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    Smugglers, Poachers and Wreckers in Nineteenth-Century English Painting by Christiana Payne

    Published 2005-12-01
    “…Turner, David Wilkie, Edwin Landseer and Charles Napier Hemy are amongst the artists discussed.…”
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  3. 2303

    Visioning the Body Mosaic: Enchanted Transracial Selfhood in Postsecular American Literature by Erick Sierra

    Published 2015-08-01
    “…Emerging from a matrix of “postsecular” texts—by Don DeLillo, Charles Johnson, Tony Kushner, Toni Morrison—is a counter-argument to such a notion of selfhood. …”
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    De la voix au théâtre au théâtre de la voix : l’envers du décor poétique de Robert Browning by Yann Tholoniat

    Published 2008-12-01
    “…Robert Browning wrote seven plays : Strafford, King Victor and King Charles, The Return of the Druses, A Blot in the ‘Scutcheon, Colombe’s Birthday, Luria and A Soul’s Tragedy. …”
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  11. 2311

    Re‑Constructing and Celebrating the Louisiana Purchase in New Orleans by Jean‑Pierre Le Glaunec

    Published 2006-03-01
    “…Chercheur au Deep South Regional Humanities Center, il a participé sous la direction du Professeur Sylvia Frey à la création d’un CD-ROM (Louisiana State University, 2003) retraçant les mécanismes historiques, économiques, sociaux et culturels ayant précédés, accompagnés et suivis l’Achat de la Louisiane.Ce texte est issu d'une communication au colloque « Stemming the Mississippi » organisé par l’Institut Charles V de l’Université Paris 7. Il s’agit de la première étape d'un travail en cours sur la commémoration.…”
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  12. 2312

    Merveilleux-scientifique et merveilleux-logique chez Maurice Renard : une épistémologie romancée ? by Hugues Chabot

    Published 2018-06-01
    “…In the Anglo-Saxon world, some also try specifically to reason the scholar’s creative process by referring it to a "logic of science" (Charles Sanders Peirce, 1878) or to an "experimental logic" (James Mark Baldwin, 1908). …”
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    Una historia por descubrir: anotaciones para un estudio del diario carlista El Correo Español (ca. 1888-1921) by José Luis Agudín Menéndez

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…The problem, however, was caused by the economic hardships that the newspaper always suffered and the difficulties that the pretending kings Charles VII and James III had in effective control of both the property and the message transmitted to the Carlist militants and sympathizers, having account of the role played by such a gazette as a transmission belt of the Communion. …”
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  15. 2315

    Autour de Christine de Pizan : entre lyrisme courtois et engagement politique by Claire-Marie Schertz

    Published 2014-01-01
    “…The reign of Charles VI (1380-1422) saw the emergence of the author as a character involved in politics. …”
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  16. 2316

    Le Paysage, le style, et la modernisation agricole : la vallée de l’Orne dans Bouvard et Pécuchet by Grant Wiedenfeld

    Published 2018-03-01
    “…This consideration of literary landscapes then leads to a comparison with nineteenth century French landscape painters in the final part of the article, where Charles Blanc’s comments on prosaic subjects and on style’s connection to the ideal animate our abstract comparison.…”
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    From Travel to Text: Reverends Wolff and Lansdell’s Missions to Bokhara by Irina Kantarbaeva-Bill

    Published 2024-03-01
    “…When Joseph Wolff saw Bokhara in 1843, Central Asia was at the peak of Anglo-Russian rivalry, an extremely dangerous and violent place where his two compatriots, British envoys Charles Stoddard and Arthur Conolly, lost their lives. …”
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    Livestock Rendered: Animal Painting, Meatpacking and the Founding Collection of the Frye Art Museum by Kathleen Chapman

    Published 2024-02-01
    “…The collection, assembled by Charles and Emma Frye, who settled in Seattle in the late 1800s, features nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century paintings by European artists, and includes numerous images of farm animals in agrarian settings in which any evidence of modern agricultural advances is absent and idyllic depictions of close, peaceful bonds between humans and domesticated animals predominate. …”
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