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11 kirjaa tekijältä Ruth Morris

Let Me Learn

Let Me Learn

Ruth Morris

Lulu.com
2007
pokkari
Let me learn from you so I may better teach you. I am a teacher who has nothing to say until your voice is heard. Here is a collection of poetry and essays reflecting the passion of teaching and learning. It is a tribute to the teacher you recall with a smile and remember exactly how they opened the doors of learning for you. It is the voice of the teacher who passionately searches for the key to open the door of learning for every student in the class. Read, reflect, and remember.
Domino Prayers

Domino Prayers

Ruth Morris

Trilogy Christian Publishing
2022
pokkari
What if you ask God for sight beyond the physical and for knowing with your heart?Imagine the chain reactions...The Apostle Paul's prayers for the believers at Ephesus give us four key requests and the resulting cascade of heart-changes: REQUESTAll the riches of wisdom and revelationRESULTIntimate knowledge of GodREQUESTA light-filled imaginationRESULTExperience the hope of His callingREQUESTExperience supernatural powerRESULTBecome an enticing advertisement in this world for HimREQUESTSee God's unlimited glory and favorRESULTExperience all the dimensions of Christ's love & overflow with the life of GodFour short prayers - long on impact
The Detailed Gourmia Air Fryer Cookbook
I bet you crave for simple, no-fuss air fryer recipes That's why I decided to create the best air fryer cookbook with 600 delicious & easy meals, that you'll ever need to cook in your air fryer The Detailed Gourmia Air Fryer Cookbook contains the following categories: 15-minute air fryer recipesPlenty of Beef, Pork and Poultry air fryer recipesPalatable Seafood air fryer recipesA great variety of Breakfast & Lunch recipesThe Most-Wanted healthy air fryer recipes for Sweets & DessertsSpeedy Breakfast and SnacksVegetables and Vegetarian air fryer recipesRecipes for Sauces, Dips, and DressingsAnd much, much more If you buy this book with air fryer recipes, you will surprise yourself, your family, and your friends with new, delicious dishes. Well, that's great, isn't it?
The Detailed Gourmia Air Fryer Cookbook
I bet you crave for simple, no-fuss air fryer recipes That's why I decided to create the best air fryer cookbook with 600 delicious & easy meals, that you'll ever need to cook in your air fryer The Detailed Gourmia Air Fryer Cookbook contains the following categories: 15-minute air fryer recipesPlenty of Beef, Pork and Poultry air fryer recipesPalatable Seafood air fryer recipesA great variety of Breakfast & Lunch recipesThe Most-Wanted healthy air fryer recipes for Sweets & DessertsSpeedy Breakfast and SnacksVegetables and Vegetarian air fryer recipesRecipes for Sauces, Dips, and DressingsAnd much, much more If you buy this book with air fryer recipes, you will surprise yourself, your family, and your friends with new, delicious dishes. Well, that's great, isn't it?
Mary Elizabeth Braddon and the Jewish Question
Investigates the representation of Jewish characters in 70 of the prolific and wildly popular Mrs Braddon's novels from the mid-19th century to the eve of World War One. It considers how Braddon changes her descriptions across this timeframe and argues that these changes are reflective of the changing social and economic status of the Anglo-Jewish population.
Mary Elizabeth Braddon's Belgravia

Mary Elizabeth Braddon's Belgravia

Ruth Morris

Academica Press
2011
sidottu
This work has grown out of a previous study entitled Mary Elizabeth Braddon and the Jewish Question: A Victorian English Novelist and the Worlds of Anglo-Jewry, Zionism and Judaism, 1859-1913, which focused solely upon Braddon’s novels and used them as a lens through which the changes in the Anglo-Jewish community throughout her lifetime could be charted within her work. Although the study examines over seventy of her novels, any understanding of `the Jewish Question’ in relation to Braddon is incomplete without also considering the portrayal of Jewish people and Jewish customs within her periodical, Belgravia: A London Magazine (1866-1899). References to Jews, Judaism or Jewish life in general span the entire time period of the magazine.
Mary Elizabeth Braddon and Yorkshire

Mary Elizabeth Braddon and Yorkshire

Ruth Morris

Academica Press
2012
sidottu
This scholarly monograph offers new research on Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Braddon (1835-1916) who wrote over eighty novels and rivaled Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins in popularity in mid and late Victorian times. The study looks at the representations of Yorkshire across over thirty of her novels and analyses her uses of the Yorkshire dialect, her Yorkshire settings and specific towns and cities in the county (Braddon mentions more than 25 of these by name). It provides both an overview of her work and also contains some in-depth study of specific novels (including the best-seller Aurora Floyd). The study spans a significant time frame (over sixty years) to analyse how depictions of the county change. As well as looking at Braddon s work, it also considers the representations of Yorkshire by other prominent nineteenth-century writers including Elizabeth Gaskell, Edward Bulwer-Lytton and George Eliot amongst others. Place has an important role in sensation fiction, of which Braddon was a major exponent, much praised and pilloried by critics in her time. The domestic setting of many of her novels was one reason why the genre was so heavily criticised. There are no studies which look at Braddon s engagement with Yorkshire which is surprising as Braddon lived in the county for a period, and had her first novel produced by a Yorkshire publisher. This study aims to fill the gap in scholarship on this subject and elaborate on Yorkshire's unique place in 19c English popular fiction.
Belgravia: A London Magazine

Belgravia: A London Magazine

Ruth Morris

Academica Press
2014
sidottu
This scholarly monograph investigates the representation of Jewish people, characters, places and customs within the periodical Belgravia: A London Magazine inclusive of the years 1866-1876. The magazine, edited for a period by Mary Elizabeth Braddon, contains a range of articles on many different subjects including history, politics, literature, tourism etc, and the Jewish presence is clear within a diverse field of disciplines. The study considers how this presence changes across the time period and how these changes can relate to broader societal and political movements that were occurring. The book also engages with how the magazine incorporates ideas about specific issues facing Anglo-Jewry such as conversion and Zionism.This work very much follows on from the previous research about Braddon and the Jewish Question. It provides a discursive analysis of the Jewish presence in a similar way to Mary Elizabeth Braddon and the Jewish Question: A Victorian English Novelist and the Worlds of Anglo-Jewry, Zionism and Judaism, 1859 - 1913 but draws on the references from Mary Elizabeth Braddon's Belgravia, A London Magazine, and the World of Anglo-Jewry, Jews and Judaism, 1866 – 1899. There is no other research into the Jewish presence in Belgravia but the magazine is attracting more interest with other studies looking into this periodical. There has been some research into the role of specifically Jewish periodicals in the nineteenth century but few into how non-Jewish magazines depicted Jewish people. The work is original but does fit well into existing fields of contemporary research.
Mary Elizabeth Braddon and the Jewish World, 1880-1915
Ruth Morris’s new book focuses on Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s novels from 1880 to her death in 1915 and how the portrayal of Jewish characters and Jewish culture shifts throughout this timeframe. By tracing the fortunes of Anglo-Jewry through Braddon’s fiction into the twentieth century, it draws contextually on significant world events such as the Boer War, the beginning of the Zionist movement and the events leading up to the First World War. Each of these events is seen through a Jewish lens in the sense of how they affected Jews in Britain. Morris also discusses them through non-Jewish eyes because Braddon was not Jewish herself and was writing for a predominantly non-Jewish audience. Through a careful reading of the novels, these seemingly incidental references provide a rich narrative of how the Anglo-Jewish community was viewed during a particularly dynamic time in its history.