Showing 101 - 120 results of 200 for search '"New England"', query time: 0.04s Refine Results
  1. 101

    Io Moth Automeris io (Fabricius) (Insecta: Lepidoptera: Saturniidae) by Donald W. Hall

    Published 2015-05-01
    “…With the exception of Cape Cod and some of the Massachusetts islands, it is now rare in New England where it was once common, and its populations have declined in most of the Gulf States since the 1970s. …”
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  2. 102

    Pamięć zdarzeń, które „nigdy nie miały miejsca”. Slavery Memorial Martina Puryeara by Aleksandra Piętka

    Published 2023-12-01
    “…Drawing on the history of higher education in New England, the author analyzes the artistic devices employed by Puryear to convey the truth about Brown’s involvement in the transatlantic slave trade and the rhetoric of perception imposed by the monument on the viewer. …”
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  3. 103

    Io Moth Automeris io (Fabricius) (Insecta: Lepidoptera: Saturniidae) by Donald W. Hall

    Published 2015-05-01
    “…With the exception of Cape Cod and some of the Massachusetts islands, it is now rare in New England where it was once common, and its populations have declined in most of the Gulf States since the 1970s. …”
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    Article
  4. 104

    Radical Innocence: Margaret Fuller’s Utopian Rome by Leslie Elizabeth Eckel

    Published 2016-06-01
    “…Transcendentalist New England was animated by utopian dreams throughout the 1840s, but even as she occupied its intellectual center, Margaret Fuller stood apart from these enthusiastic projections. …”
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  5. 105
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  7. 107

    Murder and Aesthetics in Patricia Highsmith’s Deep Water by Robert Lance Snyder

    Published 2023-07-01
    “…An esteemed non-conformist in an upscale New England community, Van Allen is initially tolerant of his wife’s serial infidelities but reaches a breaking point when he kills two of her lovers before strangling his spouse. …”
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  8. 108
  9. 109

    « It starts when you begin to overlook good manners. Any time you quit hearin Sir and Mam the end is pretty much in sight » : la jérémiade dans No Country for Old Men by François Gavillon

    Published 2023-02-01
    “…Taking its cue from this suggestion, this article proposes to trace the historic precedents of the jeremiad, from its biblical origins to its renaissance in 17th-century Puritan New England. Chronically, the jeremiad has revealed individual as well as collective aspirations for moral, religious, civil and political perfection. …”
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  10. 110

    Le moment Atlantique de la dynastie des Winthrop au XVIIe siècle by Lauric Henneton

    Published 2016-03-01
    “…The Winthrop brothers (the sons of Governor John Winthrop) and their uncle Emmanuel Downing managed to establish a network stretching from New England to the West Indies to the British Isles, the Wine Islands and as far as the African west coast (« Guinea »). …”
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  11. 111

    Puritans, Nuns and Love: Reflections on L. M. Alcott and Mary E. Wilkins Freeman by Aušra Paulauskienė

    Published 2022-10-01
    “…In Pembroke (1894) and the early short fiction, her younger New England compatriot, Freeman, echoes the idea that it is better to remain a metaphorical nun than marry for any other reason but mystical love. …”
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  12. 112

    Harriet Prescott Spofford’s Development of a Protestant Aesthetic for a Diverse Nation by Paula Kot

    Published 2019-10-01
    “…In “Charlestown,” an historical sketch from her 1871 collection New-England Legends, Harriet Prescott Spofford examines the contest between Protestantism and Roman Catholicism that shaped Americans’ understanding of democracy as well as Spofford’s understanding of her role as an author in an increasingly heterogeneous nation. …”
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  13. 113
  14. 114

    Ian Worthington by Borja Antela-Bernárdez

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…He has also taught in many different institutions and countries, including University of New England (Australia) and University of Tasmania. …”
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  15. 115
  16. 116

    Camellias at a Glance by Sydney Park Brown

    Published 2012-04-01
    “…Native to Asia, the first camellia plants were brought to America in 1797 and grown in New England greenhouses. Over the last 200 years, they have proven to be dependable additions to the southern landscape, where they grow and bloom with minimal care in most inland areas of North and Central Florida. …”
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  17. 117
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  19. 119

    Imaging the Climate Crisis. The Ceramic Art of Horie, Galloway, Snider, and Rhymer-Zwierciadlowska by Mary Ann STEGGLES

    Published 2021-06-01
    “…Galloway was so shocked at the decapitation of the Wandering Albatross and its near extinction that she set about to create classical funerary urns to draw attention to the endangered species of New England. Amy Snider’s objects concern the world’s melting glaciers and the climate crisis that is causing their disintegration. …”
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  20. 120

    Dangerous Liaisons? by Norman L Jones

    Published 2000-01-01
    “…A case in point was a few days last month during which I attended a well-sponsored meeting of the Ontario Lung Association, reviewed a couple of papers reporting drug trials, read of the threats of litigation made by pharmaceutical companies to two Ontario researchers, heard of a public apology made by the New England Journal of Medicine regarding reviewers' conflicts of interest and received a critical letter from Dr Rob McFadden, an associate editor of the Canadian Respiratory Journal, about a sponsored publication that accompanied the last issue of 1999. …”
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