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Redcoat by Bernard Cornwell
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Redcoat by Bernard CornwellRedcoat by Bernard Cornwell

The British occupation of Philadelphia during the Revolutionary War brings together two unlikely comrades, redcoat Sam Gilpin and rebel Jonathon Becket. The story of these two young men evocatively illustrates the divided loyalties that characterized this war. Though both men love the same woman, the true heroine of the novel is Becket's patriot sister, Martha Crowl. She commands the attention of the reader with every appearance. The grim and gory reality of war is skillfully played out against the gaiety of Loyalist society.
 
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Tags: Cornwell, Becket, appearance, reality, played, Redcoat, Cornwell, Bernard, Martha
Caesar and Cleopatra by Bernard Shaw
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Caesar and Cleopatra by Bernard ShawCaesar and Cleopatra by Bernard Shaw

Four years before Julius Caesar sailed to Rome to meet his untimely end, the great leader sought to conquer the outer reaches of the land, always questing for a kindred spirit to rival his own. What he finds, sitting on top of an ancient Egyptian Sphinx, is a young Queen Cleopatra, who beguiles him not only with her beauty, but because she may be the very match he's been seeking.
 
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Tags: Caesar, Cleopatra, political, personalizes, relationship, Caesar, Bernard, ancient, Egyptian, Cleopatra
Dublin (Bloom's Literary Places)
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Dublin (Bloom's Literary Places)Dublin (Bloom's Literary Places)

Most notably the home of James Joyce and the setting for his masterwork, Ulysses, Dublin is also the birthplace of George Bernard Shaw and was the childhood home of Oscar Wilde.
 
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Tags: Dublin, Oscar, childhood, Wilde, Bloom, Places, Literary, Bernard
The Fable of the Bees by Bernard de Mandeville
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The Fable of the Bees by Bernard de MandevilleThe Fable of the Bees by Bernard de MandevilleThe Fable of The Bees: or, Private Vices, Publick Benefits is a book by Bernard Mandeville, consisting of the poem The Grumbling Hive: or, Knaves turn’d Honest and prose discussion of it. The poem was published in 1705 and the book first appeared in 1714. The poem elucidates many key principles of economic thought, including division of labor and the invisible hand, seventy years before Adam Smith (indeed, John Maynard Keynes argues Smith was probably referencing Mandeville).

 
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Tags: Mandeville, Smith, Keynes, before, Bernard, Fable, labor
Constructing a Sociology of Translation (Benjamins Translation Library)
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Constructing a Sociology of Translation (Benjamins Translation Library)The view of translation as a socially regulated activity has opened up a broad field of research in the last few years. This volume deals with central questions of the new domain and aims to contribute to the conceptualisation of a general sociology of translation. Interdisciplinary in approach, it discusses the role of major representatives of sociology like Pierre Bourdieu, Bruno Latour, Bernard Lahire, Anthony Giddens or Niklas Luhmann in establishing a theoretical framework for a sociology of translation.
 
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Tags: sociology, translation, Bernard, Latour, Lahire