2,126 research outputs found

    Marguerite Ferguson Papers, 1954, 1958

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    Typed summary of interview (6 leaves) with Marguerite Ferguson, concerning her parents, Philip and Mary Weisbecker, who moved from New York to Moorhead, Minn., then to Grandin, N.D. where they bought a hotel. Includes mention of the first business establishments in Grandin, additions to the hotel, cooking for threshing crews, boarding farm workers during the winter, Lynn Ferguson, Marguerite's son and farm manager for John S. Dalrymple. Also includes clippings

    Péchés capitaux et « Vices italiens » : l’avarice et ses complices dans L’Heptaméron de Marguerite de Navarre

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    Ferguson Gary. Péchés capitaux et « Vices italiens » : l’avarice et ses complices dans L’Heptaméron de Marguerite de Navarre. In: Seizième Siècle, N°4, 2008. pp. 73-87

    Mal de vivre, mal croire : l’anticléricalisme dans L’Heptaméron de Marguerite de Navarre

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    Ferguson Gary. Mal de vivre, mal croire : l’anticléricalisme dans L’Heptaméron de Marguerite de Navarre. In: Seizième Siècle, N°6, 2010. pp. 151-163

    Letter from Edwin E. Ferguson, Regional Attorney, War Relocation Authority, to Ernest Besig, Director, American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, November 25, 1942

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    Letter from Edwin E. Ferguson to Ernest Besig, in which Ferguson writes that the San Francisco War Relocation Authority office will be moving to Washington. Ferguson expresses fondness for Besig.The ACLU-Northern California case file records contain legal documents and correspondence pertaining to the case argued before the Supreme Court in Korematsu v. United States (1944), challenging the constitutionality of Executive Order 9066

    Bibliographie d'agrégation 2021 : L'Heptaméron de Marguerite de Navarre

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    Gary Ferguson, Véronique Montagne et Marie-Claire Thomine ont préparé une bibliographie sur l'Heptaméron de Marguerite de Navarre, au programme des agrégations de Lettres pour la session 2021. Vous pouvez la télécharger ici : Biblio SFDES Heptaméron Agrégation 2021

    Ferguson School District No. 4573

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    Photograph - A view of Ferguson School building near Athabasca, Alberta. ATS 24-66-21-W

    Ferguson School District No. 4573 - 02

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    Photograph - A group of pupils with baseball equipment from Ferguson School. ATS 24-66-21-W

    The Music of Mary and Martha: Tension and Dissonance in Marguerite de Navarre's Chansons spirituelles

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    This study examines Marguerite de Navarre's Chansons spirituelles in the context of sixteenth-century ideas concerning the self and self-expression. In essence, I find that Marguerite conceptualizes the self as a series of relationships between the interior and the exterior, who one is on the inside and the image or projection of that entity on the outside. To help establish a framework within which to develop these ideas, I focus on theological, gender, and poetic tensions at play throughout the compilation of songs. These tensions provide opportunities to examine what Marguerite desired to communicate about her understanding of the emerging concept of the individual in Renaissance France. Additionally, these poems demonstrate how the author's portrayal and valuation of violence both clarifies and obscures the relationship between internal and external that is fundamental to proper interpretation of the songs and much of early modern French literature

    Jonathan A. Reid, King’s Sister – Queen of Dissent. Marguerite of Navarre (1492-1549) and her Evangelical Network

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    L’étude de Jonathan A. Reid – à l’origine une thèse d’histoire préparée sous la direction de Heiko Oberman – nous offre un vaste panorama du « réseau » évangélique de Marguerite de Navarre, et entend démontrer que les idées religieuses de celui-ci, son programme de réforme et ses activités politiques, depuis les années 1520 jusqu’à la mort de la reine en 1549, étaient collectifs et cohérents. Pour J. Reid, Marguerite et ceux de son cercle en France poursuivaient avant tout un projet de réform..

    Ferguson-Smith, Malcolm: transcript of a video interview (06-Jun-2015)

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    Interview with Professor Malcolm Ferguson-Smith, conducted by Ms Emma M. Jones, for the History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group, 06 June 2015, in Glasgow. Transcribed by Mrs Debra Gee, and edited by Professor Tilli Tansey and Mr Alan Yabsley. The project management was undertaken by Mr Adam Wilkinson. Professor Malcolm Ferguson-Smith (b. 1931) is Emeritus Professor of Pathology, University of Cambridge. He graduated in medicine at Glasgow University in 1955 and, while undertaking postgraduate training there in pathology, was introduced to research on sex chromatin under Bernard Lennox. An interest in Klinefelter’s syndrome in 1957 to 1958 led to his appointment as Fellow in Medicine at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, in 1959, where he established the first chromosome diagnostic service in the USA, and undertook cytogenetic research into Turner syndrome. Research interests include molecular cytogenetics, karyotype evolution, vertebrate sex determination and comparative genomics. He is joint author of 'Essential Medical Genetics'.The History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group is funded by the Wellcome Trust, which is a registered charity (no. 210183). The current interview has been funded by the Wellcome Trust Strategic Award entitled “Makers of modern biomedicine: testimonies and legacy” (2012-2017; awarded to Professor Tilli Tansey)
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