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I the Apostle of Capitalism: the Economist from 1843-1863 A
The Apostle of Capitalism: The Economist from 1843-1863 A Thesis Submitted to the College of Graduate Studies and Research in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts Department of History University of Saskatchewan Carla Jeanine Fehr © Carla Jeanine Fehr, September 2009. All rights reserved. i PERMISSION TO USE In presenting this thesis in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a Master’s of Arts Degree from the University of Saskatchewan, I agree that the Libraries of this University may make it freely available for inspection. I further agree that permission for copying of this thesis in any manner, in whole or in part, for scholarly purposes may be granted by the professor or professors who supervised my thesis work or, in their absence, by the Head of the Department of History. It is understood that any copying or publication or use of this thesis or parts thereof for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission. It is also understood that due recognition shall be given to me and to the University of Saskatchewan in any scholarly use which may be made of any material in my thesis. Requests for permission to copy or to make other use of material in this thesis in whole or in part should be addressed to: Head of the Department of History University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N 5A5 Canada i ABSTRACT For over 160 years, The Economist newspaper has been one of the most influential, sophisticated, and effective proponents of capitalism. It has consistently championed and conveyed a form of ‘humanitarian political economy’ to its weekly, global audience of professionals and business and government leaders. -
April 07Cal.Pmd
April ’07 EXHIBITS In the Main Gallery 4 WEDNESDAY 11 WEDNESDAY 17 TUESDAY 24 TUESDAY JUDITH HUTTNER: Inner Sanctum, water- A BIRTHDAY TRIBUTE TO BETTE DAVIS: A BIRTHDAY TRIBUTE TO BETTE COOKING WITH GRANNY OR GRAMPY: SHAKESPEARE, PART I: Aspects of Love. colors, through April 26. Sponsored by the William Wyler’s Jezebel (1938-103 min.). A DAVIS: What Ever Happened to Baby Jane Register beginning April 17 for a workshop This literary dash through several of the Art Advisory Council. Southern belle (Bette, winning her second (1962-133 min.). Aging, demented child on Saturday, May 12 at 11 a.m. You don’t Bard’s plays will explore the many splen- In the Photography Gallery Oscar) goes too far to make her fiancé star Baby Jane Hudson (Davis) torments have to be a grandparent to attend this fun, dors, as well as the many frustrations, in- (Henry Fonda) jealous. Clements Ripley, her sister Blanche (Joan Crawford), a hands-on “cooking” workshop with the spe- herent in male/female relationships. Join MARK BERGHASH: I’s Closed I’s Open: Abem Finkel and John Huston scripted, from former movie actress crippled in an auto ac- cial child or children in your life. Chef Frank Shakespeare scholar John Broza, retired The Inner Self, through April 30. Look for the play by Owen Davis, Sr. Max Steiner cident. Lukas Heller scripted this suspense Miale will show how to make classic no-bake Schreiber English Department Chairman, a slide talk with Mark Berghash on Mon- composed the score. 12 noon. classic, from Henry Farrell’s novel, for pro- snacks such as Rice Krispie Treats, s’mores for an enthusiastic and authoritative explo- day, April 16 at 7:30 p.m. -
222 1 Remembering the Famine
NOTES 1 Remembering the Famine 1. Speech by the Minister of State, Avril Doyle TD, Famine Commemoration Programme, 27 June 1995. 2. The text of a message from the British Prime Minister, Mr Tony Blair, delivered by Britain’s Ambassador to the Republic of Ireland, Veronica Sutherland, on Saturday 31 May 1997 at the Great Irish Famine Event, in Cork (British Information Services, 212). 3. Irish News, 4 February 1997. 4. The designation of the event is contested; some nationalists find the use of the word ‘famine’ offensive and inappropriate given the large amounts of food exported from Ireland. For more on the debate, see Kinealy, A Death-Dealing Famine: The Great Hunger in Ireland (Pluto Press, 1997), Chapter 1. 5. The Irish Times, 3 June 1995. 6. The most influential work which laid the ground for much subsequent revisionist writing was R. D. Crotty, Irish Agricultural Production (Cork University Press, 1996). 7. The most polished and widely read exposition of the revisionist interpretation was provided in Roy Foster, Modern Ireland, 1600–1972 (London, 1988). 8. Roy Foster, ‘We are all Revisionists Now’, in Irish Review (Cork, 1986), pp. 1–6. 9. Professor Seamus Metress, The Irish People, 10 January 1996. Similar arguments have also been expressed by Professor Brendan Bradshaw of Cambridge Univer- sity, a consistent – but isolated – opponent of revisionist interpretation. See, for example, Irish Historical Studies, xxvi: 104 (November 1989), pp. 329–51. 10. Christine Kinealy, ‘Beyond Revisionism’, in History Ireland: Reassessing the Irish Famine (Winter 1995). 11. For more on this episode, see Cormac Ó Gráda, ‘Making History in Ireland in the 1940s and 1950s: The Saga of the Great Famine’, in The Irish Review (1992), pp. -
Historiographical Approaches to Past Archaeological Research
Historiographical Approaches to Past Archaeological Research Gisela Eberhardt Fabian Link (eds.) BERLIN STUDIES OF THE ANCIENT WORLD has become increasingly diverse in recent years due to developments in the historiography of the sciences and the human- ities. A move away from hagiography and presentations of scientifi c processes as an inevitable progression has been requested in this context. Historians of archae- olo gy have begun to utilize approved and new histo- rio graphical concepts to trace how archaeological knowledge has been acquired as well as to refl ect on the historical conditions and contexts in which knowledge has been generated. This volume seeks to contribute to this trend. By linking theories and models with case studies from the nineteenth and twentieth century, the authors illuminate implications of communication on archaeological knowledge and scrutinize routines of early archaeological practices. The usefulness of di erent approaches such as narratological concepts or the concepts of habitus is thus considered. berlin studies of 32 the ancient world berlin studies of the ancient world · 32 edited by topoi excellence cluster Historiographical Approaches to Past Archaeological Research edited by Gisela Eberhardt Fabian Link Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliographie; detailed bibliographic data are available in the Internet at http://dnb.d-nb.de. © 2015 Edition Topoi / Exzellenzcluster Topoi der Freien Universität Berlin und der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin Typographic concept and cover design: Stephan Fiedler Printed and distributed by PRO BUSINESS digital printing Deutschland GmbH, Berlin ISBN 978-3-9816384-1-7 URN urn:nbn:de:kobv:11-100233492 First published 2015 The text of this publication is licensed under Creative Commons BY-NC 3.0 DE. -
The Transport System of Medieval England and Wales
THE TRANSPORT SYSTEM OF MEDIEVAL ENGLAND AND WALES - A GEOGRAPHICAL SYNTHESIS by James Frederick Edwards M.Sc., Dip.Eng.,C.Eng.,M.I.Mech.E., LRCATS A Thesis presented for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Salford Department of Geography 1987 1. CONTENTS Page, List of Tables iv List of Figures A Note on References Acknowledgements ix Abstract xi PART ONE INTRODUCTION 1 Chapter One: Setting Out 2 Chapter Two: Previous Research 11 PART TWO THE MEDIEVAL ROAD NETWORK 28 Introduction 29 Chapter Three: Cartographic Evidence 31 Chapter Four: The Evidence of Royal Itineraries 47 Chapter Five: Premonstratensian Itineraries from 62 Titchfield Abbey Chapter Six: The Significance of the Titchfield 74 Abbey Itineraries Chapter Seven: Some Further Evidence 89 Chapter Eight: The Basic Medieval Road Network 99 Conclusions 11? Page PART THREE THr NAVIGABLE MEDIEVAL WATERWAYS 115 Introduction 116 Chapter Hine: The Rivers of Horth-Fastern England 122 Chapter Ten: The Rivers of Yorkshire 142 Chapter Eleven: The Trent and the other Rivers of 180 Central Eastern England Chapter Twelve: The Rivers of the Fens 212 Chapter Thirteen: The Rivers of the Coast of East Anglia 238 Chapter Fourteen: The River Thames and Its Tributaries 265 Chapter Fifteen: The Rivers of the South Coast of England 298 Chapter Sixteen: The Rivers of South-Western England 315 Chapter Seventeen: The River Severn and Its Tributaries 330 Chapter Eighteen: The Rivers of Wales 348 Chapter Nineteen: The Rivers of North-Western England 362 Chapter Twenty: The Navigable Rivers of -
PORT MASTERPLANNING Planning for the Future Port of Ipswich (Source: ABP)
PORT MASTERPLANNING Planning for the Future Port of Ipswich (Source: ABP) This White Paper is part of Port Futures, a thought leadership platform for British Ports Association (BPA) members and the wider industry. The programme addresses key issues for ports, including technology, infrastructure and skills, as well as opportunities for and challenges to British ports that these issues present. ABPmer has extensive experience helping develop port masterplans for Associated British Ports’ facilities across the UK, many akin to the diverse range of ports within the BPA’s membership and throughout the UK. What is port masterplanning? At its core, a port masterplan will nearly always include a map, setting out the physical extent Port masterplanning deals directly with two of of plans for change. The map should result the most challenging issues facing the ports from a detailed process of strategic thinking industry: that delivers the best possible contribution to commercial growth, the local economy, and the 1. Understanding the nature of the very rapid local environment whilst working with a commercial, environmental, technical and practical understanding of the risks and social changes that are going to hit constraints facing the port. At the same time, it economies over the coming decades. should also deliver a set of investments over the short, medium and long term. 2. Responding appropriately to such changes. For the ports industry, these present big By their nature, ports are at the challenges and exciting opportunities. interface of land and sea, making Successful ports will be those which make the them unique places to masterplan. most coherent infrastructure and property _________________________________________________________________ investment. -
The Contradictions of Techno-Nationalism and Techno-Globalism: a Historical Perspective
New Global Studies Volume 1, Issue 1 2007 Article 1 The Contradictions of Techno-Nationalism and Techno-Globalism: A Historical Perspective David E.H. Edgerton, Hans Rausing Professor of Science and Technology, Imperial College, London Recommended Citation: Edgerton, David E.H. (2007) "The Contradictions of Techno-Nationalism and Techno- Globalism: A Historical Perspective," New Global Studies: Vol. 1: Iss. 1, Article 1. DOI: 10.2202/1940-0004.1013 ©2007 New Global Studies. All rights reserved. The Contradictions of Techno-Nationalism and Techno-Globalism: A Historical Perspective David E.H. Edgerton Abstract Techno-nationalism and techno-globalism are descriptive and prescriptive categories for understanding the impact of technology on society and vice versa. They reflect the underlying assumptions made by analysts of the place of technology in the world, and denote ideologies, rather than technological policies or realities. They also help us to realize that standard accounts of the nation and globalization are not as securely based as they appear. Indeed, nations and states are important in ways techno-nationalism does not capture, and the international and global dimension is crucial in ways which that techno-globalism overlooks. Yet an analysis of both terms yields building blocks to a more sophisticated appreciation of the linkages between the nation, technological innovation and globalization. KEYWORDS: techno-globalism, techno-nationalism, technology Author Notes: David E.H. Edgerton is the Hans Rausing Professor of History of Science at the Technology Imperial College, London. Edgerton: Contradictions of Techno-Nationalism and Techno-Globalism In this article I distinguish two approaches, which I label techno- nationalism and techno-globalism, to the study of technology and society at macro-level. -
A DEFENCE of the CLICHÉ1 Samuel Godwin
JOURNAL OF ENGLISH STUDIES - VOLUME 5 (2005-2006), 139-153 A DEFENCE OF THE CLICHÉ1 ADOLPHE HABERER Université Lumière-Lyon 2 ABSTRACT. A sure thing is that clichés have a bad reputation. Trying to define the cliché as a linguistic or stylistic category, however, leads to all sorts of difficulties, as we seem to be dealing with “matters as imprecise as the shape and size of a cloud or the beginning and end of a wave”. Following the example of Louis MacNeice who once wrote a “Homage to Clichés”, in this paper I will take the defence of the cliché and show that in the terms of a (Lacanian) problematics of the subject’s enunciation it has its own function and significance. “ce cœur parlant que nous appelons l’inconscient” 2 Jacques Lacan (in Kaufman 1993: 395) Samuel Godwin (1948), the Hollywood cinema magnate, is reported to have once said to his team of script-writers: “Let’s have some new clichés!”. This raises the question of whether one can “make it new” when dealing in clichés, or be at all original when dealing with clichés – as I will be doing here –, bearing in mind everything that has been said or written on the subject. Perhaps, the only proper way to address the cliché is, as we shall see presently, to follow the example of Louis MacNeice, who composed a “Homage to clichés”, and write up something that would be both an illustration and a defence of the cliché, a discourse from which anything new or original would be eliminated, leaving only what falls into the categories of the banal, the commonplace, the ready-made formula, the 1. -
CABARET SYNOPSIS the Scene Is a Sleazy Nightclub in Berlin As The
CABARET SYNOPSIS The scene is a sleazy nightclub in Berlin as the 1920s are drawing to a close. Cliff Bradshaw, a young American writer, and Ernst Ludwig, a German, strike up a friendship on a train. Ernst gives Cliff an address in Berlin where he will find a room. Cliff takes this advice and Fräulein Schneider, a vivacious 60 year old, lets him have a room very cheaply. Cliff, at the Kit Kat Club, meets an English girl, Sally Bowles, who is working there as a singer and hostess. Next day, as Cliff is giving Ernst an English lesson, Sally arrives with all her luggage and moves in. Ernst comes to ask Cliff to collect something for him from Paris; he will pay well for the service. Cliff knows that this will involve smuggling currency, but agrees to go. Ernst's fee will be useful now that Cliff and Sally are to be married. Fraulein Schneider and her admirer, a Jewish greengrocer named Herr Schultz, also decide to become engaged and a celebration party is held in Herr Schultz shop. In the middle of the festivities Ernst arrives wearing a Nazi armband. Cliff realizes that his Paris errand was on behalf of the Nazi party and refuses Ernst's payment, but Sally accepts it. At Cliff's flat Sally gets ready to go back to work at the Kit Kat Klub. Cliff determines that they will leave for America but that evening he calls at the Klub and finds Sally there. He is furious, and when Ernst approaches him to perform another errand Cliff knocks him down. -
IPSWICH Road, Rail and Sea Connectivity to LET Close Proximity to Ipswich City Warehousing / Open Storage Land / Centre, the A14 and A12 Design & Build Opportunities
IPSWICH Road, rail and sea connectivity TO LET Close proximity to Ipswich city Warehousing / Open Storage Land / centre, the A14 and A12 Design & Build Opportunities Ipswich, IP2 8NB Range of opportunities available Available Property Delivering Property Solutions Ipswich, Available Property Boston A16 A148 Opportunity A52 A17 A1065 A151 A148 The Port provides multimodal facilities, including 1,800m of berths and Spalding A140 A17 King's Lynn A1175 Sat Nav: IP2 8NB a direct rail connection. ABP Ports A47 Norwich A1101 A10 Dereham A47 A47 Airport Swaffham Norwich ABP has invested significantly in the port over the past few years, modernising Wisbech A47 Downham Great Yarmouth Market A15 A47 infrastructure to supply customers with specialist storage solutions and handling A1122 A146 A12 A134 equipment. Existing occupiers on the Port include Tarmac, Brett Aggregates, March A11 A1117 A141 Lowestoft Cofco International, and Clarkson Port Services. A1065 A140 A146 A143 A10 Thetford A142 A1066 A1(M) Ely A11 A142 Mildenhall A143 M11 A12 Location Port Services A10 St Ives A140 Bury A14 A14 St Edmunds The Port of Ipswich is strategically situated at the head The Port handles 2.0 million tonnes of goods annuallyA1 J14 67m Newmarket A14 St Neots A428 of the River Orwell, 12 miles from the open sea and and has expertise in the handling of steel, forest A134 Cambridge Stowmarket within a short sailing time from the North Sea shipping products and bulk cargoes. A11 A14 lanes. The port also has an active rail line on the West A12 A10 The docks can accept vessels of varying sizes: M11 Ipswich Bank Terminal. -
Films from the THIRTIES: PART II 1935-39
t% The Museum of Modern Art 1] West 53 Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 Tel. 245-3200 Cable: Modernart No. 83 FOR RELEASE: Friday, August 25, I968 Films from THE THIRTIES: PART II 1935-39 The Museum of Modern Art, will present a retrospective of films from the thirties beginning August 23, and running through October 6. The Thirties, according to Willard Van Dyke, Director of the Department of Film, will consist of 39 pictures, representing some of the richest creative talent in American cinema at a time that has been called "the dear, dead days not beyond recall." Two years ago the Museum presented The Thirties, U.S.A., Part I, covering the first half of the decade. The films being shown now as Part II were made from 1935 ^^ 193 '• Among the pictures to be shown are: Frank Capra's "Lost Horizon"; Paul Muni in "The Life of Emile Zola," the Story of a Northern Jew's lynching in the South; the great thriller "Night Must Fall," an adaptation of the Emlyn Williams play starring Robert Montgomery; and "The Good Earth," a spectacle film in black and white, from Pearl Buck's popular novel, for which Luise Rainer won her second Academy Award, with Paul Muni in the starring role. The latter part of the thirties was characterized by further achievements in the musical film, largely due to the talents of Fred Astaire, who with Ginger Rogers starred in "Top Hat," and "Shall We Dance," both of which are in the retrospective. The most important contributions to the annals of films made in the thirties was the series of "snowball" comedies Hollywood turned out at a time of grim, economic hardships. -
Radar Fails in Bermuda, Flight Slated Tomorrow
i- «A6B BKim m i MONDAY, MAY 18, 1968 A re n g e DaUj Net Ptms Run ............ .... |i ■' jiancIiPBtpr Ewfaittg For ttia Week Ended The Weather AprU 20, IMS Foreenet of I). R Waothet BmreM The Holy Family Mothers Circle Th* m iancheater Registered will meet Wednesday a t 8 p.m. at Nuine'a Association will meet to Blue Lodge Night Fair and mild tonight. Low 41 About Town the home of Mrs. Ekiward O'Brien, morrow at 7:30 p.m. in Manches 13,974 268 Autumn St. Mrs. J. F. Squires ter Memorial H o ^ ta l board roonu Set by Omar Qub Member of the Audit to 60. Wednesdag partly eiooRy Tha executiva board o t St. will be co-hostess. Future chsmges In the organiza . Ihirenu ot OreidaUoa and ralM. High liear 10. Bridget's parteh will meat tonight tion will be discussed, and final Manchester-— A City of FiUage Charm at 7:30 In Parish Hall. St. Margarets Circle. Daughters plans made for an annual dinner. Friday night will be Blue Iiodge of Isabella, will meet tomorrow at Night when Omar Shrine Club The Women's Fellowship of the 7:46 , p.m. at the K of C Home. The Past Matrons of Temple meets at the Country Club^ VOL. LXXXU, NO. 191 ■ I Presbyterian Church will not meet (SIXl'EEN PACES) MANCHESTER, CONN., TUESDAY, MAY 14,1963 (daeatfied Adverttslng on Pago 14) PRICE SEVEN CENTS Members are reminded to oring Chapter, Order of Eastern Star AH members of the Masonic tonight. playing cards.