Academic literature on the topic 'Earl Lovelace'

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Journal articles on the topic "Earl Lovelace"

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Jaggi, Maya. "Interview: Earl Lovelace." Wasafiri 6, no. 12 (1990): 25–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02690059008574220.

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Aiyejina, Funso. "Earl Lovelace: A Chronology." Anthurium A Caribbean Studies Journal 4, no. 2 (2006): 2. http://dx.doi.org/10.33596/anth.76.

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Johnson, Nadia Indra. "Earl Lovelace: Selected Bibliography." Anthurium A Caribbean Studies Journal 4, no. 2 (2006): 6. http://dx.doi.org/10.33596/anth.77.

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Roffey, Monique. "Earl Lovelace and Monique Roffey." Wasafiri 27, no. 3 (2012): 18–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02690055.2012.687606.

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Hodge, Merle. "The Language of Earl Lovelace." Anthurium A Caribbean Studies Journal 4, no. 2 (2006): 5. http://dx.doi.org/10.33596/anth.80.

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Thomas, H. Nigel. "“Progress” and community in the novels of Earl Lovelace." World Literature Written in English 31, no. 1 (1991): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17449859108589142.

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Thomas, H. Nigel. "From “freedom” to “liberation” an interview with Earl Lovelace∗." World Literature Written in English 31, no. 1 (1991): 8–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17449859108589143.

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Cary, Norman Reed. "Salvation, self, and solidarity in the work of Earl Lovelace." World Literature Written in English 28, no. 1 (1988): 103–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17449858808589049.

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Wilson, Lucy. "Review: A Brief Conversion and Other Stories by Earl Lovelace." Explorations in Ethnic Studies ESS-10, no. 1 (1990): 34–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/ess.1990.10.1.34.

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Pérez-Montijo, Edgardo. "Review of Caribbean Literature After Independence: The Case of Earl Lovelace." Anthurium A Caribbean Studies Journal 10, no. 1 (2013): 7. http://dx.doi.org/10.33596/anth.226.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Earl Lovelace"

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Grau, Perejoan Maria. "Reterritorialising the Caribbean: Marching alongside Earl Lovelace." Doctoral thesis, Universitat de Barcelona, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10803/295842.

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This study revolves around the figure of Caribbean writer Earl Lovelace. The thesis demonstrates that the emphasis on the deterritorialisation of the Caribbean region and the focus on transnationalism has meant that what is produced within its geographical boundaries is sidelined in favour of what is produced beyond them. The study argues that even though Western academia holds transnationalism as the most appropriate and encompassing approach to deal with Caribbean literature, its applicability is limited to those writings produced in metropolitan spaces. In fact, due to the transnational nature of the Caribbean region itself, it is possible to see the Caribbean as both an intercultural and transcultural space and to recognise that the nation-state is a reality. The figure of Trinidadian writer Earl Lovelace serves to reclaim the importance of Caribbean-based narratives. Lovelace’s alternative journey distinguishes him from the majority of West Indian writers. To start with, he has made the extremely political choice of staying in Trinidad and has thus rejected the pull towards migrating, which is still a staple for the West Indian artist. However, his choice is not without consequences. Because of his decision to stay in the region he has been labelled a regional and national writer, since his work is not tailored for a Western readership and offers context-based narratives in which Creole language is present. As a result, his writings have been excluded from the mainstream postcolonial literary field. This thesis foregrounds Lovelace’s writings as an extremely important intervention in the Caribbean, as they prove that the Caribbean nation is also a place where people can build a life. In his writings Lovelace contests the representations which establish the perceived impossibility of residing in the Caribbean and the pervading idea of the region as a non-place populated by non-people who have created nothing – a construct which ultimately contributes to maintaining the region dependant on Western approval and tutelage. Like many other West Indian creative writers, Lovelace has theorised on Caribbean culture and literature. Aware of the historic roots of the ills of the region but optimistic about the possibilities of constructing a new culture, he has emphasised that the heterogeneity of the region is its most enriching characteristic and one that allows for the creation of a new future together. Lovelace has argued that the diverse and heterogeneous nature of the region, as its real heritage, not only needs to be valued, but it needs to be seen as a precondition which allows for the creation of a New World. While the Trinidadian author argues that the construction of a New World for the region can only be accomplished through the collective involvement of the different communities, this study argues that in order to reverse the trend that sidelines non-diasporic Caribbean writing, a similar collective endeavour is needed. This collective endeavour includes a variety of cultural agents: writers, intellectuals, activists, publishers, critics, scholars and translators alike. Indeed, ethically and politically motivated translations of West Indian literary texts can also participate in the critical network that contributes to the collective dimension of social struggles. Through their artistic renditions of a source text, literary translators can help spread these narratives’ symbolic force.<br>Aquesta tesi doctoral explora la figura de l’escriptor de Trinidad i Tobago Earl Lovelace. Actualment el món de la literatura postcolonial està dominat, en gran mesura, per obres literàries que s’estudien des de teories transnacionals i post-nacionals. L’estudi subratlla la necessitat de recuperar narratives caribenyes situades al Carib i escrites per autors no diaspòrics; autors que són definits com a locals o nacionals des d’un punt de vista hegemònic, i als que no se’ls dóna cabuda en el panorama literari mundial. De fet, els textos de Lovelace són de gran importància en el context de les lletres caribenyes perquè no només se situen sempre a l’illa de Trinidad, microcosmos del Carib, sinó que a més el Carib es presenta com un lloc amb una rica cultura pròpia i on és possible construir-hi una vida. És a dir, els textos de Lovelace ofereixen una visió del Carib que pretén contrarestar construccions freqüentment utilitzades per referir-se a la regió i que en última instància contribueixen a mantenir la regió sota tutela del món occidental. Així com Lovelace manté que la construcció d’un nou inici per al Carib – New World – només és possible amb la participació col·lectiva de les diferents comunitats de la regió, aquesta tesi defensa que per tal de revertir la tendència actual que menysté els textos d’autors no diaspòrics, és necessària una implicació col·lectiva d’escriptors, editors, crítics, acadèmics i traductors. D’aquesta manera, l’estudi posa en relleu la figura del traductor literari com un agent amb la capacitat de contribuir, amb les seves traduccions de textos literaris caribenys, a oferir una visió del Carib més plural i rica que no menystingui autors com Earl Lovelace.
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Selph, Laura. "Performing the Caribbean nation : Chamoiseau, Lovelace, and Kincaid /." view abstract or download file of text, 2007. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1421603821&sid=1&Fmt=2&clientId=11238&RQT=309&VName=PQD.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oregon, 2007.<br>Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 181-186). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
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Le, Vourch Noémie. "Pouvoirs civils et religieux dans la fiction d'Earl Lovelace (1935-...) : entre collusion et collision." Thesis, Brest, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014BRES0015/document.

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Dans les romans et nouvelles d’Earl Lovelace, l'île de Trinidad se trouve aux confluents de systèmes antagonistes, branlés par la récente décolonisation. Les forces civiles et religieuses, piliers de l’organisation sociétale, ne peuvent échapper aux dynamiques de transmutation et d’adaptation. Ainsi, dans un contexte de sécularisation et de politisation croissante, le religieux se voit obligé d’écarter toute tendance autarcique, s’il veut triompher de la tentative d’annexion par le politique. Un conflit, dont l’enjeu n’est autre que la survie de l’individu, est dès lors engagé. Cette thèse se propose d’explorer les relations de rivalité et d’usurpation entre pouvoirs civils et religieux de même que l’issue du dépassement de cette dichotomie au sein de la Caraïbe lovelacienne. En d’autres termes, le politique dans la fiction de Lovelace détruit-il le religieux ou fait-il corps avec lui afin que s’opère le passage d’une politique condamnable à une foi praxis de libération ?<br>In his novels and short stories, Earl Lovelace describes the island of Trinidad as caught in the ebb and flow of two antagonistic systems of thought, both shattered in the event of a sudden decolonisation. Religion and politics, the corner stones of social architecture, have no choice but to undergo changes in view of adaptation. Facing a background of secularisation and growing political consciousness, religion is compelled to lay aside its selfsufficiency to avoid being overthrown by the body politics. As a consequence, a struggle, in which the survival of individuals is at stake, ensues. This thesis offers to explore the rivalries between the religious and political bodies as well as the ability of Lovelace’s fictional Caribbean to overcome this dichotomy. In other words, in Lovelace’s work does polity annihilate religion or act in accordance with it to achieve a move from unworthy politics to a faith aiming at liberation?
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Tressler, Gretchen E. "Dance and Identity Politics in Caribbean Literature: Culture, Community, and Commemoration." Thesis, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1805/2592.

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Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)<br>Dance appears often in Anglophone Caribbean literature, usually when a character chooses to celebrate and emphasize her/his freedom from the physical, emotional, and societal constraints that normally keep the body in check. This study examines how a character's political consciousness often emerges in chorus with aesthetic bodily movement and analyzes the symbolic force and political significance of Caribbean dance--both celebratory (as in Carnival) and defensive (as in warrior dances). Furthermore, this study observes how the weight of Western views on dance influences Caribbean transmutations and translations of cultural behavior, ritual acts, and spontaneous movement. The novels studied include Samuel Selvon's "The Lonely Londoners" (1956), Earl Lovelace's "The Dragon Can't Dance" (1979), Paule Marshall's "Praisesong for the Widow" (1983), and Marie-Elena John's "Unburnable" (2006).
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Books on the topic "Earl Lovelace"

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1935-, Lovelace Earl, and University of the West Indies (Saint Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago). Faculty of Humanities and Education, eds. A place in the world: Essays and tributes in honour of Earl Lovelace at 70. Lexicon Trinidad Limited, 2008.

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The modest ambition of Andrew Marvell: A study of Marvell and his relation to Lovelace, Fairfax, Cromwell, and Milton. University of Delaware Press, 1995.

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Poetry and allegiance in the English civil wars: Marvell and the cause of wit. Oxford University Press, 2008.

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Funso, Aiyejina. Earl Lovelace. University of the West Indies Press, 2017.

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Aiyejina, Funso. Earl Lovelace. University of the West Indies Press, 2017.

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Lovelace, Mary Caroline (Wortley) Counte. Ralph Earl of Lovelace;. Palala Press, 2016.

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Mary Caroline (Wortley) Counte Lovelace. Ralph Earl of Lovelace;. Palala Press, 2016.

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North, Rosemary June Macaulay. Settling accounts with history: Cultural perspectives on post-colonial Trinidad in the work of Earl Lovelace and V.S. Naipaul. 1998.

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Bruhn, Mark J. Intentionality and Constraint in Conceptual Blending. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190457747.003.0005.

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This chapter proposes a systems-theoretic adjustment to conceptual blending theory with respect to the so-called generic space. In creative conceptualization, the generic space is not an optional by-product of conceptual mappings across previously and otherwise constituted input spaces, but rather their effective cause, and not by selecting for them but by massively constraining against anything not them. As a first approximation of the blend’s targeted or intended meaning, the generic space functions as an indispensable “proto-blend” that sets the parameters and satisfaction conditions for the resulting conceptual network. This underappreciated point is elaborated through case studies of three well-known and increasingly complex creative blends: a sentence-level metaphor (“This surgeon is a butcher!”), an extemporaneous discourse exchange (from the live radio talk show “Loveline”), and a highly iconic lyric poem (Richard Wilbur’s “Piazza di Spagna, Early Morning”).
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Collins, Nick. Origins of Algorithmic Thinking in Music. Edited by Roger T. Dean and Alex McLean. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190226992.013.2.

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Musicians’ relationships with algorithms have deep precedents in the confluence of music and mathematics across millennia and across cultures. Technological and musico-mathematical precedents in the ancient world predate the Arabic etymology of the term ‘algorithm’. From Guido d’Arezzo’s hand to rule systems in music theory and eighteenth-century ars combinatoria, there is a rich background to twentieth-century rule-led music making. Robotic music, too, has precedents, and there is an interesting proto-computational thread linking the automata builder Vaucanson to early programmable weaving looms. Ada Lovelace’s writing, Joseph Schillinger’s composition system, and John Pierce’s 1950 stochastic music science fiction article provide productive insight into the origins of algorithmic music. Indeed, the world’s musics reveal a panoply of interesting practices, such as campanology, Nzakara court harp music, time structures in Indian classical music, and many more examples of the rich combinations of music and mathematics often predating musical computer science.
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Book chapters on the topic "Earl Lovelace"

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Erll, Astrid. "Lovelace, Earl." In Kindlers Literatur Lexikon (KLL). J.B. Metzler, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-05728-0_14201-1.

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Breitinger, Eckhard, and Astrid Erll. "Lovelace, Earl: The Dragon Can't Dance." In Kindlers Literatur Lexikon (KLL). J.B. Metzler, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-05728-0_14202-1.

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"The Meaning of Personhood: Earl Lovelace." In Caribbean Literature in English. Routledge, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315836553-33.

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"Earl Lovelace and Caribbean Gender Symbolic Forms: Revisiting Masculinity and Reconstructing National Identities." In Symbolism 16. De Gruyter, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110465938-008.

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"42. MAKING SPACE: Henry Handel Richardson, Patrick White, David Malouf, Peter Carey, Christina Stead, Robertson Davies, Margaret Atwood, Michael Ondaatje, Maurice Shadbolt, Janet Frame, Keri Hulme, Anita Desai, Salman Rushdie, Earl Lovelace." In The Novel. Harvard University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4159/harvard.9780674369054.c44.

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Shears, Jonathon. "‘The Nausea of Sin’: The Early Modern Hangover." In The Hangover. Liverpool University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781789621198.003.0003.

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The chapter pursues the representation of the hangover in poetry and drama, religious and political writing and in the culture wars of the seventeenth century in England. It begins by exploring why the hangover has been obscured in writing about early modern depictions of drunkenness through a study of Anacreontic verse by Ben Jonson, Robert Herrick and Richard Lovelace. Hangovers, it contends, are more prominent in other forms of literature such as Protestant tracts and sermons and in bawdy verse and drama of the Restoration. They also feature regularly in what the chapter terms ‘anti-symposiastic’ verse written by Whigs in the 1690s. The chapter argues throughout that the hangover – whether leading to feelings of guilt and shame or defiance – takes us beyond studies of male fellowship and tavern culture, increasing our understanding of the way that the body becomes a route to discuss moral and spiritual failings in this period. It also gives examples of the way Withdrawal-Relief recovery methods – sometimes known as the hair of the dog – became associated with defiance.
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Gaines, Susan M., Geoffrey Eglinton, and Jürgen Rullkötter. "Early Life Revisited." In Echoes of Life. Oxford University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195176193.003.0016.

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That the evolution of organisms depends in large part on the evolution of their environment is something paleontologists have been noting since the early nineteenth century, and indeed, it is so inherent in Darwinian theory as to seem almost banal. That this dependency might have been two-way—that the earth’s minerals, atmosphere, oceans, and climate have been in large measure determined by the evolution of different life-forms—was somewhat harder to document and accept, partly because the most dramatic evidence was hidden, at the molecular level, in the elusive Precambrian rocks. The concept of the coevolution of Earth and life saw its first cohesive and most provocative expression when James Lovelock presented his Gaia hypothesis in the early 1970s, but not until the end of the twentieth century were the basic tenets of the hypothesis accepted as a valid theory. Lovelock began conceiving the Gaia hypothesis when he was designing instruments for NASA’s first extraterrestrial explorations and it occurred to him that, unlike the moon and Mars, the earth had an atmosphere composed of gases that couldn’t and wouldn’t coexist without life’s intervention. At the same time, a handful of paleontologists and geochemists had been conceiving similar if less provocatively formulated hypotheses based on their studies of the earth’s most ancient rocks and sediments. In 1979, a decade after Geoff, Thomas Hoering, and Keith Kvenvolden had more or less given up on the prospect of garnering clues about early life-forms from the fossil molecules in Archean and early Proterozoic rocks, one of those paleontologists inadvertently inspired a certain Australian chemist to give it another go. Roger Summons met the paleontologist Preston Cloud when Cloud was on sabbatical at the Australian Institute of Marine Science. Summons was working in the biology department at Australian National University and had been assigned to play guide and chauffeur for Andrew Benson, a visiting American plant physiologist who was staying out at the marine institute. “There was a couple living in the guesthouse next to us,” Summons tells me. “And this guy was a jogger. He’d leave every morning at 5:00 A.M. and run past the house, clump clump clump clump, and I’d wake up.”
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Saloum Diatta, Cherif. "Violence and mimicry in Earl Lovelace’s fiction: a social criticism in the anglophone Caribbean." In Réalités et représentations de la violence en postcolonies. Presses universitaires de Perpignan, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pupvd.3267.

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Neyrat, Frédéric. "The Unconstructable Earth." In The Unconstructable Earth, translated by Drew S. Burk. Fordham University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9780823282586.003.0014.

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In chapter 13 Neyrat summarizes a variety of conceptions of of the Earth conceived from various actors, from the early founding thinkers of the environmental and ecology movements in the United States such as Aldo Lepold and John Muir to more recent scientific conceptions of the Earth as a cybernetic living organism proposed by the celebrated scientist James Lovelock and his Gaia theory or Carolyn Merchant’s conception that each part of the ecosystem contributes to the health of the entire ecosystem as a whole. Neyrat goes on to show that what he terms minoritarian discourses refuse to consider the Earth as something that is mechanical in any way and that it is a living organism in its own right. These minoritarian discourses are in complete contrast to the variety of geo-constructivist discourses that today see the Earth as something technologically manageable.
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Sherratt, Thomas N., and David M. Wilkinson. "When did We Start to Change Things?" In Big Questions in Ecology and Evolution. Oxford University Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199548606.003.0013.

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As we wrote the first draft of this chapter (during early summer 2007), the potential dangers of ‘global warming’ had moved up the news agenda to a point where most major politicians were starting to take the problem seriously. Our opening quotation comes from a book published in early 2006, which seemed to coincide with the growth of this wider concern with global warming. Lovelock was not alone in trying to raise awareness of the problem; around the same time another book on climate change by the zoologist and palaeontologist Tim Flannery also attracted global attention to this issue, as did the lecture tours (and Oscar-winning film) of Al Gore—the former US presidential candidate and campaigner on the dangers of climate change. Indeed, in his role as a climate campaigner Gore won a share in the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize. It is possible that future historians will see the period 2005–2007 as the start of a crucial wider engagement with these problems. Things may not be as bad as James Lovelock suggests—in his book he deliberately emphasized the most worrying scenarios coming from computer models, and other evidence, in an attempt to draw attention to the critical nature of the problem. However, all these worst case scenarios were drawn from within the range of results that most climate scientists believed could plausibly happen—not extreme cases with little current evidence to support them. That one of the major environmental scientists of the second half of the twentieth century could write such prose as science—rather than science fiction—is clearly a case for concern about future climate change. It also raises another important question, relating to the history of human influence on our planet: when in our history did we start to have major environmental impacts on Earth as a whole? This is clearly an important issue from a historical perspective, but the answers may also have implications for some of our attempts to rectify the damage. Our discussion of this question comes with various caveats. Many of the arguments we consider in this chapter are still the subject of academic disagreement.
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Conference papers on the topic "Earl Lovelace"

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Markus, Julia. "The early education of Ada Byron." In Ada Lovelace Symposium 2015- Celebrating 200 Years of a Computer Visionary. ACM Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2867731.2867740.

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