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1

Stebbings, Chantal. The private trustee in Victorian England. Cambridge, U.K: Cambridge University Press, 2002.

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2

Victoria. Office of the Auditor-General. Management of trust funds in the justice portfolio. Melbourne, Vic: Victorian Government Printer, 2012.

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3

Boniface, Jean-Michel. Les camions de la victoire: Le service automobile pendant la Grande Guerre (1914-1918). Paris: Massin, 1996.

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4

Taxation Institute of Australia. Victorian Division. State Convention. Papers presented at the State Convention of the Victorian Division of the Taxation Institute of Australia, 16th to 18th October, 1987. Sydney: The Institute, 1987.

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5

Canada. Parliament. House of Commons. Bill: An act to amend the operation of the Act of the Legislature of the late Province of Canada, 19 and 20 Victoria, Chapter 141, to all parts of the Dominion of Canada. Ottawa: I.B. Taylor, 2002.

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6

Tom, Badgett, ed. Ultimate unauthorized Nintendo game strategies: Winning Strategies for 100 Top Games. New York: Bantam Books, 1989.

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7

Stebbings, Chantal, and John H. Baker. Private Trustee in Victorian England. Cambridge University Press, 2005.

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8

Stebbings, Chantal. Private Trustee in Victorian England. Cambridge University Press, 2009.

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9

Stebbings, Chantal. Private Trustee in Victorian England. Cambridge University Press, 2001.

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10

Editors, The Nichols/Chilton. Ford: Crown Victoria/Grand Marquis 1989-94 (Chilton's Total Car Care Repair Manual). Haynes Manuals, Inc., 1999.

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11

Haynes, John Harold. Ford: Crown Victoria/Grand Marquis 1989-93 (Chilton's Total Car Care Repair Manual). Haynes Manuals, Inc., 2006.

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12

Henderson, Andrea. Introduction. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198809982.003.0001.

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Victorian England witnessed a reconception of mathematics as a formal rather than a referential practice—as a means for describing relationships rather than quantities. The value of a mathematical claim lay not in its capacity to describe the world but its internal coherence. Victorian mathematics thus contributed to the development of liberal capitalism by justifying abstraction: liberals proclaimed that formal consistency was the foundation of a rational, equitable order, and marginalist economists insisted that value was not inherent but relational, and made economics a branch of mathematics. Marx, meanwhile, profited from the insights of mathematical formalism even as he resisted its mystification. In its privileging of formal relationships Victorian mathematics redefined all fields around it, even redefining Kantian formalism such that mathematics and art came to share the same virtues: they couldn’t claim to offer truths about the world itself but they insisted that they told a deeper, formal truth.
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13

Freedgood, Elaine. Worlds Enough. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691193304.001.0001.

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Now praised for its realism and formal coherence, the Victorian novel was not always great, or even good, in the eyes of its critics. As this book reveals, it was only in the late 1970s that literary critics constructed a prestigious version of British realism, erasing more than a century of controversy about the value of Victorian fiction. Examining criticism of Victorian novels since the 1850s, this book demonstrates that while they were praised for their ability to bring certain social truths to fictional life, these novels were also criticized for their formal failures and compared unfavorably to their French and German counterparts. The book analyzes the characteristics of realism—denotation, omniscience, paratext, reference, and ontology—and the politics inherent in them, arguing that if critics displaced the nineteenth-century realist novel as the standard by which others are judged, literary history might be richer. It would allow peripheral literatures and the neglected wisdom of their critics to come fully into view. It concludes by questioning the aesthetic racism built into prevailing ideas about the centrality of realism in the novel, and how those ideas have affected debates about world literature. By re-examining the critical reception of the Victorian novel, the book suggests how we can rethink our practices and perceptions about books we think we know.
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Rahe, Paul A. Sparta's Second Attic War. Yale University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300242621.001.0001.

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In a continuation of the multivolume series on ancient Sparta, this book details the second stage in the six-decades-long, epic struggle between Sparta and Athens that first erupted some seventeen years after their joint victory in the Persian Wars. The book explores how and why open warfare between these two erstwhile allies broke out a second time, after they had negotiated an extended truce. It traces the course of the war that then took place, examining the strategy each community pursued and the tactics adopted, before explaining how and why mutual exhaustion forced on these two powers yet another truce doomed to fail. At stake for each of the two peoples caught up in this enduring strategic rivalry, as the book shows, was nothing less than the survival of its political regime and of the peculiar way of life to which that regime gave rise.
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15

Chase, Robert T. We Are Not Slaves. University of North Carolina Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469653570.001.0001.

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In the early twentieth century, the brutality of southern prisons became a national scandal. Prisoners toiled in grueling, violent conditions while housed in crude dormitories on what were effectively slave plantations. This system persisted until the 1940s when, led by Texas, southern states adopted northern prison design reforms. Texas presented the reforms to the public as modern, efficient, and disciplined. Inside prisons, however, the transition to penitentiary cells only made the endemic violence more secretive, intensifying the labor division that privileged some prisoners with the power to accelerate state-orchestrated brutality and the internal sex trade. Reformers' efforts had only made things worse--now it was up to the prisoners to fight for change. Drawing from three decades of legal documents compiled by prisoners, Robert T. Chase narrates the struggle to change prison from within. Prisoners forged an alliance with the NAACP to contest the constitutionality of Texas prisons. Behind bars, a prisoner coalition of Chicano Movement and Black Power organizations publicized their deplorable conditions as “slaves of the state” and initiated a prison-made civil rights revolution and labor protest movement. These insurgents won epochal legal victories that declared conditions in many southern prisons to be cruel and unusual--but their movement was overwhelmed by the increasing militarization of the prison system and empowerment of white supremacist gangs that, together, declared war on prison organizers. Told from the vantage point of the prisoners themselves, this book weaves together untold but devastatingly important truths from the histories of labor, civil rights, and politics in the United States as it narrates the transition from prison plantations of the past to the mass incarceration of today.
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