9,147 research outputs found
E. M. Forster
This set comprises 40 volumes covering 19th and 20th century European and American authors. These volumes will be available as a complete set, mini boxed sets (by theme) or as individual volumes. This second set compliments the first 68 volume set of Critical Heritage published by Routledge in October 1995.Cover -- E. M. Forster: The Critical Heritage -- Copyright -- General Editor's Preface -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Note on the Text -- Where Angels Fear to Tread (1905) -- 1. Unsigned Notice, the Times Literary Supplement, Sep- Tember 1905 -- 2. Unsigned Review, Bookman (london), October 1905 -- 3. ' V ' Review, Manchester Guardian, October 1905 -- 4. Unsigned Notice, Glasgow Herald, October 1905 -- 5. Unsigned Notice, Pall Mall Gazette, October 1905 -- 6. Unsigned Notice, Birmingham Daily Post, October 1905 -- 7. Unsigned Notice, Manchester Courier, October 1905 -- 8. Unsigned Notice, Guardian, October 1905 -- 9. Unsigned Review, Speaker, October 1905 -- 10. C. F. G. Mas Term An, Review, Daily News, November 1905 -- 11. Unsigned Notice, Yorkshire Post, December 1905 -- 12. Unsigned Review, Spectator, December 1905 -- (american Edition, 1920) -- 13. Unsigned Review, Springfield Sunday Republican, March 1920 -- 14. E. M. Forster's Arrival Discussed in Bookman (london), June 1907 -- The Longest Journey (1907) -- 15. Unsigned Review, Tribune, April 1907 -- 16. Unsigned Review, the Times Literary Supplement, April 1907 -- 17. Unsigned Review, Nation, April 1907 -- 18. Unsigned Notice, Evening Standard & -- St James's Gazette, April 1907 -- 19. C. F. G. Masterman, 'the Soul in Suburbia', Daily News, May 1907 -- 20. Elizabeth Von Arnim, Letter to E. M. Forster, May 1907 -- 21. Unsigned Review, Morning Post, May 1907 -- 22. St Barbe', Notice, Queen, May 1907 -- 23. Unsigned Notice, Pall Mall Gazette, May 1907 -- 24. 'R.w.l.', Notice, Black and White, May 1907 -- 25. Unsigned Notice, Standard, May 1907 -- 26. ' V ' Review, Manchester Guardian, May 1907 -- 27. Unsigned Notice, Cambridge Review, May 1907 -- 28. Unsigned Review, Athenaeum, May 1907 -- 29. Unsigned Notice, Pforw, May 190730. Unsigned Notice, Liverpool Daily Post, May 1907 -- 31. Unsigned Notice, Birmingham Daily Post, May 1907 -- 32. Unsigned Review, Spectator, July 1907 -- 33. Unsigned Notice, Outlook, July 1907 -- 34. T. De Wyzewa, 'a Newcomer', Revue Des Deux Mondes, December 1907 -- 35. Frieda Lawrence, Letter to E. M. Forster [1915] -- (american Edition, 1922) -- 36. Unsigned Notice, Boston Evening T -- 37. Unsigned Review, Springfield Sunday Republican, Octobcr 1922 -- A Room with a View 1908 -- 38. R. A. Scott-james, 'a Novel of Character1, Daily News, October 1908 -- 39. Unsigned Review, the Times Literary Supplement, October 1908 -- 40. Unsigned Notice, Morning Leader, October 1908 -- 41. Unsigned Notice, Daily Mail, October 1908 -- 42. F, Review, Manchester Guardian, November 1908 -- 43. Unsigned Notice, Pall Mall Gazette, November 1908 -- 44. 'A Young Woman in a Muddle', Observer, November 1908 -- 45. 'a Clever Novel', Morning Post, November 1908 -- 46. C. F. G. Masterman, Unsigned Review, 'the Half-hidden Life', Nation, November 1908 -- 47. Unsigned Notice, Athenaeum, December 1908 -- 48. Unsigned Notice, Outlook, December 1908 -- 49. Unsigned Notice, Evening Standard & -- St James's Gazette, December 1908 -- 50. Unsigned Review, Spectator, January 1909 -- (american Edition) 1911 -- 51. Unsigned Notice, Inter-ocean (chicago), May 1911 -- 52. 'the Candid, Innocent Seriousness of Father and Son, New York Times, July 1911 -- Howards End (1910) -- 53. A. N. Monkhouse, Initialled Review, Manchester Guardian, October 1910 -- 54. Unsigned Review, the Times Literary Supplement, October 1910 -- 55. Unsigned Notice, Pall Mall Gazette, October 1910 -- 56. 'the Part and the Whole', Morning Leader, October 1910 -- 57. Unsigned Notice, Standard, October 1910 -- 58. Unsigned Review, Daily Telegraph, November 1910 -- 59.Unsigned Review, Spectator, November 191060. Unsigned Notice, Observer, November 1910 -- 61. R. A. Scott-james, 'the Year's Best Novel', Daily News, November 1910 -- 62. 'Villadom', Nation, November 1910 -- 63. Archibald Marshall, 'the Season's Great Novel', Daily Mail, November 1910 -- 64. 'A Fine Novel', Daily Graphic, November 1910 -- 65. Unsigned Review, Westminster Gazette, November 1910 -- 66. Unsigned Review, Morning Post, November 1910 -- 67. Unsigned Review, Athenaeum, December 1910 -- 68. A. C. Benson, Letter to E. M. Forster, December 1910 -- 69. 'A Story of Remarkably Queer People', Western Mail (cardiff), December 1910 -- 70. Unsigned Review, World, December 1910 -- 71. Jacob Tonson' (arnold Bennett), New Age, January 1911 -- (american Edition) 1911 -- 72. 'A Novel That Suggests the Work of Galsworthy but Lacks the Galsworthian Strength', New York Times, February 1911 -- 73. An American Summing-up, Current Opinion (usa) April 1911 -- 74. D. H. Lawrence, Letter to E. M. Forster, [1915] -- 75. Katherine Mansfield, Journal, May 1917 -- (american Edition, 1921) -- 76. 'R.h.', Review, New Republic, April 1921 -- 77. Unsigned Notice, Dial, October 1921 -- 78. George B. Dutton, Review, Springfield Sunday Republican, January 1922 -- 79. T. Sturge Moore, Letter to W. B. Yeats, April 1911 -- The Celestial Omnibus (1911) -- 80. Unsigned Notice, Daily Telegraph, May 1911 -- 81. 'A Book of Phantasies', Daily Mail, May 1911 -- 82. Dixon Scott, 'the Pipes of Puck', Manchester Guardian, May 1911 -- 83. Unsigned Review, Nation, June 1911 -- 84. Unsigned Review, the Times Literary Supplement, June 1911 -- 84. Unsigned Review, the Times Literary Supplement, June 1911 * -- 85. Unsigned Notice, Athenaeum, July 19 N -- 86. Unsigned Notice, Cambridge Review, October 1911 -- (american Edition, 1923) -- 87. Unsigned Notice, New York Evening Post, September 192388. D. H. Lawrence, Letter to Bertrand Russell, February 1915 -- The Story of the Siren (1920) -- 89. Katherine Mansfield, 'throw Them Overboard!', Athenaeum, August 1920 -- 90. Rebecca West, Review, New Statesman, August 1920 -- 91. D. H. Lawrence, Letter to E. M. Forster, September 1922 -- 92. Hamish Miles on E. M. Forster, Dial, May 1924 -- A Passage to India (1924) -- 93. Rose Macaulay, 'women in the East', Daily News, June 1924 -- 94. Unsigned Review, the Times Literary Supplement, June 1924 -- 95. A. C. Benson, Letter to E. M. Forster, June 1924 -- 96. H. C. Harwood, Review, Outlook, June 1924 -- 97. Leonard Woolf, 'arch Beyond Arch', Nation & -- Athenaeum, June 1924 -- 98. H. W. Massingham, 'the Price of India's Friendship', New Leader, June 1924 -- 99. Unsigned Review, Observer, June 1924 -- 100. 'c.m.', Review, Manchester Guardian, June 1924 -- 101. Unsigned Review, Birmingham Post, June 1924 -- 102. Sylvia Lynd, 'a Great Novel at Last', Time and Tide, June 1924 -- 103. Gerald Gould, Review, Saturday Review, June 1924 -- 104. Ralph Wright, Review, New Statesman, June 1924 -- 105. L. P. Hartley, Review, Spectator, June 1924 -- 106. J. B. Priestley, Review, London Mercury, July 1924 -- 107. R. Ellis Roberts, Review, Bookman (london), July 1924 -- 108. Marmaduke Pickthall, Letter to E. M. Forster, July 1924 -- 109. D. H. Lawrence, Letter to Martin Seeker, July 1924 -- 110.John Middleton Murry, 'bo-oum or Ou-boum?', Adelphi, July 1924 -- III. Unsigned Notice, Times of India (bombay), July 1924 -- 112. Laurence Stallings, 'when Rudyards Cease Their Kiplings and Haggards Ride No More', World (new York), August 1924 -- 113. Edward Carpenter, Letter to E. M. Forster, August [1924] -- 114. 'A Striking Novel', Statesman (calcutta), August 1924 -- 115. E. A. Horne, an Anglo-indian View, Letter to the Editor of New Statesman, August 1924116. S. K. Ratcliffe, Another Anglo-indian View, Letter to the Editor of New Statesman, August 1924 -- 117. Rebecca West, 'interpreters of Their Age', Saturday Review of Literature (new York), August 1924 -- 118. Henry W. Nevinson, 'india's Coral Strand', Saturday Review of Literature (new York), August 1924 -- 119. 'D.l.m.', Review, Boston Evening Transcript, September 1924 -- 120. St Nihal Singh, 'indians and Anglo-indians: as Por- Trayed to Britons', Modern Review (calcutta), September 1924 -- 121. 'C.w.g.', Review, Englishman (calcutta), September 1924 -- 122. I. P. Fassett, Review, Criterion, October 1924 -- 123. D. H. Lawrence, Letter to John Middlcton Murry, October 1924 -- 124. Elinor Wylie, 'passage to More Than India', New York Herald Tribune, October 1924 -- 125. Edwin Muir, Review, Nation (new York), October 1924 -- 126. 's. A.', Review, Springfield Sunday Republican, October 1924 -- 127. Robert Bridges, Letter to E. M. Forster, November [1924] -- 128. Clarbncb H. Gaines, Review, North American Review, December 1924 -- 129. Arnold Bennett, Journals, January 1925 -- 130. 'an Indian' ('a.s.b.'), 'hommage a M. Forster', August 1928 -- 131. Bhupal Singh on E. M. Forster's Picture Oflndia, a Survey of Anglo-indian Fiction, 1934 -- 132. Roger Fry on a Passage to India, as Quoted by Virginia Woolf, 1940 -- Four Views of Forster (1927) -- 133. Jacques Heurgon, 'the Novels of E. M. Forster', Revue De Paris, April 1927 -- 134. Edward Shanks, 'e. M. Forster', London Mercury, July 1927 -- 135. T. E. Lawrence on Forster and D. H. Lawrence, August 1927 -- 136. Virginia Woolf, 'the Novels of E. M. Forster', Atlantic Monthly (boston), November 1927 -- Aspects of the Novel (1927) -- 137. E. F. Benson, 'a Literary Mystification', Spectator, October 1927 -- 138. Virginia Woolf, Review, Nation, November 1927139. L. P. Hartley, Review, Saturday Review, December 1927This set comprises 40 volumes covering 19th and 20th century European and American authors. These volumes will be available as a complete set, mini boxed sets (by theme) or as individual volumes. This second set compliments the first 68 volume set of Critical Heritage published by Routledge in October 1995.Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries
Free-Riding in Pharmaceutical Price Regulation: Theory and Evidence
We present a model of the strategic interaction among authorities regulating pharmaceutical prices in different countries and the R&D investment decisions of pharmaceutical firms. Regulators’ decisions affect consumer surplus directly, via prices, and indirectly via firms’ profits and R&D investment policies, which in turn affect patient health. The positive externality of a price increase in one country provides an incentive for other countries to free-ride, and we show how country-level characteristics affect optimal pricing decisions and equilibria. Our theoretical predictions are tested using price data for a set of 70 cancer drugs in 25 OECD countries. We find evidence of behaviour that is consistent with the free-riding hypothesis and which, in line with the theoretical predictions, differs according to country-level characteristics. Countries with comparatively large market shares tend to react to increases in other countries’ prices by lowering their own prices; in countries with comparatively small market shares, regulators’ decisions are consistent with the objective of introducing the product at as low a price as possible. We discuss the policy implications of our results for incentivising global pharmaceutical R&D and the recent proposal to move towards a joint pharmaceutical procurement process at the European level
Reconciliation and renewal in Roger T. Forster : the doctrine of Atonement in the teaching and practice of a restoration theology
Over the past fifty years, Charismatic Renewal has represented a significant development in English Christianity. While this has prompted a number of
investigations, few have touched on the traditional Evangelical distinctives of the new birth and crucicentrism. By way of making a contribution in this area,
this thesis undertook an explication and critique of the doctrine of Atonement in Roger Thomas Forster, an indisputably significant figure within the movement. The work identified Forster's theological framework, his
understanding of the circumstances that called for Christ's work, his critique of the three main historic motfs, and the key elements in his own theory. Examination was also made of the relationship in which the Atonement stands
to reconciliation, and the relationship of the Church to the Atonement. Finally, Forster was 'located' historically by identifying his sources and influences, and
'defined' theologically by comparing and contrasting his teachings with those of conservative Evangelicalism. The thesis concluded with an overview of what had been undertaken, and its significance
Strategic Interaction in Pharmaceutical Price Regulation: With or Without U?
We study strategic interaction among countries in pharmaceutical price regulation resulting from innovation-related spillovers. In our theoretical model, regulators’ pricing decisions affect welfare both directly and indirectly, via firms’ R&D policies. We characterise two types of equilibrium, depending on whether countries price at, or above, the minimum level the industry is willing to accept to serve the market. The combination of these two equilibria may imply a U-shape relationship between countries’ pharmaceutical prices and relative market size. We find support for this hypothesis, using data for 83 cancer drugs in 23 OECD countries. Our results contribute to the academic debate about the relationship between prices and market size, as well as the policy debate about using supranational procurement policies to lower prices. In particular, we show that joint procurement can lower or raise prices according to the sizes of the domestic markets which join to create a single purchasing authority
Late-Stage Pharmaceutical R&D and Pricing Policies under Two-Stage Regulation
© 2016 Elsevier B.V.We present a model combining the two regulatory stages relevant to the approval of a new health technology: the authorisation of its commercialisation and the insurer's decision about whether to reimburse its cost. We show that the degree of uncertainty concerning the true value of the insurer's maximum willingness to pay for a unit increase in effectiveness has a non-monotonic impact on the optimal price of the innovation, the firm's expected profit and the optimal sample size of the clinical trial. A key result is that there exists a range of values of the uncertainty parameter over which a reduction in uncertainty benefits the firm, the insurer and patients. We consider how different policy parameters may be used as incentive mechanisms, and the incentives to invest in R&D for marginal projects such as those targeting rare diseases. The model is calibrated using data on a new treatment for cystic fibrosis
D-SEED I.
It is an audiovisual film that presents a musical compilation of five artists accompanied by sculptural objects and is one of the other outputs of the ntity.one.Default platform. The ntity.one.Default platform has been a collectively curated platform connecting the independent electronic scene and visual art for two years. The audio-visual D-SEED I focuses on materiality, especially fabric, in sculptural objects. The haptic and tactile perception of art is the axis of interest in the artistic activity of the authors of these sculptural objects. Their creations outline a surreal world that is partly influenced by the reflection of the climate crisis we are facing. Michaela Rožnovská sculptural objects, in collaboration with Martin Dominik Kratochvíl, make imaginations of new animals on earth visible, based on abstracted shapes of plants or the simplest organisms living on this planet. They present themselves as heirs of our culture, mythology and religion. The sound side of the whole audiovisual film is created from a compilation of five performers - RLUNG, Thistle, Natálie Pleváková, sees_pod, timmi. The resulting sound mix is the work of the author sees_pod (Martin Dominik Kratochvíl). The whole compilation is composed of ambient surfaces, field recordings and processing. The whole is then built as a collage of constantly changing situations and emotions. At the moment when it may seem to the viewer that something identifiable emerges from the changing mixture, the composition turns into something else
D-SEED I.
It is an audiovisual film that presents a musical compilation of five artists accompanied by sculptural objects and is one of the other outputs of the ntity.one.Default platform. The ntity.one.Default platform has been a collectively curated platform connecting the independent electronic scene and visual art for two years. The audio-visual D-SEED I focuses on materiality, especially fabric, in sculptural objects. The haptic and tactile perception of art is the axis of interest in the artistic activity of the authors of these sculptural objects. Their creations outline a surreal world that is partly influenced by the reflection of the climate crisis we are facing. Michaela Rožnovská sculptural objects, in collaboration with Martin Dominik Kratochvíl, make imaginations of new animals on earth visible, based on abstracted shapes of plants or the simplest organisms living on this planet. They present themselves as heirs of our culture, mythology and religion. The sound side of the whole audiovisual film is created from a compilation of five performers - RLUNG, Thistle, Natálie Pleváková, sees_pod, timmi. The resulting sound mix is the work of the author sees_pod (Martin Dominik Kratochvíl). The whole compilation is composed of ambient surfaces, field recordings and processing. The whole is then built as a collage of constantly changing situations and emotions. At the moment when it may seem to the viewer that something identifiable emerges from the changing mixture, the composition turns into something else
Optimal Bayesian sequential sampling rules for the economic evaluation of health technologies
We present a Bayes sequential economic evaluation model for health technologies in which an investigator has flexibility over the timing of a decision to stop carrying out research and to conclude that one technology is preferred to another on cost-effectiveness grounds. We implement the model by using an evaluation of the treatment of bacterial sinusitis and derive approximations of the optimal stopping rule as a function of accumulated sample size. We compare the performance of the model with existing frequentist and Bayes sequential designs and investigate the sensitivity of the stopping rule to changes in the parameters of the model. Our results suggest that accounting for the dynamic nature of experimentation, together with its economic parameters, should lead to greater efficiency in resource allocation within healthcare systems
"Closing the R&D Gap, Evaluating the Sources of R&D Spending"
Both spending and tax policies have been implemented in the United States with the goal of stimulating private sector research and development (R&D). Karier questions whether current R&D policy, especially the research and experimentation tax credit, can contribute to closing the gap between nondefense expenditures on R&D in the United States and such expenditures in other countries, such as Japan and Germany. He also explores possible changes to our current R&D policy to make it more effective.
Linear and Kinked Oligo(phenyleneethynylene)s as Ideal Molecular Calibrants for Forster Resonance Energy Transfer.
Czar MF, Breitgoff FD, Sahoo D, et al. Linear and Kinked Oligo(phenyleneethynylene)s as Ideal Molecular Calibrants for Forster Resonance Energy Transfer. The journal of physical chemistry letters. 2019;10(21):6942-6947.We show that oligo(phenyleneethynylene)s (oligoPEs) are ideal spacers for calibrating dye pairs used for Forster resonance energy transfer (FRET). Ensemble FRET measurements on linear and kinked diads with such spacers show the expected distance and orientation dependence of FRET. Measured FRET efficiencies match excellently with those predicted using a harmonic segmented chain model, which was validated by end-to-end distance distributions obtained from pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance measurements on spin-labeled oligoPEs with comparable label distances
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