722 research outputs found

    Black Fashion Designers Symposium: June Ambrose in conversation with Carly Cushnie and Michelle Ochs

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    June Ambrose in conversation with Carly Cushnie and Michelle Ochs at The Museum at FIT's annual fashion symposium, Black Fashion Designers, held on Monday, February 6, 2017. The one-day symposium featured talks by designers, models, journalists, and scholars on African diasporic culture and fashion.June Ambrose is a celebrity stylist and designer whose clients include Sean Combs, Jay Z, Alicia Keys, and Gabrielle Union. She is author of the book Effortless Style.Carly Cushnie and Michelle Ochs founded their brand Cushnie et Ochs in 2008, creating collections that juxtapose bold sensuality with minimalist sophistication

    Ambrose Bierce

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    This is an online bibliographic resource produced for Oxford Bibliographies. It consists of an annotated bibliography of scholarship on the American author Ambrose Bierce

    H-Diplo Roundtable XX-20 on Matthew J. Ambrose. The Control Agenda: A History of the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks

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    A set of reviews of Matthew J. Ambrose\u27s The Control Agenda: A History of the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks, with a response from the author

    Ambrose of Milan\u27S Method of Mystagogical Preaching

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    Author: Satterlee, Craig A. Title: Ambrose of Milan\u27s method of mystagogical preaching. Publisher: Collegeville: Liturgical, 2002

    Soul Recreation: Spiritual Marriage and Ravishment in the Contemplative-Mystical Piety of Isaac Ambrose

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    ABSTRACT Tom Schwanda Soul Recreation: Spiritual Marriage and Ravishment in the Contemplative-Mystical Piety of Isaac Ambrose This thesis examines the theology and piety of Isaac Ambrose (1604-1664), a moderate Lancashire Puritan minister. More specifically it raises the question about the nature of his spiritual practices and whether they reflect what Bernard McGinn calls the “mystical element” of Christianity? This research is distinctive since Ambrose has never been the primary focus of research. There are six chapters to this thesis. Chapter 1 examines the definition of three key terms: “mysticism”, “Puritanism”, and “Puritan mysticism” and then substitutes “contemplative-mystical piety” for McGinn’s mystical element since this language is more familiar to the Reformed community. A review of the literature reveals the prevalence of contemplative-mystical piety within mainstream Puritanism. Chapter 2 explores the biblical and theological foundations of union with Christ, which the Puritans often called spiritual marriage. Contrary to common perception, the Puritans encouraged intimacy and sexual enjoyment in their godly marriage that they often perceived as a reciprocal relationship with their spiritual marriage. The third chapter creates a contemplative biography of Ambrose through his diary entries and examines his relationship with God and his neighbor through his annual retreats, the struggles of his soul, serving as a physician of the soul, times of public fasting and worship, and the significance of specific places or environment to his piety. Chapter 4 narrows the focus to Ambrose’s teaching on meditation and contemplation. The influence of Bernard of Clairvaux is clearly evident as Ambrose contemplatively looks at Jesus throughout all the manifestations of Jesus’ life. The fifth chapter considers Ambrose’s use of ravishment and examines the nature, dynamics and benefits of this ambiguous term of delight and enjoyment. The final chapter moves from the seventeenth-century to the present and inquires whether Ambrose’s contemplative-mystical piety can guide contemporary Reformed Christians. That requires an examination into the resistance of Karl Barth as well as the more receptive possibility of retrieval through Herman Bavinck. This work concludes with seven principles from Ambrose to encourage those who are members of the Reformed tradition

    Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson, and the Opening of the American West

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    Nonfiction by Stephen E. Ambrose Simon & Schuster (Hardcover, $30.00, ISBN: 0684811073, 3/1996) For decades, biographer Ambrose had nursed an ambition to chronicle the Corps of Discovery, as Lewis and Clark styled their ventures. Hitherto detained by opuses on Ike, Nixon, and D-Day, Ambrose here loosens the reins to his admiration of the duo\u27s fearlessness and skill in braving the unknown, an exploration of which had sunk into obscurity in the 1800s but has since ascended to iconic status in American history. Framed as a biography of Lewis, this work relies heavily on both Lewis\u27 and Clark\u27s famed journals, backed up by the author\u27s personal travels along the Missouri River route from St. Louis to the Pacific. A stimulating tour guide, Ambrose paces the mundane so well with the unusual that readers will be entranced. Not content as a mere recorder of deeds, Ambrose often pauses to assess the military leadership of the explorers, how they negotiated with the Mandan, Sioux, or Nez Perce, and what they reported to Jefferson. Ambrose\u27s epic, a combination of rhapsody and reality, feels like a final glimpse at a pristine Eden before the crowd of trappers and settlers altered it forever. The book clubs are also agog over this, so prepare for many requests. ―Gilbert Taylor. Copyright © 1996, American Library Association. All rights reserved.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/mwp_books/1437/thumbnail.jp

    The Burnside Expedition

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    By Ambrose E. Burnside, Late Major-General, United States Army. Personal Narratives of Events of the War of the Rebellion being papers read before the Rhode Island Soldiers and Sailors Historical Society. No.6 – Second Series. 1882. Written by Ambrose Burnside and read before the Rhode Island Soldiers and Sailors Historical Society on July 7, 1880, the author discusses his military expedition along the North Carolina Coast between February and June of 1862. The expedition was part of General Winfield Scott’s overall Anaconda Plan, which was aimed at closing the blockade-running ports inside the Outer Banks.https://digitalcommons.providence.edu/ri_history/1001/thumbnail.jp

    Lewis & Clark: Voyage of Discovery

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    Nonfiction by Stephen E. Ambrose, photographs by Sam Abell National Geographic Society (Hardcover, $35.00, ISBN: 0792270843, 10/1998) Don\u27t expect Ambrose\u27s second treatment of the Lewis and Clark expedition to retread his Undaunted Courage (1996), a huge-selling biography of Meriwether Lewis. An inspection of both books reveals only tiny verbatim repetition, and the cause soon becomes clear: whereas the biography held to the form\u27s stricture that the author be detached from his subject, this photo album proclaims Ambrose\u27s 20-year-long personal obsession (as he puts it) with the epic story. Since 1976 he and his family have spent their summers along the route taken by the Corps of Discovery; some family members have even moved to Montana because of their devotional interest in Lewis and Clark. Ambrose, drawing on his hikes and canoe trips to all the monuments between St. Louis and Fort Clatsop associated with the explorers, melds his memories and own journal entries with a new Lewis and Clark narrative spiced by entries from their journals. Akin to religious pilgrims, Ambrose and companions (including Dayton Duncan and film producer Ken Burns) often re-read passages from those journals at the locale an entry was written, allowing Ambrose to comment on the place\u27s contemporary appearance, whether pristine (Gates of the Rocky Mountains), or altered (the dammed-up Missouri River). The visual difference between Duncan and Burns\u27 Lewis & Clark (1997) and this Ambrose treatment is notable: the former uses nineteenth-century paintings; the latter contemporary National Geo-style photographs of the vistas. Ambrose remarks that his obsession changed his life, and surely his travelogue/tribute will change the vacation plans of some readers as well. Popular, beyond doubt. ―Gilbert Taylor Copyright © 1998, American Library Association. All rights reserved.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/mwp_books/1178/thumbnail.jp

    Christ in the clouds coming to judgment: or, The dissolution of all things [electronic resource] : Recommended to every person's perusal. By Rev. Mr. Isaac Ambrose, Minister of the Gospel.

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    Extracted from the chapter on Dooms-day in: Ambrose, Isaac. Prima, media, et ultima. Some editions name "Dr. Bates" (perhaps William Bates, 1625-1699) as author, and several editions are entered under the surname Bates in the National Union Catalog.Date of publication supplied by Evans.Signatures: [A]p4s Bp4s (B4 verso blank)Evans,Electronic reproduction.English Short Title Catalog,Reproduction of original from Library of Congress

    Dr. W. Haydn Ambrose Is the Author of a New Book

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    1 p.In 1968, W. Haydn Ambrose, an administrator at Kalamazoo College, published his book "The Church in the University.
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