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History of the development of the Nursing Service of the Veterans Administration under the direction of Mrs. Mary A. Hickey, 1919-1942.Bytheway, Ruth Evon. January 1972 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.D.)--Teachers College, Columbia University. / Tyepscript; issued also on microfilm. Sponsor: Katherine R. Nelson. Dissertation Committee: Frederick D. Kershner, Jr. Includes bibliographical references.
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Fabricated Histories (or My American Daydreams)Baumann, Judith Marie 01 January 2005 (has links)
The three print series I completed within the past two years appear hardly related at first. However, these individual bodies of work, when examined chronologically, are continually informed by similar ideas. The most obvious of these is the act of piecing elements together to form something that had previously not existed, yet still influences the original source. In all three series, images are taken from an original source and re-contextualized. The idea of cultural or anthropological landscapes is also a theme throughout my work. Each individual series toyed with the idea of an imaginary or theoretical anthropological landscape in direct comparison to its pre-existing model. These humorous and oftentimes puzzling images are influenced by my over-active imagination, fueled by equal parts pop culture, playful cynicism, and desperate idealism.
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"Poem[s] of a new class": women poets and the late Victorian verse novelMacFarlane, Samantha 30 April 2019 (has links)
Because of its importance in the history of the verse novel and the history of women’s writing, Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s Aurora Leigh (1856) has overshadowed the works of other female verse novelists in Victorian studies scholarship. By focusing on non-canonical works by four understudied women poets writing in the late nineteenth century— Augusta Webster’s “Lota” (1867), Violet Fane’s Denzil Place: A Story in Verse (1875), Emily Pfeiffer’s The Rhyme of the Lady of the Rock, and How It Grew (1884), and Emily Hickey’s “Michael Villiers, Idealist” (1891)—this dissertation expands our understanding of both women’s poetry and the verse novel in the Victorian period. It demonstrates that the genre was taken up in multiple ways after Aurora Leigh by women poets who, like EBB, addressed urgent and controversial social and political issues—such as parliamentary enfranchisement, adultery, marital rape, political sovereignty and land use in the Scottish Highlands, as well as socialism and the Irish Question— through inventive and complex generic combinations. This dissertation does not outline a teleological development of genre but, rather, recovers works through case studies that offer microhistories of verse novels at particular historical moments in order to expand the canon and definition of the Victorian verse novel. / Graduate / 2020-04-25
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Le mouvement sentinelliste : réflexions sur un problème de survivanceLalande, Jean-Guy 25 April 2018 (has links)
Québec Université Laval, Bibliothèque 2012
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