Academic literature on the topic 'Buxton, John'

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Journal articles on the topic "Buxton, John"

1

Snow, D. W. "John Buxton (1912-1989)." Ibis 132, no. 4 (2008): 621–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1474-919x.1990.tb00289.x.

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Macdonald, Simon. "A Grand Tourist Identified: Robert John Buxton (1753–1839)." Notes and Queries 55, no. 4 (2008): 413–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/notesj/gjn151.

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Zuo, Wenrui. "A Preliminary Solution to the Indigenous Issues in South Africa Colony." Asian Journal of Social Science Studies 7, no. 4 (2022): 105. http://dx.doi.org/10.20849/ajsss.v7i4.1101.

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South Africa is an important colony in the colonial territory of the British Empire. In the process of British colonization, the nonstandard management and unconstrained colonial behavior caused considerable troubles and injuries to the indigenous people. Evangelical Thomas Fowell Buxton and missionary John Phillips contributed to solving the local indigenous problems. The indigenous problems in Cape colony promoted the establishment of the select committee on Aborigines (British settlements), which gave relevant suggestions to solve the indigenous problems in South Africa, and to some extent
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Gomme, A. "John Buxton, Norfolk Gentleman and Architect: Letters to his Son, 1719-29." English Historical Review CXXI, no. 493 (2006): 1184–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ehr/cel272.

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Mellinghoff, Ingo K., Brian Alexander, Donald Berry, et al. "Abstract CT062: GBM AGILE: A global, phase 2/3 adaptive platform trial to evaluate multiple regimens in newly diagnosed and recurrent glioblastoma." Cancer Research 83, no. 8_Supplement (2023): CT062. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1538-7445.am2023-ct062.

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Abstract Background: GBM AGILE (Glioblastoma Adaptive, Global, Innovative Learning Environment) is a biomarker based, multi-arm, international, seamless Phase 2/3 Response Adaptive Randomization platform trial designed to rapidly identify experimental therapies that improve overall survival and confirm efficacious experimental therapies and associated biomarker signatures to support new drug approvals and registration. GBM AGILE is a collaboration between academic investigators, patient organizations and industry to support new drug applications for newly diagnosed and recurrent GBM. Methods:
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Kahr, Brett. "The first Mrs Winnicott and the second Mrs Winnicott: does psychoanalysis facilitate healthy marital choice?" Couple and Family Psychoanalysis 9, no. 2 (2019): 105–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.33212/cfp.v9n2.2019.105.

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Dr Donald Woods Winnicott, arguably the most famous and influential psychoanalyst since Professor Sigmund Freud, married twice during his lifetime. In 1923, he wed Miss Alice Buxton Taylor, who divorced him after more than a quarter of a century; and eventually, in 1951, he embarked upon a second marriage to Miss Clare Britton, a social worker, with whom he enjoyed a far more stable partnership which lasted until Winnicott’s death in 1971. In this essay, based predominantly on the author’s hitherto unpublished interviews with members of Donald Winnicott’s family and, also, with relations of Al
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Wim Wesselius, Jan, and Peter T. Van Rooden. "Two early cases of publication by subscription in Holland and Germany: Jacob Abendana's Mikhlal Yophi (1661) and David Cohen de Lara's Keter Kehunna (1668)*." Quaerendo 16, no. 2 (1986): 110–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157006986x00125.

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AbstractPublication by subscription is a sales technique developed in England in the seventeenth century. It was probably not introduced to the German-speaking countries until after 1725. The first hitherto known instances in the Netherlands date from after 1680. The article describes the publication of two linguistic works by Sephardic Jews which are the earliest known examples of works published by subscription in Holland and Germany. The first of the works concerned is the Hebrew Mikhlal Yophi, a commentary on the Bible of which an edition prepared by Jacob Abendana appeared in Amsterdam in
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Liu, Lu, Yu Zhang, Di Xu, et al. "Overexpression of USP8 inhibits inflammation and ferroptosis in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease by regulating the OTUB1/SLC7A11 signaling pathway." Allergologia et Immunopathologia 52, no. 4 (2024): 60–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.15586/aei.v52i4.1108.

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Background: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a familiar disease, and owns high morbidity and mortality, which critically damages the health of patients. Ubiquitin-specific peptidase 8 (USP8) is a pivotal protein to join in the regulation of some diseases. In a previous report, it was determined that USP8 expression is down-regulated in LPS-treated BEAS-2B cells, and USP8 restrains inflammatory response and accelerates cell viability. However, the regulatory roles of USP8 on ferroptosis in COPD are rarely reported, and the associated molecular mechanisms keep vague. Objective: To
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"The Two Forgers: A Biography of Harry Buxton Forman and Thomas James Wise. John Collins." Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 86, no. 4 (1992): 483–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/pbsa.86.4.24304704.

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Richards, Jake Subryan. "Political Thought and the Emotion of Shame: John Stuart Mill and the Jamaica Committee during the Governor Eyre Controversy." Modern Intellectual History, June 10, 2022, 1–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1479244322000154.

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This article argues that the emotion of shame explains how John Stuart Mill and the Jamaica Committee developed intellectual arguments in response to the brutal suppression by Governor Edward Eyre of the Morant Bay rebellion in post-emancipation colonial Jamaica in 1865. Positioning the emotions as integral to cognitive systems, the article traces Mill and the committee's arguments against their opponents, the Eyre Defence Committee. The Jamaica Committee was not solely concerned with liberal imperial order. Instead, under Mill's leadership, the committee sought to reconstruct and defend the p
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Books on the topic "Buxton, John"

1

John, Buxton. Five years to liberty: Thewar poems of John Buxton. Pentland Press, 1994.

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John, Buxton. Five years to liberty: The war poems of John Buxton. Pentland, 1994.

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3

C, Bates John, ed. Catalogue of books in John C. Bates' circulating library, "Advertiser" office, Hot Bath Colonnade, Buxton. Toucan, 1985.

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John Rylands University Library of Manchester. and Buxton Festival, eds. The Arthurian legend: An exhibition presented by the John Rylands University Library of Manchester for the Buxton Festival. John Rylands University Library of Manchester, 1986.

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Whig, Hanoverian. Remarks on the Letter to John Buxton, Esq;. Gale ECCO, Print Editions, 2018.

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John Buxton, Norfolk Gentleman and Architect: Letters to His Son, 1719-1729. Norfolk Record Society, 2005.

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Newton, Hannah. Conclusion. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198779025.003.0008.

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Disease was not always for life in early modern England, nor did it necessarily lead to death. This book has sought to recalibrate our assessment of early modern health by showing that recovery did exist conceptually at this time, and that it was a widely reported phenomenon. A passage from a letter by the early eighteenth-century Norfolk architect John Buxton to his son Robert, reveals the ubiquity of recovery in everyday life:...
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A letter to John Buxton, of Shadwell, Esq; on the contests relative to the ensuing election for the county of Norfolk. Gale ECCO, Print Editions, 2010.

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9

Collins, John, and Nicolas Barker. A Sequel to an Enquiry into the Nature of Certain Nineteenth Century Pamphlets by John Carter and Graham Pollard: The Forgeries of H. Buxton Forman & T.J. Wise. Oak Knoll Press, 1999.

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Bilston, Sarah. The Promise of the Suburbs. Yale University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300179330.001.0001.

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When did the suburbs gain their reputation as places of dullness and sterility? This book traces the origins of such suburban stereotypes back to the 1820s, the earliest decade of suburban growth, and argues that those stereotypes were forged from the first to denigrate women and the new middle classes. Disdain for the suburbs blazed especially hotly at the fin de siècle. Writers like George Gissing and H. G. Wells famously presented the suburbs as dull and tedious places, inimical to creativity, and these are the images of the Victorian suburbs scholars know best to this day. This book traces
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Book chapters on the topic "Buxton, John"

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Franklin, John Hope, and Loren Schweninger. "The Midwest, Haiti, and Jamaica." In In Search of the Promised Land. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195160871.003.0006.

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Abstract Although young James Rapier was hoping to return south when the Civil War commenced, he had at least found religion and had settled into a steady life teaching in Buxton. His uncle Henry had committed himself to raising his family on a farm. Henry’s brother John Rapier Sr., after debating whether or not to leave Florence, had decided to ride out the southern troubles at home. But two of Sally Thomas’s family were still birds unwilling to perch. Both her son James Thomas and her grandson John Rapier Jr. continued to feel uncomfortable about worsening conditions in the South, so that wh
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King, Benjamin J. "Providence and Colonial Slavery." In The Oxford Movement and the People of God. Oxford University PressOxford, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1093/9780191802539.003.0003.

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Abstract The same Tractarian leaders who gave the laity a role in the Church demanded the enslaved remain subservient to the established social order. Countering historians who argue that it is incoherent to distinguish in the early nineteenth century between proslavery and anti-abolitionism, this chapter critically lays out the latter’s theological foundation in Joseph Butler’s doctrine of providence. In addition, Newman used John Chrysostom’s interpretation of 1 Corinthians 7:20–1, and Froude’s firsthand accounts from Barbados, to express concern about what effects manmade abolition would ha
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Stillman, Robert E. "Sidney and Europe." In The Oxford Handbook of Philip Sidney. Oxford University Press, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198859451.013.36.

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Abstract What is most important about Philip Sidney’s Europe can be best expressed by a paradox: Sidney needed his cosmopolitan education in Europe in order to think beyond it. The move beyond was as pragmatic as assailing Spanish tyranny by a global assault against Spanish trade, and as visionary as an Arcadian world in which tyranny could be disarmed by force of natural law. Moving chronologically from John Buxton and Charles Osborn to Beatrice Nicollier de Weck and Alan Stewart, this chapter traces a history of critical responses to Sidney’s European travels and their consequence for interp
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Shakespeare, Critics Theatre. "21 December 1817, John Keats (1795-1821) on Edmund Kean as a Shakespearian actor, and John Hamilton Reynolds (1796-1852) on Kean at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London, as Richard, Duke of York in the play of that name adapted by John Herman Merivale (1779-1844) from Henry the Sixth, Parts One, Two, and Three; from The Champion, reprinted in The Poetical Works and Other Writings of john Keats, ed. H. Buxton Forman, revised with additions by Maurice Buxton Forman (Hampstead edition), 8 vols. (New York, 1939), v. 227-46." In Shakespeare in the Theatre. Oxford University PressOxford, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198711773.003.0015.

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Abstract The first of the reviews cited here was written by the poet Keats to help out his friend Reynolds, who at the time was reviewing for The Champion. A great admirer of Kean, Keats wrote a play, Otho the Great, in collaboration with his friend George Brown, and started another, King Stephen, in 1818, hoping that Kean would play the central roles in both; they abandoned King Stephen on hearing that Kean was planning an American tour.
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Conference papers on the topic "Buxton, John"

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Gabodze, Julieta. "Album – Chronicle of the Epoch Foreign Language Records of Vakhtang Gambashidze’s Album." In XII Congress of the ICLA. Georgian Comparative Literature Association, 2025. https://doi.org/10.62119/icla.3.8919.

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Album Manuscripts, like humans, often have unusual fate. Who knows where they travel, where they appear, what stories they collect; and then, when blizzards are low, they quietly wait for their time! Indeed, Vakhtang Gambashidze’s album is a chronicle of the epoch. A handwritten album of the sanatorium “Patara Tsemi”, founded by a famous Georgian doctor and a public figure, encloses the records of XIX-XX century Georgian and foreign celebrities, writers, scientists, doctors, and politicians. In the album are collected 144 different types of records – poems, essays, impressions, congratulations
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