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The Colonial Controversy - Containing a Refutation of the Calumnies of the Anticolonists, the State of Hayti, Sierra Leone, India, China, Cochin China, Java, &C., &C., the Production of Sugar, &C., and the State of the Free and Slave Labourers in Those Cou (Paperback)
James MacQueen
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R423
Discovery Miles 4 230
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This book (hardcover) is part of the TREDITION CLASSICS. It
contains classical literature works from over two thousand years.
Most of these titles have been out of print and off the bookstore
shelves for decades. The book series is intended to preserve the
cultural legacy and to promote the timeless works of classical
literature. Readers of a TREDITION CLASSICS book support the
mission to save many of the amazing works of world literature from
oblivion. With this series, tredition intends to make thousands of
international literature classics available in printed format again
- worldwide.
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A Geographical Survey of Africa, Its Rivers, Lakes, Mountains, Productions, States, Populations - Its Rivers, Lakes, Mountains, Productions, States, Population, &c. A Map on an Entirely New Construction to Which is Prefixed a Letter to Lord John Russell Regarding the Slave Trade and the Improvement of Africa (Paperback)
James McQueen
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R1,336
Discovery Miles 13 360
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The owner of West Indian plantations, McQueen collected extensive
information from slaves which led him correctly to the conclusion
that the Niger ended in the great delta of the Blight of Benin.
First published in 1840.
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A Geographical Survey of Africa, Its Rivers, Lakes, Mountains, Productions, States, Populations - Its Rivers, Lakes, Mountains, Productions, States, Population, &c. A Map on an Entirely New Construction to Which is Prefixed a Letter to Lord John Russell Regarding the Slave Trade and the Improvement of Africa (Hardcover, New Impression)
James McQueen
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R3,916
Discovery Miles 39 160
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The owner of West Indian plantations, McQueen collected extensive
information from slaves which led him correctly to the conclusion
that the Niger ended in the great delta of the Blight of Benin.
First published in 1840.
Spoken word access processes are the mental processes which underlie our ability to recognise spoken words. They are the perceptual processes which take the sequence of buzzes, bursts and chirps that make up the raw speech signal and convert them into a sequence of words. This edited volume contains articles and short reports which examine these processes. These papers are based on presentations at the workshop Spoken Word Access Processes (SWAP), held in Nijmegen in May 2000. They cover the major issues that the field is now concerned with, and thus provide a snapshot of the current state of the SWAP art. Core representational issues about spoken words are addressed: the form of the representations which are used to access the mental lexicon; how phonological information is coded in the lexicon; and how morphological and semantic information about each word is stored. The main components of the lexical access process are also discussed: competition between candidate words; computation of goodness-of-fit between the signal and stored lexical knowledge; segmentation of continuous speech into words; whether there is feedback from the lexicon to earlier stages of processing; and the relationship of form-based processes to the processes responsible for deriving interpretations of utterances. This collection should be essential reading for those working in this or related areas of psycholinguistics. An introductory article is included which makes this research more accessible to students in cognitive psychology and phonetics, and to specialists in other fields of psychology and linguistics.
Related link: Free Email Alerting
In 1829 the Church Missionary Society began operations in the
African kingdom of Abyssinia (Ethiopia). The Anglican clergyman
Charles Isenberg (1806 64) joined the mission there in 1835,
followed by Johann Ludwig Krapf (1810 81) in 1837. Soon afterwards,
opposition to the Society's presence in Abyssinia caused them to
leave. However, they were determined to establish a base in the
central Ethiopian kingdom of Shoa (Shewa), and did so in 1839,
entering from the Yemeni port of Mocha. Isenberg stayed in the
capital, Ankobar, from 7 June until 6 November 1839, while Krapf
remained until 1842 and travelled to other, lesser-known parts of
the country. This work, published in 1843, is an account of their
period of missionary activity, told through their journals. It
begins with a geographical account of the region by the leading
specialist of the time, James MacQueen (1778 1870), widely
considered one of his most important works.
James MacQueen (1778 1870) was one of the most outspoken critics of
the British anti-slavery campaign in the 1820s and 1830s. A former
manager of a sugar plantation in the Caribbean, he was editor of
the Glasgow Courier, a paper that favoured West Indian merchant
interests and opposed rights for slaves. First published in 1824,
this book is a direct attack on contemporary anti-slavery
campaigners, such as William Wilberforce and Thomas Clarkson, whom
MacQueen holds responsible for 'the dreadful misrepresentations
scattered abroad' about West India colonies and the planters.
MacQueen, who insists on calling himself an enemy of slavery 'in
the abstract', argues that abolition in the colonies would lead to
insurrections, bringing chaos and barbarism to these territories.
This, in turn, would lead to the loss of the British colonies. This
volume remains an essential document in the context of
post-colonial studies.
Spoken word access processes are the mental processes which
underlie our ability to recognise spoken words. They are the
perceptual processes which take the sequence of buzzes, bursts and
chirps that make up the raw speech signal and convert them into a
sequence of words. This edited volume contains articles and short
reports which examine these processes. These papers are based on
presentations at the workshop Spoken Word Access Processes (SWAP),
held in Nijmegen in May 2000. They cover the major issues that the
field is now concerned with, and thus provide a snapshot of the
current state of the SWAP art. Core representational issues about
spoken words are addressed: the form of the representations which
are used to access the mental lexicon; how phonological information
is coded in the lexicon; and how morphological and semantic
information about each word is stored. The main components of the
lexical access process are also discussed: competition between
candidate words; computation of goodness-of-fit between the signal
and stored lexical knowledge; segmentation of continuous speech
into words; whether there is feedback from the lexicon to earlier
stages of processing; and the relationship of form-based processes
to the processes responsible for deriving interpretations of
utterances. This collection should be essential reading for those
working in this or related areas of psycholinguistics. An
introductory article is included which makes this research more
accessible to students in cognitive psychology and phonetics, and
to specialists in other fields of psychology and linguistics.
James MacQueen (1778 1870) was a British geographer and also one of
the most outspoken critics of the methods of the British
anti-slavery campaign in the 1820s and 1830s. Although he never
visited Africa, he became an acknowledged expert on the continent,
through reading all available accounts, ancient and modern, as well
as interviewing slave merchants while managing a sugar plantation
in the West Indies. This work was published in 1840, and was aimed
at assisting the expansion of colonial trading interests. In the
preface he is critical of the efficacy of British attempts to
eradicate the slave trade, and also of the ill-preparedness and
often fatal ignorance of many explorers. He believed that with
better information and planning, European involvement in Africa
could be much more effective, and that the slave trade could be
better reduced by the work of missionaries and by increased trade
than by military intervention.
James MacQueen (1778 1870) was a British geographer fascinated by
the problem of the River Niger. He set out to try to establish (on
the basis of accounts by explorers, traders and missionaries), that
one and the same river flowed continuously through Africa and into
the Atlantic Ocean, thus challenging long-established beliefs that
African rivers either disappeared into the sand or terminated in
lakes. MacQueen documents his findings in this pioneering work,
first published in 1821. Drawing on evidence from a range of
authorities, he argues that previous misconceptions about the Niger
had left Africa isolated from the civilised world, and shows how
his discovery could open up trading opportunities between Africa
and other countries, suggesting that contact with Europeans would
lead to the eventual abolishment of the slave trade in the
interior. This important study remains relevant to scholars of both
geography and African history today.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
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Excited States (Paperback)
Bruce Herbold, Kristi Closser, David Newitt, Patti Cobb, James MacQueen, …
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R377
Discovery Miles 3 770
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A collection of original Scottish Country Dances to accompany the
recording of the same name by the band StringFire! Also includes
all of the original tunes from that recording
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