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Search results 2171 - 2180 of 2278 matching essays
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2171: Geoffery Chaucer
... in some way. Works Cited Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Canterbury Tales. Trans. Nevill Coghill. Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1960. Edden, Valerie. "Sacred and Secular in the Clerk's Tale." The Chaucer Review 26.4 (1992): 369-376. Frost, Ed. The Age of Chaucer. New York: Prentice-Hall, 1950. Malcolmson, Anne. A Taste of Chaucer. New York: Harcourt, 1964. Morrison, Theodore. The Portable Chaucer. Colonial Printing: 1963 Robinson, F.N.. “The Works of Geoffery ...
2172: Mao Zedong
... of the Red Guards. US News & World Report. 20. May. 1996. Online. Galileo. Internet. 15. Jan. 1997. Teiwes, Fredrick C. Seeking the historical Mao. China Quarterly. Mar. 1996. Online. Galileo. Internet. 15. Jan. 1997. McHenry, Robert. "Mao Zedong." The New Encyclopedia Brittanica. The University of Chicago. 1992. Vol. 23. 468-72. Pool, Teresa. Mao’s frenzy of mass violence. World Press Review. Aug. 1996. Online. Galileo. Internet. 15. Jan. 1997. Schram ...
2173: Hemingway’s Greatest Hits
... in A Farewell to Arms.” Journal of the History of Sexuality. Vol. 4.1 (1993): 76-78. Justus, James H. “Hemingway and Faulkner: Vision and Repudiation.” Kenyon Review. Vol. 7.4 (1985): 1-14. Martin, Robert A. “Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms: The World Beyond Oak Park and Idealism.” Hemingway: Up in Michigan Perspective. Eds. Frderic J. Svoboda, Joseph J. Waldmeir. East Lansing: Michigan State UP, 1995. 289. McNeely, Trevor ...
2174: Adolf Hitler: Ruthless Leader of Germany
... in his bunker by shooting himself in the mouth. His body was burned but the ashes have never been discovered. On May 7th, 1945 Germany surrendered and World War II was over. Works Cited Herzstein, Robert. Adolf Hitler and the German Trauma. New York: Putnam, 1974. The War That Hitler Won: The Most Infamous Propaganda Campaign in History. New York: Putnam, 1978. Laurie, Arthur P. The Case for Germany. Berlin: International ...
2175: Ulysses S. Grant
... and marked the successful completion of Grant's Western Campaigns. (Scaturro 2) Grant's first campaign in the East was as commander of the Army of the Potomac in the Wilderness Campaign where he faced Robert E. Lee. There were severe losses on both sides and the entire encounter was a tactical stalemate. However, Lee was unable to stop Grant's progress southward. (Porter 109) Operations at Spotsylvania, North Anna River ...
2176: Juliette Low: Founder of the Girl Scouts
... City where she had her “coming out ceremony” which meant that she was no longer called a girl, but a lady. Juliette Low founded an organization in 1912 and named it Girl Scouts. General Sir Robert Baden-Powell, a British military hero inspired her to start the organization. When he started the Boy Scouts, 6,000 girls registered as well. Girl Scouts was originally called Girl Guides. The first two Girl ...
2177: Martin Luther
... Life of Martin Luther. New York: Mentor, 1950. Dillenberger, John. Martin Luther: Selection From His Writings. New York: Anchor Books, 1962. Russell, Bertrand. A History of Western Philosophy. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1945. Schultz, Robert C. and Helmut T. Lehmann. Luther's Works, Volume 46, The Christianity in Society, III. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1967. Tillich, Paul. A History of Christian Thought From Its Judaic and Hellenistic Origins to Existentialism. New ...
2178: Hemingway and His Writing Style
... Hemingway Code, he has been built up by his unity with mankind. In the end, he finds the world a “fine place,” that is “worth fighting for”(Curly 795). In his personal confrontation with death, Robert Jordan realizes that there is a larger cause that a man can chose to serve. In this way he differs from the earlier Hemingway hero. The insistence that action and its form be solely placed ...
2179: Caravaggio
... S. “Art as Collective Action”. In Art and Foster and Society: Readings in the Sociology of the Arts. Arnold W. Judith R. Blau Editors. New York: University of New York Press. 1989: 41-54. Benford, Robert, and Scott Hunt. “Dramaturgy and Social Movements: The Social Construction and Communication of Power.” Sociological Inquiry. 1992:62(1):36-55. Blumer, Herbert. Symbolic Interactionism. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Transaction Books, 1969. Friedlander, Walter. Caravaggio Studies ...
2180: The Life of Napoleon Bonaparte
... had burned Moscow to the ground. Alexander knew that the winter was coming , and with no refuge Napoleon and his troops would be in grave danger. Alexander was right, Napoleon's lost many men to frost bite and other such related winter ailments. This single strategy killed almost half a million men. This was the beginning of the end for Napoleon. Out of the 500,000 troops that he brought, only ...


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