Academic literature on the topic 'Paul Bunyan'

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Journal articles on the topic "Paul Bunyan"

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Griffiths, Paul. "Paul Bunyan." Musical Times 130, no. 1751 (1989): 31. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/966109.

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O'Rourke, Michael. "Paul Bunyan Lives!" Capitalism Nature Socialism 14, no. 2 (2003): 1–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10455750308565522.

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Law, Joe K. "Paul Bunyan. Benjamin Britten." Opera Quarterly 7, no. 1 (1990): 201–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oq/7.1.201.

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Hill, Mary Louise. "Performance Review: Paul Bunyan." Theatre Journal 48, no. 2 (1996): 229–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/tj.1996.0033.

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Buhl, David, Mark Oursland, and Kristin Finco. "The Legend of Paul Bunyan." Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School 8, no. 8 (2003): 441–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.5951/mtms.8.8.0441.

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One of the greatest forms of entertainment that is passed down through generations is the art of storytelling. Stories told from generation to generation have entertained children around the world for centuries. Many favorites for children have been myths and folktales that entail measurements that pique our curiosity. Some examples include Johnny Appleseed; Nessie the Loch Ness Monster; and Paul Bunyan and Babe, his blue ox. These are just a few of the better-known characters of such tales. When used in the classroom, storytelling often captivates the imagination of students, thus enhancing the learning process.
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Hennigar, Mary Jane. "The First Paul Bunyan Story in Print." Forest & Conservation History 30, no. 4 (1986): 175–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4004730.

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Hoffman, Daniel. "The Birth of Paul Bunyan—In Print." Forest & Conservation History 30, no. 4 (1986): 177–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4004731.

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Reed, Philip. "A Rejected Love Song from 'Paul Bunyan'." Musical Times 129, no. 1744 (1988): 283. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/964879.

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BROGAN, HUGH. "W. H. Auden, Benjamin Britten, and Paul Bunyan." Journal of American Studies 32, no. 2 (1998): 281–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021875898005921.

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Somewhat to the surprise of the critics and the public, the exiled company of the Royal Opera House had a great success with their production of Benjamin Britten's “operetta,” Paul Bunyan, just before Christmas, 1997. Everyone knew the difficulties in advance – for instance, the piece has absolutely no dramatic momentum – but no one seems to have foreseen that the splendid music would carry all before it in a theatre, or that a highly accomplished cast would find so many moments of real comedy and pathos in performance. Even now it is hard to imagine the piece entering the regular repertory, but it is easy to foresee frequent revivals, and still more frequent concert performances.To an Americanist, however, the work presented as many unexpected problems as pleasures. The fault was entirely W. H. Auden's. His libretto is in many respects as brilliant and beautiful as the music (though at times it sinks to doggerel) but the theme he expounds sticks in my craw. Once upon a time the New World, he says, was nothing but virgin forest. Then Paul Bunyan, the giant, was born, and dreamed of felling trees – of being the greatest logger in history. And such he became. When the forests had all been cleared, “America” had emerged – the America of the farmer, the clerk, the hotel manager, and Hollywood. Paul Bunyan therefore moved on, leaving his followers with the message, “America is what you make it.”The difficulty is not simply that this myth of America seems ecologically and historically unsound to anyone who knows something of the pollution and despoliation inflicted by American logging companies; nor even that the total elimination of the natives from the story (except for one reference to fighting Indians) is a grave falsification; nor even that the accumulation of these and many other simplifications produce an effect that in today's terms is politically incorrect and in 1941 seems to have been thought patronizing. It is that to anyone with actual knowledge, however slight, of American history, Auden's myth is so inaccurate as to make any suspension of disbelief largely impossible. To take but one detail: as Auden said himself, Paul Bunyan is a post-industrial-revolution myth: he is a product of the nineteenth-century frontier, in the tall-tale tradition. The loggers, like the mountain men, the boatmen, the cowboys, and the slaves, were at the mercy of large economic forces; they consoled themselves for their impotence by developing the legend of the giant lumberjack who was invincible and omnipotent. The forests were far from virgin: if they were silent it was because first the game and then the original inhabitants had been driven off by the process of European settlement. Even in 1939, when the influence of F. J. Turner was at its height, Auden could have discovered these points – probably did discover them. But he chose to ignore them.
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Stokker, Kathleen. "Store Per: Norwegian-American "Paul Bunyan" of the Prairie." Annals of Iowa 71, no. 2 (2012): 188–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.17077/0003-4827.1631.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Paul Bunyan"

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Sickler, Ashley. "Paul Bunyan design assemblage /." Click here to view, 2009. http://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/artsp/18.

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Thesis (B.F.A.)--California Polytechnic State University, 2009.<br>Project advisor: Charmaine Martinez. Title from PDF title page; viewed on Jan. 21, 2010. Includes bibliographical references. Also available on microfiche.
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Croker, Michael Ryan. "The life and origins of Paul Bunyan : volume one /." Diss., CLICK HERE for online access, 2009. http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/ETD/image/etd3319.pdf.

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Croker, Michael Ryan. "The Life and Origins of Paul Bunyan: Part One." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2009. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/1937.

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Master of Fine Arts This novel is a chronicle of the early days of Paul Bunyan, an important figure in American folk culture. While Paul Bunyan is a central figure in the tale, the story itself is told through the eyes of Clay Filinger, a young man from the backwoods of Kentucky who leaves his home on a journey of American exploration. Clay reaches Boston, where he hires on to work for John Patrick, a wealthy merchant headed to Maine in search of pirate treasure. John is travelling with his nephew, Randolph Bunyan. Along with them are two more hired men: Stokes, a foul riverman, and Silas Jefferson, a smooth-talking man with criminal intentions. As they travel up the coast, they encounter a shipwreck with one survivor, a pregnant Irish girl named Muirenn. Muirenn reveals to Clay that she is, in fact several hundred years old, having been trapped as a girl by the King of the Fair Folk. It is this supernatural king who is the father of her child. Clay, not wanting anything to do with these events, flees as soon as possible. He is turned back, however, by threats from a pooka, a mysterious creature. Shortly thereafter, Clay confronts a mysterious and powerful being called Liath Luacra. During the conflict, Muirenn gives birth to a boy named Paul, who is adopted by Randolph Bunyan. She then dies. The men finally find themselves in The Aroostook Valley of Maine. John Patrick continues looking for his treasure, and Clay does what he can to protect Paul. After some months, Silas Jefferson rides into town with a band of armed men, looking for Patrick's treasure. Clay fights him, and Jefferson is killed, but promptly possessed by Liath Luacra. The pooka is forced to become a huge blue ox while Clay and the others flee. Finding themselves on the other side of a river, Clay and his companions eventually are forced into a final confrontation with Constance Jefferson, who came with her brother, and finally with Liath Luacra. With luck and supernatural help, Constance is defeated and Liath Luacra is forced to flee.
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GIER, CHRISTOPHER T. "PAUL BUNYAN AND THE EVOLUTION OF THE TALL TALE." University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2005. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1132066290.

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Margutti, Vivian Bernardes. "Peregrinos em busca: alegoria, utopia e distopia em Paul Auster, Nathaniel Hawthorne e John Bunyan: alegoria; utopia e distopia em Paul Auster; Nathaniel Hawthorne e John Bunyan." Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1843/ECAP-89JQTD.

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No presente estudo, investiga-se o caráter alegórico do romance No país das últimas coisas (1987), de Paul Auster, tanto através de suas ligações intertextuais com a paródia 'A estrada de ferro celestial' (1843), de Nathaniel Hawthorne, e com o texto alegórico O peregrino (1678), de John Bunyan, como a partir da noção de alegoria presente no pensamento de Walter Benjamin. Faz-se um histórico do uso da alegoria na tradição literária, com o intuito de vislumbrar a possibilidade de uma reavaliação, na modernidade, dessa figura de linguagem. As três obras em questão são analisadas a partir de diferentes níveis interpretativos, percorrendo os sentidos metalinguístico e figurado. A metalinguagem está presente em todos os textos estudados e se liga ao trajeto da alegoria e do romance na literatura ocidental, em um cenário amplo que vai desde a época medieval, passando pelos períodos do Barroco e do Romantismo, e chegando aos dias atuais. O sentido figurado das obras apresenta um viés que é associado à crítica social e às noções de utopia e distopia. Leva-se em consideração o pensamento de Lewis Mumford no que diz respeito à utopia e seu papel na história. Destaca-se também a tendência contemporânea à produção de uma literatura distópica. Através da viagem de aprendizado e crescimento espiritual de cada um dos protagonistas, o sentido figurado indica, ainda, três formas diferentes de peregrinar: a primeira, pela graça divina, a segunda, pela modernidade liberal, e a terceira, pela exposição exacerbada da fragilidade humana.
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Harty, John Patrick. "Legendary landscapes : a cultural geography of the Paul Bunyan and Blue Ox phenomena of the North woods." Diss., Manhattan, Kan. : Kansas State University, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/2097/413.

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Books on the topic "Paul Bunyan"

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Paul Bunyan. PowerKids Press, 2012.

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Blair, Eric. Paul Bunyan. Picture Window Books, 2011.

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Kleinhenz, Sydnie Meltzer. Paul Bunyan. Harcourt, 2003.

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Benjamin, Britten. Paul Bunyan. Virgin Classics, 1988.

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ill, Garland Michael 1952, ed. Paul Bunyan. Child'ss World, 2013.

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ill, Orback Craig, ed. Paul Bunyan. Millbrook Press, 2007.

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Shephard, Esther. Paul Bunyan. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1985.

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ill, Chambers-Goldberg Micah, and Robledo Sol, eds. Paul Bunyan. Picture Window Books, 2006.

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Snyder, Margaret. Paul Bunyan. Western Pub. Co., 1992.

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Johnston, Marianne. Paul Bunyan. PowerKids Press, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Paul Bunyan"

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Fleeter, Rick. "Telepresence: Paul Bunyan Takes a Hike." In The Logic of Microspace. Springer Netherlands, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-4273-1_19.

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Folger, Till Nikolaus. "Brexit: Unsicherheit ist Gift für die Wirtschaft." In Die Wirtschaft im Wandel. Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-31735-5_16.

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ZusammenfassungKommt es zu einem harten Brexit? Müssen sich die Unternehmen auf neue Zölle, kostspielige Zollformalitäten, Zeitverzögerungen an der Grenze, teure Unterbrüche in der Wertschöpfungskette, erhöhten Kapitalbedarf für die Lagerhaltung, unterschiedliche Produktstandards, abweichende Rechtsvorschriften, und weiter zunehmende Kosten einstellen? Zahlen sich für viele kleinere Unternehmen die Geschäfte mit der EU überhaupt noch aus? Oder gibt es am Ende doch noch ein kooperatives Ergebnis mit beidseitigem Marktzugang zu einem gemeinsamen, einheitlichen Binnenmarkt? Sie wissen es nicht, müssen für alle Eventualitäten planen, und schieben ihre Entscheidungen hinaus. Unsicherheit ist Gift für die Wirtschaft. Bevor überhaupt eine Entscheidung gefallen ist, bremst die Brexit-Unsicherheit die britischen Unternehmen und beeinträchtigt Investitionen und Produktivitätswachstum.Bloom, Nicholas, Philip Bunn, Scarlet Chen, Paul Mizen, Pawel Smietanka, and Gregory Thwaites (2019), The Impact of Brexit on UK Firms, NBER WP 26.218.
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"Camping with Walt Disney’s Paul Bunyan." In Queer as Camp. Fordham University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780823283637-011.

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Mielke, Tammy L., and Andrew Trevarrow. "Camping with Walt Disney’s Paul Bunyan:." In Queer as Camp. Fordham University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvfjd074.13.

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Goldfield, Michael. "Paul Bunyan and the “Frozen Logger”." In The Southern Key. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190079321.003.0006.

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Chapter 5 highlights the wood industry, one of the largest industries in the country. Most of the woodworkers were located in the South, and half of those workers were African-American. Woodworkers successfully organized in the Northwest and Canada, the other two centers of the industry. Despite a perceived willingness of southern woodworkers to unionize, this did not happen. The chapter attributes most of the problems to an incompetent, right-wing, racially backward leadership, which was installed by the CIO national office before World War II. The chapter also argues that the successful organization of southern woodworkers had the potential to radically transform the civil rights movement.
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Pritchett, V. S. "“That Time and That Wilderness”." In The Dixie Limited. University Press of Mississippi, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.14325/mississippi/9781496803382.003.0026.

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This chapter argues that William Faulkner, who died in 1962, was the only substantial American novelist since Henry James, the last to have a historical sense of the American environment, “that time and that wilderness.” It considers Faulkner to be as American as Huck Finn and Paul Bunyan, though his relationship with the American literature of his generation is modified by the kind of difference that separates the Anglo-Irish from the English. It asks whether there are no American novels, but only American romances. It suggests that Faulkner is unique in sticking to the bypassed town where he found himself and in mixing the realities of the South. Finally, it discusses the humanism in Faulkner's writing, his concern with initiation into the knowledge of good and evil, and his mastery of that kind of American humor that becomes funnier and faster the more it digresses.
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Otis, Laura. "The Bodily and Cultural Roots of Emotion Metaphors." In Banned Emotions. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190698904.003.0002.

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Recent theories of emotion take different stands on how greatly language can influence emotional experience. William James’s peripheral feedback theory, Paul Ekman’s basic emotions theory, Magda Arnold’s appraisal theory, and Lisa Feldman Barrett’s conceptual act theory offer distinct frameworks for understanding how physiology and culture interact in human emotions. The research of Max Black, George Lakoff, and Zoltán Kövecses indicates that emotion metaphors have bodily and cultural roots. Dante Alighieri’s Inferno and John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress illustrate the religious origin of metaphors for culturally “banned” emotions. Traces of these religious origins can be seen in the metaphors of self-help books such as Daniel Goleman’s Emotional Intelligence, Travis Bradberry’s and Jean Greaves’s Emotional Intelligence 2.0, and Spencer Johnson’s Who Moved My Cheese? A long-standing cultural tradition presumes there is a self separate from the emotions that is responsible for controlling them, but scientific studies point toward emotional regulation within a self.
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Mee, Nicholas. "Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star." In The Cosmic Mystery Tour. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198831860.003.0007.

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The emission and absorption of light by atoms produces discrete sets of spectral lines that were a vital clue to unravelling the structure of atoms and their elucidation was an important step towards the development of quantum mechanics. In the middle years of the nineteenth century Bunsen and Kirchhoff discovered that spectral lines can be used to determine the chemical composition of stars. Following Rutherford’s discovery of the nucleus, Bohr devised a model of the hydrogen atom that explained the spectral lines that it produces. His work was developed further by Pauli, who postulated the exclusion principle in order to explain the structure of other types of atom. This enabled him to explain the layout of the Periodic Table and the chemical properties of the elements.
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Conference papers on the topic "Paul Bunyan"

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Istawiah, Yasir Arafat, and Yenny Puspita. "Optimization and Role of Bunda PAUD Village in Efforts to Improve the Quality of PAUD in the District Ogan Komering Ulu Selatan." In International Conference on Education Universitas PGRI Palembang (INCoEPP 2021). Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.210716.102.

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Oktawisra. "Increasing Cognitive Development of Children through Science Games in PAUD Permata Bunda B2 Group Subdistrict Lembah Gumanti, Solok Regency." In Proceedings of the Padang International Conference on Educational Management And Administration (PICEMA 2018). Atlantis Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/picema-18.2019.51.

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