Academic literature on the topic 'Highgate Cemetery (London, England)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Highgate Cemetery (London, England)"

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BELLAMY, RON. "Speech at Marx's grave, Highgate Cemetery, London 14th March 1999." Bulletin of the Marx Memorial Library 130, no. 1 (1999): 4–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/bbml.1999.130.3.

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Crespo Fernández, Eliecer. "Euphemistic conceptual metaphors in epitaphs from Highgate Cemetery." Review of Cognitive Linguistics 9, no. 1 (2011): 198–225. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/rcl.9.1.10cre.

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Death is a timeless taboo in which psychological, religious and social interdictions coexist. In consequence, human beings feel reluctant to deal with the subject of death using straightforward terms and therefore tend to soften the effect of what they really wish to communicate. With this in mind, it is the aim of this paper to explore the euphemistic language on a sample of epitaphs from the Eastern Highgate Cemetery in London. As figurative language constitutes a potent source for death-related euphemism, the present study proceeds to trace an account of the different conceptual metaphors i
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Braid, Barbara. "Neo-Victorianism as a Cemetery: Heterotopia and Heterochronia in Tracy Chevalier’s Falling Angels and Audrey Niffenegger’s Her Fearful Symmetry." Humanities 11, no. 1 (2022): 11. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/h11010011.

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This article examines the nature of neo-Victorianism as a heterotopia and heterochronia, that is, situatedness where the relationship between the past and the present is paradoxically concurrent and palimpsestic. This is done via a discussion of the cemetery as a governing metaphor to describe neo-Victorianism, as it is a highly heterotopic and heterochronic space. A hauntological approach is applied to interpret the attempt to bury the spectre of Victorianism in Michel de Certeau’s “scriptural tombs” as the main project of neo-Victorianism. Two neo-Victorian novels, Tracy Chevalier’s Falling
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Crespo-Fernández, Eliecer. "Euphemistic Metaphors in English and Spanish Epitaphs: A Comparative Study." Atlantis: The Journal of the Spanish Association for Anglo-American Studies 35, no. 2 (2024): 99–118. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10464523.

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Following the framework of Conceptual Metaphor Theory, it is the aim of this paper to analyse the conceptual organisation underlying death-related metaphorical expressions in English and Spanish. With this in mind, this paper presents a comparative study of death metaphors in a sample of epitaphs from Highgate Cemetery (London, UK) and from the Cemetery of Albacete (Albacete, Spain) focusing specifically on those aimed at substituting the notions of ‘death’ and ‘dying’. The results obtained reveal that the conceptual organisations that underlie the euphemistic metaphors
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Akopova, Victoria. ""London: A City of Mysteries, Revealed Only to Those Who Believe"." "London: A City of Mysteries, Revealed Only to Those Who Believe" N/A, N/A (2024): Article 10. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14172325.

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<strong>"London: A City of Mysteries, Revealed Only to Those Who Believe"</strong> delves into the rich and enigmatic history of London, exploring how myths, legends, and paranormal phenomena have shaped the city's identity over centuries. Through a multidisciplinary lens combining psychology, urban studies, mythology, and architecture, this article examines the intricate relationship between the city&rsquo;s historical events and its enduring supernatural lore. By focusing on key elements such as cognitive dissonance, confirmation bias, and the role of environmental factors, the article explo
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Wright, John. "More light on Tripoli's Protestant Cemetery." Libyan Studies 38 (2007): 53–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263718900004246.

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AbstractTripoli's Protestant Cemetery is a place of some mystery. One of the most persistent of these mysteries is the whereabouts of the £200 Sterling that the former British Consul General in Tripoli, Colonel Hanmer Warrington, publicly claimed to have deposited in the Bank of England around 1841 to maintain his family mausoleum and the rest of the cemetery. Research at the Bank of England and in the National Archives in Kew, London, has thrown fresh, but not conclusive, light on this matter. Another of the cemetery's mysteries are the five graves, said to be those of some of the United Stat
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Szydło, Zbigniew A. "Science Curiosities Cabinet And The Chemical Showcase." Chemistry-Didactics-Ecology-Metrology 27, no. 1-2 (2022): 79–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/cdem-2022-0007.

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Abstract With the drastic reduction of the school chemistry teaching program in England in 1986, large quantities of apparatus and chemicals became redundant. The disused apparatus at Highgate School inspired the construction of a chemical showcase for pupils; this has encouraged pupils to develop a passion for chemistry. The idea of a “miniature museum” came from a visit to a local primary school in London, which had a beautiful science curiosities cabinet in one of its rooms. In both schools, sciences thrive, and are popular among pupils. Undoubtedly a display of assorted artefacts, which ca
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Murphy, Phillip J., and Elizabeth Murphy. "The value of urban trails, statuary and installations for Geoscience education: uses and abuses from the north of England and further afield." Terrae Didatica 14, no. 3 (2018): 277–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.20396/td.v14i3.8653526.

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The origins, uses and fates of a number of purpose built urban educational resources sited in the north of England are reviewed. These include walk on geological maps, building stone trails, a church gate and landscaping in a city park. A geological trail in the municipal cemetery of Rochdale dating from 1855 is a candidate for the oldest purpose made geological education trail in the world and the most recent educational resource was built in 2015. The destruction of a walk on geological map of England and Wales in 2004 shows that such valuable geoscience educational resources are in need of
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DeWitte, Sharon N., and Jelena Bekvalac. "The association between periodontal disease and periosteal lesions in the St. Mary Graces cemetery, London, England A.D. 1350-1538." American Journal of Physical Anthropology 146, no. 4 (2011): 609–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.21622.

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Cadogan, Gerald. "Nicolas Coldstream (1927–2008)." Annual of the British School at Athens 104 (November 2009): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068245400000174.

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Nicolas Coldstream, archaeologist of Greece and the Mediterranean in the 9th and 8th centuries bc, was born in India, educated in England, and carried out the research for his first masterpiece Greek Geometric Pottery (1968) while Macmillan Student at the British School at Athens (1957–60). In 1960 he began a long career at the University of London, culminating with the Yates Chair of Classical Archaeology at University College. Renowned as a teacher, he drew many graduate students, especially from Greece and Cyprus. As a prolific scholar, he also wrote Geometric Greece (1977), many articles,
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Books on the topic "Highgate Cemetery (London, England)"

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Chevalier, Tracy. Falling angels. Dutton, 2001.

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Jiashan, Li, ed. Tian shi bu xiang shui. Huang guan wen hua chu ban you xian gong si, 2004.

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Chevalier, Tracy. Falling angels. Wheeler Pub., 2001.

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Chevalier, Tracy. Falling Angels. Penguin USA, Inc., 2010.

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Perry, Anne. Highgate Rise. Souvenir Press, 1992.

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Perry, Anne. Highgate rise. Fawcett Columbine, 1991.

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Perry, Anne. Highgate rise. Thorndike Press, 1991.

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Perry, Anne. Highgate rise. Ballantine Books Trade Paperbacks, 2011.

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Schwitzer, Joan. Model for London: Victorian farm school to modern primary : the origins and development of St. Michael's Highgate. Hornsey Historical Society, 2002.

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Woollacott, Ron. Camberwell Old Cemetery: London's forgotten Valhalla. Maureen & Ron Woollacott, 2000.

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Book chapters on the topic "Highgate Cemetery (London, England)"

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"London (England): Hampstead and Highgate." In Northern Europe. Routledge, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203059159-104.

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Brain, Timothy. "Damocles Unbound: 2005–7." In A History of Policing in England and Wales from 1974: A Turbulent Journey. Oxford University Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199218660.003.0011.

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Charles Clarke’s accession to office was as smooth as it could be in the circumstances. Son of a senior civil servant, he had made his way through Highgate School and Cambridge, becoming, like Jack Straw before him, president of the National Union of Students. In the 1970s he was a member of the ‘broad left’ but by late 2004 that had long been transformed into support for New Labour. He quickly set off on what many chief constables saw as a positive course by inviting them, in contrast to Blunkett’s ex cathedra style, to a convivial private ‘get to know you’ (or at least, resume acquaintance)
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Schuchard, Ronald. "In The Lecture Halls." In Eliot’s Dark Angel. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195104172.003.0002.

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Abstract Who ever thinks about T. S. Eliot as a classroom teacher, preparing lectures late at night and marking the papers of working-class adults who came exhausted from their jobs to attend his classes? Who ever considers how crucial was his teaching experience to the development of his poetry and criticism? Most of Eliot’s readers are quite familiar with the succession of his wartime activities after he arrived in England in September 1914—postgraduate student, new husband, dissertation writer, assistant editor, poet, reviewer, and banker. Biographical accounts of this period usually make p
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Hinton, David A. "Kings and Christianity." In Gold and Gilt, Pots and Pins. Oxford University Press, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199264537.003.0008.

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New discoveries play a major part in archaeological research, but coincidence can also have a role. When four copper-alloy scabbard-studs with Style II ornament were excavated in the smith’s grave at Tattershall Thorpe in 1981 (Fig. 2.18), they were the first of their kind to have been found in England, despite being well known on the continent, where they are dated to between 640 and 670. Within a couple of years, however, another set turned up, on a scabbard in a cemetery in Buttermarket, Ipswich, Suffolk. Then, in 1999, yet another set was found, in a grave at the new football stadium in So
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