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schilderkunst --- Musée des Beaux-Arts (Pau) --- museumcollecties
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French literature --- Barthes, Roland --- Barthes, Roland, --- Congrès --- --1990 --- --Pau --- --Barthes, Roland, --- Congresses --- Barthes, Roland, - 1915-1980 - Congresses --- Barthes, Roland, 1915-1980 --- Pau --- Barthes, Roland, - 1915-1980
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1810-1830 was a crucial period in the development of New South Wales, when the legal foundations of a free-settler and emancipist society were laid. This book explores the relationship of a colonial people with English law and looks at the practice of law among the ordinary population. Paula Jane Byrne traces the boundaries between property, sexuality and violence, drawing from court records, dispositions and proceedings. She asks: what did ordinary people understand by guilt, suspicion, evidence and the term 'offence'? The book reconstructs the legal process with great detail and richness and evokes the everyday lives of people in the colony. It focuses on the different valuing of males and females and analyses the complex gender relations of the early colony. This book innovatively ties recent ideas on convict society and Australian colonial women's history to the legal, economic and social history of early New South Wales.
Criminal law --- Criminal justice, Administration of --- Administration of criminal justice --- Justice, Administration of --- Crime --- Criminals --- Crimes and misdemeanors --- Law, Criminal --- Penal codes --- Penal law --- Pleas of the crown --- Public law --- Criminal procedure --- History --- Law and legislation --- Legal status, laws, etc. --- New South Wales --- NSW --- NPV --- N.S.W. --- Nouvelle-Galles du Sud --- N.-G. du S. --- Nieu-Suid-Wallis --- Nīwe Sūþwealas --- Yeni Cänubi Uels --- Sin Lâm Wales --- Штат Новы Паўднёвы Уэльс --- Shtat Novy Paŭdni︠o︡vy Uėlʹs --- Новы Паўднёвы Уэльс --- Novy Paŭdni︠o︡vy Uėlʹs --- Нови Южен Уелс --- Novi I︠U︡zhen Uels --- Novi Južni Wales --- Sukembre-Nevez --- Nova Gal·les del Sud --- С̧ĕнĕ Кăнтăр Уэльс --- Śĕnĕ Kăntăr Uėlʹs --- Nový Jižní Wales --- De Cymru Newydd --- Neusüdwales --- Uus-Lõuna-Wales --- Νέα Νότια Ουαλία --- Nea Notia Oyalia --- Nueva Gales del Sur --- Novsudkimrio --- Novsudkimrujo --- NSK --- Hegoaldeko Gales Berria --- Bretyn Yiass Noa --- Nova Gales do Sur --- Sîn Nàm Vî-ngì-sṳ̂-chû --- Ног Хуссар Уэльс --- Nog Khussar Uėlʹs --- Nýja Suður-Wales --- Nuovo Galles del Sud --- ניו סאות' ויילס --- Nyu Saʼut Ṿails --- State of New South Wales --- Nova Cambria Australis --- Jaundienvidvelsa --- Naujasis Pietų Velsas --- Neuvo Galles do Sud --- Új-Dél-Wales --- Нов Јужен Велс --- Nov Južen Vels --- НЈВ --- NJV --- Valesa Atsimo Vaovao --- Shinė Ȯmnȯd Vėlʹs --- Nieuw-Zuid-Wales --- ニューサウスウェールズ州 --- Nyū Sausu Wēruzu-shū --- Nyūsausūēruzushū --- Nyū Sausu Uēruzushū --- ニューサウスウェールズ --- Nyū Sausu Wēruzu --- Nyūsausūēruzu --- Nyū Sausu Uēruzu --- Nyuu Sauth Wiels --- Niiw Sowth Waayls --- Nòva Galas del Sud --- Nòva Galas dau Sud --- Nuòva Galas dau Sud --- Nava Galas deu Sud --- Nowa Południowa Walia --- Nova Gales do Sul --- Noul Wales de Sud --- Nova Valisa dal Sid --- Новый Южный Уэльс --- Novyĭ I︠U︡zhnyĭ Uėlʹs --- San︠g︡a Soghu̇ru̇u̇ U̇ėlʹs --- New Sooth Wales --- Nový Južný Wales --- Нови Јужни Велс --- Novi Južni Vels --- Uusi Etelä-Wales --- Nya Sydwales --- Bagong Timog Gales --- Yeni Güney Galler --- Новий Південний Уельс --- Novyĭ Pivdennyĭ Uelʹs --- Novo Gales del Sud --- Gallera Verociya Newi --- Social conditions. --- History. --- Arts and Humanities
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Dreaming Revolution usefully employs current critical theory to address how the European novel of class revolt was transformed into the American novel of imperial expansion. Bradfield shows that early American romantic fiction - including works by William Godwin, Charles Brockden Brown, James Fenimore Cooper, and Edgar Allan Poe - can and should be considered as part of a genre too often limited to the Nineteenth-century European novel. Beginning with Godwin's Caleb Williams, Bradfield describes the ways in which revolution legitimates itself as a means of establishing Political consensus. For European revolutionaries like Godwin or Rousseau, the tyranny of the king must be replaced by the more indisputable authority of human reason. In other words, democratic revolution makes people free to investigate the same truths and arrive at the same democratic conclusions. In the American novel, however, the Enlightenment's idealized pursuit of abstract truth becomes restructured as a pursuit of abstract space. Instead of revealing knowledge, Americans explore further territories, manifest destiny, limitless regions of the yet-to-be-colonized and the still-to-be-known. In a spirited discussion of works by Brown, Cooper and Poe, Bradfield argues that Americans take the class dynamics of the European psychological novel and apply them to the American landscape, reimagining psychological spaces as geographical ones. Class distinctions become refigured in terms of the common people's pursuit of a meaning vaster than themselves - a meaning which leads them to imagine the always expanding body of colonial America. However, since class conflict is never successfully eliminated or forgotten, the memory of class struggle always reemerges in the narrative like a half-repressed dream of politics. In Dreaming Revolution, Bradfield reveals and interprets these dreams, opening these American novels to a richer and more rewarding reading.
American fiction --- Politics and literature --- Literature and society --- Revolutionary literature, American --- Social conflict in literature. --- Romanticism --- Imperialism in literature. --- Political fiction, American --- Deviant behavior in literature. --- Dissenters in literature. --- Imperialism in literature --- Dissenters in literature --- Deviant behavior in literature --- Social conflict in literature --- English --- Languages & Literatures --- American Literature --- Pseudo-romanticism --- Romanticism in literature --- Aesthetics --- Fiction --- Literary movements --- American literature --- American revolutionary literature --- History and criticism. --- History --- European influences. --- History and criticism --- European influences --- Cooper, James Fenimore, --- Poe, Edgar Allan, --- Brown, Charles Brockden, --- Godwin, William, --- Po, Edgar, --- Boy, Ētkar, --- Poe, E. A. --- Poë, Edgard, --- Pui, ʼAggā ʼAyʻlaṅʻ, --- Pō, Eḍgār Ālen, --- Po, Edhar, --- Poe, Edgar Allen, --- Perry, Edgar A., --- По, Эдгар Аллан, --- По, Эдгар, --- פאו, עדגאר עלען --- פאו, עדגאר עלען, --- פא, אדגאר אלאן --- פא, עדגאר --- פא, עדגאר עלען, --- פו, אדגר --- פו, אדגר אלן --- פו, אדגר אלן, --- アランポオ, --- 愛倫坡, --- Po, Ailun, --- Quarles, --- American, --- Author of the Pioneers, --- Author of The spy, --- Cooper, Fenimore, --- Cooper, J. Fenimore --- Honorary member of the U.S. Naval Lyceum, --- Kuper, Džems Fenimor, --- Kuper, Dzheĭms Fenimor, --- Kuper, Fenimor, --- Morgan, Jane, --- Pioneers, Author of the, --- Spy, Author of the, --- Купер, Джеймс Фенимор, --- קפר, פ., --- קופעער, ג'ימס --- קופער, פ., --- קופר, פ. --- קופר, ג׳אמס פנימור, --- Political and social views. --- Cooper, Fenimore --- Cooper, James Fenimore --- Kuper, Džems Fenimor --- Kuper, Dzheĭms Fenimor --- Kuper, Fenimor --- Morgan, Jane --- Pioneers, Author of the --- Spy, Author of the --- Купер, Джеймс Фенимор --- Pau, Aiḍgar Elan, --- پو، ايڈگر ايلن
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