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Religion, Redemption, and Revolution provides powerful arguments for the continued relevance of Rosenzweig and Rosenstock-Huessy's work in navigating the religious, social, and political conflicts we now face.
In his memoirs Dr. Kirkonnell has avoided a merely chronological arrangement of his autobiography but sought rather to take various phases of the Canadian tradition and to analyse his experience of each down through the years.
Christopher Dean looks at medieval and Renaissance Arthurian literature in detail and examines contemporary chronicles and histories, chivalric theory and practice, popular myths and legends, folk-lore and place-names to examine English attitudes.
Alexander Macrorie, the narrator, blithely announces the subject of the novel in the first brief paragraph: 'This is a story of Quebec. Quebec is a wonderful city.' In fact, it is the story of the love trials and tribulations of a young bachelor subaltern and his fellow officers of the 129th Bobtails quartered in Quebec City.
At the age of ninety, Grace Craig looks back to her youth and tells the story of the impact of the Great War on her family and friends. Letters from the young men on the Western Front are interwoven with her own memories of the war.
Mr. Corbett has carefully and vividly sketched in the backgrounds of Sidney Earle Smith's story, has woven into the account reminiscences of the man and his work by his colleagues, and has brought out his personality, style, methods, beliefs in a persuasive atmosphere of personal warmth and strong academic conviction.
Barry Cooper's study of this important contemporary thinker gives context for an understanding of Merleau-Ponty's politics and, in so doing, brings together the complex issues and ideas that have shaped modern European political and philosophical thought.
The need for a third printing of Church and Sect in Canada reflects the continuing interest in this pioneer study of the development of religious organization in Canadian society.
Topics of widespread concern to Canadians interested in the social sciences and to the general reading public are dealt with in this volume of essays by a group of Canada's leading scholars in political science and history. The book is presented in honour of Henry Forbes Angus.
In this volume, Professor Clark shows that for two hundred years Canadian society was subject to the same kind of disturbing and disruptive forces that revealed themselves in the United States in the Revolutionary period.
Rather than examining the puzzles and paradoxes which surround the affaire de l'Esprit, this volume presents the documents upon which solutions may be based.
Empire and Nations was written in tribute to the accomplishments of Frederic Hubert Soward. The volume consists of essays by fourteen outstanding contributors and have as their common subject the nations that evolved within the British Empire and found, or are finding, their place in the world.
This book is an attempt to make available to the student a coherent modern view of the theory of partial differential equations.
A collection of twenty-three essays from The Royal Society of Canada's 1966 annual meeting on the chosen theme Water Resources.
The many surviving letters between Annie and her brother William cover various topics of mutual interest to Canadians and Americans, reflecting both Canadian and American cultural experience in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
By questioning the widely accepted picture of suburban society, this book will challenge much of our thinking about certain trends and developments in present-day society.
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