484 research outputs found
Souvenir de Dieppe : polka-mazurka : op. 15 / Ernest Barraud ; [ill. par] A. Ferrières
Titre uniforme : Barraud, Ernest (18..-19.. ; compositeur). Compositeur. [Souvenir de Dieppe. Piano]Polkas-mazurkas (piano) -- +* 1800......- 1899......+:19e siècle:Piano, Musique de -- +* 1800......- 1899......+:19e siècle
Petite marquise : fantaisie genre gavotte pour piano : op. 20 / par E. Barraud
Titre uniforme : Barraud, Ernest (18..-19.. ; compositeur). Compositeur. [Petite marquise. Piano]Fantaisies (piano) -- +* 1800......- 1899......+:19e siècle:Piano, Musique de -- +* 1800......- 1899......+:19e siècle
Postal telegraph from Ernest Besig, Director, American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, to Charles Horsky, Esq., December 18, 1944
Telegraph from Ernest Besig to Charles Horsky: "Will you please have air mailed to Ernest Besig, 216 Pine Street, San Francisco 4 copies of the opinions in the Korematsu and Endo cases. They are for use by Wayne Collins and the Civil Liberties Union. Many thanks."The ACLU-Northern California case file records contain legal documents and correspondence pertaining to the case argued before the Supreme Court in Korematsu v. United States (1944), challenging the constitutionality of Executive Order 9066
Shelley's influence on the Chartist poets, with particular emphasis on Ernest Charles Jones and Thomas Cooper
This study examines the Chartists' interest in Shelley's poetry and
accounts for it, but it takes the second point first:. Three factors
are discerned to be of prime importance in giving rise to Shelley's
reputation amongst radical Chartists. First, the Chartists' estimation
of Shelley's political philosophy as more intrinsically radical than
the mainstream of British radicalism, as exemplified by Godwin.
Second, Shelley's stands on the questions of religion, inheritance
and political reform proved to be appealing to the Chartists. Third,
and most important of all, to the Chartists Shelley was a political
poet - and poetry they saw as a principal means of moving the people.
The political arguments that permeated Shelley's poetry and the
mingling he managed between poetry and politics corresponded to the
Chartists' political thought and their advocacy of poetry as the most
apposite literary medium to serve and enhance political change.
Accordingly, Shelley was awarded a unique position in the Owenites'
and thartists' publications. He was chiefly acknowledged as a political
poet whose compositions foster the peoples' radical inclinations and
lend force to their efforts to initiate political reform. The Chartist
poet and leader, Ernest Charles Jones, read, published and quoted
Shelley on many occasions. His published and unpublished works testify
that Shelley made a strong impact on his political arguments and exerted
direct influence on much of his poetry. The other thartist poet whom
Shelley seems to have influenced is Thomas Cooper. As a great admirer
of Shelley, Cooper also read Shelley's works, published extracts from
them in his journals and delivered many lectures on Shelley's poetry
and thought. The affinities between Cooper's and Shelley's political
arguments suggest that Shelley might well have exercised a considerable
influence on Cooper's political reasoning. Moreover, the comparison
between Cooper's epic poem, The Purgatory of Suicides and Shelley's
Queen Mab leaves little room for doubt that Shelley has influenced
Cooper in this particular poem.
The main contribution to Shelley studies lies in the evidence
provided of Shelley's popularity amongst radical Chartists and the
charting of his political and literary influence on two Chartist poets:
Ernest Charles Jones and Thomas Cooper. This study should serve as an
important part of a thorough and comprehensive evaluation of Shelley's
influence on the Chrtist Movement as a whole
Letter from Ernest Besig, Director, American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, to Fred Korematsu, June 19, 1944
Letter from Ernest Besig to Fred Korematsu, asking Korematsu's help locating additional people the ACLU could represent in additional test cases. Stamped "confidential."The ACLU-Northern California case file records contain legal documents and correspondence pertaining to the case argued before the Supreme Court in Korematsu v. United States (1944), challenging the constitutionality of Executive Order 9066
Postal telegraph from Ernest Besig, Director, American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, to Charles Elmore Cropley, Clerk, Supreme Court of the United States, December 18, 1943
Telegraph from Ernest Besig to Charles Elmore Cropley: "Please send copies of opinions in Korematsu and Endo cases."The ACLU-Northern California case file records contain legal documents and correspondence pertaining to the case argued before the Supreme Court in Korematsu v. United States (1944), challenging the constitutionality of Executive Order 9066
Telegraph from Ernest Besig, Director, American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, to Charles Elmore Cropley, Clerk, Supreme Court of the United States, December 18, 1944
Telegraph from Ernest Besig to Charles Elmore Cropley: "Please send copies of opinions in Korematsu and Endo cases."The ACLU-Northern California case file records contain legal documents and correspondence pertaining to the case Ex parte Mitsuye Endo (1944), in which the United States Supreme court unanimously ruled that the federal government could not indefinitely detain United States citizens who were loyal to the government. Files include documents related to the Gordon Hirabayashi Supreme Court case Hirabayashi v. United States
Hemingway, Ernest -- Mizener, Arthur, 1949-1951
20 files composing 15 letters between Ernest Hemingway and Arthur Mizener, the author of The Far Side of Paradise: A Biography of F. Scott Fitzgerald. Correspondence ranges from 1949 to 1951. Letters are as follows: 1. EH (Ernest Hemingway) to AM (Arthur Mizener), TLS, 6 July, 1949, 1p. 2. AM to EH, TL [carbon], 16 July, 1949, 1p. 3. EH secretary to AM, TLS, 23 January, 1950, 1p. 4. EH to AM, TLS, 18 April, 1950, 1p. 5. AM to EH, TL [carbon], 20 April, 1950, 1p. 6. EH to AM, TLS, 22 April, 1950, 2pp. 7. AM to EH, TL [carbon], 29 April, 1950, 1p. 8. EH to AM, TLS, 12 May, 1950, 2pp. 9. AM to EH, TL [carbon], 28 May, 1950, 2pp. 10. EH to AM, TLS, 1 June, 1950, 1p. 11. EH to AM, TLS, 29 August, 1950, 2pp. 12. EH to AM, TLS, 2 January, 1951, 1p. 13. EH to AM, TLS, 4 January, 1951, 2pp. 14. AM to EH, TL [carbon], 8 January, 1951, 1p. 15. AM to EH, TL [carbon], 16 January, 1951, 1p
El niño del carretel: Una visita a Ernest Freud
In this article, the author tells the story of her visit with W. Ernest Freud in March of 1999 at his
home in Heidelberg, Germany. W. Ernest Freud, the oldest grandson of Sigmund Freud, was born
in 1914 and died last September 30th at the age of 94.
In Beyond the Pleasure Principle, Sigmund Freud described the game (Fort-Da) of an eighteen
month old baby whom he had observed at play. W. Ernest Freud was the object of that observation
and the inventor of the Fort Da game.
The author recalls some of the events in the life of W. Ernest Freud and ties them, thematically,
to his childhood game of Fort-Da as well as to his later scientifi c interests.
This linkage illustrates how the childhood game, originally observed and interpreted by Sigmund
Freud as a way of symbolically recreating separations and reunions, seems to have paralleled
some of W. Ernest Freud�s subsequent life experiences.En este artículo, la autora relata su experiencia a raíz de una visita que realizó en abril de 1999
al nieto de Sigmund Freud, Ernest, quien, a la edad de 85 años, aún vivía en la ciudad de Heidelberg,
Alemania.
Ernest es el nieto de Freud que creó, siendo un bebé de 18 meses, el famoso juego del carretel o
�fort-da�, al cual se hace referencia en el célebre libro Más allá del principio de placer.
Este trabajo relata algunos acontecimientos vitales de la vida de Ernest e intenta poner en
evidencia la estrecha relación que existe entre los eventos que le acontecieron ya a partir de su
más temprana infancia, y los intereses científi cos que desarrolló más tarde.
Así, vemos cómo su primordial juego del carretel, observado e interpretado por su abuelo Sigmund
como una manera simbólica de recrear separaciones y reencuentros, parece haber representado
un paradigma en su vida
ERNEST: a semantic network system for pattern understanding
Niemann H, Sagerer G, Schröder S, Kummert F. ERNEST: a semantic network system for pattern understanding. IEEE transactions on pattern analysis and machine intelligence. 1990;12(9):883-905
- …
