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  • 1
    UID:
    almafu_BV007203253
    Format: XI, 238 S. ; , 23 cm.
    Series Statement: Modern language studies
    Language: English
    Subjects: History , German Studies , English Studies
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Deutsche ; Reise ; Reisebericht ; Reisebericht ; Großbritannien
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY, USA :Cambridge University Press,
    UID:
    almafu_9961254311402883
    Format: 1 online resource (xii, 458 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-009-30647-2 , 1-009-30643-X , 1-009-30648-0
    Content: The nineteenth century was a period in which ideas of history and time were challenged as never before. This is the first book to explore how the study of classical antiquity and the study of the Bible together formed an image of the past which became central to Victorian self-understanding. These specially commissioned, multi-disciplinary essays brilliantly reveal the richness of Victorian thinking about the past and how important these models of antiquity were in the expression of modernity. In an age of progress, cultural anxiety and cultural hope was fuelled by the shock of the old - new discoveries about the deep past, and new ways of thinking about humanity's place in history. The volume provides a rich and readable feast which will be fundamental to all those seeking a greater understanding of the Victorians, as well as of the reception of classics and the Bible.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 29 Sep 2023). , Introduction : history, God, and me / Simon Goldhill and Ruth Jackson Ravenscroft -- Genealogy, translation, and resistance : between the Bible and the Greeks / Simon Goldhill -- Herodotus, historian of the Hebrew people, without knowing it / Suzanne L. Marchand -- The Bible, classical antiquity, and the invention of Victorian art at the 1887 Manchester Jubilee Exhibition / Kate Nichols -- The classical and biblical in dialogue : a conversation in Victorian sculpture / Caroline Vout -- Dionysia in Bavaria : Greek theatre, German Catholicism and the cultural uses of the Oberammeragau passion play, 1830-1910 / Robert D. Priest -- Popes and caesars : St Paul, protestant Bible culture, and the building of the American Episcopal Church in Rome / G.A. Bremner -- Protestant travellers to Rome and the legacies of the Apostrolic Church / Dorothy M. Figueira and Brian H. Murray -- HMS Baccfhante : religion, time travel, and the Victorian monarchy / Michael Ledger-Lomas -- "Whoso Humbleth himself shall be exalted, whoso exalteth himself shall be abased" : F.D. Maurice and the history of philosophy / Jocelyn Paul Betts -- "The borderland of the Bible" : M.R. James, the apocrypha and Christian antiquity in the late nineteenth century / Alison Knight and Scott Mandelbrote -- Words thrown out : Matthew Arnold's version of Isaih / Laura McCormick Kilbride -- Hellenism, hebraism and heathenism in nineteenth-century England : Connop Thirlwall, George Grote and the religions of antiquity / Brian Young -- Epilogue : Bible, antiquity, and the shock of the old / Ruth Jackson Ravenscroft.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-009-30645-6
    Language: English
    Subjects: Comparative Studies. Non-European Languages/Literatures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Aufsatzsammlung
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  • 3
    UID:
    b3kat_BV047924102
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 v)
    ISBN: 9781784714574
    Note: The recommended readings are available in the print version, or may be available via the link to your library's holdings , Recommended readings (Machine generated): Audretsch, David A. and Max C. Keilbach (2006) Entrepreneurship and Economic Growth, Oxford: Oxford University Press. -- Bailey, Mark (1998) 'Historiographical essay: The commercialisation of the English economy, 1086- 1500', Journal of Medieval History, 24 (3), 297-311. -- Baumol, William J. (1993) Entrepreneurship, Management and the Structure of Pay-offs, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. -- Bennett, Robert J. (2011) Local Business Voice, Oxford: Oxford University Press. -- Beresford, Maurice (1967) New Towns of the Middle Ages: Town Plantation in England, Wales and Gascony, London: Lutterworth Press. -- Birch, Debra J. (1992) 'Selling the Saints: Competition amongst pilgrimage centres in the twelfth century', Medieval History, 2 (2), 20-34. -- Brenner, Reuven (1983) History: The Human Gamble, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. -- , Casson, Mark (1982) The Entrepreneur: An Economic Theory, Oxford: Martin Robertson, New ed. Edward Elgar, 2002. -- Casson, Mark (1991) Economics of Business Culture, Oxford: Oxford University Press. -- Casson, Mark (ed.) (2011) Markets and Market Institutions: Their Origin and Evolution, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar. -- Casson, Mark, Bernard Yeung, Anuradha Basu and Nigel Wadeson (eds) (2006) Oxford Handbook of Entrepreneurship, Oxford: Oxford University Press. -- Chandler, Alfred D, Jr. (1977) The Visible Hand, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. -- Ekelund, Robert B., Jr. et al. (1996) Sacred Trust: The Medieval Church as an Economic Firm, Oxford: Oxford University Press. -- Ekelund, Robert B., Jr., Robert F. Hebert and Robert D. Tollison (2006) The Marketplace of Christianity, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. -- Fordyce, William (c.1834) History of Tynemouth, Newcastle: W. & T. Fordyce. -- , Gough, J.W. (1969) The Rise of the Entrepreneur, London: B.T. Batsford, Chapter 2, The cloth industry, 30-52 (text), 294-5 (notes) [23pp.]. -- Hayek, Friedrich A. (1949) Individualism and Economic Order, London: Routledge. -- Hughes, Jane Frecknall (2007) 'King John's tax innovations - Extortion, resistance, and the establishment of the principle of taxation by consent', Accounting Historians Journal, 34 (2), 75-107. -- Jeremy, David and Geoffrey Tweedale (eds) (2005) Business History, London: Sage. -- Jones, Geoffrey G. (2005) Multinationals and Global Capitalism: From the Nineteenth to the Twenty-first Century, Oxford: Oxford University Press , Jones, Geoffrey G. and R. Daniel Wadhwani (eds) (2007) Entrepreneurship and Global Capitalism, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar. -- Kirzner, Israel M. (1973) Competition and Entrepreneurship, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. -- Knight, Frank H. (1921) Risk, Uncertainty and Profit, Boston: Houghton Mifflin. -- Landes, David S., Joel Mokyr and William Baumol (eds) (2010) The Invention of Enterprise: Entrepreneurship from Ancient Mesopotamia to Modern Times, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. -- Livesay, Harold C. (ed.) (1995) Entrepreneurship and the Growth of Firms, Aldershot, UK and Brookfield, VT, USA: Edward Elgar. -- Mann, Thomas (1901) Buddenbrooks, London: Everyman. -- Mingay, G.E. (ed.) (1977) The Agricultural Revolution: Changes in Agriculture, 1650-1880, London: Adam and Charles Black. -- , Moore, Karl and David Lewis (1999) Birth of the Multinational: 2000 Years of Ancient Business History, from Ashur to Augustus, Copenhagen: Copenhagen Business School Press. -- Penrose, Edith T. (1959) The Theory of the Growth of the Firm, Oxford: Blackwell. -- Piore, Michael J. and Charles F. Sabel (1984) The Second Industrial Divide: Possibilities for Prosperity, New York: Basic Books. -- Schumpeter, Joseph A. (1934) The Theory of Economic Development (trans. R. Opie), Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. -- Smith, Adam (1776) An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, Glasgow edition, 1976, Oxford: Oxford University Press. -- Tedlow, Richard (1990) New and Improved: The Story of Mass Marketing in America, New York: Basic Books. -- Willan, Thomas S. (1976) The Inland Trade: Studies in English Internal Trade in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, Manchester: Manchester University Press. -- , Christopher Dyer (2005), 'A New Middle Ages', in An Age of Transition?: Economy and Society in England in the Later Middle Ages, Chapter I, Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press, 7-45, references -- Adrian R. Bell and Richard S. Dale (2011), 'The Medieval Pilgrimage Business', Enterprise and Society, 12 (3), September, 601-27 -- R.A. Donkin (1958), 'Cistercian Sheep-Farming and Wool-Sales in the Thirteenth Century', Agricultural History Review, 6 (1), 2-8 -- Thomas W. Blomquist (1971), 'The Castracani Family of Thirteenth-Century Lucca', Speculum, 46 (3), July, 459-76 -- Iris Origo (1937 [1960]), 'Money', in The Merchant of Prato, Chapter 5, London, UK: Jonathan Cape, 136-55, references , Frederic C. Lane (1944 [1967]), 'Old Wealth and New', in Andrea Barbarigo: Merchant of Venice, 1418-1449, Chapter I, New York, NY: Octagon Books, 11-44 -- S.D. Goitein (1967), 'The World of Commerce and Finance: Part A: The Merchants and their Employees', in A Mediterranean Society: The Jewish Communities of the Arab World as Portrayed in the Documents of the Cairo Geniza, Volume I: Economic Foundations, Chapter 11, Berkley, CA and Los Angeles, LA: University of California Press, 148-64, notes -- Kathryn L. Reyerson (2002), 'Introduction', in The Art of the Deal: Intermediaries of Trade in Medieval Montpellier, Leiden, The Netherlands, Boston, MA and Köln, Germany: Brill, 1-15 -- Philippe Dollinger (1964 [1970]), 'The Merchants', in The German Hansa, translated and edited by D.S. Ault and S.H. Steinberg, Chapter 8, London and Basingstoke, UK: Macmillan and Co Ltd, 159-85, notes -- , Oscar Gelderblom (2003), 'The Governance of Early Modern Trade: The Case of Hans Thijs, 1556-1611', Enterprise and Society, 4 (4), December, 606-39 -- Wang Gungwu (1990), 'Merchants Without Empire: The Hokkien Sojourning Communities', in James D. Tracy (ed.), The Rise of Merchant Empires: Long-Distance Trade in the Early Modern World, 1350-1750, Chapter 13, Cambridge, UK and New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 400-21 -- Andrea Colli, Paloma Fernández Pérez and Mary B. Rose (2003), 'National Determinants of Family Firm Development? Family Firms in Britain, Spain, and Italy in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries', Enterprise and Society, 4 (1), March, 28-64 -- David J. Jeremy (1984), 'Anatomy of the British Business Elite, 1860-1980', Business History, 26 (1), 3-23 -- Franco Amatori (2011), 'Entrepreneurial Typologies in the History of Industrial Italy: Reconsiderations', Business History Review, 85 (1), Spring, 151-80 -- , Jonathan R.T. Hughes (1966), 'Eli Whitney and American Technology', in The Vital Few: American Economic Progress and its Protagonists, Chapter 4, New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 121-48, 471-72 -- Christine MacLeod (1999), 'Negotiating the Rewards of Invention: The Shop-Floor Inventor in Victorian Britain', Business History, 41 (2), April, 17-36 -- Andre Millard (1990), 'The Business of Innovation', in Edison and the Business of Innovation, Chapter 3, Baltimore, MD and London, UK: Johns Hopkins University Press, 43-62, notes -- Jennifer Tann (1978), 'Marketing Methods in the International Steam Engine Market: The Case of Boulton and Watt', Journal of Economic History, 38 (2), June, 363-91 -- Andrew Popp (2007), 'Building the Market: John Shaw of Wolverhampton and Commercial Travelling in Early Nineteenth- Century England', Business History, 49 (3), May, 321-47 -- Charles Harvey and Jon Press (1986), 'William Morris and the Marketing of Art', Business History, 28 (4), 36-54 -- , Jon Stobart (2004), 'Personal and Commercial Networks in an English Port: Chester in the Early Eighteenth Century', Journal of Historical Geography, 30 (2), April, 277-93 -- Philip Scranton (1993), 'Build a Firm, Start Another: The Bromleys and Family Firm Entrepreneurship in the Philadelphia Region', Business History, 35 (1), January, 115-51 -- Jacob M. Price (1967), 'The Rise of Glasgow in the Chesapeake Tobacco Trade, 1707-1775', in Peter L. Payne (ed.), Studies in Scottish Business History, Chapter 11, London, UK: Frank Cass and Co. Ltd, 299-318 -- Simon Ville (1996), 'Networks and Venture Capital in the Australasian Pastoral Sector before World War Two', Business History, 38 (3), 48-63 , Andrew Godley (1996), 'Jewish Soft Loan Societies in New York and London and Immigrant Entrepreneurship, 1880-1914', Business History, 38 (3), 101-16 -- Jacob M. Price (1986), 'The Great Quaker Business Families of Eighteenth-Century London: The Rise and Fall of a Sectarian Patriciate', in Richard S. Dunn and Mary Maples Dunn (eds), The World of William Penn, Chapter 20, Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 363-99 -- David J. Jeremy (1991), 'The Enlightened Paternalist in Action: William Hesketh Lever at Port Sunlight Before 1914', Business History, 33 (1), 58-81 -- Hazel Petrie (2006), 'Maori Enterprise: Ships and Flour Mills', in Ian Hunter and Diana Morrow (eds), City of Enterprise: Perspectives on Auckland Business History, Chapter 2, Auckland, New Zealand: Auckland University Press, 27-49, notes -- , Hannah Barker (2006), 'The "Public" Face of Female Enterprise', in The Business of Women: Female Enterprise and Urban Development in Northern England 1760-1830, Chapter 3, Oxford, UK and New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 72-104 -- Alison C. Kay (2009), 'Retailing Respectability', in The Foundations of Female Entrepreneurship: Enterprise, Home and Household in London, c. 1800-1870, Chapter 4, London, UK and New York, NY: Routledge, 54-82, notes -- Christine Jackson (2008), 'Boom-Time Freaks or Heroic Industrial Pioneers? Clothing Entrepreneurs in Sixteenth- and Early Seventeenth-Century Berkshire', Textile History, 39 (2), November, 145-71 -- Philip Ollerenshaw (2006), 'Innovation and Corporate Failure: Cyril Lord in UK Textiles, 1945-1968', Enterprise and Society, 7 (4), December, 777-811 -- M.W. Flinn (1959), 'The Lloyds in the Early English Iron Industry', Business History, 2 (1), 21-31 -- , W.H.B. Court (1938), 'Huguenot Capital in the Black Country Glass Trade', in The Rise of the Midland Industries, 1600-1838, Chapter VIII, London, UK: Oxford University Press, 115-31 -- A.E. Musson (1975), 'Joseph Whitworth and the Growth of Mass-Production Engineering', Business History, 27 (1), January, 109-49 -- Per Boje (1993), 'A Career Approach to Entrepreneurship: The Case of Thomas B. Thrige', Business History, 35 (2), 33-44 -- David Nasaw (2006), 'War and Riches, 1860-1865', in Andrew Carnegie, Chapter 4, New York, NY: Penguin Press, 66-88, notes -- John N. Ingham (1978), 'Social Analysis of Iron and Steel Entrepreneurs: General Characteristics and a Pittsburgh Model', in The Iron Barons: A Social Analysis of an American Urban Elite, 1874-1965, Chapter 1, Westport, CN and London, UK: Greenwood Press, 13-39 -- , Mark Casson and Andrew Godley (2007), 'Revisiting the Emergence of the Modern Business Enterprise: Entrepreneurship and the Singer Global Distribution System', Journal of Management Studies, 44 (7), November, 1064-77 -- Hoh-Cheung and Lorna H. Mui (1967), 'Andrew Melrose: Tea Dealer and Grocer of Edinburgh 1812-1833', Business History, 9 (1), 30-48 -- Simon Phillips and Andrew Alexander (2005), 'An Efficient Pursuit? Independent Shopkeeping in 1930s Britain', Enterprise and Society, 6 (2), June, 278-304 -- Sheila Marriner and Francis E. Hyde (1967), 'John Samuel Swire: the Man and the Family Business', in The Senior: John Samuel Swire 1825-98: Management in Far Eastern Shipping Trades, Chapter 1, Liverpool, London and Prescot, UK: Liverpool University Press, 1-18 -- , Maurice W. Kirby (1993), 'The Foundation of the Stockton and Darlington Railway Company, 1818-1825', in The Origins of Railway Enterprise: The Stockton and Darlington Railway, 1821- 1863, Chapter 3, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 26-53, 193-97 , Mark Casson (2009), 'Business Strategies and their Effects', in The World's First Railway System: Enterprise, Competition, and Regulation on the Railway Network in Victorian Britain, Chapter 7, Oxford, UK and New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 280-313 -- Maury Klein (1986), 'Chess Player', The Life and Legend of Jay Gould, Chapter 16, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 176-93, 526-29 -- Leslie Berlin (2005), 'Takeoff', in The Man Behind the Microchip: Robert Noyce and the Invention of Silicon Valley, Chapter 8, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 178-206, 343-47 -- David M. Hart (2005), 'From "Ward of State" to "Revolutionary Without a Movement": The Political Development of William C. Norris and Control Data Corporation, 1957-1986', Enterprise and Society, 6 (2), June, 197-223 -- , Michael A. Cusumano (2002), 'The Software Business: Lessons from Bill Gates and Microsoft', in Michael J. Lynskey and Seiichiro Yonekura (eds), Entrepreneurship and Organization: The Role of the Entrepreneur in Organizational Innovation, Chapter 5, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 172-205 -- R.H. Tawney (1958), 'Cranfield in the City', in Business and Politics under James I: Lionel Cranfield as Merchant and Minister, Chapter IV, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 73-120, bibliography -- Koji Yamamoto (2011), 'Piety, Profit and Public Service in the Financial Revolution', English Historical Review, 126 (521), August, 806-34 -- William B. Friedricks (1989), 'A Metropolitan Entrepreneur Par Excellence: Henry E. Huntingdon and the Growth of Southern California, 1898-1927', Business History Review, 63 (2), Summer, 329-55 -- , Richard Blundel and Angela Tregear (2006), 'From Artisans to "Factories": The Interpenetration of Craft and Industry in English Cheese-Making, 1650-1950', Enterprise and Society, 7 (4), December, 705-39 -- Katrina Honeyman (1982), 'The Sough Masters', in Origins of Enterprise: Business Leadership in the Industrial Revolution, Chapter IV, Manchester, UK and New York, NY: Manchester University Press, 34-56, bibliography -- W. Turrentine Jackson (1968), 'The Scot Discovers the American West as a Field for Investment', in The Enterprising Scot: Investors in the American West after 1873, Chapter 1, Edinburgh, UK: Edinburgh University Press, 12-35, 320-24 -- Lisa Bud-Frierman, Andrew Godley and Judith Wale (2010), 'Weetman Pearson in Mexico and the Emergence of a British Oil Major, 1901-1919', Business History Review, 84 (2), Summer, 275-300 -- , Carl E. Solberg (1982), 'Entrepreneurship in Public Enterprise: General Enrique Mosconi and the Argentine Petroleum Industry', Business History Review, 56 (3), Autumn, 380-99 , What are the secrets of a successful entrepreneur? When did the origins of enterprise occur? This important title addresses such questions by uniting historical case studies of entrepreneurial behaviour from 1200-2000. Key features of this collection include a thematic and chronological comparison of relevant studies as well as coverage of a range of industries, including the software industry. The editors have also selected papers which allow for an examination of a range of entrepreneurial backgrounds and personalities, including female entrepreneurs. This topical research review will be of great use to both students and academics who will benefit from the ability to contrast case-studies of large-firms and their executives with small firm-start-ups and their founders
    Language: English
    Keywords: Fallstudiensammlung ; Electronic books
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    Author information: Casson, Mark 1945-
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  • 4
    UID:
    gbv_551924861
    Format: Online-Ressource (xviii,269,[1]p) , 12°
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Farmington Hills, Mich Cengage Gale 2009 Eighteenth Century Collections Online Electronic reproduction; Available via the World Wide Web
    Uniform Title: Reisen eines Deutschen in England im Jahre 1782. 〈engl.〉
    Note: English Short Title Catalog, T180049 , Reproduction of original from Bodleian Library (Oxford) , Translated from 'Reisen eines Deutschen in England im Jahre 1782', Berlin, 1783 , Electronic reproduction; Available via the World Wide Web
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (Full text online)
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,
    UID:
    almahu_9949602145402882
    Format: 1 online resource (671 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783319755939
    Series Statement: Knowledge and Space Series ; v.12
    Note: Intro -- Dedication -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Contributors -- Chapter 1: Geographies of the University: An Introduction -- Historical Perspectives -- The University, Knowledge, and Governance -- The University and the City -- The University and the Region -- The International University -- References -- Part I: Historical Perspectives -- Chapter 2: The Repertorium Academicum Germanicum (RAG) and the Geography of German Universities and Academics (1350-1550) -- Repertorium Academicum Germanicum -- An Initial Example-A Database Query -- The Gelehrtenatlas (Atlas of Scholars) -- Areas of Mobility and Catchment Areas -- References -- Chapter 3: Scientific and Cultural Relations between Heidelberg University and Hungary over Five Centuries -- Mobility of Students, Scholars, and Knowledge -- The First Gilded Age of the Relations between Heidelberg University and Hungary and Reasons for its Decline -- Heidelberg as a Political and Intellectual Center of Calvinism -- Conditions and Factors that Promoted the Spread of Protestantism in Hungary -- Philipp Melanchthon -- Zacharias Ursinus and the Significance of the Heidelberg Catechism -- David Pareus as a Main Authority on Calvinism and an Instrumental Councilor to the Ruler of Transylvania -- Fluctuation in the Number of Students -- Social Origins, Choice of a Place to Study, and Choice of Occupation of the Students from Hungary and Transylvania, 1595-1621 -- Cavalierś Tours (Grand Tours) by Aristocratic Students -- Foreign Policy Interests of the Transylvanian Princes in the Choice of Where Their Subjects Studied -- Impacts of the Thirty Years ́War (1618-1648) and the War of Palatine Succession (1688-1697) on the Mobility of Hungarian Stude... -- The Decline of Heidelberg University in the Eighteenth Century. , The Second Intellectual Heyday of Academic Relations between Heidelberg and Hungary: The Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centur... -- Reasons for the Renewed Flood of Hungarian Students to Heidelberg -- Where the Hungarian Students in Germany Studied, 1789-1919 -- Choice of Majors among Students from Hungary and Transylvania -- Social Origin and Choice of Subject of the Hungarian Students in Heidelberg -- Religious Confession of the Hungarian Students Enrolled at Heidelberg University -- An Explanation of the Soaring Number and Percentage of Jewish Students -- Social Origin of the Jewish Students at Heidelberg University -- Heidelberg: One of the First German Universities to Accept Jewish Students -- Regional Origin of the Hungarians Studying in Heidelberg, 1789-1919 -- Eminent Figures from Hungary Who Studied in Heidelberg in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries -- Scholars in the Liberal Arts, Social Sciences, and Economics -- Natural Scientists -- Stagnation and a Fresh Beginning of Scientific Relations -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 4: Catchment Areas and Killing Fields: Towards an Intellectual Geography of the Thirty Years ́War -- Part I. Introduction -- Intellectual Geography -- The Geography of Universities in the Early Modern Period: An Overview -- The Thirty Years ́War as a Turning Point in European University History -- Methodological Presuppositions -- Part II. Universities within the Holy Roman Empire -- Reformed Universities -- Catholic Universities -- Lutheran Universities -- Regions Compared -- Confessions Compared -- Part III. Universities outside the Holy Roman Empire -- Scandinavia -- The Dutch Republic -- Part IV. Conclusion -- Findings -- Prospects -- References -- Chapter 5: A Political Geography of University Foundation: The Case of the Danish Monarchy -- The Danish State from a Territorial Standpoint. , The Geopolitics of University Foundation -- Eastern Denmark -- The Duchies of Schleswig and Holstein -- Jutland -- University Foundation from a Geopolitical Perspective -- Establishment of Universities and Nation-Building -- The University of Oslo-Det Kongelige Frederiks Universitet -- The University of Iceland-Hskóli Íslands -- The University of the Faroe Islands-Fróskaparsetur Føroya -- The University of Greenland-Ilisimatusarfik -- Universities as Part of the Arsenal of National Symbols and Institutions -- Discussion and Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 6: ``A Small Town of Character:́́ Locating a New Scottish University, 1963-1965 -- Early Initiatives -- A New University for Scotland -- The Competing Locations -- Stirling -- Inverness -- Ayr, Dumfries, Perth, Falkirk, and Cumbernauld -- The Decision -- Conclusions -- References -- Part II: The University, Knowledge, and Governance -- Chapter 7: Knowledge Environments at Universities: Some Theoretical and Methodological Considerations -- The Spatiality of Learning, Research, and Academic Careers -- What Is a Knowledge Environment and Which Caveats Should Be Considered? -- Research Needs Specific Environments -- Research on Knowledge Environments of Universities Should Address Various Caveats -- Of What Components Does a Local Knowledge Environment Consist? -- Capacities, Characteristics, and Behavior of Persons Significantly Involved in the Activities of a Scientific Institution -- Financial and Material Resources -- Organizational Structures, Institutional Rules and Logics, and Scientific Cultures -- External Factors of Influence -- How Can a Knowledge Environment Affect Learning and Research Processes at a Given Place? -- Universities Offer Unequal Learning and Research Opportunities -- Environment Related Mechanisms and Processes that Influence Learning and Research?. , The Significance of Social Spaces -- Theoretical Concepts Contributing to the Understanding of How Knowledge Environments Function -- ``Knowledge Travels in a Selective Way ́́-- Concepts Focusing on Structure, Agency, Interaction, and Interrelations -- Theoretical Concepts Focusing on Life Worlds and Holistic Interpretations -- How Can the Quality and Influences of a Knowledge Environments be Verified? -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 8: Innovation Governance: From the ``Endless Frontier ́́to the Triple Helix -- U.S. Government Role in Innovation -- Sources of the Assisted Linear Model -- The Origins of the Endless Frontier -- Beyond the Endless Frontier -- The Triple Helix -- Devolution of Responsibility for Innovation -- The Changing Role of Government -- Transition from Statism to Laissez Faire -- Transition from Statism to Civil Society -- Transition to an Innovation State -- Transition to an Interventionist State -- Innovative Governance -- U.S. Innovation Policy -- Bottom-up Activates Top-Down -- The Emergence of a ``Bottom-Up Planning System ́́-- Indirect Industrial Policy -- GovernmentIndustry Initiatives -- Industry Government Initiatives -- Conclusion: Endless Frontier and Triple Helix -- References -- Chapter 9: Quality Cultures in Higher Education Institutions-Development of the Quality Culture Inventory -- Theoretical Background -- The heiQUALITY Cultures Project -- Methods -- Operationalization of Quality Culture -- Structural-Formal Questionnaire -- Organizational-Psychological Questionnaire -- Data Collection and Sample Characteristics -- Selected Results: Evaluation Options -- Organizational-Psychological Questionnaire -- Structural-Formal Questionnaire -- Discussion and Future Prospects -- References -- Chapter 10: Agnotology: Ignorance and Absence, or Towards a Sociology of Things that Arent́ There. , Agnotology: Properties of Ignorance -- Ontology and Epistemology -- Chronicity -- Granularity -- Scale -- Intentionality -- Absences, More Generally -- Privatives and Absences -- Theories and Modalities of Absences: Silences and Invisibilities -- Symmetry and Stupidity -- Conclusions: Studying Things that Arent́ There -- Methodology -- What do we know about ignorance and absence? -- Postscript -- References -- Part III: The University and the City -- Chapter 11: The Civic University and the City -- Universities as Urban Anchor Institutions -- The University and the Development of the City in the Round -- Societal Challenges and the Civic University -- Tensioned Themes -- Business Models of the University -- Linking the University to the City and the City to the University -- The U.K. Experience: Universities and Sustainable, Healthy, and Creative Cities -- Anchoring Universities in Cities through Urban Foresight: The Civic University in Action -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 12: City and University-An Architectś Notes on an Intriguing Spatial Relationship -- The Early European University Within the Power Structure of Town, Court (Government), and Pope -- Urban Integration and Architecture of Early Universities -- Medieval Paris -- Medieval Oxford and Cambridge -- Medieval Vienna -- Universities in the Early Modern Era -- The Turn Toward Research Universities -- The Integration of New Research Facilities: From Convent to Palace -- Archiginnasio Bologna -- La Sapienza -- Altdorf University -- Uppsala University -- Vienna University -- Coimbra University (Portugal) -- Trinity College in Cambridge, England -- Triple-wing university buildings as new paradigm -- An Ideal Plan for a University -- Early European University Export -- Latin America -- North America -- Toward a Modern Research University -- Universities in the Nineteenth Century. , The Rise of Technical Universities.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Meusburger, Peter Geographies of the University Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2018 ISBN 9783319755922
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Electronic books
    URL: Full-text  ((OIS Credentials Required))
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Oxford, England :Academic Press,
    UID:
    almahu_9948026246302882
    Format: 1 online resource (573 p.)
    ISBN: 0-12-800380-4
    Content: Distributed Generation and its Implications for the Utility Industry examines the current state of the electric supply industry; the upstream and downstream of the meter; the various technological, business, and regulatory strategies; and case studies that look at a number of projects that put new models into practice. A number of powerful trends are beginning to affect the fundamentals of the electric utility business as we know it. Recent developments have led to a fundamental re-thinking of the electric supply industry and its traditional method of measuring consumption on a volumetric basis. These developments include decreasing electricity demand growth; the rising cost of fossil fuels and its impact on electricity costs; investment in energy efficiency; increasing numbers of prosumers who generate for some or all of their own needs; and market reforms. This book examines the implications of these trends in chapters focusing on distributed and decentralized generation, transactive energy, the role of electric vehicles, any much more. Discusses the technological, business, and policy trends most impacting the electric utility sector Provides an assessment of how fast and how soon distributed energy resources may make an impact on utility sales/revenues Explores, through a series of international case studies, the implementation of strategies that may help retain the viability of the utility industry Features contributions from a number of scholars, academics, experts and practitioners from different parts of the world focused on examining the future of the electric supply industry.
    Note: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Front Cover -- Distributed Generation and its Implications for the Utility Industry -- Copyright -- Contents -- Author Biographies -- Foreword -- Preface -- Introduction: The Rise of Decentralized Energy -- Historical Perspective: Centralized Generation and Growing Consumption -- What has Changed? -- The Rise of Disruptive Technologies -- Changing the Fundamentals -- Organization of the Book -- Part I: What is Changing? -- Chapter 1: Decentralized Energy: Is It as Imminent or Serious as Claimed? -- 1. Introduction -- 2. What Is Behind the Slowing Demand Growth? -- 3. Rise of Renewables -- 4. The Rise of DERs -- 5. How Serious a Threat-or opportunity? -- 6. Conclusions -- Chapter 2: New Utility Business Model: A Global View -- 1. Introduction -- 2. What is the global perspective? Views from the Senior Management of major global utilities -- 3. What Business Models are Actually Being Employed and Who will be Successful in this New Market -- 4. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 3: Germany's Decentralized Energy Revolution -- 1. Introduction -- 2. What Is Driving the German Decentralized Energy Revolution? -- 2.1. German Feed-In Regulation for Renewable Energies and Cogeneration -- 2.2. Industrial Policy: Lead Market and Lead Supplier -- 3. Prosumer Empowerment: A Genuine Bottom-Up Movement -- 3.1. Who Drives the Revolution? -- 3.2. Empowerment: Bioenergy Villages and Cooperatives -- 3.3. Municipal Utilities and the Emotionalization of Energy -- 4. Challenges and Unforeseen Consequences of the Feed-In Scheme -- 4.1. Open Questions in Financing and Redistribution -- 4.2. Technologies Lagging Behind the Momentum -- 4.3. Ensuring Security of Supply -- 4.4. Counterstrategies of Energy Utilities -- 5. Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 4: Australia's Million Solar Roofs: Disruption on the Fringes or the Beginning of a New Order? -- 1. Introduction. , 2. Context -- 2.1. Rising Household Electricity Prices -- 2.2. Subsidies -- 2.2.1. Capital Subsidies -- 2.2.2. Production Subsidies -- 2.3. PV System Costs -- 3. Methodology -- 4. Results -- 4.1. IRR of Investment in Rooftop PV -- 4.2. Valuation of Capital and Production Subsidies -- 4.2.1. Capital Subsidies -- 4.2.2. Production Subsidies -- 5. Winners, Losers, and Consequent Questions -- 5.1. Have PV Owners Had a Windfall Gain? -- 5.2. Is It All Cost and No Benefit for Other Energy Users? -- 5.2.1. Energy Market Impact -- 5.2.2. Network Impact -- 5.3. Should Tariff Structures Be Changed? -- 5.4. Is This the Beginning of a Death Spiral for the Centrally Dispatched Model? -- 6. Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 5: As the Role of the Distributor Changes, so Will the Need for New Technology -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Value of the Grid -- 2.1. Reliability (Balancing and Backup Resource) -- 2.2. Voltage Regulation -- 2.3. Voltage Quality -- 2.4. Efficiency -- 2.5. Optimal Sizing -- 3. The Advantages of Accommodating Local Generation -- 3.1. Enabling LENs -- 3.2. Costs and Benefits of the ElectriNetSM -- 3.3. Examples of the Value of the ElectriNetSM and the Flexible Load Shape Concept -- 4. Distribution System Technologies Needed -- 4.1. Distribution Planning for Flexible Load Shape -- 4.2. System Responsiveness, Resiliency, Flexibility, and Customer Connectivity -- 4.3. Integration of Local Generation -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6: The Impact of Distributed Generation on European Power Utilities* -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Challenges Facing the EU Electricity Sector -- 3. The Impact on Major EU Power Utilities -- 4. How Are European Power Utilities Responding -- 4.1. New Business Strategies for Europe -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 7: Lessons from Other Industries Facing Disruptive Technology -- 1. Introduction. , 2. Confronting Disruptive Technology -- 3. ESI Response to the Rise of DERs -- 4. Conclusion -- Part II: Implications and Industry/Regulatory Response -- Chapter 8: Electricity Markets and Pricing for the Distributed Generation Era -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Pressures on Traditional Approach to Electricity Pricing -- 2.1. Traditional Approach to Dispatch and Electricity Pricing -- 2.2. New Developments -- 3. Reform Proposals -- 3.1. Efficient Dispatch Integrating Different Energy Resources -- 3.2. Efficient Distribution Network Investment and Operations -- 3.3. Fixed-Cost Recovery for Competing Sources of Energy -- 4. Unsolved Problems and Proposed Reform -- 4.1. Why Current Reform Proposals are Inadequate -- 4.2. Reform Proposal -- 4.3. Variation on the Reform Proposal: with One Wholesale Market -- 5. New Business Models -- 5.1. Redefining the Consumer Offering: from Commodity to Service -- 5.2. Growing Role for DSR -- 5.3. Distribution System Operators -- 5.4. The Growing Role of Aggregators -- 5.5. Reversion Toward Vertical Integration -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 9: Transactive Energy: Linking Supply and Demand Through Price Signals -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Defining Transactive Energy -- 3. Transactive Energy to Balance the Power System -- 4. Information Technology Underlying Transactive Energy -- 5. At What Price Generation? -- 6. At What Price Distribution? -- 7. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 10: Transactive Energy: Interoperable Transactive Retail Tariffs -- 1. Introduction -- 1.1. Forward Transactions -- 2. What is TE? -- 2.1. Spot Transactions -- 2.2. Products and Interfaces -- 2.3. Subscriptions -- 2.4. Coordinated Decentralized Control -- 2.5. Decentralized Transport System Control -- 2.6. TE Business and Market Processes -- 2.7. TE is a Vision for the Electricity Industry -- 3. Current Retail Electricity Challenges. , 4. How Will an Interoperable Transactive Tariff Work? -- 4.1. Customer Interactions with ITRTs -- 4.2. REP Interactions with Transactive Retail Tariffs -- 4.3. DO Interactions with Transactive Retail Tariffs -- 5. Will an ITRT Work? -- 6. Benefits of ITRTs -- 7. A Future Transactive Electricity Business and Regulatory Model -- 7.1. Structure of the Transactive Business and Regulatory Model -- 7.2. Differences with the Current Business and Regulatory Models -- 8. Conclusions -- Chapter 11: The Next Evolution of the Distribution Utility -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Current State of the EDU -- 3. A Vision for the Future Electricity System -- 4. The Future Business of the EDU -- 4.1. The ``Local Reliability Provider´´ Model -- 4.2. The Membership Model -- 4.3. The DG Ownership Model -- 4.4. The Mixed Model -- 5. Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 12: An Expanded Distribution Utility Business Model: Win-Win or Win-Maybe? -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Rationales for Limiting Diversification -- 2.1. What the Rationales Are Not -- 2.2. Discrimination -- 2.3. Cross-Subsidization -- 3. Not a New Story -- 4. Loss of Market Does Not Mean Market Power Disappears -- 5. Other Factors Mitigating Concern -- 5.1. Economies of Scope -- 5.2. Ex Post Regulation -- 5.3. Ex Post Antitrust Enforcement -- 6. Subsidizing the Competition? -- 7. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 13: From Throughput to Access Fees: The Future of Network and Retail Tariffs -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Economic Inefficiency of Existing Electricity Tariffs -- 3. Other Reasons Why Utilities Are Considering Alternative Tariff Structures -- 4. The Industry Response-New Tariff Designs -- 5. Optimizing the Utility Response-Embracing Change -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 14: Industry Response to Revenue Erosion from Solar PVs -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Understanding the Threat Posed by DERs. , 3. Three Different Utilities, Three Distinct Approaches to Solar PV -- 3.1. APS: A Contentious Approach to Solar PV and Net Metering -- 3.2. SDG& -- E: Customer-Driven Policies and DG Penetration -- 3.3. Green Mountain Power: VT and the Solar Capital of New England -- 4. Lessons Learned and Policy Suggestions for Increased Solar Acceptance -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 15: Making the Most of the No Load Growth Business Environment -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Five Major Factors Causing the Electric Sales Growth Slowdown -- 3. Electric Utility Investment Needs are Also Unprecedented -- 4. The Survival Toolkit: Four Strategies -- 4.1. First Strategy: Stay the Course -- 4.2. Second Strategy: Electrification -- 4.3. Third Strategy: The Safe Haven -- 4.4. The Fourth Strategy: Go On the Offense -- 5. An Analytic Approach to Strategy Selection -- 6. Three Tactics Regardless of the Specific Utility Strategy -- 6.1. The First Tactic: Rethink Rate Design -- 6.2. The Second Tactic: Reimagine Forecasting -- 6.3. The Third Tactic: Reinvent Load and Market Research Functions -- 7. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 16: Regulatory Policies for the Transition to the New Business Paradigm -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Near-Term Issue: Transition Grid Models for Cost Recovery and Rates -- 3. Medium-Term Issues Shaping the Regulatory Framework for Utility 2.0 -- 4. Conclusion -- Chapter 17: Electric Vehicles: New Problem or Distributed Energy Asset? -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The V2G Concept -- 3. Modeling: Why ``Macro´´ Uptake Figures Are Not Enough -- 4. Detailed V2G Modeling -- 3x EV uptake scenarios: -- 3x charging models: -- 4.1. EV Uptake -- 4.2. EV Travel -- 4.3. Household Energy and Power -- 4.4. EV Charging and Discharging -- 5. Modeling Results: The Real Impact of V2G -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- Part III: What Future?. , Chapter 18: Rethinking the Transmission-Distribution Interface in a Distributed Energy Future. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-12-800240-9
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-306-93002-2
    Language: English
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge :Cambridge University Press,
    UID:
    almafu_9958087070502883
    Format: 1 online resource (xxii, 400 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-107-23291-0 , 1-139-60962-9 , 1-139-61148-8 , 1-139-62078-9 , 1-283-94311-5 , 1-139-62450-4 , 1-139-60827-4 , 1-139-01818-3 , 1-139-61520-3
    Content: W. H. Auden is a giant of twentieth-century English poetry whose writings demonstrate a sustained engagement with the times in which he lived. But how did the century's shifting cultural terrain affect him and his work? Written by distinguished poets and scholars, these brief but authoritative essays offer a varied set of coordinates by which to chart Auden's continuously evolving career, examining key aspects of his environmental, cultural, political and creative contexts. Reaching beyond mere biography, these essays present Auden as the product of ongoing negotiations between himself, his time and posterity, exploring the enduring power of his poetry to unsettle and provoke. The collection will prove valuable for scholars, researchers and students of English literature, cultural studies and creative writing.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015). , Machine generated contents note: Acknowledgements; List of contributors; A note on editions and abbreviations; Introduction Tony Sharpe; Part I. Contexts of Place: 1. Auden's northerliness Tony Sharpe; 2. Two cities: Berlin and New York Patrick Deer; 3. Ideas about England Stan Smith; 4. Ideas of America Aidan Wasley; 5. At home in Italy and Austria Justin Quinn; Part II. Social and Cultural Contexts: 6. Auden and the class system Adrian Caesar; 7. The Church of England: Auden's Anglicanism Tony Sharpe; 8. British homosexuality, 1920-1939 Gregory Woods; 9. American homosexuality, 1939-1972 Richard Bozorth; 10. Auden among women Janet Montefiore; 11. Auden and the American literary world Aidan Wasley; 12. Atlantic Auden Michael Wood; Part III. Political, Historical and Theoretical Contexts: 13. Communism and fascism in 1920s and 1930s Britain Matthew Worley; 14. Auden and wars Patrick Deer; 15. Auden and Freud: the psychoanalytic text John Boly; 16. Auden's theology Alan Jacobs; 17. In history Susannah Young-ah Gottlieb; Part IV. Creative Contexts (i): 18. The body Edward Mendelson; 19. The cinema Keith Williams; 20. 1930s British drama Steve Nicholson; 21. The documentary moment David Collard; 22. Travel writing Tim Youngs; 23. Auden and post-war opera Michael Symmons Roberts; (ii) Precursors and Contemporaries: 24. Earlier English influences Chris Jones; 25. Shakespeare Stephen Regan; 26. Yeats Michael O'Neill; 27. Eliot Hugh Haughton; 28. Some modernists in early Auden Gareth Reeves; 29. In German Rainer Emig; 30. Auden and Isherwood James J. Berg and Chris Freeman; Part V. The 'Most Professional' Poet: 31. Auden in prose Sean O'Brien; 32. Auden and little magazines Andrew Thacker; 33. Double take: Auden in collaboration Richard Badenhausen; 34. Auden and prosody Sean O'Brien; 35. Auden's forms Seamus Perry; Further reading; Index. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-521-19657-4
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 8
    UID:
    almahu_9949582027802882
    Format: 1 online resource (504 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781350323230
    Series Statement: Bloomsbury Handbooks
    Content: Friedrich Froebel (1782 - 1852), the inventor of kindergarten, was one of the most influential educational thinkers of the 19th century. This book showcases the cutting-edge work being undertaken around the world inspired by this pioneer of early childhood education and shows the many ways in which Froebel's work has been applied and extended. It presents a wealth of Froebelian expertise on topics including pedagogy and curriculum, history, architecture, neuroscience, peace and religious education and links Froebel's theories to other thinkers including John Dewey, Michel Foucault, Paulo Freire, Aili Helenius and Chen Heqin. It highlights what Froebel means today in a variety of settings around the world and includes contributions from academics and practitioners based in North and South America, Europe, Australasia, Africa and Asia.
    Note: Tribute Introduction: Connections, Disconnections, Reconnecting and Interconnecting, 〈i〉Tina Bruce (University of Roehampton, UK)〈/i〉 〈b〉Reflections〈/b〉 Froebel for Me, 〈i〉Aili Helenius〈/i〉 What Froebel Means to Me, 〈i〉Louis Werth (〈/i〉〈i〉University of Cambridge, UK)〈/i〉 〈b〉Part l: Connections - Searching for the Authentic Friedrich Froebel〈/b〉 Editor's Introduction, 〈i〉Helge Wasmuth (Mercy College, USA)〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉 1. Translating Pedagogy - Reading Froebel in Different Languages, 〈i〉Sebastian Engelmann (University of Education Karlsruhe, Germany)〈/i〉 2. Froebel's Law of the Sphere as a Theoretical Groundwork for his Pedagogy, 〈i〉Michael Winkler (〈/i〉〈i〉University of Jena, Germany)〈/i〉 3. Froebel's Mathematical Thinking, German Idealism and the Occupation of Plaiting,〈i〉 〈/i〉〈i〉Michael Friedmann (Humboldt University Berlin, Germany)〈/i〉 4. Between Theory and Educational Approach: Anthropological Presumptions and Basic Terms of Froebel's Pedagogy of Play, 〈i〉Ulf Sauerbrey (〈/i〉〈i〉University of Applied Sciences in Neubrandenburg, 〈/i〉〈i〉Germany)〈/i〉 5. Friedrich Froebel's 〈i〉Mutter- und koselieder〈/i〉 and Its Importance Today, 〈i〉Christiane Konrad (Germany)〈/i〉 6. Archival Holdings on Friedrich Froebel and the Edition of His Letters,〈i〉 Bettina Irina Reimers (〈/i〉〈i〉Bibliothek für Bildungsgeschichtliche Forschung) 〈/i〉〈i〉and Stefan Cramme (〈/i〉〈i〉Bibliothek für Bildungsgeschichtliche Forschung) 〈/i〉7. A Discussion of Fröbel From Authentic to Modern, 〈i〉Isabel Schamberger 〈/i〉〈i〉(Friedrich-Froebel Museum, Bad Blankenburg, Germany) 〈/i〉8. Peace as Unification of Life - Peace Building as Hidden Curriculum in Froebel's 〈i〉Education of Man〈/i〉, 〈i〉Karl Neumann (T〈/i〉〈i〉echnische Universitet Braunschweig, Germany) 〈/i〉〈b〉Part II: Disconnection and Transitology (The Transfer, Translation and Transformation of Froebelian Study and Practice)〈/b〉 Editor's Introduction, 〈i〉Yukiyo Nishida (〈/i〉〈i〉University of Aberdeen, UK)〈/i〉 9. Discoveries at the Back of the Kindergarten Cupboard, 〈i〉Helen May 〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉(University of Otago, New Zealand)〈/i〉 10. Pioneering Froebelians and the Kindergarten Movements in Italy, 〈i〉Keiko Omri 〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉(Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan)〈/i〉 11. From Keihau to the UK: Eleonore Heerwart's Role in Establishing Froebelian Pedagogy in Britain From 1861 to 1883, 〈i〉Jane Read (〈/i〉〈i〉University of Roehampton, UK)〈/i〉 12. Grace Fulmer and Conservative and Liberal Approaches to Froebelian Education, 〈i〉Larry Prochner 〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉(University of Alberta, Canada)〈/i〉 13. The American Froebelians, 〈i〉Ann Taylor Allen (〈/i〉〈i〉University of Louisville, USA)〈/i〉 14. Morality, Beauty and Froebel: Cultural Philanthropy and the Establishment of Free-Kindergartens in Australia, 〈i〉Luke Touhill 〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉(Macquarie University, Australia)〈/i〉 15. The Route to the Hebrew Kindergarten in the Early 20th century, 〈i〉Yael Dayan 〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉(Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel)〈/i〉 16. The Froebelian Garden in Spain, 〈i〉José Pedro Marín Murcia 〈/i〉〈i〉(Complutense University of Madrid, Spain) and Maria Jose Martinez-Ruiz-Funes (University of Murcia, Spain)〈/i〉 〈b〉Part〈/b〉 〈b〉lll: Reconnecting - Exploring and Working Through the Challenges of Current Practice〈/b〉 Editor's Introduction, 〈i〉Jane Whinnett 〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉(University of Edinburgh, UK),〈/i〉 17. Getting Down and Dirty with Froebel on the Allotment, 〈i〉Kate Razzall 〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉(Endorsed Froebel Trust Travelling Tutor, UK)〈/i〉 18. Pollinating Minds at Guildford Nursery School and Family Centre: A Froebelian Approach, 〈i〉Sally Cave (〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉Froebel Trust Hub, UK)〈/i〉 19. Exploring Interconnectivity Between Froebelian Principles and Australian Aboriginal Ways of Knowing, Being and Doing, 〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉Libby Lee Hammond, (Purnululu Aboriginal Independent Community School, Western Australia), Elizabeth Jackson-Barret (Edith Cowan University, Australia) and Stella Louis (Early Childhood Consultant, UK)〈/i〉 20. Hope Cottage Nursery School - A Year of Nature and Sustainability in the Age of Climate Crisis: A Journey In Progress, 〈i〉Natasha Stewart〈/i〉 21. #Blocks Rock, 〈i〉Catriona Gill 〈/i〉〈i〉(〈/i〉〈i〉University of Edinburgh, 〈/i〉〈i〉UK)〈/i〉 22. Blocks in Bhutan,〈i〉 〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉Margaret Brooks (University of New England, Australia) and Chimi Demi (Paro College of Education, Bhutan)〈/i〉 23. Froebelian Approaches in Primary School: A Case Study of Topic-Based Learning in the Primary Phase at Annan School, 〈i〉Alastair Leigh〈/i〉 (〈i〉Annan Froebel School, UK) 〈/i〉with an Introduction by 〈i〉Mark Hunter 〈/i〉〈i〉(Annan Froebel School, UK)〈/i〉 24. The Glory Kindergarten and Peace Education, 〈i〉Fusa Abe〈/i〉〈i〉 and Ran Shirai 〈/i〉〈i〉(The Glory Kindergarten, Japan)〈/i〉 25. The Power of Partnership: Linking Froebelian Practice and Connecting Practitioners Across Early Learning Centres and Primary Settings in Midlothian, Scotland, 〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉John Dagger (Moorfoot Primary School North Middleton, UK) and Kerry Knight (Burnbrae Primary School, Midlothian, UK)〈/i〉 26. Learning From Our Children: The Story of Eilidh, 〈i〉Lynn McNair 〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉(University of Edinburgh, UK)〈/i〉 27. Family Songs at Home: A Multiagency Approach to Supporting Children and Families Through Digital Media Using Froebel's Mother Songs, 〈i〉Donna Green 〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉(Froebel in Falkirk Lead, UK)〈/i〉 28. Developing Froebel's 'Instinct into Insight': A Play Therapist Supports Families to Grow and Find Solutions to Their Own Challenges, 〈i〉Elaine Fullerton 〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉(Play Therapy Base, Midlothian, UK)〈/i〉 〈b〉Part lV: Interconnecting - Exploring and Finding Links Between the Essentials of Froebelian Principles and Practices and Current Research and Theories〈/b〉 Editor's Introduction, 〈i〉Sacha Powell 〈/i〉〈i〉(The Froebel Trust, UK)〈/i〉 29. Pedagogies of Care with 1-year-olds: A Contemporary Froebelian Lens in New Zealand, 〈i〉Maria Cooper and Jean Rockel 〈/i〉〈b〉〈u〉〈/u〉〈/b〉〈i〉(University of Auckland, New Zealand)〈/i〉 30. A Froebelian Approach to Making Theatre for the Very Young, 〈i〉Samantha Lane 〈/i〉〈i〉(Angel Theatre for Children, UK)〈/i〉 31. A Life 'In and With' Nature in the Period of Earliest Childhood, 〈i〉Jo Josephidou (〈/i〉〈i〉The Open University, UK) 〈/i〉〈i〉and Nicola Kemp (〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉University of Canterbury, UK)〈/i〉 32. From 'Real Spaces' to 'Other Spaces' in Young Refugee Children's Free-Flow Play, 〈i〉Sandra El Gemayel 〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉(〈/i〉〈i〉University College London, UK〈/i〉〈i〉)〈/i〉 33. The Encounter of the Froebel Blocks and the Giant-Sized Blocks, 〈i〉Fredrika Visuri and Susanna Gilberg 〈/i〉〈i〉(Ebeneser Foundation Kindergarten Museum, Finland)〈/i〉 34. Pedagogies of Hope: Exploring Play Opportunities for Young Children in an Urban Environment, 〈i〉Marlene McCormack, 〈/i〉〈i〉Aishling Silke, Annette Kearns, Leah O'Toole, 〈/i〉〈i〉Patsy Stafford, 〈/i〉〈i〉Tríona Stokes and Mathias Urban 〈/i〉〈i〉(〈/i〉〈i〉Maynooth University〈/i〉〈i〉, Ireland)〈/i〉 35. The Roots of Froebelian Arts and Skills Pedagogy in Memorised Narratives about Finnish Early Childhood Education and Teacher Education From the 1920s to the 1990s, 〈i〉Inkeri Ruokonen (University of Turku, Finland) and Taina Sillanpää 〈/i〉〈i〉(Ebeneser Foundation Kindergarten Museum, Finland)〈/i〉 36. The Art of Serious Play: Froebel's Influence on Early Childhood Pedagogy and Beyond to the Creative Work of Artists and Designers, 〈i〉Pete Moorhouse (〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉Early Years Creative Consultant)〈/i〉 37. Off the Grid: Insight into Design's Inner and Outer Landscapes, 〈i〉John M. Reynolds 〈/i〉〈i〉(Miami University Architecture and Interior Design, USA)〈/i〉 38. Spirituality in Early Childhood Pedagogy: a Froebelian Lens on the Role of Women in a Chinese Context, 〈i〉Fengling Tang 〈/i〉〈i〉(University of Roehampton, UK) 〈/i〉〈i〉and Juan Zhao 〈/i〉〈i〉(Hebei University, China)〈/i〉 39. The Realisation of 'Life Unity' in the Mother Songs, 〈i〉Yumiko Taoko 〈/i〉〈i〉(Ryukoku University Junior College, Japan)〈/i〉 40. Educating Hearts and Minds in Early Childhood Education: The Importance of Social-Emotional Learning, , Spatiality in Finnish Early Childhood History and its Connections to Finnish Pedagogy - A Closer Look at the Kitchen Area, 〈i〉Taina 〈/i〉〈i〉Sillanpää 〈/i〉〈i〉(Ebeneser Foundation Kindergarten Museum, Finland)〈/i〉 44. Integrative Neuroscience and Froebelian Understandings in Early Childhood Education, 〈i〉Carole Bloch 〈/i〉〈i〉(University of the Western Cape, South Africa and 〈/i〉〈i〉PRAESA, South Africa〈/i〉〈i〉)〈/i〉 45. Froebel as an Antidote to 21st century Neoliberal Curriculum Reform Policies, 〈i〉Dan Castner 〈/i〉〈i〉(Indiana University, USA)〈/i〉 46. From Freire to Froebel, 〈i〉Sive Ngubethole Mbolekwa 〈/i〉〈i〉(PRAESA, South Africa) 〈/i〉〈i〉and Tina Bruce 〈/i〉〈i〉(University of Roehampton, UK)〈/i〉 47. Froebel Researchers and the Implications for Research Practice in Post Second World War Japan: Two Case Studies by Professor Shoji Masako and Professor Ogasawara Michio, 〈i〉Naoko Matsuma 〈/i〉〈i〉(Yamaguchi Gakugei University, Japan)〈/i〉 48. Young Voices on COVID: An Exploration of the Froebel Storytelling Approach in Support for Young Children's Agency and Autonomy through the Covid-19 Pandemic, 〈i〉Chris Pascal and Tony Bertram 〈/i〉〈i〉〈/i〉〈i〉(Centre for Research in Early Childhood, UK)〈/i〉 Conclusion List of Contributors Index
    Language: English
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  • 9
    UID:
    gbv_552271837
    Format: Online-Ressource (xvi,[12],436p) , 8°
    Edition: The second edition
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Farmington Hills, Mich Cengage Gale 2009 Eighteenth Century Collections Online Electronic reproduction; Available via the World Wide Web
    Note: English Short Title Catalog, T91352 , Reproduction of original from British Library , Electronic reproduction; Available via the World Wide Web
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (Full text online)
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  • 10
    UID:
    almafu_9960118229502883
    Format: 1 online resource (518 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 1-139-38309-4
    Series Statement: Cambridge library collection. Religion
    Content: Henry Aaron Stern (1820-85), of German Jewish birth, moved to London in 1839, converted to Christianity and became a lifelong missionary for the London Society for Promoting Christianity amongst the Jews. With his wife he preached in Palestine, Babylon, Constantinople, Baghdad, Persia, and to the Karaite Jews of the Crimea. Famously, in 1863, he was caught in a diplomatic dispute in Ethiopia that led to his imprisonment and eventual rescue, five years later, by a British military force. Stern was made a doctor of divinity in 1881. He wrote three memoirs, which were drawn on by Albert Augustus Isaacs (1826-1903), a vicar at Leicester who knew Stern personally. Isaacs's biography, first published in 1886, is hagiographic and written with religiosity. Nonetheless, it includes informative accounts of missionary work among Jewish communities, and remains a valuable source on the orientalism of Victorian Britain.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015). , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-108-05350-5
    Language: English
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