2,363 research outputs found
Julius C. Anderson
Julius C. Anderson, a Provo resident. was the Utah State Auditor from 1933-36
The marriage record of McDuffie, Julius A. and Anderson, Mary
Marriage license for Julius A. McDuffie and Mary Anderson. A.P. Brockway was the Notary Public
Gift inscription in Minions of the Moon: a little book of song and story
This edition includes a gift inscription possibly penned by the author, Madison Julius Cawein, "Frank on Valentines Day, 1914. M.J." Madison Julius Cawein (1865-1914).Cawein, Madison Julius, 1865-1914
Julius Bab Autographs Collection 1919-1955
The collection contains handwritten and signed letters from Julius Bab to several individuals, including ten letters
from Bab to Margarete (Grete) Collin, widow of his close friend Ernst Collin, and one letter to Lutz Weltmann. All of the letters are
of a personal nature.Also included is a handwritten poem by Bab entitled "Deutschland!"; a typescript by Bab with memories
of Ernst Collin; and a page of an essay about Alexander Moissi, which includes Bab's signature.Born in Berlin on December 11, 1880, Julius Bab was a theater critic, author, and co-founder of the Jüdischer
Kulturbund in 1933. He immigrated to France in 1938 and to the United States in 1940. He died in New York City on February 12,
1955.The original German-language inventory is available in the folde
Fission-fusion cognition in Shakespearean drama:The case for Julius Caesar
This paper examines how Renaissance notions of the mind and the subject, as constrained and constituted by social means, are narrated and staged in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar. This analysis is supplemented by a few references to Montaigne’s Essays, whose influence on Shakespeare and concern with the nature of the mind and self are long established. To further ground the case, it begins with two brief overviews: firstly, on narratological approaches to drama and their particular relevance to Renaissance drama, and secondly, on various current approaches to social cognition. I focus on what I argue are the linked concepts that a multiplicity of agents can operate within a single human being, and conversely that multiple individuals can form a cognitive unit. These related notions of the mind as social, both in Renaissance fictional and factual narratives and in current cognitive science, are understood to be due to human psychophysiological capacities. These capacities both afford and require boundaries and flow between the constituent parts of the self, both as regards those within skull or skin, and as regards those in the world. As I want to highlight the issue of divisions, as well as sharing, between individuals and within an individual I have adopted the physics term “fission-fusion,” which has been used by ethology to describe dynamic social networks that periodically merge and divide, and I have reapplied it specifically to cognition in order to capture the malleable and shifting nature of the cognitive units formed
[Irene Anderson]
Photograph of 1 female, Irene Anderson. There are two images of the same woman in two poses. In the left image she is sitting at a slight angle to the camera. She is facing the camera in the right image
Anderson, Julius (Birth, 1897-04-04)
Address: 1232 Gest St.1914/Pg. 212/1897/M W/Ohio/Ohio/Dr. A. G. DruryOriginal record filed in drawer labeled'ANDERSON-ANKE'
The Other Face of Julius Fučík
The author of the thesis is primarily going to examine the publishing activity of Julius Fučík in the magazines Tvorba and Kmen in the second half of the 1920s. In her work the author will also focus on Fučík?s life and the historical context of that time. Part of the thesis will deal with his later works. The aim of the work is to show Julius Fučík in a different light in comparison to the previous unilateral views
Anderson, Julius Edward (Death, 1903-01-17)
Address: 528 Hannibal St.Age at death: 2 mo.Pg 6/1903/288/M W S/City/Dr. A. G. Drury/Flannery/St. Joseph's NewOriginal record filed in drawer labeled'ANDERSON-ANKE'
Julius Lester, circa 1970
Julius Lester (1939-2018, Class of 1960, was an author who gained success as a children's author in 1969 with the publication of "To Be a Slave", a Newbery Honor Book, and Black Folktales. His subsequent works continued to show his interest in African-American history, folklore, and politics
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