943 research outputs found

    Isaac Nathan and Lady Caroline Lamb: A Response to Graham Pont

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    Modernism and Science: The Case of Pound\u27s ABC of Reading

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    Lady Caroline Lamb’s Revisions to Her Novel Glenarvon: Some Observations

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    Eliot\u27s Cats: Serious Play Behind the Playful Seriousness

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    Twisty Little Passages: The Several Editions of Lady Caroline Lamb\u27s Glenarvon

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    A literary criticism of the book Glenarvon, by Lady Caroline Lamb is presented. It presents the symbolic significance of the characters. It outlines the consequences of denying true love and the importance of aristocratic leadership and self-control. It examines the preface of the book in which the author states that the novel is not immoral even with the inclusion of crimes and she asks readers to recognize that her intention of writing the book is to describe human nature

    Hebrew Melodies as Songs: Why We Need a New Edition

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    Cradle of the Copperheads: Education and the Career of Jesse Stuart

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    Lady Caroline Lamb Before Byron: The Godfrey Vassal Webster Affair

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    This article provides an overview of the love affairs of Lady Caroline Lamb. Before she met Lord Byron, she had a long messy affair with Godfrey Vassal Webster. Their affair was known through letters which was held in the British library, the public records office in Chichester, and the like. Caroline cannot or will not adapt to the complicated social milieu of regency London

    Barth, Barthes, and Bergson: Postmodern Aesthetics and the Imperative of the New

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    PERCEIVED HAZARD AND PRODUCT CHOICE: AN APPLICATION TO RECREATIONAL SITE CHOICE

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    This study improves upon the standard "dummy variable" approach to modeling fish consumption advisories by jointly estimating a "perceived hazard" model and a site choice model. The perceived hazard model overcomes the shortcomings of the dummy variable model, namely that all anglers respond equally to advisories and that all anglers know of and believe the advisories. We find that anglers' perceived hazards associated with consumption advisories do affect product (recreational site) choice. Anglers' perceptions also affect welfare measures, where the benefits of contaminant removal follow a more reasonable pattern than that of the dummy variable approach. The joint perceived hazard/product choice model is applicable to a wide variety of risky choices with which consumers are faced.Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
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