5,742 research outputs found

    A Clergyman\u27s View of the Changing Morality

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    UA99/6/2 BUWKY December

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    Monthly student publication of Bowling Green Business University featuring news, short stories, jokes and poetry by and about students, faculty, staff and alumni

    Executing Duty: Ōno Domain and the Employment of Hinin in the Bakumatsu Period

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    Early Modern Japan Networ

    Spartan Daily, October 22, 1974

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    Volume 63, Issue 24https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/5908/thumbnail.jp

    Visit to Pakistani Women's Madrasas: April 2007

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    I visited five women's madrasas, in addition to meeting separately with other male madrasa leaders and briefly sitting in on Hafiz Khalil and Shabbir Ahmed's own 10-day workshop. The report documents the experiences of the author touring women's madrasas in Pakistan

    The Elegiac Puella as Virgin Martyr

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    This is a postprint (author's final draft) version of an article published in the journal Transactions of the American Philological Association in 2009. The final version of this article may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/apa.0.0023 (login may be required). The version made available in OpenBU was supplied by the author.This paper explores the ideological currents running through Maximianus's subversive revival of the genre of Augustan love elegy in the beleaguered Rome of the mid-sixth century. The third elegy narrates an apparent childhood reminiscence of the poet, a failed romance with a young girl, Aquilina. But it soon becomes clear that, in the character of Aquilina, Maximianus has deliberately blurred the literary archetypes of the elegiac puella and the virgin martyr from Christian hagiography. This bizarre configuration allows the elegist simultaneously to provoke questions about the representation of female figures in both genres. By likening the elegiac puella to the martyr, Maximianus highlights the latent violence of elegiac topoi. By likening the martyr to the elegiac puella, Maximianus highlights the eroticism that often has a prominent place in accounts of virgin martyrdom. Not merely a formal experiment or the product of Augustan nostalgia, Maximianus's elegies represent a real attempt to reinvent elegy's questioning stance in a new social and religious context

    Ariel - Volume 10 Number 3

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    Executive Editors Madalyn Schaefgen David Reich Business Manager David Reich News Editors Medical College Edward Zurad CAHS John Guardiani World Mark Zwanger Features Editors Meg Trexler Jim O\u27Brien Editorials Editor Jeffrey Banyas Photography and Sports Editor Stuart Singer Commons Editor Brenda Peterso

    Spartan Daily, April 2, 1990

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    Volume 94, Issue 46https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/7976/thumbnail.jp
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