03487nam 2200529Ki 4500001001300000003000600013005001700019006001900036007001500055008004100070040003100111020003500142020003200177020001500209020001800224035002100242037002700263043001200290050002800302072002300330082001900353049000900372100002700381245009500408264004800503264001000551300005700561336002600618337002600644338003600670504005100706520126000757505040002017588004702417600003102464650003402495600003902529650004002568650004202608600002302650650002002673650004102693655002202734776012802756856005902884994001402943ocn861792525OCoLC20131107103808.0m o d cr cnu---unuuu131031s1992 ctua ob 001 0beng d aJSTORbengerdaepncJSTOR a9780300160888 (electronic bk.) a0300160887 (electronic bk.) z0300050097 z9780300050097 a(OCoLC)861792525 a22573/ctt2zxt05bJSTOR aa-cc--- 4aDS778.C4966bS38 1992eb 7aPOL0000002bisacsh04a951.05/092222 aJSTR1 aSchwarcz, Vera,d1947-10aTime for telling truth is running out :bconversations with Zhang Shenfu /cVera Schwarcz. 1aNew Haven :bYale University Press,c[1992] 4cÃ1992 a1 online resource (xii, 256 pages) :billustrations. atextbtxt2rdacontent acomputerbc2rdamedia aonline resourcebcr2rdacarrier aIncludes bibliographical references and index. aZhang Shenfu, a founder of the Chinese Communist party, participated in all the major political events in China for four decades following the Revolution of 1919. Yet Zhang had become a forgotten figure in China and the West--a victim of Mao's determined efforts to place himself at the center of China's revolution--until Vera Schwarcz began to meet with him in his home on Wang Fu Cang Lane in Beijing. Now Schwarcz brings Zhang to life through her poignant account of five years of conversations with him, a narrative that is interwoven with translations of his writings and testimony of his friends. Moving circuitously, Schwarcz reveals fragments of the often contradictory layers of Zhang's character: at once a champion of feminism and an ardent womanizer, a follower of Bertrand Russell who also admired Confucius, and a philosophically inclined political pragmatist. Schwarcz also meditates on the tension between historical events and personal memory, on the public amnesia enforced by governments and the "forgetfulness" of those who find rememberance too painful. Her book is not only a portrait of a remarkable personality but a corrective to received accounts and to the silences that abound in the official annals of the Chinese revolution.0 aPreface : No Way in by History's Road -- Introduction : The Laughing Voice of Zhang Shenfu -- Ch. 1. The Making of a Bookish Rebel -- Ch. 2. Libertine and Liberationist -- Ch. 3. An Eccentric and Almost Forgotten Communist -- Ch. 4. Between Russell and Confucius -- Ch. 5. In the Realm of Red Dust -- Ch. 6. Final Regrets, Final Retorts -- Postscript to an Enigmatic Life -- Works / Zhang Shenfu aDescription based on print version record.10aZhang, Shenfu,d1893-1986. 0aCommunistszChinavBiography.17aZhang, Shenfud((1893-1986)).2ram 7aCommunistszChinexBiographie.2ram 7aCommunisteszChinexBiographies.2ram17aZhang, Shenfu2swd07aBiographie2swd 7aPOLITICAL SCIENCE / General2bisacsh 4aElectronic books.08iPrint version:aSchwarcz, Vera, 1947-tTime for telling truth is running outz0300050097w(DLC) 91000817w(OCoLC)24142834403JSTORuhttp://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctt32bntz aC0bJSTOR02876nam 2200637Ki 4500001001300000003000600013005001700019006001900036007001500055008004100070040003100111020003500142020003200177020001500209020001800224035002100242037002700263050002500290072002300315082001600338084001500354049000900369100002400378245010700402264005500509264001000564300004100574336002600615337002600641338003600667504006700703505052100770588004701291650003701338650001701375600003201392600003501424600002501459600002501484650003001509600003801539600004101577600004301618650002001661650002401681600005801705600005101763600006101814650006301875650004301938650003801981655002202019776012402041856005902165994001402224ocn861792753OCoLC20131107103823.0m o d cr cnu---unuuu131031s1997 ctu ob 001 0 eng d aJSTORbengerdaepncJSTOR a9780300146455 (electronic bk.) a0300146450 (electronic bk.) z0300068379 z9780300068375 a(OCoLC)861792753 a22573/ctt2zzkfqbJSTOR 4aBC199.I4bH55 1997eb 7aPHI0130002bisacsh04a111/.82222 a08.312bcl aJSTR1 aHill, Claire Ortiz.10aRethinking identity and metaphysics :bon the foundations of analytic philosophy /cClaire Ortiz Hill. 1aNew Haven, Conn. :bYale University Press,c[1997] 4cÃ1997 a1 online resource (xviii, 180 pages) atextbtxt2rdacontent acomputerbc2rdamedia aonline resourcebcr2rdacarrier aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 159-173) and index.0 apt. 1. The twilight zone: Unfettering reasoning. The equals sign. Confusing sign and object in identity statements. Confusing names and descriptions in identity statements. Confusing concepts and objects in identity statements. Equating equality and identity -- pt. 2. The quest for a clear extensional ontology: Identity and Frege's foundations for arithmetic. Russell on the origins of the set-theoretical paradoxes. Russell's paradoxes and his theory of definite descriptions. Propositional attitudes. Modalities. aDescription based on print version record. 0aIdentity (Philosophical concept) 0aMetaphysics.10aFrege, Gottlob,d1848-1925.10aRussell, Bertrand,d1872-1970.10aMarcus, Ruth Barcan.14aBarcan Marcus, Ruth.17aIdentiteitsbeginsel.2gtt17aFrege, Gottlobd(1848-1925).2ram17aRussell, Bertrandd(1872-1970).2ram17aMarcus, Ruth Barcand(1921-....).2ram 7aIdentitâe.2ram 7aMâetaphysique.2ram17aFrege, Gottlob,d1848-1925.2fast0(OCoLC)fst0004407817aMarcus, Ruth Barcan.2fast0(OCoLC)fst0007229717aRussell, Bertrand,d1872-1970.2fast0(OCoLC)fst00035776 7aIdentity (Philosophical concept)2fast0(OCoLC)fst00966889 7aMetaphysics.2fast0(OCoLC)fst01018304 7aPHILOSOPHY / Metaphysics2bisacsh 4aElectronic books.08iPrint version:aHill, Claire Ortiz.tRethinking identity and metaphysicsz0300068379w(DLC) 96030387w(OCoLC)35055569403JSTORuhttp://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctt32bfc0 aC0bJSTOR02330nam 2200565Ki 4500001001300000003000600013005001700019006001900036007001500055008004100070040003100111020003500142020003200177020001500209020001800224035002100242037002700263043001200290050003000302072002300332082001700355084001400372084001700386049000900403100002000412245010100432264004800533264001000581300003700591336002600628337002600654338003600680504006700716520015200783520003800935505022400973588004701197650006701244610006901311651003601380650001901416650002801435651001901463651002401482650005301506655002201559776011001581856005901691994001401750ocn861792952OCoLC20131107103823.0m o d cr cnu---unuuu131031s2001 ctu ob 001 0 eng d aJSTORbengerdaepncJSTOR a9780300147926 (electronic bk.) a0300147929 (electronic bk.) z0300087659 z9780300087659 a(OCoLC)861792952 a22573/ctt3004qwbJSTOR an-us-ma 4aLC214.523.B67bE38 2001eb 7aEDU0400002bisacsh04a379.2/63222 a5,32ssgn aDV 28502rvk aJSTR1 aEaton, Susan E.14aThe other Boston busing story :bwhat's won and lost across the boundary line /cSusan E. Eaton. 1aNew Haven :bYale University Press,c[2001] 4cÃ2001 a1 online resource (x, 293 pages) atextbtxt2rdacontent acomputerbc2rdamedia aonline resourcebcr2rdacarrier aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 279-286) and index. aSixty-five METCO graduates recall being bused from black inner-city schools to white suburban schools and how this experience affected their lives. aContains primary source material.00gCh. 1.tThe Other Boston Busing Story --gCh. 2.tWhy They Went --gCh. 3.tWhat Remains in Memory --gCh. 4.tThe Gains --gCh. 5.tThe Resolutions --gCh. 6.tWhat About Now --gCh. 7.tCity Life and Suburban Schools. aDescription based on print version record. 0aBusing for school integrationzMassachusettszBostonxHistory.20aMetropolitan Council for Educational Opportunity (Boston, Mass.) 0aBoston (Mass.)xRace relations.07aSchulbus.2swd07aRassenintegration.2swd 7aSchwarze.2swd 7aBoston 2swd 7aEDUCATION / Philosophy & Social Aspects2bisacsh 4aElectronic books.08iPrint version:aEaton, Susan E.tOther Boston busing storyz0300087659w(DLC) 00011667w(OCoLC)45102855403JSTORuhttp://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctt32bk5w aC0bJSTOR01404nam 2200397Ki 4500001001300000003000600013005001700019006001900036007001500055008004100070040003100111020003500142020003200177035002100209037002600230050000900256072002300265082001400288049000900302100002700311245009700338264004300435300003400478336002600512337002600538338003600564588004700600600002100647650002800668650004000696650005400736655002200790776012200812856005800934994001400992ocn861792378OCoLC20131107103823.0m o d cr cnu---unuuu131031s1910 nyu eo 000 0 eng d aJSTORbengerdaepncJSTOR a9780801466618 (electronic bk.) a080146661X (electronic bk.) a(OCoLC)861792378 a22573/ctthcb46bJSTOR 4aPA25 7aLIT0041902bisacsh04a480.5222 aJSTR1 aJones, Horace Leonard.14aThe poetic plural of Greek tragedy in the light of Homeric usage /cby Horace Leonard Jones. 1aNew-York :bCornell University,c1910. a1 online resource (168 pages) atextbtxt2rdacontent acomputerbc2rdamedia aonline resourcebcr2rdacarrier aDescription based on print version record.00aHomerxLanguage. 0aGreek languagexNumber. 0aGreek dramaxHistory and criticism. 7aLITERARY CRITICISM / Ancient & Classical2bisacsh 4aElectronic books.08iPrint version:aJones, Horace Leonard.tPoetic plural of Greek tragedy in the light of Homeric usagew(OCoLC)83537248403JSTORuhttp://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7591/j.cttq44zw aC0bJSTOR02309nam 2200541Ki 4500001001300000003000600013005001700019006001900036007001500055008004100070040003100111020003500142020003200177020001500209020001800224035002100242037002700263041001300290050002600303072002300329082001200352049000900364100006200373240005300435245010500488264007400593300005700667336002600724337002600750338003600776490006700812504006900879588004700948650006000995600005301055600009401108650003101202650002401233650002301257600002401280650004701304655002201351700004101373776021901414830006101633856005901694994001401753ocn861793586OCoLC20131107103823.0m o d cr cnu---unuuu131031s2013 dcua ob 001 0 eng d aJSTORbengerdaepncJSTOR a9780813221304 (electronic bk.) a0813221307 (electronic bk.) z0813221293 z9780813221298 a(OCoLC)861793586 a22573/ctt3ck0zpbJSTOR1 aenghlat 4aBT1120b.P4713 2013eb 7aREL0150002bisacsh04a239223 aJSTR0 aPeter,cthe Venerable,dapproximately 1092-1156,eauthor.10aAdversus Iudeorum inveteratam duritiem.lEnglish10aAgainst the inveterate obduracy of the Jews /cPeter the Venerable ; translated by Irven M. Resnick. 1aWashington, D.C. :bThe Catholic University of America Press,c[2013] a1 online resource (xxvi, 302 pages) :billustration. atextbtxt2rdacontent acomputerbc2rdamedia aonline resourcebcr2rdacarrier1 aThe fathers of the church. Mediaeval continuation ;vvolume 14 aIncludes bibliographical references (pages xv-xxvi) and indexes. aDescription based on print version record. 0aJudaismvControversial literaturevEarly works to 1800.00aPeter,cthe Venerable,dapproximately 1092-1156.00aPeter,cthe Venerable,dapproximately 1092-1156.tAdversus Iudeorum inveteratam duritiem. 7aLiterarische Polemik.2gnd 7aAntijudaismus.2gnd 7aMittellatein.2gnd04aPetrus Venerabilis. 7aRELIGION / Christianity / History2bisacsh 4aElectronic books.1 aResnick, Irven Michael,etranslator.08iPrint version:aPeter, the Venerable, approximately 1092-1156, author.sAdversus Iudeorum inveteratam duritiem. English.tAgainst the inveterate obduracy of the Jewsz0813221293w(DLC) 2013003974w(OCoLC)841186848 0aFathers of the church.pMediaeval continuation ;vv. 14.403JSTORuhttp://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctt3fgnx7 aC0bJSTOR