2,772 research outputs found

    Ioannes Blund, Tractatus de anima. Edited by D.A. Callus o.p. and R.W. Hunt

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    Van Steenberghen Fernand. Ioannes Blund, Tractatus de anima. Edited by D.A. Callus o.p. and R.W. Hunt. In: Revue Philosophique de Louvain. Quatrième série, tome 70, n°7, 1972. pp. 434-435

    Beryl Smalley to R.W. Hunt on the Significance of Alexander Neckam

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    The most widely consulted thesis in the Bodleian Library for most of the twentieth century was that of R.W. Hunt: ‘Alexander Neckam’, completed in 1936 for his D.Phil. at Oxford under F.M. Powicke. He was later its Keeper of Western Manuscripts, from 1945 until 1975. The list of those who have consulted the thesis, pasted in the front of the volume, stretches for many pages. Hunt had made a leap forward in the knowledge of this author’s life and works, but never published more than a few notes on Alexander before his death in 1979. The thesis finally appeared as a book in 1984 as The Schools and the Cloister, lightly revised by Margaret Gibson. Published statements imply that Hunt never made a serious effort to publish it himself. But a rare letter from Beryl Smalley, who destroyed her papers shortly before her death, shows that Hunt had in fact made efforts to publish his work in 1960. The letter also offers her own insight into Alexander’s widely misunderstood biblical commentaries

    Development and demise of plasmodium liver stage parasites.The hunt for a genetically attenuated malaria vaccine

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    Contains fulltext : 112643.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen, 10 juni 2013Promotor : Sauerwein, R.W. Co-promotor : Janse, C.J

    Beryl Smalley to R.W. Hunt on the Significance of Alexander Neckam

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    An explanation of R.W. Hunt's delay to publish his influential 1936 doctoral thesis and its relationship to the 1984 book 'The Schools and the Cloister'. Includes the text of an unpublished letter from Beryl Smalley (13 July 1960) on the importance of Alexander Neckam

    Beryl Smalley to R.W. Hunt on the Significance of Alexander Neckam

    No full text
    An explanation of R.W. Hunt's delay to publish his influential 1936 doctoral thesis and its relationship to the 1984 book 'The Schools and the Cloister'. Includes the text of an unpublished letter from Beryl Smalley (13 July 1960) on the importance of Alexander Neckam

    Male identities in conflict: The construction of masculinity in the characters of Devi Mahasweta’s “The Hunt”

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    This article analyzes the construction of masculinity in Devi Mahasweta’s “The Hunt”. Michael Kimmel and R.W. Connell’s work on gender identity are used as a theoretical support to identify the different masculine archetypes present in the text. Also, masculinity is conceived as a discursive structure determined by the socio-historical conditions that interpellate individuals; in this case, capitalism. Finally, it is concluded that each character embodies a particular, and in some cases more than one, male identity in conflict. These male identities are the result of capitalist and cultural globalizing processes that affect the Kuruban society.Este artículo desarrolla un análisis literario sobre la construcción de la masculinidad en los personajes del cuento “The Hunt” de Devi Mahasweta. Como marco teórico referente se utilizan principalmente los aportes de las teorías de Michael Kimmel, y R.W. Connell en lo que respecta a la identidad del género masculino. Por otra parte, la masculinidad se entiende como una elaboración discursiva determinada por las particularidades sociohistóricas que interpelan a los individuos. Finalmente, se concluye que cada personaje representa una –o varias en algunos casos- identidad masculina en conflicto producto de los procesos de globalización capital y cultural a la que la sociedad de Kuruba se ve sometida.Universidad de Costa RicaUCR::Sedes Regionales::Sede de Occident

    What remains of monetarism?

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    In October 1979 the Federal Reserve, in an attempt to curb double-digit inflation, announced that it would place more weight on monetary aggregates in policy deliberations. This policy shift helped reduce inflation but sent the economy into a recession. Three years later the Fed abandoned monetary targets and returned to targeting the federal funds rate. ; Monetary growth targets currently play no official role in the setting of U.S. monetary policy. Is such disregard justified by the data any more today than it was twenty years ago? This article provides a historical perspective on the development and apparent failure of monetarism as a policy guide. ; The author also explores whether the basic monetarist propositions still hold true for a sample of fifteen countries. The analysis suggests that it is premature to dismiss monetary aggregates as uninformative. The data from the economies studied indicate that, in general, nominal income growth and inflation are positively related to money growth. While these results do not support short-term manipulation of the monetary aggregates to deliver precise control over movements in income and prices, they also do not reject the notion that changes in money growth have important long-term effects on the economy. What the results suggest, therefore, is that failure to acknowledge this empirical fact could lead to undesirable policy consequences.Monetary policy ; Monetary theory

    Sounds Local, 1997 October 25

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    Re-airing of July 29, 1994 segment of the interview with Beau Biggs of K.M. Biggs Tractor in Lumberton and R.W. Wilkins, agri-business advisor to North Carolina Governor Jim Hunt, on the state of tobacco farms and market in Robeson County; Re-airing of July 29, 1994 segment of the interview with author Phillip Gerard on his novel, Desert Kill, a murder mystery set in Arizona; Gattaca (film) review by WHQR's film commentator, Steve Taylor; Overview of upcoming events on the cultural calendar
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