601 research outputs found
Transkei, en sydafrikansk tragedi : Vårt land, vårt ansvar : Två uppsatser om Sydafrika
INNEHÅLL: 1. Transkei en Sydafrikansk tragedi / Randolph Vigne – Inledning: På jakt efter verkligheten – Propaganda: Verwoerds vrångbilder -- Propaganda: Vorster och verkligheten – Politiken i Transkei : Vägen till ”självstyre” – Politiken i Transkei idag: Slut på förhoppningarnat – Transkeis ekonomi: överbefolkning, utarmning, förfall – Transkeis ekonomi: en tragisk lek -- Det ekonomiska generalprogrammet – 2. Vårt land – vård ansvar / Duncan Innes -- Inledning – Myten om "skilda nationer" – Verkligheten i en Bantustan -- Effekterna av apartheid – Limehill och Stinkwater – Studenternas uppgift </p
Man cave
Man Cave is a novel about the façades that men construct in order to escape their lives. Pete, a suburban professional with a family, is desperately trying to construct a “man cave,” a getaway in his basement where he can cool off from the pressures of modern life. Andy, a disturbed, alcoholic carpenter, is obsessed with knives and has built an underground home in the forest behind Pete’s house. When they meet, each man’s strengths covers the other’s deficiencies, but only for so long. Eventually, even the most carefully built façade crumbles.M.F.A.by Randolph Schmid
Randolph Vigne and Charles Littleton (ed.), From Strangers to Citizens. The Integration of Immigrant Communities in Britain, Ireland and Colonial America, 1550-1750, The Huguenot Society of Great Britain and Ireland, Sussex Academic Press, Brighton, Portland, 2001
Cabanel Patrick. Randolph Vigne and Charles Littleton (ed.), From Strangers to Citizens. The Integration of Immigrant Communities in Britain, Ireland and Colonial America, 1550-1750, The Huguenot Society of Great Britain and Ireland, Sussex Academic Press, Brighton, Portland, 2001. In: Diasporas. Histoire et sociétés, n°3, 2003. Passages, conversions, retours. pp. 207-210
Randolph Vigne and Charles Littleton (ed.), From Strangers to Citizens. The Integration of Immigrant Communities in Britain, Ireland and Colonial America, 1550-1750, The Huguenot Society of Great Britain and Ireland, Sussex Academic Press, Brighton, Portland, 2001
Cabanel Patrick. Randolph Vigne and Charles Littleton (ed.), From Strangers to Citizens. The Integration of Immigrant Communities in Britain, Ireland and Colonial America, 1550-1750, The Huguenot Society of Great Britain and Ireland, Sussex Academic Press, Brighton, Portland, 2001. In: Diasporas. Histoire et sociétés, n°3, 2003. Passages, conversions, retours. pp. 207-210
Vision and Desire in Postcolonial Australia: A Conversation with Alison Ravenscroft
Alison Ravenscroft, author of The Postcolonial Eye: White Australian Desire and the Visual Field of Race, discusses her book with Kira Randolph.</p
La vérité folle
Using fragments of text, documentary photographs and sketches of hysterical women, author Randolph and artist Jolicoeur develop an alternative history of the physiological and psychosomatic illness. 2 bibl. ref
Poetical and dramatic works of Thomas Randolph. Now first collected and ed. from the early copies and from MSS. with some account of the author and occasional notes,
v. 1. Some account of Thomas Randolph. Plays: Aristippus. The conceited peddler. The jealous lovers. The muses' looking-glass. Amyntas.--v. 2. Plays: Amyntas (cont.). Hey for honesty. Poems. Oratio praevaricatoria.Mode of access: Internet
Poetical and dramatic works of Thomas Randolph ... : Now first collected and ed. from the early copies and from mss. with some account of the author and occasional notes, /
Paged continuously.Facsimile of the 1875 ed.: Reeves and Turner, Londonv. 1. Some account of Thomas Randolph. Plays: Aristippus. The conceited peddler. The jealous lovers. The muses' looking-glass. Smyntas.--v. 2. Plays (cont.): Hey for honesty. Poems. Oratio prævaricatoria
Loranna J. Randloph letter to Lucile Atcherson, Ocotber 21, 1914
Loranna J. Randolph of the Licking County Equal Suffrage League wrote this letter on October 21, 1914, to Lucile Atcherson of the Franklin County Woman Suffrage Association. She wrote the letter to thank Atcherson and the FCWSA for sending literature in support of women's suffrage. Randolph explained the amount of money she sent with the letter and she tried to recall how many leaflets she ordered. She also informed Atcherson that she would likely be ordering more literature, and when she ordered more Atcherson could tell her how much she owed for the paper ribbons that had been sent to the Equal Suffrage League.
The Franklin County Woman Suffrage Association was formed in 1912, after the Ohio Constitutional Convention elected to bring to a vote the question of removing the words "white male" from the state constitution with regard to voting rights. Headquartered in the Chamber of Commerce building in Columbus, Ohio, the organization put out regular publications, organized public speeches and meetings, distributed literature and held parades in support of the suffrage movement. Women's suffrage in Ohio was defeated in a special election in 1912 and again in 1914 and 1916 before a resolution narrowly passed in 1917 allowing municipal voting by women in Columbus. In 1920, the 19th Amendment passed, extending the vote to women and prohibiting state and federal government from denying suffrage on the basis of sex
Mapping and promoting South Africa : Barrow and Burchell\u27s rivalry
Barrow\u27s six years at the Cape, with four long journeys, and Burchell\u27s close on five years ox-wagon travel gave Barrow\u27s Account of Travels pre-eminent authority status, with jealous attacks on rival travellers\u27 books and their maps. This criticism included those of Burchell, as scientist and mapmaker largely his superior. Burchell hit back with equal vituperation. Despite their enmity they advanced knowledge of the interior "least known to Europeans" (Barrow) and came together in promoting the Zuurveld as place of settlement for the 5 000 emigrants dispatched in 1820 by a government aiming to export potential radicals among the unemployed. Burchell depicted the Zuurveld as a demi-paradise to the Poor Law Commission of parliament and Barrow did the same to ministers. The anti-Xhosa \u27buffer\u27 was never an issue and the 1834 Rharhabe invasion unforeseen. Barrow, public figure and prolific author, outshone Burchell, the retired botanist and benefactor of Kew Gardens: the latter\u27s fame has come late. The long-term consequence of their case for Zuurveld settlement is still undecided
- …
