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Bad habits : temptation & the divided self : a work of fiction and a critical accompaniment using the lunatic asylum, the theatre and the uncanny motif of the double, in the context of nineteenth-century Fremantle, to explore female sexuality and fractured identity /Morrison, Joanna Burnett. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M.English and Comparative Literature)--Murdoch University, 2006. / Thesis submitted to the Division of Arts. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 126-129).
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The Literary Reception of the Chicago World's Columbian Exposition, 1893 /Klein, Irina. January 2002 (has links) (PDF)
Techn. Univ., Diss.--Braunschweig, 2002.
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Sara's transformation a textual analysis of Frances Hodgson Burnett's Sara Crewe and A Little Princess /Resler, Johanna Elizabeth. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Indiana University, 2007. / Title from screen (viewed on April 22, 2008). Department of English, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI). Advisor(s): Johnathan R. Eller, William F. Touponce, Marianne S. Wokeck. Includes vitae. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 79-82).
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Economic and social development in the lower Burnett, 1840-1960 : A regional study with special reference to Kolan Shire and the Gin Gin DistrictDignan, Don. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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Economic and social development in the lower Burnett, 1840-1960 : A regional study with special reference to Kolan Shire and the Gin Gin DistrictDignan, Don. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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Re-evaluating land use choices to incorporate carbon values: a case study in the South Burnett region of Queensland, AustraliaMaraseni, Tek Narayan January 2007 (has links)
[Abstract]:Land use change from forest to non-forest use is a major source of greenhouse gases in Australia. From 1996, the Queensland Government provided incentives for landholders to plant ex-pasture and cropping areas with hardwood plantations through the Southeast Queensland Regional Forest Agreement program. Spotted gum (Corymbia citriodora subspecies Variegata) was a target hardwood species for Southeast Queensland (SEQ); however, the long-term viability of timber-alone plantations relative to cropping and livestock production, in the medium to low rainfall areas of SEQ, and elsewhere in Australia, is questionable. Carbon credits resulting from additional carbon sequestration may change the relative profitability of these land uses. The aim of this research was to compare spotted gum plantations with peanut-maize cultivation and beef pasture in low rainfall areas, incorporating carbon values.This study covers all variable costs and benefits, and different sources and sinks of three major greenhouse gases: carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide. For the case study of three land use systems (maize-peanut cropping, pasture, and spotted gum plantations in the Kingaroy district of SEQ), production, carbon sequestration and emissions data were supplemented by formal and informal interviews with landholders, agronomists, sawmill staff and government extension personnel. Forest inventory, biomass and soil sampling, and stakeholder interviews were used as sources of primary data. The costs and benefits of all land use systems were converted into monetary terms and discounted to produce net present values. If the comparison of net present values is limited to traditional benefits (i.e. income from crops and hay in cultivation, beef in pasture and timber in plantation), cultivation is the most profitable option, followed by pasture and plantations. Even after the inclusion of beef value, plantations could not compete with other land use systems. After the inclusion of greenhouse gas value, plantations were the most profitable option, followed by pasture and cultivation. However, if the carbon price was reduced from the price assumed in this thesis of $10.5 t-1CO2e to $4.3 t-1CO2e, cultivation would remain the most profitable option. If the currently used nominal (pre-text) discount rate (six percent) increased to seven or eight percent, the optimal rotation of plantation would reduce from 34 to 31 years and 29 years, respectively. At a seven percent discount rate, plantations would be a less profitable than pasture, but marginally more profitable than cultivation. If the discount rate were eight percent, plantations would be less profitable than both pasture and cultivation.These findings have some implications for attempts to increase the plantation estate to three million hectares by 2020, through policy frameworks such as the Australian Government’s ‘Vision 2020’. Therefore, this study has recommended several measures to increase the benefits from plantations.
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Sara's transformation: a textual analysis of Frances Hodgson Burnett's Sara Crewe and A Little PrincessResler, Johanna Elizabeth 15 April 2008 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Frances Hodgson Burnett’s life revolved around her love of story-telling, her
sons, nature, and the idealized notion of childhood. Burnett had an ability to recapture universal aspects of childhood and transform them into realistic stories containing elements of the fantastic or fairy tales. Her ability to tell stories started at a young age
when she and her sisters were given permission to write on old pieces of paper. Burnett’s love for storytelling, reading, and writing was fostered in her parents’ household, in which a young Burnett was given free reign to explore her parents’ book collection and also left unhindered to imagine and act out stories by herself and with her sisters and close friends. Later her love for telling tales became a means of providing for her family—beginning with short story submissions to magazines. Although Burnett did not necessarily start out writing for children her career ended up along that path after the success in 1886 of her first children’s book, Little Lord Fauntleroy. After this success, she was a recognizable author on both sides of the Atlantic. Sara Crewe; or, What Happened at Miss Minchin’s, the 1887–88 serial publication in St. Nicholas magazine and the 1888 short story publication both were titled the same, and the subsequent reworkings of Sara’s world in the forms of two plays, A little un-fairy princess (England, 1902), and A Little Princess; Being the Whole Story of Sara Crewe, Now Told for the First Time (United States, 1903), and the 1905 full-length novel which retained the American 1903 play’s title, outlines the creative process that Burnett undertook while exploring the world of Sara Crewe. By examining the above forms, readers and scholars gain an insight into not only the differences between the forms, but also a view of how the author approached adapting an already published work, and the influence of editors on an authors work. The examination of the development of Sara’s timeline will bring light onto Burnett’s growth as a writer and specifically her transition into her role as a children’s literature author.
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Gilded Age Travelers: Transatlantic Marriages and the Anglophone Divide in Burnett's The ShuttlePeterson, Rebecca L. 01 July 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Frances Hodgson Burnett's 1907 novel, The Shuttle, is an important contribution to turn-of-the-century transatlantic literature because it offers a unifying perspective on Anglo-American relations. Rather than a conventional emphasis on the problematic tensions between the U.S. and Britain, Burnett tells a second story of complementary national traits that highlights the dynamic aspect of transatlantic relations and affords each nation a share of their Anglophone heritage. Burnett employs transatlantic travel to advance her notion of a common heritage. As a tool for understanding the narrative logic of The Shuttle, Michel de Certeau's theory of narrative space explains how Burnett uses movement to write a new transatlantic story; featuring steam-driven travel in the novel marks a new phase in the transatlantic relationship. Burnett's solution of a joint Anglo Atlantic culture expressed through the marriage plot makes The Shuttle a progressive novel within the transatlantic tradition. Whereas many nineteenth-century writers emphasized a contentious Anglo-American legacy, Burnett imagines the grounds for a new history. She joins these transatlantic-oriented authors, but challenges and revises the historical narrative to reflect a more complementary relationship that may develop into a hybrid culture of its own.
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An Analytical Study of Children in the Novels of I. Compton-BurnettKrieger, Vera P. January 1964 (has links)
No description available.
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El hombre de la fotoMartínez, María José, Ramírez, Gonzalo January 2006 (has links)
Tesis para optar al título de Periodista / Con una mirada atónita fija sus ojos en la cámara que se empina dejando de lado el fusil militar. Tenía 23 años y era dirigente sindical de un laboratorio químico. Su imagen ha circulado por el mundo como símbolo de la represión de la dictadura en Chile. “El hombre de la foto” cuenta la historia de Daniel Céspedes, quien fue retratado en 1973 por David Burnett en el Estadio Nacional.
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