988 resultados para Speeches, addresses, etc., American.
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new ser.:v.10 (1853)
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This small notebook with marbled paper covers contains three Latin addresses delivered by Adam Winthrop during Harvard College ceremonies: the valedictory oration on Class Day, 1724, the "Oratio Salutatoria" at the 1724 Commencement, and the "Oratio Gratulatoria" which closed the exercises of the 1727 Commencement. The last page of the volume is signed "Adam Winthrop Jun'r."
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This dissertation examines novels that use terrorism to allegorize the threatened position of the literary author in contemporary culture. Allegory is a term that has been differently understood over time, but which has consistently been used by writers to articulate and construct their roles as authors. In the novels I look at, the terrorist challenge to authorship results in multiple deployments of allegory, each differently illustrating the way that allegory is used and authorship constructed in the contemporary American novel. Don DeLillo’s Mao II (1991), first puts terrorists and authors in an oppositional pairing. The terrorist’s ability to traffic in spectacle is presented as indicative of the author’s fading importance in contemporary culture and it is one way that terrorism allegorizes threats to authorship. In Philip Roth’s Operation Shylock (1993), the allegorical pairing is between the text of the novel and outside texts – newspaper reports, legal cases, etc. – that the novel references and adapts in order to bolster its own narrative authority. Richard Powers’s Plowing the Dark (1999) pairs the story of an imprisoned hostage, craving a single book, with employees of a tech firm who are creating interactive, virtual reality artworks. Focusing on the reader’s experience, Powers’s novel posits a form of authorship that the reader can take into consideration, but which does not seek to control the experience of the text. Finally, I look at two of Paul Auster’s twenty-first century novels, Travels in the Scriptorium (2007) and Man in the Dark (2008), to suggest that the relationship between representations of authors and terrorists changed after 9/11. Auster’s author-figures forward an ethics of authorship whereby novels can use narrative to buffer readers against the portrayal of violent acts in a culture that is suffused with traumatizing imagery.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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vol. I. Life and correspondence.--vol. II. Speeches.
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Index: p. [i]-ix.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"Writings and speeches ... published or delivered at various times and in different places."--Prefatory note.
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Henry White, chairman of the delegation.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Includes five addresses and a list of the awards.
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Editors: Jan. 1841- G. R. Graham (with E. A. Poe, Jan. 1841-May 1842; C. J. Peterson, Mrs. Ann S. Stephens, 1842; R. W. Griswold, July 1842-June 1843; R. T. Conrad, Jan.-June 1848: J. R. Chandler, J. B. Taylor, Oct. 1848-Dec. 1849).
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The Appendix to the Answer of the United States has imprint: Washington, Govt. print. off., 1923.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.