5,562 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Emmett L. Bennett, Jr. Offprint Collection
The scholarly library of Emmett L. Bennett, Jr. compiled in the course of his Editorship of the journal Nestor (founded in 1957). The collection includes scholarly publications (offprints) and manuscripts sent by prospective authors to Dr. Bennett. Includes a Finding Aid (PDF and Word) and Catalog (an Excel document for each of two record groups: offprints collected up to 1995, and offprints collected from 1995-2011). Both the Finding Aid and Catalog are provided to facilitate researchers' searches for offprints by author, title, journal, year, and subject.Classic
Recommended from our members
Letter from William McDonald to Emmett Bennett Jr., January 28, 1958
McDonald requests information on the student A.E. Samuel enrolled at Yale.Classic
Marriage record of Bennett, Samuel and Mayo, Janie
Marriage license for Samuel Bennett and Janie Mayo. N.W. King was the officiant
Coleman family portrait
“Doc” Kelly Bennett (1890-1974) took this family portrait of Samuel Coleman, Sam Bennett Coleman, and his daughter Gwendolyn Bennett Coleman. Bennett was a prominent pharmacist in Swain County, NC. Owner of the Bryson City Drug Company, Bennett served as alderman and mayor of Bryson City, on the Swain County Board of Education, as well as several terms as NC State Senator and NC State Representative. He participated in numerous other initiatives and organizations. Known as the “Apostle of the Smokies,” Bennett was an instrumental figure in the movement to create the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. He was also an avid photographer, skillfully documenting a wide variety of people, places, and events in Swain County and the surrounding area
Harrison Bennett and Samuel Green tintype
Tintype portrait of Harrison Bennett and Samuel Green, of the 67th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, depicted in their Civil War uniforms. Bennett enlisted in Company A of the 67th O.V.I. on November 9, 1862. He died of disease in the hospital and is buried in Long Island, New York. Green enlisted in the same company on July 18, 1863, and was killed in the assault on Fort Wagner in South Carolina.
This item was featured in "Over Here, Over There," an exhibit that opened at the Ohio History Center on July 1, 2011
Immaculate catalogues, indexes and monsters too…: David E. Bennett reports on the three-day residential CILIP Cataloguing and Indexing Group Annual Conference, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK, 13-15 September 2006.
Reimagining Europe and its (dis)integration (De)legitimising the EU’s project in times of crisis
In this article we introduce our special issue of the Journal of Language & Politics on the (de)legitimisation of Europe. We start by outlining the rationale and research that led us to the special issue. In Section 2 we set out the contextual framing of the contributions, i.e., the crisis of legitimacy that European institutions and indeed the entire European project, have faced for the last decade and a half; crises that have been brought about by different events and actors and have resulted in centrifugal and centripetal processes. Next, we outline our theoretical approach to legitimation, which combines politico-sociological perspectives with discursive and communicative ones. This is followed by Section 4, which introduces and weaves together the contributions to the special issue. Finally, in Section 5 we briefly discuss the findings with regard to the aims and goals of the issue and also suggest potential next research steps
The Bennett Family Plot
Report prepared as part of the coursework required for REL 167, Speaking Stones.Description and interpretation of the monuments of the Bennett family, with details about their lives. Includes Joel B. Bennett (1817-1881), his wife Sarah S. Bennett (nee Fitch) (d. 1876), an infant son, daughter Helen A. Bennett (1848-1872), and Joel's brother Samuel A. Bennett (1828-1860)
Letter from Thomas Bennett to Alden Partridge, 17 June 1826
Thomas Bennett writes from Charleston, South Carolina, to Alden Partridge at the American Literary, Scientific, and Military Academy in Middletown, Connecticut, regarding the speech impediment of his son Washington Jefferson Bennett; he wishes Washington to be allowed a furlough to travel to New York City to see Mrs. Leigh (Jane Leigh, author of "Facts in relation to Mrs. Leigh’s system of curing stammering, and other impediments of speech," 1826).Transcription by Sarah Cruz. Transcriptions may be subject to error
Bennett Reimer Papers
Bennett Reimer (born 1932), a wind player, music educator and noted author, held the John W. Beattie Endowed Chair in Music position at Northwestern University where he was Chair of Music Education Department, Director of the Ph.D Program in Music Education, and founder and Director of the Center for the Study of Education and the Musical Experience.The collection consists of published books and accompanying materials, unpublished works, journal articles, guest lecture materials and drafts of speeches given by Reimer, and materials related to books Reimer published for Silver-Burdett Music. This collection is unprocessed; an inventory is available upon request
- …
