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Hesburgh of Notre Dame - - Bog - Springer International Publishing AG - Plusbog.dk

Realizing the Distinctive University - Mark William Roche - Bog - University of Notre Dame Press - Plusbog.dk

Hesburgh of Notre Dame - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Hesburgh of Notre Dame - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Theodore Martin Hesburgh, C.S.C. (1917-2015) was the most widely recognized priest and university president of the twentieth century. His tenure as the leader of the University of Notre Dame not only spanned 35 years (1952-1987) but also arched across the most tumultuous era in the history of higher education—the late 1960s through the early 1970s. During those years, the university’s faculty grew from 350 to 950, enrollment climbed from 4,979 to 9,600, the annual operating budget went from $9.7 million to $176 million, the endowment jumped from $9 million to $350 million, and funding for research soared from $735,000 to $15 million. Over 40 new buildings were also added during his presidency. As a public intellectual, Hesburgh also invested in the debates that defined the mid to late twentieth century. At a time when such intellectuals were in retreat, Hesburgh contributed to policy efforts related to science and technology, civil and human rights, and foreign relations and peace. At the core of his commitment to those issues was his vocation as a priest and his belief in serving as a mediator between heaven and earth. Assessing Hesburgh’s legacy, however, is difficult due to the lack of concise ways to access his thought and the nature of his contributions. By highlighting his own words, this volume fills that void by offering insights into how he transformed the University of Notre Dame and addressed the pressing debates of his day.

DKK 954.00
1

Frank Miller's Sin City Volume 2: A Dame to Kill For (Deluxe Edition) - Frank Miller - Bog - Dark Horse Comics,U.S. - Plusbog.dk

Storied Places - Virginia Reinburg - Bog - Cambridge University Press - Plusbog.dk

Narrators of Barbarian History (A.D. 550–800), The - Walter Goffart - Bog - University of Notre Dame Press - Plusbog.dk

Freud and Psychoanalysis - W. W. Meissner - Bog - University of Notre Dame Press - Plusbog.dk

Untrammeled Approaches - Jacques Maritain - Bog - University of Notre Dame Press - Plusbog.dk

Humanophone - Janet Holmes - Bog - University of Notre Dame Press - Plusbog.dk

Humanophone - Janet Holmes - Bog - University of Notre Dame Press - Plusbog.dk

The poetry in Humanophone , the third volume from award-winning poet Janet Holmes, celebrates composers and creators such as Harry Partch, Raymond Scott, Leon Theremin, and George Ives, who had to invent new instruments to capture the music heard in their “mind’s ear.” Taking its title from a George Ives invention—an instrument made from a group of humans, each of whom sings a single note, arrayed like a xylophone— Humanophone appears on its surface to be about music. But its real subject is the artist’s creative dilemma—how to deliver a new idea, whether it be a song or a poem, through existing media. Holmes works language into a variety of forms both familiar—syllabics, couplets, villanelles, sonnets—and engagingly new. With everything from kumquats to abandoned wedding pictures, Clara Bow to Bill Robinson, Keats’s belle dame to Dante’s Francesca, feng shui to a recipe for octopus, Humanophone celebrates how the body shapes art from the world it is given. In Humanophone , Holmes not only chronicles events such as Harry Partch’s transformation of glass chemical containers from the Berkeley Radiation Lab into the melodious and beautiful Cloud-Chamber Bowls, but also traces a playful path through the familiar, as a trombone’s upwards glissando becomes “a backwards pratfall/in brass.” Engaging a broad array of subjects, Holmes’s poetry is as delightful as it is thoughtful, as simple as it is complex.

DKK 876.00
1

Dante Now - - Bog - University of Notre Dame Press - Plusbog.dk

Dante Now - - Bog - University of Notre Dame Press - Plusbog.dk

Written by ten distinguished Dante scholars, the essays in Dante Now represent the most significant areas of contemporary Dante studies. This collection, originating from a 1993 University of Notre Dame conference, includes some of the particular on three intensely cultivated areas of Dante studies: poetics, "minor works,"and reception. The stimulating ferment on the problem of Dante's poetics is well represented in the first three essays. These range in approach from the stylistic-ideological treatment of Zygmunt G. Baranski's essay to the inter-and intra-textual concerns presented by Christopher Kleinhenz, to the compelling hermeneutical and epistemological reflections on Dante's poetics given by Giuseppe Mazzotta. Dante's so-called "minor works" have increasingly become a focus of attention in contemporary Dante studies, and the textual problems represented by the Vita nuova are sweepingly reconsidered by Dino S. Cervigni and Edward Vasta. Ronald L. Martinez dedicates a substantial essay to Dante's poem of exile "Tre donne," and Albert Russell Ascoli addresses the issue of the relationship between Dante's Commedia and the minor works, especially the Monarchia. The final section of essays examines the phenomenon of the original and continuing vitality of Dante's work as a profoundly of influential, enduring, and enlivening literary classic. R.A. Shoaf addresses the literary influence of Dante in medieval England; Kevin Brownlee investigates Dante’s most important medieval French connection in the works of Christine de Pizan; and Nancy Vickers illuminates Dante's translatability into avante garde films and videos. Finally, Brian Richardson considers the Commedia's Fortunes during the Renaissance in terms of its remarkable editorial and publishing history.

DKK 940.00
1

Uniting Of Europe - Ernst Haas - Bog - University of Notre Dame Press - Plusbog.dk

Making of Jewish and Christian Worship, The - - Bog - University of Notre Dame Press - Plusbog.dk

Living with Dying - Robert Dunlop - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Politique - Paul Strohm - Bog - University of Notre Dame Press - Plusbog.dk

Politique - Paul Strohm - Bog - University of Notre Dame Press - Plusbog.dk

In this book Paul Strohm shifts his recognized talent for textual and cultural analysis to the later fifteenth century, arguing that England experienced its own "pre-Machiavellian" moment between 1450 and 1485. These turbulent decades encouraged new pragmatic discussions of political policies of a sort not previously seen and not to be seen again until the middle of the sixteenth century. Strohm contends that England had no need to await the writings of Machiavelli to find its voice in matters of practical statecraft and political calculation. In support of this thesis, he analyzes a range of mainly vernacular fifteenth-century English political texts along with several contemporary writings from Burgundy, France, and Italy. The writers of these texts are unsentimental, shrewdly informed, and keenly concerned with political practice in the world. Intricately connected with this new discussion of worldly politics is a revised, and more hopeful, view of the individual’s relation to Fortune and her operations. Emergent in the English fifteenth century is the possibility that the prudent prince can effectively "Fortune-proof" himself by the exercise of foresight and the qualities of vertue —a trait remarkably anticipatory of its Italian and Machiavellian counterpart, virtú . This view is introduced to England by the poet John Lydgate and flourishes in the second half of the fifteenth century. In addition to Lydgate, Strohm looks at the imaginative accomplishments of other undercredited writers such as Fortescue, Pecock, Whethamstede, Warkworth, and the unnamed authors of Somnium Vigilantis, Historie of the Arrivall of Edward IV , and the Great Chronicle of London . He also offers an appreciation of the collective linguistic and symbolic endeavors of those in the fifteenth-century public sphere. This detailed and rich study, which is based on the 2003 Conway Lectures Strohm delivered at the University of Notre Dame, contributes to the fields of medieval and early modern studies, medieval literary criticism, and political philosophy.

DKK 974.00
1

Knowledge and Human Liberation - Ananta Kumar Giri - Bog - Anthem Press - Plusbog.dk

Quantum Cellular Automata: Theory, Experimentation And Prospects - - Bog - Imperial College Press - Plusbog.dk

Excavations at Capernaum - - Bog - Pennsylvania State University Press - Plusbog.dk

Issues of State Responsibility before International Judicial Institutions - - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk