923 resultados para Sermons, American--17th century
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Title varies slightly.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Each part has t.-p.: "The Georgian period" being measured drawings of colonial work; parts 1-7, 9-11 lack general t.-p.
Resumo:
Contains reproductions of original title-pages of some of the plays.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
"Edited by Melville E. Stone Jr. "--Kramer, p. 354.
Resumo:
Preface signed: J. W. Buel.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
v. 1. From an agrarian to an industrial economy (1785-1900)--v. 2. The problems of a world power (the 20th century)
Resumo:
"In this autobiography, [the author] tells us the events of his life over the past fifty years. It is, too, a brief history of Los Angeles from the turn of the century--certainly, as far as the Negroes in Los Angeles are in the picture"--Preface. Jamaican-born Somerville became a Los Angeles dentist deeply involved in the NAACP.
Resumo:
Cover and spine title: The new American literature; a survey.
Resumo:
Writing in Tongues examines the complexities of translating Yiddish literature at a time when the Yiddish language is in decline. After the Holocaust, Soviet repression, and American assimilation, the survival of traditional Yiddish literature depends on translation, yet a few Yiddish classics have been translated repeatedly while many others have been ignored. Anita Norich traces historical and aesthetic shifts through versions of these canonical texts, and she argues that these works and their translations form an enlightening conversation about Jewish history and identity.
Resumo:
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-06
Resumo:
Drawing on English language sources and material relating to the colonial administrations of Western Samoa (now Samoa) and American Samoa, this examination of photographically illustrated serial encyclopaedias and magazines proposes an alternative historical analysis of the colonial imaging of Samoa, the most extensively covered field in Oceanic photographic studies. Though photographs published between 1890s and World War II were often 'recycled', without acknowledging the fact that they were taken much earlier, and despite claims in the text of illustrated publications of an unchanged, enduring, archaic tradition in Samoa, the amazing variety of photographic content often offered contradictory evidence, depicting a modern, adaptive and progressive Samoa. Contrary to orthodox historical analysis, the images of Samoa in illustrated magazines and encyclopaedias were not limited to a small repetitive gallery of partially clothed women and costumed chiefs; and the ways in which readers understood Samoa from photographs and text raises questions still to be explored.