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Crop varieties : Varieties of cereals, flax, potatoes, beans and field peas
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Year: 1951 Publisher: London Farmer & Stock-Breeder E. & F.N. Spon

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Meditatiën op het lijden en den dood van onzen heer Jezus-Christus
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Year: 1886 Publisher: Hasselt Ceysens

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Crop varieties : Varieties of cereals, flax, potatoes, beans and field peas.
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Year: 1951 Publisher: London : London : Farmer & Stock-Breeder Publications ; E. & F.N. Spon,

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Baillière's Encyclopaedia of Scientific Agriculture. : M-Z.
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Year: 1931 Publisher: London : Baillière, Tindall and Cox,

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Encyclopedie --- Encyclopedie


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Gendering time in Augustan love elegy
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ISBN: 9780199652396 0199652392 0191745782 1299160042 0191626236 9780191626234 9780191745782 9781299160040 Year: 2013 Volume: *4 Publisher: Oxford : Oxford University Press,

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Gardner looks at the gendered language of time applied to men and women in Latin love elegy. Focusing on the poetry of Propertius, Tibullus, and Ovid, she uses Kristeva's theory of 'women's time' to explain the cyclicality, repetition, and eternity attributed to the elegiac beloved, often identified as a courtesan-puella (girl).


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Pestilence and the body politic in Latin literature
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ISBN: 9780198796428 0198796420 0198796420 0191837709 0192516353 0192516361 Year: 2019 Publisher: Oxford : Oxford University Press,

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Scientists, journalists, novelists, and filmmakers continue to generate narratives of contagion, stories shaped by a tradition of disease discourse that extends to early Greco-Roman literature. Lucretius, Vergil, and Ovid developed important conventions of the western plague narrative as a response to the breakdown of the Roman res publica in the mid-first century CE and the reconstitution of stabilized government under the Augustan Principate (31 BCE-14 CE): relying on the metaphoric relationship between the human body and the body politic, these authors used largely fictive representations of epidemic disease to address the collapse of the social order and suggest remedies for its recovery.Theorists such as Susan Sontag and René Girard have observed how the rhetoric of disease frequently signals social, psychological, or political pathologies, but their observations have rarely been applied to Latin literary practices. Pestilence and the Body Politic in Latin Literature explores how the origins and spread of outbreaks described by Roman writers enact a drama in which the concerns of the individual must be weighed against those of the collective, staged in an environment signalling both reversion to a pre-historic Golden Age and the devastation characteristic of a post-apocalyptic landscape. Such innovations in Latin literature have impacted representations as diverse as Carlo Coppola's paintings of a seventeenth-century outbreak of bubonic plague in Naples and Margaret Atwood's Maddaddam Trilogy. Understanding why Latin writers developed these tropes for articulating contagious disease and imbuing them with meaning for the collapse of the Roman body politic allows us to clarify what more recent disease discourses mean both for their creators and for the populations they afflict in contemporary media.


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Problems of poverty
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Year: 1912 Publisher: London Nelson

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The Latin Love Elegists
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ISBN: 9004688153 Year: 2023 Publisher: Leiden : Brill,

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"Latin love elegy's flourishing concurrent with Rome's transition from Republic to Principate has remained an issue central to scholarship on the genre since the turn of the last millennium. This book addresses the Greco-Roman literary inheritance and Augustan socio-political context that paved the way for that flourishing, while examining the genre's key elements and characters as illustrated in the poetry of Propertius, Tibullus, Ovid, and Sulpicia. Special attention is paid to the gendered dynamics that govern the relationship between "poet-lover" (amator) and beloved and to the role of the poet as artist and creator of a "written girl" (scripta puella)"--


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The Latin love elegists
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ISBN: 9004688145 9789004688148 Year: 2024 Publisher: Leiden: Brill,

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"Latin love elegy's flourishing concurrent with Rome's transition from Republic to Principate has remained an issue central to scholarship on the genre since the turn of the last millennium. This book addresses the Greco-Roman literary inheritance and Augustan socio-political context that paved the way for that flourishing, while examining the genre's key elements and characters as illustrated in the poetry of Propertius, Tibullus, Ovid, and Sulpicia. Special attention is paid to the gendered dynamics that govern the relationship between "poet-lover" (amator) and beloved and to the role of the poet as artist and creator of a "written girl" (scripta puella)"--

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Odyssean identities in modern cultures : the journey home
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ISBN: 9780814252970 Year: 2014 Publisher: Columbus (Ohio) : Ohio state university press,

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Addressed to both classicists and students of modern culture, Odyssean Identities in Modern Cultures: The Journey Home traces the Odyssey's central theme of homecoming in a wide range of narratives from the late nineteenth to the early twenty-first century. Accounts of the journey home in novels, plays, lyric poems, paintings, and a television series explore the challenges of returning from a long absence to reclaim a former life. These retellings raise fresh questions about the relationship between home and the identities we expect to find rooted there and stress the elusiveness of a satisfying homecoming. They remind us that the Odyssey's happy ending is itself qualified by the hero's unsettled future, the violence of his return, and the independent desires of his friends and family members. At the same time, they highlight new obstacles to homecoming posed by the modern world with its political and economic upheavals, newly configured family relations and gender roles, and diminished confidence in the stability of identity. The authors discussed include Charlotte Yonge, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Rebecca West, George Seferis, Yannis Ritsos, Gwendolyn Brooks, Charles Frazier, W.B. Sebald, Marilynne Robinson, and Zachary Mason.

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