| Anna Theresa Kitchel - Comparative literature - 1921 - 354 pages
...But to minimize the results of Zola's achievement would be to close our minds to the fact that in the last decades of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth Zola was read and was admired by many English novelists. Chapter II. The Sources of George Eliot's... | |
| Richard Bernstein - Philosophy - 1983 - 314 pages
...strong continuity between Gadamer's early interests and those that emerged in Germany in the latter part of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth: the Romantic tradition; the growth of historical consciousness; hermeneutics; the Geisteswissenschaften,... | |
| John I. Goodlad, Robert Henry Anderson - Education - 1987 - 300 pages
...promoted counterparts must be rejected. Toward a Sound Educational Position During the second half of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth, the elementary school came to be viewed as a series of graded hurdles to be cleared one after the other... | |
| Michael Strong - Education - 1988 - 320 pages
...programs, and the "natural approach" are all factors that were linked with the growth of oralism during the last decades of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth century. The desire to begin instructing deaf children as early as possible certainly provided increased... | |
| John Hick, Edmund S. Meltzer - Religion - 1989 - 260 pages
...the United States since 1654, the vast majority of Jews came to America from Eastern Europe in the last decades of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth. The immigrants, the 'first generation', had all they could do to eke out a living, but they concentrated... | |
| Steve Fraser, Gary Gerstle - History - 1989 - 348 pages
...economic role for its national government. The American state did not remain static, certainly, in the last decades of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth; but it grew slowly, haltingly, incompletely.2 The Great Depression, which would have been a difficult... | |
| Larry A. Hickman - Philosophy - 1990 - 255 pages
...example is Dewey's treatment of the waves of immigrants that hit the cities of the United States in the last decades of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth. He faults Dewey for his inability to see the problem as a class problem, suggesting that he had viewed... | |
| Social Science - 1965 - 622 pages
...raising funds. But these, it was soon seen, were not adequate for the job at hand cither. In the closing decades of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth there came into the consciousness of American life a new emphasis upon social problems and new faith... | |
| William Lazonick - Business & Economics - 1993 - 392 pages
...transportation revolution was a prelude to the transformation of US manufacturing that took place in the last decades of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth. The central organizational phenomenon in Chandler's analysis is the vertical integration of various production... | |
| James Davison Hunter - Social Science - 1992 - 431 pages
...Baltimore, Rochester, Detroit, and other major cities. In sum, the discrimination faced by Jews in the last decades of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth, while in many ways different from that experienced by the mainly Irish Catholics, was no less hostile.... | |
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