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This Is A New Release Of The Original 1885 Edition.
Tilley's essay is written from the perspective that the French
Renaissance Literary movement presents more a record of a great
national literary shift than of individual men of letters. Also,
that it was a faithful reflection of a corresponding change in the
whole social and intellectual life of the people. He believes that
the literature of a nation is more or less an index to its moral
and intellectual state, more so in times of great stress and
fermentation, which was occurring during the French Renaissance.
Tilley has also included a sketch of French mediaeval literature so
the reader can understand what the new French Renaissance movement
was replacing. Contents: The Character of the Renaissance in
France; The Antecedents of the Renaissance in France; and The
Beginnings of the Renaissance in France.
Tilley's essay is written from the perspective that the French
Renaissance Literary movement presents more a record of a great
national literary shift than of individual men of letters. Also,
that it was a faithful reflection of a corresponding change in the
whole social and intellectual life of the people. He believes that
the literature of a nation is more or less an index to its moral
and intellectual state, more so in times of great stress and
fermentation, which was occurring during the French Renaissance.
Tilley has also included a sketch of French mediaeval literature so
the reader can understand what the new French Renaissance movement
was replacing. Contents: The Character of the Renaissance in
France; The Antecedents of the Renaissance in France; and The
Beginnings of the Renaissance in France.
In today's demands for moral absolutes, the puritanism of early
Christian Donatists is reflected. Maureen A. Tilley's study gives
new insight into the Donatist church by focusing attention on the
surviving Donatist controversies. She persuasively shows how
Donatist interpretations of Scripture correlate with changes in the
social setting of their church.
The Donatist Church of North Africa was known as the Church of the
Martyrs, yet its martyr stories are virtually unknown. The
Donatists lived in Africa Proconsularis, Numidia and Mauretania
(present-day Tunisia and Algeria), and their communities produced
songs, sermons, pamphlets and stories of martyrs. These documents
were suppressed in antiquity, and few of them survived. They
remained untranslated, and were therefore mainly ignored by
scholars, who instead relied on what the opponents of the Donatists
had to say.
The right to access information is explored in this book. The focus
is on the South African law – said to be the "strongest access to
information law in the world" – but there is an international
perspective, with contributions from India, Bulgaria, the United
Kingdom and the United States. This title argues that for the right
to information to be meaningful it must extend beyond nation-state
governments to transnational corporations and multilateral
organisations such as the World Bank. The right to access
information is not only an important civil and political right. It
is also a socio-economic right, enabling the full realisation of
other socio-economic rights such as the right to welfare, housing
or education.
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