Academic literature on the topic 'William Garnett'

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Journal articles on the topic "William Garnett"

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Bruce, S. "Redefining Christian Britain post-1945 perspectives. Edited by Jane Garnett, Matthew Grimley, Alana Harris, William Whyte and Sarah Williams." Twentieth Century British History 19, no. 2 (December 13, 2007): 246–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/hwn005.

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Baugh, Gayle M. "Biodata handbook. Garnett S. Stokes, Michael D. Mumford and William A. Owens (Eds), CPP Books, 1994." Journal of Organizational Behavior 15, no. 7 (December 1994): 667–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/job.4030150709.

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Lyon, Eileen Groth. "Redefining Christian Britain: Post 1945 Perspectives. Edited by Jane Garnett, Matthew Grimley, Alana Harris, William Whyte, and Sarah Williams. London: SCM, 2007. xii + 308. $34.99 paper." Church History 78, no. 3 (August 21, 2009): 704–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0009640709990291.

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Lempke, Mark A. "Jane Garnett, Matthew Grimley, Alana Harris, William Whyte, and Sarah Williams, eds. Redefining Christian Britain: Post 1945 Perspectives. London: SCM Press, 2007. Pp. 308. $37.25 (paper)." Journal of British Studies 47, no. 4 (October 2008): 994–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/592938.

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Chandler, Andrew. "Redefining Christian Britain. Post-1945 perspectives. Edited by Jane Garnett, Matthew Grimley, Alana Harris, William Whyte and Sarah Williams. Pp. xii+308. London: SCM Press, 2007. £17.99 (paper). 978 0 334 04092 7." Journal of Ecclesiastical History 61, no. 4 (September 3, 2010): 882. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022046910000382.

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Pollard Brown, Nancy. "A Shorte Rule of Good Life: A Handbook for the English Mission." Recusant History 30, no. 1 (May 2010): 47–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0034193200012620.

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None of Robert Southwell's writing illustrates as do the texts of A Shorte Rule of Good Life the conditions under which he wrote and the manner in which his work was transmitted by manuscript copy and printed book. Until recent years it was known only in rare printed copies representing a series of editions issued in rapid succession following Southwell's execution in 1595. The first, issued from Henry Garnet's second secret press in 1596 or 1597, was probably edited by Garnet himself. The volume also contained the first printing of Southwell's Epistle to his Father. There can be little doubt that ‘The Preface to the Reader’ preceding the Rule, though unsigned, was written by Garnet himself when the grief of loss was still raw. This was followed by two more editions from secret presses in England and further editions from Douai and St. Omer. The first commercial printing in London was that of Richard Field for William Barret in 1620, when the text was crudely adapted for English readers with Puritan sympathies in a volume that gathered together verse and prose already established in popularity, although the author was still identified merely as ‘R. S’.
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Kane, Kevin J. "Barbara Hepworth and The Tonsillectomy." Journal of Laryngology & Otology 126, no. 7 (May 16, 2012): 698–700. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022215112000916.

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AbstractThe Garnett Passe and Rodney Williams Foundation, a major medical research foundation in Melbourne, has recently acquired a hitherto unknown and uncatalogued painting by Dame Barbara Hepworth, the celebrated British sculptor and artist. It is of the Foundation's nominal patron Garnett Passe performing a tonsillectomy, probably at the London Clinic, in 1948. This article gives an account of Barbara Hepworth and her relationships with Garnett Passe and Norman Capener, the two surgeons who introduced her to this subject and who led to the creation of this unique work of art.
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Rice, J. C. "Garnett Passe and the tonsillectomy gag." Journal of Laryngology & Otology 130, no. 4 (January 19, 2016): 329–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022215116000074.

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AbstractKevin Kane has written about the painting by Barbara Hepworth of Garnett Passe performing a tonsillectomy, and wondered about the way in which the gag appears to be suspended. This article traces historically the various methods of holding the gag for tonsillectomy, and postulates that what is illustrated in the Hepworth painting is a jack owned by the late Dr Sydney Cocks, who not only was a friend of Passe but who also commenced the discussions with Passe's widow, Barbara, concerning the formation by her of a trust to support young Australian ENT surgeons, which eventually became The Garnett Passe and Rodney Williams Memorial Foundation.
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Harrison, Donald. "The Garnett Passe and Rodney Williams Memorial Foundation." Journal of Laryngology & Otology 110, no. 8 (August 1996): 717. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022215100134784.

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Gabriel, Claudia Margaretha. "Hommage an William Garner Sutherland." DO - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Osteopathie 19, no. 03 (June 2021): 44–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-1346-4311.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "William Garnett"

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Mierlo, Willem Louis van Verfasser], and Falko [Akademischer Betreuer] [Langenhorst. "Major element diffusion in garnet and the exsolution of majoritic garnet from aluminous enstatite in Earth's Upper Mantle / Willem Louis van Mierlo. Betreuer: Falko Langenhorst." Bayreuth : Universitätsbibliothek Bayreuth, 2012. http://d-nb.info/1021924741/34.

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Books on the topic "William Garnett"

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Garnett, William. William Garnett: Aerial photographs. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press, 1994.

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William Garnett, aerial photographs. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994.

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McGee, E. S. Garnet xenocryst analyses: Potential for diamonds in the Williams kimberlite, north-central Montana and the Lake Ellen kimberlite, northern Michigan. Reston, VA: Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1987.

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Repère, Théâtre. Coriolan / Macbeth / La tempête by William Shakespeare [translated by Michel Garneau]. [Quebec]: Théâtre Repère, 1992.

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Garner, William T. Faith of a soldier: A POW's story / by William T. Garner. Denver, Colo: Mapletree Pub. Co., 2008.

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The secretaries of Riel: Louis Schmidt (1870), Philippe Garnot, William Henry Jackson. Prince-Albert, Sask: Published by Les Éditions Louis Riel for La Société Canadienne Française de Prince-Albert, 1985.

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Fuller, David B. Swedenborg and osteopathy: The influence of Emanuel Swedenborg on the genesis and development of osteopathy, specifically Andrew Taylor Still and William Garner Sutherland. Bryn Athyn, Pa: Swedenborg Scientific Association Press, 2012.

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The Extraordinary Landscape. Little Brown & Co (P), 1987.

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Servile Ministers: Othello, King Lear and the Sacralization of Service (the 2003 Garnett Sedgewick Memorial Lecture). Ronsdale Press, 2004.

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Take Your Glory Lord The Life Story of William Duma by Mary Garnett. Sovereign World, UK: One Way Publications, 1992.

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Book chapters on the topic "William Garnett"

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Griffiths, John. "‘Sir Garnet Wolseley and the Poet William M'Gonagall', in Dundee Evening Telegraph, 15th November 1882, p. 2." In Empire and Popular Culture, 356–57. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351024709-54.

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Roberts, Neil. "Epilogue, 1912–1913." In Sons and Lovers: The Biography of a Novel. Liverpool University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5949/liverpool/9781942954187.003.0009.

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Lawrence's mentor Edward Garnett, who had brokered publication with Duckworth, cut the manuscript by about ten per cent. This weakened the role of Paul's brother William, which justifies the plural of the title and reinforces the thematic emphasis on Oedipal relationships. The complete text was eventually restored by Cambridge University Press in 1992. In March 1913 Lawrence sent Jessie the proofs with an accompanying letter. She returned the letter, the final act of their association. She had written an autobiographical novel of her own, The Rathe Primrose, which Lawrence read and admired, but which she subsequently destroyed, together with all his letters to her. Despite this she retained a detailed memory of what he had written, with the result that her remembered versions are printed in the Letters of D.H. Lawrence. After his death she wrote a vivid and deeply moving memoir, D.H. Lawrence, A Personal Record. We owe to her an unforgettable image of the delightful young genius she had loved, but she had little sympathy for the great and conflicted writer that he became. Sons and Lovers was published in May 1913 to largely favourable reviews.
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Gosse, Van. "We Think for Ourselves." In The First Reconstruction, 377–434. University of North Carolina Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469660103.003.0012.

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Beginning in the late 1830s, Black New Yorkers mobilized statewide to regain unrestricted suffrage, offering an organizing model for free people of color nationwide. Leaders like the young Henry Highland Garnet, Dr. James McCune Smith, Samuel Ringgold Ward, and the veteran Stephen Myers (an associate of Governor William Seward) built a network covering dozens of counties. With the radical antislavery Liberty Party putting pressure on the Whigs, this effort culminated in an 1846 referendum in which “Equal Suffrage for colored persons” was overwhelmingly defeated.
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Griffiths, Martin. "‘The Chorus Girl and the Tariff’ by Katherine Mansfield." In Katherine Mansfield and Children, 127–36. Edinburgh University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474491907.003.0009.

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KM took literary inspiration from America-based performers that visited Wellington and London, including pianist Teresa Carreño and actress ‘Mrs. Hannibal Williams’ – she associated with performing artists throughout her short life – and took an interest in American theatre and cinema. KM used theatrical conventions, techniques and characters in her stories and had a desire to reach or create an audience in America. ‘The Chorus Girl and the Tariff by Katherine Mansfield’ is a monologue concerning the dull humiliation of scratching a living off, and on, Broadway, New York. Despite problematic jargon and detailed geography specific to locations in New York, attribution of the text to KM – who toured as a chorus girl with Garnet Trowell and the Moody Manners Opera Company in 1909 (when it was published) – is plausible and the sketch has the potential to shed light on some of the obscure events of KM’s early life in New Zealand and London.
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Ritchie, Daniel. "‘The Eloquent and Fearless Friend of the Slave’." In Isaac Nelson, 41–124. Liverpool University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781786941282.003.0003.

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This chapter has highlights the central importance of Nelson to Belfast anti-slavery in the 1840s and early 1850s. Nelson’s emergence as a leading anti-slavery campaigner took place against the backdrop of the Free Church of Scotland receiving money from and engaging in fellowship with the proslavery American churches. In the subsequent ‘Send Back the Money’ controversy, the Belfast Anti-Slavery Society joined the chorus of abolitionist voices calling on the Free Church to break its ties with their proslavery American brethren. Nelson joined with leading American abolitionists such as Henry C. Wright, Frederick Douglass, and William Lloyd Garrison as part of the ‘Send Back the Money’ campaign in Belfast. This bore some positive fruit as the American Old School Presbyterian, Thomas Smyth was excluded from sitting with the Irish General Assembly in 1846. Nelson also defended the radical abolitionist principle of no fellowship with slaveholders at the inaugural meeting of the Evangelical Alliance in London, 1846. This chapter also explains the causes for the eventual demise of the Belfast Anti-Slavery Society, notwithstanding its late revival with the visits of Henry Highland Garnet to Ulster in 1851.
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Barnes, Calvin G., and Charlotte M. Allen. "Depth of origin of late Middle Jurassic garnet andesite, southern Klamath Mountains, California." In Geological Studies in the Klamath Mountains Province, California and Oregon: A volume in honor of William P. Irwin. Geological Society of America, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/2006.2410(13).

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Hess, Earl J. "They Ought to Be Remembered." In Storming Vicksburg, 273–78. University of North Carolina Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469660172.003.0020.

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The failed attacks of May 19 and 22 produced many opportunities for participants to garner honors or deserve infamy, and those incidents either strengthened the rest of their lives or haunted them forever. A number of Federals failed the test of combat and shirked their duty, but the military justice system was weak and porous at best. While some of these acts of combat failure were officially reported, little was done by the system to punish the men. Officers were allowed to resign and the process of dealing with enlisted men was rarely called into use. It was easier to allow the individual to reflect and improve in his future conduct. Sgt. Joseph E. Griffith became a national hero because of his exploit at Railroad Redoubt. In fact, Griffith eventually won an appointment to West Point where he graduated and became an officer in the U. S. Army. Fourteen-year-old Orion P. Howe of the 55th Illinois became famous for telling William T. Sherman of the need for more cartridges as he returned from the failed attack of May 19 with a slight wound. Many members of the Forlorn Hope were awarded with Congressional Medals of Honor after the war.
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