Academic literature on the topic 'Links between History and Literature'

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Journal articles on the topic "Links between History and Literature"

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ARZUMANYAN, ARMENUHI. "INTERDISCIPLINARY LINKS, LITERATURE AND HISTORY." Main Issues Of Pedagogy And Psychology 12, no. 3 (December 12, 2016): 85–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.24234/miopap.v12i3.81.

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Professional grounding of the teacher, his attainments of modern methods of education and his skills of their usage promotes the index of student`s training as well as helps the student in formation of good outlook and getting positive qualities.Different manners and methods of education give the teacher possibility to fix up his goals. That is why the teacher must be wellinformed of the new methods of education and must put them into practice perfectly.There are interesting links between object-lessons among different methods of education. One of the varieties of interdisciplinary links is literature and history. This way of education contributes to deep study of historical issues, helps to make lesson interesting effective.
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Randall, William L., and A. Elizabeth McKim. "Toward a poetics of aging: The links between literature and life." Narrative Inquiry 14, no. 2 (December 31, 2004): 235–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ni.14.2.02ran.

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Inquiries concerning the nature of ‘biographical aging’ within the emerging field of ‘narrative gerontology’ have pointed to the need for a detailed consideration of the parallels between lived texts and literary ones. This article draws on a number of such parallels in order to outline what might be called apoeticsof aging. The central proposal is organized around 3 key concepts: narrative imagination, narrative identity, and narrative environment. The article concludes by speculating on some of the applications of the proposal in relation to growing old, as opposed to merely getting old. (Aging, Narrative, Gerontology, Poetics, Imagination)
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Grauzľová, Lucia. "Canadian literature as an American literature : CanLit through the lens of hemispheric American literary studies." Brno studies in English, no. 1 (2022): 149–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/bse2022-1-8.

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This paper addresses the noticeably low presence of Canadian literature in hemispheric American literary research. The fact that hemispheric literary studies focuses on a comparison of the United States and Spanish America is partly because of Canada's marginal position in the Americas, its lack of identification with the continent, and Canadian scholars' reluctance to engage in hemispheric studies due to their insecurity concerning cultural identity and the discipline's potential imperialistic impulses. By examining a representative history of Canadian literature and several literary studies for intersections and tangencies between Canadian literature and other literatures of the Americas, this paper will demonstrate that there are natural links between them, which make a transnational comparative approach to Canadian literature both legitimate and desirable.
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Ross, Danielle. "The Promiscuous Life of a Genre for the Dead: The Marthiya as an Instrument of Community Construction in Muslim Russia." Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 64, no. 4 (June 4, 2021): 343–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685209-12341539.

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Abstract This article explores how the Islamic elegiac genre of marthiya can shed new light on the social and cultural history of the Muslims of Russia’s Volga-Ural region in the late imperial period (1870s-1917). The marthiyas enjoyed great popularity across geographical, ethnic, and factional lines as a medium for asserting and affirming social bonds and expressing collective identities. Volga-Ural marthiyas reveal the links between Sufism and Tatar national history-writing, demonstrate the interrelation between Sufi literature and Muslim revolutionary culture, and point to historical figures and groups that were left out of the evolving Tatar national historiography.
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Marićević-Balać, Jelena. "Interdialect links between the tale that killed Emilia Knorr by Milorad Pavić and the poem Međimurska by Nikola Pavić." Kultura, no. 177 (2022): 71–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/kultura2277071m.

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In his book Comparative History of Slavic Literatures, Dmytro Chyzhevsky saw macaronic poetry and also dialectal poetry, language of the Roma, children and different jargons as specific aspects of Baroque defamiliarization. Milorad Pavić, a known researcher of the Serbian Baroque, knew Baroque in its broadest sense, hence this aspect was not foreign to him. References to the book of Chyzhevsky made in the book History of Serbian Literature of the Baroque Era, testify to this. The manner in which Pavić as the writer used the potential of the dialectical poetry, reflects in the story titled The Tale That Killed Emilia Knorr. It ends with verses in kajkavski dialect, from the song Međimurska written by poet Nikola Pavić from Zagreb. This paper has been designed as an attempt to identify the functions of the verses in the context of Pavić's story. In other words, the paper is an attempt to answer the question about what meaningful horizons the verses have opened in the context of history, history of language, history of literature and culture. In The Tale That Killed Emilia Knorr, the quoted verses from the Međimurska song, which also conveys some spirit of our civic poetry or the spirit of Pannonia, suggest a love triangle - between two guys in kolo and Cecilia. Except the love triangle, Cecilia and her two suitors may also represent the literary mirroring of Nikola and Milorad Pavić, as well as the solidification (Cecilia) of their mirroring subject, or conflict subject if we accept the interpretation of the conflict (named as Emilia). The process of quoting verses in the body of a novel or a tale, have opened the interpretation of Pavić's deadly landscape as a double scenery (real and metaphysical). This has set the overtone of the ballad atmosphere to The Tale That Killed Emilia Knorr.
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Ferentzy, Peter, and Nigel Turner. "Gambling and organized crime - A review of the literature." Journal of Gambling Issues, no. 23 (June 1, 2009): 111. http://dx.doi.org/10.4309/jgi.2009.23.6.

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This paper was written to review the literature on the historical relationship between gambling and organized crime (OC) in the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries; examine the current state of affairs; point out gaps in the knowledge; and above all draw attention to this understudied topic. The paper begins with an examination of the different sources of information examined, including law enforcement reports, participant observation studies, psychological and economic studies of the links between gambling and crime, historical studies of gambling and crime, and a number of commission reports. The paper then provides an overview of OC and definitions of OC and gambling. This is followed by a discussion of the history of OC and its historic links to gambling. The paper ends with a discussion of the contemporary setting and directions for future research. Our literature review was written in part to facilitate further research and thereby help rectify a shortcoming in overall efforts to understand and document gambling-related issues.
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Hejmej, Andrzej. "Komparatystyka i (inna) Historia Literatury / Comparative Literature Studies and (an Alternative ) History of Literature." Ruch Literacki 53, no. 4-5 (July 1, 2012): 401–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/v10273-012-0026-y.

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Summary This article examines the relationship between comparative studies and history of literature. While paying special attention to the present-day condition of these two disciplines, the author surveys various approaches, formulated since the early 19th century, which sought to break with the traditional, national model of the history of literature and the ethnocentric model of traditional comparative studies, driven by an impatience with both nationalism and crypto-nationalism. In this context he focuses on the most recent projects of literary history like ‘comparative history of literature’, ‘international history of literature’, ‘transcultural history of literature’, or ‘world literature’ - all of which are oriented towards the international dimension of literary history. The article explores the possible reasons for the late 20th and early 21st- century revival of Goethe’s idea of Weltliteratur (in the critical thought of Pascal Casanova, David Damrosch, and Franco Moretti) and the recent vogue for ‘alternative’ histories of literature produced under the auspices of comparative cultural studies. At the same time it voices some skepticism about the radical reinvention of comparative studies (along the lines of Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak’s Death of a Discipline).
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Dobroruka, Vicente. "Hesiodic reminiscences in Zoroastrian–Hellenistic apocalypses." Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 75, no. 2 (May 15, 2012): 275–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0041977x12000043.

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AbstractThis article fits into the general picture of investigations on meta-historical thinking in Antiquity, as well as possible links between Persian apocalyptic literature and early Christian literature. The paper also explores the long-standing debate on the influence of Zoroastrian thought on Jewish–Christian apocalyptic – or whether it was rather the other way round.
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Rüger, Jan. "OXO: Or, the Challenges of Transnational History." European History Quarterly 40, no. 4 (September 9, 2010): 656–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0265691410376488.

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This article discusses the benefits and challenges of transnational approaches for modern European history. It reconstructs the origins of a particular Anglo-German entanglement: the meat essence OXO, originally a German invention made in South America by a London-based company. And it links this example to the questions prompted by the rise of transnational history. Surveying the recent literature, the article argues that the parallel histories of nation states and the transnational interest in the space between and beyond them need not be mutually exclusive. The microhistory of OXO thus illustrates the weaknesses as much as the strengths of ‘transnationalism’.
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Köpke, Sören. "Interrogating the Links between Climate Change, Food Crises and Social Stability." Earth 3, no. 2 (April 29, 2022): 577–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/earth3020034.

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There is a vivid scientific debate on how climate change affects stability, resilience, and conflict dynamics of human societies. Environmental security and collapse theory are theoretical approaches that claim severe negative impacts of climatic disasters on political stability, allegedly through the vector of food insecurity. Yet there is a disconnect between this work and the rich body of knowledge on food insecurity and society. The literature is fairly unanimous that (a) drought does not necessarily lead to famines, since (b) famines have a political context that is often more important than other factors; in addition, (c) famines and the distribution of suffering reflect social hierarchies within afflicted societies, and (d) even large-scale famines do not necessarily cause collapse of a polity’s functioning, as (e) food systems are highly interconnected and complex. As an illustrative case, the paper offers a longitudinal study of Malawi. By combining environmental history and analysis of Malawi’s idiosyncratic (post-)colonial politics, it discusses the possible connections between droughts, food insecurity, and political crises in the African country. The single-case study represents a puzzle for adherents of the “collapse” theory but highlights the complex political ecology of food crises in vulnerable societies. This has implications for a formulation of climate justice claims beyond catastrophism.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Links between History and Literature"

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Devaux, Peggy. "Écriture féminine and terri-stories, the intricate links between space and women's writing in the works of Nicole Brossard and Daphne Marlatt." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1997. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk3/ftp04/mq24580.pdf.

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Murphy, Amy Tooth. "Reading the lives between the lines : lesbian literature and oral history in post-war Britain." Thesis, University of Glasgow, 2013. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/4243/.

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In existing scholarship of twentieth-century British lesbian history the post-war period has been largely overlooked. Whereas the interwar period and the 1970s and 1980s have garnered much critical interest as crucial loci of lesbian identity formation, the post-war period has been obscured between the two. What work does exist has focused almost exclusively on the creation of lesbian public spaces and lesbian communities. This has been to the exclusion of research into lesbian home and private life, and has also served to obscure experiences of closeted or isolated women. The critical focus on the interwar period in particular has also been facilitated and corroborated by lesbian literary studies, which has used the modernist movement as the backbone for the creation of a lesbian literary canon. This has been to the obscuration of lesbian literature of the post-war period. Furthermore, this academic bias has overlooked the significance of the cultural value of such literature by failing to acknowledge or investigate what lesbians in post-war Britain were actually reading. This thesis positions itself at the intersection of these research gaps. Employing an interdisciplinary approach this project argues for the greater inclusion of post-war literature and post-war lesbian lives in scholarly investigation. Through close textual analysis of a range of post-war lesbian literature and oral history interviews conducted by the author, this thesis presents insights into the minutiae of lesbian life and into the roots of lesbian identity formation within this period. To situate itself within existing historiography this thesis takes as its starting point the lesbian magazine, Arena Three (1964-71), undertaking an analysis of the magazine’s book review column in order to build a picture of the post-war lesbian reader. Following on from this, close textual analyses of lesbian pulp fiction and original oral history transcripts are used to assess representations of domesticity. Specifically the concepts of hetero-domesticity and homo-domesticity are developed and employed to investigate lesbian identities as they existed within both heterosexual and same-sex relationships. Graham Dawson’s oral history theory of ‘composure’ is used to examine how lesbian narrators are successful or unsuccessful in incorporating experiences of hetero-domesticity into wider lesbian narratives. This framework is similarly employed to investigate the ways in which homo-domestic experiences can assist lesbian narrators to achieve composure. Lastly oral history reminiscences of reading in the post-war period are analysed in order to assess the role that literature played, both in lesbian identity formation and in facilitating narrators’ journeys into wider lesbian social worlds.
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Williams, Simon J. "Reading between the lines : Arabic fiction in Israel after 1967." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2014. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:23a6d929-e16b-4f14-b240-c5cdd2d27933.

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Arabic literature in Israel has evaded critical attention, or has been treated as an uncomplicated part of Palestinian national culture, on a quest for unification and an identity that was devastated in 1948. This dissertation complicates that narrative through close readings of short stories by five Arab citizens of Israel—Imil Habibi, Muhammad ‘Ali Taha, Muhammad Naffa‘, Hanna Ibrahim, and Zaki Darwish—between 1967 and 1983. Focusing on the relationship between geography and fiction, I suggest that literary constructions of “place” and “space” by these authors reveal a range of cultural negotiations that break down entrenched dyads: Palestinian yet Israeli; Palestinian on the one hand, Israeli on the other; spared exile, but suffering occupation. Instead, these writers evoke the hybrid and ambivalent experiences produced in the paradoxical spaces of Israeli-Palestinian life. I develop an analytical framework that incorporates geographic and literary theory. I use the work of humanists such as Gaston Bachelard, Yi-Fu Tuan, and Edward Casey to suggest that literature mediates geography in a way that communicates belonging, alienation, or personal and collective meaning. The framework is bolstered with the work of postcolonial theorists such as Homi Bhabha, along with historical and political sources, to capture the contextual resonance of the texts. After laying out these theoretical guidelines, I offer a historical account of Arabic literature in Israel and embark on four analytical chapters. Chapter Two explores Imil Habibi’s portrayals of anxiety around post-1967 Palestinian reunions. Chapter Three focuses on the themes of Muhammad ‘Ali Taha’s Palestinian collective identity in Israel. Chapter Four takes up the theme of “the land” in the works of Muhammad Naffa‘ and Hanna Ibrahim, in the context of 1970s land expropriations. Chapter Five explores a long story by Zaki Darwish and its depiction of the body’s phenomenological relation to the homeland. Rather than portraying counter-narratives that suggest a binary of “Israeli” and “Palestinian” always at odds, these authors portray the spaces and characters in between. They disclose the anxieties of finding a sense of place in the context of a dispersed Palestinian nation, geopolitical uncertainty, social marginalization within the state, and the subtle geographies of a historic homeland that both is—and is not—one’s own.
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Shank, Ashley C. "Composers as Storytellers: The Inextricable Link Between Literature and Music in 19th Century Russia." University of Akron / OhioLINK, 2010. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=akron1290275047.

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Gossage, Ann. "Between the lines : the representation of Canadian women in English-language novels written by women in the 1930s." Thesis, McGill University, 1996. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=24085.

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This thesis examines the role of Canadian women as presented in English language novels of the 1930s written by women authors. Within the context of the Great Depression it focuses on issues that are central to women's daily lives such as work, love, marriage and motherhood. It also isolates recurring themes in the novels and attempts to understand the authors' messages within their social context. Social reform, politics and gender relationships are among the subjects explored.
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Monfared, Hashem. "An investigation into the links between upscaling and history-matching." Thesis, Heriot-Watt University, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/10399/2074.

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Upscaling procedures attempt to account for subgrid heterogeneity in such a way that coarse grid simulations produce flow scenarios similar to those that one would obtain by running simulations directly on fine grid geological models. The conventional single-phase upscaling approach leads to averaging of low and high permeability streaks. As a result, the underlying physics of th~ reservoir is ignored and the permeability variability decreases. Consequently, further adjustment to absolute permeability is required in the history matching stage. The essential issue is whether the ultimate permeability distribution of the history-matched model bears any semblance or relationship to that of the upscaled model. This dissertation investigates the link between upscaling and history matching. First, we introduced the Effective Permeability Ratio concept (EPR) to formulate the errors arising from upscaling. Later, by employing geostatistics and assisted history matching techniques, coarse history matched model was generated by adjusting absolute.permeability fields. The comparison of resulted coarse model with upscaled mo~el proved that the permeability variability, which plays a major role in the flow response of reservoir models, could be preserved using the proposed workflow. Furthermore, the capability of suggested workflow in generating multiple history matched models enabled us to investigate the uncertainty in prediction performance using the Bayesian framework. In the cases studied, the proposed workflow produced a comparable result to the truth case suggesting that, the geological knowledge at the fine scale can be preserved appropriately on the coarse scale and the uncertainty in the field prediction can be quantified.
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Pizziuti, Floriana <1983&gt. "G.M.Trevelyan:A life between Literature and History." Master's Degree Thesis, Università Ca' Foscari Venezia, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10579/2930.

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Lo scopo del presente lavoro è quello di analizzare le fonti storiche e letterarie che hanno sviluppato la sensibilità di G.M.Trevelyan per la conservazione di una natura incontaminata. Tale condizione ha permesso al paesaggio di rappresentare in maniera univoca i valori spirituali della nazione inglese.
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Aracil, Adrien. "Histoire d'une liberté dans la France moderne. Protestants, politique et monarchie (vers 1598 - vers 1629)." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Sorbonne université, 2022. http://www.theses.fr/2022SORUL071.

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Cette thèse interroge l’histoire politique des réformés français au début du XVIIe siècle au prisme de la notion de liberté : liberté comme défense des acquis juridiques conférés par le régime de l’édit de Nantes, mais aussi comme capacité d’action. Loin de considérer les huguenots comme les victimes passives d’une « France toute catholique », elle les pense comme des acteurs politiques. Cette capacité d’agir est analysée en deux temps : nous interrogeons d’abord les caractéristiques qui fondent cette liberté d’action dans le contexte du XVIIe siècle, à travers une étude de la place accordée aux institutions, à la mémoire, à l’union et au langage dans leurs pratiques. Nous étudions ensuite la « mise en pratique » de cette liberté politique, en interrogeant les évolutions du parti huguenot, du rapport aux institutions, à la noblesse, aux stratégies langagières à la suite de la mort d’Henri IV. Enfin, nous consacrons une dernière partie à la « mise à mort » de cette culture politique : la fin du parti huguenot, largement documentée, n’est pas le fruit de dissensions internes, mais d’une volonté politique qui cherche à attaquer cette liberté
This thesis questions the political history of the French Reformers at the beginning of the seventeenth century through the prism of the notion of freedom : freedom as a defense of the legal gains conferred by the Nantes edict regime, but also as a capacity for action. Far from considering the Huguenots as the passive victims of an «all Catholic France», it considers them as political actors. This capacity to act is analysed in two stages: first, we examine the characteristics underlying this freedom of action in the context of the seventeenth century, through a study of the place given to institutions, memory, union and language in Reformed practices. We then study the «implementation» of this political freedom, questioning the evolutions of the Huguenot party, from the relationship to the institutions, to the nobility, to the language strategies following the death of Henri IV. Finally, we dedicate a last part to the «killing» of this political culture: the end of the Huguenot party, widely documented, is not the result of internal dissension, but of a political will that seeks to attack this freedom
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Hicks, Penelope Rose. "The fortunes of King Lear in London between 1681 and 1838 : a chronological account of its adaptors and editors, and of the links between them." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 1998. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.299179.

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Abodunrin, Olufemi Joseph. "The literary links of Africa and the black diaspora : a discourse in cultural and ideological signification." Thesis, University of Stirling, 1992. http://hdl.handle.net/1893/24387.

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The politics of the Middle-Passage and its attendant socio-cultural and historical trauma is the starting point of this study. The dispersal of Africans, or at least people of African origin, to different parts of the world has produced over the past few decades numerous dissertations and theses describing socio-cultural linkages between Africa and the Black diaspora. On the part of creative writers and literary critics of every persuasion, there exists a consensus of creative and critical opinion that seeks to establish that "the history of Africa and the Africans ... is one of iron, blood and tears." (Nkosi, 1981, p.30) The study is in agreement with Omafume Onoge's submission that the cultural imperialist process went beyond mere acts of vandalism to produce a period in the history of Africa and the black diaspora in which "many educated Africans (and their counterparts in the diaspora) required a major act of intellection to ascribe aesthetic value to our traditional arts." (Dnoge, 1984, p.5) The study grapples with the source(s) of this socio-cultural apathy, and how the liberal humanist discourse which replaced the body of the colonialist's mythologies is predicated on what JanMohammed describes as "an ironic anomaly." (JanMohammed, 1985, p.281) My exploration of this ironic anomaly begins from the premise of the myths, legends and traditions that are subsumed, truncated, misread or simply repressed to propound this 'humanist' philosophy. What emerges from this cultural and ideological exploration is a vernacular theory of reading built around the carnivalesque figure of Esu Elegbara (the Yoruba 'trickster' god) whose "functional equivalent in Afro-American profane discourse is the Signifying Monkey." (Gates, 1990, p.287) The study is in two parts. Part One consists of three chapters exploring different aspects of the cultural and ideological discourses between Africa and the black diaspora from historical and theoretical perspectives. Part Two focuses, in four chapters, on the works of five writers from Africa (Nigeria and Ghana), South America (Brazil), the West Indies (St. Lucia) and the United States. These are Ayi Kwei Armah, Wole Soyinka, Jorge Amado, Derek Walcott and Amiri Baraka respectively. The conclusion summarises the major arguments of the thesis.
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Books on the topic "Links between History and Literature"

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Commission, Mississippi Library, and Mississippi Committee for the Humanities., eds. Mississippi mindscape: Historical and literary links between people, places, and traditions. [Jackson, Miss: Mississippi Library Commission, 1990.

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Literary links: Celebrating the literary relationship between Australia and Britain. St. Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin, 1997.

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1974-, Martin Craig, ed. Lived between lines. London: Book works, 1998.

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Reading between the lines. London: Routledge, 1993.

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Reading between the lines. Madison, Wis: University of Wisconsin Press, 1993.

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Reading between the lines. London: Routledge, 1993.

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Russia's dangerous texts: Politics between the lines. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2004.

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Stevie Smith: Between the lines. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005.

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1944-, Parisi Joseph, and Young Stephen 1960-, eds. Between the lines: A history of Poetry in letters. Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, Publisher, 2006.

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Between the lines: Literary transnationalism and African American poetics. New York: Oxford University Press, 2011.

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Book chapters on the topic "Links between History and Literature"

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Quirico, Monica. "The Environmental Movement Between Institutionalization and Conflict." In Palgrave Studies in the History of Social Movements, 137–63. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-27370-4_6.

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AbstractThis chapter aims to explore the development of this movement in Sweden in the 1980s, i.e. in that “middle-earth” between the formative period of a renewed environmental movement (1960s–1970s) and the completion of its institutionalization at global level in the 1990s. Theories of political opportunities structure have overlooked that the relation between the political arena and the complex galaxy of environmental groups was far from being uncomplicated. The chapter focuses precisely on this multifaceted interplay, which is studied through two cases of bottom-up mobilization, one at national level, the anti-nuclear campaign, and the other at local level: the struggle against the Scandinavian Link. How were institutions regarded by these activists? How did they experience the relation between representative and direct democracy, both in principle and in concrete terms (dialogue/confrontation with institutional representatives)? By addressing these issues, this chapter aims to contribute research on social movements with a more nuanced understanding of their oscillation between the institutional and the confrontational level. The sources are, besides secondary literature, bulletins and publications of the groups and associations involved in the two campaigns examined in this chapter as well as media articles.
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Hart, Jonathan. "Between History and Poetry." In Literature, Theory, History, 141–57. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230339583_9.

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Whitelam, Keith W. "Between history and literature." In Revealing the History of Ancient Palestine, edited by Emanuel Pfoh, 78–87. First. | Abingdon, Oxon ; New York : Routledge, 2018. | Series: Copenhagen international seminar | Series: Changing perspectives ; 8: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351260404-5.

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Rodriguez-Pena, Naiara. "The Continuity of Migration Drivers: A Historical Perspective on Spanish Social Transformations." In Migrations in the Mediterranean, 225–49. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-42264-5_14.

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AbstractEfforts to map migration drivers have in part resulted in calls to abandon rigid economic and demographic indicators so as to explore how cultural and political factors facilitate or constrain migration. Although a considerable amount of research has investigated the migration-development nexus, its focus is often shortsighted or primarily on developing countries. Instead, this chapter adopts a social transformation perspective to analyze how processes of change at the political, economic, technological, demographic, and cultural levels have impacted the drivers of Spanish migrations since the early 1880s to the present day. To do so, the chapter draws on a collection of statistical data on Spanish migration and societal indicators, as well as on a comprehensive literature review of the social and migration history of Spain. The chapter argues that the interrelation between three forces explains Spanish migration transitions: (1) state expansion and contraction, (2) economic fluctuations, and (3) uneven urbanization processes. Ultimately, the chapter also demonstrates that the unequal development of central and peripheral areas within the country is a consequence of social transformations, and in turn, links past and present by illustrating how similar factors have triggered migration dynamics for more than a century.
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Evans, Nancy Remage. "New Links Between Pulsation and Stellar History." In Astrophysics and Space Science Proceedings, 95–98. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-29630-7_19.

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Cooper, Jonathan. "10. Alphabet Pies, Animal Quacks, and Ugly Sisters: John Evans and the Growth of Cheap Books for Children." In Cheap Print and Street Literature of the Long Eighteenth Century, 259–320. Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.11647/obp.0347.10.

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The printer and bookseller John Evans was, in the last decade of the eighteenth century, seemingly prolonging the lifespan of the type of publication that had hitherto typified the Aldermary Churchyard press and which it was abandoning in search of ‘respectability’. The place of business Evans established for his work, and which was retained by his family for a further forty-five years, was originally John Marshall’s, and what seems to have been his ‘big break’ came courtesy of Marshall when he fell out of favour with the patrons of the Cheap Repository Tracts. Nevertheless, Evans had a distinct career. Stretching into the 1800s, he was arguably the last printer of the traditional ‘penny history’ in the capital, a text and illustrative tradition that dated back at least to the printers and publishers of the mid-seventeenth century; he was a major link in the production of broadside ballads and slip songs between Marshall and the later printers Pitts and Catnach; and, as this chapter will show, he was a significant and heretofore underappreciated printer of street literature specifically for children.
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Rose, Kenneth D. "History, Literature, and Isolationism." In American Isolationism Between the World Wars, 119–68. New York, NY : Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group, 2021.: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003156956-5.

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Arnds, Peter. "The Wolfman between History, Myth and Biopolitics." In Lycanthropy in German Literature, 11–24. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137541635_2.

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Baird, Caroline. "TABLES: Backgammon and Race Games between the Sexes." In Early Modern Literature in History, 161–202. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-50857-9_5.

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Peck, John, and Martin Coyle. "The Twentieth Century: Between the Wars." In A Brief History of English Literature, 245–63. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-35267-5_14.

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Conference papers on the topic "Links between History and Literature"

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Lorenc, W., S. Balcerowiak, J. Czajkowski, and J. Dobrzański. "The Coherent Concept of the Lever Arm in a Cross-Section." In IABSE Symposium, Wroclaw 2020: Synergy of Culture and Civil Engineering – History and Challenges. Zurich, Switzerland: International Association for Bridge and Structural Engineering (IABSE), 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2749/wroclaw.2020.0684.

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<p>The coherent concept of the lever arm is presented. The new graphical interpretation of the lever arm Z regarding shear flow together with mathematical justifications are provided. The conclusion is, that the lever arm Z is a crucial parameter which connects shear flow and transverse force and it links diagrams of the normal stress and the shear flow for a cross-section and such a representation is not known at literature. There is an analogy between the lever arm regarding the shear flow and the effective width regarding shear-lag effect for normal stress. The background of historical analysis of the issue is presented.</p>
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"PV-126 - BETWEEN MY MOTHER AND COCAINE: FOLIE A DEUX. A CASE REVIEW." In 24 CONGRESO DE LA SOCIEDAD ESPAÑOLA DE PATOLOGÍA DUAL. SEPD, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.17579/abstractbooksepd2022.pv126.

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Introduction: "Folie a deux" is defined as the transference of delusional ideas in individuals with a close and intimate relationship. While the relationship between cocaine use and psychosis is well described in the scientific literature, there are not many studies on how cocaine use affects individuals who share a “folie a deux”. Objective: To identify and compile the different factors that may drive the patient's psychotic episode. Material and methods: Review of the clinical history of a patient admitted to the Salamanca UHB with a diagnosis of substance-induced psychotic disorder. Clinical case: A 41 year old single man, who lives in a farm located in a village with 12,000 inhabitants, was referred with judicial authorisation from a Court of First Instance and Instruction for Psychiatric Assessment. He presented delusional ideation in relation to a neighbour. The Court report included occasional episodes of heteroaggressive behaviour. He also tested positive for cocaine (more than 900 ng/ml) in the hospital admission analysis. Interviewing his mother, who is still living in the same building as said neighbour, there was evidence of an increased delusional ideation in her regard. Results and conclusions: Despite incorporating the delusional ideation into his biography, the patient was able to develop his life away from the original focus. According to the reconstruction of the history, the behavioural alterations usually appeared in the context of consumption. The “folie a deux” develops slowly and is perpetuated chronically by the members who share it. On the other hand, about 60% of drug users have a psychotic episode during their lifetime. The coexistence of these two factors in the context of a psychotic episode opens up several lines of work in intervention and therapeutic orientation.
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Zolett, Daniel, and Alejandro Rafael Garcia Ramirez. "Desenvolvimento de uma Interface de Monitoração Remota para o Sistema Robótico ROBIX, Integrando o Protocolo MQTT e oROS." In Computer on the Beach. Itajaí: Universidade do Vale do Itajaí, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.14210/cotb.v11n1.p405-412.

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The history of the industry has been undergoing many changes,improving production methodologies and setting new goals. Theindustry is currently facing a new challenge called Industry 4.0.This is the result of technological developments in areas such asthe Internet of Things (IoT), Information and Communication Technology(ICT) and Automation Systems. The goal is to define amore dynamic and efficient production line, improving productionin terms of resources and time. However, in the current scenario,there are some difficulties to overcome. One of these difficultiesis the existence of various communication protocols, being manyproprietary and closed, which hinders the interoperability betweenmachines. For this reason, there is a need to standardize communicationprotocols, facilitating the integration of all elements in theproduction line. Given this context, this paper presents the integrationof the MQTT protocol with the ROS tool to control a roboticarm viaWeb. The angles of the robot links movements are informedvia web interface. The interface communicates with the robotic armvia the MQTT protocol. The arm control software was developedusing the ROS tool as well as its simulation environment. The softwareis implemented on the Raspbarry PI 3 development board andthe robot servo motors are driven by the Arduino Mega kit processor.Data exchange between these elements is done through serialcommunication. Tests were designed to assess communication latencyto validate the feasibility of using the MQTT protocol for thisscenario. The tests proved that the latency average of the MQTTprotocol, considering the worst case scenario, was 300 milliseconds,which is within the range of the studies consulted in the literature.
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Hutchings, Jeffrey. "Empirical Links Between Demography, Life History, and Recovery in Fishes." In 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. Jyväskylä: Jyvaskyla University Open Science Centre, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107017.

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Ciurria, Michelle, John Voiklis, Laura Niemi, and Uduak Grace Thomas. "What Does a Benevolent Institution Look Like? A Conversation." In Moral Motives & STEM-Informed Action / Motivos morales y acción basada en STEM. Knology, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.55160/dgnb3259.

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This piece brings four authors, John Voiklis, Laura Niemi, Michelle Ciurria, and Uduak Grace Thomas, into conversation about definitions of trust from different academic disciplines. Voiklis highlights criteria required for trust that draw on literature from multiple sources, including human-robot interactions. Writing from a feminist perspective, Ciurria notes that asymmetrical patriarchal relationships and a contractual approach to trust actually foster distrust between individuals. In turn, that distrust transfers to governments and institutions, including those responsible for science. While hierarchical relationships do not always result in mistrust, for the authors, institutional trust depends at least in part on historical practices and positions. For example, Harriet Washington has written eloquently about the history of abuse and violence towards communities of color perpetuated by scientific institutions, some of which continues to this day. Referencing prior research around trust in zoos and aquariums, Thomas and Voiklis argue that benevolence is the missing link in institutional trust. Meanwhile, Niemi reminds readers not to discount the specificity underlying different issues and the types of institutional actors implicated in each. For example, she questions whether judgments about pharmaceutical companies are made on the same basis as those about zoos.
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Conrad, Brett, Weixing Chen, Reg Eadie, Richard Kania, Greg Van Boven, and Robert Worthingham. "Developing a Predictive Model of Near Neutral pH Stress Corrosion Cracking of Underground Pipelines." In 2012 9th International Pipeline Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/ipc2012-90629.

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Near neutral pH Stress Corrosion Cracking (NNpHSCC) associated with external corrosion of pipelines is an issue facing industry today. Determining areas of NNpHSCC susceptibility is crucial to developing Integrity Management Programs and inspection dig schedules. This research involved collecting pertinent field data (inspection dig reports, failure reports, loading histories) and developing a predictive model to help identify areas and lines most susceptible to NNpHSCC. The predictive model focused on the loading history (in this case, SCADA data) patterns to classify different groups of loading conditions. Hydrogen has been identified and established in previous literature to be a major contributor to NNpHSCC. Different Hydrogen Enhancement Factors (HEF) were applied based on how the mechanisms of hydrogen embrittlement react to the respective loading conditions. The predictive model illustrated a dormancy behaviour, similar to the one seen in field conditions and a mechanically activated growth dependent on both hydrogen and previous loading scenarios. A correlation was shown between a limited field sampling and the predicted values. Further improvements and calibrations can be made with the gathering of more field data and continued experimental validation. Once this validation has been performed, this model has the possibility to illustrate what loading conditions increase a segments susceptibility to NNpHSCC.
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Wahlström, Torbjörn. "Prediction of Fibre Orientation and Stiffness Distributions in Paper – An Engineering Approach." In Advances in Pulp and Paper Research, Oxford 2009, edited by S. J. I’Anson. Fundamental Research Committee (FRC), Manchester, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.15376/frc.2009.2.1039.

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The orientation of the fibres in a paper directly influences many of its properties. The focus of this work was to predict the fibre orientation distribution and tensile stiffness distribution of a paper. The predictions were based on a proposed link between the two distributions and physical parameters measurable on the paper, no fitting parameters. The fibre orientation distribution in paper was approximated by a probability density function. Both curve fitting type of distribution functions earlier used in paper physics and physical based functions derived from Fluid mechanics, Orthotropic analysis and a simple Stress/strain analysis were evaluated. The physical based functions used one measurable physical parameter, the fibre orientation anisotropy. The tensile stiffness distribution was predicted with a distribution function from the literature and functions derived from the Fluid mechanics and Orthotropic analysis approach. The predictions needed two measurable physical parameters, the MD and CD tensile stiffness. Predictions of fibre orientation distribution and tensile stiffness distribution for restrained dried papers were compared with experimental data from restrained dried oriented handsheets with varying fibre orientation anisotropy. General approaches valid for all papers were compared with experimental data from pilot made papers with different drying restraint history. Both the predicted results for fibre orientation distribution and tensile stiffness distribution showed good agreement with experimental data.
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"A Comparison between the Methodology of Recording History of Ancient Historians." In 2018 International Conference on Culture, Literature, Arts & Humanities. Francis Academic Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.25236/icclah.18.035.

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Zhuykova, E. "COMICS AND LITERATURE: THE HISTORY OF FRIENDSHIP." In VIII International Conference “Russian Literature of the 20th-21st Centuries as a Whole Process (Issues of Theoretical and Methodological Research)”. LCC MAKS Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.29003/m3761.rus_lit_20-21/353-358.

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The reputation of comics in Russia was seriously spoiled in the 90s, when they were viewed as a purely entertaining and mass form. But in fact, in the modern world, the graphic novel is becoming a completely serious genre: great artists are creating comics, scripts for them are written by Ph.D's, and they often touch on complex topics. Moreover, comics have a long history of relationship with literature (for example, in the 30s of the 20th century, during the first wave of emigration, Russian literary comics were valued throughout the world). And in the last decade, this line of interaction has only intensified: many graphic adaptations of classic literary works, comic book biographies of writers and poets are appearing, and descriptions of comic books are increasingly appearing in modern literature. The article will be devoted to the history of various forms of interaction between literature and comics.
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Ji, Yu. "Inheriting the Sublimation and Transmutation Analysis of the Relationship between History and Literature." In 2014 International Conference on Social Science (ICSS-14). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icss-14.2014.64.

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Reports on the topic "Links between History and Literature"

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Ismail, Zenobia. Interaction Between Food Prices and Political Instability. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), May 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/k4d.2021.091.

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This report reviews the literature on links between international food prices and political instability (including protests, riots and social unrest). The literature on food prices and protests, riots, unrest, or violent incidents consists mainly of peer-reviewed scholarly articles that utilise econometric modeling. Some early studies examined the links between international food prices and political instability and found conflicting results. Some assessments concluded that there were links between international food prices or food insecurity and the number of violent incidents, while others found that such a link was tenuous. This literature review covers some of the main arguments and findings in the recent literature on food prices and political instability or conflict. The majority of the econometric studies in this review find that there is a link between food price increases and a greater probability of protests, riots or social unrest. However, there are still a few studies that have contradictory results. So, the debate on the effect of food prices on political stability continues. Food subsidies, cash transfers, price controls, and the elimination of trade barriers are some of the policy interventions that may address rising food prices and mitigate the rise of violent collective action. However, the literature questions the effectiveness of such policies in cases where violence or protest action stems from deeper, underlying economic or political grievances.
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Price, Roz. Links Between Energy Prices, Fuel Subsidy Reform and Instability. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), February 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/k4d.2022.023.

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Increasingly, the links between energy insecurity (including energy prices, availability, and fuel subsidy reform) and instability are being studied. These issues often become flashpoints for social mobilisation and protest. Previous research has started to explore different types of fuel-related conflict and its relationship with scarcity, abundance, and energy prices but the research is fragmented. Much of this existing research focuses on a possible link between oil and armed conflict and rebellion, rather than on fuel prices as a source of intra-state instability below the level of armed conflict. It is argued that this research gap is important as these protests often have the potential to escalate into broader political movements, and the pressures to reduce reliance on carbon-heavy fuels through increased taxation or the reduction of subsidies is increasing. This rapid review provides an overview of the evidence on the links between energy prices, subsidy reforms and the risk of instability. It first highlights these links and discusses the literature, and then provides some brief evidence on recommendations and lessons learned on managing the impact of subsidy reform processes. The review was unable to identify any indicators of risk or quantitative metrics for appraising energy-related instability, apart from the unique fuel riots database created by Natalini et al. (2020). This rapid review takes a wide view of “instability” and what that means.
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Evans, Tom, Sarah Olson, James Watson, Kim Gruetzmacher, Mathieu Pruvot, Stacy Jupiter, Stephanie Wang, Tom Clements, and Katie Jung. Links Between Ecological Integrity, Emerging Infectious Diseases Originating from Wildlife, and Other Aspects of Human Health - An Overview of the Literature. Wildlife Conservation Society, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.19121/2020.report.37426.

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Wodicka, N., H. M. Steenkamp, T. Peterson, I. Therriault, J. B. Whalen, V. Tschirhart, C. J. M. Lawley, et al. An overview of Archean and Proterozoic history of the Tehery Lake-Wager Bay area, central Rae Craton, Nunavut. Natural Resources Canada/CMSS/Information Management, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/332501.

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This short contribution describes the Archean and Proterozoic history of the central Rae Craton in the Tehery Lake-Wager Bay area, Nunavut. The study area comprises six lithotectonic domains separated by large-scale structures: the Gordon Domain, Lunan Domain, Daly Bay complex, Douglas Harbour Domain, Kummel Lake Domain, and Ukkusiksalik Domain. These domains can be differentiated on the basis of metamorphic assemblages, Nd model and U-Pb ages, absence or presence of specific lithologies, and/or geophysical characteristics. Links between these domains and neighbouring areas of the central Rae Craton, the timing of assembly of domains and terranes, and the effects of the Snowbird and Trans-Hudson orogenies are briefly described.
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Bolton, Laura. Aquaculture and Mangroves. Institute of Development Studies, April 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/k4d.2021.056.

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This report aimed to focus on the impacts of coastal aquaculture on poverty but it was often not distinguished from inland aquaculture in the literature and took extra time to ascertain. Aquaculture reporting was also combined with capture fisheries in some reviews. The initial search aimed to draw on evidence from the past 10 years but key papers emerged that were older and the reviews drew from earlier research. There seemed to be a lack of recent research on the links between poverty and aquaculture. The tension between environmental protection and economic development is present in the literature with different views being presented depending on either the agenda in grey literature or the focus of the publisher. There were data on mangrove loss that did not describe the cause of the loss, data that described human-driven mangrove loss but did not distinguish between different human influences, and a small amount of data that linked aquaculture and mangrove loss directly. Unfortunately, it was not possible to find recent data on aquaculture and mangrove loss to assess the latest trends.
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Crouch, Luis, and Deborah Spindelman. Purpose-Driven Education System Transformations: History Lessons from Korea and Japan. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE), March 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsg-rise-wp_2023/139.

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This paper is an essay in comparative educational history and its possible relevance to educational development today. It addresses the question of whether Japan and Korea’s history in using educational development to further national development can be useful as (partial) models for dealing with the educational challenges of today’s lower- and lower-middle income countries. The hypothesis of the paper is that there is much to learn from these countries, but that the lessons one could learn are not at all obvious or superficial, and are only partially about what was done (specific education policies) and are more importantly about how it was done (the high purpose and thoroughness of policy engagement). The paper first characterizes educational development, especially in terms of the intense emphasis on equality of high achievement in Korea and Japan, in quantitative terms, to demonstrate that these countries possess certain admirable characteristics. Caveats regarding learner stress and rote learning are dealt with by looking at the relevant statistics. A framework for assessing the quality of policy borrowing processes is built, based on the literature on this subject. The paper then analyzes the historical development of education as a means of resisting Western colonialist probes into Japan and Korea (end of the 19th C), but also Japan itself into Korea (first half of 20th C). How both countries borrowed from the West, but in a contested and very deep manner, and as part of a resistance to being colonized, is documented. The paper also shows that part of the healthy, contested borrowing was the involvement of teacher groups and civil society. The paper concludes by taking into consideration the fraught issue that potentiating the role of education in national development could be seen as tantamount to using education for nationalism. The paper links to the possibility that there may be a more inclusive and rights-oriented use of the concept of the nation to foster human well-being, and that education could play a role in such processes. Some practical suggestions for taking these ideas forward, or at least exploring them in more depth, are made at the very end.
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Mazza, Jacqueline, Andrew Morrison, and Christian Daude. Core Labor Standards and Foreign Direct Investment in Latin America and the Caribbean: Does Lax Enforcement of Labor Standards Attract Investors? Inter-American Development Bank, October 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0008905.

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This paper estimates the impact of the enforcement of core labor standards on FDI in the region and contains the following: 1) Introduction; 2) Survey of the literature on the determinants of FDI: theoretical models, empirical estimation of the determinants of FDI, and the few studies that have examined specifically the links between core labor standards and FDI; 3) Description of data used in this study and explanation of the authors' decision to use sectorally-disaggregated bilateral flows of FDI from the U.S. and Japan as their dependent variable; 4) Details of the methodology used in estimations; 5) Results of the study; 6) Conclusions.
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Montiel, Peter J. Capital Flows: Issues and Policies. Inter-American Development Bank, May 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0011498.

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This paper presents an analytical overview of recent contributions to the literature on the policy implications of capital flows in emerging and developing countries, focusing specifically on capital inflows as well as on the links between inflows and subsequent capital-flow reversals. The objective is to clarify the policy challenges that such inflows pose and to evaluate the policy alternatives available to the recipient countries to cope with those challenges. A large menu of possible policy responses to large capital inflows is considered, and experience with the use of such policies is reviewed. A policy `decision tree`-i. e. , an algorithm for determining how to deploy policies in response to an exogenous inflow episode- is developed, and strategies to achieve resilience to both inflows and outflows in a world where exogenous events may frequently drive capital flows in both directions are discussed.
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Sims, Kate. Education, Girls’ Education and Climate Change. Institute of Development Studies, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/k4d.2021.044.

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This Emerging Issue Report (EIR) explores research and evidence on the relationship between education, girls’ education and climate change. There is scientific consensus that climate change is real, manifested through increasing temperatures, changing rainfall patterns and increasing frequency and severity of extreme weather events, including drought, flooding and cyclones. Climate change, environmental degradation and climate vulnerability are closely linked. Climate change exacerbates environmental and land degradation, especially in areas with drylands and permafrost, river deltas and low-lying coastal areas. There is high confidence that people living in areas affected by environmental degradation are experiencing an increase in the negative effects of climate change. Gender, alongside other drivers of vulnerability and exclusion, is a key determinant of an individual’s vulnerability to the effects of climate change and environmental degradation and influences how climate change is experienced. It is estimated that at least 200 million adolescent girls living in the poorest communities face a heightened risk from the effects of climate change. Evidence and commentary on the role of education, and girls’ education, to address climate change through adaptation, resilience and mitigation is limited, albeit growing. This EIR identifies and summarises the evidence and key commentary around the following themes: links between education, particularly girls’ education, and climate change; how climate and environment matter for achieving gender equality; and why securing girls’ education is an important strategy in addressing climate change. The EIR draws on academic research and literature from low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), as well as policy frameworks and grey literature, media articles and blogs from the climate, education and gender fields.
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Yilmaz, Ihsan, and Raja M. Ali Saleem. Military and Populism: A Global Tour with a Special Emphasis on the Case of Pakistan. European Center for Populism Studies (ECPS), March 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55271/pp0010.

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Although populism has become a focus of research in the last decade, there hasn’t been much academic work on how militaries around the world have reacted/acted to the rise of populist leaders. There is some timeworn research on the relationship of militaries in Latin America with various left-wing populist governments and leaders from the 1930s to 1970s. Given that populism was largely understood in the context of left-wing politics, with the rise of right-wing populism, the literature on the military and populism needs to be advanced by studying the relationship between right-wing populism and the military. This article aims to address this gap by looking at the right-wing populism case study of Pakistan, where the military has actively participated in the rise of a religious populist leader. To situate the case study within the larger literature of the military and populism, the dynamics and history of military associations with populism and populist leaders are revisited in the article’s first part.
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