657, which provides for enhanced remedies for reckless neglect; and section 15657.2, which limits recovery for actions based on “professional negligence.” The court held that reckless (...)
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  10.  6
    Building the Architect’s Character: Explorations in Traits.Kendra Schank Smith & Albert C. Smith - 2017 - Routledge.
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  11.  23
    : Nature’s Laboratory: Environmental Thought and Labor Radicalism in Chicago, 1886–1937.Kendra Smith-Howard - 2024 - Isis 115 (2):426-427.
  12.  37
    Farming God’s Way: agronomy and faith contested.Harry Spaling & Kendra Vander Kooy - 2019 - Agriculture and Human Values 36 (3):411-426.
    Farming God’s Way (FGW) is a type of conservation agriculture (CA) that re-interprets the CA principles of no tillage, mulching and crop rotation using biblical metaphors such as God doesn’t plow, God’s blanket, and the Garden of Eden. Through faith-based networks, FGW has spread throughout Sub-Saharan Africa, and beyond, as a development intervention for improving food security, adapting to climate change, and restoring soil productivity for resource-poor farming households. This research identifies and compares the production, sustainability and faith claims of (...)
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  13.  24
    Ethical Requirements in the Instructions for Authors in Journals Publishing Randomized Clinical Trials.William Gardner & Kendra Heck - 2009 - Research Ethics 5 (4):131-137.
    Objectives. To document the prevalence of ethical requirements in the instructions for authors of journals that published randomized clinical trials (RCTs) in 2005. Design. Using a validated computerized search strategy for retrieving abstracts of RCTs, we retrieved 13 184 references from 2056 journals. These journals were divided into journals that had published > 30 RCTs in 2005, and those that had published fewer. We included all the former and a random sample of the latter journals in the analysis. Measurements. Coders (...)
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  14.  51
    Who Invented 'Avicenna's Gilded Pills'?Zbigniew Bela - 2006 - Early Science and Medicine 11 (1):1-10.
    This article questions the belief expressed in various histories of pharmacy that the tenth-century Arab physician Avicenna introduced the tradition of coating pills with gold and silver. Although an examination of his Canon documents Avicenna's interest in the medicinal application of gold and silver, no mention is made of coating pills. Nor do other Islamic physicians seem to have been familiar with this practice, any more than such medieval European authors as Arnaldus of Villanova, Raymund Lull or Johannes de Rupescissa. (...)
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  15.  42
    Scholars of color turn to womanism: Countering dehumanization in the academy.Sheron Andrea Fraser-Burgess, Kiesha Warren-Gordon, David L. Humphrey Jr & Kendra Lowery - 2021 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 53 (5):505-522.
    The article draws on critiques in political theory and morality to argue that womanism, a worldview rooted in Black women's lives and history, provides an alternative conceptual framework to prevailing Eurocentric thinking, for promoting socially just institutions of higher education. Presupposing a positioned, encultured, and embodied account of identity, womanism’s social change perspective holds transformative promise. It foregrounds Black women’s penchant for reaching solutions that promote communal balance, affirm one’s humanity and attend to the spiritual dimension (Phillips, 2006 Phillips, L. (...)
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  16.  75
    Guests, hosts, and teaching the ethics of service learning in medicine.Gregory Schneider, Marin Gillis, Kendra Kirchmer, Prasad Bhoite & Natalie Castellanos - 2019 - International Journal of Ethics Education 5 (1):67-82.
    Within medical education, there is an increasing need to provide ethics education for learners embarking on service learning. The concept of hospitality, as illustrated in Homer’s classic epic the Odyssey, has the potential to underpin such ethics education. This paper describes the implementation and evaluation of an ethics education session for medical students, built on the concept of hospitality, before they embark on a three-year longitudinal service-learning home visit program. In preparation for their household visits, second-year students at a medical (...)
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  17.  72
    The Specimen Dealer: Entrepreneurial Natural History in America's Gilded Age. [REVIEW]Mark V. Barrow - 2000 - Journal of the History of Biology 33 (3):493 - 534.
    The post-Civil War American natural history craze spawned a new institution -- the natural history dealer -- that has failed to receive the historical attention it deserves. The individuals who created these enterprises simultaneously helped to promote and hoped to profit from the burgeoning interest in both scientific and popular specimen collecting. At a time when other employment and educational prospects in natural history were severely limited, hundreds of dealers across the nation provided encouragement, specimens, publication outlets, training opportunities, and (...)
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  18.  50
    She's only a Bird in a gilded cage: Freedwomen at trimalchio's dinner party.Liz Gloyn - 2012 - Classical Quarterly 62 (1):260-280.
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  19. (1 other version)The Nature of Morals Founded on the Human Fabric.Elizabeth S. Radcliffe - 2021 - In Esther Engels Kroeker & Willem Lemmens (eds.), Hume's an Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals : A Critical Guide. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. pp. 13-32.
    In section 1 of An Enquiry concerning the Principles of Morals, Hume claims that those who deny the reality of morals are disingenuous. He also notes that philosophy has had a history of disagreements about whether morals originate in reason or in sentiment. Throughout his book, Hume applies an experimental method to find the “universal principles” from which morality is ultimately derived. Then, in Appendix 1, he then argues for the origin of these principles in sentiment or taste, a product (...)
     
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  20.  13
    The Vivekananda Kendra in India: Its ideological translations and a critique of its social service.Samta P. Pandya - 2014 - Critical Research on Religion 2 (2):116-133.
    This article is based on field work with the Vivekananda Kendra in Kanyakumari, India. The Vivekananda Kendra is a Hindu spiritual organization founded in 1972, based on principles promoted by Swami Vivekananda. The organization’s members translate Vivekananda’s Vedanta and Yoga ideals into national reconstruction. The efforts of Eknath Ranade as the key transmitter of Vivekananda’s ideals, the way he effectively wove austerity, renunciation, and service to realize them, and the Kendra’s strategy of social service and its effects (...)
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  21.  23
    Gilding Textiles and Printing Blocks in Tenth-Century Egypt.Anya H. King - 2022 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 140 (2):455.
    The surviving portion of the tenth-century Egyptian Muḥammad b. Aḥmad al-Tamīmī’s recently edited Ṭīb al-ʿarūs has several formulas relating to the dying and perfuming of textiles. Some refer to the use of carved molds to impress designs upon textiles. Tamīmī’s formulas treat in particular the application of gold leaf and perfumed dye pastes with blocks, but presuppose the technology of using blocks to apply designs to textiles and include a vocabulary of technical terms for the process. This textual evidence provides (...)
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  22. Gilding and Staining and the Significance of Our Moral Sentiments.Jacqueline Taylor - 2010 - Hume Studies 36 (1):89-95.
    In Part 3 of Projection and Realism, P. J. E. Kail offers an original and thought-provoking analysis of Hume's views on morality. Kail seeks to make sense of Hume's talk of projection and realism. Kail's stated aim is to help us understand Hume's own views, rather than some new Humean view. Part 3 is thus a contribution to the literature on Hume's meta-ethics. Kail's particular approach presents two challenges to the student of Hume's works. First, Kail gives us a set (...)
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  23.  32
    Helmholtz in Gilded-Age America: The International Electrical Congress of 1893 and the Relations of Science and Technology.David Cahan - 2010 - Annals of Science 67 (1):1-38.
    Summary This essay recounts Hermann von Helmholtz's trip to represent Germany at the International Electrical Congress in Chicago in 1893 as well as his reception by various members of the American scientific, technological, and cultural elite in several other American cities. In doing so, it seeks to portray something of the vitality of the youthful and increasingly important American scientific community; of the strong relationship between American and German scientists, including how Helmholtz used and was used by them and various (...)
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  24. En främmande fågel i en förgylld bur: Reflektioner kring svenska Asiensamlingar [A foreign bird in a gilded cage: Reflections on Sweden's Asia collections].M. Fiskesjö - forthcoming - Res Publica.
     
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  25.  27
    The Labor Question in America: Economic Democracy in the Gilded Age, Rosanne Currarino, Champaign, IL.: University of Illinois Press, 2011.Alex Gourevitch - 2013 - Historical Materialism 21 (2):179-190.
    It is said we live in a second Gilded Age, which makes our understanding of the first all the more relevant. Rosanne Currarino’sThe Labor Question in Americamakes the bold claim that, far from being a period of defeat for the Left, the original Gilded Age saw an expansion of democratic citizenship. A group of economists, social reformers and labour organisers transformed our understanding of political participation from the earlier, producerist to a more modern, consumerist ideal of social inclusion and collective (...)
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  26.  32
    Work, Protest, and Culture: New Work on Working Women's HistoryFamily Connections: A History of Italian and Jewish Immigrant Lives in Providence, Rhode Island, 1900-1940Sisterhood Denied: Race, Gender, and Class in a New South CommunityLabor's True Woman: Carpet Weavers, Industrialization, and Labor Reform in the Gilded AgeWomen, Work, and ProtestCheap Amusements: Working Women and Leisure in Turn-of-the-Century New York. [REVIEW]Marjorie Murphy, Judith E. Smith, Dolores E. Janiewski, Susan Levine, Ruth Milkman & Kathy Peiss - 1987 - Feminist Studies 13 (3):657.
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  27. (1 other version)Henry Cabot Lodge, Alexander Hamilton and the Political Thought of the Gilded Age.H. G. Callaway - 2018 - Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
    We are currently witnessing a renewal of broad public interest in the life and career of Alexander Hamilton – justly famed as an American founder. This volume examines the possible present-day significance of the man, noting that this is not the first revival of interest in the statesman. Hamilton was a major background figure in the GOP politics of the Gilded Age, with the powerful US Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, Sr. drawing on Hamilton to inspire a new, assertive American role (...)
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  28.  29
    Kimberly A. Hamlin. From Eve to Evolution: Darwin, Science, and Women’s Rights in Gilded Age America. vii + 238 pp., illus., bibl., index. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2014. $40. [REVIEW]Evelleen Richards - 2015 - Isis 106 (4):956-957.
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  29.  47
    Memory and Distance: Learning from a Gilded Silver Vase (Antwerp, c. 1530).Carlo Ginzburg - 2004 - Diogenes 51 (1):99-112.
    This article concerns a silver beaker (now at the Residenzmuseum, Munich) decorated with scenes which seem to be related to the Spanish conquest of Mexico. On the basis of stylistic, iconographic and archival evidence the silversmith is here tentatively identified with an Italian-born artist, Stefano Capello, who is thought to have added a decoration to a pre-existing beaker on the eve of the treaty of Cambrai (3 August 1529). Margaret of Austria, aunt of the emperor Charles V, might have given (...)
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  30. Hume’s “projectivism” explained.Miren Boehm - 2020 - Synthese 199 (1-2):815-833.
    Hume appeals to a mysterious mental process to explain how to world appears to possess features that are not present in sense perceptions, namely causal, moral, and aesthetic properties. He famously writes that the mind spreads itself onto the external world, and that we stain or gild natural objects with our sentiments. Projectivism is founded on these texts but it assumes a reading of Hume’s language as merely metaphorical. This assumption, however, conflicts sharply with the important explanatory role that “spreading” (...)
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  31.  24
    Johann Christoph Sturm's Natural Philosophy: Passive Forms, Occasionalism, and Scientific Explanations.Andrea Sangiacomo - 2020 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 58 (3):493-520.
    In the third intermède of Le Malade Imaginaire, Molière imagines a sort of medical convention in which "the wisest experts and professors of Medicine" examine whether a bachelor candidate can be deemed to enter the medical profession. As the first question in this examination, the "Chief physician" asks, "What is the cause and reason [causam et rationem] why opium induces sleep?" The candidate answers without the least hesitation: "Because it contains a sleeping virtue [virtus dormitiva], whose nature is to put (...)
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  32. Lincoln Steffens's the Shame of the Cities, and the Philosophy of Corruption and Reform.H. G. Callaway (ed.) - 2020 - Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
    This book is a new scholarly edition of Lincoln Steffensâ classic, â oemuck-rakingâ account of Gilded Age corruption in America. It provides the broader political background, theoretical and historical context needed to better understand the social and political roots of corruption in general terms: the social and moral nature of corruption and reform. Steffens enjoyed the support of a multitude of journalists with first-hand knowledge of their localities. He interviewed and came to know political bosses, crusading district attorneys and indicted (...)
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  33.  15
    Little Eternities: Henry James's Horatian Sense of Time.Kathleen Riley - 2019 - Arion 27 (1):21-41.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Little Eternities: Henry James’s Horatian Sense of Time KATHLEEN RILEY Summer’s lease hath all too short a date. —Shakespeare, Sonnet 18 On a visit to Bodiam Castle in Sussex in 1908, Henry James remarked to Edith Wharton: “Summer afternoon—summer afternoon; to me those have always been the two most beautiful words in the English language.”1 The potency of those two words derives from their immediate evocation of an arrested (...)
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  34. Projection and realism in Hume's philosophy.P. J. E. Kail - 2007 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Religion and the external world -- Projection, religion, and the external world -- The senses, reason and the imagination -- Realism, meaning and justification : the external world and religious belief -- Modality, projection and realism -- 'Our profound ignorance' : causal realism, and the failure to detect necessity -- Spreading the mind : projection, necessity and realism -- Into the labyrinth : persons, modality, and Hume's undoing -- Value, projection, and realism -- Gilding : projection, value and secondary qualities (...)
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  35. Parmenides and Plato's Socrates: The Communication of Structure.John Blanchard - 2001 - Dissertation, New School for Social Research
    Can we make sense of the dogma of Parmenides' poem, that only being is? The prospect that Parmenides presents a perplexity, rather than a solution, forms the central hypothesis of this dissertation. Plato's Socrates seems to have understood this, and we, too, may fear our failure to fathom Parmenides' words and understand his meaning. Every attempt to penetrate Parmenides' thinking becomes unwittingly entangled in an impossible dilemma of trying to account for itself within the austere singularity of being, in seeming (...)
     
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  36.  24
    The Political Writings. Volume 2: Political Regime and Summary of Plato's Laws by Alfarabi.Philippe Vallat - 2017 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 55 (2):344-345.
    Butterworth here offers a perfectible translation of the Political Regime and a commendable, skilled rendition of the Summary of Plato's Laws. These two texts are published together and in this order because the contrast between their respective contents and methods would show that only in the last fourth of the first, as opposed to the whole of the second, "does Alfarabi consider political life as it usually is", that is, shorn of what Leo Strauss's disciples regard as metaphysical humbug. Metaphysics, (...)
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  37. Bauddha darśana meṃ śānti, sthāpatya, evaṃ kalā.Aravinda Parihāra (ed.) - 2013 - Jodhapura: Rājasthānī Granthāgāra.
    Transcript of papers on culture, philosophy, doctrines and other facets Buddhism; presented at a conference held in March, 2006 at Jai Narain Vyas University, organized by Bauddha Adhyayana Kendra.
     
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  38.  28
    Brian Black. Petrolia: The Landscape of America's First Oil Boom. xiv + 236 pp., illus., tables, app., index.Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000. $42.50. [REVIEW]Paul Lucier - 2002 - Isis 93 (1):151-152.
    The history of the modern oil industry begins along Oil Creek in August 1859 when Edwin Drake and Billy Smith found petroleum at the bottom of their well. Over the next decade and a half, Petrolia, the name given to this region in northwest Pennsylvania, produced more oil than anywhere else on earth. In the process, Petrolia became a massive industrial site and a vivid cultural image. Understanding this profound dual transformation is the object of Brian Black's sensitively drawn portrait (...)
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  39.  14
    Reexamining the Great Meddler.Randall Lockwood - 2022 - Journal of Animal Ethics 12 (2):179-185.
    Most previous biographies of Henry Bergh, founder of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, the Western hemisphere's first animal protection organization, give little attention to the very mixed reaction his efforts received from the media, legislators, fellow social reformers, the general public, and the large number of enterprises that benefitted from the exploitation and even abuse of animals during America's Gilded Age. A Traitor to His Species provides a detailed analysis of Bergh's life and times and (...)
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  40.  19
    Books and lives, reading and achievement.Mary Kelley - 2013 - Modern Intellectual History 10 (1):193-205.
    This deeply researched and beautifully crafted study takes as its subject a generation of women who came to maturity in America's Gilded Age. They were scientists and social workers, physicians and educators, and, perhaps most notably, Progressive reformers engaged in the pursuit of social justice. Claiming the newly available opportunities for higher education and professional employment, these women successfully pursued lives in uncharted territory. Barbara Sicherman introduces us to a less visible but equally salient factor in their journey to public (...)
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  41.  14
    The Society of Equals.Pierre Rosanvallon - 2013 - Harvard University Press.
    Since the 1980s, society's wealthiest members have claimed an ever-expanding share of income and property. It has been a true counterrevolution, says Pierre Rosanvallon--the end of the age of growing equality launched by the American and French revolutions. And just as significant as the social and economic factors driving this contemporary inequality has been a loss of faith in the ideal of equality itself. An ambitious transatlantic history of the struggles that, for two centuries, put political and economic equality at (...)
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  42.  8
    Building womanist coalitions: writing and teaching in the spirit of love.Gary Lemons (ed.) - 2019 - Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
    Over the last generation, the womanist idea--and the tradition blooming around it--has emerged as an important response to separatism, domination, and oppression. Gary L. Lemons gathers a diverse group of writers to discuss their scholarly and personal experiences with the womanist spirit of women of color feminisms. Feminist and womanist-identified educators, students, performers, and poets model the powerful ways that crossing borders of race, gender, class, sexuality, and nation-state affiliation(s) expands one's existence. At the same time, they bear witness to (...)
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  43. The origins of balinese legong.Stephen Davies - unknown
    The Genre Legong is a secular (balih-balihan) Balinese dance genre (Anon. 1971).[1] Though originally associated with the palace,[2] legong has long been performed in villages, especially at temple ceremonies, as well as at Balinese festivals of the arts. Since the 1920s, abridged versions of legong dances have featured in concerts organized for tourists and in overseas tours by Balinese orchestras. Indeed, the dance has become culturally emblematic, and its image is used to advertise Bali to the world. Traditionally, the dancers (...)
     
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  44.  14
    The Arrows of Apollo.Brooke Clark - 2019 - Arion 27 (2):63-84.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Arrows of Apollo BROOKE CLARK To Aachchi If thou beest he; But O how fallen, how changed From him who in the happy realms of light Clothed with transcendent brightness didst outshine Myriads though bright— —Milton, Paradise Lost i. Today, slumped at my desk, I glimpsed the sun. I wasn’t certain how long I had sat facing my own face’s dim reflection in my computer screen—chin ringed with (...)
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  45.  35
    Prostitutes and Courtesans in the Ancient World (review).Madeleine Mary Henry - 2007 - American Journal of Philology 128 (3):419-423.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Prostitutes and Courtesans in the Ancient WorldMadeleine M. HenryChristopher A. Faraone and Laura K. McClure, eds. Prostitutes and Courtesans in the Ancient World. Wisconsin Studies in Classics. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2006. x + 360 pp. Cloth, $65; paper, 24.95.This collection stems from a conference at the University of Wisconsin, Madison in April 2002. McClure's introduction situates the essays historically from nineteenth-century assemblages of textual references to (...)
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  46.  13
    Henry Adams: The Historian as Political Theorist.James P. Young - 2001 - American Political Thought (Un.
    "In this revisionist study, Young denies that Adams was a reactionary critic of democracy and instead contends that he was an idealistic, though often disappointed, advocate of representative government. Young focuses on Adams's belief that capitalist industrial development during the Gilded Age had debased American ideals and then turns to a careful study of Adams's famous contrast of the unity of medieval society with the fragmentation of modern technological society."--BOOK JACKET.
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  47.  21
    The Persians: Timotheus.John Warden - 2020 - Arion 28 (1):95-99.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Persians TIMOTHEUS (Translated by John Warden)... urging on their floating bronze-beaked chariots ram by ram furrowing the waves with pointed teeth....... with humped heads stripped away arms of fir, thumped ’em on the left, mariners tumbled, smashed ’em on the right in their pinewood towers, back on their feet again. Ha! Tear off flesh to their rope-bound ribs, sink ’em with thunderbolts, rip away gilded splendour with iron-helmed (...)
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  48.  2
    Hidden Hands: The Lives of Manuscripts and Their Makers.Jeffrey F. Hamburger - 2024 - Common Knowledge 30 (2):207-208.
    The steady stream of books on medieval manuscripts addressed to a popular audience over the past two decades coincides with the advent of tablets such as Amazon's Kindle. As the flatlands of the digital realm encompass more of life, nostalgia for a tactile realm of reading, whether in the making or the perception of artifacts, asserts itself, as does the desire to immerse oneself in the real space of the conventional book, as opposed to the virtual yet denatured spaces of (...)
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  49.  35
    From Manuscripts to Codicology: An Introduction to Critical Edition.Harun Beki̇roğlu - 2019 - Cumhuriyet İlahiyat Dergisi 23 (2):855-889.
    Muslims are fundamentally interested in the practice of writing especially for scribing the copies of the Qur’ān. Later, the practice of scribing ḥadīths texts and writing diplomatic correspondence increased the demand for developing this practice. It is because the writing is based on a religious reference in Islamic societies; over time, the interest in writing and writing materials has also turned into an art form. Thus, writing and writing materials have been named with the selected words from the Qur’ān. Pencil, (...)
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  50.  9
    Degrees of Equality: The American Association of University Women and the Challenge of Twentieth-century Feminism.Susan Levine - 1995 - Temple University Press.
    The American Association of University Women (AAUW) is one of the nation's oldest and most influential voices for equality in education, the professions, and public life. Tracing the history of the AAUW, Susan Levine provides a new perspective on the meaning of feminism for women in mainstream liberal organizations. In so doing, she explores the problems that women confront and the strategies they have developed to achieve equal rights. Established in 1921 with the merging of two regional groups of women (...)
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