243,178 research outputs found
Scrap Bag Squares quilt by Idella Dahl Robinson
Image of Scrap Bag Squares quilt created in 1840-1850 by Idella Dahl Robinson. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Idella Robinson as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-1994. Warmth
Lone Star quilt by Margaret Ellen Robb Robinson
Image of Lone Star quilt created in 1940 by Margaret Ellen Robb Robinson. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Maggie Robinson as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-1994
Broken Dishes quilt by Margaret Ellen Robb Robinson
Image of Broken Dishes quilt created in 1904 by Margaret Ellen Robb Robinson. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Maggie Robinson as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-1994. We Assume. She made this when she got married
Laurel J. Robinson
Laurel J. Robinson
Catalogue of exhibition held at the Centre for the Arts Gallery, Hunter st Hobar
Alvaretta Farozine Robinson
Typescript of answers by Alvaretta Farozine (Butler) Robinson of Paragonah, Utah for a questionnaire filled out for Utah Works Progress Administration\u27s "Pioneer personal history" survey. She was born in Spanish Fork, Utah, in 1854, and the family moved to southern Utah and ultimately settled at Paragonah. Typed by Byron A. Robinson of Paragonah on August 5, 193
John Rowlandson Robinson
Typescript of answers by John Rowlandson Robinson of Paragonah, Utah for a questionnaire filled out for Utah Works Progress Administration\u27s "Pioneer personal history" survey. He was born in Parowan, Utah, in 1854, and the family moved to Paragonah. Typed by Byron A. Robinson of Paragonah on July 22, 193
Receipt of payment to J. Smith by A.M. Robinson for services rendered dated July 10, 1860
Receipt of payment to J. Smith by A.M. Robinson for services rendere
Competing models of socially constructed economic man : differentiating Defoe's Crusoe from the Robinson of neoclassical economics
Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe has seldom been read as an explicitly political text. When it has, it appears that the central character was designed to warn the early eighteenth-century reader against political challenges to the existing economic order. Insofar as Defoe’s Crusoe stands for "economic man", he is a reflection of historically-produced assumptions about the need for social conformity, not the embodiment of any genuinely essential economic characteristics. This insight is used to compare Defoe’s conception of economic man with that of the neoclassical Robinson Crusoe economy. On the most important of the ostensibly generic principles espoused by neoclassical theorists, their "Robinson" has no parallels with Defoe’s Crusoe. Despite the shared name, two quite distinct social constructions serve two equally distinct pedagogical purposes. Defoe’s Crusoe extols the virtues of passive middle-class sobriety for effective social organisation; the neoclassical Robinson champions the establishment of markets for the sake of productive efficiency
Reference to the index of J Moore-Robinson newspaper cuttings.
Moore-Robinson News Cutting Scrap Books - c1913-1940.
Cuttings of articles on historical subjects, from the Mercury and other newspapers, including many written by J. Moore-Robinson (1873-1935). - Transfered to the Tasmanian Archives and Heritage Office (TAHO) - Jan 2013 -www.linc.tas.gov.au/tasmaniasheritag
J. W. Robinson
Typescript of a brief biography of Utah Congressman J. W. Robinson. He was born at Coalville, Utah, in 188
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