405 resultados para Sermons, American--17th century


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"The papers which form this autobiography were originally published in the Outlook, the chapter telling of my going 'home to mother' in the Churchman, and parts of one or two others in the Century magazine." --p. vii.

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In the signature to the Introduction and in several places in the text the editor's name appears as Lucy W. Baxter.

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Description based on: 17th (1908).

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"... a compilation of reports, stories, pictures and special studies that have appeared in the Guernsey breeders' journal ..."

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Reprinted in part from various periodicals.

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Includes index.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Bibliography: v. 2, p. 347-395.

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Robinson argues that the detective genre’s lineage lies in experimental works on the margins of what we recognize as classical detective fiction today. Authors like Edgar Allan Poe, Mark Twain, Pauline Hopkins, and Rudolph Fisher drew on detective fiction’s puzzle-elements to wrestle with complicated questions about race and labor in the U.S.

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'The Resonance of Unseen Things: Power, Poetics, Captivity and UFOs in the American Uncanny' offers an ethnographic meditation on the “uncanny” persistence and cultural freight of conspiracy theory. The project is a reading of conspiracy theory as an index of a certain strain of late-20th century American despondency/malaise, especially as experienced by people experiencing downward social mobility. Written by a cultural anthropologist with a literary background, this is a deeply interdisciplinary project that focuses on the enduring American preoccupation with captivity in a rapidly transforming world. Captivity is a trope that appears in both ordinary and fantastic iterations here, and this book shows how multiple troubled histories—of race, class, gender and power—become compressed into stories of uncanny memory.

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"In cooperation with the Illinois Department of Transportation."