Books by "Robert Daniel Wallace"

8 books found

The Making of America

The Making of America

by Robert Marion La Follette

1905

Relation of the Barberry to Stem Rust in Iowa

Relation of the Barberry to Stem Rust in Iowa

by Irving E. Melhus, Robert Stearns Kirby, Lawrence Wood Durrell

1920

The countries of the world

The countries of the world

by Robert Brown

1884

A Rural Social Survey of Orange Township, Black Hawk County, Iowa

A Rural Social Survey of Orange Township, Black Hawk County, Iowa

by E. E. Eastman, George H. Von Tungeln, George M. Turpin, Martin Mortensen, Robert Lorenzo Webster, Russ L. Bancroft, W. H. Pew, J. S. Glass, M. F. P. Costelloe, Russell Dunn, John Marcus Evvard

1918

The Highland sportsman. corrected

The Highland sportsman. corrected

by Robert Hall (sportsman.)

1883

The World's Greatest Resumes

The World's Greatest Resumes

by Robert Wm Meier

2005 · Random House Digital, Inc.

A career counselor's guide to overhauling a resume, including the world's first "Resume Rater and Resume Quality Index," real-life success stories, and more than 25 before-and-after samples.

The Matter of High Words

The Matter of High Words

by Robert Chodat

2017 · Oxford University Press

In a world of matter, how can we express what matters? When the explanations of the natural sciences become powerfully precise and authoritative, what is the status of our highest words, the languages that articulate our norms and orient our lives? The Matter of High Words examines a constellation of American writers who in the decades since World War II have posed these questions in distinctive ways. Walker Percy, Marilynne Robinson, Ralph Ellison, Stanley Cavell, and David Foster Wallace are all self-consciously post-WWII authors, attuned to the fragmentation and skepticism that have defined so much of the literary and critical culture of the last century and more. Yet they also attempt to reach back to older forms of thought and writing that are often thought to have dried up-the traditions of prophecy, of wisdom literature, of the sage. Working within this dual inheritance, these authors are drawn equally to both art and argument, "showing" and "telling," shifting continually between narrative and discursive genres. In their essays they act as moralists, promoting the broad, abstract concepts that might inspire action in the face of naturalistic reduction: community, family, courage, fraternity, marriage, friendship, temperance, judgment. In their narratives, they offer particular lives in particular settings, thick descriptions that give flesh to such high words. Rarely do these movements between genres generate a tidy equilibrium; where their essays speak of cooperation and redemption, their narratives display alienation, loss, and failure. But in pursuing such risky, unorthodox strategies, these postwar sages are not only able to challenge some of the dominant naturalistic theories of the last several decades: cognitive science, neo-Darwinian theory, social science, the fact-value divide in analytic philosophy. Through five chapters of detailed analysis and close reading, Chodat explores the question of whether vocabularies of ought and ought-not can still emerge today, and how these concepts might be embodied, and whether such ideas might be found in things.

South Carolina Bench and Bar

South Carolina Bench and Bar

by Ulysses Robert Brooks

1908