1,818,926 research outputs found

    Translation Talks: getting to know Daniel Hahn

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    Daniel Hahn is a writer, editor and translator with about 70 books to his name. His translations from Portuguese, Spanish and French include fiction and non-fiction for adults and children, from Europe, Africa and the Americas. His work has won him the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize, the International Dublin Literary Award and many others. He is a past chair of the UK's Society of Authors and the Translators Association, and a former programme director of the British Centre for Literary Translation.Conversatorio entre el autor, editor y traductor Daniel Hahn y el panel docente de la carrera de Traducción e Interpretación Profesional. Daniel Hahn comparte sus perspectivas respecto a la traducción literaria, su experiencia profesional y responde preguntas de los estudiantes de la carrera

    Die Kunst, das schwache Leben zu erhalten und in unheilbaren Krankheiten zu fristen

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    In FrakturVorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: Hannover, 1799. Bei den Gebrüdern Hahn. - Kolophon: Königslutter, gedruckt bei Karl Wilhelm Hahn

    Hahn, Erich -- 1963 -- Correspondence, Individual -- letter, 1963-11-30

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    Letter from Hahn, Erich E. A. to Sabin, Albert B. dated 1963-11-30.Sabin Collection Fair Use Policy</a

    Apostelgeschichte u. Brief an die Römer

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    Autopsie nach Exemplar der ULB Sachsen-AnhaltVorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: Hannover, bei den Gebrüdern Hahn. 1801

    Briefe an die Korinther, Galater, Epheser und Philipper

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    Autopsie nach Exemplar der ULB Sachsen-AnhaltVorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: Hannover, bei den Gebrüdern Hahn. 1801

    Cornelia Hahn Oberlander on Pedagogical Playgrounds

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    Cornelia Hahn Oberlander on Pedagogical Playgrounds is a curated selection of writings by a landscape architect dedicated to children’s right to play in urban environments. This volume assembles key texts from the 1960s and 1970s where Hahn Oberlander urges city planners and developers to recognize playgrounds as important sites for childhood development and to include them in new construction. She emphasizes the social benefits that free play and independent discovery create, and she provides practical proposals for the formulation of new playgrounds. In pieces including a short history of children’s play, reflections on her own work, and a report urging levels of government to protect children’s right to play, Hahn Oberlander responds to austerity by encouraging the use of inexpensive and recycled materials such as sand, water, logs, boards, and tires for use in playgrounds and suggests vacant lots as play sites. She argues that developers and planners must always consult with their users and that children’s input and needs must be considered in playground design. An introduction by Jane Mah Hutton, landscape architect and associate professor at the University of Waterloo School of Architecture, explores the intersections of active play, ecological thinking, urban development, and the enthusiastic and often-playful advocacy of Oberlander’s writing and practice. This title is co-published with the Canadian Centre for Architecture and is part of the Building Arguments series

    De rotatione annvli Satvrni

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    Zugl.: Göttingen, Univ., Diss., 1793Autopsie nach Exemplar der ULB Sachsen-AnhaltVorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: Hannoverae, apud fratres Hahn, 1795.Frontispiz (Kupferst.
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