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    E. M. Forster

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    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 &amp -- 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 &amp -- 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 &amp -- 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

    Forster, G P, VX44939

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/385853Surname: FORSTER. Given Name(s) or Initials: G P. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: VX44939. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 17862.253398 Item: [2016.0049.18146] "Forster, G P, VX44939

    From dialectics to dancing: Reading, writing and the experience of the everyday life in the diaries of Frank P. Forster

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    This article is an examination of the reading and writing practices of Frank Forster (1910-98), a casual labourer and Communist autodidact, as revealed in the diaries he kept between 1934 and 1938. One of the most influential texts Forster encountered during this period was The Positive Outcome of Philosophy, written by Joseph Dietzgen (1828-88), a German tanner who had also independently developed a Marxist philosophy of dialectical materialism. Dietzgen's work on the relationship between thought and experience appealed enormously to autodidact sensibilities. Recording his reading at the same time as other activities, such as cinema attendance and dancing, Forster was able to reshape Dietzgen's ideas so that he could apply them to the issues most immediately important to him, particularly the pursuit of social and sexual experience. This seemingly idiosyncratic understanding of ‘the dialectic’ can only be understood in the particular context of Forster's life, locality and time. His diaries deserve wider attention as compelling evidence of how one individual combined theory with everyday life to create his own form of ‘self-help’

    Projection operators in correlated noise fields

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    Includes bibliographical references (p. 7-8).Supported by the ARO. DAAL03-92-G-0115 Supported by AFOSR. F49620-92-J-0002 Supported by the NSF. MIP-9015281H. Krim, P. Forster and A.S. Willsky

    Multivariate complex B-splines, Dirichlet averages, and difference operators.

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    For the Schoenberg B-splines, interesting relations between their functional representation, Dirichlet averages and difference operators are known. We use these relations to extend the B-splines to an arbitrary (infinite) sequence of knots and to higher dimensions. A new Fourier domain representation of the multidimensional complex B-spline is given

    Zalmoxis insula Forster 1955

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    <i>Zalmoxis insula</i> Forster, 1955 <p> <i>Zalmoxis insula</i> Forster, 1955, p. 373–375, figs. 37–39.</p> <p> <b>Record.</b> *Dauan I., Torres Strait, north Queensland, Australia, collected 6 May, 1953 by E.N. Marks.</p>Published as part of <i>Sharma, Prashant P., Kury, Adriano B. & Giribet, Gonzalo, 2011, Zalmoxidae (Arachnida: Opiliones: Laniatores) of the Paleotropics: a catalogue of Southeast Asian and Indo-Pacific species, pp. 37-58 in Zootaxa 2972</i> on page 48, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/206628">10.5281/zenodo.206628</a&gt

    Markov chain Monte Carlo model determination for hierarchical and graphical log-linear models

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    We use reversible jump Markov chain Monte Carlo methods (Green, 1995) to develop strategies for calculating posterior probabilities of hierarchical, graphical or decomposable log-linear models for high-dimensional contingency tables. Even for tables of moderate size, these sets of models may be very large. The choice of suitable prior distributions for model parameters is also discussed in detail, and two examples are presented. For the first example, a three-way table, the model probabilities calculated using our reversible jump approach are compared with model probabilities calculated exactly or by using an alternative approximation. The second example is a six-way contingency table for which exact methods are infeasible, because of the large number of possible models. We identify the most probable hierarchical, graphical and decomposable models, and compare the results with alternatives approaches

    Dynamic, economic approaches to HTA under uncertainty

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    A simple, two period framework is used to interpret existing contributions to the literature on decision rules for HTA under uncertainty and to contrast them with a dynamic, economic model solved using backward induction

    Nanometinae FORSTER & FORSTER 1999

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    NANOMETINAE FORSTER & FORSTER, 1999 NEW RANK (FIGS 4F, 71–76, 87–91, 96–99) <p> <i>Type genus:</i> <i>Nanometa</i> Simon, 1908. This family name was first proposed by Forster & Forster (1999: 166) at the family rank, but it has never been formally diagnosed.</p> <p> <i>Diagnosis:</i> Nanometines can be differentiated from other tetragnathids by the following combination of characters: female cheliceral denticles present (84-1: Figs 73C, 88D), absence of trichobothria on femur IV (Fig. 73F) and the remaining femora, female genital openings often plugged with amorphous material (132-3: Figs 74A, 98B), male palpal patella without macrosetae (180-0: Figs 73D, 97H), conductor originating on the centre of the tegulum (55-0), solid, uniform degree of sclerotization between tegulum and conductor (59-0); and tubular embolus shape (67-0) (Figs 75E, 76A–C, 90C, 91A). These six characters also represent the morphological synapomorphies supporting this lineage obtained by the total evidence analysis of Dimitrov & Hormiga (2011), in which they are labelled as ‘ Nanometa clade’ (see also Álvarez- Padilla <i>et al</i>., 2009). Additional diagnostic characters of nanometines are the female copulatory ducts longer than the spermathecae length (146-2; Figs 74B, 89D, 98D), shorter in <i>Pinkfloydia</i> Dimitrov & Hormiga, 2011: figs 8G, H, 15F); the presence of a cymbium ectobasal process (26-1); and having the cymbium ectomedian process more than half the cymbial width (30-1: Figs 75A, 90A, C, 99D). The characteristic branched tracheal system of many nanometines (such as <i>Nanometa</i> and ‘ <i>Orsinome</i> ’ <i>sarasini</i>; see Forster & Forster, 1999: 166) is not found in <i>Pinkfloydia</i>, which has its median tracheal trunks confined to the abdomen and not branched (Dimitrov & Hormiga, 2011).</p> <p> <i>Taxonomic and natural history:</i> Forster & Forster (1999) were the first to recognize this group endemic to Australasia as ‘Nanometidae’ and discussed some interesting aspects of nanometine anatomy such as the presence of an stridulatory organ on the booklung covers of males opposite to a row of denticles on the IV coxa (Figs 71A, B, 73E). They also included in their ‘Nanometidae’ the monotypic genus <i>Eryciniolia</i> Strand, 1912 and <i>Orsinome lagenifera</i> (Urquhart, 1888). There are many species to be described in Nanometinae, some which are new (e.g. Dimitrov & Hormiga, 2011) but others are misplaced, such as the case of ‘ <i>Orsinome</i> ’ <i>sarasini</i> (Figs 143A, B, 144), which is not congeneric with the type species of <i>Orsinome</i> and belongs in the Nanometinae. At the present time Nanometinae includes the genera <i>Nanometa</i> and <i>Pinkfloydia</i>. The monophyly of Nanometinae has been tested in recent phylogenetic analyses that also included molecular data and the group is relatively well supported (Álvarez-Padilla <i>et al</i>., 2009; Dimitrov & Hormiga, 2011).</p>Published as part of <i>Álvarez-Padilla, Fernando & Hormiga, Gustavo, 2011, Morphological and phylogenetic atlas of the orb-weaving spider family Tetragnathidae (Araneae: Araneoidea), pp. 713-879 in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 162 (4)</i> on pages 802-803, DOI: 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2011.00692.x, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/5440885">http://zenodo.org/record/5440885</a&gt
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