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Keywords: itinerancy
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Journal Article
Nonbreeding season movements of a migratory songbird are related to declines in resource availability
Samantha M Knight and others
in
Ornithology
The Auk, Volume 136, Issue 3, 1 July 2019, ukz028, https://doi.org/10.1093/auk/ukz028
Published: 06 May 2019
... Shutler; Lynn Siefferman; Caz M Taylor; Helen E Trefry; Carol M Vleck; David Vleck; Linda A Whittingham; David W Winkler; D Ryan Norris Using range-wide tracking of individuals, our first objective was to quantify the frequency of itinerancy in Tree Swallows. We then compared the frequency of itinerancy...
Journal Article
Migration of the Common Redstart (Phoenicurus phoenicurus): A Eurasian Songbird Wintering in Highly Seasonal Conditions in the West African Sahel
Mikkel Willemoes Kristensen and others
in
Ornithology
The Auk, Volume 130, Issue 2, 1 April 2013, Pages 258–264, https://doi.org/10.1525/auk.2013.13001
Published: 01 April 2013
..., a strategy termed “itinerancy,” instead of being sedentary in one specific site. We tracked the migration of a small Eurasian songbird, the Common Redstart (Phoenicurus phoenicurus), using archival light-level geolocators. The birds showed a distinct counterclockwise loop migration from northern...
Chapter
Wilderness, Shady Grove, and Garden
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Russell E. Richey
Published: 19 March 2015
... settlements west, the Methodist itinerants experienced woodland as wilderness. In this, as in other chapters, the patterns of Methodist religious life are illustrated with very ample quotations. In late June and early July of 1781, in successive journal entries, Asbury brought the three sylvan...
Chapter
Whitefield and the Atlantic
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Stephen R. Berry
Published: 01 May 2016
...—parish, wilderness, cloister, and haven—capture how the role and meaning of the ship changed over the course of the itinerant’s life. These metaphors also demonstrate how the itinerant rhetorically re-enacted the Atlantic crossing in his journal, sermons, and letters to illustrate the Christian life...
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Musical Itinerancy in a World of Nations: Germany, its Music, and its Musicians
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Celia Applegate
Published: 26 December 2013
...This chapter examines the world of the traveling musicians who produced European musical culture and haunted its literary imagination. Focusing on the history of musical itinerancy and travel, mainly in German-speaking Europe, it explores the ways in which Germans shaped and expressed...
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William Gadsby (1773–1844)
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Ian J. Shaw
Published: 06 February 2003
... social concern but also a political theology that had a radical dimension. His preaching was key to his urban response, and his extensive itinerant ministry was suggestive of a continuing debt to the Evangelical Revival. Ashton Ralph Gadsby John Gadsby William Manchester churches Aston James Cow...
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Journals
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Joanna Brooks
Published: 09 November 2006
... the Native communities of Long Island and New England, his tour of England, Scotland, and Ireland as a fund-raising emissary for Moor’s Indian Charity School, his involvement in the administration of tribal affairs, his almost constant itinerancy among communities in western New England and central New York...
Chapter
The General Epistles and Hebrews
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Timothy Luckritz Marquis
Published: 04 October 2019
... community, the essay draws on Michael Warner’s notion of “publics” and “counterpublics” as groups constituting those individuals who recognize their membership through an intelligible discourse. In the letters, language of fictive procreation depicts itinerant, male preachers and letter-deliverers...
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A Revivalist Ars Poetica for an Itinerant Coterie: Evangelical Wit, Punctiliar Revision, and Poetic Address
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Wendy Raphael Roberts
Published: 18 June 2020
...Awakening Verse . Wendy Raphael Roberts, Oxford University Press (2020). © Oxford University Press.
DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780197510278.001.0001 This chapter argues that evangelical wit and poetic networks were central to evangelical conversion, itinerancy, and verse culture (both...
Chapter
Coherence Intervals of Large-Scale Brain Activity and Perceptual Organization
Cees van Leeuwen and Andrey R. Nikolaev
Published: 04 August 2014
... using human scalp-recorded electroencephalograms (EEG). In the spontaneous activity, the dynamics of coherent intervals is characterized by chaotic itinerancy that provides the brain with flexibility of response to varieties of stimuli. In the evoked activity, duration of the coherent intervals...
Book
Women and the Shaping of British Methodism: Persistent Preachers, 1807-1907
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Jennifer M. Lloyd
Published online: 19 July 2012
Published in print: 01 April 2010
.... The second half of the book includes the careers of mid-century women revivalists, the opportunities, home and foreign missions offered for female evangelism, the emergence of deaconess evangelists and Sisters of the People in late century, and the brief revival of female itinerancy among the Bible...
Book
Stages of Loss: The English Comedians and their Reception
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George Oppitz-Trotman
Published online: 17 September 2020
Published in print: 04 August 2020
... and long cloaks so as to deceive the Senate as to their identities and number, disguise female musicians amongst them, and protect them from the scorn of their exiled comrades. Plutarch added to the apocryphal material around Thespis by imagining an encounter between the itinerant player and the old...
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André Cadere’s peripatetic art
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Inesa Brašiškė
Published: 10 October 2023
... Enzo Sperone Rome and Turin Biard Ida Lippard Lucy Sanchez Michael Buchloh Benjamin communication Julian Pretto Gallery New York Lambert Françoise Lamelas David Newhouse Kristina photography André Cadere mobility site-specificity itinerancy internationalism artworld institutional...
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Living on the pilgrimage: Perpetual itinerancy and ‘professional pilgrims’
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Ian Reader and John Shultz
Published: 22 July 2021
...Pilgrims Until We Die . Ian Reader and John Shultz, Oxford University Press. © Oxford University Press 2021. DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780197573587.003.0004 There are some pilgrims who live permanently as homeless itinerants on the route. They are often viewed negatively as beggars who...
Chapter
Sowing and Reaping
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Philip N. Mulder
Published: 16 May 2002
... with the Methodists by experimenting with some of their tactics, including warm, extemporaneous preaching, lively music, and itinerancy, yet ultimately they relied on their traditional distinctions in appeals for converts. Methodists forged ahead with their universal designs and waves of quarterly and annual meetings...
Chapter
Published: 12 December 2013
...In this section, Edwards reflects on the commotion the Great Awakening of 1740–42 had caused. In particular, he addresses the criticism of traditional Calvinists who regarded the revivals as essentially wrongheaded because they promoted enthusiasm, and he speaks also to itinerants...
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Social Networks and Computer Models
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István Czachesz
Published: 05 January 2017
...This chapter examines the interface of cognitive and social factors in the spread of early Christianity. The first part of the chapter discusses how early Christian preferences for itinerancy, the inclusion of women and the practice of charity shaped the social networks of the movement and how...
Chapter
Introduction: Stirring and Strange
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Elizabeth Elkin Grammer
Published: 16 January 2003
...Living in the age of revivalism and evangelicalism, many women were awakened in nineteenth‐century America to the “healing balm” of Christ. Many women were also awakened to—and eventually accepted—the “cross” of becoming itinerant preachers in an age that called women to stay at home and assume...
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‘From Shoemaker I Could Become Councillor’: Merchant Courtiers’ Strategies and Ambitions
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Marc W S Jaffré
Published: 10 February 2025
.... The chapter reveals that court merchants were fully fledged courtiers, for whom the opportunity to participate in court society was one of the primary motivations for contracting with the court. merchants artisans early modern commerce itinerancy nobility noble merchants marriage alliances household...
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Mobility
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Anston Bosman
Published: 06 June 2017
... techniques of performance; and an ontological mobility that put into question the very notion of identity itself. The chapter considers itinerancy as the norm for acting companies during the period, both within and outside England, with the actors carrying with them a theatrical art that depended on many...
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