Browsing College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences (CLAHS) by Issue Date
Now showing items 21-40 of 821
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From Master to Brother: Shifting the Balance of Authority in Ursula K. Le Guin's Farthest Shore and Tehanu
(Johns Hopkins Univ Press, 1993) -
Household Crowding and Family Relations in Bangkok
(University of California Press, 1993-08)Cities in developing countries are growing ever larger and more dense, fostering congested household environments. Using data from Bangkok, this paper examines the effect of household crowding on multiple measures of family ... -
The 'Self-Animal' and Divine Digestion: Goat Sacrifice to the Goddess Kali in Bengal
(1994)My paper explores the cultural meaning and central logic of the gift-offering of goats, pathabali. I elicit this meaning from the incantations in the rite of bali itself, my own observations on ritual action that follows ... -
Technology, Science, Mathematics Integration
(Council on Technology Teacher Education, 1995)"The idea of integrating technology, science, and mathematics curricula makes sense from a variety of perspectives. There is growing support from all three school disciplines involved. Moreover, the nature of learning promoted ... -
True Lies: Perceptual Realism, Digital Images, and Film Theory
(University of California Press, 1996) -
Momentum shifts in the American electric utility system: Catastrophic change - Or no change at all?
(Johns Hopkins Univ Press, 1996-04) -
Historically Speaking, Summer 1997
(Virginia Tech, 1997-08)This newsletter chronicles the many activities in the History Department and the numerous accomplishments of our students, faculty, and alumni. -
Historically Speaking, Fall 1997
(Virginia Tech, 1997-09)This newsletter chronicles the many activities in the History Department and the numerous accomplishments of our students, faculty, and alumni. -
Of School and the River: The Wind in the Willows and its Immediate Audience
(Johns Hopkins Univ Press, 1998) -
Historically Speaking, Spring 1998
(Virginia Tech, 1998-03)This newsletter chronicles the many activities in the History Department and the numerous accomplishments of our students, faculty, and alumni. -
Historically Speaking, Summer 1998
(Virginia Tech, 1998-07)This newsletter chronicles the many activities in the History Department and the numerous accomplishments of our students, faculty, and alumni. -
Historically Speaking, Fall 1998
(Virginia Tech, 1998-09)This newsletter chronicles the many activities in the History Department and the numerous accomplishments of our students, faculty, and alumni. -
Snapshots of Tradition: Apparitions of the Virgin Mary in Georgia
(University of California Press, 1998-10)On the thirteenth of each month, from October 1990 until May 1994, Nancy Fowler appeared on the porch of a farmhouse in Conyers, Georgia, to deliver the message she had received from an apparition of the Virgin Mary. On ... -
Louise Fitzhugh, Marisol, and the Realm of Art
(Johns Hopkins Univ Press, 1999) -
New Technology for a New Nation: Building an Internet Culture in Estonia
(1999)As in many areas of the history of technology, studies of the Internet are still largely limited to the United States and other established capitalist democracies. More research is needed on how such technologies are ... -
Historically Speaking, Spring 1999
(Virginia Tech, 1999-03)This newsletter chronicles the many activities in the History Department and the numerous accomplishments of our students, faculty, and alumni. -
Historically Speaking, Summer 1999
(Virginia Tech, 1999-08)This newsletter chronicles the many activities in the History Department and the numerous accomplishments of our students, faculty, and alumni. -
Historically Speaking, Fall 1999
(Virginia Tech, 1999-10)This newsletter chronicles the many activities in the History Department and the numerous accomplishments of our students, faculty, and alumni. -
’Changing traditions to meet current altering conditions’: Customary Law, African Courts, and the Rejection of Codification in Kenya, 1930-60
(Cambridge University Press, 1999-11)If the aim of British colonizers, Frederick Lugard wrote, was to civilize Africans ‘and to devote thought to those matters which…most intimately affect their daily life and happiness, there are few of greater importance ...