980 resultados para Stewart Manor
Resumo:
Photocopy. Ann Arbor, Mich. : University Microfilms International, 1980.--21 cm.
Resumo:
"The publication of this work, which it was intended shoud take place in the autumn of 1914, has unavoidably been postponed owing to illness and lamented death of the author and the outbreak of war"--Note dated June 1915 inserted.
Resumo:
Contains also geneal. tables of the Dymoke, Welles, and Kyme families.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Includes index.
Resumo:
v. 1. Dissertation: exhibiting the progress of metaphysical, ethical, and political philosophy, since the revival of letters in Europe. 1854.--v. 2-4. Elements of the philosophy of the human mind ... To which is prefixed introduction and part first of the Outlines of moral philosophy. 1854.--v. 5. Philosophical essays. 1855.--v. 6-7. The philosophy of the active and moral powers of man ... To which is prefixed part second of the Outlines of moral philosophy. 1855.--v. 8-9. Lectures on political economy ... To which is prefixed part third of the Outlines of moral philosophy. 1855.56.--v. 10. Biographical memoirs of Adam Smith, William Robertson, Thomas Reid. To which is prefixed a Memoir of Dugald Stewart, with selections from his correspondence. By J. Veitch. 1858.--v. 11. Translations of the passages in foreign languages contained in the collected works of Dugald Stewart. With general index. 1860.
Resumo:
Case law report - online
Resumo:
Maria W. Stewart was the first American-born and the first African-American woman known to address a mixed audience, from 1831 to 1833, and publish her essays and speeches. The purpose of this thesis is to examine Maria W. Stewart's acts of defiance--as the first public representation of Black Feminism: demanding that white America end slavery and grant rights to black men and women, re-appropriating the hegemonic, patriarchal codes which have significant social power by exposing their inconsistencies and deconstructing their ideologies, voicing the truth about the status of African-American women in early nineteenth-century America, and challenging Black women to become entrepreneurs and (as she did) acquire an education, establish schools, and take an active role in their community. ^