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Industrial economics --- Investment management --- Great Britain --- Capital investments --- Public utilities --- Finance. --- 665.6 --- 336.1 --- -Public utilities --- -658.11 --- Municipal utilities --- Public-service corporations (Public utilities) --- Utilities, Public --- Utility companies --- Municipal franchises --- Capital expenditures --- Capital improvements --- Capital spending --- Fixed asset expenditures --- Plant and equipment investments --- Plant investments --- Investments --- Mineral oil technology. Technology of petroleum and allied products --- Public finance, government finance in general --- Finance --- Kinds and forms of enterprise --- 658.11 Kinds and forms of enterprise --- 336.1 Public finance, government finance in general --- 665.6 Mineral oil technology. Technology of petroleum and allied products --- 658.11 --- Capital investments - Great Britain --- Public utilities - Great Britain - Finance
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"This study explores how Irish writers such as Sean O'Casey, Samuel Beckett, W.B. Yeats, George Bernard Shaw, James Joyce, and Seamus Heaney, resisted English cultural colonization through a combination of reappropriation and critique of Shakespeare's work"--Provided by the publisher.
English literature --- National characteristics, Irish, in literature --- Nationalism and literature --- Nationalism in literature --- Irish authors --- History and criticism --- History --- Shakespeare, William --- Appreciation --- Influence. --- Ireland --- In literature.
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Using archival sources, novels, government reports, and works on tourism and heritage, Ian McKay and Robin Bates look at how state planners, key politicians, and cultural figures such as Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, long-time premier Angus L. Macdonald, and novelist Thomas Raddall were all instrumental in forming "tourism/history." The authors argue that Longfellow's 1847 poem Evangeline - on the brutal British expulsion of Acadians from Nova Scotia - became a template a new kind of profit-making history that exalted whiteness and excluded ethnic minorities, women, and working class movements. A remarkable look at the intersection of politics, leisure, and the presentation of public history, In the Province of History is a revealing account of how a region has both used and distorted its own past.
Tourism --- Heritage tourism --- Culture and tourism --- Collective memory --- Social aspects --- History --- Government policy --- Nova Scotia --- Historiography.
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Air --- Pollution --- Economic aspects --- Forecasting. --- Mathematical models. --- Forecasting --- Mathematical models --- Poland --- Environmental conditions
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