Ishwar petlikar biography of christopher
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1588 – Herman Hugo, Belgian writer, Jesuit priest, and military chaplain whose Pia Desideria, a religious emblem book published in Antwerp, was the most popular religious emblem book of the seventeenth century; it went through 42 Latin editions and was widely translated up to the 18th century. (An emblem book is a collection of emblems with accompanying explanatory text, typically morals or poems.)
1738 – John Wolcot, English writer, poet, satirist, and physician who wrote under the pseudonym Peter Pindar.
1752 – Johann Anton Leisewitz, German lawyer and dramatic poet who was a central figure of the Sturm und Drang (Storm and Stress) era, an artistic movement characterized by expressions of turbulent emotion; he is best known for his play Julius of Tarent, which inspired playwright Friedrich Schiller.
1819 – Dadoba Pandurang, Indian social reformer, writer, grammarian, and linguist from Bombay who wrote extensively on religion and social refo
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New Academia: An International Journal of English Language and Literary Theory (E-ISSN 2347-2073)
Volume VI Issue IV Oct. 2017
(Peer reviewed and Refereed UGC Journal. No. 44829)
Editor: Dr. Sachin Londhe
Content
1. Artifice and Dehumanization: Iain Banks’ The Wasp Factory and Hatred for Life 1-10
Adam Lovasz
(Eötvös Lóránd University, Budapest)
2. Let End Define the Beginning: Using Backward Design for Developing Courses for Better Learning Experience 11-18
Anand Prakash Pathak
(University of Petroleum & Energy Studies, Dehradun Uttarakhand, India)
3. A Psychoanalytic Reading of Jill Bolte Taylor’s Poem 19-33
Chris Ajibade Adetuyi
(Lead City University, Ibadan)
4. Methods of Grammar Teaching in Schools of Cuttack 34-50
Dr Garima Dalal
Sheelpa Sweety
(Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India)
5. Revisiting Presupposition as Semantic Theory 51-