Download Article (PDF)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Download Article (PDF) 2. The Past Year's Articles a. List of Periodicals Monitored. Every effort has been made to monitor every issue of the periodicals listed here. As many readers well know, however, some periodicals fall behind their publication schedules, and not every part of every supposedly Ί983' volume was available by January 1984, when the monitoring was completed; while some parts of supposedly Ί982' volumes were only delivered in 1983. Our coverage, therefore, is to be understood as that of periodicals and parts of periodicals which were actually (not nominally) published in the year 1983. AC Arms Control AmBS American Behavioral Scientist AdP Adelphi Papers AmEcR American Economic Review AES Archives europeennes de sociologie Americas!f The Americas AfAf African Affairs AmHer American Heritage AfArts African Arts AmHI American History Illustrated AfAs L'Afrique et l'Asie AmHR American Historical Review AfB Africana Bulletin (Warsaw) AmJAnH American Journal of Ancient History AfC Afrique Contemporaine AmJIL American Journal of International AfCom African Communist Law AFDI Annuaire franfais de droit interna- AmJPS American Journal of Political Science tional AmJSoc American Journal of Sociology AfEH African Economic History AmNep American Neptune Afl African Insight AmPolSciR American Political Science Review AfIB Africa Institute Bulletin AmSch American Scholar AfJ Africana Journal AmSocR American Sociological Review AFJI Armed Forces Journal International AmSt American Studies AfJS African Journal of Sociology Ann Annales, Economies, Societes, Civili- Af(L) Africa (London) zations AfLA L'Afrique Litteraire et Artistique AnnAmAc Annals of the American Academy of AFLR Air Force Law Review Political and Social Science AFLT African Literature Today AnnE Annales de l'Est AfLS African Law Studies AnnM Annales du Midi AfMar Africana Marburgensia ANZJS Australia and New Zealand Journal AfNN Africana Notes and News of Sociology AfP African Perspectives APZg Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte AfQ Africa Quarterly AQDJ Army Quarterly and Defence Review Af(R) Africa (Rome) Armour* Armour AfRep Africa Report Army* Army AfRev African Review ARS Archiv für Rechts- und Sozial- AfRF African Red Family philosophie Africanus* Africanus AsAf Asian Affairs Afro-Asia* Afro-Asia Asantesem* Asantesem AfS African Studies ASARB ASA Review of Books AfSA African Studies Assn. of the W. Indies ASem Asante Seminar Bulletin ASG Archiv für Sozialgeschichte AfSN African Studies Newsletter ASMZ Allgemeine Schweizerische Militär- AFSoc Armed Forces and Society zeitschrift AfSocR African Social Research ASoc Acta Sociologica Af(SP) Africa (Sao Paulo) ASpH Aerospace Historian AfSpec Afrika-Spectrum AsS Asian Survey AfSR African Studies Review AUR Air University Review AfSS African and Soviet Studies Auss Aussenpolitik AfT Africa Today AustEcHR Australian Economic History Review AfTer Africa-Tervuren AustJDS Australian Journal of Defence Studies AfTP Africa Thought and Practice AustJPH Australian Journal of Politics and AfZ Afrika Zamani History AHRF Annales Historiques de la Revolution AustO Australian Outlook Franfaise AV Archiv des Völkerrechts AHYB Austrian History Yearbook ALA A.L.A.: Africa, Latin America, Asia Albion"· Albion AmA American Anthropologist BAS Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists AmAvHSJ American Aviation Historial BCAS Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars Society Journal BHR Business History Review BIFAN Bulletin de l'Institut Fondamental DHP Dyason House Papers (Australia) d'Afrique Noire (Serie B) DM Defense Monitor BIHR Bulletin of the Institute of Historical DN Defense Nationale Research BKF Beiträge zur Konfliktforschung EAA Estudios de Asia e Africa BotNR Botswana Notes and Records EAfAs Estudos Afro-Asiäticos BPP Bulletin of Peace Proposals EArch Europa-Archiv BrJPS British Journal of Political Science ECE EAST Central Europe BrJS British Journal of Sociology ECen Eighteenth Century: Theora and In- BrYIL British Yearbook of International terpretation Law EcHR Economic History BSOAS Bulletin of the School of Oriental and EDCC Economic Development and Cultural African Studies Change BusH Business History EEQ Eastern European Quarterly EHR English Historical Review ESR European Studies Review EtB Etudes balkaniques EthJAfS Ethiopian Journal of African Studies CA Current Anthropology EthRS Ethnic and Racial Studies CanAmSS Canadian-American Slavic Studies EtI Etudes Internationales (Quebec) CanDQ Canadian Defence Quarterly EtM Etudes Maliennes CanHR Canadian Historical Review EtMoc Estudos Mo?ambicanos CanJAfS Canadian Journal of African Studies EtN Etudes Nigeriennes CanJH Canadian Journal of History EtPol Etudes Polemologiques CanJPS Canadian Journal of Political Science EtR Etudes Ruandaises CanRSA Canadian Review of Sociology and EtZ Etudes Zairoises Anthropology EWKde Europäische Wehrkunde CanYBIL Canadian Yearbook of International ExEcH Explorations in Economic History Law CathHR Catholic History Review FA Foreign Affairs CBAfA Current Bibliography on African Af- FolH Folia Humanistica fairs FHS French Historical Studies CC Cooperation and Conflict ForSerJ Foreign Service Journal CD Cultures et Developpement FP Foreign Policy CEAf Cahiers d'Etudes Africaines Francia Francia CEH Central European History CH Current History GA Geneve-Afrique CHMC Cuardernes de Historia Moderna y GG Geschichte und Gesellschaft Contemporanea GJS Ghana Journal of Sociology ChQ China Quarterly GSSJ Ghana Social Science Journal CIAfS Caribbean Journal of African Studies GWU Geschichte in Wissenschaft und Un- CIH Cuadernos de Investigacion Historica terricht CLP Current Legal Problems GYBIL German Yearbook of International CJTL Columbia Journal of Transnational Law Law CMPS Conflict Management and Peace Science Η History COM Cahiers d'Outre-Mer HAf History in Africa CP Comparative Politics HAHR Hispanic American Historical Review CPS Comparative Political Studies HILJ Harvard International Law Journal CPSD Canberra Papers of Strategy and De- HistJB Historisches Jahrbuch fence HJ Historical Journal Crypt Cryptologia Horn Horn of Africa CSoc Culture et Societe (Bujumbura) HR Historical Reflections CSSH Comparative Studies in Society and HSoc Histoire Sociale — Social History History HT History Teacher CTun Cahiers de Tunisie HTh History and Theory CWH Civil War History HTo History Today CWRJIL Case Western Reserve Journal of In- HW History Workshop HWN History, War and Numbers CWTI Civil War Times Illustrated HZ Historische Zeitschrift IAB International Affairs Bulletin IAff International Affairs (London) ICJR International Commission of Jurists Daed Daedalus Review DFJ Defence Force Journal (Canberra) ICLQ International and Comparative Law DH Diplomatic History Quarterly 5 IDR International Defense Review JDA Journal of Developing Areas IHR International History Review JDI Journal du Droit International II International Interactions JDS Journal of Development Studies IJ International Journal (Toronto) JEARD Journal of Eastern African Research IJAHS International Journal of African His- and Development torical Studies JEaRep Journal of the Early Republic IJCS International Journal of Comparative JEcH Journal of Economic History Sociology jES Journal of European Studies IJMES International Journal of Middle East JEthS Journal of Ethiopian Studies Studies JHFSSA Journal of the Historical Firearms So- IJOH International Journal of Oral History ciety of S. Africa IJP International Journal of Politics JHI Journal of the History of Ideas IndESHR Indian Economic and Social History JHSN Journal of the Historical Society of Review Nigeria IndJIL Indian Journal of International Law JHSSL Journal of the Historical Society of IOrg International Organisation Sierra Leone IR International Relations JIA Journal of International Affairs IrishS Irish Sword JICH Journal of Imperial and Common- IRRC International Review of the Red wealth History Cross JIH Journal of Interdisciplinary History IRSH International Review of Social His- JISWA Journal of Interamerican Studies and tory World Affairs IS International Security JJiR Jerusalem Journal of International ISN International Studies Notes Relations ISQ International Studies Quarterly JJS Journal of Japanese Studies ISR International Security Review JLAS Journal of Latin American Studies ISSJ International Social Science Journal JMAS Journal of Modern African Studies Issue* Issue JMH Journal of Modern History IYB Israel Year Book of International Law JNH Journal of Negro History IYHR Israel Yearbook of Human Rights JNZH Journal of Natal and Zulu History JPH Journal of Pacific History JPMS Journal of Political and Military So- JAAAA Journal of African-Afro-American ciology Affairs JPPP Jerusalem Papers on Peace Problems JAAS(Tk) Journal of Asian and African Studies JPR Journal of Peace Research (Tokyi) JPS Journal of Peasant Studies JAAS(Tr) Journal of Asian and African Studies JPSci Journal of Peace Science (Toronto) JPsychoH Journal of Psychohistory JABS Journal of Applied Behavioral Science JQ Jerusalem Quarterly JAf Journal des Africanistes JRA Journal of Religion in Africa JAfH Journal of African History JRUSI Journal of the Royal United Services JAfS Journal of African Studies Institute JAGJ Judge-Advocate-General's Journal JRUSIAus Journal of the Royal United JAmH Journal of American History Institute, Australia JAmS Journal of American Studies JSAfA Journal of Southern African Affairs JapE Japan Echo jSAfS Journal of Southern African Studies JapQ Japan Quarterly JSAHR Journal of the Society for Army His- JAsS Journal of Asian Studies
Recommended publications
  • Collections of the Nova Scotia Historical Society
    I I. L /; I; COLLECTIONS OF THE j^olja Scotia ^isitoncal ^otitiv ''Out of monuments, names, wordes, proverbs, traditions, private records, and evidences, fragments of stories, passages of bookes, and the like, we do save, and recover somewhat from the deluge of time."—Lord Bacon: The Advancement of Learning. "A wise nation preserves its records, gathers up its muniments, decorates the tombs' of its illustrious dead, repairs its great structures, and fosters national pride and love of country, by perpetual re- ferences to the sacrifices and glories of the past."—Joseph Howe. VOLUME XVII. HALIFAX, N. S. Wm. Macnab & Son, 1913. FI034 Cef. 1 'TAe care which a nation devotes to the preservation of the monuments of its past may serve as a true measure of the degree of civilization to which it has attained.'' {Les Archives Principales de Moscou du Ministere des Affairs Etrangeres Moscow, 1898, p. 3.) 'To discover and rescue from the unsparing hand of time the records which yet remain of the earliest history of Canada. To preserve while in our power, such documents as may he found amid the dust of yet unexplored depositories, and which may prove important to general history, and to the particular history of this province.'" — Quebec Literary and Historical Society. NATIONAL MONUMENTS. (By Henry Van Dyke). Count not the cost of honour to the deadl The tribute that a mighty nation pays To those who loved her well in former days Means more than gratitude glory fled for ; For every noble man that she hath bred, Immortalized by art's immortal praise, Lives in the bronze and marble that we raise, To lead our sons as he our fathers led.
    [Show full text]
  • Constitution and Government 33
    CONSTITUTION AND GOVERNMENT 33 GOVERNORS GENERAL OF CANADA. FRENCH. FKENCH. 1534. Jacques Cartier, Captain General. 1663. Chevalier de Saffray de Mesy. 1540. Jean Francois de la Roque, Sieur de 1665. Marquis de Tracy. (6) Roberval. 1665. Chevalier de Courcelles. 1598. Marquis de la Roche. 1672. Comte de Frontenac. 1600. Capitaine de Chauvin (Acting). 1682. Sieur de la Barre. 1603. Commandeur de Chastes. 1685. Marquis de Denonville. 1607. Pierredu Guast de Monts, Lt.-General. 1689. Comte de Frontenac. 1608. Comte de Soissons, 1st Viceroy. 1699. Chevalier de Callieres. 1612. Samuel de Champlain, Lt.-General. 1703. Marquis de Vaudreuil. 1633. ii ii 1st Gov. Gen'l. (a) 1714-16. Comte de Ramesay (Acting). 1635. Marc Antoine de Bras de fer de 1716. Marquis de Vaudreuil. Chateaufort (Administrator). 1725. Baron (1st) de Longueuil (Acting).. 1636. Chevalier de Montmagny. 1726. Marquis de Beauharnois. 1648. Chevalier d'Ailleboust de Coulonge. 1747. Comte de la Galissoniere. (c) 1651. Jean de Lauzon. 1749. Marquis de la Jonquiere. 1656. Charles de Lauzon-Charny (Admr.) 1752. Baron (2nd) de Longueuil. 1657. D'Ailleboust de Coulonge. 1752. Marquis Duquesne-de-Menneville. 1658. Vicomte de Voyer d'Argenson. j 1755. Marquis de Vaudreuil-Cavagnal. 1661. Baron Dubois d'Avaugour. ! ENGLISH. ENGLISH. 1760. General Jeffrey Amherst, (d) 1 1820. James Monk (Admin'r). 1764. General James Murray. | 1820. Sir Peregrine Maitland (Admin'r). 1766. P. E. Irving (Admin'r Acting). 1820. Earl of Dalhousie. 1766. Guy Carleton (Lt.-Gov. Acting). 1824. Lt.-Gov. Sir F. N. Burton (Admin'r). 1768. Guy Carleton. (e) 1828. Sir James Kempt (Admin'r). 1770. Lt.-Gov.
    [Show full text]
  • History Etched in Stone: Gravestone Art and the Garrison Graveyard at Annapolis Royal
    W.P. Kerr W.P. W.P. Kerr H IS T O R Y ET The garrison graveyard at Fort Anne National Historic Site of Canada in Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia, is one of the most historic graveyards in Canada. The town in which it is located is today charming and picturesque C HISTORY yet for over a century it was a military stronghold, whether known as Port- HED Royal or after 1710 as Annapolis Royal. The place was alternately attacked and defended by the French or the British in the long struggle for military supremacy in North America. The garrison graveyard is the resting place for I hundreds of French, Acadian, and British military personnel and civilians N ETCHED spanning over three centuries. S This book explores the compelling history of Port-Royal/Annapolis T Royal as told through the gravestones in this scenic graveyard setting. O NE IN STONE: It presents a pictorial sampling and interpretations of the eclectic gravestone art and epitaphs, and offers numerous insights into the people whose lives are marked by the stones. As well, it looks at the attitudes, art, aesthetics, and beliefs that have come and gone, yet have left an imprint on this national cultural landscape. Gravestone Art AND THE Garrison Graveyard AT Annapolis Royal HISTORY ETCHED IN STONE History Etched in Stone: Gravestone Art and the Garrison Graveyard at Annapolis Royal W.P. Kerr Copyright © 2011 Her Majesty the Queen, in right of Canada as represented by the Minister of National Defence. Canadian Defence Academy Press PO Box 17000 Stn Forces Kingston, Ontario K7K 7B4 Produced for the Canadian Defence Academy Press by 17 Wing Winnipeg Publishing Office.
    [Show full text]
  • Romance of Government House
    The Romance Of Government House HALIFAX NOVA SCOTIA t)OUQLAS LibRARy queeN's UNiveRsiTy AT kiNQSCON Presented btj MP. D. A. REDNOND DEOFMBEP 1985 klNQSTON ONTARiO THE ROMANCE OF GOVERNMENT HOUSE PREPARED BY J. S. MARTELL UNDER DIRECTION OF D. C. HARVEY PROVINCIAL ARCHIVIST Two especially bound copies were presented to Their Majesties King George VI and Queen Elizabeth on the occasion of their visit to Government House, Halifax, June 15, 1939, by the Government of Nova Scotia. HALIFAX, N. S. PROVINCIAL SECRETARY KING'S PRINTER 1939 I Oi I— 00 w 05 c K E- !« K PS 6 C c PS PS o: B THE ROMANCE OF GOVERNMENT HOUSE HALIFAX, Nova Scotia By JAMES STUART MARTELL. The day they laid the corner stone was a day to remember. All the notables in town were there, the Governor, the Admiral, the General, the Chief Justice, the Members of the Council and Assembly, high ranking military officers, and prominent civilian officials. They were all out because this was an oc- casion in the history of the province, an occasion such as the eighteenth century had delighted to honour. Gazing upon the brilliant scene, there were many, no doubt, who could scarcely believe that a new century had dawned. Everything seemed the same, the scarlet coats and powdered wigs, the courtly bows and pretty curtsies. Surely the world would never change. Men might talk of the effects of the French Revolution or the threats of Napoleon Bonaparte; but who gave them a thought on this fine September day in 1800? It was better to listen to the "Band of Musicians", which having rendered God Save the King and Rule Britannia, was playing "other appropriate airs", or to take a pinch of snuff and consider the site of the new Government House.
    [Show full text]
  • MEMOIRS of the Royal Artillery Band
    TARY M Bfc_ IN ENGLAND ^^B ww <::,>„ /.:' FARMER / /^Vi^i^ 1 *^ '" s S^iii , ~H! ^ **- foH^^ St5* f 1 m £*2i pH *P**" mi * i Ilia TUTu* t W* i L« JW-Rj fA 41U fit* .1? ' ^fl***-* vljjj w?tttai". m~ lift 1 A w rf'Jls jftt » Ijg «Hri ». 4 Imj v .*<-» *)i4bpt=? ..... y MEMOIRS OF THE Royal Artillery Band ITS ORIGIN, HISTORY AND PROGRESS An Account of the Rise of Military Music in England HENRY GEORGE FARMER Bombardier, Royal Artillery Band " 1 am beholden to you for your sweet music —PERICLES WITH 14 ILLUSTRATIONS LONDON BOOSEY & CO., 295, REGENT STREET AND NEW YORK 1904 TO THE OFFICERS OF THE ROYAL REGIMENT OF ARTILLERY THIS HISTORY OF THEIR REGIMENTAL BAND IS BY PERMISSION MOST RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED. Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from National Library of Scotland http://www.archive.org/details/memoirsofroyalarOOfarm —; PREFACE. " Now, instead of going on denying that we are an unmusical nation, let us do our utmost to prove that we are a musical nation."—SIR ALEX. MACKENZIE. " A History of British Military Music is much needed." So said the Musical Times some six or seven years ago and to-day, when military music and military bands are so much discussed, a work of this kind appears to be urgently called for. This volume, however, makes no pretence whatever to supply the want, but merely claims to be a history of one of the famous bands in the service, that of the Royal Artillery. The records of this band date as far back as 1762, when it was formed, and I doubt if there is another band in the army with a continuous history for so long a period.
    [Show full text]
  • Portland Daily Press: April 9, 1878
    PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. ESTABLISHED JUNE 23, 1862.—YOL. 15. PORTLAND, TUESDAY MORNING. APRIL 9. 1878. TERMS $8.00 PER ANNUM, IN ADYANCK THE PORTLAND DAILY PRESS, BUSINESS CARDS. CITY ADVERTISEMENTS EDUCATIONAL. ANNUAL MEETINGS. There will be a minority report from the THE PEESS. House Committee on the revision of the Published every day (Sundays excepted) by the _WANTS. Taxes in the taws relating to the electoral count. It will Portland publishing co. Wanted. Non-resident City EATON FAMILY Annual meeting. TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 9. salesman, for Portland and SCHOOL, Annual Meeting of the Maine Asao be presented Herbert of Alabama, and At 109 Exchange St., Portland. energetic vicinity in the ot Poultry by to toll on commission of Portland, County eiation will be held at the Preble House, Port- AN exclusively Jacquaniie'i PORRIDGE WO€K. Maine. THE supported by four other members of the com- Tfrms: Eight Dollars a Year in advance. To French Blacking amt Grocers Goods, Box 13* tor the Tear 1870. land, on TUESDAY, April Sth. 1878, at 2J o’clock We do not read anonymous letters and communi “A” New York. Cumbeiland, m 1 his is of offi- mail subscribers Seven Dollars a Year if in ad- Station ap8d3t* p, meeting called for the election address of the writer are is mittee. The tabes the that paid Established 1856. Gives boys a and prac- cations. The name and report ground vance. list of taxes on real eRtato of Non- ’horough cers, for election of a member ot the Maine Board of Tbe following tical Business Education and fits students tor State not for the the of for the Agriculture to hear and acton reports of officers of all ca^es indispensable, necessarily publication majority plan providing for the election Resident owners in City Portland, College and other Scientific Schools*.
    [Show full text]
  • Gibraltar's 1804 Yellow Fever Scourge: the Search for Scapegoats
    See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/51307253 Gibraltar's 1804 Yellow Fever Scourge: The Search for Scapegoats Article in Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences · January 1998 DOI: 10.1093/jhmas/53.1.3 · Source: PubMed CITATIONS READS 7 354 2 authors: Larry Sawchuk Stacie Burke University of Toronto University of Manitoba 32 PUBLICATIONS 138 17 PUBLICATIONS 61 CITATIONS CITATIONS SEE PROFILE SEE PROFILE Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: influenza 1918 View project All content following this page was uploaded by Larry Sawchuk on 22 January 2016. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. Gibraltar's 1804 Yellow Fever Scourge: The Search for Scapegoats LAWRENCE A. SAWCHUK and STACIE D. A. BURKE Mrs Baynes was obliged to put both Mr Frome [the garrison chaplain] and his wife in their coffins, not having any creature near her, nor could she get them buried till the Governor ordered some men who were then in the street to be pressed for that purpose. How the town is to be cleansed we can scarcely tell, we fear dead bodies are at this moment shut up ... our men at the sick lines need to be for ever running to the main guard to beg them to remove the dead from our street, there being six persons lying there, and there was no other chance of getting their dead buried but by doing so. Miss Fletcher, who is now a very pretty young woman, was seen .
    [Show full text]
  • Williams of Kars
    WILLIAMS OF KARS MAXWELL VESEY HEN the Soviet made a recent demand upon Turkey for W cession to it of the Kars Plateau, an area south of the Black Sea and adjoining the Iranian Province of Azerbaijan, the word "Kars" reappeared in the news. It was a word made memorable in the Crimean War, when it rang around the world in much the same way as did Tobruk and Bataan not long ago. For Kars also was an heroic defence against great odds, when Turkish forces under British command held the Russian army at bay until disease and hunger forced surrender. Few now realize that in that war of a past era, in which Great Britain was engaged, the name of a Nova Scotian soldier stood for the same qualities which illumine those of the great generals of our time. This Nova Scotian was General Sir William Fenwick Williams, Bart., K.C.B., known to his genera­ tion as Williams of Kars. His defence of the town of Kars in Turkish Armenia, not far from Mount Ararat, was considered one of the most notable in British annals, and he was acclaimed for it in much the same manner as was General Douglas Mac's Arthur for his stand at Bataan. Look on the map of New Brunswick and observe the name Kars applied to a parish in King's County. It links the Province with the far-off Caucasus region, important as it was in the Crimean War time, because of its strategic position in regard to Turkey. Kars Parish got its name from Williams of Kars, chiefly because the General had a strong personal link with King's County in its principal town of Sussex.
    [Show full text]
  • Her Majesty's Army
    HER ,A1 STY'S R'.; . THE HORSE GUARDS- sAi VOL. I. MAY 1 \riDTiTU v. f-r\ i 5 1992 HER MAJESTY'S ARMY, I. CAVALEY. " TTTITH such an army I could go anywhere and do anything." Such were the words of one who, on that terrible Sunday at "Waterloo, proved them to be no idle boast and for all Scotch it is to to the ; English, Irish, whose pride belong mightiest Empire the world has ever known, they represent an accepted, indubitable fact. The British can and do whether it be beneath the army go anywhere anything ; glowing skies of India, amongst the scorching sands of Egypt, the tangled brush of New Zealand, the strange, historic, unfamiliar temples of China and Japan, the terrible dreariness of Crimean snows no region is too remote, no task too hard. "We are apt to smile at the seeming anticlimax of the boast made two centuries ago " Under the tropic is our language spoke, And part of Flanders hath received our yoke." But after all it was no empty one, and foreshadowed, though in a faint degree, the sober fact of to-day. In Europe, the English flag floats over the frowning fortress of the defences of the classic hills of in Asia the Gibraltar, impregnable Malta, Cyprus ; Empire of India owns as sovereign the Queen of England, and the spicy breezes of Ceylon's isle fill and wave the folds of her standard; in America, "the loyal pines of " Canada above a British to the heart's core in the of Good sway populace ; Africa, Cape Hope welcomes the emigrant to land which his forefathers took possession of nearly a hundred in Australia and Zealand has a years ago ; New new England sprung up, prosperous, with the strong, priceless heritage of the mother land, and the bounteous promise of its own stalwart youth.
    [Show full text]
  • Music and the Making of a Civilized Society: Musical Life in Pre-Confederation Nova Scotia, 1815–1867
    Music and the Making of a Civilized Society: Musical Life in Pre-Confederation Nova Scotia, 1815–1867 by Michelle Elizabeth Boyd A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Graduate Department of Music University of Toronto © Copyright by Michelle Elizabeth Boyd, 2011 ABSTRACT Music and the Making of a Civilized Society: Musical Life in Pre-Confederation Nova Scotia, 1815–1867 Michelle Elizabeth Boyd Doctor of Philosophy Graduate Department of Music University of Toronto 2011 The years 1815 to 1867 marked the first protracted period of peace in Nova Scotia‟s colonial history. While the immediate effects of peace were nearly disastrous, these years ultimately marked a formative period for the province. By the eve of Confederation, various social, cultural, political, economic, and technological developments had enabled Nova Scotia to become a mature province with a distinct identity. One of the manifestations of this era of community formation was the emergence of a cosmopolitan-oriented music culture. Although Atlantic trade routes ensured that Nova Scotia was never isolated, the colonial progress of the pre-Confederation era reinforced and entrenched Nova Scotia‟s membership within the Atlantic World. The same trade routes that brought imported goods to the province also introduced Nova Scotians to British and American culture. Immigration, importation, and developments to transportation and communication systems strengthened Nova Scotia‟s connections to its cultural arbiters – and made possible the importation and naturalization of metropolitan music practices. This dissertation examines the processes of cultural exchange operating between Nova Scotia and the rest of the Atlantic World, and the resultant musical life to which they gave rise.
    [Show full text]
  • Government Art Collection Annual Report and Acquisitions 2004 – 2005 2
    Department for Culture, Media and Sport Government Art Collection Government Art Collection Annual Report and Acquisitions 2004 – 2005 Government Art Collection Annual Report and Acquisitions 2004 – 2005 2 Contents Page 3 Foreword - Julia Somerville, Chairman, Advisory Committee on the Government Art Collection 4 Introductory Report – Penny Johnson, Director 9 Acquisitions 2004 – 2005 13 Annex 1 - List of works lent to public exhibitions between 1 April 2004 and 31 March 2005 15 Annex 2 – List of long-term loans outside Government Government Art Collection Annual Report and Acquisitions 2004 – 2005 3 Foreword This year saw real and visible progress in one of our major preoccupations: the exciting art projects at the new Home Office building in Westminster. The works on the façade by Liam Gillick were completed, allowing the public to see the effects as they walked past. Work continues apace both inside and out on the other projects by the ten artists. We on the Advisory Committee have been actively involved in the approval and monitoring of these art installations – the first time the Government Art Collection (GAC) has been involved in a building this way. The Advisory Committee, which includes the Directors of Tate, the National Gallery, and the National Portrait Gallery among its distinguished members, has no direct line or management responsibility for the GAC. However, as Chairman, I can attest to the enthusiasm and active spirit of involvement in which the Committee meetings are held. Beyond that, the members’ expertise and connections with the art world mean that the Director is able at any one time to consult individual members for their views.
    [Show full text]
  • Information to Users
    INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type o f computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. Each original is also photographed in one exposure and is included in reduced form at the back of the book. Photographs included in the original manuscript have been reproduced xerographically in this copy. Higher quality 6” x 9” black and white photographic prints are available for any photographs or illustrations appearing in this copy for an additional charge. Contact UMI directly to order. UMI A Bell & Howell Information Company 300 North Zed) Road, Ann Arbor MI 48106-1346 USA 313/761-4700 800/521-0600 “A LINGERING WAR MUST BE PREVENTED:” THE DEFENSE OF THE NORTHERN FRONTIER, 1812-1871 DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Joseph M.
    [Show full text]