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Keywords: shipwreck
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Journal Article
Wei Zhou
Forum for Modern Language Studies, Volume 60, Issue 4, October 2024, Pages 494–510, https://doi.org/10.1093/fmls/cqae077
Published: 13 November 2024
... of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Abstract In this article, I read the shipwrecked journeys in T. S. Eliot’s 1922 poem...
Journal Article
Peter Holman
Early Music, Volume 51, Issue 4, November 2023, Pages 591–603, https://doi.org/10.1093/em/caad060
Published: 15 December 2023
..., published in 1730, claimed wrongly that the duke ‘turn’d him out of his band because he would not turn Papist’. Gloucester shipwreck James Duke of York royal trumpeters Thomas Farmer James Paisible Edmund Flower In the early morning of 6 May 1682, the frigate Gloucester was wrecked...
Journal Article
D. J. Culpin
Forum for Modern Language Studies, Volume 49, Issue 4, October 2013, Pages 369–381, https://doi.org/10.1093/fmls/cqt029
Published: 07 September 2013
... with which he was principally associated, and published what has become the longest surviving prose work that we have from his pen. This book, the Narrative of the Shipwreck of the French Vessel the Éole on the Coast of Kaffraria in April1829, published in Cape Town by Bridekirk in 1829...
Journal Article
Michael Titlestad
Forum for Modern Language Studies, Volume 49, Issue 4, October 2013, Pages 423–436, https://doi.org/10.1093/fmls/cqt030
Published: 04 September 2013
... consequences. Enzensberger, Hans Magnus The Sinking of the Titanic Grass, Günter Crabwalk German-centred memory Sebald, W. G. apocalypse Wilhelm Gustloff Certeau, Michel de shipwreck The Royal Mail SteamerTitanic, as we could...
Journal Article
Stephen Donovan
Forum for Modern Language Studies, Volume 49, Issue 4, October 2013, Pages 393–405, https://doi.org/10.1093/fmls/cqt033
Published: 19 August 2013
... in literature shipwreck in literature in open sea, where everything seems possible (Rudyard Kipling, ‘A Matter of Fact’ [1892]) ‘Tesla's Tidal Wave to Make War Impossible,’ proclaimed an eye-catching colour article in the New York World's Sunday Magazine of 21 April 1907...
Journal Article
Linda Wegley Kelly and others
The ISME Journal, Volume 6, Issue 3, March 2012, Pages 638–649, https://doi.org/10.1038/ismej.2011.114
Published: 01 September 2011
... was identified to the lowest taxonomic level possible (genus level for corals, functional group for turfs and crustose coralline algae, and species level for macroalgae). Algae and rubble samples (mixed algal communities living on carbonate skeletons) were collected at 10 m depth from the shipwreck site...
Journal Article
Nicolas de Sadeleer
Journal of Environmental Law, Volume 21, Issue 2, 2009, Pages 299–307, https://doi.org/10.1093/jel/eqp016
Published: 22 June 2009
...Nicolas de Sadeleer However, the ECJ considered, in answering the second question, that given the circumstances of the shipwreck, the hydrocarbons accidentally spilled, mixed with sediment in the shape of pies, could not be treated as a reusable product. Being substances which the holder did...
Chapter
Published: 19 October 2017
... depicts the shipowners as modern-day explorers, slave owners, and filibusterers who employ a group of Central Americans but never pay them and keep them trapped on the ship in fear of deportation. The shipwreck functions as a metaphor for the crew’s situation as well as a narrative device, and the novel’s...
Chapter
Published: 01 May 2008
... discusses James Irving's shipwreck and enslavement. The maiden voyage of the Anna, Irving's first captaincy, sailed from Liverpool on 3 May 1789. In September 1789 it was reported that ‘the Anna, Irving, from Leverpool to Guinea, is wrecked at Uld Nun; the cargo plundered...
Chapter
Published: 01 May 2008
...This chapter presents James Irving's account of his shipwreck and enslavement covering the period May 1789–October 1790. Which was wrecked on the Coast of Barbary, on the 26th of May 1789, the Crew sold for Slaves; continued in that state untill January 1790, were detained at Mogodore...
Chapter
Published: 01 October 2013
... Weihai Sino-Japanese War Shipwreck Throughout the Poseidon research, there was something missing from the process: Despite the sinking having taken place in the twentieth century, there was no personal connection to the incident. Not only had all the survivors passed away but, in many...
Chapter
Published: 01 February 2019
... such as Rachel Whiteread’s House, Robert Rauschenberg’s Erased de Kooning Drawing, and Jean Tinguely’s Homage to New York. Genet Jean Kerouac Jack Landy Michael shipwreck failure Lotringer Sylvère Braque Georges Büchler Pavel Calvino Italo Mallarmé...
Chapter
Published: 12 January 2016
... to their own purposes.These historical and archaeological findings therefore have a potential role in the process of determining the identify of shipwreck sites dating to the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. Relatively few writers on pirates have resisted the temptation to regale readers...
Chapter
Published: 05 March 2025
...0 05 03 2025 © James Kearney 2025 2025 James Kearney Chapter 4, “Shipwrecked Ethics: Chance, Affect, Tragicomedy,” takes up both Arendtian natality and the ethical experience of luck as it turns to Shakespearean romance and shipwreck. Like many works of early modern literature and moral...
Chapter
Published: 27 April 2010
...This chapter focuses on the comparisons made by an international team of mineralogists led by Gaston Giuliani of oxygen isotope ratios in one of the emeralds recovered from the 1622 Atocha shipwreck. Together with these emeralds, some famous Mughal stones long thought to be either...
Chapter
Published: 31 December 2016
... and Trade Treaty 1871 Calendar Chinese Foreign Affairs Ministry of Japan Investiture patent of sappō or sakuhō Ryukyu House Ryukyu kan Satsuma Shō Ken Prince Ie Shō Yūkō Giwan Uēkata Chōho Concealment policy DeLong Charles E U S Minister to Japan Kabayama Kumamoto Garrision Miyako Shipwreck...
Chapter
Published: 01 December 2015
...The first chapter lays out the critical different between “wet” or oceanic modes of representation on the one hand, and “dry” or terrestrial ones on the other. Shipwreck texts present maximally wet encounters, but even these representations cannot remain immersed for long. They seek through...
Chapter
Published: 01 December 2015
...In classical epic, the cause of the disaster is vengeful Poseidon or angry Juno. In religious tales, it is wrathful God. In both cases divine anger rules the waves. Early modern theologies of shipwreck unfold the peculiar doublethink of Providentialism faced with disaster. Aeneas Hakluyt Richard...
Chapter
Published: 01 December 2015
... shipwreck. Athena Boatswain Grotius Hugo Hesiod mare liberum maritime skills metis Metis Titan Odyssey The Roch Jeremy Shakespeare William Tethys Zeus accumulation of discourses anthropotechnics Cohen Margaret composture Conrad Joseph Jetztzeit “now” Adorno Theodor Carlyle Thomas Cook...
Chapter
Published: 01 December 2015
...The first epilogue considers a resonant phrase, “the bright light of shipwreck,” from George Oppen’s 1967 poem, “Of Being Numerous.” The second dives down after The Bookfish, a seventeenth-century illustration of a North Sea codfish with a tiny book in its belly, published...