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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Charles Cameron, un architecte écossais en Russie

Husson, Catherine, January 1989 (has links)
Th. 3e cycle--Etud. angl.--Dijon, 1988.
2

Charles Cameron Kingston : radical liberal and democrat.

Campbell, Craig, January 1970 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (B.A.Hons. 1970) from the Dept. of History, University of Adelaide.
3

Thuyet / by Karl H. Cameron-Jackson.

Cameron-Jackson, Karl Henry January 2003 (has links)
"December 2003" / Errata inside front cover. / Bibliography: leaves 89-96. / 2 v. (vi, 789 leaves) ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Contained in this thesis are the novel Thuyet and an exegetical essay concerning the novel Thuyet. The essay examines issues in the novel, the formation of each character and their historical reality, and plot and structure. The exegetical essay is also concerned with the role of myth, the genre of Thuyet, and the evolution of a 'special breed of heroes, the Heroic Warrior.' / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, School of Humanities, Discipline of English, 2004
4

The public career of Adam Kirk Cameron, 1874-1967 /

Harflett, Deborah Caroline. January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
5

Filles de Femme de Cuivre d'Anne Cameron : mythe, langage et féminisme

Durin, Corinne January 1993 (has links)
The shift in paradigm which gave rise to relativism has brought about a number of reconsiderations of the critical act--reconsiderations which question in a fundamental way the objectivity of the subject, the autonomy of the object of study, and the neutrality of language. Recent advances in the field of translatology participate in this shift in paradigm, insofar as they dismantle the discourse of transparency and restore to translators their primary role in the reception/re-enunciation of the source text. / A study of the production and reception of Anne Cameron's Daughters of Copper Woman (1981) demonstrates the extent to which the translator, in choosing to take on the stakes arising from the source text, becomes responsible for her/his performed act of mediating. / Furthermore, the translator must be prepared to accept the subjectivity of her/his own reading and ideological convictions, and to contest the value of invisibility traditionally attached to the translator' s role. Analysis of the translations of the first ten short stories of Daughters of Copper Woman illustrates how the translator's ideological stance orients her translation choices. In this thesis, the translator's process of textual intervention is examined from two distinct but complementary perspectives--the feminist and the Bermanian.
6

W. Cameron Forbes and the Hoover commissions to Haiti, 1961

Spector, Robert M. January 1961 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University
7

Filles de Femme de Cuivre d'Anne Cameron : mythe, langage et féminisme

Durin, Corinne January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
8

The public career of Adam Kirk Cameron, 1874-1967 /

Harflett, Deborah Caroline. January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
9

Konservatismen under Churchill, Thatcher och Cameron : En idéanalys av valmanifest och partiledarnas biografier / Conservatism under Churchill, Thatcher and Cameron : An idea analysis of election manifestos and political biographies

Lindvall, Marcus January 2016 (has links)
The purpose of this paper is to study how the conservatism have changed in the conservative party in the United Kingdom and what influence the party leader seems to have over the party ideology. To answer this purpose an idea analysis is used and a material consisting of election manifestos from three periods of the party´s history (Churchill, Thatcher and Cameron) but even political biographies of the leaders. The result shows some difference between the manifestos and the leaders, but even some similarities. One difference, but also a similarity over time, is the view of a cooperation in Europe. Churchill’s manifestos are positive to a cooperation between nations in Europe, Thatcher and Cameron there manifestos share the same skeptics against a further European cooperation. One similarity over time is the support for family as one of the central values in the country. About the leaders and the manifestos there are some similarities, but also some difference between them. Example of similarities are Churchill and the manifestos support full employment, Thatcher and the manifestos support aim on inflation. Cameron is personally divvied in his relation to trade unions and so is the manifestos.  One difference between Churchill and the manifestos is that Churchill accepted capital punishment, but the manifestos never take a stand in this issue. Thatcher and the manifestos don’t share the same view on homosexuality rights, Thatcher is negative and the manifestos not even take a stand. Cameron´s view on privatization is unown, but the manifestos are positive.
10

Patterns of kinship and clanship : the Mackintoshes and Clan Chattan, 1291 to 1609

Cathcart, Alison January 2001 (has links)
Highland history of the middle ages continues to be regarded generally as separate from the history of the Lowlands, as well as the political history of Scotland. To a large extent, the perception of two distinct societies within Scotland during this period has been swept aside, but few moves have been made to integrate fully the history of clanship into that of Scotland as a whole. This case study of the Mackintoshes and Clan Chattan seeks to examine clanship from a sociological as well as a historical perspective. Kinship was a fundamental characteristic of clan society, but these relationships were not limited to blood relatives. The creation of Active kinship through ties of customary obligation within a clan reinforced clan solidarity and cohesion, a vital factor for the geographically disparate Clan Chattan confederation. Within the locality, Active kinship was established by the contraction of more formal alliances which had social, political and economic objectives. The creation of these relationships enabled the clan to survive and expand. For central Highland clans like the Mackintoshes and Clan Chattan who lived in close geographic proximity to Lowland society, the extension of fictive kinship facilitated easy assimilation across the perceived divide in Scottish society. The realisation on the part of clan chiefs that cordial relations with the crown would be beneficial to the clan as a whole saw a movement throughout the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries towards closer integration with Lowland society. This examination of clanship places the history of the Highlands into a wider political and social context. While clanship was a unique phenomenon within Scotland, it should not be examined in isolation, but rather as an integral part of Scottish political life.

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