361,269 research outputs found
Childhood disrupted : Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s unfinished autobiography Before the knowledge of evil
As Mary Jean Corbett in Representing Femininity (1992), Linda Peterson in Traditions of Victorian Women’s Autobiography (1999) and David Amigoni in Life Writing and Victorian Culture (2006) have all noted, Victorian women could write about their lives in several ways: autobiographies, diaries, letters, journals, memoirs and disguised within their fiction. Braddon utilised several of these options, including diaries between the years 1880-1914 and an autobiographical account of her childhood that she tellingly entitled ‘Before the Knowledge of Evil’ (Reel 1).1 She began writing this account in 1914, but after one hundred and eighty-five pages of typescript she had only reached the age of nine; presumably she was going to continue to write her entire life history, but she died before its completion. Autobiographies can be used in several ways, and Braddon’s account will be discussed as an example of Victorian women’s autobiography of childhood; as a snapshot of history in the 1830-40s; as an exploration of the inner psychology of a child; as revealing Braddon’s nostalgia for a time past; and finally to explore how she makes a case for a child’s right to have a childhood
Sam Sortland of Ambrose: Japan, World War II
North Dakota Prisoner of War Report by Sam Sortland (1914-1999) of Ambrose. Sortland was a POW of Japan during the Second World War.
38 page
Generalized resolution for orthogonal arrays
The generalized word length pattern of an orthogonal array allows a ranking
of orthogonal arrays in terms of the generalized minimum aberration criterion
(Xu and Wu [Ann. Statist. 29 (2001) 1066-1077]). We provide a statistical
interpretation for the number of shortest words of an orthogonal array in terms
of sums of values (based on orthogonal coding) or sums of squared
canonical correlations (based on arbitrary coding). Directly related to these
results, we derive two versions of generalized resolution for qualitative
factors, both of which are generalizations of the generalized resolution by
Deng and Tang [Statist. Sinica 9 (1999) 1071-1082] and Tang and Deng [Ann.
Statist. 27 (1999) 1914-1926]. We provide a sufficient condition for one of
these to attain its upper bound, and we provide explicit upper bounds for two
classes of symmetric designs. Factor-wise generalized resolution values provide
useful additional detail.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/14-AOS1205 the Annals of
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
[Rezension zu:] Hermann Sommer, Zur Kur nach Ems. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Badereise von 1830 bis 1914. (Geschichtliche Landeskunde, Bd. 48.) Stuttgart, Steiner 1999. XII, 786 S., 196,- DM.
Rezension zu: Hermann Sommer : Zur Kur nach Ems. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Badereise von 1830 bis 1914. (Geschichtliche Landeskunde, Bd. 48.) Stuttgart, Steiner 1999. XII, 786 S., 196,- DM
Agglomeration and labour productivity in Spanish industry: a long-term analysis
This paper analyzes the relationship between spatial density of economic activity and interregional differences in the productivity of industrial labour in Spain during the period 1860-1999. In the spirit of Ciccone and Hall (1996) and Ciccone (2002), we analyze the evolution of this relationship over the long term in Spain. Using data on the period 1860-1999 we show the existence of an agglomeration effect linking the density of economic activity with labour productivity in the industry. This effect was present since the beginning of the industrialization process in the middle of the 19th century but has been decreasing over time. The estimated elasticity of labour productivity with respect to employment density was close to 8% in the subperiod 1860-1900, reduces to a value of around 7% in the subperiod 1914-1930, to 4% in the subperiod 1965-1979 and becomes insignificant in the final subperiod 1985-1999. At the end of the period analyzed there is no evidence of the existence of net agglomeration effects in the industry. This result could be explained by an important increase in the congestion effects in large industrial metropolitan areas that would have compensated the centripetal or agglomeration forces at work. Furthermore, this result is also consistent with the evidence of a dispersion of industrial activity in Spain during the last decades.agglomeration economies, regional disparities, spanish economic history
Watkins, Samuel Houston, 1914-1999 - Collector (SC 1736)
Finding aid only for Manuscripts Small Collection 1736. Two items related to the Felts family of Logan County, Kentucky. Also certificates and correspondence related to Samuel Houston Watkins\u27 service in the Merchant Marine during World War II
L'evoluzione del federalismo nigeriano tra conflitti etnici e transizioni democratiche.
L’intento del presente lavoro è quello di fornire un’analisi dell’evoluzione del federalismo nigeriano
dall’amalgamation, operata dagli inglesi nel 1914, sino alla Costituzione del 1999 che ha sancito l’inizio di una
nuova transizione democratico-costituzionale, attualmente non ancora conclusa. Nonostante le lunghe fasi
autoritarie, a causa di numerose giunte militari, l’evoluzione del federalismo in Nigeria necessita di attenzione
per le particolari disposizioni costituzionali che ne regolano il funzionament
Construction of a surface air temperature series for Qingdao in China for the period 1899 to 2014
Abstract. We present a homogenized surface air temperature (SAT) time series at 2 m height for the city of Qingdao in China from 1899 to 2014. This series is derived from three data sources: newly digitized and homogenized observations of the German National Meteorological Service from 1899 to 1913, homogenized observation data of the China Meteorological Administration (CMA) from 1961 to 2014 and a gridded dataset of Willmott and Matsuura (2012) in Delaware to fill the gap from 1914 to 1960. Based on this new series, long-term trends are described. The SAT in Qingdao has a significant warming trend of 0.11 ± 0.03 °C decade−1 during 1899–2014. The coldest period occurred during 1909–1918 and the warmest period occurred during 1999–2008. For the seasonal mean SAT, the most significant warming can be found in spring, followed by winter. The homogenized time series of Qingdao is provided and archived by the Deutscher Wetterdienst (DWD) web page under overseas stations of the Deutsche Seewarte (http://www.dwd.de/EN/ourservices/overseas_stations/ueberseedoku/doi_qingdao.html) in ASCII format. Users can also freely obtain a short description of the data at https://doi.org/https://dx.doi.org/10.5676/DWD/Qing_v1 And the data can be downloaded at http://dwd.de/EN/ourservices/overseas_stations/ueberseedoku/data_qingdao.txt
Cover of New Yorker magazine from November 29, 1976
This is a cover of the New Yorker magazine from Novovember 29th, 1976. The artwork on the front cover has a Thanksgiving theme and features Abraham Lincoln at a table with a group of people. The artwork on the front cover was designed by Saul Steinberg.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/fvw-artifacts/5614/thumbnail.jp
The Returns to Skill in the United States across the Twentieth Century
Economic inequality is higher today than it has been since 1939, as measured by both the wage structure and wealth inequality. But the comparison between 1939 and 1999 is largely made out of necessity; the 1940 U.S. population census was the first to inquire of wage and salary income and education. We address what the returns to skill were prior to 1940 and piece together the first century-long history of skill premiums, the dispersion of the wage structure, and returns to formal schooling. We use the 1915 Iowa State Census, a remarkable and unique document, as well as several less-obscure but untapped reports. Using all of these sources, we find that the wage structure narrowed at several moments in the first half of the 20th century, not just in the 1940s, both coinciding with major economic disruptions brought about by war. The returns to education were in fact higher in 1914 than in 1939, and the enormous expansion in secondary schooling beginning in the 1910s was a contributing factor to the decrease in educational returns. Inequality and the returns to education across the entire century, therefore, first declined before their more recent and steep ascent.
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