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  1. 1121
  2. 1122

    Covenanting Exchanges with the French Court during the Wars for the Three Kingdoms by Allan I. MACINNES

    Published 2014-07-01
    “…This resistance was carried further by the Scottish Covenanters fighting and winning the Bishops’ Wars in 1639-40 and then exporting their revolution through armed intervention in Ireland from 1642 and in England from 1644. The Scottish Covenanters’ alliance with the English Parliamentarians was formalised by the Solemn League and Covenant which again sought to impose permanent checks on monarchy throughout the three Stuart kingdoms. …”
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  3. 1123

    Dorothy Richardson’s Correspondence during the Second World War and the Development of Feminine Consciousness in Pilgrimage by Ivana TRAJANOSKA

    Published 2020-06-01
    “…Moreover, the letters written during the Second World War are particularly focused on domestic life in war time England. The present paper, through the analysis of Richardson’s correspondence during the Second World War and her unconventional way of dealing with current political and social events, aims to show Richardson’s unique approach to female experience and the development of feminine consciousness.…”
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  4. 1124

    Questioning Agency Through Intergenerational Dialogue: The Adult Ghosts and the Forgetting Children in Rudyard Kipling’s Puck of Pook’s Hill by Hera Kim

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…In the story, although Kipling’s narrative return to the construction of the old England and evocation of its war heroes seem designed for the Empire’s imperialism, the conversations between the adult heroes and Dan and Una raise the unsettling issue of the past heroes’ being wounded ghosts brought about by the British Empire’s imperialism. …”
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  5. 1125

    Replicas, Revivals and Restorations: a Scottish Political Miscellany by Aonghus MacKechnie

    Published 2023-10-01
    “…The European Counter-Reformation church of the Gesù was used a model for James VII & II’s Canongate Kirk (1688); whereas the Tudor Gothic style was imported from England during the Napoleonic period of high British nationalism, evoking and celebrating a British past that never existed.…”
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  6. 1126

    The Advent of the Printing Press and Britain’s Multilingual Textual Culture, 1471–1510 by Jordi Sánchez-Martí

    Published 2023-09-01
    “…As soon as he relocated to England, however, he abandoned this multilingual business model and devoted all his energies to print books in English, as did his successors Richard Pynson and Wynkyn de Worde. …”
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  7. 1127

    The representation of Irish affairs in La Gazette and in Nouvelles Ordinaires de Londres, 1649-1652 by Karine BIGAND

    Published 2014-07-01
    “…The context in 1649-1652 was particularly newsworthy – as Charles I’s execution and the establishment of a new regime in England coincided with the beginning of the Fronde in France. …”
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  8. 1128

    Palimpsestes ou l’image au second degré : Gail Albert Halaban, Hopper Redux, et Laetitia Molenaar, Here comes the Sun [it is all right] by Helena LAMOULIATTE-SCHMITT

    Published 2015-12-01
    “…In order to create the Hopper Redux series, Gail Albert Halaban went to a small New England village, where she located sixteen houses originally painted by Edward Hopper in the 1920s, and she then endeavoured to photograph them from the same vantage points. …”
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  9. 1129

    Labiodentals /r/ here to stay: Deep learning shows us why by Hannah King, Emmanuel Ferragne

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…However, the lips may be particularly important in the variety of English spoken in England, Anglo-English, because non-lingual labiodental articulations ([ʋ]) are on the rise. …”
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  10. 1130

    “Do leaders change?”: A review of the contrasting behaviors of political leaders in ordinary-extraordinary situations by Arzu Özkanan, Yunus Yılan

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…In the study, the biographies, relevant scientific research, media, and official statements of the leaders of countries such as Germany, America, China, England, and Russia were transferred to the NVivo 10 program and examined, considering their pre-pandemic situations. …”
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  11. 1131

    An investigation into the critical ingredients of intensive support teams for adults with intellectual disabilities who display challenging behaviour by Lucretia Thomas, Brynmor Lloyd-Evans, Louise Marston, Angela Hassiotis

    Published 2025-02-01
    “…Aims and method NHS England recommends the commissioning of intensive support teams (ISTs) to provide effective support to people with intellectual disability (ID) when in crisis. …”
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  12. 1132

    The Homosexual Exception? The Case of the Labouchère Amendment by William Fize

    Published 2020-06-01
    “…However, that being said, in some respects there is a case for considering that English law regarding male homosexuality in Victorian England was not so ‘exceptional’ after all, and indeed could even be seen as representing a potentially more lenient evolution of the criminal law. …”
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  13. 1133

    Culture as a dimension of country brand: the highs and lows of Brazil’s brand image by Fabiana Gondim Mariutti, Mirna de Lima Medeiros

    Published 2018-01-01
    “…Therefore, the aim of this paper is to explore ‘culture’ and its associations for Brazil as a country brand dimension, which is the unit of analysis for this interpretive study in England. Thus, after focus group and thematic analyses exploring and interpreting the findings, Brazil was perceived as having a ‘diverse and positive culture’. …”
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  14. 1134

    Le sentiment d’appartenance dans North and South d’Elizabeth Gaskell by Benjamine Toussaint-Thiriet

    Published 2008-12-01
    “…Margaret Hale, the heroine, has to leave the rural South, to which she feels her heart truly belongs, twice : first as a child, to be brought up by her aunt in London, and then, as a young woman when she must follow her parents and settle in Milton, an industrial town in the North of England. The opposition between her beloved South and this new home is no less striking from a social and cultural point of view than it is from a geographical one. …”
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  15. 1135

    Beyond Anything Realism Can Represent? Monstrous Crime in Marx’s Victorian Novel by Jayson Althofer

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Following Friedrich Engels’s <i>The Condition of the Working Class in England</i> (1845), Marx detects and dissects capitalism’s crimes. …”
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  16. 1136

    El nietzscheanismo de Nikos Kazantzakis by Peter A. Bien, Alfredo Eduardo Fredericksen Neira

    Published 2018-12-01
    “…Más allá de esto, tenemos algunas observaciones en England, y un puñado de referencias a Nietzsche en las cartas publicadas por la señora Kazantzakis. …”
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  17. 1137
  18. 1138

    A Critique on the Book A Critical Approach to Community-Based Development by Mokhtar Nouri, Homayoun Abbasabadi

    Published 2021-08-01
    “…She has focused both on objective developments in Western societies such as England in the context of globalization and on two philosophical turning points of the twentieth century: the Brazilian philosopher Paolo Freire and the Italian philosopher Antonio Gramsci. …”
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  19. 1139

    The Mystery of the Past Haunts Again: Jane Eyre and Eugenie Marlitt’s Die zweite Frau by Ivonne Defant

    Published 2010-03-01
    “…When it was published in 1847, it made an immediate impact in mid-Victorian England, partly because it drew on the paradigmatic story of a romance heroine, partly because it interpreted the needs of the women of the time. …”
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  20. 1140

    Dean Farrar’s “Divine Crusade” and Victoria’s “Little Wars” by Stéphanie Prévost

    Published 2007-12-01
    “…So doing, he became closely connected to the metropolitan political decision-making centre, London, and to the breeding ground for the future members of Church of England clergy. As a consequence, these numerous experiences, both as a churchman deeply involved in public relations and a pedagogue, naturally fuelled his beliefs. …”
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