1,483 research outputs found

    Gift inscription in Minions of the Moon: a little book of song and story

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    This edition includes a gift inscription possibly penned by the author, Madison Julius Cawein, "Frank on Valentines Day, 1914. M.J." Madison Julius Cawein (1865-1914).Cawein, Madison Julius, 1865-1914

    Remembering Julius Nyerere in Tanzania History, Memory, Legacy

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    Cover -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Authors -- Acronyms -- PART 1: 'Capturing' Julius Nyerere -- Chapter 1 - "Julius Nyerere": the Man, the Word, and the Order of Discourse -- "His Eternity" Nyerere? A risk of déjà vu -- The political 'afterwards' in the late postcolony -- Debating the meanings of 'Nyerere' -- From Mwalimu-in-Power to Mwalimu-in-Memoriam -- Tanzaphilia and Nyererephilia -- A primus inter pares among a 'few good men' -- Building Utopian Tanzania -- Looking Through Nyerere -- Capturing 'Nyerere' -- Securing the political space -- A tutelary figure -- Vilifying Nyerere? -- Poetry as political performance -- Post-Mwalimu education -- 'Nyerere' as a Political Struggle -- Floating 'Nyerere' -- Post-socialist nationhood -- References -- Chapter 2 - Julius Nyerere, Ujamaa and Political Morality in Contemporary Tanzania -- The Past Ups and Downs of Nyerere and Ujamaa -- The Contemporary State-Built Imagery of Nyerere -- Nyerere and Ujamaa Through the Lens of Party Competition -- Popular Re-imaginations of Nyerere and Ujamaa -- Contesting Mwalimu, Contesting the Nation -- Conclusion -- References -- PART 2: Entering and Securing the Political Space -- Chapter 3 - Julius Kambarage Nyerere: His Formative Years -- References -- Chapter 4 - Julius Nyerere, the Arusha Declaration, and the Deep Roots of a Contemporary Political Metaphor -- A Powerful Political Metaphor -- Nyerere and the Early Years of Tanzania's Independence -- Political and economic challenges -- Freedom and justice -- The Arusha Declaration -- A political move -- Recapturing the public sphere -- Creating Cultural Memory -- Conclusion -- References -- PART 3: In Search of a Tutelary Figure -- Chapter 5 - Nyerere's Ghost: Political Filiation, Paternal Discipline, and the Construction of Legitimacy in Multiparty Tanzania -- IntroductionConstructing the Nyerere Line: Filiation in Tanzanian Political Rhetoric -- Nyerere's Legacy: Seniority, Providership, and the Happy Nation-Family -- The symbolic gerontocracy -- Paternal providership -- Governing the happy family: The anti-politics of CCM -- Nyerere for the Opposition? -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6 - Different 'Uses of Nyerere' in the Constitutional Review Debates: A Touchstone For Legitimacy in Tanzania -- Background -- 'Nyerere said this… and so it should stay that way' -- 'Nyerere cannot be frozen… he was progressive' -- 'Nyerere cannot be used in the current situation… He is not relevant' -- References -- PART 4: Julius Nyerere &amp -- His Critics -- Chapter 7 - Julius Rex: Nyerere through the Eyes of His Critics, 1953-2013 -- Anglo-American de-colonizers as Nyerere critics, 1955-1970 -- Foreign critics of Ujamaa-era Nyerere, 1970-1985 -- Nyerere's Tanzanian critics: irony, exile, imprisonment -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 8 - Recasting Julius Nyerere in Zanzibar: The Revolution, the Union and the Enemy of the Nation -- The Zanzibari Exception in Tanzania -- Revisiting the 1964 Revolution -- Nyerere, Mastermind of the Revolution? -- Nyerere, Colonizer of Zanzibar? -- Ending 'Nyerere's Dictatorship' -- Nyerere's crusade against Islam? -- Conclusion -- References -- PART 5: Politics &amp -- Poetry -- Chapter 9 - Tanzanian Newspaper Poetry: Political Commentary in Verse -- Swahili Newspaper Poetry in Deutsch-Ostafrika -- Shukrani za Africa ("Thanks from Africa") Jakobo Ngombo Pwani na Bara (January 1911) -- Kwa Siku Kuu ya Kaiser Wetu ("On Our Kaiser's Birthday") Ramazan Saidi Kiongozi (February 1915) -- Uimbo wa Kaizari ('Song for the Kaiser') Mbaraka bin Shomari (c.1897) -- Swahili Newspaper Poetry during British Colonial PeriodHeshima ya King George V ("Respect for King GeorgeV") Kaniki Nguo ya Kale, Dar es Salaam Mambo Leo (c.1923-36) -- Sikukuu ya Kuzaliwa Mfalme ("King's Birthday") Komagi bin Sansa, Tabora Mambo Leo (c.1923-36) -- Post-independence Swahili Newspaper Poetry: An Efflorescence -- Nyerere Poems: A Collective Biography in Verse -- Nyerere Kuitwa Mwalimu Mwasemaje Washairi? ("Poets, What Do You Say about Calling Nyerere 'Mwalimu') Mohamed Ali (Mwanafunzi -"Student"), High Court, Box 9004, Dar es Salaam Mwafrika (22 January 1963) -- Rais Nyerere ("President Nyerere") J. I. Farahani (Simba Kuu - "Great Lion") Baraza (6 April 1972) -- Tumuheshimu Mwalimu ("Let's Respect Mwalimu") Rajabu Njembwe, P.O. Box 33353, Dar es Salaam Mfanyakazi, 20 June 1998 -- Twakulilia Nyerere ("We Cry For You Nyerere") Kassim J. S. Kibwe (Mwanamuziki Mshairi - "The Musician-Poet") National Youth Forum, S.L.P. 9354, Dares Salaam Mfanyakazi (1 March 2000) -- Nyerere Tunakukumbuka ("Nyerere, We RememberYou") Athanas George Masao (Power Mkongoto -"PowerStrike") Mfanyakazi, 28-31 October 2000 -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 10 - The Poetry of an Orphaned Nation: Newspaper Poetry and the Death of Nyerere -- Uhuru Newspaper -- Swahili Newspaper Poetry -- We will cry for our father -- Baba Tutamlilia ("We will cry for Our Father") Saidi A. Likongine Uhuru, 29 October 1999 -- Revered in death -- We should concentrate on the future -- Mwana wa Simba ni Simba ("The Child of a Lion is a Lion")Saidi Nyoka Uhuru, 16 October 1999 -- Washauri wa Taifa ("Advisors of the Nation") Saidi Nyoka Uhuru, 23 October 1999 -- Nyerere as Discourse -- Poetry and debates -- Conclusion -- References -- PART 6: Post-Mwalimu Education? -- Chapter 11 - The University of Dar es Salaam: A Post-Nyerere Institution of Higher Education? Legacies, Continuities and Changes in an Institutional Space (1961-2012)The University of Dar es Salaam: An Institution for National Development -- Higher education and the new ideology -- From speeches to facts: The implementation of University policies -- The Neoliberal Turn: a Quiet Revolution13 -- Shift in UDSM's mission -- Reintroducing cost-sharing policy -- The budgetary outsourcing in University research: the end of self-reliance -- The Ideological Legacy: From Memories to Practices -- The ongoing though insufficient financial involvement of the state -- University Actors and Negotiated Continuity -- A comparison with Nairobi and Makerere -- A Post-socialist University? USDM as an InstitutionalSpace of Transition and Continuity -- References -- Chapter 12 - Ward Secondary Schools, Elite Narratives and Nyerere's Legacy -- Julius Nyerere and Secondary Education, an Enduring but Contested Educational Settlement -- Secondary education and the post-independence educational settlement: an elitist education in a socialist nation -- A contested educational settlement -- Ward Secondary Schools: An Egalitarian Policy? -- The 'social demand' narrative -- An enrolment expansion without budgetary expansion -- Forced community contributions and ward secondary schools: a regressive tax on the poor -- Ward Secondary Schools: Domestication of the Youth in the Time of the Knowledge Economy -- 'The youth roaming in the street' or 'the ticking bomb': secondary education expansion to ascertain elders' social order -- Ward secondary schools, providing the youth with skills for the knowledge economy? -- Conclusion -- References -- Back coverDescription based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries

    Julius Bab Autographs Collection 1919-1955

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    The collection contains handwritten and signed letters from Julius Bab to several individuals, including ten letters from Bab to Margarete (Grete) Collin, widow of his close friend Ernst Collin, and one letter to Lutz Weltmann. All of the letters are of a personal nature.Also included is a handwritten poem by Bab entitled "Deutschland!"; a typescript by Bab with memories of Ernst Collin; and a page of an essay about Alexander Moissi, which includes Bab's signature.Born in Berlin on December 11, 1880, Julius Bab was a theater critic, author, and co-founder of the Jüdischer Kulturbund in 1933. He immigrated to France in 1938 and to the United States in 1940. He died in New York City on February 12, 1955.The original German-language inventory is available in the folde

    The Other Face of Julius Fučík

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    The author of the thesis is primarily going to examine the publishing activity of Julius Fučík in the magazines Tvorba and Kmen in the second half of the 1920s. In her work the author will also focus on Fučík?s life and the historical context of that time. Part of the thesis will deal with his later works. The aim of the work is to show Julius Fučík in a different light in comparison to the previous unilateral views

    Julius Lester, circa 1970

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    Julius Lester (1939-2018, Class of 1960, was an author who gained success as a children's author in 1969 with the publication of "To Be a Slave", a Newbery Honor Book, and Black Folktales. His subsequent works continued to show his interest in African-American history, folklore, and politics

    Julius Bab Collection 1895-1977 ; bulk 1895-1955

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    The collection contains few personal, official or vital documents, but is exceptionally rich in correspondence, manuscripts, diaries, appointment books, and scrapbooks documenting Julius Bab's cultural work and endeavors. The bulk of the collection consists of the scrapbooks, which contain extensive clippings of articles by and about Bab. Of the other series, the correspondence is of particular note both for its extent and for the impressive array of original letters by notable cultural figures. There are the over 100 letters from the literary critic and martyred revolutionary Gustav Landauer, and nearly as many from the playwright Richard Dehmel; the files also contain a considerable amount of correspondence with Nobel Prize winning playwright Gerhart Hauptmann, with the philosopher Fritz Mauthner, and with the influential editor and writer Moritz Heimann. The correspondence files contain letters from over 90 additional cultural figures, chiefly writers and persons involved with the theater. Among the more prominent of these figures are Walther Rathenau, Thomas Mann, Richard Beer-Hoffmann, George Bernard Shaw, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Max Liebermann, and Stefan Zweig.Rounding out the collection are series containing diaries, theater and lecture programs, and clippings. The diaries series contains two diaries from before 1900, and thereafter several notebooks and appointment books which Bab used as calendars. Although these volumes are primarily functional, occasional longer entries or passages throughout the various volumes have a more diaristic character. The theater and lecture programs series contains programs, clippings, and promotional materials, such as handbills and small posters, for theatrical events and lectures that Bab participated in. A few items of the promotional materials are interesting examples of Jugenstil and Weimar era graphic design. The final small series of newspaper clippings of articles by and about Bab mirrors the overall structure and content of the Scrapbooks series, although it consists entirely of loose, rather than bound clippings.The memoirs of Bab's wife, Elizabeth, 'Aus Zwei Jahrhunderten' are catalogued separately in the memoir collection (ME 21).Photographs have been removed to Photograph CollectionBorn in Berlin on December 11, 1880, Bab was a theater critic, author and co-founder of the Jüdischer Kulturbund in 1933. He emigrated to France in 1938, to the United States in 1940, and died in New York City on February 12, 1955.A 23-page inventory is available in Box 1, folder 1.Julius Bab, Ueber den Tag Hinaus, Heidelberg, Schneider Verlag, 1960. (Library)digitize

    Modern Painters, Vol. 1, No. 1: introduction

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    A multi-author 'One Object' feature convened and introduced by Chloe Julius that responds to the first issue of the British art magazine 'Modern Painters' (1988

    Optimum currency area theory: A selective review

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    The first part of this paper is a review of significant papers in the vast literature on optimum currency area (OCA) theory. The author focuses on the main classical contributions, then considers modern treatment of OCA theory. The second part considers empirical literature on the types of geographical areas that might constitute optimum currency areas, particularly with respect to asymmetry and symmetry of shocks.

    Optimum currency area theory: A selective review

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    The first part of this paper is a review of significant papers in the vast literature on optimum currency area (OCA) theory. The author focuses on the main classical contributions, then considers modern treatment of OCA theory. The second part considers empirical literature on the types of geographical areas that might constitute optimum currency areas, particularly with respect to asymmetry and symmetry of shocks.

    Clinical complications during treatment with a modified Herbst appliance in combination with a lingual appliance

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    Abstract Objective To assess the types and frequencies of clinical complications experienced when using a modified lingual Herbst appliance and to compare these with those associated with conventional Herbst appliances reported in the literature. Methods Treatment records for 35 consecutive subjects treated during the observation period from October 2013 to August 2014 who received a combination of a lingual appliance and a modified Herbst appliance (WIN, DW LingualSystems) were assessed for complications linked to Herbst treatment phase. Complications were analyzed descriptively, and complication-free intervals were calculated using Kaplan-Meier plots. To enable a comparison with data reported in the literature, the cumulative treatment time for all subjects was divided by the total number of complications. Results 71.4 % of Herbst treatments were free from complications (n = 25). Complications were seen on 13 occasions (8 instances of Herbst attachment loosening, 5 L-Pin fractures). Most of these complications could be fixed chair side utilizing simple clinical measures. Considering all complications as identical statistical events, the percentage of treatments free from complications would be 88 % for 100 days, 70 % for 200 days and 56.8 % for 300 days. For severe complications, the averaged complication-free treatment interval was found to be 27.8 months. Conclusion In terms of clinical sturdiness, and taking into consideration the step-wise mode of activation used here as well as the differences in the design of the various Herbst appliances, the WIN-Herbst appliance was found to be superior to comparable vestibular Herbst appliances, as well as the banded Herbst appliance belonging to the preceding generation of customized lingual systems. Success in treatment of non-compliant Angle Class II correction is considered to have better predictability using the modified anchorage strategy of the WIN-Herbst appliance
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