Warner Arundell Clement Y K SoWarner Arundell: The Adventures of a Creole (1838) is a novel by Edward Lanzer Joseph. Published in the last year of Josephs life, the novel claims to be an edited version of the memoirs of Warner Arundell, a Creole lawyer and doctor from Grenada. A common literary trope of the time, this grants a modicum of authority to the author while maintaining his distance from events that may have been drawn from his own experiences. Believed to be the first
Parsi anglophilia
How can English language punctuation discard its domineering and strident overcoat to enable a greater diversity of readers
It provides in-depth analysis and knowledge of Africa’s diversified economies by establishing relationships between industrialization trends
The current questions and challenges surrounding cross-civilizational relations make such a contribution particularly needed and likely to receive a broader attention in the years to come
phenylpropanoids and glycoalkaloids
Three lines of enquiry guide the work: pedagogy and professional development
Saleem is forced to rediscover his sense of self and the hard-won stability of his life
Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago
A substantive introduction that emphasizes the historical setting as well as major interests and ideas of the philosophers accompanies each chapter
including Roscoe Mitchell
While paying tribute to Harry Braverman for launching the research field known as the labor process
To the first English-language edition of this volume