325 resultados para Literature and history.
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"Book list" at end of each chapter.
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First published in 1889.
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Includes bibliography.
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A study of the Beat-era writers in a global context. This title was made Open Access by libraries from around the world through Knowledge Unlatched.
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Recently published articles
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An annotated bibliography of 190 items is presented, covering AEC report literature and selected references from the open literature on biological effects of neutrons, gamma radiations, and combinations of both.
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Cover title.
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Foreword.-- Biographical sketch [by H.H. Ingersoll and G.F. Mellen]-- Civil war reminiscences.-- The transcendental movement.-- The South in the revolution.-- Goldsmith.-- Puritan races and Puritan living.-- Changing customs.-- East Tennessee in state history.-- The song of the automobile.-- Last days of Andrew Jackson.-- Unchastity in fiction.-- Thomas Carlyle.-- The South is American.-- Thoreau, the nature-lover.-- Literature and life of a people.-- An epic of the Knoxville bar.-- Calhoun the statesman.-- Tennessee, past and present.-- Athanasius.-- The Tater-bug parson.-- The bar of the South.-- John Bell of Tennessee.-- The chronicle of 1907.-- Notes critical and explanatory.
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Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Bibliography: p. 405-411.
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Contents.--v. 1. Philosophy and metaphysics.--v. 2. Aesthetics and mathematics.--v. 3. History and law.--v. 4. Law and religion.--v. 5. History of language.--v. 6. Literature and art.--v. 7. Physics and chemistry.--v. 8. Astronomy and earth sciences.--v. 9. Biology.--v. 10. Anthropology and mental science.--v. 11. Medicine.--v. 12. Medicine and technology.--v. 13. Economics and social regulation.--v. 14. Jurisprudence and social science.--v. 15. Secular and religious education.
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"Art and popular literature to the beginning of the thirty years' war": vol. X-XII.
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Economic and social history of the World War. (British series)
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Edited at first by Robert Walsh, Jr. and then by Eliakim and Squier Littell, the monthly Museum of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art was the leading American eclectic for twenty years. Much of its contents were selected from British magazines; included were reviews, poetry, literary and scientific news, biographical sketches of British authors, lists of new British publications, and articles on literature. The engraved portraits in each number were a popular feature. After 1830, plates were published regularly, and the magazine began to devote a large proportion of its space to serial fiction by Dickens, Reade, Bulwer, Thackeray and other popular English novelists.