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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Wilson Muoha Maina

James Wilson (1805–1860), Issac Butt (1813–1879), T.E. Cliffe Leslie (1827–1882)
James Wilson was one of the first financial journalists in Britain who made a genuine contribution to economic doctrine by his staunch defence of free trade and the principles of the banking school. Above all, he was the founder of 'The Economist', a magazine specifically designed for businessmen. Issac Butt is best known as an early advocate of Irish Home Rule but, as Whatley Professor of Political Economy at Trinity College, Dublin, he was successful in creating something akin to an indigenous Irish brand of Classical Economics. T.E. Cliffe Leslie, Professor at Queen's College, Belfast, is notable for his rejection of the abstract-deductive methods of the English Classical Economists in favour of an institutional and historical approach. With Bagehot, Ingram and Toynbee, he was part of what amounted to an English historical school. In particular, Leslie's writings on the land question have been taken seriously by, amongst others, Marshall and Keynes.
Harold Wilson's EEC Application

Harold Wilson's EEC Application

Jane Toomey

University College Dublin Press
2007
sidottu
Britain's policy towards Europe in the latter half of the twentieth century has been the subject of endless interest, scrutiny and debate. The European question has dominated foreign policy agendas from Churchill to Blair. This book seeks to further our knowledge of one of the most crucial periods for both Britain and Europe but also to enliven the debate concerning fundamental issues. Why, against a backdrop of the burgeoning 1960s, did the Labour Prime Minister, Harold Wilson, seek to replicate the path taken by his Conservative predecessor Harold Macmillan, and make an application to join the EEC? And why was he unable to succeed? These two questions are central to this study and their answers provide invaluable insights into the formulation, execution and fate of Britain's European policy during this period. Using newly released archival material in the National Archives and having consulted extensive interviews with many of the key political figures, Jane Toomey not only challenges old assumptions but also offers a new interpretation of Wilson's European diplomacy.
Fred Wilson

Fred Wilson

Ridinghouse
2011
nidottu
An anthology of critical texts and interviews with the fascinating American conceptual artist Fred Wilson, who describes himself as of "African, Native American, European and Amerindian" descent. Recipient of a MacArthur Foundation Genius Grant, Wilson's subject is social justice and his medium is museology. This publication focuses on the artist's pivotal exhibitions and projects, and includes a wide range of significant texts that mark the critical reception of Wilson's work over the last two decades. Concentrating on some of the most significant moments of Wilson's career, the book will also include extracts from seminal exhibition catalogues such as Mining the Museum and Speak of Me as I Am - Wilson's installation in the American Pavilion at the 50th Venice biennale exhibition.
Woodrow Wilson: USA

Woodrow Wilson: USA

Brian Morton

Haus Publishing
2008
sidottu
This title is about Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924). It is September 1919 - a meeting hall in a small mid-Western city. A thin man is speaking to a sceptical audience about peace. He has already met the city fathers and has been warned that 'out here' what happens in Europe means very little. Even the late war scarcely impinged on the place, though it had been recognised that it hadn't been altogether good for trade and one or two local boys had died on the fields of France in the very last days of the conflict. The speaker was obviously impassioned, with a preacher's cadence to his voice, and particularly so when he promoted the idea of an international League of Nations to guarantee future peace and ensure that the war into which America had been lured in 1917 really was 'a war to end all wars'.It is noticed that the man is sweating and pale and that he pauses frequently to dab his lips. The price of his campaign for peace - and peace conducted with principle - seems to be a terrible struggle between strong belief on the one hand and failing reserves on the other. Woodrow Wilson will live for another five years, but his battle to convince America to join the League is lost and much of the vigour that marked his time as President of his country, as president of Princeton University, even as an enthusiastic college football coach, was left behind in the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles. This book will look at the life of Wilson, from his early years during the American Civil War, through his academic and political career and America's involvement in the First World War, to Wilson's role at Versailles, including the construction of his Fourteen Points, his principles for the reformation of Europe, and the consequences of Versailles for America and on later conflicts.
Brian Wilson

Brian Wilson

Kirk Curnutt

Equinox Publishing Ltd
2012
sidottu
Brian Wilson is a genius. Ever since British press agent Derek Taylor launched a publicity campaign with that theme to promote the landmark LP Pet Sounds in 1966, some variation of that claim has been obligatory when discussing the significance of the Beach Boys' founder and chief composer. Originally designed to liberate Wilson from his outmoded image as a purveyor of sun-and-surf teen pop so the symphonic sophistication of his music might be properly appreciated, the assertion has been repeated so often in the forty-plus years since as to render it virtually meaningless. Indeed, if anything, the label today seems an albatross around the man's neck, inasmuch as Wilson's slow-but-steady reemergence as a working musician since the mid-nineties after three decades of mental illness and drug abuse, has been freighted with expectations that he again produce something as epochal as "Good Vibrations" to justify the adoration he inspires in impassioned defenders. Brian Wilson interrogates this and other paradigms that stymie critical appreciation of Wilson's work both with the Beach Boys and as a solo artist.This is the first study of Wilson to eschew chronology for a topical organization that allows discussion of lyrical themes and musical motifs outside of any prejudicial presumptions about their place in the trajectory of his career. The chapter on lyrics explores questions of quality, asking why the words to Wilson's songs are often considered a detriment, before surveying such tendencies as melancholy and introspection, the conceit of childlike wisdom, his depiction of women, and Americana/nostalgia. The section on music focuses on his falsetto, the famous harmonies, the peculiar whiteness of the Beach Boys' sound, as well as song structure. A final chapter on iconicity asks how rock criticism's investment in auteurship both maintains and limits his reputation. Finally, Curnutt examines what Brian Wilson means to his most fervent fans. Together, these issues emphasize the often overlooked point that, despite his status as a "living legend," Brian Wilson does not always fit neatly into the paradigms of taste and value by which critics grant certain artists entry into the pantheon of pop and rock importance.
Woodrow Wilson Avenue

Woodrow Wilson Avenue

Mark Lee Kirchmeier

Amazon Publishing Center
2023
pokkari
"Woodrow Wilson Avenue" by Mark Lee Kirchmeier tells the story of Jonathon Verliebt, who purchases a haunted house on a changing street in Dallas. Lonely and eccentric, Jonathon gradually meets his diverse neighbors, from the caring Lupita to a charming ladies' man Juan Jesus. As drug houses appear nearby, the community comes together to cope with the changing neighborhood, highlighting the importance of human connection amidst adversity. This heartwarming novella is a must-read for anyone looking for a touching tale of friendship, community, and hope.
Joe Wilson and His Mates

Joe Wilson and His Mates

Henry Lawson

Sydney University Press
2008
nidottu
Joe Wilson and His Mates (1901) is a collection of many of Lawson's most celebrated classic Australian short stories. Lawson's darkly realistic work includes all four stories of Joe Wilson, a sheep shearer suffering from drinking problems and the hardship of the bush. Along the bleaker tales are more 'humorous' takes on bush life, including 'The Loaded Dog', 'The Golden Graveyard' and 'Jimmy Grimshaw's Wooing'.
Judy Wilson Cook Book

Judy Wilson Cook Book

Judy Wilson

Editio Ars Conscientaie
2024
sidottu
Unlock the secrets of delicious home cooking with Judy Wilson's Cookbook This charming collection features over 50 treasured recipes, passed down through generations and perfected over the years. From hearty mains and delectable desserts to easy meals and budget-friendly dishes, Judy's cookbook has something for every occasion. With its hand-written notes and vintage charm, this cookbook is more than just a recipe collection - it's a timeless treasure trove of culinary wisdom. Whether you're an experienced cook or just starting out, Judy Wilson's Cookbook will inspire you to create memorable meals for your family and friends.
Ray Johnson and William S. Wilson: Frog Pond Splash
This gemlike Ray Johnson book celebrates his friendship with writer and logophile William S. Wilson in pictures and words A New York Times critics' pick | Best Art Books 2020 Dubbed "Ray Johnson's Boswell," writer and logophile William S. Wilson was one of legendary artist Ray Johnson's closest friends and biggest champions. He was also perhaps Johnson’s most trusted poetic muse and synthesizer of referents and references. The influence was mutual: throughout their lifelong friendship, begun when both men were in their twenties, writer and artist challenged and enriched one another’s work. Published on the occasion of the exhibition of Ray Johnson works from Wilson's archive at the Art Institute of Chicago, Frog Pond Splash embodies the energy, expansiveness and motion of their work and their friendship. Editor Elizabeth Zuba has selected short, perspicacious texts by Wilson (from both published and unpublished writings) and collage works by Johnson to create juxtapositions that do not explicate or illustrate; rather, they form a loose collage-like letter of works and writings that are less bound than assembled, allowing the reader to put the pieces together, to respond, to add to and return to the way Johnson required of his correspondents and fellow travelers. Taking its title from Wilson's haiku equivalence of Johnson's process, Frog Pond Splash is a small book but many things: a collage-like homage to their friendship, a treasure chest of prismatic "correspondances," as well as an unusual portrait of the disappearing, fractured Johnson through Wilson's words. Zuba's nuanced selection and arrangement of images and texts in this sumptuous little volume honors Johnson's "open system" (which rejected closed and consistent meanings, codes and symbols) in its open, associative, and intimate playfulness.
Millie Wilson: The Museum of Lesbian Dreams
The first retrospective monograph for a legendary feminist artist and pedagogue who taught generations of artists at CalArts Accompanying the first retrospective exhibition showcasing three decades of work from Millie Wilson (born 1948), this publication delves into the influential, yet under-recognized, artist and educator whose work has deftly examined feminism, queerness and their historical erasure from art institutions. Her work joins 1980s postmodernism with the personally and politically charged conceptualism of the 1990s, reflecting a particularly unruly conception of queerness that emerged in California during these decades. The catalog highlights Wilson’s appropriation of museum display practices and institutional authority, her art historical references to Dada and Surrealism, her sharp attention to gendered portrayals of sexual deviance in early 20th-century psychoanalysis and sexology, and her long-standing interest in bodies as contested sites. It also features newly commissioned scholarly essays by curator David Evans Frantz and scholar Jill H. Casid, a conversation among artists who studied with Wilson, and extensive new photographic documentation of Wilson’s work. This book was published in conjunction with Krannert Art Museum
John Wilson in search of Dreams

John Wilson in search of Dreams

Morteza Kamali

Supreme Art, USA
2022
pokkari
In the extreme cold of winter, when the steam of every breath froze in the mouth and fell to the ground, John walked down the street, rummaging around the street and trash cans to find a piece of bread. John was only thirteen years old. He was eleven years old when he lost his parents in a bank robbery; He had neither brother nor sister. After his parents were killed, the government gave his custody to his grandmother, but unfortunately, his grandmother died a few months later, and because his family was poor, they left him nothing to make a living. After his grandmother died, the government sent him to the Kingsley Orphanage, but he did not stand it and decided to flee, and finally, on a cold winter night, he carried out his decision and fled.
Robert Wilson: Chairs

Robert Wilson: Chairs

Robert Wilson

August Editions
2025
sidottu
This unprecedented angle on the oeuvre of Robert Wilson reveals the importance of chair design for his cross-medium art For American experimental theater stage director and playwright Robert Wilson (born 1941), theater is a totality of visual, textual and performative mediums. Wilson has incorporated furniture designs into his scenography since his earliest productions in the 1960s. "In almost all of my plays, there is a chair specially designed," he said. "Often, the chairs are much like an actor." Wilson’s chairs, with their frequently referential names (the Kafka Chair, Queen Victoria Chairs, the Mondrian Chair), assume expanded significance as the surviving artifacts of each performance. The works in this publication range from 1969 to 2011, from the stainless steel mesh Parzival Sofa (1987) to the painted wood Clementine Hunter Rocker (2011). Wilson’s practice as a designer is illuminated by his practice as a collector, with pieces in materials ranging from wood, bronze and steel to taxidermied legs, tempered glass and neon. This publication includes several works never previously exhibited.
Rusty Wilson's Rocky Mountain Bigfoot Campfire Stories
Welcome to another book of Bigfoot stories by the World's Greatest Bigfoot Storyteller, none other than Rusty Wilson These all new stories from all over the Rocky Mountains are sure to give you chills, yet also make you want to meet a Bigfoot-well, maybe theoretically, at least. Are you brave enough to read them at night by headlamp while camped in the deep forest? Or will you read them at home, after locking all the windows?Fly-fishing guide Rusty Wilson has spent years collecting these tales from his clients around the campfire, stories guaranteed to make sure you won't want to go out after dark.Come spend your night with a brave snowcat driver grooming an extreme ski slope in a most dangerous way, then join a scuba diver in Glacier National Park who meets a most unusual underwater companion. Come along as a woman discovers that her neighborhood harbors the perfect solution to cold winter nights, then experience the terror of being stalked in one of the planet's deepest and most extreme canyons.If you survive all that, read how a newly divorced doctor finds that his idyllic rental near the Tetons has a hidden secret that comes with a flyswatter, then follow along as a lone hiker discovers the high mountains of Idaho hold more than he bargained for.Next, help an old Wyoming rancher decide whether to sell out or stay, then visit a remote campground where rocks are the incoming thing. And finally, hike into the rugged Wind River Range of Wyoming as a strange rescue party provides a most unusual relief from hurricane-force winds.Another great book from Rusty Wilson, Bigfoot expert and storyteller-tales for both the Bigfoot believer and those who just enjoy a good story.