351,878 research outputs found
Patrick Lateur : dichter-vertaler in gesprek met anderen
inleiding bij de verzamelde opstellen van Patrick Lateu
[Police Photos of William Earl Patrick O'Donnell, February 4, 1964]
Criminal intelligence report to Captain W. P. Gannaway and Lt. Jack Revill concerning William Earl Patrick O'Donnell. The report includes two photos of Mr. O'Donnell
The Ghost of Patrick Geddes: Civics As Applied Sociology
In 1904 and 1905 Patrick Geddes (1905, 1906) read his famed, but today little-read, two-part paper, \'Civics: as Applied Sociology\', to the first meetings of the British Sociological Society. Geddes is often thought of as a \'pioneer of sociology\' (Mairet, 1957; Meller, 1990) and for some (eg Devine, 1999: 296) as \'a seminal influence on sociology\'. However, little of substance has been written to critically assess Geddes\'s intellectual legacy as a sociologist. His work is largely forgotten by sociologists in Britain (Abrams, 1968; Halliday, 1968; Evans, 1986). Few have been prepared to follow Geddes\'s ambition to bridge the chasm between nature and culture, environment and society, geography, biology and sociology. His conception of \'sociology\', oriented towards social action from a standpoint explicitly informed by evolutionary theory. A re-appraisal of the contemporary relevance of Geddes\'s thinking on civics as applied sociology has to venture into the knotted problem of evolutionary sociology. It also requires giving some cogency to Geddes\'s often fragmentary and inconsistent mode of address. Although part of a post-positivist, \'larger modernism\' Geddes remained mired in nineteenth century evolutionary thought and fought shy of dealing with larger issues of social class or the breakthrough work of early twentieth century sociology of Simmel, Weber and Durkheim. His apolitical notion of \'civics\' limits its relevance to academic sociology today.History of Sociology, Civics, Patrick Geddes, Scottish Generalism, Urban Sociology
Disciples of a crazy saint: The Buchen of Spiti
The Buchen are specialist religious performers from Spiti, a culturally Tibetan valley in North India. They are widely known for performing an elaborate exorcism ritual that culminates in a slab of stone, marked with images of demons, being smashed on a man’s belly. In winter groups of Buchen perform their religious theatre, a localised form of Ache Lhamo, the Tibetan Opera. This book, published in conjunction with an exhibition at the Pitt Rivers Museum at the University of Oxford is the result of a research project and substantial fieldtrip funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, with project partnership from the Pitt Rivers Museum.
Patrick Sutherland has been photographing in Spiti for nearly two decades and working with the Buchen for several years.
The book consists of a self-reflexive essay by Patrick Sutherland illustrated with historical photographs and his own photographs, followed by four sections of photographs and captions by Patrick Sutherland. It concludes with a substantial essay, placing the Buchen into a wider cultural and historical context, by Tashi Tsering, founding Director of the Amnye Machen Institute (Tibetan Centre for Advanced Studies) in Dharamsala. This essay is also illustrated with historical photographs
Decker-Patrick Company Dry Goods
Image shows a general view of the Decker-Patrick Company building on 200 South.This photo included in both the Shipler and Classified Photo Collections
Father Patrick J. Holloran, SJ, president of Saint Louis University, 1943-1949
Father Patrick J. Holloran, SJ, President of Saint Louis University (1943-49) [Same as PHO 2.0.245. Also found on p. 7 of the 1945 Archive Yearbook
Father Patrick J. Holloran, SJ, president of Saint Louis University, 1943-1949
Father Patrick J. Holloran, SJ, President of Saint Louis University (1943-49) [Found on p. 9 of the 1945 Archive Yearbook
Father Patrick J. Holloran, SJ, president of Saint Louis University, 1943-1949
Father Patrick J. Holloran, SJ, President of Saint Louis University (1943-1949) [Same as PHO 2.0.245. Found on p. 7 of the 1945 Archive Yearbook
Father Patrick J. Holloran, SJ, president of Saint Louis University, 1943-1949
Father Patrick J. Holloran, SJ, 26th President of Saint Louis University (1943-49) He added Parks College to the pantheon of SLU schools, in 1946. [Found on p. 9 of the 1945 Archive Yearbook
Patrick, Ed, 1950 September 14
Letter from Ed, Charles, Mary Elizabeth and James Patrick to Fr. John P. Markoe, S.J
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