Academic literature on the topic 'Inc Jane Teller'

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Journal articles on the topic "Inc Jane Teller"

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Perko, Gregor. "Présentation." Linguistica 51, no. 1 (December 31, 2011): 3–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.4312/linguistica.51.1.3-4.

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Au cours des dernières décennies où l’on assiste à une refondation de la morphologie, la discipline s’intéresse de plus en plus à des phénomènes « périphériques », « marginaux », « irréguliers » ou « extragrammaticaux », à des phénomènes n’appartenant pas aux « régions nodales » de la morphologie. Le présent numéro de Linguistica, premier numéro thématique de notre revue, réunit des études qui s’intéres- sent aux frontières internes et externes de la morphologie. La diversité et la richesse des thèmes abordés et des approches proposées témoignent d’un intérêt croissant que les linguistes, non pas uniquement les morphologues, portent à cette thématique.Les articles proposés s’articulent autour de cinq axes majeurs.Un premier axe rassemble les articles qui étudient les frontières entre différentes composantes de la morphologie. L’étude de Michel Roché examine les contraintes lexicales et morphophonologiques sur le paradigme des dérivés en –aie. Les résultats de son analyse remettent en question la notion de « règle de construction des lexèmes ». Irena Stramljič Breznik et Ines Voršič se penchent sur les néologismes de sport en slovène et essaient d’évaluer la productivité ou la créativité des procédés morphologiques en jeu. Dans une étude d’inspiration cognitiviste, Alexandra Bagasheva aborde l’hétérogénéité des verbes composés en anglais. En s’appuyant sur les données fournies par les para- digmes verbaux du maltais, Maris Camilleri examine la complexité du phénomène de classes flexionnelles basées sur les radicaux. Trois travaux concernent des procédés typiquement « extragrammaticaux » servant à former le plus souvent des occasionnalismes: Arnaud Léturgie tente de dégager des propriétés prototypiques de l’amalgamation lexicale en français, notamment celles de la création des mots-valises; Silvia Cacchiani analyse, à l’intérieur du cadre de la morphologie naturelle, les mots-valises formés à partir de noms propres et de substantifs, phénomène relativement récent en ita- lien ; Thomas Schwaiger, se fondant sur les données tirées de la base « Graz Database on Reduplication », traite des constructions rédupliquées dans une perspective universelle. Deux articles adoptent une perspective contrastive: celui d’Eva Sicherl et Andreja Žele étudie la productivité des diminutifs nominaux en slovène et en anglais ; celui de Marie-Anne Berron et Marie Mouton propose une analyse détaillée de l’importance quantificative et qualificative des procédés de la morphologie marginale dans le slam en France et en Allemagne. Géraldine Walther présente un nouveau modèle général, inscrit dans une approche réalisationnelle, qui permet d’évaluer et de formaliser la (non-)canonicité de phénomènes flexionnels.Un deuxième axe se situe sur la frontière séparant la morphologie dérivationnelle de la morphologie flexionnelle. Tatjana Marvin se penche sur le problème de la préservation de l’accent dans les dérivés anglais, mettant en comparaison les approches de Chomsky et de Marantz avec celle de la théorie de l’Optimalité. L’article de Patrizia Cordin explore la façon dont les constructions locatives verbales dans les langues et les dialectes romans, notamment dans le dialecte trentin, ont perdu en partie leur sens spatial au profit d’un sens grammatical plus abstrait (aspect, résultat, intensité etc.). Se focalisant sur la langue indigène d’Australie kayerdild, Erich Round insiste sur l’utilité de la notion de « morphome » qui permet d’instaurer un niveau de représentation linguistique intermédiaire entre les niveaux lexical, morphosyntaxique et morphophonologique. La contribution de Varja Cvetko Orešnik, qui adopte le cadre théorique de l’école ljubljanaise de la syntaxe naturelle, apporte quelques données nouvelles sur la morphophonologie et la morphosyntaxe du verbe en ancien indien.Les deux articles suivants examinent des questions d’ordre morphologique aux- quelles se heurtent les langues entrant en contact : Georgia Zellou traite du cas du cir- confixe /ta...-t/ que l’arabe marocain a emprunté au berbère, tandis que Chikako Shigemori Bučar analyse le sort réservé aux emprunts japonais en slovène.L’axe diachronique est exploré principalement par les articles de Douglas Lightfoot, de Javier E. Díaz Vera et de Metka Furlan. D. Lightfoot examine la perti- nence de la notion d’affixoïde et evalue la « suffixoïdité » de l’élément germanique « -mann ». J. E. Díaz Vera décrit la lexicalisation, voire la grammaticalisation des verbes causatifs en ancien anglais. Metka Furlan se penche sur une relation « morpho- logique » archaïque rattachant le nom protoslave pol’e à l’adjectif hittite palhi-.Autour du dernier axe se réunissent les contributions qui examinent la frontière entre la morphologie et les disciplines linguistiques voisines, telles que la phonologie ou la syntaxe. Marc Plénat étudie en détail les contraintes morphologiques, syntaxiques et phonologiques pesant sur la liaison de l’adjectif au masculin singulier sur le nom en français. Janez Orešnik, fondateur de l’école ljubljanaise de la syntaxe naturelle, explore le comportement morphologique de l’impératif dans une perspective universelle. Mojca Schlamberger Brezar propose une étude contrastive, à partir des don- nées tirées de corpus monolingues et parallèles, de la grammaticalisation du gérondif et du participe en français et en slovène. L’article de Gašper Ilc applique la notionde« cycle de Jespersen » à la négation dans le slovène standard et dans les dialectes pannoniens. Mojca Smolej propose une étude fouillée de l’émergence des articles défini et indéfini dans le slovène parlé spontané.
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Books on the topic "Inc Jane Teller"

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Ellmann, Maud. Sylvia Townsend Warner. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199935338.013.31.

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This article reviews some important recent contributions to the belated recovery of the work of English novelist and poet Sylvia Townsend Warner. Described by Eleanor Perényi as “feminist, Marxist, historical novelist, social comedian, teller of fairy tales,” Warner has received scant critical attention, in stark contrast to her remarkable productivity. Warner published thirty-six books during her lifetime, in addition to four posthumous collections of poems and short stories; at least 154 short stories published in theNew Yorker; her diary, published by Chatto and Windus in 1994; several volumes of correspondence; a revised and expanded edition of her poems; her translation of Marcel Proust’s critical writings inBy Way of Sainte-Beuve; and a volume of previously uncollected writings,With the Hunted, which includes many short pieces previously published in theJournal of the Sylvia Townsend Warner Society. The present article looks at key critical responses to Warner’s work by such writers as Jan Montefiore, Jane Marcus, Gillian Beer, Jean-Jacques Lecercle, and Mary Jacobs.
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Fisk, Anna. Stood Weeping Outside the Tomb. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198722618.003.0009.

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This chapter concerns the task of mourning and re-membering in feminist scholarship, imaged through the Gospel narratives of Mary Magdalene weeping at the empty tomb of Jesus. It reads biblical scholar Jane Schaberg’s efforts at feminist historical reconstruction of Mary Magdalene’s witness to the resurrection, along with novelist Michèle Roberts’s reflections on the impossibility of feminist revisioning. Alongside this scholarly mourning, I tell my own Easter story, of my friend’s death in our early twenties. Fragments from feminist biblical scholarship and literature, placed alongside bits of autobiography are pieced together to produce a collage that maintains the necessity of mourning and the inevitable failure of feminist revisioning.
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Joseph-Gabriel, Annette K. Reimagining Liberation. University of Illinois Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252042935.001.0001.

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In the 20th century, black women in the French empire played crucial leadership roles in anticolonial movements. This book harnesses untapped archival documents to highlight the work of Suzanne Césaire, Paulette Nardal, Eugénie Éboué-Tell, Jane Vialle, Andrée Blouin, Aoua Kéita and Eslanda Robeson, women who remain relatively understudied in scholarship that continues to privilege male politicians and writers. Examining the literary production and political activism of African, Antillean, Guyanese and African American women, this book argues that black women writers and thinkers articulated multi-layered forms of citizenship that emphasized plural cultural and racial identities in direct opposition to colonialism. Their decolonial citizenship expanded the possibilities of belonging beyond the borders of the nation state and even the French empire to imagine transnational Pan-African and Pan-Caribbean identities informed by black feminist intellectual frameworks and practices.
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McLaughlin, Neil. Erich Fromm and Global Public Sociology. Policy Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781529214581.001.0001.

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Erich Fromm’s contribution to public sociology around the world has largely been forgotten as Burawoy highlighted C. Wright Mills, David Riesman, WEB Du Bois and Jane Adams as canonical figures. This book puts the story of Fromm’s sociological training with Alfred Weber, key role in the critical sociology of the early Frankfurt School, influence on C. Wright Mills, David Riesman and early sociological Marxism back on our historical awareness. The book outlines Fromm’s major contributions to sociological theory and public sociology, theorizes how his optimal marginality created his activist and public intellectual career, tells the story of how he became a forgotten public sociologist, narrates his activism in the 1960s and evaluates how his public role improved but also created limitations to his work. We also offer a reformulation of his psychosocial ideas first outlined in Escape from Freedom (1941) but updated in the context of a global Fromm revival to help us understand global Trumpism, the current crisis of democracy and rise of authoritarianism and narcissism of both the right and the left.
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Hickmann, Thomas, and Markus Lederer, eds. Leidenschaft und Augenmaß. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/9783845294292.

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In dieser Festschrift für Harald Fuhr behandeln Weggefährtinnen und Weggefährten unterschiedlicher beruflicher Stationen eine große Bandbreite an Themen aus sozialwissenschaftlicher Perspektive in drei Feldern: 1 Unter der Überschrift „Entwicklung und Verwaltung“ sind Beiträge gefasst, die sich wie Harald Fuhr mit der Frage auseinandersetzen, wie Entwicklung gefördert sowie Ungerechtigkeiten behoben werden und Verwaltungen auf lokaler, nationaler und globaler Ebene dazu beitragen können. 2 Unter die Überschrift „Umwelt und Klima“ sind Beiträge geordnet, die sich gemeinsam mit Harald Fuhr oder in gegenseitiger Inspiration der Frage widmen, wie regionalen und globalen Umweltveränderungen begegnet oder entgegengewirkt werden kann. 3 Unter die dritte und letzte Überschrift „Praxis“ ist schließlich eine Reihe von Praxisbezügen summiert - Harald Fuhrs mehr oder weniger heimliches Steckenpferd in seiner langjährigen Arbeit als Wissenschaftler und Professor für Internationale Politik. Mit Beiträgen von Thomas Hickmann, Markus Lederer, Malcolm H. Dunn, Joseph P. Ganahl, Sabine Kuhlmann, Heribert Dieter, Werner Jann, Wolfgang Merkel, Kilian Lüders, Nina Reiners, Tanja Börzel, Thomas Risse, Guillermo Navarro, Alonso Villalobos, Victor Milla, Hartmut Elsenhans, Thurid Hustedt, Markus Seyfried, Andrea Iro, Urvaksh D. Patel, Kristine Kern, Detlef F. Sprinz, Shradha Shreejaya, Devi K.V. Prasad, Charlotte Streck, Sebastian Wienges, Hendrikje Reich, Sven Egbers, Ursula Stiegler, Thomas Gebhardt, Andreas Obser, Christoph Reichard, Dieter Wagner, Ibrahin Amhed Leon Tellez
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Voß, Heinz-Jürgen, ed. Westberlin – ein sexuelles Porträt. Psychosozial-Verlag, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.30820/9783837977851.

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In Westberlin war immer mehr möglich – gerade in Sachen Geschlecht und Sexualität. Auch Sperrstunden und Sperrbezirke, wie in der BRD üblich, gab es hier nicht. Die interkulturell offene Stadt hatte nicht nur für Dienstreisende einen besonderen Reiz, sie war auch geprägt von alliierten SoldatInnen und von GastarbeiterInnen. Junge Männer, die vor der Bundeswehr flohen, suchten hier Zuflucht – genau wie Menschen, die eine ausgemergelte Großstadt mit einer alternativen Kultur wollten. Die AutorInnen eröffnen Einblicke in den Charakter dieser besonderen Stadt, wobei sie auf das Geschlechtliche und Sexuelle fokussieren. Texte und künstlerische Arbeiten fügen sich zu einem Gesamtbild, in dem individuelle Lebensentscheidungen ebenso Raum finden wie trans*, lesbischer und schwuler Aktivismus. Mit Beiträgen von Gülşen Aktaş, Bilbo Calvez, Gérôme Castell, Jayne County, Danielle de Picciotto, Nora Eckert, Egmont Fassbinder, Carolyn Gammon, Cihangir Gümüştürkmen, Peter Hedenström, Manfred Herzer-Wigglesworth, İpek İpekçioğlu, Susann Kaiser, Manuela Kay, Wilfried Laule, Katharina Oguntoye, Jayrôme C. Robinet, Dieter Telge und Koray Yılmaz-Günay.
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Lipscomb, Benjamin J. B. The Women Are Up to Something. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197541074.001.0001.

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This book tells two intertwined stories, centered on twentieth-century moral philosophers Elizabeth Anscombe, Mary Midgley, Philippa Foot, and Iris Murdoch. The first is the story of four friends who came up to Oxford together just before WWII. It is the story of their lives, loves, and intellectual preoccupations; it is a story about women trying to find a place in a man’s world of academic philosophy. The second story is about these friends’ shared philosophical project and their unintentional creation of a school of thought that challenged the dominant way of doing ethics. That dominant school of thought envisioned the world as empty, value-free matter, on which humans impose meaning. This outlook treated statements such as “this is good” as mere expressions of feeling or preference, reflecting no objective standards. It emphasized human freedom and demanded an unflinching recognition of the value-free world. The four friends diagnosed this moral philosophy as an impoverishing intellectual fad. This style of thought, they believed, obscured the realities of human nature and left people without the resources to make difficult moral choices or to confront evil. As an alternative, the women proposed a naturalistic ethics, reviving a line of thought running through Plato, Aristotle, and Aquinas, and enriched by modern biologists like Jane Goodall and Charles Darwin. The women proposed that there are, in fact, moral truths, based in facts about the distinctive nature of the human animal and what that animal needs to thrive.
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Pollack, Howard. The Ballad of John Latouche. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190458294.001.0001.

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Born into a poor Virginian family, John Treville Latouche (1914–1956), in his short life, made a profound mark on America’s musical theater as a lyricist and librettist. The wit and skill of his lyrics elicited comparisons with the likes of Ira Gershwin and Lorenz Hart, but he had too, as Stephen Sondheim noted, “a large vision of what musical theater could be,” and he proved especially venturesome in helping to develop a lyric theater that innovatively combined music, word, dance, and costume and set design. Many of his pieces, even if not commonly known today, remain high points in the history of American musical theater, including Cabin in the Sky (1940), Beggar’s Holiday (1946), The Golden Apple (1954), The Ballad of Baby Doe (1956), and Candide (1956). Extremely versatile, he also wrote cabaret songs, participated in documentary and avant-garde film, translated poetry, and adapted plays. Meanwhile, as one of Manhattan’s most celebrated raconteurs and hosts, he established friendships with many notables, including Paul and Jane Bowles, Carson McCullers, Frank O’Hara, Dawn Powell, Ned Rorem, Virgil Thomson, and Gore Vidal—a dazzling constellation of diverse artists all attracted to Latouche’s brilliance and joie de vivre, not to mention his support for their work. This book draws widely on archival collections both at home and abroad, including Latouche’s diaries and the papers of such collaborators as Leonard Bernstein, Duke Ellington, Douglas Moore, and Jerome Moross to tell for the first time the story of this fascinating man and his work.
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Zalasiewicz, Jan. The Earth After Us. Oxford University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199214976.001.0001.

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Geologist Jan Zalasiewicz takes the reader on a fascinating trip one hundred million years into the future--long after the human race becomes extinct--to explore what will remain of our brief but dramatic sojourn on Earth. He describes how geologists in the far future might piece together the history of the planet, and slowly decipher the history of humanity from the traces we will leave impressed in the rock strata. What story will the rocks tell of us? What kind of fossils will humans leave behind? What will happen to cities, cars, and plastic cups? The trail leads finally to the bones of the inhabitants of petrified cities that have slept deep underground for many millions of years. As thought-provoking as it is engaging, this book simultaneously explains the geological mechanisms that shape our planet, from fossilization to plate tectonics, illuminates the various ingenious ways in which geologists and paleontologist work, and offers a final perspective on humanity and its actions that may prove to be more objective than any other.
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Luc, Heres, ed. Time in GIS: Issues in spatio-temporal modelling. Nederlandse Commissie voor Geodesie, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.54419/v5m55p.

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Most Geographic Information Systems started as a substitute for loose paper maps. These paper maps did not have a built-in time dimension and could only represent history indirectly as a sequence of physically separate images. This was in fact imitated by these first generation systems. The time dimension could only be represented by means of separate files. A minority of Geographic Information Systems however, started their life as a substitute for ordered lists and tables with a link to paper maps. In these lists, the inclusion of a time com-ponent in the form of a data field was quite usual. This method too was copied by the systems that replaced these paper tables. The current trend in the development of Geographic Information Systems is towards the inte-gration of the classical map-oriented concepts with the table-oriented concepts. This often leads to the explicit embedding of the time component in the GIS environment. The Subcommission Geo-Information Models of the Netherlands Geodetic Commission has organized a workshop to discuss the theory and practice of time and history in GIS on 18 May 2000. This publication contains 6 articles prepared for the workshop. The first paper, written by Donna Peuquet, gives a bird’s-eye view of the current state of the art in spatio-temporal database technology and methodology. She is a well-known expert in the field of spatio-temporal information systems and the author of many articles in this field. The second article is written by Monica Wachowicz. She describes what you can do with a GIS once it contains a historical dimension and how you can detect changes in geographic phenomena. Furthermore, her article suggests how geographic visualisation and knowledge discovery techniques can be integrated in a spatio-temporal database. How to record the time dimension in a database is one thing, how to show this dimension to users is another one. In his contribution, Menno-Jan Kraak first tells about the techniques, which were used in the age of paper maps and the limitations these methods had. He goes on to explain what kind of cartographic techniques have been developed since the mass introduc-tion of the computer. Finally he describes the powerful animation methods which currently exist and can be used on CD-ROM and Internet applications. Peter van Oosterom describes how the time dimension is represented in the information sys-tems of the Cadastre and how this is used to publish updates. The Cadastre has a very long tradition in incorporating the time component, which has always been an inherent component of the cadastral registration. In former times this was translated in very precise procedures about how to update the paper maps and registers. Today it is translated in spatio-temporal database design. The article of Luc Heres tells about the time component in the National Road Database, origi-nally designed for traffic accident registration. This is one of the systems with ''table'' roots and with quite a long tradition in handling the time dimension. He elucidates first the core objects in the conceptual model and how time is added. Next, how this model is translated in a logical design and finally how this is technically implemented. Geologists and geophysicians also have a respectable tradition in handling the time dimension in the data they collect. This is illustrated in the last paper, which is written by Ipo Ritsema. He outlines how time is handled in geological and geophysical databases maintained by TNO. By means of some practical cases he illustrates which problems can be encountered and how these can be solved.
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Book chapters on the topic "Inc Jane Teller"

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Neupert, Rieke. "Zur Gruppendynamik in Janne Tellers Nichts. Was im Leben wichtig ist – Anführermotiv und Kollektivhalluzination nach Freud und Le Bon." In Zur Ästhetik psychischer Krankheit in kinder- und jugendliterarischen Medien, 135–54. Göttingen: V&R unipress, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.14220/9783737010597.135.

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Schreiber, Carolin. "»Halt den Mund. Schweig still. Sag kein ________.« Sprache und Sprachlosigkeit: Die Darstellung tabuisierter Themen im aktuellen Jugendroman am Beispiel von Janne Tellers Nichts und Tobias Elsäßers Für niemand." In Zur Ästhetik psychischer Krankheit in kinder- und jugendliterarischen Medien, 261–88. Göttingen: V&R unipress, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.14220/9783737010597.261.

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Newell, Quincy D. "Desired to Do Right." In Your Sister in the Gospel, 89–103. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199338665.003.0007.

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Jane and Isaac James divorced in 1870. Their reasons for doing so are unknown, but may have been related to Jane’s devotion to the LDS Church and Isaac’s inability to live up to LDS standards of masculinity. Jane reported that Isaac left her for a white fortune teller. After the divorce, Jane moved closer to the center of Salt Lake City; Isaac left Utah. Jane James lost several children and grandchildren to death. The Relief Society, the LDS women’s organization, supported Jane financially and spiritually in this difficult time. She got remarried to Frank Perkins, a black Mormon widower. In 1875, along with several other black Mormons, Jane and Frank Perkins went to the Endowment House—a temporary ritual space used until the LDS temple was completed—to perform baptisms for the dead. The Perkins’s marriage dissolved within two years.
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Ngai, Mae M. "The True Story of Ah Jake." In Cultures in Motion. Princeton University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691159096.003.0008.

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This chapter examines how the issues of language, labor, and justice intertwined in the murder trial of Ah Jake, a Chinese gold miner in nineteenth-century California. The focus is on the transcript of the Sierra County court's hearing in October 1887, on whether to bring the charge of murder against Ah Jake for the killing of another miner, Wah Chuck. Much of the hearing took place in pidgin, or Chinglish. The chapter first tells the story of Ah Jake and how he came to stand trial for murder before discussing the cross-cultural relations between Anglo, Mexican, and Chinese workers in the gold fields of nineteenth-century California. It suggests that the traces of history that can be gleaned from Ah Jake's trial and pardon, when considered within the frame of transpacific circulations of people, language, and organization, produce new knowledge about social relations in the late-nineteenth-century California interior.
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Gordon-Reed, Annette, and Peter S. Onuf. "Jan Ellen Lewis Historian and Writer." In Family, Slavery, and Love in the Early American Republic, 1–6. University of North Carolina Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469665634.003.0001.

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The essays in this volume show Jan Ellen Lewis at the height of her powers as a writer and a historian. She was a historian of the period she studied, not a specialist in the history of gender, or emotions, or political culture and practice, or the Constitution. She listened carefully and sympathetically to her subjects, weaving fragmentary evidence into the stories they told—or sometimes, more revealingly, could not or would not tell about themselves. Lewis’s treatment of Thomas Jefferson, and his relations with his family, best exemplifies her approach. The essays collected here offers an elegant—and eloquent—introduction to the history of the early American Republic. Whether writing about the histories of gender and emotion in early American history, or about the status of women under the Constitution’s Three-Fifths Clause, or about Jefferson and his family, or about Sally Hemings, Jan Ellen Lewis enables readers to grasp what it must have been like to be alive at the beginning of the new nation’s history.
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