1,722,682 research outputs found
Daniel Martin
Daniel Martin has been appointed as the Sales Representative for the new Republic Supply headquarters in Vernal
Mrs. Daniel Martin and Mrs. Leonard Kendall
This image shows Mrs. Daniel Martin and Mrs. Leonard Kendall
Daniel Martin Feige: Die Natur des Menschen
Rezension von Daniel Martin Feige: Die Natur des Menschen. Eine dialektische Anthropologie, Berlin: Suhrkamp 2022
John Fowles' Daniel Martin: "Ill-Concealed Ghosts"
John Fowles' Daniel Martin can best be viewed in the context of his previous novels, The Collector, The French Lieutenant's Woman and The Magus, as well as his non-fictional work, The Aristos. Fowles is particularly conscious of himself as author and his novels invite the reader to participate in them as co-creator. Therefore, the way in which Fowles develops this self-awareness in his novels and the purpose behind his use of metafiction are central to any discussion of Fowles' works.Master of Arts (MA
4. L’Innocence défendue de Daniel Martin (1602)
4. L’Innocence défendue de Daniel Martin (1602). In: Albineana, Cahiers d'Aubigné, 23, 2011. Calomnie, rumeur et désinformation : l'Histoire du Père Henri, jésuite et sodomite, sous la direction de Pierre Martin et Marie-Hélène Servet. pp. 153-190
A rhetorical analysis of John Fowles\u27s “Daniel Martin”
This dissertation analyzes a novel to demonstrate how fiction provides strategies to influence its readers. Increasingly, critics have discussed rhetorical elements of fiction, yet what calls for more attention is the development of methods to examine the strategies of novelists and their fictional arguments. To direct more attention to the interrelationship of method and the persuasiveness of fictional worlds, this rhetorical analysis offers an exploratory method to show how one novel, Daniel Martin by John Fowles, seeks to influence readers. Daniel Martin is an ideal work for such an analysis because its author has made clear his rhetorical intent as a writer to use his work as a means to change society. The exploratory method for Daniel Martin is pluralistic in approach as it draws upon ideas from the work of Aristotle, Chaim Perelman and Lucie Olbrechts-Tyteca, Mikhail Bakhtin, and Kenneth Burke. Of the six chapters in the dissertation, three through five constitute the application of the exploratory method, which utilizes the concepts of the classical appeals of logos, pathos, and ethos as well as modifications of Bakhtin\u27s idea of voices and Burke\u27s idea of identification. While the exploratory method itself represents a different way to analyze a novel as a source of potential influence, a distinctive feature of chapter three is the appropriation of The New Rhetoric\u27s discussion of informal reasoning in its recognition that values are indispensable to an argument. Developing a position that gains adherence from particular groups, Perelman focuses upon values, hierarchies, and loci of the preferable. Chapter three uses the six loci discussed—quantity, quality, order, existent, essence, person—to serve as elements of the logical appeal. Using pluralism as a feature of the exploratory method to analyze how Daniel Martin seeks to gain adherence from readers results in a number of similarities. On the other hand, the use of different tools yields different emphases and perspectives that one analytical tool used alone cannot provide. In the end, this dissertation\u27s insights point to the need for additional dialogue about Daniel Martin as well as further study about novels as vehicles of persuasion
THE TERMS OF POSTMODERN CHARACTERISTICS IN DANIEL MARTIN NOVEL OF JOHN FOWLES
In this novel, it is hardly a coincidence that Daniel Martin is reproached for his chauvinism by Jenny McNeill in much of the same way as is Miles Green by Erato. The theme of the complicity of the author or the narrator in the creation and propagation of certain male-biased stereotypes of women had already been foreshadowed in FLW, but it is in these three books that it comes out most clearly. This is because of the fact that it is these three books who concentrate on the act of writing fiction itself. It is shown that while fiction can help to deconstruct certain meta-narratives, the author himself (the pronoun being deliberately masculine here) is at times propagating the very stereotypes he's trying to deconstruct. Finally, in Daniel Martin, Fowles illustrates the literal and metaphorical quest and the self-discovery of his character Daniel Martin (Dan), who struggles to shape his identity and his art, to acquire a sense of unity and to see life and himself totally. In this sense, in the novel, the multiplicity of the fragmented and discontinuous narrators, characters, settings and events, the shift of time and places, simultaneous forward and backward movements, reflect the distinctive characteristics of the postmodern novel. Consequently, in Fowles’s Daniel Martin, the fragments of Dan’s life are portrayed within the fragmented and discontinuous texts in which Dan attempts to capture reality, to realize the connection of his past with his present and to gain whole sight. In this postmodern context, the protagonist’s attempts to discover his identity, to broaden his mind and enlarge his vision through his quest, like the efforts of the protagonist in a Victorian Bildungsroman, contribute to the unique and distinctive structure of the novel, thus at the end the protagonist achieves realizing his unexplored identity through his quest.
 
Biography of Wilhelm Otto Daniel Martin Neitz
Document created with Microsoft Word 97-2003 (24.0 kb) on April 14, 2000. Migrated to pdf format with Adobe Acrobat Distiller 6.0 (20.0 kb) on October 27, 2010.Biography of Wilhelm Otto Daniel Martin Neitz, internationally recognised as research expert on theileriosis. The biography includes information about his education and career, scientific contributions and writings, homages and distinctions
My name is Daniel Martin,
voiceand Ralph E. Roberts for
Mary Celestia Parler
Transcribed by James Ward Lee
Collected by James Ward Lee Sung by Albert Harrison
Hindsville, Arkansas
Bohannon Community
August 7, 1958
and Ralph E. Roberts
Reel 244, Item 7
Daniel Martin
My name is Daniel Martin,
I was born in Arkansas;
I left my aged parents,
I left my loving wife;
I was forced to go to Rolla,
It was all to save my life.
I joined in Phelp's regiment,
I'm not ashamed to tell.
The colonel and the officers,
All treated us very well;
They dearly loved the union,
They loved their boys too;
And for to make us happy,
They tried what they could do.
We met them at Cross Hollow,
And there we had a fight.
We killed old Ben McCollough,
Likewise old McIntosh;
We shot old Sterling through the arm,
We sent them in a rush;
There was a young leiutenant,
Whose name was Charlie Moss;
And on a bed of sickness,
Charlie was always nigh.Funding for digitization provided by the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Happy Hollow Foundation
Earth Day 1992 lecture and celebration - Daniel Martin
Poster for a lecture and celebration of Earth Day 1992 featuring a talk titled Cosmic Restlessness: Faith and the Earth by Daniel Martin, Ph.D., Wainwright House.https://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/archives-posters/1174/thumbnail.jp
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